Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-21 - Orange Coast Pilot.. -•· . - -·I'! - . - ,_. .... •. ·>.~,l .• .. _: .. -· . .. ' ~ , .. .. -~Jlar Rea~ting ~To--:~Wild 1lu111ors~~ ~-. Hits Be~Md Lows, "' ' j ' ... ~sualey ,:.f~-~b!~.p~~t~-:3 .Y·. 'f , . i.Cra:sh. Site~ jD ·So-pin· Viet ~-1 .... ' ... ••• .• •• -. ' ' .... I • • ' I ' ' : ~b'Gicair; 'l'!WrandY.l;P> .:.: Th<~ ;,--soplits said; -liilWeVel', none .wit , ·IP! lodiclUOll. that any·""1~ritans listed discovered at any of tbe wr>eks. w.' Id ~. ~ acttbn. in Soutbe:ast Asia The iiifonnaUon about findings at ">1¢< atlll allv!'; .Bng. Gen. Robert C. crash sites would be communicated -.~ngston hid toClly. . ' ·!";.;:~oa , bi!eds> the Joiitt casualty throUgh . regular mllltary ~nels to 1he 1~solutton~ter,.a t7Ht>an unU charg· nest of kin of 1he m"'1 involved, be said. .• ~ wl\h."loc'1inl!-c:rulcslles '"'1 ·111'1* He explained ·tbat-relatl!_"'·of'men·lostln· {·Cld~er!41b0 remains of Americans sir craahes oftep kntiw1 whete their "1~1.ln·~· planes went down tb}ougb cor-··•tt\J;r)le: .. r.~ b;ls ,listed I', 30 O reipoc)dence with other men in the units. -~·d.:tnisilng In actlot»and·bils · · ·' . · "'~ . ..-t;ioo ~ad, allll&ugh .u,detalli. an:.~.1rema~r· ~~ir -alnl !Jave not lletn· r«:i>v~. Ibis '!oWd "get the nut of kin v.ry 1111· '"'~ton"' '>fd hla JJ'ien ·have ~ i~~/1 he said. 11:We are not going to· an-;~eej}r•'!»oltes In South 'lletnam. i.it nounot wbelfJer ,.. "'"'1d, remains or • :.at ~ 10 -dlsclole whetbet;_IDl',.,_ • not." :~~rf!"''~:e-r.~ ~Jdait1nld~4'1:.. ~.. ••• • ··.-, ...... ·-... -... Dollar· Bits Depths Due 1,oRumors ·LONDON (AP) -Gold soared to record prices iri. Europe today and the U.S. dollar dropped .to new lows as a result of speculation that the \Vatergate scandal would tOrce President Nixon to resign. In Zurich, gold ·shot to a record $113 an ounce, up $'7.50 from Friday's close and $2.50 above the record set there last Tuesday. Swiss · banks, which buy pd sell for Mlddle East oil interests, international cori>orations and wealthy individuals, have been active in the gold market in the past.two weeks. In London, the world's biggest b¢1.ion center, gold was traded at $l12.50 an oun- ce, up $7 from Fridafi close. The previous record in l..oodon; set last Tues- day, was •11i. •• · The 'd.lnii·Th<!BnWlti!. 'hiorecor~ lows ' ' ' in Frankfurt and !'Vis and weakened sbarpiy hl.molit othlk-~ ~em! In Paris, the u.s.r.ctttrifiCy'\. sank to 4 . .000 commetcial rrancs,'"below the 1o..,. of 'the Febru.,Y inOoetary '<r.~ wheo the dollar was devflued. One ~ing soorce said while ti>\\' tali' that )11%ql might reslgn was 001.y rumor,·~· "tffe market is •extremely nervous an4 . )n.. clined 1o react to lhe wildest rumon:" · In Frankfurt, the· dollar dropped to 2.M30·marks. -·~ , ·: · •, · In Looclorl, the l>OJllld jumJ;ill moili than two cents,. trading at sz.5742 by mlil· morning, u~ from $2.5512 Ill~ Friday. •The dollar was a!lo wea{er In Zurl!;!t and , i,lilaq, In'i•Zurlcb II 'bQugbt~·Ql!jy, 3.Ul25 Swiss ' ,....,., compared ·'!Ith (See GOLD, Pap t) . . . , .All ~Q.f:f~JB£.$i~ .. :No · REPE4T EFFORTS ' ' f • -flt .J'PERGA..TE SET Re1riger~tor Stolen I ' • ,v, " ' -· • ' . · ·In· Niguel 1Bn..i.Jary . ''U at • .!Jrlt ...... " Advertisers often do .. OR MORE TV . -i;; ~lllO:ll!d ~tile fig! try wben they try a ; >' ,. , . · A brand,...,.refrtgeralor and other kit· · Dell(l'lliit d~ ~ant ad. Look what -' HEit-YORK . (UPI) -Tlil> msjor chm• aP!lllan«i with a total value of happened her~, ,1<1 r.~vislon netwarb .WUl .ag~·!l"Ye liv., ,•-iim--.tolm daJ:IQc the ~ b¥ l 1 • ~ Bit to beocti -, tiolut '"; erage of tl)e -_Serilte Waletp~,r. .. blll'gla~ mllt lntO s=,.Nlpei • • 'Jiiid, 'i •• br, ooior~ tiln- n wh«> the bearft)p_~ ~y home uuuer c!onatrucl)<irt, County • • deck,~ 1)90. (~No.) 7·1.m. PDT.. • Sborlll'a alllcers said. , i . . , , , Jn addition, ·the Na!lonil Broadcssting ' Deputlcl aald the 1oM was reporledol b~ • 1IJe 11ou ... wu rented 19' the 'FU\sT ''· pany has scheduled a one-llour news conlractor Cou~y Plat~ 62, 2111• -who saw tt. Try calling your ad· ~ lntden cut a wldilow ..,._ to gain .,,_ .. .....:~ R dir I It . .., u71 . ~ on Wat•raate at 7 p.m. Pl>T Alla Laguna. Plitt ~ lbetn that In-v1oor and ohe'll try her best to help you .~ -•Y· lry to the cme al 'l3811 Sblcklotoo !ale. ·~ er "' ne 11 ~-• . ;:, " _, •• • . • -~ ._,_ ·-. ' .... ~ ., • . ·' .<~ 'J ·-p .......... • .. . . ., . ' . ,... -~ ~~ . ' . "''·' .. . - • --• .. .. . ·---. • "' -• --~ . ·- . .. . :.. ..... ... .-· •• i:;.. ·. -" Soviet Jet Plait~{: ..:c-." ;· Departs El Tor_~·:: . ' . -~·· After Coast To1•r:~ 'i • " • ' ans ·~~~~'t' -•r· .. ~ -· , __ ----· ..... -t· . No Coast Link Headless Man Found In Oilfield in Carson · · By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tllt Dffly ,1 .. 1 Slffl CARSO N -The murder of a young man whose headliess body was found in an oilfield llere Saturday is not linked to the string of mutilation murders that have occurred in this area, police said to- day. Detective Brad Phelan of 1he l.<ls Angeles Police Department said the man who was found Saturday was apparently the victim of a robbe!'y. "There is no relationship between this killing and the others we are in· vestigating," Phalen said. 'Ibe ·others Phalen referred to are a string of four mutilation murders in Soviet · Officials Leave · El T oro After Area Visit A four-.engine Soviet jet plane about the size of a Boeing 707 .left El Toro Marine Corps Air Station this morning on runway 25 headed over Irvine enroute back to Russia. The plane carried about 50 Russian security experts · who spent two-days , along the Orange Coast looking at the Western Wfiite House. • The visit is in preparation for some ''future, possible" visit by high Soviet of· ficlal,, an El Toro spokesman said. It was believed tbt security evaluation ma:Y have related to the possible visit to ' San Clemente in late June of Soviet . leader Leonkl· Brezhnev, who ,js schedul· 1 ed first to meet with the President in Washingtorr, 'D:c; ·· .-· The Russian agents' IL 62 transport plane parked in a pQrtloo pf the El Toro field normally reserved by t h e Presld•nt's pllllle. . Due to its size and Weight, the plane u .. ed. lhe east.west rurlway, on its retum to an undisclosed. honle base. Ships 0 1,"dered Out • • LONDON (AP) -Iceland demsnded today lhat Bflt81n immediately withdraw its navy vessels from disputed fishing grounds off Iceland as the cod war between the two nations has escalated . which . the victim,, were homosexually assaulted. Phelan said the , Los An~el!s coroner has confinned that the · latest murder victim ·had not been aexuaU~ anaulted and he was 'found·fully clothed. . · PoliCe from flve agencies In ttie· Los Angeles Harbor area and weatem·Orange County are aWI invesUgaUn& the bizarre mutilation murders . In which· only one of the four victims has been identified. Thou victims · are· ·Ed.Waid Daniel · Moore, 20, whose bOdy w.ls found Dec. 26 in Seal Beach; a·'young man found Feb. s · in the Wilmington 'Area ; ·anoiber ,young man found April 14 In Huntington' Beach and a young man whose 'dbmimbere<l corpse was found sc"atter~. throughout the Harbor area and In Swl.set Beach. 1 1'f)o Coast · Men Save Neighbor's Life in Blaze • Two Huntington Beach r.en were credited with saving the life of a neighbor who they dr!lgged unconscious from his burning honie early Sunda~ mom Ing. <llules Tough, 55, ol 8142 Danburh Cir· cle, was taken to Paclftca Hoepltal and· treated for smoke Inhalation. He was transferred to Long Beadl Veteran's Hosplt81 where he Is scheduled to be released today . Tuugb wa1 rescUed from his flaming livlhg room iat about 1: 15 a.m. Sunday morning by Robert I.bog and· Ray garver .. FireQ)en credited t~ two. men · with 1avin1-'1"?Ugh11 life: ·· · • ' · The fire which threatened Tough's life· began, according to firemen, when a cigarette smoldering in a living room aofa caught, fire. · T~gb's wife· managed ·to nca'.pe the' bumlng home with flnt degree burns·on b<r ·right hand . and some smoke ·ln- halallen: She was treated · and released !<om P.acifica. • Firemen had \be fire bnder control in five minutes and ostlmated ~be ze did 13,lOO damage. lo the .living ·. Nelghter Lon& • .who llveo a MU Dan- bury Clrcle, nor Garver, wlio lives at~ 84&1 Danbury Clrclei reported any in- juries In rescuing their nelal\bor. .· . -.. ~-• ., Financier Vesco Fails To Show Up , NEW .YORK (lJ~) -Fonner cabinet men\bers John N. Mitchell and Maurice I Stans pleaded innocent today to charges of perjury and conspiracy in connectkm with a $200,000 gift to President Nixon's re-election campajgn from a~ financier wbo1 "fl&S Wlder federal invest.igaUon. The financier ,8nd codefendent, Robert I L. Vesco, 38, did not appear to enter a plea and a warrant was Issued for bis II'· rest. Vesco ba.i left 1he OOWllry and last was rePorted id C.Ot8 Rica. I A fourth defendent, prominent New 1 Jersey Republican Harry L. Sean alto ' pleaded innOctnf. ' ' 1 AMlstant U:S. Attorney John Wing· ask· eel that a penoual reoognizanoe bond of $1,000 be pooled' for each defendarit. But I Judge· John Cannella rejected the ap. pllcitldn--.nct rel(Ued 1be defendanls In 1 their' .own custody. · -~ pale and shaken, MilcbeU and bis blwyen had to-push a path thn>ugh reporters who mobbed them-as they u-1 llnd al. the C9W'll!ouse. Mitchell's mi, oommerita to ·a barrage. ol ques&iona were, "Good momlnj. How are you? I'm -<See M1tt:a41, Piji's• I ' -• I ' ' ,0r..,. ·. Weadter Cout ·The Los Angel.. weather service A1I the SUll' will break tl!roo&!> U-low clouds on Tuesday rcir , the first time In 11 days. Mostly sonny afternoons are e.ipected tor the rest of the week. Highs of 68 at the beacbea, rising to 74 inland. . IN~ll,tE TODAY "Tht \Valtons," TV's surprise Iii&. of tht staaon, and tht JuUt Andrt101 Hour, canultd m mi'.a. set\.Ton, 1har1d. top honor1 at ~ annMal E'IJ'tntl award prc:.sent0- tion1. See Poge ~ for oU-IM dc- t4ils, l..M. ...,, , ...... ·11 C.tltlnlla I Ca.•lflt41 D·H • c-k• 11 c,..._. 11 OM!tll "9tktt I ........ , ,... . •"""1•llM'Mllt .. 1. ,ia.c. , .. ,, uw1111r• u .... .......... 14 • J' -. J DAllY 1'11.0T s Skylab Crew Sets Friday Repair Job HOUSToN (UFJ) -With 1 ftlaht director ~lcting "tbey11 fix us up," the three Skyla:b I astropeuts step up their final training today for an un- precedented attempt Friday lo repair the wotld1e lar&est spaceship. The latest plan ts for the crewmen to cool the o\lerheated 1~ce station by n;. tend.in&: a silver and white paruol, a "beach umbrella" large enough# cover a two-car garage, through an -cf'i;ht·lnch· square alr\od<. Before jhey do that, Charles .. Pete"' Conrad, JOO<plt P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weltz plan to open the hatcn or their Apollo command module, reach out with something akin to a tong boat hook and atlempt to free one of Skylab's two jam- med power generating solar cell wings. 111 think we have a fairly good chance of doing that," flight director Nell Hutchinson said ln an Interview SUnday ni&ht. "If we can ge~ the sOlar curtain up, and lhat wing out, we're back in bllliDesa. ·We're set." George B. Hardy, a chief Skylab engineer, said operaUon of only one of the two stuck solar panels would give the bfg space station enough extra power to conduct a normal mission and support thrte crews as originally planned for a total of 140 days in space . .. I'd say that would take us right back to the top of the world," he said at the J6hnson Space Center. The astronauts, scheduled for launch at 9 a.m. EDT Friday, will intercept Skylab 7 hours and 41 minutes later and show engineers at the center and viewers around the world what the station look9 like. They will attempt to free the solar wing Friday and then get a night's sleep in their Apollo before enlering £kylab and raising the umbrella. Conrad will call 'the signals in orbit. Hutchin300 said, "I couldn't think ot a better guy I'd want In a position like this. I suspect they'll fix us up." Aller honlng their space piloting skills in a command ship trainer and reviewing the parts of Skylab's new parasol, the three astronauts plan to fly to Huntsville, Ala., tonight to get in one final practice session in a 40-foot-deep, I.4 million gallon water tank. By floaling submerged w:itb special breathing _appara~·the QJ.lrooatuq; can, &bnulate weightle&!lness. 'ntey will prac-- tice raising two versions or a large awn- ing - a l)Otentlal backup skylab remedy that woUfd require work In open !J)llce. Hardy said the 2Z by 24 foot umbrella1 which can be erected safely from inside the spece station, ts the prime candidate for the job. But In case the small airlock in the wall of Skylab Is covered by debris from the ship's ripped meteoroid shield, the astronauts wouJd resort to raising the awning during a !!pacewalk. The three crewmen plan to fly from the Marshall Space Flight tenter in lfuntsviUe Tuesday evening to Cape Ken· nedy for final preparations for their lwice-<lelayed fltgtit up to the 271-mile· high orbitlng iaboratory. Frot1t Pflfle 1 GOLD ... ~.1485 at the clOl!ie Friday. Gold broke past $100 last week in a surge of speculation partly triggered by the Watergate scandal and fears that it 'vould undermine President Nixon's plans to control inftation in the United States. That wave subsided by Thursday, the price of gold began to decline and the dollar improved. 'The trend was reversed at the opening of the markets today after a weekend durin& which some British newspapers carri~JSpeculaUve stories that the .scan- dals {D Wa!hington might force the President to resign. Some dealers said the nlarkets were made more uneasy by a report that the President's chief foreign policy adviser, Henry Kissinger, might resign. OU.NH COAIT IT DAILY PILOT Til.t OflflOI CHtl DAILY l'ILOT, Wllll wt.1(;11 It ~111111 l'M N1.,...l'r111, It Pl/lltl\1114 ~y w. Or•tlO• ~·t P'ub1wi1"' c~.,. hll'I· rite IClll!Otll 1r1 Pllllollolttd. MDndly 111•11111~ ,,11f1y. lor Coot1 NIHI, New~rl fUtc:h, H1>nllf>C1llHI llta<hl,IUnll ln Vtl11y, Llfl""'I •wct1. ,,...,lnl1hddlftlldl _,.. .. n c~ .... ni./ lln J.,.n C11111rr1M. A 111'4.. ...1-1 .011i.n Jo ~·~ s.iw.i.,,. Md """"'~r•· TM pr1N:1p.a1 llll.lbtl'"'"' ,i.m 11 11 m w..1 .. ., &lf"Mf, CMll N\11.t, Ctllfomll, .. ff. lt\1ri N. W,,,4 l'A'lldtnt 11111 P'Wllllllr J1clr It. C11rley \"kt l''*lffnl t!\111 o-J1l M-..r Tllon11, 1(,,.,11 ..... 'Tl!t11t4' A. M11•,.i11• MIMllft9 fdllw Chtr4e1 H. lee1 lllch1r.J ·r. Nill ANIMIM Nllflltllftl ••I...,_ """• 0.1• M•1 :IJt Wtll • ..,. Str .. I Nft'llll'l'f htdlr nn ff.....->tf ....,tev•l'll ~teldlt m ,_, •-~..., ... at.ell! ,,., • ._,. ""''"" .. 1M ~I aM Nw1tl II (Mnlne lllwl Tfll s' I (7141 641-4111 Q "W .u..tl .. MJ.1611 .,. ClelMI ,,,.... ...... i...tillM .... tlfl-44ff ,_,..,...,,..... ~ ~ -tut c.....,,.11111~ 1t7i. ar.ntt c-t '"'-'a... c-111• '" -,..,-..., 111ii.1nl1M1;. ... ,.,... .....""' .,. ---'~ ....,. l'IWIJ .. f~ •"""'1 ..... -"'!Hlerl M cwrrllM .....,.. .,_,. CIMf ""'"' ..W 11 COiie ...... c.tllfllf11ll, ......... W Uff'W .... -'htrl 11¥ -H t:J.lf -IM'i'I inllltWY t!Ht!Mtllnl 12.61 lflltlfWf'. I Ul"I T1l1phcllo Medical Family The Guyton family of Jackson, Miss., are doing their part to he lp lhe doctor shortage in the nation. Posing on the steps of Harvard Medi· cal School are (from top) David' (Class of 1969), Robert (1971), John (1973), Steve (1975), Cathy, who will atlend the medical school this fall. and Jean, a Radcliffe sopohomer who's mum on her career plans. Desegregation Appeal Nixed by Supreme Court WAStilNG'tQtl (AP) -An equally divided Supreme C6urt . t.OOay denied a Richmond, Va., di!trtct judge the power to reach ·into suburban counties to desegregate inner city schools. There was no written deeision from the court and no word as to how its members voted in affirming an appeals court decision that earlier had overturned the district court order. An equally divided court '3Ulomatically affirms an appeals courj..-decision. In ()ther actions tod~. the court: -Held that stiffer punishments are constitutional in retrials. -Ruled lhat the National Labor Rela- Uons Board has no authority l.o determlne the reasonableness of wtion 1 fines a&ainst members. Juetlce Lewis F. Powe11 Jr., a long- time member of the Richmond school Beach Official Opposes Change In ·Sm·f Rules City AdminJstrator David Rovvlands has recommended against any change in lhc summer surfing regulations or Pacific Coast Highway parking meter prices In Huntingt~ Beach. Qty councilmen will consider both is- sues tonight, during their 7 o'clock meet- ing. On May 7, nearly 100 surrers filled the council chambers to ask for an casing of the surfing ru~s around the city pier. They also asked that the 25 cent.:.: per hour meter price on the coast h1gh- way be reduced to 10 cents, at least near tbe Bolsa Chica blu!B . The current sur!iDg ruJe says no surf· Ing from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., June lS to Sept. 10. Under the bluffs:, however, surfing is allowed all day, all year. Surfers, Jed by Rus Calisch of Inter- national Surfing Magazinl'.!, :lsked the city to install a ''black flag" syslem which would leave it entirely up to life- guards to detide when surfers might en- ter the water. Jn a three-page explanation to the City Council, Rowlands says the city controls 3.2 miles of beach. of which 1.5 miles have no surfing cootrols. "We certainly sympathize with the surfers' request that during the"summer there are a few days that the ratio of surfer to S\\·immcr is qu cstlonnable,'' he \vrites. "•Iowever, this occurs very rarely l'lnd it is usually accompancd with ab- normal weather conditions.'' Howlwx:ts aJso says that the city has not obtained the cooperation of some surfers in the past when they were asked to clear ~ hazardous arcn. "h1 1972, we gave 3,02.2 direct surfing 'varnings. Twenty-four arrests were made arter repeated warnings. These facts point out that there was little or no co- operation from 11 certain segment of the surfing papulation." Rowlands also said !here \rcre 224 medical aim caused by surfing in 1972. one-third of which involved Innocent by· standers. As to the parking meter price. Row- lands said the high price is used for revenue to keep ll rapid c1rculallon in th t' area. 'The surfers requei;ted a tov.·tt parking Fet from 12th Street to Bolsa Chica State lleach. Rowlands said the city would lose $12.538 annually, If th@ meter fee was reduced. lie said parking metel' money got.~ into a fund to build off.str~et perk· ins.l.. 8nd center dividers. A third rnque!t made by l~al surfers -that helmeta not be u$Cd during the U.S. SurfbMrd ChamploMhlps -...., con•ldered • moot point bee•un the city has dropped the <Clllt>ot J board, did not take part in setting up the four-four split. In January of 19Tl U.S. District Court Judge Robert Merhlge Jr. ordered the predominantly black Richmond city school system combined with 'the predominantly white systems in neighboring Henrico and Chesterfield Counties. In June last year, the U.S. Circuit Court at Richmond, in a 5-1 decision, disagreed with Merhige and reversed his order. The issue of metropOlitan desegrega- tioo, has ·not been sett1ed by the court's action loday. Similar suils are pending In such cities as Detroit, Atlanta and some ni ne other cities. The split-court decisk>n 1s not binding in those cases. Today's one-sentence acUon by the court read simply, ''11le judgment Is af4 firmed by an equally divided court." Unasses.sed is the Impact of the coort vote on the school busing issue on Capitol llill. Antibusing action had been brought to a virtual standstill pending court s.c- tion in the Richmond case. The Nixon administration had argued against metropolitan desegregation in a sharply worded friend of the court brief. The case reached the high CBUrt on ap- peals by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and the Richmond school board. E-..ch sought to reinstate Merhige's order. New Categories For Homemaki1ig Slated at Fair A variety or new contest categorjes have been added to the homemaking skills competition at the 1973 Orange C.Ounty Fair running July 6-15. "We want everyone to get a chance to show oil their homemaking skiUs, whether they're children or senior citizens," says Mrs. Dee Cox, home economics supervisor ror the rstr. To stimulate interest she ha.! added 23 new contests, including reupholstery, original recipes using cake mixes, junior table setting, and honey-baked goods. A zigzag partab1e sewing machine will be presented to the winner of the grand award for the most outstanding enlry in clothing and textiles. Other prizes include needlework kits. dinnerware and gift certificates. Prerhium USLs and entry blanks are ob- tainable from the fair office, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. For additlooal in- formation, call 54~1131. Deadline for returning entry blanks is June 1. Massive Me11u Set for Mesa 's 1973 Fish Fry More than 4,000 poun~f Alaskan fish have betn ordered by Co.sta Mesa -Newport Harbor U Club to make this yea.r's Fish Fry the most successful event in Its 27-year hi3tory. All that fish, plus 1,500 pounds of cole slaw, 3.000 pounds ol hot dogs, 001000 soft drinks and a truck.load of omer foodstuffs wlll be needed to serve up between JJ,000 and 14,000 fish dinners. The gross proceeds from the June l to 3 event are expec:ted to be ln the neighborhood of 1100,000 with local charitles to receive all pronu. Over the past 11 yean, the Uons ha~ rai!WXI approximately ${00,ooo for charity Ulroogh the Fish Fry. Some of the 1ttnctlonl are a thrft.. mJJe parade, a )0-ridt e1m:lval, bNuty and baby conlelt, and musical and stage pruentatk>nJ. I . 'Ni:x:on Wish' ·'Allege Haltkman Quoted in Request to CIA W ASlllNGroN CAPl.-Former Whli. llou!< chit/ <ti ital! H.ll. Haldeman was 'qooted today •• having aaid, "lt jg the President's wish" that the CIA ask the FBI not to 1nvestlgate Muican angles in lhe Watqate affaD. Sen. Stuart Symington ( 0 • M o . ) , disclosed the statement was noted in a memo by deputy CIA director LI. Gen. Vernon Walters on June 23, Im -six days after the break·lD at Democratic party ~uarters. : · The memo Wai made-public today aa former CIA jlireetor Richard Helms ap- peared tiefore· tbe Senate Foreign Rela- tions Committee Of wb~ Symington ls a member. tt concerned a ll)eeting OP Jwie 23 t~ valving Waltefs, Helms, Haldeman andt- John D. Ehrllchman. At the end, Walters noted in his memo, Jfaldeman turned to him and said, "It is the President's wish that you go to see f..1r. Gray." L. Patrick Gray 111 was ac- ting director of the FBI. Asked about the notation. Helms said he v.·as in the meetng but does"not recall the specific invocation of the President's name. But he said instrucUnns from the chief of staff were assumed to be car- rying the President's authority. At that time investigations were under Y:ay about "laundered" coampaign con. tribtltions sent from Texas to Mexico to be converted into checkJ and cash. Some of the chetks eventually wound up in the bank account of convicted Watergate conspirator Bernard L. Barker in Miami. tbere had been previous testimony that the FBl was asked to stay out of lhat part or the investigation in order to °"ke it IOOk like a CIA openillon. llelnt1 toJ11 the commlttee h I 1 only concem then was that the CIA should he kept oat ot the Watugat• af· fair entitt1j. AA Helml appeared at Symington's committee, another Senate commit~ was questioning Archibald Cox, selected by Elliot L. Richardson to be the in- dependent special prosecutor in the Watergate case. Cox aald he lntenda to take full responsibility and said .,Rlchard!on re- tains only the autmrity "to givriiie bell il I don't do the job." He added: "I think he ought to keep that authority." In anollier development, John C. Caulfield and Frederick C. LaRue, a~ peared to give pre-trial statement In 'it Watergate-related civil suit, but re. mained only briefly. The Washington Star-News reported the Justice Department has expanded its probe of the' u~rcover ·campalgn ac- tivities of Donald H. Segretti to five new places -San Francisco, San Diego, Pittsburgh, Portland, Ore., and possibly Milwaukee. , The Star-Newa, in a story by James R. Polk, said investigators have Segrettl's travel records and long -distance telephone records. Segrettis is a young California attorney who has pleade~ innocent in Florida on a charge of !E!lding fake ca m pa i g n literature. The Federal Bureau of Investigation has ~n told Segretti was paid $30,000 to $40,000 in campaign funds by President Nixon's former personal lawyer, Herbert W. Kalmbach. Another Star-News story said Nixon campaign advi.sers llW were dlJtrfbl/~ "bulb money" to me ur mored the te\I ooovtcted Watergate eoosplraton . tteently as earl.: April -about the ia time that federal investigatora w being totd about efforts to cover up t ~ scandal. ~ 11te principal recipient apparently~· • G. Gordon Liddy, sald to be the organize ,,. of the burglary of Democratic ,. quarters last year, the newspa~­ reported, quoting unnamed sources. ... Uddy is the only ooe or the se\len have rtteived a final sentence, and he serving an additional jail term for r~ • - ing to testify under immunity. . ~ A special Senate investigating ~ mittee resumes its televised Watergatt "'. hearings Tuesday with convicted burgla • James W. McCord still the witnw. .!.!;..·· . , From Page I MITCHELL •••• here to enter a plea." lnside the court, Mitchell, former a tomey general who left that office to~~ Nixon's campaign, tilted bock in hi~· chair and wrung his hands as he waite to answer the charges. . - He shook hands with Stans, fonnerJy·!j! commerce secretary and chief of the ~ election committee 's finances, and Sea~. who arrived about 25 minutes after him.~.: Cannella ruled that it was unnetessary ~ to have the defendants fipgerprinted and : photographed in the fec!eral marshal's of·•~ * * * * * * lice. - Following the arraignment, the three defendants went to the chambers of ~ federal Judge Lee Gagliardi, \\'ho was assigned the case. Gagliardi, 54, of IJarchmont. N.Y., is one of the newest judges in the Southern District. He was Watergate Pro·secutor .Cox Has'AllthePower Needed' ,_appoint~ Jn ~imuary 191'2-• A federal grand jury mdlctOd allzotli': d~endants on charges of conspiracy to o~truct justice and consp!racy to fn;;'.\...; TI.uence a Securities and Exchange Cam-·.(::: mission (SEC) investigation of Vesco'•}~: financial interests. ..;: WASHINGTON (UPI) -Archibald Cox testified today that Attorney general· designate Elliot L. Richardson had given him ''all the power needed to be in· dependent" in his job as special Watergate prosecutor. "The only authority he has retained Is the authority to give me hell if don't do the job," Cox told the Senate Judiciary Committee, "and I think. he ought to keep that autborit~ .'.'. •. Richard!on introduced the 61-year~ld Democrat, No. 3 man in the Justice Oepartmcot d~ the . Kennedy ad· ministration and ~rt of the Johnson ad- ministraHon, at the same time that he made public fonnaJly new guidelines ex· panding on the authority that the pros· ecutor will have in the Watergate case. Richardson, ln a brief introduction of. Cox, said tM Harvard law professor would have ''full independence" in the case. Sen. James O. Eastlal\d (D-Miss.) the Jud!ciary Committee 'chairman, asked C.Ox if he was sure he cou1d work with Richardson according to the guidelines. "l am," C.Ox said. "I discussed them with Mr. Richardson over the telephone. There were a number of points -we talked foe two hours -:.. We worked out together. "I'm satisified they give a special prosecutor all the power needed to be in· dependent. I certainly intend lo be in· dependent and to take responsibility to the best oC my ability." The revised guidelines, dated May 19, give the special prosecutor ' ' r u 11 authority" over the Watergate case. They say Cox "will have the greatest > -~ -··- degree of independence that is consistent with the attorney general's statutory ac- COWltability for all matters falling within· the jurisdlclioo ol tbe Oepartmmt ol Justlce." The guidelines provide Cox full authori- ty for issuing waJTants, subpoenas, or other court orders; cooducUng pros- ecutions: detenninlng to what extent he would inform or coosutlt with the at- torney general. and in determining when he had completed his duties. Cox has said be would not feel an obligaUon lo inform Richardson of what he was doing in his investigation. Julie Says Dad Won't Bug Out WASHINGTON (UPI) -Julie Nixon Eisenhower, President Nix- on's younger daughter, said Sunday she doubts the Watergate scandal wilJ ever force her father to resign. She said that "Watergate is overshadowing his achievement . .. but I have faith." It has been "a very difficult time" for her father, she said. "When the going gets rough, 1 don't think he'd ever bug out," she said . "He really Joves his country. l·fe 's a dedicated man. The country needs hls programs." Mrs. Eisenhower made her com- ments during a program on WRC- TV. In addJtion, Mitchell and Stans ~:: charged with perjury -accused of .~: six times each 1n thelr appea~: before tbe grand jury. ...r ... : The grand jury was investigating .1t;:: secret 12a),OOO cash eontrlbull1ln made'Clt; :: April 10, 1!1'12 -lhree days after the new : • federal campaign contributions ·~ disclosure law went into effect -to the-"1- Nixon re-election committee. The -.: $200,000 •was returned to Vesco after·~ stars disclosed it Jan. 31. .. ~ Al that lime Mllcheli headed the cam-·: paign and Stans was .dJainnan ol i~ ~ finance committee. 'l1>e indictme1't t: charged that the contribution, in $1119 .:: bills, was delivered to Stans 1.D.· i: rtaJhington by Sears. Sears at that time :· was chairman of the New Jersey Com· :..: mil tee for the Re-election of the Presf. .. : dent. :.: At the time the contribution \Vas made, :; Vesco was under investigation by the :: SEC for allegedly "looting" 4224 million : : from four mutual funds controlled by his ·:.- interests. ~: The lour defendJmts were accused of < "corruptly and by threats and by ·~ threatening communication" having a.-· J'.. tempted to influence that investigation. r MitcbeU, the indictment said, arranged ~": .. for Sears to meet wiUl SEC Chairma.d • William Casey to discuss the Vesco in!·-: vestigation. '! Mitchell also got Presidential COWlsel ~ John W. Dean Ill to communicate wit!\-,,:. Casey to seek a postponement of t~ :~ return date of SEC subpoenas served oo ...., Vesco employes; the indictment said. ; The purpose, the indiclment saJd, waa to pr.event d!sclosure by the emp~s .: relating lo the secret Vesco contribution. ~ -.. 26th AnniversarvSALE! : ;. . ' .,, SAVE ON GE.'NO FROST 1 REFRIGERATORS with AUTOMATIC ICEMAKERS Ml cU. "'· ..,.0...1on tM491 U'•IHIATO•.flllUaa •.i&, 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. • 17.f CU. "T'. "'NCMlltOfT"' 11,llOIUTOl.f'llU.lt ••• OIAMT W C-•. Pl NO l'•OST $69996 110..,.1101 lll'll•IUTOI. CALL 90 DAY DUNLAP Member of ~ Callfornf•'• L1rgftt CASH Cooporotl" Buying WlfH APPIOVID Group With Tho CllOIT Authorized GE SERVICE 548-7788 Volume Buying m Powtr of t 10 Storti ... 1.1111~ BE Downtown Costa Mesa Phone 548-7788 ~ "'" ~· r .. • • ; ; : • . . ' ' • • ' f g r a t l • • --·-· ·---- Monday, MQ 21, 1973 s DAILY PILOT :J Coach Hit8 •Hair FreaAs~ AUSTiii, Tu. (UPI) -Atbltles ""° wear loag hair DOI only ant rojoctlng eltabllsbed autllorilY but abo espoolng tllelr "alliiiimw" cl!lna aod brNt1ng with "biblical pri.Dclp1es." according to the lead article of the May Issue ol "Tex· as COach.., . Tony Stmpooo, a bead coach In GllleDa Park'I acl!ool l)latem, W?W tbt article. ID It, be called for a natlomride ban ol long hair on athletic n.Jda. "It Is time that American coaches stopped allowing thern.telves to be personally represented by male athletic t.ams aod individual> that look like females," SimP90D aald. "It is •tme that American coaches realized that a male'• hair i. not just an American tradition but an issue involving biblical principles; lime that coaches Two Children stopped fllllooalblnc aod comprombioc their --_, tlme to -Ille Americoo alblete that hlJ most voluable dlaractedstlc i. not pbJslcal ablll1;y but r<specl for~- It II .... t6jae dldat.s thal IOOC hair on. a lnlD. w .... dJa:g:race, let'• stop comJll'Oftllslnl our ....,.... ....,. by allowJnc tt, 11 SimPl')n said. "A good baiT code will g<I Ille aboormal3 out cf athletlcJ before they become coscheJ and bnns . their ....... llandm!s. 1n to the coacrung ~." Silmon'• ~e in ''Teus Coach," the olllclal publleotloo ol the Teua Hlgh School Coacbts' Aaociation, came within weets of an UIOdation decision to ban long halt on putlclpants in its annual high scbool footl>all ml basketball all· star g1111e1 Tale of Two Houston athleteo, lncl•"'bli !he moot -hi after -MWtblll playor In Tau -Eddie Owens cf HOUiton Wl><aUey -said they'd boycott the imnes before tbty'd trim back · thdr sideburns aod Afros. "Why do llWl1 eooebes n1t1ona11,. and compromise 1helr norms am! ltaodanb of good grooming habits and allow them.selves to be per10Rllly represeq- ted by males that look Db femalesf" Simpson wrote. "A male with long hair is a sign of re- jection of authority -his own 1u1hority over himself as well as the aUtborlty of the laws of the establishment," be said. "Under the laws of the establishment, God designed the male to domlnlte tbt woman just as He designed Christ to Terror dominate D\ID ... S!mpooa nld Ille Bible lndlcoted bll hair oa women repraenttd 1 Ji&n of 1U• mission and that man's short balr wu • sign of authority over women. "It is not normal for a male to be ~ subm!Mloo and Uke it," he aakt. "But tM American male youth -Wld rri.any not so young -wear their hair longs simply because they know Ille females will like lt. These ~ males are in submis~!!lon to the warped norms and standards of females who Uke to set the dress and grooming ttandards for their mousy husbands, the1r pan- tywaist boyfriends or their feminine sons." He said "the coaching prolesslon ii one of the few large organlu.Uons left wttb: any commn sense left ." Survive Fire; 5 Others Die Laguna.ii Atrocked in Mexico Bakers Claim Loss of Bread, Seek Raise DllllY Plltot 11111 Pllotn New Arrival The first child of Rich and Carol Hanson, 22877 Via Cereza, Mission Viejo, was a boy, as sign notes. ul've got a husband who's pretty proud," said Mrs. Hanson. It was his sister and her husband, how- ever, who put up the sign advising. the neighborhood of the good news. . Paper Offering Reward For Newsman's Abductor DETROIT (Pl) -The Detroit Free Press has posted a $5,000 reward for in· formation leading to the arrest or the gunman who abducted one of Its reporters Investigating narcotics traffic and held him captive for 12 hours over the weekend. Lee HUis, pre!ldent and publisher of the Free Press, announced the reward Sunday after reporter Howard Kolm C9Caped death when the gun of his would- be assassin jammed as the two men fought. "' fonnalion on narcotics trafficking in the city if Kohn would go to a hotel. He said he went to his car and was met by a man with a gun who told him, "The man wants to see you." The two then went to a motel, Kohn said, where the gunman Ued Kobn's hand and feet · with strips of ripped up pillow cases after they checked into a room. At dawn, Kohn sai~1 _the gunman untied his bondJ, ordered nim to cle.an up the room and told Kohn to drive between two condemned buildings 1n an alley in the downtown area. NEW WATERFORD, N.S. (AP) -Two whimpering children who huddled in a cupboard beneath the kitchen sink were the on1y survivors of a fire ear1y today that took the lives of five of their brothers and .sisters. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Longpbee were not home when the blue .started. Five of their seven children between 5 and 15 years of age perished, Dead are three daught.rs, Loretta, 15; Theresa, II, aod Debbie, 10; and' two aons, stephen, It, and Anthony, 6. AU five were trapped in upstairs rooms when fire broke out in the two-story, wood-frame duplex. Two other daughters, Cathy, 7, and Wendy, 4, reached the lower floor where they took refuge under the sink, police reported. The two girls remained there as flames ripped tbnJugh the borne. Con.table Gerald Murphy ol the New Waterford Police Department said be rushed around to the back door after a crowd that had gathered began shouting there were children in the burinlng house. By JACK CHAPPELL Of .. Dlltr ""' ltetl Like thousands of other Southern Callfomlam, Lagunan Jon Gabriel! is a frequent traveler to Mexico's Baja California. He wu a frequent traveler. "I was asleep and suddenly both doors opened and they were shouting and they came in from both sides. 1bere were four of them and they p:iinted a rifle and a pistol at me," Gabriels said. "One spoke English. He said 'get out.' They yanked me out and searched me. One gave me 1 hell of a slug right here," Gabrieh said, making a list and pointing to his groin. The incident took place at 2 o'clock in the morning as Gabriels, a schplarly ap- pearing middle-aged man I c a m p e d recenUy on the outskirts of Ensenada, aOOut a half·mile from a police station. Gabriels Jost his 1971 camper, his camping gear and the cash he carried. The loss is not covered by insurance. He had visited Baja 50 to 60 times before. He said it will be a long time before he ever goes back, if ever. "J haven't been that scared siilce the war," he said. After the bandits searched him, "When we opened it a lot or smoke Gabrlels was forced back into the came out; you couldn't see anything, but camper and driven 13 mlles out the old you could hear children crying, weeping Ensenada road where he was dumped like," he said. out, and tied. The men then left. " . : . We got down on our knees and "They discussed killing me ," he said. crawled in a few feet and shined a light "They tied me hand and foot with my akmg the Door." belt. J broke that and got out right He aa.ld be found a child under the sink. away." ''Someone was saying there wa:a Gabriela then started hiking back to another ooe there and," be added, 1'wben town. But whenever a car would come, I left with lhl1.cme, 1G1Debody ... 'Fl'" ·'!:.J..~ 11\19,a dlfll!l,JeorlM,!11\cab- the other chtld that was there." ware-nturnme: . A a~ familY' thit ahared. 'the ~ . He came to a toll station on t~e new with the.laJgpbees esc8i>ecf the blili ~'highway•and wm<driven to a.po11ce ·sta- witbout Injury. · tion, where ~ met another American The cause of the fire has not been who had a similar tale to tell. determined 'Ibe Ensenada police were not too con- . cemed, Gabriels said. Special Meeting Of Saddlehack Board Planned A special meeting of the Saddleback C<lmmw>ity College Board or Truste .. will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday in place of the regular meeting which falls on Memorial Day. Topping the 1genda will be a propooal from the Associated Student Body on alternatives to the board's policy on campus s~akers. At the last board meeting, the trustees voted to uphold a much-debated clause in the policy which states that where con- trovers.lal Issues are involved, speakers representing tioth sides must be schedul- ed for the same program. But student spokesman Tim Jansen was charged witb developing a pilot pro- gram for presenting ~ken singly which the board could evaluate. Other items oo the agenda. inclUde adopting guidelines for environmental ~valuaUoos of 8addlebact projects, discussing proposed. new courses for the summer aesskln, and a ppr o vi n g payments on the construcilon of two . campus buildings. Burglar 'Visits' Mazda Facility 'Ihe souvenirs at open house for tbe new Mazda Technical enter tn Irvine wenin't ~ to Include JnOTe than $800 worth ol compllly toolJ aod equipment. Yuldo Mikuhlma, an executive wl.th the firm at 1424 McGaw Ave., complain- ed to police last .....t that a variety cl Hema vanished. · Officer Bob BerJ said the spolteaman for the manufacturer ol. the Utile Japanese car whose engine ..:.._ acoonllng to ltJ commerclalJ -goes : mm·rnm.m-· mmm·mmm, pointed out many people tourod the plant just behltt the Items were discovered mtsstng.- "They just took it all down without any reaction whatever, to the point or being lackadaisical They said check tomorrow at 10 o'clock. I checked and they said call TALE OF TERROR Lagunan G1brl1ls us next week." The ~other American's case sounded similar. except that the thieves took his shoes and dog. He had to walk to the sta- tion baref90ted, he said. WASffiNGTON (UPI) -The batini industry says it Is now loslng money on bread. It wants the Cost ol Living ~ cil to pennit industry-wide Jrlce bites. Richard W. Dasplt, president of the American Bakers Association, t~y reported an industry survey lhowing tbi.t the average nnn in January wu Jostn« about one-tenth of a cent per IOlll because of rising costs. The survey showed that the who1-le value of a one-pound loaf of bread during the month was 25.07 cents while COlb .M- ded up to 25.16 cents. The survey cowred commercial bakeries excluding those . · owned by ~permarkets. 'l In 1972, prices averaged 24.73 cents and I costs were 24.08 cents, leaving a pre-tu profit or nearly seven-tenth! of a cent for ~ the wholesale baker. • "We are dismayed but not surp:l&ed 1t these latest ligureo. We_pw Jt coolll!I la!t September when we asked the Colt of Living Councll for relief. It 11 Im-1 peratlve that \Ve get some response from them," Dasplt said. The suney showed that compared with 1972 fulJ.year averages, 'the bakers' CMt ror wheat flOlD' In a one--pound loaf or bread rose mol'fl sharply than any other cost item. It went from 4.15 centa last year to 4.66 cents in January. SeIUna ""·ages and fringe benefits rose almolt u much, going from 5.Tl cents a loaf to l.IJ 1 cents. Alter checking with the police, . I G~T/!~ ~"'.'::O ~~\£~·~ore' · Perjury DMpi;,aed•;,; • 1· responsive," he said. 111ere, he learned • that many tourists are being hit by thll SA1j, .J)~\lO . 1/-!:l._r.i, A ~l particular brand of crime. owner,"""' been ~ ol 1Ytnc to,. Gabrie!St.said he would like to warn all federal grand jury became of what the , other Amli'jcans planning to go to Baja judge called unfair tad.I.cs ti the U.S. I to be careful and suggested a tourist Justice Department pl'C9eCUtor, Reuben boycott until "the police become CariUo, 32, of Calexico wu clwJed with somewhat more dynamic." perjury in testifying in a grand jury b-' "Other people who consider traveling vestigatJon which resulted in bribery and i therr., well , just consider it," he said. fraud indictment! against three men. ' "Seldom in modern times ha! a reported been subjected to thi$ kind of violence and intimidation when his work polnted the fmger at criminal activity and corruption," said Hiils. "Neither the Free Press nor Howard Kohn will be in- timidated b violent tactics." Hills vowed the newspaper's in- vestigation into the illegal narcotics traf- fic in· Detroit "is going to continue." Kolm llaid the gunman Oldered him out or the car ind when Kohh healtated, the kidna~r began wavlng a rtJlotvet In hJJ face. Kohn said he grabbed the gunman'11 wrtJt and \he gun went off, grazing the shoulder )lod en Kolui's sport Jacket. Kohn seld the gunman tried to shoot at polnt·blank range, but the gun jammed and the gwunan fled down the alley. Kohn spent mucb of Saturday retracloi the events wJth police. Reiinhursement OK'd For Officials' Trip WELCOME TO OUR HOUSE! Kohn , 25, has been investigating the city's narcotic:! trade during the past two years. He recenUy co-authored stories in the Free Press revealing the n&me1 of l l of Detroit's top dope dealers and s\x poliOe officers involved in the heroin trock. l\()hn's ordeal began at ll:SO p.m. Fri- day wht!n he received a phone call at the ttewspaper offices in downtown Detroit. Kohn said the caller promisod aome In- "We've be<;n furnished 80me suspects' Oronp County Airport Commlaslon names that We're cllecklni on DOW, a ewlll be reimbursed for ex- palice !pokesman saJd Sunday, "but. lncurred In attending a state we've made no arrests." t of AeronauUca aympOslum The Free Press seld the Wayne County In RI-lut week. · cltluns grand Jury wu In the final Tbe Board ol Supen>llon Tuesd.oy ap. stag., of pr<paring lndlctmenll against 1 proved the expenditure for the traveling 10 of the 30 olOcers Kohn named, plua which toot place i.1t w .. k. The tot81 II elgbt other ol6cera and 15 heroin clealer1. not to e.t<eed $100. .. ' ., • I For Hom• of 11111"111 , You!) Silk I Wool Suit i11 Gr•v with R.d Trill'I •IHI l11r9111Mfy wlth 11111 Trim by Fr1M· b.rt of 8011011 -$17S.OO. All Cotton Ollford lutton Down Shirt lty S1ro -111.00. AU Sillr Ripp l it by T•lbott-$1.50. 1 • Newport Be•ch, W!11hlrt1 Sh•rl'Plt" 011ln, P11111d1n11, L•k•woM, W111t C.vl111 • I l I Developers Move Inland SECOND LOOKS DEPT. -Some theorists suggeated back when the state coastal control bill was being debated that tl it ~was adopted as Proposition 20 was. some cmslderable changes in growth patterns might oro..ir along our coasUine. Some evidence today suggests that this ls happening. Proposition 20 did pass into Jaw last November and a series of regional com- mission and one state super-commJssion were created. The se commissions are charged with two responsibilities. First, they eithe rsay yea or nay to all con- struction within l,CKX> yards of the coasWne. Secondly, they are supposed to develop an overall master plan for future coastal development. SO FAR, THE commissions have been pretty -well bogged <k>wn willl making judgments on building pennits. They have a big backlog of pending con- struction projects and really, there ~·t 9eelll to be much light at the end ol that tunnel. MeanwbUe not very much has been dooe about ~t overall master plan for coastal development. This is vr'hat some of those theorists thought they saw ·coming .,~:ith the passage of Propossition 20. And they figur¢ that ef!Jp_hasis on development might shiti elseWhere ....:... like infana;· just outslde of the 1,000-yatd range controlled by the coastal commissions. nius it 1s that properties "just inland" wlilch, in pre-Prop. 20 day.·dtiln't look so prime ror development, abruptly take on a new glow for dev elopers. ONLY LAST WEEK, for example, word came that a masterplan for development is being created for 10,000 acres "just inland" of our coastline. For oldtimers in the region , it is known as the Moulton Ranct't properties although it is in more ownerships than that now. But outslde of the Irvine Ranch, it is the largest undeveloped ctumk of real estate in our region. The 10,000 acres in- volved ls bounded generally by bucolic old Laguna canyon Road and El "Toro Road and en down southeast to Crown Valley Parkway _~ the 8al'J-:!ll_eio Freeway. YOU GET THE notion that the owners are serious since they have issued a $200,000 contract ror the master plan of development to the Irvine planning firm of Oiapman, Phillips, Brandt and Red- dick. In ·a preliminary way, the firm has \n- dicated It will come in with a series or planned community proposals for this acreage which is almost too expansive to contemplate. The land includes the rolling grazing hilb jw:l beyond the coastal slope, the lowlands surroonding Rockwell lntema- tional's unused ziggu rat plant and the valley areas of Aliso Canyon with its meandering creek. Right now, it is main- ly the domain of cows and nature lovers:. Tomorrow is likely lo be something el!e. AT PRESENT, there are f i v e owmfrships. They are the L.F. Moultoo Trust, 5,000 acres ; Mr. and Mrs. Ivar Hanson and the Rossmoor Corporation, 2.300 acres: the Nellie G. Moulton Trust, 1,600 acres; and Chapman College, 250 acres. Soon there ntay be many more ownerships, Thu s you may agree that Proposition 20 has taken the pressure off the rapid development or coastline properties. Coastal development may slow down in the years just ahead. Indeed. much open space may be preserved along the coast. But you are left with a couple of disquieting thoughts . Like while the coastline sleeps, what's happening 1ust over the hill? And if a huge population develops over the hill. what kind of pressure does that put on the coastline when the hot winds blow ? Actress Returns Hollywood actress Shirley MacLaine arrived in Hong Kong Sunday after a month's visit in the People's Republic of China. She;ieaded an American women's delegation of 12 -ranging from housewives to a psychologist -and during the visit met with the wife of Chinese Premier Chou En-lai. Ransam~ TrJ Thwarted, . \ Hijackers Go to Cuba CARACAS, Veneiuela (AP) -A hi· jacked Venezuelan airliner returned safe- ly to Ca racas Sunday night with 25 passengers and five crev•n1en aboard despite the government's refusal to ransom it with 79 prisoners. nlREE ARMED men and a woman B1·ezhnev Says lie~ Show -up For Nixon Visit BONN, West Germany (AP) -Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev says he will go ahead with his visit to President Nixon next month des pite the Watergate scan· dal. "America will stay there where it is," the Soviet Comnumlst party chief told an inquiring newsman Sunday. "The time is already published. What do you expect - an earthquake?" Brezhnev, on a five-day visit to Bonn, said be will be in the United States June 18-26 and has "all the best" of hopes for his talks with Nixon. Today the Soviet leader was meeting at his hotel with leaders of the German trade union federation . Then he was going to the lJth century Hombu rg Casile 30 miles northeast of Bonn to lunch with Gov. Heinz Huehn of North Rhin e-We s t pha Ii a, West Germany's richest and most populous state. They were expected to discuss the agreement on economic, industrial and technical cooperation BrC'lhnev and Chanoellor Will Brandt signed on Satur- day. Tonight tre Kremlin chief gives a ban- cruet in Brandt's honor , serving caviar. vod ka and champagne flown from Moscow. Brezhnev and Brandt talked again Sun- day night at the chancellor's home. 1'he discussion apparenlly included the thorny issue of West Berlin. which Bonn says is part of West Germany and which Moscow says is independent. took over the twin-engine Convair Friday evening on a domestic flight to the capital They threatened to blow up the plane and all a board unless the govern- ment freed the 79 persons the hijackers said were political prisoners. But when the government refused even to negotiate. the hijackers settled for a flight to Havana . The quartet said they belong t.o the lef- tist underground organizatioo. Punto cero -Point Zero. Appettntly they sought political asylum in Cuba, but the Castro regtme did oot announce what it would do with them. · After they took over the plane, which then had :n persons aboard, the four lef- tists ordered it to the Dutch island or Curacao for refueling. It flew on to Panama for more fuel and food, and there the hijackers let a pregnant woman and another woman and her child g.et off. SATURDAY l\10RMNG the leftists ordered the plane to Merida, on the Yucatan peninsula. and then on to ?.fex- ico CHy, where they made their demand for the release of the pri.sooers. "We will not be blackmailed," the Venezuelan charge d'affaires in Mexico City said, refusing to negotiate. An official of the Mexican interior ministry boarded the plane and talked the hijackers out of blowing up the plane. With the official aboard as a hostage, the plane left Mexico City for A1erida and then new on to Havana. Cuban authorities report-Cd t h e passengers and crew were safe but tired upon their arrival Saturday a fternoon. Sunday, a Mexican plane was sent to pick up the Mexican official and Convair flew back to Venezuela, refueling en route at Curacao. French Rocket Flops BRETIGNY SUR ORGE , France I AP) -A French rocket carrying two space satellites called Castor and Pollux failed •to separate correctly today and fell into the sea after launching at Kourou, French Guiana, the National Space Studies Center announced. -Drizzles Plague Southland Clo uds Exp~cted to Break Up After Dreary W eek erul . Tempera t ures tt1111 low Pr Al tlll<l""'l'<l""' u " AllChC>rl'04' " ,, All•11!• " " 8•k ... 1n.!d " " BlrmlnalMm " " -·~ " " " g:1c-" " nclnNIJ " " Cl•wlMld " " .. ~r-u " "" " " ...... u " flOf'I W«lll " " ··-" " :::::::·· .. " " _ ... • n g·::'t." " ~ n'i1' '"' " " " .. oul1.,1ftr .. " Ml•m~ " • ·-.. ., ·-" " ·" ~ .. ,. " " •ltOml Clttl " M ·" ,~.,,,,.. " M '" " " ... Photnl• '" • ~'"•':/" v. " .O• r.I" .. ·" ·~ " LOO :1~r1mtnlo " " ti ""'' ,, " II ~kt CllV ll ff '" ... 11 rtr'>Clt<O " 5••1tl• " ii W_,.l!lna'!On .. ·" Ca Hfertd • TM dtllli.J •'1d dolldhWlt m.tt fNGe 1 ~,,.,.... "IM WMlllM It l~llfd TO c1tr1 •rv I, tllowlna ._.,. I loll ...,d 1 lollt V Wlffnl" "1"C*'•lrn to I HAU0!1Al WIAIHfl •ttYl(f 'O•l(AST I• 1AM t•T '-ll-~ ' .. " ""wtA1Hll IOIOC:A$.T. 1t1ltr '°'1tMm Ctlllotftl1. Ti. N•~ w.tn... StrlVtl _.Id Ille t11n~lfll It 1x11tct9d ~ W••~ tllrOQOl'I wllfl I -~fl'llnq of '"'-cloud CO'IW tllrit Not t.fWOUclld tilt rt11!011 lot ""'' """ • wttlt. llGtHO-----. ~'"'" l;,e~aSHOW ,,.,..,., ~ ... ~'MCM'l lS ·~ flOW Coastal Weather P11f!ly CIOU(ty tool\'. l l(IM 'ltrlt~I wind, r.IOhl Ind mornfllO /lou•I bt- c"'"lf'O wttl fl! ~t 11 fl! If knoi, l'I 11ti.moon1 to.Moy 1nct T..,.9d11y • HIOh lod1y !11 IM th. to 6'. lnlMld ffml'll•1t11r•1 t1rigw from U to 70. Wtlw t.ITIP1r•l11rt 5'. Sun, /lfoon, T ides MONOAY Second 11101' 11:51 pm. <t.I S.Conc! low !:J1 11.m. 1.1 TUf.IOAY Fl!'lt hlOll ••.. l :ll 11.m. l,,J Firs! I°'"' .• 1:~ 1.rn -4.t SecOMI 11191'1 ,,,45 '·'"· u Second 1ow . . 1:.u 11.m. 1.1 SIJ<I llllMt 1:45 1.m. S1l1 7;SS 11.tn. MoM •I• 11:•1 p,m, s.11 t =ll p.1111. DAii. Y I'll.Of DELIVERY SERVICE- Od!WfJ ol Ult OMlr Plklt Is twll!tttd ~U-•llllfii.fot . .,._. -·-.. ••• ,._ c.i1 "" -..,., .,. M ........ ti ,.... C•IM .,. ...... _ 11• .. .. .................... .,.. .... ..... ,,_. .................... ..,.. .... ...,,.,1 """""'--...... -" ........ " ..-.c..-........ lt ..... , .. ,._ _.._c_,.,...., ........ ---....... ······-·· .... ... ~c....,._--........ c........ .... .... ............... .._ .......... ... Tiit llloll WI ""°' AnotlH r .... Ml•y I• ••l*;t.d In ""' ._ J'h. A COOi &$ OM•-_, "KorO.O SV"ld•~ Co.111tl ttmw11t.i'•• flflOI trom .,. ----------~ ) ( - U.S. Jets Repel · RedS Cambodian Troops Drive Back Communist,s From Wh Strricel PHNOM PENH -U.S. w~ bit C.amnnmht targe1' In C8mbodia for tho 78th -.. day SuodaY, their atrlkee concentrated on two llfghway 4 areae where government and Com- munist troops clashed. " Military eources said American jet fighter-bombers supported Cambodian lf"OOPS in driving back. Communists in one clash near the highway linking Phnom Penh and the South Ollna Sea Girl, 6, Saved By Non Swimmer MESA, Ariz. (UPI) -Kathryn 1'>uise Panloo ,%4, Amherst, N.Y., who dldu'I know how to swim, gave up her life to save a child. Mrs. Pantm, who was en vacation, pulled Jennifer Hicks, 6, Mesa, out of deep water and into shallow water Satur- day, but then was caught in the same swift current that bad trapped the little girl and was swept downstream. Mrs. Pantoo wa.s pulled from the water about a quarter-mile downstream by two men who administered mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. She was pronom1.ced dead on arrival at a hospital~ "[~,~ '""',...""•' fiqure prob!•"' Os <j.lf~ront. lne ro•ul!< you od"e"• f•"'"' ><>Ut pe••oneli:ed pro<1••M .,., ,., be d tftercnl l hen ti>o•e .. ~~1Cv•d bt 1<>meo!lf: cbe." ~AL'l'ID WERE listed ._, one govemaieot ooldier illled and three wounded wtlh two Communlata illlod. Further -along the hlll)lway, Ille -aid, .......,,....t ,....,. called in more American planes when troops there claahed with Communists. On the Mtkoltg ruver, official sources said Communllt gunners opened fll'e late Sunday on ... ftn Cambodian landing cran bringint· ~fugees to the capital rnim·.the !my miUing at Neak Luong, 32 miles -.m.r. Al least two of the boata were datnaged and several penons reported wounded. In lhe far northwest of the C<IU!1lry !he only 0De in Indochina with DO fannal truce, government troops fought an hour- long battle ·With an estimated 7m to 250 Communist troops. Military sources said two governmenf troops were killed and another five wounded. lN OTHER developments in Southeast Asia: -A hand grenade attack blamed oo Communist terrorists killed two civilians and wounded Zl others Sunday at a hamlet 110 miles north of Sail<on, Ille South Vietnamese rommand said today. -A South Vietnamese Air Force UHI Huey helicopter on a training mission was shot down by small arms and automatic weapoos fire this morning 60 mu.. norlbeast ol smgon. Three iv hat are the advantages of the GLORIA MA R SHA L L rn ethod? crewmen were wounded. rn J 11 t a r y -said. A eommWllque broadcast by rad.lo Hanoi, said' U.S. jets made recon- naissance fiight.s a rew miles south of Hanoi SUnday montlng. North Vietzutm'1 Foreign Mlnislry said in the broodcast that "this act is in blatant violatioo of North Vietnam's sovereignty and ter· ritorial integrity, of Article 2: of the Jan. 27 Paris Agreement on V~tnam, and of the U.S. commitment." I -In Ca:mboWa, President Loo Nol b reported going to the United States for medical treatment, a move the Nlxon atf... ministration hopes will open the way for cease-fire negotiatioos. But deposed Prince l'forodorn Sihanouk, the oominal "leader of Cambodia's in- surgent3,is talking tougher these days. He said recently in Peking that his forces "will never agree lo negotiate with the group of. traitors" in Phnom Penh who deposed him. Since the insurgents control about two.. thirds of Cambodia and have the capital under virtual siege, the prince is speak- ing from a position of strength. -North Vietnamese and Amertcan technical experts took over for Henry A. Kissinger and his Hanoi counterpart, Le Due Tho, meeting from morning to ~! &mday in the longest Vietnam ~ on record in Paris. •"Affidavits of alJthenticity are on file in the home oNice." • You get friendly, individual attention. Your particular figure problem is carelully ana- lyzed and your figure correction program will actually be designed iust to lit your needs. ~ gu arantt t ,.,., e Tell us the dress size you Wdnt to be. We wilt then analyze your figure <'Ind tell you exactly the num· ber of inches you need to lose. We ere so sure of your results !hot we guarantee in wri ~i ng that if your. mea sureme nls are not as promised. you may continue your treatments at no charge uni ii your goal is re<!!ched. • You'll experience the comlort at having your treatments in cheerlul, pleasant semi-private surroundings. • Th ere wilt be no tiring exercises for you be- cause Gloria Marshall is not.'! gy"1 or spa. • Results are achieved th rough a program of nutritional guidance and individually de· signed firming and toning techniques. tire 11rice is 0 11ly $150 FIGURE CONTROL SALONS f.'rr4• Cu11rtt·:;;y Vi:.;it - p~r y, h1 11e1l/rnen1 on any program ' NEWPORT BEACH- 430 Pacific Coast Hwy. -642·3630 'THE CITY'-59 Brazllia South-997"°211 Daily 9-9, Sat. 9-5 I '' .. ·----·- -. FTC Complaint Tlerd Try Clmrmed ';tssemhlymanDies, BART Mofld.IJ, May 21, 1973 DAJLY PTLOT $ 1 Bradley Repudiates ' Support by Panthers -,-Hawaiian Punch • PET ALUMA (AP) Hit While Jogging ., . . . .... '' Ad w Be Alwred WASHINGTON (UPl)-The makers of "Hawaiian Punch" have agreed to stop promoting the drlnk in a way that could lead people to think It con~ taln!! more Cruit juice than it does_ Tbe firm, RJR Foods Inc., and its advertising agency, William Esty Co., both of New York, also will be forbidden ror one year to use any ad or label depicting fruit er fruit (IN SHORT ... ) Only two Anb nations pur- d1ased significant amounts oC U.S. arms during the period. the statistics showed. Saudi Arabia bought $141 million wort.h while Jordan spent $127 million oo U.S. ar:ms. Lebanon spent $3.7 milllon, and token pt.rebases were made by Iraq, Syria and Kuwa!L • Bod11 in Trunk KEARNY, N.J. (Pl) -The lli!i third lry for tbe crown was the ll)(:ky one for .... pound BUI HarrilOll of San Jose, who v3nqulshed New Jeraey lobstennan Pete Mistok t.o capture the world's heavywelgbt wrist wre.sUing champjooshlp. 'Mle 31-year~ld bachelor put down hlJ 270-pound ad- versary in 20 sweaty scooods ol velo-popplng lemlon and bulging muscles Saturday nigbt before a crowd of 2,S<IO persons jamming t b. Veterans Me mor i'8 l Building lo see contestants from 12 states do their stuff. "I didn't come up here to lose," said J;larrlsoo after his final victory. body of Angelo Oiieppa, re- portedly the bodyguanl of an alleged underworld gambling figure, bas been found in \he trunk ol. his wife's Cadill8c, police said Sunday. '-----------' ALAMEDA (AP) '- Assemblyman R<>bel crown (0-Alameda) died early loday after being st.ruck by a car while jogging near hls home her<, police report Crown, Sl, was taken to Alameda Hospital after the aceident Sunday evening and first was listed in fair con- dition with a -fractured lert leg and poosible internal injwW!, said Police Sgt. Stuart Jed- deloh. But about five hours later doctors reported tie had died of a combination or shock and Internal bl~, Jeddeloh said. UPI T...,... .. ASSEMBLYMAN DIES Robort Cn>Wn juices unless the fruit juice content is clearly given or the product contains 100 percent single strength fruit juice, the Federal Trade Commission FrC said Sunday. The agreement \vas an- nounced in a consent order provtstmally accepted by the FTC in response tq_ a com- plaint it had issued agafust !he product. Detective Sgt. John T. Sil- vers said two bullets had been fired into the base ol Chieppa's skull The car was in the park- ing lot of a department store. Chieppa, 53, lived in a $75,000 home in Livingston next door to his reputed bosS. Ruggiero "Richie the Boot" Boiardo. Juvenile Prisons Fought JEDDELOH said the car that struck Crown was driven by Charles E. Shuler Jr., 41, also of Alameda. Another car had stopped at a comer to Jet Crown -known fOr his in· terest in physical fitness - run across the street, Jeddeloh said, but Shuler failed to stop and was unable to avoid hit· ting him. Shuler originally was cited for passing a stopped vehicle at an intersection, but Jed- deloh said the case was under further investigation. ngalned control, Crown had not supported Bob Moretti for speaker and Moretti put in his own man -Willie Brown of San Francisco. e Crash Kills 6 HONOLULU (AP) -Six persons, including the chair~ man of the Honolulu Police = C:Ommision, were killed when #J their twin-engine Beechcraft plane crashed near the Hono-arl lulu International Airport, a ~ spokesman for the Federal Ort At1atlon Administration said. "' e Belfast Toll BELFAST (UPI) -Gunmen in automobiles Shot and wound- ed three men in two separate incident in Belfast today and bombers blasted a cowttry police station. On Sunday, more shooting claimed the 10th life in four days and pushed the death toll for four years of strife above the 800 mark. SACRAMENTO (AP) Separate juvenile prisons once considered a major reform in the state's cor- rections system -would be swept away by a Reagan ad- ministration bill set for hear- ing this week in the capitol. Crown , -a bachelor, first was elected in 1956, and served as chairman of the Assembly Ways and Means Committee during Jess Unruh's entire career as House speaker from 1961~9. He lost chatimanship when Republicans gained control of the Assembly in 1970. JN, 197!, when Democrats This year Moretti appointed O'.own to chairmanship of the Criminal Justice,Committee. Crown, highly respeced and regarded as having one or the sharpest minds in t h e Legislature, wall an expert in budget making and in past years had been an expert on reapportionment issues. Som in San Francisco Jan. 23, 1922, Crown attended school in Alameda a n d graduated ,from UC Berkeley and University of San Fran- cisco law BChool. The commissioner, Dr. Rob- ..., crt C.H. Shung, owned the air- i. craft and was piloting it at the ~ time of the crash Sunday night, th the spokesman said. : e Sale; Revealed ~ .. ? :.! The 80lst victim oC fighting among Roman catholics, Pro- testants and British security forceg was identified. as Ed- ward COogan, a I9-year-0ld Catholic painter found fatally wounded in a Catholic area. Police said a gunman in an automobile,. shot and wounded a man in the chest in the Ormeau Road today. Shortly afterwards, a gunman in an automobile fired on two youths in C-c>linpark street, near the Springfield road area on the city's west side. The bill, authored by Sen. \V. Craig Biddle (R4 Riverside), is set for hearing Tuesday by the Se n a t e Judiciary Corrimittee. It will be the first-major test for Bid- dle's proposals which also in- clude elimination of lhe state's controversial p r o b a t i o n subsidy program. ·.wet Bet!' 1st WASHINGTON (UPI) - Israel has bought nearly $1 billion worth of U.S. weapons ~j-since the 1967 Middle East ware -three Umes more than Arab states -according to de- classified Pentagon figures. The Reagan administration, which li.sts Biddle's bill as a key item in its legislative pro- gram, describes the bill aS a major reform, but at least one critic has labeled it a fraud. Jubilee Leap Worth $300 -: :· .. . • ~ • .. • • j j f ! ! ! I ~ ' • a • 1 l c 1 i I c , ~ • I I ' i t I • ' ' • I e l • • s ' ( i ( • • ' ! ~ :I ANGELS CAMP (AP) - "Wet Bet," who is a frog, has earned $300 for his owners by outhopping the competition in Sheri.ff Ousts Cyclists THE MEASURE would : lhe 197l lnlemational Jumping -Merge the Adult Authority Frog Jubilee. Youth Authority and thre;;,... . "Wet Bet" turn~ in bis win- T • R F state parole boards into ~~ ~ performance Ol 17 feet 4 error1nn0' ace ans agency w!tll .... m b 'itll;!!' '!lo indies 8und01. ~ ____,_~ : ' . responslblllfy for men........... :ied.: by!.eo!W'd ' )!all or HUTClllNSON, Kan. (uPI) -Fifty members of three motorcycle gangs terrorized and abused cycle racing fans at the state fairgrounds Sun- day. State officers and a sheriff carrying a Tommy gun ran them out of town. The El Foresters from Wichita, Kan., were escorted Li,ving Cost Concerns Americans · • and JUVentle:sr Lal ette Tb .a..a... . home by HighWay l>attoI of--~bolish ")be P'O ~ cak~ated on tt! 6fsil; th~ ficers. The regents 0 f SUbSldy p~ under Which frog's first three OOps. Oklahoma City and the Scor-coun.ty i;>robabon deparu:ients "Good frogs, good frogs. pions of Dallas were escorted receive increased state aid for That's the secret," Hall told to the state line. each convicted felon who is reporters after the com- The Wichita gang moved in-kept under. local custody in-tit'ion . to the Oklahomans' campsite stead of being sent to a state pe about 3 a.m., locked three prison. THE ANNUAL jumping con! wives of Regents members in-Replace probation subsidies test, which attracts froggy en- to a van and said they would with state aid based 00 county trants from Australia to be raped if anyone tried to population. Ireland, 'is patterned alter the leave the fairgrounds. -Establish a $20 millio frog compeUtions staged by THE ANNUAL Kansas State system or subsidies for local the 49ers back in the days of juvenile facilities intended to the Gold Rush . Motorcycle Rally, which at-replace the state's various The miners made wagers on tracts thousands of spectators faciliUes for youthful of-their creatures, and tn 1865 and several hundred cyclists, fenders. Mark Twain immortalized it was being held at the fair-h rounds -Provide a single prison all with a tale of a mlg ty g · system for men, women and caJaveras County jumper "They came in W l th juveniles. named "Dan'l Webster" who weapons, threatened the peo-Calling the Biddle proposal met his downfall when be was pie. wouldn't Jet them leave i....b.-1 d b 1 f and kicked them oot of their "a major revolutionary pro-wl e .. d·~· ksohotwn. ybealmoa b? PRINCETON, N.J. (AP) _ gram," Allen F. Breed, Youth ea buc Just ore a 1g 'bedrolls and took them over,'' t Americans have become more Reno County sheriff James Authority director, says the contes · cone rned w·th th h. h I Fountain said. "They said if proposed changes are a major ''Handsprings,T" enteMredcC blly e 1 e ig cos relorm which would move the Oregon Gov· om a • f anyone left they would kill h · h o living that with the war in th treatment of juveniles back to swept t e competition m t e Southeast Asia, according to em. their home commW1ities. governor's division by a leap "One of the men was able to f !' f 1 4'" I h theGallupPoll. o ""ee , r~ nc es . slip off in the darkness and got California Gov, Ro n a I d Tue poll al.so reported that to my ofice. We were real thin D Reagan's "Jelly Bean Vil" the issue of corruption in on help at that time S<> it took a vis Band didn't make it into the finals. ii us aOOut an boor to get out government, spec· ically the there. IOWA GOV. Robert D. Watergate affair, has become Gom· g Coed Ray's frog , "~lop-A·Long a matter of concern to 16 "I ~ODE IN there in a jeep llawkeye" was second with a percent of tl108C polled; com-with a Thompson submachine 5-foot , 11-indl jump. Alabama pared to one percent io mid-gun on my hip. ThatlitUebaby DAVIS (AP) -1.fembers of Gov. George Wallace's entry, drew some attention and they the Cal Aggie A 11 -Ma 1 e "LitUe George,'·' had en off February. didn't move a muscle." Marching Band at the day and bopped only 1-foot 47~ The 1,531 adults interviewed Fifty police and sheriff's or-University of California Davis inches to finish last among the May 4-6 were asked to name ficers with riot gear moved in campus have voted to admit three governor's entries that the nation's two most im-and confiscated a number or women after the student senate made it into the Unals. At 1 knives, three pistols and two cut off Its funds. least three frog jockeys had portant prob ems. sawed off shotguns. The two Under pressure from the UC a frustrating -afternoon. Their Sixty-two percent named the groups plus the Dallas club Regents and the UCD ad-entries sat sullenly through high cost of living, with crime were told they would not be ministration as well as from the l~second time limit1 the second choice at 17 per-PfOSeO:!ted if they stayed out the student senate, band mem· refusing to budge despite cent. Governmental corruption of town. Two of the bers approved the change stomping, pleading, bair-tear-- and drugs followed with 16 Oklahomans were beaten but unanimously, band manager ing and hand-banging. and Hall, a real estate broker, have been entering frogs in the jubilee for 16 years and have finished. in the money nine times, Hall t o 1 d reporters. Proctor said "Wet Bet" hails from a pond near Bakersfield. . ·' I "' "' percent each. were not seriously injured. Roger Baxter said Sunday. Proctor, an airline pilot, Only seven percent of those l iiiiiiiiiir.ii!ii7.:ir.ir.iifir,iii!~ifti!ftP.i~"'ii!P.w!P.IP.i!iP!iiiimiiil surveyed named thell "Southeast Asia situation" as the major coooern. Patrolman's Body Found NEEDLES (AP) -The body of Dave Harold. 28, a highway patrolman at the Needles Station, was recovered during the weekend from the Colorado River five mJle11 !Outh of Needles. Olllclalo said h• d~apoeartd while swimming with lrlencL, May 11. PHARMACY -CHICI THUi SUPll SALi SPICIA~ lutt. ttt. ' O!olr •M. Prlc• 1 • 100, >.i.lEE WITH c. Vl!fl"llM •••.••••.••••••• $7.45 ss .•• MtCRlN MOUTHWASH, II ot ...•••••••••••.•• ,, $1.S• $1 .29 CUR.AD, "!ONUS IOX" lt11dtld1 •10 •••••••••••••. ll¢ 71t #10 WILKINSON IONDED ILAOES w/fr•• r•tor •••• $2.00 St.69 2700 E. Coast HiRhwav. at Fernleaf, Corona del Mar • 644-7575 Tunnel To Open OAKLAND (AP) -The Bay Atta Rapid Translt system's planned 75-mlle network will be three quarters complete to.- day with the scheduled ~~ Ing of one of the country's longest railway tunnels pass- ing through an active earth- quake fault. LOS ANGELES <AP) - B1ac.t Panther leader Jluey Newton says his group m- dor111!1 black city councllman Thomas Bradley for mayor or Los Angeles. But Bradley an· grlly says he refuses the bocking. Mayoc John II. R<adlng. Seale Jost in • nmolf to Reading i..t Tuetday . Bradley, who lost lo lln<>- lime white Mayor Sam Yorty in a runoff (our yeeni aao in a contesl that frequml)y al· luded to rece, laued a re-- sounding dl!clalmer of the Panthers. The l~ntile Oakland-Con- cord run of the controverstal .$1.6 billion electric commuter train system will be christen- ed with a jazz band, barbershop quartet and an an- tique car motorcade, bringing the number of stations served to 24. BART, the nation's largest locally financed public proj- ect, is targeted for completion next Septemberwlth the open- ing of Oakland-San Francisco service through a tunnel under San Francisco Bay. 111.E CONCORD line's open- ing puts the number of operative miles in the systen at 58, including a 3.8-mile tun- nel through the Oakland- Berkeley hills. 'The twmel is on an active part of the San Andreas Fault system, the Hayward Fault. Special construction In the fault area was needed to keep track aligend because of earth movement. 'The new section's operation calls for six trains running on 26-minute intervals, with con· nectioos between Concord and Oakland, through 0 r i n d a , Lafayette, Walnut Creek and -Pleasant Hill .. Before the trains beiin San Francisco runs, BART ad- ministrators have been told they must cure:. s o m e mechanical ills which have beset the commuter trains since initial operatloos. ALONG wrnt . questions over car safety, some critics contend that on-board com- puters for stoPPing ,iralns at stations, are responsible for station run-thrvugbs early in operations. Others f e e 1 operators dcn't trust the com- puters as much as they should preferring to stop trains manually. "I did not iteek, do not want and I reject and re~"-1.late the endorsement of Huey P. Ne~·· ton," Bradley said Sunday night within scant hours after It was rep;>rted Newton had expressed support. Newtoo's remarks had oc- rured in the presence ol sev- eral newsmen after a news conter-ence be had called to ;remote his new book, "Revo- lutionary Suicide." "We support Bradley and v.'e're sure he will eOjoy a great victory.'' said Newton, who has spent m06t of his time at the news conference talking about another mayoral contest. that of fellow Panth('r Bobby Seale against Oakland ··Huey Newton and~ l are diametrically oppGSed oo many Issues,'' Bradley do- clared in a statement. "Fore- most among them. I have a!Vr-ays been opposed t.o vio- lence as a means to an end. I oppose Huey Newton and the Black Panthers in their pro- grams of assault and ldlllng police olflcers." As the May 29 runoff elect- ion nears, poll» show Bradley leading slightly with much - suppot1 among mlnoritles and liberals, and Yorty wtth an ed~e in many white suburbs. including most of the San Fer- nando Valley. -=------ FASHION J ISLAND NCWPORT CDNTER • llV "' ...... ' ... ·· ~1 ·~' • Whats in a name! Generations of Tradition. Traditions serve a very real purpose. They main- tain the best moments of a man's life and create continuity between each successive generation. My family began the tradition of nam ing the eldest son Theodore over 250 years ago in Nijme- gen, Holland. Theodore Van de Kamp. And with the name came the tradi- tions of the Dutch farmer" -hard workers of the earth. In 1876. Theodore Ill left his native Holland and came t o America to ·begin a new life. But the old traditions remained, and he named his eldest son Theodore, Seeking adventure, he traveled west to California in 1913 to begin the first in a long succession of Windmill bakeries. I was born here and my father named me Theodore, and so contin- ued the tradition of the first Dutch farmers of Nijmegen. And so it fol· lows that my new gentle- men's clothing store has five generations of Theo- dores behind it. And a re- spect for honesty end hard work dating back to the first farmer who broke Dutch soil. I am Theodore V. And so is my store. • ! O!flclals also reported Sun. day that the body ol highway patrolmaf\ Barton J . Brubanker, 36, was found In a swimming pool at thelr home in lfesperla by hls wife. Brubakcer apparently suffered a belirl attack, olflctals said. . ' 46 Fa9'tn lslard o ~ Beoc.h o ~ (714} 640-83'0 J ,, \, \ ' ' I • I • • I f~ ~ ... ~A D .Y PILOT EDITORIA!. r ~~· I! . .-· .. ~ , • I . ' ' . •' Vote Change · Unwise In a Np baclcwanl for county government, Orange Cowtty *llJM!rvlsors have reversed a 1971 decision t.o ~ qlllre a rour·fiflhll vote of the supervlson1 to fire a ~unty department head, restoring lbe lonner th""' filU.. vote provision. Supporting the proposal put forward b7 Supervisor Robert Battin, the board did, however, reject his su~ gestion 1ha1 olber job security provisions also be re-mo ved. · Department heads still will be entitled lo receive written notification of charges or reasons for dismissal, and to a closed hearing before the board . The 1971 four·fiflbs vote requirement cl)ange was a direct reaction to an unsuccessful move by Battin to oust County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas. It was argued at the time that requirement of only three votes to remove a department head left too much lee- way for political pressures on county.job holders. T_hat f,f.JW!!ent rem~_ins valid. Though departme~t heads alw~yo -are answers ble t.o 1he. ~. the vote c:!Jan&(;turtQ.er dilute11; 11\.e administrato~ strength In dealing with county offices. ' · ' The only. acceptable aspect of the move ts reten- tion of the notification and hearing provisions· which will at least hamper any purely political dismissal at- tempts. We can do without a re-run of the 1971 political shenanigans. No Gain for County The second most populous urban area of California would gain chances for two new seats 111.-.-the Assembly if the Legislature approves and Gov. Reagan signs a re· apportionment bill adopted by the Assembly last week. or Hu)ltjng!on l!each and l(!bp'~rigp ~·Fullerton. Jlurte and Baillwt1 v~-aprn,i the measuni. Bad- ham dted diluUon of Orange Criunty Assembly strength since !be two n-distrlc15 Include land, a11d hence pos- sible candldatea and vot-.•from ru.wnide County in one new district and San Diego County In the other. Further. Assemblyman Kenaelb Cory:t_ district gives the Democrit from Garden Grove now conotitu· enls. They live in Lakewootl In· I.as Angeles county. Any way It Is sliced, lbe county which bas grown faster than any other In !be past decade, does not really gain new represerltatfon In thilr latest supposed 11one- man, one vote" ~cling. Not Our Business? -Gov. Reagan has advised Sacramento newsmen he will.not talk abllut !be Watertate affair any more be· <ause It is "nojle,pr my'l>usln~. · ., Tti(,re is· no reason to as8o.Q1.e the Governor knows • · any mDre about Watergate than the average'ciUZen, but one is' inclined to wonder il ,.be'd feel the same way if it we;t ·a Democratic ·adminljfra~nri~the hot .seat. A safe guess is tllit he might be a vocal commentator. Prior to bis ultimatum, and before Watergate as- sumed its present magnitude, Reagan had accused both the press and the Senate investigators of blowing the issue•out of proportion and blamed them for suggesting Presidential involvement. He also opined thjlt the Watergate. bugg~ team should not 1'!' considered criminal, despile 1b5:ille~ality ·of thejr actions, implying that 'thetr ,motives,_ at least, •were n,ot cri~nal. · -;;, ' , '. I\ .. ...... . ' l l I I I I • I I I I . ' 1 I ! , I I , ·.1 The measure takes geography away >from three 1 Republican Assemblymen, yielding them solidly Repub- lican districts, boundaries of which are entirely within Orange County. They are districts held by Assembly· men Robert Badham of Newport Beach, Robert Burke Now th~ governor; has announced he will have no further comment on "subjects nOt related. to California." · News that the state•s~chief official feels that Water· gate is not related to California may come as a relief to some -though under the circumstances his ration· ale is mystifyiftg. 'Will I get to see Disneyland? Certainly, I'm going to Washington.' I • Who Decides Nixon Concepts Suffer Reversals If-Killing-- 1 Gus Dear Gloomy ~he Erosion of Pr~sidential Power :j Is Murder? WASJilNGTON -'Ille erosion of power ~ 1 departments. This \Vas the heart o{ in the Nixon administration has become government mOOemization on ·industrial / Was it right or wrong for Ellsberg quite visible. A great deal of it, but not RICHARD WILSON management lines, which Congress would ~ ~ to steal government papers he had ajl. is traceable to the Watergate sensa· not approve but Nixon put into operation · sworn to keep!secret? It is as sim· h h h SIDNEY J. HARRIS I lh t lion. In matters ot er t an Watergate t e anyway. Pe as 8 · President's ideas and concepts of.his sec-~.L.L. ond tenn are suffering reversals. as Congress alone iS concerned, fle might THIS JOGHLY centralized type of o1Mmr 0111 CNll"'"'" .... '"'""''tt.111 ar These are matters of great importance have won . In fact, he was winning the organrzation placing power in fewer I raad•,.. •nll d• "'' n-.arll'f rttract "" battles of the veto, and he was prev.ailin. g hands could not survive the departure of The Teacher and the Preacher were ;:: :/ 0::,,., 'O!,•i;;i1r s.:ri:,. ~our "' ~t~f· toTh:f's !~~ in the impoundment of funds until the Nixon's chief lieutenants, H.R. Haldeman discussing the sorry state ot affairs in thority and to the courts reversed him. He might have won a~d John Ehrlicbman. With their demi~e, lhe wotld, and how it might be improved. pattern he . th.ought in Congress on bis au.thority to bomb in Nixon also w~ co.mpelled to recagrnze I "All that pl ha 1 ..,. · obe ,._ his d le Cambodia !had not the Water~' sen.<ia· that the presidential power cannot be peo e ve o"'<ts Yuit: lh~Preaeher,"iince&tatesddferabout secon nn • ·".>' ·r ,,. neU nnni.+f ed "t Id! td 10 Commandments," said the Preacher. lt &6 do Churches and so doMindividual \loold fi\Uow. ·Con-.Lt~· s~charged, the-' J/Jls ,_Al\' t a y a"'~i~ on in o severs. e ega ~ '"nlen almost everyttllng would fall 'into • ien ,, • gressiona\ votes de--mosphere. Even in the)',fuatter Of ex· Parts while ·~e--Pres!dent hunself sit s Jllace Pl"Ollt1'1Y." consc ce1. nylng his coosti\u-.ecutlve ptjvilege he might have prevailed lonely, theoretically prot~ted ~t .very l"Let'a just take ~ "E~cUy,': saiA ~ .TeacheJ! ~'A .te ·~ Jlutbari~ to , , un,d,er o~. cur~~!?r-.. _ .... ~-ulne~abl~, a .. tt~nn~le of,power. · one or the commancl·' . • .! ! ~<l!ciUi &f!aii.IYiUil\.rlva~ ~s..1. 6""-Y..ln'. taln'bo-~'. )1 ~·'NJ.~ a~<i!>tli!l ilefea( Q.Jer! • .' N'{xon 11¢ l . ted so much power ments,'' said the bad, we la~I it murder and J>rOhibit lti dia , several c 0 u rt · of any of these fields o( battle. He will that he was helplessly Uninformed by his Teacher. "1,'he one but ii we decide another kind or kllluig ts d-. reversing hi~ lmj)OUildment of continue to bomb in Cam!J4xlia .despite own admission on the most catastrophic single event which has overtaken a presi-1 cient in 50 years. NOW HE is trying to reform the presidency on lines he once decried, the . Eisenhower pattern with more reliance on Cabinet members and .the regular machinery of government and less on a supercharged and overpowered White House slaff or zea1ous "loyalists" without political foundations. The magic Eisenhower ingredient of affection and faith will be harder to find, but Nixon will have to come out of the isolation ~hamber in pursuit of s001e s-emblance .o_t it belore he regains the public confrCence a succ'essful presidency requires. that says,. Thou permissible or necessary, we label It conpess1onally au~~ flJD;ds an~ a congressional votes denying funds for 6halt not klll. ,~ow ·patriotic' or 'legal' and remove the ta~1t. reversal of his policy of exe~uli~e that purpose. He will continue to hold in about that one . moral stigma from it.. pnvilege are wholly contrary to NlXon s impoundment the funds the lower courts l"Of course said "We ha t · • ,_ t don't doctrines of the presidency. haVi! said he must release until such time the Preacher. "It's ,.. ve 0 use our JU"6'"en ' as there is final adjudication of the issue. one of the most im· we , asked the Preacher. TAKEN separately from the Watergate Despite 'his relaxation of the executive portant ." "But us4ally our judgment i s psychology which darkens Washington, privilege doctrine, his stranglehold will .''What about war?" asked the Teacher. determined by our sell·interest and our these acts are great challenges to the continue on information Congress ~·ants "Isn't that a form of killing? Would you cultur~,'' said the Teact:ie~· "Christ~an Nixon presidency. on government activities in vital areas Books D.ar e to ·Question Some Ch erished Beliefs urge young men not to go to war for their countnes have fought Ch.r1 st1an countries ln one case his war·making powers are such as the operations of the Internal country?" bitterly, with the bishops ol each side brought to issue as they never were sue-Revenue Service. ' justltying their country's 'right' to kill cess!ulJy all through the Vietnam war. Jn ~ "WELL,'' said the Preacher. "That's a so!dJers and civilians on the other side.'' another case the President is told th.at he Btrr IT IS becoming more doubtful dif!erent matter. If your country is at. cannot legally thwart Ute w:ill of every day ttiat he can sUstain ·his de- tacked, you have lo defend it. If that 11111AT'S the way people are, un-Congre!s by holding up the aJ,lotment of fiance of Congress and assert so strongly means killing, it can't be helped." fortunately," said the Preacher. many billions for correcting water the authority of the presidency. The ,"What about capital punishment?" "Exactly," agreed the Te ache r . pollution, continuing hi g b way con-reason the doubts rise ls th.at a president asked the Teacher. "Isn't that a form ot "That's why it's a simplistic answer to struction , and carrying on sOcial pro-can sustain only foc limited periods lines killing by the state?" tell people all they have to do is to follow grams. of action which do not have wider sup- "But if jt's legally permissible as a the IO Commandments. Religious groups Jn the matter of executive pfi,vilege the port than these special issues. deterrent to crime, I wouldn't call it 'kill-can't even agree on .,.,·hat '1bou shalt not President's doctMne·proved so sweeping Nixon has had to backtrack also on ing' in the Biblical sense," said the kill' should mean _ each stretches the as to be impractical, and so suspect of another cherished idea about the func· Preacher. "Possibly ~·hat the Bible meaning to cover what it wants to do." being part of the Watergate, coverup that tioning of the presidency. When he meant was, ·nro shalt not commit "If not the 10 Commandments, th.en it was revised. abolished the system of super Cabinet 111urder.' " what?" asked the Preacher. i;hiefs, he conlessed the failure of his •·But who decides· when something is mE CONCLUSION can easily be ideas about executive managem~nt, murder or not?" asked the Teacher. •·only one commandment," replied the reached t'hat Congress will not stand for, which were dear to his heart. "Does the state decide, your conscience, Teacher. "And that is, 'Do not lie to the courts will not support, and the In his original judgment the presideccy or your church ?" yourself about what you really believe, public will be suspicious of as strong a could be streamlined by giving three men and why.' That 's the beginning of hones· presidency as Nixon tried to establish at in his Cabinet jurisdiction over large ''riS A difficult question," conceded ty, of morality -and of true religioo ." th.e beginning of his second term. So far areas which included several government Think Your Gasoline Bill Is High? State's 16,000 Ve hicles Brirn 42 Million Gallons.·a Y ear Every now and tihen I threaten to get rid Of our gasoline credit caret If the kid:ii: had to shell out cold hard cash when they pulled up to the gas pump maybe they \.\'Otddn't be "'"IO wheel-loose and fancy free. But. If .Yott think your monthly gas bill is rough. try this on the family budget! The state has 28.000 of those han- dy-dandy gas credit ca rds and the an· nual tab comes to $10 mi!Jlon. For IO million gallOD.1. en t6p oC tha.t, IOO state buys another lZ rnU· lion gallons, Jn bulk, for the pomps In its own garages. CALIFORNIA owns and operat es 16.000 motor vetdcle1. From compact sedans to llmousin~ to pickup trucks and high. powered patrot can. Each year the state auctions.off Its older can and buys 3.200 new ones. At a cost o( f l4 million. From then on It cotts about 78 cent! a mile for gas, oil, tire., bl:tteriet, '1 e p a l r s , maintenance and i.nJ'8'ance and housing and on Md on. The O.,p!. of Public Workl, which oyersees the d!Vision of hlghway1, hBs Its O'lm fleet of 3.900 vehJcles -2,200 sedans and 1,700 pickups . It COiis '5 millloo a ytar to nm that fleet -fl.Z million Ju.<t 1 \ ( RUSWALTON ) , fo r gas and oil and lube and wash jobs. The Dept. of General Services provides pool cars for most state agencies . That t,1kcs anothe r 3.700 vehicles garaged in seven ci ties lhroughout the state. Adrl to those two flee ts the cars and trucks for \Vater resources, parks and recreation, nnd forestry and tbe highway patrol. and it totals 16,000. ABOUT 9,800 are older models -pre- 1970. Soon the state will have to shell out $35.for each of those, to buy thr required ant1smog devi(!(!S. That's the initial cost. ~ anti· smoggers will cut gas mileage by 8t least JO percent. That will mean hundreds of thousands of cittra gallons(>( gas. 1,.ate model state cars, 1972.s and 73!. nrc averagin g about 10 miles to the gallon. Ten! That's what Ernie Peterson or procurement say3. He blames it on "clean engine s.'" Says the state, by law, has to buy the "cleanest" engines available. So. the taii;payers are caught betwee11 "clean '' air and extra aa.s at higher prices. · Th.e question is, will the gas 0 be available &nd for how much? Right now the state h.1s contracts through December 1973, with both Stand- Brd and Union Oil. Those companies are reluclant to talk about new contracts un· til supply and price questions are cleared up. Weekend jaunts. That sort of tMa.g. And th< taxpayers pick up the lab. What kind of hanky-panky Is that? IC they want a second car in thelr·tami· ly, let those gu)'!I go oot and buy one. TllE BOYS in general services' pro--For the past nine months the state has curement are trying to compute their been phasing out these . big state seal budgets for next year. They are figuring decals on the front doors ol OUr vehicles. oo a 10 percent increase iu the cost of They are switching to small (2~") tlres and a 49 percent increase in the decals on the back windows and an ln- cost of gas. Forty-nine! When you're nocuous license plate holder that talking about tens of millk>ns of gallons whispers "State Vehicle, Official u 1 e ' or gas, that's a lot of 1aipayer dough. Cjlnly." . .. The cost · and · supply ,,.,crunch Ls The 'ojd-t'imers down at the state forcing the state to ~aluate Its prage uy that's a mistake; lt will in. Policies on the use of otnctal vehicle£' crease the improper use ot1 •tlfte oars. lfigh Ume' •' ''Especially now that state vehicles don't For years front-office bureaucrats dime ID tbe tra~itional gray paint but have -been using 'late cars as personAI ·are puldJ.ased In all (run of the as.aembly vehicles. Home -to -office commuting. line ) colors., By George ~~~~--. Dear George: ~nee the: I a s t election I've bt9i.n to worry about my political 11fflllatlon. J'm a Democrat, but my fathef-..ln-law 1aya the Democratic party wlll never be the same again. r1 he right ? Dear D.E.: (){ course he's right. D.E. The Democratic party nev!I" has been the same. Don't argue polities with your father-in-law. . . .you may both switch parties before lll76. (lf you have problems that keep you awau nlghta, write to ~rge. ff• need! lots or letten. ' ' .be'! llO ""rrled ho has to read b!Jniell to' ;i .. p.) Two new books have come onto the market that could do much to shake some rock-bound tenets of science, religion and perhaps even human thought. It normally takes a great deal of im· petus to force such glittering generalities out or this typewriter but there was more than enough force in Erich von Daniken's "Olariots of th& Gods?" and "Gods from Outer Space" (Bantam Books). 111E FEEUNG I get from i;_eading von Daniken's "heresies" is that anyone with a partly open mind wiU go away feeling like a man born blind suddenly given sight . In a nutshell, von Daniken's two works speculate upon the distinct possibility that man as we know him today is a deliberate mutation created through planned cross-breeding somewhere in the dim, distant past of our planet . He claims, and does much to support his contention, that the "creator" or homo sapiens on this earth was simply another man -or men -from a dif. ferect world somewhere 1n the universe. He says these beings artificially bred with the lower primates they found on earth and set them on the path to civilization. VON DANIKEN's "proof" would never be considered accurate or valid by scien- tists who lock themselves away with test tubes and books. He claims the unexplained wonders ci. the world -the great j>yr:amlds of Mex· lco and Egypt, the Easter Island stone heads, the high clvlllzatlon.s n ow overgown with jungle vines -were the prod,ucts of visits tp earth by in· telllgences ~ ~ve yet to moet. Von Danlken IS an untrained writer but f\i.1 words have a rlng or sincerity. His tflougtits In the books are at times ran. dom, but the meaning Is clear. His scientific rererence, are clear and understandable to most u n tr a in e d minds. Von Daniken~a throrlcs, which must be read to be aJ'preciated, Uter•l1Y cast the lie In the race or SCJentJflc theorie.. until now believed proven beyond a shadow of doubt. ms BELIEFS press for a reopening of study into allegedly "solved" myaterles and exploration for ·proof of other mysteries with en open mind . Von Daniken goes .0 far as to qpestion the realities ol Biblica! !'l'illnp--the (o'undalion,, of ,.ui1~ einj)lru built '° mctfculously by age upon age of learped hum.on betnp. He claims many ol tM legends found In °"8e ancient ......i. l (THE BOO~AN J originated somewhere else than on our earth. i\1y first reaction to von Daniken's theories, despite what I consider an open· minded attitude toward such things, was , "here's another atheist with his hare· brained idea s." But v.·hen I finished reading , I had only one thought. Here are books that dare to question the foundations or human civilization as we know it They dare to tell m&nkind that perhaps he isn't the only human in· tellig e nce created by the Almighty. Indeed, von Daniken ls a super·theologian. Ile is conscious of a supreme elemental force th.at started the wheels rolling. But he ls skeptical of all the facad es and taboos man has built around the real answers to his creation. WlLLrAM SCHREIBER Quotes I t t l "We bave a respons.lblllty to make cer-I taio that Republk&n1 t a k e t b o leadershJp ln cleaning op what tbe Prell\. dent bas called a sordid affair." -GOP Sen . Charles Percy of Illinois on the 1 Watergate scandal. 1 OUNat CilT . l1t1!£jij 111 Robert N. Wecd,.PUblhhtr Thomal Kcevil, Editor. BarbartJ Kreibich EditoritJt Page Editor The editorial page or 1he' Dtily Pilot tttks to lnlonn and ltimulale readers by Prescntirta" on th.is page dtvtne·~mcntary' on loplC11 oJ h>-tt'rest by Q'1'1dlcated co1umntm •nd cartooni5ts, by provld1niJ • forum for readers' views and by ))n!lleftting thla newspa~·· optr1:i.on. and idcu on c:un.nt t-""' "\""'~ "''"""' ot iho Dally Pl}Ot • .,,. ... O/l1Y In tho ~~ ~umn •t the top of the ....... o;mtm. ex......,.i by ......... unuriltB and. • c.rtoOr.1$1 and letter writ.en are: their m;n and no endonir.t-...nt Ol.:i>e............. ... ·Dally l'llqc_ .... _ ' . ' Monday, M'ay' Zl, 1973 • ' " r I t I t I I I t , I • ) • • Qu~ENIE By' Phil lnlerlancll "I told him to get out l!nd make something of himself and all he did was get oul." ~ L. ltl. Bo9d Retire Earlier And Live Lo:Q.ger Eariier you retire from the job, the longer you'll live.i probably. Or such be the indications in a recent study · among physicians in Britain. That doctor there who stops work at age 65 is known to live only two more years, typically. But he who quits at age liO can be expected to live another 13 years. Fewer than half of all the citizens natioowide }lave Sui~ GLENDALE (AP) -Mote over Captain Alll(lrica - cough, wheer.e -bin - Smog Man. '!be cnoallon ol 1 lf.YOIMld hig)l;.cbooi student 111 llils i... Aogeles suburi>, Smos Miil It bllled .. "America'• lle"'9t super" hero" in a terie8 ~ comic boob put out by Charles !\)'an, a~- RYAN "PUBUSID!S" the comic hooks bimonlhly and sells them hllme!f .... -a copy. He11 been ' dolnc-ibe series f~ about, • year, photocopylllg the .stripe, - ' • ----- Man Latest 1tlllnl them to ftimds. The theme II ocoloo with &l10I balllilll the ptllllilln. "I hope JlOOl)io will not look ll Smog Man u another l!moll,y the -· )'CU -· -ol oomy," aid llyan. "I HOPE lhey11 rel!ly road the story and g<t out ol It '"1at I'm trying to say." nae • 'bero" Ls a oollege senior named Ben w b o -· lmmwie to smog by running through ' pollutJoo. choked dty port and Inhaling "'an unproven and potenuaJly deadly -called 7-11" which is ••pure ~ of -)opt la ............ _. letDI: 11ld .....,.. ~ . The ._..... 'With tho pollutkn ond 7-11 - Stqoc ..... to --the anl1 realdint ol "holl!o'• City" .. aunivo Ill Pr polJUOcn a1tact, bul there la uie aide eflec( Hll noie i.11' all. "'IBE LD6S ol llt)' ,_ Is the llnal ... ol ::/-adap<· mg to tiiJ bJi I en- vironment, n aays SlnOi Man. who "!'!"' the titandanf comic boot boro ran. of • tor»tlght sult embluooed with "SM" and a hood to cover bis head. Mte< the smog a ti a c k B ero leaWll p··· Qty ' ... -pYl!;)'ll'd." SlrloC Mon4odaroi: "I must pict myoelf out I Cllllombod car and lood II with ~ ol today's et· maopbete and the 7-11 and then ~ myMI! ao no ..,. will eftr 1 forget wt» l am : The only human to ....- ourv1 .. ~ full 1._1 of pure smog -SMOG MAN:" JN ONE SMOG M a n episode, the hero Is seen driv· i,. to Glendale hopinc to be free d. smog "for awhile at least.'' Instead, he finds ~ foothill • oommunlly, llke the mt of the Loi Aogeles area, IU!· lerinl from smog and -to Wk with city officials. But when he bttaka Into I -~officials say, "Cougl>. OJuC!il You're out ol Order Smog Man -OJugb!" !\YAN IS ALSO a businessman who got hllMelf a booth at a recent comic book convention •nd sold ~ palnted Smog Man T-shirts in addition to I.he comic books. But he coocedes t b a t bwlness dropped off after he aold several shirts to friends and clas.s.mates. • • ---------.- . . • I ,. -stayed -even so .mucb-as .. ooe night in_ a hotel .• .'It's believed a rabid skunk can't fire its odoriferous volley •.• Roget's Thesaurus lists 107 synonyms for hate, 4-04 foe love. Encouraging, what? . . . There's more water in lettuce than in whole milk, remarkably ... It's also true the average woman -. ·-• A I . married once has more children than the average woman married twice. If you've ever had second thoughts about the brand of cigarette you smoke, : ratb~=~!.;;;.!'.~;1scr::s:.,.""'r!!"~y~~ here's a quick way to find out if it really delivers what you want . say. Whenever an audience . breaks up during a routine, -· ;~~e~~~.·:•bly~f~~.~homm~1.u~~· .. : :~~.fi~.~ffn~~:Wll ~~u .~.!~!.~"q~~!.J~-~'.~ .. ~~· Bec~°:w~~l~~~on.,;: :i~eedarcli n:~~:: ' .,.And 1°f OU make tL _ .... _ test'. . ..... !lt:." aW'nston,' . .._t_ -'lt •..:11 ~.~. hy m.,. ""~ . Ol ''I". ,1n. what poisonous to niosl animals: And any faricY: fowl with . ' . ; }11 , · 1~ · S W .IJll · 1 ·UJ.eY Ui:'I.-~ T""'6 W · ,'f·~""'1&-, " · a beakful ol it gets suddenly scissorbllled and goes ptuiil. smokers can· point to their brand and~ "llQw goOd it is!" :r· ' no •ff• That profession wherein the ladies have gained the greatest ground of late is bartending, please note. About 2Q years ago, only six percent of the nation's mixologists were women. Now, the barmaids make up 21 percent; MOST CIULDREN -Q. "Any record as to what men fathered the most children?" A. King Soloman is said to have had 700 wives and SOD coocubines. Presumably, he merited that top .fatherhood distinctioo, although ~ numbe!' ol his offspriog remains unknown. Moce recently, Emperor Maulal Ismail of Morocco had 300 wives and 700 concubines, leaving upoo his death ln 1'127 at age 81 exactly 548 sons and 340 daughters. IQ tests in penitentiaries Indicate three out of four murderers possess somewhat less than average intelli- gence. Pomona CoUege researchers found that out. And they concluded therefrom that most homicides are com- mitted because the killers lack sufficient savvy to deal with trouble except by violence. They're just none too swift, say the scholars. Those Scots are famous for their homespun tweeds,• true. But they didn't invent the weaving Of same. Arab sailors, beached therea!Souts when the Spanish Armada was whipped, taught them. Addre1s mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New. pof't Beach, Calif. 92660. ' I See by Today's Want Ads e TRAILER HITQI • It's an easy lift with this brand. There's al9o a wall type log fireplace, etcctric, fol' ..... e COOK UKE A PRO with this 36" Magic Chet gns range. It h8ll a large griddle and Is fn:excellent condition. DAILY PllOT THE HELP~UL GUIDE - FOR TODAY 'S HOl\1 E M A KE R S , ' 17 Test #l Sniff It Take a whiff of the tobacco. Does it smell rich and fresh and apPj,aling? If yourciga- rctte is Wi95ton, you'll reci;ig- nize the aroma of costly Vintage LeafTobaccds. ·Winston chooses the most nearly perfect leaves money can buy. Then we age these rare • tobaccos in wooden casks. We do it for the same reason you'd age a fine wine. Aging makes our tobaccos mellow and brings out that extra dimension of natural goodness. Test #4 Light It Does it hl.llll evenly? Here's a critical test of the way your cigarette is made. A cigarette rolled fresh, packed full and made with care will bum evenly, draw easily. Winston always does. How does your brand shape up? . Aska Winston snioker. , He'll tell '~, Warning , The Surgeon Generar Has Determined That Ciga!ettd Smoking Is Dangerous to 'lour Health. ' I I \I Test #2 Feel It Roll the cigarette in your hand. Pinch it slight!\\ Does it feel srale? A cigarette that's been,wait· -ing in a warehouse, or on a shelf, can lose some of its freshness. And some of its taste. But, because Winston sells so fast, every pack · comes to you fresh. The fact is, on any given day, Winston is likely to be the freshest cigarette your money can bu): Test #5 Smoke It What could be simpler? That's the ,.real test of a cigarette. Can it deliver good taste and real satisfaction every time you light up? Wihston can. Ask a Winston smoker. Any tiine. He'll tell you in four simple words: .How good it is. ' , Test #J Take a puff ••• before ·lighting ,,. "' ••• Take a puff-without lighting it. ; That's a good way to learn ;," about the tobacco and the ,,,. filter. If you can taste the '." tobaccos without lighting '. up, y'ou know there's rich· ~ 11 · ness up froµt And that on the fi lter doesn't·get in the "" '" way of the taste. Winston's ,1.,. exclusive Filter-Blend, a :"'· top·secret blend of different tobaccos, '"'· works with Winston's mcxlem white ' filter to deliver satisfying taste in every·pul[ ." ' ' i.. ••• • • e 1t Jll.J,llfl0lllf014CCeC:-. 'J liil• f 20 mg. 'taf, t4 mg.nicotine av. per cig111na, FTC Repon FEB.13. ' I •· • f • ' • • DAil. Y PILOT M....,, 11.,. 21, I 97l l S-""'"'-'.;c._~~~~~~"--'--~ Necessity for County Open 11ipace ,Office Told ORANGE coum Exte11sion Of Optiori Authorizetl SANTA ANA -An option lo lease a small parcel of land north of. the, Orange County Airport tower bas been ex- t.ended two months becaU5e of illness to the owner of the San- tana Heilcopter Service. County supervisors were in- formed Tuesday that Robert J. Benish, president of the helicopter firm had suffered a heart attack which caused a two-month delay in prepara- tion of his development plans for the property. During the ettenslon period, Benish will pay '500 a month option fee. Death Notice• By JAN WOtml Of .... "* "*' lt•ff SANTA ANA - A new cowt- olllc< will be -to Im· nt tbe open IP""" goall will beoome I port of the county general plan. This WU part of 8 pttSen• lallon by Bob Pipher of the COWllY plannillg department recently durfn& tbe flnt draft or the county's open space ele- ment. The report al'° pointed out that open space is not only parka and greenbelts. It can mt1n otmdorl<s. aolf couroes and coll<ge campuaes. PIPHER IUMEWED the goals and re<0mmendatlons ol the report at a pqbllc bearing, fourth m a series before the commilslon. . F I n a I recommendations regarding the open tp8Ce and conseniatkio elemeotl ol the general plan, aloog with the implementing resource management ordinance and the cost-benefit analyab, are expected lG be made to the Riles Will Visit Co~y Educators SANTA ANA -Dr. Wilson Riles, State Superintendent of Public-lnstructk>.n. will be a guest of the Orange County Department of Education Thursday. Dr. Riles will tour the Day Care Slwrtage 'Serious' department's new building at 1250 S. Grand Avenue, Santa Ana; OOld a press conlerence, and dedicate the department's new Instructional Materials Display Center -the first such facility in the state. A stat! luncheon will honor Dr. Riles at 11:30 am. T11E N E W lnstruclional center baa been reorganized to provide improved services to districts throughout the co.unty in ordering textbook and media materials, according lo Dr. Warren C. Marsh, chief administrator and special pro- jects coordinator for the cow11: department. J•'"" M. Cowl•, 1t11 <••"" L•M, SANTA ANA A ·1· I Fvii.rion, O•tt ot t1••1ri. M•y 11. st7J. '-cr1 1ca Jn additJon to assisting ~~~1 "Two-~~ ... :~.n1/i; :'. shortage of licemed family <tistric~ in ordering materials, cowi., °' ,..,,.11. C•UI.; .. .,., M. cowi., day care horn-exists in th t taff ill be UK A..-ln; two 1r1Mn, N•lll• Buick, .._ e cen er s W Woodlu'ld HUl11 J"ll• M11r1 ... u, 51n Qra"ae County, accn-''"." to r•~s·••o ! O r conducting 0~1 • 1nr" Qt•fll.klllldr9ri Furier•l ·~ ""~ .... ,....~. hJl Board d SUpea riaw• in early June. 1111l SUPEBVJBORS will conduct anoC!>tt oerles of bearlnp tMJuih June, with pmage ol lho 1WO mte maJ)o dated elementl tlated for June 30. " 1be report recommended lhat project -.tlnlton be hired to overtee eioCh priority project of open spaoe .• Of the five areaa .ctmen for top billing .. far, detailed open apace proposals are finished on two' the lilgbiy· developed urbanized areas ol I.he north county, and the <lllno lllfll atta bordering on tbl'te olhu' a;iuolies . il\ tbe oorlheut 1ectloo. ' 11lll MULTIPLE PROJECT coon11 .. 1or COllC<pl repc .... la a modification ot t b e prellmina.ry retQU1'Ce manage- ment ordinaoce, w h l ~ h originally called fOF o n e overall resource manager. Pipher !old tbe commission that ooe of, the biggest obolacles i n impleineotlng open 8(l8Ce goals will be the need to coordinate with many government agencies and civic organizations. In the Otlno Hills itrea, for aamp., lolr CllQlltlea come tocetkr1 IN THE propooals !or ~ northern urbenfud areas, the county "'1f have to -~ will\ up to 11 ol the cotm.ty'a 28 cities, a:op:ie of wb1ch may not be in~re!ted. · Roger Slates\ dWnnan of tbe contmleslcin, oald he did not feel a coordinator fnlm the county should tell tbe ciUes what to·do. · "Some of the cities have fine parl< aod open sp1100 Jngrams already," he said, ;;and the only thing that stops most of lht -Others ts lack of money ." Ol1IEll AllBA8 designated top ~y for _, llj)OCO ~at!i*' aro lbe UJ1P<I' Santlqo Gn<J>belt, the Aliso Gieeobelt, and lbe Laguna Greenbelt Coordinotlnll them will be simpler slnoe they are ln unin- COf\lOl'llted land. 1be rel)Cl<I calls for annual review of. open space pro- grams to assure that im- plementation of the concepts is~ Piphei' aald lack of im- plemeritaUon kept the county's last general plao, created In 1947, !Jool doing Its job of guidlaa ..mui ~~ moooe THE OPEil opoce team had previously preoenlad their general goals ol bealtb, recreation, 1 a f e t y , en- viroomenta 1 quality and natural resources. lhey added several more Tuesday. "Protection of the quality of tile of all inhabllaots sbould be a dominant planning factory -not •pedal interest, '1 the report stated. Water, waste, noise and air po!Jution must be reduced, and dependence on aerospace and land development should be lessened, the report added. f.=:' J~'t~~.€ii;bl'~~ ~e~ ... Knt!~:.!. t~e County pilot. and learner verificatjon --1'~:.00::::::-,._ wltllln; IO,,,'::.-'.CWM.e_ ~~~ • --.--.It~#:-:~ ----··ol- rntmorl•I conh'lblltlon•, ..... cen1r111111e "11le proposed. cutback in The 1aci1ily occupies Qf1 Besides frae,checking- Centineie·BftAk.~r-AeW-Oleck·Guarantee.c;ard.aoo Aulomatic Reserve Account. Get them slarte9 together-they g0 10 "'9 Cowl• Meflioofl•I FU n d f d f " th ·' P....crtl9fi.n ctii.wc:h Df ,,.. cov""•"'· 2156 furufin g o day care an pre-square eet 1n e new 1;:UUC8· :~~::, ~irv,cOT::C'°'~· 8'11 school facilities by the federal tional complex on Grand JOHNION and state governments is very Avenue. Sv1vl• E. Jottnton. A11• 411 rn10'"' o1 serious," Knight said. "The i~..!:: .. irf•1;.:..!:.'"·r~i 1'1l: impact that the cutbacks wlll J._, -· 1UcNr11 TM'h:tt. Huri11"91°"' ha lh adequacy of Supervisors Study Cost Of DisfJOsal t,nch1 brflher·fp·l•w,y,. Edwlri JOl'tru.o.... Ve on e w;:1~1Tll c111ou::t•f,;,,,..,:",,.1lf,,i:g, t"!':t licensed day care homes ls ~l•I P•rlo;. Wntcllrr C hf P I I aJanning." Mortv.ry, ......... Olrte""'•· SCHllMIC Ktl?Y l!dw•tii Sctlll"*-..... n. °' 1'60 ~ Aw., Sp. lf, Coat• l>VM. Sur· v!wd by wlfto, Gl911Y11 two cMvgl'tt9rt, ,,,_.rlorl• 8•1mmtl, Lot """'"' Gtacty1 a-tMri, B•ldwtri ... ,., ....,,,...... en.rt" ol' N-H9'TIPlhir•1 f.-ndMughtw, Mii•· lfl9 Holms. ~rtv ... l•"""Y -...ICM -· held •l UI II,...,.,.., CIM..... lriurri· men!. F•lr1WWtl ~l•I ~•rt(. a.u arwdw•'f Moriu.ry, Olrtetorl. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTIJARY C'I E. lllh St., Colla Meu 1111181 BALTZ-B,RGERON FIJNEllAL HOME eo.... del Mar 1'1J.'450 Colla Mesa 141-%Ul • BELL BROADWAY MORTIJARY 110 Broadway, Costa ~ten LI s.u3J • M<COllMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTIJARY 17Gi 1.a,... Canyen Rd. ""'415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary Cli1pet SSOO Pacific View Drive Newport Beacli, CalUonla "'-!7• • PEl!K FAMILY COLONIAL fl'UNEllAL ROME '1111 Bolsa A,.., w-..11ar m.:ms SMmlll' rloRTIJARY C'I Mola SI. Bantlngtoa Bettb - He said many people are unaware that a state license is required to care ror unrelated cbilden In homes. "LICENSED FA!tULY day care is the only legal sup- plement to tbe reduced number ol o.tber cblld care facllllle& qd the ~ n \ y recognlztd cfiild care facility for infants," Knight explained. He said that children from birth to two years of age make up nearly one-third of alt re- quests for family day care. "Licensed family day care Is quality care 'With an em· phasls on 'mothering,' " he added, "Each day care mother provides her own special brand of 'mothering' to a limited number of children." HE SAID consultation from the Welfare Department is available to provide a healthy. safe and happy environment for children in day care facilities. Those wl!hing further In- formation as to how they can qualify for such care may call the Jlcensinl{ section o f welfare's Fam i I y and Children's Services at 834-4321. SANTA ANA -Orange County Supervisors have balk· ed at spend!Jll ia:100 to pro- vide the $1{erlff's Department with a diiposat device tq get rid of used plasUc hypOOennic syringes. '!be sheriff reported that lbe present incineration method ls no longer legal and that another method must be used. Supervisor Ralph Clark ob- jected. "Why can't they walk across the street to the health depart- ment and dispose of them there?" he wanted to know . (Actually the health depart- ment is three blocks from the sherlf£'s oJflces). Supervisor Ralph Diedrich wondered if the law required that the syringes be disposed of immediately after use. Wednesday, the board mem- bers decided to have the coun- ty acknlnistrative officer study the problem and report to the board. MOST SUITS, COATS, 1-Pc.DRESSES 99<: the easury DRY CLEANING OltANADA Milli 18000 Chalsworth St., Y01t1tANCIS~lved1 ~d ~•thorroe WOODLAND Mllll2i!l00 V1etory 811'1! LAICfWOOOCirS6" S!. 11\d Para'l!wnr Hh'I. ltlVlltllDIJSlll lyltr ~!. IUINA l'Alttt8e~c~ ~nc! Orangetftrope IANfA ANA3900 Soutlt Br1~llll SL OltAN GIG•r~en Grove Blvd. and Mant~e~tw • .. We're celebrating our Semi-Grand Opening with some thomugh!Y grand offers. First, we ate ot!QtinafREE,P~nal Cl1<1eking <nr,(jfe. No~ .. ~~uired;~i~chafg:::.;.;,,;,,:;. No 1&11r.gt:& Caft&cfled. • _ r · . . . : .. . . . . . Just open a Charter Depositor aecount in OUT t""'l"""'Y facility•" ' at Broo!<hurst and Garfield, and we'll print your Charte<tlepcsitu · · ··· seal on your chock at no charge. Your FREE checki~g p(iVileg~ can save you $25 to $40 a year in service charges tl)is year IJili;l' f!NerY year that you bank with us. Don't delay-this valuable offer is for a limited lime during our Semi-Orand Opening. hand-in-hand for doing your banking out of y0ur pocket. · You'll find there are many reasons to bank at Centinela, like: •Banking on SATURDAY-10:00 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. • FREE Business Chocking Accounts (Minimum Balance $500) ··~ ., • Photo Checks-We take your picture in itte bank, free. SATURDAY, MAY 19 • 9:30 AM-4:00 PM • (while our building's being bulH) " . ' A Grand Opening Without Give-aways, . isn't very grand. So, besides FREE Lifetirl)e Checking, all of our free banking services and the friendly personal service of our independent bank-come in for goodies and give-aways and get ~ acquainted over tree ~ refreshments. Free t--1i r""""~--;;f-..::!1~:;..,J balloons for the " youngsters! • Extended Hours for Your Banking Convenience: Open Satu.rdays 10:00 a.m.-1 :00 p.m. Monday-Thursday 8:30 a.m.-5:00 p.m. Fridays until 6:00 p.m. 19006 Brookhixsl {al Gsfle)d), Hunttnglori Beach/(714) 963-6851 Newport Beach/lngloWOOd/SOuth Bay/Playa Oet Rey/Hoollngton- Member, F.0.1.C. FROM Fashion ·Island Newport Beach STEREO SOUN.OS OF l :HE .HA.RBOR ' ' I • " . ..... . . ~-. . Julie; W altons TV,. s 'Best CBS Edges ABC 25-22 in Annual Emmy Awards ' ' By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP) Televtslon'• biggest success"bl the season, 0 '1be Wal tons," and Its most glamorous failure, ''nle Julie Andrews Hour," don\lnated the 25th allJltlal Emn\Y Awards presentations. '"Jbe Waltons," the CB.S country, said: "I'm dO~ 1 'm thrilled. I ..,S so buoY Cl)" Ing •od claJllllnl fqr.-\UdJanl 1bomu, I alma!t didn't hear my name." In the 8Dllual nel-~:rlval· ry, CBS woo 25 awanla, fol· lowed b~ ~· with ii. NBC won 10, and the l'llbllc Brood- casting System bod .....,,_ Valode llor!l<f,. ,..... nam<d ~ ---pa,.ni. the wrlteno . ol '"nle Electric CompeDT'; 1"l'be ABC MISS MOORE bad Aid AluncbOel Spoclal," t be ooru.<lho bem JnCllclng bor "'"" ol tho Curlew•"·, and to "porennlal looet'I smile" and -said bocbtqe afte: the pres-~ Lewis for "A flclure of entaUon: "I'm really 1111'--'-" 11 In sports, Emmys went to .--ABC's "Wide World of Sports" DAILY PILOT Ml• Moan earlier -Un> for tis COYOrall• ol the Olym-Emm1" In her appearance on pies ~t Muntcll, to ABC <00\-tbe old "Dick Van Dyte menb.tor Jlrn McKay for the uP1 ,......,. SMw." Olympic& and to the videotape story ol a rural Virginia fam· ily during the Depr~ion, won six awards Sunday night in- cludlDg best dramatic series; best actor. for JUcb&rd 'I'hornU: best actress, f<r Michael Leorned; and best supporting actress, for Ellen Corby. Sunday's awardl were ror eoterlalnment _..,. and achievement. News and docu- mentary awards will be -sented Tuesday nlgbt in a ceremony in New Yort Qty over C'BS. '!be Emmy fn>m the Na-· editor for 11io Olympics EMMY AWARD WINNERS FROM 'MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW' CELEBRATE VICTORIES tiooal Academy .alTelevtsklo. ~-~-~~e!for!.!ABC~~·~~~~~~~~~~~F~rom~~L~e~fl~,T~ed:::_~K~ni~g~h~t,~M~l~ss~M~oo=:re~,~V~a~l=•'~ia,_.:_:H=•'~pe='-'r,~D~i~re~c~to~r~J~a ~y ~S•=nd.::::.r~lc=h~~~~~~~ Arts and Scleocea for -,. comedy ...nt for the thlnl Miss Andrews' show, can- C<led by ABC because of low ratings, picked up seven awards, including best musical variety series and a nwnber for technical aspects. Miss Andrews was reported abroad during the moment of triwnph at the Shubert Theater. 'lboln!ls, wbooplnjt . and laughing as ho rushed to tbe· stage dtring the telecast mr ABC, said: "While trying to· thin\ ol sometlilDll I<> say K I won, I destroyed my car." LATER, he explained he had wrecked his small foreign car oo. Hollywood's Fountain Avenue while en route to the theater. "I don't want to say too mllCb," he said. "The m- surance company will be on my back." Michael Learned, whose 111le in "The Waltons" is her firit· television appearance in this year to "All In the Family." Producer Norman Lear said, LAURENCE Olivier WU "! dldn, tin); we'd win agato. named outstanding actor ln a Not ttil1; n , don't. deserve tt. single performance for ABC's Wbeo ·"·-llloore and i.ro 1111 "Long Day's J...,,.Y lillo her .,.;;;;:'woo; r tbought li· Night," and Oorlo i..odunan would.go lhal way.• was named O!Jlstandillg ~ Jack Klugrnau, costar ol fO'r' an ~ M?vie , of ~ '"The ·°'1cLOR.rple." was na~ Wee);;,_M .J!l:andAew f.lle. ed lJlo ,boal come4Y ador'for Both 'WO .,.,Qloir'Winnl;rs. bis poilrayai of I sJomr ,'Jbe ~:~."II ~V ~ sJOtawrjtel;: •ffe>'woti fol'ihe ~~ ;a·ipyrtr"l!il ·"' tlie . -role In 19'/J, . bitter'~.....,_-. .. . ._, .. . .. . ......... • ............. MA.loll -flict inNortbe111.Ireland, was -~..:-•...-·ith. z.·· -·NBC namea· oubtalldlrig ~ dr• ~· ~ w • . .a.ui:; IJ matic pnignun. sj>edal starring Uza )!lnne l Scott Jaroby, 18,-was·named was named best aingle variety best supporting a~ -In I show. It ~W>usly WOii a drama for tbe ABC mom Peabody Aftrd. '"Ibat Certain Summer," in When Emm~ pre 1 enter which be played a y0uth l\f· David ,_ riad the.name of . to . ~--... ,......... tlie \flm«'lor.-Vlliety, be mg C'Ope: Wu.LI..-,,.,~~-·-aa\d •'be'1•dtne'tt lgU:t".Jle ~~. · wP WU 1"'ertloJ to Bob -Folse, named tiest 8~ 1111• 8 pr-oduce·r;~dtre~.~ comedy, and two peitonlten ~·~ oi:'tbe "I.tu. 'Mooreoo berSho~ ~ ~...:. Tylerd . So ·1., thlo.¥<!1J'.. F .... bas w, 1~ ~an won tbe·P.fttfody, two Tony• for Broocl1itY"• "Pippin" and an 09caJ' fOr directing "Cabaret. u • • ' Foue said that, wiµt all hii· . recent achievements, 0 I would --be-wise' to comblne'll ---_,_ .. -. you speech wt t b an-.. Th' e nouncement of my reUrement fine an· ·of · cake decorating. Learn how at from show business." . ,. . "AMERICA," the JJ.part reflection on the United States by Alistair Cooke, was named the wtstandlng new series. The show, &ho a Peal>o<IY win- ner, WU produced by the British Broadcultng Corp. Another BBC show, ''Tom Brown'i SCh>oldays,'' w·a s named ootstandin& limited , Decorator server stand, for a stylish 3 75 presentation. , ..n.o. Its~ Anthony ~~ --M~y, was ninieQ-litSt ao---. em!e·¥D-. .. iot"lh. --.... < .. .. ' ' . : ' .ili \ .,., , '• 1. • .. ::,~<tJ.+.ll:: SUsan Hemplblre, ....., .... · • •o· • .. ;; ;~;;::~'E::::=:::::~~~~~ ; ' --Emmyo previoasly, lb . • • • • ~ l WU named best actresl in 8 ~ • • • • - •I ·uf;s.T ....... 'WAl.,TONS' STARS IN MOMENT OF l'RlUMPft MichHl LNrnocl, Richard Thomas ¢hit~~·~~;t • '. , ltmlled tterleo, the BBC's /! "Vanity Fair." Both aeries ~~'.\ were aired on Masterpiece Theater oo ·PBS. · Tim Comriy .... oelecled best . 1IU)llJCJl1inC player !!' a variety ibow for an ap- pearance on the ' ' C a r o I Burnett Show." EMMYS FOR ootstanding children's programming wenJ, to "sesame Street": ''7.oom"; • Ii u ~(),P IOV 1.49 each is ~air you pay for professional 9()1or. portraits of your ch.ild. Select either large 5x7•, or set of 4 wallet size, from several poses. cswa:::::. ____ ) Basic decorating kft lncludet ah you need to get started. Make.flowere, borders, or your own "profeaalOAll" creations. 650 • • ~--.:r··· ·-...,...... .. --• • ., ... ~. . JCPeniiey ' MAY 22 -23-24-25-26 HOURS:'TUES.·fRl.10·1 & 2·6;•SAT: 10·1 & 2-SiJO . FASHION ISLAND ONLY -Newport l1aclt ' ·-tyl 11 proud to ,... ... "'• co.try'• -popokr prof ........ callo docom«, Mr. N°"""" Wilton. Tltls int.,.,•tionally recogniied author ~•nd lecfurer is • creetor of modern food decorating id••s from design t(\ m•nuf•c.ture. He i1 pre~Jdent of' Wilton. Enterprises and director of the Wltton School of Cake Decoratin9- .... Mr. Wlltoe wDl lectura wt" d-tratlon by Mn. C-lo Rico la tloo lellowl119 sl'O(o: Fashion Island Newport Beach Tuesdciy, May 22nd. 6:00 to 8:00 p.m. Speelal. Cake arid Food Docorattng 4ftlo. YwllooJ< by Wilton. -VT _:) ,. 33..pc. cake decorating kit has 21 decora ting tubes, plastic coupler for fast changes, 2 bags, 2 spatulas, flower nail and 5 paste colors. All packJd In a plastic organ izer box.1119 Mickey W.Uoe cake kit lncludl9 O)'•JYlh(ng .needed 10 Cfe•te your.favorite cha,...,.., plus CO\ftlllello lnatructlOlll. .(Cek9 mtx not Included.) 520• JCPenney We know what you're looking for. NEWPORT BEACH Fa shion Island Only \ \ I • ' ' • I \ ~fl DAil 1 PILOT -· 111., 21, 1973 TONIGHT'S TV illGffi,JGHTS KTl'V m 8:00 -Musical Magic of Burt Bachar- ach. An evening wilb the top compooer •!>d ·~ Dionne Warwlcke, Joel Grey and Sacba Dll\"1- KHJ CJ 10:00 -In Search of Rulity: the Blaclc American. James Earl Jones narrates thill special exploring black activity in the Los Angeles area and Negroes who have made significant contribu- tions. CBS 6 11:30 -"Husbands." Peter Falk, Ben Gazzara and John Cassavetes star in th.is drama from 1971. '""·~-·--' ... - TV DAILY LOG Monday Evening MAY21 1:00 IJ 0 0 Ill ti) Iii;) Ill -m-o-. @ ... ..... ow ......... .. l!O-IM&w" -c..r lnim 5PM. m"'"'-111,..,,.. m•--r'\~M ... mnno- Tuesday DAYTIME MOVIES ,..JO O (C) "l roUn Anow" (wes) '50 -Jamis Stew1rt, Jtfl Ch1Ml•r. 10:00 [I} "Ht Rldet Ttll" (wes) '54 - Dan Our,t•. TOllJ Youn&. O "Scotland Y1'11 lnsptdof' (m)'5) '52 -tes1r Romero, Lois M1nteU. 12:00 O "Ne'ltr S.r Dit" (com) '39- Bob Hope. "Hill Wm" (lllJ'I) '54 -Altl "ieot. 10:00 IJ (() Medic.II Cta.r (R) Cunt1 Dl1r11 Muld1ur ind P1ul 8urM pllJ 1 brilll1nt wo11U1n mld11tl trtcl h« untmploytd 1ilin1 husblnd whose mmt111 is thrultnt~ by 1 11p In lhtlr ctrHrs. omm•m 1:15 D Mode: "I.cwt, t11tt 1111 Dl$- honof' (dt1) ·~vuna Lisi, P1ter 81ldwln. ~ 1:45 IJ Morie: "Tlte 1111...W S.· tt•trt" ldr1) '43 -Henry Fcmd1, Mu1re1n O'Hart. 1:00 m (C) "Hlf Twl'fl Mt1" (com) '54--G'"' G1non. Robert Ry&n. l:lO a (C) "Wtfk, Doa't 11111" (com) '66-Clry Grin!. 3:111 (j) (C) '1llt Srtat Rice" Concl {com) '&S -Jack Lemmon. ®J (q '1lM V.l.,.'s" Conti. (C) "Wlltt £nr M1p,entd to llbJ Ja11tr P1rt I (su1f!) '62 -8tl1• Dl\'is, Join Crawford. l ;MI O (CJ "Tiit 4·0 Man" (sci-fl) '59 -Robert ltn1Tn1. lH Meri-fl'Ulhtr. 4:00 IJ Mlwle: (C) (Ziii') "lllt NllM el Ille Mrztr'" (dr•) '66-Clinl Wilk.er, Mirth& HJtr, KMMn Wyn11, KOCE, CHANNEL IO Oringe County's UHF televlllon station, KOCE-"n', h11 sche:iuled the following speci•l proenms today. Detailed listings or Channel so's procrams are carried 1n the Dally Pilot's TV Wttk e&eh Sunday. .,. v • 1.._.._ , 'Flipside' ' Joins TV· . 'Gigi Musi¢a.l Takes Stage ' Pop Shows By DUSTON HARVEY SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -x,.,_ and Loewe have returned to the theater after a IS-year absence wtlh "Gl.g1," a Fr"""1l charmer looting a lit· lie Jatt<red by the trip !rom film to stage. Their other new lWJel, writ.- ten for Britlah Import ,..,_ Stevens in tbe Utle role, In- cluded a !orgetlable ~""­ ballad and a rousinC· .~ duction number. Frenchman's memo r ab I e ----------- mannerisms. By JAY SllAlllll1l7 NEW YORK (AP) -The hills may be alive with tbe sound/of mtuic, but these cbtya it's primarily due to the revtrberatiom ot pop music shows that have sprouted all over televWoo on weekend!'. On Fridays, for example, there's ABC's "ln Concert." followed at one a.m. Satur· day by NBC's "Midnight Special" This in tum is followed Satunlay and Swxlay nights in many cities by "Flipslde," a n ew syndicated half-hour show. ' ,AU.. three shows began lhls year, "Flipside" being the most recent entry. And one more is in the works. It 'll be a series of three 90- minute rock concerts produced by Tom Owens, a JI-year-old pop music producer whose firm is known as Ego Produc- tions ol. Los Angeles. OWENS, WHO says none of. the shows have been given a title yet, said the first will be taped in late June and feature four major acts-. ENTERTUCflNT creaton; performers appear on them al relatively low fees because lhe TV exposure helps boost their record sales. But since September, 1971, at least two rerord labels own· ed by the Columbia Broad- casting System have produced TV music shows with a dif· ferent business approach; they only want to boost record sales. The labels are Columbia and Epic. Al Teller, Columbia's national director of. merchan- dising, says the two labels jointly have produced a total The theatrical version or their 1958 movie hit was the first stage w«k by composer Frederick Loewe, 72, and lyricist Alan Jay Lerner. 54, since they broke up in 1960 after "My Fair Lady" and ''Camelot.'' It was also the first musical originally crinceiyed for the screen which reversed the route to the stage. The charm- ing story of a turn-of-the-cen- tury romance between a bored man-about-Paris and an un- restrained innocent had a troubled journey despite new songs and Lerner's rewriting "to make some scenes look: the same." of five half-hour shows seen on IT GOT a warm _ but not TV stations around the coon· much more -welcome from try. opening night patroos o! San AIL FEATURE Columbia Francisco Civic Ught Opera, LERNER AND Loewe both 11id before the opening t)\a_! tl]ey expected to keep work1ng on the play prior to its arrital ln New York after runs here MISS STEVENS. 20, , and tn Los Angeles, St. Louis, displayed a gamin charm, a Detroit and Toronto. throaty-voiced singing talent, ''Ibey might reconsider the decision to drop the secondary almoat no dancing ability and love plot between the old roue little stage presence. She and Gigi's grandmother, which wasn't helped at all by Onna Is hinted at long enough to White 's pedestrian Justlfy their duet, ''I Remember It Well," and then choreography. and J .o . .s e Ph just dropped in the second act. Hardy's lackluster direction. Lerner end Loewe,-wh? '?be $5 &O , O 00 production started working together in featured .Javish sets by Oliver 1942 and had their first hit Smith which were Changed four years later 'r'fith "Briga- almost conlirluously ln scene doon ," might also take a look shifts reflecting the play's at the talky first act and the movie crigins. play's abrupt, flat ending. Veterans Alfred Drake .1.;:=:=======''==.I Agnes Moorehead, M a r i a Karnilova and Daniel Massey \:)layed the other principals with professk>nal fiair and charm, although Drake's big voice and droll rakishness couldn't erase memories of Maurice Chevalier's unique boulevardler style. Dr a k e widely avoided imitating the L I D 0 N£WPOOI BEACH lNTltANC"f TO llOO !~II ~·1111so If'• Wacky, kooky •IHI Wiid "SLITHER" IPGJ l11rt Rey1t0lds RCKIMI W•lc;h ''FUZZ'' ********* DltYl·IN W,,. JWM Mlll'ii! IUllJI '9C)lm ~ W.NHoU & ~t AU ll1U! .... to•• ... 11 li4"0I M.VO. ·~··•·l ~·-··--·j . ... -··-·"- s ... Di•c• f•J Capl•l••no 011·•• p ... 4 4 KARATE/KUNG-FU! FISTS OF FURY !11 "'"' t C"'°'UI -R£D SUN !H>I S•n0•~1or .. ,. •l 6<ooi.hunl (So.) 962·2•11 (UNTWTWOOD DIRTY HARRY 111 l'l.IJS • GIOIGI c. scon He said his sales represen- laUves will try to interest any of the three networks in buying the !hows, but ti that !alls, they'll oell them to in· divldual stations on a syn- dicated basiJ. All these stiows are pr~ duced with the main idea of making mooey for t h e i r the first of five out-of-town or Epic artists. 'They show up engagefl)ents planned before a in two rock shows, one county November 0 p e n i n g on and western program, one Broadway. easy·Ustening show and one The loudest cheers were cla••lcal -··1·c offer'""· ....., ......... ~-o reserved for its prepackaged All of them are offered free hits from the £ilm _ "Gigi," to local stations in return for "The Night ThCy Invented the TV exposure, or they're Champagne," "Thank Heaven sponsored by major record for Little Girls," • ' I stores in the areas in which Remember Jt Well" -and for they appear, or the two labels one new comic quartet run-- buy the TV time. • ning nearly 10 minutes which IFri~;~~i~~~il =-!i~H~O;SP~)- ~~: IP!~tlll!Bl!l~·j j1a). "PACIFIC VIBRATIONS" I "AS.rfl9t~"'-LA.n"'" hfforwtncn-7:l0 ••d 9:10 (PG) Whatever the method, Teller proved Lerner and Loewe said, it definitely produces haven't lost their musical significant sales increases for:,~to~u~c~h~·========~~~~~~~~~~~~~ll the oeoords of those in the shows. And that's the whole idea behind It. "It's interesting," he mused. "We started doing these things because of the absence of what we coo.sldered exposure for artists on television." "CLOCKWORK ORANGE" ... "DEALING" B1rl>1ra H1rth1v Both Color IR I ··sounder" ... "Flnlan's Rainbow" (GJ ... "Pick-up On 101" IRJ "The French Connection" ~llcl Ill.I "M*A*S*H" (R) "The Getaway" I PG l ... "Lady Sings The Blues" ( Rl KLONDIKE ~:ENA • MUC SIC.I.TING • IC( HO<:IC(V • J!GU~f U:AT!N(I • SrtlD ~~A,TING 'ii~~~ • ,RlllATI • G~DIJP INSfRIJCl•DNS ,C: • P:ATES -SAllS -Rll<TA\.S -lllPAIRS • sru;••l RAltS TO GllOl.#S • t lllST~AAHT NOW OPEN , UllW~W.Srt -lli-:.rAAIM I 1 cM!lfJN.vt.Awt•••MCM.IOA"' ' M!I 'AIJLARl~O Avl_ COSTA Jill SA • NIAil 50tJTH COAST ,LAZA • "40Nl 1114 tn-11'1 U. A. CITY I SOUTH COAST CINIMA~TUESOAY Sic {All l.ADll!S & COLO•N AOllltS-CNNIJllO Tll J :lt P.M.,) • Cllnl 1!1t1-.i lot I (OD "DIRTY HAii.RY" -...~ -" 51tltiltf"l1nd "l(lUTE'~ I Olh In Coloi-r '"' lM Marvln·Gt!lt H•clrm•n ~ ''PRIME CUT" Caler (RI • Pat..-l'lJlal "Nl!llON ... ~,. ....... -...~ V1net11 R9d,r1v1 "MARY, QUEEN 01' SCOTS" CPGI Ry111 O'NMI ""fHE THllEI' WHO CAME TO DIHN&ll" G. J1c•wn1P. f'IMf'r • "THE NELSON Al'l'&IR" "MARY, QUEEN Of' SCOTS" lolfl In Color ,,., 19tll 011d NEWPORT 541·1551 "QM of tM YHr's 10 a.t" -LA. TllMI "THE EMIGRANTS" -tPGI a.-... OllTIM "SLEUTH" N•r.: Ma. rt.ni hi. "fmltr•b'" 7:10: "Slnt\" t :lO OW PLAYING IHIRVlD SIATS On Sjll Dai~ 12 'IH ! MARlOH BRANDO .• ltL 'j>a . @,::.:-li111t14 "'-~ ~DI. THRU 111URS. I P.I . FRIOll I I 9,45 Sl!UROll l·l I 9:45 SUllOll 1·5 I 8 ALL SlAn $4.00 won1•>11· .. f.& Wft,.111U NTll O'l'OOU ........... WICDATS 6:•S .. , ...... , ''(Hiil LEADERS" ·~(OUC~ or !IGA"" IOTM fl&NllS lAllO !Xf S•"'" Ano f•••••• ..... Ch•P""" Avo. 551-7022 l• ..... ~d• Blvd. S21·99SO Y1vlh Stiow, n :XI & t:lll p.m. ft"llm 4:)(1 p.m. -.. OllilTY NARllY" (Iii) •nd "KlUTE" Ill) J4Ml> CO~U~N IN ... , BILL y STARTS EOWAROI C\.INT'(,..s'rwooo "' STARTS ''il\RROli°QI cOstA 'MisA ·. ~L "HIGH PLAINS DRIFTER " WEDNESDAY ""'"' WEil "' ivmMiNi.ffe.: "PAT GARRETT THE KID" WEDNE SDAY MAY 23 ,;,'.~·~:' l (" ._, .l'Ol1i ~i't'J~~ SHAMUS •.~ . ~ .... ~ I /~il-......... /.THI ONLY OlANOI COUNTT IUN,,. • POSITIYELI EIOI YUES. A ~,.;n.:.-::=.-=-~,,,., __,_.,., .. ,_._ .. """""_......, ............ .....,,-......0.,.. ... "fll"O'nter sun SLorret' MOOrr ~~=pJ • SfCONO HIT e '' \< 1 .II ·, 11 'Travels With ffiyAunt ' 1 MA"\' 23 . C!NH.\11 VIEJO . li\ISSION VIEJO~ . ~" ... ., ... .. --· .~ .. -.. -. , Mondly, May 21, 1~13 DAIL V PILOT J I , ·~ Capsized V ~s~l I ' 'Not· Ins~cted' POINT JIJt>ml, RJ. (UPI) -The Coast )'.lliard' il!ld Son- day night that a charter f;.,hlng boat that sank in the AtlanUc Saturday apparently had not been lnspected before it set out. Twelve bodies have been recovered frorn the 56-degree watera of.I the Rhode Jsland Coast, Hope was fading for five Olhera, stUI missing and fe~ drowned. Eleven survivors w e r (, rescued when a sailboat spc>t- ted them clinging to debris from the Cornet a 5-foot con- verted fen')' boat that went ... c1own ... .n mn .. IOlltheU( o1 Point Judith. "WE DON'T have any rec- ord of the vessel being inspec- ted," said Rear Adm. Robert W. <l9ehring, command<r of the Finl Co<st Guard Dlslllct in Boston. "'Ibis would lodlelte that the boat WU l)OI , Ii> spected in &CC<l!'<lmce with federal law." A l<><mal Coast Guard 1"' vestlgation Into lhe sinking was to begin today. Two Coast Guard cutters and a helicopter were resum- ing the search '°"thees! ol Point Judith today. Sunday'a day-long search failed to turn up any lrace of the five mls5- lng persons. "There's always a chance but it's certainly getting slim- mer," said Coast Guard spokesman Lt. OJav Haneberg. GRIM-FACED SURVIVORS LEAVE HOSPITAL Pair Were Among Those Saved When Fishing Ba.t Sank Antiwar Suspects Cleared CAMDEN, N,J. (AP) -A federal court jury, instruc:led It could return an innoet:nt verdict without finding the government went "beyond the bounds or reasonable Jaw en- forcement." Sunday cleared 17 perSON O[ all charges stem-. ming !ron1 a raid on a draft board. Assistant U.S. Attorney John Barry said the \'erdict was "obviously, to some extent, a verdict on the war" in Viet- na m. The 17, v.·ho together with 11 others were called "The Camden 28," ti ad been charg· ed with conspiracy, breaking into a draft office and destroy- ing draft files during an Aug. 21 , 1971, raid on the Camden draft office. During the trial Robert Hardy, a government in- former , testified that the FBI had provided llO percent of the equipn1ent used to carry out the raid. He said the FBI had promised the raiders would be arrested on conspi racy charges but would not be allowed to .carrJ out the raid. WHEN JURY forman James Lomax ended the St,) month trial and four daya of delibera- tions by announcing t h e verdJct, the defendants and an estimated 200 spectators join- ed hands and sang the hymn "Amazing Grace." They hug- ged one another and shook hands. In his charge to the jury, U.S. Di.stri ct Judge C\arkson S. Fisher said that. to free the defendants, it must conclude that the governme nt 's participation in the break-in Michael Doyle, one of four priests among t~ delendanta. read 1 letter he aid wu written during the trial by a juror, Samuel Braithwaite of Atlantic City, and filed with the court clerk. Braithwaite was one of those who returned the verdict. • Braithwaite's letter said the defendants tried to "heal sick. irresponsible men" who "were raining death and destruction on a hapless country.'' lle .ask- ed "all men of the cler,gy" ~ they could .. teach ~ttlc children not to kill and yet re· main silent on the killing" {in Vietnam ). Barry said be wwld ..-n· mend that charges be cbvpped against 10 other defcndantJ. One of the raiders has pleaded guilty. J uclge Na med SACRAME'.'ITO (AP) -An Oak.land lawyer has been nanled a judge of the Alameda Coun ty Superior Court, Gov. Reagan's office announced. He is stanley P. Golde, 45, who has practiced law in Oak.land since 1953. had been "intolerable and 1----------------------- beyond the limits or reasonable law enforcement." To acquit on grounds of government entrapment. the jury must find there had been "no previous intent to break a law" and the defendants had been "persoaded or induced by a government agent to commit a crime," Fisher said . AT A NEWS conference following the verdict, Father Denture Invention For People with ~'Uppers'' •nd •tLowen'' The ncprnt thm11: to h:a\•1nl( your o .. ·n teeth is J>O!iS1hle now with (I pl11~lic cream d1e1eo••cry th:i1 aclu· ally holds both "uppers .. and ''lowers" as ne1•cr heforc l)l')Mohle. It's a di!IC01·ery c:i\h:d FIXOOt'ST" for daily h ome use \U.S. Po11. f:l.003,988) and •t has revolu· lloniu:d denture wearing. F1x.oow1 fnrms an t.l1stie membr:ine 1 hat hcl~ :ibsorl• the shocks or b1l11\J a111t d 1cw;n1t \\11 h F1'(0Df'ST m:iny tlentur~ v.c;urr~ ma}·(.,11, ~peak, laugh, .. uh httlc WOffY o! denh.1i:a.comin& IOOIC. One ::ipplitatTon may last for l1ouri. Dentures that fiL :ire ~11· t1:il to heulth. See your dent1•t rt11,u!arl y. C.t•l eas~·· to-USC! F IXuot:t<IT Dcnturl! Adhesive Cream. Rogers Jubilant At Game ''IF THEY managed to climb out of the water ootol~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) - Secretary of State William P. Rogers had the time of. his Latin American life Sunday watching two Brazlllan soccer teams battle it out before 65,000 fans in this soccer-crazy city. The old Colgate goalie cheered and jumped to his feet, waved a baMer and stayed to the end. Even a hair-rising ride back to his hotel failed to dampen the spirits of the U.S. cabinet member. He shook hands with two motorcycle policemen who Jed his entourage f r o m Maracana Stadium through a massive traffic jam. Everyone else in the "party was just happy to make it back alive. RIO IS THE siith ol the eight Latin American cities Rogers is visiting on his 17-0ay tour. His sched ule was plan- ned so th at he could loaf and enjoy life in this dazzling metropolis, leaving the work for Brasilia, the capital and bis next stop. Rogers had been lool<lng forward to the game. His security men were of another mind. They know bow esclted soccer fans get, and MaQtcana is a w1de open stadium. Afterward Rogers stayed around for 15 minutes to shake the hands of the two captains. They presented him a n autographed white ball used in the game. some debris maybe they have a chance. U they're still alive exposure is the worst danger." Survtvon sald Sunday they kept alive by grasping tables and other floating debris but others panicked or "couldn't hold on'' and slipped to their death. · "I saw my friends die right in front ol me," said William Haslam of Pawtucket, R.I. ''!itey drowned and I <OU!d do nothing to save them." Haslam said eight-to 10-foot seas began washing over the rails half .an hour after the boat headed out to sea. "PEOPLE WERE getting very nervous. Some guys panj.cked. .So~ _ Q{_ t h e m pounded on the captain's dOOl'. The captain said 'Slay with the boat, stay with the boat,' " Haslam said. A shcrt time later, Haslam said Capt. WiDiam Jackson, whose body was among the 12 recovered, shut down the engine "and then everything went bad. Two men panicked and went over the side ... and some were just thrown orr the boat. When the vessel began to capsize the rest of the passengers lunged for the other side. Then the "l>olt broke in hall, Hulam said. Haslam !<>lei ·-be and a companlon <:lung to a wooden dinghy while otheno cllmbed into a lifeboat untll a sailboat hap~ by several hours later and picked up 10 of the survivors. A Coast Guard cut- ter rescued the other. 60 Persons Injured In 'souther:,, Tornado United Pr6s International Tornadoes st ruck in Alabama and Tennessee over the weekend, injuring at least 60 persons and destroying more than 125 homes and house trailers. High winds alao h i t metropolitan Atlanta Saturday night leaving an estimated 2,000 'persons temporarily without power. THE ALABAMA tornadoes touched down at Fort Payne, Hazel Green, Section, Scottsboro and P o w e I l ' s Crossroads. 'Ille h e a v i e s t damage was at Fort Payne, where 35 persons were hurt, Spas.sky In Slump- Tied at 7th DORTMUND, West Gennany (UPI) -lt was enough to remind B o r i s Spassky or the bad old days in Reykjavik. Making his international comeback after Bobby Fischer defeated and dethroned hlm a world chess champion last summer in the Iceland capital, Spassky is now tied for seventh place after f o u r matches against opponents even chess experts have trou~ blc identifying. He won his first roond match In the Weat Gtrman open champl~ps.. a swintc that took hlm 23 moves. Then HallNochen Hecllt beat him lhd anolht!' 1Weat German, Uwe Kunstowlct, held him to 1 draw and ln his fourth match &mdoy, Spastley was held to anoUitr draw, U'4s time by Paul J{eres, a fellow Russian. 0 1 hive nothing to say at this time," SposUjl said. Hedlt ls \lading the 1t1J>o dingo with 8pua)G< and foor other playen In Kventh place. ' two seriously, when a twister cut a 200-yard wide swath through a section of the city Saturday ni~t. Numerous homes w e r e destroyed or damaged as well as a church. The city fire de- partment and a section of a nursing home which was under construction were also damag<d. An apartment building hous- ing two families was moved about IO feet off its foundation by the twister. SEVEN PERSONS were in- jured at Scottsboro as a twister damaged s e v e r a I homes and knocked out elec- tric power. Baseball-size hail dented cars and damaged the city jail. "Ten persons were injured at Hazel Green, about 15 miles north ol Huntsville, and several homes were destroyed. Five injlU'ies were reported at Powell 's Crossroads, near Fort Payne. A Nashville youth• was slightly injured .when struck by lightning, and tornadoes touched down in three Middle Tennessee counties. AIKEN FLOYD, 6, was in satisfactory condition alter being hit by a lightning bolt. A tornado struck n e a r Fayetteville In Lincoln County and damaged 12 houses and 10 barns. There were no injur'c!l. The twtstm "!!" touched down in Wlllo!t and &nnner cowiUes without damage. Many areas of · Tennessee bJ>erl•nced hall and· high -·· • FCC Denial W ASH!NGTON (AP) -The F e d e r a 1 Communications Commission has upheld Its l)nlodcast buresus' denial of lalmeas doctrine claims by Aa:urlc)' In Media l n c . agalnot an NBC documelltary on Sin Francisco's Chinatown. ADI dalmed tllal the Jo .. I brood<ul by NBC _..,lid a ont-tldcd view of Chlnatown . I : Daily 10-10 Sun. 10-7 While Quantities Last MENS POLYESTER FLAl.ES Large assortment of mens polyester & polyester blend \.',::,;;:;;:_~ pants. Assorted dark and "" light colors. Dress, casual a nd western styles. Sizes 30 -~0. - \ SALE! 16x56" WOOD FRAME DOOR MIRROR 2'6 0 I \ Clear reflecting glass m lrror enclosed. in quality wood frame with attractive wal· nuf finish, Eosr to' mount on wa I or ____ u---door. Charge it now I i • I ele hi ,.11\ " • TUES. & WED. ONLY ., 1'fa • iDDIE CANDY , ~~g~cE 2/1.cJQ Canana c,,ramel, Bubble Gum, Jaw Br•kers, r.oot Beer Barrels and Mary Jane Caramels. I _.t. _ _,rnnn .,,,, 1~ 27"x45" THICK SHAG RUG Lu )(u rious polyester/nylon shag p ile rugs to glamorize any bare 444 cOrner. In spring Yellow, Blue, , Pumpk in, Perrot Gree(I, Pink. With waffht ba ck. Don't miss this sale! SIMILAlt TO llUSTflATION <:" :=> REDWOOD STAIN , ii II• · ,I SAVE OVER 30% 70" PADDED CHAISE 2 DAYS ONLY 1000 22"x70 '' Vinyl Covered floral pad. Assorted colors to c hoose from. Save now and Charge ltl Mdl. ~•200. 11-~·-.... ,-...... ..,,,,,,?1 .......... _.,..~,~·"'""· .,., •• 72" PADDED LOUNGE .~ 2 DAYS 1800 ~ O~LY Deluxe innersprin9 .i P•d with floral desi9ns-Adjust· able for summer coinforl. Moves e11lly on 6" wheels. T ublar Arms. Md/. A-600 . i I CONVERTIBLE SLUMBER BAG I 011 REDWOOD STAlll! 2 DAYS ONLY It's: o comforter. h's o $lefpil)g bog. h's the greatest boon ever for teen ~lumber parties or extra-guest bunking! Cotton print top reverses to 10lid color, hos 1 Yl ·lbs. virg in polyester ftU1 9711 zipper. Open5 to 6Bx80''. Jn 6 patterns! • 99c Gol. HAND TOOL SELECTION z Days O.ly 3 / 100 Adds new beoutytoald and weathered redwood or col: or uniformity lo new wood, Giant selection of hll ndtools for the home handyman, incl. Screwdrivers, Saws, H1mrT'lers, Wrenches, Wood Ct,11111, Oil C ans & meny more useful ifems. 2200 HARBOR BL VD. ~~::~· a~·fd COST A ·MESA Harbor . -. -----------·-~-···--" --.. --\.· " I ' I I I I . . , :: • .. ' "' .. • • l ' I I .I I • Jt OA!lY PILOT -· ..., 21, 1973 ' _ ...... ... ... . ., ..... _ ®~ ""Bless Mommy ~nd Ooddy and all those other people 1n lost-night's prayer." Growtla Curbs Water Rationing Plan Extended SANTA BARBARA !AP! - The citizens of Santa Barbara County have voiced a vigorous "no" to further growth by re- taining a water ralioning plan in effect five month s. Jn a special election, the "no growth" people -Citizens for a Responsible Water Polic y - won out over lhe "growth" people -Friends of S a n t a Barbara Coun~ -b y upholding one ballOi measure and defeating another. ( ECOLOGY J Prop. B, retaining the water rationing program and keep. ing In effect a water hookup moratorium, was passed with 68.93 percent of the votes. At the same time, Prop. C, which would have UJted the water rationing and hookup plans, was defeated, receiving on~ 23.68 percent yes _vo~es. ~ BERKELEY (AP) -· The late!t batch of oil-slicked birds West Coast H yp11otists Unionize New York (AP) -Howard Coughlin, president of the Of· flee and Pro f essit>nal Employes International Union has announced the granting of a charter for a West Coast hypnotists local. To be designated ·Local 472, the unit ls lo be based in Panorama City, Calif., end represent 200 to 300 teachers and i:nctltloners of hy~ notlsm, used in c e r t a i n therapy applications.and as an aid to education. COughlin last month issued a simJlar charter lo LocaJ 469, based ln Pittsburgh, Pa. and representing eastern area pr<>- fesrional hypnotJsts: Ms. C hri s tin a Vick, secretarj'·treasurer of t h e West Coast local. said hyp- nosis can be beneficial in athletics and in promoting voell·being. Sen. Nicholas C. Petris, ( 0. Oakland), said his bill, air proved 7·2 by the Senate Health and Welfare Com· mlttee, would bring n o n a gricultural pesticide! under the supervision of state public health officials instead of the stale Food and A gr i cu Jture Deparlmenl. which now regutate.s a 11 peslfcide use. The bill \vent to the Senate Finance Committee. • Reversal See11 OAKLAND (AP! -A federal official who toured the Oakland·Berkeley hills where frost·k.illed eucalyptus trees pose a fire haunt says Washington may reconsider its refusal to grant disaster aid to help clear them. OVERWEIGHT Men and women needed-- SO women and SO men •t t.•1f 20 Jbt, overweight •nd no more than 80 lb1. h> complete 6 WHkl cr••h weight •nd inch 1011 program. For re1earch '10'Y on hum•n CHORIONIC GONADTROPHIN M111t be •bl• to pu1 rigid phy1lcol •nm and P•Y cott of m.cfical and lab fee, etc. COSTA MESA 646-l 633 I Hf NIWPOIT Omega ; Clinic HOUU: f:ff.1:00 P.M. 1 • Rael! for Utah Senate Race &hi Fonntt lllchlpn Gov , PEOPLE Cllat _, bClllOt 1'!11 bave ( 1 ....... -lllllA. parlJoo QI GMrp 8-11 "IO pen:eut lx..,iit lo 111," aald RW&en commlltod" lo run for lhe .._ _______ _, Preoldent Edward J. Bloua- Senate lrom Utah next year. ttta. according to a Republican 10Urce. 1 Romney will seek the seat held by Sen. Wallace F. Bel> aeu CR-Utah), who 15 73 and erpected to step down al lhe end ot hil fourth term . Romnty, president of American Motors before being elected governor of Midtlgan, resigned latt fall al President Nixon's &eeretary o( Housing and Urban Development. * Gordon Liddy can no longer praclice Jaw in New Yark slate as a result of his con- viction as one of the planners of the June 17 Watergate break-i n. Llddy, U, waa convicted of second..<fegree burglary, con· splracy and wlretapplng in the break·in at Democratic Na· tional Committee bead· quarters in Waahington'1 W atergate offJCt-apartmeol comple1. · * Black actor Paul Robe.oa, once considered a wayward son by his alma mater because of his admiration for the Soviet Union, has been qWetly presented an honorary doctor of humane letters by Rutgers University. * A former soldier who ran up more than ""° In w.pl1ooe ' .blll1 by making calls from Franklin, Tenn. lo b l I ... .. ,heart in O>lorado learn- ed ahe baJ DO Intention of ffiM11'lnl hlm. ",Wow, I re1lly thought she w11 the one lot me," utd Roger G•ace. "I gut'5 I'D have to forget her." * Sbroa Rote has won an urr oonditional divorce c r 0 m sportscaster Kyle R o t e , former Southern Methodist football star and New York Giants running back. . ' • ' PSAsfves youafft. . / The former FBI agent was disbarred by the appelhrte division of the state Supreme Court of the tst Judicia l Department , acting at the re· quest of the New Yo:~ City Bar As.90Cletlon. Robeson, confined to his home in Philadelphia by ill· ness, was represented by his son, Paul Jr., in ceremonies from which newsmen were er· eluded . Married twice -in Juarez, ... , .'• Mexico, on Aug. 2, 1965, and inl-======~:¢;=::==:::;=='===========~=~ ~~~v;:.~~uy,; ~~~;. ~~ Try · Sa~day's News Quit "After a period of neglect too long contributed to, and countenanced by, the universi· ty, we return to you with this been separated slnce Nov, 15, --, · • • . 1971. The divorce was g111J\ted . • ' we Dare· y OU in Manhattan Supreme Court. - CASINO IRAN D Cheese Wedges 59c M,VlllE'S Engl./Sh B'1scu·1ts w, .. ,,1 •• '''' T ... ~ Fn1it Short,•k•, Cr••m Cr•,k•rt • 01. 45c RICHARD'S TOP OF THE GRADE u.s.O.A. CHOICE 1£EF London Broil Steak G .... •. •· o. 1.98 lb. It.ADE CUT Chuck Steak Chicken Legs Cubed Bottom Round Ri chard's Pork Sausage 1h Cornish Game Hens ~ 2 Stuffed Bell Peppers i ·.. 8eafooa ~ Northern Halibut Steaks ~ Eastern Flounder ~ ~ 100 "· pork i ExcluslYOly Lido HOME & GIFT SHOP For tti. U111n11•I RICHARD'S FLOWER SHOP ~ i ~ 1.19 lb. 89c lb. 1.&9 lb. 8~.c lb. 69c ea. 1.19 lb. 1.98 lb. •o 1.09 lb. ' I VODKA CA~~~~~;:~ qi. 4.22 filth J,4J ~ GIN 80 p•ool qt. 4.27 filth I.SO ~ BOURBON 86 proof 6 yun old qi. 5.21 fifth 4.24 ftti~~~~~~~~t~~~~ftti~~~~~ 'f~ HARBORVIEW 16liOMac Arthur,N~Beach OPEN DAILY 9 -8, SUN. 9 -o 644-1660 ' Cocld•il SIH 12 os. $/W~ Royale Towels PLANTERS Dry Roasted Peanuts COLLIE• Charocal Bnquets DEl MONTt Tropical Fruit Salad 7-Up Cans Coronet Facial Tissue STAR KIST 16 ••• JO lb. 16 •1 11 0.1. ' 200 ''· 7 (f't, 135 Solid White Tuna in Water Hi-C Fruit Drink 46 01. French's Mustard Sunshine Yum Yum Cookies Minute Maid Lemonade pink or reg GREEN &IA.NT Le Seuer Peas in butter sauce French ·Bread Apple Danish Chocolate Loaf Cake Dutch Crunch Dinner Rolls 24 01. 10 01. 10 01. .. • " \ 3 fo'r 'Sl 29c · ' 3 lb~. $1 4 lbs. 29c 29c l9c 3 for.$1 asc 4 for $1 Slc 3 for $1 39c 47c 2 for 25c 55c 2 for 39c . 1.09 6 for 41c 39c -. . " " ~-. ' I ,, ,, I .r - r ) ~-\ .\ ST()Bo!$ -1 ~lllllE KASPER Ot ... _.., .... lalff • • • "\Ve ne..,. bad any -we cooldn't get It ,die. 'We just ...... got started." Jade Bindtt'I comment almoot ...... to dw8eteri>e ·the Women 's Center about wijid> .;he js jalklng. Its twO.y~ bistOry Is, one ol change . . . ot Dew it8r!s and reorgaoJzati">s which f'*veh't lead to a1 long-lived, Cob- tinuous 9'1Blllzation. . Pb.Ysil;flly, it bu moved ti.r.e times, from Cdst1 Mesa to Santa Ana a n d, finally h\ January, onto the UC! campus. And it bas,._ ...... _ ond the .. ~_ '' ... ~ .... w pe<>ple lrivolved -t lour times. '· ~. At ~ it was ~·)U_per radical, ,._then it • moved •<right ot the middle" !or a-little . :-,.~Jfhile arid then lt went "more radical" . again, exP.lipned. P/lm fJfer, Ofle. ol the " ~ atudents wOO is t'r}iing to reorganu:e the 'center. "MIDDLE'' STANCE NOIW," she· and others believe.-1t .will ta}(e more of a "middle" .stance. _ T!)is iatest change In dlrectioo is need- ed to attract. the UCI Wotnen students who are mw· their main interest. The un!Versuy · has very few feminists, "in term.s of what I wouJd call feminist:s," Ms. Alger said. It is a commuter18Chpol, with probably hi."O-thirds of its ·stadents coming from the COW1tY 'Ond"""~~ !airjjl ~!PP1'''. class. . Lynn Toseaoo, another student · .iD-. volved in'· bte center's reorganizatiorl, believes this might have something to do with the feelings of women on campus. "Somehow when women don't have to work for what they've got." she said~ •• ... ".they feel more secure ... " .:. Bat sht also noted that many of 'ibe • women there Itel !emUilsm Is a muculine ·tbing. Obviously, • h. di-.. ab< and othen ""' "building brklgea" to lnlonn coeds ol tile centor. to dlscov their needs and -to meet t":-1'dl¥ this foundation work will be dooe dw\ns Woman's Week which Is being• 11*!""'.ed on campus this week by the eentet. Women at Irvine and the Associated\ Studalls. Panel dlseusslons ons=· OtJS career in· terats.. women in war · · ; a film tlUed The Girls; rations of sel!-<le!eme and sel!·belp In the area ol health, IDd picni<s llNl scheduled during 'lhe wee!C GROUPS Orientatlon to conscioum>eS&, raising and an ~tlonal meeting for the women's center also are scheduled. ·"They (Irvine'• women students ) think everythlni ls running smoothly," said Ms , Toscano. But in the groups, she ex- plained,' "Y!>U see through it all and you see an the problems." Btcause the group. sessions will give them a better idea· of what the needs are and what direction the center should follow, immediate l!tlention is being focosed there. Groupe, they explain, also wW help the individual and enable her to see the philosophy of the Women's Movement and .how it a~es to the campus. · .:.a:•r th.ink ·every woman is kind of a feminist at heart ," said Ms. Toscano. ' $he recalls going throogh a change In the 12th grade. "I was using what I had as ·a female to get where I wanted to go," she said, explaining she would dress jlljj ~ &t;! •. ~,m!ffi. ~.;M1~ ttes: ~ i;>lher than a · boy!_rt~ii4.;~')n_ f.r!!er no-r, .I don't have J UC L Women's C enter is sou r~e " of information. Lynn Tos<tano handles phone qu estion, above.: · . Befow,. s~e t alks with Ben ita . Kasten. use s resource library. . .. . ~-· .... ' . . / • . .. ? ••• l r U...O baniuI>S," alle said. Her ideal now would he to 1>e a playwright and choreographer for her own theater (f'OOP wtllch would present reminist:-plays where tbe woman is not always given the subdlWlve role. Ms. Alger's personal committment dlf· fers a bit. She believes she was a feminist "a loog time ago" probably because everybody in ~r family "'as COO· Stdered an indivlduaf. She never con· sidered marriage as a goal. "J've always wanted to work." ex.- plaJned the social science major v.·ho is oorWdering counseling as a caret-r. Another young woman involved in the campus center l! Benita Kasten , "I'm in· terested in the whole thing because I 11m a woman ." She believes tbe renter offers her a chance lo grow and develop personally. But she's giving it something, too. by leaching a class on auto mechanics on Saturday' mornings. LorTatne Sutuki, interiln director of the Community Projects Office on campus. always had been sympathetic to the Women's Movement but only became ac- tive in the center at the end of last year to try to solve some of its problems. FEELS NEED f.1s. Binder isn't a campus student but, she said, "I keep coming back because I really feel there is a need." AU Of the women speak rather n1atter· • ange ol·laetly wtthout aur••!lh.;~ ... 'M>ty state simply, ··~ 11~ Wbi:nen's need! on campus." They re.i the center mlgl\l.bel; lnltlate women 's studies courses ln th& ctuficu- lum, provide health services, make re- ferrals, help with career planning, and work on specific problems women stu- dents have. whether these be dellirtg wjlh discriminatory grades or difficulty get- ! ing into the dorms. Ms. Toscano y,·ould like "to gel women out of their rooms and active ..• com- municating with each other as.qtuch as possible and unify so finally we can change men's ideas.' The groups arc the first \Vay of doing this but she also hopes to get "interest things" started. She sees the mechanics class as the first step in this direction but suggests they might start women's hik- ing or volleybal l teams or whatever else the y,·omen are interested in. NEW TIONGS . ;,People come in everyday with new ideas," she satd. Announcements of neW groups and classes as well as other notes of in~est are posted on a "What's Happening -&ister" bulletin board which shares a wall with a collage of posters. The center is housed in about an 8-[oot Portion of a trailer behind t h e (Su WOMEN'S GENTER, Page Ill ~men BEA AND&RSON, Ed itor M111H11y, M1y !1, 1•11 l"•tl 11 ·.~·,\,.-,f' W o;niE!n "' a·f b lrvirie See 'k Affirmative Acfi l&n " Affirmative action ;~,. f""1 the un· pointments, she explain~, leaving onl~ 22 And these, because of men's predomi- derlytng attittldes whiclr lll!lve .caused women on the reguJftr'· racu1ty of about nance ·in higher education, are , •male I networks." such policy statements on the status o 400. !"°"1en .. .is the basic reasm ror being of And of the actual faculty members, she So the women organized aft er the tea because 11we wanted to push for more Women at Irvine. said, 17 are tuntenured·"assistant and women faculty." Their goal, betler representatton and a~ia&e pmf~Who can be dismi ss· Bu f the , ... . t a greater number o W011J'1 in recognition of women on the campus' ' ed every ·two years. Only seven women Women at Irvine are in staff posijK>ns. laculty and staff, SOlltlds s\glp~$ll00gl\.' rank a._ the tenured professora. They feel that _some pooiti001 ~ But It W<>uld break .~Qat ~~.con-Al.Qw STATUS upgraded both m title and m salary. . ' , UCJ. It's happening all over the c(}Wltry .. Dr. Leonard was a member of a pressure group at UC San Diego whore her hus- band is a faculty member. She also headed an academi c discrimination task force for a San Diego Chapter of the National Organi:7:ation of Women ~hich, last year, caused a change Jn the community Colleges. 'POOR RESULTS 111lered • traditlOll • or ·1bl!o ~ ll'llts is Witbin the average for the .','r.\O&t WOOien In staff posltloos are ic&dem~'lllrlsl-, • • •• . , _ u..t"'-·ity ol ICalllomia ~stem. Less .do1llll, ~than their jobs orlginallY re-She admits their efforts haven't work· •The •••lied chlr'~ the (II , ""''"" . ,, '~'qlljted,mWJldtheteacherollndlanbistory ed out "too well" this year. sec.use. of groo~ "!.,,-.,. , • than~ perctb!·ol the faculty at each of . .fllld ""'lpgj:,. or..,, she llid, they are the 1yst~~'.s budgeting problems, lhe ~enn follOWJ~ a rathetttl'adi~I tea the lMtttutions ate women and at some i · dolfi the'liaf\ ot an adminlstr1¢iv~ ,.,m-unlversh)' 1Wi received very few slots to , party" ._el! bf',,.,. IDd Gown to rails as low ., two ]Je!'Ct!Qto said Jlr, ~ed lrool"Mvtn#'lntc>-be fille<1: Thil. , ol course, dotsn't allow .; honor the unlverwily's f«ml6. !KUily Leonard. • _ 1• 1fd -.; ~ d 111 e r e 0 t re-i !or the hiring o1 many more women. . members. .,The ·-"·ble " .. i..... ...;~.i · '· \. 1: , 1r1 •• But the group bas been concerned with 1 • :--.... -women are a .. -.u. • -·,_..., • • -,.r ..,.. -the affirmative action policy which must It was, accordmg to Karen Leonard , . nollng ~~ 11 -1 ol lbe ...,..le· , ' ' • be ·~~ Io Jul and 1 ~--i to be tlim • "''"'lolliltilnt....,-"--'ln lbe ' ' ~-'o.:..<._ ,..... ' ' r '· eu~uve Y •~...,....,.. '., T'>-cul ... ~ -receivlng doctorate°""""' are-· ~· ti<ln l!W atfd ti.en MS a plari to eliminate discrepancies In the comparafive ture& department. 8 Universities have not been 1'QU}red to .. ts " admitted Dr. Leonard numbers ol minority and women raculty . ''V""!I pllsloadio(.U..'' .~It w..,_ said pul>HclY ~· !>L.~V~ open · int 1~.....,;.cn whj>ee poaltla)J Jiov~ slaf! and sraduate studenta reccivin.& thiit tbe unlvml\)IJ>fl.H lal:Ulty women. faculty pooltlom. R{Ibei'l 'il!e silcf. hlrlng beea'llj)grlded. ' financial assistance. ' But 44 o1 these •..lri tmgulii , op-bu been done•lllr«igh """""') oontacts. Std> o thMI lo DOI at all unique' with " And· the orxanizaUon wtll want to • fl watch that the program is being fo1lo\ved ., 1£ there is a complaint, explained Dr. Leonard, "We do have legal appeal." She indicated , however, that this would not be desirable, at least partly because the Department of Health, Education and ~Welfare, \vhich handtes sooh cases, ts way behind and hasn't actually cut al'IY contracts off as it might iI a case ls proven. But the group faces another problen1 : interest among both women stlldents and· faculty in women's issues ts low. "Most women are not !emlnlsl! and many ol. them don't' tbellQve there is dlscrimloatlon," said Dr. l,e9nard . "'\'hey bayei 't JOOugbt about their "conditions or that they should have more in terms of staU salary or position." Many or the tCJ¥lred Women assume that if they made IL-others can, she said. And Janet Palmqdl'st, an assistant pro- res'S<>l or mathcn\atiCs. noted that un- tenured women are "very vulnerable." • She feels women who have complainll are not likely to come forward and tell about them because "t.heY're afraid !IOffiebody will hear about it and: be in a J)08ition to cause Dlem great harm." Women, too, Dr. Palmqu15t said, are more apt to feel they "deserve" such treapnent whiie a man would be mdre 'llUly to demlnd a change. This she blames on culture and up- bringing and dtes how girls IDd womeo are depicted in eti!mentir'y textbooks (wh1ch was the subject of a recent film strip they presented). ' I , Jta,i.,tng people's awareness is another a!fort of llll> lllWe wbich ts porUdpa in Women's Week oo carligus,__thts - with a panel dlscusslon on' 11women· a P,ro(essors." Mero.be.rs also hope to obtaln women' studies classes and enlist student port. ''Ultimately att\t.ude1 have to ~e. Dr. Palmquist sald. • l 1 _I • . Jf DAll.Y PILOf • --'Born 1~oser' Sho~d Your Horoscope ---~ ....... -. ·.- T ~u:rus: Gain, 1 • • • Finish · Game of Life D£AR ANN LANDERS : Please excuse the notebook paper but I am writing this letter durilw: study period. I am l{ and in lbe ninth grade. Your book. ·•SiJloe You Prestige Noted .i Mk Me.'' if tit GUr 5Cbool library and I jWot t<Olf it. -. t saW my9eti on page 102. It was a ltt-DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have this ter from a mother whc> lived tn Wiscoosiq. Sbe wivte. "! wish our 14-d<ar friend (I'll call bet Mabel) who has ~Id daughte would wall< out ol tbe a lleart of gold but her housekeeping and never come back. She was a makes me skk. colicky, mean kid from the mlnute we When I go there for a cup of ooflee and. brought bet home fmn the hospital. a ptece of cake I have trouble owallO\•ln~ When she was three months old she an)11Mg because Mabel never uses soap began to look like my lal.sblnd's sister or hot water oo her dishes or silverware. who was the town tramp . ., She rinses everything under the cold 'l1lef1 the mother went oo to teU about water faucet and dries them with a dirty ell the terrible things her daughter had dishtowel. It's enough to ltil1 a penon't done and sbe ended her letter by saying. appetite for a week. 1,.le.ase tell uS what to do with thi s girl Yesterday was .the last st.raw. When l belore !lhe gets her picture in the paper went to the kitchen to get the coffee pot, and disgraces us." there was her big Maltese cat aleeping in Mom doesn't give a damn about me the sink. I nearly fainted. Our cups, and I've known ;1 ever since I was a little saucers and spaons were on the kXl Dad works aU the time and is Hite a sidel:ioard with the cake, ready to be 1~er. I have a sister who is 16 and served, nothing covered, just sitting right very pretty. l am plain looking. Mom out where the cat could have walked over keeps talking about how different we ·-evel')1.hing and probably did. look. She keeps saying, "Il's hard to Should I, have said something? \Vhat believe they have the same mother and about the next time? How can I get >way father." I have a nine-year-<> Id brother and with not. ~ating when I go to , visit her? .;,en Mom isn't talking -about my Help ~e, please. -L(>VE ~ .ll(jr. • • beautifUI sister, she is bragging oo this DEAR 'LOVE: No'"'point ii sbying srnart·kid who is sure to be President of 8...-hi. .... Mabel has _..}...,hly been ktt!n.. the United States-at least. ..,,....._. !"'..,.._., ,.. do ing house ~like. this for years and •')"OU I know there is nothi'1g you can to aren'i going lo change· It. Tejl ber Jn li'd· help me, so maybe U~ best thlng you can vance that ytu'd prefer that she not . do ii .tQ . ~~me wby I wrote this Jetter serve anytblog because you ar~ trying to ~~ ~ very well I am -A BORN cut down on calories aod H. wouJd . be a , hel.P U sbe 'didn't tempt you.,. -.,, DEAR FRIEND: I refuse to can you a loser, betause the ball game fs far from CONFIDENTIAL TO NO-PRUDE BUT finished. You are only 14 and this is oaly HOW CAN WE STOP IT?: You can't. It's the second Jnnln.g. beyond your control. If everyone swPpt in You wrote becau.se you were feeling front .of his own front door, the whole •alone and depressed and -Wanted tG world would be a lot cl~er. Try it. Uniforms Mark " Mrs. Lonnie Vincent and Mrs. Hubbard Howe CTeft to right) show their early Girl Scout .leader unif.orms to Brownie Elizabeth Blake, daughter of an early Newport unit member. 'Leaders and volunteers will be recognized Thursday, ~ay 24, al a luncheon at 10:45 a.m. in Our Lady Queen of Angels Parish Hall, Corona del Mar. From Page 13 . ,. TUESDAY MAY 22 By SYDNEY OMARR AllJES (March 21-April 19): Accent ls on social activity ol surprise and pleasant nature. You meet people and could go places. Some ol your f8!11asles might be turned into ae.- tualitles. Broaden horizons. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Progress is keynoted. So, too, is prestige and general gain. You baye more responslbllity as room is made for you at more elevared position. GEMINI (May 21.June 201: G'ood hmar aspect oow coin· cides with Journeys, ability to communicate ideas, concepts. CANCER (Jillie 21.July 22): Accent tis on mystery, special agreements, f i n a n c i a l ar· rangernent with m at e 1 partner. UlO (July 23-Aug. 22): Lie low. Let others take initiative. Your own judgment now is apt to be based on emotion rather than logic. VIRGO (Aug. 23-~pt. 22): , . Emotional pressure c o u l d nlount. Key is to keep balance. Avoid extremes. Some may • • • Women's Center Changes unload on somebody. I'm glad you cbose me. J f_llUelt tba& you do'010me more Are your parents: too. strict? Hard to Humanities Building. Ms. ed the center "to get their will probably have to fund get going "people will come ual~ a school counselor. 'Maat's reach? Al!n Landers' book:Jet, •'BQggtd Toscano thinks of it not as heads together" and then wenl-raise or fold. _ back," said Ms. Suzuki. what i:bey are Uttre for. You'll be by Pareob'! How to Get More Fttedom,·' small but intimate. Still, it oot oo their own. Even on The Community Projects "We have to prove it won't· ' 1arpr1,sed at M mucb beUer you'U feel could belp yoa bridge the generation gap. .seerps roomy with only a desk, campus, Ms. Suzuki said, "We Office, and therefore 'ilie fall apart again," added Ms ' take advantage ol your will· tngness to '\'(Irk. , LIBRA ( 8epl. :i$-Oo>I, 1%): ' Spotlight ls on creatiYll)l, bow · you d<al with children, bow you relate to special member of opposite sex. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Evidence may • exist 'f o r preternatural gifts. You teem capable, somehow, 61. J,iia1<ing significant move at right Wb.e. Could involve property,_bome , special appliances. Leo Jn. divfdual may poke fun bu! 11 is all In fun. SAGflTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 l: Emph.ashi is Oil movement, short j our n e y • special visit from c Io s e neighbor or relative. Home could become base of activity, operations. Cancer. ·capr1cem persons play prominent roles. CAPIDCORN (Dec. 22'Jan. 19): You may be templed to spend in "wrong'' directions. Key is to know what it is you want and tq go after it. This would be more coostructive thad,.scattering your forces. Social conlact will be mean. ingful · AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Cycle is indicaUve of new starts, added independence. Check fine points, details. Read between the lines and be aware of fine print. Your judg- ment is on target so do what yoo feel sllookf be done. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Look behind the scenes for valid Inform a lion. Be analytical. Puzzle pieces can be put together il you so desire. One who has not been entirely truthful might oon~ fess. Don't cast first stone. after you've verbalbed your anxieties. Send 50 cents in coin with your .r~uest bookcase neatly arranged with got a lot of peOJ>i.e coming in Women's Center, will 'l'lii . Alger. Pletie go -and let me know bow it and a long, stamped, ~e1sed feminist literature and a !ew interested but nobody was in-longer be funded after this ,· And they're determined to.----------- warked oat. envelope to the Dally Pilot.'~. : · chairs and ·pillows taking up terested in staffing." quarter ends. But they are d . t that \ floor space. Many of the women, she going ahead "with a hope and 0 JUS • ~ . But, she admitted, the cen-said are involved in other a prayer ... and maybe we'll LOSE WEIGHT THIS WEEK ~.. Ear) ter is "really still at a mud-thiniis and found they had have brownie sales," said Ms.1-;; ___ ;..;; _____ •I ."-FOR dled state." over-extended their time. Alger. 1~ PRESCRIPTION l~' ~ The latest reorganization Then, at the end of April, The tuture doesn't seem to L PRICES "•• (9ml•r""'' was just about a week old and the center's director left, leav-w~;~y them too much. . Tiie Od1lnex Plan c.an help .~IJ become the slim ttim person that yo1.1 would like lo be. Odrine~ llas been uud successfully by ll!OU$1ndS 111 over th• country !or 14 years. Get rid of exeess lat tnd live long&r. ·az.:i.ar , r .. v ... , cM.... the spring term would be over ing the job of staffing open to I m pretty sure once thrngs '-' 6~~a2H A• • • ~ J~P y•P , in ,:1~~.';.e ~:'\::fu'!~;,.i whomever would take it. Odrlnex ls 1 tiny tabltt 1nd easily s~llowed.Contalns no dangerous drugs. -Ho .... 1m1nr. No speclal txtrcRes. Odrlnex PJln cos1s $3,25 llld t"9 lf'tet . economy alzt' $5.25. fl· doing , ""I , ·, ' 1•~' Shodowline by the Community Projects But staffing is a problem In " npert · '• , . ~•--Sit£ Women's Centers throu""""t !fl • -cut1111 4•,• \w· , . . ' ~· ,.. ··-~~~. 3 ~ ,was the country, Ms. S""'1d";i:i. e•s ,1 ~~-,:111 V"'.. , crcs."': .. .r • -i' I • ~:._~ , .l,.,.........,tly, wOtnai li}l,V',0 i. • r \ 4 ; , ~ ';;-"~-..,...._ ~rt •. ,,. •. ,~.~:II\!·~ fl .~::den~ix>dy. . IC. 'l ls~u'Shed centers ~d"~! ........ 5~' . ·o' w: j. SPORTSWEAR.~ • I'll. 17,. Sr.• Tml1 A•. '"°' .. •••,n·1 Mtt.1 ~i. ·,·>'Originally,· the' Ctder was got1~-on to other things·'w:ithou Ea1tbluff Colfiares eo.t.N::: ...,._ M~M104 ...,. ... ,. ·~ ~blimied to take women training women to replace 1660 ORANGE AVE. ', .. ......,_,...,. ,....,,..., nt:ll'ley wlll he refunded. Ito qtJestJons Med. ""-Pt no substiMn. Sold with this iuanntee by: Eas:&bluf~~~e Center MINI."' ... ,.rt,, It t-Stt., .. 1 ,..,.,. from the campus into the them in the centers. COSTA MESA. 645-7357 ~~~~ :-~.g~~i:ri~':l -==========~=========::":=====; ====== community to interact with Still, within a week after the!;~~~~~~~~~~~:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. -other women. It moved onto UCI coeds became involved, the campus in January ap-someone was scheduled to be parenUy because the CPO in the center from 8 a.m.. to 2 board felt it was not involving p.m. each day, groups were enough of the university started and they were involved ''INdEscRibAbly BEAUTifu l'' Old fashioned elegance sets the mood for Intimate dining for lovers •• , and other people •. Turn.of-thP..Century artlracu accentuate viStial Interest In this excellent restaurant. Our attractive, perfectly costumed waJtteSseS wlll spoil you. And, our unusually fine ~uisine will capture yo1.1r imagination. Once you've dlned here, Seacliff wlll call you back: again and again. 'The excitement or i:-------r.-r,,..,r-----------. elegant dining w .... , ... , ........ \Ve may be a little difficult to find, BUT, we're worth the effort. is a dally 1fCalr. We take Ctt•I pride In servinf a very provocative busine&\man's lunch at 11 a.m. Sunday Otampafne Brunch ls an interesUnr exPerience for lovers and Cami!~ ¥;;;;:..::;;"'"'~"--~J...---------.J between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. l>ancing • Entertainment 3000 Palm Avenue • 1-luntlngton Beach, California NO RESERVATIONS • CLOSED MONDA VS (714) 53&8866 Try, Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You women. in Women's Week. Added impetus for the move Although Ms. Toscano ~med to come with the credits themselves with hav- threat of being "kicked out" of ing done "real well" in this tbe house which they were short time, she didn't want to sharing with ·the Feminist think of the center's past Women's Health <'£n'fer · in , because it W<!§... in a "sorry Santa Ana. state." "At orie time there Was a "They were playing with the Women's Center and it work· old instead of making up ed," said Ms. Binder. But ~ new things," she said. And, she super-structured environment added, "1 have a feeling thal wasn't wanted and the op-the people before me went posite result was ir· about it too radically." responsibility in upkeep of tbe One change she hopes to facility. bring Shout is In involving men Many of the women who had on .campus in consciousness been involved in the center are faising groups. "I feel we've also active in the Radical excluded men far too long ... Feminist Lesbian group in the half the change has to take county. They have "officially place in them," she explained. split (relations) but are still But in addition to having to friendly," Ms. Binder said. gain support on campus, the Other women in the past US* small core of women involved -·-•COASTLINE ., HEAL TH FOODS~ • SPECIALS FOR MAY 21 TO 26 . ACEROLA PLUS • Vitamin C-100 mq's 100 Titibltts -C~ewablt -Very Ta1ty BUY 2 IOTTLES FOR $3.25 GET 3rd BOnLE FREE! ALMONDS O.llclous and Nutrltlo111 1 Lb. (16 o>.) SPECIAL 1.39 Regular 1.69 LECITHIN CAPSULES ~:_~;:;·;.~ '••••1" SPECIAL 1.49 YEAST 500 Plu• VttamlM •ncl Mh,•ral1 1 Lit. (16 OL} Regular 2.19 SPECIAL 1.79 Coastline Health Foods C0tta Mna Tustin 19" lf"flllt •ftll. HHr $,, ... ... IM Lagana Hll~ t41t2 •• ,.,. , ... N11r 1.•IPflt .... , .. .. , . •• r SPORTSWEAR FABRICS Prints • Solids • Novelties Tremendous selections of designs, combinations and colors to wear now and all through the summer. MACHINE WASHABLE, ideal for pants, tops, summer suits, and dresses. VALUES TO $1.69 YARD 44" / 45" wide Cottons Cotton blends MULTI-COLOR DESIGNS BOX & RIB STITCH SOLIDS MACHINE WASHABLE beauties in on out- standing range of textures, colors. 58"/60"Widths VALUES TO $3.88 YARD . SAVE UP-TO $1.38 A YD. 1 5 00 YDS. FOR 78~ llHOUSE OF FllBRICS 9 always first quality fa bric& Hvntlntton Center -Edinger at nee.ch Blvd., Jiuntlngton Beach -197...,011 South COMt Pl•z• - arl•lol at s.11 Dlt110 F"'Y. (Dita MtM '-~1514 Orenadair Mell -Oral'IQl!lli\tPrPl ltl(! H••bot Fullerton -526-2234 Honw Pl•:n - 1711t at Bristol S•nt• Ana -54J.5551 lut>na P•rk ·Ctn tar - ~ Palm• •I St•~IOll lutn• Ptrk -121""4S2S Gardltfl drove -12181 Brookhunil !next to Von's) -.5>0--1542 l ......... __ .,, .......... .. ·II)~-. .__MEI.PP lQJ . 6fTOUT'1ClM' --· TUMBLEWEEDS DooLErs WORLD SALLY •ANANAS . 'fllE sot.PIERS ARE COMIN6' ! ! 1llf 501..PIE:RS ARf COMIN6! ,. ~..,.:-t 5o!'Ql..it MUTT & JEFF WAA;!;WR<>HGWIT\l You, JEFF?You'l<E WALKUi' FUNHV.' I OONr-1 ~ FIGMENTS NANCY YOU 'PROMISED TO MAKE ME A HERO SANDWICH /ODAY YES··· I EVEN BOUGHT A LOAF OF' GENUINE ITAL/AN 0READ FOR RELEASE MONDAY, MAY 21, 1973 TODAY'S CBDSSIDID PVZZLB ACROSS 47 1934 Nobel Sa1urd<ly's Punle Solved: prize winner 1 Orienlal 49 Stlive for nur.M vlc1orv 4 Kind of house 50 German river 9 Tender 51 Anglo·Saiwn 14 The human "peon" race 52 Sign on • 15 Actreu Ruth building 16 Sir Francis 17 Improving in quality 19 Had the flu 20 Snow·rain mixture 21 Vehlcle 22 Airpon code for Helslnki :z.j FiWI 24 Royal 26 ViOlenl speech ·· 29 Employ 3 1 FeminirnJ name 32 Evidence of an ifliury 33 Of 1 prin\inf 54 Poor section of 1own 58 Child's toy 60 Bridge plavef'a word 61 Defense ' organization 62 Murderor ~" 64 Thin paper 9 Harem room 40 Cen•in 66 Roecttlnishe 10 Sma!l voung trout5 ffl 1/21 W11h. chk:kans: 42 F•ilsto city Var. anend 68 Larpe dMf 11 lncornict 45 Of pan of 69 Rep1esen1a1"'9 nolions th.fl eye 70 Dormancy 12 -O\Jt: Make '8 S 71 l egal matter do U N petty DOWN 13 Color officers , 1 Entertain 18 Ckltcome 53 Roman I '2 ·-··Leal: N. 24 Welcome offici.11 of old Amer. flag ,guesl5 56 L.A. athlete by Al Smith I MIG!!TIH'FORM'Yliu,SIR. YO!J f-IAVE PUl''lttJR Sllr:lES O~'Tl\E WRONG FEET/' by Dale Hale by lrnie Bushmiller WHY PO 'YOU' INSIST ON HAVING YoUR BREAD , TOASTED :? PEANUTS GORDO • MOON MUWNS '< ANIMAL CRACKERS JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Doux WHEt<SAM DOESH1' CALL HER 6ACK, MT5Y ?IE COMES IRRITAOLE! JUDGE, COULD t c.E.RT,41JHLY, 'eETSY! POSSIOLY eoRROW MAY I ORNE ';OU YOUR CAA '? ANYWKERf? style-, 36 Li.ll:Hfit'f 38 Dh&ert 39 Colonist 41 Windows 43 Was in 3 8(0edwiy 25 Worker 56 Of value: t backer 27 Mother-of~ Rare l ·', 4 Campuc peltl'I 67 Brott,emood g!Nl\tp: 28 Br1id of hair members ~ ~mal · 30 Window pan 59 Vivacious 51Qlstance unit 61 Tak•• 6 ~hurch · 33 E11entiail !)holograph MISS PEACH by Mell aession 44 Unreliable .. ...,.. 48 S.iarv irK11ase1 1 2 3 " 17 20 23 ' " I Y's~ent point 82 Bu1i~ 7 $upeMHd 34 Alp1 e11pert : Abbr, 8 'mpressed JS L.l11enlng 63 Tene deeply 31 Vehicle 66 Madrid cheer 5 6 7 I l i J ! • '11\:A, W"A'T" I~ rT A~ 'T"M~ ~5SION!O THAT MAKES YOIA FUI.. ~ ~ MATl41tJNI; ?' • . DICK TRACY .AND M!l{tS VOl!R . CAP! • «)TO WORK ., 11 • • • I I I M.....,, MOY 21, 1973 1 DAILY PILOT Jlp by Roger ~6elcl by Charles 8-ttl by Gus Arriola SCltJl!'I, 611'f6f .r J/AD Tll/IJ i/Al.JNTJNe-JIAN/aU(. 1D w,<.J.J,oW IN THE WtJ.J.CWf by R09er lollen ~ - 'I. ql1t' \~. ~If~·-" II ~ f • J • ·r1towwww.1• • ~E SIJ.llE LJJ(ES illR ! •. : ' 1 • Jf DAILY PILOr I Odd Move Backfii·es On Dodgers An.ANTA (Al') -.Hank Aaron agreed it was lht thing to do but it still seemed strange when the Los Angeles Dodgers \l'alked Darrell Evans intentionally to get to Aaron SUnday. The lfammer, needing 30 home runs to tie Babe"ku1h·s all-lime record of 714 , re!ponded vdth a sizzling line drive single ro left fi eld that chased home Ralph Garr in the loth inning and gave Atlanta a 3-2 victory over lhe Dodgers. Los Angeles used the home run power of Ron Cey and Joe Ferguson t&--win the nightcap oC the doubleheader 8·3. Aaron couldn't recall the last time it had happened to him. "l'm sure they walked Eddie Mathews to get to me when we were in Milwaukee. "liowever," he added , "l thought it was good baseball sense. Evans has been hitting the ball well. The situation really demanded it." Garr beat out an Infield single to start the inning and was sacrificed to second. Evans then drew the (ree pass and Aaron got the hit that gave knuckleballer Phil Niekro his tooth major league victory. Evara had been tearing up Dodger pitching in the series. running his total to 8 for 16 before the day ended. They ifl.. eluded four home rull! and nine rbi. Evans accoun~ for au of Atlanta's runs olf ~ Downing, 5-1, in the nightcap by belting two home runs, his 10th and 11th of the season , tying Aaron and Pittsburgh's Willle Stargell for the NL lead. Cey belled a three-run .,,homer, his fourth, in the opening inning of the nightcap and Ferguson had an rbi dou-. ble as the Dodgers gave Downing all he needed before he ever took !he mound. Ferguson added a tw~run homer, his ninth, later in the game while Downing was matching Niekro's first game by hurling a three-hitter. l'IRST GAME LIS 1.MtJts IJ) Altll1tf8 {)) •brll rbl •brll l'bl LOPM,2D •O OOG•rr,rl 5121 8udi,..r. ID 4 0 1 0 M P1r~1, t i J 0 0 0 Mot1, It • O O o Ev~"'· lb J O 2 O P•dor•,lf OOOOH ...... rori,Jf •OJ I w .o.v11. cf • o o o e.ir. .... cf • o o o F9'VUNfl, o; J I 0 D 1>41.JOl'ln>.on, 2b • I I J w.Cr•wtonl, rr • o o o oi.11. lb 1 o 1 o Cl'Y, lb 4 O I O Gllbnillh. lb I 1 O O Rl.ISMll, n l I 0 o O•lft, o; 4 O 1 O Otl .. n, P 1 0 0 0 P.Nletcro, p J O I O G•rw'f',ph 1017 Cul...,.,p 0 000 TOl•l1 l l 2 J ' loj4J5 l2 ) ' ) 0.... out ....,.,. wlMJl>lil run KOl'td. Los ~" ooo ODO 0'20 o -1 AU1nl1 000 000 JOI I -J E -Gllbr11th, DP -Los A~" 1, A!11nl1 1. 1.08 -Lo. AnQ81fl l, AU•n1• t. 28 -G1rY11.,, lll -EYIM. HR -D•. Jalwl~ t•l. $ -<Ml-. EY_, I", M141to, AA. P .. ll. "''-Culver (L,1·1) P.Nl.i.ro (W,J.1) Time -2:JI, ll"Hll•lla•so 1 !o 1 l • l ll!l•111f 10J11J • SECOND GAME LH A~I" Ill Alt111t1 IJI itbrh rtll lbrll,.I l0Pft,1b i27DGarr,rr •000 8udll*", lb 5 1 • o M.Pt rer. 11 ' I I O w .O.vl1, er ' o I o Ev•n•, Jb J i 2 J F•rvui.on, t 5 7 2 l Ba~er, cl ' o o o W.Cr•w!on:I, rl 2 7 I O O..Juhni.on, 1b ) O O O P1clorM, II 1 O 0 O 0 1.llrown, It J D o o CIY, lo • l 2 l Ditti, JO 2 0 0 0 R ... i.111, q • o 2 1 Ce1•nova. c J o o o Y11w . c l o 1 o Glntry, p o o o o Downl1>11, p 4 0 O O T.K11t1y, 11 I o o 0 Hou~•. o I O O •O Prlsl!!I•, II 0 0 0 0 Bl1nk1, pn I O O O Sthuel..-, p o o o o T01•11 17 • IS 7 To!1l1 2t l I a LOI Al'IQ .. 91 401 100 002 -I Arl•nt1 000 100 l'OO -J E -Evan1, M. P11 e1, Garr, 01. JOllnton. OP -lot Ang.i" I, All•n!a 2. l08 -lot A~tt 6, Allan!• I. 78 -FtrgulOR. Hit -Cl'\' t•J. fYll\S 2 (II), f ergui.on j9J. Se -LD?S•· Ru1.ell. II" H II E• al SO Downing tW.S.l) t l l l 1 1 Gen!r., (L.4-ll 7 Ill I 5 s t o 'f.Kt11ey 7·Pl J 1 0 I 1 Hou~ 1·111 2 O O I 0 Frllltll1 I o o o o Cl $tFlue\1r I 1 1 1 0 I '"IBP -b., HO.Ult IW, Oavhl, WP --Gentry, Time -2; 17, Atlttld111<1 -21 .570. • • UPIT ....... PIECES FLY AS AL LOQUASTO'S DREAMS OF MAKING THE INDY 500 GO DOWN THE DRAIN AFTER HITTING THE WALL SUNDAY. Last-second Run Bumps Posey JNDJANAPOLJS (APz George Snider and Jim McElreath got lasl- minute positions and Sam Posey ol San Juan Capistrano got the boot Sunday as a field of 33 starten was completed for the li.1emorlal Day Indianapolis 500-mile race. Snider, 32, of Bakersfield, got hi! ctumce to make the lineup when his long- time friend , A.J . Foyt, gave him a ride in his backup Gilmore Racing Team Special only two minutes before the shutdown time. Snider, a nine-year veteran at Jn· dianapolis, responded by cranking out four laps at an average speed of 190.laS miles per hour, fa stest of the final round of qualifying and good for the 30th pc>si· tion in the field . McElreath, 44, already had packed his bags and was ready to head bad: to his ranch when he was offered a trial in Posey'! backup Norris Eagle. It was the next·t~last. qualifying at- tempt of the day -Snider'! was to be the last -and McElreath made the most of it. Despite having had no practice time in ·the car and with benefit of only one warmup lap, he put together four trips at 189.MO m.p.b., earning the last spot in the lineup. He bumped rookie Tom Bigelow or Whitewater, Six., who had qualified oo.ly momenls earlier at 186.809 m.p.b., com- pleling the field. Posey, a graduate of the road racing ranks, had qualllled his No. 34 NOCJ'is Eagle oo the first day of trials May 12, but at the slowest speed of any of the starters, 187.921 m.p.h. He wa.5 first amoog the initial qualJfien oo the ~ list al1er the last three po.tjtioos were tilled. Then. when McElreath made the deal, Posey was left like a sitting duck for Snider's sb:lot- down. p..,.y, 29, had known all along that his No. 34 car was extremely vulnerable on the bump list. Jn practice this week, he had run some hot laps in what he said was a new Eagle purchased from the New Dimension fQr ·Angels With Epstein in the At~ack Harry Dalton did not display any com- passion. The California general manag~r. hav· ing just watched his Angels complete a three-game sweep of Texas Sunday with a 4-l Y!ctoey, lmmedlate\y went out and carted off Rangers f\rst bueman, ·Mike Epstein. Twenty minutes after It~ game lhe Angels and Texas announced a fivc- player trade. Epstein , 30, pitcher Rich ~Jand, 24. and catcher Rick Stelmaszek were sent to Galifornia in exchange for pitcher Lloyd Allen, 23. and first baseman Jim Spencer, 25. "We got Epste;n because we like his power bat," Dalton said. "This add s a new dimension to our at- tack," added manager Bobby Winkles. "We needed a left-hand hitter with power and Epstei n fits the description." Epstein "-'as admittedly unhappy in Texas, a fact confirmed by Rangers owner Bob Short. "He was unhappy when Oakland traded him to U!I and there was nothing we could do to change his fellings," Short said. ''He wanted to return to the West Coast.'' At the time of the trade, Epstein was NAL hitting only .188 with one homer and sL't rbi. Spencer was hitting .241. Epstein, who tol d Winkles he was delighted with the swap, had two singles for Texas Sun- day but It was not enough to prevent the Angels from sW<el)ing tho thr~ Angels Slate C11lllornl• •I Ch!o;1110 C81llornl• •I Chlc•oo C•UlornL• "' ChlCM!O !l;S!i D.m. 5:1S o.m. 11:101.m, series as Frank Robimon drove in three runs with a homer and double. The victory was the eighth in nine games for California and bc:nsted them to within a half game cl the division-leading Chicago While Sox. Does the acquisition of Epstein tum the Angels into solid contenders, W'mkles was asked after the trade. "1 think we're contenders already," came the quick retort. California scored twice in the first in· ning against loser Don Stanhou!e, o-4. when Billy Grabarkewitz drew a two-out walk and Robinson plated him with a double into the alley in left-center . .Bob Oliver then singled home Robison. In the third Rudy Meoli singled !or the Angels and Robinson drilled his seventh Adjusts to Winds· homer of the season, boosting bis rbi count to 24. · It was also the l,637th lifetime rbi for Robinson, moving him ahead of Ernie Bank! and into the No. 1 spot on the alltime list. Clyde Wrigh~ 2-5, who was winning hi! second straight game, held the Rangers without a run W'ltil the seventh when three walks and a single gave Texas its first score. To•• (21 Clltt.n!l8 (41 D.N•lton, 1b H11tTIJ, cf H•rr•h. lb . A.JOI\,_.., II EPlllln, lb IBIJf"rougtis, rr SudV:ls, dh S1.11r1z. c M8SM!, 11 C..rty, "" Lovl!lo, 3D' "•ntiow.. p •brfllrtll •r•,., 4011Pi ... Dn,lf 4000 4000Ml!OIJ,.u ltlO 3 0 Cl 0 Gr1~1"11'Wltt.2b J l 0 Cl 4 I I 1 Alonwir, 2b 0 0 0 O 3 l 2 O F'.RObln~. dh J 2 l J l OI Oll.OllY..-,rl 4021 •o oos11nton.r1 0000 • 0 2 0 Sl)!l'IO;tr, lb 4 O o O 20108e<T)',Cf lOOO o o o o G81lt!Qher, 3D' :i G o o IOOOTorborg,o; lOIO DOOG C.Wrlgl'IT, p OGO O s.11$,p 0000 Tol•l1 l2 2 I 2 TOT1l1 30 4 ' 4 Tens 0» OOG no -2 C•Htwnl1 202 000 OO!I -4 E -P lnlOll, 01" -C.Ularnl8 l. 1.09 -Tea:13 I, Callloml1 5. 78 -F, Rot.I~ HR -F, llobl1t- Kln (7), A. JollntOn (JJ. ,,_ M a lill aa SO St1.W.0..-(l.A-41 I 6 4 4 J l C.Wrl;fl! IW.2·5) 1·'1/J I l 2 S J S1ll1 1·1/J Cl 0 0 o I 5•v1 -Siii• (ll. l lmti -1:5'. Atttl'ld1nce - 15,689. Gottfri;ed Upsets Ashe In Vegas Net Classic LAS VEGAS -Unseeded Brian Gott- fried of Fort Lauderdale. Fla.. upset fifth-seeded Arthur Ashe of 1\fiami, Fla., &-1. 6·3 Sunday tO win the second annu al $150 .• tan King Tennis Classic. The match was relatively e8."!y for Gott- fried, 21. who played the ~ mile-an-hour gusty winds with the patience of a veteran and made the 31-year-old Ashe seem like a rookie in the professlooal ranks. Gottfried ran orr the fir st set in 20 minutes in the one hour match, only al- lowing his opponent to hold serve in the fourth game. ln the second se t both players held serve until tw~all. when Gollfried broke Asbc's serve three con- secutive games for the match. Ashe didn 't seem bothered by the bone spu r in his left ankle which he ag- gravated 1n the semi-finals Friday. "I ran better today than the last two days," he sa id. Jn adjusting to the winds Gottfried said, "I stayed back and played more from the backcourt and tried to go to the net only on approach shots." The frustrating performance for Ashe marked the fifth time he had lost in six tournament finals this year. His $15,000 prize brings his yearly total to $78,ISO. Gottfried earned $35,000 in lhis reported- ly the richest tournament in tennis history : $30,000 for singles and $5,000 !or \Vinning the doubles with former Trinity University teammate Dick Stockton on Sa!urday. In addition 10 the prize money Gott- fried won a new automobile. nc, Calilomla shop ol Dan Gurney. Ear1ier Sunday, h<>wever, speedway of- ficials said they had discovered that the No. 31 car Posey supposed]y bad brought in for protection actually was the same No. 34 he already bad qualified. Chief .steward Harlan Fengler said Posey's crew appermU)r bad planted the No. 31 m the already qualilled No. 34, and made some minor ctianges in the sheet metal with the idea d. running it in another qualification attempt in the event Posey was bumped. Bob Harkey, 42, Of fndianapolis WOO the 31st spot with a speed of 189.733 m.p.h. Sammy Sessions, 37, of Nashville, Mich., became the 32nd starter with a speed of 188.9116. 13 HA.VE Dl~D AFTER INDY WIN INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -Wmning the Indianapolis Motor Speedway's annual 500-m.ile race ls the ultimate of auto rac- ing -a victory worih bundreds thousands ol dollars to the driver. Yet few winners have followed the ex- ample of Ray Harroun, wbc> lutg up his helmet after capturing the fll'St 500 in 1911. Of 46 different men woo have won the 56 Indy races, 13 have been killed in later races. The last was 1965 winner Jimmy Clark, Scotland's gr ... t Grand Pri% driver whi> died io .a Formula U race ai Hockenbelm, Germany, in 1968. Woman Finds . Liberation With Soaring WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Betsy Howell is a girl who likes to see a hawk making lazy ctrdes In the sky. If the hawk i.91l't available, a dust devil will do. Even the heat rising olf a blacktop road can bring a smile to Mrs. Howell's face. What is her hang up? Nothing, In fact she is a completely liberated woman. So liberated she soars -literally. Mrt1. Howell, UI, is a sallplane pilot and Sun- day she became the first woman to com- pete in the transcootinental sailplane '8ce from Los Angeles to Washington, D.C. Mrs. Howell i! competing against five ol the w0<fd's best glider pilots. They hope lo arrive in Washington "on or about May 31 ." A !tewardes.s, and the wife of an airline pilot, Mi!. Howell hopes to average between 2.50 and 300 miles a day. Most of the route will be nown at altitudes ranging between 7,000 and 14,000 feet at speeds up to 120 miles an hour. What makes a y,·oman put on a parachute, pack a survival kit, squeeze herself into a sailplane, and go in search of a rising column of warm air to carry her over mountains and deserts. II ~ not tho mone}. Smirnoff Vodka rontributes $6,000 in cash, but the mooey must be given to the Soaring Society of America to meet the expenses of the U.S. team ln next year's world soaring cham- pionships in Awtralla. "1 like the competition -not only against the other pilots, but against nature: You have to be a1ert to every small change ln the weather. You've got to look for the telltale signs that tell you where the thennal updrafts are," Mrs. Howell said. Mrs. Howell admits Abe is up against tough competition In the race -all of the male pilots are top heavy with sallplane experience while she only began flying sailplanes in 1969. • Hill's Play Wins Title At Memphis MEMP!llS (AP) -Wiry, ln!enao vet- eraa Dave Hill turned back a Ooct ot challengen with a par-12 and won the Danny 1bornas-Memphls Golf Classic Sunday, while Lee Trevino moved put the Sl·million mark in career earnings. Rill celebnted his 36lh birthday with a 233 Iota! -fiVHl!lder-per -oo the 7,193- yard Colonlal Country Club coone -and picked up his foorth Memphis title in ~ven years. At one time or another «1 the wann. sunny day, eight players got as close as two strokes, but oooe could matd1 Hill's .solJd play Clown the stretch. - Trevtno, who bad won thl! tournament the last two years, tied for -second with young Allen · Miller at 2.84, one stroke back. Miller had a 69 and 'n'evlno a 70. Each collected 116,1117.SO from the total purse of $175,000, and it was en<ll.iiff to make Trevino the game's fourth miUlon-dollar winner. Trevino, who joined the toor m a full. time basts only siJ: years ago, now has a 1 career mark ot. $1,001,899.47. Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and BIUy Casper -none of whom competed here -are the mly other men in hisl<lry ' to ei:ceed $1 million in pro golf earnings for a career. And Trevino did lt the faster. lt look Nicklaus: about nine years and Trevino did it in slx. A group at 285, two strokes bact ot fill, included Gene Littler, Olarley Sif- ford, Hale lrwin, Larey Ziegler and David Blem. The veta'an Sifford c1-I wi1h the day'!I best round, a ~, whlle Ziegler and Glenz matched 69s and Littler and Irwin posted 71s. . It was the 10th carttr victory for the oonlroveniial !Illl, and earned him f,15,000. A )uder •ince the Oeain4 round, HJD opened the day's play with a one-stroke advantage and never surrendered the top spot although Miller caught hlm with a birdie on the 13th hole. The youthful toor sophomore bogeyed the next bole when he missed the green and Hlll held the advantage the rest of the way. The man who ooce instituted a multi- million dollar suit against the PGA stretched his margin to two strokes when he holed a 12·foot birdie p.rtl m the 16th hole. Trevino gambled !or the greon and a possible eiagle on the par five lath, but pushed hi> shot into tbe gallery at !be right and could do no better )hon JiM· lnu litinterecl. !tis tltlrd on lliat hole, chipped out of the sand to about two feet, then missed the putt. He made bogey, but it didn't really matter. FJf\8 1 _.. 81111 tnOllll' WIMl1111• $1.1/lllly Ill tM M1rnp1<il1 0011 ci.11lc: ....,., .. n--.11) 11-n-11.7t-214 ,.,,,.,,..,_,.. 12·11·7>-ff-llS 7U..7.Wf-'»J 12·7).7MJ-'Jt5 71,7].'71).1l-7U 1 ... rw.-10-21~ 12.11.n .11-216 71,7...,.,,__'216 DIYI HUI, W,000 LM T,....llOO. 116,1• Allen Mlllll', Sl'-1• D1v1c1 Gllnl. u.m L1rry Zl911t', N.Ml CMr ... Sifford, ~ Glrlt Llttllr, '6.4tl H1i. IA>lft., ll&AJ Hutim GAln, M.llO 111111 On.II, 14,151 Jam Seti ... , U,&7' l..11 Eldlr, Sl.&1S L""'rd ~. U"1S l'errnt ,..n., u.ou Jahnny Mlllff, '1M.l 7Uf..n-n-211 11-n..,..1s-m n -n.1....,_211 71.f>.n.~211 -· D•n Sikes, U..UO lob SMw, nnoo Miki Mcf'le~. 12.-UI Tom SMw, UAJO DI._,. Stoc:ktan, S::..UO Jt rtV MCGel, S1,4ilt Rlthlrd Cr•wford, Sl..ilt Jim Oen!, 11.&lt t>Hn-t 1B1man. 11.&lt <>-'"OI ArCMr, ll.6lf Miki Hiii, '1&,lt ll•v "'°"'· ii.no ~~':]1' •• 1te:~"': '11'11~'° ahn M•heffl'Y, 'I''° iMc~l.fO ,1 F~l~t~, tl,190 Glbtrt Ol0/birt, "'7 DIYI ,..,.,9111, ""1 7J.74-11·70-291 •1·7.J.1._11-H? 7U..74-7J-21t n.10-n-n-2n It's a No-hitter -Andal-OLoss SALINAS, Calif. (AP) -Pat Tatom pitched a oo-llitter but lost the game a! the Salines Packers fell 1 ~ in the second game ol a doubleheader to tbo Reno SU- Sox. Sallnu also loot the fint game Sunday in calllomla League, play, and fell to thin! place, mly one game ahead ol Reno In the stand- in8B-Tatom, ZZ, now 1-3, walked eight and atnJck out 10. He also gol 111t Infield single, one ol thfte 'Packtr hll•. Reno acored In the tint lmlnlr .... a walk to oecond baoeman Gary Ellis, a steal, ID Infield out that moved him to lhlnf, and a sacrlllce ny by Rlct Miming that ll<Ol'id him. • I •: I ' West Puts Knoek on Caliber of ADA • CHARLESTON , W.Vo. (AP) -There's no comparlJon between tbe rival American Basketball Assoc.laUon and Natlooal Basketball Aaaociatlon, If you can believe NBA All-Pro Jerry West. The former West Virginia Unl verslt)'- Afi-Amcrlcan and veteran of 13 NBA season11 with the Los Angeles Lakora says natly "none of the ABA teamJ could beat our best teams." motion, and entertained questkm from reporten at a nen oonfereoce. "81111 QmnlnghaJb, a good lrlolld of mine, was named-the molt valuable pl>yer In the ABA tbll year and I doll'I think he could ever have made It that bl' In our left&Ue,'' West'·sald. lei..,.., or maybe evtn a ptv ceiduog job. ~ from autlldo lnttnSll and 1!11 ployers u.a-iv.. will keep blm from coaclting 11 the ""°'Ir• 1 ... ~ Welti · uJd. He labeled the IJ'aenklay crop of 1colllogo atbl~ "• little apollcd." "SlaUltlca are ~lea," he "'1d. "! can\ oee I blc li1 ll1)' play. I made tbe ol.11'f'O team and tho' .n- defenslve team IO 1 mult ,,_ ,lflat I • bad • prtlt.Y c.w ........ " . And I ~ one, too. He tum.a the Lakers-Otll!IRO Bolla playoff oertes the moot physical oile be had ewr played In, "and tr blllbtbell were played lit• tbal every day I'd quit." UPI Ttll,.,,...tl LA'S BILL BUCKNER FAILS TO STOP TWIN KILLING WITH SLIDE. West visited Charleston over the "·cckend for a recreational veil.Idea pro- He indicated he wuuld J!lay .ot least (In< m0<e year wtlh the Latei1. Whal lheii? Maybe 'II co111J1lenlary job wtlh a radio or television net,...rt, certainty not a Ille of LOol<lilg boclt on last aea:son, wllen the Lllen W1ft dclhrooed os NB.\ cbaJn. po111 by tho New York Knlcb, West said the record book doesn't reveal the true picture. WtSl bu one more year to go oa a reported '300,IJOO ti-.year poet with I Loo Angel.,, I 1 I 1 ' 'I ' . • ... . . .. . . ~ .. -.............. -:" -· . - I Sports In Brief Mitltip'le l)eatm On Sports Scene NAIROBI -Three of Kenya's top crkket players were killed Sunday in an auto crash at Kertcho, 200 miles'. from here, while on their way to the Lake Victoria tnn ol Kisumu for a match. They were Mubarak AH, Tabassum Parvez and Zahid Cockar, members of the leading Nairobi team. Sir Ali Sports Club. Inquiry MONZA. Italy -The otate attorney of thl! northern Italian town opened M in- vestigation Monday into the deaths of Finnish motorcycl- ing ace Jarno Saarinen and Italy's Renzo Pasolinl, killed in a mas!ive spill during a world cbampionshlp e v e nt here Sunday. The investigation aimed at determining the cause of the spill and any possible responsibility. PasoHni and Saarinen were killed and five other riders were injured in a fall on a bend during the first lap In the 250-cc class race. According to some reports the accident was caused by an oil spot on the track. Others claimed a collision between riders was the cause. After the accident Sunday, organizers and federation of- fic ials stated the accident had been caused by fate and that the track was safe . · But Saarinen, a 28-year-old engineer and No. l rider of the Japanese Yamaha team, had said in an interview Friday that be considered the Monza track too fast and dangerous. Cycle Death before be was lilted Into the ambulance. V.S. Loses LIMA, Peru -World clwn- pton Yugoslavia put down a """"'1 ball U.S. rally 9mday night to win 9U1 In a thrilling secood nlgbl men's dlvlston finals game In the fint World Basketball Festival Tbe first ball was domlnated entirely by Yugoslavia's 6- foot-10 center Vlnko Jelanc who, uslni a sweeping right· handed book shot, repeatedly converted accurate passes from penetrating g u a r d s Nikola Plecas and Zoran Slav- nlc. U.S. efforts to stop Jelovae, first with 7-foot center ·Dan Traylor of South Carolina Unlversity and 6-foot-8 Corky Taylor of Minnesota, were fu. effective. Sotliets WitL TOLEDO, Ohio -The Soviet Union defeated the United Sta~ 16-4 In the third mmd Surnfay and captured the first World CUp of Amateur Wrest!· ing cbampiollshlpe. Tbe Russians fmished the two-day meet at the Universi- ty of Toleclo Field House with six points, as they swept all three of their matdles. Tho United States finished second with f00r points, follow<d by Japan With tWo. Canada, the fourth team in the invitational affair, failed to score a point. New Aret1a BOSTON -The owners of Boston's ·professional t>asket- ball and hockey teams have agreed to build a $20 million sports arena in the South sta- tioo area, according to the Boston Rede v e Io pm en t Authority. The ogreement to build the 18,()00.seat arena will be sign- ed early this week. Davis Cup Challenge Roundup Romania, Jut ,...,.. ,,,,.. nerup to the United States In the Davis CUp finals, came from behind SundaT "' deMl the Nethortanda S.I ond win Its quarter-final matdl In EIJr9. pean Zone A play. New 1aland, tho Soviet Union, and France el9o reach- ed the .. m111na1s In European Zme A DaY!s CUp play while Italy, West Germany and Spain gained aemlflnal vic- tories In Eowpean Zone B competiUon. With Romania ond the Netherlands tied S.:1, U.S. Open champion Ille. Nastase defeated DJ.tchman Tom Ot- ter M , S.2, M to give his eountry the vjctoey. Earlier In the day, llclmanla's Thoma Ovtcs had beaten Nick Fleury W, 6-3. H to set up the crucial fifth match. OMy Parun of New 1.ealand defeated Zelijko Franulovlc 6- 3. 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 In the deciding fifth match to provide his country wtth a 1-2 edge. In the other singles match, Yugoslavia's Boro Jovanovic defeated Brian Fairlie 6-31 &.2, &-0. At Budapest, Ales Metrevell defeated Balacs Toroczy H, 6- 4, W to givo._the Soviet !lJ>lon an unbeatable 3--1 margin over Hungary. Later teammate Teimura,, Kakuliva rel.ired after gaining a one.set lead over Szabulcs Baranyi ond the HunR:arian was awarded the match. France completed a 5--0 sweep over Norway as Patrick Prolsy downed Erik Melander 6-0, 6-0, 6-3 a,ed Francoise Jauffret beat Per Hegna &-0, 6- 3, 6-2. Italy also enjoyed a 5-0 sweep of its matches with Bulgaria a.s Paolo Bertolucci defeated Lyuben Genov 6'!, g. 3, 6-3 and Adriano Panatta topped Bozhidar Pampoulov 6- 4, u , f>.3, 6-3. __ ... .._ Mondly, May 21, }-,JJ DAlLY PILOT J7 IRVINE LEAGUE CHAMPS -Estancia High's Ea.gles won the Irvine Lea~ue championship under coach Wally Chute for the fifth stra.Jght year. Standing from left -Mark Les, Mark Pender. Larry Collins. Kneeling -Tim Reynolds, Brian Lindley. Estancia Golf Team's Goal: Capture CIF Championship By ROGER CARI.SON Of fM a.ltr ,llol Sl•ff says h.ls team has an excellent opportunity to capture the CIF title. of the credit must go to the Mesa Verde Country Club youth program. Miiiikan Potent F4tding Weakness Tough Task for MD Finding Long Be a ch ,,--------... MWlkan's weaknHS b going to be a dilflcult task, for Mater Del when the t~ teams clash Tuesday in the oecood round of the CIF AMA ba,.ball playoffs. Mater Dei will face Millikan at S p.m. Tuesday with the game tentatively set for Col· den West OJllege. Moore League opponents tried with only the slimmest success, one victory in 15 games against Millikan as the Rams tied a record for league victories set 15 seasons ago. They've lost only tlree of 24 SPORTS games on the season, and ad· '----------vanced to the second round of the playoffs with an easy &-0 · victory over Fullerton. It isn't too surprising then that coach Cary Brown con· siders this his best team since a CIF title outfit in 1969. Though not possessing any super standouts, all around marks in batting and pitching renect the team balance 1hat has been the Rams' key this season. Area Seas Wm·mUp . For Fish Areas po rt s £1 shin g is gradually picking up with the warming trend of the seas. With it is the opening of McCu ll ah Brother s Sportsfishing in Huntington Beach and the continued daily activity at Dana Wharf tn Dana Point and Davey's Locker and Art's Landing in Newport Beach. McOJllah Brothers is or. fering patrons half fare Thurs- day and Friday to launch the Probable starting pitcher for the Mater Del game is Brett llouser, a rlg.hthander with an S-.1 record. If needed, there's Cory Zogby (S.l), and Steve Fenoglio (8--0) who doubles as a left fielder with a .304 average on the season. Other standout hitters for Millikan i n c l u d e shortstop Doug Stokke (.377). seeond baseman Greg Airhart ( .321) and center fielder Don Zim- merman (.308). Fenoglio is also the team's power hitter, and has four home runs to his credit thls season. Zimmerman, t h e leadoff man has successfully stolen 24 'bases this season and scored 25 runs in 27 games. Defense bas also been a Millikan strong polnt, ac-- cordlng to Brown, wlth the double play comblnaUon of Atrfwt ond Stokke a btg fM>. tor in the team's success. • ll:oll!llCI Hlllt J 6 So1.r111 T.,... I J Sorr• 2 l ,.IOI "°"'" 0 o El Stouinda 1 • H11wltlol'M ) S SIVIOl'IM I 7 l!ll&hocl MOl!lgomtfl' l ' SI. lt1nt1rd 1 new season. 2 1to111111 H111• ' The landing will operate dai· 1 Le wu_. 1 I S1rr11 S ly with a boat leaving at 7 11 c~ 2 a.m. and returning at 3:30 1 ta JordMI o • Uke'IOOOCI J • l • ' 1 • ; • • SAN JOSE -Four-year veteran Don Castro o f Hollister, Calif. has won his first American ~1otorcycle A s s o ciation championship race, a race marred by the death of another rider in a preliminary heat., Ernie lt1ks PROVIDENCE, R.I. -All· American Ernie DiGregorio of Providence College ha s reportedly signed 'with . the ' Bl\f~.o Braves of the National llasketbaD Association. West Germany completed a ~l rout of England as Juergen Fassbe.nder took Roger Taylor 6-4, IJ..6, 6-3 after Englishman Mark Cox had gained his country's only point, 4-6, 6-0, 6- 4, 6-2 over Karl Meller. Irvine League opponents may tend to disagree, but scanning the circuit records The Eagles haven't shot at the clip Marina golfers have -Collins is the leading player one might coocede the loop ti· .m be lhootl tu. ,the 1•. ~ Ue to Estancia ...,,, ~ anil . . T!l!I ·rn\ ore In' the 77-&1 concentrate on oometll!ni!'<lili.' '"iange<, liU\'Ciftlte tilplilM: ., "It's a geographic thing, no question about that. We renect their junior program, but we'.{e al'°' getlin& ~ from ~ .wbUc, ,_,,_ &\1 CDl\a p.m. . t LA~ ..........._ ____ .. Ac:tiaa •t Dian. Wbld tiC.-:-• ,.a.._ ' ~· Castro; 2:1, won easily ln tbe fifth championship race of tpe season Sunday at the San Jose Fairgrounds track, but two hours earlier Lloyd Houtchins, 24, of Los Angeles was killed in a finish line accident. Houtchins collided with Pat Mccaul of San Jose. Both riders hit the pavement in front of a capacity crowd of more than 7,000. Houtchins' cycle nipped 3nd hit a fence. McCaul was able to walk away . after rescue workers lifted 'his bike from him. But Houtchins was pronounced dead of internal injurles NEWPORT LEASES 2400 Wm Coost Hltfiwcry Leasing all Vehicles The Braves called. a news conference for Tuesday, but a Buffalo report during the weekend said that the IJ..foot backcourt ace had signed a multi-year contract for more than $1 million. Manne! Orantes' M, 6-l, 6-1 victory over Sweden's Ove Bengstori provtdeif Spain with an unbeatable 3--1 I ea d 1 Sweden's 16-year-ota Wimbledon junior champion. Bjorn Borg, made the fmal margin 3--2 with a S.7, 6-3, 6-3, 2-a, 7-5 triumph over Antonio Munoz. The semifinal palring11 for European Zone A will be Romania and New Zealand and the USSR and France. c!oadi wan,. Qiute's crew "These averages are has clUbbed !ta way to the somewhat . deceiving· because Irvine Lague team cham-Mesa Verde Country Club pionshJp for the fifth straight (Estancia's home course) is a year and is eyeing the CIF ti· very tough course. tie that the Eagles copped in "We only lost by one stroke 1968. to Marina on Its course." "We've had periods of time Estancla's won·loss record where l feel we are as good as is a flo35y 1~2 wilh the only any in the CIF," opines the setbacks at Marina at · Los Estancia coach, "but we've Alamitos. fluctuated some." As for the Eagles' tremen- nie quintet off to Glendora dous record, Chute says much Country Club today for the 'l.!esa"oolfa;;d~ IJhib,. "'Ihe kids are dedicated, it's not. just a social game for them. Collins Is as· good an Jn. dividual asYthere is in the CIF and depending on the time and track J'd say he's an excellent bet to win the CIF individual championship. "He played a 73 at Los Coyotes and finished five strokes better than any one else in our league . . . and that'~ not bad credentials." GW's Lock.man At JC Trials In European Zone B, the matchups are: Italy and Spain and West Germany against C>.echoslovakia. prellms cOO.sisted of Larry Collins. Mark Les, Brian NORTHRIDGE -Golden Lindley, Mark Pender andJlm West C.Ollege'.s Dave Lockman Knickerbocker. will compete In the JC 3.000. Pistol Pete Al.>J a key to Estancia's rout meter steeplechase t r i a 1 s of tbe Irvine league was today at Cal State (North-BATIJN ROUGE, La. freshman Billy Conrad ridge). During his college basket.ball If the Eagles are successful LA's Alston Wonders What Might Have Been The top tour flnlshen will career at LSU, Pete Maravich today Jn tbeir bid to gain the CINCINNATI (AP) -Slow· 645-2202 advance to the state track led the nation three times in ~mals a week be.net; at Hun· talking Walt.er Alston, dean of ~~~~~~~~~~~~m~ee"'_t<_Sa~tur~d'.':ay~al<_B~alc~e'.:rsflo~l~d:.. _".'SCO~rtng:'!:· ________ t1ngto~~n~Bea~ch~Se~acC<l":1ff':, ~Ch:i".ut~e. major league b a s e b a 11 ' s " managers, Isn't saying where his nl:kname in grade school because of his pitching speed. Later tie left the farm to play in the St. Louis Cardinals' farm system, where h e averaged .299 In 13 years. Seven times he hit .310 or bet~ ter. In 1936, he slammed 35 homers. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Eut Dfv!tlon w L Detroit 20 18 Baltimore 17 17 New York 18 18 Milwaukee 17 19 Boston 14 19 Cleveland 16 23 West Division Chicago 21 13 An1els 21 14 Kansas City 23 16 Minnesota 18 t7 Oakland 20 19 Tens 12 23 Svnd11Y't 0- Nf'lll' Yotll; •· C!tvell!l\d 1. ltt Ntw York 1. Clevtllnd l, 2nd Mllwll\lkff 1, 0.lroil 0, Ill O.lrolt S, Mllw•ukn l, :tnd c111cewt. MlnnetOt• 3. 111 Ml.-.ohl l, ChlcMo O, 2nd K1ntM (llV ,, Otll:i.ncl ! """'' .. Ta" t eoston °' 8•1llmo!'9. po11t-* T_,_ Pct. .Sli& .500 .486 .472 .424 .110 .618 .600 .590 .514 .513 .343 loliton (lion! oMJ 11! hllll'l'IOl'9 (PIO!"*' 44) GB I l'h 2 31> .... "' "' 31> 3'h 91> NATIONAL LEAGUE Chicago New Y<rk Plltsburgb Mootreal Philadelphia SI. Louis Houston Eul DJi>tsloo W L 23 16 t9 is 15 17 15 18 14 23 12 u West Dlvtston 26 15 26 17 23 16 San Franclsoo CinciMati Dodc•n Atlanta 23-17 16 22 15 26 San Diego SUlllllOY'I OIO"'ft S.n Dltff 1, Ch>el11n1tl 1, hi Clnc.tnnell 3, San Dleoo 2, 1nd Mo!ll~I 4, St. Louis I, 191 s1. Louis 7. MOl'llrwl J, 2nd Ct\!~ IOI Phll~pfllo, '°'tPONd ""'"'' 2, Ded9er'I 2, 111. 10 '"'*'"' Deft..-. t, Atl9"tl 3. 2nlf ,!TIJb!,1'111'1 IOI N* Yor11., -IJIOMd, Hwlton I, .. n Frl>llCltCO 1 Pct. .590 .543 .469 .455 .3711 .333 .634 .605 .590 -.575 .421 .:JM -·-("k'ffio {P8PPO' 1.l) 11! Mol'll'"4 Ultllko 7·21 GB 2 4'h s 8 911 he'll be next year. But he knows where he'd be without baseball. "I'd be working my tail off to make a living," said Alston, 61-year-old fonner school teacher who Is in his 20lh sea.son as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Alston was here with his Dodgers, whose .thr~game series with the Cincinnati Reds ended Thursday. The Dodgers manager said he often wonders what might have been had It not been for baseball. He mused over his home town of Darrtown, Ohio, ju.st north of Cincinnati, and wondered what role he might have played there. He may have been a tanned ancf tolling farmer1 working the aoU tilled before him by his father. Or a proud wood- worker, whose flawless cabinets and tables enhance homes in the sleepy town of 400. But he was to only have one time at ba't as , a ma.tor leaguer. He was the No. 4 first baseman on a Cardinals team that had Johnnny Mize, Rip Collins and Dick Siebert ahead of him. Jn 1943, he joined the "Brooklyn Dodgers organization at the urging of Brahch Rickey. After managing Mon· treal of the International League to two nrst place finishes and a second in three ye11rs, Alston got the call. That was 20 one-year con· tracts ago. And Alston's trademark has remained. "We're still built around speed and pitching. This year we're scoring more runs than a lot of people ex· peeled. And this is the youngest team we've ever had." ~·.Uii '<:<llUl~Y •-Ibo t -i •• w1!ikthd with 549 ........ eol· " ... -• ' . b -"°'"' -o Uk9-d ' }ecting 3,059 flS : I LI ~y J Indlvtduah hitting Well were ,, Le w11-o San Clemente's Ray Dwayne l2 c~ 1 • LI Jwdol'I I and Biii Slade, who hooked up 2 ukl"W'OOCI 1 with an 18 pound, three-ounce s ta PolJ' o yellowtall and a 13~-pound , F1ill.r1an ~1' ,,...... halibut. Bass, barra'-'!da, bonito and some halibut have been in the mainstream. Spokesmen at D a v e y ' s Locker and Art's Lariiling credit the warming trend in the waters for the slight im· provement in recent catches and predict even better results in the near future. Bolh landings have hall day boats leaving daily at 6 a.m. and 12 : 15. Santa Ana's P~te Doucot came up with a 5tf.t·pound bar- racuda Sunday to capture the daily jackpot and Garden Grove's James Young caught a 7Jk.pound sand bass. Stewart Wins, But Protests ZOLDER, Belgium (AP) - Scotland's Jack.le Stewart was the first to protest and the first to finish in Sunday's Belgian Grand Prix. Stewart, the "safety man" among the world 's grand prix drivers Jed the protest that almost led to cancellation of the race because of 18 poor track surface. But when 11\e race was over, on a track rt.Ul breaking up on critical comers, It was the ex- perienced Stewart, t w i c e world champion, who posted bis 24th grand prl% v~. Stewart, driving a Tyrell· Ford 1t an average speed ot 107.73 mllea per hour, toured the Zolder clrcull ln I hour, 42, minutes and U.43 seconds. Stewart added !hot the loose track surface which lbe racers had oomplalned about meant "I Md to drive very pceclsely. I had to stay on the exact line througb tile comer. JI you went off the line, you crash. ed." . Eight Of flie 23 starters In the race era.shed on the same short series of corners. None was Injured. • ' • j N..., Yoric (Meclldl ').I) 111 Ci.wl•NI CPM'TY NI Ken ... CllY 10_,' C-.ton Ml ., OlklMICJ OtunW ... Onlr ,,,,... K"l'ltdvltld T .... ey't a""'* c~ 11 a.tt1mwo • Pllttbu,_,. (Etllt W) 11 '°"ll~ltl ftlrlton .f.61 &I. LDU!t (WI• 6-t) "' ..... Yori! (~Soll SM Ftllflci-C•l'Yant W> 111 Hevlkln (Fend! .. n Ontr .-tcMOuled. · ~··­Pl~9'ftllll°"9111t!ll Chieffo IOI Munlf"I Maybe he would h a v e remained in teaching, something he did ror 14 winier> while playing baseball in the summers. lrultead, "Smoky" Alston left the plow, the paint brush and podium for baseball. a decision the Dodgers never Baseball's Top 10 Stewart's victory gave him 28 polnts ln the world cha.m-- pk>nship standings. Emerson Fittipaldi of Brull, w h o finished third here In a JPS. Lotu1, ranks flrst with 35 points while France's Francois Cevert, driving a Tyn!ll Ford, fini!hed second and bas 18 points. Mllw•Ull" 11 9Dlton New Yorll IOI o.troll KenMt CllY 11 Mlnnaolt .......... , C:l'llcll!IO ltit•t ., Otlllef'ICI St. Loult IOI Nw Y"1t SM! f,-_,.. 11 Atlanta Howllllll It Clnd""9tl Sen OloMtt ~ \ have regretted. "I used to work my tall off farming with my d a d , ' ' remembers Alston. "I uaed to look forward to Sundays when we'd play catch. My dad, both uncle9 and I were a team together." At Dfte 10. he 1aw his first beaeball game. "My dad brought mo down to Cincinnati to see the Reds play the YankttS ln an exhibition game . t got to see Babe Ruth . "It was the only big league game t saw until T got to tbe majors," said Alston, "'1lo gol ,.ATtONAL t.CAOU• P1"'t'Of' (111• 0 A.a R \\ ""· L~' LA 10 It 11 .311 Wll'lon H!n 41 144 10 S .361 Mot1 LA 1! H 11 ll .352 S11n10 Cl'll :It 1:1'9 20 d .loff W.Robln'°" Piii 'H 11 13 JJ U f I I M~ JO M 13 :l't .34) "' 11 111 11 3' .l:n Poll 4 1~~ 19 )J ,:tu '' t. S4 120 u • .m Moro•n Cln 31 121 i:J "° .u1 Home•-lt•ro•ll· P ltlbl#:"Q.• '11 M "~'Oii, Alont11, \ll Ev1ni. 1111•11 : 11: 8 1'C lnclnn·:, IC! "",.,, •· ' • Frri:w•.ot1, Lr· l'~·J'llt' ~. •· ~ •·n f ·n:· ' A• ' c1-, •• ~ Peter ReVIOn, one of the United States' leading drivers, was among those who crashed on the corners. Cevert. who took tile lead from Ronnie Peterson of Sweden after the nm lap. h"1rl It 11"til lh~ ninth when he s:iid , "l dell">eratcly spun tho wh.,n J ,,. • off line on the t1 avoid. <;hing." ·· ~alfl.':; engine drot>oed Qfter some 20 laps with-low fu el pressure. "Otherwise, ~ don't think Stewart could haft passed me," he. said. I , I I I ' . . .. 5 -· M112l. lm l•BiglaGear Vehicle ·Tune-up ~ Saves,.You Money Br CARL CARSTENSEN or•_.,,.....,.., When does your car need a Pie-up? Wbatta.tbe difference 6.tween a min« and major lune.up? Ii ti wortli the cost? Few inotorfltl know the answers to tbele· questions, Jet • tune-Op i. .... of the most important prwmtative maintenance aervicea for your car. malntenance expenses long run. ALT!IOUOB MANY reputable garol!!-s advertlte tWle-<lp spectalS, 11 '9YI to get the.......,.. to a'few cjueltloos belin acceptlll( ""1 offer. For enmpje: -What spedfically ;, in- cluded iii: the advertised price? U you're getting less than a needed, full tune-irp, it may GOVERNMENT AND in-not be a bargain alter all. du!try 'lttkUer J:ndkate that -Doe• the adverti!ed price J more ,than ball of the more. apply io your car? A tuno-up '; than U01000 ,Yebkles on the · lor a four· or six-cylinder f~-;ood•!;dar J¥I I lun&<Jp. A engine WU! cost less than one ~ twte;d e6g1ne, ~ to one • for an eight-cylinder engine. that 1"1krt,, '!ill 1 m Pr 0 v e -Is the garage using quality 1u0Ufit rruleale up to IO per-parts' Inferior replacements cent, latprove acceler~tton up parts· lower the overall repair to 10 percent, and emit about o»t but you may need your iball a1 much carbon moooxJde nexl tune-up sooner than ex-ana hydrocarboDS. ' r How often thould JOU. tune pected. your car? Most automakers -Is the garage equipped to recommend a ,tllneo(Jp at least do the job? To perform a every 12 months or 12 000 thorough tune-up, minor or miles. 'lbe lack of ~e maj or.-a . tecbQician r_equires • tune-up c~ nwult in fuel modern diagnositc equipment. waste ••e e s b a u s t If a garage hasn't invested In 1ino~. banktart.a, stalling, tbe right tools, you may pay ~ qine pert~ and less, bot l"" al!o may have to ffloilul!I repa\n that could ~et the job done a aeoond " • New Coraeept -hive .been avoided. time. < .. If yoof 'cir Deeds tune-up ....-. knowing what to ask for , can keep it · ruMing " smoothly and. reduce your WHAT DOES a tune-up in- volve'? A minor, 12,000-mile tune.up usually in c I u d e s replacement or the air filter' This steam turbine rot.or i5 part of a new concept in electric power plants -the c o m b i n e d cycle plant -which will go into operation later this year. The rotor was manufactured· at Westing- house Electric Carp's plant in Lester, Pa. I r fuel f i It er, PCV (Positive Crankcase Ventilation) valve, spark plugs, distributor points and condenSer. Spark plug wires, -ignition coil a n d distributor cap and rotor should be inspected, and replaced i! necessary. Also, Individual Investor Deserts the Market ' :.~ :• I I I ·. i' 1-." I th<it yours may COMPLm OUH•I COUNTY COYUA•I lttclHl .. t L.-t-leKli ... ,,_.-........ ~. --I.A. '~':iMiiiOICTMijj TC> . r AL I.Ult NO Dlrosn 119UlllD ON AJIPIOYID caun A....OMLY $17.00 PU MOH .. TOTAL COST . t••Rllllfte4 ,...sJ 5 NIW C"O¥PACT UNIT SID 111/4w4•thJ YOICI MISSAfil PAfilU AUO All AVAIL.Alli RfU Flll MAINTINANC ORANGE COUNTY RM1!0TEI EPHONE sEnv1c;[ I .. ( 714 • IJl.JJOI expect to pay a labor cbarge By SYLVIA PORTER for adjustments to the You, the Individual investor, carburetor, choke and ignition timing if the job is dorie p~ haYe in reci!nt m o n t h s I deserted, and you are still ery. Unless your car has a deserting, the stock market in specific engine problem or has such massive numbers that passed the 50,000-mile-mile you are d a n g e r o u s I y un- mark, it probably doesn't re-dermining the liquidity of our quire major tune-up service. A capital markets -a liquidity major . tune-up starts with parts and a d j u .!I t m e n 1 s which U: essential to thf!""ve.ry covered by a minor tune-up. In survival oJ our priv~te en- -lld4\Uoo, it involves a aertes ol terprlae economy. . . . ~Ile d>ac:ka IA> __ !be . l{Oll·ir• ~-·~ ear·. eng\ne ttllli'pttts\on, be\. wtilch"is de- tery, alternator, l'Ol ta ge pressing regulator, vacu um system and stock prices other i~U~n compone~ts to and making determine if any additional it increasing- repairs are needed. The Jy difficult tech nician also will clean the r 0 r thous.- carburetor and road-test the ands of corp-- vehicle. orations - smaller reg- TUNE·UPS ARE no longer ional com-ftOltTI!• the relatively simple chores panjes particularly -to raise they on~ were. Do-it-yourse.lf money via stocks. mechanics can sUll replace aw YOU HAVE beco . cleaners, points and plugs, but me 50 m- because of emission control different to stocks t h &, t devices on late model can. thoughtt.ul o,bservers are now ... , ~"~· !:'.:'.~ "~,. precision engine adjustments thoroughly alanned that ·we ""' hll!t, hi! ci._.., s .. J~ should be made by a trained may be movm· g toward a l'hlr_, •t T9"', ull 1.U I 496-JHJ service technician using Pl"OP" market dominated, as in many ~~~~~~~~~~~~er~eq;w~·p~me~nt~.,_~;;;;;;;.;;:;r/ Ew-opean nations, by a ; relatively few financial in- I· ., ) If Tou Own A •••• PORSCHE-CORYmE-JAG-MERCEDES OR OTHER TOP-OF-THE-LINE CARS-- YOU WANT THE IESTI stitutions a n d profe!sional broker-dealers. Yet you, the public investor, are t h e ba ck bone of our country's capital-raising mecha.nb.m and you are o.ne or ~the few ad- vantages we still retain :in world competition, we dare not risk losing. .~ J l ~ u: 'l'rAllS rxft••••NCI!" INl ~I e AUTO BODY • PAINTING • DETAILING • • COMS" TOI J :J/u1 fiow e·o/ Wa x & Co/or 171 t POMONA AV. COSTA MiSA PHONE '42-1510 - ' • ' • • I I ... ,,. i ' I l l' ' • ' ) t ·- 1000 ORDER ·~ •-;(. ~eautiful .. -'• t ·~· Stick·on .YOURS \ LABELS .~ TODAY! • Personalized • Stylish • Efficient , __ Order For Yourself or • Fritnd· May bt-4.l&t d on envelopes as return address la.b•ls. Also very h•ndy a s identific•tion I labtls for marking personal items such as books, records, photos, etc;. L•b•ls stick on glass and may be us•d for mt rking homt ct nntd focd it•ms. All ltbt ls •r• printed w it h stylish Vo9u• type on fine q utli+y whit•· g ummed ptper. r-----------------------1 I fl1t • fllh ~. ,11, •" rna11 wMi s1.t1 •: I '"" ,..,..!Mt L•IHI 0!¥,. l'.O. In lut I CM!• M .... Callt, ,,,2' ,· -I I t 1'-. I I . I _ _:_~tL~!-~!~J!~~---J § The growing disenchantment with stocks of the individual investor -not just the small investor but the large iri- dlvidual investor too -is scarcely news. \Vhat Is news ls that both Wall Street and Washington are now awaken- ing to how much Y® att miss- ed. NOT EVER have I heard this so powerfully emphasized as by speakers b e f o r e members of lhe Society of American Business Writers in New York City recently. They were o.bvlously worried that if the lnstitutions take over the equity markets they will threaten the very base of our capitalist system. And they made no secret of their con- cern. ~lave you any Idea of the ex- tent to which th~ Individual in- vestor ha.!! retired from the stock markets? Consider: e Share volume on the New York Stock Exchange was 9 pcrctnt lower In the first quarter of '73 than in the nrst quarter al '12. but volume on the Ameriean Stock Exchange was down f2 percent "in- dica1Jng the greater lack of in-- terest in smaller companies." e THE RA TIO of trades of 200 shares and under to the total v0Jume on the-NYSE ·Js half or what Jt was five years ago -and the' usual e~· planatJon that the indl\liduaJ Is buying mutual funds instead won1 wa!h. For the pall 14 months lndivldual1 'have been ciisblng 1n more IW)d shares than they have been 1buylng. e The Dow Jones average is 200 shares and under to to the total volume on the NYSE is half of what Jt was five years agQ -and the usual ex- planation that the individual is buying mutual funds instead won't wash. For the past 14 months individuals have been cashing in more fund shares than they ~Ye been buying. stocks is still almost SO per- ~gly misleading. While _the · DOJi. rose to_an all-time high or-more 'than iooo-·ltm November and it's not dread- fully far down from that today an unweighed index of l, 400 stocks is still almost 50 per· cent below the 1968 peak! eW HA T W E have developed as a result is a "two-Uered" market with the big glamor growth stocks - the "religion" stocks -get· ting all the attention, while the smaller, less glamorous com- panies drag along in the face of the highest earnings ever. Why the Ind iv ..i_d u a I in- vestor's retreat? Because: The individual took a licking in the market breaks of 1968- 70 and he wants no more: the inO:iYidual investor thinks in- stitutions get all the good research best prices and in- side information and he wants no stake in a game in which ttie cards are so stacked against him ; it's concerned a·bout the solvency o f brokerage firms and doesn't want to get caught in any new paperwork foul·up ; he recognizes the aUracttveness of returns on high-grade bonds and simple savina;s accounts in comparison with the risks in stQCb: and steep brokerage commissions surely are a fac- tor too. WHAT, THEN, can be done? There are a variety of solu- tions : (ll The creation of a central market system in which the indiYidual will get a fair break at all times; (2) ArnuCh higher degree of professi'onalism in investment advice to~he individual plus a sliding scale of charges for brokerage services so the in- div idual would pay (¥lly for what fle ,wants: . . . (3) CHANGES:in tax laws to give the individual incentives to invest in Small, young com- panies; ( 4) New disclosure laws so institutional "investors would have to reveal what they hold and what they are doing and the individual could judge the "cards" against which he is pJaving; ~-) (5) Removal of the Cellmg on div1dend rates so stocks could pay a return CQmpeUog more faYorably with that paid by bonds. Perhaps the answtr• lie a bit in all these, and perhaps they lie In other dlreeUon.s en- tirely. But the lundamtntai point ls that your importance finally Is being aclmowledged -by In· dus(ry, by Wall street, by Washlngtoo. And tbs~ or course, is the first step toward wooing you back. • • •• r ~ • . . • wa11 ·;· .. str~l • • r I ' • . . ' ' • ) ' . . •' • 1 . • • .. ·Rfteeri. out :Of .eveiy 106" Ame ric ans 'loday We cciuld~'t prove it, of course,. but it see l"1 s ,. likely that the percentage is even greater here in the Or- ange Coast area ... and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years ago, to be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring its readers "today's final .stocks toda Y,.:. via super high :..\ speed wiliil services. We're still doing it in every home- delivered edition . and the service gets better all the time. Wall Streer.s computers "talk to" compute rs . jn the DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the /ate of I more than l,000 ·words per minute. It takes ".only 12 minutes to move the entire New York and Ai:nerican Stock ~change reports from the canyons of Wall Street. to the · typesettihg machines of the DAILY Pl tOT right here on · the. Qrc;inge Coast. • • " . .. ' And 'whep tecbr:iology finds a , way to beat that 1speed. ,,: record, th~ DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be amorig t9e ·ffrst 't~ qse it to bring readers "today's action today:'' ' ·f I ' WHij n i( c~mes; to financial news, the one that n'l~ns . business ·is~· the -. . ' ': .. .. 1 . . . ' ...... · . ' ~ • ~ • -. I • . ~ I • • I T .I, • l • ) ' .. '· .. Buy The DAILY ~ILOT For Peanuts! Here'• he;.oa . here'• CHARLIE BROWN .. , Md WCY .... and UNUS ••• •nd hn'• SCHROEDER ... end lut but not leut, here's 8NOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the whole Pe,..uts gang come and visit you dally • ' 1 " • f I I i • • . • • DAILY PILOT • ,. ( • 1'17l , , • , ". 7 • • . \ ' i: . " "I ,. • ' •• ·' • ... ·~ .. ,(.. .. ' " ·.' • The DAILY PILOT .. l "• .. •• • ' .. ... . ' '. ''. .. , ....... ". ' • ' -, -. ' '. .. '. ' • ' ' • .. •• .. .. • • ' . '. . ·-. I ' 11-~ -f • • . -·~"---,p . , ..... • .r .. " ' ·- -. ~-I~ > • · 1· .. · . • , .. . ' .. , • ., • ' . . • " '" ~,· t . ' I I : . -. ., .... ... ': ' ,, • ' '" ------... "T•" ••• ~ ., ."'I' . I I t • o • " . ' .. , I . " ' -~ ·.:: ~ " -,.•'.,0 I'• '•' T _., :, " . l' ~: I "' -··-" '. -, .. .... _.-, .; . ~ ' ; ::::,. ~ ' ,. ) .~-·­' '• .. , L • .J • • t .. ·•·' .... •I ' ' .. -4-> :• ~ .7 ••<I'"'~~ 1 1<1.'1' I .. ' ., .. ·~. • • , •_ /, T ::~ -~.,~·\• 111tl ~:l?li-0~ ?i:Jtl~Rli• j'l'f"• 1tl e..,.. "~'Hl M ·-'-•'~' 1 '•·~··~ ... .,., , .. J-· ' . • It ..,. ...... ...,, "°'" ,.,. 4 ,• • ' ,. ' ' -1 '· ··~ . . . " ... " • • Still only .:·~l.6.5 a •oth ··~ ' . l · .. delivered to your door seven .. -days: ~! ' . • I '" . ... •• ... • .. -.• , ~ ..... ., . , "' ... , ··' n - ~ "" • -,, • -. .. • • ,,,..,,, • ' ti . l '" • c l • T .. ... TA . ·"' ' ' • .. • ''" T " w " • '1 • Mio " o. -. ,._ ~ ·,r:, • ,, . •• o•I ) '" •!) 0 ·u~) ''"CJ ,w " -•• "'' ··-~ 11) 'W• "' ., -· .. ' ., I!'.· • . '• ,. '" 1'· ' ., ... ,, , ... 'i ,, .. •• .. . .. , " " ~· -· . " "' . ,.,. '"' • " ' ,., ' ., .. ··-~ ,.,., - .4 '. ... ·~· .. . ,,. ,~·1 r-".I :' f• 't ~·Or~~~~~ ~~l~~~~e Nu.~ber To ca:11. -Th~:-:PAJL~ !.~.~~T Office In ~our Orange Coq$·+ Ar-ea : ;Com:mvn1+ .. J;:l ··. I , 1 ~ I ' I . ' • 1' -· '• - I ' ' ..... .._ (' ,_ I ' . ,.. 'l" I I '. ' ... • '' ',. . " ' ' " •• . ' • .. ' '·. ':!' •' l ., ,. '" ' ' • l o. \' ,. ,,, • -' '. ' '.' . . ' ' ' ' I ' ·-- • •• • •• .. . , I ,.,, i ·' ... ., -' .. • ... ·~ .Oii "' ,. •" •• • •• .•. ,.,, • • f! '·' ~­... ,. .... '·' "' ·no ' -· ·'~'°\ "' ~ ., .. J" "' • .. ,, .. A '• ' --· " '' ~ ' " "' I< '' , .. .. . "' • , ... "" ··~ • ., ' oM PUBLIC l«7l'ICE 'l I .. .._. 11'1 21 ••• ,, Yacht Clubs Open ' ·1 Season ·· ' • Passage First Yacht . . To Finish Sww Race Wlndwarll Passage, t b e fanied 73-foot yacht sklppered by Mart Job!l8oo was the first boot to cbilt ..,,,... the finish line at l.oog Beach Sunday at 6:27 p.m. ln the 113-mlle race from San Diego around Catalina Island. it was the first race of the neW Pacific Ocean Racing C.onfereoce and was a drifter an the way. The race started Saturday at 12: IS p.m. from San Diego. Three other boats h a d finilhed after W l n d w a r d Pasaage. Second boot to fmtsh was Al Cauel's 50-foot sloop Warrior from Bahia Corin- thian Yacht Club at 7,09 p.m. Bob Grant's 81-foot sloop El Tesora Wins BYC's Third Race Ralph Mack's Eflc:!oo.ls EJ Tesora was the overall and Claas D winner Sundday lo Bal!!oa Yacht Club's· l&inlle Drilling Islands race,the lblrd lealurt ot the ea Serles. • Tile '""' ..... marked by 11"" llCIUlherly winds lo both cllre<!llm. ~ multa' CL<\SS A -(I) 11rtat>t Siar, Bill Pa.!coe, j'lllYl:; (Z) New>Boy, Jact BaIUle, BYC: (3) <llariJma, William Power NHYC. CLASS B -(11 Free Spirit Roy LaHue, BYC; (2) Trend, Jim Underman, BYC; (3) Ana Marta II , Al Schoellerman, BCYC. CLASS C -(ll Antares, Alan Andrews, BYC; • (Zl Oluqule, O!oate and Arnold, BCYC; (31 Sunraker, Bob '111al1, WYC. CLASS I> -(I) El Teno; (2) Balandrs; Ullman and McClaln>.BYC; (3) Andlamo, Bob Sodan>, BYC. MORF -(I) Menrydown, Blll ·La~ NHYC; (II S.. Jlm Moore, SSSC; (3) Bkluom, Mike Kln- J, llYC. l Robou and Bob Lyi)ib'a 83-foot sloop Sirius II '1111 sh e d between 8 aDd 8:30. Tbrefl boats droPPed out of the race 'in lhe · ·ltow going an>und the Island Sunday, leaving 11 still left.in the race with no prospects of. an im- provement of lh~ weather. Slowe3t pert of the race waa on tl!e· ~ckatd• .GI Catalina Island. Windward. Passage was abeam ol the east end at 5 a.m. and did not clear the west end untll 3:30 p.m. Handicap results of the race wiD'be lllDOUllCed byClbo race will be:lllllOUnoed Iiy tbe race committee when all of the yachts are accounted for. a.ft-....... I There was no word from ~Beach Yacht Club today on bow many other boat. finished during the night. Overall Winner Paul Berger's Erlcson·35 Decision from Del Rey Yacht Club finished the Ball\()• Yacht Club's 800- mile Guadalupe Island Race Friday with an hour to spare in winnin~ overall handicap honors ·over Jack Mallinckrodt s front runner, Swill BYC Gets End9mion ·, Donald Douglas Sr. campaigner of the famed oeean racing schooner EndY- mlon ..ntde<licajel ,a m=·I of the beautiful-craftrt~Balboa .Yacht Club tor fint to finish In the Gua upe laland race. Nick Potter lri6ht) of Newpon ~cb wu Uie deslpie~ of En on which was llrst to finish in the first Guadilupe lslall1l. race m 1940. The award ~oes to Jack Mallinckrodt, whose Newpon-41' 1 Swift was first to flnl~h in BYC s renewal of the race. · _ ~ ' ' -- I l· . " .I' ' ' • • ' • -. .. I " ' ' . ' I . I '~ I '.:I I I '" " I• -. ... I ' t p DAil Y PILOT PVBLIC NOnCE PllllLIC HOTICB '·~ 1,ss 7.SS 1.,1 1.n ,..,, .... 10.0, f .11 9.11 '·" 11.17 10.70 '·" 7.6S .. ,~ ! 6 4 2 -5 6 7 8 c L A s s . I F I E D .I ·Y 6'f 4 2 - 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T ., bAILY PILOT WANT ADS TU irl~ 81.rVGUJ 111.tBCETPUCB OIV TBB ,OJUNQB CO.tS'.1' -CALL DfftF.(.'T 642·5871 --- General 18 ROOM MANSION PAINT & SAVE General GREAT STARTER t10ME 1 WESTSIDE 3 Bedroom Free- dom llome on larae tree aflldded lot • needa little fOf yoong 1&mlly. VA lN· "~-· and paint. Illness VESTORS WELroME. S UA,aU King-siz.e Bedrooms. Room S + DEN + GUEST torces aale only. to expand. Build dtta.cl:lCd Wf'Olllht tron fence protect· $23 ,950 gintae, family room er boat in& huet estate and l*fk· storage. Ea.By Or1vc lO Ill<• --=-'" HORSES ! ! Beacli. SZ,500. HURRY! chitect'll"e kalli1111C rare Call anytime, 846-{[65 . .........,....,1, and -••• aIJowro on t•i. 11 -= IMAGINATION? a:ta. w1:a&Wa. Banquet for. ranch Wlth I~ cll9'tom Can ,_a ..... _ val 5 ma1 dinin(, Step down ~ home, fenced conal PLUS ~ .,,._.._, " ueA with ceillJ:I&' h1gh firtplace. a 3 bedroom rental at $3XJ./ Yf!al'S; frOln ·now?· H<ry" Ge.nlen view muter .Wte mo Custom home ts va-about what lh1a property u1 with 6 can'.t -qutdc possecsion. Will gop,z-to be worth?T Approx .. ~~.th~ au:~· exehange for hey-side du· 18,<XXI sq .. ft, R~. (b, You floor. 2 bedroom guest hooae plex. ~ 1C::0 ~;::, ~~ with ldtdleo le: bath. Great $65,000. ,you in the financing. Call fJ:Jr e~ C" 11 anytime, 64&-os55. -· I 01(1 \I I 01 \II\ ,. ~ ',.. FACING FORECLOSURE Owners an arndoua: to sell !heir huge 2 story borne im- mediately ao it'a priced lower than appraisal at $U.OOO. Over 2iOO aq. ft . of lJving area and located on a eut-d~ lot .close to achoo1' and Juat 21> blocla from the ocean. You can't a(ford not to see thla one right away. 847-6010. OPEN TIL II • ITT> FUN 10 BE NICE/ ~ .· ...--~ .... I 111111"'"•· . "' I" \1:1 "''' l '''"· u. THE REAL ESTATERS TRIPLEX BARGAIN North Costa. Mesa, 3 large units ol approx. 1200 sq. ft, each.· Consistant income of $490. pe~ mo -on lease land. $38,500 Newport at F•lrvlow 646-1111 tonytlmo) VACANT & READY Owner anxious! Redecorated 3 bednn A: family rm home on huge comer lot • room for boat or trailer, King-size covered patio & prlvate -~~=====~'-yard. Quick possession. J..£lw 2810 PORTOLA down. $27,950. CALL64Z-lffi 9=f21 FIVE BEDROOMS. 3 BATHS $38,950 Lovely 4 Bdrm. with dining rm., in desirable Meu. de! Mar. 2 Baths, bit-ins, newly painted inter. Nice carp. & drapes. Elec. garage door opener. ?lo1any other extras. Priced to sell for $38,000 CULVERDALE Best buy in an area ot lovely homes. Conv. locatlon. Spacious 3 BR. i& family rm., blt-ins1 ~-& drapes. Nice back yird for "Vlctoey Garden" or }XIOL Offered for $37,500 MORGAN REAL TY 67:1.6642 675-6459 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Sharp, bright f\\."O story home v.ith two master bedrooms, super spacious d re a m kitchen. New carpets and 3BR 2 BA, like new -family paint throughout. Beautiful rm w/firpl & bar. New land!ICaping front and rear crpts & drps thru-out, park i with sprinklers. Well-kept like yard on q u i et neighborhood. It you need 8 cukle-&ac, detached idea bfk' home this is for you. room. , . Call> now 843-2535. ,... .....J,, 1 OPEN 11L e • ff'S FUN 70 8E HUI "-"' JIU" [II J ~21 VILLA-ACTIVITY 1733 We.tcllH Dr,, N.B. UNIVERSITY PARK A real gem and brand new on the market this weekend. Three large bedrooms, 2 ~r•I ' S.UPPLY LIMITED~ DEMAND GREAT! ._. Cttst Colldomlnfum Homu, cJllStered •boat h1ndsomt CCMn1ftrds. ocalPJ one of tht few rtm1lnln1 l1rr1 properties In deslf'lbla Newport Beach. Exactly rlitit for perm1· nant residency« llolldlJ home. Sundecks, fi ret:tlaces, wet bars, Sun-LI! .. kflcheas, tuck-under doublt p1111es. Heated swim· minf pool, Uahttd teMls courts, saun1s, lhll'IPJ pool All exit· rtor mainten1nce provided. A 1astlnr experience in l1orious Hvlnal Tn, thr11 ' ,._ Wrooma. 1"""$65,495 From Pacific Coast Hl(hw1y, up Superior Aw nut to llcond1rog1, and dlrtctlJ to #12 Robon ea.rt. Gonor•I EAS7SIDE 2 BEOROOM--$17.000 A-~E-F1ND -especially with features like these -beam ceilings thruout, massive stone fireplace, large bedrooms, 1 beautiful bath & a large fenced yard complete with fruit trees . Owner moving to Oregon and MUST sell . Open this week end. Call us for details. I MESA VERDE-HOT ITEM JUST LISTED, neat, freshly painted 4 & family on a quiet street -Huge enclosed, pooltable size lanai, no grass to cul l>nly plants & shrub s w trim. First time on market and OWJler needs quick sale. Offered al $38,950. ~,.t,"' HERITAGE REALTORS General 546-5880 Open Eves. Gene'rel "OWNER CLIMBING WALLS" -.. has bought another house; this is your chance -owner wants offer on this elegant lge. bay view home; 5 BR., 4 ba . Complet~ e~~rtainment center around lge. htd. & lilt d. pool; locked wrought iron gates. NOW $159,000. Land available. AVAILABLE Carmel model, Harbor View Homes. $72,000. CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS Coll Anytime 644-7662 Gan1ral * SOMETHING SPECIAL IN COLLEGE PARK * A sparkling clean well main· tained 3 bedtoon1, 2 bath home with formal dining, family room, pool sized yard and inside laundry on General HARBOR VIEW "CARMEL" ~ARKUNG BRIGHT Immaculate 3 bedroom • family room Carmel on greenbelt. This upgraded beatty won't last. Lovely p r o fessional landscaping and patios. Clean as a whls- Ue, pride of ownership home. Formal dining room oU private patio -2 balh.s. All this and on fee land to top it off. Only $69,900. Call 67J....8550. baths, beautiful built-~ ~ t•t ~(714) MH141 electrlc kitchen plus biencf.. -:. -" ~ ly wet bar' Tile roof ana ... _ a lovely tree Wied low traf· fie street. S'r.).6679. ONLY $33,'l50 Nigel IG!liy "'-· & Assoc. VIEW Lovely Cameo Highlands home on large, beautifully landscaped lot, 3 Bedrooms plus convertible d c n , spacious living room wilh fireplace & sliding glass doors to covered patio. Lots of privacy: private com-J munity beach. $72,000. HARBOR I REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 El Dorado Sorrento is a love- ly home in Mission Viejo. 4 bdrm. clean as a pin with new carpel fl: throughout. Area to entertain friends around the pool. Bring us an offer. 586--0222 "CINDERELLA HOME" · ONE OWNER, comer lot, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, shake roof. Beautiful yards. Needs some paint and carpets but \VHi\T A BUY! Excellent COLLEGE PARK LOCA- TION. Another Coats & Wallace exclusive. rc;,,,,., co: TS ·~WALLACE REALTORS --546-4141- NEWPORT ISLAND (Open Evenln9s) Duplex:. 2 BR., 2 ba., tam. '""~!!II!!~""""'""'!!'!'!!!! I rm., lrpl., sunjXlrch & sun· NEW 4 - deck, priv. yard + Jge. 1-·~ BR. apt, w/carport. Good First time advertJsed, new owner's unit. $65,500. and l'C'ady to sell. Choice Call: 673-3663 673-8086 Eves. location In Costa MeSI\ good associated BR OKERS-REALTORS J:025 W Balboo 671·3663 OWNER DESPERATE· IRVINE Choice CulverdaJe location. Sharp 4 Br, 2 bath home near pool · & recreation facWtlcs. Don't \\'!lit on this one, wUI not last at $36,COO. Pretented by Linda Recchia • Re<I Carpet, Realtors, ""'864(), WALK ON THE WILD SIDE 3 BR, 2 bath ho1ne located near E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. you won't need a car here. Prtscnterl hy Sydney Ellen.berg, Red Ca r p e t , Realtors. ~- QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT rental area. $80,000 full price. Presented by Don Campbell -Red Carpet, Ren.llol;l, 546-8640. FOR THE SWING.ING SINGLE $16,900- $136 PER MONTH Not a rondo, cute &; beauUful -new carpcUng &: the furnishings remain wUh this horne. Perfe<.·tly situated on a large lot & the gardens al'f! lovely, \'VALKER. & LEE Realtors, 546-0022. EASTS I DE BUILDERS HOME Eve.rythlrig huilt to la!lf. forever, bulklt'r decides on largtr home. Only one year new · 4 br, 3 bath home on large con1er lot. What a buy at last years prices only $45,000. Prttented by Doug Jone1 -Red Carpet, ReAltor1, 546-8640. RESORT UVJNIJ every day tO< $.'ll,500. Bayside Vlll .... I~ clubhouse. pool, beach, boRt allps, 2 BR, 2 Ba., 2b52 M'obUe, 3 yn old, wood ilktlrtR 111tlna:let1, beBUl lndscpd, lmmed J)OMUl1onl Owner, No. 39, 300 E. Coast Hwy, NB. • WANT AD You'll find it In Cl._.lfled , Sostc\ab .H~l!'r .~ ~_very . 18 a.a., t11 alMt. prlvatt ")all0.\.4AUn,t ·'.area :~ in the kitchen plu1 formal dining ·area. New 1ush carpeting, drapes a n d wallpapers. Super value at $48,000 REAL TOH Neglected Gicint -c...tb•Pnlt<tot•.a"' 1 ~~=====::=1 s +Guest 2 Story 11.C.,l ........ llCnRl-U.• $34,500 C. F. Colesworthy Realtors ~O NEWPORT WEST 3 BEDROOM $antral CIOtnctof Exdusive rolling green hill· o 197l P&lfill Jl.C., IK. sidi.'S of "Back Bay." Needs ... _ --. • ---Live near the beach, in the very popular Newport West. Immaculate, f!'eshly Pflinted 3 bedroom Mme available for occupancy uport fcan ap- proval. Priced to sell at on-1----------- ly u<.ooo. 842-2i15. A MOST (}.vner transferred. leaving ~lay 31st, must sell~ 3 BR, 1 ~ BA, Townhouse ln beau- tiful Fountain Valley, Chvn- er has reduced price for fast sale. d£'COr11ting, but a fantastic vakie. 5 bedrooms. Huge ranch kit chen with eating aro:i.. Pondel'O!la party room. Entertainers patio overlook. ing green ln1vn, towering lrets, ro1Tal and 2 bedroom guest facility. Brand new on market. Belter huJTy! Call 6'5-0303, OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN 10 8E NICfl ALLURING 4 BR·VIEW· IOKl\t L 01 ~O\ PFA1 OR' THE REJIL ESTJITERS ~ * COLLEGE .* -PARK - $52,500 ~St. Not a misprint -this unusual ~~1 C.a. 92708 I--------- custom designed home will I ~~~'"''"''"'!'"!~'"'~ P~O delight the entire. family. NE US FOR Expansive ,.., yard, tall OWNER trona. 3 bdnns,, 2 trees + be"' u r i r u 1 1 y baths. Boal & can1per ac· A BONUS Quiet, :o;ccluded home with large shade trees, beautiful added family room with beamed ceilings and mas· sive fireplace, 3 large bed· rms, deep shag carpeting and 2 sparkling baths. A pleasure to eee at $42,500. CALL 545-8424 S o u t h C o Realtors. FOR RENT OR LEASE 4 BR, 2 bath Mesa Verde home. Availabl e Im- mediately. $360 per montti, please Call Red Carpet Realtors for details, No Fee. 546-8640. BAYFRONT 4 BEDROOM landscaped. All e I cc tr i c cess. Dining rm, bullt-lns. built-in ~tchen. L 0 v c I y Fireplace. l'ark·llke yal'd. spacious living rooni, corner Large storage area. bric fireplace, 2 baths -locatrd 1 ;01:;:31;::·950~.,-'54<>-'C'-7"'7"'"''--o-=­on quiet sttteL Hurry, Call O\VNER leaVJng. Jn Mesa 673-8550. Verde. 4 bclnns., 3 baths. ()PEN TIL II . rrs FUN TO 8E NICEI Formal dining rm. built-ins. ~II Family rm, fireplace. Huge lot. Beautiful. brk $42,950. ~17.lO. OWNER. anxious .. Elegant 1 bdrm. BreaJdast b a r , EASTSIDE UNITS lormal dining rm, ""'"" Five units in Choice Eastside kitchen. Fam 11 Y rm, location. This ls a real in-fireplace. Real living rm. vestnient at $72,000. Rents Near the plua.. brk $38,500. Are great. Call for rletails, l ~b;;';;k~979-iii;~2300i;iii~' iiiiiiiiiiii ... Presented by Lee Moore -Rro Cm-pet, Reolto", HOME & BUSINESS 546-8640. 4 Bedroom, 2 baths, double garage. $30,000, -Best o( HAWAIIAN LOTS terms. $3500 in Alooloa, $8500 ln IOEAL FOR Kal•pan• 1 mile from p,&. GUEST HOME posed marina on Black NOW! for Info. Call In Newports' most exclusive locaUon with a pier and sUp. Artistry Md skill have ('()mblned to nW<e this Lin- da tale Home out best home value. ,Large deluxe master bedroom with bath. Water view, Ba.yfroot family room • wet bar • jacurzl. Call to- day, the price will surprise you, 61l-8550. .;;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;;;; OPO<TILO ·~•i•110B£MCEI NEW T°RIPLEXES Jam.. M-:H•rmon- 16931 Bolero L•no Huntington Be•ch You arc lhe winner of II IN COSTA MESA 3 Bdrm., 1% Bath 2 Bdnn., 1 ~ Bath 1 Bdrm., "-Bath tm DOWN Orang• County one free pau Good for a whOlc carload to an,y of the PACIFIC THEATRES EASTSIDE C.M. Fint Owner 10-lBR+ 2-2BR,fll.m. Top ~ntal area near trans. & shoppin,e:. lllf pool. Good 11c1 il\(.'01ne. A ~al barulnl e CALL ANYTIME e 646-3928 or Eve. 645-4375 .Lachenmyerl Rc.1i tor 1 ,Aplirtm.nt (Subject to small &erVlet! Realtors 547-6791 charge at thcatn). D Pleue call 642-5678 ext. 314 A ULT DELUXE to cia1m ,...... "'""· <No,t• CONDO County toll-free number I• 540-1220). rn Fountain V..Ueys Qpest """"'*""1;.,6-A~P=T=5.~*-­ communlty • nt'&r new City llalf. Modtl unit, gR11 ·BBQ 2 BUILDINGS wtth hua<' bonus !bobby> INCOME $24,540 room ovtr luge double Out of Art• Owner garage. Only asking $30,500. Anxious =·R & LEE R"'ltprs, FORTIN CO. REAL TORS 642·5000 "Weed It I< Roap'' Fat Pront is attained when From tnt~ to t:raih YOU IJl'll through result-gt1· Turn them 1ilto wh ling Dally Pilot (.'IRs.,tfied, ' CAI.J.. DaU.Y Pilot Ada. 64J..5618 • ---~------ \ f, MESA Verde 5 Br., tam. nn., 3 ba.; cov. patio. Fortin Co. Rltn 642-5000 TWO ON A LOT Outatanding custom 2 br home plus charmtna 1 br nntal plu1 super llzed garage with all manner of extr&8 ror the hobbytat, boat builder, tinkerer. A truly versatile property . Presented by Pat Kent Call 54&-8640 J'ted Ca t p 0 t ' Realtors. FANTAmc PANORAMIC VIEW Vl('W or BA:·. Deiux nvtna h this I~~ .. '·r, 3 bath homl (}y,'l\Cr y,•-·1t.s quick SAi~ priced ~: $115,0011 ~ntcj by Joo Recchin f Red CArpc>t, R ea I t o r 1 546-IJ6ot(), .~ . . -. --,,.... • • .. • . . . .. . .. REALTOR® ERRORS. AdyortlMrs 1houid check tholr ocb d•lly & report Wl'Ot'I Immediately. Tho DAILY PILOT ... .._. lloblllty for tho first Incorrect lnMl'tlon only. General Gener•I ~-s.;JI, ~-~ REALTORS 21128 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MM.CALIF. 644·7270 e BUILDER'S DELIGHT Ready and waiting for second unit on this large corner lot. 2-bedroom house, carpets, drapes, fenced yard, in Newport Heights. ................ " ................ " $33,500 VIEW-VIEW-Vi EW Watch the boats by day and harbor lights by night from your living room. The ULTl· MATE in FEE ownership, luxury on·the-- water living. 2 .J3edrooms, 2 bath condo in prestigious CHANNEL REEF area. Pool, se- curity guard, boat slip-available. CALL FOR appointment, $95,000 . FOR A YOUNG FAMILY . within walking distance to schools and shopping? 4 Bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace. Has assumable VA loan-All !or only $29,950. AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS . . . . • . 644-n70 Gener•I , :1 General ' . . . . ..... ,, .. THE SANDPIPER -If it's a single story four bedroOm. floor plan you're looking for, the Sandpiper is it! Two fireplaces, beam ceilings, formal dining, a sunny b'reakfast nook, an honest-to-goodness powder room, a big children's bath with double sinks and a fee lot that affords room for a pool in front or back of the home. Whew, · whattahome! $93,495, but owners are anxious to hear what you think it's worth, so make an offer. UN19u1 HO~ oF Co•oNA DEL MA•. 675-6000 A Ultl"f •f Koy fikna . U~'i()UI: lif)MI:§ REALTORS 1, " D~LV P!Ll!f • • .. , May20-26 I~! ]~ I~[ l~I ---I~ I -·""' -··· l~I ---. Huntlft9!0n -Gener•• ··-·-hr ....... , 3.BDRM VERY IDEAL Coit• -Huntington - BACK IA y SEASHORE SUPER SHARP MINI VIEW COTT' "GE PONDOROSA Espanded • "• • ,.,.. ed FRANCISCAN $52,500 .... '" Mile ID beach. Huge yam, "N'""'°" W•"" 4 B<lnn + FOUNTAINS ONLY $1300 3 pslloa, fonnal dining, $18. lull dinl"" room. Famoly Se<cluded ~c property DOWN yard thick shq, ma&nili· room Nu rich. ~·aim p&nl'I· BY THE SEA in prestige estate area of cent tchcpg. On~f-a·klnd. Ing plus fireplsce. Bulllln 1'.1ost lu."<urious hornet In finer homes. Dram at i c Clean ' sharp. 2 & den or 3 10"' down . only $34,900. breakfast bar, fully bu iltin area . lYl'O story, 4 bed· cathedral ~in 11vq bdrms. l "' bath. Seller will CAIL 968-4456. including reirig. plush W/\lt rooms, 3 baths, pro! ldscPe, =· ~~-. --i...n~ ~ $1,0Cll 9f ~n closing La CUESTA· • C'rpts &. i\•indow co"erlngs. :i:prinklen, water IOftener;;d • v r-i.:iuu '""""" "'"'"'" costs """"'' $26000 Call Garage door opener · 1\lany d dra fonnaJ dlnina: room, 4 large · -•"' ' · EJ CAJON more xtras. Full price only eroralor pes, UPII'&.d ~~ -~ o u • e t I thruout. Too many xtra.s to ucu.avuntll, auu I rm 5 o~-~a1 d1 .. 1.... $41,950. w/only 107~ down. kit~-with~-·~ t ....... i.. ~ ....... ......, ~....... ""''fi list. Below ma r k e t at """" .... "' ...... as ~ ,. .. , ~arp. ~·stom'--~ CAI..J., 962-8851. . and peek-a-boo view ol the "'"'""" ..,....1 ~· ~· ~ "'UICK !~·~;. CALL 842~4.51 O< back bey. Ask Ill •bout the Open .,.. thruout 3 Car gor, """"' 'P ~ lnte .... tlng poaslbllltie• .., . lot, pork-like """'"•· Gov't POSSESSION WE PROMISE YOU appreciation on tlUa ex· Honeymoon Cott-ve transfer. 6 Months new! tre I d .irable ~ $1.~ ~'-H CAIL 968-4456 3 " lamlly rm, 1% bath, A ROSE GARDEN me Y e prope • ..,. *"" ....,.,..... uge nm'lplll SOL · stone tittpl, w/w crpts &: Please call today tor an~ room W/frplc. Nice yard VJST A· drpll, loc. only ~~ mile to FOR BONUS! Plush S I-S ..,, 950 3 b d r O 0 m """""" Rec U ed pointmcnt to view this with fruit trees, ftagstone be h ho H t "·) nil clrctric 111· x 24' patio 'f'M.I• • e ..,..,,led..,.. Nen Yr 1 ech-highly unique propert y . patio. All this+ valuable NO DOWN GI _ac 1~11 1~ri~n ·0~~ 1111-ge ran1iiy IO~pg iA ~ home on a very Jarge ora • e w Pus MG-2313 R3 lot, for only $25,000. APPROX. 113 ACRE ntea. j purb. Close' to rollege 6 PICTURESQUE SETTING lot. Beautlful mature carpeting. Lovely pie-°""""·"•roonoeEiiai Bkr 536-2551 4 1 "8·950ED. CRAMLL 962-885$25 15· 00 Broadwoy ''"'""'"•· 12000. shade trees. Fenced turesque yard. 2 baths. ~-~ BY OWNER. 3 BR, 2 BA, Country livin& in the city · 4 • • below mkt a1 only $.17,500. yard. Plastered walls. Formal dining room. 11~e:ll'il c r pt s, d rps, pat 1 o, ~ms, huge living & \o'scan.1 for quick possession. CALL 842-4451 or 545--0458. Picture windows . Large Built ins Fire place ----· ·-"·-clubhowle/pool. close to am l,y. B.est J.l.B. Joe, k>ad· 1% Ille bath, FA heat, w/w AmNTION -• • • 1W i Schools. stS-8008. ed w/frl.nt , close to Broad· crpts, t'lec bltins, gnrage yard. Move-in condition R~ living room. Two , LOVELY 2BR ·boose It 1 BR ~shopping. Only $li,900. boat door. Flagstone patio & YOUNG 54().1720 patios. 54().1720 DRS., a<ct>, attorney's . apl $40,000. Call for ap-968-4456. B-B-Q. Only $2500. down EXECUTIVES Lookee . 80 ft. cor. in C.M.. potnbnent. M!J.-9441 pafu,ent plus1 closing costs. ---------1---------1 Zoned A&P • Approx l<m 5 BR, 3 BA ·with fam rm., C 962-885. oq. tt. bldg. hu 2 balN. Pr. 10% Down. $39,950. Am>me "' ~ Bcautt.M GREENBROOK GRANADA three level on quiet cul-de-sac backing to old eucalyptus trees. Huge family with wet bar plu.1 mll.11.)' mo1-e fine featurn. CAI.l. 842-MS l or 546-0t58. SPANISH $28,00>. • $2300. down • No FHA; no qualifying 540-2562 ;11Y.1 loan fees. Call at 1871 , ~ Harbor Bl., C.M. tor ke)?-DINI Point Sparkling co n dition. Quintard RllY. &U-2991. ...;..;--=----11110KERS INC. T · C Jl $40.800. Very sharp. 2 e-i•--p I I e srEAL this 2 .BR home! 1...,"!.''!!'~~"'!'~""' =--=====-"'° op area m o ege baths. Screened atrium g9 -en nsu • .Fantastic view of harbor.1-= B • • TWO FIREPLACES! 3 BED.ROOM Park. Large covered with wet bar. Dining TRIPLEX 3 • 2 BR .. $1'5,000 131,950. ARGAIN BUY FROM GOV'T patio. 3 bedrooms. room, built·ins & dish-DUPLEX •.••.•.••••. $57,0!)0 • 2 FOUR·PLEXES, $19,900 . No e&<!row charges • low ~ining room,, modern washer. Family room, MARSHAl.J.. Realty 67r4fiOO ea. JACK ROBERTS 4 BR + 30' den + down paymenl kitchen. Family room. fireplace. Quiet street BAY Front duplex. Prl. REALTOR Din. + 40 ft pool, 2 baths. Trailer dock & Lovely decor 540-l'120 beach, Pier prlv .. $198,500. ~ VAC~~~2~P3~· 4 harm gate. $36,500. 54()..1720 · . · Offer. -Owner 673-878&. Fountain Villey Beach house and condos. Let our ~~'!"'~!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"-I 2955 HARBOR BLVD. Coronl del Mar $27,950 !:li~~:y. save you _tln1e GoVERNMENT '$618 '000 WEEK' " PARENT'S UNBi;:LIEVABLE BUY OF GINNY MORRISON OWNED ' . · • THE CENTURY!! H BR 2 BA, belier than now. COSTA MESA IC.lft1720 Shirley Rich, our Cameo RETREAT Just listed, yoo can't miss! •***• -REALTORS-NCJ clolJing C011ts. low dowo .,...... Shores re·&ident apeciallat, Love your kkh but need a Modern conveniences. 4 "*QM* 1!!05 Mesa • Only $27.250. --------------~----I has just completed her best Ix! • H * •Verde Or. Eart, * 4BR !"BA J 123 8SO week In real estate. In few minutes of peace and queen nn ll. uge paneled 1 , nn y , , General General . seven days llhe made two quiet??', Then see this bet· fam. rm. with mammoth ~ .. ---.• Costa Mesa CALL 968-4441 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\ sales and listed a beautitu1 ter-thal'Mlew home. Bonus fireplace. over1ooks fan. *•* 551""130 * Crest Realty • Cameo Shores home for a room makes a "perfect taat:lc 40' pool. Deluxe <Open Evenings) OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Exporlonco C•n Provide . ~ . , FOURPLa-SO. OF HWY. Two 2-Bdrm. units & 2 1-bdnn. units. X!nt cond., always rented. Beautiful tree shaded courllard. Two 2 car garages. $126,500 EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Six 1-bdrm. furnished units, always rented. Sharpest Eastside complex that ·we have seen. Located 2220 Elden Ave. Please drive by & call us to see. $95,000 total volume of $618,0Cll. l't"~at" for Mon; & Dad bulltin .kitchen. Bar. Full e e LITTLE RANCHO Shirley, who is from Texas, I w/1ts .own % BA . size dining rm.. ni c e on tht. large lot zoned for says this ls "just a typical Downstairs bu 3 lrg BR & carpets, boat access with SUPER SHARP units tht're sits a cute little Tex8.n's real estate week". 1% RA. Fresh paint inside separate stol'tlgi? near the 2 BR houAe. Anyone can Her husband, Al, is also & out, cov'd patio block wall beach. E·Z terms'. NO GIM-CALIFORNIA CLASSIC qu1llity. Speculators dream! joining the growing Colwe~I fence. Assume VA loan. Call MICKS. IT'S FOR REAL! $23 500 aalet force ao watch thCll' today! Cs.11 early 962.5585 ~~--sh~~--c1u' t olo dm ior PERFORMANCE ,.,., reconls really cllmb 11!!M -~ ~--• yr ·. '"""*' .. when this tum ltatta ~.I .l =:"f ':':'cJ"~ e VA,CA.NT i '1 :;,:;\~-,.Y ~·~~ 51 ·51H·~jlll.'l "531•5111 '1a I<..-\;...., .,;0o . .Adult < BR. 'BA. -· -.... Call675-'1225. occ -Aaume&%%Glloan. paint. 0~ $27 ,75G ~ OWNER moving. Park·llke Only i:u,m "CALL 893.3533; Jo'HA-VA terms. Ca 11 E; ...+. & UT ~!'J'.!,m_,!. SCOTT REALTY • .;:-.._. ya.rd. Family rm, formaJ -";iJ;~c=--====::: l.CWMn 1 .,,,....,i),).J dining rm, fireplace. Bull!-1110 DEGREE yt[W COURTYARD ins. 3 bdrms., 2 baths. ENTRANCE ;'•;•;;1n~•;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,\ Custom interior. brk $34.500. . 3 962-1373. NO MONEY DOWN Patios, fireplace, extra nice m·~·ER """~... Beauti'ful Location, location! A hun· landscaping. c~ to Hunt. TUrtle Rock Ha'llt '" ....... dred J 1 Hart>Or. Health forces sale · En.joy the view and bask in interior. Deeorator's patio. sta rs ead 10 rambling Only $30,500. CALL 893·8533. the luxurlc!.111 Interior of this Boot access. 4 bdrms., 3 ~L WOOD COTT AGE DUPLEX $66,500 baths. Dining rm, fireplace. with heavy 11hake roof and 4 bdrm., 2 ba. famlly room SOUTH OF HWY. Built-ins. Rear living rm. an unbelievable VIEW of home. Beautiful pro(essionaJ 0 . .. 'd .. .-..... . brk $41950 842-256l twinkling 11 g h t s and land1Caplng that include• a .? pnme Wl er s~~~ 111 • • • • • Catalina. A decorator'• variety of frulU. ll you't11 I Quiet neighborhood. 2 OWNER Jeavmg. Rich panel-dream dripping in country looking for the ultimate, aee B{t.., 1 IM\. &. 1.-BR..,_ 1 ha.; Ing, Corked ~· 4 elegance. Roua:h 5 awn thia one today! Pr:lee of l -sty. Plcturesqbe setting. bdnns.. fa m 1 l y rm, redv.'OOd in big breakfast $84,500 includes lhe land. . Qu.ality constructed " well fireplace. Rear living rm room Plush shae carpets V1's1'on milntalned. Open beam Built-ins, Numerous fruit cryst&i chandelier, sET - G..,.r•I Gonor•I cells., heavy '!!al<• roof , -·· Latte yarn. bl'k BAR, formal dlnhlg. AnU· REPOSSESSIONS - '--'-'-------''-"-;..;.;_;.;._ ______ I dbl. cloeed ~· Call fOl' $37,462. 962-8865. que collector will sell no i eel h u app't. to rtee :'or lnformAtk>n and location • EASTBLuw· RI.I)' 644-lll3 As1Um•bl1 7.~ Ln money down VA for fa~! of these Fllft &: VA homes, . r I * * * * * * :::::==::;,~:!,;,· ~c;;;= Prime Fountain Valley area sale. Hurry, you know Uus co: '.:i.ct • do.. to school> -· hmn• v.un'I last al $31,500. KASABIAN shopping centers. 2 BR, 21~ BKR 962-551 1. REALTY * . TAYLOR Co. * BA Townhouse, cuat drps, RHI Estate 962-6644 Un!V. Puk Cent<r, lNine CdM Duplex upgTaded crptJ. prlv patio W 4LK TO IEACH PRE5TIGE tract. 3 B<., 2 Call Anytime, !IS>-MI 2 B front w/gas BBQ, 20x22 fam rm QUI ~-o ou t 8 PM CUte 3 BR, a house w/gas fplc 2 car garage Newport West, beaut 4 BR, 2 Ba. Boat ctr, 51.4 % assum. ce ,..,..n G1u~• o w/fncd priv patio & yard. w/el.ec ctoOC opener • sauna BA Hawaiian Model, prof able loan. By owner. Ph. SMOG FREE IRVINE lmmcd. occup. 2 BR, 1 ~ 1 tennis tot lot • ' low malnt Jand1cpg, enclos-846-5333. Immaculate 2 BR townhouse NEW EXCLUSIVE OFFERING! Love at first sight when you see the beauti· fully landscaped grounds of this exceptional estat.e--Jike home. The front approach is only an indication of the exciting"interior & lavish furnisblngs which ARE mcluded. Call to see this Big Canyon 3 bdrm classic (incl. 2 mstr stes). Unusual pool & jacuzzi. ''Our 28th Ye•r'' rear house, xtra wide 42' s'Ou'TH aAv REAL TV ed. atrium, xl nt loc. Adult PURCHASE OR 1 YR LEASE in Walnut Square. air cond., lot. Call 6/a-6900. occlzp-Many many xtra11. All 2 BA ir'X!. 000 Red c .. ..-=~::::,,;::.~:;;,~=-962-:JXl2 * 968-7117 uprraded appl's w/w crpts 4·br, 2~ ba, 3 car gar. 2 • ....,, . -~ IRVINE TERRACE' eves: 968-4004 & drps, lnterco~. elec gar story, Nr. Beach, details Realton. 833.-33tlO Great family home. 4 Br, 2% F.V. 1$T OFFERING door opener. Truly a walk call 968--0939 alt 4pn1 UNIVERSITY Park -3 BR Ba, farn, new·crpt, remOOel· Plenty of room for the kids to the beach home. $41.950. FANTASTIC 4 BR trl·level, &t Atrium. Extra yard. ed kitchen. LarKe comer lot to p~ a.round this snug 1, Colors galore! $55,900. 19272 Comm. privl. Prln<;Jp&bl w/2 fenced yards. Prfn. witu• bit family home. ~lll;wt=lglilm Worchester Ln. 962--0686 only. By owner. 5.52-9639. etpals only. 67 3-3007 . ---~---~ Owner Sparkling clean, fatted air t · I ( -i ••• "lOJ OWNER, save PXMJ. 2 story, By Owner 3 BR. 2 BA, pool mlliliWt!!WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 21 II S•n Joaquin Hills Road "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" • S .ACRIFICE e heat, 4 AR,· Modern Square -. ...-4 be<irm, $42,000. Days & park prlv. 2% Yrs old. plan. 60xOO rear yard w/lrg · 642-Qi67: Eves 675-0641 $35,000 • 552-.l1114 2 BR.: pool, 2 car gar. patio. Seller ·will help with WALK TO BEACH General Gener•l ft...2 Lot. Only $56,500 the cl08ing cost. * Warm and friendly 3 BR IVAN WELLS -BAYCREST Lots of charm in this 4 bdrm., formal din- ing rm. home. Bright fam. rm. overlooking pool. 3¥.i Ba .• Courtyard entry. $87,500. Va- cant. Mary Lou Marion BAYFRONT -FEE Spectacular view main bay & mountains, sandy beach -pier. Gardel} abt!osphere. West Bay•Ave. near N.H. Ya"\ ~Jub. '197,- 500. Co ntact Bill Bents ' "> • BUY OF THE WEEK EASTBLUFF 4 Bdrms. & den. Formal db>-• ing w/view of gardens. 3 Full baths, Xlnt lo- cation. $67,500. Don't delay -call now ! Paul Quick 5 BEDROOM HOME Magniftcent University Park home, has absolutely every desirable feature all ON ONE LEVEL ... just listed, $69,900. Call "Chuck" Lewis TALK OF THE TOWN AU the beauty of perfection. 3 Bdrm. Lusk H.V .; lovely garden & stunning in.side. 1532 KEEL. Terrific price $88,800. Jim Muller LAGUNA CONDOMINI UM PROPERTY Ocean Views -prime No. Laguna loc. at Boat Canyon . Develop 25-27 condos or apts. Presen t income $15-0()-,2000 mo. $265 000. Call George Grupe ' Oceanvlew ReaJty 6~ for l'erionnance 2'% BA home NEW DUPLEX -Great bay 963-fQl *·Paneled & SolUiw floored view plus extensive gTeen .e YmRANS e family rm. , Gener•I Gener•I belt -Sl00,000. Prin. only. H t-" ~"' .,,., _.... 1 4 * Bulltlns., forcro-e.lr heat, ~ -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I * 67J..9239 * ea""' JJX.., "~'om poo • * "Pride . of • ownenhip'' • bedrms, 2 baths. Only neighborhood Cotti M... $32,500. NO down. REAL * A Boat t ·i d I--• _-ESl':;:.:,A:.:TE=:..F:;AIR~,:%-::,::c2'01""':;,· ,-ga e 1 es , ""' NEW~ Y LISTED "' ' * $38,950. A""ng pr1.,, * llollttt.I * BY Owner, I BR, 2 BA, lge Call now to hear au tts MESA ·DEL MAR finished booul rm. antique goodies. f"-"" ........_, Excell location gl~-~ waJ900I paper,. 5"-l•rwln rt•lty inc . SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ;,~~,...... Walk to ~1895· --· ' alt pm 968-4405 (24 hrs) 5Choot$. Well decorated. AU Huntl..:..toft 8Mch Ow;NER n1oving. Beautiful Linda Isle WHerfront crptd'&: Jnd8Cpd. 4 BR, ram ~:;;.:.;:;''V:=.:;':;.;...;;:..:.;;.;;;.;.__. I Deane 4 bdrm. Heated &: Custom;4 bdrm., 4"2 bath home on lagoon. rm, 2 BA, 136,900. Owner. A y...., Special filtered pool. Family nn, Full~ equipped island kitchen, waterfront 546-2891. -·' dining rm. fireplace. Built· f bill! d $245 000 BY Owner, East.side cuatom Hom.... ins. Shag carpet11. brk a y room, ar room . . . . . . , • 142 950 962-5566 home. Book Bay area. • On A V•ry Spocl•I . . . For Complete Information BR., 3BA, den, lrg tam nn, S OWNER anxloua. Prestigk>u!I On All H & Lot Pio c II hrdwd noon. fruit trees, Nr trfft area. Choice 3 bdrm. p011h omp ... , •H • : all schll, Wonderful quk<t * SIMPLY LOVELY * Interior. Family r m , .ILL GRUNDY, R"' & • 'JOR ~-· A-I oond. JBD, 2BA, Formal dlnl"" fil'eplace. Secluded living &A• . ~ Aliao Ave., 50 x 156 lot Alley entrance, nn. Formal dlnlnJ rm, ~34~1~B~•~Y~•;lclo;,D;;;,•·;·~Sulto;;;.,l~,~N;·;B;·'!'· !!!!!!!!6;7~5-6;;1~61;,..~~~~-~d\ly~~-~·==·::"""!" parking for that rec veh. or deluxe kitchen. brk $65,000. ~ boat. 846-1383. Gon0r•I Gonor•I *JUST umo * B~~~ St, Hunt.~.1 .::..:*:.,.:::F:::;o=u~R=P-L~E~X~.-;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;,~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 2 BR. bome Oft Eutside OWNER desperate. Brick &: One :. 3 Bdrm, t\\'O • 2--Bdnn, WATERFRONT CONDOMINIUM Zoned prof-wrought-iron ,., .. ,,,, 4 one • l Bdnn. Let th• !en- WITH BOAT SLIP -New 2-bedrt>om. 2~ UT.SOO bdrm 2 baths otn.tng rm ants make your payments. baths. ready for occupanrv. Full price O.Orp W1lll•mton built·~ Boat · a cc ea a'. North Hunt. Bch. location. -.1 R .. ttor 541-6570 Patio. Forced-air heal. brk $9,560. ll'Oll! income. '87,500. . 1 .. !!!l ... ""'-""'!!!!! .... 1133.000. 86-06()4. 84$-ll51 O< 847-85.31 QUALITY BUil T EAST SIDE 4 BR -Shupl Exec Home OWNER leaving ..... Lara• CLEAN SHARP 3 BEDROOM, hardwood w/nwllf extru • nu rur )'l'd. f.;M!ly decor. I 111~1• floors , i!niplace, ent!osed ""tio ~w carpeta caro<t-By owner, anxiOU•· lxlnn&. F a-m 11 Y rm ' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 oflnJa PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES MACNAB IRVINE I -"A BEAUTIFUL PICTURE" $124;500 ~EE Panpramic view -, ocean, bay & night lights of community. OPEN DAILY 1·5 p.m. •46 Mission Bay (Spyglass Hill). Beautiful 4 BR. "Cape-Hom" model - 2\0 baths. FR. & formal DR. Upgraded cpt/pad -stereo intercom. Waller King 642-8235 (RU) IRVINE TERRACE VIEW HOME Picturesque 2 BR. + den pool home. Oeean. Bay & Fashion l1land views. One o! a kind! Located on quiet street. $74,950. Tom Queen 644-6200. (RH) ELEGANT LINDA ISLE 5 BR. home. on protected lagoon. Hand- somely finished in every detaU. Space for lg . bo8t. '285,000. Dona Chichester 642- 8235 (R-33): and fresh natnt. Wide, co~r Jo'i':__ walk to G ~~~nly. {ll e!:.p1~1y~~~£ \ ~ -- " 1hopplng. )ust listed at $30,750. MESA VERDE 135.950. _, • · I v ... nt a BR, 2 BA, block e FIXER UPPER e SPANISH HACIENDA Cc:11chr.-9 Blnkar 541)..llSt wall yard .l Pl!~ qwet 3 Bdrm home In xlnt area De~te owner mull .ell I lrvi .. e l -nob-IMMRoolt~ .... --1 ,.... _ re1ktenUa.I area., ll1'1o down. oot:at1tndlng achls., ncal I~. 3BR, 2BA, Ula? new 644-2430 ~EALTOll!....,,,,,ill Open Ev... $31,000. • 96U668 Beach & Edlngtr. Zon"" for "'~'" draptt, bltl"'. 5 -'"!"""'""!!~"!".,.!!!1!--!'!!"!'!!""'!~!"'!~P-!i 2 OLDER HOUSES trjplex. Subnill Ill t""" . min ID beach. Largo well I~ 2 Br 6 V.. B ea.taidt llurry' $24 ~ &(7-6061 &,t \ot, fenced yard. !!!! !!!!!!!!s!!!!so!!!!N!!!!E!!!!w!!!!P!!!!o!!!!R!!!!T!!!!c!!!!E!!!!NT!!!!E!!!!R!!!!D!!!!R!!!!.!!!!. N!!!!.!!!!11.!!!!!!!!!!!!ll for Action •••. Call 642-5678 $3150o. FLoWER sT. KATEi.t.A REAi.TY. 11.a. 1:>p~~RM";.~CE -------------------'---'Own<=;;c•_-_W.=-'134!'-'---Sf:ll \dle tte.nu .•. 642-5678 847~ •• I \ l I 101 Dov.r Df!Ye Mt-12'1 1114' M•o.A.rthYr l«·12H fMwport ... eh, talllornla 12in ' • I • .. ------·~ --• • ~ ....... ~·S:M The BIUest Marketplace on the· OrarWe Coast __ .. s.m ... m·.., -.... ••. , .•••••• ,950 .. 990 DAILY Pl•Oi CLASSIFIED ADS ........-•••••••••• SlS ·S.t9 L11pl0111.t. • , • , ••• 700 • 7W ,_ .,., s....-. . . . . . tie) .. 199 .., ...... c;..d.. . • • . 00 • 199 finoocW • • • • • • • • • 100 • 299 You Can ~II It, Rnd It, ( '642 •5678 ) Trade It With a Want kJ · One Call SeMce Fast Credit Approval .................. 300· 49'9 Hi.Moet ktr .. • • • • • • JOO • 114 Lw A kAlrtd , • 5SO • 574 --............ >7>·"9 -...............• 600·/HI ~~-.•• •.· .• I00 -849 .,,..~ totiof,. • • • • • • • 9lS • 949 ---_,,,.. I~ I -·--_ .. _ I-~~ ~~-l~~IM~ w-~*~~~~-1 --------1 -~-------: For Silo 12.! -DELUXE 'PLEXES Opportunity -MODEL HOME BUILD ~ L1gun1 8HCll Cost1 -Irvine , BR•,8~~~~ "'" YOUR OWN Motor Home Rentals it_3 !l' .. (2.;.:.,0:,,i~~.1~~ PARTNER 1175 -utll Pd_ smau ""·' BR. 3 BA. --•ro--R-..... --u-ru-... -,-.-P-ark-, """'"" !ln, .... '""· rov I NEWPORT traf heat, air/oond., -ACTIVE wrrn su.sn CASH ..... Pttv. patio. Pool. park, -W/W cpt, dlpo, Lux. 3 !»', 2 ha -· 1 k 1 SALES & LEASING garages. Walk to ahop'g & & MGMNT ABD..ITY Ideal ~. dabwr, ~ A lndacPg. Premium Green-belt loca- patio, auto• Pr n 1 er'' HEIGHTS tull 5erv1ce taclll1.y schls. Pool facil. St•rtlng S.l•ry $205 -UW Pd. Lrr Ooean-$350 mo. $100 Jee, drp. tioo. Ooee to pools & tennis. ~:.. PrmdpaJs only.!"'" ""'" located lot In Oanmar Motor Homes o~ ~o~~i:"Z.ci~ pl!U of...!.!:'°.!: =k-ftl.o ~':..\ Shldlo. Fan .... t le ·~ESA DEL .. ·R ::-.;..d=~ely patio & BROAOMOOR · Newport Heights I! perfect Sp.1rllng lnveitment ahould'""-;uily net ,...~ $255 -Nloe 2 Br Ocean V\ew" M ""-" l BMch TUR'M..EROCK for a family hOmt. W4-!k· 531-6800 . Corp. selected over S30.cm 1st ~pt. Nr. ~ l>eck. 3 BR. 2 BA vacant ''""•..:lc.u..;n•......;;.;;,;;.o;,; __ _ 2 STORY, 4 br, sep. din nn, ing d1s1.ance to all schools. 6J8..566l year. Information to ptin-NU-VIEW RENTALS rt&dt: Call Jade Pede: nso _ 1 BR ln 4-plex. New film rm, lrplc, 3 ba, 3 car 0111ier will carry financing. ~~~;~~~~;;~llg~~~g~~~g~ cipals onJy in confidential 673-4030 or 494-32t1 * 5t6-ai62 * crpt.. drpe, bltrui, 2 blks gar, nr. school!, pa00 & Only $:al,OO'.l. Call 646-71TI . Industrial Pr ...... rty 161 lntervtew. References ex· ...r .. n._....,.,,.. ... BR ~• I beach.' I '-•~ 'Pkl--~ ~blk •· be=acb." ,....,.11~ ~· ..... " 3'BR, 1u Bath do u b I e .......,. -· 2 BR --pl ~--p oo 1 · L«...,_l"' ..... ~OPEHTIL ll•"'SFUH 10BENICEI~ 1 Ro .. Eot~.. JIJll! changed. Call 5 47-56 85 ....., ~.....,.., ,,,.........,. praae;n'petio:"°Walkln g~"" '-""" .. QJl:1.;. Shown by appnt. S59,rXX>. •• 4 ACRES Mon-Fri, 9 am-5 pm ed except llni!rl. Heated dWance to achoola & sh:>p-beaut ocean view apt. Deck. R33-m&. Gentt~I pool. June 23 to July 19. ping $250 mo ~zm ~' -Lrg 4 + Fam rm. Lagun• Beadt I · • Investment $9(X). ReferellCt'I & deposit NEWLY t•d '= d 'd 2 B ;hfuc, bltns, gar,· yard, Acreage for sale 150 WeU located corner. Present Opportunity 220 ~ired. Ga-4876 ewa. house w~ 1 chil1}ok N~ cN·hUd/pelt. W R N "''AMJLY --==~~==~ ' lnoome $1400. per mo. Great VICTORIA Bch.1 BR hse + peu $too ~ mo •3786 ·VE E TALS r, • • • • llARBOR VU HOMES BUiLDER'S ATTENTION potential -will divide. Ap. BE A sep rm w/bath on•2 lots, or 5fs...oioo. · 673-4030 or 4~3248 •.•. Parad!.JC. This J bdrm. Montego 4 BR, 1 story Choice location, Tustin. Ap-prox $1.25 sq. tt. ''SPEEDWAY'' view tram patio, $250 yrly . ...,. M B . Lido Isle home will delight you & See VIP' a b'OUing in Big Can-proved for 45 units. Roy Mccardle Realt\r 642-1272 -o.-usrnea us e --------- Yollr famlly the instant you yon 1rorn beck yard. Lrg. DANA REALTY CO. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Lido lsie ~on lnW.~ ~ .. C~ LAR. 1 br. X1nt location see it! Large living room, cul-de-sac lot. Prof . * 642-6560 * 548-7729 SPONSOR 642-22'2'1 !Mag. 646-96&6). frplc, prlv. patio, 2 cat gar, roml.ortable dining area. landscaped, cov'd patio, 50 AC No. of San }~ranctsco DELUXE ~ br, secld. patio, $350. yearly. 60-0306 Conveniently arr an Cc d boat .pad. Fantasticl:llly On hill w/beautilul l"\~an Invest tn 1h4; hottest 1...-in utll. pd. 100 ft from bean~ 2 BR house In court, cpts, Nowport D-ich kitchen to MVe Mon1 aomC' radc<l Island kHchen ""-"" ....,. ~ .... ., ...__ 2 all chi1dre --en!'. Beauutul ocean view. upgul ed ;.._ a;~ Del' view, Call 642-215.5 INDUSTRIAL Southern Ca 11 for nla -Avail July-Aug. $900. mo. u..Vo, gar., s.m n,1-"-'---'...;.,,_ __ _ '" ,... vu t U\:am ce ..... .,, sPEEDWAY MOTOR · Adults, no pets. 675--3609 no pets. $155. mo. 2077 *NEWPORT ~i:JORES * JOS Apta. Furn. 360 Cost•- Casa de Oro ALL~PAID Compare before )'Oil rent CUstom dclilned, featurlntr: e SJ>adous kitchen with In. dlroct Ughtlng e Separate din'g area e Home-like storage • Private patios O Closed garage w/storage e Marble pullman • King-llZ Bdrma e Pool -Barbecues • sur- rounded with pluah land- scaping. Adults. No PcfJ. LARGE l BR ;t8S 36.5 \V. Wilson 642-19n * SUS CASITAS Furn Bachelor & 1 BR'S. Models Open Dally. 2110 Newport Blvd., CM BEAUT. FURN 2 BR $175. Blt-ins, w/w, Htd pool. Adults, no pets. (infant ok) 642-"520 $56,0Cll. Piso tile, toil paper, all C I I INVESTMENT CYCLE RACING. Exper. Wallace, apt 6, ~ I-STY. 2 BR, -nv. d•n, cpt. tin1ed glass, pnl'd garage ommerc a 18 Unit complex. S21.000 Net Newport S.1ch ...... ... "°' I~,,,. wlwall 0, cabinets, laurxtry Property 158 income. Low down PElY· ienced rider needs financial I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! $175. 2 BR, patio, Kar&&e. nu drps, bltins. Patio. 2 car AVAIL Now _ E/side 2 Br, .,e...,,.1v hink, and so much more! ment. 6 Mos. old. 9.6% Cap backing. Excellent advertt~t · cpl!/drps, adults. l6S B 21st gar. Avail. June 16th. $325 1% Ba, pool, nr scOOols a: REAL EST.'AT" Open Sat & Sun 1-5. Ownoc. CORONA "''" 8.6% 'P'"dabl• & 7.6 Ing and promotional op. St. 642-8017 Mo., yearly leai;e abop'g. No pet>. 646--0474. ""• • 6111-7344 X Gross. Jim Keane portwdty. Bu.1nesses or~ SHARP' 3 BR. 2 BA dbl 4 BR, l<5ty. 1* ba, bltn.s, IBR. Irg tastefully furn, 1100 Gl•nncyre St. NEW BALBOA DEL MAR COLDWELL, BANKER dlvtduals call for deWla. gar. Dshwhr. Oondo. 'PooL Cpt/-. Patio. A v a 11 . work! d It> n1 1155 49-1-9473 ~"19--0316 Build what you want on this Realtors S4l-5221 Ph. Steve,~ after 6. DOVER SHORES Re<: ctr. $240 mo. 673--4891 soon. $325 Mo. Yrly lse. 1004 ~ ~. 5,J'.:5704 · Would You Believe DUPLEX rare 126' n .. rcel. Good cor-YOUR BUSINESS 4 BR., 4 ba., view home. LARGE 2 Br. Encl. garage CAYWOOD REALTY54&--l290 ' BR -u fu s·~ ,... Marine oriented fun-money Dining rm. June 15th to avail. 1 Child ok. can AVAIL June 1st: Custom mo. 'utll"01nc'"1. 'No '"chll' .:::'n ..• 'J Bdrnt. own your own P"mc N-"port P•on•'nsula ner location South o f Lots for Sale 170 -:;t-In •-art f N rt Aug. 15th. Maxine W""·--4BR & I •-~" •-n ".. .. Jliohway Call t 0 d a , -.:;:.o..=-'-"-'-----""" m .... er ""' o ewpo . .ll.Ullllllli 642-1656 or 979-797S. am rm, on "'5 00 pek """ •-o :ipt., close 10 shopping G< location. Spacious 4 and 3. ...., · Y · -End of 1st year showing 642-323.5 (R-50) cul-de-sac Jot, rm for boat ""· ~. lti'llch. Lge. htd. pool & rec· r>rluxe features includC' floor sra-7225. VIEW LOT ilM monthly net. This ~m cozy 2 BR, frplc, pool,. m. or trlr. Gardner pd .. NICE 1 Br dplx. Quiet. Sep rcatkm a re a . Beautifully 10 ceiling brick fireplace. TWO adjoining income prop-Newport Beach, view of bay business Investment baa yard. Adults only. Ref a. E-$450/mo lse. 566-8868 or by garages. Employed adult lndscpd, Hurry on thi• one l...'1.vish use of tile in kit· ert ies, center C.M. $15,000. & ocean. Consider yacht in challenging h 0 r ii on 11 . aide. $195 548-4424. 642-4.387 over 30, no pet11. 548-1021.. 111 S28,000. \'hens and baths. Walk in by owner. 645-2(!20/642-6560 part. $67,500. 979-3194. Information by appt, only, 642-8135 644-6200 3BR, 28A, family ri:nt' NEW Bluffs 3BR 3BA, den e TROPICAL POOL e • ·. ~ 1;lose1.~ ... open beam ceil-Condominiums .Golf course R-1 Lot THE BLACKBURN 00. 3012 Clltt Dr Pref retittd fireplace, fenced yd, qu1e · w/tpl CUBtm drps crpts 1 Br tum $145 gas & wtr pd ' : t-· ~ 111gi;. Laundry area for each for sale 160 158' on 15th Tee, of Mesa 1831 Westclift. NB 645-1800 couple, semi-retin?d or 2 $275. 2459 None Way, CM wshr,' dryr, refrig. 0Pool & E/slde ~n 18th. 5@-1168 · . uJJit, StC'ps to the beach. Verde c.e. Fantastic view. Money to L011n 240 ladies. Low rent. Write: M~A Verde 3 Br., fam. rm. yard maint. $475/mG. Ph~ BACHEWR Ap ts. $11B & SlOfl,000. Call 646-7171. Assumable 7,2°/o Ln 546-3000 I 545-1926 Ruth Etter, 1034 Calle Adults. No peta. 640..()209 or 644--0904 Up. ·No children or pets. 494-5671 -t9t .JIOO OPENnL t . IT$ FUN TO ee NICE! Prime r·ounta!n Valley area, LRG Vu lot, 1n Dover shores, 1 JD L Jazmin, 'lboosand Oaks, Ca. OWner/qent 642-0COJ WATERFRONT -Newport 2135 Elden Ave, Apt 1, C.M. 0'""" • ' shopping ""nle-. 2 BR, 2" O•rnc". "ve11 714 -640-1623, 1 BR H-••• • ~45, util pd. -•~ I b d pl N •· .-1t>1:: 1--,, . ...,._. ... ,.. .. , z __ , M I $23 950 [II ~ d os• to "boo'" pnrks, 152,000 for ..... hold. st oa ns 91300· 5 BR. crpta, dcpa, bl tins, "" i.Jand. 3 Br, 2 Ba uppor NICE 1 & 2 BR _,,_ ~ 0 11 I BR "'I ·1 cl 00 __ ,, ..... ... -,. • "' '""""' .... to eve•.;,• . cu u ex. o pe .... ....,., ""'· &: u~l33 E. 16th st., C.M. 1 l·r · · "'11 c ap tu1.1 BA Townhouse, cust d ....... , days Zl3 -636--0757 UP TO 95% Al.so CdM. 1 BR home' & ati -~ -1~irlagt• \v/shingle roof, · ded . .,..:' av ,......,.... .,,,....Mi)V, 64Z.. · nr•,>1fl1'fl under /1'(>('9 in I/JC ~~ BBQCfll~1}v rritlO SAN Clemen;e R-4 Street to 2nd TD Loans bachelor Units start'g $8.S. MESA Verde, u.r. 3 br, 1% 5 BRIJ Ba, lg FIR. D/R, 2 H_u_n_11-.-.-•• -.------.-h-_--villiigc Industrial z 0 11 e. -lb f 1 ' 2 8 rm ~trcet lot. Sl.2.500. $3500 dn. Agt. Fee. 979-84.30. ba, fam nn, frplc, patio, [rplca, nu crpt + drps, • - GJ'ca! porentia.I! F P~!edlNS1ULA DUPLEX :,:~~ [~; ope:~. =. ~c.0rRo~ard Co. Houses Unturn. 305 Avail 6/1, S275. 5J6..&89 comm. pool. $575. 673-4899 AtJSSION REALTY 494-0731 urn..,.,. or 9ummer ren-I pool tennis tot lot · lowest retes O ren9• Co. 1 BR house, middle age cpl., 4 BR, 2 BA, F/R, D/R, CONDO. 2 BR. 2 BA on Golt ta!, 2 BR, 2 BA. lower soliTH BAY REAL TY Mount•in, Desert Sattler Mtg. Co. General No children/pets. lh dbt trplc. Harbor Vu Homes. '°""'• bltrui, beaut vu, ten-w/patio & 2 BR. 1 BA. up-962-3002 * ~1177 Resort 174 642-2171 $45-.0611 gar, $150 mo. Sf8..4000. &M-54TI or !Z13) 79'1424. prr w/sundeck. Nice con· "°""'" 1-,;.;,.;.;_..;.,.______ $400 nil club. 10% dn, $36,9CKI. d 'I' A k' 17 2 5 o o eves: 968-4004 Serving Harbor area n yrs. fountain Vall-_.:c:::::,-· ---~~~-8JI-<l638 A1g~;,: sing ' · 2BEDRM CONDO w/pool In '/! ESTAT~ SALE-Two NEED CASH? $1.000, or up -r SANTA Ana Golf Course NEW 2 BR, 2 BA, all alect, 67>1972 fiT:r-4073 Eves. San Juan Capistrano. $1150. Big Beer lots, $11 ,000 to S3,!XXJ, $10,000 and more. RENTALS 6 BDRM on cul-de-sac just view, 4 BR, 3 BA, $495. One bltns, $39,SOO -$5800. do\\11. * 2 UNITS * dn . Jo"'HA loan/or will leaSC' each. Lake view, $7,500 Rememb<!r Avco Thrift tor Apwtmenta North of Mlle Square Parle. yr lease, 1 sm pet. 557-9409 , 4M--7*, 496-zn&. P\ w/option to ~· ii'7S--670G and t$1,000. HERtTAGE a Real Estate Loan. Upon DJp6e:xe& Downstairs hu 4 br, frpl, HARBOR Vu Hms, Carmel, · ·• 1 i:w tull at;,~·'°"-¥. Blk •. .n1 • .,,•, ""'-... ~anyUme--~ tKVlllTMINT DIVI.. •PPf'OYal, UR the .. money ,._ otil rm. OvenbiBd prqre" 3 Br., Fam, Br, 2 Ba, Near L!J.-,J:!ltuel . . ~AL-" * • "°' 2 • 91_., -~ ......,,,.,, "°" 11-.,Al ... A.ok """"" yard. t.c-all eled Pool, $425. 64o-1._768 . JI( ;>~ CON001 _ Park-like isu;.-~·---about our unSecured · ·-· ·-kftch & din rm . Upstairs Vle:~~~i~r~~~ 3BALB~~lcs~:i~·~pa. ro~tngs-pool,NB,3BR.s ·Ranches, Parms, r~~-loans. AVCO ~\~'.~~ii~~= bas Jge finished bonus ·rm,Sen Clemente club on 1 aide: _ WHITE * 67•7_0 * • BA. $43,000. Bkr. 673-'5271, Groves 180 620 N Ce (Piccadilly Circus) 744 sq ft includes 2 br, water ocean view on the ~ -..& 642-3&15. ewport nter Dr. closets, !link, cupboards, EXCLUSIVE Palisades area, f I p 166 40 AC Navel grove in Suite 101 COSI'A MESA OITICE 1'1!-Creation area. Xlnt for Jge walk to beach, I o v e I Y other rom this very C?n-Newport Heights ncome roperty Riverside. 20% dn. Buy al Newport Beach 833-3l40 fomUy "..,.. mo c....:_ oi;:97 custom bullt 2 br, 2 ba, temporary artect de111gn Serving-Costa Mesa, Newport . ~ · ~ / t d fr 1 bltl home. lots of glass. Circle SEA BREEZE WANT BIG RETURNS subdivision price $7000 ac. CA$H IN A l{URRY! Beach, Huntington Beach. F 2 & 3 w w cp • rps, Pc, ns, dri 2 d I bd Thls grove has nroduced a Borrow on vnur home, n"id FOR LEASE, .V., $250. 496-1035 or 993-3820 ve, e uxe 8. + at &ow, low rent17 lot of good fruit. Realtor ,,.. .,... $120 • Unbelievable! 1 Br. BR Condos, encl 2 car gar, . den, formal din., breaktut Plus view of ocean & bay 494-l288 for or not. Uae fund.a to con· Furn House. Encl patio & 20x22 1am rm, prlv patio. bar, bltln kit., NEW pluah from upstairs family rm. A perfect set.up for the fu. TI4: 683-4740. Eves :Udateb blll9, improve your yard. Pools, tennis, sauna, child Condominiums apt, NEW paint ins.Ide & Charming 2 BR, 2 tiled tw·e. Eight 2 BR stucco 2'1.i . level acres be~ween me, uy new property, or $120 • Nice Furn. Bachelor. play area, South Bay Unfvrn. 320 out. IT'S A • BEAU'J'Y. balh9. lge. dining area; Homes 20' apart. 105'x300' Capistrano & Lake Elsmore. for any good pu:rpoae. Con· All u!il pd. Cat ok. Really, 962-3002, Qwnerl---------- $76,950. By owner. 831-2478 frplc, w/heatolator, F.A. M·l lot. lOCrxl()'j' Yard in $3,920-acre. $975 down pay-fidentia.1 , fa.st service in $l2S. 1 BR. Furn. All util pd. Agent M ission Viejo PANORAMIC heat. Extra lge. kitchen & .. ear. Apt• and homes on all ment, easy terms. 833-32'23 your home or our office. Oll.iple ok. 3 BR 2 BA • __ brkfst area walk i try • SIGNAL MORTGAGE co. . . '°"'114" earage, 3BR, 2BA condo, enclsed at· OCEAN VIEW In bea.utlful birch C.abln~ts. & "Jr ~Ins: sides. A Fac1ory man's Real Estate Wanted 184 c714) 55&-0l06. $1fi0 • 1 BR. HOWie. Encl like new. D la h w a ah er, tac gar, crpts, drp.!1, d/w, Monarch Bay TerraCt', 4 br, E I I paradise. Whittier Ave. at I ;;iiiiiiiii;;i;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1 yard for kids&. pets, ftreplace, pool, ~ mo. rnlf cl•aning ov•n, patio, 31 ha, "', ad~ eel~~· ~n kit1.1 01~~ fe. ~~~ ~J~nog; \V. 18th St., CM. $107.fXXl. k Quick Cash * 1' CALL 6t.S-Olll Agt:nt BU-'421 :'wim pool privl. nso. orma in. v,., ........ m a $49 500 easti. to a 70% loan com· Will buy ~ur property. All 2ND Trust Deeds l13l>-Ol!7l rooms. Room for pool on • t n..~ 'ft'" "y LAGUNA BEACH OFFICE H ff ... n •---h 1.::;;..:=-------lar. lol. Only 21Ai """'· old. CALL 0 646•2414 mt mcnt. vw ..... r may ...,.,e cash within 72. hn. Call PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. un "•·0 - LOW WEEKLY RATES Executive Suites 727 Yorktown Blvd. Beach Blvd. at Yorktown SJU.111 STUDIOS & 1 BR's. e Full kitchen • Heated pool e Laundry facilities e ,.E;'ree utlllties • ,.,... linen& • T.V. & maid serv. avail. • Bar-B-Que • Phone service • 1 Mlle to IX'ean $145-$165 BACHELOR & 1 BR., patios, Jrplc's priv. garages - Divided bath & lots of closets. Rec. hall, pool & pool tables, sauna baths. See for ~une!f. 17301 Keeh1on Ln. (1 blk W. of Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). S<Z-7848 $140 -ULTRA NICE Apl. 6 Pools. 4 tiardens. Sauna. Tennis. Private pa t I o , Adults. Ph: 84&-0259. Laguna Beech $89 950 B ,.. 91 I. a~ TD. A great tax saver 962-8851 Serving Laguna, Dana Pol.nt, T ho F 330 · · Y owneT. 831-2478. and will ram 11% NNN on i My Amount San Clemente, C&plstrano 2 BEDROOM, 1 Beth, own UM urn. Lido Isled •cf411l. equity. Pick up a set-up al ~-!!ll•t $1~45 • STEPS to Oocin! beautiful up g r • d . General * OCEANFRONT * * EX~USfVE * N~•r Ne!p~:,L:o~r Offlee n1~ ofrice if you .ha:-re money il!JY.I * Call 675-4494 BKR. Furn Bachelor pad. All util eel townhouse, inc. re----------Lease J BR, 2 BA. $750 mo . .... L. to invest for solid income, ~ pd, Long hair/pet ok. f I h J BR Buena Park nr 6 mos. minimum to 5 yrs 4 B<inns., p[u9 den: 5 baths. * LEASE OR BUY * .. lliillllllli!I $180 -SUPER 2 Br. Crpts, r gderator, d' hw 1 •h .. freew~ys, schools, $ 2 4 o. (also unfum.) 2 BR, 2 BA 50 Ft. Nord co r ne r . 3 BR , ~ r il ., Fu 1 LYTLE REA BROKERS INC. Money W•nted 250 drps, bltns, patio, Children er, ryer, •• was er. days, 558-8161, eves 645-7ti20. $800 mo. & up. Enjoy cool, A-fagnllicent, cuJi:ton1 home. · '"'5e. am Y nn. • 1 L TY !~~~~~~~-~~~~~~ tine. Like new, good loc• I 50 bl P if 1170 ooo. ba's., 2 frplcs. Lg<'. yard. 583 W. 19th, CM MONEY wanted. Secured by s~ _OLD, ·-··· Ch·-•'' tlon ....,,, mo, '·k for ')up exH Unfum. 3 ue AC ic, sweeping view ' Bl'St N'pt. H'ts. location. 54s,.9493 1 jfAl ls! T.D. on prime Newport ~~ --6<&'-..... ., .pw "" ™lllne, elevator to beach Rlf:L.:-51 ""Do': SuR EmAmLcrT, ywlnter ~At.*· Bci~:~~~p~o*ROP. *42 u n·1 ts* halncial ~ ;,T~r~u~.,::D.~-:.tr. 671)..6270060 s~~~~ ;~:~=~~ :: N-~~·-'"';.:.' y"96_,,._2-44_w~~1-B~AR'°'g,__t~;,.-m-e, l·B_•_lbo_:_•_•l_•_~-·---p-,,-,, , ,N"~-:-:-"""po,-'.Z'C.:·t--R"lr'"~'-.--:~:.:h.:~=:..· sar_c . ..v . 2 Br. nr beach. Stove, 1% ba. 2 car gar. Nr. school 1tfe~ i BR'at2 Ban~! elec 3.'m Via !.!do, Np!. Beach 4 RDRl'it .. J BA. lge ]iv rm, 2 Business re-frig, kids/pet. &: shopping. Avail now. can S42S 67l-38Js, 214 Grand I ·s-29-50~-Wk------ 673.7300 sty, bcnm clngs ln everv CENTRA L COSTA MESA CALL 494-9491 for appt. 213:431-9644 Canal. BR &Pf'£I'achel!s~PCo~o~1¥v: ra~~~~l~U.~~~~dio ~:p ~~o. a~~.~~R a1it $485,000 Opportunity 200 rou~;R0~~~0~5~1 F'R~E l~~~R~R~CE 2A~· 32 :~,' ~en;e:· t!1!;:c:o=ro=•=•==d=•=I =Ml==·====-:-:iJdJli~~rt ~.~~ GRUBB & ELLIS CO. NEW-Earn 10% lntenist on well· w/pool Agt Fee 979-8430 v=y 4B 646-9681 2 BR. & i.~ 2-bdrm•. REALTORS 2n LANDLORDS! , , , , ~n Nice R, 2',\ba 3 SfORIES, baytront. ocean 2863 E. Cst. Hwy, CdM Ed Riddle Realtor 646-8811 DISTRIBUTORSHIP SPCured d Trulll Dttds on '" 3 BR. 2 BA, all appliances, frplc, dbl oven, dsh/ws~ CK:EANFRONT _ Open June vicw.4Bdrms .. 4bath.s 67~7()8{1 40 UNITS IN A PARK Pnrt·Time, retired, g~11:,.:L~igi~~~~EestcOt.e .. We Speclallze in Newport cpts, drpa, $200. mo . crpts&nudrps,gar,4blk8 & July. Fonner owner1 $225,000 * POOL Outstanding garden apts on s em i -r e I Ir c d men o.r (714) 556--0lOO Beach • Corona del Mc.r e !st/Jut nX> req'd. 968-8111 to ocean. $365 mo. &f4-.683:),, Unit. $3Xl &: S22S wkly. LIDO REAL TY * 1.6 acres ot lnimaculately women. Cust?m Swag Kit & Laguna. Ou r Rental Ser· 3 BR, 2 ba twnme. frplc, No pets. 6~1. 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach l !i Bn, fam. rm., r1'('. rm., by kC'pt grounds. Pool, ale. seeks resJl'.Ons1ble persons I? .,.4500..,..,c,.am..,ou,,•,."'..,·,.· ,.N,..e,. . ..,, I vice la FREE to You! Try patio, Nr. Beach. $230. rno. ''H,.-.unt-7.l~n~gt~o-n"'"'Boo~-c,_h--1 BR apt, upstairs unit. 673-7300 O\\'lll'r, $49,900, 642--1550 I 7'"i rina""ing, 6.7 x """""'•. ,;ervlce high t:raltlc retail Nu-Vlew! Owner. 963-8912 utilities paid, Cail ~· --"'" e·-.... accounts tor the ne w Sl2,500 2ND TD payable Sl25. 6!1~:~1EW0~EN~~LJ~., lrvlno ~u• LIDO ISLE BEAUTY San Clemente I 1495·1~· Principals only. Custom Swag Kit, your per mo. incl 9% on l com· ·~ • ~,,_, NEW 2 BEDROOM or 548-6355 Charmi ~ BR. &. f ·1 Sparing Investment Corp. home, 10 hours per Y..ttk. merclal acre near ottramp -;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;11 Bath losed pvt OCEANFRONT decorator 40"• ·1•1 1 t Lo•m•,y O\,'NER·mu:c;t SC'J! or trade 6 638-5662 No selling_ No vending. We So. Orange County. Value 3 BR, w/w shag, patio, FP, • In dup!' enclntildlng SJ.95garagr. turn, 2 br. Avail July, week· rm. · 0 · ve Y ""''' · I d bl •· ~-C bana Cl b P Santi t 2 BR. 1 Ba. ··••• · · •· ••• ·-ex · · per I 213 271 ~ garden !)Jltio. $105.000 1 lud ocean vtC'\\' o I · Cannery Villige \\'Bill people that want a ou e encumU<ance11. u""' a u • ac. a I\ ,.._., A1 y, : .........,., LIDO REAL TY nc ing plan. S 2 2. O O O. good solid rontinuing In· 2Yi yellNl. 1570 discount 8341 Munster. Call (213) 2 BR. 2 Baths .•..••••. $325 mo. so 3 Bedroom, 2 ~~==='----492..R264 . 2 C-1 lots come. pr 0 du c t rerom· cn4} 830-8660 794-10'27 2 BR. den., 2 b&, a.Ir oond $265 bath, $250. mo. Manag~r ~at 3377 Via Lido, Npt . &•ach Westminster 'iii blk lrom cannery, rest· mended by the Sm a 11 Corona del Mir 3 BR. 2 baths •.••.. $3651275 313 Oswego, Huntington 673-7300 uurant, nu high-rises. 00.y. Business Administration. 40•){i Oi.4'C $64M we:ll secured -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: 3 BR. 2~ ba. · •• ·• ••• •· $300 Beach. Newport Beech FOR GROWING \Viii S<'!l scparat(' or t~eith-Moderate Investment. 100% lst. Pay $640 Mo 1()% all • 4 BR. 21iW ba ........... $400 5J6.4152 FAMIV, er. llavr houst" 1\·/prkin11;. huy tmck guarantee. Write cflle l978. Box J, Apple 4 BR. &: t&m. rm ••••• $475 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Ca ll ov.·ncr. t::arnie Ball. Mr. Bill Wiseman. 'l2S() Valley, Ca. 714124,_7144 We llave ~a!s Spanish Villf1. his young &16-5076 any\ln11•. Frnnldin Ave., L.A. 90046 · ~-----~ 3 BR. + sewing roont. 2 Ba. w<·ll pl11n1lt'd h<>l1l(' offC'rS ----. I d h be ) v1"s on I Frptc. Corner lot. Dbl gar. lq!is l)f Ji\'ing spac..._., lrg Liv SIX UNIT -apartment• wftll fine u e P one num r ally Company • Apiirtmerits forRent Vacant. $44.~J;,(J Rnt, Dlnioi.: Hni, .,111 Jn 111'C't1.11 bn>eZ<"s. Spacloul S EXPANSION FUNDS II~ I CdM. Ocf?an view home -J . GEM l{itchC'n. :1 BR. RC'c lloorn BR._ 1% !lA. hlt'.ns, i·r111'd. * 3 FOR 1 RETURN* HouMlfcrfttnt BR. 2 bath: dbl. garage, 8 d h•11 6 W/pri office & II :l car drp rl . 65 :.: :mo. ('Jose .to(_) u R Ex c E LL EN T . pool, retrig/washer/dryer. re I A F 1 10 W. Coasl llwy., N.n . gnrnl;"i'. Xlnt <'Ond in nr('n. J:!;r11 nunnr srhool. $llf.llJ. 1n· GR01•-11 AND p 0 $500 MO/yr!}'. H. PeJTy/R. B1pllbo1.1 ul1rln1.nd REALTORS 642-4623 "'-I I' E ron1r. Asking-$125,000. but • v' R FIT Shenll&n, 642-8235 IRJ8) BY OWNER ~-..... e ~. ~· Agcn!s 1nnk<' nn offr1'. KlNGAAH.D ALLO\VS US TO MAI<E Houses furnished 300 Pvt beach, CBay:c;hores), 3 ')6:\-~\ R.E. 64Z..2222 TlllS GUARANTEED OF-REALTY Bdrm, 2 BA • designl'd for 'H T FF:R. THE MlNIMUM or G•ner1I A Company With Vision YEARLY - 2 BR, 1% BA, indoor/outdoor living. Prlc-~ ' 0 TRl·PLEX'' $.'31XK1 AT END OF lST. 642-8235 644-6200 Univ. Park Center, Irvine aundeck above. l 1911' ~ f II ·~1 T.'T' 2591 -·-I :ma POTENTJ/\L! FL\'rr llOU .... YEAR r~oR F:ACl{ SlOOO Bob Ro1sen Call Anyllme, 562.'™1() Emen.ld. Employed adults. \.." 0 U'. · .v · ·1\1· ~ I d "' . ,1 1 be .. ._ INVESTED. CAU.. NOW. Cre!!lvicw Dr. 646-0079 or pus u,7e~. 1~ onf'y ~ For appointment for full 216 36th St. $200 -Small 2 Br Hoose. OUl.ce houn 8 AM lo 8 PM ·'~aa Peninsul1 644-731 1 n1adc here. $.19.900. ~lJB. disclosure details Newport Beach $235 -Rede<: 2 Br. Duplex. -------- THE BLUFFS Mobllo Ho-1 !\!IT ALL TR.ADES! V. E. Stlf &: Sun ci.K. You lu'~ ~ winner at Car. Nlce deek. Child ok. 4 R .... u1r;; $25 WEEK & UP .... 1-101 ... atd & Co Realt s f SSOO -Lrg 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 B · 2\fi ....,., • ·········..,....., e Sleeping Rooms ',••YN, 4 ~~~· 161'.l ~ft. For Sale 125 6-l!'t-8400. ., or . e MLr: VlclorS 17l<ll ~:m Good r<:: a ~~arload lrplc'.s, 3 patios, bltns, gar, J BR. 2~ ba. Deluxe • Housekeeplrtg Rooms n u """'"""· mRny x .. ,.!I. 1quor tore 28m+gr beaut. ocean view!! Pool. Bluf.fl, N.B ........... $41'5 e Oeean View Aptl ss2.ooo. By 0"'"'· "' """' '"''° 1 1~. Mo1>n• hom• EXCHANGE • Electron;, Ml/ Asmbl PACl'F0IC.nyT•H1EA""TRES NU-VIEW RENTALS 4 en 1ha•va1r111 .... = BALBOA INN .t: wkmds. 640.()549 or w/10x20 cahana. Xlnt rond. e C II Sh b / 673-4030 or m.~'lAa 4 BR N bt. Ava.II 8/1 '. '425 105 M·'-s-t 640-0228. Principals only. Furn. 54,_7632 R·2 t..otlwill toke 6 Units, o •• op eer .-oo 4 Bft 2 ba. T fl llilll $475 ..,, ..... " 11unlirijltOn Beach. wine China Cov Cotta · · '· 400 675-8140 Cff01CE V\J, Bl« C.at1)'Qf'l I()( 10x!"J(I MOBILI-: Jfome FOR: 10 10 15 Unit.. ln e p,·,,. try $3000 'n (Subject to sma/l M'rvlce e .:. .. -_!~months~ BBRR.221?-~.rurn .•••••• '400 C d I"· In N.-n .,cb ~-.. 1, /10x30 Cabao bull ,...__, ...,_ ' o h .~ I .,...,.,,lq ~ . ,. Ulll •• •··· ••••• $385 oron• e ,._r "l't"A' al" • wT w a t on, ,_,,-.. ngf' -..vunly, c arge at un:atre. New townhouses • $«!0.00 by owner, ll.100 _sq fl, on cov ho.ck patio, beaut SparUng Investment HOLLAND Bus. Sales Please call 642-5678 v:l, 314 Spygla.1r1 FiYe bedroom • STUOJO apt, turn, 2 blks to 2~rn..!,.,~ Sit~~ l\n<!V .«15tpgh, "'s"' ol "!~· .ll90 Corp. 645--4170 or ~ eve. eoun'o clabn yOOr ticket. CNortti Wl'S.00 octan, $1~ mo, O:lll incld. "''·~·•:o•r~u-or · . t. spc :...,, N.B. ••• t-''l 17)6 Orange, Costa Mesa "A" nty 1 .toll·free number !Ji D•---675-4174 call bet llam SOMERSET model, HArbcr ~ ~ .,..,.123J ;;~;;:-·-,•·=~'--:-.,,..,:---! View JiomO. by Owner'. 5 NEWPORT BAY BEAl!fY SHARP trlplt'x-, N •pt, 1.00KING for 8 good bl.ly? . 3BR. 2BA, lJ"R uvtng area, Costa Meta BR, 3 BA, beaut de<»nlted, Adult pa111;, private bta<'h llrights area. $64,500. Drive Yardage Shop at rost Fix· You don't netd • run to yrd & pr. $35.'> mo leue-. 1--$30--W-&_E_K_A_U_P __ 360 The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S lea~~~g ftt JMd, $83,900. 644-5.D 2 BR 2 BA Ii LR sundC'Ck by tures & hwentory w/3~ yrs "Draw Jl'ut" when )'Oll , $44-731.11646-9079 OCEANl'RONT J~nO'lic ~\cw ' ~3612 . 2&1' 16th 1\LACE remaining on l~ue. tor place e.n ad In the n..uy Costa MeM Jtt ~=~S::"BJd&'. : ~1° :al~ ~~~1~vatt : M · I Dut>IC'X, own r r /a 1 en t M!JST SACRIFICE ~~dy cc::nde=r~S:'. ~= Into co.JI n4 -:1~t Adi! C.D now Oh!VU!dlv Park, lM~f' e Phone Servtct-Htd. Ponl 0'' lelp ace 87.J..WJJ I2xOO 7I Chsmp!on. Shown Will cOntdde'r t1m.Rl1 T.D. or • VACANT 2 Br hu all $t45. Da.,. Sft.7000 N'9hts e Children Ir Pel Section i ,, Duplc11:• he(lr the «ni 1 by SpaC'C 54. 19:\50 Ward St, 11maJ J tJormi nMl' l'Tth St. 411 SMALL ahop tn ~I~ area Al80 3 Br, rec nn & poot. / ,.••""!!!~!!!!!!'!!"'!!"!11• $00 Mttlthl,y Mlll'li LA.tlOn, RcaJ1or lt.B. IW6-966J all 3. part down rtady to go. Quitting to iO Any d&y la the BEST DAY to Kidl/ptt&.. Aa't· Fee • 1. .... W ll the 8Dn' DAY t> 2378 Newport Blvd., CM ,.., ... ~ · back to 8Chool. Ca J J ,· -·" ... A~I Don't .., 1.... 9]'9..8430. """ ........ ..... ... -.. ~a..._ •Gt'J...8563• ~·r .m ...... &12·!.671 &II Id~ Item~ ...... 642-5678 ~72 or-644-(.528. • "'' ..,, au ue....,.. • • run an ad! Ool&'t .-....,. • ;r'l<J"illl'•..., or ..,..,..,.,..., , I I ( I _.,_aU_1od=ay'-""&o-<;m."'-'='---Nted a .. Pad"t Place an ad! .call tod!)' &0-5618. .Ad Good For $5 on Rent ' I .. • ,,., ., • d ~ 'f j ·I 1 _ 1 I , I I I I ,I •• I ' i ' ' 'I I ' -1 I I l ,, . •1 I I I I I ·1 I :I I ' I ·I I l I I I l I ' 3 I • * DAILY "LDT 15 I •. ' ' ' [ ,.., 7 --1~ [ •t t --1~ 1 ..... ·--1~1-' ,.--1~ :.I ---;;· ~;;;;~~,i:;'~;;-;;--;;;-;;l~;;;~I .. -.. -~1~~~--..--~1~..:.~, 1-... -1~ ' IApt,~,~U..,,,,,_tum. ___ _:..,365;,;c Apt, Unfum. J6S -., .._.., R-lo t. Shore 00 Olltc. Rentol <MO ScMok & SdtM!t & C-, CeftCNle DELUlC 2 hr, -..... :1817 COii• -,_F_._,,._. _ ... _u_n1um. ___ m ___ ,_ ..... __ ... _Unfum ___ ._m_ 'w ·-ANTED---, ,..-..... --..... --... -.. PR£STIGE OrFICES '::='-==='""='===5=7=5=='n=·-=='°"='===5=7=5 1' ·CDIENT=;;.;;...-...,;·=-=;.;..---.1 ~. BSlil,L .,.,.,,;1 ar ---------1 Cotta Mele Cotti fM18 age (7"5) to ......... ! BR. 2 New prUeu.ianaJ b Id Io 1 .I· Wall, p11Uo1, aldenJb, etc. a:n:: lll•nd 11=;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; ~ "':m ~l~'i.1.V~~::. ORANGE COUNTY llYhr~o; ~~:.:' ~'.I EL PUERTO ,...., ~ 95itm alter receptjont.t, an1wertn1 VOCATIONAL Patio & "'1b .~~""t. ~~~;.., ,, ~ :;,!f;gONAL woman ~"i· ~~: TRAINING SCHOOL 9Uittl56 bay. $375 Yrty. • will alwe bMut. &. Mata SecretutaJ Service. Avail. Contractor WINTON REALTY 675-3331 ,. A MESA Beb heme w/wne. CJote IO 'l>b: SCJ..11119 <r Si6>4955. ---------1 ELEGANT 2 Br w/gar, nr • .,, ~an. flStmo. R~t·a 1617 WESTCLIFF LEARN JACK Taula.ne -Repair • Jeue 963-1914 ' ~mod.. addll. 20 )Tl exp. !!hJpe/bch, Yrly, 83.>3437, PINECREEK P • 1980, 1921, 756 .l 540 sq. ft. Uc'd. My W-.y Co. 547..(l(Q6 Eve/wknds548-7398. LIVES UP ... FOR MATUR.Epll01hr.3bdl'm Ampl~ prka . Utll . AUTO TUNE-UP "" BETTER hse w/aarne, els. 1o heh. &umprdner No. 104 . Electrical YEARLY t,. -em 3 Br, 2 TO ITS NAME •• , ' MH0.12 --------ea. CfPIJI, drps, bltns. 1JO Over 500 tall ll'ffli --::-:: S140/mo. H.B. 1 •2 -2929 ELECTRICLAN. U~naed. Pearl. 675-0158 and 10 streams with -A~~ to lhare. Male luslnen Rental 445 bo~. Small jobs, m&int A S.lboa Penin1ul1 \\·atertalla Cft'&l.e a ' ~-Lquna. Ocean vlew. Balboa Penin.. 700 ~· ft. di· * 1 Wiii * MODllN repa!N, ~ OCEANFRONT $175 Channing Vu, .studio, avail yearly, adlta • no pets. 6J3.li37'l Newly .r:fecorated, upstairs J BR, lease yrl,y, no pets, adl.tlts only. Ref req. $160 monthly. 673·5990 aft -4: 30. relaxing setting for Own Br, Ba. Util. iod.. suo. vkt@d. into s rooms. locs of 1111111111¥1 coun1 DIA•Nome ,F_loo_r_•-------I )'OW' specious new 1· or Call aft. 6. m..8841 wall space. SUitable Jar an 19UIPMINT 1 • 2·bedroom apartment. Small -.... ~ ----------1 a:aUeiy, antique ahop, llJ" * TUIT10N .. NANCIN• TILE & LINOLEUM. petsok:. F'rom$165. Furniture -r,..... ~~ ... ~ Summer R1nt1l1 420 chltect &. draftsman. Near AYAILAILI * PllPAU.TION POI LAYER. CALL 5--T ~:~:~~~~ADULT .LIVING FOR LESS SHARE Apt or Hou.e & ~~~:n:~ * ==N & ~1t.:1;~;~~C::o c..r:!~,:Gs~ SAVE ,,. HOME eUng needa. AJL 41:30 ph. PIMIN• cwsn ___ _:_ _____ , Pork-Llko Surroundl119 e j Ml. lo &..ch PARTNER Lie. Busln.,. 673i!i690. A Proroulonal, unUonned Q 2 UlEI'& 3 BORE~~ e Sun Oedci &· l""~s·,-•3-0-----.1 Call 836-ll94 or st&-14'7'9 ''·"·The""'-,,Fa"ct"'ory'=°"· -:hu,.--,:Sbo,,-ps * Job Pl•cement A11l1t•nce Av•ll•blt gardenlna: team. Sel'Vinc n...--i .:>. $15 wUI share m)' lovely Avail . Ideal tor booksl<n, * Cle1111 form ing Now only lg ~tates, apt I: Pvt Pattc. * Htd Pool P1tlo1 quiet home in C.M. to ref!n. leather llhop, etc. Starting * Specl•I Cour111 for M1chanlc1 who Indus romplexet. Free ot. Nr. Shop'g *Adults only e Carpets, Dr1pe1 & UP ed lady. Ref's. No smo~. fiom $110/mo. 425 30th St., Med c1111 ''A'' Licenn Custon1 Landacape M&int Martinique Apts. e Load• of Parking AU. uni.ma PAID 185 w/priv, bath. -ms. N.B. 6""'606 FOR INFORMATION '"A ~k~-: eo," 1325 lm Santa Ana Ave .. CM e Gar--Pool I & 2 BDRM'5. * WANTED Male to Share 4 CdM, 17c/tt. UM/boor x ,11---C-All 714/646-506_5 __ .. Mgr Apt ll3 646-5542 • Rec. Room Furn. & Unfum. Av•il. :::,':!.~mo. Quiet. ttl. $12Xl. 615-76Sl <24 hr. ~~Rti:!~~ ~~~:;e;: * RENTALS * 71~:'1::~:~TREET, COSTA MESA ~0t~t~1e ~.~~ !~a~ou::1~U!!2!1!2o!!P!LA!!C!E!!!N!i!T!!!IA~A;JViCE~.-eOOiio,siT~A_M_E_S_A-=: ~~il86~1 land"""' YEARLY lease, nu 3BR, 2BA, unfurn apt, close to bay & ocean. 67J...2.512 3 BDRM, 2 BA, bltns, mo. Avail June. 6'l5-J308 Cepl1tr1no Beach 3BR, upper, duplex, ocean vu, $250 OM>. Open Sun 10-2. STI--0666 eves, 34443 Via Espinoza, Capistrano Bch . Corona del Mar ON TEN ACRES Apts. furn./witurn. Lease Fireplace I prlv. patios. Pools Terutls Contnt'l BJdst. 900 Sea Lan, CdM W.·26ll (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) SO. of Hwy 2 Br up&tainl w/gar & suncteck, priv en· IIJ', newly decor & crpt, S'Nt!dish frplc, bltns, refrig, ~ mo. 518~ Begonia. Open Sat & Sun 9--5. M.>3493. 2 BR, din. rm, frplc; new crpts &: drps. $185/mo. Call Mr. Beals, 556-8790. 2 BR. $265/mo. Cl'pts, drps, Gar. Crpt, drp. Call Mr. Bea.ls, 556-87ro. LARGE DELUX l bedrm, ooe block trom beach. $225/Mo. Call Agt: 644-7270 2 BR, 1 BA, 2 blks to Ltttle Corona. Lrg pool. $220. Eves 1133-3227 NEW 2 BDRM, family rm, crpts, drpa, bltns. $350. mo. Avail Sept. ~ I..ARGE 2 BR, bltns, cpts le drps. $140 ' per month, Sharp! 646-9270 YEARLY Alto Garages for Rent woman. Call MS-4449 *I ft, adjoining busy comer, Schools & E XPERT Japan e 1 e F rom $650 Month ''!'"'"'!'!"l'"'""'""'""'""!l'!'!l'!"!""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""' Costa M~ M5-2020/6fl.6500 1 [j] I I .5TS Gardener. Complete Ya.rd SUMMER IA'. Unf Ger .... for Rent 435 frrwloMls I .. nstruct on• Service. Free eslimates From ,1200,Month pt. urn, 365 Aph,, -~~~:~r--1 ;;1nc1~u~11~r~1.f1~R~on~1·~1;;;•~5~o11~~~~~~~·~,,_~ LEARN ,,..,.,,.., BILL GRUNDY Newport BHcll Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ALLSPACE EXPERIENCED JapanHe Realtor 675-6161 Huntington Beoch S.11 Storttp NOW LEASING SPEEOWRIJING Gartle.,.r. Complete yard ''Rent A Piece Mini WarMOUnt Huntington Beich Soclel Clubs 535 ma In t enan c e, shrubbery, TWO BR DUPLEX of 1 Pal•ce'' 1 BR. n,i1c. Furn/Unf. Various sizes from $7.50/mo. NEW M-1 'PARTNER' INTROD. S:HORTJIAND trffs. F'rtt est. 645--0347 Eastside, Crpts, drps, enc Close garage. 2 % blks U lock It· U keep the key. 940 Sq. Ft. A Up Personal ServlC{'. Low Fee in as little as EXP. Japanese . mah\. garage. Adults, no peta. OCEAN and. beach! See Mgr., 405 7th St. On site mgrs -24 hr. access Hamtlton & Newland 548-1479 or 836-12TI I t en 11. nee , c I ea n -up . Avail June ht. $160/mo. H. B. No mov~1iyN~=:t fee 646-00.97 or 833-0019 Tr•vet S40 6 WEEKS Landscape. Fl'ee ext. 6'"'387. HARBOR VIEW N-port BHch Open Dally tor lmpectlon ' . "'2~8lr-IH38 $165-2 BR. 11,, BA. Studio on Elegant apartments des.lened HamUtcn &: Newland St., HB NEW Bld1, Ideal C.M. loc, JOIN our crew -In1 'l Sehl. FfRSI' Visit Frff. Aero cul -de-sac. Prlv. patio, pool, wilh a Muter's touch, IU· OCEAN VIEW: modem, all 833.(l5J9 U ,,,~,,.......... nr. frwy. w/ofc I: heat hot of Snmanship-on boe.n.I 00' THE only !JChool in Orange Gardening Ser v. Main. crp~, drps, bltns. Nr. perb house &eCU:rity, exclu· electric, crptS, drps, blblS, DOUBLE' Carno ans, ~1 wtr, 3 pbse 220 pwr, 10' Motona.iler. 213/37&-5760 County authorir:ed to teach tenance A La.ndacaplnl. Bhop g. Otildren ok. No sive Vttaailles Club and halcony, pool. l BR., furn &: Garage. Avail OIH door, EZ entr & exit. speedwrl.tlflK shorthand &aS-1930 pets. 735 Joann St. CM. pool with unique Aquabar, unturn. Lease. Adults only. Jtme 1st. Storage only. 1100 sq.ft. $155. Da y 1 eEXECUTIVE SEC OWNERS unit 3 br, 1% ba, fountains and formal gar-MalTai Apt&. 1510 W. Bal-Newport Heights. 644-003tl. 6~. eve 613-1417. I ' l[Sl • bltins, dishwhr, firplc, dens. All part ol the South boa, N.B. (n4) 675-4DI. Office Rental 440 M·l 1300 aq. tt, tront office, LlltMllll...... eSECRETARIAL crpt.s, dra, Mesa Verile Coast's finest apartment WINTER, Summer, Yrly, f;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11ry rear door. 1240 Loganl~ RECEPT. area. $240. mo. Water pd. community." Anita's Rental.I, Bkr, 20051 1 St .. $llr> mo. &t&-5033 days I---eCOMPLETE STENO Aval!. June 1't, ~"'82. I Bedroom/.tudio. trom $195 w. Balboa Blvd, 673i21l58, PRESTIGE 641Hl6111 eves. Found llrM eds) 550 eBOOKKEEPING NEWLY DECORATED 1 2 Bedroom from S305 OFFICES R t I W ted 460 •-•-·m, utlliti"e• Pa,. d, Models open-9 A.M. til duak Newport Heights \ en • 1 lft FOUNO large altered male FREE Placement Assi!tancc ut:UJ'\A.I Fountain Valley, Beauti· · trlped Fireplace. $ZX>. mo-to-mo. . ~ CLEAN 1 or 2 BR. Adults, no fill new building, ground E•rl H•rri11 cMatb' 1""'1 ~.... ,.,:_4 SeMuon1,1 In a HURRY? Pre-pare For Re-altor, 644-7270 floor 9891 S I -*L " o e r&&a , u.o11ta eu., THAT GOOD JOB NOW pets.-Lge kit. $~$150. 2421 , 3,000 aqua.re feet, p nneaer Dr. 646-6841. Owner p I ease Tuition Budget Plan * SHADY ELMS-POOL E. 16th St NB ~1801 wiB divide into mn.aller Huntington Be.ch claim. No pets allowed AvaiJ·tJ!.e : ~~~Poo~~4581~P· ON THE BLUFFS omces. 50c per square You are the winner of here! 177 E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 AT NEWPORT I II .,, ~p..,":;\U.:,~~.!l: one tr.e paaa 1'ro~u'°'N~D~S~l,-rne-,.-k~l~t-t-.-. ~ ,-kit service. Call Marilyn ' Good for a whole calioad vicinity Stiakey'• p I z z a E to any at the Parlor, Ne~ Beach. Ht Bluff From Newport Blvd., tum at =----;;;;.; SWva11 cn<J m544(), p·•c1F1c EA -~· -------1 HO<]>ital Road (I block • II TH TRES f.:.'!~. ~ for Int e DELU>f.E e above Pacific c.oast Hwy) to Rooms 400 SHARE beautiful 1200' 3 BR, 2 BA Afll for lease. entrance. 900 C8.gney Lane, ----------office, fully c•rpeted fSU~jed: to amaII 1erv:ice TRI-colored male Bas!let [ncld spac. master suite, Newport Beach, Ca. 92660. FURN sleep'r rm, pleasant •nd furnished. Gre1t charge at theatre). Hound wefll'ing heavy black din rm & dbl garage; auto Telephone: ('n4J 645--0060 · tr •~ ~ t P1eaae call 00·5678 ext. 314 leather colla.r with broken door opener avail. Pool & ~~~I~ ;nt ';; ~ U:, for CPA, ln1ur•nce, to claim your ticket. (North ~:.~alvlclniHIYB ,!>i,!S_ Jl Recreation artt: EXCLUSIVE elderly. Llnena 1: wkly M.lnuf. R-.,., or Seer• Cowrty toll-free number ls ~·"'A" e, · · -...-. • 1287 • BIG CANYON cle""""p, 64'71361. torl•I Service. Contoct 54<),1Zl71). FOUND -Young whl"' , 865 =J~: NB Luxury Golf CourH C.M. pri bath A: entrance. Ginny 557-4130. Wanted to Rent ~~:, ~ CM~*~) WI Kitch privl. Runvi.ble. OFFICE 444 Old 3 Bed r oom unfiJrn1lhed • 11~--.. , LLIAMWALTERSCO. Apartments Call bef 11 Ql, ~i-Tn9 Newport:rv:ea'blU N of hDUle wtthttMedyard.b Co•t& Mesa B e t . Huntl"lfOn a.:.c.;_ ~15R_T .!,.EACH Ma.Y .ElltD ~-... __ ,, _ • Cout Hwy 1.• 3 dratting °rih, docl 5&-<DS3 ~·'ISln' I -"" .,....., SllARE Adult Condo. with & l ~. I'm.· All tor RESPONSIBLE m a rrie d ~UUNU -pretty' t r e nd I 1 BUSINESS INSTITUTE E.'CPER. Japanese Gardener. Complete yard R'Y. Rella. A neat. Free est. 642-4389. Heull119 YARD, ~ cle&nUJll. Remove treM, dirt, Ivy. Driwwya, andtna. 847-~. GEN Haullna. Tree/Sbnlb trim. Gar A Yd cleanup. Est. ~~. 5S7"'904. LOCAL movlrc &. haulln& by student. Larp truck. Reu. 5.14-1846 or 5.14-2164. ... ,,, I . I _,. ,.. ' I .1 Cost• M•,. WAITING LIST OPEN Phone 714/•4t 0509 owner. Private room. $300/rno. Util Jncl. 2nd fir couple need cozy 1 to 2 BR honey co1oftd part ma1e Kitchen privil-. Color w/ocean view. 54 8-5300 home with yard on Cocker.Vic.LqwiaCaeyon GffiLS 7-UI, Swtm, surf, LM COMPLETE HOUSE "IV THE NEW -&~.. Eullide CM H B Refs Rd volley ball, artl .l crafts. &: CLEANING SERVICE. 11•, DELUXE APARTMENTS Air Cond • Fl'plc'.11 • 3 SY.iim· min&" Pools • Health Spa · Tennis Courts • Game and Billiard Room. 1 Bedrm. From $165 2 Bedrm. From $205 MEDITERRANEAN for l,2or3BRApt at the VILLA YORBA lluntington Beach (714) 842-9622 TV. Pool. $90 mo. 548--3738 eves. 5S?-'79'3' or • · · • Call 4~7333 goOO vibes. 5 mornings 11 * 6t6-6&f3 * 5'8--306a * '•11 HAYWOOD APARTMENTS aft ?PM OFFICES AVAIL NOW. Vic k 4 ,,. C pl · r '" -St c • • n_ •. ,, ROOM ~'th k"•t-•-n ~v fo• FND: Watch. ROid. Ladies \.\'ff • \.\'"'" om ete in o LADY wantl houleclea.rdnl Jn Newport Beach are ROOMS $18 wk Up w/k.it $30 l 1w · .M. ~ '""" 1SU1te1, .... T .,~ ~·· • • Vic of parking fot by Ba.skin Call 536-1712. work. Expeor. Own tn.na. ' I ready. The sales ottice ii wk up &pt& Orlldren &: pet cpta, drps, $150 &: $175. 1-5 summe~ ~73~0. Robbins, N.B. Please klen-847-3837. open daily from 10 AM to section. ~76 Newport Blvd., Rm. UX>. ample park tity 673-5812 ~,-'7,-""'-,,,----- 6:30 PM. MacArthur Blvd. CM. 548-9755, 64S-..1967. space. Suitabel Dr. Dent. . . P•lntlfttl & .,, &: San Joaquin Hills Road. 'ROOM w/beth. Furn. or un-Rltr. Med Lab. Account, FND -o~ }oq' haired I I~ PiperMntlnt 644-5565 furn. Kitchen prtv. etc. 642-U'l2 I l(•ijlCI cat. Vic. Marquerite It ..._ .., ...... • !i67"859 • ruu. SERVICE A I ca ... Coast Hwy, CdM, Male. . . ... Now~ 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath, 3 BR. 2 ba. Nr. beach $35G W Jiff a,, Id ~ alt 6 * WALLPAP R * VILLAGE 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. 1n4J 557.SOO.O RENTAL OFFICE OPEN 9:30 AM lo 5:30 PM bulltln1 ful~ ce-ted 2 BR, Penlnaula ,,,,,,,,$250 WANT lady for rm A private etlc -I 1.,. 1 • r-· MARSHAlL Realty 67S-t600 Ba Jn lowly N.B. home. Kit O:lrner Westcliff Drive &: CLUTCH p u r • e with Bebytlft'nt When you ct.11 "Mac" Children 0 • $145. per NEW 8ayfro pri Be priv. Car nee. $'15.. 548-6288 IIVlne Blvd., New Port Announcements 500 ~ glasees. 19th ~. 548-1414 eves. • ,, '! month. Call DALE, Pier JBR, 28'!", ~ m:;. Beach. Mr. H o ward Costa Mesa, ~9387 aft. Bruce Mera. PAIN11NG a: repair 35 yn ' •· 962-4471 . Jy. 979-0631or6#4510. R~Mm!:h:e~to~ ~ 646-6101. Rory Peplx 1=00 p.m. 26011 C•brlllo worlananahlp suar'. Take ' *MOVE IN TODAY* EASTBLUFF beaut nu apt, CM 641)..:9136 l RM deluxe 9tlite, adj. 1629 A Caraway F°f!UNID medium \\small I~ S•n Ju•n Caplstr•no advantqe of m.Y exp. !~.: 28 28 ••--Hotel I< O.C, Cott• u_M ..... ma e puppy, go uc:n You are the wtnne• ot 5l&i'ftl06. r More Room-Le11 Money COME .see a real garden a pt! Like living In a home tor $162.50/MO. 2 BR, 11,2 BA. 2 prk'g places, priv patios & rec arca11. Wilson Gardens, on Wilson St., \Y. of Harbor. No child./pet. 2283 Fountain Way East 646-2816 HARBOR GREENS Furn. & Unfurn. Fr $130. Bach, 1, 2 & 3 BR's. Modela Open 10 'til 7 pm. 2700 Petenon Way, CM. nr. Har- bor Blvd. & Adams. 546i0370 Spac. 2 & 3 BR. ~49 & t'Wl. R, A. nu bltins, pool .. ~ue1t u-. 415 ~~~ me ,.~--y•-tnth• ,..____ • 111 f~-AweA:~~·tc:1.11c:fk 1;;;'·~5=F DR. PRIV &:~:available for ~ !;1'te:;r~.c~ti You;::!~ ot c1el·M;'fm..03s3 ~ \.UIVllK r.ood ~·a~f:':arload P!°u':· ~l ~ "::: l.".'J \" r Beach Blvd u SJ t ambulatn..., ........ ' ..... .i..... DuPont, Rm. 8. 833-3223 Good for a whole carioad SPAYED fem dog, ?mos., to any at the Rehl. 548-2759. ;j,0 847-G;O, ·• 0 a · 2 :!l.2~~~n applian~. care&: n~&;';~_ .... '6 D~ space available $50 to any d. the :e ti'!:.,~~·~ ~i!: PAClfJC THEATRES C.M.B. PAINTlNG I WALK TO BEACH Apts,, , Summer S::ia 420 ::;•is~ ~ ":"~:;! PACIFIC THEATRES Hto, Lquna, 4>Hl815. F:""~~T "' New 2 BR, O'pt/drps, Fum. or Unfum. 370 available. 17875 Beach Blvd. FND: h@avy Wan 15th & (Subject to mna.U aervice 1 •--E lo I r d5hwshr, frpl. 205 15th. CORONA del Mar 2 BR. Huntington Beach. 642-4321 (Subject to small IUVice Santa Ana Ave., CM. Iden-cbqe at theatre). nter1Ur xtlr r ··i 817'-3$7. Costa M... t ·1y • t 1 bl charge at theatre). tity. Please call 6C2-5678 ext. 314 W&ll coverinp •·••• 6'5-S925 rum rm ap.. urn. k EXECUTIVE sulte1, Im· Plt&R call 00.56'18 ext. 314 548-5830 to claizn )'OUf' ticket. (North P•tloi 2 BR, 2 BA, $210. Adult Gene Hovatter ~~I~ :n· t: =-';,.~ mediate occupancy, Coast to claim )'OUr Hcket. (North FNO: Young male Seal PoJnt County toll·he number 11 ---------; ~~~lde~~e~~r.:'g 3205 Minnesota Ave. 61$-ll'.18 1.!:rPie attr!'ew:~ k ~~: County toll-tree number Is Siamese. Vic. Warner & 540-12'20l. \\'OOD PaUo Coven, Qiu 1 patio. 6 Pools. Sauna. Ten-Cost• Mes• COMPL tum 3 Br on wtr, 642-444. 540-1220). Springdale, H.B. 846-5158 lttATURE woman will care Croes Lattice, Ga rd en nls. 846-0Z':l9 You are the winner of Bal Isl. June $300; Aug 2 EXEX.:'UTIVE otftce f nt ALLEVIATE anxieties fean FNO· % 9\eiilerd % Sam for your home & children Struct\lft1. For AP pt , 2 BR. Newly decorated. Walk one free pan \.\'ks .$250, 4 wkl $900. in omen ot Lqunacr C:A, guilt. Be healed through oyed. Vic. OruJP ll nei w~lle {,':t vacation. Xln't ------"--The"-"Good--G-"'_'_· -I I',. to OCt>&n. Encl gar. Bit-ins. Good for a whole carload 67'"".>-6737 fl'5 per month. 4M-9751; 1ugestivc meditation. Call Mar, C.M. M!!-JOOJ.. ft'.. ves. MS--0574 or Phofotr•phy fl~/rno ·-"IS5 t ol th TI4·. """' ....,.. 545-2529. 60-6480 • • ...,., · ~ · o any e SECLUDED New Port __,...,,_... FOUND preenant cat. Vic. CHll.D CARE I bom NEW 2 BR, 2 BA. drp" ** BRAND Now 2 Br, PACIFIC THEATRES bland. Swnmer rentals, OFFICE --. tor rent. Sao)ta Eaabelle A Santa Ana depondable 4 ,.:;..~ Otll~ crp:, P1ool, BBQ,~~· trplc, gar. Walk to beach! availabl~ now. 6'13-6210, Newport Beaoh, Wntcliff 1 ll•J AVf., Cbrta Men. 54&--172.9 ren from 2 to 5. 54MJ.'5. W. H. Roborh 2706 Llth"-M leM C°"'"" del Mor Ad ti on y, no pets. • 410 21st St .. H.B. Mike. (213) 3n*4640 collect. art'a, 1,000 11q. ft., sharp, Pwa nm OLDER Great Dane 1 "====<"''7"-.,,~- Bay. WALK to beach. Luxury 2 (Su~~etoa~a:~icc LIDO hie, 4 BR. 3BA. home call Gene Hill, 642--0200. Brtndle fem. Fnd Vic. BABYSl1TING Anytime • AITRAC. new, lrg, l & 2 BR BR, l" BA w/prage. 506 Pleruie call 64Ui678 ext 314 July $1al0, Aug, $1400, days HUNTINGTON Beach, pvt • Irvine &: Mesa Dr. $7-786l Ucensed, hot meals, at- ii.pb!. Crpbl, drps, bltns, 17th St. 846-5617 to cla.Jm your Udc:et. cNorth 962--1356, ews 675-87tl6 bath. Ott street prkg, uW 530 FEMALE G~at Dane -Vi c. lention, Ph. 96S--0887 H.B. Adµllll, no pets. $135 up County toll·free numbcr ii UDO late Waterl.ront 3 Br/2 pd, adj PO, Mr Lanr Personils ,,Santa Ana l Del Mar. PROFESSIONAL te~r You are the wlMer of one free pau Good for a whole carlo&4 to any of the ' I 646-01'16. L~un1 8ffc'h 540-1220 Ba. .Tune/July $'1250/mo. ~1301 VETERANS Fawn. SG--0223 will care for childn!n. Nilc1 VALUE -quiet -2 Br, LAGUNA -te THEI. EX~'G Aug. $1500. 673-88116. OFFICE SPACE days, wkends. 645-1057. crpts, drps. dshwshr, pool. living on PALM M s~'u' NR ' hannel 3BR Earn $4.58 to n.oo per hour WllITE cockapoo puppy I PACIFIC THEATRES ,, Mature adult~. No pets $135. acres of gardcna. Wide E A APTS. ocean, « c , . Newport Beach. Varlou!l 11ize guaranteed by uslnr your Fountan Valley are a , Builnul Service -p ·1· A o:~a -ocean viewB. I..ee., cultom 1.UNUTES TO NPT, BCH. 2BA, $250-$275 wkly. Day1 1Wtee., prime area. Call G.l. Bene0tg whil«" at· 531-3'121 ~ a.c1 ic ve . ...-oo•o. decorator apt.I. F rp I cs, , Bach 1 & 2 BR. from $150 6'15-5.l66. aft 5, 548-3.2'J6 manqer G'15--l.2Xl tending Santa Ana College. SMALL black kitten with --- GARAGE apt, Pr I m e close to beach. Swimming A.dui•a No Pet., Vo••tlon R~ol1 425 Call now BOOKKEEPING .l Account. Eastsldc Joe, l BR unfum, t n 2 BR 2 oo•'--..., -.... FURNISHED &: unfum. of-••r-~ -E t ,,0 fl ea collar on .Avocado St, In&" Se:vlce, ay1tenu de-65mo 67S4630 poo 900 · ·• .. .,.,. ,. 1561 Meu Dr. lice suites. Easy acce!J5, ;J't """' x ~ Costa Me1& &6-4124 signed tor your )ookkeeplna: CSUbject to tmall toervice charze at theatre). Pleue call 642-5618 exr. 314 to claim your ticket . (Nol'th County toll·tree number J1 ""'1Zl71) . ~looJ Owner/~n: v e 1 ~nl:n3t ~~tl!y 'at~ to:. (5 bllc:I fro~ Blvd.) NORTH Lake Tahoe Dollar $55. &. $65. mo. 23.1.1 E. flTLLY UCENSED SMALL honey~lored kitten, needs. Free Est Im ate 1, 2 BDRM, util. turn .. crpt, Considerate adults. 4M-4653 * CASA VICOORIA * :!Tet. M~e: io~T;nJ: ~~!wyO~.~~~::, Splr~$~~ !"m.10 ~l~::bor~ =· jus! to. ---~~·-------Pli•t•r, Patch, R.,.lr d~ range & retrlg .. Older or your broker. pool• beach. For ln1o (415) $155 Allio 600 ft pm. Advice on all m~ttert. C _. Serv * PATCH PLASTERING l I• adults, no pell. $150. mo. ,LARGE l bdrm bltm 1 &: 2 BR. Fum & Unfum, 622-2177 or write P . qtrs ' ~ · 312 N. D Camino Real, San FND: Wht German Shepherd Irr:! Tee All type FrM ltlmate $35. security, 839-5l66 Sunset Terrace % blk tci C.arpett, drapes, D/W' TV Petenen, fi5.-K RedbW Cir-SI'ORE, tt.55. C.M. &t&-~ C I e me n t e • 4 9 2 -9136, mix. Vic. F. V. 963-5795 JOHN'S ~-• u-~•-te~ Calli. c.in. !.,. & \ > .__ _. • ant. Pool, etc. Come by in. cJe Tiburon, Calif 94920 ~u Idle lft!1n1 642-5618 ...... .,..., • ..,....... ·o1 .....,._,, • LAR.. 3 br, 2 ba, crptl, dru..i. bee.ch. Panoramic ocean quire about our Mow-In • · • · f.92-90.14, MAY 13th. Irish Setter. Drl·!llampoo tree Scotch-Pl bl I bltins, $170. mo. 78T view. $275. mo. incl ulil. Allowance 525 Victoria St. e FREE Yosa 64&.8997 suant (Soil Ret&rdanti). _u_m __ ... .;..-----l I Shalimar, 554--0372. ll 00 Eve Cn4) 982-7821 at Harbor; C.M. 64).&970.. Demonstration Mon at 10am1m'=o"."'Sh=ut"ten="'aou"""t"'H"wy-.-Degreucra &. all color L.R. OTIS PLUMBING I 1 ans. 645-4512. Cl..ASSIFIED will sell tt! lBR lBA tum $UIO T: d f Pa d• .l 8pm. Yop Center, 445 E. ~7 hrllfttenen .l 10 minute Remodels .l Repain.. Water ** SPACIOUS 2 BR, crpi., MoH Vorde 2BR 1BA unrum pSo I ra er s ra 1se !!J.h ..,.'!t. Coot• >le I. 7 Lott 555 bleact. for wb).. c..,..11. heaters. dlopolalo, rum..:... I drapes. $140. Marncd pref. 151 E. 21at St. C.M. .,...,...._,..._ Sav• yaur money by aavlnc dthwuhn:, 642-QS.3 MIC 'I: j 673-8146 aft 6. DLX 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba. Encl * ~ * 1 PROBLEM J>reanancy, Con-REWARD! tor any In-n~ extra trips. Will cle&n BIA. Complete Plulnblna LRG 2 BR, crptt, drps, gar. $165 up. ~nlal Ofc., NEW l BR Furn $190 Uni l1"nes tldent . sympathetic tonnation rt1ard1na" the ltvll'tl rm., dinln1 nn. A _Serv!co""'""'"'·==,.-,===--bl~. prlv. patio. No pets. 3095 ft1ace Ave, 546-1034. $170. Adulta, nO pets. n .. E. preirnancy countellng. Aber-dlsappearance or a large h•ll $15. Any rm. $1.50, PLUMBING REPAIR t·· Sl 55. 557-6(8). Newport IMcft rotb St., 548-0137; 646-4095. ~-A: adoptionl ref. collection of •kin diving :~h J10~gi:1rc!it~ ~ No job too small 2 BR. Adults/ no pet.t. BAY 1 'BR. 1o~urn .l Unf. Pool nr t1"mes "A;;;;,l'cARE""""==-=,...,,6C-1436o:;:::!!" gear. SpedaJ._Sam~·HaJtlonll method. T do "'Ol'k my1elt. * * $0..3128 * * MEADOWS AP'!'. 387 W. PARK NEWPORT PREGNANT! Th In k I ng gpear '"°' • •"'-•>P (lood rer. ~117'110!. S.wl ... /Alterotlon1 1 , Bay St. CM. &16--0073 shops. Adullfl, no pets. Util abot'tlon? Know all the tacil muk, from Irvine Terract: - $140 up. 2 Br., 3 Br., 2 Ba . Pool, blt·ins. play yard. 1996 Maple. 642-3813 LAR. 3 Br, 2 Ba. crptl, dnu, Nr. OCC. Freshly pntd, UJlflWl'I. $179. 557-0.150. NEW 2BR lBA, carpet.I A dnl.,.., bulltna. $185, Roy McCardle Rea.ltor, 54&-rn& OVER 40--Adultl o n I y , """"" lloor, 2 br, patio, newly crpt A: dra. 642-1740 UNF. 2 BR, 1 ~ BA. Adultl only, no petl. fl.50/mo. 810--C Joann St. 548-0073. SMALL 1 Br, Eastskie. Util Pd. l adult, no pet. Yrly. P4Ml45. ~ 642-11520 The ''Yellow Pt.ll!1'" of clustfied •.•. 542--5878. APARTMENTS pd. 11184 Mnrov!R. 54&--0336 d II tint! can LIFE LINE -:M hnrne. 67:H710 Carpenter Alter•tlo...,,..2"5145 I On the bay Hun lin"'on Beoch 0 ars hrl, 5<H522. LOST bl&ck l wbl"' cat, aJ, N N t accurat -I •• 1 _, t a1 , ··t M EW, remodi:I. ft1unt> 1;; ea, e. ~ yeuw up. I· YOUNG COUPLES l&-35 -t er..... ~ e. ~ tieen llY flnbh, store&, officc1 & • l,uxury apartment livi~ LA QUINTA HERMOSA '-----------------.J Pa.rt\es or meet cpl to ~ 6th, C~ 9M:ftl atta. home• etc. Cuttom work. overlooklna' the water. En-SD&nlsh Country Estate Uv· PRIME rdal ~-t HAVE ~ chol •--"' Call "Leah" 2-Spm. 53'9---~call. REWARD! U.-.naed. 962-1961 . joy $750,000 heallh «Pll. 1 fng &. Spack>ul Apt1. Ter--eom~ •wn . '"ac. Cl ll&llU on ALCOHOUCS Anonymous, 9 "1".J.JQ.6. swimming pools, f llahled need pool, aunktn 811 otalr comer, S.3 acres. FtM Va;n Buren bl 'JUvenkle Cir. Phone S42-nt7 or .mtie ''LO""'=ST"',=,.,.--,,...-1-.. -ed~-m-ale A ll Type1 C•rpentry tf!nnil courta, plus mllea of BBQ. Ullibelievable 1.Jvinc. A: clear. F.qWty, $3:50,lm. IUtO.OC:WH, water, elec., gu. P.O. Box l22l, c:o.ta Mesa.. eat, 11"&¥ w/wh:ltti Pf.WI "' '""~Lary==• ,:,or"""Srn:;;;;all;,;;;5,16,;;;,;;1648::,=,~ blcycle traU1, putttna, tltu1, 1 BR, UNFURi/ m5 l'nde for Be"°" ""' eorni WANT IAouna lncorne --· Vic s.n4 C..U Dr GENERAL CARPENTRY neboml. eroquet. Junior 1'1 t BR, TURN $1!5 mtrelitl or IT n-79, Mr, f'oQ, ftltr. '9fit.288. SWINGING SINGLIS 11·_..:_ v·u Ill"-n!, _ _;• AND REPAIR ~ ·Call "~" u pm, ·-~~ •• -:::::... ... ·-~·· .u."'11 SU9li0 moathl,r. lllo 1 2 BR. FURN $Zl5' WANT cl.tu tate mod. mtr. O.C. nnch cloM tn, 47 ac. ~ ~VlhliJ • 675--52:11 • and 2-bedroom plana and AU. l1l'll.n'IES PAID hm. Trade (4) 1" ac, 0) 10 Nat Fcrett ptewQ, fC'lme Social Cllitts "' SMALL wood Jocko 2-stOIY town hou9el. EllOC-bt Adul~O PetJ t c p&rcd Yucca V&l/JOlhua rec am. [deal holdlnc synd aculpture tn orange bq by trie kitchen#, private pt.tlol <4 :;,. 9. of blk ~ ~ rr area. Val $1.SM 613-3472 croup. wilm. app, tak• PAT! LOVE WORN Vlc.10f' HUKO'•. R. e w a rd • 011 balconle•. e&rpctlna, dra· on • ..., ch, l • on ott or 3l'll Kt'Wimee Dr CdM trd boat, dart or 1 ~ o•·--r DISCOVERY -· ·~ -~ -~ -· to -u PatUlde Lane.) • . ~~ -lnK with elevaton. Optional (714)-3'7-$U1 -~ ac. Ho; 9an Dieso Cnty HA.VE..OORONAOO 27, PROFESSIONALS In a f'ltld SMALL wblte ted<Qr bear. maid ~. Just north of t BR. Deluxe . .Adult poohdde: 15 ml. • Rancho Ca.lit. (val. wn..t. TR.ADE USE OF of Amateur Matchrnaken. Losl 5/13. Reward! Fuhion llland at Jamborea aarden bungalow, n ea r JEliO Pfl' ac) Will trade all BOAT FOR DOCK SPAQ;, fEAt. 1996). 84~1 and &m Joaquin Hills Road. ocean. Frptc., lrJ patio, 6 or put for O.C. proptrty or Clll s:J3...Z60, (TI4l ~ (213) 387 .. 3393 I.OST 2 pearl tngu rtna. Telcpborle (n4) 6'4-1900 pools, sauna, le:nnLs. $160, ?. 54s-= or MJ..mO. Evtt: tl57·'1MB Vic •• of 1'111hlon f8h1nd . ror mital lr1ton:n1Hon 846-0'259. CLAmnED .... , . 642-~ Rewan:I. ~%>M ' I ~' l ' Cement, Concrete 1'"0UNDAT10NS -Artistic Pl&nten, concrtte &: hnck paUoe, etc. Uc'd 644-0087. PATIOS, walkl, drlw1. Saw. break, remove A replace concrete. M&-8668 for e1t. PATIOS-PLANTERS All Con~e work. ~'\.1. TIME FOR QUICK CASH ",. ' ~. ' ~1 ... , THROUGH A DAILY Pilot WANT AD 642-5671 1 -----~~-4 ' ,,, '" , .. ,, lll " ~. - , I • • ...... ,.., 21, 1973 l[ll) I 1 e't"•' • ,, j ' . 1 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~I -..... w...._ Ma, 110 11o1p wMIW. M & ' 111 Ho1p w-. Ma ' 11 l[ll} I r , ... " l{Il)I ~~· :~·: ~1 ~··~JJ~L ~·:;·a; ~1 -~0~_t)l~I' ~~' ~ll~Jll~' ~$ 1~11 ~1 ~l[IJ]~J l I 1;.., Wonted, Mlle 700 HolpWanhd.M& P'111 HolpWant.d,MIP71 w..-.M&P71t .._ HolpW ...... M& P71t ~W...,.,,Ml1'710 OPENJN<ll ... _.._,. 1;..;.;....;_.._..._ __ -:-. llAPl!:RY --.11o HAIRD'.llltsEMll LVN-Owwo" Med. i.11.,. KAN ., -mu ,,_In ddll.,... ...,.-. T.,..1:::;;::fi;~;;~I EL M._ -""""' AUTO SALES CASH!_~,·-·-'!..,. noc. Ila""'• llrat>trY ARE YOU TIRED l/tlaW. lmmod. H.B. ..... ttntsJ ,..,,s. ~-In-. .,.Uc O>tp. 1llSl """"""IP...!. fl>ntrol G. Mgr , t!Juo to manqt: mott':I. Good Et~rltrlce prtjm'l!(f. will Must Mw exp. a:HAC'.• --.--~ l&ll Oh.ma tlQ. OF WORKING POR ~ W/hl!M bazxlwnd.128o WW St., Irvtne, 9'19-4dO Sa.let Enalneer dqtte JWC J ;,;;·.,c:l:, = aft ' ~.~=-~New =cs~· ~.r..,.ln CM • • SOMEONE ELSE? IAACH!NISTS :;:-... m ~-lS30 Outbnl Molor Mochanlc ~~d .. = I Good benefits. t 0t fMWe ~ n. Oean ~t at111Uon in extlOlfve 5 Yn min. upcr. Dtveni· MAtfA~ wutetL &nail to beautiful L 11 k r Ar-Mtd. trnt ofc .-' rommlPlon and'lleU>o • CR. CHECKER DRi\iER; Put 'llmo. Malo Be in -.. /Or ....-r. E>lpa1mooW " -. Summtt or...,...,.,,,.-· -I RE c E N T 1. Y a r r I v e d co. n BrAtU'UI modern ban.le nefdJ cut .cionon1:1 car Mlast salon near s. a.st Pim. fled wort&: Jo6d Manu1. of Nen"ation dub. No fJ'· rowtftd.. Call ( 7 I "4 J Inven. Oerk $t50 Jap9nete,&tudH!twantajob ~l'llOn~ =·Com lodlv.wtthllkexper.'Mlil kmW.-~ cOua1y Weoflf!f'recepllonl1t lnstrum lation. Adva.ocl.'d ptl.iet:o:Dl!Cll..,..~ 3314501. SecretariH $650 t u Jive-in bowie boy to l\fesa co. ~ from withl.n. 835-3140. ll"l'Yice llnl!ll RIV lkint en , im m...-.. _-.-1 ff Receptil')'plst , j share American tamlly file. .;:;;.;;::;;·==;;-:::::::--::::::::;-Siart SflO, all Unda Ray, modem° equip. pvt~ Kinetics", ~ ·-.--MANAGEft4ENT OVER fl uperle~~ 00 ee Eacrow Oler ...__ AlrrOMaJ'IVE ..,... manul. 5AO-SJ06, Coutal Pe"°"""' Earn Xtra Morw1 HURRY • st., C.M. "6-Tlt5. Equal TRAINEE ""°"a ~room woltreaa O•ri< fypist Job W~nted, Fem1le 702 •"""'•• •.,~n· ',.•, m...-e ch . Aaency, 2790 llarbor Bl\'d, Work from )'OtJf' b om• -Only 2 ata.Uonl llOW' avatl Oppor . .Emplayer. . .i.o ~ Mr. 512 ~ Keypt.1nch ..... CM 01C09e your own time. Fir Call 546-8491 fer appt , MAOIJNISl' GDriERAL Our home ottk:e is lit· SL, ...... ta rsa. Stat Typist NEED help at hOme'! We ::~~· ~"" ..;,: QflLD ca~my home. 5 dys. lntnvlew, 540-0028, Miu eeorpana, Mar Oni.ifv C.M. CD. nee& eclOd uated an a liutt ~ Kltcbcn $48--0366. Acetng Oerk $500 l ha.ye a.idea, nu r •es, trade. \Ve ha\l'e Pa 1 d wk. SUmmer oo1y. Call aft. ELECTRONIC TECH HOUSEKEEPER • Taite all arQl9d ~-· ~ looking the Pld1lc Ooeart w h' Gen. Acctng Orie to $650 11 ho u • ekpn;, comptUllons. holidayg, vacatklns, 1111. 5, 5.5l--Q508. I: Lal:n.tory. BacQround charge ot HlUll. Harbour d~ A~putL ~ i: Newpot't Harber. U are seman Le&al Secretary S&50 ' Homemakers UP j 0 h n • l)enaion pla.n. Call 642-7391 CLEANING ~n office 41iital A analogue dttuJt:ry. home w/2 nke »ehool • ~er etc. 40 'br wk _ )'OU qualey, we ofltt you Gal. F'rl Med Bck&md ts5l:l 1 . 547-6681. for appt toe interview or ap-N.B. 2 hrs. in eve. Send Dlvtl"liWed wort load ln children. EXp'd ori\y . .$300 Steady CaU 642-«8> for th1il unique work environ· Sec y/Constr I .A.-} HOUSE CL£ANING .. ""·in-ply at S58 Production Pl., resume, Claaaitied ad no. production .&: u.ttna ot In-per mo. Call 846-3024 or appt • mftrt &: • challenging SHIP & REC EXPER Pertonnt ""•ncy .i dov.·s. c~ •hampooed. N,B. Mon-Fri 8-S. 639 c/o Dally Pilot. P.O. strumentation. Advanced 846-ffiSl. · profeatonal opportunUy. NEWPORT call btwn 9 am Ir. 6 prn. cA"U;=;T;,;0-Gc;;-liiR<;L;"-iF'°R0 1"D°'A;;Yv-~ 1560• Costa Mesa, Ca. KinctiC'I, Inc., 12l1 Victoria HouukHper, f/tlme MACHIN1STS we are eeeking an in· Top$$$ 133 Dover Dr., N.B. 496-1864. EXPERIENCED . St., C.M. 646-n&S, E qua I ~ dlvidual w/min l..l yrs Solid Irvine Company 642·3870 BABYSITTING, hte houae-P/timc. Alf deaks. Good CLERK TYPIST Oppo•. Employ«. DAVENPORT B"'"""' Exper. Clerical Coll lmmediaiely work 'in your home. Avail· typiat. Stt Mrs. Slaughter, Part lime. l pm to 5 pm. ELECTRONIC meehank:al IN PROCESS -Set·UP Men ·SllperviAory exper. proefd. able weekends on1y, please Mon thru t~n at Countywkle Moi:1·Fri ... S2.50 hr. Blll..ing, assembly. Will train. Pal INSPECTOR Salaiy'wi!J be in accord· call after 6 PM &C-5697. Rambler, 12222 Card e 11 typing, fihng, etc. Must type E J e ctr 0 0 i cs 6 3 91 Receiving & final inspection BROWN ance w/exper. & qUaliti· LOOKING I.or Apt. managtng Grove Blvd, Garden Grove. 50 wpm. Fast growing O;>st.a we• 1ml'n 1 t er' Ave,, o! electro mechanic a I cations. For comidera· job. Pttf. beach area. 1 AUTOl\IOBlLE exper. only Me 11 a E ~t r1° :a,1 ct! WrsJnll.nster. as8em·b~ ~a 4 l elec· &: SHARPE tion please send resume 7-yr-old. Expcr. 53&-8539 need apply -SI! r v l c e Dfullis~~tori! desired ~33 ELECTRONICS technician tronid!iru,1~ n, Yl'I ex· set-lJp Men & salary history to: M a F 710 cashier, bookkeeping. Sal me · t QC --uni,. ........ ~. per · Good Xln't co ~-H•lp Wented, open. Dean Lewis lmporta, Mornings pleaae, Mr. Tuttle 0 llflers Pai ... E'lec~.. 549-3041 wages. · ..._ .. ..,.. Acc0UNTANT, exp'd, for _..._=_,!003~;,· ,.. ..... ,..,..--•COLLECTOR: Small unit ~f wesbrunster Ave~; F.qual Oppor. Employer ~'!iLPe~i ::?'o=r:: C'la.ssified ad no. 872 cl o Daily Pilot e P.P.S. Pacific Personnel S.rvh::e1, Inc. 500 Newport Center Dr. Suite 900, N.8. 640-1970 load Newport Center CPA AVON SAYS desk, credit or colltctkln ex· Weatrnhuiter. INDUSTRIAL firm. Must be CPA can-''Be Your Own Boss'' per. pref'd., but will train EXP'D Blood draY.'t?r for ENGINEER PANTRY Man • 2nd Cook, I didate or CPA. Recent local Earn an lnooote of your own, right pen10ni.,gontac;t Mr. busy clinical lab. Salary PACIFIC TUBE CO. has an F.qual Oppor. Employer nites. Exper. req'd. Apply firm exp de!irable. Nu posi--· ht · own neighbor Clbt. at 642-· commensurate w I exp. immed openIDa: fot" an In· "-·--d•-~rauo· n •!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~~~~I betwn 3&5. Cyrano's, 600 D P. O. Box lMO. Costa ...... ea. 92626 NITE FOREMAN~ t ... n due to growth. Salary nhoodg • "'a.yam-an AVON Re......: COMPANION -Prefer 64)-(1140 bet 10 & 5. dus~al Eng; ........ : Must ~1 -J '-')"<' E N.B 156 r·-.... .. ... -.o.o. Setup exper req'd tor not-MANAGER TRAINE Newport Center Dr, · open. 64+-6 sentative. Call oow! widow betwffn •ge1 EXPER. fire&: casuality in· have a degree A a min_ 2 ching, tapping, drill Ing, Outstanding opportunity to ACCOUNTING !'>46-5341 or 54l).7041 5o..60. Care for bed pa· sun.nee secretary. yrs exp as an IndustnaJ debuning, broaching. & advance to managerial posi· PART TIME TECHNICIAN BABYSI'ITER needed UPM, tient-live in. Room & 6Tl-4899 ~eer wl.th a ba~und other machine operations. tion in 30-.fiO days. Our cur- CITY OF vi Be h & •-_ d I n , 1 Ja•-tn wock SJmplificanon or Xln't co. benefits. Perm rent m a n a g e r s earn NEW ACCOUNTS CLERK SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO my home, c. ac uu.r' saery ope ·EXPDwomen .or ."".even· better methods systems, 'Ito /good h f $l()()(l..ll500 mo. Must have S~-$879. Ability to perlorm Magnolia, HB Reference1 required. lng (alt 10 P~) Jarutortal plant 111.)'0U't job eva.luation post n \V c Mee or direct sales experienei?. 1 em i -Professional a~-• iiiiiiiiii..;536--034liii; ...... iiiiiiii"" I 961-1931 \\'Ork & supervision. 97'9-3f52 & new equip justification. advancement. Call Mr. Newman 979-5222 50 W.P.M. typing , sh pre(er· counu,,. wo•k. Malnta>n i•BANK COOK EXPER EXPERIENCED lf yoo ,.,, you m"" 1h.,. MACHINISTS MATURE M>n !o• night red. PubJic Relations P.R. ' :1 EXIOC. LEVEL I We seek outstanding sales I oriented lady for our lrvine / office. Ideal tor resulta I oriented, career minded, 1 creative woman who likes to ·I 'run her own ahow'. This ia I a responsible & dignified ~ position offering persona.I j = w/re~~~~ ~: i Service. Xint sta.rtin&" salary .. ~ + exp. acct + comm + 'l I auto allow. &: loads of 1 benefits. Call 0 o l ti e , ' 11 ~ for confidential : appt. TE!\!PO TEMPORARY HELP .-l; tinanclal and cost. account BROIL, ER MAN LEGAL SECRETARY qualiflca11ons, forward . a watchman In 1ndustrial -UNITED-recon:ls. typing, filing, ESCROW OFFICER . resume &. salary requll'e· M do 1"' "' UI complex. Some day work. pUrChastng and rel a. t e d Top pay. Apply in penon active ottlce requires legal ments to· I w Payne Per-wit own a e m 833--0519 CALIFORNIA BANK ' 1 work. Two yean expenence Indu1trial-Commercial Loan only. The Derby, 1262 S.E. aecretary exper. in litigation aonnel :M~~r PAb:nC setups & have own tools. _s.t_•ad~y_. _Pb_. ---· ~-Purchasinn Clerk I in bookkeeping or related ProceSllOr for Orange Coun· Bristol, S.A. & commercial matters, Sal-TUBE CO., 5.,.," 'Smith Way Good opportunity Jor ad· ?o.1ATURE exper. assistant 201 Avenida Del Mar ~ .-:j • Id H0 gh School oo·ploma nd •.aw vancement. Xln't woridng m .. n .. .,...r. Lanz, Fashion San Clemente The Irvine Company ue · 1 ty. Top salary. COOK·RELIEF ary_ open. Depe en.•. upon St., City of Commerce, Calif. conds. Perm. -•tton. Good ··-~-... " • or equivalent required. 0}>. I kill &: abil ty to ..--~ Island, NB: U't'f"""t'lll. 492-5123 Knowledge of A/P function . 1 tain. application from 32400 S Mutual Exper. Apply in person only, 8 11' exper. · · 1 90014· . benefits. MAR IN E EN' G IN E as related to rtteiving dept. · Pa.sea Adelanto, or phOne tate Arley wm, Z106 W. Ocean· handle .responsibility. Pleu-equal opportunity employer l\IECHANIC Equal Oppor. Employer helpful. Typing 65 w.p.m. &: :I 493--lln. Deadline May 25. Savings boot, N.B. ~ce, Newport Center. ..Jtf-"' .,..... 'lf:iot: S£CONOARY Must be exper. & cuITent onl~~~'!"'"'"'l"""'""':'!"'"'! I use ol 10 key calculator. AD TAKER COOK, f/timc days. Person-·1'!'~~"!·"'"!!!!!!!!!!~"!"""'!' pleasure boat gas &: diesel PART Time, Ex c e 11 en t Call 644 3389 ' Enjoy rtealing w/the public! Call Szt-1300, exl 264 nel Dept, Hoag HosP.IE:xJ>·o in general &: ad-~ ~ OPERATORS engines, transmissions, out-Typist, knowledge oi spell· Betwn 9im & noon -1 Join the Penny&1.ver team Equal Oppor. Employer Ne\\'J>Ort Beach. vanced bookkeepi,,., thru ~· drives, etc. Highest wages Ing&: grammar, 4 hr d~. 5 "'!~~!'!'""'""'""'"~"'""'I .' I CCDlN"-rra&rrt..11""\/ in indus""'•. Brand n~ day wk. Permanent call ;:; · ol enthuslrun.ic, progress ve COUNTER Girl, hrs 11·7 Mr. trial bal. Must type, answer oA.l\J~-"-'U~ I ... J RAPIDLY growing' boat co • .. ad-ad saJes gals who. • BANK ee,t Cleaner's, 2938 E. phone•, one ~ ofro·ce. H-FEE PAID R-u,·-• lor ta""'ng, oo'-h-facilities at Sunset Aquatic 542-1884 bet 8 & 9am ks 1 •-· "h I jobs F/time Co c t H CdM • Se•nd"' ••1 ~ .. •o:u ...,. "' Park. C~l l,st for appt. 714: Part Time Office Girt, Don see exper. A/P Clerk. ; IVYe t er · · · oas wy, 8-5 dally. resllllU! o Chief Elec. Engr S25J< ing, drtlling, deburring, 846-4!25 or 213: 592-l64S 1he n --choombe•. 3901 E. Irvine Indus. Park location. I beneflta. Apply in pcnion, S exp. education and state ·, broaching, assembly ffe other 0<0J1 Phone 493-4586. Pennysaver, 1545 Newport Pletform ecretary • Croll country salary needed. Wr ite Chief Mech. Engr $25K . Ex 'd anrtiltie. Coo.st HWy, Cd'M. Blvd CM Sh & typi,,., knowledge of d N 674 oa·1 Manu.f. ~iana.ger $25K operataons. per. req . MECHANIC RESUALCCESTESSACTEARE,_ SALESER !' • · · R.E. comm'I & IL Joan Drivers Classified 8 0 · ' 1 Y Sales/Mktg En.gr $181< REXNORD INC PBX OPERATOR AFTERNOON yard teacher documentation. Paying & e Foremen Pilot, P.O. Box 1560• Costa Comm/Ind Loan Proc: $850 ' • Experienced in lawn mow~rs With lite clerical tiling, Tern-Ne-.v or experienced. Join the , 1 for ChrisllM Pre-School. Receivi"" TeIIPn, Collec· e Managori Mesa, Cal. 92626· Management Tme $800 & turf me.inlenance equip-porary assignment in Santa World"s largest and taat.e11t ~. Ca.JI 64frID7 !Ion Teller. Full or p/timc. e A bl FAST accurate typist needed F/C Bookkeeper to $700 Specialty Fastener Div. ment. lo.lust be abl~ lo com-Ana area. Starting int· growing resale organization AN OHIO OIL co. offers 01 '--isem •rl with some medical ex-Cost Accnt Clerk to $680 3130 W. Harvard pletely ryn mamtenru;ice mediately thru Sept. 15th. with a network ol over 300 ,. Expcr. only. e M Id ~ I I I I shop Sa1~--· open Benefits . 1~• S portunlly for high tncoo1e O ers perlence, ·1"'-c n ca Girl Frl/Constr to $650 Santa Ana · ..... ,-· i Victor Temporanes, "'-"' . offices and become-a PLUS cash bonuses. con-Cont•ct Mr. Walsh e Inspector.I laboratory.Eileen,640--0140 Secretaries toSO.S n4/546.SlOO Zl3/58S-2tS4 Santa Ana area, n Anaheim Blvd, Suite 120, member of our Millionaire venlion lri~ and fringe Benk of Costa Mesa e Gel Repeirmen Fiberglass Repairman ~t. Bookkeepre to S600 equal oppor. employer m/f ~7975 Anaheim. Call 635-603l. Club. Multi-million dollar benefits to ma!ure man in 979-4200 All 3 Shifts and Recept/Oictaphone S600 MECHANIC Exp'd, own PBX operator, am. serv. advertising proeram. Free • ' beach area. Regardless of M A/P Clerks to $575 tools, 5 days. Busy "hop, Relief shift. H.B.. guaranteed licensing school. · experience. air mail. S.U. Or Send Resume To We Will Train Stockrooi:n an Sec'y&, no sh to $570 paid Insurance, l 7 4 1 Call 53&-8881 Excellent sales trainiog. Read, Pres., Amer l ca n P. o. Box 2380 MecGr9g0r Y,•ehctMCorp. FA•• .,,'ast !~mg ~~· Girls Friday to !m MACH IN E Anaheim ave., CM. PERSONNEL Please call Vitginla Jone. Lubrjcants Col, Dayton, Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 1631 Pia.cent a, · • PP a ..... pper e Receptionist to -""' MECHANIC Assistant for · ~1. Ohio 454£11. ... ~ .... ~~~!!!!!~~! Corp., 1919 E. Occidental, l>"ree & Fee Positions golf course. Call tor in RECEPT. Rl!Q. CARPET ANSWER 1 NG Service Equal Oppor. Employer CUSI'OMER SERV. DEPT. S.A. CALL TRISH HOPKlNS SHOP terview Mon thru Fri, Due to pro~?" fine local R•eltors wUl traln D\v. of lar. maJ\ute.cturin& ..,ltreah flQwers. Thll time. 488 E. 17th St. l11.t Irvine) CM . dJe troot desk for pet50nnel REAL ESTATE r.""· Coata Mesa. area.. MEN WANTED FLORISI', min. 5 yrs. exp JERRI WHITI'EM~RE 644-0002 co. needs indtvtdual \o ban---.=.,:~;;<:~-I I P pref. or . BANK " ...,._ .... 111 optn'--. " ifoP ll'f'"'• d...:..1--fnedorn S.ult9 224 642·1470 MEDICAL front <>Wee. Ex· dalit.. Will '. belp do in-SALES MANAGER f),40.\771 . ES'clo' .... ..>.UHL ..... ,R,·-~ .._,....>CO. We are 8.n Orange perlenced only. Call 642-8566 tervil:wina &: handle 6eavy * * FtlLL & PA T TIME 1. . V'-"° 1fo" ,,.,. " 't County bearing man-bet..veen 2-4.. phones. Start $475. ca.n Resale Office needs managtt APARTMENT $4. PER HR. FOOD service§ supervisor 12 ufacturer \Vho has MEN & WOMEN 10 27 Gloria Gray, s 4 o-6 o 5 5, with 2 years or Real Estate 956-9341 mo. Under genera I INSURANCE g i r 1 for imn1edinte openings .., c t I p so 1 Ag ·y experience. Newport Beach MANAGEMENT CLERK suJ).!rvision to be responsi· casualty agency in Corona for the fol1011•ing Earn to $342.30 salary per oas a er nne enc ' area. Expanding company. COUPLES ONLY DAY Kitchen Man. Day Bus ble for the operation of the del Mar. Part or full time. positions . mo. while we teach you a 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM Excellent opportunity for MAJOR property inve11tn1ent Boy. Apply 301 No. Twitin School cafeterias to se~ct &: Flexible hours. Seod resume job skill in Electronics. Me-Persnl Counsellor Trne professional growUi. Apply Jlrm now intervi('\\llng C Ave, Santa Ana. ITain personnel to assist in to Classified AD, Nl!I. 870, .. FIRST SHIFT. chanics or Adminislration. Llkc to lry your hand at in confidence. send resume couples for Management Newport enter DELIVERY HELP planning, remodeling &: Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, After training earn $45-60 something interesting & to Classified ad no. 638, c/o Training Program . Ex-Brench Full or P/tltne equiping cafeterias. $735-Costa Mesa, Calif.~. TOOL & DIE MAKERS per mo. for i days work. fun? Do you like unlimited Daily Pilot, P, o. Box 1560 cellent opportunity for ad· W h c-0, Chrunbcr of Commertt $898 ~r month. Send writ· JUNIOR SALESMAN: Call '!'Sgt Yoong, Calif. Air earnings? If so, call Louise Costa Mesa, cant. 92.626. ' vanCl'ment. No children or • ave an open~ ""r--·pon Book. Good know1· ten resume to Saddleback Earn $20·$40 per week National Guard 979·1343. Pomeroy, 557--6122, Abigail REAL ESTATE SALES ""lll. 40 + years. No ex· fn9 for an indlvld-......,u v-" Unil'~ s hool working att-""hool and GRINDER =~-~~-=~=~•Abbott Personnel Agency, ~ ii r edge~ W--'-'Rnte• area & llllley ""'"' c "'' ...... MACHINISTS MEN _.......,~ .. in H B F V """ FREE LICENSE perience: necesu.ry. Ca or ual with previous own "1r'ans=po•rt•wal~~ •. Above District, 14736 Sand Canyon •ICCUCU • • " • • 230 W. WB.rnef', Suite ~. 1 n t er v I e w appointment. .., A E t Irvine on Saturdays gettin& new area for mornnig newspaper S.A TRAINING 835-2.168. experfendce typing average earnings. Pai d1.,;;i;"'ii'i;i;aaiii;i""~~·~iiiiiiiii I pc~~!o,_mThe~ fs"'not""• paDapeil~ HEAT TREAT auto routes. 1~,p~2Ys hrsl.iitiii·iiii~~~~iiiiiiii .. 'di escrow ocument1. daily. Pick your own hoursl• FRY COOK lJ<I ... OPERATOR per morning,,...""'" PRESS A/Payable Clerk. Rapt Y fi-om 10 arn-S pm. Apply 315 . route Md does not include MEN , Part 1 i me expanding development C:O· Stertln9 I • I • r y Jttl Street , Suite-E, Hunting-Expenenced. Interviewing deliveries or collecting. SECOND SHIFT eves:/wknds. Good Pa Y. ~~vi~~:] th~~io~~~ar~~~ commensurate with ton Beach. HoMA,~0(::;,"M~fN~ i-4. ~!~~~pe~~sa!!d ~~~h • • ~ir"""1i1ce Cleaning Service ly or Y.urk. Xln'I op-experience. DENTAL Sec 'y, I girl office. B Hun"ngton Beach ~tti.. GRINDER - portunlty to \\'Ork vt'/an ex· Exp<>r. necess. Send resume 3333 So. ristol St. Appl; now! ~9641 ..... ..,. MTST OPERATOR ceptionally qu ulificd ac-Plea1• Call For to Classified ad no. 871, c/o COfila J.\.!esa I """"'"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"" I MACHINISTS Fee Paid. One ol the finest OPERATORS Women-Men counting staff. Salary $52.i Appointment Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Equal Oppor. Employer m/f J, W. Robi"nson TURRET LATHE companies in Org. Co. mo to slart. Costa ?>.Iesa, CR. 92626. Beautiful ore & • c r ea 1 For fiberglass &: resin com-Beard DcvC'lopmcnt Co. Ml~ Bondi 1--~-~-•. ~---fllLL or P/time MACHINISTS k Start ·~ Al 7434 DENTAL Recephon1st, n~ust Kitchen Helper, mature Newport Beach co-wor e~. .........,. so presllion presses. Some gen-~ · · 0113 be~ I c ~ s ant, attracti~, \\'Oman. Dishwasher, eve Has 0 ...... ina l''or PROD.UtTION Fee Jobs. Call Sally Hart, eral plant exper. required. exp. d, l~ all front oft1ce shift. Janitor & Laundres.~. r-·~.,. S40-6055, Coastal Personnel APPLIANCE SECURITY dul!Ci. 552-8339. ~lcsa Verde Conv. H06piw, SALESWOMAN MACHINE OPERATOR Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd, Day, Evening & Third Shift TECHNICIAN Oil work in a clean. modern Experienced in l''rigidaire & DENYER MINING CO. 661 Center SI. C.l\t. 548-55.S.'i Experienced . F/time Excellent fringe bene-NOW going through planned plant. Maytog. Good Company. PACIFIC GENERAL LABOR FW Belt" Sportsw•u fits fr>d uding com-expansion. N•ed ''P"· Fringr knefits including taking applications for: pany paid group in-finish cabioet makers . "°'"" "'"°""m & .......... BANK W'1ITRESS Ap~y in """"" JO.S pm •w-ancc. 541}-2860. CAMBRO MFG Please apply al zalion. Experienced only ft No. 2 Fashion Isl., NB "' Nurses • nc:-ed apply. Newport 9each Equal Oppor. Employer Apply Personnel Dept. RN-LVN-AIDE 'COMPANY DAVIS-BROWN Those experienced in food le Coste Mese LSI 11-7 & other shifts. Top pvt 7601 CLAY AVE. TV & APPLlANCES EquA.t Oppor. E1nployer cocktails only need apply. Senta Ana KEYPUNCH duty pay. Inuned. pa.y for HUNTINGTON BEACH for inlorn1alion: l\lr. 'Vcbster 719 \V. 19th St., C.i°\'1. Oranne & Irvine floor duty. County w Ide 1 548-3.430 Barmaid wanted-Various Bch\'een 10 Al\1-4 Pl\1 • Trunsport JnllVWS Mon-Fri 9 . 5 . (West of BeaC:h B vd., just shU~ open. Apply in person ""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•INo Fees . Weekly Paycheck OPERATORS I Lesroulie Nurses Registry, South of Garfield) l h1m-2p1n. LlUle John's Department Store Day shifl !!. 2nd shifts and Dinam CS 351 Hospital Rd., NB (Lob· An Equal Oppt!' Employer Apt Pt1anagcmenl "As1l1tant Resident Maneger Major Newport Beach firm seeks assistant res i rl en t manlij(er for largt> apt COlll· plex. Ability to deal "'/lhl' public, relate l\~11 Io ~'hit1lf'('n & kl'ep accuri:ite T'<'oo1•rls. The individual "·e S(.'C'k mu.~t Jive et ron1 plex & be willini,: to 11."0rk weekends occa1donall y. S11lary + reduction in TC"nt. Excellent c.'O. bcfl('_li•s. Call 644-3319 Betwn 9 & noon Only ATTRACTIVE girl lo n'IOrlcl privately 3 to 4 hrs per \Vk. Dey or rvcning. Great pn y, No experience. Strictly for tun! Rf'ply In confirlenct 10 P .O. Box 10516, Santa Ana, 92711 A'ITRACTIVE lady, $3.00 J)Cr hr plus comm .. full or part lln1e. Perm. \V-0rk 11 .B. uea. Phone 4 to 6 PM for appt. 6.16-22SO. Christiru1 Studio8, 1326 At a i 11 o I i a , Anaheim. ASS EM B~xprr. a1 PCB. hand 90lder & aomc ~'Ode. 1821 McGaw Ave, trvlnr. AUTO Inn, 20072 No. SanlR Ana J W R b" Ml> Avl', Santa Ana J-lghts. • • 0 1nson graveyard. \Ve are seeking exp er . 3131 . Segerstrom by Park Lido BI d g J <Corner of H.cdhlll & Ne\\'J)Ort BcaC'h keypunch operators f o r Santa Ana 642-9955, 540-99-54. Bristol) l!a11 Opening For • P P S daythne & swlngshift. 4·pm· Equal Oppor. Employer m/f NURSES BARTENDER • • • 12:30 nm on the Univac LVN 7.3. p/time. Nurses . w· Styl' t 1701-1710. \Ve are willing to EXPER. ICJ IS Pacific Personnel train on the tab punch MAID . FuH tinre. Aide, 11.1, exper. prefd. ,\1ust Be Experiented Services, Inc, V"M·ttcr. Location of the k•y Motel &: Apls. Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, Top P11y. Apply in {X'rson ~ Call •~0411 •~ C St CM 548 ~•• fo'ull 'I'ime punch dept. in the near ...,.,.. <><>• enter ·• · · . ..._,, only, The OC'rby, l262 S. E. 500 Neo.vport Center Dr. D · I ~ future will be-J.'ashion MAJD • MOTEL. Apply Ex-NURSE -Psychiatric exper. r1~to . · .A. Ap1>iy in ""l"!'>On 10-5 pm Suite 900 N..........-Bch ] I nd N Beach Pe I d ,.-"~t"'•• s a , e\\'J)Ort . ecutive Suites, 2080 Newport p/tlme. raonne e pt B~AUTICIAN ne<'ded pa1·t No. 2 Fashion Isl., NB 640-1970 Blvd ~-18 M Haog Hosp NB f E 0 E I Pi'."" call Mrs. Rose •• "'in esa. ' · · titnC', also boo!h or 1"1.·r1t. qunl ppor. ~mp oyer ......... 0 ~ 548-2-112 or 51J-51SO 1;:;;::=~;:;;=~~=~·1 24 Central auwcr, raQge for an appointment MAID work in exchange for NURSES Aide needed for HEAUT\" Operator. cl entelc ~ ~ -_.-Newport Blvd, CM 548-9Ta5 340 Victoria. C.M. i ---------547-6446 I (Il4) 547-75Il opt. 4 hrs. day. 2378 conv. hosp~Appl;r'lln pe:non, pref. Use iron .lit. blo1ff:r. DIAL A JOB' 215 E Commonwealth GREAT WESTERN f:znptoyec benefitJI. Joe • Suite F · Fullerton Mell Room Clerk NURSES Aides, Expcr. req. Fom>ster Lid. 645-5370 870-1833 SAVINGS Young energetic girl to sort 7-3 Utime le 11-7 f/Ume. *BOOKKEEPER* Li• Rolndon Agency Equal Oppo" Employ..-& """"'' man. G•.,.ml of. H.B. area. W-5531. Must be tulJ charge book· keeper, tor part time or rull rhne 'JX>!ii1ion \\·ith wholesale inanufacturing firm In South Santa Ana. Salary open, Ce ll Mr, l\1oore, 5-16-415.1. BUSBOY S -Day ,\ Nite Ex- pt>r. only. Apply in prr.;on, El Niguel Country Club, 23700 Clubhouse Dr . , Lall\lna Niguel. Career Secretaries 4500 Campu1 Dr, N.B. l!'""li"!o!'"!""""""'".,..li418 N. tfain St., Santa Ana fice, filing & llte typing. 2 OFFICE GIRLS 557.]401 Gan'I Ofc·Trno An Equal Oppty Employ" Tem..,....,. Job fo• 5 month• NEEDED $433 33 In Santa. Ana area. Victor Radio telephone dispatch ~ Environmental m~ed? Th1J1 Ladies Sp• Attendant x~~~;Vd., 1 Juit~ u~: Must be-25, able to drive DISHWASHER, cw shift. Irvine area co. will train Prior exper. In _-pa pro. A heitn Call ~l Apply In Rerllon w~ t.hru Sun. Bah I a you In that dept. Lite typing ce-clun.>. Must: be oY'ef' 2'1, •iinaiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiii"' I YELLOW CAB CO. CormthLan "!achl Club, 1601 flk. Co. splits fee & relm· kllO\vlOOgable in use of MAl"""NANCE 186 E. 16th, Costa Mesa Baysirte Drive, Corona de! burses other hR.lf. A1so rce whirlpool & sauna. Conlatl n 15. !\far. Sec Chef Debus. Jobi. Call 557~1 2'2, Abigail Per80nnel Munager, MECHANIC One escaped l••t week I DISH\VASHER Abbot PenonnPI Agency, Belboa Bey Club In-mate!' need replacement wanlNi. part thne. da .... 230 W, \Vnrner. Suite 209. 12'21 \\I, Co.<ist Jfwv., N.B, We have 2 o\)l!nings: one for for I\ COJlg(!nial AIP Clerk. ,. .., /f>.10 .... 'n N.B. Stick & Stone Builder. 548--9249 anytime S.A. LEAD COOK, EXPER n "l&R "' ;.·S exper. 1 the m 11. I n 'en A. n "e or $40-74.14. DISPATCHER. UMer direct GENERAL OFFICE FRY·DINNER COOKING prcdaion ~bin,. too I s OPENINGS for Truck supcrvi1don of tmnsPorttl· Bcauriful n1odern office in Apply In Person 11,/knowledge of 44(1 Volt, 3 Driver, Maller & Receivl.ng tlon 1tupe:nd110r performs all Irvine co1nplcx. Gr f' 11 t Sextant ResteUrant J')hlljje e I e ctr I c It y & Clerk Sta.rt S2 per hour. PRINTERS \Ve have 2 openings. One 8 ani-4 pm shift, & one 3 day, 12 hr shill. ?Ytusl havt' exper. on the 2650 MulWith, DX> can1era & 1250 pl'eSS, Stripping & masking on 11Cgallves. Apt>ly 9 am-12 noon Monday thru Friday PACIFIC MUTUAL 700 Newport Center Dr. Newport Beach Equal Oppor. Employer Production Test Technician Average range $500-$7";;,(I, Top $. NO t~E[S. N.B., C.l\t., lrvll1c. Orange & S.A. Call Immroiah•ly. clrrictlol "'rork required for ro-worken. Good •benefi~ 630 Newport Ctr Or. supcrvl~ry tjackground. Ot>pfndable, thlnklna i~ I.he operation ~f the achool Start $450. Co.JI Glor!& Gray, Nev."(lorl Beach. Ca dlvldual&. Apply bf pcnon. e Top SSS bus .si'n.ice & other re.lat«! ~. Coa5t11J P~rt0nnel ... &iiiiOii ... iiiiiii;iiiiiii•I Th~ other poslUon requlre11 Mon-Fri 7AM-3:30PM MO e At leMt 2 yn; eltc. exp duties rui requfred. $5794702 Agency, 2790 Jlarbor Blvd, 1 --t... H..._..• 3-5 ye11rs of ge n era I w. J7lh St., Qd ' e Solid Irvine Co. per month. Smd \vrlttf!11 CM ...ua""Jll was•.. malnteaanc.'@_ ex.per. e P.P.S. Call lmmediatel,y REAL ESTATE SALES Resale1 in Newport Beach area. HARBOR VIEW HOMES 1829 Port Sheffield Place Newport Beach 833-0780 wk·da¥s only ' RECEPTIONIST GENERAL OFFICE Looking for bright, pleasant 11"01nan to be our receptic.i. isl, do lite lyping &: filing. lll1swer telephones, &: take care of the mail. Libcn.I fr inge benelits Including prnfit sharing. Xln'I oppor. tunity for advance1nent Sal· ary open, Calir. lnj('(.'tion Molding 200 Briggs Ave. Irvine hxlu1. Complex C0111a Mesa RestaUl'8Jlt NEEDm NOW! WAITRESS, EXPER. Full & p/time. MuRI be over 21. Xln'I hours, FRY COOK, EXPER. Fufl Time. Must .be clean & nca!. XJn't working condi- tions A pay, DISHWASHER Pi!ullf be neat & clean. Over 21. Dependable. Apply In Person Surf & Sirloin 5000 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach SALESMAN Nted 1 1aleaman, l'X· palttnoed. Sell BMC. FO't· rnrt. large tnvll':ntory of uaed C&l'I, Ftff demo. exttlltDl worltfn& conditions. see Bud Ryder or Tom AJldtt 1t Pacific Per.lDnnel S.rvlce1, Inc. 500 Nt-wpor1 Cenh::r Or. ~:U;;c tU~dkei;bh"o~~G ="'EN""ERAL=~-cH"eJ"ps,-p-1"'t1-rne The Irvine Company Steady, day shin v.·~rk in a QUICK CASH Olstrlcl 1'1736 Sand Co.nyon eve1 from Spm on. Driw:rs cl~n ~m plant. • p p s Ave ~t Irvine A Kitchen. Over 21. Apply Seeks exper, ·lt11.1lna: hodesa Ple9J1e·Apply At: RN Utimc. Em er Ren c y ·• In penon, Mc n Eds, tlO E. to shOW & leA.ae apta In UM! ys-.. N rt THROUGH A • • • Dept. 11·7 .\ 3-U:!IO llhtfta. DOMESTIC lff'lp Gt-orge 17th St, Co1t11 Meu Irvine 1tto. p I ea 1 an I uni ewpo Peciflc Per'°"nel Xln't emplO)'ff bendttl. , , NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. C...O Hl'Y., N.B. MZ"405 . f Sutte 900, N.U. .640-1970 24 <:t-nrral Tower, Orange 547.6446 F.qurd Oppor. 'Employrr All(!11 Byland Agency, 106-B GENERAL Office work In pcrsionaJlty. Typtng oo. Mu't 3324 W. Warner Ave S.rvl~el, Inc Contact E •iergcney Dept, ~F."'··~1:.:61:.:h:.;5"'"-··oc57·A.754~7..,--0.1"-"!15'-' . .,,., rest home. P/Umt:. Must be wUlina lo work Sent• Ana B. RoAche, ~. Collla M'~ Uk!! lo Trt\de? Our Tnder s like oldtr peopkt. &IG-.6TI.6. \\'ttkend.,_ SU.7154 WANT AD 500 N~port C~nfer Dr. MeJnOrlal H~lal. 301 vtc-p~~Adlse5 dcolum,n ls5 bufor k)"OU! GlRL •'R.fDA y £xec:o llent ....orkl".., ooncls & Equnl '()ppnr. Empk>)-tt Suite 900 Nt"Nport Bch torla. C.M. 2734. Equal 5 u...,.~. ay1 or c 11. M 1 h .. -Sm 11 f ,,. 640-)9'10 Opportunity Employtt. ad. Call 642-5678. • un:. a ..... .,. • 0 c. co, btncnts. RN 11 7 l'-f 2 d -~~------1 PayroU, heavy phone, Some Cell """J389 Ukt to Trade? Our Tnder'1 642 5678 1 · "' IC'· A)'I per ~'; ~~~~e'Pi:': $50, try ! ~IWli;;~.11~ .6"=.' of=:-:=iu i .. .,.ee.,.•w,,"'.,.".,".,m.,.&..,n.,.oo•,,• ,,..! ~d~ ~~~for you! ' _____ • _____ ,':~otra::t Ad!" haw I wk. 11 .~1~ ( t I s s ~~~~~~~~~l ~~~~~~~~-~~··r,· M11 21, Jq1J DAILY PILOf 7 I -wanto11, M & F 111 '"''' • l[II]j ~I ~· '•' ';;;,~l[Il1~1J~I ~·~";;' ~,~l[fi1~J;I ii;iij, "•' ''m;~: mJ~IJ:ij':iiil •'•" ;;'' ;;• ;;;;!!ii -~A.. j~[ ~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;~ I 'iiiiiiiii•iiiiiid"'iiiiii"'iiiiiii' .;J;m~m;I ROOM O.rl< 6 Malob. ,..11_ Helj>Wantod,M& F Jlt HotpWOntM,M& I' 71 HolpW..-,M&P 710HelfWanlell,M&,l'710 HelpWenled,M& P n1 F"""'-110 Mltcellwwt '11 TV, Rodio, Hlfl, rfod, LaauM Beocb. Mr. SECRY. R.E. * SECRETARY * WAm<ESS&'I 6 Busbo)'s. NEW ooodJtlao l"ld • * AUCTION * Stereo 'hlfkr, ~ Secrel&rial podioa in actlvt needed q. Ntwpatt BMeh Eq:lef. on I y. Interv\ews whl1e llOla, aolid bb'eh Mr. Realtor's ot.ftcr. Beautiful Brokera1e F1rtu. 1'1* thni SUn llllm-U&n1. I Mt¥. cirnaer w/mirror, 1 FRIDAY 7:30 PM Harold P•rith new ottlce ln Newport Responalbllltitl ldc See Mn. Maklot or Mr. ft. Jon& baU wa.11 room MAY llTH 1147 El Y•rde Clrcle Center. ~nlal stlU ol. tran•r::;, 9l!oCUliliea. w Id y Uk J B Evarts,~ Verde Ooun-divid e r w/a tora1 e. '7l MODEL clearat!CI! on RCA A 7,.euilh TV • ~ l.owel't pric-c1 Of Iha Y'C*r &I 0r&fll(1!' County'1 lf.t'l'M{ d('altr. Zeni th t.9 '' Chromacolor $3-19. 25" coo- ~l' remote $598. JtCA 2$" Solid State t'01190le1 trom S.'12.). J!l" Solid S1t1ite $389. 3 y r f)l1.:tun.> tube, 1 yr partJJ • service. Cash 00 or ttnns. 9021 Atlanta, H.B., 90-6559 ()r 1!l046 Brookburs1. H.B. 968--U29 l Founteln Valley ~ ~l.~~1 ~be~ AtiHwt'1fi,;~~ OU OU e 0 ecome ~. g~ .. ::»~tit: ~l~~lace w/nw.-~~~re:~ M~~~ iyou are tlu: w1nner or KOOd telephone voice, SJI It learn lnaidel of exctUnc pleaac. ENTtRE house full of Dinlng Srt& 4< lfutch. Dl· on@ tree pua IBM Exa·. abilitiea. Real bushlt!M. T)rpe CIO wmp. Waltresw Banquet t.&stl;ful r urn it u re & van1, L&ml1ll. Cott~ T1abl1:11, Good for a whole carload estate exerien<.-e not euen-Send ~ume to P.O. Box A ,. Of J h E • • Exper. prerd. Apply tn per-furni.shines. ~nuville, \\'asher'$, Dcyt'n1 tor MUCH PACIF1c"riliAiREs ~ .::,.,,~r,~ .. t~i! ~· >;,~\'°""" """' art e xc1t1ng :; .. ~ ~.''!,,::n;,,!0 ::. ~~ ~, "':::"" .:"~:...""r MwiNDY'S AUCTION call Mrs. Duhl • SECURITY guards full or porttt Inn llotel .1.S'10',) Alac· vacuu.rn cleaner. 640--0169 (SUbject to small sezvlce char&e at theatre). Please call 642-5678 ext 31-4. tb claim your ticket. tNortb County toll -free number is ~Inn). . SAW GIRLS FUii time, Weekendas tton Open. Some nit.es & Manager Posi- APPLY HELEN GRACE CANDIES 2300 HARBOR BLVD. •COSTA MESA, CA Wesley N. Taylor Ch 644-4910 p/time ln C:O..ta Mesa area. ArthW' Btvd., tNfne, * MUST Sacrifice-my plush Phone (n4) S«>-aSn ext 73 Co te I d t ? vel\>et !lOfa & lovE"seat & e Secretaries e Typists • Trne Asumblers • G1n'I Laborers VOLT Instant Personnel Temponu')' Service 3848 Campus Dr., Sui.te 106 Newport Beach 5464741 Equal Oppor. Employer or Room 22.1, llS1 Ji.-, mpu r n us ry. WAl't'ERS-Wa!-Exp'"· HeO"Culon '°la & love,.at 2 C.M. req'd. Day le/or eve. Apply nio. old .,..,... """"" · betwn 3 lc 5. Cyrano's, 600 D . ., • .............,. SECURITY Guard. 'l'rB.UWlg Newport Center Dr, N.B. 5 PIEX:'E hard rock maple avail. Pel"!IOllnf!l DepL Hoag WAITRESS. twin bdrm set + l'lfatt. & llosp. N.B. Cl & exper. Ovt"Ur 21. box 1prlngs. Mu.st sell Xlnt ean · neat. Fu or cond &U-2'138 SERVICE Station full time p/~. Apply Ell: & Ale, ' ' salesman & mechanic. Must VDM 64().-3120. 4 PC. living or den group. have 8er'V. st.a exper. 4 be WELDER-Lead man M t f!:lue Jlerculon & walnut, qualified 1n all lubrica.Uon & be experienced in all·p~ like new, Olftt! Prlv. Pty. mloor mech. duties. X1n't of welding. Good pay. 4 day1,;6'6-"=1'11"""l~,,_~~~-- earning potential, 2 Open-· "wk week. Apply in person CUSTOM r.tade uphol.!.1:ered ings avail. Apply in person Trabaca. Products. 831 W. chair, Early Ameri can Sec'y-no th to $550 10am-3pm, Gerey Parham, 18th, Costa Mesa. Dutch cubinel w/stereo bit N.B. ''" wm train "'"' Meoa Verde Shell Service, Var1"an Data Mach1"nes WHO WANTS TO WORK! in. &15<1183 struction. Learn pub I l e 3131 Harbor Blvd., C.M. •~==~~-----reports, change 0 rd er 11 , DRIVE A CAB! PRIVATE Owner -Anl ique buyer lots, marketing, etc. SERVICE Station Salesmen CHOOSE your houn work &-nt~'OOd Chairs for 1hQsf> Great career & growth op-fuU time eves. Lite mech. for :yourself. be Yo~ Ov.'l'I who cherish quaUly, $50 COhfE Bf{0\\'SE AROUND :aJTh1, Newport Blvrl . Behind Tony's BldK. 1\.111.tl's. Costa Mesa * 646-8686 -------.. -1 Health spa membership 11val1able for I yr. lnot •he requiJ:ed 2 yr l'Ontrnctl. Tllkf' over payrnt•nts flt $1 3.50 mo. Call 847-rm aft. 5: W \\'k-days or anytime ~·k.-4.!nds. I USED TO BE 200 LBS.! 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.DO ADORABLE kittens, 6 wka, 2 le, 3 ma .• grey. blk/wht, blk, fluffy. N('C(! love. ~ --DA11UNG little pupple11, lM!agle/poodle, 6 weeks old, IOUkln~ for homes, 557-4011 aft 6 pm port. 100% Free to ap-knowledge. Also, p/tlme boss. Men or women. Can each. 979-1738 21" COLOR CONSOLE j!!!I~":"!!!!'!''!"!~~!!!!"' I plicant-Also Fee Jobs. Call eves & \\-1mds. Neat in ap-be slightly handicapped. DEx:ORATOR Ganie Table fl5. Good pictw-e. l Sales Glrl Friday :>57-&22, Abigail Abbot pearance. Apply morns, 2500 Ne a t-Oean Appearance. \\'/4 chairs yel.Jow & ,vhitc * &t~ * T\', DARLING. Duffy kittrns. 7 \Vffks old, grey & \\·bite. 1 Nt't'd good br>mt"s. 644--0903. lary I P • I A 230 w Newport Blvd, CM. H th f n . 2 ed' t I v tired ·-:n t 70 ' Si p us rommlwon, e""'nne goooy, , 3$ e 0 0Wl0g 1mm (3 e 011110 Ilg$ "" re , -· o . pd. $425. Soll $200. Uke Mlscell1neous ifood phone personality & Warner, Sultc 209. S.A. Sharp Aler1 Girl I"' Supplement )001' tncon1e. new. 673-8886 W _, (yplng required. We need * Secretary .. Recept. * For diversified ofc work. Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a . anflKll 820 (21 BLACK kittens 8 wks, I tit, 1 F, y,•eaned & hsebrkn. l\.tother Russ BJu 642-T7S8. unu now! cau 797-3111 M cG y cht Co day. Apply in person, h.'lTOIBN '.f~ble & 6 chairs, ----------,,v SH. not req'd. Gen'\. real a regor a rp., Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th $75. Lrg d1n111g rn1 drop leaf WANTED (Irvine). estate exper. desirable in 1631 Placentia, C.M. St., Costa MHa. table $25. 963-2447. SIJ.,ES, Office products &: nctive, p1..:igresslve ollicc. , ----------I I~ Ma.ricing. Full or p/time. 1'~or interview-1-WIG Stylists -Exper. $2 -Garage Sale 812 Women or retired men. 270 Call 644-4848 SK ILLE D M $2.50 hr. Sal + Bonus. 'llml-O:.....,.=-"-=---.,.,;,;;;: f'URNJTUR1': & /\PPL ! ANCES :r;~· <= Redhill) PM ~~~~J5 ASSEMBLY arketing Coordinator w='o~t:;.':,y after ~~~~;~ ~~t~ SALESMAN & Mgrs, mtf. 2 Yrs ex per. Must have exper. in sales order 2 pm daily, Foster F'r'ttze, Items for sale. Items for $800 & up monthly guarn. if SECRETARY administration & contracts. Background in 899 W. 19th St., C.M. tree, Items v.-e'll pay you to Dogs 854 e PUPPY WORLD e ICE box suitable for smnH 100 MIXED PUPS. O~n can1per. Outside rack for Eves. lrish Setter, Dober- s11are truck tire. 642-3963 alt n1an, !-'ox Terriers, Huskle, 5P!\.1. \VC"clu!ncts 1dL IOAM Bull Terrier, T-Cup Poodle, OLD ORJENTi\L RUGS. Chihuahua, Lab., Boxer, l PIECI'.: Olt A ~IOUSE1''UL 547,5721 qua]. No exp nee. Mr. Lee, Join the exciting M>rld or ad-· . rod . WORKING A as 1 slant take away. Miscella~us (213) -vertlslng, Good "'1lls + SOLDERERS engmeenng or p uction scheduling helps Manager, nltes, ""'" 30. Ap-lurnilure, tiou.ewares, trunk SALESMAN full & p/tlme. creative ability & outgoing ful. ply in penon, La. Petit, w/rounded .cover, books. $2.50 hr + comm. 18 or personality. Start $600. Call Huntington Ceuter Mall, HB exercise equip, tuppet"Wtt.re, over. Call 1 oam-2 pm Sally Hart, 54()..6()5.5, Coastal Call Immediately w T Grant's needs clothes, tools, 40 Chon! ~ Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 o · \Veekends Included AUTO MECHANIC organ, port. Hoover ~·aaher Cockapoo. SWAP Shepherds \V1ll pay ~10'/r more cash tor ?? Stud Serv nut than lop $ payers. EvC'S. b-~ 53 ~ Harbor Blvd, CM BI ' t M h • o & clryer. 411 F1ower St. SALF.s Lady. Expec. Mature $650 e Small perts W>der magnl-uepr1n ac 1ne pr Exp'd prer. Good benefits Coota Mesa. (Be t we• n lady for better sportswear -Sec'y Bkkpr fying glass. Apply in penon • Irvine & Tustin Ave) work wknds. 675-2870 'Vestcliff Must have exper. on duplicating machine. Grant Plaza 64&-4n6 5-5-5070 ::c'"'""~~·-·.c,-1~'~,,,,,·-·-.,,---1 BLACK & Silver GermllR Shep. Police pups, 4 wk• $15-$25. No papen:, 646-7662. SARAH Covontry Jewelry. P•l'OJnnel Agency CIRCUIT BOARDS en<ri•eering files & engineering documenta, •m Adams A"'., Huntingtonl 'cw='°s'°'E"T,_,a,..,-an~o,-"'""' ...,G'°re-•"• No invest, deliv or rollect. 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. "~· Beach . Bargains at Garage Sale 894-'7133, 645-!i946. (Mark III Center) tion procedures. Equal Opporturuty Employer Prices. Men's, women's & WANTED to buy. Trail 90 or 11mal! motorcyclC', rt'a!IOn· able. 544-3417. M""8836 iliiiiiiiliiiiiiliiiiiliiiliiil WYERS home needs e Wire & Harness children·s clothes, shoes, mature woman for 3-11 & SECRETARY '/ Reception-e Some Schematics & bags, a ,c c es so r i es . ORIENTAL RUGS. Pl'ivate party will pay cash for all sizes. 644-5326. ML'IIATURE Schoau%er, beautiful AKC pedigreed female. 774-3106. u" shll... Prac. Nurse ;,, N""ewport• -~en1.c,t ""'" blueprints. ~mputer Operator -11~ J Ho .... ho .. 1• • o o • i .... Pie· Hou11ekeepi.ng. duties. Also struc n '~ esta e exp V lures, s tes, gwtar s~·-~-;-64&.6716 desirable.Per m anent. Top $$$-No Fffs lng mac h i n e. 4727 C\IU!I., p · · Benefits. 644-0iOS Dorchester Rd, Cd M . Office Furniture/ Equip. 824 SAINT Bernard puppies, AKC reg. $150. 557-71~ SEAMSTRESS. mu.st be ~=~=~~---1 • p p S A minimum of 3· yrs computer operations 1eameo H. hland ) l9Ut exp'd. Must be able to do "Make Room For Daddy" 1 exper. w/l yr DOS. 2nd ShifL Antiques 800 thru 27tb ig 8 own repairs & maint. 4 De.y ••• clean out the garage • • • B oodb Id =c=c=o-·~~~=~- work week. Apply 'f'rabs.ca ... turn that junk into cash Pacific Personnel L. • W r ge May 24th. 25tl'I. 26th FOR sale, office chairs. 3 swivel, 3 side arm, 1 ex- ecutive. 644--9050, 2 O O Newport Center Dr, Suite 312. OLD Engll•h Sheep Dog pup- pies, AKC, xnlt blood line, shown by sppt. ~7444 PEDIGREED Collie pups. 6 weeks old. Call 545--0246 Keeshound AKC, 8 mo'g old. $15(), Beaullful dog . Products, 837 w. 18th St. with a Daily Pilot Classified 26891 Salazar Dr. Open all day. A wonderful C M ad. Call 642--5678. Services, Inc. Mission Viejo way to help the animals! . ' 'I fa} Newport Center Dr. El·ec1ro-Mechanical You are the w1nner or iJti ~~~ ~~;era%ve ~~m\,~~ 1~~ ~ Suite 900 Newport Bch one free pass Supl 867 W 19 CM M2-3408 can 642-4al5 640-1970 I t Good for a whole carload MOVING or c I ea n in g nspec Or 10 any ot the garage? Don't lhrow aw.,. Pianos/Org1no 826 24 Centra!.J~.';,'"· Orange PACIFIC THEATRES Get money !or good rond. remal•. !150. ~·~ Req uired lo inspect computer systems & small items. Call 642-7009 ORGAN HOBBY 962-8717 SILKY AKC ' ' . 215 E. Conunonwealth lower level assemblies for workmanship, . . lewelr,y 115 B£AUTIFUL AKC Beaale Suite F _ __,._, Fullerton co:Jleteness documen_tation. MU.St have reo< (SubJect to small lel'Vlco · Don't bu7 all;)' c:.sm until Pl.lppy, 10 -wb..-~~ ~ A CCNYDlliNr IHa'PING AND -d, 8iWSNO CUDE FOR THE ··~-la -~.:.~canrse at .~.l. • QENU'INE -tNliaA Jewe\q . )'Ol.I cu pla,yl Non..plaien * m.• ~ £qual OPR'x'.1 Employet ,,.. exper. Secon4 shifl · -. .. • .., S -i· t:"'cl:im ---~t.~ Cbalc:ivv\llcel. xlnt ~1· iw~rome \o attend ttet work HO[MI I\ 156 i ~ /ill.Oii .. ~ ' , .... ='---.\-\. -· , JV-• l~•!k>IW"-allca, 1Via. Mops. N~niatllrt ~ - For 1n ad In Woman~s World SNACK Bar Cook. Me COUnty toll-tree ,number 11 Phone 84fJ.:.8)80 Contadt: 'ISrft.'IOMer!Ch PART Arablan ~ ~ old. "' • -'--~,., 546-U'lOJ. Ml II . 818 ·-•••1 1SH geldlng Gentle but Call Mary Belh 642.S678, ext. 330 Day 'u. '--IX¥' ·Day • .parua I t Appll 802 see _1neout _.,..&N r spltiled .sweet nallt;y i torlnthian Yaoht Club, 1601 nspec or •n-CoHI Muolt'S~rvlc. paok i..Clud.,.,, ~7 • To Size 50! Newest for Men! ~~~e Dr, CdM. See C'bel ApplianH<OOM VER 802 WANTED Newporteos,,.t"dM .• a,.t Harbor HORSES Boe.nfed, r1~1--Min. of 3 yrs exper in a receivinJ? inspection .._ -1 -·~ .. f • tr 9497 J' SIZES U50 r.., 1(f ,..,~'::" 1lf AAT'- Everylhing about t h I !I princess is a delight -the fit and flare, deep pockets. fu:e quick zip-up-and-go! Whip tl up in a gay stripe or print. Printed Pattrrn 9 4 9 7 : Women's Si2es 34, J6L. 3'8, 40. 42, 44, 461 fa, 50. Sbe ~ (bust 40) takes 2 71'8 yards 45-inch. SEVENTl·P'IVll VENTS tor eacb pattern -add z centJI tor each p&ttem tor Air lllaJ1 and Sped.t Hand!· Ing; otberw1'e third-cl.,. delivery will take thrff weekll or more. Send to Marian MJI'tln, the DAILY PJ1..0!1 442. Pattern Dept., 232 west 18th St., New York, N.Y. 10011.. Print NAl'llf:, ADDRP'.SS wtth ZIP, ~IZE and STYLE NUMBEJI, SEE MORE Quick Fa.thlonl and choose one ttem free-from our ..... .sum-Catalo(r. All t On\y 50c. INSTANT SEWING DOOK aew tod8¥, wear tomonow. $1. INS"l'ANT FASHI ON BOOK -Runclttda o t f.bhlon f.ncta: SI. fat Profit Is attfllnM when you sen throui;h rctult-pt· -uni Delly Pilot Oa.tldfted Adsi 8'2-5678 TELEPHONE Sales. Work ti , , ...................... ;;;i;;;;;ol arena"' .... is. 4i\Ul1.L Acacia ac v1ty testing -resistors, capacitors, pulse St s A He'·h•· "" 0 -1. "9m your own home. BABY GRANDS . . ' ~ ~· ~· 1 Highest cornmissiom. Ex-transformers, transistors etc. May be re-WASHER & DRYER TICKETS TO MATURE Boarders wanted perlence n 0 t necessary. quired to assist lower level inspectors. Portable-Ju.st like new. LED ZEPPELIN Now save up lo $1000 on cer-Box stan1 &: aU fae. Have 892-5184 $150 CONCERT lain floor models. Olhel' special otter. 962-8679 TELEPHONERS 4TI FlO'lt'@l' St. Costa Mesa Grand Pianos from S729. (Between Irvine &. Tua tin P leue call These and many more at: F~,:-::;;,;~;~ p;; Calibration Techn1"cian A"•) ...... n~ 548:7881 wallichs Music City n1otiQn. Pick your own hours FREIGHT Damage Sale on * For Cost Only * South Coft!t Plaza 540-2830 new Hotpoint & Whirlpool ·"'""'=-~-~-""'"~-1 ~~~~~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!'"" 110 am-3 pm or 3 pm-8 pm. Jr. collea:e or technical schoolinl? + 3 yrs r e tr i g / wa !lhen:Jdryers HAND made un.Lque King 4 I HAMMOND o""'n, Sa"rlli-. $2 per hour + bonus. Exper. · alib 1-f ·n VTVM 545-07SCI. poster canopy bed, King ·o-· .... .....-nol neccss. We will train exper in c ra ion o osc1 oscopes, , Louis XIV era. Oak It Immaculate Spinet with ex- trom our office. Apply, 315 pre-amps, differential volt meter, digital S I D E b y s i d e Mahogany w/masslve hand traa incld ear phones. Only 3rd St., SUlte E, Huntington equipment & other electronic test equip-~eO~Ktuc-,FNeu,.,M,mniattll made chest, 12 drawer. Sae. ~......,. Redaady r:.A~ ...JA I a Y • Beach. CaH 536-ZlOO. ment. size. ee e & e $1000. Stain gla.a windows, ~ ys, ~eves. TELLER Attractive o~ning for \\'in· do\v teller, Savings & loan experil'nce preferred. range. ~909 incased inwood many BREATHTAKING Austrian LADY Kenmore auto ~asher panels. See to appree. Best Baby Grand; ebony, x1nt $75. Frigidaire auto washer offers, Pr. Pty. 832-0624. oond, Sac! $725. 96!J.-4.100. $40. Guar & delivered. DJNETI'E $25, Joveseat $55, BALDWIN Upright piano 546-8672, 847-8115 chair $29. 75, 11m 4 drawer AcrotK>nlc, Beaut. co n d . Mayteg Electric Dryer desk $10.75, Bdrm set, no 557-3948. $50 mattr. $70, metal cupboard Sp0rtlnt Goods 830 1--~ I~ Bo1tt, Gener1I 900 ' Mrs, Hedley J..,.. 3671 FIM St. Irvine You are the winner of one free pass Good tor a whole carload lo any of the PACIFIC THEATRES IMPERIAL SAYINGS & LOAN Electro-Mechanical Assemblers Min. 6 mo's electronic assem bly exper. 1st Shift & some 2nd shift positions immediately 54s.-3)31 $7.50, lloor .scrubber $4, tricycle $4.50, 2 wheeler GOLF .Clubs, MacG~r. (Subject to tmall service FRIGIDAIRE widler/dryer YeHow. Xlnt. Gentle cycle. $7 . 50. ml sc. USED charge at theatre). USABLES, 2560 Ne'""'_, new, Nicklaus Heritage, Pie~ eall 642-5678 ext. 314 """"' complete. C.OSt $450. Sell I !3lvd, C.M., Tues thru Sat. $250 548-41B9 548-2«2 lo c aim your ticket. (North Telephone 673-3130 or 644-1461 REFRIGERATOR 5 yean * AUCTION * · ' County toll.free number ls f_or appointment. old auto defrost, very clean JAGUAR Bl g -Ga me 540·12201. Equal Opportunity Einployer 89J.-9060. Fine F'Urnlture Speargun. Never used 1$78. * -WANTED -par~ & A 11 new). Sacri[ice at $35. THE SHOW OFF Electro-Mechan1"cal $80Lal YmodR, guarn, de! & lmtall. Auotions .:.·day··"t"ao ~m 496-4123. with dock to buy le Kenmore washer ' · ' · 1har1 Coronado 27 •. ful .. Saleslady age 35-50. Ex-per-636-2840: ·839--1778. • Windy's Auction arn Store. Re1taur1nt, ly oqp'd, $3,7,., CALL /, , ience unnecessary, 2'l Fash-Ass bl RECOND. APPLIANCES 3'.175~~ Newport, CM 646-8686 Bar 832 83'2560 ~ !i ion Island. N.B. em er Delivered -guar. Dunlap's, Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'l. ,,. or 557-7648, •~• N CM uo .. TI,., $325., NCR Ca.sh Register. e TRAINEE, yng man as op-~... ewport, .rtO""' ONLY AUTHORIZED Good Condition. FISHING BOAT e ttcal instrument rep a 1 r 2nd shifl Must have at least 1 yr rework ex· • DISllWA~" ---~ ~. ~1780 ** 15" FL •• 11 p Ev! ""'i:.n..;>• .... ..,.....,., Kirby Vacuum Distributor In -.. =-i-· n , ..., · · nnide rnan, req: 2().:M) vision per. dryen -bit ~ • =~~~=~=:.:.,--I Tilt Trail '·-Wh ' , • ~"' • Q< Costa Mesa -WUl be happy TV R di H'FI er --.."e eel. '"ithout glasses. MechaniCal delv d. 839-7620: 2"1. to arrange a hoinc demon-, a o, I , $550 or best offer. 871-952l skill & apptitudc. Machine Rent Washers/Dryer• ,tra~. Stereo 836 or 636-5208. shop exp desirable. 54&-()606. "'"" ;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;I J "~t what he ni..'Cds tor TYPIST/Receplienist:, for $2. Wk. Full malnL Call 979-5222 RENT TO YACIIT Troubles? Comider -Ce CP #""--* 639-1202 * or 979-5469 OWN substantlaJ tax & financial \\'CCkcods, vacation_ make it Newport nter A ou .... ~. dvantage f now! Prior lina.ncial/statistical lf you meet any of these qu alifications & AUTOMATIC washer, elec-3 MO. old 8' Deluxe Gem Top TV'S & STEREO 8 1 lDs lo donating your Plea .. h'·m w•·th the newest typirJ&: exp desired. Polition in'·--ed · · · · tric ~--. Excellent con-Camper shell for pickup. SlO VeM'<e • sland Dr., San are ~~t in io1nmg a -wing Orange ..... ,..,., Rafael Call! ••-•••· In ai.sual good loolc!'; -this open due lo growth & pro-6 '" dition. $90. 646-5848. perfect shape, original cost 454-2'76. · ~L ...,. sporty top or vest. Crochet of motion. Salary open . Co. co mpany that offers xlnt benefits and MAYTAG Waahe & Drye S.150. Owner sacrificing. tor knitting worsted In easy shell 644-6156 working conditions alM> many olherrfunilitl~ $285. 646-6581, 4 pm-8 pm. No Credit Check•No Jle'postt NEW custom C-D racing st!ch. Pattern 7364: Men's 640--0169 BAR & bar •lools, offlce Free Delive..., E'ree R-ni-runabout, completely glasa-s· 36-38 40-42 Incl 3 . " • ..-~ ed. Extra light/tasl See to ~SE••,~N,.;..,_,~ .CENTS UNSKILLED Bui/di M t I I 806 desk & ex('(!. chair, 6" Monthly Ren!als Available apprec. 2656 El .... · ~--1 ........... , .... co ng a er• s round brkflll table w/4 Open Eves. SC3 4444 Mesa. lA" ' ~a tor each pattern -add 25 Plea A ly I p -• Surplus. Building ~irs. all like n e w _ 0 !!~~.,,,~~~!!!!!!!!!!•I -;,-;;;;;;<:n:--,;;;-;;;,.....,=~ oents for ench pattorn rot 58 PP R erson ~7"!1 i; WANTED' 50'-70' Sailboat. Air Mal\ and Special Handl· ASSEMBLERS MATERIAL. locio's Of NEW • STEREO: 1973, 200 Watt Su.liable for am. famlly Jov. ing; otherwise lhltd-cla.u n'EMSI Doon lumber ply. AC generator, new, 15 KW Quadl'ft90nlc, Garr a rd Ing. Will pay cash. 673-340) delivery will take three Mom! Th f 'da 8 30 AM 4 PM wood alum 11beetlns ino1c1-Krw: &: Root.. Powered by 4 m~I. systemlt.cd au 1 o Eves. weeks or more. Send tti Female 3V· JU n y : .. i1't3, ~. etc. ' cyl. Diesel. Rblt. 30 day tum111blc. AM I FM / MPX i;:~:-;==,...,.----1 Allee B!OOka, tho DAILY 1 BUILDERS SURPLUS w""'"ty. 67>--4383 R""""""· 4 Quad Speakeno, Boote, Melnt./ PILCYI', 105, Needlecraft No FHs-Top $$ J4D6 So Mal St S A Tcl~e dregser w/mlrror. tape deck. WRS left S.rvlc• 902 Oe.L' -163, Old Chelsea · n ., · · $35 t unclaimed, still brand new -::::::::'.'.'.':":_,,-----'I Cnll Imrnediate\y Mon thru Sat II) 5 en • prov. • r g "UN 'OERW Statton, New York, N.Y. 714 ·-1,...., -watertllll w/pump, $12S. In boot and guaranteed. Orig ATER hull cl~ 10011. Print Nune. Addl'el!lll, Weekends Included T Th p I D ; _,. ....u 545-6174 price $400. Now $185. Cub Ing. inspection, repair, and Zip, Potwa Nomhor. • p p s 0 e ersonne epartment C1mer11 I. or small payments. 893--0501 •al,age, etc. L ECRAFT '72• E • IOI AUTOMATIC G11rage Door 54&-t'IK NEED · • • 3u1pment Opener. Reg $200. Special· STEREO: Unclalmed 1973 ........... <Xoehet, ~· etc. Free Or CODtaCt: B. Krafka NEED c am er it w/ln· Lowest Prltr cv('('? $129. Garrard model, full ti.ze ,,_IARJNE mcchanie -Frt'(' d1~;1'' J\taC...mt1 BMk. Peclfic Personnel •-"·-·eable lena. 400mm InsWlcd. 213 _ -430-795.1. turntable, AMJF'M Stcroo et1C t1.1 wlthJn Newport proper. · :eo....,• S.rvlces, Inc. "i .... -.16 l'l'Ceivcr, fun range air • Burr's Marine, 675-86TI Buie, fancy knoll, pat· lele. lt>n11. le. Pentax. Nikon, LARGE JOlld oak desk, re-speakers, laJl(' deck and Boats/Marine lenlll, $1.00. 500 Nrwport Cenltt Dr. etc. after 5, 673·1050. Cf'nUy reflnli1hcd S30. \V NI-headphone plug In jacks. E I ln11tant Crochet Book -Suitt• ~l.. N.B. ONE Photo Blowup Camera ding gown &: mantllta, size Brand new in box ' qu p . Le.am b&, pictures! Pal· 640-.u.-10 2 2 w/12' track bed &: 24" lcn.11 718 $60. 66092ti. f(Uarantef'd. Orig prtce $190, PURCJIASED $l50,000 in- t•mo. $1. ' 7 2 M1"chelson Dr., lrv1'ne !or silk screen woc k. (21 6' Molal tool """"' roe now 195. c .. h or small vontory "' new marine Complete lnltant Otft Boot 24 Centml TOW'l"f,, Ora.nae $40-2860. PU truck. ~ each. AJ9:1 paynlCnts. 89.1--0501 "·-t -more than 100 ailta -547-6446 ..,.. •wu, ware for tallboR.ts. No . $1.00. ·' Furniture 810 """'""1 operated llrt """· *SPRING SPECIAL* 1·2-3 wtncheo & handles, ...._ .. AIOan --215 E. O,mmonwealin 833 2400 Extens1"on 336 175. 541H1672, 847-8115. . Rtbu/lt:Plcture Tube ota1n1 ... mnchioM. -t $LOO. Sultc F Fullerton • ' •••SOFA A Lowsco.t, REELtypcmower.Brii;clt?I&:. $85-ll#' or 2S'' COJor t11:nc1, pulplf ha.rdWatt, It Jltft ll"C Book• • SOc. , ~-.,, ~. ~... r never ultd, both tor $155. ~~~ conrllt!on. * 2 YEAR WARRANTY genoa ca~ & slldctl ... You Boell ol U ft'bt Alp.as. ..t;Atwu~..., ..... ~~ UIJUlUy homo, 96&-7910 ....... lnstallaOon Avsllable NlnM' It??! All ltnn1 priced 50c. .,. SQUARE o.k table. Old MOvtNG f'Um, Indoor&. out-Rirt's Tl'lP.vltlon Service forShl l~mt"d. sale. MJnneyt1 QaOI 8oot 1-16 patterns. VETi:.RINARY i\.lllltant for fuhXmcd dretser. Plt . door. Swi"", !""is, toys & r P .... nfl.ndlery, 253'1W.0t 50c anlMA\ ~ N.B will ·-& V't ormerly Mesa North Ct'ntcr Jlwy. Newport B e a ch, 1'1~ Qollt Book I -traih-Wture ~Salary A ,..,~, Opportu 'ly (m loy ~ aflt':r 6 ml.le. All goet. 962-7;.44 FV 1 Bick S. of Saker 54IHi002 ~8-4192 Open Sun 10-.l 50c. } open. Rnume to classtaed n Uf'"' . nl p er ITAL t AN Prov I nclal WATER Soltener, R.chner, open g..5 C6 dl'.y!Jl ,69 Otrl'BO Qalh• I• TM1..1'11 f,lvlnc • Ad nO. 659 C/O De.fly Pilot, Bookcai!e by Ore:ctl, Pecan tam si. Lifetime rr~l1. Stll 23" Motorola, all channel }05, \\'/ronn:i~ ~t..!: available. 1125 """· li33"'900. f5 beautiful pattem11. 50c. P.O. Box 1560, Colla Me11a, lln1-h. $ll5. 644-0388 cheap. SC3--7'58t 24 'hri.. color TV; wtnu picturt tube hnt!J'S. l\.1ust sell $895.. Aft S ••••••••••••' •••••••• Callt 112GS. I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'\ Wh11e Elephant Olme-A-Une Sell Idle ltem!'I -..... 642-5678 :clnt oond. $150. 645-S9!12. pm, 962-<ll38. I , I· I , l . , ' l I • t ' ' I • , I DAILY PILOT · I~ I .. , ...... llil I _ ..... WANTED John's Racing Cycles TICKETS TO a.JISSIC So. °"'" 1 8 CO * LaP'tral<e. 6 cyl. lfauletl & * BU L TA LED ZEPPELIN eng. rem(g. law '72. fl250 i EADOUARTERS FOR CONCERT 644-8880 DESERT, MOTO X Tr Ple!Uie call 17' BAYLINER w/trailer. 1-Iarbo~<.~i'~f~~: C.M. 548·7&81 ra> Mer c inbrd/oulbrd, 646-4655 or 64&-2428 * F o r Cost Only * fuJly equipd. Sa~. $2500. ;::•94-::...:M:::.,;o:.,c c:•!l&-:::.-.:221='-~7 Mobile Homes 935 196S Dodge Van Zf INBOARD/outbrd. Bait 24 x 6.5 SPA. 7 Mos. new. 2 Ne\\'ly r~huilt engine. Brand tank, radio, depth tinder & BR., 2 ba., lg. den; deluxe new 1ra11smissiop. GOCJC! con· trlr. 639-9382. inter .. beaut. lndscpg., COi'· dll101 ,, .j9()(). Call 64a.6927 CLASSIC Bay Boat, Nice 18' n('r' lot. Loe. Villa De La eves aft J pm. So. Coast Lapstrake. $1995. ~laya adult park, Hun· '71 DODGE Sportsn1an 300 646-0910 eves. linglon J1arbour. O\vner Van, auto w/air. Boats, So1il 909 846-958.1 ti40·0169 30' TRIMARAN -35,../c. completed inclds plans, 3 huJls, Cl'OSl!anns, be s t materials, must sell. $1250 cash. 539-1156 Motor Hom•• 1969 f'"O RU Van. $2300 or Sale/ Rent 940 Best Offer. Before 2 ---'--------, 5.16-0134: Alt 4. 9684860. e SALES e Autos Wanted 968 • SERVICE • INSTANT CASH ! • • •. • . . . . . • ••• , .. I~ ~;A.'"'"~--~l~§J~I;" JO;~:---~· ;-:~·11§1;1~1!;;~~111..~"flil~I·~~-;~~';· ~,..,..~~-:· ·=)~~i ;l~-t-~-..,,.,~,~·-.t ~'l Q~I: .._ : := s ara ...... :a.ii0." ~I' 71U ·'I . ....l. ~ d '/W ._....._, , .,. •<. -•·~•Uoiol .' ' nv ~-ij,il · ,._, . ..,..,_ --..... ""' - MAZDA TOYOTA • CADllU~ . (fOIYEJI E MERCURY ; • ~ NOW OWN.THE FABULOUS 1973 CAPRI --.-,;;d,:o ~-::.:;;,;.;:..,_ __ ,_·10-TO.....;YOl~:A.;...,o>:...~-..,--~ 195 cxm\iErn: ti-JJ68 COLONY "l'8rlc 9 -· * M '" Rotary * ' 'ff ' E L 11'0 RA D 0 "'11t -' 1pd, o/b. p1., .....,,, run J10"4.r;r..,i. air, $U'MONTH (~!) SJ,l$5. Movlnc, 1 Ullbn.._...idnt eobd: .•. P IS, P/B, twi, T;J(uk. -lll-"OPEN•~•~ must~oeU.ltli:-, Muft-U.fodoy.$2300: ~-·~-·--~ .. = -t .••. 71~ __, ~~ 114H188. ~· ~-!"",' ' win 110&9!'-lns • YO ·AG '·' ••-....,..__, ~~ - CALL•)(R. FRY -pJ y ••. As K F 0 R CQUGAll MUSTANG . Hunt. Beach . v:w:~. GEORo~ .. ~11 • '11 COUGAR XR'-Su .. , ,,..,,1-----,..--1 MAZO' A l :r"a~lr ;.,...~ • ''7·£M>ILLAC 4 dr, '"''"" at ~196.-Xlnt roud. lo 1969 MUSTANG. V-3; auto. vol"' job. -transfer· mileage, .aew tires Jully radio/hea~, • p/1, 1 x:la,t · r • loaded. AM/FM stereo, tilt oond. $:JA95..,.613'-:3690 ' 5 ~~ST A ifAf~ ~r ~ ..::! f#~, Cal! wheel, p/.iteering A. be..... . '69 ll.ACll J s~JCE . m••'m . ·:, •'70Et DOli'ADO ·alreoild.,deluxeto~o" ~·~·e'ld·mUeage. tmt Beach Bl. sa.a:;es '~• . j .. , • , . . . conavJe,}iD;''<-~W',(bla ,·_,.s,,"""''==-"'n=--"~"'-'~~ , _. J,lide greeo,. leather,· loaded. wtny~ ri»f, Ollf -origins 1¢l• MUS?JiNG,. AUto', 6 cyl, MERCEDES BENZ ,::_ = ~> ~ .:"¥3. ~ .•wn. ~ne~ nJ«i1-1•n.~ $1000. q_'.=-'· 50 .. USED 15 MINUTES FROM ·:r.~ .... c...~~ ~ 'DC)l;GE Ql,D$.~QllLE. MERCEDES MISSION VIEJO ceptloMl. Lur ·Kelloring __ _ .a .a cad. 673-0607 or &U-4839 Sales & Service ON 1>15· PLAY ~RE~ '65 DODCE Monaco 2 dr bt, :UU so. BRISTOL. S.A. '68 Cad 4 CIT, Se<1 de vme. ~ sp, r/h, au-, good tire•. . QLDSMT OBILE Sharp New Car 546-0220 xlnt rond .• ,.ir ex~. V.cy $2511. 894-3938 alt. 6 pm GMC RUCKS Trade-ins . "(S.A. Frwy. ~ast on . ,. mile•. Priv ~.alter 5 . FIREBIRD HONDA CARS \~~;in2~~ v.~it~'Yll~er,:rm~~ Coming In Evert Day 1st~ mi.} .~me=~~ VWe. , ... UNIVEISITY ,OLDS =r0~~~~d:::mt~p~itpoh !~~ AUs1k_~~.u!-~. Ln00iq .. ue Cori11nOnWecllth l~ather interior; vtnyl. \?.P•I 1~!~R[:,~~ ~ f:!ull CoetW~~borl ~l~Mo.96«>. ag _ ,AIM, F/M stereo, tilt·te .1 ... ...,64 ,"4.8 6 disc brakes, style sieel Plans Motors Ltd. steering. 490-2200 ml e • ..,,_..,. "' ' 1968 OLDS DEL MONT 4 dr, wheel, radial tires, bucket H of I ' .675--0435 · PIS. PIS -Ph "'"· OROER YOURS OUse mports Santa Ana ;68 CAD. O>nv.,)l!hite wlRed ;68 =~BIRD 400 · P/S ~'••~ • • ~-' leather Interior. .:Ex c. •.<.;u~ •• ~ • • Cl.»"'O'tOO NO\V. $2789 ~~M~~~;r~e~ark '71 YW. B.UG ··a>iic!. ·1· ,. . !"9-1907. :fih~i96lnom: auto ~· '67 .9LDS.,S:~•· ale, p/s,. OR IF' YOU PREFER 523-7250 Brow'n with pin striping, 4 68 CAO.'•Sed\.J [)eVllle, fully ,61 .FIREBIRD 4 speed Xfut p/b, NeedB · bort block & '71 CAPR I * SPECIAL * ;pd, (!OOCF0$1 Sl.99_ . . ~· ~~= top .• cond, IOOO. ,;,, .\><?• Qµ,er. 'j'Y W!)rk. $175. 546--0009 !231CORJ . . . -1749 ; ' • ' PINTO" Gus¥~~SON '70 MERCEDES BENZ Bl~:t,.~EY CAMARO FORD , ·12 Pinto. 2000 engine. Dioc L• ( M '69 CAM.ARO, yellow, auto '70 GALAX1E r500 '..,. 'j~ltes~ 1>leli!O FM. Mags. lftCO ft• ercury 280 SL CPE ROSTER 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 trans, smaJ.I v...s. xlrit run.; 2 Dr. Hardtop, Auto. Trans., New !ires. Porsche seats. 16800 Bo"h •l W=er HUNTl/IGTOil. BEACH , ning oond. Sml. 548-2854 Air r--• Power Steer'"• ll<ot Direr. Mw;t ,.u! A<k lfunting1on Beach , , ·n M'W Sq~. ";/ell 0 w: ,69 CAMARO 228 000 owner, (660..\YV):' -.... 'foi-' 3ii'b. 833-8345; 642-5005 842.a844 * ·(213) 592-5544 Sparkling: polar wh l !e, w/blk, HJgfi-mileage, but like new, make oller call J1295 eves & wknds. ''Ho m e of the Viking'' automatic, power steering, very good oond. see at 1931 675-Q37. ' ~ BARWICK JMP'ORTS PLYMOUTH air conditioning, both hard Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. DATSUN & "'" '0 "'· An .acce=n"-1..:::64&-898:::.:::::':c....=~=--CHEVR9LET ":.S".::'°ea';:/::' l.ow . mileage. Call f~r an ,69 VW C.Al.m£R. Xlnt cond 49J.::3375.· _or 331_1J175 '70 DATSUN 510 appointment to sec tbis ex-• ..,.~ .,_,,· CARR 8 ~ ~ UDO 14, Fully equipped, cover & trailer, many ex· tru. $1000. or best offer. 534-5213 e RENTALS e ceptionally niaintained w/pop top & tent.~· '72 YALL, ·.pass.~ '68 MUSTANG '67 FURY Ill, gtX)(f cond., good ttrer, nu shocka, $500/bl!st offer, aft 5, ~-W E ARE IN 2 Dr .. 4 Spd., Radio, (825-Distinctive Automobile, Daya ~46-8877 , eves Ton,300V.S,radio,auto,ps, 6 1 3 ~ ~k »·dio \VA i 64H843 p~trntdiscs,air,hvyduty cy., 6~'"' stn: .• •1.q , DESPERATE NEED i • 839-taKI. C695-Bls. Dir.) -"'"-"=·---~--Heater, · MECHANIC~Y '6.5-PLY Satellite 2 dr, V-8, LIDO 14 Comp\ \\'/trailer $950. de Anza Bayside Storage or call { 7 1 4 l 328-3169 KITE 100.i Yellow & white hUll. All attached equipment. $000. 675-2300 CATAMARRAN Shearwater 161h' Complete w/trailel'. $450. -1633. LIOO 14, nu sails. very good cond, $725. ~" , HOBIE 14, TRAILER 833-1010 or 645--0380 Boall, Slips/Pocks 910 SLIP available 4.''I' sail or power, fine!'t in tbe Bay. 61H606 Private 65' Boat Slip Negotiable 213.592.5907 /213·592-2311 OF GOOD, CLEAN BARWI C$~t~~PORTS JIM SI.EMONS ·~ut-sra;' c~":.1 A~anl~: ~. =:.· ~.cm mi. ~~~ID;·LySorJ.r8 .~b ~~t!i. 4f~.exceptiona1ly FOREIGN CARS ~3.175 Can1ino Capistrano IMPORTS 43,000. 'Orig. mi. nra0. 1965 CHEVY SU.per Sport MILES! new$5ra50diator PONTIAC TOP DOLLA R-Paid S.111 JuHn Capistrano MERCEDES BENZ 646-.'Xi96 aft 5 PM Impala 327, full power, air, HUNTINGTON BEACH For Or Not! ·193.--3375 or 831-1375 '69 V\V Fastback. Automatic. bucket seats. 302 S. Olive St, Call Jack at 5 4 8-0 4 G 9 j ' • Call or con1e in to see us. '70 DATSUN AtrrHORJZED. $995 Santa Ana, 543-7603 Bet\\·een 6 & 10 P~'I 69 Pontiac Executive 18801 Reach Blvd. 842-8803 NEWPORl SALES & SERVICE e 544-3417 • 1967 EL Camino, V-8. air. PR.ll'.ATE ·PARTY Station W8gon J-{UNTINGTON BEACH PICKUP Jim Slemons '72 v lk R & H $1250 auto, p/s, p/b, $1150. '71 ~nRD MUST•NI'!. 10 Passenger, Air Cond., IMPORTS 0 '· . · 962-7307. Call alter 5. ~ " ~ Au•-Tran' Pow-Steer. ILLNESS in fa1:nily ca.uses 1~·ith 6 PAC cab-over.catnper, Imports New tune-up. Good tires. Vi"'" Top A1r Cond Auto "'t.. ··:-·:"• ~· sale of 1972 Luxury Balboa 3100 w. Coast J-11•'Y·, N.B. {55.lBEL) 9645-1282 dayse '69 NOV:A ~ ' ~s. f~). . " · ing, · i..oapeaj· (974DFB). Motor Home. Purchased 9 642~9405 $l B99 1301 Quail .69 BUG, new tftes &. brakes, 6 7yl, auto, ps, pb, 37,500 · · ·, 12795 • . .$ 395. ~s. ""°~1~'.'""", t:!w ~n!; WANTED BILL. MAXEY New~~ach ~nd .. , clean. $995. mites, ~1250._ '54-0142. BARWiCK iMPORTS BARWI~~ t_MP~RTS Mono ma tic toilet, a l r • ENTER FROM MacARTHUR!-""--'=-------. 71 ~ICE 33375 ean1tno Capistrano '33375 Cam ino Capmrano X • TOYOTA . '68 VW B n t•-, clean Air, pwr, am/fm, $2800. San Juan Cap1·----San Juan Capistrano furnace & ('lCtras. Int cond. OPEL . ug, ew ... "'. • o.....,_,,.....,. .. uculU 4M "75 8311375 $800 * ~ * 493-3375 or 831-1315 .........,., or -Still under warranty. Priced 18881 BEACH BL. 847·&55.5 Call ... '993 'n G to sell now at $8200 \Vill ac· \ d d bl -~..-. LlKE nu, 1968 lrnpa!a, 4 dr 1969 FORD XL Conve•"ble. rand Prix · · . , ' very epcn a e econoniy H.UNTINGTON BEACH I •" ccpt low ~n &: l:'x1st1ng car in good condition. !\>Ju_,;t •70 Opel GT 1969 vw bus camper, many vinyl top, p/s, nu tires, o Black beauty, ptS, P/B, Power Steering, Pow~r long tenn financing. 1624 J111ve fl radio &, he able to '70 DATSUN PICKUP 4 Spd, Orange, LO\v . 10\v xtras private pty, 496-1993, mileage. Mu9:t sen; 837'-7266 PfW, many extras, xlnt 'Brakes, tilt wbeel, Air CoM, Anliqua Way, Dover Shores, v.·ithstand freeway driving. 4 Speed, AM Radio, New 832 8834 1960 CHEV. Station Wagon. oond, will S&.Q'ifice. 968-'943 Bucket scats, AM/FM, Newport Beach 642--9980 V\V, Toyota or ? $200-S300 Tires (837BR I). Jlililes, Nic$e Car. <775ITL). 1.:::=· =:..· -~----Good transportation. $150. '65 FORD Fairlane. Auto, 17,000 mfles, Rallye wheels "'1"1"f'"vCO Tops. Please call 847-4772 $1395 2149 '62 V\V camp. cus. int, eng. 545-8031 {138FWD). • ~ 30 P" ek needs work. $400. or oiler. pwr steering, air, gd tires. $4695 25' VIO<'.OVERER attcc 5' ·"we tlay• °' BARWICK IMPOR TS BILL MAXEY 8J:hl602 '66 Impala 2 Or hrdtop S.S. Depend. tran.. $300 eMh 2'1'·22'.COrffINEJNOTYASLS anytinie weekends. 33375 Ca1nino Capistrano TOYOTA '-.1"'0"-'vw=-eam----r-S_u ___ r Pvt -pty: 557-0026 Eves. only. 546-'2129. DAVID J. PHlkLlPS-20' PJtlJ IE & \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR . .,.. ' .,.. .5S'7 9695 EXP LORER OF r.stJNS San JuRn Capistrano Clean. New tires, lo mi's. -6T GALAXY,--..C dr., pfs, -p/b, BUICKPONTIACOPEL.1nc. VAN l'ON~ l~ ' . -·~• FOR TOP USED CAftS 493-3315 or Sll-t'\75 18881 BEACH BL. 841~ $1,900 Cail' s.6-9596 aft 6pm '67 CHE\7Et.~. ·4 spd. ~~ .. l~~ J»d 1\1.bber, ,$600 ., ~~975. \ ~ · 1r.:&:\ :'°"ttl • Service e -:::1ten1r.ia U Yo1tt .car \11 extra clean, unz.•73 24DZ AM/FM AIR HUNTINGTON BEACH . . cood, Bucket seats, ~!~):Wt ~' Bl.IJli~ 1'.E:AS _ ~ -·~ * Dan~~ctric. * .--~~smCK MAGs . · E-XHAusi . '.-~.~'4£-. _ .. ~t>n~·~.139§: .... J85tl.613-~ .... ,, , .. , ·1t1 ·~·S.. .... ··~ .,,.00 · E 1:-~'IQ1 Hatlinr \vd., G. . ~25 Harbor Blvd SYSTEM. WHITE W/REO "'':: • ~ . _ ~968--6336=:0:::::...?'-...:...~~--• ~,·~new P111~·P~ ab'. 'lugg'/_fJ.'ck_. ,"l·DAVE~o'is- .. , · )?.J-~ -f " Costa Mesa 979-2500 INT. 556·0236. '58 SUPER 1600 Porsche, Nu '67 vw $800 mQtor. $150. Pvt party. life bfue, Cf3::58u. PO,._AC Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Next to G.u. De sun IMPORTS WAf\'TED ·72 DATSUN 6 -Pack lacquer, Pirellis, reblt eng, or BEST ·ooer! 536-7056 .: '61 FORD' COo~rtible. ·XL ftll MOTOR HOM!5 Ornngc Counly's Cab-Over Can1per Delux~. sunroof, nu pholster'y, xlnt 1'" .645-0926 * '69 EL Camino Air ·eooct, 500. Power; d.uto. Top con-241«) Harbor BlVd .. at Fair 3 MO. old. $• Deluxe Gem Top Can1!'('r shell' for pickup. perrect s h a p e , original cosl $350. O"nf'r .sacrificing for S 2 8 5 . 646-6581, 4PM-8PM. Apollo, Pacesetter, Ba r o n . Jamboree, Robinhood • We've got 'em at TOP s BUYER l\1any extras! 16,000 mi.. body, $1915. 646-0575 '66 Sqback & '65 Bug MAKE OFTER dition. $795., 846-1323'. Drive; Costa Mesa 5'£.8017 BILL MAXF.Y TOYOTA ~'OOJ 5411--<397 TOYOTA $675 & $575 67~1 '68 FALCON +.D, xlnt KEN DON MOTOR HOMES 18881 Beach Blv ~._ _ 1973 DATSUNS _!\loving, Must sell. 494-7394 '681MPA1A Air. R/H. Ne\v mecb., below book at $845. H. Br1ch Ph. 841·8:iJ5 TOYOTA SALE tires:, ·brakes, zood cone!. cC=•::ll'-'540-:::C..:7215==~~-- '69 CATALINA, air cond. Pis &. p/b, radio, 4 dr sed. \Vht vin top, maroon, spoke whls.. Whsle bluebk $1050. Sell $800. 96,000 ml.'11. Runs very good. 644-1932. 6 mo. old 8' Deluxe Gem Top Camper 11bell for pickup, perfect shape, original cost $350. Owner sacrificing for $285. 64&-6581. 4 prn-8 pm. Autos, lmportea 970 ALL MODELS . AT VOLVO 1"10, 675-0190. '71 FORD Lm Countcy IN STOCK Pre-Devaluotlon VOLVO SALE! _·_c_O_NT_IN_EN_T_A_L~1 im1tt,;;st"X!;.. ~/;1'· e THE FINEST IN 707 N. I-Tarbor. S.A. 554.0033 USEO IMPORTS e LUXURIOUS 3j· motor e THE FINEST IN BARWICK IMPORTS , PRICES 1 33375 Camino Capilrtrano BRAND NEW Huge Savings ~ '70 Marquis. 28,IXJO mi. New '60 PLYMOUlll st at ion wqon, 9 · paas. good !J'aruiportation. Prlv pt;y $400. 531--0338 home. Nev.• motor, tires, IMPORT SERVICE e colOl' TV, Stereo, air, self· Do yourseH a favor and come cont. Calif. coded, has si>!'.' us first. Open Tues. C'Vcrything. l\1akc oiler. 714-and 'fhur"s. It! 9, Sat.Sun San Juan Capistrano • 1 • tires. 4 Stilts, pwr, T.O.P. 33 I 7 19n '72 .,. 1~ tMS-~. 9 MO. '72 Traveleze 911.i' cam.per. llyd., j a e ks, boun(;(!-A.\Vays. Self cont X1nt, cond. $150. under book, by ownC'r. 9Gfl-96.'">8 493·75or83·135 ' •. Auto. trans., ra'dio, fact. air ONL y JEEP ·59 PICKUP, imn1ac. in· cond., w.s-w tires, tint. 1i terior, AM/Fl\f. rebll eng. glass. (TE210061507), LEFT AT '70 LINCOLN 'MARK Ill cRAMBLER 774-8927 ti! 5. $1300. &I0-1.'l46 af! 6 pm * CAMPER Shells Cor s11](' or rent. 1\ll m11kcs & model.~. 2941 Grace Lane, Bldg G. C.M. 1973 DiSC'Ovcrer and Sundial Q",,-RCPEAN=°'"""-----~, Motor t-lon1cs for rent, make EU AUTO; rC"scrvalions for Summer SW. (wi::RKS) .s...c-. llO\I'. PhonC' l\tiss Benne! at ZIOOH.tx:r l!M1 Co9la ...-. 1MS·1••0 $2563 PRE-DOll.AR '72 DATSUN 510. t:i,;j(X) mi, 2 iAvE NO\V DEVAL.AUTION dr, hi perfonnance equip-AT PRICES! Y·8, automatic transmission, 111dio & heater. power steer'· ing, pov.·er Drakes. p o "'" e r "·indov.·s, power" seats, white sidewall tirfl, air condition- ing. (ZSN4<l!). '62 lN~.(\TlONAL Scout 4 whl drl-ve, w/worn hub & big 1:1.tts. $600. 546-9605 62 RAMBLER Classic, $75 or otter. n1cn1. 6~H24·l MAJORWAY & 1-lalf Pini Campers & Shells at fat;. tory prices. ~ W. 18th. C.M. 8-0b l<>ngpee p 0 n: i" . ALFA ROMEO 892·6651 or 636-2500. Rent A Motor H!>m• 'S9 AL.Pl-IA Ron1l'O Spydcr for your Vacat ion Veloce. Pri. plv, * 531-6800 * 675-'6>1 '71 PU l\'ilh ;iir, chronic 9'"•_· r"oy\·,·A .. •• ••. =k~I~~wv~~~l,Bwd~.~~ries nn1s, · nu tires, $1,600. lUWfl. ~"' 496-4123. "i1 DATSUN 120<1, xlnt eond., nr11t!!r!'s. 2.J,000. $1250. Ph. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-~ . YOLYQ 96R·llbll!l. '72 TOYOTA CE UC A $4889 GUSTAFSON Uncoln.Merc11ry 16800 Beach at warner Huntington Beach. s.ci-8844 * (2131592-5541 ''Home of the Viking'' J·BIRD * 162 LINCOLN ·57 T·BIRD. xlnt body, mags, Make Offer .. · .~ reblt 3.12. nu upho~. MA ¥ERICK au1o, pi•. p/b, $1575. --------· 640-<>;'15 ·12 MAVERICK 2 DR. -V.fl,· "'670::.,,T~-BIRD=~,~Ooo-r~Landa~.,....u. '69 V\V CAt\ilPER, IV/'72 engine, $2600. or best offer. 637-4182 Trailers, Travel 945 cusroM n1adc gJ'('(']! L1l'[I FIAT ---'-------fur ·72 Alfa J<on1co. 6-12-3963 -~------­ SMALL CAR ow N E "s. ·•c:"..::5:.P'"'M-=7"=---• 6S fiat 850 Cpe CAMPER & trailc1· rr>pa11·s & supplies also vnn con· versions. ~ \\I. 1~th, C.J\1. '68 OPEN Road 814' run cab-over, jacks & !;idc anchors, ST:iO. 962-.1l:f.t Looking for a roo'rny, COl\1· -BMW PACT TRAILER? Head for Lo11· i\1iles, 1\ Heal Nice Car. a full size camping vacation I----------(XDA2241. with the Ladybug -designed LEASE A $899 for small cars. Specially BILL MAXEY '64 Jeep Pick Up Truck & Camper. Prlv. purty. priCN'l thru ?.1ay only. $324. 49'.Hrllt, '2981 Colle Pockc-1973 BAVARIA TOYOTA lo, San Juan Capistrano Call 548-5747. '73 21' f'"IREBALL on 1-11.ni !~AA! BEACl-t BL. 847-8.155 Dodge chassis. stilt under CREVIE R BMW HUNT INGTON BEACH Cycles, Bikn Scooters 925 warr. 5:i00 rni. Pricc>d to &llPs ·Service· Leasing El71 f"IAT, Sport Spyder, 5 sell. 54f)-3'ili6 Eves. 201'.1 W. 18~~31-ilnta Ana spd, xlnt <.'CncL $2700. or F'OR rent 27' \\'innt'bago• ---.;..:,:,_..cc,-'-..---n1akf' offer. Call 586-2813 \'AMAHA 90 l!:nduro. Good i-BMW Chicfl•n, 'lcop• 6, deluxe. KARMANN GHIA" buy for U1e sn1all guys. &10-0 70 Fork brace, high rise · 3 Bob Mc laren, Inc. fender, adjustable r car '69 NIJ\1ROO, Camelot delux. Sales, scrvice-leas1' shocks. This bike is 111 great slps 8, Slove & ice box, L<'asc a 1973 Bavaria. ArC shape. Phone SJ0.6697. $300. 548-6592 & AM /Fl\-1 !or $137.86 pr>r BICYCLE SALE Trailers, Ut ility 947 1no ,open t>nd. R.10 No. Beach Ew lo SPEED ITALJAN -----~'---·I Blvd., La Habra. N Sl\1A.LL CAR 0 \V NE RS. 714-52'1·5.133 BICYCLES S59.95. Beach Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa Looking for a rooniy, rom· Daily Pilot \Vant Ads have Blvd., Balboa m.7282. pact trailer? Head for a full baf'Rains galore. I size camping vacatitin 111lth -~-­YAMAHA 175 Enduro, like the Ladybug ~ designed for new \vilh rork bract' and ('.,.. srnall cars. Specially pricC'd pansion chan1ber. Exce llent thru J\fay only, s 3 2 4 , runni(lg condition. Phone 493·0711. 32981 Calle Pf.'rfel'· ~. $400. to, San Juan Capistrano. '70 liONDA ChoppPr 3.Jlk·e 5 ALUl\1 ul illty trl. Ji)" spd. Pvt party. Reas. \1'hN'ls/n£'1\' 1i1't's, propane ~aul. bike. 5 51-0 6 2 6 • S IO\'f', \\·a!l'r tunk, Si7:i. 979-4517. Eves. 5S7-9695. 6.i.~1162 '6.5 Honda, 250 Scramblr>1'. l ~~~~~~~~~~I eng reb1t, s125. I ~ 61>-3971 or SlH<l72 [ 1§1 USED BICYC LES ....,.,.S.S. _ _ All T:.cpes * 642-1272 I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;~;.;. '68 KAWASAKE Di11 'Bike, Recreationiill murt see lo apprl'ciatt'. 64()..0169 Vehicles 956 1973 PUCH 175 cc l\fX '69 JEEP. \'-6 . .i 11·hl dr Sr Endtrro, 110 miles, xlnt. O.D. & Cahover EldoradQ Save $300. 640--0169 can1pr>r, 3n:J exit>, fully CZ 2SO MX. nu Dec '_72. used !ir>lf-cont. 646-5792 3 raciet. &Uiaer llke nu, SAND Buggy, Xlnt • ('Ond. 67)-'828 or 547--2595 Recently rebuilt ('ngine. Mlril Bike; 6 hp :-'"'°-=-.· 9684-""--"'883"'---=I $125, $16-"53 Trucks 962 '72 HwqvUna. 125 CR Good .-56-DO_DG_E_\i_lo_n_p-lek_u_p·I ron111t101" sm ,. """ otttt. m; ~hat aell :U.S..121S · e 544.3417 e + 1m Triumph BonoeYW.e, 650 cc, $1000. * ~T-1485 ... rait rttultt IN JDM: a Dbone' calJ away &0-515'11. t '65 F'ORD ~ ton pickup, 352 V•8, 8 ft . bed, Excellent con. dltlon. 64,;-19JO • • GIMINI ~MAYll Y'~tfJuHr 10 ·~~--..-, •• ·/. ''"l. 'Ci!l KARI\IANN GHIA con· l'l'rliblc, C:'\cel!ent condition, R42-!l~07 You don't need a gun to "Dra1v f>~a~t" v.•heii you plJ1.re fin ad in the-Daily Pilo1 \Vant Ads! Call now -6,12-5678. • 4 Spd, Air' Cond, Beautiful turqUoise finish (753EKR) $2699 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300 '70 Volvo 2 Dr. 1425 Auto Trans, Sharp Blue rinish. (389CEH) Auto ·Trans. P/s. 'Deluxe full pwr, ani/frn rad. $850. !nt. Priv. ~y. ~4. 557""1579. , ··MERCURY -VALIANT -1963 4 dr Valiant, lo mileage, BILL MAXEY $2299 '70 MARQ.UIS Colony Park 10 -pass wgn, loided! Xlnt cond. 675-81971642-771Jt. best otter '. eYefi, 640-1575 TOYOTA BILL MAXEY HUNTINGTON sii:V.. T5)YOT A WAREHOUSE SALE WA.REHOUSE SALi 'n MARK IV .. 18881 BEACH BL. -5{7~ 188itl BEACH BL. 847-8555 '70 TOYOTA HUNTINQWN B~ACH V·8, automatic transmission, radio &: heater, powei steer. ing, po\\'er brakes, vinyl tup, air cooditkming, White side- wall tires. (965EHS). JUST ·ARRIVED I ~' LAND CRUISER '72. VOLVO (543A>..'EJ 4 dr $edan. Sacnf1ce $200. 'FROM ITALY ~ .,. $:1295 t.o.p, Pvt pty 900.1072 an 6. BARWICK IMPORTS Autos, UNd 990 $7489 GUSTAFSON Llncol~·~•rcury S! 0 , c i 1:1 1 33375 Camino Capistrano Snn Jua..n Capistrano 49~75 or. 83J,-U75 '72 TOYOTA Corolla , 1600. A/t, AM/FM radio. Best offer. &12-6731 Need a "Pad"? P1ace an ad! Call 642-5618. ' BUICK 1968'RIVIERIA L~DAU TOP 46,00) mi's. fuJJ. pwr fact ai'r, ipn/fnl radio Bal-Blue Boole -·16800 Beacb at Warner Huntington Beach 842-1144 * (213) 592-5544 ''Hom, Of the Viking'' IQ ~ CORVElfE ~ M-UST--SE-1.L--.TO--M-OVE-· I i 1970 BUICK Electra-.225. full 'EAsr 1966 Corv1!'(te, new OIQ pwr, a/c, xlnt cond. Must tires & exhaust l!i;ystem. C: see to appre¢ate. 541--0725 ~a,y be seen at Huntington '63 BUICK SpecU\I, 4 dr. By The Sea Trailtr Park, 42,IXJO ")4 ... , rib, new tire</ 11871 N""1and St., Spa<e ~ $40.3894 SOLD ONLY IN THE CRATE (CISJ Tp Auomblo • Super Llthtwtight 10 SPEED .a.CYCLE ALL COLORS • ALL SIZES ONLY brakes. ~· • ~1_'87, _H_.B_,. _ _,_,-~_, SSC Autos, Imported 970 Autosi lmjrortad 970 $98 88 ·.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;N;;;~;;;;. ;;;PO;;;;R;;T;, .,;;;;, •;;;. T;;;;SU;;;N,;1 ;;;;;;;;; 11 . I • ' ' ~ ·1 :c ' = ~I' '!i ~ :c ...... llURIY 0 $140.00 llj ' YOU CAN mt.L err ~ Valve ~ A NIW 04'1SUN l l i '" · 0 ' c..-a"';,,T;;;:.J;;,,,JHI O\D PllCI ~ • Ce.mJ11.nola ~Dtr8.ller • Aluminum Chain ,roiec-. ! -Jft ton • ,(Juf\lfn\lm Center Pull Brake •· Aluminum 9' I Unll 1973 . OATS. u·N 240.Z Gear "J>rotec.tor • Aluminum Kick Slalld • Safety ~ I fttn i Reflector Side .l Rear e Aluminum Hl\ndle Ban ~ ·~ SEVERAL TO clf&sE FRoM • Hlih Grade Gum nre. e tlumlnum Wide Flange ~f . AL L COLORS-IMMl!DIATE DELIVERY Hqbc e Quick R~leue !tubs .• Factory Wrapped ~ · BUY OR J.EASE ,-. " Plu•ed ~Bin. '' i . NlWPQaT · IMPOIJS -I ~ JIOO W. Coottt 1Hwy. Now,-.__ ~ ' ! . . . ., 60-94o5 , . :. I WA•IHO!J~ SA1I WAUHOUSE SALE • I ' •• • I • .r • •• Today's ; EDITION -- ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORl'llA MONDAY, MAY 21, t97l TEN -CENTS • AV-co Gets Handicap in ;(;olf Course Hearing '" By TO~f BARLEY '" . Of ,._ ru,ny l"IS.t tNlff us .ccW. He handed Avco lawyers a further set· bad< this morning by warning them tbat be will only allow testili>o(iy lrom the comJ)any;'s executives related to ac- tivities on thf. golf course development · .. Avco. pevelopment Corpor~l1l19 e:ii:· -ecutim wen caned to tbe wii.ness stand 10day in Orange County Superior 'Court in ·au eleventh hour bid lo avert ~n in· junction that would halt all building ac- tivity In a key =tor of their $100 million planned l'OIIlll'unity. · betio""1 the period OCt."25-Nov. 8, 1111%. Those.14 days.immediat<ly proceed the enforcement at ·the coastal conservation statute ouUined in Proposllioo 20. · Judge Herbert Herlands has already Issued such an injunction agalnst a tract eannarl<ed for the building or a stiopping complex thal haS an Alpha Beta 'store at ·Avco Jawye'rs a'rgue that their ac- quisition in 1968 of the 836-acre Capron prOperty and.work 'carrled out from that Pause To ftef.pesh . . ..· . , Dog tall~ advantage-Of the public foµntain in Heisler Park at La· -··llUfta"·B\iadl-forT<OOUDg-dritJ[t',.Jlevfug ·pbot<>grapber speculated that running.,_ lb(>se m· pirk can. 't:je pretty thirsty work on a warm day, ~pecially·with a fur coat. ·-... . Nixon 'Cove rup. Wish' Trdced to Hald eman WASHINGTON (A"P) -Former White Houst chlei o; staff H.,Jt. Haldeman was quoted today as having said, "lt is the Rre.sldent's wish" tbat tbe CIA ask ll>e • FBI not to investigate Mexican angles in tile Wattrg°ate affair. · Seo. Stuart Symington ( D -M o. j ; ~ the statement was noted in ·a memo by deiiuty CIA director u.-a.n. y~ wa.tters on June 23, im -slx ~~ after the break-in at Democratic Ji1!!:!1· headquart<rs. , 1ne memo was made public t(lday as fc:Wmer CIA director Richard Helms ap. ~ befGre the Sena!< Foreign Rela- UohS c.ommtttee of which Symington is a m<m1>er. It coocemed a meeting on June 2l m. totvjbg Walters, Helms, Haldeman and John D, Ebrllchman. At the end, Walters noted in hl5 memo, Balde.man tlitned to him and aid, "It is the Pruldint's wish that you go to aee ldt. Gray." L. 'Patrick Gray DI was ac· . 'AD REQUIRES NO .. JlEPEAT EFFORTS • I \ ting director of the FBI. Aske<i about the notation. Helms said he' was in the meetng'but does not recall the specific ipY9C1tion of the President's name. B'Ut he said "iristructinns from the . ~h,iel of staff Were ~s~urpedJo be car-ryh/J the Pr .. id<nt'• au.lllotity. At.that time. fnvestigat.i<m were under ""Y about "laimder"I!" coampalgn coo. trlbulioos sent lrbfu. l:eus to Mexico to lie converted inlo <!\eeks and caab. Some or the checks eventulilly \.ound up In the banJc account of convicted Watergate conspirator Bernard L. Barker in Miami. Thera had been previous testimony that \be FBI WU asked to stay out ol 'that pert of ttie lnvestigatiori in order to make Jt look like a CIA· operation. Helms told the commlttee b I 1 only coocem then was llmt the CIA should' be tept out ot the Watergate af· (See WATERGATE, "Page%) Girl, 3, -Bitten; ' - Canine· Sou ght ' ;tfJf at llrsl ... " Mvw\oers oft<n do ilklcted on the first try when they try a .. ~~~~~~."!· . -ei~.t-· • • • \ :.\·San Cltmente wo~whoff ·3-year· tkl daughter was bitten ·by a shaggy >rhffl <j\>i.S.tuhlay.lat J!ou"!f-o.-plea)or- F<JOni :ilia l\Osl -Ibo •oe fl>· C2ll poi lee. ' .. . ' . • POINT. Blk to. beach, beoul mod, I hr, color TY SW> deck, yrly 1190. (Phone No.) Tbe hou;. was renled to J.be .Fl11ST person who saw it. Try calling your ad· vi!!Of, and she'll try her heal tA> betp you 1utceed. Her dtrect line lo 642-56'111. "Maryann Pinon, who will be 4 years old thiJ ,week. wa1 bitten Oil the band -,,bile at a baby altt<u house Ii 725 Presidio. The dog, deo<rlbed as 20 inebes hlgb, whit~ with black apota:, ahaggy and very dh1y 1 dl.sappeared afterwards. Unless the dog Is found , Mary&M mt)' have to go thfOU8h a series of antlrrabiea shots, Mn. Sylvta Pineo 111d. date amounts to an UDCballengeable case. of their vested rights tA> develop the. ocearM>riented area. But.Judge Hertands today point<d -OU! lhai be was pinning much of his faith in the pretrial-bearing in an Arizona lawsuit that is at the heart of the.Environmental Ci>alitlon" o1.· aranae C"'1ntJ's case again>l Avco. He tokl O>alition attorney Stanley Jones that he had reread the Arizma case over the weekend and now felt that Jones bad correctly interpreted the issues in that vital lawsuit. Avco lawyers argue that the work perlonneCI on the g'olf course iite - wort.en bad stripped the area of vegeta- tion and filled a deep canyon by Oct. 25 -givea them the right to proceed with its de~lopment. Coalition laywers contend that the pasSage of coastal protection laws outlin- ed in Proposition 20 terminated that right and made A'O'co subject to the South Cout Regional Conservation Commission in all matters aff~tinc the propenies. NwiY ball ol the planned golf course lies wilhln 1,000 yard> ol the 111«n high tide line -the boundary drawn by tha coastal conservation measure and the area now protected by the coastal com· mi.ssion. Avco lawyen have repeatedly argued thal developmeflt ol the lnlllld phase or tha Salt Cleek project Is pointless unless oorresponding ""'structlon can take place on the seaward aide ol the 1,000. yard boundary. Judge Herlands bu told both sides tlw:t his injunction , only hal ts Avco activtUu pending trial of the is.sue or pending other pretrial actlOD by Avco that could overru1e his findings. And he bas made it clear to both side• that he believes that an appellate court will have the last work on whether the Avco development aoes lhrough or is lorced to adapt to stringent coastal com· miSSion guidelines. Crabs 'By the Billions' Still Infesting Beaches Dollar Hi~ Depths Due · To Rumor LONDON (AP) -Gold soared to record P~iD ,Eur~ ~y-and: the us. doliF~ ;-If~ !"I: . • 8'~'F-:-.,..,, . ·aijoc'~ '!_ rec<ird $1fi iii olince, up f7.50 rfrom E]iday's close and $1.50 aboYe the rec'ord ·set there last Tuesrlay. Swiss banks, which buy and sell for Middle East oil Interests, intemaliooal corpofatioos and wee1thy individuals, have-been active in the gold market in the past two weeks. • ' In London , the world 's biggest bullion center. gold. was traded alf112.50 an oun- ce, up $7 from Friday's close. The previous record in London, set last Tues. day-, was $111. The dollar, meanwhile, hit record lows in Frankfurt aiid Paris and w~kened sharply· in most other European centers. In Paris, the U.S. currency sank ·to 4.4050 rommercial francs, below the lows of the February mopetary crisis when the dollar wai de"valued. One banking (See GOLD, Page %) Soviet Officials leave El Toro After Area Visit A four-engine Soviet jet plane about the size of a Boeing 707 left El Toro Marine Corps Air Station this morning on runway 2S headed over Irvine enroute back .to Russia.· · The p1ane carried aboul SO Rusaian security experts who spent two days along the _Orange Co"'t loo~ at !\>< Weste?V\Whlle llotlse. -; •. The ''Vis.It Js fn preparation fdr ~me "future, P91Si~Ie" vi.sit by high Sov et of· fk:lals, alfEl .Toro spokesman said. ! lt was ¥ievecf the security evaluation may have fel~t<d to the possible v!slt to Sart ~te ln late June of_,_,Sovlet leader LeOqid ·Brezhnev , who is scbedut.- ed lint to meet wlth the Presidenl In Washington, D.C. ' . The Russian agents' IL 62 transport plane parked in a portion of the E~ troro field ~lllf reserved by . t b e President's )'lane. Due to Its •lze llld weight, the plane ..,. ed the tast-west nrnw8:y, on Its return to an undisck:lfJed borne base. .. •oeals ~ Delay La11d Information Due Frida y The White House bas again delayed disclosures on President Nixon's real estate dealings in Sao Clemente and Florida but spakesmen promised today 10 give the accounting this Friday. THE DISCLOSURE had been promised ooe week ago when presidential spokesmen vigorously denied a Santa Ana Register report that Senate invesli· gators were looking into the possibility that Nixon campaign funds may have been used in the purchase of. the old Hamilton H. cotton estate in San Cle- mente. · . ~ , , --:""-Pil>µfy Press Seoretary ye(ald i,. Warren soi<! the Whitt: !!-~ . • ' If ' . -• -. -;., .. !.\." ZleglU .lald the· lnllinnatlcm . lie'bl''.:litallablt m ••ada.¥Gr8tl" ' . ' ... j . •f +•-·· 1 ·~ ........ : .. l.·· _ _,,, llJ'-' ..... --...::! -·~"' ..... .~ ... ..,,;;;: • ··~,... -._ ~-wAJUi!:N SAID the ft!-liad bee\! 4elay~ ~auae_ the White HOUie wanJ,ed ti> make certain U>e information was "complete. accurate and doc- umented." He .said actirig presidenUal counsel ~rd Garment and his staff "are putting together the details,' documenting the facts and having contact With a number of people." ' Before his resignation April 30 in the midst ot the Watergate controversy, presidential assistant John Ebrllciunan handled most matters conctmlng Nlron's personal finance. Also involved was Herbert Kalmbach, a Newport Beach attorney w~ served until recently as Nixon's personal lawyer. Man's· Decapitated Body Not Linked to Murders By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tl!e O.llY 1'1111 St1tl CARSON -The murder of a young man whose headless body was found In an oilfield here ~lurday i5 not linked to the string of mutilation murders that have oceurred in lhis area, police said ~ day. Detective Brad Phelan of the Los Angelel Police Department said the man who was found Saturday was apparently the victim of a robbery. "There ls no relationship between this killing and the others we are in· vestigatlng~" Phalen said. The others Phalen referred to are a slring of four mutilation murders in which the victims were homosexually assaulted. Phelan said the Los Angeles coroner has confirmed that the latest murder victim had not been aexually assaulted and he wa s found fully elotbed . Police from five agencies in the Los Angeles Harbor area and western Orange County are still investigating the blutre mutilation murders in which only one of the four victims has been identified. Those victims are Edward Daniel ~1oore, 20, whose body wu found Dec. 2& in Seal Beach; a young man found Feb. 9 in the WilmJngton Area; -r yoong man found April H in Huntlngtoo Beach and a young man whose dismembered corpse was lound acattered tbrougbou' the Harbor area and in Suntet Beach. School Boumla,.,,..tin.e Cha nge to Be Studied Clemente High, Wimer said. Trustees tonight wlll be considering adoption or elementary and junior bJ&b school attendance areas, ~tlonal pay for summer school teachers and a~ pointmcnt of members to an Instructional materials review committee.. Pbnnping F~tures . . Worth $3,300 .Gone.· . Plumbins fixtures · vllued by the owners at more tbm·U..000 were 1tolen dudJlC the we<l:.,>d tram a Dena Point cooslruc:liDn lite, Orll1p County SllNlll'I olnc.n said. -Olliclalo of Los ·Marlanu Corpal'alloo, ~w Sanl4 Clara st .. Dana Point, told dcputl.. the materials we,. stolen W tr._rs on a buildin& sit. at that oetan ftont addr61. • Creatures Washfugln On S. Coast By CANDACE PEARSON Ot' ffM O.flY ,.11411 l lllf Thousands l)f small red crabCI oontlnue to wash Jn "'.itb·tfie surf tn ~-~nte and Dana Point.-~-·· J!ontb' '""1rc..ollood .. _sullt ""'llftll.. • 'A~l!arr Oementf llfeaaat'd '.ljj6~ •Id the "in-'' ol polallc (ltee-sWlmmlng ) crabs that; ,...ml>IO lolloteri was tn even larger num_bera toda)'. • He said the unusual mu1 OCCW'NllCe ol the silver-dollar sized crabs has been reported from u far south aa Ensemda north to Newport Beach. "We've got those by the billions.'~ a Harbor patrolman at, Dana Point sald this morning, "They're swimming around our docks.'' He added that the same crabs came Jn similar numbers•ll years ago and then 12 years be!'"" the!, as i! on acbedule. Fishing 11 still bad al Dana Point, he said, because fish eat the crabl, not bait. "The fish all have lat l>Appy grins od their faces," tbe Harbor spokesman """ firmed. 'I1le small crabs pinch, OOt don't really hurt llumans. The swim backwll'dl ilke a lobster, but in some areas are getting stranded behind surf lines. Dr. Donald Bright, a marine biologist at Cal State Fullerton, said the crabs' pruenee on the surface water• ts unusual. Thi.9 species, Bright said, u11Ualb' in- hlbitl ocean waters at about '° to to fathoms ol depth. They are being pushed north Ille! to the surfoce, said Bright, chairman ot the biology deportment at Gal stat., by normal warmer tropical water currenta lrotn the south oomlng north. 1be crabe swhn &long with the warmer currenta and are brought up as tboee currenta and some wind conditions change rapldly,-he said. 'In r,lont.rey ln 1159, a similar number of crabe were t;irown ashore becaute of, the turbulent mix of waters, he said. ..- ·Dr. Br!iht added that while the crabs •"8. edl~e. their Bllllll amount of meat mllltt not be worth tho eoer17 trying to gertt ou1. ....... • • W4!•er The !.oo Ancelet weather servioe saya the sun will break through those -low cloods on Tuesday foe the first time in 11 days. Mostb' 1UJU1Y afternoons aro .. pected ror the rest of the weelr. Hlgbs ·of II at the beacbea, rlslna tA> 74 inland. INSIDE TODA1.' "The Waltom;" TV's st£rpriae hit of tht 1ta.son. ond the Jillie Audrew1 Hour, oaneeted m mi(i.. . wuon,."'°'..S.lo!> "°""''al IM ""''"°'-Em11111 owqrd ptCSCllfO. Uon.r. Set Page g for aU lhC <I-. tau.. '.M. -,,• ...... .. _ . <......... IW& C..la ,. <_...,.. ,. --~ . •.iteN• ,.... • ••n . RI 1114 ,.,. l'1*lff ,...,. MMllUI I 14 AMI UMln It, ) 2 DAILY PIL.OT SC 'Prosecuwr I iffasPower I ' Sowns Told ... WASHINGTON (UP!) -An:hibald Co• testified today that Altorney g'neral· designate Elliot L. R.lchardson had given him "all the PCJ""r needed to be in- dependent" in hlJ job ., special Watergate prosecutor. "'11le only authority he has retained Is the authority to give me hell ir don't do the job," Co1 told the Senate Judiciary Committee, "and l thlnk he ought to keep th.at authority.'' Rlchards<lll introduced the Sl·year-<>ld Democrat, No. 3 man ln the Justice Department during tbe Kennedy ad- ministration and part of tbe Johnson ad· ministration, at the same lime that he made publlc CormAJly new guidelines ex- panding on the authority that the pros· ecutor will have in the Watergale case. FUchardson, In a brief introduction of Cox, said lhe Harva rd law professor would have "fuU independence '' in the case. Sen. James 0. Eutland (D-Miss.) the Judiciary Committee chairman, asked Cox if he was sure he could work with JUchardson according to the guidelines. "[am," Cox said. "I discussed them with Mr rue~ over the telephone. There .)ere llfumber of points -we talked for two hours -Yle worked out together. . . "I'm sati.sifled they give a special prosecutor all the power. needed to be !n- dependent. 1 certainly intend to be 1n· dependent and to take responsibility to the best ot my abWty ." The revised guidelines, dated May 19. give the special prosecutor ' ' ! u 11 authority" over the Watergate case. They say Cox "will have the greatest degree ol independence that Is C01111lstent with the attorney general's statutory ac- countability for all matters falling within the jurisdiction o! the Department of Justice ." The guidelines provide Cox full authori- ty for issuing warrants, subpoenas, or other court orders; conducting pros· ecutions; determlnlng to what extent he would in!onn or consutll with lhe at· torney general, and In determining when be had completed his duties. Cox has wd be would not !eel an obligation to lnfornt Richardson of what be was 6oing m tu. \nVts\l&a\kln. The Democrat.a have contended. that RichardlOn mUBt be..completely reawvea from the invveaU1aUon so as to avold any suspicion that, as a member of. Pre!i- dent Nixon's official family , he was in any way exerting control over the caae. Richardson said repeatedly he would give the special prosecutor ' ' f u I I authority" over Watergate but would re- tain "ultlmate authori ty" over him. The Democrats insisted that the proserutor have "complete independence." Gas Pf..ice Hike To 45c Forecast SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A ga5ollne executive predlct.ll the current fuel short· age soon will cause the price of regular gasoline to rise to 4S cents a gallon . "We're not too far away from it right now," Robert Cavin executive director of {be Society of Independent Gasoline Mar· keters of America, said Sunday. Cavin, here for his organization's semi· annual meeting, said many o{ its 210 member companies have had to cut back bu.sines& at their total of 20,000 retail outlets because gasoline has become inaccessible. He said the shortage wu cauaed by "a lack of sufficient domestic crude," aod called for an end to import quotas. "We'd like to see it possible for anyone l\<lth the financial resources to go 11fter foreign oil to be allowed to go get it," cavm said. DAILY PILOT 'l'M Or ..... Co.ti DAILY l'ILOl, wlft> ""odl ... .....,...,., llM 1o1 ........ ,... •• " "'1011111M .., lhtP Orl"'O"' Co1ir l>lllW""lnD CflTl!Nl~Y. '- ntt llll!lllM 1r1 M!Wttd. Mond•Y l,ll""'llh Fr .. y, for (Mii Mita, HfWPO<I 8Nth, Hur11i..o1on 8tK1'1/f'_,.lll Vtllty, I.~ 8eid'I, INIMi/lillldlfMCll 11111 lln ('""*'It/ i..i J1111n Clpltlr-A 1l119le '"lfrlll edition It .,,,..lltllef ltlllrdlY' Md IVl'ldty1, TN prlncip.I fllblltftlnt P .. nf It 11 DI Wql .. ., Slrwt, CMll MM.I, °'""'"'" ,,.., .... ,,.. N. W,M "'"lderit .,,,. l'vllthllW J11• It C\lrl.., Viet l"fU iollMI ll'od 0-11 Me,...W lh1,,,11 Xttril """ Titoflltl .... M"'rphl"t M1,..t+119 l.llltor Ch11ft1 H. l..H Rlcli1r4 f'. No ll A•llle<'ll M~ 1!111119o S. Chq1•1c Offk.e lOS N•rih ll C.t111ln• ••ti, 9267? ....__ Cotti---~ UI Wttl ••Y Stret1 ........., 9-drl: am NfWM!1 ... ....,"" ...., ...... l#Cfll ,,.,, ~ .......... "' U..W ~I at f' ..... 1 AWll\ll , .. ,,., r C714f 142-4JJ1 Cl_,.., .W.&1Tl•1 '42·1,71 S. c:r1u111111 Al D•••-•fi: ta,t as 4'2-44.t• C'.enrwit, 1t1a,. Ort,.. C..I 1t.-i111'1"" =-"'· ,., ...... .,......, 111,,,.,,,,._, ... '"''""' ., . ~,_,,,,."' ...... "' _, be • ·~ -""*" ..... -""'*" .. ..,.""", """"'· ~.-Clea ............ c.tl• ...... ..... ' ~.... .... arrW t:l.ff ""9lltJlllY1 "" -11 U.IJ mtn1t11'1'1 11111t1r1rr ....... II•• NM lllfftll'l/Y, • Ul'I Ttle ... M SCENE OF CRIME -This is the Rockville, Md., telephone booth where Watergate conspirator James McCord said be received promis- es of executive clemency if he would keep quiet about his role ·in the affair. FronaPogeJ WATERGATE • • fair entirely. As Helms appeared at Symington's committee, another Senate committee was questioning Archibald Cox, selected by Elliot L. Richardson to be the in· dependent special prosecutor in the Watergate case. Co1 said he intends to take full responsibility and s.aid RichardS(ln re- tains only the authority "to give me hell if I don't do the job." l~e added: "I think he ought to keep that authority." In another development, John C. Caulfield and Frederick C. LaRue, ap.. peared to give pre-trial statement in a Watergate.related civil suit, but re- mained only briefly. Th~ WuhinglOf\ ~ar-News reP!Jr.t~d the luitlce Dej)Ortinent baS espan<IM ll•f J>robe of the undercover campaign ac- tivities of Donald H. Segretti ro five new places -San Francisco, San Diego, Pittsburgh, Portland, Ore., and possibly Milwaukee. The Star·News, in a story by James R. Polk, said investigators have Segretti's travel records and long· d j s ta n c e telephone records. Segrettis is a young Callfornla attorney who has pleadc .'. innocent in Florida on a charge of sending fake campaign literature. The Federal Bureau of Investigation has been told Segretli was paid $30,000 to $40,000 in campaign funds by President Nixon's former personal lawyer, Hert.:-t W. Kalmbach. Anotbcr Star-News story said Ni~on campaign advisers still .,.,,ere distributi ng "hush money" to one or more of the seYen convicted Watergate conspirators as rec12ntly as earl; Apr;t -about the same time ~hal federa l investigators were being told about efforts to cover up the scandal. ·The principa.1 recipient apparenlly was G. Go rdon Liddy, said to be the orgr:iizer or the burglary of Democratic head· quarters last year, the ne\vspapcr reported, quoting unnamed sources. Liddy ls the only one or the seven to have received a final sentence, end he is serving an additional jail tenn for refus· ing to testify under Jmmunlty. A special Senate investigating com· mittee resumes its televised Watergate hearings Tuesday "'ilh convicted burglar James W. li,lcCord still the witness. Stereo and Ski Equipment Gone About $800 wor!h -0f stereo and !ki equipn1e11t was stolen from a ~n Clemente borne Sunday niorning whUe the owner was out eating breakfast, police said. Dennis L. Dodge of 202 Calle Cor tez told San Clemente police he and friends hlltl gone out to cat after H party nl his house. _ Missing upan Dodge's return Were ono tabletop eight.track stereo valued at $150; one si x·string albino white guitar, valued at $500 and one pair of Fisher glass red and white snow skies. v.·orth $150, pohce said. Countian's Death ' Still a Myste1·y An autopsy failed lo disclose the cause of the mysterious death of a Garden Grove man whose body was found Satur- day noon under a mattress In a pickup truck, the Orange County Coroner'• Qf. fice rcrported today. Further tests arc planned to detennine what kllled Gary tlcikkila , 28, coroner's deputies said. It has been e~timated that l·teikkjla died Friday night. lnv~stigntors did 8"1Y that there were no signs of foul piny on his body. Pool Committee Schedules First S. County Meet A new steering committee to plan the construction and use of two new public swimming pools in the Capistrano Unified School District will meet for the first time next week. Delegates from the Parents on Pools Committef: -which led the successful effort to win passage of the .special tax district at the polls -will join represen-. tatives from the two high schools and the community at large in an effort to launch (lonJtruotion. Of the ~. Becrlllb < I directors from Avco cOm mu nl ty Developera and the Mi.mun Viejo COftl. pany aJso Will join in the dlscusslons Wednesday, starting at 8 p.m. in the district headquarters. · Among the responsibilities delegated to !he commlttetJ will be the detennination ot the various recreaUonal and educa- tional uses of the new pools the type of pools that will best serve th~ needs and development of plans and specUications. Olalrman pro.tern or the committee will be Bruce Deacon. the head of the parents committee which won the cam. paign for a 1()..cent special tax rate to finance the pools. At present a jolnt-piowers agreement between the counly and school district formally establishes the SJ>C(!ial taxing district. Cash will be set aside from the tax revenue to build hvo po o I s simultaneously at San Clemente and Dana Hills High School. Money also will be set away for the construction of a third pool at a future high school campus in Mission Viejo. From P"fle 1 GOLD ... source said while the talk that Nb:on might resign "·as only nunor, "the market is extremely nervous and in- clined to react to the wildest rumors." In Frankfurt, the dollar dropped to 2.6430 marks. Tn London, the Pound jumped more than lwo cen!5, trading at $2.5742 by mid· morning, up irom $2.5512 late Friday. The dollar \vas also weaker in Zurich ;ind Milan. In Zuricb it bought only 3.12125 Swiss francs, compared with :'.1485 at the close Friday. Gold broke past $100 last week in a surge of speculation partly triggered by the \Vatergate scandal and fears that it v•ould undermine President Nixon's plans to control inflation in the Unlted States. T~at \vav~ subsided by 'I'hursday, the price of gold began to decline and the dollar improved. The trend was reversed at the opening or the markets today after a weekend during which some British newspapers carried speculative stories that the scan· dais in Washington might force the f>resident &o resign. Some dealers: said the markets were made more uneasy by 11 report that the President's chief foreign PoUcy adviser, Henry Kissinger, might resign. Wo1nan , Boy Found Dead in Vehicle SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A 4.l·year .. ld Sara toga woman 11nd an Infant were found dead from exhaust fumes in a car pnrked In the Santa Cruz Mountains, police said. Mary Rulh Popelka and the boy, who a pathologist estimated at hetwecn one year and 18 months old, w~rc discovered by a local man, police s.a 1d. --. W a rant .Out on _ Vesc . ' .. • • Mi,,Chell,'St.ans Make lnnoc~nt P I ~1· ' ' - as , <' lftw YOllX' (UPl) -Fonner cabinet rnemben John N. MltcheD and Maurice SlaM pleaded Innocent today to cha1les or perjury and ooruipltaey in connection with 11. p:I0,000 gift to President Nixon 's re-election campalgn from ' a financier who was under federal inve&tigation. The financier and codefendent, Robert L. Veaco, 36, did not appear to enter a plea aod a warrant was lssued for bis ar- rest. Vesco has left lM country and lu1 was reported in Q:le:la Rica. A fourth defendent, prominent New Jer!ey Republican Harry L. Sears, also pleaded innocent. Ass istant U.S. Attorney John Wing ask- ed that a personal recogni%.anet bond of $1 ,000 be posted for each defendant. But Judge John CaMella rejected the ap- plicatioo. and released the defendants in their own custody. LOOking pale and shaken, Milcbell and his lawyers had to push a path through reporters who mobbed them as they ar- rived at the courthouse. Mitchell's only comments to a b.11.rrage of questions were, "Good morning. How are you? I'm here to enler a plea ." Inside the court, Mitchell, former at· tomey general who left that office to run Nlion's campaign , tilt«! back in his chair and wrung his hands as be waited to answer the charges. He shook hands with Stans, Connerly commerce aKretary and chief of the re- election c:ornmittee's !insnces, and Sears who arrived about 25 minutes after him. Cannella ruled that it was unnecessary to have UM; defendants fingerprinted 8.J'ld photographed in the fe<:eral marshal's Of· fk:e. Following the arraignment, the three defendants went to the chambers of federal Judge Lee Gagliardi, who was assigned the case. Gagliardi, 54, ol Lflrchmoot, N.Y., ts one of the newest judges in the Southern District. He was appointed in Jannary 197%. A federal grand jury indicted all four defenda nts on charges of conspiracy to obstruct ju.st.ice and conspiracy to in. !luence a SecuriUes and Exchange Ciom- mlssion (SEC) invesUgaUon of Vesco's financial interests. In addJUon, MJtchelJ and Stans were charged with perjury -accused of lying six times each in their appearances before the grand jury. The grand jury was investigating a secret $200,000 cash contribution made on Casualty Team Inspects 3 Crash Sites in South Viet BANGKOK, Thailand (A P) -There is no indication that any Americans listed as missing in action in Southeast Asia arc still alive, Brig. Gen. Robert C. this would "get the next .or kin very anx- ious," he said. "We are not goirig to an· nounce whether we found remains or not." April 10, 1972 -three days after the new federal campaign contribution disclarure law went into effect -to tbe Ni100 re-eJectlon committee1 · ~~l\t $200,000 was returned to Vesco after Stars disclosed it Jan. 31 . At lhat time Mitchell headed the cam·&ifllll paign and Stans was chairman of ' its,._. finance committee. The indictment..._ charged that the contribution, in $100*1:.i1a bills, was delivered to Stana ~ rJaJhingtoo by Sears. Sears at that lime~ was chainnan of the New Jersey (Jorn. mittee !or the Re-election of the Presi· ,.,.... dent. At the time the contribution was made, Vesco was under investigation by the .::-t:~ SEC for allegedly "lootinB" $224 milUoo "'..; !rom four mutual !wlCts controlled by bis .,_ interests. ; The four defendants were accused of·. ._ "comipUy and by threats and by • threatening communication" having at·• tempted to inllueitce that investigation. ~ iiP Mitchell, the indictment said, arranged • for Sears to meet wihh SEC Chairman1 ';Ii William Casey to discuss the Vesco in •• vestigation. ~ Mitchell also got Presidential counsel~"':' John W. Dean III to commun icate with :-~tit Casey to seek a postpooement or the . '-'"' return date or SEC subpoenas served on · t~ Vesco employes, the indictment said. ~.-:: The purpose, the indictment sald, was t ~ to prevent disclosure by the employes : .... relating to the secret Vesco contributioo. Jt?: r , ~ :: Women Marines ,~ Not Interested 1.;· In Combat Rol.e ' ·~ Kingston said tOday. CAMP PENDLETON, (AP) Women Kingston heads the Joint CasuaJty 1"f D nds leathernecks 8.re wllntercsted in becom· Resolution Center, a 17>man unit charg--..,.roup ema Ing combat soldim -but would like to ed with locating crash sites and graves join the Marine BaDd. '"'=" and recovering the remains of Americans Halt · to Bomb:ng ..,. "We have •.Pilot Program up for con-~ Jost in Indochin'a. " sideratioo wigning WOOJen to the com- The Pentagon has listed 1,300 bat forces," said Cot. Margaret Brewer, Americans as missing in action and has WASHINGTON (UPI) -Americans new director of lhe Women Marines. declared another 1,100 dead although for Democratic Actioo (ADA) has wound "But I don 't foresee women. in ground their remains have not been recovered. up its national convention with a caJl for combat forces as, riflemen, say. Our Kingston said his men have inspected '·an immediate end" to all U.S. bombing American society is not interested in three crash sites in South. Vietnam, but in Indochina. this, and I don't fmd women wanting d this." , he refused to lsclose whether any re* A resolution adopted by the liberal mains were found or identified. Reliable group Sunday urged Congress to cut off Bot they are "very interested in now sources said, however, none was all funds for the bombing of Cambodia being able to audition for the U.S. Marine discovered at any of the wre<:ks. and any U.S. mllitary activities based in Band," Col. Brewer .said in an interview · The inrormation about findings at Thailand or the Gull of Tonkin. ~J'· Id ·--A......::...i '-el 'd • crash sltes would be communicated. ADA said the Nixon admlnistralion year-o .... ~:-"'~ COlWl sai , ' through regular rq:illtary channels to the "caonot claim to be uninvotvey" in Viet· =lM~ Ina ~ve not b ~ neu·ol·ldnol.tt.._._...i, be oa1d. nun -1111111 provldeo IO_. pOOnt, ~w··\i:&j -111~...,,... He explained. tb1t relatives of men lost in of South Vietnam'! operating budget. . rules for those -Mth dvfllail ~ air crashes often knew where their On Saturday, ADA passed a resolution~, cbUdrer'I « planes went down th r o u g b cor· calling on Prealdent Nixon to "!l.1P and; • · ~ ... ... - respandence with other men in the units. asking Congreas to censure hhnt&tau.se/ ! _... ~. . ... ~l,;,.[_d_e_ta_u._ar_e_re_v_ea1..r __ pr_ema_t_ur_e_1y_. _o_r_the_w_._terga __ i._ ... ___ nda~-L--"'-~ :Ita for ASylum : ~ Hit by Marco0'; Sports Ba~ker David Eisenhower in Pririt PHILADELPIIlA (AP) -Baseball "possesses sport's richest traditions," says David Eisenhower in his first column for the Phil- adelphia Sunday Bulletin. It is "the single major sport which draws on its own traditions in a direct sense," wrote President Nixon's son.in-law. And if baseball is in trouble, it's "because its leaders fail to grasp its uniqueness and threaten it by trying to conform baseball to t he mold of other major sports," he continued. Eisenhower, whose copyrighted column is to appear once a week on the newspaper's sports page, added that he favors some changes but "changinS: it without considered recognition of its strength and charms does 1t a disservice." MANILA (AP) -Auperto Baliao, act- ing Philippines consul general in Los Angeles who is seeking asylum In the ... United St.ates, has been under in~ vest1gatlon or assisting gun nmners and of immorality, says an official of th Marcos government. .- Information Secretary Fancisco S:-->: Tatad to1d newsmea Sunday that thi' !! governmect would not ask the Uni~ " States to return Balaiao, who see f C political asylum after signing a defec, 4 lion document with bis own blood in Lo~ : Angeles. ti Tatad said Baliao's request for political .. - asylum was a "poli tical stunt. .. part o&t ~ an effort to gain the sympathy of the-; :- American people. He was a small man In ~ • bad fut." . 26th Anniversary5ALE! SAVE ON GE."NO FROST' REFRIGERATORS with AUTOMATIC ICEMAKERS 17-' c". PT ... "°'""on'" •tP•t••llATOtl..fl'IS•ll• s3441s CALL DUNLAP GIANT U.l c .. '"'· JIO ,.OST S6899& SIOl..,.,.101 l•PllJOIUTOll 90 DAY Member of Ctllfornlt'• L•rflOJI ·C:ASH ' ' 'oil I•; . " " ". " ' " I , " am Cooptir1tlv• Buying WltH Af'f'•OYID '" . ' Authorltod GE SERVICE 548-7788 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa Group With The CUDIT . .. . ~ Volume Buying &.\:! ~ Powtr of 110 Stor11 r;..,IM m -Phone 548· 7788 I I' I( I I \ ' • • • ' • . • • .. • • I • ' • ' - • • .. .. . .. ;. •' " ~ , .. ·' ... • .. " . , . . . ". • .. . ' 18 DAILY PILOT SC , ~· In Digit Gear ... ·Vehicle Tun.,.up · • -.Saves You·M~ey By CARL CARSTENSEN ot ... D9llY ,..., '"'" When, d ... your car need a ture-upf 'flhat'• the. dllfereoce between a minor and: major ; tune-up? rs It )'Ol1b the cost? ' Felf motorlits lluow the answers to these 'luesUons. ~et a tune-up is ooe or the most important · pnwen£ativ'"e malOtenance .services for your car .• ,. .. • • tnaln-..,,0 txpell!ea In th• long nm.~~ .. ALTH'C>UG1R MANY r<pulable '1anieo .adverilae IWIHi> llfkiab, 'lt Pi)'> to get tl!e answer. tci•1.,...queilions beJo're accepling 1111' o!!er. For e1ample:i -W..t 1peci0oally Is . jn. cluci.ct:lp the O!i~1'1l#<ld :prtco? It youYre·getting .lest tbaft a .....,,..., • lull tune.up, K may 00\'EllNMElll'. AND iih ;;;;jt;' a bargain aftu all. , dustry s!Jldles .µMlicate that '"";;'~ the advertised price • -~ thao half-of the more "apply to your 'Cal'? A tune-up than 110,000 vehicles on the for ·• a four.. or siJ:-cylinder niad toda! ™"""-' tune-<Jp. A eniJn• will cost le8I than ooe . tUned engme, c;olhpared to one fdr.'an' eight-cylinder ecglne . .:tQat's · not, ·will Improve. · · . gasol~ mileage.up'° 10 per-· ' --I9·the gar8Je usui.g quallty cent, improve acceleration up parts? Inferior replacemen~ to 10 percent, and emit about parts lower tbe overall repair half as much carbon nfooo.Dde .cost, but JOU may .Peed your and hydrocarbons: ' , ,~ ~p . 59t'~.e' lhlfll e~- How often should you tune ...,..... · your car? Most automakers -ts the, aarage equipPOJ! to recommend a tlme-up at least do the job? To perform a e~ery 12 mont.l:\s or 12,000 . t~~~gh , t~~ . ~iJ?O~. 011 rajles. The lack ot periodic ma1or, a '.,tec~~an .~es :tune-up · can resu1t irr fuel ··modern· dlilgnosit,c ~.ilipment. waste, excessive· e i: h a u s t If a garaie basn t I(ives~ In • ,l ·,,' " . N~Concept · smoke b&rd-itarts. stalling, the right tools, you may: .pay rOugh ~ngb:ie J)erforml'nce and le!!', bat you alab may·liave to 'eventual fepairil 1 tbat could ~t the job done a second have been avo\ded. , tune, 1f joCr car ~-tune-up s~ice, knowing.. wtta1 to ask far can ·• keep it· running . smoothly and ·reduce your WHAT DOES a tune-up in- volve? A minor, 12,000-mile tune-up usually i n c 1 u d e s replacement of the 'ir filter, fuel f i 1 t e r , PCV ~lti.ve Crankcase Ventilation) vafve, spark plugs, distributor points and condenser. Spark plug "'.ireS, ignition coll a n d distributor cap and rotor ohould ho inspected, and replaced , if necessary. Also, eipeCt lo pay a labor< charge for adjustments to t h e Tbls ' steam turbiqe ;Qtor ls part ofta i:iew.concept in electric poWer-plants -the.~ c p m'b i n·e d cycle plpnt -which will go into ·operation later this· year. The rotor was manufactured at Westing· house Electric Corp's plant in Lester, Pa . ' that yours may not ! 1 COMPUTI OIANCil COUNTY COVl~51 I.cl.al .. : ....... S-.ClemHte,-MMIM Vie 0..... Pphit.:m~· .. ......... _ ....... 'lrilOllTll....T01 MQMTtt lllrfFA ... IASIS:. • •; M6·. 0DIPOSir i1191ltHD ' ON Al'PIOWID'«;UDIT 4 ONLT 117.IO PO·MO . TOTAL COST (•1dl111fMd ,...., 5 NEW COMPACT UNIT SIZI 11'1••4ir'/1J VOICE MESSA.GI PAGEU ALSO ARE AVAIL.AIU 7 FULL flH MAlllTlllANC ORANGE COUNTY R \OI07fLE PHONf St:HVJC:E I'"( 714 • 115-JJOS M 50. SANTA ~E, SANTA ANA ,..,.. ~ •MClll. ,MfalM Viel• Hint, I.In e....,.... r.-i ,..,.._-. El T•n. mn 't9!1 4t&-S~ Individual Investor . Deserts the Market By SYLVIA PORTER carburetor, choke and Ignition You , the individual investor, timing if the job Ls done J>rOI>' have in rewit m o n t h s I deserted, and you are still er y. Unless your car bas a deserting, the stock market ·in specific engine problem or has such massive numbers that passed the 50,000-mile-mUe you are d a n g e r o u s I y un- mark, it probably doesn't re-dermining the liquidity or our quire major tune-up service. A major tune-up starts with capital markets - a liquidity parts and a d j us t m e n t s which is essential to the very covered by a minor tune-up. In su~vival 0:£ our private en- addiUon, it intolves a series of terprj.se economy:. dl~stic checks to . te5t the .You are ~creaUng "a vacuum cars'ellginecom~1bat· wbiCh·iS·de-• · ,.. · tery,_ iµ~fn8it0r, ~p.lt,age pi;e.t1sin.g . reaplator; vacuum sY,Stem'and stock Prices other ignitl~n co~b to and mllking determine if any addiilonal it increasing· repairs are needed. T h e Iy difficult technician also will clean the f 0 r thous· car~etor and road-test the ands of corp- veh1cle. orations smaller reg- TUNE-UPS ARE no longer ional com-1"01tT•1t the relatively simp~ chores panies particularly -to raise tney once were. J)o..U-yourself . •~k mechanics can still replace air money via Swi.; .s. . cleaners, points and plugs, OO:t ·YOU HA VE become so lll- because of emls§ion control different to stotj[! · t h a t devices on late. m~el cars, tJiOughtful oJ>:;en'erS .all. now precision <en~in~ . 4d]Ustments thoroughly alarmed tbit · we s~d, ~ m~d~·by -a trained may be ·moving tow.ant. a servJCe t~hniclAD Wmg!lprop-market dOminat...i as i.):many er equipment. · · '""''· =;;~;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~;;;;_,;;;;;;;;;·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;rl Etlropean nations, by a • relatively few fJDancial in- If You 0... A ..... POASCHE-CORYITTl-JAG-ME~CIDES . OR OTHER TOP,OF-Tl1E•LiNE ·CAll$- .YOU WANl THI IESTI 11 Y•AlllS l!Xll'e•1•11c• Uh • A.ul'o IODY e PAINTING, fi DETArLING 9tituti<N a n d prolessioniJ broker-dealers. Yet you, lhe public investor, are . t.b e backbone of· our country's capital-raising mich3nism and )QI ate one . of ~ few ad- vantages·. we still retain in world competition, ·.we· dare :J/ieJ/oU6e ~Wax & Color ' . 1'1' l'OMONA AV. ' '· C:OSTA MUA · PHONE '42~1510 . ..,., ~~ow ORM,R .~a~if!ll . · ,./ · " Stlclc;ion YbORS ' LABELS ... TOl)A,Yl . " • Pers"nar11id •. Stylish· • Efficient Order For Yourtelf or • Frlenct· . . ' . 'tiA1y be ut1d on •nvelopes 1s return •ddrets l•b•ls. AIJo very ' h1pdy 11. idfnti~ic1fi09' · , libels fo r mMlcirtCJ p•f.so!'•I •items (ucN''. ... book1, r•cords, photos,· etc. l'tibels stic.lt-oft ' 9les• •nd m•y bi used for .m1rltin9 hQ)M' · c1nned foc:d lt•"1'· All l1b1ls are pril'lted' wi'th' 1tyli1~Vo9ue type cin fitn1•qu1lity whitl' guriim•d Pi'per. · " ·" ·: " . ,,, tc' t ____________ ..__ ____ l ''ltill J!llit ~·~.~-11 ft •1.21 •1 ·I I I '· I ,, I ,f!Ulil .......... LIMI :. PA.•• 1UI I t .. l•M..a.C•llf. · • • .. •• • H"• I . . . ~ ~ ' .... • • • The Dow Jonn average is ,. . . .. ,CO • • • • I • • • Sports In Brl~f Davis Cup Challenge Roundup Multiple Deatm I On Sport,s Scene Ronwil•. Jul year'• nm- -to the Unltod Slota In NAIROBI -T!Jree o I bolott he WU lllt<d Into the the Dav!J CUp llnals, <ame Kenya's lop cricket players ambulance. h-om beh1n4 Sunday to deftal were killed Sunday In an auto (J.S. IAt•e• the NetherW>dt 3-2 and win lb crash at Kerlcho, 200 miles quarter.finaJ match tn Euro-~" ~-· LIMA, Peru -World dwn-from here, w1u1e on 1-lft:'lr way pean Zone A play. to the [..ake Victoria to1Vt1 of pion Yugoolavla put dotm a New 7.elJand, the Soviet Kisu1nu fo r a match. second half U.S. rally Stmdly Union, and France also ream. They were Mubarak Ali, night to win 93-87 in a thrUliog ed the semifinals in European Tabassum Parvez and Zah!id second night men's divtsloo ~e A Davi.a Olp play wblle finals game In 1he Ctnt World Italy, West Gemwiy and C:OCiar, members of the Basketball Festival. SpaJn gained semJlinal vi<> leading Nairobi learn. Sir Ali The first ball wu dominated torlea ln European Zone B Sports Oub. entirely by Yugoslavia's g. competition. foot-JO center V'inko Jelonc Wltb Romania and the Inquiry who, using a aw«plng right-Netherlands tied 2-Z, U.S. MONZA, Italy -The state handed hoot shot, repeat.dly Open champion Ille Nas- rthe converted accurate passes defeated Dutchman Tom Ok-attomey of this no m from penetraUng guards ker 6-4, 6-2, M to give his Italian ~·n opened 3rl in· Nikola Plecas and 1.oran Slav-country the victory. Earlier ln vestigaUon Monrtay lnto the nlc. the day, Romania's Thoma deaths or Finnish motorcycl-U.S. efforts to stop Jelovac, Ovica had beaten Nick F1eury 1ng act Jarno Saarl.ncn _and first with 7-foot center Dan ~2, 6-3, M to set up the Jlaly's Renio Pasolini, killed Traylor of South Carollna crucial fifth. maleh. · University and S-foot-8 Corky Onny Parun or New Zealand in a mas!ive spill durmg a Taylor of Minnesota, were in-defeated Ze!Jjko Franulovic 6- world championship event effective. 3, 4-6, 6-2, f>.2 in the deciding here Sunday. fifth match to provide hls The investigation aimed at So1'fet• Win country with a J.2 edge. In the determining the cause of the TOLEOO, ObJo _ 'Ibe Soviet o t h e r 11 i n g I e a m a t c h , · b I Unlo d ~ ...... _ Yug06lavia's Baro Jovanovic spill and any P 0 s 5 1 e n eaeated wit: United defeated Brian Fairlie 6-3, 6-2, re.<poDSlbility. States IM Jn the third round 6-0. Sa . Sunday and captured the first paSl)llnl and annen were World Cup of Amateur WmiU-At Budapest, Alei: Metreveli killed and five other riders ing championships. defeated Balacs Toroczy M , &- were injured in a fall on a The Russians C"mished the 4, 6-3 to give the Soviet Union bend during ttie first lap in the two-day meet at the Universl-an unbeatable 3-1 margin over 250-« cltw ract. ty ol. Toledo Field House With Hungary, Later teammate A---~mg· •· some reports · · t the pt 11 Telmuraa Kakuliva retired l.1.Vlu .... six pom s, &! y swe a 1 d the accident was caused by an three of their matches. Tho after gaining a one-set ea oil spot on the track. Others United States finished second over 51.abolcs Baranyl and the claimed a CQl!ision between with four points, followed by Hungarian was awarded the riders was the cause. Japan With two. Canada, the match. After I.he accident SUnday, fourth team in the invitational France completed a 5-0 organizers and federation of-affair, faJJed to score 8 point. sweep over Norway as Patrick IRVINE LEAGUE CHAMPS -Estancia High's Eagles won the Irvine League championship under coach Wally Chute for the fifth straight year. Standing from left -Mark Les, Mark Pender, Larry Collins. Kneeling -Tim Reynolds, Brian Llndley. ficials stated the accident had Proisy downed Erik Melander been caused by fate and that Ne11:1 Arena &-0, 6--0, &-3 and Francoise the track was safe. Jauffret beat Per Hegna 6-0, 6- ld BOS'OON -The owners of 3 •2 But Sa.arirlen, a 28-year-0 , "" . engineer and No. 1 rider of the Boston's professional basket-Italy also enjoyed a $-0 Japanese Yamaha te~. had ball .and hockey teams have sweep of its matches with said in an interview ~riday agreed to build a $20 million Bulgaria as Paolo Bertolucci that he considered the Monza sports arena in the South sta· defeated Lyuben Genov &-3, 6- track too fast and dangerous. tion area, according to the 3, 6-3 and Adriano Panatta Estancia Goll Team's Goal: C11ele Death SAN JOSE -Four·year veteran Don Castro o f Hollister, Calif. has won his r1rst American Motorcycle A .s so elation championship race. a race m11:n-ed by the death of another rider in a prellminary be.at. Castro, 23, won ea!ily ln the fifth champtonahlp '""" of tho season Sunday at the San Jose Fairgrounds track, but two hours earlier Lloyd Houtchi.M, 24, or Los Angeles was killed in a finish line accident. Houtchins collkled with Pat McCaul of Sa n Jose. Both tiders tlit the pavement in front of a capacity crowd of more than 7,000. Houtchins' cycle flipped and hit a fence. McCaul was able to walk away after rescue workers lifted lhi.s bike from him. But Houtchins was pronounced dead of internal injuries NEWPORT LEASES 2400 Wflfl C.-.t H·ll-y Leasing all Vehicles 645-2202 Boston Re d e v e 1 o Pm e n t topped Bozh.ldar Pampoulov 6- Authority. 4, 3--6, 6-3, 6-3. Capture CIF Championship The agreement to build the West Germany completed a 18,000-seat arena will be sign· 4-1 rout of· England as Juergen ed early this week. Fassbendcr took Roger Taylor E-le Inks tH, IHI, &-3 after Englislunan • •• Mark Cor had gained his PROVIDENCE, R.L -All· coontry's only poinl, U, 6-0, &- American Ernie DiGregorlo of 4, 6-2 over Kerl Meiler. Providence CoUege has Manuej Orantes' a.6, 6-4, &-1 rePQrtedly signed with the victory over Sweden's Ove Buffalo Braves of the NaUooal Bengston provided Spain with Basketball Association. an unbeatable J..1 I e a d . The Braves called a news S w e d e n ' s 1 6 • y e ar-old conference for Tuesday, but a '. Wimbledon junior champ~on. Buffalo report during •the Bjorn Borg, made the final weekend said that the 6-foot margin 3-2 with a 5-7, 1)...3, fr3, backcourt ace had signed a 2~. 7.5 triumph over Antonio multi-year CQl'ltract for more Munoz. than $1 million. The semifinal pairings for GW's Lockman At JC Trials NORTllRIDGE -Golden West College's Dave Lockman wlU compete in the JC 3,000- meter steeplechase t r i a l .s tOOay at Cal State (Nort!r ridae). Tlie top tour finishers will advance to the state track meet Saturday .at Bakersfield. European Zone A will be Romania and New Zealand and the USSR and France. In European Zone B, the matcbups are : ltaly and Spain and West Germany against Czechoslovakia. Pistol Pete BATON ROUGE, La. During his college basketball career at LSU, Pete Maravich led the nation three times in scoring. By ROGER CARLSON Of flM t>.llY ,llOt Stitt Irvine League opponents may tend to disagree, but scanning the circuit records one might concede the loop ti· tle to Estancia every year and concentrate on something else. Coach Wally Chute's crew baa clubbed ita way lo the Jrvint League team cham- piomhip for the lilth straight year and is eyeing the CIF ti· tie that the Eagles copped In 1968. "We've had periods of time where 1 feel we are as good as any in the CJF," opines the Estancia ooach, "but we've fluctuated some." The quintet off to Glendora Country Club today lor the prelims consisted o( Larry Collins, Mark Les, Brian Lindley, Mark Pender and Jim Knickerbodt:er. Also a key to Estancia 's rout of the Irvine league wa" lreshman Billy Conrad. If the Eagles are suC<..'eSSful today in their bid to gain the finaJs a week hence at Hun· tington Beach Seacliff, Chute -Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division Eaat Dlvtaton w L Pct. GB w L Pct. GD Detroit 20 18 .526 Chicago 23 16 .590 Baltimore 17 17 .500 1 New York 19 16 .543 2 New York 18 18 ,486 11,1 Pittsburfb 15 17 .469 411 Milwaukee 17 19 .472 2 ~fontrea 15 18 .455 5 Boston 14 19 .424 3'h Ph.lladelphla 14 23 .378 8 Cleveland 16 23 .410 4~1 Si. Louis ll 24 .333 9~1 West Division West Dl\lfsloa Chicago 21 13 .618 Houston 26 15 .634 Angels 21 14 .600 \\ San Francisco 20 17 .li05 1 Kansas City 23 16 .590 \\ Cincinnati 23 16 .590 2 Minnesota 18 J7 .514 31\ Dodgen 23 17 .575 21,) Oakland 20 19 .513 31\ Atlanta 16 22 .421 8\1 Texas 12 23 .:u.i 911 San Diego 15 26 . 366 II s1111111r1 °""'' .• .,.. . ._ N"" Yort '· ct...,e!end ,., 111 S.n 019oo t, Cl,,dnn1t1 1. lSI N-YOf11 7, Cl...,.,..and l , 1nd Clnclm>1IJ 1 Se" Dle!Po ?, 2rtd Mllw1ull .. 1, ~lt"Clll t, hi Mon1TMI J, SI. LQUfl 1, 111 Dt!rolt S, Mllweukee J, 1nd St. Lovl1 1, Mont""! S, 1rld Clllcall'O '· Mfnnt'loT& J, hi Chlc..o<> al Phll(ll(le!Pilla. -ti:iol'ltd Mll'll'lftOft 3, Chlat90 o, 2nd Atlf"I• '· Dod"" 2, ls!, 10 lnnl"'9'1 Kin ... , Clh< I. Ootllllnd 2 ~t.At1ent•J,tncf "'"'"'' '· Tna' t Pllltbu111ll 11 N-York, -l"PoMd f101ton 11 B•ltlmo~. llOllJ>oMd 1iou1too 1,. Sen Franc:lJCO 1 T9drr'1 01-T.....,.., GMntl Bolton fTlant 4-4) 11 Belllmo<t fl'&!tner •n Cl'lk-!P-l_,J at~ IRtnllo "'1 Ntw York {Mftlld'I 3-1) at C~lnd (Pwry N) Pllh.llu111h 12!tls '"'lat Pllllfde.111111.1 (Carlton H) l<tnU!I Cltv (011 Cll!llon 2·21 11 Oakltnd (l'lunlw St. Lovlt IWl11 '41 II N"' YOl1t {I(_,, 5-l) .,, says his team has an excellent opportunity to capture the CIF title. The Eagles haven't shot at the clip Marina golfers have -Collins Js the leading player and he shoots in the 74s. The rest are in the '71-81 range, but Crute explahls: "'lbese averages.,are somewhat deceiving because Mesa Verde Country Club (Estancia's home course) is a very tough course. "We only lost by one stroke to Marina <1n its course." Estancia 's won-loss record is a flossy 16-2 with the only setbacks at Marina at Los Alamitos. As for the Eagles' tremen- dous record, Chute says much or the credit must go to tbe Mesa Verde Country Club youth program. "It's a geographic lhing, no question about that. We reflect their junior program, but we're aJso rgeUlng kids from the public course at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club. "The kids are dedicated, it's •not just a sOciaJ. game for them. Collins is as good an il}o dividual as there is in the CIF' and depending on the time and track I'd say he's an excellent bet to win the CIF individual championship. "He played a 73 at Los C.Oyotes and finished five strokes better than any one else in our league . . . and th~t's not bad credentials." LA's Alston Wonders What Might Have Been CINCINNATI (AP) -Slow- talklng Walter Alston, dean of major league b.a s eba 11' s managers, isn't saying where he'll be next year. But he knows where he'd be without b.aseball . "I'd bo working my tail oil to make a living," said Alston. 61-year-old former s c ho o 1 teacher who is in his 201.h season as manager of the Los Angeles Dodgen. Alston was here with his Dodgen, whMe three-game series with the CincinnaU Reds ended Thursday. The Dodgers manager said he often wonders what might have been bad It not been for b.aseba.11. He mused over his home town ol Dan-town, Ohlo, ju,,t north of Cincinnati, and wondered what rnle he might have played thfil1'. He may have been a tanned and tolling farmer, working the sou· illled beloro him by his father . Or a proud wood- worker, whose flawless cabinets and tables enhance homes in the sleepy town of 400. his nickname in grade school because of his pitching speed. Later he left the farm to play in the St. Louis Cardinals' farm system, where h e averaged .299 in 13 years. Seven times be hit .310 or bet· ter. In 1936, he slammed JS homers. But he was to only have one time at bat as a major leaguer. He was the No. 4 first baseman on a Cardinals team th.at had Johnnny Mize, Rip Collins and Dick Siebert ahead of him. In 1943, he joined the Brooklyn Dodgers organization at the urging of Branch Rickey, After managing Mon· treat of the International League to two first place finishes and a second in three years, Alston got the call. That was 20 on~year con· tracts ago . And Alston's trademark has remained. ''We're still built around speed and pitching. This year we're scoring more runs than a lot of people ex· pected. And this ls the youngest team we've ever had." Moftdi')', M~ 21, 1973 DAILY PILOT Il Miiiikan Potent Finding Weakness Tough Task for MD Finding Loiig Be a c b ..--------... Millikan's ........,. Is eoJng to be a dlfficult task, for Mater Del when the two teams clash '1\Jesda:y in the ~...'tbu.":lt .tyol7: CIF Mala' DtJ will lace Mlllikan at S p.rn. Tuesday with the game tentaUvely set for Gol- den W..t College. Moore League opponents tried with ooly the slimmest success, one victory in 15 games against Millikan as the Rams tied a record for league vlctori.., set 15 seasons ago. SPORTS 'lbey've lost ooly three ol 24 games on the season, and ~-'----------vanced to the second round of the playoffs with an easy 6-0 victory over Fullerton. It isn't too surprising then that coach Gary Brown con- siders this his best team since a CIF title outfit in 1969. Though not possessing any super standouts, all around marks in batting and pitching reflect the team balance that has been the Rams' key this season. Area Seas Warm Up , For Fish Area sport sf i shin g is gradually picking up with the warming trend of the seas. With it is the opening of McCuJlah Brother s Sportsrishing in Huntington Beach and the continued daily activity at Dana Wh.arf in Dana Point and Davey's Locker and Art's Landing in Newport Beach. McCullah Brothers is or- fering patrons half fare Thurs- day and Friday to launch the new season. The landing will operate dai- ly with a boat leaving at 7 a.m, and returning at 3:30 p.m. Action .at Dana Wharf pick· ed up considerably over the weekend with 549 anglers col· lecting 3,059 fish. Individuals hitting well were San aemente's Ray Dwayne and Bill Slade, who hooked up with an 16 pound, three-ounce yellowtail and a 131h-pound halibut. Bass, barracuda, bonito and some hallbut have been in the mainstream. Spokesmen at D a v e y ' s Locker and Art's Landing credit the warming trend in the waters for the slight im- provement in recent catches and predict even better results in the near future . Both landings have haH day boats leaving daily at 6 a.m. and 12: 15. Santa Ana's Pete Doucot came up with a Slh·pound bar· racuda Sunday to capture the daily jackpot and Garden Grove 's James Young caught a 71h-polUld sand ba!s. OCllAN51De -16' 111111.rs: to bu-ra;;uu ... ¥~1oon1101 _11.13 o.q, 16 h•lloor, 2~ roe:~ COCIL l Ya!towtlil. SAN 01&1110 (M11!\Klpf1 Pftr) -755 1ngl1r1: Ul \1llowi111, 185 b1rr1clld1, l>• oonlto, l1 c.11co Din, 10 111111>111, ~I roc:tl cod, OAfiA WHAll:I" -:Ill 1ngl.,.1: 24' k~ ti.u, JO 1Mrrac:ud1, 26l oon110. 14 h1t1lbul, N roe.<. COd, 3 Wh/N -t>au, 14 m.cktrll. SAN PEOllO -3'lO anglers: ' 16 bofi110, ns c1llco wu. lS haUb\o!, 1.ns rfXI( COd. 111 cow coo. runo 11. L•R· don,J -II angltrs: 41 calico b9A, 2 hlllw!, 1 Oo!\!,O:J.! fOC;IO. COO. N•WPOll:T INTt Lllllll•l -141 111011r1: :1.4 aarrac\1(11 , 11 ~~s. 11 roe:,.; cod, 2 mack-I, 1.ff bllle "M. 10~"'1'1 LltC<ltf') -141 1nt1Jtr1: JD blrraQlda, 12 bonito, M IMH, 3 Whll• Ma tJ.eM. M.S rtoc:l cOd, • 11.11111u1. s•.U. ·a1Ac" -1fl:1ng1t1r1: ''°" rO(k cod, ••f'M -l n{l11r1: 190 bofl!!o. ) kllo !NU. 20 llbul. PAllACISI: COVI -1.0 1ngl1n: 1,s..2 roclr. ~~ . lONG 111.\r;;M llelmon! Pier) ~ t9 anvlen: 1.012 rvctt COd. Blr'M -102 anglff'5: nu bolllto.; s ENrrlCUd1, ' 1alld b4tJ, 12 119Jlllv!. (Plllt,POINT UNOINGI -1611 1ngl1r1: "' l)Dnlto, '·'" ba11 • .-66 l'O¢ll. '"· ltl!OONOO -%11 angl•n: 4!I elllco ll•u. 7J oon11o, 2,SfJ '°'"' coo. ••f'9t -131 1r1111..-.t l• bcw111~. 2» rock cod. IMPlll:IALJIACN -40 •nGltrs: 1!f borr1c11C11.t.2 ltol\llO, 31 ~llOW!all. OXNAll:u -tl .... ngltr1: l.QM l>atft It 1111/but, l.J14 roc:t Cod, so 111111 cod, 4 cow COCI, MAll:INA OIL ll:IY -:U angl1r1: 345 rock COii. • VINTUll:A -119 ..-oi.r1: 1.49 rock t Ott. Q~ CO"' r"':f, ~ lfl)1 '"'1, AVILA BAT (""".I.rt U.11) -.. 1ng!er1: fG3 •a<:', CO'S, 210 1:ni cod, ~Oll:T M' IMIMl -12 1ft<l\tn1 931 calico btM, 1 111111111!, 1'2 roct ~ MOll:ll:O aA'I' (Vl'l't llllllhll -fl '""'''~,· 14 un .. OOd, 11 roclit cod, 11~11 SI--1'2 1110l1r1: "1 111111 ((Id, l.s:l2 rock cod. Probable starting pitcher for the Mater Dei game is Brett Houser, e righthander with an &-1 record. If needed, there's Cory Zogby (frl), and Steve Fenogllo (8-0) who doubles as a left fielder with a .304 average on the season. Other standout hitters for Millikan i n c l u d e shortstop Doug stokke (.377), second baseman Greg •Airhart (.3Z!) and center fielder Don Zim- merman (.308). Fenoglio is also the team's power hitter, and has four home runs to his crecl.lt this season. Zimmerman, , t he leadoff man has successfully stolen 24 bases this season and scored 25 runs in 'l:l games. Defense has also been a Millikan strong point, ac- cording to Brown, with the double play combinaUoo of Airhart and Stokke a big fao. tor in the team's success. LOlll --.11 MUlllCM • Rolllno Hiil• 3 t 5o111n Tomtrcit f ) Sarr• 2 l PllOI V9f'd•• 0 0 El S.Vunc!o 7 4 Hawtmm• l 5 Sev1nn1 2 1 Bllflos) Mo<ll9orl'llrl I 4 St. 11.rnard J 1 Rolllng Hlll1 ' I Lii WlllO!I 3 • S.rfl 5 11 Comc>l'Oll ' l LB JorOtn 0 ~ Lakewood l f LB Poly l 5 La W11tiM I ' C"""'1on J 11 Lii JC!f'Hn ' 0 LaklJWOCld ' I LB PolV 3 1' Lii WltfOll 0 12 COll'>Ofml 1 • Lii Jordan 1 2 LakrNOlld I 5 LB Poly 0 Cll" 111..,..,,. 4 Full.rtoro 0 ~ Stewart Wins, But Protests ZOLDER, Belgium (AP) - Scotland's Jaclde Stewart was the first to protest and the. first to flnish in Sunday's Belgian Grand Prix. Stewart, the "safety man'' among the world's grand prix drivers led the protest that almost led to cancellation of the race because of ra poor lrack surface. But when the race was over. on a track still breaking up on critical comers, It was the ex· perienced Stewart, t w J c e world champion, who posted his 24th grand prtx victory. Stewart, driving a Tyrell· Ford at an average speed of 107.73 miles per hour, toured the 1.older clreutt In I hour, 42, mlnutes and 13.43 secoOOs. Stewart added thet the loooe track surface whidl the racers had complained about meant "I had k> drive very precisely. I had to stay on the eract line lhrough the corner. U you went ol.f the line, you era.sh- ed." Elght of the 23 starters In the race crashed on the same short series of corners. None wa.! lnjured. VOLVO SALE! Huge Savings OVER 30 '72 & '73 OnlY tlmtt ~ui.d Tu.td•Y's 0-c1...,e>1tnd 11 Battlmor• Mllw•llkff al &ollOtl N-YOO'k el 0.lroil S.an Franc!M:O Clrv....t S-3) al l'lolnton CFlll"'ld> ._,) Ont~ ·-ICMdull<I!. Tllftdff'• oa..-Pl!!~ et Pl\Uadtolpftla Chlcate ti Monrr..af SI. LOUii al Mlw York Maybe he would h a v e remained 1n teaching , &0methlng he did for 14 winters while playing boseboll 1n the summers. Irutead, "Smoky" Alston left the plow, the paint brush and podium for bastbaJI, a decisjon the Dodgers never have regretted. Baseball's Top 10 Stewart's v1otory gave him 28 points in the world cham- piooship standings. Emerson Flttipaldi of Brazil, w h o fmished third here In a JPS. Lotus, ranks fint wHtl 35 points while France's Francois Cevert, driving a Tyrell Ford, finished se<:ond and has 18 points. VOLV OS Ii l(f[J Af !'·:' DC·' I AR D"/AlU1\ rrO N P~:'C i ) I 1<1nws Clh 11 M.ll'lflt"°4• San Franc!-1! AlllMI .Al>fth 11 Chlc;qo HOU1""1 •I ClfKll\Mll T.itll al Oakllnd Sff! oi... tl °""""' DEAN LEWIS. B~ra~Jii:~.~l 1966 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA 646-9303 Strvicn dnd P.1rtt for All l111 por fed (,,,, Modern Body Shop for All c.,,, Or~,·".'('-,.~"~ f :;:~f''f :i··d \;.t '.f.,1,·•; '),-'1 a""!\, •1 f 1,,,,_-r WE MAKE OVF:.RSEAS OEllVEAIES "l u.sed to work my tall off fannlng with my d 1 d • ' • remembers Alston. "1 used to look lorward lo Sundays when we'd play catch. My dad, both uncles and I wet'! a team together.'' At a~e 10. he saw his first besebail game. "My dad brought me dow:i to Cloclnnati lo aee the Reda play the Yankees in an exhibition game . I got to see Babe Ruth. "It was the only big 1 .. gue game I saw until I got to the majon," said Alston, who got NATIONAL LlilOUI! Pia.,.. Clllfl 0 Al • H .. ~. l!IPH lA 29 " ,, !! .311 W•tMw! Hin 41 l.W 30 "'J Mol1 LA t5 U 11 )I .3$2 Sa11to Clll » 12' 20 -45 .Jeff W.ROblnM111 Phi 2' 11 IJ 21 .346 F1lrh· Mori JO n 13 it .341 tdOo~ SF ll ll 13 3' .nt ~llh Poh 24 Ill 11 )5 .l31 f0rr. 11 4-. '4 IXI U 4C1 .»J Moro•'1 Cln V UI ti Ml .JJl Peter ReV30ll, one ot the United States' Jeadtng drivers, was among those who mshed on the corners. Cevert, who took the loed from Ronnie Pelerson oC Sweden ·after the first l1p, j "·'rf t• .. ·tll 1~" ninth when he sil4 "r r' .. f1"~~atelv !plm the 1•." 1 ·ff line on the t· a void ::hing." •··· . ?J.ld;'s engine dropped after some 20 laps wtth low fuel pres.sure. "Otherwise, t don't think Stewart could haV11 paS!ed me," he said. I I I \ - ~·! ' .. .. •' ' •'' ' "' ' " , • .lltodol. lilt 21. 1973 ~onday~s Cl~ Prices-C'A»mplete New York Stock Ex~a~e List • • .... 111 .... --~ .. ............... ................ ............. ................. _ ....... T ............... .... ,... ......... .. .............. . ····~·"·· SC . • • . ' .. I 1' ' 1 I • • • I -~ • ,--, ,, ' z •• --·-· • .. --.. --.. • I .. .. . ' . ., .. ~ I ' . '-' ., •1J' .. ., " I '.' . . . ,.., .. .. • ' ""~iii# 'i• 1· .. -~-• .., ' • . . ' • .. ., ..... ·~ ' . - . I ., .·' -. ". . ~ . ' ' ' ''{' ~ • ' .... ··1 I I • ...... ' . / ... , . .... ' ': ' fl ' ' -' ' "" ~ . ' . '. ' . .. " ••. •t " . , • .. ' ... . ' · .. . ' ,, ,., Still only $2.65 a ·nlOnth · The ·DAILY PILOT • • • " • • delivered to your door seven days a ·week: ' . ' I• •. I' .. : . . . ' .,7 '7 <Or.;Use Toll Fr.ee Number To C·aft · ·Thf .DA.li.Y .. ·.:PfLOT . Office' In :~our Orang~ Coast ~r~'~ ~~o ·~-~~:~i~Yl . ' ., ... ., ·' ' ·, ' • . ..... ' • .. ~" ·- ' • . -- " '. .. "' . . ' " ' " I ' '" . .. .. ' . •' '• '· ' , ..~.' .. ' ·• • • • , "' ' . T • ' .. '" ' .. ' .. ' "' ""' • ... T .... • ' ' ' ·~<t • i • .,.; ,, ' " "' ".I ,, . . . ' w> ... '•h "' .. , ~· >K " '" ,. ., J>M "' "' "' ~·,,~ wJ .. ·~••I ,,A .. ' ., ..... ... If .~ .. y~·:. '-~ l . '• ....... :. .,. •Ho "' •OJ-> ... . '" .~ '" ·~•l.l_ " ,, .. •• ~ ,, m •ot ' .. "' ''" .,,..p ~" Ill lo ·•l'l'I' l•()<IA ~· • ..,.n ·'"OI• •~111 k,~o; .. ,.. ••• ,,~, ,1111!'0 •w• ,, .. ~ '" ,., • .,. ~' -· ••• T t !llt II"!' ~ • ' ,, !118~ .. 0~11 T (\,/ "'" MT .. ,, I .... , . .. ,, "' ..... 11 ?l&(I •• lltl ,.,, ...................... ..;-. .......... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. ~ ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ........ ~ ......................................... ~ ...... ~ ......................... ~ ........... ,, YIM . . ( l I I 7 • :7 I J --. . • .... ... t ~ g • a Beach I" :VOL 66, NO. 141, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES • • . • OR:;.NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI~ , •• - Today's - liAONDAY, MAY 21, 1971 TEN CENTS • ' ' tA vcO Geis Handi~ap in . Golf Course -. ' Hearing .~;;_ • By TOM BARLEY \I OI .. n.b Pllilt swt 1• Avco Development Corporation e1- ecutJve1 were called to the witness stand ' today in Orange County 51lperior Court in u eleventh . hwr bid to avert an in· S that would bait all building ac· m .a key se~t-01' of their $100 million commwlity. Judge Herbert Herlands lw already iuued such an injunction agal.ns't a tract evmarlted for the bulldlng of a shopping complex that lw ao Alpha Beu store al its core. He handed Avco lawyers a further set· back this morning. by wamiDg them that be · will only allow testimony from lbe cqmpa.oy's executives related to ~ tivitiea on the golf course development between the periOd Oct. 25--Nov. 8, 1972. Those 14. days· immediately proceed the enforcement of the coastal ~rvation statute outlined in Proi>oJlticip 20. Avco lawyers argue that their ac- quisition in 1968 ol the 136-acre Capron ' ~perty and work carried out from lhal date _amounts to an unc]lallengeabJe case or their vested rllthls to deve!Op the ~an-oriented area. _ Bu1 Judge Herlands today pointed out that be was pinning much of his faith in the pretrial bearing in an Arizona lawsuit ttiat is at tbe heart of the EnviroOinental ~lition of Orange County's case against Ayco. He told Coalifion attorney Stanley Jones that he ha(\ reread the Arizona ci.se over the weekend and now felt that Jones ~ correctly interpreted lhe iwies in that vltal lawsuit . . Avco lawyers argue that the \\'ork performed on the golf course site - workers ha~ stri~ the area of vcgeta· tion and filled .---aeep canyon by Oct. ~ -give.s · tbtm the. right to proceed with tt:s deyelopment: Coalition laywers contend that the passage of aiastal protection laws outlin· ed. in Propositioo 20 terminated that right and made Avco . subject to the South Coast R<aional eoo .... auon Commission Jn aU mattm all~,~ .l\fGl!<rlles. . Nearly ball OC lbe planl)Od' goU c:ourn lies within t,llllO yanll oMbe.meon high Ude line -lbe bounduy dra"'° by the ' ·-coastal conservation ~ and th< are" no·w protected,.bY1tbe;~al com-mission. • ~ .-_ Avco lawyers havi reeeat~ argued that development of'lbe 'inliiid·phase of the Salt Creek pro)«! is pob!OtK ,unless ~rresponding constructioo_i-ctn take ' place on the seaward side of ~ Ji •.• yard boundary . • Judge Herlands has told both sideS ~· • his in.il.lllCtlon <¥tiY halts Avco actlviUel .. pending trial of the Issue or DMdiol ' other pretrial acuoo by Avco thclt coltki . overrule his findings. "! .... And be has made it clear to both 11ldtt that he believes that an appeUate-edw\ !"' will have. the last work on whether Ute': Avco development goes through -« ii . forced to adapt to stringent coastal ~~ mJ,s.slon guidelines. ;:, . 1, _ . . .--· •• • ··~ ' -• ea ·en1e '· i l tcliy ·Problem Bothers Police Things are jumping at the Laguna Beach Police Slalioo. "At first1 I thcJwgb,jt was just me but .then I talk~ one of the other;gals, and she said she'd been bothered too," one of the department's female dispatchers ~ said. . "They sprayed in there, but, it didn't do' any good," another said, pointing to the radio console area where the women sit. The deparbnent has fleas. So-.ith · Lag ooans To Deeide Fate .. Of Bond IS.sue South Lagona voters will go to lbe polls Tueoday to decide lbe fate of a $3 million Sewer bond issue Jl'(>posed by the South Laguna Sanitary ~ct. · Dollar Hits Depths ·Due To .Rumors LONDON (AP) -Gold soared to reeord prices in Europe today and the U.S. dollar dropped to new lows as a result of speculation that the Watergate scandal would force President NI!on to resi~. In Zurich. gold shot to a record $113 an ounce, up fl.5{1.h.<!m trl!IM'• close and *i&~-1"1 ";t''."''81ire last .. 'l\le9day. · · · · .>Sl\'bs bahks, wblch buy aod" sell for - ··di tultq"".~ernaUonal 'l!ld: malthy · Individuals, ve act!V. Jn the gold market in tl)e past two weeks. In London, the world's biggest bullion center:, gold was traded at $111.50 an oun- ce, up $7 from Frtday1a clcee. The previous record in London, set last Tues- day, was $111. • • ' -' . .":" . ••• 1 ' • ,l ·~ ' ~ ~ ..•. -- The bolds, if approved by the district's 3,749 voters provide funds £or replare- rnent of an old 1,200 foot line from Aliso Beach to Three Arch Bay, and finance the district's participation in Aliso Water Mariagernent Agency (AWMA) projects ~ng sewer collection, treatment ~ dlsJIC)Sai facilities. 'l'1le dollar, meanwhile, hit 1ecord lows in Frankfurt and Paris and weakened sharply in most ot.her European centers. · • Dallf •P"' st!"£,.... ! WATER • BREAlf·'BE~EATl+COAST-HIGHWAY IN LAGUNA BE ... CH-DISltUPTED ·'T'RAFFIE -'FODAY · Bicyclist Kfffts His Powde r Dry While For ding the Strttm in Downtown of Art Colony '· A twMhirds yes vote is required to \fess tbe bonds. sanitary district spokes- men .say no tax increase will be needed as a result if the hoods pass. l'lllla will b< open from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. ,for balloting. Polling ptaces are: Treas· ure Island Clubhouse, 30801 S. Coast ·11ighway; building at 31740 4th Aven~e. $'.outh Lagwia; and South Shores Baptist ei.urth .. 3;112 crown Valley Parkway, l\aguna Niguel. i • No opposing argument was placed on "lbe ballot and no formal opposttlonrbas ·11een raloed to the bond eleclioo, al· lhough the South Laguna Civic Assocl· &lion fiB.s come fot=Ward-with criticlsm OD ·~?of the election. ., "'Primarily, the aSsociation obj~ to •rttle i1DclusJ.en of funds for expan1>~n of .;,the systems capacity in the same issue •.,nth funding for replacement of a d~ t~orated sewer line. In Paris, the U.S. currency sank to 4.4050 commercial francs, below the lows of the February monetary crisis when tbe dollar was devalued. 0oe banking source ~aid while the talk that Nixon might resign was only rumor, "the market is extremely nervous and in- clined to react to the wildest rumors." In Frankfurt, the dollar dropped to 2.6430 marks. In London, the pound jumped more than two cents, trading at $2.5742 by mid- morning, up from $2.5512 late Friday. 1be dollar was al90 weaker in Zurich (See GOLD, Page Z) Invading Crabs Still Infestin g S. Coast Sands 11 .... "Citlzens should ~ awa~ that such ·~ion implies a vast increase of By .CANDACE P~N ~at!pn wlLhin the area which brings °' tM Pllll'f ...... ,,.,. , with it·the· commitment to enlarge the Thousands of small red crabs continue ulater • .,....,, th~ road .,.tern. the to wash in with the surf in San Clemente IC'"hool _..._ --• all other tax suppo.rt· b•-'"' .,._ .. ~ and Dana Point, providing a ~.., ' ;..;t .......... '-," a blill.etin of the assoc1a· -.... ~ .. --sowi:e of foo<fto sea gulls and r!Sh. ::~-!~~ .. pro1·ec1s., be financed by ASan Clemente lifeguard spokesman• -•ui:: ".,.,.. said the "'invasion" of pelagic (free-'* two third of the bond money are en-str1 ........ 1 .. -trl.bs that resemble lobsters e'21tge¢tm ol the All.so Treatment plant _,._' _..~~Ion of an ocean outfall off Albo wu in even larger numbers today. r ,_..., . . He Nici tbe unusual mast occurrence of ~-Miller manager of the· dis· tl\e .Uver-dollar· sized crabs . ..., been :~~if bond money iJ ·not made reJ)9rled frqm u _far south u Ensenada · ".-.'t: .~. _ , · ct, l · •• and probably more n9i1b to NewporJ Beach. . . a .-· "ft"aflable, at.emaK: . · "We've got those bJ the billions,' ·.-.~' t :p• • ~ m~ ~=...di.strict ex· Harbor patrolman ol Dana .Point said ' ........ .,.d . 1pe ~IQ!I~ 1 oolli-llOi.-!jijtrcMmanclng -thif nwning,..L"lbey're 1wlmmlng around-g l.tfe , , ~. 'If genm ga 1 our docks." ,.. • J J .._ , \'· (See SEWER, hie ! .He added that the same cram came in r .. · p~ 't,"! '.itD REQ UI BES NO -ftE~EA T EFFORTS ' t'lf at first .' .. " Advertisers often do • ~ on tile first try wben they try a ; Qtlly PU<lt classinCd want ad. Loolc what lfapned here : • . ,, "" • POINT •. Blk to be•iv beaut 'L. ir .' mod. 1 br, color UI .<o deck, yrly $190. (Phone o.) The house waa rcnled. to the FIRST pelUl who oaw It. Try calling your •d· vl>or and llle'll try her beat to help yw ~. Her direct lint II &IW611. t slmltar numbeft 11 yeat1 qt> and theo 12 :. 1 ... 1 ~:: ., , •. .l y ..... belon tbi~ u lfan ochedul•. · X 11\!m ~ ~ii' .~th;~th · Fishing is sllll ·bod •I Dana Point, he CoU1 II ID ,tlo)\'lltown :liat1UJ1A sald,l>eeau9e ftsb eat the cnbs, not bait. B&ch, pl'Oi ced a <;aal!ading nood of "The fish t1ll have fat ,ba~py .a:rins on water, lUted the lfishway pavement their faces;'' the Harbor spokbman con--seViral Ui>cfiel 1lod Closed ~the low o's finned . -.r main ~rt for hours today. The 1111.U crabs plach, blll <lon'l really a tbe highway belween Ocean hurt bumans.,.The nN!\ backwards Uke Al'*DUO ' -ced a a lobster, l>!'l ln IOme a_reaa are gelling mi~ ilffl of .mom- slrOnljed bei)in'd iurf llnil. ·"'·-~-i · v ~ Q Forest1 Dr. Docfald Brighi, a marine -I ..,.,., iirlJ.1fl!llf.;{Orton.n at Cal state.·~kf~ .ll!)lba'; ~i.ia'. ~ the 'fl8hl·inch =··-Ute . ... .... It lhlck <¥Wf~=· ~ ' ''llli1 ;pec1es Jlrlghl aald osually iJ\. ~ fl '!"'! . line, presumed to haJ>it•' ocean ~tera at a~t so to' IO ~ die' cl~ -was unknown, fathom.t of dOptb. aid J J< mlbager of the Tbey are belnc pushed north and to the· LliUlla . y Waltr District. (See CRABS, l'ap II Sw<any; ~~~.'!'.••!er!~~· sup. ;, j plied water to all Ule diltrict's customers and that no S.-vice interuptk>ns were caused. Workme"n had to lay two tern· porary lines downtown to the flotel Lagu.na and the United California Bank. Sweany said that until crews broke lhrough the cement highway, there was no way of kno',in& the l~tion of tl1e break or what h&ppent!d to-the line; a 47· year-old iron pipe. . • . . ' ' ' . Sweany reporfe<l • second failur,.1n th• , 'rea of the SOit llU>Ck of S9qlh Q>aal Highway, but , !"\d 'ir"'I• mipillllll com- , parod ·to th< do'wnt'l"l1 '1lre4k. · Restflcted tr•U¥:./ · .ff10veaitnt was perljUtlod "" !ht .)ll~way loter lo the 1day , ~I,.. i ~r ·•' · ne ore.ak'occwre<I ii ·abo\ll c 1.in. t~ \ t ! • • day. he &aid. • "Apparently. we can't ay for ·sure, there wat some kind of surge In ·the.matn feederline from Corona del Mar. lf'COUld have been an opening or closing of a ma- jor valve alon1 the sySleJl'l rrom here to Yorba Linda,' Sweany ·11rid ... The old.line under ~ jlialtw!!f bas bursl aboul<Ii•e u.._...Jn ,tJit.poat ~ ..... Sweany said. "Tber• is no way lo ~!¢. l'heo and· where lhls..\i'1e might ... :.~ ol '11 look llko tlte day ii was ,Ptlt hl11>t ground, you can , even read the \l?a~facturer's name on It. but Others .... ' Sw~any ald, ••plaining that chemlcallJ hOC. or · <lOr- rollve aoll around the pipe< eata through IS.. BREAK. Plgt'I) ( J State Hig~ Court Shuns City Appeal By JACK CHAPPELL Of ._ O.llY Plltt lhln The California Supreme Court has refused to hear argument& from Laguna • Beach appealip.g a lower court decision whlch overturned the city's lnltJ1tivt vote that impOrSed 136-foot height limit on all Art ·C.olony buildings. i , City Attomey Tully SeYmour waa notified Frid&Y, that the high sute court ·• llfa refused the clly'a petlllon lo bo • beard In ~~lier. · • · • 1\lay0r oaru.. Boyd aid todiJ he • dOeln't believe the city wW attempt Id appeal lbe SUie Supreme COUrl'1 decision into tho federal judiclil l)'ltem. "We will rely on our own ordinance ae> • tion," Mayor Boyd said. The action of the st.ate court kllleCi the ' height limit voted Jn by a 3 to I margin . of Lagunans in a city-wide election the summer of 1971. A' second height limit law was paned by action of the City Council with many of · the same standards as the initiative measure anp remalll.! in effect ac-; cording to city officials. ' The city's height limit has been tbt ; subject of a series of court battles. Realtor Yem Taschner initiated the ac·' Uon against tbe height limit and was at ftnt-turned down in a superior cuurt : level suit. · The Fourth District Appeala Court In , San Bernardino, however ,__overturned. the. 1 lower court decision and ruled the Ur i Jtiatlve law unconstltutianal. 1 The city then appealed to the Supreme : Court and was denied a beariug. · 30 Hurt in Der ailing Of T rain Cai· in NY· NEW YORK (UPI) -Thirty !>0""'1s we.re reparted injured today when· the rear car of an eight-car Long Island Rail Road train derailed near Woodside 114' tion in Qu~ns. the Fire Departmenl said -30 pa.!Sengers on the 6:57 a.m. train frorn l Speonk to Hunter• Point Avenue were ln·~ jured but none of the· injuries werelr ~eved serious. I .;or .. ge Welidaer The Los Angei<I weather oervtce says the run. wW break ,lbrougb those low clouds on Tueactay tor the first Ume in II "-i's· 1.ioett,Y aunny afterooOM ~are ~ted for U1e re.st of tbe week...~ Of .aa at the beachea, n.lntl lo 7C inland. . ' INSID~ ftlrA.Y "Tiit Waltom," TV't hrprife hit oj tht season, and '"•"Julit' A11dTtws Hour, canctltd hl mkJ,. .season, shared C9J> "°'1011 a& 4ht annu,aJ Emmu atoard pre1mtQ..' tions. Set Paae 9 for all the de· tailJ, I ~ • - I J? twlV l'ILOf l• 1 Duhau ·Wins Top Post At School Franco!J Dubou. compolinlnr on a j.lattonn that aludenll should become -e Involved In lheir cmununlty, )las been elected preoldent ol the Laguna lleaoh ll1&h School Auodated Student Body. Dubau will be lnlul!Ufated Into al!loe this wek to preside ov.,. student body affairs during the 1973--74 school. year, beginning in September. The winner collected 444 votes. His op-e:!: Erle Ressler, recelved 102 A two-hour convention, complete wlth all tbe red, white and blut\ trappings of national compalgua, waa beld at the hllh school Thursday morning for students to listen to candidates' !peecbea and mark tbelr ballots. Dubau, 17, told students they should beColDe lnvo1ved in projects within t.beir community. He particularly urged 1tu- dcnt participaUon in eff<lrts to place a greenbelt around the city of Laguna Beach. He alao urged better communications between students and their government, suggosth!i a stronger Student Congresa and a lludmt representative to &it with tbe Laguna Beach Board ol EducaUon. Othen elected to the high acbool ASB Student Couoc1I were: Vice President -E)ie Heard Secretary -Susie McCalla Treasurer -Julie Smith Assi!lant Treasurer -Terri Byington Student Congress President -=--Eric Morton Commllsiooer of Education -Kimber- ly MaddOck c.omm.issioner of Boys Welfare -Jon Brocknan Cumml.uiooer of Girls Welfare -Jen· niler Maqulre Cmnmlssioner of Social Activities - Marla Stinnett Q>1Dl1\15sloner of Publicity -Sandy Turner Qxnmlsslooer of Finance -Hillary Kuhn Commissioner of Organizations and EJections -Oz Simmons CommJ.moner of A.soemblles -Robert Ahlke • ComnUssioner of Pep -Patty Slowsky Members of the new Student Council will hold meetings this summer to begin preparatlons for the upcoming school year and to hold discussion.. with members of the hl1h school and school district admlni.straUve staff. Border Patrol Business Dips Border patrolmen at the San Onofre checkpoint today a r e wondering what happened last weekend . In contrast to usual weekend ar- rest.s of 60 to 80 or more aliens, on- ly about six were apprehended Sun- day. "We can hear the patter of little feet," one patroman joked this morning, "but we can't see .them." F ront Page 1 CRABS ... surface, said Bright, chairman of the biology department at Cal State. by normal \Varmer tropical water currents from the south coming north. The crabs swiln along with the warmer currents and are brought up as those currents and some wlnd conditions change rapidly, he said. - In !\tOnterey in 1859, a similar number of crabs were (,1rown ashore because of the turbulent mix of waters, he said. Dr. Bright added tflat while the crabs are edible. their small amount of meat might not be v.•orth the energy trylng to g.et it out. .. DAILY PILOT l"-0....,.. CMtl DAil Y P'1LOT, wftlll Wflk!I .. _.,.,""""""' ,..... ,..... .. ,..., It llUDlllll'ltd w tr.. Or•nge CO.ti P'lll>llthlno Con\llilny • ..,.... ''"' l'llltlooiil •r• puillltlW, MMlll•Y ""'9uclll ll'rld1y, ""' C0ot!• M ... , H.._-i 9ttdl. 11.....,11n91an ' 9"ci\l"-talfl Vali.-,t, '--PUlli 9Ndl, l"'IMl &adlli.Mdl ...... Ian C*'-""' s... Ju'* <"•tt-A t1r101a Nlll'-1 .:!Ulot1 It publflMd' S.lul'll•,_ and SUlldtn. flls pdrw;fp.tl pUb~ ,iMt fl at l30 Wfll" .,., s1,...1, co.11 Mna, c..llllW?> .. , n.a. Rebert H. W1M rr9111NM •M '°""""'*' Jack II, c ..... 1 • ., Vic• ,,. ....... •NII °"""'" ~ 'Tll•111•1 Kea"U l!lfllOI' n..,.,.,, A. M11rphll'I• Mlnlflrll •• 1,... Ch1rl11 H. L1a1 lllch1rd r. Nill At.lhf .... f MaMtlrll ••119n LefllM a..• Offke 222 fffltf A¥111Va Malllat ....,,,..,u ,,0, ••• •••· t2•s2 ............. C:..i. Mlta1 JJI ':'!!:fSlrart = ..... , »II hll+twJ'I H Mfl llildlr IN1t hactl .............. SM OtfftM'91 m ""'91 II Camilla ll .. 1 ......... (71 4, '42-4Jll ~ A'"1tttlf11 M J.1671 ........... Al lapal ..... I T•P•••• 49M 4U c.,......,, 1'11, ~ tfMI 1""4111111 .... C~nr. N6 -,.,...., ui.,.1r1t11r1a. ..,,,.,...,_. --.,. Mwrt'--1• ...... 11111' .,. ~ ""'*" ..... ,.,. '"'"'°" of _,,.., .....,, hotfW CltM "'""" HJlf .. C...1 MfM., C1lllonlLI, ~1"'1111 _., ctrrftr UM ~1~1 W ...._II A.It 111Mff\tr1 lllflltwy *1itl111tla"'I PM """IMY· L .. - , ·polic~man c ...... Jtftlf"der Callr l"/111 11111 l"fl.i. Pause To Refresh Dog takes advantage of the public fountain in Hei.Sler._fark at La· guna Beach for a cooling drink. Roving P.hotographer speculated that running loose in park can be pretty thirsty work ~on a warm day, especially with a fur coat. School Boundary Line Change to Be Studied A proposed change in attendance boun- daries for San Clemente and Dana Hills High Schools will be discussed tonight by Capistrano Unified SChool D i s t r i c t trustees. 'ft\e meetmg will be at 7:30 at Serra School. A ,report to the board says that a change µi boundaries is needed because growing enrollment.a at the two schools are out-of-balance. One suggestion Is to remove the area Laguna Girl, 2 Marines J a iled On Pot Charges A Laguna Beach glrl and two El Toro ~ Marines were amoog four persons jailed during the weekend when California Highway patrolmen allegedly discovered 12 bags of marijuana in their car after halting the vehicle in Orange for what they said was a traffic infraction. Orange County Sherifrs office rs took over the investigalion and jailed Mavis Marie Perkins, 20, of 659 Ramona St., Laguna Beach, El Toro Marines William Earl Whitlock, 19, and Jeffrey Donald Steele, 20, and Donald Ray Smith, t9, of Santa Ana. Deputies said the car occupied by the four defendants was halted by CllP of- ficers In the Orange Park Acres area and subjected to an on the spot search . Patrolmen said they found 12 bags of marijuana in the vehicle. All four defen· dants are awaiting court appearances on charges of possessing marijuana and possessing marijuana for sale. Art Co rnpetition /udges Selected The judges for this year's Orange Co1mty Fair art competition will be Richard Challis, of Challis Galleries, Laguna Beach ; and \Vadc Zint. !X'rtrait artist, and Marla Klein , graphics and acrylie artist. Zint and Ms. Llcin nrc both ex hibitors in the Laguna BeaC'h Fes tival of Arts. Artists \\'lsh.ing to enter the fair co1n- petition must be residents of Orange County and over age 16. Details on requirements. fees ;ind judg- ing as Y.'Cll as entry blan ks arc available from the fair adminis tra tion offi cers, 88 Fair Drive, Costa !\fesa. The deadline for return ing completed entry blanks is June l. Front P age 1 BREAK •.. the Iron, we11Jeening the line. ''Then if you get one or these surges, out she goes." he said . Sweany said the water district now Is Investigating r~la~mcnt of the pipeline-. combining a pipeline of the Sout h Coast Wattt County Water District in a joint crfort. • of Mission Viejo north of Oso Parkway and east of Marguerite Parkway from the Dana Hills: High attendance. There are no families living in that area now. District off~ial Joe Wiiper said artilher posalblllty would be haft1 all . potential Mission Viejo area students at- tend San Clemente ·and not Dana Hilla High. This plan would create a atudent population of between 1,700 and 1,800 at Dana Hills by next November, and a population of 1,700 and 1,755 at San Clemente High. Wimer said. Trustees tonight will be considering adoption of elementary and junior high school attendance areas, additional pay for swnmer school teachers and ap- pointment of members to an instructional materials review commiUee. FrontPaflel SEWER •.. is not approved we would probably re- sort to revenue bonds SGld by AWMA and secured by revenues from the sewer system," Miller said. He estimated such financing could e o st an additional $2 to $14 a month for users. Ca r Hurts Child l1i Laguna Beach A 5-year~ld was hit w hi I e skateboarding in Laguna Beach Saturday and pushed across asphalt pavement for eight feet by the wheels of a heavy lux- ury car. Dean Andrew Ford of 3066 1'-1ountain View Drive was reported In fiir condit ion with injuries lo his chest and shoulder at South Coast Community Hospital follow· ing the accident. He was to be adipltted to the intensive care unit f<r observaUon, aides said. The driver of the car was Rozella Ann Roberts, 37, of 343 Locust St. No charges are being considered against her said , Polee Sg t. Nonnan Babcock. The accident occurred near Rida le Field , a little league ballpark. Sgt. Bab- cock said the child slipped into the path of the big car and fell under its wheels which pushed the boy along the pave- ment. '' l suppose he is lucky it was a big car, a smaller vehicle might have rolled right over him," Babcock said. Wo111an, Boy Found Dead in Vehicle SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A 43-ye•r-old Saratoga woman and an Infant were found dead from exhaust fumes In a car parked in the Senta Cruz Mountairni, Police said. Mary Ruth Popelka and the boy, who a pathologist estimated eit between one year and 18 months old, I were discovered by a local man, police said . 'l njure4 ' 1n··c11me Seen , in OiHield = . ' ~~ A ll!mtlniton lleach pollce motorcyle officer ill hospllall!ed today with Injuries suffered at the climax ol a three-city pursuit of two youths who allegedly stat> bed a thlrd and atole his ..,u. , OO!eer Jeffr.ey Cope, '¥1, was hurt wl'.en his cycle slid on wet pavement and piled Into a parked car at Huntington Intercommunlty Hospital Saturday. The accident immediately preceded a colll.aloo in which a Garden Gr~ police car rammed the swipects' vehicle and foreed It out of actkm. Investigators grabbed the driver as be piled out b.Jt hia passenger scaled a chain link fenee to Good Shepbered Cemetery and was caught after a foot chase across the graves. The suspects, both 11, were admitted to Orange County Juvenile Hall folloWing the k.lnfe assault at a Chicano dance in PlacenUa, leading later to the auto chase which exceeded 100 'miles per hour. During the initial stages, another Garden Grove police car was put out of commlsalon when the patrolman at the wheel wrecked it while tiying to run the fleeing 1963 station wagon off the road. Charges against the two youths include amult on a police officer, since ·they allegedly tried to run down a Sants Ana office.r on foot as he signaled for them to ~top. . The patrolman was forced to leap for his life after the abortive attempt to halt the pair at Harbor Boulevard and 17th Street in Santa Ana. The pursuit's path was largely a1oog Harbor Boulevard, but included turns on· to Hazard Avenue and Golden Weit Street in Westminster before it ended with the hospital parking lot pileup. 6 R efugees Rescued ~ALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -The Border Patrol today held six refugees from HalU who wei'e towed here Sunday after spending seven days adrift aboard a leaky eight-foot boat. The four men and two women said lhey fled their bome.s because of politlcal and economic op- pression. '"Deals~ By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of "'-DlllY PMtt 'tiff CARSON -'J1.ie murder of a young man whose headless body was found in u olllield bere !laturdoy IB oot'Unked to the Wini of mutUaUoo muroera that have occarred 1n thh area, police sa14 t~ day. Detective Brad Phelan of the Los Angeles Police Department said the man who was found Saturdaf was apparently the victim of a robbery. "There la no relaUonsbip between this kllllJJg and the others we art in- vestigating," Phalen said. Soviet Officials Leave El Toro After Area · Visit A four-engine Soviet jet plane about the size of a Boeing 7~ left Et Toro Marine Corps Air Station this morning on runway 25 headed over Irvine enroute back to Russia. The plane carried about 50 Russian security experts who spent two days along the Orange Coast looking at the Western White House. The visit ls in preparation for some ''future, Possible" visit by hlgh Soviet of- ficials, an El Toro spokesman said. It was believed the security evaluation may have related to the pos~ible visit to San Clemente in J4te June of Soviet leader Leonld Brezhnev, who is schedul· ed flrst to meet wffh the President in Washington, D.C. The Russian agents' IL 62 transport plane parked in a portion of the El Toro field normally reserved by t he President's plane. Due to its size and weight, the plane us· ed the east-west runway, on its return to an undisclosed borne base. Delay Land Information Due Friday The Whfte House bu again delayed dlselooure1 on ""'91dllll.Nizon"• nal estate deallng.s' in San Clemente and Florida but spakesmen prdfti1sed ~ to glve the aecotmUng this Friday. THE DJ8CLOSURE had been promised one week ago when presidential .spokesmen vigorously derued a Santa Ana Reiister report that Senate iove.tti- gatoM were looking into the possibility that Nixon campaign funds may have been used in the purchase of the old Hamilton H. Cot ton estate in San Cle- mente. Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said the White House decided to set a "dale certain" for release of the infonnatlon rather than face daily questlon.s on when the data would be available. Last Monday, presidential press secretary Rooald L. Ziegler said the information would be available in "a day or .so." WARREN SAID the release had been delayed beeau..e the White House wanted to make certain the information was "complete, accurate .abd doc-- umented." He said acting presidential counsel Leonard Gannent and his staff "are putting together the details, documenting the facts and haVing contact with a number of people." Before his resignation April 30 in the mid.st of lhe Watergate cootroversy, presidential assistant John Ebrlichman handled most matters concerning Nixon's personal flnance. Also involved was Herbert Kalmbach, a Newport Beach attorney who served until recently as.Nixon's personal lawyer. The others Phalen referred to a~ 1 t;i string of four mutilation murders in = which the victims were homose1U1lly I assaulted. ... Phelan said the Los Angeles coroner has c:ontirmed that the latest mu,rd1r victim had not been sexually assau.lted • and he was found fully clothed . ":~ Police from five agencies i.n the Los ;:: Angeles 11arbor area aod western Orange :-4' County are still investigating the bizarre ± mutilation murders in which only one or the four victims has been identified. 7 Those victims are Edward Daniel ~ Moore, 20, whose body was found Dec. 26 ~ in Seal Bead!; a young man found Feb. 6 T-111 in the Wilmington Area; another YoWtg '°"' man found Aprll 14 in Huntington Beach qi: and a young man whose dismembered N corpse was found scattered throughout W the Harbor area and in Sunset Beach. i F rotnPaffel GOLD •.. .. ~ = ·W and Milan. In Zurteb ~ bought only , 3. 11125 Swiss francs, compared with ..C. 1.1435 at the clooe Friday. Qi: Gold broke piut $100 last y,·eek in a ~ surge of speculation partly triggered by -· the Watergate scandal and fears that il would undermine President Nixon's plans 1 to control inflation in the United States. That wave subsided by Thursday, the price of gold began to decline and' the dollar improved. The trend was reversed at the opening : of the markets loday after a weekend · during which some British newspapers carried speculative stories that the scan· i . dais in Washington ~ might force the ... President to reslgn. Some dealers said 1'l. the-markels .were made more uneasy by :~ a reprort that the President's chief j foreign policy adviser, Henry Kissinger, 1:> might resign. ~ Flooding Suit Blames Lag una 1 ' . " A Laguna Beach coople who claim : their home at 658 f\.tystic View was flood· j- ed to a depth of one foot during a heavy "' rain.storm last November have sued tb&-cicy fO< $27~.in d • ...,... '.Q Jack A. and Virfilnla S. Clarie cbar&tl"i , the city of Laguna eaeh with negllaettce ~ C<llltflbuting ta the ;fkiodlng. In thel'M Onllfle C<>unty Supe~or Court aetloo. 'IbeY.:..clalm that faulty construction ~ and maintenance of the stonn-drain in the Vista Lane and the opening of a ~ manhole during torrential rains last Nov •. ~ 12 sent runoff water cascading into their home. Refrigerator Stolen In Niguel Burglary ~ . .. •"' "' _ A brand-new rtfrigerator and other kit! ': Chen appli8Ilces with a total value or e $830 were stolen during the weekend bY. ~ burglan who broke into a Laglllla Nlguef ': home wider conslructioo, Orange Countf. ~ Sheriff's officers said. · Deputies said the Joss was reported hi ·C contraclor Courtney Platt, 62, of 291\ :-. Alta Lagwia. Platt told them that int ~ truders.cut a window screen to gain eni " try to the ome at 33811 Shackleton J;Je. r < I~ .. , 26th AnniversarySAl.E! . ,.,; I(~ SAVE ON GE-'Nli FROST' REFRIGERATORS with AUTOMATIC ICEMAKERS M.I cu. "· -WWI:!?" alPlllelUTOAofll"dlla ''" cu. "· "'IKM"•orr-..,111•111ATff:·P••O•• s34411 CALL DUNLAP & Authorlied GE SERVI CE Mtmbtr of 90 DAY C111forn11'1 L1rg1st CASH Cooper1tlv. Buylne Wl1'H A"lOftD Group With The CllDtt Powtir of 110 Storn ,..~ ~ Volu me Buying SI 548-7788 t;;::x:z ·111 NEWPORT BLVD. Dawntawn Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 t ' I I ~ "< I. 1 • " 1 • • I . - ! - l Sadlllelia~k ,, Teday's Fbaa l f' !loL 66, NO. 141, 2 SECTIOf'IS, 28 PAGES •• ( ORANG~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA· MON DAY, MAY 21, 1973 r-) TEN CENTS I I ·car Torched in Irvin~ After.· 120-MPH Chas·e I :· .~ stolen, $12,000 Italian sport ~ .. destroyed early today wheo two joy rkFs piled .tt up In Irvine after a 120- "111e-per-bour chase .and dellberately set It iln fire. 1he pair -including the driver Who ~" oai<f.slioWl!d remarkable driving um -.escaped · on foot following"'W! r>ifll~w.it ~<!£ .t!!'!!Jeft a ..J>!llrol car irifc,+ked in.San· ~ino C:OOmY:--• estiglrton u;jd QQth siispe¢s e~ Uy e:b)lerl injury .in ·the seri~ oC . "';, --,.. .. • two crashes. California.Highway. PatrQI sgt. Richard Martin and Officer Lonnie Leitzman also escaped injury about 1 :SO a.m. when they rammed the stolen car in the rear during a bectlc chase. · The officers spotted the low--shmg 1972 De Tomaso Pantera streaking along State Route 30 near San Bernardnio and initiated a punuit. A CHP spokesman said the chase r~_speeds of 120 miles pe11 hour, but · . .. ended abruptly when 1he ~uad ar ~ lided with the rear of the Pantera durmg a chase maneuver. Tile vehicle belonging to Dr. Olarl'5 Crone of 821 Bellil. St., Ne"""'1 Beach, hnd been stolen from Johnson and Son Lincoln Mercury, 2626 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. O>sta Mesa Patrol Sgt1 Cliff Y-cBride, who talked with CHd:vestigators after l~ accident, :said.~ maryeled at·the abl.lity of the driver andte the costly car . The origin ol the Pantera and the San Bernardino Qllmly punull only came to light ihout 3: l~ a.m., durlnc in- vestlgatioll of the Irvine plleop. OOJcer Doui' Stoermer was dispotch- ed Iii ' the scene after two peighbon awakened by • series of crashes called police. The Panlera's driver apparenlly ii&· ged when ~ should have zagged oo curv- ingil>lena Amli!o Rold iOO feel soulh.ol Turtle Rock Drive. ._ • Tile sport coupe lholl CIJ'OMed olf ...... dil!erent polnta ol lmpod, in- cluding loor u.e.., a -sign and a block woll belatt oomlng to rut. Damll V. l;ole, ol ·u 1!1erra Verde Road and Steve.Armeolnll!I. ol 5545 Sier- ra Verde Road. both delcrlbed at least two penons u being pre0ont Tiley told polke lhe Pilf1oolted under lhe liood ol the car, .then • too.od • flaming object at It and the l'lntera ex- plod<d • In a hursl of IWµe. County Fire Departrr*nt ~unfta were called to the scene, but lhe etotie sporta ear was a total loss.• lnve!tigators said matching of details by witnesses showed the driver was about 20 and had a short, bushy Afro- st)'le ha irdo, while his passenger's description was mote vague. Poliee were uncertain just when the car was stolen, but a private patrol told them a check at 11:40 p.m. Sunday at the auto agency revealed that everything ap- peared to be secure.· ·Dollar Doldrums .. 'Wild Rumors' Affecf Gold Price LONDON (AP) -Gold soared to record prices in Europe today and the U.S. dollar dropped to new lows as a result or specuJat!on that the Watergate scandal would force President Niton to resign. In Zurich, gold shot to a reoord fll3 an ounce, up $7.50 from Friday's close an<f $2.59 above the record set there last Tuesday. Swiss banks, which buy and sell for Middle East oH interests, international corporatlom and wealthy individual!, ..,.ve been .active in the gold market in the past tWo weeks. In London, the world's biggest bullion c~ter. gold' was traded at $f12.50 an oun- ce, up f7 from Friday's close. 1be previous record in London: set last Tues- day, was $111. The dollar, meanwhile, hit record lows in Frankfurt and Paris and weakened shaiply in most other Europeao ctnters. In Paris, the U.S. curreney sank to 4.to50 commercial Cranes, below the lows of the February monetary crllls when the dollar wu devalued. One banking source said while the talk that Nixon might resign was only rumor, "lhe muket is extremely nervous and in- cUned to react to t.ne wildest rumors." In Frankfurt, lhe doUar dropped to 2.6430 marks. In Landon, the pound Jumped more than two cents. tradinf.o at $3.5742 by mid· tSee GO , Page Ii i Man 's Decapitated Body ·~Not Linked to . Murders 'President's Wish' Cited l.n Inquiry. Surviv al Theater ' ' "°h-1airffg ·.a' non-verbal point in 111Cycle: Three," Sur- •vi val . Theater at UC Irvine are 30 cast members . whose production bows at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Fine. Arts Village Concert H.all. Without costumes . or sets_, Dr: AshJey Garr's students will create "ocean, grass, eternity, tree, curiosity, touch ka- leidoscope and materialis1n.'t Human pyramid is part of show set for evening Performances through Saturday. Admission is $1 . ' ' Red Crabs Invade , Tho usands Wash Up at San Cle mente; Dana Point .~· • • By CANDACE ·PEARSON ije ad~· t~t.the Same crabs came in Tbey Bre being pushed north and to1&e · ~,,,. DlillY Pll;U-$t•ff-similar nLD;nbers 1l years ago' and lben.J2 surface, said 'Bright., ~~n ·,~~ Utt· 'l'houwids <>I.small red crabs conlinu< · yws>behlre Iha~ asJI on.IChedule. blofogy department al cat•sta!e, ·by te wub'iir }Vitb' the surf in ·san Clemente Ftihilig is stilt bad ·at Dana Point, he normal .wtU'lllef tropical water curnntJ arld Daha .Point, providing a handy said, because fish eat the crabs, not bait. from the south comfug'IK>l'tb. source of fOod to sea..gulls and fish. .. 'The fish all have fat happy grins on The crabs·swim alolig with the wapner A San Clemente lifeguard. spokesman their faces," the Harbor spokesman con-currents and are brought up as thOse said the '"Invasion" of pelagic (free· firmed. c1µTents and some ~""'1¥1 6>nditur. swimming) crab! that resemble 'lobsters The small crabs pinch, but don't rea11y change rapidJy, he said. t. was in eYen larger~ numbers today. hurt .humans. Tbe·"5Wim backwards like Jn Monterey in 1859, a. similar number •· f or crabs w~re ~.1rown ashore .because. of ··--- Mitchell Denies Guilt NEW YORK (UPI) -Former cabinet Judge John Cannella rejected tbe ap- members John N. Mitchell and Maurice plication' and released the. defendants in Sta ns pleaded innocent today to eharges their own custody . of perjury and conspiracy in connection Lookini pale and shaken, Mitchell and with a $200,000 gift to President Nixon 's his lawyers had to push a path through re.election ca mpaign rrom a finaneier reporters who mobbed them •s they ar- \vho was under federal investigation. rived at the courthouse. Mttchel1'1 only The financier and code!endent, Robert comments to a barrage of questions L. Vesco, 36, did not appear to enter a were, "Good morning. How are you? I'm plea and a warrant wu il!Ued for his ar· here enter a plea." rest. Vesco has left the country anG last In the court, Mitchell, former at- was reported in Costa Rica. to y general who lert that offleoe to run A fourth defefldent, prominent New Ni on's ~paign, tilted back ln hla Jersey Republican Harry L. Se~1 al ., Ir and wrung his bands as he waited pleaded innocent. to answer the charges. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jolm aak-He shook hands wllh Slans, formerly ed that a personal reoogn~ bond of commerce secretary and chief ol the re· $1,000 be posted for each dE!endant. But electk>n committee'• financet, and ~ra who arrived about 25 minute& after hlm . Soviet Officials Leave El.Toro After Area Visit Catmella ruled that It was wmeCetsar)' to have the derendants finlerprlnted and photographed in the f..:Ual manhal'a of· rice. !l'~Q~N (AP) -:--Former While I Houio chlet ol ltall R.R. Haldeman waa quoted today as h&vlng uld, "II Is the Prtsldent'a wish" that the CIA ut lbe FBI not to investigate Mexican angles ln the Watergate affair. Sen. Stuart Symington ( D • Mo • l. dlscl08ed the statement was noted ln a memo by deputy CIA director Lt. Gen. Vernon Walten on June 23, 1'12· -alx daya after the break·in at Democratic party headquarters. The memo wu made public today as , former CIA director Richard Helrm ~ peared before the Senate Forelgn Rtla- Uons Committee of which Symlngton is a member. It concerned a meeting on J uoe 23 ~ volvlna Walters, Helmsi Haldeman and Jolm D. Ehrllchman. At the end, Walters noted in hi& memo. 1 Haldeman turned to him and said, "It Ls: ; the President's wish that ycu go to see . Mr. Gray." L. Patrick Gray Ill wu ac- ting director ol the FBI. 1. Asked about the notation. Helms said he was in the meetng but does not recall the specific invocation of t.he President's name. But he said instn.1clin111 from the chief of staff were asswned to be car- rying the Presider:t'a authority, At that time investigatJons were under way about "laundered" campaign con-- tributlons sent from Texas to Mexico to be' oonverted Into checks and cash. Some of the checks eventually wound up trt the bank account of convicted Watergate 1 coosplrator Bernard L. Barter in Mlaml There had been previous tesllmony that the FBI wa,. asked to stay out of that part of the investlgaUon in order to mate ~look like a CIA operation. Helms told the commlltee h I s (Bee WATERGATE, Pap ,t) I r--~~~~~~~~--.1 • • He said the unusual ~occurrence o • lobster, but in -some areas are getting the tW'bulent mix of. waters, ·he 54id. "' the silver-dollar sized crabs has been strandetl behind surf lines. '""-~ reported from as fat south as Ensenada Dr. Donald Bri&bt, a marine biologist ur. Bright added .that wtme the crabs A four.engine Soviet jet plane about the. size of a Boeing ?(fl left El Toro Marine Corps Air Station this morning on runway 25 headed . over lrvine enroute back t6 Russia. Following the arraignment, the three defendants went to the chamber,s of federal Judge Lee Gagllard.J, who wa1 assigned the case. Gagll@rdl, M, ol Larchmont, N. Y ., is one of. the newest judges in the Southern District. He was (See MITCHELL, Pare%) Welldter The Los Anseles "'.O•lher servJc:e aays the sun will bttat ~ those low clouds on Tuesday/for llie first time Jn ll days. !.jootly eunny afternoons are expected for lhe mt ol the week. Hijhs Of 1111 at the heachet, rltlng to 7C·Jnland. ·i . • afe edible, their. -11 amdUnt <¥ nlOat north to Newport Beach. at Cal State F'Ullerton, said the crabs' might not be worth. ~ energy ttyin& ,to "We've .got those by the billioM," a presence on 'the surface waters is get it out. .. , ... ·<· . Harbor patrolman at Dana Point said l.lll~. thi.1 molni!ll . .'"They're swimming around nus. species,. Bi:ight said, usually in- aur doclts ... ._. habita ocean waters at about 50 to 60 fathoms of depth. A.'D REQUIRES NO REPEAT EFFORTS ."JC at first . , ." f'\dverti sef!J often do JUccted on the Jirst try wllen they try a DaiJy Pilot classified ·want ad . Look What llappened !)ere: . POINT. Blk to beach, beau! mod. l br. ('()Jor TV sun deck, yrlt $190. (Phone No. l The house was rented to the FJRSIJ' person who saw it. Try catling your ad· visqr. and she 'll try her .bes\ to help.you 1 succeed. Her direct line is 642-5678. • • Bro-WU Criticizes . . ., Econoncy-Curbs SACRAMEN'l'O (AP i -President Nix· on's economtc policies have clamp;ed con- trols on salaries but not on prices, says secretary of State Edmund r.G. Brown·Jr. In a speech Sunday berore a statewide conlerence or the United Steelworkers of America, Brown said infJatioo ha s been "appare'ntly out of coatrol" during the pa.rt year, reductng the working man 's buying powu at Lbe1wne ume as cor- paration profits approach record levels. " Itchy Pr?b~.~. Bother;s ~PQJi<;e . Things a're 'jU~pi~g · at .. the Llg(loa ~ Pollco Statioh. • --"Al~~tholJglljt was just me hut then l lal~wttli OM of lhe other gals, and· rald. ltle'd been holhered too," I OJ1' oi' t h e ::~en"._s le~•!\> dfs~ "11>ey 1pr11yed "' uw.. "'41. it didn't do any godd," ,anotller 1114, polnlh1g ID the tlWo'.-le .,..., where IM' women sit. ~ The department has "'"" 1 The' plane carried about SO Russian security uperts who spent two daf1 along the Orange Coast looking al lhe Western White House. , The' 'vtsU · it in · pnparatltiq for som~ "future, possible" vtsltiby'higb SO.let Of· . flciala, an El Toro· spokninftnr saJd. ~ · • II was lielleved the .eculliy eval~aUon may have"related to lhe ~sl~ ,visit to · ~ Clemeote In late June '<If• &Mel lt!Odet Leonid Brezhnev, wl» I> ochedul· • ed' first to meet with the Pretldent in. Washin&CO., D.C. · • The Rlllslan agentsl IL a &an.Port plane par~ed in a•portljJn of .the El Toro field ~ly , reoerved , by I b e Pr..Hjeiil'• .plane. · • ' Due to Ju llze and ,..1&1>t. ·the pllllt u. ed the east.wesr runway, on tts teturn to an undiacloled home base. Last Rites Held For Dr. McClary Memorlal ten1ces were held at 3 p.m . today !or Dr. Dlllon ·R. McClary, 83, ol University Park 11ho died. May II while trr.vf!lilll Jn hru. A native of Georgia, Dr. lolcClary tived Jn Irvine for eight yean:. · He ia liJM'lved by bla' 'lridow, Mrs. Helen McCIU')!'Of !ht "'11Uy,liome, 17711 Acactt. Tree Lane; two daqbten, Mn. Genalis lfMdy , of H<Alltoli. Tex., and Mn. Louise Bouchillon ol Kin31porl, Teon.: i brother; Dr. L. ll McCIVy·ol t..o..lsvUle, Ky., and eight arondchlldmi. Servtoei and entomhmenl ""'• al Pacir\o ·vie,. Memorial ·Park-, Co!ula dtl , Mar. 't'he '•milY _ .... Clllllr!bulm'nl07 he made to a lav0<11t char!!):. INSIDE TODAY .. The Walton.t," TV'1 surprise ._it o/ the 1e121on, and the J~ Andr1ws Hour, canceled ftl tftild. • l1a10n, #hared top llonon oc &M ' onnuaJ Emmw award prcsnto. tiom. See Page 9 for all Ille de- tails. L.M. ~ 1 ....... ,, C.11... s ·-.... t-'n II Cl'MI...... If DM•, "'4tktt I ... ...,.. '"' ' .llleri..... ,. .. ~ .... Ke •" .......... ,. 14 · ................ M -. ...,,......... ' or .... e....; ' ,,..,.. ,..,.... ! ........ , .. MMbK .. :s:.s '.J.. w-.-.¥fttl'.. ..... ' \ I I I I • ' ' ' ' . l I • ' I • I I "' I I % DA!l.V PILOT IS M...,, ...... 21, 1973 SkylahCrew Sets Friday • i Repaii· Joh HOUSl'ON (UPI ) -With a Oighl director predicting "they'll fix us up," the lhree Skylab l astronauts step up !heir final training today for an un· p~ted attempt Friday to repair the 1 y.·orld's largest spaceship. The latest plan ls for the crewmen to cool the overheated space sta tion by ex- tending a silver and white parasol, a .. beach umbrella" large eoough to cover a two-car garage, lhrough an eight·inch- square airlock. Before they do that, Charles "Pete" Coorad, Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz plan to o~ the hatch of their Apollo command module, reach out with something akin to a long boat hook and au.empt to free one of Skylab'.& two j~ med power genuaUng solar cell wings. "I think we have a fairly good chance of doing that," flight dlrecWI' Neil Hutchinson said ln an interview Sunday night. "If we can get the solar curtain up, and that wing out, we're back in business. We're set." George B. Hardy, a chief Skylab 1 engineer, said operation of only one or the two stuck solar panels would give the big space station enough extra power to conduct a normal mb.slon and support three crew11 a!I orlgtnally planned for a total of 140 days in space. "I'd say that would lake us right back to tile top of the world," he said at the JohnMln Space Center. The astronaut.!, scheduled for launch at 9 a.m. EDT Friday, will intercept Skylab 7 hours and 41 minUtes lateT and show 1 engineers at the center and viev.>ers around the \\o'Orld what the station looks like. I They will attempt to free the 90lsr wing Friday and then get a night's sleep , in their Apollo befort entering £kylab and raising the umbrella. Pause To Refresh C.Onrad will call the signals in or:.bit. ' Hutchinson said, "I couldn't think of a better guy I'd want in 11 position IJke this. I suspect they'Jl nx us up." -Dog takes advantage of the -public fountain Jn Heisler Park at La- guna Beach !or a cooling drink. Roving photographer speculated that r unning loose in park can be pretty thirsty work on a warm day, especially with a fur coat. After honing their space piloting skills in a command ship trainer and reviewing the perts of Skylab's new parasol. the three astronauts plan to fly to Huntsville, Ala., tonight to get in one final practice session in a 4G-foot--deep, 1.4 million ·gallon water tank. By floating submerged with special breathing apparatus, the astronatuts can simulate weightlessness. They will prac- tice raising two versions of a Jarge awn· ing -a potential backup &kylab remedy that would require work in open space. Hardy said. lhe 22 by 24 loot umbrella, which can be erected safely from inside the space station, ls the lKime candidate for the job. But In case the small airlock in tbe wall of Skylab is covered by debri!I from the shtp'S' rlpped meteordid. shield, the astronauts would resort to raising the awning during a spacewalk. La guna Girl, 2 Marines Jailed On Pot Charges A Laguna Beach girl and two EI Toro Marines Y:ere among four persons jailed during the weekend when Callfomia Highway patrolmeh allegedly discovered 12 bags of marijuana in their car after halting the vehicle in Orange for what they said was a traffic infractlon. Orange C.Ounty Sheriff's officers took over the investigation and jailed Mavis Marie Perkins. 20, of 659 Ramona St., Laguna Beach. El Toro J\1arines William Earl Whitlock, 19. and Jeffrey Donald Steele, 20. and Donald fl ay Smith, 19, of Santa Ana. Deputies sai d the cac occupied by the four defendants was halted by CHP of- ficen in the Orange Park Acres area and subjected to an on the spot search. Patrolmen said they found 12 bags of marijuana in the vehicle. All four defen- dants are awailing court appearances on charges of possessing marijuana and possessing marijuana for sale. OUNS I COAST DAILY PILOT Tfl• Or1noi1 Coa1t PA,ll Y PILOl, wltti oW!kfl " c:omf)I,..., ,,,. H ...... Prn1. II pVtlfl\llfC llr -Ot'•no-CN11I Pub!lllllno C°"'Pinr • ...,._ '''' e<1u1on1 ••• P<llllllMd, MOOd•r ""OllVl'I Fr~, tor Co1!11 M...-, Hfo¥111>rt Bffefl, H .... 1rno1on fl••(~'"'-"'" V•U11, L..,_ 8~. trvll'l4'IS1i;ldl"9d1 _. S1t1 Clt-'t/ ~n J11M C1pl11r1.-o. "' 1l11Qlt '"lvNt ""''~ 11 PllOll\l'llod S.t..,,...p 11'111 511'41y1, r,,. p•ir>e!Ptl oubll1hl119 Pl•"' 11 11 llO Wnf 811 StrM1, Co1 11 M1w, C1llklr111f, PHH. Robert N, W11d P•t•I01m Ind P.itot.tr J1clr It C11rl1y Vk-1 Presti..,! 11111 ~ti Mtnttw Tltern11 Kt1Yil E .. 119<' Til1m11 A. M111plrtl111 Ml"f01"9 l!d!tor Ch1,.1c H. L101 Jtic:lr1114 r. Nill AMlll.lf'll Ma111191nf Mrlllo't Cetll Mh.11 UI WMI 81y $11'111 H...._, llK!o! )Slj N......_, lllvlwtrd 1....-k1<111 m "'°'"' ,,._ HUrlllftOIOll tllC'll: 11fl5 Bffdl S...lnt•d SM C1-ltltl! ... HOt'flil fl C.'"lno •111 ,.,.,.._ rn •J ,,1 ... J11 CJwafflM A"-•1tllf19 '42·1671 s .. C'"'-te AH 0.,_,..llh: r • ..,,.._ 4t2Mtt Cnvrltf\I, -ltrt on.-Cini PoAll!Jtl .... GlfnpMiy, No -1torr.. lth111r1t1ont, n 1ao..111 ,...11.,.. or ..,...,..lttfrwnl'J Mr"411 ""' w ~ wl!Mvl '"'It/ _. ,,,] ...... "' ctWlllll ·-· ~ tl111 _..., MW ti c..11 MIN. Ct~. S..llMl'i,t*' ~ ,,_,,.,. ..... "-llll'r'1 IW IMll t),IS ll'IO'llll,.,J ml/fl.,,. ....... ""'•· 11.6' """"'''· School Boundary Line Change to Be Studied A propOsed change in attendance boun- . daries for San Clemente and Dana [-fills High Schools will be di scussed tonight by Caplatrano Unifled School D \ s tr i ct trustees. The meeting will be at 7:30 at Serra Schop!. A 'report to the board says that a change jn boundaries is needed because growing enrollments at the two schools are out-of-balance. One suggestion is to remove the area of Mission Viejo north of Oso Parkway and east of Marguerite Parkway from the Dana Hills High attendance . There are no families living in that area now. District official Joe Wimer said another possibility would be havng all potential Mission Viejo area students at- Si gnups Slated For Kinder garten In Saddleha,ck Registration for kindergarten in the Saddleback Valley Unified School District for next year will be held today through Friday. For specific limes, parents may call the school !heir child will attend. The following documents will be re- quired for registration: -Evidence of birthdate. either a blrth certificate, baptismal record, newspaper announcement, or slate1nenl signed by a notary publi c. -Evidence of immunization, including diphtheria, pertussis, tetanus, polio, and measles. Children under seven must have had at least rour DPT shots. the last one since September, 1970. For Polio, children must have one of the following ; three doses or Sabia oral vaccine , two doses of trivolent oral vac- cine. or three injecllons of the Salk vac- cine. For measles, one Injection against rubella , 10-iiay measles. is required. More information may be obtained by calling the school in a fa1niJv ·s at- tendance area . · Victim of Cras h Loses H is Leg An attempt lo reconstruct the !hat- 'tered leg of a 17-year-old El Toro Jli1arine when his motorcycle collided with an automobile in Iniine failed and doctors were forced to amputate the llmb. Daniel E. llenry \VllS reported inl .serious condition at Tustin C.Ommunily 11ospital followi . .g surgery. The marine's knee cap, found at the accident scene by Irvine police officer Robert Kredel after a mllital')' ambu· lance left with Henry, had been raced to the hospital by Officer Kredel in an ef- fort to 88Ve the dam aged leg. The colllsk)n occurred on Trabucco Road near Culver Drive late Friday a!J the motorcycle was In colli!lon with a car . The forct of the collision threw the rider JOO feet. tend San Clemente and not Dana Hills High . This plan would create a sludent population of between 1,700 and l,llOO at Dana Hills by next November, and a population of l ,700 and 1,7;.5 at San Clemente High, Wimer said. Trustees tonight will be considering adoption of elementary and junior hi1h school attendance areas, additional pay ror summer school teachers and ap- pointment of members to an instructional materials review committee. New Categ ories For Homemaking Slated at Fair A variety of new contest categories have been added to the homemaking skills competition at the 1973 Orange County Fair running July 6-15. ''We want everyone to get a chance to show off their homemaking skills, whether they're children or senior citizens," says Mrs. Dee C.Ox, home economics supervisor for the fair. To stim ulate interest she has added 23 new contests, including reupholstery , original recipes using cake mixes, junior table setting, and honey-baked goods. A zigzag portable sewing machine will be presented to the winner of the grand award for the most outstanding entry in clothing and textiles. Other prizes include needJework kits . dinnerware and gift certlfJcates_ Premium lists and entry blanks are ob- tainable from the fair office, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa. For additional In- formation, call 545-1131- 0eadline for returning enlry blanks is June L lrviae si.creage Ruling Clarified Irvine Planning commlssioners J,oist \11Cck approved an interim open space plan calling for a total park acreage dedication by developers of 6.0 acres per l .000 people. The Daily Pilot inadvertently indicated that this was an increase from the pres- C'nt standard of 2.5 acres per 1,000. In fact the comparable flgure called ror in the ceport is an increue from 2.5 acres to 4.5 acres per 1,000 people of park open space to tJI:. dedicated by devtlopers. Another I .5 acres per I 1000 l! custom- arily granted to developers reaerving school sites within their developments, yielding the total 6.0 acres in the lnterim standards the commission 1ugges~ lhe city adopt. Brewery in Flames WARRINGTON. England (AP) -Fire badly damaged Europe's btggest brewery Sunday night before the $$0-mile plant started production. A pollce spokesman said the pos,,lbiUty of arson was belng In- \ estigRted. • WATERGATE • • .._ mlJ ....... i--that the CIA thoold be llepl out ol lbt Wttttgalt af. fair~ ~ ,., ·~. _,.,, . ).,·~~at Sytfilnat(in'I · ~ committee C.Ox, selected by ~io be the in- dependent specta1 prosecutor in the Walergate cue. Cox sald he lnteodJ to take lull respooslbllity and sald Ricbardaon re- tains only the authority "to give me bell ii 1 don'I do the job." He added: "!think he ou,ht to keep that aulb>rity." Jn another development, Jobn C. Caul field and Frederick C. La.Rue, ap.. pearc<I. to give pre--trial statement in a Watergate-related civil suit, but re- mained only briefly. The W.eshinfton Star-News reported I he Justice Department has ei:panded its probe ot the undercover campaign ac- livJUes of Doaald H. Segretti to five new places -San Francisco, San Diego, Pittsburgh, Portland, Ore., and possibly Milwaukee. The Star-News, in a story by James R. Polk, said investigators have Segretti's travel records and long-distance telephone records. Segretti is a young Californiia attorney who bes pleadc ~ innocent in Florida on a charge of sending rake campaign literature. The Federal Bureau of Investigation has been told Segretti was paid '30.000 to $40,000 in campaign funds by President Nixon's former personal lawyer, Hert~-~t W. Kalmbach . Another Star-News story sa1d Nixon car(lpalgn advisers still were distributing "hush money" to one or more of the seven convicted Watergate conspirators as rectntly as earl. -Apr;! -about the same time that federal investigators were being told about effort.! to cover up the scandal. The principal rtclp!enl apperenUy was G. Gordon Liddy, said to be the org~ of the burglary ol Democratic head- quarters last year, the newspaper reported, quotJng unnamed sources. Liddy is the only Ofle of the seven to have rtceived a final sentence, and be is serving an additional jail term ·for refus- ing to testify under immunity. A special Senate investigating com- mitlee resu~s ·its televised Watergate hearings Tuesd.ey witli convicted burglar James W. McCord still .the witness . FrotnPagel GOLD •.. morning, up Crom $2.5512 Jate Friday. 1be dollar was also weaker In Zurich and MJJan., In Zurich it, bought mly 3.12125 Swiss francs, compared with 3.1485 al the close Friday:· Gold broke past 1100 Jut week in a surge of Sjle<U]atloo pOrtJy triggered by the Watergate scandal and·fears that it would undermine President Nixon's plans to control inflallon In Ille Unlted States. That wav~ sabl!llded by Thursday, the price of. gold began to decline and the dollar improved. The trend was reversed at the opening of the markets today after a weekend during which · !OITle British newspapers carried speculative stories. that the scan- dals in Washington might force the Presldenl to resign. Some dealers said the marke18 were made more uneasy by a report that the President's chief foreign pnUcy adviser, Henry Kissinger, might resign. Bomb Threat a Hoax DENVER (AP) - A Western Air Lines alrlln« en roote from MinneapoU.,.St. Paul to Los Angele! made an unschedul- ed stop here after a telephone call warn· ing that a bomb was aboard the plane. The 727 jet was held over for l ~ hours Sunday while officials searched in vain for a bomb. -. . • • lay . - Land Information. D~ Friday: Tho White lloooe hu again delayed dl'Clqiures on President Nbmn's noaJ estate dealings in San Clemente and Fk>rlda but spokesmen promised loday lo Biv• tbe accoontlng OU.. Friday. Till! DISCLOSVRE bad bem promised one ·Week ago wheo presldenlial spokesmen vi&oroosly denied a Santa Ana Register report that Senate in ... u. gatora were looking into lhe possibility that Nixon campaign funds may have been used in the purchast ot tbe oJd Hamilton H. Cotton estate in San Cle-mente. Deputy Press Secretary~· Warren said the White House decided to set a "date certaln" for the infonnalioo rather than face dally questions oo when tbe data oukl be available. Last Monday, presidential press .secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said the information would be ava11able in "a day or 50," WARREN SAID the release had been delayed because the White House y;anted to make certain the information W83 "complete, accurate and doco. umented.'' ~e said acting presid.ential coun:se~ Leonard Garment and his staff "are putting together the delails, documenting the facts and having contact with a number of people." Before his resignation April 30 in the midst o! the Walergate controversy, presidential aj!lstant John Ehrlichman handled most matters cooceming Nixon's perJOtal finance. Also involved was Herbert Kalmbach, a Newport Beach attorney who served unW recently as Nixon's personal lawyer. Watergate Pros~cutor Co • Has'fillthePower Needed-I~ WASHJNGTO~ (UPI} -Archibald Cox. trom the fnvvestJgatlon so as to avoiFJ.. testified today that Attomey general· any wspicion that, as a member cl Pre.al-zi'C' designate Elliot L. Richardson had given dent Nixon's ~fficlal family, he was in.:;.._:"'. him. "all th needed to be in any way exerting cmtrol over the case. .. <'°'-" e po~r , -Richardson said repeatedly be would dependeo l In !u. job as special give the special prooecuWI' • • f u 11 ./• Watergate prosecutor. authority" over Watergate but woo.Id r~ '" · "'The only authority be has retained ts lain "ultimate authority" over him. The the authority to give me bell if don 't ·do· Democrats insisted that the Proseeutor · the job,'' Cox told the Senate Judiciary have "complete independence." Committee, "and I think he ought lo keep *: * * that authority." Richardson introduced the 61-yeor-<>ld Democrat, No. 3 man tn tbe Justice Department during the Kennedy ad- ministration and part of the Johnson ad- l'romPage l MITCHELL • • • • •• ministration, at the ·Sfme time that he appointed in January 1972. •. made public fonnallY.-new guidelines ex-. pant!ing oo the authority that !be proo-A federal grand Jury .indicted )Ill lour ·: ecutor will have in the Watergate case. defendants on charges of coru:piracy to .; Richardson, ln a bdef introducUoo of obstruct jusUce and conspiracy to in-;: Cox, said the Han'ard Jaw professor fiuence a Securities and Exchange c.om-.; would have "full independence" in the mJssion (SEC) iovesUgaUon of Vesco;s ·~ case. financia l interests. it; Sen. James 0. Eastland (1Hdi5s.) th< In addition, Mitchell and Stans ...,..;...., Judiciary C.OmmJttee chalnnan, asked ·-~ Cox U be was sure he could work With charged With perjury -•f<"l'ed o! lying ; ;pi Richardson aooordlng lo the pldellnes. six t!m.S each in their ;~ances 41 "I am," Cox aald. "! discussed them before lheotnnd-Jury. :"" With Mr. Rlcbardaoo over !be telephone. The grand ltlu .. m ·-M}ptld\r a:l!! There were a number of Poinlo -we oecret l200,000 C8J!(con~bUllooma&U.:,; talked for two boura -we worfed °"4 AiiU 10 1971 • ....,;io,,:a11er ~~- together. --feclerJi 'catiipat1111 cf .tt t r'rb u t"l.f> n • "I'm salislfied they give a special dlsCkMoire law went lnt9"'e!leCI -·to the prosecutor all tbe power needed to be in-Nlxllo ~ectlon ·committee. The :Jl dependent. I certainly intend to. be in-$200,000 was returned to Vesco after· -11 dependent and to take responsibility to Sears disclosed it Jan. 31. : a !be best o1 my ablllty." At that Ume Mitchell headed the cam· !Cl . The re\llsed g.wdelines, .dated ~ay 19, paign and Stam was chalnnan of its :.., give !h~. special prosecutcr f u 11 finance committee. The indictment · authority over the Watergate case. charged thal the contribution in '100 ~ They say Cox "will have the greatest bills was delivered to Stans tn :; d~gree of independence th1at is consistent ,-,cbington by Sears. Sears at that time , .w with the attorney general s statutory ac-wu chairman of the New Jersey CcJn.. ~ COWJtability for all matters falling within mittee for the Re-election of the PresJ--: the jurisdiction of the Department of dent. '~; Justice." . , At the time the cootribution was made, .. -,: The ~de.lines provide Cox full author1· Vesco was under investigation by the L :ei ty for 1S!Ulllg warrant.!, subpoenas, or SEC for allegedly "looting" $224 million i ~ other court crdus; conducting pros. from four mutual funds controlled by his :-< ecutioos; det.erm1ning to what extent he intere!ts. ! .>. would inform <?I' consuUt with the at. The four defendants were aceuaed or', tomey general, and in determining when "corruptly and by, threat.s and by J..,; be had complded ru. duUes. Uireatening cmununlcation" having al-t .,: Cox has said he would not feel an tempted to influence that invesligatioo. fl-'!' obligation to inform llichardson of what Mitchell the indictment said an:anged t 4 he was doing in his investigation. for Sears' to meet wit.h SEC' Chairman l'J! The Democrats have contended that William Casey to discuss the Vesco in-" ~ Richardson must be comple tely removed vestJfl:ation, 1 ;~ ~---~-,c 26th Anniver$arv5ALE! SAVE ON GE"'iiO FROST' REFRIGERATORS , · tU cu. "· "'"°""aetr a1P•t••llATOUllUU with AUTOMATIC ICEMAKERS 17.6 CU. PT. "'Mo.l'ltOIT .. aal'JI ll•U 70..f'J1a•z•1t ••Alff w cw. "'· "o 111aost S6999& llD•.-Y-11 DI ltlllllt 18JlltA TDtt M1mbtr of 90 DAY Collfornl•'• Lorgest CASH Cooperative ByYlng WITH AP'PI OYID Group Wtth Thi ClllDIT GE SERVICE ~ 548_7788 Powtr of 110 Slorff •-"'" r:;JW Authorized Volume Buying m 1815 NEWPORT BL YD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 t l .. • • I I I 7 '1 1 l I ---~. ~ . . n I ' • -.. .. .,,_ *-~-. ........ -..... . • • • . - •. : '~ -.. ..-: .fj\ .~ ~-..... ~ ·• • ••• ..... 4 ·- ..... -.. • . --· • -· ... • "9 • • " ·City Adm!nl$trator!lavid 11.wlmb baa p;ef;'jj:r_ -ljw!i-ll!ct.ZS cents. _ ~ Ii ~Wlieit Otlllirl mi@ir ... rt<onunmded·gant'any ~,bt ~ per lloii.-.J!l'b Oii ll>i.COJSI high-ler~1!1'1<t;;. _. _ lllllUner IUrllD( ~ .a:,Padfic W11 lelldril ta:lO:ceata..alltast near IA;a tla_. ~to the~ty Eloast ~.; po;k!ng: m;ter jrictl' Iii tha:JIGIM.'"Qfta:blllfl*; ,__,.,., • .ccuncn;~lll~l!utcilf contrOls ... • .... _ n.... . ' s-...-..~•rilU..la)'a"iio Siii'!· -..u·.ll!Uea:'lll« of 'ldllch 1.5 ·milos • .... ..,._ ~ m,·liiiiiifu~li-f<i:m., Jiiiil> 1$ to·>-.bo .. ~no . ~ · ..._ 1:'. • . ,City NJ1mdhnen ·will Cl111'1der'-15-~--,··:una.;..~-lil\!ff<,:~hiwever, "We .--· ·~patlllte with Ille O{IM.l<mlgll_ ~ durinc. thelr'7 o:•wlr.J!Jeel-_ _.._. a"-" -11 •-,..u -_ -.•.:...r,;,..c • . I/ii<~·· --.,.. ~~....,., ~ _"fV""'!ol "-.1, yewr .~~z~s .• ~ . -..'r":..· • · .. · ' Soders; led brR,. caUsch ;ol Inter· 'there.,.._.. . . ~il!" Ille rat_io·o1 · · 'Ma)"7, 'nea,rJylOO:llttfera lillod'the n~~·• ·. Spdlng ;Magazlne f asUd the · 'l!'f!r· to·...,.,,,... q~ijonnabio," he CllOOCiJ. <liamllen ·to al< !or.111 ..,1ng alt .lo .ioo1A11 •a. ·~k JIM" ;system .writes. ~H~ver. tl!Ls occurs very~ O! the. ~!Ing. ,ivies ·fn>und .. !be -.lty wbicli 'wiiilil'leive -lt'mUi-ely up·:10 lif.. ·and -It. ls"'.'.llaOally "°"""'P"ned with-ab- M1Jclt~,:.:, : .. " Sians · Pl~~d~, .Nat Guilty ' . . . ... . ·~ . .. ~ .. .... ~. 1 ~\'"'i'·~·.'r ·'.'··1t,· ··;:· ,-, ~ ·, -~·t ·M'"Ula~ ' . ' . ' • .... ~··gff~~t Nij<on ventures into the •c(t>Wd · ~r an A{med Forces -,:-~.•peecb m ·Norfolk, Va., from the l)~t.of the· aircraft carrier · -~epi!ndence aruj .i.s hugged by an exnbei'ant well wisher. I ; Today's l'D.~ N•Y· Steeks MONDAY, ~AY 21, 1973 TEN CENTS • Ill Surfing Rules normal weltber condiUons." llol'1ands alao says that the city bu not obtained the cooperation of some surfers in tbe past when they were uted to clear a ~-area. "ID Im, we gafo'l,022 dir<ct surfing wlll'lllilp ~our arn#l5 'ltf• made after ripeated' nmings. These lacta point·out that"tbere was little or no co- operation froiD a certain segment of the surfing J>OPU)atlon." Rowlands also said there "<ere 2.24 medical aids caused by surfing in 1971. one-third, of wbicb lnvolved innocent by· Standen .. As to the parking meter price, Row· lands said Ille blgb Price Is used !or revenue to keep a rapid circulation in the area. The surfers requested a 'lower perking ree from 12th St.reef to Bolsa Chica ·state Beach. Rowlands said the city \\'OUld lose $12,538 annually, if the meter fee was reduced. He said parking meter money goes into a fund to build off.street park· ing, and center dividers . A third request made by local surfers -that helmets not be used during the U.S. Surfboe.rd Championships -was considered a moot point because the city has dropped the contest. ' Pair Rescue Man HuntingwnFire Victim Saved Two Huntington Beach meit wtre credited with saving the life of a neighbor who-they dragged unconscious from his burning home early Sunday morning. Cliarles Tough, M, of 8442 Danburh Cir· cle, was taken to Pacifica Hospital and treated for smoke inhalation. He was trans!eqed to Lang Beach Veteran's Hospital where he is scheduled 10 be releliSed today.' Tougb was rescued from his flam ing living room .at about 1:15 a.m. Sunday morning by Robert Long and Ray garver. 'Firemen credited the two men with savi(\g Tough's life. The fire \fhkh threatened Tough's life bcigan, according to firemen, when a cigarette smoldering in a living room sofa cau&)lt fire. Tough's wife managed to escape the burning home with first degree bunu on Frida11 Attempt· her right hand and some s1noke in· halation. She was treated and releastd fl'Ol'1' Pacifica. • Firemen had the fire under control In five minutes and estimated the blue did $3.500 damage to the living room. Neighter 1.Ang, who lives at 8441 Dan. bury Circle, nor Garver, who lives at I 8442 Danbury Circle, reported any in· juries in rescuing their neighbor. Skylab Repair Training !EJn.: ~ir~ ·" ."'.:-.: ~tinues f or·Astrona11ts .· N';(AP)~~erWhlfe'·lf'"·~ ,, . ': . 'President's Wish' Cited lkAlst dliel or ili!! H.R. 'l'llldeman was · • •''' .. ,... • I ~-,. · " c'ff" "'~ •· 1<I "l~ ~.It .having oald; ~n'ls'tbe.. ~N tUPO;,Yi ,llltb. • Dllll,\. attempt to !Tee one of Skylab'• two Jain-PF;;id.nt•i 'l"isb" l]jat the t!A sk •the dU-.Ctor predlctlns tl!e)''il Ill "' up, med power,1enerattns 1101at cell n,... .. , • . the thn!e ·Slrylab I utronaut1 otep up "I think wi bave a fairly good tbonct FBI not to lnvesh~t.e Mexican angles rn th~··final trabilng today for an un· or doing that," flight director Nell the Watergate atfa":. p~ented attempt F~y to repair the Hutchinson said In an Interview Sunday Sen. Stuart Symington ( D ·Mo . ) • worlds largest spaces,b1p. night. "If we can .get t,he fl()lar curtain discloaed the statement wu noted in a The latest pl.an ts for the crewmen to up. and that wing out, we're back ln memo by deputy CIA director Lt. Gen . cool .the overheated space station by ex-business. We're set." Vernon Waller; on June 23, 1972 _·six tending a ,silver and white parasol, a George .B . -Hardy, a chief Skylab days after the .break-in at Democratic "beach umbrella'' large enough to cover engineer, said operation of only one of ~ party headquarters. a two-car garage, through an eight-inch-the two stuck solar panels would give the t-The memo was made public today as square airlock. '· bic space station eoough extra power to .. •• . ' ·' ., " ' former CIA dir-ector Richard, Helms ap.. Before · they do thal. Charles "Pett" conduct a normal mission and support P."j•ed before the S.nato Foreign Rela-Qlorad, Joeeph P. Ktr\Vin and Paul J. three crews BJ originally planned !or a tioris Commlttee of whlcb'Sytnlngton ls a Weil.I plan to open t,he hatch of their total of 140 days in space. member. AJJOUo .. coromBfKI inodule, reach out with "I'd say that would take us right back , • Jt concerned a meeting_ oo June 23 in-sOmelhing akin to a long boat hook and to the top of the world," he said at the volving Walters; 'Helms, Haldeman and Jobnson Space Center. Jqhr\ D. Ehrlicbman. The utrooauts, scheduled for launch at · At the end, Walters noted in his Jllemo, J .... Y Selec'ti'on 9 a.m. EDT Friday, will intorcept SkYlab ' Htoldeman .turned to him and said, "It ill u.I.· 7 hours and •1 minutes later and show the President's wish that you go to see ena:lneers at the center and viewers 1 Mr. Gray." L._Patrlck Gray m was ac-Jn Two· 'Offi' .. ~ .. Js' •l'.OUlld the world what Ille station look.J ting dlre<:tor of the FBI. '-AQ. like. Asked about the notation. Helms said They will attempt to free the aolat, U wing Friday and then a:et a night's sleep I he was in the meetng but does oot rer.all Trial nder way in their Apollo before entering .ftylab the specific invocation of. the President's . . • . .. . and raising the umbrella . • name. But he said instructinns from the Jury ielection began today in the Conrad will call the signals in orbit. I chief of starf were ass··-A .... to be car· Hutchinson said, "I couldn't think of a ! 1,11111t:U Orange. COunty Superior Court extorllon bet I'd rying the Presider.t'.1 authority. trial ol Westm1nster cit)' o!fielals Derek ter guy \V&nt in a position like this., At lbat time inve.Ui:atioils weft under McWhlMey aod Tad FuJita. I suspect they 'll fix us up." I way about "laundered " campaign con-After bonina their space piloting skilll tributions sent .from rre1as to MexJco-to Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner assign-in a command" ship trainer and revlewina be converted 'intO checks and cash. Some ed Judge John. L. F1ynn Jr .. to take the the parts of Skylab's new par110I, thel or the checks eventuaJfy wound np in the bench for what is expected to be a four· three astronauts plan to £1y to Huntsvllle.t bank account or conv~ Watergate week trial on allegaUons that they al· Ala ., tonight to get in one Cina! practice cnnsplrator Bernard L. Barker ln Miami. tempted to obtain $10,000 from Mlle seuion in 8 40-foot-deep, J.4 milllon There had been previous teatllhony Square Park farmer George Murai. gallon water tank. 1~.t that lbe FBl was asked to ·stay out of Fonner Mayor McWhlnney, 40, and By noatlng submerged wlth special that part of tbe investlgalioo in .ot.der to city planner Fujita, 35, were indicted by breathing apparatus, the astronatuta can make it loOk Uke a CIA operation. the Grand Jury on charges that they simulate weighUessness. They will ~ Helms tofclo ~ the commfttee h i s pressured Murai into parting wtth '5,000 lice raising two versions of a large in. only concem then was that the CA in cash alter telliflg him that hJs con-Ing -a potential .backup sQlab remectr should be kept out ot the W.atergali! af· linued operaUons at the Fountain Valley that would require work in open 8PIClJ fair enlirely. -. . park hinged on the paymenl As. Helms appeared at Symington's The prosecution will allege that Murai committee, another Senate committee was ordered to write a further check for was questioning 'Afailbalcl Co!t &elected J5,000 which was made payable to county by 'ElliOt L. Richanbon to oe the in-' Supervisor Robert Battin'• campaign dependent apeclat prosecutot lh fbe funi:I . Battin was not involved in the (Set WATERGATE, Page 11 alleged !tanaaction, the Grand Jury oald. Orange ... Weather ' Tbt Loo Ancelea weather aenlte says the sun ·will break throuab those low clouds on Tuesd~r IOr- the first Ume in 11 days •• ~tlr SUMY afternoons are Uj)eCted fllr Ille · reot ol the Week. lllibs of a at the beaches, rising to 7t ll!laod. INSIDE 'J'CtDA Y ~ "The WattOtU,;, TV's tvrpris:e: hi£ of the secuon. ond. U....!J...U. Andrews Hour, °'""led in mjd.. season, sh.ared top honorl ot the annual Emm11 award prcacnld- ti°"'. S<e Page 9 for all !Ao de- ' tai1•. • "i" J,I", ., ....... L.M. .. ¥4 1 --~ .. _. ... .. • ..... _ COMM> " C,........ IS --. l.....WI , ... • ·--... ......... ..,. Mir Ill ~. ff ---" , -0 ' . ~ ::.t' .. ._ 1: ==-;·~ ·--I T-' ....... =-...: .............. , . " l ~ -.. -.. ----- Has Power, . Solons Told WASHINGTON (UPI) -Archibald Cox testified today that Attcmey gen~ral­ designate Elliot L. Richardson had g1v.e11 him "all the power needed to be •.n· dependent" in bl! job as 1ptetul Watergate prosecu&or. "The only authority he has retained Is the authority to give me hell lf don't do the job," Cox told the Senate Judiciary Committee. "and I think he ought to keep that authority." Richardson introduced the &I-year-aid Democrat, No. 3 man In the Justice Department during the Kennedy ad· ministration and part of the Johnson ad- ministration, at the same time tnat be made public Connally new guidelines ex· ponding on the authority that the pr.,.. ecutor will have In the Watatate cue. Richardson, ID a lrlof lntroduc:tloo ol Cox said the Harvard law professor v.·ouid have "fu11 independence" In the case. Sen. James O. Eastland (0.Miss.l the Judiciary Committee chairman, asked Cox if he \VB! sure he could work with Richardson according to the guidelines. "I am," Co1 said. "l dlsawed them with Mt. Rlcbardaoo over lbe telephone. 'lbere were a nwnber cf paints -we talked for two hours -we worked out together. . . "I'm satis!Hed they give a special proaecutor an the power needed to be ~· dependent. l certainly Intend to be in- dependent and to take relpMlibUlty to the best of my ability." The revised guidelines, dated May 19. give the special prosecutor ' ' f u 11 authority'' over the Watergate case. They say Cox "will have the greatest dtgree of independence that is consistent with the attorney general's statutory ac- COWJtabJUty for aJJ matters falling within the jurilldlctlon of the Deparim<11t of Justice." .. The guidelines provide Cox full author!· ty tor Jauing warrants, subpc>enas, or other court orders; conducting pnio- ecutfons; determining to what extent he would inform or consutlt wilh the at- torney general, and in detennining when he bad completed his duties . Cox has said he would not feel an obligation to inform Richardson of what he was doing in his lnvestigatioo. The Democrats have contended that Rlchardaon must be completely removed from the invvestigation so u to avoid any IU!Picton that, as a member rl. Pres_i· dent Nixon's official family, he was in any way exerting cootrol over the case. RlchardJon aald repeatedly he would e the special prosecutor 1 1 f u l l . '¥!1J" bver Waterjate b!Jt would r .. • "ulUJnate au\hori.ty" over him. Tho llelTlocrato Insisted that the proeecu1or have "complete Independence." From Pagel WATERGATE • • Watergate case. Oox said he intends to take rull responsibility and said Richardson r~ tains only the authority "to give me hell If I don't do the job," He added: "I think be ought to keep that authority." In another development, John C. Caulfield and Frederick C. LaRue, a~ peered to glve pre·trlal statement in a Watatate-related clvtl auJt, but re- mained ooly briefly. The Washin gton Star.News reported the Justice Department has expanded It.! probe of the undercover campaign ac- tiviUo of Donald H. SegretU to five new places -San Francisco, San Diego, Pittsburgh, Portland, Ore., and posalbly t.1ilwaukee. The Sl.ar·News, in a story by James R. Polk, said lnvestigat-0rs have Segrett\'s travel records and long·dlstance telephone records. Segrettl J.s a young Callfornlis attorney who bas pleadc. ~ IMocent 1n Florida on a charge of sending fake c a m pa I g n literature. The Federal Bureau of lnve.!tlgation has been told SegretU was paid $30,000 lo '40.000 In campaign furnb by President Ni:ton's former penooal lawyer, Hert:..t W. Kalmbach. OIAMel COAIT "a DAILY PILOT "TIM o •• ,... CNtl OAJL'f PJLor "')"' ""'k" .. COITl&IMll·ftl• Nt-Pr .. J, It °"'DU ...... bV 11'9 Or ...... c .. 11 PllbllslllftQ Com111111v. S•- rl!t ..i111on1 ••• ""'*'41..,.., M-•r lhrouoll "rki•r. for Colll M..-. Ht ... perl ludl, H""llftotoft 81tdl/l'-llln Vlllfl', L.q11111 9Ndl, lrv""'1._..11Hcll •lllf &M C._11t1/ h11 JIMn (•Pll tf-A 1 .... 11 ,.,!_I •lllon .. pllblltl!MI """'" .... s..rn..,.. TM prlroClptl PW'olltl'll"11 ll"°nl It tt *at Wnt .. , &ll'Mt, C..I• M .... Cftlftmlt. nuL. ae .. 111 N. W11d P'~I 1MI "'*11"-r Jeck •• c.,,,'I \'kl P'rll"'-'1 1r4 O-r1I Mtllttfl' Tii-11 K11.-ll l!.dl19• T\11¥111 A. Mllf'phin1 .M•l\llln1 Edi"' 01rlu H. U.e1 ltlch11'J '· H•ll Altlm"\M-Oi..t l!.t119<1 y,,,, c .... 111. W•I Or .... C-tr t:•r"" .............. OMJ. 17171 le11t. le.ii•••" Mt lll~ .44WN111 P.O. le• 790, tJHI --Llflllll ._, m ,..,.... A..._ C.!1 M911 • w.:;.r &WWI N I lll'dll #U If 8'vffvf ... .!Ti.ii-.. 1 .. ,..,,.,.. I (fnlWI • .., Tll1ptrrr f11•1 Mlo4J21 c~ ••s• ''*' '414'71 ,,..., '"""~ .. ~ ~--Ult C.,0,.llflt, lt1l. ~ OW.,t .,... .... lllf Ctmliolnr. Ne -1'9rlM. IHwtnl....._ •llWl•I mttter W .,.,..,.,_.. ...... ... ., " ·~ ...,,...,. .....,, ..... ........ l~lfM-· .._,. ci.11 .,....,. .... et e.tt9 • .. ~.,~ ~. kltllo'~lln ... ""'"' ~I bY mtll 1.1.ll ft'llflfflll'I ltlfl ... I')' ....,_llOM U.61 ll'llllf\ly, ( Seen • ID· By JOANNE REYN0Ul8 Of ... DlffY ........... CARSON -Tbe murder of a young man whooe beadleas body wu found In an olllleld hero &aturday Is not llnllod to the string o( mutllatlon munfen that have occm roed 1n thLs area, poUoe 11kl to- ctoy. Detective Brad Phelan of the Lot Angelt.! Police Department sa..ld the nian Board to Study Higher Budget In Huntington A preliminary $8.6 million budget for the 1973-74 fiscal year, up about '1.2 million over 1972-73, wHI be discw:sed Tuesday night by trustees or the Hun.- tington Beach City (elemen tary ) School DI.strict. The spending plan would be rmancec1 by a ta1 rate projected at $3.03 per •100 possessed valuatim. an lncreaae ~ nur- ly nine cents over this year, said Robert Hawthorne, director of fiscal services. 'The tu increase Is mandated by state legillaUoii created to equallu tax rates amoog acqool dlstricls, be said. The district's total property tax rote Is now $2.9f, he said. The rate will go up because the di!:trict's wealth is greater than most other districts in the state, and because the current tax levy is less than most districts, he explained. Additional new lncome in the budget would be derlved from a five percent in· crease fn the district's u,,es,,ed valua- tion. The largest single lrem In tbe budget 13 $4:,688,427 for teacher 181arles, up more than $1 million over this year. The preliminary increase is due to a four per- cent cost-of.living salary boost, new benefits and 33 new teacherA and a decrease In the teacher·student ratio, Hawthorne said. salary figures are tentative since teachers are still negotiating with the district, be Said. Child Molesting Trial ~ Awaiting - Huntington Man A Huntington Beach man accused of child molest~ and related charges in connection with his alleged association with two girls ages 6 and 7 has been ordered to face trial July 25 in Orange County Superior C.ourt. Judge James Turner set lhe trial date !0< 'l'urldal>bom Jawtd Nouri Shemsed- dln, 61, of 324 Clay Ave. He ordered the defendant to return to his coortroom July 6 fO< a pretrial bearing. Shemseddin was arrested last Feb. 1 after police investigated complaints filed by the parents of the two chlldren. one -0f whom Uved in an adjacent apartment Jn the same bulldiog. He Is charged with crimes against children, indecent exposure and molesting children. He is free on bail. Miss Lynn Wins Teaching Grant • Dorothy Ellen Lynn, a senM>r at Foun· tain Valley High School, baa woo the an- nual Naomi Jonkman Career in Ttachlng scholarship. \Vith the award from the Fountain Valley Education Association goes a '150 gilt. Her selection was based on 00 gradua· tion from a Fountain Valley element&ry school (Fulton}, academic and extra-cLU'· i;icular achievement, and involvement in the hlgh schOOl's work experience pro- gram. Miss Lynn. 8695 El Cerro Circle, was a sli.:dent teacher this past year In vocal music. • • I .. wbo WU low>d Saturday WU appareotly the >lctim of • robbery. "There II no relatlombip between this kWtne imd the others we are in- vootlptm,," Phalen Aid. '!ht odltn, Phalm nfemd to ltt I llrinr of four mutilation munten In whlch the victlm.t were homoeaually assaulted. Phelan said tbe Lee Angeles coroner hu coallrmed that the latest murder vJctJm had not been sexually 1111aulted and be WU fwnd fully Clothed. Police from five agencies In the Los Angelea Harbor area and weatern Orange County are still lnvestlptlng the bizarre mutilation murders ln wh1ch only one of ' lhe four victims bas been !dentlfled. Thoae vlctbns are Edward Daniel Moore, 20, wboae bOdy was found Dec. 26 Jn Seal Beae!I; a young man found Feb. a in the Wilmington Area; anolher young man found AprU 14 in Huntington Beach and a young man whose dismembered corpse was found scaUered throughout the Harbor area and in Sunset &ach. Huntington Girl Wins Top Honors In Art Contest A pastel drawing r the sun setting over an oil field baa won an eighth grade girl top honors in "The ·Bad and the Beautiful" art contest sponsored by the Huntlngton Beach Environmental Coun- cil. For her top entry, Sandra Van Du Loo has been presented with a tree "'11ch she can have planted in the part of her cboloe. Near the tree will be a plaque In- scribed with her name. The contest, to determine students' at- titudes towards the city's environment, drew more than 200 entries from sixth, seventh and eighth" graders in the Ocean View School District. On the back of her aun.set scene, Sandra wrote: "There is something good and bad about Huntington Beach. The oil wells (are) good because they bring in money ... bad because they spoil the landscape and they smell ." Sandra, a studeot at Meas View School, is the daughter d Mr. and Mn. Hink Van Der Loo, 10443 Slater Ave., Fountain VaUey. ~ .lCOlld place was awarded to Elizabeth Valadez, daughter of Mr. and Mn. David Valadez, 8431 Vatcher Drive, H1.mtington Beach. Elizabeth, a sixth grader at Hope View School, drew a picture of three children sitting on a fence looking at ducks oo a pond. The capUm beneath !lie drawing read: "You know, the way things are going now, do yoo think they'll really last, by the time J grow up?" 'Iblrd place went to David Biggs, son of Mr. and Mn. A. J, Biggs, 883l Connor Drive, Huntington Beach. A seventh grader at Westmont School. David asked, ''This • . . or this?" beneath a split picture showing a blue sky, flower and a bee ne:1t to a smoggy sky and limp flower. Among the "good" thlnp noted In the city by -Other students were the beach, weather and the life support systems Of· fered by marshes. In other entries crtUcism was levied against noise, over population and trash on the beach and In parka. Speech, Hearing Oinic Planned A speech and hearing clinic '"ill be held Tuesday, Wedne!day and Thursday for pre-school children in the Fountain Valley School District. Purpose ol the cllnlc is to identify - before the child starts school -speech and hearing problems, wbleh may affect leanting and development. Results cJ the ~aring and speech evaluations will be given to parents im- mediately after the test. Ttk free clinics \\1U be held from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday at Tamau School; 8 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Wednesday al Lamb School, and 8 a.m. to noon ThuOOay at Wan!low School. Casualty Team Inspects 3 . Crash Sites in South Viet BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -,,,.,.. la no Indication that any Americans Usted as misslng Jn action in Southeast Asia are still alive, Bria:. Gen. Robert C. Kingston Sild today. Klnpton helds the Joint Ca1u1Jty Resolution Q:nter, a J75-man unit charg. ed with locating crash 1\tet and grave,, and ttcc1vcrlng the rem•lns of Americans lost In Indochina . The Pentagon has llsted 1 , 3 O O Amerl('ans a.s mlssing In actl-0n and has ~tared another 1.100 dead although their remains have not bten rtc0vered. Kingston ga Jd hi! men hAvc inspected lhree crash sitet In South Vietnam, but he re(used to disclose whelhtt any re- mains were found or ldentifltd. Reliable sources said, however, none w a s discovered at any of the wrecks . The lnfonnation about findings at era.Ml sites would be communlcated through regular mtUtary ethannels to the next of kin of the men Involved, he said. He e1ph11ned that relaUves of men lost In •Ir cra!het often knew whtre their planes went down t h r o u g h cor- re.spondence with other men In the unltn. If detaib are revealed prematurely, this would "tet the next of iln very anx- ious," he eaJd. "We are not going to an· nounce whether we found rtmalns or not." --' ,.. r • • • . . . ~ . • UPI T......,_ Prag tor Vletory1 Chris Huhta, a junior at Sp<lkane's Whitworth CoUege, ponders a sign at the entrance to the school's campus. Off1c1als had no com· ment on the effectiveness or the suggestion. . Desegregation Appeal Nixed by Supreme Court WASHINGTON (AP) -An equally divided Supreme Court today denied a Richmond, Va., district judge the power to raach into suburban counties t o desegregate inner clty schools. There was no written decision from the court and no word as to how its members voted in affirming an appeals court decisk>n that earlier bad overturned the district court order, · An equally divideft court automatically affirms an appeals court decision. In other actions today, the court: -Held that stiffer punishments are constitutional in retrials. -Ruled thft the National Labor Rela- tions Board' ha s no authority to determ ine the reasonableness of wrion fines against members. Justice Lewis F. Pt>well Jr., a long· Wounded Leader -Of Valley Ceiiter Said Improving Adelaide Luna, director or the C.Olonia Ju11re:r; Community Center in Fountain Valley, is reported Jn improved condition today after she was wounded in a shooting nine days ago. A spokesman for the Fountain Valley Community Hospital said the 44-year-old woman is still in the intensive care unit of the hospital but noted that she has been out of her bed and is very alert. ~1rs. Luna was shot several times in the head and back May 12. She was found by a Fountain Valley policemap. who was malting a routine traffic stop of an auto near the intersection of Warner Avenue and Euclid Street. The driver or the car, Richard ~forones , 46, of Santa Ana was arrested in connection with the shooting. He was scheduled for arraignment t<r day in the West Orange County Judicial District Courf on charges of assault with intent t-0 commit murder and assault with a deadly weapan. time member cf the Richmond sclxx>l board, did not take part -lri setting up the four-four split. In January of 1m lJ .S. District Court Judge Robert Merhlge Jr. ordered the predominantly black Richmond city school system · combined with the predomlnanl1y white systems i n neighboring Henrico and Chesterfield Counties. In June last year, the U.S. Circuit Court at Richmond, in a 5--1 decision, disagreed with Merhlge and reversed his order. The issue of metroPolitan desegrega· lion, has not been setUed by the court's action today. Similar suits are pending In such cities as Detroit, AUanta and some nine other cities. ·~ The split-court decision ls not binding in those cases. Today 's one-sentence action by the court read slmply, "The Judgment Is If. firmed by an equally divided court." Unasseased is the Impact ot-lhe.....,-t· vote on tbe scbool buaiQlf lslu~'llD Capitol Hill. Antibuslng action bad been brought to I vJrlual standltUI ~ court llC-tkm In the Richmond case. The Nixon admlnJstr.JtJon had BrBu"ed against metl'QpQlitan desegregation in a, sharply W-Orded friend of,the court brief. The case reached the high court on ap- peals by the NAACP Legaf Defense Fund and the Richmond school board. E:.ch sought to reinstate Merhlge's order. The civil rlght lawyers contended that the Circuit Court's rulin g did not affirm the principles that the court set forth in 195" when it struck down scbool segrega· lion. In other action the Supreme Court rul· ed that the Nati-0na l Labor Relations Board has no authority to determine the reasonableness or union fines against members. In a 6-3 detislon, the court said lht. act creating the NLRB gave it no right to in· terfere in such internal union matters. The reasonableness of the finest can prop-. erly be determined Jn state courts, the high court said. The decision reversed an appellate court ruling in a case involving the Boeing CO's Michoud plant in New Orleans. - r ., ln,~ading Clemente 1 I I Dy CANDACE PEARSON Of the O.llr Pitt\ SMff ' I ! Tiiousands of small red crabs continue I to wash in with the surf in San Clemente - and llaQO }'o\Dt. JlfOVidinJ a handt,: I source of food tO sea gulls and rw1. 1 A San·etemente lifeguard sp0kemian said the "invasion" of pelagic (free .. " swimming) crabs that resemble lobsters -f was in even larger nwnbers today. , J He saJd the unus'ual mas1 occurrence of the silver-dollar sized crabs has been f4 1 reported from as far sooth as Ensenada ~ ! north to Newport Beach. "We've got those by the billioos,'1 a t I Harbor patrolman at Dana Point said I this morning. "They're swimming around ~· 1 our docks. IJ I He added that the same crab)!; came in similar numbers 11 years ago and then 12 ij I years befOTe that, as if on schedule. ' I Fishing is sail bad at Dana Point, he I said, because fish eat the crabs, not bait. ',f "The fish all have fat happy grins on ' their faces," the Harbor spckesman con-.~ J firmed. ·~ The small crabs pinch, but don 't really hurt humans. The swim backwards like ,,. a lobster 'I b}lt .bl ,SOII\e areas are getting f stranded 'De.lllnd surf lines. , 111 Dr, Donald Bright, a marine biologist at Cal State Fullerton, said the crabs' presence on the surface \Yaters is ....,,. unusual. • I This species, Bright said, usullly Jn· • habits ocean waters-at about 50 to 60 fathoms of depth. They are being pusbed north and to the ., surface, 'said Bright, chairman o[ the ; • biology department at Cal State, by ~:;;.; normal warmer tropical water currents ,,..,. from the 90utb coming north. '""= The crabs swim along with the winner P.nf currents and are brqiljlit Up as those "1 currenis· ahd sorile Wfnd Conditions ~·,~ chang~ ·rapidly,' he said. · .. _ In ·Monterey in 1859, a similar number r,-J -0f crabs were •• 1r0wn ashore because ol - the turbulent mix of waters, he said. · Dr. Bright added that while the crabs are edible, their small amount of meat might not be worth the energy trying to get it out. PareJJ.ts F~cing Beating Trial ' ... ~ .. : ··'..-! A 1..-0S Alamitos ~ewple ·•CCU¥d IJf Ur; 1 flicting ·,mUltlJ>l'e · lnJu~ .l!ft, l!ieir ;m II small children have been ordered to face arraignment May 29 in Orange Ciou:oty ·."t Superior court. , . "! Judge James Turner set the ar-•• raignment date for Shirley Ann Urban, • 24, and her husband, John , 24, of 11932: f l Pine St., after a munlcii)al court judge \ recoounended higher court action on the - felony charges. . ... The couple was arrested after pclice ·:: discussed the injuries allegedly inflicted "'; .. on their children, John Jr., 2, and Shane, ~'" five weeks, with medical authorities. · 1 They &aid injuries included bri>ken arms · ' and ribs, scratchi11g and bleeding. The · :.· couple is free on '6,500 bail each-. .._h.i . ., .... Brewery in Flames .. w o> WARRINGTON, England (AP) -Fire · ,..., badly damaged Europe's biggest brewery ;., Sunday night before the ~lle plant · , started production. A police spokesman · 1 " said the possibility of arson was being 1n· .{ vestigated. · ' ' ·-. 26th AnniversarvSALE! ,., . ,. '" •1! SAVE ON GE."10 FROST' REFRIGERATORS with AUTOMATIC ICEMAKERS 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. 1rA cu. "· "NO-f'•on'" at,tlelUTOP..,PllJla 134411 CALL DUNLAP & Mo'"ber of C1llfornl1'1 L1rte1t Cooporatlvt Buylllf Group WUh Tho . . 'JO DAY CASH . . 1 WITH A'PlOVID CllllDIT Authorl1od Vol-llvylllf . • ~ OE SERVICE Power of 110 Storn ~ ••• 548°7788 ' IJGwntown C&sta Mesa -Phone 548-7788 I /Ill? ""' • • •• . .., oc .. ' .. 1 I ., ·-· I.;. .. , , r• -· ,. If<!> • •• ; . .. -.1 I I 1 ' , I I I t 7 • -·· M11 2\, l 97l H DAILY PILOT ;f Gold Z_ips t9 Highs; Dollar. .Lows • • •oeals!l Delay Land Information Due FrUfuy Tbe While -bu apln deloyed ~ ca Pra!dmt Nbiim's ... 1 eatate dullnp lD Sa.a Clemmd• aDd Ji'krida llllt fP'lrwnen promiled today to pve the tcCOUDtlnc this Friday. THE lll8CL08lllU! hid bem pramlted C1110 ....ir' ... wlloll 'pre>ldeoUal spokwnen vi&oruusly da1lod a SUlta Ana ~ IOIJ'lt. tllat Senate ln,vestl- 1•tono ...,. looking lnlO the PoUlblll!y lhet NWlil catnpalF fllnds may have been uaed In the pattbue <I. the old Ham!llGa H. Cotton -le Jn Sall Cle-mente. Deputy Press Secrelar)' Quaid L. Warmi oald the White Hou!e decided to IOI a "dale eertaln" lot releue ol the lnlormaUon rotber than faee dally questiaos oo when the dala would be available. J.ill Mandly, prOsldenUal press secretary Ronald L. Zllaler IAld tbe lnlormaUoo would be avillable in"adayor10." WAJlllEN 8AID tbe -hid beer! delayed because the White llOll!e wanted to make certata the tnformaUoo wu "complete, accurate and doc- umented." He oald acting pr<lldeoUal ...-1 Ltonard Garment and his stall "are puttlna tosetber the delalls, documenting the factl and havinl cootact with a numlitr of people." Befoni b1a real1DAU011 April 10 In the midst ol the Watergate controversy, prealdenUal assistant John Ebrllchman bandied most matters concerning Nl1on's personal finance. Also lnvol...t wu lltli>ert Kalmbech, a Newport Be1ch attorney wbo oerved until ,..,..tly u Nlml's personal lawyer. Laguna Water Pipe Bursts Flooding Coast Highway A bunt nter main beneath SOI.Ith Cout lllgbw1y in downtown LlllUJlA B .. ch produced a cuc.img flood o! wale', Jilted the hlabwaY J)llvement oe9Wll Inches and clooed the town's msln lbonu&hfare for houro today. a..ure of the hllhway between Ocean A""'ue and 1!'0nlt Avenue produced I major tralllc jam u bundr9dl o! 1IMm> -lnl motor111a -. detoured up Forest ad uound to -.tw1y wll1le -1imen ja-mered through the elpt.lncb thick concrete highway. Cause of the broken line, presumed to be the 12-lnch city main wa.s unknown, aald Jooeph Sweany, manager of the IAguna Beach Cowity Water Dl.dtjd. . Sweany sakl alternate water lines 11.1p- plled water to all the dlstrlct'a,CUJtomers and that no service lnte'uptlolll were eaused. Workmen hid to lay two tem· pcnry lines downloWn to tho Hotel . . Real Life Drama Erupts at Coast Movie Theater The !<reel of law and order prevailed both on and otr-.creen at United Arti!ts' South O>ut Cinemas theaters Sunday night. Pollce eonve1'{ed on the movie booues at 1651 W. Sunflower Ave., Sona Anl, and arrested a suspect, charllnl him with being the would-be bandit Jn an aborUve holdup. Snott S. Barrera, 21, a transient, wu -..ct lo< lnvestlptloa of kidnap and· ormed .-ry following the lncldent ln- •olYlng both <mp!oyes and tboote' J)lllroos. lnveatlgator! IAld an armed lntrudtr fcfted the theater cfoonnaD Into a mtrvom 11 gunpoint, tbon tried to forte the JX'Ojeclionj&t to tum aver the even· lnl'• box office re<elpla. He flnaUy ned, empty handed, but commllldeored a ear Cll'rl'inl two other 'riewerl Iii · thi! parking tot. '!be vtblcle WU surrounded by pollco "" llJey &I' rived. Olflcm """ llmoted Bunrea ll1qed that he bad a .~caliber automatic plltol, but It we1 alter<d 10 tt c:nuld not flro. One of the fe1tute Wms playing during the arr't8t of Barrera wu "Diity Harry" I Clint E"""""4 production lboul a cop who roes to l!'e•t JenatJ>s to 1et bla man. Laguna and the United California Bank. Sweany said that until crews broke through the cement hlgbway, there was no way of knowing the: IOcaUon of the break or what happ<ned to the line, a 17· yeor-old Iron pipe. SWeony reported a second failure In the erea o! the ~ block of South Coast Highway, but, said It was t11lnimal com· pared to the downtown break. Restricted traffic movement was permitted on the highway later in the day . The break occurred at about 4 a.m. tcr day, he .said. "ApparenUy, we can't say for sure, there was some kind of surge in the main feederline from C.Orona del Mar. It could )lave been an opening or closing of a ma~ Jo< valYe along the system fn>m here to Yorba Lindi,'' Sweany said. '!be old line under Coast Highway bu burst a~t five times in the pa.st year, Sweany aald. "'lbere ls no way to predict when and where this line might go. Sections of it Sook like the day It was put in the ground, you can even read the manufacturer's name on it, but others ... " Sweany slid, eiplalnlng that chemically hot or car-. ro.slve soil around the pipes eats through the iron, weakening the line. "Then U you get one of these surges, out the goes," he said. Swuny said the water district now is lnv..U11Un1 reflacement of the pipeline, combining a pipeline of the South Cout Waler County Waler District In a joint elfort. Itchy Probwm Bothers Police Things are jumping at the Laguna Beach Police Station. "At first, I though It was just me but then I talked with one of the other gal!, and she said she'd been bothered too," one of t h e department's female dispatchers said. "'Ibey sprayed in there, but, it dldn't do any good," another said, p:>lnting to the radio con.sole area where the women sit. Tbe department has flea s. Heigh.tLaw Plea Nixed By Court By JACK CHAPPELL Of. 1141 Dllfr """' ltt+t The CalilotUla Supreme Court bu refused to bear argumenta from Lal\IDI Beach appealing a lower court declslon which overturned the city's lniUative vote 'that Imposed 36-loot height limit on all Art Colony buildings. City Attorney Tully Seymour - notilied Friday that the blgh •late court had refused the city's petition to be heard in t.he matter. Mayor Charlton Boyd said today be doesn't believe the city will attempt to appeal the State Supreme Court'• decision into the federal judicial S)'ltem. "We will rely oo our own ordinance ac- tion," Mayor Boyd said. The action of the state court kilteG the height llmit voted in by a 3 to 1 mlJ'lln of Ll8UJlllllS In a citywide election the su"1mer of 1971. A second height limit law was passed by action o( the City Council with many o( the same standards as the initiative measure and remains in effect, ac- cording to city orficials. The city's height limit has been the subject of a series of court battles. Realtor Vern Taschner initiated the ac- tion against the height limit and was at first turned down in a superior court level suJt. The Fourth District Appeals Coutt in . San Bernardino, however, overturned the lower court decision and ruled lbe I& itiative law unconstitutional. The city then appealed to the Supreme Court and was denied a hearing. Soviet Officials Leave El Toro After Area Visit ~ A !OUH!Jglne SOvi<t jet plane about the me of a Boeing '1111 lelt El Toro ll4arine Corpo Air SlaUori ' this n'1omlni '<xi runway 25 headed over Irvine enroute back to Russia. The plane carried about llO Ruulan security experts who spent two days along the Orange Coast looking at the Western White House. The visit l! in preparation for acme "future, possible" visit by high Soviet of· ficlal!, an El Toro spokesman said. It was believed the .security evaluatiQo may have related to the possible vtalt to San Clemente in late June of Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, wb.o is scbeduJ. ed flrst to meet with the President in Washington, D.C. The Russian agents' IL 62 transport plane parked in a portion of the El Toro field normally reserved by t h e President's plane. Due to its size and .weight, the plane u.- ed the easi..west runway, on its return to an undisckl.sed home base. Reimbursement OK'd For Officials' Trip Orange County Airport Commiosioo members will be reimbursed for ex· penses Incurred In attendtng a stale Department of Aeronautics .symposium in RivP.rslde last week. The Board of Supervisors Tuesday ap- proved the expenditure for the traveling which took place last week. The total ii not to exceed $100. Long Hair Must Go-Coach Nationwide Ban on Shaggy Athwres Vrged AUSTIN, Tn. (UPI) -Athlet• who ,....r lonl hair not only ant reJi!cttll& ntai>Ulhed autllort'.ht:':! a1ao espoalng thell "abnOrmal" ad breaking wllll "bibfleol prtncipln," accordln1 to the lead article <I. tbo May Issue of "TR· .. Coach." Tony SlmplOll, a head coach In Galena Par''• sdlool 1yt1lom, ...-the article. In ii, he c:llled for 1 nation-ban of Iona hair oo athletic flel4 "lt ls time that Amlrieen eoadJes alo!>f>ed all<nrlng themoi!lves to be penonally repreaented by male athletic tean11 and lodlViduall th1t loot lille females," Slmpoon ytd. "It Js tJme ·that American coerbet realtz.ed that a male~ balr II not jual an American tndltloo but an lalUe lnvoMna bthllcal principles; Ume thal -~ ratlonall%lng and coonpromlllnc theli' common sense: time to lhow the AmtrlCIJ\ athlete that his lllOll nluable chorocterlstlc II not ·phyalcal ahllll)' bul respect for authority. ' It la common ,..,. dlctata that Iona: hair 1 on a man ii a d1craoe. &et't ttop coinproiiwslng our common ,.... by alloiiinc 1~" Simpson .. id. "A 1ood hair oode . wtll 1e1 the 1bnonnah oul of athletlil befo,. they beoome coadles and brlnf 'lllelr lolel'I'. --In to the coa~ prof~ton." Bl'""'1't article in "Texas Coach," the otn~'publlcatlon of the Texas High Schoii1 Cooches' i\SSOC\atlan, ceme within weekS of an auociaUoo. decisioo to ban lopg llalr Oii ,partlclpanll !n Ill annual blib school fdoiboll and basketball all· 1111' ....... Two Houston athletes, Including the lllOll eought after prop balketball player In Tens -Eddla O..ens o! Houston Wheatley -said they'd boycott the gomoa be!°"' they'd trim back their ~andAfn>o. "Wily do many coechel rotlonallte end ool'lljlfOlnl!Je their norms and atandards ol good grooming habits and .,tow themselves to be peroonally represeu. led b7 mat. tbal loot like females!" Slmpoon wrote. "A dlale wllh looc hair II I algn of .,._ jeclion of authority -bla own authority over li~U as well 11 the authority of the laws ol the establishment," he said. ' ' "Ulld!!< the lam of the establishment, God designed the male tAi dominate tho woman Just u He designed. Christ to domlnate man." Simpson said the Bible lndlcated long hair on women represented a sign of sub- mission and that man's short hair was a •Ip! of a'utbority over women. •'It Is not nonnaJ for a male to be in. submission and like It," he sald. "But the American male you th -end many not ., young -wear thelr hair longs 1imply because they know the !•males will Ilk• ti. The>e ao<alled males a"' In aubmlsslon to the warped nonna and standards of females who like to eel the dress and groomln1 atandJrds for their mousy husbands, tbetr pan- tywaist boyfriends or their feminine sons." He said 4'tbe coachJng profession ls one o! the few la"l!e orpnhatloos left with aJIJ C:OUUDOD lmlle left." '1 ·'· Dtl" 1'111! lllff ,...... Pause To Refresh Dog takes advantage of the public fountain in Heisler Park at La· guna Beach for a cooling drink. Roving photographer speculated that running loose in park· can be pretty thir:sty work on a warm day, especially with a fur coat. Watergate Fears Rife hi Europe LONDON (AP) -Gold soared to record prices in Ew-ope today and the U.S. dollar dropped to new lows as a result of speculat:on that the Watergate scandal would force President Nixon to resign. ln Zurich, gold shot to a nrord $113 an ounce. up $7.50 from Friday's close and $2.50 above the record set there last ~-Tuesday.· Swiss banks, which buy and sell for 1¥1iddle East oil Interests, international corporations and wealthy individuals. ' have been active in the gold market in the past two weeks. t In London , the world's biggest bullion I center, gold was traded at $112.W an oun- ce, up $7 from Friday's close. The previous record in London, .set last Tues-- day, was $tll. I 'Ibe dollar, meanwhile, hit record lows 1 in Frankfurt and Paris and weakened sharp\)' in most other European centers. j In Paris, the U.S. currency sank lo 4.4050 commercial francs, below the lows I of the February monetary crisis when the dollar was devalued. One banking source said while the talk that Nixon 1 might re.sign was only rumor, "~ • muket ls u:tremely nervous and in. clined to react io the wildest rumors." 1 In Frankfurt, the dollar dropped to ' 2.6430 marks. In London, the pound jumped more than two cent!, tradJng at. $2.5742 by ml<J. mo rning, up from '2.~12·1ate Friday. The dollar was ~ weaker in Zurich and Mllen. In Zurich it boogbt only 3.1212.5 Swiss francs, compared with ~.1485 at the close Friday. Gold broke past •too last week in a surge of speculation partly triggered by the Watergate acandal and fears that It 1 1 The first -g~al planning session of process is supposed to be Interim, while would undermine President Nixon's plans Coast Panel Sets Planning the South Coast giona l Zone Consenia-the six regional and one state com· to control l.n!latlon in tbe United States. 11. tion Commission ill take place tonight mi!lsion create a plan to submit to the That wavt1 subsided by 'IbUJ'lday, the • ll at 1 o'clock in l.Alng Beach. . ~egislature. . • • • price ol gold began to decline and the '"· The commission created by Prop. 20 The coaatal permit Dme;lt l,000t1.nl1 dollar improved. . .will tiedllctiSibfg'fliil!onal arnt1ocil i!iput-· Inland fnmnnean high tide line, bu! the -T1"' trand -·nnroed 1Mlleopeoq ;.,. to the coastal zone management-land use ultimate planning zone can be up to five of the markets today. after • weetmct1 ' ·• plan which must be developed by 1975. mlles ~ .... :.._ ~ 1 ~ " . , · ~ l during whlch IOme Brttlsh newtp1per1 ' •• ~ The meeting in Long Beach ttarbor Some of Uie planning elements and how carried speculative stories that the ~ ~ Department headquarters, 925 Harbor lhey can be developed under discussion .dal.s In Wultb!;tm might force the "\ Plaza Drive, ls public. are marine ·environment, m I n er a I : President to resign. Some dealers aald The South Coast Commission, which in-resources, geology, recreation, design, the marketl were made more uneuy by eludes Orange and Los Angeles counties, coastal land environment, transportation a report that the Pre1ident'a chltlf has concentrated on permit and ex· on land~ air and water, power pla nts and foreign policy adviser, 11enry1Cfsslnger, emption matters up to now. The permit utilltles•and population dens ity . might resign. -------- - WELCOME TO OUR HOUSEi k, HO!Ple of lu1int1t, You' Silk I Woel $11it in &tey with ReJ f,1,,. 1rtd lur91111dv with llue Trim by Fr1.d- INtr1 of Boston -$115 .00. AU Cotto!'! Oxford l11tton Down Skirt by Soro -$12.00. All SUit Ropp Tio l>v T 1llNttt -$8.SO. .Pfielps c1!lea9er ' ,. . Newport Bt•ch, Wllthlro, Sht rft'l llt 01k1, Ptttclt110, Loko...,ood, W11t Co .. lnt , - •• •. " u ... 1i ... •• <: ' L' " • " ~ • .... ~. ... ' . " ' -. -.. • •• ... "-! w ' 1; 1: ~ t . • I j I I I ' I l I I I I I I I I • I I I I •• ....... .. ......--... -.... • -· -···-·~ . ........... ~ . ' ' I 4 DAILV PILOT Developers Move Inland SECOND LOOKS DEPT. -Some tbeorbts suggeJted bact when the slate coastal control blD was being debated that U it was adopted as Proposition 20 was, some CCJDSiderable cha~es in growth patterns might occur eJoog our COISUiDe Some evidence today suggests that this Is happening. Proposition 11) did pass into law last November and a series of regional com- mlssim and one state rruper~sion were created. These commislfions are charged with two re.sponsibllllles. First, tb!y eithe rsay yea or nay to all cm- structlon within 1,000 yards of the cooslline. Second ly, they are supposed to develop an overall master plan for future ~taJ development. 80 FAR, THE comntissiom hav~ been prell1 well bogged down with making Judgment.s on oollcllng pennit.s. They have a big backlog of pending con- strucdon projects and really, there doesn't -. to be much light at the end of that tunnel MeaQWhlle, not veey Jl\Uch has been done about that overall master plan for coastal development. Th.fs is Ml.at some of those theorists tOOughl they saw coming with the passage of Propossi!ion 20. And they figured that emphasis on development mfglat shift elsewhere -like lnla nd, just outside of the 1,000-yard range controlled by the coastal commlsslons. Thus it is that properties "just inland" whlch, Jn pre-Prop. 20 days didn't look ,. prime for development, abruptly take llfr' a ne~ glow for developers. ONLY UST WEEK, for example, word came that a masterplan for development Is being created for 10,000 acres "just inland" of our coastline. For oldtimers in the region, lt is known as the Moultm Ranch properties although it is in mare ownersbtps than that now. But outside of the Irvine Ranch. it is tbe J.arge51 undeveloped chunk of real estate in our region. The 10,000 acres ~ valved is bocmded generally by bucolic old Laguna Canyon Road and El Toro Road and oo down soulheast to Crown Valley Parkway and the San Diego Freeway. YOU GET THE notion that the owners are serious slnce they have issued a $200,000 contract for the master plan of development to the Irvine planning firm of Chapman, Phillips, Brandt and Red· dick . In a preliminary way, the firm has in· dicated It wilt come in with a series of . planned community pl'Op05als for this acreage which is almost too expansive to contemplate. The land includes the rolling grazing hills just beyond the coastal slope, the lowlands surrounding Rockwell lntema- tional's unused ziggurat plant and the valley areas of Aliso Canyon with its meandering creek. Right now, It is main- ly the domain()( cows and nature lovers. Tomorrow is likely to be something else. AT PRESENT, there are five ownenhips. They are the L.F. Moulton Trust, 5,000 acres; Mr. and Mrs. Ivar Hanson and the Rosmloor Corporation, 2,300 acres; the Nellie G. Moulton Trust, 1,600 acres; and Chapman College, l50 acres. Soon there may be many more ownerships. Thus you may agree th.at Proposition 20 has taken the pressure off the rapid development of coastline properties. Coastal development may slow down in the years just ahead. Indeed, much open space may be prese,rved along the coast. But you are lert with a couple of disquieting thoughts. Like while the coastline sleeps, what's happening just over the hill? And if a 'huge population develops over the hill. what kind of pressure does thal put oo the coastline "·hen t.he hot winds blow? . Aetress Returns Ho)lywood actress Shirley MacLalne arrived in Hong Kong Sunday after a month's visit in ther People's Republic of China. She headed an ~erican women's delegation of 12 -ranging from housewives to a psychologist -and during the visit met with the wife of Chinese Premier Chou En-lai. Ransom Try Thwarted, Hijackers Go to Cuba CARACAS, Vene'luela (AP) -A hi- jacked Venezuelan airliner returned safe- ly to Caracas &mday night with 25 passengers and five crewmen , aboard despite the government's refusal to ransom it with 79 prisoners. mREE ARltED men and a woman Brezhnev Says He'll Show Up For Nixon Visit BONN, West Gennany (AP) -Soviet leader l.£Qnid Brezhnev says he will go ahead with hi s visit to President Nixon llext month despite the Watergate scan- dal. , "America will stay there where it is," the Soviet Commurust party chief told an Inquiring newsman Sunday. "The time is already published. Wllat do you expect - an earthquake?" Brezhnev, on a five-day visit to Bonn, said he will be in the United States June ~ 18--26 and has "all the best" or hopes for hls talks with Nixon. Today the Soviet leader was meeting at his hole! with leaden of the German trade union federation. . Then he was going to the 13th century Homburg Castle 30 miles northeast of Bonn to lunch with Gov. Heinz Huehn of North Rhine -Westphalia, West Gennany's richest and most -populous state. They were expected to discuss the agreement on economic, industtlal and technica1 cooperatloo Brezhnev and Chancellor Will Brandt signed on Satur- day. Tonight the Kremlin chief gives a ban· quet in Brandt's honor, serving caviar, vodka and champagne flown from Moscow. Brezhnev and Brandt talked again Sun- day night at the chancellor's home. 'fhe discussion apparently included the thorny is.we of West Berlin, which Bonn says is part of West Gennany and which Moscow says is independent. took over the twin-£ngine Convair Friday evening on a domestic flight to the capital. They threatened to blow up the plane and all aboard unless the govern- ment freed the 79 persons the hijackers said were political prisoners. But when the government refused even t o negotiate, the hijackers settled for a flight to Havana. The quartet said they beloog to the !el· tist underground organizattoo Punto Cero -Point Zero. ApparenUy they sought political asylum in Cuba, but the Castro regime did not announce what it would do with them. Mter they took uver the plane, which then had 37 persons &board, the four Jef. tists ordered it to the Dutch island of Curacao for refueling. It flew on to Panama for more fuel and food, and there the hijackers let a pregnant woman and another woman and bet child ~t off. SA11JRDAY MORNING the lefti.st.s ordered the plane to Merida, oo. the Yucatan peninsula, and then on to Mex- ico City, where they made their demand for the release of the prisoners. "We will not be blackmailed," tl\e_ Venezuelan charge d'affaires in Mexico City said, refusing to negotiate. An official of the Mexican interior ministry boarded the plane and talked the hijacken out of blowing up the plane. With the official aboard as a hostage, the plane left Mexioo Qty fDf' Merida and then flew on to Havana. Cuban authorities reported t h e passengers and crew were safe but tired upon their aITi.val Saturday afternoon. Sunday, a Mexican plane was sent to pick up the Mexican official and Convair flew back to Venezuela, refueling en route at Curacao. • French Rocket Flops BRETIGNY SUR ORGE , France (AP) -A French rocket carrying two space satellites called Castor and Pollux failed to separate correctly today and fell into the sea· after launching at Kourou, French Guiana, the National Space Studies Center announced. Drizzles Plague-Southland Clouds Expected to Break Up After Dreary Weekend Te1npe rature• Hltll L..-,r AIWQut-rlllilf " " Anc"'°'..ie .. .. A fl en .. " .. •r.k~tllitM .. !l B ""flltht"' " -., " .. ~~n " .. :! .. lrtel•lld .. ... ""'~' r. " """'' .. Flll1Nnlt• " ~ ll'ort WOl11'I " " e~ " " .. " ·" • " •ndf•:~r· n .. K.,,._1 /ly " ., Lt1 Vf: .. .. LDVll¥1 le ll " Ml•m&...m " ·-" " Htw Yorti " " ... g:u=::.. .. •• ctlft .. . .. ~~It !l ·" " •• '"-'"1 '" M P\111':1/I .. " ·" ll .. ·i: :rc~ .. '· IKr11ntnto " " g· LllUll " " It Lr.~• CllY " .. "·-II tt 11 Fr-ltco S.~l!tt ll Wt1illl'llton " ·" Callfertda ' T,,. drFai. tnd ~., mrtdf t ,,._MDI~ tM It t~t..i .. Cltf' M, II Mlllll'I 't: tlld 1 11111 't wtnnw "'"" ~ Coss tsl We athe r P•rt!y clOlldy lod•Y· UOlll Y•rf•Olt w!t'llh nfOl'lt •nd mo..,11119 llol,lr• ~ comlf\f wt1t to nortflwt•! 12 to II ~noh In •N•r-• toaty •roe! l ~td•Y· HIQh •Od•r In lt\t '°"' to 6-1. lnltnd temP1r1tlurn r•nv-from 56 fo 10. Wttef' tempecrth1~ so. Sun, Moon, T ide• MONDAY S.Cond 111111'1 •• 11:5' p.m. '·' 5--.d low , . S;ll 11.m. 2.1 TUISO.&Y ''"'' hloh ...... . J:u run. :Ll FLW low , ••.• , , . 1:'6 t .m .-..Z Second hltfl .. 11;'5 t .m. ~.3 S.Cond low . . . t :'5 11.m. 2.• Sun Jllttt .S:'5 1.m. s.,1 7·ll P.l'lt • MOOfl Jtl• 11;0 p.m. S1!1 9:11 p.m. DAIL T PU.OT 08.MllY SEllV!Cf Dt""7 ti ll'lt D~ ,,~ h ........ u ... ....,,...... If ,.. ""' "" '-"'-,.,.. -.. ,,. ,,,_ "'" ..... -"""' .. .......... -C:•lla ....... ·-Jttl ..... ,...,,.,. ... ,...,, " .,.. • Jiit ...... .,_ _, ~ t '•"'-._,,..,., • I I ... '"'"""'·--·""-.......... ,..." ..... , ... """'ltl.M, T tlfplloMs """' °"-C.aly .,,,,... ·····" .._ ---... .. .... ·-·--.. ~~ ..... ... ,...~ ... ...... .... ~i._...11 ...... ..... <:.wi!tl l1mQtr•r11r11 ••no~ lrom S. ~--------~ . . u ~s .. ~;.:· Jets • Cambodian Troops Drive Back • ommunists ,.. ... wn S-S- PHNOM PENH -U.S. warplanol hit Commanlat torget.s In Clmbodia for the 7!th -.. clay Smday, their strikes concentrated on two JDgbway ._ .,... where govomment llld Ccm- munisl troops claahed. Military IOW'CtS said Amf:rican jet f!ghter-l>omben ouwc>rled c.mbodian troope In driving boa Communlst.s In ODO clash near the blg)nray ~ Phnom Penh and the Soutli Ollna Sea. Girl, 6, Saved By Non Swimmer . MESA, Ariz. lUPI) -Katl!r)<n Louise Pantoo ,24, Amherst, N.Y., who didn't know bow to swim. gave up her life to save a child. Mrs. Panton. who was oo vacation, pulled Jennifer Hicks, 6, Mesa, out ol deep water and into shallow water Satur· day, but then was caught in the same swift current that bad trapped the little girl and was swept downstream. Mrs. Pantoo wu pulled from the water about a quarter-mile downstream by two men who administered mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. She was pronounced dead on arrival at a hospital · CASUALTIES WERE lilted ., cme government aoldJ!ll' k1lled -and three wounded with two Commwillt. killed. Fw-ther eouth lllons the ~~~. the .......... said, .. ...,,,,,..t·i ~ in more American planes when troops there cbsbed with Communists. On the Mda>og River. olftcial oouroes said Communist gunnen opened Utt !ate Sunday on seven C8mbodlan 1andlng <raft brfng!ng refugees to the capital lnim tho !my crossing at Neal: Luong, 3i miles downriver. A1 least two (J( tlie boats were damaged and several ptrSODs reported~ In tho far norihwest of the COUlllry the only one in Jndochtna with no formal truce, government troops fought an how'· long batUe with an ealimat<d 200 to 250 Communist troops. Military sources said two goverrunent troops were killed and another five wotmded. IN O'l'BER developments in Southeast Asia: -A hand grenade attaclc blamed on Conununist terrorists killed two civilians and wounded 22 others Sµnday at a hamlet 110 miles north of 5aigon, the South Vietnamese command said today. -A South Vietnamese Air Foree UH! lluey helicopter on a training miss.ion was shot down by small arms and automatic weapons fire this morning 60 miles northeast ol Saigon. Three cnin.ai t :-m Waui\dod, souroes saul. A commwdque broadcast by radio Hanoi, said U.S. j~ made ;econ· ,,..._ !IJC.hll1 a. few miles ..-ith of l!atiol lllhday mo>nillg. North Vietnam's Foreign Ministry said In the bl'oadcast that "thl> act b in blatant vlolatioo of North Vletaam"s sovereignty and ter· Tit.rial iolqrlty, ol Article 2 ol the Jan. 27 Paris Agreement on Vietnam, and ol the U.S. commibnfJ!.t." .i -In cambodla, Pmidoot Leo Nol b reported going co the Ulllted States for medicil treatment, a move the Nlx.on ad- ministration bopet will opm the way for 7.C11U.il<m. Bui de PrlnCe NO<Odom Sihanouk, the leade!-of ClmbodJa '• Jn. ., surgenb.is talking tougher theoe <lays. He said """'1Uy in Peking that bis forces "will never agree to negotiate with the group ol traitors" In Pbnooi Penh who . deposed him .. Since the insurgents control about tw<>- thlrds ol Clmbodia and have the capital under virtual s~e. the prince is speak- ing from a pooltloo of strength. -North Vietnamese and American teclm.lcal experts took over for Henry A. Kissinger and his Hanoi counterpart, Le Due Tho. meeting from morning lo night Sunday in the longest Vietnam talk! ses.Wo oii reoafd in Paris. " , . ,IJ . :_ fHgM/iti&: v ear '{f)'/,W; ivif e ! k oit fo r the . ht and ·1/ttC -1'2 . . ~y 't()ije' s weiO ;~ 1)1.· ,_, "E11t~ ~~man'1 fiq~•o proble"' ii d1fl•rrnt. Tha 1e1ul!1 you echiev• t•om yo~r pt r1ont!i1td pro<1rom m~• b. differc•t then l~QHr •ch.ew:d by wmeon• e li.t." what are the advantages of the GL ORIA MA R SHALL 1nethod? • You get friendly, individual atlention . Yo ur particular figure problem is. carefully ana- lyzed and your figure correction program will actually be designed just to fit your needs. • You 'll experience the comfort of ha ving your treatments m cheerful, pleasant semi-private surroundings. • There will be no tiring exercises tor you be- cause Gloria Marshall is not a gy111 or spa. • Resulls are achieved through a program of nutritional 9uidance and individually de- signed flfmmg and toning techniques. •"Affldavils of authenticity ere on file in the home office." =gu ara nt ee 11 us the dress si ze you want to be. We will then alyze your fig ure <'Ind 1eU you exactly the num~ ber of inches you need to lose. We <'Ire 50 su re of your results that we guarantee in wri~ing fhot if your. mea~ureme nls are not as promised. you mi'Jy con tinue your treatments al no charge until you r goal is reached. ~""-'~""-''-""''-"'><C'l!.X~ t/1 e.pric1 is o rily Free Courlesy Visit· . ' . $150 per Vii hr f1eat111en/ on any pro91am FIGURE CONTROL SALO-NS • • NEWPORT ilEACH- 430 Pacific Coast Hwy. -642·3630 • • 'THE CITY' -59 Brazllia South-997..0Zl 1 Daily 9-9, Sat: 9-5 I I I ' I I 7 I ~OL. 66, NO. 141, 2 SECTIONS, . Crabs Make I • . ~­.. --· -·-..-- Tway's .Flnal N.Y. Stoeks • ·ORANG.E· COUNTY, CALl~NIA MONDAY, MAY 21, 1913 N TEN CENTS Vesco Warrant Issu ed .Unexpec~d l . Mitchell, Stans Plead Coast Visit · 'l'housan<U of small rnd crabs washed up on the shore Sunday at Ne~ Beach and Huntington Beach, city lifeguards rePorted. lnno:ce.nt ·Perjury • ID "There were literally thousands or them," reported Logan Lockahey of the Newport Beach lifeguards. "They look exactly like tiny red lobsters, but they're really crabs," he ad- ded. "I tttlnk they provided run for some people at the bell ch," Lockabey said, "because they built little tide pools in the sand to keep them alive, or kepJ pick- ing them up and throwing them back in NEW YORK (UPI) -Fonner cabinet members John N. Mitchell and Maurice Stans pleaded iMocent today to charges of perjury and conspiracy in oomection with a $200,000 gift to President Nixon's re-electio n campaign from a financier y,•ho \\'as under federal investigation. The financier and codefendent, Robert L. Vesco, 36, did not appear to enter a plea and a warrant was Lssue<I for his ar- rest. Vesco has left the country and last was reported in Costa Rica. appointed in January 1972. A federal grand jury in41cled.all lour defendants en charges ol conspiracy to obstruct justice and conspiracy to in-- rluence. a Securities and Exchange Com· mission (SEC) investigation of Vesco's financial interests. In addition, Mitchell and Stans were charged with perjury -accused of lying six times each in !heir appearances before the grand jury. The grand jury was investljatln& a secret $200,000 cash contribution made on April 10, 1972 -three days after the new federal campaign c ont rib u t i on s disclosure lny,· went into effect -to the Nixon re-election committee. The $200,000 \vas returned to Vesco alter Sears disclosed it Jan. 31. At that tin1e ~tltchell headed the cam· paign and Stans was chairman of its rinance committee. The indictment charg'ed that the contribution. t. 1100 (See MITCHELL. Pag. !I the oaean.,, The crabs were first spotted on the Orange Coast early Iut week in San Clemmte. 'Ibey were ~ in Newport Beach In heavy numbers begin-ning Sunday morning. In Huntington Beach the crabs a1so began awewg Sunday, but in lighter nwnbers. .. A fourth delendent, prominent New Jersey Republican Harry L. Sean, also pleaded innocent. Asststant U.S. Attorney John Wing ask· ed that a personal recognliance hood of $1,000 be posted for each defepciant. But Judge John Cannella rejected "the ap- plication and released the defendants in their own custody. Number Was Up Car KiHs ·Newport Visitor "They were scattered out along the beach " said a HW)tJnlrton Beach lifegu3 rd spokesman. "Btit there weren't so many that they would cause a pro~ lem. Lifeguards in both cities said the dying crabs \vcre not considered a health hazard. In the ltlidd"le UPI Ttltjlllett President Nixon ventures into the crowd after: an ~ Forces Day speech in Norfolk, Va., from the deck of the aircraft carrier lhdependence and is hugged by an exuberant well wisher. --- Looking pale and shaken, Mi tchell and Patrick Klfk Silvis, 25, had just gotten his lawyers had to push a path through a job after deciding to spend the summer reporters who mobbed them as they ar-in Newport Beach with his mother. rived at the courthouse. Mitchell's only He was !tilled early Saturday mQming comments lo a barrage of questions were, "Good rpoming. How are you? I'm by a hit·run motorist while he v.•as ap. here to enter a plea ." parently trying to cross West Coast Hlgh- lnside the c®rt, Mitchell, former at-way near the Arches overpass. torney general who left that office to run Police said .they arrested the driver six N. • 'C w • h' Nixon's campaign, tilted b&ck in his hours later when he went to Hoag Me-lxon Over up' . f,S chair and wcung his hands a• he waited morial Hospital for treatment of ohock . M ting ·slated to answer the charges. Andrew Keith Skiver, 27, oi 21 7 35th St .. 00 He" shook hands with Stans, formei-Jy Newport Beach, was charged wilh man· commerce secretary and chief of the re-slaughter. T Explain Sui l T d t H Ide eJection .commjttee's fma~s and Sears Police said his anaignmmt has not 0 race -0 :a· . i'f!H·nn whd,arrivecj a)\ollt25~··f!F'bim, beenldled!oled. ltwllltake<place.llOlll&- 1 1 • ..:!.L~-Cinnella rul ed Iba ~--~Tu~ .. .!!; 10 110n., --Over Jet . Nt>~-. _.,.,, · · -"'! ~ · ·:.-J · · · · · .ll -_.. photo · . 1be 1e<:es-~ii<'i!!f'.P'.d'..'"'Ai.t},,~.l~ WASlllNGTON(AP)-_form~rWhite hew.!.jn,~~t .lout·doeo~ ~· ., ·· · ~. . •· _.. The Airport Ac:tioo AssoCiatton will ftot1s<{cllier ·oi st.dfl !!':II. Jtaldenlan was ~Of the p ' -~1!tli · · ~ -.,ii hold a public intonnatloo moellng quoted today as having sild, "It is the . nom~. Bilt''M''8fil• Instructinns ft1lm the def• 'ilt\tj ;W!iii to_-~ ~~ /)[ ·· · Wednesday in Newport Beadl to esplain President's wish" that the CIA ask tbe chief ·of ·staff.were assumed to be car-feder&i Jlldle Lee Gagliardl, 1.wm· wa1 ' the group's $150 million damage suit FBI not to Investigate Mexican angles in rylng the Presldert's authority. assigned Uie case. Gagllar\l1, 54, of f'riflay Attempt pending over jet noise from Orange OJun.. the Watergate affair. At that time investigatiorut were under ~rchmont, N.Y., ts ooe. of. the newest -- Robert Silvis GI Porterville; his mother, Mrs. Jacque Rickles, ol 1560 Placentia Ave., Newport Beacb;11ftnd two brothers. Michael Silvis, 29, a'1.Stephen Silvis, ~· "He just came down here two weeks ago," Mrs. Rickles said this morning. ·•He'd been out.fooking ror work. He just went out Friday afternoon to apply for a job as a cook at the Surf and Sirloin Restaurant, on West Coast. Highway. "The owner called him just before din- ner and said to come back for an inter· viey,•. "I didn't know Wltll the owner called Sunday that he'd been hired." Mn. Rickles said. (> "'It smns so ilnnll•, I bad IOli[1ijjjf' (4. be~ • Ille ll!lb""1· I -fl!jnl· inc 'about -.JlllllI..-. u11 11o AllQMotn, don'!""' -.y. 11 "'7 1111111-~··jup., It'••'" ty Airport. .. . ' will Sen. Stuart Sym;••ton ( D. M 0 . ) , way abou t. "laundered" campaign con-Judges in .the Southern District. He was The main speaker for the evenmg -.., 'b I Sk lab R • T • • he attorney Jerry Fadem, who has diaclosed the statement was noted in a ~ ~~~::~~~:':..l°c:x~m~ y . .. , epa1r ra1n1ng helped prosecute successlul jet noise memo by deputy CIA director Lt. Gen. of the checks eventually wound up in the Slaym' g of Man damage suits relating to Los Angeles Vernon Walters on June 23, tm -six bank accmmt of convicted Watergate International Airport. days .after the break·in at Democratic conspiNltor Bernard L. Barker in Miami. To Mutilations COntiriues for Astronaqts Another atlomey, Angelo Palmieri, win pally headquarters. '!lier< had 'been previous testimony N l Connected give a status report on the inverse con-The memo was made public today as that the FBI was asked to stay out of 0 demnation lawsuit filed by t O O f CIA di Ri bard H I homeowners in the airport takeoff pat· ormer rector c ems ap-that part of ·the investigation in order to ~ Defore the Senate Foreign Rela· make it look like a CIA Ol)eration. tern. tioas Committee of which Symington is a Helms told the committee h i s In additioo, Newport Beach Coun· · ber ........,.~ mem · only concern then was that the CIA cilman Alilan Dostal is e ... .,.."........ to It, cOncemed a meeting on Jtme 23 in-should be kept out ot the Watergate at-.outline detailll{of a third 1Uit \be city of volving Walters, llelms, HalCl:eman and f~lr entirely_ Newport Beach may file against county Jobii. 0 . Ehrlichman. As Helms appeared at Symington's airport operations. a spokuman for the, A:t the end, Walters noted ·tn •his memo , committee, another Senate committee airport group said. Haldeman turned to him and said, "It is was .questioning Archibald Cox, selected The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. the President's wish that you go to see by Elliot L. Richardson to be the in· l·n the auditoriwn of Newport .Harilor Mr' G "L p 1r· k G ill . ray. . a 1c ray was ac· dependent special prosecutor in the High School. Anangements for the ting director of the FBI. Watergate case. meeting are being made by 8 group of ~ Asked about the notation, Helms said Cox said he intends to take full atudents studying the airport noise COil.· responsibility and said Richardson re- troversy as part of a social studies class tains only the authority "to give me hell at the high sctm. In addition, music if I don't do the i·ob." He added : "l think entert.ainmeal will be provided by J l ' S D d members of the Corooa del Mar High U ie ays Q he ought to keep that authority." In another development, John C. School band, a spokesman for the airport Caulfield and Frederick C. LaRue, ap- group laid. Won 't Bug Out peared t• give pre-trial statement in a Wlltergate-rolated civil suit, but re- mained "'1'1. briefly. : Senate Bugging Cha r ges Blasted Pl'M'SBURGH (UPI) -F o r m e r Teamsten President James R. Hoffa said Sunday that man; of Ibo cbargea made during lbe Senate Waterplo bear- ing wre "bued m hearsay ~ and woold nevtr hold up In court. Holla said the W ate<gate ocaodal heloogll "In !root of a IJ8lld jury and has nothing to do with legl!lative ptllc- lices." The senators "are able to have a field day for their own pw-poooa as they did • wltb me ... and I object to people being iricked into believing that whal'a being said woold be pennlsslble '!; court," be said. . Holla SP<fll four years In a fllderal oriton for I jury trunperlni OODvtc:tlOn. lie 'wu !teed when Presldellt NW>n graoied executive clemency. :.4D REQUIRES NO REPEAT EFFORTS · '11 at first ... " Advertim often do suoceed on the first try when they try a Daily Pilot cluslllod want ad. I,ook what 1 happened here: POINT. Blk to beach, beaut mod, l br, color TV sun deck, yrly $11(1. !Phone No.) The house wo.~ rented to the P'lRST ptraOn who a•w It. 1"'Y calling your ad- visor. and she'll try Iler beot lo help yoo succeed. lier direct line ii IO-M1I. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Julie Nixon Eileebowet, President Nix- on's Y'>'lll(en daughtet, said Sunday s(le doubts the Watergate acandal will ever 1orce her tatbel) to resign. She ... iaid . ~ ·••waiersate is ovenhadowipg his achlevement .. \but l ' liave taitb. ".11 ha! b!!en "a . very ~ difficUlt time" fer Mr' !athei:, lhe said. "W1¥11'\l.Je golhg gets rough, I don't W be"'d ever bug out," she said. "He._ really Joves his country. He's a dedicated man. The country needs" hi•"pl"Ofp'ams." . Mrt. Elsenbower made her com· mentl dUring a program on WRC- l'V. 'l1le Wlshlngton Star-News reported the Justice Department has expanded Jts probe 1 of the ·undercover campaign ac... tivttles ol Donald H. Segrettl lo five new places -San Francisco, San DJ •• Pittsburgh, Portland, Ore., ahd possibly Milwaukee. · · · ' · ~ ~ nie Star·News, ·in a story by James R. Polk, sal!I lbvestlgators have Segrottl'• travl!'I records ind'.J,ong .. diata.nce , tileJlhol>e .-.colds. Seitettl ls a yoUng Cali!omila attOmey who has pleadeJ innocent in Florkia on a charge of sending, fake c a m pa I g n literature: '11le Federal Bureau of lnvest!gatiOn has been told Segretti was paid $30,000 to $40,000 in campaign funds by President Nixon's former personal (8ee WATERGATE, Pap !) • A:-. fU,110t:niDOD 'l'Cii't c:ooqie aw~ aJ)(lll"1 the 1cnr..i11n1 im WU -97"'1 ~~·"!>m twe_;Joy ~ -• Pllltera ~ "= .ridln piled 1t up In lMnt after-I U0. 1n1J:~ :SW~ Slln I ~ cha» and aeli,berat.ly aet · 'A' C11P spokesman Slld •the-.... It oo !!ft. , reached' speeds ol 120 mllea pen1Jour, INI Tbe pair -.Including the driver who · ended •brVptly '!'hen the squad car c;ot.. JllftJen said tbolftd rem•irbble driving llded rib !he r<at of the Panttta dunni skill -ea&pod' On loot following the ·' -maneuver. predawn escapade that ten a patrol car The vehicle belongln( 16 llr· Charles WTeCked In Sa!\_Bemardlno Coonty. Crane -.r 111 Belllt St., N ... 11!1)'1 Beach. Investigators uid botb wspecll ap-bod betD lloltn !tom J"'-and Son parenQY, e!Clped l\tJurY In !be ,.riea of Lincoln Mercury, 2&28 Halllor Blvd .• two criShel. 1 Qoota Mesa. • C..Ulomta~l')' Patrol s,t. lllchard Cooti -Patrol Bet.· ~"McBride, Wriln arid ~·Lonnie Leitzmlm at.o who tilted with CllP lnmliotors Ofter eacaped inlm+-1:30 o.111. when Ibey .Ibo accident, lalil .U..y morVe!ed at Ille rammed u.,~ car In the roar clur1n& ablllly ol the driver to "bandle the coatly a btctlc.dalae. Cir. ' I CARSON -1'ht murder of a young man whose headless body wu found in an oilfield here ~turday is not linked to the string of mutilation murd~s that have occurred in this area, police said to- day. Detective Brad Phelan of the Los Angeles Police Department said the man who was found Saturday was apparently the victim of a robbery. "There is no relationship between this killing and the others we are in· vestlgating,'' Phalen said. The others Phalen referred to ·are a slring of four mutilation murders in which the victims were homosexually assaulted. Phelan said the Los . Angeles coroner has confirmed that the lateat murder victim bad not been sexually assaulted and he was found fully clothed. Police from five agencies in the Los Ange.Jes Harbor area and western Orange County are still investigating the bizarre mutilation murders in wblcb ·only one of the four victims bas been ktentlfled. Those victims are Edward Daniel Moore, 20, whose bOdy was found Dec. 26 in Seal Beacll: a young man fou nd Feb. 6 in the Wilmington· Area ; another young man found Apl11 14 in Huotlqgton Beach and a young man whose dismembered corpse was found scattered tbrnugbout the Harbor area and in Sunset Beach. HOllsroN (UPI) -ll'lth a flight di.rector predicting "they'U fix us ·up," the three Skylab I aatronauts itep ·up their final tJ:ainiog todai for an un- precedented attempt. Friday to repair the world's largest spaceship'. The latest plan is for the crewmen to cool the overheated space st&tl!>ft by ex- tending a ·sliver and white parasol, a "beach umbrella" large enough to cover a two-car garage, through an eight·inch· square airlock. Before they do that, Charles "Pete'' Conrad, Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz plan to open the hatch of their APollo command module, reach out with something akin to a long boat hook and attempt to fi-ee one of Skylab's two jam- med Power generating solar cell wings. "I think we have a fa.irly good chance of doing Iba~" Oight director Nell Hutchinson aald ln an Interview Sunday night. "U we can get the aolar curtain up, and that wlng out, we're back. in bw:ineu. We're set." George B. Hardy, a chief Skylab engineer, said operation of only ooe of the two stucl< aolar panels ""'11d <I•• the big space · staUon eDOUgb eztra power to conduct a nonnal mlnk>n and.. aupport three. crews as orictnally planned for a total of 140 days in space. t'J'd say. that would take us right back to the top of the world," he said at the Johnson Space Center. Baze Car ··The origin of !be Panter'a and the Sin B<i'nardlno'County panult ~ caine to light '1bout 8: IS 1.m., during ln- veatlgatlon of the l"lne pilalp:. · · Cllllcer Doug stotrn!W-.dllpatcl> ed. lo the 11001e amr two nel8J>llon 1wlktfted by a eer!ea of.cruha called poUce. , ; The Panfer•'s clrlver appanilltl1 iig· ged when be "should have ilgged on eun,_ Ing Sierra Amigo 1!4ad 500 feet south of TurtlfJ Rock" Dtfve. I The IJXJtt COOpo then careened of! seven dll«ont point.-, o~ ircipeqt, in, clll!lliii Joli<. trees,. ,I~ liga~ a block' wan before coming to rest. Dm<ll V. Cole. of 1186 Sierra Verd• Road and Sttve ......,..troli~ ol 5615 Sier· ' ' 1 ra Vellle Rood, both delarlbed at leut two ponona as being praenl. Tbey told police the pelr looked under the hood of the ell", then ... -• Oamlng olllecl· al lt ·1nd the Pantera u- plodecl 1n·1 bunt< of llamt. Oounlf Fire llepertment units we~ cal~ to1be ""'""" btJt the.unUc aporta car wu a Wt.al lou. lnve.Ugat«• said matching of det.aUs by wltneises showed the driver was ibout 20 '•nd had a lhorl, bushy Afro. style hairdo. while hts passenger's detctlptlon was more vague. Polite were uncertain just when the ..,. we,·llolen, but a -Private (litrol lold. them a d>eek at II :co p.m. Swia.y at the auto aitncy revetl.ed that evtf)'lbifli ap- pta.-.d to be secure. · •t '" The astronaut!, scheduled for launch at 9 a:m . EDT Friday, will intercepl Skylab 7 houn and 41 minutes later and show engineers at the center and viewers around the world what the station looks like. They will attempt to free the solar wing Friday and then get a night's sleep in their Apollo before entering fkylab and raising the umbrella . Conrad will call the signals in orbit. Hutchinson said, "I couldn't think of a better guy I'd want in a-Position like this . I suspect they'll fix us up." After honing their space piloting skills 1n a command ship trainer and revlewinc the parts ol Skylab's new parasol, tbe three astronauts plan to fly to Huntsville, Ala., tonight to get in one final practice session in a 40-foot-deep, 1.4 million Pllon y,'ater tank . By floating submerged with special breathing apparatua, the astronatuls can simulate weightle!Sness. They will prac- tite ni.ising two versions of a large awn- ing -a potential backup siylab remedy that would require work in open space. Orange Weather The Lo5 Angeles weather service says 1he sun will break through those low cloud! on Tuesday for the first .time in 11 days. Mostly sunny attetooons are e1pected fqr the r'est or the week. Hi&bs o1 • at the beacbu, rlslnfl to 71 Inland . INSIDE TODAY "Th e Walton!,'~ TV'a..nrprile hit of th4 uaiof!', ond th4 Julie 1 .lb.c!rew.t Hour, conutcit tn mfO. lta.ton, shared k>p hottOT.s at tM onnuol Emmy award prcsnuz.. tio1l1. See Page 9 for aU the de· tall&. ' " ' ..... .. " • • .,, , .. ,, .. .. • 'w ·-- ,2 Wl'Y PILOT ff W ATERGA:l'E SET FOR -MORE TV NEW YORK (UPI\ -Tbt major t~ networks wtll qa!JI bave live .,.,.,.,... ct·.tlle Sena!i"Willa'pte beer-- inp when the hearings resume Tuesday at 7 a.m. PDT. In addition, the National Broadcasting Company has scheduled a one-hour ntws special on Watergate at 7 p.m. PDT 'l\Jesday. Desegregate Bid Denied By Top Court WASHINGTON (AP) -An equally divided Supreme Court today denied s Richmond, Va., district judge the power to reach into suburban co.miles to desegregate Inner city scboolJ. There waa no written decision from the court and no word aa to bow its members wled In affirming an appeals court decisjon that earlier had overturned the district court order. An equally divided court eutomatlcally afftnnJ an appeals court decision. In other ac:tt.ns today, the court: -Held that stiffer punishments are constitutional In retrials. -Ruled that the National Labor Rela- tions Board has no authority to determine the reasonableness of union fines against members. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr .• a long· time member of the Richmond school board, dld not take part in setting up the four-four 8]llil. In January of 1972 U.S. District Court Judge Robert Merhige Jr. ordered the predominantly black R1chmond city school system combined with the predominantly white syxtems i n neighboring Henrico and Chesterfield Counties. In June last year, the U.S. Circuit Qmrt at Richmond, in a S-1 decision, disagreed with Merhige and reverSed hlS order. The issue of metropolitan desegrega- tion, bu not been settled by the court's action today. Similar suits are pending in such cities as Detroit, Atlanta and some nine other cities. The spllt<00.rt decision is not binding In those cues. Today 's one-sentence action by the court read simply, "The judgment is af· firmed by ao equally dlvlded court." Unassessed Is the Impact of the coort vote on the school busing Issue on C&pftol Hill. Antlbuslng action had been brought to a virtual ltlllldslffi pendlng courl IC- ~ ~~=.i"::k.. bad ed against metropolitan desegregaUo~ a sharply -ded friend of the court brief. The case reached the high court on ap. peat. by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and the Richmond school board. E:zch sought to reinstate Merhige's order. Jury Selection In Two Officials' Trial Under Way Jury selection began today in the Orange County Superior Court extortion trial of Westminster city offlcla1s De~k McWbinney and Tad Fujita. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner assign- ed Judge John. L. Fl ynn Jr. to take the bench for what is expected to be a four- week trial on allegations that they at- tempted to obtain $10,000 from Mlle Square Park farmer George Murai. Former Mayor McWhinney, 40, and city planner Fujita, 35, were indicted by the Grand Jury on charges that they pressured Murat into parting with $5,000 in cash after telling him that llis con- tinued operalions at the Fountain Valley park binged on the payment. The P.J"Osecution will allege that Mural was oidered to write a further check for $5,oo> which was made payable to county Supervisor Robert Battin'• campaign fund. Battin was not involved ln the alleged transaction, the Grand JW'Y sald. OU.N•I COAIT N DAILY PILOT Tne Or•llil" Coelt O"lLV PILOT, wllll """"" '' comb!...,; tn• N1w1-Pr.,u. "' MllJlltcl l>V Ill• Or•llil" CO.II Pvblh.1111111 Colftl)lny, 5"Ni· r•I• ecU1IOt"11 ••• Ptll>llSll.i, MOl'ICl•r "''°"°" ft!cl1v, !Or COS!• M-. N-..t•I 811c11, Hunlln9ton 8t1W F-i.rn V1!11y, Uoun• 81•cn, lrvlflt/~~'91 -$111 C~!•f l •n Ju•n C•olt!r•l'lll A 1/1'19!1 •tDlor>•I fCll!lon it ""bU'l'>td S.lurcllyi u1cl 51111(11yt. lllt IN"irn;lp.ol pUblitlllnt Dl111I It 11 U0 Wlfl l•V srr .. 1, Cot•• M.-... C•1!1ornle, tQ, Rob•rt N .. W••d f'ntldtnl •nd PullllllM~ Jtck R. Curl•v Vic•,,... .. ..,, tnd Gontrtl Mt11191r Tho11111 K11vU """ Tholl'I•• A. M••phin1 MINfllfllJ Editor L P•t•• Krie{ .. ...,.,,.. .. l(fl (i!y dl!•ff N...,......._OHke lllJ N1wporl lo11l•v1rd Mallint Adcfrnn r.o. low 1175, tJ6'J .,,... """" COllflo M ... t·UO W•ll l1y S!•NI L'flltll 9...:fll 222 l'OfMI ............ Hllftllr!9tM'I IMCPI: H11S lllCfl lotMvenr .$111 (~It: JDf HMlll £1 G1mMo ft .. I , .. .,.... {7141 '42-4JJ1 cr..tn.4 .......,... ••z.un ,,,,..,.""''· ltn. Or•l'Of' co.u l"uMltlll"I C...,....,iy. No ,.._ • .., .. ,, IH1r1tf'1t'-, W llO!'lll ,...lltr -_.,,.,11,,,,,...lt ,..,...,, _, ... ,...,...... wttNYI ...... " ....,.. "llUlon If aevtlfllt _., ~ diN . lll0tlt9e MW It COtll Mnlt C..llfllrtlle. """""""kllt br Clfrltf' tlU -'111\<1 "' Mf/I U.11 "*"tll!y1 ll'llllfWY *"!Nlleflt. 12.61 "*""'"'· Mond•J, Mq 21 , l'l73 Prosecutor Claims He 'Has Power' WASHINGTON !UPI) -Archibald Cox testified today that Attorney general· designate Elliot L. Rk:bard.!on had given him "all the power needed to be Jn-- dependent" in hts job as spedal Watergate prosecutor. "The only authority he ha• retained Is the authority to give me hell if don't do the job,'' Cox told the Senate Judiciary Committee, "and I think he ought to keep that authority." Rlchard!on Introduced the 6t-yeaNJld Democrat, No. 3 man In the Justice Department during the Kennedy ad- ministration and part ot the Johnson ad- m.ln.istratlon, at the same time that he made public formally new guidelinel ei- . pandJt!c on the authority that the P'Ol- ecutor will,b\ve in the Watergate cue. Ricbards6n, lD a brief introduction of Cox, ·lll!fd the Harverd law professor would have "full Independence" in the case. Sen. J9,jP<!S 0 . Eastland (D-Mlso. l tbe Judiciary Committee chainnan, asked Cox if he was sure he could work with Richardson according to the guidelines. "f am," Co:r said. "I discussed them with Mr. Richardson over the telephone. There were a number of pointa -we talked for two hours -we worked out together. ''I'm saLisiried they give a special prosecutor a1i the power needed to be in- dependent. I certainly intend to be in· dependent and to take responsibility to the beat of my abfflty." Tbt revised guidelines, daled May 19. give the special prosecutor ' 'f u J) authority" over the Watergate case. They say Cox "will have the greatest degree of independence that ls consistent with the attorney general's statutory ac- countability for all matters falling within the jurisdlction of the Department of Justice." The iuidelines provide Co:r full authort- ty for issuing warrants, subpoenas , or other court orders; conducting pros- ecutions; determining to what extent he would infonn or consutlt with the at. torney general, and in determining when he had completed his duties. Cox has said he would not feel an obligation to inform Richardson of what he was doing in his investigation. The Democrats haye cootended that Richardson must be cOmpletely removed from the invvestigation so as to avoid any SU'Plckln that, aa a member of Presi· dent Nixon's official family, he was in any way exerting control over the case. Rit:hanlsan said repeatedly be would give the ipeclal prosecutor •' f u 11 authority" over Watergate but would re- tain "ultimate authority" over himl 'l1le Democrats insisted that the prosecutor have "complete independence." Robert Thomas, Coast Retired Executive, Dies Me~i.al services are pending Robert M. "Tommy" 'nlomas, 73 who died enroute to Hoag M~:-lal Hospital Fri4 day nfibt after suffering a heart attack in his home at 4601 Tremont Lane, Newport Beach. Mr. Thoma.s, a retired sales e:recutive for a Chicago-based industrial manufac- turing firm, had lived tn Newport Beach since 1968.' Prior to that he had spent winters here since 1960. Before his retirement, Mr. Thomas was vice president of the Canadian branch of Perfect Circle Corp. He retired in 1957. An enthusiastic yachtsman. M r . Thomas was a member of Newport Harbor Yacht Club and the owner of the 47-foot cruising yacht Stranger III. He was al.so a member or the Chicago Yacht Club and was one of the few Americans ever to be elected to the board of governors of the Royal Canadian Yacht Club. In his younger years, he was active in racing Star boats on Long Island Sound and in the Great Lakes. He later turned to cruising where he spent considerable time afloat on the Great Lakes and a cnlise from Maine to Florida.He also did extensive cn.Jising on the Hudson River and !he northeast coast. He ls survived by his wife Lucille. one son, Robert C. of Costa Mesa and three grandchildren. He also leaves a brother, C. William Thomas, Monarch Bay and two st~pchildren, Mrs. John G. George, Three ·Arch Bay, and James Pearce, Costa ~fesa. Before his death Mr. ·Tilomas re· que~ted that his body be crcmaled and thst the ashes be distributed at sea. Fonda Believes POWs Quieted TEMPE. Ariz. (AP) -Actress Jane Fonda says Americans have not been told •bout U.S. servicemen who said they were treated humanely while prisoners of war in North Vlentam. Miss Fonda aald those who told of torture apd cruel treitment were senior officers who have been given "rose· strewn heroes' welcomes." "Were not beina given the storie!I or equal nwnbers of POWs who say tbty weren't tortW'&d .and, in fa ct, were treated humanely," Miss Fonda told a nows oonference Saturday. Miss Fonda and her huaband, Tom Hayden, said report& from former POWs who have told about humane treatment from their captors have been mufOed. • tl~IT ......... ON THE LINET -Former de- tective Anthony Ulaseqlcz has admitted he was the anonym· ous caller who offered James McCord executive clemency, but later denled1 having con- firmed he was the caller. From Page l WATERGATE • • lawyer. Herl .. t W. Kalmbach. Another Star-News story said NixQ.n campaign advisers still' were distributing "hush money" to one or more of the seven convicted Watergate conspirators as rec~ntly as earl.· April -about the same time that federal investigators were being told about efforts to cover up the scandal. 1be principal recipient apparently was G. Gordon Liddy, said to be the org::tlzer of the burglary of Democratic head- quarters last year, the newspaper reported, quoting unnamed sources. Liddy is tfle only one of the seven to have re'.ceived a linal sentence, and he is serving an additional jail term for refus· ing to testify under immunity. A special Senate investigating com· mittec resumes its televised Watergate hearings: Tuesday with convicted burglar James W. McCord still the witness. Wounded Leader Of Valley Center Said Improving Adelaide Luna, dlrector of the Colonia Juarez Community Center in Fountain Valley, is reported In improved condition today after she was wounded in a shooting nine days ago. A spokesman for the Fountain Valley Community Hospital said the 44-year-0ld woman is still in the intensive care unit of the hospital but noted that she has been out of her bed and is very alert. Mrs. Luna was shot several times in the head and back May U. She was found by a Fountain Valley policeman who was making a routine traffic stop of an auto near the intenection of Warner Avenue and Euclid Street. The driver of the car, Richard Morones, 46, of Santa Ana was arrested in connection wilh the shooting. He was scheduled for arraignment t~ day in the West Orange County Judicial Dlstriet Court on charges of assault with intent to commit murder and assault with a deadly weapon. Teacher's Aide Seeks Back Pay SACRAMENTO (AP) -A Yolo County man has gone to CO\D't for back pay, saying a school district refused to pay him for three months' work as a teacher aide because he altered a loyalty oath before signing it. David Fontes Jr. said he filed the suit in U.S. District COurt here against the Washington Unified School District in Yolo County, claiming more than $U,000 in back pay and damages. Fontes' complaint, disclosed Sunday, says he obtained the job as part of two years alternative civilian service ordered by his draft board after he was classi!.ied as a conscientious objector. Gas Price Hike To 45c Forecast .--st<N FRANCISCO (AP) -A gasolirie executive predlcta the CUJTent fuel shori- age soon w!Jl cause the price or regular gasoline to rise to 45 cents a gallon. "We're not too far away from It right now," Robert C4vin executive director ol the Society of Independent Gasoline Mar· • kcters of America, said Sunday. Cavin, here for his organization's semi- aMual meeting, said many of it.s 210 IMmber companies have bad to cut back buslness at their total or 20,000 retail ou!let.s becau.'le gasoline has become inaccessible. 11e said the shortage was caused by "a lack of sufficient domestic crude," and culled for an end to Import quotas . "We'd like to see It posalble for enyono with the financial resources to go after fcrelgn oil to be allowed to 10 got it/' Cavln said. • • ... ....... i MITCHEl.L ••• • bflls, WU clelfvert<I to Stint fo \?a:bing!<>ll by Sean. 5ell'l at that time ...... chairman of the -Jeney Com-mittee for lhe fte.elec::lllllof lhe Prell--. -At Ibo tlnle lhe ....-UOO was made, v---~by the SEC for all<gedly "lootln(' $224 mllllon from four mutuaf fund.a controlled by bb lllle,...., Mltchell alao got Pmldentlal couosel John W. Dean Ill to communlcete with Casey to seek a paetpooement of the return date of SEC aubpoeou lel'Ved on Vesco empioyea, the indictment said. Tbt purpoee, the Indictment aafd, was to prevent dlacloeure by the empfoyes relating to the secrtt Vesco conb1butim. Women Marines Not Interested In Combat Role CAMP PENDLETON, (AP) Wolll<!l leatbemecka: are uninterested in becom- ing oombat soldiers -but would like to join the Marine Band. "We have a pilot program up for dm- sideration assigning women to the com- bat forces," said CoJ. Margaret Brewer, new director of the Women Marines. "But I don't foresee women in ground combat forces as, riflemen, say. Our American society is not interested in this, and I don't find women wanting this." But they are "very interested in now being able to audition for the U.S. Marine Band," Col. Brewer said in an interview Thursday. The 43-year-old unmarried colooel said women Marines "have not bee n discriminated against." Their only com- plaint, .she said, involves dependency rules for those wilh civilian husband.1 or children. Ecology Officer_, Sets Coast Talk Willard G. Borden, environmental con- trol officer for the Irvine Industrial Complex, will speak at this Wednesday·s "Beautiful May" luncheon of the Newport Beach Dolphins. The Dolphins, club name for the Women's Division of the Newport Harbor Chamber of c.ommerce, will also present five awards to businessmen a n d homeowners who have contributed most to the beauty of Newport Beach. The public is invited to the luncheon, which begins with a "Get Acquainted" Hour at 11 a.m. '11ckel9 for the two-and- a-hall-bwr program are fl and can be reserved by calling the chamber office at 6™>!00. The meeting will be held at the Irvine Coast Country Club. Growth Hearing Set in Newport Newport Beach city cooneil has scheduled a public bearing today on the proposed new Orange County Growth Policy Report. Although copies of the report are not available to the public, city officials said Al Bell, haad of the planning section in the county • Planning Department, would be present to make a full summary of the report. The policy report deals w i t h mechanisms by which population growth in Orange County can be coordinated on a regional basis. . The hesring will be held at 7:30 p.m. m council chambers. . CITED FOR VALOR Nowport RNldont Smith 'IN HIGHEST TRADITION' Newport Resident Johnson ) Two Newport Residents To Get Medals of Valor Two Los Angeles city firemen who live in Newport Beach will be awarded their department's Medal of Valor this week for assisting in a dangerous underground rescue attempt. Ronald D. Smith, 37, and Maurice Johnson, 55, were both workblg in the West Hollywood station No. 61 wben their unit was DQtified of an undergr,>Und gas explosion of the corner of Pico Boulevard and Mulrllefd Road. AB firemen arrived, smoke was billow- ing up through a street manhole, fire of- ficials said. The nonnal technique would have" been to flood the underground pipe with foam, but firemen were told that three men had been working on a pipe 28 feet below street level at the time of the bl.:.st. "Firemen initiated rescue operations immediately," the llepartment said. "Despite the danger of additional ex- plosions, flash fire, and cave-ins,"' the · department adds, "and despite an at- mosphere of extreme heat , dense smoke. and noxious fumes, firemen entered Ute underground pipe via a narrow vertical , shaft . . . with complete disregard for · J their own ·safety.!' ~ Four separate rescue teams were used, each work.tog .as !orig as its supply of OOt- tled alt would last. The three trapped workers were finally found dead, but the , • - . department said the actions of the firemen were "under grave personal .. , .. peril were in the highest tradition of the . ~, Los Angeles City Fire Department." · ... j -.. Smith and Johnson will be cited along with 35 other firemen at a luncheon Wednesday at the Hollywood Palladium. Smith "Jives at 4901 Bruce Crescent Court. Johnson lives at 4827 Bruce Cres· .. ' cent Court. . ' ••• Casualty Team Inspects 3 Crash Sites in South Viet ,I' : ; .... BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -There .. no indication \bat any Americans listed as missing in action in Southeast Asia are still alive, Brig. Gen. Robert C. Kingston said today. Kingston heads the Joint Casualty Resolution Center, a 175-man unit charg- ed with locating crash sites and graves and recovering the remains of Americans lost in Indochina. The Pentagon has listed 1 , 3 O 0 Americans as missing in action and has declared another l,100 dead although their remains have not been recovered. Kingston said his men have irapected three crash sites in SouUt Vietnam, but he refused to disclose whether any re- mains were found or identified. Reliable sources said, however; none was discovered at any of the wrecks. The information about findings at crash sites would be communicated through regular military' channels to the next of kin of the men involved, he said. He explained that relatives of men lost in air crashes often knew where their planes went down t h r o u g h cor-,y respondence with other men in the units. 1"1 If details are revealed prematurely, this \vould "get the next of kin very anx-~ ious," he said. "We are not going to an-•I nounce. whether v.·c-found remains or not. .. Owner Cruising; Home Ransacked Burglars have raided the Balboa bay front home 'bf a woman out of the coun- /. " •' try on a sea cruise, looting it of nearly ,. $5,000 in oriental rugs and decorative wall hangings. ... Robert H. Nicholson, of Arcadia, reported the break-in to Newport Beach pollce Sunday after discovering the home on South Bayfront ransacked. Investigators said the loss includes four rugs and two pictures fashioned from feathers, in addition to a television set . •' Hlll"'"26th AnniversarySALE! SAVE ON GE.'110 FROST' REFRIGERATORS with AUTOMATIC ICEMAKERS • 11A CU. PT. "'No-fltlocr- lil 1'1':1•1 U TOll•Plllll:llll CALL ·DUNLAP ~ Authorlzod GE SIRVICE 548-7788 .,.,,,.SU c •. ftt, MO PlllOST S69995 1109...,.1 101 Jtll'=lltlOllllATO" 90 DAY Member of C1llfornl1'1 L1r911t CA!iH Cooperatlv• Buy1ng WITH APPROVID G11oup With The c;s;;1011 Volumo Buying ~ Powtr of 110 Stor••5 BE ... ,) r • • ' . . " . -. 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548· 7788 ( I t ( I \ ! • '(OL '6, NO.:. 1.J 1, 2 SECTIOl"!S.-211-~A~ES .. • - • f ,:: I " . - ORANGE COUNT'f', CALIFORNIA Today's FfMaJ • N.Y. Stoelu c TEN CENTS J • • -• • Mesa Student Will lie Benaenabered ' I ,. By l\UDI NIEDm:IJ>KI .., Of .. Dl¥'r ........ I In 191S, when Ulla,...., seniGn mum lo.campus.for tbeir'IO.year -will ~ l'J'meriil>er wtio tlie ASB'ilresldent *" .... -~, . "Pfoilobl;y.mt. ~ - Sludtnt body prelidenta fade from the nf.emcry· as quickly as the queen of the ~""'k lJol>.N>d 1hf! '1181\0ler •r the jinlJor varsity football ~m. · . I . TradlUol\aDy llley have been·Tiice guys . .. I . . ···,the 111tdtl: ,/ ' . Who get elected because they're popular and -bow to anange lbelr haJr Juot ... Dave Lumian, outgoing studtlit body president,.~Ooa!o Meaa High School, la a bit dif!ertJJt. 'He got elected by trying not to get eleded. And jno IO)'eart they wru. ~ still be talkinfl' abou~the way be dld it. · · · '1Jus!-pul up bla~k postera '11 over the campus with a black dot in the mid- dle .and nothing' else," r~a:Tia Lumian, 18. President Nixon ventures into the crowd after an Armed Forces O..y. speech In Norfolk, Va., from the deck of the aircraft carrier' Independence and Is bugged by·an exuberant well wisher. --' Haldeman Said 'President Sought CJA Cooperation ' j • •.•.• ~ ' . . . . ' WAslilNGTQN CAPI -FQl'Jll!t'·M that !he FBI was asked to stay oot or ilOtrse :chief o:.:..staff 11.B. Haldeman was that part of the investigation in order to ~.today as ba•lng said, ''It.1is "the: make it look like a c;JA ope.ration. Prendeot~, wish" that \.be CIA ask the Helms told the. committee hi s FBI not to-lnvest.i.Pte ?r1exican1 angles in only · concern then was that the CIA the Watergate affair. shoµld be kept out ot the Watergate ar. Sen. Stuart Symington ( D -Mo . ) , fair entirely. disclosed the statement \Vas nOted in a • -M, Helms appeared at Symington's · committee, another Senate committee rnemo by deputy CIA director Lt. G~. was questioning Archibald Cox, selected Vernon Willers on June 23, 1972 "'T" ~lx by Elliot L. ruchardson to be the in- d'ays after the breat·in at ·Democr'atic dt!PeMen~ special prosecutor in the party beadquartora. _ Watergate case. The memo was mall~ public ~ax as • Cox said he intends to , take full termer CIA dlredor Rlc!iard Hebls;O, i;eopoosiblllly all!i said Richardson re-~ :l!efQn! the Senate Forolp \Jlela., j fains oplf tile aajmrtty "to Ii•• rile bell ~ COimnJHee o!Wbich SYml!iitoii ii a 'JM doli:t'd<»the joti.'"lle &dcieci: "I thfitk melnber. · ', • • '"'. -;, ·~ought. to !"eP'that aull>orlty'" • '. u cuicerned a meethu! on JiiJlei~efi\: ) In anothir dovelo-r. • Jofio/ c. ~-Walton, HehliS,'l'Jia_.,•mt '~Ciiitlield and Frtderict C. tal\'ue, 'al>-~obn n. J!brlfdlma(I. ' peared to liv~-pre;-lrlal s\atement in a ;-At U>e el)<l.'Wilrers noled in.Ju. 111emo, ·' ll(a)iqafe.related clVil •IUJ/• but re- llaldeman' tunied'toJilutand~"'Jt~ ! mil>iecr•dily 1ne11y: Ille Presiilent'1 'wish !hit J"" go •to.,.;t'' Tbci Washbigton Siar-News reported ~.:Gray.'' ~. Patrfoc Gray IIl· was ~~ ,' thi! Justice llepanmenl bas expanded its linl dlreclor of llJe FBI. • pJ'C!be. of tbe UTI<!ercover campaign ap- • • Ask'\d al>oot tbe notation, He1111s 'ISid Uvlties of Donald H. Segr<ttt to five new ho-was in tbe •meetlDg but does oot'r;ecall place$ -san Francisco, san Diego, ihe specinc invocatlon of the President?s .. PJ.ttsbur~h. Portland, Ore., and possibly But he . d . lrucll I lh . Milwaukee.' ria_me. .sai nts ons . rom . e Tbe Star-News , in a story by Jame• R. ·C)\ip'. of staff wel"c asswn~ to-'be car· P:oll 58.id inve9tigators have Segrettl's t,1ng the Prcsi~c.:·','s .a.uthQrl(y.1 • trav~I reoord!I and I 0 n g .d11t1 n c e that timellll""!ligations were Wider ' ' (S.. WA'l'tltGATE Pa&•%) about ''taundeJed'' .catl'll>'Ji&n con. ' ' 2015 Tustin Ave. "1be black dot1 didn't mean anything at all. Jt waa just a black dot. But all the white space gave everybody iots of room for graffiti." Shortly after the phantom election postei:s a~ people on campus le~ it was Lwlpan's work. '!be news of Ills candiclacy spread from mouth to mouth. Alm~ overnight he became the leading oootender. Students expected him to say big things when the c9.11didates gathered for speechmaJdng at a campus political assembly. Lumian didn't say one word. Yet he got a standing ovation. "I did my speech in pantomime along with 30 other actors and actresses who reacted to my pantontl~e;" l>e says. ·~1•m into theater quite a bit and it 's always been my opinioo that politicians were actors and here we were actors playing politicians." F'or the perfom1ance Lu1nian, wha often wears a ba&gy GI jacket to cam· pus, got decked out ln a coat with tails, wh.ile gloves, and a distinguishing top hat. "What did l teli them~ Not much," he insists. But I kissed babies, pumped a lot of hands and handed out a lot of leaflets and campaign buttons with black dots." "I thought for sure I wouldn't get elected. I thooght the number \YOUld be tS.. LUMIAN, Page I I Vesco Warrant Is sued Mitchell, Stans .Plead Innocent • Ill Perjury NEW YORK (UPI) -Former cabinet members John N. Mitchell and Maurice Stans pleaded innocent today to charges of· perjury and conspiracy in connection with a $200))00 _gift kl President Nixon's re-election campaign from a financier who was under federal investigation. The financier and codefendent, Robert L. Vesco, 36, did not appear to enter a plea and a warrant was issued for his ar· rest. Vesco has left the country and last • was reported in Costa Rica. A fourth defendent, prominent New Jersey Republican Harry L. Sears, also pleaded innocent. 1'ssistant U.S. Attorney John Wing ask· ed that a personal recognizance bond or $1,000 be posted for each defendant. But ' Judge John Cannella rejected the ap- plication and released lhe defendants in their own custody. Looking pale and shaken, Mitchell and his lawyers had to push a path through rtporters who mobbed them as they ar· rived at the courthouse. Mitchell's only comments to a barrage of questions were, "Good morning. Ho\v are you? I'm here to enter a plea." Inside the court. Mitchell. Carmer <1l· torney general who left that office to run Nixon's campaign , tilted ™>ck in his chair and wrung his hands as he \\'ailed to answer the charges. He shook hands with. Stans, formerly commerce sec retary and chief o.f the re- election committee 's finances, and Sears who arrived about 25 minutes after him. ·Mesa Council Prepares Cannella ruled that it was unnecessary to have the defendants fingerprinted and photographed in the feVersl marshal's of· fiee .. B1Cycle 'riaers .as well as motorists soon may be required to sign the ticket pads of Cbst'a MeM· police officers if they violate a proposed bicycle ordinance. MemberS. of the city council are ex· pect.ed to act on the ordinance when they meet at 6:30 tonight in city b,3.11 council chambers, 11· Fair Drive. The ordinapce makes it unlawful to drive a motor vehicle in a bicycle lane and makes it unlawful to ride a bicycle outside of a bicycle Jane if one is prt>- vided. CiJy officials say failure of both drivers and bike pedalers to heed the bicycle lane rules have resulted in the recom- mendation ·ot the law. CitY' cotmcilmen Wert. to have enacted the ordlnance·tw0>weeks: ago but the item was ·delayed at the request of Coun- cilman Robert M. Wilson who wanted some extra provisions included. Wilson said the interval would allow City Attorney Roy E. June iruff.icien! time to determine whether ridlnJ on the wrong side of the street and nding on sidewalks could be outlawed. Tonight, city councilmen will also con· sider the following : -Awarding a $244,787 bid f<or the second phase of the Fairview Road storm drain project and a $123,850 bid !or con- struction of slt. ttmis couits at TeWlnkle Park. Senate Bugging Charges Bla~ted PITJ'SBURGH (UPI) -F o r m e r Teafrt.sters President James R. Hoffa said Sunday that many of the c~es ma4e dUring the Senate Watergate hear:- ing were "based on hear&ay eVidence" and would never hold up in court. Hoffa said the Watergate scandal belongs "in front of a grand jury and bas nothing to do with legislative prac· tlces." Ji".o!lo._,.~ tf1C· arraignment,. the three . . Woltiiti'--.•. ,.. t ~" ~~ ol ~.•tti 1 • _ _ -......r '1 t.ee Gfl'li' , · was .a..1,-.c'fiV -, a"fi..,_ ~ •ue.o Gaiilonl4 .~ of , ... .,. ..... _,,pProprialing federal llevJncie Shar· ing funds for st.reel repair 00 stonn drain projects .. -Authorizing architectural work for remodeling the fourth and filth floors of the Civic Center, a project estimated to cost nearly $1001000. -Granting an appeal hearing to Mrs. Joyce Remsen, operator of the Carden-4 Pre-School, 250 W. Wilson St. The appeal is to overturn the council's earlier decision Ordering the abandonment o( teaching activities. Mesa Will File Action Against Pier 11 Club - A public nuisance hearing on the con- troversial Pier 11 beer bar has been canceled, Costa Mesa City Attorney Roy E. June said today . The hearing was to have been con· ducted at 6:30 tonight by the Costa Mesa City Counci l. June said he would in5tead file action in Orange County SUperk>r C.ourt against the owners of the 1976 Newport Blvd . night l}lOI. That request wnl consist of an in- junction for a zoning variance violation as well as abatement as a public nuisance. June explained that the city council oould not initiate tbe nuiaance action because it was discovered the city's public nuisance ordinance covers only dilapidated buildings. Pier 11 was declared unwelcome in Costa P.1esa last month when the oouncil ordered the inning variance revoked. The action was taken after numerous residents co mplalned about allegedly disturbing music and unruly patrons. ~,. N,Y., ~ •• al \lie neftlt j•w:Jn lbe s.utheiit11>11ti!Ct: Ho was apPjljijed• in Jpnµary !Sn. · A federal grand jury Indicted all four defendant'.!! on chtlirges of cohsplracy to obstruct justice· and eo11spiraCy to in- fluence a Securities and Exchange Com- miuion (SEC) investigation of Vesco's financial interest!. In addition, Mitchell and Stans were charged with perjury -accused of lying six tlmes each in their appearances before the grand jury. 1be grand jury wu lnvestigatint a secret $200,000 cash contribution made on April 10, 1972 -three day!I after the new federal .campaign contributions disclomJre law went into effect -to the Ntxoo rH.lection committee. 'lbe $200.000 was returned to Vesco after Sean disclosed it Jan. 31. At that time Mitchell "headea the cam· palgn an·d Stans wa!I chalrrit.!n of its finaoce commtttee. 1be indictment charged that the contribution, in SlOO bills, was delivered to Stans in •·1a ·hington by Seers. Sears at that time was chainnan of the New Jersey Com· mittee for th e Re-election or the Presi· dent. At the time the contribution was made Vesco was under investigation by th e (See MITCHELL, Page l) Bread Sc ulpture Class Offered Want to make some bread! A now c1 ... by the Costa Mesa Depart- ment of Leisure Services oUen some in· teresttng possibilities. It concentrates on the art of bread· sculpturing, of making decorative objects from bread dough by air drying and bak· ing. The two-part class will be held from 7 p.m. lo 9 p.m. at the Cosla Mesa Com· munl:y Ccntei; r.tay 24 and May 31. Regls tralion fee is $5, and signup deadline is this Friday. 1005 'scot· from Teo.a t9 Mel.lea tO \ li\I. copvei:ted Into d>ecu and ca.oil:, So'"''• " B e d · ~ =~·:=im= · ~ .·· · @.Y · • · er.lllli0.:1 f!iospirator,~L.Bar~Mlami: • .~'' ~ t 'l!JFo had ,._ prevtous:t~ l "· Raze Car . --' • . ' I • ·~v· ·RE. Q'~rJ:DZ'c, ri;,'., .,A .-.,f!2.00l ,.JtaliaD eport "!"II" :a. 'U/C-n.c..JJ,' · :V. t•., was deolroyed early'l<iloy -two joy ' • ' "~ piled It up in Irvine Iller a ll0-REP EJ4 T EFFQRT.S . lnu~ ch ... and ·dcllberately aet ' it OD fire . "'ll at fjm ... " Advorttaers often do The pair -Including the driver who ..,..,.... on the fli:1t try when they try • pursuers aatd showed romarkable drtvlni . Daily Pilot dasl!fieCI want ad. Look "'1at sl<Jll _ eBCaped Qlj loot lollowlng tl)e biped bere : • . prtdawn escapade tha~ left a jiatrol cat wrecked in San Bemlllll!QO CqwttY. POINT. Bik to beach, beaut lnveot'"•tora said JJoth ~ .~ mod, 11 br, color TV itlun, 'l ·-,.. cteck, yriy •!.90. (Pltone:No.) · parently escaped Injury in tho l!el'iell' oJ r' two crashui The hooso was rented to tho FlllST· PCl'IOl1 wbo aa w iL Try' caru.c your acf. visor, and slle'll try lier bell<bbolp )'Oii. 1ucceed. Uer direct line Ill IC4'/L • ·-... ?.1 ClljlomUi H!Chway Patrol Sil· l!lch>l"I Martin and Oflicer Lonnie Leitzman 1lao ..caped lnjUry 1boll{ I :311 o.m. when tlity rammed the stolen car in the rear dl!Tb1& ... --. '!be olllcen opolted tbe low-cluna 1m The origin of tho Pantera and the San De Touwo Pantera ~ along Bernardino Coon!)' pw'Sult only came to Sll141loo1a 3li nw-·SIJl Bernardino and light about 3: 15 a.m.. during in-!nlt!alod • pursuit. A CHP spokesman Aid the chut vestlgation of the Irvine pileup. reached speeds ol 120 miles Pai hour, \JUI O!ftcer Doug Sroermerns dilJ>alcl>· ended abruptly when the squOd car cor.. ed, to the scene after jw() neighhort licled with the rear.of the Pon!Ora during awakened by a 9\'l'iet 9r .~ caljed • chase ,,,... ... ,. pol Ice. • Tho , vehicle belonging to Qi: Charles The Paptera's driver ~n:ntiy ~Ill· crooe of 1121 Bellll).I., N,ewport Beach. ced when he:ahOuid ~av;·~~ed on cnrv; hod bte/1 1tolen fro!JW?ohnoon .-d Soo ing Sierra Amb!o Roell .iflO feet south Of( Lincoln Mercuiy • lP"' H4rbof-. lllvd ., , Turtfe Rock Drlve. . "·· .--'. Cotta Meaa. ~· ' The spo,J coupe then, jlji~eened ofl c.o.ta Mffa P• Sil~O f 14cllrlde, seve~ diff'!"nt IP(Jinl$ M._.~¢.pact, ;,,. wit<> talkecl w~ ton alter t ci"4i'1'~ '\reflS,.~ ~~and a the accident. .titey ~ '&t the bi!'J\ ~U 1~Ji0m~ ;, , ., abUity of lbe •4'W'41> llAndle ~ -\y • '.llWrell '.V.,'Cof~.~ ' " ',~ car. · Road end Stl)Ye Annefi!rout, ll 554S'Sler· ra VerdO Road, both described at Just two per90or as being present. They told police the pair looked under the hood of the car, Ulen one tossed a fla'mlng abject at it and the Pantera ex· plodad hi a burst of name. . County Fire Department units were t illed to the scerie, but the exotic ·1ports car wu a total Josg, ]Jlveatiaators said matching of details by witnesses showed the drlver \7as about 20 tind had a short, bushy Afro- style haltdo. wh ile his passenger's deacrlptlou wa5 more vQgue. Police were uncert1ln juat when' the car was ,atofen, but. a ' private patrol told then» A cltti:k at llHO p.m. Sunda,y at tho auto 1genoy u vtiltd that c.vtrythltlg a~ pcared to be secure . .. THEY'LL REMEMBER HIM Mesa Hi9h'1 Dave Lumian • ' • Coast V isitor Killed ~y A uto, 'Num~et ~~-Up' Patrick !\irk 'Sllv}t, 15; had Just Soll!a· a Job lfter de<lainl tO 1pood Ibo --· In Newport Beoch wttb 1\11 motlter. · 'lie_ w~ killed earty Saturday moriilna by a hi~nm mntorlil wftue he ' wu .ap. parently trying lo crosa West C..11 llll!>- way near the Arches overpaaa. Police said they arrested the driver six hours later when he went to Hoag Me- morial Hospital for treatment of shock . Andrew Keith Skiver,.27, of %17 !tith St, Newport Jleach, was charged with man· slaughter. Police said his arraignment ha! not been ocheduled. It will take place some- time after Tuesday at 10 a.m., when l~I services for Mr. Silvia will take place at Angelus Abbey Mausoleum in COmpton. He is survived by his father, Joeeph Robert Sll•ia ol Porterville; bta moth8', Mrs. Jacque Rickles, of 1560 Placentia Ave., Newport Beach ; and two brothers, Micliael Silvis , 29, ~nd Stephen Silvia, 211. "He ·just came down here two weeks ago," Mrs. Rickles said this morning. "He'd been out looking for work . He just \vent out Friday afternoon to apply for a job as a cook at the Surf and Sirloin Restaurant, on West Coast Highway. "The owner called him just before din. ner and said to come back for an inter- view. "I didn't know until the owner called Sunday that he'd been hired.'' Mrs. Rickles said. . "It seems so strange, I had told him to be caroful Oil the highway. I 'wis think· ing about th<i8e nutty mllrders and he said, '1'1om, don't you worry. If my num- ber 's up, it's up.' " ~ Or ange • Coast ·The Los Angeles weather service says the sun will bt'Mk through 1 those low clouds on Tuesday for the first time in 11 days .. Mostly sunpy .a!lernoons ~re expected for tile rest of tbe -11. Highs of Ill at the beaches, rising to 74 inllllld. INSIDE TODAY "The Waltom," Tv~, surprise hit of the sea.son, a11d •the Jul.ft Andrtws Hour, oancelcd m mid- .sea.son, shared top honors at Ole annuol Emmy awo?!'d presnto. tions. See Page 9 for all the de- tails. • ' • Z DAIL.1 PILO I C GoH Course Hit By Court Ruling A pn>pOIOd golf course in lhe heart of Avco Development Corporation 's pro- posed $100 million Laguna Niguel com- plex was alymied today by ain Orange County Superior Court ruliJ1& that bllt$ further grading of the coastal pn>p<rty. Judge Herbert S. H&lands closed a three-day hearing into the issue by grant- ing the injunction demanded by the Enviroomental Coalition of Orange Coon· ty. coastal conservation tnel5\D'e on which the 001.lltion balled Its case as a "damn the torpedoes, full $peed ahead" attitude. He noted that Avco exceutlve Raymond Peloso admltltid in tesLlmony this mom-in& that bis orders wert to carry on With lhe Salt Creek project despl,. wba,.v., restrictions Proposltkxl 20 might lm,pose upon It. ' W A.TERGA.TE SET FOR MORE TY F roMPfffJel LUMIA N ... too heavy for them," LumJan maintai ns. The result at the polls : Lumian 320, nearest oppane:nt 220. ~ Prosecuto1~ Claim s He ' 'Has Power' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Archibald Cox leslified today that Attorney general- designate EIUot L. Richardson bad given him "all the power needed to be ~n­ dependent" In his job as :ipec1al Watergate prosecutor. "The only authority he has retained ls the authority to give me hell if don't do lhe job." Cox told the Senate Judiciary Committee, "and l think he ought to keep that authority." I I . The judge bad earlier granted an in· junctioo that allo bani-8'adJnc opera· lions in a planned shopping ccmplex on the old Goolge C.pron pn>perty that baa an Alpha Beta market at Ila coro. Judge Herlands iJsued lhe order al,.r ~ Aveo defiance of the COalition atlOmeys succeu£ully argued that puuge o( the meuure fnne all o:.m:tructlon activHies within 1,000 yards of the mean high Uk< line ol Calllomia's coeatline. Avco lawyers said alter the bearfng that ll la "hilhlY likely" that they will seek an ~ court revcraal of Judge Herlands' ruling. Once in offict, Wntlan set about mak· Ing some changes. He'd beard about a high school in Coonect.icut where studellls actually partidpot.d fn making !IOl'De administrative decllklns and the idea IOUllded prelt)' good to him. Aa a resull, c..ta Mesa 1IJgb DOit year will have a new l)'ltan of goymunent, called the School Community Govern- ment. Richardson fnlroduced the 61-yelM!l<l Democrat, No. 3 man in the JU!tice Deportment durfng lhe Kennedy ad- minl11tration and part of the Johnson ad- mlnlstratlon, at the same time that be made public formally new guidelines e1- paodfng "' the aulborily that the prC16- ecutor will have in the Watergate case. Richtlrd!on, tn a brief fntroducllon of Cox said the Harvard law professor wouid have "full independence'' in the case. • U'1T-[ l Prafl for l'ktory? '.j ' Frida1J Attempt Chris Huhta, a junior at ~pokane 's Whitworth College, ponders • ' I sign at the entrancj! to the school's C!lqtpus. Off1c1als had no com-. Skylab Repair Training Although its 11trueture Is quite complex, it baslcally involves students and parents in the process of making declsims about their school, as well aa the ad- minlstration . The principal retains th e power of veto. ~ "Student government got a little behind," says Lumian. "To make things rea Uy meaningful on campus you need the support of administrators. teachers and the parents." Sen. James 0. Eastland (0-t.tiss. l the Judiciary Committee chainnan, as ked Cox if he \Vas sure he could work with Richardson according to the guidelines. ment on the effectiveness of the suggestion. ~ I Desegregation Appeal Continues for Astronauts "I am," Cox said. "I discussed them with J\lr. ·Richardson over the telephone. There were a number of points -y,·e talked for two hours -we worked out together. ' Nixed by .Supreme Court ~ HOUSl'ON (UPI ) -With a flight -predicting "they'll fix us up," lhe tine Skyl1b I uln>nauls alep up their flm1 training today for an un- pncodenled al,.mpt Friday to repair the world's largest spaceship. 'Ibe latest plan is for the crewmen to cool the overheated space station by ex· tending a silver and white paruol, a "lieaeh umbrella" Jarge enough to cover a two-car garage, through an elgbl-fncb. square ... airlock. If the changes indeed make things "meaningful," Ltnnian will, ironically, have brought change to campus with the help of a meaningless white poster, a bl.act dot, and a speech that said abtloluteiy nothing. "I'm satisi!.ied they give a special prosecutor all the power nmted to be in· dependent. I certainly intend lo be in· dependent and to take responsibility to the best of my ability." The revised guidelines, dated May 19. give the special prosecutor ''tu 11 authority" over the Watergate case. They say Cox "will have the greatest degree of independence that is consistent with the attorney generaJ'11. sta~tol')_' a~ countability fflr all matters falling wttbin the jurisdiction of the Department ·of Ju!tlce." WASIUNGTON (AP) -An equally divided Supreme Court today denied a Richmond, Va., dlslrict judge the power to reach into suburban Counties t o desegreg\,. i1111er cily schools. tion bas not been seltled by the court's action today. Similar suits are pending 1n ; such citieii: as Detroit, Atlanta and some .. nine other cities. Robert Thomas, Coast Retired Executive, Dies Memorial services are pending Robert M. "Tommy" Thomas, 73 who died enroute to Hoag ~~~~:-:a.: Hospital Fri- day night after sufJering a heart attack in hi.! home at 4601 Tremont Lane, Newport Beach. Mr. Thomas, a retired sales executive fur a Chicago-based iodustr1al manufac· luring !inn, had lived In Newport Beach since 1966. Prior to that he had spent winters here 1lnce 1960. Before his retirement, Mr. 1bonw was vice president of the Canadlan branch of Perfect Circle C.Orp. He retired fn 1957. An enthusiastic yachtsman, M r . 1bomas was a member of Newport Harbor Yacht Club and the owner of the 47-foot cruising yacht Stranger Ill. He was also a member o[ the Chicago Yacht Club and was one of the few Americans ever to be elected to the board or governors of the Royal Canadian Yacht Club. In bia younger years, be was active in racing Star boats on Long Island Sound and in the Great Lakes. He later turned to cruising where he spent considerable ttme afloat on lhe Great Lakes and a cruise from Maine to Florida.He alJo did extensive cruising on the Hudson River and lhe northeast coast. He is survived by his w\fe Lu.cute, one JOO Robert C. of Costa Mesa and three graitdchildren. He also leaves a brothu, c . William Thomas, Monarch Bay and two stepchildren, Airs. John G. George, Three Arch Bay, and James Pearce, Costa Mesa. Before his death Mr. Thomes re- quested that his body be cremated and that the ashes be distributed at sea. 6 Refugees Rescued PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -The Border Patrol today held six refugees from Haiti who were towed here Sunday after spending seven days adrift aboard a leaky eight-foot boat. The four men and two women said they fled their homes because of political and economlc op- pression. OIAN61 COA.lf CM DAILY PILOT Tl!• Or•-Ca.U OA11.Y .. II.OT, w\111 wll~l'I " comblnM "'• .. ..,.p,.1$, l• 11111111"*1 " tl'i.e Ori .... COlll Pllitll&Mng C.....-..ny. 5-· r•ll ldl!lon1 •rt PUl>llfl>td, MOl>d1y tll rOUO!t Frld•r, for-C111!• Ml ol, N1woorl 8HCll, HIJl\11nQ!Oft BtKl'l/F-tl!n V1!11y, LIOUM •Nth, lrwlM /hddfeMClt ~ ill! Ci.m.nl1/ Sii! Jllln C1ptttr1no, A 1lnD!1 t111Joovl ldltloH! 11 """1"""" S.tun:l•rt '""' SvnNr1. Tiii prlntl1>11I PVt>llll!lflill .i1nt 11 11 J.)O \Yell a1r l tr .. I, COii• M .... , C..Utor..i., tMM. a:ob1rt N. W1"4 l'r1&i.M11 11'111 l'VOl!llhlr J1tk a:. C11tl1y Viti l"f .. W...I 1nd ~rel.MMlltlr . Tllo"'•' Ktt •il Ed)IDr n.0'"1' A. Murplli11• ...... .,..1,,, l!"flfw Cli1rl" H. L101 1;,it,..J '· N1U Alllstlfll M.l""tlJllf """"" c .......... °"'" JJO Witt l 1y Str11t Moilint AJJ,.111"P.O. l o• 1160, t2•16 °""'°'"'" H...,.,., a..dll 1m H.....-rt a111fewl1I l.l9llM •-ctn m l'Of'"' A-M1.lftl"""" lllKl'i: 1111S •M<ll .... llvlrd Jin CltfNo'llt: )OS HOtlfl II Cl"llM llNI T.t ...... f714J 64J-4JJ1 c~ A4•••".._. 641·••11 c.py.... ,,,,, Or"..... Cottt l"v!Mlllllfll ~: "'' -••let. JJl1<1Ptll ..... tlllllllrloll 1'1'11.... ., ........ ,llllMMI ..... INY M-~ .......,. 'f'ICl9I ,.. -.1u1ori Of ~ twMI'. • ..... C:Yllt ~ ...... c .. , ....... Cflltlnlll. . llllilierWIM W ~riff dM .....,.,., W ffttfl P.IJ """"'"'' l'llfflfWY • ..._..... q, .. !W'IM¥. l Before lhey do lhat, Charles "Pe"" Conrad, Joseph P. Kenvtn and Paul J. Weitz plan to open the hatch or their A~llo comm\nd module, reach out with sorriething akin to a long boat hook and attempt to free one of SkY.lab's two jam- med power generating solar cell wings. "·I think we have a fairly good chance of doing that," flight director Nell Hutchinson said In an Interview Sunday night. "If we can ge~ the solar curtaln up, and that wing out. we're back in business. We're set." George B. Hardy, a chie f Skylab engineer, said operation of only one of the two stuck solar panels would g1ve the big space station enough extra power to conduct a nonnal ml.ssion and support three crews as: originally planned for a total of 140 days fn space. "I'd say that would take us right back to the top ol the world,'' he saJd at the Jobnlon Spa"" Center. The utronauts, oclleduled for launch al 9 a.m. EDT Friday, will fnlm:epl Skylab 7 hours and 4J minutes later and show engineers at the center and viewers around the world what the station looks like. They will attempt to free Ule solar wing Friday and then get a night's sleep in their Apollo befure entering ~kylah • and raising the umbrella. Conrad will call the signals in orbit. Hutchinson said, "I couldn't think of a better guy I'd want in a position like this. I suspect they'll fix us up ." After honing their space piloting skills in a command ship trainer and reviewing the parts of Skylab's new paraool, lhe throe astronauts plan to ny to Hunl3Ville, Ala., tonight to get in one final practice session fn a 40-fookleep, U million gallon water tank. By OoaUng aubmerged with special breathing awaratus, the astronatuts can simulate weightlessness. 'Illey will prac- tice raising two versions of a large awn· ing -a potential backup skylab remedy that would require wtirk in open space. The three crewmen plan to fly lrom the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville Tuesday evening to Cape Ken· nedy for final preparations for their tn•ice-delayed flight up to the 271-1nilc· high orbiting laboratory. Fonda Believes POWs Qtri eted TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) -Actress Jane Fonda. says Americans have not been told about U.S. servicemen who said they were treated humanely while prisoners of war in North Vientam. Miss Fonda said those who told of torture and cruel treatment were senior officers who have been given "rose- strewn heroes' "'elcomes." "\Vere not being given the stories of equal numbers o( POWs v.·ho say they u·eren't tortured and. in feet, were treated humanely," ~1iss Fonda told a news conference Saturday. fl.-fiss Fonda ancb her husband, Tom ~layden, sa id reports from former POWs \\'ho ha\'C told about humane treatment from their caplors have been rnuffled. Mesa Motorcycle Ra cer Injured J\!otorcyle racer Greg Hartwell, ZS, or Costa Mesa, was seriously injured Sun- day during a cb.aln re.acUon colUslou at Riverside Raceway. Hanwell, of 817 W. 17th St., was pushing his balking cycle off to the side of the track when the sta rter flagged off the field and stvt!ral ma chines collided with Hartwell 's. New Categories For Homemaking Slated at Fair A variety of new contest categories have bee n added to the homemaking skills competition at the 1973 Orange County Fair running July 6-15. "We want everyone to get a chance to show off their homemaking skills, whether they 're children or senior citizens," says Mrs. Dee Cox, home economics supervisor for the fair. To stimulate-interest she has added 23 new coni.sta, including reupbolatery, orjginal recipes using cake mixes, junior table setting, and honey-baked goods. A zigzag portable sewing machine will he pre!ellled to the winner of tho grand award for the Dl06t outstanding entry in clothing and textiles. Other prizes include needlework kits. dinnerware and gift certificates. Premium lists and entry blanks are ob- tainable from the fair oUlce, 88 Fair Drive,. Costa Mesa. For additional in· formation , call 545--1131. Deadline ror returning entry blanks is June I. From Pagel WATERGATE • • The guidelines provide Cox full author!· ty for issuing warrants, subpoenas, or other court orders; conducting pros- ecutions; determining to what extent he would inform or consutlt with the at- torney general , and in detemining when he had completed his duties. Cox has said he would not feel an obliga tion to inform Richardson of v.·hat he ~·as doing in his investigation. The Democrats have contended that Richardson must be completely removed from the lnvvestlgaUon so as to avoid any auaplclon that, ... member of Pren.- dent Nixon's official family, be was m any way exerting control over the case. Richanlson said rej>eated!y he )'ould give the special prosecutor • • f u 11 authority" over Watergate but would re- tain "ultimate authority" over him. The Democrats insisted that the prosecutor have "complete independence." From Page l MITCHELL ... SEC for allegedly "looting" $224 million from four mutual funds controlled by his interests. There was no written decision from the court and no word as to how its members voted in affinning an appeals court decision that earlier had overturned the district court order. • An eqoally divided court automatically affirms an appeals court decision. In other actioos today, the court: -Held that stiffer punishments are consti tutional in retrials. -Ruled that the National Labor Rela· tions Board has no authority to determine the reasonableness of union fines against members. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., a long- time member of the Richmond school board, did not take part in setting up the four.four split. In January of im U.S. District C.ourt Judge Robert Merhige Jr. orderod the predominantly black Richmond city school aystem combined with the predomfnanUy white systems l n nelghborfn¥ Henrico and Chesterfield CounUes. In June last year, the U.S. Circuit Court at Richmond , in a S.-1 decisiop. disagreed with 1t-ferhige and reversed his order. The issue of metropolilan desegrega· The split-court decision ts not blndlng ia those cases. Today's one-sen.tence ~clion by the court read simply. "The 1udgment ts af· firmed by an equally divided court." Unassessed is the impact of the court vote on the school busing issue on Capitol Hill." Antibusing action had been brought to a vlrtual standstill pending court ac· tion in the Richmond case. The Nixon administration had argued against metroPoUtan desegreialion ~n a sharply worded friend of the court brier. The ca se reached the high court on ap- peals by the NAACP Legal Defense Fund and the Richmond school board. E:ach sought to refis~ate Merbige's order. 1be civil 1'bt lawyers contended that the Circuit Court's ruling did not affirm . the principles that the court set forth in 1954 when It struck down school segrega· 1 lion. In other action the Supreme Court ruJ.. ed that the National Labor Relaliooa ·, Boar,d ha11 no authority to determine the reasonableness of union fine5 against members. · • In a 6-3 decision, the court said the act t creating the NLRB gave it no right to in- terfere in such internal union matters. ~ The reasonableness of the fines~~ prop-" erly be determined in statee.ts, the high court said. J- The decision reversed an appellate . court ruling in a case invol~ing the Boeing Co's Michoud plant 1n New Orleans. Mitchell also got Presidential counsel telephone records. John W. Dean III to comn:umicate with Segrett.i is a young Califomiia attorney Casey to seek a ""'"tnt\n.:>rnent of the \ Woman, Boy Found Dead in Vehicle who bas pleadl'.. '. lnnOcent in Florida (JD a ,...,.. ,...... . .._. TONIGHT SANTA CRUZ (AP) -A 43-year-<>ld charge of !!ending fate campaign return date of SEC aubpoena11 served on COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL -Saratoga womau and an infant were literature. 'Ibe Federal Btll'eau of Vesco employes, the indictment said. Regular meeting, C\ty Hall . 6:30 p.m. found de ad from exhaust fumes in a car Investigation ha!! been told SegretU was The purpose, the indictment said, was 11J~DAY, MAY %l parked in the Santa Cruz hofountains, paid $30,000 to $40,000 in campaign funds to prevent disclosure by the employes COSTA MESA SENIOR CITIZENS th by President ixon s ormcr persona relating to the secret Vesco cootributlon. CLUB -es ay u , m N. ' f I Tu d Cl b Com un1"ty police said. Mary Ruth Popelka and e · t W K I b h · r-11 3 boy, who a pathologist estimated at lawyer. Her ~-t . a m ac · The four defendants were accused of Recreallon '-'Cnter. a.m.· p.m. Id he S N "d N" "E · ·1h a d by beiween one yea r and 18 months o , Ano! r tar-ews story sa1 1xon ''corruptly and by threats and by UCI Lecture -venings wi n campaign advisers still were distributing threatening communication " having at-Eugene IAring," Fine Arts Village ~·ere discovered by a local man, Police "hush money" to one or more of the seven ,;';•m~pt;•d;;;t•;::i;nf:;:lu;e:;:n;••~t:;:h;•t;;i;n:;:v•;•;tig~a;ti;o:;:n·==:;:Th;•;•;;te;r.;8~p.;m;.=========='a=id=.============j convicted Watergate conspirators as 1 i reclntly as earl: Apr.I -about the same time that fede ral investigators \Vere being told about efforts to cover up the scandal, 1be principal recipient apparently was G. Gordon Llddy, said to be lbe org::.izer of the burglary of Democratic head· quarters last year, the newspaper reported, quoting unnamed sources. Liddy ls the only ooe of the seven to have received a final sentence, and he is serving an addJUonal jail tenn for refus- ing to tesUfy under immunity. Camper Stolen At Ne ,vport Site A Newport Beach man ~·ho took a pros- pcc.1ive buyer lo see his 91,~foot camper unit at a Costa Mesa storage yard over the weekend found someone else decided he wanted it. Charles C. Palmer, of 530 Kings Road, dlscovered the rig stored at 187 E. t81h St., pending its sale, was nowhere to he round. _... Tite property owner was contacted and told Palmer he just assumed the camper, valued at $2,600 including bedd ing inside it, had been sold when it vanished more than two montha ago. College Park Group Formed Mnre than 70 residenls In the C:Ollege ?ark area of C.Osta Mesa have formed a homeowners' organliatlon and elected a bo11rd of directors. 26th AnniversarvSALE! SAVE ON GE"''iiO FROST' REFRIGERATO_RS with AUTOMATIC ICEMAKERS ''·1 CU. PT. "llO·ftll;OJT s324•~ llf 1'1110 l!ltA TOlt01'1taUl!lt 17.f CU, "· "NWl:OJT" It l~ll:IOSll:A TOll:.fl"Jt•SI•• Member of C11llfornl1'1 Lergest 90 DAY CASH Cooperative lvylno WITH APPROYID Group W ith The CllDll Medf~l autMri11~ at River.ilde Cnm· munity Hospital &aid today th-at Hartwell required surgery, but that he now I~ In satlslactory condition in the Intensive care unit. ' College Park l!! bounded on lhti oorth hy Merrimac Way and Wilson Street and . Fairview Rood and Harbor Boulevard . Authorlled GE SERVICE 548-7788 Volume Buying ~ Power of 1 to Stor•• iiiJ {8H Hartwell was said to h11ve suf£ertd e broken wrist, leg and hip ln the accident. 1, Information about the College Part lBlS NNIMRJ BLVD. Homeowners Assoclation ls avallabl<! tnru l"'1m Mrs. Grace Massello, ~152. '!....---------------------------------Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548· 7788 I t ' I \ l ' . I I