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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-07-17 - Orange Coast Pilot' ' •• ----..... ____ _ .. ' • .. . . 's. • • ase a IZZ ean . ea I ----·--·. -I . -'-'-t • . -' -=--~ -. --~ ---. c-, --. Transeript. Error ' Hostages Slain --. -In Cold Blood; Shake~ Proseeutor ... -. . -. Jn~ .Bei~eeke Ca·se. · GunDtan _Dn·n1ed . --. • • • ' • DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * • WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 17, 1974 YOl. fl, '90, ltl. 6 IKTtottS. • ...... Gets His Gal ' I' ReinttKe Catt ... ..__ . Tra~script Flaw l n Pe~jtir'y Trial "'" BUIJ..ETIN. prosecution at Reinecke's perjury trlal. WASJDNGTON (UJ'I) -Government said he met with Reinecke for 15 to 30 proaecuton were taken by surprise today minutes in his Whit-e House Office at 9 In California Lt. Go~ Ed Reiaecke's a.in. the day Reinecke was_ to testify perjury trial when a stenographer before-the committee. testffied that changes bad been made la The prosecution is expected t o a Senate bearing trallscrlpt fonni.ng the complete its case toclay. . basis for charges agaiDs& Reloe<!ke. Reinecke is accused of lying to the . committee about his role in a n!ed~e bv ' - • , • • I Lhtk:Prohed - To h·i sl1 Terrorists LONDON <UPI ) -. A bomb, possibly planted by mA terorists, exploded in the 900-year-old Tower of London today. hUrling broken glass and masonry into crov.'ds of ·children aod their .parents jamming the city's most popular touris~ sight. One worn.an was killed. At least 36 persons -more than half of. them children -were 1injured in the explosion, several of them in critical condition \\'ilh crushed arms and legs. Detectives sifting -through the debris found the severed foot of a small child. • w~sm~GTON (AP) -Forme r an International Telephone &: Telegraph presidential counselor Clark l\1acGregor Corp. suOOidiary of financial support to testified ~Y Ile advi&ed California-ll--bring:.....ihe-1972 Republtcatan-natlona Police said most of the injured were c emmn1£n:d-oanish•c. -~--------1 Diii)' lll!91 Steff P""'9 Jay Ward leaves Ne~rt .Beach police headquarters with prized pc>ssession, an original paiii~ by·Mel"Ramos. Ward values Ule paint- mg at $10,000. II wu taken lroin ~ Breakers Drive home by bur- .glars, who police caid, appanntly sluhed it in 'a nearby tree. Painting was recovered· aller it was apoUecl frQm air by sUrtled police heli- copter crew. .. Judiciary Panel Hears . . . : ' Kalmbach ~n Wrap-up ' IVASllJHGTON (AP) -The Hoose Judiciary 'Committee is talring the last testimony in f1'1 hnpeachment inquiry and ·111en Wlll tum lo drawing up pro. IJO!ed articles al. lmpeoctun~. Al .,leiit· six articles, ihe--chltl-one charging obstruction ol justice in Hon1oscxuals Backed --By New England-(;ity . . . connectiOn 'with the \\;atcrgiile cover·ui>, are rePofted to be 4farl.ed and ready for preseru.tion tO the committee in secret briefing sessi<m Thursday and Frldfy. The qlH!l:tioning today or 'Herbert w. lmbadw>LNewpQrt_JJeaoh,__EresldenL Nixon'• fonner personal .lawyer, completes a 10-week examination tiy the cornmitlte ihto iW"ide range o[ actions by ll1o Presldetl" 'and associates; kalmbach Wit' ~tly convicted o! selling an ambassadorship, and is i.I~ a lodenl prilon•ln lhe East' lo be ... uable for the ~mlttee bearings. Later, he is ' WORCESTER, Mass. (UPI) -The •xpecled lo be transferttd lo lhe federal Gov. Ed Reinecke to cooperate ~.tell coovention to San Diego. the ~th at. a Senate Judiciary Sen. John v . "Tunney (D-CaliL ). a Comm1ttee hearrng. . member of the Judiciary Committee. A1acGregor, a witness for the testified Tuesday' "¥! telephoned 'Reinecke in Sao-amento on J\farcfi 3. Baseball Greai .. Dizzy Dean Dead at 63 • ' RENO, Nev. (UPI) -Dizzy Dean, one of baseball's greatest pitchers whJ starred with the "Gas H<M.1.9e Gang" d.uring the 1930s, and later a rldio and television announcer famed for his un ique brand of fractured English. died I toWiy ht 63. (Ile- ails, Pa$tc '11) l\frs. Dean ~'as at his side In St. Ptfary's llospital when he died at 1:35 a.m. Also resent were ~is ther Paul, and ·!--~ OIA"'~Pa.u1-0ean's-t\'IO- ~h1ldren. The llOl'l or a_ totton-pieker wbose family moved about the South 'in the eaQ.r, 1920s, young Dean de.velopeft""" a strong arm b y throwing dirt -clods at Pf'&ltie do:~s. ·1972, to tell him he might be called as a witness in Senate hearings. Tunney quotCl;I the lieutenant governor as saying that "unless he ""as losing his memory, and he didn't think he was. he remembered \iery clearly h a vi n g discussed this with fi!r. }.l ite.hell in May." Under cros:irexamination by defense attorney James E. Cox, Tunn ey discounle<l._ 911.Jggestions that .he regarded Reinecke as a potential politica l opponent in the race for governor. "No way -that I v;as going to run for governor," Tunney said. Reinecke was defeated for I h e Republican nomination for governor last month.. _ . . Cox tried lo establish !hfit Reinecke was suffering from jet lag and fatigue ·after he new nearly an night to testify before the Judiciary Cominiltee on April 19, 197'2. Tunney: "lie was tired. Just by looking .at him you could see he was .tired. He looked as though he had a long trip." l\facGregor said that today the meeting in the White House was also attended by Ed~Gillenwat.ers, an assistant t o !See REINECKE, Pare 21 HE SOLD PICKUP TO FIRST CALLER · • • . UP'I T•llf'llDN OF.FERS TESTIMONY . 59n. John Tunney llostages Killed In Cold Bloo4; Gu.n nian Hitnted . . ' ?.IlAi\U (UPI) - A gunman took tl\"O hostages today. ushJ!red them into :i vacant lot· in south Dade County and Killed them with a Thompson subniachine gun, authorities reported. Police and fOOeral agents launched a manhunt for the gunman, who ned into a v.'()()(led area follov.•ing the shooting. There was no hnmediate word on how the suspc<;t got the hostage~. Kenneth W. \Vhittake~. special agent Irr charge of the Miami FBI, was personally directing the manhunt. centered near Southwest !17th Avenue and 1381h Street. · The Suspect was1 described only as a . black man wearing brown clothes. · Kenneth \V. Whittaker. speeilll til(ent in becrl following ,lhe suspect and two hostages aroood Dade Cotµlty for .nearty_ ~n hour tcxlay when he suddenly stopped nt :i vacant lot, forced the hostages out of the car'nnd mowed them down V.'ith the submachine · gun. - Tlie explosion sent hundreds of American and other foteign tourists fleeing from the moated s.tone fortress. A fC\\' were crying but there was no panic. The bomb. the _ second to explode \\•ittioot warning in London today, might have been the v.·ork of the Irish ·Repub!ican 'Army, police sa id, but there was no proof. Police sa id the bombings had some of I.he hallmarks of other IRA attacks that have killed 12 persons and wouiided 115 others in England since December. A J\1rs. Harris of Sydney, Australia. near .to !he explosion ·in the tower but who emerged unscathed. said: "There were Wounded all over the place -it (See TOWER, Page Z) Orange Coast Weatller Sunny and·warm ThUrsday with .. only patchy early morning clouds at the beaches. Highs ln>ra lhe mid-ms at the strand to the 80s in- land. Overnight lows in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY For1rn?r f'eliciano's'Resta-u1't.lnt partner Geue Randa110 lw.s drauHl his second state prison ternt -wl1et1 tudg~-rtded lie vio- lated probc1tio11 inzposed ill liquor hijacki ng .case. Story, (>Oge 9. --'--ii;iottea~~CIJy~' ~J11is!!n at ~ ~ =--.c== proposed ordinance to ban dl.tcrlminatlon Following Kalmbach s testimony, A'mlable although incredibly valll. he was the aoul of !he 1934 St. [.()uls Cardinals, Popularly known as the "Gas House Gang." e swaggered si"'ti°'in"g"°'d"o•"'~'" .... on~ce~­ dangl~ a teammate out of a 12th- slory hotel window and l\ked to Invade formal pa.1 ties dressed in house painter's overalls. "It ~Id the rirst day the ad ra; ~"The"'first"'t'Dllf:r bougttt-.my ~kup;.!!.said the satisfied Daily Pilot ad~iscr lrom t FounU!in Valley. _ Authorities said lhc suspect., \\'as "' _ """' S•rwk• > driving a yell.o~es Bci.1.\_ <w .. ~ ...... ...,.._'!•~ .. ,:i,.~ 10 Po. ssil>ly· stOle.n £mill Ofie'OTUiifio:ia'rCs. c'"'°"''' • 1 ....... u.""" 1t Mil._• ' ---~1----el Mt¥ifl H M M f4.:!S again91 -.uals In )obi and bolialn& While House Counsel James D. St. Clirtr by a 7-2 Vote. wtµ be given an oPportunity lo sum up The change, which would h a Ye the cue against impeachment and the amended the city's human r1ghts \aw to ltage will thefl be 9Ct. for the final act in Include OOmoseXuals, was proposed by the <;tWnmittee's historic proceedings. the Wortester Gay Union and supported Judiciary Committee Chainnan Peler ,by lhe Massachuseil< Civil Liberties W. Rodino Jr. 10.N.J.), ~'Id Tuesday he Union (MCLU) and lhe city's Human hopes the committee can rcnch a Unnl nights CQlnmiuion. (Ste Ul.MBACll, Paae %1 ... . • · \Vllh ll al1. 01' Qiz was one of the -greatest pilchcrs in b.a s e b a 11 histocy before A. freak accident in 1937 cut sh011 his career. ,. Here's the ad that did th~b (or hln1: . 1964 JEEP P.U.1 4 Whl Drive Good condition. . ~l a Daily Piiot cl_assificd ud \\'Ork for you. Giiii 642-5678. • I ' ha h C•rMr Cir-I• There v.•as ,no word w t triggered t e c:1,,.111e.i " •l-H Cha"" CO'l)lCJ 11 ....:. Cr11twenl 11 AUthoritles said FBI agents 'A"Cre 0e.111 JrM11tn 1• follo'A'ing Jhe suspcct's car in several s.i::::ia- unmarlted ·cars and also by helicopter. """"~ Tht: chase 1:1pparently led southward :::"°" dO\\'n ~1ian1\'s Pnhnello Express~·ay Info '"'""""'i." tStt 110STAGES, J•qe II • 11, l•·H U·U " • " M111111t P'ullll• a N1tlM•I N•ws 4 Or•Ptt• C:wn" f.11 "*•" 11-42 "~ rtw It~ ,, II '"rt1 • 1'·1t Dr. 11&(f!c:"'9~ H Sloe-Mlff~tts n •U T ...... I~ U T~N1•n )IU w-e,u .. r 1 Wor!tl Ntw1 I • --· ·---··--- .2_D.!!_LY PILOT ___ ~ _____ W_tdn't$day, July 17, 1974 ' • ... " .. Dank T'101Dpson Highlights Fair T~night -- Hank Thompson nnd the Brazos Valley Boys, one of the nation's leading C<lUn,lry • and v.•es tern b..1llds, "'ill enterta in visitors to the Orange Counly Fair tonight. The band, which has lµld more than 100 chart records, one third 'Of which Were iq tm:..to ...ll'ill perform 111 7:30 p.1n._au t p.m. in the an1phitheater. (Related pie· lures. Pa,ges 9, JL. 14.) Admission lo the concert is free with th e price of admission. Fair tickets are $1.7S for adults, SI for children 6-12, and • free for children under 12. Other fair highlights tonight are the Chuck Jones ~lagic Shov.', at 7:30 p.1n. on 1.he 1nall stage; lhe Father Coughlin Boys 1 .. Choir. at 8 p.m. on the fimlly stage; the Nl.'\LDimensions Patriotic fllus.ical Revue ·on the mall stage, and thetlawaiian Review which follows at 9 p.m. on the mall stage. The biggest bargain is Thursday when • . . all persons carrying cameras will be adml lted free as part of "Camera Day" at the fair. Servicemen also v.·ill be ·admitted free on Thursday. Thursday's fair schedule is: All Day -The Art of Crochenit; Furniture Refinishing, cake Deco- rating, sewiilg-Teaihlques Noon -Oemoonstrations by Amateur Astronomers, Radio Operators, Carv· ors ,and Needlepoinl EIJ)e<U .. 12:30 p.m. -Glass. Dtcoratfng, O'eatlve Stitchery, Needlepoint . J p.m. -Aladdin Magic Show, Berdene Will lams Twirlottes, Beef Animal Judging 1:30 p.m. -Lo\v Cost Cookery 2 p.m. ~Army Rock Banc:t "Now ExpreM," New Dintensions Patriotic Music Revvue , Rag Doll 3 p.m. -Aladdin Magic Show, Boonie Dancers, WhltUer Variety Sbow 4 p.m: -f\1usic A1an Band, New Dimensions, Dueling Banjocs by Tom and George 5 Pim. -Bonnie Dancers, KW1g·Fu Demonstration, Ak1ddln Magic Show 5:30 p.m. -Ribbon Roses and Pin Cushions, Necdlepolnt 6 p.m. -Galena St. East Musical .Revue, U.S. Marine li'Jag Pageant Pots P11ns Gua 7 p.m. -Kilns-Fu Dem<Nlllratlom 7:30 p.m. -Chuck Jones Magic:·Show, Piua Taste (feating, Hank ThompllOll and the Bra1a11 Valley Boys a _ p.m. -Galena St. East Mualcal Revue, Marine Fhtg Pageant 9 p.m. --Ne~Olmenslons, flawali an Revie w, Hank Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys, Pizza Taste Teottng -,..,.__ • Popeil Trial Ju.ry P ic king' Con t inues ife Match · , - ·Screening of 66 prospective jurors who -, , will try 10· decide lnocence or guilt in the murder-for-hire trial of NeWJ>Qrt Beach matr:on Eloise Popeil began today in Los Angeles County Superior Court. She and her boyfriend Dan Ayers, IO years her junior, are accused of plotting the death of her estranged husb8nd Samuel Popell Jr., a "lnultimilllonaire Chicago kitchen gadget tycoon. 'Ibe procesa of impanelling the jury for what ls e:1pected to· be a six-week trial got under way Tuesday-with weeding oUt some among 220 prospective jurors: - Vacations, work schedules mld ·ot~r ·factors were considered in light of the · anticipated trial length. FUTURE FAR MERS OF AMERICA DISPLAY SKILLS IN SWINE SHOWMANSHIP COMPETITION County Fai r Con testants Show How l hey Can Control and Direct Their Animals wltl1 Cenes Mesa Quartet Freed in Plant Pilfering Case From Page I REI NECKE ... Reinecke. AtacGregor said. "It seemed to me -Uiere was some concern expressed about ne'o\'S accounts'' which de ta i 1 e d ReineCke's alleged involvelllCllt in the ' ITT matter. · 4 '· . Charges of possetslon of . stolen Pro-Nixon Author Sees property initiated against four Costa Mesa men arrestedin a predawn raid on an apartment crammed with 2.8 potted plants have been dropped. ~Fight to End' in Book Ernest Pease, 20, of 2131 Union Ave., plus James Thomas, 21, Kenneth Way, 21, and Michael Way, 20, all of 1315 Baker St., were released with no . By BELEN THOMAS U,I WNte HMIH RIHf"fW President r.tlxon, having put thoughts of-resigning-behind him, 11lans a "fight to the finish" against impeachment according to a book written by one of his strongest defenders. Summit," written by Rabbi Baruch complaints filed. Korff. bead of the National Citizens No theft reportt couki be traced to the Committee For Fairness to t h e plants, no victims came forward and Pmidency. there was no way they could be traced Korff interviewed Nii:on l\iay 13 in the such as through a name and address Oval Office and later got w r i t t e n painted on a pot, police said. responses to questions. He made the 123-One source said of.fi~ may have bad - For 11 Officers SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 24-year· old housewife held 1.1 officers al· bay here for, about an hour with a riOe, ax, machete and barrage of fUJ:Diture, pcta and pans, police said. -'nley reported that Nancy E. Waltz was throwing pots, pans and furniture from .a window of her home in the Ingleside Distiict at 6:30p.m. nliiiiay. When the first two officers arrived, they were met with a bal'iage· of flying household items. . Mrs. Waltz also flung anaiOUt-tbe window, slightly injuring officer Robert Sudano in the left leg, they said. Nine -;jnore officers ·were called ior reinforcement and attempted to storm the front door. But Mrs. Waltz aUegedly held them off with a machete and a rifle, ~Y reported. · At 7 p.m. officers used various dlver;sionary tacties and wStracted l\trs. Waltz to the rear of the .house where officer Robert Quinlan captured her. She was taken to San Franctsco General Hospital for observatioo, they said. .From Page I ·TOWER ..• ! ' j looked like a scene out ol hell." At ieast·balf the tourists stumbling for the exit were children.. Many Were IChoo1 ,._ being shephenled by toocher>. "Move oo, move' on, .. police shoot.eel. "There nUght be another bomb.'" The first blast today damaged a goVemment office building in the suburlJ of Balham before dawn, but caused m casualties. '.l)le tower, guarded by the oolorful p_i.ll:e-earryigg Beefeaters, daily draws thousan~ ol foreigners to see the royal family's ceremonial jewelry and iW co11ectioo. of armor and· firearms. \ Jn various oews stories , Reinecke had said he was mistaken when he said he first talked about the 1TI' pledge ·with t~en-Atty. Gen. John-N:-Atitchell-m A1ay lin'I before the settlement of an !TT antitrust._ case. Reinecke told the press that be really met with 'fililchell on Sept. 17. 19'71. after the settlement. •---·-r attvrstantr.'Reinecke f" 1e11 the truth and be responsive ·to t h!! questions." 11facGregor said in describing his meeting with Reinecke prior' to the -Nixon·alao=says that ii the Watergate. related accusations against him "'ere page book public Tuesday after meeting to . drop charges against the :men with Nixon. ---__:._originally. su.tped.ed-ol__._pottedi,_,p!Amt.- I hearing. MacGregor, now vice president of United Aircraft Corp., was counselor to President Nixon for congress i on a I relations at the time. He later-succeeded Afitchell as head of the Committee t4> Re· elect the Pros ident. . · The t\1-'()-COW"lt perjury Indictment deals with his testimony on April 19, 1972, during Senate Judiciary Committee hearings on.the nomination of Richard G. Kleindienst to be attorney general. Welfa re Checks Sent ' 'In Erro r' NEW YORK (UPf) -Embarras.ied city olflcials have admitted that a computer erroneously spewed out $7.5 million in un authorized checks in three --months to welfare clients dropped from the rolls. The problem has been corrected and authorities are trying to get the money back -but some of it has probably been lost for good. Acting hWtfan resources administrator Howard S. Stein Tuesday said the computer issued the checks in April. May, and June because of a programming CITOC. ' OIAN61 COAST " DAILY PILOT • Tl'8 °'-Coasl llll<i. Plltll rift -.. '°"" t.r.ol "'' ~...._, .. ........,...,"' .... ~ C.0.0l~""l~ ~01·--­pulll-. 1.1-y I,,,_~ rNUf b ~· M-. N-8Hcft.. !V>l"'l!lon llucl\/f°"'"' 1 .......... 1. l ....... 8ellCfl ............ ~ lflO S... ~!WSen "'*' Cop. ... _ A .....,.. ,_..1 ..,,1;on ,. DUlll-S1m,•Gt"' t1'111 Su,.,. <M~•. ll'l9DMC•P91 ...... .......,}ilont 1>013JOW.S. D11si..-.eo.i. -.ao~a ...... ~ Robert N. W..d ~..,,,P\1111!1 ..... .locJ R. Ciiiey YlQt ......._ -ae.11 MllNQtr T~K .... ~ ·- . true he would not remain in the White House "for a minute" and "nobody would have to ask me to resign." 'Ibe comments were made in the book "The !Personal Nixon: Staying On the * From Page I K.t\L MBACH. • • vote by July 26 on v.·hether to recommend impeachment ol Nixon. With the Democrats holding a 21·17 edge-in the committee, the key que,tion on aqy impeactment" vote will be how many Republicans support lt. Rep. Charlea E. Wiggins (R-Ollif.), a Ie6ding Nixon loyalist on the committee, predicted Tuesday that no Republicans would vote for impeachment and that ~h 0e·rnoerats would swltch over to kill it in committee. "We're going to win this goddam thing," he told newsmen . "I think th e committee will act as lawyers when the chips are di>wn. The evidence just is not there." \Viggins' comment prompted other Republicans to say they didn't know how they were going to vote and that it was JX>SSible they could vote f o r impeachment. "There are at least four Republicans \\'ailing to see what the legal theories ror impeachment are," said Rep. 1bomas 1'~ . Railsback, (R·Ill.). He identified the four as himself .and · \Villiam S. Cohen o[ J\.falne, AI. Caldwell Butler o[ Virginia and Hamilton Fish Jr. of New York. . At a news conference, Korff said he pilfering but they didn't drop the flower has the impression that Nixon "agrees pots. . . with· me" that the conspiracy-perjury The greenery was given to the city conviction of John D. Ehrllchman, Parka Department for public landscaping Nixon's fonner No. 2 aide, Is "a blot on purposes. justice." In the book, Nixon called Watergate the "thinnest. scalijlal in American history." He said that if he had been "bas!Cally a liberal" by )?J'!:SS standards, "Watergate would have Deen a blip." He sar.i he comidered resigning lf the House votes impeadunent "and I totally rejected il I have decided to go the distance to defend this office, and to ~elend m)'Seli against charge• of which I am wholly innocent." Resignation, be said, wodld burl his successor and set "a precedent of a man mortally weakened from thlS process of destroying a President who was not guilty of a high· crime or misdemeanor." .. Speaking of the news med.la, Nixon said: "I know for example, in the press room that my policies are \generally disapproved of, and there are some, putting it in the vernacular, who hate my guts with a passion. But I ·don't hate them, none of them. I understand. 'Their phllosoJi!ies are different." Nixon has been taking. It easy at the Western White House since Friday, concerned mainly about economic )Xlllcy. He has talked several times with Secretary or State Henry A. Kissinger by telephone about the CfPrus situatkm. FroM P iife I HOSTAGES ••• Pigeon .Archer Sport Hal ted LONDON {UPI) -Argent ine-, born Juan Hen.!hore disliked pigeons because they s p r e a d disease and .. made a mest of Trafalgar Square. That's why, be told the judge, be "'as stalking them in London's Gref!n Park -with a bow and arrows. Police confiscated his archery gear, and the judge gave Herishore a one-year suspended sentence. "It 's a shame that my bow and arrows have been taken from me," Henshore said, "I was geUing a ,better shot every time I used them." No Markups '• l~"-Mu~ .......... [Orlut OolnH. Loo, ~-dud ,.Nc:a --'Ki ng's X' o·n Sta rn ped-Goods ,._ .... ~ca- Otflm , C'G&llM-:D()\l,'fll8.\Y!!''r9'!! HfowPOll lt8tfo ).133 ,...._.., lko-*\I ........... BllOl.2llU1>1Ul -"•~~-11 I HUll!...,,,..l!•od'I '"'~~ft"°"'"-~ 51110.-·~··"-lllMI WASffiNGTON (AP) -Safeway Stores, Inc., the nation'& largest supermaTket chain, announced today It plans to stop m1rking up prices on most products already stocked on shelves. - .,.,_ POLICE COMFORT SWISS TOURIST, TWO ,CHILDREN AFTER BLAST One Kiiied, 36 Injured at Terrorl1t1 Bomb.Tower of London . ' • •• Converse All Stars Basketball Shoes 1.0.95 • Canvene Skldgrlp Tennis • '~-17141642-~ )21 .ei.111t1,41 •"'"...ttNMJ 642-1611 ··--=·-= '°'""""""'...,,.Dlut\NlkKll ., 49t·44Z ' -""""' °"'""' "°""""'~ "' J4~12ZO "When we ate forced to make a/rice jncrease, cans and pack· ages which are already prlte·mark'I! will be sold out at the old price," said Safeway vice ptesldent John Bell. He said itJLCan. or packaaeJ>ears two prlces \he .. product.will be ·J--::so="',;""t'"h3e tOWer price, and if a price is lowered all foods bearing • the old higher price will be mark ed with a new lower price. ~ Court c-1 Tennl Shorts 6.95 • 8.95 • I 0.95 Wl ls.on enn is Sho rts 9.95 1.16.95 T-ls Shirts 6.00 • 8.00 • 9 .00 T-ls Dressei-Ladles Shorts Ladlu Tennis Shoes 8.95 • 17.95 1.'..--'~--SIShoe"-,-9.95•--·•..,_ __ .__ Jack Purcell Tet1111s ·shoes ·10.95 ~ot>t. ,.,~. ()aflOll c.o.tM ~.,.. °""" ~ Nof\l"""°"""_ll_MltOlllll!!lllft Of ,o...,._.,i. ""' .. " .... f bt ~ W!lfW!lt*tll-ol~· &ecOllll (:l.IH -'111'1 l*ll t ! ~ ~ C.~IOt' 1tt1 ~""" bJta<.., 1300 -"'fi b,-1N1I I• 00fll0tl!N)'t llllll!...,OM11MUDlll ».001!10ft11'111, ···---• . Bell said the new pricing -p9licy wlll go into effect about July 28. He said it will cover meats, groceries, produce and nonfood p roducts, but not lair-trade items and baked goods. . Bell said at a news conference that the new lowest-price policy was prompted by inflationary trends. .,.. • • Fred Perry Tet111is Shoes~l 5.95 . Tretorn Tennis Shoes 17.95 : .• 22.9 ~ Adldai T..-ils Shoes 22 .95 • -I , • ~- • • -----·---"' -• Wtdnt~ar, July 17, 1974 s DAIL V PILOT S At Your Service Coastal High -Ris.e ASuaday, ,Jonday. Wednttcl1y and •'rkt•y •·eature· Of the Dally Pllo< Cot ci' problen1? T/1e11 wri!e Pat Dunn. Pat wUt cut red tape, get the aris141er1 arid • action you need lo solve inequitJe1 in · yuvernmenC and -1 bu.,ine,,s. A1ail your querlions to · Pal Dunn I Al Your Service, (Jra.ngt Coost Daily Piloi, P. o. n Boz 1560, Cosla 1ileso. OA 92626. Include ~ur teiepl1one number. y Fer Tlarlft11 A9ed DEAR PAT: Hu anyone publilbed a good, lnnpenslve boolt that advisee older people how they can' save money? I know the~ are a lot of books oo general thnftlnes!, but senior cllizens have specific problems and spending areas that younger perlOl'ls might n o t enoounter. C. F., Ll1uaa HUis "nae Amerlc1n A1soelatloa or Retired Penom ind tbe N1tlonal Retired Tt1cllen A110Clatloa offen 1 free boell:iet, ''Retlremi1t CDnnmer Gulde," ~ coven every 1tped of ff!OllOmlcal IM111 for ohler perMn. ~ by wrltlar '° AARP·NRTA, ms Couetdcat Ave., N.W., W1Ublpoa, D.C • .._ PlltlJ Pong Tourtteff DEAR PAT: Some lime ago you told a reader interested In joining a Plhg l>ong Club, or !Jleetlng others interested In this game, that he should look i n t o paflicipaUng in a toomament acheduled sometime this swnmer in Anaheim. 1bat's all I remember about It and I'd like to know the dates and ir players can still sign up. P.L., s.11 aemeate Tllo C.Wtnlo Allplo ... !-. - Sul Sodtty .. Or.op c-ty wtll - Hr die leCOMI 1naul P111 PH1 Toan.· A·'l'llN Aq. J.ll •I !-. QaoHty 1u; Still Admires Bina . Aide . Calls Nixon ' 'Miserable S.O.B·.' • "What I really meant -is a tough and hard-nosed JllY· What I'm trying to .say 1s you have to be tciugh. You have to be willing to take your knocks. You have to be combative to succeed. "I'm not talking about a guy as a fr~ or as a person, but as president of . this country. A nice sweet guy would be pushed around;" Nofziger ta.id. Trial Judge Rules New µppert Suit 'WRONG WAY .CORRIGAN' WOULD RATHER FORISET IT / No,w 67, Ho Shuns Publicity, Declines Interviews Fa111011s Flight W roug Way ~orrigan Was Right By WlLUAM J. STANF!ELD- 'u1111H f'r.u 11111,...tleul ' . .. F' DI A?.TO!'i""'. ---~ DIDN'T EXIST 'l'he hislorY of man i s a <:hroniCle of invention, and the perfect stone for je\\'elry \\'Ou ld have to be in.vented jf jt did not &1lrcady exist. The . pcrrecl jewelry ston e Should renect ll')ost, or the ii i ht fallin g on its surface: it should be harder lflan any other niaterial known; lo be appro1>1ialc for :di fashions and seasons. jt should be colorless and clear, but also uvuilable in colors such as gol<len ycllo\\1• chestnut brown , µink. • PENDANT. Rope bordf:!r 'lo:s1gn tor elegant s1mphc11v. $120.00 Coun~y Asks Zone Plan Revisions By JOHN VALTERZA ot n. Dtltr '"lift Stitt ..\.. Lanma Bea_ch devel~r is back a_t the drawifli: boards Uris week reviving a controversial application Ior a zon .. change ~tiich coo.kl allow higJ.:ri~ tl~·ellings on property at the base of· the Capistrano Beach Palisades. County plaMing commissioners Tuesday took the application for the rone. change fileCI by Terra Prima, Inc., "under submission" and told the firm that an environmental ilripect statement needed • expanding and that some alternate land-use proposals should be drafted . Once those items satisfy the planning staff, a new hearing would be set, the cpmmission agreed. --The bead of the development firm is former Saddleback College Trustee Joh..'l Lund of Laguna Beach and the land fig- ured in a controversy during Lund'~ tenure on the boahl. LwKl 's bidding, former college Presi- dent Dr. Fred H. Bremer lobbied for more Uberalized development policies 1 affecting the bluff land in the Sootb · Coast. The property at issue In the :zone change befcre county planners lies at the base or the bluffs along Pacllic Coast Highway more than 1,000 reet downcoast of Doheny Park Road. The proposal-whicit has drawn strong condemnation from residenu a n d eo1nmunity grOJJps· as well as the coUnty planning stafC -calls for a shift in zone from RHE (residential hillside estates) ~and C.I (local business) to R-3 (apart· ment). Under the new zone, high rise con- struction could be used to creeate about 28 d\velling units at a density O{ 18 to the acre. The Capistrano Beach Community Association, United South Co a.st Communities (USOCC:) and dozens of residents have opposed the .idea. The county planning staff apposes the idea because it is not corWstent with proposals in the current suggested revisions to the Capistraro ·valley General Plan. The congestion of dwelling$, the staff added in a report to commissioners, would cause serious traffic probl~ because the busy=highway would be the sole access to the relatively thin strip of developable property at the bue of tl!IN>luffs. The county's existing height limits would allow the construction of f<XJl'.story buildings in the area proposed for a rezone. • Planning staff spokesmen said no defmite date ror a new hearing has yet been set, but ·it ~'OUld ~depend on the completion of several new addition! to the EIR as well as alternate suggestions for land use . - CWTent thinkirllj: in the planning department calls for land uses in the , area related to beach-area tourism and ' ' recreation. i The property Hes· directly across the 1 highway from the day.use areas of J' ·noheny State Park. CUFF LINKS rope border. .c;;rnar• chain ' . • . Aa111tlm. Spffnmen uy Ute cembln ... --~Lt~~;~~~~::'.~C~~ 11---11-1-................ t plfy'wltf- -Terry Geer •od Bad &osier _ _,..che:lu c and green: this stone shoUld 3 SO; C\1Cl1 i(\Vhifc, give nasfieS"U.f red. green nnd blues and. fi nally, it shoulcl ho Hhundanl enough so p&,y .. 1 • '"°"' mar1tlloa la •• effort .. bnt tlle Hl•tln( dtublt• ........ lt11tc1 by tlle Galneoo Worhl Book ol Ro<ordt, no. Rve __ , loblet •Ill ht- ..ive n se1m1 ud • player• In round- tlte-doek 1etkm. Pllytn of all 11es lrt aeeded •nd fllrtlttr lnfonn1tfon m1y be of:ltll-.r by calllng Gl"ll7 Rttd, 133-7 ... , or Terf) Geer, Ut.,.11 . • Nears Co111pletiot1 ' . ' The $3 .9 mUllon math·science building at Saddleback College is' schedule~ for use in the fall sc'nlc ster. It includes a greenhouse, laboratories for math, langu age,. physics, chemistry, botany, biology ~ and anatomy and two large lecture ·rooms. One of tHe lectu re roo1ns is eventually to be converted to a domed planetarium . • -· that the majority of people c~n afford to O\\'ll it . 'l'his stone , forlun:it cly. is provi~cd by ·n:.i turc in the l'or1r1 of the d1um ond. us yet uucqu(ll\ ·d by theinvc ntiv. p.cnius or n1nn. . -·~ ·' J. C. JJ~P.~rieJ JewefertJ 1~23 NEWPOA"( BLVD .. COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS B&nkArnericsrd-Mestat ClisrglJ ZT YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 548-3401 . . • • ---.. • f DAILY PILOT Wtdnt~lY. July 17, 1974 \ Jus t •e t ~·-·~ ' -~ Turks Mass Troops • Ill Cypru·s Crisis· '\ with T om ~ur.phine . .::~•-.. ~ . ., Coooty Voting Change Needed Wa lkouts Spreading ' Across V.S. ~ By Assoclatff Prffs SLICL~G THE l\IEWN : The absence National Guard troop.s "''atcbed over -Of RMald-Caspers from the Fifth District prison fumates ,in Ohio and Rhode Island, seat oo our Orange County Board ol thousands of San Francisco area Supervisors raises some interesting side commuters \\'ere ll'ithout bu 1 e s and questions on our systenl of electing pickets \\'ere posted at two airlines as county government representatives. strikes ron.tinued today,across the nallon. Solemn memorial r.ites "''ere conducted Officials in Los Angeles sakl they dld in New'J)Ort Beach fOf' Supervisor Caspers not kow how long the city woold be able yesterday. IL is widely accepted that he to maintain full '''ater and power service lost his life at sea. follo"'·ing a walkout by workers in the Despite tragedy and grief , politics can Department of Water and Power, the be COW1ted on to press ah~d. And the first such strike fn 30 years. 11le questions ny thick and fast up at the department's 5,000 v.'OrkerJ began County Seat in Santa·Anaoo what should striking at 12:01 a.m. after negotiatims be done <fbout the vacant Fifth District broke up late Tuesday. chair. CO There are e\•en legal haggles going on . PPER l\UNE~ liquor store clerks, rot to menhon the backroom political prison guards, hospi~l \\·orkers and manuevering. autoworkers were among those off the job.in scattered areas in a rash of labor ~iA!\'Y LEADERS of communities, disputes federal mediators say Is both in city and unincorporated areas. unprecedented since_ the end of World are "-orried abou11 leaving the coastal \\'ar II. representative's seat vacant too long. Analysts say the labor unrest has They reason that the Fifth District, bubbled 1o the surface with the tilting of after all, is \fhere the action is ,these ecmomic controls. At the start of the 'A'ttk, there were 600 strikes involving a days in county government. quarter-million workers. Growth patterns are strongest ¥t ·nr~ strike-plagued Ohio on Tuesday, places like Missioµ Viejo and the about 7.500 striking public employes Saddleback Valley and in Fifth Di.strict closed 25 liquor stores and hampered cities such as ~ Juan CapiS1rano. And o Pe r at ions 8.t t'A·o ~versities, 14 \\•ith the growth come the problems. niental hospitals and eight prisons. or course, the Board of Supervisors is ~ational Guard troops were called to composed of five members. And the four assist 'A'ith security and medical services remaining are carrying on. at Lima State-Hospital for the criminally insane after pickets hurled baseball bals TROUBLE JS, many Fifth District j.nd baOlhlls at workers v.·ho crossed their residents point out, the other four men· do .... ines. er troops were at the state's not represent our coastal region in the largest prison in Lucasville "'·here prison central and southern sector. guards are on strike. · Thus if there is a basic flaw in the way v.·e _go about setting "up our county government, the election of supervisors by district might be it. Because of this system. First District Supervisor Robert Battin .comes from Santa Ana and is expected to take care of his people there and in the Fountain AUTO WORKERS kept Ge lfTI'a I :P..1otors' Lordstown plant shut do'A'n for the fifth day and about 2,000 coal workers closed mines in the eastern part of the state in a one-day protest of proposed federal strip mining legislatioo. .,. _ _,Valier_ region.J)avid L. Baker's Second District embraces the Garden Grove area, Third Distr.ict Supervisor Ralph Diedrich is from Fullerton. Ralph Clark is the , Fourth Dist rict man from Anaheim. State lawmakers drew up a wage proposal they hoped would lure the SfriJilii(pubIIC empioyes·back lo work" or the first time since July 6. 'Ibe fuJI legislature considers formalWng the offer on Monday. Prison handling of an inmate assault on a guard sparked a walkout by some of the 247 officets at the Adult Correction ·lnstitl;ltion in Cranston. R.I., on 'I\lesday. 1 IN THE l\ONDS of many _people , then, each supervisor has his own cubbyhole and takes care . of his own home. front. 1\nd with the loss of Caspers, many folks in the Fifth District figure places like Nev."J)Ort Beach. Laguna. Costa :P..1esa, !\lission Vie}o, El Toro, San Juan, Dana Point and environS are unrepresented. This is technically true. But as a practical matter. even with the F'Utb District seat filled, you need two otl\er \l03rd votes to get anything done for the coastline. To be effective then, the other four supervisors must have done their home'A·ork on lhe coastline as well as in their O'A' •. • :.ime district. And the Fifth District man heller do bis on the central l---coon1}-:-too:- l think the Temaining four supervisors ha\'e tried 10 till the ga p in Caspers' loss. .Dave Baker, for example, has aJ·ways been a friend of the coastline. Bur IT DOES give you the question to ponder if we wouldn't be better off if the five supervisors were electl'd at large. i\1aybe we coult go to a system like the city of Nev.1>0rl Beach, where super\'isors would_ be nominated by di strict but clecte<i by the en1ire county. If s an interesting theory. anyway. National Alrlines, •he nation's eighth largest, furloughed 5.500 of its 8,000 employes as prospects dimmed for an early set.tlemerit of a strike by 1.600 mechanics, clerks, fuel truck drivers and inspectors ol the Int er na tiona l Associa tion or ?ifachinlsts. ABOUT 900 supervisors comprised a skeleton work force at the airline which canceled all lSS daUy !lights to 45 American cities and L9nd0n until Friday. Talks in Naples, Fla., r e a ch e d an impasse over fringe benefits. In oakland. flight ~ews remained ol{ the job at Trans International Airlines, one-of~the world's lantest v a ca t i on charter finns. The airline carried 680,000 passengers last year. The 191 cockpit crewmen and r>88 flight attendants walked out on ~tonday, proteSling shifts which they claimed v.·ere dangerously long. About 200,000 commuters who normally travel by bus from Oakland to San Francisco have been forced to get there by other means because of a strike against AC Transit District . The 1,600 bus drivers. mechanics and clerks sought a cost of living raise. C:ruslaing .Defeat ... ' ,.,.,.~ ..... ' .. ~,.. Dt;posed Makario s ht Lo11don By United Preoo ht.n1U.RAI Turkey sent an annored dlvlskln to its southern coast today to join troops massed a for a possible ·invasion of Cyprus 50 miles away and world leaders ... increased pressure on Greece to tnd the coup before Greece and Turkey go to war O\'er the Issue. Turkish Prime ~tlnster Bulent Ecelit and Defense Minister Hasan Esat Isik flew urgently to London for crucial taJkl \\'hile Turkish newspape~s spoke openly of imminent ~vaslon. Deposed Cypriot President· Archbishop ltfakarios also flew to London for talks \\'ith British leaders, TURKEY, GREECE and Britain are co-guarantors of the freedom and independence of Cyprus but Turkey says Greece defaulted by permitting Greek officers to lead the Cypriot national guard in the revolt against Makarios. Turkey has threatened to act alone if Britain does not joln it in intervening in Turkey. - With the J anti-Makarios insurgents apparently in virtuaJ control of Cyprus Greece's 14 .allles in NATO called on the Greek officers who led the coup to leave . the island and permit Makarioe to return. 'nlere were appeals from the United States, Britain and other allies to Greece and Turkey to use moderation . I .......... Archie A b1e11t "All in the Family" las taped its first show of fall without Ar<hie Bunker. Carroll O'Con- nor, who plays Bunker, is in contract dispute with owners of show. X-rated Movies' . Male W o'rkhorse Retired Gen. \Villiam S. Westmoreland blamed .himsell for Tue,s. day:s defeat in South Carolina Republican gubernatorial prim3ry. "I was an inept candidate,1' he said. \Vestmoreland was defeated by State Sen. Jal]les Edwards. The Soviet Union issued a stern \\'anting to Greece and said "iht So\'iet people resolutely denounced tbe armed putsch" against :l\takarios. A nwnber of Soviet warships _were reported in the vicinity of Cyprus and at leut seven U.S. 6th fleet ships includlng the cmier Forrestal were in the area. However \\1ashington said the 6th fleet had noi been placed on an alert. .4rrested by FBI -~ NEW YORK (UP!) -Hmy R,.mo, the \1rell-kno\\'fl workhorse of X-rat.cd. movies who has played leading man to such l!lars as Linda Lovelace and Georgina Spelvin, w~ arrested today oo charges of violating ~ federal interstate Taping to Sl1ow Surprise By Ehrlichman Reported THE BRinSH DEFENSE ministry obscenity laws. said it diverted the 28.500-ton Britfsh Reems, whose real name is Herbert ..., troop c11rrier Hermes \\·ith a .900-man Streicher, was:;:picked up by FBI agents · commando unit to the E a s t e r n Tuesday on an indictment handed up last Mediterranean today because of the Thursday by a federal grand jury in Cyprus ~ituation. The ship had been :l\lemphis; Tenn. expected to dock at Malta today. Also named in the indictment were Frome Wirt Services \\I ASIUNGTON -John D. Ehrlichman arranged to tape record a meeting with a Nixon campaign lawyer last year so the former pmkiential adviser co u I d "register great . surpri!e" ·at "all the gruesome..fact.s!!:oL~Watergale:.cover­ up, the \Vashingtoo Post reported today. The Post quoted a confidential camp near Swedesboro Tuesday and The Cypriot representative to the Herbert Nitke, producer of "The Devil In broke his arm . the lawmaker said. United Nations Security Council asked 1\1iss Jones," and the di.rector of the The assailants . ....,.ho \lt'ere said to be t he council Tue9day to demand a cease-picture, Gerafd Damiano. angry beCause they felt they \\'et&-being fire in Cyprus and Jet the 2,000-man U.N. All three men were charged with harassed, also assaulted t'A·o other peace-keeping fcrce there enforce it No lnteni.ate transportation of obscene pen;ora on the tour. action "'as taken. Britain and the United matters for sale ~ d 1 st r i b u ~ ion , Democratic Assembl~ Byron Baer States were ~ to believe the ~ and aiding and abetting. It of Bergen, 'ff. ., sUf!e a Men-rerr--situation uia· SOviet11niOii took----con¥iGted•ort-...alkhn!e·count9,-each•couldl---I ann before he escaped in a car. a stiffer . stand ~ called the coop a ~i~e up to $20,000 in fines and 15 Yeal'I threat to world peace. m jail. . . e 1nnocent, Sags fia rne g JACKSONvlLLE, Fla. -Sen. F.dw"ard J. Gurney has pleaded innocent 'to · cormpiracy, bribery, cover-up a n d perjury charges and says he has not decided whether he Will resign from office. GREECE MAINTAINED that the coup on Cyprus was an internal affair of Cyprus and that the co}onels ruling Greece had ~ to do with tho uprising. Turkey and Makarloo put the blame 1q11arely on the A t h en s Reems first received naUonal exposure for hi! performance as the psychiatrist in ''Deep Throat" who diagnosed the wtlque anatomical problems ol Linda Lovelace. memorandwn by lawyer Plato Cacheris concerning a meeting between Ehrlichnum and Paul -O'Brien. an aitomey for the Nixon re-election committee, ci.t San JJemente "April 5, 1973. Cacheris is a defense attorney ror fonner AUy. Gen. Joh! N. Mildlell in the Watergate rover-up case. The Florida Republican ~__Jhe · pleas on Tuesday in a quick and quiet arnignment before U.S. Magistrate Joseph Hatchett. Guemey was released on a $1,000 signature bond. government and today U.S. Ambaasador ·Henry J.-TasCa told Greek Foreign :l\tinister Coostantine Kypralos the United States opposed any violatim of Cyprus' sovereignity. Cyprus' new Greek""""8<ll'ed regime The movie was subeequentlJ declared obscene by Manhattan Criminal Coor\ Jili!ge JOel Tyler wllo, In his declslori, noted ~liss Lovelat-e'fl "SWtl'd-swallowtng capacity_for..fellatio." Reems also made starring appee.rances - in "The Devil in 1\tiss Jones" and, 111ost • recently, "Memories Within :l\tiss Aggie." e Cou• Disea se Spre u s S • D MARbIN,-Tex. --Animal health . • niatra ~p!f.rts officials siad today a roadblock .'l al' Ahe apparent!~ isolated a cattle-di ..... ~ustr l ll r outbreak m one Texas county, but m-• fected cov.·s slipped into Oklahoma where ' Gov. David Hau banned tho imporlt•tl•• ·Tl•reat of Bomb of more Texas livestock. 11 Billy Ray Gowdy, president of the Oklahoma Board o( Ag ricultur e, conflnncd eight rows died of anthrax, and five more 'A'ere believed killed by the disease. e 1tlob Burts OH lela l SWLDESBORO. N.J. -}.Jore than a dozen migrant 'A'Orkers swinging sticks and baseball bats chased and attacked a New Jersey le~lator ~uring a labor SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -Frank Sinatra ended tiis controversia l Aumralian tour today with a police escort to the 8irport after a caller threatened to blow up bis plane Wlless '75 millioo in ransom v.•as paid. / Pol ice cars surrounded the Qantas jet on which the singer and his party \\·ere booked, and security officers searched the airport, but no bomb Was found. · loday bnlodcast "sincett 1 .. Ungs of friendship" 1or Turkbh ~ and TV Personality's reopened the Island republic for eight ~ey marshaled strike lorcts a1..,,-Deatli Recorded ts 90UI~ shore opposite Cyprus as it ._!lid in 1964 and 1967 when Greece and Turkey came within a hair's breadth of war. Those troops put to sea but did not land in Cyprus \\'hen the United States and NATO intervened. DAI LY PILOT DE LIV ERY SERVICE Delivery of the Da ily Pilot isouaranteed MOtld1,.f ,ld•1: It l'O"dct .......... "°""'"""'tr'/' ~ )l p,m .. <•II Md ...... COPY ... m Ile D>l'""!llll IO · SARASOTA, F1a. (UPf) -Television talk show hostes,, Ouistine Chubbuck wanted a pennanent record of her on- camera .suicide which horrified vlev.ws of her daily "Suncoast Digest" program .l\-1onday. Officials or WXLT television said ~ay that Monday's program was videotaped at the special request of the 29-year-old f\1iss Chubbuck, who died 14 hour-3 after shooting herself in the rig'1t temple with1 a 438-callber re'•olver. Pacific Northwest Wet EIGHT POLICE oqWld ca"•· unmarked police vehicles and plalnclotbes detectives cordooed off the area around Sinatra's hotel in the King:s Cross district. The caller demanded that the moDey be left at a postoffice near the hotel. yau.C•l•Mt 11~..,...,1'1 l;OOp.m, ~uwP•r•"" ~,:If l'Ofl do~ rtce1 ... ...OU. «>II' 111"• 1,m, S.."'0.¥, or I 1,.,,, ~'' <llt -I <OP1' will tit 111'""9'11 lo '°"'',.,, • .,., t1~e11 ..,,hl 101.m. Pollce said i\fiss ctiubbuck's script included a news-like account in the third person of her suicide and listed herself in.. critical oondition.-She was in critical condition before she died at Sara!Ola Memorial Hospital 14 hours alter the shooting. SF Drivers Strike ' .. _ Telephones Thnndershotuers Dwindle Along Gulf · Coast Stai.es Police sai d the man must have been a crank. Shortly after his visit began, Sinatra ran into a massive labor union boycott - Mou Or•noe coum, "''.i. ..... ··-...... .,1.m 1 NortftwP'1 H11rlli""'on 9!-i>Ch 1...0 Wt1lmoft1i.r .............. , ••••.•• '40-1110 .. SAN FRANt;lSCO (UPt) -Some 56 drivers 'for the San Francisco Airport Bus Service struck Tvesday to back contract demahds.: OC!Jcials cf Teamste~ Union ~ 265 said the drive~ were demanding a '6 rai&e to $50 a day this year with $6 raises each in the next t1'0 years. • _ beta~ he called members of tbe pre!s =:!1;"'-~Tlr'twrntrbYl••~ms. parasites and t>ooken in-remarks- V .S. Sammarg dwing the first performance ol his loor G•l•·lwf:• WlllOI •f'ld M•yy r1ln1 in Melbourne. The WliOM refmed to =~r .~"!~. 1':nH:.c!11'= (o~3''~:1 aJIQw his tour to continue or 'to servtce trlllQl•M 111u•n,,.r111ower1 rrom th• any planes on which be might ._, to ' Ct~lttl ll:OCk I MllWl!'d, •• l -~C-ntt>,Ct11o•I•-~ .S.nJ11•n C•lli\u-. 0...a Pooni, lloulll l.-;r~n•. l•~ ,,.,_, , , , . . •• ''11·•.00 0111111v~11, w • .ri .. "'e.t''"eci ntir1v travel around or out of tbecountry1 In f'W;h l>t r .. rn 1nd ,,. __ ,, Or• .. -· tllffl ... It '" 1'>1;11, .111tftf111 l>t ltt' '"'" • <111otrt1r 111<n AUSTRAUA'$' TOP union olficiaJ, Bob lll<'lllltHO "" ft OC:kltt ll!d llllS-• Miululi»l v111tv. w1111 rnur.der•rorm1 l·lawke, Intervened and sett1ed the "'""''~ llowty' M!IW•rd, I IM!MOO Wll •Good for Life ~ st(lh!IG fl tl Ti.orldlV Flt§r Kindred, dispute. -Pill ""·?~'-"•• 11-""' G11t1 co.11 Because the dispute canceled one " his · dw111c11ecr ,_1rd mQN!lllfl "c~t In five .perlonnances, Sinatra allowed his Gtonii1 1n<1 Soutl'I C•rvll111, (tMr akin tOl\11.......:I rrOITI r.:: flR' al -'onnan-~.~.y •'-•• to be for Female 'Dogs_; N~t -Hri1nans ce111r1I .MO iOVll'Wf'n Pll'lilt to ht ~·" '-~ 1 uor:llUll ''"6''• .<"''''' '"" N!rffletn All1n11t Cot11, televised free, and an es;ttmated $ n1Uion GAINESVILLE, F1a. (UPI) _ n.. •• T-1'""'' W.•• cool In th• A It 1· tuned in H st k the ~·"6 ._.,,,...,, 1t111 motnll'llf, w1111 ,.,.;no1 us a lantl • e rue out at 1n "" JOI 1nd '°""' ..,. ~n. press again on the televtsioo hoolrup, manufaclilrers are testing a one-lime Cnutal Weft(ller charging nt'A°Sllltti can dish out criticism birth t'Clltrol pill fw female dogs which '~"" """"" , •• .,. L1t111 v1r11b,. but cannot take lt. will ,,;.~ 1i1-..1--.....,._in.., ~-di~-wil!Ot MoM •lid '"""'11'111 flour• -.,... • .., 11~•.i:: r'-'"''"""' i.nc ·~..,.. '°"'r"' ""'''"'',.... 10 to 16 tnot' In fl the Nati«\al Humane Sod.-tv Sllys. 1!1tf-lod•t Ind T~rfdai', Hffl't '"V ~o:i' ~·1•1 ,!::':;;: Ba·kcrsfiefd-t-BJa~·~---Bu' he said the government is afrald If •1Mt lfllnl '' to u. w11., ..ttmOtl'i· me-pUI g& m the martg-people take -· ~ - S 11.R . ~·-"· Tides · WlDNISDit.Y Stc:ond ~1111t 1:11 11.fl'I. f• $«Olld io. l·)l 11.,.,,, '1 THUllSOit.Y l'lrit 111011 •• f;S4 o.m. 't lllrtf IOw ...... l i» ··'"' ·1,l S..ono l\lo/I -··-l1JJ 11.M.. 1,1 lec:Olld ,,,.., ' '. :l:fl ··"" '·' S1111 fh .. S~Jf f ,M, St'$ l;Of 11.,.,,, ,..._ n._,, l :SO •·"'·'kit 6:U •. fl'I. SAKERSFIEW (AP i-Fire !Wept tltrough a block-square medical and steel $Upply warchoUse Tu'Mday night jn U1c downto'G sec1lon, txplodlng a 32;fl00.volt ctcclrlcal transformer and se nd Ing firemen scurr)ring to prevent the explosion of a 1,500-gaUon tank of nitroua oxide -laughing gas. "{ koow that several drug manufacturers are "'Orking on thit. but {hey are very se<:tetlve-about how ra r ttlong It I,;,'• said Frrut.lc Mc~fahon o( Washington. _ ffe . .,11ma100 lhal lhc product might be five ytBl'I IWQ trom marketing becawit the F'tderal Food :iOO D r u g • ----------·~·-------\•----" ' - Adr!)lnistraUon is reluctant to liceme 1t. He said the FDA lean humans might t1ke the pills. Mc.\tahon said one pet ·food manufacturer plac.d • dog r 0 0 d coolaining a birth control a111cnt ·on the market but the FDA forttd It to be • '1\1.ttw:trlllwn. He Mid the.FDA fe8rtd low income· humaM 'A'OU\d 'eat the dog food. He did not identify the manufacturer •• t.tei.\fahon appcnred before I h e Ga.JntsVU\e City ComrUisslon in support of a proposed SI0,000 a year subsidy l'OCOUr&Re.dog owners ro havt their pet.a spayed or neute.rizcd. ~ pro11011ed ordinance wooJd pay one lhlrd of the 005! of such treatment. . ' . ' •· W«lnesday, July 17, iq74 DAILY PILOT 5 Hearings .Refu sed .Mayor's Daughter Cliar ged I $400,000 Ransom ; 2 Held in-Kidnap ' On Milk Pricing SACRAMENTO CAP! State q:rtcultme oftlclals have ..,_ lo hold hearlnga on reduclac milt prJces despite the I.ct 40 legislators requeeted them, two consumer Sf'IUPI My. S·poke1men for the CaUfomia 0.Uzen A c t t o n Groui> and Fight-Inflation Toe-(F1T) said Tuesday that the lawmakers had •ilned a petjtlon uklng fur the heartllp. They '8id C. B. chrbtemen, dlrtctor of the s t a t e Deportmeot of Food and Aoiculture, tumed doWn lhe r.queat. Clu1atensen said In .a tele~ Interview that he wanted to wait for legislative reConvnendat.ione oa the milk pricin& structure b e r o r e holdlni hearing• THE SENATE Agriculture and Water O>mmlttee held heal'inp oii the I t a t e ' I compllcated milk p r I c I n g . system earlier this year lNt has made no formal r e c o m m e·n datloos, saMI comm.itlee chairman }loward Way (R-Exeter ). The state has set minimum milk prices at farm, wholesale and retail levels since the 1930s. ICichard Spohn, a spokesman for the Caljfomla Citizen Action Group; said lawmakers requesting t h e hearings included Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy <D-San Francisro); former Assembly Speaker Bob 1Moretti (0-Van Nuys), and Senate Democrat.le FkKr Leader George Moacone (o.&ln Franciscc). OuiJlen9en said he had received a list of legtslaton who bad lligned pelitlons but did not get signatures. . '"Ibis would not make much ' difference though," be· said. "We would prefer to wait for the .committee." . The two consumer grou~ have been battling publicly . . ~~':e s:.:~~:t~~~~= five.eent per half gallon 'retail price hike last Marth. The price hike boosted min~um p-ices to between 68 and 7$ cen~ a hall gallon stalewkte. * * * ·consumer Groups, Rap Director • LOS ANGi;iES (UPI) -~ P~yllls Bradl,y, 29, daughter or Mayor Tom Bradley, was charged Tuetday with being part of a cocaine selling ring. The Sberlff's Department brought a felony charge of "consph'acy to f u r r. I ~ h cocaine" a g a i n S-t Miss Bradley, and related chargM against three 'other persons. , Miss Bradley is still facing charges of assaultinf( a police officer from an incldent June In Co1&rt I 21, when slie a!Iegi<l!y had 1o be mana c.led hand and foot R ecovered < Cher Bono, 28, of" the ~·· after kicking and clawing TV talk show host ?i1erv singing and comedy . officers who chased her autc> Gri!!in, 49. plans to . LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The FBI ha.s identified one of two men ·arrested in coMecHon with the disappearance of the son of a Palm Springs man as the youth's marijuana 111upplier. Jn an FBI affidavit unsealed Tuesday by U.S. District Cow·t Judge A. Andrew 1-lauk, it was revea~ that the girtfrlend of Candidate . Camp~ig~ In the Nude team "Sonny and Cher" when she sped away from a l th h •t l t traffic violation . She was eave e · ospi a O·, LOS ANGELES (UPI) -was in Superior Court d r h d ·11 con~icted in 1967 of stealing ay or ome an Wl Say1·ng. she ";., the only Tuesddi for divorce· t l k · -ckMhes from a car and in 1972 S ar wor again on candidate with nothing lo Procee ings from Son· M d He s hos SACRA.MENTO (UPI) ' of marijuana possessioo. on ay. wa • hide," Elizabeth Kealhly, the . -"-ny, 39. The pair argued pitalized six days ago . Peace and Freedom .party top state ' a gr i culture over div,ision of their A SPOKDMAN for the with pneumonia which carldidate for g 0 v er n 0 r, department official has·denied . property and custody mayor's qrfice said Bradley was attributed to ex-walked nude down the beach a charge by a . i;onsumer oCf their daughter, would have "no comment Wltil haustion. Tuesday. coallUon group.seeking a milk hastity, 4. such time as the court ----------Mi!tS Keathly campaigned price reduction that "the dairy -----------·proceedings are completed." ' among the nude sunbathers Industry has 8 stran&lehold 00 Deputies said James Riley, T k S d there, "'ho are faced by a city Sacramento." p t s t 21, and his wile, Ann Marie, rac UP. . council eClict , expected to take . aymen e ~. also charged Jn .... effect later this week ' Jed Adams, state milk complaint, . had sold three B c z · t ordering arrests for Q.Udity' marketiiig administr!llor in -grams of cocaine to _ Y ye lS "I feel that nudity is a the Department of Food and For Bucr ging Wldercover officers la st matter'ofpersonal preference Agriculture, Tuesday denlid e Friday and that they had LOS ANGELES (UPI) -and that individuals don 't have promised to bring four pounds The Indian I>unes motorcycle the rigtit to impose their the charge made by Ruth VENTUR A (AP) more to sell for $68,000. track in Valencia was named values on other individuals," Vanatta of Fight Inflation Recording the privileged Inve stigators said that when as defendant in a $500,000 she said, passing out handbills. Together and called I i conversations of tv;o attorneys the pair returned to make the damage suit filed Tuesday by "There is nothing aggressive "sensationalism." 1 and two clletls is going to cost transaction, they w e·r e a 17-year~ld girl motorcyclist aboot this beha vier as opposed A1s. Vanatta leveled the a Ventura County sheriff's arrested by officers who round from Glendale. 10 many other politicians. who charge after the department deputy his job. the four pounds of cocaine to Donna Hom alleged in the presume to run other people's turned down a petition for a A Superior Court ju r Y be flour or a similar bulk Superior Court suit the track , lives ror them." hearing on the coalition's ordered James Koontz to pay substance. due to negligence, w a s She challenged Edmund G. request to cut milk prices. $3,000 to each of the plaintiffs The Rileys .'38id M is s responsible for ini·uries she . Brown Jr., the J6.year-0ld "This is the third time in in a civil· suit -Asst. Public Bradley had furnished the suffered July 22 when she ran · b ache Io r "''ho is ·the four months that he Defooder Kenneth Oeaver, original three grams of ·into an unmarked barbed "'ire Democratic candidate for (Agricul ture Director C. B. Deputy Public Defender Paul cocaine, deputies added. ·fence. governor, to a "nude debate." Christensen) has refused to Clinton and James D>naldsoo 1--'----'--'------------- hear the evidence. and I:.lllian McCllntock. "It is now clear that the The jury found by a 9 to 3 dairy industry has a strangle-vote that Koontz had wilrully hold on Sacramento in the and i n t e n t I o n a 11 y tape missing 16-year~Id Lawrence R. Adell told FBI agents that the youth said he was going to meet "Angelo" to obtain a pound of marijuana just before he d~ppeared. One of the two men arrested in c..'OMeclion with the boy's disappearance was Angelo lnciso. 61, of Ciithedral City, identified as an alleged former Chicago labor racketeer. lnciso and Hugh 1-tcLeod Pheaster, 41, oC Long Beach, "'ere arraigned Monday before a U.S. magistrate oo charges ol conspiracy to kidnap and extortion. · The two allegedly contacted the boy's lather, re t Ired · Detroit industrialist Robert Adell , and demanded Uiat he leave $400,000 in small bllls' at a specified locatlm. Adell said he did 19 three times, but said that the money was never claimed. The youth's. girlfriend, I6- year-0ld Francene Gomes, said in the affidavit that she was with young Adell at a Palm Springs coffee sOOp June I when he said he was ''leaving to meet Angelo to obtain a pound of. nw:iJuana •. and he would return in a few minutes." The youth did not return, and has not been seen since be left the <Xlffee shop. ....----THE BEST-----. llloctlooof PERSIAN RUGS yet offered for sot. lo - NEWPORT BEACH wllbe~lly,...• AUCTION n SUNDAY JULY ·21st • 2-Pft\ Pre•lew I P .M. Wt...., ...... _..w1 ... c1I 11r1le..._.lilt_• ........ piKn efhn4 ................. , .. ...., I ...... Al,-..._. plftlleM4i • -••._.. ,._a._._ ... _ .. _, ................. Wt ....... ,.. ..... NEWPORTER INN, n11 ,,., AUCOR IMC.12131 990.29 I 0 '-. c91eck I _.._ crMH c.,.. · .. M.. same way it cont r o I s recorded cooversations be- Washington,'! Ms. Yanatta tween ihe lawyers and their said. clients WHITE SALE Missoni's SANTAANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA. .. Freestyle collection by Fieldcrest DOO•c get 00 wiili your:~'"l:OJ01 ct':!tlng nl'W ielieiiii~di dtft~ plaids, tlorals, SU'; pes and-checks in this co.Ucctioa. By simplf ~ ~ comforter or pillow ClSC', you c:u1 ac:u:c new lotally coonlinatcd looks to suit your mood • .In polycsre.r/cotroa. Dotted 1bcccr. fitted ooJ'y. Fined dotted sheets in s:ible, t.u1gerine1 cmary. spearmint, :llld iDdig> sh:idcs. P1aid. striped and nor:i1 sheer, fiat only,axne io bluc/grcca. sable/indigo, canary/1angerine combinations. CHILDREN'S SHOE S1andard <ases: pr. Reg.$7 •. 5.99 King cases, pt. keg. SS..,.6.99. 1Y.·in sheets. Ri:g. $8 .••••. 6.99 Qu~n shcctS. Reg StS ••• lT.49 l)oublc. shee ts. R'cg. $9, •• 7.99 King sh~ts. Reg. $17. • .14.99 .Rc,·crsiblc co1nforter pl:iid to dots in polrester and conon. 'J;,,,·in.Rcg.$55,49.99 Full. Reg.S65, 57.99 Queen,King.$85, 74.99 ~l id 'lcryl ic blankn: coordinatrd in c:in~ty. mui~ and sable shades. Vl\LUES ·~ •• OUR-hARGES'f-SALE EVER BUSTER BROWN ADIDAS. • KEDS. MANY SANDALS cmLDLIFE and many other SCHOOL and DRESS STYLES. Outst anding School Shoe Selection Naturally, All From Our Regular Stock. REGULARLY TO $18. $ TO Sale St1;1rts Thursday. Doors Open I 0 a.m. All St lta Flnt l - .~_..,.. __ , • No Exch1ngts Or Rotunda :JO, Fa1 hl on l1la nd • Newport Be ai;h . • l!.44-2464 • .--- ' ' • '...l • • ·r\\·in. Reg. $20, 17 .J9 Full. $22,J~99 QucenJG~g. '30, 26.?9 1bwels: "]1.lillOni Floral" sheared cotton terry 'b!ue/grttn, sabk/ inJigo, tangerine/canary. "]l.fissoni Suipc: sophisticated stripes aM Jots, sedate che\•rons. In cotton terry unshcarcd jacquard, same colot 1:01nbinations :is Rora!. D:11\i.1lcg. $6,-4:99-Hantt:1teg;3:15;-9~9~ • \X'ashcloth. Reg. 1.70, 1.49 Rug and shower cu::u.in also &va.ilahie.. Dath Shop, Dcdrooro .Atces.roiies • • Shop .Mondaylbru Fri<lay, I 0:00 a.m. co'9: 30 p.m. I Bullock's Santa Ana, 1 Fa~hion Square, 2800 N:-Ma-in S1reet, Santa Ana, Telephone: ~47·72l l Saturday, lO:OO a.m. to 6:00 p.11\, ·Bullock's South Coast Plaza, San Dicb'<> Frocway at DriSJol, Cosi.. ksa, Tclcphooc: 556-0611. I ,, .; ' • ' . -' . -•• I ' . ; .. • • DAIL y PROT ·EDITORIAL PAGE . .. . . Evaluating the Force . . The past fbur weeks have been trying ones for 8an ·c 1e1nente's city officials and police officers alike. A team of experts worked within the city police force to evaluate the department's efficiency and seek C?Ut the factors creating an apparenUy critical morale problem. . · Dur-i.pg those· weeks, the consulling firm , led by former Los Angeles Police Chief Thomas Reddin, came forth with so'me startling, but accurate, conclusions. \Vh at is nlost interesting is the accuracy of the team's report, proving its ability to fully comprehend the complex factors that led to ai serious morale prob-· lem. \\'hat is co1nmendable as well is the determination that -the department -its internal problems notwith· standing -has a highly professional rating and con-. tinned strong support from the commun ity. • ·It appeafs that city councilmen will place great weight on the Reddin recommendatiQns al)d that the sug· gestions for change will be put to work. But the investigation of department eCficiehcy and mor· ale by a consulting ·tirm api;>ears the strongest reason for Murray's departure. · Despite the curref\t problems, powever, one must measure the man's pefonnance by examining his 18 years in the department. · \Vhen ~furray came from Oregon, San Clemente suffered under a national image of a speed trap - a label perpetuated by famous entertainers for years. His years of work ended that image completely. ,and .built the department into a modem, professional' law enforcement agency proven to be capable of pro- viding ·securi~y for a President of the United States: <.r It is unfortunate that circumstances are such that the official responsible for sucJt a transformation now has been retired under controversy. But his consider· a.ble contributions tO San Clemente remain. Reasonable .. ,Compromise In all, the examination period has been arduous, traumatic and damaging to ·the department's image. '-Only so many sardines will go into· a can and only In the Icing run, it could have been an extrel1'ely ~onstructive, elen1ent in building a new and stronger 1mag.e than ever. . M_urray's 6ontrihu!ions Despite bis graceful and understandable rationale of resigning for health reasons, San Clemente Police Chief Clifford ?t1urray obviously saw the writing on the . wall. 1. • · \Vith a critical evaluation of his department com· pleted by a consultant t.eam, it was obvious that he no longe r could. stay in command of the growing police force. , Obviously, open heart surgery which he underwent several years ago_ created Serious problems for him. Special Help ,_. On Hardships Hard to Find WASHINGTON -A scathing internal memo has accused the Federal Energy Administr.0.tion of neglecting the poor, the elderly and the disadvantaged whom it had pledged t() help. • Dea1·· Gloomy Gus---- \Ve've been ~ging the county for years to put m· a traffic light at Wesley Drive in Scuth Laguna, where the school buses tum left ~mid heavy cross traffic. What do v.·e get instead? An increase in the speed limit. Gentlemen, start your engines! A.T.B. CIMftly G111 ctmm111!1 IN t11bmil!M bY reHer. itllCI ,. Ml fttcnWrllY reflect ttoe YI... ol II• _...,..,. Send your "' -VI 19 Gloomy Gvs. DlllY Pilot. so many people will go into a town. That's the basic point behind a movement in Laguna Beach to lower allowable densities in the city's multifamily residen- tial zones. The city council fouled things up when it initiated t he -density reduction by an urgency ordinance mora- torium enacted in a secretive manner. However, that is past history and a past mistake. n.ot unlike othe.r past mistakes in zoning that allowed the current problem to happen. The reduction in zoning densi~ieS as passed by the Laguna ~each Planning Commission is a compromise _between the moratorium standards and the current code requirements. It should be adopted by 'he city co1,1ncil. Apartment transitions of old neighbdrhoods and 'the tremendous influx of population represent.S a real hazard for Laguna Beach. The council will be acting re- sponsibly if it limits that hazard. s '.-. .... : . . . 1-"'GLOBETROT"fER -· 'Last of tlae Luke War111 Lovers' ·:t;for $8.50, Se:µd Broadway Quality . . To the Editor : I just read Tom Titus's review ()r the Orange Playhouse's newest fl()p, "Born Yesterday,'' and while I disagree with. l\1r. Titus on a couple ()f minor points, 1 wholeheartedly concur with h i s assessment of the star taleu.t and the overa11 quality . of produc.ii<m being offered by ()Ur SCK:alled "professional" theater. ( MAILBOX ) simpl y to stop the use of .()bviously ()bscene slickers, not the .use of stickers that tnay just be considered ()ff-co lor. · If there rire those (like Jackie Hyn:ian) who are afraid of "getting fired upon once a year" then all they must do is remain at home on July 4th and avoid PEOPLE should always maintain their. the risk. But it seems silly to 1ne to ban freedom ()f speech and right of fireworks entirely simply because a tiny Letters from readers are· welcome. expressioo but not · if they are going to fraction of people are in jured while using Normally, writers should cunvey their have. total disregard for the rights of them . Banning firew()rks for that ~son messages in 300 words or less. The ()!hers. Many citizens are disgusted by ls as , logical as banning the sale Of right to condense letters to fit space that type ()f verbiag'e. It implies that by dartboard sets for the same reason. or or eli1ninate libel is reserved. Alt let. banning such . stickers, it's going to skateboards. Or even bicycles. Think of ters must include s'ignature and mail· "cause a real problem ror the bumpei: all-the -people every year. who are-killed ing ¢dress but 11ames may be with· sticker industry". H()g Wash! The "or injured while riding bicycle:;. held mt request if su.jficient reas01' dictionary is full of words that do not ,I I The Special Impact Office. \Yhich was _, 1----supposed-t()=flelir=hardship=victims-~shortage.==was ''precedent_setting:~u their energy problems , v.•as "created the memo alleg;s that "ttle relief Like Mr; Titus, I have been in-the opening ~ night audience ' of b o th pr~uction; "La_st _()f the Red Hot vers"' an<f11B0m YeSteM8f?'l bit my tongue after the first play -true. Pat Paulsen's no Barney Cashman, but he is a homet()wn OOy, and ever the eternal ()ptimisl, I figured things could only get better once the theater's production sch.edule-got Under.way. ~_ap~rent. Poetry _will not be RUb-_ ofJ~_cit~~ I'm SW'e most of. th,_e --' .. O__ME,-lhe....ftlL&DILexcllemen&_o( __ hshed. bumper sticker indust~y realizei their fireworks justify the sale and use of mer~JL_.fpr_.. political expediency," t~ strategy, s,uch as it was. was announced memo charges. on . April 4, ()ver a lllClnth after the • 11 ed ()rigjnal petition. In the interim, the Arab The explostve.memo cataJ()gues a eg ()ii embargo had been lifted and supply of exampl es -0f t h e gasoline to all -including migrants -creepm~ letha~gy. ceased to be a major obstacle" Here are the high-· Hg91s: ,_ -The gas shortage caused many _ Before a sched·. personal. tragedie~ that. were ignored ~y uled appearance at the Special Impact Office. A par~pl.eg!c. But after Tuesday's ins u 11 in g · presentati()n, I must spe3k out. I don't like being played f()r a sucker. a Senate Aging Com· ror. example, pleaded for .help 1n. findm~_a mittee hearing,_f_e~ reliable _source ()£ g~whne. H1_s~pec1al _ l'M THE FffiST to admit that Orange -er a 1 energy czar ·autom01l1le \\'as hi s only fo rm of County-needs a professiorrat-thearer: But John Sawhill called transportation. Every time he needed to \vhy should I pay $8.50 to see a pro. the Special Impact use the washroom, he had to drive all the duction that is (I) certainly-not atnC1ng Office to find out what they -,..-ere \l'ay ho!Jle where he had speCially the newest .offerings available and (2) oo doing fdf ·the elderly. The answer, equipped facilities. Yet as of this writing, better than (if, indeed, as good as} mCJSt accord ing to the memo. \"'33 ·'noth-his letter hasn't even been answered. community .theater pr~sentation.s I can ing.'' ~whill's office instructed the Concludes the memo: "Unfortunately, see·f()r $2.50 or $3? hardship experts to start some program the most pathetic and needy element -0f If the producers at the Orange he could tell the.Senate about. The memo the population looks I() ()Ur office for Playhcuse are going to cootinue to _l\ls. Olsori. is a good writer and I enjoy reading lier articles, I decided tc read it. As usual, the story .(about Setnla MOlTison, an aspiring poet who died at 59) was well written and I'm .sure it touched the hearts ()f all who reiait. When 1 got to the end, I was crying erecause-1 ·see mrself in both Selma Morriscn and JO Olson. Llite -Selma, I enjoy writing, and like Jo, enjoy making other peoj>le happy. TOO moral that lols. Olsoa put in hel' st()ry can never be said too much. It is: Never put ()ff a chance to brighten up anyooe!1 life because-that lire may oot be there t() tooch tc:>morrow. '!bank you, Jo Olsdn and Selma Morrison. responsibility to the general public. so do fireworks even in Newport Beach. I have not be so irresponsible as to attempt to been here ror almost 19 consecutive make others believe that immoraHty Fourth ()f Julys and 1 have yet to be begins with the bumper sticfer makers. ~·fired upoo." I like fireworks and I think Yoo would do well to purchase a we should keep them. r-. bumper sticker .. that has long been a CHRISTOPHER G. McKF.NZIE favorite ()f mine. It reads, ' ' A Respomible Press Has No Opini()llS-Just the Facts Please!" DAVID H. PARKS ---____ (___--=- -l'u11 on tfle Fourth To the Editor: Tfle Amerlea1t Way Tu Y!LEdltor: _ _. --· _ It seems to me not only ironical but ill· 16 advised that fireworks are allowed to be sold in Orange County and yet shooting them ()ff. is prohibited even in SCI safe an area .as Aliso Beach v.'ith its unusually• \Yide sweep ()f sand and the whole Pacific beyond it. calls Sawhill's subsequent testimony relief and is met with palliatives and charge high prices, then it's only fair to ---aDout~how-his-agency-was-helping-t pOlitltaJ-verbiage.,. _______ _:•!l''•l!lrn!Llthem that the caliber of their elderly "a display of p o Ii tic a 1 productiOOSMii bett-be--equally high.- MARCIE KIRSCHENBAUM - On July 6 there was an article aOOut firey;·orks by Jackie Hyman. She maintains that too many j>eople are injured each year aid-that therefore . firewOtks shbuld be banned, except-in "carefully ~upervised s p e c ta c u I a r di.Splays.'' ARE . PEOPLE instead suppcsed to shoot them off surreptitiously in res!· Clential d is tr icts y;·ilh serious fire hazard ? Or up in the hills with extreme fire danger in all that dry brush': Isn't It about-.f.ime for-a-moruealistic..appmadl._ bef()re the nex t Fourth of July? ... manipulation ()f fact and intent." THE FATE ()f the memo, v.Titte n by Orange County audiences are more _ A survey was ()rdered ()f federally Susan Silver. now resigned, itself sophisticated than the--p Ja y h ()use funde11 transportation systems that serve illustrates how the new, mushroom ()bviously gives them credit for being. the elderl y It Was Supposed to be Federal Energy Administration has · After its first week of production, completed by ~1ay 15, but Special Impact already developed into a bureaucratic "Lcvers" attendance rell way off, deputy Ch.ef Cu ,. Jones told us the bog. l\fs. Silver told us the memo '>''as 1 r is because the quality ()f the production results are still coming in. In i ny event, supposed to go to energy director could not sustain ,a profitable three·week the-.. survey doesn't cover independent Sawhill, but he never g()t it. run. W()rd of mouth is critical to the. systems, which are more likely than She· then tried IQ inake an appointment success ()r any theater ,......ration. and federal Syste ms to be Cul back ... s a with the direct()r, but was twice turned ... _ there · is' fl() indication that "Born result of the energy pinch. down. Finally, the enterprising critic Yesterdaj'' will be better accepted. slipped the memo t() ~1rs. Sav.•hill , her former college profeSSClr. Thu3, the IF TIDS trend continues. then the energy czar, finally got the message, Orange PlaYhouse will be forCed to close l'our•letter 'l;l'erds To the Editor: Re the column ol July 9 by Mr. Murphine, .. Sticker Ban Sticky Issue": It's quite OOvious that the article dealing with my efforts to ban obscene bumper stickers had a total disregard ror the fact.a. It mentJooed that l wanted to stop the printing of all four-letter words. 1bat's just oot tn.Je. My intent is • ~ FIRS't..of all._i_t should ~ pointed out that the man she menti()ned as an example was injured by a "cherry OOmb," and unless I am mistaken, those cannot be OOught legally in Southern California. Fir:eworks cah be and are for the most part safe and sane. Besides, 1hey are fun and one of a very few tradi1ions this nation has. I do think that their sale should be controlled : e.g. allow only tOOse 18 or older t() buy thein. 1'1lat will insure needed su~rvision. ' Lertls hope that bull·horns and beach patrols will-no longer be heard ancL_seen on-Aliso Beach prohibiting youngsten and their · parents from shooting off sparklers and flower pots in celebration (){ this most American of holidays. Or have bull-horns and patrols at Aliso Beach now become the American way? . WINIFRED PALMER • -JONES boasted that Operati()n Harvest, ~n emergency program to help migrant workers ()btain gas during the called the author and promised ac11·on. ·The Honorarium Racket its d90rs before it's completed.,. a run seasoo. And if that happens, we may as well kiss professiooal theater goodbye in Orange County, for no ooe will ever get the bi g-money backing to roopen them. We must fl()t let' this happen! Instead. we must coovince the Playhouse that we're a discerning theatre-going public that demands quality professiooal theater at professiooat prices . . . that '!~'re_ oot '"hicks"' and we won't accept worse-than- amateur work ' under the guise of a professi~l fabel. Bureaus: Problems or Solutions? • By WALTER J. CAMPBELL ConsuUJni Editor Industrial Week • V.'e wer,e reading the story in the ne\\'spaper aOOut the hefty ine-0tnes .:()me ( GUES: REPORT) congres~men make -0n the side by we explain food stamps and welfare collecting fancy fees for m a k. i n g benefits ror strikers? spetches, when the telephone rang. The We alSC> have listenE:d to many or those caller was an executive or a trade speeches for which s u b s t a n t I a I association in Washingt<m. His group is 1 · honorariums were given. 1\-t()stly, they S('heduling a huge convention in Las "'ere drivel prepared by a member o( the Vegas. in the fall and \\'Ould like very rongressman's staff-whose salary is much !() have me come ()Ut and speak ()n paid by the taxpayers. "Free Enterprise-Key to the Future." Art aSS()C:iate 'listen ing to such a speerh \Vhat W()Uld be my requirements? becam~ indignant. "You mean to tell me \\'e replied we-would need travel that they pay that .guy, 17,500 tO dellvcr expenses and a n1odest honorarium thatt such hogwash?" We explained to him would amount.-portal to' portal-to that the speech was not the thing; it was ·1 considerably less than the federallY what happened Je.ter. Y()U know I.hat all .ordained minimum v.·age. · the tickets to the policemen's ball are D()t "\Veil . 1'1r. Campbell, you know t~ ls OOught by people who like to dance. an election y'Car, 3nd, as a .nnu~r· ()r • policy, e.11 our honorariuins and trovel WE REGRET THE practice of labor . Tboagldl •• Lllrp: Almost every bureau that iS set up to cope with a particular p r o b l,e m ' eventually oontributes aa much to ~he problem as to the solution -which mi'ght indicate-that ou'r who I e "«ganlzational" approae;h ought t() tie replaced by some system that is less The Playhou.~ isn't bringing us new aetf-delee.tlng . shows. Jts first-sea!Oll line·up ·1 s • • • comprised of shows which have .been Even truth tums ... produced by the county's numerous rancid in the nKlUlh commun ity a nd semi· professi()nal ol a habitual .:.Jar. oompanies f()r years. So they had best • • • be superi()r producti()ns of those shows. One psych<llogictll Olherwise, we're better off-giving $2.50 rta:BQP for inflation or $.1 ID a community playhouse to see is that people useif the likes ()f ''Born Vesterday,'' "The Owl to live within their _ and the Ptwycat'' ()r the three Nell the";~! u:i: U:~ expectati()ru _ thu! Simon offerings this season. '1Last of the pu llina alon1t with them the millions who Red Hot Lovers." "Promises. Promises" still try vainJy to Uve within thtir means. and 'jCome Blow Your Hom.'' (How • • • ma~y times have •·e seen that ()ne1) Im agine the profound Jonell 5 of ( SYDNEY HARRIS ) those who marry for sexua1 attraction finif the attraCtiorrwaning;--even those who morry mainly to have tjiildren differ over the way the children should be reared. • • • The consci()US seeking after popularity is the first sign ()f corruption in the soul: and slnee· this is the sine qua non or winning public office. how can we expect our politicians to be pure in heart? • • • -Jf you read the ~als ()!..any dynasti~ mona~. you will )tarn that kin gs have always lmaginOO ·tnemselves poor;--an have incessantly petitiOfled t h e I r parliaments for m()re personal funds ; which lndlcates that eveQ at the nt0n·· archical be.ights, our expenditures rise to exceed ()Ur means. • • • S1m,ply, I would sum up the Orange thole ,..ho must have music ))()U~ tn. Playhou!;C's first $eason thus far by them all the time indiffen!itt to lt!I-Everyone SuCfen from amnesia in rusticity may perhaps be instructed, but false refinement i~ incorrigible." •• • • .Where a man prerefs to live is t truest test of his political philosophy;. -if Kar.I Marx returned today, I am certain he .would feel far more at home ' living in England or the U.S. thM In Russia or China. DAILY PILOT .Roberc N. Weed, Publisher T/lomu KteVit-; Editor Borbara-Kreibich Editoriol Page Editor """ .<dilorlal ,-ol .,. DOtly Pilot 'iffks to" inlc>nn Md !ltimulat• i:taders by pntKnti"I on 1bi1 PIP d1verae •commen1-iary' on. topic. (:tl fl». tettst by 0<ndic•_tM colwnnista Uld c:artoonlstl!;, by'pmvtttlnr • forum tor moneys are' reserved for congressmen.'' unions and other well·heeled pressure roups__oUeting congressm_en ranc,.Y. f<.'CS -WE LONG had been aware that so1ne as a kind of legal bribery. We believe it pressure.. • grou.ps rcgul.arly h Ire is .... ooe more steP in eroding whatovcr retiUing Its first t\\'O roductions., "Lasl_quaJU and-gra&tful-ool 1 ,,..._· __r.cC()VecingJrozn_illtless~he.prompUy an r t llike arm. vers incessant nolse dt()wn.lng out their sense taslly rorgets the µromiSes he made to "Stillborn Yesterdax." ()f i9Jlation. himself when he was sick. -fftdfft:'-\'~'111'1d-tiy.prettfltiJW-· .... >-ll- nc11.·sparptr's nplnk>ns and ~u 'Clll cutTtnt topics. The t'd.ttorilJ ·ophliont congressmen 'to speak at their mee1ings integrity is left in gov~cnt. at ttes of $5,000 to $7.500. We have heard But when the private sector adopls the labor unioo leaders count th e same pr"'ctlce, we rej(:N!t it even rnert. congressmen they "own" (their tern1, l f busineu and Industry are to adopt not ou.raJ. the pracfjce of payiog big Mnorarlums to A congressman receiving se~al soch coogressmen to inOucnce t h c s e honorariums likely will takr a n1ore ('()ngressmen's votes1 then let's stop 1----t" JavQtable :vie QO______Jea:i.$laU tJ:i.•L-"WJ!l'i IK....Ntl!P.0.YS t>latitudcs ;ibouLrr l pressure, group Is backing. llow 't!lsc can e1uerprlse. · ------1-. CARL.A K. 00\V .• • • •. • • .., " The practice of "speed-reading" is worthwhile onl)I for_tt uff that is~ .:... worthwhile reading in the first place. Of t~ O.llly Pllot apPear only In 4ht tditorlat column •t The 1'0p 0( tht pace. "OpiniOns ex~ by the col- u~ltlstrand t'111'fqofiftts ""arid Jete .. writert 11.l't their own Md no tMoiR-· Touefllng Story To the Editor: Ton ight. Jufy 11, ••hen I was rellding h U.Lf11 sa Lhat the Pilot Log ~ w .. WJltten by Jo Olson. Since tt fs the way fn which we cboosti our pleasures lhat largely determines the kinds of calan1iUes that befall us.:; _ • • • lt 11 an unobserved irony that those who marry ror one main reason tend to dlvor f!{ 1hat same re11son-lhost who marry money 9uarrel ~ • . mrnt or lhclt ~" by ~· o.u,, Listening lo a 1tl\dwestcm woman Piiot 1"0Jld be W«rtd. pronoWlce the word ''b3th" with an lmP\)ssibly broad "a." 1 was re.minded 1>f , • • Wednesday, July 17, 197• l~t·a--nro~rk-that--"Barbarfsm --andr-'-t::.=:::;:::.::_=====:::::::J • • • • ' • ' . . ' ,-. ' • • ,,, • ·WOMEN ·UNIFORMS Orig. SI I.OD To $14.00 NOW 7.88to ~!_88 • SlreeH1111Jlh· & Pant Uniforms • Ml1111 & Junior Sises • Smocks al~ , . w .0MEN1S DRESSES . . 25% To 50% OFF • Street &..IM)lh & P...t Dresies • Daytime & Dressy • Jr~ Mi11es, H..,.bn ~hoe Dept. D 200poir WomonsBettei-Heels 0 100 pair Boys Con~s Shoes . D IOOpoi r Mens BetterDress& 'otHG. 8.99-15.99 4.99-6.99 Cosuol Shoes 14.99·22.00 D 100 poir GirlsCosuolShoes 6.99-8.99 0 100 pair Womans Sandals 3.44-5.44 O 300 poir ~womans Better ltolion Sondols _J 1.99-15.99 ·Women's Sleepwear1>ept. .0 0 O c 38 only Brushed Nylon Bobydoll 30 only l ong Floro I Print Gown }Sonly Cotton Quilt Robes Women~s-Accessories 0 0 0 0 Costume Jewelry Cleoronce 16only Felt Hots . 12 only DeniiDJioti 9 only Wooden Jewelry Boxes D '34 only Denim Belts , 0 . •21 only Embroidered Denim Handbags Fine Jewelry Depf. • [J ·25 Only Digital EteH!ic·clocks~, -- Jet Set, White Only 50 only Continentol Watches, 6.00 13.00 11.00 1.003.00 4.50 .3.00 12.()(),23.00 3.0<M:oo 6.00 7.88 D • • fashion, Sports & Digital Styles 1~.9.S.2:2.95 0 20only Eorrings·Gold.Filll'd Pierced &Screw Styles 5.88•9.88 WtdntMi~y. July 17, tq74 ilAILY PILOT '· • • - .. FASHION ISLAND SAVINGS IN • NEWPORT BEA~H ONLY EVERY DEPARTMENT • CUSTOM DRAPERIES BOYS SOCKS .BOWLING BALLS Orig.23.99 1.00 4 • Uplo60% For Off • Assorted Pairs & Panels • Mm.ifacturei-s Closeout • Various Si1es • Top Troalll!Oftls • Satins & Casement Fabrics WOMENS S1PORTSWEAR • Spart & Casual · • L""1' Selection 60PC. TOOL SET Orig. 54.99 • Tripi• Crown by Brunswick • 17 Only BELTED TIRES . Orig. 19.95' 25% To 50%. Off NOW 7 • 00 plus F.E.T. Now39.95 • Tops & Boltollls • Jr. & Misses Sizes • 145X13 • For Small .Ccrs • lncluclos Sockets • Wrnches " • • Goad Selection ;. E•1rylfiln9 for "Do-i~yoursolf" • 80 ()nly. NOW 3.99 2.11 ID.II 3.11 1.99 5,11 1.11 6.11 2.11 -.. Boys Dept. 0 44 only Boys Beller Dress Slocl:s, Sizes 14-20 q · 91 only Boys CoordinOTing Sportshirts, · Sizes 14-20 '' ·· ,. 0 38 only Boys Coordinating 1 urtlenecks, Sizes 14-20 0 44 only Preschool Boys Jeons & Dress Slacks, Sires 4.7 . D 126 only Boys Jeons, Sizes 8-18 Men's Clothing 8.88 "4.88 3.88 ...98 .4.98-5.98 NOW ' . "4.88 1.18 l .88 2 .81 2,81 0 60anly Men'sSetterPolyeslerSuils 80.00 · S9.ll 0 53only Men's Solid Color Sport Coots -40.00-, ~ 29.11 O 880n1y Pre-Washed faded JeonJ 9.88 5 .88 -----B-"--520-nly-Wolking-Shorts•-~---------3 ;.9999--- .~·. I.II ... 4.11-16.11 1.1 .. 2.11 4,11 3.11 9 .72-17.21 4.71°7.90 0 64 only Men's Better Knit Slocks 15.00 7.81 0 7only Men'sCorduroySportCoats 32.95 24.11 Yardage & Notions 0 210only Pennbrook Print~. 2.99 1.44 0 ! 16 only Pennbrook Ploids & flocks 2.59 .II 1 0 -42 only GinglpmOoubleKnils ~-4.99 3.11 D 135 only WolJ"t.>isiley Prinls 2.-49 1.22 D 250 only Crel?e Plaid Polyes!er Knit 3.99 3.22 D }{)only Rode~Chambtay 2.49 1.11 D . 95 onJy ,Rodeo Chambray Coordinales . 1.79 1.22 D 55ooly 'Cofe-ou-l.ait'PolyesterKnit 5.99 3.11 D 65 only Crocker Prinls · 2.2fl )";22 D 110on1y Children'sPrinls 1.98 .II Housewares Dept. • .• ORIG. .NOW ·O l 5only SholfeittSpices 0 40onlt T~i-:t'oodServingBowl· 6 only Strawberry Canisrer Set 0 35 only 5 Pc. SeNing Tray Set 0 :JOonly KitchenOrgonizer B · 8 only 7 Spe~r.I Bf end~ w/Timer 30 only Elec Corn Popper 0 200only 4b,60,Z5,1 00W~ight Bulbs, l'kg./6 .98 .99 6 .99 2.99 2.99 25.12 9.88 .66 ••• 2.H ... .66 12,11 .4.81 l ,00 .25 · 0 300only Wear-Ever Aluminum Foil,25sq, ft. · 0 lOonly Wihon,CakeDecorotingKits .S.00·7.00 1.88·2.81 6.88 [J ..Aonly C~.Alum.Chitkenfryer 16.99 ., HQrdware Dept. D 0 0 0 36.only Heavy Quty_Pen.lighl8otte.r.ies 18 only His & Hers Flashlights wilh Batteries 8 only Mister Pluf!!ber Bowl Cleaner 20 gals Semigloss & Flot interior ,62._ • 69 3 .99 ••• Pre Mixed 8.99 5.18 l.81'"'49.99 O 30 only Ready lo. Assemble Shelving Unlt.f, to .ii2.99 Sporting Goods Dept. 0 9 ~n1y Tennis Dresses 0 6 only JC PenneY Fielders G!o11e 0 lO only Eric Von Dillon Tennis Rocket 0 4 only Tennis Boll Cor riers · 0 lO only Asst.GolfWoods 2s:oo 16.88 16.99 9 .81 9.9~ 7.88 15.99 8 .99 4.75 2,99 • . • • 0 25 only Dynamite Denim Pri nt 2 .-49 1 .II W 1 S · 0 -1600,ly Flocked·Q,ghomCho<k 1.79 1.22 Toy Dept. ' ' ' • ) Omen S pOrtSWear ·a 840,ly Polye>l"'.Silk Ploid>&Solid> 3.79 1.88' \ D 12 only) Crepe Blouses -----,1'"9".oo""'~-~1l:ll----G-25·only-Ghildren'.&-Quihed.Saeen.P.rin1~-~.9f!.--~· .• a.:•~---f§;---.~c;:;;;;:f.;.~•~ut"~::;r;::,..:o;:,;;;f--------!~~~ _1 !~=·---tl----11 0 27onl:./ ShortSleeveBodySuit 9.00 6.18 0 28only Polyesler RibKnit 2.99 .18 0 . 6 only Ski11lePoker 12.9.9 , 3 .99 t-·1----·---D Lc.n1y: ess Blouses 7:~b.---'4.ll -8 t 4 only s~~=::ctu1tY •2:~~ •16 ~':; D . 12only l O"RoodRunnerTrike 14.79 6 .18 D· 37only l ong Sleeve Blouses 4 .18 D 55 on:y R es n K' ' ,,,·99---~·':: .. ~----roi---Sc5i'lty'SUbl!"l:lrclrGome--~---1 0.2·9'---:7.99 t ,\ D ~lonly 2Pc.BlouseSets 14.00 9:11 D 7.Sonly ~irro; ~i;g k~ . · • D .9only Purse Kil 12.95 1.99 .00 1 S·on:y ~o~g:ilee'leSwe~ers · ~~·~ 1!·:: . 32 ony B~:~e,0(~) ec ewing ~ 6•88 <If.II 0 28only CondleMokingKits .9.99 1.99 ' Sony oy ozers · · D 1 G h (:h kS . O Sonly CondleMokingSupplyKit l .88 .44 B 1Son:y ~lhor\~uag:iops -1 ~-~ :·:: 30ony B~:~et~;m{ ec ew1ng 2.88 1.81 0 Sonly Stuffed Elephant.-13.49 l.9: D 18 onl y s~ra s moc op; b 10'00 7·.. D 9~nly lehHond~dSciSSOl'.S. , 6.75 4 .88 D 7only Superstor ShowPlane 2.99 5 .9 D ~~~:I~ lo~:H=:~~~;k~~' 18:00 1J:ll D· 225only Assorled Notions .20/.79 .10/.44 0 12only PolntbyNumberSe!s -.99 O 4onl y -Short Hawaiian Tops -20.00 12.11 0 200only MissesPJoid Poly Ponts 10.00 7.1& 0 11 only Jr.S~rsuckerPonts 10.00 5.11 · D . IOonly Denim Pontsw/belts 12.00 9 .11 O 8 only · High Rise Denim Panis 13.00 'I 0.11 O 6 only Misses Florol Pents 18.00 15.11 O. 14:0only Jr.Penis 10.00.13.00 6 .81·9.81 0 80only Jr.SweaterTops 6.50-10.00 • 3.la.5.11 O 35only DenimJeonJocket~ 18.00 11.11 0 72onl}t Misses Co-ordinatesSeporotes 10.00.20.00 .C.11·11.I& • Ready-To-Wear 0 D 0 0 18 only Women's Better Pantsuits l4only Bridal Gowns .S only Sweater Coots 6 only Jr.formals Girls Dept. •1 only Girls.J'.;ans,Siies7·14 40.0<M2.00 29.11 80.()(),120.00 59 .... 99.11 28.00 15.11 38.00 27.11 - 0 tJ 0 0 0 0 73 onlv Girls Dresses, Sizes 3~X 7.00-11.90 1.11 3.11-5.11 3.Jl-5,11 2.11-3.11 2,11-3.11 4'4 only Girls Dresses.Sizes 7:14 6.88-10.00 38 only Girls Skirts. Sizes 7-14 4 . .50-6.00 41 onl y Girls ~portsweor 1 ops, Sizes 7: 14 ... Q0..6.00 .S I only GirlsSummerWt.Poiomos, SizesS.14 · 3.98'5.49 1.811-3.11 0 .. Oonly 1ocldler Dres~s • 4,00.,11.cio 1.11-5.11 "Q v 31 only Todd I er 2 Pc. Ployweor Sets 0 ' 1 20~ lnfOn1s 4Pc.PioywearSers [] 12only Tq lerfoncyPlaysuils • 6.00 3.11 8.SO ... II 6.00 3,11 Bedding & Bath Depi~ 0 0 0 0 0 30 pair Kiitg Size Pillow Cose$ 28 only fitted Double Sheets .47 only Fitted & Flot Twin Sheets 24 pair Standard Pillow Coses J only Swlng-n-Vue Mirror Gifts & Lamps D 0 0 0 0 Q 0 0 0 18 only Franciscan GIOSSWIJl'e 48 only Foshion.Glasswore 20 only Divided Serving Dish 26 only Cone Pole lomp 6 only. Double Bell Alorm dock 20 onl v 3 Pc. Condle fnsemble 7 only Asst. Oil Paintings 4 only Noslolgia Boxes 7 only Fruit & Nllf Arrongernent . Drapery & Curtain Dept. 4.2\> 4.99 J.49 .2.99 43.95 3.75 2.25 3.29 3 1.00 5.99 • 6.7S 19.!8 12.00 2 • .SO " 2.81 3 .88 2.88 2.22 24.11 ·" .... .... 19.11 I.II 2.11 5 .18 6 .18 lk 0 · 40 only "Supet Sheer"' Panels 54", 63", 81'' 0 20 only "Rliopsody" Panels 4 !"115.(" 2.99 1.81 3.19 , Ml 13.99 .. :2.11 0 18 only "Rhopsody" Ponels 41 "•8 l '' 0 30poir Gingham Trim Tier Cu'1oins 0 30 poir R.ulfled Sheer Tier Curtol ns O 18 pair Ruffled Sheer Tier Curtains 3.49-4.19 2 .18 3.89-4.19 2 .88 ".'49-4.89 3.11 • on y ufffed PfiKl!ta·Cortalns 1·84x5.f 0 I only R.ulfled PriK111o Curtain 2721163 20.00 _, s,ll•-- "'0 I onty Ruffled PriKillo Curtain 272x8 I 0 6 only Nylon Shag Rug 27x4_5 0 a only Nylon Shag Rug 36i58 .o-1SonTy Nylon ShOg"Rug '48x70- 33.00 26.11 34.00 26.11 8.30 6.11 15.00 12.00 26.00_ ., 1.00 ----· ,, '-' . ----\ • " • Furniture Dept. 0 2 only Swivel Rocker 0 I only Armoire Chest ,0 · l only Campaign Chest 0 1 only Trodi1ianol Safa 0 1 only. Trodilionol loveseot 0 1 only Vinyl Tufted.Sofa 0 2 only Vinyl Tyhed loveseot 0 l only Pueen Size Sleeper O 1 on!y Blue Damask Solo O · 1 only Bl ue oa·mosk loveseot O 1 only T rodiiionol Reclin~r . 0 l only Modern Stripe Sofa. .Appliance Dept. 0 1 only Gos Dryer · • 0 1 only 24" Gos Rongo 0 l °"ly POflable Dishwasher Electronic Dept. D I only 2.S" Color Theatre 8 I only 2S''Colarlhealre 0 20 only T ronsistor Radio O 6 only AM/FM Digilol Oock Rodio 109.95 280.00 125 .95 329.00 259.00 . 299.00 19V.00 999.00 -449.00 ~ 349.00·. 169.95 299,00 199.95 139.95 199.9S 995.00 89900 12.83 54,95 88.00 139.00 66.00 :277.00 215.00 233.00 166.00 249.00 344.00 266.00 122.00 222.00 . 159,00 109.00' 159.00 711.00· 618.00 5,11 29.11 ------1~--i Carpeting Dept. O 14 CH1ly 6'.itl2'Tweed Rugg 0 18only 6'x9'ShogRugs • 2999 15.99 19,99 9.99 • • ' 8 DAILY PILOT - U'I T""""'• FINDS AN ALLY Sandra Silvii \Valer Boartl \ SACRAi\fEN'{'O (UPI I Ralph E. Graha1n. assistant city manager of San Diego, 11'as ai)pointed by Gov. Ronald Reagan ,to the state \Yater Commission, s ucceeding \\'ililam Jennings of La l\1esa. The Governor reappointed Ernest R. Nichols, a Ventura rancher. " Wrdn@sday, _July ·111 1974 • ACLU Ha~ks SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A city supervisor has called for the dismis.531 of a young Na 2-i typist In the police department, but the American Civil Liberties Union has rushed to her defense. Super\'isor Quentin Kopp said he '''ill ask lhnt Sandra Silva, 20, t>e dis1nissed for allegedly lying iibout her residence oo her w o r k application. "I THINK IT is offensive to have a Nazi v:orking in the police department ,". sa id- ' Kopp, but said his quest to dismiss 1.tiss Silva is not political. ·'Miss Silva, a self·a\'Owed Nazi, flatly denied Kopp 's allegation that she l i v e s outside San Francisco in violation or pol(c)' for city e1nployes. TllE Al\IERICAN Ci vi I Liberties Union said Tuesday • tha.t Kopp ls "using ii totally irrelevant substitute in nn attempt to depri\lc her of her right to free speech under the First Amendment." 1\1e ACLU vowed to stand behind her constituftonal rights. ''Her pitch is that she · maintains a residence at her grandmother's house In San Fran~.sco by leaving clothes there \YhiJ e living \Vilh her parents in San f.1ateo and lhat 'J nonsense," Kopp said. l\liss Silva dismissed Kopp as "a jerk" l\1onday. • Nazi . K~OWN AS A QUrET and efficient junior cle rk-typist , ~liss Sil\'a shocked c I t y officials .last April \Vhcn she nnd five uni!ormed members of the National Socialist \\'bile Peoetes' Party -the Nazis - attended a school b 0 a r d ~eting to protest integratifn. "I have evidence tbat sh~ is living outside the city and ihe is violating the city ordinJce saying "If you come to wdrk for the city after July 1971 you have to 1ive in the city," Kopp sakl.. But an ACLU spokesman said ~tiss Silva is Living \Ylth her parents in Sit\ Mateo temporarily out of "fears for her safety." Charge of Gun Smuggling Against Waitress Dropped LOS ANGELES (AP l -Gun .smuggling charges have _been_ quietly dropped against a former Santa Barbara cocktail • \\'aitress accused_of smuggling \ guns into England. What CAN You Get for only a dime these days? Alli son R. Thompson. 18, had been scheduled to appear before a l.l.S. Distric1 Court judge Tuesday for a trial date to be set. But prosecutors told newsmen that charges \Vere dropped Thursday "fti 'tile interest of justice." l\llSS TIIO~fPSON had been arrested here J\lay 19 after ·.~ stepping off a jet from ~ f London. She \\'as '~1arged with l ,.. vio lations of the Neutrality ,·· , ,.Ji. .. r.:nct and the Firearms Control y 1 ;r.• Assistance Act. Earlier, sJM? had b e e n acqllitled of charg~s i n . England that she smuggled ~ ·nve pistols and 150 rounds of am munition into thar CQUntry in a false-bottomed suitcase. · ' • 'T1·easure' ·SF Meri More Security Whh FALSE TEETH Cari Wear Dresses Whtie l.tl .. Jolklna Squabble Develops Alr1id t1i.. tNth will drop 1i thl Wl'Olll lime? A M11tvn adhlm" et• Mis,. t::ASTEBTH• PowW 1lve. M11h1rM 1 lonpr, llnner, eta&dlw SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -It . hold. Whybtt•mh.,r-41 F« ._ '\ 111~11rhy ll'ld eomfort u1• PAS· \VASHINGTON (UPI ) is legal today ror a man to .:rEE1'H t>f.11111111 Adhtilv1 P1Wt&tr. New '°1exico's a t to r"n c y general has thfeatened to sue Dl-n\11r11 that Ill 11• -11tl1I to dress as a woman---0r vice 1M1lth. s.. yoC.t clenlltt rerul1rly, versa--On the streets of San l------------ I the Army lf It ~ies to dig for a hidden cache f Spanish gold he said col11d be y,·orth as much as $225 Ilion. J David \ L. orvell , the attorney g e p r a l , said Tuesday the Atmy l~ moving. equipment in• the White Sands. N.M. 'missile range in an effort lo recover "the treasure trove of Victoria Peak." Francisco. The Board of Suoor\'isOri . ~tond•Y night scrapped ~Ix old law• which no long~ are \enforced-including a prohibllion aplntt wearing clothes of the opposite sex .with intent to deceive. The board also ljtruck do1¥n a law which proh·ibited advertising abOrtk>ns. lewd THE ARPttV· DENIED-this. HIJACK FILM literature and cure.a for It said the legendary treasure John Lindtay venereal diaeaae. d~sn't exist and never did. B The supervisors a I s o ut Norvell and a group eliminated laws w h i c h represented by attorney F. £ • ds · Lee Bailey. which claims to l;Jl ay prohibited minors l r om kno'~ .. where the gold is. said congregating on Public streets the Ar1ny rerused ifs request w ·zz Pl a It er midnight; proh1bited to enter the missile range to I, lLJ pt!r300S from ca rrying look for the gold. advert.Ising signs· on th e B ·1 t Id ~ streets and forbade anyone a1 ey 0 reporters •the Ir· Mo~·,:e r In I group adyised the Army of the ., a. ., rom wear g nn unusua general location Of t h e · . · costume in public or making t d 1...!! unusual noises for advertising reasure an t .... t the ·Arn1y PARIS (AP ) _Former NeW has "moved machinery to the •-=""='pose:==='::·:;;==::=~:===;j site" to dig for the j old. York li-fayor John V. Llndsafu _ _ _has .been-signed by producer -TH·I NORVELL SA.ID-"IT is no\v Otto Preminger to act in a - my intention to confer w_ith film about Arab hijackers •• ••. 'S the governor of New Mextco . . . ....,..._ and file suit in the near future being. fi lmed on location 1n .,,.......,, MHti111 lo· enjoin" the Anny from France and Israel, a produc· T:. t':'~' removing the gokf. tion spokesman said here. "' ,_. ..,, N M · ~!!°'"' •All OtMrs c ~---' Great stars in person! HAnk Thon\plJon TillEGrau~ Les'ftrown SkUes It Htnda son The f'uurT~atuNn n..St .... Si ..... I °"""' """'• Ma4Jc - II Continuous fn!e entertainment i Ge~al Admission: Act.dt1 $1"8 Cl\iktttn $-II $LOO Under 8·lrtt e\\' ex1co would get 25 Lindsay, in . St. l'wl a Io , -~ 14J.11s1 percent or the go1d cache if it France. confirmed the dealr~:::=================:::-is brought out by Bailey's Tu sd nd d' group. Norvell said. The .• e ay a sai he is missile site is operated !Jy th~rexpected to start filming his Army on land leased from part in Paris nel.1 week. New hfexico. . Preminger flew to Tel Aviv to The "first cache'' of g~ld PrePar~ for sequence to be \\'OUld be ~·orth about $2 billion . at current prices, Norv.e11 said. • shot in Israel. .Hut he said an estimated . $225 billion worth of gold may TIIE SPOKESP.1AN a a 1_d be buried in the area. Lindsay \Yill play the part of a U.S. senator whose daughter ia ACCORDING TO Bailey' his among five giTls on a luxury" clients, whom he refused to identify, produe:ed a sample yacht hijacked by Palestinian gold bar to support their story terrorists. . Last Chance This Summer! Sewing Course for . Girls or Boys age 10 to 18 • Learn to sew and make an outfit this vacation. Loca4 want ads 1..\ After he~ arrest in London. l\li ss Thompson admitted in an inter\•iew that she played "a sucker's part'' and said. "I admit that I \\'as a dumb "'hich assayed out at "60 The former mayor and u'1 T,....,.,. ......,.cenf pure gold." The 0--ret ..,.... oX\.: presidential aspirant. \V h o Accelerated course. 8-21Ahr lessons,1750 (only 98U:hr) Register today for class starting July 30th. -(Dime-A-Lines every Saturday) DAILY PILOT 'A DUMB Bf(OAD' Service has the bar, Bailey along \\ilh his family has been · AlliSon Thompson said. 1· Ttie legend of a lost treasure trave mg in Europe the past broad." has been cropping up since the six months, Would not disclose in\·olved in a plot 1lo kidnap a lime -~ the Spanish explorers how much money "'M offered. THE CASE BEGAN \\1i1h a-' tn c I u d es t · r "I really di"dn't want to do her arrest ~-. 29 at French diplomat. nu a cas o ~ "'· . --ch3Tacttn '\ranging, . f r o m ll," he said. "OOtSiiiCe coming London's Heathrow Airport A former ~ i"avy enhsted Gerotiimo Uie Jild ian reader ,to Europe I ran out of money along \vith t.\\'O f or m e r -m,an·. Theodore D. Brown, 31, to forme;. pr e~ id e n ti a j a few times and that helped fOf addrl'n of the Singer Sew109 Cet11er ntitre51 you. 5H Whi1e Page5 ti~r SINGER COMPANY. · SlNGER -~ UC S a n t a B a r. b a r a p\faded ~llty" in Los Angeles a,ssfstant John \Y. Dean 111". -~make up my mind." -.. students. A bd e I h k 1 r El_j' ,1 ,. . . . h'-::::::::::::::::::::.:::::.:::::.:::.:::.::::::.:::.:::.:::.::=::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.:::.::::::=========-Hakkaoui. 26,• of ~1orocco and as~ ". ay m ~ecllon w1t 11 Ather Naseem, 21, ' .of the plot and is serving a jail Pakistan. The two \Yer e term. LOCAL ... TO SERVE YOU ~BETTER! ""'' ~··· ....... ~. ~, . . ' ;, •. i Singer Inflation Fighters Sale! Inf lat ion Stops at the Singer Door. "l;-Rich Milke. 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Shop early for best choice. Women's Swimwear - Bikinis, I ·pc, 2·pc, & 3-pc La rge Selection • Big Savings .Group It Orig $1 2-$2 I Girl's Swimwear' Sizes 3-6X Orig. $4-SB S1le9'7-14 Orig . S5·6'so Now 7,99 Now 9.99 Now 1.99 Now 2.99 Gi~l's Bikini Panties . 1 00~;. Nylon. Asso.-te<:t Em0to1oered Tnms Silesb-14 Orig. 79' Now 3for$1 Women & Girl's Shoes 120 pr Girls Clogs ong 1 99 20 pr \;'.'Jonien s Clog:. Ong. 8.99-12.99 Family Fabric Shoe~ L1mi1eo Ouant1!1es & S12es Group 1 Or19. 3 99-5 99 Group II Orig. 4.99·7 99 Men's Slacks No• I.BB Now I .BB Now I .BB Now 2.BB As:.011eo Casu.tl S tyles. Not all s12es •, 80 pr. Orig 7.49· 15 98 B'oy's Socks 100% Cotton Oew Socks White or Assortea C.olors 'ow 3.B8 4for$1 , Wed11tsday, July 17, 1974 DAILY PILOT 9 Ran~an~o Saga Ne~rs End ,. By TOM BARLEY .. 11ched !20,000 •·orth of 0t .... DtttJ •lltil '"" liquor from the old Sa~e- SM'TA AN A-Former back Inn in Laguna Beach to Fcllclano'1 Rest11urunt paryner . "'hit "'is then. the Feliciano Gene Handnno has drawn his night spOt' on Wcstc.lifl Dri ve second state prlson term fro1n in Newport. an Orange County Superior ~ before he dre"v :1. 9().. Court.J\,ldge who ruled that the day jtul term aod three years ·ooe-Ume NF-Npcri Beach man probation for the hijacking he ·\tl~latcd the probation inrposed also figured' as the principal Jn a liquor llljacklng case. ' defendant In a Su~rior Courl Rindano,\ who drew a prison civil-action brought against apcfl "'of one to five yt'ara less him by the blind eulertainet. tlaaQ a month ago fron1 Jud~e His next brush ..with the law · William C. Speirs for his came \\'h:ile he \ras fighting · 8tte19J)ted bribery ol a Colta the Fellciaoo action in the M~ poll~an. got another' civil court and winning a ·prisoo term of one Co to ye_ars series of ccntinuances in !he from Judge James C. Tumtr. hija cking case. Judge~ Tur n'e r 's only COSTA ~tESA patrolman concession was 10 alloW"'ftan· Gary BarYlii;:: was the central· dano , 48, to serve the prj.son_ figure in .t.he next~ crhni.nal . tenns concurrently. actiQn when Rand.'lno and TllE COURT action would appear to close a tile that \vas first opened five. years ai!'.O when R a n d a n o illegally Samuel Rosman, 32, were accused Gf offcrmg Barwig $10,000 to "fix " a witness In the upcoming hjjacking trial. Olarles "Chuck" Dreyer of B roke Out of Courthous e Laguna Beach had IJ\lell a partner with Randano in the Fellclano enterprise and he v.•as nalll('d with his partner in the Grand Jury iMictment that llstM th~ hijacking allegations. But Dreyer agreed t o become 11 prosecuUon wit ness against Randano. ' TT WAS testified ·in t1\11 trlala that R.andano tried to destroy Dreyer's credibility as a wltncs.. by .arranging the Lagunan'fl arrest by an officer v.·ho could be bribed to plant drugs in Dreyer's car while he questioned the drh·er about a suppOsed traffic infractioo. .Darw:ig's testifl)Q[ly: _s_e n t_ Rosman to state prison, but it took tv•o Superior Court trials to convict Randano o f identical cha rges. Wh.lle his lawyers fought the hijacking and b r i be r y ' 1 convictioM in four appellate coons, Ran<lano fled to his native Las Vegas to figure 11111 serics or ext r adi ti on proceedings that at one tin1c Jed Orange County law1ncn to believe that they would never get him back. ' RANDANO claimed i n Nevada courts that he v.·11s critically ·ill v.'ilh a heart condition. that Orange County judges v.·ere pre J.u d ic e d against him and that at least one judge who had been on the bench. before hin1 detested anyone v.·ho hailed from Las Vegas. At one point. distri c t attomej's ·investigator F.dc!i1~ Banks__.J'ecalls.---California's Gov. Ronald Reagan made a personal call to ~'cvada's governor in a bid to ha ve Randano sent baCk to Orange Courity and,· ultimately. to state prison. W11twlf4 Mt Mt1el -'lorlts 1Mf:111·- l,DOO 1H111i ff 1it lttl• 11111 D111 tt St1t•~1t lltlt~ ClrPlt Clrcu1 allot Uwi111 . Prisoner in Gun Du el. Seni£nced estwardGlfo ctlotf.1 l!J ~a~ino SAT\'TA ANA -A man whose gun ~uel with an of'f· duty Callfomia H I g h w a y patrolman ended the ';plan he had formed with two ~other prisoners to escape from the Orange Coun'(y Courthouse has been sentehced on a variety of felony offenses, Frank Allen O'Hare, 23, drew state prison terms on conviction! of assault with intent to kill, anned robbery anrt ·11.ssault with a· deadly weapon •. There were seve ral se ntences but the longest was for 15 years and Superior Cou11 Judge Everett W . '\'hen -Judge Dickey-refused to sentence him immediately to the 132 years in prison he said · Judge James Turner promised him last .time he appeared in court. "There is no satisfying some people," Deputy D j s t r i c t Attorney Pat Brian commented as he pressed for maximum terms for O'Hare on every rount . .O'Hare w11s first of the trio to be recaptured June 1 \.\'hen he and his companions made the rrtiitake or trying to comrriandeer a car driven by off-duty CIIP officer Jim· Paul sh orthly after they O\'erpowered their guardl · in the county courthouse botWng cell. • 1 Pau1. 2.6. '"as shot in. the arm and shoulder but he in tum shot O'llare several times in the back-to halt bis progress while Wilson and Tarpley fied from the scene just ahead of pursuing officers. arpley v.•as recaplured by . police who nushed him from bushes several minutes later. Wilson. now sentenced to life in state pr iso n , \..•as recaptured in the 17lh Street area as he sought refu ge in a store. \llilson "'ill be brought back from prison July 29 to be tried with Tarpley on the escape. ' • • : • I • assault and armed robbcry l -~-----------~---------­ charges. Tarpley, "'ho v.•ill be alone i'n the courtroom this time, "'ill be retried Sept. 4 fc;ir !he anned robbery c h a r g e s shelved v.·hen he. O'Har.e and \\Tilson made their ill-fared 1 tJight frcm ·the count yl courthouse. Neci rly E·veryo11e Liste11s to Landers · · Dickey conceded that O'Hare could serve the others concurrently with the IS.year term. But O'Hare, 'A'ho was being tried 'Ai th Prince Pico For:i The Record I --.~ ~ f I Tarpley. 19, also of Aha'lleirn, liiKl'Hli · NV"t•ff«W!....., na wra on armed robbery ch'arges 1,1•hen the tv.·o men and L:e ...... e. . PADELFORO<ANFIELD -JIHll! n, .. ~·•a a Etlw•rd L. P1!1fllord, 21. of Cost~ convicted killer L a w r e n c e .i.(rw, •nd Peoov L.,..,n C•nne1<1. ;:, I brok of An1i..1m. . Eugene \Vi son, 30, e _out Of Jtl l 11tAGSDALE-wooos -J-22,i;IMn Of the COW1ty courthoose June arr age ~;:r~Jl"~l~~s~lr-::s:.!f:.; 1, ""ill be in prison_fot...lmige;oJ----------'=---~•r , than-is yea rs. !ti • WESTLING.SMITH -JUM 22. IJouglas ar-ane Allen w11111119. n o1 w .. 1m1nr.1u. 1be sentences meted out • •. :I ""' M.ry Louf&e sml!h, 20. of l •nl• will begin on the day he MIY ii.,.,, ~,r'lr:iiLEFIELD-HUYETT -J ...... '22. \ ~;.a. Cfndelar., Jos~M Incl Crtncv Plu1 Etl•1. ll•nwdetrt V, •r.d Jonn G. Hiii, P1trlci• AllM •l'ld W1lll1m Eugen1 JOlln'°", ll1r1>1r1 J. incl J1mt1 e . StOl'v. RCl!ll!JJ G. 1no Georgie Bea1riu C•1r 1. E~•vn M_ and w1,.en s. JohnlOll. ""''to. J. Incl O•vld P, G1rrloll, Ylrg!I C. Ind Glennell S;>Ofln, Htrold P1ul •nd ~™'<! Oflllii Sou1h, Ot"I l ff Ind F1.,fll H. Harw, Merv Ann •nd BlllU Travis, J0o1nn M. 1nd Roy A. JD11e1, CitfolYO AM 1nd Keith Flt!U>tr u ,, , , , , ' "' , o,,_, Tlll!te, co..-1 II , ,-O•·•• Oubl1, D1!1 A. Ind l<alnleen J. .,,, s, • 'CI ~111 • ...,., •• ·-• ,. •• ____ Fa",.,,.n..J.n...D:!!l ln.Jnd Sn.i:an.u.111111 Mllcl1ell.4llph1" P, enif-t+eldl-Y,.---~llW'lnt'~ncH;<rtrPo Deputy, Jr., Piul L. Ind P11rlcl1 L. Wrl!ihl, JllTIH W. Ind Ann t.. Sher-. Cl!Mrine J.eiMf •f'ld Wlllltm S<lillf:lll. ~llY R. ancl J1....,1 M. Hllcllcoclt, JMllf'll l ftd RoclMY S. StethTi•n. Ge-u<tli M. 11111 J. H. Oa~den, Jay J. ind Viol1 Be<n..:ldll 8 utrer. Sandri S. 11\C! 51~ H. St lina1. Mvrl Loui•e 1nc1 Jn us P. PlrlO(t, Gjorl1 A. lfldJ1n t. IElll9 ..... J<MY 1 ~ K~nnedv, P•rr!tl1 K. tdn J1mt1 C1lvln P•1>1r1•0, Je1n M. ll'ld C1rlo Nie~ Aren!sen, t.Urlene J. 1»<1 MJ.ch:lel o. G•;m, Fran~ Tnom1t 1!1<1 N11'1C'f' Helen Gri1wold, RlcMrd Alltn tnd OenlH Sll1ve..,,, J1mt\ A, end 611:i1 M. completes tris state pri90ll • VALLES-DELG;AOO-een11mln, d , "' '1JllTlft C.cll Shlbbtef111d. ». -of '~------::----:::--~~==..;;... ___ ,,,,.... tmlnst lid R M ! 4t f Garden Grovt. 1nd Chlo'I Jnn --term of not less than five wes ..... °" •r•, •0 H11Y911,u ,ofcos11 MH1 •.• -sun-"I•• ,SL-al•. ....-.,, -for ... An ah elm Comi:>1C111. i;HeR1AULT-Hf<MILTON -JuM 22, Nieves i-.. ner, Glori• 11'111 Oorllold •. .EnH,..11 Julys H1ll, Mtllndl V. Ind W\lll1m F. ll1gl1fl'lil1, PoltXen! •ncl Geetge Ros~er. RltkY ind R-rl Lee Tllom.81, Ttrry DarleM 1nd L1rrY Ad1m1. Myrn11 A. '"" A"hur J., Jr. Rl!ter, Qllvll H. apd J1m11 R. • • ·. "":'l:"'.'°'. '°1 .... ~~T?~ '31 "~"'·I· ' Mm· • • . OANEIJ.-VIGIL-Rkr.lrd Fr•n•. 0 , W11ley Rey Tlleri•utl, :U."of ~ \ Q nibbery. It'd M1rlto. Miry, 33, bolh Of Bt1ch, 1nd Chrl1!1,...·Ann H1in!UM1, 1·1 EU!;l•'ll LrlK. Vln1 l .. Ind Scony Joe Frdnca. MfcnHI '"°' AU~\ISll Arbuckle, R~rl M. Ind L01'11!1 G. M\'lri. Ann Mtrt!n •r>O 0.W•td S0<~ln. Jlnice 1nd M•rlln B, P11, C.irollne M. ind J OR G. Brluen!•. ICl!htrfne E and D011"'4d V W~!ler. Norm111 wu1,..o and Elf91yn , t __ ,.. Old at Gree~flr1pe ~ ! ~ r 1And there may be still more. Hunt111111on Bffch. 21, of Hun111111ton BN dl. -2=-• ~ ' MEAO·SMtTH--JKk II., 33, of '--llOORIGUEZ-GREENWOOO -J1me 3t"':-Plii~'-sesOn'g 37·9 · ~ . ..,. N. ow ' • .. ,ge'Dlckey •~~·•-ch .,,_Lovi. Miil• Roorlo~•. u , • ..,....,. .., ... , ~ •• · • ..._ ·,. ', •,•, , , , .nau ~'Ure ~· .•-h _ind ~l'llrloll1 Dl•n<M, 27, Of s1nt1An1,11>d Lynn ""n" Gr.enwood; a.we..,. J-21 Y't_'~; Edwaro An•Mlo "'" Carman Cora Sk•gg1, EJlllOI" F. •nd lrt ROO.rl Yt rel1t •. Roberlo Ind Imelda Cllavez, l!on1ld J. 11nd Lfnd1 O. Iii$~"· PhYlll• •114 Wlflll Tllomnson, Norm• 11, and JarrDld E. Wenll, Phy!lfs H, •nd Jam11 C. · • · A BB .. 'Vlth the ..,..,,,.,,,....,, 'that he Wtstmln1tff. 11. of eo.1. Mesi. 109 Oueen Slie~ls t>rig •• 7.11~' ••'· Now ~· wan ts" to study O'Hare's file cL1ME-URQUHAllT-ctier1n Tlmofhv. FERGUSON·RIDDLe _ June n, 6. B 15, •lld :ifl F0$!0tr, U. bolh of Jlobert W1lltr F1rguson, 11, end 76 King Sheets Orig. 9.49 .• ~ Now .8 and perhaps another sentence Foun111n v Y. 011n1 L" Rldd1•, 11, both oi Mote, Ch•rm1Jn Ind P•lmer L11 Smith, Sh ... m1n Arlhur .,Id Chrl11in11 Nicoll, Mar~ Jane and H~nry 01nlllft McF•rlend, Vlt•I A, •nd G-a• A. Mlrl1 Brandl. Viekll Ann 1nd Wlll1rd L. Kinman, Doltwtl J. Ind Svrl W. S<lnlon, S•n!a W. and Sal>del J. Crocltor, Oon l'l. and Raber!a L. ' for oW'-~ f ~-J LAMAR·NESllJ'-Chrl'"'*1"r JOl!n. i1. w111mln•1'r. 8.:":'"'r" ~"I""' .. 0 ~llC mu : end Elltll l;Oul111, lf, bot~ of COlll li1Cl<S·8 URNS -Jun1 22, Gta1d ;tipJe infr3ctiOOI committed by Me11. ... ~. :tt"' .W1yne ttleks, -n;--ot Tustin, 1M O'Hare during 'hll jail ?Weak. WtLt"'N·liJiRllll3AH-fill'IOftlv Woad. Cllrlstle L•r11ne aurnt. 20. •I.......,_ ...., 1•1n V1ll1y. ·I",·. 011art has pleaded guilty to ... 'i:.ia!.nd ~· 21. bottl al Cosfl SMIT·LAM8ERT JUM 2 ~' M1rllno, Lyd!11 Pt1rl •nd Em1nu1! lloxun. l<llhlMn Ann and Diie Stoart Stie!lan, S1ndra Lu 1"<1 Mlchael Jowptt A~ri~iamDonna Gia.av• end cnar~ Charles , Mlyer, Je•rY Anne Ind Lyle RU1.1ell Nii•M, lllJdy v1101, ln<I Vlcltl Ann . _Regan. T•nr1 Louf11 •1'111 T!mof1W Ole!re, James Alan Ind ll1rti1r1 Lou!1t $1-, J111111 O. 1n<1 Vlrainlt L. Edward • Ptlky, L•llOI! Pe1•l 1nd Thom"• Lloyd sruck•'• Loul11 J, •nd Albor> L. l'rentn. lletrv Louise and l!obtrt Llovd Mlll1•.'"0Dlor•1 N. •ncl (Urll1 E. 11..-!rlOlll, Ch•rln W. and Gail A. Larkin, SU1.ln Melody 1nd How1rd Whem1n, Sherryl A. Ind Neil H, 'Nilson, 01nnv l . lln<I Made (, Monr<>I' Fan Clearance , . . ' 8 Regular 20 ·Orig. 17.99, : N~w· 1·3.BB '."t--1 s.BB Now 19.BB Now 7.f8 every charge thrown at him in ei:gr.r:,."°'b~~;~~~~i~'. a, •nd =~~\::' l::c~SC.'::i 5:~1 ~'.,(:~ , recent' Weeks. . IC~~~NP!'l'T8~S~~-~site: • limber!, 1i, ol G1rdln Grav-. 1 Ptllt1r!no, s11pi,.n s. 1nd N11u1en Tni ~~~'r.:,.,J~~fr F"::3Ji:'!~' T'&.m•• J..:k i:raue. sanoue J. 1nd G ... ild E. Moon, W•l!er-F. Ind C1rl JI. OrlMI•. Jotn I nd JorQe E. Vain, Patrl<l• Ann 1nd JlllTlft Camillo Mut]n, Dl•n1 FIYI Ind Most1f1 T. ~ "11'1, S~ndrl M~•I end Thomas A. Biel1w1kl, EdWlrd 4. aM Cy,.lhl1 E. 14 Deluxe 20" Orig. ie.99 Th. An ah e Lm ma D _ n. l'lf H°i:ii"ri.ri..., lleoodl. LE .MAY·S~ARkS -June 22, ~Ill -OH GI""•_. l. LeMay, Jr.1 27, of Newport Be11th, I · d b · J J l PAPP.SC:HfRME ORN -,..,, _. <"· ,_ R s-• 21 • ll>0e•m1n, Tfrry Alltn end P11111l1 P1pe, O<winl ,,..,le Ind Brute Edw1rd Ctolldr1u. C1r11lvn J. Ind llobtrl L. K•y Culv.,.. c ... rlfl fl. 11111 Marcia El~nor Marlts, Wilma """ •nd Dwight WUl11m Janes, S1nclr1 S. •NI Wllli•rn I(, C1w1. W•rrt11 Hl'fde" 1nd M.•l•n McCr&cken, Dl1n1 V1ronlc1 Ind Ron11d co n1 p a 1 n e 1 e r y Ral"9 • .u. ,,... D•wn Ellen, tt, llolh '"" '"'' " ,...., s. • ' °' u.11111 MJaoi.1 cosi. """""· V /4 N ME f R l E·IRE'#Elt-W...,.,. TURNEJl-BRUYN -June n, L-.ird Trooo. P•"iCll T. •ftd Hetiry 0. Fr.noel! R31""'1'd H~ ... SOll, 1Nrg•r1t fA,. 1Jld Jemet. HIYllll. Ktrtn Et!t•t>etll •nd Mar!y GI~. Jot 1nd Judlrh A. 8r1ndl E-con .. 1v. Mary M. I ncl Gtry T. 3 Re'4t81'Slble 20·· Orig. ~ 99 T~. 21, lfld SUMn Mlr11, 20, Rav Turner, )6, •nd Grl!IY lrvvt\Jll• bofll of Sin Cll1nfntl. balll of Hunll11g!llft h -.;11. \ GALLIGAH·P~~~~ ll.. Jt, Ill' LOCl<MAH-MAYaERRY -JllM :n, . Lt&hV. Robtrt Wllll•m Ind Ml•11•r•I Welll'I, Alll~le e .Ind Dlvld J . -LU!H, Fr1nc11 •ftd John Vince . Afln H"'11C>Kk. Theim. M. I nd Clyde L santcwo. lwura C. and Gvltt1rml"I P. Kid s Like To 9 Fan Stands Orig. 11 99 - The.se Items Go On Sale · Thursday 9:30 A.M. Ask Andy Harbor-Sfloppirrg-CenteT .. Now at Straw Hat Pizza Palace-, San J-Capistrano ·32095 c -1no c,.1.trano 17 141 496-0051 Order any 1 e pizza at regular price during Pepsi Days al Straw Hat Pizza Palace and you get a free large pitcher of Pepsi-Cola. Or. a family-size bottle of Pepsi with a large takeout pizza. Come on in-the Pepsi's free! - -'. ii coat• M111o1, Mid 5hlrlw '-""• n. ·0-!1 Mkllffl LockrMn, 22" pf of ~ , , • ~ • ...i Ctwyl Ann """"'*"'· k!'OUCff-~F.SMA-Tl>Om•• H .. 21, lftd lt, OI Huntlllgton B11cll. . I" 1<1r.n Etf11M!ll, U botll of Co:t• STRICl<LAHD-JUSTICE -JllM . '1, Mesi. u....,d W1Han1 s1r1c•11nd, 29, -of OANAHER·TILLEY-Tlmolhy J , •.t, Fullerllll'I, 1/ld R1blcc1 · 011 n e 1nd Iris L., !2. blllh "' Sin Cte..,.t\i1. Ju1tlc1, 16. of Westmlns!er. ""'" it. '"' G!TCHl!Ll"'WOOD-C:-r..:;rt11m, $3, Cf O'NEU;l;-\INYEJIZAGT-.-. June~n, ' -• "' ... , 0-J-•o '''" "' Jallll (, O'Nelg, 21, Ind F1ylhe M· ~~... ...,. "" -' 4'0, Unl't'W11ogt, 29, DOlh of S•n Clemin~. °' Mlrihttt,_e-l"i.,, aARTLETT·SANCHEZ -JuM I fl, M.(F.l.JILAHD,.HOTZ -l(en1111h Pon, Jlmtl Wlllllm l•rtt11!, .U, l ltld U, llfld E'"ZI""' ~11111ff, 31, M1rl1 Elen• S.ncller, 25, botli •of both of Cott11 ,Me\I, L11111111 81Kh. ESINHAlllT-MCGREW-llt1ch•rd Ar1hur, SEARCY-GUNNING -June 1..J', ll. •nd ,.,,.. "Ille"· 5', botll t" l•"1,.•, Mlcll••I Dffn S11rrv, 22, of Or f, LAS-VEGAS. -'~--Mlrrlt11 ~• U~efl-f11Ufod .htt1 !11Ctude: •nd LYnd• Jayt1 G111ml11g, 211 of CAPRA:eURMTT -Jim. 21, Chlrlts t.t(IUM HOit.\ ' ~ W•llll' C1pr1, 20, of COii• Me•~• llld Jltbe<:CI LYnM llur111t1, 17, 11r "llJ~!llY'lan ,.,. .. ,.,, DRAl!G!R·lllARSTED -Ju111 ?'I , Wiibur M. D•HGer, 47, of H11111!119l"'1 eudl, 1nd Delarn Miry Her11ed. "3. of Whl!ller. " Dlssoltctimas of M•rriag~ Hull!, Robtrt• 1/ld l avd s. ~\;:;0~'r~'~":.,:i~1;,11;.r1:!11?,; i:as1. Fr•n-w. and 011"' Lynn Sca1t Owent. Giii LYM •!Id Dlvld Merk Gl'IQOl'V, MaurHn c;.n dnd Fr•n-J-..., Gltaldlt1e end Robt•t INrry, Wllll•m H. Jr. 1ftd J•llllf JOMl'Oll liale, TllcM""' R1ndell 1nd Virgin!• Cl•rtr.1, Dolorn Ann Incl Lll'ytl D•le Cl'MIM, ll1rblr• A 11'111 S!even P. OarlMe Rull,_, M. Glenn •NI Shir!..,, Eytci..Mltl, Llnll• J, end Fred Ewell!! HWIOll, Ol•l'le LH I M Jollll W. Slmpi.on. SnMr1 ind Donald '""VllnQ. Molly Ju1n111 1no F~d Page, C1rolyn Lynn end R1rmoncl Bah,_, Llnd1 Siie ancl R1nd1U Edwlrd liern1•n P1!rlck • Wi!sl!, Edwlrd-S;---t1 Y<ll'!flrNr.-........,;n, P•mel• Joy •rid Cl'l.WI Lougl'lm1n, BeVerty A. al>d Jahn A. PllCkfll, Ceclll• M••ll 1nd P1ul Wr.ltY Rober! Hcsklsan, J1nlce G. and Rlcl'l•rd P. l<ltKl\ner, .01111111 Lt• 1nd JOl!n Enl•,..d Jul1 l F'sltr, N•MY Jo.end Al/Qi.IC. Georgi , S(holnlng, Vlvl1n El1lne and S!tven Galnn, Dolores R. 111<1 Terrv L!Wtll, Ollorts V. •nd J1dc' I!. $~'L.wr111Ce II. inc/ Elizabeth Forest, 8f!'ftlrd Ind G-n<IOlyn s .• McKH, 81r11W1 LR '°"ll1n I/Id Mldl1el Wood!, Shllll M. Ind Donald E. Garrttt. C•rOl Ind Frink E. • oane c~m.,tiell. Mirthe sue and fl.lUy "~" Rl!Anlngt(, Herry J•rr111 1nd Dl1nn ll1ld, Cl1rtnce J•Y Ind ll1rbara J11n Shlolton, Sandri Lff Ind Michael M•rle Lln!ewortl'I. GtrY M!ch••I 1 n d Cl'larlts WhllaWer, Pamol1 Jovce 1nd Junior Ev1!1tlcl• . Allin. SYIYlt L. and wuuam B. Ray BclhweH, Gilt A. MtGow1n Ind Jamel Se1ly, l'rance1 l(a!herlne tl>d Gavle L. McNabb, Melln'd1 l(alnryn ll>d MkhHI V rbKk H1ten f.,.n11 ,,... Nlel1 v~rnov, M~del•n• R. and V!rqll Lee J°'epll 0 ' J En11lebre<:M. Mfl•Mfl Jal!!! Ind Donald York. Dtnl•I .... Ind C1ro1 L. ·Hlrlld -. Mllt'r1r. Rober! w. and O!lnM N. Ona Klrlland, S.lly Ann •nd Mlcl'IHI Je·nup; John H ... IChll .-Frances ArOllMin, Norman L. and SM rlev M. Edw1rd ROii La Courn, Mlrllll IL atld JOWl!ll G. Horlon, Debar•h J , Ind J ... ry D. Foley, Stircr s. ind J•mfl o . Rnlt•. C•rtl'!tl• L. •rid Jerrv O. Murr1y, cerol Na111 1nd "'"' c11non .Th-nson, Mlrli<J'lrls!IM 1nd "'ii A(t~ HOOO H. •nd Dol!M M. Aul0enk1mp, (ll'DIYn Ann lrl<i Jtrry ,:;-.:_~-" Lf\111~, 1(1rof Ch1rlff •f'ld Loh Rutt\ Wiiy ... .,..,,,., Gr•ID, Robflrt N. •rid Sutll'IM V. C ' C Fltdltr, Et1!1 Jull•AJ 11'111 Denfth JOI l(rluff, CIM!'YI Lynn •>Id L•rry Cart LIWfs. l(lfflllfffl ' Ind Olll'I • SHOAF·IA!lEY -June 21, A~llKlrly JMn Sl'lolf. 3'. 11'111 AnM Lff ll1ll1r, G, both of ll'YIM. llROCKETT·PAlllCS -JllM '1 , Owa!n Leroy llroc:kett, a, •lid Suvn ,_,le' P¥b, )7, bath of F-t1ln V•lflY. HOllPlt, Wlllf•r11 C. Jr, 1nd Julle F. Miorv, Do!>n• Mid ,._,, a..ruy, Jonn,w1Uac1 .,... J..11M O.pn1'e ,llfAL o•cRllS Allherr. Jotn C. 1/ld CKll V, Ill. trvt!llo. Jun1n ll11'dcllph end Pemtla Penk1v1, Ha•rltl J11n •net Doo\lld IM.,.. J-11 O'llrh, How•ni A. lftd J1nlftr I. LOUii~ Codlrll!, JMn Atke ..... Wlrililm W1rnt1. Ricki L .. Ind Jlmli I". Ge!ormll!O, Fr•nk Ind Lulfll J, eulord MoHI. Ol•M M. Ind G1«1tt o. Ml•oe. Gtor<;ill w. •nd Fr11nlt M. .Dononnt. Anni "·Ind John A. McDermott. Rlc,..rd LM Ind L11tlnd1 C•mPMll. G1<y L Ind Cll1rl v. . WllCH-WUEftU -J-?'I. Wtrrr1m llMill Wwlch. 41, of Wfltmlnsfw, 1ftd LllUIM ll•Khvnl wuerer. 3,, of ~ G1ry Altiert •nd P1lrlci1 Mllry • W•ndtn, Joy A, •nd l(lrby I( • ' -· e.,.._ •Frri •nd M•-arJll Pllut0, J11M1 Paul .,... OM Ann1 Zlra. Miry eeth •nd Joseph vrnce111 ---,p_ . ,,,... 'NIH11ms. Sftlron Attt 1/ld MlcllHI Waolum1, N111C~ L. and llern•rd C:, 0. Vl'tM,,JGllMM L. •Ad G1ry J1cot1 Lewis Rieger, Su11Ue Ml•ll ·11111 llidlln:I W. lAl•O-STEED-J-21, R•u1 Alberto T•ltlll, )I. "Mll•J1ne11 M1rle Sited, 19, of Hllfllln..111'1 !Inell. 111,,.rlco. 'C.f111f1!1 A. •lid Flf11tnh111 Cowin. G1ry, L. •nd HYt SU'< Sobc:Jy111-f, Miry Ellen Ind Sl•l'lllY '('orrel, Dorl lnol """°'!110 \l W1ogner., lil'TIOIJ.t M'" and SM!dr1 W1t11111, "11•1111 Ind Rlcllll'd MDlfTE-FISCHIECIC -JU'llt 21, Cfll.ri.s Al•" Monte, 20, Mid L1uren Allll Flld!bldo:, 1,, bath of Hunll11gl011 ... th. ri.llOl~~-.iv:" k.iolllle~rte I Lou-' DIUQllertv, Ol•nne M. I nd Wlill1m E. =r J'..e Ann Lindt 11111 C~I~ ----- J UDLIH-H'l!NNEaERGEll '-Ju ... :tJ, J•mt' W1lter Jucllln, 36, o I Huntington llffdl. ind OOrls L•~•d• HeflnlberVfir, :n. of li•Wlhorntr. OE LA C~UZ..SIHG -J11111 H, Runno DIL•Crvt, )$. Ind Elf,.. M. Sl119, Jt, llolfl of Hunllno!C111 1.-11. l"llANCIS-llUSli -JUM 22, Robtrl M. l"r•ncls, 71, of l.llun• JIU11.-1nd -VlfmrL-;-eiiih,""-J.J. 01 co1t1 Ml.a. 8EAR:CKOLa0tJllME -Jlllll 22, Frtn• C.I~ llt1nf •• 49, Ind Jull1 C, Col*rl'le, JI. both of Cotti Mt.a. Aiiotlier Chance? '"" ~.lrMndtl. Vll:glnl1 L Ind ll1Y~ ~ llrln~t. Miry c.ro1 ..... Ind Edw..-.:1 T. M ... ln•, 0.lw• ICIY •nd Mldleel 81olneu , Ch1r lalle A. •nd Jtl'Jlll H-1 ~OOlld• •nd CllfHlrd P. ' Ctm~I. J•mts L. end l ?r• (1r11r se11mldt, G1rv L. •nd LVndl L. NlflOl'I, Chlrl11 Plfw-81111-M.lflr L11ellle Lowell, J111tt A. •nd Johll W. WIMm•n. Dlnlll R•Y 11'111 M1rl1 eu1h. GllNMI •nd J•me• Shlrm•n Johlnll!I, MlfVll'IM Ind Hllll'lk i LI Vtqlll, LIWlt end JudY KaeJC ... , LlllH llld Ernesl Wlllli: Cochr•n, M,llry k•l!1ryn Ind F• ,. o. Blunk, K1tt11 Sue Ind J1mt1 ll Plf't:lns, a.11 Ann and..Jll'l'Y LW" - lllU"lllll'dll«, Elllen Fr•\ICIS 11/ld ~lailm Mlllrltt w_...., Lout.a 11. 11111 JOHI E. C•bOI, Jwollh .I.. 1/ld llo'td H.mlllon Hlltlint~ J•mn llt1v Ind Shlflofl 1-..J-,. WOOd. Glry D. •noll INl'on 0, Giii, Shlrtl(l L •lid l(lftlllttl G. HONG KONG (UPI) _ Sl'IJ! .... LI .. Jiii •lid Rotiert Mkh11I Olflllrl" Cllllttn C. tnd Albtt1 R. ' • W1>uld be dri\•er who Colll111. JMnle M. 1/ld L•wr•nc• H. ....... • H\lflm1n, JIH H. Ind Gtrlld M. failed six previous tests TorM1u., 11t•r G. •ftd J-' M. ••--(got his lictnse. but srroiier. ""-"' K~IM l!'ld Hl'l"dV lll1'9 M1ttllew instead got arrMtcd for H_.,ic111. Oet111t1 a. ""' M•rv P, ----··"L ' S.,...,, ~ Fr•ncll Mid J-• Alvln· ------·---~·-'"retoYkls.-•llltld.LAM~!V"""'--~,;."\~ While the am'net w n• 11-..., Loul1 R. Ind N•flq' ex I ..., JK-IOll. Glldy• M. •nd Tl!OmlS s . writing "passed" on a Dr~. NMlne A1111111.11 1nd 111ct11rd •-I · t vr1vne sheet, toe 8 p .P I CI n Hullton, l(eren L. 1nd Norvtce G, thought he was • wrltfng 11'191111, wi1111m OovQll•• and ., .... r1y "failed". In lrustration, he c;;~ Anll1 M. •lid L•rrv T. Ol die But Goodie Births ST. JOSE.PH HOSPITAL July ) Mr. ind Mrt. Gary L. Bold!, 4152 Old MUI SlrC"tl, 1r~lnfl, IKIV. Mr. •NI Mft. Glen o... Ol2 Mlrgarlt1, 1.-.1111. 1111. ----- took a metal file out of his MU"t•, Antt• F~•nc:n 1nc1 D•nnY J1v h SOUll\t:'. llenl•rnln D•vlcl ,.., Llroqt pocket ahd hit t v e K•Y examtntr on. the head, ••::~"· Gleim w11111m •nd Dee~••• causing minor injuries. Llll••d, e .... ''" c. •lid Jun M•v Rtlh, MlcMit I . l l'K! (dwft!'d Alie" , ev1n1, R1chlrd 1nd Ltll11!1 Tilis 11Seagrave" fire engine was used ns early as 1909 by.the City of Pa~acle~a and put out its share of fires during its lin1c. Now reiired, lhe 1nuscun1 p1ec.e IS on exhibi i at the Oran ge Coynty Fair r'nall untu· JOly 21 . The Seagrave we1gh1 6,500 pounds and is about 21 reel long. -. . . ' ' ~------.< ·-I ' . ' _,,, .. ' • • • • \ DAILY PILOT Other Deailis OCEAN SPRINGS, Miss. (AP)·-James Reader Leavell. 89, foml er president and board member o f Contlnental llllnoll!I Bank and Trult Co., died Friday. Before retirement In 1950, he was direct°' o ( International Harvester Co., AmlOur and Co., Illinois Central 1Railroad, Lamar Life Insurance Co. of Jackson and The Southern Co. of Atlanta. ' -Death Notice• ' ' ' • ' ,. ,. . ' .,-.. ; : ., ... . ~ . '· -. AllUCICU & SON . .WUTCUff~Y 1<427 E. 171t..£t .. Coua MIMI <W><888 _,_ lllATZ--ON fUNllAL llO!ill Corona del MOr 673-9450 Cosio Mao 646-2424 -·-llLL l~AY MOllTUMT 11 O B1oodwoy. ·eo~ro Mesa. 642-9150 -·-DILDAY llOTlllllS MOllTUMY 1791 I Beod1 Slvd: Hunti1191a" 6eod1 842-ml 24-4 Redondo AW!. Long Beoch • (2 13)-438-11-45 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA llACH -TUAIT 1795 Laguna Con)'Oll Rd. .49.4-9-415 --·-· McCoaMICK MISSION ~AIT 28832 CamillO Copisrrano San Juo" Capistrano 495-1776 -·-PAClflC VllW. MEMORIAL PARK C.me1ery Mor!uory Chapel 3500 Pocilic View Driwe Newpor! Beac h, Ca\1for11ia 6'4'4-2700 -·-co:~~~~~!UL NOMI 7801 Bolla Awt1 .• Westmi"slf:f' 893-3525 -·- SMITHS' ~ARY 627 Moi" SI . Hu"li"QIOll Beoc.h :536-6539 -- PUBLIC NOTICE PllllLIC NOTICE. l'tcTTTMMIS •USIMllS .... n•T•MrWT--• : ""' ......,.. ...,_,. •r• ctolnrg ~· ""'-"; 11ol -r." t1 M1,,, C1111., '1611. .. , QUALITY ~ING SERVICI!', Don1N , T , llU 14•vtr Pl., :-C~~~lt. 'T •• ~JI~ MIJ'm' Pl .. • Co•" MtJ•• ''\"·•· n a11. Thi• b!.11lr11u 1 concluclld lw •n ~ 11141'1111~••· •, Oonllfd ~. TllNJ' • • Tiii• 1t11t,,,.,,1 w.1 fllld wltll ~111 ~ : Gavnlr C.lilfk of °"'"" County °" Junt ..... ,,, ltl~ .. -. " .. • , ' Wednewtay, July 17, 1'174 Fin~ncing Listed · in 'County Campaigns I . I By o.c. HUSTINGS DONATIONS AJ'IOUNITTN'G t tho I -~ I .... I ·~ 5pe:n e-~ P c .... >ei up coroner, Capistrano Beach's D~trict race, In c um ben t lhe cam p:algn ·for • the Of nie 0•11~ "11" 11•" to $6,000 from lobbyist and $3,747 in c:oi;itributlons and Bradley Gates. Andrew tnnshaw r e p o rt e d Republican nomination, Dlvtd I SANTA ANA -The late . oo~ltant Frank ?.11chelena ; spending $3,12.8. Gates, whb will serve ne expenses of $30,002 and raised Gubl er, re ported ~penses of Fifth District Su p e r v Is or $\,000 ea.eh from T err a Jn 8 n 0 th er supervisorlal undersheriff W\Ul assuming _l38_,266_._11_1,_1op __ opc._pon __ •n_t_in_l_1_1._1S3 and receipts of tl0,435. J ~n~:: ~:r~s~'':'d ~~~ ~enlures of Newport Beach, .race, the winner ot a runoff the top spot early next contributions to wage a Eddy r.1eredlth of Tustin, Ray berth in the November elec· January, spent $74,487 •1dl o-..,..--.----.-------------- successful prln1ary e ectlon 1 \Vid1ner, and J aek Osborne of tlon, Da vid Beker, spent collected donations of $68,813. ....,·. ~ • ..,., •• ,.,_r ORANGE COUNTY 23 Extra Fire1nen On Jobs . ORANGE -A ne1\' fed eral minimum hour wage and hour law approved earlier this year has sparked the need to hire 23 extr.a seasonal firefiJhters to man Orange C:Ounty's forestry camps this summer. b:1ttl e, figures on file w. A1&Q Pacific, Roberl W. Bein, $73,084 , with an income from Gates, whole camp a I g n ............ c:ontribuUons or . $80 ,079 , included a billboard program ----· r ·nspers len1 him••Jf bout the Rev. C. W. Grady (w~ -..... 11 ...... "'' placing his primary • race in hroughout the co u {I t y , -c .. C,.ff $ 9 3 , 0 0 0 I o wag a led memorial services at rites .the red. ' Nd major donations that GONE . computer letter b!itz an ·AfOnday afternoon in honor of duded $5,000 from Loe effort lo s<ive cash 1n the long Ca d hi t ) BAKER'S LA ft.GEST Hasenjaeger, &imllar amoun ts IN 60 ' ru1c"1orbyy lastclinJcuhneing a primary w:ipersth;1 Sou~h woe~ i cooE ltribu_tcnol Riv.:ere .d PJa ukl from Omar lA:>ng and Ben ••... · n erpnses vers1 e, ac Deani::, plus $1,000 from AVCO s o s Caspers wos In the midst of Olil~oo Company. Osborne and At c Keo n Community Developers. EVrtD \ !91" se lling million! ol dollars 1\lr California donated $800 Construction, each g Iv l n g Other candidates and their i;-!~ ·-:\~~g~ ~ ~ K~· andDelahanRepubt llolcanFullleaertder George ~l.:~rt :~--.S,.alHgoa~e·--and1o ioCOl'De and expenses include: . • . . -;\ . ' y on gave ~,,..,.,,, ~ """" • -,. .~tN· -Jt...:,. :, .. 9om>wed 1 on his assets to '500 the campaign. -Gates' challengers George ' (JZ ' . , come up with cash quickly. the direct-malling computer Baker's foe in the November Savord with expenses of h :· -r -race, La~ence Schmit. spent -$28:286-and income-cl' $24,135; campaign cost the candida te $9,376 and tQok in $16,350. He Spero Janiie a balanced $8 1,696. now has a surplus to finance ledger or $4 ,008 ; Mara.hall HIS TOTAL in con tributions. including the •·Joans" amow1t to $196,264. His expenses for • IPGI the primary amounted to nu; TOTAL EXPENSE abou t $148,000. 'Mle report !Uod ~-:is vastly different than the v.•ith 1he county Regislrar of a mounts spent by the three Vote~ includes figures from losing challengers, ·who early his 1970 campaign showing in the campaign conceded that fuftover expenditures a n d t h e incumbent's financing contributions. \\'OUld be the t o u g h e st the final race for the seat on Norris with a b a I an c e d the board, account of $15,650 ; Jerry Lee The Fourth D I st r i c t ' s Lawrence raised and spent AH ADVENTUIE'IHTO AUTO THEFT Th e records on tile shol\' challenge. winning incumbent, 'Ra Ip h $915; Gene Vinlove 'raised Clark was blessed wlth a $3,767 and spent $3,129. substantial ending balance In the raoe for district from his first .campaign, thus, attorney, incwnbent victor when the balance was added Cecil Hicks raised $22,037 and to the new effort's proceeds, spent $21 ,036. _,, k L MAIJCll MIRCJ.M111.1 CO. I .MC TAI• . C'fPUS5 ...... ·-c-• 121-1141 •.u&TTWIN 11161---lf --""" ''2·1241 .... IJI ... It, ---,,.,,l,, ..... ...... t --.,,_ The new firefighters started \~'Ork at the start .or the nC\f fiscal year. 1hat in the last days" of the Marcia Bents, the nmper· J une cam paign Caspers =.tave 1uP, ·\pent $28,500 and her himself a $28,000 loan and income t.otaled $29,414. Clark wouhd up with a war -In the 40th, Congressional cllCl>f. that surpassed h is ---------------------- Spokes.men for the c:ounty Fire Department said the men will be assigned to fo r· estry camps in Yorba Linda, OraflRe. Irvine Lake, El Toro, San J uan capjstrano and Tr a· buc:o Canyon. TIIE FEDERAL legislation which required the extra hiring spe(ified a maximum nwnber of hours w h i c h firemen can \\'Ork in a given v.·eek. The act specified that after working a 60 hour '"' e e k, firemen would have lo receive overtime. ea rlier in the gllme donated Newport Beech optometrist $2.5,000 to the w i nning Nolan Friz:zelle reaped $7,MO campaign waged by former in contributions and spent fo o tb a ll s t a r ~l\larlin $8,051. $.12,231 In ·-·-· by $12~40. NEXT TO CASPERS, the biggest _.ier in t h e campaign was U.e landslide victor in the race for sheriff· ~·lcKeever, who won t b e Sa n Ju a Jl Capistrano's Republican Party nomination James Tborpe reaped and in the 72nd Assembly Diilrict ----~---------~-----! race. Caspers' major contributors in the data filed. before last Friday's deadline show these names and figum: Health Messages Planned Nearly Everyo~e Listens to Landers .. Sears fountain Valley Art Leogue -HOW THRU SUNDAY South Coast 'Plaza •. a, r.fany jurisdictions h av e found it cheaper to hire more personnel than to grant large chunks of overtime pay. THE NEW hiring policy in the county raises to 50 the number of seasonal firemen signed on to augment the permanent staff during the crisis periods in fire danger r · Students at UC Inrine will receive advice on health proble~ via taped telephone messages as a part of an automated health education plan to be implemented this Where Thrift Is Always In Style Located on the Lower LeYe·I · i : ~, . Throughout the state, the bunt of hiring due to tl'le ne\V federal legislation has made for a strong gain in the statistics. An estimated .1,000 tie w firefi~hters are on the )pb this summer to make up for U.e new provisions. TIIE EXTRA hiring comes at a time when fire danger is greater th!.P in other summer· periods. Experts predict a particularly cfevastating sea· son because of the heavy . growth of brush late this past spring. The com b us ti b I e material flourished with the help of wann spring rains. County Pair On· USC Unit fall. ' Dr. Gerald Slnykin, director of UCl's student b e a 1 t h services, said the program supplementing the r e g u I a r student heallh service will offer recordings on a variety of health topics, including u.-eiJlhl control, nutrition, O'.lntraception, drugs, preg· nancy, alt'Ohol, cancer, smok· ing, heart disease, venereal disease, depression and dia· betes. Video tapes on th e s e subjects will be available for viewing in the Student Health Center \\'aiting room. Some subjects also will be discuMed in Student Health seminars. Student volunteers will staff t~e self-help desk for referrals to programmed instruction. Students will also be directed lo appropriate m e d i c a 1 personnel. "Illness and accidents often can be prevented throug education," Or. Sinykin saiH • "Many students are anxious to learn more about corrlmonly experienced medical p r o Robert Huntley of !ems." W es t m i n s t e r and Paul Fundlng for the project Whisenand of Costa Mesa... comes from UCl Student have been named board Affairs Special Project Fund members fer the SCAPA and a $1 ,00> gift from Porter Praetors, a Support group for Hendricks of Hendrick!\ and the University of Southern Robinson Insurance, Los An- Califomia's School of Public geles. Hendricks Is a fomier, Administration. president oC the UCLA Alumni The Praetors is one of '1:1 Association. support groups for us c,;======:;====:; profess ional and specialized schools and programs. Each group has a minimum of 100 members, each contributing at least $100 annually to the school or program their group THE NEPTUNE SOCIETY supports. .. OF ORANGE COUNTY C:ALIFORHIA'S LARGEST LAW SCHOOL PIOYIMOHAUY ACCllDITID IY 1* COMMITTR Ofl IAI UAMINllS OP lMt ll'ATI IAI °' CAUPOIHfA OFFERS A CHOICE Of FOUi ...oGIAMS OF LAW STUDY: e IN llMI 2"1 ., J Tl.US of JVU..TIMI llW ttudy 115·16 cl1111-. hour• ptt ~I. or e IN lffTMlt 3 Y, w 4 YU.IS of PAl:f.ftMI cWy, t¥tni119. or -•k•tld ltw 11\idr 13 t liiii1 per WMk. 3-4 hour1 per dou,t, .• You c«1 "'" your NltS DOCnll. IJ.O.) .... Ind ....... . ELIGllLE TO TAKE THE ~LIFORNIA IAR EXAMINATloN Wint Oii PltOHI POI CAtALOOUI 100 Soulh lroolohunl A .. Jiiliil 92804 17141 635-3453 APPLY NOW FOR THE ·FAU SEMESTH, llEGINNING SEPTEMIEI 5, 1974 llUOINTS IUOJIU '" flM-.-LL' tNIUllO SfVOIKT lOAHl ' • Af'l'llOVIO fOI VllllANS '~~~~~~---~~~- CUT 33% to40% Misses1 Summer Shorts Were $:?.99 lo S4.91J. -, CUT 30%to43% .---~ So11th Coast Plaza Bue na Park Sears :!:1:13 u.;,, .. ,· st. l'honc 54.0-3333 )--.. 11150 I.a l'uhna Ave. . l'Ju)tlC 828 .. 440() • Misses' and Junior Swimwear Were S6.9<J to S9.9') <Yrange 2 1lHI N. Tu•lin Aft. Phone 637-2100 • . ,.. ~-- S lftl'I" 1lnnr~: l\loftd• ,.hr11 !S•11n''ll•r i 9130 A.M. In 9::10 P.K., !'iu111l111 12 Noon to S 1•.111 • • • ·- •.'-• • - .· PUBLIC NOTICE Oil . Drilling Study Told U.S. ·Reportedly Started Work About Year Ago PIJBLIC NOTICE ,. '1::9~.~· ,inrNfvi '~\ .... , 'Ttlt~ --la ...... ........ MAM• ITATIMSllT •1 Tiie followlflll ._ ¥If clol119 ·n~ .. ;-"'flT ' U....oL.IT£1V .......,..., •t ; NO, ttr;as::r"liltllft N.c., Mt. AllWAY OH!1_'1]14 Sli:y Ptrk Ca. fltl7 11\ld., lr\ll(lt, Cl. n1w. ~ ...-.:.... lt:tlllf. t 12 s E"'ti°"1.. c-1r11e11on. t111:., 17"2 ~ ...... C40f,.......,.. IMcll. Sky P•rk 11\ld., ll'YIM, c ... n1111. ~~--· , L-b 0, Lt-•· Ul\loll Oii C90ltw, Tiii• tlUllneu I• cillNl&lctllll by Ill !tr.' 1111, Lot .......... C1lltwnl1, ffllllholMI, ~' T .. S M. ,IC""'... LW.1::9~'h. t~! ~net.lid: 8 JACKJD llVMAN ' ... fl wllilo "" /'N, .no M~. Chl•lft H. Tur11tr. y .a:. ~w;;;.,. Of'Mil ~\"..ji"" JvM '"'1"1 Herrow Place/ ..,.....,, laatll. C•., Of "'9 Ody , • .., Iliff Califomla congressional elegaUon in Washlngt(m, dU:rlng JUne. ~fonday, Carter met wittt the "general public," including representatlvet: of -environmental groups, }fe has heard almost unanimous OPJ>061tioo lo the oil drilling at ~ of these meetings. ' ' nMO, ' ,..., Mr. .Ind M .... Clalr 1. l llr11111, 1911 \:The US ""'-"rlmenl ol the Interior ~~...0..-c .. ,, I Dilly Pllol, SMdrln, c~ Ott M•r, C•lll, . . ....... -i- JVM 11.. Mii JMtr·a. 10, 17, m• •Dll-7t TM•'*''""' li oendl.lded br, llmllld gen investigaUng the posslb\lity of. :.:..;.,-.c.=..=.::..;::..:::..=:..;.:=:11,...;;;.,~;...~1... ulng olteo for offshore oil drilling in . • IH~=·i~~~~Nc~~~~· Southern California about It year ago, ~-~PVBLIC==-NOTl __ CE_;. __ 1 Tiii• .. *'-1 w•• nlH ..,,,.. the according to a tiat ol actiods issued by •· ,ICTmowt • .,.,,..,, ~ c;11r11 Df °'1• CouJirv Oii Julr '· the department. llAM• ITATSM9NT lllOaftnOtl, llOWISI AMO OAll.AllD 1 Tiit 1011ew1111 ........,, •• 11o1"' ... C•mMI .,..,. RePQrts. on the ~hie resourCes of ~ ;'' ••Dt-ttLL. 10 1t1» °'""' ......,.. '-Ill Clltf .. ....a the aiea were requestM from federal Dllctt • ........, ...-. c........ ,_ Tt11 cn41 ...,_ • Pmn . I Jul d r -: ed by A t 1&191re c. ~ 11 1119 ..... f'vllll&lled °'''* C-t O.llY Pllol agenoes n y an r~eev ugus , Diie ... .....,... 'lketh. c .. w..1111 m.o ...... ie • 1973, the list states. WlltMt •• ..,......,..... ttla .... °"' _... , 17, u. 31, 1'7• 2S.1·7• ~ :::'17 ._ "--9Mdl. ca111ar111e PUBIJC NOTICE ON JA,.,UARV !, 1'74, notice was i:1111 ......... tt cendlld9d b'I' 1 ~·•l---;:==:::c===~-1 published in the F~er~J [tegister uking ,.,,..,.P. ~ · 'tmnot.11 •USl111111 oil oompanies to name those areas in the I...,_ C. MVIMI , MAMa l'T.lTllMallT • I Tiii• • ....._. wM "'" w11t1 ""' n. fallowlno ptnon I• dol"" 11usr11111 Southern California outer • contmenta ~ ... Cllrt • Or•• Counlr Oii Mlly .. : HMIBOlt SYSTEMS JAHITOIUAL shelf on which they would like to bid. A P-MI• 1E1tv1ce, 12.c H111t1r, Ap1. •· G••*" notice was aent to newspapers at the J~IMI ~~ l~o;ir. 1::!11" 2~~ ~ GmtiK'':.~ ~NELLY, 12402 time. Ma1tw, Apt. •• G..-dtn GtOYt, By March t I when nominations cl1?9ed, PUBLI~ NOTICE ~=-,..;!~:::' r1 conducred tir 111 a. total of 6.8 million acres bad beeh · 1ndMM1. nominated by 17 oil companies. IU'-HPt • Ml"'-Allan c-11, 'ICTITI°"' •1111M•11 Tiii• 1111e""'m .... , 1111c1 wrth 1111 1be area under con!lkleration reaches T"' fol= 1".!::.•11!r1 dolno ~f..ntY ctert °' ~•fl09 eou.itr 1111 July 3' from southern Orange County to Point tlltlllt:T ~1ou1i, 1610 NIWl*'t Blvd.. PIJbll•lltcl °''"* Cotti O:ny ":rta't~ Cmceptlon north of Santa Barbara. c-. ._ ce mn J Alm08t the entire San~ Monica Bay and D'~.:, •· C1Hfot11l1 torperetloll, uty 10, 17, tl. 31, 1,7. U64·74 b :tea , "" or1w, H1WP011 INcll, PUBUC NOTICE the entire Orange Coast were selected ' y ~~.'::in... 11 Mint c0111111el9d bV •h,-~~~cc-~~=~--I oil companies &!I desirable areas for cerw.... PICTITtol.ll BUllll•ll offshore oil drilling. • .. ·op:, lllC'. 11AM.S ITATil .. llT --'-1111 M. ,1111Mtl, secr.iary Thi totlowl1111 ~ 11· 11o111111 111,111,,_.1 THEN, ON FEB. t, the [)en•rtment of T)llt tttlemlllt "ttid wll 1111 Covllty M: I"" cw.. or °"''1'1"COUlltY Ori JUM 14, 1t74. IA••Y WOOD YACHTS, :mo w. the Interior published a notice In the ,..,..nt Co1•1 Hltl'IW.Y. Mlwpotf 1Nc11, c.111., Federal n...;ster asim... for comments .. "1"41tllld Ort11111 Cot1t O.tly Pllol, nt.60. '""&' "'"""'Ii J11111 • t11d J.,... a. 10. 11, lt7L 2W-1• Barrr •· ~ 1'50 M1rt11r, L01111 At the Sliibe time, a second ~release PUBUC NOTICE ~ht.u~! .. •\• cOl'ld11eit1111 bY '" wla,aent and a ·nwnber of officiAls were -··--~~~----I •nc11v1dut1. coraete<f by m1i1 for reecDons. IL'.a.t · Tn11 ~~;"' ..,,, 111eoc1 with ,... "Appa.mttJy we didn't do a very good •1J:r.:'fc:t ~o;~iE ~ cwt o1 Ot"•nae c-rv °" J_lllv >. job of publidiing it," D e p u t y nATI °" CAL1J1M111A POil nm• Undenecrl!tary of the lnterior Jared G. .. TM• COUllT"Y CMI ..,... l'IJbllllled Dr1111111 Cont D•ltv Piiot. Carter commented this week. "We btlte • ~~H. Deaned. July , .. 17' u. "· in•. :Wl·74 received only eigtit responses, all agam c=~•., ts tt!"::.!y ,!,::" d~';; PUBUC N<1J"ICE the drilling." flllt •II ~ 111¥1111 cllllms -0.11111 1111 In lt-tay. environmental evaluation ..W dk'9dlrlt 1rt1 ~ to llto thlm. SL.JI "411 ..+!ti '"' '*'""ry YOUdlilrs. In ,... office llOTK• TO Cltl'Dfl'Oms began on the nominated areas to assess ol ,.._ dlt'k or tlll allio¥I ...t+lltid t SUfll'ltlOG: COU•T OJI THll h fi " . to lll'IMllf ......,, w1t11 .,. ,::;.~ 1TATS .,, CALl,OllMIA ,_ sue matters as con 1ct! over use, voudlwa. ID ""' UNlwllpiid ., '"' Lew TM• COUNTY OF Ol:AHGi • economic and social impact, and Dfflce ef MliX• ,IH!C, ml WllSHllli "9. A . -.S . (aJ '"-(' 9L'1t..'S.-STI!. -Bl!Vl!IC:Y ,HILLS. £1t1te or GARY LOUii STOHE, enVJronmen COl'l91u.t:18 1('1'1$. CAL'f"U"HIA !I021J, wlllc" h 1tw 1111.c. ol DlcMHd. : ._._ o1nwUllMrllOMd1n 11t1t IMllGI'• NOTICE 11 HEREIY GIVEN 10 llMI • UNDER THE U.S. Environment.al pwt•llMllll to ..,. ..,.N .-.. Id dletdtfll, Ctldltor1 ol 1111 1boY1 1111'1111111 Hcldent Pol' Act · tal · ct wftNll,l\Mll""""""'..,... 11111t nne ,ubltu. 11111111Pf'-'111"1"' cl•IMS '1111ns1 the icy , an env1ronmen unpa 'tlon ff ffll• ~ • .. 1c1 oee.dlflt ,.., rtQUlrld '" 11 thlm, statement (EIS) must be completed o.-J-20. lfJ._ 'wllll ""' .-rv v11Uetien1, In. the clfk• MAX ,041( Pl tt11 d.n: ol TM abov9 emi!ltid court °'" be(ore department officials C3ll decide to 1:.....-., "" "NIM of to pr-1 !Mm, willl the ~.,.....,. I o(f·•·· 'I 'l • · 1tw .....,.. 111niid dloct11111111 v011Ctw1, 10 ,... \llleltrslgntid •t "'-Liw ease ai1V1e 01 SI es. =-w~.fi•s •LV ..,. ,.. °'"u Pl CulYlr v111 &ure<l, lDI e. e11v1 Department officials then met With •ll'Vl'•LY 111us. W.1,ci•111a tan "!;:;.!.~~~\~'~= \~ California senators Alan Cranston and T•h cn1J m.t1n 10 matters w1e111koa to the •"•'• o1 Mld John Tunnev as well as a Southern That meeting was folio by three meetings between caur mlans and Department of the In officials, c~lelly Carter. 111E FIRST l\1 AS Thursday I n Sacramento, where Carter met with legislators. Then Friday in Los Angeles he conducted a meeting with Southern caJifomia city and county officials. The future timetable, according to Carter, is for the draft of the EIS to be ready in late October. Following publi~ hearings, be plans for lhe final EIS ar to be completed in January and decision made by ~lay, 1975. -, I \ I I . Elderly Problems Beset Cit.ies of Orange Coast "Old Master' Portions of Orange Coast commanltles from Seal Beach to San Clemente have some of the greatest problems In servlag the elderly of any other sections of Orange County. So sa)'s the County Council on Aging which bas released the.results of its 12· month study to assess the scope -or problems of elderly county residents With low incomes. The council said more than 90 percent of the county 's elderly citizens lack proper health care, nutrition, and recreation.· . In its search for areas in greatest need, the committee found that areas of Corona del Mar, East Bluff, Newport Heights and Balboa Peninsula · were area9 where the greatest increase in services is needed. • , In those areas. the council says, 18 , percent of the residents are 60 years or older, and 11 percent of those now .Jive belo'w legal poverty levels. ' The report \\tuch cost $f,1,0oo recommends that county o ff i c 1 a 1 s immediately go to work on new ways to reach elderly resld.ents in ten target areas. Those sectors include portions of Seal Beach, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, -. south and central Huntington Bea~h and pockets throughout the soulh coast iricluding some in the . communities of Laguna Beach, Capistrano Beach and San Clemente. Tile oouncil claims that even though 150 programs have been set up to assist thee iderty, onJy a fraction are used to a great extent. The report contains a list of service categories. and in each the report cites the fturhber of persons eligible as opposed to the number serviced. Statistics were gathered starting last January. 'Ille categories and the pa n e I s oonclusions include : Artist Erin Bryari, 3, warms u'p for giant "Paint-In" which will be held at Orange County Fair Friday.· Amateur and professional artists are in.vited to paint live models in front of Fine Arts Building from 1 p.m. until dark. Admission to fair is $1.75 adults, $1 for kids fi..12, under 6 free. -Comity YMCA Receives ' . Irvine Foundation Gift -Jn programs offering information .L T he J a m e s I r v i n e eicpansion and new directions and referrals to helping agencies, 5,982 Foundation has giveg a with a growing population and persons were served, .tlut 79,000 have $100,000 grant ·to t h e oonstantly changing s o c i a I need of such assistance. Metropolitan YMCA or Orange condition.ii, Leonar.d said . ;._ In ar:eas 0£ special transportation, County to e s t a b I i s h a The county YMCA serves the only program singled out for praise permanent endowment fund. thi! follo\ving Orang'! Coa.st was La Habra.'s Dial-a-ride. A total ol. Endowment funds enable the cities: Seal BeaCh, Huntington 1,754 persons have been served as of YMCA to charge fees low Beach, Fountain Va 11 e y, January although more than 45,000 rould enough that most of its young Mission Viejo, Irvine, Tustin, make use of such programs. users can afford, said General Laguna Beach, San Clemente, r In home health, six programs otfer Director Leooard F. Kaiser. SanJu.anCapistranoandDana nursing, household services and shoppinc::,--The_r_•_lso_pro __ •i_de_· _fund __ •_f_or __ P_o_in_t_. -------- for shut-ins, but only 3L9 persons have been sirved. Yet, 22,353 are seen as in need of such services. Try Saturday's News Quiz "'::.":a 5ti ~ de(lflMttt, Wi!"ln fou"t monlfll •ftlr !he .I Or · Coltt tl•llY Pllot, flt'lt Putlllc1llP11 of tllls 110llce. 1-----------'---~-------------------------~------------------------Junl JI. ....i Jutr 10. 11, 1'7• nu.7• 1>11-d July 3. 1'7L , PUBLIC NOTICE CULYE• YAN BUREN, Admhll1lr•tor ol the t:il•I• ol ltM! lf'bovt lllmld dletdlnl -----~~~---!CULVSlt VAii BUl•ll 'KtittOUI BUllWSU •1 a. ONw A"ll. • • lfAM9 STATIMlllT ......._ c.91'. " .. n.,. .......... ~ .. «ii .. Tth CHJ) .... 7GI • ·: -~IUI "'°'001 ........ ·-1w ....... l .. I 1"'1•"""' • l .., ,,....., ~ ...,.. ,.,, lrvtn1' f'vlllllhtd 0r111111 c,,.st Oa!lv Pllol, -----_ , ' Jul)< 10. 17, M, :n,J'7• :isfiO.J• . 'J!'=i:a, ~ .. ~. "1\11 PUBUC NOTICE " .... trfa., IPfQ\ 5icY Part tlrdll,,1~----------1 ' A, IMIM. Caflf .. ""'1. 1 MOTICI OP JMllMtSIPOllSlllLITV _..._. ~~1n:n 511~..._ °'*' 111o11ee t• ""'°" 91....., ttiat '"' -r;;;' :...-"Cellf~ .... .. Ulldlr ...... will not bl flll*llJble tor Wiii .......... ....,. .... I ..., .... W Wtt119 alltr'Klt'CI by .. --""* IMtl """ ... ,, "" Pf •ffw )1)1• . . "" ~. . I ., ... ~--J:, :is.-:, DltlfJ:. ~i:..~· "7._ ,. I .,•f • • 'tDO _.... A"ll., Na. 211 lldl. 10 .,. • J ~ • ~ ' ,,__. VGhtY, C1lllonil• 12111 I ,_.,.. Oi-Mle c.at o.nr ~lot. ,_..,... Or .... eo..i oa11y Piiot, '*"jr· lJ, ..... ~i MIH I W.-1• ""1 1f. 11, 2Z, ff'7t 2W·7• 0 O· ...:...../ SIZZLING SAVINGS .. Continu._thlu_Sat,._M)'_,,.,20..__. NOW & LATER PRINTS Cottons and &lends, dress ·& ,_iez.oo 77c sportwelgl'lt for blouses and ctr.-.. 45" wtde. FG'sreg L0W yd ' ptc:es 1.1~1 .49. · • . ' POL Y£STER DOUBLE KNITS Y-lo·4.DO · ty of popUlar stitctles In sd)d ' " <eolors. for l·l'lose beautiful ewe-tree fashions. 60~ >Mde. FG's - ... LOW pri<o 2.19)'d.'1 to 5 yd. yd, 1eog1i.. ' . BRIGHT SCREEN PRINTS ,_,,. J.oo - Aorais. geometrics. novelties and sac other patlerna. Nylons. Acetates, '-A&yons and blends. Nylon Jeneys and blends. •S" '"""' yd. FG'sreo LOW.prices 1:5Q..2.29. TRIMS • TRIMS • TRl~S 9c.19~. . ' ,_,..,,. . 'M.nv 1tytet, and cok?fS -tl!ai~ eYelel&. loldovefs and !Jlhetl tor )Our creative designing. • NEWPORT BEACH 20 r I Ian hlmNI Open Mon .. Fri. 10-9;30 P.M. Open Mon.-s.t. 9-5~ Set. 1(>.8 P.M: Sun. 12.e p,,n, · Sun. 12-e P.M. .ANTIQUES · haturing Fint Oki fo~?AI ~F _1--+-.--'""""'--...,....__..__w_o.:..y -t .A.Mtti<•11 Fvniiture LGlllpt Acc•1'9riff lric-A-lrec hMihtltyDi~ Pi~lt ......... .... GALL.OW;\ VS 4 jo list St. 6fS-2121 .... WATER aO$ET ................ ttte ............... ... MClt~ tr• )h1St.t11-lff) 422 Jtn suftt IMPORTERS o! EUROPEAN ANTIQUES FINE o,,-rs' JEWELRY You art cordially inritad to bro- 3009 VILLA. WAY Anhaues • Objects d'Art Con1emoorary L1ght1flg • Architectural Elemi?n1s b!lening Soon -. 2a 11 v1ua Way. s1~s·2s SEAFOOD MARK.ET FRESH FI SH DAILY l"I Facials Mani cures-Pedicures 2815 l •1•yirttt 67!>-4100 BOltTOO~ -r-• AFRICAN ··JEWELRY 30°/o OFF GOU•MIT Md COHTIM'°IAIY ACCISSOlllS 4ZS lOtti St."'":'" 6 7S-6Z74 • '.5'L~~~~ STAINED. LEADED ANO ETCHED GLASS. CUSTOM OESIGN.'SPECIALIZINCl IN , • RESIDENTIAL COMMISSIONS. " ---·--~·ii '28 13 LAFAYETTE "E St. 0 ~~31~·~·~s·~"~~-fl•~~~-1 l ... 30th:::.::.· .;::sf ... : --iJ +---, ANTIQUES -GIFTS PLANTS -ART CLASS' \\'i!ticling Dresses <..:u~turn i\larle 416·31st 673-1467 CONSIGNMENT l TD. 1111 51 ' Ii I I , I DAN llEI CUSTO -UC Wlil t.R.Y SC:1.1t.?Tt1U --! Speoaj Gia ·01SCOVER ~ _,;::,; .. ~ • 281'1 WAYE'l'7El NOON TO ~PM CllOllUMCINDl\Y Fo '""' &.••11 ~1y 512' 29th Sitt'()! b1J.)2~ HARBOR PAINT CENTER, INC. wallpaper floor coverings · & draperies 675-4040 .-. ~.;:;;i%~ Q75·8830 • ' • I I .. v J% DAILY PILOT "'' T1i.t1111 IK Hospllal Condµctor L e o n a rd Bernstein, 55, 4 under- going tests at Bridge-_ port Hospital in Con· nectiCut.-tfe became ill over weekend.· Removal Of Judge ··Pressed • Top · Post Created For Women • PARIS (AP) LL Fnlnce hai. tteated a cabinet-level depart· ment to look after the status of women. Named as lts first head was a w o m a n magazine pub- lisher who says she rejec~ Ute notion of sexual equality. • 'J ltlortgage Dias .. • W otrien Called Len4i1ig· Victim WASHINGTON !UPI) - f.iortgage lending institutions subtly dlsCriminate against minorities. but the bias is blatant y.·hen it comes to lending money to \Vomcn, according to a report by the ·U.S. Commission on• Civil Rl"'1ts. . --, - After a year-long study or mortgage lenders in llartford , Conn.; the commission concluded : "Mlnori.lies and women face a rormidable hurdle of White male prejudice in obtaining mortgage loans. " ... FOR MJNOR11.'IES nnJ women , the mortgage finance system is a stacked deck - S tack e d s ometime s iQadver~ently, oft.en unthinkingly , but slac ke d nonetheless." PRESIDENT V A L /!= R Y Giscard d'Estaing 'I\ie!liay appointed Francoise Giroud, 57, to head a .department dealing with "la condition feminine .'' the .. problems of women In a society· oriented~--------. by law and tradition toward \Vhi1e mort gage di s C' rim In at ion against minorities is "subtle." the report added. ';against women it · ls 1nore blatant, with minority women bearing twice the brunt." men. Mrs. Giroud, who has two children, is publisher of the weekly news mag azine L'Express. the country's l~rgest. She wrote in the · magazine that G i s c a rd d'Estaing earlier offered her a subcabinet level post, but that she turned it down. The commission said the study revea led broke.rs and , loan officers can disapprove applications using on their own biases and subjective criteria such as the character and domestic life or the applica nts and their motivation. • ' 124 E. 17th St., (at Newport) COSTA MESA • 645-4330 • WP.'. . ·s A y ·E HI-LOW PLUSH SHAG ONLY $699 PERSQ. , YD. 100% NYLON• Values To $14.95 SitAGS SHAGS • PLUSH SHAGS • HILOW~ •NYLON SHAG • TONE ON TONE • SCULPTURES • TRI-COLORS $400 , •• so. ONLY Y.UO • DUPONT 50 t •HI LOWS • 50tlD5 • COMMERCIAL • NYLON • TWEEDS ·$300 m so. ONLY YAID VALUES TO $9.95! VALUES TO $6.951 HOURS: Mon., Tue,., Wed., SQ!. 9 lo 6 P.M. FINE QUALITY PADDING & LABOR AVAILABLE ALL WORK FULLY GUA~ANTEED • ~< Come by land or come by sea, you'll fmd exqui- site shops and.elegant Thun. & fti. 9 to 9, Sun. I l to .5 ;;: Bring in Your Room MeosuretMnfs (7":'°~ LAYAWAYS AND TERMS AVAILAB(E rv'.::'1 • .. .. . ., .. , . -.. romantic board~ · walks to wander '· ~ · ~ along, landscape ,.. ·~ patios to linger over, and fan- dinirig at Lido Village. ~~~~ -::, . tastic fare on which to feast. ~, ".. \L_ ----~'' ~i "\':Stroll.down, sa!ldown? ~al We're doEkside in Newport ~= Beach, corner of Newport * Boulevard and Via Lido and . . · ~ :~~i'!::"·~-~' ':°"'-,: ~ t~'· your bike o~ driv~ -s~oppmg 1~1 :: ~ :\.~-:~~:-~.:.{~IS" hasn't been like this ·smce the • ~ • • .. w • ... .. -.....;,,: ·-.. the sea, with plenty of · room to anchor your 1 ~j i: :j~~~~~ ~-~-~ reign of the square-riggers. 1 '~ ·; &i.~~!r-· Lido Village is a wonderful schooner or. your station wagon. Lido Village prom- 'ises seventy shops to -browse through, . ' ' We are already here (or wa:tch for our opening soon): --· Devereux·fo r Lilly Pµlitzer (bouti<)ue), Jade Hou~e· . Open---1-~ ~ ' ·~ (jade jewelry), Laguna Originals Gallery, Pappagallo's · • "Y"" · .,;. (fine shoes); Jannelie's (ladieS boutique), Black mah, Ltd. (fine jewelry), Pri~ts and Q cn-1o1 fven\s • · -Paintings, Lemons Us, Inc. {gills & cards), Turquoise Tee Pee (turquoise jewelry), ™ •• _ ~"' · • ---·.German Home Bakery; Light of the.World (gifi ·shop).Martinique Beauty Salon, • •. •· . . ., · : Simply Us (custom made jewelry), Sea Treasures (sea shells, etc.): Th~_Chi ldren's ~--• Sales and Rental Council pf -~ Shop (children's apparel); Mione's Old World Delicatesscn:The Garden (teenage/ · ""'.:NEWPORT HARBOR ART MVSEUM;i. college girl apparel), Custom Clothes by Ann.Douglass, Yard Arm (fabrics), A Lillie =.--· · presents "'""': Intrigue (ladi\'S boutique), Birds Eye View(art gallery), Lido.Book Shoppe (bo6ks; ~.. ' :· magazine~ prints), Hatteras of California (marina, yach t broke,), 'Anything G'oes ~:EVENING JN LJOO. VIL~ (custom made clothes), Flo's Boutique (fme clothes), Sydney (ladies .boutique), !JulyJtitlr • , . · ~~ Stuar.d's Men Store (men clothiers & outfitters), Jurgensen's (gourmet store), f;: _.=~.!!,SIC _!~~RAWtN~~ · _ Lo.rd Jim Barber Shop, and Carousel Flower.Shop. · ,.. place to spend .time discover- ing the rare, the unusual, the . beautiful, and the new. ·.:..:~- --- Auditions Listed Cast Announced ~ For 'Promises' Tc;>M TITUS lnlerml11lon For th& foorth consecutive year, the We s.imi nster Community Theater is gearing up for a summer mwiical. And, like au the others, it's being directed by Fred West. First cam~ "Once Upon a Monday, July\ 22, will be a Mattress'.' in 1971, thc.n "A. l''unny Thing Happened oo the busy nigti. for actors along the Way to the Forum" in 1972 (a Orange Coast with three local show placed by this column at the top of. the ,heap of the' theaters au~ltionlng fo~ th~r year's e<1mmunity t h e a t er season..operung productions m offerings). Last s umme'r -Scptembcr. \Ve_stmlnster got a little mGre Alrelldy announced are the ambitious with "P.1amc. Westminster Community This year, for ils second Theater's.. tryouts on that date show and first musical in its for "Will .Success Spoil Rock brand · new-theriter;-\VCT-!S Hunter?" Joining---<>WCT for. - becoming the first theater casting calls -will be the amateur or profcsSional, t~ Huntington Beach Playhous~ mount a production or fo r "Not Now,--Darllng" and ··Promises, Promises." 111c the San Clemente' Community rirst, but by no means the last Theater with "11ie Ninety Day since subsequent versions ar~ Mistress." planned this yc.ar by Santa Randy Keene wiil direct the · Ana College, the . Orange H~tington Beach com~y, Playhouse and possibly Scbag. which call~ ror a . cast of five tian's West\Dinner Playhouse. men and m women. Tryouts are scheduled for Monday only_ at V:30 in the playhouse, 2110 Main St., Hwtington Beach. llEADING THE cast of the Neil Simon·B urt Bacharach musical based on the Oscar- w inning mo vie 1''The Apart~t" are EriC Gillette in the "Jack Lem1non role" and Nancy Baskins in the part created on the screen. bY Shirley MacLaine. Bob Busch enacts the libidinous hem originated by Fred MacMurrlt)', while . B e r n i e Simon has won the plum supporting. role or the doctor. 'Robert Sax, Joe Addotta and John Autry \\.'iii play the errant executives, with Penny Hayes and Ann Lapp lending distaff supPort. Zack McEw8n ·returns as musical director, as does Rita Liedags (now Rita West) as choreographer. Ron Albertsen is designing the set, with Phil Jay serving as stage ma~ and Don McLaren, !lee cal director. " mises. Promises" opens Aug, 1 for f1>ur w.e_c\.;e.!ld$ ot Thursday-:-through • Saturday performances at.the Westmin· sler c:ommunity Theater, 7272 Maple Ave .• Westminster. Ad· vance reservations are being accepted at 893-:8626. At San Clemente, Beverly Sparks is scheduled to direct the J ... r. Coyle comedv and will hold readings both · 1'1onQay and Tuesday evenings at 7:'30 at the Gabrillo Playhouse, 202 Avenida Cabrillo. A cast ol four men and three women is required for the show, which opens Sept. 12 for three weekends. BACKSTAGE -:-0 ran ge Coast College has announced a cast change for its upcoming musical "Oliver'\ .. replacing Jack Grubish in -the role of Bill Sykes will be John Orchard, a well-known Engl.ish actor who played Sikes in the original London production 12 years a,i::o ... "Oliver" open~ July 31 for a four~ven.ing run. • • Iii '1 Two \\.'eekly matinees have been -added to lh~ Orange Playhouse 's production of "BOm YeSlefi!ay" with lJoward Duff and Sue Ane Lang don ... the afternoon perlormances will be staged Wednesdays and Sundays at 2:30, according to Harry * CAIJJIOARD Zevin, new general manager Ne x·t of the Eq·uity theater. -~---1 ALL MAU:ED PllClS WEIE Elf"AILISHID IN CON· JUNCTION WITH INDlAN TIADl lS AND All COM· 'AIAILI TO 'llCES·THAT All CHAIGED AT THE INDIAN TRADING '0STS. YOU .PAV ~ LlSSI Wt h1v1 rectlYtd on co111lcnment land by purchu•. a Jar1e·collec· tion of autlttnttc Amtrlcan lndlan Jtwe!ry from Ind.Ian Trader• who deal dlrtc:l with tbt trlbta. ' Our 1tore1 will have a "1up1r a110rtment" or Indian Jewelry in 111rUn11llver with turquoise, c11ral, & 1hell adornment. Each pltc. It hand-crarted by \M H11pl. N1v&j11, Zuni. & Santo Domln10 tribes. Tht ont-of·l ·klnd ltefnt pictured below repre1ent but a few ltemt from our f1bulou1 collection; •·••~ lu~i cl!op "'""I' ~ ... t4• I ""'" l~..,,oi~ bu er It I .... ''' S~k $SK.MO t-Un'' Zuni In!.., ltin8 .... suo Silt .511. ~uoll blo•tom N'dl,ce R ... ,.'!9 s.11e 51119.60 ' 1 tll>M IUtquclM! br.c~i.1 M,n•, l11p lu•quc•"' kon& Rr!!-)"11 S•lt Sl1 a ... i 1'1 S•le S41AO l~M•C•,•111•·,_ • .., .,..,.,,,_.,,,.,, ..... _ ... M~IO .. ~,., -~ • ..,_.. •!c&>otnu M--... c-'!00~•-, , ... _ -· •oo••NCt,"" •-·-- -"·"'·'--Oll""'Gl.•"1.-• ..... f~ ......... --..... "O!IUi,••- ----·---- • ' ..• J.itsday, July 17, 1~74 DAILY PILOT f:J , Wf -uosrA .MESA / HOME CE I SO ie Prices Effective July 17 thru July 23 TAM JUNIPER STAR JASMINE • Mokea o g•eol g1ound-covar. F eo1he1y, low grow ing E vefgr~en, requiie1 liflle' REG . 77( s 1.29 SALE! l·GAL. REG. S2B.89 SALE! ---.-1· -· --1 ! : l . ' IJO''.J2"-36"1i i '. W·AGON GRILL WITH MOTOR ANO SP1T •• 6·po•ilion fi1e pon. 17'•' x 23" bo11om 1ha1f. S inch -..heels. 22 77 117398 SCREEN DOORS EMPIR E Reg . $17.99 12.97 '1°'1 LANC ER Reg. Sl9.99 14.97 •1045 • core. REG . 321 · S4.49 SALE! S·GAL. 6 FOOT REDWOOD PICNIC TABLE & BENCH SET •• Mode of k iln·dr ied Colifornio r•dwood. S.roc:ed for s11e1>gth and durability. "REG. S J~.99 SALE! S/8" x .il f T . x 8 FT. PARTICLE BOARD •• Pre11ed wood chip boord .in handy 4 ' ic8' s i1.e. Smooth both 1 ides. Na il or sow just like p lywood. Un· darloyrnent grode: Rag. $6.49 ·So le! • • 20 WT . OR 30 WT . PENNZOIL MOTOR Oil , , 1003 pure P enn1ylvonio motor oil. REG. 47( "' SAL E! · QT . L IMIT 6 • We Stock Multi·Via o t S l!gh1ly H igher P 1ic:e ' ' Sl((t JIG SAW i OUR 1 PRICE INCH x 12 JNCH PECKY CEDAR REG. 34,-.... SAL E! I INCH ic 12 INCH PINE SHR YING REG.1 '" SAL_E! d NTER 3-SPEED . BOX FAN •• Complete ly portobla, Sii e: 20 inch. .~i~.1111 SALE! I . Sl(I/,. 1/4" DRILL •• Ho1 the powe• you need for fost, oc.c:urote, dril ling in concrete, plo1ter, wood or wall board. Good generol·pu<po1e dr il l fo• l igh1 drilling work. OUR 1399 PRICE ,503 ECONOMY REDWOOD STUDS REG.'41' "' SALE! 2x~w8FT. REG. 57c '°' S°ALE! i:7301 #208 • WINNERS OF DOOR . PRIZES AT COSTA MESA GRAND OPENIN.G • Earl P11ra1ynsld •·~•ne s Baos Kell1>99 Toppo!r Frar><:es Oelor>g Hun!. Sch. Ma,,•s Walt h Mr~. E , An<le(son Sanl• An.i s 8119' KelloOO N l!rohumu~ -J . AbD<>ll Cos!a Mesa HI SpeeCI Bike 'M•. & Mrs, Thomp$onMls1lo" Viejo 1(10' BIO Ke11099 Ac:idaU T. Zien Hun!. Bch. Gar1tge DQO• Ope,,.,,. J .L. F!scner Ml11lon Vlojo Scooler ·watt Smith Costa Mesa Mi"I M•t:·Chaln Sa w Meg Ba•·ry NeWp0r! Beach 'Wrougllt Iron Flower Stand G"vl o . K"v Costa Mesa JO Gallon Waler Hellh'• • George Huetll l•vhw .io Bo•e• D1ite Carpel Tile Gre!ll Kente r Newl)Orl Be1ch Tool C•blnet 11nd Chest Roger Clarke Cost• Mesa • • Cer!ons Place & Press Tile R.N, G•lb•Ch Newl)Orl 8f!•ch G1Hbage DISl)OSal lll J .E. Wilcox Coron.a Det Mar 6 Bo•es Crvsl"I Tile Oen. W. Parnell Laguna Hiiis 811dger Garb.ige Disl)Osal Jan Lu•e,,.,t>ourger Cosll Meslt 6 Bo•es CryS1<1\ Tde Jane Ef'ri9hl Sanllt Ana · Waste King DlSJ)(l••I Mich•el E. HUI S•nla AM S Bluf!S l 8rjck Maq:,111 re1 Greenwald Hunt. Bch. lnslnke•alor Olsl)Otel Mrs, M. S!ltnl•ll N!!Wl)Ott Bei!Ch S 8oice~ Z Brick G.F. SmHh Cost,, Mes• Enlry Door 1/1 .. rJt' W!!SI Cos!" Mes• S 80 •1!$ O:lle Ca•u<'I Till' ow Co• Coron" Oe! M"r Skil Electri<: Saw JO"rt L. B,o!ley S•nl• An" • (,,rrons P!,,ce & Prl'SS Tile. Maq;i,,ref "••SO Cos!• Mes" Skll Ele<:lric s ,.w C. Sr&ok•nire l'ountalrt v .. 11ey New Tof'e Chiml's J oa1\n HVOs11n Hun!. Bch. Ski! Elect ric: Saw Mr. Luke S•nl• An11 F•b<!rw•re Fry P11n J ack Htll Tu~lin Skit E le<:l ric S"w Toni D•vi• Newl)Otl Beach 11" Sink C11nr"d John•on Lagun• Beach Ski! Electric: Saw Kalhy M .. Hogberg Newport Be •ch u"finisned St>f!lvi"Q Alan w. Forkwood Cos!" Mes• Skil J ig Kll Al.in R. Ba1<1win Cos!• M<ls,o Unflnisnea Shelving Paul Arr.old Costa Mel• Ski! Sab•e S11w K It • Ken~lh Pt:!tll!V lt'vl!W Saker's Rack lrl!ne R. Ziemer Orange Skil S•btfl S•w !OJ Hf!rbetl i::. Ol~•n E l Toro Picn ic: Coo"r S•ra Maguire Newl)O• ! Beat h Ski! S&b•fl Saw 1(11 La••Y Martin Costa Mesa P icn ic Cooler s .. 11y L•n•lng Cosla Mesa Lawn €<1ger Cecil Garrioll Anaheim P icnic: Cooler Mr. & Mrs. J .C. Rul<l Newl)Orl Be•ch Rockwell He<lgf! Trimmer John K. Cora!hoers Coron& Oel Mar HI G"llon AQU•num Set A J. Tk hilvlt Hunt, Sch. Qockwell Gra~~ Trltnm"r w R lcb<! S"n'• An<t Empire Vani!y Rklla•d Wl<lman Newl)Orl Be•c:h +iockwell G••s s Trimm"r J.imes O'Mar" Cos!" Me»• W"'"' Sprinkler Timer B. Benson Fullerton '1" 8 & 0 Odil O.G. Sonnen Sftn Clcmen!e Antenna J . Loeltler Cos!" Meta '<'' 8 & D Drill Virginia Meseme Fullerton Vlt"wmasll!• M'"•!ne Sl11llmi:t Or.inge '•" 8 &•o Drill Bob Ti<1well o r .. nge 'W.h••l!I HiOnd l•uClt. w• R;eh••d~n Newpgrl Beech '•" e & o·o ,"111 Hil1t• P . Co,,ner Ncwl)Orl Beach 1 Wtleel Hand l•uck "''-'n Pllll co~ta Mei.• ~·" 8 & D•Drill r:iav H11rn10ss Co"" M"'" 1 Wh<>el H•nd ~ruck t~ w. /\Pbi~cN>r -S11n1,, An11 fl!l''"' Tl!(>! Kit 5louxrif! Zart11; Coronil D"I M"r 1 Whef'I Hand T'rUc 1t. ~oner! R, Cool Co•'" Me~• Be•nl Tool Kit E<I KeC!lt' Cost• Me~ .. 1 Wheel H11nd True It. '· J M. s1un•k" L,.gun11 Beach 8ern1 Tool Kir Jewel Coooer Coll• Me~a 1 Whee! H•nd l ruclt. E .O. Morg,ln Newl)Ort Beach Berni Too+ KU N. Neal S.iri'ta Ana 1 Wheel Hand Truell waYne Campbell M ldwey Cilv Bernz Tool Kil • E•flo G. Sharman Costa Mesa .'J Wl'teel Hand Truck w .D. Bruc:io Ntlwl)Or l Beach W<!Uer S<1I Mrs. GurtrVOe Allen M i11!cin Vit'i., 2 wnee1 H11n<t Truck Co1ta Mei.a Wt'ller Set 1 Wheel H&n<1 Truck Co1>r11d Peace T.M. Burnes Hun!. Sch. Donna BledlOP Co•I• Mesa W•ller Set Alton Arno1<1 Irvine • Gat. coionr L"'e• Hau~t' Pelnt Founl.,in V""!ll~V Biii Bell WeUer Sal W, Dtvlne coua Me•• 'C•I Colonv !.•!In P;1!nl R.W. !le11mish Newl)O•I Btat h Weller Set F R. Gregory $.lnl• An• ' C11I Co!onv P•lnl fO. Dougl,,i.s Costa Me•a 1•M B•ndlnl SulMH PIU~ f'-r.i nl< R. C.irer Hunt. BCh • G111, Arlcr11fl Inferior P1tlnt Ro" l)omllit'r l<""llUne Hll!S U,,.,dlnl L•wn Sor<:i..t11r F •ort:nce Shil!r Newl)O•t 8each "G"I Ar•<•''' lnlt:flor P"inl MM.V, Arqvllla 1rYl""' •<;Cu. S Bl>O• Gromuicn Mrs. IC .c . Slough If Vine Beh• Plu• ~'•in Artt'nl! srnHh Founlaln Valley I> Cu. S 81Ql Gromulch Anne Gilllg~n Cos!a Me~" 4-G11h Behr PIU• S!1un D,E. t-f""1ens Newl)Orl Ou,,ch '1 Cu. S BllQS G•omulch T. G~ wes!rnin~ter • c; .. 1. Olymp(c St'"i" Johri l.llJ~croll Co51" Mt'~• '1 Cu. S B•!I• Gromu!Ch M"'v" Nav1rro Co••a Mesa ~ G,,I, Glldl!el'I HOU~C P.tl"I J lrn H09"n B1tl1'9<1 1$1,,nd 125• Kellogg Ftr!lllte~ H.A. Sl,.ner "'"ehflin• • Gii. Gtiddr.n Hou~" P11!nl Ooro!hy Gr ol!(!C S11n1'" Ana S 8"0' KellOQO Topper M11rl!vnn M•rtin Coil• Ml!S" ~Gal GHd<len Hoose p.,;n1 Whller Mc:C.ulre Colla Mei• s B""' ..:ellogg Topper .. • • ' ' . I ' .. '· ,- ' I --• ' ~ J<J DAILY PILOT Wtdrttsday, July 17, 1974 QUEENIE · By Phil lnterlondl • Three Jfletfaom ..-.------~~~~~...:..~~~~~ Film ·Prosp~cts Bro.ight Into Focus By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joyce: I wonder if you could please help me find out aooui becoming a f 11 m director or producer. T \VIII be a senior in high sc hool next year. -S.R., Chicago. Essentially there are three v.•ays .to scripl. your future ~ filmmaking: college s tudy. on-job experienc·e , and independent filnunaking. A con1bo or all three.probably is the oph1num approach. COLLEGE mIDY. For a Performing Artl, Washington. D.C. 20666. Choose a 9Chool ·that takes film seriously; one indliC_atioo is the number of film courses offered ~ the more the better. Another ls tht faculty's background: Are thet dedicated lilnunakers, or \\ " instructors of other· subje<:ts who teach film on the aide? A solid film prcigram includes ~s_in the fmancial angle of film production. - to commercial !Ummaking. You oon ~en y our knowledge Of 11 te r a tu re , graphics, paintlJ111 history and music -use fUI knowledge to filmmakers. College study 1lso gives you a ctiance to geryour bands o~ expensive 11-..t m equipmen\. and try your creative wings. on the Other hand, there's a gap between college and real w o r I d rummaklng where conditions rarely are as, jdeal 4s the student has come to e:icpcct in film. • discu..ulon ot theory or . esthelics, it ii possible to acbieve technical proficiency at a very ~pid rate." Disadva tages· as a trainee include t risk of getting ,..,.._,.. stuck ln routine' Jobi -you 111 have to grasp every oPportunity to learn 'from ' expertent'ed filmmakers. Yoo may remain narrow in Your perceptiom or the art in the grind or getting your job done. ... INDEPENDENT FILM· MAKING. Your own firs t p,r o j e et Is an interesting -and risky -idea. Some have 'had mode.ratL success.. with first efforts, but most have oot. Libl'arics are full of .Fair Winners J>ooks wh.ich would help you -list of colleges and urliversities that offer undergraduate and graduate degrees in fil n1. see the American Film lhstltute's ''Guide -to Ciol.lege F 11 m Courses, 19i2-73" ( I ales t editk>fl). The guide is available for $5.95 from the Institute at the K~edy Center f o r The academic approach is desirable because it offers a good technical foundation, as well as the opportunity to learn in a laboratory-like setting v.'ithout the financial a_Dd other pressllrfS common . o N • J. 0 B drERIENCE. 'People -aiw&yi Jiim OOSl. Oy doing. As one film expert has said, "The pressures and pace of commercial r11n1making are so great that learning takes place by a kind of sink.or- •wim shortoot. Altllough there is very little mpent in the make your own filrg. nOn pammes, :r.1arcella SparkS and Karen lifortil-•· "No, we don't hAve any requests. Anti, £rankly , I hope nobody else has!" ((c) 1974. Mc N-a ugh t~-laro, all of Costa Mesa. are winners in art com~ · Syndicate, Inc. All rights tition at this year's Orange County Fair in Cosla reserved.) Mesa. ' ' Proposcil 'Softens' His Girls Jn \'estigatofs checked out the military service.records of • so Kansas farmers w h o appear to be runn ing -successful operations. Maybe you know how. all m.ilitarY men are given tests during basic train- in g. Those tests show- ed -the farm- ers only had one charac- teristic in common. And it wasn't an affection for the soil. strength or even a physical high I.Q. Was mechanical ap- titude.' • A RENOWSF.'D photog- rapher o[ gorgeous girlS" says he proposes to evetj• model he photographs. Trick is to get them to look into tbe camera lens most romantica.lly just 1he way they might look into ihe eyes of their gentlemen friends, says he. So as he squeezes off his shots. he whisPers, ·"You're beautiful. . ( L.M.BOYD ) Will you marry me?" He thinks this does much to soften their faces. WIDOWERS .Q. "If all the wido\vers in this country lived in one place how big a city would thc}I make?" A. It would be the sixth largest nationwide. \Vith a population of 1,834,000. NO SIR. you cannot legally sha,·e off you r v;hiskers while dr ivi ng a car in l\lassachusetts. EACH ~ULE you dig down into the earth -raises the temperature by 80 degrees. One mile down, its 132 degrees F'., average. Two miles down, 212 degrees F:, just boiling. IF YOU are a ' teenage girl who ne,·er ~had a baby, you have one chance in 200 of giving birth to twins. If you're an expectant mother in your late 30s with ~seYeral children already, your chanei!s -.of twinni{lg go up to one in 50. PEARLS '\Vas the J apanese. as you might expect, "Ailo taught the I Northern Australians how tG induce-oys ters to grow pearls. Nov.• those AuStralian experts 1----,are--turning-out-mar~Hized - pearls in half the time it takes the Japanese to do likewise. Whatever their secret is, they're not publishing it. ' YOU CAN housebreak an armadillo, you know. This comes up because a client asks. And asks. also, how frequenU y a pet arm3dillo should be fed. ()lee a day at 9 p.m. Dog food will do. But the litUe beast probably will like milk, eggs, berries, nuts and raw pieat better. JN 111E PROVINO: of New Brwmirick, the St. ~ohns -Ri· ver pours Into the Bay ol Fun- dy over • waterfall 200 yards wide .• And four times dally1 the Bay of Func1Y pour1 bid< Into the St. J ... River over that ,.me -a!L High Udel do It, or coune. Qui te a •!gilt. I'm !Old. th!> reverslble , w•terfall. . Addrt ... ""'" to . ·t.M: 'BovcJ. P.O. Box 1875, New- port n~cclt, 92660. GIANT SUMMER CLEARAN.CE SALE!· PWIH c-. .• '"'"····_...., ........... 100% FORTREL •POL VESTER PILE. MANY TRl·COLORS AND SOLIDS AVAILABLE. LONG WEARING AND EASY TO CLEAN. NOW SALE !!'RICED,,. COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••• $7.99 100% KODEL • I II-POLYESTER PILE. A NEW THREE· LEVEL TWO· TONE PATTERN WlfH MANY. BRIGHT COLORS AVAILABLE .. NOW SALE PRICED ••• COMPARABLE RETAIL •• $1.99 DACRON•ICULPTURED HI-LOW · .......... *""._, - 100%DACRON POLYESTER PILE. A ~LASSIC THREE· LEVEL PATTERN IN MANY. NEW EXCITING COLORS. . NOW SALE PRICED ... COMPARABLE RETAIL •• $1.99 IHAG c...•r .... •11•• ....... .,, .. ......_ ... • 100% FORTREL • POL YEST!:R PILE. ATTRAC· TIVE TONE ON TONE SCULPTURED EFFECT. ·EASY TO MAINTAIN. AVAILABLE IN MANY COLORS. NOW SALi PRICED •• , COMPARABLE RETAIL ••• $9.99 • IST ouaun IOI IUll_CAIPITS AT LOW DISCOUIT PllaS •~SIUCT ROM Tiii UIGIST •VDTOIT II Tiii WIST RIMNANTI SIZE 0 IOOO'sof 'LARGE60% SIZE 0 ' SMALLS I % • IVllT IOLL OF CAllPIT IS MAIUD AID PllCID FOi TOUI SllOPPllG COIYlllllCI 11111; YOVI IOO• SAYINGS . · MllSuaMlllTS. UP TO .. · SAVINGS . UPTO .. •ALL UIOI UICOIDITIOIALLT GUAIAmlD DUPONT NYLON HI-LOW DUPONT NYLON HIRC•ON• ICULPTUlllD HI-LOW ~ 11-100% CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON BB TRI-COLOR IHAG BB PILE. POPULAR Hf.LOW PATTERN 100% DUPONT NYLON PILE. RICH .. i00% HERCULON• OLEFIN PILE iN A THAT COMBINES BEAUTY AND DUR· DEEP OURABL£ SHAG IN NEW · . TIGHT LOOP WEAVE FIBER THAT RE· ABILITY. A LARGE SELECTION OF THREE .COLOR DESIGNS. SISTS STAINS AND W£AR. TWEEDS IN A VABIETY OF COLORS. . ...... ,, .............. ""'"""' .... SQ. YD. SQ. YD. .,..,,,,_ ~••••M •o• '" "'"'' ''"" SQ. YD. NOW SAU PRICED ... SAVE IOW SAU PllCID ••• SAVE IOW SAU PllCID ••• SAY! COMPAIAIU IET AIL •• Sl.99 S2.00 COMPAIAIU mAIL ._, $5.99 .$2.00 COMPAUIU mall •• $7.99 $3.00 ~ HIRCULON11 SHAG KODEL11 DlPLUSH HIRCULON• WOVIN 100% HERCULON OLEFIN PI LE. NEW, BB 100% KODEL •Ill POLYESTE~PILE.A 19 PAmlN IB OENSERSHAClTHAT RESISTS STAINS NEW. DEEP. LUSH CARPET IT~ 100!6 l-IERcULON• OLEFIN PILE IN A. AND WEAJl. YOUR CHOICE OF MANY LUXURIOUS ARPEARAN CE AND TIGHT LOO~ WEAVE ~HAT COMBINES BRIGHT fWEEDS AND SOLIDS. PERFORMANCE. MANY DECORATOR BRIGHT DECORATOR COi.ORS WITH .......... -............... "'"'" ................. COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM. , A UNIQUE DESIGNER PATTERN. . SQ. YD. ............. '" ........ ~ ..... SQ. YD. SQ. YD. IOW SALE PllCED ••• SAVE IOW SAU PllCID ••• SAVE IOW SM.I PllCD ••• SAVE COMPAUILI llTAIL •• $7 ,99 $3.00 COMPAUIU ma1L •• $1.99 ' $3.00 COMPAIAIU maN. •• $1.99 $3.00 ............ , ...................................... _ ................. ., ...... DUPONT NYLON DUPONT NYLON PWIH DUPONT llYLON IHAG -~!~!!!T_CONTIN UOUS FILA·, BB· IHAG ' BB 100%ouPoNTNYLONPrLLEXTRA 11 • 100% DUPONT CONTINUOUS FILA· DENSE. LOW PROFILE SHAG IN MENT N~LON PILE. TH ICK PLUSH MENT NYLON PILE. THICK . DE NSE LAVISH MULTI.COLOR COMBINA· IN A MULTITUDE OF COLORS. SHAG IN A MULTITUDE OF EXCITING TIONS THAT WILL BRING HIGH IOW SAU PllCID ... SQ. YD. COLQRS,_ SUPERIOR PERFORMANCE. SQ. YD. FASHION. TO ANY ROOM. SQ YD SAVE 10.tr SAU PllCll ••• ;uvE IOW SAU PllCD .. • SAVI. COMPAIAIU IETAIL •• $9.99 $3.00 COMPAIAIU mAIL.$11.ff . $4.00 COMPAIAIU mall. $1 •• 99 ss.oo . INDOOR OUTDOOR CARPETS· KITCHEN CARPETS 11yo1i1~ DO-IT-YOURSELF. CUT AND CARRY • 100% POLYPROPYLENE. IDEAL FOR PATIOS. POOL AREAS, PLAYROOMS. AVAILABLE IN MANY ,<!EW EXCITING COLORS. 99 SQ, YD. NEW DECORATOR DESIGNS WIT H Hl·DENSITY FOAM BACK. EXCELLENT FOR KITCHENS, RESTAURANTS, , DENS. PLAYROOMS.' . NOW SALE PRICED ••••. ; • ; •• , COMPARABLE RETAIL .......... ;,., ... $3.99 ' SAVI SJ.DO NOW SALE PRICED ••••••• • • • COMPAIAllLI RETAIL ........ · ......... $5.99. · -• 111·!0·90DITUO111111111 • COllYl;IHI CRl~T l'WU•-11111-.ulE • C.lll lllllflll-·11·-lllMCE • !!$IT DUI CUITOI lllllPll1 llPT. • Calll. COlllllCTlltll UCllll ... 1111114 NO . HOLLYWOOD VENTURA WHlnlElt LONG BEACH wm COVINA MILLBllAE FOUNTAIN VALLEY • 7007 lovr•I Conyo11 2501 E. Ma in St. IStll E. Whittm tml. HOI a.11Aow1r IMI. 2S26 I. Wortuwte11 Av1. 320 El CetniM .... 1SMS "9rHr lt.4. HOLLYWOOD l lYcl, -fl2°2fOQ 641·5041 '4J-Ol6l .. ,, .. ,,.. . ...... 71 ,, (411) ••2-2111 17141.IJf.1700 . TORllANCE I PASADENA C.f.NOGA PARK MONTCLAIR SAN CARLOS CAMPBELL 1122 Viii ST. . -.. 2 .. 232 . 21031 Sh•""•" W•y J47-2JJ4 -.1--- ' • ' • ·1 " 'I PILOT·4DVERTISER W!dntsdai. J11t1 17, 1CJ74 CLOSE•UP Toothpaste 4., Qi\ LARGE\ SIZE HELENE CURTIS "EVERYNIGHT" 4 OZ.SIZE Shampoos- •• ,s .... lem11, Nert>al, l1in1t1r Riise 1r Wil4 Str1wierry! 1oz.88~A. Efferdent DENTURE CLEANSEI Spray or Licht Powder! 11 OZ. OLD SPICE , Shave Cream Moisl11l1l11 Flrula i• R11ular, Menl•ol-or Lime. 2.49 i --; A .:.-::::r:. I -· .. __,. ·~·· . . ;~°'!" • .. ' .... \.~:~~~ ' •' I • : ~· ,, ... r - Clearasil C~M MEDICATION Wo~s invisib~! 1 09 Tinteil or Vanishing formulas. 1.2 11. . • ea. ·Sil· I · . ·. Long & Silky ~· CONDITIONING LOTION 89 }J for girls who "never want to cut their cTJ hair"! De-snil'IS and silkef\S with anti-static ingredients. 4 11. . . . . ..... . '· • MEN'S OR LADIES'- Grec i an-EofmU la HAIR COLOR LOTION • • HIGH POTENCY VITAMIN FORMULA WITH MINERAlS ••• BOTTLE OF 100 5 39· TABLETS Pl" 30 FREE! • • SHELL ~ No Pest Strip *: kills flyin1·insects i1411rs fDr 1p 11 4 Lt. manlb! l . 49 -~ 11 oz. SIZE RISE . . \~ SHave-C1eam Ric-_ 111ist latier! Reg1l1r, Lime or M11t~1I. REVLON . ''Milk Plus.6'' SHAMPOO & CONDITIONER Rich, 1r111ic ltrml la c111~iti111s each str1ltf 11 Nir. 1.98 IOX Of 24 • , \ ·' . . .. . " - " • • - • "' ' \ I JI DAILY PIDT ,, • Wtdnesday, July 17.' 1974 ~.,11001 Job Sac~een Littlefealher, who appeared for Mar· Ion Brando at 1973 Academy Award cere- mony, will do televis· ion tape on interctil- tural relations for Los Angeles Schools. Muscle shirt ' -•'' Machine wash cotton in assorted solids with trim. 6 to 16. Sizes 4 to 7. 88¢ .. ~2/99e Toddler shorts Easycare polyester/cottons and co~ons. Assorted·colors. 2 to 4. -4.49-.. ~ 4 pc; canister set Reg. 5.97 "Clrocker}ilook" canister set in multk:o'or fruit design. .. --.---. l ~ . . . I State -Cracks ]}own-on Bootleg Beef -~ I.OS ANGELES (AP)-The as Los Angeles, Orange, / \.\'hich can prove fatal (or the James E. HiD, 44 , was also Cali fornia Department of Food V~ntur~. Santa B a~r bar a,· elderly or the .~er~ you_ng, tlall . ··p1a~ '·oo ·probation by 8 and Agriculture \.\'ill begin R1 vers1de, San ~mardino, added. lie . ~i<ln t cite any Riverside municipal judge tqr ~racking down on w1inspected Imperial and San ~ego. ca~ of I.he diseases. the viOiatlons. HaU .salCi Hull beef. some of it poss ibly The ~leg beet is too poor tie said most or th e diseased, th~i!1g sold . in in quality to be graded good, bootleggers "buy d i 5 e 1 s e d sold at least 10 ti<;ad of Cjl ttle eight Southe rn C a I 1 f o r n 1 a choice or prime . by U.S. livestock and cows at auctions a wee k to a R 1 v e r 8' i d e counlies, a spokesman say~, Deparbnent of Agriculture for about six cents a pound • convale~nt home and sev· Robdrt J. 11all, supervising inspectors, and generally sells and then sell them butchered era1 ind1vJduals. complaints of~icer for the • for 25 cents cheaper per pound •for 1'boot 85 cents a pound." departJnent, said as many as than quality beef; said Hall. , 10,000 uninspected cattle a year may be slaughtered and sold Illegally to restaurants, rest homes and individuals in Southern California. HE LISTED ntE counties ' THE ILLEGAL beef i<>ld may carry parasites and di~s in~uding tapeworm, f"'OOH'"" poisoning and undulent fever, an incurable affiiction r 2/$5 CLOSEOUT Men's Polo shirts. Machine wash cotton. Assorted styles, colors in S.M.L.XL ;~.~2'l88e· . ... ... . Bikinis -Machine W8sh nY!on in pastels. S.M.L. 1.99 Aluminum skillet Reg. 2.87 10" Mirmskilletwith Teflon II" interior. Decorator colors. ' - A ~11RA LOMA man W88 fmed $3.000 Monday after ~ pleading "no contem" to three coUnts of illegal slaughter, transport.aliori and· sale of uninspected beef. · 44e f>!intihose Sunday is .. Fllt1E>AY in the 1.1.ug;11.11 If por1ect-bo: 1.2961 .. 69 Selected seconds of sheer stretch nylon in · fashion tones. S.M,L. 11.88 Steel tennis racket Reg. 14.97 Strong. lightWeight steel won 't Warp or corrode. 19.88 . Bpgina ' Electrikbroom"' Reg. 23. 97 Small but strong. Easy- empty dust-cup. (62512) ·Prices effective through July 21, 1974 .. ' . -·-• -··························~· . -2/$6 Family boat shoes . Reg. 3.99 eotton duck uppers, cushion insole .• Men's, women's, boys', .. ·children's sizes. .... 3.99 Men's Basketllall Shoes 3.99. "Ice Free" chest Reg. ~.97 No iee needed , just freeze the lid. Styrofoam. HOids 2 six packs. 6-poek size. Reg. 2.97. 2.49 36.88 Eureka canister Rq. 39.97'eomptele with 7·pc. tool set. DispoSable dust bag. (500BTI \ JCPerre; • 123 456. 789 .0· 9 """'"' """"" .. ·---··--CHARGE IT at The Treasury wilh your JC Penney Charg e Card. If you don't have a charge. jut! see how fas! we can open up yQur n1'!W accounl. -~ - • 'BUENA ·PARK , ORANGE ·s.ANTA,. ANA -. .__. .. a, .. ..,.. . 0,..,. Dtlty ':JO to t:JO ..... .-.,. 10 I• 7 ' ,, .. .. City Dr ........ h•• .. ,d. 0,.. 10.t.,.. My.., 10 ... JtOO S.. ........... of le. Cent P'lnil 0,.. 11-f p-ar.ir ~ If .. 6 ~------ •. ~~~~~-~~~~~~~~-~0- , ' • . · • , . -• I . • I Wed11tsday, July 17, iq74 DAJ[Y PILOT J7 ·nizzy Dean--·Mr. Eccentric of Baseball -Dies Sm1 Battles ' - Hawaiiru.1s At Ai1aheim The Southern California Sun and the 1-Jawaiiam, both trying 10 input offensive punch and register first triumphs, meet tonight in lhe Sun's World Football League home opener. =-=::.::....:=-===-=----, - Ex-migrant Cotto11. Picl{e1· I I I Suc~umhs .to Heart Attack RENO (/\P) -Dizzy Dean, an Arkansas farm boy who pitched his way into baseball 's llall of Fame with a · blazing fastball , wi nning the admiration of millions with a downtown twang and zest for life that somelimes made managers pale, dic.>d ea rly today. He was 64. Dean, 'A'ho with his' brother P{lul fQrmed a fea red pitching duo for the ·"Gashouse Gang" St. Louis Carlinals in the 1930s, died at St. Mary's Hospital , A near-capaolty orowd or 40.000 is expect~ for the 8:05 kickoff in Anaheim St.'.ldilim. Jhc SI.in rates i!S a seven-point -li ,... favorite over the Western Div)sk>n,rlval: ,.,_,-__.two_days art£!'' su'ffering_ a severe hea_!'t attack. "1 think, v.·e 'can look ror a lot more polish this week,'' said Tom Fears, head coach of ~uthcrn cauromla-which lost 11·7 at Bi?lhingtmrit in the season-opener last week. t 'We plan to move !he ball a lot more, tiotll on Ule ground and in the air.~· l ~ Coach ~e Giddi,ngs' Hawaiians -were edged 8·7 6Y 1the 'F1oridn Blazers a Weck Oat Tl' Tonight -'"' . -Cla1rne l J:l ai: 8 -~~~~·~-·"'i:;illii;8:iii;;iji;;:;;;:;;~,_-+ _ago..Allhlil1gb-""t&•lotog Flor' · offensive j3tdage, 20l·llS, the llawaiians -coughed up three fumbtes and suffered ane intertoeption. The game features a local flavor with •. Gidd ings •a former Newport Shores resident bnd player Greg Wojcik a former Orange Coast College gridder. The Sun features •former Mater Dei High standouts Kevin Grad y and Eric Patton in addition to ex·1'~oontain Valley Iiigh star Gary Val buena. Th'~ Sun also outgained Hs first foe. 310.22(( but an intercepted pass thrown by Tony Adams resulted in the gam~ wi nning·itoucbdown. · Adams. C.~·Utah State_ star v.•bo . completed . 11 of 23 p_asses and hacf several on-targo.t ,throws dropped , starts • " at quarterback for the Sun. ' His favorite target is Dave \Villiams, National Football Le:ague veteran, Who caught fou_r aerials last week. Ul"I T11..i.o11 14-YEAR·OLD JORGE LEBRON PLAYS STREET BALL BfFORE REPORTING TO PHILS ORGANIZATION. Kermit Jl)hnson, who rushed for 88 ' yards. ancf Jomes McAlistcr. the bonus S t ' fte ft II N l • S babies from UCLA , man !he running po SWr r CC8 S _ ot ll. lJ!! , ee1ns back positions for Southern California. v The Hawaiians. who have been training D ' c A :~.%~b~1~'':r'r~~i;.;;·~~1'1i:Y;F~ostr! izzy s,._ razy n. ti~s To R11ffle Phils' Angeles {tams. _ "'' Starting quarterback Norris W.eese -;:--room-MisSiSSipp; and leading ,,..,,·..----s-=--e-e_me_·. -d=--=-N~e~·v-e~r-to~=E=-"'n'--7.d~-1-~ veru· old 1'erek 'ViHiams frdm UC.Riverside were ~-J • high Ram draftees. Weese's backup -' tonight, ex-UCLA quart.erbaek Oeaois '° PHILAOELPHlk (AP > -Jo rge · Dummit:;._ooce had a Ra.ms.t17out. • . . Lebron is a lf.year-ald ~rto)\ican \\'ho \Veese completed 7 or 15 paStes against EDITORS NOTE: Wt.!n~ Bob Broeg game. 3·1 , unlll he ame a bvrn c:: "doesn't speak English. B in the last few Florida•anct-DerelrWttliams carTied \8 was a youngster in the le.305. he workeCI legend as an overst~ffed baseball • 'days he's been accorded the attention of times for 94 yards. His. running mate, around the baseball pasl:J in St. Louis. broadcaster \Vho fract ured !he langu~g'e a celebrity Jame's Buchanan. has been llowed by a taking lickets aod doing olher chores. He and his audien ces, he fulfilled the second · . . knee lnJ'ury and Giddings mav wait wit.ii joined tbe SI. Louis ' Pest~Dispatch in half of Gabby Street's prophecy, too In order .. the tall, thin. dark_.haircd I ..,. · , . . · youngster signed a contract wit h the game lime to name his replacement. . 1945, becoming Us sportJ editor in 1958. . No one._ 1nclud1ng the , Great One Philadelphia PhiHies, had his first The Sun and Hawailaffs meet for tHe He knew and wat ched Dizzy Dean himself, ever knew what he d say or do. workout in 8 big league stadium and was first lime in league play ·but they are not .throughout 'that period wben Dizzy was a including ;t man he never . cea~ lo exposed to the: media. ' str..rs a~er splitting a pair of pitcher and then a b r~o ad Caster . amuse, amaze or anger. Frank Frisch. H . he t kin .1 11, "J 1 1 r 1 p~son scrimmages. Following are hll jeeollections. pilot light of the Gas House Gang, a ow ts . ~ ~ 1 a · .ee. peace. u • Fears and Giddings kept private any 1 colorful depression ball club of which ~nd·tranqu~. said lhe Spanish speaJung abservations or each other's team.~ , By BOB BROEG Dean was the best and most boastful fif'St..year high school student. "They·re a good team," said Giddings.. • member His words were translated by Mrs. ''I've seen quite a tiit of them and I knaw St . Lol:ll Post-l>ispatch · · Judy Amaro. Wife of Ruben A'maro. the For 'nit Alsoclimd Press Such as the lime at Boston thal Dizzy Phillies'· chief scout in tl)e caribbean 've'll hav~. play ~ ball.~ ST. LOUIS (AP) -Jay Hanna ·'Dizzv" bet .-friend two bits at a crack that he'd area. Lebron is staying wtth the Amaros. )o( ,_., w: h strike out the Braves' Vince DiMaggio The lad from PUerto Rico sat 00 the Dean warmed u~ ror the first time in t e every time up that aflemoon. 1'he eldest F . C • d n1ajor leagues on the last day oI the 1930 · Dil\1itggio fa nned three limes and then edge of a ping pong table in the Amaros' 3llS 3llfl0llC season1 a lean, lanky right.hander with a with the Cardinals leading in the ninth back yard. tossing a ball in the air and smooth, nov.•ing delivery. · inning, 2.1. Vince lifted a certain game. .calching it in a glove as he unemotionally T "" • Ea } St. Loui s ma.,....r Victor Miller. on hand d. f I belt' d the I t answered each question. 0 ,-l'l'IVe r y ;,v Cll ing OU In p a e. l.ebf'OJ1 iS 3 ShOrtStOp Or a lh!rd ... -to congratulate rriana0 ,.r Gabbv Street T F · h' d' De thunder-' at ~ / o rise s 1smay. an eo baseman. He has great range and a for. a storybook pennanl, asked a startled rookie calcher Bruc e strong arm, ~pecially for a player so Anaheim Stadium and Oitv officials are question. Nodding toward the high· o od ski· "Drop 1·1 drop 1·1-oamn =t • gr ow , · · · • : young. He's S.foot·IO and pack5 about 150 urging football fans to plan on anivlng eOO,.-kbonOO, 19-year-<lld pitcher, he it. if you want to catch rie ag::un, dro p pounds. He has good power, ea rly for tonight's g&me between the woridered, "Is that Dean going to be as it." demonst rated at the Phillies' Veteran Southern California Sun and th e good as they say, Gabby?" 1 --1~awaiia . ------Street-smiled:-'"'l-think beis·going-to·be 1'"or mol£h· marbles l!f fried channc Stadium where several of his shots ''We are anticipating a near capacity a great one, Mayor," said Gabby in one ~;~~~D~e !1~~~t'o~m' ·~~~ ba~ =~ r:~e~!:~i:~1i!~ ~~I~ ~:u~ crowd ." a Stadium official saJd./'Ahd we of Ule most prophetic doubJe-barr,eled and fogged," to' use· his .own expression, in Puerto Rico he hit over .800· in .23 hope people will start coming as early as pronouncements ever. "But l'm afraid and then cackled in glee after protect ing games. posaible to eliminate any itraffic tie.ups." we'll never know from one-minute to tbe b f Jn v ' fiis pride ana th e ball game y op.n g . One or the more impressive things Gates are slated to open at 4 ralher next what he's going to do or say." DiMaggio a fou rth time. about the 00" is his emotional maturity. than the normal 6 o'clock opening, and Street should 6ave gone: ioto the Hall of f h led ' Dizzy was capable o t e unexpec Nolhing seems to ruffle him. Phillies' traffic control personnel has been Fame with Dean ror puttin g that one in from the lime he was chopping cottor;t as president Ruly Carpenter, fann director strengthened lo help smooth the flow of the conversational side pocket. Ol'Diz, as tlle son or a poor sharecropper in Dallas Green 'and Amaro watched him incoming spectators. the gangling guy called himself from the. Arkansas and Oklahoma. When a sho\v his stuff at the Vet. The only '\\'OrdS Recommended traffic routes ·to outset, did become a great pitcher, his Anaheim Stadium are Orangewood, career cut short bY'"'8:flll iµjury when he neighbor friend. Jost a son, young Dean from the young man v.·ere, "throw it Katella and state College Jk>ulevard, and should have been just reaching his peak. was quite comforting. He allowed as how harder." to ,the pitcher. He didn't ap- spect.ators are urged to avoid the But from the' time he threw a three-it would be neighborly to change his pear ln awe, didn't get ratUed. Chapman Avenue entry \f possible. hitter to beat Pittsburgh in his first name to the 'Tllan's dead youth. So Jay ~!rs. Amaro says Jorge adapts very . Jianna became Jerome Herman. qulckl y to situations. ''He pallticipatcs Once, 01 'Diz stepped into the Braves ' fully.·· she observed. Angels ·Solve .Indiam With LtiHoud's Homers clubhouse to ti!JI !em ,tic wquld use only Lebron t'01lfkles that he h.:1s been fastballs that day. He did aod pitched a thinking the past few years that he could ~utout. Another time at Brooklyn, he be a major league ball player. lie interrupted Casey Stengel's clubhouse -expresses admiration for 0 a k I an d meeting to tell how ~e'd piteh to every shortstop Bert Campaneris. "because he hllter. And when brother Paul, a rookie. plays very intelligently, and has a 10\, of pitched a no-hitter just after he had pepper." He watched Campancris on hurled a one.hitter In the first gn n1e of 11 tele vision in last year's \Vorld.Series. double header dov.n the stretch Jn The late Roberto Clemente. a national CLEVELAND (AP) -Joe Lahoud hi t a pai r or t\\·o-run homen aod Bob Oliver and Orl.ando Ramirez supplied. two-run singles. leading lhc California Angels to a Angeb -Slate All o.-• ll(Mf'( (711) Jul\f It C•lllornlt 11 C'-""!INI July It C•llforn!a al a11r1.....,.. July !O C1 Utornl1 11 Bltlll!IOl'9 !2l 11·2 victory over the Cleveland Indian! Tuesday night. Oliver's single highlighted lhe An gels' three-run first scoring l..t'C Stnnt.pn and Frank Robinson. Dave Chalk srorcd the hngcls' first run on Robinson 's double. Qdifomi a scorc.-d four more runs in the slict.b innlng. chasing Ind ian starter Fritz Peterspn, 7-5. namirei's s,ingle climaxed lhe si~t_h. Inning rally, scoring Ellie .Rodriguez and Denny Doyle. Bob Valentine scored on Doyle's single and JCamirti crossed the plole In the sixth on a t"hrowing error. E<t li~lgucroa. 2-1. got lhe victory with • • relief help. He gave up single runs to the Indians io the second nnd third Innings. "Figueroa ,pitched '"only three Innings and allowed five hits. CALIFO•NI). CLEV•LAND allo r llrtoi all r ~ffll M.._..,,c1 so J • lo-1n,11 • o' o c1111~. lb s 1 t o Crosby, 1s • o 2 o klle~l,Jb 0 0 0 O EUli,lb JO 0 1 Stanlun. rt 5 I 1 o· k>Nttlo rl J I O FRobfnsort,dh l J 2 I ~dh J 0 0 0 McCr1w.dll 1 1 1 o l h..dll I ·o o o V1ltnllnt, II J I I t Holndrlc-, cf J O 2 I Lehol.ld, II 1 2 2 4 lilTlll'rflt Cf I 0 0 0 "ROHwr.lb ! I 1 1 llllfl,lll 4 0 I 0 Dcherty, lb t 1 t o o.-.n. c a • o t EtAdr9e1; c 2 I I 0 Atllby, c I 0 0 I OOoylt, 211 $ 1 I 1 l""'h•mr, 2b I t 1 0 llarnl~. M t I 1 1 Al"11rl0o, lb l 14 0 0 ,,~ .. ,. • 0 ... ·~"""''*"' 0 0 0 0 Tan..,.., 1 I o I O •-, P o 0 O o .---...... --Wlko•, 1 o o o o Tota• • 11 16 lO 1'0111, !1 1 1 2 ca!lflnli. lOG ... 102-11 C.........., OH -llOO--2 E-11. OJl"91'. tlltlMlon. StMlll. oP-Calltorlll• J, Cl....,.._ t. \.Ol-Cllllonll1t' f , C'"'"41nd S. '11- fl. ~ I{~. \lelt!IMM.--Mlll~-4 110), ll-IU~ 11"-t~ M JI Ill II IO Fl11ucr1>1 J J J 2 1 o T-1'w.._ J•llt ' l 0 0 I t P111«--(i.~"SJJ 11 1 6 J ! 11--11fJJ2tll Wlkil1 1JJ2 01 HllP-by Fl!illtnM (Epl~tJ), t1Y W!~ 11!.i. 11t11roo11. T-1:30. ,.,_.,JN, ' September. 1934, Dizzy b ee fed : hero here in Puerto Rico, is his hero, "Criminy, if Paul had, told me he was a· rii;:ht? \Vron i;:. gonna do it, l'd·a done it too." "l\1y hero is Joe Di~t:iggio." said That year1 alter pred ictin~ tha t •·me '11 Lebron speaking o< !he forine r Ne\v Pnul " v.·ould win 45 ga mes. four fe\l•'P.r York Yankees· outfielder who reti red than the brothers Dean contributed to the from baseball long before Jorge was Gos House Gang's cause, 01' Di z had a born'. ball from the tim e the Cardinals arrived Lebron leaves today for lhe Phillies' at Detroit's Navin~ld for a pre-Series Auburn, N.Y. fann team in the New look. In street clol Dir.zy took the bat York·Penn League. He's noc. going to out of a surprisCd Ti 's hands, stepped ' play much: into the batting cage-1 hit a pilch into the ''We·re sending him 1o Auburn becaosc !!'.!ft fi eld ·seats and said, "Tha t's the. way Larry Rojas manages there and he speaks to do It fellas/' Spanish.'' Arnaro soid. "We'll let hlm- The National Lea~ue·s last 30-g:ime leam and perha ps he'll pla,y a !Ju.le the winner -he had 82 wins over three last ty,·o y,·eeks." sea.cions -leaped to break up a double The Phill ies were able to 1ign the play as a pinch-l'lltlfler in the fourth · youngster bcciru51? tbe major league Nie game of thal World Serles and was that prohlbitS signing youths until they s l tu c k in the h.eld nnd-cnrricd off, are grHuated from high scboo1 doesn't unconscious. Newspaper h e a d 11 n e s apply in Puerta Rico. - the next day told the story -"X·rays oC • Amaro says Lebron is a "sleeper" Oc1tn 's head' sho\'I uolhlng." tiecliusc he has been playing Class A Practicing the gamcsmanShip that-ba.teball , and not 100 many scouts hav lSee ANTICS, Page •II caughl h\1 act. t .. ' , Dean, died at I :35 o( heart failure after his condition bad takj?n , a tum. .fQr, t~. v.•orse Tuesday aftemqon, said' Ed Spoon, ·hospital spokesman. Spoon said-Oean·s wife, Patricia; his brother, Paul , "Daffy" Dean o f Spri ngdal e. Ark .. and Paul 's two children y,•ere at the bedside when the former pileher died. Dizzy Dean and his v.'i{e had no children. Spoon said Dean had "numerous ups and downs" during his lasl 12 hours and had been conscious tgJ.lil an hour .before his death. He was hospitalized here Sunday n_ight "·ith chest pains and suffered a severe heart attack early h1onday. . . Dellll first began complammg about chest pains last Thursday and he \l'a.s hospitalized for three days. He v.•as visiting a friend there and had competed in a golf tournament. " The fun eral and bW')ial will be held in \Viggins. ~1iss., where llean lived. Dizzy Dean ; a.fo rmer migratory cotton picker who claimed he only V.'ent through the second grade. was one of baseball's great pilchers. But he might have reached much great.er heights if an injury had not destroyed b i s effectiveness at age Tl, when he should have Only begun to reach his peak. He was perh aps baseball's most eccentric character since the days of Rube \Vaddell , early in the 20th century. He was·a big right·hander who had a blazing fast ball and bra gged about it. He used to tell the hitters when the fast ball was coming. then fire it past them. He struck out 17 batters in one game -then a record -and led the National League in strikeouts four straight years. He ~n 30 games and lost only seven in -pitching tile St. Louis Cardinals to the National-League championship and \\'orld Series title against Detroit in 1934. No National l:eague pilcheTMs reached the 30-gamc victory plateau since. His brother -Paul. constantly referred to by Diny as "nle 'n Paut," woo HI. Di1.zy won two World Series games; Paul ~·Qn the other two . Jn one of baseball's amazing feat s. Di:zzy pitched nine times in 19 days during the Cardinal s' 1934 pennant drive and continuing inlO the World Series. lfe was voted the National League ·s Afost Valuable Player tha t year. Dizzy's career was cut short when he l''as bit on the toe by a line drive fro1n the bat of Earl Averill in the 1937 All-star game. The Uljury changed hiS pitching motion, which sub5equenUy hurt his ann and fdrced him to depend on curves instead of the fast ball. That.Proved lo be Dizzy's dov.·nfall as a pit,cher. From :i 30-7 record in "1934. 28·12 in 1935 and 24-13 in 1936, Dean slipped to 13-10 in I, - DIZZY OEAN 1937. Sold to the Chicago Cubs for $165.000 and three players in 1938, hi· helped the Cubs to the t93ti pennant \Vith a 7·1 record and started one game in the \\'orld Ser:ies against the Nl'\V York Yankees, ,... -·· ~le turned to baseball radiD and . television commentciry after his career ended. He trlcd bfoadcasting football in 1947, but quit alter just one garn.e. "The only thing I got righ.t was the kickoff," he said. Referring to \hi.: olficials as ··umpires" and ··those guys wcarin' striped pajamas." Dir.Ly said the head linesman ~'as "a .guy \1•ith a gw1 11•ho must be Jo1v on ammunition or a poor shot, because ·, ain't :;een him hit nobody." " · • Dizzy l:kcame famous hver the air with his V.'Ord .. slud" for slid and his rendition of lhe '·\Vabash C&nnonball." a railroad song. 1follyv.•cod even made a motion picture about him, .. The Pride or St. Louis," starring Drul Dail ey. tie may ha\"e angered "English teachers \vith "ain·1," "slud." "throv.•ed" and other \l'Crds. but of that he said. "A Jot of folks that ain't sa)'ling' ain't, ain't eatin'." He said he was "gonna keep on sayin;l ain't and keep on eat in'. And if a gl\Y sluds , he s\uds. don 't he'? Nottlln' wrong v.·ith. that, is there? t'm gonna talk like I talked in Arkansas." , And if the cilizens of Brooklyn couldn't understand 'hi1n. he said. "they ain't gl)l not hin' on me -I can't understand them. either." Dizzy never made more than $25,000 a year in baseball, but he niade far more than thal in his announcing role. And h(' made ~ for .. The Ptide of St. Louis.··~ Dizzy ballooned lo nearlv 300 pounds in the years arter he quit playing. and he once attributed thal to catching up for a!I the food he missed v.'hen he v.·as young and his family "'as poor. After he quit broadcasting in the late ·1950s. Dizzy appeared as a celebrily at t;aseball events, did guest shows as ;1 "rommultator'' on baseball broadcasts as late as a month ago and played ~olf. A fe~· years ago Dizzy summed up hi1nsel f succincUy. "There'U never be ano!her like me." he said. Best Tea111 Aroutad ~obody Beats Dodge1·s But · Tl1emselves~Davis LOS ANGELES (AP) -\Villie Davis has this observation about his forn1er team. the Los Angeles Dodgers: "Nobody beats then1 but then1selves. If they buckle up and play ball they're the best team around. If they get It together ,they'll win it. It's as simple as that: But they can beat UM!mselves. The Dodgers had just committed hvo errors, both of them contributing to runs . Dodgers Slnte All 0-.mtt •• KA•C 1'901 1:2S 11.m. 1:2$ 11.m. 7:15 11.m. 6:SS P·"'· I :Ut p.rn and Davi!l did the rest.. He coll ted fou r singles and a double to lead ~lonlreal to an 3.7 victory OV('I' the Dodgers Tuesday night. The loss v.·as lhe fourth in five games ror the struggling Dodgers, and it Jen them only 6\1: J{a mes in front or fnst· closing Cincinnati in tht National League's \Vestem Division. The Reds have picked ijp..four games in a ~·eek on the Dodgers.· The v.'1n for the Expos 'moved then1 into aecood place in the Easl, l Yt games behind Philadelphia. Tonight Montreal's steve Rogers, HJ-10, and selected today as one of the pitchers for the N.l .. All-star team, will oppose Lhe _Dodgers' '[om.my John, 13-3.._ opeJJl.Y disgusted that he wasn 't .i;elected to thl! team. The Expos opened a 5-0 lead In the tirsl three iMings, chasing 1.()8 Angeles starter Don Sutton off the mound In tM midst of a three-nan second Inning. ll. .. marked Suuon's 13th stra ight failure to get his seventh "'in. But the Dod gers rallied, S<:Orlng thrco .uns in the. sa'lcnlh and Jou.r_ more in the eighth to move into a 7-6 lci!d. In the Expos· ninth. with knucklebal\rr Charlie Hough pitching, ~1ontreal got even \\'hen Davis sin~lcd home pil 1ch runner Boots Day. and then Ken Singleton produced ·the winning run 1vith a sacrifice Oy. MONTjtEAL LOS ANGELf.S ll"tl. 2b wo.,ve,, cf S!ngltlon, rf F11tr1v. lb Woecj,, If Bll!lfy, 3b FOli, Jb Jor9~,..,..1r srlnsO!'I.' Mon!11;~.11 Frl111, ss H""l, lb ll:ff!l<o. o (Taylor. ll Fool!!. c 'torr11, pr o.:i~. pr JMor•le-o, c abrllrttl Hrllrbl •300Lopes,2b J O OO 6 1 S 1 Mofa,ph 101 1 s 1 2 l •ue1b9c~.111 o o o O t 0 1 I McMufl"',1b 1 D 1 1 J o 2 o 811Cl'.n.,.,lf • o 1 t J0 11Wf~n.d 5 0 10 DO OOG~rvty,11.' •1 00 2 t O O l'l'Cr•wtor<l,rl J? l O 50 1D(ey.lb 5 1 11 D 0 0 0 Fl!fll'U'°"' c ) 1 I 0 •O IDRUtMill,t ' lO ll 1000S11rton,p 0000 ••1o z...n~,p 1000 o •ooLacy,1111 10 0 0 1 o 1 o __..Qi,wnlno. p o o_a_ o OO OOJ<11nu1,l)h 10 00 o 1 o o M&~1l,11 a a ct o 0 0 0 o· HCplullf, pl! I 0 D 0 Hollpl>. o a a o o 'tot~•s ..o I IS 7 Tot&ls 311 7 11 t Manire.if Ul 000 011-ft LOI ~es OtMI 000 J ... 1 t-LPl!fi, ... ~rt)Mn. OP-Los A~ I, l06-MDn!fHI I~. LOS. Angele I, lB-W. D;o!Yll, >#, Cr11 ... IOf!I. SF-~lngltlOfl. PB-Fll'r!I-· 1-3:11. A--34,54-1. DODGERS HURLERS 4 ON ALL-STARS • S1\N FRANCISCO 'API -Los Angeles Doditcn: right-handers Andy ?lle$Crsmilh. 10-2, and reliever ~ll~e ~fnrsha!I. 11-4. \\'ert among eight · N!'.l.Honiil r:; n-gue pilch~rs nt1m«I tod ay bv ~1anngcr Yogi Bl.'rrn 101· ncxl Tuelldoy's All·Stnr 'baseball garne ~11 Pittsburgh. Other sclectioas by Btrra, the Nev.· York ?ilel 1nant4i;1er, v.·e.re lert-handerli Ken Brett 11£ Pittsburgh, ·11·6. :111d .Jou ~latlnck or Nev.• York.· 8-G, a!ld rlgbl· handers Buzz Ctlpra of Atlantn, 9-4. Lynn 1'tcGlothcr1 of· Sr. Louis. 12-5, n nd_Ju~ve tlogers or ~1offircal,-m.1Q. • .;J.f: DAILY Pll.Of WE"d11rsday, Juty 17, 1974 !fsp0rt~ In Brief ~ ~-~a11i~' Ca1np Opens; .. f .. ; .. ; H~dl (lefuses to Report :..-! I.OS ANGF.l.ES -The store 01x:ris ror A cro v.'d or 2.100 watchc<I; Smit h bfut 1j:he. Los Angeles Ran1s tod av bul sunH! _ l\lnrlin, 1he 17-ycftl'~ld junior \Y ln1blcdon x:u~1ntodllies will be 1nissing 'tro1n coacl1 chan1plou. J.6, &-1. 6·2, in Soldier F'ictd. .,::huck Knbx 's shrlf. . Fourtl,..set'Cled Eddie Dibbs cun1e bnck !:( S;<!venty-on<.' free tigcn!s und rookies to bcnl 'fon1 .Leonard :J..G, 6-4, G-3 In ~41'C!c SChi.'<lull'd to report for physlcals nl another ri~t-round nuitch. ,i(l ·hospital before ope ning dr ills on Other seeded plnye rs ,.,.ho won flrst- jtf'hur!lday morning at f'ullrrt~1 S111 1c. round'nicttchl!S y,·ere: Roscoe Tanner and i;i.,...~veral veterans "'ere invite-ct to the llamld Jomun. 1'hc s Ix t h. r an k c d "'fif!Vance camp but aren't ~xpected 10 be T:inner bent Troy \Vnllkc. fi.1, 6·2 and there bec&,usc o! the N~tiona l Football &>loinan, No. D. defeat ed Syd Bnll, 6·1, &. Lea.gue P1ay1•rs Association s I r l k c l. -nst the 1eugue. E 'l ~00·1 CXJ><'Cl any veterans \\•ill • <;01•111111011 tl'i11s por1 ," said All.Pro guard Tom l\Iat•k, e . Rams 1>lt1yf'r repre-sen1111lve. Ile };E\VPORT. R.I. -Top-seedf'd ":hlco d'ed Iha! he wasn't surt.thc carnp Hagcv of Sta nf ord Unlrersit y bc?lt °''ould be pickctt'd. UeArinond Briggs of Arizona UnivCrslty, ~· :. 0.1. 6.fl TueSda y ID n1ove into the ·-Dctdl .~ft•ll.:cs quarlcrlinals in the liSLTA !\ten's :OSAN" DIEGO -.Qun rtcrbnck John !lad\ National Amateur Gr Ass Co u rt s"ii.111 Tuesday he "'on't be reporting lo l'hnn1 piD11ships at New1>0rt Casino. "" I F'ourth seeded Dav id Mitchell {)f l.Als Angele! Ra1n!I training rarnp unti !he current strike is sellled . Pcpperdine downed Ste phen l\1ott of Rook ies oJ)en camp toclay w Ith · UCLA . 6·5 , 6·3, in another singles 1natch. \'elCrans schedu led 10 report Sunday. In doubles play, four1h seeded Scott .'~I'm a pa r!. of the associatlon and Carnahan and n.oix'rt \Vrlght. both of the· llii!t's Jt," snid flndl , rcfcring 10 the Uni\'ersity of California at lr\•lnc, beat NatJol'lal F'oolbatl ,League p I a y c r s• Jirll ~1cNalry and Ton1 McArdlc, both of t).!!troclat ion which Is on strike. the µnivcrsi ty of Houston , fl.3, 6·5. Briggs 4'1'1n not going to 00 on the picket line. and Rand Evett of Arizoha, Lop seeds, lhDugh." He is an excculil'e with a San . \\'On by ~ault. ~o' ~velopmcnt con1pany. e ~nriae• Si911s e .t!fle by Dec.~isl011 BOSTON -1'.'lnrvin Bamcs. the 6·foot·9 ·DENVER -Ron Lyle moved solidly Prorldcnce College basketball star •. has inti) lop hcsvy"'eight contention \Vilh a signed a professional contract with the · 16qmi mous 12·round decision O\'er Jim my Carolina Cougars .of the American ""Ellls TuesdRy night a! Ellls' hopes fDr a Basketball Association , his atto111ey comeback finled. reported Tuesday night. ··:ryiere Wl're oo kllOCkdO\\'llS but Ellis \II~ sta ggered severe! times by his much SUJ)nger 'Opponent. .. jl!:JJlarkmaH Tabberl sfANFORD -Bob Black1nnn or 1i\rnols and Vlnce Dooley of Georgia \\'ere 111!111ed Tuesday to assh;t head coo ch Bo ~rmbechh:r of Michigan in preparing tPil! East learn for inc 50th nnnuat Shrine East·'Vest ooll egc all·slar foolbaJI ga me I~ Dl'C. 28. ·"· •.smlt11 ftolHes ;'GHJCAGO -.TOP'sceded Sto n Smith oi.-erca1ne serving troubles Tuesday 11ight ahd won a three-9et match OVl'r local faVorltp Blily l\larlin in an opening ruund 1natch of the $50,000 JnvllatiDnal tennis rcsllval. _\NTICS • • • f Continued From Page 171 made him a winne r on tnc go lf cou rse and at the card table, too. Dizzy stalked out for the sev~n-!h gan1e or the '34 Series, stood behind pitching rival Elden Auker as he warn1ed up nnd hu1nphcd, ···You· don't expect to get nnyonc V.'!lh that crtip,. do you podnl.ih?" In the th ird innlng, Dean , a ~ood hitter. fielder and-. baserunner. stretched a lcadoft single into a dpubl j!. avoiding a su bsequent force play:" and setting up a scven·run Inning lo which h"\?~contributed another single. He "·on 11..(J. Final Ballot Tahulatio11 ,.., "·. F 01· Baseball All-stars ·;. .. -· . • .,. • .",! American League • IIinlile Thi1·d .i\ Elli11s Field SJi~ed to 32 ·' • • • • Edison Downs Lakewood; I ., . Marina-Topple~,El Toro r' . I • Estar1cia Re111ai11.'5 Unll eaten Edison Jligh q U i Ck I y w,!:J"" le~ ~·'l,j"~•,• !'_.', U111vw11~.,.. '' o..':'; 11 l&-lt re versed a one-game losing -...., , , ••. ,, 1 ,, ,, ., l~n11 Beach's Doug J-•-soo ~-1n....1 · '"""'..i11 .. , °' • ........ -. Ron Smith ond Dlll Lee -U11u """" . '-"\I .11.treak In the Huntington _ ,. 'i "-"""'"" INc~ 1111 his lead ln lhe annual West Coast Match Beach Recreation v 8 r 8 1 t y jfn::r, · ~ 1! fl 11 ,, '' tosiicd In thcce R<Jals eoch ID G:in1e Eli minations Monday night nt basketball league while P.jarina t_'tfr.~ ! 2 ! 1 1C1rh11 • o 1 2 tend un beaten Esluncia fllgh Costa h-1e8'l's Kona Lanes \Vlth the fleld Hl..:h contlnued to dointnale ~~n-·'~'llt' f ; ~ 1~ !::;;!:, • ? ! 1~ lo a 7.3 rDmp over Lon~ Beach n·irnmcd lo the lead lng 32. .the l\1eSA·~I t.1nr circuit In Mat::', 1 o 1 2 f:!'.:.,1 ,1 ~ ~ ~! Jordan Tuc!!tay night In Johnson has a plnfalt of 5.354, 3~ uheod acl!on Tuesday nl111ht. Fl~~~:r: J ,f 11 J t~1~~ ' g 1 1 val'slty preu wnter polo acUon of Anaheim's Glen Chrl9tenscn and 109 In Bob Losner's 21 point!! pticed "''"· v.u~~·re •r ~'~10 20--40 Tot111 ,f u ,~ 11 ill Orange Const Co llege. fron t of lrvJne's·Farrell Hlnklc. ~1nrina to Its lop.sided 64·50 LDI A11mno. 20 1A 14 ,._.. •11111e11 c~~J 11 The Ettgles rll n their slrt!ak The bowlers return this con1ing "''" ove r El. Toro at Costa •• ,. (IMIW!ll~l·n~ -: •• a~:r'' 0 0 ·: :2 lo (our straight wins \\'Ith the ?ilond11y for an eight-game bloa with the Ale.'8. ~:;=• 2 • j 1f Nlc~101-w it : J >• JIOOI assault 1v h I ch "'a:J top 16 advancing to the semifinals the 01111 Miii• 1::1 rt pl If \:~~: : ! i ti g~~/' ' ~ l f fin ished of( by n St.eve Wyatt following week. =~:.. t ' I f: ;~·,i:;, ,: ,: ,: ti w".i~~. ~ ~ i ~ st'(ll'C. The competition begins at 9 "'It h a ~~r~.11 ~ -~ i ': Lot Arni::-_,, °"'t""'H"' 1......,. t otfl• tc-•~ 0.::,..,' ,. 51 In four ga mes so far !hi! rolloff for the No. 32 spot bet.ween Sanla H1111111 , :t i • t111 c""'""'' 1 1,._.1 11t1M I• u 11 11 ,,_,, summl!r, Estan cia has !allied M k!.wlc1 I 2 J • c .. 11 Ml" ' H11n1, 111,11 11 n " ~1J Ana's Bob Hand and La Crescenta's ,John w111,n1 o o i .,i n '' rt ,..,.,,.,, oi) 34 ,qoots. Elledge preceding the action at 8:45. r01•11 1, _ _,, °"i~~· 15 !Yr.: ~ I j '! " n ,, '' Edison High finally collected Johnson is averaging 214. g;:o:i1111 :; :~ :: ~: :=;: ~rr:.=.. ~ : 3 ; ~:~TM° f ~ ! l~ a \'l ctory after lhree straight 1. Doug Johnson, Long Beach 5.3~ c..--.i ~ 1s11,• ,. 11 ~.: : ~ : i' 5!;:r."" ~ ~ : U losses, downini:; Lo~ Alamllos 1 2. Glt'n Chrlstenaen,' Anahclm 5,32J AlldtrlOl'I r .,. ) t Wlll1 0 1 0 In~-: r ~ ',i i 5·3, 1vhllc, Rlvtrslde Po 'I 3. Farrell Hlalde, Jrvlite 5.t4l B~ti:-11 f l ",• ",, 1°'11 .. u 111'1Wt11r \':) ,. : : ~:~-f ~ 2 ~ handed Lnguna Beach an 8-8 4. Johnson Haveles. Garden Grove 5.18'1 . e~:.· ~ ~· ' l IK-I , ' • H\ l I) 0 .J Selback in nnother gnme. 5. Btb Weller, NDrwalk 5,182 ~f~'" l f l 1 SK1-;:n'" l i ~ : 01111 w .. 1,..1~1":• (M1 1° 1• • Ed ison's Chargers go I 6. Art Berens, Hawthorne 5,179 Weoo 1 , 1 • v111r1 : J ~ 11 ., 11 " '• balanced sroring In th c 7. Dick 8raa1cb, We1tntln1tcr 5,111 ~':'r,1-3 ~ j ,',J ~~11 l l J I ~~~':. '! ~ J '! triumph. Glenn Dyron 8. ~1ntt Bowcult, Cerritos 5.125 11\'0~.1~ 1: 1~ u M~~I~' 12 14 ll a . J=::011 , ~ 3 :i penetrated lhc Los Al (6al 9. Bobby Knipple, Loog Beach 5,072 ::~~~ l g ~ 1i twice \vhlle Wally Andelln. 10. Greg Pickens, San Diego 5,067 Jo~;\':,; il i! ,; ~ ~1errlll Riley and ?.-tatt Van i i. Terr y Brent, Santa Ana 5.056 J B h T • •~-•v Gwl'-t•·• . C'r0rdon added s.luglc tallies . 12. \\lalt Block, Carson 5,05~ .Algona. eac t•tps,• ~=11.,. ~ ;r l: ::.:!! Laguna Beach wasn 't qult.c 13. Sle\'e Carson. lrvlne 5,038 11 T•r• 1J011 " pl ep ns fortunate. fulling into a tic 14. Bill Phillip,s: Orange S,025 • C011N1 v . ;: 1 ~ ,, with Edison for-rlflh, despite a 15. Jerry Burdick, West Covina S,025 MV· Ma lei• Del FaJ} ;j~~:1~1,111 ; ~ g : :!lix·goal barrage. John Newton 16. Larry Nordstrom, Anaheim 5,0 11 ' -· · M•ccp~.,, l g i * scored twice for Lbe Artists • 17. Joe l\lcCue, El ·Toro 5,oot h ci;J°"''" o 1 1 1 whill! Brian and J>at O'flara , 18. George Vallevienl, T~C:C . 5,004 __ eacl!lca...rallied.....to_outscor1L.-.Jnar1tl.n....&0init..Jnto the-flnaWJr;l;_ ~__j_J_LRob~Rotter-aod-Phli...Morreale- .1 9. Jack 'l'oyer;-Sanur-fe Sp1'1l'i~.f;970 Laguna Beach 14-7 In lhe final quarter. 'I'h•f's when Paclflca TDlll• ""'"~• 1~ 4 20 50 added singleton&. 20. ~ Hartnett, Arcadia 4.967 quarter and hand the Artlsta a wenl to work to annex the win. ,, Loallff' fl " ,, '' 21. Mike Stephens, ~ahelm 4,957 33.31 setback In the Foothill 11:,ater Del W&! led by Mark 1,,.1, ; ~ : 1~ 22. George Shore, Pico Rivera 4,954 summer ba:!lkctball I e .i g u e tfusa who te0red IS, the 111111et> 2 • 2 10 23. Bob Ram irez. Anaheim 4.946 Tuesday night at FoolhllJ me ae Mbaion Vlejo's Mike ~!:MnC• ~ · ~ : ! 24. Tracy Dt:Vusser, HimUngton 4,944 High Wares. tcft~ll"' ' o o 4 25. Ralph Lombard, flermosa Beach4.9~3 In · another Foothill League _,,.,. Dtl c•1 ~~-~ ! ~ ~ ~· ~kj(::yden, sp•,Cleme~tc 4.131 game, Mission Vie}<> lost a er1u11111 1 ~ ': : T1t111 •cww ~ ~:t.<"120 • " -. 1c n ers, am Spnngs 4.931 low·scorln.I{ ~28 dec.ision to F111c,,.,.. l g i : El Toro 11 1• 13 t-JO Pirates Lose 26. Randy Holland, Azu!a 4.922 · lhe hoals coached by ex-O:>ata ~~:i':: ~ ! f , M1rln1 11 u 16 1~ 29. Don John800, Santa Fe Springs 4,909 ?l.fesa High mentor, Be b ~:~i:~k... ,l, '!', l .,1..,. 11~ " ., '' 20. Denny PenlO; Jluntlagton Beacb 4,Hll Sor nsen 101111 '° t•O'I' ' 1 • 20 Wini'• lilrirn c•l 31. John NovCJICh, Santa Ana 4,897 · C ' • Ht lttl,,,.i.!fi"' V1ll~yj :11-73. .tll'!>ll ~ ~ 1 11 ' 1t r 11 nt La Fonda shut out Ward 's Pirates on four hits en route to a -4-0 Afetropolltan. League ba.<>eball win Tuesday night al ~lc1norla.I Park in Santa~· 32. Bob Hand, santa Ana 4.890 . Mater Dei was also tripped ttl• v • •1u1,. t; ,,. ~;;:;11c11 3 3 ~ '! .... ~:ti:;, 1:1 ! ~ ~ g ::a. John Elledge, La C\escenta 4.890 ~~·st!:onbk5:~~ ~roo~alley ~~:uD 2 i. ,f :i:•; ., ... · g : 1 t }~~1.w~~1b i f ! { How others finj!he;d : 40. Br I an · Laguna Beach's Frank ~:~::iv i j t , ~?:.1~n ~ ~ f f ";":;~;1 iri ,: • 00 · g g f\1 cMahon (Costa Mesa) 4,824: ~. Mark~ Wright tallled 1~ and ii looked a.r"t/~r.••n 1f 2 : 1: wi~~r. J 1~ J ~ y't',~r;· ~ 2, ,' ,' 1• Ready (Costa Mesa) 4,672; 77. Nick llkc the Artl:!lts would breeze sc.,.. •v G1111rten 1c1,.. ff owrtlrt 21mmer, ?b Slraggi (Huntington .Beach ) 4,587; 86. when they opened a 24·19 r".!:~~~n viiio· : J 1: ,,:ll ~~\':o,,WOOd jg ll j~ ~! ~ c;i;::1·, D J : ! : f\tike Suppc COsta Mesa) 4,53?; 89. John -'----• ~· ·=-"""iiliiiiii.,-C'a rlilc I Fountain Valley) 4.513; 9(). Chick Romano (\Vestminsterl 4.508 : 91. Robin Lindsey (Costa Mesa) 4.480; !J2. D<1 ve Schwartz (Costa ?Ytesa) 4.479; 94. Ray Fryson (Westminster) 4:434: 95. Mickey Dougherty (Fountain V."Uey) 4,42.1: 98. Jlm Ewing (Newpcirt ·eearo> 4.400: 99. fred Doughen y fFountaln Valley) 4.343: \Vithdrew-D"•ayne Hicks ( M i s s i o n Vi ejo). Tea1n Ten1iis NIW Yont tt/ ...... 11 Wom.,, -Wttdt• <NV) be~t Melvlllt ll > .. ,_ Me" -1111 11'1111!1 b<l11 !~~rfw M.!vtr I NY) •·I, WD<Mn'1 doubfl!1 -Wede TeettU•nh'" (NY) btll lk>1trom·N1wbe•rr !Bl .. 2 . ' M.n'I douorn -R•ld·TIYlor II ) btll Ml~I•· allt_nn• fNY) 1•2. Mllo.ed Ooublet -S•rllant ·T"IJu•rd.., {NY) bit! Bo11rom·W1"'bovs 18J "' A·831 .Jt \Jnl~nd•lt, N.V. lil!U1dtllftl• :n, l"IOrllt 11 Women -1C!119 (Pl bMt.G•ubb (1'1 •·T . .Yen -F!Jrlle (P) bell Ory101l1 F> 1.J. Womtn'J ODUbllt -Klr,g.An!llonV (PJ bttl ·0•110~ Flt mlng I F) l·J, Men'1 Goublll -F1trll1·5te111 (Pl bt11 Or,tdll•· FrothllnQ {f I '"'· Mixed Ooimle! -Fr1t1·Mollr1m !Pl 1)111 1'1111• 8~t•ln !Fl 1·6. A•J,1(1 ti P ftil.Jdf!Ohlt Dtllnr H. tin l'r111c!1<1 JJ W M'llft -Durr IOI 1>->•1 "'""' l!FI .. ?. M•n -lorl'wl1tldt (SF) Ott! P1llltc1" 10) 1-4. H'::'nrn:· doubltt -'Ou"·K•m-· COJ bu! ICIO<·· /~~"'' dDUblt• -l ornn1ledl·McMIU1n CSFI bo11! Roc:ht·Pt l1<111 10 1 .. 1. Mlaecl doUOltl -Mdfllll1n-1C:ID11 !SFI bell lloc:ft• K1•tHl!•r !0 1 1.&. -.., A.l.1()7 11 Ot<lwr. Ml-11 H, Cllvt/111, 12 WDm~ -JontJ (Ml i..et 01/Dor>I !Cl 7 .... 1'1'!ft -RI~~ ICI bel• 1-1 .... 11• •Ml l·S. w.....,.,•, doublts -T~r"Otlll·kllalllu CMl bf.II OUP011t.C.un1cr CCI .. J. Mon'1 ero<lllM -Htwhi·Onvlllloon !Ml bttt M-• Gr•e-r (CJ .... ""l•ffl °""'~' -Or11on1r.Gu"t1r (Cl OHi L1oyG. lioll~ftJ (M l 1... . A·l.711 II Mlnnt Ktll. " ' WOUl.D-'IOU- ' BELIEVE? 1-~Bas_ebnll S-tandings Del Mar reveals Tho1Y111ghbl•ed raciiJg for what it isl . OYER200 HewandUnd r TOYOTA'S IN STOCK ' ., ' MewlsTMTimt'Tol ... · HH)h Ga1 Pric•s LEASE BRAHD HEW J74 TOYOTA Corofl• Jt lll1»0ll O AC --ALSO 52NEW ··.VOLVO'S 1i12·1· 144 a· 1 4~s 164'S· 164 S unrOOIS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY USED TOYOTA PICKUPS 4 f• Clteot• ~ Stttrf 1t s1777 1,,.,,~ .. • MIERICAN LEAGU~ East IV L Pct. GH Bos Ion 48 42 J1.tl B.:'ll!in1ore 41 42 .528 'I Cleveland 4G 42 .523 I ~l!lwauke 46 44 .511 2 Ne1Y York 45 45 .~~ 3 Uctroit .. 46 ·"' 4 'rest Oakland 52 39 .57f Kansas City 4G 43 .517 5 Chicago 45 .. .006 6 Texas .. 4' .473 9 J\linnesotu 43 49 .467 9 .. Angeles 36 51 .381 11 Tul'sday'11 Scores Cnllfomla l I. CIC!vc land 2 Ouklund 4, Balti more 3 f\b\\' Yark 2, TClC3! 0 Knnsa~ City 5, Bol ton 4. Chicago 6. Dc:Lroll o Wtdnet11y•1 O•mo1 T'•~J rrilQllY 11.11) 111 NllW t,ork JO°?"°" 1·11) C•lllOl'n • 1111,.1er 1,,, 1 • c ¥1l•lld J. Pe"r •·TJ 0 1kl'11G {8111<1 ,.,, It ll•l!lfl'lllr• fCt1tll1r !l.J DOl lOft (M~rtl l l or Wit• l·•) 11 K1n•ll C!IV fP~nln '"'l Mllw•u~"' 1c111DOrn '·!I " Minnow•• l~orll•n ~' Oe!rQll IFrym~n ~·~) 11 C~l(~ I 00<1 l·IU • T~11r111v'1 o~mn O•~Mlld If Cltwllfll MlllMtCHI 11 Qfltol! ~"""* c11111 Ntw vor-. '~'on or •••• Only t •mn 1<1'1'11dul~ NATIONAL LEAGUE East w L Pel. GB PhilAdelphia 46 .. .SI I 1\-lonlrcal 43 .. . 494 .. . St. Louis .. 46 .489 2 'Pittsburgh 40 .. .4'9 511 Chicago 39 49 •• 443 • Ne w York 38 "° .432 1 Wesl Dodgers 61 31 .001 Cincinnati 55 3A .591 6\1 Houston 49 <1:1 .5:13 12 Allanta 49 45 .521 13 San Franc!~ " 52 .441 2(1'\ San Diego · 41 55 .421 22 Tucldey'~ Sctlre! Pl U!hUrgh 6. lfou5ton 2 Chici+go 7, 'A!lohtl\ 2 Cinc!nnntio 12, St. Louis 7 San Dl<'go 5, Phlladel phin 4 ~lontrcol 11. Los Angeles 7 Snn Franc!sq> 9, New York 4 w..i.,.t11y'1 G1,,,_1 N~w Vert (SNVl!• 6•4 or Aood&c:1 2·~) ti Sin F r.,l<h(O iO'Atq~l~•o 1·'1 MoodM Wl!Mori 6-4) 11 Plrt1tou•t h {Olmtrv M or Rllllll 1·1l t°llf( "llO ., Atl.ln11 IC~or· •·•I C:~.~,_.u !T. Clrr~I 1°') ~·SI. Louis !FOl'l(fl l·I Of" Cu I 1 1·101 P~11~191111 CL~ 11·1) 11 Sen Olno (JMft 6·13) Monrr111 !Rijg1fl 10.tGI 11 LOI l\J'lttltt CJD1111 U.J) -- - -· Thrilling! Colorful! Exciting! Challenging! And the .largest spectator sport in America! Jf you've nevcr,.bcen to Del Mar, you're .1c::illy niissing son1cthing. America 's most popular major lcoguc sport , .. and wilh good rc:uon! Be sure lo plan n day at the races during Del Mar's 43-dny season, starting July 24. J( you've never enjoyed a day at Del Mar, you may be surprised by ii$ beautiful selling. Just a ~tone's throw fron1 the Pacific Ocean ••• nestled in :i pleasant volley. Expect a sunn y (but nol hot) holiday. Jn n setting of lake,, fountains1 palm trees, fl ower~. -And the nrchitec tur:.il .ftavor of old Mis- sions un<l paluccs. lvuybody Go11 l Who goes 10 Del Mar? Almost eve rybody. Burt Bachu rnch and Liza Minnclli. San1 Johnson and his sister Muriel froru Duluth. Sou1hcrn Californi a's leading citizen1. Visitors frcm 11Il over tho United Stnlcs und abroad. They come because they Jove beautiful horses. They're lnlrlgued by an atmosphere that's both ex- citing and rclnxln1 nt the :uune time. They enjoy meeting friends or m:iybc CAtching a glimpte of 11 fAVOtitc SUlr. 0tJ1ecause th~y ju1t kn9w it's their lucky doy~ • ' But riiost people do find it challengi ng bec:iuse lhcrc :ire 50 many vari ables lo consider. And your ~I is u con1n1iln1cnt 10 :1 spec ial horse. Pcrhap1 it'!I 1iys involven1ent and the influence of an excited crowd that causes the nicest, most charming people - to suddenly go a little crazy With cxcilement at th e finish of eve ry race. 1 Expen1lve? Not at all! Jt takes less than S5 to find oot if Del Mar is for you, General n.dmisslon ~ Sl.75 . (Seniors, ugc 65, urc welcon1e wcekda)•S for just SI.) Parking, SO¢. A progrnn1,.25.¢.-1tinimu1n bet,.$. ____ _ A shAdcd, theater·Styl6 reserved sc>1 t is :in extru SI .SO. And, of course, there ure snnck bars, cafc - terlus, Jounacs and even closed-circuit television of 1hc ruccs . • Sl11t1 July 24 Remember, it ull st nrts July ~4. and continues throuah Sept. 11 . Nine races duil y. Post time 2 p.m. For re serv11 1ions or 111orc lnforn1ation, please call Del Mur Thoroughb1ed Club, (714) 299·1340 or (71.4) 755.1141. ·You don't hlYI to 11111 lll1 lh1HI II.,.,,, l#tUMe _,,lit., 01-11 .::it all to enjoy Del Mar. Oamblina? You don't have 10 wager I • • • 1 .. -----:-;::~~--:·-~---_._J . • l • Los A lauai tos Blacki e8 -Racin g .Entries Posts Win Cletr tr.ck l'ftl. l'!rit l"Ml 714S p,m. II •11cU Pl"! 111(1. I• l!~l<ltt Oii ""· 1111 I ... "" Ille ... l'llllT ltAr.R-'OCI VM<h. • vtor old 1•11lde!\•, Cl1lml119, p-1000, fllllMIV Mlk.,. fMVltt) •l•lrlon (W1H<1r ) '"' C111l1 Kid IC11rdot1) Vncl• Tonv lHort) &rid Do Viti• (Cle•lutl Nickle Jld Ul1nll.i) B11r Mt11 0&1 IMer.u<1.i lieltty Oolddutr l llrooli~) Vin Oldo Ill• (Ar1l1~) L1dy lumlg11 ILlptiarnl Al•ll l!1j.ibl1 llto1! Diiiion !Cl1t1!~M) Wlndv $o0!1 (l!ltook1I Ml', SP!lld COllnl ISml!~I et11·1 Fool CCtttOG•I ·~ "' ·~ "' ,,, '" '" .. 1. "' I" '" , " "' '"- SRCOHO ltACl!-J~ Ylr!h. J Vtlf old1. Cl1lml119, Pur11 lllOO. C11lmln11 price 11000. Sport1119 A"91I ILlph1ml . Sl-c~td DK~ 15"'11111 · lllV D•1c;on l tr !C•rdou) Ton. Rtbtl 4Cltrl-) Mu1 Tl11tr lltrtloQHI SMtkl ~ (M¥1HI $~111 ll OWr IW1lk1trl Ewertfl• II• l!IOb !Brooks) Miu Go Rhoa1 (ll1n~1l 111 "' "' "' "' "' m '" "' THl•D llACl-d Ytroh. l y ... , olds & llll· Cl11lmlna. Pu• .. 12:100. Cl1lm!n11 P"k e '3000. The Cll••l~I Wdghl Sure Ai Al tllllllolml l lghlnlnQ 11111 (W11MN1\ \Vhwll1 LOii tHaru WoncMr Ho• !Smflll) Ch1r11l119 (hl•lle !Wini) "' m "' '" '" Fisl1 Repo,rt C111t N'Oulc.k (BrooluJ Ill Blackle.s c ont i nue s to 0·01.i CPt1111J 11• dollJinate the Eastern OivJsion FOU llTH llACt:--400 v1rdt. 2 v11r 9f ~ Costa 1.-fesa open ~r.1,:i~~'' :1nr. PIJl'"w tt7'00. 'summer basketball I e a g u e :1: F~~'!~f::.18V ri.. s.i itt .following Jts slxth win against t:'~ 't\~1,c 7l~~!:i~,1 :~ one defeat Monday evening nt l lm11, llr11toff IWthonJ Ht Estancia High. TIOH bv 1111 Tt !I lC•tdOltl !:t2 M!H H•mmlt (Word) 1 tt Steve Sabins and J e r r Somer,_, L.vc•v (Mvletl 1'2 • Old!• But GOOdle i111001u1 nt Cunningham led Blackles with. S(:orp, Flyt (Orev•r llt Conctio 01nc1y co1n1J 119 26 and 21 points as Blackies Al•t I Ut llllt 13 . ( h If(' Htv Juu• cct•doaJ 11, overcaroc a ·po1n a 1me f~f!;'1~0: 1b~11y1~~t~11 :;: deficit to post a 76..fi9 victory 11..-11,~1"9 Ann 1w111$0ri) 11t over Red Carpet Really , Jn a companion game KiCrulffs remained a game <lff ,_, I B ackies' pace with a 77-71 "' '" ..-112 '" "' "' '" "' "' . triumph over Orange Coast CoUege Alumni. II ... Ctrll"I (0 ) •• ' ' ' . " • ' • ' ' , " " ' ' • • ' 2 , • " " " • ' '1: • .. " " " " ' • • • ' " LOii Alatiaitos El Nig uel Golf No tes _Racing Results Ann Teel and Jackie \Vatsoo were the low gross and low net winners in A fUght Of a tournament at El Niguel recenlly. -TwW•v, Ju" "' ttH Cltar, Tr1c11 '''' l'l•'T •Aci! -llO vardt. 2 v•~r old M~I.....,,, P"rflit •JJ«I. (l.o C•mp-n Go (Wotci) Kl<W>lcltto I KnkU>tl Tr~c Jtl IMylt1l Tlmt -11.IJ 19.00 11.60 6.DO 11.00 i MI , .. AllO rtn -Lfdv Tr11~. Pltntv F1>t, !<~J"• MOVl"'1. St..k• M Down, No Dicey, Tuff EIYll Sc•1lchld -GIDdt 8ouod. Mht P111llmu, Go Min's l'r!dl. Cool rt 81Dy • TH tlU> ltACE -\.s-9 v11rd1. J Vt1r ol<I$ & Up. Sll•l1r1 tllow•nc:t. l'ur .. ... ~. l,t_M CH (Ptgel HOitry Vin 111 (Htr!I Allru!tlie /l 1nk1I Tl~ -27.Sl 4.00 l.«1 2.•0 1.:ro J.ol(I • •• Al!IO r1n -Mt•• A Grits, lt\in Moon Run, llr11<.to•f1 No i.cr11ctie5 FOU•TH Ill.CE -.00 vards. 2 Ytlr 0111•. Allow•nc•. PUl'l,f u:roo. Pl•Y SUst11Jt CCrt~1r )1l.OO U.80 1.00 MorJet l l lptwimJ •.DO J.70 Tt.9 Am1M1s11<1or (Mylttl 4.<11'.1 T!mt -211.» Also· ~•n -Jo. Moon Too, Rocker Ove, Oeckl Jal, Sun1hln1 N Flowers, Record Charger, Pletd To l!Yltr No scrttctw.s Old1. Cl•lmlnt. Purw uooo. su,..,_ (llOlllml 1.«1 2.IO 2.40 Klp.arco {Jmllll) 1.00 3.00 RocklllQ Dick (MYlff) ,,10 Tl1n1 -20.SI Abo r1n -Fr0tlt0 Dolt, Rr•I P1rto1111, Un Ancl Only, HaPPV Ef!O\IVh, T11r1 MOOn. Scr.icMd -l!lo lllobby -........ 11 •XACTA -J.lllPfrltl'I • 1. I• l(lp1rco. Ptlll iM.M SIVl!NTH Ill.Ct: -lSO v1rd1. l v11r olG\ .. up. CllHHild 11!ow•nc1. PUU.f SSOOCI, Thi S1n11 1!11rtl.tr1. An!elot11 Ml~• !C1rdn11J3,IO 2.«i 2,70 C1rt1r,1 O.ndv fllpli1m) t . ..0 2.20 Vllut A~ !Smith! 3,60 Tl,,,. -17.IO Alwl r1n -Fir" Shuf1!1, Mr. Three Wlr"-OM llold l!lrOld. MIClnlght 81eky No ll<:•~lcllll • l!IGHTN llACI! -3SO Yl•CI$, s vr1r olds. Allow1nc1t, PurM 52300. 0 \111 Ml•s ll lpl\tm) 1.00 4.60 2.60 Mr. '"'-1 Splt\11 {C•tllelrtl I.Ml ).00 MOM Yin MIN (W1rd) 2.20 Tlmo -11.111 Als.o r1n -KlptymykMI. Go Jollt , Go · Sc1r1w1v. lm~••llWIY, Deir Oii Girl. C1lll1 l"lrker. Our Pr1rog111ve Scr•lfhtd -Qllte"6 Row IS RJICACTA -6"DNI Min & t-Mr. Moc.II Spl11J1, pall 1112 • .M Teel had a score of 86 and ,Wal;son 's low net was 74. Second low gross in A flig ht was Gerri· Cini with 91 , wh ile Ann Wright had second low net with 79. In B flight , Pat Iverson won low gross with 94, followed by Pat Francis with 95. Low net laurels \\·ent to Judy Eriksen (73), Dorthy Heacock (76), Alma Ralston In)· and Charlotte Lowe and Midge White (60). Virginia Blacker was the low gross winner' in c night with a score <lf IOI wilh Kay Bauman second (103). Lo\Y net was captured by Elsa Wise (76), followed by 1'1..erle Ferry NINTH 111.ce -.uo v•rlb. 3 yeir (80) and Lemmie Emstthal Ollb .. \Ill. Clllmlng. Purse "900. (80). Tff!'lbl• Tlnt:y D flight low gross a..~oors ICr1-eeO 101.00 34.411 12.20 llV <:wnlc ocn10M) t.20 s.oo went to Eleanore Barrett with "~~ ~1~\1Ctrdei•J 2•90 111 with Dorothy Levy second AllO r1n -Ft"' RYt1111, You R1sc11 with 112. Nadine Thomas was v°"'. Third lma.ve. Geronimo M1yor, l..n I Olvl'™'<!'S lllr, Count ()f H()n(lr. Rrddy t,11"' OW net Winne r With 00, w 110 • 'Collowed by Mary Kroman Tr~a1d1td -R11n ltObtlv R11t1. TYrlv' (83), Jan Mahaffey (83), Kay McChesney (84) and Alice IS l!lCACTA -·2·Tlt'r1111• Tlllll'f &. 5-~f lo FIFTH •ACIE -549 Vo•at. l V••• Cumlt, 119lcl 11116.M 2 ll olds & up. lnv11a1lonal. Purw MOllO .. l ----'-----------~~----------1 Parker (85). TONIGHT'S TV HIGHLIG¥TS NBC 0 8:00 -A New Ball Game for Wlllle- :P.fays. Jack Kl ugman, who plays a sportswriter on The Odd Couple, narrates this hour-long tribu te to the recently retired Giants and Mets star. . KCET !Ill '9:00 -"Young M~rrieds at Play." Two maried couples conrront their unrealized dreams in the Hollywood Television Theater drama with Arlene Golonka, Tyne Daley1 Seymour CUsel and Lawrence Pressman. · ABC D 10:00 ~ ABC News Closeup. This documentary explores the health services fo r child~ ren or poverty.level families. TV DAILY LOG _ aotta, Jd: Soo, fir ..,...,. 1 ~I The Tl\ClrOU(lhbred Jockeys tnvll11rlonal. lo .................. -.......................................... -.. ~ ~ American Oream , 0--,-1Cal'l\9ffi t .Oll •.eo 2.IO l • A-SPOiied 8•r Bull (M.,;•) •. 20 2.6(1 Paramount Sports Gve,.gl~in<J in 5ennu Wed.nesdoy Two 10111ty 11.,..r-o1c11, wtio ~!t lhn1u1~ • collep ~per Id -Evening sll111 • ~ ll!.IC:!tl...~ iDin '°":~~--1 ptllir tOtiatrt -IM pri 11nnf111l ' "' "' "' t 11 Marbl• Man !Man.) 2.eo Time -27.0I ~, tp Also ran -A·Accet1r1te, W•nll Go, 1 JU1;!ik<1 Pa, Hv 01vy. Ovna90 en, S 10 Uncle R\lf1,11 ~ 21 No KratcfleJ I ~ A-0 . Wayne Lukas 111d L. E. 2 " P•Ut<MH'I entry 17 11 SIXTH llACE -.00 Y1nls. 3 )'tor .-Grunio1i Run Ex pected NINTH llACR-3Sll Ytrdt ... 3 .,.. •• old1, Cl1!mlll!ll. ('lll'W IUIOO. Cl1lml1>1 price 53000. Grunion are expected to hit Soul.hem Cal ifornia beaches again th.is week with Friday 119 beginning a fOur·night run of and 12:18 the f<l ll owing morning. There is no limit on the number that can be kept-but only the hands can be used to catch the fish. Mllesflc Jr. (Cre-r) While Fron! I Kn!v~t) MY Piiie Moon (Drey~) l!ltll&'• Sh1dow fM&rll F1mllv Fight (ll11n~1) V8tlev lleeu fCJer11 .. 1 8e!lertJy (5m!th) Rtd Rf .... r Rusty (PIOt) Get H~ppy (CordOZI)..;. "' he 11' · t nocturnal species. 11t Friday's schedule is fro1n "' 111 9:45-11 :45 and lhe two hour 111 runs for Saturday, Sunday and "' 119 Monday begin at 10:34, 11:22 Any. person over the age of 16 must PoSSCSS a valid fishing license. General SPRINT-JET RADIAL. A vailable in sizes to fit most import cars. The General Sp ri nt~Jet .features a radial rayon cord body for strength .••• rayon cord belts for long mileage ••• and an aggr~ssive siped tread for traction. AS · LOW AS $2895 Fits :Fiat, . 5;,. ,.~, " .. :~~ :,:~:,:h plYI 51 51 Ftd. Ex. T•~. . . SIZE AEGl.Jl.AA FED. LOW PRICE EX. TA){ P'lfl THESE IM'°flT CAllS 15SSA·13 $29.95 $1.60 165SR·13 $30.95 $1.78 155SA·14 $30.95 $1.71 Alfa Romeo. MG, Toyota 165SR·14 $34.95 $1.89 Mercedes Benz · 175SR·14 536.95 52.07 Saab, Porsche, Alla Romeo 155SR·15 531 .95 $1.83 Volkswagen, Volvo, Saab, Renault 165SA·15 $34.95 $2.02 Triumph 185SR·15 538.95 52.20 RAJN CHECK· Should oyr 1upply o! •ome 1lze1 or nne1. n1n •llort during lhi1 e~nt, wt wl11 llo"or_1t11·ord1r. l1ced now ~u!lms cteHvery et the t d"lnl1ed prlct. ee ~elt Radials FACTORY BLEMS General DUAL•STH'° RADIAL , •ifwosteel belts •2-plyradial con11trucUon ' HIGH SPEED WHEEL BALANCE O~ YOUR CAR SflE ' IR7i=ll • SllE Dl 7 ... 14 . Sill &171-14 s2so ·~ . EA.·~ ' Limited Quantities! Give yo.urself a. brake ... fncl\ld0!$ W.;ghts MoSt cSi s11n111ra ~· , COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE ' 9 5 ::::i~an cars SPECIAL OFFER! wnH IVUY TEHMIS lAC9UET MCHASED THIU JULY JI, WE Ml. ... DONATE Sl .oo· TO THE ~ MA.1101 HIGH SCHOOL. 18t'IS TUM! ........ .._."MiooloM ........ ....., EXPERT STRINGING Ind REPAl!':S! 333 e; 17th St., Costa MHa (S.n1na '"' •-na!.,..,. HOl/Wo! Ptnct~t$I ~ PHONE 642-6886 Mon., T1>11•., WtO., f!lufS.. SI!, H . Frc M . &ll'l 11·1 Fits 9 out of 10 IMPORT CARS! General DURA-JET. • 4·Ply Nylon C:ord Construction $ • Long Mileage o uragtlO~ Treacf R\ibber 00 • Sharp Whitewall For .Today's Look SIZE 560112 • S11:e 560•121ube_..n<i_, Dluo '1.611 Ftd. Elo. tu . llr9•• lillH ...... ~ti ~11118 pr!~··· . EXPERT FRONT- END ALIGNMENT Includes setting Caster, Ca m ber, Toe·in, and T oe-out to manufacturer's specs ... Safety Check & Road Test. ' .1. loit.il HEW llN'J dlly ... oo II 4 · ~ Extra charge !or larger o r air conditioned cars. setting torsion bars .. , and par'fs if needed. -·' 2.•tWdtt.c~01tal_wfllHk! 3.llH<lllo•• ..... hffTy..,-. fWd. . 4 • .,. .. -. .-. ... .... s. ,.,. ... .,_ ......... ..... ···-k---.... 7. A .. t _... wl clilfP: ,.,,.., ...... ...... '"',_.... , .•.. USE GENERAL'S CONVENIENT AUTO-CHARGE , PLAN no money down ••• monlh1 10 pay 'sl ANDARD & COMPACT ~MERICAH CARi ·s 9nly 1095 Charge it at Genera) , GE NERAL TIRE CiiST GENERAL TIRE 58~ WEST 19.th ST., COST A MESA ....OAIL Y 7:30· to 6:00'-. . . 646-5033"-"'540.5710 • • • JULY 17 lllnm. 1---. ''"'~IEll!IE!ll -_...,.,..,,,_,, Ml ~(i)('i!l})J""" .. , ..... (COlll) '52 -Mujoriti liil'I hMlllll Co111'd ftOll 4:30 Mai' l'lrey IGlbfide.. • PM. Anrtls vs. Clmil•nd lndlms. ..... C.. I Mii ....... ,.,. I::::.;·,=.. ....=::... .... ~ Mbl!M: l..,...;Me thl oa.;ri-(RfC.-lllc:oMl .. Miii 5'1111 lfllnesil **-• Ille Muillt Mt. D PIM Clmllz Soulhtni Cllifoniia 1M:11rt. wllill !Ito CJj lllljlf t..,_ lls9al Cont'd liml_11.1 n ·OIXI WMlp r....:· I~ 4:30f'M. 00.land A'1 vs. lllti· D QI m l lC W••111ilr !il'"°ri:M.t" iilwil: (llw) .,.. "'1 Wiii"' (R) C*') '70--«,lft Dolfai-. RoOelt 5"" lldf Mitchulll, RidlNd WldiM"-LILI Al;o l:JCI (i) Oult(1 a.Ice bript, Siiiy FleW, lllMfltrie Jot.. 1 Olct V• DJllt lict, HMrJ Clfey k . .._..n " & Mm Crlffhl aw •qon tr1i1t .,...., tor tilt Ont• Ill"~.'..'.,"""' COlllltly in 1843, &tnlule to _.. fll QJ Cl. lllOUltl 0¥lfWl!tllnill& olllfldla, Tiit """'" (I) Tiit .... 0... . n.. .w-t..... lliJ ..... (C) (2111)...,... .... _ LIUlt laKMI ftlllln" (com) '65--«ock ff~ ,,., 15:.n om m-"" "''''""'" · ......., hr w.. a c.n.. .. Mwili: CCI (Zlw) "Duby" (wa) l)jl MNI: (C) fllll't .,,_ k ', It M111jhy, M1ri lll1nclllrd. CUlcl" CoAcl. (drt) '55 -hlll I Jiwlltr Hewman, Jtattllt Wood. WMt'1 MJ Lile? m....-, ....... 'lllliM I l.M tic, "Younc Marn.ft 11 ,.,,.. (R) k · II T .. A lllid ltM GolonM, T~ Da!J', StJm111t " Ill I "" ... • 11 Je•le Cnstl tltd Ll'llrtl!CI F'TmllM1t ltll' IMitr in lllia dr11111 about two IUfritll (j) DrtPlt couplls wtlo confrallt tit* ....... .... : (C) I~ "'1\t .......... !ltd dtums. IN) '51 -Robt rt M11thL1111. aJ &c.urli ..... ' Ln .... WedM t:U al CMrM1 W M"Mkllf.. .... ~""""......... l'.JOl -lwwwj ..... --, ,.. tlllHIJHIJ-._ I 7:JD I""' htilc c... Lolli Ii ~ly Ri¥1f" (II) Si1n .-, ...._ •• ""-' • blr1 Allin 1uat1 as 1 JOlllll P-SJ'" Wik DI y.., r"*"' leb .._. choloti\t wtto SHb l(o!U's """ Miit 'hr...._... whl11M:r pairoltl-lllnCM ._. ... i..f1 li6MI A Dell with I llilll IR his blod ..... • ' ...., 11111-.... old ltOfl. " _,_,IClt•~I -· Imm-: " s., ......,. .. (drl) '56-Rock ,.,,,..._ Hudson. Conte/I Borchers. @ {)) GB UC ..... a..8111 I Nlw Price h llf&M An lllWSl,ttillft Ill IM ~ ter• Thie 1111 vicn fot dtlldrtn wlloM ftlllilill tll T• Ttl 1M Trttll find II difficult Of lmpoAiWt ill f"I (I} ...,.,._. '4lllfll for m•clitll urt. i ....... lli "'•••- """-DtMr PIKts Slnafn'" Am1t1w bl111anu POUJi9 ~ ...... trt showulld. • 1 Mc:il Slrftll fD Male If :tit ,..,.. "Pid:in* I TM CllMI ... l;rrlht tM IM CWi 1:00 <9 (i)J ((} .. ..., Ori.... 110-JO ""11t: (C) .. ,.. """ '""' an. Jin11111t W•lkt1 (Good Timas) 1 ,,__.. (a>rll) ~ 1nd Sh1ri lewis 1utsf. RHd, OrlOll Wtlltt. ta.al Miii. ' OBESTIET: . I "'-* Bell SyitemSpecial ~_c:::........., "A NEW BALLGAME . • FOR WILLIE MAYS" It • ~=h• ·o @ ooa m rnmm •11:00 ~og m-,.,. ... , ....... Wfllit ...,. )lck Ill fl (i) ... kl~1rr1111 is hast 111d 11rr1tot of If !his doc1Jmtnl1ry on Willi• Ml)'S, ffilllt 11111fJ lht 43·)'tlr-(lld HSIJ He1 ltlcl," AlllM Mdact ,._ who retired 1s 111 1diw basebtll ...,.: "llcNt v.t.N-.... pl1Ju ihtr.22 ,.1rs willl tM :.-'~Ttytor ..... ~ Yoik/Sln Fr111ebco Gitntl 111d Ntw Im"" -Yotk Mtts. , fiii $11111 D MIN: (CJ ('90) "re fW A Y!J.11 w Mllllt ..,_.._1n outdoor tr1vtl ·film ( !,.l)J DI,..... with !ht Jtrry 11"'""1 ltlltily. 11:15 Cillm J4 o @[l) m"" -..,.. u"' t!ffl (IJI was ,.. -Remounts' (R) Cim1T1V11 fHls llU· tihl llMpill& Ctr ......,... mili•ltd when 1111 U.S. CM!f)' n · (mys) '6&-Yva Molllllld. a-. f11S11 to bllJ lht ''wild'' horM ht 1· nont. · c1plured ind 111 is IOl'Cld to rttYrn fD@ lliCD.....,C.... the 1nim1I lo •n lndiu chltf lrom F~fllcMn .* whom itw1s stolen. Mlwlt: .,...,... (dn) '51• I Ottler's CMict M1t1 Powt11, Todd AldflWL .• • • S111rttt M'"1.,. G @(J)&I WW. W.W ...... Ylrilty : "M1nlyn R1111emblt'ld" . cmmc-~""''n ""'~:' .... -'lllllo .... plor1tion of Ille con11ov1rsi in Hew (wa) '37~111 Altry. • Jt1se7 IWtr !hi l111d rrom C.pe M17 MM!t: "'latripl" (mys) '!l~"."'f 111 Glouwttr Coun!r--l1nd Ille ecol· R1rt, .luM HMC, l• °W • otlst1 w1nt lo PllHM in its n•IU· J:Olli (j)QJ(J).._ : u l 11111, !ht l11me11 w1nt to f11m. T...miw ..... t i nd lndllJlri1lisl.s w1nt tor IK1ol} 1:45 : (C) .......... ""I: locitioM. ·s1_,tt looM. r"C:" .. . !fl -•-.. -............. _ ..... a:JO a @m m ••c ••••••'•1 ...._, .. -... ...... ·~ ~ ,...: IC) (tO) ... u..s" (II) l ;ll 9 MNt: """"8 MJ U'flllf"" ~ (dr•) 7J-..Otsl Alnw M .. Season (l'll)'S) 'S.2-blrt Ry-., ldl Lil• JlubllJ, Altlllon1 Zubt, Michlll M•r· pino, · Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES t:OO D .,...,. et N•l9bm" (dr1J 'S7 -J1tk P1l1nct, 1L11b1r1 Lin&. H1r· vld J. Stone~ ' t :JD II '11111 Dnit I. IM ~" (clu) . '3Z-C1ry Grant. Garf Cooper, Tai· tul1h 81nkhe1J. l l :Ol.8 "lnt T"Nll" ff tlll Aztea." (ld'I) ·6t-Al1n Steele. "Se!MoM It tlM llMr" (m)IS) '!IO--Micllae! Mtnin. Gtry Mlflll. 12.'00 m ~ '""" ...... (com) '54-lirHr GlnO!I, Robtrt 1tr111, 81rry Sutlrt111, Jtlnts Ar"tss. J:t1 A <C> .,.,. ... ld11) ·sa-0.111 w,ntll', Mel fener. ,..., (C) -... -( ... , , 'Ji,..:.Joel McCte1, Mlrl Blalldllrd, 2:JO ID "TM '"" hctln" cnJ 'It -rrec1nc Mvdl. a .. Calllflii ._ Btl in. : ''"'(IJ""' .,,.... ""' Cini 'It -Cl1rti; G1ble, M11i'711 MO!lfO&. ~ ®J (C) "11 Dll Ill PR" (drQ·'SI -I.Ollis lolltd1n, Kurt Kflll". : 3:30 8 (C) "'A Cltaf I "'-t '-11' (dr1) •11J!-.Hal Holbrook, E.G. Miiii shall, .lowph C.mp1net11. • • CI1 "OM DHIN" (drl) ~4 Baxter. Rock HudSOll. ....__;; a <e1 "llfllt 111 111 Pllin" ,vr., '62 -Oli,11 de ..._., twu.. Mimieu~, Geotp HlllU.. ..._. 8ranl • @ru -.. N'-..'51· -JlllllS .ll.lstk:t. .. r • , fl) ril IC) -~ 'it· -Hfvi11t 8r11111, htlt """! h ma Drury, Do\11 Mcalr9. 4:JOl9~1 """' -....... 1: (dr1) 41 -"'1 C:..., ~ Stl""J'Cll,. .: ' • KDCE, CHANN EL II Orange County's UHF television station, KOCE·TV, h.ls sche:Juled the following special programs today. Det1iled li!ltlngs of Channtl SO's ptO(ranu are carritd in the Dally Pilot's TV Week each Sunday. J:• LOV• TI NMll fC) "7"9 Volltv" l 11C W"•I LS. 11CllNS, ANO CLAY lCI "Kiin' IOI' flrh10" 4 111 _..MlST•ll ll 0 e e llS HllOHIOllHOOO I' I t1M llRCTlllC: COMl"ANY IC) J:ct SIESAMI STll•e T IC:l t1tt OH) IT IC:I "ln•l11Jl1111 1 LAWN" -With NII! Tom llr!il. 61M l.A W POii TH• '11S (Cl "Rt•l. , • • E•1ttt tlrokll'I" • ltllel'I n • t: .. lOV• TINNll (Cl "Tiit \lol~ 7~M KOCIE ll"ICIAL1 0 II A ll •I COUNTY Pl.Ill !Cl l ttf IMITl•l"llCI TMRATlle 10 Tiit E4w1rdltn1 • "L~ o.trwi" tiJf T"I NA-r VIA l..I ST I lot "Thtodort ' R-lh Ht ... ~ Pllnltd Wiii P,.1«v." UO '"lllJ "' , ' • • • -·--· , . !0 DAILY PILQl Wtdn!Sd.U, July 17 .. 1974 ' t 1 ... -1111'2'8 •• • • Itek..,.'~ S111all Boat Wii 111e1• - Tinsley Light , a 35-foot sloop skippered by John Grand in Jr. of San Francisco and Ne\\')lOrl Beach has been declared th' overall handica p v.•inn er of the Vi ctoria to .l\)aui race. Tinsley Light was a recent competitor.in the \Vhitney Series. ...,_ -. .....,.,_ -REFUND -.. . ---· • • . Aluminum Yachts ·Disappointing in T:rial NEWPORT. R.1 . IAP) 'l'he United States' two new aluminum 12-meter racing yachts. Courageous a n d Alariner, ha\'e proved S<>tne\li•hat a disappointment to seafarers who expected thern to revo lutionize America's Cup 1 competitlon. The inclusion or aluminun\ as a material for building the 12-meter yachts has not been o\•erly impressive. Sa i I l n g ' perfonnnnce or the alumlnu boats has not yet sho1vn t superiority over the \voode vessels that m1111 ant icipate. During prelinlinar trWll races here last month the Intrepid prov.ed that althou~h it is wooden, it 1nust not be considered "obsolete" and can not be ruled out us a top U.S. contender to defend the Ameri· ca·s Cup for the third tilnc. Intrepid dcl'ended the· Anlcri- Hardy for C11neo ea's Cup In 1967 Md 1970. this year's America 's OJp, Baron Atarcel Bich, i s AUSTRAIJAN challenger for this year's America's Cup, returning to Newport with his Alan Bond, holds high hopes wooden 12-meter, France I. A for his new alumlnum 12· ·spokesman for Dich said the meter, Southern-Crms, and French will have ready by said his new boat is much 1977 a new aluminum 12-meter fa ster than his wooden 12-"'hich. already is under tnetcr Gretel II, which lost the construction· in France. America's Cup races in 1970 lo Earlier this year It was Jntrcpld. reported that the BrfUsh had The French challenger 10 -started construction of a new aluminum 12·meter challenger, but e con o m I c conditions in England at Utat time and the lack o( a suitable 12·meter to pace the new aluminum . In 1891 the Swiss built a 17· fool laUnctt ol aluminum for lake we . A year later the French produ«d 1he 40-loot steam yacht Mignon, the Cirst all-aluminum seagoing vesnl. By 1893 a U.S. !Jim In llllnois was building and oelling sb:k in aluminum duck boats. Whlle this year marks the entry or aluptinum into the 12~ meter cliss, it has been used · ror everything which noats, from . cano es to the superstructure ·of the Queen Elizabeth Jl. because lt.s record in preliminary trial races showed that the deslin had oot proved ,,satlsla<iory. · • Cup Skipper on· Way Out? aluminum boat again hailed its completion. The British withdrew tM:ir · challMge for this year's C,up races. Designer Britton Chance Jr. said: "I think one of the principal advantages of alu1ninum in 12-meters 'ft'lll be <hal it will be po88ible to IO<Ch off ex Isling ports . of' 1hc structure and subsequently weld into p I a c e new subasscmblles that \I' e re prepared .and which can alter the boat very radically in shape du.ring the course of the natural facing season if It is so indicated." WllETHER the aluminum ~-------~ 12-metcr yactu can show supe1ior sailing Point• over boats built of wood rematm unproven. One new aluminum U.S. 12-meter, Mariner; is being rebuilt' in New York JULY SALE ! By Al.i\tON LOCKABEY IMllll9 IEtlllor John Cuneo, the highly touted Ol)mpic in e d a I i s t na1ned as ski pp e r of Australia's America 's· Cup challenger Southern C r o s s may be on his wa y out. "'ith the 1970 skipper Jim llardy standing in the wings championships and a rHl--5 championship. He crowned his sailing career -with a _gold ALU l\ll NUM is no newcomer to the sea although th.is· Is Lbe first. year 12-ineter yachts have been built of ·mednl in Drag~ in the 19i2J •--------.. Olympics al Kiel. LU.SE A ,74 DATSUM FOR EXPERT SERVta 710 2 dr. '19" mo. for your ln.,ort We need vourTrade! Premium ~rices paid. EXCELLENT SELECTION Jmmediote Delive.y NABERS ~ CUNEO HAS had only one • , .. ,, •. 0.u.~ call experience at match racing. COSTA MESA DATSUM furoPHrl Car Repoirs • c.wr .. 10At'-~ lie placed 10th out of 10 in the 2145 HA.1101 ILVD,. c.M. 2106 ...._. ""'-CJIC Please Call 540·9100 .. Congressional Cup at Long 5404410 141-14ff 2600 Harbor . Cos 11 Mesa Beach, sailing w~eel-steered1:~==::;;::::::=~~~==~~~~::::~~::::::::::~==! Ericson-39s. ?, Even before leaving 1--__,_lt__Qays to wax with Qypont This is the \\'Ord from "down under" from a ·sour,s:e "'ho cannot be identified because the ronjel'lure was 1nade in a private letter to friends in Ne1o1.·port Beach. -~ Jl has been signiticant th:it ' Hardy has been skippering Southern Cross in tuneup races at Newpo;1, R.I .. in an effort to .get the boat moving better to weather. Australia,euneotoundhimsclf L 'N Boaf f y Usell sa iling more and.more in the ~g ew s or our •. shadow of Hardy at the helm of Gretel II. Fun in the sun without owning a boat. No up-keep, sl ip fees, payments or insu rance costs. , I refund offer HARDY IS TllE skipper "·ho steered Gretel JI to two llardy also is an able small boat sailor having \\'Oil a world d"ta(llpionship in 5--0-Ss in 1966, beatlng Paul Elvstrom, admittedly the top small boat sailing skipper in the 1,1,·orid. wins over.1 Bill Ficker in KELAXli\G Intrepid, only to have ooe of SCIENTIFIC them nullified by a disputed , helm of a wheel boal. much SD.EDISll foul. He "'as broug~t to the less a 12-me'er -until chosen 11lf·, ... · SS .. GE U.S. by Alan Bond this year as -; . , J"t' •. ., 1'. the skipper of Gretel JI , a trial by Bond a.s lh1s year s p T , MIMIEISMPS MOW IBNli TAON cAt.rFOANIA l,E/SURE BOAT a.ua is npw laking ai»lication& for new club members. A uniQUe new club tor boating enthusiasts. Our members wlll have use ol our 8 new boats located it m,.rinas 1hfoughoot Newport Harbor. Skiing, fishing, cabin cruisers. and executive cruise parti,s. CAUMOWOl_)l __ IOATllDl--DITAU CALIFORNIA LEISURE BOAT CLUB horse to Southern Cross. challenger skipper. ANN VICTORlAN, R. · · Cuneo, 44., is one of the top As a small boat sailor ,he HOME OR OF.FICE CAUS 2115....,....llYllL small boat sailors in Australia has · \\W seven Allsl ralian 3400 Irvine Ave., ;: 103 ·s· · IMtwWoocly'1 W....,I -675-8866 but had never been at the Sharpie titles, t"·o Dragon 1•ftfJltf• .),"i7·fl,'i39 Hewporthecll ~::::::::~~~~====================~ Friday Evc11i11g Races Sailed bv Bahia Club ,, ' Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club cla.MCS ranging from Sabots to is running an unusual summer Islander 36s. series of sailing races each T"·o races have been ~iled F ·d · · h.ch 11 to date. Results of the Fr1d'1y. r1 ay evening 1n "' 1 a _ July 6 race: classes are sailing on a CLASS " -J>at Dougan 1so11no1. handicap basis The series is Bcvc; ul Ga•ton 0r.11z. (son ..... 1. • BYC; (ll 'ftobert Tl'lillt Oi1tncltf·:Wl the Summer Sun, featuring ecvc •. CU.SS 8 -(1) ~!!!IY ~MY (ltM!r) BCYC: (2) Bob R.titlv (Thlt11el BYC; 2.07 Boat Sho'v Scl1edu.led (31 " Jim Ltngll' !Ltser) BCYC; (•) Kevin Kirk (Use/I 8YC. ,. CLASS C -(l) K•flh l(Jlpafl'!tk ./Wllollrel eve·: f:fJ Mike Plncknel' fSllbofl BCYC; (J) Doug C1l1U {S1boll BYC. Rally cream earwax 1.79 For.Au g.rn;t .Rally liquid earwax lllA~S SHIN£! PAllllCT& The Newport' Harbot Boat Dealers Association h as announced plans for the first in-the-water Power and Sail Boat Show in mid-August. I Purchase Ou Pont Rally Cream or Liquid car wax and Du Pont will refund you directly 60c. See deJ~ils on can. ,,------ lhe lteasury ORAMGE ! BUEMA PARK -~ .. Ot--.. C:ltyflt ........ -.. .. .. ~~ l:>t!.t:Jf,.,., _, !O IO J °"'""lf.t ,....,.,.,...., .... . SANTA AMA l ttt H. M1-.. of h . C:-"""'- Opoo I f.t -~oily"""*' n'" • -· All major manufacturers of boals \li'ili be represented at -the show. The · public will he allo"·ed lo inspect a wide variety of cruising and racing vessels ranging from IO to 50 feet in l~ngth. Admission to the all-day event Aug. 10-11 , will be free . The show will be conveniently located adjacmt to Delaney's Restaurant, 621 Lido Park Drive. F'eatured will be the Gulfsta rr-44, ?i.1 organ· 4 I , Viking-40. Coro n ad 0.£4 S, Cli~pcr-30 and dozens o{~ other models. - ''The Good Lile'.' We offer to you Planes, Motor and Sailin g Yachts, Mexica n Vill a. Ski Lodges. and much More. We are a limited membershi p group which provides jndividuals or corporations Luxury R ecreation and a potfnti a l tax advantag~. We offer first class privi leges at nomihal costs. TRANS MECCA Charter Memberships are now being accepted for a limi ted time and will exclude monthly dues. Group m e m berships a re transfera ble a nd fees will be _ increased after our initia l offering. CHARTER MEMBERSHIP $1500.00 ' For more irtformorlo~ please coll. 645·5541 • • Julv 13 raCe: CLA§S A -(1) Gftlrge Ch11e !San Ju1n-l4) BCYC: (1) R.ober'I Tlla1' II-lit) BCYC1 (3) Ed Arnold (5ollng) BCYC. CLASS 11 -n) R.on. H~ r1n1ern1t!onal·l61 BYCi Cl! W 111 TefT\plelon fThi5tleJ BCYC; 13) Ed Sllwyer (Thlttlel BYCJ <•l Ile between J~ C1rr!tk (Thl5ll1) M8YC, Ind Bob R..tnv CThl•llt) eve. Ct.ASS C -Cl) Keith l(llpetrltk {Wllclflrel BYC; (2) Ml~e Pinckney (SaDol) 8CYC; (ll Dtvfd C•ltll (Hobie-10) BYC. Uniak Wins •Harbor Race Bill Uniak of ·Huntington Harbour Yacht Club was the winner or the second race of the Ne.wport Harbor Cal-20 Summer Series recently. The race was i;ailcd in the ocean off Newport Beach. Runncrup was Barry Branin of King Harbor Yacht Club and third was a tie between Elliot Rosenthal, Voyagers Yacht Club, and John Fleming, unattached. Robert J . Wigmoro ASAN INDEPENDENT INSURANCE AGENT ...... -fTw .. '"'" .... _, .... ,..,... .. ow __ .,..._ ... ..-rice -tl•t ... c.htih. 4 n.r.-. -•••• , .... . _..,,._.. WIGMORE lll,1"'1$ INSURANCE ' 29SJ Ho1ll'•t 11,cl.·C•1t• Mn• , 979-25,55 .. • ' s B.F.Goodrlch conventlonol passenger retreads are buill on sound, foclory inspecled tire bodie< T~eyJ give a smooth, comforfable ride ond good mileoge. ........ c.-...t.. ...,,.,. P'l>""V' .... -"'•""""" ,.,..i.,"""'""P'l'""'ll"'•"'-" .. ~ """"!f<lul ..... w." ""' .. '9'(.'DI ltead ..,.....1 ... ~ O..e 1u.-i.. .... -·--~-_..,,_"IP"'' """"'e-•...-l br -i hi;wordl, who:~ ........ -r<:rd!o 11-e 11t~ 11"'~doe.rorogpty10te!•--lll~ p.t'l(ll.ole\ lttn ~ ._.... -"""'°9'd br "'"""ll llol.ln.-1~~· .... ,,,.......,...,.....,,,,. .....-:tk ,.,..<>:....rt...,....,. ... h<.,. ......... wd.,,, -"'"''"*'"-"~...-.;bloo-o ~~~.....,.tb<o>n....,td- """'q.dolc!-....i~"l""M"'""~ • , ___ ,.__,!Oa•G""'e"'~'...! ~ tao,.....,..,... b<~•-i.ldbt ad,v>W po""C>llw orG'" ""' . ._ ,. ",...... -O<cordtog "'"""'_11"1......,.,,..,.,,,{lj<..,,..~gtC· 1o-"'" -... n iype,,.,.,..... .,c ~'• shock a bsorber sale $400 oil Am·eficco cars i:itus installation $2.SO ea'ch .11 ..... G78 ·14/8.25·14 • H78 ·14/8.55;14 D78·13/7.00-13 F78·15/7.75·15 G78 -15/8.25·15 E78· 14/7.35· 14 H78-15/8.55· 1S plus 45¢ Federal Excise lox and retreodoae'trode-in. Whi!ewolls $1.50 more. Goodrich front end alignment special $9. o·o ~=:.:..,,.,-::.~:: """' ••d potb. Please cau· fur appointment ' . ' .. ., • , B. F. Goodrich Store 2049 HARIOR BLVD. lat bayl COSTA MESA ALSO A:': I . F. CiOOPllCH STORE I . P • .oOoltlCH STORI 6182 IJMCOLM 524 'f/. UHCOLM .. CYPRESS ANAHEIM • -. 826-40 I 0 774-7578 . . 14M4ZI 0.....C41 M*-. 14MJ4l •• F. liOoDllCH ·sro1l · 200 SO. MAIM ST, SANTA AMA . 547,7155 . ' - • , . • 1-)·---____ ...._ _ _:_ ___ _,.~--':---------4----------'-~---'------,----i • • • • MIXED SINGLES AN ON~'ROUNP rrs A RAP10~0615T t , NATURA~. · ·. 600Me~ ... ' , ')JIMBLEWEEDS t""l~V:::fR::1"::'.Y,:-:P::f:::RE:=:'S"'.'N:'.'.Uff=IN;:, 50:::"-,""'"1 PIG 9055 IN PA SKY: IF 'tbOSEtL LAY A H"LPL"SS AS A C"IL" SICKI~. MIRACl.E ON Me"IJA!fY IJIWPDfR1 I MAYHAPs 1 SHOOLD y,\\F1 m PRaM1se PAT IF 1 eVfR c;oes MCK 1' A PRAY"" F"R "." ~~... CHOICH,l'U. l'!JflN DA COU.fCTION ~ASKffj "" • "' 'u', ALL PA SCRA11:H l'VE 100K 001;\ IT.AMEN. --~--, r-----.l l • MUTT AND JEFF FIGMENTS ~""""'_,_ . .. by Tom K. Ryan @ ' 0 0 0 " by Al Smith • .. " . . ' ' • DOOLEY'S WORLD Musr/e Alovs• tlasllts a/on.!_ Iii tltd big race • iiftltdsason .... '-.:'-\.~-:­.1/"'F.~z Dr. SMOCK GORDO . . . .. S4CIJ~ in' the bwwktlgo tn.t noM <Jffhe 'other rvnners ilrt: ¢Yen 11Nr '1im. MAM CY by &nle Bushmiller _;NANCY, I WANT TO I :>PEAK TO YOUR AUNT ER ··· MY AUNT FRITZI 15 ASLEEP • ABOUT YOU' BREAKING I.' M;, W INDOW TODAY : . ~ . ... . ' ; ; ~ "· :: . UNITEp Feature Syndicate TUESDAY''"'"""'"'' ACJlOSS 1 Tam's relal1ve 6 Touch -10 Humidily 14Put10 stame 15 Facial le1lure '46 Roused lo action '49 Quebec scenic area ~France's longest river 51 Consume s 52 Auditor; 16 B!Ollcal Abbr. a11e 55 • ··---·-, 7 St•reolyped in 18 Ontario or disguise Michigan: 58 •• ~ •• .2 words Pradesh: 20 Word of Indian endearment state 21 Pir't cl "to 60 Cravats be" ,3 F 1 61 OneUme ,,,. crrna only practices 62 Prostrate 24 Cold 63 Concludes ytesther 64 The birds item and the 26 Animals on Cwiadian nickels 28 Ad)Jsl ao Agp 31 F~qileal 32 Tottering 36 Galeous mhaure 37 Cha!lenon 38 Or r;o1 39 Wrqte in Ahe!aun alp i net 42"A-···ol Ho y'' 4-4 EngAstt seaQOrl 45 Rival~ Caesa· • ' '1 " 17 • .. .. I : "I " ,. " " H " I .. •• " .. " " .. ,~ . 65 F1tt1ers DOWN 1 Roman 2 Spanish river 3 Heavy precipl!a lion: 2 wrnds 4 French direction 5 "The Boys In ... ---·" 6 Spirilual being 7 Brought s "' . \ ". " " . ' n ~' ' ,, .. .. " " ,, •• into Ille 35-US authOI' 8 Utilization Zane ·-·· 9 Light 37 Futt gainer, ------rilreshmenl e.g. 10 .Se! free 40 Mallman's 11-''Gol -•••• concern wllh an 41 Swellings Angel" 42 Even bets 12 Producer .,.3 Elect. uni! 13 Spur ~S Light stroke 19 Minute 416 Shallow diah Quantity 47 North 22 ••• neck: American Canine · songbird delect · 48 Lubricated 25 Destruc· 49 Ptul'!"ls l ive perKIO 51 Ending with 26 Wailed ' 27 FoolbaU ~ad and players . inter 28 Far away 53 Window 29 Ouartette diviaion less one 54 War god 30 More angry 56 Whimoer 32 Bewildered 57 Feminine 33 Police sulllx ollicer 59 Three: 34 lmpor1ai:ice Prell)( • ' ' . 10 11 " '~ " " ' " ~ '1 " 27 JO ~1¥ " l• ll . ., ,, " . " . . " ,, " " " 62 " • ,, • " .. .... ~ .. -··-·-- Edith had refused to .. marry him because he was too fat. JUDGE PARKER NOT A Tt!ING, MR. • HELLO, WAl..T ! DRIVER! GOOD TO SEE 'l'OU! WHAT'S NEW;_?~i;';:;?;:7:e~ ,<:=o,-~ MISS PEACH THAT 'S MISS SPENCER'S FRIEND •. , LAWYER SAM DRIVER! 1 EXPECT THEY'LL GET ~-­ MARRIED ONE OF THESE DAYS! . .. • •• I~ ii 'I !, !I ' . > ' i ~ I SHE'S .ru&T A60UT THE FlNEST WOMAti I EVER MET! by Mell WILL; GfS, Wl'Vf. • AltTHt.4111:, '10tA CALL..,.... A '"OVlt'f LIAP'! ONLY NIN 601H~ 5TIAl>Y ~O"lt l>AY~ ..• ! I ! • DICK TRACY . - •SAM TAKES WHITE POSTP PAINT ANO MA~ TI4!-SU5PET CAR. ·' by Chester Gould VEAH,TRACY, LETS HOPE IT DO_ESN'T RAIN"s•VSSl>M. -·- . -. . ' • Wednesday. July 17:1974 DAILY PILOT $Wdtn!Y. tlt.y all f/qs/) oy in the .oppostte direction. by ROCJ11r Brodfield OVAL -mACKS CONFUSE MUSCL£ MOUSE by GeorcJe Lemont II by Gus Arriola ..~Es, Y•I'< HoNoR·· 1t> ~Ol'<D MULLINS. by Ro9er Bollen LET'S 60 O\IE~ lllE 6'1i!IP Ae.i.IN ." DENNIS THE MEMACE '~ 'How 'cQl.IE YA DIONT1ULM£ )QJ DYED ~IWR AN' 11\AT WE. NEED NEW CARPETS'?• _, ' I " • -> %% DAIL V PI LOT Wednesday, July 17, 1974 Over The Co unter HASDU ...... for Tottdoy.JulyJ~. J9T4 \ --- .· A Classi«! Gfus sic , Ul"IT ......... ' The Romulus II , hand.assembled boat-tail speedster, is on dis play in New York. The molded fiberglass ca r is equipped with 1974 Ford running gear and is manu· factured by the Classic ?l-1otor Car Company. Selling pric~? $19,000. lnves1111en1 Giali1 . :: .. · . . THE -MONEY DOCTOR " ·: every c;Wy. Tiie commerdal or trade I h e. bouael actually' buy commodity in the tut1ns: marlcet becaU!e \hey ar.c willing to accept a delivery ,it the end of the contract period'. It gives 1hem a fixed cost ueae: versus which they can prl~'. finished or (>nlfCSSOO g~. The seller in the fut~. market Ls selling versus actual invent.ory which he can dellvW at the end of the period. Thua, he bas guaninteed himself a . . price ,for his goods. T~; functions lend stabl!My to ti:,e- commercial markets a.s the* f)eople do not ha ve t () speculate day to day. on the. price they P.aY or receive: 1n e!fed, t Ii e y uSe tlie· commodities markets i-0' insulate themselves ( l"O ffi dally, wee kly, and monthly' price fluctuatiOJ't!l- THE INDIVIDUAL trader· on the other hand, buys anct· C 0 M M 0 D I T I E S ARE _. , sills the COlllfD)(fJty with •~: ' ,Big Auto Insurance Increase On tl1e Horizon for Motorist traded on exchanges like listed the most str~~ rules in the ~ in delivery, ~! stocks or bonds. 1be ma...M._1...a .... -._for.~uM t-"'•eciton-of-• ~~ to_ take advantage ~"".:.. ex ges are Oilcago • ....._, · . !"'.. tM eb!>a11anQW'OflJflcer.--- Board of T-rade w h I ch the customer. We will conclude...thi.s..ser:ies' features the graJns', eoybeans, . ~~~ties':~ n ex t ~. e e k w I t h rh:e· soybean products, plywood, or u conunodihes markets from and silver. delivery. In other"~· when tfle viewpoint of the lndivid\lal The Ch i c a go MfrcMtlle you buy ~· you l:M.iy wheat investor -who should trade Exchange~ cattle, hop, ~~~~~: i::,~ am how do you do it. Capitol Ne~-s Service SACRAi\1ENTO -·r h e re hasn 't been the rap.id· increase in automobfle Jnsuran<'e rate! in recent years lhat ·night be expected -but . f.!on 't hold your breath. a major increase is on the way. more than 1,300 firms with statistics on rates and claims. ~N HIGH GEAR) up 15 percent : medical costs up 10 porcent: doctors' fees up 9 ·percent ; and auto repair and maintenance is up 14 percent;- pork bellies (bacon), eggs. buying a contract that ceases (Dr. Adler will answer lumber and the IntemaUoool to trade :m December 1974. letttrs directed to him at 3,13',llOO "' ... ·~· "" LoM-r11 lndustfy spokesmen blame the upcoming rate hike ir.t that old bugaboo inflation, and on an upswi ng in accident rates despile the federally imposed 55 mf_.h speed limit. "Tlicre is no way to circumvent the hike caused by infl ation. said a spokesman ror the Insurance Services Office in New York, which provides And, the major in surance companies say rising medical bills and rep.air costs are rorcihg companies to p.ay more for each acc id e nt . Strange as it ma'y seem, more motorists are having accidents now than they did before the energy crisis hit last winter. At this point. no one will say just how high the rates will go, but the Consumer Price Index shows that hosPltal rates are '..t<"k -t: *** -A u to ~fakers R ecord Just how Jong it will take for the imurance cost increase - repair and maintenance prices- -and other factors to level off Won't be estimated by thOSl! in the industry. · * GSA. A.ward To Colema1i _) An 11indermite quantity" federal contract ·which could lead to total sales of $196,000 has been awarded to Coleman A proposed federal car sa fety seat s-t-a·n·rt-a r d ror children \\."Ould outla \v General Motors' popular 'child and infant "love seats" even Systems , t n I r vi ne, thqugh the devices ha ve Congressman Andrew received hig h marks from Hinshaw (R·Newpc:>rt Beach) users. announced. GM said in a response to a The award, from the National Highway Traff I c . Safely Ad m i n i str3.t i on G e n e r a I ·SEv1ces proposal calling for striCter ~ A d m inistration, standards. that .it would have Thursday (7·11), s for the ' to take the seats off th.e development and manufacture market if the standards are of measuring and t e s t adopted ror the fall of 1975. instruments, Hinshaw said. About the shortest_ period a the.Daily Pilot.) futures contract wiJI trade is -months and the longest 18 months. wrm 11IE exceptioo. ol. the metals, virtuaJ:ly all contl'act- sizes are a full box car load, a tank car load, or a ship hold Collins Gets: : ' . Navy Task · load. A few examples, grains A $2,756,875 contract fiaS are 5,000 bushels, _potatoes been awarded to RockweU- 50,000 pounds, cattle 40,000 I n t emational Corp.-COIHns poonds, eggs 22,500 dozen, Radk> Co., of Newport Beach SUllar 112,000 pounds. -lor d,evelopment of U.S. Navy When you are t r a d I n g c ommunications equi pment. conunodlties, you are placing C o n gr e s s m a n AndreW yourtelf in the position of the Hinshaw (R·Newport BeaCb) people w&o actually ..-tbe announced. r · materials f o r commercial The cifritract under tbe purposes. The i n d i v i ~ u a I ~avaJ Electronics S y s t & m commodity s p e c u I a t o r Coritmand is for V e t,_d 1 n. provides a valuable economic c o mmllllications equipmept role in thi.!1 function. He and will be performed at tbe provides the liqttidity in the 4311 Jamboree Bou I e v a r ct market that g u a r a n t e e s plant of Collins Radi~. · I MUTUAL FUNDS DETRQIT fUPI) -The j974, recol-ding a 28.4 percent U.S. auto industry started the drop in early July sales. second half of the year on the It h same downward trend that was t e sharpest year-to marked the first six months of year decline since mid-April Complete .Mid .. day ·American Stock List S.it-\ Net .• P·E !hd~! L•~I (h!J. .. .,. 1vork -Fo•· .,"",",',•, 1.s1 1.s1 •vv Fund s.•2 s.'2 ViH• F 1.21 1,N and 1the 21st straight lo-day M'l9 $ • 11$1 ol u G•I" J p c;w111 112 •. vov.-;i 8.05 l .IO I .Od h" h r ·1ed bid • ..., .1$~t<I prl-er r, Fii ··~ 9,JJ J-.11) Fcl 14.411•.•1 ~M•V F 1.00 1.00 sa es per1 w IC a1 to ctt __ on M11111•I E<1 .f Fa 1.n ue ~'" , 11.12 11.n ~--· F s.01 s.•• match a 1973 perfonnance. F"uiils •s QtlOleCI by Ory Lv 111.llo 11.'IO .IOtlN HANCOCK: 5'olec: Eq 4.H 6.71 -F ' T ll the NASO 1111:, Otyf LA 9,91 .•. 8ncl FO 17.16 18.65 S.t«o G •.n 5.!e ........... e s The JaSt time auto makers 5o rncm 6.JI 6 ... C..-wlll S.W. e.1 SCUODEll 1"05: A.I. .&II h -• •- TINH.i'I' lrcl c:ent 1.61 1.J• !'.I""•' 1>.4-I 1. '"'' 1nw 11.&0 n.ao \\·ere on t e up-side was in the •&E P1•~t~ J n 2·~ •.• JlllJ 1•, \91l E&E Mw 2 .... J.M KEYSTONE: Belil'IC 12.2• 12.26 Dec. 1·10 per1"od last year, and ','*,,!..~1, ........ ,, ~ ', ','.·,·,· a 11t As• E~le c.r--s.ts •.» c.ust e1 11.20 17.99 Com l.6S 1.•s N -· · Adm Gw l .SI l.IS lATON & (uU 82 16.9111. Spec:•I 19.IS 19.IS ewspnn" t fhat Was a meager 1 percent Atrfl Fl .\~ l 1¥ l -\'e Actm 111' l.02 J.31 l'IOWAltO: C.Ust 8' .. .:z l.)'I Stx;1 U'V J.11 4.14 j A!'fonc• I~' •• J lt 1 ... AClm 1111 6.91 I.SI 81111 Fa ,,.. l .H Cllil kl $ ... '·'s SlCUltlTY FDS: ump. Afros.of r., . . 1 1\~ ... .f.oyli.er J.17 •.12 C>wt~ F 1.ll I.SS Cust ICt 4 . .12 •.1' EQUily 2.6' 1.95 The ( AlliklC•p )j I I 1\o ••• Aeln.I Flt t .OI .... lnune S.OI s.ss C.Ust !al 16.67 ll.U lnwst S.11 5 • .0 our U.S. auto makers AllilPl)I .Ult ' 2 ,, ••.• M t.,. tn 11.ll U.Jll Slle<ol F 5.19 S.61 (u!.t SJ. 1.'H> LIJ Ull•• F i..11 s.JJ p • Hik AIC ""IOSl 7 1 2\o+ \It #Jwtu~ 11) t1) )t<k Fd 1.41 9.JJ eu.1 !al S.J<I 6.01 HLECTED FDS: .-. n ee es Monday reported sales Of 1"•Pil•EI Sk l 2 41'0'-\'• AC.E f lt l . .::I l.18 EOIE Se> u .1• n .11 C.W.\ !>I 1.S6 J.11 Am !in• S.9'1 S.'M 175 786 . Alan wooos 5 I I•~ .... AHs1'1t I .SI 9.12 E9rfl C.1 9.J.o 10.ll APOiio J.'H> l.2• Opp Fd 6,!1 6.$1 • Cal'S lfl the JuJy i·JO Nau .• "'l•I 12 10 4\\1-... AlPN Flt 9.00 ..... Elfun lrt 11..:1 ... Pl?l•S 2.0 2. Sol 5111'$ 10.13 10.JJ pe riod compared w'th 214 912 Alba W•IOfl S 211+ 1- Am;•p F l.S. 1.11E....,Q 1.l9 1.Jt l(llKl r •.11 s.JaSeo>!l""'I I.Cl t .U V"'ll.TCQUVER B C (UPI) I ' 1 ' Al~"''''' 'j 1 6 •. Am 61rtn 9.6110.6 EM•Qr t .62 t.62 l(nlr c.tll 5.26 S.16 S...t•r F 10 •.W1 JS ~· • • • asl year. Qn a daily rate AH11 Tl<t ._ S 1 711-~. Am ows 1.n 1.19 Falruo '·°' •.6l Lnclm•k l.n s.s• SH"'ltEHLD ·GRP · -~lacMillan Bloedel, Ltd. i.. • "lh .gh llin d "'HThl!r 1.10 s 1 1s~ ••.. Am EQ11 l.69 •.O.Fm e .... 1.11 7.11 LO EOit U.JOll.16 Corn!.! l.11 • 11:1aS1S. WI Cl t se g ays "''P'W lllCl\t~ l l ,,, •.• """ EX RE55 Ftd IUh 1.t9 ••. LlX GJtOUfl: Enl•Pf •.J!I saki il will increase the price d . 1he "od lh. Alla< Corp ,, 1 \.o f UMP$; FIDELITY "' Lffr 12.M ll.92 Flt• fd 3 2J unng pen IS year All« Cp ... 1 .. 1 1·16~1-16 c.t>i.i s.:io s.19 it0u,.:. Grwtn •.67 5.10 .,..,bf ••2 or newsprint sold to customers and seven last year l AU..-Fas ~ • s "' '"'om 1.19 1.16 ano ae11 7.91 t .12 Reiten 11.n n.n L~I L S39 ... · B .1. h Col bi Albe • sa es All'lco 1n.i~1 3 10 ,,,_.(\ 1nvstm •·• 1.111 c.1.111 1.2' t .Ol Lit1 1n1" •.•1 s ... PoK11 Flt 5:., ••• Ul n IS um a, rta were off 28.4 ~t. Aml'i<$\ wh •• 6 ,,, !.ptc,1 s .... s.•1 eon... 1.•s ... Linc c.11 4.'1 5.JI !ME•flSOM fOS: and the Western u n i t e d Am "Iron'" J 6 1 ... !aloe~ s.n 6.lJ C:v SSK S.IO ... LOOMIS ""°"'' !S.24 16.16 s The industry had a 59-day Am&ll ,, .~ 5 3 , •• ::: Am c.r1n •.n s.1• 0n1 s.22 ••• u.vus: 1ncom 1•.'IO 16.21 tales. I I Id A CnM111 ••t •. 1 ·~ •.• Am 1ns111 J.•• •.D.t Ehf• s.1s •.. c.p ow •.u •.sJ invest t.06 1.11 . supp y o unso cars at the AmF11 1.•Sct • • 1Jl ••.• A.m 111.-1.I 3.tl l.61 EW•H t.U 10.19 MlltlYI II ... 11.'lfo Sh 0.¥1 11.13 11 .ll 1be company sajd the new he . . r J l 11 he! AmC..rct 2• I 1 121..o ""' Mui '·"" l.•1 F-12.IS 1.J.21 ~o U I : Sidf FO • 13 7 ll . • gmnm.;...:o u y, we ow AmtSfll .l .. 5 2 6'>-'i-i S•les Net P·E (nct5J t:tsl (:11{1. CaltNaU .52 S ' 10Vr-1t O>lefNn ......... ,. 1h-\lo ~:::t!. -~ -~ i; 1~~!-·;,;; CotwMI Q wt •• 3 l:J.16+ 'II" Combd Ccim 1 II 9~:.-\.:. Comb Eoulp 10 t I'!•-\ .. Com Gr .OJd s • 3~.. , • , (.Qmpaln .12 5 1 •'.lo •.. =.0.,.,,11 .~ ~ 1si't.:1-~ Cam.Oil C..t t 11 S!•+ ~ Cons Aet .40 • 9 1 + \~ Consyne Cp 1 2 •"" ••• •Cont Miier! • 2 1\.o , ••• ConlTtl WU •. l 1\111 ••• Cook Ill .20d 2 • 11~1 .. ,M Cooi:P•i11I I 5 l 10111 ••• Col"-1ntt 6 12 •~~-\to Cot'el.a. 111< t 2 10l• + I;. ~ .ISi\ 4 2 3\•+ \~ COii C.oblt 10 I $1,\ •.• O •me•El J! 2 l S ' -11 CreollP 2.60 S 1 14h -\._ Ctw Cll .2SO 2 10 1117-~­(ry_\lal Oil 6 JS 10 .. \o C>E. Cp Cit • 1 10', • 1,, Cut>!~ CD 0 .20 ' l •'• CWTrn .2Sd 4 t t . --D .,_ DlirMOn Oil 12 ' 21. ... Gtow c .:no u 1 Jv.-v. 'Gr.,.n lnctu1 t ' 1;. •• , GSC Eillrp •• I I ... G T I (Ofp 6 l ""' .,, Gulf Cin .to 11 • 4 ''"'+I Gulf lttpFtl l <I l\lo-Vt -H H- H«ll Ml (fl IJ I 12 -~-Har.,.y Gt11 •• 2 ','I ••• H1yc1tn Sin •• 2 1:1,;, •.• Htl•nn cnm 4 2 ai.-\'o Htlnl(-1 In 6 9 I ••• Htll M I.lid l S ·~· ,., HI G lncorp • l 5'4+ v. Hlglllnd (IP •• l 1h ... HIOnavn Sir. 4 I 2\o-\-Hd,.,.., 11111 l 1 2 , "" HOllM!n 1.M U 1 21'•-l'lii HOH~ (Ofp • IS ll'r-\lo Hom()t"' -~ II 10 ll + v. HornOIB .)Cl U 2 ;M + ~ HOrnwlC .M 1 2 16'kf" \lo HOWi 1.0d ' 9 ll!o + Ila HotpMI' Wl •• 1 )-16 "• =~;:,,, ·~ I~ >_:~ ,{W +·v= "'"rOI .30 ' • 161'9-\la 1-1'!'<1 IMP •• 25 2~-~ H1'91"olll .20d l I 161':1+ \'o _,,_ l,,.IGr .OSd 5 215 11·1'-V. New ldr Mr\ 71 S rfl+ ~~ Sh!l()I pl 1''o .. l '7 "a; .. '*-•Ir R 6 12 2 -V. Sllos>M!I In 2• 11 3\\-t'• New Pr .lid 1 20 sw + " Sllowbot .ao • 4 •~ ; .... NYl lmt .60 ' 1 II Sien • P.. .12 • 11 16 .. .,,, Nlt11f"rS .1' 4 1 5""-\Ii Slllo Ind .:llo 5 1 I '·' ,.:-· Nortek Fn<P 5 ' 2\lo ••. Skl..,.lns ». 4 1 •~• \9 No C1110lls I 113).16-1.\ Sl,ftCp.:10 10 2 l~ .... N,,.GMob wt •• SI s~~+ i; Slm-ln•n .60 5 1 7 ..... No'IO Corp 4 I 21.'o .. ~"i Solilfon Oev • • • 21A1 •·• HU!NC Oi~lo-!. 11\o+ \0 ~~ ... ~. ~ : ::.!:t: Oft"'°'e Co 1 ? 17'h+ V:i SCE'91 l.'6 •• 1 to """2 ONoBr;i,s I II 5 ll'k •.• SC:EOlll 1.•S •• • 15 -... Ql(C: Corp I • 3 20\0+ '' SCEdPf 1.116 ,. 1 11\tl , •• Oii.i lllduilS J • 1h ... \0 SC:.Ectpf 1.111 •• !100 11\'ll-\.o ON""" .100 4 I 1P\'J+ \:. So Royll .61 1G 1 1t'A--l;o Ollldr 5111"'1 4 I S -.los S...Cior 1nd • 1 .to!o •-• °"'""'D .'O I 10 10't-\fl 5PN«IPI 31 11 2 2\;it-li1 Or«llA .Oki 21 2 3b •• ,· Slltlrman In 1 1 l \.o ••• -I' I"-*""'' °'' 4 10 1\11 ... P&F lndu~ 10 11 \• • ., ~ntlM .12 4 .J 6 ••• PKO! Prp •• I 11:i ,., !>SP lllCI .?• 4 I 6111' ••• PGE pf 2.IM •• 4•'20:!,;,+ \.lo SlctMtt•t C:p 5 3 31'<-l" PGE Ill 2 l'l •• 2 22~-\o SIMolPr .•2 S 17 5 -~ .. P.tcGl.Epf 2 •• 20 1917 .. o;. SldSl'la•S 1-4 l •\'1--n PGIE pf I... •• r 19 .... -\'< Sld'Thom ... J 10 11 + b PGElpf 1.ot ., • 11 . + 'II Sf•ctust Inc ll 3 1\t •l." '°" 'f:l' 11' ., .5 11~+ •,o !ittlbtl' I nd 14 1 21+-,. PGE A 1\lo ., 1 1J •·• Slerlint Elt S , 1\t , • ., PGE eot lV, ,. l 17 + \.. SierlPr~t Sit .i 6 2\to ,.,.. 1 I .. m,,.tc.r 1.111 1.tt P\lfltn 1.11 1.to AH11.1 s.61' •.u s•GMA FuNos: prtce, effect ive Aug. 1, would the recoi'd 81-day supply o! ,''"' •• 1!!,',,·". '• ', ,s1o.!.~'·' •NtHOlt s.t11m F J.U J.41 Am Bus 2.1<1 2.1s cap Sl'lr s.n it1 he M~ a ton on th I --1----,..ouP· Trena. _·11.!l...!.!d!_ e no oeb 1.n 9.0! 111v 1.12 t .55 ~ e ower unsold cars a.1.th.e beginning.of. -"-~1ro_1,lo0---~~ • Gfwtn s .• , 6.21 FIHAHtlAL lUTMlt:1tAN·•1to : r.,-1 ·:v-~---mabtland-ot"'"Brltish ColU'l'l'ltila F= w·1h . AmPlan 10lt ' J 31 ~ ... -O&nie1-2'g-t -.a-:l!I l1 O.•• C:onl•I •. 2 1•.1o .. '·• _J11¥11r•I. lnlll 2....J •ji,_ ••• l"°"rOll ,IO 1• 121-fl"'°~ llllrco .20 • II lh + 1-'f l11<awrm Ai 6 1 l~'o ••• 11111 He.cl wt ,. 7J 21'•-l'o t!ISlrum s11 ' l • 1\.f+ \ .. ttrlt'!lll•S -•. 11 1'h-l'o tnlrmtdco 60 15 1~ .. .,.. In !Ynknol• .• t 7·16 ••• Int FOOd,~t l 6 J + V. Poc:Hold ,;w 4 2 l !it-'ro Sle.;cOllnll 2 1 2\t;;i. -PMN"N--1,11-t -2-l a-.v.-~mOr-.lL..-1..ll'JA:: ----... -I P1cSvL/I .II 9 l 19 ,.. STP CCI .200 2JG 1 •1 1mom s.'1 6.s. PltOGlt"'Ms: BrOl'I Fd 1.,, t.u vrn1,,, s 11 6 ls eon.iary. 1 mventory and Am A11 .409 s 1 31, •.. A. ... rv 111.01 10.'11 ,;n Ovn J.11 3;11 Bro inc 1.0. 1.11 Smit~ e 1: .. 1:M and Vancouver Island $235 a adJ·ust-ts that ·1 n c l u d e d ,•• •• ~',,',"•'• , ',' ,1:•,•. ',,,• ~-" 3.JI J.1C f111 11111 3.lB 3.ll Bro us 9.IS 10.16 sa 1&c..-11<1 11<1 • he B · ' "'~' ~ ' ~llCI 1nv s.n 6.U Fin Inc •.9S •.9S """'"co: So ue11F 9:s1 9:,. ton tn t .C. interior and massive layoffs and plant "'m l••IMQ • 3 1 ~-~· W•N•U 9.1l10.01Vrnl J.tt2.ttFretm 6.U•ns ... itlnv Sl663"1 AJ~la and M45 t . th ' AM!CCD .04 s '1 1 •.. Auo.~ F s.21 S.6•1~1Fa v1 I.Ml t.•o lnlt!I F 1.10 ,:M1s .. 1nv c. .:,, .:wi UC"I """ a on in e stnrtdowns auto makers have "'1191oc .n~ 1 2 1•,+ 10 ~Gt!TOH ' r~ei~TDltS: ::: /.tc~:" '·" ~,:~ ~-= ~-~ westem United States. been able' to balance their t;~~: .. ~~ ! 111~~= t': f"'1d A 3.9s •.tt OIK Fct J.5' 1.'° MIT s.9s 9.11s1.P 1no s:n s:11 The current price of the stocks o£bi·g andlitllecars. "',,"'.'.', ..f~t 2,. ', ',".·::. fuoct b 6.0I 6.61 Grin Flt s.,2 , .... MIG 1.9" 9.IJ ST"'TE IMO GltP: ndard . """ ..... •• Sl«k . S,06 S.SJ lncom t .l.o 1.11 MIO 10.tt ll.19 O>mFo J.5' J.11 Sta , 30-pound l Whi te "'hesh d · I J f Arwood Co• 2 S~+~• Alf Si:I 3,4l l.18 Slot' f" •.11 6711 MFO t ;0 10:JS Olve,it 3.99 .•.36 newsprint is -OO !he lowe-r -! " arp J'OP Jn ear Y U Y Al.lll"llet• CD 9 _.. 7(1i •.. CLc c.'n '·'° •.11 1i;1 Mu1u •.ts •.ts Meo 10.>0 11.2• Pr09,, 1.so J.u . ~;J was due mainly to ·a 49 1 ,..,,,,ct011 ea • 1 ,,,_ •.~ Sib)on I.ts I.t s Frm &r I.II ,_,, Mlkt '" 1.36 1.:llo St Fr G• J,61 l .61 mainland and the island "II . Ail•IK In<: l 2 H•-u. s...,..oc •.60 }2s FCAUMG1tOUfl: MUM• 1.111.11s1Frlnc 1ot 1ot ',.... percent decline from a year "'tco inctust n J 1 +1·1• b•v•~ Q• •.Os • •l 100 ~no 7.st 1.$9 Mia Am l .91 •.Joi 'lolat~ Str 13:90 u:JO in the B.C. interior and. Al· AllalCll wls .. 1 ~ •.• Be.en fil I.DI I.DI 101 F1111 t .s2 6.$2 Moner M 1,00 •.• STIEAOJMH FOS· he d I . ~~o reported by the Ford A~t tn .IS 11 1 11 .... ~ till•'on 1.2s 1.21 to1\#Tl 1.i. 1 ... *'"' Fct 1.91 .... ""1 1na 2.21 2.2i rta an 213.50 1n the West· Moto Co 1be d d . .t.uitr•1 011 n 1 •~·-'"' :=;::i: l:~ l~lJ..F~ 3:n !:~;~a e~g \~!. ~~~7 f~!st0 · 1:~l 1:~l ern United States. part rto ·sales ':i::S u~ ~~::t':Oot_~•. l_ ;::-.~ f!o!o1 Fon I.ts l .SIFOt.IHDE ltS IF FO 6.}9 7.12 Octtn S.S1 S.SI Tbe nwve duplicatesa'price --- &C>-..n J.lO 2.JI GAOUP: F <;.ro l .IS l.•1 STEIN AOE FDS: h"1ke ·-·-d b c ended in June, ·causing a &M!oO ,6l0 .. J \J~ ... Brnnm 1.:16 1.36 c.r.111 •.JO' Ol 3.76 '·°" S.IMIC 1 .... "·'· .... ., ....... e y rown d pof£ . . I I Btn•ller LI • • t lo-'• 0.LYIH FU NOS : ln<om ,_ .. ID.SI rn 7.14 7.1• (apill 6.91 6.91 1.ellerba h Ud 12 d ro In ear y Ju y, the a.n....-' .Ol • I 2 .... ... Sull FO 10.QJ,O ... F M!...,t 1.'1 111 Sl'lrs IS ... 15.'9 Slot-10.J<llO.;M C ' · aysago. rompany sa>·d 8tfnel l"I •1 1 J\1 .. . Ci:ln fO 9A 10.3' F Siottol l,IJ 9.M U lrs 1.7' I.I, MS GltOU,.: ----• 8••~ "G SI 1 •t• .. ·~ 2'.i.:W l;l1 ii\'5~':t-::.r,,,.6 ... 6""::11T 1s:<F~t1, 1·" ~o!:: ::~;S:J~ --.---:::~F~~ .~ 1T f~:~: r.Y Vffl I.SI •.l9 GllOtlfl: 8.a'-'<. •.ti 1.60 SnWllll •.Cl •. DI r------., 11.Hlfl 1'9!fl 1 6 Jlo-1-. CG Funt 1.M 1.1-OflllC $ .•• t .14 Bona Sr l .M 4.JS lt<lllll S.11 1.11 I , SILVER I MOBILE PHONE llotU lfMI .•• :It "•-lo c.tnt ~~ 1.11 t.SJ c.wtr. Sr $ ... 6.11 C.v•dll 2.'1 J.11 ~1 F 1.)0 1.20 61•4 Al .•loll l 1 2~ ••• ""1! Inv t .'1 l.6J Fr lnc:m 1.62 1.11 Pf"' S•k ).116 ),SJ f""'lll c. 1.1t I.IS Blrtre!I lfw It I 11 ••.• C:H.AHPONG VSGY 5 9.01 9.tf l11<om 4.01 •.JI Trwi (ap 6.IS 1.12 ·• Berl\Hll'N• 10 1 21.o+ 1- fl UNDS : UUl1h1 l .ll l.tJ SC«• Sr $.5' t.OI 1ri•I EQ I.ti 1.1l I -.. -I Blrle• .llt J 1 ••1-~I "'""' 1.05 1.11 Re• cap !.It •.H c...w111 '·" s.lJ r-11 ..... 1.... · • ..... 11· ·-,.... 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' • Ge11e1·ally Lowe1· 1 e Tel(prompler WASHINGTON (UPll The Secur1t1es and Exchange Comrrussioo (SEC) charged Ptionday Teleprompter Corp , the nation s largest cable television rranchise operauon. defrauded stock holders and.. the p u b I 1 c Mth misleading financial 1nformat1on m lr73 Teleprompter and 1ts Chiel- 0U1cers agreed to a permanent mjunction without adnuthng gwlt or innocence m U S District Court 1n NeW: York City the SEC said Teleprompter has about 2 million cable te\ev1s1on subscribers lll 34 states The allega tions 1 n v o 1 v e d reports to stockholders and potential investors expla.inmg "hy Teleprompter eammgs dropped from 22 cents per share to 6 per cen ts per share 1n the first hair of 1973 Ameriea11 10 /tlost Actitle Ame rlca11 Sales Vol11me • OAIL.Y PIL.01 is dy ing to mee t Harry Crow n : ~ EDWAROS '~ CIN EMA · Harbor Boulew;ud ii Adami Costa Mfll • 546-3102 . . . -. \A.'ednt!sday, July 17 }q74 BARGAIN MATINEE WEDNESDAY • I :00 P.M. ALL SEATS S 1.00 THE MIRISCH CORPORATION Preseflts CHARLES BRONSON in A l/'ALTER M1Rrs6H· R!CHARO FlE!SCHER PROOUCTIOf~ "MR. MAJESTYK" Al50Starring AL LE TTIERI LINDA CRISTAL LEE PURCELL Wr111en tJ1'EL/v'IOPE LEONARD Muse by CHARLES BERNST!r:IN Proci.ICe'J bV WALTE:.N MIRISCH Directed by RICHARD FLEISCHER inr;J7.p G ,,,,,,;_,...;;.;i1•1t i COtOl'<!IYOCLVl<l ' lJnrtad.Arhata 1£1..J'] • .. ""-;.·2· ~:~.? • plus • '"' T•<I': W!;~t"''"'STt H CC:NTI" .. c~ •111•1~5110 ' Gl'IU!fl( li!U H 1 ••9l .,, .... ~ ~··~·~ __ , . "" ~''" '"" 892-4493 ., .... ,.c..,. ~r" 893·75..8 I . r . . . .. ' -. -. . . . •' . .. . . .J • • Ma11ulis Heads Americru1 -F1ih11 fustitute ' \VASlllN'GTON (AP) "Da)'S o( \\'ine and Roses," The American Ftl mlnstitute' arrangement with tbe Institute \Va! . rounded In 1965 to ls fie.""<ible eqough for him to encourage the art or the tin··'-h' -• I n'IOUon picture and to help coa u.:: 11 own p",.,,.uct on ---· J\tartin ~ltinulis. a ''' n rd . ''Lu \'." ''The ~t i r ::i c I e "'inning 1notion picture and \\forker.' "'Dear llcarl'' and telc\•islon 1>1'oducer, h:\s been "R e q u i e 111 for u 'lenvy- nanlt!d dircclor or the \\'C.lJ!:ht." For its tirs:t !\Ill American F' i I en ln!!l it11h~'!'I l'enrs, he-lvns sole producer 1 " 1 ·c 1 . 1 s 15 tc.1TI opcrntio11 ~l Beverly or the CBS lrlc\·isior1 se ries "Pltlyhouse 90." preserve Jls ·heribge. I t projects. ()Pf'rates Its O\\'D theCer in thef ir==========~::?==='====='11:__~­Kenned~ Center and flas recclved more thin 12.000 feature films· which Mve been dcpofiit.ed In the library of Director George SlC\'Cns J r.. '·TI1e.. American Fi I m announcing the :tllJXlintnlCnt, lnstilnte is at a singe." said J\1anulis '''ill nssu1nc his Stevens said, "\vhere \Ve need ne\1· dullcs Aug. l n t an evoo grenter involvement Greystone, the c on v e r I c d fro1n the prof~slonnl film n1;111sion "'hich houses the corn1nun it)'. tl·lartin ~tanulis i n s l i t u I e' Si ~nter for \\'ill lead this dcveJopn1ent ond Advanced FlltTI Studies. nlso be associated with. n1e in ~1anulis productions lla\'e the ovcr·all direction or the rec.clved 2 Emn1y inslilute's planning and non1inatioiis nnd I I 'E:n1n1y . grouih." awards as \Vet! as si:\"' Oscar ··---- nomin;tions and an Oscar. l1is prod uclions have I n c I u d e d • Congress. The Be\•erly Hills operation Is ln effec t a conscnatory fQr YOWlg filmmakers W' practice their skills. Traineef follow a t'w\'c>-yca r program, ~ the end of \Vhich ooch is in\-d.ved in an original film projecL Alanu l i s s a:d his IVIS. NOW 7 P.M. CONTIMOUS SLIHDAY NOM2P.M. 673-8350 Great stars in person! Hank T ti.om,pson Th.! Grass Roots Les Broown Skiles&! Hcndcrsoft. Where were !JQi.J in '6Z? ~- , Tlw Four Freshmen I 1 The. 51:,\plc Singers Chuck Jones Ma~ic Revue 1 . I Continuous free jl entertainment , rodeo • horse show motorcycle races TV pro&rams . spo.-ts fk:M<ers · carnival ..,_...,_ ..... _ .... .,... ....w_ .. ,.., =-=IL r ·~- ™ IRONSOM "MR. MAJESlYK" ,,, __ CALL THEATRE FOR- SHOW TIMES 671·6260 .t.110 George Segal Glenda Jackson "'"~1..;nfnnlr.F.ta A Tuuch Of Class PAUL NEWMAN ROBERT llEMORD KATlfA!llNE ROSS. "BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" A.Ii Al SWU STA'""° ... MA.TIMUS DAlv ' MA.TIMUS DAILY 12:10 2:10 4:10 6:10 1:30 I O:lO 2:00 4:JO 7:15 t :JO there were a fe\v things a fashionabl e girls school Qk!nl teach. ' ...... "LAST Of SHEil.A" He,ba, Bovlw.,d •t Wilson SUMI C~t• Meu .. 146-Dl57l • ... ... "THE CANDIDATE" tPGI PLITI CITY PLAZA 1 In the City Centre Orango • 997·0832 BU1Cil A 1HE KID ARE BACKI . -Jud ............. of Ill ----1+1:1-:_..:,: At Theatres and Drive-Ins Throushout Southern Callfomla · PAULNEWMAM · ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE ROSS . "BUTC" CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" 'A GeclGll Roy HIR·P~ Mllll~n ~rodUC.l,qtl. Co-Sran~STROTHER MARTIN· JEFF COREY· HENRY JONES E~Pfoducer PAUL MOtTASH• Prod<.ICed by JOHN ~OREIAAN 0.recled byGEOAGE ROY Hlt.L . W1~en ty WILLIAM GOlOMAN Music COmPOs.d ind Conducted by BURr BACHARACH A NEWMAN·FOREJ.-"N Pfesentallon• P~~· • Colof b'f OeLu~e• ~!"l~,..-r ~~~of1~flliCi:H.! 1roi:~-:-::::...-::;i ~ , .. -.. LlllJ canAVESA ORANGE COUNTY DUfllliE Fox South Coast #I 714-S46·271 I COSTA MUA Paulo Orion-In 714-545-3313 RTlllO Stddl!back Pl•za Cinema 714·581·5880 NUllTINCTDI IUCH Orange M311 Cl11ema 714.fi37·0340 lllANliE Stadjum Ori¥!· In :;:4 714-639.fi990 WESTMINSTfl Cirtema·West 714-8924493 WSTMSll./lllltlST. 1 Westbl"a;olt 714-53G-4401 ... .,....,..,., ., I c:.:'.:".!';" .. , ... 1 .. 1 MU VllNl'S/MTSftllOVS \ tSlAD Of CALl'tllN NIMO lflll "'"' • -.a-Wt tollll KU.KATOA WT Of JAVA (flO • ' • . ' • • .. . >. ·-.. ' •. • . . .' ;.. =~ . ' · . ... :: . : (: :-. . =~ •• .. .- .. : .. .... .. ~ ~ '!l !¥1.A.~.n. Hunlin1ton Cinem1 714-847-9608 I IUlllE Cinedome 20 714-532·3328 ~~~~·-~~~ '"' WOODY L~LEN SAM " :o•h lri Color 1'1 A '· ' ti"!" 'tol'SP<>l'.JOl.JCTIOIOI' .. ~. A GEORGE ROI Hill FILM THE STING ?1 'rhia ', • ? • lyT.f. Ew11y S1111rd1y In the DAILY PILOT • ,, .... ~_,_ . ...,... ______ ,_. ____ __ 1 -• DAYSTAR .. Presents The Southern California Tour of • Coming to: Laguna Beach High School Auditorium· · USPnA .... L ...... _loach Friday, July 26 8:00 P.M. Saturday, July 27 8:30P.M. Sunday, July 28 ~:00 P.M .. At Pri ces You Can Afford : Ad•-• TlcUls AcWl1 SJ.pO-Sluclt!!!1 & Cllil*" SJ.DO __ Al The Door SJ.SO & $2.50 Tick.ts Go C!n Sale · 1 O:OD A.M. Thurs. Al Bo Jangles Music Village 933 S. Co~st Hwy .. Laguna Beach Coa st Music 1839 Newport Blvd .. Costa.Mesa The Four Muses Music Center / 302 N. A'Venlda de la Es1re11a. San-Clemente-- "' Mission Music 27601 Forbes Rd . S.D. Fwy. al Crown Valley Pkwy .. Laguna Niguer . . .. . ·~ . -..... , . • . .•. --. "IUTCH CASSIOY 'THE SUN DAHCt IUD" .IK~NH::ti.15- .. C~~"~ll "HHl•llOIS-AliArN" ~ "WOILO'S lil!ATIST ATHUTI,. C:....al.KtlOl<IMlll "Ml. MAJIST'fK" ... , .. _.. • . ' :· "ONE OFTllE : BEST " : -lf•11 R ffd 111!AsT · lllJWL l!llTllTAI~ • --'ll!nnn- ; . .. ' . wu !YU , K llADl" -L.A. rim./ -HBC·TV "'Mlt,,.A'JllfYI(" -.. WHITE LIGHTNING" 1'MUMDlllOLT AND LIGHTFOOT" Ill -"IUlflMG" "IUTCH CASSIDY I THI SUHDAHCI llD" - .. "THI HIAITlllAX ICID" .. WHITI L19HTNltil~" l(ids Like to Ask A,idy " EXUBERANT, EXTRAVAGANT!'. LOUfDITI ·····-_ ... __ ~NEW-TV ~MeVIE-LOVERS ORGY!" -t.A;f#wlJd-ErMlllw ---- ·: . ....:...----~~1-···------~----- 1CINIMA I " ~ECIAL EHGAGIMEMT! "~ONE IN ' :: . lO SECONDS" S~"ELIANOR" DESTIHID TO II -+."' • A CLASSIC ; : S'9w11 At Y. 2-4:J0.7. ~JO'·""· , ~CIAL nA CHILDltEH'S •. PiLM lllSTIVAL THUltSOAY ONLY DOORS ortN I Z:JO Skw 1:11, All Stet• Sl.00 • ,Cl~All ; ' ALL WALT DISHIY ; • 00SUPIR DAO" ~·soN 0, FLUllER" , Co1YiiMHM11 2 l".M. : , Doily l •c•pt Tliw!. ~------.' • "THI MOOVI TUil" 1•1 • "THI MYS OU$ l$LAlolD Of. C4"Allol lolf.MOM ' .......... W.tJ••• .. l'G>I •Sl'ffiill l'fl" 111JO 10 1,00 p,!'I, •h•c• 11111,. H0Ud1y11 $1,00 iP"Clll '..lJe• 1''>0 10 2'00 ~"' !••C""t 1•11,. Hoh•~r•I SI ,00 t)p," 0 • 1, I ' Ill 1• ~, .. A ~ltME CLASSIC% l l HI '111.1.11•: UTitlHLl' FA.SCINA'fE(-!." -1-i....-. .vM..-...... •Plf.TU ll): Ot' Tiit: ,'10 ,T ll1 A l'OIG.SANT l.lJ\'t; ~TORl'. Gl'MIU.!!llt:PHt'.KD I!' ~!..\ft. \"t'.1 ~11 S. A Rl.ITllE. COQUt."ITISll l)fP, A 1rllOIJ:ll EAfl'l'f.U t'ttt:t: SPIRIT. A Gt:11!- •· 111 ltt:<~l'En 'il'l'flf 'f'Ht:."ill Nt'~ ANI) I N'f'El .Llt:t:Nt;E,''-·'·-~,.. {'J, •:Ti ..... "ITAll ClllU SHlnlll• IAllYhOWM ClOllS WClfMAM .... ,,.., ........... ,.. >. PmR llOG™.l'O.'ICH 1'1!0DIDION Stars Mel Brool<i Harvey Korman Madelyn Kahn - PAIJL NlWMAN ROBrRJMIAW • ... ,. "'-'t(''"'"''!' :NI THr811NG WINNER 7 ACADEMY AWARDSI · a-i-c-tn~1•1 ............ ,.. .... ,:····. -; • . .j· . . . .. . ' a... 'i.t-IJMm • .... I f """'900I ..... "'•n• ••''"""" """*'' •11..c." ........... .._7/11 _ ... _.. ........,, ... IN MISSION'ti-1 .............. . llll'ISTHQOOK 1 . . 'llW.""' i ' ... ' • ..• -BUTCH I THE KID ARE BACK! Just for lhc fun ot It I ..... j MOL NEWMAN· ROBERT REDFORD KATHARIMI ROSS . "BUTCH WSllW AND THE SUMDANCI KID" Co·Starnllljl • A George Roy 11•1l·Pa.il Moria~ Pr0duc:o0n • STRoTHER MARTIN• JEFF COREY• HENRY JONES· l •ecuif\la Proo.x:er PAUL 11uriA::.1 t For Weekender Advertising Phone 642-4321 -~<--- .\ . . . . . . . - Wtd11!1d<ly, July 17 1974 DAILY PILOT 25 ~--- YOU WILL LA UGH AND FEEL GOOD AND. HA VE A MICE EXPERIENCE " ... BOISTEROUSLY FUNNY OLD TIME FARCE ..• STREISAND AT HER BEST!! Vin cent Canby New York Tim es (G) 13ar-br-a ~t..-elsand l!l!(()r l'.ete~ Sake" .. -plus - GOLDIE HAWH "BUTTERFLIES ARE FREE" Kids Li k~ to Ask Andv • • . ' , -.. IA! JaCt)diq~~ ........ • •• MON..TVft .. WID.. TH\11$. l'ltl. 1:ff.t<Jl-11:45 I .[ii 1. .·~1 I·· I' I \'. ' • ., .. ' • • -------------------- -i I I -. 28 DAILY PILOT flor1none ' Treatr1ient . Defe11ded __ _.)ly DR. STEINCROHN Dear Dr. Sleincrohn: I had a hy~erectomy at age 32 because of bleeding. fibroids that made me quite anemic. But'the surgeon found that I had diseased ova ries and had to remove them. too. 1-----H&.-has-put--me-0n-sex - hormones to ma ke up for the I loss of my ovaries. I've been taking them for about three months and feel pretty good. ~ty qu estion is this: IS it always necessary to take se x honnones when the ovaries have been lost? A !rk!nd of my mother just had a similar operation and her doctor Sll)'S she does not have to take them. Why the difference in treatment? -~trs. Y. co~mlEttf: As you haven't told me the approximate age of the patient. since· she is a friend or your mother, I ·am asswning that she is in her late 40S and over mosl of her menopauSa! symptoms. \Vhen ovaries are removed after the normal menopause, the operatiJn does not usually DOCTOR IN THE HOU!OE . ' cause changes that req uire estrogen treatment. 'lllere is no need for it as the normal secretions of the ovaries have Stopped anyway. °' J.f there a re an y psycOOlogical reactions to the operation, perhaps all that is necessary is the use of tranquilizers. 'lllerefore, Mrs. Y., [ suggest that you keep on with your hormones a s prescribed until your doctor thinks you can do witho1.it them. FOR ~IR. T.: A painful bwrion that interferes with \•:earing shoes to work is reason enough for considering operation. You may have to stay off your feet fCJr a while -\\'hich may interfere with your job -but. you can get an e3timate of your postoperative . disability by tal~ing it over with ap--orihopedist o r podiatrut. When bunions l>e<'Ome so discomforting and painful that they inWrfere with -u-ork and comfort, it is time to quit temporizing and consider the benefits of sur_gery. . D!j DJl STEINCROHN: ls i ix>ssible for a man chang into a \~'Oman by operation to give birth to a baby? -~fr. G. C 0 J\f r.tENT: lmix>ssible. Tran ssexuals can be trano;formed superficially by surgery so that they resemble a member of the opposite sex. For example, the m a I ~ tra~xual may have his genitals removed and have an artificial vagina created. But basically he rema ins a man. He has no ovaries to produce eggs and no uterus to contain the embryo that becomCJ. the full lenn baby. ~fRS. J.: \Vhcnever an famil y simultaneously to complain 0 r headaches -especially during the winter -I think. that suspicion Is ju s tlfiedly directed at an heater devices and ventilation. Have an expert come in and take a look . I recall a family or seven who suddenly bef!an to suffer from headaches. The reason ? A f;wlty heater - and mA!lt: chronic m ono x Ide Poisoning. FOR l\fRS. 11.: I can only believe it is coincidental that Mien yoo r husba nd stopped ta·kln g vi t amins his hemorrhoid! disappeared. I can't accept any relationship between hemorrhoids a n d Vitamins. Dr. Steiocrohn welcomes reader mail and incorporates fil\ll~·ert in columns when fJ(>ssible, but re~rcts he cannot reply by letter bee••,. of \-'Olume received. I • . -. . ~Vtdnesday, July 171 1974 P!ices Goo d lhru Tuesday, July llrd - • FANTASTIC RECORD BUYS! .. • --__ . ......,.... . PILOT-AD\IERTISER ,_J • . ' ... , .. ' WI RemYI Ill Rit~l 11 limit l1111i~ft" No StlH to Dealers! ... .................. ...__; CLOSE-OUT BUYS!·. ' Never Before at These Low Prices!: · PANASONIC • ., • Colorful 2na·al1 ~eeR ·. o---..---. ~ ..:~:~'flAt HIT! 22 GA.u, lAt Rll71!Tr Formerly ·-- Advertised on TV at 3. 99 rach! .. OVER 20 FAMm ARTISTS _20 or MORE HITSI "GoOCI Vibr~tions" · 22 orli!Jf in 22 h•11! 61ood, Sweot & Teon. Rod S•ewon. Jcihnl!V No1h, locl. ing Glou, Moe.Dovir. Jome' B<own, mo1el ~Do It Now" 20 o"i"s;20 hits! 9to0lle1, J~lfe<1oi"I Alt. plane, Jonis Joplin, Tl>e Auocio1ion, Ne•I Diom<Kld and many, mony orhe'1, each Reg.6.8a-=5ss ONE MAN VINYL COLORFUL POOL BO•T ""vwhe•e the•e'1 wcner.you11 be cible 10 floot on 1h11 l!O•Y·la-mlloie pOftOble boot, Coru truc1itd of rugged vinyl wolh •ape tciw lone on ccilorf>..1 shodei.. Prl(.t! doe.111ot include paddle on"!hi1 voco!<CI time >p•cool! MALLORY HEAVY DUTY "AA" SIZE BATTERIES Reg. 59c BIG FAMILY SIZE . CHUNKY CANDY BARS r~.110 !hk lr; & e .irci good. Scilod m~k chocolo•~. m~l (h<K01o1e w i1h roi1inl. ~an1 cir P"°""'., ' FOR35c COOL REFRESHMENT IN SNOCONES "Big ltt!0l" 1no ,on1t1 ~odd.es 90 for ,:_ now OI bog oov"'9l. SIOO. up 'f"O\lf frterer nowl .. '. ........ us J96 SAVINGS It! . LUMINUM BACKPACK FRAMEAND BAG QUART 349 THRIFTY EXCLUSIVE' HARllOFF VODKA -;in out\•(W>dtrrg buy n1 in ..... ry. dll"~ luw Pl••• -rtow .,,..n )CIW: •• lor o ~ ed tlm.e oni.,.. Santa Ana D Save 1.32 to 4.52 011 21 YOUR CHOICE 2 FOR 66 t 2'' to 4s9 POLYlSTER . . BED PILLOW SPECIALS Now -cill si zes 01 on• low p1icel Pi11mp, soft p~lowt !~led wt1h white polye11er & cci~•red with pin~ or blue p_oli1hed or. "Sr>owflok•" p•inl.0 cci11on. Non.ollerg•nic, sioy soft , .• midew-p•oof & odotie11. 100. Re,:Hoce !he fom~y·1 cild pill""'' -.el.ct o ,;,e to pll'O.e e~•'VO"•! REAL $TONE LOOK JEWllERY • S...per..:091n of "r...-.1 loo•" jodt!. 1opil, fvOty ot <;oool 11ecklac1t1 & rcipes -ftr•t ot lh,.hy. CO!ne ••I • lllatc•iltt 1•11•• Style [uriqs ............... : •.••••.• 1.1! .. ~ ,_..,~ID~m~~-;::::;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;--, , Safe Priced ·3!' SALE OF POPULAR GAMES C,.•M Idell lo l~t oio<lg llfl vocotoont O<ld trip.1 l~p eni oy,,,.llf for li.iddin O<ld odu-.1o .S.99 $(rabble,' 09 Cl ..... II<-' 99 Manopolv Al ";OV' f_,.;._., Costa ~esa 23l l '17111 St. 1406 W. Ediogor' lrislol Fountain Valley t41p1ll• .. ,...,.. ·costaMesa 2~00 Horticw at Wll- Santa Ana ll25 lrislol at MocAritw • .. . Fountain Valley 16141-atldi"'I" • REG. ' 18" & 19". YOUR I CHOICE · ,. ·. . MIST STYLE HANO · 11UD'lf'AIR'11Rm-··: ~--- Richly Quiltlll to the Floor! Reg. '10'7 ,f 77 Twin Size PRINTED AND SOLID ·QUILTED BEDSPREADS 9eau1iful 1oibred, 1111u.lfia>.1>ly q"'bed oce1011 1offet<1 or royon Mohcir s preads in bold splo1hes of so~d colo< or flofof prin11 odd chorm IQ bedroomL . •l ei 11.!J Fill l tf Sire lrls,.-e1f .................... 1.11 • R1fltef Q1iltef C1,ulefte 111111" ......... 1.11 399 Well hoir lar o profeuio<toJ dry. inci 1tvl>..g )ob. flng1r1ip con11ol, ,t'fHb8S PANASONIC MIST STYLING COMB P111hbut1on m1~1 O"{lled lo we1 "Oii hoir Cl• iu>1 I curl, A11och· menll. ,f£H7•S • 16.88 PANASONIC STYLING COMB WITH ATTACHMENTS · ' Reg, 1.48 122 10~1°0 Reg.39~ 19c NORWICH jlSPIRIN tiotlle cir 100 ~ Reg. 1.53 Reg. 1.22 99c 88~ KAOPECTATE NTIDIARR.HEA 12 Ounce VISINf 1 EYE'DliOPS 'h Ounce, Gl1111 <11 Plottic .. I . ~~· 96C -jjcc DECORAnD METAL TV TABW GILLETTE ' -Reg. 1.43 Reg. 1.55 91c 99c ERBAL ESSENC ARRID EXTRA DR . . Me•ol 1V lrO'f' lubie1. wo!~ de<or1lled • .,.,....,Je11 IOfa. FOAMY SHAVE lor9112J \1)"~15"' 1e...m9 et•o. f,.m brou.-. ieoa. Ritt. Mirnthol, t""• -SHAMPOO . ANTl·PllSPIR ANT ; 1.J! llftl Si11 l1, l llJS .................................. tlc Pf!ce ind , 1er cifl I i,.r El Toro · El T0<0 at Rockfiold Westminster W11l:~ht at Golden Wnt . . . . . . Huntinc)ton Beach 9161 !..._. at lroot.hursl Huntinc)ton Beach H llwllMjtoo C- , 8 Ovn(e 11, 11uln• l><ltr~""'d & Dry or Ol!v l'lfht Pt>wtJ,, I' 01 Huntington Bea ch ·· 21 ! l I leoch Bh•d. ot Atla nta HuntiftC)ton Beach 5811 WC1Mtt,. • • ' . • • Goo-d Licki • I \ \ .. • "'Time was when making homemp.de ite cream·meant everyone taking his or her tum at cranking the freezer ·handle in a shady spot aMhe family picnic. Today .the method is much simpler. Just use the freezer trays. · · For a start, make Orange Ice Cream, a.fool· proof, easily made treat rich in refreshing citrus flavor. Freeze the creamy blend until it's mushy, then stir and freeze again until it iS solid. By adding other ingredients .to the , basic recipe, you can make more exOtic combina· tions, , With Ideas like these, who wouldn't want to revive the old art of ice.cream making. ORANGE ICE CREAM 4 egg .yolki % clip sugar '>' teaspoon salt 1 can (6 ounc"e) frozen orange juice concentrate, thawed, undiluted · 2 cups light cream \ 2 cup~ heavy cream, whipped Beat egg yolks until thick and. lemon col- ored. Gradually beat in sugar and salt. Stir in undiluted orange concentrate and light cream. Fold in whipped cream . ..l_Turn-into . .....freezer tray..s....or loaf pans ... and ... : .. === freeze unW-mushy. Stir;-tben--freeze-until- solid. Makes 2 quarts. · Orange Swirl '\. When ice cream is frozen almost solid, stir 1ln l can (6 ounces) frozen orange juice con- centrate, thawed and undiluted. Stir just . enough. to marble; do not mix completely. / ~ Orange R~m Raisin \ Plump I> cup dark raisins and 'h cup light raisins by ·covering with boiling water and letting stand for 5 minutes. Drain well, cool and add to basic ice cream mixture with 1 ~aspoon rum flavoring before fteezing. 1 Banana. Coco.nut Amb"°'la Add 2 cups mashed· rive banana and 1 <;Up toasted flaked coconut to basic cream mixture before freezing. • ' BEA ANDERSON, Editor CAROL MOORE, Food Editor .........,, ,_, 17. 1'74 , .... Ease the bud9et and please the family by servin9 Ten9y S.eilfood With Pineapple Barbecue Sauce, crispy summ~r salad and icy lemonl!de . 0ceen perch is recom111ended but other fish --may belub1tituteCI. . -· , . ' • . . • •• eserve-d Everything's Some people like ice cream better than anything. Ryan O'Donnell, 2 has unswerving for his cone. BiuelusaLof brother Kevin's offer of a taste of hot dog, resulted-in a prize-winning photo for father, Daily Pilot pnotographer Patrick O'Donnell . Fishy • Seafood Surplus Alert Issued .. A record inventory of frozen fish plus 2 tablespoons red wine vinegar Combine syru p and re ma In l n I ·this. swnmer's cat.ch may well put to rest 1 teasjXIOfl salt ingredients; mix well. Simmer 10 to JS the pun that •<the average shopping cart minutes to blend flavors. Add pineapple today holds one child ·and a: week's 1 clove garlic , sliced tidbits; heat. Serve over fish. Makes 2 sa " cups sauce. -,f"'""'~-----------'.l'haW-frozcn-fishy..;-plaee--in-shallow•--~------------- Cold storage readings confinn that dish. Combine and mix catsup, oil, mOst po~ar seafoods are more plentiful vinegar, salt, and garlic; PQ!lr over fish. this season than they have been in years. Cover and reCrigerate aOOuf one hour. Market prices are softening in response Remove fish from marinade ; drain. to .the ample supplies. Discard garlic and save maririade for Toe.al frozen inv"entories on June 1 were 424 milliOn poonds -up 151 million· pounds from 1973. -Ocean pereh and flounder. lead the particularly heavy ·fillet and steak variety, up to 81.5 million pounds from 61 million poonds a year ago. Holding's of frozen fish sticks and portions climbed to 40 million pounds, 50 percent more than last year. An all-time high of frozen fish blocks assures - corltinuity ol mariulacturing for these handy Items. . Shellfish in storage on June 1 totaled 116.8 million pounds. Shrimp products, both raw and breaded, head this list. King and snow crab also are high on the , --ltSt of plentifuJs. Use fillets in. these two teeipes fOr a tangy barbecue en~ree or a pretty luncheon casserole. The fondue familiar to most ot us Is the "dunking" kind. Les! well known but everY bit as delightful Is baked fondue, ba900 on egg whites .ralhe.r than cheese, to giv~ it a Jigl1, aouffle-like texture. --. . " TANGY SEAFOOD WITH PINEAPPLE-BARBECUE SAU~E _, 2 pounds ocean perch oA other fish . fillets, fresh or frozen 'I• cup "Catsup Yt cup cooking oil basting fish during cooking. Arrange fish in single layer, skin side down , in well-greased baking pan. Spoon remainitig marinade over fish. Broil about 4 incheS from source of heat 10 to 12 minutes or until fish fiakes easily when tested with a fork. Baste fish once during broiling with marinade in pan. Serve with Pineapple- Barbeque Sauce. Makes 6 servings. PlNEAPPLE·BARBECUE SAUCE I can (131h: ounce ) pineapple tidbits \1 cup catsup v, cup finely chopped onion 2 tablespooos (packed] light brown sugar 2 tablespoons red wine \.inegar I te_aspoon cornstarch v. teaspoon ginge'r Drain pineaprle tidbits: save syrup. • • • • SEAFOOD FONDUE I cup water 1 pound fish fillets, fresh or frozen ~~ cup ( 1h stick) butter or margarine · l cup sort bread. crumbs I (13 ounce) can evaporated milk 1/.t cup minced green pepper i pimiento, chopped ' 1h teaspoon salt 'Ai teaspoon pepper 1 tablespoori Worcestershire eauCe 1 cup cooked peas 3' egg whites Place water in a saucepan or frytne pan. Bring to a boil. Add fish, then e»ver, lower heat and' let simmer 7 to 10 minutes or until fish flakes easily when tested with a fork. Drain and flake fish. ' A-felt butter or margarine. Add crumbs and 'milk arid cook about 5 mimltes, stirring constantly. Add green pepper, pimiento, salt, pepper, Worcesterahire, peas, and fish. Beat egg whltei tmtil stiff J;Krt not dry. Fold into fish mixture: Spoon into "Nt!J.. ~greased 1.quart casserole and place in ' pan of hot water. (It is a sare practice to place the pen in the-1:1ven, add the...hot water wittrpan in place, then add casserole.) Bake at 350 degrees a~lt-40.m.lllutil or lUltil firm in center and 'lighUy ' bro•lled on top. Serve w!\h Hollandaise , sauce made from the yolks of the -. ~f'1kes 4 to 6 .servings. ' . , . • ---· - fa· DAIL V PILOT Wtdntsday, July l f,' 1974' • • . . • . ._ . . . . • . • ' • ' • t . • • • i ' ' • I Beauty O)' JO 01..SON Ot lllt DfllY l"llO! Sl1tt There '.l'ere no entranct' req uirements for this particular beauty contest. Contest.ants rould be single or married, have children or oot, be old or young, tall or short . ~ "It v:as just £or fun..'' explained the winner. ti.1Jcheale Arutunian . She entered the annual Orange County 0 1t1s. Bankamerica Club" beauty pageant simply because she thought it \\'Ould be a nice \\11)' to meet Y.'<>mcn from other branches of her b.1nk. It's not that ti.trs. Arutunian wasn't \\·ell qualified: h9\vever. As a fonner UUss Costa Mesa and a former Miss Firecracker, she had a few things going for her. ' Like a statuesque bearing, honey- bloo:ie hair and iood measurements {37· ~). •' But the Huntln gton Beach resident emphasizes that th e pageant .was not an exploitation of Y.'Omen, a pul-do\\11 or a slam against career-minded .,,·omen. "It was done more for fwt," she reiterated. "The attitude is in your own mind. It's the sj>irit with which you go into a thing." The contest was the focal part of a social evening at the Disneyland Hotel put on ·by the bank's recreatiQD club for members and guests. · Judges six, including two professional foott»lll players, a fo rmer pageant \\'inner !Ifill three officials from the b.•nk. Contest serious about moving up." ti.1rs. Arutun!an. a 25-year-old 'vilh lhree years or t:ollege behind her' said There was no tale nt contest and no she thinks she will alway! \\Wit, evm evening gown rompetition. 11-1 r s · when she and her husband, Tom, have 4rntlmian sa id. Spirit was high and the children. various "community offices" of the bank \\'ere rooting for their f a v o r i t e She V!'OUld like to complete her degree contestants. and perhaps work in bank management. •1 Ar t · • ri t ' Her husband '1s very proud of her fnc1 i• rs. u un1an s p zes \\'ere a iara, doesn't believe such a contest ls huge trophy, bouquet of roses, gold necklace, trip for two to the state degrading. . · Sa · F Id "I love it," he said. "S""-z..ly after the pageant 1n cramento (with a r ay '""' l off to make the trip) and expenses for a competition one of the other husbands recreation club trip to Ensenada in came up to me and said, 'How does it November. feel to be king?' F.ach contestant also got. to keep Ute "It is a very rewarding thing for me, swimsuit \\'Ore in the pageant. to have my wife win. It takes style, class The ea t was coordinated this year and charisma to ..w.n. nip competition was detinitely.there." by a map k officer. ~trs. Arut ·an does not believe beaut y Even witOOut his wife's latest victory, pageants are judged strictly on looks. Tom Arutunian kno\\'S he picked a The ·personality of a contestant is a big winner. factor, she said. He first saw Micheale when she 't\o'aS in a line.up or contestants for the Miss CHALLENGE Firecracker pageant. 'There's riiuch more to It than the • He remembers · teling his uncle~ "If exterior. You. &n1t feel competitive. that blonde doesn't win, ·these judges You're all there having a goOd. time. don't know what's happening." You're not fighting 'anyOOe.'Ille ju<fges Arutunian left before the contest was will select who they want anyway. That's over, but saw in the newspaper the next the challenge-to retax and be natural on day that she had won. They met at stage." Orange Coast College seven months When asked if she thought a woman later, when they both were auditioning FOCYI'BALL PLAYERS seriously trying to rise in bank for a play, and a little over two and a The 44 contestants ..!P~;.;.i ·\'l····""'·'····--l!iffilelll..\\WkL~~ ... tlll.!.JY.P!'. ~L ....... --... ,~Jl-~~~~L~-~,i<er.~-_ .. .. , ·r Tom and Micheafe Arutunian admire · trophy • " . 1 I ----~-·--··········--·····-·········---· swimslits and· were judged~by ~,..,-Ul ~ conteSt ~ said that "some-v;ere very ~ '~1:1.......AI~-~ · _ --~ ·--~-"-'- We .ddings arid Engagements ' To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to ·have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De· _ partment j.De week before the wedding. Pictures received after thal time will not be used. For engagement _a nnouncements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be su b- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding datei otherwise it will not be published. To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available in all the DAILY PILOT offices. Further. questfohs will be answered by People Section staff members at 642-4321. r December Rites Mc Vickers Tell Troth Dr. and ~1rs. William C. McVicker of Newport Bea.ch have annou nced the engagement of their daughter, M. Kilty ~1cVicker, to Or. Thomas Davin Fahey, son of the Thomas D. Faheys of San Francisco. :ti.1iss McVicker, a graduate of Nev..-port Harbor High School, is a graduate student in. education at California. State tJniversity, San Jose. Her fiance eerned his PhD in education at the University of California, Berkeley, and Is a faculty member at Cal State San Jose. He also is doing .... researctt worltm ph)'Siology:--- The betrothed will exchange vows during December riles in Oirist Church by the Sea, Newport-Beach ... They w;tl be feted on their engagement during a skl M. KIL TY McVICKER holiday in Argentina. JCPenney . Now-an organic hair remover I lai"S off in minutes, stays off for weeks. Leav~s skin beautifully smooth, lree from hair ••• without shaving, waxing, using smelly creams or foams or resorting to electrolysis. There Is now a wa)>fo remove unwanted hair from · . face, arms:'thlghs and legs, and keep it Qff longer. You use a gentle, odorless, organic compound, called Delila, and the results are simply great. Del ila actually lifts out the whole hair from the follicle ••• leaves your akin be:aulifuUy smooth and free from h'air for weeks. .t The little extra time Delila may take al first won't matter once you find you ~n realty forget about hair removal ••• yes, for weeks. There are no blunt ends. No prickly stubble, no nicks or cuts. And there's no quick grow back as there Is using razors or creamy or foamy depilatorles. When hair eventually comes in, It seems sparser and baby soft. OelllalM Natural ,Organic Hair Remover. Ideal for teenagers, too. $5.95 at our cosmetic counter. NEWPOAIBEAtH 1714) 644-23 1~ Men's 'Knits Now Home Stre~ch •• 1n NEW YORK {UPI) - A manent creases and rould be Stevens, one of the giants in couple of years ago knits hit cleaned at home. the fabric business, said, "We the men's wear market in an With suits it was a different have bad a very successful orgy of overproduction that matter. Suit sales were down , (fall) season with co Io r only the clothinglndu.stry can losing oqt to the gieat trend coordinated waip knits styled be guilty of. toward sports and leisure llk~ .woven sportswear fabrics knit tops and bottoms." Deering Milliken, Inc . , another t e x t l I e giant, 'displayed its latest · knits at a. recent musical fashion show in New York, its annual breakfast show which plays lo 25,000 buyers and manufacturers. The hit of the show wis a new raschel knit fabric of 95 percent polyester and I percetll nylon · called "suit younelf." "The gray hannel suit will never be the same," a spokesman said. He display~ The popularity of knits for wear. Hungry manufacturen for .compatibility colo·red suits quickly waned for some saw knits as· the new Messiah sports wear se~ates. of the fabrics looked so gosh and rushed headlong into "'Ibey r a n g e d from awful nobody would wear production, . glutting t b e monotoned textured surface them. · market. A lot of them came patterns on Jllain grounds to Now the nation's economic up with some trashy garments be the ·Ucb . h be · a gray flannel suit that i! vir- tually wrinkle proof with a floe worsted finish but with all the knit qualities of shape retention, recovery a n d romfort .• woes are helping bring them that were pretty awful. ·-a r llO wit a num r ba k . th . . Tbe new knits are mere of color-keyed patterns to uselr;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;ill ;:=:;::;;:::;::;;::=:; c smce ell' prices are interchangeably for shirts orj J generally lower than other sophisticated and the waffle slacks. JOE CARLOS . STACEY SMITH fabrics. There also • r e weave of the old knits has PLUMllM5 CO • enonnous improvement!' -in gone along with the incredibly "Since warp knits 'perform the look, quality and feel, and Jotid patterns and a slick and just like a woven fabric in the Lt:. ;::_:,"2~ some of the knits are virtually shiny fmisb that felt cold to prod.UC!loo line and are. Jess 548-5558 indistinguishable from such the touch. The trend is toward expensive than double knits or 1675 Superior woven fabrics as flannel or solids and textured solids 't\o'ith • textured polyester wovens, Cosl• Mesa brushed denim. a nubby silk or linen look. m~ny manuf~cturers a r e The original knit boom was Many of the new knits \vi.Ii lJ.Slng . them m . casualwear SPORTSWEAR ••~_:"."' Date Set .... At Party based mostly on double knits end up l.n suits but the~ is a rollections for sprmg, 1975· o.. S,.Cwtr and they are back in great trend toward leisure suits, "Price-conscioos shoppers "Fw A Wirhr HMtw • A .. volume. j sometimes called a "second can look for lower retail price Yt'mQfFPIAZA. MIOAISWC ._ _. A .... i. Stylt _ • During a party in .the Balboa Bay Club the engagement of Stacey ,Louise Smith t o Sterling Conley Ball . .F_as But what may prove an even suit," which have less real tags OD next season's warp ~~ 21~~W:w.. _. ..,. lnl 9'kti Serftct greater boon in the fall tailoring and are comlortable 1 _____ ,'..'--:::::::=::::::=~~~~~==~:.=:.,=:":":'":::":•:...,.=:===='- announced. ' Miss Smith, daughter of Mrs. Michael Hook of Tiburon and Dargin Smith of Balboa. was graduated from Redwood High School and attended Orange Coast College. Her fiance ls a graduate of Ne\\'port HarOOr High School, and his parents are the Ernie Balls of Newport Beach. . The betrothed are planning a spring ceremony in Newport Beac h. Map Tips DETROIT ( U P I) Families....-ptaru:Ung vacation ~rips to new or unfamiliar areas !hould map their routes carefully to save gasoline. clothing lines are warp knits to wear. Perhap! their which are slightly lower in greatest ·use' will be in sports price~and__bav.e.~s ey_e r a I jackets and slacks, and in tops advantages, mainly. in that and .bottoms, matching or they are far Jess inclined to coordinated. snag and bag. A spokesman for J . P . The reason for lhis is in the knitting process. \Varp knits, alM> called raschel knits, are ========== made by knitting a series of verticalfy interlocked stitches row by row Into a flat fabric which will stretsP o n I y Jengthj"ise and are I e s s inclined to runs. Double knits are produced by knitting from left to right, interlocking what are really l wo fabrics. These are usually more loosely knitted, stretch both ways and can bag. Double knits never lose their popularity in slackes manu- facture and still account for perhaps 80 percent of volume, mainly because of their great comfort in such sports as golf, and for their easy care char- acteristics -most had par· ' ~~~,~~~~~~,-~ 1t . JULY SALE! .: i Selections from Our REGUlAR STodc . ~1· Yi~~y~~a~?.~~:§ ................ NOW s1. 99 OTHERS AS MUCH AS 50% OFF · . ' ~~~t1NYr~~~Ws5,~~ ....... ~~!~. 50% OFF I ~l~~~~~dv~~~~~t~! ............... ."~.'0• Y2 .PRl~E ~· soor,,~,~IRTS I ~9~~,~~RTS $ $21.00 -tr-~ $33.00 s2 to s7 s5 to 57 ' MANY MORE ITEMS (~fl f:'.JJ UP TO 50% OFF! °' .If ,Jl¥ ~)\~ GRADUATE CORSETlE RES n~:;.., lVJJ f:'\Ot~<'l~ SPECIALIZING IN B TH AU FF CUPS Jill • v ,..,v,.. ~· •' -(/Ii ~ "",•;' 370 E. 17th St:-. ~ £.l ~u' .~ NEXT TO RALPH'S MARKET-COSTA ~ESA • · 'ffl . :.Ut.•i 1\ • Daily ~:30 to. &-!sat. 9;30 to 5.30 ' ~· ~ • ALL SALES FINAL -NO.PHONE O~OERS PLEASE-NO LAYAWA.YS $,l ' ANAHEIM PLAZA -Anaheim FASHION ISLAND -Newport ltoch IJVEISIO£ PLAZA -lr..r,;d. TYlfl MALl -liftf-lide CENTIALCITY MALL- Sooih<~il'ICI f~VALLEY­ Soo.Oiego • D • ' D • • ' AMALFI • • • • • • • • • •• Reg. to $45.oo NOW 1/2 PRICE DOMINIC ROMANO Reg. to $40.00 NOW 1/2 PRICE . AMANO .•.•••• : •••• Reg . to $32 .oo NOW 1/2 PRICE ' . RED CROSS •••• •• Reg • to $24.00 NOW 1/z PRICE $31.00 NOW 1/z PRICE SELBY " ......... ,. .Reg. t~ .COBBIES .......... Reg. to $21.00 NOW V2 PRICE -I PASSPORTS ~ ..... Reg. to $25.oo NOW , 1/a PRICE . . ~ AND 'OTHER FAMOUS NAME BRANDS SIZES TO 10 MM TO c, lllTN."!IAU Stl!S 1N Alt smH AND COlOtlS: •• so IE f~ '°" IESf SElECTIONI •all.otftfinoll •noe•diongttl •nortfwftdtt U.-'""' ~A-ICOl'd, Motl« 0-.- • _ _... ........ ~"-'"-·......,...we-I • @~~~~~~~®$'~~~~ !.-:==--=--===-=:::::===::::::::;~ • • •• • ' \ r • .. - • . . I -1 .. 1 •• " - ' , • • Gv-WtdMsday, July 17, 1q74 DAILY ~ILOT 291-:;=::::;;;;;;:=:::::=~ ·Junior · Gr-ade Rank Given This Name qreat stars1 in person HAnk Thom.psun The Grass Roots .. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Nevtr thoosbl '!, a ~wn male, would wind up on your couch, but here I am. We are expecting our firs~ child in about eight or nine weeks. If it'a a boy my wife v.·ants lo name him alter me. This \Votdd 111nke him Harvey Whitesides the rourth fficlitious name, but the nu1}ll>cr is ciir~). · · ~ I have had It with lhe '!Junior" bit and I want to brt:ik the chain· tor my son's sake. All my yre I've lived in my father's. shadow. and \ I am doomed to this punishment long as my dad is alive. -. The conru$i between us is a pain in the neck and .constaJ:!t comparislms are a pain someplace else. I can't under· stand \l'hy my dad did this terrible thing to me, because his own father did it to blm and he thoold have known better. Now my wife wanta to do It to OUR child and t ~Y. 0 No. way." She has It io her htad that there IS someihing very cle.ssy about a foorth.gCll:;fflltlon name. I say it's a lot of gari>Clge. want my IOn to have his own identity Ind It can start with a name of bis own. What do you think ? WHATCHAMACALLIT 111E' THIRD DEAR WHATCH: Some Jaaion-lnd 'nllrth. FIMlrtM aad ...._ -•re very proed lo be la Ille 1-,. 00... doa'I like tile Wea. U Yol fed so strongly about lllil, I bellne yoar wife 1llolld mpect )'OW' ...... DEAR ANN LANDERS: Ten lashes with_a wet noodle fer you, baby, How c:oold '/00 idool IUCb' an utterly square atUlllde toward lbat girt """ went to bed , ., , with her dream guy, then '1everything was dif!eren~ magic was gone"? ·Wake up, woman! 'l1le guy on the make Is not crude and inconsiderate. lie fJatters her, )Vines and di/les her and swears she's the Jove of his lite. Alter he accomplishel his mission he may stick around and he may not. But he sure as hell doesn 't have to treat her the same as he did before, because 51le1s already been had. What I'm saying is, the. dame who loses the guy becaWJe she gives in never had him in the first place. Modem morality no longer labels a girt who bas premarital sex as a "tramp." (Notice, I said premarital, not promiSCUOUS.) Tbe problem exists only in the heads of those duinb. ~·sl3rVed women and men. too. They confuse a little attention with true love. -EX-SWINGER DEAR EX: Sorry, Busler, but an a"ful lot or glrll jump lnlo bed, tblnking ti 's lbe way tt enhance • man 's intrrest. 1bll error in j...tgment ls not uncom1non among the anJnltllited, the lonely and 1he ln1ec~wldcb Includes· a I a r g e . segment of the female popul ation, both · married and· single. 1 llrmly beUeve that bed Is no place 10 .1et •cqWliated. Oltce die relatienship ls peo;td •t u.e bed level Utere l!l lilllt lor no) inlt:reit in espktrtq a girl's ideas, cballlcter or anything else. It's "lltllo Lei '• Go ••• Goodbye . ., DEAR ANN LANDERS : rn1 one guy Wfio reads your columii -every day, admits it, and doesn't hide il uoder lhe sports page. Several years ago you printed your own definition for success. I carried it in my wallel but it has beeome taUered from age. \VIII you rerun it, please -LAWYER IN MANHA'rl"AN . DEAR t'HIEND: \\'Ith p I ea s ure :- Success is that place In the road where preparation and opportunity meet. But lOO few people !:!;COgnlu it, because tou often it comes cUsgulsed as hard work. There is a big difter'ence betv.·een cold and cool. AJVl Landers shov.·s you bow to play it cool without freezing· people out in her booklet, "Teenage Sex-Ten Ways to Cool It." Send 50 cents in coin and a long. se lf·addressed, stamped envelope to Ann Linders, P.O. Box 3346, 222 W: Bank Dr.-;- Chicago, Ill. 60654. .... .._ Skiks Ii He-ndt!niM The four fresh.met\ Th! Sc.4pke SinQt..- Chouil:k Jones Ma.tic l«Yue ; Continuous free entertainment I rodeo . hor'K sN.Jw motorcycle races TV protrams ·Spotts Howcrs • carnival -Gen£r&l Admissk>n: Adult!i $1.75 ~ Ctiildrtl\ 6..ai $LOO llnder6·1~c Horoscope: Capricorn. Lets Others Catch Up THURSDAY JULY 18 keep you tied to pa st. 1t is JULY CLEARANCE WOMEN'S SHOE SALE j ' By SYDNEY O~IARR ARIES (March 21-April 19}: No one seems lo wanl you to have an easy time. Obstacles appear to be order or the da}'. If quiet within, yot1 will ob- tain needed~\~ers. TAURUS (April 2D-l\fay 21ll : Accent moderation. Hii:;hlight ability to utilize available ma- terial. Don't scatter ei£oits. One step at a time will ~chievc purpose. GEMINI (May 21.June 2<JI: l\foney, income; investments and basic security -these areas are highlighted. Be sreptical or one who promises something for nothing. Check · valuables. CANCER (June 21.Juty 22): Be ready for change, travel, variety, ex c It in g contacts. Your ability to analyze is enhanced. You see through sham and detect the real thing. time to perceive future and ------------I your personal potential. SAGI1TARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21 ): What appears to be opposition will boomerang in your favor. Accent is on · ind e pendence, creativity, money from unortbdox source. CAPRICOR!j (De<:. 22.Jan. 19): You may have to slow so that mate, partner ca n catch your pace. Key is to observe, learn, plan, determine direction. AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 18): One who sbould know bet~ seems to push. cajole. criticize. Don't e om poun d error. By maintaining your personal dignity, you win friends and a po·ssible promotion. PISCES (Feb. 19 ?.farch 20): Do some remodelin g, rebuilding. Check plans with ·expert. You have right to Cnjoy v.·hat you earn. Strive to fulfill aspirations. !>'£~£ PO/NG Al.I. !>'£CAN. . .' SHOP US, TODAY! COAST SUPER MARKET WE DWVH EVEIY MOH., WID .. NI. 673-3510 334 7 E. COAST HWY . CORONA DEL MAR YOU CAN'T AFfORD TO MISS THE FANTASTIC SA VIHGS OH ALL OUR FOMOUS IRAHD NAME SHOES lfGUlAI t OSJ0.00 -HOW •JOYCE $-1590 • BANDOLINO AND TO • ITALIAN s.18'o • IMPORTS lfG.ULAI TO SJl.00 now • AMALFI s22'0 • KIMAL lo • SELBY s25'0 • GAMINS The SHOE TREE 3410 Via Udo -H.wport l!ach -673-5521 • "''""'Ji:>ll LEO (July 23'Aug. 22): Look over'y<:Mr sboulder. Someone• -~~~~~~~~~_'.~:::::::::::::::::::::::::__i_!~"."'~~~:"::::::;;:;::::::""::;:::"':;:::::::;::1111111~:;:::;::~ is trying to tell you something. I-- i Ul"IT ........ A family member is involved and you woo1d do well to listen. Make adjustment. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Single Parents Complex Avoid tendeocy·to see through romantic haze. In s tead , perceive people, situations as they actually exist. Some hopes. wishes are due for revision. ) A spe<:ial apa'rtment complex has been built in Denver for singles with children. While paren~ work, children play in. a learning center (abov~) which is provided by the complex. One reside t expl~ed !hat she moved there so her child would have others to get to know on a day-to-day basis. \ Vows Recited HURWITZ-KESSLER In an evening ceremony in Temple Beth Ef!let, Anaheim, Rhonda Kessler became the bride of Harold Alan Hurwitz. Officiating was Rabbi Aaron J. Totield. Parents C)f the bridal COQple are the LeoMrd Kesslers of Irvine and Mr. and Mrs. R . Shep Hurwitz ol Anaheim. The bride graduated cum laude lrom UCLA where she majored In psychology . and earned her BA ond teaching credenUal. · Manasevit, A1ison Cow a n , Jeffrey Kess)er, Leon Gossin and Perry Arenson. FOSTER-TEEGARDIN Married in Calvary Chapel 'Nith the Rev. Chuck Smith officiating were Teri Teegaidin of Coota lllesa and Michael S. Foster, Huntington Beach. ' Their parents are Mr. and Mr. James E. Teegardin of Newport Beach anti the Albert D. F~ten, West O:Mna. Attendants were Mrs. Burt Her husband is a summa Sanden, Carol Beatty, Susan cum laude graduate of UCLA Theil, Tricia Burst, Aridy where he majored i n i\cooom!cs and was elected to Angulo, Ed Angulo, Ttmoth,y Phi Beta Kappa. DeSmet, Stephen Hardy, G<ne Attendants were D et; r a Jarrard, James Teegardin and Kesslt?r, Richard Freedland, William Foster. Mr. and Mrs. Jay Kessler. f The new1xweds wiD make A1rs. Jerol'!!C Schechter, Beryl . their home in Costa Mesa. Jt ~ rflaflw~ f<,r HAIRSTYLING TINT ~s12so SPECIAL ,.. PLUS FREE COHDITIOHEW COOL. EL URA WIGS -CAl'l.ISS "'°" nnu s22so Sk'1ntop s31 so At4D cotOIS -•••• m. A~ is0-0 .... 17111 "'""'' . • .... s.-.c--a U!~: s4a,3446 .. LIBRA (Sept. %1-0ct. 22 ): You have more pressure than usual; key now ts t o manipulate, maneuver. Mea~. don't seWe for leftovers, ---~ second best-or used products. MAD .. ' SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Break down barTiers which SEMIANNUAL SALE . . STARTS THUR-. ·JULY lBTH "~DRESSES 30°0 v AL •••••••• if S ~ 40°0 VAL •••••••• $2Q 50°0 VAL •••••••• $38 7500 VAL ••••• ••P $36 I $16.00 SWEATERS $JOO I PANTS -~f1 -SKIRTS VALUES $10 To 25.00 SUITS 40.00 to BO.II VALUES MA $2500 MANYOfHP GOOD VM.UIS j,NEWjTHE CQM~.~~l~;9.~""~.~0PPER SAVE 10% TO 30% ON YOUR FOOD BILL TllF. COJ\fPARISON SHOPPER is an original new weekly publication that lists over J.000 of the most-often·pur- chased h"l'OCetY items by brand name and package siT.e. It shows how much 1•a«h item costs in each of the ten large~t ~upcr· markets in your neighborhood, including Alpha Beta. Albertsons, Food Kin~. l.ucky's, l\1arket Basket, Rnlphs. Safe- way, Stater Brotbers, Thriftimart, and Vons. CONFUSED BY DISCOUNT ADVERTISING'!' 110\V J\tUCll C~N YOU SA YE? If ,·uu·u· an a\·eru e family of four you .o:peni. tt\'er $3,000 o food lut. year. And thc CO!i'.t of that food was up 23P"~ over the vear be.fore. Alust exptrtl 1ay 1J1e 11·ursf inflatio11 ii yer to come~ Bu~ find the lowest prices on your grocery item!! end you c11n help blunt the effect of in na- tion. Spt!nd If) minules a week with Tlit-; COt-.IPA H\SON SHOPPER and you sho' Id l'Ut .rour l{toc~ry bill by at least 1070 without cuttinl{ one ilem lrom your li~t. That•s n S25 savings every nionth for lhe 11ver11ge family. J\oloroover, if you·re willing lo :;pend a little more time you can increase that savings by careful .selection of·brond and package siies. \Vith care vou could chop your grocery budget 30o/o Or more! You·u see a sub9t11n· ti11l drop in your ~ expen!jlls the ''erv first week you U$e THE CO~IPAKJSON Sll OPPEH, or \'our mone\• bur:k. tlO\V TO us•: 1·11 F, co~ Ir A ltlSU ~ SHOPPER \'ided. fill out your '!!hopping list. on the rn.tk pa~e. and then go throu11h THt-: CO~IPAHJ SOX SHOPPER and circlt the lowest price for each item you need. Ate glancc \'Ou 'll be able to tell which mi1rket or nia.rkcts .... ·ill 511.\·e you the niost n_ioncy . l\t US'l' YOU SHOP AISE\'ERAL l\1ARKETS? J\b,;o/111ely _ 1101. Just studyini; Tiit: COMPi\RISON SHOPPER to find the one market in your neighborhood thut has the lowest rrices on 'the majority or the items you nt>ed will result in suhslun· t ie t savings. Add onto thel the savings from purchasing lhe most econon1icul sizes and you 'U find your food costs drop· ping shm-ply. Of course. if yo4're willing to stop at two· or thret! rnarktts to pick up the best buys, your savings o,1•ill be even >?TCill~r. JS THE LA.ltC:ER SIZE AL\\'A YS THt-; BEST BUY·! \Vith moat. supermarkets advertising discount prices, how con you be ~ure you 're getting the most for your monl!y'! Until now you had to do your ownt:onipar· ison shopping, either by driying from store l.o store, or by pouring over ne\\'S• paper ads l.o find lh1s wl'!ek's bargains. Radio ads and newspaper sale specials are ~ders designed to lure you into a mai1!et. Once in there you must compare pricee cartiully to determine if the ite~ you need are more or le9S ei:pensive than elsewhere. Now THE CO/.f PARIS01V. SJ/OPPER doe• the pn·ce chttki11$ for Open up your copy on the dllY you )IQll. pricirtg 1tore by 1tore oil the 1tem1 receive iL in ·the mail {usuBlly Friday!. ya11 'U M buying regularly, and upda1i11K ln!"ide you'll find the len major i'!Upt!r- :"o! THE CO~lPAR I SON SllOPPER show!! the price per n1easure of e,•ery item listed. 1-\nd this ran often mean big sa\•ings. For example. the recent u \·era~c price of the 84-oonce bo:c• of Tide .,,.as 81.49 t 1.&f per ounce). The la rl!_fr size. 171 ounces. v.·as priced 11t ~.4912.0c' per ·ounce'! You could ha''" s11ved 51i by buying tv.·u or th" &mailer boii:es rath'r thnn one big one! \~'ilh TtlE CO~I PAlll­ SON SHOPPEI{ you'll never have to . v.·asle time trying to calculate which. size is the better buy. lt·s don11 for you. rho1e price1 every jj;ttlt.! As a subscriber markels listed across the"lop of each you·u know exactly which of the te>n P81!t'· Items are grouped by category: major chains has the Jov.·est price on the there will be. a piige of mcat11. one of items you .need, on sale or not. produce, Ol1Cl or canned vegelable5. etc. There will be over 1~000 items listed, and DON'TALLSTORESPRfCE,\DOUT they·u be thrn;e iten11 mnst used bv the THESA~tl"t 8\'erage family. You'll find the ilem listed by brand and size. You·u find the price See for yourself. llere are a few ea<'h store ill selling lhat iten1 for under examples of price differllnces between the thaL store's name. Beside each price len markets listed above on !IClme com· you'll find the pricl! per n1easure !i.e., the mon items recently surveyed by THE cost per ounce) so you crin easily deter-INTRODUCTORYOt'f'ER COJ\IPARISON SHOPPER. The per· mirie which size is the best buy. Allpn'ce 11 The regular _P,rice for Tl-IE CO~f PAR I· centa1,>e difference is }iow much more aro clitxked wef!klv af/llr flut .~ufes are iii SON SHOPPF.R is $12 per quarter !less you'd pay if you shopped at" the highest effect, .(O y01, ron be llll'f' you·ro ~aiuiirg t.han SI a week). To introduce you lo this Pj-'-ioxl-~m-•_,k_•_<. __ -c:::;--:,,..==,-'iP·IO·tht1·minulP. .information. Addition· unique shopping COIU!Cfl l you cnn l!Ub· tO'<'' ·~· Dlftt.1· ... MAlkET MAl1".tt t:.~CE Rump ftoa5L, Per Lb. Sl.09 Sl.65 Sl<"o ICa.mpbeU's Tomato Soup, .31 .:16 161' 26ot. Kellof'a Corn Fla es, 12 oi. .33 "' ;JO<; Jello,60L .2l .28 -Top Sirloin, Per Lb, 1.98 2.98 50% Am on the Cob. per Ear .10 ,J!l -Peachn, Per Lb. .29 .S9 103% °'&White JHns, l Lb. .IX\ ... '""' They certainly don 't all price the same: yow could be payil'lg vuer f(J(/'o maNt· for n10.11y ite:m1 timply b)t buyinll at the wrons morlt.1!1 nlly you·11 find a monu·plnnning page, 11cribe to T l·T'E CO:O.I P1\HISON helpful 11hop1?ing hin ts that will alert you Sl-fOPPl-:n for lhe low introductory prit.>e lo ariy tcf*C1al pricing pr11cti<.'es, ind a of o~ly SI for Lhe. ~rst ""·eek. Yo!.!'11 r~ive blank shopplng list ready to be filled in. one issue o.n ~r1d11y, If yo!! like 1t, thf! Just"pl11n your inenu in the space pro• regul11r rat.e1sonlySl2for l3 1!Ji;u<!l!I. -----~-,..,~.------, fTllE CO~iPARISON S M OPPER. nUJ\llANTEf: •1 2232S.E.Bristol.Suit~20~ e t Santa 1\na, California 92707 f 1 f Sua11~~ibererfli~·i;~ t Send ,me. un~ isi;:ue of Tl-1.~; Cfl~lP;\RISO'l" , 1-1\'.)PPE.R. !fl \'our first ill!ue you j '·don t find 1t ~a\e." me fl\·e t1m~ th\' .iu~r11?l10n price 1n Jind it lsn·t thebigge!t tune and money. 111 return the issue and you II relum myf grocery shoppin g aid I monr)' tome promptly, • Y!lu've ever round, • PLEASE PRINTCLEARLY • rumply return tho j issue to us and we'll • I r:hr.erfully ind imme-I NA:0.1F.: ----------------- diately r.efund your STREEt : f f~~.sriiption price In t ii·y: ---------------j t ZIPCODf:: >HONE a £nt'ln~ is SI ('.a!ih ('IMick f.loncv Order ------------~- First Issue to IM malled no later than July 31. , • ' - I ; ' • ~ • • ' • • • • • -: ' . • • . • • ' • :JO DAILY PILOT Wedne~ay, July 17,. 1974 -/ -- I ~~ cup {>'\Ions, sliced \I cup }teen peppe,., dlcod • ~ teaspoon salt I tf'aspoon sart 1 teaspoon parslcy1 chopped 1,~ teaspoon basil ' ·-,Fresh Ve§e-tables Win Whether you ha~·c your 0~11 garden or just enjoy the seasonal plenty from your favorite produce stand, try servfug chfcken with rre5b' vegetables for a winning summer comblruttlon. l\'l!!m.: Y.OJI J .dd 1.be high protein content of chicken to the vitamins and minerals or vegetables, you can't produce • more nourishing dish: \t teaspoon.pepper· v .. cup cream 2 large tomatoes, peeled and quartered Dip individual c hi c le e n pieces in milk then roll in, flour. In large heavy skillet heat com oil over medium high temperature. Brown chicken on all sides .in com oil. Cover and cook about S nlinutes over medium heat or Wltll com is tender. •Remove~~ arrange ch\ekcn piC!JeS ln skillet }Yilh corp m1xture: add' cream and tomato quarters. Cover and simmer about IO minutes or until chicken Is done. Dip clllcken pieces IJl 1nilk: ihcn roll In floW' .• In la.rte skillet over tnediun\ high heat, pour <.-om oll. Lightly brown chicken on all sido5 then remove rrom skillet. CBJCKEN·VEGE'l'ABLE In remainder oftil in 6klllet POTPOUIUU add scallions. ce:lery aildokra: Chicken • •' ' . . I Hams (\,. ·Every Potpourri SUMMERTIME CHICKEN CAIJCO Cover, reduce heat t o i n medium and cook about 15 'minutes. Remove c h 1 c k e n from skillet. 1 broiJer..!ryer, cut serving pieces 1 cup milk l cup (lour V1 cup com oil 2 eups corn To the remainder or com oil in skillet aadthe corn, otilOhs, green pepper, salt and pepper. . cook abOut 5 nlillutes stirring 1 broiler-fryer, cut In · constantly. Arrange chicken In serving pl~s okra mixture in skillet, then 1 cup flour · add tomatoes, fa lt, parsley 1 cup milk and basil . 1/4 ou p com, oil HE1at to bollin'g, then reduce 3 large scallions, chopped heat to lo~·. ('..over. skillet and ~~ cup celery, diced slnuner about 40 minutes or -1 ~'t Cups OKtil;-diced • ~·---i;un~•filChlCkcn·Js done:--- 3 large tomatoes, pee]ed Serves 4. ·We give you. the truth about d -i.sCount ••• ~ST~~ES, -, iit.~~ri~E~~ri1 " ... ,.!~·~ .. ; ..... :: .. · .... :':.: ... ~. and -the savings •. s0 :: Nutritionally you have just .....,.... _ about everylhing you need fo; ~·;:;:; "':i:,~,:::.. 10 With Lucky'• TRUE dlacount pricing you wlll·Ave every time you ahop -not on Pa.ired I -~·~k~n 1i; :.!~dslice~'~ :.-.:;.•:..,. .... ITIMS_OI ws juat e few lte.m•_, but In ell department• et ell tlmn. We don't uae glmm~k• like bolognp) for protein: crisp ~ l-"" ~ "'"•a•••lftM.l,..,.o••c•"o.. s18mps or coupons, we save you money with ev~ryday ·loW prices! lettuce-filling -the green leafy Lo..-· ~ ~ ·~·~•'Tl•HDAllOOO'lllll,_ .... T ' ~1111~T rim.., LUCIO' tTOell; Ille.. .,L~ll~t,llM1¥1• ' vegetable spot, and cool-rings1--;,;;;;;;;;;;o.--=--....;;::===:;;.._....; __ ,;:":;":;;";:~:;;';;";,;";,:';:"';,... ___ ;:::~;:.:::==.:::~:::::::,,::::,::::,:,::,,:!!::!.::.::=~::.::::.;::::,,::::::,::;,= of naturally-sweet, pear sl "'NO 1.t.Llf TO MM.II ... ... providing_ vitamins A,B, and c ·.. with a dairy ·sour cream dressing enriched w i t h crumbled. blue cheese. lf speed is a factor, this salad is a winner there, too. If voo 're really in a hurry, you don't f!ven have to ·peel· the pears. · Sliver the meat and green pepper, stlred lhe lettuce and cui 'the pears Into slices',· Then • toss \1ilh the 11ght1Y -spired dressing and serve with your favorite packaged or • homemade muffins. PEAR AND HAM SALAD 3 fresh Bartlett pears I cup slive,red cooked ham '~ cup sliver'ed green pepper I quart coarsely shredded iceberg· lettuce ~3 cup inayO~aise ~3 cup dairy sour cream 3 tablespoons crumbled blue cheese 2 teaspoons vinegar ~~ teaspoon seasoned salt 1 teaspoon dry mustard \ . 1}! teaspoon onion powder Dash whi'te pepper Halve, pare and core pears; , ,,.. cut in crosswise s-1-i c e s , , .. -Cocbine in a large sa1ad bowl "'·ith ham, green pepper and lettuce. Blend together all reamining ingredients. Pour over salad mixture, and toss lightly. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Crust's ' Corny Brazil nuts and sugar coated com flakes fonns the crust. And the filling . . . if you don't. tell anyone it's cinly in- stant vanilla .pudding and whipped crearri, they'rl' likely to think it's one of those frothy concoctions th'at t a k e s gourmet talent and long hours to make. SIMPLY SUMMERY PIE 3 cups sugar coaled . corn flakes 1 pkg. (3 ounces l Br\zil nuts, finely chopped ~~ cup regular margarine or butter 2 tablespoons sugar ~l pint \\'hipping cream, chilled · I pkg. (31,2 ounces) instant vanilla pudding mix I cup cold milk Cmsh' sugar coated com flakes to measure 1 cup fine crumbs. Place in· small. !Jim·!. Stir in nuts ; set aside. A1easure margarine a n d sugar into small saucepan. Cook over low heat; stirring Rib Roast lor11• End ···' RIB ROAST SMALL ENO BEEF •• l ,lt LI Ground Beef --Chuck Roast ...... SIM -89"" · Pock "' Unc:o~ioMlly • IOl'ffd IMf La EXTltA LEAN l lc:ido Cul ••• 1 • 78! GROUND IEEF •• 1.H La 7-I ONE ROAST) BEEF CHUCK • , tJc LI Top Sirloin aon.i. •• loo! loin Uncondit!Ol'lolly lol\d.d ... , CHUCK STEAK 22~ BLADE CUT, BEEF , • 7tc LI Cross Rib Roast 13..8 TOP ROUND STEAK BONELESS, IEEF • , 1.Jt LI CORNISH GAME HENS USDA GRADE A 20-0Z •• etc IA Troeswoet Pink Groptlrult 39 ~ ,,... JUICE .......... oz CAN Lldy Loe Light Milli Udy Loe $trtwbtrry . -I ~d CHUNK TUNA·~;~,4~ -~PRESERVES 'J~' 65~ rlHAM .. ' ·······'" CAN499 -Canned Foods ••• ,,.-.aA.N.C.HS!'fL~ B~Ns_,,_,.ozc••33• ,,...~~,!t~ .Dl.Ll..P!CK~~S ...... ··"oz'" 54• ~~~~f!P~~~ES~N~.H.EES~°'°'" 1,. Frozen Foods •••• ~TREES\riEETO~~~~~.J~IC,~0,°'"51• ~~~~,P.El(AMPSCHICK~~~l:!t ... 55• ~~~~9~~ PIZZA SNA~KS ,7-1"0ZPKG ,., eyAF.~!Tl~~ft~SH S~L~ Fl.L~~.s;,.,0 1•• ~~.~~o~1!~.~~G R'OLL~'''' 60ZPKG &a• Household Items .•.. eyA.KLE~NEX: FACl~L !IS.s.u.E aoCTeox44• cyAt~,~~zt,lfSTIC C~PS ....... oocrPKG 5.9• WONDER CLOTH TOWELS ' 0 ~-....... , , , , .. , , . , , , .. , .. , , , , , , , .. , , ,.,CTPKG43 SARAN PLASTIC WRAP • · 340 o-"' .............. "'."" ..... ' ... '.~so FT ROLL GLAMOR ENE SPRAY & VAC 11 o-"' RVOCLEANER ...................... 24 OZ CAN 1 ~~,~~!~l. V',H.ITE. °.~~~~~~!zer,59° ~~~J!tl!~.~~J.~.N ·~.S.".l~E;0,,TL 990 . ~q~~~E~.CLEA.~ER . "ozcAN 1" eyA~~h~Jl~!Y,E BA.T~. ~~AP. .... •oz"" 24• ,,.-. ~u~~~uou1.D.BLEACH .... •AL•TL 55• Packaged Goods ••• ~~~"! ~~R~~~~~LO~ "OZ SAG 39o eyA~Wc!~~~H~!~R ~~~~.~1.~ozaox 73• JIFFY POP POPCORN · '. 34• ~REOULAROR &LJTI'ERFLAVOR •• ,, .... 50Z PKG eyA~'!Y~U,~~.Y.~~E.A°. .... 2'0ZLoAF49° 11'4~J!'~~;!q~~.~~~~l,ES .... lSOZBAG 79o . ~ClAJ.~~llJl,~o~.~~~.DER .... •oz aox 53• ~~A~~~,ql.~v~~L.PER~.~112ozaox 59° Beverages -Spirits • • • ~'J!?JA.B.E.ER ..................... •PAcK1H ~~!!,Y~S! U.AY WINE .. ' HALFGALBTL , .. !~~FSE_AL ~°.°.KA .......... HALFGAL OTL 7H Pet Foods .•.•• ~~t'!!.'~Jl.P.9.FOOD. ,,,,,,,,, ZHBBAG 31.1 ~~~~J-~P.fl,Y~~ .D.o.a .. F~~ ~ ·•" ... , .. ,,-.ltt~~.~1:t~f _c,~T.f.~°.°.. '' '' 60ZC••.1a• Dairy Products •••. ~LA°.'. L~~ BIJTT~~lllll.K _ "ozcTN 59° ~FLE·l·S·C·H·M~N~·S· "'~~llA.ff.l~~zcrN 62' LAOY LEE BUTTER 0 •IM'ic'llliitAtioiiice i.i1i.ii ········ 74• , .................... , ............. ,l /2GAL SO CTN 59 Deli Items • • • • ~sc.A~. lllA. V.E.R. ".~.Ill.'' .... ' .... .3LBCAN 4•• os~~R . fltAYER . ~~M ..............• "c•• 7., ~~Sfl~ lllA. YE.R. Vil~~~RS. .... ,,.oz PKo 83• ~,~~~r M.A V.E.R. ~RANKl ...... ,.., PKG a1• tl~~'"'~v!~,~ntJI~~ ~ .. ~ ...... eoz PKG 58° 1 _ ~~~Mi¥o~J~~~!~c'1:'flt~ ......... eozPKo75• M~~s~~M,KOSHER P.l~K.L.E~,, oz ,..89• eyA~~~&~R S.TAR FRAN~S ... 1'0ZPKG 990 ~~~~fl!~JE,!§J#.KJ~Y.S,~9,E"o 1H ·Health and Beauty Aids ••• WIPE 'N OIPE 99• f1"4D1SPO&ABL' CLEAN·UPS FOR BABY , •• , •••. ~l ARRID DEODORANT ~ ll·DRY, UNSCENTED, POWO, UNSC. PWD . ,, .90Z 1 OJ ~J~·J·B~~YPO\VOE~ ... .z•oz 111 ~J.'cJ .·~~y OIL ········= ..... ~lOOZ 99• ~J ~.~.c.o.TT~~.SVi~BS '" '"" 57' MITCHUM DEODORANT ' O""ANTI·PiRS., REG., PWD.,SCENT,,& UNSCENTSOZ , •• _A LOOK FOR THE ~ .... -"KEY BUYS" "Key Buys" ore exlro savlngl mode possible 'by manufocturers' tem· porary pramolional otlowancel. FE1~::J~.:;i; · ~========~-~,..::'ll:::'E.::'SE:-:::1ri='EM.=-::'S-:A::~::'Al::'l.A-:B.::t:-:E:-":::w'."".L::11i::r:K=r-=11::1s=c,::tJ::uN=r=-=c£=w=Ti='ER='S:-:oM=i:-:r:-----::::::;• well. Reserve 2 tablespoons crumbs mLxture for topping. \Vith. back of spoon, press remaining crumb mixture evenly -and firmly around _sides and in bottom of 9 inch pie pan to form crust. Chill. ~ In small mixing bo"'.I, whip cream UnUI &tiff peaks form. Sel aside. Place pudding mix and milk in large mixing bowl : beat one minute. Gent.ly fold in whipped cream. Spread filling evenly over chilled crust. Sprinkle reserved crumbs t o p p i n g evenly over filling. Refrigerate about 2 hours or until set. Serves 8. Pear Sauce? Nice use for overripe fresh .Bartlett pears is to chop then1 and cook in very lit.tle-water witti mgar and lemon peel Wllil ~ry sort. Sleve · and serve "'arm or cool wllh pork, poullry or p.1 k'5. • .. Pla1tlc Hamper 44.quort •lr• In durobl• plattlc. Appl•g1••no1 1 '' bun•r<up y•llow. Pli1tlc Wa1telHl1kot 11-quort t1l• in 11on•morrll'fg •""''· APf>I• 77 ,/. gre•n or butler· ¥ t11p y•llow, "Trlple Top" Pitcher Stvrdy bo....1 of II pou,., 1troln1. and do•••· breok r••l•ton1 188 Mod•olunbreok· 88,,_ M•lamlne • Heovr ' • obi• plo1lic in o•~· · ¥ duly. or11dcolor1, le• Cuff Troy_ .. Twl1t Out!' type 76 #o lor eo ... Mod• ¥ al d11roble plo1tic. Pla1tlc Pitcher 69-01. 1!11 wllh 38 #o fllp·l«k top, ¥ A1J1. colo11. ~ 1$1 8 I -~ l , I l' ~ '1 6)-~--~.. ~[·;'0 1 ~ " -, ' . ·~::_rf) .~.' ' •, -· _,~ ·:-.___:> -_.' ·~·.:; Snoopy 0101 .. 1 ENJOY ONE-STOP SHOPPING CONVENIENCE • w ...... ,,. .. • lo4ils' fJoeotll ........... ··-m&u.. .. "Oln9hom" 20-pc. MelaMlne Sot Cowltoy Mu91 Snoopy, ev•ryon•'• f11vorll• Cholceofpla1!lc<awbayboat cortoon dog. tM whlm1lcal M ~--& ,~ Dil'lowrwor•1ibreokrM111Gl'!I, 27.¢ r..-al•. lf'I .. orted ..,. ..... oy • .__.. _.. d, h h f d 411 or 1ht·•hool•r •"'I•. wwvv ''" t• wo• •r •e •.on ·r 9lotlwore ll•m1, ......_ •· e A ... , I'-~-~ 1toln ,.,1.1en1, Come In 01u, color,, ..,..,,_ Ytlloworgr .. n. !A ~~.0··-• 4· s~ ',... ... Acct1nrf11 ••~lier ZorlM 111-roll lun<ltform ' .. _ •-· • -& htll lllH• M.n• & lodle•. Hvy. Duty. C.k• Pen ~ •. of 2 12o01 ,,,., ... ''1"..... "" 88,,. .... ,,_.·. ·•· 88~ • '"' ·' --ch Towel Foll Streu._I ¥ .... • s..11 A11l11tct1 31., ,. .a . 117 C.ke Pon ... ..., Mu' 970 . • UINl , •• 11'11 ........ . ........ 1 .... C--'.... ~.-.... .... ........ t ....... Mlfl AM • Ult Iii, ...... .................. 11ttrt'1 A .... ,,. <•lfOt . 11•1 So.,. .... hi. ana_...,, • ....,.,., ....... , ........ <-.lit&. ..... , •• QIW,IM.•I ,,..... llrrl ..... a.. . Ml•IH IUCll • .. , ...... ht. • IW IUCll • .. L ...... II, _,..,.. lllOI • ....... W.. ._ i ] Uil ... · -L ....... AM. ta ........ , ........ --..... c,.... -IUCl ·11U .... ... Yft&-. ......... ------""" un . m1 ......_.,., .._ na .1.n.,....._ w na.... · ..,..1 ........... . ..... , ..... ,.... .... AllN °lnL...._ttri.t U&IWlli , •• , ........ ... _., ....... ~ .. ,.. .... .•• (9YIM ............ (tit. """' . '"' .......... , ................... ' --·""'-·· ...W ·l•W.lllllilliilhill. . . LAMMMU·--"9·"""' ......... 411 W ......... ..... ~---·M ......... !'1-............ -~ ................ a.: -· · •• .... ~ i,a .... u: • 1..,1 ... ......_ llM. .... • .. L 0.-..._ ..... = ...... .... --Ill ···---"· LIU .... ·t•I • ._,_ ... ........ ,..c......, . .................... -........ .... ......,.,. ...... ... .............. """"9 ...... """' .... ................ """ . '"" ........ '"' " "' ... --··· -1 --->;>..- ., • • •• )i ·I -. • " ' ' •, ~ • • ;l' ·~ • t . ' ~-:· :1· • • • .• <- ~· ' ' ,. • , • . • " • I '. ·- •• • • ' ,l, '· ' .. • . . • / --····------ ' ' ._~r. · .. ~ .. . . . . ' ' . .... . --•" ' . _, Wtd11tsday, July 17, 1974 DAILY PILOT 3J • ... ·~~·----- •• Alpha-Beta Travel Service-anoounces· a dream holiday -~ -· Caribbean Cruise -including round trip jet to Miami -for little more than ., . •• '. ' ' • '· • •• ..... :i~ • • • . . l " , .. • ·-,_ ., . '• . . , . ·, ~; :: •• ... •• •• .. •• ·. .. ·. •• . . ,• '. •• • . • • • DU,;H-E-lt'S P!IDE MEATS . I I BEl'I l'll~E ·. B PATIYJIJX __ _ BUDG BURGER . n,.;_.;.11;.11_ I "uvuuu: I 6-0Z. BOX • CHICKEN • CORNB AD c LB. STOVE .TOP 4 STUFFING MIX I 12·0Z llOX • CHICKEN .IS ~PACK • 20-0l:• .CtiOC.• TAPIOCA BETTY CROCKER ·· 59 PUDDING . ' I 120 ·so, FT. ROLL• ASSORTED . ZEE PAPER _ 38 TOWELS -I 1.33 38-0UNCE BOTILE -WESSON OIL 32-0Z. CAN • CHO COLA TE I 2 6 ~STLE'S QUIK I FLUFFO SHORTENING 1.47 jiFlv°PoP "piJPc"oli'rt0"·~3 4 . 24-CT. BOX • REGULAR OR SUPER, KOTEX · 89 . NAPKINS I .29 -14.5·0Z. CAN." CHICKEN ALPO DOG FOOD the .airfare alone! For complete information, pick up a free brochu re now at any Alpha Beta ¥arket! f'RESH RIOZEN MEDIUM SIZE DUBUQUE 'r=~' PORK SPAR.RIIS c LB. USDA 'GRAOE A • WHOLE BODY SOUTiiERN GROWN FRESH FRYERS LB. NATURE'S FRESH PRODUCE "PEAK OF THE SEASON" L'---~~A=LP~H~A~e~ET~A~B~u~1c~HE~a~·s ~ra~11~E~e~Ee~F ____ ...JI BONELESS B!ff 159 STANDING RIB LUGE 139 FAMILY STEAK "'"" LL BEEF ROAST !"' LB. 1 29 BONELESS BEEF,llllll 1 49 LI. CHUCK ROAST I . CUT LB. ·1· 69 BEEF · '"" 99c LL CHUCK ROAST CUT • LL SUCED F~~AX ' . PORK LOIN 1~ USDA iNSPECTED • FRESH FROZEN 49 NEW ZEALAND -' -;--· l SMAlJ. LOIN LAMB CHOPS -' LB. Thew ITIM1 ices tffective July 18 thl'Clu 24, Thundll'f through Wtdnasday. 1.2s-oz. ENV •• CHILI SCHILLING 21 SEASONING MIX 1 1 31·0Z. ENV. •SLOPPY JOE .21 1.S·OZ. ENV. • SOUA CREAM .21 1.S·OZ. ENV. •MEAT LOAF .21 1.25·0Z. ENV. •TACO .25 14.8-0Z. JAR• DEL MONTE SWEET CHERRY PEPPERS 32-0Z. JAR . STAAWBEAAYI 08 CHB JAM I 32-0Z. JAR • APRICOT/PINEAPPLE 1.07 32·0Z. JAR • PEACH/PINEAPPLE 1.07 32-0Z. JAR~ BLACK CHERRY i 15 CHB PRfoERVES . I Jr ' 16-0Z. CAN• REG.• ELECTRIC PERK D!CAFFEINATED 'BRIM CQFFEE WHAT'S IN STORE~ I I ~-t~w, tr'·'i'.,~.ti! Sumnlertime and The Living Is Easy ,;,·(·f%)1 ::.. With warm weather, kids home from school, ~: ,. ·= •• and viu=ation time schedules. summer is meant for ;~ '~;relaxation . Simple, but nutritious, foods should be ,'. planned for the menu. Fresh fruits and vegetablts are plentiful. Many make excellent snack foods for ~between-meal-munching or qu_ick additions to a ,; P'!tio meal; Cold, frozen orange juice and lemonade a~ · much Jess expensive than· most soda driqks and }& . have far more nutritional value. Try adding less ~'h,.,_., waler to the concentrate, then freezing lhe juice in ice cube trays for "kid coolei's." (What a long line of neighborhood children joined my own at the refrigerator when I paskd out thCje cube$ in napkins!) For mealtimes, outdoor b:lrbecuing is great. The house stays cool , and . the whole famil y Can get Into the act. Ir your own backyard isn't large enough, vis.if a nearby park ror • special treat, 05' a special basket or let -~the children decorate a box for the picnic. Colored napkins and olher paper goods make the picnic see m festive -even if it's just hamburgers. It's suprising how many ~splendid entrecs can be found in the frozen food cases these days. With a large (ruit or mixed 51Jad, which is easily prepared, the addition or one or these main course delights can make meal pre~ration almost likc.'"d" · out." I spotted Italian and Oriental dishes, Mex)ca n specialties, and ef, chicken, turkey and tuna casseroles, as well as the old favorite chicken,-sliccd-beef,-and fish~filletso-U!e a- colorful garnish in dressing up the serving plate. Red tomatoes and n.dislr roses, purple onion slices, green cucumbers, parsley, and lettuce leaves. orange ca"ot curl s or citrus. slices can make the entr~e look ''chef prepared." · , · It's a fact that some or these frozen dishes arc the same as served in fine re staurants, but a\•ailablc at Alpha Beta at a fra ction of th e cost. Ma ny frozen entrees can be purchased for 30 to 50 cents a serving, proving that convenience is not always costly. Live "easy" this summer. ~ _ Cb • Director of Consumer Affairs ~ • -• _. ....._,...,_., • ·-' 777 So, Harbor Blvd. Esther Cran1er La Habra, Ca. 90631 15-0Z. CAN• BEEF• CHEESE 7-0Z. CAN• SOLID• IN BRINE 59 GEISHA WHITE TUNA 1 P-A'Etio'i.iv£" ai\tfi" soAP .23- Bakery Double Discounts 1.37 8-0Z. JAR • SUN GIANT ALMONDS 14.5-0Z. CAN• HORSEMEAT .33 1.-.~:.:.--/il .. CHEF BOY-AR-DEE RAVIOLI .43 .75 24-0Z. LOAF. SCHArs ORIGINAL SHEEPHERDER BREAD 6-0Z. CAN• MEATY TREAl 20 KITTY QUEEN CAT FOOD I . 6-0Z. CAN·· LIVER.. 11.21 6.4·0UNCE TUBE . AIM TOOTHPASTE . .C•OUNCE AEROSOL DIAL DEODORANT . 11-0UNCE CAN • DOW.OVEN CLEANER Wt re1t~t 1tie rl~ht tfl ~ruse pit~ ti) rommercl•l dt•l,rt. S.ltJ t•x culletted 11n •II l•~al!le ilcm1. Sall1f•Clion ut'.'fQut mone7 rtfunditd. 12-0UNCE CAN• CHOPPED DUBUQUE HAM .63 I O·OUNCE JAR 39 KRAFT SPOON MALlOW , "46·0UNCE CAN •REG ELECTRIC PERK Y LIB.AN COFFEE GARDEN FRESH BULi(. CARRO JS .10LB . GARDEN FRESH ITALIAN SQUASH .19LB . ALL GREEN SOLID CABBAGE • lOLB. SALAD FAVORITE 1 LB. BAG RADISHES · • 19EA. ·HONEYDEW MELONS • SHAST DAISIES VINE-RIPENED Delicatessen Double Discounts - COLORFUL FRESH 69 CUT • IUJfCN 23·0Z. BOX PEPPERONI .-# ARRIVEDERCI ' I 79 SUPREME PIUA 1 26-0Z. BOX • COMBINATION 1.tS 16-0UNCE BAG FLAVORLAND 67 APRICOT HALVES 1 Fiiult 0MEDLEvv0 •LA•O .73 ' r..:n=,, cilfiN'0~NG"EG'G ·Ra'Lr·~&9 MACHIAEH SALAMIAYER .81 UVERCHEESEAR ~AYER .76 OSCARKMAYERT BOLOGNA .61 06SCARKMAYER.WIENERS .83 16·0Z. PKG. • BEEF .14 .41 8·0Z. CAN• PILLSBURY CRESCENT ROLLS s·uc rn°0arnaN'A •• T'0··~ 7 9 ~-OZ. PKG. •HEBREW NATIONAL 79 SLI CED SALAMI 1 sAL'AMIK&. PRov'oLaN'E'" .9& lTALIAN°SALAMi'. SLICED .64 &oien Food Double · Discounts 32-QZ. BOX • 2 PACK I 09 OH BOY CHEESE PIZZA 1 • Pili'.A's"N'tc'K'rRAY , 95 , VAN' DEMMP HALIBUT 2.99 12-0Z. BOX VAN DE KAMP99 FISH flLLETSI · · c0HicKEN°sruFtEo• pj[• .55 Everyday Discount Prices . tt'AM'suRGERK suN's' ••TA.32 ~Yr~~1~f:r~~~ .55 8-0UNCE PKG. • ALPHA BltTA 49 BRAN MUFFINS 1 14-0Z. BOX • CHERRY !CEO ALPHA BETA I 25 ANGEL •FOOD CAKE 1 19-02. BOX • BEEF• CHEESE • FROZEN VAN OE KAMP "I ENCHILADA FAMILY PAK 1.07 .12 s'HoE'Sr'RiN'ii~-POTATOES .33 1·0UNCE BAR UNO CANDY BAR 6·0UNCE AEROSOL SECRET ·.74 ANTl-PERSPIRANT CUTEX .. THE THING"-FOR LASHES • EYES OR .79 ... CHEEKS 50-CT. PACKA,QE SWEET N' LOW .54 SUGAR SUBSTITUTE SMALL SIZE • WITH LIO MEXICAN 1.99 ST{lAW HAMPER MEDIUM SIZE '-" LARGE SIZE ... Copprt11ir I P 74 II lph11 Bt lll, CrJ,,pany. Alf t1t hl1 rtstrvt,d· STORE HOURS: MON.-fRI.: 9:30-9:30 SAT.: 9:30-8:00 ,.'.SUN:: 10:00-7:00 PRICES. EFFECTIVE IN ALL .SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ALPHA liE'rA MARKETS • .. T I ' --------· -'"'-'·---------··· --·--·;..· ---------·--------------- ·- . WedntSda)', Jul)' 17, 1C>74 Dairy products travel well in picnic fare. Butter makH the cake extra rich ,. and the bested chicken • Menu Ideas Designed to Go· \Vith carefully p 1 a n n e d OOmemade picnic fare li ke this aboard -soy baked chicken wings, a nippy cheese spread for crackers and lhe like. and a golden butter cake - you'll be ready for wha t e v e r adventures the great outdoo~ can provide oo a summer day. Any of the s u c c ul en t summer fruits in good supply -melon, cherries, peaches, pears, apricots -would be suitable for this cMrd feast.~ It's the kind of menu which is an done ahead and can be taken wherever you go by water, land or air. The piece de resistance of the meal surely has to be the tasty, gourmet chicken \\'ings. Buller. soy sauce and brown sugar do nice things to thi.s inexpensive entree as it bakes and browns. It's delicious both hot or cold so keep It in mind for serving at hOOle too. PIC1'1C CH!cu:N WINGS 1 :! cup butter 1 cup soy sauet 1 cup brown sugar, packed 'h cup water 1 teaspoon dry mustard 3 pounds chicken wings ~felt butter, stir In soy sauce, brown suga r. water and mustard. Arrange c h i c k e n wings in 13x9x2·inch baking dish. Pour in butter sauce, turning chicken to coat. r.over and chill 2 hoUrs or longer. I (l·powld) package powder· ed sugar 6 eggs I tablespoon vanilla ~~ teaspoon lemon extract 1h: teaspoon salt 2in cups nour . Beat butter until ·son. Beat In sugar and continue beating until smooth • and fluffy. Beat CROCKED CHEESE SPREAD in eggs, one al a time, beating v.:en after each addition. Beat 1 ¥! cups grated sharp in ·vanilla, lemon extract and Bake unC{)vered in 350 degree oven 45 to 50 .minutes, basting occasionally, u n t I I chicken is tender. Serve hot or cold. ~lakes 4 to I aervlnp. Ch icken may be reheated if desired. cheddar cheese 1 , salt. I \~ cups garted monterey StLI:' in floUr gradually, J&Ck cheese mixing just until blended. I (3-ounce) package cream • ~tter will be qUile stiff, Tum cheese into greased and floured 10- 'I• cup butter, softened inch tube pan. lf.i cup ale or beer . -Bake--in-350-degree Oven 1 ~~ teaspoon . dry mustard hour and ten minutes or until --~----------~fl'L.dashes~Jqu1d~ Jleg:_piek-inserted~into-center Wh t M • d f per seasoning comes out dry. Cool 1~ Q Q f Ina e. Beat cheeses wi1h butter minutes m pan then care1u11y until softened and blended. ·invert on wire rack to coOI. fl.farinade makes it lively BARBECUED BEEF LIVER STEAK Gradually beat in ale, mustardl~~~:i~~~~~· ii should not be overcooked. tt is and liquid red p e R per done when pink in the middle seasoning. P-ack into crock. Good Delld and crusty on outside. cut into Chlll until ready to use. 1 ~-inch crosswise s I i c e s . Serve with crackers or melba make the seine 2 pounds beef five r in one piece, about 2-inches thick ,.1akes 6 servings. to'asl l\1akes about 2 cups. SUndays CALIFORNIA MARINADE: GOLD EN BtmER CAKE A _, Pour marinade aver li ver. Cover and r e f ri ge r ate overnight: Remove f r o m marinade and place on rack over hot coals. Grill JO to 12 minutes per side for rare, 15 minUtes for medium \veil. Combine l cup beef broth, llf.t _ __:.:_~~~~~~~~==in~·~the~:'~'fi~'~''~'l~ij~IJ~t!~l~I cups dry red wine, 2 1 _ 1 1h: cups butter, softened tablespoons on, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1 cµp chopped 011ion, 1,: cup minced parsley, I teaspoon thyme, 1 teaspoon oregano. ~ teaspoon tarragon and 1/t teas poon salt. Bring to boil then simmer 2 minutes. Turn once. Baste once or l\\·ice with marinade. Liver USDA CHOICE FRONT 89't PORK ROAST .................. 89tb CIHTIA CUT PORK CHOPS $14? 'l:' ••• -ALETS ............... s2~9 PORK ROAST Lolo ... $1 O?, II MARJ.MATHA MEAT CO. 1500-•••· Cotla Mosa . IM---'°C-...n...I 546 -1196 OptttSt ... Dan-9....,.la6,.... ~ W"--r .. -.... If you 've been eating ordina ry "franks ", and wo ndering where the flavo r went, then it's time to''try Schirmer's German Brand Frankfurters. Made the "old cou·ntry" Way from the finest meats and seasonings. The de licious contine nt al flavor will please the whol e family. 5chirmtts . · the Sociable Sausage • Av1il1ble In the Deli Mdion ol: LUCKY DISCOUNT STORES· glistenin g golden brown, Cheese c·rocks from the ice chest add to the fun. We think you should have a lovely glossy · green coffee tree for your home. Coffee tree plants ate hardy and bloo m with fra: grant whit e blossom s. Th ey are quite hard to find and eve n if you did, th ey would cost almost twice as much. Do send th e coupon below. And we will se nd you a carefull y potted, 7 month old , 6 to 8 in ch coffee tree that is nurse ry grown froro the fin est coffee spec ies (Coffee Arabica grown in South and Central Ameri ca). Th i~ is th e coffee bean that helps give MJB its full bodied fl avor .. . Limited supply of plants proh ibits ship- ping o( orders rece ived after September 30th . We need the res t of our Arabii:a. beans to keep bringing ;you MJB : The Grea t Coffee in the Grce n·Can. · ... • • • paint. .. paper ... / & things ... ' 2919 east coast hwy ..•. corona del mar • Thi!t i!t your coOt!e tree ";· "' approximatt:ly 3 yeor old. COOt:e 11lt111/!l i;ro111 up 10~11e /00111 year. I' 1, .. I • • /' waNpaper h~nging class .... July 23 Sign 'up Now q,1. -2033 ' I I p ')i'""''ili"lll"lli"'liii"'iii. -.. Send !his order form to: MJB COFFEE I TREE OFFER. P.O. Box 271 BeVer!y I Hills, Ca.·902.13. For each c01feo tree • you order include a proo f. of. pur _ I chase code number. You find It when 1 you look at the botlpm of an MJB Coffee can. It is on awry MJB can (any size or grind). Enclose also $1.59 I IOI each collee tree ordered (please sena check or' money on:ier only]. I Please send me coffee lree(s) along wllh • comptele'lft e cere Instructions. ~ 1 The MJB Code number(s) Is (are):-----=- • Nome I (Pltast lll•lllJ Addres•-;-------------· 1 Clly Stale _ZJp Code I {f"YH90) !IOl•:i?3Z I M•.._ c11t1;1i1 OIY•W. lo: WI COFFEE TREE.Off.EA. I (Pltl H ltnd RO Cll~) • Olfoll tJpllll .......... , '30, 1114. Y11ld In AlllY, l11w .. I l '-d • I c,•n•cl•. VOid tlio .... ~ .. -111mc1~. t11td (II othtr•I•• Piii· I n bOtd 1711 1,1'111. Allow 4 .10 I -k• /1)1 ottt-Y orotrl 1101"1 ,.t11ler1 •~d wt,10Rii1t11!} 11t11. a¢CtP1tcl T~11 Olllll Is mlllt 11, l~I MJI Colllp!llt)I, S1n 11nc1SCO, C.. IM107 •. -. -.. ;;;;·. •-Fashion lslond l--Y-_:N cwJl9rL.Bc1 STERE,O SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR --;'----.. \--~ ,. _......., -. -~ --- • • • ----"~-• • .-" t • •• ,• ....... .:c.. .....· .... ,,.,·. ,.-••• ","\. • • • -/i PILOT-AOVERTISER Wtdnrsday, July 17, 1974 OAIL V PILOT :J3 Ne Need -for Alarm Over Hour Some weekend mo r n l n g t ho r o u g h 1 y co mblned. in cup com syrup milk. Serve warm o v e r As.!orted fresh or canned sli.a\•ed ham pieces. invite your friends and Graclually add Ice crtam " te9.!poon clnnatnon wanes. Makes l~ ctJ~. frulll Wrap fruits in a: Ii c e d neighbors over for a patk> belting until smooth after I cup suaar Thinly sliced I u n c h eon luncheon meats, va r y Ing breakfast. each .. A.nu,,.,, e SLEEPYHIAD 1.ABOBS mea'· """' -· J (5 ) ted ~ flavor combination!. Seeure II Ibo Idea of .. _ .. ,_. a M•···-mil" m· •· ~uart can ounces evapora IA cup u,.uid ti:>ney ped """"""& ....._..., "' w ~ milk """' For glaze,' measure honey wrap sausage balls and pre.noon telebratlon fllll your pltdter or punch bowl. Add 1 • 1 tablespoon lemon juice and lemon juice into small wrapped fruit s alternately on held with vlJkN of alann orance juice mixture to milk, Measure water, com syrup, 1,1 cup com(lake cru1nbs mixing bowl; stir to combine, 12 kabob skewers, allowing 3 clock.s rtnginc before dawn 1tirring to comblnt. Serve clnnamonandaugar into small ~cup milk Set aside. to 4 sausage balls per skewer. and tryln& to get up a party Jnunedlately or refrigerate saucepan; stir to combine . Place , crumbs In large Brush honey-lemoo -juice spirit while Watching the sun overnight, stirring well just Cook over medium heat, stlr4 1 egg mixing bowl. Add milk, egg, glaze evenly over all sides of 'creep over the ho r l z on , before serving. Makes lZ rlng lrequenUy, until mixture .~3 cup finely chopped onion 6ition, mustard and salt; bea t kabobs. Grill kabobs 0 n RELAX. servings about'-cup each. boU1. Continue cooking 2 min-1 tablespoon Pre P are d w.ell. Add sausage ; mix only greased grill 5 inches from This breakfast barbecue utea longer, atlttlng constant-mustard ur.111 combined. source of heat about 4 minutes men11 ls full of do-ahead CJlEAMY CINNAMON ly. 'k teaspoon salt Portion sausage mixture by on each side, turning once, or recipes. Last minute atlrring SYRUP Remove from heat ; oool 1 pound bulk pork sausage level tablespoon ; shape into until sausage balls a re and serving ls all you'll have 'I• cup water slightly. Stir In evaporeld Shaved ham · balls. Wrap sausage balls in tMroughJy cooked. 1ooomllle'""1llng. 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Let pactag.. of frozen waffles, just out of · the freezer, ..,,iace a bowlful of batter. After grilling, aerve them with Creamy Cinnaomn S)'nlp. If the waffle grillers will move to one side a little, there'll be plenty of room over the cools for fruit and saumg_e kabobs with a lemon-honey g lJ.' z e , all refrig<rated l!o ntJll! -.. n Crab Claws without SUNUP• s.Wu!J · 1 can (II ounces) froml orange Julor l . • price pinch z bonaoaomll-milbed , 3 pmta · a iOe crum, 80ft<nod f I 6 cups cold milk ~~~r;~ny· Jule~ large~ I; anw . ; . -t ~ Gao<{ /(· P'-r · • ,'! ~ I .. ,9oqkle . Cru M~y · You'll .. l.\R 1 ti-c rh p Almond Co!!.. Cilotllo" lo oerve wMh fftib 'lrulla I !or .. ..,-I Tbete ooot1es1 are good UID4 -·-..,._,, fl'llh ~. 11111 u you ll'""' aOt lo boU ID Ille clougb al ooe time, JI will looep ... u Jn u1e re~. • Fryers ....... 37 AUo10ND llOnEE OOOKIES Iii cap llder .. ~ \~---y tea . 1 _,... lmtaDt coffee \ i=..TioQla \ 3 .... a.ar . 111 ' "'6 ._ Pofider 1iS 1!111 .. 111t ~ 2 Dbl ,,... *'1n1, II .cap lllCod 1lmbnd1 , · ...... Crelln lhortening a n d brown -until figllt and 8Mfetwck-llMeCUl a.:k Slaiks-......... 7-Booe Steaks Bfftctood< . Round Bone Roasts ,llffl-MCUI Round Steaks .... .... Boneless Beef Roast nutty. Add egg and beat well; 1..rcttuc11-9oftt1t11 add JMtant co1ree and vanilla Family Sleeks .... 79 lb .• 19 .... 99 .. 1.29 lb. 1.39 lb. 1.59 and blend into creamed Any Ill• PMUge mbit11re. Leanest Ground Beef" Sift flour witti b a k I n g lb. 1;29 powder and salt and mix into PDtnt Cut creamed mixture, bea t f n g Fresh Beef Briskets hard until well bl~ Miz in lfff Loin-........ ~::'._Y ~·~~ ..... ·~-2 ~ strips >JIJO.pe l.VUUC' .._...,. WW t I.&~-..... Ofltllctl rolls •about I II lncbes in Fanner John Bacon diameter. Wrap in plastic wrap or foil and cbllf 2 or 3 q;'.;-81_ ~ hours. Olt lnlo thin slices and arrange on a llgbtly grtued. .. u.....,_.,..,... ·coold• sbeet. . ~mp Tum on oven to 350 degrees ,.. ""dr es you put cookies into ovtn. \Alhltlftn BakeabouttO·rninutesoruntll · ~···-~·._ don< and ~yJ>rowned. _ =~ If yoo bake am!Jierlh«tO! -.--of-Sole-· lb. 1.39 lb. 1.39 ••••• .. 1-.99 lb. 1.39 .... 28 lb. 1.89 ........ _,..,_ ... Crab Claws AalpftsERtutlft-A ...... ofleet And Soy ......... Conce~ ...... Burger CelitOmia Grown-Dey• Fresher Fryer Drumsticks You~-w/Albs Att1ctied Turkey Breasts Young 1'"tey Wint• or Turkey Drumsticks Uee Uke Groul'ld lee! Ground Turkey Alaskan Crab Claws ~t their best. The claw contains the tenderest, most delicious meat of the crab. Perfect for cool s ummer salads, seafood cocktails, or a party treat. For a limited time, you can enjoy this luxury seafood for a very down-to-earth price. Crab claws without the price pinch, only at Ralphs, the Super Market. Just crack and eajoy . • ... 99 .... 88 lb. .89 lb .• 99 lb. .49 lb .• 79 Super Bakery Whit• or Whe•l-S•ndwlch Of Split Top Ralphs Bread Ralphs-Fresh 81ked French Rolls •••. 59 ol 12 • A1lph1-Dlllclou1 Lemon Tea Cakes ..... 73 A1lph1-Ho1t11em1d1 Goodn111 Apple Pies ...... 1.09 A1lph1 Super Deli , 0 ' Shrimp Cocktail · .... 39 Onion -Clam -G1rlic-Blea Ch•••• Rod's Party Dips A1lpl]1 -Mk191t Longhorn · Colby Cheese Super Si>irits Country Styfe or 911tt1rmllll Pillsbury Biscuits Schlrm1r'1 ..... 49 ;lb. 1.39 .... 14 ' loi. ,78 Lell11hlre Gin or S8ndra Vodka 'Sewe .20 3.89 '"' 1 4 89 qusrt • Otd a .. nwood-1 "''' o+d Straight Bourt>on I ... 3.99· MOflkl•lr C•n1dl1n Imported Whisky Beef Knackwurst Oven Aesdy or lkftt-1111 Ballard Biscuits Plump •l'ICI Juicy Ballpark Franks M11t or Beel Ralphs Bologna Sott-1 l\lb Ralphs Margarine • .... 14' "'· 1.09 1 lb .• 93 ..... 53 AspenlrewldinOrqGoldon-12BeerOi.C•n• ,:.i:; 1.05 A•IPh• 47 .. Imitation Sour Cream ".. • Take the pledge •. Sr..vitchto Suiter Produce Sw.et-Julcy Le Grande Nectarines '7.'. .25 W••t•m Iceberg Lettuce Fr111'1-Crl1p Bell Peppers Mlld-Sw11t Brown Onions Fr11h -Top1 Aemovld Carrots ..... 25 .: ..... 29 ....... 10 ....... 10 Thlcll-Y1llow M11t Banana Squash ,., .... 10 Super Flowers Fr11h CUt Stock Colorlul Killian Daisies buncll ,78 ll11utllul Pompons bunch .78 Super Household Values Sav• .20-1 Sl1e-Popul1r Shedes Ralphs SUper Panty Hose ,., .• 57 A1tul•r or L19sl Sizs 48 Envelopes ··~ • Sllllnle11 Stsel 1 88 Food Steam Baskets ... , • With 1 Ou1k Suds 'Jet-X Sprayers_ _ '"" 3.99 cookies after oven has heated, reduce baking time lo about 8 minutes. Makes 4 to 5 dozen small cookies. ~~~-~-cc==~ ¥,rlcff_.._111~oc-H_n_J_u~~-11_~_r_o1111-=-h-Ju~fy_2_•~~~~~~~~~ .. ~(9 Jl1J~~-r--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.... Zucchini Appealing From Jewish culline. STUFFED. SQUASH 4. medium zucchini, split lengthwise Peanut oil 1 pound lean ground 2 slices white bread, cut flOO 2-·-111 laafiooM sug>r l I, Jh teaspqoo cmnamon Dash of pepper v.. cup water 1 tablespoon lemon juice Minced panley 1 usmg the tip of a sturdy spoon, scoop out and reserve seeded centen: from squuh. Place zucchlnl shells 1n a shallow baking pon, bollow !Ide up. Chop oeeded cent..-. fine; cook pntly in 2 ta~ peanut ott unW sort -about 5 minutes. In a medtum mixlnc bowl .... k lopther the beef, bread. salt, sugar, cinnamon and pepper. Mix water and lemon juice and add to meat mixture with the cooked oeeded centers : ml~ well; spoon into 9QU8sh she.Us. Bru!!h uncovered cUt side.~ of squash wilh otl . Bake In a pr<heal<d m.legreo o v e n abQut 45 minutes. Sprinkle wtt1t panle11 Makes l ,servings. • .. 1 " -~-Twin Pack Patato --Best Foods ~-. '::; .59 Mayonnaise ''~95 Treeswaet-Pli* Grapefruit Juice ... ~; .39 -~lieatth 6 Beauty Fro:r.en Food Pantry Fillers .... ~ ... c....... t•11. 89 ~~·~"""-1'1 911!. 99 ;~'-~'.;-.1fc ·Lu1-••th~• 28 u ... ·~·-'"• Arltl11pk ...... 83 ~ A;;a' \,11.,_ll C""9fl I ~ Sm" Soap eKi. I .. Mll'l.,..M11d-Aerid1 , ti 73 -i;:; ,,,Oo•e-FOJOl1ll11 n 81 -~ ·:.::; • ~ . Orange Juice ::. • ~$s , . ~~ Liquid Ot!lailjent ..:; • ...----• ,,.. 41 ,1.. lhr!li M1k1-•ut1errnllll ,. 59 . H1n1-AllGrlfM:11 '" 1 08 -••. ft.o.---1.-D-.. OL G nd ,........ . Cdglll er.n Clll I .Spt-'.~l ~ n11 ~ ga\111111 pllg. • ;_ . 1 r'OU \.IUlllDl"ll:I' Clll • DeMwea..-2 oz. 85 G':.J...,_ )_ S~t-Melll&flll 12 er. 49 , 1 ~ l1r9•Slt• 2tot 49 lllnll FNlh Liquid -• ~"." -~ Spinach Soullle "'· • , ij:-_ ?,'.:'-.! , ,Hei,, ~nz .... ~etchup ...,; • ........ -=•........ :IOCI. 1 35 ..:-' llltl-•Orl'!f". 1• 89 ·~ nr '""' 51b 89 ~ ll1mpons ,... • ~ · Sara Lee·~ .:~ • ,,.·~·P,. Pillsbuiy Flour ••i • CKl!MrO...,.. tOOct. 1 25 ~'. ' terU-frllll 1tn. 1 09 ~' S1ll>d0,.11i11g qt. ·88 Wipe 'N Olpe \Ylptls ,... • ,s; u Pen:h Flllels "• • ' . Miracle Whip I•• • Ralphs Everyday Low Prices . . ......... ,_ ...... -''::.: .17 ........ ...,_,_ ·.: .11 I<.,....,_,_ _ __ ,,_ .. ~::: .53 --C-leo V•nlll1 Wsfer1 ·.:: .3e Ben-Gey Ointment Lemonade llack P9pper S1llln1 Cr1ck1r1 ----,.., ... 11 c .. -~--""-~::: ... (;-............. .:!i .43 .. ...... -c .... , ..:.: ·'' DellUn CMntment "'!" • • st~ner'1 Cake• hptr Tow1l1 Sel•d Dr•••lng _ .. _ .. __ ........... ~ .............. ,....... __ .., ::.11 ... 2.ft uit,~;.14 ".: .21 _,_ fried Halibut .... l>OtJFood Dog Food ..... -°"' _ .. _,_ ~-,c-..... \ .... -•.. ·-1.11 • Cerrot Cell•• 1~: .73 Bord1n·1 Cremore ft• 1.13 ln1t1nt Coffee " 1.71 V...lyt1Drop1 -.. . 'Asterisked items not available ::!:"~:.=:=: t:=:::::~=....-~::::::::0,'"1.o',-::-~::::~:~·.~ ... -:::-· in the following stores : =::~::=.::· ~~:Ui7""-.... ~==~== ::::-...:;~ ~:!"!'::~~:~0o":'- r ••• .... • •• •., r•--+e·---.,_ VACATION PHOTO SPECIAi.i I ' .. ".·t•-'-' I ·I ....... _._ I Cl.... Yllllll ·-Jllf 1Z ~ I 1111111 ,,._ .. _ ...... Meshed Potsto11 ·--.... ---Ber Soap ·--• Herv1rd Beet• ~ ........... n~•HS-1 .. ....-1tot1•'°"''• ....... -IJJ••-"""· _,, .... 1,_,,,....,....._ 11 ftl.-..CO :!!'-, .79 11 11 lnlhllt 1 21: 1. KODACOLOR FlM un _... COff• •;:: • U-I =·~·:: SO-89 . . Asaortad Banquet Dinners Eicept 8111 or Ham ··~ .41' Pantry Fillers • ··~:.42 ·~:.37 _.21 II;:; ,37 ' ··-1111 ....... Helni Ph:kle1 ·~--.. °"" Liqukt Detergent ·-- 14 •r. .... .. OL 59 ...... .. ~ 83 Clll I 111'10&. 57 ..... 21~ 83 ..... ~:; 2.97 t4: .II ..:0 1.N Bethroom Cleaner •.: .n --~ ..... --...... -Jlmmr D11n S•u••te ~ ... '"""""" O.••· •lll"'""'•'" II<!. c-••1111.c---.. ~ .......... 11111 ,..,._ -. __ ......... ll.fltf-. _, .• \ ............ .... -11 ..... ,,, ,_~,~ _ ........... .... I UMltOlltlteftl111dOlltlC"'°""-fCu1I0111•r I I 'u.1tOftlh•m •nl01teColll"fll"lrCu1tem1r I '· The s .I- I .. '-=,;:.:"""" · • L ._~8.::~"!"""~,.~~-• . 20!411&•·11.••1111.,.,,... 111ar_•. et ~-1•-----------__________ .. _!~ - RALPHS STORES ARE LOCATED AT: 380 E:r17th ST., -COSTA MESA 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGlON BEAClr 15471 S. BROOICHURST, WHlMINSTfR • :24167 PASEO DE VALENCIA, LAGUNA HlllS 17261 17th .ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM 6942 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH STORE HOURS: 9·10 Doily, 9-9 Sunday . ' . • -----.--=-~-'--- • •• - ' ·• t----''---:.==--=~--------~------<'''---~· ' - 31 . DAILY PILDT ·Wedntsday, July 17, 1'974 ' . Hurry for Treat Golden ·chance 1,~ cup chopped celery 1,:, cup chopped pecans, cashews or peanuts 1 teaspoon salt 2 cups sliced peeled nectarines Dressing: 1,~ cup .mayonnaise 14 cup sour creani in teaspoon fresh . · juice Local LOBSTER THERMADOR . DINNER • • • • • •••••••• Ju1t '495 -.-iM:ludl'5 SOllp or Wod. ~ , Potatoe1 or Ric• Pilaf. -.m.t ... , .... 11 f;.0111 TIM ,W. ....W-.,.. ki;iew 1i'i pod!' -.. LIMITED TIME OFflR al . · THE BLACK KNIGHT .· '. llSTAURAllT •• l l O E. I 71tt st. Costa -· From Oreqon -PINK TAIL PERCH.:··~·· 79ib FRESH RED SNAPPER ROCK COD UNG COD lah• M.....,,. 5" ln•I 99ib lttiidod Ready to Cook· . . BITS ' of SHRIMP•••• 1.30 lb. ' '. " COMP AH PllCIS 11!1" COMITO ... THE FISH MARKET O.,lJCtn S.. 10 .. 6:JO I 4S I. HOADWAY-44~52U· -:-c....w... .... Jtm and Sandy Cam mer ,. S~eet ·on Bologna? Scored, studded with cloves sauce and topped with a spicy glaze. Preheat gas grill on high for the bologna roast is a good .IO m.iootes. choice for backyard pilrties or Score entire surface or !amily~suppers. ' bologna in·a·dia,mond pattern. Bologna, like all sausage Place a sharp knif~ at a 45 products, is high in nutritioo degree angle to one edge ol . . . especially protein . . . the bologna : begin cutting, and easy on the budget. \Vith . rolliilg bologna until knife no bone or fat to trim and no reacfies opposite edge. shrinkage, you get more Repeat al l·lnch intervals serving per pound tban with then reverse, the process to fresh meat. 41chieve a diilmond pattern. Whether sliced thick,or thin, Place a whole clove in' the a four-pound bologna provides center of each diamond. ... ty,·elve really man-sized serY,· Insert spii rod through the· ings. center or bologna roast and . BOLOGNA ROAST W t T H fasten with , holding forks. and barbecue sauCe in small sallce pan; t'OOk on grill w1til preserves are melted. Brush on bologna during last 30 minutes or cooking time. Bologna is done when it is well glazed 'and h e a t e d through, a~t 45 minutes. To serve, let roast rest-for 5 minutes then slice as thick or thin as desired. Place"slice on buttered Kaiser rolls With leaf lettuce. A1akes · 12 servings. Garnish with a fruit kabob, if desired. Chick Trick SWEWf 'N SPICY-G4ZE Cheek for balance by cradling i f.pound) roll of .00. togna the eoo,,··ot spit in yOur hands When barbe<;ulng two whole and rota~ ~ rod. chickens on a rbtlsscri~. ;mhunt . DELANEY BROS. WINE LIST: Whole cloves Turn grill to low .hea~. and the Pir:ds in opJ)osite 'direCtions _J)__wp_J!Jlfil~tl~'"-'"''"-' --~lace bologna en ~r1e. __ to_mainlain good balance_<in·1------------ \~ cup bottled barbecue Combine apricot preserves the spit. · · ' , ·Nkn IFPICTlft WU., MT t7 ftlll MS., UIL T 2J OSCAR Ml.VER $1 09 MEAT WIENERS .................. ••· DASH .,_.a.97c DETERGENT ........................... !11~ .. • n;,-m•-,W~l~'1M!K'"T!••:"'T • ! &"• • . ' ::::"::9--......... -·---..U..il .. e9 ... •1" _....... . . . 'I" ... , ........... --........ _ ... ____ ..... _,_ .. . _ ........ _,__ "'0 ., .. ... ,.,, , .. ~ .......... , _____ .... _,_,! .. </l. .. ,;::i .. ~= .......... --.---·--=--..:!e .. !!:;._ff• r .~ -...... .,~ .. ·-...,.,...... ... ...... .. .... ~!!~!!' .... 26• -.. ..,, ... , .,,, ,_...,,.. .. ,,__, ........ ____ ·~- ::-.:. ....... ,,_,.._ '"~.!.!!!:.··· : ............................. · ... -...... -JDl.r.u.22" • RECIPE! . ' • • -· I I ' --.~ . .. • • Pinch of This, 'Pinch of That • i:~fdt Rice Dishes Worth Savoring Here ~ three rice recl,pet, Rice bu tbe abWty to blend each wUh a • loUdl of the with and lltnldl flaYOl'I. ~usual, (that mt vie summer HOT ana!N-RJCE menu Jribleqi1. • SA.LAD Try a ne~ Vegetable (okra) 4 choice chicken pjeces 81 ' in llkille\ Gambo. · Or (about 1 poWld) experlmeot with a,· dil!erent I cup chopped onlolll serving temperature ... Hot 1% cups aJ.l.ced celery with Chicken Sltlad. Add a touch o( leaves . dill weed and Savory Twia I tablespoon butter , o r Bake Is no Joocer jWll a margarine .. · · routine """"*· 3 cups hot enol<ed rice Each of ~recipes starts I> cup chopped sweet pickle I> te81poon ground '"""' ~ cup mayOMal&e 1~ tablespoons sweet pickle juice Remove skin and bone from chicken; cU;t in small thin pieces. Saute chicken and onions in butter about 3 minutes. !ttlr in celery and cook 2 minutes longer. ~ cup chopped &reen pepper and seasonings. Bring to a 2 tablespoons bacon boll ,add .okra,andreturntoa drippings or vegetable oil ·boil Using a fork to separate I can (141h to 16 OWlccs) okra . Cover and simmer for 10 tomatoes, chopped mln~tes. IA teas ...l.. I' Stir In meal and rice. • poon ta"""I' gar IC Continue cooking u n t i I powder, Rolernary, and thoroughly heated. Makes 6 pepper servings. 1 teaspoon salt • 2 chicken bouilloo cubes SAVORY TUNA BAKE v .. .teaspoon pepper 2 cups grated Swiss cheese 1 can (6 to 7 ounces ) tuna 3 cups cooked rice l cup each chopped onions, celery, and green pepper Blend flour Into butter. Add broth, mu s tard , and seasonings, stirring constantly until thickened. Remove Irom heat. · l package (10 ounces) frozen cut okra 1 can ( 12 oonces) canned luncheon meat, cubed 2 tablespoons flour Stir in 1 cup ol the cheese 3 tablespoons butter or and remaining ingredients. margarine, melted Turn into a greasCd shallow 2· 2 cups chicken broth quar.t casserole. Bake at 350 Wfdnesday, July 17, 1974 DAILY PILOT with en& Gl . the pl o r e If• cup cboPPed pimiealol ecooomkal Jl!Q(elna, • ,canned 3 •--· ,,,L.. chopped • luncheon meat,· chicken and nlllll'UNM:IU eggs, Remove from beat, add ' remalning ingredients, and .... lightly to blend. '"'""' while boL Garnish I servings wtlh tomato wedges IDd ripe olives. 3 cups cooked rice Saule onions and green peppel' in drippings until • tender aisp. Add tomatoes 2 teaspoons "' prepared degrees for 20 minutes. -. ...... ;; mustard Sprinkle w i 1 h remainlng -ttma • .JUce_is added .to 'mate ____!}i_~ ';Bit SKILLl!.'T Gl/MBO_ 1 cup chopped onk>ns 1 teaspoon salt-----cheese and bake 5 minutes. - - each one serve more people. 'A teaspoon pepper in teaspoon dill weed longer. Makes 6 servings. ' ·;-:· ~' t\ ., ~ .. -"' .NI ; " ' ' r · r ALL YAlllllllE$ PLUMS ~ B LAllD PKGS. -~:BEEF ~lAMB USDA CHOICE :.: ....... ClllCI b 1 A.9 • ·f?~ .. iHOiii.il1 1 f ., ~LAMB CHOPS.&l . . ' ..... IUll. Mil91if ... ·-If--·-----·- .. GROCERIES .. I I PRODUCE .... GUVONSTEIN ~ 39" APPLE 'TIME~.'· T APPLE SAUCE .. .. ORE IDA ~ ,, ... 89* TATER TOTS .. '.."..': .. CHOCOLATE, LEMON i! 1. :loHN'sioN's ..... 99* CREAM PIES~~· • Wlt~\vtj1Plt£D POTATOES i_!~< 9' J. SWANSON -:::: y FRIED CHKKEN ... ~rl=r~.~.~ .. :~:.88 * PET STEW " 20* ~~g-~:oD~ .. '.~~~-. - FREf!CH'S -~ , ... :33 .. 9 MU.SI ARD ........ ·~~ .. BALLARD . M L T REGULA.It OR BUTTERMILK 1· 3;. BISCU~TS ...... : ...... ~. fifl'fI1L~.:~3 7* ' . ' . HAWAll'AN 59* ' PINEAPPLE ......... .. F FRESH · 3ac I NECTARINES ...... (IT , . 119;.il JALAPENO y\" CHILI PEPPERS . . . UINIOW ASTERS 7 7 * ~r::ERS ......... -• • -·· ·· ' . =-·~------~~J7• ~---···---~ .. _ .. ____ ....... __ ....,.. __ ... __ -----........ _____ ,. ____ _ ....... __ .. _ ... ..... __ ... __ a.a ____ .... __ ..... _ ........ __ _ ----~ DEC., COfFEE .. L$. 53 TASTER'S CHOICE .. -·--~.!. orc., co"" ·,..,, $273 TASTER'S COFFEE ................. !!.!. ~ -' Summertime Sweet Tropical Twist AJJ a perfect "sweet" to top ofi a summertime supper. try easy. qUick and thrifty pineapple almond st~·-- Not only will adults love this new version ol old-time shortbread, bot it will delight boys and ltirls as a snack for picnics and beach parties. Serve them w i t h a refreshing cooler of chilled canned pineapple juice topped' with your favorite sherbet. PINEAPPLE ALMOND STRIPS Pineapple Filling ~ cup butter or mars:arine ;~ cup sugar l egg. separated 'h teaspoon vanilla 1'4 teaspoon alinond extract 1'2 cups sifted all-purpose now- 1h teaspoon salt \'.,a teaspoon baking J)O\Vder I ~Z tablespoons syrup from pineapple 2 tablci;poons sliced abnonds Prepare Pineapple Filling and set aside to oool. . Cream butter, gugar, egg yolk, vanilla and almond extracts tog ether. Resift flour with salt and baking powder, and blend into c re a·m e d mixture alternately with 1 1h tablespoons pineapple syrup. Cover and chill dough 30 minutes. ,.,. Divide into 2 equal-size porticns. Shape each Into a rectangle, lhea roll to 7 x II inches. Spread half t h e pineapple filling down center of each rectangle, covering about J'3 the width of dough. Use spatulas to lift edge of dough, and .fold lengthwise sides over filling, leaving Sboot ,-, inch space between the two sides. Beat egg white lightly. Brush over the dough. Fold again in half leflithwise. 80 cook.y makes a narrow 4· layered strlp. Brush top with egg white, and sprinkle each strip with a tablespoon almonds. . • Lift onto baking sheet, using broad spatulas. Bake In 325 de- grees oven 45 minutes, until lightly browned. Cool 10 minutes on baking sheet, then slide carefully off onto '\\oire rack to finish cooling. When cold, cut into 18 diagonal strips about 1 v .. inches wide. Makes about I 'i. dozen strips. Plneapple FOllog:: Spoon off 1 ~2 tablespoons pineapple syrup from I (8 1/4 ounce) can crushed pineapple and set aside for cooky dough. Turn remainder of pineapple into small saucepan, and 1tir in I tabl~poon cornstarch_,_ 2 tablespoons sugar and a dash mace. Cook, sti rrin g constantly, until mixture boils tOOrough ly and !hlckens. Remove front heat, and ·cool before using. ·Introduce your taste buds to Schimier's Bavarian Braunschweiger, but be generous. • This brawny Braunschweiger is created the slow, old·time way from delicately ·smoked liver combin~d with the lush goodness of Pistachio nuts, then stuffed in a natural casing to preserve all that goodness. Serve it today! Yov'll be glad you did. ~ 5chinntr~ the Sociable Sausage Av1ll1ble in the Dell sectl0tt oil EL RANCHO· --• • ' - -- I I • I t • t I .. • I • . .. •' ' 38 DAILY plLOT Wtdntsdly, July 17, 1974 • . - Wfjl"'d•r. July 17, 1974 5 PILOT-ADVERTISER 'T • QUALITY SERVICE BLUI CHIP STAMPS • I , . ·--·""·-·-$139 FAMILY STEAK ---.. -". · · · -"""""""--.. 99c 7-IONE ROAST-............. LL ---""·-$139 ROLLED ROAST_ ....... -....... , .;.,._ ... __ ............. • 139 IEEF Rll STEAK ...... --·-·"· _,iiiicwB s1uK-LL-' Jt-9 · . ., ... ...,.,..... •119 " CORNED BEEF ____ ......... _ BEEF BLADE ·CUT STATER BROS. CERTiFIED GUARANTEED c · iOiiNistiii< IOlll-IN-LL' 1 37 iiii:IT•iuM'P'ioAST -LL' 1 37 BEUCUBE STEAK--ao:'·l-'9 ""'°"'"_.........., . . • 1 93 T·BONE .STEAK , __ .:.__.LL itoitTiitilousE · s1uKLL • 1 •• ioit .. imLi1ifcsTEAK.-LL '2-1:•- BIOuND•sTUKOlllO~ST • 1 79 .~ SIRLOIN TIP ............... -.. ~LL .Oll.r.:i:::::ainu U 1 EFSTEW MEAT-LL $1 29 011.!'::.:!'1 UNCONDmONAUY GUAIANTRO 'R·n-.B~'"R.._O . .uA.$l.4s'T $119 TON.UIYOU ... OIYOWMONIY PROTEIN BLEND HAM HOCKS BEEF-SLICED __ .. LIVER . BACON 6-TH&7•THlll-•. LL WIUll~Y-SMOKED FRESH e SUCliD M!RIT BRAND Hf!IH e DlUCIOOS e AN'I' SIU ,ACKAGf 79 c GROUND BEEF .. ______ , .. FRESH GROUND DliUCIOUS PAID MIX LEAN e MEATY PORK SERVE WITH,IACON . 1-POUND PACKAGE TURBOT FILLETS ~--·-·LL99c . aN'lllCUTeSMOl(fOf'O..C • · $1 59 HAM SLICES -· .. ·-·-----"· . · BEEF ROAST ::93c lllWlllWI LL . .. 59! 69c 69!. 59! VNfDllAMl'SlfffOIOUSl • • 102 ENCHILADAS.-·--'.~~~: -· . . EGG SUBSTITUTf~.\';l':_____ -· n 85' GRAINDROPS MARGARINE ~~ ......... : .. ---" 62' CEREAL • ..!Ot9'fllQl't.f(HOllhD"fLAV0411 sac U CREAM PIES.-.... _.: ..... ~~.?fi . VAH'Ol IA"'" OllCl(JN 5·3 c STUFFED PIE •.. -....... -..... '.?:~~~: : . DiLLSHCHIPS ·_ ---·-:~~45 c i0 iilESSiRNAG MIX~~~s9c CHERRIES SlYLAAIDltfOIUT 55' f'Ullllll• $100Jlf•e o~OZ.,_Ci as· POWNY,l....:! ' 21• '"'°---.. ---.......... ,, CRUMEDCHICltEN ....... WAFFLES _______ .,"" ' GRAPEFRUIT JUICE ~.lt,,_ .. o, 79' -61 C C'Rui'CiiruEPIE 81' uii'OtlAiiE "''-18' ORANGE JUICE TIUSWUT ~ -----64-0Z. 75' 11-0L S..t.t ll! l'IAL ....... 1 - -... .#llJNIJI( .... ,o t0Ntmi.A1i: , __ ,, ___ .Ol 19' . DUTCHAPPLECHE _,,__ UMUDE ...... ---•°'· DUNCAN HINES. ASSORTED LAYERS 6' I c CAKE MIXES_·-.. -~:: · 7·111' 28·0UllCI 29c IOUINA8UI ... -----· BUNS ~~~----·-·-~391'· GATORADE"""".,.""'----"·" 37' BlmR LEMON """""·---·&."'"'· '1.20 TONIC MIXER """''"'-.. & "°'· '1.2t HARVARD BEETS"', .... """ __ .... .,.36•· BEETS w /ONIONS fil.'1:"..i:t'lo .... o, 36' . CSRESCENcT,LAROLLS ___ ....... 45 c =~~A•CH ..... ~._49c VEllE·8URGER .-..., "''" 92c TKODDl···ER·MOVERNl.GHJ I ES DIAPERS_o~~:2· $1' o,· 5 DRESSING MIX ::'l;~.~'. __ ...,,45• HALFHILL TUNA"""'""'-----·~ 49' GRATED TUNA ~ . . ·~43' "' ROAST BEEF HASH ~~-'--'""' 74' DEAL PACKAGE. 21·0UNCE 2 7-BEEF STEW 85' COMET CLEANSER ... 'ENCHILADASAUCEli~~;.::::~3·. · , · -· RED CHILE SAUCE ~'--'"" 23' AJAX. DEAL PACKAGE . CHILI CON CARNE 1~'"""'-t:!45' 'DETERGENT GIANT 8 5 c PETEVAPORATEDMILK ... -.1:::27' ---·-SIZE . .. GLAD e 30..COUllT s2c fUNCHS -··3 9 C . OAUA018AGl-MUSTARD--.---N. 0 PEST -.SKIPPYPETSTEWm• ....... ..: __ ,.,,.25' ?/eatn{, & go,,.,,,.,, l'/uU. S4QU«A1.. · CHEERIOS CEREAL ·---. _ "°' 72' _,,.,, '"7 . SH!LLSTRIP ANGELCAKEMIX ~_ ....... 73' .. CLAIROL AIM TRA T·ll woR•s $163 110LDMEDALFLOUR _____ 5 .. ~11· HAIR COLOI TOOTHPAITI = .,,. . GOLD MEDAL FLOUR ___ JO ... '1.19 $ · . 68 74. C ........ 4-llOllTNs LA PINAFLOUR ___ " 5..;:79' ...... 1 •<-O> 83' !!.·~:..~~!" ··~ $112 BLEACH TASTERS CHOICE i:.~·--·-·'"' 11.33 EXCEDRIN · 11011 win:· . ULTIA 8AN TAIUTS llllll·HI IOOODIODOIAllT PEACHES LARGE. SWEET YEUOW MEAT $ POUNDS 'CABBAGE FANCY SOLID Q!IEEN HEADS "m• $1 °9 '"::.':""63 C . 93 C Of"·IOO tOffU U o, I • r ULTIA lllTE · IDOi IT. JOllPN'I TOOTHPASTE SHAVE CREAM AIPlllN MIRACLE WHITE TASTERS. CHOICE .. ,.,., ............ 'IAI . 'NY 6 6 c MAXWELL HOUSE"""'---~ 'S.11 NIW -DlR· YUIAN COFFEE "'·"" '3.35 fRIEDOM ""°""' LOMA LINDA YEGELONA -"'" 11.09 ""'~" ""' c PAMPERS TODDLERS _,,., 11.07 SPRAY STARCH....... · .. o.48' BUnERNUT COFFEE ... ""---•1.1 ~ PILLSBURY fLOUR::::::.:.._5 •• 93' ~· 45 c ·~~· 874 ~iE::.29c You Always Sare With Slater Bros. Low.Low Prices , ~"' 45 .IERGENS SOAP l.OTIOll MILD u1111 ·6c SIZE ( . . . WOOLITIE SMUCKERS LIQUID PRESERVE IMllllCl Sill APlllCOT W /PUIEAPPU $'1 r1 . t DINNER · CUTS Liii LmA•l4C. 93' . J,_ -- ' • ' . ., ' .. ... ..; . ' . . -.,. . --• • C' • Ca ~orie · Cracked ' . In · Half ~, I Dy BARBAJ\A GIBBONS Atten~l.on peanut ,freaks! &om. day you 'll be able to eat twice as many tor the same number of calories. thanks to J, J. Spadaro and his co.workers in }l'cw Orleans, site of the U.S. Department of A gricu I tbre ' s Southern regional lab. Ue and tu!""fellow research- ers have perfected a commer- cially workabJe technique ror cutting extra calories· olit of the peanut~oe of the world's · 10 mOAt fattening foods. Only 41 roasted peanut , halves total 100. calories. But Spadaro and crew have come up with, two handfuls: 9S ---. - CHEER GIAH'f SllE DETERGENT ' < '" ----' ' , ' :.:.1:.""'8(1Ut balves foe lOO FOREMOST PREMIUM 100 calories worl'h of_the_new 1 2 "' And, acconllno to S\ladaro. JCE -CREA'M '' G•L nuts bave 137 per cent mon RO VHD · protela tban the ordinary kind, -·ru......-.... ''-;;;;;;:;;~...;;=;.....;=...;~:::;:;;:;;;:::::;::;;::;::!::::;:::;:._~=~::;.. ... ! which is what interesll &be ~¥11!11'.: ·~ ..-. , government most. · t ; ' v Ordinary peanuts are more than half fat, wruch bas more ' tban double the calories or e i the r protein or carbohydrate. The researchers decalorlzed peanuts by removing up to 80 per cent of their oil. It Was all very simple, according to Spadaro. He and 0>researchers Henry L. H. Vix, Joseph Pominski and Jienry M. Pierce, Jr. described the process in the technical Peanut Journal aod Nut World magazine. ~ BriefJJ, here's what's done: Ordinary fatty peanuts are spread beneath •an4 squeezed 'by a hydraulic press. After·SO minutes, 80 per cent of the 1~ • has been pushed out of tne nuts. · • The nuts, by naw woefully misshapen, are pressure- cooker boiled and expand back to their original size and 1 shape. I ' Salt or other Oavorings can be added to the water at tJiis point and the expanded peanuts are then . dried. ruld roas~. They will taste and 1oolc lille the anlinary kind ·-· but their fat and calories wtll have been drastically mtuced. their protein p o we!r _'._dramaUcaiJy"UJlSl'aded!!-~!- Spadaro sees ~ great future for the skinny hats, both as an OK-nibble for calorie-watchers and as a nutrlUon booster. They envision 1 l Iver, e ~ skinny ~ts aa a great Oavor and texture-adder for ~breakfast foods, perbaJll a pean utty calorie-shy "granola.'' 'lbe technique v.-orks equally well on Spanish and Virgll\ia ' . 103 CAii 1' . FRESH LARGE GRADE AA •• • 'EGGS DOZEN MJB ·COFFEE FOREMOST • · YAMl .or II 01, CAllS • • ~. ,~ ·, ·.··29· c •• SO-LO YOGURT soz. CUP Hal'• ' .• ,, < SP.,A. 1r.... ,,,. J OZ.• .-..... Sl'READ . . , ONlYZACKY FARM FRESH . GRADE "A" ·~ TllE FRYING :'o-:45c TURKEY · BEtT CHICKEN LB. HINDQUARTERS ' NORTHERN . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . • / • FRESH PRODUCE WATERMELON · 7~. ALL PURPOSE WHITE ROSE 69C -POT A l'OES---=--- MIHIJYE MAID . , , 10 U. IAG • TREE RIPENED MANGOS , YEL~OW FREESTONE · 19C PEACHES LI. LOMG GREEM . . 1 OC GUCUMBERS . EA. 5 0%. FROZEN FOODS FAMILY .... 6 01. CANS SPRINGFIELD . •.ORANGE JUICE •OL CAMS LIQUOR DEPT. c SCOTCH QUARTS 39 SCORESBY RAflE $599 LB. l--WH_IS_KE_Y _____ --' : ~ peanuts, an d experiments have begun On a l monds , pecans, cashews, walnuts and Brazil nuts. RLLET TURBOT 69 ROYAL SATIN s429 c GIN FUU91Jl.RT LI,~----\ Be .. 111!ertalnini hoot with decalorized dips, ibcluding a homemade "sour cream" wilh only half the calories! Send a 1 ta mp ed, self-addressed envelope and 25 cents lo SLl~i GOURMET PARTY DIPS, in care of tbt Da,il)'. Pilot, 50 West SMre 'l'rall,,ilparta, N.J. O'iS'll. Spepiaf's_ A Winner Qmvchicnt and ine,(pensive canned spag hetti makf!I these do u b le-header sandwiches popular for dinner after Little League games. BALL PARK SPECIAL ~~ cup chopped onion~ 1 tablespoon marg1rine 2 clW (15 ounces) spagbetU & meatballs %. lb. frankfurters, cubed 8 cheese slices 18 frankfurter buns ln a large skillet· ·saute onions in margar1nc untll clear. Add rem a In Ing Ingredient.'! and simmer for 10 minutes. Spoon Into buns 1llned with cheese slices. $ 69 ROUBELOF FIFTH s329 1 LI. ~V~O~DK~A~~~ ~15! Store Hours: 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Dailv lncl'udinq Sunday Pri cet (fft<llve: Thunday ihru Wed..,.Moy July IB to 24 c WIGUDlY ACCIPTU.S.D.A.FOODCOUf'OHS 6, Prlce1tMbj.dtostoe:•o•hMd u . .___,,,,_~ 79~ 49!. 59 C COSTA MESA EA. PLA<;ENTIA -.~-=-= 19th and Placentia ?IO W. Chapman • :J8 DAILY PILOT ·1 • ~ \I . Wtdntsday, July 17, iq74 .) FREEZER TREATS MAKES A CHILD'S SUMMER COOLER Thirst Corne, Thirst Served A hot .day is a good time to involve your yoongsters in S-Ome kitchen ~vities. Jo~or guaranteed interest, try a recipe made with a children favorite fruit pundl and tasty treats. And for safety and comfort, skip the range and let the freezer do t h e -··cooking.'' Use the electric blender to whirl fruit cocktail with !IOllle punch. (Uttle people like to watch the bkoder in action.) Fruity Cubes are child's ~play Y:ith an lee cube tray: ·-pour punch, pop in a piece of fruit and pass the job along to the freezer. Even tiny fingers can hull strawberries and quarter orange sections. each) 19 popsicle sticks or wooden dO\\'eis ·1n blender, combine one-1l3-lf or the ptmch and fruit cocktail. Blend tmtll smooth. Pour into a large pitcher and stir in remaining punch. P o u r mixture into paper cups. Freeze unW mushy. Rest a stick at an angle into center of each cup. Freeze until hard. To serve, cut off paper cup. For long storage, slip stick through a piece of plastic wrap and cover the surface of the pop to prevent ice crystals from forming. FRUITY CUBES I can (46 ounces)"ery berry Hawaiian ·punch Whole ·hulled strawberries Pineapple chunks, fresh or BAWAllAN RIPPLE I C E CREAM ' canned I can {6 ounces) frozen fruit Quartered orange slices or juicy-red Hawaiian punch canned mandarin orange coocentrate, undiluted sectlorui 1 can (3Yl ounces) naked Cantaloupe cubes coconut . Fill as many Ice cube trays I quart v a n i 11 a or as desired with Hawaiian strawberry ice cream Punch. (This amount will fill Into a small bowl, spoon 1 three trays; any remaining tablespoon of the fro i en may be stored in the concentrate. Add coconut and refrigerator for snacking.) mix with the rmgers until Place a piece of fruit in each coconut is pink; set aside. cube-section. Freeze u n t i 1 Using two freezer trays, hard. Remove from trays and -layer ice cream a n d store in plastic bag until remaining concentrate ending needed. with ice cream. Sprinkle with Use as a navorfuJ chiller for coconut. Cover and freeze punch, ginger ale, lemon-lime until hard. Scoop into 8 carbonated beverage or any serving dishes and serve at other soft drink. once. For a marvelous sweet treat in a week of heat, let junior che(s make their very own ice'lr _________________ iiiO_iiiii ______ _,J cream flavor Hawaiian Ripple. ,,.. ROSY FRUIT POPS 1 can (46 ounce ) fruit juicy. red Hawaiian punch 1 can (30 ounce) fruit cocktail, drained 19 paper o.ips (3~1 ounce Don't Duplicate Refresh Tasters When you start a meal with a fruit cup, or fruit in some other fonn, doo't duplicate the flavor by serving a fruit dessert Instead choose this ~10\asses lotint Ice Cream made in your home freezer. Jt is ab so lut e l y delightful-refreshing to the taste and as smooth u can be~ MOLASSES MINT ICE CREAM I \~ teaspoons unnavc>recl gelatin 1 cup rhilk % cup aigar 1,~ cup tight molasses 14 teaspoOn salt ~~. teaspoon mint extract 1 cup heavy cream. whipped In a cup, soak gelatin in 3 tablespoons ol ~.milk. In a small saucepan, scald remaining milk. Add gelatin and stir until dissolved~ Add sugar, molasscs1 salt and mint extract; mi x wcU. Pour mixture into ice-cube tray (without divider) and place in freezer with control set at coldest temperature Wllil frozen and 'h lDch from sides oC tray-about 3 o minutes. Remove from freer.er and spoon mixture into a large cold mixing bowl. ' With rotary beater or electric mizer, heat until Duffy and smooth. Fold In whiPJl<d """"'· . Two·ytilr supply (104 lists) furnished in convt1 ient ltor-off pad for just $1.00 ( pesta11 prt1»id )? Send in Coupon Today ,and Become A .Super Shop11.er_ ------------------fill i• tlli1 ce1pon , cli p ilftd .. ;1 with $1.00 to: Pillt Printinc Shoflllinc List Post Office Box 1560 .Costa Mes.1,Cllil.92626 Best Idea Since . Shopping Car.ts ./ . Now you can do a week's shopping without forgetting a single ~ -item! -Use-f)re ·printed shopping lists prepared ' for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 separate printed items, pl~s~dd itional spaces you · can fill in you rse lf. Just check 'em off - 34 Suplts 21 Vegetables 14 Fruits 6 Bakery Items s Bntril&es 19 Meat and fish entries II 0.iry items 20 Misctl~ntot1s' • llt tl sit••• act••I li11 Return to freezer tray and ------.:.----•----·------, ('reeu until sol id about 1 inch . ' 1 ::. •Ides or lray-aboo• 1 ------<---.---~---------·I Beet aga in unl il fluffy, but ________ :., ________ • _____ , not mclted. Return mix.hire lo freezer tnty and freeze USltil 1t Suttt••seJnrz1,CH1 I , DAILY PILOT • . -• • . . Wtdnttday,,~uty 17, 1974 N PILOT ·ADVERTISER .6 EVERFRESR ·hed-Bar t FREE llC~EIS 10 !HE RACES 18300 YERMOJ'fl'. GARDCNAo MOIO.(:llO$S E MOTOllCTCL[S D 'iiiiiiiT1~w . ~r v s2so 'i:. . 'Aiiiiii11- ·'('()611fts!IUM' l $ "•"'·~O.rt l •~d RF D Mogan Davl'd =~~~=~~~$ p~-g~ 1~-· MOTOllC~CL[S • • • • • • • • " uo PAY $350 I 1las. lOl .• N"tf • ><.W,. , ... 11.\1o19 ONLY . .... D Sii.cad Meats ;,,~,':',!'.·~,.:,":::.i:;,,, 4".~ -Ao'M1r2 -· • • • • • • • • • I bt DUHf auccv·s ~ 0 M . WIENERS Of' age 11< SPRINT C.IJI~ o scar . ayer •• ~ .~·:· ~"~". ~"· "" ~~l,!3~ ~ D B h . OSCAll MAYEll-1·\B. 990 ADMn" 2 8 010J1 • ' raunsc we1ger •. "~0':-!"1• • :~.::,:.·~.. u D SandWiCO: pread •• 0·~:·~~·:":-59C --~r;$3so ;... _ . 01' Virginia • Sliced ~==~-... ,-,E-N-DE_R...;-1;,;.1,~1 • Wisconsin Longhorn """'". " I 1' 9.oz. 1' • JAN£ ANDERSON BRANO Kraft Sliced American ~N~lfS ,, •• '!1-lB. .. #lltf;. D Miracle Margarine ••.• ~'!~ 59e P t t S I d , )"" ANOERSON 83C D o a o a a .••.•• '':· •• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• • KllA'FT-8-0Z. · : i Philadelphia I'll'! i Cream Cheese 8 : •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Discount Values! l'ET'M-DOGor CAT . . 1 a f • ONE SIZE • Flea CollarS 111'.~·:..~uQ ••. a G'1llette~~~l~1~~l~SS RAZ9R&AD£S-S'1 I~ VAtU~) 740 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Hi-Pro Burger A OEllCIOUS BlEND Of FRESH GROUND ~ BEEF, WATER AND NUTRITIOUS SOY PROTEIN I • SHOUL PORK ,~..,· f AMllf. • SIZ~~~~ 5·7l~ SHORT ;-: sHAN~rB . & 'f':~ WRAP~· • f • Fresh Fish Tod: D Fresh Fillet of Black Cod D Fresh Fillet of Dover Safi D Mexican Green Shrimp -.~ ••• "''4 -: :· ••• .:, ':: •• :,, .. o Vail.de Kamp's Enchilada r~.s1°i ;·, B C P. ~·~"" s1w" D oston ream 1e ••• ':."'.~;°'; • I o Oh Boyl Sandwiches ·:~~~89°" I . -..... , ,,, •• 4 •• D Lavoris Mouthwash .c·~;:.~~~UEJ s1 2• D Coloring Books ••• :~~~~;~~~· 27~ MINUTE MAID ""0"r 6 F' $1 ;! D Playing Cards ••••• ~:::~~'! 81° LEMONADE· •• !g~ . 8 : o Prell Concentrate .'~:.~":::~ 84° · · 270 I Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesci • ·a.3922 Brookhurst~ ~ . . . . . . ' IJnn-.3 to 4 bours. •••••••••••••••••••-••• l~~-\.~.M~a~kes'!..!_l ~qu~art~.'---~-1.I~..,. ................ ~~~~~"""'""""'"~"""'"~~~~~~ ................... !'.._~~~~~~......,-~~......,.~~\ -;...,..==----~ J ~----~,-- • . ~ . . -· ' . 7 PILOT~ADVERTISEll N • '#01t1! , Wtdnrsday, July 17, 11174 All Stores Join In! • ~~uti~ul New Super1narket In Mission VieJo (LaPaza1Ma rg~~ri1ePa rkway) :, I , on· over q·l4-·600 ~-. -" . ---- items! ~ DAILY PILOT 39 ,, .... ' OUR POLICYGUAllANTEES THESE lOW PllCES TO aE Eff!CTIVE AflEAST70AYS, wtO .. 1UlY 17 nilW TUES., Jut'f 23, 1974 • • E"" e FINE QUALITY i r · • Picn·, ' LB,, ........ ~ \tHJB~\J &Qr,ELE SS ., .. -(FRESH .0.K SJ 69) LEG STEAKS • • • •. ll. -LB. .( I~ e .··············•· .... ·; ;. !HALIBUTE d •lf,;89&.: STEAKS : ·1 ~1·' : 'f 71 : all t • J • ll . : fROZEN : <OC1l $179 e • NOllTHERp.f • PDUNO • • L8 • :;51 I e • U. e • .. J>Ei; .,, ••••••••••••• ••••••• • !' ·· . • •• ~· ;. ·:· •• •• •• '· :, -"' j . . • l·lB. LOAF 38-0Z. BTL. • LA PINA ·· 25-LB. $349 FLOUR •••••• ':'. . . • i~~ • • • • • ~-• 5 ~ • •• • 6-0Z • CAN • • • #························ • • • \....-.,.-: .. ~~-····························· DC t F d""' ""'""""'"'~ · 19· 8 . 00 !>Cl. •TUN"'" OOIC~lr.I , ~lltolll" Cl:~V'r ... • • • • • • • • • .. • • .. • L\ D Taster's Choice ••• "'.''!of:': sp• ' • LB • . Boneless Cbuck . R·oast BEEF GOLD BOND LEAN AND TENDER • $ 15 t.s • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• o Brim Decaffeinated Coffee :•: sp 9 o Mayonnaise ••••• ~~?.' 89~ 0 Prize Dry Dog food ••• ":". s319 VAN DE KAMP'S $299 HALIBUT ••• ::.:~~: .. - SUNNY VALLEY_ (REG. 65c) llMlf I DOZ. 6r I COUPON PIR AOUlT CUSTOMER • I -. . ~ 1 ;Gfde~ Grove • 13~8· W~ Edinger, Santa ~na • :5858 Wainer, H.untin~on Beach • 23811 El Toro. El T9ro , . ~ I ..;-. • • • • 1 -~---__!. -~-~ ' -. • .( • • 48 DAILY 'PILOT Easy a a Basic Barbecue Sauce a little for four exciting -aru1 affordable entrees. The sauce has a built-in brownlng f a c t o r • light molaues. The remaining in- gredients-orange juice con- cenlrate, .garlic and soy sauce-add tippy flavor and aroma to many dishes. Used as is, the sauce enhances barbecued chic'ken, still one of our best protein buys.· _Mg:ect_wi!,Q_chiti sauce and green pepper, the sauce wiffi its flavor notes of ·tomato does wonderful things for barbecued ribs. For barbecued It a Ii an sausage, the sauce becomes spicy-hot-its hearty b e r b taste Is more exciting when charcoal broiled. BASIC BARBECUE SAUCE 2 bottles (12 ounces each) molasses 2 cans (6 ounces each) frozen orange juice con- centrate, thawed and un· diluted. 6 garlic cloves. minced 1 cup IOY sauce ln large bowl, ,stir all in· credlents WJtiI well blended. -Pour into a-jar with a 1id and store ln the refrigerator until needed. Makes S'i; cups. " BARBEcum CHICKEN 2 broiler-fryers (2 pounds ... each). split into halves Salt and pepper 2 cups Basic Barbecue Sauce Sprinkle chicken on all sides with salt and pepper. Place halves in a shallow glass dish and cover with s a u c e . Marinate at room tempera~ for I hour or in re(rigerator overnight. Drain chicken well, reserv- ing marinade, and place Not Bad Guys , Charges Refuted Carbohydrates are o f t e n thought of as the "bad guys" which put oo weight. . ' ' ' ---, • .... ' Wtdntsdi\f, July 17, 1974 Sau _ce - ' Covers Multitude of Meats haves on ~barbeLiJc gfil! 8 inches &\\'SY from gr<1y coals. \Yith tongs, tum chicken halves every 10 minutes. Brush chicken y.•ith reser\'ed marinade on each turning. Cook 45 minutes or Wllil bro\\'llcd and crisp on -the outside and fork-tender inside. Heat any rem aini n g marinade and serve with chicken. Alakes 4 servings. ·BARBECUED RIBS 2 racks spareribs (5 to 6 pounds), cut in 2·rib !«- lions Salt and pepper 1 cup Basic Barbecue Sauce I bottle (12 ounce} chili sauoe I green pepper, nlinced Sprinkle rlbs on all sides "·ith salt and pepper. Place in shallow glass dish. In small bowl, mix Barbecue Sauce, chili sauce and green pepper. Pour evenly over ribs. J.1arinate I hour -at room temperature or ovemig~lt in . FLAVORFUL I BORDEN[ MAYONNAISE •, the refrigerator. Drain ,rlbs well, reserving marinade. Place ribs 8 inches above gray coals. With tongs, turn. ribs every 10 minutes. Brush ribs "'ith reserved marinade on each turning. Cook 1 hour or until brown and crisp. ·Heat any ... remaining marinade and serve with ribs in 6 port ions. BARBECUED BOLOGNA 2 pounds stnall bologna, in one piece 1 cup Basic Barbecue Sauce J small onion, grated 1 can ( 4 ounces) sweet green chilies, drained a n d minced Remove casing f r o m bologna and cut intG 6 lttick slices. Place in shal101v glass dish. In a small bowl, mix sauce , onion and chilies. Pour evenly over bologna stices. l\farinate at room temperature I hour ot overnight in refrigerator. Drain bologna , reserving marh\8.'do. Place oi1 ·grill · 8 inches above gray t'Oals. Grill 10 mmutes on each side until riehty browned. • Heet remaining marinade. Serve bologna in 6 toasted hamburger buns, topped with hot marinade. BARBECUED I T A LI AN SAUSAGE 3 pounds Italian swfft • aauaage 1 cup Basic Barbecue Sauce SMOKED I tablespoon cli.l.H power ~ leaspoon Tabasco )le!ore marinating sausage, fry the links until lighlly browned on all sid'es. (This step ~rains off excess fat and prevents nare-upa w h 11 e barbecuing.) Place part I y cooked sausages in a shallow glass dish. . ln a small bowl, mix re- ma.ining lngredienl5 and stir to blend. Pour evenly over sausages. Marinate lit room temperature l hour o r overnight in relrlgerator. Orain well, re1e rvirl1 marinade. Place in grill basket or spear on he{llproof skewers. Pince on grill 8 inches above _gray coals : broil 15 . minut es on each side, brustung with reserved marinade cver.-y S 1minutes. Heal rema jning marinade and spoon over sausages as they are served. If desired, serve in 6 or 8 split toasted hero rolls or Kalaer rolls. USDA BRADE A fARMERJOHN FRESH .FRYERS HAM • VONS. VALUE 'GROCERIES · VONS VALUE PRODUCE ~VONSVALUE ·. ···MEATS ~ VONSVALUE ~DELICATESSEN ' ~PLUM CRAZY Too often they are cut out of .,, the diet rompletely for the sake oC shedding a few pounds. FANCY FARMS GREEN BEANS , .19 SAL~Mi;ORM.-.TCH LB .29 JERSEYMAID ""' 29 SOUR CREAM ""T '· PINT .SO • ·J Thi.! may be all right for a ?.illle, says Genevieve P. Ho, Los Angeles County home . 15Y..Ol, CAN Jwseym1ld Butt• . GRAOE f:.A l ·LS.CTN. advisor. "Without carbohydrat.s Homo sapiens may not ba\•e 'survived," she said. Knudsen Chllled Dr1nge Juice •:;~~ .89 Dl1liland A Crum Com • '.l•'I." :23 ,t:.· ~EG.OR , "Carbohydrates comprise the most plentiful and varied sources of food stuff In the v.'Orld. They supply the highest yield oC food energy per unit of land, and therefore, are the least expensive." _ BrlmDtc1Uelnated Coft• 'ili~~i:,· 1.39 Carbohydrates, Dr. H o _ explained, are food stuffs whieh are made of carbon, JERSEYMAID""''"" 79 ICE CREAM o""" ASSY-D FLAVORS HALF GAL. CTN, • hydrogen · and oxygen i n varying degrees. 'Ibey come in two main categories, the s i m p I e fOrms-sugars and starches--and the m o r e complex -celluloses -u·hich are indigestible by humans. , Wis-bone Italian Dreislng · '~,r· N blsc T I C It SNACl<SOR PARTV 1 o r s u s '"""' .oL PKG. -Dltf llle Coli • ~ETURN.-.Bll: ~PK, 16-0Z. BTL 16-0Z'. BOX .69 .62 .83 .66 The body has a "specific need" for carbohydrates as a source of energy for the brain ..._and certain spec!ali:ied purposes, Dr. Ho said. . "It 11 well documented that carl:dtydrates help metabolize fats more completely and prevent 1t e lo s i s (~cessive Cr11mette Lasagna -FANCY FARMS PINEAPPLE HALF SLICES 8·0Z. CAN .15 formation ~ketone in the body); they conserve ReclpeHarfyM11tSttW electrolytes (socium, llOdium, JIO!assium, etc.); they spare lie TawtlS protein as a source oC energy ~ ASSORTEDOR PRlNTEO 170-CT.ROLL !::t ':;s wa'!~ th;;~~l .. ' Y1rdley lllrb1I S..p down the need for a high rat diet 1o provide adequate aarax Dry Blacll ca1ories and they help relieve SATHSIZt ~OZ. BAR 61 -0Z. Pl<G. .27 .38 .45 .98 fatigue almost instantly ." -Dr. Ho added that 'l''hiie • · ' 3 man can live w i thout MRS. FILBERTS ' 4 carl>ohydrale! for a loog time. • MARGARINE they are needed to oo this , • . k l ·LB.CTN. -· 'l11e Food and Nutrition Board of ·tbe National Reteardl r.ouncil suggests that the ncrmal adult eat irvlmd sot calories frOOl carbohydrates each d a y , whlch is approximately 125 grams. "Even a diabetic should not reitrict carbohydrate 1n1ake to less lhan 100 grams a day in a t,IKKkalorie diet," Or. Ho said. • She 111 l e·d carbohydrate oontent In IOmf oommoo foods: Milk. 12 gnuns .,per cup : cheddar cheete, 3 ounces • · INCL •. 060~F 2.70Z. TUBE Al• ll1rToot11pa11 lllpr Aaplrl• FAS T PAIN RELIEF IOO·CT, TABLElS ~· O·Tlps Conan Swabs : llll•lvl Cut laUOll 110.cr. PKG, REG OR HF.A BAL 6-0Z.8Tl .48 .77 .66 .56 · TWIN PACK RIGHT GUARD INCL .25 OFF a.4.oz. CANS 1.32 REO. BLACK OR YELLOW Fresh Romaine Lettuce Mild Brown Onions t<ING OF THE 19 SALAOS EA.o SWEET ADDS ZEST LB., 10 . c.nr. Valencia Oranges •,':i.~i 8 i~• .98 • Solid Hearty Cabbag~ ·~~'Jo~iT ".1 O s ' RIPE, SALAD TOMATOES REO ANQJUICY Bloaml119Mm M1rguerlt1 llllsles LARGE BUNCHE§; 2.69 BU, ,79 Bostanfns "'"':!".llir ... NT 3.98 ~ FROZEN. FOOD -- BANQUET 1 5·9 ~l,~DCHICKENI. Everfrash Pat1taes C:RJNl(LE OA 90Z •• .t 6 FRENCH FRIES PKG .• l FrHZar Queen Dinners '\~~~'~Jg;• .39 ,,..., SI uffe ·eu f'..L DEV<LSFUOGE OR 89 a r p .,.,, ICED 'l'E.LLOW •a.oz. PKG. Vons MIC1ranl & ell•• MINUTE MAID LEMONADE 12·0l.CAN ' 8-0Z. PKG. Arri .... n:I Pim COMBINATION V111e 2~0Z . .,G, ~BAKERY Cl1n1111on or Oruge Rolls .. ~. CresClat .Da•uts MOISfANDTASTY I OOZEN .29 1.79 .53 .65 FRESH l'l·~iN~OA,_ BREAD · WH1!£, WHEAT ORSANOWICH ~39 USDA Cllolet Round Stak BONE 1 39 IN LB. , USDA Choice flmlly Slaks c2~'".1.69 · Bantlua Rottnd Slllk ";~i~~~E ... 1.49 USDA Cllalce Rib Steaks LARGE 1 59 ENO LB. • . USDKCHOICE 89 !?.~~~K STEAKSLB • ' . Slloul•er C10• 11aa11s . c~~. , lB.1.59 , Fresh Beef Brisket. -~g~.'r'~~~ lB.1.59 • -USDA Cllalet Ri•p Rusi ~~NE LB.1.49 . Bonlm.Ri•P Routs c~~. lB.1.59 -CENTER CUT BEEF ROASTS USOA CHOICE CHUCK LB .99 Firmer John Ham BUTT PORTION Ls.,89. Fanner John Ham Slices OsClr Mlyer Splrtrlbs F•cy Turllat Rll1ts CENTER 1 •9 cu r Le. .~ ,, FROZEN MEO.'SIZE WHITE ME.AT • LB . .79 lB .• 89 ~ ~ . FARMER JOHN 38 ~'N~~ .. !A,;~SAGE ,.. '"-~~~~~~~~~~~~--' Oscar Mayer B11unscllel91r ,g~u::G .. 47 IN01Vl0U"LL Y WR..,PPEO Vons Cheese Spread ii'!::::;~ 1. 09 Hebrew lllt.·Sllce• Salimi 0~~~'i'i'o"'. 75 Pillsbury Crescent Ralls 8-0Z. PKG. .41 CHEDDAR 1 39 CHEESE voNs iz11~g0Ns1N • . IN fHE PIECE • LB. • Sf_ WINES & SPIRITS A... t A Ba rll SAVE.SO II-PR. 5 99 n.... ge u on ST. KENTUC<V OT , Port Wlo-'MPORTEQ BARAOO' 99 llllDISI Wlil!'IROSE. flEO Of\ WHITE FIFTH. P1bst Blue llbbaa Be• ,,'~i.'c~'Ns 2.39 MILLBROOK VODKAauART 8DPAOOF 3.79 li-----".'viiiiiii'iiis-;w !ii YUBAN' INSTANT Ill I 8 oz. JAR • • 5·0 ii 11-SAVE • · 1, EFFECTIYEJULY 11T02• ()..3 I LIMIT ONE ITEM .-.No ONECOOPOH PEA AOUL r cvsrowEA I • ............ vu ••. ~---------------- ~111CEI EFnCTIVI TMUAI. TMftU wio. 'UL\',,., .. wt lllHAvt TMl lllGMT TO 111"111 aALE TO COMMEllCIAL OIALEllS AND WHOLlaALIAI. ~ll ITIMI ANO PlllCll NOT IN IFFICT IN SAN DIEG O COUNTY. 1 gram; lea, trace; fish, 0: , red .kidney be-I> cup. 21: cam. 1 ear, 11~ potato ctttp.,, 2-incb d"'""«, 10; medium banana, 28. Cake, pllln with Icing, I slice. 71 : 1 cup corn nakes. 1Ugar-coated, 361 beer, 12 ounces. 14 : gelatln dessert, !ftpered, lO CUI'! :W. • Oscar M1yer Botogna 12-oz •• 89 _,..-.... ·--·"-.a-o z. .56 Krall Mfracl• Margari,,.1·Ll .CTM ... , .............. -.......... 55 ~ CRICKET-.fAS:r-ER~-OMOICE 'striekenOf The.S..:r-vn1 ~l1GH?.J • ..; .13 Oscar Mayer Smokle l inks 12.oz. ... _.,.., ........ ···--·· 1.02 Kraft Golden Caesar Dressing l'-OZ. ,82a-oz ... _,.,,_ •• SO COFFEE Chicken 01 The Sea Tuna Cl( LIGHT 11.-0z .691· .. o z -.19 Osc1rM1yer Wieners 1-Ll.llEF .87 ~Ut -·---.83 Kr.alt BOk1 01 .. slnga,o --···· .. --................ -·--· .60 • LIGHTER ' FAfUEOMOf.OZ. .. .2.3'1 Chlck1n 01 Th1Se1AlblcoreSOLIDWHITE10tl 7-0Z. 65 Kern·s Strawberry Prnlr\lttl32·0Z ·-···-· ...... -·-··· 1.23 Kratt Spaghetti W/Meat 11-..oz. ·····-.. ··-· ........... 78 DECAFFEINATED I-OZ. .. 2.5a Chicken Of The Sea Albacore CK WK!TE/OIL .... oz. .15 • Kr1tl.Grated Parmesan a.oz. ......... _ .. _,,,...... .. ..... 1.20 Krall Tangy Spaghetti a.oz ............ _ ........................ , ..• 42 1. 35 . 4.oz. 1.45 Chicken 01 !he Sea Albacore SOLIOWttlTEtwATE". 7-0Z •• 65 I 011 t Adams Ave., at lrookhurst, Huntington leach 5922 EdlllCJft' Ave., at SprlllCJdale, Huntll!C)ton lecich 21 082 leach_ Blvd., HuntlllC)ton le•ch 34081 Doheny Park Driv e, Capistrano leach LCIC)lllia 'Hills Plaza,, El Toro 179 50 MCICJllOlla, Fountain Valley ' ·--,--.-----~~ ;-. ~-------;--t----,-,------1;--'(~~:.--~--~1---===----~~-1__, ____ ~"~__,.._~1~·-- • . ' ' ' 5 5 ~ 5 ' ' • '' • ~·I' -• ... '" - • -· " ' -• .2 PILOT.:ADVERTIS EH . Wtdnttda,y, July 17, 1974 WtdnMday, July 17, 1974 DAILY PILOT 41 Super Shopper Savings! Fruit Drinks SIXPJCI ••••• 49c They belong on a cook-out! Tree!weet-6 oz. cans ••• Lemonade,.Pu.nch, Grape!~ Treat the family -and yourself.-to somethinJ('special! Make it steak one night this week-and make it steak from El Rancho! Then it will be really special!' If you haven't yet discovered El Rancho'; quality, El Rancho's but_cher shop service, then this week is just for you! • Startist Tilwa ••• 49c Chunk Style Hi ht meat ••• No. 'h can ~o _ Diefa[J_ •••. ......_ • ....,,23,__c --= -Liquid 1upplement, all flavOrs! 10 oi:, Margarine ••• .' •• 49c Blue Bonnet for navor!· 1 lb. ctn Y•111 Coffee •••• 5119 ' ' One pound can choice of grinds! Nabisco Triscuits .-s9c Instant Yuban ••• s11' Criapwheat v.·afers !or 5nacks! 9V! oz. For real co!!ee flavor! 8 ounce .. P SlllCKfll'S 6 3c reserves APlllCOT.flllAPPLE ..... Look at the savings -and the quality!· Thick, with1lots of fruit! 18 oz. :- ~io$ • ·~· • • •• 69C Start the day right! ·Big 15 oz. box · Root Beer sara ••• · g9c Barrelb~d draft flavor! 12 oz. cans Mushrooms • • • • • 29c Crest TI011ftSTE • • • • • 39c Brandy~·ine pieces and stems! 4 oz. ReKUlar or ?dint - 7 ounce tube CuCUmber Chips • • 39c Toothbrushes .. ~ 5 1ws1 Wilshire's country style! 22 oz. jar _ One for every member in the family! B-B-Q Sauce 141UU ••• 25.c Springfield ••• compare the quality and the price! Regular or hot! Kai Kan aTF11111 • • • • 29c Apple Sauce • • • • 2sc Tuna-Beef, Tuna-Salmon! big 14 oz. can Serve chilled, aii a side dish! VB No. 303 Fabric SOttener •• 79c Liquid. Bleach : ••• 29c Oowny brings back the OuIT! 33 oz. Springfield, for value! HaJf.gallon Tide raum: ••• ~ •• $2'7 LifebQoy Soap • • • 29c '!'he big 10 lb. box (inc. 60¢ oil) Bath siz.8 bars -choice of scents! Lemonade H.1.JR · 2 25c ORl'mt • • • • fqr · Springfield frozen concentrate -so very refreshing! 6 oz. (12 oz. 11ize 25¢) Stuffed Potatoes • 35c O' Boy! Sour cream or cheese! 12 Oz. Pepperoni Piµa • • 39c • Jeno's -·frozen -just heat it! _13 oz. CREAM PIES ~Johnston's ••• all flavors! 28 oz. big! ·Liquor D'ep.'t. SAVE $1.00! llUAY TMS SCOTCH sa•• Hottled especially for El Rancho! 1, :?al • An "ntA . ss'' c1e ge ••••• Chicken & Noodles 93c Stouffer's makes it so good! 11 Vi oz. Onion Rings • • • • • 29c Crisp 'em in the.oven! Ore-Ida, 7 oz • P>icta in effect · Thur. Juft' 18 Fire up the coals! This is the time to plan a. ~ harbecoe ••. because it's El Rancho's ll.S .0 .A. Choice beef 11t a very special price -and it's al\\•ays special <1uality. - lMTO VWTACE DlfTIOll ......................... ~Fill~ Inglenook Cabernet •••••• $4.95,-. ' . . ~ • Here's the proof! You can. get El Rancho quality at a budget· price! Compare! See 'vhy El Rancho's center cut' chuck steaks are really something special! , CENTER CUT! 'fGUI aior:t: ••• IOS( Ill WllTE ...... ;: ....... .1111 Mateus W'llle ........ ; : ••• •3.39 Here's the value Super-Shoppers look for! Loin cut of naturally aged U.S .D.A. Choice beef -s9 tender, so flavorful, so closely tri1nn1ed! (llW .. Yllll STllP ••• 2.19 •.) WIT1I S1IM, PUii Ill WUll'S ................... Fill Petite Sirah ••••••••••••• $2.75 AGED STEAKS /IL U.S.D.A. Choice top sirloin cuts! Ground Beef Extra lean bulk or patties! ~ndSteakss 129 3 per pound Ht Save 50¢ on straight whiskey! Quart Vodka CIOWlllUSS[ ••••• $899 through \Ved. July 24. f)p~n Dail.v 9 to 9 - Sunda.v 10 to 7 Compare! Look for the difference in EI Rancho meats ••. our top sirloin, for example , •• naturally aged for flavor •• , trimmed for value .•• and U.S.D.A. choice qualitv! Barbecue these ••• and be delighted with the difference! ~ •Serve a brand you 'know! Half-gallon El Rancho Scotch • S691 ·Bottled in Scotland for us! Quart El Rancho $419 GIN_ !'linety proof for great tnilingl Quart . Club Cocktalls •• ; 99e . Heublein's -Chill and aerve! 8 oz. can Brandy JICQIU .-r • • • • ~539 After dinJl"'• or with &Oda! Quart R • Ru"" · s519 Ofll1CO Ill • • • • Your choice, light or dark! fifth ·--SANGRIA ~----• • I No 1ales to dealer& aED ONIONS Sweet ltalittn variety-fine (or aalads! I "---- Super Fresh !J~fl!.!'o!'-l!..: .. ~.~~11! Honeydews ..... ~ ........ 1,~ Ripe! .... with that sweet me.llow gJ<Xlness that makes them a summertime favozit.e! Fresh Carrots •• 2 tor 29c . Crisp and.tendert l lb .. plio bag Valencia 5 S 1 Oranges lbs . California fruit, sweet and so juicy! I • ·Fresh Lemons ••• 10! • Juicy California lemons, full flavored ! ROMAINE LETTUCE 19~ Garden fresh ... criiip and all green! More Meat Values!- El Rancho 69c HAM S"l~~l~ALF • Selec ted pork legs, cured for El f{n nchn! ffamlllTTPOITIOll 1 •••••• 79~ You'll love the flavor of our ham! . Ham SlicesClllTIRcvr •• sl 39• Our own han1 ••• sliced t hick or thin! 1111! WYUl'S -SOii Ill wrrK =S;T 51°! For a taste treat ••• sprinkle hris\:et with oniOn soup mix.-. .... rap in foil, and hake! And .. ve aiv.J' vou -fl't'e -the packa~e of \Vy_rer\; Onion Soup Mix! Sliced Bacon ••• ~ 99~ El Ran cbo;s own ••• ranch style slices! Split Broilers • • • • 49~ '\"ou n.g, meat~· •. king-size fryers! STUFFED PEPPERS Oven ready! Net ••eight 8 oz. each FRESH . $169 SALMON -. • .__ Silver saltnon, firn1; tasty! \Vho1e or half!· Salmon Steak rm. •• s209. Silver salmon-great to barbecue! Fresh Clams QDIYSTGllS 1~ From New England!. (lJTTUIBU ••• 9tc •-) Turbot Fillets • • • 99~ From Greenland's icy cold w~ters! 1 Delicatessen! JACK CHEESE ~chrciber's Monterey ,Jack! 8 oz.. pkp:. Ham Salad ••••• 59c Ne\v sandwich spread from Buddig! 8 oz. Knudsen Salads • • 49c Potato, Macaroni, Carrot, Slaw! pint Blue Cheese • • • • 49c ' ltoho.st navor hE:re! Treasure CaVe-4 oz. Pork Loin uu • • • • 69c J)ani.s h meat in 4 oz:. package·Dak Beef Franks •••• 79c lllrae1 International brand! 12 oz.. pkg. Beef Knocks • • • • 79c F'rum Israel Inlernationa l! 12 oz. pkg. BONBINO 59c CHEESE Italian flavor from Laughing Cow! Soz. ' . ot stores with Sr:ack Ban Pastrami Sandwich · "·ith piclHe, potato N.!ad and Mffeti Ot &Ort drin k! • 93c , ' , . r • • L • ' . , . . . . . . . .. . . ~ . . ... . . . . . . . . . .. ' . . . . STAI llST · .fl TUNA 6'h .. 1.Can VARIETY DEPARTMENT ~ Fabric Softener ~ ~Do~ny-ForSolter, 79c . = .. Whiter Clothes. . .. ll·ounce Bottle ~!!~E~.!!!,~~~~ .. ~~~· s1 a• -~!!'"~!.-!~~ .. DnM.1.~;:29< TOMATO JUICE Town House~Cl.ill & Serve ' large Plump fl Ripe Beauties. Ideal to Slice Into Sandwicll or Salad. LARGE 'AA• · DOG EGGS FOOD .CreamO'theCrop-"Frosh". Recipe·{Except Beef Chunks) . c!~~ a :-1"-~ ' --~~~::'-~ "-~:liool' '-~~~~----~--JJ ".'.'.'.,~~_-_·~~~~~~~J QUALITY MEATS FROM THE EXPERTS AT SAFEWAY! BACON Smok·A·RD"mo Regular Slic .. ...,:0: .. -I • PORK CHOPS WIENERS - Sterling Skinless . C. FRYERS • ,. TURKEYS c • . .. ... . ' . . . - ' 30-SllCE ··.BRE.AD Mn. Wti9ht'1-Ftnhly label J c: • Barbecue Sauce ' Hein1-ldeol For 39" · ()ytdoor Cookoufs "' 16·ounce Bottle C toot.Jor the11 t111. T!ey urk llflPllmf extra 11vl111s 111 - tie stor1:Slock 1pl SAFEWAY WINE BUYS ' ' \ I I • !. • ) ' ( • • I • -· ·- ----- , I FOR THE SMALL . INVESTOR . Yes, )'011 cuA buy your OYln units for only $SC.,9$0: Z units on 85 x J95 Jol. Close" to schools 6 aho11pin g. You can rent both unit.i. for f525 ,per monlb or' you may want to oetapy \h& Jarce 4 bedroom unit yourself. PJeue ciU 147.allO foe appoinl.ment. lO tee. NEGLECTED JRISTATE $35,950 P'omuli entry large separate Jiving room. 1''onnal dining room far. twelve! Coun'try tli7.ed bulll in -kitchen. lluge f8mily room. Urge rear yard. 1''oresL or trees. Comer lot. Ji'resh paint and new carpcL }'orced sale I Call....,, ..... ,67 2 STORY-$33,750 4 BEDROOMS 2. ~. only S33,750. Briaht new: p1int out 111de. !lright kitchen, sclr c1e .. n1111 O\'en beaut1ru1 h.ard.woo~ floo rs und ear1iet Upgrudcd tile 1n kit chen <ind yard 1wiU.: }{Jtller .acccss • ..Will sell fai;t. Call-963-6767. WALK TO BEA.Cd . 2 YIE'ARS OLD - Ne,ar new! Walk to beach• Private ent family roo".1· Bright sunny. kitchett. Larg • master suite. Separate servi('e por('h Custom C!lrpcls. Pro(esstonally landscMped: He ready to buy wherfyou see. Call 963-6767 HAWAIIAN BEACH! -$167 PER MO! , Decorated llawaiian style! Close to BEACH ,only . $167 P:l.T.I. Beautiful islands entry. St;taclOWi liv~ng room, Large dining. area. Circular kitchen plan. Family sized bedrooms_ POLYNESIAN COVERED PATIO! Vine covered Islands walkway! ALL, TtllS ••. Only $167 per month! Take <¥fvantage 963-6767 , CUSTOM HOME, OM .HUGE R·3 LOT ls • special buy. Lot is 66 x 33S feet. 20 ned R·3. Cus~~ home is 2 Jx>droom with large formal d1n1ng room. Call now to inspect this fine property. 847·6010. 6 BEDROOMS S &: S PARK-HUMIINGIOM_ 6 Bedrooms. Fine S & S const'r uction. .f;Jccellcil:l .location. 2 miles to beach. Fully •UT cond1t1oned . .Large_ patio. J car gar11ge. l'ormal dining, lluge master bedroom. ~ and sharp thruooL Looking for a large family home? Don't m iM this. Call' I"""· ...... "161. --~ WHY MOT ENJOY UFE? And 4?Wft this fine home. 1·ormal entry. Beaubrul floor plan. Formal dining. Large · famil y room. Two (2) fireplaces. i-·our large bedrooms. PresU,ious neighborhood. Want lO be<tr more? Call· IW7.a:ll0 now to see. . -HUGE SHADE TREES $21,500~M C.M. llu;rrY! Three bedroom home .at.this price won't last. lopg, 646-7171. ' BALBOA PENINSULA i6.0,950 a bedroom 2 bath homti plus· blcllelor rental. J\uilt-ins, fireplace aod patio, 6'6-7171, PROUD NEIGHBORHOOD . Just down the sLtecl from Alesa Verde -Country-Cliibl-iteaJ,-shake-z,::itoc:1 ~tled among mature trees. Spacious entry to wide Jiving room with raised hearth fireplace. separate master bedroom! WhML<> more? An . elegant heated Jl(IOI! The most that $61.500 can buy in Mesa Verde. today -Call 546-2313. • .A.JR COMDITIOMEI) . BY MOTHER MATURE! 1 And it's not nice to fool Mother Nature! So flee this UNBELIEVABLY upgraded home within walking dislan<-e to ocean. Lavish • laftbcaping. Courtyard entry. Rough cedar. walls. New carpets & drapes. New paint. BUilt in b;lokcasea. Must see lo appreciate. Call now 842·2535. SLIDE INTO SUMMER FUM·WITH POOL This home h as i t a lt. CUSTOM . THROUGHOUT. Great living room. Loads or .antique smoked mirrors. Deep shag carpets. (.beery kltchen. lluge master Suite. Mirrored wardrobes. Ye a r -round enclosed t!IUrt.liDers' patio. Sparkling custom pool with ran •tide. Walk to schools.· Close to l!tqlping. Easy terms available, Call now • ........... FOUNT AIM VALLEY POOL! l""9y home on cul-de-sac street. 2 Story elegance. PRlfif_E fo'OUN'rAIN VALLEY 1 location. Upgraded throughout, BOAT. ACCJ::ss on side, Community POOL. Greenbelt near., Just 3 years new. EXCELLENT t erms·. OWN&R SA VS HE MIGIIT HELP FINANCE: Take advantage • call 8"2-2535 . .. NEWPORT BEACH 1700 N...,...-. ..... 7171 ·----~----• -~ ~· ·: :·. ·: ' ... • . • Wtd~sdly, J11ly 17, 1974 O.t.ILY PILOT 43 MOTHER OUT BACK . EASTSIDE COST A MESA · Uving in lhe 2 bedroom cottage and you in the 'i bedroom boute with t he Roman Bath & f»mily · room like a mountain loda;e, with huge at.one fireplace. Westcurr 1hopping area, First lime ad- vertised. "'8.500; Call <1uick 646-7171. MAKE ROOM FOR MOMMY! $40,500 She'll Jove this spacious 4 bedroom home. And she'll use the cupboards, spacious big homemaker kitchen. Jo'amlly playroom for ~e diddie1. Much m:ire! Can 847-0010 lo see! CAREER OPPORTUNIT Y , fARN WH ILE YOU lEAR l'.l '.l'hi s extensi\.c tralning program is held month!~· (or ptofessionall}' Jtlind<!.d individuals wtW gru;seSs .in.: tegrity and enthusiasm. Our hi g h l y sut·c e ssl'ul manageme nt team offers this training · No obliQation . ~ext training program begins July 15, 1974. Call Randy Mccardle · today for enrollment . PhonE 7~-17 /. FOR THE LARGE FAMILY $39,900 Lots' of home for this bdrgain price! r amily r'oom l 'f. x ZU ! Specl<1.cular fireplal't'! 5 bedroon1s. !'\ire trcelincd slreel. Belter hurry on this one! Call 847·60111. EASTSIDE C.M. 3 BEDROOM Quiet" rrisp)r clean on ma8:nirlcent hard"''ood floors. Delightful yard in great neigbborhood $)5,950. Call 646-7171 ; . ~. WIMTHERACE FOR SPACE ~on~ le~~I for easy ~aintenanre. This one has ·it.all. ,Big kitchen. Family room. 4 big bedrooms. Ki.ngs~ze master suite. Great play yard. Good price, $tl,500. Call now! 847·6010 _ 4 PLEXLBEACH DUPLEX • ASSUME LOW NEWPORT RIVIERA $8,000 DOWN ' INTEREST V 4 LOAN 4 BR FAMILY ROOM To orig.inate a ~I loan or. St5,000 at 8~'f; intttl}Sl . llll'OO"le $330 per mo. Payment S2J5 per mo!!~ Call Join the nviera ufe·style. Healed IX>CJ\ _ ame ~.~!!co~ll Full ,price only $53,000. Take mwM2·2535Agen l • ruo1ns ·photo dark room -riluny ex citing ex,ras! -.._e. now-MZ..2535Agent . Grac\ou5 entT)'. Stone fi1'ep\ace. Eal·in kitchen. Garden patio. Loads of slorage. Will sell fast at # _,._. sn.ooo. CaU Sfi-2313. "BLESSED" BACK BAY "Thft owner is praying for a fast sule ·on thi! heavenly 3 bedroom , den . firepl:1ce, 3 bath. townhouse .. ftteditate in a garden settin~. Peaceful location, near two churc hei.. Don t "''ail ror lhe .ripLute!! $34,950 Ca ll now &IB-717 l . • _ _ · SUMMER SPECIAL A tnos t popular model in the fi nest condition. Jdeal Locution. Great access to schools, shopping, transportation. Gracious cnlry. Stone fireplace. Sepafate• master bedroom suite, Enjoy your suuuncr in lh.e. heated and fi ltered Anthony .,P60l. Call MS-2313 for .'.lppointrµcnt.; TOUCH 01= CLASS For the m('sl discriminating buyer. Jifesa VERDE'S ll~~T . Neat-shurp. )luge cul-de-sac lot \\'llli buskclhall play area and se11arale bldg. for orfice. gu~t house or cabana. Roo1n y 4 bedroom.<;. Family room. }·ormal dinin~. Beautiful pool adds another touch of plca:;ure, $73,9fi0, .By appointn1ent t<ill MG-2313, SHHH EXCLUSIVE Can't shOw till next week, but call quick. Rare South Laguna hillside with double lot & ·true v.·hile "''at er \'ie'I\'! Use your iniagination on this sturtly 2 bedroom & den home v:ith open beam ceilings, hard""·OOd floors. Cre'ale another oc-ean ~icw bedroom, ~\dd a deer. Add a pool. \\'oodsy dream ~llini:. O\l·ncr Vt'il\ assist with tlilancing. Cull now 54U·2:11J. SPANISH HACIENDA 4 LARGE BEDROOMS Spanish llaciendi1. 4 f<1mily sized bedrooms. Huge livin~ rooin. Fireplace. Bright chct!ry kilchen. La rge lot. Bcautirul Jundscaping. F.disv n Iii School dislrit1. Just listed. Call nov.·· 963·6i6i •. VA~AMT IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 3 la1'GC: be<lrooms~ \'acant!! l\1ove in llov.·!, 1LAHG E Hll!Gl-IT KITCllE!'.":-1:;;:1r~e dining and family area. lluge living room ·wilh fireplace. Cul·de-sac. J)on·t wait. Call !16J~jh7_ $32,900 STILL BUYS ·: :A great home. But not very often! This one ls . in doUhousc ('ondition + Ji·aiting for a. new ™ner. It v.·on't Jast Joog. Betier cail to see LESS THAM RENT TRI-LEVEL + ATRIUM BEACH MEARBEACH Upgraded in every waY. New paint ·in and out .' Professionally landscaped terraced yard. Private. HUGE YARD with shade tree, pn,.e thrµ BOAT a~~um-·entry .. ~right cheery kitchen. fo rm,al IXX>R. Full price only !29,SOQ! l Can't 'Jast Jong.· dining, large bvtng room. large separate family Call oow {or more details 842-2535 agent • si7Jed family room, large bedrooms, sundeck off · master bedroom. Beautiful patio, block wall. Walk to bea ch. Call now 963·6767. CLEAN AS SPRING! lmmneu lute 2 story 4 bt..><lroon1 3 halh honic in peaccrul qui et area.of Costa i\l esa. Hike one n1i\(' to beach. Fnn1ily sized funul.r ruon1 y,·ith l'ireplace. Only ~ year:> youn~. $52,5UV. _,Cull • 646-7171. . toda,y l 847.0010. . COUNTRY CLUB COMMUNITY 'I'his large home has Privacy from the time JOO enter the enclos.ed courtyard until you leave it. 3 yea1's new. 4. ~drooms. Separate dining,.~afgc family room. All this and very luw )'ard maintenance at $1)1,450. M6·7l7J. 4 PLEX/BEACH $50,000!!! Toda y's appreciation for YESTERDAY'S' PRICES. It's true. $50,000 4 plex near the -. available. OWNER WlLL HEL~"FlNANCE -CQRQN-A DEL' MAR_· SELECTIQ --s beach. Good ;noome. ""'n'"i ,, ••• , .. ., flo!-----fl l'--sifU''.:~',WJ;..AOYA!!TAGEl CALI; EVERLASTING VIEW CORONA HIGHLANDS IN .CAMEO SHORES JEWEL FabJlous 4 Bedroom. 3 Bath. Pool home in Catiieo Shores '\l'ith an e\•crlasting vie "'' from Spaciou.~ two bedroom home in secluded area 'the Jetty to Palos Verdes. Formal enlertairiing of Corona del l\lar -aocess to private beach. and Seml-Formal enlfrtain'ing on the 'star "Sil down" view or ocean and sail boat:r1. studded patio and really i n formal l-leated and fi ltered pool -you own the land. t.'IUrt.ainment in the unique l<'un House built Nol lease hold. Priced .reasonably at $69,500. m·er and around the pool. A choice of "'·et bars Call 673·85.",0. w:id kitchens. Or use the nvailable Hawaiian SPARKLING MEW LISTING . .Bright, cheerful 3 bedroo1n home. 'fv.·o full baths. Complete 1nodern kitchen. Large living 'roon1 with fireplace. Step-up dinin g roon1. •tagnincently in1proved comer lot ~!Ith brick. and concrete patio 'and 'exquisite landscaping .. Upgraded 1:arpets and drapes inc)Qdcd. Ca.II \IS Q/~8550. • replica private beach .. Just listed al $154,000. Cbt't miss this. Call 673"8550. ~--. PRIME LOCATION EXPANDABLE Arch·\tcclu rally designed -Exccplio110tl CO H.Oi\"A UEI~ ~1 1\H. loe :itiun. Spacious bed.roon1s -den -11\'ini,: roon1 v.ilh n1:irl.lle t'ireplnce -!'" an H2 lut. 111::ur l.M:~an front. Residence :ind garai,:c arc )';t ressed \(1 accomn1odato fiC cund iJoor :id(!itlon. GoOO 'fiibucing available. Cull 1'11)"' 673~ • HUNTINGTON. KEACH SWEEPING VIEW Gracious oourt)·a rd entrance to this exceptional cu::;tom-buill home in Irvine Terrace. Three spaciQUS bedrooms_ 3 baths plus maids' room and ahlolutely great view of both the bay 11nd ocean. Call ror details and appointment to show ~~!finance. 673~. • BALBOA ISLAND CHARMER .J1ist listed this home wilh 3 bedroont•. 3 bat~. family room pllL~ a g'ucst roorn and h:1lh. /\e\V decorator -shag carpets ;ind drupt!t. 1.arge fireplaced 11\·ing room. Unusual\\· lar~c P<i l10 ror indoor and outdoor !llllcrtainin~. Pr:i('( ic11l ty on the bay. Seeing is believing. Ju:st $94,500:' lictter call now--073·8550, AT THE BEACH This btiacn nome in NewPort 1s C\'Cr~·thing' you can imagine. Bi.I! -nev>'ish .and E·Z parking -3200 sq,.ft. 4 big bcdroonis, formal dining, big breakfast room and kitchen. Very Ju rgc· family room JJlus full·si~ed billiard room "'ith "'·et bar. lligh peam ceilings • chnrm and elcl,(ancc. l...arge patios.and sun· d(>t·k~. Isl timt• ath·cr1 i~.t.-d . On two Jots, i ·ou uv.·ri the land . S!li,500 .. tf.16:?171. SEMl·CU.STOM 5 BEDROOMS & POOL $79,90ct One-of-kind, built for 'executiYe V.P of developer. Dramatic tbrouii:hout, this spacious tri·levcl. home features a Jargo master suite. Sepa1'ate rormal dining room . Family room with fireplace. )Jr!:,akfast ar.ea in kitchen. lligh\y desirable~Cii;thborhood. very convenient lo eletncntary ~·chool, --pa rk: tennis courts <tnd bike trail. Please phone 546-2313 roe additional info and·.appoiotment. THE HEIGHTS NEWPORT BEACH 'l'his outstanding 3 bedroom immaculate home is near Jlarbor Hi. Sheltered parking ror 4 ,·chicles, Large sundeck overlooking \\'Oodey yard ~3,500, JJe the l SL to see. &16-7171. . INVESTMENTS CoSTA MESA Z7to --. 146-ZJIJ Z10.M _ ... ,, HW7'7 6014 w ........ . CORONA Dt;L MAR lJZ M•t•trlte I HU MecArtll•r lllvd., S•ll• 1 OJ llYIM 75z.1700 M7·6010 67l .. i50 • -.. -•• • .. . . .. ' • I 44 DAJLV PILDT WtdMlday, Ju~ 17, 1974 PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ' '"" ·~!!li°lll ll'.!11\11' • bal! ............. 1000.1999 • I I Tl'lt Blu111 Markltploco on tl»'On{'llle Coe11 ' ' • • blplo,_, s..M'.'FA ?oJIY'\'J0f:. Thi 1111•-T;',:,.:,: i:"~;,. 1111U11tu ST•T• OP C&ll, .. •IA l'Oll as: (I ) TGI l!nl•prl-. Inc, 1111 Hit· , ... COVNTY CM' O.A••• l!Mm.~tr 'Gfll•tlff ?i'oi.rv of TGI IM. A4tl• El\ltrP'hfl, Ill(,, 7i Ho, CMtl e:111t1 Of Cl'l'DI ~OAHIEL HO"N, HlQhW1y, L~ Mt C1ll1Dt111• tMSj ................. --e·· '""''Nftf , "" .......... !iJoo.5CM9 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS ( e4~ .. s81a) ~.~~1 l::: "-••ion ...... 7000.71" Mor<hondi ........ ICJOO.I09' ..... _ De!:t•*· TGI EnteriitloM1, 11'("., 311 Ht. (Ml ,,.:i~l~Eolllll:E,"c!!"' 11~,!!:H~~~ !!,~~~IV, Llt\IM IMCl'I. <;t lltotfilt 1'111 Ill "1'Mll\I Mvlnq cLtllN llltlnll t.nt ¥1:11 b111IMt& It CGMuttoM '• C«· itld dttHtnl 1r1 r1q11lr9d to tilt t1>1m, cior1Uon. w\1'!! "'" ntcffl~!'V YOUC'll«• In tn1 clllc• TGI Ellftr.,.1t1. In~. of IM de1t ol tht 1b0v. 1n1ft!td court, or Tiiis 11111rn1nt w11 ni.i Wlltl t!1e C-· to pr-I tllef'll, wllh tilt "nt ct n••• J;Tt••rll of Or1no1 C°"'"h' on J11M 26, YO\ICllefS to tl!t 11no.r1tgri.d lr tilt oflke 'UOcU Of Mr 111or"'yl JAMES O. SWOl(O, 1(1(1 PutMl$11td Or1t111e COii" OlllY Piiat, W!lthlrt 81Yd, ullt ol()O, Senti Menlc•. July J. lt, 17, ?•. 1t74 1'51•1• C•lll.1 t0-11!1, which 11 the ' pl1c1 of M lto• .. Oii the uno.rs!Qned In 111 m&tl"• 1------. r>Wt11111"ll to Ill• •11111 of 111a arceaenf. PUBLIC NOTJrli1 wllllln lour "IOlllns 11!1• !M f!r11 l----~~----'~""==-""~lc•)kln of lhll notice. STATIMIHT OP AIAHDONlllaNT D.r• Jiiiy lJ, 197<1. 01' Ull 01' ~:~j,,f1~~~f1 McOAN IEl HOlllN. l'ICTITIOUI IUS1lllSS NAMI ol l1WI !11111 ol thl Thi klllowl"ll 179r-"'8ve 1111,,.,.,_d 1-. 111....a !l<l{edent !he 1,1H 01 ''" flc11tlout btn.lnttt 11<1m1 .IA.MIS D •wo•o LAWlol·A·MA1 OF SANTA ANA, 2J014 VII 1• Wj\i.111,:. 11-d, Ill. • c1r111, Mlnlon Vl•lo. C1lll'arnl1 t'.la7.S. s1o1111 M1111t1, CA. "401 The llctl1IOV. bv!lMll 11<1 .... rtftf1"14 lo "''"'"' ,., ••rn111111r1lrlx lboYt Wll IU-.:1 ln 0.11111• COUlllY.., Apr II l'ulllll'*l 0!'111111 Ca.ii Dilly Pll<il, U. ltl'l. July 17. ,., :n. ~ Aug111t 1. \t14 2111·14 1, "011MAM R. ZALL, 10112 C1nllby PUOIJC NOTICE SI .. Ctrrllot, Cl • .01111 t. ICtM SUTHERU.'110. nou VII C1~z1 • .l.1l1Mot1 Vlelo. Ct. t2'7S SLP·MOI T~ls bvilnHS "'II corocllld<!d bY I SUl'tllllOlll COUllT 01' TM~ P'tlMrlNP.. -~ - - - STATI 01' CALll'OlllltA FOii Mormi n R. 2:111 l'-24.IH THI COUNTY OF Ol:AMOE Put>ll1htd O.•noe '°"'' 01itr Pllol. lllOTICl-.;F H:~.~:o"'oF PeTtT•ON J!,!nt U, and Julr 3. la. 11, lt1' n53-1l l'tR PROIAT• OF WILj. AND FOi: - LtTTl!IS Tl!STAMEMTAl:Y, Olt rOI: PUBLIC ··oncE LITTI!• OF AOM.llllSTRATION IN ,., 'fM• ALTl!l:NATIVE -----·I l:Jl•h of l:Al'AEl CENTARO Vl!GA, l'ICTITIOIJS IUllMISS lka RAl'AEL VEGA, Ofc•aS NAME .STATEMENT NOT ICE IS HEREIY GIVEN Iha! TIM followlllll 1>1r)Oll !1 dolr>g blnlntU ltEl'UGtO VEGA h11 llltd hw•ln 1 11: pelltlcl( IOI' Probel1 ot Wlll 1nd for THI!. lfUG, liOlO Del 1'r111<1, 01111 L11i.r1 T1111ment1ry, Cl!" for Lt'ttWI of l'Dln!, C11llern\1, tu29, Admlnl1t,1t1on In 11\e 1 11 e r n , 1 1 v 1, TIM lrlf, 111e,, I Ctllklrn!• Cll•POI'•· • .!Ion, 2SO'IO Dll Pr1M, 01n• Pr.Int, rt If'""' to whl(h 1~ m1dt lor f11rlhtr c lffwlllt t?61' 111r!lcUI~·--Ind '"'' the time •nd pl•t• T~I bullMll . 11 coindlltled llV • ol ht1r1no '"' 11mt h11 betn itl tor corporitlort. Julv 30, lt1~ I.I t :30 a.m .. lit lht THI! 111110 INC tou•ll'O<lm of utperlm"11 Ho. l of ''Id Chl'1d lin c cti.rrln •r~u.M court, '' 100 Clvl~ Clflllt Drive WHI. In Thli il•ttrMflt ' w11 111!,, wllll !tit Ille Cit¥ ti S1nt1 A11t, C1llfornl1. C&Un ty Cltrt o1 Orll'IM COU'ntV Oii Jl,lllf 1, O•hld J!,!fy 12, 191l 1914. WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, County Clwll. R•MALD H. Pl:ENNIR 1611 1111 l"DUrlll St., Sit, 121 r,1~11 ~'%i1UltrN1 nN1 · ""'""Y lor: P .. n1- F. STAJO.fY WllSSIUR• U1)1 Lil Ptlll P.O. I U 711 Dana Plllllt, Ctllfel'lll1 ft6tt , .. ,, ......u ~ Pub411htd on.nae eow 01lly P11et1 Julr J. 10, 11, 24, lt7• 2•l1-1• Pllblllllt0 0!'1~ Cotti 01Uy Piiot, J1,1J, 11. 11, 2~. lt14 -, .. ,." -------------1 J•UBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PICTITIOlll I UllN•st PICTITI04't •utur•s• NAM• Sf.ATIMINT NAME STATIMINT Tiit lollowlflll Plf'toll 11 •ol,.. IKKIMSI !hi fallow!"' -IOI! 11 dolnl b~llntll ... . .. , AllTES FAfrlTDCCINI 1112 Port TDMCHAIC. l!HGI NEEl:ING, '1•1 • l llllop Pl., Wfttm1Mllt, C1UI. '26&3 '::.'.:lclr. Pl1c1, N1wport I H<h, c.i. Slfjtrld Alfred T~k, l68N Lolo 0.... Arltn l rlgl'l.lm. 1117 Port Cir .. Founl1!n V1U1y, Ctllf. 921lll lltnwlelr. Pl1c1, HtWPOl'I llffeh, Cal. 1,,!i~~u.tstness Is ~ueltd b~ '" .... , Sltlrld A, Tomc:hllr. Th I 11Usl11111 II conducled ~ in Thi• ill'9m•nl wtl flltd with fllt IP10lvld11~1. C lnnouftcetMn11, , ........ . Lot! • '"""' ...... lOl0-5'199 $onkHllltpiitt 6cJoo.- Vou Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With ·a Want ~ '• Gener11I R.E. 1002 General R.E. EltRORS: Adv1rtiaer111 ;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:; 1002 General R.E. • 1002 thould chock tlwlr •4• dally & report error• Imm• die taly. Tho DAILY ~ILOT .,,...,.. llablllly for tho flrat Incorrect lnMrtlon enlr. eMOVE to MONACO Bask in the IU.'i:Ut)' of thl.1 tl<tt1>11on.'\1Jy benutHul 2 bt.'<lroc;un and rlcn home. Quiet cul·de-sac locaUon. S71,9j(I, FEE, Ca r o I :~~;;;;;;~;~I \V\lkinsoo, 641).-4161. eLET'S GET POPP IN' I I~ ON_ PQPPY. ,\ lrlpkx._Jn • .......... 1i! Cl!rona. dcl l\tar? An • i.nveslo1ent lhnt peys for General R.E. ID01 - 1 YR WAR RANTY • HOME irscU? Clean bulhJlng and IK·at (1.'nants. U n d l' r $100.000. ,\JJ Lhi.s. situated on l\\'O R·2 lol:-1 n\alro this R i;upr1·ti vnluc. CRll fnr dC'iails. Bart J a c o b 1 c n . &W-417.4. Co11cepl Leading North Ornnge County Bro~er, ex- panding Newport Office-INTERVIEWING for TE N top salespeople, At us t be experienced . 1>roductiv and-h a-v-e co- operative attitude. Exceptionally gener· ou s commissions split plus terrific profit sharing program. The finest location In Ne"'- port Beach. "The Estate Realty Building". corner o{ Ne\vport Center Dr. & Farallon. Individual offices for sales peopJe, For confidential inti!rview, cell Gordon }Janey, President 618-1618 ~)MORE FOR lOUR MONEY eCATALINA. PALOS VERDES Gonoral R.E: ·1o02Ganero(R.E. 1002 ~E\VPORT HARBOR. Sre -;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;,;;;;;:;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;. This ' 4 beliroom home ii; 3 yean new, a lr conditioned wd hrui n great fan1lly room, With 2100 square feet or space and only a short drive to South Coast Plaza, It's a irt.eal at $44,500. call ......,.,., \\1.1 .L' Ii I \I I \ . . 4 l'LEX FOR THE OWNER OCCUl'ANT thc1n all h'On1 yotn· fully ,. landscaped and h i g h I y llJ>lP'8dcd Spyda.u H I I 1 retreat. 4 Beeiroot11s_and family roon1 . l'~ee land. 1·or only $169,500. Conipare 1\11 other view . prices. Bart Jacobsen, '44-t174 640·1120 COLLEGE PARK POOL HOME NOTIUNG ON TCrVE"I'S ASSU~lE GI LOAN * WATIRFRONT-HO~IS"'*­ Prize 4 bdrm., 4'bath Lido 'Nord baffronl; 40 ft. Jot. Pier & float privileges. i29S,OOO. Elegant 4 BR . & lge. family rm., 6 baths. Pier. & float. 30 Fl. lot. $275,000. Lovely 5 BR .. 5 ba . on prize 60 ft. \vaterfront lot , Lido Nord. Pier & float. '315,000. . * WATERFRONT LbTS .* 40x90 ft. ?\1a~nificent view . $250,000 . 30x105 Ft., Lido Nord, view. $165,000 BILL GRUNDY, flEALTOR lqulpNnt .••••••• 900!).tOff Aut .... blM, & other Troo ot1on .... 9100.'"9 General R.E. 1002 Gener•I R.I:. 1002 .5 BEDROOMS GRIAT NIW LISTING OF HUGE 2000 sq . It. Bar Harbor home. Outstanding at $45,500. Lots of extras, cul-de-sac, sprinklers, inter· com. Call no\v ror det ails. 546-5880. IA YCREST'S IEST $'2,IOO -Quallly built custom pool home. Featurln~: 3 Oversized bedrooms, large, wood panelled tlen, beautiful formal dining, _2_ !ireplaces, 3 bal bs, luads or storage, 1 un· dry room, atrium entrance and oversized carage. JJ.01ne centers. around lovely pool area. ~fany, many custom features. Just llsted,. call for complete details. S46.5110. 546.- 0pen Eve1. • , , • HERITAGE . . RlALTORS General R.E. 1002Gener•l-R.E. 1002 Ir Balb«!a Bay l'ropertlet ·*· NEWPORT SHORES SeoUess! 3 BR .~ 2 ba. home. Walk to club, pools & tennis. Only ..,:J,!00. 875-7060. • Newport lack Bay 2BR.. din. nn., lam rm. Lge bac1<rard. 6.lxl5 ft . cov'd patio. Cul de sac. Nr. horse trails, etc. $49,950. 556-8800 NIWPORT BIACH POOL 3BR, lamilfrm. Lovely · grounds w/greenbouse. \·Valk .to schools'& shop- ping. $65,960: 642-74111. ---.-STOP e . .. and see this brand new duplex, l·blk. ID beach. Open dally Z.5. 207 30th St, N.B. 673-7420 m . REALTORS Lil S Local Office• To Serve You ' Don "· lrlghtllf' County ltrlr. of 0!'111111 COIHlfll on Julr Tl>l1 11~1rm1n1 w11 111ec1 with th• lt, 1'1'· Co""IV Cttrlt of Otlrli!t Count~ n J1111 n. 191•. PJ5tl' l'ubll1hld O!'•fltt c ... 11 O.lly Piiot, July 11, 14 JI, Ind A1i1tlllt 7, lf71 2tol-1• Seldom do \\'C Ilnd on Investment property that is capable of exeellent income produc tion AND • is nl$0 suitable for o\vner occupancy in a roon1y 3 BR 2 BA npru'lmcnt. PLUS has e:ii:cellent . tenrui \\'ilh 20'/c down. This beautiful College Park hon1e has all ll1e 111 n1~nltles lhat )'OU've been looking for, C1Jston1 Spanish tile pool, wall to wall carpets lhruout, and a GI loan \\•hich can be ll5Sunu.'<I with paymcnls ol only $247 montti. AAk about JU.Ung No. 8860 ""'3"4"1"8"'•.,;Y.,•i,.do.,..D.,•., .... s.u.it .. •.,1., • .,N., • .,e . ...,..,.6,.75 ... ..s,.1 .. 6;,l..,. Goneral R.E. • 1002GanerofR.E. ,1M2 01ner•1R~E. 1002 -G•"•ral R. I. 1oo2 ) ;i~;i;~~iiil:.iiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii ,,...n Publbhed O•lnvt Coil! Olltt' Pllol, '----~--------1 Julv 17, 74. Jl, tnd A.11111111, lt7• 1606·7'1 VBU . PUBLIC NOTICE P C NOTICE ,, ...... IH'71 lllOTICI TO CRIDITOll NOTICI! TO CR•DITOl:S SUPl!ltlOlt COU•T M TNll SUPER IOI: COURT OF THE STATI OF CALll'OltlllA PDI: tTATf OP CALll'Ol:NIA POii: •~ THI COUNTY 01' OU ... I TNE COUNTY OP OllAltOE He. A • 7KH Ml. A·n171 Effete of SAMUEL E. FROMM. Ell1lr of SPERO C. MASON. •It-Oec111ed. Sl'l!RD MASON, l kl SPE•O CHRllTIE NOTICE 1S HEJIEIY GIVEN It IM MASON. Otc1111d. tr .. llor1 of it. illl<>W n6llOotd ftctdtnl NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEH ,. tht Iha! I ll persons Nvlng clelml ... 11\tt the c.W!toti ol 1111 1W.. n11ned tltCIOlnl u ld dtellCltnl i re req11lred to fllol llltm. lhal 1n Pittson1 htvlno tltlrns 901111:11 tM wllli !Pit MCeSMlty vou<lllr., In 1111 otllct u ld d«edlnt ,,.. r1qulrld to flle '"''"· of lhl d 1tt of lhl •bow• tntltltd court, or With IM ntnHlrY \IOUC!lltl, Ill lhl <llllCI 19 ,,....,., ltitfn, with tM neceu•rv of the clerk of !Pit 1b0ve irn11n .. ('Ollt1 V9Udltt1, to 1111 undortlllll<!'d If Ille otfkt ot lo pr1Ht1t l'hltn. "1111 it. -..ry ol 1111 11totnt¥s. JUGGERT, V•VERKA lo llOU(Mr1, lo 11W1 t1n111r1l11ntd 11 IM ofllct WAYMAN, 1ll5 l1ktt' S1Tttl, C111t1 MIH. of Mr 1ttwM.,.., S H I! p H ER O , C1Ulomt1 t2fa6, wllkh 11 Ille pltct !If SHl!fltiERO g. OUMO•S. 2172 OuPDnl bllslnaw c,f !Pit undlrslllflld In 111 rnlllltl Orfvt . 5111!1 11, He'*POl1 1e1cn. C1l1tornl1 perl1llllfl9 to tllt rsl•ll ol Mid d«edlnl. 921.ll, wllkh 11 the pl1c1 ot ?K>slnHI ot wllllln tour monlltl Iller Ille flr1t IM ~·~ I~ 111 m1lt~•J. rR•lalnlr.11 1111tlllc1tl0<1 gt tnl1 nclkt. lo 1'!1111~1e ol ~Id ote<illl!nl, wllNn lour Olltd Junr 1•. 1'71. mei:''"' 1tter lhe flr1t Pllbllctllon of 11111 JtOllEl:T l . FRO.WA, not•C•' e xecutor of ni. Wiii Dlltd July u, uu. I' IM •bovt! nt.tntd .dlKl'denl ' SHIRLEYAMH E HOIUNE JUN• T, V1V•R1tA &'WAYMAN 11!!1ecutrl1 of tM wlll ol !Ht Iner """' 'Ille 1b0\l1 nfmtd tll(edt!lf C ... 1 M9M. CINI, ""' SKrl'klRD. '" "'"•l:D & DU•DAI T .. l 1n4) f7HIJ2 2171 ou,....1 Drtyt, '"" 11 Allll'M'f'I ..... __,.,. ""',.., ••t~. Cl ft"4 P11bllllltd Dt1no1 Cont 01lly Piiot. Yeti tru ) &JJ .. IH J~ 2'-end Jiffy 3, 111, 17, 1174 W2·7• All-JI lor E•telllr'l• P\lllU1hed Orlfllte Co.11 Ootlr Pllcl, Jutr 17, 1•, 31. 1nd AUilull 1. 1t1• 2653·71 -~ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUllMlll ·-----,..-· MAME STAT•MfNT , THIS IS IT!! Only sn,soo Call -7711 /Jn Nll fl CAii EY & A'.'>ll[IATLS Balboa Island C· 1 + Residence Exel hlgh traffic location !or Mlall buirincu. llome on rear. tflore in front. Asgume 71A 'Jf l.ol'ln. $5.1,950. IDEAL LOCATION Neill" Hunt. err, 4 Br. 1~ bn, trplc:. l'nimae. By Q\\·n· er, S33,000. 897-4917. :1u:::•8o: ~_:>~=!1:~iA ':o•~ 11T_tie 1anow11111 person 11 dolnt 111.111ne li1 PUBLlt NOTICE ; HE C UllTY Dfl'OIAN•I 'LINllOOK L.AWNMOW!:R, 211311-------------' NI. A llSll · Wt1I Llncoln A-. A n • h 1 I m , JIDTl,S I. OP' MIAlllll• OP PITITlgH C•Hlttnlt 'IU:lt'AT\Jr ill'.tkYAMD F • ..., c. · ica.i. 20J1 Cl~•tM"!lCllt L1M. ~11111 ol l8AHELru1 ,.EREZ •• An1Mlm. CtllfQl'nll. D«Hlold ' ,, Tl'll• lllnlntlt II ·~onducfeod DY 1n NOTICE 1$ HERl!IY /)IVO:N 11111 lndl•\.du•I. llOTICt TO t •IDITORS su,••IOI: COUlllT OP THI ITATI OP CALll'ORJllA POii TNa COUNTY 01' ORANGE ...... ..,. llACHEL HAMIL TOM 1111 lilac! ...,_In t RG'I' C. K11>.11r--111t1tloiil for PrCO.lt ol Wiii ll'd let Tl>!J 1l•ltmenl wll fllld wllll lilt Erte11 Ill ESMA JACKSON, OecNHd. luuall(~ of Let11rs Tnli..,.ntir, 10 the Countr Clert. of Orq1 CCIUfllY on J11M NOTICE IS l'IEREIY GIY'E.N lo Ille fll!lfllentr rl'f"'9nct lo wlllcl'I 11 rnedt for n. lf7•. c•..:lltor1 ol lilt tbowt n1med dt(tdtnl ""'"*' P'•llc11l1f1. Ind !htl Ille lime Ind ROIE•T M. KAUll"MAN lhtl Ill Pl•IOllt lltvlno cl1lm1 •0.911111 Int ,i1c1 bf 11r..-1no Ille -!It• bHfl Mt lMI ht:t •-• A-Mld OKedlnl •r• required to tilt tMm, for A\lgllll t, ltU, II t ::IO •.rn .. In 11'11 Le-MIMI!, Cdflnll1 ".f'M wUll 1111 MCHIMV Wou<lllt'$, In Ille offltl F:Ml71 ol tl'I! clerk ol lhe 1oov1 enUlled Court, or WALKER & LEE REAL ESTATE 545.9491 CORONA DEL MAR • CUSTOM DUPLEX A real one ol n kind cu11tam built duplex on an ovcrslxed lot, south ol BayB.ide, only 2 .blocks to the beach. House has 4 bedropms, 3 baths. tamDy room and fircplere in master bedroom. Income unit is very l&.rge with 3 bcdroom1, 2 fUll baths. 1 S125,900. 644-7270 > Tri-Level + Atrium Beach Pro.festionally Jnnd11cnped lcrrnccd ylll'(j, Private 111· rium ontry, bright cheery kltchcn.t furmal dining, large living room, ial'l!:e l!epn.rate fa1nlly 11IKd room. large bedroom9, 11undeek off mn11- 1er bedroom. Bcautllul patio. block \i1all. \Valk to beach. Call now !J63.6767. Ol'E.N 1/L O • IT'S FUN TO 8£ Nia' cowlt-.i Oii o.p.rfm.rnt No. l _. l l ld Publlll'lfod 0!'111111 c ... 11 01ity Pllof, to pttwnt ttiem, wl!h !M MCl$Wry court, 'II 100 Civic Ctnltr 0!'1119 WHI, Ill Jul~ l. 10. 17, 1•, 1'14 ~·3'·14 yOll(;l\!f'), to Ille UMt n lontd II Bank o1 j iii:~iii~ lhe Clh ot S.nl1 AM, Ci1Htot11I•. 011.i J1,1I~ IS. ,,,,, ·---,,.=--.,,.----~---Am1rlc1 N1tlon1t TIVll 11\d 1.1•111!1• A11cc:l1llClll, IOI No. M•ln 51tMI, knll 425 BAY ~~: ... SI 'OHlll, PUBLIC NOTICE An1, C11ttorr>11. N11. t'J101, All ; TnlSI TNMAI •• Hl .. DlltSOH. JI. CHpt .. IYhlcll 11 ,tile pl1c1 cf Duslnt$1 ol AlltrMY .. Uw l'ICTfTIOIJI au11111•ss !l\e Undlfllllfltd lfl 111 l"l'lllllra Plr'lllnlflll lit 1 ... 17th ltrwt ..... 111 NAM• STAT.MINT To Ille tHlll Of Wltl .,.tldtnt, within f~r CAii M .. , Clllllrftl• tul1 Thi !CllloWll'(ll pet10111 1rt dolne mofllhs '"" !Pit flrll 11ubllc•1loo al 11111 Tth 0141 M-11U bu1Jne'1 11: ~otlce. All-l' lo!': 1'1111"-r HAl INC... 10t VII Florence. 01ttd July ,,, lt14 Publl1'*1 0!'1nooi c ..... O•lly Pllof, -N.~lfjGrl a11d1, c ... ,, tHtO. ::~lbN°[L \~t~·~c~HD Jvly 11, II. 2•. 191• u .• ,,,, l'ltrald £, Alden.on, 10.. Vii SAVINGS ASSOCIATION PUBLIC NOTICE MOTtCI 01' D\SIOLUTION .OP PA•fNlaSHI,. l'lortfll:t, Newport Beach, C11i!. 9'26'0. 1 na!IOJ11t b~nkln.Jl 1;!IOCl~11011 r<i:.::~~~~ =~·llf.'.~~r.l~ll MO ;::;:~1°,i1~1!t"'dk'!lt:~/~! Tllll llUlll'lffl It conalKIOi:I by 1n I, ALICS M~I llldtwld111I. ':II N111e1r.,. llo. l•I H1rold E. AlderMll Ctr1111 ftl ""'-'• C1Hfonll1 t'JIJI l'ubUc nollct It .....,,.,., 17!11111 lhtt P•trlcl• J, Ahltrsort T .. i '7)..,, THOMAS R. ao11tl1S Ind ITEl'HIEN E. Tllll ''''""'"' Wll llltd wl!ll ·~· An_,.., l•IWI« East!lide chartn<!r on one block long Jitn?Cl. \Volletl front and fencdl rear ynrd. Beamed ceilings. elec bllnll, ·cov patio, sha;i: carpels + your o"·n citrus and rruh trees. Drive by lh<!'l call to ~·"µ"'"' Pl f\I T[l<l'• f "<l 1-'i. 1 ... ·.~ • CUtllif,FE ........... dcilno bulll11111 County Cl•k at °''11111 Cllllnlr Clll J11111 Pllblltilld 0!'1n11' COi t! O•l!r Piiot, 11ndt• .. Pit nct1ll01.11 firm ""'"' •nll 1hlt ,,, 1'14. J11IY 11. '"-~1. Avauil 1, 1t1~ 1'1tl·l• i,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ot Pl)JSH COW .. CO,, ti JOOI Jttdhlll, Pl .... ---'~---------City 04 Cot!• Mnl, County of Or111111. Pvbll.r.td Orlntt C0911 01llv Piiot, "BEAUTIFUL BLUFFS s1.11 of e.u1c1rn11, did "" 1111 1111 o.r o1 Jiiiy :a. 10, u, i.t. lt14 r..sl-1• PUBLIC NO'J'JCJ<: Jum" •IJ7". 11y m1rtuet (OMtftl, dluol~ Spaciou5 rrnncL..ca11 nwdel lht Mlid p1r1..e1W!p 11flll t1rmlnet1 their ----in l>eftt>r fh!\n rt1a111wt1 •• 1>1t111tt1 t11er~111. PUBLIC ft\OTICE conditio n. DchLxe. n t w plush S~ld, bllift>tll In Ille tulvrt wlll tit con®clwd b~ STEPMEM E. CUNLIFFE', I-------FICTITIOUS lllllllll!!SS llC\\' 1.:arpct ' . ·"-n c \V wtio wltl P.r ..... dl1e111rooi ••ll ll•bllllll'I PtCTITIOUS 1usn1•11 MAME STATEMf~T appliances: 11·idc gn-enbell !.'.!,ir'~w:!.. ";:,::";in!~ r«tln •n Tiit 1o1!.t:E !!:''1~~ b111lntt1 ,,~,,. lollowln1 •-11 doo111 Dllslneu vif:'W in original i;c,::tion. 3 Fvtt...., nalfct 11 lllrllW ghrtn 11111 !Pit ,,, THE ,AT(tfWORK MotJll. 4U w. . A.l .W. DESIGN, ltH LtmllOI Bdnns .. 21~ l:x!.th.!i; h·pl c., UNIVERSITY PARK--$4.1,DOO Unusual-because this is a delightful SeP.. arate 4 BR & FR home & NOT a town house . Beaut. decorated, spotless & 1nost charm- ing. Private yd \Y/1ush landscp. Choice loc. WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO. 1111 San Joequin Hills NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. Ro1d 644-1910 General R. E. 1002 IRVINE 'TOWNHOUSE UNDER $30,000 SUPER BUYS * Vacant lot, County R-4 zoning S2t,7SO. * Eastside 3 bedrm, huge lot, $36,toO. * 3 Bedroom & family Mesa Verde $41,500. * 4 Bed.rm, rumpus rm, quick poss '$47,150. * 3 Bedroom Duplex , E.Side $47,tSO. * 2 Homes on Lot. Santa Ana Hghu $41,750. * 7 Units, Long Beach, xl nt inc<>me $5t,500 ·~21 lowest Priced 4 Bedrm Mesa Verde Quk•t &trcet. ni..·1u· ~ o I t l.'OUl'SC. Cl<!11n hu111e with 11111!,µre l~C5, Grci1! r111nily nulgh.burhood. Only $42.!150. 1797 ORANGE COSTA MESA 642.1n1 1002 Newpart Beach · Owner \Viii Finun~ Huge Family Roon1 Boat Parkln,i:: OWNER selling 3 BR . 2 BA. (plus utillly room) Alpine-style condominium in Walnut Square. Air conditioned. Shag carpeting, drapes, redwood patio. Across , from com· munity pool and park. Near schools. Immed· • COATS iale poss ession . Priced at $29.900 with 90 & per cent financing available. Call 551·5151 WALLACE OPEN HOUSE REALTORS \Vl1en )'(IU purch!U!e a life slyle. N~lY Hi·IOW Carpets, 2 fh<eplacts,l>eautlful family roon1. all on a. quiet tree shadL'<I l'lll'l'tl. Offered at only $55, 750 ""IU1 the oW!ll'r financing. Ask about U1tlng No, 10199. Walker· & Lee Real Estate. 545-9491 SAT .• SUN . -54M141- 14645 KAZAN (Optn Evtnints) "G"•"n'"••"•'"1 "'R"'.E". """"''"1_oo~~""'Ga"n"•'",.";"R".!!!!e.""'"""1"'002"" 1 '""""'""""'""'"""""" 1 ' ..... oc ... E'"A'"N'""'v'"11'"w'""- ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. 4·1'LEX PRIVATE B EAC HES See thi11 corner location 31 Dose lo Tll lbert & Newl&.nd. bedroon1• family room Each Unit b1 2 Bedrooms, 1 home. llighly upgroded. both with pa I i o nnd J::njoy the placid pool or use CRrports. °"''ntt m a Y u1c private beach. A su1>cr exchange lor l11rger 'Units. lan,-e lot. A truly belt buy Off<!~d tor $69,000. Call OLD TIMER Big 5 Brotoom hOml!, With· A lornud dining room, httvlng 1770 ~· ft . nnd 2 brick lirc11lat:Cs. I.ocatNi (Ill 11 11w shaded corner lo1, 57'xHIO' ..... anYone Ctl.n l11kc over lhlt 7~''/e Ion n . Paynble S200. tnonth PITI or S20,000. Br ing 11.-pnlnt bl'ush nnd MaVf' mru1y dollars. full OCEANFRONT DUPLEX 3 Bdr n1s. up, 2 bdrms. down; 2 haths enr.h. Spaciou111 upper unit 11'1th open be111n rr.i!~&..._, Jgplc., comel~tely furnished : 101\'t'r u n It furnished lol' 11 u m me r 1't'nt11I. $199.000. Call; 673-3663 833-0j23 Eves.- associated BROKERS-Rf 11.L TOlf'; 1r>1~ W lloll>of' ~ 11 J~l I price Just I :::::z=:C=:iC $33,950. 2211~11. 646;;8til Sun/Eves .. 646-HSS 121 WAREHOUSES Dn1nd new. now lcn11ing. 70< • ., already I ea s e d : uppor1unily. $500,!XXI, t:xL<el- lt.>nt l't'lU1T1: 7.5 grus.s. 6'6.-055:>. at $89,900. 644-7270 . . ' ,, .. ' \.\l~LI ·:' IU \I I \ ' .,,,, . .... ' • ' " V• ' I bl .. I FREEDOM HOME V09e & Bab " WHO WANTS ONI? REAL TORS . I Conipletely remodeled NEW Bil:: Cnnyon Speclall11ts f..'Old shag carpetJ, New Country Clu b floml!I Md j>enllng. Complele new Home Sites kitche11 "Takes 11 m 8. 11 260 Ne1vpqrl Ce.nler Or. amouni of cn11h to move In.'' Newport Bench 17141644-iiroG ! Ca.U 646--7711. und1raillllld Wlll Mt bl ~alblol, ''"" 3Dlh St .• HtW!*'I •••ell. Ca. ""° Ofl••· Cosll MHI. C1lllornl1 '2624 f11nnal d I ti I n ii: . Lo\1• 11111 daron.tor111y Obn11111on ll'ICllfT'tll Irr Jf E O.UI •• , Wllll1m A. ,_, I"' Ltmtllll or .. -lr.11sehol..1 V""Ant &. reltdy '"""'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"I tn1 ottitr In Illa -n 111me or ltt 1111 11111'11 1 ,,.. 111 c • 92705 r. l4'f7 111 "'" s " CCIII• Mffl, c..111or111e .,.,. • • "· .... • Cll Ille firm. · ' ~e. 1· T11t1 ilutf11111 I CONllKltd bl' 1n $&1,!JOO W (lff Do I SUPER CONDO! Enjoy pool. 1 t.:=~~;~ ~---.. i"""''· ·•bl ""· """•"· • Walker 0 lee Only $33.900. BOB~E. Bkr. U' 646-7414 or :iQG-4793. ~•A \'''''' DATED AT (Olll MIU, C•llforllll . lhll T~1• bVtlflll.I 11 coroclvtltd bf '" llldlwlo111I . c " c I rth ,stc ver 2" d•~ o1 Jlllll, ltt<L llldlYktu11. Wi1111m A, l'owor • r. 0 .. WO J REALTOR.5 T11om • •obl:ll J""' "· 0tL•1r Thi• 1111emen1 .. 1. !!ltd wnn '"' REALTORS ·--o E•ecutlve Home SINCE 1944 Gonoral R.•. 1002 Chnerat RE 1002 1owlil a JloU "' l hl1 111i.ment ... , !lied wit~ the toi.1111Y Cltrlt of °''""' C1111nty on J111, _._,. "' 1 ;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;, '" ,....,.,, Clllltf .,,.., 111. • .... CovnlY Cltrlt 9t °'"""' c.vn1v C111 Jvn1 n , 1t14 -..-. .-.. ..-. .-.--. .-Sha rp! Shnrp! Wt>ilClllJ nrcn j.;..,...,,,.'.7•J.4400!!!""!!!!!!!!!!'! H"""1 hlcll. C.....,., ""' 2•• "1'· 11".JSSlJ ___________... I f I $16 •"" Fllt!li.'*' Or•not c11111 D•llY ,-11111. . ,,,.. l'u11111htd 0r111111 c ... 11 0111y •llt11, BE~CH INCOME JOene or on Y .. ;,;i, July 11, "'' 26U7t J:r,~b~!":'nd %~~ 1~1: 1~:nw ;1/~.; July u, 1..,·:n Mlllw Auouti 7, nu "1•·7• Your choice of 3 Occ11n11lro~. ~~~1~:.b\2~ l~:ii::"u~;)'1~ WESTCLIFF PUBLIC NOTICE All indlvldunlly Pr Ice rt . large pool. Owner ho' EXECUTIVE PVBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE beautifully!-dceornl.cd nnd 11.lre11l1y houM'.hl nc1v home in Suf)(!r l'lht1rp \Ve!!lcllff hon1e. M2:~~i::L ~c:~~Ofl J'tall& ~~A .. :~ STATEMENT DP WITHDRAWAL ,.OM (u1•nlshcd, Ex<.oell rlll lnco1n1: S.1'~. & \\'ll.t\111 fn~t 4.!ICf'O\V •. 4 8rdroon1, 2~1 bath, Ulrge DtSTl:ICT FOR TH• COUNTY OP l'A•THlllSMI,. D,IRAJ;HIO UND•• J'CCOl'tl, Priced (J'Om $93,500. Thi~ hOlllC 11•llJ hfl\'C OpC'O !001. Thi~ hOnll' ill the be~I •11•"0 .. STAT• Of' CAllPOll"tA P•CT•T•ous •VllH u •AME PETE BARRETT house EVEH Y DAY 11nll1 huv •• In Nl.'11•nnrt Bca•·h, C:\/I .., lt6U T/le 10ll0Wint11 Pftfof\ lltt wOl'ldrlWft •• NOTICE 01' IULK Tl:AllSl'Elll 1 •-' Not1c• OP l'Ult.IC IALa • ~111r11 ""''""' lrcwfl llW p1r111rt1hlp NOTICE IS HERl!!IY GIVEN TO THE -REALTORS-~llOld. So hul't')', l!cfo1't ii'~ 1;.:1~·7111. !UNLAWFUL o •TAINll:I Ofllttlll'ICl undel' Ille' tktltf&UI bu1l11111 CREl)fTOllll DI' Eir1 senlev. Trini•er(>r, loo la te. &l&--7711. I DO~llLD v . MONTOOTH •M LUClll~ ~lfllt cl LlflERTY COIN CO. 01' th•\ I llVlk tr1ntftr '' tbOUI lo tit 11\IO<I 642·52l)O A. MONTOOTH, P\.AINTIPl'S. w 1. HIWl"OlllT IEACH, II 121 Do..., Dr .. 11" r1n1leror, whose DU1l11111 lllClrltl 11 F .... ,..K CORI ll!d VlllOHICA co•E. S!,!lle 2s, NtwPOrl I Ndl, Cl . 15311 lrDOkllU'!'ll Sltltl In lllol Clly ol ~ OiJtf>denu. Thi llclltloo,I• '!Vil"'" nll!ll 111t1,.,1n1 WHll'lllMlll', Cwntr o1 Or111111, 11111 at ------- NOTICE IS HErt&•Y CIVIN Oii btlltlf tot ""01i•l111t1hop Wll Ill•"' 1·12·1t 111 Callfotnll. •11111 t ll ti Wllctll alhet llullfttn ONL y $H,SOO Walker·" lee ol pltlnllfhl In !hi •-..,1111e11 KJlon IM COv!'itY _. Ot1119t, 11tmM •ncl 11Mr11111 uHd wllllln •nr" Beat CoCtn fttcsn /or lG~ U Walker &lee ~IAl lffl ll 11111 If\ J~'' 1,, 1974 dllfl"ll 1111 P\111,!ra "' Fllll N1m1. •nd Addi'"• ot tllt Pll'~ vear• ltlf p111. M 11r 11 t-n to ,~ .. ,,1 Uobeli•"obl•. A .~ ... ;;;;;';";'~'~"~'~';'==;;::I Ml:OO 1.'". to S:OO p,m. •I 4.16 Viti• Jtomi, Wllhclr•Wlno. Trantlll'lf. t rt Golftl!wl1t Cll1ntr1, "'" ... " ----------- Hewport llHCll. Cllltornll plllnt!ll1 wlU MAURICE: A. LEVY. l20t llVlllftd IJ)ll ••*"""ii ''""'· Wt1ll'N~lt1, nktly rcmOOeltd h0111c In fl (Oml)ll!litl119 bldd!llQ .,, tfltlrt f!G1,1u11Gkt N.lutlce Levy Tr1111ltft1. ~ llU!T'niR kdrH1 Is '" of 'rfewpo1•l REALTORS OPEN SUN, 1 to 5 6 "4 2 • D A I L y ' I L o · T c L A ~ s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 CIUM lo DI IO!d II I pUbl!t u!r by ftd.,NewoortlMCll.(l.'2'60 Cll1ff.rnl1, to Htllt ltr11.l rOM , -fan1Uu l~l.llhbornood. Inflation Fighter MESA VERDE of l\ltl'lll,,., Nmllhl11ts. •POil-'~ ind 11.J1111 TtlU 111oa111111r1t s11tt1, 1n t"' cit~ "' Roon\ t.1 room in lhl11 hi'!: EXCLUSIVE et11tr pencnel Pt"91tl't' d 1, '"1 ct P\lbll$1\ed Orlllfl CNtt Dilly,, Pilat, H1111tlntton l••c!J Col.only o1 0t111111. bllck yard. but hWT)' this Thil 4 I.Ir, 3 bn CXL'\..'Ut.i\-c {11111• •Dtt\dontd b'r: dellnd•nt J 1r c111 '"• "1 J-'" 11111 J'!_IY 1. 1°' 11• 1"4 2u t ·7-St11t1 "' CiHtotll 1• at 111e touowrne C811't ftL~I. Call 6.t&-1711 Live In I, -Rent Other Jlv honte httll 11 roi,_lA I dln-0.01111 In !ht tbo\lt tnflllH ttllon ~ttrlllW -IOllll prapet.IY 01 T~-llfW, '.& r~g·~ & LEE pUIWlflf lo C1lllorr>l1 (Ml o4 Chi! PUBLIC NOTICE ·'°"wll: ~ ' r~ ~-"' \rell l>ullL ~ u"' hlH'fl1o1ood I~ l'(ljjjl1 tc ~ ~pn ,.,oc:.iur• 1«ll011 117.,· kkl ltwtlllDkl 1111 11«.11 In trldf. n~turtt. ""1'""111 RtAt. t-.:.~rATI:; 0001•1, tlri'plAl.~, ~Nll.•n .l fRn1lly rorn1 \lr/~poM.td ::~~ pe~S0:~~1~J:,'*.!:l F1cTt:•ous 11n~1s1 ::1.::'11.~ .: ~..::!:~ ~~=: NEWPORT W/POO tree~. StP'-"''e l IJll hOmc, beti.~ & IJi.ic brk!k h71le + 505-5051'.1 LARKSPUR : It's really open-in the framing stage. Be your own decorator : select your own colors. Save taxes too, Qll· Joy fi rst owner depreciatio n plus the good 1 -6 lfo In. Corona del Mar~•t24,000. _ ;.__ BIG CORONA BEACH HOM E: First time I ever on the market. On the ocet)U. Small hide. oway, private fated entry. Flexible financ· ing J>Y 0\\1ner. 150,000. .,.,.c1i11t11, """'I!" dltetrl!IW llWM '"" ''" ,,.•, •.,1 STAT•M llT ,. lfld 1ec11ec1 ••· 1))11 aroot:nvr•• "r1tt. ,... ...., ..... 1 1.-. t.'On)l'r IOI. Cre•l F.11«11k:fe 11 hl!I f.1. (iltcrcd pool. l.'15,00ll. .. ar tlltets. 1nctlldfd In Lltmt ft IM 1J -perMl'I• .,, I'll 111 "" City tt Wfttn'll111t1r, C-'Y of ..,,1!!10111 !Ju l t , ..... iic 1\1\ rurr ,, •-•A" _,, "'-I t Dull...e •1· 0 5, 1 -c 11, •• ••••• 1 '"' '·t I •-II 3 MICnhull • .rru,-.r . .....,n\JI fl e. ('All !ur l!flPl IC> 1100-Mld 1,1 1 lrHatr. !lllW!lr. *""• c ,.,·A'UO ,.1 ,. ,,,,., ttno•, o • .. • o1 .., ....., ..... w • al'I( • n • "" • t'""11tlon Mii. llt,... 11111 l'qlftptntn•. .... ... • .. '°'*'Ill bUttit """"' Wiii DI n -..ll'DOI 2 ~,,,, form• I ... £.17ifilllif01£\_l DAVlf) ~. L~. • RLTR. illrnlM ·~ ol/lff """""' ... W111m1n11tr, C1IU(l!'t11a, fUli, ,_Umn'l6t• fl! 0( .,.., T111Jr.-1y "" Dt..... ns. ... . ' I """ " '"" .. "'"'"' fll!,ll-t Wlllltm L W•ITll'I, ...... 11111Wld91, 1$1 .. , ,t AWVtl. ltr• """"' 511CtOW dining roon1 • ..P ('fl II t , t u I C.I. 1----..:::::::::::::_ ___ ' Pl~nt1?1~ rfltrW tilt"'"' ,. tltl Ill 1111 •n:~~·J 'W!~r::..·· ..,:. 11111~1· NO. 1••· ,, llW fllC(9W .... lmltll (II tmaulA r pool w\th "loadl or "'°"'ty ollertd lat 1111. An111e1m i:ttltlf'nllli ' ' tht ltetloi1'1'•1 11111 AcM"'" 1'•nc:~ ol flllllo, plus 2 ylU"d &l'l!IUI. ..... MESA VERDE 1 Foi lurllltr lllfllrmllkl!I tll'IHH c1n '41• R•' , MHltr. nt .. lloMln . Coutl. IKllfllY l"actric M•lltfl•l ••~It •I tOOlit Now Cl)....,.l1fdl'll""i. fl/t!'"'IY -OJJO, F',...,.,1111 V•ll••"''""'ti .... ,,. lrootllllrst llrttt lfl ffll c ur tf • "" ,,~ .-..... 1 • ~ 1 1 • HAll SEELY, .... M. l oulM Mllltl'. u9U ltoOlon Mununo•~n &11c11, COOJnly OI Ul"nci~. t'('ll\(\d('lcd ·balhs. 11.l l c y -----------1'' ... "fl"r 111!1 l'l'uU<'n• pr ce O HAL •••LY, fllll O\ltllllH 11CondVClld11'1'. gtn111f Nt•I• •-'••!rtin in Nc11·port. llc.4:hl• s&.t.i.MJ. '"' ... -. u ,. ' ·' WE'VE iEIN IUSYl-SOLD , • 5211-~'Ai Dahlia Corona del Mar' • 605 Avenlda Cail.pen~. Dlulfs Condomln• lum 1 • 21:11 So nllago, Baycrosl-Newpon Beach • 20021 Amnlln Pl., .~nssron Viejo Hew,.,1 '"'"' • Tiii• .ier.mttll Wi\ tu1<1 with thl 11cu11TY ,.•c1p1c ••T101P1AL IAMK &,1r~664ti Buy 211';{ ln1cN·t.t In otrlc.-c. A!\11un~ 61,f V.A . Lonn, nt l.. ·7 8 I J • ' I ' ' ' . ·I I. L ,-.uornov 1• PLAtNTIFl"i c1111r1• Foun!lln v111t~. cilltorni• r'l10l. ~·:~•1tJ ;;~'!nl;;, I rt('l'i'l!,~. Que. of tht" hes• b!~.s R-" C•r-R.E. Offlca ~~'~,'..\!,t.ln. ~°'.,'.".,~,',',·",,",111(', ... ~1 ,•0.a,•. :."'=1~~0,1,, 11trtn.r;r~~~ w MHlrt · 1r1n•l•'ot ~Cnll PRESTIGE !10~1€5, \V11rklnjt f)lll'lni·r Wftnrcd. l\llll rond. lf~e nnUo. "....,.,, -...11. C1Uftllll• ,,... CO\/nlw (11rlt tr 0t1not COUlllY on June '" o,., ... , ... , , ,.,.,., .,.., • <'.Mil 64~ lor lnfr iuMl, nio. or Ht lln1l!l('1\ 1 1>15 E. Coast Hwy., Coron. dtl 'Mar ,~ ...... , :ia. 1114. • ... +• -• "'1 ' . ..,..,., "'"'N R"AL "0STA-· •1•ss11 ... .., Pttlwtlff • Plllf.I Allllff•tertw Dfjiolrtnittol C~·~"~''L:t:Ad:l'....:Ca:':' ~su...::"1::!!:!!..~~.!"..~i'~~i5'-U'"~··~~,~~· ,.;:~ .. =~~:;;~·;;;i "l~~ ................ ,;;,;'o;;;;.;;,~~~~~~!l!!!!~'.!_ ____ ~l ~ Orll\fl COlll Dtllf ,.llt l, Pvbll'11«1 Otlf'IOI COIHI D1K¥ Pilot, 1"\11111.•htd Ot1nooi Co•tt Dally Pflol, tt)l'f.iv! ''ou'll find it ln Clt«UI 971).6743. -, -.J 1'7• -;-H,.'N :hlly-l. 10;-11, fl, 1'11 ':Ut•tf 11,.-191 ~· • . ' . ,. . "' ' ' . . . ' . . , . . ' . ' " ,.. . ' ' . \ -. .. • •• _ .. ~~~~~;;~~~§~~~~~=~~~~~§!f.;;:; WtdM5day , July 17, lq74 OAILV PILOT •t .E. 00 1 ,;~;';"';;';';l;R;;.E;;.;;;;;;1002;;;;;;;G;;••;;•;;';;'l;;;;R.;E;;. :;;:;;;;';00;2;;· l;Gen•ra l R.E. 1002 Corona del r 1022 Costa Mep 1024 Huntington Buch 1040 lrVine 1044"- ~~.=~~J 1:;:2,0.~.,. ·NBA ~ ,, ""'$3z~~:.~· ,.,"""" one Mile 10 Beach 1Rv1Ne rwNHse PJLOT·ADVERTIS£R Wtdneulay, July 17, 1974 .E . 1002Genera - EASTSIDE DREAM HOME Only 2 y.ars old, 4 bee!:, 3 bath, hardwood floors, dream kitchen, super upgrading - Large comer lot with extra concrete cfrive and boat gate. Eastside Costa Mesa only $48,900, or will trade. tOr income proJ,erty. PR€STIG€ I HOM€S REAL ESTATE BROKERAGE 300 N. NEWPORT, NEWPORT BEACH "645-6646 General R.E. 1002 JUST LISTED FINEST MESA VERDE LOCATION-quiet ~ee lined street. Walt ID par~ and schools. 3.~ and famlly .. ExcellenLcondition._ Cedar roof, shag carpets, fi~lace and pa· tio. Full price '42,500. C•ll 1151. DUR BUSINESS IS HELPING PEOPLE LIVE BETTER I BLUFFS-CONDO-DELUXE Profe ss. decorated , 3 bdrn1s., 21h baths, frplc. AJmo sL separate dining rm . + eating area in kitchen. 1.'op quality carpets & drapes; flocked wallpaper; terrazzo tiled entryway. & patio; even the garage is fiilish- ed like separate room. Property vacant & ready !or quick occupancy. $69,000. , 1910 PT. PROVENCE HARBOR VIEW HOMES OPEN DAILY 11 -5 3 Bdrms. & dining ~ea. $691500 DUR BAYAND BEACH 675-3000 &:407 E.CDABT HWY. CORONA DEL MAR General R:E. 10020.ntr•I R.E. 1002 IN THE BLUFFS . pojntl.'d 3 bd1111., 2 1.>uth . UNDER $30,000 lot -IHld -u • hulf. ::I Corona del ar hoint l'-~llh ninny f111lt tr('tlj. A Owrtl'I' li\"'11\ng 3 l)r :I Uu =111~i~n~111111j:Je= U U ?nclud<-11 klttiicn buill·inic. :nctlv~ 3 ~dmi. 2 be!h tplus utllhy roonii 'AJJ)\nc'. ln-eatttlar pool \vilh loadi cf ne p Q,\·ered patlO, JoUll price, li(:.:I aJ ~re~ ne:ar lity!i' tVrl\kuni.11\1.vn 111 \\'1,1J. p.'.lllo, plu.t :l ynnl areai-. BACHELOR PAD $3?,iSO. Alik about lilt liV.'lm ~ lcnn\5 j va:f nut $q uC11'\l. Air conililk>n1..'(j, New CIUll'tlllc!rul)el>. Ne11i'ly In Corona J,liiJllart(.)il v.lth ~1;;bte loan. QI. I I U!)b'l'llded Clirpetsc ~~~'& i shag carpeting, dn1pe1, ml· t't'n1ocluk•d baths, a J J e y iu''':gs 10 .Private beach • 2 ~1r ntt!lchl't! IC&i·a'i,:t. Jlrctty v.ood t»ttk.o. At·t'l)ll.'I frorn ·,,. tu."t.'Cti.li. One 01 lhe best buys ~R 2 BA v.·1U1 giant nl&Blcr [TARBELL J W-et"n lalltrl. Sl3 500 C 14 11 1..'<f1'1111ninlty !IOQI nn1I pal'k. In N1•wpC1:rt llr>_ij;hls. ~.500. l>Uitt" And l<Ul,'t' POOL · £G..8836 ' . N~or ~hooli;, l.r11111tdlt!\C' IRVINE W/POOL ~.500 !iuper ttrn1s. • . . ~Ion. Prite S:.'9.900 . Custo m honte on CORNER LOCATION ~ v.·lth 90o JM!r1..,~n1 fin11nl'i~ p~~Uglous h·vloo Boulo· A 2 art hon1e on R·2 11,hh iu·ui!;ihl(._ Call 5.j1·51.5I Vt11·d. · Nl!f.Jils 11ainl Jul\! l' ic c e 11 e n t e X 11 flll8iol1 295:> llurbor l\l\'d., Col!ta ll•A~N~YT~J~M~e~. ~iiiiO~iiiiiiiiiiil CIU11t~ 2 Bedroonu1 wlth 1m..;ibil ilies, bl(; yard, It: :\tc11a l:lf¥e ma. .. ter irulte. 3 balbs! b1·11t in kitchen only $61,500. AIR CONDITIONED De• f m1al d" · · 3 BR 2 BA 268 J-:. J9th St., C.1'.t. I "'" I t "lh 111 .. , Q 1nu1J,:" n;K>n1, Pf!rfC(.'t f~· cider <.-ouple v.ilo ,,~,.acu t1 l' 111 pallf' ug. ldt'p-&a\'tl' kitchen, \\'ill sell i\]$0 011 an R-2 lot with 11uu/d like a littJe srra~j~~~~~~~~!\ nlJJ'l'lll'S, l(J1cly patio :u1d f11s1. Only S59.900. OPEN duplex potential a flexible incomt>, or yow~ starters. landl'lt;ap1n{:.. An C'~ct'111ion&J SATURDAY & SUNDAY. floor plan ln a terTilic north The J>tl~ is rig/ll: at S2S.500. 4 h<lr111., :l1:1 ballr ho n1 e DREAM HOME or h~~~"'av location $69,%0 T t' r ni s. SIK>i\'n }'OW' . • "·Ith farnlly roon111nd 11ri1nc Only 2 year'$ old, 4 hcd .• 3 SwlFt DUPLEX cont·enl~nc..-e. C'.Jl !>18-3209 SUMMER IS HERE! lt.1t11.tion. s.iS.&00 balh. hanh••oOd floors . A l'OOflly 3 BR 2 BA ownc-n ~ 1 l!fl Stop fighting trafllc to aT\d CALL 552-7500 ch'can1 kitcht.'fl, i; up e r unlt 11•lt h !ittpJ,.i:u .. -e and ~i"' 1'11~ front !he ti:each! ! Own ,!.:our • VISION • upg111ding--L<u"l;e l'<lI'llCr fon)1al dining and IK'ti.rly ~ _ _ 01,·n studio Condo right lot l\'ith cxh-a eoncrcle drive braild new 2 br gar11l:e • • acn">Fs from the· ocean 111 and boa! gate. F.asl.$k!C apartment 1.1ilh be a n1 H tin la f REALTY C(Jflta ~leisa, only S<IS.900. or ct"ili~s and cot•ered patio Da na Point 1026 wi gton 1 rtx>ur or onl y "'ill \rode !or inc o in c en1ry on~ S9t.500 • s2-1.900. Or t!njO)' a ·l.'CO!. , a l'l.!d Hin cnmpany 1 THE C OWN JEWEL O\\'NER. \\'alk to Ooh••y rcla.xing sunimer in -a nmre Univ. Pa1·k C\.'rrter, ln•ifl(' propcr'~,·,·LL 01 ,_,._,,_1,. Bel 2 BR 2 8,\, spacious 1 bMr oon11..,~.,.----.,._, ..... """""" '~!.~:~ om;hcue';'~ o{.i~· hi~ !-~1~\shed. Gu ~. &. PaUo'. Co~n1iniun1 11· it h 3ILJN1\r:-1>1u·k, uiu~t-i;cti\i1iS gorgeous 4 BR ho1ne \\•Ith $4.;.000. 493-200CJ beauritul patio, upgr<1ded "·et!kl'nt.l, 4 BH. 2 story. ./(' PR€1TIG€ I HC?ME:I 300 N. Ne\\·po11 BJ., N.8 . forn1al dining a huge game Eastbluff 1030 c..-af'J_!Cts and drapes. Only Beaut. inter.· fa\'o~-ablc room all in ('Ustom built SZ,t,500. 1intincin~ a\'ail. 0 "' n r . elegance $149.000 I Ask f.or .Al~se or Dave 55~93. Oi l S..1.t/Sun, 40.s6 f'or All The Above ; Chr1st1an~ Realty Qe1111,under \Vicy. Call 64-1-1211 I 6916 '.'Varner at Golden1.1·ei;t UNIV PAltK, BUY NO\V , . \ llunongton Beach Stz..7-186 F'OR LJ-:SS !-'RO.\! O\V1"t:R. J ~ · Ne"' 2 BR. 2 l)a condo. 2 B~~~:s 2Cl~~o~~'"" ~ HELP! ACRES OF ,t!,f~c:::·":,~.·:::.: Condon1iniu111s... Only $21.950 GREEN 2 Bil, 1\vaiJ. 11115. t.·lth $I098. dov•n includ" The ·sellers of I his great 49.>-1728 e\'c;; & v.•klM!s closing cost.~, i 836-4200 family ~ "1111t to sell! Surrounrl lhis 2 stcr)• 2 L.anUna Beach 1048 Util_lo.3...eM. Th_ey have J&'t lo1t·ei'Cd ti.le brdl'OOlll 2 ba.lh to11·nh00sc --""-'-•-c...._;.. __ ..:..;;.;.:1 1:illi!;~~~:'~--;:1~;i;: 11• th-tiugc ".~~ nx>lll for --RAND-YMAN bekrn• that. Ji;u: big e xt r a gn">\\ing sl?:n.-c. Balboa Peninsula 1007 $60,000 ,. .. •' GREENBROOK The UNIQUE Features Of This Home Are: Spectacular view o! the Back Bay from this 3 bedroom Bluffs condominiwn. \Vind pro- t~c_ted patio, split l~veJ floor plan and ex- c1tmg decor. See this now at $&4,500, in the Bluffs. 1 YR WARRANTY • HOME Oops! Not ln Corona dcl ?\far but on the Balboa peninsula very old duplex • maybe just a teur c'km11 -Jot \•alue estimated at $15-SJO.COO. Sparldlng p:iol. Large yanl Vac~n.t fo1· I ~. 1n e ~ ia t c SPECIAL v.i l.h mat\ll-e trec.'I &. shrub:> n\O~e-in. JuS1 ~ "' ~n too OUR BUY OJ-" T ll E ,.. • and all freshly painted !0~,f~.500 full pnce. Call YEAR! Located ab o v c COUNTRY KITCHEN MODEL -Vaulted ceiling, 3 bedrooms, onJy one year ne\Y, modem as today and ready to move into. Lots of rough textured. woods, shag ~carpet.S, lireplace, the "'·orks! 90% Financ· Ing available. Vacan~ see -!Oday. Cill" 540-1151. Gener.ti R.E. 1002 Genenl R.E. 1002 * HOUSE & GARDEN CHARM * Enchantingly beauti!ul 5 bedroom home. Large secluded. tree lined brick patio w/ custom designed ramada for delightful la.Jn .. ily fun-It entertaining. 2 BR's upstairs; 1 BR w/flreplace & balcony. 2nd frplC in. lg. family room off living room. Jewel like din- ing room w/picturesque windows. Lovely crpting. lly .owner $67,500. 1CI Holidty Rd., N.B. 646-21!2 RENTALS! UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 67>6000 Buena Vista! Thr most 2443 E . Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar unuisual ' .street' in to\\11. A I !J:!""""~~---~'!"''!"'"'"""' .................. I sntaShing 4 bedroom 111'0 G IR E 1002 G ... r.I R~.E. 1002 story \\·ith tlock. sandy enera · · beach and pa.tio. $8j(). sc•RCE ITEM. HARO.TO.FIND DelighUul .duplex nestled by the harbor. Big 2BR units, fireplaces, bit-ins, sundeck. Too good to last at $72.950. Low down or ;your trade. Don 't hesi_ta.te ! GRUBB & ELLIS BROKERS 675-7080 The Point -On the bay, steps h-0111 Lile "·e<lgc. Large olck-r a bedroom hom.e yenr round at SHlOO nlO. Call 67;)-7225 ••• '""'' ....... •'l \'.\LLE\ HI \I.I\ ,,,,~ ''•'""'' ... ' AN '' ''"•ANCL ..... ~, STUNNING 4 BR. 4 bath family h0n1e. Lg. earner lot. Some ocean/bny v u . 6T~9 Corona del Mar 1021 $65,000 Rare C·l lot. .$0Uth of highV.'!IY • 45' al the lnterseellon of !\facArlhw· and the Highway . Also possible build to suit. $65,000 Very nk't' three bedroom hon1e, · fin'place. Corner lo<:atiorl possible to add second unit. TlY. $70,0.00 inllide ruld oui. This is an ""WALKER & LEE Victoria Beach, just a 0 P P 0 It i U NJTY! The t;hgt1. stroll hum the gracious 4 bedroom floor ltEAL ES'f1\TE beach. Unique ' floor plan, plan ~ a la~e kitchen and ---1• n t: S I:: N i L Y BEU\G either ~ form! dining room Executive Condo USED AS :: BDR~LS. & or !unuly rooni. 111e sellers DBI\' 1\111 cnr;y a 2nd trust deed. &tlroon) + h~gc bonus or · The l1?nder 11·Ul rellnruicc party room v.·1th full bath. Rw,1ic liv. rn1. v.·/LGE. the 1st trust deed al 911:'7c, \\'et , 'bar. OJ.stom lll!Jdl' BAY \VINOO\V OPENS TO and 100 "ill find \"alley's drapes, excellent carpeting, SPACIOUS SUN DECK & exchl~lve 1 yr ""ur.i.nty a :~1 i Baths. ~pa.rate dlni~g OUTS'fANDlNG VIE\Y 01" venr of. trouble r re e area. BBQ. Enclosed patio. THE SEA. Gl'acioui; brick enjoyment. HWT)' -sonie 2 car enclOSl..>d garage. fireplace exudes 0 Ide lucky fantlly v. ill be living 0ose to !XJOI. lnler-rom op-l.agw1a cha11n. C en t er In Eastblufi next Sl.'hool l nonal. $32,500. sUUl'l\'Cli leads lo 2nd stOI')' year. \\lt)· not )'OU'! I' <11;: sleeping chrunbel"!i, The 67;;-i'l25 elc\all'd instr. suill' HAS \\'ALLS OF GLASS, IN ''2•4471 ( :::,!) 54M10J SOl..AH.IUi\1 SETTING . .A \"ery i nt c r cs l l n g 11,...,~ .......... -....... 1 \l/ITl-i BALCONlE."\ & opportunily to really nutke I!' -----OVE PO ,., 'G an orfer! 0 10ice · dunlcx, ---------I DOLL HOUSE "R \\L..t!N OCEAN 1 YR WARRANTY • HOME ,. "° ,..._ VlE\Y. large roon1s, good condition. Fountiin Valley 1034 ......,zy, cuie and l.'lean a:.; a private beach • two 2 --'.:....,.;..... __ _,__ pin! '111it'k and toasty \varn1 Channing lath house patio, bedroom units. ' BY OWNER carpet. Custom v.·ainSl.-ooting HAS A1A.SSIVE O L D ti 5 bdrm., 3 ba.lh, pool. huge &. polished wood!>, shiny BRICK F l R E P L A t r; open bei\Jl1 mst. suite \\"/ vinyi floor . Big gourmet in se<.·luded green sctthJi. Call 6'i.r7'??5 •<L~o''"•l•>'~>l > k tub Cl ' kitchen. Candlelight dine, 1·rus older hon1e hus a sw1 en , ec . garg.. b \\'aler liOftener, spr~erii, rick patio v.·fBBQ. brick "CASE Of Tl-lE BLAJ-r S'".' gAA HBQ & niot"C. $(i6,5W. firephtC<! in hu-ge LR, 3 good NEEDS REDECORATING General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1 -----~--1002 8-12-7SS7. size BR's. Assu1ne 5'...•;V VA & A LrITLE 11\L\Gl~.\- SP\"GLASS 2 s\01·~· 4 BR, 3 \ -loon · pay1nents $155. Jl<'r TION. If you have a flair BA. fam rn1, bonus r n1\\'\lh 1· ~lJ!i1E .. ? 1~ loon S::7·3))· mo. PIT!! $35,900 1-"ull price! fol' Jhc unu1'Cual , THIS\ \',\LLl:\· HL\LI \ 1 YR WARRANTY • HOME Ol'<'IUl vie\\·. lrg yd, sales pa ice ~·\.GO sq It bar, Cash to loon! Bkr !162-5511. S fltUCTUALl..\' SOUND cul:de-<>aC. $875./nion or '\ *DUPLEX* ~~·=d b~:i~i(.'l~ut~~~i;~" --------·~--1-\0i'o-ll!:. "·d\ bt an ~51Xl. 497-25n Both v.ith bn.y vie\\·s. 2 Lots. ti.11J...8-10l or 5.%-S&ll 4ssume VA Loan out;i1.anduig buy, '01• only '~<"Lf ~"~>'~ ... ~ .. ,~ ...... ~··>·~··~~-~'" (.) ..... ., 1_G_..,.--..r_•_l "'R'-tE-'. ___ 1002= 0-rOJ-R.E. 1002 MORE FOR YOl.IR MONEY CLIFFHAVEN NEW LISTING Hurry ID ~ lhis :: IA"'<lroom. :? r_ull hath, ianiily roo1n. lor111al dining 1-00111 ho111e 011 .~pncious co1·11e1· lol v.•ith a beautHul lav.11 and covcrccl pati o. SOJ\I ET ll ING J-.:.:\'l'HA • a scpnrate guest roon1 or hobby room or ?':?":? ltrally • this v.-on't lai>l~ 1 C 11! to !;.\.'(', $66.000. j South ol ihvy. one :,·ear , _ de ., $04,900 FULL PRICE ' llZiMfl ,\SSU~l~'iliL.E 51~~"'c loan, on"' \\"II, 4 o lt . 2 B1\, llko! Bltll'\G YOUR PAINT ;\ND I CLASSIFIED new. •""t'· 3BR, 21 ~BA plus 20'x:fl' nu cpts, dl'llS &: \'inyl floor. DEA BOO!< tionus n u. 01,r lX'r lake 2'n<.I. Sep. laundry tu1., close tu HOURS $41,500. 8-17...ai6 or 6"6-3808 nc1\· Sears shoppg. $36.900. • ~!SSIQN REAL TY H I• gto •-h !"""" S-:2-7-Hl· E ves· ~tl78 985 SO. Ci>:1st H\I)'., Lagun LIDO REALTY \~77 11 , 1 .. i. ..... ll WE HAVE MONEY! \\'oni-ed about carr:.<ini:; t"·o house p ay m e nt s? \\'e i;:uarantee I he, sale or )'our home. \VorrK!d that )'our home Vt'Ol\'t lelJ before you mo\'e? 'Ve can loan ycu f'oough lo close t h e purchase of your new OOme. J usl enll 61&--0555. • " "' ' ' ¥· • " I \'.\LLE\ 10 \I.I\ . . .. '"'' ' ... , "' .... ~ ' '" ~· 'WESTSIDE TEAR DOWN P.cnrable l belhin beginner borne \\ith $$ for the future. room lor 4 UniL<; -60x21>5 Joi. 1967 An11helm, Cooa 1-lesa Only $29,500 . 400L1~ ·, u. This 4 bedroon1 home is 3 yt'ars lll.'W, air conditioned nod has a 1:,-reat fan1ily room. \Vith :?1.00 i;(1u1u-c ft::C'I I of .SJ>."ICC nrut only a shor1 drive to Soutl1 Coast Plnv1. I it'fl a ~teal at $44,500. Call I 646--0.)55. . ,, ... ""''''"" ... ' \'.\Ll,f=\' HI \I .I\ -~·' '~ '"" ,,,, ..... ".~'' ''"~• .. <l(c> .. O<N> 644-7270 I 2 HOl\·tES, Both 7!~".I> ai;- 1 EA!,'1'SJD.E 2 Br. honie: I su111ablc..-s .. Exquis\re decor. EASTSIDE c:a11>. & drapes: 3 mr gar.. in "'Calil:.l1onies" & "Rack· DREAM HOME n.2 lot. &-II or exchange et Ciuh! Jack Pe1•k Agl. Fol"'lln Co .. R!ti·s. 642-50001 Call 5.'j&.596·1 "P.llclio Pa.,r.e EASTSIDE INCOME I . ,\~'lu~;E 5'iO . · K-t61." -· dell ..__ ,_, Titls 4 Br .... Ba. family Classified Ads ••.••• &l2-.l678. ! ,._,...,._..,...,,..._ , .. -o . ""~ on 91)(! n11-. home ha<; it a.ii. Qirning ---· JB R, 2SA w11_h dbl .a:ar &: range &: c..'Ontinuoos cleaning I G::.:.••::•~r~a~I ~R~. E~.~;~1~002~;1 ~G~e~n~er~•~l-~R~-~E~·;;;-1"00::;2 2BR, IBA 1.1·1th dbl gar.· a.·en, ceran1ic mos a. l c Seven yrs old. Xlnt buy, countf'r lops, tush crpts. gre11t , lnvesttnen!. O\\·ner v.·allpaper & p a n e I in~ -occupied. C~I rru.;srTGE thruout + htd & filter pool. HOJ\.~ES fo_: information and David Bourke Realtor • dctal.L". 645-0046 ~t9s0 sell? Oaulfied ads do it I ~-~--C,,-'-'--=== I 'i''ell • call NO\V 642-.1'£78. Gtner•I R.E. 1002 • tb Coldwell _ Banker LOTS OF LAND I. TREES" ... but you live carefree in th is University_ Part townhouse. Largest available : 4 bed- rootn, 21,'i baU1. t\VO fireplaces. Steps to al! facilities. Call now I $69,500. PRIVACY AND SPACE on Balboa Island. Large two story custom home on l\vo lolS. Perfect year round home !or growing family. $159,500. Adjacent lot . may also be .purchased. LIDO EARLY AMERICAN Large 5 bedroom and den home. ·Great hr cation on street to street lot. $167,500. BEAUTIFULLY DESIGNED BAYFRONT Over-4 000 square feet in this custom built, near ~w exquisitely decorated home. 35 ft. frontage on exclusive \Vest Bay. Dock: facilities. $300,000. - HOUSE & GARDEN CHARM Seein' is believing U1is exquisite hom e sur- rounding lovely English gardens. Vie\v o( Bay, near private beach in Bayshores. $150,000. THE CAREFUL BUYER'S DREAM Rare Turtierock find with central air coir ditionlng. self-cleaning oven, upgraded tile & carpets, near park & pool with S bed- rooms . dining room . family room & 2 bat.hs. Only $55.500. I \._ HARBOR Vl'EW HIL!.5 Dramatic Burlingame in park lik• setting. Full" grow n pine trees. Cathedral be amed ceilings. Spiral staircase. 4 bedroom. !am- Uy room & huge bonus room. $122,500. DIAL M4-1766 21'1 Stn Jooquln Hiiis Rd ., N.B. A COLDWELL BANKER CO • macnab I irvlne realty LINDA ISLE Lovely 6 bedroo1n Turner designed home at head of Lagoon. X·lg. pier & slip. Air conditioned-2 n1aster suites. Offered furl).. or unlura. Martha Macnab 642-8235. (E69) LOVELY FAMILY HOME 2 yr . old, 4 bedroom, 3 hath home. De- lightful yard & sundeck. Priced to sell - $112,500. Betty Kerr 6440200. (E36) NEW OFFERING 4 bed.room, 2 bath bo1ne in-1-larbor 1-tigh- lands-across from library & park. Love-- ly yard \V /brick P:atio. $53,950. Jeanne Newman 642·8235. (E43) DOVER SHORES Delightful 4 bedroon1~ family room home \V/spectacular Upper Bav VIE\V. Bright & cheery garden room w/lndoor plantings. Ofrered in fee for $189,500. /uny Gaston 642-8235. (E73) MINT CONDITION Newly listed CARMEL model, Harbor Vie"' Hoines. 2 covered patios -coffee garden -lg. trees. Carl Butler· 642-3235. (E29) BUILDERS-INVESTORS! , Two side-by·slde R.-3 lots-on choice corn- er in the 500 block of \V. Balboa l:>eninsule. O\\rner sa-ys "111ake 1n1 oiler". Cllllt A1oses . 642-8235. (E74) HUGE LOT BY THE SEA Vlew o! beach. jelly & Ca talin a. Exclu- sive Shorecll!!s, prival:e beach. Approved plans avail. $150,000 fee. Kon Hartl ey 64U235. (E75) 101 OOftf Drive 142·123S 1644 MK Allhwt 644·t200 Advertisers may plaee their adS by telephone 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. i\londay thru Friday 8' to noon Saturday COSTA ?11ESA OFFICE 330 \V. Bay . 642·5678 NE\VPORT BEACH 3333 Ne1\'fl0rt Bll'd. 642·5618 . HUNTINGTON BEACH . l 71fi5 Beach Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEACH 22'2 Forest Ave, 494-9466 SAN CLE~IEl\"TE 305 N. El Camino Real . 492-4420 NORTH COU?\'TY dial free 540-1220 CLASSIFIED DEADLINES Deadline for copy & kills is 5:30 p.m. the day be· fore publication, except fo1· Su11dny & l\londay Editions v.'hen deadline is Sllturday, 12 noon. CLASSIFIED REGULATIONS ERRORS: Ad vertisers: should chl'Ck t heir ads daily-k t"llport errors lmmt'diately. T 1-1 E D.\JLY PILOT assumes liability for the first ln-corr~t inscrlion only. Ci\NCELLAnONS: When killing an. ad be sure to make a record of the KILL NU111BER t.-iven you by your ad taker as r~ceipt of your cancellation. This kill nun1bcr must be pre- sented by the nd\'ertiscr In case ot a dispute •. CA.t~CE'LLATION 0 R CORROCTION OF 1'.'E\V AD BEFORE RUNNING: Every effort is made to kl 11 or correct a new Ad that ha:;; been ordered. but \\l.' cannot guarnn· tee to do so until th~ ad has appeared. in th c pol)C'r. 01~1E-A-1J:NE. ADS: These ads are slJ'ictly. ca.sh In advance by mall or nt nny 011e or our of· rices. NO Phone orders. J:>en~lhw : 3 11.m. Friday. Cos ta -:'IIcsa orfice 12 noon -all branch or- ficcs. .1 TtlE D1\ll~Y PILOT re· scn:cs the riitht to clas· slf:,·. ·<xiii , Cf.ll!Or" or r~ fuse an~ 11d\'l'r1isemcnt, nnd to chAl'\Jt'l Its rates & rcgulatloll$ \t!lth<lut prloc nou~ .. CLASSIFIED MAILING ADDRESS P. O. Box 1560, Costa ?\Jes& *673 -7300 * un 1n n .-ac -· · · Phone (714) 494.0731 UY ()v.·ll('r on F'eeo LD.nd. ll.V. Hill.~. So. SH11dplper i\lodl'l. ·I EH, 21,~ 8.-\. F~1n1. rn1. :; car gflr. Upg1<1rted . 2 lrplc..'ll. $98,f,00. Open llou.se Sa t . Sun. &1~·19::8, S.IS.1331. 1528 Keel Dr. A.SSUME 7°/o ( BRA1~~.!,:\R) -IDEAL ••• '.' SNAZZY!! I Grent 3Bf~.-11·.fan1 ily r1n. Ocean view. SG50. ~Ionth. or $S-1,5!l0. -GEMM-- 120-r Tustin Ave .• N.B. REAL TOI ts 6-12-$23 ' IRVINE TERRACE ~ Hr .• 2 \.1:1., ISOO sq. 11. S6:l.:>OO. P I' in c . Onl y 67.~7910. FHA LOAN 1:;i=:::::;1 .. .family . honic: t>njoy _lb low m11111t(·~ce of this 4 Beauliful 2 be d r 0 0 m bd1"111., 2 bath hon1c. 1''ormal \"01ictov.·n Villa Condo . GIANT ASSUMABLE diui~ rn1. 11·i1h 1-0ul'er Prinic beach I o cation. 6V2~. LOAN .s I i d in g doors [m11 Convenie11t to shopping anrl J Bcdroou1s, 2-IOO sq. fl. of ki1cht•11 ... bt'ick Irplc. in 1'4:hooJ;;. TI1is 2 yr old atlult spaciousness. 'Floor I o the li\'ing nn. & upgraded occupied l10111e ofkrs the ceiling !I/. one l i r e p 1<1-c e . carpet Jn::: lh.ruout. A bonus n1tl.Xin1wi1 in car ct re e Largt' family room, 3 bath.<;, to this lo\·cly ho1ne-, is th<" living. ?\o '1 u a I i f Y i n g homemak{'N. k i t c he n . con1n1unily rec. center "'ilh rwces.\llry. $195. per month Sepat·ate laundry r o o T1J. • park, \\·Ith kid<fie & olyrnpic pays all. $28,900. Great lluy for $'1.\,900. enn si1.ed s11·imming pools, Just COATS The Real Estate Fair steps fJ'0111 your front door. • I. 139-6133 °" S36-2SSI 1-18."'° WALLACE ~.;I~ REALTORS Hunt. Harbour 1042 .,,/T0t,/Z/f, 962-4454 LEASt-Bc>0t. \\"atcdroot 2 REAL ESTATE l~VE!-.l'OHS & BUILDERS I:========:! BR. 2 Ba ConOO.' \\'fprl\'. ~ Glemteyre St. &'i' 509 Goldenrod. 40xll8 lot l ' bottt slip. Avail. in1nlCd. 49.J..9-17:1 549-0316 ' 2 BR cute home. 2nd uni t ~ewport West 8-lfr-1807 I lx>gun 11· I ,\ P P P.OV E D anci ontof the very best ! i.:::==------l--SU-PERBJf l-- l ~~~.lo con1plete. $69,500. :? SfORV-3 Bcdmi. fainl!y Irvine 1044 .. ,iev.·s or oet-an Jrom al nn., dining roon1, 3 baths,1---------:.... r oo n1 s of t h i s ' UNUSUAL 2BR. 1r f Ir g hard\\'OOCI floors. cpts & PRESTIGIOUS a r C"hitccturaHy designed. prh·11te yard .~ 11·ood deck. llrps .. A·l la1vn, lruil trees. TURTLE ROCK different h0n1e. Spaclou.-; 2 (ilttnhousc. Pireph1t.'i', \\'ill etc. $.:.4,500. All 4 airy bC'!lrn1s luok out on lx!1111s., 2 baths: beams cam· 2nd TD. For sillc hy Roy McCardle Realtor a g:u'tlen in this fttmily 1h1·oout. -PPW:-'J)1!.llo. nlr· O\i'ncr. $59,900 433 Se111,·nnJ. 1810 Newport Blvd., CM home 1\ith din nn. fiun m1 r on flit i o n i n g . Qualify 6la-1616 541-7729 B-nd mt'ZUIJline library. This thn~.JJJt xlnt cond. Asking UNUSUAL 2BR, w 11 re ' rme has rt-1J Calif. ~~k>n '87·500 pri\·ate ytl.rd, \l'OOCI deck, li\'ing, includin~ redwQOJ fireplace, b'N.>enhouse, pt1 Assume 7112°/. Loanl <•tl'iun1. beach, Ov.'Tlt'r. 2nd TD 3 Bcdr1n, 2 bath. Ort Garfi<!ld WESTLAND I "''ail, sa!J,900 tiT.>-1616 btv.'ll Bushard & L\l«gnolia, REALruH 83:?-j.)33 I H.V. Hills, 4 B~. Fan1-nn, 3 borderline I.It~ H.B. & r. R"i 011·ner. ln1nHic. 3BI!. car gar .. pv.t.10. Co!. Inc. Y. ~A~s111ne \A loun , ?1 2bn. Chanc..-ellor h0111r l11 I O...·enn~~ ~illl v1e11~~p.1.500 0'I' $2\l,.iOO, total p~m11\s S~1? U11l1·. !'ark, fo1111l ,1111. lrr: leru;e .. J?:.i n~o ·191--171. n10. Pticed at Stl,!).X). . kitchen. 111111 m1 & inio:ill;• By OV.'ll('r 2 BR. A\'nil. Three Worlds Realtors util rn1. On sm·111.IC'lt & -------=-==i i n1 nl c di ate I y . Terms. 96&410J ' 96S-2'..?97 £,·es. close to . a_ll 1..\)l'l1m. P!flY s;,.1,000. 714 1~ er n 1 ca f . REPOSSESSIONS areas ~]11t'1lllles. Lo n1ai11t. Ocean View 84G-Si:l4l. yurd. .i.1'.!-<~:?00. $ 5 ~ . 5 0 0 f' L ===------l fo1· illfQITtllfllion p.ntJ !Ol.'ation Q"·ncr (':111 .flSiSt 1.1·/fin:ltlC• rom GCJUn(I Costa Mesa 1024 or lf!Clie r!IA & VA llonies, 111$!. \'UI consider lease Beautiful 3 bed1w111. !![ .:.:::.:..:;:::.:c_.....;._..:..::::.: contact • upti·~n. bath hOnH.' "·lth outstanding l:XTRA lgE' 111oclen1 4 Br, 2 KASABIAN U.'\'t\'EP...SITY Pllrk. :;so. ocean ,. i e w. T hi~ &t + studio in xlnt Hillglc 21~ ba, fan) rni. UP'b"'ftvled inunaculnle hon1e is 01,1Ly 2 family area! $.iOOO. dn. Rul Estate 962-6644 th r u 0 u t. Lrg ynrd years Ill!\\' and haS al \ $<19,(.00. 637-7368 or 998-3003 -xs--,--\l'/CO\'Cred p..'1.1lu. Be i; I spacious 18.'IO sq. fl . A I n.flM" 6 pin. -ASSUME & SAVE loc..-ation on. major Greenbelt lireploce and bc-01n ceiling;, k 1 1 1 l\ttellt lhls uiie L..'tgUna 3 BR;. 2 ba, blk \11811 fence, O\'fr\OO ing pou &· cnn ~ \"Uiue ptil.'('l'.f at $62.500 hllin~. Cl"J'ltS, new paint & Sharp .3 ~rm Stardust courts ~~n cul-de-sac Sl. Call Today 644-7211 lndscJ')tt-Asswn. Gl loon Honie in pnrne 11.B. area. O\\·ncr, ;i.32-S;:IS~S=~--I $2 1,1}. nio. Xo ag s: \Vnll li:t "·au CJits, nc"' tile. --IRVINE COVE elm lttt-6222 khchen n.tul bath. ~'reshl\• . . . · painted in and out. Bkr 96.~ Outl!lflnd1n~ 1."0r1li.'.I' \"1e\\' 101 ' , , BY Ol1'J1<:r, Eastside Cos ta ~I E1\':\lh1ble ln one of till• UlOl!I I i\lt'~ri . 2 011 a !01, lhl' in 1, ~X('lu.~h •" private beach ~ re-111 the utbcr out. 161h,ill, $39JO(loii•n. 1-'rei<hl.Y nllf.nll'l:I. ~11ununi1Jc11 In So. Cal. EMERALD BAY 2-2 Bit 11·/dbl gam.~s. . ,. . t'OnlHCl Bill D:l\'t'!1JKll'I S-*9.000 Prhw. onW. t14;,-2)77, noot 5<.:hools & ~1'°.Ps-: 3 \\t'!t Cua,sLPitcllic Ck't't1n i!ltlc ol • J111y.. :; ~::;:::~=:;,.c1=::..::= I bdrn~. 2 h.11111>. bu!lt -1ns. il·l-8Jl·2.i00 a7~ el·es b<lnn~. 3 bu.; &unroom: 3 UR. 2 ba. 11/f pool, cust. family n n, fri1lc & ---' y,·hi1e \\'Il ler vk'\\' & 1111lk 10 kit. J)llncling, frpl t, ;\11J1t1111e S\\'lnunlng pool. $39.500. USl.VERSTTY P1\RK. 4br, be11-ch. SI .!lOO 6'1 loa n. Ov.•111-. 257 Bi·ent· Bkr. Tu1•hell. Ctlll BU-2561. factlll: the. :? 111 a i.o r TURNER ASSOC. wood. S.\).3$W. LA CtJ<'•ST \ B Sc--;-1 blk grel'nbeHll. O"·n I a if.I.I . 11" N C '"1 fl ' Lt -.... ' Y , A, t.:11 :-,oo 01\'!lcr •\1111 lea ·o w ' • o is "'-".. IJ{lllta m· O \VN Er~. L\Jl:S.\ 10 proposed nio rin R: ;::k i'l2--i9"J6 ~ 4~1177 \rt-:Ror:. Xu-a lrg -IER. 200. 11·nlk to,<K-~an. 4 en. 21.i. bn, --· LAGUNA._P_R.ES~T~l~G~E~l-1 ~ith·rly no aj en I s . hl~'t' f lf/LR, c 0 n1 fl . OCEAL'll VTF:\\' lUI~ _2SA, lpl. . 5:"17.til76. upgraded, )A!aut . \rid.!iClling, \rg 5Undt'Ck. $1.!"A.\1 111~e~· TI;!!' cu~lun1 hrn11~ has. lhW • • ,. -· Jli:POS.'lEs.)fOX!\ b" 01~·ner princ. only. appraisal. A!su1n:iblc •' r hni>~!, of t-1·crrth1n,t. SJ}Cc'- Thruout Or. Co. Cnlt for Ut.t · ,j(l(), ~S.I. \'.\loan. $:l9,90C>. a&-403? 01· tacul<\r C(l(IStline \fe-.1·, ultrll · ..a..a \ . • 99114$30 (}.t.'fll'r. n1cdern sounnet l..1feht'll. of aw..~t·~. 1''\lls ~alty. C>;r,nel' nm~. Pool horn"~ -Cl'f/ Oc--a.rti:sf~ studia, inn:io1·1('d llle !').-16:-773!1: 6-15-9il1 s.3WO ~·11. 3 tvJrmii, -~ 'lDr. ea~fr~t .bll.lhs -it's t1ll 1hr1'llf Of· BY Oit'TW>f :t13R. P1! bn, ~;: boll~ f&Jlllly rr11. frpl t'. 2 Ill •. w BA "fr" Xh1I ·\\'. fcn!d 111 $12!; 0V0 )3 k r s. . Plnt,H, Tet1l\~. j;,g hullt-ln5. Vr\ul!ed ccillni;. lot.:11tkln I: I.Jul rUng. St00,000. 497.1761' -' ' Hudson. ~16-8736. !.It,'\!: ca~I, ~.900. Bkr Pr\11\.', only. 64·1·3<150. --'=-=-====='I ,-1··•.1 \'0~ 3 B•·. 2 ·'"'lh. II 961~. NOP.111 I ·• 1.o. I 3 BR $\\r.:EP l".0 CX'D\.S vrt_;\\'\ ~ ...-nn: UJ , 1 • ".'It'll' ""'"' · ·• l."'s.ccuthe !Sil, l~I tor s,19.~. C1\I ~7-i.i.'lO (<1r LET nie sell yo1n nonie. Top 2 00-.. au•-cond •• Li~e ~" family li\1n£:. Clt11Jh>-(', 1ioo1. ..,up111. Prln only. $ $..· , fe~ problem!. Call . ~~OIJI. <hl1ier ;1H-2'751 tennis 'Vuik 1o bc.'l~'!t. Clo8r I ·1-PLEX. 12) Eastsidc, C:'ll. lod!l.,,V. G,.,.Ql(l"l jUJl . ITURTbE nOCK •lBP.. 21.:u.A, to Os.n.:i l?Oh1t l\t&-.l'ino.. Sit~. 1tas ~Tgmt. ()v.-ncr/ \\'ant a lo1'':"flri~ car! prof kl!K'pd 11.·/mal\)' xt~ll-~500. BOXO RE:\LT\• :""' ..,. ________ _. Bi.'Okf'r, Sil-52'.ll. • . Rf'ttd today'11 Oanili€d Ath. 8334513, Owru-, --! 1-Ml1 ..-• 92£26 ~~~~..1-~~~~~~-'..,-...r.:..~~~~~~~ ... . • • , ------• DAllV PILOT Wtdntsday, July 17, 1«'174 ~ Wtdn<1day, J~I 17. 1974 PILOT-.. DVErTISER 18 L19un1 ... ch 104I Newport B11ch '1069 Newport Be1ch . 1069 Income li:ropttty 2006 ;-;AO:r::"'"::i::-rr:n:'lf::ur=n:r1,:ih::ed:TY-tt:':::'.~rr="'°"'°cl"'7--'i=:':=:'T=:::::r:t=-;-r-::r.::--..-.:::,::n;-,--U.;;~ HIGH ON A HILL O\'f:1·1onklna: the dt.v or u._.,,1118, with ~1de OC!tlLll BUY A WARRANTY HOME '""'" lhl• weu 01annec1, 1• BA YFRONT yri. young home •. hat 3 COWNS ISLAND bdnn•. 2\1 boths, forn>AI dlnin&" nn .. lge. living rn1. Do you know -.'here it ia! 1\'-frplc. All on IY.'O well The litlle bit of paradise l&ndscnped lots. An xlnt 1>uy just "of( ~re'' froo1 at ~.950. . Balboa U.land. 5ooo-of ftbl;Pa absolute hJX\ll')', 100' ~n the ~---~ 1 ba:t'. A lruly niagnillcent _....._ • ., hon1e. $395,000. "'·"" <tt.2100' THE POINT OFFERED A gracious older f,I v e bedroom home, over. 3000' '.. .• , by builder. Lovely 3 45. 00 lhe bay • l{ll1fe pier bdrm., 2 bath sunny home: and slip • SZ50.000 and tor dramallc entry to step.up lease for only $l2,000 a DOVER SHORES Sl50,000 S.'18·35."~ or 98-1-3372 OCEANFRONT 1DUPLEX Newport Shorn 1072 16 UNITS -~ ll1lbo1 l•l•nd 3206 Huntington Buch 3240 Mew v.~ 326' 120/o SPENDABLE 3 Bil, cozy, >"'1>1c. Qi>la, ENJOY' Br ht w•"'( ' BDRM. All -kltch •• True! J USt' R E Du c E 0 HoUMI P:urnlshecl Ol•ps, garage. $330. 0)(1, Sln¥1e• ok. ~Una nook. ~ to llCh. ' WX>! \G ga.nlcn type Wllls. 1.A'a1e. 121~ Opal. 673-2'J88 BOAT pte 3 +2 &1iop1. S33(1. 83S-02't1 5158 WALK To BEACH Qutet off.street \\'est.minster Gener1I 3102 B1lbH Ptininsut1 3207 rmEPL:fc1"i:'+~-Newport leech 3269 !Ocatlon. \roodburnlnljl'. ~ ~- 2-St.y. 3 llR., 2 b.'\. t.ge, tlrepl3l'ff. Tcrr.:.zzo cntr)'a. Sill UTIL pd bach. bch Ideal $62.J, .,t.10. yrly Ille. t.1oder11 HOMS11!1111Fl"INOkD.ERS Sl~. UTlL pd re<lec 1 Bdr NEWPOR'n Beach, on water, 2 he<lmm Exeou1tve Condomlnlun1, ·tum. SUJ)tl' view. Bolt lllp. Pool, l•CIWI. Avail July ' Au,euat. Wffll ot tmnth. Phone dsys n4: ~ eve1. 114: 673-nm Mr. tfead conao. un1urn. puUo: Crpk:., brklst area. Enclo6cd 1.ara.Ses~ Spatklln& for 1tuCl~1t"l.qWUl 2 Br con@. Occo.n·bny v1l'\\'. 1 bJk beach. Balboa. oc"A''~ [)()SlleM.000 R$56E,A!IOllLTY • pool. All Jarie 2 bed:En $150 UTl pd, nl1,,-e bach No. Boftl sll11 HVail. 10 45'. IJn• * 642·9900 * ~nln $2211. 2 BDR lront ., .,.. units. Gl'OSI $3070 rr . end. yd, t>k·Laiuna n1ed. c~upy. 32 C OOu11e Child, 1m1 pet ok, * SU.1290 * l2'i~ spendable. 6. ti ie11 $2"15 2 Bdl', fpl hae, 1ar yd, l MILLIER REAL TY 1 abrillo, Costll Mega CdM BEAUTIFUL Nott trvine ~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~! I ~1s. Just $225,000. Huny hlk bch Cdt-.1 642-4811 1-'))r lease, $260. per mo, $350. 3 BDR, 2 Ba, frple hie Townhoutc. 3BR. 2 BA. CANALFRONTbome; 4 Bfl: tor th is one· c:aU <'ll.4> NU-VIEW RENTALS CoronodolMor 3222 BeautltullydeooratP.d.Adult 2blk1beach,CdM. Utility room. Air • •· I I in . 'l".i2-1700. 613 -~ or •••-3'"o> oe<:1.1plcd. 2 BR duplex. 2 NU-VIEW RENTALS condlllonlt11. Patto. Gar.,e. $,vi:i;,l~n, & lil'.~;ir:cl1~b Jrm:mlllll!ll $100~ Br nlObile , C.l\~ w; CHARMING! car Kar., w/wa.aher It dryer 613..f030 or 494--32-18 Nr. llC'hooll. Fl'ff UM! or men\bel'lhip. One b J 0 ck [II • 1 1 •-~ ••~ UtU h!>oku11. One mile to ocean. POOL, lrpll 3 BR oommu_nlry pool, Water A trom beach. $ 1 8 • s o o . 1 , ;i "N ~ w;fk i....,, t • Nr new Civic Center atx1 f'UnN 1 si' by k kend cable TV peld. $296. mo. ;~~!:mente 1076 ,J i;l!.~ll 1. ~· Uu1 pd. Bal ;ale~;; ~~~ ~:;s> t!,':le ~~ma ~~A ~~~~:o doas. blf~: ~~~:~·;Br l~~.ie. 551·515l . Avall Aur. 111111! l;il" &h :PBF: ~Lo.&. spnrkling pool furnished 3 BR, 2 BA, ftreplace, cpts, J."'UR:i~t~ 3 ;R + LlKE new, 2 BR .. 2 ba., de'!, LUXURIOUS 1cu.sto1n built we~vE GOT-. . . $395. drps, blln RIO, :ar .. nice BALBOA furn 2 Br bo3t" dbl, p.r .. patlo; faces I:: Spanish \11/panoramic \\ilite WHAT YOU WANTI COUPLE -.·W hoUlffit sulr Su""'r localion south of Yard1 8• $27?· mo. Ask Jor 2 BR, ga::.f:, pet ok ' area. $325. l;'ark Udo, B; vi , br ' " ba. In Jct, 1-1. B. area. ,.. Da e _116.'-4561 H--JI * --Realt« ~ y,·ater ew, ., :1 Four 4·plexe1 In choice &. 84&-0980 hlgh\\'&Y . spacious three ~· · ""'"" ,. nvv 5CC!lu<led artn. A t tr a C . side Jocntion. Good rental bedroo1n ty,·o AIOI')' • lot1 of Irvine 3244 IN THE BLUFF S • MISSION VIEJO. 3BR,28A. A one of a kind Ivan \\'ells courtyard, lge deck, unusual 11rca. 1 block from 17th St. 81lbH l1l1nd 3106 1,,.00(, pl'lneling, fireplace, TpivnOOuae living 4 Br 21, Nu co»do. Air. F1replact. 1:f1~erd with a nt~ik-nt f ea.I urea th r u-out . 11 hop pl n g, Good ap. COZY Cottaie, want 11 and bean1ed ceillng11 $6.iO. . * RENTALS * , Bn, llOO\V white Crsit, _fPrl~~ AvRll Imm«!. 892·1219 Uv. nn .. spac. deck, custom ceramic tile \\'Ork, $43,500. year. ThC! best buy in beautituJ Laguna! For f u r t he r lnforn1ation & a pp ' t • sho,vlng, call * 832·U.52 * Southcoast Pacific Corp. !ACUNA hoJTl(':-'4-br, 2-00, frplc, belltll ceiling!!, crpl, drp6, canyon vu. 497-1R16. Legun1 Hlllo 1050 SHARP SHARP SHARP LAGUNA HILLS 4 bedroomR. dining room. & dt'n. Super home, premium lot pool, upgarded i n every "'sy. Best buy in tll'ea. A real pleA.sure. to sho''" Call MG-ml. Walker &Lee ···~ .. ,.,. Naw World Coiiilo A custon1 decor.. aiN:ond., 3 lxlfms., 2 ba. Alsun1e 1\i'lo FllA. Price $32,500. 9:f21 CORBl~MARTIN Re•ltori * 644-7662 * L19un1 Niguel 1052 SALE OR LEASE , lmmediate. Rural. View of tlUls & Sea, Shepherd & his sheep. 4 BR, 2 Ba, 40' !\fountain · Lake Po o I , 831-262} Lido Isle 10S6 1 YR WARRANTY • HOME 1~ . 11 rooni ;ver 00 ~Ilg Sl.75.000.00 ~':,''. t10,,",';,t~ ..... 'u1heldte[. &:lh;n,-ffiJl\Pi!.J\Y J\.11.y: _J.~ Sept. Alt LMdklrd 1 W Ill'"' Vd laee 1 U_?lv. Park. Irv. wine ceJ\ar, prdco pallo J'ABADISE MANOR _2BR ~ckvm~roon:,·~~~c re!~ RITr~HER K. nwzl~~ ~."ta11 you -.·an'i"tor ~lnnet ::r: -•223 Dt ani:On d, n~ rental lls~ing11 ~ ;:_~; :::m::: :¥,°':ia. :~ ;~l~~l ~~ce~'~r ~·~ :~~ :J car bedrooms. Asking SUG,000. ·0cean & Harbor View n·:estors. Don't y,•ait • . ~:~=rts . fumi.shed or NillHge III Univ. Park,. lrv, lived ln. 644--0lll or 640-4097 Duplex11 Unfurn 3'00 LIDO PARK ShRrp 4. BR. 1so Degree These ""'On't last. Principle& B1lboa Peninsul1 3107 · 3 Bclnns., 2 ba. "160,1-"=-==-"'"-''--""--'"" --'-------- The most prh·afe address in to1\'fl. Quiet seclusion for the mature couple who y,•a.r1ts the best of 'o\'&\erfront living. Lovely t h r e e bedroom unit. Boat slip available. $125,000. BALBOA COVES Spacious 4 bedt:00m home in frE"sh redecorated condition. Includes a boat slip. Chvner n1lght tradC! for commereial or income units • $ral,OOO. HARBOR VIEW A beautiful l\\l> story tour bedroom home, on cul de sac, near an elementary school with an eXceptional y11rcl. J>rofessionally de<.'Oraled in warm autwnn colors. $85,950. CaU 6.i;i-722:'> \'\LLF\ RJ \I I ' u ' ' • u ' «:ean view. Den, fonn. din. only. Sr Call 675-7225" 3 Bdrms., 2~ bl\. $475 e YEARLY RENTAL e COSTA Pile1:11, 2 BR-.. your nn. Deck. ?.fo~ $65,COO. * ~~x* 8fl"o!:'~R$!~1~. Wi~:.' ~~'. 3 ~~~I ~nl~ Park, Irvhoo 2BR, den, 2BA. Pt'n Pt $375. nwn yard & encl, garage. ---GE,~M11---Eastslde loeation. 3-2 bdrm Avail. Sept 14th. 673-2039 · '• · 2BR nu sharp apt $275 Just ttpainted new stove, units sum>un!ling beautiful Corona del u., 3122 The Terrace, Univ. Park, Irv. 2'BR lg upper apt, fpl. drapes• cupet,. $190 120-F Tuslln Xve., N.B. REALTORS 642-4623 Santa Ana 1080 4 BR, 2 Ba. TOWNHOUSE, end unit. Sbag, d r p s , carefree kltch, xtro Jge patio, 2 car gar, \V/lrdry lac:il., pool, rec. & play areas. So. Coast Plaza area· nr everything! A 11 k i n iC $32,500. 9~7810 pool. And lhal's not all! '"" 3 Bdrms, 2 ha., new $400 beam ceil S29a ~m f75::'16V9 There's room to expand. COTT GE 2 BR lg 2 Bdrms .. 2,ba., new $l50 Coast Propertt<-. 673-5410 Aportmenh Furnished_ Additional 2 units can be A ' sm. · Turtle Rock · Jrvine ' built behind existing units. ~p},lo~d~~s~le peraon or 3 &Inns., 2'ba. FR r $~'.?? 4 BDIJM, 2 BATH Balbo. l1l1ncl 3706 , •1 ,__ """'~= Ow 2 Bdrms., 2 b!I. S425 . H u.. s~ uuA.».1. nera Newport Beach 3169 $100. MOVE IN 4 Bdnn11., 3 ba. $415 N~w Harbor View ome. YEARLY '2 'en upgtaiNI ~;:t1£:(i REALTY 6't2-4811 ,. ALLOWANCE Gi:-ecntrce Hon1es ~ !:,:i~~ t ~l vlf:·n n ~ri 811.ylront. S310. mo. Clomp. $130 000 NEWPORT BEACH 3 g,, 2\i &. blto•, lrplc. 3 Bdnn• .. 2 ba. S38:i cow'I park & _;hools 14$ !urn dlshos, etc. Avail. , . _ gataRC-. 1600 sq. ft. $400. mo. Udo Isle, Ne11•port Beach c714)640-6868 ' · Sept'. 67"":>-2290. BEAUTIFUL 613-2925 all 6 4 B<inns., 2 ba S690'17mo;•=· ==-~~~""°',.-~ -i"""'-'~=i~-,.--='"I l 0 UNITS Lloda bl• " Lido Isle . CALL 5f2.7500 * SUPER HOME! 3 br, 2 BalbN """"''"'-m1 1~ =~~~ s~J'i!~e~~~~ Ann~t~~m':i:!se,. s~~;'. ts_~ 2 P~· co~~: • VISION • ~Uy I&~~~~~ BAlBOA INN BY Owner, 1 )T old 4 BR • 9 ~ 9 , Biii Grum. Rtr. heh. S495 n10. Lease option/ inclds gardentr. 1524 Anita Under renoyation le ~ to"'l'lhome. S.A. near C.~1 •1 ,c:>W yr. 9. ~0 reiurn. 6.4x 0\11nr will fin 494-2508 Ln F t 642--1121 dec0ntion, awnme!', winter Crpting, drps, all elect kit, gross, Full Price S130,000. 675-61 I · · REALTY · 67'!.ril<tMPP ., • ; ren1aJ1, 675-8740. 11d, pool&, tennis c r 111 Very little deferred main-ELEGI ~ 4BRI homlee w/ hill I ~"~"--~~------EARLY 3 BR V cl tenance. Anxious seller. Call \\'ATERFRONT w 1 p I er poo • spectacu ar v w of a red company ON the IJe.Y. mobile home l Y • . . ery -ean, nC!arby. s33.500. 546-5985, • n+7521700 today' $1500 mo. except Aug S:mll bay & channel, Super for Univ. P11rk Center, Irvine BR + cabana• S1o've, refrig, 1,i Bllci1o 8&)' & Ocean, $2'l5. Sant1AnaH1ights 1082 [!l'NllE. s™I. 1.·~· l!.~l 1no. (213 )934 -0920/ ~~ef!~!ni•""s·~ .. 1120096 mo , crpt, $250. lse. Mature mo.673-6055or673-9045 -•-• -(2l3l27G-4547 .,.,.,...MM!I ,...., -UNIVERSITY PARK adlts;no pets. 613-3826. Costa' Mesa J724 HORSE PROP. IMINll!t!!!lf!ll l " llARBOR View Hills, ocean 2 BR., 2 ba.., ne\v $32.i BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VJE\V ' ) 1/2 ACRE YEARLY 3 BR .. 1 ba. bench le bay View; 5 B,R, Jam. 3 BR., 2 l>J. $350 Luxurious Jiving in tWs $30 WEEIC i UP Small stable, 2 BR, 1 Ba, 1 ~~~';" 11!!!!1~! J hi~e. i...gt'. fen~$350 nn .• 3 'ba. Priy, eticl. patio 3 BR, 2~i: ba., fam. . $315 Ne¥.'J)Ol't twnhse. 1$450, mo. e StUdiO & 1 BR.Apta. -w/bunkhouse. $45.000. lge ; n-.o ease Agt. w/pool. $150 !ilo. on year's C BR, 2% ba, tam. $425 Call Sheri, Agt. 645--61•1. e TV &. Maxi Senice Aftll. down req. 557~ Inflation Fighters Houses Unfurnished lsc. Agt. 675-5'7l6 TURTLE ROCK 4 BR. 3 BA. Comm. Pool, e Phone Service-Htd. pool Westminster 1098 Sever a I small R.E. G I 3202 SPACIOUS .home:, o UI 3 BR 2 ba, lam. $400 Gdnr pd, nr Scitlll. $400. mo. • Oilldren I: Pet Section -----.;...---'= Investment situations y,·ith enera C.D.M., 3 Ba.. ~am·nit. COLLEGE PARK Leo Daya, s.t0-8121, evt11. 2376 ~ B!';d .• ~ PAINT & LOVE 111~.:'.m.".!'~'.:'1 •. ,,·, """"'""''I •LA UNTALS Frplco, Yrd. Patto, $500. 3 Br., 2 ba, tam, new $360 -<r 6111"""7. -----~ -.. mo. Ava;1. 8-1. 613--07">1. WALNUT SQUARE HARBOR v" Hom ... 3 Br, 2 ....... us CASITAS* can make thiS yoor dream I I WI llKIAl.111.,. MIVICI I BR + . f •· 3 B" 2 bat"· ·-• l'I'"' home. Anxious owner liiiiiiiiiiiii: ~ scini urn, no pe..... ""• "" • ~ Ba. Yearly leue. $415, mo. Mlnutt11 to Newport Beach. \\'Ill help you finance this 3 ~::l:>.K'-S2.l5 mo. 514 1'1'.arigold, Call 61$--0562. Bacbelo~ & l Bdrm. From bedrm 2 bath ho COMPANY f ~it HOUllS 57J-OI03. BlX Jrom beach. 3 Br, 2 Bn. $150 Ad It ts 2110 60x12'1.' lot. Full ::1: I~~ i f Ji1 -am~ 2 BDRM + dE:n, fil'eplaCe, gar. Near n.Qw $330/$300 Ncwliort 81~'.1°c.k · ·i $27500 842-7461 ------. builtins. $375. Yearly. yrly. 642-4289 or 832--SJ22 - PA'RI( PLA'CE, RI TRS REALTOR: 83J.-l206 NIWJOIT au.v,c.M ... 2.nu &IHllO. HARS.Vu·Home, saJ~/lease. 1m!~R~ 1~ts i~~ '°i 16062 Be h Blvd H it Bch 4 APr Units on 1.9,SOO sq ft. SEVERAL bach IHllln'I<: 2 LGE Br 1 small &-patio + e . . . ac ·• un lot -Zoned C-2 Newp&t apt.a_,,...., d • .,~· ht Western Bank 81A.... 4BR, 2~~BA. 225(1 sq. fl. Call U75. 1993 Church. Sf8.9633. Blvd C ~1 • .,..,. mo i"-e b1rn, util pd·nr beach en.-· sA<> """" univ·-% ~-';!,, &W-10'l1 f ~ " · · _..., '"'"'" · NR ocean 1 er house, avail .....,...,..,,. ~-,., .... ~.... ...... LGE 2 Br um apl, ... ..,..,, to ~o::en~.o msn~~ .rocol~ ~ stv, C&D. fncd for pet Costa Mesa 3224 Days 55 ~1000 Nights Newport Heights 3270. =-~~~'. 1~\~t~ist('t' no ~- t '' • ', ., " '"• 't I i • • .·: ... " ... .. . ~; ... ... 1 ' 0 ·'· • ,'I, ' " I"' t .J .. "· ., : . I · . ..:: ' ' . ' :: l ' ' --. ' ., .;• . ' ,.,, ' ,,",. l "';.·' ,, I ·' ' . ' • l •• ;:: J ~I I ' ' "' • • t I " " .. O"·ner·Broker, 642--0500. COZY 2 Br house $150 fncd LUX •-· f d t h'ld & t gar · 2 BR ,..,.,ndo SZ33/ Uc • · new twn,......,, pro · ee. D n Point 3726 L I I I 2200 Oor c: 1 pc • C ·• FREE-\Vntcr has 1 bdrm ......, •••• .mo 3 Br, trplc sU cln m-en, Ige --'-'-------I .... -! o 1 or M e LO \11hile house E. 1\1 stv, rcntul. 2 BR Condos .•. ··~ & $21S patio, gar. \\'alk to Harbor Mobile Homes .......,. D & C, lge yd fncd NE\V 4 Br furn. Sng\s ok 3 BR Condos •••.. $265 A S:m HI & Ensign schls. Ue. 2UB11R1 ",·,owci·l·Y,.a~. Cablt«!e, $2SOTV.· ;in '1· NEW USTIN'G! I~ Exci ting bachelor or couples permanent home or \\·eekend hidea\11ay . in THE AREA of Newpo r t . for sale 1100 u.u1 • QUIET 2 Br house $195 stv/ S175. 2 Bdnn, Hurry! 3 BR Holmes. $300. $325, $335 S300 54&-QiOl: 6"6-755S eve uucu ----------PR 0 Al 0 NT 0 RY Bay ref, fncd w/ gar, vac DINING rm 4 Br trplc 3 BR Hornet • $360,$375, $395 . . ' 960-1142. ) WATERFRONT $ l 2 , SO o . waterfront lot. 50xl00'-50' TREES 2 Br house S265 Lone KIDS &, pet; 3 + i gar. 4 BR Hom C's ... $33.1,$395, $425 Newport Shores 32n Hunt{ngton IMch 3740 I Enlarged fioor p I an , mas&lve view of Cannery area and boating activity. Lease, leue option or Ale $500 or m,;,oo . Call 6'Q. 7225 ' Picture windows Vu Lido boat •lip. Ownei-may on lot, chi & pet, gar REDEC 2 Br $200 kids/pets RANCH REALTY . -· I!!le. 548--0553 or 6/:>-l99G. accept trade. Xlnt terms RARE find 2 Br hse S220 Homefindera * 642-9900 * 551·2000 * 3 BDRM, 2 BA, patio, frplc, FROJ\f $139'. t/2 mi. to beach avail. Asking $_1.3 0, ObO. CdM, child&. pet, gar RANCH REALTY .., co1nm. pool, tennis. \llalk to BEAUTIFUL POLYNESIAN Acreage tor Ille 1200 Contact Steve Smith, 833-GOLF course 4 Br, 2 Ba S225 EASTSIDE, de c: orator s * ~ '* bench. $315. n10. yrly. . 6 POOLS, TENNIS, PRIV. 3212 (office), or 66-4815 nice c:pts, fncd for kids delight! 2 BR Spanish, just TUSTIN REALTY 960-1235 or 5#-8655. PATIO Garden A p 1 s. • ~ • y . \'.\f,LE\ BUY A WARRANTY HOME 2~1llle~CRi!~. i~,OOOAn~~ home. SINGLES try these 3 Br, 2 ~eled, w·:~ ma-* 832-Slll * Sin Juan Snunas, jacunl, 2 car prk'g. $100>. or offer. A&swne BaJ. Ba $250 H.B. $2/a Cl\I $300 any c:arpe u' ':'",,.c -.·.g~ BEAUTIFUL North Irvine Caplstr1no 3278 846-1323. "' ! (714} 6T:>-5741. One of a Kind. privale mo. U1, i.ncld. 3j5J 'Townhou5e. 3 BR, 2 BA. STUDIO Apt, Huntinst.on RI \I.I' Kids Underfoot? ft.1. 60x300 in desirable POOL home 3 Br, 2 Ba $29;) Santa Ana A\e, 673-079'1. Ut 11 lty room. A Ir 3 BR, 1% be, open tbUrway, Jtnrbor, near beac h , Commercial Prpty 1600 Singles, kids, pets, fncd/· 3 BR, 1% ba, freshly pe.lnled oonditionlng. Patio. Garage. irplc 2 car gar, comm. fuml.~ed. fplc, ~ mo .• There's plenly of roont tor them in this 4 bedroon1 C plan in the original Bluffs. Oi:· llCnd them out lo the pool that's nearby. A beautiful no-care frunily home tor only $74,900. Call 64&-05.i.5. • Easlslde location. S34,500. gar inside & out. Ne'v cpts, Nr. KChools. Free use of pool.' fully crptd, lnd scpd, 213--596-9479 _., * Shopping Center * '"!!A'!!<'!!".,1·~-~ .. 3255!""-."!!"~"!"'"'" ~tANY ?tf.ANY ~tORE tlrps. Lg yard. FllmiUes oomn1unlty pool. Waler A back yd fenced. Nearly new, 1 .:==.::::::.,.,=--~-1 Cosla A1esa. Grosi;es $2,765 1; Call us or Come by only. Refs req'd, $250 per cable TV paid. $295 mo. 1 ml lront ocean & marina. \VANTED pe~· n1ontl1. JOC'~ Retw·n. VlEW 1.DT-Fee-Back Bny, ALA Rentals 642-1383 1no. Absolutely no pets. laue .. So,..Sl.51. Avail Ai¢. tn4l' 525-7389. * USEs1?~~CKS * '" . . ' ' . . Waterfront Triplex Ch11ner'11 apt .. 2 studio apts., 3 bdrms. each; leasehold. $100,0'.ll. Land can be _.....,,, li\~S~ Assumable loon of f~·~oo· Be~.®~ p ~i $85. 1 Br nr. So. Cst 5'19-10:;8; 516-4141 Agt. :1st NEW DUPLEX, Pvt yard, 2 ~~~~Is $::y~1j l\t~!~U eye. $185. 2 Br. "'OOd burning LEASE-Ocean View, 4 Br, UNIVERSITY P A R K car 11:ar., 2 BR, ~ Ba, Fam· Laguna Beach L 'do Rt lty 67,7.,.,. s AN Clemente-Cy Pr us frplc, 11~, nice yard. ll~~ Ba, new Crpts, [)rps, Townhouse 3 Br, 2 Ba, cpts, rm, Tennis, nr Beach, ~255. 1 Util , 1 ea ... -Shores lot 60:tl20. Ocean POOL with fireplace. \\'et Bar, !reshly wallpe_p. drpl, atrium, xlnt cood. mo. 49&-8363 ask tor Jeff. $220. mo., Inc 5• + .l'alANY HOMES IN OR. CO. ere<i, big yard, fruit trees. $400. leaM!. 552--0528 clean. dep., A\•ail Aug. ht. ' ... ' Neer Be1ch & Tennis 3 Z.bedrrn. apts., steps to everything! $165,000 \.\LLF\ RI \I.I' Duplexu/Units vieil'. pvt beach & entrance. Call our Friendly S-100 642-0415 Avail 811 ~ ... t A 3280 See now. 1 BR, frplc, Cose for .. I. 1 BOO , ~158=·°"'=· .o.•,,<'cc"c.6oc1.o"-.o12'l0=.'---... Off' · mo. ' ' $300. ~IO. Nr. CUlwr &: JPn 1 nl to bench. 497-1559 Balboa ----'-----'=1-Costa m.la tee EXTRA Jge .modern 4 ~r. 2 Walnut 4 Br. 1%. ha. bltns, 4 BR 2 Ba TOWNHOUSE Mount'n, Duert, Homefi~rs * 6q-9900 Ba + 1tucho b1 xlnt &Jll&le cpts, kids/pets ok. Al\f or d ~t sh d ~ una Nituel 3752 4 Adjacent duplexes. \Valer " oriented. $110 ,000 To SI 15,000 each. 11,-l. Yrs. old. Buy one or all. ' . u, • ... .. • ' HOUSE+ TWO f..'e\v 3 BR, 2 BA, plus 1i\'O ~ BR, 2 BA apts, frplc, pt.tlo~. garages. laundry, yards/Builder 6464414. OCEANFRONT DUPLEX _R_eso_r_1 ____ 2'-400-'-132 Cabrillo, eosta·Mesa family area, $400. nio. eve .. O\\rner 546-9091-~n kitdi : 1 rps,~ DESERT HOME LANDLORDS! = ~:·s ~~-1368 or <BR, 2BA, tam nn & tot. ,'; ..,: 'wil~ .. tacit., WEST NINE condo. 2 BR, 2 BA. Weekly or yearly. ~~~~~-=-·~--• $395. monthly. Call 581·403_1 pool, rec. &: play nreas. So. \VI!' Spedali.ie in Newpor: 2 BR, 2\2 BA, Frplc, gar, or 998-4831. Coast Plnza area-n r 52:r ~ 732 49IHIST7 Peninsula Point Charmer! 2 BR, den, high beamed ceilings. One blk. 10 ocean, bay & tennis ell. Sep. goest quarten w!Com· plete bath. $82,500. On five acres in Happy Beach. • Corona del lo.far • crpll, & drps, no pets TURTLEROCK 3 br, 2 be, everything! $295. mo. Valley Rlvenlde County· & Laguna. Our Rental Ser· plcuure, water & trash fam nn, atrlwn, s.m per 97'-7810 $35-WK UP. 1 Br'. 2 Ba. &: Newport Buch 3769 $150,<XXI. 638-35.'i4 or 984-3372 Com tort a hie furnished ~~~~w~'REE to You~ Tr)• M'rvice paid. $25(1, 544-5l00. nio. 833-1964 rir 6#-3240. LEASE, beautiful .3 bedrm Bach. Color TV, mald se.rv. cott11.ge. Price Sl!i.lmor v.111 NU-VIEW RENTALS 8 to 5. with bonuii rm. cpls, c1rps, 1 pool. THE MESA, .415 N. Income Property 2000 exchange. Larry Pfister, 673-4030 or 4M-l248 2 BR ItOUSE, Priv palio, Lagun1 Buch 3241 % ba, avail Aug. lsl. S325. Ne\vport. Bl., N.B. 6tl).9681. PETE ·BARRETT encl gar, newly remodeled, per mo. Village R.E . \VATI;R"°~NT, f~. !;!;oat llOO REALTY • ' I ' II ON THE WATER Sl.JARP 3BR with own boat slip, featuring large pntio and side yard for trailer or addition -to settle estate -Offer. Reduced to S94,T;J(I. BEACH UNITS ELEVEN-NEW REAL!_Y,,63-4.353. ''RENTERSll" no pets, 1 year Infant ok. $135. AITRAC. 1 Bdr house 962-+171 · · dock. 3.BR furnished. Sle-e:ps CHOICE newer 7 Rm, Vou Get All The Houses S195. 388 Bay Sl., C?.1. ytl, paliG, mature, penn 8. By wk, mo or yr. Am>whead home. Lake use. available for rent in OUR 66-1311 only , Hs11 Furn/Unfurn 3300 61.>-6169 -714-4384 l\f11.ny xtras. Furn. opt. Big BULLETIN UPDATED 3 FOR lease Aug. Sth 1 story $185. NICE l Bdr with gnr· t RR I F tll pd l'..Z *67J·7300 * Dec:or1tors Ore•m Brand new 11 unit SE!\11· 11avg'li .on own. sale & fin. tlm~/week. condo, 2 + 1, 2 car gar. age. No .. t'nd. Near beach. 1'\VNtISE on bay, 3 B~ 2'A ap · um. u ' r.· DELUXE apartment! \Valk Cons. Leese opt. $46,500. Homefinders * '42·'900 $24(). Nr. pool. Nr. So. Csl. $2Jj. PJlIVACY & charm! ba, 2 car gar, boat shp. yr mo. 216 E. 8al6oa, N:B. 2 Bdrm. &: den on large lot. Close to tennis & the beach. Oflered at $88,950. Open Tue11. thru Fri., 3 to 6. 123 CALL 64M672 LISTINGS NEEDED :it.beCoC:PerU~!~~~g. th:i; 1 "'t-33~1c.c·,;3»<=,....,~=~c--132 Cabrlllo, C.M. PIA.Zn. Call 552-7712 ~lee 2 Bc\r hse So. Legunn l11e, $495-$595. 646-2'100.,, 5-rn·~i:ANFRONT cleaning ovens, stainle1111 ?.IAl\tl\IOTH LAKES large FREE FREE 2 ·BR house. fenced patio, S: . UTIL pd 1 + den, !rplc, Don't drop the ban ... Gel YEARLY Via Nice. Newport Heights 'nk · h comer \1e\11 lot, of! eP.rot · __ , "-·· e encl. gar. lndry·rm. good wet bar, pool, deck .. a,,iob wtl.h a low~t Dnlly s1 s & dis "'ll.!lhen, thick •1 rid! lk I , es11io11u ~·-vice 1-"11·-. ·~. "'"12~ or •325, VERY '"'e 3 Bdr, 2 Ba. PDot Classlfied Ad! li42-.5678 3BR, 2bft. $500mo., 6'12~11.1 shai:; cnrpets, l\texican tile "c lln, y,•a to new char •LANDLORDS* ........ '"' _,., .......,... "" .. j NI I Ontu Big, luxurious 4 bdrm, high I abO\'e the harbor! On a cn l!'Yl'i, forced air beat, 7 IHI. All util. undetgl'OWld. . (1) 991-1550. frnlc, yd~ n.at ~· Lal! g11e Costa Mas• 3724 Costa Mesa 3724 sundecks and much more! &15-8031 afL 6 Homeflnder1 * 642.'900 2BR House. \V/\V cpt. Blt·ln NU-VIEW RENTALS 21 coun1ry·idzed fee lot "'Ith 190 11. frontage. Has all the extra.A. $ 9 8.., 5 0 0, Call All 2 bedroom 2 bRth. Grost EL CARI.SO Villae:e. 25 miles CalUomia's ~fl R &: 0 . ·Yard. Garage. $200 673-4030 or 491·3248 r------------------ S.1100 mo. 9% interest avail· E. or San JuaftCapistrano. e Rental Service!• mn. 55.>C-Victoria 673-52TO 2 BR, 2 BA, den, bl!ns, 3 614-8750 Dble. 200% depreciation. All 2 BR min. cabin, l acfe, FOR. LEASE: New 3 VACANT 2 BR $155. 3 BR decks. Be&ntiful ocean vie\\', COR RHlton TIN ( TI'IRBElL.) * 644-7662 * . ~ LEASE OPTION • SALE O\\'NER/Bkr, 4 BR, 31,i BA compl. remodeled w/pool. 45' kit. $149.500. lQ.l Via ~lentone-, MG-3977 or 613-2984 Mission Viejo 1067 U1ls for only $312,lOJ in ''ieY.'. $28,000. Ch\'nr. r~ bedroom, 2 bath Laurel-.® $Zl5. Alto 2 BR hse il.B. No peN;. Yrly leau. WJ. prime Appreciation areu. Patio hon1e, Tustin CUstom $165. Agt. Fee. 919-8430 mo. 64-1-7680 or 640-8914 Take odvAntagc · call 110\\' Real E1t1te Wntd. 2900 dni.pcs, lnndscitplng, patios. BEAUT 4 l:J.r hsc for lsc, VIE\V & p.1tio, 4 Br, fan1 nn, 17141 752·1700. $375. 5-44-"'"'36 afler 5 P.l\f. di .,,. · 1 -•· ''AAA'' BUYS HOUSES <1uality area. }~amily only. n rm . .,., a. inc. E'R1m:nei'. f~lNYE:i:~':Dl:UIF.lfil!tll--1'!11• I No cost, no points. Broker 2 BR C. f\f, S155. 2 BR. bike $380. By owner 979-4510 IM. 0\\'Tler. ~15lq - ' .I ' • ', pays cash immediately, to beach, H.B. 2 BR, ·2 Ba. COLLE6E Parle 3 Br, 2 Ba, Sl)OO. 00\\'N. Take O\'Cr Gr . 2 Br, 2 Ba, lndsepg. S39 900. Or -.•111 rent. 5-17-1:500 days, ~16-9Ta4 eves Newport Buch 1069 - 600 Ne"'Jiort Center Drive _____ AM Realty 839-2700 ten.house $195. N.B. Also tam nn, dbl gar. blk wait, Lagun1 Hillt Opet1 9 10.9 v a c I\ n..1-hsc, · utll pd C/D S3l5 83l 2196 LEASE OR PURCHASE, 3 Lag. Bch. J\gt. Fee. 979-8430 · ' • LAG. IIl..S.-EJ. TORO. $32j, BIG CANYON or 4 BR. \\'ith asrumable 1 LEASE, Occanvlew J?'ark. 4 n'IO. 3BR, 2BA, AJC, ChUl'I CUSTOM HOME BRAND NEW f'i1~t T.D. ·Prine. only. I l'be fastest dl'l'll9 tn the Wett. BR. Pool llome. U25. nia. OK. no,pets.Fnc'd yd., dbl Overlooking 6 i;·airwa.v goll Hunlington Beach. lst owner .'.)86..7100 or 586-0.tTa. •.. a Dally Pilot Clio.ulned, 5-18-6396 or~. gnr. Beaut Joe A \.'\I. crse. Price retluced '$-Kl.000 depreclaUoe. 3 Br. 2\~ Ba Dani Point 32261 .-•;~2-_9~36_7.,"'="-· -,.--.=•I I tor immed, sale .• Beaut. duplex -on corner. ~ 4 -L1guna Nlguet 3252 4,tx'Xl 11q. ft . 5 Bil. 5 b3.-hloek11 from oceitn. Good C.~"0 })"\.. j f) 'C ~Q. e AVAIL .Aug.I llC!\11 3 bl', 1~~1--=----=------11 lncldlng ntalds quarters. income area. BUru;, frplc In O\!;a_ ~"t.! ~).. -~ J,:.I(,/" \J i>a, f.p., cpl thruout, cloi'Je to SEA TERRACE 8.YAi loan &Viii, or owner each u n i I . 30 -day Th 11Chls, marina. $2';!0. mo. I \Vhite water octll:i \iC\ll 3250 may acet>pt ft'adc t'Ompletion. Buy now&. plck at Intriguing Word Game with 'a Chuckle 171,1)828-9777. ·among rolling ·hi 11 s. SIG CANYON r1&11t on 11th $245,000 )'Our color tor cnrpe111 . & t,1 .. , •r CLAY 1. '®AN Fountain Valley 3234 Everything a family could fllin\·ay,' lrg yd, DEAN ShO"'TI appnt, 011ty. Contact kllchen apollanee11. dc~lre. Guarded entry gate. l\IONACO, ~ BR, 3 BA,+ Steve Smllh, 8 il J • 3 212 Wm. T. MILLER RL TY· 0 ~:::":;,~',,.b\:'r!.o,'d', :: I''":;::."'.:;:--,"".:;;-.._ LARGE 3 Bedroom, huge &11.ch park1ng. Recreation .i.:tru. $115,000. or Leue. roni~l or 6-G-4815 home. '42-4111 low 10 '°'"' '°"' )lmpl. words. Ntnpw; morn, 3' both, 1111 cl11b w·pool, tennis. New 497-2.:in . F le H a. h bltn11, 2 car. gar. S\\1m pool. atlrae1lvely decor . .4 BR, DESPERATE ourp x uni -ac I I H A • E E C I Kld11 OK. S2SO mo. No ftt. film rm. \\1alled yd, easy "l\1al:e I Roon1 f~?[_ Daddy" Need llAtln•s on Somet'8el Fix & S1ve I I'~ I' J I Agent 842-4121. mo.lnlenMce. $545, Lenae. . • • c ean out u,.. garage • ~e ~ hel:lnn + 3-2 bedrooms, H I B h 32 .. " 493-5769. , , . turn that JU' nk into cash or Portoflno models• In L<l>;I unt ..-n NC ._ ¥.1th a Dally Pilot Oauified llarbor Vle\l' llome11. \\'e .b tn11, clo!M!d gar., l\lllm _....:...... l\fONARCll SlJM?l.,tT ad. Call 6'12-fi678. ha\.·e hnmedlale qualified pool. Hurry, only 3 lc.lt. I , Ji.:X1'X:. 3 BR. 2 ba. w/pool. New octlln vle-.11 oondo«. HARBOR VIEW HOME buyers. Please can Only $58,950 . p A T D A I f ! Nr. brnch, fonnal din mt, Adu lt lh•ing. 1400-1700 ~ft, Put1ofinn, 4 BR. 3,,, bns. HARBOR VIEW First PIOnffr Reelty I I I' I lj • <Ii lg. lnn1 nn, •stone -trplc 2 & :l BR. Patios, clutihse • .., 1 HOMES 142-4421 cathedral ceilings, $450.'nlo. w/pool & Jacuzzi. $350--S<l;'XJ. P11n1·nn & Game·m1. t inclding pool serv. Avail. 493--03.,l. Anne BruTett, Agt. Who~ the new ~d on the block? AMBASSADOR INN . BRAND NEW . $3450"~.:.. •. .,..,...,.._ '{ ............ •lk•feclltM ..... . .......... ....,., ....... _ w .. ... , ... ,,. ...... ...... Dhct ........ eqjl, ·--....... .... -!htU9'1 . ............. w..._,°'l"".,, ... WATllPAU.-STllAMS-LAM>OMS 2277 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA 645-4140 owou. 189,950. 8.1.1-389<. . REALTY 13l-07IO 2-lourplexes 1 tmmid. 968-'450. 3 BR. °"" 2 e.i. LEAsi. S£U. or 1 ta 1 "I o P l ' ' JtARBOR Highlands, by SidP. ty &i<lc in eX'C!Cll1•nt L A V E V,-1 VACANT $.'t'iO, mo. 49.>;4728 evo1--.l Bayfnmt Vista del Udo. ., DR 1 ~ ho. North Coic,ta ~fwi. locnUon. I lit I Beauty fades, but I plain 4 BR. pool, anunn &. jl\C\JZl':I. l\'kl'l(IJ. ... _____________ _. ___ ,. ~ :~ J..a.n.aj Co1¥k>. f~~l~able. l\lnri:~: Jnoon'IC S16.~. Just lls!ed . . . gtrl st1y1 -fortwr. 1•1f • \Volk 10 oetitn Sl50. Ask for Lido Isle 3256 · Ensl;n, NC\\·port H 1 filh nnd exclusive sales price I l.tR. SNIDER 96244il. HARiOR VU · ILO lo-IE S • district. Vacant. $4.<1,000, .$67,000 each. CAii !\Ir. . D A M 1 R Y I 4 BR. 3 ba, ram rn1, lrg PROF OECX>RATEO 4 BR. 2 SG7.SOO. MOJ\ICO, J BR. 2 Ba. 646-73-U. JUsscr 545-8424 SouthCo, r--,1,-.,1'-n11r-.1r..,~ O ,.__ bonus rm. heated pool, yrd Ba, bit.ins. cWM<Mr. atc:J>N ava.11 lmmed. 6 1 G-0 $6 2 =;;-=;:--;,:,,...-,,,--,,-·I Reallon. J ......,,pl.,. me dhic•1• C1110ttid Ir. nnnJ malnt furn, 96S-4Sll lo pr1v. betich. Reduced lo oYo'Mr broker FOR Sale By J) w n_e r, '--'·'-."·-'-· -'·'-J.·-' by ll01119 '" n.. 111r..in9 word .~ · Ptnlnsula h o u 11 e • nr MESA VERDE -4-Pl.EX . -yo11 d~lop tr0111 ••P No. 3 bllow. 1 Bn contlo, near beach. S625 rno. ~tui;t I e a 1 e · 3 BR., 2 BA 6: 2 BR, J BA cbnnnel, lrg 101, 3 it BR, t mn1nc:. Ullltll in Prime loca., $100.n'IO. No pe!s. , 673;SS7l or 83,1.1316. ~uplex, steps to beach. 3be., 2128 .Eafi:l Occnn Bl\td, fiex. flnnl'IC'inic Rvall. PttNT NUMBfllD lflll1$ IN $.'6--ll87 rnENCH Twnhse \l'•Vhl\\•. 3 $.i7,000. 64G-3.303 Balboa Paul \V, Bruntfltld & A~. •lttESf SOUAl~S " VACANT 2 UR ·$I65. ~ BR llR, 3 ba !:-dt'n. ~-!\St f:nd. DY 'Owner HV HOmet, BY O"'ntr Udo t •I e, e~i :.:;.~ day~ 54(J.IOf!l C\'f!. ··--'l/N"IC"""IAM;:.:.!.:;lE::;A.::;80::.:V'-f•l-ET_l!_'_' __ l_L_.J_l_L...JI '~$::.225~·:... ~n~b::..!.o !:2 C.lll1..:.!!:: ""'""'~"-$-1!).l-·, I ~l;;"';;;;'"~";:""::::;":-'c,"°,·"i;I<';;;-~,. ;yr;l:;Y··ll u~ CtttmeJ. Fct l1nd. c:hlntlltl« 2 BR + den, DELUXf._:; $ unhl!I, 3 Br, 2 Ba, \l0 Gft ANSW[lt . . . . • , , J • C.~1. A'1. t'tt. 9~ 64()..8717 or 6i'J-189G. S1 .000. ~. owner 1cavl11J area. "'ill ll'A'llCt"s uni!. A/C, ;oori ''EAR leaS<t, 3 BR. 2 hn. St.~Mle bm& with a Dally ~ldtt aclllng Lu r n.. JocnUon +:-~ ' On~.~ M t Call &U-5678 fi;plcf put~. Be ft u t Ir u I ~t Oaa:tfted ad. &fl....007! , ~'I";;:i;Jl<IO='-· ,;.g;;~,.°"ms=::..;==="'v;,E;;;'A.;;G;.;' E;;;R;_;;~;i;;TY,;,.....;5'64\;;;" """":..:' ._....:.SC.:.:..:R;...AM;.;..·L;;.E;;.T;.S:;.A\'~;::.'w"'a"r..:•.:cl nc....::C"l ':.:'"''U"lli'°ca"l"-lo,,n"°l"Ol:.o:O_ ~ "UJ'r-""'=====:..;--'-cood= 11011 .... J.17~0- • . -~ .... ' . . . ' ,.. .. ... .. . ... .. ~ ~ .. ' ' ' --· " • • •1d ' . '' ' • '·: i I .I ., -I . -I '· I' ... '•I ' '• ' .. , ' ,,, ':°< .. •.' ·, . ' I .;, t ··.-: " -, ,_ .... , " I .... ' . . . ' ' ' -.. " I • ..,. PJLOT·AD\IEATISER Wtdntsday, J'IY 17, 1"74 I 1 '11.a.'-.D;;t;;;MO.Tf,;T.:;;;;-r-T.;::::..:;,:::;:::r.:;::~~:;'~,,_.,......,,==-,=="="-,..,--,--,.---,.=--,-,.-..,-,.-,...,,...:..,-,,--==.,.--~~-~-~~~~-~--Wtdnrsday, Jill/ 17, lfJ74 DAILV PILOT ;•' -p1rtment1 urn. I Ap1rtm•nt1 nfurn. I Aptl t'urn/Untu rn BOO fl•nta ls to 1h1 re 4300 1nCfu1trJ.i Rent1I 4500 ["t & Fovnd 5300 f!1r10Ml1 "5350 Electrical 60 32 Tile 6011 . •:ae l1lboa l1l1nd 3806 C t Mo 372• j • _.,.,; 01 I ta ., CHOICE ''Rare Opportunity" * NEW BUILDING * CAL11''. ANl~tAL COSTROL llEU'! Ahach JOo.~. much 1':1~trical Constn.teton; CEitA~lJC TILE, Quality ,, ,, VACANTI lll'<luctd to $2(i(\. LAKE FRONT Ji'n..<0 nPnt! li$nd.~rue, coot SO. SANTA ANA llun!inzt'>n Bt'oc:h Sh~ltt't mb.stricl, tY.·tl\•& ¥tar 0111 hoy Comffien:i.:l.l Residential vtork, lteat. pri~. Call 1 •• I I Ii ' • )Tl,Y. 2 Br, 1tht1;, W,,11, gar 2 BDR?it llQ\lSC, P.'fn.rricd cl~e. ''1-':X'-"'Utive type" and 1400 • 1600. 1900" 2800. oi.('0) 8J2i )';(Jlllt'n St. 5.'36-Zlll Ill i •S In I one \\t.oek. fndustrlo.1 • &ii>-0.l';T A..\J to 6 P~t 616-l871 13511 n.,nt .... n A""" ' c:'O\lplc 1 L· .. ild 0"' ll"O LOCATIONS at1nu:tlvc 1u11tr cool sisttr -ft 3 Pi•"•" ........... , ... fB!Jick of Jlunti~ SOcltty) UwTen<.-e La.c:ey ls 4'l0", W ELl.CTRICI , -,..L.,. IC • ·• .... .,.. • ......,........,, • ' \J"• '"'· • • "'111 ~we beaut 1f u11 Y ..... · _,.,. ...,.« ' ..... A."'ll~IAL ASSISI'. LEACUE IDB. btt.M'rl ri.ti.am;:y hair. , ~ ~ AN -Lict"nse '-"£.•lA~I TILE ~1~ &: YIU.Y, Avail 00\\', l nn. i\~13!11 Avocndo, Gt. VERSAILLES decot;'lltd, Country Club s*.o. ~~~A MESA * Acloptlon, !ipn.)'lng and 18.rae hattl eye;i, very tan No .. 23~108 .. S~all jobs, r;~el, f ree e!~llllllleii. New, l1llinii, drapes. Call typo af)(. netr beach ~·Uh llt!tllerluw Inform ., 5:'.6-~ t"mplexloo, ooe tront tooth mnmt I.: N'11<11ni. ;rlS"'5~ Sm jcbl \\'t.l<.'Omc, ~2426 GT"N4-11 anyllme. D1n1 Point 3126 ON 111E LAKE OOQJ, attractive lemale 28-6SO Sq, ft. SlJ5., tlG-ZK> P\\.'I' ANl~fALS J~lPOU!'IDI::O brok~n In halt, La!r.t llef'n G•rdtnlng 604S Top Soil 6092 81lboa Penlntul1 3807 jQ'Cji;J;~:-d~;-;-;~~ At Sluth Coas t Pla1a. 35, alliO il&\'I! nice v.·iU'dl'Obe 1300 sq. ti. Private office. Gtrin Shep, IJ!k/sll\·cr, !" "en.rin: ar:uY.;e r->lo ~!rt, .:.:::.:;::;~'----:::::::1:..:;i:.;~;_ ____ :::::.1 Vu tl<'lux 2 DR, 2 Pool • Acapul<.'O Aqu:i Bar Jar ycul 1\\u Cadll111.c11. No ovt:rhca.d tJoor. $!95. ta,IXIO Shag:;y Ttrricr, BrYln, l\I go!~ & bro1vn striped l..c!vl P a r1dia.._oa rdtnin9 . * TOP SOIL * CO?o.TPOST J1 'rc~~~~u. ~~b?,!·,,~. 2"<1,·nim~l.· & JllCUU"J. $pt't;friculur 8 phonle11 or r!peiU arti.sls. !'~ .... :~)'. i lil in e d 1 al c Sha~. Ten· .. Blond, r· nbiur11 &: brop •1 ·n motorr.yc11c1 S~iallz.e Hci;toration * ?-fULCII * 11F.O\\IOOD ore. ~l La .. Pru: lli1. Acre l..okr v.·/TO\vuing Ple11.Se1\ ll real down to C. fiOnER.T NATTRESS Sl1tip/Terrler mi."11:, '[ri., !£', 11°0 .t K • ea 8 e ca &. Lantis.car~. ~onllily Call 58G---6930 G?HSOl tUI 51 5'18-:ZC..G!!. Jo'ount111J1is -~-1.~filllon Dollnr l!flrth, toC"ether, fei'n.11.Je. llf'.ALi'OR fiem1 Shep, Blk/Tan. ~I 0 unbnfion ~ch Police 1'111\ntenance & SPrlnkler Tu oring 6094 CU'rr; AS A BUG I' . -· . :y "' ,. ,, 2 BR lludlo d11.1i.le11:. l hou!Ml lro1u oceHn. Atlult11, nO llClt. 2U £. Bulboa llh•d ti1tH\t.i.'O ortl)~:!'J NE\V rxecull\'o 3 Br 2 Bu apt11 f2l. :E. ()f Pavilion . 'w. rno. yrly. l\1r. S1vln;i, f;.?b..1011 or 841--2$00. --Clubl10•"e Cyn1 ••unu 979-0159 .,,. 'I••• 91 ••• 71 1-lusky mix, Btk/"·ht, I' ept . 14_1 5.16-~I. !ti,,,, Ir. "-'I "·'" 0"19 SUf'l':lt 2 BR. APTC' 'Cot-• ,o::_,· "ty. • ~ • '1.A=-o~v""'~"'" .. -1o-no_r_t_o_s1-•• --'<' •• ~ .. ..... ... v~ "' ,.., .;IC!,; ,-, ,,.._ ..,., MOVE. NOW TO-t:ocknpoo. Blk, l\-I 1 ~ \\1.'u~T TO GO in o business? 549•2015 sp, IS!f LESSONS BY •. Gt'eilt Vie,~·! Tho1ntmu11 JJninedinle Occupancy honie V.'hinme. catl eve& or O:w·kupoo, Grey, i\t \ SUper plant sl , :ruitablc BE LITZ-TilAINEO LADY. : if.> ' ,, ... . -~. ~1a1111.ge11111nt Corp 193--0id t ADULTS .• v.·c.-·kend!i 847-l!iOT MIS$10N VIEJO Germ Shep, Blk/'fan, F (2) tor nUL n y rel u t e d lfO\\' & r;dgelbr torni)lcte. E.' . 64S--37i1 • ,, • Huntington 8e1ch 3140 $otTy, No J>et.s Gar•t•• 'for R. ·ent 4350 OFFICES FROM T~11ier ?ill"IC, Tan/v.·ht, ;1 bu;,ilncsscs, Lr~ fnc'd back C.1ennups -20 )ears ex11. W indo.w Cleaning 6091 ·z, -.11 -: , 1 BR, $190. n1 tbl)', lirst & lasl, ltd IJOOr \\'/view, 213-697-1400 B1chelor. 1, 2 & 3 Br'•· 400 so. FT. ~gh~.:.!TI •r\'ht, •• .f' area., i:<1 J>lll;klngN ~1nkfl 110.1"'.,;G:::»:;·:O::;R;:;G:::'E~llA::::::;'1::_l'_:T~O"S~1 I· CHILDnEN from $175 per mo. MINI WAREHOUSES Industrial .aero to 6000 ~.ft .... ep "''" e, an, mo euse, on I.>' vi:·· REL. Colle~e student needs •.SUKSHlNF; \\'ORl\ERS * ... _,_ "~.:5 • ":1 . ,, .~ .. ·' .. _ ·1 ~ STQR GE Ca.II ~1-1600, 2799'! C111ntno Seller rtti."11:, Tri, F N.B. 0....-ner ~llpplnl:' on f(I Cln./up, Jte;. & Roto jobs. indu.stria.l, re~ldcntial WELC()f'AE S•nta .6.na A c .1 ......... .,. 01 ;· 11'1-Fh, Red, F ~lg,ger & bell~ lhings. )~"!;p./Gatdt-t1er. 54 3 -45 ~1 t"ree est. 612-69l1 2 !3r1?.,fi'flni $llill. JL<c safe 3700 p~ Dr. Ko l\lo\'o-in or r.tove-0ut 1 "'•"','"·~·ri•;,;.uiht 1 '"°c, 1 1"l' Cocker, Blond. hi &12-8199ar675-:~fimtj;·;;;o·--·\-'"~"~~tin~·~··=~=~--l -5 hool & I ... I ~ "h•-•• •·-m $7 '" ~r 0 v ry, 2'. 0 un no Ten·ter, "'k/b-"p, >I < s eAe OS\.'u ~ ay ure:l. /1. 71 •5., ••« ' -,.• · •" . .,., ,~ Capistrano u. '" PREGNM'T? """"E EDGE I I t' child':.> dl'eaui. BI I n x • -mon . · · Elkhoond. ·rn. ~l!iile Ca r in,, c 0 n rid fl n t la I • r •;' . · n s rue ion AVAIL. Aug, l11t lo\•ely 3 Br, l"t-<lecoratrd, closOO i:-uru.~C: I:::!!:::;:!:::::!!::===::;:: I llMlilton I.: K~·b.nd St., Im Coxie mix, B~n/v.·ht, F 1t,' &: r 1 'lard ATa.lnen:uic.-e Service ,.. "·· •~···or uolt Pool be 1 ... ~ I· ALLSPACE NOW LEASING P·-Ue,11~,·1o,l' co~ ~ re erra 'Cleanu""'fHaulln .... ~FLUTE LE SSONS. J oe1. """' • • aut. 1u...,:;ca1,._,_,, Close 10 t"IV·~.' 'll---"~-""" ·11 A00r:tl()ll, ~pt Ion A "" ... p_,,,,.inners 1; up. 9 \'""' fenced patio, fl'plc. Chlldn:!n shopping & i; c It 110 I !i. ..¥CtUl!l.ltVl--UliU7 . ff0.1'70 Hunt"'9ton le1ch Old l::~l!:d1 Shoep, 1'1 keep111" '-""6 . • '" "'·eleome. 6 n10. min. least'.,: 5.i6-4LJO. NllW M-1 CATS APCARE &t2-4136 J AP A !\l::SI:: GARDE:-.: Ell.· playm: exp. Ryn 497-29S3 s::.50. &14-9-l:A> 1lay• ' or ~~~".'!'~!!!!!"'""'""'"'I ""'lllC lllW CGlfCIPT I Office Rental 4400 T bb G / ht f' M f · ';"" uw 940 Sq. 1''t. & L'T a y, rey ". , SPJP.ITUAL READER .._,'eanup:i:, ~ e~lln~tes, 6#-93-f.I e\•es. Jo'ROl\l $139. lli ml. itibeal-h. IDUlT jJllCSIK LIVIMC HUNTINGTON IIamUtDn k f\e\vland·St. Greyj\\·11ite Siamtse, t, Open 10 A}.I to 10 Pi\! ~a!I !or Kris l:na. t s u · 1 Coron1 dal Ma r 3822 7005 &~~'t2102 ~~~· )'~::~;: Qu11~i ~i~~'t~b,;~r,~~~f:. ii :;:;::;:•,110 BEACH M0-1m ~::~~~(:!~~~· .. ~;~~e ~~v~~ El c~~".::~ 1.,;~;.~.','.=;'~ienc:--ed~J-,-~P~.-.-,-,-• l1!;· iiiii!iiiiiiiiiiii~ l 1-• I l'A'flO c~-• --· 22-A.l'\D OTI IERS 536-2513 ,.-j marr "" er, no pc I 11 . •u1..1en A pt s. • 1 II, 2 Bit NE\V BLDG AI-1, l200 1&q. ft. San Clemente, for •appt. L1nd1cepe Girdener ] £ W t:I' M I • , 87'"~:511 ~:;;.,~,j~uu.I, 21:ar prk'g. •2 BR & Oen 5075 Warner !tY•. $180. m,.3 ph., fl'Ont office, LOST 1 c..'Ompute.r module Call 492-9034 492-91:'.6 TAKATA NUP.SE.R'f 5'lS.O'rn ° In 1 • • ~.-: 1 NE\V, i;paclou11, clehixe 3 Dr, F 3. Blkll East of Hu.ntln~on crpl8, lrg rear doors. aboul 8~~··,.11·· 1'Tapped in VAS~r.tY . :\tO\V &: EDGl:-nJOnthly l;\l;\ID ("tnploynient f 0 r • '1 2 '3a1 "'alk to beuch in 12 BLOCKS to bead1. $235, 2 rom $175 . $435 l!Rrbour. 6,000 sq ft ol al· Anaheim & Te.nnlnal \\'ay, plastic. Lost en route. to Con f ~ entntl lnfonnauon maintenance yard clean t'<ll~cnial ~i )Told Christian •, shopp•"K· Avnll. J\ug. lJ..-i. HR, l'li ha, enclosed J;dJ'., MesoV.n:leEasi& A.J-ms flee~, 2,000 sq ft ol drafting CM. Days 646-5033 or e~·es Anaheim from Costa t.fen counschng It referral. '&hauling Goor.i!' 5-tS-m~P fantily man y.·/3 children. ··: , J39j. A<lulls. G7".r2Dl)l blt,ns, dl~hwastier, wet bar. l'\Ulil or school roomlil. 2 BR adult 1 cMJ>.<m~=~·-------''lll Nel\·port & Riverside APC·~E. InCorp. A Non-, . ', .~~· l::xp in marfagcmcnt, retail • --,; \ 2mtC'AitAGr. A p T .' children & pets OK. \Valk to l iii::O;;i5~4~0~-~1~$=0~0~~i:i I 11pt. Llghl plane tJwne1.,,. NE\\' ~t-1 1•100.2800 sq ft 11hup 1',\\')', Return great 1 Y Profit Agency, 642-4-l:xi. l'.:XP.' JAi ANESE., ~O\y sa l es e re d i t ' and .. ' : Range, f'(!f1ig, gllf'a;.:c, S2J> .. market. Red Ca. r JI e t --~~ Offices adjoin hfcadowlark & ofic~s. 208 3 pha11e pwel', appreciated. Contact Andy * PAU.l/CAP.D READER * 1,IO\\ · J\-I~INT: <;!--F~ANUPS. ad\'e'l1.ising, \\'ould 11 k e •':•I lease.01>endully,J2-6.6l2~M: Realtors 536-8836 NEW Alr1Jl)rl. trash iserv, xlnt loc nr SD Andersen 6'12-C:n. AD/REDUCTION lR'?\JtllJ?)Q._~ .. 486 •• ·•' · position 1''/futurc. Ca l l , tL Jas111!ne. &t2-S:IJ.i7. LARG E 2 Rfl i;tudio. Couple. fr.,,,')'. 6"G-llj2. 1'h" t'orbeil· 1''0UNO kittl'n on Andros St. 10831 Beach Bl., Stantun. l::XP Japan gardener, 49S-6972. ,... ~i:I l r~B~EA-UT~. -oc-~-,,-0-.-1-,,-,,-3-0-,,-:i Infant Oh'.. N" pets. itST.50 DELUXE OPEN DAILY ,_S PM t -°'-"-'-·------~ i'.fei;a \'erde, Abt 3 mos. old, 527-3406 maintenance & clean up. ;\llODL"c-.-.-,-rn-an--•. -tt-h-good~' _r : Ba. blln'I, ljJ.l'a:;r., fl''l beach \Varner & Beach, 8,17-4440 146-0155. Eves. 14~7945 Rent1 f1 Winttd 4600 creatn colored \\ilh lt. PREGNM"T? Th ink In,, ~u:r.zo c onstt"Jclion n1anagen1cnt • 1 prl\'git. SJ7:i. Ad u l t 1 , OCEANFlt01'.'T, small lBlt. APTS ----------b".°"'11 ~rl~~ dk feet, blue Aborti:ln? Know all th~ EXP lfa"·alian Gardener background: l\fo\'ed . t o ~t 673-815~ $285.l mo:--Judy-Young. 2 &' 3 Bdrn1s. crpt<t,-d~. NEWPOR-t-BEACH--RESP-. COLL. i>tudent needi> t)'e~. \\e1t1J1~ Oca. collar. -facca-first;.€1lll-LIFE I:JNt.'-serving l"'eY.lJOrt Bea<•h-~a ~-porL.Beacb .. a.nd de1>1~s :,,:-) J Costa Mesa 3124 8·12-8540 or ?lfgr: 536-14ST. utilities paid., llitins, Utun-\Vaterliu nt executi\-e oUil-eg; untum h!;e/apt w/fnc'd yd 546=3540. ii hrs .. 541-5522 ' free estin1ates, &16-4G16 to relocate v.·ith o.n Orange -I 2 BDllJ.\t, clOt>etl g'..tr3ge. thy facllitle1. R,e(;. room ooe \\'/frplc., v.·et bar, priv. for obed. trained 1Jo;; bef. LOST-;~\1/A~.D 1'~em. ? )T * P.AL'.\VCARD RE.\DER * EUROPEAN GAROE~'r.."'R. County _Com~ny. 6-H-57·12 --Child & 1nnall pet OK. $l6S. \Vlpool table, ID'ffi roo1n, baUi; ooe :? room suite \\ith 8/20. Undr. $125. l\llc:bael, ol~ Ginge~ Boxer/Shep. ad/reduction U...ndscapina: • tree service 10 A...\1 til 10 l ill I NEW 847-8l•l9 or 962-i~-:7 saw1a, pool, bl.oq nn:a. vie11· of boot! & v.·ater. !~"'~'-~307~9·~~~~~~~ mtx. Tan. Vie 22nd Ii Santa. le&ll Be-ch Bl Stanto 1~a!Wnable. &12-5329. 685-142:i PEP.SON Knowledge Boat ' Adult11 only, no pets. 2881 8111 Grundy, Rltr Ana, CT\T. If found call Pam, ~Z?-3.00 n. . llull Repair \\'illing To \VALK lo beach. 1 Bit. l JiA, llrii;tol, Costa f\lcsa. S.l5-6;oo 6754161 6-1-t-o:ti or. &-1&"'42,15._e\·e,ii, Cle1nup & Reg-Sarv \\'orlc \\'eekerxls. ca JI .. "· . ' ... i ' . I , I ·" ' " 1, 2 & J BEDROOM ~~'}.:~~ ba, s.150 t ...... ill JI •I LOST' 714, vie. 3'th ST., Trovel 5450 F'R"" E.'>1' 5'tHl73 eouoct s P.M . .,...,_,8077 N.B. S.\f~\Ll. "YOP.KIE" EUROPE BY CAR E.W. J apanese Gardener 21 \T old r.1a1e seeks \l.'Ot'k ·~ 2 BR. 2 BA upper, bltn ~1s :jiiiijiiiiiiijiiiiiiiill;jijj 1YPE ~'E~J. DOG. SJL\G-. . Please ca.II after 4p1n iof ~pprox 6 wlo; Good .• . "' • • .' •.{ ' ... " ""I . . . ' . ' : -' ' . $pli l Level Apts Uni . AVAIL NOW! FEATURING: Loft Bedroonis • J"rplc's • Ceramic tile kitchrr ; " Ex- poEtd Berun Ccllin;s e l::n· <:1o.o;ed Pnlios e Pool & ninny other Convcnlenceli_, Adulta ouly. HAYLOFT APTS. 213 AVOCADO COSTA MESA '4>0143 1\Ion-Thurs 5:~7:30 p111 Sat-Sun 10.4 pm Off The Beaten Path Spacious Adult Garden Apt&. * Luxurious sha;: carpets * Bit-ins incl OiJ;:h\\'&liher * Lr:: Pool & Gas BBQ'1 * Private Pati<>io; 1 Ii 2 BR's. $170.Sl ~ Gas I:. \\'atl.'r Pd - Encl. Garage LA MANCHA APTS. 778 Scott Place, C.1'1. 642->IOT P1rk·Llke · Sunoundlng1 DELUXJO: 2 &: 3 Br. Apt:;;, Pvt Patios -!ltd Jlool Nr. Sbop'g • Adults only. Martinique Apts. .tm Santa Ana A\•t> .. O f f\tgr Apt 113 6-1(;..{i.')42 BACliELOR & Loft, util, pl:l.id, pool, jllcuni, CID, rcfrig .ft gnra,,f{C. ·1 adult only, yrly. 393 1-lnmilton, C. ir. Sl60fl!J5. 64 &-4411: MZ-1960 :~29cpts, drps, Sl.50. mo. I ~ ... -lu1ine1s Op~-~ .~:35· }'0A1PIELEAS'S 'E'DI~.;!·,:AR· P0h ~re/~ i.l~~~.c :~~~fie~ St~~ refs. &l4-l~S6 bcfoff SP~I. '[I v •~ • • · •-...:..• • delivery in EuroPe'. we Gener1I Serv1ce1 6046 !Pam) Ir vine 3844 . Z.~!!.. •Liquor Stores-(2) LOST \'ic. of -Ne v.·port handle ·all . details of "TillNGS" by ,1 Ge ,1 JobW1nted, Fm1fe70S0 eOr •ng• Julius, EI Pjveria townhouses rnlnia. Overgeas deh\'rry '-"'ork · "oose ... n l'------:....--''--1 P·ARKWOOD 2 Bit. Townhouse, frple, Trms gl-ay pocxlle. Lower ' front "'ith you per~nally 10 plan c arp_en t!Y · re.p~.s, NEED A •, N ., I & F frou1 SZO. l Bil, frum $l9i;. eHdWe Mfg-Pi tentecl tQtllh ntis.sing. Call aft tip1n, your dri\•ing itineraiy. F.!un2 i.,~1>ng3.-.., Elec re1nodcling. -COMl!!ANION? ew AUU t 1mily Pool, tcru1 \s, <."Ontinental 6~14~. Re~·ardJ B L R Vt -oN Apts. breakfast. Separ.itc family 01'~}'JCE SPACE-F 0 R eSailbo1t Mfg (A11at1) f'Ol.JND: July l3th i1kinny · uy-A~n 11~':ke •nt i\JASSEU1t State ~· \\ill ~ncni,:uin.bered ~head, ~ast ,-, 2-3 BR's·Fronl S220 r.to. Bit· i;cc:t1on. Clooe to ;;hoppin~ R&'IT. Costa Mesa. HarlxiI' HOLLA.1'\'D t;USINESS scruffy, non-Oescript grc)' Y m. niakc house calls. Reas 12 srs. in p~bh~ rclat1011!. · • ln ran;:e, garbage disposal, !kii·!fi~m~ebcjji"!!"~"--[!!~2()~1~1!!!!!!!! I' al Adams. B ca u t i f u 1-615-4170 $,U.f_;g 540.0008 feinale kitten, approx 3 EURAUTO r1;ttes. 8:16-72'21 bef 10 ant; \\'/111a)Or lntn I firm, .'°''ants dshy.•hr. Delu.xe shag crpt'g, modern. Air, ni u ,; i c , \VA.VI' TO co into business? n ford , 673. S alt 1 pm to , l;l:cl av.·ay l.rom !l all . ntE t:XC..TI'ING · · · .. • Clu nill~. ex ,..,, v c · ' 4 50 D ha k 11 Drapcril'tl. Jan1to1i<u, s:1 A. \Valkcr su·1~r plant shop, i;uitablc C.'ypress. 821-136.l. uor..1E REPAif: n ves-i; sec Y s · 1 5 • 17;J(,() .lordan Ave. 552-0900 PALM MESA APTS. & Lee Bl<lg. Call Gene Hill, r 1 t d ---·---3700 Ne\\'J>C)M J\e1vport Beach b: loves the sea. R e f -I Loguno Buch 3848 t.IL'IJUTES 'l'O NPT. BClI. 557--01..:i.i or 642--0200. 0 r nia n Y r e 8 e RE\VARO $25 foc i n f.o ' Caryienltj', Pilll}.1 in; exchange. Call loam thru Bach, 1 & 2 BR. fro1n $157 businesses. Lrg fnc'd bac.'k Jcadin:; ro recovery of ElcctriC!I.!, Jteas. 54~Irot. 2p1n (213) 428-18!3. I--"-------".:..;." I Adu.! N p DESK space avaJiable S:iO ai·ea. gd parking. Xltrt $110 ?o.lotobecane Bi ke, lie. 37137, 1 1 ~ CLASSY Can> deserve quality APT, ne<U'ly now, \l.'hite ts, 1 o. etll. .......... \Vil! pro•'do furn"1tlll-mo le:·-on Npt Blvd ~' 0 "· .. -• F · 1 Help W•nt·, M&F 7100 1561 ?>.1 D .. .., •· " ""'"'• · ·· SWlen range ......,..., Y air s..---~ care. \Ve c ean & ~·a."11: Ca.t'I! '"'• y.·ater view, blk to beach. _ esa r. at $a. mo. An s werin g l\'.B. Qy.1ier i;Jlppin~ on to TJl3. 5-15-QBZi . • by hand. Alan 96S-l092 ----~~ I.ease. 2 BR. 2 bes., SZTO. (J blks ircun Nc11.'POrt Blvd.) I i;ervice available. l 7 8 7;;:, bi;::-~er & helter thin:~. -•-•----•-4.~1-3383 or 49-1-23.l'9 • 5'1&-9560 Beu.ch Blvd., lluntin:ton ~2-8199 or 6T':J-2234 LO~"T-golclen retriever. ri-Iale, , , Hauling 60S1 - DEAllfIFUL 2 BR, Pool, Beat.ii. &42-4321. · --.--· 1 \-T old, Golden v.·hlte. 8 •by11tt1ng · 600I --Acc.'OU!lting Clerks to $j2j M __ ._.,_,_V_e_r_d_• ___ 3_8'-63'-I e.iose to shopping &: Bus l50I WESTCLIFF OR. '~10ILP ''~~a~~'! ~::i~,lc Nc~port Beach area. Please $12 A LOAD \\inc Tasting Cell ar . I ,,,,. ~---· c •• ~.. .... · contact unhappy 13 yr old EXP. l\10)J. TOYS. l'AT'-..0. · Get ,,.J of w'~:,,t,ll)' i'.\l11M.,...rs ("-"plo1· ISOO+ e H0~1E ATillOSPHEP.E &1111,.e·=~~ a-...,,..,. ... , "'' NE"'PORT y : ....... ,,,.,, Centor Lead1""' makes 0 w n er ' LU".,... ...... ..~ ..,..... o.>luxe 2 ~ 3 BR. Rental Ofc ,,......,., .............. reti,;;;~ $Z,(Q). ·pl us stock I 6i~!l:l40. . ,:, .... i, PE."TS. l 9th St. TitASH &: DEBRIS Bookk~pcr to S80D 3095 ?.lace Ave. ~103.I Rooms 4000 C~~s~.s~:i-~~ri~R & 1lxtnres. V.'ritt Clasm!icd LOS'l':Ji'en1ale Iry.sh Setter:. 3 * &16-7SSO * College SbJ.dent a4S-6428 Legal se<:/Corp1R .£. $l!IO V • ad No. ~. c/o Daily Pikrt. I yrs old. on Fri. 5/ll. \'1c. NEED A BABYSrITER! t.IOVING I-I u1 -E: MTST/r.tTSC $736 Mi1sion le10 3167 ROO~t for rent $9:1. All (il4} 6-12-3lll est. 246. P.O. Box 1560 Qmta ri..tcsa \Ve:itslde, C.l\I. Re\l.·ard. f'\JLL TI~IE, l\lY HO)IE R ua'b! • It a 1~bJ ~r. Exec. Secretlll'V $700 * l J\10. lo'Rl!:I-: RE."NT * Ca 92626 ' ' &l:>-2057 * 54:;...oo&; * e ~»e. · eason:.i. e. ree Sec/bkkpr · :SiOO ~ BR rondo ].Jis5ion \'iejo. conveniences, lgc. bcau1. e111. le.-7~1. SecJR E 1 · $62.J C1oscd garage. kids & pets secluded hon'IC in Tustin. No leiUiC req. Dix. offices, LOVELY BO t' T I Q U f_; • 1 F~nd pair of PuscripUon Bu1lnet1 Ser vices 6009 LOCAL mcr.'111°' & hauling by In~oicin~ c~~,;ini; 10 ~ ok . $2S5. &l5-3'l.% or S37-ti050 )latun!! man only. 838-oo38 adj. Airponer Hotel. 55<:: Sq. peaceful, beautiful San \\'ll"e frame ~lasses. Vic .~ 6009-student.. ea...,··c_ truc.k, P..eas. s ·•lli•'"t.lk/NCR. llOO ,0 •=• '"I t r 9 30 f't. incl. A/C, full ~rvkes. ~1-•-~ in Balboa PtnUl B • 5 • "' ... """"' ext "" . )Core : a.m. Clenientc. SSIXX). ( i 14 I " 4111 j:"'· · UllMll erv1ce1 Barry, 531-lt35 or m.,,,..33. Clerk l)"'iSl ·~"' 2112 Ouf'<;.nt, R1n. 8 492-]137:. 1.Her 6 p nl, cC~al~I !6~<3-~7699~~· __ .,._ ___ 1 ::::::::-:::::::::::::'~::::-::::::1 ' -_N;e;w;po;;;;rt;;;;B;;;;ff;C;h;;;;;;;3;8;69; · ,ROOr..i y.·/kilchcn pd,i.I" ha..~ 83::h12'l3 (9 lil noon) 496-llS-I .• LQsr ~ brovirn feniale BOOKKEEl>JNG SERVICE ?i_IO\'ING &. IL\ULTh'.G. . P T C<'n office to $3,25 • T.V., ~~c, ~K'.p: CORONA de! ?olAR, no\\' nro Re ta 11 eslabllshed Gem1an . Shorthair Pointer Small Business Speclalisl. 32 it. l'>fo\'ing V.llJl. :.~sure;t. ~ ~ CHANNEL FRONT dl')-er. 1 · · to a 1' · a\'Uil. Attractive, nev.•Jy tl: hlt a\l.'8 Ii ('hest All Tax(!!l. 30 Ye a rs Local & lo~ dist. :i.-sl~13· mo. &12-$17 Plant stores. Tu·o fast food n ,":~ '~ e ~ -· Ex-,.;ono-. .,,._...,.~,, "ov·-,··c & H,\ULUl\'G ccm~ceA.l"""l':I..~ Dix 2 &, den, 2% ba unf $600 d('C'Orated suites. 4ZO to 1650 J'elltaurants. One night club, 642-35.Si RE\\ ARD ~ ... .,..., IQ lu "' .JU'\)' l\..C..J ~'"'A.. I 2 Bdrm .• 2 ba., 2 ~ar gar\ LRG Room E.a.~t Costa ri.tesa. 11qft. Sil1iilc ofcs $115 & $115. Costa J\.1'esa. LOST: Pearl necklace, single BCX>KKEEPJNG, p11.yroll, SZt't f\lovin; V~, .1~ 48S .E. 17th St (at Irvinel C~J trplc. Furn. . . .$500 Yrly ~~~. ba1~ e~'.!.J.'m Kii~: ~~~1117 6}~ RI tr s, 67~ strand, gradwftcd size. Cd)I ta."~· typing. Kathy'~ Book· Local & kili~ d1St. :-i8l-004 60 3 Suite 224 642.1470 BAYFRONT 5-18-599$. -lnveit Opport'y 5015 area. Sentln1e~t.al value. keeplJlg Services. &1,,.2650, J'H~o~u~1~1~c~l1::•~n~tng~U;;,~54::.:1= ... ;;;:="'ll=•~•;••;;;;~llj~';• ;";;;:~'llloo:,:I 3 BR, 2 ba., 1111f. S·IT.; "i'rly' I c:.c;,;::;o~~--~~~ \\'E~"l'Cl.11',~:.DR. Ke"·pc..11 Reward. 673-259i. ' . Cabinet 'M1kinn 6014 HOUSE OF CLEAN STEPS To OCEAN ltOOi'ltS $3) \\'K up,' 1~ith "-·· h "" !t ·10 \it. • ·k.itchen: $30, v.·k up apt. D<.-..... <: •"""sq. · "'"1 ' • SELECT Group of In vc11tcrs LOST: Sealpomt . Siamese, ACCOUNTANT . i • . :·~1· :; ! -·1 .. '" l .-: . I . t .,. " • ' . ' , . 2 BR., 1 ha., lun1. $300 Yrly :»S-9755 or 645-3967 Piivutt' .B{l.th & Dnlcony. desired to participate in neutered niale, \\'eal'in:: fica CABDl'ETS, Boat \Vo r k, C;i.rpets, \\i.ncki\>"S,, flool'l> 3 BR, 2 ba, unf. $385 Yrly !.l"~'~; ... ~10. Call (jell(! Hill, \l'alerfront project. i'l!in. collar; vie. l\lesa Verde lattice \\1Xld l.'OV'cl patios. uphOI. S11Ccial ratei;i for t'eg. Life insw'aJJCL' accountant. ., .. ,;. :i U!t. l ba. $:!JO Yrly * R.00).l 1''0R ~I \\urking ~-v.:.uv in\·estn1ent S70,00}, Secured, 540-915.'i Frtt est. Reas. &'6-5219 serv. W6S2-I. ' AJust have coUege degree &: CORONA DEL MAR ;!~~:::"e~~Tg~aul, 00"' *I-MO. FR-E E RENT* attractive return~. 64(Hi5{12 FOlJND: Small, "·bite, Curly C•rpenter 601S Dedicated Cleaning 1ni11. of:! ye1trs ~x~r. in the ·" 2 BR, 1 bu, unf, $215 Yrly ----E:xet>Uent Office Localion in Mort, 'Trust Deeds 5035 halred dog, 1en1. T/15, • \\1:: DO EVERYTHJNt,; * ,~t"l.'pru~~1 ... oftlife insw1 ·anc1:e ,:.,;.f 1',Ult..,+rsllt;D room fur rent. ?\e11o''""'I, uear bay. lOW sq . ,.. T 11• kl Pk C •1 PATIO -Co,·ers & Derk~. Rets. rree "SI. 6-1&~ manci;u ;xa c~1cn s "'a ""-bah .-· e •,n e · area, ·" · Cu d "" kllO\\'letl"e of G A A P Wl!i...., t!ntrance, pVt. t • ft. s;;m. 497-1215 LOANS UP TO W /e "»-!542 stom csigned expertly J . . I 6063 ? • .. · · 11:1 S:lri. ~au ti -0 -E-LUXE OFFICES L a-· built. f ree estiinaics •n1tor11 _ Act-ountmg. Send. resume --1st TD o·a ns FOUND: Set of car keys. 10 646--7598 ~9-195 -y.1/rccenl salary history to: Sttpin£: ruom; rhlnn fa<.il· 1"Mn $W Per r.'JonU1 key'8. Found at medical S.\lAl,.L Company v."OUlcl ,\\'CO }'inancial Services • rf associated W.-.. O\w 411. $11.i n)(), DJ, riC\\lJOrl Beach center 20ll \Vestcliff Dr. RE1\IO.Dl!.L, ADD-ON, GAit like to do oflice & ~ &>v.-port Center Dr N.=rt ....... .~~· .=: 1D)Qu1v.·· ~.e;1;;,n~';:T8~~~~~~~ 2nd TD Loans .:-.:~ snia11. v.Me. male ~~~·~st:~. :V!e :~~ ~~;'.1m=·uJ1:~~~aoo: 'fe\~hn~ ~~· ~i~~ ... 't -gm 41• •tW. m t'Mrr st, I.a ~k Ilk .....,,,ii &15-3439 License F.qual Oppor. Employer NEW ORT VILLA Ground Floor w SUite, Lowe1t rates Orang• CO. puppy,.._.... s e ..........-e, \\.. i'ENCES-GATE~STEPS il·------. ... ,_-•I <."Wit pa 11 el I e d • receptionist, Sattler Mt1. Ce. flea collar. Call 54~1347 RAILINGS-DECKS-E..'TC:. M••onry 6070 ACCOUNTIN.G CLERK. ' '. 01 BROKERS-REAL TO~o; 102~ w e..111,.., 671 ltl) LP.G 1 R.i.'f bachelor apl, fre!lhly painted, crpt'd, nr. o.c.c. & !'hops. See 9 to 12 noon, ~ El Camino or call ~3473 aft 5 pm. JIARBOR VILLA APTS. SQUEAKY CLEA.'J! NE\\' Spacious. xtra lr.: •VU. ~4350. 6-13-8222 642 2171 l!.11! •LJl c.~t 548-1631 • •• , all adult J;(>('Urlty build~. 1 SIMI r I ' ..... .. 1617 W ESTCLIFF-NB • --l"'Ot.Jh"D: Female 1ri8 h t\'es. nr:ck·BJock . Ston~ Patios .1:. OUtstan<ling !inn n eed 1 , , • &. :IBlt, tliA "11h tt.1nf.W. -----------:...·. lall, 2300 •/f. ~r~; illl.l'bor area 24 yrs, setter. Vic: lSth & A Garage Today, A ~)lmlly \~all!1."Qu~1ty \\-orkmanshi__p indiv. v.·/good acoounung ;iarki1~ SP<lo'-~; . .'~~ ... bl~~ \'AC.An»t"' nlR~lliA or;;, --541-503:! lST,,_'too.~. $1~QOO. Ocea.nfront N.B. Ownel' room tomorTO~'. $750 up. hsc. 5ii7-6563 --backgroundl ·,_r.10 .. ~e r aeat1i '·"•I -;.,i :" "' " " ., -, - .... ' -" • II.ti. _, .Unfum J. &: 2 Bt · patios .. 1 Hr $135., 2 Br SltlO. Pool. 2621 Harbor lilvd., C.!'11. crpts, drps, d/Y., go •Im~. ~ J"'*-. 2 lit ...-• ._ 9 .~~;,. $14.i. per mo., all due must idCntify 6T'~t2:--~7637 e-.-es. P1inting7P1per ing 6073 typing & O .... y l':l'. ~;:q :1~:n!~~t~1~~hp~ ~~: •!It-":.-.;I dnl,(i i O~J'id:s ~k~~.esJ5cCe!1ci~f~ ~o~'r.t~J>i~roperty, 2 LOST \\'atchcs at the ,,,./~G~lif~IR ~ = P~:~~~: t~ f * ELi'.\I GARDENS APTS UN1"URN. 2 BR apt In Adult Section. 171 E. 22nd St., C.?ol. &12-3&45 SPACIOUS 2 Br, bltns, crpts, drps, ?JOI, lrp!c, gar. 1\dul h1, no pcls. !176 W. Bay, C!'ll. $UO. lBlt Duplc..x. J\larried couple, non 11n1okers, no pets. 968 "B", \\'. 17th. ~18-0358 UPPER 2 Br. Cpl!!, dnJs, mg/oven. F11.m. only. No pets. $150. 758 Shalln\11.r. 5'18-0358 J BR unfUrn, stove & n::frig $140. Pref mid aw> cpl or re1irerl. No children or pcti;. 64~48 SllARP Ii CLEAN. :: Bedroom.,, 2 !r'llh apt for leallC. $lJO. A1o. Ref/Ii. nCC<led. Call J\g'ent :-tM'i-41,tt ltEC ltc)O;\IS. hc11.u.<d pool, ~~ • Ul /" m ¥7'.D . • IW-100 I:: 1Slh. C. l\i. Announcements 5100 \'olley b:tll crt at Andersons LO\V RATES 548-7637 e\·t s WALLP-A@ERING.__t-'°"-'-'~====~~-1 • " Stiw1ns, gynl, &oonge '-' ' ill' ur fHS-77'.8 Sehl, HV Homes. &S0-0790 PAINTING ADV. Pll.O'DUCTION, Paste- llBQS. ti) lilil-1ii2! L \ O . T BE' C II Reward. E..XPERT CARPF..1'.IRY Up ·~-t. ,,~,. n-•·" 2 •. ~ , N .~ ~ P J~ A , ENCOUNTER/ GENEll.AL RF~PAIR Comn1erclal rResidenli:!.l :u..... .,,... """'"" 714-+IZ-23.iT LAGlr.\A t;ou~e. l m., \\lei;tcllff Dr. 800 sq It. GRO\\o"Tll GROUP LOST: blk. & \1•hite cat, 2 CABlNE'fS &lt;...l!l!35. J;;xterlots & Interiors\ wks a nio. for Ne11'J)Ol1 So1Ty, nu pcls fJ'plc, 1 or :l 111"tW't adui111, ""'•l.Jmo.. 1 yr lease. G 1 \\·hite: diamonds on chc~t. ...,, ,. E' · n1ag. r'ast, exact work a .J;.19 Plat-cntia A\'t'., N.G. · no ~~. Walk '" bcitch, ~200. uc11c Hill . ;:: 1~~~.ht ~~~re~~~ Of~~~ Vic. 62nd St., l\"B MS-i413 C•rpet S•rvice 6016 Q Q~t~ne~~n~~.ce n1ust. Call (71·1) 64:;...16U. -P ARK NEWPORT-~~S.I. vie!~'· ~· \Y k I NE\V Plush orfice Bldg .. a ability for Intimacy & LOST Vic 1-· r R nc I g c an JOllN 'S C.'U"pet & UphollJlcry Hadio Telephont> A...~S\\'ERrnc s En v r c E APARTMENTS • to 6 R).i suites. Conference t.'<lntinue your ~ro..,,1h. 3 Eve f'oWttains, S:tc.10 paint ot Dri1 S 1. 1 p 0 0 (Soll !\c11'p<lrt &12'·1000 gtrl, over 2.1, :'ill truin. Bachelor 1 or-2 Bedrootns DANA J'-Oillt • fun1 l Dr, $7J. ll.m Xerox <.'Opier Near ~1:°~ps27longoilt:; for 3~ yrs. Ram. Call &42-49-12. P.etardan:!i~ Dc~asers-r& l!unt: Bea~h ~~7-l~S C.i'.~._:,ru'l:'u.. S.JG-1177. • and Tov.'tlhouscs \\'k, 2 Br S95. "'k. Clo..e to o.c: Ail'port. 833-2&10. ~ TOY poodle, y.·ht fm kl:.1 all color brighteners & 10 r ountaln \:ly ~-0.J.5;1 APPOINT~If:J'l.'1' Secn!!tary, ~ t'r. $214.50 O....,n ~6 Dail\• lX!RCh &. inaiiua. Also Si\"'".,' ,,.--lli~:i'.\f2iid NEED Polynesian Dancer:;: 7/12, \1c 2'lnd & Oran~e. minute bleach for \\'h!te ~_--..-.._ part tin1c, S/tl, typing, call : ~ ' moothly ralcs. 49&-rolj 1 11~ 0 ce. ' · L. • I "" "16 Spn Pools Tennis ~· _ _ floor, otflee + storage rm. for your luau? Hire us 1vr !fas nea & gm~·....,,....,,, · cai-pera: Sa\-e your nioney * u Es r \VORK·LO\\'EST 157-1114 for inlervie\v • Across from Fashion ISiand N~'PORT BEACH:, Ocean $150. nio. l\1011-fri, Sam.· comm. functions &: P\1. FOUND: Germin Shepherd, by saving me o!."ll:tra lri~. • BIDS• ASSEMBLERS at Jamboree on San Jooquin \'It!\\'. 3 Bit, avsU. 1 \l'k 51>m, 6T~16. parties. OOS-7101 Elk &· Tan. Vlcty . Back \\'Ill elesn li\'ill~. nn., dining E:c.pcr. waUpape1· h~~~,1.f; For sniall el«tro-tncchanical Hill!! Road. only. July z;. Aui:. 3, $200. L'RON~ fl. d n Cir Pool 5150 Bay 97'!}-3522 or 49-1-!m'i J'nl., " hall $15. A:1Y ~"n; Call for ci;!Jmale • 61~• 01anuf, (_'(), Pt'rm & V1in1e. (7141 644-1900 6-i.r ~ or &IS--.1101 ,. ;._ 0 ice. groun oor. 11= h $10 Cl ·~ W I 6 • 1~ ;xi .1&18 Newpo11 Blvd, c.r.t. FOUND frlsh Setter w/tattoo ·oN• couc , · uur ~· a ter · ~lust have GM dc:..:terity & BACHELOR APT. ~WPORT, l blk ocean. !'>iS--9700 <'AR POOL . Nev.'POrt-Crn to No. Female vie Santa Ana. yni. exp. is "'h"t counls not PAPER ll ANG l NG & vision. Non smoker req'd. ·, adJncent to Udo 8hopiiU1g pool. Sips 8. Xtms. E-Z B • R t I ••50 \V. L.A./Bcv. Hills. A.l\f. & [;.I~. method, .I do .v."Ork myself. palntin;:, 21 yrs llarbOr No exper. nccess. Ver)' il ~ I 1,~... lo·-•e. Ro,,oonable. Ul lftell en I -P.-r..I. hrs. ne..xib\C. Ph: Good ref. 531~]0]. l'"I' {uro '" •~281 lea• t m"'I co CnU center. Ut'. "'' Yenr Y '"6 ......... LOST: Germ shep lab. ~[ale Rrl!a. "' · · ._,,.. • P _an s ..., · ll'!ute only! SU5 l\1 o. Call ~Tor 968-().138. }'QR lease ideal sales lot for 673--1300 or (2l3) 7i3-S635. 71110. Blk \\'l'Brn eyebrows, UR Crpt Clnrs. lfi;e $24.95 &12-23:'16 &U-SJ8..I for appt. s.n. 67'.S-9217 sur..L.\fER AT TllE SEA lilled ca.rs, boats, motor 7.9 536-38:>9 P.:n $4. Sim h!lf: $39.0C). Sofa PAINTll'i'G & repair 35yrs En~ in e e r in g, 8 J -4 a1 YRLY A I... Furn. apt. 1 blk fron1 ocoon. homes, nJObile home JJ, lg] Sl·t a;,. Guar. ~170 \\O~kmanship guru·.' Take Prociuc:llun Pl., N.B. BJS\v Auradh>e '3 ~~~1.~ 2 1ivol. ll.B. Wk or flh. Con1plete servi~· facilities. L•t llMI 1fUlll I FOUND: SmaJl, "'hlte poodle Ceilings 6011 ad,·ai11a:;e ot niy exp, ASSl~"Ti\...\""T l\f an a g c r , lt:l. firepl. hlt·illS, drps:, 1 9tJG..Zi46 Also 11.lnt ltV auction site. . \'1.c or Stater Bros. 22nd & 53&-i056 inuncd\at~ position l:lVl:lll- {ro .,::::n ~0"" '"""' Be h • O!!. c a a>'I ';-h·--' Nt\\•port, C.~1. Call 646-Z93'.! I bl F' J E" Ith l\SI.' 111 ocean . ....,.,, . .J.ll<.n NE\,-rvRT ac ~ICJ?ll. to ice s1mc v . ""6 "-.... CALCOUSTIC PROF, painter, JOnest v.'Ork, a e. or 1·. ~xcc w \\'. Bnllloa 673-22".n bch. 2 BR &: 1 DR. $DJ & & p.1.vcd. Orange Cowny's I Lost & Found 5300 FND: \Vatch, Vic. N.ll. reas. lnt..ext., iree estimate. Jr. r~ashlon retail exp. Will sr-:E Catalina & NC\\'JlOrt ~~:i .. \Vk. Hoo.l 11 I l p busiest intern:.'Ction S.E. , · 99.J....6214 bh\'11 6 l:. S P~f. f'Oll. Heii4. ~8-2Ta9, &IZ..3913. consider ' top saleswoman Bay from )'OUJ' beaut. :IBJt 67~2. Co1't1Cr Garden Grove & , LOST: 'RE\VARD! small r,OUND;:hleila del ?.Jar area. ACOUSTIC CEILINGS PROF. wallc..'<l\'etinGi_ staje OOI\' ready lor 11.ch·nncen1ent. , L I ~ ' •. 3 BR, 2 BA. POOL F'amlly 4-plex, no pets. $:.:00. Nr So. Cooi;t Plazn. 979-6995 1 BR, balh, crpti., drp11, stove, $]91). n10. Ca 11 &ii-31~ OT 615-46.'\9. \\'llterfmnt 11pt. New erpls, 2 an, fl'pl , 2 BA. Nr. pfll'k. ti.arbor Gl\'d. Call day& i'ITrii:. Rging, pl ump, curly black & r·emalf!. Sian1e.w -Cat. 10 yr ~i:tr, fl't!c glitter lie. Ko. 279Jl•1. Insur., nil S6c Slncha, Chris fast'lion, (lrps & paint, fw·n/unfurn, bca<~h & b;\y. $WO \\'k. 3606 Tucker (714) 638-1512, 13028 brown fe.n1slc Tcnier last 5~7--0145 &•st Pri1..<e ty?Qs paper. 11·1-S42-43Sti. So. Coast Pla.z11. bOnt slip llVnU. 6'14-6856 P••k l.n, NH. GT3-{).1TJ. Hw'bor Dlvd, G a rd c n seen 11 pn1 J uly 4th near llN • , 1 ......A\ ~ &I; 9g.,s0 ----.... Gro~-c. Coast lnn pt1rking lot. F'O D: ti .~mac 1......,.., cs, -.,. PAI~TirINLO by col sto at low ,\utl). :·:j $155. • 2 BR. Infllfllll lo l year old. 2017 \\'all1tce, C.AT. l).l&-J223 2 BR dell1>:e litudio, u!ll pd. CHns.. <.Tpl11, pool. $1!Xl. 1078 l\IRplc. 64;,.."'~17 NEAitL Y NE\V 2 GR., 2 &., bltlns, laundry lac. Enc. ~ar., no pets, $2'?), G45-7T"J5. l BR. +, Semi furn. No pets. $160 n10. 582 Center St. Nr Park. 6r.Hi137. 2 nn.. quiet atn10sphtrt'. no pct11. StOO. -....- 2 HR. l1 t 1~-CouplCli, doRll "'·el<.'Ofnt, 610 Apt C Joonn. 9;" •• -- BE:ACll & BOAT SLIP 3 BR, 2 Bi\, iiey..·Jy dee. Pvt corner or Coast 111\J'. y.·hlte, 1 black, 1 apricot, l (.>rices. l()yr exp, ';'-~:k guar, Service Adviser Bir; Bay ANO Oeenn Vu pafo, Jul/Au"' •"1Y'l/mo & Nl::\\'POl{T SllORJ<.:S ctuunpagne. ~3. *\\'ILL.\f:D Pai;1ti11z, Xe\\' U'i!e l'llt, 1-l.ob 6'i'3-:~:iS N I I 2 Bl, .. "ft .... ..,.,., 6100 w. cs• H11o'", Ne"'·port. l\lounta.ln Rd&. Gn\'iota Dr .. _.__ 1· I ·1 Ir •' ~'.o::.0::"-':;::;""°"'=--1 lot 'le-~• ..... De"' & f'iat ''" g ux. "" "' ....... $200 )'fly. 962-5.jll; 61!'>·5810 ~ " Laguna Beach. l'l~:lMl call FOLi\'D: Chlltl's retainer at a<."Olls ica cci • rep:i s n.:i· * 10•;-0 DISCOUilo'T • '' ,,_L...,,.., Pool. St'c. Bldg, 2 gar. $G$S. NPT. CCII. 2llll. hl:IC, sleeJ>!i !~e 81~rft~~:ire b~~~u~~ 497-2Sl i. Corsica Park. i -11. dI')'"·al1, ~'o. 28103~. G-12-jTi!i \\'all(Jl:lpering & Painting ~~~~7::::~~ar11y EJ~!,~~ nw. C'lrey, CA\'l'ICr 6i~i-8:>51. 7, One blk lo heh. $1fAl/Y.·k. ~I'l.'1cc. Avail . ln1n1ecl. LO~'"r n1ale puppy, black, 3.-'.17·9610 Cement/Concrete 6019 t'ree l!'.st. Call a.-:&--O:HS sion, xlnt. IJin.o;:e benefi\:1, 3 N s;i. vi"''1): clf\_~!;1~ \~. Call ~. JL\lLliOll. ~1,\N,\(01::)\ENT cockapoo, approx 3 mo. rot.'KD: on i·ll. 61:.t~k n1:i1e IS TA ,,1 pt: 0 e 0 n c rete, * W11lpa per Hinger* etc. Ask mr pcnronnel num- 1 · .. ry Calsc. o.:"'·,,,...,\'RJk, Vacetion Reni1l1 4250 001\-IPANY !NC. Stri)·ed or lak1'n fro111 Poodl~. nr Garfitl<l ~ ...... bbtestone tile b r ick C Rcbko ti16-2--ttJ agrr. &-11t. •lh. l lt'l'f"lo>.» "'' · \'thicle. \'le. I.icorice Pizza Erookh\/Nt 003-~9'1 .. .., · ' ' ''l"''-""=---_::.;cc:;'.O'I MISS'ON VIEJO days 8 10 5 or 8T::>-083l Wk-l nott..'f. houst! on Penn. nr. 6i5-GOOO on Nev.·port Bl\'d, C. l!I. No FOUND: Fem Siamt1se cat, ~.:~·&l~~~~t:eklf, drl\'e-Ples ter /Repiir 6077 l' mlii. 10th St. beach. s:m: "·kl:Y; !.oo SQ. !1'· off in-Costa quei;lkmll, t'hil"dren 1nl!l!1 )-oung'. tteelltn\.ini:1. 421'X! PATCI' PLASfERING IMPORTS OCE"NFRO'~ I I I ' II' I D 1\teSll, s...... h Pie -c·'I -~· • BLOCK\\',\LLS -Planteni, ~ ' • :.n• •~ l, )TY I'll', r'run ~ pre • ~ Y ll 64fr2130 \'Cl')' ,.riuK' · """ ,.. A l~l\'er A1·c,, N.B. 01..-.~16. Sidel\~llkii, 0 r \<\• e v.· 8 y 1 , All 1)-pti. !''tee cstint:it<'s 2S'i01 1\1nti."Uf!Jite Parkv.·ay BR upper, cpts. d~, $300. =·X2-I. e\-ell I: .,.._-kends Industrial Renta l 4500 r~tH110. f'Ot:KD: Bl:U~k-1..1h mi.~--:-'j &1~i20 inomh~ or t.\'t'S Call~ 49>1700 o r *31·1740 _ee,r mo. &12-3443. .rll·I~ l''OUND: Black &: "'hite n10e .• Lk: So. 1938 \"le. 33t\I 6021 Plumbing 6071 IJSf; A\o"ERl' Pfo."\\-Y E."\IT San Clem.nte 3176 R ent1l1 to d\1 re 4300 l\E\V r..t.J t."00 lo 3'1.t? i't rt llus~ frPPY In vicinity (I! SI. N.B. Gli>-3S3G. Contr1cto r Auto \\'Alli to beach: Nf!w ~[)Ile 2 SINGLE ~Tothcr v.'Oltld like \\' SnntA,, An.'\ or Cos111 i\lesa ~ J~~ k naktr. &~I i·l5lr;o..'15:Kliien.-fit.'"1i:\rtm GER\\'JO\ &. Son Old; Conrr. L.R. OTIS PLtntBl~G SALESMAN UR 2 BA En I I -\.. A-" Otfi~ I: 1\·arthouse-Anip ~ • , ' . . Sllo.,.pl"• Ccnl o.r. ,\Jd -,, ·'St. lie Ul·U·f'!'Jl llemodels I Ile.,,_.,;,.., \\'Mier c gnr poo !(I ulV\'t In house v.'f)'mu •~ 3Pll • \'·hot ,,.,1,..J:!.': • ·-' \\ -" , .. .., '" ....., -,......¥ · ocn' ,iew, $2.io, ·l!IG-Otii6 ' . ~w .-:. ..... FOUND: i..auie~. nst\l'llli • ·~7~,(il 6~11. ~2J70 • ht11.tcr11, dispo:Wi;, fumaces. PrPfer matTie<I ll\iJJg l.n ·~"-'"'-'"-''-"'-"'"-'='---bh\' 0 1 k 'Llli;UM Oellch Triuh 11er 64&-1Zi'.l/&1·....£tis tn L.iguna Hills ma ll J\M' T•ut·-a.t lo• dihY.'1tshn. 6-12-ti".1$3 ~1.:c I beach ar~. tor No. l "s J \\'Isa.me. call \Vend y ~ \..n 11 .._.,.. p • O'ELUXE-Adlllll, um Mq. ft lft uan ~ :M;-:l!il.T, ~-18$!1 \\·ork I PACI1'1C. Bt.un~ I N 0 . _b: 1 I~ :.e od d"d Li~ B-1 2690rl E/A'. Cornpletc Plouibln;: ln1port M'llC'I'. -AM !Gr t~, ,29~.1Jl~~·rlfllo C1el1tr1no 3171 Cl lRlSfl-\N nlOther & aion PA~ r\C\\' ~t;~'f1!1s. JSOO >'Ox~L; F~~· ll~:tnd 1w~lte r Ptn;onab ~ ?11,~\f~aeo: &1i.1703. Service. Uc. 2'7'3i!).I, ftfJ'l)·.~-l~Ma ey $ I . 't. . 2 lln + eonv den. ,_U/ 7, d~ to share API ot to t:AAN ~· rt~ lOo)J \Vh!Ulcr u• ) lie sl"".s. e. n · ne -. "W 0 l 6021 RAYS Pl.Ul\ffilNG SER\'Iet; 'I" J: "~tA ke Room t'or Dacldy" w,;;. Neil'. Adult ro~::un-home \\'/Clirlstian \voinau. 1\1'll, C. J\l. ~~i'GI)& C.IS-3(87 • ... r v ewayJ Rep1dnc' • JnstallaJions T .•• cltlll1 out tha ga.rn;c ll)'. PutthlU' grilcn/riool ' 4~3-0C).}3: nft 6, cK.11 SJO..ll~ 10c P E R SO. FT. LOST· 3 nio. old 1{\tten, 1 Per1onal1 5350 TOP qu:\llt): upha!t seal 24 hr . .ctvice 5LS..~ oyota ' . "·turn tht1.trJi:nk~t~~ i·lc;s~ to tt0lf 00\trilt!. $.1.50. '\"Oil don'! need a gun 00 3600 1111. ft. 4001 Birch. NB i.:i.hL'O longhalr. vie. uper. 1;G11tlnw,1, palchini.:. a:t~ipplnlJ Rooflf't 6082 ~~S..~'\n;ad1J!1\~. ~:{11 ~ .. ~a~~z.ari:. + (2131 69&-13$0 * "Or;t\\' 1-·ollt" ,..,1~11 yo\I Bauni.gardnt!i', 1\gl. ~lt..roll. lor & Pl11cen1la. 548-?b't.1. f\TClf \RD A G n 0 VE ! 11h11Ty 11001. repairs. 8-12·30'Z9 unl n oq at 1 The rastc!ll dr&w In ll:te \Ve11t. 3 ER...._2 BA. E~l yd .. 2 J pla~ an ad In tht DAlLY 1000 SQ tl.St~e. $110. ll:i,·ti somcn1l:ng lW Vi'•nl 10 'ALI, voufi s t. TEn · 1N I ~II fille llenu \\1111 11 D:.illy REPAI~. 11.ll , t>1""'· Rea11 C??n't ,,R:l''t 11f, tht 11111a! •.. a "llill)" 1 Pl~lot Claulf1td chlldi'tn. no Pols. \\'11.lk to llTLQT \\!ant i\d11 l"'o>.lJ now ~ir'~~ach. ,\,-ail A\lt. 11cllt 0 1thlfled •ds do It L.\l\:f! \nH0\\11J:;h0. J>tiol C1 w lfied Ad. &C-51378 #I r""' ts,, Lied, Ai;k, for Lf!lt It hi c ,_!l,lf!«I, Sh M. t...U:~7S. Ygni"L $ZJ"r'93-4~ .. _ JU.a;iS. ,_ _ ' 1.. ~~!.ll,.u11ll NLlV.'~~iGJ\ ' •.., . ' ~ ~·alt,-~ t1:11}'1ime to Shorr R~lt~! 64Mil!TS. l~~==~""'"----""""'.=..;=::TF'"""=--' ' , " ' ,. ) : - •, DAIL V PILOT ;:•R~lp Wontod, MIF 7100 Auto. MECHANIC Alel'Cf'd.e• Benz experienced, Clua A llr.enllt!. Guaranty plus good 1..·ornn1lsAlon, >ilnt frifllre benefits. etc, Alk for pen;onnel mgr. "-MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS 28701 Marguerite Parkway •r 4tS.1700 or l!J.1740 .:.~, USE AVERY PKWY. E:XlT L.~ A UTOMOBILE-Servlce ! .. ·Cashier, exper. pref'd.J11.'t't : • • & greet our custon1ers, • •• Great person ality & ;.·\ groornlna a must . Good 1 • general oHice 11kills. 9-6 i' · '• Mon-Fri. Pbone 9~2500. I -1"'""'""'"""""""""" .. i:::. AYOH . " :·' ·Asb *** l ---r1 '-Is thl!ore an~ A V 0 N . representative in )'OUL' life! "• l( not; ,_.e may need · , IOtDeone like you in your , neJahborhood. Sell in your ;~. spare time, earn i:ood 1 ••• money, Interested? Call 540-7041 i BABYSI'M'Elt, m.v home, ! ~ mature reliable lady. 1or I . more inrcnnation e a I I · ~ or MZ..1517 eves S!arting Aug 5th 1'' BABYSITrER, mature ~ ' woman., for 6 & 'I yr old ( ·, good pay, refs req, 847-1611 w U2-48at aft 6 ~· .. BABYSITrER 41,i YR OLD •--~-·t· -BOY~-- -, .- --• • w ....... ,, July 17, 1974 Holp WontOCI, M&F 1100 Hofp w~.n~toc1~.~M&!!!F~1~1~oofj!Ho~1e[w~on~~~'.!!~!!!~1p~~~· ~i!J~ If 0 T I!: L Al A l 0. N o Atllftl.IC'ment T...inet: ~ J o.l er 1.., • I 'Retept'°'1111 .., , SEMISTftESS -g pan ls h ~~ Wtdntldoy, July 17, 1974 I P Dellv· .. .,..,..,~Sunclay Only OF. DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS: RE· QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA·· TION WAGOl,'I OR VAN. CON TACT MR. BENTON WILLIAMS, 330 WEST BAY STREET, COSTA MESA.-TELEPHONE ~I FOR APPOINTrENT. An Equal Opportunity Employer Holp Wontod, M&F 7100 Holp Wontod, M&F 7100 CURK·TYPIST Large company in C.Osta l\tesa area has openina: for clerk·typist. Duties consist o( r,yping,, filing, good nt handling telephones. ?\lust be able to \\'Otk ~~ day on -Saturday occasionally . Advanct'ment Opportunities Excellent company· benefita. Write cl8S!iti.ed ad No. 203, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa l\1esa, Ca1il. 9263j Equal opportunity employ~ Clerical l'ART TIME ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN Pt'rfonn el~tronlc checkout ol niicro wave products ti; RF componenUI. N e e d technical or service school tf'!lnlng i n electronics. Exper. in rad'° Ii: tv repair helpfu1. Some QA technician positions available. Beacb l't'SOrt comn1w11ty, smog !rec. Call For Appt. Jndustrlal Reletlon.s (714) 49C.94Cll TELONIC INDUSTRIES experl.~ neceMIU'Y· 114 Sportiftt GOOlla $9,UO JIOldUon, Mlit accurtle 50 , PBX •peak lnr '. "'Olcome. Sr. Project Enatneer.lndu11 Ave Del : t.111.r; ;.. San Flay boJI withe giant• tWpm ryplzw reg. SH !ClaehiM &: ha!KI; \\'Ork. Prod. Development $20K _o_em.....,•,,•l"'•·,.',.",,-.,19,,,u=c:--I otrenna:. wUque' oppor. ~ dealred.--....in. • , Crochei "wk. 4 9 6-7 3 61 Pro1ect Etta!= Sl.GK lJVE "?~5EJ<iE~~·LITE ~~p1:r'".dv.=~e::i'.ne~?i ) 9uallty ' Cilitrol Reception is' morning•. ~. 'i:~~ilrc. lr!!tua. lo :~~ COOKING 1 ADULT, 4~1 JOhn Lobo, ~. Denr\l.1 Growlnr1 Go. bu lmm~te ~ Security Desla:n dt'llft'lnlll\/e\e(: S12l< YR OLD BOY, A Df'Mll Penonlw:!I ~ncy opoldna._ M ·a YOWll mm A buty front tff.lct_. _ F.CDookl!~' ,,,..,-,~·PllOj---·I llUN~~NC~R brr. Irvine, ~ A11chelll0l1 ~l:ng ~:!:~MU1t-"'Oiner1I· ctericil tlUtlet-mRE ~~~~,<mt-~-~::::= HO 'U SEK ·EE PER MEOIANICWnnted.ClassA hAve exp. in r eadtn1 •nd•ccur• .. typlng,.. GENTLEMAN Sccy B~aa ••••• , ••• $b25 exp'd /live·ln, Eng. Smo£ Ucense preferred. Bl u ept•lnts & ualna quired, CoN bO.lrd. for Ac.QOllllll Clr •••.••••• $550 speakU\i. Xlnt salal)'. Must Top Pay. Apply In pel'80n at m lcronM1ICt'I, v en le r •' Good frlNe benefits. •rCURITY Clrl\ J"rl. A ..... '"!'$MO ha\-e reta. Private\ nn A Exxqn, JOO\"!. 17th St. Costa 1C1el&h~~cs, etc •• O>ntact Nice, ltut ectfve work· ~ F·C Bookkeeper ........ $700 bath. Nwpt8ch67S-3198 ...... ' • Int condlt'-Apply• GUARD Al'~""tlng·C~k ........ 1S511 HOUSEKEEPER U In Med ""~t Ole to ..... .11. orotek, Corp. . . Call , letnnle Sisco -ve. · "•vu ~ 12812 Knott s GG D ICEO N br Jud Ill Steiner Care for elderly lady. P.lU5't L~ Lovely, In White . t., . fF You are i(lterested in NEWPORT Urive. Re!s. Gm!en Grove. Coigrowl doctotl oHlce iieeks 891--1389 ' ,_'01idng 16 hoUn between · -: 962-4255 or 962-Stn . alert. stable indlv. for bUIY E midnight Friday and PeraoMtl Agency • HOUSEKEEPER Llve In. poelUoo. Call Ba•bara Moc, REAL ESTATE' lectron1' -, midnight Sunday and want 133 Dovsr Dr:, No. 10 l\fothe.rlesa home. G 0 0 d 833-2700, DennlJ & DeMl.a · -' · ' : V. lo mllke $3.00 an t.our and Newport le•ch '42.Jl70 driver. Penn. Ref 's , Peraotwl Agency ol Irvine, IF YOU UICE 'I are ~r to take Pl'nn. Pia.cement Agenty }~~i:c:~~:rn~. Qill l\~O~~~n ~ptk)rusl • PEOPLE. IC. ~11'Je to ~~1trh .,!~ ~ or · part·tlme. New or t Ex~r & matUtt. l'itust km\¥ ·.WE. 'D UKE YOU 11522 Von K.nn•n We are NOT a RCW'ily · dlamond letter .Bc~acl\,;~"""'-'""0!·~·:06-!5,=t'""'""'·I pegbo&-d. can btw 2-lpm • lrvlne, C•fff ftlM iUBrd lmlicc. Apply: W1UCer Irvine 1rea 97'"6122 HOUSEKEEPER COOK.1 _wkd~•Y;.,'-;;;· 642=-...,.,.,.,· =--Tu""""'"• c.r.... with the DICE ON liiii ... ·..,...;;;&&iiOiiiil U.o In with'°"'' • Ncwport MOTEL MAIDS '""""'In rcal..,.t• ..,...,., An =~FunUy · ElECTRONICS, STOl'lll Beach. Refs. 640-0009. WILL TRAIN .Yii'e D~·lhe sales~ INC \VlfY NOT SE."I' YOUR OWN ==--~--~~'I Full U A I ~1 Ing. Together 'A'e'U get .,..,., Tht~ro openings, qufl.llfied or P-ane. PP Y \..Va a ~'"' • PACE THIS SUMMER?! school bus drivers ~fen ti10, 32Qj liarbor y,·~re)'Otlwant,toao. RN's&LYN'S ' l8522VonKarnuui TAKE pref. I! ·not qual, training Blvd., Costa hlesa. Ol'll'IC,IS BELOW Irvine, Calif., THAT will be ..,,vlded. Xlnt job l ·,--M"'O=T=E=L~MA~l=D~S-'"RE INT. IRI. STED DISCOVER A AN equal oploportanlty FIRST for housewife in local area. ,A .. N,, .. _..,.. ........... 1....d .. ,, ........, "" NEW emp yer , • Call Mon.Fri 9-2 ~3 W• .... _.., ••a•'-"""'6 u~uo IN YOU WAY TO WORK!! . STEP WITH US \V. Pacific Coast Hwy. N. • You'll be amUed at the ede \VE'U. WALK THAT EXTRA Inspection Tr•lftff B. Top \Vages, Full Time. ~~LL MANA, GER ~T \\1th which yoo can iaet your SECRETARY Pit I L E with you. Grow w/a growing concern. own pace -& the abWty or Here 1s an opporturdty to Learn quality control in the MUSIC LOVER? BUENA PARK oer strl! to make ~t happen! (TEMPORARY) discover a new way to woric electronics industry &. earn Your New Job Would Be 52J.2156 Create )'Our own "'Ork v.-eek In the home health cltre 4--7 hrs daily, ?iton-Fri filing exper, \\'ill train interesting busill(>M records system. Personable, alert. Position, locate4 in Costa P.lesa, Arlaheim. Good stal'ling salary, fringe b enefi t s, Apply In pet90n, l-2pm, 1''ri, 7/19th, Sheraton Anahehn hotel, 1015· Ball Rd., Ana· helm. A!>k for Jay Davis. \\'h\le you learn. Genera.I General Ollli..'C Duties & COSTA:' MESA w/a varifoty oJ asajgnments, AJ)pl'OJ(ln\ate1y 3 nlonth11. -field . l Equal Oppor. Enlployer l'it on i t ors, Inc. 3019 \Vorking With ~1u1dc Helps. IN HOSl?ITAL TypJna:~· w.p.m. + IBM WE NEED YOU!! Enterprise, C.l\f. Plfut Programs F0t· Record· 545-MtJ . STA.Fi', RELIEF Selectric. Shorthand 70 ./Prectlc•I Nur111 EXEC SECTY tor Land INSURANCE s~~ ~-G~Jl:2Po-FOUNTAIN VALLEY Apply :if,i ~ 1',11. w.p.m.~ +. PreVtous public /Nur1ti Aides . , Development Co. Shtnd & Experienced Insur a'n c e t!al ,, Expand •1754 r --I HOM. Eu .. W'lil'B-S __ contact..h, elpf iE-alesc·-Al,-• TYPJng req, legal exper.--Accounts FteeeiVable Clttk7 ten · A3 ·inn s. FUU."l:RTON '""""'_."° ..,.,... ..,., - , , CLERK TYPIST helpful Gd salary & call Mn. RI ch a rd 5 0 n, <En1ployer Pays Our Fee) · IJl·lS42 UP.JOHN AppJy 'in Personnel Dept. IVb&lng Hounmothers : Sharp, ambitious penon ,_ith benefits. Call l\1 art ha, Empire Insurance Co. C•rol, UJ..9145 HUNTINGTON l 'EACH 33& Placentia Moi\day thru Friday 9-llam. /New lnf•nt C1re :; HUNTINGroN HARBOUR, 5.n-Tllkl (DlCK) • BARTENDER-full tlme. 11 good figure aptitude & 83.1-0123 for interview. 8.15-6766. ·PerJOnftel Resources Ne .. lpOrlBeach &&5-5S3l PACIFIC MUTUAL Apply Mon. Thnl "Fri. :· yr, or over. Exper prel. but moderate lyping ab i 11 t y EXPERIENCED waitresses.. Invent~ C.Ontrol · Agepcy: 1151 Dove St 540-5141 (Entr. Placentia le F1aphlp) 700 Newport Cenle~ Dr., N.8. 9-12 &: 2-4 :' ., ~NI~· fil:sr~ill 1 Wi:: needed In this secure office. Apply in person, Carrow'a THINK & ASKI Suite 111, Ne,_wrt Beach TUST:::s..~IL.L an equal opportunity empty. HOMEMAKERS Fashion Island, De a I g n Terrlllc Fringes. Restaurant; 620 Ave Pico; l\1ajor Corp. Needs Some-.}"ree, Fee & Temporary RN' 7 to 3 PM. 41 Bed SE --UP JOHN plaza. N.B. Jason B•st Agency SC One m Help Deve1ope A NEED Help-Male or female-WESTMINSTl!R convalescent hospital. Good ~RETARY ·330 Placentia BEAUTICIANS NEEDED 17400 Brookhurst, F. Vly. FEMALE wanted, expd full \\'orkable Inventory ~trot light assembly Applx, 815 \V M0611 .Wary. 549-3061. Buay, vanety spot,, ~th lots Newport Beach 66-~1 w/Jollowina'.. Beautiful &hop Suite 213 963-6775 time employee, f j &' u re Must Have Figure Aptitude 11th ST Bldg 1, CM RNILVN ,_.eebndl 7-3 3-U of oe_por. _for a g~I with good {Entr. Placchlla & Flagship) I!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I aptitude, (heavy work & Be Able To Think Thlnp NEW FACTORY Speclail program for. good conds T $$' i...5 skil'3, bright smile, &: rlppy1~"!''!!'! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""I nr Fashk>n Island, N.B. CLERK typist for trainee in w I ! i g urea l , Poatlng Through. Promotes From unllcen=ed applicants ' · op · peraohall!.)' Fun Job 18ruoENTs tl Tenific oppty. 644-5750 accounting dept: Newport pegboard gystem, 10 key \Vithin.·$500 to Start & Branch outlets just openlne ~ ' Superior, N.B 64Z-24lO MMES ·1.,,. FREI! Fall, Neat. '~IT'a~ i:;, ~~ ... BOAT BUILDERS Beach insurance firm. Call adding · machine, eood A 3 Months Revie\v. infll'(!aneec\sthe!ollowing: Bureauc>f nec..Mr.Levi,846-5455. I'.' Westsail Corp. needs ~9000. h and w r It Ing, Write (Employer Pays Our Fee) ~~~) $~ ~ ROUTE E~ployment Agency ' SUPERVIStilt :-_ ./Engine Jn1taller Classified Ad No. 195, cJo C•rol 133-91.U Sal Ope W lk & l Costa Mesa ' 556-1100 . · I i Bonden COFFE£ SHOP Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Personnel Resources .. • .. s~~~ ... """""r nncJtlon:. a er 81 SALIS 2'.106 Harbor Bl., Suite 20~ Stock, SIOl'<l.Ke & shipping. A . ." ./"'n-..nters Costa Mesa. Ca 9?Q6 "-~ .... ,..,.. ~'"l Dove St .... u ........ "' ,,,_ ~••l ,,,.,.. --J , Anaheim ' 776-8120 fast gro,_>tne stttl furniture ....... t"" ~~·-.r ....., 4~106S WE WlLL TRAIN YOU , 600 No. Euclid manuf. fir1n need, , an ~ ., Co. e~pansion has created WAITRESS FEJ\.11\LE help want ed Suite 111. Newport Beach And pay you ... good sa.li.ry 8 m b 1110 u • f ~tomer ; openings for career minded f u 111 PI t l me . Apply Free, Fee & Temporary NE\\'SPAPER Auto Route \\'E'RE PART OF while doing it. It you haye SECRETARY-ol'lcntcd ninii. expcr. -in 1 -people Appl y Now Kentuck;y Fried Ollcken, IRONING Lady_ to do my {Htg. Bch) Must be over 18 YOUR FUTURE alwys wanted to nm your ADVERTISING stock control le ahipplnlf tD i ' 1638 Placentia, C.l\I. 693 S. Coast Hwy, Ll&'Una ironing in your hon1e in & have ~ndable c~. Equnl Opportunity Empl<iyer own bu.lnesa we will ·show Are ·you a notch above· tbe head this critical tuncUon. :•',•BOAT painter, must have \Vith 1 Year Experience Beach. CdM area. 673-G5Ut. 2~ Hrs y, $~. -~. you how to enjoy your "''Otk. rtat It looking for more 'than A good pl81ll\ing Ir: yacht experience. Cat l FEMALE help wanted JANITORESS Friday only _nw. 847-2300 bef. lO a.ui. REAL EST ATE Salary + comm. + bonus; Just n secnitary posit\on, Ol'g8.ni%ing ability is r 548-3561 Apply In Person f u 111 rp It l me. AJ.tlily Jor 6 hours· housecleaning. NURSES ·TRAINING Vehicle• furn, all ecp(!nses then you're our girl •• Must req'd, Aleo, ability to 1 ,-· BOOKKEEPER Kentucky Fried Oaicken, Call (2U) 380-5040, Inter. e CCU'S e pd. Erta':>llahed operating have good shorthand & comminlcfltc w/all levcls or · Restaurant exper. F/tirne. .._,..,, Ill onl l712 n---~t NB Xlnt ~-"ts d thal a suCCC!flfuJ salesman O'oss Blue Shield. &fajor to Cluei_fled ad No. 193, clo & frin.... benefits: "'And 'lie ~ PoP~c1ilic Coe.at Hwy, 7119/74. Fri, 8 am-12 pm Full or part time. AU shifts. VAU..EY REALTY believes te1Titory le bustneu, Blue typing skills. Send resume the·organliation. Xln 't PllY Good .... i .. -. 642--7880 lo . y. .......,a,. ....... ,, · · """'"".., ' goo D ti P l PO Box '~" ·-~-~ f ---.J· r FRY COOK Exp., must be JANITOR'~' Part-tbne-full y,'Orlr;'Jng ronditlona. EOE. Is one who is Y,'ell •trained. medlcal bene, profit shar· a Y 1 Ol, · · J.JW, ~ume to P.1'ra. Comfort, ,; interview. dean le neat. Over 11. tim Loc:7 nin.,.., Top Costa Mesa Mem. Hosp. \Ve are looking for eareel'o lng, retirement at age 57. Costa lilesa, Ca 92626. 11621 Von Karnl&n, lrvlne, ! ~ BKKPR. needed by local Apply in pen;on to Surf & e,1 ~ ... ~.dults 301 Victoria, ~~. m I n de d , conscle:ntious, No slrlke or lay otts In 75 Secretary to President ca 9'1705 j CPA ofc. Prior CPA ofc. RI Sirloin, 5930 W. Coast Hwy, ~~.ex a · OFFICE CLEANING honest men and Y.'Omen ,..'ho yn. FREE TO TRAVEL fii;iiiioiio;;iOiiOi..,iiliiiOf , exp. prefd. ALSO Interested • N.B. . t:'-want to learn and grow wtth OPPORTIJNITY TO EARN Excltln& oppor. w/tnt'I finn Telephone Sales i I In Jr. Stalf Accountant. Call taaer JANITORS wanted p-\,lme. 5 Approx. 4 hrs evea . ....,.~ our Company. Our company \\'HAT YOU'RE WORIB. awaits poised indlv. All · 1 ~O q q * GARDENER * Nigbts )!er \\'eek. Must be couple, $3 hr ea. + auto is nationwide and ·listed on ENJOY YOUR WORK le travel ~penses pa Id . , Cott• Me1i1 Are• ! BOYS & GIRLS Be yo~ own bcu! Part. or =-si:i. Start $2.25 hr. Call ~iecf~ !. ~llifk~JS the American Stock PROVIDE A GOOD lJVING Fantastic beneflta:. ca 11 Work Fr0m 'I Newspaper Camera Min 16 F~'-Island Utime. Your own area.1 -;;;,;;;i;.;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;; l ~~~~-~...:.:~~-1 Exchange. U YOU want to FOR YOUR FMULY Lynn Man;ch, 8 33-2 700 . :, • 10. Lido Isle, ·Balbo~ ._.....,, I' 9Zi'..Oll5. be part of our expall.tjon \\'Oru.:ING LOCALLY. Dennh1 & Denni! Personnel , Peninsula. Contact hlr. N..-port ~ach °!!.1~-lnco~:-GNoWU'aO_.p J. C . PENNEY CO. OLDER Lady who can drive, program, we will train )'OU. Call Mr. Tucker, ·f>49.3ll0 Agency of Irvine, 2082 Your Home ' Bacbtnnn 1 th DAILY Betwn .9 lrtl am·or 3 l< 5 pm ....... wmen. LAI." w. ay part time cornpunlon, ltc. For oonfldential interviC'i'. Equal Opportunity Employer Michelson Dr. :~ PILOT or :an S:Z.Cl21 & Equal Oppor. ~eJoyer 1j;:7117 or 534-ll<44 2'N::;poah~n a':!:h' -hswk .. far older couple, s. cat\ Valley Realty (TI4) ~!!'!~~~,.;,!"'·"!"""i•f~*:SSoc;cc•'YS:-!BkoiGDkil-JCicM;o;po;;;;:;-f .Top Commi1iion1 ~ leave application. 'iiici>'"ffi'Pli""'E'i. :1"'~!'.:-641-ct.:'"'1'1"5m 1•63!>-0W'"'ii;iii'IO""'iiioi'ii"'i;;i;Miis ... W ... oliiiff. SAl~RS. bandworlt· ys, r1 , * 558-1311 * F.qua1 Oppor. Employer CONSIDER A CAR~EER GARMENT cutter. Exper Has Opening For ; OPTICAL LENS C~ER, REAL' ESTATE en,&: aeam!ftresse=--H~~~~lnd~~~:;t J!!!!'E!!q"'aal~Op~por~.!!!E!'n!O'l>!!loy~er~I ; BUYER WITH LARGE l'NTL pref. or will train right PART-TIME 5::!!fe~t :,:tai!ote== Salespeople! You have your TaySloArLMAaDde ~1!"K· E--R «l20 Birch St., Suite 104 TELEPHONE SOLlCITORS I Women's apparel, jr's, &: LIFE INSURANCE CO applicant. 5 dys wk . BEAUTY OPERA.TOR 642-544G own private desk & phone. ,....,.. • New;>ort Beach 8.13-8100 for non-profit athletic club. l &iris' 7·14. Should have Development of two agents 7:45-4:15 $1.50 hr to 8tar1. ...,....,..,..,..,..,..,..,,I Same location 18 yrs. New F/time. Ne\v El Toro Dl•I A Job ~5 $270. mo. sa.la.ry fpr 5 hn; merchandillng degree &/or required in area. $10,0CK)./ Apply 837 W. 18th St., Costa Excellent working· conds. PART TIM(. or exp'd real estate sa1es Restaul'Mt. can eves aft No Char,. To You per day. Apply 315 E. 3rd practical exp erienclll . year,,plus commission. l\t esa. Mon -Fri, Outstanding Benefits · people \\·e\come!' can ror _5pn1, 830-4930. Ask forl\fgr. EstablMled 1965 St., H.B. 9;45 ,or 2:45 I Pleasant surroundinp. No Xlnt fringe benefits. 8::stJam-noon only. Apply In Person inttrvley;, 531r-1100. pressure. 8 hr day. 5 day f':ltl7 ~ Quintan8 JO.. 4 30a lOA!\l-4Prit ~ ffiUR W.E, L•chenmy1r, Rftr SALES SF.CRE'l'Exe•. TARYYP." w-_1,. t"B,; M&. week. Xlnt opportunity for .,. ·:>wr -: : GENERAL 1860 N rt Bl d CM EXPERIENCE .. ... ' ' I Eq...i Oppor. ·Emp1~-· m/f ewpo v ,, · · DI t •-~·ul ' day/~· "P' · ~~~st:ie~ Se~e=~ i~ Sal -~~JngK NHclecl Now! IV,J~ I or Eve. 67M577 · NOT NECESSARY· 'xl~t a~s!rt~1~· ;Ith N.wB: . . x ; -... emente n-..ier 00 ., .. •-~-. ~-. -· EST _A_.. ...-.11...... , -~ 93i72 ,..,., .....,UUI ......... __. I · Newport. $2'.50 start. l\fust ATE: 6 llcemed meat co. ··""""' t''""""'~ Rolutne'to Qlassltied ad No. i pref'd., but v.ill tn.ln. Apply ./Typ sts be responsible&. personable. CAUFORNIA sa1 people needed to lease Individuals TO SELL AtEAT 1111. rbaily Pilot P.O. Box TOO~ DIE1.r. MOLD llllEI ! P 0 Bo 95 •--Cl a.ry · .... """""' to exp. 1•--·otorles JOB OPENING, Nueprintlng, UNrTED ·Multi Million S Whole~ Mtg.-·,.uani.•"'" ""11. Send ; CA!i»JET maker.carpenter between 2:»4:30 p .m . ./Cltric•I 494·TI33. offices and b u iJdlng s . DIRECT'l'O.TilEPUBl.3.C, 151'.t o.t.MN ca 92626 11· trainee,· for fast growing Hambarger. Rainlet, 1545 ./Keypunch $57S BANK Newport ROn Henr·y, Income,·beMfits, bonuse1 & ~ ' · ·Small electronlca firm needs 1 boat manufacturer. Apply Adams CM. Ask for Atr. ./Technlci•ns JR. SEC'Y T;,2..-023t. co. expansbt are outatan-.:;a;r.,:ar.orARY I RecepUOnlll , f:xperlenced person w/ablll· I' . 8-ll 17422 Derian, Irvine. -"-~~··~------Ute sh, good ~ C ding Job Security. ·,piiiral""o(Oce 'y,'Ol'k. ,.Sh ty to dcsip '& tab mold$ or CAR EE -= ./Accounting 37 Hours Per Week 630 Newport Inter Dr. R. E. career training. Small o( i.:dvancement e;-ccellent. not ,req'd. In O::>sta P.~etla. dies from detail dra'A>lngs. ,~. R OPPTV Cook Continental exper . ./As11mbler1 WESTCLIFF . Newport Be•ch classes. Penional atlention. G-at ·-•n;,,,. ,, ........ am. St!nd resume to Class1nect. Good wo..t.:~ .. comit. Day I_,. Dynamically ll'OWing finn, need only apply. See 6 Acadamy Schools 548-1192 '" ..,.., g ... .--.. • d 196 I n...11 .. Pilot ·-~ , t in lrvh>e re q u Ires Richard Detanna, ch e r , Call Dottie 540-4450 Per90nnel Agency '44 14 4 Addltion11.l tralnin&: (or top a l'IO.. • c o IJCUl,J" • ' shift only. , • ·indivld"-' Balboa a ... Ct b ,~ IV NEVER A FEE AT TEJ\IPO ('fark tit r -terl p-,,.·-~ P. 0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, 1.' ....... 1 Oppor. Emplo,.r I ~ .... to handle currant L-.,J u ' .u .... 1 ' TEl\'lPO Temporary Help !651 E Edin....,,, S.A. An Equal Opportunity acasONNEL '""""""'"M;: Johnson Ca rJ63j ....,. ..... 549 3041 I'~ oUk:e a: bi.'-1"< 'llt"Ork le Coast Hwy, N.B. · . ger, Em 1 y•r .. ~ _,. o~.3 • · --IJ J ""t"d 542-8836 P 0 .. CLERK (113) • •v-"""' SECRETARY. Pe-·-nt 1 ... .._...e"' a vancing COOK . All around '"'"'"' l!"'"""'""'""'""'""""'""'""I I!-further w / a cc n ti experienced. Immediate. l'rUml LIQUOR C_LER~ . P.lrt. Tirfte Job n::vy man u f ac t u r l n g EVERYO~~~Ai.:s ,J\fEAT! ~lb~':U:'~~a, Typist .C responstbilltleg, Ex.per . -r49i:-9950~*r---l---111i11Uft,l-----1 Permanent-evenmg-pomtton.----..-::= .. Jn c-A-•·· .. __ L--' I YEAR EXPf j'"~" -ibould Inc 1 u de w'Ol'k Afust be over 21. e.xper. Flexible nuw"ll, HMpltaJ!ty· QDftlpaedny ~· ...... -~ .... '""" Sales S!t.iitTAr..Y law office. ..... At I• All W• N-~ To '" wtinu1tlple general ledgen,. COUPLE, motel trainee, as-SECRETARY pt'ef. but not nec'ess. Hostess Service needs Imm iate ·opening for OVet 25. tYP/ h !ling •u• o:1.. ... ~ trial bal's & adjusting slst. mgr., malnt. & desk. 673 7530 A.i.\t onl lntelllgent, women to individual who enjoys heavy DO YOU WANT Allb N 1 s ~ spe ·Get You Iilto This Great I•, e-ntriet:, u well u --~1 2376 Newport Blvd., C.l\I. · · Y· wei""'me new famll\ea. You contact with gc_ neraf pu_bl.tc, ...i-req. 0 eg exp req. Local Firm That OUen •--~·-3967 LI t •t h d 3 -h good "' nd fil To Call On Restauranta SIQ y,•k. 54()..0830. Un"•··-'Jy Good •--f•"-, 1s omce skills, Inc lud ing 645--• ve n .,ot ers 1w1per, ,viii need a car & .. 8;5· ·~Ptng: a .mg u II K Bov ...... ix:-1..,.w. ' 1 ...:===<;,...~=~~--ISalary comm e n 11 u r ate I I chlld world Skill S per job t b To Sc We nown SERVICE Sta. A t t e n d . 1'hey Promotl! From wtthln. f typ ng •. sa,l ary DELfVERY& w/abllity, exper. &. sc~age re~ k,::f typewriler.Call 54T.-3095 Jor · s. u .blllt wf eragel.Jne?$800Draw PJtlnic. exper. Nc !lt To$.OOto Start&The ·1 commensurate weducatlon STOCK MAN qualifications Send resume mo ier, own rm • "' e s lnterviewappl re1po n s 1 Y Ol' &$150Car Allowance J. 1 It exper. Call 833-9182 for . off. call 67"':>-'1001 for detnlls ' employment and reception +Fantuttc Benefits. appl!ar. Avail 3PM Dally. Employer .t'IQ'll Our Fee ) appnt. Full time, days .. ~lust be to P.O. Box 2322, Newport LIVE-IN light housekeeping, duties in corporate offices. (Employer Pay• Our Fee) Apply 2590 Newport Blvd, Ci1rol 133-9145 !' CAREER Woman ...... _ -"" 0"er 18· Note: this Is not a Beach, Ga 92663· child care. 5-1 d11"". Sal11"" PAY THE BILLSI Some penonnel experieOC9, Carol •••9145 CM ·"9rsonn1I RtMM.lrce1 "'"" n.,.,..s Summer job. l\tust be avall. ...,~ _,, htlptul but comn•ny will -$500+ mo st. Must be u les "''hen school starts. See GENERAL Of.lice Oerk, 40 open. can 842·2995. If you Have A Year Ol train ~ this field . ..-· Personnel ·Resources SERVICE stalion attendant, Agc~cy: 1151 Dov\, St I oriented. l\tr. Lyon s Harold, 49J E. 11th St., hr y,•eek, full Co. benefits, MACHINE Payables & Want A Great Call 557_74.70, 9:30-f!PJ.t Agency· 1151 Do~ St fully exper, days. Good Suite ll2, Newport Beach IMS-5455. Costa Mesa. An Equal ()ppty E nplo Loi..'8.1 Firm With Roon1 To ASSOCIATED Suite u2• Newport Beach pay. Oass A tnechani~. _!_ree...!...Jo'ee & Temponry I! CASHIER • Hostess, Dontol •-si'itont Storer ·Cable Tv yer. O;LRATORS Move Up, Call. They Free, Fee le Temporary 'I'llneup & catb~'l:p. Xlnl TYPIST $S2S I restaurant exp prefrd. See ""' 2139 L.agUna Canyon Rd, • Oller Unllllftlally Good CONCRm ~==---~~-1 pay, 5 day1. Reilly s Aroo, Be Wul od ff I ' flti.911 McLeod, Ben Brown's Periodonli11t needs exper. Lagww. Beach 'JRAIN Benefits. Pays to $570 . *RSALEScal Eat.le Jn·-tmenu l9tb '&Newport C.P.f. ~~led Inn\~ Oxn,1~x~ I~· 49!r2271 f·Ume asst. X·raY CeniO· To Start PRODUCTS .... 1cg-talion nd I!" cate req'd, E:.:panded duties GENE It AL 0 FF l CE, (Employer 'pays Our Feel Small, aggressive, R.E. SERV 11 atte ant, This pmltion Is open dut! to ........ UIUI"''" ,.........., ""....,,,' ... ..-DUU11a~~.. ... undmtandin&" of measuring in Mies, development &. SUpenor, Costa ~sa workers. C.O. pays ~1 of ,!~· ~1 ... ~•!.!fi~ .. ~ian. 1.manfor ~~l. H.B. area. (TI<IJ pE,x,,.penn.cncedo!f,..'... ~ .... ~, .. ! Sho u Id b ave bas I c Ci1rol, 133-tl.U An Equal Oppor. E~ investment company, active exper: Days. T!;"aco, 1695 promotion. Great /co· kitchen. N B, call 67)-7722 i5ii;;'iii;-p,;;;;;lQ;it;C"O. l ~""~~fw~~l20~,!'~'"-W'~tt!:!8~19<~ ·-•-• koo 1~-t Penonnet Re10Urces •Ynd le a tlo n ""' one 51"1~/a-·tvl-fee/Abo fee Johll. Call Sally DENTAL Pedodont'·c lab · · !'I WUMll, gaces, 111: w ""6' 0 "-~e""": 11S1 Dove SI REUBENS • -·~ H ~ =• C t I •GEN Of FUll A Put ttm readin& blueprints Some "6 ·-.r openlng. Creal opportunity Allltm , male or fem. · art, ,,..,..._,,.,,, 0 a 11 a '~ Cl • I trainee know dental c e person al tool& req. Suite ll2. Newport Beach lor profe11ional . l\fuat be Small y,'bc>lelale manu!. Pel'IOnne.I A£ef)C)', 2J90 1,'~~ enca terminology & procedwu. Need n1atu.re dependable Opportunity to.i:rogreu to Free, Fee le. Temporary licensed. Local "ottlce. Write n<l'V't!lly co. St:ll1 natlonally. Harbor Blvd, CM i Some chaitside "-X-ray. nonsmokera. S.A. 835-l098. PBX OPERATOR Ct llled ISO I J b Non-smoker, under 3 0 , machintllt. Sm I compeny Now Hiring us ad No. , Dally SOme ex p er . beneficial. ·rYPIST • ~ O &44-0011 Girls-Guys Trav.t atmosphere -big company Answering setv:lce exp., full Pilot, P.O. Box 15ti0, Co1ta Golden's Maaic Wand, 948 TECHNICAL TYPIST I!' , 1 -,'~0"'"-' ~~S~~S~T~A~N~T~ 18-23 Frtt to travel with benelits, Apply or part fune. Apply 007• W. COOKS-l\tesa, Ca. 92626. \\'. l?th St, C.M .. Apply .. lmmedlnte openlhg for in· I D~JAL A S l • ProsMr lndu1trl11 19th, Suite H,1C.l'it, &12-1403 HOSTESSES SALES TRNE $12K llAM. .. dlvld al 1t1 good t I ·~ OppOrlURl'ly :r.~. ~ront or ~::~~';: ~:. t~~~t! Dhislon of Purex c.orp. P/TIMI · ·Fee P.ald to ' 11klll11~ forw d~ta proce:1: '"'""""'""'""""'""'""'""'"I l>gl &. able to atart lmmcd. 2 ~'East.Ball Rd, Anahei m PCB Giant In the pe.per product• dept. f'or appt.. contacl 1 • \\'eeks exprme paid training equal opportunity en1ployer BOOK KEEPER field deaires sharp Ind Iv. for SK I PPER Debbie \\'\Uson, 644-5800. K -1. Desper,•tely Nffdtcl progrom. lmmed. t: ash MAID \\'ANTED · Apply 3-5 Dally entry level ' posltkin. All Avco Flnanclnl Servlct11 • IJJll11w1 SECRETARIES dra,vJng account, trnnspor-· SEACLTF'F i\tO'T'EL Die.on Electronics • 251 !'. Cult H..,-bcneflta. Call John Lobo, equal opportunity e1npl£. Too M"any To List talion rumlshed. For per-1661 S. Coust Hwy. Bl h 8.13-2700. Al!IO Fee Jobs. TYPIST ~ ! AAMES 100-h FREE sonnl lntl!rviow CBll t.-lr111. Laguna Beach, 494·'892 lei1dlng mi1nuf•ctur1r ,Ne~port_ •C Oennia le I>Blnls Pel'80f\Jlel WANTED Fee Paid. Beautiful ottl in , (Swinl Shltt) 4pm·l2pm l'itld· Bureau at 'VJ!j(' 635:1750 10Un--4pin l\tAID. Pflrt time days, pref of Printed Circuit Equal Oppor. Employer Al(ency or Jrvlne, 2A:l82 Il'vlne Complex. Stort $450. nltc. Employn1ent Agency l\lon·Fti only. expd or will train, Udo Burdi It ... king qu•I-Recept. Trainee , to $-l50 lo1ichelson Dr. AlllO Fee Jobi.-Call Rlla fl.flnimum of 6 m 0 • 1 Costa Mis• 556-1100 GIRL \VANTED no exp. will Short• Hotel, 67~ lflec:I c•ndklate1 for It's Wh•ls"Up Front SALES . ' John*'"· ~. eoa .. tfll keypunch u'Orkllli ecper. 2706 llru-bor Bl., Suire 201 train, to niake Draperies. ,.,~,-A~N--b'a~in-"-1~0-, ~w~h-..,~"' stock room, Inspect Jon, That Counts! t'rlendly &. Better fflshlon Ir: 1por1swe11r. Licensed fOr 100 Tons Peraonnel Agency, 2f 9 o ::z:,c ino or m~t An·•he~ No. Euctrf6-1120 :.o~,~~'riay, CM. MUln ~.~a~er.$4~::1w~~h~ ~~lt~1l!~1r:cr:: =ctl~~c lnd~"t· S:f. :: f~n.b~tl4t =a r:~ or better. 131' Gall Rig_~·11-;"~'~'."°'~=~8:''~~-~-· ._CM_. ~::::;_-I S C f ~"""~:!"!'~~~ .... l"! I GllU.. or Yoll"I "c>n11.n freo 1 yr, Over 25. Tall, ,neat. chine _.._, photo pr inf.. Tn:tmtfldous benefits & l\fn. Oiapman, 9: 30 lo 1 om aed Ketch. Daily sails fHO lerk DISH W ;.\SHER needed to tra~I In mo&w homt. 64f.8..IM. I i"'""tncl locatkm. Call Uz Blalce. SALES Mlp for gift shop In • · Jl'f•ll• 50 •"Pm+ IBM Selectric, i/h immed, l\lon·Fri, 8-3, Cook flnd look aftft' elderly I ;;i;ii;;i;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; "I• it, incl Jrd 83l-Z100. ~ls &-Dr:nnis Nn,'{lOrt Beflch. ~lature wo-of( Waikiki In Hawaii . 70 ~fission V1ejo, 581-3232 genUenWL •21.61, lilllillf!ofD shift oper1lng1. Will Peraonnel Agency or Irvine, man. l\Just be 11.ble lo ,_'Ork ... , ., ...... r Sec~rv DRAFTSMAN GIRL FRIDAY, pirl-tlmo, ~ train aharp oppllcont1.1~2M2""'M'=-=""'1="°"""'°'=' =.-m• S.<l'• "S"n'I, 67.1-283< Rmh reply to ou4 • ' 2 Yr.s min. e~r., plumbing A.I\(. oUice, 25-4.i. Apply 8-W1 are •n ••t•bllshtcl, REC~PTIOHIST for appointment. SANMAI J: T.vPlnc 5:i ""'Pm + ffil\I & <'lectricaJ f.iC'ld prtfrl. 10 a.m. 1260-B Wga.n, C.l\1. TRAINEES . reput•ble 9rowlng com-. Scrffn cUl1, p-eet vlilt St.LES Ol"l'!IOn, IUi. supplies $ '• Selectric. •·h 8J · "'Pl'l· Xlnt bcneJits & ,l.,'T0\\1h GOOD JOI riny· with ~ IMne-Wkh good t)'pjnJ Y.1.ll be A J?.l<"tUrt' frartlts. 40 hr wk. "! tntfftltofe.xperience lnln· oppo rtun \Ur.s. Ple:i...<1e: ed t t In •-• 12-6 -·--ed --~u F II & /I I M•r Ore-promo! o attreary a ""f'l"Y i;im, •uaorw . CRUISES c:·~. _. • con1~ct Jack r·o1ey, 5,;6-6700. Rttlred mtn or pC'nsklnffll u p t me County airport, Appl··•y": lhor1 period of time. Salary 190 s. CoUt H"''Y· Lquna mD . DR'S ASSIST•uT whO ~Ire 1u;:;11n • Wttk to •· Call Rita Johnlon, Bea('h ~ ""' ... 0~. No -,......., Int 1E!'-rv1ew1 n',~ow"for .. --~ C In. I = Madi .\: Elellah orltntfd. YOW\&• lady (1J.28l to wotk " ..... ••. uuuu Plllltkins In ,..,.,,,__ Co. DlCEON ~. oasta. rcnonnt Savi R Tm I $8300 -40-+ , ___ ' ··-""-6~. ~"... """'t!Y· mtlHartor BI,~. y"l'.''IPAN .IANOK 2427Hl1nl_ingtonDr. ..... . -r··· • '... mK:10r II A!t.\J:llant/l't'· --~O~U~A~R=D~S~~-Mt,n1l be O\'t.r n. bOndab\c & CM fOU C, -la ....,_1 De 1 t"<fl!lonlot In ,....th •Pl· No In aood phyalc:al cond. llav ,::.;:.,..,=====--=I ON THISI San Marino, Ca. 91108 t'tD 11 •. m. Mon-Fr1p ric;p. necH!llcy. \\'e lt'al n ln11~~ ,N<edOrantull '"eo· p/tlme car & telephone. Go to ·T . Electron1'••, n E c E PT I 0 N.J ST wtth Fet! Pak! PACIPIC MUTUAL you.. Apply in 1~1~ llfttr-,gua, .... 0110i U\IJe.~1 • are11. Toe Market 1neattJt you or tN bookketptna: 11kllls, for Friendly lndlv, 10Ugbt for (213) 684-2777 noon or eves. 2930 \\:',l. Cat. C•ll (21.,) 4~. 8'im· ttlet>bonf'l ouro~. • iaartPl'-'t I ndu •tr in I ~at oppor. w / fft mou•l-::=======~~1 1 '100 Newport Cent'r Dr. ltwy .. Ne1\tp0rt B~nl·h. !'lpn1, Mon thna i:· r 1 . <n41 m-14.J.1 _ . IRC. p I a 1 11 c • co., Costa ............ Temnc Jocillon 11.l N'ewport 8f'ach . Lln\.Ttnce SeeuMl)I, Inc. I For ln.lormltion Mtan/N"'pt v!r. alf>..62t.1 .. ~."' -Ot>l>or. EmpJoYff ORll.G CLERK, vrof•"lonaJ HO-ST~ISS C-AS-H-11-R TIC TOC SYSTEMS ben•fll•. Call Marlon Monn, ---------•! Phann.cy. No ev~ or Sun. 11522 Ven K•rm.-. &~. AlllO }'~ Jobi. Must be ~enced ~ln HX, 1:.~perlen..-e(f, over 21. AlJPI>' E<lu&I ()ppo(. l:tn.ployu Jrvlne,·Ciflf. '26't t•J·•tn Ohct•c.hd Dennig A Dtnni11 Pf:l'IOnnel ....... er1*T dept."' '1\ckneas •upplll"•. In rE!lOfl. VELVET -~ ..... -....... 1\itncy -or lrvlnt, ~ ~ .._ Top,.,.~. mttt, lnl!, pl'Ont TU RESTAURANT. ~IG!\.IT lrnc $.UO 'Vi·k £qual OPl»rtimlt)' I. __ __,,__ fltf"lllOn r. • Piiot ~ a ha r I n f .... C.O L L.l: C -W f k>u hland,~'-:ewpon. ~uarn .a:t....., prcl'.d. -e-1nplo~r.,n1-1 Mt , 1 PHARMACY $40-"580 Cr.ntl"r. Mr. RJchanb, ~-1..,,.,. ..... ,.,..., • ., -. . . ' . -. r • r -. ·. -• . ........ ' . . , - For Clwllled A4 ACTION Coll A DAff. Y PILOT . .. ,_ '42-Hll • ' • • J9 PllOT-AOVERTISEA WN~. July 17, 1974 Wfdntsday, J11ly 17, 1974 DAILY PILOT ilp lN•nted, Mil" 711t ~-tl_,qo_,.. __ -:-:*' !§! ' iii i'umftVre· Iii AGCill-y I071 Mlicolla-.. -.;..P.;;;•tt.;... _____ IOl7 Pianos & Organ1 -Boats, p_., 9040 j TYPIST FR.., LOVE -AiRCompre11or -JoylPO\Vf~R?.tO"VlER$25.Ref(lg, lofACNIFfCENT Umbrella PRIVATE PARTY WANTS SUPER DELUX&: l''INB estate Jewelry, ~ flllAL 3 DAYS Twbtair, Type 10T2-.4 . $25. i\larble Bailn 101;1 ~· Cockatoo & Scarlet fo.1ackit.w TO BUY PIANO 1''0R VEGA VOYAGERl ·Our mall room needs · Rn bronus porctlains; 1 I n e ll•ldl la a 214 yr. okl yellow ., Immediate available S1950. l''uldinst doors ~·. Jo'WUnti P 11 r rot a, comp It If CASH. 30' DIESEL TRAWL.ER Accunt11 typlal, ~ w.p.m. cryflal, ru&•, u r "be labradot In need of a family 21>15 Placentia, CM 113 Pole $7. f·LP £ngme Sl3. w/bcautifu! ca ii e 5 & ~-~*c..o"':='~-!)l"-;'45'-*-,= On display Now! !- No t!Xpt'l'. IK.'C. App I y :~lque:t I:~~ mo:u~rion. wllllnr to give Iola ot love FURNITURE Ml .. , IOIO Bnlss boll• $2.50 Volta~e driJt11o'Ood ~he• & lolJI of s_porlint Good·~·'--'°" F'\berglass'n teak! • N.-iUona.l S)'lltemt, 4 3 6 1 2200 and undf:rslandlng-and lot IC a Jn\'erfer · S4. Eltttric drill food. Sa.crlllce $400. each. _ _..._ .Fu11 Dil-;placemel)t! : ~~~1 o.sd. fi:n . 546-1360. .;~;'pp=,;11;:.::.;.= .. =---••'"'"11 ~!'°°, ~~o run,,·hShe 11 AKC bratded rug t?~n= ~.~ t ~in f~o:= ~~~: &a ra~rcci1~:i~~~ s,",,o,,wN,•,NooG, n.,.,""',·o~ro' ECOSANOFMEtc' ALI ---jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;j;aj.;.;:;:;;;.;;.;;,;;.., __ ..,,.._'-1-i"m•'s ei-ni w Pa Pe rs Twin bed set i.1ecl counter S25. Socket !SCI 1 ,... Ible. WI! •wJd ltlte"t S75. Newly veretl wtna: SID Tires s.; Chevy St8rter l200 or 67~3662 _W;:.';;:"';:"';-;;;''=i"O::i:'~:::;lll=:,;;OOc:,-,=:::;-1 Only $27,750 ' URG~NTLY FREicHT DAMAGE S~ llff her Co In iood people One ol Or&Je County'• lllOlt ch&Jr S75. andlron ~l · 3250· 1 GOLD (.TOwn Con<k>ur f6 GAGE shotgun. Xlnt cond, WILLARD BOAT \\'OR~ • t' ,• I·· • • •I ' •, new If o t Po Int with a WG yard or a ranch ~ ~. 1.fillt lltoo , $1., 4 artist's $10. 646-· PAITOl Bird le cage $70. Call $!50. Model 06 Rem 22, $85. f'actory Dlrecl SnJe11 • NE OED . ~~ru:~:~~~~: ;~~t ~~e ~:i~r;'11ot~t fu~~d=~ leia ch: ~i:~~ict=~arn'!i i."'l~ SCRAM-LETS ~~..;l;c•"°o.::';...&;;;._Or~t:c•;..•.;;• __ 8090;...; ~.~dlo, HIFi St.1091 ~ o~,~~S~E~~~1 WatNnlf, Credit, B ot A. love ln retum, do not call =~·a "DesJaner's De-all. Origfna.I oU palnti11gs ¥.. -Xlnt l'Ond. Twin Scrc11o·s, :225 TYPISTS = ~~~~m-~~ Ana. =:'xu~t 6 75-86 24 eves & 'SAYE FROM rceJi:Y~ ~::~ 2 ~::j ·ANSWERS • PIANOS B~JIL~·I:e~rr~t~eo;d~~ ~: :~~~~~~~·. Vefec~1~r~~: SEA.R'S 19,<m anr Air e PUPPY WORLD e M ern davenport with end Menace_ Adapt_ Valve_ • ORGANS 1'~ l\f /A ~1/s 1 ere 0 !-"'X rllJlge. hot \\'Bier heater, cond., u11e<f two mos., like ~1111 • Ge11nan Shep. 40% 18 68% lab!e attached, $25. G.E. l\! rlad PLAIN RenfalS fr $5 tuner/amp. New F light Wiowcr & he8d. Slia• 6, ·-1 malnt h~1 Chlh···•ua Tl Rotisserie $10. • Foot •tool Y -Oeck "-ntrol P•-1 lh•l 11n.-•al i'llenal gas tadks. VOLT new. _.., yr · .,, ... ' ...,, 1• n Y 11. Iron RJte lrone• I'". 8cauty tades. but a plain ....,, '"" "Ii •-m•nl ~ ~19· ~••., Pit Bull• "--kil. • -IN po-up at a louch. Tuning ~lust sell pvt party. tJp.ke Tempor1ry S.rvictl -·-~ l>Jl--..u ............. ' ' '-"'-' • carpen1er'11 ancient tool girl stllyl; PLA forever. ""' offer. See 11.1 3862 Sirius Di-. •1 _, Pl THERM ID o R self.clean poo Pomennlan, Irillh Set· eFURNITURE chest 39 .. x 2'3" "" Golf C'-• C Open Ni9ht1 'tll t meter in Put Io u t Pu I HB Hunlin"ton l!arbour "'·'d ajor Ml.'Cllciu lln oven n ...... e ....... w/grlddle ter, .American E •ki mo, eLAMPS .....,. OPENING ~n m orona '.t•t: 'til5:30,Sun.12..S auxiliary jacks. ·Stereo . ..,. ... Now AvaUable · .-..'6 "'" u..-100 MIXED PUPSt cart $.1. 3 plywood hinged de! l\far Patka Sh o P, r. headphone jack. l\lain unit J&land, 213-592-1836 Temporary :;ervtce bit-In. Avocado, p e r 1 e c I St:i·· Service MOii Breeda: •ANTIQUES ~ boards $5. 2 maple Margie's "House of Many 1ft'Pl1no1 & Gr•nd•* In !A'Ood grained Walnut 2'Z' DIESEL, Super swrt. 3848 Campus Dr., SUl!e 100 coud. 613-6653 Open Eves. 531·5027. 'Jb"""-& f..W... television eablnell $15. ea. Things". Let me sell your Baldwin -Cable -Ollckering veneers · with Booe "'hite Cutty Cabin, Sport Fisher, Newport Beach st6-4741 LI.KE New A d m 1 r a I ••--J 1 .... J Misc. odds &t ends make art 'A"Ork, handmade gifta & • Fischer· Kawa.I · Kimball top. 40 watts of pov.·er. itoo. ro.any xtras included. ~lnl · .. ,, ha·-a compiete·pa-•-ge i:oppertone, aJde by ai~, GuE_~.--~14 tr.,ma.J!. J ~ 18111 & 19tll oUer. 4-6 lpl -~1-.... w.._~·M• creations on consignment. -Kna\)e -M;•:on &: HlllT"''"I . Call 548-3404 after 6pm. M.F . To11,·er, new factor;• de~. "' " ~ 19 eu It ---r<fri(. ~~~. w · -· U Th1ln., Fri ~ •• , r Fo• furthe• lntonnaUon """"' • Sohm" • Stein-$l2 000 0 ,.,..,,,, of employee benents. We pe; firm.•567-1619. Beaut. llnea. Sac. Can't Sal. &: Sun. 3061 Loren Lane please l.°8..11 l\largie at \\'a.Y. Storey&: Clarie • Win-PIONEER SXI<m ~· Teac & ~·knds, a~~-3~03 ' e:vcs pay top wagcs.1 All office A R-t W-L-ra/Dryerl · Wk~.:-CM645-0715. 188 W. Cost.\ Mesa. 6'7>3606. ter • Wrulitzet . Yamaha A 1S()0 W 11o•/trans1storl!:cd lndustrlal &kills are needed. ..., -.....,.. 1Dam ~ 2 SLIDING I.us d New Splnefs 11 ......... $595 auto• reverse. (2 Cs-38's) 197() FIBERFOAl\I .19· Eq ual Oppor. Employer '' $2. Wk. ~I malnt* • BEA•.,.;. AKC At Ch an • "1"11 I & ~ REJo"'RtGERATOR 20.6 ~tW, Used from ............ S95 dual 1212.;,~l xlnt cond. fiberglass bay boat, RGal~ * m::.um u~ pane 11 • comp. new .......... frosUeS!i, 200 lb lreett.r. S600 531)........., 8, I/B-0/B, 21. hrs 101al Pupp'es. cham,p Crown JI C D 11ell~ng $70. Modem aofa & Like new. $215. 8' fioral Players " .......... $895 • • Sell WAITRESS I HOSTESS, HOOVER portable waah111&: Creal line all colors, rea.s, 2' ampu1 r. chair. AI, $70. 12xl7 rubber oouch & chair $50. Dinette Grands " ....... : ... $395 RCA AM/Fl\1 Stereo console tinlC. ~ COSJ $7000. ,,;: part. t l mo. Experien<:ed machine. Xlnt cond. $150. or 'l96--8701 Newport Beech back rug, ifldoor...outdoor, lab!<!, ext. '2'', 5 chairs $40. *°RGANS* \\'ith four. speed re<."ord :f~~ 673-~ eves new. only. best otter: 142-7SM pup pl Es, pure br e.d (Near the 0ra"'9 N~ S90, sell $19, twin bdrm Sean Combo radlo/phono, Baldwin· Conn · H8mmond • changer . XJnt cond. $99., BLUE DOLPlfJN FREE 1 PICX UP-Rers, Norwe•ian Elk llounds, s COUllly Airport) set $JO. ~27'6. maple cab .. needs \.\"Ork, Ka11,•ai. Kimball . Lowrey · 581·2619. 1 YR old, !8. GLASTRON;,\•/ •• 00 Via Lido NB ' ~ .. "•-•a• Call Tho -~===,,.-,==~~I trlr. Like brand new. Sea!i: ~ • · · Appl S I: ......_.. ,...,.... wka. $30/no pa p e r a. SILVER $75. 540-0456 an S pm. Rodgers -ma' • .. m· 6. OLYt.1PIC STEREO S, ny .,..pd. y. 8 302 (:i" WARElfOUSEMAN ·Looking anytime 675-a58 64&$l30 ll-7pc ·place se ttin .... Wallace aha · Wurlitzer. CONSOLE. SCLID STATE, ·• vi . • Summer W•rehouH ·~· I IUYll Op"-SI'""" molor. An Spm, (213) 592· for mature. alert lndl dual G.E. electric dryer. 3 cycles ·1 St. Bernard pup, AKC Rei:. Grand Baroque + servicing •• o.q;an • ·•·· ·••• ....... "" $100. 541-5838 lS41. • willing l.o learn le a(.'(.'ept Uke newJ65.• $50. 3 mntha old. 1 mlnla· Cluranct pc's. $3'.JOO, min. bid. Avail Good, used furniture & Lowrey Spinet · ••••.•.• $195 responsibility in estab. N.8. 962-1965 lure poodle pup, 9 wb old, New quilted rebuilt mattress tor inspection. 1118, Thurs. apoliances or \viii sell for you WurU12er Spinet, new • · S499 ~ CLASSIC 18. Sou t h cads t ::a_rn1 in:lv~ l':ri yacht~, R E FRI GER.ATOR-Freezer-pedigree $25. 962-4732 • A box sprlnga se!J. Full "-Lido Nord. Phone 675-2234/ MAS TE RS AUCTION o*rt~= t:is~is ...,::-~ I ~ }f ~~tra~.ba)n~ s :n~: ut:'~~gtut..:. -;:;r ,.;; Whlrlpool eacellent cood. GENTLE beaut pupplet, twin '""· 642-8!99 "'' appnt. 6461616 or 13i-9625 . le.. ,,, .. ,, ..,w ,...,. l<>p, xtfo.<. person. Filling of ordel"ll & S'l5 • .o48-881Kl mother ta • boxer, healthy, 646-8686 taorp,.::;;9625 ~UTY SHOP Qua 1i 1 Y aft. 6 or Sunday 839-0974 FULLERTON MUSIC J 'iiiiiiiiiiiiimiio J S2950. or best oiler. &la-l!G-3 general 'A'Rl'f:house duties. SEARS eokl ColdlpOt frost S5 ea. 837-9670 eves-. --tiir~me:i~~ C~~~ Misc. Wanted IOll 18191 t'uclid, Fountain V8lley General 9010 30· CHRIS CONNIE '67. Call 661006. . tree. 1% .YI' old. $175. + IRISH Setter, M/2 yr old.. CONTEMPORARY 8' 110fa. chair, sinks, rou.a-\\'aYll, WANT TO BUY LIGll'rS 557-4136 flyt)ridge, trim labs, bait WHO WANTS TO WORK7 much mott. ~ Needl 11 good home. $50., Kina: IZ water bed reception deak le dryers 122 N. Harbor, Fullerton 8~~· KITI'YMARAN Dinghy, tank, canvas rm. IWim s.lep. DRIVE A CAB! Bicycles I020 CH.8.) SU-6.j77 w/llner, frame, pedlsfal, $DX1. call~ . ~~r YAMAHA l25 c.c. 871-1805 4 hp l\lerc 0/8, deck ehrs. $12,500. firm, 213.781-429t CHOOSE )'OUI' hours, work YORKIE, AKC, MALE ~~ foam pad. $100. 5AVE$10 · , · & tbt, davits, Sll anchor, lT Lar9on JnboardJOutlril.rd ~yo~";_~ ~ New~ l~C~~~. Lia 11 mo's. ~793a ad~· . . OnedW~ton-Detilta t~~ •• 60 rimoU-Mu1leal ln1trum ts IOU IC 0 NT I N U 0 US FREE ~m:· dit~er-213-n 600. Cabowr Camper t11lly ~ -· -B'-·cl &;;;:'Iii TABLE, Oak mund 6 3 -· roa litt, t& ~ . • ORGAN CLASSES FOR ~· Both in xlnt :nd· be 111.ightly handicapped. "'-J es, Af""GHAN female dog, 3 yrs, Sofa i: Love Seat. Antique -never used S25. 675-1345 WE spe<;ialize in ~~ ADULTS. Beginners WILL TRADE l\lAGNlFl· Neat • 0.t!an Appeara.nce. BOYS BICYCLE 10 SPEED champ. Une. Must .ell! Delk, great books. Maple eves or weekends.. exper . 1nstru~ts. ,.,.,. 7:00PM, Intennediates"8:15, CENT Ladies Diamond 19' T BIRD Tri hill. ~ty :~,e'!e~·.::: 21!!: MADE IN FRANCE $1!i(I Make offer. 64.5-5674 , Jldbrd Ii: Frame Lg e SALAD SETS hand carved ."·eek Specials are Collta l\fesa. . Tuesday Ring, for Sail or Po\•:er cabin, 15,; Ol\fC I/O .. all Drive a "'b 6 hn1 or more a ,,..._ llmaer, Hutoh, 96il260 B=iltan ....;. • ...,. Sold at ~ M2$~";i\1:;:' night&, Fountain Valloy -BoaJ,,_~ rood. 645-!2'7 x...,, ~='" w/brat ... day. Apply ln ~non, 2V~ty ~•a1'•. 0'!: l[i CORNER P'P· red·wbt. blue $29.96, (7 pcsl ~ $20. per tin 0f7 w/c!.se s2z> Drop Wednesd~n~ghts•.11Start any 1 or · $4250, Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th --• ....,.,......,,.. .uu:1• r .. ,.... . --olefin upbols. Pr orange set, or $15. set entire Joi. 85 8econd week. 1:'"'' CWJ n Bolt1, Marine Eq. 9030 13' Sea Witch whaler type St C.osl M &: girls. 006-2454 aft 10 am. "" . • uphols. chairs 3 small aets avail. 640-45.15. • l,n_ & see us at charge. Coast l\fuslc Cosla bay boat. 1973 Chrysler lJ!ip ~~·~· ~~·~~""~· ~~~~ 10 SPD Bikes S74 asaemblcd painted chests reas 646-S b l4S yd 2 1 Fiddle, 140 Cabrlllo, Costa :l\1esa. Newport Blvd, at eng. ncm. Call ~ or Stokei, Spokes Bicycle11 3 Llne11 2 Tlme1, $2.00 n;o ' · ubpe' llY 1 -· ds. on,de ~lesa. 645-1703. Harbor. Y~M .. ARll,Dbai""y,i.util·. 8, . .,• boa1211Pl! 642-7880 l I~ !!1'1111!!!"!!!11•••!!!!!! ,C°"''-,~--~---1 m . CllJlle . -.,y s. sun go ELEC ·1 & ml 642-2831 ..-w1 I •dlwlllll f.!lirrlr.. HB, 5J6....«M() &t.536-7697 Natural 3 strand rattan. Drapery Spec. SHOkES · gw ar : s amp. """"'!~~~~~!"'"" Miller J\1arine, &IG-3938 V BuUdlngMat.rla~ Free To You li4S Id~al ·for .tamily .room. 13 INTE!?IORS 2640 Avon St. !~~~i:ea;t::er~.~~~ COAST MUSIC 35HP Evinrude OutbQard ALUM. screen door, gas FREE LOVE pc s inclding bar i&. ~tools, 642-2255 or 548-4654 cond, 645-9675 aft 4pm. Naw Open Ev•ftlng1 J\fotor $75. An lq 8005 $:44XI. Stt to a p Pre c . KITCH. Tbl w/5 ctu"s, $40. Of F & E I IOl5 MON, THURS, FRI 10.9 642-3215 -~I="°-''---~~-· --1 stove, marble bath sink, Heidi I a ,2•L ....... year old 53fr79:KI. Hatch-eover Tbl. $75. Woven c. urn. qu P. -.a• 16t LARSON ftbergli ss. w/40 hp J ohnson, cali\.•as tilt trlr, elect start, $1¥50. wall heater, water heater, s 7a .,. OPEN SAT 10.6. SUN 12·5 BOlfl, Power 7-0r -• Co Anti-u.1 . b windo yellow labtador in need of a r COUCH, S.' love seat. both \\'OOCI. Made, yellow/walnut Cor. Newport & Harbor, CM I "-'-~------•··• ' ..., anllq. lU • cottage w, family willi11&: to give lots of for $40. Drum set $300. 1.finolta Camera, rni&c. ALMOST NEW, Desks, 646-0271. Hundreds of ant I q u es, kitchen sink & disposal. Jove and wv:lenlandlng _. w/Zelgen cymbal (24'') 644-5238 Chairs, Couch, wan Unit, Brookhurst at Talbert, FV 673-900t eves • stained glass, Wood e n 675-1462, 608 Acacia, CdM. and loll of room to run. She n.so. 646-4552. aft &pm. DUNCAN ~·•e table & 6 Credenzas, 64()..8325 or Aft. chain $15 & up, Pianos, & E I -• ·~· 960-6733 rolltnps, 838 w E. 1st st .. Cameras qu p. is AKC registen;<I with WIIJ..E'M' maple van, cht!at, chain, Gu ranges ID" & 6. 644--CM38 Santa Ana. Open 7 days, 9 ,. .. A .. •rvA· C220', 21" ,. ~pen available. \l,e v.'Ol.lld dbl bed, box sprnp le mat. 30", fo.laple Bed set, 7l~EXE="c".-,.:-v7t-o"hrs"°'S"1"51"25;-I ANTIQUE KlmbaJI Upright. to 8 daily. MAm like to aee her go to good ·Top c:ood. $250. Wi sell sep. drawer desk, 2 'J'v,in beds, 7 Dks $15 up, Secy chrs $8/24 M8hog. case. $300. Call DaUlAT lenRS; red, grn ii yel filten ranch style lot. Ple&St!-U =: • 0 ·n Diekl powered 28' Luhrs Custom Sportfisher wt,run 18' L.Y?.tAN lapstrake hull, eqpt. Bargain! SH-'ltti, inbrd. eng, rover & xtras. 6Pl\1 : ' $1800. &W-1607/673-1608 15' DORSEIT, Trailer & 10 IT. Glasspar runaboUt. Top, 40 hp Evinrude, 5351 Steering 11o·hecl &t cableS: Sierra Verde Rd., lt1.<i.ne. $175. 673-9280 ' 4 PIECE Walnut ·~-m tonnal, w/'ilJ & !la nun people v.'ilh a BIG yard or a962-·~,:,7482""~===~~-l ~"'~"'=·"=ben=,.:'"'-':543--0!36C'"'-"~~· Pierce, 867w19 Of, 642-341l17S2-05 ':O:::'T""·-----;;;;;;; set, Oak Windlor desk le Jens shade. ~~ 673-1195. you cannot give Heidi a Jot HOME IS ~LD! Funnture COF'fEE Garden M~tal Honda m7 Honda fn7 chair, carved Wall cabinet. BUSHNEU. Sky Chief n ot love ln return, do not eall must eo too. ~. ':Oilee" i:naJter. ~le •• · Wicker Rocker, TI n s, T 1 Xlnt Mike at 675-8624 eves It 162-1483 1ted ~. rruac househbld lamps, much m o re . Refractor e escape. .,..ke--'-. DINETTE, 6 dWrs, lt!af, furnishings. 4l2 Avocado, .... "----"""" tond. l\tany extras. $150. ,,... co~r 673-3534 Honda tn7 .Hondo fu7 ' .. . ' ' '• " I • • ' :-" • ' I ' I .. '· • ' ' ,_ .. •I -11 1: : ! I• '. I •• •' " '. I! ,, •I ,j I' :! ·I .~ momiags Ii eves .......--. Ask for Ste.,.e. 6T.Hl695. Lava.hie Fuzzy I: H 0 as t!. xlnt cood. $50. 1 • · • 6t6--0783 Cats 1U5 trained Oog, movifw, needs Call 545-7231 l\tAYTAG port ad rye r, PAINT & VARNISH removal good home. Lewes people, * 8 PIECES, nice RATTAN =o gas ~~:a ""s'pec""'ialtyFum. ~ure7_,_,,,our SIAMESE Kitten, rem, 4 mo, 548-7934 after ~:30: FURNrruR.E. Call after 4. M t ~7~ w -••.11:1 Lilac Point, CFA reg, shots, PLEASE SAVE ' ME FROM 842-7011. us se · · BEDROOM aet, marble top S50. 551.:s359 THE POUND! L.ab/Shep ADJUSI'A Bed, ~ uSt!dCall. -~~Rel~~. ~ = * ~:= * Dot• ... mix. Great watch doe;. Best olr over ~ tbls +: couches $ 2 o o Free. 5'4-0030. ~-:.::.==·w;;:;;;Eii.-:--·1;com~~P~•·~··~·~ .... ~~12S6~·==:c:I QUILTS • HANDMADE 0XKERS. ......... parli_ I ADORABLE BLACK ~ WANTED Make Otfer pUppies, AKC, Anahelni: WHITE FLUFFY KITIENS * USED BRICKS * ME M BERSHIP avaJlabJe * 545-2444 * 1-533-1428 8 wb. old, weaned. 6#11& 87Q..456f Newport Beach Tennis Club. ••·~YEO mat 7 ~--'bluff Must 11ell, Reuonable. Ph. Have IOIYM!thlng )'OU want t(I -v • e, JnOI., ~ • * LOVESEAT le sofa custom aft 6pm, 675-3271. Rll! ClllSllltlt!d adl do it I Had sfDll. noo. Unmarrjed Cockapoo wants ·made. very gd qual, never USED Elecb"Ollies pumps, well • call NOW &G-5678. 131-367 you IO take 1 of her 1ree used, Ull1ally bm, 968-7910. 1 en er a t 0 r 8 • Surplus A cotNB•IT IHOI # $UG 8l1MNG GUI)( fOll nee: GM.ON lffE 00. F0< en eel In w--. "..W Call Mory . Beth 6424671, oxt. :l30 &amfli-To-Slim! For Girls, Too! 9177 SIZfS 3•-41 811.i d!'f!u. al11~•·de11 COii. Prl111ed l'•ller11 'IT1 . '''omen'• 8lw1 •r• SI (3A-IG(l1 hu1t "'ltb 40-lnth hip); SI (4n buat._41 hip): I~ (4f bull, 41 hip); 40 (44 buat, ~· 111D): 41 ,,. Mitt. 48 hip); '' (tll "'111, SI.I hlD): 4f (50 bUll, fi, btp); .fl IU lllUI, 54 hi p), ~ n .ot l1lr each 119!1"11. Add :U tttm fur 11e~ Pfllln-11 for l\nt-elau IQll W Jpttial h•IHlllln•: 01Mrw11" thlrll· tlaios dr,li~ff>' wlll t••~ !hrtt Wf'of'i:-Ot 111<1N. :'ltndto M1"11 -M1l1in. 442, U. lft.{ly Piiot, 11111..-11 U••·• J3101 \ll'N latt ,_., N1w \•ort. N.V. 10011.· Print NAM I'!, Al>O Mt:.otll, ZI I'. Nir. And STYl.r. NUll8Y.lt osr. rH•:E !•ATTt:HNof)t)llr rho!tttu"'°nd f(lf',on~ fr" '11. te"' l1111de Nt:~· "PRING· !IUMMKll: r ATTKMN CATA l.OU. IOO~ty)H,•IJJI-. ,!'ft ~\lttft ftxlp/Jfl Send 7k now. Sfo:W • KNIT HolOIC IRiflh ~i1(U,•m:11~n1;r11 ,, •••• 11.zs Ir.I in\ ·~•htOn IKK!k ,.,-ti 00 0 IN!tn\Sc\l'lllj lkNlt, •• ,.$1 00 sassy 8wk OO!s. 493-4810. Must Sell, dinette, swival Systems, lJ) 23rd No. 12 i: WHITE toy pxidle 7 mos. chalr, rocker, aofa, stereo, No. 13 Costa Mesa, 645-M!IO. Male. Free ID aood . home. chests, rn.iac. 646.~ Patio, Dtjltwood ph.nten, Call 546-2848. 3 OU"ome Stool&, $35. ea. As pet90rnll)' designed, lrK. FR.EE to gd home, male Good u New. varit!ty, priced right WI. COCKER SPANIEL. 2 yra. • 962-8734 Jean 644-5380 Has He. 8t6-0J!6 _ Gar ... Sa.. as.5 LIKE new «t" range double ALL white ahorthalred ma.Ji oven avocado $180. Dinette kitten. lD wks, nt:ErutlIOOR bit-in oven & set Mediterranean ltyle $80. Call MG-5392 range top. dining room, 968-9876 ocx; Joond, 6 wka old, b i; patio, furniture, be.by ~1,'=p;::,"'. :....,W~A~T"E"R"7L°"E"s'"s1 w., nt!eds eOO!'.l home. le miac. 115 Sapphire, COOKWARE SE:r, 1till ln 847....sl& . Balboa Island. 673-66S.l cuton. $20. PUPPIES ID xood home. Hor... IOIO 557-2679 Hall cocker, h&lt terrier. 6 GOLF dubs, Stan Thompmon wk old m-nos l\fUSTANG qtr. mare, 14 custom tittt!d for s~z" gal. 4 -Bi Ui"ifuT K lhound hands, 7 yn, Sorrell Fully \\'OOds 8 irons. Almost new ....-a Alale S::763 trained Wettern/English. $12.S. 673-6918 aft 6:30 pm. · $500. Cn4) 897-262'1 FAMlLY Golf Membel"lhlp Jo'REE: BLACK AND WlllTE REGISTERED thotoughb~ Irvine Coast Country Club. * KITTENS * gelding,· hunter potential. $1700 including transfer fee. 546-22ti7 Best offer. Shawn. 496-7344 . Call 675-6138. 2 KI1TENS. 1 all b!ack, long BONA Allen western saddle. m""i:e"=-"w~e.,_lgh~t -,..,.,,....,&-cben=t:h:-.1 haired, 1 gray &. white long xlnt cond. i&KJ. $25, O'Keete. & Mcnitt gas hiµr. 66-6927 alt 5:30. Call 613-3772 range $55, Ha&en jOll club& ~~ Siamese., 7 week&, spunky, ARABlAN WELSH pony. \Veil w/bag & cart $2). 557--3338. outrageous, box trained, 3 trained, some tack. Sac. BANKRUPTCY-Private Sale. females, 546-3684 . $275. 557-1104. at wholesale. 1V's, ranges, • J\IINIA. Poodle, fem. 1 ~ii yrs Llveitock I075 dishwasher. 540-0154. old. While. Housebroken. All lDxl2 YEU..OW shag carpel "'°''· 963-0>!. HORSE BOARDING ,;1pad. Good condition. soo. KJTIEN, grey tiger ltrlped &ck BaY Area. Box stalls &1$-2288. female. Needs loving home available!. Call tor detaila.1 -.=-=AIR~'-,Coodl~=tioner---:;8500""-I Call: 6'5-6674 546-6600. BTU, Sears. like new, $85. Fumlture I050 Machinery 1071 962-4731. 2 UPl-IOL Decorator chairs, Top quality, deep blue velvet, like new, &42-9fGI Don't gtve up the ship! "Llflt" it In classHled, Ship to Shore Rewlts! 642-5678. -AIR.LESS SPRAY GU N , COMPLETE Set Tool M.akt!r Binks Super Bee. :'\1nt cond. Machinist 1001.S, Mikes. n.... ~ 546-9238 Gauges Indi c ators , r•·vpty ......... · Pa.rTell~, CUiien, Drill.5, SHAG RUG, 6.x9 Rust & ete. Gentner & Kt!nned,y Beige, nylon. $30. S\VAG Tool Boxes, 557-85fi6 LAMP, 'vlcker. $10. 546-8582 SEEK& FIND• T Q.,.T R OP 0 A P P L E 0 F S 0 D 0 M N O 'I. 0 A A r 1 S -T~llAM-A NI E. MU I E I B P T AN D £ E W N 0 S M.I J I GNEIPAMUIELLADONTAN HsrNCTOTNOLPccErTNO TILLICPEAINUTEEPENM SHADEGGPLANTTERM~OA AENYAI OER IMTWSUESD R J;'or &ale, la\\'11 mo\\·er $5 . 'J"A'O bird cages $3. New 16 x 2() frame $14. 592-1679. Oak Desk $15. New pair of Bilslein shocks for V.W. . 544·3417. SUZUKI 100, good co~ $100. 13' Boston Whaler, &p Chry, 11100. 846-2733. DEEP frceier $50. Stel't!O, tum !bl I: 8.JJlp. $50. Ca.II 642-9985 • ELEC. Dryer SIS. 9 drawer dresser, unrlnbhed $25. New commode. $10. &12-6666 BRAND ne,.. Cortina engine, p' GT AN CUC I U Z.S WM TEW AT 1500 cC, $150. 518-2318 p G S F C 0 C U C P A Z 0 -0 T E E L S USED DECORATIVE ROCK LPDATAWI EENLTTTYE LA RED•Wlll'l'E-Oil:APt * 567-01~ * E L I T I .. s I T f"o I T .0 L A T E S-I l-SAN-D~l~v"1rn.:i'"'c,,-1.~u,_,-,,J07=--=-po OO CAHPOT OS I OTA MOT I E Set.$6ll. . .,.......,. T S ~ u A a I E S 0 L A N UM T A 0 X PERSIAN RUGS DMRCllTSLIMSONWEEDP 637-G827 ••• In TEST DRIVE HOHl!A TODAY WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF NEW AND USED HONDA CARS IN THE WEST ' SALES . SELECTION~\ SAVINGS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON COUPES• HATCH BACKS • CUSTOM "JOBS" • 4 SPEEDS• AUTOMATICS OVER 'l9 MPG (By EPA R~rds) IMPORT OF THE YEAR tBv Road Test>Magai:irml -'' ' SERVJCE AND PART~ DEPTS .. OPEN MON: THRU SAT. • ~ ' • • . . . ' . ' " ;. -·-------. , :. • •• • ' • . • DAILY PILOT W:;rd:::':.:.":.:."':.:.':...· :::Ju~l>~l:,;7:._, .;_I 1:.:7:.:.4,_,,_,.,.----'"'°=:-::-.--=-:----i==-:--.--r-----:-= "'ioet1, ower 9040 &o.t1, •ii 9060 Bo.ti, S•il ;9060 Motorcycle1/ Moto rcy cle1 Auto Ser. & P•rts MOO •• T::,•uc::::k:,:•:..,_ ____ = :::.::.:..::.:;;.;;:; ___ ...;.f:..;.:705 Scooters 9150 Scoot,r1 91 50 '54 SPORTS FISHER 1~· KORF.LLF. JR. sailboa1 hlUb'T sell \liking 20' clils~ic SUPERIOR Auto Foreign '67 OIEVY 1 ton 12' n11nt 'Tl At.FA R01'fEO 200) CTV, f'lrbrldge, auto pi1ot, falho, 1'11th Jl lghlander trailer. \\'OOd cnhln sloop. Slip.~. l96.! \'A.\IAJIA J:zj cc ,...,in HONDA ~ cl aupt:r chc~ P11r1s hlll hundreds or med bed ·s"'k~. Good $1.J)). 1!!000 mUr11, Im Ill!\ c, llOE'. ratlk.11, tv.•hi .Cl't'\\', Great for beginn .. ~rs. rcnnes Call &15-t!M. St. \ei,'81, iurn signals: rond. 4686 ml. extras $6j0. fo1~h.;11 auto parll ll I firm. 54H:nl . Bu r g u n d "i Be au I . 290 pl ·fuel, 80 a:ll.1 \IOft.lCr, 11.ith 111.-iinMil, Jib, 001'11, 22' \\'OObEN s L 0 0 p Excel. cond. $250. :>1&-24:!8 '69 YtlnlahA 90 ele<:. arart, ~US(ln8ble p~ &: fre e '65 DODGE. ' pl\U. P.ti. AUIOU\Oblle. SS500. 499-l-1389 ftove, retri&", v.·lnch. 2 ba h p:uklle & life jae.kl"ls. O~y days:iUor, stlils, nil11e equip. ';';;;' HD 5 rt 1 ,;;:c--1 fairing, extras $1SO . cklh·cdy. 7".)2-Ui56, 1731 runs good, 8 ply ~a . Call leave 1ne158ie --• 6 .. '" ........, in v.·atcr 6 1unes. 74 .-=. '' · po 'er. .. .. ce · 548-6135 SuptMor, Cotltn lilesa &'" ~~ Audi 9707 'iiii:3soo .. eep1 ' ... ~.-. t'\-oglsti;:tion Included. $600 $800. 5'1~?£IG, Gn.-J...,.,. ~~n•~. ' Call after <lpm .. I ,;,.13,;'-;::H:;:O::,~~D~A-•~=~L.-Su~' -per 9$10 Vo~n1 . ;..;;;,o;. _____ _;,;.;.;. ** 24' SEACAACPER, 1973. or v.111 consider trade for Boats, Sllp1/Dock1 9070 ....,.,.. "" clean! 8600 m~w "SUper :G;;•:;,"°::;.'•;;;I:__ ___ _;,::.:.;. 9570 '72 4 DR Audi JOOLS, AUl°'f 30 hn, like Ue\\', V-8 & trll'. r"'~.0,1!'.!_TRPhilc rquipnlenl. 4.)' Side tie on nlaln w. 11,./D. ·1~, ~~·e.',· ',",,rorig'd chain $950? 4G6957 pp WANTED ·n 1'"'0RD Club Ol81cau Van, A/C, 11le."'e0, new rartl~a, SJ-ps· 4, '""'· ,~ ... ,.. ~ "" 11 .in.. ru.rne. .O-.. me. c""'-U70 CASH PAID 12 " A/C Atr P/S S3'1:i0 64.J.5670 \\'kdys I -'N" EXCLIUSIVE Ne\\}IOrt. Ctl v.·cek .....,.s, W/trade for Vett 64.;..1621 I-"~""'""'------PR " ' ' ' · · galley..OJst $17,000. Best il 979-00.'il . -· --* '73 YAMAl-lA 2Ml fi!X * For Your Junk Automobiles. deluxe Intel' .. new lit'es, xlnt '72 AUDI lOOLS. 1unroof, u!r otr., over $8800. Fin. l\VRll. 3·1 Islander. rand new cus· \\'Ai.'ITEI>-Slip or side tle fdr 196t HONDA 350 CB Xln't L'Ond. Best offer. C1ill 642-4930. L'Ond. 968·8816 aft. 7. AM-FM & Prlt'ed to Sell. n·4t~l88 eves. 497-MI ton1 tionl. Suiter loaded. By innall 22 foot Mllboat Ct1ll $ilOO •ft 842·7259 •• 533-7007 aller 4 pnt Antiques & Clas sic 9520 •n FORD Super Van S02. , \VIII trade-831-2040 Dlr. "ED;". owner. t.T.·Th. oft. 5 ym, S.18--0297 after 6P?t!. '73 !fONd.A t;f ... }SO. Xlnt '?l BULTACO Labito l OO, dh1 A,uto., rarnper c o n v · , BMW 9712 SUP tR Ski-1'"'ish/Bay Boat! ~-6:-. & Sun. • all day. Bo.t S--'-& Sic 90IO rond. CaU a ft e r 6 pm, only $275. Firm. Top iha.pe, \\1ANTEO -'[)<1·'56 Ford ra.1:~."r' l~l .. e!!"'_!!-,2'1111t eond. SKIP JACK, 20 Hu 11 . ="""~~=--=-o t s, .--i 962--0791. Call 4~ before 10 A.M. Pickup j n a:ooct to excellent 1-''!~""-"'"-'~e:::=N'---~ • CUAtorn bit. 280 Hp Chrysler S A t L U 0 AT P 2 8. l7' SEARAY. 150 hp '69 BULTACO 250ec, ~w top ,73 TRI. 750 JIURRICANE condltion. Wiii pay to11 '731 DODGE VAN, 15,0CQ I/B. ~fany xtras. $6500. or EXCELLENT CONDITION l\1erT.rulser. 18/0B \V/CU!lt . end, runs i;troog, $200. or Sacrifice at n7SO. ,.._U dollnr ror right truck. Call nliles, loL'I o! xtrns. Trade for late t.1 D L FOR SERIOUS .SAILOR. can\'llS L"(IV. Vanson trlr. offer. &l2-2190 Scratch, 49+-3452, 9 ~12. .G;,;T3"1~>li~~B.::"O!':..· al::;.::;";:';;'c.:P,:-':::'::-· I ___ ;•,;•"'&"':!2'J.12""-_:*:__=,, Mm?edes. S48-7741 v.·kday1, 494-2307. 49'.t-8815. $t?50:-&t4-'847-~988--0522 1~>~1EV 1 di W -• 9590 ~ eo.•es & ~·knd11. 72 SUZOKI-ZiO-Ch&mp\Orl"' HONDA CB lOO \\'ht & blu "' '-'' · iipecia x-: Autos 1nt-HOBIE 16. Shart1 cat. Llmt'.' Llh'.E NEW! $575 Nu & -rt-t '••-t ty-·. 7&,000 n1i~. ml'i. Runs xl.nt. '73 NOVA \Vcllcralt, 26', t'Ain green v.'/black ra c ing ~ CALL ~LJ:M7 "'" ~ ... "" "'" $9X1 m-stm TOP DO.lLAR PAID Mere .188. Vanson trlr, s1ripe1. r.tust sell by Aug 1. J .a. : yv=: 2131 Vtraoo Place, IJvlne. . ehl 9530 IMMEDIATELY Extras. 'TI) hrs, total. Sl850or offer. 67>4287. T,...,.,utiM ... '69 YMIAHA 100. Gd cond. Motor Homes Rec V cl•t Sll.500. 494-6286. JIOBIE Cat, 14' llght hlu & !.'g_~,1(718:flll~~t otr. S.le/Rent , 9 160 BOAT~TRAILERS ~ o~c00i~~t~N~~~ lli' RlENELL 1/0, 120 Oi\tC, ,i!Old, trapeze and othor Campers, S.le/ RV STORAGE MUst scll quickly! $2150. Xtra.!I \\'ilh car top canier tl20 ·73 l!ONDA, 350 G, 2500 mi, 5 e VACATION e • 96&-91'.iil • • 497-~TI Rent R10fl. old, $8511. Fi r nt · AT YOUR OWN PACE . . • 24 Hour Security •~-11, Rent/Ch•r. 9050 'd ~-~ Co I 'IERCED ~-per, 8 l'•'• 4!»--4i28., Choose from So. Calli. & In & Dul SorY ice --10' w/s1 e ........ u. mp ete ,. '"' ... " ·n DUCAT! 450 RT, $750. "Largest Selection." $225. or best oiler. Call xlnt t.'Ond Dometic rcfri.g, ID '" Mini & >I H . ) ?.lonthly Ra1es FOR RENT, DAY. WEEK, 67"";>-5i 47. other XtrRs, $750. days 'TI Honda 100. $350. Both in ver"" s · · 1 • p1"(1pane Static.in AIO. CORONADO 3.i. Call 1 -~~=~-~~--1 .xlnt cond. 96&-8816 aft. 7. DA1£S LETE RV (TI4) 32>-mt 0 -IARTE R Boat. Good rond. ~67l-~3200'0"'c' ~"""=' "'.,......."-'=--1 Jo'OR sale Nova three rail MOTOR HOME COMP Sloop r igged v.·ilh engine. ·n VW Super ca mpeT. RENTALS SERVICE & REPAIR Bo.h, Sa ll 9060 Lllpstrake. 673-34-11. Po I lta .. _,. motorcycle trniler one year p-top, conip. w a Cu.:u old $225 .. Phone 892-5496 Redhill :. San Juan, TusUn CENTER-STORE 16' SNIPE w / O a c r on lOxlO canvas nn, $2800. ITI4) ~o -14' CAT ~·/trlr, blue/\\•hite r:"" nt'.t\ nit 5pro. •n SUZUKI ~ condltio>> _............ Rt1ils & trailer. Xlnt cond. J.jU"'tL,IU' • 6""" • - ---· ... --, ,,, -1 -'~"'-:llS<M::*c;-oqu:..L"'~ A°"i""'s"~"'~"~"'·*~~· -"-"_·I c~°"E'°'1~cco1AN"002-'ic-~'-2". "no"."'2"so'."'s'"",-,..,.,, I o.e~,",'°'•~"°',~°'~"',"~",he'-'o.'",d-,.,-oa-"m-pe~P~~ I ~~~ best offer. can H~~~f. T~1~d·b ~~ra~~~: t ~ j~.\\J ~ ~J ~· I J rare equip, immac, mini R/H, $2850, 548-6397 '73 llOD1\KA 125 Won1bat. ew· cng, I res, r s, etc. Top cond Sti80 &16-1187 ... ::n. Much more. Ah11t sec! ._._,.la , •-a I.'...:;. nt -· · · i ,.c':::""::':=•"r .,;'::'3-4:...;;5444.>5~.:;-7--~~ 1 Motorcycl•1/ _..... ,,..,, "" ~-... z GlJ\SS Sabol, w / s a 11 s. XLNT. · Lido 14. ~o. 1886 Scooter s 9150 __ _,,cttll""-::®!!~::::· ::·c_ __ 1,=s<GOO~;;,:.:;•o.r .::he"•°'t"'ott;o•"r'-. "'640-4'°· ,..=596 Sand Canyon Exit NfOOs ~'<>~~.;11~ w/trlr, 2 sets sails &: xtras. -'-'-'"-'-'.;.;.,----" Wiii Buy Your Cycle '74 Shasta, :n• MolOr Home _ _.cl:.:7:._14:..:l..:5=5::1·..:1:::17:.:1 __ il'tlTVU"" $109;). PH : 673-3731 '73 HODAKA dirt bike. . Trailer--· 546-SOlS. for · ri:nt. $l75· Per. v.·eek. CHINOOK·TOYOTAS round KITE & Tr•fler no. 608 1.5' VENTURE Cat, dacron Knobbie tires+ extras. $475 '71 TR!Ui\IPH 5fiO ~Y· 554-48:28. tripper now on displny .•. $52J;'640-l749 sails, _\\'/Iris. beauJiMl 645-4712 e $950 e Ready for vacatioil trips .•. NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Const Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 CADILLACS Largest Selection In Or•ng• County Coupe DeV\llec: • Sedan De- Vlllf'll • E' DoradoA • Cot.- vert1bleij, lllllO n1any other select Cnd:Jl ae Trade-Ina. Sell idl II ~'-5678 . 5f. 979Al99 979-1268 \\' I d Its &U-5678 4§2.6629 ell S pm RENT: 'll El O·o r ado Buy now! ... ltll!lpeet-and· 1:=:;..::::':c,:;:::•m=':.."::':.."::·~-~=1 ,"'P""-"'f"'~c..c· =·~--"'= an a reau ··••· lifotorhome. Slps 6, sell-drive out .•. See bow you TOP CASI-I fOl" clean used AYto1, New 9800 Aut , New 9800 1 Autos, New 9800 Autos, New MOO coor. $175. wk. + 5c a mile. can save dollars at Bill cars and trucks 548--2514 Maxey Toyola, 18881 Beaeh Howar"'_ Chevrolet RENT nev.·Flingmotorhorne Blvd., Huntington Beach. ,,, · 1 SC S.17 8.J5.5 l\tacArthur and Jamboree Slps 6, ful y , air, etc. -"''--""°'"·--~~~~ N port Be h \\'eekly rates. Weaver, 545-Sports, Race, Rods 9540 ew 833--0555 ac "624. '73 BMW 2002 TII, 4 speed, air. Mt·Ft.t stereo. 831·2040 D~ •n BMW ~. 4 speed & • SWll'OOf.-L11·2040 Dir. - .wni. tull• , .. BAVARIAN I $'1 Now In Stock e '74 3.0 CS &. 3.Q CSA e :m2·2002A & ?002 TII e '74 BAVARIAS 4 speed e '74 BA..VARlAI Auto. • '14 3.0 s It: SA.'1!11 • XL.NT LEASE. PI.l.WS • &• I. -. EXCELLENT SERVICE • 234al Matguertte Parkway P.1isskxl Vl::?jo USE AVERY PWY EXIT. i11·2040 • 495-4949 LEASING SPECIALISTS 24 x 64 dual wide. 2 BR, 2 '&i PLY. Belvedere Stage III WE BUY USED CARS BA. 4:e den. Air cond. MRam charger. New t~ AND TRUCKS s::_rv~~ .. ~urian~ ~~8!r =· Adult pnrk. 49Hl153 ust M!e lo apprec. ~ C.ome in tor a tree a'pp1'8l&al .. T ·1 T I 9170 ' '"O"'rm=,. -~,'9961=7.C,--:-~~ to GROfH O:IEVROLET, v.·u awardt.d the BlofW r•f art, r•v• 1 ~ Service Award by Hottman 1965 CHEVY ~li Ton VS. . 18211 Bet.ch Blvd., Hunt. Bch Moton. We are dedicated FACTORY close out on 2 Auto trans. Radio. Long 847..fi(m 549-3331 to give you eood service on sho\\' units. 1-14"-4 sleeper bed, 1 owneT. $?75. SrrH387 WE 8UY your new BMW._See us PI LOT-ADVERTISER 211 BMW 9712 ORANG E COUNTY'S OLDEST 0 1 1974 IMW'• In stock ready Jur lrnmedllte de.livery. Excellent 11.vlrap on l'emalnlne 1913 1T1odell. SALEs.SEH.IJICE LEASING OVERSEAS DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc. ROLL.S ltoYCE BMW 2:'H E. 17th St. C.OStn li1csa • M&-44" Capri 9715 CAPRI '72, V-8, 4 apd, air, private party, S 2 8 9 5. 213-431-4511 ~ve 1 wkdys n4-83S-3833 ext 2llO '73 CAPRI. AM/FM ll~ mags, V6, 1ow m~ mileage. Red w/blk vinyl top . Xlnt ·cond. 59'l-5136. • D•tsun 9nt . Newpolt leach • *DATSUN* -~EASE-. or BUY Spoolol1 260 z $137 Pr. r.ton th. + Tx &: Lie ··-NE\V 1974 610 2 or 4 Dr. 4 Spd. Tra1111. Included -Any or all options during !his &ale ONL'i· AUTO?.IATIC ........... $96 AIR CONDITIONING •• Sfi6 AM-Flit STEREO , , , .... U6 SIDE litOLOING , , , ... , $ 6 UNOEROOATING •••••• $ 1 \Vlth copy of a.d onlY,!. SALE ENOS 7·18-74 ·-· NEW 1974 PICKUP $2969 \V/dunl pcm·er etc & marine 4 Wheel Drives 9550 Ir.IPORTl~O At.rroS before )'OU \ease an~ BMW. · toilet. 1-16' ·5 sleeper dual B~ST PRICES PAIDI Large shipment of"74 BftfW's · p<l\\'er ele \v/or v.'llhout 1973 TOYOTA Landcruiscr, ... ..: L 11· I rll just arrived. MORI models 1''1JLL PRICE + T It L NEW 19'74 B210 2 DR. $2570 nu .. rioe lollct. Rocondo Rec.-Y.'agon, uklng $4595, Sharp .... a n ew mpo uv. :lable for Immediate de-reation Pnxlucts, 12691 Nel· &l{).8144 days, all 6 1!:fi6 Herbor, C.1.J. 646-930:: son St., Garden Grove, Ca.1 -'64-'5-_75~72_. ------CASH FOR llve~EVIER BMW 530-21.91 or 847-0741. 9 am· '6 5 INTERNATIONAL. YOUR CAR """ w ,_ s s A. -·31n ti. t s··-·'-.,...,____..,_,_ ........ . ..... 1 1., . OCV' pm excep w ........ ys. \\'/101,1 ' Cabover,. Roll·a· ----'~=c'"='·--- ERIBA trailer. Ideal for long Camper. A·l C.Ond. AUTOS' IMPORTED '68 Bi\fW :rol, 4 speed, silver compact can. Lg. bed, 2 557-26?.6 w·black interior 831-ZKO IJu.1Tier stove, Ice box, & Truckt 9560 General 9701 1.,:0:.:~:,,,.==~=~-~ ether extras. 1 yr old. '73 BM\V 2002, 15,000 miles, 64&-2939\tys,-499-2631 e\"eS. 1971 DATSUN PU. ll)ag whls, BUY or LEASE SW\l'OOf, AM·FM stereo. ·n st'OTSi\IAN JJ~t 11. v.·/ many xt:i'aS $1600, '1 o SAAB 831-2040 Dir. air. Gd cond. Prac. self· YAMAHA 115MX, $ 200, & eonl. $600. '9&4639. ,.._,,,. ALFA ROMEO 1971 DATSUN PU, leaving '"' town, price ha.s bee n •t reduced for quick sale, Best VAN type trailer 1Tx8' bed. oiler. 545-2107 Troilo", Utlllty [h-<1rh Jl111p1111'.·· You can Charge DAILY PILOT Classified Ad1 642·5671 FULL PRICE + T It L NEW 1974 710 2 DR. $2969 FULL P RICE + T & L -'7S 240Zo 4 sp;eed, Alll-FM stereo, air, mags, P.fult aee. \Viii trade. s:n-~ Dir. Newport ~un 888 DOVE S't. . NEWPORT BEACJI Betv.•. ?.1aeArthur It Bristol at Jamboree Road Near OC Airport I CALL 833' l100 +< . . ....... .. , . . ·~ ' . . . ' . .. - Drop door, xlnt cond. nu '5? FORD % Ton P.U. new tires, S48-0045 aft 8pm. Brakes, clutch, g<t runner, Auto Ser. & Parts MOO $350. or oUe r. 536-1780 days 1 ~•:..• ~w.cknd=•~· ------1 "Directly across from the SES FlJEL INJECroR with FORD Ptp. 4 \\•hl dr. New · Balboa Bay Club" '71 DATSUN 4 Dr. Sedan WHEN YOU PAPER OR V.'/air. Gd cond. SlT';l(). PAINT A ROOM, wtite lhe 839-0254 amount of paper or paint ='="'==-=,--,,,.--c.o-1 it took behind a picture. '70 DATSUN sro, Sta. Wgn., Then next ttme you order, neY.' tlres, gd shape. $1600. THIS JUST MIGHT BE THE. BEST TIME & PLACE ·EVER TO BUY A USED CAR EXCELLENT ECONOMY LUXURY AUTOMOBILES ·n DATSUN PKXUP 72 T-BIRD LANDAU ~~ .............. 2 Ct. E...,y ~ l•ltL 8e-tul ~ --Mich. .cMI belleel 1 ..... '73 PINTO WAGoN 7 1 MARK Ill s4795 ~. Nll:omlric • ...., ll•n. Midi. ~ lnlllQI'. •ati-, llereo, Ill """"• 111:1111 a... i 1.000 ,,..., I 1 Nr.lfLI ""-POrt tlll,lll 'f*'I'. (&nc&ll 72 PINTO RUNABOUT 73 MERC. WAGON . s4395 Autom.i•c. new radial llrl .. radio. °*"'1Pa'll11 -· All ll>tl '"'""'Incl -,.,.,.(OQllEJ.N AMJ~M 11"90. Ju1! PtllChlMll llOll'I Ferd M*l"Co. {'31H60) , . I MUSTANG va .. 72MARKIV s5995 ttc, -l!Mnfl9, Bet\11~ ,.,,.,...n-.lnO--(IC>ld •~ """!>ntwlirn R&H.1~2Kl<ZJ ciol~ Int. 2~.000 lllllU. All Opll'Om., ,.,.....,, 73 VEGA KAMMBACIC 72ElDORADO $6175 Mr1 '*"-· .-NW Mid\: ""' lir"-2S.OOO iru111. I own.,, S1nd wlllt IK!Of)I '"• 4 5P°' .. ''" 1 cono1111. ~ """" 100. ,.... -"°""' ,......, T-.(ll&IFU) adapter for V.W. complele blueprint motor w/beadera. Sales e Service you 'll know exactly hov.· M1-2913 ' Cl..ASSIFIED will 11!11 it: CLASS SELLS -642-5678 rriuch material you'll need. ClassiJied Ads •••••• 642-Q618: \l.'ith pressutt reg>;l/&lor, alr j_!P~H!;,o1!!60-~2L15~-;__:__~j ~64!:5~64~06~--~64~5~64~00 cleaner, all bu'dwatt. $85. 54&-1879. A-Now 9IOO Autos, New 9IOO Autos, New 9IOO :A;;":.:.':::"':.•c..N:.:.;•;;w ___ .;.9800;;;:...,:A:;:u;;l.;:•::••:..;:N::•.;;w;_ __ .;.,.;.llO;; I ,. • lllAllD HEW : '.74 COURIER . -·_..-1t{ciuoos 104.3 Inch wheel 'base, with 1800 CC Calif. engine, easy shilt tr a n s mi s s i on , ''four-on·the·floor", crank down spare tire, Inside hood release, tool kit, 60 ampere hour. battery, 35 amp alternator, arm rests. PLUS A NEW EM BROLITE LITEWEIGHT 'CAMPER S HELLI Sii<. #1676.. Ser. lllAHDHEW . '74 PINTO RUNABOUT Fold-down rear seat, load and p assen ge r· area carpeti ng, ell vinyl buckel ,seats, front bumper guards. rear bumpe r guards. '4 sp·ee d transmission. {4A11X166395) Sil<. 11504 IRAHDHEW '74 MUSTANG II IRAHDHEW '74 PINTO WAGON Hardt~. Front disc brakes, Front disc brakes. an vinyl all vinyl bucket seats, bucket seals 2300 cc eng tack/instrument~llon. wheel 4 speed, Front bumpe"i covers, cut·Ptl e carpet, guards, r ear bumper front and_rear bumper guards. (4A1 2Y192626). gua rd s, AM r ad io. Stk.'1!'1720 (4A02Y200682) Sil<, #1943 IOBIA.TI DWYllY s2879 52499 53098 ·527 IRAHDHEW '74 LTD 2 DR. H.T. Cruisomatrc trans.. Power steering·disc brakes, air conditioning, clock, steel belted WSW, AM radio, wheel co vers , remote . ·mi rror, t i nt, g lass ,· (41 6251163347) Stk. #213 .,._.A.Tl DILIYU'( ASK ABOUT OUR USED CAR WARRANTY INSURANCE No Mileage Limit! '72 FORD 4 DR. '72 MERC COMET 2 DR. '72 FORD E200 VAN V-8, auto. trans .. pewee steer., radio, heater, Gold me tallic, 6 cylinder, auto. trans., air, V-8, radio. heater. auto. trans.. power steer. DEMONSTRATOR MARK IV RAND - NEW ·••+1~ra.clean..(284ELA} · [ild~IJ..!-~P· (976::Ee,TF,_,Jc__~+"'""'"d'-~lo::,r_,_m!'-'("9~26'°5"6"K")-r ' We haY• 3 Marts at TNmenclous ScmlllJI. Clyde Ir Dick Johnson and l'lter ,...,_,, Sales MClllGIJers Mark. ALI.MUST GO! LINCOLNS l to chaose from Includ ing Mrs. JohMoll's. MERCURYS.CAPRIS.COMETS WAGONS.Etc. SJ.VE! SJ.VE! .. t,iome of the New Cor ''Golden TOuch'' 1.974•5 NOT JUST ONE. OR TWO, BUT NEARLY 100 BRAND NEW LINCOLN~MERCURYS AND CAPRIS AT B~T EVER PRl<;J;S! Home of the New C0i ''Go!de'n T oudl ·• Cosld Mesa 540-5630 '70 T-llRD 4 DR. Metallic blue, while roof, pwr. sir., pwr, brks., pwr. wind. & seats, auto., radial lires. . {162ADA) • $2 488 ·71 MUSTANG MACH 1 Bright yellow. V-8, auto. trans .. air, radio & "10e-{940CKI() 52888 ' v-a~~~t!~a~~. ~!r ~~~-U~!!!~ air. vinyl roof, AM /FM. (tl95EPX) 52988 .. '72 T·llRD Loaded, maroon & white. Air, pwr. slrg., pwr. brakes. Many more options. {23 1GA!) 52988 '71 PINTO COUPE Bright red, radio. heater.• speed. (756C1E) 5 1288 '73 PLYMOUTH DUSTER V-8, radio~ heater, auto. trans., power steer, vinyl rool, low miles. {378.JFU) ~~., .• 111!11111 :=:-:. ..... --·--• ... -...,,.,,_ ........... -..... -............ -~ '-·· ... -·' -· ... ·--, .... _ -"•-•.-... . • • • -.. . . -· -.. • .. .. • • 2 ( PILOT-AOVEATISER , Wtdntsclay, July 17, 1q74 Wtdnfsdar, July 17, 1CJ74 DAILY PIL"l Datsun t72G Sub 9760 Volvo 9772 AMC ., '905 Chevrolet 9920 DO:dge 9935 Musteng -9'52 Oldsmobile 9955 Pinto '957 WILL 8.uy YOUR71 '61 SAAB. 96V4, IJk@ new '74 VOLVO NEW AMC/JEEP '13 MONTE CARLO. Bl~k '&.! OODGF: VAN S1300 YSY·4.'b'7. l'ltus1nng 'C9, t'.H. 070 VISTA CRUISER Wi:fl. 'i2 PINTO \\'gn. (787~-WXt ODRATVSOULNK, sTwO"f~ETNA -~,.."".!.~=''!..·~-""_l._$950_·_. _ea_ul 11cfllc ....... i,, IV.t+ll ·h·"."' lop •. PIS,~ .. ~~l MUST SELL! V-8, air, •utomatic, Ol!W Roor rack, air, au10., ~·er ·A/T, AIC, Roof rack -_Jo}...,.. NOW OPEN IN tul'IO Y ro, tur, tl\wwll, * 968-7328 1tfl. 8:30P~t * 1Ntlnt. 847--0828 , 111 ., f>O\\'er bral<es, low SHARP $2149 PAID FORlOR NOT. "'ILl. Toveta 9765 lest Deal Huntiugton Bc1u:ll ~~~~.1 .:.?Jr~~7s·~~J95/ Ford '940 '65 CLASSIC 2+2. Stick. miles & superb. 831-20-10 (Dlt.) Bill &G-5700 PA.Y TOP DOLLAR. CALL 5.;.;. A h I ·~ Smog cert. Enoginc grt.>al. Dir. Plymouth . • '960 KENT AlLEN, 541J..M42. '13 Toyota C.Orona MKilCpe. :rc ere. '69 EICa nilno. Cood ena:. '70 GALAX IE 500 Jo"J\.1 radio, $175. 979-2792 ·-l> Auto ..,.....__ La·•-, lo LEAS OR BUY New brakc11, needs body * $700 * _, '72 OLDS Cutluss Supremet ATLAS u• ATSUN P .U. $615 or U..1. ........ '""" • w w-oi·k. Sl300. or best offer. 1967 8 CYL }"01-u :r.tustanx. A-ale, p/g, p/b, am1f1n best otter, MUST SEU.. rn ~ • frlced to sell. WW OVERSEAS DEU VEllY AAtC/JEEP lnc. w:!-403B. Tra.nsp. cur in 1,,'00d rond. I cond. Belit <!lfer. Must st('reo, new lire~. gold Chrysl~r/Plymouth NOW! 673-«:07, trade! 83 -»10 Dir. SPECIALISTS 16751 Be-11.ch Bl\ld. r.' 962-70Ci6, l'l'C iiiJ 18711 Apple. Sell, 00,000 mll~!I. 842-721 3 "'/blk vinyl top, aft S Pill, J\.IUST SELL! '74 260Z, man1 '73 Ttyota CeUca, Land.ail, l \ 1/2 mile ,;o. o( S. b. Fwy. :.5T CHE.'VY Belnlrc 2 0 11. "'flO(J fircle, 11.B. -,65 FORD iHfefiANG 979"-2853 Open D11\ly & Sun. 'Ul_lO PM Xll'll.S, $6100. or olfer, Still ~to~. ~·~et~'t..01i'Eo~ -bl tuli4 llUr-JTl~~.i~~BEACJ I s11J.' ~~~.needs TLC. '69 F'XJR LANE, mags 4 SPEED. R.Af)\,10 1 "o~o-Lfi~S-C~,-11-.,-.,-,-d-,-. -H=T 2929 Jlarbor Blvd,. under wan-a?ity. 1·493-8S:i9. WU! 831 -DI VOLVO ~ ·~ CllL''*. Ion-lo Spt c-. l\('lld~~ i;itle pipes, p/s, $100. a-18--6381 air, Ruto1. p·s, P·b. lntmacu. Cosra MC!sa •n SU . , --r. Cod'olloc ' I 9915 ..., i.:.v •-,... 11/h y,,..., uoocJ cond $800 I I nu tir<'~ $1720. flli3.4il39. 546·1934 DAT N 510. Reblt C?ng, 4 1 -~~S.l-lc11.ter, A/C, $275. 5.~~184;" .. . . Oldsmobile HSS i:~ ~.~··"''" -·· '1 ~OYOTA 1 1966:=:;.=:'"'~'~"";;'c;·,;C::-':::':,· ,,.::646-.::.:9::30.'!"' ·n)(j. s,EDANd Del Vil~~· l~dcd950. 64 ,.,._evy !mp, ju~! OV"rhlol, 68 TORINO. Ve ry fast. Sales .. Sl":Vlce _P_i_•1 .. • ______ 99 .. 5_7 '74 GRAaJN k\1, m,.mt.b.," Flet t D--' '72 VOLVO \Vgn. Xlnl concl. n onn · 0 nui;i:. .,., · ..,., .... A1o~."·I spd, traction hars, OLDSMOBILE '71 PINTO, 4 spd, 2000 cc n1pg, 'r. auto, m . u., WU.I Extras .. Atust BCll. Priv. 54&-9791 or 968-9392 atter 409 C.D. f.'luny Kira.Ii $500. curn. xlraio. Sl200. finn. Pl·!: GMC TRUCKS eng., radio/heater, xlnl ~l:::m"m:::':o'.::"':::'"":.· c:<!l!>-"-'1'"•129:::.,,, __ 1 uwl....rel ' p arty. Call 493-2886. 6pn1. Runs 5:00ll 8'1G-tll7 anytin1c 51~38""-'"''-----~ HONDA CARS contl., $1575. 673-4105. '00 PLY~toun1 V.I.P. ell rw•-'66 VOLVO 1 -~ '70 CAD CONY Cougar H33 Vono LTD Wo...-.n. Full '13 PINTO R"-'"°"'· -•-exlra.<1, super cotld. $475. LE I! OR BUY ' X"l c~~-• • '"'"" """'•· ;;v""d. UNIVERSITY OLDS cond. 16,000 ,;;r Dix;;;;"""''""=""''------! AH Moclel1I Ra.dlalg, ~4 Like new, dclm:c. all extras. '68 COUGAH, V.JI, Jiuto, PS, Af.111'~1 Stereo & Electric 2850 H bor Blvd Day 49&-n 11 Eve 492--8154 '70 DUSf.E.H. R/H, A/C, 1 --=~~:,=,,==--I New li~11. J\.1ovlng, must PB, f'aet . air. Hid !, Good trail brk. 831-20-iG Dlr. ar · NT 6 1 20 >!PC R l li.:i AUTOS USED sell by FRJ. Asking $2800. cond., Alu.st sell, bc!it. oUcr. Carta lifesa 54n.96t0 '72 PINTO Runabout 2rol, 4 · cy • · Un! Ull'W PH: 979-0410 1133-3872 Mercury 9950 'ti OLDS Della Royalc llT spd, xlnt cond. 21 mpg, & looks xln1. SLWJ. 6r:>-5568 TOYllTA Genar•I 9901 '73 EL DORADO loaded n...i-9935 C...'pe. a/c., 19,000 n1iles, S2000. 54.11-7213 '70 HOADRUNNER, 3 8 3 UI, $6700. or take ov~ lease, ai· --r '65 MUSTANG S3,::95 pvt pty, 76.31 Seine '73 PINTO Runabout, 2{MXJ auto, $1200 • ~ • H'll:. """"'"'""' 6 CYL.-4 SPEED.. _Pr. HB. cc's. Bei>t oUer. A1ust Sell. 5.58-8251 646->Zla '66_.PQNTIAC, Power, Air, ,.......,, mo.·ui.rvu•,,. '67 DODGE Dlirt GT. 6 cyl, Ro"·""l •oogl-··'""".and ='-"=---1-88-81--.-6~TI U'UU ... ...... ....,. OLDS ~ oa otoon Call '" 11. '69 >""RY, xtro n·o-, lmmao. Gd trRlls, new !!res & Camaro 9917 auto. pis, air. Orig. mi ......,.. '"""'" v ... ~ I:..;;:::;:::. ____ _.;.= ----+~~~-~I trans., 64.2-6742 -46,<nl. Jn1mac co111.I. $1100. rear end. A Real Dream· Wagon, auto trans, p-s, ~b, '72 RUNABOtrr, 4 spd, A/C, PIS, S109;). 817-996--1 ·n CAMARO. Xlnt rood. smr or best offer. Call art 9pn1, tieeds about S25 In body a-c, top rack, good ooOO., Shelby \Vhllf., clean. ~. p nt' 99'5 Turn yout gott c1ub!:I Into V·S, '"ID trans,, v;nyl top. 64z_161j \1.-ork. Just a few £mall J\!ake offer, 5-Kl-5397. or best oner. 536-2.m.I aft. 6 · . .;:•~•..::•.:c ____ _;_:;.:1 a stereo. Sell ther~ "'Ith di 1 1 I good i;:.75 - a 'Daily ·PUot Clruisilied Ari 8'17-&m aft 6:30pm. ·Have something you want to r~i':: 64'2-~ · ~ · Don't ~ve .up the ••hip! '72 4 spd. Good concl. $JG$. '6-t GRAN PRIX, gd rond .. '73 MARK II ~ta wag, auto, air, Plf, ~ rack, 12M miles, like nu $36 0 0 , 1972 XJ6 JaRUar , blue, lo 53&-7904. · 1nlles, great shape, $7400. o1970:0%""""·TO=Y"OT='.\~Co~rono--.~41 call 497-2319 , door, auto c._rans, air, M1zda 9731 AM/FM, 'l1 !!!pg. $Ul0. Good cond, 67~332 '72 MAZDA RX2. Air, stereo, '·n=""°'ro=Y°'OT=°"-'1;::::-~~1 leather, vinyl roo(, metallic A elica Llke new. Low m es, many paint. 554-2368. ~.;.. Must ,. ll! Oilers, '73'Mazda RX3 Coupe, Auto/ ~ air lo Mlle. Moving Must '73' CELICA yeUOw. Mags, seD lmmed. 557-4006· xlnt cond 26.im.'1mt. $3200. Moircodos Benz '740 l32 W. Canada NO. A., San ~ aem. '72 MBZ 2200 Diesel. Auto. '·i"•"'ro=Y'"-CE="u~CA~~. -.,~.,, -.,,~. , tr ' ., air Ir like new! 6_ U -• 1 ·~ ,.11 ~~ Dir ,....., m es, to'"' P y. ~ ~ · & evN 439-5197 •73MBZ 45/JSL. l3,l)X) orig. I ·1!112"'='-'ro~Y;:OT::,::;A:::Cm>;....~D-a --~~,I m , air, &: AM-FM atereo dr In 831 :nto Dir. • x t. cond. 2tOOO mi. 963-S817. '74. MERCEDES 1150 SE ~ALLIC GOLD E icecu-'72 COjWu..A lEm 4 spd, tiv' car • one ()nly (SER. 25+mpg, '73 Mota',1 best NOj 018009!;· .'!ow 36-mo. ofter. 979-8367 I opep Je1~ at $243.08 per '68TOYOTA Corona. Iii top nlO: Cully equipped. NO shape, 31341 S.W. Cypress, caplal reducUon required. S.A. Heights. im Slemo111 Volksw-ma Imports "'CUSTOMIZED BUG-Xlnt IJOl Q<111i1 rond. Crpt, FM/AM radio, Newport Beach 8 track, n111p, Wip ant, crpt 833-9300 just cleaned. Just painted '":!:!j~R~FRO~~M~Ma'!':cAR~THU!!!!~R; I blue metallic. $ 14 O O . I 002-2l!W; OVER ·n vw ""'""''· ,., •. 35 USED AM/FM "'"'"" radial•, chrome whls, tuned iexh. MERCEDES """oUo" MotSI .. u by Fri. July 19. 546-6526 N DISPLAY '69 VW BUS. S"nrno1, -""' camper equipment. Also n H uw of Imports • n vw ne1""' ,..... ID 523-7250 -lrom-CaU 83!-3MO Dir. MERCEDES 450SL '59 V.W. Camper Van $450. Coupe. Xlnt cond. Re--blt eng, nu tires, hrkll, party. Sll,750. 979-3040. papen:, propane lantern, 3275 eves. ltove, he8ter, tank. Behn 1972-28Q S.E, 4.5 5, 833-T.& aft 6 497-1101 919-1197 Oean. MOVING MUST SELL 1972 VW Super BUe, tape Dck. Excel. mech. co9C1. 32,000 mL One owner $1995. &l&-5185. • Mercedes Benz. 200 Recent v alves , ng $2500. 498-1986. 'n 280 SE. Full power incl "a.Ir • 1polleal 831-3'*1 Dir .~ , M0 11 '742 * '681 MG r.pdgel. Radio, bestet1 Wlre Whla, Michelin X. ne'lf top, 1 owner, offer~ 548-31'iX;t 6 pm wkdys. MG ET l,969, eiccel eng, 07.000 ml), radial tires, dttk green, black top. $1500./ofer. 493-9783 eves. Opel 9746 '64 VW Baja J>i 1600 ..,., l r.· a n • porter trans-axe!. Crown tondon bar, wide rims, $500. 543-Ij17. BAJA BU.G, Corvair ~. new ' thnH>ut. Newt med. Beit off,r! 1711'3'63. . '68 SQUAREBACK, am/fin, new engine 36,000 mi ago, immac. $100'.t 536-0107 aft 6pm '72 VW. Yellow, air, AM/FM radio. New tires, shocks, lugg. rac.k. 554-2368. '69 V\V Sqbck. A:r.f/FM radio, auto, xlnt eond. Call <n4) 5~1164 or 586-7658. '69 OPELKadctte Raflye. 24 '&I vw Westphalia Camper, mpg, stuw, xlnt cond. reblt eng., new b r k s , Must ecll.$695. ~2992. shockll, tires. $10Ci0. B:"'ltl-15-18 CHERRY !.969 Red Opel GT 72 VW Fastback, auto, red, da)I 64C>-8800 txccl cond, ohly 12,000 n1i. ev1..i 644--0184 $2'l00. 833-92.66. P0<sch• 9750 '71 SUPER BEETLE PORSCHE 1970 9ll·E Fuel xlnt cond., call aft 5:30, Injected, Alloy Ma it fl , _962-4871::::,~~·~~~~=~I AM/FM :tereo, 5 gpd. '64 VW BAJA BUG $5500. :>&n7B ask for Mr. $550, 960-13.30 ~pton.-----'61 vw-xtnt--mnditi9n 19n PORSC:IE Model 914, l $875./best offer White w/Hack interior, \ i' 493-3308 * ~~call aft 6 eYes, ...;-SQUAREBACK, L--, reblt eng, R./H. Slim. '61 <DCO ~"· new rung. 546-5358· gear, Koni shOcks, log light.a. Very nej:. $UXI. '63 VW, nms good. good ~-,,.,.,4 body, good lnter. Xln't -....... $550. 847-<145. and use the money for a Caasified Act! can 642-5678 sell ? ClassiJied ads do It "List" It in clasal fled". Ship or best oflcr. Gr:r-3551 dy$, fclory air, Sl45. stereo! Call 642-5678 Today. today! '"'ell . call NO\V 642-5678. \V1tnt ad resull.$ •••.. 642-5678 to Shore Results! 642-5678. 8'J3.-5866 eves. 673-92SO -~ ~-----~·--~--~--~--~ --··-'-----"'I • STOP IN TODAY AND &ET YOUR FREE SEASON TICKET ORANGE COUNTY'S WORLD FOOTBALL lEAGUE PROFESSIONAL FOOTBAU TEAM WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY HEW OR USED CAR OR TRUCK- SOLD THIS WEEKEND. OFFER EXPIRES SUNDAY, JULY 21, 197 4 BRAND tlEW 1974 CUTLASS' SUPREME $ IMMEDIATE DEllVERY .. OYER 40 HONDAS . TO. CHOOSE, FROM 1974 GMC JIMMY 4 WHEEL DRIVE 350 V8, auto., P.S .. P.B .. fro nt stab .. guages, R&H, R.R. seat, 9kld plates, H.O. F&R shockS, chrome btJmpers, H.O. ~kes, H.D. Battery, radio. (516260) GMC 4 WHEEL DRIVE CENTER # HONDA GVIC DEALER IN · ORANGE ·c 4FT COUNTY c;.;, ~· 'g ,p.::.._'k .' -1-913-HONDA-GIV~G-s­ · HATCHBACK Mag wheels, radio. {#731HYSJ . IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE s4977 DELIVERY • . ANC11H1R RRST FOii U!llV!RSllY TffE All NfW TERRA-VAN THE-FIRST 4-WHEEL DRIVE GMC VAN OFFERED FOR SALE IN THE U.S. ~·Home of the Ground Hoc.I" IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' ' ) • " ' { .' J . •' , • , • " ' '73 PORSCHE 9ll· T. Air cont! I " f -.. '"'' 850. ·n vw Super Beetle, xln't • 0 0 lu ....,, ""' cont! "-~-I fr Call -* 9~f901 * . ,..,_ or uca o . -·13 PORSCHE 914. 5 spd, -496=5185 'aft 5:30 magJ whls, $5100. Call '65 V.W., Excel. running, 581-::li27. Original owner car. Best Clan' led ads sell blg Ucm1, offer., 497-1925 · CHEVROLET · . · a t:'~-'"-'"'"·'""•·$291116' ~~VAH _~l471 1·----~sleerlng t-brlkes.""""'-· -Alllom•llC, radio, healer,· IOll. Mw, •1r conditioning, , , {11ifi39EI • • (478GOO • 5 Items or any Item. SeU ·ldle items with a Daily fied Ad! &t2-5618 . ., Pilot Oullfted ad. IC-5678 ·-Sl'!· um ocr. J1~l~ J6.J7.J9JO ~II_,, '70 '71 MERCURY ~. r•dlo. 1\f, •1.1to., p-wlndow1, p·1111, WSW, {54.2BENJ TOROHADO Vinyl 1cw. powlf wlndo-lrl. e...., power Miii, 91«.0. llr, ....io.. WSW t1nra, all fJO""• (&110>JJ s1777 '71 PINTO • ~. rlldlo, N!ater. whit• ..... Ura (11!60RJJ s1477 '69 s1977 \18, ll.llOIMfie. rldio. Natet. '71 GRAND PRIX ·s3277· WSW, vln11 top, 101d1d. ' . (181295) '72 DATSUN WA-.oti • . RMto. /!eater, .c speecl. mag W>eets. {XTT260J s.977 MAZDA s2277· ....... v.ltfl amper, .. soeecf. flldlo, fle11er. alt c:ondiUOnlng • (122432) • • . - • ' .. • > • • . ~. . . , .~ 11--.c.,ll~"' ........ " . . ... " .... • ! 7 *NEW '14 ~·(:ARLOf • """' ...... bucllet MltS, llnled aim, ~ 'llM•tno and brakea. "-*~"· radio. ve. en-~ .eu~etc. · BIG STOCK HEW ECONOMICAL '74 LUY .TRUCKS! llG SAVINGS! No. 230203/3345 with four-speed trans., 1heater/defrosler,. mirrors. fill~ decor pkg .• while wall !ires, etc. *NEW '74 CHEV. PICKUP! • No.1409<0/3015 Only s97~!: .. On approved cred~ on Chevrolease for only thirty-six months. Pickup has tinted glass. fleetside box, auto. trans .. radio, heater/defroster, ,step bumper. gauges, HD radiator. 'Ho shocks;""Springs, mirrois. etc: On ap.proved credit on Chevrolease for onlythirty·six months *NEW '74 BEL AIR! ......... . .':' .. '3;,. ,.,.. . . . . . J . Hardtop with lour spe~ tt'lns., air '74 CORVETTE -:-cond.; Power ateerino and brakes. power wiodowa. white ktttered radials. AM/FM stereo, tinled glass. et~ No. 1924 • MAK~ OFFER. I '71 MG Roadster Mk Ill ' • ,.,_,, AM/FM '°dio,«edial tltes, s2195 IJX)d miles & exceptional.,{481CANJ OHl,Y ., .. !-~~1~9.e~n~ radk>. auto . ;A trans., tfoted glass. white lelte<ed ...... s2395 ~ etc. (94539K). Extra, extra nice! New paint. , . OHLY '72 VWBUG 4 speed, AM /FM radio, good mile• & s2295 extra nice. {311Ell) . " · QHLY CORVETTE -· AulOnlltlc lt811l<ninlo11, "°""'"' _...... ~ IH•k• .. AM/FM ...,, ........ 11.000 ..... & #le-. ()I( to .... 111113) Act Fast '72CAPRI · . V6 coupe, a1tomatic. radio & heater. deluxe interior, new radial lires. low 52695 miles, sharp. {852FNI) Ot4L y .173 COURIER PICKUP . Four·speed lrans .. radio, heater/de frost er. wryite . w8tls, slepS2895 bumper. etc. (98577R). E•cellent truck. OK 'to Lease. Only 8000 miles. OHL Y , , --'71 AUDI SEDAN IOOLS $ . :,U~~3~ heater/defr~•te~=~~ 339 5 • T ... .. ' • PILOT-AOVERTISER "* '74 MALIBU CLASSIC COUPE ·-DEMONSTRATOR No.402894/2897 .I. • With tinted glass, air cond .• VS engint . 'auto. trans ., power steeri"G· wheel covers, white walls, AM/FM ra~io, HO cooling, exterior decor. BU lights. remote control rnirror, tilt wheel, 'vinyl roof, oo.,:;;~:~:tc. Onl f .·s39" '* NEW'74 VEGA ESTATE WAGON! I =,;of"'o; IA.Ith air cond., auto. trans., tinted glass radio. luggage rack, GT eq uip., dlx bumpers and guards, power steering '71~"~~ .. A~ spd., r .. dio & heater, . heater/defroster, wood grain exterior: 5 1695 s450· etc. ' OFF decor group, vinyl roof. Exceptional . (978EAO), Orily 14,000 miles. Like _new. OHLY r----------·--. WINDOW! '72TOYOTA CELICA $239 Four speed transmission. radio, heater/~efrosrer, linted glass., white -5 wall~ mirrors. etc. UMOE~Sl ONL y '72 LUV PICKUP Four-speed trans., step bumper, white walls. radio, heater/.d~froster .. mir~ors. s2. 595 etc. (598FUO). Good miles. ONLY '73 i~ra~~pe .. AutomaUc. power s3195. steering, brakes. air conditioning, vinyt roof, radio ., heater. low (Tliles. Sharp. .(827F.!H).OKTot..... • OHLY '72 GMC 1/2 Ton Pickup Long box, auto . .trans .. steo bumper. radio, heater/defroster. new~whlte s2595 walls. tinted .glass, good miles. etc. !36083KJ. OHL Y '69CORVITTE ~T . ~ Automatic transmission, power steering, POW9I" brakes, power windOws, air cond., till wtit, AM/FM radio,, & iminaculale throughout! (21 BAKO) DON'T MISS IT! ·1· 3 RAT 850 . t' · SPt'm. COt1¥11T•u l=our·speed trans., radfo. heater/delroste r, etc. Cule earl {8380SX} 51 ·795 . '11 OHLY CAin~ ----.-- Au1om"'' tra "'·· !"'wer steering & s2795 brakes Factory Air. Rallye wheels. Spec1at tire s. Immaculate lhru-out. · (792JOK} · OHLY . . . . A LOT OF MEW CAl FOii UTTLE MOHET! NEW '7-4-NOV k TWO DOO COUPE! Onl ©: . I 833-0555 .... • • • • \ • ·' Wrdrttsd.-y, July 17, 1974 Weclntsdily, Ju ly 17. 1974 DAILY PILOT •• AIR CONDITIONING AIR COINDITIONING -· ___ Lfp~ -. -.------~~,;."' " -~~~-; -W lTH ANY NEW WITH ANY NEW • COMET _ • c PRI • CE A YEAR SALE ON COMPAN AN DLEASf-.ETOINS SOME HAVE AS UTILE AS ~500 ACTUAL MILES TREMENDOUS $AVINGS. _._• MlllC.URYS~CAP-RIS·~-~ I ~TATION \'\'AGONS - _../ l uNCOLNS ~MARK IVS --IXAMPLE · - · 1973 MONTEGO ol Dlt V-8, autQ, trans .. factory air conditioning, power steering, power ·(disc) brakes, radio, hHtt r, Wflittwall tirts. vinyl roof, tinted glass, 2M9· WM!! covtrs. #007 SY ---·~-' , 1974 MARK IY V·B, auto. trans-:; factory air conctifioning-;--fijfl power . power steering, pQWer (disc) brakes, power windows, power seats, ntdio, heater. whitewall tires, vinyl root . · IN OUR T ENDOUS STOCK NO EXCEPTIONS! MAKE YOUR CHOICE AND AIR CONDITIONING WON''T COST YOU ONE CENT! 2 Dlt. 6 cyl., auto. trans .. tactory air conditioning._ radio, heater. 139HTM 1972 DATSUN 240Z 6 cyl--:-;--4 speed, µower steering, power fdisc ) brakes. radio, heater, wh itewall tires. #071GBQ tintedglass.wheetcov~:.s,~·:miles. AYE '4288 !!t.!~.!!!!w~!'~·a;;~.:--1m-..c!~ra!~tr~ns"!ii-<!ionl!,,power,- heater. power sttering, power (disc), brakes, power windows, #Ol8FVY $1488 . 1969 CHEY. . 2 DD Imp. V-8, auto. trans .• factory air cond itioning, .tull .... PoW:tt.. power....~teec.ing.,~r.a,d.i.ll, .beatJr .. .w__hl!.ewa!L--= fires . vinyl root. • 129 I ZVK728 \. • power seats. radio, healer,.whitrwall tires, vinyl roof tinted glass. wheel covers.' $ ' ' . . #lS.._FTB MON.-flll • ••• -10 IAT. l 13M ••• 10-" • • • .. •• -· =~ .. ;~ .. ·-. -• • • • OAfl Y PILOT Wedrttsday, July 17, 1974 lil . ······ ·· -73MAZDARX2COUPE Rotary. 4 speed, radio, heater, ai r conditioning, radial tires. (4"8HRN) • '71 MERCURY COMET 2 door, 6 cyl. eng., auto. trans., radio, healer, power steering. air rood., wsw tires, vinyl top, & Custom inlerior. (726CEM} ' ~ ~ o I '67 VOLKSWAGEN "speed transmission, fully factory equipped. (957EAD) 72 CHEVROLET CAPRICE VS. a~tomatic. AM/FM stereo w/tape player, power steering-brakes-windows-seats. vinyl lop, cruise oontrot, tilt v.tiee1.. (577FPZ) •2195 - , . - · '72 CHEVROLET VEGA COUPE Aulomatic lraosmission, radio and heater. (401 EiC) 70 CH.RYSLER TOWN & COUNTRY 3 seat wagon, Automatic, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, while wall tires, air conditioning, roof rack. { 134419) Wed!lfsday, July 17, 2q74 PILOT -AOVERTISER 141 ' I NEW · TRA VEL·ALL --==~B NEW '74 ·-$COUT 4 WHEEL DRIVE ' Fwllyhctooj E..-lpp1cl (4S8DG028000) • .. •' • . • .. ' • W!dnesday, July 17, }q74 ' Wtdntsday, July 17, 1q74 DAILY PILOT ~---"-'--'-~~~~~- . - ' OF I y • BRAMD MEW .COLT IRAND NEW COLT·COUPE "5'ECIAL'". LOADED, NOT STRl1"11D Vinyl tiucKel seals. 1600 cc engine-. vinyl . s1oe nio ulo 1ng s , .B 00 .13 tire:.. (6L2 1K45305502) IMMEDIATE DRIVERY 52476 , T&L • 1BEAT THE . RISING COSISI """"" ______ ,,.._,."""" ,,_ _______ , -------·· ~ -~:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: 1-c BRAND . ~_.·_, 'BRAND NEW BRAND 1 ·?1ft> 4 WHEEL DRIVE BRAND NEW ,, ,..___,_, .. , DNAEwRr•P: . . Dod~e PICKUP NEw '°' . -0--11.ii -PowERWAGON MONAco % ~if '",~~.::_~,:;::::· CHARGER H~~.~~~~ 2 00 H.T. ...t"'l-..,,'lEifl~ UAHD teW S~hne pickup: VB, 360 VB. tinted glass, llAH~.~:~l~~·GH DOD61 POWll WAGON 4WD ... DAlfl'·SWINGoll "SP'ECIAL .. ' . automatic. H.O, front & rear springs, power .W100 8' sweplltne cust. cab. VB. 3500 Iron! llAHD HEW MOMACO!IVICl.t.L" ~· . 4 LOA.DID, HOT STWWND • steering, power disc brakea, muclJ more. LOADID, HOT STllmD ·SlCle. H.O. rear springs. increased cooling, LOADED, HOT mlf'PID . Auto.matic. 225 6 cyl .. bUmpe. , guirds. (014AT4S038544) · 2 Or. H.T .. Automa\ic, vinVl,\'.ats, ?1 6 eng . · 'radio, dual brile mirrors, pawer steering, 4 Aulomalic lransmission. 360 VB. radio. radio, POwer steering. vlrwt side ' 1_dgs. IMMEDIATE DEUYUY E78x1 4 WSW. vinyl roof, prn stripes, whe1 el w;, e e 1 d r i v e . M u c h m 0 r e . healer, Power sleenng.-l)Ower brakes and ?L'Lx2.3~~~;Ja,.co~ve r s . .:.whit e ~r11 s. $ 337 , covers. ~uc~ more. (WL21G4G135435 (W1 4AIME4MS1E38D2lo;T1 E DELIVERY n-ucnl'MM~~~~~f~=[~~ERY I $IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I . . 6. $IMMEDIATE DWVERY $ .. ' ' . 3276 Wl'RlLol~wrrH 2976 4476 t T&L -f &L 4 WHEIL DRIYIS! + T&L LOADS TO CHOOSI H.OM 138 VAIS II SIOCk-IMMEDIATE DELIYERY-CLEARANCEI ·1 = ~~··+f . ·1· '71 Phnnouth Fu Au1omafic:-,adiO.-heaief. pewer sleenng f 102CAE 1 FULL PRICE 01 tfYOU PllHI Au!C>mllic. Hi Back 9eals. rl!ld10, healer, 'lr.s.w. (327G8V) Special = FUu -t·13iiliifZ 1• Tou-:-$43a3-... -PRICE .... PllHI '°"" (Irv,. 14)83 kif 311 mot, ..;i~ 1?911 -f11ll UJlo PNCO' t 14611 !MI onci I I I Oell!t11t<1 ,..,,.,.1"1'>&1 • f'lt, :>tl f\c '69 Musl""9 · . · Sp•clal Vinyl too. radio and heater, bucket seats, center console and more (OlflGBKI ::.~LI '1076 ~= •31•• =..... O'ov l.'.h lM lo< 39....,. .. ~~ 1119_. l'\IK ....... .,._ J IUOM lflC! TI l 0.-.......... ~ 1110 11""6Pol AP lttl~ 2 Dr. H.T. Automatic, radio. heater. padded dash. vinyl interi0<. . ' BRAMD MEW Dodge VAN llAHD MIW DOKl YAM MSPECIAL"' LOADED. NOT STllPl"ID l1nled windshield. increased cooling. H 0 F & R springs. padded dash. 011 gauge. cigar Iller. du:-ir brlle bumpefS, chrome m1rrors, much more. f811AB4V049335) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 53376 I T&l Ol D f A~Hlf)Nf D tHW ENGLANr \All\ & II RVl(I J Sp•cial AJr oond .. r•dio. helter, buckel seals. w s "', wheel covers. {835l:YS) i ' 11 · I ,. •• Ill I ,. l~VJ • 10•• . 011• l'lllCI • J~ Oii~ UJ 83 tor 311 moo .. ~~ 171111 """"n l'ull U5~ Otoe• • ••~ lofi """ ! • ! """'"~n 0 I ~--,6-:-"""'o.'°.-~-;-~-"-'~-:-~-'-'--'°M_• __________ S:"p_•_C_i'"al---I .. P':l~Ll • 137 6 ~~~ vs. automa Jc transmission. mag wl'leals, bed. •Ce bo• and more. I (61053K) :~~LI •• ,. ~:~~ $3268 ::.... ()-11132611 tor 24 °""' ••I~ 111111-•~II"'°'~ ll'oa! 192~ !Jfl •t>C:I I ,I l 0.19<<~ .,.,,_ ... .,._ 11®32 A PR n ~!>% '67 Buick Sport WCICJon . ~ Special Automalic. radio. hea ter. POwer steering .. 1•11 wheel 1oadf!d {UNZ0951 '70 l'lvm. Valiant SpKlal l'ULL l'lllCI .,,, '73 ci..,;. No•a 01 If ' YOU l'tlEfff Autom8fiC, roof rack, radio. healer, power steenflg. wheel , =~ lt "1Nw.L •• ;, ~~u· -•31 M . ,. Coupe Automatic. radio and heater. {934GHCJ l'lllcl . • I'll-'°"" FULL PRICE •13•1 .. ~~. • PRIFIR °'¥ Ill 8" IO< 31! mot .. ~~ •2fl .,,_ i.," i;ioJll Pric-•I 140 !~ ·~ f l I O<ttwtt .... _....rox:.n ••51•,Jll"R 11M~ °"" t•..:Ula 10r :M"""' ••I~ 12'9 °""" lu1t <:&Sii -1 l•Sll ~ ,~, ! ' l O.lolrt.-i OO•-t ,,...,. •11·ra1111, ... P.A. 20.&o'JI, NOT SATISFlfD WITH SERVICE? Try VICTORY ':You're tho Winne~" SIRYICI HOURI MOftdey 7:JO • .. t:N l'flt T.u.-M. t:Jo .... s:otl'llt We accept all Worranly Worl< on All Chryoltr Products OODGE •CHRYSLER• PLYMOUTH Motor Home Service Tool • lllVf~(lt fllW • ~ SAN 01[(;0 .. = II • • • •• -. • • ,,,. . • -DAILY PILOT . BRAND NEW -~~ BUBBLE T08 . --. ,. - CAMPER VAN Gauges, aUto. 1rans,, tinted windshield, sliding cargo doors. xtra cooling radiator, F & R chrome bumpers, Malibu "A" wlndows, adj, passenger seat, camper equipped. candy apple '"'· -5"ICIAL-FINANCING AVAILAIU · IMMEDIATE $ DELIVERY BRAND NEW 1'974 PINTO .C speed 1rans.~ front & rear bumper-guards. (#4R10X208368l Summer Discount Price UKE NEW 1974 PINTO . RUNABOUT NOT STllPPED - BUT EQUIPPED $ .Auto. 1ransmission, 2300 - cc engine, radio, heater, decor group. #874J OU. · Summer Discount Price ' LIKE NEW '74 MAVERICK 4 doo r V-8. auto. trans., (disct $ brakes. tinled glass. foaded, N.tK92F146949 _ Summer Discount Price . (SGTAPY06096l , SPECIAL . FINANCING AVAILABLE • • ~ 'I ' ;_ • • (El 4GHT 41 440) SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE ... __ , -·73 DATSUN- 240Z V6 Allio. tran5 .. factoyr air con-4 speed, radial l lrn, radio, 4 , speed. radio, heater. diliolng, AM/FM radio, hell· tiealet. b!X:kel .$t:lllS. llPLS211SS4-41•l ter, mag wheels, IOW mlles. 11'28EYHl $"53"7"m' :$2'4 77' $2 188 , '73 HONDA CIVIC • speed, radio, hea~r. low, iow miles. 11.at.J"EQl '68 v.w. SQBK. • speed. r111dlo, he&lllf'. Exlr• clean. (ZXHl9Sl .. -------"" '73 DATSUN 610 CPE. :$1 97 l 1 $-1077 $2488_ '72 TOYOTA '69 DATSUN '73 DATSUN CELICA WGN. 610 CPE. • soeecf, lacfory air condl-• speed, radio. Maler. • $Peed. radio, he<tter. Just lionif\9, radio, heater, IZQSIJ6) lik.e new. tPL61003'>0) 1191HOB '71 TOYOTA . '72 TOYOTA PICKUP CORONA CPE. ··~·"gassl'ver-rarefind!'" Aulo, !rans.: radio, healer, 10711iwJ 1'l6AFOF $1.877 $17 79 $.1788 Auto. trans .• ~r steering, radio, neater. (TOP4J1) . . $677 '70 DODGE COIONn COUPE Fully equipped wilh ;,II the 1uto. trans .• ritdio,'healer. low goodles.118JOFLZ) low miles f12?8QF $888 ,$-] 097 '71 INTO 2 DOOi . A SPee(I. (1'760CTR) • '.70-CADlttAC---'-71~T·BIRD El Dorado LANDAU l oaded & Rice. C#02SAGS) loaded & nlc1. i tl•X:HDt '72 LTD '7 L '73 FORD 2 DOOR HARDTOP 4 DOOi H • c..,ntry Sedan V·I, au110. trans., fillClory ai r V-1, auto. trans .. lpctorv air Station w~ auto. lrillM., conditioning, Mwer . steering, conditioning, power steering, ~ steering, poMr tH"illkes, radio. tieater, vinyl root. power bn11kes. radio, healer. 1..,,.,. rack, "LOADED" & i037KOG Landou lop, prolKllon group. EXTRAS !! (661GMHI $1 988 _$2'797 l ~277 '72 BRONCO WGN . '70 FORD VAN ElDO LOllO Wheelbase. 6 cyl., V-1. •uto. tr1n~ .. taclory air 'wheel ddve, .flJ21CLN au10. tr1ns .. ne1ter, f,t52481P) coM'fioning, P!)Wet steering, pcll'lll9( b#iklS. AMIFM radio. $2 988 $ l 988 :$2488 . . FORD .. --• ' . I Wtdnesday, July 17, 1'174 . PICKUP & CAMPER I ~4 F.ORD * TONl'ICKUP-) . 1J, I' MAJOIWAY CAMPER CAIOYEl"flllnellng, et<. & ready for your . personal t-h. (RY·1133) HARDTOP 2.3 litrt 4 cyl., power steering, (disc) brakes, heater. wh itewall tires. fronl & rear bumper 9"'"''-l•R02Y19297JJ $- Summer Discount Price BRAND NEW . 1974 TORINO .1 2 DOOR HARDTOP V-8, aulo. trans., power steering, Pcrowr .!disc)_ brake5, radio, heater, whilewall tires, tinted ~ass. lt<H15Hll2J9!1 ( $ Summer Discount Price THIS PICKUP TRUCK & CAMPER IS READY TO GO (F25BRU62476) "' •• • • • •• • • ·-. "' """-+-• . .n ----- ., ' " San Cleinenie Tod•y's Flnal ' . -, Capistrano EDITION . N.V. Stoeks VOL. 67, NO. 198, 6 SECTIONS, 80 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1974 TEN CENTS Brush Fire N·ear · Art Festival Burns 40 Acres . . 11,y JACK CHAPPEIL ot ... .,. .. , ..... ll•ff A raging brush fire that , was apparently started by a model rocket burned more than 40 acres in Laguna Canyon about a half mile ~ of the Fe>tiYll of Arla grounds "Tuesday night, snarling _heavy traffic on the busy Laguna Canyon Road. Nearly 150 firefighters from the Orange County Fire Department and Div~ of. Forestry and the Laguna· . . - Beach Fire Department fought the blare Which blackened the · Irvine Ran ch acreage on the west side of Laguna Canyon Road. The Sllipected cause of the fire was a model rocket fired by a man oow sought by authorities. He was not identified. There were no reported injµries, and no livestock deaths are presently known. The first major LaiUJU! area bn.tshfire of the season, the cooflagration beian at about 7 p,m. and county fire crews were still at the site today cleaning up and checking the area for smoldering embers wh.ich could begin another blaze. Control of the fire was arumunced at 10 :30 p.m. as firemen, hand cre\\'S working with shovels and chain saws, and· t\\"O bulldozers ringed the canyon fire. Laguna canyon Road between Laguna BeaCh and El Toro y;as blocked. Laguna Beach and Californi3. Highway Patrol officers halted motorists at road blocks as fire units lined lhe canyon road. Visitors to the dlty's art festivals and the Page8nt of the Masters were delayed. Laguna Beach Fire Chief Charley Kuhn and County Fire ~pt. Bruce Twi>eville, information officer, agreed that the fire fighters were fortunate in receiving advantageous werlther during the fire. The fire first raced up the canyon wall front the point of ignition riear the side of (See BRUSll FIRE, Page !I Terr'.orist Bomb Rocks London Tower; I Killed ' San Cletnente Bla st Kills Council Studies Woman; No Downzoning Plan ·Panic Seen LONDON fUPI) - A bomb. possibly planted by IRA terorists, exploded in DIUr f'llll ........... FIREMEN BATn.I 41MCltE LAGUNA CANYoM llRUIH'ILAZI Model Rockeb Believed C1ute of Fire Nur Art Colony -' Esea~s in Woods Gumnan Kills Hostages In Wild Mia1ni Man-hunt A downzoning proposal which could reduce the maxiJmm populatioo of San Clemente by almost 4,000 penoos comes ~ore the city coundl ,ogaln toolght. The -L C1111ni b-cbooCto Jn the medlu.\i;"lMii!atft.lql, llld hip &notty resideritial zones, wu stalled at the last meeting with a 2 to 2 tie In the aboeftct of Mayor Tbomu O'JCeefe. O'Ke<!fe wtll W back flol&llt and '° is Ihe coolrownial oubjed, iJong with ·~ array of otber·topics on a heavy council agenda. If appl'O'l<d, the dowmooing amendment woukl reduce density in the medium density zone from 17 to 10 units per acre. In the medium htgh Z?fl'· maximum development \\'OWd. be sliced from 311 to :It units; and In the high - sity ZOOes,-rrom 55 to 36. About 24S wxleftloped acres would be affected by the amendment. · MIAMI_ (UPI) -A gunman took two driving a yellow Mercedes Benz auto -Many local cootrac.tors, realtors, and hostages today, uiihered them -into a pOalbly stolen from one of the hostages! builders llave Wice opposition to the vacant Jot in sooth Dade County and The're was no word what trig&f:red the proposal, saying to cut down on. killed them wilh a ThOmpson submachine chase. deve)opment would seriously hamper a gun, authorities reported. Authoriiies said FBI agents were profitable buildinl boom under way in Police and federal agents laWIChed a following the suspect.'s car in several San Clemente. manhunt f<irthe gunman , who fled into a unmarked cars and also by helicopter. otben have maintained the city . does • v;ooded area following the shooting. The chase apparently led IOUthward not have a right to reduce tbe ~ity .°' Thefe was no· immediate word on bow down Miami's Palmetto Expressway Into private property thus affecting its h ·t ot the '--.... -t~ sparsely set.tied area of southwest potential feturm for the owner. t e suspec g 11U:1i.o.ges. ~ On the other hand, a·ty planner staffers Dade County when officers momentarily Kenneth W. Whittaker, special agent ln (See HOSTAGES, Pap I) llave warned that San Clemente already charge of -the Miljmi FBI, was pcr~lly ha! density and overi:rowding problems directing the manhunt, centered near in many secUoos of the city. . Southwest Il7th Avenue and 138th Street. w Jk' Limi• One planner sakl at the last meetmg The susPect was described only as a a 1ng ts that if the coUncil doesn't act to reduce black man wearing brown clothes. • crowdini. the city will become "a sea of KeMeth W. Whittaker, special agent in C D Ki asphalt and concrete." be<n l<>llowlng the ... ped and · two For us . ds Othel' Items on ·tonight's ageoda Reddin in hi~ probe of the San Clemente police department. Expected act.kin refers to abolishing the present position or assistant chief and director or public JJaf•ty. • "'f'· . Saddleback To Select Replacement ·The Saddleback -College board of trustees Is scheduled to meet behind cfosed Cloors Thursday to discuss the five top possibilities for superintendent of the commllllity college. Trustee Norrisa Brifldt of Irvine said the final decision on the new man, to replace Dr. Fred Bremer who resigned as superintendent six weeks ago, probably will not be made until next week. The selection procss has been led by Dr. Robert Jen It ins, former superintendent of school in S a n Francisco, who was hired by the district to recruit and narrow the field. About 70 applications were received from across the state and nation ror the (See COILEGE, Page I) /lµsebal l Great UP'I T.._... OFFERS TESTIMONY· Sen. John Tunney Reine.c& Trial Transcript Flaw Shocks Attorney WASHINGTON (U PI) -Government prosecutors were taken by surprise today in California Lt. Gov. F.d Reinecke's perjury trial when a stenograJ>her testified· that changes had been made in a Senate hearing transcript forming, the ba_sis for charges against Reinecke. Benjamin H. Firshein. who 1-ecorded the testimony during a Senate Judiciary . Committee hearing, said the transcript submitted to t~ court did not contain corrections he made in it. · the 900-year-<ild Tower of London today. hurling broken glass and masonry into cro\\'ds of children and their parents - jamming the city's most popular tourist sight. One woman was killed. Al least 36 per30l'IS -more than haU o.t them children -were injured in the explosion, several of them in critical condition with crushed arms and legs. Detect.Ives sifting through the debris found the severed fdot of a small chi.Id. Police said most of the injured were Gennan and Dani.sh. The explosion sent hundreds or American and other foreign toorists fleeing from the moated stone fortress. A; few Wi!re crying but there was no panic. The bomb. the second to explode without wam.Ulg in Loodon today, might have been the work of the Irish . Republican Anny, police said, but there ·. was no proof. Police said the bombings ' had some or the hallmarks of other IRA attacks that have killed 12 persons and wounded 115 others in England since December. A Mrs. Harris of Sydney, Australia, near to the explosion in the tower bot who emerged unscathed, said: "There were wowlded all over the place -it ' looked like a scene out of hell." Al least half the tourists stumbUng for I the exit were children. Many \\'ere school groups being shepherded by teachers. "!1.fove on. move on," police shouted, '1There might be another bonib. '' TJ.le first blas t today damaged a government office building in the suburb of Balham before dawn, but ca used no casualties. -· hostages around Dade Co!plty for nearly indude an 11our today w11en he IUddmly tJlopped · ~"ion •f • propiJsed ....,.ation D:zz~v Dean at a-vacant-lot, foroed the bollo .... out ot---lJ nder Restudy ot·the-I,441)-aere Fonter lla!1<h-"¢-a_ -~ '.,/~ -- Firshein testified as a government witness but assistant special prosecutor Richard Davis was clearly taken tiback by the disclosure. He said he thOught corrections }lad been made in the transcript introduced in evidence. The tower. guarded by the oolorful pike-carrying Beefca.ters, daily draws thousands of !oreignen to see the royal family's ceremonial jewelry and its collection. of annor and' firearms. The famed tower served as prison for hundreds or enemies of Pritis_h t0Y!UY.<" iilcluding Sit Walter Raleigh. r.tany famous prisOners were murdered or executed at the tower,. including-two young princes, nephews of Richard Il l, and two of Henry Vlll's wives, Anne Boleyn and Catherine Howard. the car and mowed them .down with the • recommeOOatlon that oil ind gas drilling .. ··~~~fil:Sglln.;,id the luspect was Trust ... of. the Capistrano Unified . -~·2.}~Il~-:;·i;,. ":..:'!:led .. that Dead at 63 School District agr<ed this -k to ~~~ration of the 19'74-7~ l>Udget consider clllnges, in walking distance for tbe' Chamber of Commerce, mcludi~g 1ing ry Housewife requirements for ""' .... 1ce, b•t only a controvenial section dealing with where safety la a factor. pri>moUon and adverUsing ~ts. , · _ Pomible action on two of the many Cliucks Pots, A~ 1'31: ~est !I' :i~~m~ reconuneodatlins made by niomas . , -"-~-'"~-"OUllQ Commoolili~.bo..1111,J •. ______ _ A-t-tawOfftce rs no~~:,e-:-:~~~~~~ 13th Day for Reus--=:- dilt.ancel were 'too long in some areas. • SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 24-year· old housewife held 11 officers at bay here -ror aboU.l~ an hour with · a riJJe, ax, machete and barrage ol furniture, pOts and pans. police sa.'.d. They reported !hat Nancy E. Waltz was throwing pots, pana and furniture from a window of her mime in tbe Ingleside-District at 6:30 p.m. Tueaday. When the first two offk:ln arrived, lhey were met wtth a bamge of flying hou1ehold items. • Mrs. Walti also flung an ax out the window, •llg!>tly lnjurln1 officer Rober! sudano in the lelt leg, they said. Nine more olJicers were called for rebiforcemenl and attemple4 to_ •onn the front door. But M.,, .W•lh ollqedly held them off with a zp.achete and 1 rifle, they reported. At 7 p.m. oUlcen used variouS . diversionary tactics and distracted Mr!. \Valtz 10 the rear or the house where officer t\obert Quinlan captured her. She was Wken to San Fi'aneisco ,... General f:lospiLal for obscrvallon 1 lhey said. .. . ' • "In our irea Laguna Niguel high school MOSCOW (AP) -Two S o v I e t • studente blve a three-mUe ltmit," he cosmonauts in their 13th day aboard the said. "I'm concerned with the lack of Salyut 3 space lab ,have started to sidewalks and generalJw.ardous ~llking prepare for their return to earth, the oondlUons.." official newt agency TM! said today. Sam. Olicas, assistant superintendent· Ta• said c:osmunadts Pavele~\'ich for business tervices, reported to the and Yurt ·Artyukhin report 0 n board th at 1r old walking distances wer.e experiments they t.ook on while the Soyuz reinstated the district would have to pay 14 space craft was attached to Salyut. an additional $104,585. Bus service was cut back during the energy crisis because fuel allocations to the dialrict were decreaMd. "Perhaps there ls a fuel shortage,' said Sayre, 0 1Xit many buses go half en1pty and no drivers hive been lenninated or furloughed." He -akf"Ofe conitiUCtiOn or new trat"ls have mMle trafric problems criUcal, aQd many d1lldren '"' walking to !IChool oli, unSafe streets. Cblcal ogr<ed !bat adjustments shoold HE SOLD PICKU P TO FIRST CA LLER "lt"llOfd the' fnt day the ad ran. ,. • "The Ont caller bought my piclrup, said the uUlfted Dilly Ptlol advertiser from Fountain Valley. Here's the ad tblt did the job for him: be mlde wkre conditk>ns are unsafe and 1114 JEEP P.U ., 4 Whl Drl\'e asked Sayre to bring in a detailed Good condition. req1ae1t for tius service changes In f specific area!I. lie added that problems ' Let a Daily Pilot claaril1ed ad work or with streets leading to Del Obispo School you. Call foU..$678. shood al!ll be Included. ---------- I Reinecke1s lawyer immediately caHed RENO, Nev. (UPI) Dizzy for dismissa~ of the case against lilean, one of baseball's greatest ..Reinecke. pitchers who starred with the "Gas • Judge Barrington Parker did oot House Gang" during the 1~. and immediately fule on the motion. Instead , later a radio and television Parker ordered the jury out or the room aMouncer famed for his unique and sharply criticized the government Orange Coast br.and-oLfractured..EnglWJ, k<f ___ la~~I'-their failure to bav.e..cau,..,._1 _____ F today at 6.1 (De-the mistake. ta ·1s p ·t7l rrwaTiiOfimmediately clear what the , 1 • ap;e changes were but Firshein's testimony M~s. r_:>ea~ \Vas indica ted they were in the part of the at his side in St . hearing transcript that the government Mary's Hospital 'ted .. . h. · f when he died at c1 m accusing 1m o lying to the 1:35 a.m. Also coinmittee. . • resent "-ere ~is Former presidential assistant Clark other e.a11t. and l\1a.cGregor testified earlier that he urged Paul Dean's tY.'O Reinecke to tell the truth in the Senate -- !hildren. testimony that led to his tfial. The son of a cotton picker whose l\facGregor said he talked with family moved about the South In Reinecke in 1973 about "differences in the. early 1920s, yoWJg Dean recollection" between the lieutenant ·developed a strong arm by governor. and former Attorney General throwing dirt clods at prairie dogs. John J\fitchell over the date of a meeting Amiable although incredibly valn, Y.'here they di scussed an offer by I'l'T to he was the 90ul of the 1934 St. L<iuis help finance the 1972 Rep u b 11 can DIA .. Weathe r Sunny and warm Thursday with only patchy early morning · clouds at the beaches. Highs from th&.. niid-705 stt the stri:ind to the 80s in- land. Overnight lows in the ISOs. INSIDE TODAY F'o"ner Feliciano's Restaurant partt1er Gene Randano ha& 1 drawn ilis second state._ prison -term whe1l judge ruled Ile tno- lated probation imposed i1i liqitor hijacking case. Story, l]jlg• 9. Cardinals. popularly kno'A-'tl as the convention. .''Gas House Gang." l\tacGregor -\\'ho left the \Vhite At YMr h rwk• 1 Ile swaggered sitting down, once llouse to beco~ head of President--~,:."'..,... ~ """' LMINn " "4111M• • dangled a teammate out of a 12th-Nixon's re-election campaign in mld-1972 ~·N._..cer-1: story hotel window and liked to -said he probably expressed "some c::i" 4>-J4 Invade ronnal parties dressed In concern" over differences bet"' e e n ~::.U_.. ;: house painter's O\o'eralls. Rcinccke's and l\tltchell's statemenls. Dfftll N9tlcn '' With It all . 01' Diz :was one of the But he-said he told Reinecke uthal all •=:'"' 1,. 1 .. ,1 greatei;t pitchers in b a s e b a 11 he could do was to teU the.tru th and lO be ,,1u_ 11-u history before a freak accident In n..,;pons.ive to the question." :::.C.,. ~ 1937 cut short his career. r..tncGrcgor said he n1et with Reinecke '""'""11.i.n 1s (Ste REINECKE, P110 Ii • ' ---- ·-°"'"' tt Ml"rilJ"NN!4-U M!fllilal ..... 11 N•tllMI MIW9 4 Or-(-'Y f.lt ,._.. ,, .. , I'• flll .IC ..... J, lt SMrU U·lt Or, S~M ..... N Si.ct; Merli;"-tt•tl Tll"ltlM It TI!Mt•n 1ttJ --. Wffll ""I 4 - . 2 DAILY rlLOT Wtdntsda,y, July i7, 1974 SC • Pllot-Logboolc Pe1·ils of ThiS Pauline '· . . Lead to Happy Ending By ARTHUR II. VINSEL ot ,.. nan, ·""" ''"' ~ty female friend Pauline stayed overnight not long ago, and now she Is eating tor two -or three, or four -but it isn't my fau1t she's .in a Family Way. · Pauline. )'OU see, is a calico cat. l Her pretty, onetime mistress apparently overlooked her \Vhen she moved- out from next door, but every time a person has to pull up stakes there are also discards. So \\'here did Pauline move? One who has never cared for the idea of a cat, or a dog, or a parakeet, or a hamster, or a gaggle of goldfish, or C\'Cn a wife cluttering up the house does not always plari things just right. · . WE ARE STILL SOMETIMES perfect targets foe ambush, by the Paulines of a. World in which not all stories have happy endings. · Cynical old newspapermen are sometimes very vulnerable. ~IMSEL The other night, Pauline was dining on creamed tuna from the plastic cat dish that seemed like a good supermarket bargain at 29 cents, and J had a vodka-and-tonic beside the typewriter in -the den. The stereo was playing and the ·wOrld seemed peaceful, with the 6 o'clock television news turned off. Pauline got up to stroll around, her matronly belly swaying, apparenUy inspecting the premises -to be sure the bachelor pad clutter had not been re-arranged since her last visit. And it hadn't. SHE MIGHT BE HUNTING for the eventual maternity ward -maybe under the wet bar, or in the demi-john -as the tiny s~ bathroom is known. - Despite her condition, Pauline still wanted to share my bed. "No, get the hell down," I ordered the first time she jum~ up on it after her old nig bed had been made in the kitchen and it was time for lights-Out. -. "No, get the hell down," I ordered the second time. THE THIRD TOIE WAS a charm, as the saying goes. -: "The hell "with it," J whispered with a snarl, "just stay on the other .side of the bed." Fighting a cat in the dark is a miserable proposition. The perils or Pauline have apparenUy ended now, at least temixirarity, She began to be gone for longer periods and when she did show• up to sniff around the wtaltered bachelor pad clutter,. she was finicky about the food . She only picked at the veritable repast that costs 22 cents a can. She would baptize her tongue in ~tra-Rich grade milk, wanned in a saucepan, then glare at me like I was a bartender who forgot to put the olive in the ·martini. TIUS MORNING lT FINAU. Y beCame apparent that Pauline bad found her place in the sun -literally -as this cynical old newspaperman left for work. , She sat in the window of another apartment, basking in the sun, fat ~ . a hog, happy as a clam, and gave the cynical old newspaper reporter going out on his morning beat a great, big, calico eat grin. I grinned back. Some stories, you see, do have a happy ending. Prem Pllfle 1 REINECKE .•• --• Legal Points No Mark:ups f 'King's ~' on Stnmped GoodS Pair Lock Horns On Caspers Post WASHINGTON (AP) -Safeway Stores, Inc., the natlon'1 llrgeat supermarket chain, announced today It plans fo 1top mariJng up prices on most products already stocked on ahSives. "When we are forced to make a price increase, cans and pac):: ages which are already price-marked will be sold out at tjle 01y By JOHN VALTEllZA Of t11t 0.11• ,llel llllH Orange County Coonse! Adrian Kuyper and California 's Attorney General are at apparent loggerheads oo legal points raised in the struggle for BUccession to the vacant Fifth District post on the· Orange County~ of'~pervi90rS. . The conflict 1s reflected in opposing legal opinions dealing with the length af term whir.h \\'Ollld be in effect if Gov. Ron· aid Reagan ~kes an appointment to re· place the late supernaor, Ron(lkt Caspers. Kl}yper Tuesday afternoon reportedly sent on a supplementary report on his opinions to individual supervisors. That document i;einforces Kuyper's opinion issued last June 24 when he inalst.ed that a Reagan appointee would serve only W1til Caspers old tenn expires on Jan 7. ·Then, Kuyper )las sakl, w~ir suc- ceeds Reagan as governor would make yet another appointment and that would last through the new term which Cas- pers won i na landslide primary victory only a few days before his death at sea. That term would expire in mid-1976. . Yet, in an opinion which sources claim has been given to ltfragan from the Attorney General's .. Offlce, the length of an appointee's terin is far different. Reports from Sacramento Claim that state legal officials are suggesting that an appointee would serve through the end of CaSpers' old term and through the new one as well. State officials have also conceded, however, that the County Counsel's· opinion may be the one which would be mo..ihooored, _ Jruyper has cited a 1958 opinion from the attorney general as the basis for the county position, and that apinion has never been altered in any court decision. The latest reports of an apparent legal dispute point to a possible -court battle to seek a d~finite solution. * * * Caspers' Aides ' Rap Officials Over Drilling Adding nlore fuel to the complex fire in tbe wccession Issue is that pressure from orange County might force tbe state legislature to finally approve a bill which calls for a Novernber election with the winner laking the Fifth Distril"t post, ! A group of leading c o u n t y Democrats-without the blessing of its central committee -,is waging a petition campeign throughout the county in an -effort to jog loose the leglslatioo. That bill was into introduced only da}'S after Caspers' disappearance b y Assemblyman John Brigg (R·Fullerton J bt.'t bas become stalled in conunlttee. It now appeai:s headed for a rehearing Aug. 12. . Critics claim that the election bill wouJd play strongly· into the hands of Newport ,Beach Assemblyman Robert Badham, a Republican who has been cited as a prime candidate -for ·the Caspers post. Bad.ham, however, has disavowed any strong intention to seek a spot on the ballot as a candidate for supervisors. He already ls rwming for reelection to his assembly seat. · Adding to the· convotutetf .. siluatioo, is the official leave which supervisors have granted Caspers-lasting through Aug. 9. A1though the board could reverse itS action earlier, It does not appear, likely. Yet, Reagan might appoint a successor at any time, leave or not. ·Rumors at the county level continue to abound this week as to who appears to be the chosen successor. This week's prime candidate appears Rodger Howell. a resident within the Fifth District and a . well-known lawyer who speeializes in municipal law. Spokesman for. the senior ·partner in the law firm of Rutan & Tucker insisted late Tuesday that there is no knowiedge that Howell is the top candidate. Gaspers' top aide, Tom Fuentes, recently moved within his l a t e employer's district, and has been mentioned as a prime candidate for appointment. Fuentes, highly rel~Je sources say, has the corqplete blessing of the Gaspers family as successor. price," said Safeway vice president John Bell. " i.re said i( a can or package bean two prices the rroduct will be sold at the lower price, and if a price is lowered, al foods bearing the. old higher priee will be marked with a new lower price. Bell said \he new pricing. policy Will go into eflect about July 28. He said it will cover meats, groceries, produce and ~pnfood products, but not fair-trade items and baked goods. , ~, , . Bell said at a news eonlerence that the new lowest·prlce policy was prompted by i~flationary trends. " · Pro-Nixon Autlwr Sees . . 'Figh~ to End' in Book By HELEN THOMAS U,I Wllllt HMM It-'- President Nixon, having put thoughts .of.resigning behind him, plans a "light to the finish" against iJn peach men t according to a book written by orie ol hl3 strongest defenders. Ni1ton also says that if the Watergaie. related accusations again.'1 him were true he would not remain in the White House "for a minute" and "nobody ~uJd have to ask me to resign." The comments were made in the book ''The !Personal Nixon: Staying On the Suffimit ," Mitten by Rabbi Baruch Korff, head of the Natlona1 Citizbs COOuniUee For Fairness to th e Presidency. ~ Korff interviewed Nlxori May 13 hl the Oval Office and later got w r i t t en responses to questiOM; He made the 123- 'page book, p(iblic Tuesday after. meeting with Nixon. At a news conference, Korff said he bas the impresSion that Nixon "agrees with me" that the conspiracy·perjury conviction of John . D. Ehrllchman. Nixon's former Na. 2 alde, is "a blot on justice." · ln the book, Nixon called Watergate ·the "thinnest scandal in American Resianatlon, he said, would hurt bis succeSIOl' and set "a precedent of a man mortally weakened from tbls JWOCelS ol deslr\>)'in( a Pmldent who was not guilty of.aJligh crime or mlsde~." Speaking of !he news media, Nim! said; "l know for example, bl tbe,1ire11 . room, that my policies are gener~y dlsapProved of, and there ate some, putting It in !he vernacular, who bale my gul> with a pualon. But I doa't bale them, none of !Jlem. I undentand. 'lbeir philooophles .,. different." Nixon has been taking jt easy at the We.stem White Ho111e since Friday, concerned mainly about economic policy. He bu talked several times with Semlary of Stale Henry A. KiWJ1ier by lelepilone about the Cyprua sltualioo. ' Special Caspers Vote May Get San Juan Backing history." He said that if he had been 8an Juan Capiltrano city mmc:Umen CUSD A "baSically a liberal" by press standards, may join others who are arglng the atate . p· proves. "Watergale woold have been a blip." legislature to allow a -la! election to -.-He~says he emsidered resigning if the fill the 1eat vacated by the late Ronald · Openings Left For Coloratlo River Exc11rsion S h l B d-House votes impeachment ,"and l totally C..spers. •hortly before the ,stale oflicial lestified Top aides· of tile late Orange County C ()() U !?;et rejected it. I have decided to go the The """1C11 will be asked tonight to before the Senate Judiciary Committee. . Supervisor Ronald Caspers condemned L.J distance to defeOO this office, and to adopt a reaolutioo at the request of Tliere are still openings for a YMCA trip to the C<llorado River for boya...and. girls In the ninth through twelfth grades. · The trip will begin July 29 and end.- Aug. 3, and is sponsored by the South · Coast YMCA, serving cities In South Orange County. The camping tri( will be based at a .campground near Parker, Ariz. and will include short float trips oo inner tubes and rafts down the Colorado River. There will also be short excursions to Lake Havasu and the London Bridge there. The cost for members i.s.. $48 and for n'onmembers, $53. This lncl1Jdes transportation, campsite fees, food . and leadership. More infonnaUon Is avallablf. at 831-9622 or 495-045.1. Policeman Sued For Boy's Injury federal officials for their asserted failure Of $lS,S . Milli' on· defend myself.against charges of which l Mayor Roy Byrnes, eeei:btg leglslatkm to The Watergate prosecptor's 0 ff i c·e to consuJt local legislators before am wholly innocent." permit a special election in the Fifth charged Reinecke lied when he testified proposing a massive program 0 f lilperviaortal district. he did not tell Mitchell about the 11T encouraging oil drilling in federal waters · • In W'linl the election, the reJOlutlon offer until September, 1971 -two monll1'1 ol the Orange Coast. (&laled story, A publication budget ol $15,86.1,000 has uos: nry' . Maker •tales that the dllllri.. n •• d • rte. 1 f fed I . Pal(e 11 ) . been adopted by tnlstees of the Capis-CJ I &1;.-representation that reflects the W1shes of a sett ement 0 a era anlitrus~ Tom Fu~tcs, top aide in the Fifth trano Unified School District. The fmal · ..... the voters of the dtstrlet-;-aiil that penon suit against rrr. District offices tenned the Interior budget will be approved -Aug. 5. S M F • should not be a gubernatorial appointee. Jn previous te!timooy, Sen. John B. Department's er~ program to firant oil The latest budget figures show a tax ueS eSU f,Tm It also ~tes that the election should Tunney CD-Cal.If.), and Lee Frernstad, a leases In waters from· Palos Verdes to rate decrease of 55 cen~ from , last year, -take place before an interim appointment repcrter for the Sacramento Bee, said South Laguna "a very disheartening dfOpping from ~·85 to $4.30 per •100 of_.. 1L'Eggs P~ucls Inc., manufacturers is J11iide, and that the ter mbe for a full . nned I I w--"-~· b I asgessed valuation. f nt h f'led $10 'II' d four vears. Reinecke had told them he info examp e o ;uwugwD ureaucra s According to Sam Chicas, director of o .Pa y _ase, 1 a· nu 101;1 arnage J Mitchell of the I1T offer in May 1971 _ failing to consult with local officials." business services, the tax drop was suit against a. ~sta . Mesa comp~y ~so~~;: an a"""'°"'ent rio the . . . tU t He terms the federal department's possible because of a huge jwnp in · Tuesd1ay, cbargmg 1t with illegally usmg ""'"""" P r. to , antitrust se . emen · . . decision to seek .bids for offshore drilling assessed valuation which rose from the-L E~s trademark. . between. the San Juan CaplJtraM Reineci:e s lawyer, while concedmg hIS as a proposal which would have "a $241,744,135 to $303,761,580. ~e s~1t alleges starCrest ~ucts of Chamber ol Commerce fJX1 the city client gave some erroneous lnfonnation massive impact on the area." nie board approved several minor Cahfonua ~Jnc., 3163 Red Hill Ave., stating that the city will pay tl\C chamber to the commlUee, says Reinecke's "lf there is one asset of California that . embarked on a "concerted and '12,250 for promotional serviceS. the people cherish ·t is bea be d c!ianges m budget ~ ~ed that an intentional scheme of false a n d - A request by the Planning problems may stem irom b ei ng coastline The ~ ~ the c 1 s anst eight percent salary mcrease -for misleading advertising throughoul. the Ctiinmialon -to include applk!atklns for straightforward to a fault. ' . . . 5 a,~ge ~chers. has been left in the budget for United States" by using the L'Eggs logo OIHite and off-site directional subdivision Reinecke, said attorney James E. Cox, ~tional facility m the state, he mfonnat1on only. Teachers and m· ·115 ads. slnn• in the moratorimn oo buJldinor and · ,...J..t_,ght I said. d In! h led ~--is a 5UlU , gent e, courteous, overly "I am d ubllul that ·1 dril .. 1· . , a m strators ~ve not yet sett on In additioo to the damages, the suit zoning, cooperative human being ... who will appropriat 0 use ' f 01 h ~istif: wh~t the .salary 1ncrea~ should be but seeks to ban StarCrest from using tbe -ReneWill of. the agreement with the talk to people maybe when he . e 0 sue a u u Oucas sa1d ·the salary schedl!1e can be L'Eggs trademark in all future firm of Welputt and Okazaki for legal shouJdn't." ' ' ~~~meg : ~~~r, i~ •rre ~ver i1s to t>:e1 changed after the final budget 1s adopted. advertising. services at the ra<e of $1,500 per month Cox was defending Reinecke Tuesday in m a 1 orru~ wa _en, 1 for 30 hours with an addiUonal fee ·of $50 in . the first day of testimony at should only be after consultation with the per hour for additional wort. Reinecke's perjury !rial government and people of tile area to Israeli A.ir Needs From P-e l -Status report "' Prima Deoedta · make sure that all possible visual and --.. Canada dump site access r 0 u t e s envlronmental safeguards are assured," HOSTAGES • • __ _. b• ~~ty's envtroomental "' p l he sa'd TEL AVIV (UPI) -Israeli leaders r· .. ...,..-,, wn:u .r_nml Y~ Fu 1 ;.. 'd be · t · ed Iha told Treasury Secretary William E. • review boanl. A Fowitain Vailey man suea-ure-cUy --- and three of its policemen for '5,000 COLLEGE .•. en....,S3l 1sno ~convmc t 1 tha , -"--lderat'-olhomeowners' d I 'd 1· ha be · Simon today that lsrae needs.more-n .,.,... ...... a equa e cons1 era ion s en given to $2 b'll' . .1.t d 1 lost si'ght-of the su...,..'s cat' • --_.aSIOCiatlons!-.t-...._and-l·a-n-d-a.c.a.p.0 __ _ ?i.fonday in an Orange C<lunty Superior Court action charging the trio with striking and kicking his 16-year-old soo.. Louis R. .Hilden!>randl, 9121 I.a Estrella, claims that . the injuries were inflicted last Aug. 27 3nd that bis son, Clay S., 16, required medical attention after the incident. He identifies the three officers allegedly involved as Lowell Waine Lipe, Richard H. Deweber and \\'illiam Parker. OIAMMCOAST DAILY PILOT Ti. Onrio-C:0..1 Olily PilOI. "'1111 *'"cl> i.- ~ '"-"-""'Pl'Mt. • P<fb1""9d l>f "'-a.- Coott PIJ.Oli1M1>11 °"""""" ~· ...... .,. oub1<1toed, Nond1y 1"""'911 F<td1y, o1or C..!1 Miiot. ,.,..._, lk..:11. >M!llllglQ<I Sliet./F- ,_ Vl119'1', L1g""" SIJCI\ 1...,....,~ I nd ~ -S.0..-.a-tll/Sll> ~~ CllJ:H!,.no. A ~"Ole fflg<Qnl( """'""It llUINl'9d &ol~•l>CI s.. .... ~ T!le princ@lqutll_••'""O ~ 11330Wd &.l>S!No91, Co.11 "'-Cll~tim •. 926la s ... c.,....Offke )OS ~8CO<TW.oR~ O"-Offke1 Cott• "41$11'.»0""""' 8av$l'flr.I H~~~~!JrNlev"'.I Hl/nllf19!1)1'1 O.IO> 1 re'~ IJI\--=~ llou-. .. ,4 L~>l'\18"0 ,,,,~, ... - Telt,itoN 17141642-4321 Ct.•tifltd Alh'trti-., 642·.1671 s. c ........ All o .. ,.,, ........ : ,.,._ 4f2·4420 ~.1•1•.0r-co..i~~ ~ '--'-~""''"-·-Olltl/111"• 0r-1Mom ,,,,,.,,,""~""~ •flcaA-•1-Mi('lll OI~-, "'°°1'11 '"'" IO\lete °"" .i co.i.t Mom. ~.,,.._ ~ ~'°" "'<:#'-1100 llW)lll""".., ..... ,14.«J l!IOl'lnly:/1111~~ iMallllol-f!I OO'"°""""lt, • $35,000 a year post. Bremer, who had been superintendent since 1968, resigned under pressure but will serve as president doing special assignments of the board for the remaining two years of bis contract. The initial process of reviewing_ and narrowing the applications wa~ done by a seven-member citizens ~com m i l-l-e e chaired by Jenkins. The group included a faculty member, administrator, student. two trustees, and two members of the community at Jarg~ "I want this job finished," Mrs. Brandt said today. "I think our delays are ' throwing a Jot of people off scheduJe." From Pagel . BRlJSH FIRE.-.• the road. , Several times the hoses of firemen were burned throu~h as the fire moved along. At the top of the ridge. an onshore breeze prevented the blaze from jwnping a fire break and crossing to the other side of the ridge. . Later, an olfshore wind pushed flames back against an ' area already buraed, Chief Kuhn said. Capt. Turbeville noted that the cool everiing temperature and the lncreuin·g humidity also worked to th e advantage of the firemen . -1 "l hope that's the biggest one vie have," ' Chief Kuhn said today after surveying the blackened hillside. Peacekeepers !\feet SAIGON, Sou!h Vielnam I AP) -The four·natlon intemation;il peacekeeping commission met today for Its first regular se.ssion in three month.1 . the issue. 1 100 a year 1n m1 1 ary an econom c """". ........, lcularl ln The aide's sentiments rollow closely aid from the United States, government Seyeral minutes later, the lawmen in maintenance problems, part y !ho ol U S R Andr J H. ha officials r e po r t e d, Finance MinJster the helicopter apparently spotted the the Weltport tracU. se · · ep. · ew · ms w Yehoshua Rabinowitz told Simon that suspect and two bodies and saw the -Status reports «t the civic cente!" ( R-f!iewport_Beacb).~-who-lasL-\\'~srael1s·balanee-d-payments-detJCtNhts-suspect"'M!--into il~wOOded area, car.eying. -.site _home.~warranty-commatee,_and, __ --reveal~ the extent of the fede~al year amounts to $3 billlon. ,the machinegun. architectural board or review. program after JI briefing with Interior Department executives. Hinshaw stressed that the only possible means of local support of the drilling would be iron-clad promises from the Interior Department and the winning bidders that all conceivable environmental and visual safeguards wol,lld be brougtM. to bear in the drilling projec!>. Hinshaw, howevei:, condemned the concept as having a profound and Lynn Hort HART'S John Hnrt SPORTI NG GOODS BICYCLES-I' ARTS-TI RES-ACCESSORIES •• assertedly adverse impact on property If 1.,..., ............. ..,llll~llilll~llllli~'!".!~~!!,!!C•~"!l'l!'!'!""'" .. ~!'"!~""!'~~ll'!ll!"~!"""!!!'!!!'-4 values in nearly every coalltal area I i E · L .Ci.om . affecled by !be offshore drilling which 1' ~ 538 CENTER STREET-CO TA M SA-46-1919 -· proposed beyvnd the lhree-mile limit. Jury Selection In Popeil Case Begins Today Screening of 66 prospective jurors who will try to decide inocence or guilt in the murdei'-for-hire trial of Newport Beach malron Eloile Popell began today In Los Angeles County Superior Court. She and her boyfriend Dan Ayers, 10 years her junior, are accused of plotting the death of her e9lranged husband samuel Popeit Jr., a muJtimillionalre Chlc11go kitchen gadget tycoon. The process of impanelling !he jury for what is eipeeted to be a stx·wttk trial got under way Tuesday with weeding out some amon.g 220 prospedlve jurors. Vacations, work schedules and other factors "'ere considered in li&ht of the anlldpa!ed trial length. Court Casual Tennis Shorts 6.95 • 8.95 • I 0.95 Wilson Tennis Shorts 9.95 • 16.95 Temls Shlrts ·6.00 1•:8.00 • 9.00 TennirDresse~adl•• Shorts Lacles Tennli Shoes 8.95 • 17.95 • 22.95 Cot1YtrH Al Stan Baskeiball Shoes I 0.9 5 Con'lerH Slddgrlp T-1• Shon 9.95 Jade Purcell T.-ls Shoes 10.95 Fncf Perry THiii• Sltoe• 15.95 Tretorn T.n• Shoes 17.95. Adidas Tetinls Shoes 22.95 . I \ I -f f sday's Cloeing Prices I' ' \ • New York (fps and DotVns ' . ---~-. . ... Wedne~it J11ly 17 1974 SC DAIL V PILOT ZS • : I NEW YORK 1STOCK EXCHANGE • Year's High-Low1;1 Appear Every Saturday Late Rally Props Ne,v York Stocks Fi11ance Briefs e Rock1cell An1erlean 10 llfott Aetlce L ... -I " -" • • r • .. • • • • i , "' --.... isfying (01meet Hj rry Crown. BARGAIN MATINEE WEONESDA Y -I :00 P.M. ALL SEATS S J.00 . . . ....... ' Ma11i1lis Heads Ame1·ica11 Filn1 Institute \\'ASll lNC.:TON' (AP) "Days of \Vine aQd Roses," i\l :trlin i\lanulis, a '~ a 1· d . : .. l.uv." "Tile !\1 i r 11 c I e \\inni ng niotiori picture and \\'o~k'er .' "De:1r Hl'art" and l ~\c\'lsion producer, has bce11 "'R (' q u i e 111 for n ftlerivy· na1nt.'CI dircr1or of t h c • \\·~iJlht." For its lirst l\ro .\rnt•rican Fi I n1 Jn~tit ult''s yr.:u rs, he \\'3S sole producer wrstt•rn operatii;n :it Beverly of lhf' CJlS ft!IC\'ision scrics /lilts. ··Plriyhouse 90." Dirrl'lor G(·orge Stl'\'cns J r.. "Tht_• i\n1ertcan FI J n1 The A1nerican FUm Institute arrangernenl Y.'lth the institute \\'as rowldcd In 1965 to ts nexible enough for him to c.oncouragt' the art of the cOnUnue his Ol\11 production 1noti<>n picture und lo help "''""""'ts. prcscr\'c Its heritni;e. I t 0r= "•;;;:··============""=;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;';~~:::::::. operates Its 01'Ti theater in the r In 1955 announ(.'ing lhe n1>point111<'nl. lnstilutr is 11t a stiige.'" .~:iid i\lnnul is wi ll n!"su1nc hi:-1 S1evcns s;iid, "\\•here \\'e need 0::2 .... ~c---f I u1•\r Y.!.!1©L.-Aug.. L o111-uvt.ll1-gr.ealcr lnvoh·eml"nt :::: f{:r1~,vstonc. lhe c o·n \' e. rt ~ d frotn lhe professional fiJm Kennt'dv Center and has received 1nore. lhan 12,000 feature filtns "'hlch have been deposited In the Library or Congress. .. Thp Be verly l~ills operation is in)effect a conser\'atory ror you11g lll1nn1akers to practice thelr skills . Trainees follow a l\vc>-~·car program, at the end of 1rhich each is in,·oJved ln an original filn1 projcCl-. --- there were a few thihgs a fashionabl e girls school dil!Jll teach. 99 ;r;;% Beam: 1 ~~ r.,:,.;, ='I~ co . .;~ 5¥ Ct...L>.£8 (Ii') I .... GEORGE C. SCOTT -FAY DUMA WAY "OKLAHOMA CRUDE" . ..-.. LINCPLN -DRIVEIN Lincoln A~enue W. ol Knoll Buena Park • 527·2223 THE M1RISC H CORPORATION Presai1s CHAR LES BRONSON in A VIAL TEA t..i1AISCH· AICHAROFl...EISCHER PRODUCTION "MR. MAJESTYK" Also Starting Al LETIIERl UNDACRiSTAL LEE PURCELL Wntten by ELMORE LEONARD ML.SC b'(CHARlES BERNST&:!N Proouced by WALT Er~ MIRISCH O•rrc1~ byR,CHAAD FLEISCHER -IPG I ""·'.:?-~'":''~'} oo..i:<tl\Y{)[Lu•f· Un1tedAM1sts • plus· IN HU: W E<;l ... INSH U Cl'Nll'" IN T .. ! WIE:S f"'!NS l l:A C.l tH LD CC?4 Wl 5t .. ,..51f• ~ 'OI°'~ •UT lt1 U9l "U ""'"". '-lit• •u• 1•1 utj . .,,~,!~ r. .. o • c,•u•• l l•• ~llW '•" hl•l f• ... oo ' ~..,,, • ••• "" ..o •••• 892-44.93 _j9)· 581.. -- -------'--'--'--'---'-~-~------ 111.insion \1·hich houses the con1n1unity. J\·tarlin J\fnnulis i n s t i I u I r ' s Cen ter for 1\'ill lead rhis dl'vclopment nod Ad\'a nced Fil1n Studirs. also be associated with ore in i\l;111ulis productions have the over-all direction or the r r c 1• iv c d 2 E 111 111 y iriSfltule's · • plannfiijf and non1l11:1l ions And 11 E1nu1~· gro\\"th." ~l a nul is s aid hi s a\\:ll'ds <1~ \\Cll as ~b: Oscar 1101ninations and ;in Osc11r. His producticns ha\'C i n c I u d c d Great stars in person! Hi\nk Thompson Th<-Gr.\SS Rool s Ll'S Brown ~ill!S &! H.:ntk•rson Tht> four f'n~s/'1 11\\.'n Tki.> St.,plc Sin~rs Chuck Jones M <),l!ic ~vuc Continuous free entertainment rodeo · horse show motorc)\::lc r>\.Cl'S TV pnll!r.\mS · sports . - ,. flowers . c.\rnival I ~C~ I, --~ I -~~1.,,1 I" l ""• 'lo Ml Genera.I Admission: AduJt!i $1.75 Cl\i1dn::n 6·12 $1.00 Under 6·f~e. __ ...,_ ll'lill ........ ,... ...... _ .. ,.., ... _ --· a:'f '· - · CHARW BRONSON "MR. MAJEmK" ,,, __ CALL THIATRE FOR SHOW TIMES 67 3·6260 Al10 .. ... .. -.. ' ....,.A.:>.n. - WOODY J..:..LSt{ "P'-"' Y :":' .i.GJ1I. .. SAM'" :ot!i '"Color 'f • •n' . ·~ r•~·~ ? lyT.1. E~err S11urd1y in the DAILY PILOT :lido ........ "'"' -....... . .. ....... '.. . .. ' .. lYfS. flOM 7 P.M. COHTINIOUI SUf\IDA l NOM 21'.M.. 673-8350 Where were you in '6Z? ,,. ti 1'1.US George ~~~'"g!~~Jackson I A 10uch Of Class , Paul Son ino HildegarJ Nei l """~i..Jnhn C~mtr<>n ..._ h Li<:or,ct" &rrit .. ..i::>ammy Cahn '.t'nn•~~. Mtl•in Frank •MJad1 Row p.,....._ ..... ,.i!\.,.,...,b. .l.i~lviri Fnnk ~" lw<n Emh.o.s.y 11,i.,,.., r"'"""°""' r,,..., . ..,.... --------· ~"·" :!<o.V>hT .... _ ... .:.N<,, .. JlrlM II.~~ Hi::• 'PG; MllL NEWMAN. ROBERT RIDfORD KATHARINE ROSS. Ali All SUPH STAI c ... WATIHHS DAILY 1:00 · MATIHflS DAtLY 11.:30 1:30 4:30 7:1$ 9:30 ' "BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" <1:10· 4:30 1:30 10:)0 JP.llff!JL ROBERT N~· JMIDJroJIW ;· -~ --~ SJBY!IW ' II~"° t .,1-~tr,::T~'I(' A GEORGf RO( Hill FIU-11 7BESTING \•:.: .. ,t,DAVIO S. VIAAD· ~· ... ·1,GEORGE ROY Hill r...:-.;a.1 ~TONY Bill~ MICHAEl &JUUA PHILLIPS ._~~..,..~ ............................. .. ' -- • 1#11€ H.lrbor Boulh'.,d It WI hon StrMI C•t•Masa•&M-0573 .. JIUKtl Ir THE KID~ARE BACK! Jud .,, the fun ol 111 At Theatres and Drive-Ins Thro119hout SOuthem California -~ PAUL NEWMAN· ROBERT REDFORD KATHARINE ROSS . "BUTCH CASSIDY AND niE SUNDANCE KID" ·A George! Roy tlilT·P.aul MonJ~h PrOC!ucbOt'l. <:o-StamnJ STROTHER M.tf'TIN • JEFF COREY• HENRY JONES E~eo:;lllive PtodUClll' PAUL,MOtJA~I~ • Proc:lucedb~ JOHN FQAEMAll O:rllCll!d Ly GEORGE ROY lllLl • llk<tlcn 111 YllLUAM GOLDMAN Mu~icComoo~ a~ ConOOCled by BURT llACHARACH A NEl'IMAN·fOREt.IAN Pr .. ~lion • Pal\IYl5IOR0 •-Color b/ 0.Luxe• ~liiltful;is fM:<I 111lt-(l!iii"n119bJl.J. T~ 1 COSTA ltllSA ORANGE COUNTY ORANG£ """'" ..... ft-Of•fit' 5t•l•C- 'W.102! ., ' c-•·-IH'I •-• 413·4~S Fox South Coast ~l 714·546·271 1 COSTA MESA Piulo Drive· In 714-54S.3313 El TOIO . Sadcllebatk Plaz1Cinema714·581·5880 lltrNTlltlTON tEACN Orange 1.1an Cinema 714-637·0340 DIAHIE Stadium Drive· In #4 114.539.5990 WESTMINSTEI Clnema·West 714-8924493 WSTMSTl./llKH•ST. MU 'lllNl'l:flllY'tlliOUS tu ao Of U.'1Altrf NIMO ll'GI Pl.US I MUIMWI tOllU ICIAKATOA UST Of JAVA lPG Huntinrton Cinema 714-347-9608 OltNlt CiMdome 20] 14-532·3328 WesllnQok 714-5304401 DAYSTAR \"'flresents The Southern California Tour of • Com ing-to: La911na Beach High S~hool Auditorium 625 Pn ATt,, L.,... leach Friday, july 26 8:00 P.M. Saturday, July 27 8:30P .M . Sunday, July 28 8:00 P.M. At Prices You Can Afford: Ad-• 'l1diolt AcWh SJ.00-5-nts I. Chitdml $2.00 Al Tiit 0-SJ.SO I. $2 .50 Tickets Go On Salt I 0:00· A.M. Than. Al . Bo Jangles Music Village .. 933 S. Coast Hwy .. Laguna ·seacn Coast Music t 839 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa . - "The Fo !JI .Mus.es Music.Center. ______ _ 11------2 N. Avenida de la Estrella. San Clemente Mission Music 27601 Forbes Ad . ~.O. Fwy. at Crown Valley Pkwy., Laguna Ntgucl ,... -. ;· . -- .· .. -. . " -. " -· .. ., ' ' -. -. " -· -- .. ~gu11a-Beaeh -' DITION "Today's Final N.Y •. Stoeks VOL. 67, NO. 198, 6 SECTIONS, 80 PAGES ORt NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA \ WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1974 TEN CENTS .. ~-B~ush Eire-Near Art_FestivaJ· Burn·s 40 Acres I . . . , ---------- ·L t'llltEMEN BATTLE 40-ACRE LAGUNA CANYON BRUSH BLAZE Model Rodcet Bollewd C•uso Of Fire-· An.Colony ~~~~-. . Laguna Policemen, Fire Fighters Vote on Sal~y Laguna Beach police and fire employes adjustment effective Jan. I rather than 4 today are voting on salary: and fr~nge • percent. benefit proposals by negotiators wh!cll -Police will receive time and one-- would give them significant p a Y half overtime salary for all hours ~'orked increues. in excess of 57 hours during a seven-day Agreement between represenlatives <If cycle. the clty-ol-La~una Beach...3nd the t\1'0 ---=..lli.J@Jl'lo~s workin as acting assOclations, the last of the city employes engineers or captains will rective bonus to settle on pay, was reacMed Tuesday. pay for those positions after conpletion of A request tiy the POI~ Employes seven shifts a year. A!moci.aUon for a special hearing beklre -More liberal sick leave and the Laguna.Beach City COuncil today has berevement leave policies. been w;ttidraWn due to U\e seJilement. -Vacation reductions for e1nployes Approval by the empioyes seems With less than five years with the city. likely. -An education incentive program Prepouls for both the police and fire awarding-bonus~pay of12S a-month klr erpp1oyei inchx!e: an· associate of arts degree and '50 a -Ai I· ~rctnt pey increl!.se effective month for a bachelors degree. 'July 15 ind a 4 pe!'Ct!rit increase The salary adjustments mean lhat a effedlve Jan. 1 .. Police sergeants and - -polit'e officer with two a_nd one-half years lieutenant.a will receive a 5 percent o_f city service will go from a base pay of $1;060 to $1,124 as of July 15 and to $1,169 as ol Jan. 1. • • II osrnges Killed The salary adjustments will cost Ule city an estimat:OO $Z34t000. T h e ·111 ~Cold BlOod -· __ _,,cijtlj.~~~1 ::..u:se-~~~7° 0~:,: ' ' ' -million. ~· - Gunman Hunted Angry Housewife MIAMI (uPI) -A gmunan 1<>oi< two -loday -them -Into •-Ch ks p· ts A vawil 1ot· 1n iootll · Dade County and UC 0 , X ~W:~-.~--: .. Police and '""'"1. agents launched a At~Law Off~cers . manlnri for the gmunan, who rted iilto a wooded .,.. foltowtng'Ule -ting. , 'I11ere was no J~laie-Word 9Q..bow the su!pecl got tile hootaget. Kenneth W. Whluaker, opectsl.agent In charge of the Miami FBI, .was personally dlred.ing the manhunt, Cf!rUred near Southwest 117th Avenue and liath Street. . The smpect was dncr{b:ed only as a black man wearing bro~ clothes. Kenneth W. Whittaker, special a~ent in been following the BU1pecl and two hootages around Dade County '"' nearly an hour l<l<!IY when he IOlddenly !lopped at 1 vacant lot, forced the boltages out of the car and mowed them down with tbe lllJllnladlNJ1111L Atdhoritlet 1akl the suspect was driving a yeUow Mercedes Benz auto - ' polllbly lllien from one of the hootages, There was no wonJ what lriggered the chue. Authoritles -ukl FBI agents v.·ere following the SU!pect's car In several unmartted cars and a190 by helicopter. The clwe-apparentty -1 soutbwar down Miami's Palmetto Expressway inlo (lloe HOSTAGES, P11e II • SAN •FRANCISCO-(API -/( 24-year· old ~wife held 11 officers at bay here for ababt an hour with a Tine; ax, machete and barrage of furniture, pots and paris. police said. They reported that Nancy E. Waltz was throwing pots,. pans and furniture from a window of her home in the Ingleside District at 6:30 p.m. Tuesda y. When the first two officers arrived, they were met w!Ut a barrage of Dying household Items. Mrs. Waltz also nung an aJ: out the wtndow, 11ightly injuring officer Robert Sudano in the left leg, they said. Nine more officers were called for rtinforcement and attempted to stonn the fron t dQOr. But r,trs .. Waltz allegedly bekl them off with a machete and a rifle, they reported. Al 7 p.m. officers U9ed varlouS' diversiooary tactics and distracted ·Mr1. Waltz to the rear of the house where officer~ Quinlan captured her. ~ "'as taken ·to San Francisco General Hospital for scrvaUOH, UJey said. ·• • I • ' By JACK CHAPPELL Of ,.. OdY ...... 11.tf A raging brush fire that was apparently started by a mode.I rocket burned more than 40 acres in Laguna Canyon about-a half mile north of the Fe!tival of Arts grounds TUesday night. snar11n·g-Ji~vy traffic on the busy Laguna· Canyon-Road. Nearly 150 firelighters from the Orange County Fire Department and Division of Forestry and the Laguna Beaclt Fire Department fought the blaze -which blackened the Irvine Rao ch acreage on the west slde of Laguna Canyon Road. The suspected cause of the fire was a model rocket fired-by a man-now sought by authorities.·He was not identified . There were no reported injuries, and no 11vestock deaths are presently koown. The first major Laguna area brushfire of the season , the <.'OOf!agration began at about 7 p.m. and county fire crews v.•ere . . still at the si te today cleaning up and checking the area ror sm-0\dering embers which could begin another blaze. Control of the fir e' was announced at 10:30 p.m. as firerq_en, hand crews v .. orking vt'ith shovels and chain saws, and two bulldozers ringed the canyon fire. La~a Canvon Road betY:een Laguna Beat'!i and El Toro was blocked . Laguna Beach and California Highway Patrol officers halted niotorists at road blocks .• as fire units lined the. canyon road. Visi tors to the dity's art fest ivals and the Pageant of the ~tasters were delayed . ~g_una Beach Fire Chief Charley Kuhn and County Fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville, information officer, agreed that the fire fighters were fortunale in receiving advantageous "'eather during the Jire. The fire first rliCC<l up the canyon wall from the point of ignition nea r the side o! ISee BRUSH FIRE, Page %) Terror·ist~ Bomb Roclis I -' \ ' LondOn Tower; I Killed $4.8 Million ' . - Laguna Board Approves Budget An ending balance that is $239,739 more than. anticipated will allow the Lag\ll18 Beach Unified. School District. to reinstate some programs previously l:ut from a tentative spending plan. Trusteei ~~ uJ.an i moua_ix approved a prelil:fdMrl' budget for flscil 1974-75 totaling $4,890,601. They al" sel a public hearing oo the final° budget for Aug. 6. 1be 1973-74 ending balance is '539.739, acrording to school <lfficlals who had been using $300,000 as the anticipated ending balance in earlier bu d g e t deliberations. U8CS decided upon foc the ertra money include: -Reinstating the e I e m e n t a r y counseling program. -A 1.5-percent pay-hike for teachers and classified emptoyes. -More fuods for adaptive physical education, ·a program for students who can't participate in regular sports. --Spending-$5;500-for-a -recreational leader at Aliso School after school, to be reimbursesf later by the county. In addition', $86,IXKI will be distributed later by the n~. still-unnamed super· intendent and his staff. It is unknown at this point whid!. programs will receive more (unding, but teacher representa· live Kay East requseetd the money be -spent soleJy-oo-educational -programs. The elementary school counselor will return to his counseling position, along with heading_ a oew federal_ drug abuse. program, Wliictl is funding oni-third o[ his salary. Part of the money will go to teachers. who were given the 1.5 percent cootingency pay hike when they settled their contract in June. 'nle pay-hike-was also extended to the classified employes, · who settled their contract Tuesday night with a pay raise identical to-the-1eachett~ Foster Ca1·e Crisis Both groups received an Ll.18 percent pay boost retroactive to July I. Administrators, who were given 9.5 percent last mon1h were not given the adqitional 1.5 percent raise. •• -.· "hti~~ball lJr:ai . Dizzy Dean Dead at 63 RENO, Nev. (UPI) -DiZzy Dean, One ·of baseba1l's· greatest pitchers who starred with the "Gas House Gang '' during the 1930s, and later a radio and television 8nnouncer famed for -his-unique brand of fr~acturcd English, died Dl!AN today at 63. <De- tails, Page 17) · Mrs. Dean Wf!S at his side in St. Mary's }fospital when he died at I :35 a.m. Also present were :iis brother Paul, and Paul ' Dean's ty,·o ~hildren. The son of a rotton picker whose family moviRr aljijut the Soillh in the early 1920s, young Dean developed a strong arm b y throwin.e; dirt clods at prairie dogs. ' Amiable although incredibly vain, he was the soul of tile 1934 St. Louis Cardinals, popularly known as the "Gas House. Gang." He swaggered sitting down, once dangled a teammate out of a 12th· story hotel windo~· and-liked to- invade formal parties dres.sed in house painter's overalls. Wilh..itall,-OL' Diz \1'35 one oLth~ greatest pitchers in b a s e b a 11 history before a freak accident in 1937 cut short his career. Cited by Report • • -sAcRAMENTo cul'n ~ •\al•-~eight_ V ar1ance Health and Welfare Agency's foster care progr~m .i• pl•guc<I by. :·mi•h·m .. h" 01 Plea Goes Before organtzatton· result mg in inadequate care \ for some children, a legislative report charged TueS<l.ay. Assemblyman Vin~ent Ad1' ustin (T Board Thomas, chairman of the Jo 1 n t · -t'.) Legislative Audit Committee. said there were 14 separate organit.ational units in the agency for foster child ren making it impossible f~r efficient supervision." • HE SOLD PlCKVP TO FIRST -CALLER "lt sold the Jtrst day the ad ran. "The first caller bOOght my pickup." ~id the satisfied Daily l'ilot advertiser trom Fountain Valley. Here's the ad that did the job for hln1: 1964 JEEP P.U., 4 Wht Drlvo Good condition. • Let a Daily Piiot classified ad work for you. Call 642-5671'. A rl'quest for a height variance in the new housing tract being built near upper Park Avenue in Laguna Beach will come before the Board of Adjustment Thursday at 7:30 p.m .. at city hall. David ~tiller and Associate3 is reques ting permission to build a house 12 feet 5 ind>cs higher than allowed. nie tract is opposite Thurston School. .After several mon ths of meeting Tuesday evenings, the board is returning to Its regular schedule of meeting Thursday. Other Items t~ board wilt consider include : -Approval of three signs to be placed al new attorney's offices at 1437 Glcnneyre Street, built by attorney and school board men1bcr \\1ichael Sagar. -A conditional use permit . r o r Canncl's Restau rant in Boat Canyon to sclJ l)eer and .winC'. • "'"' r • ..,..,. OFFERS TESTIMONY S.n. John Tunney ' Reinecke Trial Transcript Flaw ·shocks Attorne y \\'ASmNGTON (UPI) -G<lvernment prosecutOrs were taken by surprise today in California Lt. Gov. F.d Reinecke's perjury trial when a stenographer testified that chan,e:es had been made in a Senate heartng tran:i1Cript forming the basis 'for charges against Reinecke. Benjamin H. Firshein, who reco~ded the testimony during a Senate Judiciary Comnlittee hearing. said ..the transcript subm\tted to the court did not contain corrections he made in it. Firshein testified as a government witness but assistant special prosecutor Richard Davis was clearly taken aback by -the-disclosure. He said he thought corrections had been..-ll'lade in the transcript introduced in evidence. Rejn~ke's lawyer immediately called for dismissal of the case against Reinecke. Judge Barrington Parker did not immediately rule on the motion. lmtead, Parker ordered the jury out of the room aild sharply criticized the government lawyers for their failure to have caught the mistake. It was not immediately cle~ what the changes were but Firshein's testimony indicated they were in the part of the hearing transcript that the government • cited in accusing him or lying to the committee. Former presidential assistant Clark ~lacGregor tes tified earlier that he urged Reinecke to tell the truth in the Senate testimony that led to his trial. ~1acGregor w sa id he talked with Reinecke In 1973 about "differences in recollectlon " between the lieutenant governor and former Attorney General John ~litchell over the date of a meeting "'·here they discussed an offer by JTI to help finance the 1972 R e p u b I i c.a n convention. ~1acGregor -who left the \Vhlte House to become head of President Nixon's re-election campaign in mid·l!m -said he 'Probably expressed "some concern" over differences b e tw ee n Rci necke's and ~fltchell's statements. But he said he told Reinecke "lhal all he could do W{IS to tell !he truth and to be rc~ponsive to the question ," ~tacGregor said he met with Re ine<.>ke tS.e REINECKE, P1ge !I ' Blast ·1Glls Wo~a11; No · Prune Seen LONDO~ IUPJ ) -A bomb. possibly planted by ffiA terorists. exploded in the 900-year-old Tower of London today, hurling broken glass and. masonry into crov.·ds of children and their parents jamming the cityls most popular tourist sight One woman was killed. At least 36 persons -more than hair of them children -'vere 'injured in the explosion, several .of them in critical condition ..,;ith crushed arms and legs. Detectives sifting through the debris found the ~severed foot of a small child. Police said mol'lt or the injured were German and Danish. The explosion sent hundreds of American and other foreign tourists fleeing from the moated stone fortress. A few \1'ere crying but there was no panic. The bomb. the second to explode l\'ithout warning in London tOOay, might have-been the work ot' the Irish Republican Anny, police said, but there was no proof. Police said the bombings had some of the hal lmarks of other IRA attack! that have killed 12 persons and \\'Ollnded 115 others in England since December. ~ A Mrs. Harris o( Sydney, Australia, near to the explosion in the tower but "'ho emerged unscathed, said : '·There \rere wounded all over the place -it looked like a scene out of hell." At least half the tourists stumbling for the exit .,.,·ere children. ~any "·ere school groups being shepherded by teachers. "h-tove on. move on," police shouted. "There might be another bomb." The first blast today damaged a goverriment office building in the suburb of Balham before dawn, but caused no casualties. · The tower , guarded by the colorful pike-carrying Beefeaters, daily drav"s thousands of foreigners to see the royal family's ceremonial jewelry and it! collection of armor and !ireanns. The famed tower served as prison for hundreds or enemies or British royalty, including Sir Walter ·Raleigh. Many famous prisoners were murdered or executed at the to...,·er, including t\lt·o young princes,_nephews -0f_Rjchard ill, ~ and two of Henry Vlll's wives-;-AMe-~ Boleyn and Catherine Howard. Orange Coast , Weather Sunny and warm Thursday with only patchy early 1norning clouds at the beaches. llighs from the mid-70s at the strand to the 80s in- land. Overnight lO"-'S in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY Former Feticiano's Resta urcu1t partner Gene Randa.110 has draWtl l1is second state prison term whe·n judge roted lie vi~ lated probatio1~ imp9se<{ t11 liquor hijacking case. Story, Page 9 •. At Ywr ''"'" J l.W.llllf 2t L. M. lft'ol 14 (111 .. f'fll• • CerHr Cellltt' 14 Cl•ulfiecl 4).U CemlO tl Cr•n•""4 11 °'"" foltllctt It E ....... .i •. "'~"' l'lft•ftllll .... Hor•KOH lnltrmll11t!I .. . n , ff.ts tl·U " tt " Alwt L1 .... rf tt M•illlU • M_., o.c.11r n Mtllln N ft M '4•tl M11l11l4 1'1111d' H Nill-I N._.. ~ Or-C-IY "'t .._.. 17,., ,..,. 1111 11.Klli t, 1t $p0rt1 lt•lt Dr. Sl!lll( ..... 11 11 Sl.C-M1rll;fl1 n.tt Tt11vli.IM It T~••lfn tOI W111nwr 4 W«lll NtWf I " -... ~. ' 2 OAILY PILOT LB Wtdntsday, July 17, 1<174 No M~rknps 'Ki,ng's X' 01i Sta 1iiped Goods L WASHINGTON (AP) -Safeway Stores, Inc., the nation's largest supermarket chtill1. announced today it plans to stop marking up prices on nlost prodUl'lS ulready stocke~ on. shelves. ''\Vhcn we are forced to make a pr1~e increase, cans and pack· ages which are already price-.n1arked will be sold o ut at the old rice " said Safev;ay vi ce president John Bell. . p He said if a can or packa.ge bea.rs t~o prices U1e product will. be sold at the Jo\\•er price. and 1f a price .1s lo"'crecl, all foo~s be,r1ng the ~Id higher price will be marked with a new lower pnce. Bell i;aid the new pricing policy will. go into effect about July 28. He said it wi ll cover. 1neats. groce.r1es. produce and nonfood products but not·fair-trade items and baked goods. . . Bell. said at a nev.·s conference that the new lowest-price pohcy \\'as pron1p1ed by inflatio nary trends. F rom Pagel REI NECKE ... shortly before the state official tes~ified. before the Senate Judiciary Comm11tee. The \Vatergate prosecuior 's o ffice charged ReineCke lied v.•hcn he lestified he did not tell ~litchell about the ITT offer until September, 19'il -lv.'O months af!er settlrment of a federal antitrust sull against ITT. In previous testimony, Sen. John B. Tunney (0.Calif.), and Lee Fremstad .. a reporter for the Sacramento Bee, said Reinecke had told them he infonned ~lilchell of the ITT offer in ~lay 1971 - prior to the antitrust settlement. . . Reinecke·s Jav.:yer, \\'hile conceding his client gave some erroneous infonnation to the commiUee,. says Reinecke's problems maY stem from be i n g straightforv.•ard to a fault. Reinecke, said attorney James E. Cox, is a "straight. gentle. coiJneous, oVer.ly cooperative human being .• · v.·ho will talk to people, maybe when he shouldn't." · Cox was defe~ing Reinecke Tuesday in the rirs.t · day of testimony al Jteinec~e's perjurf trial. From Pagel BRUSHFIRE • • • the road. Several times the hoses of firemen ,..-ere burned through as the fire moved along. At· the top of the ridge, an onshore breeze prevented the blaze from jumping a fire break aod crossing to the other side of the rKlge. Later, an o[fshore wind pushed names back against an area already burned. Oiief Kuhn said. Capt. Turbeville rioted that the cool evening temperature and the increasing J1umidily also v.'orked to the advantage of the firemen. "T hope that's the biggest 9ne we ha ve" Chief Kuhn said today after surv~ying the blackened hillside. ' Fro•n Page I HO STAGES . •• the sparsely settled area of southv.·est Dade Count y v.·hen officers momentarily lost sight of the suspect's car. • . Several minutes later, the-lawmen 1n the helicopter apparently spotted the suspect and tv.•o bod ies and saw !he suspect run into a wooded area, carrymg the machinegun. Laos Chi ef Ailing WAS HI NG T ON (AP) -An international contingent of 13 physicians is caring for Prime ~linster ~uvanna Phouma of Laos, v.·ho 1s recovering fro~ a serious .heart attack. Souvann~ .1s widely regarded as the key pcrsonahty preserving the fragile ne\v coalition government of Laos, long a battleground between Communist, neutralist and anti· Communist forces. OAANCil COAST DAILY PILOT ,,.. Or1"91' CorJ ~ -""~ -.......... "'"'"""' ,;j~W)-Pre!s .. """"'"'"" l!Vlllt Or-Colol Pulll> ... "'I ~ Sel>lr•~· .-Mo(>f!O; ... o~.-. "'""""' """"II~ J...,,.,.. IOt C<>ol• Mftl. N9Wfl<WT -~ IV>'ll'IQIOll .e.llGNF- tto/> ¥-• l':i<-1"" DIP_.,, "'""9/~ ~M :-0..--, S:.~ -"-' (.ol'"'Ol'C A -~ , ... ,.,.....~~..,... ~i.e.ir;;....,,Clll"l,...,i..,,"' o., TN1 t>r•»t•i:o<il l>JDI~ r>lonl .. 11,lJO Wlbl l>o SN"', C<M11-C&lilorfo11. 1281e Robe-1 N. We•d Pr .. --Pw·•"8t' T llQm)'I Kee~ ,_ 11 ..... ,.. .... ~'lllV·~· M~L:I."" Ou1ri H Lon·. ~..:!lord P 1~ A1HtM"->noC11<11>r\ l .,...ltecllOffkir 222~1i,._,.,.., /.'OJroo~fi\.P.a Bo. bb6. 92~1 O....Officir• a MKil DOWW a., S""' Ne'fot>(WT&.... lJll™'-'&-1 "°"'"'V'""~ '"~llHe!'o~d S...~$.·"'°"~ll~Jlt<I ,..,,.._ 17141641.·4]2 I a.um.4 ~.-. 642·5671 ....... IHctlAID1,.._.11t.: ,...,._ 4t4-t466 ~ .•• ,. a...,. a.., """"'-('.oll· -No ... ., -_..._ ..,,.,,,, ...... 11 .. "O' ----'""' M ~IJ ~----~~­~c•-llD'tl191Mo:IMC&lt•"1"W Ctl ~., Ril!N'<Ol<llf>li'f'~ l)liOIMl\lt.I~ ~• 11$oi t•OO_.inry.-.....~l3.00-nt,. Gas Compan y Gets PUC OK To Hik e Rate LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The state Public Utilities Commission t o day authorized Southern California Gas Co. to increase annual rates lo customers by $33.7 million -39 cents a month for typical residenti al usage. -The company serves approximately 3.2 million persons. The PUC said the nev.• rates should allow lhe util ity an opportunity to earn an 8.5 percent return on its in \'CStment. The rate of return fOWld reasonable in 1972 was 8 percent. Current earnings are 6.69 peroenl, Southern California Gas President Harry P. Letton Jr. said the company y.·as pleased v.-ith the rate re.lief but was "extremely concerned O\'er the extended delay in reaching the decision." Letton said application for a $53 mi llion annua1 increase was made in January, 1973. and~ that the company hoped a decision would be effective early in 1974. "On the .surface, it might appear that the customer benefits when our needed rate relief is held up," be said. "The W'lfortunate fact is that the serious adverse impact of our earnings the first half of this year makes it more difficult to raise the ·capital ·needed to maintain our utility service. The resulting higher cost of r_a ising money is an mmecessary financial p e n a I t y imposed on lhe consumer in future years." Theater Program Of 'OkUihoma' Se t for Laguna A community theater production of "Oklahoma" will be presented at 8 p.m. Thursday. Friday and Saturday at the Laguna Bead:! High &boo! auditorium, 925 Park A\1e. in Lagllfla Beach. Th.ere also Yt'ill be a matinee performance at 2:30 p.m. Saturday of the Rodgers and "Hammerstein musical. t he "Oklahoma" company consists of 35 actors, dance rs and singers who are professionals. semi-professionals a n d local amateurs. Director Genevieve Smith works with Columbia Pictures and Assistant Director and Choreographer Roy Fitzell has been a dancer' on nine nelwork television shov.·s. The producers are Diane Evans, i\1ission Viejo , and Garol Ec kholdt, San Clemente. - Principal cast members include: Theron IWbin.son, Laguna. Beach; Sandy Fitze\l, Laguna Hills; Beverly And erson, Laguna Hil\S; Roy Fitzell. Laguna Hills; Jerry Brady. Laguna Hills: Bunny Barth, Laguna Hills; Bud Barth, Laguna Hills. Garth Roge rs, Mission Viejo; Janis Vida, Mission Viejo; Bruce Fuller, Corona del Mar; Shirl Carter, Mission Viejo; Steve Roll , Corona de! Mar; Tim Atclnerney, Long Beach; Glenn ftteigs, Newport 'teach; and ltferill Swenson. Costa l'i1esa. Tickets for the production, sponsored by the fl1onnon Chureh, are $2 and may be purchased by phoning.,.@31·9090. -·-J Hannah De Vere ·La st Rites Held Funeral services ""re held today at 11 a.m. for fltrs. Hannah DeVere. 92, of Laguna Beach who died July 12 at her home. 460 Shadow Lane. "1frs-:='DeVcre IS -sllrvived by tv.·o daughters. Mrs. Iris McQueen of Lagw1n Beach and ltfrs. Jnez Esterline of Missouri , six grandchildren, 14 great· grandchildren and eight great-great· grandchildren. Services v.·erc held 11 t Sheffer ~lortuary Ch<ipel in Laguna Beach. Interment will be at }1telrosc Abbey, Ana.t>eiln. ~ • Dads Gro up Se t At Boys Club The Laguna Beach Boys Club has Initiated 11 "Dads' As$0Cialion'' lo support club activities. Dues to the new group are as a year and association dads receive nn auto wlndoV.· stickcr.··a members.hip card and Boys' Cluh nev.•slettcr to keep them infohned or club activities. The membership fee is toi dcducllbl~. further lntormation Is av :t 1111 h,1 e t.hrougb the Boys' Club, 1085 Lnguna canyon Road, Laguna Beach. · " • Saddlehack Panel Mulls Post The Sadd leback c.onege board of trustees ·is scheduled to meet behind closed aoors Thursday to discuss the flv~ top pO~Jbilities for superint~ent of thd' C<lmmurilly C<11lege. Trustee Norrlsa Brandi of Irvine said the final decision on the _rte_w man, to replace Dr. Fi"1!d Bremer who resigned as superintendent six v•eeks ago, probably v.·ill not be made Wltil ne1t '''eek. The selection proc:ss has been 1ed. by Or. Robert J e nk i ns , former superintendent of ,school In S ~ n Francisco v.-ho was hired by the district to recruit 'and narrow the field. About 70 applications ,.·ere received from across the state and nation for the $35.000 a year post , Bremer, who had been superintendent since 1968, resigned imder pressure but v:ill serve as president doing special assignments of the board for the rerliaining two years ol his contract. The Initial process of reviewing and narrowing the applica tions was done by a seven-member citizens comm i t t 'e e chaired by Jenkins. The group included a faculty me"!-ber. administrator, stud ent, tv.'O trustees, and tv.'O memt>ers of the"tommunity at la rge. "J want this job finished,'' Mrs. Brand t said today. "I think our delays are throwing a lot of people off schedule." Walking Limi~ For CUSD Kids Under Restud y Trustees of the Capistrano Unified School District agreed this week to consider changes in. walking distance requirements for bus service, but only v.•here safety is a factor. The request for the change-came from Paul Sayre ol United South Orange County C.Onununities. Sayre said he "Was no! asking that the district return lo old busing schedules, bul thought walking distances were too long in some areas. "fn our area Laguna Niguel high school students have a three-mile limit," be said. "I'm coocemed with the lack of sidewalks and general hazardous walking conditions." Sam Chicas, assistant superintendent tor business eervi<:$, reported to the board that if old walking distances were reinstated the district \\·oukl have to pay an additional $104,585. Bus service was cut back during the energy crisis beca use fuel allocations to the district were decreased. • "Perhaps there is a fuel Shortage,' said Sayre. "~t many buses go ha.If empty a,nd no drivers have been tenrunated or furloughed ." •Ie said the construction of new tracts have lnade traffic problems critical, and many children are walking to school on unsafe streets. Chicas agreed that adjustments should be made where conditions are unsafe and asked Sayre to bring In a detailed request for bus service changes in specific areas. He added that problems with streets leading to Del Obiapo School shoud also be included. Woman Injured As Auto Strikes Her Parked Car 32,000 Gallons Of l\filk Dumped GREETER IMPROVED Eiler Lar'ffn Eiler Larse11 Getting Mail · . .\t Ho spital ' Although Eiler µrsen no looger stands en Coast Highway greeting visitors to Laguna Beach. a few of those who once heard his booming '·hel1001f' have not forgotten him. • The M·year-old greeter has been hosiptalized "''ith a urinary ,infection and complica tions from cancer for nearly one month. He's presently at tbt Veterans Hospital in Long Beach. During his hospital stay, though, abOut tv.·o doz.en we\lwishers, mostly from Laguna, have sent Larsen cards and mall. The La~ Beach City COuncil is planning to honor the man Who has served as the ,fo\vn's official greeter since 196.1. He unofficially welcomed people to the town since 1942. The COWlCil plans ,to take action on Eiler under "ex traordinary business" at their meeting today, sending him """ ... • Legal Point• Pair Lock Horns. On C~pers Post By JOHN VALTERZA Ot t11e DellY l'lltr Sleff Orange County Counsel Adrian Kuyper and California's Attorney General are at apparent loggerheads on legal points raised in the struggle for aacceuloo lo -the vacant-~iflh Distriet-poat-on-t Orange County Board of Supervisors. The connlct is refl ected in opposing legal opinions deaUng with the length of term wbi f'.h 'Al>tlld be in effect ll Gov. Ron- ald Reagan makes an appointment to re.- place the late supervisor, Ronald Caspers. Kuyper Tuesday afternoon reportedly sent on a supplementary report on hls opinions to individual supervlsor1. 'niat document reinforces Kuyper's opink>n issued last June 24 ~ he Insisted that a Reagan appo'lntee would serve only until Caspers old term expires on Jan 7. Then, Kuyper has said, whoever suc- ceeds ReaRan as f(ovemor would make yet another appointment and that would las t through the new. term which Cas· pers won i na landslide primary victory onlv a few days before his death at sea. That te nn would e.ipire in mid·l9'16. Yet, in an opinion which !OUr~s claim has been given to Reagan from the Rumors at the county level conllnue to abauod th'la week as to who appears to be lbe chosen successor. This week'• prime candidate appears Rodger Howell, a resident wlthln the Fifth District and a wel}.kno_wQ lawyer who specializes· in mlDliclpal law. Spckesman for the senior partner In the law firm of Rut an & Tucker insisted late Tu~ that there is no knowledge that HoWell ls the top candidate. Caspers' top aide, Tom Fuentes, recently moved within his I a t e employer's district, and has been meotiooed u a prime candidate for apPointmeot. F\Jentes, hJghly relllble JOUrces say, has the complete blessing of the Caapera family as successor. * '* * Caspers' Ai{l,es Rap Officials Over Drilling Attorney General's Ofllce, the len.iJ:tb of Top aides of the late Orange County an appOintee's tenn ls far different. SuperviJor Ronald Caspers condemned Reports from Sacramento claim that federal officials for their aaerted failure state legal officials are suggeltlng that to con.suit local legislators before an appointee wouJd serve thrOugh the end propming a · ma!Slve program o f of Caspers' old term and through the new encouraging oil drilling In federal waters one as well. of the Orange · Coast. (Related story, State officials have also .conceded, Pal{e tt:) however, that ·the County Counsel's ---Tom Fuentes, top' aide ln the Fifth opinion may be the one wh.lch would be . Diatrtct offices, termed the Interior most honored. Department 's crash program to grant oll Kuyper has cited a 1958 oplnloa from leases in waten from Palos Verdes to the attorney general as the baala: for the Soutb Laguna "a very disheartening county posUion, and thlt opinion ~s example of Washington bureaucrats never been altered iu any coort deciaJOO. failing to coDsult with local officials." The latest reports of an apparent legal He terms the federal department's dispute point to a possible court battle to decision to seek bids fo r offshore drilling seek a deflni.te solution. . as a proposal which wou ld have "a Add ing more fuel to the complex fire in massive impact on the area." the succession issue is that pressure "If there is one asset of California that from Orange County might forCe the the people cherish it is 'our beaches and state legislature lo finally approve a bill ~stline. The coast is the largest u·hich calls for a November election with reC:reatlonal facility in the state," he the winner taking the FJfth District post. aaid. A group of , leading , co u n t Y "I am dOubtful that oil drilling is an Democrats-without the blessing of its appropriate use of such a beautiful central committee -Is waging a petition coastline. However, if there ever is to be campaign throughout. the ~ty ~ an drilling In ~them California waters, it effort to jog loose the Jeglslatioo. should only be after consultation with the That bill was in to ~troduced only days government and people of tbe area to after C.aspers' disappearance b Y make sure that all possible visual and Assemblyman John Brigg (R·Fullerton> environmental safeguards are asaured " but has become stalled in committee. It he said. ' now appears headed for a rehearing Aug. Fuentes said hi:! is not convinced that 12. · bUI adequate consideration has been given to Critics cla im that the election the issue. , wouki play strongly Into the hands of The aide 's sentiments follow clOR!y Newport Beac:h Assemblyman Robert those of U. S. Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw Badham, a Republican '!'ho has been (R·Newport Beach ). who last week cited as a prltne candidate for the revealed the extent of ·the federal Caspers post. Pf0Rl'8m after a briefin& with Interioc Badham., however, has disavowed any Department executives,. strong intentiOn to seek a spot on the Hinshaw stre,ssed that the only possible ballot as a cand!date for supe~isors. ~e means of local Support of the drllllng already is runnmg for reelecUon to his would be iron-clad promises from the assen:ibly seat. , Interior Department and the winning Adding to the convoluted ~tuatlon , Is bidders~ that all co n c e I v a b re the official leave whic:h supei"visors have environmental and visual safeguards granted Caspers-lasting through Aug. 9. would be brought to bear In the drilling Although the board could rever~ Jts project!. action earlier, It does not appear likely. Hinshaw however, condemned the Yet, Reagan might appoint. a successor concept ~s having a profound and ' at any tiI{le, leave or not. aeaerted.ly adverse Impact on property val11es in nearly every coastal area affected by the offshore drilling which is propoted beyond the lhretHnile limtt. Water District's ~ CLOSID ...... , --·----• J!:~Rocquttball-Rocquets &_Balls ~_;; ':' Handball Gloves & Bolls ~II Table T .... ls Paddles & Balls£ • u: ~· Darts & Dort Boards • Duck Feet Fins 10.95 [ Badminton Rockets Wottr Wonder Boards 4.95 1 • • Racket Strl119lncf Bon Aln Slclni Boards 12.95 Bl ke R tpa I rinCJ-P arts...,. Skote Boards 7.95 to 24.00 Tin-Tubes • HARBOR CITY (UPI) -A dairy cooperati ve today defended ILi disposal C I T I Sh rts •t • sewag• plant o! 32,000 galloM of Court osua -s 0 lrcsh, drinkable •klm milk, saying lh<r< 6.95 • 8.95 • I 0.95 . . Converse AU Stars loskttball Shoes I O. 9 5 Converse SkldcJrlp TtMls Shots~ 9.95 w., no alternative bee•""' Its cows .,. Wilson T·nnls Shorts turn ing out mort milk than can be sold. .., A consumer group sakt the disposal 9 9 5 & I 6 9 5 shows an announced milk boycott Ls • ' w~!~ng.1'nk trucks !rom the Milk Tennis Shirts 6.00 • 8.00 • 9.00 Proouecrs AS>OclaUon or A rt .. 1. Tftlllls Dresies--Lodlts Shorts Joell Purcell T.,..ls Shoes I 0.95 Fncl Ptrry Ttiinls Shoes 15.95 delivered 11,000 gal!O.s of skim n!llk Lacll•s T•nnls Shots 8.95 • 17.95 Tuesday to the Los Angeles County ...-.. S.nitolkm District's woter Poliullon • 22.95 , ----~..;.!:::===============:J control ph~nt. 'J'bt associallon dumped It.'!"" ___________ .,,_~ 17,000 ~allons down the dr)lln ·Mood1y. • Tr.tom Tlftllls Shoes 17.95 Adidas Teiinis Shots 22.95 • . .. . :----''-----=---• .. ,.> -< ,• • • • •• '· -• • ; • ~ Saddlebat!k Tbday's Fiiiai N.Y. Stocks • I VOL. 67, NO. 198, 6 SECtlONS, 80 PAG S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1974 TEN CENTS • Terror·is ·t • Lo-ndon-Tower; l l(illed ' l ..Vlne•to·lrvine Mayor Gabrielle Pryor welcomes Irvine-to-Irvine exchange students frOJll Irvine, ScoUand Ian Weekes (right} and ·Francis Healey (ce nter) at the city coun'cil meeting Tuesday. The two Scots will visit the American counterpart city (or a month. i.GNOON (UPI) -A bomb, possibly planted by IRA terorists, expklded in the 000..year-old Tower or London today, hurling broken glass and masonry into crowds of childrtn and their parents jamming the city 's most popular tourist sight. One woman was killed . At least 36 persons -more than half of . them children -were injured in the explosion. Severat,-.~f lhem in critical condition with cruShed anns and legs. Detectives sifting through the debris fopnd the severed foot of a small child. Police said mnst of the injured were $2 Milli.-11 Su111 German and Danish, One American was injured, Ed"''ard KJeln of lf!issouri. . The e'Xp\osion sent b.tndreds of American and other foreign tourli.1.s nceing from the moated stone fortress. A few were crying but !here was rfo panic. The bomb, the second to explode without warning in London today, might have been the work Of the · Irish Republican Anny, police said, but there was no proor. Police said the bombings had some of the hallmarks of other IRA attacks tl)at have kllled 12 persons and Kalnih-ach · Tells Of Dairy Pledge \\IASHINGTON (AP) -The House Kalmbach was convicted recently of Judiciary Committee heard testimony !:elling an ambassadorship. and was sent today about a $2 million campaign pledge lo a Cederal prison in the East to be from the dairy industry for President available for the committee hearings. Nixon's r~lection that one member said Kalmbach gave the committee a M-odel Rocket Blamed might lead lo • bribery charge •gal.St de.tailed cru-onology of the timing ol the Nixon in the committee's impeachment milk price increase, which Nixon decided ,. inquiry. to grant on March 2.'J 1971. but which I 'f ;'\Ve're beginnin& to establish a case of Y•as not announced Publicly ·until two -'-,_ l . -----!!!ill<n'.'.'...Mid ~,.&llzabelh--.._,_U,., ~ , ·• In ' .0 "una_ .c~y· on Blaze ;~ ~:d~e:i:~:~~ rr.:. • J:; .;;:,~.~r~ie::~~0~:i ~ Kalmbach of Newport Beach, NIXOll s on &.Jareb 24 at which a spokesman for former penonal 11"".'r. the "dairy industry "reaffinned " a B..~· JACK CHAPPElL ot ""' c.ilr rn• staff A raging brush fire that was apparently started by a model rocket burned more than 40 acres in Laguna ~"On about a halt mile north of the Festival.of Arts grouod.s Tuesday night, snarling heavy traffic on the busy Laguna Canyon Road. Nearly 150 firefighters from the Orange County Fire Department and DlviSion of Forestry and the La~ Beach fire Department fought the blaze which blackened the Irvine Ranch Cottncil Adopts Nortl1 I rvine . . acreage On the west . side of Laguna Canyon Rood. · Thli suspected cause of the !ire was a model rocket fired by a man now sought by authorities. He was not identified. There were no reported injuries. and nO livestock deaths are presently known, 'Ibe lint major Laguna area brushfire o( the season, the conflagration began at about 7 p.m. and county fi re cre\vs .,..,ere still at lbe site today cleaning up and checking the area for smoldering embers whi ch could begin another blaze. . Control ~ the fire was an nounced at 10:30 p.r:q.. as firemen, hand crews workfng witlt shovels and chain saws, and two bulldozers ringed the canyon fire. Llfguna Canyon Rood between Laguna Beach and El IToro was blocked. Laguna Beach and California Highway Patrol officers halted motorists at road blocks as fire units lined the canyon road. · Other members disagreed, however, previously gfven pled2'e to conlribute 12 and . several sai~ Kalmbach added million to Nixon's re-election c11.mpaJgn. nothing to the te~y about the milk Rep. Charles Wiggins (R..caJi() said deal he had not previ~y given to the Kalrrlbach · did not establish a~Y link Sen~te Watergate committee. t>c:twe;n t~~ campaign pl_edge ·and Miss Holtzman would not elaborate on Nixon s dec1s1on to raise milk prices. her statement. Rep. Wiley. A-fayne (R·IO\\'a), said it \Vas clear to him from the e\•idence given Mnnager of Fair Con.firrn s Deatlis Of Four Anirnals Orange County Fair Ma nager J im Porterfield confinned today that four animals died .during the first four days or the fair but investigation disck>sed the deaths· were a result of natural causes. to the committee that Nixon was responding to heavy political pressure from Congress in agreeing to increase the suppo rt price for milk. Kalmbach wsa the last ,\\•itness heard by the committee before if turns to the task of drawing up and voting -on proposed articles of impeachment. Following his testimony James St. Clair, Nixon's counsel, was to be given an opportunity to submit a brief and make oral arguments summing up the case against impeachment. \\'ounded 115 others in England since of Balham before dawn, but caused no December. casualties. . A Mrs. Harris of Sydney, Aust ralia, The to\ver, guarded by the colorful nea r to the explosion in the . toY!'er bul pike-carrying Beef eaters. daily draws thousands of foreigners to see the royal \Yho emerged unscathed, said: "There family's ceremonial je,,·elry and its ,,·ere .,..,o~ all over the place -it collection of armor and firearms. looked like a scene out of hell." The famed to.,..·er served as prison for At least half the tourisl.o; stumbling for hundreds of enemies of British royalty, the exit were children. ~lany v.·ere school includ ing Sir Walter Raleigh. ~lany groups being·shepherded by teachcrs.--'-~•famous-prisoners-were·-murdered·-« ''Move on. move on," police shouted. executed st the to.,..•er, including tv.·o "There migh.t be another bomb." young princes, neph.e\\'S of Richard Ill, The first blast today damaged a and lwo of Henry Vll l's \\"ives, AMe government office building in the suburb Boleyn and Catherine Hov.•ard. , W IT ..... OFFERS TESTIMONY ~· John Tunney Reinec ke Tr ial Tr anscrip t Flaiv Su rprises V.S. · 2 Hostages Shot Dead In Florida ~IIA~ll (UPI) ...... A gunman took hvo hostai?es today. ushered them into rt \•acant lot in south Dade County and killed them with a Thompson submachine gun, authorities reported. Police and federa l agents launched a manhunt for the gunman, who fled into a v.·ooded area following the shooting. There \Vas no immediate v.·ord on ~ -the suspect got the hostages. Kenneth \V. \Vhiltaker, special agent In charge of the Miami FBI, was personally directing the manhunt, centered near Southwest I 17th Avenue and J38th Street. The suspect was described only as a black man "'·earing bro""11 clothes. Kenneth W. Whittaker, special agent in been follo\\·iDg the suspect and tv.·o hostages around Dade County for nearly an hour ,loday v.•hen he suddenly stopped at a vacant lot. forced the hostages out or the car and mowed then\ down with the submachine gun. Aulhorities said the suspect was driving a yellow ~1ercedes Benz auto - pos!ibly stolen from one of the hostages. There \\'as no v.•ord what triggered the chase. \VASHINGTON (UPI) _ Governm.ent Authorities said FBI agents were . following the suspect's car in several prosecutors were takl?,ll.bY surprise Wday unmarked cars and also by helicopter. in California Lt. Gov. Ed Reineck e's The chase apparently Jed southward perjury trial v.'hen a stenographer down Miami 's Palmetto Expressway in to testified. that changes had been made in the sparsely settled area or southwest ·Senate hearing transcript forming the Dade County when ortic:ers momentarily a . . . lost sight of the suspects car. I - Land Use Plan V.isitors_,_to the. dity.'s ad f§tivals and the Pageant oJ the ~tasters were "l'heY--died.-for two..reasons._Qne_ws the heat and the other was that manv times animals are brought to the fair b)r exhibitors in an overfed condition. They become bloated and die, and that's what happened in this case." he said. At lerist six articles, the chief one chargiilg obst ruction of • justice in connecliOif"WilOtliFW31erga cover-up, are reported to be drafted and ready for presentation to the committee in private briefin~ sessions on Thursday and Fri· basis for charges against Re.imzke. · Several minutes later, the lawmen in &njamin-H.-F..ir.stIBinr;-who~decl..-.-tOO-helicopter_ap~tly_sw~c!l'----· the testimony during a senate Jud1c1ary suspect and t .... ·o bodies and saw the The North lrvine Specific Land Use Plan, -d111fted to govern development in the north end of the city, was adopted by lhe city council Tuesday. The plan ~s been developing almost since the city's incorpor8tion in late 1971 and reflects concern for possible chaotic development of the 2,711 northern acres which was one of the facton leading residents to vote for cityhood . The area oovered is north of Moulton Parkway to the c!Jy llmits, between Culver Drive and Je(frey Road. Unlike most-of the-clty,-which-is _under_ the single ownership of the Irvine Company, the north end ha! ·many landowners ond a potentlal for uncoordinated development. ~ The document is designed to gukie bu)lding in the area which will eventually house about 40,000 penons. But in adoplbW K,, couDc:ilmen conceded that dlSCUISion o( the plan Is not yet finished. ™ pion, prepared large\\' b y consultants Wilsey and Ham, has several dtscrepanc~s with the city general plan. 1be discrepancies, City Attorney James Ericbon said, must he re!Olved before any building Can begin in the disputed &n!aS. • · An attempt to resolve the matter, and to review the general plan will begin this fall HE. SOLD PlCKVI?. TO FIR ST CALLER 0 Jl ,old the first day the ad ran. "The lint caller bought my pickup," said \he .. usfled Daily Piiot odverti"r Jrom Fountain Valley. nere·s the ad that did the job Jor him : 1114 JEEP P.U .. t Whl Drive Good cond-ion. Let a Dally Pilot c\asstfil'd ad work for you, Call 642-im, delayed. · Laguna Beach Fire Chief Charley Kuhn and Couotyt Fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville. information officer, agreed that the fire IS<!e BRUSH FIRE, Page 21 Baseball Great Dizzy Dean . Dead at 63 RENO, Nev. (UPI) -Dizzy Dean, one of baseball's greatest pitchefs who starred with the "Gas House Gang'' during thf: I~. and later a radio and television announcer famed for his unique brand of fractured Eng~h, died today ,at 83. (De- tails. Pa~e 17) Mrs. Dean wos at his side b1 SL Mary's Hospital when he died at 1:35 a.m. Also present were ~is brother Paul, and Paul Dean's two !hi Wren. The son of a cotton picker whose family moved about the South in the early J920s, young De.an developed a strong arm b y throwinR dirt clods at fltalrie ~o~s. Amiable although incredlbly vain. he was the soul.of the 1934 St. Louis Cardinals. Pof>Ularly known as the "Gas House Gang." He swaggered gilling down, once Oangled a teammate out of a 12th· @Q!Y_ hotel window and liked to Invade fermal parties dressed In house painter's overall.$. -Wfth ll all. 01' Diz ""11s one or the greatest pitchers in b a s e b a 11 history before a freok accident In 1937 cut short his career. Attention to the deaths .was called by the father of a JO.year-old Orange Park Acres girl who complained about poor accommodations for animals at the fair. He alleged that his daughter's pig died after being jammed into a stall with older and larger swine. However, Porterfield claimed !he deaths of the three pigs and one rabbit were investigated by officials from the Cos ta 111esa Department of Animal -€ootrot and the-SPCA who-found nothing extraordinary. Porterfield said animals can die or heat and bloating frequenUy during summers but said the fair docs not have a history of animal deaths. He said one·anlmal died last year but that the news....ol-its.-demlse was not reported. lrvitte Landt1aark day. . Judiciary Committee Chairman Peter \\'.Rodino Jr. {l).N.J.), said Tuesday he hopes the committee can reach a final vote by Jul y 26 on whether to recommend im peachment of Nixon. · With the Den1ocrats holding a 21·17 edge in the committee, the key question on any impeachment vote will be bow many Republicans support it. Rep. Charles E. Wiggins (R·Calif.), a leadin~ Nixon loyalist on the 1.-ommittec, predicted Tuesday that no Republicans "mild vote for iri'ipeachment and that enou~h Democrats would switch over to kill it in committee. "\Ve're going to win this goddam thing," he told newsmen. ''!.J4inlf the committee will act as l~s .,...'ftt41 the chips ar_e <!.qy.;n. The ,evidence just Is not (See KAUflfACII, Page 2) Committee hea ring, said the transcript suspect run into a wooded area, carrying submitted to the court did not contain the machinegun. corr~tlons he made in it. "' Firshein testified as a government witness but assistant special prosecutor Richard Davis was clearly taken aback by the disclosure. He said he thought correCtions had been made' in the transcript introduced in evidence. ·Reinecke's lawyer immediately called for dlsmi.sial of the · case against Reinecke. • ' Judge Barrington Parker did not immediately rule on !he motion. Instead, Parker ordered the jury oul of the room and sharply criticized the government lawyers for their failure to have caught the mistake. lt vras not immediately clear what the changes were but Firshein's testimony indicated they were in the part or the hearing transcript tltat the government --'-jStt REINECKE, Page I) Wine, Cheese Pa1·ty SeJ in taguna l liJls A wine and cheese tasting party. will be held from 6 to 8 p.m Saturday at 24252 El Toro Ro.ad in Laguna Hills by the St. NichOlas Parish Council. Community residents are invited to the party, which will oost $2 per person. Tickets are available in advance by calling 830-0364, 58&-9372 or 830-89851 or at the door. Orange Coast Weath er School 'Turns t o Industry Sunny and warm Thursday with only patchy early morning clouds at the beaches. Highs frOm the mid·70s at the strand to the 80s in- land. Overnight to.ws in the 60s. INSIDE TODAY 'The old Trvine Elementary School, abandoned this spring after 40 years of use. has been graduated and will be put to work as an industtlal building. The lrvine City Council approved a pre-zoning Tuesday for the site. which lies outside the city limits , but Inside the area. the cily intends to aMex, for future use as Sand Canyon 1ndustrial Complex. The school was abandonOO by the Jrvinc Unified School District this spring aner yt'.!&.rs ·of trying-,to have, It oondemned because or the severe noise caused by jets using nearby El Toro ~farlne Corps Air' Station. In approving the p~1.0ning, equivalent to a promise to tone. tht land for lnduslrial use upon anneiatlon,. 1~ c cooncil also decided to try to add the parcel to the city. The change of status for the land was ~ sought by the school district whiclt · s the old rfhool building a White elephant that could prove eicpenslve. The land was a gi rt from the late James -Irvine in 1929. aCcording to 'district planner Dave Klilg, but It has strings attaching it to the 1rvine Company. A stipulation of tilt'.! gift, Ktng-sa\d;-was that once il ceases to· be used as an elementary school, the land reverts to the company. The land may be used only !or a grammar 9Chool. he said, and other school district uses like a high school or Fornier rellciano's Restaurant administrative office are unacceptabl~. partner Gene Randano hos The wne change, King said, would draw1L llis seco11d state prism& have two rinancial benefits to the school tern& w/1e1& ;udge r uled Ile vio- dislrkt. lated probation in1posed i11 It "'·olilOallo\' ifiterlin lndustrlat·use·o1f-+-1tfquor ltijackl11g case. Story, the school building . Without the change, Page 9. the Of!lY use. for the land 'A"OO\d be agric.ullural, 'requiring t.bc district lb have thei>ulldlng nlzed before returning ~ ii to the rompany. -':The zone change raises the int rinsic value of the property," King said. Upon . returning the land to lhe ltvine Company, he said, it will be exchanged for partial payment for the Greent.rte School site. The approval for intetim use, he said, would enhance the exchange value . - Al Y"r Sirvic• J •MtLM 2t L, M, 1••41 U C•lll•l"ftl• I c.,.., c • ..-14 ClntlflHI 4).M Ctllll(I • t1 Crt11wenl 21 0..111 MollCtl 11 •111trt.i1t- ~· ·-... _ ... h1ter111IHlfft 1), t4·U U·12 " " " An11 L1Ntr1 Jt M•U"91 f M_, Dtclw 2t MeWl11 H H H 1•·1' Mtllltll '"""" • frh....,.. Newt • Or•-c-tw ,.,. P'MPfi 11-11 1'91' lllt II.ten t , 11 SPOrll U·lt Dr. Ste!Mrtllll H IMdl M-"tll tl·U Tett..ul911 / 1t Tllffltn MU .,..)olllltt f Weri.I H1..-i f -------~ -- ---·---··~-----• 2 DAI LY PILOT;--:-15'-----:--W'-'od:~"':":":·:J:'':' :17::,~1~97~4~------------------"° Saddlehack Pru1e l Mttlls Top Post The Saddlebnck Col1cgc board of lrustees is scheduled to 1n; ~hind closed doors Thu rsday to disc th~1flve top possi bilities for supcrinten ent of the co mmunity college. · Trustee Norrisa Brandt of lr\'lne said lhc final d'ocision on the new man, to replace Dr. Fred Bremer ~·ho resigned as superintendent sh: \\'Ccks ago, probably 11·111 not be n1adc until next \l'CCk. The sclcclion procss has been led by Dr. Robert Jenkin s , former superintendent of school .W S a n l·'rancisco. 11·ho 1\•as hired by rtic district lo recruit and narrow the field . About 70 :1pp!ications 11·ere received from across 1he state and natiOn for the $35,000 a year post. Bremer. "'ho had ~n superintendent since 1968. resigned under pressure but wi)l serve as president doing special assignments of the board for the remaining tv"o years of his contract. The initial process of reviewing and narrov.•ing the applications was done by a seven-member citizens c o m m i t I e e chaired by Jenkins. The group included a faculty member, administrator. student. two trustees. and l \\'O members.of theL'Ommunity at large. ··t v.·anl this job finished ." l\Irs. Brandt said today. '·I think our delays arc lhrowing a tot of people off schedule." Viejo's Firemen Offering Co1u·se Jn Home Safety Mi&sion Viejo firemen are offering a free home safety and aid course beginning Thursd.'.ly to tra in residents lo handl e emergency situations. The tw1rhour tra ining s e ss ion s. conducted by Capt. Tim Sappok, '''ill include showing of the res uscitation film "'Breath of Life," in struction on how to control bleeding under v a r I o u s circumstances. how to treat snake bits and in what instances to call the fire department for help. Sappok said the program ·will not provide first-aid certification, but will increase the chances or survival of victims in eme~ency situations before rescue vehicles arriv e at the scene.- Classes v.ill be offered Thursday at 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. and Sunday~at 2 p.m. at the Mission Viejo Fire Department, 25862 /l-1arguerite Parkway, l\fission Viejo. To sign up. contact Sappok at the department. Sappok said children are welcome to attend the class with their parents. Openings Left For Colorado River Excursion No Markups 'King's X' on St<11nped Coods WASHINGTON (AP) -Safeway Stores, Inc., UJe nation's largest , s upermarket chain, announced today it plans to stop marking up prices on most products already stocked on shelves. "\Vhen we are forced to make a price increase, cans and pack· a ges which are already price-marke4 will be sold o ut at the old price," sai.d ~afeway vice president.John Bell. \ . He said if a can or package bears two pt'ces tt\e product 'flll be sold at t~e lower price. and if a price is Jo ered, all foods bearing the old lugher price will be marked with a ew lower price. I Bell s~id . the . new pricing policy will go into effect about July 28. He said 1t will cover meats, groceries, produce and non!ood products, but not fair-trade iten1s and baked goods. · Bell said at a news conference that the new lowest-price policy \Vas pro1npted by inflationary tren1ds. Legal Poi1ats Pair Lock Horns On Caspers Post By JOHN VALTERZA 01 !111 O.llY ,11111 Sl1tf Orange County Cowlsel Adrian Kuyper and California's Attorney General are at apparent loggerheads on legal points raised in the struggle for succession to the vacant Fifth Q_ist rict post on the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The cooflict is reflected in opposing legal opinions dealing l•lilh the length of term wbir.h would be in effect it Gov. Ron- ald Reagan makes an appointm~t to re- place the ·late supervisor, Rona1d Caspers. Kuyper Tuesday afternoon reportedly sent on a supplementary report on his opinions to individual supervisors. That document reinforces Ku yper's opinion issued last June 24 when he insisted that a Reagan appointee would serve only until Caspers old term expires on Jan ·1. Then, Kuyper has said, whoever suc- ceeds Reagan as governor would make yet another appointment and that would last through the new term which Cas· pcrs won i na landslide primary victory onlv a few days before his death at sea. That term woo.Id expire in mid-1976. Yet, in an opinion which sources claim has been given to Reagan frorit the Attorney General's Office, the length of an appointee's tenn is far different. Reports from Sacramento claim that state legal officials are suggesting that an appointee would serve through the end of Caspers' old term and through the new ooe as well. State officials hav.e also conceded, however, that the County Counsel 's opinion may be the one which would be, most honored. Kuyper has cited a 1958 opinion from !he attorney general as the basis for the county position, and that opinion has never been altered in any court decision. The latest reports of an apparent legal disput.e point to a possible court battle to seek a definite solution. Adding more fuel to the complel fire in the succession issue is that pressure from Orange County might force the state legislature to finall y approve a bill v.•hich·ca\ls for a-Novembe r election with the v.·inner taking the Fifth Dislrict post. A group of leading co u n t y Rumors at the county level continue to abound this week as to wOO appears to be the chosen successor. This week's Piime-candidate appears Rodger Howell, a resXlt.nt within the Fifth District and a \\'til4nown lawyer \\'ho specializes in municipal law. Spokesman !Or" the senior partner in the law !inn of Rutan & Tuck-er insisted late Tuesday that there is no knowledge · that Howell is the top candidate. Caspers' top aide, Tom Fuentes, recently moved v.·ithin his I a t e employer's district, and has been mentioned as a prime candidate for appointment. FuEintes, highly reliable sources say, has the complete blessing of the Caspers family as su~r. Front P11ge l KALMBACH ••• there. 'I Democrats-without the blessing of its centTa l. committee -is wa~ing a petition campaign throughout the county in an There are still openings for a Yli.fCA effort to jog loose the legislation. trip to the Colorado River for boys and That bill was into introduced only days girls in the ninth through tv.·elfth grades. after Caspers' disappearance by The trip will begin July 29 and end Assemblyman John Brigg (R-FullertonJ Au g. 3. and is sponsored by the South but has become stalled in committee. It Coast YMCA, serving cities in Soutb ~;.w appews headed for a [.dlearing Aug. --~rang_: Co~ty. . . Critics claim that the election bill The. camp1ng-tF1p w11l-~_a1-:a-woold-play-strongly-into-the-hands-or ~a mpground nea r Par:ker, Ar.1z. and will Newport Beach Assemblyman Robert inc lude ·short floa t trips on i~ner tubes Badham, a Republican who has been and rafts ~own the Colorado River.-cited as a pMme candidate for the There will also be short excursion.s to Caspers post. Lake Havasu and th e Loodon Bndge Badham, however, has disavowed any there. . strong intention to seek a spot on the The cost for member~ is .S48 and for ballot as a candidate for supervisors. He nonmembe~s. $53. ~is 1 n c I u d e 5 already is running for reelection to. his transpo~t1on, c~mps1te ~ces_, f~ and assembly seat. leadership. !\tore mfonnat1on is available Adding to the convoluted situation. is at 831·9622 or 495-0453. the official leave whicti supervisors ha ve .-------------"'~ granted Caspers-lasting throui h Aug. 9. OIAMMCOAST 0 is Although the board could reverse its DAILY PILOT T ... Or~ Coa$1 Ol<ly Pt1o1 wttn .:...C.. ,. COii'- ~ ""' ,..,~""'-. .. -....... Ill' ! .. 0r•"9" C.0.'11 ........... ..._ c....c-Strwr!• ... !...,. - pUO!qhed, "'0tl0•1 llWOl>;ift f~dl~ for Co!.H M-. ,.._ O.cto .....,.,.qooo 8t«hlf°"1'- 1 .. ~ ~.+let. l•~~ ... 8tl0 -11!.o<idi.t«•..., :;.,, 0.-t&IS.0 ~ CtDolol•in;I " ~·· ·--..,_" ._ ~~js~S..~· diva l lll pttrW;IO.OI ~ .. Dlfnl " 11 llO Wei! eo s1 ...... Coll•""-C1111aMwo'. t;oeJe ~H.lom ~·•M.dP 14Q1 An•Mlr11 ~l'IQ (dolo<\ Offic:tl Cotll M""' »OW"'11811S!'"' ~Bt«~ m:ii.i_..~,,l l•il'J"l<l8-lo ?11 '~"--­--000~ '"~flt.a:h~d 511\C-. :DNl;rlhlJC-lll"f( T...,._.17141642·41 21 a.ulfiM A'"'11Mfit 442·1671 S. C.._. Al Orptirt.....ts: ft~ 492·4420 ~WI•, o....., C4<111 l'u-"9 c;o..., -HO-oion.o '"-"'--Ol'IMIN~ .. or -·--~ .. , i:.o _,,,l<oM ... !Qjt _."'_°'_,....._ ~ t'--r""' DH"' co.~ "'lou C..bbf> ,_, &u-&o•-1Jao~,.ll'I' ... ~ ••91l-"tl'll~~-....~l)OO""""fllor , action earlier, it does not appear likely. Yet, Reagan might appoint a successor al any time, leave or not. Irvine Council Action r At its meeting Tuesday, the Irvine City Council: -Approved pre-zoning ror lhe proposed Sand Canyon Industrial CompleK The change from agriculture to indust.ri.:i l use -allows the old Irvine Elemcn~ tary School to be used for business or industry until it is razed. -Approved a tentat ive tr:iet map nnd site plan review for the proposed Smoketree Planned Community after the developer J im Wannington agreed to preserve a eucalyptus v.·indrow. ' · ' . -Deferred consider a lion o.f th<! ,Proposed Orangetree Planned Community until .Aug. 13 lo consider potcntu1I llO!iC impact from jets using El Toro Marine Corps Air Stalion. · -Approved the North lr\tfne Specific Land Use Plan which will cont.rot developmen t in the part ol the city north of AfouJton Pa~kway and be tween Jeffrey Road and the Hicks Canyon Wash. -Approved a zone change for the proposed 1 100-acrt Wood~ Planned Community. ' - -Authorized an agreement with consult.inl3 Griffenbagen-Kroeger for ~ study of the financial implications or a proposed five-year, $16 million capital 1mprovemen15 program. -Deferred. discussion of reports by the! street naming, charter and utility rcvenuo. comm11tees. -Accepted reports from the ·hlllslde, cnmper, t"Ommuter and community health care services commllll'eS. · • -Adopted an ordinance on how to rill city council vacancies. -Adopted new versio ns or the uniform fi re and mec hanical codes. -Adopted new park rulc11 nnd rcgulntlons. -Adjou rn ed for n n10nth·long vocation. _, FroMP .. eJ REINECKE ..• cited in accUilng blm of lying to committee. Former presidential usistant· Clark MacGregor tetlllled wller Jhat he urged ReJnecke to !ell the truth in 'the Senate testimony that led to h1I trial. MacGregor said he talked with Reinecke in 1973 •bout "ditferences in recollection" between the lieutenant governor and former Attorney General John ~itchell ~"fr Jho date or a meeting where '\hey discussed an offer by rrr to help f~ance the tm R ep ublican convention. ' Mac<!regor -who left the White House t~ become head of President Nixon's re-election ~ampaign ln m.id-1972 -said he probably expressed "some concern" over difference! b e t wee n Relnecke'1 and l\1itchell's statements. But he said he told Reinecke "that all he could do was to tell the truth and to be responsive to the question." :P.iacGregor said be met with Reinecke shortly before the state official testified before the Sena te Judiciary Committee. The \Vatergate prosecutor's o ff i c e charged Reinecke lled wheii be testified he did not te11 Mitchell about the ITT offer unUI September, 1971-two months afler settlement of a federal antitru.st suit against rrr. In previous testimony, Seo • .John B. Tunney (D-Calif.), and Lee Fremstad, a reP«ter for the Sacramento Bee, said Reinecke had told them he informed l\1itchell of the rrr offer in iMa7 1971 - prior to the antitrust aetUement. Reineck.e's· lawyer, while oooceding hi! client gave some erroneous information to the oommittee, says Reinecke's problems· may stem · irom b e i n g straightforward to a fault. Reinecke, said attorney James E. Cox, is a "straight, gentle, courteous, overly cooperative hwnan being • • • who wi\I talk to people, maybe when he shouldn't. II Cox was defending Reinecke. Tu~ay in the first day of tesUinony at Reinecke's perjury trial. Walking Limits For CUSD Kids Und.er Restudy - Dallr ,1191 SI•" ...... FIREMEN BATTLE 40-ACRE LAGUNA' CANYON BRUSH BLAZE Model Rocket a.Ueved C1vse of Ff re Nur Art Colony Front Pagel BRUSHFiRE • • • fighters were fortunate in receiving advantageous weather during the fire. The fire first raced up the canyon ":all from the point of ignition near the side of the road. Se veral times the hoses of firemen were burned through as the fire moved along. At the lop oi the ridge, an onshore breeze prevented the blaze from jumping a fire break and crossing to the other side of the ridge. l..'lter, an offshore \\-ind pushed names b{tck against an area already burned, Ghle[ Kuhn said. Capt. Turbeville noted that the coqt evening temperature and the increasing humidity also worked to the advantage of the firemen. "I hope that's the biggest one we have," Chief Kuhn said today arter surveying the blackened hillside. To Begin Strike Water Workers Angry Housewife Cliucks Pots, Ax At Law Officers SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A 24-year- old housewife held 11 officers at bay here for about an hour with a rifle, ax, machete and barrage of furniture, pots and pans, police said. They reported lhal Nancy E. Wallz was throwing pcis, pans and furniture from a window or her home in the 1ngleside District at 6:30 p.m, Tuesday. When the first two officers arrived, they were met with a barrage of flying household items. Mrs. Waltz also flung an ax out the window, slightly ii;ijuring orficcr Robert Sudano in the left leg, they said. Nine more officers were. called for reinforcement and attempted to storm the front door. But Mrs. Waltz allegedly held them off with a machete and a rifle, they reported. At 7 p.m. officers used various diversionary tactics and distracted Mr1. Waltz to the rear of the house where officer Robert Quinlan captured ha'. She was taken to San Franci!co General Hospital for observatioo, they said. ~ · • ..... .... 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA-646-1919 CLOSIO ........ Court CGsual Tennis Shorts 6.95 • 1.95 • I 0.95 Wiison Te1111ls Shorts 9.95 & 16.95 ., Ttllllls Shirts 6 .. 00 • 8.00 • 9.00 T_I, Dresses-ladles Shorts 'Lacles Te1111l1 Shoes 8.95 • 17.95 • 22.95 • Convene All Stars Basketball Shoes I 0.95 Convene SkldCJrip Tennis Shoes . 9.95 Jack Purcell Tennis Shoes I 0.95 ~ Pen:y Tennis Shoes 15.95 Tretorn Tennis Shoes 17.95 Adidas Tennis Shoes 22.95 • ' • • • 8 • ' ' DAILY p .fLOT EDITORIAL .PAGE • House Pi-ices Add Up Irvin•'• city hall will continue to groan with the growing P.Aina oC a rapidly-expanding community until , as Councilman John Burton put it, the city ollicially de- termines "who's going to pay for how mJ,Jch_ of what and what the benefit will be." . Conc:ep.t& lik~ the i~clusion of low-incon1e housing tn the city fabric are 1mmilclble wllh other actions which have and may 'come ·tQ pa55. ' 1£, for example; developers are required to support the $16.7 million five-year capital improvement program being considered by the council, the cost will be added to the price o! houses to be sold. Another examj:>Ie Is the recenttx approved fee policy to cover the cost oC processing developmeht paperwork. Based on $40 per hour -admittedly more than twice the actual processing cost -the policy could add $500 to the price of a new house. This sort or activity; which seems to logarithmi- cally escalate the price or houses · as growth "continues, makes the already .difficult goal o{ a. "bafanced com- munitY'' that much harder t,o achieve. Actions that produce incrementaJ additions of $500 here, there and everywhere to the price or a new home Will determine the city's future more surely than any well·intended council policy statemen~s. ~ve the Ordinary • Uni versity Town Center, a proposed 250·acre Irvine with a mix of commercial and residential uses, even· tually housing 101000 people. A three-ltory building in the core area, for ex· ample, could have a residence on top, offices below and a store at ground.level. The plan shapes up as a carjful piece of concep-. Lual design which could provide the growing Irvine com· munity with an identifying focus and a design theme which cou14 be adapted to tie the eventual, sprawling community together. Equally important is integrating the UCI campus wjth the community. The co re .areas·of cities elsewhere "just happened," without the opportunity for careful consideration given here. Today, most are diseased urban tiulks, beset by crime and decay. Irvine has a chance for somethi ng so much better. Parental Liability The handwriting has appeared on the walls agai n in El Toro -and for Orange County park officials and many neighbors, it is graffiti with a striking lack of appeat: Vandals with the easy-art paint spray can have scrawled f6ur-letter words and pictures on the steps, walls and bridge abutme nts of the new floodway on Aliso Creek in the El Toro Community Park. .Company development which... ~!d .,£~sli,tute Irvin~!.. +-------a·owntown;-ba.--ha<Hts-nrsrlieanng foret6e plan- The spray paint is extremely difficult to remove from concrete: According to county officials, the only _successfuLmethods are costly sandblasting or expensive chemical solvents. ning commission. It represents another major step in Irvine's effort to be something more than just another suburbia. As presented by the Irvine Company, the plan for the area includes medium-density residential develo~ ment in the "wings" of the crescent shape plot. The core would be a pedestrian-oriented, high density area Parents should be reminded that under new state laws, they are liable for the willful misconduct of their children in amounts up to $2,000. Graffiti is . degrading many otherwise beautiful spots. In an age whereJnany in the younge r J?eneration carry the torch of ecology, spray-can art is a dishearten· ing travesty. • • • .. 58 6 LOBETROTTEI\ Special Help On ·Hardships Hard to Find 'Last of-the Luke War111 Lovers' WASHINGTON -A scathing internal memo has accused the Federal Energy Administration or neglectin)t the ponr, the elderly and the disadvantaged whom . tt had pledged to help. .The Special Impact Office,. which was supposed to help hardshlp victims with their energy problems. wa.S "created merely for political expcdlency," the memo cha.rges. The explosive memo catalogues alleged examples or t h c creeping lethargy. Here arc thl' high- liahts: -Before a scht'd· uled appearance at .a Senate AJ,'.ling Com· mltlee hearing, fed- e r a I energy czar John Sawhill called the Special Jmpact Office to find out what they were doing for the elderly. The answer, according to the memo, 'va3 ·'nolh- ini;:.'' Sawhill's office instructed the hardship experts to start some progran1 he could tell the Senate about. The memo calls Sawhill's subsequent testimony about how his agency was helping the elderly "a ·display of p o I i t I c a I manipulation of fact and intent." -A survey was ordered or federally funded transportation Systems that serve ___ .U10._elderly,.Jl_was....supposecL l4...be completed by May 15, but Special lmpact deputy chief Curtis Jones told us the results are still coin ing in. In any event , the survey doesn't cover Independent systems, which arc more likely than federal systems to be cut back as a result or the energy pinch. -JONES boasted that Operation Harvest, 1Ul emergency program to help migrant workers obtain gas during the Dear Gloomy Gus .For $8.50, · St:nd Broadway Quality • Irvine planners \\'ant $40 an hour just to process the papern.·ork for building in the city. If this keeps up, next thing you know they'll want to make as much as carpen- ters. F.W.D. G1Mm1 0111 --ii IN llVllfnilted ., r .... ,. aflll * -' -111Y .-.IMct JIM ¥1'1ws et "" --· s.... '9Ur HI' _.,. .. oi.-w °"'" Oell'r "llft. shortage, was "pfccedcnt setting." But ttw: memo alleges that ~'the relief strategy. IUCb as it was, was announced on April 4, over a month after the original petition. In the interim, the Arab oil embargo had been lifted and supply of gasoline to all -including migrants - ceased to be a major obstacle." To the Editor : l just read Tom Titus's review of t~ Orange Playhouse's newest nop, "Bol'Jl Yesterday," and while l disagree with A1r. Tituspn a couple or minor points, I wholeheartedly concur w)th h i s assessment of the star talent and the overall quality of production being offered by our so-call® "professional" theater. Like Mr. Titus, I have been in the opening night audience of b o t h productions, "Last Of the Red Hot Lovers'" and "Born Yesterday." I bit my tongue after the first play -true, Pat Paulsen's no Barney Cashman, but he ls a hometown boy. and ever the eternal optimist. I figured things could only get better once the theater's production schedule got 1.1nder\\•ay. But after Tuesday·s ins u It in g presentation, I must speak out. I don't like being played for a sucker. -The gas shortage caused many personal tragedies that were ignored by the Special Impact Office. A paraplegic, for example, pleaded ror-heJp in finding a reliable 90W'ce of ga90Jine. His special I'l\I THE FIRST to admit that Orange automobile was his only form of County needs a professional !heater. But transportation. Every lime he needed to why should I pay $8.50 to see a pro- use the washroom, he had to drive all !he duction that is (I) certainly not among ""ay home where he had specially the ne\vest orferillj!;s available 11nd (2) no equipped facil ities. Yet as of this ~Ti.ting, ·better lhan (if, indeed, as good as} most his letter ha sn't even been answe red. community theater presentations I can see for fl.SO or $3? --~ -Concludes the memo: "Unfortunately. the most pathetic and needy element of If the producers at the Orange the population looks to our office for Playhouse are .going to continue to relief and is met with palliatives and charge high prices, then it1s only fali...!_o political verbiage.'' warn them that the caliber of thefi" productions had be!t be equally hi gh. THE FATE of the memo, 1vritten by Orange County audiences m more ( __ l\_fA_I_L_B_o_x_ ..... J Letters from read.ers are welcome. Nonnally, writers should cullvey th~~r 1nessages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space o·r elimi11ate libel is reserved. Al! let- ters m1t1t include $igt1ature and mail· ing address but names may be with· held cm request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be putr Li.shed. Ms. Olson is a good writer and I enjoy reading her articles, I decided to read it. As usual, the story (about Selma Morrison, an aspiring poet who died at 59) was well written and I'm sure it touched the hearts of all who read il' \\'hen 1 got to the end, I was crying because I see myself in both Selma Morrison and Jo .Olson. Like Selma, 1 enjoy writing, and like Jo, enjoy making other people happy. Tho moral that 1.fs. 01900 put in her story can never be said too much. It is: Never-put-off-a cbance...to.....brigbten_up anygne's life because that life may not be there to touch tomorrow. 1bank you, Jo Olson and Selma Morrison. MARCIE KIRSCHENBAUM F••r-letter Words Susan Sliver, now resigned, --itself sophisticated-than the p·1 a y house- illustrates how the new, mushroom obviously gives them credit for being. To the Editor: Federal Energy___.Administration~..._--Aft · -f k ·• od · · already developed· into a bureaucratic er-ts irst-wee ...-vt-pr uction,-Rei-the--mhtmn-of--.July-9 by Air. bog. Ms. Silver told us the memo was "Lovers" attend~ fell \\'ay ~ff, ?i.1urphine, "Sticker Ban Sticky Issue": supposed to go to energy director because the q~hty 0~ the produc~ion lt's quite obvious that the article Sawhill, but he never. got it. could not s~1n a probtabl~ three-week dealing with my efforts to ban obscene She then tried to make an appointment run. Word ·of mouth 11 critlca.I to the bumper stickers had a total disregai'd with the director, but was twice turned success . of any . ~te.r operation.~ and for the tacts. ft mentioned that I wanted down. Finally, the enterprising critic there is ,, no. indteahon that Born to stop the printing of all f9Uf·leller slipped the memo to Mrs. Sawhill., her Yesterday will be better accepted. words. Tbat's just not true. My'·lntent is former college professor. Thus, the energy czar finally got the message, called the author and promised action. simply to stop the Use of obviously obscene stickers. not the use of stickers that may just be considered o!f-color. PEOPLE should always maintain their freedom or speech and right of expression but nol if they are going to have total disregard for the lrights or others. Many citizens are disgusted' by that type of verbiaJi;e. It implies that by banning such stickers, it's going to "cause a real problem for the bumper sticker industry". Hog Waslt! The dictionary is full or words that do not offend citizens. l'm sure most of• tile bumper sticker industry realizes their responsibility to the general public. so do not be so irresponsible as to attempl to make others believe that immorality begins with the bumper sticker makers. ·You \\'OUld do well to purchase a bumper sticker that has Jong been a favorite of mine. ll reads, · 'A Responsible Press Has NQ Opinions-Jusl the Facts Please!" DAVID H. PARKS F•u on the Fourth To the Editor : On July 6 there was an article about fire\\·orks by Jackie Hyman. She 1'naifilitns that too many people are injured each year and that Uierefore fire\\·orks should be banned , except in "carefully supervised s p e c ta c u I a r diSplays." FIRST o{ all . it should be pointed out that the man she mentioned as an example was injured by a "cherry bomb,"-and unless I am mistaken, those cannot be bought legally in Southern California. Fireworks can be and are for the most part safe and sane. Besides, they are fun and one of a very few traditions this nation has. I 'tio think that their sale should be controlled~ e.g. allow only those 18 or older to buy them. That will Insure needed supervision. If there are (hose (like Jackie Hyman) "·ho are afraid of '·getting fired upon once a year" then all fhey must do is ren1ain at home on July 4th and avoid the ri sk. But it seems silly to rne to bal\ fire\\·orks entirely simply because a tiny fraction of people are injured while using them. Banning fireworks for that reason is as logical as banning the sale of dartbOard sets for the same reason. Or skateboards. Or even bicycles. Think ol all the people every year \\'ho are killed or injured while riding bi cycles. TO 1'1E, the fun and excitement or firev;orks justify the sale and use oC fireworks even in Newport Beach. I have been here for almost 19 consecutive Fourth of Jul ys and I have yet to be "fired upon." I like fire\\'orks and I think \\'e should keep then1 . CHRISTOPHER G. MeKF.NZIE The Amerlrnu Wn" To the Editor: Jt seems to me not only ironical but ilt· advised that fire\\·orks are allo\\'ed to be sold in Oringe County and yet sltooting them off is prohibited even in so safe an area as Aliso Beach \11th its unusually \Vide sweep of sand and the Y.'hole Pacific beyond it. ARE PEOPLE instead supposed to shoot them (lff swreptitiously in resi- dential d i s t r i c t s with serious fire hazard? Or up in the hills with extreme fire danger in all that dry brush:' Isn't tt about time for a more realistic approach before the next Fourth or Jul y? Let ~s hope that bull-horns and beach patrols will no longer be heard and seen on Aliso Beach prohibiting youngsters and their parents from shooting off sparklers and flower pots in celebration of this most American of holk:lays. Or have bull·horn.$ and patrols at Aliso Beach now become the American way? WINIFRED PALMER The Honorarium Racket IF TIDS trend continues, then the Orange Playhouse Will be forced to close its doors before it's completed a full sea900. And if that happens, we may as wtll kiss professional theater goodbye in Orange County, for no one will ever get the big-money backi ng to reopen them. We must not let this happen! Jnstead. we · must convince the Playhouse that we're Bureaus: Problems or Solutions? Tboagllts at Large: ( SYDNEY HARRIS ) ru sticity may perhaps be Instructed, but false refinement i:; incorrigible." By WAhTER J •. CAMPBELL CoMaltla1 EclH..- hdastrlal Wffk We were reading the story in the newspaper about the hefty inoomf! some coneressmen make on the side by collecting fancy fees for m a k i n g speeches, when the telephone rang. The caller was an executive of a trade association in Washington. His group 11 scheduling a huge convention In Las Vegas tn the fall and would like very much to have me come out and speak on "Free Enterprise-Key to the Future." What would be my requirements? We ..replied w Would need travel expenses and a modest honorarium that would amqunt-portal to portal-to considerably , leas than Ole federally ordahled minimum wage. • • "Well, Mt. Campbell;you know this is an eleetloo year, and, as a matter of policy, all our honorariums and tra~~l moneys are reserved roe, congressmen. WE L-ONG had been aware that some pressure groups regularly hire congressmen to speak at their meetings at fees of $5,000 to $7,500. We have ~eard labor union leaders count t h e CQflgrcumcn they "own" (their term, not oun). A coogrcssman .receiving several such honOrarlums likely • w\11 lake a more favorable view on' legisl11tion t h e ,.....,., group is backing. llow else can • . - ( GVEST REPORT} We explain food stamps and welfare benefUs for strikers? We also have listened to many or those speeches for which substa n tial honorariums were given. Mostly, they were drivel prepared b~a member of the congre!sn)an's staff-whose ~lary is paid by tfie taxpayers. An asaociate listening to such a speech became indignant. "You mean to tell ,me that they pay that guy $7.500 to deliver such hogwash?" We explained to him that the speech was not Ule thing: il was what happened later. You know that all tbe tickets 1o the policemen'~ ball are not booght by people who like to dance. WE JLKGRET: THE practice of labor wiions and other well·beeled pressure groups offering congressmen fancy f~ as a kind ofiegal bribery. We believe it is one more step in eroding whatever · integrity is left in government. • a disct!ming theatre-going public that demands quality professional theater at professional prices .•. that we're not "hi cks"' and we won 't accept worse-than· amateur wor'k under the guise.._.9f a professional label. The Playhouse isn 't bririglng us new shows. Its first-seuon line-up i s comprised or shows which have been produced by the county's numerous community a n d semi -professional companies for years. So they had best be supefior productions of those shows. Otherwise, we're better off giving $2.50 or $3 to a community pl~house to ..see the likes of ''Born Yesterday H "The Owl . ' and the Pussycat" or the three Neil Simon offerings this season, "Last of the Red Hot Lovers,'' "Promises, Promises" and "Come Blow Your Horn." (How many Umes have we seen &bat one?) Simply, 1 would sum up the Orange PlayhoUBe's first season .lJlus far by retiUing Its first two productions, "Last of . the Luke Wann Lovers" and .. Stillborn Yesterday." CARLA K. DOW But when the private sector adGpts the same pmctice. we reiuet it even more. u buslnesa and Industry are to adopt Tourhlug Stor" the practice ·o( pa.ylng big honorariums to T the Editor1 congressmen to inOOencc t l'i o s-e ,,.. ~ · congressmen's vote.s. then lt l'i $lop Tonigh t, J~ly 11, when I was rea~ng praullng pompous platitudes about free the Doilly Pilot , I saw that the Pilot enterprise. Logbook was wrijtcn by Jo Olson. Since · Almost every bureau that is set up to cope With a particular prob I em eventually contributes as much ,to the problem as to the solutiOn -· which might indlca/e that our w h o I e ''organiutiona " approach ought l,o be replaced by some system that is less self~feaUng. • • • Even truth turns rancid in the mouth or a habitual :iar. . • • • One psychological reason for inflation is that ~pj~ ~ to live within tlteir incomes, and no\v they Uve up to their expectations -thus pullinc alooi;: with them the milllons who still try vainly to Jive within their meang. • • • Imagine the prnfound loneliness of !hose who must have music pounding at them all the time, indifferent to Its quallty and gratdul only fa< the incessant noise drowning out their seue of Isolation. • • • 1t is the way ln wltich we choose our pleasures that largely determine• the kinds of calamities that berall us. • • • 11 ls an wiObserved Irony that lhooe \\'hO marry for one main rtam tend to divorce for that same reason-tho9fl who marry foa money quarrel over money, those who marry for sexual attraction find the attraction waning, even tltosc 'vho marry mainly to have children differ over the \\'ay the children should be reared. • • • The conscious seeking after popularity is the first sign of corruption in the soul : and since thill is the slne qua non of winning public office, how can we expect our politicia:M to be pure in heart? • • • 1( Y.OU read. tb~annals of any dynastic.- monarchy, you will learn that kings have always Imagined tllcmselves poor~ and have incessanlly petitioned l h e I f' parliaments for more personal fund s; which indicates that even at the lllOfl+ archical heights, our expenditures rise to exef:ed our means. • • • Everyooe s1dfen from amnesia in recovering from illness: he·promptly and "'t.asily forgtta the promises he made to himself when he was sick . • • • ' The practice of "spted-readlng" I& worthwhile only for stuff that Is hardly worthWh lle reading In {he first place. • • • -UJttnlng to a ~tld~·estern woman pronowice the word ··bath'' with an Impossibly broad "Iii." twas reminded of Hatli1f1 remark that "Barbarism and • • • Where a man prefers to live is the truest test of his political philosophy: and if Karl ~larx returned today, I am certain he \\•ould feel far more at home living in England or the U.S. than in Russia or China. DAILY PILOT Robert N._}Vtt<t._ PubUshtr Thomas K tevil, Ediror Barbara. Krtibich Ediloriat Pogt Editor The editorial ,JMge of 1he' D•ily Pl.lot .Melts to inlonn and $tlm11late ttade:rs by prHet'IUrc on tttis i-ce: diverwiCommcntary'on toploi: Ol tn- t~st by syndicated colwnnists and cartoonists, by provtding a lonim'..ftw'_ ru.dft'S' views ~ by prnentlnc this newtpaper's opinions and ideu on curt't':nt !opica. The editorial opinklra Of the Daily P iiot appear only id. the editorial rolumn at the-top o« the pqe. Opinions t'\X~ by the cof. umnlats and canoonbts and ktlft' writers art theh· own Uld no irndorle-- mtflt ()( tMir vi('WI bj the DU1J Pilot "'°"Id be inlftttd. Wednesday, July 17, 1974 • -- . . • Hearings .Refu eed On Milk Pricing SACRAMENTO (AP) - state qriculture officials ha\'e rtfuaed to hold hearings on reduclnr milk prices despite the tact 40 leg i·slators rtqaMted them, twO consumer groups say. S po kesmen for the California Citizen A c l I o n Group and Fight Infi aUon Toeeiher (m) said Tuesday that the la'Wmakers had signed • a petition asking !or the hearings. They said C. B. Christensen, director of the 11 t a t e- Deparlment of Food and Agriculture, turned down the -nquest. Cllristensen said in a "We v:ou\d pl't'fer to wait for the oommittee." ( The tv.-o ~sumer gropps have been battling publicly v.•ith state agriculture officials since Christens<'n approved a five-ttn t per half gallon retail price hike last ~1arch .. The price hi ke b::>osted minimum piccs to ~l\\'ecn 68 amt 75 cents a half gallon statewide. * * Cons1t1ner Groups .Ra.p Director , 111 Court teleph>ne interview that he want.eel to wait !or leg~lative recommendations on the milk pricing structure b e f o r e holding bearing• Cher Bono, 28, of the sipging and comedy team "Sonny and Cher" was in Superior Court Tues~ay for divorce proceedings from Son-~CRAMENTO (UP I) ~ A . ny, 39. The pair argued top state a gr i c u 1 tu re over division o! their department official haS denied ·prope1;ty and custody a charge by a consumer of their daughter, mE SENATE Agriculture coalition group seeking a milk _C_h_as_t_ity:_._4_. ____ _ and Water Cbm.mittee held price reduction that "the dairy ---'~ . ~ ~ s_ t a t e ' s MJdustry bas , stranglehold on ~,:..;u~p~1 ~f-sacniiiinto" --~-Pavment Set has made no f o r m a I Jed AdaJM, state milk .1 r e co m m e n datlons , said marketing administrator in COlMlittee chairman Howaro the Department of Food and For Bu!!ging Way <R-Ex eler). 1 Am"iculture, Tuesday denied. 0 }fay or's Daug hter · Cliarged LOS ANQELES (UPI) - Phyllis Bradley, 29, daughter of l\tayor Tom Bradley, was charged 'l\Jesday w~h being part of a cocaine selllng ring. The shtlriff's Departme~t brought a felony charge OI "consptrac;y to fur r: Is h cocaine" 1 a g a i n s t Pt1isl Bradley, and related charge& against three other persons. Miss Bradley ls still facin1 charges of assaulting a police officer from an incident June ' . •' 27, when she aUegedly had to R ecoe.,..ed ~ manacled hand and foot -· after kicking -and clawing-TV talk Show host Merv-'-. officers who chased her auto Griffin, 49, plans to 1 Wtdnesda11 July 17, 1q74 DAILY PILOT 5 $400,ooo n ........ i 2 Held in Kidnap LOS AJIGELES (AP) -The missing lt>-year-old Lawnmee FBI ,has identified ooe of two R. Adell told FBI agents that meo ll""1ed in connection tile )'OUth said be wu going ID with the disappearance of the meet ....... elo" to obtain a IQl of 1 Palm Springs man u °"• ·lhe-)'Olltll'o mla r I j u a n a .JlOIID!! , ol mart Juana just ouppller. \ before be disappeared. • In an FBI af!idavit~led One ol the two men arrested Tuesday by U.S. Dist Court in coonectton with the boy'• Judge A. Andrew Hau , X was disappearance wu Angelo \ revealed that the girlfriend of Inciso, 61, ol Cathedral Ctty, . identified u an alleged former Candidate Campaigns In the Nude Clilcago labor racket.er. lncilo and Hugh McLeod Phe.,ter, 41, of Long Beach, were UTaigned Monday before a U.S. magistrate oo charges of conaplncy to kimap and u:tortion. 1'ie two altepdly _contac!ed the boy'1 father, retired Detroit lndustrlallst Robert AdeU , and demanded thai be leave $400,000 In small bllla at aa~locatloa.Adelisaid be did -J!lrtt tlm•. l>!&t '41d dlat the m>ney was never claimed. The youth'• glrllriend, 16- yeaN>ld Francene Gomes, aatd in the affidavit thai she was with yOWtg Adell at a Palm Springs coll~ ttbop June I w""1 be said he was "leaving to meet Angelo to _.. a pctnl ol marijuana, and be would """" in • rew minutes." The youth did not return, and has not been -since be lelf the collee "1ojl. when she sped away fn:m a I th h '!al t traffic violation. She was eave e . ospi o-·ws ANGELES (UPI) r.-..,....----THE BEST------. .. convicted in 1967 of stealing day for home and will Saying she "is the only ' · · · clothes from a car and-in im start work again on candidate wi1h nothing to ""ctt. of of 1narijuana possession. Alonday. He was hos· hide," Elimbeth Kealhly, the pitalized six days-ago Peace . and Freedom party A SPOKE91AN for f.be_ with pneumonia which ... <!andidate for governor, mayor's office said Bradley was attributed to ex· walked nude down the beach \.\'OUld have "no comment lmtil · haustion. Tuesday. such time as the court ----------"-Iiss KeathJy campaigned •proceedings are oompleted." among the nude sunbathers Deputies said James Riley, T k S d there , who are faced by a city 29, and his wile, Ann Marie, rac ue council edict, expected to take 26, also charged in the =~-'el~lect later this ... et. - complaint. bad sold three B~' Cy cl; ot ordering arnstslor nudity. grams of co<;. a i n e to .," "° "[ feel that nudity ii a undercover officers 1 a s t ·matter of personal preference Friday and that they -bad 'LOS ANGELES · (UPI) -and the! individuals don't have PERSIAN_ RUGS plolhtltlfw,.., NEWPORT BEACH wll llt Mid by ,..... AUCTION The state has set minimum .,... · milk prkes at farm , wholesale the charge made by Ruth and retail levels since the Vanatta of Fight Jnllation J930s. Together and called i t promised to bring four pounds The Ind.Ian Dunes motorcycle the right to impose their VE NT UR A (AP) more to sell for $68,000. track-in·Valencia was named values on other individuals," Recording the pri vileged lnvestigators said that when as defendant in a $500,000 she said, passlilg out handbills. SUNDAY JULY·21st -2 Pit\ R ichar d Spohn , a "'sensationalism.''· conversations of tv."O attorneys the pair returned to make the damage suit filed Tuesday by '"nEre is nothing aggressive and two clients i! going to cost transaction, they were a 17-year~d girl motorcyclist about thls behavior as~ a Ventura County sheriff's arrested by officers who found from Glendale. to many other politicians, who deputy his job. the four pounds of cocaine to Donna Hom alleged in the presume to run other people's A Superior Cou rt ju r Y be flour· ·or a similar bulk Superior Court suit the track, lives for them." .. ....,, ...................... n ............. . .............................................. ..., ................ ,.11 .................. _ .. ... _ .. -!'.._ .... ~Wt ............ .. ~ORTER INN, 1101 , •• · , ..... AUCOI IMC. lZ 1319'0.zt l q ...., cMd: • U.. unk. spokesman for the Califomia fl.ts. Vanatta leveled the Citi.1.e1 Action Group, said charge after the department la,wmakers requesting th e turned-down a petition for a hearings included Assembly hearing on-the coalilion's Speaker Leo 1.fcCarthy CD-San request to cut milk prices. Francisco): form er Assel\lbly "This is the third time in Speaker Bob Moretti (0.Van four montM th al he Nuy1), and Senate Democratic (Agriculture Director C. B. Floor Leader George M05CO!le Christensen) has refused to ordered James Koontz to P@Y substance. due to negligence, was Sie challenged Edmund G. $3,000 to each of the plaintiffs 'Mle Rileys &aid M i s s resPonsible for injuries .she Bro\.\n Jr., the 36-yeat'Old in a civ il St.lit -Asst. Pubuc· Bradley had furnlshed --the suffered July 22 when she·ran b ache Io r who is the Defender Kenneth Cleaver, original three grams of into an unmarked btirbed wire Deri10cratic candidate for Deputy Public Defender Paul cocaine, deputies added. fence. governor, to a "nude debate." Clinton·and James Donaldson ----'------------·------------,----------------------- CD-San Francisco). hear the evidence. Christensen said he had "It is now d ear that the received a list of legislators dairy industry has a.st rangle- who bad signed petitions but hold on Sac(amento in the did not get signatures. same way it c o n t r o I s '"Ibis would not make much Washington ," Ms. Vanatta difference though,'' he saJd. said. and Lillian McClintocl<. · The jury found by a 9 to 3 vote that Koontz . had wilfull y and intentionally tape recorded conversations be- twetn tbe lawyers and their clients CHILDREN'S SHOE VALUES ••• OUR LARGEST SALE EVER BUSTER· BROWN ADIDAS •-1\EDS MANY SANDALS CIDLDLIFE and many other SCHOOL and DRESS STYLES Outstanding School Shoe Selection Naturally, AlfFrom Our Regular Stock. -- REGULARLY TO $18'; TO 90 _s Sale Stc;irts Thursday. Doors Open I 0 a.m. All l•I•• l'ln•l 30, F••hlon Is lan d • , N ew port. No E1ch1ng11 . . Or Refunds • Beac h • 644 -24 64 • ~r~l . \ (i • . ; .. WHITE SA-LE Missoni's SANTAANA SOU TH CO.ASl' PLAZA Freestyle collection by Fieldcrest 6.99 'l'winsb<ct.l!<gulad1 $g :o,;_., get bottd with 7""'-Y«l-F.ojof ""'1llg w o:l>emeswidi tltO pr.id., llonis, mipes aod ch«ks in this a&:tioa. By aimplr m<ning acomf ortct oz pillow a.sc, you ao at.ate Delli' totally coordinated Jocb to su;t Y""' mood. In po1,....,/roaoo. DoaN sh«tr, fi""'1 coly. Fitttd dotted shtttS in sable, tlllgcrine, anary.spcamllnt, aod indigo sh.des. Plaid, scr;pod and Horii sh=, Bat only, c:omo ill bloe/- :sable/indigo, canary/tangerine combications. S<and.ud """pr. Reg.$7 •• 5.99 King ases, pt. ltt~ SS.,.,6.9!1. Twin she~s.Reg. $8 •••••• 6.99 Quttn shccu. lleg $15 ••• lf..49 Double, sheers. Reg. $9., .1.99 King shttts. Reg. $17 . • .14.99 ltevetSi ble cotnforter plaid !O dots in polyester and cotton. •rw;n.R•g. $55,49.99 Fulf.Reg. $65, 57.99 Queen, K;ng.$85, 7<l.99 Solid acrfiic blanket coordinated in canary, marina nnd sable shades. • 1win.Reg. $20, 17.99 Full $22, 19.99 Queen. King.$30, 26.99 Towels: '"]lfissoni Floral" sheared cotton terry blue/g~, Dhle/ jndigo, tangerine/canary. "Missoni Suipe~ sophisticatctl-atripes aod dot:>, sedate chevrons. In cotton terry unsheattd jacquard, same color combinations as floral. Bath. Reg: $6, 4.99 Hand. R.cg. 3.7.5, 3.29 ~ • Washcloth. Reg. 1.70, 1.49 Rug and shower curtain also 11VailabJc.. Dlth Shop, Bedroom .Acc.cssoiies ,,,-: ..... T Shop Monday thru Ftid•y, 10:00 ~m. 1o 9:30 p.m. I Buliock's Santa An" I f"'1;on Squar<, 2800 N. Main Strttt. Santa A.na, Teltphon<: )4~-721L Saturday, 10;00 a.m."' 6:00 p.m. Bullock's South Com Plaz•. San Diego Frocwar at Brisrol, Col't& Mesa, Telephone: ))6-0611 • --~-~----. ~ - -~ • - • . . ;Huntington Bel:leh Fo•ntain ·Valle * • ~ ·------• Today's Final N.Y. Stocks . \ S.ECI IONS. t . ORAN~E COUNTY, C>lllFOJ NIA \ TEN CENTS WEDNESOA Y, JPL y 17, 1974 eb PAGES , VQL. 67, NO. 191, 6 I I ' \ 1 :R_ecal Bloc Rewrites r . ~ers of a recall movement against ail ·city councilmen have completely rewritten the animal control laws ror Hunttn~ Beach. lf the new measures are adopted by the city. it should' Satisfy those promoting the ·recall effort,. according, to . a I spokesman for the Pet Owtlers C4alition. 1 -Annette Morrow, fice president Of the caalif:ion, sa)d she' and Phyllis Hansell, l another coalition leader, coo:iblned the I features ol t \\'O ntodel anin'lal control ordinaneel to produce a ·new document for Huntington Beach. l\lajor changes involve : -A reduction in the dog liti!nse fee from $10 to ts and .in the cat Hcense from $10 to $2., Spayed and neutered . animals would be charged half the new fees. -Elimination o{ the •tno knock" clause i11 currctit laws which allow animal control olflcer1 to enter private properly wrthout pemJssion or a search warrant. -Establishes an eight-member city commission for animal cootrol, with the power to hold pubUc hearings on alleged violations and appeals to fines. -Prohibits the catching of wandering cats merely for the lack d a license. -Sets a JO-day minimum for the _keeping of_ cats or dogs picked_ up by the animal control agency. -Forbids the use of euthanasia chambers (or disposal ·of animals, and instead suggests the use of an injected nuid, 80dium pentobarbltal. -Allows hwiting dop and obedience trained dogs to be looae without a leash if under the voice control ol"thelr master .. -Female dogs and cats in heat must be kept confined. ,-~~~--~~~~--'~~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I I 1 · I ' · 1 Mtr 'l"lltt It .......... l!U:rURI PArfMEU OI' MERICA DISPLAY SKILLS IN SWINI SHOWMANSHll' COMPITITION Coun~y '•ir-Conti.:stanh Show How They C:.n Control ind Direct Tllllr Anlm1l1 with Canes Huntington <;oncerned About. Oflslwte Qrilling By TERR Y. COVILLE Of tM oaiW Pll• Sllff Huntington Beach is taking a mlddle- of·lhe-road stand on offshore oil drilling in federal waters. ln·a letter lo the U.S. Department of the lnterlor, Mayor Al Coen expressed concern about . Offshore drflllrig and suggested certain measures to protect the value of the city's nine mi1'8 of coastline. 1 '.'If a decision is made by'tbe f~eral 1 government to permit drill sit!' .a Baseball Great Dizzy Dean· Deadat63 m1n1mwn distance of 3. 75 miles from shore, the majority of these installations should be constructed e n t i r e I y underwater,,,. Coen wrote. "However, if for some reason a few of the drilling sites must be situated above water, these should be camounaged in an attractive manner so that they appear to be small islands. "Since oil spills have also brought a devastating effect on portions of the Orange Coast in past years, it \\'ould also be absolutely essenUal that every known precaution shouJd be exercised so that the veritable 'foolproof' system is installed to prevent any spillage." While the city did not take any stand against offshore drilllng, .in his letter, Coen criticized the federal governmerlt for its lack of commwiication with affected communities, and urged federal oflidals to do a belle< job In lhejµture. llank Thompson, Group to Appear At Fair Tonight lfank Thompson alf(f the Brams Valley Boys, one of the nation's leading country and western bands, will entertain visitors to the Orange County Fair tonight. The band, which has bad more than 100 chart records, one third of which were in the top 10. will perform at 7::.l p.m. and 9 p.m . .in the amphitheater. (Related pic- tures, Pages 9, 11, 14 ; related story, Page 3) Admission to the concert is free "'ilh the price of admission. Fair tickets arc $1.75 for aduJts, $1 for children ri-12, and free for children under .12. Other fair highlights tonight are the Chuck Jones Magic Show, at 7:30 p.m. on the mall stage; the Father Cough]in Boys ChOlr, at 8 p.m. on the family stage; ·the New Dimensions Patriotic ~usical Revue on the mall stage, and the Hawaiian Review which follows at 9 p.m. on the mall stage. · The biggest bargain is Thursday when all persons carrying cameras will. be admitted free a~ part of ''Camera Day" at the fair. Servicemen al:f;) will be (See FAIR, P11e Z) Animal Control Laws -Dogs would have to be licensed afler they are eight months old, instead or the current four months, because male puppies cannot be neutered wllil eight montM. At Monday night's council meeting, councilmen agreed to review the new proposals at their Aug. 5 meeting. l\lrs. Monow said she hoped the ordinance could be up ror approval by Aug. ·-19, and if the council adopts it "'ithout "substantial" changes, it should satisfy pet owners. Tile new laws, she said, were developed from t"·o modeL<i, 'one writtin by the California Coalitioo of Animal Owners, and the other by the Humane Societies. of the United States. As to the recall effort, she said from a personal viewPQ.i!Jl s~ felt the ordinance would satisfy tfie majority of-the Pet Owneri Coalition but the coalition has not held a board meeting so she could not officially speak for it. The new law, she saUS, was \\'Titten with the help oC City Attorney Don Bonra and Councilwoman Harriett Wieder. \Vhen ti1rs. l\1orrow informed the oouncll such a new law "'as in the works, ·it surprised most cooncil members as well as some of the city hall staff. Councilman Jerry l\1atney vocally chastized r..trs. Wieder -the onl~ council member not named in the recall 'issue - for not informing other council members of her efforts to solve the pet owner complaints. But ti,1atncy. and other councilmen, agreed, without committing themselves. to review the proposals Aug, 5.: - mh Rips Tower \: -London Blast Kills Woman; 36 Hurt LONDON (UPI) - A bomb, possibly planted by IRA ·terorists, exploded in the 900-year-old To"·cr of London today, hurling broken glass and masonry into crowds of children and their parents j3mming the city's most popular tourist sight. One woman was killed. At least 36 persons -more than hair of them children .-·were 'injured in the explosion, several or them in critical condit~ with -crushed arms and legs. Detectives sifting through the debris found the severed foot of a small child. Police said most or the injured were German and Dart!sh. One American was · injured, Edward Klein of l\1issouri. The explosion sent )luixlleds or .~ .. ,..S 9'hcr ~ ~· Oeelng from t he moated olODilortms. A few were crying but there was no panic. 1be ·bomb, the seemd to es:plocle without warning in London loday, might' have been the work of the Irish Republican Anny. police said, but there was no proof. Police said the bombings had some of the hallm~ks of other lRA attacks that have killed 12 persons and wounded 115 others in England since December. A Mrs. Harris or Sydney, Australia, near to the explosion in the to"'er but who emerged unscathed , said: "There "'ere wounded all over the place -it looked like a scene out of hell." At least half the tourists stumbling for the exi(were ch11dren. Many were school groups being shepherded by teachers. "Move on, move on," ponce shouted. "There might be another bomb:" The first blast today damaged a --. Downtown Rapist Trial Under Way Jury selection began today in the Orange County Superior Court trial of the man police accuse of being Huntington Beach's notorious "downtoWn rapist." Robert Glen \\'old. 25, has pleaded innocent to 41 counts of rape, sex perversion and burglary. He is on trial in Judge Walter E. Smith's ~· Police have accused him Of 16 assaults on women in Huntington Beach and Westminster over the past three years. government .office. building in the suburb of Balham before dawn, but c~sed no casualties. The tower, guarded by the colorful pike-cartying Beefeaters, daily drav1s thousands of foreigners to see the royal 'family's ceremOl)ial jewelry and its collection of annor and fire&mt\'5. OFFERS TESTIMONY Sen. John Tunney Reinecke Trial Trans cript Fla·w Surprises U.S. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Government prosecutors wefi! taken by Sur.prise today in California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke's perjury trial when a stenographer testirted that Chani:1es had been made in a Senate hearing transcript fonning the basis for charges against Reinecke. ' The famed 1o"·er served as prison for hundreds of enem~es of British royalty, including Sir \\'a1ter Raleigh. l\'lany famous prisoners were murdered or executed at the tower, including t"·o -J'otmg princes, nephews ot Richard III, and two of Henry VJll 's wives, Anne Boleyn and Catherine Ho"·ard. Law. Okayin g High Ri sers Gets Backing A new set of planning laM which v.·ouJd nllow high rise buildings ii\ commercial and industrial districts was given a vote or confidence by the Huntington Beach Planning Commission Tuesday nlgbl. 'lbe multi-story ordinance "111 go to the city cowlcil for a public hearing either Aug. 5·or·Aug. 19. Tilere were only four speakers during tue;sday's commission heoring. "ith three of them op~ to the new la''" • One homeowner said he did not feel the city needs any high rise at this time. Gumard Johnson of the Hwitirlgton Beach Co., and local businessman James DeGuelle, said they felt the proposed 1 code does not offer any incenti ve for builders to put up a high rise, because of the tight open space, landscaping and other re.strictions in it. Both Johnson and DeGuelle were members of the c:;ilizeils high rise committee v.·hich v.·orked with the city to develop the multi-story code. One other committee member, 1\-frs. Lorraine Faber, who represe nt s homeowner interests, said she favored the new law and that the majority or the citizens committee favored it. The ordinance reeeivcd a unanimous recommendation for approval from planning commissioners. The city council will have the final say on it. Another ~high-rise-ord.i~nce, for residential development. is now being written by staff planners, but won 't be ready for corr\mission study unlil sometime in Augusl. at the earliest . according to staff planner John Cope. Laos Chief Ailing WASHINGTON (AP\ An RENO, Nev. (UP!) -. ~ Dean. ant of baseball's sre1'8t pltchen w'1o starred w!Ih lhe "GM Houae G111g" dul'lni 'tbe I9308, aM Jater a radio and ' tefevlllon announcer fa med for hiJ unique bnod or fractured English, died The mayor-ts currently out of town but at Manday'1 councl1 meetlll!J, hll written pollUOa "188 supporttd by o I h e r members of the city council. Councilwoman Nonna Gibbs said she did fee l most Huntington Beach residents are Of)pOled to apy offshore drilling. Hostages Slain Benjamin H. Firshein. who recorded the testimony during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, said the transcript submitted to the court did not contain corrections he made in it Firsbein testified as a government witness' but assistant special prosecutor Richard Davis was clearly taken aback by the disclosure. He said he thought corrections had been made in the transcript introduced in evidence. international contingent of 13 physicians is caring tor Prime Minster Souvanna Phouma of Laos, who is rl'COvering from a serious heart attack. \ ) today at 13.c-lIJe.. taila, Pa~e 171 Mn. D0o.n -at his side ln St. Mary's 'H01p11a1 when be dted at . 1:35 a.m. A190 """ ~ls Paul, and bl Dean'• two ~hlldren. Tbe IOll ol a coW>n plcbr -family mo""1 about lhe SOUth In the early 19208, young Dean developed a strong arm b 1 lhmvinl! dirt dAs •t prairie -· Amiable although lnc:r<dlbly viln, he was the soul of the 1934 St. Loll• Cardlna1', popularly known aa Ille ''Gas House Gang!' He swa11ered sitting down, once dangled' a teammate out of 1...J~ 1tory hotel window and liked to lnvade fonnal parties dressed in hoose painter's overalls. . With it all, 01' Diz was one of the greatest pitchers in base b a 11 history be:rore a freak accident ln 19'7 cut short his career. • Councilman Jerry Matney said he agrees with Coen's stand and supports drilling becamte "I have to believe tliere is a fuel ahortage." fMn. Gibbls said she al!IO fell C6en's pc)stUon-waa fair, Ind ao did other council members. City Administrator Dave Rowlands pledged to keep up with each new action on offshore oil drilling. Dad Sues Cit y · For Son's l1ijur y A Fountain Valley man sued the city lllld three ol Ila policemen for 15,000 ·Monday in an -Orange County Superior Court. action charging the trio with miking and~ klcklng h!s lll-year-<>ld son. Loul1 R. Hildenbrand!, 912J La . Estrella, claims ·that the injuries were innicted last Aug. 27 and that his son, Clay S., II, required medical attention after the Incident. Jfe 1dentlfieii the three officers allegedty Involved is Lowell Waine Lipe, Richard II. De"·cber and Wllllom Parker: Police Pur-sue-Extortionist BULLETIN 1\llA.\O (UPI) -A bearded black ex- tortlonlsi took al lust S5t,00t from .a we•hby lnd111tlrlalllt 'and his wife today, sla11it:btered them wttti a bun\ of machine pa fire and tJten Bed lnSo a fon:st "'btre pollee copl1lred lllm. MIAl\fl (UPl) -Ari extortionist took a man and his wife hostage today, killed ttiem with bursts from a submachincgun and then fled into a field or head-high underbrush where police and FBI agents apparently had him trapped. Kenneth W. Whittaker. special agent in charge of the Miami FBf office, would say only that the SW1pect "wanted so mueh money, and took the vicOma." The victims ""-ere Identified as f..fiami Industrialist Sydn.,ey Gans and his wife. He is president of the Sydney Bag and Paper co.--- \Vhittaker. who took special charge of lhe manhunt. declined to say how the e:ctortlon plot began or whether the victims were connected w1th 1 local bank. He said, however, "There wes n paYoff." FBI agents had been foUow lng 1he ' . suspect's car for nearly an hour when he pulled into a half-mile square field shortly before noon, shot the couple to death with the machincgun in the bucket seats of their expensive foreign auto- mobile, abandoned the car and ned. l\tore then 100 lawmen. most of them armed with shotguns. surrounded the field, '\\1lile an airi>Jane and t"·o helicopters new over the area at grass- top level trY.ing to nush the suspe;ct, described only es a thin black~man wllh braided hair and a goatee and wearing a black tee-shirt. At one point, Whittaker calle~ several fire truck! to the area and ordered agents to set the field ablaze. But he Reinecke's lawyer immediately called- for dismissal of the case against Reinecke. Judge Barrington, Parker did not immediately rule on the rfiotion. Instead, Parker ordered the jury out of the room and sharply criticized the government lawyers for their failure to have caught the mistake. lt ":as not imml'diately clear what the lSee REINECKE, P•ge Z) HE SOLD PICKUP TO FIR ST CALLER canet!lcd that order several .minutes "ft sold the first d11y the ad ran. 1aler. huddled with Dade CountY,,Sherlff's "The fi rs\ caller bought my pickup," said officers and discussed the possibility of the saUsfied Daily Pilot advertiser Crom fop:ging the area "'Ith pepper gu or tea r ountaln Vnlle.y. ___ _ gas. Here's the ad that did the job for hln1 : Other sheriff's de!)Uties, mean~·hi!(l, l964 JEEP P.U .. 4 Wh1 Drive conducted a house-to-house search or a Good conditkm. fashionabl e development about three- quarters-of a mlle away from lhe fieki .. --Jcet a Daily Pilot classilied ad "ork for in case the suspect eluded uie -scores o( you. Call 642·5678. police surrouOOlng the field. ' • Orange Coast Weather -Sunny and warm Thursday with only pa(chy early morni1'g clouds at the beaches. Highs from the mid·70s at the strand to the 80s in· land,.Ove might lows in the OOs. INSIDE TODAY Former Felicitrno's Restaurant partner Gene Ra nda1to has draw1~ l~fs seco11d stale prison term when. ji«ige ruled lie vio- lated probation imposed hi liquor hijacki11g case. Story, Page 9. • Al YWr Strvkt t I Ntllll 2' L. M, lt'lf 14 C•lll9mlt I Cit"9r Ctnttr U Ctn1ltltlf 1)..W CNll!CI --.. c .. ,,...... " ONlll Hellen II li11't r11I• -· ·-.... ""IHOH 11111rrnl11il11 "'"' Lit,.._" 2t Mlllffx 6 MOM' OKNr n Mt¥1tl N N N 2•·U Mututl '•"°' 1'1 Nitllflltl Nl'WI I Or1111t CtulllY lilt '"".. "''' ,., lllt l t<tnl •• ,, S•rt1 U·lt Dr. S"'111t~ft U Uttk M..,kth tt•tS Tt11wlllt11 .. It ThttC.rl UJI W'e•!lltr • WIN11f Nl'WI ' -• I ~ I - . 2 DAll.Y PILOT ___ • __ ---W~tsday, Ju1y 17, 1q74 Vall ey Council Actio11 Here in capsule form, are the actions taken Tuesday night by the F'oun· lain Vallt)' City Council. RECREATION: Told city stair to go ahead with bidding on phase two of 1he recreational complex In Mile Square Park, but to cut down costs as close to the $552,000 originally plannl'd .as possible. GASOL£NE : Upheld the planning commission's decision to grant a use permit to Paul Larsen for the reopening of a S!'rvice station nt 11470 Edinger Ave., denying an appeal by adjacent property owner George Jlorowit.z. ~TATE: Asked the pl9;nning commission to exP:Jore the possibility of a new zoning. a "residential estali' s" district, in u·hic h lots \\·ould be a minimwn 12,000 square feet. \ FINCH : Criticized the Fo1ntain Valley School District for not widening Finch Street near lrlolola School to a run 28 feet and sent Public Works Dlrec· tor \Vayne Osborne to a district n1celing Thursday. Parents Give '! Support. On Narrow Road P"lea Kalmbach Testifies .On Pledge \YASlllNCTON (AP) -The Houae Judiciary Committee heard testimony today about a $2 milUon campaign pledge lrom the dairy Industry for President Nixon's re-electipn that one member said might lead to a bribery charge against Nixon in the committee's impeachment inquiry. "\Ve're beginning(o establish a case of bribery," said Rep. Elluibetb Holtzman (D-N.Y.), after emerging lrom a closed· doOr committee session with Herbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach,-Nixon's fom1er personal lawyer. · Other member! disagreed. ho\\' ever, and· several said Kalmbach added nothing to tbe testimonf about the milk. deal he had not previously given to the The FoWltain Valley City Council Tuesday night joined l\loiola School parents \\'ho think a road 12 fe<"I narrower than city requitements is unsafe. Senate Watergate committee. them pot up a bond guaranteeing they'll ·Miss Holtzman would not elaborate on put in the roads before they get their her statement. building pennits," City Public Works Kalmbach Was convicted recently or Director \Vayne Osborne said. selling an ambassadorsh1p, and was sent But the school district didn't need to a federal prison in the East to bC · di . h dded available lor the committee hearings. bu1l ng permits, e a . . . . . . 'th ---Kalmbach gave the comnuttee a The d_istr1ct has been n~gohB!IRg WI detailed chronology O( the timirig Of the ~ . ' • • Nixon Says He'll Figl1t _, - To Finish ' • \By HELEN THOMAS 1 Ul'I Wllllt Mtwtt lt-'tf' Presldtilt Nixon, having Put thoug s of resigning behind him , pl ans a .. fight ~ the finish" against i m pea c h me .t aoconting to a book written by one ol his at.roogeat defeqders. Nixon allo llf s that ii the Watergate- related accuaa.Uons against him were true he wotild not remain in the White House "for a minute" and "nobody would have to ask me to resign." The comments were made In the boot "The iPenonal Ni1on: St.lyig.g On lt1': Summit," \Witten by Rabbi Baruch Korff, head or lhe National Citizens CommiUee FOr Falmess to t h e Presidency. Korff interviewed Nixon May 13 in the Oval Office and later got w r i t t en l'e!p'lNeS to quesUons. He made the' 123- page book public Tuesday after meetinC with Nlzoa. At a news coof'erence, Korff said he has the bnpression that Nixon "agrees with me" that the conspiracy-perjury conviction of JoM D. Ehrllchman, Nixon's former No. 2 aide, is "a blot on justice." .. The road -Finch Street -\\'as built by the Fountain Valley School District, in apparent violation of conditions set by the city planning commission. -. The commission approved a srte plan \\'hich called for an IS.foot travel lane on the sou th side. a t.,.,"O-foot gutter and a 12· foot.wide lane on the north side. ti)~ f\101~la School <':<>UflCll. w~ch feels .Jnilk J>!!ce lnereiue, which Nilon decided the i:oa<1 is so narrow cars~ve difficult.r to grant on March 23, 1971, bUt wliJC.---1""'.,..... pass~ and emergency vehicle acceM 15 \\'IS not announced publicly until two reslncted. days later ----~"'lnc_l!l!l"!-,.111boQ!l. Nixon _called Watergate lhe 'thinnest scandal In American history." He said that if he had been "basically a liberal" by press standards, "Watergate would have been a bUp." Instead. it was constructed with 18 feet of paving and a t.,.,1>-foot gutter. The school district said it couldn't get enough money to do. the rest because it ""'as working under state bonds. The city couldn't enforce the site plan conditions because the school district is technically a state ageacy. ''\Vith any other developers , we make Fron• Pqe l REINECKE ...• changes "'·ere but Firshein's testimony indicated they were in the part of the hearing transcript that the gollemment cited in accusing him of lying to the committee. · Former presidential assistant Clark MacGregor testified earlier that he urged Reinecke to tell the truth in the Senate ; testimony that Jed to his trial. ' ~-lacGregor said he talked with Reinecke in 1973 about "dlfferences in recollectioo" bet"'·een the lieutenant go\'ernor and former Attorney General John Mitchell over the date of a meeting v.·here they discussed an offer by ITT to help finance the 1972 Rep u b Ii can convention. MacGregor -who left the White Hou"' to berome he'f\. 'fl Preiitett Nixon's re-election campaign in mi4-f912 -said he probably expressed "some concern" over differeaces between Reinecke"s and ?\-litchell's statements. · But he said he told Reinecke ''that all he could do v.·as to tell the truth and to be responsive to the question."· 1\1acGregor said he met with Reinecke shortly before the state of£icial testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee. The Watergate prosecutor's offic e charged Reinecke lied when he testified he did not tell 1\1itchell about the ITT offer unUI Seplember, 1971 -two months after settlement of a fed eral anUtrust suit against ITT. In previous testimony. Sen. John B. Tunney (D-Calif.), and Lee Fremstad, a reporter for the Sacramento Bee, said Reinecke had told them he informed 1\1itchell of the rrr offer in May 1971 - prior to the antitrust settlement. Reineckc's lawyer, while conceding his client gave some erroneous Information to the commiUce, says Reinccke's problems may stem from b e i n g straightforward to a fault. Reinecke, said attorney James E. cox, is a "straight, gentle, courteous, overly cooperative human being . • . who \\ill talk to people, maybe v.·hen he shouldn't.'' Cox was defending Reinecke Tuesday in the firsl day -of testimony at Reineckc's perjury trial. OI AMGE COit.ST "' DAILY PILOT lr>e Oll'IQe eo.,1 O.O•tv l'llO! ""'" .. ~och '"..,.,.. b<nedt!>s '°l~ "'1oU.otoubloVl'l<ll>J!,,.O.t<W1'1 Cols! l"Ut>llt"""I ~ 5-al• ---~ ~. 1"'ft'>Oly '"OoA" f"GIV lot ~11 -HewP0<1 6ffc;h >t.....i-'9M lie-If°"""" 1..,. Yollev. loguna lk"-" '""'""'~ •"" Sin c1e .... ntt1S..n """" °'""'''"r.o A "''V"I ~· _,.,.,~.;;..,soi"'~'" """ s.,,,.. Cll'YI 11\41 Otttw:!Cltt Wbl<>IU"ll ...... ,, l l .U0 1¥e! B1Y Sltftl. Colli ~ c:.t.IO< .... 1~:16. R.X,,... I~ We<>d l'rftkltf>I"" """'''"" Joel>; p ( "lev V1Ul"l1 __ .....,...otM11\1ao OdletH.LOO\C F-.. ~P.~ Aa.od!ll'llM~ T~Co-Ole W.11 °'-"""°"""'' [f,111' M•t ..... IHt•OHkt 11815 s.oc.l.6o./t"'O'J MQ<lo>q AO.*eu: P.a Bo• 7"0. '™I OthwOffKtl lt01tn1 U.-.c" m~orni ,....,...,.. Co~l•ll'-l.30~tS.v5rr""" ~a-»»-Boouoe ... , &.<>o.o-t. lOS No)rlft CIC..-R.tt1 ,...,.....17141t42·4l21 -Cli"itlfitd A4Hertl.iN •• , ••• ,.~-· ,.,°"' N0<1'1' Ol•flO'I 0Dulw1~w""'*' 540.1220 Ceo<rrifltt ,.,. Or ... ~ ~ ... c;o.... _No ... ., ___ ... "" --~·~ ......... ""~­... llOUl_,.._OI~·~°"-· leo»ftd (llM D0Slllg9 ..., It Co!i!I t,;1.._ Cllilr """'8o/tlk.......,ft¥_U00 ~ ... -1100-1t,"'lltl do>ill...,_1)00"'°"""' ,, District trustees Thursday will discuss • · a proposal to paint one curb ·red to ~a~mbach .re~rtedly t~ld of a eliminate parking on the street and paint m1dn1ght meeting 1n a Washington hotel a white line down the mkldle of the entire on !\larch 24 at \\'hicb a spokesman for 20 feet. the dairy industry "rea!finned" a "I don 't like it one bit," FounWn previously a:lven pledge to contribute $2 Valley ri.1ayor George Scott fumed million to Nixon's re-election campaign. Tuesday night. Rep. Cbarl~s Vliggins CR.Calif.). said hit's another cleal"t'Ut enmple of Kalmbach did oot establish ·a:ny link someone else telling wi-"'·hat to do in bet\\·een the campaign pledge and Fountain Valley," he added, indicating be Ni~on's decision-to raise milk prices. felt the road ~·ould be safest if jt were Rep. WQey Mayne (R·Iowa), sakl it Ylider. \\'BS clear to him from the evidence given At Scott's sµggestion. the council to the coffimittee tbat Niion was ~ed Osborne to attend the l~s· responding to heavy political pressure ~100 Thursday and · present the cJty from C.Ongress in agreeing to increase \'tew. the support price for milk. From Pa9cl l FAIR ... admitted free on Thursday. Thursday's fair schedule is: All Day -The Art of Croche-nit, Furniture Refinishing. Cake Dem- rating, Sewing Techniques · Noon -· Demsdnstrations by Amateur Astronomers, Radio Operators, Carv- en. and NeedlePoint Experts 12:30 p.m. -Glass Decorating, Creative Stitchery, Ne<dlepoint 1 p.m. -Aladdift ·Magic ShoW,"lJerdene Williams Twirlettes, Beef Animal Judging 1:30 p.m. -Low Cost Cookery 2 p.m. -Army Rock Band "Now Express,~· New Dimensions Patriotic Music Revvue, Rag Doll 3 p.m. -Aladdin ~tagic Show, Bonnie Dancers, Whittler Variety Show 4 p.m. -l\lusic 1\tan Band, New Dimensions, Dueling Banjoes by Tom and George 5 p.m. -Bonnie Dancers, Kung.Fu Demonstration, Alad~ l\lagic Show 5:30 p.m. -Ribbon Roses and Pin Cushions, Needlepoint 6 p.m. -Galena St. East ~Iusical Revue, U.S. Marine Flag Pageant 7 p.m. -Kung·Fu Demonstration 7:30 p.m. -Chuck Jones Magic Shov.', Pina Taste Testing, Hank Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys 8 p.m. -Galena St. East ?.1usical Revue, ri.tarine Flag Pageant 9 p.m. -New Dimensions, Hawaiian Review, Hank Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys, Pizza Taste Testing. ' County, State Kalmbach wsa the last witness heard by the committee before it turns to the task of drawing. up and voting on proposed articles of impeachment. Following his testimony James St. Clair, Nixon's counsel, was to be given an opportunity to submit a brief and make oral arguments summing up the case against ilnpeachment At least six articles, the chief one charging obstruction of justice in connection with the Watergate cover·up, are reported to be drafted and ready for presentation to the committee in private briefing aessioos on Thursday and Fri· day. Judiciary Commtttee Oialrman Peter W. Rodbto J r. (0.N.J.), 113id Tuesday he hopes the committee can reach a final vote by July 26 on whether to recommend impeachment ol Nixon. Noisy Nursery Brings Protests In Huntington Huntingti)n ' &a.ch O'JUncilmen have ordered dty staff memben to study the operation of a ocmmercial nu'rsery Which has aroused the wrath of its neighbors with sprays and alleged ooisy actlvlUes. Mrs. Frances 7.ohlmann t o I d councilmen Monday night that the Oda Nursery bas disturbed the entire neighborhood with its spraying, noisy trucks and the language of some ol the nursery workers. 1M nursery is located in a 500.them Caillomia Edisoo Co. casement, north oC Yorktown Avenue, beetween Brookhurst and Ward streets. · Legal Opinions Differ Over Supervisor Term 8)' JOHN VALTERZA Of ~ 011tr P'lt.t ll1H Orange C»u.nty Counsel Adrian Kuyper aod California 's Attorney General are at apparent loggerheads on legal points raised in the struggle for suceessioo to the vacant Fifth District post on the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The conflict is reflected in opposing legal opinloos dealing with \he length or. term whir,h \\llUid be in effect U Gov. Ron- a ld Rca~an makes an appointment to re· place the late 'Supervisor, Ronald Caspers. (Related Stories, Page 3) Kuyper Tuesday afternoon reportedly sent on a supplementary report on his opinions lo individual supervisors. That document reWorces Kuypcr's opinion issued la st June 2-1 whm he insisted that a Rea gan appointee would serve only until Caspers old term expires on Jan 7. n1en. KuyPE;r has said, whoever SUC· ceeds Reagan as governor would make yet another appointment and that would last throuJ!:h the new tenn which Cas- pers won i na.Jandslide-s>rhmiry i,j.lctory onlv a !ew days before his dealh at sea. That term f OUld expire in mid·l976. Yet. in an opink>n "'hk:h soortts claim has been given to Reagan from the. Attorney General's Office, the length or an ap!X)lntee's tenn Is far different. ReJ>Or1s from Sacramento clalm that • • state legal officials are suggeaing that an appointee would senre through the end of Caspers' old term and through the new one as \\-e.11. State olficlats have al.90 conceded, however. that the County Counsel's opinion may be the one which would be most honored. Kuyper has cited a 1958 opinion from the attorney gmeral as the basis for the county position, and that .opinion hns never been altered in any court decision. The latest reports of an apparent legal dispute point to a possible court battle to seek a definite solution. · Adding more fuel to the complex lire ln the succession Issue is that pressure from Orange County might force the state legislature to finally 4PPf'OVe a bill \\'hich calls for a November election with the WiMer taking the Fifth District post. A group of leading co u n t y Democrats-v.rithout the blessing of its central committee -ls "·aging a petition campaign throughout the COIJtllY in an effort to jog loose the legislation. That bill was into inticduCC!d only days artcr Caspers' dlsapptarance b y· Assemblymon John Brl~g (R·Fullerton J but has become stalled in committee. It now appear.s headed for a rehearing Aug. 12. -----· • ' He Got His Nude Jay Ward leaves Newport Beach police headquarters with prized possession , an original painting tiy Mel Ramos. Ward values the paint- rng at $10,000. It was taken from his Breakers Drive home by bur· glars, who police said, apparenUy' '1ashed it in a nearby tree. Pain ting was recovered. after it was spotted from air by startled police hell· copter crew. Cost Estimates .Mounting On Mile Square Park Plan The Fountain Valley City Council ordered cuts in its finaneiaDy troubled recreational comple1 in Mile Square Pari< Tuesd~ The latest coS estimates on phase ~'O are almost '300,000 over \\'hat the city originally planned to spend.~ To COO>bat tqe rising, bill, the COW!cil told staff members to cut out as much as they can before bidding the second phflsc as one contract. But COWlCil member$ Said they still want to retain the major aspects of the project, including six basketball courts, two sand volleyball courts, conce~on building, parking 161 and lhree soflball fields with lighting. The city initially set aside $552,000 for phase l\\'O, the first portion of the ou1side recreational facilities. "ft's not enough,'' Public Works Director Wayne Osborne told the council. "The ardlltect's estimates of the work . have increesed drastically," Osborne added. · The new estimate reaches as high as $840,000, with the addition of lighting for a third softball field and the extension of utilities to a junior baseball field. AMistant City fl.tanager James Heck today eqiressed coofidence the city *111 ·be able to stay within its Pursestrings and still bid the entire project, minus a few frills . "We'll probably shoot lor aboot $650,000," Heck said , referring to a possible compromise cost estimate. The council's discussion of the problem Tuesday night was · dominated by Councilman Bernie Svalstad's contention that the project should be bid as separ- ate con~. Svalstad felt the city could save money by having one oontract on the irrigation and landscaping plans and a separate bid on the site development and restroom building. Other coundl member! countered that too many sub<ontraetors can spoil a project by lack of coordination and delays. They didn'L go along wit h Svalstad's suggestion. The city is also facing a pot,entlal problem with the phasing of the two parts of the romple11:. Part one - a gymnasium·recreational builcling -has been held up by the construction-strike. \Vork was suppo6ed to begin this month. No Charges Filed Jn Death of Wo111an Huntington Beach Police said today they don't anticipate filing any charges in connection with an accident 1'fonday which claimed the life of a 59-year-old \\.'Oman. Ethel \\rilson--of-.5092 Andrey Drive, Huntington Beach, was killed when her car collided with a truck driven by Donald Sommef'3, 47, of 8321 Vargas St., Huntington Beach. The accident took place at Beach Boulevard at Newman Averue, police said. He says he CMS!dered resigning U Ille House votes impeachment "and 1 totally rejected it. I have decided to go the distance to defend this office, and to defeod myaelf against charges of whiclt I am wholly innocent." Reslgnatloo, he 1ald, woold hurt his successor and set "a precedent of a man mortally weikened from this process of destroyiilg a President •ho was not guilty of a high crime or misdemeanor." Speatlng of the news media, Nixm said: "I know for example, in the Jft.11 room that my policies are generally disapproved of, and there are aome, putting it in the vernacular, who hate my guts with a passion. But l don't hate them, none ol them. I understand. 'Ibeir philoeophles are different." Nixon bas been taking it easy at the Western White House since Friday, concerned mainly about economic policy. He has talked several times with Se=<ary of Slate lleiwy A. Kissinger by telephooe abo!lt lhe Cypni. situation. Jury Selection In . Pope~ Case Begins Toda y Screening or 66 prospective Juron who will try to decide inocence or guilt ln the murder·for·hire trial of Newport Beach matron Eloise Popeil began today in Los Angeles County Superior Court. She and her boyfriend Dan Ayers, JO years her jwiior. are accused of plotting the death or her e91ranged husband Samuel Popeil Jr., a multimillionaire Chicago kllchen Pdiet tycoon. The Jll'OC'es8 ol lmponelllng the jury for what is expected to be a six·weet trial got wider way Tuesday wilh weeding out some amoog 220 prospective jurors. Vacations, work schedules and other facton were considered in light ol. the anticipated tria~ length. Peacekeepe1·s Meet SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) -'Ibe tour-nation international peacekeeping oommis.sion met today for Its first regular session in three month!. :., • ~ .• ~U, CENTER STREET-COST A MESA7 46· 19 J 9 =122! .~i! ,., Handball Gloves & BaUs · .. if.~ RacCjuetbaH Racquets & . Balls ~I! Table TeMis Paddles & Balls. • u: ~-Darts & Dart Boards Duck Feet Fins I O. 9 5 , Badmifltan Rackeh · Water-Wonder Boards 4.95 I Racket StrlflCJlllCJ ~at!1~::~ :,;5r;t: i:::: B i k e R e p a I r Tl nubg -· P a r t s--. , · Tire-es Court Casual TeMls Shorts 6.95 • 8.95 • I 0.95 Wiison Tennis Shorts 9.95 & 16.95 ' ~Tennis Shirts ·6.00 • 8.00 • 9:00 · Tennis Dresses-ladles SliOrts Ladies Tennis Shoes 8.95 • 11.95 Converse ..All Stars Basketball Shoes I O. 9 5 Convene Slddgrlp Tennis Shoes · 9.95 Jaok Purcell Tennis Shoes I 0.95 ·Fred Perry TeMls Shoes 15.95 Tretom Tennis Shoes 17.95 Adidas Tennis Shoes 22.95 ----· 22.95 ·-------....!:==========::;:~J ... I I ' ··-•"""' -.. j----~­~ ' ' H • .. • ' At Your Service Toy Rocket Ignites Raging Fire ASUnday, !\lonClay. Wednesday and .~rid•)" ••ta&ure Of the Dallf Pllo& Cot o vroble1n '.' Tl1C11 write Ped Dunn. Pat wf t cut red tape. yd the onswer1 1 ond tJCtion ]IOU Med lo .~oh.ie 111tquitks in 9ovemment and business. Mall your quesl1ons to Pal Du11n I At Your 'Service, Ora11ge C(l(l$t Daily Pilot, P.O. lk>z 1560. Costa Al(sa. CA 92626. Include JIOUr lelepho11e 11u1nbtr. DEAR PAT: Has anyone published a good, Inexpensive book that advises older people how they can save mooey? I know there are a lot of books on general thriftiness, but sCnior ciUzens ha've specific problems and spending areas that younggr per!Dls might no t encounter. C."F., Laguna Hill1 ' No .Markups 'King's X' on Sta1nped \ Goods . ' ' WASHINGTON (AP) -Safeway S1'>res, Inc., the nation's largest supermarket chain, announced today it plans to stop marking up prices on moat products already stocked on shelves. "When we are forced to make a price increase, cans and pack· ages which are. already price-marked will be sold out a1 the old price," said Safeway vice president John Bell. - He said if a can or package bears two prices the rroduct will be sold at the lower price, and if .a price is lowered, aI foods bea{ing the old higher price will be marked with a new lower price. Bell said the new pricing policx, will go into effect about July 28. He said it-will cover meats, groceries, produce and nonfood• products, but not fair-trade items and baked goods. Bell said at a news conference that the new lowest-price policy was prompted by inflationary trends. Caspe1·s' Aides Lambaste The American A1soc:latkm of Retlffil Peno111 and tbe Natlonll Retired Teacben A110C1atlon olfen a frtt booklet, "Retirement Conaamer Gulde," whldleovenevery11pedofe<ooomlcol F d al D •11• M llvln( for older perl<MI~ Request-by-e er r1 1ng oves writing: to AARP-NRTA, UZS Coanectlcut Ave., N.W., Wa1bfngtoa, D.C;------- Lo11.,ered Gia•• DEAR PA1': '-fY problem is whcr_e to find a store that sell! louvered glass. I've asked everywhere ind am told that louvers are not being manufactured ctirrently. I have large plate glass windows throughout my home and M!Veral have small side areas with louvers for venUlation. 11le louvered windows and frames need rep1acemcnt due to the accumulation of rust. D.L , La«1J118 Beacb lf yolD' center window 11 Id In . wood, ·· any 1tl81s company c•n come oat and 1irpply yoa with new Urdware for your side wbtdow11 •ecordlng lo Center Gla11 Company in Laguna Beach. U tbe picture wlndoW1 are 1et In metal fr•mn, the dde windows h&rdnre and frames may be more dUfkalt to replace. Louvered 4~cll lat wlndh1 are no I o a c e r · belnir mannfldured, but 4-lneh lou.ven are avallable. Center Gla11 Company will send 1 man out to help yoa Rpre oat bow to aolve -yoar window problems. Call .. , ... Settd lt Re9lsteretl DEAR PAT: J read with interest your item about the 'Timex watch repair and how Timei: advises people to in!ure- watcbel being malled for repair. The Irvine post ot:nce refused to tasure. my ' watch when I ~ ~ to 'flo>ex. The reaSM glttn was that mace lie ~I service had no knowledge of the-watch's ccndition, either I 'or.1imei: could claim its needed repair'• were .caused hf'..post office mishandling ahd then either I or the flnn could ask for an insura~le loss payment. How about tha~! • A.S., Inioe A Newport Be•cll 1.,.tntendent of m1DI spokHllll'D 11y1 polt oftlces DOnDllty dt DDt tnmre btokea 1rtlcles and Ute .. me poUcJ asally applies to brok• Uem1 being ,seat by registered mall. Tbere 11 a way to 1et around tbis dilemma, however. If tbe ••tell Is .. vituble" •nd yo1 can ntablkll that fact, ft can be Int by ngtstered mau. Sndlag by certified m•U will e1&abll1ll deUvery, bat if Ute wat811 steltn, JID'll be ..t tf hick. 11mei:' Atkl•llt' lleltdqaarten' customer 1 e r vi e e maaapr, Genld L. White, said dais poml blnnnee refaul problem bas never occ1ned before and U.& hmlred watcbel •re received from post efflces tbroagboat the country. How about that! Painful PrOH•• DEAR PAT: I was best man at my · · friend's June wedding. At the reception, some of ua started talking about how certain marriage custom• got started and no one knew for sure how "standing up" for 110meone at a wedding originated. Was tt for official wilnea ~· or what? ~ H.C., Costa: HI Wbe:• ..... ndlnl up": fw 1th e ' Top aides of the late Orange CoWltY Supervisor Ronald Caspers condemned federal officials for their asserted failurl" to consult local legislators be.fore .. proposing a magive program o f encoUraging oil drilling in federal waters of the Orange Coast. {Related story, Page 11.) Tom Fuentes, top aide in the Fifth Di!trid offices, tenned the lnWflor Department's crash program to grant oil leases in waters fi'om Palos Verdes to South Laguna "a very disheartening example of Washington .bureaucrats failing to consult with local officials." He terms the federal department's decision to seek bids for offshore drilling as a proposal which would have "a massive impact on the area." "If there is one asset of California that the people cherish it is our beaches and coastline. The coast is the largest recreational facility m the st.ate," be said. "I am doubtful ,that oil drilling is an appropriate use of such a beautiful coastline. However, if there ever LS to-be drilling in Southern California waters, it should ooly be Blier consultation with the government and people of the area to ·make sure thit all-pOISible visual and enviroomental ¢eguarda: are auired," be said. . Fuentes said be is not convinced that adequate consideration has been giyen lo the issue. The aide's sentiments follow closely those of U. S. Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw PUC Okays Rate Hike for Coast . Users of Gas LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The state Public UUlities Commission to d a y authoriz.ed SOuthern califomia Gas Co. to increaSe anrwal rates to customers by $.13.7 million -39 cent! a month for typical l'C!lidential usage. 1be company serves approximately 3.2 million persons. The PUC said the new fates should allow the utility an opportunity to earn an 8.5 percent return on its investment. The rate of return found reasonable in 1972 was 8 percent. Current earnings are 6.69 percent. Southern California Gas President Ha.fry P. Lelton Jr. said the company was pleased with the rate n?tief but was ''extremely·concemed over the extended delay in reaching the deciskln." Letton said application for a $53 million aM~ Increase was made 1n January, 1973, and that the compan)' hoped a decision· would be effective early in 1'74. "On the surface, lt might appear that the customer ·benefits when our needed rate relief is bekl up," he ~id. CR-Newport Beach ), who last \\'"k reveale4 the extent of the federal PtoR:ram after a briefing with Interior Department executives. Hinshaw stressed that the only possible means of local support_ of the drilling would be iron-clad promises from the Interior Department and the winning bidders that all conceivabl e envirorunental and visual safeguards would be: brought to bear in the drilling ptoied!· Hinsllaw, however, condemned the conc'ept as -having a profound and assertedly adverse intpaet on property values in nearly every coastal area affected by the offshore drilling which Is propased beyond the three-mile limit. * * * Special Caspers Vote May Get San Jun.it Backing San' Juan C'.apjatrano city councilmen may join others who are mging the state legislature to allow a special election to . fill the seat vacated by the late Ronald Caspers. The council will be asked tonight to 11dopt a· resolution at ·the-request. of Mayor Jloy Byrnes, seeking legi,tallon to permit a special election in the Fifth supervisorial district. In urging the election, the resolution states that ~ the district needs representation that renects'the wishes of the voters of the distrid, and that person should not be a gubernatorial appointee. It also states that the election should take place before an interim appointment is made. and that the fer mbe for a full four years. · Pigeon Archer Sport Halted LONDON (UPI) -Argentine. born Juan Henshore disliked pigeons because they s p r e a d disease and made a mess or Trafalgar Square. That's why, he told the judge, he was stalking them in London's Green Park -with a bow and arrows. Police confiscated his archery gear, and the judge gave Hensbore a one-year suspended aentence. "It's a shame that my bow and arrows have been taken from me," Henshore said, "I was getting a better shot every lime I used them." "'"'•""°"' bad Its belfniilop, .-weddlllg JIOrtklpo•b pnbobfy dldJl't know d& wtlaene9 were. li pes Met to .. time ..... prim--"""' .. sdecl bfo wife by captarlng ... Ill a ml Oii 11 nemy tribe, 1ccordlng .. dte Encydopedt. Americana. Fonowta1 the lover'• reblnr -with .nf&.kHe dragged bellllld hbn -bis friend• woakl "lland up" 1rond blm to ward off •Hack from rescui~jiirtle1, t6e Pl'• klilfil£ or' liir tribe. I ntrepw Goes ,One · V p ' -In America's .Cup Trials Pln9 Pot19 Tourney DEAR PAT: Some Ume ago you told a reader interested in joining a Ping Pong Club, or meeting others interested Jn.this game, that he should look i n to participating in a tournament scheduled sometime this summer in Anaheim. That's all I rem ember about it add f'd like to know the dates and if players can sliU ilgn· up. NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -Intrepid went one up on Courageous tn the America's Cup obaervation trial• Tue!lday, wJnning by one minute, 24 seconds In a race shortened to a 9.7-miles ~ause or light • winds. The victory was lr!trepid's second in P.L., Sao Clellleate H 1 B k d Tiie ea1uon1a """" •ad iao -0111osexua s ac e Seil Seddy of Oraq:e C....ty wW .,.... . • ... .-......r ..... 1 PIO( r..g '""'" By New England C11y- A·11Mo Aq. I-If at tao QaUty In, - ~ultejm. S~esmea 11Y Ute comblu-WORCESTER, Man. (UPI) -The 0.. manUtoe •ad tomuimeat plaJ wOJ Worcester City Council has killed a tndade Terry Geer and a.d Eisler ~ ordinance lo ban discrimination pla)inl a 75-lloar m11'1dlel ii u effort ag11nat bamoeexuals in jobs and housing &o be•I Ute exl11lng doable• rtcent Jiited • by a 7·2 vote. by tlte Gulne11 "'ortd Boot of R«ords, The change. which would have w~Ue !Ive &ounamea\ &ablea wUI la-amended the city's human rights law to '"'tiff 'lt team1 aid :M pl1ytr1 in round-Include homosexuals, wa1 proposed by ~lock action. Playera of &II agea •re the Yt'orccstcr Gay Union and supparted needed ind fortbtr hlform•tkm m1y be by the ~lassachusetl! Civil Liberties obtolned by ••llln4 Glany Rdd, 1114IOI, Unloo CMCLU) and the city'a lhunan f)r Terry Geer, 13Uetl. Rightl Comm lulon. three races against Courageous in the July trials and It boosted lntrepid's overall r«:0rd in the current serie1 to (.1. Courageous is 3-2 in this series on Rhode Jsland Sound and Valiant,rwhich did not race Tuesday, is IH . MARINER, TRE fourth American beat trying for the Cup defense assignment, will miss this !le?'iel of trials because of alterations. But '"Marlner1s skipper Ted Turner trill! S!_ee_aboa!'_d Vali~nt ~some of her races inClOOing the one Wednesday against Courageous. liltrepid's skipper Gerry Driscoll won the start over Courageous Tuestay and never perm;tted het to break through In a· prolonged tacking duel on the first \\1ndward leg. Alter more than an hour or sailing. lntrepld rounded the fi rst maik 40 seconds ahead. Courageou$ nearly made up the difference on the second le:g, but Intrepid pulled aw11y on the flnlll leR end- finished ISO yards ahead ot the oQl"° boat. . • J Flames Char I A~ea Clo,se I" To Festival . By JACK CHAPPELL Of ""' 0.11, f'llet ll•tf A r3ging brush fire that was appa~ntly started by a model rocket burned more than 40 acres in Lagun!\ Canyon about a 'half mile north or the Fe-tival of Arts gmmds Tuesday night, snarling heavy traffic on the busy Laguna Canyoo.. Road. Nearly 150 firefight ers from the Orange County Fire Department and OivisiOn of Forestry and the Laguna Beach Fire Department fought the blaze v.•hich blackened the Irvine .Ranch acreage on the west side or Laguna Canyon Road. The suspected cause or the fire was a mOOel rocket fired by a man now sought by authorities. He was not identified. There v.•ere no reported injuries, and ooJivestock..deaths ar_e_presenUy _known •• _•,-----1 'WRONG WAY CORRIGAN' WOULD RATHER FORGET IT Now 67, He Shuns Publicity, Declines Interviews Fa1nous Flight Wrong Way Corrigan W a~ Right By WIILIAPtf J . STANFIELD Ulll*' f'ras lftltno&HeNI Thirty Six years ago today, a grinning pilot climbed aboard . a dilapidated monoplane -after being forbidden to fly it to Europe -and took. off on a flight that was to earn him a spat in aviation history and . sobriquet, .. Wrong-way Corrigan." His announced destination when he took off from Floyd Bennett Field in New York, on July 17, 1938, was C31ifomia. Attorney Named To Fair Board As Replacement 11le appointment of Santa Ana attorney \\1arren Finley to the 9goveming board of the Orange County Fair has been annotmced ·by Gov. Ronald Reagan. Finley will replace the only v.unan on the nine member panel. Mrs. Kathleen Huff, of Yorba Linda, who filled an unexpired tenn for one year. Finley wilt serve a four-year term beginning on Jan. I, 1974. He _is the second appointee to 1lhe fair board in two weeks. Earlier, Governor Reagan announced the appointment of former Costa Mesa city manager Arthur McKenzie to fill the unexpired term of Frederick Swenson. Bui 23 hours and 13 minutes later. Douglas Corrigan landed at Dublin and asked naively o( astonished officials: "Is this Los Angeles'?" Tile flight brou ght him fame , and a small fortune as well as a starring role in Ana resident, now 671 shuns publicity and decl ines interviews. '·I've done' enough talklng in the past," he told a report.er this week. "Everybody knows what I did." \Vhat he did was fly across the Atlantic Ocean without a radio in a 9-year-0ld C\Jrtis Robin that he had brought for $.110 as junk seven years befor;e and rebuilt from salvaged perts for an6thel $600. 1-lis only instruments were a compass, which he later claimed was set wroog, and a lG-foot pale to knock ice off the ~·ings. He had two boxes of figs for food and took off with $69 worth of gasoline - 330 gallons stored in five fuselage and wing tanks. The Department of Commerce, which regulated flying in tOOse days, rated the plane strictly experimental, £orbade him from flying it at night and emphatically rejected a transatlantic flight. For years. he rontended that his destination was California. "I set that compass wrong, or I \\'OUld have got to California,'' he said.,_ "Honest, I meant to go there. lt was just dumD Irish luck that 1 got to Dublin." But on the 20th anniversary of his fl ight, he said, "That's my story. I've been telling it so Jong I'm beginning to believe it" and another 10 years later said, •·J really can't remember now. lt was a long tinle ago.'' The first major Laguna area brushfire of the season, the conflagration began at about 7 p.m. and county fire crews were still at the site today cleaning up and checking the area for smoldering embers which could begin another blaze. Control of the fire was announced al 10:30 p.m. as firemen , hand crews working v.•ith shovels and chain saws, and tv;o bulldozers ringed the canyoo lire. Laguna Canyon Road between Laguna Beach and El Toro was blocked. Laguna Beach and California Highway Patrol officers halted motorists at road blocks as fire units lined the canyoo road. Visitors to the dity's art festivals and the Pageant of the 11-fasterS were delayed. Laguna Beach Fire Chief Charley Kuhn and County Fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville, information officer, agreed that the fire fighters were fortunate in receiving advantageous weather during the fire. The fire first raced up the canyon wall from the point of ignitioo near the side of the road. ~1a11ager of Fair Confirnis Deaths Of Four A11.i1nals Orange County Fair Manager Jim Porterfield confinned today that four animals died during the first four days of j the fair but investigation disclosed the 1 deaths were a result of natural causes. "They died for two reasons. One v.·as the heat. and the other was that many . times animals are brought to the fair by -exhibitors in an overfed condition. They become bloated and die, and that's what happened in this cese," he said. Attention lo the deaths was called by the father of a IG-year-old Orange Park Acres girl who oomplained about poor accommodations for animals at the fair. He a11eged that his daughter's pig died after being jammed into a stall with older and larger swine. However, Porterfield claimed the deaths or the three pigs and one rabbil 1 v.oere investigated by officials from the j Costa Mesa Department or Animal : Control and the SPCA who found nothing extraordinary. · Porterfield said animals can die of heat and bloating frequently during summers but said the fair does not have a history of animal deaths. He said one animal died last year but that the news of its demise was nol i report~. • ,_ ., i ' '' ----~---"-!'-~---~ix., ~e p~ecio;~;~;,·~~ ~ ' ,. ' . GEM TALK " " ~ ' .. ' ' '. TODAY \1 . -.. l · ' ' ' by ~A ' v - If<' DIAMO:YDS DIDN'T J'.'SlST The history or man i s a chronicle of invention, and the perfect stone"" for jc\velry wo'uld have to be invented j( it did not .alreadv exist. l The · perfect jewelry st.one s hould reflect: most. of the li ght falling on its s urface; it should he harder than any other n1ateriul known : to be appropriate for all' fashions and seasons, it should be colorless ~nd clear. buL l!I So av11ilable in colors such ·~s gol<lcri ycllo\v, chestnut bro\\'O, pink-, blue and green: this stone should aJSO , CVCtl if \Vhile , give fi3.sh~S Of .red, green and blues and, iioally, lt should be abundant enough so that ,the majority of J>COPIO c:111 1.1fford to ow11 it. This ston e. lortunutel ~'. i:-. provided by nut~rc ln tht.•.foi"m of the diamond. us yrt unt:quallccl by the in vcnti\~(' genius or.n111n. ' ' .. COIN ~I JEWELRY ·I IN 14 KARAT GOLD 'PENDANT. Rooe 00.de~ v •·S1Qr'I for eieganl ::.1mohc1!/. $120.00 CUFF LINKS rope border J. C -!f umphrie!J Jewelers- • 1823 NEWRORT Bt~D, COST-A MESA'- • CONVENIENT TERMS BankAmericard-MastOf Cflarge 21 V.EARS IN lHE SAME L.OCAllON PHONE 548-3401 -----.. • _L l • ' <f OAJlY PILOT .... , : ''· '\"\ I -::.•;.:. ';'·"'~. with •..... T ·.·;.;··· om .... .. arphine .' ::•;::. .. " County Voting Change Needed SlJCING THE MELON: 'l11e ab.<ence ol Riloald Caspers from the Fifth D~trict seat on our Orange County Board of Supervisors raises some interesting side questiclfw on our system of electing county government representatives. Solemn memorial rites v.·ere cooducted 1n Newport Bea~ for Supervisor caspers yesterday. It is widely accepted tbat he Jost his life ·at sea. · De,spite tragedy and grief, politics can be counted on to iress ahead . And the Questions fly thick and fast up at the County Seat in Santa Ana on what should be done about the vacant Filth District chair. There are even legal haggles going on, not to mention the bad:room politica·I manuevering. MA!\'Y LEADERS of communities, both in city and unincorporated al"e'as, are worried aboue leaving tbe coastal i-epresentative's seat vacant too long. They reasoo that the Fifth District, after all. is v.·here the aclion is ·these days in cowity government. Growth patterm are strongest in places like Mission Viejo and ~ Saddleback Valley and in Fifth District cities such as San Juan Capistrano. And lVith the growth come the problems. Of coarse. the Board or Superviscn is composed of live members. And the four remaining are carrying on. TROUBLE IS, many Filth District residents point out, the other four men do not represent. our coastal i'egioo in the central and -sector. Thus il there is a basic flaw in the way \\'e go about setting up our county government, the election o( supervisors by dimict might be it. Because of this system. First District Supervisor Robert Battin comes from Santa Ana and is expected to ,take care of his people there and in the Fountain Valley region.. David L. Baker's Second District embraces the Garden Grove area, Third District &Jpervisor Ra]~ Diedrich is from FUnerton. Ralph Clark is the Fourth District man from Anaheim. IN 111E MINDS ol many people, then, each supervisor has hi.s own cubbyhole and takes care of his awn home fronl AQd with the loss of Caspers, m3ny folks in the Fifth District figure places like Ne\\']JOl't Beach, Laguna. · C.osta Mesa 1 ri.tission Viejo, El Toro, San Juan, Dana Point and environs are unrepresented. This is tecbnically true. But as il practical matter, even with the Fifth District seat filled, you need two other boa.rd votes to get anything done for the coastline. To be ellective then, the other lour supervisors must have done their homework on the coastline as well as in their own home district. And tbe Fifth District man better do hls on the central county, too. I .think the remaining four supervisors have tried to fill tbe gap in Caspers' loss. Dave Baker, for example, has alv;ays been a friend of the coastline. BUT IT DOES give you the question to _ pooder if we wouldn't be better off if the five supervisors were elected at large. ltfaybe we coult go to a system like \he city ol Newpor1 Beach, w he r e supervisors would be nominated by district but elected by the entire O)IJOty. It's an interesting theory, anyway. ~-----' Turks ·:Mass Troops • Ill Cypru·s Crisis.' Walkouts Spreading Across U.S. By Associated Press Natklnal Guard troops watched over prison inmates in Ohio and Rhode Island, thousands of San Francisco area commuters were without b u st s and pickets were posted at two airlines as strikes cootinued, today across the nation. Officials in Uls Angeles said they did not kow how long the city would be able to maintain full v;ater and power service follOYting a walkout by workers in the Department of \'later and Power, the first such strike in 30 years. 'Jbe department's 5,000 workers b egan striking at 12:01 a.m. after neg<liations broke up late TUesday. COPPER l\UNERS, liquor !tore clerks, prison guards, -..bospital workers and autoworkers were among those off the job in scattered areas in a rash ol labor disputes federal mediators say ls . unprecedented since the end of Vlorld \Var II. Analysts say the labor unrest has bubbled to the surface with the lifting of ecooomic oontrols. At the start of the \\-eek, there were 600 strikes involving a- quarter-million workers. In strike-plagued Ohio on Tuesday. about 7,500 striking public employes closed -25 liquor stores· and $unpered o p e r a t i o n s at two universities, I 4 mental hospitals and eight prisons. National Guard troops °"'ere called to assist with security and medical servi<!es at Lima State Hospital for the crlmlnally insane after pickets hurled baseball bats and balls at workers who crossed their lines. Other troops were at the state's largest prison in l.Alcasville where prison guards are on strike. · AUTO WORKERS kept Gener a I 1t1otors' Lordst<M11 plant shut down lor the fifth day ilnd about 2.000 coal workers closed mines in the eastern part of the state in a U)&day protest of proposed federal strip mining legislation. State lawmakers drew up a wage proposal they hoped would lure the striking public employes back to work for the first time since July 6. 1be full legislature COll!lders formalizing the offer on Monday. Prison handling of ao inmate assault oo a guard sparked a walkout by some of the~247 of'ficers at the .i\,dult Correction Institution in Chnstoo. R.I., on TUesday .. National Airlines, the nation's eighth largest, furloughed · 5,500 ol its 8,000 employes as prospects dimmed for an early settlement of a strike by l ,600 mechanics, clerks, fuel b"uck drivers and inspectors ol the In te rnati onal Association of Macllinist.s. ABOUT tOe supenrisors comprised a skeleton Vt"Ork force at the airline which canceled all ISS daily flights to 45 American cities and Loodon tmtil Friday. Talks in Naples, Fla., re a ch e d an impasse over fringe benefits. In Oakland, flight crews remllined off the job at Trans International Airlines, one of the world's largest vacation chart« firms. The airline carriu:l 680,000 passengers last year. The 191 cockpit crewmen and SM night attendants walked out on Monday, protesting shifts which they claimed were dangerously long. About 200,000 commuters who normally travel by bus from Oakland to San Francisco helve been forced to get there by other means because of a strike against AC Transit District. The 1,600 bus drivers, mechanics and clerks sought a cost of living· raise. ~~,~~epose~ ,. ' Crushing Defeat ' Makarios hi London ~ By Ualled Prtll lntera1Uonal TUrk:ey tent an anMttd dlvlston to ita oouthem coast todoy ID joln troo'pa massed a for a· possible invuion of Cyprus SO miles 1way and world leaders increased preuure on Greece to end the coup before Greece and TUrkey IO to war over the issue. 'l\Jl'klsb Prime Minster Bulent Ectvit and Defense Minister Hasan Esat Jaik flew urgently to London for crucial talki '\li"hlle ~rkl,sh ·n~pn~rs spoke openly or lmpunent invas10n. Deposed Cypriot President Archbishop Makaribs alsO flt"w to London ror tal ks with British leaders. TURKEY, GREECE Ind Britain 1~ CC>-guarantors of the freedom and independence of Cyprus but Turkey says Greece defaulted by permiUing Greek officers to lead the Cypriot national guard in the revolt against Makarios. Turkey has threatened to act alone if Britain does not join it in intervening in Turkey. Wllh the anti-MakarlOI insurgents apparenUy in virtual control of Cyprus Greece's 14 allies in NATO called on the Greek officers v.'ho led the coup to Ieeve the island and permit Makarios to return. 1bere were appeals from the United States, Britain and other allies to Greece and Turkey to use moderation. The Soviet Union iswed a stem Retired Gen. William S. Westmoreland blamed himself for Tues-warning ID Greece and said "the Soviet day's defeat in South Caroli.qi Republican gubernatorial primary. "I people resolutely denounced the anned was an inept candidate,11 he ~Said. \Vestmoreland was defeated by pullch" agalnst Makarios. A.number of State Sen. James Edwards. Soviet warships were reported in the ---------------------------.. vicini ty of Cyprtitand at least seven U.S. . Tapiiig to Sl1ow Surp1ise By Ehrliclunan Reported Frome Wire Senices \\'ASHING.TON '-John D. Ehrlichm::tn arranged to tape rerord a meeting with a NixOn campaign lawyer last year so the fonner presidential adviser co u I d "register great surprise" at "all the gruesome· facts" of the Watergate a:wer· up. the Washingtoo Post reported today. T1;>e Post quoted a confiden.tial ·[..__I_N_S_H_OR_T_ ••• ___,) ·memorandum by lawyer Plato Cacheris concerning a · .meeting bet\\·een Ehrlichman and Paul O'Brien, an attorney for the Nixon re-election committee, at San Clemente April 5, 1973. Cacheri s is a defense attorney for lomier AUy. G<n. John N. Mltd!ell in the Watergate oover-.up case. e C°"' Disease Spreas MARIJN, Tex. -Animal health officials siad today a r o ~db 1 o ck apparently isolated a cattle disease outbreak in one Texas county, but in· fected cows slipped into Oklahoma where Gov. David Hall banned the importtatioo of more Texas Uvestock. Billy Ray Gowdy, piresident of Uie Oklahoma Board of Agriculture , confinned eight cows died of anthrax, and five more were believed killed by the disease. e Moll Harts Official SWEDFSBORO, N.J. -More than a dozen migrant y;orire.rs swinging sticks and baseball bats chased and attacked a New Jersey legislator touring a labor camp near s~·edesboro Tuesday and broke bis arm, the lawmaker sa1d. The assailants, who ~·ere said to be angry because they felt they \\'ere being harassed, also assaulted two other persons on the tour. Democratic Assemblyman Byron Baer of 'Bergen, N.J., suffered a broken left . arm before he escaped in a car. e 1nnoreat, Sa11s Gurney JACKSONVILLE . Fla. -Sen. FA!ward J. Gurney has pleaded innocent 'to comspiracy. bribery, cover·up and perjury charges and says he has not decided whether he will resign from office. 1 The Florida Repijblican entered the pleas on Tuesday in a quick and quiet arraignment before U.S. Magistrate Joseph Hatchett.. Guemey was released on a ,l,IXKI signature bond. .Sinatra Depar~ Australia Aher Tlireat of Bomb SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -Frank Sinatra ended ·his controversial Australian tour today with a police esrort tll lhe airport after a caller threatened to blow up his plane unless $75 millioo in r&J'lSOU'l was-paid. Police cars sumiunded the Qantas jet on vrhich the singer· and his party were booked. and seauity officers searched the airport, but no bomb was found. 6th' fleet ships including the · carrier Forrestal were ln the area. However, \Vashington said the 6th fl eet had not been ~laced on an alert. 111E BRITISH DEFENSE minislry said it diverted the 28,500-ton British troop carrier Hermes:· with a too-man "&mmando unit to the Ea 1 tern Ji1edlterranean today because of the Cyprus siuiation. The ship bad been expected to dock at Malta today. The Cypri« representative to the Uni!OO Nations Secwity <bmcil asked the council Tuelday to demand a cease- fire in Cyprus and let tbe 2,1'.KK).man U.N. peace-keeping fcrce there eruorce it. No action was taken. Britain and the United. States were reported to bel ieve the siluatioo too flul<I: the Soviet Union took a sUffer stand 8nd caUed the coup a threat to world peace. . GREECE MAINTAINED . that tbe coup 00 Cyprus was an intemal arfair of Cyprus and that the colonels ruling Greece had nothing to do with the uprising. Turtey Ind Mabrios pat tbe blame squarely oo the A th en s govenunent and today U.S. Ambassador Henry J. Tasca tok1 Greek Foreign ~tfnister Constantine Kyprak>s the United States oppooed any violatloo ol Cyprus' soverelgnity. Cyprus' new Greek-spon90ftd reglm< today broadcast "sincere feelings of fri..mhip" for Turt~h Cypriots and reopened the island repiblk: for eight boon. Turtey marshaled strike forces along is 90'ihem .shcre opposite Cyprus as It did in 1964 and !967 wben Greece and Turkey came within a hair's breadth ol war. Those troops put to sea but did not land in Cypnis when the United States and NATO Intervened. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Delivery of the Daily Pilot is guaranteed • f;.lf. 4 ,, ... Archie Afl1ent "All in the Family" has taped its first show or fall, without Archie Blinker. Carroll O'Con· nor, who plays Bunker, i5 in contract c!W>•te with owners of show. X-rat,ed Movies' Male W orkliorse .4.rrest,ed by . F Bl NEW YORK (UPI) -llany Reellll, the "'<ell-known workhorse of X-rated movies who has played leadfng man to such stars as JJnda Lovelace and Georgina SpelvJn, was arrested today on charges of violating tbe federal intent.ate obscenity Jaws. Reems, whoee real name ls Herbert Streicher, was picked up by FBI agentl Tuesday oo an indictment handed 11p lllll Thunday by a federal grand jury in Memphis. Tem. A1so named in tbe indictment were Herbert Nitke, producer of "The Devit tn Miss Jooes," end the director ol lhe picture! Gerard Damiano. All ,three men _. chargl!d wttll . -lralllpartatlon of -matters f« sale« distr i bution , coospiracy Ind ai!llol and abetting. It convicted on all three counts, each could receive Ip ID $20,000)11 ~ and 15 ~ in jaD. Reems first receivtd national e:r))OlllUl'e for his perfonnan« u the peychialrist In "Deep Throat" who diagnoeed the tntlque anatomical problems (I( Linda Lovelace. Tbe movie wa.• suboequentl' decland obscene by Manhattan Criminal Court Judge Joel Tyler who. In his decision,. noted Miss Lovelace's ''swud..walknrtng capady for fellaUo. .. Reemt also made ataning ._...,... in "'111e Devil Jn Mis Jones" and !DOii reoeDdy, "?.femories Within Mias Aioe." TV Personality's Death Recorded SARASOTA, Fla. (UP!) -me171sfon talk show hootess Olristine Chu- wanted a permanent reoxd ol her i;m. camera suicide which honified viewen of her daily "&mcoaat Digest" program Monday. Officials oC WXLT television said Tuesday that Monday's program wu vldeolaped at the &pedal request ol the 29-year-old Miss aiu-. who died 1• hours after llbooting ber:¥lf in the right temple with a .38-c:aliber revolver. Pacific Nor-thwest Wet EIGHT POLICE squad can, lllU11arked police vehicles and plainclothes detectives cordooed off the area around Sinatra's hotel in ·the King's Cross district. _ The caller demanded that the money be left at a postofflce near the hotel. Police said lhe man must have been a MoftdeJ• F"rid1y :"II 1'0U do ftCI \.....e ,.,,,.. IM'Pf• •&y !l'!IG p,m •• <•II Ind.,_ <oPY .. 111 DI btouoM lo you. C.t11i¥t l1~t11~•·I1:00p.m. 5.i111tdly t ncl Slln!Ny· !I 'l'OU di) 1111 .. c.i-. '°"" (<)Oy ~, ....... s.t ... <Y,."' ....... S<.lrld1y. <•ti -.i lOP' Wilj bot "'°"""nt lo you. c.115 ¥1 ll~t" ~!11 101.m. Police aald Miss <llllbbuck's scrl]ll included a new•llke Account in the third pmoo ol her .Welde and listed benelf In critical condition. She was In crMlcal ccnditloo before she died at Sara9ola Memorial Hospital l4 hours after the shooting. SF Drivers Strike Tliundershoivers Dwindle Along Gulf Coast Stares llGfWO ___ _, mlli!ltAtN rT""tt'lsHOW f2aillil (LuJ (fil]$.llOWt t• ~ ,!~ . ' . -. ' I •· . . crank. ' Shortly after his visit began, Sinatra ran into a massive labor union boycott because he called memben of the press bums, parasites and hookers in remarU during the first performance of his tour in ,.,lelboumc. The unions refused to allow his IOU!;' to rontinue 01" to service any planes on "which he might try to travel around or out or the country. • AUSTRAUAtS TOP union afflcial Bob ltawke, intervened and settled' the dispute. Jk-cause the dispute canceled ooe ol bis five performances. Sinatra allov.-ed his fin al performance Tuesday night to be televised free. and an estir:Mted 5 mi1lion Australian.'! tuned in. He struck out at the press again On the television ~ charging newsmen can dish out crlUcism but caMOt take it. .-.. Telephones Mtil Orantt COllflly ""'' •••.•.••• , •••... i .. »I Norl-\IHu"hnvlonS.1~ 1ndWe~tm1nUf1' ........ , •• ., ....... W0-1'20 SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Some 50 drive,. for the san Francbco Ai'l'Ofl Bus Servlce struck Tuelday to back _ contract demands. Officials ol Teams1en Union Local 265 said the driven were demanding a $& raise to $50 a day tl:U1 year with $5 raises each in the nut two yean:. •Good for Life' I Pill for Fe1nale Dogs; Not Hu1nans GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -DrUg DllllUfactunn orO ttt1lng I ....um. birth Ol<ltrol pill for female dop .. hlch wUI gl'O Ufetime pnitoction, the diroctor ol the National Hwnane Society '"l'I· But he .. Id the government Is alraJd If the p1JI fl'll 00 the ...-people lake ll •11 : know that several drug manufacturt:rs are working on this, but they are very 1ecretl\'e about how f~r along It i81" uJd Frank M~abon ol · Washington. Ile .,timat«I lllot t1i<? prodllct might be five years away from market.Ina ~use the F edCnll Food and D r u g -. Administration Is reluctant to Uceme !L He said !be FDA fears huJDana might lake the pills. Mc.\lahon said one l"I r o o d manlllactu...-placed a dog f o o d cootairi.ng a birth control agent on tbe mlri<el but !be FDA for<ed It ID be wttlldnwn. He said tho FDA lured 1olr income humam .. ,,.,1ld eat the do( food. He did not ldentilY the manufacturer. McMahon appeored btfore the Gainesville Oty Commission in support 1 of a profXtSed $10,0QQ. a ytar subsidy to encourage dog oWners to have their pets t!pllYed or nanerlied, 'J't» pnll)Oled ordinance would pay one lhlrd of the -ot such treatment. ·-----.,..--------1 ' 8 • - ·-DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P&GE Which Plan Is Next? Now that the anger and confusion over the (lve-way W,est Orange County untfica,Uon plan has been ltennin· ated ·by the •lale Board of Education, what happens next? The Huntington Beach Union High School p istrict still bas trouble. It desperately needs more adequate classroom 1pace for its 19,000 students. The propoal io divide the 52·square·mile high school district into five separate, unJfied systems had too many inadequacies and too much controversy. ,But unification of some sort is still necessary -and un· resolved. · A 52-6quare-mile district, covering five different elementary districts, four cities, and a total population or more than 270,000 resideQ.ts, seemingly is destined to be plagued with trouble for the test of its disjointed life. Two other unification plans~show considerable po- tential. One involves division of the district along city boundaries -creating four new, unified K·l2 systems-- and the other is a slightly larger, three-way split. . Both deserve further study to· determine if th ey can meet the state requi?ements for unification, and also to find out µ they can) clear local political hurdles. That last tuk will be the difficult one. If it weren't for some differences in school philosophies, and the de- sires of most trustees and administrators to keep the control they now have~ unification could become a fairly simple statistical matt.er. Rut we know-it won't J:iesimple. It will r,robably be some time before the fighting district officia s even talk to each other. And some districts will no doubt suggest a secessionist movement, asking to split off from the high school district on their own. · The iqea of going it alone will certainly be tempting \ for some of uie s~nger districts, Uke Fountain Valley Elementary, bUt such a move won't help the rest. \Vhat is needed now ts a solution for the entire area. That does sound like wishful thinking, but It is qot impossible. If local leaders will drop their persoqal feuds, and relax their egos, perhaps residents would' be surpris_ed at the result. There is sufficient sKt.1 and experience among locil educators to develop a (91d, acceptable uni· fication plan. ' U they don't do it soon, taxpayers, parents and stu· dents are going to become justifiably impatient. ,<\. Super Par.ade According to police department estimates, some 300,000 visitors lilied the streets of Huntington Beach to watch the city's 70tl) annual 4th of July Par.ade. In at· tendance alone, that indicates the parade was a huge success. But esthetically, this year's Independence ilinenry also proved quite a boost over previous years' editions: A new parade route attracted bigger noats and larger marching bands. The parade itself moved more smoothly and swiftly than it has in recent years. It also attracted more television coverage. The show went on so well that the executive direc- tor. of the state's bicentennial committee is considering supporting it as the official state parade in 1976. Whether or not it actually becomes the official state parade, Mark Hammerquist and his fellow Jaycees who organized it, and the hundreds of volunteers who worked on it, deserve a hardy round of thanks from the 300,000 who saw the 4th of July Parade. ll really was a big and bright 4th or Julf in Hunting· ton Beach. -· ., . H 6LOBETROT1EP, Special Help. On Hardships Hard to Find 'Last of the Luke Worua Lovers' _ (JACK. ANDERSON) WASHINGTON -A scathlng internal memo has accused the Federal Energy AdministraUon of neglectinJt the poor, the elderly and the disadvantaged whom it hail pledged "' help. The Special Impact Office. which was supposed to help hardship victims with their energy problems. was "created merely for political expediency," the memo charges. "" The explosive memo catalogues alleged examples of t he creepina lethargy. Here are the high· lights: -Before a sched· uled appearance at a Senate Aain.l:l Com· mittee hearinu, fed· e r a I energy czar John Sawhill called the Special Impact Office to find out what they ·..-ere doin,e; for the elderly. Tbe answer, acrordinf( to the memo, W33 "noth· inf(." Sawhill's office instructed the hardship experts to start some program he could tell the Senate about. The memo calls Sawhlll's subsequent testimony about bow his agency Was helping the elderly "a display of p o I i t I c a 1 manipulation of fact and intent." -A survey was ordered of federally funded transportation systems that serve the elderly. It was supposed to be completed by May 15, but Special Impact deputy chief Curtis Jones told us the results are still coming in. In any event, the survey doesn't cover independent systems, which a_re Jl!_gre likely than fed eral systems to be cut back as a result of the energy pinch. -: JONES boasted that Operation Hatvesl, an emergency program to help migrant workers obtain gas dming the Dear Gloomy Gus Motto for the Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach City school dis- tricts: If at first you don't succeed, secede. Five \Vay ......, 9"11 _,. -llulllftlltM 1W ,....,. .... --.urllr retlK1 .... ....... " ... -· SMllll J'Ollt' "' -.. •9-Y .... DellY Pillt. shortage, was "precedent setting.'' But the memo alleges that "the relief strategy, such as it was, was announced on April '~ over a month after the original petition. In the interim, the Arab oil embargo had been lifted and supply of gasOline to au -including migrants - ceased to be a rriajor obstacle." -The gas shortage caused many persooal tragedies that were Ignored-by the Special Impact Office. A paraplegic, for example, pleaded for help In finding a reliable 'aource of gasoline. His special automobile was his only form or transportation. Every time he needed to use Ute washroom, he had to drive all the way home where he had specially equipped facililies. Vet as of thi s writing, · bis letter hasn't even been answered. Concludes the memo: "Unfortunately. the most pathetic and needy element of the population looks to our office for relief and is met with palliatives and political verbiage." THE FATE of the memo , written by Susan · Silver, now resigned, it.self illustrates how the new, mushroom Federal Energy Administration has already developed into a ·bureaucratic bog. Ms. Silver told us the memo was supposed to go to energy director Sawhill, but he nev'er got it. She then tried to make an appointment ·with the dlrector, but was twice turned down. Finally, the enterprising critic slipped the memo to Mrs. Sawhill, her fonner college professor. Thus, the energy czar finally got the message, caDed the author and promised ac:Uon. The Honorarium Racket By WALTER J. CAMPBELL Coa•ultlnc Editor IndastrbJ Week We were reading tbt story In the newspaper about the hefty incomes -'Orne congressmen make OQ the side by collecting fancy fees for m a k i n g apeeehes, when the telephone rang. The caller was an executive of a trade association in Washington. ms group is scheduling a huge convention 'in U S Vegas in the fall and would like very much to have me come out and speak On "Free Enterprise-Key to the Future." What wouJd be my requirements? We replied we would need travel e:itpenses and a modest honorarium thal would aJt!ounl-portal to portal-to conslderabfy less than the federally ordained minimum wage. J'Well, Mr. Campbell, you know this is an election year. and, as 1 .natter. of policy, all our honorariums and travel moneys are reserv,ed ror congressmen." , WE LONG had been a"'are that some . pressure groups regularly b I r e eongressmcn to speak at their meetings at rees or $5,000 to $7 ,500. We ha ve heard labor union leaders count t h e congre.umen they 11own" ({heir term, _not ours)._: A congressman rectlvlng several such honorttrtums likely wlll take a more faV01'able view on legfslatlon t be pressure group ls backing. How else can (GUEST REPO~!) we explain food stamps and welfare benefits for 1trlkers? We also have listened to many of those speeches for which sub s tantial honorariums were given. fl.1ostly, they were drivel prepared by a rnember 'of thi congressman '1 staff-whose salary is paid by the taxpayers. An associate listening to such a speech became indignant. "You mea n to tell me that they pay that guy $7 ,500 to deliver such hogwash?" We explained lo him that the speech was not the thing : it "'BS what happened later. You know that all the tickets to the policemen's ball are not boqbt by people who like lo dance. WE REGRET THE practJce of labor unions and ocher well-heeled pressure groups offering congressmen rancy fees as a kind of legal bribery. We believe it is one more step in eroding whatever integrity Is left in governm(>[ll. But when the private sector adopts the same prnctice, we re.:ret it even more. • lf buaines.s end Industry afeto adopt ht ~ce of paying big honorariums to congressmen to tnnuence t h o'1 e cOngressmen 's votes, then let's stop prattllng PomPoUs platilUdfl about free enttrprtae. f For $8.50, Send Broadway Quality To the Editor: I just read Tom Titus's review of the Orange Playhouse's newest flop, "Bom Yesterday," and while I disagree with ~lr. Titus on a couple of minor points, J wholeheartedly concur with h I s assessment of the star talent and the overall -quality of production being offered by our so-<!llled "professional" theater. Like Afr. Titus, 1 have been in the opening night audience of b o l h productiops, "Last of -the Red Hot Lovers"' and "Born Yesterday.'' I bit my tongue after the first play -true, Pat Paulsen's ao Barney Cashman, but he 11 a hometown boy, and ever the eternal optimist, I figured thiogs could only get better once the theater's production schedule got underway. But after Tuesday 's ins u 1 tin g presentation, I must speak out. I don't like being played for a sucker. . l'l\1 THE FIRST to admit that Oraage County needs a professional theater. But why should I pay $8.50 to see a pro- duction that is (1) certainly not among the newest offerin,e;s available and (2) no better than (if, indeed. as good as) most community theater presentations I can see for $2.50 or $3? If the pnxfucers at the Orange Playhouse are going to continue to charge high prices, then It's only fair to wam them that the caliber of their pnxfuctions had best be equally high. Orange CounfJ' audiences ar~ more sophisticated than the P I a y b o u s e obviously gives them credit for being. After ils first week of production. ·"Lovers" atteadance fell way-off, because the quality of the production could not sustain a profitable three-week run. Word or mouth is critical to the success of any theater operation, and· there is no indication that "Born 'Xesterday" will be.beUer accepted. IF TlfiS trend continues, then the Orange Playhouse will be forced to close its doors before It's completed a full season. And if that happens, we may as well kiss professional theater goodbye in Orange County\ for no one will ever get the big·money oacking to reopen them. We must not let this happen ! Instead, we ntust convince the Playhouse that '1·e're a discerning theatre-going public that demands 'quality professional theater at professional prices . . . that we're not "hicks"' and we won't accept \\'Orsc-than· amateur work wider the guise of a professional label. The Playhouse isn't bringing us new shows. Its first-season Jlne-up I s comprised or shows which have been produced by the county's numerous c.omrounjty a n d se.ml -professional companies for years. So they had best be superior productions of those shows. Otherwise, we're bcttet off giving $2.50 or $3 to a oonimunity playhouse to see the likes of "Born Yesterday.'' "The Owl and the Pussycat" or lffc three Nell Simon offerings this season. "Last of the Red Hot Lovers," ''Promises. Pro1T1ises" and "Come Blow Your Hom." (How many times have we seen that one?) Simply, t \\'OUld sum up the Orange Playhouse's first seam thus far by retitling Its first two productions. "Last of tbe Luke Wann Lovers'' and "Stillborn Yesterday." CARLA K. DOW Cltl:eNs Lo•e Tu the Editor: • At the rtccnt public hearing 1egarding a pi:ojected deficit in !he-Runti ngton TJcac"h budget I was one of many In the audience opposed to the ne'Y real estate trenstet"ta-x a' a mtans-for solvht'g this "probltm'1• Although much "ll8 said about uses for the money and ho\\• much "'" needed, I hea rd no rationale ( .... _M_A_I_L_B_o_x ___ ) Letters from readers are welcome. Normally, writers should convey tlieir messages i n 300 words or less. Tile rig/it to condense letters to fit space . or eliminate libel is Teserved. All let- rers must include signature and ~ail· ing address but naJMs may be with- held cni request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. ·presented as 1 to why a new highly selective ta:it of this type w a s appropriate. So it Was with considerabl~ interest that I listened to KNX Los Angeles radio giving me the lnS\\'er as related to them in an interview with City Administrator David Rowlands. i\IR. ROWLANDS cited the progressive things that the people. of Huntington Beach have done in making their city attractive. e.g.. curbing streets. establishing beautiful park areas. He notes that it is only fair that people moving into the city should help pay for the privilege of eofoying the good things that ha\.'e been 400e in the past by the current residents. Is he for real? Hearing such "rationale." from Mr. Ro"" I ands prompted me to \\'Tile my first-ever letter to any editor. Firstly, the new tax is not home by the buyers, but rather by the sell~ -=-~-~rge good tj!izens who helped make their city so attractive. Secondly, most or these progressive residents of Huntington Beach are relative ne"·comers themselves in this rapidly growing dty of newcomers. • SINCE real estate sellers probably coostitute leu ijian 20 percent of the populace annu.ally the return to the city cannot be enough to make a dent in the budget but it certainly will make one in !he seller's pocketbook. I know of very few· people that endorse this highJy selective tax whlch causes a home seller to pay tax not only on his personal equity involved in the transaction but also on any mortgage value. I think it's time the HWltington Beech City Council listened to the people and used only broad based ta:ites to support a budget \\illch benefits all residents of the city. It's also time they furnished ~Ir. Rowlands a new story subStantiatlng why it is equitable to ta:it those unfortunate few who of necessity must move away . .and leave behiDd the beautiful city they helped build. c.R. BALLARD Fun on the f'0urth To the Editor: On July 6 there was an article about fireworks by Jackie Hyman. She maintains that too many people are injured each year and that therefore fire'llwks should be bani;ied, except in "carefully supervised s p e c ta c u 1 a r · dltpla)'I." FIRS'Po( all, it should be pointed out that the man she mentKJned as an example was injured by a "cherry bomb," and un1ess I am mmaken, those. cannot. be bought legally in Southern California. Firev.·orks can be and art for 1he most part safe and sane. Besides . they are fun and one of a very few traditions !his nation has. I do think that · their Jale should be Controlled : e.g. allow-only tho~ 1a or older-to buy-them. 'Mlat \\'Ill Insure needed supervision. If thenrnre tho,,e-(like JAckle-1tymnn· \o.'ho arc afraid of "getUng firtd upon once a year" then all they must do ·is rcn1a.in at bolnc on July 4th and avoid the risk. But it seems silly to 1ne to han fireworks entirely simply because a tiny fract ion of people are injured while using them . Banning fireworks fo r that reason is as logical as banning the sale of dartboard sels for the 'same reaSon. Or skateboards. Or even bicycles. Think of sll the people every year "'ho are killed or injured "'bile riding bicycles. TO !\IE, the fun and excitement of ·rire"·orks justify the sale and use of fire..-.. orks even In Newport Beach. I ha\'e been here for aJrnost 19 cooseeutive Fourth of Julys, ~nd I have yet to be "fired upon." I hlte firewor ks and l think \\'e should keep them. CHRISTOPHER G. McKF,NZIE Touchh19 Story · To the Editor : Tonight, Juty· 11, when I wss reading the Daily Pilot. I saw that the Pilot Logbook "'as written by Jo Olson. Since ,.ls. Olson is a good writer and I enjoy reading her articles, I decided to read it. As usual , the story (about Selma P.iorrison, an aspiring poet Who died at 59) "'as well "'rilten and I'm sure it touched the hearts of all who read it. When I got to the end. I was crying because I sec niyself in both Selma P.lorrison and Jo Olson. Like Selma~ I enjoy writing. and like Jo, enjoy making other people happy. The moral that Ms. Olson put in her story can never be said too rTiuch: It is: Never put off a chance to brighten up anyone's life because that life ma y not be there to touc~ lomotroW. Thank you , Jo Olson and Selina r..1orrison. MARCIE KIRSCHENBAUM T#te Anaericon Woy To the Editor: It seems to me not only ironical but ill· advised that fire'ol·orks are allowed to be !!Old in Orange County and yet shooting- them off is prohibited even in so safe an area as Aliso Beach with its unusually \\1i<le sweep of sand and the "'hole Pacific beyond it. ARE PEOPLE instead supposed lo shoot them of£ surreptitiously in resi· dential d i s t r I c t s \\'ith serious ~ir·e hazard? Or up in the hills with ext reme fire danger in all that dry brush~ Isn't it about tifne for a more realistic approach before the next Fourth of July? Let us hope that bull-horns and beach patrol s will no loogcr be heard and seen on Aliso Beach prohibiting youngsters and their parents from shooting off sparklers and flo\\'Cr pots in celebration of thi s mosl American of holidays. Or have buJl,horus and pa1rols at Aliso Beach now be<.'01Tie the American \\'ay? \VI NIFRED PALMER f'o11r•leUer:ll'"rd• To I he F..ditor: Re the ('()lum n of July 9 by ~Ir. 1'1urphine, "Sticker Ban Slicky Issue": lt's quite obvious that the article dealing wllh my efforu·to ban obscene bumper stickers had a total di.st'egard for the facts. It mentioned that I wanted to slop the printing of all · four-letter \\'Or<ls. That's just not true. ~I)' intent is simplf. to stop the use of obviously obscerie stickers, not the use of stickers that may juSl be eonsidc rt.<d oU-color. PEOPLE should nlways mainh1in their frel>don1 Qf speech and right of expression but not i! !hey are going to have total disregard for tbc ri1'hls of - others. ~1any citizens are disgusted by I hat type olverbliij!:e. It 1~~tlcrth<lt by b<lnnlng such stickers, it s going to "cause a real problenl for the butnper sticker lndui.'lry". llog \Vnshl The diclionary is full or words that do not offend cit ize ns. I'm sure most of ~ bumper sticker industry realizes their responsibility to the general public, so do not be so irresponsible as to attempt to make ot hers believe that immorality begins with the bwnper sticker makers. You \\'ould do well to purchase a bumper sticker that has Jong been a favorite of mine. It reads. '•A Respoosible Press Has No Opinions-Just the Facts Please!" DAVID H. PARKS Boord V11re1pon1h:e . - To lhe Editor: In response lo ' the Daily Pilot's editorial entitled "More Wasted Effort," (regarding Huntington Beach High School reCall)· I would like to inquire as to just \\'ha\ the editor would recommend citizens to do to "resolve district problems"? 'Vhenever we brought our problems before the school board, a not.i,ceable lack of-comrninl, rtSponse of an y sort, or action occurred. The citizen is made to look foolish or is put down for coming before them in the first place. \\fben faced \l'ilh an unresponsive school board and administration, there arc very few cha nnels of recourse (or _, alternatives. if you prefer) left. Our · Constitution docs offe r a sol ution for this,_ .- ho~·ever. through its provision of the recall process. PERHAPS the Daily Pilot will admit that certain byproducts of the recall as reported i and in certain c a s e s investigated ) by the Pilot w e r e beneficial : such as, illegal expense accounts dissolved. gratuities exposed, expense act'Ountability for retreats and trips, questioning the legality of altering contra cts after they were granted, to nan1e just a few. Surely the Daily Pilot will not be hypocritical enough to believe apathy is more oonstructivc lhan the energy and effort put forth by a group of people who cared enough to give of themselves to solve problems totally unacceptable to thC.m in the very best way they knew how. . To ans\ver the Daily Pilot's statement • 1hat the recall comn1ittee rar e I y launched verbal attacks against Ron Shenkn1an -the editor should be aware that most of our comm uniques were in . responSe to 1he. un\\'arranted attacks launched by Dennis P.1angers on the recall committee. -DORIS ALLEN Citizens for Parents Righ~ OIANll COASY DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vetd, P1WUsl1tr Thomas Keevil, Editor Barbara Krtibicli Ediwrla'L Page Editor • nie editorial 1P8iC of 1~ Dliily Pilot .~ks to infonn and ~mul&te ~adeni by pnosenUrc on \his pmp divel'S(''COnun~nt&JY'on ioplca: ol in- terest by ~r1tUeated oolumnllts and cartoonists, by providing • forum for readPn' v~·• and by pre~tlrc this nC\\'Sp&Jlf'r's oP/rUons and ldeu oa cum!nt 1opica, The editoril.I oplnioftl , of the Daily Pilot appear orily In the editorial column at the tnp ol the page. Opinions e.-tl)r'H8td by the C*l- umnlsts and c11rtoonlS1:1 and letter -wrltm arw their OYt'fl ud no~ mtnt of their ~s by 'IM DalJ7 IOt""'lfiovkf bC nlmtd: Wedn esday, July .1 7, 1974 ( . • ' I ' !' . . •• . . -....___..::..-_______ _ ------- • ' ( Wcdntsd ay, Juty 17, 1q74 •DAILY PILOY. 5 .' Hearings .Refused ~layor's Day,ghter '.C1iarged $400,000 Ransom; ·2 Held in Kidnap On Milk Pricing SACRAMENTO (AP) - State q:rlculture officials ha\'e refused to hold hearings oo reducing nlilk prices despit e the fact 40 legi s l a t or s req~ed·thcn11 l\\'O consun1e.r groups !3)'. Spok es m e n for U\t: ntlifomla Ci1Ji.en A t t i o n Group and Fight Inflation ~ (FlTl s.\id T\l\'S..iny that the lavolruiiers h."<i signed a p<dtlon asking fur U.• hear~s. The-y Wd C. B. Cbrist~'S\. dil't'dcc ('{ Ul\" !l l S I t L~>rol ol t"t>ld Mod .~tw"t , turnN dO\\l\ lhr """"" . Chri.sttttR!l. !03l.! ., .1 l'tit~'\Oe i:l~t!'A"C" u-.:ii ~ "-w.t'd tO) •"alt (\"(' ',!. !:!;\~ n'-~u...w re t.~ n'!l.'.l ~ strUt.'1"..ll't' ~ t f o r t b.~bouq'- THE SE:.'L' ~ ....... ~ .. ~~ S=:.i \li3~ Cba:=..:::-« M! ~~ cc ~ s:.i ;t '$. l'\.~~* ~ p:1 ~: ' ,~:'el ~ :h:s \"ll'l: • t!.u. ca...~ oo i::e.1 : :<!0:1.' ~;!''!Q::..n.. ~ :c'.CI..~ 1..-of~u: 3.""1..-,,:- .... J..V" S·D'!r.« ~ ~~ :JS ~ -·.=_-er-:: ,..,-l ~ .... ~ .&! 1~ ¥":).:~ -o! M).! :"tCL ').!"'f't..o! $0.~ ~ :~\· - fi :~:1:.! ~';~':.: l srol'"~ ~x :.:it-1.~.r:-J. Cm..-en .lo..~"C ~'G\ - . la~ :"\*\~ : : t ht-sri.ng.l o..iu..~ .\..~'y Speaker l.t'O :\lcCa::: \-1 V.~ Fnncisco : ftx"me! .\..<:St":nNy ~aker ·aoo )ftX't':ti 1 D-Van :'\uysl. and Senate Democratic Floor Leader Georgt )llOISIOlOe I Jl..San Francisco l: Christensen said he had received a list ol legislators v..tio had signed petitions but did not get signatures. "This would not make much difference though." he sald. . . ' "We \\"OUld prefer to wait for the committee." The t\\"O consuoler groups h.i ve been battling publicly \\'IUt state agrlcullure~orf!clals s.\11<.>e: Christensen approved a fi\'e<tnt per ha lf gallon retail pri<-t hike. last ~larch. The lX'il'C' · hikr booot~ minimum piC'tS to bt>l\\'ffll 68 11.nd 7S ('('fl!S I half gallon StAlt'\\idc. Con su rn er Groups f{ap -Director C'hel" Bono, 28, of the s.ingin'"g and comedy te1m "Sonny and Cher" n s in Superior C'ourt Tue.;:ds~· for di,·orre LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Phyllis Bradley, zt, daughter of A1ayor Tom Bradley, was charged Tuesday with belng part of a cocaine selling ring . 1The Sher'iff's Department brought a . felony charge of "consptracy to f u r r. i s h cocaine'" against P..11ss Bradley, and related charg8jl against three other persons. Reeollf!red TV Wk show host Merv Griffin, 49, plans to LOS ANGELES (AP t -'!be FBI bu ktentlfied one ot .two men arrested in COMedlon with the disappearance ol the 100 ol a Pabn..Springs man u the youth's marij u ana · supplier. ln an FBI affidavit UMealed 'l\!esday by U.S. Dbtrlct Coon Judge A. Andrew Hauk, j was revealed that the girlfriend a( Candidate Campaigns • In tl1e Nude · missing di-year-old Lawr.nce lletn>it lndustrtallst Robert . ! R. Adell told FBI agents tbal Adell, and -anded that he I the yooth said be was going to leave $400,ooo in small bills at I meet "An&eto" to obtain a a apectfled locafJon. Adell a pound of marijuana jll!I he did oo ttree timeo, but said before he dlsoppeared. lhat the money wu nev.r One of the two men arrested claimed. ln connection with the boy's · 'Ibo, }'OO!h'• girlfriend; If. disappearance wu Angelo year-oaa Francene Gomes, lnclso, 61, of Cathedral City, said in the affidavit that she Identified as an alleg~ former waa with young Adell atl a O\lcago labor racketeer. Palm Sprjnp col!ee Dip June lnclso and Hup McLeod l wbeft he l8ld he wu Pbea~..-. 4l, oU.ong l!eoch, ''leaving. to meet An&elo to were arralgned Monday before obtain a Potmd of marijuana, 1< a U.,S. magistrate on charges and he would retum in a few ol Con.,plracy to kidnap and minutes.·~ extortion. The youth dkl not return, '!be two allegedly contacted and has not i-. _, since be the boy's father, r eti r e d left the colfee lhop. leave the hospital to-LOS ANGELES IUPl) -,,..,----THE BEST------. day for home and will Saying she "is thti ooly · · start ~·ork again on candidate with "nothing to .... d._ of pf'OC'ff'din~-s fron1 Son- :;.\f'RA .. \ft..\iU flf't) -·' n~'. 39. The pa.ir argued uv $;'°St~ s~ s r i ,. u l t u r t o'-e r di,·L~ion l)( their P..1iss Bradley is still facing charges Of assaultin~a-poli officer from an incident Jime. %1, \\'hen ~~ allegedly had to be manacled hand and foot after kickin,i and· clawing officers \\'ho chased her auto \\·hen she sped away from a traffic violation. She was Con\•icted in 11117 of stealing clotMi;. from a car and in .1972 of marijuana pos.se&ion. Monday. He was hos· hide," Elizabeth Keathly, the pitalized six days ago Peace and Freedom party A SPOKESMAN fOf' the with pneumonia which candidate for governo r , PERSIAN RUGS ~~ld>: ~ l'A~ d«,K\i pn)1'<'ny and cust ody ma)"Or's offic:e sakt-"Bradley "-'as attribu ted t.o ex-walked nude down the beach a ~ by s C\X".l:Nfllt.r ()f t.hi.'lr d.1ugb1e.r . ~'\Sl.a.~ ~~a milk _<'_h_a_,,_il_~·-· _4_. ----- \\Wld have "oo comment until haustion. , · Tuesday. such tin'le as the court -----~-~--Miss Keathly campalgned proceedings are coinpleted." among the nude sunbathers yotolflltdfat .. lo · NEWPORT BEACH i"<"t M...~.kc du1 ·• m~­ ·a,:L~ ~ ~.u 1 ~lcbok! on Slk..~\.- :'td .\ds.a~ S tt' . t l:'L,.~ llt.!...."""'IUll~t.Y l?I ~ ~~ ci !'.xid lilld \J:"I ..... ~n-. ~ derut\i ~ . ~"),"!' ~ 1.tt" Ru:.ll ' JC",.E,:i · d ~ 1Xla:1on ':°fl!,'('~ Jn: ~ 1:. ~~"CL:s::;._·· )t_(, '\'£".ca le\·~ :..~ da..:~"t ~~ Or ~"18.."":Tncn: ~ IQ.."llJ'Z 1 ;ie:T.J.'11'. t<r. l. b!o.!..-.x a: ~ tnlllJ:mt $. rt'm ..... a ::ri1t: ~j~ ~...s lS t.°t!' ::ti:S :i..~ r. !oor ::;x~ : :. ' : hf I .\gricu!t:-"'t ~..r· (. 3. Olrista.'i..~ i tm ~ t.' hear the e\"ideo..--e, "It is row deA: ~ ~ dairy industt"y b.is a w-~~ bold Oil Sacramento ID ~ same \\ilY it co n ;r o l s \Vashington." ~ls. 'Ya.n.ar.a said. Dtputies said James Riley, there, v.'ho are faced by a dty P a yment Set i: ~'°bis ~-:-nu:; Track Sued ~~1.,~; T.ed ... ~~~~ • romplaint. bad sold three B C z · t ordering an-ests 10r nudity. • gnuN of c o cain e to _J__ JC is "I feel that nudity is a F or-B 11rr~~~,,,.--olli='-h , , -matter o1~persona1 preference -~~ e Frici3y ~ that they ha'.d LOS ANGELES (UPI) and that individuals don't b.1ve ,. r ~ 'T t· R :\ ,n , _ ~li8fdrto bring four pounds 1'he Indlaii Dunes molorcycle the right to impose their, ~ · • \. 1 more--10 se:U fur $68.000. tract: in Valencia was named values on other Individual!;" Rero.""Ct1"' t!'W' ?t'JTil~ ln\-estiga1ors said that when as defendant in a $500.000 she said, passing out handbills. wllllelOldby,...c _AUOION SUNDAY JULY ·21st-2PM Prmewl P.M. COf'\'e.."'S&~IOOS " ...-~ an~~~'S thEo pair returned to make the damage suit filed Tuesday by "1bere is nothing aggressive and :wn cllen:.< :.<. g~ ui ~ tramaction. they \\.er e a 17-year-old girl motorcyclist: about this behavior as opposed w.....,,...,... _. .w 1...,. _.. .. ,,, ........ tllll .. • .i. \oenwn l~tr ~ s UT'es1erd by officers who found from Glendale:-•lo many other politicians, who .... • .. piMn ...._. tw .. tMt ........ , • 1 i. ....., dCNJ~ n~ ~ tht four pound! of cocaine 10 Donna Hom alleged in 1he presume to run otber-people'a ....... Al,._.. .. ,...tr•••• w .. ._..,._a cm M ti.-Superior O..iu:-: i .i r Y ht !lour or a similar bulk Superior Court suit the track, lives for them." _._,.,._ ... ~s. .. .-.,._. .... n.-iic.""C!G James 1'Ct."Ct1 UI ~Y substance. . due to negligence. wa s She challenged Edmun:l G. s.l.,M'l L'l ea~ of W pl.;.m.ufts The Rile.ys &aid ~I i s s responsible for Injuries she Brown Jr., the 36-year-old NEWPORnR -INN, 1111 Jri • M. a: l. C:\"il s.ir. -.Wt. PubUc Bradley bad furnished the suffered July 22 when she ran ·b ache.lo r who is the AUCOI INC c21 Jt 99o.;2910 • -~f!l' !\emt'th O ca\·et. criginaJ ·three grams of inloanwunarkedba'rbedwire Democratic candidate f o r --.dleda-' ~~...._· ~· Puh!x:Defe?Jder ?aW ~"""~~i~~-~dr:putl~~·es~a~dd~ed~·--~f~enc~•:· ____ __:"'.__ ___ !go~v:emo~r~,~to~a~"~nu~d~e~de~ba~~~.'~'~::'.:::=:=:=::::::::::::::::::::=:=:=::~ ~ and Ja."'rleS Donald!co!· .&!1.5 Lilhe McO.intod.. Tot jm-y fciund ~-a 9 to 3 '"°~ tm.1 Micmu had wilfully zX !:.1~n1 i on.ally tape ra."tt'dtd ~tions tie. ITf'el the la-a-yen and their c:bents , - WHITE SALE Missoni's SANTAANA SOUTH COAST PLAZA Freestyle collection by Fieldcrest • Don't g<t bottd with 70"'.J;cd.Injor a..tiog ...., °""""' •ith die plaid!, llorals, otripcs and clm._in ihis coll<ctioa. Br iim!'IJ' rctwiug a comf otter or pillow cast, yoo:da create DC'lf toeallycaxdimted.Joab to suit your mood. Li pol!"t<l'/coam, Ilo<ll:d ob«a, lia.d ...r,. Fitted dotted sheets in sable, rangcri~ caoary,spearmiot., tnd indigo i;hades. Plaid, suiped and Borlt shttt, flat only1 CoiM in bluc/,pm. sable/indigo. a oary/tangerioe combinations.. . ' CHILDREN'S SHOE S1>ndardc...,, pr. Rog.$7. ,5.99 King""'-pr. Rog. SS,., .6.99. Twin .if..,,_ Rog. $8 ••• •• ,6.99 Qa<:<n she=. Reg $1S.,.lTA9 Double, sheets. Reg. $9 ••• 1.99 King shttts. lleg. $17 ••• 14.9' Rc\'ersible comforter plaid to dots in pol)'estit and cotton. Twin. Reg. $ll.~9.99 foll.Reg. $65, 57. 99 Qu...,,King.$85, 74.99 Solid acl')'liC blanket coordinated in canary, nurill:l and sable shades. VALUES ••• OUR LARGEST SALE EVER BUSTER BROWN ADIDAS • KEDS MANY SANDALS CIDLDLIFE and many other SCHOOL and DRESS S'JYLES Outstanding School Shoe Selection N atur.ally, All From Our Regular Stock. REGULARLY TO $18 . Sale St~rts Thursday. Doors Open I 0 a.m. No Ea:ch1nge1 Or Refunds -30. F11hlon Island • Newport. Beach • 644-2464 • , . - • Twin. Reg. $20;1 7.~ Full. $22, 19.99 Qu=, King. $30, 26.99 Towels: ")fiooni Floral" sheared a>«on terry blue/green, ahJ.e/ indigo, rangerine/anary. ''Mi.ssoni Suipc~ sophistica~ stripes ud dots, seda.techcv1ons. In cotton terry unsheared jacquard, wnc mlor --i~ combinations as floral Dath. Reg. $6, 4.99 Hand. R.eg. 3.75. 3..29 • • W"hdotb. Reg.·l .70, 1.49 Rug and showc:r cu:tain a1'o ...ailablc:. Dath Shop, Bedi:OOIIl Acccs.sories <· ... SbqpMonday 1hn.i.Friday, fO:OO a.m. to 9 :30 p.rn. I Bull ock's Sanra Ana , I Fa~hion Square, 2Sdo N . .Mai n ~trect. Sanra An a, Telephone! '4'~-721L · Sanuday, 10;00a.m,to6;00 p'.m.. 'Bullock's South«:O.sc' Plaza , San Diego Freeway ac Bwtol, Cosa Mesa, Telephone; ''6-0611 . ··-• • 7 • • ' . ' -.. .. • ----. . -• :r -· , -=-~Orange Coast . 1 .:· ED I TION Today's Final ,. N.Y. Stoeks· VOl. 67, NO. 198, 7 S.ECTIONS, ·88 t AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1974 N TEN CENTS Mcinnis Seeks Unanimity Against Oil Drilling Rv SAcKlE' llVMAN --(N IM D41llY Pllef Stiff Newport Beach ·~1ayor Donald l\fclnnis said toda y he ho_P.es lo get a unanimous slatement or-opi)ositkil to offshore oil drilling from all·~ Orange ·Coonty cities. "The Orange County Chapter of the League of :Cities v;ill Lake up the matter Aug. I," t.tcinnis said. "We're going to try hara for a unanimous decision." He .N!<i the Newport • Beach City Bomb B'last Bips Tower Of London -. Councll will probably delay passing any resolurtons opposing the U.S. Departmcnl of. tW Interior's pro p o s a I to lease offshore oU drllllng sites Wltil. alter the League of Cities meeting. · "That wiO make our resolution more erfective," Mclnni8-explained. "However. I ab3plute1y believe Newport Beach will pass a resolution agalnst the drilling no ll).atter what the League of Cities decldel." ' •. He said opposition ·to the .proposed · leasing .is based On two separate iasUes: '"First of all, there's the oil drilling itself and the danger of an oil spill;" Mclnnis said. "Second, .,..e object to the method in which the Department of the Interior has handled this matter," he said. ''\\'.e have strong lDdicaUons from our legislators in Washingtofl that the ·actual dectaon to lease·· the Site! has already . ' been made and that the so-called mee tings now being ~ld are noth_ing tut a racade." Representatives from Newport Beach and other Southern caJifomia cities met with Deputy Undersecretary of the Interior Jared G. Carter in Los_ Angeles Friday and expressed their opposition to the proposed leasi~ of oil drilling sites in the outer continental shelf. At that time Carter told them his department has made no .decision and will not until an environmental impact Statement has been com'pleted, probably in Januarf or February. Allbough...carter has said that local considerations will weigh heavily in the decision the continental shelf bet\\·een three and teq miles olfS'hort ts federal teerritory aod ls not. subject to slate or local control. t.IclMis said the California coastal commission could make things difficult for offshore oil drillers by refusing to permit onshore facilities. · "However, that means they'd have to transfer the product onto a tanker and there could be a spill during this process,'• t.1clnnis said. "I believe the coastal commissiorl will be looking carefully at the problems involved in permitting or denying onshore fa cilities." Reinecke Prosecutors 'Dismayed' and sharply criticized the government lawyers for their fai!Ure to have caught the mistak~. • LONDON (UPI) -A -b. posaibly plant«! by ffiA lerori!t!, ezploded in the 900-year~ld Tower of London tDday, hurling broken glass aiid, masonry into cro\\'ds of children and their parents - jamming the city's most popular toufist sight. ·0ne woman was killed. .v ' \VASHINGTON (UPI). -Government prosecutors \"ere taken by surprise tcid.fy in California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke's perjury lrial when a stenographer testified that changes had been made in a Senate hearing transcript fonning the basis for charges against Reinecke. Benjamin H. Firshein, who recorded the testimony during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, said the transcript submitted to 'the court ·did. not contain corrections he made in It. Firshein testified as a" government \\'itness but assistant special prosecutor Richard Davis was clearly taken aback by the disclosure. He sakl he thought corrections had been made in the transcript introduced in evidence. Reinecke's lawyer im mediately called for dismissal of the case against Reinecke. It was not immediately cte<ir "'hat the changes were but Firshein's testimony indicated they were in tl\e part of !he_ hearing transcript that the government cited in accusing him · of lying to the com mi ttee. At least 36 persons -more than half of. them children -were ·1njured in the explOliion, several of them in ~itical · condition with crmhed anns and. legs. Detectives sifting thrOugh ~ debris f<iind the severed foot or a smaH cbUd. · Police said most « the injure:! were cei-Tnan and Danish. One ~ was injured, "Edward 'Klein of Missouri. · The erpkJ&iori sent OOndreds · of American and other foreign tourists , nee1n1. from ,lt_le moa~ stone fOrt~; A .1ew..e,.~,.~l'~lllJl!lllc. The bomb,_ the ieCOnd to uplode •ithout waming in lAndon ·todaJ, iiligbt - have been the \\'Ork of tbl Iriilh Republiaua Army. police i'ald. 11111 !here . · · was no proof. Police" said the bombings · had some of the.hollmarkl of other IRA attiets that hive killed 12 penons and 1\-ounded 115 others In Ebgland since December . A Mrs. Harri1 or Sydney, Australia, near ·to the explolion 1n the tower but who emerged umcathed, said: '"lbere were wowxled all over the place -it loOked like ...... out ol bell." . At leut ball the tourists ll1lnll>lill( for the exit \\'ere children. Many were 9Cbool groupo being shepherded by teachen. "Move on, move, on," police shouted. "There thight be 8nothef Jxm,b." ... . The !pt blast today. damaged a goveFnment office blilldlni lh the llU~ ol Balhaffi before dawn, but caused no casualties. The tower, guarded . by. the oolorl'Ul pi~g Beefeaten, daily-dra\\'S thousahds Of foreignen ... to see the royal famfly's • .,.,....,....! jewelry. and Its collection of armor. and fireamui. The famed tOwer served ·~ ·pr;aon for hll!ldreds o1 -ol British royalcy, lncludlDg. Sir Wal ter Rllelgh. Many famous prisonen wet'!: murdered. or executeif&rlhe-tower, tiiCliillifllWO- yotmg princes, nephews of Richard III, and two of Henry Vlll's wives, Anne Boleyn and C.tberine Howard. Laos Chief :\iling WASHINGTON (AP) An intemational cantlngmt of 13 phylieians Is carlag for .Prime MlnJter Souvama· Phouma of Lao!, who Is recovering from a aeriou! heart 1Uack. • Dell»' Pilet Stitt Pit ... He Got His Nude ' Jay Ward ·1eaves NeWport Beach police headquarters with prized posseasion; an original painting by Mel Ramos. Ward values the ·paint· ing at $10,000. It was taken from his Breakers Drive home by bur· ~ara, .Vt'.h,o police said, apparenUy stashed it in a nearby tree. ~aintin~ was ~covered a~ter it was spotted from air by starUed police heli· copter _crew. Milk Pledge Testimony By l(almbach ""W~'l'OPI (APi ' !:' l!llilill Judge Barrington Parker did not immediately rule on the motion. fnstead , Parker ordered the jury out of the room Fonner presidential assistant Clark l\facGregor testified earlier that he-urged (See REINECKE, Page Z) 'Miserable S.O.B.' Nofziger Says Nixon's .·Nice · Glll~~le Mistake J udi<.iary Committee beard testimony ~ today about a 12 milllOll. -mpalgn pledae SACRAMENTO (AP) -A former \\'as because he v.•as a miserable s.o.b .. ..... " presidential aide who 1till admlret and and I don't say that derogatorily. Almost ftom the dairy tndllltrf for Preildent supportJ Richard Nixon -a.YI , the anybody who gets to the presidency is a Nixon's re~leclion that one member said President Js "a miserable S.O.B." who miserable S.O.B. because he's got lo go might lead to a bribery 'Charge against made a big political mistake when he over an awful lot of bodies to get there," Nixon in the committee's impeachment tried to pose as a nice guy. Nofziger added. inquiry. Former Nixon aide Lyn Nofziger told a Nofziger, a second echelon \Vhi te '"Ve're beginning to establish a case of group of high school students Tuesday House aide for l\\'O years. left the \Vhite Nixon was a hardnosed. politician who House staff in February 1971 to join the bribery," said Rep. Elizabeth Holtzman lost his 1960 cafupaign for president in Republican Nation3\ Committee. He later (0.N.Y.). after emerging from a closed· part because be tried to change that was manager of Nixon's California door committee session with ·Herbert image. campa!gn organization in 1972. Kalmbach of Newport' Beach, Nixon's "I don't believe you can .make He held a 45-minute question·and· fonner personal lawyer. somebody IOmething he is not. 1 think ans\\·er session with 75 high school Other members disagreed, however, you can make· him look better than be is, students participating in a Junior and several said Kabnbach added but I don't-think you can make some Statesmen summer school program in a nothing to the testimony about the milk miserable S.O.B. into a very .nice guy," Capit~I hearing room . deal be had not. preYiously, given to the Nofziger said. . Questioned later about the ·'miserable Senate Watergate committee.' "One reason Dick Nixon t61t in 1960 S.O.B." comment, Nofziger said it ts Miss Holtzman would not elaborate on accurate, but that he would have phrased htr statement. it more softly if he had not iced reporters Kalmbach was convict~ r~tly or H K ·zz d in the room. selling an ambassadorship.'ancf was sent 0Sta,ges f, e "\Vhat I.really meant is a tough and to a federal prison in the East to be harcl·nosed guy. \Vhat I'm trying to Say W In F• · available for the committee hearings. Jn E x tort ;Olt,• is you have to be tough. You have to be estgate Surance·, J.rfil Kalmbach ga.e Ille committee 1 ~ willing to take you• knock~ You have to detailed chronology or the timing of the be combative lo succeed. milk price increase, which Nixon decided S · t C t d "I'm not talking about a guy as a to grant on ~larch 23. 1971, but which uspec ap ure friend or as a person, but as president of Rul d In I h l d was not announced public!y_yn_til tll'O this oountry. A nice ~weet guy ll'OU!d ~ . ·e so vent v· u ge days lat~r. Bru..ETlN pushed around," Nofzige r said. . :_,_:._ __ , -. ~. ---· .!l@lmbaclL..J:eportedly._jol t-•--'-AllAMHVPl>--A-lle1rded-bla<k·tr·-.-------, By L. PETER KRIEG Of "" o.11Y Pllet Stiff A state insurance commission offfcial said today he does not know whether lhe def\mct Westgate-California Insurance Company has enough assets to pay off '3.3 million in outstanding claims filed by . pasl policyholders. 11te Newport Beach-ba9ed insw;ance ..._,y, a •lll>si<liary ol the finandaliy troubled Westgate-California C o r p . owned by 5'"' Diego financier C. Amh:llt Smith. was declared lmolvent In ~-Colmty Superio< Court. 1be state wu appointed consen•ator of the company with authority t o Insurance Corp. (FDIC) and the Internal Revenue" Service. The FDIC is the receiver for the failed U.S. National Bank, another Westgate. California subsidiary. • In the petition filed against the insurance company. the st.ate Insurance commissioner claimed'"future operation of -Westgate may -be hazardous to' policyholders, creditors and the public." Deputy Commissioner Martin said he isn't sure bow loag it will take to process the claims filed by W e s t g a t e policyholders. · midnight,mceting i~ a \Vashi.ngton hotel tortloabt took 11 leist '51,000 from a on lo1arch 24 at which a spokesman for wealthy lndastrlllist and his wife today the . dairy . industry "reaff~ed" a sliaJl!tertd them with a bunt ot machln~ preVJously given pledge to contnbute $2 million to Nixon's re-election campaign. pn fire and then fled IDto 1 forest where Rep. Charles Wiggins 'CR-Calif.), said police captured him. Kalmbach did not establiSh any link between the campaign pledge and Nixon's decision to raise milk prices. Rep. Wiley Mayne CR· Iowa), said it : was clear to him from the evidence giveh to the committee that Nixon was responding to heavy political pressur~ from Congress in agreeing to increase the support price for milk. l\tJAMI (UPI) -An ei:tortionist look a man and his wife hostage today, killed them with bursts from 1 submachinegun ~nd then fled into a field of head·high underbrush where police and FBI agents apparenUy had him trapped. B<1seball Grent Dizzy Dean Dead nt 63 RE NO, Nev. (UPI) -Dizzy Dean. one of baseball's greatest pitchers who starred v.•lth the "Gas House Gang" during the 1931M. and later a radio and lelevision announcer famed for his unique brand of fractured English. died • administer Its future opera~ions. He said company controller Jack Peters is staying on to help with management duties, but president Hans · Coffing bas left the company. Kalmbach wsa the last witness heard by the committee before it turns to the task of drawing up and votJ.nt cm (See KALMBACll, P1ge %) Kenneth W. Whittaker, special agent in charge of the ?.1iami FBI office, would say only that the suspect "v.•anted so much money. and took the victims." The victims were kfeatified as Miami industrialist Sydney Gans and his wife. ·He is presi~ent ot the Sydney~Bag and Paper Co. Coday ::it 63. <De· tails, ·PaAe 17) Welldler Sunny and ~ Thunday with ooly patchy early morning clouds al the beachel. m1111 from Ille mld-7111 al the stTand lo the 1111s in- land. Ovemlght lows in the lllls. . ll'VSmE ToDAY Former FeHclmao'1 Restaurant pcrintr GIM Randano Ital drawn his Hcond 1tatc prilon ,.,.,,. .,,... judge ruled la< trio- l4ttd iwobation imposed tn Jlquor hijacking oaae. SUir11, . Page 9. Deputy L n s u r a n c e ConuniMioner JORPll Martin, who was at the company's ofDces at 1501 Quall Stt th is morning, said all of the company's policies have been re-insured, but ·the firm Is still laced with the $3.3 mlllloo In ootltanding claims. . "~e are· hopeful there are enou~h u.etl to i-Y them," ~1artin said. He -would not say what would happen if there lsn'l enough mooey within the company. Westgat.e,callfomia . specialized i n cuuaJty inlurance, primarily workmen's compeoo1tlon. Marijn said It had poUcyhoklen: tJrOuchout California, 1be Orm wu ·fqrmed Jn 1944 as the CUUalty Inouranoe Compony o T Cllilomia and was bought by Westgate· California Corp. in 1969. Martin said the petition asking the order of conservation was filed bs:ause the lDsurance company's, capiWI fell below $1 million, the minimum reserve requlred by the commission. _He explained that _mw;h or its invettment.s })ad been in the parent • company, whose stock is nearly valueless becaU..e of the nearly $360 million In claims · flied by the Fede'8l _Depo•ll County, Stat e Legal ·Opinions Differ Over Supervi,sor Term 8)' JOHN VALTERZA ot fflt DlllY P'llet lt.tf Orange County Counsel Adrian Klfyper and Cali fornia's Attorney General are at apparent loggerheads on leg11l pointS raised in Jhe struggfe fqr sucCesslon to the vacant Fifth J)istrk;,t post on the Orange Count)' Board Qf Su~lsors. The connict is reflected In opposing legal opinions dealing with the length or tern1 whl!!h "'OUld be in effect It Gov. ·\ton· &Id Reagan makes an appolnUnent to re· • I . . pktce (he J11te supervisor, Ronald Caspers. (Related Stories. Pa~e 3) , Kuyper Tuesday afternoon reportedly. sent on a supplementary report on his opinions lo lndlvkfual supervbors. That document reinforces Kuyper's apinion issued last June 24 wh"en he insisted lhat a Reagan appointee "would serve only until Caspers old term expires on Jan 7. 'M'len, Klfyper has said, ••hoever suc· cccds Rea"an s.s itovernor would make yet another appointment and that would '(Seo CASPERS, Page Ii . . \\'hittaker, who took special charge Qf the manhunt. declined to say how the extortion plot began or · whether-the victims were connected . with a local bank. He said, however, "There was a payoff." HE SOLD PICKUP TO FIRST CALLER •1tt sold the first dayihe ad ran. "The first caller bought my pickup," said !he satisfied Dally Pilot advertiser from Fmtnlain Valley. llere's the ad that did the jQb.Jor him : ' 1964 JEEP P.U., I Will Dl'lve Good condition. Let a Daily Pilot clasified Id work ror you. Call 642.W8. • ' h1rs. Dean v.·as flt his i.1de in St. Mary's llospital when he died at l::l5 a.m. Also present were :tis brother Paul, and Paul Dean's two DEAM ·,... ~hildren. TI1e son of a couon picker whose famil y moved aboul the South in the early l.920s, young Dean developed a strong arm b Y thrO\\'inli( dirl Clods at prairie do~s .. Amiable :ilthough incredibly va1n, he wa s the 90111 of the 19.14 St. L<>uis Cardinals, popularlr kno\\ll as the ''Gas House Gang." He swagge red sining dO\\'TI, once dangled a teammate out of a 12th· story hotel ~·indow and liked to invade fonnal parties dressed In house painter·s overalls, · \Vith it all.'01' Diz was one of the grealest pitchers In base b a 11 his1ory before a freak accident In 1937 cut short his career. ----=-' I . • ·--- ,.,__:D:cA:cll:;Y_Pc:l.:LD:_T:_ __ -"-----~ednesday, ~July 171 lq74 Dank Thompson Digblights Fair_.Tonight • Hank Thompson and I.he Brazos Valley &ys, one or the natlon'1 leading country and ""'eidem bands, will entertain \'isltors to tbe Orange C.Ounly Fair tonight. The band, whlCb baa had more than 100 chart rc<.'Ords, one third of which were in the 101_> 10, will perform at 7:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. in the amphitheater. (Related pic- tures. Pages 9, 11, 14; related story. Page 3) Admission to the concert Is free with Nixon Says He'll Figl1t To Finisl1 By HELEN THOr-tAS U,.I Wlllle MfWH lltPCtrlW President Nixon, having put thoughts of resigning behind him, plans il "fight to the fini sh'' agaiilst i m p each men t according to a book written by one of his strongest defenders. the price of admission: Fair ticket:i: are $1.?S for adults. $1 ror children 6-12, and free for children under 12. Other fair highlights tonight are ~he Chuck Jones l\taglc Sho"'• at 1:30 p.m. on the mall stage ; the Father Coughlin Boys Choir, at 8 p.m. on the family stage: the New Dimensions Patriotic l\lus.ical Revue on the mall stnge, and the llawailon Revie\v \\'hich fo\IO\\'S at 9 p.n1. on the mall stage. Nixon also says that if the Watcrgate- related • accusations against him \\'ere true he \\'OUld not remain in the \\'hite 1---~,ou=se~ror a m1nute"3ri011nobOdy wour have !.O ask me to resign ." The comments were made in the book "The Personal Nixon: Staying On the Summit," "Titten by Rabbi Baruch Korff, head of the Nalional Citizens Comm.iUee For Fairness to t h e Presidency. Korff intervie"'ed Nlxon 111ay 13 ln the Oval Office and later got w r i l t en responses to questions. He made the 123· page book public Tuesday after meeting With Nixon . At a ne"'S conference, Korff said he has the lmpression that Nixon "agrees with me" that the conspiracy-perjui-y conviction of John 0. Ehrlichman. Nixon's former No. 2 aide, is "a blot on justice." .• 1 In the. book, Nixon called Watergate the "thinnest scandal in American history." He said that if he had been ''basically a liberal" by preSSistandards, "\\1atergate "'ould have been a blip." He says he considered resigning if the House votes impeachment "and I totally rejected it. I have decided to go the distance to defend this office. and to defend myself agains t charges of v.'ttich r am wholly innocent." Resigna tion. he said, would hurt his successor and set "a precedent of a man mortally weakened from this process of destroying a President who was not guilty of .a high crime or misdemeanor." Speaking d the news media , Nixon said: t'I know for example, in tt\e preis room that my policies are ·generally disapproved of, and there are some, putting it in the vernacular, who hate my guts with a passion. But l don't hate them, none or them. I understand. Their : phllosophies are different." Nixon has been taking it easy at the Western White House since Friday, concerned mainly about ecooom.ic policy. He has talked several times with Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger by telephone about the Cyprus situation. Pair Suing Stat~ Over Home Fire Car.,in11 Champ C. E. Mc Neil of Newport Beach walked off with five• awards for his wood carvings at the Orange County Fair, including best of show1 best se'nior citi- zen entry and most creative senior . citizen entry. l'rom Pa11e 1 C . .\SPERS . · .. last throucil the ne\V term y,·h!Ch Ca~· pers "·on i na landslide primary victory onlv a few days before his death at sea. · That tenn would expire in mid-1'16. Yet, in an opink>n ~·hich sources claim has been given to Reagan from the Attorney General's Ofrice, the length of an appointee's term is rar different. ' Reports from Sacramento claim that state legal officials are suggesting that an appointee would serve through the end of Caspers' old tenn and throogh the new one as "'ell. State officials have also conceded, ho"·ever. that the County Counsel's opinion may be the ooe which \\'ould be most honored. Kuyper has cited a 1958 opinion fro m the at!.Omey general as the basis for the county position, and that opinion has never been altered In any court decision. The latest reports of an apparent legal dispute point to a possible court battle to seek a definite solution. Adding more fuel to the complex fire in the successioo issue is !hat pressure from Orange County might force the state legislature to finall y approve a bill which calls for a November election with the winner taking the Fifth District. post. A Ne"'J>Of'l Beach couple and the A ~p of leading c o u n t y insurance compa ny with "·born they Democrats-without the blessing of its protected their home against fire sued central committee -is \vagin.R a petition h · d h campaign throughout the county in an I e etty an t e state Tuesday. effort to jog loose the legislation. The 01.1nge County Superior Court action filed by the Employers casualty That bill was into introduced only days Company and Margaret and William after Gaspers' disappearance by Bertuleit state~ that Ignition 0 f ~~iemblyman John Bri~g (R·Fu)!erlon 1 subsurface gas was the ca use of the fire has become stalled in com~ittee. It --iaSi Oct. 2 that destrOyed the -aer1uie1c--~;w-appears beaded for a rehearmg Aug. home at 46 Balboa Cove. Cr· · l · h lh I · · • The lawsuit st.ates that the city or the , it1cs c aim t at . e e ochon bill state or both must take responsibil ity for \\ould play strongly mto the hands of allov,.ing the Bertuleits to build their Newport Beach ~mblyman Robert home in such a hazardous locat ion. 13:8dham, a Repubhcan who has been DamaRes claimed total $84.150.S2. riled as a prime candidate for the ... Caspers post. OIANCH COAST H DAILY PILOT 1 ... Of ... Corl Dody Piiot, Ml~ -"~ b....,i -N•M-Pr-. """'"-Dy-0..-C..0.5' Putl!i"""G ~ ~-..,._ ••• _......,. 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"Ill ... , Of tfPOOl.Cltll _.;t"°""-"'l'*""-ol~Q~- 8"0f;ol ~M _..,.. -t< c.tll ..,_ Qll.-.... £u!MrlGl~oY1;1""' t)DO_.~!\o rtt',..~ 14 00 ""'""'"'· ""'~""' onlilllllllnt 1),00-"'!\o. • I . " Badham , ho"·ever, has disavowed anv strong intention to seek a spot on the ballot as a candidate for supervisors. He already is running for re-election to his assembly seat. Adding to the convoluted situation. is the official leave \\0hic:h supervisors have granted Caspers-lasting thro ugh Aug. 9. Although the board could reverse its action earlier, it does not appear likely. Yet. Reagan mi ght appoint a suece!sor at any time, leave or not. · Rumors at the county level continue to abo1J1ld this week as to who appears to be the chosen successor, Bike Trails Set Fo r CH ART Tal k The de.velopment of bike !rails and park trails in Costa l\tesa and Newpcrt Bcach will be the subject of n discussion Thursday by the Citizens !·[arbor Area Research Team (CHART). George Kuyper. former C ll ART president, \\"ill be the featumt Spe:lker nt the breakfast session schedul~ for 7:30 a.m. at Glendale federal Savlng11, l~t1rbor Boulevard and \Vilson Slrett , Costa ~lesa . Complimentary coffee ond doughnuts "'Ill be served. The discussion Is open to the public and studf!nts from all Herbor Area schools a.re especially invited to this m e c t I n g according to BUI Dandaruk. current CHART president. <, ' The biggest bargain is Thursday when all persons carrying cameras will be admlttcd free a.a part of "c&mera Day" at 1he fair. servicemen also will be admitted "tree on Thursday. Thursday's fair schedule ii: All Day -'!be Art of Ctocfte.nlt, Fumi1ure Reflnl8h1n.g, cau Deco- rating, Sewing Techniques Noon -DcmsonstraUons by Amateur Astronomers, Radio Operators, Carv· Jn N~vport ers, and Needlepoint Experts 12:30 p.m. -Gius Decor11ting, Creative SUtchery, Ntedlepolnt l p.m. -Aladdin Magtc Show; Berdene Williams Twirlettes, Beef Animal ·Judging 1:30 p.m. -Lo'f Cost Cookery 2 p.m. -Ariny Rock Band "Now· Express," New Dimensions Patriotic ~1usic Revvue, Rag Doll Litter Termed ) Major Problem Li.Iler is becoming· a major problem in Newport Beach and the Parks, Beaches and Recreation (PBR) Con;unislion is trying to figure om what to do about it. •·J think lhe problem is definitely getting ":or~. just from looking at it." said Police Capt. Donald Oyau, who met with commissioners Tue!day about the possibility of stricter enforcement or municipal anti·litter laws. 1 includes lifeguard protection and parking enforcement as well as cleaning, Stewart pointed oot. • However, beach cleaning a-l o n e requires five full·tlme employes and 10 swnnfer youth eroployes, aecprding to Newport Beach General S er v 1 c e s Director Jaeob Mynderse. 3 p.1n. -Aladdin tilaglc Show, Bonnie Dan<.'ers, \\'hlttler Variety Show 4 p.1n. -ti·luslc A1on llancl. New Dimensions, Dueling Danjott by Tom and George 5 p.m. -Bonnie Da~n . Kung.Fu Dt~monstration. Aladdin ,.1agic Show 5:30 p.m. -Ribbon Roses and Pin t;ushions, Needlepolnt G p.m. -Galena St. East ·Musical Revue, U.S. Marine Flag Pageant 7 p.m. -Kuni·l'll flomonltrallon 7:30 p.m. -Chuck Jones P..1aglc Show, Pizza Taste Testin&, Hank Thompeon aM the BlUOI Valley BoYI • I p.m. -Galena St. Eut Mu.olcal ReVU!!, Marine Flag Pqeant t p.m. -New Dimensions. Hawaiian Review, llank Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys, Pi:r.za Taste Testing. High Tides Predicted For Newport High tides this week Jn Newport. Beach are expected to continue al least through Thursday, lifeguards said today. "The llde will probably be highest about 8:59 p.m. Thursday, when it should reach ab<iut 7.1 feet," said Don Stewart, an offlcial of the Marine Safety Department. Ordinarily, high tide is-· about five feet. · "We're willing to enforce the anti-litter laws wheil we see a violation but we don 't have enough manpower to assign officers to litter duty regularly," Oyaas said. 'lbree o( the full-time employes operate mechanical beach cleaners, which filter the sand, and two drive a truck and empty refuse from garbage confainers on the beach. The youlh employes pick up litter in areas which the mechanical cleaners can't reach, such as along sidewalks and under piers, according to Myndene. "We'¥_e·been having high Udes-all.weet:----i'I -six feet Monday, 6.5 feet Tuesday, and He added that parking problems, which also result from heavy use of beach areas already require five parking control officers, cadets and reserve officers luring the week and seven or eight on \l.·eetends. Oyaas attributed the increa,,e in litter problems to ''the undisciplined nature of our society today." Although the exact cost of cleaning up the litter has not been detennined, PBR Director Cal Stewart noted that Newport Beach spends about 1.$ million a year on Hs beaches and receives only about $500,000 back in beach-related revenues, such as from food concession stands and parking facilities. The money spent on the beaches "We also use our regular street sweepers to clean up litter that's }eft on the streets near beaches," ~fynderse ~~-. He added that although additional refuse bins on the streets might help relieve the problem, some citizens ob}ect to the bins as eyesores. • "Ho"·ever, we do put receptacles near cafT)'-out food "places," Mynderse said. · He and . representatives from the ~farlne Safety Department will meet with the PB and R Commission Aug. 6 to discuss the extent of the problem and ways of solving it. ''Our commission is concerned because the problem is growing," Stewart said. UPI T"'""' OFFERS TESTIMONY Sen. John TunMy FromP.,,el REI NECKE ... Reinecke to tell the truth in the Senate testimony that led to his trial. ~1acGregor said he talked · with Reinecke in 1973 about "differences in recollection" between the lieutenant governor and former Attorney General John Mitchell over the date of a meeting where they. discussed an offer by ITT to· help finanoc the · 1972 Re p u b Ii can convention. about 6.9 feet Is expected tonight," he said. Slewart alln1>uled Ille high tides lo tile ~ilion ol the moon. "It gets like this About twice a year and then we get high tides," he said. stewart said the high tides are not e1pected to cause beach erosion. "That depends on which way the wind aod water CUITents are moving, and right now there's practically no wind," he said. The high lides are not expected lo cause any serious flooding problem, according to Wade Beyeler, as.Ntant general services director for the city. "We're ready in case there ia: a. problem, we've pushed a little sand by the lileguard headquarters and filled some sandbagS', l>ut I don't think the Ude ~ going lo be high enough."" he said. Huntington Concerned About Offs1wre Drilling MacGregor -who left the White House to become head of President Nixon's re-election campaign in mid-1972 -said he probably expressed "some concern'' over: differences between Reinecke·s and Mitchell's1statements. But he said he told Reinecke "that all he could do was to tell the truth and to be responsive to the .question." MacG regor said be met with Reinecke shortly before the state official testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee. The Watergate prosecutor's off Ice Beyeler said new aluminum bulkheads at street ends in the Finley tract will get their first real tea and are expected to eliminate the chronic flooding problem there. 'lbe surf has also been somewhat higher than usual, up to seven feet Wednesday and six feet loday. according to Sttwart. He said there is no relaliooship between the high tides and lhe high surl. By TERRY COVIlLE . Of tlll Dd'f ...... Stiff Huntington Beach 1s taking a middle.. of-the-road stand on offshore oil drilling in [ederal waters. In a letter to the U.S. Department of the Interior, Mayor Al Coen expressed concern about offshore drilling and suggested certain measures to protect the value of the city's nine miles of coastline. "If a decision is made by the federal government to permit drill sites a minimum distance of 3. n miles from shore. the majority of these installationt should be coostructed e n t l r e I y underwater," Coen wrote. "However, if for some reuon a few of the drilling sites must be llituated above water, these should be camouflaged in an , l'ro111 Pqe 1 KALMBACH. • • attractive manner so that they appear to be small Islands. al '--.... " charged Reinecke lied wben he testified "Since oil spills have so ucv'"&"t a he did nol tell Mitchell abot.i the m devastating effect on portions of the offer tmtil September, l!r71-two month,, Orange Coast In past years, it·would allO after settlement of a federal anUtnlSt be abso lutely essential that every known suit against I'M'. preca ution should be eterclsed so that In previous testimony, Sen. John B. Tunney (0.:Callf.), and Lee Fremstad, a the } veritable 'foolproof' system is reporter for the Sacramen to Bee, E id installed to prevent any spillage." Rei{leeke had told them he Informed Pr~iClent Golfs With Son-in-law At Pendleton While the city did not take any stand Mitchell or the ITT offer in May l!r71 -• h" 1 prior to the antitrust settlement. President Nixon flew by helicopter against offshore drilling, in 1s etter, · from his San Cle--•· esta•· lo ~ Reinecke's lawyer, while conceding his .. ~.i.c i.o:: u-..:: Coen criticized the federal government client gave some erroneous infonnation nearby Camp Pendleton Marine base to for its lack of communication with to the committee, ~ys Reinecke's play golf today with his soo-tn-law affected communities, and urged federal problems may stem irom being Edward Cox, a young New York lawyer. officials to do a better job in the future. It was the second time this week the The m1!yor Is currently out of town but straightf'orward to a fault. two have gone golfing. Monday they at Monday's cotmcil meeting, h1s written Reinecke, said attorney James E. Cox, played the private course c:n tbe estate of position was supported by o t be r is a ••straight, gentle, courteous, overly U.S. Ambassador , to Britain Walter members of the city cotmcil. cooperative human being ••• who will Anneabera near Palm Springs. Councilwoman Nonna Gibb! said she. talk to •people, maybe . when he The President's doctor has suggested did reel most HuntingtOn ~each residents shouldn't." more exercise, especially sl.nee Nlxm are opposed lo any offshore drilling. Cox was defending Reinecke Tuesday suCfered from an attack o( phlebltla: tn Councilman Jerry Matney said he in the first day of testimony al h1s left leg. agrees with Coen's stand and supports Reineck.e 's perjury trial. 1be President's daughter, Tt1cia O::nc, drilling because "I have to believe there "''ent along for the trip to the golf couree, is a fuel shortage." aceording to deputy preM seaetary Mrs. Gibbs said she also fell Coen's Peacekeepers ~feet C.rald L. Warren. I position was fair, and .so did other council As ls his practice lately, the President proposed articles of lmpeachment. members. SAIGON, South Vietnam (AP) -The gave no advance \l."Ord to the newsmen of Following his testimony James St. City Administrator . .D.am. Rowlands four-nation 1nt.ematlonal peacekeeping his departure from the Western White Clair; Nixon's· counset",-was ·to-be-gtven--pledged to 'keep-up wilh·eacb~new ·action--commisslon-;-met;-today for-Us-first.--House-and-none _were permltted_to , an opportWl.lty to submit a brief and on offshore oil drilling. regular session 1n t~~ths. accompany him. make oral arguments summing up the case against impeachment. At least six articles, the. chlef ooe chargi ng obstruction of justice In connection with the Watergate cover-up, are reported to be drafted and ready for presentation to the committee in private briefinR sessions on 11nznday and Fri· day. • · Judiciary Committee Olainnan Peter W. Rodino Jr. (0.N.J.), said Tuesday he hopes the committee can reach a final vote by July 28 on whether. to recommend impeachment of Nizon. With lhe Democrats holding a 21·17 edge in the commiUee, the key question on apy im peachmerrt vote wUI be how many Republicans support tt. 'Rep. Charles E. \\1lggins (R·Calif.), a leading Nixon loyalist on the commltte<!, predicted 1'ue5<\11y that no ltepubllcnns \'.Ou!d vote for impeachment and that 1:nough Democrats would switch over lo kill it in committee. •·v.1e're gofng te win this goddam thing." be told newsmen. "I think the rl'.lmmltttt "i ll act as lawyers when the chip! are dov.11. The evidence just is not thert." \~0iggins' comment prompted other RepublM:a:n., to say they didn't know how the.y v.·ere going to vote and that it was PQMlble thty could vote f o r impcac.hment. "There art' at least four Republicans waitlng to Set what the legal theori's ror Impeachment are." said R~p. Thomas F . Railsback. tR-111.), · He Identified the four as htmselr and Wllllnm S. Cohen of Maine, M, Caldwell Butler of Virginia and Hamllton Fish Jr. of New York. • ...... ... 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA-646-1919 .. J::qRacquetball Racquets & Balls '.:> ;> • . Handbal Gloves & Balls ~Ii Table Tennis Paddles & B.U1.4 · 1i; ~ Darts & Dart Boards Duck Feet Fins I 0.95 Badminton Rackets Water Wonder Boards 4.9~ Racket StrillCJlncJ Bon Aire Skim Boards 12. 9 5 . . · t . Skate Boards 7.95 ·to 24.00 Bike Rep a.1 r in CJ -par s- Tlres-Tubes Court Casiiill Tennis Shorts 6.95 • 8.95 • I 0.95 Wiison Tennis Shorts 9.95 & 16.95 ~Tennis Shirts 6.oo • 8.00 • 9.00 Tennis Dresses-ladles Shorts Ladies Tennis Shoes 8.95. • 17.95 . . • 22.95 • ' •• - ConYerse .All Stan lasketbGll Shoes I 0.95 Con•ers1t Sklclgrlp T ennls Shoes. 9.95 · Jack Purcell Tennis Shoes· I 0.95 Fncl Perry Ttllllis Shoes 15.95 Tretorn Ttnnls Shoe• 17 .95 .Adidas Teiinls Shoes 22.95 •• t I • • --- DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGt'i -Protecting City Land Newport Beach councilmen !Jst week· cavalierly dis· missed the complaint by a resident over the private use or public beachfront by people who own homes on the water. . But the issue goes deeper than one man smashing some planter pots on a bay beach. Despite his questionable tactics, he was venting a resentment felt by many whon use ot tbe public water- front already ls significantly restricted. The problem of private encroachments onto public "' beaches is a major one, and it certainly is not new. For· mer City Attorney Tully Seymour was just beginning an in-depth study of enroacbments when he left o!fiCe more than two years ago. He had found that probably hundreds of home· ownei's have apparenUy helped themselves to a little piece of beach . -. Along Edgewater Avenue on the Peninsula, tor in'· stance, residents have built full-size patios on public property. There are numerous little gard~ns and benches. One· resident even hl.S a telephone Jack out there. · · The problem also is widespread in 'Vest Newport: There, dozens of patios and fences extend a foot or two, or more, onto the public's property. There may even be a handful of stnictures in vfolation: Unfortunately, form~r city attorney ~Seymour did ' little more than identify the scope of the problem before he resigned. More unfortunately, the city council has let the inve~tigation die since then. Serles of legal actiona. -Or they could issue encroachment permits -for a fee -tblt would allow the uaes to continue yet elim· Jnate the risk of losing public ownership. One of those alternatives should be pul'ftl,led ,im· mediately. LOng . Road Ahead The announcement last week that the Californta Department of Fish and Game expects to buy its first parcel of land in Upper Newport Bay for a wildlife pane· tuary before the end of the year was good news. However, that doesn't mean there is going to be a rejuvenated Upper Bay by next spring. In fact, it doesn't mean there'll be-one-in 10 years. First, the disputed ownership of much of the land must be resolved before the land can be purchased. Also, the Fish and Game Department will have to decide pre- cisely where to draw the line on what land they will purchase. So far, desCriptions have been vague. Then of course there's the problem of raising be- tween $5 and $25 million to buy the land. The exact price probably will be a matter of dispute even when the appraisal figures come in, hopefully by August 1. · And after the land is purchased, it must be dredged to restore the bay something like its condition before the 1969 £1ood. The dredging will have to be approved by If it's left unresolved much longer, the public could stand to losi1iUe to thatpro~be"cause-b·omeown~rs will start telling the courts that they've had exclusive and uncontested use oJ the land involved for 10, 20, 30 .---'a number of public agencies, including the regional and st-ate-co-a·stai-co~missi?ins:-- or more years. There seems to be twO courses of action that coun· cilmen could follow: -They could order the encroachments abated in a And ·at any point a public agency or citizens' group could object to the plans ior the dredging and stow the process down still fu..rther. · So all in.all, it's still going to be a long wait before Newport Beach residents can enjoy a restored Upper Bay. f. • • N G LOBETROTTEI\ Special Help On Hardships Hard to Fi11d 'Last of tlae Luke Wurua Lovers' WASHINGTON - A scathing internal memo has accused the Federal Energy Administration of neglecting the poor, the elderly and the disadvantaged whom it had pledged lo help. Dear Gloomy Gus Did Joe Rosener quit the planning commi!ISion because Judy is so busy with t.he-('.oastal Commission she can't give him brlefmg1; every two v.·eeks any more? N.C.E. ....... , .. ~ -9'Mftltt9' ~ ,...-. NII • Jiit -'" r•tltcl ltte .. -., "" _..... ...... .,_. "' ,.... " . .._., .... ~ ,, ... . The Special Impact Office. which was supposed to help hardship victims with shortage, was "precedent setting." But their energy problems, was "created the memo alleges that "the relief merely for political expediency," the ~ strategy, such as it was, was announced memo charges. on April 4. . over a month after the original petitioo. In the interim , the Arab The explosive.memo catalogues alleged oil embargo had been lifted and supply of examples of t he · gaaoline to all -including migrants - creeping lethargy· ceased to be a major obstacle." Here are tile high-lii;thls : -The gas shortage caused many . For .$8.50, Send :Broadway Quality To the Editor: / I just read Tom Titus's review of the Orange Playhouse 's newest nop. "Born Yesterday," and while I disagree with Mr. Titus on a couple of minor points, J \\1holeheartedly concur with h I s assessment of the star talent and the overall quality of production being offered by our so-called "professional" th~ater. Like Air. Titus, I have been in the opening night audience or b 0th productions, "Last of the Red Hot Lovers'" and "Dom Yesterday." I bit my tongue after the first play -true. Pat Paullien's no Barney Cashman, but heh a hometown boy. and ever the eternal optimist, I figured things could only get better once the theater's production 'schedule got under\.\'ay. But after Tuesday's ins u It in g presentation, I must speak out. I don't like being played for a sucker. ( l\fAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcon1e, Norma lly, writers sllould convey tl1e ir messages i1t 300 word.! or les1. The rigllt to condet1se letters to fit space or etimi11a1e libel is reserved. Alt le t- ters must include sig11ature and mail· ing address but flames may be with- held O'll request if sufficitnt reason is apparent. Pottry will 1wt be pub- lished .. many til?\6 have we seen tUt one?) Simply, I \\'OUJd sum up the Orange Playhouse's first season thus far by retitling its first two productions, "Last of the Luke Warm Lovers'' and • "Stillborn Yesterday." fireworks even in Newport Beach. I ha\'e been here for-almost 19 consecuti Fourth of Julys and I have yet lo be "fired upon." I like fireworks and I think \\'C should keep them. CHillSTOPHER G. McKF.NZIE Tourhi119 Stor1f To the Editor: Tonight. July I I, when I was reading the Daily Pilot. 1 saw that the Pilot U>gbook was written by Jo Olson. Since ?tis. Olson is a good writer and I enjoy readi~g her articles, I decided to read it. alternative and also offers a most .entertaining evening. The temp-tifi,on for so1ne t-0 buy "safe and sane" firrwor ks v.'hen they are so easily accessi ble (with the profits going for very "'orlh\\'hile causcs tagcncies) ts too much for many to resist. I for one earnestly hope that the City of Cos.ta f\iesa \Viii ·assume the authority and responsibility to ban fi rev."-Orks there also as I see this as a major step in alleviating Newport's problem. KAY BROWN Fo11r0 letter Words As usual, the story (about Selma ?.forrison, an aspiring poet who died at To the Editor: 59) was well wr itten and I'm sure it Re the column (l f July 9 by Mr. touched the hearts .of all who read -it. ?.lurphine, "Sticker Ban Sti cky Issue": When I got to the end. I was crying It 's quite obvious "that the article \ • CARLA K. DOW .,.... Before a sched· personal· tragedies that were ignored by uled appearance at the Special Jmpac.t Qfflce. A paraplegic, l 'l\I THE FIRST to admit that Orange a Senate Alitil'lg Com· for example, pleaded for help in finding a County needs a professional theater. But because I see myself in both Selma dealing with my efforts to ban obscene Morrison and Jo Olson. Like Selma, I bumper stickers had a tol<1I disregard enjoy·.wrlting, ·and like·Jo.-enjoy...mals.ing___for the facts. It mentioned that I wanted other people happy. lOSl()p~he-printing-of-all-four-letter ---' The moral that r.ts. Olson put in her \l_'ords. That's just not true. ~ly int~nt is mittee hearing, fed· reliable source of gasoline. His special why shouLd I pay $8.50 to see a pro- er a I energy czar automobile was his only form oL ductio0-that is (1) certainly not among John Sawhill called tr,anspor:tation. Every time he needed to the newest -0fferini;ts available and (2) no the Special Impact use the washroom, he had to drive all the better than (if, indeed, as good as) most Office to find out what they ;vere way home where he had specially community theater presentatioos I can doing: for the elderly, The answer, equipped facilities . ·Yet as of this writing, see for $2.50 or $3? accordini;t to the memo, \\'3s "notlt-his letter ha¥1't e":'en been answered. U the producers at. the Orange ing." Sawhill's office instructed the Coocludes the memo: "Unfortunately. Playhouse are golng to-continue to hardship experts to start some program the most pathetic and needy element of charge high prices, then It 's only fair to he could tell the Senate about. The memo the populatkm looks to our office for warn them that the caliber of their calls Sawhill's subsequent testimony relief and is met with palliatives and produ.ctions had best be equally high. about how hi!I agency was helping the political verbiage. 11 --Orange CoWllY audiences are more elderly "a display of p o I i t i c a I sophisticated than the p I a y h o u s e manipulation of fact and intent." THE FA.TE of the memo, written by obviously gives them credit for beilg. -A survey was ordered -0! federally Susan Silver. now resigned, itself After its first week of production, funded transportation systems that serve illustrates how the ne\Y, mushroom "Lovers" attendance fell way off, the elderly. It was supposed to be Federal Energy Administration has because the quality of the production completed by l\lay 15, but Special Impact already developed lnto a bureaucratic could not sustain a profitable three·weck deputy chief Curtis Jones ' told us the bog. Ms. Silver told us the mem_o was ruh. Word of mouth is critical to the results are still coming in. ln any event, sup~ to go lo energy director success of any theater operation, and the survey doesn't . cqver inde~ndent Sawhill, bu.the never got It. . there is no indication that "Dom systems, which-are more· likely tfian--she then hied-to·make an-appo1nh11ent-yestefdlY""Will"t>e"'OOtter.recepted-. - - federal systems to be cut back as a with the director, but was t!li.ce turr.i~ result of the energy pinch. down. Finally, tbe enterpr1s1ng critic IF nus trend continues, then the -JONES boasted that Operation Harvest, an emergency program to help migrant workers obtain gas during the slipped the memo to Mrs. Sawhill, her Orange Playhoqse will be fol'Ctld to close fonner college professor. Thus. the its doors before it's completea a full energy czar finally got ~ mc~sage, season. And if that happens, we may as called the author and promlSed acU on. well kiss professiooal theater goodbye in · ' Orange County, for no one will ever get The Honorarium Racket the big-money backing to reopen them. We must not let this happen! Instead. we must cooyince the Playhouse that we're a . diSceming theatre-goin g public that demands quality professional theater at professional prices ... that \ve're not "hicks'" and we won't aca!pt worse-than- amateur work Wlder the guise of a professional label'. By WALTER J. CAMPBELL Con!lultbt• F.dltor IDdustrtal Week We were readJng the story in the ne'vspaper about the hef{y incom'es ~ome congressmen make on the side by collecting fancy fees ror m a k i n g speeches, when the telephone rang. nie caller was an executive of a trade association in Washington. His group is !IChcduling a huge convention in Las Vegas in the fall and would like very much to have me come <1ut and speak on "Free Enterprise-Key to the Future." What would be my requirements? We replied we would need travel expenses and a modest honorarium that would amount-portal to portal-to considerably less than the federally ordained minimum wage. "Well, Mr. Campbell. you know this is an electk>o year. and. as a .natl~ of policy, all our honorariums and travel moneys are reserved for congr:essmen_," WE. LONG had been aware that some pressure groups regularly h i r e. congress men to speak at thclr meetings at fees of $5.000 to $7.500. We have heard labor · un ion leaders count the congressmen lhtiy "own" (their term, not ours). A congressman rccclvlng several such honorariums llkety wlll take a mote favorable view on · legislation l"h e pressure group ls backing. How else can • (GUEST REPORT) The Playhouse isn't bringing us new shows. Its first-season line-up i s we explain food stamps and benefits for striken? wellare comprised of shows which have been We-alSQ.have listened to many of those speeches for which s ub stantia l honorariums were given. Mostly, t~ey were drivel prepared by a mernber or the congressman's staff-whose salary is paid by the taicpayers. An associate listening to such a speech became indignant. '"You mean to ten me that they pay that guy $7 ,500 to deliver such hogwash?" We explained to him that the speech was not the thlng; It was what happened. later. You know that all the UckeUI to the policemen's ball are not bollgbt by people who lllce lo dance. WE REGRET THE practice of labor unhlnl and other well-heeled prHsure groups offering congressmen fancy lee!I as a kind of legal bribery. We believe It is one more step in eroding whatever "integrity is left in government. Dul when the private sector adopta tl)e same practice, we reKrel It even more. If business and Industry are to adopt the.practice or paying big honorarium!! lo congreu men to lnfiuence l b o s e congressmen's vot es. then let's ·stop prattling pompous plalitudts about rr~e enterprise . • produced by the -county's numerous community a n d semi • professional companies for years. So they had best be superior productions of Ulose shows. Otherwise, we're better off giving $2.50 or $3 to a. community playhouse to see the liki s of. ''Som Yesterday," "The Owl aud the Pussycat'' or the three Neil Simon offerings this season, "Last or the Red Hot Lovers," "Promises, Pro1nlses'' and "Come Blow Your Horn." (How .. • Quotes "The burglary of !he 1>udget is much more serious than the burglary or the Democratic national headquarters." - Milwaukee Mayor Henry \\'. !\ll~r. president of the National Conference of Democratic ~tayors, criticizing the Nixon administration's impoundment or urban funds. " M~®.l!.J!!ere's a...reQl hunt on !or Jews. We are on the run. \Ve are under siege. It l:s fl(lt a vny pleasant feellnR to hide away like a rat." -A.leUDdtr Gold· f1rb, a Je~1ish chemist. -A Bo..,, lllrs. Du9an! To the Editor: On the occasion of her birthday, may a long-lime resident of Newport Beach be allowed to pay tribute to a woman who has contributed so much to the children of Balboa. I am speaking of the ch.ildren's Iihl:arlan, Mrs. Joan Dugan. Mrs. Dugan has given our children her time, her patience, her Jove of books, and her own love. To stand in the ~~en's Ubrary and watch the children nock around her, anxious to show what they have read, anxious to find new books to read, is a wonder to behold. P..ly O\.\n children have always known that they can go to Mrs. Dugan for help in finding books that interest them, that help In certain classes in school. even while in high achoo!, they go back to her for refer.ence..material. She knows the names of each boy and girl and seems to Wlderstand what will stlm~te each one· in the love of reading. Her projects to interest them in the library are legendary. She deserves our gratitude and our acknowledgement, and I would like to extend them to her on her birthday today. SIURLEY SHEPPARD Full Oil the FoMrth To the Editor: On Ju1y 6 there was an article about fireworks by Jackie Ryman. She · maintains that too many people ate injured each year .and that therefor!?. fir\!-works should be banned, except in "carefully supervised s p e-c ta cu 1 a r displays.'' FIRST of all, it should be .pointed out that the man she mentioned as an example was injured by a "cherry . bomb," and unless I am mistaken, those cannot be bought legally in Southern California. Fireworks can be and are for the most part safe and sane. Besides, they are fun and oqe of a very few traditions this nation has. I do think that their sale should be controlled: e.g. alloW' only \hose ti or older to buy them . That will insure needed.supervision. If Utere Are those (like Jackie Hyman ) woo are afraid of "getting fired upon once a year" then an · they must do is remain at home oo July 4th and avoid the. risk. But It seems silly to rile to ban firtworks entirely simply bea.utc a Uny fraction of .~le are injured while using them. Banning fite\\"orks for th11t reason Is as logical as bannin g the s.ile or dartboard sets for the &ame reason. Or skateboards. Or even. bicycle.. Think of 11111 the people every year v.'ho are killed or Injured while rtdlng Sicycle!I. TO ME, lhe fun and e1cilcment ot 'flre~·orks justify the sale and' use of story can never be said too much. It is: s1n1ply to . stop the use of obv.1ously Never put off a chanei! to brighten Up obscene s~1ckers, not. the use of stickers anyone's life because that life may pot be that may 1ust be considered off-color. there to touch tomorrow. Thank y<>u, Jo PEOPLE should always maintain their Olson and Selma ltforri son. freedom of speec h and right of ltlARCIE KIRSCHEiiBAU~I expression but not if they are going to have total disregard for the rights of The America11 Way To the Editor : It seems to me not only ironical trul ill· advised that fire\\<'orks are allowed to be sold in Orange County and yet shooting them ol£ is prohibited even in so safe an area as Aliso Bench "'ith its unusually \\ide swee p of sand and the \\'hole Pacific beyond it. ARE PEOPLE instead supposed to shoot them of£ surreptitiously in resi- dential d l s t r i c t s with serious ~ire hazard_?_ or up!TI the hilli with ex(femc £ire danger in all that dry brush:' Isn't it about time for a n1ore realistic approach before the next Fourth or July? Let us hope that bull-horns and beach patrol s will no longer be beard and seen on Aliso Beach prohibiting youngsters and their parents from shooting off sparklers and flower-pols in celebration of thi s most American of holidays. Or have bull·homs and patrol s at Aliso Beach now become the American "'·ay? \VlNlFRED PALi,lER Spirit of '76 Tot ~~rJ:li~~~rt-(iiC'SUige$i iOii ma e by Newport Beach Councilman John Store for a "'picn ic. perade and patriotic speeches" for 4th of July 1975 as a '·dry run " for 1976. others. ltfany citizens are disgusted by..I that type of verbiaJl:e. It implies that by banning such st ickers, it's going to "ca use a real problem for the bumper sticker industry". Hog \\'ash! 11'le. dicfionary is full of "'ords that do not" . offend citizens. l'n1 sure most of the bumper sticker industry realizes their responsibility to the general public, so do not be so irresponsible as to attempt. to make others believe that immorality begins with the bumper sticker makers. You would do \.\'ell to purchase a bumper sti cker that hos Jong been a ravOt'ite--or n1tnc. It reads. ''A · Res ponsible Press Has No Opinions-Just the Facts Please!" DAVID H. PARKS Flamer• 1felro111ed To the Ed itor: \\1hy not thank the Balboa residents for planting flo\\·ers on public beach areas adjoin ing their h<lmcr-.instead of persecuting them? What's wrong with trying to beautify an area? We bicyclists en}oy very much everything they have done. lt seem!I to me la\V)'ers and courts could be used for more importa nt "crim inal" offenses. LOIS DUITMAN OlAN61 COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Veed, PtlbU.tlttr Thomas Keevil, Editor BorborB Kreibich Editorial Pooe Editor The edllorial page ol t~ 'Dail)! · Councilman Store attended this year's ~lebralion at Mariners Park \Yhich \\'as &>.sponsored by Mariners PFO and the city PB and R Departn1ent, and.evidently he believes that this project is v.'Ot1h expanding oo and repeating with much greater city and citizen participation. l attended this fun ct ion with our family and, thiough disa ppointed by t h e relatively small turnout. feel that it "'as a successful first effort and one wh ich can grow tremendously given adequate support and endorsement by city council and better publicily. J believe that the time is now to rtlnstill our faith in America, rea ffirm our loyalty and lnculc:i te this talth and a ~ f<!tllng of pride In our )'Outh. PliOt -~ks to infonn and 11dmulale readers by prnen\inc on this pq:e dlvel'M!•M mentary"on topics of in- ltttlt by syndical~ rolwn nists and cartooni51!, by providing a forum tor rnden' v~s and by prest'rt\ing ttilll ne\\'Spapt>r's opin.lonl and ideu on cumnt topics. The r.dltoclll oplnionl of lht-Daily Pilot l\ppl'11r only in""ftlt editorW rolumn 11t the 1np of the paae. Oplnloos e"preued by the col- \lmnls1a and canoonh t11 11111 lelltt \\Tlteni a.re their ~·n and nc> erw!orle- mt nt or 6icir Yiew11 bf the Ot.lbr Pilot should be infm~ WE llAVE. of eo u r s t, bccn .. tre-· mendously diJappolnted tti.it Ne,~porl Beach has not put on its own fire\.\·Orks display ln the pa.st few years as It used to · do so successfully. 1 ant nol convlnc~ that this -wlll compleJeJy allay 1he problem or illcgol use o( lireworks by others; however, it does P,rpvlde an • Wednesday. July 17, 1974 • l ( • H~ings .Refi1sed- On Milk· Pricing SACRAMENTO (APl - stale q;rlculture officials have refllled to hold hearings on reducing milk prices despite the fact 40 legl s l a,tor s requested them, two conswner groups aay. Spoklesmen for the Callfomia Citiien A c t l o n Group and Flg/ll Inflation Topther (FIT) said Tuesday. that the lawmakers had signed a pe\illon uking fur tile • bearings. 'Ibey said C. B. Ot.ristensen. director of the s t a t e Department of Food and Agricu]tilre, turned down the request. Cllristensen said in ~- •·we .,,,.ould prefer to w·ait for the comniittee." '11\e tw'O consumer groups have been battling publicly ~·ith state agriculture ofticials since Christensen approved a fh•e«nt per half gallon retail priCe hike last 1'.1arcb. The price hike boosted minln1un1 prices to bet,~•een fi8 and 75 cents a haU gallon state~ide. * * * Consu1ner Groups Rap Director lta Court Cher Bono. 28, of the singing and comedy team ''Sonny and Cher" was in S.uperior Court Tuesd;:iy ~ !or divorce telepOOne 'lnterview that he wanted to "'ait for legislative recommeodatlons on the milk pricing structure. I> e fore holding bearings. proceedings from Son· SACRAli.tEN'I'O (UPI) -A ny. 39. The pair argued top state a g r i cu It u re over division of their department oCficial has denied propeftY and custody a charge by 8 ~ume.r of their daughter, coalition grouj; seeking a milk -_C_h_a_st_ity;_._4_. ____ _ price reduction thal "the dairy industry has a straaglehold on n1E SENATE Agriculture and w..... Commlllee held bearings on the state's co........:iu. .. ted milk prici ng .. ..,..._ Sacramento." system earlier this year but has made no form a 1 Jed Adams;, stale milk r e co m m e n datims. said . marketing administrat6r1n committee chalnnan Ho\\'lll'd ' the Department of Food and Way (R·Exeter ). . . Agriculture Tuesday denied T'1e state has set nun1mum ' milk prices at fann, \\'holesale the charge m~de by R~h and retail levels since the Vanatta o! FJght Inflation 1930s. Together and called i t R i c h a r d S po h n , a "sensationalism." spokesman for the Califomip ~Is. Yanatta leveled~ the Citizen · Action Group, said charge aher the department lawmakers requesting the turned down -a petitk>n for a hearillis included Assembly hearing on the coalition's Speaker Leo ~lcCarthy ID-San request lo cut rriilk prices. Franciscol: Conner Assembly "This is the third time in Speaker Bob 1w1oretti (0-Van four mooths that he Nuys), and Sen.ate Democratic (Agriculture Director C. B. F1oor Leader George Moscone Christensen) has refused. to (D-San Francisco). hear the evidence. Christensen said he had "It is now clea r that the received a list of legislators dairy industry has a strangle- ""ho bad signed petitions but hold on Sacramento in the did not get signatures. same v.·ay it cont r.o 1 s "'Ibis •-ould not make much Washington," ~ts. Vanatta difference though," he said, said. CHILDREN'S SHOE VALUES ••• -OUR LARGEST SALE EVER ' BUSTER BROWN ADIDAS • KEDS MANY SANDALS CHILD LIFE and many other SCHOOL and DRESS STYLES Outstanding School Shoe Selection Naturally,,All From Our Regular Stock. REGULARLY TO $18. s-90 90 TO Sale Sh;1rts Thursday. Doors Open I 0 a.m. 'All S.le1 Fin ti • No Exch1ng11 Or Refund• , .. SANTAANA ----.,---- WtdntSday, Ju11 17, 1974 DAILY PILOT IS -. $400,000 Ratisona; • 2 Held • Ill Kidnap 11l1ct1Mof PERSIAN RUGS " ,..., ...... _._ .. • NEWPORT BEA.CH wllbttoldlly .... c AUCTION SUNDAY JULY ·21st-2 PM • l'rttlow I P.M. . ...,, .............. , ..... , .............. .. .................................. . , .. ..., ............................................ _. ••• " ....... ~s. .............. . WHITE SALE Missotti's .' Freestyle collection by Fieldcrest 6.99 'l'..Uuhecr.Jl<,gul.,fy$8 . • SOUTH COAST PLAZA. Don't g<r borc\l w;th your.:J>td. Eojoyaming""' o:hcmenrids dMt l'!aids,Bonls, ouiP" Ind ch«ks ;,,·1hiJ mll<i2j ... By oimplJ ICIU!itg a com f ott<:z or p;uow rue, you = ~ ll<W IOblly OlOldioaml loob 'tu,.,;, your mood. Ill pol,..ttr/coaoa. Domd .._ liel mly. l'i<ttd doacd •hcets "1 sabk, nngerioo, -.,., ._..u.~...i i.adigo ' &h•des. Plald, 1tt;p<d and Bord sheet, S.. ODly,ClllDO ill blatlsieca. pble/indigo, canary/ito~rine combinations. 'Srsndudc...,1pr.R•g.$7 •• S.99 KiogastS,pr. l!.g. SS.,.,6,99. Tw;n •hects. Reg. $8 •••••• 6.99 Que<n sheets. R•g $15, •• lfACJ Double, sheets. Reg. $9 ••• 7.99 King sheets. Reg. $17 •• .14.99 Reversible comforrcr plaid ro dots in polrcsttr and eotroa. 1•·;n. Reg. $55,49.99 Foll. Rtg.$65, 57.99 ~-King. $85, 7.f..99 Solid icrylic blanket coordinated in wwy, marina and sable shades. • Twio.R<g.$20,17.99 Fu1L$22,19.99 Qu-Kiog.$30,26.99 Towels: ")tisson[ Flotal .. sMartd conon terry bluc/grcca. ahle/ jndigo, tangerine/canary. "Missoni Stripe~ sopbistiu.ted 1ttipcs aod J ocs, sedate chevrons. In cotton terry unsheared jacquud, same a>lor combinations a.s Bora!. Bath. Reg. $6, 4.99 Hand. Reg. 3.75, 3.29 ---..: • Washcloth. Reg. 1.70, 1.49 Rug and shower aut:Ua ;also availabk. . Bath Shop, Bedroom .Accessories • • • 1 ' . : • I -----· - Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 67, NO. 198, .8 SECTIONS, 92 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1974 c TEN CENTS .~ 4, ; ' ; Dlllr "llM Sl•ff '"et. FUTURE PARMERS OF-AMERICA DISPLAY SKILLS IN SWINE SHOWMANSHIP COMPETITION CountfF1ir ContHt1nh Show How They Can Co!'trol ind Direc:t Their Animals With C1nes }lank Thompson, Group to Appear At Fair Toriight 'Hanj Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys, one of the nation's leading eowttry and Vt'estem bands, will entertain visitors tci the 0ra:nge County Fair tonight. The band, v.·hlch has had more than 100 , chart records, one third of whidl were in the top 10, w~ perform at 7:'° p.m. and 1.p.m. in Ille ...-1a. !llel'led ~ic· lures, Pages t; ti, 14; related stOry, Pa1e 3) . -Admi!Sloo lo the concert Is· frM-wlth the price of .admilllon. Fair ucbts .,. $1.75 for adults, $1 for children &-12, and free for children under 12. other fair highlig~ts tonight are the Ctiuck Jones M&gic Show, at 7:30 p.m. on the mall stage; the Father Cougblln Boys Choir, at 8 p.m. on the family stace: the New Dimensions Patriotic Musical Revue on the mall stage, and the Hawaiian Review which follom at 9 p.m. on the mall stage. ' ~The-bigge§l bargain Is ,Thursday when all persons -c8rifing cameras will be admitted free as part Qf "Camera Day" at the fair. Servicemen al90 will be admitted free on Thur!day. ·'Thursday's fair schedule is: Ail Day ...: The Art of Croche'oit, Furniture Refinishing, Cake Deco- (~ FAJR,'Page %) Hosiery Maker ' . Sues Mesa Firm- L'Eggs Prod ucts Inc., manufacturers or pantyhose, filed a $10 million damage suit against a Co~a . Mesa company TueSdiy, chafiing it-wttli iUeganr usurg the L'Eggs trademark. The suit alleges StarCresl Products of Callfonlia me., 3t63 Red Hill Ave., embarked on a "concerted a·n d intentional scheme of false a n d misleading advertising throughout ·the United States" by using the L'Eggs logo in Its ads. . Jn addition to the damages, the suit seeks to ban starCrest from using the .,. L 'Eggs trademark in all f u tu r e adverlllling. Oraage Coast WeaCller SUnny and wann 'Malrsday with only patchy early morniJll clouds at the beaches. Hilhs from the mid·70s at the strand to the .IOI.in- land. Overnight lows 'in the IOI. INSIDE TODAY Former Feliciano's Restaura1tt partner Gene Randano hos drawn l1is second sto~ prUon term when judge ruled he tno- lated probatio" tmpottd m liquor hijackJng case. Storu. Page 9. ..... ~ tf -. --. ,_.,... ...... ..... MoJtMI ....... II MtlltMI ...... f on .. c•tr ,.,, -u ... .............. '' ,_,. --. ,, . ., DI'. , ... lleftlm " ............ ,.. :r ........ _ lt -... -. ........... 4 Tower of Lo1idon Blast Kills Woman,.Hurts 36 LONDON !UPI) -A bomb. possibly planted by IRA terorists. exploded-in the 900-year-old Tower of London today, hurling broken glass and maS9ntY into crowd$ of children and their parenfs jammtni the city's most popular tourist ligbt.;o.e .... !1111 killed. I Al-·-·-mar. than haU ol lbem children -were inj_ured in .the • Mesa Sets Study Of Pawn Shops Before Action The owner of a Olsta Mesa photo shop • wlll have to wait 30 days for A pawn stiOplicense until City official! have com- pleted a studf on pawn !hops in general. Members o .the Costa Mesa City Coun- cil , •on a 4-0 vote, ordered the delay on Narenda Kumar's request because Lhe31 weren't convint'ed C.OSta Mesa needed another pawn shop. Councilman Dom ·Raciti, himself a dwntown jeweler and pawnbroker, ab- stained from the vote and did not com- ment on the subject. City Manaa:er Fred Sol'sabal said there were 10 licerl!led pawn shops, four o( then1 in the downtown area near Kumar's 1869 Newport Blvd. store. He indicated the report i,o,wld cover the costs to the tax- payers or police checks on the pa\\•n shops. Jn a study session which preceded Tuesday's meeting.· Councilman Alvin Piilkley-reacted negatively to a concentra-; tlon of pawn shops in the do"•ntown area. "Anytime you get a lot of pawnshops you ·a:et a lot of schlock," he sa id. Raciti did not comment. on I.hat either. Mayor Seeking Engine Inventor Inventors: Do you have an alternative to the infernal internal combustion "'(ine! If you do, Mayor Robert M. \Vil.son of Costa ·Mesa wants to hear from you. Wilson male a public appeal during Tue!day night's city council meeting to find a substitute for the "gas-caUng oil· burning engine." • He said he heard 90 many stories about find ou( for hlm8elf if America is "smart private inventors lhat he has detided to find out for himself if America is "smart enough to devtlop an alternative." W11.!ion invited persons with ideas for fuel-saving low emissions engnes to contact him through city hall, 77 Fair .Drive, Qiota M!l<B. . HE SOLD PICKUP TO FIRST CALLER expl06ion, several ·of them in critical condition with crushed arms and legs. Detectives sifting · through the debris found the severed foot of a sma11 child. Police said ~t of lbe injured were ~~ ~'Q!lt~.-injw.d Edward JIJOill 41 ~rf. ..,, . . . The ezplosiori seol ~-o~ American and other foreign toorists neeing from the moated stone fOrtress. A few were crying but there was no panic. 'lbe lxlinb, the second to explode \Vilhoot warning in London today, mi ght have been the "·ork of the Irish Republican Anny, police said, but there wits no ,proof. Police said the lxlmbings had some of the hallmarks of other IRA attacks• that have killed 12 persons and \\'OWldesl 115 others in England since December. A Mrs. Harris of Sydney, ,\ustralia. near to the explosion in the ti>we r but \\"ho emerged unS<.'athed, said: "There \\'ere wounded all over the place -it looked Jike a scene out of hell." Al least half the tourists stumbling for the exit were children. ;fany were school groups being shepherded by teachers. "Move on, move on," police shooted. "There might. be another bomb." The first blast today damaged a government office building io, the suburb of Ba'Uiam before dawn, but caused-no casualties. The tovoer, guarded by the colorful pike-arrying Beefeaters, daily dra"·s (See TOWER, Page%) Baseball Great Dizzy Dea1i 'Dead at 63 RENO. Nev. (UPI ) -Oiu:y Dean , one of baseball's greatest pitchers who starred with the "Gas House Gang" during the 1930s, and later a radio and television announcer famed for his unique brand of fractured English, died DIAM today at 63. (De· tails, Page 17) Mrs. Dean was at his skle in St. ary's IIMpilal ,hen he died at 1:35 a.m. Al!'.o resent were ~is rother Paul, and Paul Dean 's tv.·o ~hildren. n ie son· of a cotton picker whooe famil y moved about the South in tbe early 1920s, young Dean developed a strong arm b y throw~ dirt clods at prairie dogs. Am)able although incredibly valn. he was the soul of the 1934 St. Loui s Cardinals, popularly known as the "Gas Howie Gang." "It 90ld the fir!t day the ad ran. He swaggtred sitting down, once "The first caller bought my pickup,'' said dangled t teemmate out of a 12th- the satisfied Daily Pilot advertiJer from story hotel ll1indow and liked to fountain Valley. invade formal parties dressed ln J:lere's the ad that did the Job tor hhn: house painter's over;ills. 1964 JEEP P.U., 4 Whl Drive With it all, 01' Diz was one of the Good -~Ilion. greatest pitchers in b a s ~ b o 11 <~N --,..:---1"4iiStOfTtielOl'f: Bffea!C"'accldent In Let a Dally Pilot classUted ad y.•ork for 1937 cut shor1 hi! carter. you. Call &12-~!. • ----------~-------"'-- Transcript Error ~einec~e Prosecutors 'Dismayed' WASIIJNGTON <UPI) -Government prosecutors were taken by surprise today in California Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke's· perjury trial when a stenographer testified that chanJit~ had been made in a Senate hearing transcript fonning the basis for charges against Reinecke. Reinecke 's and ?ilitche\l 's statements. Reinecke had told them he infonned But he said tre !'Old-Reinecke "that all t.lltchell or the !TI' offer in•'.\1a'),...l971 - he could do was to tell the truth and to be prior to the antitrust set tlemen\. responsh·e to the question." Reinecke's lawyer. \l'hile C<>nceding his l\fa,cGregor said he nu:t with Reinecke client gave some erroncou! information shortly before the state official testified to the com1nittee, says Reinecke's before the Senate Judiciary Committee. problems may stem irom bei ng BenJCJmin H. Firshein, who recorded the testimony during a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, said the transcript submitted to the court did not contain corrections he made in it. The Watergate prosecutor's or f ice straightforward to a fau\l. 'f charged Rei necke lied when he testified Reinecke, said attorney James E. Cox, he d.id not tell Mitchell alxlut the I'M' is a "straight gentle, cou rteous. overly o[fer until September, 1971-two months cooperative human being .. , "'ho will after settlement ol a federal antitrust talk to people, maybe when he Flrshein testified as a government witness but assistantJ~l P.:rosecutor Richard Davis was clearly taksn aback by the disclosure. He said he thought corrections had been made in the sui t against JTI'. shouldn't." In P!eviOus testimony, Sen. Jo.Pn B. Cox \Vas defending Reinec ke Tuesday Tunney (0-Calit), and Lee Fremstad, a--1n-1he first . day of testimony at reporter Cor the Sacramento Bee, said Reinccke·s perjury trial. transcript introduced in evidence. Reineeke's lawyer immediate!)' called .. 'Miserable s.o.B.' for dismissal Of the case against Reinecke. Judge Barrington Parker did not immediately rule on the motion. Instead, Parker ordered the jury out of the room and sharply criticized th e government lawyers for their failure to have caught the mistake. ·;Nofziger Says Nixon's . . It was not immediately clear what the changes were but Firshein's testimony indicated they were in the part of the ·Ntce ·'Guy .Role Mistake hearing transcript that the government SACRA1'lENTO (AP) _ A-former. cited in accusing him of lying to the comm ittee. presiden liaf aide who still admires and Former presidentjal assistant Clark slipports Richard Nixon s3ys the MacGregor testified earlier that he urged President is "a miserable S.O.B.'' who Rei necke to tell the truth in the Senate made a big political mistake when he testlmori~ that led to his trial. jried to pose as a nice guy. MacGregor said he talked with Former Nixon aide Lyn Nofziger told a Reinecke in 1973 about "differences in . group of high school students Tuesday recollection" between the lieutenant Nixon was a hardnosed politician who governor and former Attorney General I st h' l960 · f John Mitchell over the date of a meeting 0 is campaign or president in where they discussed an offer by ITT to ~rt because he tried to change that help Hnar:ice the 1972 Republican image. , convention. ..I don t believe you can make MacGregor -who left the Whit&.' somebody some~hing he is not. I think u., to· ~ head' '.OL~lllllC ~·E'I" m~~ him IQo~ better than~~ Nlxon•s fe.electoon campe!p'lfl')illil:fllll'l'-11'8i •1dta't lhmk. ""1 am· midi - -said be proi>al>ly expresslid ,......, -le S.O.B. into a very nice guy," concern" over diffe.renc'8-b et ween ~Noftiger-sald. --- "One reason Dick Nixon lost in 1960 .. \\lhat l really meant is a tough and hard-nosed guy. \Vhat I'm trying to say is you have to be tough. You have lo be willing to take your knocks. You have to be combative to succeed. "I'm not talking alxlut a guy as a fri~nd or as a person, but as president of this country. A nice sweet guy would be pushed around," Nofziger said. 1Vixon Defender Says President 'l'o Fight to End By HELEN moMAS Ul"IWllllt"9vHll-'tr Judiciary V1iit If ears Testi1nony Front Kal1nbach waS because he "'IS a miserable S.O:B .. and f don 't.say that derogatorily. Almost anybody who gets to the presidency is a miserable S.0.B. because he's got to go over ~n awful lot of bodies to get there," Nofziger added. Nofzlger, a second echelon White 11ouse aide for two years, left the White House staff in February 1971 to join the Republican National Committee. He later was manage r of Nixon's California ca mpaign organization in 1972: Pl'esident Nixon, having put thoughts of resigning behind him, plans a "fight to the finish" aga inst i m p each m e n t according to a book written by one of his strongest defenders. \VASHINGTON (AP ) -The House Judiciary Comm~ttee heard testimony today about a $2 million campaign pledge from the dairy industry for President Nixon's rMlcclion that one membel' said might lead to a bribery charge against Nixon in the committee's impeachment inQuiry. "We're beginning to establish a case of bribery," said Rep. Elizabeth Holtunan (0-N.Y.), after emerging from a closed· door ~mmiltee session with -Herbert Kalmbach of Newport Beach, Nixon's former personal lawyer. Other members disagreed. however. and several said Kalmbach added not hing to the testimony alxlut the mifk deal ha-had not-previously given-to the ~ Senate Watergate committee. Miss Holtzman would not elaborate on her statement. Kalmbach was convicted recently of selling an ambassadorShip, and was sent lo a federal prison in the East to be available for the committee hearings. Kalmbach gave the committee a detailed chronology of the timing ot the milk price increase, which Niron decidt'd to grant on March 23. 1971 , but which was not announced publicly until two days later. Kalmbach reportedly told of a midnight meeting in a Washington hotel on ~larch 24 at which a spokeSJllan for the dairy industry "reaffinaed'' a previously given pledge to contribute '2 million to Nixon's re-election campaign. Rep. Charles Wiggins (R-Calit:), said !See KALMBACH, Pagt ZJ Bike Trails Set For CHART Talk The development of bike tr81ls and park trails in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach will be the subject of a discussk>o Thursday by the Citizens Harbor Area Re!earch Team (Cl-lARi'J. George Kuyper . former C H A R T pre1ident, wiU be the featured speaker at the breakfast session scheduled for 7:!16 a.m. at Gl endale Federal Savings, Harbor Boulevai-d and Wilson Slreel, Costa t.1esa. CqmplimC!Jtary teoffee and doughnuts will be served. • The discussion Is open to the-public and student s from all Harbor Area schools ai'CeSJ)eelally thvited to-this--m e e·l I n g - aet.'Ordlng to Bill Bandaruk , current CHART ~resident. He held a 45-minute question-and· ariswer session with 75 high school studeots ' participating in a Junior States1nen sun1mcr school program in a Capitol hea ring room. Questioned later about the "miserable S.O.B." oomment , Nofziger said il is. aceurate. but that he would have phrased it more softly if he had noticed reporters in the room. Nixon also says tha t ii the Watergate- related accusations against him were true he v.·ould not remain in the White. House ·'for a minute" and "nobody would have to ask me to resign." The comments were made in the book "The !Personal Nixon: Staying On the Summit," v.Titten by l{abbi Baruch Korff. head of the National Citizens Committee For Fairness to t h e Presidency. Korff interviewed Nixon May 13 in the. Oval Office and later got w r i t t e n (See ~XON BOOK, Page Zl , ' D.itr l'lltl ftMt9 h' l" l"nM lnclaes frona A111putatio11 Rescuers work to fi-ee Fermin Villasenor. 19. nrtcr he was caught In a vinyl slitting machine this n1orning al Air Products and Chemi· cnls Inc. plant, 17~9 Placentia Ave., Costa rttesa . lo"ellow workers stopped the machine before l-he Cos ta ~1esan was dragged into the blades. A spokesman fo r fire department rcsen-e-team said tho young worker apparenU y escaped \fith JUSt a'broken arn1 , - ' . • • L • Z DAILY PILOT Better Fire Protection Negotiated Children at Bear Street School and the .. residents of Canyon and Pac.Ujc Avenue., In the Costa i1esa area will soon be getting better fire protection through an agreement now being negotiated by Costa Mesa city and Orange County fire officials. The areas are so-called "county islands" in Costa Mesa 'vhich are now being served by the Orange County Airport station. Costa 1.fesa has flte stations that are closer. City Manaiter Fred Sorsabal Wormed Costa l\1esa city councilmen "Tuesday night that the county is willing to pay $4;700 a. year to Costa Mesa for ftre COv.erage in the areas involved. The agreement was described as sensible by City Councilman Alvin .Pinkley who said -that a fire truck coming from as far away as Orange CoWlty Airport "might as well not come at aJI." - Costa ?.feaa fire engines, under ideal conditions, could reach the islands in one minute or less. Good · response .time from -!he-airport -station Is about eight--to IO minutes, city officials said. F ro1n Page l FAIR ... rating. Se\\ing Techniques Noon -Demsonstrations by Amateur Astronomers, Radio Operators, Carv· ers, and Needlepaint Experts 12:30 p.m. -GI~ Decorating, Creative Stitchery, Needlepoirit . I p.m. -Aladdin Magic Show, Berdene Williams Twirlettes, Beef Animal Judging 1:30 p.m. -Low ~t C.OOkery 2 p.rn. -Army Rock Band "Now Express,., New Dimensions Patriotic Jl.iusic Revwe. Rag Doll 3 p.m. -Aladdin Magic Show, Bonrue Dancers, Whittier Variety Show <f p.m. -1'1usic ltfan Band, New Dimensions, Dueling Banjoes by Tom and George 5 p.m. -Bonnie Drulcf;rs, Kung-Fu I>emc:atration, Aladdin Magic Show 5:30 p.m. -Ribbon Roses and Pin Cush.ions , Needlepoint 6 p:m. -Galena St. East Musical Revue, U.S. Marine Flag Pageant 7 p.m. -Kung-Fu Demoostratton 7:30 p.m. - Chuck Jones Magic Sbow, Pizza Taste Testing, Hank Thompaon and the Braws Vlilley Boys 8 p.m. -Galena St. East Musical Revue, Marine Flag Pageant 9 p.m. -New Dimensions, Hawaiian Review, Hank Thompson and the Brazos Valley Boys, Pizza Taste Testing. Jail Term Given In Mesa Burglary A Costa Mesan who admitted stealing $3.000 worth of electrical equipment from a local company was ordered Tuesday to spend the next 90 days in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge Everett W. Dickey ordered ·the jail term after Jeffrey Swigart, 19, ot 220 h1onte Vista Ave., pleaded guilty to second degree burglary. Swigart must also serve three years probation upan his release from jail. Swigart 'was arrested June 16 and booked by Costa 11-fesa palice for the burglary Of the YarwObd. Cfilfopr.fctiC Corp~. 136 Broadway. Ofliceni said evidence found at the scene of the break-in Jed them to the young Costa Mesan. All the equipment was recovered. \ OIAMMC04ST CM DAILY PILOT lNO••~DMJ"~ ""'ft ftlo~ ......., .... l'te ... ~ ·~ ~"" o.rooo eo..i .._..,.. ~ .S.0...1!• "'"""'" .... Plllli<"""1 ~ 11'1'°"91' r...,.y tor Coo!• M9.., °""""" ee-. ........,,"""" 11tocl\J•OU11· tllft v°"" ~ e.'tc11. """""t~•...., SM a..-e1Son -'-C:.Dollfaro I< 1ono01 ~ -oO'I . l!Ut>I·--s.tutGI» """ ,.. .. ~. fMP"flCIPtl ~ oltrll" 1! 3l0Wt ll llty S1•"'· Cott• "6tM.C:.1''°"""· tn n . .bt~ R.C..-., Yk91'fM-1tlCIC.-olM1~ ~Ke.vi ,_ ~A.~ MltllOit'llllCllllCll' Clofrt1H. U-~ P. No' ,._.,. l.!atl9fol'O !llllCll'l c .... w...Offk. JlOW•11 Bo.. 3-!o Moiirq Aib1H1. P . .J. !loo SoQ. ij2626 -. ..... " M--1S.Kft l.Ul...._,,. ..,......i ~ ........ 8-fti:~""'"" .. - -""'"" hlCI' '"" klCf> .,.._ SM :::...O..n11 Xl!o ~ £.:-AM ,........, 17141642·4l21 Clht!fl.ll A,..wthMf 642·1671 ~ ,,,, ~-eo,,., "'*'•r>ont c-. -"°"""""--lliuolr""""--... "· ,,, --~ti -.... , t>e ~-....rw~--°''*""'""­'"'°°"" c11M 111)11191 f!oflO II co.ti li'l!'SI, C.~ICll" ~·• .!Vlll«~oOll a,...,,,. ·~ 00J'P'!)'ll~l1, DT ,,,_~ M 00""0f\lltlf ""'"""~ ..... -·l OO-,. From Pqe 1 KALMBACH . •• Kabnbacb did DOt establish any link between the campaign pledge and· Nixon's decision to ralse milk prices. Rep. Wiley Mayne (R-Jowa), said It was clear to him from the evidence ~ven to the committee that Nixon was responding to heavy j>ollllcal pressure from Congri:ss in agreeing to increase the support price for milk. Kalmbach \\•sa the last \\1itness heard by the co1nmlttee before it turns to the task of drawing up and voting on proposed articles of impeachment. Following his testimony J ames St. Clair, Nixon's counsel, was to be given an opportirnUy to submit a brief and make Oral arguments summing up the case against impeachment. At least six articles, the chief one charging obstruction of justice in connect ion with !he \\'atergate cover-up, are reported to be drafted and ready for presentation to the committee in private t briefing sessions on Thursday apd Fri- day. Judiciary Committee Chairman Peter \\1• Rodino Jr. (0..N.J.}, said Tuesday he hopes the rommJttee can reach a final vote by July 26 on whether to recommend impeachment oC Nixon. \\'ith the Democrats holding a 21·17 edge in the committee. the key question on any impeachment vote will be how many Republicans support It. • Legal Points Rair Lock Horns - ' t. · On . Caspers Post By JOUN VAL TERZA 01 IN 0•11~ Plitt ll•ff Orange Coonty Counsel Adrian Kuyper and Cnlifomla's Altomey General are at apparent loggerheads on legal points railed In the struggle for auccesalon to the vacant FUth District post on the Orange County Board of Supervisors. 'n\e connlct ls reflected in opposing legit oplnlono dealing with ti1e length of term whicli >A'OUld be in effect U Gov. lton- ald Reagan makes an appointment to rt· place the late supervisor, Ronald Caspers. (Relafed Stories, fage 3) Kuyper TUelday afternoon reportedly sent on a supplementary report 00 hli opinions to lndlvkJual supervisors. 'Jbat document reinforces Kuyper's opinion issued last June 24 when he insisted that a Reagan appointee would ser.ve only until ·Caspers old term expires on .Jan 7. Then , Kuyper has said, whoever sue· ceeds Reagan as governor would make yet another appointment and that would last through the new term which Cas- pers won I na landslide primary vletory onlv a few days before his death at sea. at.ale ICglslature to finally approve a bill which calls for a November election with the winner taking the Fifth District. po91 . A group of leading co u n t y Democrall--wlthout the blessing of Its cenlral commlttoe -ts wq a petition . campaign throughout the (OUOty ln an effort to Jog loooe the leglslaOon. That bill wu lnto introduced only days after Cupen' disappearance b y Allemblpnan John Brl~g (R-FullerlooJ but bas become ltalled m committee. It now appears beaded for a rehearing Aug. I~ C..ltlc!-claim thal lhe election blll woold play lllroogly Into lhe bandl or Newport Beach Alsemblyman Robert Badham, a Republican who has been cited as. a prime candkiate fOr the Caspers post. Badham, however, haa disavowed any strong intention to seek a spot on the ballot as a candidate for supervisors. He already Is running for re-election to hil \ auembly seat. Adding to the convoluted situation, ls the official leave whkh supervisors have granted Caspers-lutlng through Aug. 9. Rep. Charles E . \Vlggins (R-calif.), a leading Nixon loyalist on the c:ommittee, predicted Tuesday that no Republicans ~·ould vote for impeachment· and that enou~h Democrats v;ould switch over to kill it in committee. -"We!re-going-to win this goddam thing," he told newsmen. "I think the POLICE COMFORT SWISS TOURIST, TWO CHILDREN AFTER BLAST One l<i lled, 36.liljUred 11 Terrori5ts Bomb Tower of London 'l"hat term, would'expire in mid-1976. Yet, in an opinion which sources claim has been given to Reagan from the Attorney General's Office, the length of an appointee's term is far different. Reports from Sacramento claim that state legal officials are suggelting that an appointee •·ould serve 1.hrough the end of Caspers' old term and through the new one as well. AJthough the board could reverse it1 action earUer, It does not al>PCl@f likely. Yet, Reagan might appoint a !llcceSIOI' , at any time, leave or not. committee "'ill act as Ja"''Yers when the chips are down. The evidence just Is not there." Wiggins'. comment prompted other Republicans to say they didn't know how they were going to vote and that it was possible they could vote r o r impeachment. "There are at least four Republicans waiting to see what the legal theories for impeachment are," said Rep. Thomas F. Railsback, (R·Ill.). He identified the four as himself and William S. Cohen of Maine, M. Caldwell BuUer of Virginia and Hamilton Fish Jr. of New York. Mes a Quartet Freed in Plant Pilfering Case Charges of possession of stolen property initiated against · four Costa r.tesa men arrested in a predawn raid on an apartment crammed wilb 28 potted plants have been dropP,ed. Ernest Pease, 20, of 2131 Union Ave., plus James Thomas, 21 , KeMeth Way, 21, and Michael Way, 20, all of 1315 Baker St., were released with ·no complaints filed. . ~o theft reports could be traced to the plants, no victims came forward and there was no way they could be traced such as through a name and address painted on a pot, police said. One source said officers may have had to drop charges against the men originally suspected of potted plant pilfering but they didn 't drop the flower pots. The greenery y,,•as given to the eity Parks Deparunent for public landscaping purposes. Welfare Checks Sent 'In Error' NEW YORK (UPI) -Embarrassed city officials have admitted that a computer erroneously spewed out $7.5 riiillitif in un3litliOH7.ed checks -in tHree moot.hs to weltare clients dropped from the rolls. The problem has been corrected and authorities are trying to get the money back -but some of it has probably been lost for good. President Golfs With Son-in-l aw .4.t . P endleton President Nixon flew by helicopt('r from hiS San Clemente estate to the nearby Camp Pendleton Marine base to play. gol! today with his son·in-taw Edward Cox, a young New York lawyer. It was the second time this week the two have gone golfing. Monday they played the private course on 1he estate of U.S. Ambassador to Britain Walter AMenberg near Palm Springs. The PresKlent's doctor has suggested more exercise, especially since Nixon suffered from an auack or phlebitis in his left leg. The President's daughter. Tricia Cox. y,·ent along for the trip to the golf course. according to deputy press secretary Gerald L. Warren. · As is his practice lately, the President gave no advance word to the newsmen or his departure from Ule Western White House and none \~·ere pennilted to accompany him. Before he le!t, \Varren said the President talked "'ith his chief of staff, Alexander M. Haig Jr.. and Press Secretary Ropatd L. Ziegler, did some more work on budget decisions and review:en[W~ on the c y p r u s govemmy er situation. Schools Offering Summer Camp The Newport-Mesa Unified School District will offer a one-week· summer Camp for Sixth, sevenlh and eighth grade students beginning Aug. 2 in the San Bernardino mountains near. Redlands. Among the activities available at the camp will be swimming, volleyball, folk dancing and nature study. The cost is $56, 'Including transportation and lodging. Reservations may be made by calling Tom Duttine at the Newport-Mesa Swnmer School Office, &m.aal9. Pcacekeep e1·s 1'1eet SAIGON. South Vietnam (AP) -The four-nation international peace~eeping commission met today for its first regular session in three months .. Hostages Slain Police P ursue Extortionist BUILETIN MLUU (UPI) - A bearded black ·ex· tortlonlst took at lealt $50,000 from .a wealthy lndustrlaU1t and bis wire today, slaagbtered them wllb a burst of machine pn Dre •ndJben fled Into a rorest where police captllttd bbn this afternoon. li-fiAMI (UPI) -An exlorlionist took a man and his wife hostage today, killed them with bunts from a S\Jbmachlnegun and then fled into a field or head·high underbrush where. police and FBI agents apparently bad-him trapped. Kenneth W. Whittaker, special agr:nt In charge of the Miaml FBI office, ""'ou\d say only that the suspect "wanted so much money, and took the victims." The Victims were identified as ltllaml industrialist Sydney Gans and his wife. He is president of tbe Sydney Bag and Paper Co. Whittaker, who· took special charge or the mmbunt, decllnecf to say how the extortion plot began or whether the victims wue connected with a local bank. He aaid, bowevet", '1There Was a payolf." ' FBI agents had been following the suspect's car for nearly an hour when he pulled Into a half-mile square field shortly before noon, shot the couple to death with the madl.inegun in the bucket seats o! their e~pensive foreign aut<r mobile, abandoned the car and fled . J\.fore than 100 lawmen, most of them armed ~·Ith shotguns~ sutrounded the field, while an airplane and two helicopters new over the area at grass- top level trying to flush the suspect, described only as a thin black rrtan with braided hair and a goatee and wearing iJ bl:ick tee-shirt. At one point, Whittaker called several fire trucks to the area and ordered agents to set the field ablaze. But he canceled. that order several minutes later. tnxtdled w1th Dade Q>unty Sheriffs officers and discussed the possibility of fogging the area with pepper gas or tear gas. Other ahe.r\fr'a deputies, meanwh!I(', conductcil a house-to-house. search of a fa shionable development about threc- quar_ten_ of a mile ·away from the fteld, In case the s\,lSpect eluded the scorts of police surrounding \_;he field. F r o m Page 1 TOWE i;{ ... thousands of foreigners to see the royal family's ceren1onial jc\velry and its collection or. armor and firearms. The f3med tower served as prison for hundreds of enemies or British royalty, including Sir \Valler Raleig h. 11-tany fanious prisoners were murdered or executed a t the to\\·er, including two young princes. nephews of Richard Ill, and two of Henry Vllf's wives, Anne Bo!('yn and Catherine Howard. State officials have &190 conceded, however, that the COunt,Y Counsel's opinion may be the one which would be most booored. Kuyper has cited a 1958 opinion from the attorney general as the basis for tJle county position. and that oplnion has never been altered In any court decision. The latest reparts of an apparent legal digpute paint to a.possible court battle to seek a definite solution. Adding more fuel to the compl~x fire in the succession issue i's that pressure from Orange County might force the Rumors at the county level continue to · abound this week as to who appears to be the choeen IUcctaOr . This week's prime candidate appeen Rodger H....,11, a re.Iden! within the ;Flftti District and a well-known lawyer who specializes in municipal Jaw. Spokesman for the senior partner ln the law firm of Rutan & Tucker insisted late Tuesday that there Is no knowledge that Howell is the top cand)date. Caspers' top aide, Tom Fuentes, recently moved within his I a t e employer's district, and has been mentioned as a prime candidate for -appointment. Fuentes, highly reliable sources say, has the complete blessing of the caspers family as successor. Westgate lnsuranc~ ,Firm Rule_d h~solvent by Judge f're•Pqel NIXON BOOK ••• responses to question,,. He made the 123- page book public Tuesday after meetinC with Nixon. By L PETER KRIEG ' 01 !Ill! O•llr Piiot SI.it A state insurance commission official said today he does not know "•bet.her the dc!W1ct \\'('stgate-Califomia Insurance Company has enough assets to pay off $3.3 mnlion in outstanding1:'laims filed by past paliryho\dcrs. · The Newport Beach-based insurance company, a subsidiary of the financially troubled \Vestgate·Califomia. Corp. owned by San · Diego financier C. Arnholt Smith, was declared insolvent in Orange CouritY Superior Court. . The state was appointed conservator of the cempany "'ith authority to administer its future operations. Deputy l n s u r a n c e Commissioner Joseph ~1artin, who was at the c:ompany's o!fices at 1501 Quail St. this morning, said all of the company's policies have been re-insured, but the firm is still faced with the $3.3 million in ou tstanding claims. "We are hopefu l there are enough assets to pay lhOll),'~ Martin said. He would not say what "'·ould happen lf there isn't enough money within the company. Westgate-California specialized i n casualty insurance, primarily workmen's compensation. Martin said it had policyholders throughout Cali£omia. The fifm was formed in 1944 as the Casualty Insurance Company o f C<ilifornia and was bought by Westgate· California Co rp. in 1969. ~1artin said-the-petition -asking-the- .order of conservation was filed because the insurance company's capital fell below $1 mUUon, the minimum reserve required by the commission. He explained that much of its in vestments had been in the parent company, whose stock Is nearly valueless because or the nearly $360 million in claims filed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) and the lnlemal Revenue Service. The FDIC is the receiver for the failed U.S. National Bank, another Westgaf.e.. California subsidiary. Bean Field Oahn Rejected by Mesa City <'OJOCilmen routinely proceesed a $125 claim from Costa Mesa's wealthy land-Owning Segenitrom Family Tuesday night for damage done to a bean field. • The claim, for damage caused by a police helicopter making an emergency landing in a lima bean field owned by the Segerstroms, was given to City Attorney Roy E. June. June Indicated he would recommend. Its denial and refer it to the city's insurance carrier. However, in a study session preceding Tuesday night's city councll meeting city offic;a!s-a ppeared puzzled by-the claim. At a news conference, Korff saKt he has the impression that Nizon °agrees with me" that the conspiracy-perjury conviction of John D.. EhrJiclunan, Nb.on'• former No. 2 aide, is "a blot on juatice." . In the book, Niron called Watergate the "thinnest scandal in American history." He said that if Ile had been "f>¥i,cally a liberal" by press standards, "Watergate would have been a blip." He aays he coosldered resigning if the House votes impeachment "and I totally rejected it. l •have decided to go the distance to defend this office, and to defend myself against charges of whi~ I , am wOOlly innocent." Resignation, be said, would hurt his ~ and set ''a precedent of a man mortally weakened from this process ot destroying a Presldent who was not guilty of a high crime or misdemeanor." Speaking d. the news media, Nixm said: "I know for example, in the press room that my policies are generally di sapproved o!, and there are some, putling It in the vernacular, who hate my guts with a pas.sioo. But I don't hate them, none of them. t understand. Their philoeophies are different." Nixon has been taking It easy at the Western White House since Friday, concerned mainly about ecooomic policy. He has talked several times with Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger lly telephone about the Cyprus situation. • • """ ... ' 538 CENTER STREET-COSTA MESA--646-1919 CLOYD SUNDAY •. ,.£!.~Racquetball Racquets & . Bans '.'' .·' Handball GloYes & Balls ~I! Table Tennis Paddles & Bl!llls. -• u: ~ Darts & Dart Boards Duclc Feet Fins I 0.95 I hdmlnton Rackets - Water Wonder loorcls 4.95 j . Racket Strl11CJlncf Bon Aire Skl111 Boards I 2. 9 5 . Skate Boards 7.95 to 24.00 BI k e R·e pa. Ir l·n g-P arts.-. Tire-Tubes ConYene AU Stan Court Casual Tennis Shorts Basketball Shoes I 0.95 6.95 • 8.95 • I 0.95 ConYene Slddgrlp Tennis Wilson Tenni s Shorts ' Sh 9 95 oes . . 9.95 & 16.95 Jac:k Purcell Tennis Shoes I 0.95 ~Tennis Shirts 6.00 • 9;00 • 9.00 Freel Perry Tennis Shoes 15 .95 Tennis Dresses-ladles Sllorts Tretorn tennis Shoes 17.95. Ladles Tennis Shoes 8.95 • 17.95 Adidas TttinJs -Shoes 22.95 · i.---·---22.95-=..:-----~==========;!I ' .. -_., ' , J I " , l I - • --' ' DA.lLY PROT EDITORIAL PA.GE McKenzie Appolnlmenl of Arthur R. McKenzie lo lhe Orange County Fair governi ng board should have a positive et· feel on the chilly relatlolllhlp between the fair and Cocla Mesa City Hall. McKenile 11 the firat Colla Mesan lo be appolhled to the board &iDce Robert Humphreys, a Democrat, was whisked out at the beginning of the Reagan era. Tbrou~hout Humphreys' tenn there waa a mood of detente. Coata MeUns were pleased to have "their man•• on the ~ and city councllmen were able lo use him aa a sounding board for their Ideas. ~ However the recent lack of representation by Costa Mesa on the fair board bu contributed to the steadily 6trained relationship between the two governmental agencies. There remaina a feeling among city officials that the fair board 'doesn't care about Costa Mesa be- cause the board is conatituted. exclusively by out-of- towners. .~ And,· conversely, the fair board: }>ictures city offj. cials as a threat, a • group trying to muscle' in on lair board jurlsdlclion. • Witb his background ,s Costa Mesa police chief and city manager, McKenzie knows a great deal about the community's hopes and concerns as wen as the inner workings of the city. He should represent Costa Mesa's lnlere.U well. The other members of tbe fair board, it is to be hoped, will find McKenzie a constructive link with city hall Yt'henever they have something important to com· municate to their neigbbon acro88 the street • Ill the Seat nol one, bul !Ive different color postcardJ which will be distributed in racks all over the Orange Coast area. Previously Costa Mesa was represented: in the postcard derby by only; an aerial abot which actually showed more of Newport Beach than Costa Mesa, and because of its dullness did no\ rate highly with postcard buyers. The new tcen.ics proposed in<llude the colorful Costa lrtesa city entrance sign featured on several thorough· fares at the city Um.its, the historical Estancla, a suiiset- drenched view' of city hall, and the community's fa· vorite gathering place, downtown Colla Mesa Cily Park. The choices of the Chamber of Commerce's Front Door Commit~e are excellent and its members are to be comm.ended for pusbing the postcards and thefeby stimulating increased communiiy pride. · Leading the Way . · \Vhen it comes to matters concerning Fairview Park, there is no group as enthusiastic, energetic and imaginative as the studen~ of Estancia High School. They proved their leadership by helpin-g push for ~,_..- acquisition of th·e park in the halls of Sacramento. They L set the tone for its future use as a wilderness-type park. • Most reeently, they bec~me the first to sketch out a mas· .. ·.·.··. G" :::;::;1 ter plan of development for the vast, unspoiled 257-acre site near their ~ampus: The development plan was drafted by students in .:'·.. . : -··· Gilbert Collins' nature studies class with technical advice ; ..... ··'·: · : of Estancia's Ecology Committee. It bas since been for· ~1:~'.:.i:-~:·. ·.'···: ···· .. ~ .. j .. ~:-" -.: ••'.· •. ' . warded to county authorities, who in turn, have asked ····:1:· ·,... · --· · , mendations into consideration. · ~%."''-1..'14~~;.~.::~: ~i :~ : . · · · ' .... Fro-n' t Door Adverb' sm' g park designers at Boyle Engineering lo lake their ricom· <'!f,,f,,'JJ.?i ·'. •. ':"\•::··:.:: .: . . .. . • •-------------------------=-------" .... ..+ 'r.om-an-imaginat-ive-design-approac•, the•----1-··f~~~?-.!;-~-·~·::,:,..~. : _,. · ·· •· It probably stUl won't be a l)_ousehold word, but studenrs:-hard work is evidenced by the fact thai'they l;~~~:~i~:.;:: .. :·' . .': .. _. ·'. ·:.'.: · .. .. Costa Mesa shofild be much better known around the conducted extensive soil tests and catalogued the park's ;:!:ft.~$~~,::.~:·~": .. -~ .-··. · . ' · · ~~0:'.ieb~o~~ ~:m:~:ii 'r>~~tathbe;fnn1:ec~~g~~:~ flora~~~f:vu:aihe final park design, Cost.a ?ifesa should :j;~:4;.:·::~~;S~~:;~::.~:~·.\-·., ... · : ··· ' . .. picture postcards from Costa Mesa. be proud· of jls Estancia students for taking such an Plans are now being completed for the printing of active role. c 6LOBE.TROTTER Special H_elp On Hardships Hard to Find WASHINGTON -A acathlng interpal memo has accused the Federal Energy Administration of neglecting the poor, the elderly and the disadvantaged whom · it had pledged lo help. The Special Impact Office, which was supposed to help hardship victims with . · their energy problems, was "created merely for politiatl expediency," the memo~es. The ~plosive memo cata1ogues alleged elamples or th e - - creeping lethargy. Here arc ~ high· . ~ghts : -·Berore .a sched- uled. a pifearance at a Senate Aging Com- miUee hearing, fed· e r a I energy czar John Sawhill called the Special Impa ct . Office to find out what they were dolnit for the elderly. The amwer, according to the memo, was "noth· ing." SawhiD's office lmitructed the hardship experts to start aome program he could tell the Senate about. The memo calls Sawhlll's subsequent testimony about how his ·agency was helping the elderly "a display of po I i t i ca I . manipulation of fact and Jn tent." -A survey was ordered of federally funded transportation systems that serve 1he elderly. IL was suppoaed to be completed by May 15, but Special Impa ct deputy chlef CUrtts Jones told us the results are still coming in. In any event, the survey doesn't cover Independent systems, which are more likely than federal systems to be cut back as a . result of the energy pinch. -JONES boasted that Operation ilarvest, an emergency program to help migrant workers obtain gas dW'inl the Dear Gloomy Gus Why must both the water district and the fire department test !ire hydrants at regular intervals, al· lowing precious water to now down lhe street? GOIN' THIRSTY 9"""" ... ClllJCllAll -........... ff ,....... .... Mt__,.., ....... .. ...... ef ..... .,_. Slollll ,_ ,.. ......... .....,. .... .,..., ,.._ Shortage, was "precedent setting." But the memo alleges that "the relief strategy, such as it was, was aMounced oo April f , over a month after the original petition. In the interim, the Arab oll embargo bad been mted and supply of gasoline to au -including migrants - ceased to be a major obstacle." -The gas shortage caused many perscnal tragedie1 that were ignored by the Special Impact Office. A paraplegic, for example, pleaded for help in· finding a reliable .IOW'ce of.,guoline. His special automobile • was hia only form of transportation. Every time he needed to use the washroom, he had to drive all the way home where he had specially equipped facilities. Yet as of this writing, bis letter hasn't even been answered. Coocludes the memo: "Unfortunately. the most pathetic and needy element of the population looks to our office for relief and is met with palliatives and political verbiage." THE FA-TE of the memo, written by Susan Silver, now resigned, itselr illustrates how the new, mushroom Federal Energy Administration has already developed into a bureaucratic bog. Ms. Silver told us the memo was supposed to go to energy director Sawhill, but he never got it. She then tried to make an appointment with the director, but was twice turned down. Finally, the enterpr!Sing critic slipped the memo to Mrs. Sawhill, her former ·college prof_essor. Thus, the energy czar finally "got the message, called lhe aulbor and promised action. The Honorarium Racket By WALTER .J. CAMPBELL Cootoltln«i -IDdastrlal Week We were reading the story In the newspaper about the hefty incomes .'Ome congressmen make on the side by we explain food stamps and welCare collecting fancy fees ror ma k l n g benefits for strikers? speeclles, when the telephone rang. The We also have listened to many of those .caller was an executive or a trade speeches for which subs tan LI a I association In Washington. Hts group is honorariums were given. Mostly, they ltheduling a huge convenUon ln Las were drivel prepa~ by a member of the Vegas in the fall and would like very congressman's staff-who'se salary is much to have me come out.and speak on paid by the tal)>lyen. "Free Enterprise-Key to the Future." An asaociate listening to Such a 1peech What would be my requirements? beclme Indignant. "You mean to tell me We. replied w~ would need travel that they pay that guy fl,500 to deliver eipenses and a modest honorarium that such hogwash?" We explabted to hini would amount-portal to portal-to that the speech was not the thing: It was considerably less than the federally whit ba~ later. You know that all ordained minimum wage. the tickets to the policemen's ball are nOI. "Well. Mr. Campbell, you know th~ is bought by people who like lo dance. an election year, and, u a .Tlatta-of WE REGRET 11IE practice of labor policy, all our honorariums and travel milooa and other well-heeled pressure mooeyi are rese~ for conaressmeo." group1 offering congresanen fancy fees WE LONG had been aware thal some as a kind of legal bribery. We believe It pressure .groupt regularly h i r e ls one more step in eroding whatever coogressmen to speak at their meetings integrity b ltll\ in government. at fees or '5,1'.m to .7.500. We have beard But whf.n the private 9eC'lor ldoptt the labor union leaders count t he same practice, •e ~ It even mort. congressmen they ·~own" (their' ttrm, If business and industry are to adopt not ours). the practice ol paying big honorariums to A congressman recelYiDa 1wral..sucb_~ressmen to lnOuence t b o s e honorarium• Uktly will take a more congressmen's votes, then let'a stop fa·vorable Vl@W on legislation l h e pratUing pompous platitudes about (ree presairc group Is backing. How else can enterprise. . ~ 'Last of tlae Luke Warm Lovers' For $8.50, Send B_roadway · Quality To the Editor: I just react. Tom Titus review of the Orange Playhouse's newe1t flop, "Born Yesterday," and while I disagree with Mr. Titus on a cquple of minor points, I wholeheartedly concur with h i s assessment of the star talent and the overall quality of production being offered by our so-ea.lied "proCessional" theater. Like Afr. titus, I have been in the opening night aOOience of b o th productions, "Last of the Red Hot Lovers'" and "Born Yesterday." I bi!· my tongue aft.er the first · play -true. Pat Paulsen's no Barney Cashman, but he ls a hometown boy, and ever the eternal optimist, I figured things could ooly get better once the theater's production schedule .got underway. But after Tuesda)i's ins u It i n g presentation, I must speak out. I don't like being played for a sucker. I'M THE FIRST to admit that Orange County needs a professional theater. But why should I · pay $8.50 to see a pro- duction that is (I) certainly not among the newest oHerings available and (2) no better than (if, indeed, as good as) most commwllty theater presentations I can see for $2.50 or $.1? If the producers at the -Orange Playhouse are going to continue tQ charge high prices, then it 's only fair to warn them that the caliber of their productions had best be equally high. Orange County audiences are more sophisticated than the P I a y b o u s e obviously gives them~credit for being. After-itS first week of production, "Lovers" attendance fell way off, because 1he quality of the production could not sustain a profitable three-week run. Word of mouth is critical to the success of any theater operation, and there is no indication that J'Born Yestenlily'' will be better accepted. IF nDS 1 trend continues, then the Orange Playhouse will be.forced to close its doors belore it's completed a full season. And if that happens, we may as well kiss_ profe.ssional theater goodbye in Orange County, for no one will ever get the big-money backing to reopen them. We must not let this happen ! Instead, we must convince the Playhouse that we're a di9Ceming-theptre-going public that demands quality professiooal theater at professional prices • • • that we1re not "hicks'" and we won't accept worse-than- amAteur work under the guise oC a prol'essional label. . The Playhouse isn't bringing us new shows. Its first·sea9Cll line-up I s comprised of shows which have been produced by the county's numerous commWlity a n d semi ·professional companies ror years. So they bad best be superior productions of those shows. Otherwise, we're better off giving $2.50 or $3 to a community playhouse to see the likes of "Born Yesterday," "The Owl and the Pussycat" or the three Neil Simon offerings this seam, "Last of the Red Hot Lovers," "Promls(s, Promises" and ''Come Blow · Your Horn." (How Quotes "The burglary of the budget is much more serious lh&n the burglary or the Democratic national headquarters." - Milwaukee Mayer Beary W. ~takr presldtnt of lhe National. Conference "Of Democratic Mayors, criticizing the Nixon administration's impoundmenl of urban flDlds. "In flfoscow there's a real hunt on for Jews. We are on the run. We are under siege. It Is not a vel')I, pleasant reeling lo hide away like a rat." -Alei:andtr Gold· fart., a J c"•lsh chemist. ( .... _M_A_IL_B_o_x _ _,,) Le!ters from rt"aders are ioelconie. Normally, writer.T ·should can"ey their messages in 300 words or less. Tl1e right to condense 'letters to fit space or eliminate libel is rese roed. AU. le t- ters must include signature and mail- ing address but names may be with· lield on Tt'qut'st if sufficient reas011 is apparent. POt"try wiU not be pulr lished. many times have· we seen tbt one?} Simply, I would sum up the Orange Playhouse's first season thus far by retitling Us flr.ot two productions, "La8t of the Luke Wann L<lvers" and ''Stillborn Yesterday." CARLA K. DOW Na Ba11daat• To the Edilor:- I disagree JWith your editorial urging the Costa Mesa City Council to get on with low·incxme housing. We're fortunate in Costa Mesa to have a city council that looks out for i1s taxpayers and Its own community, and we're glad they don 't go begging to the fede ral government for handouts that ultimately have strings attached. As soon as the government comes in \Vith aibsldles for low-income housing. it will 900l'I be dictating who can live in them. Already it ls moving whole families into local homes -and you and I are paying for thr..lr keep. With low· income ·housing, we would soon have a huge population moving in on welfare, more blight than we have now, more crime, more of every undesirable element. Let's consider finding housing for the few of our own elderly who need it, but let the able-bodied find their own. And let's keep the federal government out ot our local affairs. JACK HEYWOOD f'llOJ -tJoe f'aartfl To lhe Editor: ·On July f there was an article about fireworks by Jackie Hyman. ' She maintains that too many people are lnjlU'ed each year and that therefore llreworks should be banned, except hr "carefully supervised spec tac u I a r displaya." FIRST of all, it should be pointed 'out that the man she mentioned as an . example was injured 1 by a "cherry bomb,'' and unleu I am mistaken, those cannot be bought legally in southern Calilomia. Fireworks can be and are for the moll part safe and sane. Beskies, they are fun and one of a very few tradltlON this nation ha• I do think that their sale 1hould be controlled : e.g. allow only thole II or older to buy them. 1bat w:IU inlure needed supervision. If-there are thole (like Jackie Hyman) who are afrakl of "getting fired upon- once a year" then all they must do is remain at home on J'Uly 4th and avoid the rist. But it 1ttma silly to me to ban firewort1 entirely limply becau1e a tiny fractk>n of people are lnjured while using them. BaM.ing fireworks for that reuon is as loiical 81 banning the sale or dartboard sets for the same reason. Or skatebolrda. Or even bicycles. Think of &II the people every yea r who are killed or illjured wtllle riding bicycles. TO ME, the fun and exclttment or fireworks justify the _tale and use of --~·-------~-1· fireworks even in Nev.·porl Beach. I have been here for almost 19' conseculive Fourth of Julys and I have yet to be "fired upon." I like rireworks and I think we should keep them. CHRISTOPHER G. McKF.NZIE Toacl1h1g Sloru To the Editor : Tonighl, July ti, "'hen I \\'as reading the Daily Pilot. I saw that the Pilot Logbook was written by Jo Olson. Since ?ifs. Olson is a goOO writer and I enjoy reading her articles, I decided t.o read it. As usual, the story (about Selma ?.forrison, an aspiring poet who died at 59) was well written and I'm sure it touched the hearts of all who read it. When I got to the end. I was crying because 1· see myself in both Selma Morrison and Jo OISQn. Like Selma, I enjoy writing, and like Jo, enjoy making other people happy . The moral that Ms. Olson put in her story can never be said too much. It is: Never put off a chance to brighten up anyone's life because that life may not be there to touch tomorrow. Thank you, Jo Olson and Selma ?.1orrison. MARCfE KIRSCHENBAUM The A111erka11 Way To the Editor: It seems to me not only ironical but ill· advised that fircy,·orks are allowed to be sold in Orange Counly and yet shoe.ting them off is prohibited even in so safe an area as Aliso Beach with its unusually \vide sweep of sand and the whole Pacific beyond it. ARE PEOPLE instead supposed to shoot them ()ff surreptitiously in resi· dential d i s tr i c ts with serious !ire hazard? Or up in the hills with extreme fire danger in all that dry brush:' Isn't it about time for a more realistic approach before the next Fourth of July? Let us hope that bull-horns and beach patrols will no longer be heard and seen on Aliso Beach prohibiting youngsters and their parents from shooting off sparklers and flower pots in celebration of' this most ~rican of holidays. Or have, bull-horns ·and patrols at Aliso Beach now beOOme the American way? WINIFRED PAU!ER Spirit at '76 To the F.ditor: I strongly support the suggestion ma.de by Newport Beach Councilman John Store for a "picnic, parade and patriotic speeches" for 4th of Jul y 1975 as a "dry run" for 1976. Councllman Store attcndt'd this year's celebratioo at Mariners Park \l'hich was 1»sponsored by Mariners PFO ::ind the city PB and R Department, and evidentl y he. believes that this prilject Is worttt expanding on and repeating Y:ith much greater city and citizen participalion. I attended this function "'ilh our family and , though di sappoirited by 1 he relatively small turnout, fee.I that It was a successful first errort and one which cah grow tremendously given adequate s-upport and endorsement by city council and better publicity. t believe that the lime ls now to reinstill our laith in America, reaffirm our loyalt y and inculcate this fa it h and a feeling of pride in our youth, WE HAVE, of c o u r I e, been tre- mendously disappointed that Newport Beach has not put on Its own fireworks · display in the past fe\\' years as it used to do so successfully.. I :im not convinced that this will completely tillay the problem or illesal use or flrewoi-ks by others: however, it docs provide an alternative and also offers a most entertaining evening. The temptation for some to buy "safe and sane" fireworks when they are so easily accessible (with the profits going for very worthwhile causes/agencies) is too much for many to resist. I for one. earnestly hope that 'the City or' Costa ~lesa will assume the authority and re;sponsibility to ban fireworks there also as 1 see this as a major step In alleviating Newport's problem . KAY BROWN f'a11r•letter Words To !he Editor: Re the column of July 9 by Mr. Murphine, "Sticker Ban Sticky Issue ": It's quile obvious that the article dealing with my efforts to ban obscene bumper stickers had a total disregard for the facts. IL mentioned that I wanted to stop the printing of all four-letter v.·ords. That's just not true. ~ly intent is si mply to stop the use of obviously obscene stickers, not the use of stickers that may just be considered off-color. PEOPLE should always maintain their fre€dom of speech and right of expressi,on but not if they are going to have total disregard for the rights of others, Many citizens are disgus ted by that type of verbiajl'.e. It implies that by banning such sticke rs, it 's going to "cause a real problem for the bumper sticker industry". Hog Wash! The dictionary is full ~or words that do not offend citi1.ens. I'm surt; most of the bumper sticker indu_stry realizes their responsibility to the general public, so do not be so irresponsible as to attempt 'to make others believe that immorality begins with the bumper sticker makers. ·You would do well to purchase a bumper sticker that has long been a favorite ·of mine. It reads, ' 'A Responsible Press Has No Opinions-Just the Facts Please~" DAVID H. PARKs f!:laicers Welcomed To lhe F.ditor: Why not thank the Balboa residents for planting flowers oo public beach areas adjoining their homes-instead o f persecuting them ? What'~ wrong' wjth trying to beautify an area? 'We. bicyclists enjoy very much everything they have done. It seems to me lawyers and cour\s could be used for more important "criminal" offenses. ' LOIS DUITMAN OlAN•E COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, P1'bUsher Thomas Keevil, Editor Barbara Kreibich Editoriat Poge Edito r The editorial .,page or the Daily Pilot ~ks to inronn and ,;UmuJare readers by prescntfna; on this page 1 dlvene•t'Ommentuy on topics of in-· lertst by syndicaled colu.mnistl and cartoonists. by providing a forum for ~aden' ~·1 and bf preRntinir thi• newsp1p&'1 opinlo!'Ls and ideu on curTent topics. The editorial opi9ionl o! the Daily Pilot appeAr only tn the editorial column at the 1op ot. the Jll\81!. Opirdons e~~SllCd by tht ool· umnilts and cartoonists and letttt ."'1'itm art thtir own and no endortew mmt of their viilro'S by the Daily ~ .. - Wednesday; July 17, 1974 I ' t I ···' Hearings .Refi1 sed On Milk Pricing SACRAMENTO (API - stm tpicWbn officials have -"' hold bearings Oil redld>I mllk prices clespl te the fact 40 le1t1lators ·reqaeol<d them, i... """"1n<r """psay. S po kesmen for ' the Califomia aur.en A c t I o n Group and Fight ln/latlon ,......... (ITT! said Tuellday tho! the lawmaken bad •lcned a petition asking for the hearings. They said C. B._Chrbt..-., director of the 1 t a t ,e Department or Food and Agricultun, turned down .the reci-1- Qiristensen sakt in a telephone Interview that he wanted to watt foi legislative reoammeolatkm on the milk pricing -elute b e I o r e boldJDC bwJnaL "We \\-OU\d prefer to \\-'ait for the oommittee." The two consumer groups' have been battling publicly with st.ate agrlcu1ture officials since Christensen approved a five-cent per half gallon retail price liike last March. The price hlke 00..ted minimum i-icei to between 68 and 75 cenu a hall gallon statewide. * * * Co1is rt1ner Grortps Rap Director 111 Co•rt Cher Bono, 28, of the singi ng . an!i comedy,· team "Sonny and Cher'' was in~ Superior Court Tuesday for divorce. proceedings from Son~ SACRAMENTO CUPll -A ny, 39. The pair argued top state a gr l cu It u r.,e over division of their department official has denied. property and custody a charge by a consumer of their daughter, coaliUon group seeking 8 milk _c_I_ia_s_ti_ty_._4_. ____ _ price reduction that "the dalry industry has a straeglehold on Sacramento." P a vment Set ,/ . ' _w~ .. ~~~w~·~'·~J~·~''-1~7~·~19~7~·~~~~~~~-D-•l_LY~P_IL_OT~=$ I }fay or's !Jaughter Cliarged $400,000 Ransom; 2 Held ·in· Ki dnap LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Phyllis Bradley, 29. daughter of Mayor Tom Bradie,, was ' charged Tuellday with beln& part of a cocaine 1ellin1 rlng. The Sheriff'• Department brought • felony cbargo of "oonsptracy to tu r r. Is h cocaine" a g a l n s t Miss Bradley, and re1ated charges against three other persona. P.fiss Bradley ls sUll facing· charges of assaultin!( a ~lice. officer rrom an incident June 21, when she allegedly had to be manacled hand and foot after kicking and clawing officers who chased her auto when she sped away frQm a traffic violation. She was convicted In 1967 ot stealing clothea from a car and 1n 1'12 of marijuana posseakln. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The FBI has klenti!led one ol two men arrested Jn connection with the disappearance or the son ol a Palm Springs man u the youth's marijaa n a auppller. Jn an FBI artldavlt unsee.led Tuesday by U.S. ));strict Colrt Judge A. Andrew lfauk. it was revealed tllat the g~Irriend ol Candidate · Campaigns ,Jn tl1e Nude TV Wk show host Merv Griffin, 49, plans to leave the hospital to-day .!or home and will LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Saying she "is the only start work again on can<fidate with nothing to Monday. He was hos· hide," Elizabeth Ke.athly, the pitalized six days ago Pe.ace·' and Freedom party A SPOKESMAN b the with pneumonia which candidate for govern 0 r , mayqr's office said Bradley was attributed to ex-walked nude down the beach would have "no comment until haustion. Tuesday. such time u the court -----------Miss Keathly campaigned proc-.g. are oompleted." . amoog the nude sunbathen Deputies said Jameo Riley, Track Sued there. ~ilo are '•ced by • city 29, and his wife, Ann Marie, council edict, expected to take 2'6, a1so charged. in the effect later tM we et , missing l&-yeal'-Old Lawrence Detroit lnduslrlaliat ROOerl R. Adell tol.4 FBI agenta that Adell, and demanded tllM he the yooth aald he wu g<>Jns to leave $!00,llJJO in amall bills at meet "Angelo" lo obtain a a spedfied loco-Adell aid pound ol marijuana julll he did ao -timt1, but aid before he dllaPl'eonid. that ljie -Y -nevor One ol the two men arrested claimed. .Jn c:onnection with the boy'• 'Ibo. yuu1h'1 girllriend. l&- dl>appearance waa Angelo )'MN>ld Franc... Goot<S, lnciso, 11, ol Cathedral City, aald In tho atrldavlt that she Identified as an allea:ed former was· wiCh young Adell at a • OUcago labor racketeer. Palm Springs colfee lhop J11ne lnclao and Hugh McLeod I wh<n he aald he was Pheaster, -41, of Long Beach, "leavtng to meet Angelo to were arraigned Monday before obtain a pound ol marijuana, a U.S. magistrate an charges and he would return 1n a few ol conspiracy lo kidnap and minutes." extortion. The youth did not return, The t\llO allegedly cootacted and haa not been seen since be the boy's father, re ti red left the' coffee lllhop. ...-~~-·1-H~E -BE~s-1====~==:: 11l1dlo. of PERSIAN RUGS pt•"" od -... NEWPORT BEACH ..... -11y . ...,ac TUE SENATE Agrk:ulture and Wale< O>mmiu.e held heetklp on ·the s t a t e ' s complicated milk pric Ing system earlier this year but has made· no fo rm a l recommendatiOM~ said convnittee chairman Howard Way CR-Exeter ). Jed Adam., state milk ..marketing administrator in the Department of Food and Agriculture, Tuesday denied the charge made by Ruth Vanatta of Fight lnflation Together and called I t "sensationalism." complaint, had aold three B y Cycl;st onlet"ing arrests for nudity. gram. of c o c a in e to .. " "f feel that nudity is a For Buo gillg undercover olfioeri I a S·t matter o{ personal preferenCe e Friday and that they had · LOS ANGELES (UPI) and that individuals don't have AUCTION SUNDAY JULY·21st-2PM 'The state has set minimum milk prices at farm, wholesale and retail )e\•els since Ule 1930.. pl'tl(lli8fd \o bring four pounds The Indian Dunes motorcytle ·the rigbt to impose the1r VE NT UR A (AP) more to sell for $68,000. track in Valencia was named ·values m other Jndividuals,'' Recording the .prlvilq:ed. Investigaton said that when as defendant in a $500,000 she said, passing out handbills. . . Richard Spohn , a spokesman for I.he California OtJzen Action Group, said lawmakers requesting t h e hearini\ included Assembly Speaker Leo P.fcCarlhy (0-San Francisco l ; former Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti (!>-Van Nuys). and Senate Democratic F.1oor Leader George ?tfoscme (!>-San Francisco). conversations of hl'O attorneys the pair returned to make the damage suit filed Tuesday by "There j,, nothing aggressive and two clients is going to cost tramaction, they were , a 11.year-0\d girl motorcyclist about this behavior as opposed Wt...,.....__. .w & .. awl••r• .. ....., ..... • Prtolow I P.M. , Ms. Vanatta leveled the charge after the department turned down a petition for a hearing on the coalition's .request to cut milk prices. a Ventura County. sheriff's arrested by officers who found from Glendale. to many other politicians, who ... •lit ,._.. .....-t.r .. W .. _.,, I I •..., deputy his job. · the fow: pounds of cocaine to Donna Hom alleged in the presume to run olher people's & -.. All ,-.. .. ~ • _.. ..._.. ,._ • ._ .. A Superior Court jury be flour or a similar bulk SuperiorCourtsuitthetrack, livesforthem." '11•,.,_•tlll'~~ ...... ,... .... ordered James Koooti to pay substance. due to negligen&, was She challenged Edmund G. "This is the third time in four months th a t he IAiriculture llir1!dor C. B. Cllristensen) has refused ID llear the evidence. $3,IXMI lo each of the plaintin. The Rlleys .. 1d M 1 s s responsible ror injuries she Brown Jr., the :l&-year-old NEWPORTER INN, 1111 J •. ,. K in a civil suit -Asst. Public Bradley had furnished the suffered .July 22 when she ran b ache Io r who is the AUCOI tHC.12131990.291q Defender Kenneth Cleaver, original three grams of into an umnarked barbed wk'e Demoa'atic · carididate fo r ..,__ clledi • c,... c.,._ Deputy Public Defender Paul. _:c~'°'~c:a~b~ne:_,_.'!d'!;!eputle5~!'~a~d~d~ed~.-''-_!'.fe~l1C<l~. ______ _..:_ _ _l!go~v~emo~~r,~t~o~a~"~nll(ud~e~de~ba~te::·~"~::::::::::=============:::::::::~ Onistensen said he had received a list of legislators Yt00 had signed pet.it.ions but did not get signatures. ''This '.l'Wld not make much difference though," he said. ••rt is now clear that the dairy industry has a strangle- hold on Sacramento in the .same .way it controls \Vashington," Ms. Vanatta said. Clinton and James D:lnaldsool· and LU\ian McC\intock. 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Datb Shop, ikdroom Aca:sso.i:ics SbopMQlldar ibna Friday, 10:00 a.m. 10 9:30 p.m. I Bullock's Santa Ana, I F"hion Square,.2800 N. Main S<rcc1, Sarua Nia, TelephOOc: )47-72ll lja<urday, 10:00 ...._to 6:00 p.!n.· llullocl:'s South Coast Plw, San Die.go Frttw11 at llri1tol,..CC-Mesa, '!elcpbooe:-)~6-0611 • -· • -. . --