HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-05-31 - Orange Coast Pilot31, 1m
S ylah Suff e s
2 New
llOUSTO (UPI) -Two new. JIDftr
falJma struck America's ort>iting sty\ab
&oday. 'Ibey btled major flight plan
1evisi&m aacl added urgency to bok1
plms a a spaoenlt to free a jammed
solar cell YinC and double the specie ~
tion •• . electi1ca1 supply.
11le .... boatlles cost Skylab
another • pen:imt al Its liml1ed ~
supply -making a total ol U perceit
apparent)J at permnenlly, and nbbinC
the lOl-too space stab ol any margin
for alleorblng future laaes wkbout
p,....p,.eJ
ONOFRE ••.
Hopefuily, this wquld oome from our~
pliers."
The tlity awns 20 percerit of the plant
located nmr the Western White Bouse at
San Clemente. Southern Ca 1 i for n i a
In a supplementary s t a t e m e n t
dimilJuted after lhe suit was filed in the
U.S. District Out for the District of
Columbia, David Brower of San Fr~
cixo, presidert al the FOE, said:
"Ovenrhelming 8Clmtific evideooe bu
shown that the lnrea of millioos of people
are being threaimed by the operation of
thele plants. Each of these plants con-
tam,. a quantity of radioactive material
equivalent to the fallout from several
thousand Hlroshima-size nu c I ear
weapons.
''Yet the safety systems necessary to
prevent release of this radioactive
material into the envihmment are crude
IJJd untested."
Some of the AEC's own scientists have
made cautionary statements about the
emergency core-cooling systems, but the
AEC contends that it& emting safety
criteria regarding IUCb systsns is aif·
ficient.
An AF.c spokesman said in a statement
that .. While we have not yet studied the
petition we know of no basis for suspen-
ding operation of ooclear power plants,,-
"The commission presently has under
way a comprehensive public proceeding
to consider whether p r e s e n t re-
quirements for emergency core cooling
systema - a backup safety system in
nuclear power plants -should be
modified in any way," be said.
Failures
~eclcflt!on =-24 percieot ol tbe
st.atiaD. s dec:ti lcal bahttiel shut down
temporarily. 'Ibis plattd a hefty lmd an
tbe mnamq betteries, depleting thmi
and fon::int redDced operaticm today to
JlrlWide time for tt:dlU Pc-
'nlere was Deftr' a tllrea1 to i;:;~r._
ol amtes "Pm'" Qmrad,
Kernl and Pml J.
But mission caa&rol c• eele4 an
porunt eai1b tdOlllcel lllrft1 artginaDy
scbeduled for loday and Did the mipe of
all such au''~ plmnd by Che cmr 'll'«lkl proa.bty be reduced.
11le j84Aalam OCCQmd after ~
pointed its nose earttrnrd Wedneday
af1enloan and made man's first ex-
aminations from artJit ol terTestrial
ibOUl'OfS daring. 17,114-mile per hour
sweep from Utah past Mesko and
Brazil's Amam1 Basin to the farmlands
ol Colombia.
<banging (be space Jtaticm'I position
forced it to swl1ch from its good solar
cell dedJ'ical gem:a atcr"S to battery
power became its llOlar cells no ~
were f.ac:iDg the sun. Engineers said this
maneuver triggered a chain o1. eveJl&s
that produced the problem•
Flight director Neil H u t c b I n s on ,
meeting with reporters in a midnight
news oonference at tbe Jobaon SJ*e
Center in Hou.stem, said engilwrs sUll
did not fully UDdentand the failures.
"There's going to be a lot of engineer-
ing analysis done t«llgbt," he said.
With the latest electrical failure,
Hutchinson said, Skylab's problems ilJ.
elude "three or four biggies that we're
chasing and a myriad of little ones."
The other "bjggies" jnchtded recurring
difficulties with one of the space station's
stabili7.atim gyntiuipd, the failure of a
telescope the astronauts tried to use
Wednesday to photograph the Milky Way,
and an overheated cabin.
Among the little problems was one
reported earlier in the day by Qmrad -
a dripping cold water faucet in Skylab's
kitchen. Canrad saJd "it's obviously got a
bad <Hing in it" IDd asked that time for
some orbital plwnbing repairs be
scheduled soon.
But despite their problems, Hutchinson
said, the astronauts bad a very sue·
cessful sixth day in space. They shot pie·
lures of fWnes streaming two million
miles out from the sun, and tested
themselves for motion sickness by whirl-
ing in a device like a barber chair.
F,....P .. el
NEW WATCH DEVELOPED • • •
said the watch represents the natural
outgrowth of sophisticated military com-
puter technology that Hughes has
spectalized in for years.
The watch design eliminates all mov·
Ing, wearing perts and instead of a
mechanical balance wheel -or twting
fork in some watches -it uses precise,
tmva.rying vibrations of a tiny quartz
crystal to tick off its minutes and
secmds.
The crystal pulses more than 500,IXXI
times per second and that rapid beat is
cut down to ooe per second by a tiny elec·
tronic component that makes the Hughes
watch unique.
The tiny part that comprises the heart
ol the watch is a chip or ceramic one·
tentlH>f-an-inch aC1'06S and scientifcally
imprinted with more electronics and wir·
ing than is in the average television set.
"The chip has more than l,SOO
transistors oo it," said Eckess.
'Ibe average hand-size transistor radio
has less than 20 full-sized transistors.
The chip -known in the electronics in·
dustry as a Complementary Symmetry
-Metal Oxide Semiconductor (C.MOS )
feeds the ultrastable output of the
vibrating crystal into tiny lighted digits
under the blank crystal ol the watch
To get the time and date, the wearer
pushes two buttons on the side or the
watch. The numbers flash on the screen
momentarily and then go out until the
next push.
Weakland explained that the push-but-
OU.NCH COAST IC
DAILY PILOT
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MaN91nv Edl!Or
Ch•rl11 H. L.01 lticJ11rd P. Noll
""i•lont AMM91no Edi!ors s.. a. •••• Office
305 North El CamiftO ltol, 92'72
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ton operation is DeCi!Sll8ry to romerve
power in the two tiny batteries that
pofer the watch. If the digits were
lighted all the time, the batteries would
wear out rapidly, be said. Now they last
a year.
The c o m p a c t , hermetically·sealed
design of the watch makes it almost in-
vulnerable, according to Hughes officials.
It is said to be shock.proof, dust.proof,
waterproof, beat-proof and never needs
cleaning or lubrication.
Hughes management Is coofident there
is a large market for the watches, which
will go on the market under various
brand names starting Jn August. Full-
scale production will get under way
within a month.
Weakland estimates the initial l'OSt of
the watches at about $175 but said that
within only a year or two, models will be
available for "under $50." The watch
costs Hughes about $35 to produce.
Weakland said the conventional watch
industry is in an uproar over the new
watches.
By 1980, Weakland said, the worldwide
watch market will be 300 million watdles
per year and Hughes officials think the
new design will slowly take over a good
piece of tba t market.
Weakland and his marketing men said
they fully expect their watch to go into
competition with less e x p e n s i v e
mechanical timepieces now on the
market once the initial demand for the
watch subsides.
A by-product of the new Hughes prod-
uct is the volume of business it has
already produced at the Newport Beach
plant.
"We are already expanding our space
and probably will need more to keep up
with the demand ," said Eckess. "The
shortage of defense contracts won't be
fell here, that's for sure."
Weakland said virtually every major
watch company in the world is "pounding
af our door" and he said there could
easily be too much business for the new
watch.
The prospective buyer of the Hughes
digital watch probably will have no Idea
it is a Hughes model when he buys it,
Weakland said. The companies who have
bought the new system probably won't
advertise the fact Hughes made the
workings. he added.
But Weakland contends that when the
watch starts appearing in the stores this
August and when the prices begin drop.
ping as supply meets demand , the
mechanical watch and the corner watch
repair shop may become things of the
past.
Race Baffles Reagan
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan said Wedoelday the Los An-
geles mayoral race In which city coun-
cilman Thomas Bradley defeated in-
cumbent Sam Yorty was "confusing"
and tbe lssuee were never clear to him.
But Reagan refused to comment on the
outcome of Tue8day'1 election, saying
only, "The people have spoken."
THERE'S ANOTHER PAINTING THAT LOOKS LIKE THIS IN LONDON; WHICH IS REAL?
Work, Supposedly That of Italian Chierici Gae tan, Was Given to Laguna Beach Art Museum
Family Feared
Dead in Alaska
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -The
search for an Army sergeant, bis four
children and their boat operator was of-
ficially disrolltinued when officials said
all six occupants of the boat "are
presumed to have perished al sea."
The search began Saturday evening
when the group failed to return from
what was to have been an all-day fishing
trip ipith of Seward, Alaska.
Aboard the 26-foot Army ftshing boat '
when it left Seward Saturday morning
were Sgt. IC. Floyd Harper, 40, originally
from Riverbank, Calif.; his four children,
Ilse, 16, Mary Bell, 15, Floyd Jr., 13, and
Christine, 8, and the operator of the boat,
Pfc. James R. Foster, 18, from Old
Hickory, Tenn.
Front Page l
SUSPECT ARRESTED • • •
Mesa, is accused of planting a pipe bomb
that blasted a hole in the roof ot The
Sizzler steak house in Huntington Beach
three days alter it was !10bbed.
The FBl entered the case as a result of
that blast which shattered the dinner
hour for scores of patrons, none of whom
was injured by some lucky quirk of fate.
Detective George Wilson -ironically
-convince.<! the alleged bomber to come
to police headquarters and surrender
himself by phone after ~veloping in-
formation on the Telephone Bandit case.
lnvestigators said tliis morning that
Orange County deputy district attorneys
issuing the complaints are urging that
S50.IXXI bail be set to keep the defendants
in jail.
Besides Alcala, tl~y include Paul C.
LaJoie. 18. also of 525 Victoria St., Costa
l\Iesa; Todd B. Chappelow, 18, of 18151
'l'."ellowstone Drive, Costa Mesa, plus Join
P. Diener, 19, and Jeffrey D. Welch, both
transients.
A seventh youth was actually in police
custody this morning for questioning in
connection with the pickup of Rounds
about 8 p.m. Wedoesday.
His name was not released because in·
vestigators said be was actually just de-
tained at that point and not yet facing
any specific charge. ·
During what gradually grew to a three-
weelt reign of terror to s o m e
restaurateurs and market operators in
West Orange County, the notorious
Telephone Bandit struck seven times.
.A mystef! caller would warn the
manager wbo answere<I the phone that a
high-powered rifle was pointed at hll
head and a bomb inside the premises
would be detmated if he failed to turn
over the mone.
FINAL DAYS
·l
..... P .. el
TING • • •
...
11th Century painter.
ftltlpt1c1111 will be to cseunm:ne wbdber
• Ollerk:l'• palntlnp have 11 e c o
ftlua ~ to establish •
market.
H said that Mn. Brtskin bad purch»
eel the painting in Rome ~ a major
gallery there aboUt 20 years qo.
"Flnt, we'll go back to ChriBUe'1 and 1
get whatever information theY can give.
Then I'D write to a major museum in 1 Rome for further information," Enman I
said. I
She donated it to the Laguna museum ,
after moving to a Leisure World ·
residence, he said. '
He said that even if it turns ~t the 1 museum has a copy, the painting will
still be valuable. :
"It's a good example of 19th Century
Italian work," he said.
"Its a great drawing card for
children," Enman said !>f the sprightly
painting depicting a boy scanng ~s
younger sister to the annoyance of their ~
mother. . He said while fakes are fairly coi:nmon .
in the art world, this is the first tune a
conflict bas occurred within the museum.
The painting is on view from 11:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. daily at the museum's upper -,
lobby.
Border Patrolman
Slays Mexican
I '~
Youth; 3 Seized ..
CAMPO (AP) -A Mexican national
bas been shot to death Jn a struggle witb ·
a U.S. border patrolman and three othera ·•
have been arrested, the border patroJ
says. • •
Patr1& agent Robert W._ Gilbert e~.
coun~ five men wear.mg shoulder
packs Wednesday near the border town..;
of Campo, 35 miles east of San Diego, a_
patrol spokesman said. •
Believing the men were carrying co°"•
traband into the United States, Gilbert"
tried to arrest them and bad handcuffed '
two together when be was attacked, the-
spokesman said. _
He said Gilbert shot one man to death
and struck another ~ his pistol ~
man escaped across the border.
The dead man was identified as Cruz'
Cedillo Lopez, 18, of Tecate, Mexico. •
·J .26thjll!li1Jf/:Jarq Sak
COLO WATER. CRUSH.ED ICE or CUBES
WITHOUT OPENING THE DOOR!
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[Ifft, i '. •"•o.·--~' I TH2411P •
1Z"di11onll ADVENTURER
PERSONAL PORTABLE TV
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Diffieult Rescue
Paula Shouse, 24, of Torrance was thrown from her
horse while ridiDg in Laguna Hills Wednesday and
:..iffered a broken leg. The terrain was too steep
f?r a vehicle (one got stuck) and Orange County
frremen had to hike about 1 % miles into the hills
DallY P'llot P'hoto1 W .i.. ~
to make rescue above intersection of El Toro and
Laguna Canyon Roads. Ten men carried her out.
She had suffered a broken arm last week in an auto
accident. In picture below Dave Merchant applies
splint to leg.
Forget Gas Hoard Notion
It's Illegal to Store More Than a Gallon at Home
s DAILY PILOT •
'1 as ' led
oman, 91, Has No Doubts of Space Ship
AURORA, Ta. ) -A tl·~
woman says sbe the nigbl on
April 19, 1897 when her parents went to
the spot w an alrlhlp crashed into
Judge Pnx:tar's well and later when the ~
pilot was buried in the community
cemetery.
"That crasb certainly caused a Jot of
excitemeot," Mary Evam said Wedne!t-
day. "Many people were frightened.
They didn't know what to expect. That
was years before Wt! had any regular
airplanes or other kind of airships."
The Wright Brothers made their
historic flight at Kitty Hawk, N.C. in
December. 1903.
Some believe Qiat the airship that
crashed at the 'J'eUS well was from
another planet, if indeed such ' an airship
exists. Mn. Evans has no doubts.
"I was only about 15 at the time and
had au but forgotten the incident until it
apPe&nd in the newspapers recently,"
she said. "We were Jfving in Aurora at
the time but my mother and father
wouldn't let me go with them when they
went up to the crash site at Judge Proc-
tot's well.
"When they returned home, they told
me how the airship had exploded. The
pilot was tom up and killed in the crash.
The men of the town who gathered bis
remains said he was a small man and
buried him that same day in Aurora
Cemetery."
The UFO advoc11tes have combed the
Aurora area with metal detectors, radia·
tion meters and scientific devices in re-
cent months in an attempt to get some
tangible evidence to file with a court
order to exhume the body of the alleged
pilot. Pieces of the metal taken from the
area have been sent to various scientists
and metallurgists for examination.
A physics professor at North Texas
State University tested one piece and said
it was unusual because It was 75 percent
iron but lacked many of the properties
common to iron. The professor, Dr. Tom
Gray, said It was not magnetic and was
shiny and soft instead of dull and brittle
like iron.
"I don't mean by my comments to in·
dicate whether this Is of terrestrial or ex-
traterrestrial origin, but that the physics
of that much iron being not magnetic
stirs my curiosity as a scientist," he
said.
Restaurant Hit
For $2,200 Theft
Butglars who smashed a Window to
gain enby"tocilt $2,!00 In casb'Wednesday
from the cashier's desk of a South
Laguna restaurant, Orange ColDlty
Sheriff's officers said.
UPI Tollpholl
IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE? SCIENTIST WONDERS
Dr. Tom Gray Examines Metal Sample From Texas 'Space Ship'
Property Owner W inS
Appeal on Conditions
A Capistrano Beach property owner She protested that neighbors on both
won an appeal Wednesday to conditions · sides r 1 !ier property had buildings en-
imposed bn improvement of her property croachir t:i as much as one foot from
by the county Planning Commission. the property line.
June Weber, whose home is located on · With the support of Supervisor Ronald
the ocean side of Beach Road in the Caspers of Newport Beach she won the
private Capistrano Beach community appeal. She will be able to build the
between the Santa Fe Railway tracks carport to within three feet of her prop-
apd the beean wants to expand an ex-erty line.
isting garage by adding a carport, use Caspers said he did not think the set·
part of the garage for a studio, build an back was that important. "On Lldo Isle
interior stairway to the second floor apd where I live there are no setbacks ln
add a bathroom. •· :··· pl~· e'na it does not seem tc make a
The commissioners lq}\I her she could big difference.'.' the supervisor said.
not encro!l<;h. ~ore tban tla"ee ·feet into
the reqwred s.1-root setback from the lll:no: Q to Halt fro11t p.rope.rty line. , ., ~
Mm. Weber said such a restriction
would make her proposed Improvements 'P f G ' impossible on the small beach lot. a y as OU O Deputies said Intruders ransacked the
manager's office and pried open filing cabinet drawers. at Ben Br 0 w n' s Fisher Hooks Botly SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (UPI) -The llli-Restaurant, 31106 Pacific Coast Highway nois House has passed and sent to the
in a successful hunt for the day's takings. ZEPHYR COVE, Nev. (AP) -A Lake state Senate a bill requiring that no more
Also under investigation by deputies Tahoe fisherman bas told authorities than half the toilets in public places
assigned to the South Laguna area is the here be hooked and pulled up the body of could be pay toilets.
theft of hardware valued at more than a man while fishing from a boat near "This bill is for relief of the little guy
$330 from a home under construction at here. Tracy Vincent told the Douglas -I might add a gut issue -that would
32611 Caribbean Drive. County sheriff's office )le pulled the body wipe out pay toilets," Rep. Robert Mann
By JOHN SCHADE
-the home are caused by "the improper
Officers said intniders pried open a to within about eight feet of the boat (D-Chicago), sponsor of the bill, said
anyone wanting to store more than the door leading to the workshop area then Tuesday before his line broke and the Wednesday.
gallon limit must obtain a permit which drove off with the brand new.fittings. body sank back Into the lake. The bill was passed on a 104 to 20 vote. Of "'' Dally Piiot SI.ti .
Anyone thinking about hoarding ga~
line to survive the current fuel shortage
had better think again.
Orange County and its incorporated
cities have strict regulations governing
the storage of flammable liq1,1ids in th e
home.
Deputy Fire Marshal Stan Boettcher
of ttie Orange County Fire Department
-which serves all uninc rporaled areas
in the county and seven cities, including
Irvine and San Juap Capistrano -said
persons can store up to one gallon
of gasoline in their dwelling wi'tbout a
permit. . Any more than one gallon 1requires a
•·real need" permit· in which the fuel
must be "absolutely necessary" for the
operation of the facility. Such a permit is
hard to attain, Boettcher added .
Boettcher said many of the injuries in
use of gasoline in close proximity to ap-
pliances that produce a spark or flame."
Gasoline is especially d a n g e r o 11 s
because its fumes may crawl along the
floor and reach a flame, Boettcher said.
"When ignited," he added, "one pint of
gasoline power is equal to 10 sticks of
dynamite."
Orange County regulations are based
· on the 1971 Uniform Fire Code for the
West Coast. Most community fire
departments have their own rules based
on the code.
·County regulations require storage in
metallic containers with a p p r o v a 1
stamps. Plastic containers are not ap-
proved becau~e of possible seam leakage.
San Clemente fire regulations require
all gas over one gallon be stored un-
derground and pumped by a remote
pump. Fire engineer Don Hodgson said
LA Star ObScenity, Fraud
Trials Slated-for July 23
Separate trials have been ordered for
fraud and obscenity allegations filed
against the Los Angeles Star in Santa
Ana municipal court action which does
not rule out tbe possibility that both sets
or charges may be aired in one court ac-
tion.
Judge Paul Mast Indicated Wednesday
that he would have no objection to
amalgamation provided lawyers on both
sides can reach agreement well before
the July 23 trial date he set for both
cases.
Star operators and owners named by
tile dlstric;:t attorney's office in boU1. ao-
tlons pleaded innocent Wednesday after
;Judge Mast overruled a series of pretrial
objections filed by the defense.
Star editor Paul Eberle, the High Class
Publishing Company of Los Angeles and .a vending machines in Orang~ Coun-
ty" are among the defendants hsted by
the prosecu,lon in both actions.
The newspaper is accused in the fraud
action of pu_blishing an artlc:le that wa
i:haracteriied by District Attorney Cecil
Hicks as "an open invitation 'to defraud
the Pacific Telephone Company."
The article, "Call Me Anytime,
Telephone Credit Code fOr 1973," analyz-
-ed the system used 'by the telephone
company to log and record credit card
calls. " Hicks claims that use of the in-
formation contained In that article of
April 11 may already have cost many
Orange County subscribers millions of
dollars. Obscenity allegations against the
newspaper are based on a number of
stories and advetllsements carried by
the Star prior to April 11 and are ln no
way linked to the fraud charge, defense
lawyers have pointed out.
•
Quentin Inniate Dead
SAN QQENTIN (AP) - A priSon in-
mate has been fotmd dead from head
blows and strangUlatlon, officials say.
The body of Edward Salino Lopez, 30,
was found Wednesday in the prison gym-
nasium's showers with a massive skull
fracture, marks oo his neck and four
shoulder stab wounds, priaoo spokesman
Lee De bord said.
requires an exacting storage and building .-----------------------------------.....::
Inspection as well as a strong justifica-
tion for need.
The Costa Mesa fire department also
works under the 1971 Uniform Code. Fire
platoon commander Gary Golson says
resident dwellers may store up to a
gallon without a permit, but only 10
gallons with a permit.
Golson added that most permits were
issued to businesses with private dwell·
ing inspection not a normal procedure.
Issuance of a permit depends on the
hazard possibility and how the flll'!l is
stored. Only safety approved metallic
containers are permitted.
Fountain Valley Fire Marshal Floyd
Warr said that gas up to one gallon does
not require permits for private dwelling
storage. Fuel must be in sealed, metallic
containers. Approved glass and plastic
containers are allowed, but not recom-
mended.
Warr attributed mlll\Y of the fire in-
juries to perscm using gasoline to clean
grease off their garage floor and to fill-
ing lawn mowers near pilot light flames.
Newport Beach Fire Captain Jim Top-
ping found it "very unlikely that a permit
for more than one gallon in a dwelling
would be issued."
Newport · just completed a home In-
. spectlon program in which residents re-
quested a check of their dwellings, Top-
ping added. Tbougb gasoline power
boating is a major part oi Newport life,
no appreciable number of gas injuries
have been reported.
Laguna Beach regulations come under
the 1967 revised fire code. A permit is re-
quired for more than one gallon of gas
storage. Fire Marshal Jim Presson says
the storage of 55 'gallons of diesel fuel In
specially approved upright shipping
drums plus pumps have been approved,
but "regular gasoline, never." Presson
admits enforcement of private dwelling
requirements .is "tough."
1be Himtington Beach code allows
single r !dent dwellings to store a gallon
of Oammable liquids f!1f maintenance
purposes only. Fuels are pt'Ohtbited In
apartments except for bulldlng main-
tenance. Fire captain Roger Hosmer
says tile department averages about one
gasoline fire a month , mostly caused
when the fuel is used for non-fuel
purposes.
' Your favorite decorator here to asmt you.
H.J.GAl\l\ETI fURN\TURE
PROFESSIONAL
INTE,RIOR DESIGNERS
Open Mon.,
Thurs. & Fri. Evet.
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF. -,,./"\.~.
"There Is no authority to check single
dwelling far violations except upon re-
quest or obriom hazards that are code
violatloos," he added. 1-----------------------------------------
\
4 DAILY PlLDr Tlllrfdair, ..., 31, 197)
ank -----
•Life Saered~
Two Senawrs Want Abortion Ban
Anyone Want
A Jet Airport?
WILD BUJE YONDERS: The presl·
dent d 0rqe County's llio:rglOWn
airline ...... -only yesterday In
Newport Ben and his view semwl to
suggest that Orange County Airport just
Isn't loin8 to mike the grade by the year
1880.
He II Bob aifford, the heed mm ol Air
cailfamla, an outfit that evayllod;y
Jau&fwd at only a~ years beck when H
cnmlled up IOIDe uled Jets ml declared u would ny to San Frlaldaco.
• stats bPe petttioDed the &ija ewe Court
for a maal ol lta Iberian dedskm
11le ...,,.,wtnwnt would establish that
fetuleS are per www mtitJed to coo-
stitutkml and lepl protectioo. In Its re-
cent deddon on abortlom, tbe SUpreme
Court held that fetulea are not pean11 In
the whole lell8e ml that they do not
poaea tbe capablllty ol mtaningful life.
BUCllJ.BY TOOlt DIBUE with the
eourt's finding and said the terms of the
aID«ldmmt would apecl.flcally establish
tha1 unbcrn children are penons within
the meaning of the 5th and 14th
aroeMmeuta to the Constitution.
In dllcnnlng the cne exemption to the
ameodrnmt wl*!b would pennit an ahar'·
tion if the mother'• life la threatened by
pregnancy, Buckley said:
"The emnptkll ii 1everely lbnited in
scope, and most emphatically does not
cover tboee spurious claims of risk to
mateinal llfe and health which are a ::rr-cloak fU' abcrti<ll 00 de-
'MJ'llE LARGER question Is not only
A funny thine happened to Air Oal,
hawever, GD Its way Into the sky. People
started riding the big jets with the
oranp and gold sunburst on the noee.
l.Gtl d people rode them. Air Cal
lJondflNI ~ booming . Local fo1b
started calling it "our rubber-band
airline" lo an idelltlflcation cl aHectlon.
SOON, JWWEVER, a lot al. other air-
lines nodced all tboee folb Air Qll WU
hauling to and fro from The City. And
~ wanted to get into the act.
Lots cl big jets began flyin« out of our
county aerodlome and that started the
cries from folks who live beneath the
takeoff pattern that we ought to Bail the
Jets.
Newspapers Tell 2 More
Possible Break-in Cases
Now it it interesting that Air Cal's Cllf.
ford casts his eyes ahead to 1980 and
clearly doesn't enviSion Orange County
Airport as being sufficient to liand1e air
passenger demand. By then, Bob sug·
gests H million people will be wanting to
Catch jets oat ol Orange CGunty for
someplace elae.
IN ms TALK before the Newport
Hartlor a.mber of Commerce, CliHord lliggelted that our good Board cl
StiperY1lors l8n 't doing everything It
could to find us anode' airport which we
are golJJg to IOl"ely need. We reported he
was blghly critical and assailed the
board's action and Air Cal Bob kind ol
takes exoeptJGa to that. Clifford figures
he was simply pointing out that deapiUI a
couple ol rather expensive a l r
transportation studies, Vf1' don't seem
much clo9er to lll'ldlng a super jetport.
Well, delplte the lnterpretatJon of
strength you put on bla early-morning
remarks, you cai understand why the
good aupervison appear to be stuck pret·
ty much on dead-center In finding a new
airport location.
AIL 'l1IE BA VE to do Is start looking
at speclftc real estate, and right away
the citizens in that region beg1n fonning
up In a torcb1lgbt parade.
When supervilorial eyes cast envious
glances at El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta·
tion, the whole Saddleback Valley &eta lts
back up. Los Alamitos Naval Air Station?
You can raise an Immediate fight Jn
RIDltington Beach, Seal B e a ch ,
Westmlmter and Fountain Valley, not to
mentlan Los Alamitos itself.
Talk about a big jetport on~
Pendletm's range and you've aot
oposition to ftll the new San Oemente
Clubhouse, as Fifth District Supervisor
Ron Caspers learned just before be Oed
that scene.
SOME FOLKS BA VE talked about big
jet operations out cl <lino Hills up Brea
way or down on the ranchlands behind
Mission Viejo. Little comrnooity en-
thlslasm has been generated by these
suggestions and a lot cl oppositlcn
Which brings you back to Air cal's Bob
Clifford and his notioo that Orange Coun-
ty's airstrip "can never be anything ex·
cept what it is -a little, tiny airport."
And assume Bob is rorrect, that brings
you back to 1980 and those 14 million peo-
ple who will want to ny from here to
there.
You have the feeling they may be in a
permanent holding pattern.
By United Presa lntetMtional
'lbe. Los Angeles Times and the New
York Times today said authorities are
looking Into reports that two separate
burglaries may have been carried out by
agents of the FBI or the Committee to
Re-elect the President.
nie Los Angeles paper said tbe FBI is
investigating the poeslblllty that con-
victed Watergate coosplrat«a G. Gordon
Liddy and E. Howard Hunt "er their
associates" lrob Into the Manbatt'D of·
flees ol the National .WOMatW! for the
Teens Numbering
2,0QO Run Amok
In New Jersey
A'l1.ANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -About
2,000 tem-agen roamed the city's main
business lleetor, hurling rocks and bottla
at pedestrians, motorists and police cars.
Police reported that a patrolman bad
been stabbed. He was treated at Atlant!c
Clty Hosp(tal and released.
Several pedesµtans and a taxi cab
driver were reported Injured during the
Wednesday night disturbance, whldi oc-
curred during a ''merchants' fettival."
At least a ~ youths and ooe adult
were arrested on charges ranging tnm
indUng to riot to attempting to free
police prl!Cllers.
Several streets bad been blocked to all
vehicular traffic for the festlftl, which
Included band concerts ml the display of
antique autos and motoreycles.
A police spokesman said trouble
started about 9:20 p.m., when police
began re-opening the streets. The
spokesman said hlDldreds ol youths at
first refused to allow traffic to flow and
then began their assault on the police
when told to disperse.
Blast Kills Woman, 74
NEW YORK (UPI) -A 74-year-old
WOOUlll WU tilled ml her 69-year-dd
friend crit1cally injured when what may
have been a pipe bomb aploded in a
Manhattan apartment Wednesday night,
shattering windows and 11 p r a y i n g
furniture about the room. The woman,
Edith TeMer, was pronounced dead on
a1Tival at Bellevue Hospital.
Advancement of Colored P e op 1 e
(NAACP) legal defense fund the same
weekend the office of Danlel EUsberg's
psychiatrist In Beverly Hills was
burglarized.
mE NEW YORK TIMES said It has
learned that FBI agents broke into the
office of an undergiound newspaper ln
Wuhington shortly before President Nb:·
on's inauguration in 19119 to look for In-
formation linking the paper w I t h
subvmiVe groups.
The Los Aligeles Times said it learned
the investigation was begun at the sug·
gestion of Jack Greenberg, dlrector <A.
the NAACP fund. Greenberg said federal
prosecutor Earl Silbert told him the FBI
had been «dered to check into the
possibility the break-In at his office was
connected with the Watergate burglary,
the nmes said.
OFFICW.B OF the NAAQ> fund said
they found oo returning frcm the Labor
Day ftekend last Sept. 7 that desks and
a rue cabinet had been broken into but
nothing was taken. although there was
$100 In cash in one of the desks.
Greenberg said the fund keeps no
secret Information In its ollice. At the
time of the meat-in. the fund was in-
volved In a number of politically
sensitive cues, including the defenses of
Black Panther leader Bobby Seale and
New York 'l'lmes reporter Earl Caldwell,
who was fighting subpoenas from a San
Francisco grand jury investigating the
Black Panthers.
In its story the New York Times said
two former Army intelll1eoce operatives
revealed that they took part In the FBI
raid on the office cl the Washington Free
· Press at the request ol the FBL
DAILY PILOT
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Twister Lashes Oklahoma
Thunderstorms Hit Southern Plains Area, 1 Killed
"" ...... OtOUSt.
IOUfltMlt ti Oltlltloml City.
One ,,_ waa kllled """ - -.......... --lnlured ...... Lt>clllf!On, Okie., wllln 1"e ..,_ -0\'*I
1-.-............... f.orm.
~Y ulcl. The front wall st.me!
golnt tonflrcl, Ind ewrylhlng slo~
com1'IO -·"' ·,,,., "The next tlllnt we knew,.,....,.
.imno cut lheN In "'* yard."
Most ol '"'-notion !Mod mlld lemPtf'·
1turn '1nder dcudy sides. ShoWen and
thUnderstorms werw se11tt9'l"ed aver tht
Northast •nd mountainous Wesl. s.ver. tllUftdenlorm& IWtpl 111<1
f'kw1d1 ptnllllUl1 W-Y· t>ul !My
wef'll nol fir enougl> south 10 htlp ....
tlnglilsh flrn llurnlng out ol colllral
...., tlle l!nrvlldn N.nonol Par1l •nd
Bit '-s-. ly midnight tM ,.,,. __ _
APPllml
SEEKS AMENDMENT
Sen. Junes Buckley
what we do to the unborn -although
that is bad enough -but what we do to
ourselves by kllllng them."
Buckley said the amendment would
establish that the test of whether a
person is entitled to constitutional pro-
tection is biological and not legal as he
said the Supreme Court determined.
Hue Thwarted _ '
Saigon Believes Action
Doesn't Mean Offensive
SAIGON (AP) -The South Viet-
namese government tb1nks a Communist
tank attack Wednesday near Hue was
only a probe and not the begbmlng cl an
offensive against the former imperial
capital, a government spokesman said
today.
It was the first Communist tank attack
since the cease-fire four m<lltbs ago.
The ~Command said North Viet-namese or Viet QJog infantrymen with
tine BT'16 ampblbioos tanks
crcssed the Rao Nai river and attacked a
government position 18 miles IOUthwest
of Hue.
WHEN '111E A1TACZERS were 300
yards from the defense perimeter, the
South Vietnamese called In artillery that
destroyed ooe tank and killed 15 of the
enemy soldiers, a spokesman said. He
said the other two tanks Oed back across
the river. One government soldler was
reported wounded.
A government communique a 1 s o
reported Communist gunners flI'ed 115
rounds of artillery and mortar fire at
three other positions west of Hue but
there were no government casualties.
Earlier, mllltary sources said they
were trying to determine the strength of
the tank force to assess whether the at-
tack heralded a new offensive against
Hue.
The attacked post is part of a defensive
arc running through jungled mountains
west and 1C1Uthwest of the city. Accord1ng
to field reports, the whole network has
'come under continuous and Increasing
North Vietnamese and Vlet Cong
pressure In recent weeks. American
sources report at least one government
position bas been given up, but the~
Saigon command has not announced this.
To the west Is the A Shau Valley,
where a big c:ommunlst military buUdup
has been reported. Tbe area Is said to be
protected by missile sltes, and a road·
building program is under way.
In other developments:
A redudlon d. 40 perceot in B52 bomb-
ing strikes In Olmbodla bas been
ordered by the Defense Department, the
Washlngton Post said today. B52 flights
have averaged 50 to 70 a day f« nearly
three months.
U.S. jet fighter-bomllers struck 14
miles southeast or Phnom Penh today
along the east bank of the Mekong River
where government and Corrununlst
troops clashed Wednesday, mllltary
sources said.
The head of the Canadian delegation to
the International Commission of Control
and Supervlsion, Michel Gauvin, sald he ·
would take over the commission's
rotating Chairmanship fer June as
scheduled but would call no meetings
unless a deadlock over reports of North
Vietnamese Infiltration is resolved.
davis~brown
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CLEARANCE
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MANY ONE-OF-A-KIND
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RCA COLOR PORTAILE. 17" d1acJ. plc·
tve. Accacolor. Price slashed. Remote
control model also for only $30 more!
RCA PORTABLE 18" dlag. picture,
Accucolor. Now drastically reduced.
RCA PORTAILE 19" dial). picture, $3l888
Acc11Color. Priced to clear.
RCA Mc.tit.By styled CONSOLE XL-100, color.
tit 25" dlag. picture. Drastically $59888
ndllcecl. 1 aely-EI Toro Store.
RCA PEDESTAL, swlHI base XL-100
wltll tlcmt color. 25" dfCICJ. picture.
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RCA lianchomely styled XL-100
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Spar
101 Fires
By 'l'tle Aaodated Prell
Intense mmer llg.htnlng
storms blowing over northern
and central Sierra foothills ig-
nited 101 fll'es and blackened
some 1;655 acres of California
grassland, the state Division
of Forestry reports.
Most of the fires, including a
l,IJOO.acre blaze five · miles
( BRIEFS )
northeast of Sanger in Fresno
County and a ~acre fire
near Ahwahnee in Madera
County, were under control
late Wednesday.
Nearly 1,100 rangers and in-
mates f r o m conservation
camps worked to douse the
flames; but more lightning ac-
tivity was forecast today.
• l"arm Workers
REEDLEY (AP) -Sixty to
70 members of the United
Farm Workers Union walked
off their pruning jobs at nine
vineyards owned by D'Arrigo
Bros. here as part of the
union's continuing jurisdic-
tional dispute with Teamsters.
Both the UFW and D'Arrigo,
one of the largest fruit
growers in the San Joaquin
Valley, exchanged charges
Wednesday that the other had
violated a working agreement
while attempting to negotiate
a new contract.
e Youths Killed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Retaliation may be the reason
for the slaying of two youths
and the critical wounding of a
third in the East Los Angeles
area, police said today.
The bodies of R i c a r d o
Hearns, 15, and Anthony
Martinez, 18, were found
W.ednesday night at separate
locations and Martinez' 20-
year-old brother, Joseph, was
found a short time later lying
criti~ally wounded in neari?Y
Pecan Park.
e Russo, Dimb
. SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Pentagon p a p e r s principal
Anthony Russo and black
Qmununist Angela Davis have
t~amed to promote a local
oi'ganization against ''racist
abd political repression."
'If we have I e a r n e d
ahything from the Watergate
affair it is the existence of a
n 11 t i o n a t , w~ll-organir.ed
sfstematic apparatus to stifle
opposition," Miss Davis said
Wednesday. The group is nam-ep the San Francisco Bay
Area Defense Organization
Against Racist & Political
Repression.
e Name Droppers
.SACRAMENTO (AP) -An
Assembly committee has ap-
proved a plan for dropping
some of the cwnbersome
names by which state colleges
have come to be known.
The Assembly Ways and
Means Committee voted UHi
Wednesday for a bill by
~semblyman L a w re n c e
I(apiloff, (D-San Diego) giv-
ing trustees of the state's 19-
campus st~te college system
the power to simplify the
~mes of the campuses.
UPIT ..........
Ari:ona-Reall11
Sherry Nix says she
was 'not trying to pull
anything over on any-
body' by rebounding
from a California beau·
ty contest loss with a
win in Arizona, which
led to her. finishing
ahead of her one-time
California rival in the
Miss USA final.
~--------~
Watergate Blam~d·
Scandal Pl.ayed Role in LA Mayor's Race
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Although tho LoS Angeles
mayoral election was non-
partisan and the two can-
didates were Democrats, both
aides say the Watergate scan-
dal rocking the Republican
party played a role in the out-
come.
credibility and believabWly
because of the great doubt
Watergate 'cast en Certain
types of polWcal activity,"
~aid Rising.
times, including attempts for
governor, U.S. senator and
president.
Both men, despite the strong
personal animosity that has
raged between them more
than four years, said they ex-
pect a smooth translllon
between administrations.
CALIFORNIA
Mayor ~ Yorty, who lost
his bid for a fourth tenn, told
newsmen Wednesday: "I think
that Watergate has permeated
the whole political structure
and made it more dlHicult for
incumbents."
"Our polling showed the
·people were very concerned
about honesty in government.
I think they saw in Bradley an
honest man, totally above
reproach."
Bradley says one of his first
tasks as mayor-elect will be to
name a committee to help him
choose new members for the
policy-making c i t y com-
AND NELSON Rising, cam-missions.
Sentence Looms
For John Alessio
paign director for winner Bradley also told a victory
Thomas Bradley in Tuesday's -news conference Wednesday
election, said that w h i le that after he takes office he
Watergate was not a direct intends to work for con-
issue in the cam~ign "it was struction of a rapid transit
a favorable backdrop against system, improved police pro-
whlch our campaign could be tection and elimination of
played." crime on secondary school
'.!'be SS.year-old Bradley will campuses.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
son of San Diego millionaire
John Alessio, convicted on a
count of giving a gratuity to a
federal prison official, could
be sentenced to prisoo for up
to two years.
become the first black mayor Yorty had litUe to say on DOMINIC ALESSIO, a 31-
former Lompoc federal prison
administrator Anthony San·
tiago.
Government prosecutors
contended that S a n t i a go
reciwocated by giving the
elder Alessio unauthorized
leaves while a prisoner there.
ThuNday, May 31, lq73 DAILY PILOT a
Air Guard Chfuf
Gets Reprimand
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
commander of the california
Afr National Guard has been
reprimanded for four · in-
stances of "poor judgment"
and denied some retirement
pay but was cleared of 8lJ ar-
ray of charges ranging from
nepotism to misuse of govern·
ment property.
MAJ. GEN. Glenn C. Ames,
commander of the California
National Guard, said Wedncs·
day that Maj. Gen. George
W. Edmonds, commander of
the slate ANG, had been
disciplined as the result of a
P e n t a g o n · o r d e .r e d in-
vestigation.
Ames said four letters of
reprimand were issued to
Edmonds and he was denied
retirement pay which he
would have received for work
as a civil service technician.
prompted by letters lo several
members of Congress, written
in February 1972 by Maj.
Harold D. Simmons o f
Carmichael, who had recently
been fired as a National Guard
personnel specialist.
AMONG mE charges were
claims that Edmonds had ar·
ranged for ANG plane's and
crews to fly him and others to
an Aalskan hideaway for
fishin g and hunting and that
he had arranged for part time
jobs to be created for two
sons.
"Some 20 chargrs were con·
tained in Major Simmons· let·
ter of February 1972." Ames
said. "Only four of them were
found to have any substance
or basis in fact. The balance
of Major Simmon~· charges
were simply unsubstantiated
or related to conduct not con·
stituting an offense."
court Holds of Los Angeles July 1, making Wednesday about his plans. ye a r -old San Diego --------------------·----------
the city the largest in the na· restaurateur, was found guilty
lion ever to have a Negro "EVERY TIME I'm out of Wednesday by a seven-wooum,
The investigation w a s
chief executive. office, I usually go back to five-man jury. The jury ac-Firm On He attacked Yorty's cam-private law practice till I feel quitted him on a more serious
paign tactics as racist and real good, then I run for office count of bribery.
questioned Yorty's acceptance and lose again," the 63-year-U.S. District Court Judge N--..1 -R z · " • $&0,000, paid-up lire in-old Yorty told a news con-Malcolm L u c a s scheduled l.ULe U ing surance policy from political ference at City Hall. sentencing for July 9.
friends. During his 37-year political 'rile younger Alessio was ac-
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -career, the mayor has sought cused of providing a two-day
YOUNG PEOPLE'S ART
County's Bast Now on Exhibit
South (oast 'Plaza
The state Supreme Court says "HE (YORTY) lacked office 18 times. He lost 10 vacation in San Diego' to
it will not change its mind that 1--~ ---------------------------------------------------------
local ordin~ces banning
topless and bottomless en-
tertainment are constitutional.
The court Wednesday re-
jected a plea that it reconsider
its May l ruling, or at least
postpone it until an appeal can
be carried to the U . S .
Supreme Court.
The court had ruled 4-2 that
ordinances adopted by Orange
and Sacramento counties and
the city of Sacramento could
bar topless and bottomless
waitresses and entertainers
from working where food and
drink are served and from
taking part in live acts or ex·
hibitions except in theater·
type establishments.
Opponents had contended
that such entertainment was
communicative and therefore
a form of speech guaranteed
by tl;le Constitution.
However, the court ruled
that the local laws regulated
conduct, nOt words or speech,
and the(efure were valid and
cOuld 1tie justified ill grounds
theJ; were needed to protect
public .!"oraIB:-and welfare .
J
Bar to Pav
el
$1.1 Million
For Accident
SAN FRANCISIO (AP) -
The owners of a bar have
agreed to pay $1.l million to a
man injured in an automobile
accident allegedly caused by
one of the bar's patrons.
The settlement was ap-
proved Wednesday by Superior
Court Judge Joseph Karesh on
the basis of a 1971 state
Supreme Court decision which
held that 1'artenders and bar
owners are responsible for in-
juries caused by obviously in-
toxicated persons they con-
tinue to serve.
Attorney Bruce W a I k u p
brought the suit on behalf of
Howard Bemett, 62, a former
history professor, and his wife
Elizabeth. Bennett sustained
brain damage in the 1968
crash and has been hospitaliz-
ed since.
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',
mmer Invasion
Kemorial Day uiually marb the openbaJ of lbe
belch teUOD, and Jf th put tend was any sample,
it'• Bini to be a gh one. Record beach crowdl, rec-
ord lrat:4c jam.1 and a record shortage of parting spaces
heralded th 1WDJDer to come.
~ the inland PoPUlaUon, and inland temperatures,
80al', the beach invlsfon c.an only grow, deaplte wishful
thinking to the contrary.
'lbree yean ago, MunUngton Beach pulled lb bead
oat of lbe .-nd, formed a parldng d.lltrict and built
ltaeff a ~t beach parting lot. Result: those who can
fi.lht tbeir way through traffic have an ucellent chance
·of ftnding a ~lace to park there -while paying for the
)>al'klng lot with their fees.
San Clemente also wisely shelled out some money
to develop parting for its outlying beaches and lure
the crowds away from jammed central areas.
Now Newport Beach, after years of turning away
from the problem, ls pondering installing a tramway.
Laguna Beach bas given top priority to a $1 million
parking structure to accommodate 349 cars -but not
by this summer. Meanwhile, ha;J:j~ extended the La-
gum bus line inland to Laguna , El Toro and Mis-
sion Viejo, the city bad the bright idea of putting bike
racks on the buses to persuade more beachgoers to
forget about driving.
Now they're pfanning bus surfboard racks, too. Tbls
ts realistic tblnking. The beach invasion is not going
away and it will be up to the shore dwellers to figure
out how to cope with it.
Welcome News
Purd1ue of 15 more buses to augment the Orange
County Transit District's current 39-bus fleet could
hardly be more timely, with gasoline shortages continu-
ing to barus commuters.
The Transit District expects delivery of 63 new
buael in February, but the additional 15 were confirmed
as a supplementary order, for delivery in July to help
tramport summer beacbgoers. .
They'll cost the Dlstrlct $704,198, with half the
sum coming from cash reserves and the rest ~roll! gaso-
line sales tax. An '11 million federal grant will finan~
the February delivery plus 100 more buses and eq~p-'
ment over the next four years.
Bus patronage is increasing slowly but surely
throughout the county and perhaps the boost of new
buses for· summer will encourage more drivers to leave
their can at home and drop out of the traffic jam-
parking space hassle.
Transit District Board Chairman Ralph Clark
summed it up when be commented that an additional 300
bpBes right now would be welcome. Meanwhile we can
be grateful for the extra 15.
Security Risks?
In the course of recent hearings into Federal em·
ployes' rights to privacy, Congressman Jerome Waldie
(D-Callf.) turned up a unique special security check oper-
ated by the U.S. Civil Service Commission.
It applies only to Federal job applicants who were
college students after June of 1968, and therefore were
on campus during the period of unrest and anti-war
sentiment that marked the era.
The fonner students, it seems, are subjected to a
special background check by the House Internal Security
. Committee (formerly the House Un-American Activities
Committee) in case they might have been guilty of "dis-
loyal" behavior. .
Waldie calls the policy outrageous and says be will
seek to have it rescinded. A reasonable background
check of job applicants certainly is in order. But point-
ing the finger of suspicion at any young person who
attended college during the five-year period borders on
the ridiculous. Chances are most of the flaming yo\lllg
campus radicals have long since bad their fires damp-
ened by the humdrum demands of daily existence and
are entitled to at least an equal chance to earn their
bread as adults. ''IT~ (30T To <REST SOON.~
The Tussock Moth Hew Watergate Climate Was Created
And Lufilher Costs
Dear .
Gloomy
Gus
'Super Intelligence' Blamed
r ,. •• j• ~ ~
f f r i' . ,• ,.
~· ,. ,, ;; • . :. ,•
·=-~
r .. • ,. .. • :· t• I'. ' '·
•• • f.
;.-.
You may figure that the tuSIOclt moth ( J
1s probably no big thing In your life. The , RUS wai:rrON
little fellow is only about H', Inches long, W.t\ 1J.
J1vu in the forest attd carries on his
pcnona1 affalra in the tops of fir trees. ----------""
Well, that stinking lltUe moth Is
cleltroyiDg millions
el boll'd feet al
lumber evrry year
Jn CalifGrnfa, Oreson
a D d Wuhlngton.
And, became of lta bunCrY ways, the
price al lumber ii bl&her than it mlgbt .... .·
The .... loael thls 1ear are in Oregui an d Wah-
ington. But caufornla foreaten are boldinc their breath. Th e tuaock
JDDth Could decide to ride the winds to califomia'• ·Umber lauds.
'no: JAST big ~ moth Invasion
In Calilomia ocecn1ed In 196.1. It destroy-
ed. tbclrii111kls al acres of forest and mil-
liDDs ol board feet ol lumber In tour
northern ClllUDtles. Since then foresters
hsve managed to bold things In check.
But et Ma nest meeting, the State Boanl
ol FwwtrJ will take • serious look at the
~ ol amtber tussock moth ln-
ftlian ol Callfomla's northern counties.
Ezperta predict the moth will knock off
more thin too,000 acres of timber in
eutern Oregon, this ,ear; a Joa of about
311 mUlloo board feet of Douglas fir.
Moch ol that would have been shipped to
111e c.u1orn1a rnanet.
'lbe direct dollar Joa Is figured at
lhout $13 mllllon. The Jong-range impact
-IOClal, economic and environmental -
ii prcibably cloeer to f136 million.
WHAT MAKES aD this so maddening
II that the tus8oct moth is getting most
of HI aid and comfort from bureaucrats
and politicians. Not by design ; through
stupjdity .
'lbere'• an eaq way to get rid of the
moth and its relatives. Spray them with
DDT.
It doesn't take much. About one-half
pound of DDT in a gallon of fuel oil will
protect an acre of trees. Tbe stuff can be
sprayed from planes and setUes in a fine
mist In the tree topl where the moth II
chomping away. .
DDT ii the ooly Insecticide proven to
be effective against the tl1S.'IOCk moth.
Other chemicals just don't touch it.
But, the forester can't use DDT .
WHY? Because the f e d e r a 1
F.nviroomental Protection Agency won't
permit it. The EPA says the DDT
"mlgb1" have a harmful effect on the
birds and the fish In the area.
So, the moth goes Cll lfteding and
eating, the trees die and we are once
'DtMr Mr. Pompldou ••• '
Water from Northern California to
Lake Perris and points between:
$2.3 billion, no umbrellas or heat
shields required. Sky-Lab I: $2.6
billion. Who got value received?
S.A.S.
G1M11W e.t --... """"-bY .-. -...... _,ity ~ the vtwws et IM ,...,.,,.... s-4 reur pet
-19 OMnlY Ous. D1ftr l'llel.
more the victims of the great anti-DDT
boez.
Meanwblle, back In Babylon, politicians
such as ,U.S. Senator Alan Cranston and
lesser state lights, are screaming about
timber exports to Japan. They see that
as a major reason for the soaring costs
of lumber.
The fact is, California loses more
lumber to insects each year than it does
to exports. In 1970 (last available
figures), we exported 175 million board
feet but lost 1.6 billion board feet to the
bugs. Oregon and Washington, together,
lose about half as much to insects (1.1
billion feet) as they export (2. l billion
feet).
IN ADDmON to the lumber loss, the
tussock moth creates another real forest
hazard: fire. After it is through with its
dinner, It leaves the dead trees standing.
Have you ever seen a dried-out
ChristmaS tree explode? That's the kind
of bomb the moth leaves behind.
Entomologist William H a z e I t i n e ,
Oroville, bas blasted the EPA's decision
against DDT. He calls It politically ex-
pedient and environmentally dumb.
"It seems ridiculous to limit exports
(that help redress our balance of
payments deficit) and still look forward .
to Insect losses. It jUBt does not make
seme or fit a sound environmental pat-
tern of thinking."
Which Is another way of saying that
politicians and bureaucrats are willing to
control people and enterprise but have
yet to permit the control of the destruc-
tive tussock moth.
WASHINGTON -While It is possible
to find discrepancies in the President's
newest disavowal of involvement in the
Watergate burglary, it is becoming in-
creasingly difficult to sustain a challenge
to his primary disclaimers.
~are, simply, that he did not know
about Watergate before or after, took
part in no cover-up
of the burglary and
knew of nooe, did
not offer clemency to
the Watergate defen-
dants and knew of no
offer. But his subor·
dinates probably ex-
ceeded anything he
had in mind in both
the conduct of his
campaign and his attempt to tighten up
national security and intelligence oper-
ations.
Many people, it can be guessed, will
accept ttlis as the truth and still wondef'
how he ever became Involved in such a
frightful meSs. They may find a large
part of the answer In what he did in set-
ting up two super intelligence groops.
They were super in the same sense as
virtually everything he d i d ad-
ntinistrati vely in his first term. They
gathered under White House control
functions other agencies with at least
100,000 employes spending a billion
dollars, were <reated to perform but did
not, or could not, perform to his satisfac-
tion.
IT WAS in this way that Preside!X Nix-
on created the climate he says he did not
intend to create: tile ruthless, in-
timidating atmosphere of an all-powerful
White House resorting to any means
towanl a justified end.
Specifically, what had happened at the
White House in creating the new secret
Intelligence groups on domestic disrup-
tion contained the seeds of what hap-
pened at Watergate.
An lnte.ragency committee ·represen-
tative of the intelligence services of the
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), the
Dogmatic Shultz Opposes Controls
.
~ Fear of Runaway Inflation Spurs Auto, Television Buying
J 1 WASHINGTON -The revealing show
• •
+ • . .. ,. ;
of polltical impotence put on by the
Houae Democratic leadership in its fee-
ble efforts to impose tougher price con-
trols on the administration has oow given
Mr. Nixon a splendid free hand , except
f« Gee towering ob-
st.c:Je: Secretary of
the 1'ftasury George
P. smltz.
Had the House
dGbe what Its Demo-
eratlc leaders boast-
ed It would, and vot-
ed to freeze prices,
Mr. Nixon wou1d
Uft been under em-
., .... rearalilt. If he then had U.
_...,. ti.~awtielmlng cry ol polltl-
, tlOC'liomisU, housewives and wort-
., and llp!d a Iliff Democratic perty-
ClllltnDed bW -er ordered a freeie on
hll own -he would have seemed to be
111r1rm:lerilw to .bll poll ti cal enemies.
Now, however, Ir e 1 h from tllla-sbioul tactical victory In the House,
wbkh pve blm y the on&-year u-
teuloa cl ty be ahra)'I
... free
NOi' ONLY command total
tJcal credit by JDOYin8 from the
( EVANS·NOVAK.)
hapless ShuJtz-lmposed Phase lU to a
serious program of price controls. He
can also be certain of near-total oon-
grea6ooal approval by Democrats and
RepubHcanl alike -it be can make
George Shultz, a doctrinaire free-market·
eer, bend ta reality.
Moreover, there are signs that Mr. Nb·
on 1s beginning ta listen to some of the
out.side experta -and such powerful but
unheeded inside uperta as Dr. Arthur
Bums, chairman of 1he Federal Reserve
Board -for the first time since ShuJtz
aold him on the cll.suter of Phase m.
IT'S about time. Albert Sindlinger, the
natklo's top apert an the habits, spend-
ing and confidence ol the American coo-
iumer, now computes from h I a
apongelllte national polling that at least
one million Americans have bought new
1973 model automobiles In advance of a
buying pattern which would nonnally
have delayed the purchase unill 1974
modell.
Slndllncer, whose data Is avidly
devoured by the White HOIJ!e (if not by
Shultz), also is finding that televisi911
sets, anothlf big consumer Item, are
being bought at an annual rate of 13
millions -one-third higher than normal.
The reason ls the same In both case3:.
the ~chology of fear that inflation has
become uncontrollable and that "forward
buying" means a better bargain today
over next year.
The hidden danger in this Sindlinger
finding is that a mere one-third of the na·
tlon's consumers are responsible for It.
Many of them are union members under
contracts with bullt·ln cost-of-living
escalator clalllll!ll. That guarantees a con-
tinuing inflation spiral.
UNTIL very recently, Shultz and his
laissez-faire policies have managed to
dominate the inflation debate in the
President's Oval Office to the point that
some esteemed economists actually think
Mr. Nixon has been geWng sugar~ted
statistics.
Now, however, for the first time since
the presidential campaign, Shultz ls
attacked by AFLaO JnSident
George M y, A steady stream of
private crltidJm aplnst ShuJtz Is
reacblna President from such con-
Rep. Wll MiDI,
Bouse Ways and Meam
Committee. And from the ivied towers of
the outside world -but not all -private
economists are describing the quiet,
unassuming Shultz as stubborn, dogmatic
and beyond the reach of the political
pragmatism essential to his office.
His r1gidity, in fact, goes beyond
economics to the vicious battle over the
enefgy crisis now dividing the ad-
ministration. The environmentalists
regard ShuJtz as enemy No. 1, a free
market dogmatist who believes govern-
ment has no right to stop construction of
such huge energy users as glass buildings
without windows. That, he has said, is a
"pr! vate decision."
BUT THAT is unimportant compared
to his refusal -up to now -to heed the
• frightening political dangers n o w
· threatening the Republican party over
the Issue of runaway Inflation.
Shultz appears still to be in high stan-
ding with the President. He is still Mr.
Nixon's cho~n spokes -an fo-choice
White Hause briefing~. He still is the
cool, dispassiona te advoc2te Bu· that
may not be enough ·il!1 t " P~2s ..ie~"
hand now free b c t:l"! : ;··05 ·~·· ; -
flatlon , he Is not l'k'?b t' I ·~ e " · f :!
favored Shultz s and in hi· w<i . H • an 't
With pice indeJ: galloping
ahead at a 14 percent annual rate
(rucllARD WILSO~
Pentagon and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation operations. The scheme in-
cluded the authorization of break-ins,
wire-tapping and other cloak-and-dagger
trappings of foreign espionage applied to
-,he turbulent America,n scene.
HOOVER backed out after the decision
was made for an unknown reason, but
surely not because of person al
repugnance for the methods. Some in-
ternecine warfare between the in-
telligence agencies must have been in-
volved. Hoover was crotchety in his old
age and has been described in an in-
terview with a former lop FBI· official as
of "unsound mind ."
Nixon was unable to control Hoover
and unwilling to fire him. Instead of
going ahead with the new plan, Nixon
settled for an lnteragency body called the
Intelligence Evaluation Committee on
Domestic Intelligence.
The unexecuted but still explosive
plans lay donnant and ended up in the
files of the President's counsel, John
Dean 111, who spirited them out ol the
White House into a safety deposit box.
These plans reveal the will whicll existed
et high levels in the White House to
resort to the option of burglary to collect
intelligence on the incidence of domestic
turmoil, disruption and security leaks.
WHERE l'HERE is a will some will
find a way, and so it is not surprising
that the idea of officially rondooed
burglary became a part of the Nixon
"climate" Which he says he did not. in-
tend to create. It was therefore not a
very long step from burglary cunmitted
in the national interest by the intelligence
lfgencies to burglary of Democratic Par· l.f Headquarters by employes of the
Committee to Reelect the President. In
fact this kind of burglary has been
justified as in the same cause as
burglary for national sectnity reasons.
It is rather chilling now to discover
that White House officials of limited
capacity, viewpoint and experience were
placed in controlling positions in matters
of such extreme sensitivity. For all prac-
tical purposes Nixon bypassed the FBI,
the CJA and Pentagon Intelligence, to
give the White House zealots a com-
manding voice in intelligence operations
in a critical area.
Ideas, Not Commodities
I doo't often feel what the Germans so
untranslatably call the eijlotion of
Scbadenfreude, but I must ad'init to this
unlovely reaction when I read recently
that the "Saturday Review" magazine
was filing for bankruptcy .
My Schadenfreude (perhaps best
translated 31 "plea-
sure in someone
else's misfortune")
springs out ol a mix·
ture ol sorrow and
resentment. I had
been reading, and
contributing to, the
"Saturday Review"
for many years, and
was an old friend and
fellow -crusader of its decent pub-
lisher, Norman Comins, in o u r
commoo advocacy of world federalism,
nuclear disarmament, tennis, and ofi-
color limericks.
When Norman sold the magazine to a
California combine, I had doubts, but
also hopes. Doubts that the new people
would be as humane and idealistic as he,
and hopes that they might on the other
hand raise the level of that worthy
magazine to attract a circulation 0£
millions rather than mere hundreds of
thousands.
ALAS, as so often is the case, the
doubts muJtiplied, and the h o p e s
diminished. The magazine swifUy took on
the look of a business enterprise more
than . an editorial achievement ; selling
seemed to take precedence over thinking,
writing, and editing. Emblematic of this
change was the blunt name of the new
publishing company: "Saturday Review
Industries."
Now, whatever else a magazine has to
be in tenns of advertising and circula-
tlion, if it Is to pretend to any quality
beyond mere amusement. It must he an
intellectual enterprise first of all. Not an
"lndustry." Not a hyped-up medium fo~
sellln b:ioks. records . cuJt··ral ~ .. tif~cts,
or mail-o~d·r fr\lt'. cl·e•
\ p•• .1 ~qfIN~ fl 'M ' •
r ..
' "
n .. n tr ..
~ '\ th~ , ''"'n~e,.. en
. . ·~·
• ,;, -.s
~ fieids, n~t lo
~YDNEYJ.H~
its own self-aggrandizement. 'The people
who read it will quickly lose faith, and
others will not be attracted to such a
hybrid periodical .
I felt that at the time, and in
something like a year, it came true. The
magazine's failure, I feel sure, had little
to do with its editorial cmtent or its
marketing strategies ; it had to do, main-
ly, with the aura of get-rich-quick
mercantllism that seemed to saturate
every issue, so that readers felt they
were being manipulated by their abiding
interest in the arts, science, education
and society.
IN MY view, the new pulillshers
betrayed· the very values the magazine
used It> stand for; and it is kind of a
sweet poetic justice that Nonnan Cousins
was called in lo lake over the failing ven-
ture and combine it with his new
"World" magazine. Virtue isn't often
vindicated so fast these days.
OIANM COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N, Weed, Publisher
Thoma& Keml, Edttor
Barbara Kretbich
Editorial Page Editor •
The editmial ,page Ol the I)aily
Pilot ·leeka to lrdonn and 1tlm,iate
rieaders . by l*taeatinc on this .-re
dlvene icornmentar)• Oil topics Of :ln-
tBfft by CYndicated ~nlsta. ~ cartoon1sta, by providb1g a b:vra for
rttden' vlew1 and by J)l'elentlq t2m
newspaper'• opinions, and ~ on
current topics. The editorial oplnlons
ot the Daily Pilot appear onb' ill the
editorial eolumn •t 1he, top of the
page, Opinions tx(llt•d by the cof.
umnlltll and catloOiillt and 1eUel'
wrlten are their own Ind no ......
· mcnt or 1helr vlewa by' Ult DIBJ LP!lot lhGuld tie Inf~
_ Thur:dt y, May 31, 1973
--
Bollworm ·
Target
.:~ o ·f Plot
Capitol News Service
SACRAMENTO -Califor-
nia entomologists are hop-
ing to enforce a kind of
.~· gay llberation on the pink
.-bollworm to save a significant
proportion of the state's cotton
crop. In the process, they may
also find a way to get the
worm out of the apple and
flies out of the barbecue pit.
THE DEPARTMENT of
Food and Agriculture i s
sponsoring a research project
in t he Coachella Valley in
I which a synthetic form of the
.. .._. __ female pink bollworm's
: distinctive mating perfume
was sprayed on a 12-acre cot-
ton field .
Since the bollworms look
el'ike to each other, the
perfume is the only charac-
teristic to tip .off the male to
his potenliia} lmate. Sending the
pest inf() sexual confusion with
the synthetic allurer, the en-
tomologists r e p o r t en-
--,-coura.ging prelimhlary resul .
IF THE MALE confusion
technique turns into
reasonable sucx:ess following
expansion of the research
under way, se'lentists are hoi>-
ing to apply it to other
biological situations where in-
sects have s e x u a I com-
munication by means of the
perfumed signal.
Two candidates fur such
research are the worm from
the apple -produced from
the ooddllng molh -and the
common housefly.
Last Stand
Revisired
HARDIN, Mont. (UPI)
- A group of 16 persons,
including seven Indians, is
trying to figure out what
really happened in 1876 at
the Battle of L i t t I e
Bighorn.
The National P a c k
Service Is initiating a pro-
gram it hopes will result
in a ne~ format for the
telling of the story.
"Our aim is to tell more ot both sides of the story ·
-the Indian side and the
cavalry side -rather
than concentrating on the
Custer Massacre," a
spokesman said.
Good Deed
make the scene
Sundays
in the iif ·!!ijij!MI
..
•
Thundly, May 31, 1973 DAILY PILOT
nyl~n knit .
bodysweaient
Relox. This little ribby swe.,ter
. polntelle top
and shorts
hy Catalina
Striped crewneck top has pointelle
pattern. In easy care, cotton knit in
red/white/blue, yellow /blue,
S-M-L, I 0.00. Pull it on with shorts of
polyester-cotton knit. In white, 8-16, 8.00.
From a collection by this maker.
Active Sportswear, 78
rlng-o halter
bikini hy Catalina
The sensuous swimsuit. All
sleekness and lots of
tan between. It's nylon jersey
with a ring-linked ht1lter bra.
Pink, white, green, black, 5-13, 17.00.
Junior Sportsweor, 97
a .... lfofllJPtl' ,,, • --
,..1
NEWPORT HUNTINGTON BEACH .. Ofl,A°NcpE, .t.\.Al,L OF ORANGE
is Phillips bb® nylon, ll Phillips
fiber. Machine woshobli, · .
. and dryable. Navy, red,
yellow with white collar.
S-M-L. By Kepeth Knits.
12.00. V-neck style not
I ;
··~
sketched. 12.00.
, Street .Roor
Sportsw&llr, 65
Ji
' / ®Phillits is a register•d j :'trademu of Phillips Ffber /j Corp. for Its nylon fiber • J, /I ~.
.•
short sleeve
· shlrt·fae
The shirt-joc for
summer's pants, skirts. In Avril9
ray9n-cotton dots of black/white,
red/white, novy/white, sizes 10-16,
12.00. Similt1r style not showrfjn
solid color, wnite, rea0[evy,
lemon in Kodel® polye,ster·"".'riJ9
rayp~, 1,2· f8, Ji .OQ.
Street FIOOf.Bf<i>vses .. SIUr:ts; 06
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:::· ..... -1~ • '
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C!JU.~ .. ··· -·
shl~J~~~et -~
Short sle~ves. T wcrpc?ckets. Th:!t:·.:
tunnel waist .shir.tjacket .to .,
top it,all.11')'.~9.~I ~·~~r5~Ck~(~
of polyester.cotton-; Sim· ·
a to 16 .. Ff.i?ma:~oi1~c:tr~ft~~
by Alice.Shlorl~ .i6.QO£
Misses SpbffS.~6,~fr .. ~: ~
• ·: J: { .. -• \i ..
.. .
4 •• ·-·r:
....... ".°• ..... ;.
.,
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CERRt'ros·
47 Fut.Ion l1llftd 17141 644·1212 7777 Eclift9er AHnue 1714> 192-llll BOO N. Tus+rn Str••t 17141 998 -1311
ANAHEIM
444 N. Eucllcl I 7141 IU·ll 21 500 Los C•rrTt•s M11J 'UIH" ~l1
SHOP 10 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. MONDAY THROU~H fRIDAY. SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M~ SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5 P.M. ,.. . . -, ~
•
TllarsdaJ, -31, 1973
I h·a ·jackers
Di.e,op Key Demands
BOOOTA, Cololtlbia (AP) -
The hljackerl of a Colombian
airliner today dropped their
demands for the release of 14&
leftist priJoners here but rais-
ed their money ransom from
$200,0llO to $400,000.
The four~glne turboprop
Electra was on the ground in
Aruba, a Dut.ch 'island In the
Caribbean north of Venezuela.
The aircraft took off from
Isadore'•
there before dawn today with
the two masked hljackes's and
tlreir hostages for Lima, Peru,
but it was forced to return to
Aruba because the engines' oil
ran Jow.
A REPORT fcom Princess
Beatriz Airport in Aruba said
the hijackers then permitted
33 women and children to
Ireland
Def ea
Catholic
DUBLlN (UPI) -Erskine
Childers, first Protestant to
contest a nationwide popular
election in the overwhelmingly
Roman Catholic Irish
Republic, emerged today as
Its probable ne~t president.
In the fli'st 40 con-
546-5527
The Great 'Put-Together' •..
2640 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA . 1¥1E A
OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6:0Q
SUNDAYS 9 TO 5:00
PRESENTS A leave the aircraft for food and ~.J
stituencies ( votini{ districts) to
announce official results Jn
presidential elections, Childers
had a 44, 410 majority over
his Romlin catholic opponent ---Tom O'Higgins. Modular Greenhouse Lunelaeon medical attention. That left 56
passengers and crewmen re-
UPI T1 ....... to ._oes -f''ree e POW Dental
FASHION SHOW! maining on boar-d with the hi· A British judge has or-
jackers. dered innocent verdict
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP)
One of eigfit former war
prisoners charged by an of-
ficer with misconduct says the
J Garuning HobbyiJts,. Dad's, Mom's,
Kid's can grow plants from seeds and
cuttings, even hydroponically (water
grown.) Easy to assembltt or add -to.
Light e n o u g h to move anywhere in
garden, patio, balcony. Its' size: 4'x6'x
71/2' high, 160 cubic feet 99 00
The plane was hijacked in for American singer
Colombia Wednesday by the Johnny Nash on charg·
hijackers armed with sulr es of possessing can· ( . )
-OF-
Men's Shirt Styles
and Fine Neckwear
nabis resin. Judge cited IN SHO'DT machine guns. Early today the conflict in evidence. .n. • • •
Colombian government re----------_ _
AS UNIQUELY MODELED BY
LEOTARD CLAD LASSES
IN SHIRTS AND TIES FROM
THE . SHIRT SALE
333 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA
FRIDAY, JUNE ht, AT NOON
333 BAYSIDE DR.
AT· PACIFIC COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
jected the hijackers' original
demands. Later the pilot,
Capt. Jorge Lucena, teported
to his superiors in Colombia
that this irritated the hi-
jackers and that the situation
had become tense. The men
had threatened to blow the
plane up with all aboard if the
government failed to meet
their demands.
THE AIRIJNE, SAM, agreed
to pay the money. But the
government said to comply
with the demands of the hi-
jackers "would imply the total
breakdown of the country's
legal regime."
"Negotiations with t h e
government should be ac-
celerated,'' the pilot, Jorge
Lucena, told the control tower
at Medellin, Colombia, in a
shaky voice as the plane sat
on the Aruba runway.
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ANAHEIM
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McGrd Olton =
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Tennessee
Ban Upheld
For 'Hair'
CINCINNATI (UPI) -A
federal appeals court has rul-
ed that the rock musical
"Hair" is obscene, at least in
Tennessee.
In a 2-1 decision, the U.S.
Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals
Wednesday upheld a lower
court ruling that llfficials in
Chattanooga, Tenn., had the
right to refuse _producers of
"Hair" tile use of t h e
municipal auditorium.
The majority opinion of the
court was stated by Judge
Paul C. Weick, who said:
accusations are "unfounded."
He said he plans to file a $1
million damage suit.
Army Spec. 4 Michael
Branch was notified Monday
that a complaint had been
lodged against him and seven
other enlisted men -five
soldiers and three Marines -
who were held at the Hanoi
prison calle<l the Plantation.
The complAfut was filed by
Col. Theodore Guy of Tucson,
Ariz. He was taken prisoner
when he was shot down over
Laos on March 22, 1968.
e Graham C1·01vd
SEOUL, South Korea (AP)
-Evangelist Billy Gralliam
drew 516,000 persons Wednes-
day night for the opening
of his five-day crusade in fue
South Korean capital. He said
it was his largest crowd in his
33 years of preaching.
Graham said lhis previous
record was 200,000 in Rio de
Janeiro in the early 1960s.
e PX Sentence
"OUR CASE involves only NEW YORK (UPI) - A
depraved sexual action -only millionaire engaged m the
the question whether a federal military post e x ch an g e
court has any right to order business was s e n t e n c e d Wednesday to 18 months in the state to permit the ex-prison and fined $176,000 for
hibition for profit of filthy, turning an illegal profit of
obscene, sexual material on $42,00ll.
state property. In sentencing Leon Weiss,
"No one has a constitutional 56, of Mount V er non,
right to exhibit obscene, sex-Manhattan Federal J u d g e
I bli bu.Id' " Lloyd MacMahon said the ua acts in pu c 1 mgs. crime "is one of almost in--
A District Court jury at credible greed by a man who
Chattanooga decided about 18 became a multimillionaire."
months ago that ''Hair" was;=.========:; obscene and violated Ten·
nessee law relating to indecent
exposure, lewdness, public
nudity and obscene acts.
In a minority opinion, Judge
Wade McCree said, "I know
an obscene play when I see
one ... 'Hair' is not that."
'YOU Sec:tion'
There's something for YOU
in the "YOU Section" of the
DAILY PILOT every Sunday .
Check its personal appeal for
you and yours.
of GREENHOUSE . . . . . . . . •
Another Great 'Put-Together' ...
Everything you need to create your own
Hanging Container Planters {See June '73 Sunset Mg.}
CIRCULAR WIRE IASKETS Stu rd Y 89
and 1tron9, -al sl-from • • • • • • •
Y HALF CIRCLE WIRE IASKETS H11119 99
against a wall CM" fenco, from •• • • • • •
~----_,.., SPHAGNUM MOSS For llnlng wlro 119 ~ir-.;.--n before plantla9. • ••••••• • • • • • • • • •
~~5:C. SUPERSOIL Ideal potting mix for plant
-growth.
1/1 Cu. Ft .• 98 1/3 Cu. ft, 1.49
Two To Get You Started ...
TUIEROUS HliONIAS
111 4" poh .......... • 98 each
All array of gorgeous color for your
shade garden.
Upri9ht a11d Cascadln9 FUCHSIAS
Doub le and single flowerin g, many
colors.
1 Gal. 1.98
Jewel-like flowero · hanging b .. ket
growth.
.Also • , • lobolla, .African daisy, alyssu111, petunias,
111arhaolcls, 9era11la1111 and vl11cas
Visit us soon • . • See a variety of plants ideal for
eye-level, hanging-basket gardening !
Calif. Favorite -Avocados
'FUERTE' -lest know11, .i9h 41uallty
fruit, latCJO grawlag ""· 9.95
'ZUTANO' • Pear-shapf(I quality fruit,
large aprl1Jht tr" IJrawth.' EACH
COSTA MESA-NEWPORT HARBOR LIONS CLUB
GRAND
PRIZE
1973 FORD
PINTO
To Some
l.tlcky Winner
• . 28th ANNUAL •
FISH FRY AND •••
e DELICIOUS FISH . DINNERS!
• DRAWINGS for 50 PRIZES !
e MISS MERMAID BEAUTY CONTEST! e BAIY CONTEST! e MIDWAY -CARNIVAL-EXHIBITS ! e BAND CONTEST!
FRIDAY NIGHT
DON'T MISS THE FUN !
Bring I.he Family for All 3. Days!
THIS SPACE DONATED AS A
COMMUNITY SERVICE BY:
DONATION TICKETS
ONLY $2.00
All proceeds g.o
to Harbor Area
youth activities &
to services 'for
the blind!
Y'all Come!
COSTA MESA
PARK
PHONE:
,540·5710
646·503.3
Ml~Aiilm
j • ThundlJ, M1y 31. 1973
e ored
They're Gl.adys Hendrick' Babie -AU 555 of Them
MRS. HENbRICK, a Covina
. resident, started her service in
·, 1948, after her children had
been ral9ed and her husband
died.
!• Her qualifications then w~
., experience with her own three
children and a "great love for
i· infants." They now include a
book, "My First Three Hun-
dred Babies."
HER PHILOWPHY for
baby care is, "It is not what
the baby does -for at times
Deaths
LARCHMONT, N.Y. (AP) -
Harold Hastings, 54, one of
Broadway's leading orchestra
conductors, died Wednesday,
apparently of a heart attack.
He had cooducted · t h e
Broadway hit "A Little Night
Music" as usual Tuesday
night.
· .. SOUTH CHICAGO
HEIGHTS, m. (AP) -Jazz
clarinetist Voltaire "Volly" .. . i •.
DeFaut, 69, who played with
Jelly Roll Marton, Muggsy
•. Spanier and Glenn Miller, dilld
Tuesda>;.
Death Notices
a•CKEll ~~ Iese S. Becker. 16>111 N.-Blvd .. No. , C0&I• MeH. Dote of d .. 111, May 29, m . Survlvtd bY Msler, Mn. Mar11oret renclt, of llllnolS. lus, soturda'(, 10 .#.M. Bell Broedwa . Chapel, wtftl I\•¥· Roger Berg offld1t11111. Interment, Har'bdr Rost Memorl1t Perk. Bell Broadway Mortu1rv. Directors.
• flOTCHMAN . l.lndl McMlnus Folchmen. Age 95, of •'~6592 Kattltr Lane, Huntington Beach . .1)111 of dHth,_~y 2', 1973. 1iurvlved by
1'ftlret' daU:Oh~ Je1nnie 0 ' B e c k , <1'•therlne Shinn and M1r111n Cris!: son, Paul FotcKni~; 2S ;r""41<:1111dren: c 'tre1t-ar•ndehUdrtn1 .5 a r •a t -g r • a t -.1randchlldron. RIQ\llem ».au, Friday, "11':30 PM, St, Bono..,,ture Catllollc
.Church, HunllncilOI> Beach. Peek Femllv
"'Colonlll Funer1l -· Directors. ,. KINIJ "lAvrH• T. Kl1111-,,_ 91. of 390t Roche •O.d, Sp, 1!.t... f.'lflbrook. Del9 of deolh, y 29 lYT... Survlv..i bY daughter, m• Martell, Foll · son J•mts E. II na, Sen Franclsco~lar, Mrs. lr-G<>ode. Florl!I .. Mrs. King had made her hPmt with lltt da1htar, Mrs. M1rltll,
•lctow of the 1••• anta An• Attorney.! •llohn Mortelh I ved n Cost• Mu• for 25 years end was an honorary member Of • Ille Coste Mell Womens Club. SMVICff .'Wiii be held Frld1y, 11 AM, Smlltl & "Tuthill Chapel, with Rev. LtRol Arrouet !lclatlnq. Interment\ P•clflc View emorl1I Park. Sml h & T u I h 11 I ortuarv. Dlriictor1. * PERRY Woodrow Ptrrv. Age 59, Of 662 Joann St ..
1 st• MHI. Date of death, May 29, 1973. rvlvld bV wife, Sera· thrH sons, erlos. David end John: ihrie d1uglllers, 11rltl1 Perrv. Sh1una Manhan and J1rrv nn Crowther; brother. James P!fr/; ten pndchlldren. Serv!CH, S•tvrd1y, 2!30
-;f,M, PHk Famlly Colonial Funer•I Homo.
THROP' 1't<llh M. Three>. For.-r111dtnl of i('orona del Mar; manager of food ftrYlcet Cost• MeH Hlgll School. SurvlY9d bY st>ofl<!1~rt Thn>p, of Arizona: son, IP M enhall, Ari~: daughter, le A Ion T send aka: mo!Mr, r:. F. J l::ock~n1: 1 sters, Poulin• tH onil Jackie Lortnlfl\J, oll ol vroslde; brqther, Spenctt' Cockerham, tlsdelt, Ar~•< ,1;ht 11r1ndcll1tdren. rvlcos were netd at Acheson and 1ham Chlpel In Riverside. Collf. on y 13, 1'73, wltft Rev. Phllfll> Murr1y
lcl•llna.
ARBUCK(.E & SON
WESTCLIFF' MORTUARY · m E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
Mt t888 • BALTZ-BERGERON
•. , FUNERAL HOME
Corena del Mar 173-MSO
. £osta Mesa Hi UU • BEU. BROADWAY
~ MORTUARY
, ' 118 Broadway, Costa Mesa
LIS.SW • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
" 17G6 Laguna Canyon Rd.
4M-9'1S • PACIFIC VJEW
MEMORIMl NRK Cem~ .. .Jforturr
35IO Paci&Vt ~ Drive
Newport =-I'll.la • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME
'1801 Btlla Ave. w•· tmhlimr m;sus
f ·;
POLY & STllL SILTS·
Peerless GJJality!
$1ZE FITS: 011111 ....
ltlll lllftD
'll(IS
TER1
F 78/14 195/14 $J3u
'"''ST£EL 205/14 $34'5
G78/.14 ·
·.STEEL
H78/1 4 215/14 $3695
~TEEL 205/15 $35'5
'G18ll5
·Sllll . 215/15 $3795
H78 /1S
le• 1973 •odels • • nu,
6.45114 878/14
6.50113
7 .35/14
7.7S/14 F78/14
8.25/14 G78/1 4
8.25/15 G78115
8.55/14 H78/ 14
195/15
G70/15 205/15
£70114 185114
E70/l4 175/14
f70/14
F70/14
G70/14 205/14
F60/15 E60/15
ORANGE COUNTY
1. French Toast with Egg,
2 Rashers of Bacon.
2. One Egg, 2 Rashers of
Bacon, Toast & Jelly.
Officers Set
Dinner Meet
3. Diced Ham, Scrambled
Egg, English Muffin & Jelly.
4. Plaln Omelette, large
Blueberry or Bran Muffin.
Our cus1omer p;licy is lo be1ttr 11rve you.
If you hne 1 qu11tion conurni119 pro·
ducts or 11rvic11 rendered to y911, please
coll our Director of ConHftllr Affairs,
. Mr. S. Arabian (213) 170.1737 or l,tl·
1218. If we should sell out or your sire,
• • "lain Check" will be issued assuring o
later deliwery at the dvtrtiied price.
GARDIN GllOYI
t-•rwkllunt
(Corner Westmlnttr
1nc1 8root<lluraf)
C7t4J 11 J,ioo
LA HAllA
-Wnfttlel' alYd.
(corner of Wllltllor
and a11ch)
SERVED UNTIL 11 A.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
-AVAILABLE AT THESE PARTICIPATING LOCATIONS NEWPORT BEACH, 3110 Newport Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH, 9791 Adams
FOUNTAIN VALLEY, 16155 Harbor Blvd.
f. h ..:.
195/14 FR78/14
205/14 GR78/14
215/14 _HR78114 s65u
205/ I 5 GR/7811 S S64"
215/15 HR78/IS
we se,mi ~~;;';·'-::;;: ·~,',:'#2~3s~1~3s:=1.SR~is.:vf1 s~;~
Only BRAND N~.!
1st Quaf~fy ~~~:~~~:;~'
World's
le•tll111
Tire
Deo/tr
I. WllU~ IUGllMl~T l'Oltc:T
~ TUii. I0,000 llU$
2. llUYY om TIE "°' IMIUlt
3. 4 WllUL COil lPRlllC
IUllUltU
4, IUIE ADJUSlMUT
1610 WILSHIRE Bl VD.
(Comer of Wiishire & 16th) 829·1793 870·6868
IUINA PAlll PULLHTON
2"2 Llncel• a1vd.
(comer of Lincoln
and Knott)
'714J 12 .. 1no
1321 ""'"' •11elltl
( 1 &tock North of
Rlverskte FrHway)
17141 17M100
OllANGE
410 N, TOllllft Ave.
17141 Ut.4JJ1
UlllRD'YAL
full
sl•e u.s .
. cars
. • • . • . .. ..
~ ..
I• • I • • ' • ~ ,
• "
.. .. ..
... . • •• .. •• • ,P ,• -c .. . • a • •
U,.T ........
Jl, 1973
Rx Price
Bill Goes
To Floor
' Dali Sound a Lot Like . Ali
From Wire Ser lees seat vacated by her husband. up the ship, Cmdr. Lloyd
Every other painting in !he Her brother had Lbe en-Bacber, is retiring this week
Prado art mll!eum in Madrid dorsement of their mother, at San Diego after 22 years in
SACRAMENl'O (AP) -A was at least ~years old and head ol a poUtically powerful the Navy.
controversial pharmaceuticah the exception was one un-family In IOUtbeastern Ken· In 1968, Bucher surrendered
prlclnf bill opposed by the lucky. the spy ahip Pueblo to an
C a I ifornia Pharmaceutical finished effort by Salvador * overwhelmlng North Korean
.Assodallon ha1 cleared a lcey Dall. Friends of poet and novelist force and spent 11 months in
committee teat without a vote With the hanging of one of his Boria Puternak g a t h e r e d ti his to spare. paintingir in the famed gallery. around h I 1 grave in the cap vlty with men. Most
Dali scored a first. His work ls recently' the ' 5 • y e a r • o I d
ASSEMBLY Speaker Bob 8 portrait of the favorite (.---------] Bucher baa been stationed in Moretti (0-Van Nuys) said hia daughter of Generalissimo Guam.
bill would require pharmacists Francisco Franco. PEOPLE "He's just aolng to retire
to post a list of their 100 moat About 200 carefully selected _ quietly," said a N a v y
common I Y prescribed members of Madrid high spokesman. "He hasn't re·
prescrlpUon drugs. The state society watched as nali made Moscow suburb of Peredelklno quested a ceremony."
would have the job of making a brush stroke, turner! to his to read some of his works on *
up an annual list of the JOO audience and said : "I'm the the 13th anniversary of his As though sen. NCtT!s Cot·
drugs. greatest." death. Min's wife, Ruth, didn't have
The Moretti bill would also * Such annual tributes to dead problems enough a I r e a d y ,
lift a ban aaalrut drug price Former Kentucky state writers are common in the she's fallen in her bedroom
advertising that exists cur· senator John Raymoncl Turner Soviet Union. and fractured her right hip.
rently. defeated his sister, Treva Pasternak won and then re-A spokesman in the New
An 11-6 vote Wednesday sent Howell, in their primary race jected the 1958 Nobel Prize for Hampshire Re p u b I i c a n
the measure to the As.5ernbly for the Democratic nomination Literiiture for "Dr. Zhivago" senator's olfice said Mrs. Cot·
floor despite opposition from for a Kentucky House of after severe Soviet criticism. ton is 80, suffers from a heart Kent Stacey, lobbyist for the Re tar
.....
'
Flvmrth~San
'idmesa clayon PSA.
(Cilllfornlats .. IOffld,. state bll'CI)
'))
' , ..
PSAghles you a Ifft.
B0tt0rflrf1 Pla.D
Conservationist David
Bower accepted an
honorary doctorate in
ecology from the Uni-
versity of San Francis-
co during commence-
menl He is founding
chief of Friends of the
Earth.
C a l ifornla Pharmaceutical presen ives seat. * condition and has a pacemaker
Association. ~:M~rs~.~H~ow:e~ll~w~a~s~se~~~ki~ng~th~e~-The~~n~a~va~l~o~ff~lc~er~w~ho~ga~v~e__'..im~~~an~t~ed~in~h~e~r~h~ea~rt~.~~'-=============~~=========================================-
STACEY, a former
Rep u b Hean assemblyman
from Bakersfield, said the bill
would only cause consumers
to be confused.
Yoacanpndly much
name your own price.
If you come into our Coit• Me1a store ju1t to
shop wound and get an idH of pric11, you won't
have much luck. There simply won't be any price1 in
evidence. But if you come looking for the be1t pos-
1ible dHI on 1ome new stereo equipment, you'll
prob•biy go home very happy indeed. lnstHd of
11kin9 the salesman for a price, you tell him what
it'1 worth to you. We'll accept any rH1onable offer
on just about anything in the store •
There re•lly aren't many rHtriction1 on thi1 im-
probable event, but since we heven't completely
lost our hHds you can probably gueu the obvious
limit•tions. Fair trade item1 are strictly out of bounds .
"Reasonable offer" mHns that we don't want to 90
broke; but how c:loH you get down to the actual
cost depends 1olely on your own bargaining ability.
Finally, the items listed here aren't 1ubject to
bergaining because they've bun chosen as examples
of how low you can expect prices to come. So if
there's any dereo gHr you've been wanting, come
to Pacific Stereo and indulge your fantuie1 of mak-
ing • 1tHI.
Orig.
Miracord SOH record olayer . . • $179.50
Lenco LBS record player with base,
dust cover, & Stanton 600EE cartridge 304.50
Famous English record changer 39.50
Brand name receiver . 129.95
Kenwood 2200 AM/F=M receiver 159.95
Sansui 1000 AM/FM receiver 329.95
Sansui 2000 AM /FM receiver 379.95
Altec B72A Madrid speakers 219.00
Dynac:o A25 2·way speaker~ 74 .50
1-iarman·Kardon 20 2·wav soea'<ers 39.95
Fisher XP77 3-wav speake'~ 139.95
AR 4X 2·way speakers 57.50
JBL l·BB Nova soeakers 198.00
Sony 122 cassette dee~ 115.95
ADC 10E Mark IV 11llipt1ca1 cartr idge 50.00
Sony DA7A stereophone~ 15.95
25' coiled headphone extension cora J.95
Ampex C60 cassettes 1.29
Robins record cleaner 2.99
fFni"lPBCIPIC , llWJsteReo
.. TM Plac1 fo 811y A Mus.t Svsr1m··
2338 HARBOR BL VD.
COSTA MESA
SALE
$ 99
234.50
29
97
127
204
238
158
54
27
69
44
168
88
24
8
1.49
49,
1.79
...
AC 055 FROM FAIRVIEW HOSPITAL
Phone 979-1231
BATH VANITY
Burnham pattern matches in any
direction! 12x12 ihch.
19st .
NC!W n.
FIRST QUALITY
MOSAIC TILE
Exciting shapes and colon
for floors, walls, countenl
Approx. 1 sq. ft.
NO# 69~Etr
MIRROR CABIND
18 inch surface-mounted cobinet
with large glass mirror! Bargain!
Now12 88
BUY3ROLLS, FREE' GETTHE4THROLL •
1
l·piece top and bowl; white base trimmed in gold . 3295
2lx11 in. NOW
FAUCIT 'NOT INCLUDE~
NO-WAX SOLID
VINYL TILE
The luxury floor with the rtfetime
shinel 12ic12 inch tiles.
NOW 27s!. FT.
MIRROR TILE
Makes smon rooms loolc l<Jrgerf
EOJY to apply 1Ox10 inch tiles.
NOW 49~~~
GOLD VllN TIUS •••• •••••-••• •• 59c EA.
OAK PAllQUET TILE
Pre-finished • reody to walk on!
6 Yz x6 Y.i inch tiles.
•
NOW · 37 95
~!;~~~!!e~~2~~!l!~~!~~T TNlolwE 4"'
TUB ENCLOSURE
T•mper•d gl•u doors Jn huvy eluminum fr•m•!
FIRST QUALITY
CERAMIC TILE
29' Herd, bri9ht 9ln• fiftbh:
lovely dtcoretor colors!
lll in. tllH ... •HY to
ln1hll, .. IV to c:IHnl
colorsl 7 ~. FT.
RETURN UNUSED TILE FOR A •uLL CASH EFUNDI FRH lNSTRUalONS, lOAllED TOOlSf
Costa Mesa-2221 Harbor Blvd.
645·1126
STORF. HOURS:
OPIN SUNDAY -11 o.m. • 5 p.m.
THURSDAY, FRIDAY -8 a.m. • ' p.m.
MON., TUIS., WED., SAT. -8 .. m .• 5:30 p.m.
ALWAYS P NTY OF FIU P~lllNa
NOW
' I
ThLndly, M11 31, 1973
-Chief Claims mprovement
Q.Y .....
mall lel'\llcfj "loasy,n h q
service we'll J e to for·
get aboutT ·
A. The reference I made to the service
being lousy· was, oviously, a bad choice·
ol words. When I look at the overall pic-
ture, we're bound to have problems at
times -like any large organization. But
since the organizatioo act, we've made
some very substantiat changes and I
think we're on a much sounder footing
than ever bdcn. I
Q. Many of your policies are clearly
aimed at cutting the deficit even farther.
Is there any room ln that scheme for Im-
proving service?
(For ~ the U.S. Pm o~ ran ct o cWfidt 41 a mail ·~
subaidized bu tlw! fedft'a.l governmtnt. But the Postal ~
Act of 1970, wldch ~ the Post Of"/fte into a· gooentment-nm
corporation called tM Postal Sennce, directed the Sennce to break ~ by 1984. Poatal deficitS. have dropped f1'0ff' fl.I f>!Uiota in 1971 to
$1 .4 ~iofi in 1972, but complaints about shoddy sennce have &kyroo-
keted. E. T. Kfcwen, poftmaster general, is responsib~ fOf' administef-.
mg the service and its 680,000 worken. He ii mtmneioed by the e<U-
tors of the Washington Monthly.)
each year. (The Postal Service bandies
about 90 billioo pieces of mail annually.)
Q. So Is tile pabUe belDg llll(elllOD.Bble
lo Ua demnda OD you?
you dlink of the nwsive organization we
have, spread throughout the coun-
try, and the way lt bas been nm fir 178
years, and then ask U! to tum it around
In 20 months, !hat's unreasonable.
I
handed, eepeclally at amstmas time.
Perhaps this was the t of 1llY cost-
reduction program. When I begah that
program, I asked field management to
cut costs but still pay attention to
service; apparenUy costs t o o k
precedence and service was neglected to
some degree.
SOI miles eoet by air.
ve oae clau of mall, with one
meu1 a le?
maD by tile ..
A. That may happen. Keep In mind that
we'~ far more dependent now on air and
tnJcb than ever before. We used to have
10,500 peS9e1!ier trains to move the mail.
Now, we hav Ollly a couple hundred.
Q. Bui U all moves by air aew,
But our field management really learn-
ed something from this exercise. 'Ibey
had never been held accountable for costs of any kind before. A postmaster why ahoald • pel'IOD pay tbe extra three
cwldn't have told YOU what it cost to run cents for an air mall stamp?
his post office. Now, they ~ that A. There are advantages .. we try to
costs and revenves have to have some pick out ~ sacks of air mall ~d give
Congre8$ and ask for more money. ~~ tak %~~:;1s!J! =~. rif~!
DAil. V Pll.OT
AJI Pllote A. Yes, we can still improve. But
even if we were 99 percent efficient, we'd
still be open to about 900 million gripes
A. No, but-if we miss a letter
somewhere along the line, the Individual
runs to his <X>Qgressman, the newspapers
pick it up and it becomes a horror story
before it's through. I think some of this
impatience has been ire111ature. When
Q. Ya.'ve cat the poMII work force
from 7ff,OllO to ·ao,eoo. Last year, you tn-
stltuttid a temporary job freeze. Hasn't
this added to the problem?
A. In some areas, we've been short-
relatioaship since we can't just run to them~pectal tment. Th; airlmes are
Q. An air-mall stamp costs almost ff unders · Is that they go when the
percent more than a flrsklass saunp, airlines have space available.
bat you admlt that most first-class mail Putot .,.,._...n SJIMllute
'ON SOUNDER FOOTING'
Elmer T. KlesMn
. ,
ROBINSON'S CACHE OF . ' . .
ORIENTAL RUGS.
ALL SALE PRICED. . . , . . ...
AT ROBINSON'S NEWPORT BEACH ·.STORE FOR TWO WEEKS ONLY.
Hand woven wool and wooVsilk rugs from scatter to mansion size. Room sizes (hall runners included) from Persia, India, Turkey,
fakist-an and Indochina. So·me of the more than 15 patterns_ include Heriz,~ Sa~ouk, '·Kirman, Tabriz, Saraband, India and Bokhara._
All rugs are specially priced for this event. Co~e, make a beautiful investment! Use one of our convenient c_redit plans. Rugs/Carpets.
SCATTER AND AREA RUGS
Size
Kerman ••••••••••••••••••••• 4.x2.
Hamedan .•••••••••••••••••• .2.5xl.5
Cqrnet Ind ................... 4.x2.
Super Rekha Ind ............... 5.x3.
Antique Cazak ................ 4.2x3.2
M.eshkin ...................... J.6x.1.6
Belouch • ; •••••• ~ •••••••••••• 5.x3.
Abadeh ••••••••••••••••••••• 4.1Qx2.1
YlllY FINI QtlALITY IOllHAU
•"'PltOX. 2. a 2.
LIMITID QUANTITY
$69.00
t ' -•• '.-
Royal 'Palace Saru k •••••••••••• 4.2~.2 ·
Afg. Bokhara ••••••• •· •••••••• 3.Jx2.2
lndo Chinese ................. 4.x2.
Hamedan •••••••••••••••••••. 2. !0x 1.10
Everest Ind ............ , ..... .4.x2.
Abadeh ••••••••••••••••••••• 5.2x3.7
Harnedan •••••••••••••••••••• 6.4x3.4
Palace Kashan ................ 5.7x3. l
Khamseh ••••••• .' •••••••••••• 7.4x4.2
Nahavand ................... 6.8x4.2
Afshar ...................... 6.9x5.
Palace Tabriz ••••••••••••••••. 6.2x4 .2
ESfahan ..................... 6.8x4.10
Antique Chinese ••••••••••••• -4.9x3.
NEW 8011HAllA
APPIOX. S.6d.6
$149.00
Pak. Bokhara ••••••••••••••••• 6.2x4.2
Antique Chinese •••••••••••••• 6.7x3.l l
Super Rekha Ind .•••••••••••••• 6.x4.
Palace Kashan •••••••••••••••. 6.3x4.2
J
Sale Price
$89.Dlt
29.00
69.00
150.00
299.DO
39.00
19.liil
179.00
179JO
49.DO ··
99.00 ~9.00
49.00
275.DO
150.00
450.00
250.00
250.UO
299.00
599.DO
699.00
299.00
299.00
299.00
199.00
150.00
Size -·
Palace Kashan ................ 5.x3. l
Mazleghan •••••••••••••••• .S.2x3.7
Everest Ind. •••••••••••••••••• 5.x3.
Shiraz •••••••••••••••••••••• 7.lOxS.2
Palace Quom ................. 6.8x4.7
Palace Esfahan ••• , , •••••••••• 5.5x3.5
Imperial Pl. Kerman ............ 5.x3. l
Bokhara ..................... 6.lx4.3
Everest Ind ................ ~ •• 6.x4.
Silk/Wool Quom ............... 5.2x3.5
Malayer •• ." .................. 6.2x3. ll
Silk/Wool Quom .. ; ......... , .5.x3.
Palace Kashan ................ 6.3x4.2
Ardabil ••••••••••••••••••••• J.2x4.8
Afshar •••••••••••••••••••••• 7.2x5.5
Mahaabad .-;-~ •••••••••••••••• 6.2x4.2
Seraband •••••••••••••••••••• J.x3.9
Palace Esfahan ••••••••••••••• 5.4x3.5
Royal Pl. Saruk ............... 5.x3.3
Shiraz •••••••••••••••••••••• 5.6x3.7
LARGI HLICTION or
HAMIDAN
APPIOX. 6.x4,
$150.00
ROOM SIZE RUGS
Belouch ••••••••••••••••••••• 8.3x4.4
Turkaman Bokllara •••••• : ..... 8.7x5.10
Shiraz •••••••••••••••••••••• J.4:c4.3
Imperial Pl. Kennan •••••••••••. 8.3x4.10
Pak. Bokhara ................. 8.3x5. l
Everest Ind ................... 9.x6.
Kerman ••••.•••••••••••••••• 9.3x6.2
Golden Bokhara ............... 9.10x6.10
Kerman ..................... J J.5x8.2
Palace Kashan •••••••••••••••• I0.3x8. l
Tabriz ...................... J l.10x7.JO
Royal Pl. Saruk ............... J0.2x7.
Palate Quonl ................. J0.2x7.3
Sale Price
. -.
$450.00
250.00
125.00
499.00
\ 850.00
599.00
225.00
251.00
199.DO
551:111
251.00
550.00
850.00
550.00
350.00
250.00
250.00
599.00
450.00
175.00
499.00
799.00
350.00
699.00
399.0D
350.00
499.00
&99.0D
850.DD
1799.0D
999.00
1999.00
2299.00
Size
Kerman ••••••••••••••••••••• 10.x7.3
Silk/Wool Quom ••••••••••••• -9.x4 .9
LAIGI SILICTION Of
IOKHAllA
APPIOX. 6.6 x 4.6
$250.00
Imperial Pl. Kerman •••••••••••. 9.3x6.
Turkaman Bokhara ••••••••••••• 8.7x6.
Antique Chinese •••••••••••••• 8.x5. l
Palace Quom ................. 9.x5.2
Shiraz ...................... IQ.4x6.8
Palace Kashan ................ 9.6x6.k
Royalty Kerman ............... 8. lx6.
, .
YlllY PINI QUALln IOllHAllA
AP,IOX. 3. x 2.
LIMITID QUANTln
Kashan ••••••••••••••••••••• 13. !0x 10.5
Tabriz ••••••••••••••••••••• -13.5x9.7
Saruk •••••••••••••••••••••• 13.4x9.7
Kashan .••••••••••.•••••••• -12. IOx 10.5
Palace Eslahan ••••••••••.••• -12.9x8.4
Super Rekha Ind ............... J2.x9.
Saruk • ..................... -14. lx 11.3
aEAUTIPUL COLLICTION Of
PINUILK IUGI,
SILIC t.WOOL NAIN
& SllllfWOOL ISPANAN
Imperial Pl. Kerman •••••••••••. 13.9x9.5
Super Rekha Ind .•••••••••••••. 14.x 10.
Tabriz ...................... 13.lx!0.2
Palace Ka shan •••••••••••••••• 13.2x9.7
Meshad ..................... 13.6x9. ll
Golden Bokhara ••••••••••••••• 13.2x9.6
Antique Chinese •••••••••••••• 12.x9.3
Palace Cuom ................. 12. lx8.
P~lace Esfahan ••••••••••••••• 14.8xl0.4
NEWPORT e FASHION ISLAND e SHOP l 0:00-5:30 e 6-44-2800
Sale Price
$150.00
1299.00
999.DI
799.00
450.0t
1299.08
550.00
1299.0D
850.DO
2199.00
1599.0D
1399.00
1899.00
2399.00
799.00
1499.00
2399.00
11199.00
1499.DO
2799.00
1599.00
1299.00
1199.DD
2499.00
2999.00
Size
Silk /Wool Cuom ••••••...••••• J2.7x8.9
Antique Chinese ••••••...•••.. J4.x 10.
Antique Turkish ............... 15. IOx 12.10
Meshkabad ••••••••.•.•.••••• J2.6x9.6
Tabriz ...................... J3.7x9. ll
Imperial Pl. Kerman ........... J2.7x9.2
Hamedan •••••••••••••••••••• 14.x 10.11
lndo Chinese ••••••••••.••.••• 14.x 10.
Yezd ...................... .l2.2x8.4
Royalty Kerman ............... J3.2x9.10
LAIOI HLICTION OP
IUIMAN
••• :a.
$19.00
Royal Pl. Saruk ............... 13.x9.10
Imperial Pl. Kerman ............ 14.2x9.
Kashan ..................... 17.x 10.7
Imperial Pl. Kerman ••••••••.••. 21.4x 13.8 ·
Antique Kerman ••••••••••••••• 19.Jx 12.6
Kerman ..................... 16.9x 12.4
Antique Chinese ••••••••.••••• J 7.7x 11.9
Bakhtiar •.•.•••••••••••••••.. 21.Jx 14.8
Imperial Pl. Kerman •••••••••••. 26.4x 11.10
Palace Quom ................. 17.x 10.10
MayMay .................... 17 .xl0.8
Saruk ...................... 17.Sx 10.5
Tabriz ...................... 18.3xll.9
Sarah •••••••••••••••••••••• ] l.x3.6
Gharejeh .................... I0.8x3.3
Kerman ..................... J2.x'2.4
Kerman •••••••••••.••..••••. 9.10x2:6
Gharajeh •••••••••.••..•••••• J0.7x3.4
Meshkin •••••••.....•••••••• J0.9x3.5
Azarbaijan ••••••••••••••••••. I0.2x3. l
Mesh kin .................... J4.8x3.6
Royal Pl. Saruk ............... J7.9x 2.ll
Sale Price
I $3999.00
1199.00
12.00
1219.0D
1291.DD
1991JO
1399.00
1399.IO
llft.91
1991.90
2999.DO
2299.00
2999.00
7999.00
7999.00
3999.0D
3299.0D
2691.00
6991.DO
4919.00
2499.0D
2399.IO
3999.0Q
399.DO
391.00
450.00
399.00
399.DI
391.DO
358.00
599.80
1299.DO
' '
..
Thundar, Mq 31, 1W3
Doctors Stress
~
Device Dangers
WASHINGTON (AP) -Two tlghter regulation of me.di.cal
doctors have testified that In-devices by the Food and Drug
creasingly po p u I a r in-Administration and stronger
trauterine devices (IUDs ) are policing of deviC8!1 advertising
the mosl dangerous type of by the Federal Trade Com-
contraceptive in use. mission.
'Ibey said at a House sub-11IE FDA c.ontends that it
committee hearing Wednesday lacks legislative authority to
that the metal or plastic rings, require premarket s a f e t y
Bprings, coils, loops, bows and tes•; .. .,. of the thounsands rJ.
spirals Jact proof of either ~'6 safety or effectiveness. medical devices on t h e market.
MAJ. RUMEL J. Thomsen, More than thrte million wo-
an Army gynecologist at Ft. men in the United States and
Polk, La., said he has inserted 10 million women elsewhere in
hundreds of IUDs but now the world have been fitted with
prescribes them cautiously. IUl>ll, according to tbe FDA.
He said the devices have Madry said he Inserted 45 of
been "proven to cause death , the devices before halting the
sterility, hemorrhage leading practice in early 1969 because
to anemia, disabling pain, of his concern about their
unwanted pregnancy, miscar· safety.
riage, ruptured tubal pregnan·
..
,,,,. l'llele
DRUNKEN DRIVER
Liv Ullmann
Actress
Escapes
Sentence
cy, ,thousands of major "THE M 0 ST dangerous
surgical procedures, massive means of contraception today
infection, blood transfusion is the IUD," said Madry, ad-
and untold numbers of x-rays ding that he considers the
to the ovaries of young device only slightly more er-
wpmen." fective than a douche and far OSLO (AP ) -Norwegian
·He and Dr. John G. Madry, less effective than oral con-newspapers are unhappy about
a · private practitioner at traceptives, diaphragms, con-what they call special court
Smokers'
.Measure
Defeated
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A 11m "Nonsmokers" Bill ol
Rigbta" WU killed Oil a fint
vote by an Asaembly com-
m It tee after several
legislators said the meuure
would be next to lmpouible to
enroree.
Assemblyman John Briggs,
the Fullerton Republican who
authored the blll, a s k e d
Wednesday that the roll be
kept open on the bill.
THEN, HE kept up an effort
to change the original 7.S vote
by picking up the additional
four votes he needs to get the
bill sent to the floor.
Briggs' bill would make It a
misdemeanor for officials or
owners of specified public
places -including
restaurants, public meeting
places and theaters -to fail
to d e s i g n a t e non-smoking
areas in their facilities.
ASSEMBLYMAN John Knox
(D-Richmond) asked Briggs
how the owner of a small
sandwich shop was to meet
the bill's requirements.
"Will he set aside one stool
or what?" Knox asked, and
dWay
Sun Lamps Co~nt,er Britain Rain
I ANTHONY SCHOOLS
HAllOI CINTll
Ult NttW ~ Cut• M-. car...,,...
gr_ IVFJ!, England (AP) -
Marijuana mercbantB tn
Cornwall are using l\IJI lamps
to grow bigb-grade pot despite
Britain's rainy climate, police
report.
"Using ultraviolet 11 g ht,
growers can force their pot
plants to a height of six feet in
a couple of months," a detec-
tive said.
Users say tbe home-grown ''IF YOU grow lt to market,
pot 19 "good though not u thq are fortunes to be
good as the best." Sl%tetn made," • youth aaJd.
ounce1 of Cornish g r a 11 Many growers c u 1t i v a t e
f ..... ~ _ their ~ in garden sheds
e .... -up to -· according and ~ ylll'da. At one cot-
PL (714) t7t.USJ
1111 '-.......... "· Alllhellll. Cal. ,...
"'· 1714) 776-llOt to local youngsters. tage, police found 300 cannabis
The Cornish growers start plants ready for harvesting. I!!~~~~~~~~~
off their pot seeds in damp "1be raids are going to bit
tissue where they grow rapid-our 8UJllll¥1' supplles," a
ly, aided by sun ray lamp buyer complained. "There's
•-a..--t and the •·-\'!rate going to be a real nm on what
POIJCE SWOOPED across U'C: •UROU """ climate. The harvested eaves Is left."
Ask Andy
Kids Like To
Cornwall, one of southwest are sprinkled with white wine Police said they plan further
England's top vacation spots, and dried in the sun. raidi. ----------
over the weekend and later--------------------------------
questioned 69 youths and girls. '"':!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~j
Six were charged w It hll
possessing or supplying illegal
drugs and others may appear
ln court later, authorities said.
The raids netted a $250,000
haul of home-grown cannabis
and cannabis plants cultivated
from birdseed bought over the
counter, officers reported.
Police said the Comish
growerS', whose activities have
swollen the numbers of young
people who flock to Cornwall,
were let in on the sun larnP
secret by a young London drug
pusher.
"'111EY SHOULD call this
cannabis county," a youth
said. "Pot Is available in pubs,
on the beaches and almost
Otily Coast Qffors -
• 63Guaranteed Certificates
·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
MAINOFflCEI iiiiiiM:i_eiiilboiiiiiiiiiiumiiiiiieiii, iiiFiiiliiiaiii.' iiiiiicaiiiliiilediiiiiiiiiiifoiiiriiiiiidiiioiiimiiisiiiaiiiniiidiiifiiioiiiamsiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimil , treatment for actress Liv
Ullmann.
The blonde star, who was
Henry A. Kissinger's date at
the Academy A w a r d s
ceremony in March, was
spared Norway's mandatory
jail term for a drunken driv-
ing conviction.
anywhere." Briggs said "Yes."
Some legislators who votedir,;!;;!;;!e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:tll
"yes" on the bill said it was
time that smokers started
concerning themselves with
the rights of non-smokers.
Effectlve Annual
Earnings
5.00o/o-5.13%
Passbook. No Minimum.
9th & Hiii, Loa Aneeles • 623-1351
other offices WILSHIRE at GRAMERCY PLACE:
3933 WilShlre Blvd., L.A.• 388-1265
STOP INTRUDE
NEW3M
HOME ALARM SYSTEM
3m SCARES OFF INTRUDERS
IRAID INTRUDER
ALARM
c..,.ct-A thirty-six trwiltlr, ..r1Htt111ftc.
lnlllc1ymn1111lghing onlytwl IN NI-hit,_...
Si••i.-Jlllt •l•O lnta 1111 -.nl111111 .... lt
oudllt.
~v .. cu c111y it wltll "' n. .,..
tranl tor 1:1mpl111 h1t1J.tftD11l P1•t1ctl1n.
Attmidn A mit..,,1r1rlly styled 11114 weltlll
ubin1twltll 111t1r1Ctin ~lack grill thatwill 1Ullf
lllu• 1•1111y •-·
CMWlll'-t-TI11 3M lntrud11 AJ11111 bll I 15
11cand •1l1y which 1llow1 you to 11t your 11••
and ltm 1111 .. , without 11ttln1 lff th• 1l1r11,
EXTRA LOUD Thi1111111loW1 yeu tt r1-1nllr th1 1111111hu1-atf
HORN Ill• 1111• 111ith1ut saunding thl 1i11n. You l1m th•
unit 11Indlff11111it JIU! llYing p1t11m.
Elhct1"-Til1 lntrud11 Al11m will prlllet 1 cen1 shp14 1111 "' to 21111t ....
and &I' wide C1ppmim111ly 300 ••111111111). In 11011 hom11 1n• 1p11t1111nt1, one
u1i1, ,11cd llcint • m1in tr1flic na, win gin YtU pr111ction !or yoar111I 1n• ywur
Y1l11bll1.
Ad1pU1ltle-Tht lntrud11 Alarm CIAtllna hi IWI i1t1rnal 1iru IM Clll 11M Mn
an IXllfllll Hlr•laud siren in1t1llld. ln1id1 or 1ut1id1 of your hm1. Or pa ...
11i1cann1ct thl 1i11n1 and thl unit will only 1Ctiv111 your l1mp-provl.in1 Yt• wldl
1 uniqn •1ti1111etiv111d, 1ulom1tic ligh~ng 1yst1m. Th lntrudlf 1l1n11 11 adept·
1111111 pur Htarhy n11d1.
Demonstration-Sat., June 2 10am-4pm In our store
The ''summer-safe''
fertilizers for
California lawns!
for Grass. Spread Scotts SUPER TURF BUILDER, the .high
greening-power fertilizer plus the plant ·available iron.
Helps your grass grow thicker, sturdier and greener. And
when used as directed, will notpum your lawn.
$1 off 2,500 sq ft (15 lh lbs) ..s..t1 4.45
$1oft5,000 sq ft (31 lbs~ 8.95
$1oft10,000 sq ft (62 lbs)~ 17.95
For· Dichondra. SUPER DlCHONDRA BUILDER supplies the
same high-nitrogen feeding as Super Turf Builder. Plus
plant-available iron. Ju~t apply as directed and enjoy a
thicker, greener lawn , without fertilizer burn.
SI oft 2,500 sq ft (15th Jbs)...sM" 4.45
$1oft5,000sqft(31 lbs)~ 8.95
Open: Moa.-Frl. 9.9 Sat. 9-6 Sun. 10-4
NEWSPAPERS this week
re~d the conviction of
Miss Ullmann, an Oscar
nominee for her role in "The
Emigrants."
They also recalled that a
housewife got the mandatory
21 days In jail plus a $1,725
fine for the same conviction In
February.
Miss Ullmann was fined
$3,450 but her · jail term was
suspended.
In 1972, Oie actress stopped
at a pollce roadblock while
driving home from a ·party,
and a policeman asked her to
take a blood test to determine
the amoUJ1t of alcohol in her
system. Sbe failed and was
convicted of drunken driving
and sentenced to the jail term.
Briggs' bill ts AB 292.
Feminist
Speakers
Scheduled
An organizational meeting of
the National Women's
Political Caucus will hear a
series or feminist speakers
during a session at 5 p.m. Fri·
day at the Island House in
Fashion Island at Newport
Center.
Speakers will i n c 1 u d e
Ramona Ripston, director for
the Southern C a 1 i for n i a
American Civil L i be r ties
Union; Jane Boyd, Laguna
Beach school board trustee;
Joy Conners, attorney, and
IN AN APPEAL case, two past president of National
doctors, bottl friends of the ac· Or.ganization for Women; and
tress, testified that Miss Pat Hen.og, attorney.
Ullmann was • ' d e e P l Y The meeting is open to the
depreesed" and added that a public.
jail term would cause "lr··-----------1
reparable damage" to her
heallh.
The Norwegian Supreme
Court suspended the lower
court jail sentence and May 19
turned down an appeal by the
state prosecutor.
Sunday is
Fl1L1BAY'
in the liJ·jjijijj{1ll ·
F!THEl\'S 'DAY
Jm17
SEE THE GREAT
SELECTION OF
FOOD GIFT
PAESAT
ftitlc"'1
t4t~r.
Westcliff Plaza
17111 & Irvine -Newport BHch
01'111 Mon.-Frt. 'Ill r1 Sol 'Iii 6,
Sun. 'Ill 5
Alse: Tow• & Counlry Clftllt' -Ortng1
62 l'oslllon Squuo -La Hobtt
Art Unkk!lter
The Insiders Club: A new
way to beat lnflatlori. Its
membership card permits
you to buy nearly every·
thing you need from the
finest closed-door show-
rooms at substantial sav~
ings -appliances, furni-
ture, stereo equipment,
sporting goods, draperies
and much, much more.
You can even buy cars
at the "fleet'' price and
moblle homtis and motor-
cycles at substantial sav-
ings. The Insiders Club
5.75o/ ... 5.92%
One Year Certificate
$1,000 Minimum.
6.9()o/cr6.18%
Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum.
Up to 90 clays loss of Interest on amounts withdrawn befoce maturity
on all certificate accounts.
. also provlc,les big dis-
counts on tlckets to sport-
1 ng and entertainment
events ••• plus a whole
list of free services: safe
deposit boxes, money or-
ders, travelers checks,
and notary services.
Membership requlre-
ment for savers -$2,500
minimum balance. Coast
borrowers now receive as-
sociate memberships en·
tltllng them to all outslde
referral services. Ask
about joining at any Coast
offlee.
LA. CMC CENTER:
2nd & Broadway• 626-1102
HUNTINGTON BEACH:
91 Huntington Center (714) s97;io41
SANTA MONICA:
718 Wilshire Blvd.• 393-0746
SAN PEDRO:
10th & Pacific• 831-2341
WEST COVINA: Eastland ShQpplni ctr.• 331·2201
PANORAMA cm:
Chase & Van Nuys Blvd.• 892·1171
TARZANA:
18751 ventuni Blvd.-• 345-8614
LONGBEACHi
3rd & Locust• 437·7481
EAST LOS ANGELES:
81h & Soto • 266-4510
DIAMOND llAR:
328 S. Olamond. Bar (714) 595-7525
TUSTIN:
Larwln S(!uare Shopping Ctr.
(7l4) !132-0810
LA MIRADA:
La Mirada Shopplne: Ctr.
(714) 522-6751
SAN GABRIEL:
Del Mar at Las Tunas • 287-9941
l)aily Hours-9 AM to4 PM
All Offices. Except Civic
Center, Open Saturdays
9AMtolPM
How In
HortMttl
C1///om/a
ASSETS OVER ONE BILLION DOLLARS
THE BIGGAR
FESTIVAL of SALES
Save yourself a bundle
on a trundle. the hideaway guest room
for bovs
•
~
111 001
~~~
\ ... ~· ~~ -·~ ~ .. -·
SALE $99 Reg. $219
•1H with two sets mattresses & platform, reg. $337
Here's one of the Biggar values
from Ports O'Call, a collection
expressly designed for the young
man in your life. Ruggedly
constructed to withst~nd a
boy's exuberance, yet with Its own
unique custom look that
announces the Biggar quality
in brushed white fini sh wilh
red and blue trim .
It's also an elegant way
to let your grandchildren know
they're always welcome.
~~~~~~~:-~Better hurry for these.
SANTA ANA• 1110 N. MAtN ST., (714) 547-1621
' '
..
G A ks for Delay
On Emission Rules
WASHINGTON (AP)
General Motors a a k e d
Congress Wednesday to delay
and relu: ms auto f'!J'l!urlon
standards and systematically
monitor the company's efforts
to curb pollution.
other states, but much lesa
rigid than regulations schedul·
ed for 1976.
GM President Edward N.
Cole said if Congress doubts
the firm's good-faith efforts to
reduce polluting emissions, it
should establish a watchdog
over GM.
AT THE SAME time, Cole
told a Senate subcommittee,
Congress should initiate a new
study of 1976 standards with
an eye toward relaxing them.
Meantime, Cole s a i d ,
~ss should "consider
freezing into law nationwide
for several years the 1975
federal interim standards for
California."
Those restxictions would be
somewhat tighter than the in-
terim 1975 standards for all
Make money at
Keystone· SaVings is more than a
place to save money. It's a place to
make money. We're here to make
your money grow.
Stop by Keystone soon. Open
your savings account, choose the
free services you want, and get your
Money Machine card. You feel richer
at Keystone, With good reason.
•9ol Certificate Account•. $5000 minimum deposit
70 Term: 2 to 1 o years.
*53,0l Certificate Account*. $1000 minimum 74 70 deposit. Term: 1 to 2 .years. ·
•5 1,0L Bonus Account•. $1000 minimum deposit. 74 70 Term: 6 months or more.
*5Dl Passbook Account•. Deposit any amount.
70 Add or withdraw at any tiro~.
' ... ( ' . •Annual lnter,t11t, 'Acco\Jnts lnsllriiS.uo to $20,000 by an agtiicy of the Un1ted States Go,Yernment. · r .
\,I 1•
~ ....... '• • 1' { ····" OKEYSTONE SAVINGS
Ronald W. Caspers, Cllalrrnan of the Boan!
Ea&wnn ama11 W_.nster, 14011 Beach Blvd. next to Ha'feMy JM, Phone 8113-2491. A11aJ1e1a omce. 555 N. l!lldlll-
opposJte lroadway-lloblnson'•, Phone 77:Z.7••o. Airport Center, Newport olllClt 4301 MacArthur :BIYd., Phone W«ll7
Assets over $60 million.
4414
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
California investors, like their
counterparts j u s t about
everywhere else in the coun-
try, have pulled out of the.
stock market in droves.
That is evident from a look
at trading . volume figures of
the Pacific Coast Stock Ex-
change, biggest ,of the regmal
securities markets and l'fo. 3
behind the New York and
American exchanges.
From Jan. 1 to May 15,
trading on the Pacific totaled
88.7 million shares, a 14 per-
cent tumble from 103.3 million
shares In the like period of
1972. FOi" all of the 1972 the
total was a record· 260 million
shares.
THE PICTURE was much
the same on the bigger ex-
changes. In the first 4'h
months of this year, volume
on the New York fell to 1.5
billim from 1.68 billion a year
earlier, and on the 1~erican
it -dropped to 310 mlllion from
530 'million. The record year
on the New York was 1972
with 4.13 billion shares, and on
the American 1968 with l43
billion.
'lbe small Investors have
been the great defectors from
the market. This is shown by
the size of .milers and the
predominance of sell orders
among odd lot ...,.. less than 100
shares -transactiom on the
Pacific exchange.
"Disaffection with the
market has been due in large
DAILY PILOT CARRIERS
HON R R LL
The DAILY PILOT is proud of its corps of young salespeople who deliver the newspaper to your door. These
young men and women are the cream of the community. Each month, the best of them t.oiU be •elected for
listing on the Honor Roll. Each carrier listed here has obtained at least four new customers during the past
manth, has had no more than one customer complaint for the month and must have paid on time his or her bill
for the newspaper bought "wholesale." Numeral in front of star (•) preceding each name indicates number of
consecutive months that carrier has been on the Honor Roll.
Mike S1i1
Gre9 White
Doug Herman
Don Gri1h1m
Roger Sh1clderdon
Cr1i9 F1irb1nks
Merk Krieger
Steve Sterr
lr1n Cheshire
Norm1n Tucker
D1Vid Bein
Ted Well•••
Mike Senrson
Cr1i9 Konred
Robin Yould
Troy Kuykend1ll
Bruce Romen19no
Din Robinson
Rich Leonerd
John Gilchrist
J1y JonH
St.ve Corsey
Cul Seker1
Cr1i9 W1term1n
John Willucl
Jo• Hinclm1n
Ron Gli-ver
Din S1l91clo
Peul H1tuluk
Gr•9 Show
Todd Show w.c1. Freier
Billy Hudon
Scott Stri9I
Sheri Renero
Merk Donohoo
Rudy Weumon
Jo.n Murelt
Dile Robl1011
John Scheff
Dou9 Potter
Creg Z.bor1y
Chri1ti1n Dehlinger
J•rry Donahu.
G1ry Willl1m1
Mike Bebcock
Rhea B1bcock
Merk NewbrHk
2' Linda Crof+.
2• DIYicl Knox
2' K•vin Minniclt
2' Gr•g GrHne
2• Jeff GrHn
2' Je,.,Y Munyer
2• D1Vicl P1rment.r
2• Alen Tracy
2• st ... e Cory
2• John Berlin
2• Fred Bowen
2• Todd 6ererd
2° David Rores
2• Neil Freiclkoff
3° Keith Dobbins
3• Curt Bernes
3• Glori• 61rci1
l• Usa Cl11k
Carrwrs of the Month
Gloria Garcia, San Juan ca~no
I
Scott McGuire, Corona del Mar
J' Tim Hooker
4• St•ve Trottier
4' Scott McGuire
4• Bill Sp1rh
4• Chris Ron
4• G .. y Miller
4 • Rory Mill er
4• Tom Hi99ley
5° Tim Cl1wson
g• H1I Herm .. n
5• Mik• Cowin
•• Kenney Roberti
6" Bryen WoldsnH
7° Brin Welker
9• JHk Oslin
9• Lyle Fletcher Io• Min Busby Io• Chrl1 laulter
14" Dennis St1lon1
22° Freel S1nches
22° Tony S1nches
27' Bryon St1lons
21• 6te9ory D1ymon
part to a feeling that Phase 2
of the administration's anti-
inflatlon program was ended
ORDER
YOURS
TODAY!
'eautiful
Stick-on
LABEL S
Personalfzed • Styllsh • Efficient
Order For Yourself or • Friend·
M1y be used on envelopes u return 1ddress
libels. Also very handy 1s identification
libels for marking person1I items such H
books, records, photos, et<:. Labels stick on
glass and mey be used for merking home
canned foc:d items. All libels ere printed
with stylish Vogue type on Une quality whit ..
gummed piper.
Thunday, May 31, 1973 DAILY PILOT J:J • ,... ............................. .... --
OVER THE COUN'fER
NASO Lllli"I' for T~, May 29, 197J
l>"Jl V PILOT
G Fi ms
To Ration
To Dealers
Ual._ Press lm«uatJonal
Two major oil companies
said Tuesday they would not
be giving dealers as much
gasoline as the dealers feel
they need to meet current
demands.
Enon said that it would
start limiting the gas supply
Friday, based on dealers'
sales histories. Gulf Oil Co.
said it is limiting premium
and regular gasoline alloca-
tions to its retail distributors.
The two firms did not say they
would distribute less gasoline
than they have been doing.
IN WASmNGTON, Deputy
Treasury Secretary William
Simon said President Nixon
will decide "in the very near
future" whether t o a s k
C-Ongresi. to raise the four
cents per gallon federal tax on
gasoline.
He said a higher tax would
discourage consumption and
thus help conserve scarce
New IRS Chief
Donald C. Alexander, (left) was sworn in Tuesday
as Commissioner of the Internal Revenue Service.
Alexander said the IRS will make every effort to
simplify the average taxpayer's burden in complying
with revenue laws.
gasoline supplies. The govern-----------------------
ment would collect an ad-
ditional $1 billion for every
one-cent increase in the gas
tax, he said.
Jn other developments:
-TIIREE SERVICE stations
supplied by Gulf on the
sprawling Ft. Hood Army
reservation in Central Texas
have closed for at least a week
because of the g a s o I i n e
shortage.
-Four Dallas Phillips 66
stations that do a large
volume of business rap out of
gasoline Tuesday and will be
closed until Friday.
-A San Antonio
congressman asked President
Nixon to investigate, and
possibly prosecute, Coastal
Stales Gas Producing Co., the
company that last week cul
the city's natural gas supply
by two thirds. Utilities com-
missioners have since con-
tracted for more expensive
fuel oil to keep the generators
running.
-STEPHEN A. Wakefield,
an assistant secretary of the
interior, said in a speech at a
San Antonio oilmen's con-
vention that the country is in
the middle of an energy crisis
while there is almost an
unlimited supply of oil and
natural gas wailing to be
discovered in the United
States.
FTC Charges Six
Chemical Firms
WASHINGTO;V (AP) -The
Federal Trade Commission
has accused six chemical
firms of knowingly advertising
and selling c o m b u s t i b I e
plastics as nonburning or self·
extinguishing.
The class action complaint
also named a trade association
and a testing firm as defen-
dants.
THE PLASTICS involved
are the cellular, or foamed,
polyurethane and all forms of
p o I y s t y r en e and its
copolymers. More than one
billion pounds of these plastics
were marketed in 1972 for use
in construction and home
furnishings.
The plastics are used for in-
sulation, furniture cushioning
and bedding, panels a n d
siding, cabinets, chairs, tables,
pipes and lighting and plumb-
ing fixtures.
They also are used in com-
mercial airliner!! and in the
trouble-plagued ·Skylab space
station.
THE FTC ALLEGED the
plastics spread flame more
rapidly and increase the
likelihood of flashover -when
a fire in one part of a room
suddenly engulfs tbe entire
room or structure ~ generate
extreme heat and produce
amounts of toxic smoke.
It als<i alleged the plastics
release toxic or flammable
gases or chemicals more
quickly than other building
materials and release more of
such gases at various stages
of the combustion process.
The FTC complaint alleged
the 28 respondents have known
directly or indirectly since
1967 that these plastics con-
stituted serious fire hazards
"but have failed to disclose
such material facts to users."
Aero Finn
Wins TM
Cotton F arrriers See Lawsuit
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
federal district court jury has
ordered Times Mirror to pay
antitrust damages amounting
to $2.30 million dollars to Aero
Prodµcts Research Inc. of Los
Angeles.
Increase in Acreage
By the Associated Press
There are smiles on the
faces of cotton famers in
California's San Jo a q u i n
Valley these days.
In spite of the terrible
winter weather, estimates are
that acreage will increase this
year.
AND THE PRICE per pound
is causing the grins lo stretch
the last five months.
MAKE LIFE EASIER
The price has been floating
even wider. It has doubled in
near 50 cents a pound for 13-32
inch staple middling cotton 'for
the past several weeks, com-
pared with a price of 25 cents
a pound in December and
January.
Gene Egan, vice president of
producers Cotton Oil Co. says,
"anyone who can't ma ke it at
these prices shouldn't be in
the cotton business."
The price is so good that one
grower reportedly p I a n t e d
melons earlier in the year,
allowed them to come up and
then ripped them out Lo put in
cotton.
In awarding the damages
Tuesday, the jury upheld
allegations in a 1971 suit in
which Aero Products accused
Times Mirror and i t s
subsidiary, Jeppesen and
Company of Denver, of con-
spiring to cul off Aero prod-
ucts from its I e a d I n g
distributor.
Aero contended that Times
Mirror and Jeppesen al·
tempted to monopolize the
market for pilots' navigation
aids by acquiring Sanderson
Films Inc., an Aero com-
petitor, and by arranging for
Van Dusen Aircraft Supplies
of Minneapolis to drop Aero as
a supplier.
afeway
Sia ped
With Suit
~mplt Stock
~I=~~~~ • ~~~~~~1 M~~~~
' ~ Ml) ~+ \'t , I 7 l' ~ IM I~ "' =~~ l.1: 1f 'f L Im =
~ ~ l ret .. if :1 1 1 :~~F u ~:t 1l F ~1u !~dn~p;~ '1_J~ 39~ =:;.~ 1 . lj ~~m" J .'1~ 1;i50 : . " ;4 :m 1bi !t!~ H :ts£ ,f"'+1~
~ ·1 .. 1 j8: t ~,r!ICI .J ' -~ ft~ \If t \lo r fi -V. J1met F .3' t I 1"4 ICRll 1CW.+ ''o --• l I ~ ~··s . 9 ; '4 42 •1 -1\'t F lrlCo I IJ ff l'l'I 1m I~ .. J..,hen ... I s " 16 " -•• AdllllrM ;11 s ~ Mi-i. 2.22b II .WV. 5'\'t 5'-1~ ~Fed % ' 446 I I J pFd 1.61b 62 13~ 13\'t m' .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -= '·" ' ,, s."' tt -= "°' I' ''"' 161 ':"'+ ~ ~~""' 1J 7 I m: 1~ I 1"' J:itPllot ·" u :19 61 " 59 -21/J 1
The prices of Safeway Stores,=:•~~ ·~ i i~ ,i :if . ....;" ~ 1~ 1
1i 1m ,.32
1::= #=..., ~~,n~~' ii ~" ~,~ 11 .... f~~@ ~:~nt~t:~~ :: '~l~: :~: 1~::1 :~ Inc., ground beef and lamb es· ~~·1 ~ JD :II~:: ""Co ~' 13 ~ ti . .. I .... i ' I ~~Jet CPLpl ' zlOO Slllr 51 51 .
ceed federal ceiling mu· Altco~..; ' .., ~ 'Ji.-"' d 1ffl ~ 1fi n~ Po~ ff~=~ Hiil~nc· 2l ~ 1rm~~. 1::: i~ * ~~ ; r=1~ imums, SllYI 8 SUit b)' h'.ro.!i.-i~I 1t n a U'tfl-·~ 1.a1W. t~ f 19 ~ ~ .__ V. 11 ~,fl ~l!J 91 2 JlmWIJf l.60 .. 2S U'h ~ I
housewives. 11!.~· .:rtif tl .,f tU ~ ~I'll c,,hlMp.!.'E!'m Plz II I 1214 12i; 12\i•t "' 1P~1> m IJ ~ 4Jli 19 •1 -\'t J Hanl l.OSb rr 23 22'11 22~ ~
A us District Court suit 1.lbrii '.n 10 10 @ H mr. c;h1Ri<t ~p . ~ ff' p ~.,..'.'.: ~ ~:ruJ1{ 13 u 21 \ltt 1u .fil ~ ~=rn ':~ 5~ 11111, .... 1~1~-v.
WU ftkd Tueacfay by Sheila =-s~I., !1, 11f1 114 )J .i.,·--.. ~ ::.::r .I: fr ~ \~ ~ ll;~I~ tVaeM j l6 l' tf~ rm ffv. 'la~~~~ ::8 I~•~ Ill'> 3.S'la J5'h+'ii; ~ •u -~ 11... _ him c 10 45 30 ...,. • 4 -111 • r . I ~ IN 0 ,:,;:. :\Ir Jona l 1.3S 1 39 me 1m If-"'
Kreiss of Oakland and Jona AlftMt Lb_1~ .., ~ JS'* ~ 3.m_. -t r~ J J 1~ 1~ 1m! : n :I ; M 13,_ 1 ~to'1 _ j:J:,;s"A_7! ·, '3g r,:~ f1v. ~\.
Malmquist of Livermore on""-i22D , 21 ,: ~ ~ -:::: 1Al i 577 21Vo 271'1 21\lo-I ~ n ::f I : J !6"" Uv. 1 14-:; JoyMtg 1.40 18 79 30V. 29 29 -1'1 · bo l'llAmU .24 7 29 *"' W. I-VJ rv~r wt 131 1010 f1l'I f".W-l'J f ~ c · 1 1 21 241':1 23 -1~ -K K-. behalf of all Callfonuans w Alf!!E~ .IOD 1 so W> m VAi-Wr 1 Mia 92b ·; a ~ 20'1a 20J't-111 F : ~. 'l , q 1~ 14v. •V.-v. KalHrAI .so 1s 2• 1~. H'h !~'h-1 !: ~iai..'!.ud 1 7 17 :II'(. 21~ 2114 -It. n !Mii 'l.lll 9 11 ~ IN! 1910 ft !>'#~ 11' 11 ,.25 ~V. 39 ~+ \'t !(Al 5tpt Ht . . • !.S ~ ---
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!!,.:41.J ·, J ,~If: ~ ~j + ~ l"G• l.'4 10 29 W.4 2414-Vo ~laPw t.16 u 94 14 ~ l'J KAl'-'f '"' . 1 S3YJ 53~ SJ:n'h-11->
( KI JV l"'t'2,,. "" ' ~ 1·~ lo 1 _+ !'.!! nG pf 7M . . zta I 103 103 • $ 1.111 $ I + \Ir K•IHrCI so I 13 :n. :n. • . ~ --~ ., Cln G E pf 4 z30 55'1< 5S 5.1 -'II uor I> 5k 69 lq 3914 1.4 ~ ICCI prof i=to . 7 16.. 1'11• 16 ... -'• ~ n AU Ch 1.32 1J 2112 34\'J ~ ~ Cll\MUa LAO 27 9 ;}l\\ 30'1> JO',,_, P~Tlqr .20e 9 2 2' 'h 1~ KaneMll 10 6 52 121/J 12\t 17.,.,_ 'll . ). U. ~!klMapr.'!. ~ 23. 5016 \~ 161? lN1.,.+ +,~. Cl1T ~ 25.20 10 91 ..Ol'J 39~ q•:.+1 F~ CD i8S I l 17 61~ + \t lltCPU i 20 9 39 30V2 3011 30.,._ -II STOCK ~rt=--~ n 9"' C T ~, V. 1 " 9P \lll +1 F pf ~·t. .. 33 32\'J 37\'I re:CPLpf 3 'ao tSO SI'/, $114 5114 · .. ~1'1 ~~t' pflA_! .'. 14 ~·11 ~ ~ ~ ~"l"sv 2 20 II IM 464\ 4514 <16 -'4 F Fr .20a . 17 11~ 7 ' -v. ICC So Ind 2 . 7 u 28:V. 28 2B:V.+1 -~ -• z40 ---+ " II I$o l 4511 12 23 :m·1 3314 nv.~ 'It F'oote<:B .60 12 12 IOI.. 10 ~ 'UJ'la · ,, ICCSOlndpf I •110 1<11• 14'.4 141< ... · All!I SUl>mkt 10 .13 ..W. 31? 3-\<. 11., rnv · .54 5 3%< 11% II II -~1 Foote Mlnrl .. 17 '"' •'ii .l'J-" · i • 0 2n1 21'/. 21 •1<-1.1 1'1111 Ch .lib 11 71 11/c Hi l'llr ... ~lty Inv wls l8 211• 21/c 7'1• FoollMln pf .. 42 J?V. m~."f 12:~+ ~ ~=~~~ \'~ IO 111 lS'l2 51,; lSl/J ... have purchased ground beef or AllrAuto .411 10 10 10 10 10 . c1tv Inv .,, 1 · · 11 16 2sv. 2.1''>-•,1 Ford M uo 6 .so ~ -~ ,~ '" P 1 · .• 10 27 24,;. 2, 2• -~. . Al!>N Pt ..a 7 I 12'14 I~ lnl-\\Cit Stor11 IS 6 S\f• SV. S•t..+ V. For M~K 14 7 199 U\O lm 3"'4--'ll Kan lf ·-' 61'1 6,14 Jamb at Safeway Since the A~ 1'94 13 166 .s\11.I. 5"\lr .I!)'.! -•.:rkEq I"' 13 '9 ~ 4214 42\H i,. FrM pf 1.14 . . 21 .lm It,,. 26'14 + t:Z ~ty l/l<IJ"..l IO ~ ,;'~ 19 19 _·i.~ •
price cellli1g March 28. !"' ... 5c" ~ : J ra~ ~~ u~+ \lo 1.C-'/J' ;.~ ·~ ~ 1:t ;:~ 1 :~ te ~:;l~r".: :lJ H 11: L1t.. 3',,. ~h.::m l(=~~~r :12 IS 1.4' 21'~ ~~ ~Yr"· · ks $ ""6 937 · Amcor 10b 10 12 54\ ~ 541r+ Iii! lvClltt 1 92 11 l 59'4 59\lc s~v. . Fosterwpt 1 6' U¥t 23Mr ~-¥1 Kawtck .20 12 I 81'1 • • , ·, 'J1ie SWt BS l,ur , lD Am Hls1· .30 22 89 ~ 32111 32-14 <.:lev El f32 II 51 33'4 3211, ~+ 19 Foxboro . .O 26 91 U 'h U 24 -\t 1Cay1ttrR .60 S 41 124' 12 12,4+ "
d . the I ro-A HI$ Pf 311> .. ny, 71\'t )214+ •a C~El>f ; 56 1100104\'l 104V. .O•'h+ 'h FronklM .20 15 191 13Y, l2l'I 121'>-¥1 Keebler .10 II 6 23'n l~~ 11~+ ;" amages, saying 'irW p AmAlrFI .42 IS 76 1714 16''2 16'h-.\ir C vEl>f 7'..o '' 150 102''2 102'"1 102\;+l\t Fronkl5t . ..0 20 31).4 34 32\t 3214-1!6 l(HneCp .JO 7 Xl2 S,,_ .,, "{' ' vides that "any decrease in Am Alrilnos . 360 15-ltr """ 1''14-~' c ox .'s2 19 316 23'9 '"" 21~11;, Fr1111Mn .ao 20 102 23V. 221'> 22'!0 .ce11er 1n . .a 6 1 1314 11~~ 11~'1!-~ Am81k .20 • . -6\':r 6lilr M'-14 Cluett p PO 10 ..a 13 12'h !3 ! y, Fruehuf 1.10 9 37 29.\ir 28\t 21111-114 Kellogg .54 18 117 1614 ~· • quantity or quality of a meat ABrond 2.31 9 19 '°"' 39"' 391h-'llr CluellP .,,· I . 52 J]Y, 13 13Vt . :i. F~lnd " 6 3S6 l:M II ""II-"' IC•ISY·H l,30 1 23 U\.o 23'4 23\'J-~. AmBrcct .64 12 27' U'llr 27 2714 CAAi Inv C~ U 46 301• ;8\lc 211'a-2V. --G -Kenmell .84 7 A Zl'llo 23'11r 23"" · · item Without commensurate A1ll Bldg .21 9 14 Im II'.< 11-"-s;1i1A Fin .54 6 254 13~ 13 l). -.\ir Gable lnd•t 6 ISi 16 16 16~ 14 Kencolt UO I 128 25\\ 24~ 24\1o-1-'1
reduction in the price of that~~~~ 2it? IO 1~ W; m: m;-~ ~~~1'11 1J~ '5 1~~ lf.,.. 1~:~ 1~~1~ ~~~ c~°To ·; ~ I~~ 1~~ 1~-~&~~I.~ J ~ ~-l~ r~ ~ . . . . A CnM l.Ub 10 • 19'h 19Y, 19\'l .. "'~"' I 19 16 17r,. 16'116 16-.... !:F"' 1.20 .. -~ 129'.!7,i !! .• 21914,1• + ~ ICerrMIJf 4'h .. l 125~ 1251 ~ l~I"" ~~ item constitutes a pnce In· AmCyen 111< 10 123 UV. 23V< 23Y2--I CslS< Df J°83 .. 11 2...,. 2A 2A -'!lo 1m Sk 1.30 6 .. " -~ '~ 1~ 1Cev1tn .ISb 6 6 "14 •~ .,~ ·•
hat 'te " AOlstTet .AJ 21 13 ''"" ., '1V•-14 Coca ol i'Jo « 3U 143 141\lc I-+ .. mSpf 1.60 . . 6 27 lt.."1 26\'t-+ .~ KlddeW .60o 5 38 18 17'h 171'>-h crease On t l m. AmOual Vst . . 3 7 7 7 ... ~oceBoll '34 24 229 :zov, l~ IN+ \'t ~11,11nell .25 31 7 31 3,_ 31 ,, l(lddeW pf ' . . l Sl'h 51'h 51 1'2 .. ADul of .I.. . 4 13 13 13 . . . oldwBk '29 7 16 1314 13 13'/• rdDen .70 12 38 167/o 16'lli 1"4-1Jt Klddeol 2 20 7 38 37 37 -JV•
0
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%-Amlilec: UO 9 :187 26'4 26 26\lc . oieeoln ·06 21 31 15'"> 14111 IS +'i4 erlQCk .84 I ' 16'4 16'h 16'..,_ '"'Kim Cl i'.20 i6 221 45 -""' 4'~9-'" • Mo•cete ~ .l\m l;xoort .. 104 IV. I IVf-.... olaat• 1:1 1549 29Y, 2a14 291,.._ \le Gas S\'C 1.12 9 3 l•'ll 14'111 l4llr . KlnasOS .30 • 3S • A'• '"•
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -~~1~.f1.fi ·; '1'i 1~ 1:t! 1:t!: :~ c~:rf~ 3il t 'l~ ~t? m~ ft~2~ ~~~w1hl~ 11 31 n: ~~ ~ ~ ~1rtA c A·1~ .8 Ji W1' W~ J:,,, ":": :: . . . A Fin Pf II<!> .. 110 18'h 11\'z 18~ \1o C lllr FOoct 12 7 11 l!Wc I~ 'h Gemini Cop .. 4 11'!> 11'1< 11¥1 · Knloht N .28 20 45 41 .O'lio ;; , + ; •. Bank Of America says it will A GnBd .IOb · · 24 26V• ™> 25•.>-1/.i c~u~' Redlo 16 19'h 19 19 -.\ir Gem In .56a . . 2 U U . U Koellro .20b 1 14 13¥• 13'12 13'• A GCvS .76b . . 13 18~ UJ 18 -V. Colp .20 37 66 .. n. .,_ " -1:\f.i Gen Am Inv . 17 1311) 12~• 13'~.--~Kapper 1.72 7 17 l3Vl 33 33111-~. open a permanent represen-A Gn tn1 .52 7 154 15-11< 15'h 15'h--'Iii CotonWn1 '04 9 8 17'h 17~ 17YJ+ 11, Gn AOI .6()g 17 12 36Vz 36V. 36111--' 1C00e>er pf , . zao WV. SA'h S••h -'" . ff ' . M Gn pl l.80 .. 28 27 26'/.i 2614-1,; <.:olt Ind '70 7 12 17 16~• 16'Jt-,,. (;enATr ua 12 56 """ .o"" .1,,,.+1 Koracorp In 5 • S\'I 5 , -'• tatlve 0 !Ce lR OSCOW. AmH01st .AO 8 27 12 l l'Jz 11-\t Coltfn pf .j,_. .. 11 5114 .SO~; SJ11<+l GenBanc .76 7 12 130 ... 139t4 139~ •• Kraflco 1.77 14 110 •9''4 "8¥• •9 .
A W Cl b nk es. AmHom .60 3' 333 44 d~ ~2'14-1•4 c a s 1 46 12 1<14 Jlj\11 36 .,. 36'!•-2 GnCable .80 9 286 I ·~ V> -'" Kresae .20 31 515 391;, .181/1 3'!\1-'• · • ausen, a pr l• A Home pf 2 . 4 194\fJ 1941/2 INV,+Jl/1 C BS prei I . . 18 2614 26 26\t-'I• Gn Cgr 1.20 8 2 I~-167_ 167-·;.:. roenler .80 6 ~ JAii 16'1 16' .. -'•
d t 'd Tuesday t h a t AmHotD 21 40 113 41 40\<W ~ " c·• ra l 90 9 -30\\ 29.\ir 29--ltr ~ DevelOI) I 105 rn ~ •• roatr 1.30 13 345 16\'t 15\c 16\ .... -'• en Sa! Ami 1 :S0 7 U 9,,.. 9\':r 9y, ~ v • ' 1·3~l 5~y4 ·~ ·-~. Dvnam 7 30 1114 11 18 + ~ KY-1n 60 7 20 12'h J m I rn-;, pe~iSSiOn to Open the office ~ ~.S1~o.!~ 11 m I~~ I~~ 1~112 ': u:~ ~~t~~r ;: : f~ ~ l$14 -i~ ~F~ t: ?JI ~ '~'lll m: ~~ ~ l.eclede l'h 8-LJ ~ ~h 20'11 ... was Obtained While he and AAMMttCICpxf 51,11 1_1_ 584 3901 ~ ~90,t 90~-+i"',,. ~mE pf i.70 3 62'h 62'1• 62'1• -11• nGro .41b 24 5 1161Y• 1161 1161 -V: L.am1n Sn I 9 18 13'14 3 1:1 -I>
,. 70 '" 7" ,. ' s I "° IS 21 1319 121'2 12'h-•1t Gn Host CD 10 JI y, 1l -1 LtneBr .65Q 1 l " 27 H4 21""-"' Other members Of the bank's Amer Motor 6 162 714 7'~ 7lf< -1'o :'::i:v~dv 2:ao 10 BA 32""1 32V. 32-•1, Gan Instr 2k 12 2113 15''2 H:~l2 13~~1~ LorMI 1.38b 8 .a 23 21"'• 22 -1' ... . . . AmNGs 2 . .0 9 53 37 ~ ~ -~' Ca<nEd pr 2 2 26"' 26'1\ 26~ ... Genlnsl pl 3 .. 2 m. ~ • l•trobe Sii 17 2 71<> 71,, 71'1+ 'I• international board of dU'eC-Am Seat .n 13 6 lllllr 10'4 10~•-I'll ~wEdpf 1 47 · · 12 21% 21~ 21" . c;en Md• .12 21 4 2'112 24'4 up , Leersleg .28 1 "8 6 9.> 6 ... · M "th · Am Sh1D A& 7 37 17 16\1< 16"" c e pr 1'90 .. 25 2$14 2s 25~ 'la Gen3~,.M11121s.05b1 239 120064 m'612 ~~ ~.?.+ Y• lotr5 pf 2'1• . . 2 27'h 21"• 21·;,+ " tors met m oscow wi Ill· A Smell 1.20 9 83 m-. 17'12 IN+ v. :~mwEd WI . 14 11).;<o I°"' IO'lll .. . nr11qT -~, ,· 73-v. ltHCO c ·"° • .. 9\c 9·. >111-'"
d tr. I b 1.1.:. nd 1 • Am Stnd .SO I 12 llV. 11'4 11~ .. comEd Bwt .. 1 111'4 10-. lO:V. .. anMol f' 5 . 3 7<'4 3,, _ , l.eascl>f 2.20 . . 9S 11>•• ?6~• 26'12 us 1a an"'"g a lOre1gn AmStdof 4'" ' 60,,.. s9'14 59""-"" ~omwOll 2k 87 2AO tv. 1.\ir •If.-~ Geflp l'boru 1~ j' .P, ~v. g:,1: ~"" _ (: 1.easwv .SOo 1• 11 34~ l4''• J•..;,-'1• trade offi"ials of the Soviet AmSterll .52 ls 10 21'llr 21~• 21'1/o-lf• cw011,,1 1.n . . 21 ~ 20 • 2014-~ G Pu .,,,. ., u+--l-4-1 Leeds&N .so 10 18 12 , ""' 11!'2-"' . " ~~TSt&eTrll2,wtlO 12 1n2 Sllll>:t Slll'L Sill~ 'I• l:a<nsat .S6 19 19 '9 411~ olll:V.+ 'lo GenPubU H . 1171 5-,i!2 9~ .I'!\ leesonl :..o 9 10 I~ ll' .. 12'•-~• U _., '" --C t S I 118 ~ 1"' 2-I<> Gen Refract 19 ' ~· ~· · let> Pt C .60 7 IS 14'!< 14'4 14'1< .• mon. AmT&T pt • . . 67 60\\ 59.,. 60v1+ 11r ~~~ r 2~0 ·1 15 uv. "'" 1''4-11r GnSa s'"""i' i·ndu 19 3: 4i~ 4~i! 'm:: ~uh va1 1nd . . u 1~ 1•;, H•t ,,.. ATTpfA J.44 .. 33 52YJ 521/• 521/• ConeMI i Cle 6 13 17"' 17"' 17.\ir-'Ii n: teeE I ao 1'1' , .. 29 28"" 28¥·-l'l l.•hm l.42b .. 69 1~ IS11t 15•,,-r '• • C D I Am T • T wt . 1040 6 6 6 -•11 ~onnMl 8.sb 14 6 23y, 2'Jlll 23\4-14 T · -••• 37~ 3~, Lennor Co 6 23 l0''1 IO'h 10...-'" flprttS ea AmWllr .64 7 32 IJl.4 111'1 111/c . ConracC . 60 9 19 llV. 1714 17V.-... ~:w:~ 21~' ·5 ~ j~ 18~ 1•·;4 Lenox In .lO 18 25 :iG'h 30'!> 3011>+ •,1
LOS ANGELES (AP) Ameron ·sg 6 15 uv, 1' " -'It <.on Ed i eo II 161 23'1\ 23'h 23'1>--.... ~ r J.41) 40 8ltt 8"" a~ Ln Fd CID . . 16 9'!i 914 9'1• . . -AA~st~! ·1.J 106 ?9o 1 !~ 136:2 163:ft-:~. CMsEd pt' 6 . I 771" 77'4 77'h+ 'h GeM~r · 70 "9 2 l~ 16-ltr 1~·;4 LtV l(l( .75a .. 10 12~ 12'1> 12~1+ 1't C M Corp f Los .,_ c' -~ " •~ " t..onscd l>f 5 3 '4 M 64 I p ',, 33 130 38'!i 38 38 .\ir l't!VI Sirs .'8 14 X22 33'1> 32Y2 32'4-'• yprus mes · 0 AMF In 1.!18 9 231 28'4 27!\t 27-'I• ·onsFd I 30 ii JS J4'h ~ ~Vo--.\ir qen~.:'c i-16 llD l4ltt JJ'llr 34111:: 1" Levitt Furn 10 334 7'!1< 71/• 1'1•-1' An I has delayed a Amlac .M 7 4S )5'/1 15'!i l~ 'It •onFdpf ~•h 3 \'2-l> 91¥1 91....._ ~ Vll f · 0o lAO l02 102 102 +1 LFE Corpn . . 7 •'I• 4Vc ,,..,._ 14 gees AMP fne .69 41 63 121 l19Y• 120:">+1 Con Frgl .52 '7 30 12~ 12'1> 12'!0+ 19 g:~.:~ U\ '10 22 18'" 18 18""+ 'It Llbby0 2.20 ' 173 l31h 32'i> 321"-1 Previously announced ac-AMP Inc wl 11 ~ 40 1• 40 11 · • on1N<> 2.ro 9 95 211'!i 2lr 21rv.-v. oettv I lib 29 109 128 1231;, 12JYl-4t-> lOF of -tl4 . . 1 76 75',• 16 .. AmpcoP .36 • 8 .,. 8 8 . fonsm Pw 2 10 269 27l\ 27 17 -;~ Pf i 20 3 20 20 20 Llbbv McNf . . 8 •V2 '"' •V2+ •• quisition of Bagdad Copper Ampe~ Co 99 •'Ar 3¥1 •V.+ '4 !«>" P pf •Y> 1370 60 60 60 ~"lua iOb ~i 1 6v. '''" 6"'-14 l brtvco .30 ' 6 w,, 16~ "'" , Amrep Corp 3 15 ''"> 6"' ~i . . .onll Air Ln 12 ·112 m 91'1 9V.-.\ir GI !PC · llO 7 ·10 ll.\ir 12'4 IV.ii-~ Llbt!YL.n ,60 8 19 l<Rll 10'4 10''4-'.i Corp. "pendmg further legal Amster 1.70 I 11 25 24% 25 1.1><,•n 1.60 9 16' m• 2rn 271/•-'Ill ~en Finl ·5k 5 16 16'/• J61Z 16'\0-1v, l.lblu' IJf 114 .. 2 """ "'"'<ot•',>+ '• . " Atlarpt 2.65 I 40 ,0 .0 + '4 ~on COl>Pff . . ' 5 •'~ ""' . . . \..awls 52 Slla s:v. ~-"' '-'"" My 2Yl 12 J; 39 3&~ 39 + ,, reVleW. Amstr DI .61 . . 4 87/1 l>olo 8'1>-!<> conttCp ~.16 I 131 3¥ 37'1• l'4-7'h G ffHlll Mb .• ' 16'/c 161'2 16\'.-"" LkKIMy Pl 7·. z70 103 102 103 +2
C tat l "d Amsted 2.AO 8 . 12 41"9 ~ ·~-14 ;n11Cp pt2y, 10 .f214 41V. •l'llr + "'lllblFlex ~ 10 9, 18"" 15'11 16.\ir+ ~' LrllY ldl .76 43 :152 H7\ii H6'/• H61/•-•1 A yprus s emen sai Amtel 1n .20 20 l s 5 s -'"' •• 111110 .bsb io 12 17"" 17'4 HY>+ '4 ll•tt• 1.so 21 152 56,,. 55ir. so -'Ii llnc:Nrl 1.1111 t Ba ll>l• 29¥• JOv.+ .,.
that the $55.7 million ac-=~c'?~~ F9~ ~f"' ~~~ ~t tt ~~7~s· . .J~ t ~ it m i~ ~ :::-• r,,r;,o~ 1~ t: ll'12 m~ n~ ~ ti~'1 fi.~ ii 111 6!11i ~ .... ~'It+.··~
U'lll!'tlon 'mtended ori"l"ftny And c11yton 6 • 19 19 19 + 14 ..:onfl 011 IY2 9 230 31'14 31% 311-'>-v. i.oson "' 17 7 2314 22~• ~"" w1on 2'">i 11 412 8~• s•;, 8'.>-'Ii q ' ~ ~nee .10 H 72 10''1 101111 \01,'o-~-Cont 011 pf 2 a """' .. "' ... vioo-1 Mor 11 204 13"1 1314 13'4-"' Llltn CY pf 3 • lS'll :14•,, 34-1 to be COmpieted Tuesday lS AnSUl Co 41 9 6 IA~ W I• 14'4 ~-1.onl Tel Bl! i:i 97 2314 22'h 221'2-4i ~~Un 60 8 19 1~ 16'-" I~>-\'I .Inn CY Pf 2 x4 1H1h 1811 11'1>+ 'I• • Apache .32~ • 22 13 ~ 13'/• IJV;:: 'I• ~ontrl Data 9 238 m• 37'l4 371a-2 kiWst Fcl 10 10 15:V. lS 15 -1 Llttonln ~IA 1, 11'4 10'4 llW•-'I• now Scheduled to be """"'pleted • 011 • 6 52 1,~ 1··· 1--1•• onOlpf •• , Z60 S6V1 501;, )6112 rich I I>. 99 23 22'h 22'h--"' LOC~neod ·5 74 6'1> 6't. 6'1•-.,. ~vm ~pco ' ~ • • ~~ L wd ' • 26\t 25l'a 2S'lt+ 14 rT 92 HI' 279 26"' 26V• ~ 'I• LOOWSC 1.16 l 153 l6-I< 25\'z 251.'2-I on or before June 13. !o,:<t=PcO.!: 1j 1~ 1~~ 1~ 1~1!·-. 'Ii ~~k un 1.5~ r 60 P11 11'> 7'"> -'4 c;or~J '2• 1e 20 1' 1m 1J•t.-v. LomtsFI .J2 ' m 91'1 9'1'1 91'1 . ADl>lled Ma 15 " 5V1 4li 511,+ ·~ t.:OOP Ind .BO 11 13 3014 29112 29'h-,.. Gould inc' ' 9 17 2,1/o 23'12 23'h--l 1.omM 1.39b 12 15 "" .. .. -~
• Strik Oft Al!A Sv l.22 26 371'.IS'Jt 124'h 121'12-l't. LooPOTr ~~bb 16 30 16'h IS~ 15.o 'h-Grace W 11? 10 126 22.\ir 22\t ~ 14 LOnGO!' Mflj 6 5 13¥1 12fa 12?'1-'" e Arc1t1N .14 I 10 ·~ .._ 6'12-1/t ~OOP r .-1 I 16'!• IS"" 15'14-'llr urlnby .60 7 I 17'1'1 17~ 17-'141 Lone S Ind 7 37 15"' 15 15\'a--.._ Areal pf c 2 2 23" 23'"1 23"'-~-oopTpf w. . . 1 17YJ 171/J 17\'t Grand u IO • 'l!i• ll "" ""'•-111 Lon S1G l.<16 11 "8 :iov. 29'!0 ~ .. LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Arct>erD .so 1• 111 31"" 30'1 30H-l'o cpelnd .32 1• 19 20'h 19'1/r 201"> ::: Gr•nlv 1:20 6-.ca 2314 22'!0~22-llt LonglLI l.<14 10 144 21'!0 21\\ 21•1 ... , . ) k U · A•:cllc Entp • •o s 4"• Ht+ ,,. ~opp Ran~e . n IS U'h 14-V• Grant W l'h 6 "696 17'~ 17 17-lh. UL pll( I.JO .. Z.SO lU61<!> I061h. 106'~1' • R t I C er S nion Was Id I 8 5 83 23V• 22'h 22-~ GroyOr 1.20 • I 16'\4 16'h I~ . ~ono[)g .56 39 9 -66 66 -'.1 e al Ariz PS 1.16 9 68 2Ho 211'• 21'i<+ 1/1 opw · 1"2 M> 6 6-'lio GIAMI 1.S7b 10 76 Jl JOV-. 30•/2-·~ Loral Corf 16 211 3 W. Mir-'• t . 'l t 'k Tuesday Ark s .. t .0 1 10 12''o l2'n 12'>-·~ Cordura Cp 5 253 100\'J 96'4 96'4-5 Gt A&P Tat 21 12 11¥< ll :V.-r;, laltndEx 20 ll6 3~Y> 3~ 35 -'" pos poning IS S fl e Arion RllDv 8 4639 4l!a •''I ,,;,_ » Corn!'ls 1.12 3o 17 ~ 25V. 25y, GtlkO 1.:io. 24 5 24'lir 2•:V. 2•~•+ I/• La Pacific 9 63 2111' 21~> 21'1<-l'> hile a federal fact finder Armada Cp 43 9 s•' 5i;., 51'1 C0<1srn l.l lb 12 33 ~ 5-\ii ~--,,.. c;tN Ir J.tOd 12 2 1ov1 10112 1ov1 . L.ouGH t.80 12 1 30'_, ~ 30',.._ '" W ArmeoS I 20 9 56 22~• 2rn, 22'1\-'I• Cowles Com " 13 23'/i 2314 23\1<-~1 GtNNek 1.60 13 xr 4511> 45'11 45~>+ 'It lowenst .90 7 16 17'.2 l7 17V. .. spoke with representatives of Arm pl 2:10 .. tJ 29V• 21» 29 .. ~i~i~i? ,-}~ lJ 6 3014 29,, 29, 1 GNN Pr 160 x2 22•1. 22•1. 2'1'4-,,.. LTV Corr> s 12• 8'Mr 8'" s•,._ '4
• • Armurpf ..-+.-· 1JO S9'h S91h 59\.'1 · · 87 16 15 '~ 161•-• GtWsFin :40 ·1 182 181/a 17'.4 17'.4-11/1 Ll"V Corp A I 91/• 91.t. 91/.ot-'"-the umon and the food in-Arms Ck .ao 15 139 21 26 .25 -:v. ~i:a!'fFf8, ~ 133 1 8 1 ... gt w .. t u~ .. ;µ s 4.,. s .. lTV cp s pf .. s 32 3F~ 32 + 111 ArmslR 1.60 6 20 28 211:1 27V.+ •;, c ~ 1:,u 8 23 261., 211 26,,.._ ·~ t WstUn pf . 5 W I• WI• 1414 . LUIH'ltol .43 28 49 391'o 37"" 38-1 dUStry. Arvlnlnd .52 II 32 16 15112 IS'/>-'h ci:,',,~'K IO 8 9 141' 14 UV.-V. r1 WUh In . 13 3'Jt 3 3 -•.4 l.UCkV St .S4 12 71 IH'I ll 'h II~ ..
W L H 't f rmerly ASA Lid I . . 231 8'l~ 7'l'1 83'1'+7''° C H •54 IJ s l?Y~ 19 19 ~m Gttnt I 10 11 23 22V. 22""+ '4 lUdlo"! I.tie 9 31 1~1 15 15\'o+ '' ayne · OrVi Z, 0 ASA Lid WI . 173 41r, 39''7 4llo+3"" Crouse C 'rk IJ 54 22'A ll'h 21 y,_ ~ <;rnGpf 1.76 . l JI" 01!\t 31-;ra l.uken$1l .80 9 9 22'1'< 21:V. 2l:V.-1 Of lh .. Cost of Living Council Alhl 011 1.20 a 202 25'1t 2•'1' 25 .-'4 c~nzr ? 20 11 119 28'12 28,4 28.,.._ •;. Gr•vhd 1.0. 9 99 1s '""" w111-v. 1. v o corp 13 J7 ••1. • • -v, ~ ' Asl)ryG 1.30 11 35 JS>~ 3.SY> 35'h-112 f ·20 v, ' Greyhnd wt .. 23 J 2l'c ~ l.yke Yg•tn 17 l1 9 BV. I""-'" met with spokesmen from tu 5Pr 1.20a 8 1 2•14 24'4 2•¥.-•1, 'f"sP c!,.P ·a ~ fr' ~ tl -14 Gro11er .90 " m 11 10 JOi.i.-..., lvk DI 3.12c 16 21 26"" 261\-~ .. . Athlone . .o 5 8 12 114\ 11.,._"" 111 30 13 2, 12 11,,., n v,_.,.. Gr~'niT.~" In 19' 52,).2~ 1n: 1~~+ ~ Lvnehsv .40 l~-.. i~ 9 9 -'" ~~~ s:s !~nd:%ii!f~1:e~ iii~~~~~ J 1~ mt il~ E~~~~~~:"0~ :~ 2~ ~~~!'It ~f4~:~~r~,k:r~d 13 ] ~,~ .~ filt:~m~~13~ ~ ?s 1i~ 1%1 1}~ :::
tum to Washington Wednes AR.ch pl :1:\4 .. zso 52Y1 s2•,1 s2v,...... l':r C:urtlssWr A 12 J 2~'1 26'!• 26'/•-14 uul e&th 1 18 6'!0 6'llr MecMll 05b 1 28 1 6'1> 6¥1-'•I ~!y to present his finding~ :~~~ pf c~~ 102 I~ ~\f· 5m 5IV>:j:'\; >~c't~~ck21 ; ~ ~~ m: ~ ~ 8~118 i~' 13 .;f 1 'M~ llt ~ ~~YJA 11 •• 2 ' ,!J U1' lf'lil ~~.::./• l ed. :110 lne0 ·/6 J 2~ J,,. s~~ 5f,,:::3~ Cyprus Ms I 9 rJ ~ 29 29 . . Gulf&Ws .6' ' 101 23 221V-. 22ij= I\\ MadFd .-IOll . • ao IO'h 10 101<1-'10
to a federa m 1alor. A~.:;:i ,1~ 9 JI 10'1'1 9·~ 9'f.t+ :~Damon Cp Jl-42 39'1c Jm JB:V.-:\le &r~~; J; :: l't 1~! ·7~~ 1~.,.::1t ~O:fc'!:"~ -~ 'j .: :~; :~~ :+.,,,,·:: Avco Corp 4 16 V. " ,,,_ " DanRlvr . .0 9 39 no 81Jt IV.-'4 GlfWs DI ~l .. 1' Sl'/2 53 S3'h+ V2 Mtlfnav .60 13 197 121<> 111' 11'/c ... • El --t• Avco Cp wfs . . 19 2't> 2 2 DanaCp 1.36 9 31 32\'z 32 32 -\t GllWs pf 5"" . . 2 TP/I 7•'11r ,._ .,.. Mallorv .96 9 10 181/• IB'/• 1811•-•• Jr.a ..... ,. '"" Avco f,' J.20 26 39 38:\4 39 ·-1/, Dart In ·r113 106 34 331h 33'1>-'h Gulfon lndst 15 · 2'' II• 4'h 4'h-Y, MeloneH .32 19 13 24V2 24 2•V•-14
Special to the Dally Pilot ~~.'"'in~ :~ r. 1~l ~~ ~1/2 fs'"'::a~ 8:~~:' p:.1. '9 ~1 n.,, f:~ 1~ = ~ HallPrl .801 74'o!'i7 17 17 -"'~=~~ :~ 1S ~~ ~1~·: m~ m::: ~ LOS ANGELES -A lG-acre Avnetlnc .30 6 25 I r,.... 7'1>-14 Dav lnln .2• s 79 I'll 8 I -v. Halllbtn 1.12 36 1121'2h139'413':\4-2~ Man Hn 1.56 10 76 30'\li 30:\ir . . AvonPr uo 59 113 ll:FJlo 132 132 -2V. DayjonH .54 10 <16 1714 17 17 \4 . HarnP•P .so 13 A2 IB'c ""' 11¥1+ 141 MAPCO .$4 21 3' 32'1• 32'"1-'• El Monte site on the south side Aztec 011 6k 54 66 " 1av. 1af1 ~ oavPu •.116 11 1 22!'1 22v. n>t>+ •11 H1indC1> .40 7 '15 1'4 a a -:i. Marottion M 1 70-I 21,,., 21i.. n'"-v, -a -, OPLpld 7.41 . . z20 99'h 99'A \lllY:t---3 Haft<llem .68 8· 48 n'o 7'h 7'h. · Mar Oil 1.60 10 105 3ll'I 301/c '.~-Hi of Telstar Avenue east of Bab&Wll .IO IJ 57 26',(< 25'/1 me-~ DaPlpf 1.10 .. zto 102 102 102 . Handy H .12 IJ · B 20v. 20 20V•+ .,., Marcor .90 a 170 "'" 19.\ir 91/,..... •1 llactle .ISb 14 120 S~ $ 5 -" OunWlt 40 4 33 7~ T'h 7~-y, Hant1CP .60 6 19 13 12"" 12-14 Marcor DI 2 . . 31 <O'llr 40 40 -'4 Rosemead Boulevard has been Beker In .16 25 51 26 223s112 25'\:-~ oeere 1:oa 9 :m ,..,, J9'1t 391._2v. Hann• 1.JS 20 n *"' •5 "5 -I~ Marem .tob 11 98 341;, 3314 33-'ll-1'·
Id II BakerOll .37 21 116 23~ ,,., 23•,~ ,. OetP&L 1 16 9 39 '"" 16 16'-" +v. Harcour!B I !O 23 2A1i 23'llr 23'14-,, MtrMld 1.80 8 7S 271'2 27 m:-v. acquired by the Co we B1llG•• 1.96 10 92 iav, 2328¥! ~28-\'J 1• 0e1 Mnl ,-10 9 27 11y, 18,4 18,,,__ v. Hardees .16 1s d 12~ 1n• 11~-+ 1• Marioni. .21 29 <14 Jll'I l<1'4 ' +v,
F d f 1 d BanCal 1.3' 69 3 23'h "• '" DellaAlr '.so 15 122 SJ 51\'t 51-11/J H1rn1fo I 20 6 9 22:\4 22.\ir 22\'J+ \le Maritn I.II 18 274 371"> 3~ -21/, Banker un or p anne Band&A Inc •l 51 21'h ~"' 8~ ~~ °'"ec fritn • 29 Ha w. w.-'" H•rr1h• :22 II 19 i:n·. 17'h 17"2-""MarleyC .0 16 21 33'12 32\'J 33112+111. I B1noor Pn 4 17 81/a '"" Y..-r .,.. Oetto 6 c 6 S4 13~ 13 13 1;. Harrlslntp 1 11 23 271.oil 2.7 27 -~ MarQtt Cem 7 711, 71,~ 71/1 future deve Opment. BenorP pf 2 . . I 24\'J W i2 ~y,_ ~ Denn~n to 7 98 2•Y, 23 23 -1~ H1rsco Ill 7 3 17 16 17 + Va Marlotl 21/7k 37 204 27'!4 26'' i!f~l1•t
The property is in Gilbert· ~~~k"~~v.8i 1~ ~ ff'1• ~ ~·= ~ g:::~~s" 1>fJ i6 s~ l~:! l~ l~ =114 ~:;::~x.108: 1~ 1~ l~ Jgr,: lUt+ v. ~!~n'/..1 1:~ ll 5~ 2~"' 25~ A;:'~
Flair Park, 10 miles east of ~!~~;&•t2~ IO ~ ~~ ~ 29'~ '~ ge"s!,""{ :61 14 t3 IHO 18 18 : : . ~=~~E~1~..lf 1~ 1~ m~ m~ m:+ 'h ~~'1:-'C~ 1J~ 1r 2~ lfY! lf\Z j~~-14
downtown Los Angeles. IB:~~R1.Ji 3t M w ~~ ~I~ i::~~~{~~ i JI~ .... l~l: ~ : ~~r'~nln :: ~ 1::z ,:v. 1m+ ·;;; ~:~~ .. ~ 3(5 5~ • .,ffll 1~~ 4rJ;1; :~: :·~ .e.'.1 2~ 11 zl 6 9'/: ~ ~t-J4 Oetdf 7As . . zlO 91\4 ~:z 1~:Z .. Heck Inc ·12 1l IO l~ l~ Bl.?t1~ ~:a ·l~ 7 ~ i°w. l'"" l~ ~ • ltJines Opell alesM "' 1 6 15l'c ls>.> 15''1 +'141 Oextr Cl> .25 16 2 16V. 16•'1 1619+ '" ~:Cl1~,:' 2~ 3: •: 12~ 12'/.i 1214-'12 Mas Mt ~ 11 •2 22'h 2nt :!1~.._ ~ 1th Ind .30 8 123 25 2414 2•V.-y, Dl•I Fin .54 12 8 20•;, 10'/• 2014-'" ~ H 1 'oe " 93 42"" 471,~ •2V.-Yt MatsuE . 1'b 10 90 29 -l''-v. CARLIN Nev (UPI) -1u1chl. .'2 17 313 ~,.. P~L ~~11 ;'! DI• Intl 1.ao a 23 2~ gm 2719 it~naR ·76 54 .o lMir u v. 36'!• -Mattel .0211 . m S\t "'' . • • axter '-.15 59 2'° ., ..... ., •••• ,._ ~ OJ•m $hm 1 9 33 II'!\ 81/c 18~=-Curt 2 ~ 3'!'a ~ MIY OS l.60 ' 236 ~ 30 -•1. Two abandoned gold mines avukCg .so 10 6 11~ """ 11-:f! Di•Shm .,, 2 s ~ 29 -'I• lerlnt .u i6 25 32\t 32111 v. .. May prf 1.ao 1 26 26 26 . earlllQs i 13 ~ 40 1'0 .,. -~ Dr.Shilt l .20 23 15l'c 15:\4 1.Wo p 60 9 16 18 W 4 .v. MayttOs .65 14 3 2':\4 2"1tr 2HI-'le will be reopened because of .. , Fd1 · 111 u ~nr,~ ~ "'~ g1c1aP1>n .30 11 55 •~ '"' 8'h-.... e1:W p~y·,,. 12 " 23 21'h 2w.-1y, M•vsJW ..so 1 s ri~ 7'• n. +v. . f h eckmn . 7 27 ~ • ebold .40 21 6 <14 45'1• '514-\'I Hetnl61> cap 9 ·2'\lr 2111 l'l'a Mavl•A t.30 13 96 28'11 27'1• 271/,-1 the higher pnce o l e g~ono .3S 28 x1p1 311M. 13~ •ll 1 g1G1orgo .60 1 31 10 9~ 9-.,.. tn .300 · 3 7''1 1111 1v. MCA 1ne .6' & 2 22'4 22•• 22r;,_ ,, . hAr .70 1 • ··~ ~ .,,~ l!rllal Eoot 47 120 116 IS 15 -1 Hem 1 61 20 171 37 36'!i 36!\t+ 'It McCord .N 7 5 161/J 16'/• WV.+ ·~ precious metal, the Newmont • coPef 2k ' 57 :ff' 1t9!2 _,.... +·· 011111111h . .o 13 11 6¥1 6'.W 6l'I+ 1<> 11:."liv" 1 ·10 11 91 1s>Jt 1s 151/o--11, Mccrov 1.20 5 31 2w. 201. 20l'11-~ . . eel 8eldon 1.20 8 7 ,..4 ~ "' n Ollllngh Pf 2 I 22 22 22 Ht\lbl In '91 21 136 '1'h 41% 41¥1-l'a oollcOermot l 26 '9 62 514 60~>-l:J. Mining Corp. announc . s11dGH ] I• ,,• ~ .... ' 29.,,,:!:1~ 0111one .eoa 15 2 29 2814 28'11r Hewiif P ·20 47 69 83~ 11•1. e1 •1.-2•~ M~ld CD 62 388 67"' 64\ir 6olY:t---J'!i Th h I h ltll flow 9 21 :!Mir 6! o snevw .12 62 317 93 91 '2'111-:v. HlohVolt En 30 u s~ S'!i S4i M g .40 a 10s 241,'1 23'4 24'1o+111 e company, W C emlsCo . 7 9 I~;\" 1114 171/•-}'• Oloston .o6b 10 6 13\t 13 13 + l'I In bl" '3 IJ ll 22"" 22 221/•-V. me n .40 8 105 24'~ 23"" 24711+1'11
operates the Carlin gold mine ::SI: c1t J 10 2T ~.z ~t,? lfv!+1 v. 01s111sea .10 19 2 37"" 37"" J7'11r-1/, ~111~ H11 · 1 10 31 23.,. 2J11> 23'1•-~· ~. ;e~, '.~ 1~ ~ ~ ~ 2rn:: ~ • c I IS ] 98 2714 W t. 26'4-I Olverslfd In . . 59 2... 2.\ir 2'1io .. HMW Indus 16 19 3YJ ~ 31'2+ ~ MGHI I I 20 I 20 20 i + "' said the Bootstrap and Blue ien ~' 2•;, m 32•4 321/• 3~t.-1A OlvMt '-'2b a w 24 23'12 23~+Y1 Hoi>aHM ·"' 16 JJ 29'4 29 " -14 Mctn&ro · P · · '"'° 56..., 54,12 i;,+1112 · ...C "' 4 :io · · 1 68 61 _ 1;. DrP..,.,.. .n so 256 22¥1 11"" 2Ptt-I~ Hoemar 91 9 • 216'!0 26'1'1 25~ -'Jo McKee l5b 13 32 ~· 2p , ,,. Star mines will go into pro-tnQuot tiic ·, 51 3 ~ 14-14 OomeMn 1a 30 113 99'19 91•4 99¥•+940 Holl e1.Ctn 1 211 a'h 8 a•,..._"' Meleen · .60 12 3 ~ ~ :i.:: "'· . . ertury Pho 7 SO 101'1 I014 10:\'o-'h DomFd .891> · · 13 7.\ir A' 7'\0.--li• Ho Inns .lO 15 167 21 \'o 20.\ir 20'12-.,,, Mcl<>11lll Stl 8 21 15'1 1 ~ I~ 14 duction m late 1973 or early ~ 1...00 , 2•9 29-'h 29 29 -"'~!:l'l1J .12 a15 635 ~-""2~ J~-t ',':. Hollysu .50b 8 " 131/• 13.,.. 131<>+ .,.. McNeil .1s 1 1 12 11'h 12 _ '" 1 ' 9 . h he t f k B '"" .52 19 10 42~ 'l •I ~, ... ~ .. ~ y .4& ·~~ -~~ ~ flomeslk .60 211 411 "'" W "> ..a:v.+s Mead Cl> 60 II 20 Wh 13'4 1374 1 74, wit t ra e o wor 11 ac .Dk 1 <14 6ol 109 lOI 10814-'" Oort<: CP .32 ' 16 15.,.. is 15•.1. ,,. 1-1on~1 1.40 22 132105 1cmi. 10314 . Meldr>f 2:ao . . 1 35YJ 3sy, 351/:i-·,,,
d d. ld . B1'1r n . ..a S 29 71,1,, 7 7 -~Dorr Ollver 8 13 8~ Tll 8"" . Hoover 1.21 I 2 21V. 21'\0 21""-V. pfB 12.80 . . 6 36'12 36 36 -V1 ' . epen mg on go prices. anost.ghl 10 , 3 \T'h 17'!i lffi--,_. oor .. vc .10 s 13 "'" 64" 6'11r-v. Horizon cp 2 69 8\':r 7% ,_ Medusa "'' 8 19 2311, 22 ,,., 2314_ ,,1 BIOCkHR .24 1'1 106 8 714 1'4-1 Oo.,,.rCo .M II 7 361"> 36 36 .. H Ital Alf 8 7 101/• 101/t IO'l'o-'19 ME I CorD 10 U 3 3 3 . !IUlllell .65 ' 63 1m 17 17 .. OOWChem I 2• 190 52¥1 .SO'lt .501/e-""H:::cp 06b 12 5'1 14'h " 1' -"' Mel Shoe .43 22 113 W h 25'h 2S'h.-1'4
AS FOR ACREAGE, Tom
Cherry. a vice president of
Ca lifornia Planting Col lo n
Seed Distributors, says that
"based on seed sales I'd say
over 900.000 thousand acres
will be planted to cotton this
year in the valley." About
850,000 acres were planted In
1972.
11~.: r.~& 1~ ~ 19'!i 1:¥~ 1:¥;:: ~; sr.:o 1~ 9 1! 2~ 2r· :J.\ir -~· ~gsu:i~n~· ·it 1I u m: n;: mtt ~ ~::i'.c:c~· .. ~ ~ i·a ~1• : • ...= ~ G B • zls G u Boise cased 8 143 io,,. n• 9-y, Dresser J . ..o JJ 39 JS 37'"> 3719-l'I Houc1101 :iv. I 2914 29V• 29'4-''•Mere st 1.60 20 1139•12 139•;, 1391/1-,,.. • as l to 0 P Bond Indus . I •11o •'~ •'I•-•Jo Ores Pl 2.20 · l 40\'I 401/• olO'lir · Hough M ., io 3 12V. 12"" 12""+ V. Merck 1.18 43 216 90 89 119'/•-1 BookMo 1.38 I 2 20'/' 201/J lO'f>-1/• Dresser Pf 2 . . 25 3S'4 35 35 -'h F i,,-1 11 165 S'!<I ff s:w,+ 1;. Meredith 10 7 s 14 u 14 -•t. Bonlen l.20 10 12• 22 21~ 214'+ l'I Drexel 1.20b . 18 19:\4 19\t J91AI-•1 ~=:Fn • 86 10 402 24Yl 2• • 2• -1 •Merrill .28b I 305 U% u 14-"'
br TORY GIANT, R.Ph
Our pharmary i~ your
neighborhood health station,
always ready to h('lp salisfy
your regular and rnwrgem·y
needs. .
We supply the h!'alth-aids
that add safety and satisfac-
tion to your daily living.
What you get from us b<'l-
ters e.i ther your heal1 h or
your comfort. And whPn
sickness strikes. from our
prl'scriptlon department you
g('t lh1> mf'dicinl's to makr
you -..·rll again. Lifr rnn be
ll'ss difficult, wh('n you rlr-
pend on a pharmnc)-, nllt'~
WC' hop<•. for y11ur mrdirinf'
and sickroom ll!"l'd~.
YOU on YOllR DOC"Tnn
CAN PHONE US wh<'n ynu
need a delivrry. We will de-
liver prompUy without <'Xlra
charge. A great many people
rely on us for th<'ir h('alth
needs. We welcome requests
tor dellvery s c r v I c e and
charge accounts.
PARK LIDO PHA"WI\
151 Hot'llt>1I "oil<'
Newport Beach 64.
Free Delivery
"This is one of the best
prices we"ve ever had,'' Egan
said. "We've gotten better
prices in wartime, but I can't
good as this."
AUTOMATIC
GARAGE DOOR
OPENER
SALE
ORANGE COUNTIES
YOLU ME DISTRIBUTOR
LOWEST PRICES!
ln,tallation & So>,.lce
Garage Door Hardwa re
Replaced
642-3490
Sea · Coast
, . Builders Supply
1651 Placentia,
Costa Mesa
-BUY SILVER OR GOLD-
T•k• Actual Po11e111on-.t99 Pure Sllnr
l119ot1-M.cl1lllont-Coln1
weeLTH ,.oT•CTIOll AHO P'OTINTIAL GAIH-1'11111 IROCHUR E
91f-164Z UNIYIRSAL T~ADI co. tn.uo
Jiii IAVINI AVI. CN AA AlltPORTI SUITI! 11J HfWP'OltT llACH
Borr> W I.JS 8 37 2111/1 ~ 2~-'la OrekvfupsCp .~ 152 3327 291~ J,,0 ~"t-~House pl i'li . ~ 16 5Sl'I 54\'t $4'h-l'h MesaPel .10 18 52 S9'11r 59 sm-•1 llorm1n1 In 16 12S 3:\4 Jn 314 . Ou e 1.-~ •~' -HousFpf l'h 6 43y, 43 •lift+ 11, Me• Spl 2.20 . I 122 122 122 + :V. lost Ed 2.44 11 97 33'/• 32'h 33 -I'> Oµke pl 8.70 .. 2430 110 IOl'h 108'h-ll'J Housl Pl .0 i4 ll '21fc 42,,, ,2..,,_ 'It Meubl .5'b 11 36 9~0 tV1 9''1-'ii If P Ve A B •d oslEcl 1.18 . tS60115 II• 11• + 'h Duke pt 1.20 . . 1..0 UM~ l0.'1'4 1041/•-V. HouNtGt ·34 17 16 -2''h 2.i'I>+ ,4 Mesta M11<:h s 12,,. 12,1, 12'"1 Ves ourns lne I 2 1214 1214 1214-v. Ouk•.,, 7.80 .. z120 IOI 101 IOI NG I 21'> 11 54 53,,,. 54 +~ M G M Inc io I ll:\4 IS14 15¥.+. ;,; Pp ro l ranlfAlr 31 11 240 101 o 9"" 9'1>-1/J OunBrd J.68 28 29 1S'h 1'~ 75 + '.4 ~~arKi I 18 221 1114 16'h 16'h-ol Metro .SOg 8 82 17'1• 16 l'i 171,.._ 1,. 1 G~l:~v1.1~ M 11~ ~:z ~~ ~~:!: ~ g~~~ 2~C N itf11md'h 1l4.:!:J~ Howmet .7o 9 101 11r-'"4 1t1,1,,-~~::~pt ~:$S · g~ :g ~ U -J
Special to the Daily Pilot
LOS ANGKLES -If the
California Public Utilities
Commission approves, gas
bills of residential customers
·would go up an average of 23
cents per month beginning In
November, but the utility
seeking the increase would not
benefit through higher earn-
in gs.
THIS JS THE substance of
an application that Southern
California Gas Co. filed Tues-
day with the PUC seeking to
offset an upcoming increase in
the cost of gas It purchases
from El Paso Natural Gas Co.,
one of Its major out~f-state
suppliers.
According to Rarry P. Let-
ton Jr., gas company presi-
oent. the $10 million offset
request is necessita~ by an
application filed by El Paso
with the Federal Power Com-
mission on May 2 for approval
or a $40 million annual rate in-
crease for its southern system
customers, including those in
California.
"OUR APPUCATION seeks
only to recoup the higher rate
we will face Crom El Paso
8rl• My pl 2 ' 42"" 42'llo .,.,._'la OuPn pl 4y, . . 9 """ 66112 67 .'. Hu~ 1.15b 12 22 191'9 19:1" 19f' 1 MG1c!"1n .10 45 692 67 6""' 64'1!.-3 . BrllPet .27b 32 "9 ""' 14 , l•'h-.,.. OuP'n f1 J'h . t S3 S3 53 .. ~udn:JH l.~ 1i 1 21~ 21('.; ~~ iZ MkhGs 1.04 11 10 1m 1719 11•.1.+ 'I• Natural Gas Co.," Letton said. l~od ~~· ,·~ 11 ~ }: w~ f lt -.... 8=~. rJ·;2 I ZI~ r,~ fty, mi+ .... H::S11es T0ol 21 132 •7'!0 46'4 <14'4-1"' Mlch~Tub I ' • 14.\ir U\'I W'o-~.
"The increase Will not add to Br~ Gf .15 6 ~ II~ 11.,.. 1114 _ 1 OUQL.of 7.20 : . ZIO Nl'J 9tl'J Nl'J-r' ~::l\~hE :~ ~ ~ l~ If-' lfll:: ~ Ml~r di ::: 1t 1n Jr,~ u~ m;-~
aming .. BrUnG1 l.n 10 231,; 22'h 23~-.(! uymo In .20 ' 31!7117 l.6-llo l•-V.+ " HU"CkC::P 2' 29 "° 27 25 .. ~l'h MldSoU I.JO II 128 Wt. 2• 2' + ~ OUT e S. Brown Com 7 ~ nl ,., ~ - -d' I ' 27 _ I'" li M aMtg .IBb 9 IS 15111 ISV. 15'/• lrG"""' 1¥1 • 7 ft ff M.... Eagle Pl 97 ' ' 25'\ ~ 25'1/o HY rom ·16 • ~ ~ lllo--MldROSI IO I 25 12" lll'tr lll'tr •t.i Under the Federal Natural 'l Sh~ .20 p ~ , 1 1m lr v. r;-::oe .iob ' :ill ~m m: m:= ~ ICN p ... , ... 16-:5 ~ ·~ ·-14 Ml~lb 1'.21 IS a '5..; 4~ 4514..:-..
Gas Act, rate Increases re-~wit ~ ' CZ f 16'h Ht~ C!Ji:.l~ " 37 2414 2Jltt 24 -...... hop 1.76 10 2' ~ 29 29V.+ v. Ni1'~~~M·lf n 1ll m: k. ~ =1;
b . pipeline llrv1h W .40 I 11 23\'.l 14-"" iiaslVlll 1\IJ 11 ' lt\11 19 19 + 14 l:l::l'\-" ·~ I •y 13'.. Int 1:1 -'II nnPl UI 8 6 19'1/o 19'1/o J~ quested Y lDtefslate B~ ~ 1.13 11 r l'A r 2,,_ y, Est Ko I.Oii 37 408 13S'otr I~ 133'1t-2V. I~ R{'r 1ti, I~ 2' U ~ ~ y, Ml""Eq .2' 13 4 18'!9 19 18"' ..,4~ COmpan•--such 88 El Paso R 0 i~ 3? "" 111! ~ v. Eaton<:p '"' • 70 32-. 21~ J1"4-1~ 11 .,, i 22 , ., 1,... 11~ 1~ 14 Mu Riv .90 10 16 ISl's 1514 1s>1a '""'• • aWn j · t 21 M :io...... n, Ed'lllnM .32 20 33 2"' a:I"" · 23-l'llr I pr 3v. . z ~ ~ ~ MO Pae A '5 S 3 T.Wa 7:114 731/•-I may become effective with Buldl~I ~2b 1~ 32 2ml4 27\'o 21Yl Eci<d Jk .20 35 133 3'•/• 321/1 321'>--l'llr IJI ~r 2 20 12 37 -21 ~'!O:j: ~ ,'/IPCtm 1.60 8 3 2'\ft 24V. U•;, ... I lo w' 60 I 12 I 12\t 17"' Ed<d NC .u 20 42 ~ 2J.\ir 23-llla Ill!>'# pf 412 JI~ !.S\IJ ".,., ~I Mo Pubs .84 10 I I~ ISY, mo+ ~ maximum suspension, S j X ~nkv: Ra 6 ?'N I 10oli I!="" EG & G .JO 17 '7' 12._ ll'lii II-'Ill lllToofW .'36 20 6 ~ 25'oli 'Ar MobllOI 2.80 11 352 67'4 M'h 6oll»-J af he f')ed unR pf 11/7 5 I l94't 1 "" Eltct Alloc: 1' JI ~ 5 5 -I<> ltnPtr' 11 Cp 6 99 IOI<> 10 I + 'la Mahsco 1.20 I 74 l'V. 191'1 I~....-Iii months ter t Y ate I Burl In 1.40 H 33 :11YJ 31v. ~ ED$ Corp 32 2 39 31'11r 31~-"'INA ~ .. 1y, 8 n lJ'llr l2% 32'19 M~a~\b o; . 112 5~ •'Ir< ·-•,. with the FPC The FPC then 8url No l~i I JI 36 ~ -1'111 EE~ltet1 NM11tmo1 9 ~2 ~ ~· 37!~ 14 INAlnS .30b . . 22 231<> 23 23 _ '!Ir ~01~ Corp 1~ 4~ \~~~ \~ J~ ':'I · BurtN of .S5 7 ™r 7'h .,.. n w . • ,_ '~ -· · ncome Cap . . 3 6~ 6'1\ 6"'-It"-6 31 ~ -Schedules hearings and later BurndvC 10 12 3 214' 21'111 21-\IJ El ~Ir Ind 6 t 1 61/• 6'19 6'A-i. lncClnc S8b 2 1~ 1~ IO'IO+ ,,.. ~~..,,.r•m 6·~ 6~ ~ •11 . Burrghl :ao <16 t7 22'14 223'1ii 22• -11" ElllasoNG 1 1 163 15"' IS\ii IS'o-'·' ndltead '.80 'ii 13 1,,1 17,, lrn -"' MonroeA ·"' 12 127 19V• 18'12 19 -I'. determines how much of the -t e--e11racp 118 1 • 28'.<i 28 28 -v. 1nd GllS 1 u a 2 25YJ 25" 25,;.' ~ Monsnt 1.ao 12 215 S3V' 51"4 5214-l'llr . . ~lbLT 1.12b II 60 241" 2• 24''1-14 Erner El .... 31 1.0 8714 86'h 87111-.,, fndPWl. 1:62 8 7 2S 2•~ ,.,,::: '"'MOR•&' 2>olo . 10 64'"> 6ol'4 6414-"' rate increase will be allowed ebot CD .84 1 s 2114 21 21 -,,., EmEI r, .90 . 2 61 '°'' 61 -1• lnduNall .96 10 21 18.\ir 21\':r 21-'!Ir ~g::lP~ H~ j~ 1~ ~ ~'"' ~"' -»
and how much will be refund-=~ ~ng : J m ~ ~~~::;.~I:; :ff s~ 1& ·~ 't;; ~~-'1' ::::~Hf " ·~ ~t r,~ rr'~ :z =:' .J~~ I~ 3\ u .... U"' !!"'-·"" ed all! Flnanc: 5 31 4'!1r 41Ar 4\lo-'la !:tnhtrl 1.20 7 17 21ltt 211\\ 214"-\le lnl Conl 1.60 II l 31YJ 31YJ 311'>+ '"Morgan JP IS 129 51"4 51 f~ -~ . llllhtn 3k 23 30 t'llo ' ' -14 EMI I.I 060 IS x26 ' ' ' + ~ 1n1anc1 Sii 2 9 71 311Jt :io... ~ '"'Mor k 20b 6 "' I 1 -\ .. On the Other h a n d • amR111. 1,3,,1_1> _, 1ff 25~ 2,:~ 265~-+15 Empo 1:118o 12 , 211;, 27\iJ 271;, . ":imont .12b 6 63 m r ,,,..._ v. Mor~ Et Pr 1 : J1,4 1~a 1i!t;: :~ Im ..... -~. Emp Fl n 5i 4 21 ..... a I -YI I led C .70 7 M 10 "41 9~ '!Ir MorMSh 75 6 25 1"4 .,.,...,. ~ "-"'ornla Utilities cannot pass .,,,., 5 1· 11 1' 31" 31" 32 · · Em1>1 ... Gas • 1 IO¥o 1~ 1~ '"' 1"' 10"' 114 5 16 16 16 + v. MtgTr 1 liSb 1 33 11v. ,~. 11 -"' Ul.Ll.I' an ll..-iff 5 41\ ~ 4V.-V. E'*ltld .A3 13 7:1 Tm 1714 111J.i-1-' JnSI> Clll>P 2 10 7 '1'h '1 •1 -V. M !N ' N ~ ~ -4' on the added com to thei inP~ i, fl 1 Jr" ~ ~"'+. ~ EMlt BUI F ' 10 S~ S'-' ~ . Inst Inv .741> I 4 13 12'1> 12'!>-V. MJ:1~~ ·.40 ~ l~ ll~ffl l~ lffij I('
customers until PUC approval ·~:itl.i' Ii ~ iJ~ 1~ ~~l~~IO 2} ~ ~m :'° ~.,..:::;mi= d~ jg ~ ~ J ,: =1"' ~rf •1s"'' 20 ll1 f11\14 +21.r
11 1 $1 \'t E<JUQM 2 .i I 6 32lilr 371<> 32V. 1"1'1%1'• l.IO I 6 25 2S 2~ · · Mtst 9 I 2 4\ has beeil obtained. ~ • 1ntl 1 1 -14 Eqllt. 1.2tb II 16 2SV. 74~ 24.,_ .. ln~I"' C.3li: ~ 3'J 3;j111 3m:s~t: MSI. llldvl S 2. It..,, IQt I~ ~ :~,, ·~ "" '#tt ,_ "::~~ 1:n , ~ ~ .... m: ~~:: 1~~1i$ 7 j ~ 'i~ f~ ~ ~~~~ij , li J7I. Ji !i·::
IN ADDmON p u c -a p-:...~t.-1: ' ' ~ tt E!:'xl~ .'21 1 J I~ 1:;; it:.. ~ l~l'{~ "' • ,tt 5"' 5 "'!. ~ ~~ . l 33 I' !!.~ r + ~ proved rate Increases Cannot llTf 14 i iiMX£2.N 2 .i11r .c> '° nMlllC~ «> 11 " 21\lr 2°" 21-~ ilrro' f~ ff .... ff + ~ be applied -'-ctl"'ely -"'rt' 1 f t i +~ Et1etl n .30 12 21 m .f:JI> Ju -* I"" Mlni1111 117 1214 11111 1214+ ~ ~~~ :m ~ U\1 14-'-1 ICMVd • av -\Ir t:fhY P I 6 l' ~ 2'\h _.... llr ftlt.\Ultl 114 f 122 ii"' 2' 26 -)! MYett L' 10 12 l I 11r f2 :W. Soulhem caJuomla Gas Oo. • 1 ~ 1 1 , ¥> , ~ .,.. ~~hm ~ 1 15J f': t:t M::. ~ 1~r.r.~f'~ l~ lj# 36~ ~ ~'~ •bl 2j -N ~ 2 2 -"'
would have to absorb the ad-c ~°" • l _'la Ex<:•ll o .90 12 31 •~ 1614 1614-lt Int 1tec:11111r 13 !I 5~ ~ ~"' 6•1e:ceh ij ft U111 ~~ ~~ ·~
ded costs of the El P'aso In-dcc.,.:P .ti 7 14 1J:° I ~ v. E:..~r.~ 1: m '~ J¥1 tr"'.:!:21 .. l"~m .. Tf T 1~~ , 615 ~ ... "' 6ol .J"' N=~~ .s n d ~ rm E ~
t'] th PUC :r.'nt11 '~ 9 I • ~ tl'la _, -I n 41'> 22 ""' 6S 6514 N•I ""'' .IOb 6 2 1m " I• -'IJ crease un 1 e approves t'lanspf •!'1 •1 t 56'19 1 F•btr9t ..a , 52 ''" 1 \v.:4~ If: :f~ : J1 W61~ ~v. :gv.-1~ H•1Av 1.0Sb .. 3 1r;i 15y, 1,_"" the offset increase. co ... •n .. 20 1• !S , 12 v.-11r :•/'f" ~~ :; ~ ~ ':;Z' '6,11 I ~IN 214 n 4114 "~'"' ~:k~.i jg 6 21 L~ ll'Ar 1.... .,
Letton said Ulat any reduc• E~lft f1i 1i 1 'j ""_ '11.~lf Z 1 •-.£14 :'"~' t11o /~ 1=: t ' ~ ;P:., tl~ ffit'"" ,,., ~l~'r.:t ·j $l 21 ~t; lJ: ~!+·~ tions ordered by the FPC Jn .,I,~ •• :ll • tt tt I U •-J. o ·~ 11 1 if s · l "~ 64 6'~ N'°lln 2. 1 " l~ ~~ ~
the El Paso Increase., will ~'Jit I·~ u n b ~ -u ~~~ F.f k ' 1~· I ¥t: +"· l~le:'!rr .. ~ t 1i 1iti. 1iti. 15 -~ N•t97•111 ;'1< II 'l I ~· ~+1 1~
nMPw. 1:~ 10 ' 11r r Ml ' ; 1 -i.. {nlttPw 1132 11 9 I\ ln>t 11 + ~ ~ff~:t.J>f t~ 7 ft 'It result fn Subsequent redUC-.,,, J.oW. i{ I \.\ 14 l ~ l,n'"tai: olr · :1 V. 2 2 -W." Ger, · r 31\'o -lions or refunds to customers """ oy• 1 14 ..., .. Id 0 1 ·; 4 i 1Zl'&:ivµ ~ 11 d" .t'1' d:::: 11~ 1· 1 1m ,~ ..
"'' ti ·H ' "' "' + ... r 0 I ·' I 1-El j.lll I 42 11'\0 ir ,. -v. nd . I ~ -~ .. by Southern California Gas Co. erm-1c1 :5i ~ 1m -. ' ~ t .Jo M ~ , ·iii -•JG ..u 1 10 ~ 1f\4 ~ i. N:l Iota ·Y . ~ , ,1: , :: 1 ~ ·
"
. ~·
DAILY PlLOT 1'111ndaJ, M 31, 1973
By PhH fnterlandf
"Of course I'm depressed. I'm told I've JUST entered
my 'tired years' ..• "
L. ltl. Boyd
Wall of China
Trap for Enemy
To describe a girl as "cold" is to characterize said
feminine party as unromantic, not just in English, but in
all known languages. A universal metaphore, that one.
Make a point of this because there aren't many such that
translate into every single tongue.
Hardly any, in fact.
Q. "Where'd the ancestors of the
Australian aborigines come from?"
A. From what's now the state of
Rajashan iii India; it's be1ieved. At
least, the backwoods souls in that area
stitl use boomerangs and musical in-
struments similar to those of the al>-
orlgines.
Am asked to name the first man to hold the rank of
fleet admiral of the U.S. Navy. That was William D.
Leahy. He was the fellow who said the atomic bomb would
never explode, never ever, just wouldn't work.
REGULAR BATHS -Surveys show one out of every f~r girls starts to bathe regularly before she is 13 years
old ... Was none other than Oliver Wendell Holmes who
said, "All of our other features were made for us, but a
man makes his own mouth." .. .It just isn't true th'at the
town of Plus, W. Va., cancels out the town of Minus. Ga.
. . .Suggested the only thing Dor.LS Day and }larlon BrBJ>o
do have in common is they were born on April 3, 1924 ...
Did I mention that small animal hospitals are multiplying
nine times faster than people hospitals?
Sir, if you're an average coffee drinke!", you can
figure it will take the entire production of 14 coffee trees
annually lo turn out enough beans lo supply you suf-
ficiently.
GREAT WALL -Average height of the Great Wall
of China is 25 feet . Was built to keep out invading cavalry.
But not invading infantry. Clever fellow, that Chinese
Emperor Chin. He could have made the wall higher, much
higher. But he purposely kept it to a scalable altitude.
The wall became a cunnin~ trap. Everytlme the assaulting
Huns sent a batch of climbers over the top, Chinese horse-
men closed in behind them along the wall road. Massacre.
In track and field competition, that ball known as the
shot at.ways should be put in an easterly direction. So con-
tends one athletic expert. Rotation of the earth will give
lt more distance that way. In theory .
Among mental patients, it's the woman rather than
the man who is most likely to rip off a skein of obscene
lingo when upset, say the psychology boys.
Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New·
port Beach, Calif. 92660 .
Joh Unit Extended
Capitol News Service
SACRAMENTO, - A job-
f i nding progra~ for
unemployed engineers. scien-
tists and technicians laid ofr
by defense and aerospace cut-
backs, due to end April 30, has
been exl ended through June
30, according lo D w i g h t
Geduldig, director of the State
Department of H u m a n
Resources Development.
The federally-funded pro-
gram , known as the
Technology Mobilization and
Reemployment P r o g r a m
(TMRPI , began in April, 1971,
al lhe height of aerospace and
defense cutbacks, Geduldig
said. Since then, more than
10,000 displaced professionals
in California have been helped
tilrough HRD to find new jobs,
he said .
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e SUPERFIAT! '71 Fiat 850
for sale, it's a 2 door white, wifh stereo and
14,000 miles. Like new,
e CUSTOM CRAITED: 18'
slci 'boat, 401 'Buick with
n·aUer. It's $1800. 'J'rn>re's
also a Half-ton Oievy
pick-up for sale, It has new
tires; $550.
• air
SAN DIEGO CiU>l -
The National Organization
·for Women rates its latest
slide how G, but says the
subject , I e m e n t a r y
school te~t.books, get an
'F.
NOW 's San Di ego
chapter has prepared 40
minutes of slides for PTAs
and other groups 'bowing
pages from 10 reading
texts used in the first six
grades of C a I i f o r n I a
schools.
THE PICTURE that
emerges from the boob is
unfair to girls and not
much kinder to boys, says
spokeswoman Susan Nel-son.
"These books Lnstruct
boys to dislike .girls and
leach girls a hateful self-
image," she says.
--One book had a list
showing 147 oocupatlons
for men and 25 for women.
The jobs for women in-
cluded "a witch, a fat lady
in the circus and a queen
-hardly a fair picture to
sllow li ttle gtrls," she
says.
"WE FOUND a single
working . mother pictured
in the readen, and she
was cited to show why her
boy 'had a b e h a v i o r ··
disorder.''
Boys in the books don't
show affection to anybody
or for anybody," she says.
The state Board of
Education is r e v i s i n g
school books to give a dif-
ferent picture of e'thn!c
minorities and women.
Ship ;Getting T o
SAN DIEGo (AP) -The Navy is holding its breath
these days.
TWo big crw.rs being transferred from Long Bea
to San Diego are almost too high to pass "under the Cor--
onado-San Diego Bay Bridge.
1'be $47-inillion bridge, which was opened ·In 1969,
stands 195 teet above the water at high tide'. At low ttile1 there's 205 feet of clearance but then the cruisers Chi
. anH Long Beach would scrape bottom because 1ow •
leaves only 30 feet of water. •
But the Navy is moving full-steam toward a solutlQd.
The channel will be deepened by five feet next year ,
a cost of $9 million. And, according to the spok~ ,
"the Navy bas ordered 1111 new ships designed so they~
pass under the Coronado Bridge."
~· ..
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HOURS: WEE KO A YS 9 TO 9
SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY 9 TO 6 PM
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69t
.,
Civic '
~ .,
~-:
I
By ALLISON DEERR or Ille DlllY l'Uot Stiff
Sally Badham likes the community
spirit she found in Costa Mesa.
She enjoys the "small town at-
. mosphere that has remained even though
the ·city bas grown."
As secretary for the Harbor Area
Girls' Club for the past seven years,
she's been .involved in many civic proj-
ects. "We help other groups and they
help us. There's a great feeling of com-
munity spirit here."
Sally's secretarial duties soon ex-
panded to include art displays, bulletin
boe.rds, designing proch\ires and adding
~ork to the club's bulletin.
m,tb -taught b~idge to the teenager_s.
office practices to fourth through six
gniders and 11ow>bas an oil painting class
on }'ednesdays~~J;lti-12-year-Olds. . . ' . . --. . .
F~Y
Sally and her mother r.aised •.
n!!i>hews, now in thell' 20s. "1\1: • . .th
jewels. The younger ·one, Chris, " IS JI1-
tere8ted in drama. The older one Is stud-
yb>g•marine biology at USC."
Pride Sketched
Before her Girls Club job began taking ta Monica City College, Orange Coastand ·then leading down, and the rest-
up most of her time she was involved in College and University of California Ex-
grassroots GOP politics. Assemblyman tension.
Robert Badham is a cousin. Another cousin is a state senator from the San Before joining the 9irls Club staff she
Diego area· and . her grandfather was a worked at the Art Shop, Co5ta Mesa.
Los ' l\ngele5 legislator. I' But the Girls Club-is her fusqo.\le at
The fact thaf she's been confined to a the moment. --;. ,_
wheelchair for the last 25 years is something Sally "doesn't give much "I love all of the girls. They're all my
thought about." little friends. The wheelchair doesn't
"When something like this happens bother most of them. But of course, some
(hers was a medical problem) you have are curious about it."
two choices. Stay in the dark or get out
and do something, meet people."
A painter, "I've painted since I was 8 or
9 myself," she was named an artist-of-
the-month while a member of the Costa
Mesa Art League.
CALFORNIAN
She is a fourth generation Californian
and proud of the distinction noting "my
grandfather placed an ad in ~ first Los
Angeles Times. LA. was a small city
then."
She was born and reared in Los
Angeles attending Los Angeles High
School. She later took art classes at San-
CLASSES
Her Wednesday afternoon oil painting
proteges are admittedly "a little messy"
and "take a lot of supervision" but she
r.eally enjoys them, as she does her office
practice tramees "who get good training
to be volunteers later on."
Sally ili the k41d of persoo who "writes
_thousands of. Jetters to people when I see
a problem." ·
She noted that she managed a 43-day
cruise to Australia and South Pacific
islands with relative ease, but "can't
dine oot in my own country because the
entrance has several steps leading up
rooms are inaccessible."
She cited two focal country clubs she
can't visit because of architectural bar-
riers and ·missed a meeting recently
because it was on tbe second fioor ac-
cessible Only by stairs.
IDEAL JOB
"The Girls Club is an ideal setting for
me," she added. "All they had to do was
widen the access to the restroom. The
entrance of the teen house is ramped. I
have no problems at all here."
Her family often gets involved with the
club as well.
"Sally's mother is always there to help
with special evening activities," added
Mrs. James Dodd, past presidoot of the
club board.
"Sally's name i~ well known inl the
area. Sinee she's been with us the club is
always asked to help with the decorations
for civic events."
Does she like her work? "Well, I've
only missed two sick days since I came
here," she said.
At home? "I'm a creative cook."
'Oil proteges' of Sally Badham
(left to right),
Robin Youmans, Brett
Bartlett and Jeanette Colbourn
re.ceive pointers from J
their instructor.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Thurlldn, MIY 31, 1m ,_ 11
The class may get a little
messy, but Sally loves
them all and encourages them
to experiment (left). Bulletin
boards are done by Sally (above).
·.
l'
Cream and Sugar at Bottom of Cup ~1
. ~AR ANN LANDERS : I can see bow
rclctdle-aged couples might still be at-
tr ed to Wle another -physically, that
is if they have managed to keep their
. But my husband and I are not in
categor.y and we don't try to kid
Ives.
·-Neither of us was much to look at to
with. Now he has a double chin, a
g dome and a pot belly. After four
en, I have varicose veins, 20 extra
ds on my hips and I'm a tired-look-
old bag. .
. n I see myself in a full-length mir-
r.or after a shower I know, too well, that
when he makes a pass at me, it means
his basic animal instincts have taken
over and he is desperate. I have nothing
that would turn. anybody on.
Am I placing too much. .stress on
physical beauty? ll. so, how do I get the
comical picture of him out of my mind?
How can I rid myself of the feeling that
he ls just venting his sex needs on.me? I
wish I could do both. Sign me -PUT-
TING IN MY TIME IN DES MOINES
DEAR DES MOINES: Somewhere
along the line you picked up t.be cockeyed
I notion that the only turn-on II looks.
Wrong. Wrong. Wroag_ Tbe REAL
eroffl zone Is betwee• the eyebrows
BDd the hairline.
• 11ae sexperta say a womas doesn't
reacla her full bloom until she's 40. And It
has very Wtle to do wltla loob, dearle.
As for the "comical Image" of your hus-
band -p1ycla yourself out and enjoy
the last or llfe for which the first was
made.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I just returned
to the office after a delightful lunch
with a friend. I was in a great mood, lov-
ing the. world and everyooe in it.-Then I
stepped into an enormous glob of pink
chewing gum right outside the building
here.
l tried to disclodge the gum and broke
the heel off an expensive pair of shoes.
As I was limping 'to my desk · I en-
countered the asinine face of a Woman I
work with -chewing away e mile a
minute, as she always ts, with that
frowsy, dumbbell look on her face.
What is wrong with people that they
don't know hdw they look to others, with
their mouths open so wide you can see
their tonsils? The whole gum scene
makes me furious. And then to step in it
and wreck my shoes!
Please, Ann Landers, say something in
your column about this? lf people MUST
chew gum, ask them not to spit it out on
the sidewalk where it can literally ruin a
person's day. -CAN'T BEAR 'EM
DEAR BEAR: Happy to:
Dl!:AR READERS: If any of you are
chomping on gum, with a frowsy, dumb-
bell look on your face, kindly stop It. And
won't you pleate dlspoee of your gum by
wrapplns Jt la a pl.ece of paper first and
not just throw It whln anotHr nice
reader Dilgb& aep In It? Tbankl, chums.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm 29, un-
married, good job (executive capacity)
and considered attractive and in-
teresting. My problem? I am not sick but
J am not well, either. I've been X-rayed
from head to toe twice in two years.
Nothing wrong. Yet I get terrific
headaches, and then the pain goes to my
back. The following day my feet hurt.
Today I have an earache. I'm fed up with
doctors saying "you're not sick." ,
you help?-WELL INVALID
DEAR W. l.: A person wbo
"travellng pains" should consider
pPSlblllty that the trouble might
his b.ead. I'm not sayhlg your pain ~
not reel. They ARE -but wlat ls
Ing them needs lnvesC!gadon. I 1
an evaluation by a head doetor.
Discover how lo be date bait wi
falling hook, I lne and sinker .
Landers' booklet, "Dating Dos
Don'ts," will help you be more po
and sure oI yourself on date . "---""''p
cents in coin along with a Jong, stam
self-addressed envelope and your req
to the Daily Pilot.
DAILY PILOT Thursday, May 31, 1973
Club Calendars CirCled for Installations
' I
Democrats
Democratic Women o f
achedule will be a special
clothing sale In the Thrift
Shqp, San Clemente. On JUDe
30 and July 1 bags of clothing
will be offered at $1 each.
Beach home of Mrs. Charles Francia Reiter and Whitney and project work and varioua
Hughes. Wolfe, secretaries, and James upects of con.sumer educa-
Hanley, treasurer. tiol1.
recreatim room. with mnes
or in many other areas of the
hospital.
MacLean, treasurer.
Recipient of the Laurel
Award, which recognizes a
member who bas best ex-
emplified mendliness, love and
interest in club activities, is
Mrs. Dan Ring.
of their efforts to ltupi on the .
environment of their com-
munity.
After manning two recycling
centers for one m o n t h ,
members then designed a
recycling bookld which sholrs
children how to create craft
items from di s ca rd e d
materials. The club also
assisted in raising funds for a
new park. The award was
presented by Shell Oil Co.
Orange County will have its
annual membership tea from 2
to i p.m. Sunday, June 3, in
the Buena Park oome of Mrs.
Frank Gable.
Mn. Mary Ledesma of Hun-
tington Park, Democratic Na-
tional Committeewomen, will
be the guest of honor.
Coral Key
Coral Key of San Clemente,
a support group of the Orange
County Child Guidance Center,
will present a wine-tasting
party from 4 lo 6 p.m. Sunday,
June 3, in the El Adobe.
Also on the fund-raising
New officers of the group
are the Mmes. Brian Day,
president and Joseph Walsh ,
J. A. McCanne, Ralph Mundy
and Barry Hichens , vice presi-
dent.
BSP
Members of the Upsilon
Omicron Chapter, Bela Sigma
Phi will present 50 T-shirts
and $100 for two camperships
to the Cystic Fibrosis Foun-
dation of Orange County.
Upsilon Omicron Chapter
members will meet at the
Huntington Beach Playhouse
at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, June 3, lo
attend the performance of
"Exit the Body." Afterward
the chapter will host an on-
slage champagne party.
Xi Rho Omicron Chapter
will meet for the final business
session at 7 p.m. Monday,
June 4, in the Huntington
Juniors
The Women's Board of
Orange County Pbilharmonlc
Society will honor t h e
youngest group, the
Philharmonic Juniors et a
mother-daughter tea at 2 p.m.
Sunday, June 3, in the
Newport Beach home of Mrs.
Seth M. Oberg Jr.
Council Fire
Newport Beach Blue Birds
and Camp Fire Girls will hold
their annual Grand Council
Fire at 7:30 p.m. Friday, June
I, in Heller Park, Costa Mesa.
Tro jan Guild
New members will b e
welcomed by the Trojan Guild
or Orange County during a
coffee Friday, June 1, in the
Corona del Mar home of Mrs.
Frank Anderson, newly in-
stalled president.
Other officers are t he
Mmes. Robert B r o m I e y ,
Richard Burch and Larry
JWbinson, vice presidents;
Hadassah
New offlcen ot Newport
Beach Chapter of Hadassah
will be installed during a
luncheon at 11 :30 a.m. Mon-
day, June 4, in the Balboa Bay
Club.
They are the Mmes. Harry
Kamph, president; Ra y
Niefield, Morton Lipson and
Arnold Yank, vice presidents;
Sam Esenmin, treasurer, and
Raymond Guzin, Joseph KSJr
dle and S h e l d o n Ross,
secretaries.
Homemakers
Homemakers section o f
california Home Economics
As!IOCiation, Orange District,
will meet at 7: 4S p.m. Mon-
day, June 4, in the Santa Ana
home of Sandra Vetter.
Members serve as volun-
teers in county communities in
a variety of activities ranging
from teaching sewing in bi-
lingual programs, 4-H judging
Newcomers
• Officers of the Huntqtm
Beac4 Welcome W a go n
Newwtnen Oub will be ~
stalled after a potluck dinner
Tuesday, June 5, in the Com-
munity Center, Golden West
College.
New leaders are the Mmes.
Brian Linehan, president;
Kevin Griffin and Ridlard
Holwell, vice presidents; Lar-
ry Konnan, secretary; David
Clark Jr., treasurer, and Lar-
ry Boyd, historian.
CHOC
Children's Hosp i t a I of
Orange County needs young
men and women 16 years of
age and older to serve as
volunteers. The only re-
quirements are good health, a
love ,of children and will-
ingness to work at least four
hours each week.
Volunteers can work in the
'l1lose Interested are asked
to call the hopsital' s volunteer
office for an interview. Special
classes to acquaint n e w
volunteers with the h>spital
will take place from 9 a.m. un-
til noon, Saturday, June 2 and
9.
Troja n Lea gues
Mrs. G. William Grundy of
Newport Beach is t h e
recording secretary of the
University of S o u t h e r n
califomia Association of Tro-
jan Leagues.
Tuesday Club
Mrs. Fred Dunn was in-
stalled president of t h e
Nurses
Mrs. Lois Tait is the new
president or the Orange Coun-
ty Association or Industrial
Nurses.
Serving with her are the
Mmes. Everett CavelJ, vice
president; Patricia Gough,
secretary, and Harold Collins,
director.
HB Juniors
Huntington Beach Junior
Women won third place state
honors and $100 in recognition
OWLS
A potluck luncheon will
precede the next meeting of
the Orange CoWlty Unit ,
Women's Overseas Service
League. The group will meet
at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, June
2, in the Modjeska Canyon
Clubhouse.
Newport Harbor Tuesdaylp;;iiiiii1;;;;iiiiii1;;;;;;iiiiiil;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiil;;;;;;;iiiiii1;;;;;;iiiiii1iiiiii1iiiiiil;;;;;~
Club.
Serving with her will be the
Mme$. Rudolph V a n a s e k ,
Robert Finlay and Glenn
Schlegel, vice presidents;
Robert Weise, Herbert Hartley
and Ch a r l e s Fowler,
secretaries, and H e l e n
25°/o • 50°/o OFF
Horoscope: Cancer Lightens Burden ON SELECTED SWEATERS· TOPS· PANTS• LONG
DRESSES, ETC., ETC.
50°/o OFF ALL JEWELRY
FRIDAY
JUNE I
By SYDNEY OMARR
could be on horizon. Married outstanding. Money affairs
or single, you are due for will improve. You draw to you
significant changes, w i t h many born under Virgo and
December i n d i c a t e d as ~ces.
SJL..
BIDTIQUE
Milter Charge BankAmericard
3467 Via LldD
Newport leach
673-451 0
Bidwell Ch•rt•
The "intellectual trinity" is
supposedly Gemini, Libra and
Aquarius. Natives of these
zodiacal signs appear to have
great. capacity for learning.
nte signs best at applying
what they know are Taurus,
Virgo and Capricorn. The
signs that "feel" the most are
said to be Cancer, Scorpio and
PllOes. Those who do the most
"Inspiring" seem to be Aries,
Leo and Sagittarius. In July,
one of the "feeling" signs,
Cancer, should have new ex-
periences and could shake off
lethargy to make a definite
mark in field of endeavor.
are subject lo delay. Pisces,
Virgo persons could play prom-
inent roles. See situations,
individuals as they exist, not
as you wish they might be.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Pressure may be exerted in
legal area. There are prob-
lems i n v o I v i n g mate,'
partner. Key is to accept
responsibility, to do what must
be done and not to expect bed
of roses. Surprising financial
gain comes in form ol wind-
present. Key is to know that
you get nothing for nothing. If
you skip or skimp, you pay
consequences. Emphasis is on
security, ultimate goal ,
general standing and prestige .. __________________ _:___~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Don't reach too far afield.
Some ideas, concepts are sub-
ject to revision. Travel plans
could be changed, If not
postponed. Conditions at home
could require your presence.
Strive for long-range view.
Take time to analyze costs.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Accent selectivity. You need
not jump al first offer. Take
time to be positive. Payments
fall. ·
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Work and health command at-
tention, more so than might
be usual. You may be carrying
too heavy a b u rd e n .
Streamllne techniques. Get
better distribution and obtain
help that is reliable. Don't feel
you must do it all alone.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Creative change should be ad-
vocated. Old friend may sing
blues: But you do have life of
your own to live -grow up
and live it! Be prepared for
variety, s u r pr i $ e an-
nouncement from member of
opposite sex.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
You may feel slowed down by
commitments, past a 'n d
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
:;tories with black and white glossy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not
be used.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Don't write letters while angry
or d~pressed. Give yourself a
chance to recuperate from any
setback. Accept social in-
vitation. What is gloomy now
can be transformed i n t o
rightness. Know it ~ be op-
timistic. -
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Be aware of details connected
·with budget, expenditures.
One .Who talks about "money
deal" should be made to pro-
vlde complete story. Go after
factual information. Leave
sensationalism, rumors t o
others.
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21). What appears a
rQadblock ls merely a "cau-
tion" sign. Cycle is still high
and way. is cleared for prog·
ress. Gemini, Virgo persons
could play important role$.
Strive lo make meanings
clear. Be independent. Guard
integrity.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Highlight diplomacy. Deal
with sensitive family member
in mature, intelligent manner.
What was feared turns out to
be a shadow, a paper tiger.
Maintain sense of humor. Be
willing to laugh at your own
foibles.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Accent is on friend who
makes too many promises. Be
understanding but also stand
up for your ri¢its. Pisces,
Virgo persol}S could be in pic-
ture. Avoid self-deception.
Romantic interlude could be
featured.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
~W~I
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline is not met, only a story will
be used. ,
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding and engagement stories, forms are
available in all the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Women's Section staff members at 642-4321.
Older individual does have
yolll" best Interests at heart.
However. vou still have rirrnt
to freedom. Inaugurate policy
which enables you to ' hear
Sl'lllnd of your own vnice.
Mf>'lns accentuate individual
style. Cal>rlcom is in picture.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BffiTHDAY you have unusual
voice. You love to eat and
must overcome proverbial
"sweet tooth." You have sense
of drama, can entertain and
teach. If single, marriage
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15112 ·--"La Ml.W. Piii J2MUG
e THURSDAY
e FRIDAY
e SATURDAY
e SUNDAY
I
f
.
' . • . . . . . .
• • • . . . . . •
i,
Nonnan' Rockwell says the artist never lived who
could c.apture the true meaning of the joy of seeing
as truthfully and vividly as through the eyes of a
. ;~
Ul'I Te_ .. -
Cbi}d. Illustrating the point is this drawing by Me-
lanie Ann Klass, 12, one of 10,000 who entered a contest.
Teacher Offers Great
~-Ideas
/
By JO OLSON
Of Ill• Dallr Pllel Sl•lf
"Literature can be fun as
long as you take the threat out
of it."
With this as an introduction,
Dorothy Strauss proved her
point during a luncheon
meeting of ·Alpha Xi Delta
alumnae in the Mercury Sav-
ings and Loan building, Hun-
tington Beach.
She used a short story by
Ernest Hemingway entitled
"Cat in the Rain" as her spin-
off.
Everyone attending t h e
luncheon had read the story so
the audience was with her as
. ' shl\, started to unfold the plot
and exainine the characters.
With the fervor of an actress
submerged in a role, she got
into the story:
"This is a story about an
American couple in a small
town in Italy. Their room is on
the second floor of the hotel.
It's raining. In the first
paragraph Hemingway sets
the mood. H you read the
story only once you're con-
vinced it's nothing."
Next came an exchange of
ideas.
Strauss: "What kind of a
marriage is this?"
Dinner Party
Alumnae : "Sort of on the
rocks."
Strauss: 'Do they know it?
Alwnnae: "No."
WANTS BUN
"Hemingway is a master at
implication," Mrs. Strauss .
continued. "She wants to wear
her hair in a bun -like her
mother. She wants her own
silver and candles. Note the
very brittle, crisp language.
It's very objective.
Then another interchange:
Strauss: "There certainly is
a crisis in this marriage. Do
you think it will last?"
Alumnae: "She doesn't have
the courage to leave."
Alumnae : "There are a lot
of noncommunicative mar-
riages even today."
Strauss: "I'd like lo think
there's hope foN them. The
last part of the story is like a
coda to a musical composition.
The IOlljt cat is not what she
wants at all."
Thus ended the discussion or
"Cat in .the Rain."
Next came an equally en-
thusiastic pitch for her class
next semester at Golden West
College.
DISCOURAGED
Mrs. Strauss returned to
Betrothal Revealed
At a recent dinner party Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth C. Dierken
announced the engagement of
their daughter, Carole Dierken
to Gbarles L. Shelby Jr., all of
Huntington Beach.
Miss Dierken is a graduate
of Huntington Beach High
School and Golden W e s t
College. She now attends
Arizona State University at
Tempe.
Her fLance, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles L. Shelby, Hun-
tington Beach, is a graduate of
Marina High School and GWC,
and now is a t t e n d i n g
California State University,
Fullerton.
They will marry early next
year in St. Wilfred of York
Church, Huntington Beach.
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Sil.est IO imlium.
school to study for her
masters degree 25 years after
receiving her BA degree. At
UCI she was toltl she could try
but she probably wouldn't
make it.
She said it was. a "cliff-
hanger" all the way. Only two
Cs are allowed and she got one
the first semester.
Her class at Golden West is'
designed for housewives,
mothers and other women not
planning to pursue college
degrees. ("Don't be an unread
mother," her brochure reads.)
"My students don't realize
how good they are!" she ex-
claimed. Age range in the
class which includes three
men, is 17 to "45 and
anywhere on up."
Mrs. Strauss · 1nviteif the
Alumnae Club members to
join her class in the fall and
bring their friends a n d
neighbors.
"If I can do it, anyone can."
UFfELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
wti .. YH WClllt n. a..t
1922 Harbor llwd.
She got so excited when she
was invited to teach the Great
Ideas in Literature class that
she compiled -then had to
cut -a list or 87 works. 1~~~~~~~~~~~1
"Alienation and isolation in
20th century man cpmpared to
17th century isolation after the
great scientific discoveries of
that era" is the theme or her
class.
Costa M--541-025'
"I took a f f i r m a t i v e
writers," she noted. "We're
moving back to MacBeth. I in-
Lyle's
is NOW
1660 ORANGE AVE.
COSTA MESA. 645-7337
clude four Nobel prizewinners.1-----------
For
Week ender
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Phone
6424321 ..
OPEN
• ID
HOUSE
June 2nd -1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Jamie Bellizzi
Premiere Studio
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· 9582 hamilton ave.
Jtuntingtan beach
ph • 962-17 6 7 for rtKJistration
• CARDS • GIFTS • JEWELRY ,.., .. , .. ",......., ~"'
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NE\WORT 8 CH FASHICNrst.ANDopen late rronday& friday ~ts.
Thu~, M11 31, 1973
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Go casual, go dressed-up,
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,
•
The High Cost of 'Livi g Happily-Ever After' The 'SUGARBUSH' _,
ROCKER
NEW YORI: (AP) -'1 dre~ of for yeart, planned
for months, rem e.m be red
forever -and over in ba1f an
hour.
A wedding.
Eighty percent of all first
marriages ln tnis country are
formal. says Marcia Seligson,
who att.ended s o m e 200
ceremonies, formal a n d
otherwise, while gathering
material for "The Eternal
.Bliss Machine," her new book
on America's way of wedding.
"The basic thing I learned in
my travels is how little has
changed," she says. "Most
kids want exactly what their
parents had. It's as though
there were never such things
as riots on campus, a sexual
revolution , drugs. It's really
startling.
"The kids getting married
Season Opener
"Girls a r e programmed
from the Ume they are infants
to be traditional brides. It's an-•
Ingrained part ol our culture."
M a result, the twtdal in-
dustry taktW In $7 billion an-
nually from over two million
weddings, notes Miu Sellpon,
who got interested In the sub-
ject when she was a
bridesmaid sli: times 1n one
summer.
"I always tnew there was
something ridicuJous about
superweddings, but when I
found out one of i;ny friends
was having her gown 'em-
balmed ' to preserve it, I knew
there was something hilarious
that was worth investigating,"
recalls the vivacious young
author~
A Tahitian theme has been selected for the fund-
raising dance, sponsored br. Fountain Valley North
Little League. The party will begin at 9 p.m. Satur-
day, June 9, in Carpenters H~1 Huntin~ton Beach.
Mrs. Roy Cunnin~ham, decorauons chairman, tries
to coax son Dale into a party mood but apparently
is unsuccessful.
MRS. FRICKER MRS. McGIR~
Vows Link Couples
McGIRR-BARNESON
Susan Bameson , daughter or
Robert R. Barneson or Balboa,
married Michael McGirr in
Calvary Chapel.
The bride, a graduate or
Corona de! Mar High School ,
presently is attending the
University of Southern
California where she is a
member of the Sailing Team.
She also has been an active
Ticktocker with the Newport
Chapter, National C h a r i t y
League.
Her husband is a graduate
of Rowl and Hi gh School ,
Walnut and also is studying at use.
PRICKER.,CROSSON
Horne in Costa Mesa are
Dean William Fricker and his
bride, lhe former Diane Lee
Crosson who were married in
Calvary Chapel, Santa Ana.
Their parents are Robert
Crosson of Placentia, Mrs.
Georgie Crosson, Tustin and
Mr. and Mrs. William Fricker
of Fullerton.
The bride is a graduate or
Sunny Hills High School and
her husband attends California
State University, Fullerton . He
also served in the Army.
~,.. f~RTHSHOPS MARTEX
TOWEL
SALE
~~EVERYTHING
FOR .THE
BATHROOM
Ttwtl ......... ......, CUrlllftl
II"' I CtlllJftle II ... of_....... (
38 FASHION ISLAND 644-2353 .M
IAN.llAMHICAaD MASTta CNAl51 ,~
wedding-orlenteden-
tttpMDeUrs as b a n q u et
managers, caterers, floriN,
band leaders, cake makers,
store bridal consultants, lee
IClllptors, honeYIJlOOll resort
people, wedding ring manufac-
turers, apparel designers, peo-
ple who rent tents and who
plaolt over swimming pools,
clergymen of all faiths and
ladies who rent doves.
Sometimes she pretended
to be a prospective bride and
sometimes she admitted to
being a reporter.
Among the weddings Miss
Seligson attended was a
Beverly Hills bash where the
mashed potatoes and family
poodle were dyed pink to
match the b r 1 d e s m a I d s •
dresses, a Texas affair where
tbe parties l on for so
many weeks that t h e
ceremony was an anticlimax,
and an underwater wedding
where the bride wore a white
wet suit covered in soggy lace
and the minister had taken
scuba diving lessons in order
to tie the damp knot.
"I went to one wedding
where the couple, all the wed-
ding party, the minister and
the guests were nude,''. reports
Miss Seligson, who joined
them "because I didn't want
to stick out like a sore
thumb."
She says in today's "new"
weddings, usually held out-
doors, there's a tremendous
involvement in the vows ,
which the couple often writes
themselves. L
"In traditional weddings the
guests are usually more in-
terested In. whether the chop-
ped liver wlll be beef or
chicken than in what the kids
are saying to each other," she
declares.
Some of the credit -or the
blame -for the all-oot wed-
ding goes to the Industry that
trumpets the message it's a
once-in-a-lifetime thing.
"1bat implies foreverness.
The bridal Industry tries to
tell you that a formal wedding
fosters marriage stability, but
that's a b so I u t e nonsense,"
Miss Seligson scofis.
However, she concedes that
everybody must want a wed-
ding or the tradition wouldn't
continue and grow.
"Poor people start saving
from the day the daughter is
born," she says. "The wedding
becomes a sort of panacea for
all our fears, a status symbol
that says we made it big and
daddy cane daughter off in · · tic style,
America's for success."
Despit6. b excesses aB a
huge lee sculpture of a dolphin
with black caviar spewing out
of its gullet, Miss Seligson
thinks there is a basic need for
"rites of passage" when mov-
ing from one state in life to
another.
"Every c iv I Ii z at 1 on in
history has had some kind of
marriage ceremony," she
points out. "I think ritual is a
crucial, fundamental human
need, but when humanness
gets lost then it . becomes
ridiculous."
And what kind of a wedding
would Miss Seligson, who is
still single, like for herself.
"I want to get married
nude, on a hilltop," she says.
Sto• -... .,,_._.. •tllllltls
••nett-for -100 ,.....
Hltllliacll -3" Hlldle IHt -I
OrltlMt 111'911Clll nc"" Ii.ck ..
... -1, llOO'• -
Tnlr •....,.
plec9.
Other Nichols &: Stone
Boston Rockers from $49.'5
1865 HARBOR BLVD.
Manic Com press ion S~t~u~d~ie::_:d~'· ~~-~~-m~~~;~l~~~~L~; ~.~~~-51~31
Did you ever wonder where
they got tfie idea for those
kitchen i·ash disposers that
condense a week of garbage
and cans into a small, neat,
brown bag?
The school locker.
stuff in a year."
AT
WIT'S
END
"A year! You've got
bulletins in the bottom of that
locker a n n o u n c l n g an
assembly to watch astronaut
John Glenn go into orbit."
"Man was never meant to
live oot of a phone booth," he
said solemnly.
I watched hypnotized as he
transferred the last load of
stuff from his locker to his
closet . . . a bicycle wheel, my
chenile bathrobe, a box of ace
bandages, three apple cores, a
melted Christmas candle, half-
eaten bag of corn chips and a
broken thermos.
Suddenly, he jerked upright,
"for crying out loud, what's
this?"
"It looks like a textbook," I
said .
"You can't keep
everything," he said throwing
it on the trash, "or your room
gets junky."
In an ar~ five feet by two
by eight inches, my son has
managed to compress a year
of 11U1Ches, four jackets (none
of them hls), a science project
that stagnated, gym clothes
that have har4ened, four boots
(all for a left foot), a plastic
tablecloth, a Halloween mask
of Col. Sanders and the PQ
book from our set of en-r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;:;;;;~~;;;,:;;;;;:;;;;;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;; I
DTERT cyclopedias.
Also, 35 notes from home re-
questing an audience with his
counselor, a hair dryer, beach
towel, record album of the Al R STEP -BERNARDO -
Monkees, basketball, frlsbee, SCHOLL SANDALS -PASSPORTS
thr f deod t (all MAGDESIAN -MISS AMERICA ee cans 0 oran VINER CASUALS -HANDBAGS -
empty), four empty no-deposit HOSIERY
bottles of Coke, a sketch tablet Edwards -Gerberich -Robin Hood
with no paper, an unfinished PF Flyers -U.S. Ked1 -Summerettes
lamp, a pair of gym sh~ that C1pe1io D.nce Shoes
had to be fed and watered or Dance Wear by Danskin
th d French Correctl¥e Shoes for Chlldrn
ey got ugly, an a 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA horn.
"What are you doing with a 5 4 8 -2 7 7 8 French horn?" I asked. • IANKAMERICARO • • MASTER CHAltGI! •
"It's not mine,'' he ex-1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1
plained. "It belongs to Fred,l;:====================.I
but he didn't have room for it
in his locker."
As he dumped another load
from his locker to his closet, I
observed, "Is it necessary to
bring home the petrified
lunches? Why don't you leave
them on campus so un-
derclassmen can carve their
names on them."
"The school says lockers
have to be cleaned out by Fri-
day."
"I know, but you've been
transporting this stuff for four
days. Aren't you to the bottom
yet?"
"Mom, you collect a lot of
.. ... .. .. -.... ....... ..... , .... _... .... __ .... .... ...... .... ........ ....
OVERWEIGHT?
56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS
Under Medlcal Supervision
at the
Omega Clinic
HOURS: 9:00-7:00
• CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT •
COST A MESA ANAHEIM SANTA ANA l'ullerlofl.L1H1Dr1
' •• ,, Newpprt 16'4 w. Bdwy. 13H2TusllnAVI 15D w. LIHIDrl llva.
646 1633 778-4841 547-6329 (714) 870-9347 • (213) 697-1791
........ .... " ............. , ..... , _.,,..,.
'', ..... , ---------.......... ... ' ' .. ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' \ \\
--
In Newport Beach-Fri. & Sat. June 1st & 2nd., 'til 9 P.M.
I FHI Gins FOi LAD11S ov1111 I .I •1x1u 10"' DIS(OUNT AU 110111 I
Each lady who attends our Grand Openinv Celebrolion wil receive o lustrous cultured pearl that io suitable
for mounling in o ring or pendanl. o 1trand of genuine Siar of Siam Oriental >imulated pearls, Oii o lie lolt
far your ,,_ or gih givinv! During this event you wift be given on addilional 100/o Discount off of our low
everyday p<icH. Only •Seiko Wotches wiU not be 1ubjecl to di.count. We have many new items ... fine
14" & 181( Gold jewelry set with Genuine Diornonds. Rubie1, Sapphires, Col's Eyes, Emerold1. Fire Opals,
Orientol .lodes. and other gemstones too ,,.._ou, 10 "*11i0f'.
·L.A. RAMS ST AR
JACK SNOW, L.A. Rama Wide Receiver, will be our
gueet Saturday llAM-1 PM to talk football. During
interview with Paul Barth, Radio Per11onality, you'll
find Jack i1 an inter~ting penonality & very gracious.
fllDAY AND SATURPAY ONLY ••• SALi PRICH AT AU STORES
DOUBLE VALUES I I I DOUBLE SAVINGS
BEBE ABE JUST A FEW OF DUB SPECIALS!
flRE OPAL l'ENDANT
'11/IY Ol'AI.
.5 slyles.
141C YG
HOW $29.99
CULTURED PURL
EARRINGS 14K
Many Beautiful Styles
NOW $16.99
STAgf
SIAM
6;t.e fJU«J"I
NOW •1:!;99 14K GOlD CHARMS. A vtry unuSUll
~ltction of Oritntil CM-ms at pt
away prices consisting of Abacus,
Good luck, Boat. Temple, Rickslllw
and Opium~
LOOS£ CULIUllt:D l'lARL CUL TUfllO PEARL AUSrUll.AN l'lNDANrs rtl rAlt I/Ill Ol'Al.S UK GOU> CHAN PEAlll 6 1/2 TO 5x7 mm AND FITTJ.IGS 7MM. VAL. $12
NOW $11.99 NOW .$12.99 · NOW $4.99
20 INCH SOllD lllD rAO BLACK STAN
1411 GOLD N[Cll S/llCIAl.S SAl'l'Hllf 0.01'
CHAIN DOUIL[ TWIST. IAHIHOS, 141.
NOW $21.00 AU. ITOllS GOlO HUGI DIKOUNTS NOW $47.00
• LONG BEACH, 4313 Atlantic Ave.
• SANT A ANA, 2015 N. Moin IANKAMERICARD •TORRANCE, Del Amo Foshion Square MASTER CHARGE •WHITTIER, 12918 Philodelpkio St.
• TORRANCE, 24455 Howtkome Blvd. SOS CREDIT PLAN
NOW LAY·A•WAY
NEWPOll IUCN, Ill. 17 Fas•it1 lslH~
...
OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 -SUNDAY 10 to 7
GRANADA HILLS 1800 Chatsworth St. WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd. RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyler St. SANTA ANA
North of South Coast Plaza TORRANCE Sepulveda and Hawthorne BUENA PARK Beach and Orangethorpe
ORANGE Garden Grove Blvd. and Manchester LAKEWOOD Carson at Paramount.
, .. :,
. I
..
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Cheer for Next Year
Newly named cheerleaders tor Saddleback College
are (from left), Lori Ronkalnen of Mission Viejo,
Joan Patchen, Janet Cross and Lynne Brazda all
from Tustin, Karen Thompson of Newport Beach,
and Lois Balliet of San Clemente.
Boy Faces Immigration
Charge Following Chase·
A 16-year-old boy is facing
immigration charges as an il-
legal alien alter he led Hun-
tington Beach police on a
lengthy chase t h r o u g h
downtown Huntington Beach
In Memorial weekend traffic.
'lbe youth, pursued by two
Huntington Beach officers and
a Fountain Valley officer, was
corn&red In the Del Mar
mobile home park near the in-
tersection ol Garfield Avenue
and Brookhurst Street.
THERE WERE no injuries
Bike-a-thon
Wins -Told
Four Orange C o u n t y
residents won top prius in the
American cancer S o c i e t y
Bike-a-thon last month.
Grand prize winner was
Marvin Binder of Garden
Grove, an Orange C o a s t
College sophomore, who won a
IO-speed bicycle in a drawing.
Also awarded 1 0 -s p e e d
bicycles were Tim Bartel,
Huntington Beach, and Dick
Bell. Peter Guy of Fullerton
won a trip to catalina or Palm
Springs.
reported in the pursuit, but
Fountain Valley Officer Jack
Davis said he fired two shots
at the suspect to stop him
from ramming his patrol unit.
Police said the chase started
Sunday aftemoon when the
mother of the suspect's il-
lefltlmate child called police
tQ her Williams Avenue home
to report the youth had been
bothering her.
Officers William Bathe and
John Webb said they were
talking to the teenage girl
when the suspect allegedly
drove by them at a high rate
of speed, Ignoring their signals
to pull over.
The two officers got into
their cars and began the
pursuit that covered most of
the area between Garfield and
Utica avenues, and Main
street and Beach Boulevard.
THE FOUNTAIN Valley Of-
ficer got intQ the chase when
the suspect drove into Foun-
tain Valley on 'Garfield before
entering the mobile home
park ..
He was booked into Orange
County Juvenlle Hall as an il-
legal alien, fOl' assault and
battery and for auto theft
because his license plate and
ttitistration had been altered,
police said.
Board
To Study
Reform ..
How can local government
be reformed?
'Ibis Is the question facing
officials of local government
at a bearing set for 9 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. Friday in the Board
of Supervisors chambers, San-
ta Ana .
Representatives or t h e '
Governor's C o u n c i 1 on .
Intergovernmtntal Rel,aUoos l: .
In Sacramento will be present, HOSPITAL APPOINTMENT headed by James R. JohMoo,
executive director. M. Patricia Sturtn
THE BOARD chambers are
located at 515 N. Sycamore. LiaISOe n Comment5 from officials
and interested citizens should
be prepared in writing as well
as delivered orally, a letter of
Invitation from Lt. Gov. Ed
Reinecke stated.
Information will be used by
the governor's local govern-
ment task force in developing
proposals for reform.
Topics should be selected
from major issues oonfronting
local government.
These six themes were sug·
gested:
-Analysis of c u r r e n t
government structure.
-Allocation of p u b l i c
service responsibility.
-Allocation of f I s c a 1
resources.
-County geographic boun-
daries. (Are they relevant to
1oday's society?) ·
-Public access to and con-·
trol of government.
-The relation between state
and local government.
Senior Bike
Olympics
Set June 10
The 1973 Senior Olympics %5-
mlle bicycle race will be held
amidst the orange a n d
eucalyptus trees of the city of
Irvine flatlands June 10.
Appointed
At Hospital
M. Patricia Sturges has
~en appointed administrative
liaison and director o f
volunteer services at Saddle-
back Community Hospital in
Laguna Hills.
MRS. STURGES' employ-
ment was announced this week
by hospital Executive Director
Leonard LaBella Jr.
Saddleback Hosp.Ital i s
scheduled to open at 23561
Paseo de Valencia In July.
Formerly d i r e c t o r of
volunteer services at St.
Mary's Hospital in Long
Beach, Mrs. Sturges · wm
assist hospital auxiliaries and
about 300 in,service volunteers
at Saddleback.
sHE IS A graduate of
Carnegie I n s t i t u t e of
Technology with studies in art,
journalism, volunteer pro-
grams and management.
Mrs. Sturges !I a member of
the Association of Western
Hospitals, the C a I i f o r n i a
Hospital Association, t h e
American Society Directors of
Volunteer Services and the
Southern California Council of
directors of hospital volun-
teers. Any cyclist over 25 is eligi-
ble to compete in the event
sponsored by Senior Sports LA BEIL\ SAID Mrs.
International. Sturges' first effort In her new
Irvine city councilmen have post is the formation of an
authorized closing, of affected "Association of Saddleback
central Irvine streets to create Community Hosp it a I Aux-
the five-mile course. iliaries."
The races will begin on Representatives from com-
Moulton Parkway just west o[ munity o r g a n i z at i o n s
Jeffrey Road near the en-throughout the valley will be
trance to the Ranch Park. in the new group.
Cy 1. will pedal t t J f The association is planning a c JSts eas 0 e -benefit "'review showing of the frey, south to Barranca, west "
to CUiver and north to Moulten Buffum's department store
In the five-lap r~ce. that wiil otien in the Laguna
Entry blanks are available Hills Mall' in September.
Hall 420 ca Proceeds from the opening in Irvine City • 1 m-will go to the hospital's pus Drive. The races begin at .
1hllrsday, M1y 3l , 1973 s 11.Ji.V l'IL.01 2J
Occupational Unit
Seeks New Home
By JOHN V ALTER.IA
OI lie D9llr NII 11119
T h e C a p lltranc>-Laguna
Regional Occupational
Program finds itself aching
Crom a strong case of growing
pains and In comlll( weeb the
staff will try to find a new
headquarters.
The program developed to
serve the capistrano Unified
and Laguna Beaeh Unified
school districts, must move
from temporary quarters ln
the capistrano district head-
quarten, and eo far no new
spot haa been .found.
I N ITIAL SUGGESTIONS
call for the rental or leasing of
portable bulldlnp to serve as
a headquarters.
"But right now we still have
to locate the buildings and
then find a place to put them,"
said ROP Coordinator Jerry
Copeland.
Booming growth both in the
ROP and Capistrano Unified
operations have cauted the
minor crisis.
1be ROP enrollment has
steadily tncreued. as has the
clerical and administrative
staff.
AT THE SAME time, he
school district's demands for
space at the old Serra School
In Capistrano Beach has cau,,-
ed the po11slble "eviction" or
ROP.
The special board for the re-
cupatlonal prograip will tackle
the housing problem, as well
as budget and salary Increases
-as the summer progreases.
The highly acclaimed pro-
gram will be run next fi!cal
year with a budget of '284,308.
financed by a special tax rate
applied by the two school
districts.
THE BUDGET sum is a 17.8
increase over the current fis-
cal years' document oi $241,-
5880.
The bulk of the iDCNues
are in administrative aalarlu
as well aa the wages of the
rest or the staff.
in San Juan caplstrano for
employes for salary and
benefit Increases have yet to
be approved by the board. The
new proposals would add
•10.000 to the budget next A"'llrtl Wlnner
year. Monica Krick of South
DESPITE THE predictable Laguna won the first
growth problems, the program annual reporting award
itself continues to be a sue-from Ferris State Col-le~e in Big Rapids,
cess, aides say. Micb. for ber coverage
The ROP offers classes of various s t u d e n t
which range from construction problem areas.
and mercantile skills to ----------
automotive repairs, hospital
occupations and other in-_ 1 F
struction keyed to current in-Atluetic ete
dustry demands. ·
Some changes for the next Set by Scouts
school year, Copeland said this
week, involve the scrapping of The Third Annual CUb Scoot
a production-pottery c I ass Olympics will be held at 8:30
because of dwindling needs in a.m. Saturday at Mission Vie-
industry. jo High School.
UCI Won't Restudy
AN ADDmON to the pro-The first of a series ol eight
,,,..am next year will be the use athletic events will begin at 9 .,. a.m. following registration.
of the service facilities at the The event is open to boys 8 to
Bill Yates Volkswagen Agency 11 years of age.
Newspaper Funding in San Juan Capitsrano for The Olympics is a combined
pupils enrolled in t h e effort of the El Camino Real
Volkswagen repair classes. District (south coastal com-
Previously, the pupils held munlties) and Saddleback
Followng a statewide trend,
Associated Students of UCI
student COllllCil m e m b e r s
Tuesday night refused to
reconsider $35,145 budget for
the student newspaper the
"New University."
Editorial director Robert
Geskln said the council·
adopted budget of a week aao
retects a 10 pereent or $3,000
decrease insupport for the
newspaper which spent $35,145
thls year. .
GESKJN BELIEVJ£S tbe
cuts renect an attempt to
censure the student
newspaper's staff who have
this year been critical of
ASUCI governance.
Council spokesmen denied
Tuesday that there had been a
cut in the budget, contending
~ there was an increase.
Gesklfl explained the in-
crease burdens the newspaper
with maintenance costs oi the
entire communications "suite"
of offices on the third floor of
the comn'lonil building.
MONEY TO PAY for
maintenance of the etudent
radio station and newspaper
officers f o r m e r I y was
budaeted In the general ASUCI
budget, Geskin claimed.
The most critical cut cited
. . forth in a rented garage in District (Irvine, Tustin and
by the editorial staff dl.l'ector, San Clemente. Mission Viejo.)
was the reduction from $11,150, _____ -..;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;.;;;;;;,;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiliiiiiiiiiimif
to $10,150 of the amount thel•
newspaper uses to "pay" staf-
fers. Stipends for student
newspaper writers and editors
r~e from '900 per year for
the editor who is appointed by
the student council downward
to $150 for c i r c u la t i o n
managers.
'l1le councll denied a motion
to reconsider the budget to
amend the stipend amount and
fund it fully, rather than make
salaries dependent on adver-
tising revenues.
YOUR SUPPORTING
GIFT GUARANTEES g
YOU MORE lNCOME~0
TH COii accrue...,. _,.ly ••-· IV I
••loy lllllml•tlal ta ........ wlllle CALL Ml. JIM HIND
Hlplnt a huatt111I,.._ cwta tlwe .. lii
SHtll Coast C••••lty H..,...,.,
... "UYlllt Trust l'ratfeM." Wr!M er
call for datalla today.
499-1311
Ext. 600
SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
l117Z CHlt Hltltw8Y, IHtll ........ Callfartlla '26n
NEVERTHELESS, the coun-
cil heard testimony from
members of the Orange Coun-
ty Press Club, Larry Petersen
of the Santa Ana Register and
1George Leida! of the Daily~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Pilot. Both regularly cover the
UCI campus and Indicated
~ has been a perceptible
lmproV!ment In the quality of
the student newspaper.
Leidel, who is president-
elect ot the 3 5 0 -m e m b e r
organization of professional '
newsmen, indicated to the
council that members of the
press club would consider
forming an advisory body to
assl!t next year's N e w
University starr. 9 a.m. SUnday, June 10 and building fund.
are expected to draw 100 adultl.;-=-=-========,1--------------------
Sweepstakes Spee~•
James 0. Harper School's debate team hu been
awarded the sweepstakes trophy in the second an-
nual Fountain Valley School District debate tour-
nament. Winners are (from Jett) Dave Bontelle,
Kathy Lyle, Karen Miller, Dren Ziv. (Front row)
Jon Ramirez and Sean Dick.
compelltors, or more.
* * *
Bike Trail
Committee
Sets Meet
The Irvine bike tralls ad-
visory committee will meet
Tuesday night to discuss the
city's pro~ bicycle safety
law anti detennlne sources of
possible state and federal
runda fir bike paths.
Ms. Juanita Moe said the
public meeting will be held at
7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
Robert Ruth home, 13821
Onkayha Circle, the Racquet
Club.
The ieSsion will allO Include
finalization of t h e ccm-
rnlttee's proposed prestn-
tatlon to tbe -Irvine Unified
School District hoard o. f
education, a n d committee
recommendation~ for possible
city requirements in com-
mercial developments.
The committee hopes to ~l
standards which encourage
use of bicycles as a n
alternative means of
tranaportaUon by seeing to ,It
that shopping centers . and
schools provide f()r b I k e
storage and sale accesa, Ms.
Moe said.
GOVERNMENT
MEDICAL COVERAGE
Patients covered by 1ovttnment 1pon1ored aolstend pr09r•rn•, as well •• thetse
coYered by priv1te ln•urance pro9r1m1, ere welcome •+ lently Minor.
.... b ..... _ .............. Vhlten AIWllWS w.ta ...
..._.. M-CHwal 9M H ... 11 ..
31410 C..... C.,ld1aH, c.,...... ....
4Mol7N
REFLECTIONS
by
Reyn
Sheffer
""The way to H hatpJ 11 h
make othar• 10 ••• ' Ingersoll
A simple recipe for that state in life we all seek ...
happiness! Slmple indeed, as
are many profound obser.va-
tlons which embody basic truths. We have a chance of
many routes toward what we
believe will be happiness,
but routine observa~on of
our fellow men wlll disclose
that the happiest among us
are those who bring happi-
ness to others.
It Is seldom 41tftcult to fol·
loW this advice. We can often
delight another person by
some sincere compliment, or
praise for a task well done. Even ll slight show of con-
sldera tion, some evidence
that we thought of, and care
for, another person will of-
ten m&ke them happy and
multiply our satisfaction
with ourselves. The skill arows with practice. Try ltt our reputation 111 this com-
munity has been built upon
the most sympathetic ccn-
alderatlon for those who
have come to us for help.
~H6FF€R
rnC>llTU.LllY
LAGUNA BEACH
97' SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY
494-11536
SAN CLEM!NTE
I Ul NORTH El CAMINO REAL
491.0100
For
Weekender
Advertising
Phone
642-4321
lOu are cordially incited to
RB '73 Fall Preview
at every RB showroom-store.
On mew, the neweat,
bt'fghteat looks from the recent
home fumLthings markets
and original designs from ths
RB factcwy put togttthet in
RB de.rigned decorator room 1etUng1. ·
See the atyle1, the fabrics, the
'finishes, the colors, and the accessoJW1
you;U be wanting for your home
this fall. Our free decorating service
fa available to aa8i.rt you in
planni,.g your selections '° that you
can cOflnt on earliest posnb'le
delivery of adoonce merchandise.
llDW 41 MIAf M ..,...,._ ....,.._ a1'0llH
-1-"A ·-"·•-t•MlUlllAY ltUllTll.1 ·-TU!Jt~TIU ........ .._,._ .... aa.mwr._...,._
• 10.lf*d derallleur Pll'a
• Sports 1tyle handlebars
• Dual-Position calll*' bnke t.Vers
• Twin-Stlk• &af'hift coi1b•
* 10595
At home on the um,u1, In t-, • °" • country leH,
Schwinn'• outshndln9 ll9~twei9ht bike with futuru Hd
equi~m .. t usu•lly food on bikes co1tln9 muh more. Twi ..
Stik M 9Hr 1hi~ conlrel1, dual pHltlon ctlipar brake 1 .. .n.
Diulond style cerb .. steel freme. 6u111w1ll tires. C•me ill
toclay -you'll be tied you did.
ii LUGGAGE CARRIER sTRAPr:r= c •'*a.••=•• J 18" ELASTA STRAPS U .. PllCl ~
CAft TRUNKS, \o HOLDI DOWN IOOICI 13 I
P:OR CN.9'1NG Oft I.ACM
llCYCU! ftlDINO LIMITI WITH COWGI
COUPON ll'XPlm .lllLT J1-'7J
CAe.~z.0:.... <5 ... ; .. 91CYCLH
LA.MIST PAftTI • ACCHIOftlll
HTAIU1t1 .. HOUY lll'Pt.IEI
Of' CRAP'T MATEIUALI
Ill•. I "'1. M
-., M
._ 1N
ICIMM '->
Hl'A1a IMOP l"Olt ntl IHYICI ... 01' ALL lllAND llCYCLH
.. :\
•• .,
.. . ., ' .
..
r:' •
._.
..
i
' '
r .
TUMBLEWEEDS
SHatlFF, fM L'flNG lfARASSfO ~ Hl~RP HAMHOCKERl. .•
Mun & JEFF
WOW/WHERE'D
YoLJ GET il-1.A:T
BLACK EYE?
FIGMENTS
NANCY
i-H~ BEST"'fl.llN~
FORA Sl41NER
IS TO PUT A
?IECEO~RAW
BEEFSTEAK
ON IT!
by Tom K. Ryan
1HERf1S A I.AP'(
PReSENI
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
-ERl<llll-RUN BACK TO HLISJf..,ILL--
WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
THE CLUBHOUSE
AND BRING ME
r-----. A TEE
T~E DA" lS COMINI&
WHEl.l tt'U.. FEEL.
Sll.LJJ H.&.\llt.>Q Q.)e!
TODAY'S CIDSSWDRD PUZZLE
ACROSS 46 Make foul
1 Stage "48 A nclent
presentation A1ian
II Cuts into kingdom
1 pieces 49 Divert
11 Hindu month 50 Treat with
14 Synthetic acorn
fiber 52 Neighbor of
15 Usage Idaho
16 Adjective 56 Sesame plant
suffix 57 Make
17 Possibility u navoidablfl
19 Took on food 60 Leltl"
20 Compass 61 Long for
point 62 River deposit
21 Ship's timber 63 Algiers
22 Feminine govarnor
nickname 64 Insert
24 Atoner 66 Movie award
26 Kind of sheep DOWN Z1 Come into 1 Attracted view
30 Celestial 2 Speak wildly
being 3 Affirmative
32 Keen votes
33 Time 4 Canadian
period• city
3" Young man 5 Emmet
~ Shadeof 6 Place lor
green silting
38 Curve 7 Put a stop to
outward 8 Death notice:
39 Haul Informal
"<! Plant pouch 9 Kind of trap
41 N. American 10 Designers
plants 11 Shade of pink
42 Sing aoftly 12 Undo e knot
43 N ewapapet" 13 Gulde 1
official -·I
"45 Dance of the 18 Over:
'20s German
Yesterday's Puzzlt Solved:
p '!' D 1n.1 .1 .Ill 1 ..
L. • 11.&I' P 0 I
• cu~HH~1~1~~·Ta
I I II
i:+.-i.::.tJ!~o1T;: ~ &~I! 11•1 •IT! 0 0 ~ • I
r'l'J.ft'T.lu!'*49'i Ii;• B .t. • I H I I
P II r. 1 • .. m u ~ O W J
I 0 & T 0 J.IS T J. •I I
D [ S Ill II IT II S S 10 111 1&
23 Bllbytonian
sun god
25 Egypt:Abbr.
26 Existed
27 Play divisions
29 Appeal
29 lne calm
manner ;ro Dye
31 Embraces
33 Victor ----:
French
author
35 Jot
36 Refuse to
believe
38 -·noire:
Bugbear
39 Declarations
of r81J)8Ct
41 Absern:e of
sound
42 Rolled tel
44 Away: Comb
form
46 Moans
46 Old hat
47 Mr. Zola
48 Thinker
50 Leaveat
once
51 Glacial
snowfield
53 Fine-grained
mine rel
54 "---boy! ..
55 Learn
58 Sea eagle
59 Ceremonial
ww:2worda
-.
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
IF ';.'M NOT TAKING HER OUT
TO DINNER, I MIGHT A5
WELL TAKE BETSY!
l"A, YOU 'SAY A lrECENT FAMll .. Y CCNFL.ICf
HA~ PLUNG&O YOIA INTO A OEPf<e§SJON ? AFCI!
YOL-4 &MOTIDNAl:.L.Y ~1£ 'TO DISCUSS
,...,,,,.-. TH& treAfON FOi( THIS
FAMll..Y CONFl..IC.T ?
DICK TRACY
"OL•CE A"Tll1' +--·--_, ... ..... ---+
by Charles M. Schulz
by Harold Le Doux
AS A MATTER OF FACT, eET5'f AND
I 'LL. DO THE TOWN TONIGHT J
~uire
"' &'A~ILY A~ TAl<'ING-
~..WDY
Fl'OM THe
IJAIJY ..•
·.
-WJ.llCH
'""-r;~ M£ 'TO TH!
2'fASON,
li~il..P.
by Mell
c
[,,
by Chester Gould
WNA1' Mm YOU.A
5TQOL PICllON,
.. .
by Roger
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
H0Lt> ON TO )OUR J;IAT,RQMEO-Hl!RE
COMES i!-16 sceNe WHERE ')Ot.l HEl.C> MY AANt> .AND SQUl$Z6P IT TWICe.
BOT; Ill~ AM :r.
9TTl~EJ Hef<>E
THllJl'I~ ~ese
\~t\TG ? ...
by Roger. ·~IJ-.. .. ,
... COL.1-E~E IS A LO~~ W/l..~ OFF ·'
C>
~~~~~
w =~7~;::-"·--· h.-Stfl!L ._.
THE GIRLS
''My trouble is by the tllM I'm rested enough to do
something, I always feel too good to do it."
DENNIS THE MENACE
T~NIGIIT'S
TV IDGIIlJGHTS
KCET ' 8:00 -"The Andersonville Trill"
.-George C. Scott directed this award-winning drama
of a post-Civil War trial for prison camp atrocities.
Richard Baseliart, Michael Bums, Jack Cassidy,
·Buddy Ebsen, Cameron Mitchell, Albert Salmi and
William Shatner are featured.
. . ...
CBS IJ 9:00 -Two Family Portraits. This CBS
~ews s~al contrasts the lifestyles of two Amer-
ican families -one from the middle class the
other from the upper middle class. Charles KUrait reports.
,
TV DAILY LOG
Thursday
Evening
MAY31
m cap1111na
E?i) El Sh1111 de IOI F1t1Js
Ef) Molie: "Nine Lins Alt 11ot
Enauch" (mys) '41-Ronald Rea1a1L
'6:00 IJ DD II m GI!) m Ntn
(])®)lttn
1:30 m Men Criffin SIKIW
®) Nmll
t.oO tJ (f) I lflCIA I Tw F11111J ,.,_
trllb "We'll OK In Brld:, New Jer·
sey," "But What If the Drom
Comet True?" A CBS news special
that contrub tht life.styles of IWO
American femilles -o~ from tht
mlddl1 class, the oth1t ffOm the
upper middle cless. ·ec*nsPGndent
Cherin Kuralt b th• repo~r.
D 11ontta
(l)lttS..rt
fJ Wllttd Dud or Allve m 1lle fllnbt-m • rnt
"-fl) Qtlrt111t J OIV!dlll
fill Hodppodp Ud19
Ef)DreeStDops
r '1:30 Cl) llopn's Heraes a llwlt: (C) (90) "The Plenn
DI Hit CMpeny" Cone!. (rom) '61-
Fred •111. D1ibble Reynolds, Liiii
Pll1111r, Tab Hunter. Gary Merrill. Cll CIS llews Walter Cronkite
fJ HM Cun Will TIMI
®J Mm Griffin Show m AlldJ Grllfrth
fill Schools Without f1ilure 8' Joenu C.not1 Show
e!]llovtll m lite frenk Pwple
l}) Little RISClls
~. 7:00 tJ CI) 0 m News
· O Bowtlnc for Doti.11
00 Truth or Consequences
([) A111tricln Adnnture fJ Whit's MJ Unt? m 1Low1.ucy
QI I D111m af Jmlnll
@) Slmplemente M•lll
fB T'~ CM Cll'1111
·'-fi>M1111C1 · 'a:) Tll•Revlsta tuslcll m liars' Clllb
l})Speedltlm
0 di m lrwlclt "Cold, Kar«
. Cash" (R) Alertecr prior to the kid.
n1ppi112 of •· 111fN11 queen's daulll·
!er, Chief lnmSlda plants Det. Set
Brown IS dr!Ver of the kidnap vt·
hlcle.
0 @@ EEJ Kunc Fu "Tiie Tide
(R) Caine's search for his brother
le~ds him Into 1 web of deadly in·
tri21Je involvlnc bolll·Amaricans and
Chinese,
fB !lint m El ShW • Altktdro Sul ...
9:30 0 The HllPPJ W1i'lci.rm Slfiifllld
Henrietta go "In Search cl. S.1rcll·
light," 1 desert town In Nmdt.
ONews
el Mudladll lllllan1
e!l Este Es 11 Mundo l.ltlao
10:00 8 @) m Dun llllltla Show (R)
Jack Benny ind country.Western
singer Lynn Andel'JOll 111esl omm....,
O@(I)GJ I lflCrAI A I C
News lnqullJ "Th• Energy Crisis:
The Nuclear Altematlve" Frank Rey·
nolds Is reporter for this lrwes1l1•·
lion of tilt question rd nucle1r power
11neration -iU promises and Its 7:30 fJ Younc Dr. lllld111 "Deatll of In-problems -n the United States
noctnts'' (R) IOid•~ btfrltl!Cb two comes to oJps with 1ner11 n1tcl3
younc bomb blas1 v1cttrns, both SUS-outstripplna: cunent capacltl1s. ~::!.~n~ ~~utioft1r11S. fJ Mowle' (C) (Zhl) "W'•111 II
O Tiit AMllf1111r "Make It 1 Ml~ Str,.-. (~)<&4-Glna Lollobrlcldl,
lion" (R) Gen• Bradley returns from . ~ Cotllty. ~'
lndl1 to dltcOYtr that 5'Wlndlen '~ u M~l'll
hlvt set up a perfect double to · • Ilk• owr his Ille. loves end bank 10:30 O ,Tall 8m
aocounts of his business associates. Q)O..,i.a~ Fbllin1
0 Malia: (2hr) •Act of Love" @!) Aan11pa1111• Mnslcll 11rlel
(dra) '54 -Klrlc Dou(las, DIRY ®) Nen/Sporta
Robin. .._ .. _ . -.
(I) To Tall tllt Tnrtll 11:00 JI 0 fJ el 8' Q) lifts
Cl) "'la SlfTl'Oll (I) Cl) @) Nen G Mllllall $ Movlt: {2111) "Alin-: D 11111 Stlp lltyancl
tura of Don laan• (tdY) '49 -rr. M ..._. Diiie
Errol flylln, Ylveca LlndfOIS. p•~ 1'~ ft 9 a..t'a Make 1 llHI G Tnrlll w ~ftcel m Tllat Clrt · .ID Mowlr. "1111 lrut M!U..M..ttm'-• m Dreptt ("alvrl film) '54. Elli Acdon Chi-· m Rollin' 11:15 @m c:i.-1 34 m Pollet Surgeon 11:30 tJ Cl) C1$ llfl Mnlt: (C) "Ille
l}) Add1ms farAllJ 11111" (dra) '65 -Sm ConnetJ,
1:00 tJ ([) The WtllDH (R) OIMa's MlchHI RedlJ'avt.
cousins arrive ti Walton's Moun. 0 0 a;, Johnny Cll'IOll J oh R
lain, sayinc . thty have lost their Davidson ls substlMe host.
farm in the dust bowl and wlsll to O Tit• Cllamplont
live with the Walton family. D Cil 00 m lad! Pllf Tonlll
e,~ ~i~i~r .• ~:~yn si:ha~ CD To Tiii Ult Trutll
and Ed Sulli'lln 1uesl fZil Tiii~ Mlnlllla Wi1' •• ,
fJ CI) (J) EEJ MOd Sqaed "Run, 12:00 GJ A1fr1c1 llltdii:ect Pmt1111
Lincoln, Rim" (R) A friend of line's ·
wllo Is in the clutches of loan 12:30 O Nlwl
sherb Is .forced to set up line IS fJ Mnlt; (C) "Ila" (scl·n) '54-
a target to save his kidnaped wife. Richard £can, Constance Dowlin&. m Jtoalln's Hems m Malit: "The ~·Mrs. BIWIVl'd" ID Bolln& Fnmi Ille 01,-mplc (mY$) '36-ltan Arthur. m Htllllll10S Corejt m l'ettlcoat luctlol
~ Eii1 Hu11anltles Fil11 follllll "The
Andersonville Trial" (R) Directed by
Geor11 C. Scott, this Emmy and
Peabody Award·wlnnln1 drama by
Slul Levitt deals with the continu-
ln& theme of man and authority.-
the conlllctine: authorities of mill·
1:00 Cil 0 D CIJ llns
@) It Tabl 1 Tllltf
1:45 tJ Morlt: "Tau'H lllM' c.t Rief'
(com) '41-fred Astaire, Rita H•J·
worth.
tary discipline and moral cons-2:00 m All-Nlaltt S11ow: "hrlrllt In Ttr·
cience. Richard Bnehert, Michael ror, •"Torpedo o1 Doonr"
Bums, Jack Cassidy, Buddy Ebsen.
cameron Mitchell, Albert Salmi and 3:10 fJ Mawll: "The Si.onls11H" (dra)
Wllll1m Shatner star. '48-lany Parks, Ellen Drew.
l 1:00 m "Plllhcwtr"' (mys) ·~ -Fred Friday· lhcMurray, Kim Noval
.~ -1:30 fJ "Not 11 a sar.ncel". (dra) '55 ~ •• · DAYTIME MOVIES -Robert Mitchum, Ollvl1 dt HIYil· ~ " lend.
~; 9:JO fJ "Mlreclt of Mo111n'1 Cretllft 3:00 (J) "Ultlt .., lest" (dra) '53-
• (com) '44-Eddlt Bracken, Betty Binc Crosby, C11u4e Dauphin.
:, Hutton. ®! (C) "CHt "-= Ja,..... :to:DO rn "Dor of Flanders" (dra) ·~ Concl. N111t of the ll1M
: '. D1vid Ladd. 3:30 fJ "Canyon Croar9ec1s" (wes) '55
·. O "Ciolcl fewer" (wes) '53-John -~lchard Bue hart.
: C1tvtrt. 4:00 B '1b111 Cl•• ,...... (dra) 'SI
' 12.-00 D "Sht Goda al Shirt RMI" (dr1) -Claudette Col!Mrt, Patrldl t '58-Bill Cord. "RI Dude 60tt Knowles.
Wiit" (com) '48-Eddie Albtrt. 4:30 (]) II• 11 lDAll lllllq
• K<>c;:E, CHANNEL 50
Orange County's UW teltvislon station, KOCE-TV, has
scheduled the following • ~l programs today. Detailed
listings of Channel 50's programs are carried In the Dally
Pilot's TV Week ea 'Sunday.
4:00 Mltllr llllltn' Nlltlhbo41lcl0jl (C) variety program communlctitlna l!lllth young chlldr1n, hoslld bv Frid
ROOtrt.
4:JO lii.ctrfc Camp .. y (CJ Educotl"""I
enrertalnment mu1lc and humor ft teach primary achool chlldr1n. 5:00 S,_ s1 .... 1 (Cl Education•) 1nlertolnm1nl for: ore-s<;hQOI.,._ •;60 l'lll' 0,...,..,. ••rth <Cl J1pen11 Ila.hi 41l1•1n•I • :IOlh c1ntur1 m•ll><I~. llQllullan. •:JI ,,__ CW (Cl "Pemlll!I Fl•h:
, ~i.mbe Au Ftnoull" COONlnll 'l"IKll<t!o< ••«>l•llltd enil ' demant • bv Jull1 Clllld. 7:00 O••-Covntv •••lew (Cl s..
•
111111111, Tuesdly, June 12th, at 7:00 PM. 7:30 Omolbvl SO (CJ "l.llw 01y" SH 111111111 r ... ><lty, June 12. at 6:JO PM. 1:00 P'ocut Ort• CoOftlY CCI "Or1~
County Autt>On" Set llallng Mondi¥ June I, of 6:30 PM. 1:30 The Seulen (Cl D1llUI
"B(ownsvlll• s1111on" A rock 1nd rot band lrom ,Mn Art.or, Mlchla•r,· who bollov1 I h 1 t Mrm1ng un bf fun. •:oo M LIM !Cl Cflllnlnlat w1111.,,,
1 fdli.y, Jr~ wlll dl""'91 toplCI
of nettoMI end lftltrfltllonel CO!>-cern whh nww1mak..-1 .
Four Shows Playing
On Coast's Stages
TOM TITUS
Intermission
On the threshold of June, the
closing month of the Jivin~
theater season, activity on
Orange Coast stages is begin·
ning to wind down, with no
new productions on the boards
this weekend and only two
more in this section of the
county for the balance of the
season.
Life," a musical .revue by Ron
Thronson, Toni Shearer (of
"Mother Earth" fame) and
Bryant McKernan. M a r t in
Benson directs the show,
which features M l c h a e l
Douglass as Bierce, backed by
a skillful SCR chorus.
trying to make it on his own,
with Micllelle Brown, An·
nabelle Quigley and Jack
Bingert completing the cast.
Laguna's "Butterflies" set
is designed by Richard
Andersen (who directed an
earlier production of the play
In San Clemente). Curtain
time is 8:30 at the playhouse,
606 Laguna Canyon Road,
Laguna Beach. Reservations
494-0743.
"EXIT THE Body" enters
its third ot five weekends at
the Huntington Beach
Playhouse Friday night with
Howard Solomon in the direc-
tor's chair. Ann Cossman,
Susan O'Connell, Laura Black
and Ray Scott take the prin·
cipal roles in the Fred
Carmichael comedy.
EmRTAlllrlllT
Burt, Son
Play Moses
EILAT, ISl'Bel (AP) -Actor
Burt Lancaster and his son
are going to star in a
television movie about Moses,
the Jewish patriaroh for whom
the Red Sea parted.
Burt Lancaster Jr. will play
Moses as a young man, and
his father will fill the role of
the older Moses.
,.
Thursday, M_, 31, 1973
Film Unit
Elec
T~tees
Tyrell
HOLL OOD
Academy Award
Tyrell hat for
• C»Ctarrlng role In ''Zadlf1'•
rlde," a tar r l n g Gene
Hackman and Liv Ullnwm at
Warner BrOI .
Of the four productions still
running this week, two of
them are being offered at
South Coast Repertory, and
both are world premjeres of
original works by l o c a l
authors. "In the Midst of
Lile" pJays Friday through
Sunday with "The Clowns" oc-
cupying the Wednesday-Thurs-
day slot at the Costa Mesa
theater.
"The Clowns" is t h e
brainchild of pantomime artist
Ronald Boussom, wllo con-
ceived, directed and stars in
the production. Also along for
the ride are personifications of
four silent movie comics, ac-
curately re-created, and a
slapstick symphony orchestra.
The mystery farce unfolds-----------1------------
The other two attractions
are comedies, an old one and a
new one. The oldie is "Exit
· the Body" at the Huntington
Beach Playhouse whHe the
relatively new play is "But-
terflies Are Free" at the
Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
AMBROSE BIERCE is the
central figure in South Coast
Repertory's "In the Midst of
I NATIONAi
Gf:NEUL
THEATRES
NOW PLAYING
RESERVED SEATS
On Safe Daily 12 'til g
MARLON BRANDO
.In. 'j>ifis
@ ,:;:::" U111dA11111~
IOI. lHRU llfURS. I P .L
FRIDAY 7 ' 9:45
SllURDH 2·7 & 1:45
SUNDAY 2-5 ' I
ALL SIATS $4.00
~11.W :.Y~tlhlitvtlif;j rir
GiDnT
ANDBiilI
Curtain time for both SCR
productions is 8 o'clock at the
company's Th i rd Step
'!beater, 1827 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-
1363.
LAGUNA HAS another hit
on its hands in "Butterflies
Are Free," Hap Graham's
production of the tender com-
edy which continues tonight
through Saturday. William
CUllen stars as the blind boy
CHARLTON HISTON
EDWARD G. ROllN$0N
"SOYLENT
GREEN" -
Also tPG>
"THEY ONLY KILL
THEIR MASTERS"
at 8:30 on Friday and Satur-
day evenings through June 16
at the playhouse, 2110 Main
St., Huntington Beach. Reser·
vations ~-
Paula Stars
LID 0 N!WP()QT
BE AC ti
lNTRA,.C'f '0 LIDO 1\1 1
,. ,, Al SO
ft'I W.ty, laoliy
ad Wllcl
"SUTHER"
-'Ahi IPG> ""' . .,.. .. 'loqllel Weldi
"FUZZ"
~ JlJuth Coast Re1>ertory
A ZESTY, VlllllAHT HEW MUSICAL
"IN THE MIDST OF LIFE"
Audience Ac:c:lalmed! Fri. thru Sunday
"THE CLOWNS"
A Slapstick Symphony of Mime, Music:
and Lautht• w.~ .. •day & Thursday
1827 NEWPORT BLVD., at Harbor
lntonnalf0fl/R1Mrv•llon1 '46-ll6i t P.M, C1rtaln
.,, , •• !..t:...:<1..-.. h'J tr.a
STAD/UM 11 I .~.;,
... ...Zlil!UJ. !J.l \t.1•4'-::W
,,.,. ''lJ.l.'..:!:1-... ll'J ti!.•
STAO/UM "l ;ts~
"' A:'.l.lJ..!T_tJ Ll.Jili·:lr::-9
.,. ,.. '' ··-··n·,m·1
$TADIUM#J :~:::.
tr.. A..!..UU.!..Li.U.hC·.11:..•
_. •· r• 1 ~·w;e1 ,
STADIUM 111 .~
... ~f.'lfl•.~:t.l.l\f.'l'!I'..:•
HIW MUSICAL VEltSION
"Tom Sawyer" (GJ
Wllh JOl!nny Whitaker
NO ll•IERV•D SIUTS "CAMILOT' plua
"On A Clear D1y''
"Soylent ~r" (PG>
"Slcyjacled" (PG>
"Clau of '44"
""" ~'Lest Summer" (PG)
"The Getaway" (Peil
And
"Lady SlllCJS The Blut1" ( R J
TM Mast P'opular l'lcture or Our Tlmta
"Biiiy Jack" <PGJ
TIBKD: 0
, H ·:: ·. '! : : ' , . , ' .; : . ~ :.· i:· ·",If y. · MC.M .... . ...
: ••• •DWA"DS ••• : JAMES COBURN : I : KRIS KRISTOFFERSON( • If •
• : BOB DYLAN
." ....... ...............
MVlllGAL -·-· .. ., .... ,
JASON ROBARDS
Premier Engagement
Datl11 H~•
''T~E GRADUATE"
7:00 ...i U:lS p;r. -_, __
"CARNAL
KNOWLEDGE" (R)
. 1:10 p.111.
Call "'""-for
Sal!Clay Scliecl1l1
"ISLAND MAGIC"
"~ rciot surfl11t at Its best"
• , , Sur4er Maga1in1
Plus Kr11y K1rtoon1
hrfortnGllC .. : 7:30 and 9:30
Now thru Tuesday
Lin Mlnelll
"CABARET"
and
Diana Rou
"LADY SINGS
THE BLUES"
Both In Color.
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UPI TolePhota
A Kiss for Aunt P oily
Celeste Holm, who plays Aunt Polly in the new movie version of "Tom Sawyer,"
gets a bi~ kiss from co-stars Johnny Whittaker (left) and Jodie Foster before
the premiere of the movie in Hollywood. Johnny and Jodie play Tom Sawyer
and Becky Thatcher.
Jack L. Warner Looks Bacl{
On 50 Years In Hollywood
By BOB THOMAS
BURBANK (AP) -It all
began with a bicycle shop run
by four b r o t h e r s in
Youngstown, Ohio. T o day
Warner Bros. does a half-
billlon-dollar -busines! yearly
bringing movie, tele\'.ision and
music entertainment to the
world.
Fifty years ago last month ,
Sam, Harry, Albert and Jack
Warner formed Warner Bros.
Pictures, Inc. Their suc-
cessors have planned a year·
long celebration of the event.
starting with the appearance
or five new films at the Can-
nes Film Festival this month.
Also planned: a 90-minule
retrospective film to show at
New York's Musuem or
Modern Art June 27; na-
tionwide tours of s t u d i o
memorabilia; record albums
or Warner Bros. music; a
television special; traveling
fashion shows.
One o( the founding brothers
remains: Jack L Warner, who
sold his interest in the com-
pany in 1966 and became an
independent producer.
"WE ARE very hopeful that
he will take part in the
celebraticn," said a company
executive. "and he has in-
dicated that he will."
J .L. who enjoys telling
jokes to audiences more than
Bob Hope, could scarcely
resist. He is, after all, the last
remaining link to a vastly col-
ENTERTAINMENT
orful chapter in entertairunent
history.
Jn his autobiography, "My
First Hundred Years in
Hollywood," Warner told how
the family entered the film
business in 1903.
"We heard there was a
carnival coming up in Niles,
only a few miles away, and
Sam rented an empty store
there on a main street. When
the carnival opened, we were
ready for business. Albert sold
tickets, Rose (a sister) played
the piano while I sang il-
lustrated songs, and Sam ran
the projector.
"At the end of the week we
counted our receipts, and we
had $300."
THAT CONVINCED the
brothers to abandon their
u" Tolfphote
Pair of Hoboes
bicycle shop and move into the
growing movie business. They
started a distributing company
in Pittsburgh, then in 1912
decided there was m o r e
money in making films. They
began producing in St. Louis
and California.
Their first blg hit cafne1 in
1917, when they released 1'My
Four Years in Germany," bas·
ed oq the experiences of
Amba~ador James W.
Gerard. Wartime audiences
flocked to it.
Shortly aner f o r m i n g
Warner Bros . Pictures in 1923,
Jack Warner discovered their
first big star: a German
shepherd named Rin Tin Tin.
Warner Bros. was only a
minor threat to the big film
companies until the historic
date of Oct. 6, 1927. That was
the premiere in New York of
"The Jazz Singer," in which
Al Jolson spoke dialogue for
the first time in a major film.
The film started the revolution
from silents to talkies, and
Warner Bros. had a head
start.
IN 1929, the company turned
out 81 movies, most of them
highly forgettable. But the
1930s brought the real flower-
ing of Warner Bros.
More than any other studio,
Warners caught the temper of
the times. The gangster era
was depicted in • · L i t t 1 e
Caesar" and "Public Enemy.'"
Musicals like "42nd Street"
and the "Golddiggers" series
captured the brassy tempo of
th!! 1930s. The nation's social
conscience was evidenced in
''I am a Fugitive from a Chain
Gang" and "They w o n ' t
Forget."
The Warner stars seemed to
possess more vitality than
those o( other studios : Bette
Davis, Humphrey B o g a r t ,
James Cagney, Edward G.
Robinson, Errol Flynn, Paul
Muni, Pat O'Brien, Dick
Powell, Joan Blondell.
As in World War I, Warners
portrayed the g r o w in g
German m e n a c e with
"Confessions of a Nazi Spy."
During the war, the studio
turned out a host of war films :
"Air F o r c e , ' ' "Destination
Tokyo," "This Is the Army,"
''Action in the North Atlan-
tic."
WARNER BROS prosperity
continued into · the postwar
years with such hits as
"Treasure of the S i e r r a
Madre," "A Streetcar Named
Desire," "The Nun's Story,"
"Who's Afraid of Virginia
Woolf?" "My Fair Lady,"
"Bonnie and Clyde."
But in the 1960s it seemed
apparent that Jack Warner
had lost his enthusiasm for
guiding a film c o m p a n y
through the troubled new
times. He sold his Interest to
Seven Arts. which in 1969 sold
out to Kinney N a t i o n a 1
Service.
The new management has
led the company to new highs
of income: $510 million in 1972
for a profit o( $50 million.
TOO CLEA.N?
KUClilNG, Malaysia (AP)
-Movle theaters displaying
"Adults Only" signs may get
into trouble for not shOwing
sexy enough films. The city
council president said stem
action would be taken if it was
found the signs had been used
'E am • .gin Lac 0 e
By JAY SHARBUTf much controversy, but you'd power plants, where the Energy Commission
NEW YORK (AP) -The wonder why if thia program ptimuvfanger in a major ac-spokesman, there on-
~~htT ~=in: e ~ w ~~~ were your sole guide to the cident would be a "ventin ' of ly ooe radiolosic:al accident -
mendable study of nuclear subject. It's BO !Ow-key and radJoactive matter into the air wl:Uch he defined as a serious
energy as a major solution to dispassionate, it may cause ot' ground. incident T~ in plant He said a "blowdown"
the nation's energy crisis. slumber instead pf interest. But nowhere in the show ~ damage or bumaJl i,njury -in unplanned I of primarJ
Alas, the show has a crisis of To its credit, it does t'Or-there a specific example of the history of any commercial ant from the nuclear
its own. rectly emphasize that there'll atiy kind of mishap or incident nuclear plant in the United He said in no case did tadl
lt's about energy, but Jacks be no mushroom cloud of an at a nuclear power plant. States. tive matter escape the reac
it. Entitled "The Energy atomic explosion even i( the Such an ~ple, with il-He said no one was hurt, in buildings of the plants. 1
C r i s i s : T h e N u c I e a r worst happens at a nuclear lustrations and expert opinion that accident, which occurred Ernest Pendrell, pl'C!du '
Alternative," it is a dull plant; the plants are in no way on what went wrong and why , in the reactor section of a ·director of tonight's
primer on the proliferation potential A-bombs. would have greatly helped small plant near Detroit in dd<:lµnentary " said be
and problems of nuclear-viewers decide w h et he r 1966. lldered but didn't include
powered electric generating AND IT DOES let opposing present safeguards are ade-l!IM aceident or any
plants in the United States. factions on the show discuss at quate or if more are needed . HOWEVER, HE said that specific incidents in the s
The plants have aroused length the safety of nuclear , Act'Ording to an Atomic since 1967 there have been fOt" two re~ns. --~---~~--~~~~---=-~~~~~~-~~~~~·~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Hobo Maurice "Steam'train" Graham (left) is joined
by actor Lee Marvin, who stars in a movie about
hoboes of the 1930s, "Emperor of the North Pole "
outside New York's WaldorC Astoria Hotel whe~e
more than a score ol tramps dined as guests of the
actor. only as drawing cards to I 9!!1'!9'!!,..P!W'I
mlslead the public.
ra
. UPI Tet.t>llotea
SWEDE SAVAGE'S CAR HITS WALL AND DISINTEGRATES .••
I
Stepping Up-
Doesn't Alter
Phillies Boss
LOS ANGELES -·His uniform is dif-
ferent. So is his job title. So is his .salary.
But · Philadelphia Phillies · manager
Danny Ozark Is bCipeful that those are.
the only major changes that have taken
place since he left the relative security of
being a coach on the Dodgers staff .to
stick bis neck in-tbe ·d!OCll&~u ·a· IQ8jor
league manager. ,
"I don~t want to change as a.~!J~
he told this column Wednesday nt
Dodger Stadium. "I told my wife that if
ever do I want to know so I can get out
of manaf.ng. . " ...
"I d01J't want to be a dictator· or ~
know-it-llll. Managing gives f«l a
GL8NN WHIT8
_,
' ,
Thursday, May 31, 1973
t • Ill tory
Race Witnesses Find It Hard to Believe
That Santa Anan Survived Wreck
By DEKE BOULGATE
Of Ille o.i 1Y Pllel si.11
INDIANAPOLIS -Swede Savage is
alive today.
Anybody who watched the re-enact-
ment of his fiery crash on television
Wednesday night or witnessed it in
person at Indianapolis Motor Speedway
will find that hard to believe.
Savage, 26, of Santa Ana , survived the
worst single-car accident in t h e
SpeeAway's history during the twice-
delayed running of the 57th annual In·
dianapolls 500.
The cause of the accident is unknown,
because there is so little left of the car to
inspect that trying to find a mechanical
defect ls a worthless exercise. But this is
what happened 011° the track :
Savage had jW:it completed a pit stop
and was running third on the 59th lap
after leading briefly during a flurry o1
other pit stops.
He was on the short chute between the
two north turns, three rand four, when
his STP Eagle began handling badly. Al
Unser, the leader, was in front of him,
and right on bis tail was Bobby Unser.
Savage, according to Bobby, "began to
wobble halfway through the fourth tum,
and I knew something was going to ha!>"
pen. It seemed like he almost caught il
but then down he went, and I went by."
Savage's final lurch was toward the
outside wall. He came within a few feet
of hitting it at almost the same spot
where Mike Masley augured in last year.
Then the car veered across the track, a
bee-line for the Infield wall protecting the
pit area. Savage appeared unable to spin
the car, steer it or even slow it down. A
play hack of the TV video tape in slow
motion showed the right rear wind strut
appeared to drop, but on examination
later it was found intact.
Moments before he struck the wall, at
better than 150 miles an hour. Savage
shouted over his two-way radio lo the
pits:
"Holy Christ, what a mess !"
He failed to push the button that would
have activated the protective foam inside
his $750 safety suit.
Tbe car hit almost head-on and sent a
plume of fuel into a geyser of flame, like
a wave crashing .over a rocky prom-
ontory.
Turn four came alive with fire, the
burning fuel sloshed across the pave-
ment , and parts of the car began peeling
off.
. Savage sat helpless, strapped in his
seat w!llch separated from the main part
of the. chasis. The motor went flying
down the track, digging a trench in the
asphalt as it scraped to rest, 350 feel
away from the main part of the car.
The race was red-flagged to a stop for
the third time in three days . Back in turn
three, Savilge's STP teammate Gordon
Johncock jumped out of. his car and
started running toward the accident. A.
J . 'Foyt; who had already ha'.d a look at it,
held him back.
· "Don't go down there," he shouted.
Johncoclc obeyed. .
Six firemen rushed to the scene and
relief driver Don Mahler, also of Santa
Ana, grabbed his pit fire extinguisher,
and ran toward Savage.
One of the firemen -he was uniden·
tified by the Speedway -rushed up to
the injured driver just as, another ex-
plosion bolled out of the wre(kage.
The fOl'Ce and beat ol the ignition
recoiletl him, but when he regained his
balance, be dove into the center of the • Inferno and pulled Swede out.
There wasn't anybody who saw the ac-
cident who would have given two cents
for Savage's chances for survival , but
miraculously he sat up and spoke in the
ambulance. Medics said he never loot
consciousness.
He was taken to the Speedway in-
firmary. His driving suit was scorched,
and his helmet was battered terribly, but
his only injuries appeared to be two bad-
ly broken legs, second degree burns over
the upper part ol his body and internal
injuries.
Outside the emergency room, his pret-
ty wife Cheryl was comforted by friends,
including Betty Packard, whose husband
Jim was killed in a racing accident 13
years ago.
"He's hurt, Cheryl, but he'll be okay,"
Mrs. Packard said.
A doctor in the operating room held up
two fingers, and Savage said, "two."
After placing his legs in splints, doc-
tors transferred Savage to Methodist
Hospital downtown by police helicopter.
Wednesday night he was taken off the
critical list and today he remains in
serious but stable condition.
Today the theorists are trying to figure
out the cause of the crash, having
discarded a failing wing hypothesis.
One school ol thought is that Savage
us · himself t~-~-~ to
stay ahead of -Bobby ti~. Another
theory is that something broke in the
suspension or steering, an explanation
that might cover why the car appeared
to dip in the right rear just before it hit
the wall.
But the important thing is Savage is
probably going t-0 be all right.
Crewman Dies
After Being Hit
INDIANPOLJS (AP) -Armando
Teran, a pit crewman for the Graham
McRae car, was injured fatally Wednes-
day during the 57th running of the In-
dianapolis 500-mile auto race when he
was struck by an emergency vehicle.
Teran, 22, was hit while in the pits as
he was rushing to an accident involving
driver Swede Savage.
He died at 5:23 p.m.
Hospital spOkesmen said William J.
Olsen, 55, was in the intensive care unit
with a concussion and facial cuts.
Initial reports said he may have been
injured when hit by flying debris from
the crash of Swede Savage's race car.
But a hospital spokesman later said the
injuries didn't appear to be related to the
crash.
He said the track reported the man
was found lying in a rest room at the
track.
DAILY PILOT
Indy Winner
Would Like
Slower Race
INDIANAPOI.JS (UPI) -Gordon
Johncock, who won the twice-<lelayed In-
dianapolis 500 which killed a crewman
and hospitalized two drivers, Wednesday
pleaded for less speed in the annual auto
race.
Johncock , 36, led for 114 laps..d the 133
in the race, called after 332.5 miles, and
triumphed at an average speed of 159.014
miles an hour. The race was scheduled
for 200 laps.
"I would really like to see them slow
these cars down," he said, subdued after
his win. "By slowing down the cars, you
would see a much better race."
Johncock was traveling at about 180
m.p.h. for the. last few laps before the
yellow light, slowing the field to 80
m.p.h., came on for the final four laps
before the race was stopped because of
rain.
~wede -Savage's car earlier bit the
outside wall, then the inside wall at the
head of the home stretdl, exploding tnto
flames, and he suffered broken legs and
bums. He was faken to Methodist Hos·
)'l>ital by hellcopteJi,....11sted 0 in-c:riUcal but
stable condltlon. · ·
Savage wWJ the second d r i v e r
hospitalized as the result of the race.
David "Salt" Walther was burned
seriously Monday when his car hit the
wall and caught fire in a l<H:ar accident
which stopped the race. Johncock drove
unscathed through both mishaps.
Earlier, veteran driver Art Pollard wu
killed when his car hit the wall and skid-
ded upside down Into the infield on May
12 while practicing for quallfications.
INDIANAPOLI$ -Unofllclal flnll st1ndlng1 of tn. Indianapolis 500-mlle race, (l\Allted by r1ln .,,.,. 133 laps, 332\'I mllnl:
I. Gordon Jonncock, Fr~klln, Ind., No. ~ E1g1 .. 2. Billy Vukovich. Frnno. No. 2, "9gle-Of. ftnhauter, 133 llp&.
J, Roger McClu~..,, Tucson. No. 3. McLoren-Olfenh1user, 131 11 •
13t· 1=~ Kenyon, i; • Ind .. No. 1'. Eni..Foyt.
5. Gory Betttnhtusen, Tinley l'trll, 111 •• No. s. Mcllren-Offtnl\Alusel'rl30 l•r.· 6. Sieve l<rltliofl, P1rs ppany, N.Y., No. 2A. Klnufl1h-Olftnh1us1r. 121 l1p1. 7. Loe Kunzman, Guti.tiberg, lowe, No. 1" Eegle. Ottenheuttr. 127 l1po. I. John Martin, Long IMGh, No. "• McLl-.-01· ftnhlUHr, 125 l1p1. '· Johnny Rutherford, Fort Worth, No. 7, MCLlrtn• OlfenheUHr. 124 ilpl. 10. Mike -l•Y· Clermont, Ind., No. "· Eaglt-01· fenhaUHr. 120 11.-. brol<en connoalng rod boll. 11. Olvld H-. u-80ddlngton, Enul1nd, No. 7J, E1gle-Ollenheut1r, 102 l1pt. 12. A. J, Fm, Houston, Georll• Snider, B•icenfleld,
C1llf., No. 84, CO\'Ol•FoYI, 101 T1p1, -boX fellurt. 13. Bobby U....,., Aibuqllef'qU*, No. I, E191e-OI· ltnhe11Mr. 100 111111 brol<en connecting rod bolt.
14. "Dick Shl'IOn, Mlt Like City, No ..... Etogi..Poyt, 100 l1p1, broken piston.
15. M•rk DonOhUe, Newton Squar•, Pe., No. "' Eogle.()ffenlllUMr, n 11ps, bul'Md piston. it. Miiie Miu, TlllllR, Ne. 6, IH .. O!l11•1Mw, t1
lips, bl'CllcH YllYe.
17. Joe Laonord Son Jooe, No. 11 P1rnelll-Of.. flnhlUHj, 91 llp&, brOktn right rear hUD WllHI ...... Ing.
11. Graham McRH, New Ze1l1nd, No. 40, E1gM~ OlltnhoVMr. 90 11p1, broken uhaust hffder. 19. Jerry Or1nt, lrvlne, No. 4t, 8191e-0111t1h....,..
77 llPI, -on Ull_,1111 Nd bolt. 20. Al Un11r, Albuquerque, No. .;. P1rnelll-Of·
fenhlustr, 75 1-. brolceo pl11on. 21. Jl111my C:lnllllen. A....,..m, No. 21. IHi.ot-
--. 71 fltlS, tlam ..... rlthl froftf IUI ......... 22. Swed• Saw ... , l1nt1 An., No. 40, 8q!Hlf. fHlla-, SI TIPS. ~ I• 1111'11 No. 4. 2:1. Jim McEl .... th, Arlington, No. 35. Eegl..of. fenhlut~$4 11111, .,....., conn«llng rod l>Olt. :U. W1I DlllenbAc:h, llat Bru,.wlck. N. J., No..
62,. 1!111 tnllalJIW. " lape, brOktn conrrectl"" roCll
more responsibility than did coaclUng
and you are more concerned about the
players' future and progress than you are
as a coach. ••. AND THE .SANTA . ANAN CLIMBS FROM THE . Ft.AMING WRECKAGE, MIRACULOUSL y ALIVE ...
Olsen apparently was injured in front
of the Tower Terrace, about half way
down the main straightaway from where
the accident occurred. bolt. •
25. A. J. FOVT Jr., H0\11~• No. 14, C.,.,_,.Ol'f, 31 laps, broken ~necttng •
"You worry about whether they retain •
what you teach them and you want the
things they do od the field to be by reac-
tion instead of by thinking."
Ozark, who's made pro baseball his life
for 31 of his 49 years says the biggest
problem he faces as a skipper is trying to
keep 25 players happy and playing
enough.
"You try to get the guys who don't play
so much into games when you can, but
not in a losing cause. You want them to
try and be instrumental in winning
games but it's tough to do. ·
"You look at young guys and you know
by the w19 they look al you that they're
dying to play," OLark adds. l,IR says that as a manager he gets
m · e upset with umpires' decisions -
he's l>eefl booted ·out ol two games
already and he's only been a manager
for 46 games.
Although currently resting in the
divisional celler, Ozark feels optimism
about the club. "Our younger players are
coming along . . . tbey couJd do like ~is
club (the Dodgers) -go along and then
someone pulls a switch and they start
bitting like crazy and winning," he adds.
"I never worry about our club doing
lousy or me being fired. If you don't
have the horses to pull the cart, you
won't move it."
Ozark, a man who seems so cahn and
relaxed that you visuallr.e him .sleeping
through an earthquake, says be took the
news of being chosen Phlllles manager
with little outward emot1on.
"I didn't scream and jump up and
down when tbey told me -maybe I
should have had more emotion," he ad-
mits. "After a1 years of baseb8ll ~ ex-
citement of the game hasn't. left me. But
Ulis didn't affect me that way and i1 still
't." * . ven baseball Hall of F a m e
bers will be at ~ Stadlmn.Sun-
Y afternoon for the :J, o'clock Oldthnera
-·
D~ersEnd
Hot Month
With 94 Win
LOS ANGELES -"Give me four more
months like May and everything will be
all right," said Los Angeles Dodgers
manager Walt Alston.
Four more months like May for the
Dodgers would be more than just all
right -it would be fabulous.
The D(>dgers had their merriest May in
many summers with a sensational .313
team ~tting average, including an 1&-hit
perfonnance Wednesday night that
buried Steve c.arlton and t b e
Philadelphia Phillies, 9-4.
"That club is just hfttlhg," said
Philadelphia manager Danny OZark.
"They're bitting aggressively. They're
swinging -and they don't care who's
pitching."
"To be honest, I never expected us to
hit like this," added Alstoo, whose
~en ·averaged 11.7 runs per game in
May ~ hjl\i a lH record.
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SU·IT AGA.INS-T LA
DROPPED BY GA.BE
J
LOS ANGELES (AP) >-The Los An-
geles Rams say a $5,000 sult against the
team by quarterback Roman Gabriel has
been dismissed by mutual agreement.
The action had the sum as damages In
a contention that Gabriel n.o longer bad
a valid contract with the team because
of the clmnge In ownership 'Of the Na-
tl'ooal Football League club.
11le Rams 93id Wednesday that the
dismissal indicated Gabriel was still a
member of the club.
Btit the veteran quarterback's attor-
ney, Ed Masry, had no reactl.on end
would DO't even corlllI'Ill the dismlssal.
Masry, usually communicative, said
only, "I'm sorry, but I can't make
comment at all."
Who Says Ba:sehall Is Non•eontaet~
BOSTON (AP) -"People in the
at.ands, they think it's a non-contact
sport," mused Boston Red Sox relief
pitcher Bob Veale following a mlnl-brawl
bet the Red Sox and California
~~ at Fenway Park Wednesday
1°t:gels third baseman Al Gallagher and
Bolton catcher Carlton Fisk started the
cm&act in the fifth inning when
Gallaaher, caught in a rundown, upended
Wt. Fisk hung ooto the · ball, however,
and made tag.
Gallagher w booed by tbe home
crowd when he came to bat in the
seventh, hit the dirt when a p"tch by Luis
Tiant sailed over his bead, grounded out
a couple of pitches later and stopped on
his way to · the dugout to have a few
words wltb Fisk.
A litU pushing led to both dugouts and
bullpens meeting on the field. .
A few pushca and shoves ensued before
order finally was resklred. ,
'lbe (]yde Wright sailed a pitch
over Danny ~ter tn the bottom ot the
seventh prompting plate umpire Larry
McCoy. to issue a warning to both
managers before play resumed.
"It was very obvious what happened,"
said Callfornia catcher Jeff Torborg, who
had a brief tete-a-tete with Rlco
Petrocelll. "Fisk got knocked down on a
play he should have been ready for. Theo
be had bis pltchers throwing t WI. I
don't understand it. If he's going to land
up fl tfooted, he's going to get knocked
down."
Tiant, with his arm In lee following his
sixth victory against five • denied
trying to hurt G llagher.
"l didn't try to hit him ," tbe veteran
hurler said. "I never throw at nobody. If
I want to hit him, I hit him."
Tiant continued, "l have to defend my
players. I have to protect them."
Fisk, dcxlRlng reporters better than he
dodged Gallagher, said only, "After be
(Gallagher) said something to me, I
turned around and topped."
Petrocelli claimed to be an tnnoetm&
bystander.
('
' .
Flea, Fly Pe ts to UC I vine n·val
RED CHINA'S CHU TE·JUI BALANCES ON RINGS.
Red Chinese
Invade LA
FV Girls Seek Title
By HOWARD HANDY
... Dlltf ... S ....
1'le Flea and the Fly patrol
two-thirds ol. the outfield f(¥'
UC Irvine's No. 1 rated
Anteaters baseball team and
coach Gary Adams wouldn't
have it any other way.
"They are little guys that
nm a lot and they are the only
guys on the team I can look
down on ," the r>-7 Adams says.
The Flea i.s centerfielder
Rich Molina and the Fly is
right-fielder Clark Schenz.
The coach may be kidding
One Arm
W n'tStop
Boy
MARYSVILLE, Calif. (AP)
-Rick Madruga has size,
speed and coordination, which
all help make him a good
athlete in several sports.
And there's. no question
about the determination of the
14-year-old Marysville High
School fremunan. He was born
. with only one arm.
"There's something amazing
about this kid," says his
baseball coach, John Lensieri.
"He will put out 100 percent
and still keep going."
Madruga plays baseball in
the North Yuba Little League
Senior Division, and Lensieri
calls him "The best hitter on
the club," The one-anned
athlete also pitches.
"I started him in a game at
pitcher and he pit@ed two in·
nings before he told me that
he had pulled a leg muscle
that day in a track meet," the
coach says.
"We agreed that h e
about their siu but be is very
serious about their value to
the team.
"Bob Hiegert (CSU
Northridge coach) says they
are the ones that beat his
team in the playoffs," the
coach contimes.
"Both get an escellent jump
on opposing pitchers and when
they get a single on a bunt or
a scratch hit, it is like a dou·
ble to us because they worry
opposing pitchers crazy with
the threat to steal."
Schenz is the team leader In
stol bases with 21 while
Molina bas swi~ n i n e • Molina. however, 11 the leadoff
hitter and is the front man
many times in hit.and-nm
situations with the power in
tbe UCI attack at bat.
Defensively they Jre as im-
portant to the success of the
UCI team accordblg to their
coach.
"Anything that Is hit out
there is an out If it stays in
the ball park and our pitchers
love these guys. 'Ibey don't
worry when a ball is hit to
either one of them."
Adema recalls ho,w Schenz
came out for the team as a
sophomore after tr-erring
from UCLA.
"I remember him as a little
guy with glasses who could
run. Our outfield was set with
Mike Sask.a, Rocky Craig and
Bob Farrar. Clark came into
my office one day to tell me
he had a chance ol. getting a
job lnd was going to qulL
"I asked him If he needed
the money or If it was the fact
be didn't think be would make
the team. .
"He said be didn't rull
need the ~ and I .
that I WU going to keep him
as a pinch-runner because
was about the fastest play ,
we had.
"He couldn't hi~ at that
but he '6arned bow to cut
down on his swing and to slap
the ball. He also learned to
bunt and he has a good
average (.340) for us now." · "·•
How about the Flea?
"He Is the best fly chaser,
(Colltimled on Page %'7) .:~,
t. ·.
Luck Will , . .'.: ,, .
Decide It ::
Says Bush:.:
Seven national champions
wiO be In the lineup tonight
When the Peoples RepUblic of
China national gy1TU1aslics
squad faces a team of outslan·
ding American performers in-
cluding Olympian Cathy Rigby
Mason al 8 o'clock in the
Sports Arena.
At Prep Swim Meet
LONG BEACH -Fount!lin
Valley's girls swimming team
will be among the top con-
tenders at the CIF cham-
pionships Friday night al Long
Beach Millikan High School.
and the diving, they'll be
fa vored. The only factor that
isn't being considered is possi-
ble disqualifications."
shouldn't be pitching with a
leg injury, so he went to the
outfield and still managed to
play a good game."
The youngster, almost 6 feet __ T_H_E_F_L_E_A_(R_l_G_H_T_l,_U_C_l_'S_Rl_C_H_M_O_L_IN_A_A_N_D_C_O_A_C_H_G_A_R_Y_A_D_AMS __ _
This is the fourth slop for
the Chinese delegation in ia
tour of the United States. The
final showing will be Monday
night in Seattle.
The Chinese men's team
defeated the U.S. Monday
night in New York, 164.4 to
164.2.
Two Cal State (Fullerton)
gymnasts are members of the
U.S. men 's team. Michael
Kelley and Gene Bailey join
two-time college all-around
champion Steve Hug of Stan-
ford on the men's squad.
Tickets for the meet will be
available at the door tonight.
All seals are reserved and sell
for $4, $5 and $6.
DEAN LEWIS
Led by Olympic star Shirley
Babashoff, Fountain Valley
qualified six swimmers for tht!
finals. Six other schools have
equalled that outpul,and only
Long Beach Millikan, the pre-
meet favorite has qualified
more (8).
Millikan is expected to get
its biggest boost to the cham·
pimship in diving, which is
scheduled to be held at Costa
Mesa's Mesa Verde Country
Club at 3:30 p.m. Friday.
Millikan has the top qualifier
among the divers, while Foun-
tain Valley has no one
qualified.
"They have the best chance,
but we have a good shot at sec·
ond place," says Fountain
valley .coach Sue Donohue.
"Because of the number of
people Millikan has qualified
The big pluses for Fountain
Valley are Miss Babashoff and
Stacy Pletz, who could bring
victories in three events. Miss
Babshoff set a CIF record of
54.1 for the 100-yard freestyle,
and won in a handy 1:55.9 for
the 200 free inthe
preliminaries last week.
Miss Pletz, meanwhile, was
a preliminary winner in tfte
100 breaststroke with a 1:10.4.
A key event for the Foun-
tain Valley group will be the
400 freestyle relay, where they
will be competing directly
with Millikan.
In the preliminaries Foun-
tain Valley finished strong to
record a 4:00.0 mark, its best
of the season. If the foursome
of Lis Kelsh, Kelly Hammill,
Miss Pletz and Miss Babashoff
can better that time slightly
for an upset it would be a big
boost to the team title hopes .
tall, was named the most
valuable freshman football
player at his school last fall.
He played linebacker on
defense, halfback on offense,
and Coach Dave Meinke calls
him "as tough as nails."
Madruga also p 1 a y e d
freshman basketball.
"We had a good freshman
team and Rick really helped
us out at forward," said coach
Don Shroeder.
Joyce Madruga, Rick ' s
mother, says, "He's done it all
by himself. When bis father
and I were divorced I was
unable to teach him anything
about athletics so he became
his own teacher."
She adds that he is bothered
some because his success in
sports despite the handicap
makes him the object of lots
of attention.
"But I talked to him and ex·
plained that whatever people
write or say about him might
inspire another handicapped
person," she says.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
East East
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Huge Savings
OVER 30
'72 & '73
VOLVOS
PRICED AT
PR~· DOLLAR
DEVALUATIO N
PRICES!
Detroit 25 20 .556 Chicago 28 19 • 596
New York 24 22 .522 l1h Pittsburgh 20 20 .500 41h
Baltimore 20 20 .500 21h New York 21 22 .488 5
Boston 20 22 .476 3% Montreal 19 22 .463 6
Cleveland 20 26 .435 S'k St. Louis 19 24 .442 7
Milwaukee 19 25 .432 51h Philadelphia 19 27 .413 81h
West West
Chicago 26 15 .634 San Francisco 32 20 .615
Minnesota 24 19 .558 3 Dodgers 30 19 .612 lf.i
Angels 23 20 .535 4 Houston 29 21 .580 2 )\ansas City 26 23 .531 4 Cincinnati 26 21 .553 31h
Oakland 23 24 .489 6 Atlanta 17 29 .370 12
Texas 14 28 .333 121h San Diego 17 33 .340 14
Wt<lnesdaya Gam41 Wod-r'a Ga'"" New York 4. Oel<l•nd 3
Boston 2, Allfffa 1 Houston 4, Chlceoo 1
T••H J. Cliwol1rtd 2 san FrancllCO 3. New York 2
Bortlmoro 5, K1n10S City 4 Pittsburgh 4, Atlanta 2
Minnesota 4, Mlweut<H 0 SI. LOUii s. Clnclnnall 2
Montreat 5, san 01-3, 1st
Todl!Y'I Gam .. Sen 01 .. 0 3, Mor11rHI 2, '.lnd
D•frolt 8, Chlcaoo 3 Do111on 9, Phlladelphla 14
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MnnftOta (Woodson 3-3) at Mllwoul<ff (Colborn 5-11 Tedar'a GamH
Oak lend ( Holttman 9·2) at Now York (SlolllomYr• Houston (Rol>erl's s.21 11 ChlClllO (J9"klns s.ll 7·•> Atlante (Nletcro 3·2J et Plttsbunih (Brlln NJ Clevelend (Strom l·Sl •I Texas (SIH>err 1-3) Clnclnnotl (Grlmslev ""'l at St. Louis (Giiison 3-$) Bolllmore !Cuell"' 2·5) at Konsas City (Go rber •·ll Only oem .. scheduled. Oeltoll IPerrv HI at Chlcooo <Fisher •.JI
Frld1Y'1 Gamn f'ricla1'1 Gemes
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Orikl1'nd at Bos"f'Jn Chicinnall at Pitfsbur9h
Bi:.ltlmore al Texas Houston •' ~t. Louis
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Clevtli11nd At Kan!tas CifY Montreel at Oodter1
Detroit fll Minnesota Phlladelphi• 11 San Francisco
DE~~Jn~r'IS •
1966 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 646-9303
Service and Parts for All Imported Ca rs
Modern Body Shop for All Ca rs
Or.;:ige Co:in t-. 5 !ar;;C'<t and ~h I ~!()rl1·~n Tr••.1 ·t.1 a"1I \ r,;1 o h .•. C'r
WE MAKE OVERSEAS DELIVERIES
Matte May
Not Report
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Veteran
running back Tom Matte says
he doesn't think he'll report to
the 'San Diego Chargers, who
traded a draft choice to the
Baltimore Colts for him four
months ago.
"I've had 12 good years, and
I think It's time to hang 'em
up," Matte, 33, said Wednesday
in a telephone interview from
his Baltimore home. He said
he's "almost positive" he"ll
retire.
C'i)OWllNt; CHUCK'S DtUIARDS .
27• N-IMI. 1'47 N9. T .. ffR
c-:;:.=:-=
Area Calendar
SPALDING DOT or
DUNLOP MAXFLI
GOLF ••.
BALLS DOZ.
SPALDING SINGLE
IRONS AND WOODS
Your choice while stock lasts!
IRONS 233
WOODS 333
GOLF SHOES by DIXTEI
WOMEN'S MIN'S
11?0~7.95 14!!21.95
GOLF SET CLOSE-OUT
REG. CLOSEOUT
d IS I 39.95 .... 29.95
SPALDING TU FLITE COMB0·2 Woo • ran• ...... ·.::::::: :nus .... 94.9S
SPALDING lXICUtlVE, 4 Woods · · · · · • · · · · · • · ..•. ~ 167.95 ..• 119.95 SPALDING EXECUTIVE, llrons · · · · · · · • · • · · ' ... '::. : : : : : 121.95 .... 94.9S
SPALDING lllTE, 4 Woods · · · · · · · · · • · · • · · · '... . ..... 167.95 ... 119.95 SPALDING ELITE llrons · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • . . . . . 44 95 ... 31. 95 SPALDING INVlbTIONAL, 3 Woods · · · · · · · · · • · · • · ..•• :::: 74'.95 '. ... 49.95 ING INVITATIONAL llrons · · · · · · · · · · • .• ''. . . . 139 95 19 95 ?fo\~WESTERN ULTIMATE, 4 Woods/ I Irons · · · · • • • • ·''' ... 45:11:::: 32'.95
M"C GlEGOR WE1510PF SCOT·2 Woods/ S Irons • • • • • ·' •••... 99 95 •. 74.95 " NICILAUS GOLDEN BEAR, llrons • · • • " • " ' • • . . ' . . 74 95 MAC GREGOI ICILAUS GOLDEN IEAI 3 Woods • , • • • • • ••••• 99.95 .••• 34· 95 Mt~ ~:i=: ~OURMASTEI 2 Wood1/S Irons······••·•·':'.'. 1~:" '.:: '. 29'.95 ~AM KATHY COINELIUS, 4 Wotcla · • • • · · · • • • ·'' ''' ''. '. '. ••• 39.97 .... 29.95
M TOMMY IOL1 4 Woods • • • · • • • • • • ·'' • •.' '' ''.., ••• .104.70 .•.. 69.95 ~:UC5l::~~.tt~lc;;,: 1·wi0ci1ii'1;o.;;:::::::: · · · · · · · •1·•1 · · · ·"·n
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dison?s
Lloy Has
An .Edge
By STEVE BRAND
Of lllt DatlY l'llot Slaff "rt'• not t.ir," said one
sports writer.
"Are you sure that guy's not
a senior?" inquired another.
The object of the questions
and compliments was Edison
High's Tom Lloy, who easily
won the CIF track and field
frosb-soph 660 last weekend.
And, it really didn't seem fair.
The 6-31k and 170.pound
Chargers ~pbomQre ~PW1ed
out to the lead right from the
start, built a substantial
margin and when given a mild
challenge on the backstretch,
simply powered his way to the
tape to win by 10 yards in
1:21.1.
According to coach Gordon
Fitzel, it's only the start.
"Tom is just beginning to
find his place," says Fitzel.
"If It looks like he's toying
with the other runners it's
probably because he's so
much stronger.
"Most kids who a r e
freshmen and sophomores are
still growing. So is Tom. But
right now he's way ahead of
the ·others. When the go.ing
gets rough, he stands out
because he's more physical.
''When he strides out, he
looks smoother than the com-
petition because they're Miking
smaller strides and working
harder."
EDISON'S CIF CHAMP, TOM LLOY. Lloy ran a 50.0 quarter-mile
this: :year, so no one questions his-.speed. He's strong, ag-----------------------1
gresslve and smart. He simply
was: too t®gh for the others in
the CIF Masters meet.
All the attributes of a foot-
ball player?
·~He's broken his collar bone
about eight times," says
Fitzel, "and the last time he
said it was enough. He's not
going out for football in the
fall."
Football coach Bill Porter's
lo.ss. is basketball coach Dave
Mohs' gain.
'.'Tom played" on the junior
varsity basketball team this
year as a sophomore," says
Fi~I, "and I wouldn't be
surprised to see him starting
by the time the season comes
around.
"He'll still grow some and
he~s very aggressive. In fact,
thE;. track season ended for
him one day and he was in the
gym the next gettil)g ready for
summer basketbail."
Fitzel isn't shy about predic·
ting outstanding marks for
Lloy next spring.
"I believe he'll be down at
48.5 in the 440 and 1: 54 or bet·
ter in the ~880," says Fitzel.
"He's really untapped. I just
wish someone would have
given him some competition in
the CIF meet. I was sure he
could dip under 1:21 and with
someone to help him, he would
have done it."
The Edison coach tried ~
get Lloy in the exhibition 660
in the state meet this weekend
at Woodland but the rules
state only individuals from
that area can ccimpete.
"We were disappointed,"
says Fitzel, "but he'll get bis
chance next year. I'd say this
was a good year anyway."
Those who saw him in the
CIF Masters meet could only
agree.
Against USC
Bulling Guides
Diablns Attack
By CRAIG SHEFF
01 tht DtllY Pilot Staff
LOS ANGELES -Former
Golden West College baseball
standout Bud Bulling is one of
the key reasons why Cal State
(L-Os Angeles) is in the NCAA
playoffs this season.
Bulling handles the catching
chores for the Diablos who
will meet USC in a best-Of-
three-game series Friday and
Saturday at USC'~ Bovard
Ft!!kl. / . -Tlie Winner of the district
playoff will advance to the
Collet& World Series a t
Omaha; Nebraska.
Bullliig, a product o f
Lynwood . High, had two pro-
ductive' years for Golden West
under coach Fred Hoover, but
he's imProved even more 'in
the last year, says Cal State
(LA) coach Larry Cochell.
"He J?}ayed well for Fred,
but he's developed even more
in the past year. And I'm not
taking credit for it either. It's
just a matter of Bud being ex-
posed to more baseball and
playing every day (during the
summer).
"And he's going to play in
Anchorage, Alaska this sum-
mer and we think he'll come
back an even better player_"
Bulling batted .287 this past
season, but got off to a slow
start. Cochell says he hit
about .350 during the last half
of the campaign and batted
.301 in Pacific Coast Athletic
Association play, earning first
team honors.
Cal State won the league
with a 13-5 record and ended
the regular season with a 32-18
mark.
Cochell, who played under
Bobby W'mkleS' at Arizona
State, says Bulling has all the
ingredients to be a top pro-
fessional player.
"He's given us what we
needed behind the plate. He's
only had one man steal off of
him in the 50 games and that
was only because o u r
shortstop waS' late covering
and Bud didn't want to unload
the ball too soon."
Cochell adds that the word
on Bulling's arm got around
and opposing teams didn't
even try to steal during the
last hall of the season.
And the second-year Diablos
coach says that Bulllng's fine
defensive ability d o e s n ' t
overshadow his hitting.
"The scouts say he's one of
the best college prospects In
the country. He hits well, has
a great arm and he's a fine
receiver.
Anteaters' Brizendine
To Pursue Dentistry
"And he's a tremendous
person. If I had nine men that
had his desire and drive and
were willing to work as hard
as Bud does, it would make
coaching a lot easier. He's the
ideal player to coach," says
Cochell.
FLEA. ' By HOWARD HANDY
Of Ille DatlY Ptlol 5"11
One member of the UC
Irvine goU team who decided
to further his education at the
Anteaters institution before he
thought of playing on coach
Jerry Hulbert's squad, will be
completing his first and only
season with participation in
the NCAA nationals at Quail
Valley Country Club in June.
Johli Brizendine, a junior
classman, will leave UCI to
attend the UCLA dental school
In the fall, giving up the sport
for the present as he con-
centrates on his future pro-
fession.
"l'v' always been interested
In denial school and when I
was accepted by UCLA, it
changed things around com-
pletely," the scholarly young
man who ·turns 21 this sum-
mer says.
"I had already decided to
attend UCI ~y.se ol its
academic standing before I
even thought about the golf
team," he llafll with straight.-
forwardness.
As a result of hll studies
and !Us apparent sbowing 1n
the classroom as well u bis
play wltb th team, Brlziendlne
isn't too worried about becom-
ing another Cart Mlddlecoff.
JOHN BRIZENDINE
• •
Continued from Page 26
we have had at UCI."
D®s this include Rocky
Craig, his predecessor in
centerfleld now playing in the
Kansas City organization?
"Yes, he gets a better jump
on the ball than Rocky but he
doesn't have as strong an
arm."
Adams makes a further
c o m p a r i s o n with the
Northrldge centerfielder, Mar-
ty Friedman.
"Marty played for me In the
Basin League and he's a good
outfielder but Rich can chase
fly balls even better. A couple
of s e e m I n g I y spectacular
catches Marty made in the
"I figure I will get back in tournament would have been
golf when I complete my routine outs fOl' Rich."
education but it really isn't At the plate Adams explains
that important to me now. the · important role ),1ollna
time. plays for UCI. "I'm sute If I had the "He baa a good eye and be
to practice now, I could lower geti quite .. tfew waits. His
my handicap." average Isn't .as high ( .2'18) u
For the record, be plays to a Clark's but he's alwavs taking
two handicap out ol VJrglnla pttcbea as our leadoff batter
Country 'Club In Long Beach :!esaf:ck 1oo:~ ~
but doesn't feel ~ gets in u tell our. other hitters what the
mu& ptactlce time as his · pitcher is throwing."
teammates at UCI. The Fly and the Flea ha~
AJ a junior golfer, be much in common with their
quallfled for the national coach, himself a f 0 r m e r
junior meet at the age of 15. player at UCLA.
DAJL Y PILOT If ·
Coast Stars in State Meet .; ., Newport,
Vik.es Tied
For Lfttd
WOODLAND -'lbe Ora1lle
C.oast area wUI be lootinC fGr
Jts first champion in two years
starting Friday afternoon bl
the state high school tract and
field meeL
FrldaJ night, and i..auna
Beach's Eric Hulst, wbo .et
the national freshman record
in the two mlle.
Doupe last week to capture
the third consecutive CIF shot
put title for Newport Harbor.
•' meet. He ~ Hulst ·:
fourth. '.:
He and Doupe, out at 17 feet
plus, are ~ feet ahead of
the nut section champ, 90
once again it loob Uke a bat-
tle between the two. Doupe
leads In the series, ~L
M1 on Vlejo's Ken Hower, :·
who recorded the f o u r t h •:
fastest 88o of the state
Newport Harbor H I g h ' 1
Sailors and Marina High con-
tinued to dominate the SUnset
LeagueiaD sports award stand·
Ings, tJis time In a deadlock
for the top spot with 175
points.
Hulst, whose nm target ts
the 15-year-old mark set by
Illinois prep Craig Virgin of
1:57.8, qualified Ofth bet
coach Len Mlller says tile)'
are shooting higher this week.
quallflen, will be out to tm-.
prove on hls secGllCI place : Heading the list of seven
area entrants are Newport
Barbor Bllb's Jim Neidbart,
who captured the C I F
Southern Section shot put last
finish In the Masten meet. ·:
Newport was d e f e n d i n g
champion and Marina won the
award in 1971 following three
successive triumphs for the
Tars, giving the two schools
the championship for the past
six years.
Girls Win
Gold Medal
The ~e County
Volleyball Club, fea~ girls
from the Orange Coast area,
came away with a gold medal
in the Canadian S p o r t s
"Erie believes be can finish
second," sayi Miller, "and I
agree. We're shooting for a
4:28 first mile and we'd like to
get under 9:03 at the finish ."
Hulst, by running 9:GU,
joined teammate Judd Binley
who has quallfled In the
discus. 'Ibe two became the
first Artists entries In the
state ~t in JJ years, the last
being Mike Trainer in 1954.
Neidhart finally swept past
Inglewood High's Dave
Newport Harbor's second
entry, pole vaulter T o m
DiStanlslao, will have to hope
for an up1et even though bis
best of 15 feet ranks second.
Crespi's T1m Quran Is tops at
16-1.
The two mile figures to be
hotly contested on this track
near Sacramento and Marina
High Junior, Gary Blume,
joins Hulst Jn malting it that
way.
Blume ran his best, 9:03.S,
in last week's CIF Masters
The final area entrant Is
Fountain Valley low burdler,
Richard Lenga, who clocked a
19.2 for third place in the
qualifying meet.
The competition Is a two.day
affair with trials and the flnaJS
In the two mile set Friday
afternoen and the balance ol
the finals Saturday.
CIF Baseball
AAAA~
Loo Alamia 2. Mllllka11 1
AAA.-ft-El Sevundo I. ClaNmont I
EllOtWOOd S, 5-nh Marta 1
Newport edged the Vikings
with seven t e a m cham-
pionships to six for Marina in
the competition t h a t en-
compassed 29 different ac-
tivities including v a r s i t y ,
junior varsity and sophomore
teams.
Festival In Vancouver, Brltlsh1------------------------------
Ql~~~r;1tl~.l o s s oms Real sippin'whiskey
The Sailors garnered 95
points in the fall to 93 for
Marina but Westminster was
the leader at conclusion of
football, water polo, cross
country, basketball an d
. wrestling with 104 points.
Newport t e a m cham-
pionships were in varsity
water polo and tennis; junior
varsity water polo and tennis
(tie); a.id sophomore water
polo, basketball and swim-
ming.
defeated the Cbimo Volleyball
Club of Canada for the gold
medal after winning their
di vision.
The scores were 15-13, 14-16,
11H4 wi1h the final game last·
ing nearly l '.2 hours •
Members of the Orange
Blossoms i n c I u d e Ann
Golde11son , a 17-year old
Marina High Student, Paula
Dittmer, a 14-year old from
Marina ; Debbie Green, a 14-
year old Westminster High
freshman; Ellen Clark, a 16-
year old Huntington Beach
High student; captain Rox-
anne Elias, 17, of Cypress;
Marina won team titles in
varsity cross country and
golf; junior varsity basketball
and tennis (tie); and
sophomore cross country and
basketball. and Marie Dvorak of Studio I l;;<NT;;;:;;vc;~~~~~i-;:ill':'r.;'r.7'""'.""'Gr"lifl/1'\r-tt1>r-;;~:or.:-n;or.;;,.;~~t:\1 City. rtmi:..-':m-'
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Sunset League Claamps
Newport Harbor's perennial Sunset League tennis
champions meet Beverly Hills today in the CIF
AAAA finals. Kneeling from left -Bill Badham,
Brad Bauman, Pete Perkins, Scott Bernard, Rick
Whitwer, Rick Loos, coach Pat Wilson. Standing -
coach Charlie Bleiker, Mark Hoppe, Tom Fitzsim-
mons, Tim O'Rielly, Jim Jacobsen, Cody Small,
Steve Marosi, Steve Myers, Jim Speir.
ea
Edllon High senior Bill Ferd Frosh&pb-Captain: er-
wa.s named the a c h o o I ' a rill · Riley; Most Valuab :
athlete of the year at the Gary Gibson.
spring awards banquet G 1cJ
Wednesday In the high school V~ity -Most Valuable:
cafeteria. 1 Brad Preston· Captain: Mike
Six Orll!'Be Coast area Willa; ;Hall OE Fame: Bratd
schools held banquets for t.htir Preston; Most Inspirational:
spring teams Wednesday with Craig Maaumiya ; Most
the following results. Improved: Curtis Lustig.
COSTA M~A ~
Baaeball Varsity -captain: Carlos
Varsity -captain: Mark Posso; Most Valuable: Bpa.
Schrupp; Most Valuable: Den-DeSola; Hall of Fame: Carlos
nis Delany; Most Improved: Posso; Most Improved: Rick
Steve Farrell; Most Inspira-Newman; Coach's Award:
tlonal : Joe Pallo. John Eifler.
Junior Varsity -Captain: Junior Varsity -Captain:
Brian Phelps; Most Valuable: Kurt Lynott; Most Valuable:
Brian Coste 11 oe; Most Tom Mohr.
Improved : Stan McCOy; Most Frosh-Sopb -Captain: Pat
Inspirational : Dave and Steve studdart; Most Valuable: Paul
Bernhardt. Wissman.
Frosh-Soph: Captains: Dave Track ·
Cooper and Mark Richardson; Varsity -Captain: Joe
Most Valuable: Tim Rosauer; Troxell; Most Valuable: Tom
Most Improved : Rudy Lloy; Hall of Fame: Tom
Arechlgo; Most Inspirational: Lloy; Most Improved': Mark
Guy Krikorian. Wetherbee; High Point Man:
EDISON Dennis Wilson.
Baseball Junior Varsity -Captain:
Varsity -Captain: Gerry Jeff Jones; Most Valuable:
Lopez; Most Valuable: Dave Carl Fru~h.
-------------------------White ; Hall of Fame: Dave Frosh-SOph -Captain: Jim
White ; Outstanding Hitter: Hamman; Most Valuable: Ed
Finals Set
In .Guild
Tourney
Finals in the Adoption Guild
tennis tournament will be
staged Swlday at the Newport
Beach Tennis Club beginning
at 9 a.m. with George MacCall
serving as master o r
ceremonies for the featured
matches. Semifinal matclles
are scheduled Saturday at the
same site with the first
matches also at 9 a.m.
Open Mlxod Doul>IH St-rt ond Stewart vs. Wald and ooi.1 Winners face McCobO and Lamberti Winners meet Wright and Dunlll' In semis.
Goll Winner
Waterman Laguna ·champ
Maggie Waterman is the
Laguna Beach women's golf
club champion after com-
pleting the recent 54-hole com-
petition with a gross score of
257.
Mrs. Waterman is also
president of the group and has
been in the winner's circle
before.
In flight A, Diane Stys was
the gross victor with a 262
with Helen Drexelius the net
wi11ner at 196.
McDaniel and Vi Sexton tied
at 11 for the runnerup spot.
Lu Willey and M a r g e
Thatcher tied for C laurels
with 13.
Eilleen Yraceburn copped
the D crown with 16 with
Millie Stevens second al 14
and Estelle Robinson third
with 13.
Seacliff
It was a tin whislle tourna-
ment at Huntington Seacliff
Country Culb this week for
members of the women 's golf
group.
Yellowtail
Still Hot
Off Coast
Mike Selwood;. Outstanding Connell.
Pitcher: Dave White. District Frosh -Captain:
Junior Varsity --Captain : Jim Bogart; Most Valuable:
Mike Miller; Most Valuable Colin McConell.
Scott Cowan. Volleyball
Frosh-Soph -Captain: Paul Varsity -Captain: Fred
Tomasic; Most Valuable Rick Hernandez; Most Vauable: Bashore. Dirk Zirbel; Most Improved:
Varsity -Captain: Tom Dirk Zirbel; Hall of Fame:
Summers; Most Valuable: Dirk Zirbel.
Bob Haskins ; Hall of Fame: Junior Varsity -Captain:
Tom Summer 5 ; Most ·Lee Bonacum; Most Valuable :
I d Todd Z"rbel B t Stewart Baldino·, Most They're chasing yellowtail mprove 1 . es at Dana Wharf and Art's Land-All-Around: Bob Haskins. Improved: Mike Hutchins.
J · v 't M t Hall of Fame Awards ing with considerable sue-unror ars1 y: o s cess. Valuable: Dave Brokaw ; Cap-Football -Mike Morado;
ta. p t w·11 Corss Country : D e n n i s The all-day boat out of Dana m a 1 s. Wilson; Water Polo: Pat
Wharf has run into yellows on Swim.ming Moorhouse; Basketball: Dirk
successive days this week just Varsity -Captain: Geerge Zirbel; Wrestling; Stewart·
five miles off the coast at San Budris; Most Valuable: Matt Biddle ; Soccer: John Stirling;
Onofre. On Tuesday, 1 7 Van Gorden; Most Improved :' Most Inspirational Athlete:
passengers brought 76 fish to Pete Muhlhauser; Hall of Mark Wetherbee. ·
gaff. Fame: Siegfried Muhlhauser; Athlete of Year -Bill Ford.
Wednesday, to noon, 29 Most Dedicated: Du an e
passengers had brought 67 fish Peterson. SAN CLEMENTE
on board with additional fish Junior Varsity -Captain: Varsity -Captain: Corky
hitt' the d d Doug M a r cum ; Most Fisher; Most V fl u a bl e :
Dedicated: Tom Zanotti.
~ 1Junlor Varsity ..r-Captain :
Mike Sbintle; Most Valuable:
Jon Olk; ost Improved: Pat
Nebon.
Frosh-Soph -ost
Valuable: Mark Stavro; Most
Inspirational: Hugh Austin.
MISSION VIEJO
Baskelball
Varsity -Most Valuable:
Dave Schmidt; Most
Improved: Carl Sandstedt;
Jading Hitter: Marte Moffitt;
Best Defensive Player: Rick
White.
Junior Varsity Most
Valuable: Steve Fox; Most
Improved: Gary Connally;
Leading Hitter: Steve Fox.
Frosh • Soph M o s t
Valuable: Steve Pollien; Most
Improved: 'Mark Sorenson;
Most Inspirational: M i1k e
McCarthy.
Tenals
Outstanding Senior -Craig
Miller; Outstanding Junior:
.Bill W a I k e r : Outstanding
Sophomore: Mark Frederick;
Outstanding Frosh: T i m
Fuller; Most Improved: Gret
Whitaker.
Swimming
Varsity -Most Valuable:
Taylor Howe; Most Improved:
Emmett Rixford; M o s t
Inspirational: Jay Auburn;
Special Diving Awards: Bill
Hobbs, Bob Stater.
F r o s h -S o p h -Most
Valuable: Brian McDougle;
Most Improved: St e w a rt
Kenson.
NEWPOJtT, BARBOR
Track
Varsity ~ Captain: King
Humann; Most Valuable: Tom
Di Stanislao; Most Improved
-Gavin Hedrick. •
Juruor Varsity -Captain :
Brian M c C u n e : Most
Valuable: Clint Hoose; Most
Improved: Shane Berll.
Frosh-Soph B r y a n t
NEWPORT LEASES
2400 West Coast Hlthwoy
Leasing all Vehicles
645-2202
Humann ; Most Va I ua ble :
Tucker Sharp ; Most
Improved : Joe DiStanisla6.)
G7JDD81dcs
Varsity -Captain: Jdm
Cameron; Most Valuable: Jer-
ry Perman; Most Improved:
John Cameron.
WFSI'MINSTER
Track
Varsity -Captain: ~m
Keathley ; Most Valuable: Jun
Poss; M o s t Inspiratiobal :
Walt Sinner. .
Juruor Varsity Captain :
Dana Wells; Most Valua111e:
Kelly Corrigan;
Frosh-Soph -Captain: Itan
Prince ; Most Valuable: Blake
Schultz.
Swim
Varsity -Most Valuable:
Dave Juedes; Most Inspira-
tional: David Saul ; Most
Improved diver: Mitch Gelds-
tein. 1;
Junior Varsity -~Ost
Valuable: Mike Smith; )lost
Inspirational : Randy Saul;
Most Improved: Bill Bur~ ..
Frosh-Soph: Most Valuall!e:
Dann Veugebauer ; ~!'o's t
Inspirational : Mike Ml!ltr ;
Most Improved: Tim Loft111.
Baseball ,
Varsity-Captain: J a'c k
Hudson; Most Valuable: !'Sill
Whiteley ; Most Inspirational:
Mark Houle. ·~
Frosh-Soph -Capt a;i n :
Richard S m i t h ; Mbst
Valuable : Ralph Ramirez;
Most Inspirational: 't.im
DeMase.
Volleyball
Captain -Tony Eng~I:
Most Valuable: Tony Engedal ;
Most Improved: Dale Par!Q!r.
N•rttr 1nd Lltr1ch va. winners of DNll • Yardley, K•lt•neberg . AbbOlt
match. 0"9M ... 'S-H Lelchlfrlod ond Due•llf' vs. Hudtko llfld Edyocomb 112 saturday)
Flight B low gross honors
went to Frances Blake with
270 follow1:d by Alice Brabyn
with 281. Virginia Beals was
the net victor with a 198.
Ann Sullivan won the C
flight gross title with a 283
while Eileen Casparis was the
net victor with a 194.
Ginny Lambert won the
championship flight with 41. In
the first flight it was Juliene
Adams first at 36, Hazel
Mollica second at 35 and
Shirley Cummaro third at 28.
mg as ay progresse · Valuable: Dave Pickford. Richard Douglass : Mo s-t
"Our all-day boat has had 1.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiimiiiiiimii~~iijiijiijiij~iijiijiijiijiiijijiijijiijiijiiiiiii such success, our hall-day
boats are going out after
them," a landing spokesman Yanlley and SCrlbner vs. Beauchamp
encl laeuc:lu11np1 Wlnnlf's vs. Ehlers and •-1 WI,,.... vs. Lambert Ind
()git <• 5atvrclay). ...,_,. °"" '**" Susman and Dian vs. Hayward Ind Bradsl\IW. . WlnbUm and McCO"f vs. wfnnor of
Stew1rt·ketren1>1rg vs. Culhlng·Str•w ma tell. ( 12 Saturday) Mixed A Cr~ and Crigger vs. Mlckolwall 1nd Blrecl'.l<y (3 Sat.) Bryant ond Peterson vs. Upton end
ThUt1ow (1:311 Sat.I Wo..,...,sA Amllng ind Mlckelw1lt vs. Sltel1 end
Ketlogg (10:30 Sat.)
Evans and Winans "'· Str•Hon and s1a111r (1:)1) Sat.I Mon'• A MOnlgomerv end Butler vs. Bryont ond Boroclkln (10:30 Sat.)
lucl<ev and Winston vs. Wllllom1 .•nd
Thurlow (9 Sol.) MIHd I W•IM ond Wolas vs. Macro ond MoctH C9 sat.> Wllll1m1 and Beck vs. lltnoll ond Adtrldge (3 Sal.) W-•• l'ulHkl ond Meyers vs. Whitiker ond Kendall 02 Sal. I B-1 Ind Wllllams v>. Arrendondo and Gndasllaw (10 :30 Sar.) M.,.,, a Ogden ond Soth vs. O.csy and Beckman (12 Sal.)
H1rrl1 and Banqoft vs. Goodman 1nd ContabOnt (1:30 Sit.) MIHd C Mascari and Mascari vs. winner of
Wesal'I& and Homtr v~. Schneer end
Schneer match (12 Sat.)
F0tsdlck and Hughet vs. Popp and Beldon (3 Sal.)
Women's C
Rlem and Carson vs. P1negot1c0$ ond Doerr (10:30 Sat.) Mtn's C Belden and Burr vs. Grover and Monlano Cl0:30 511.) FosfOf' and Adams vs. Alguire ond Jonnston (9 Sot.) Mlxod D
Conover and Conover vs. Blalock and Boklr (12 Sal.)
J1ckson Incl Jackson vs. wlnn1tr
Krucker end Krucker vs. Gunther and Gunlhtr milch (I :30 Sat.)
Women's D King and Talford vs. Engen ond Laws 11 :30 Sat.) Larson ond Smit vs. Moore Ind How<i C3 Sot.)
Men's D
Buster end BlH'ket vs. Keane •nd Jolln1lon (12 Sat.)
Schnelder and Van Pelt vs. Knapper Ind Wollh (J Sit.)
Banquet
Schedule
Five Orange Coast area
schools will be h Q n o r i n g
athletic teams tonight on the
banquet circuit. A school by
school rundown :
Costa Mesa
The Costa Mesa tennis team
will hold its annual banquet
tonight at 6: 30 at the Villa
Sweden Restaurant in Hun-
tington Beach.
Dana HIUs
El Nigael
Midge Moyer defeated seven
other monthly wiMers to gain
pro of the year honors for the
El Niguel Country C l u b
women's golf group this week.
Mrs. Moyer posted a 76 for
first place.
In a better ball of partners
tournament, three teams tied
for first place with scores of
67.
Jackie Watson and Marion
Ausness were on one team at
67 with Pat Francis and Bobby
DePlanque on a second squad
and Jane Robertson with
Eileen Schuhmann on the
other.
Tied at 68 were Evelyn Nido
and Rae Cochran with Marion
Menne and Carolyn Swartley.
Lucy Parsons and Carol
Keep tied with Ruth Keil and
Virginia Peden at 69. Dorothy
Eckhoff and Beverly Hen-
derson were next at 73.
Mary Lynn and Midge
Moyer tied with Dorothy
Heacock and Helen Berkson at
74.
Mesa Verde
In the second flight Vi
O'Gara was the winner with 31
followed by Lenor Wahren-
brock with 29 and June Doyle
with 27.
Petie Croft won the third
flight with 32 with Norma
Pard second at 31.
C'Osta Iflesn
Mem~rs of the women's
club at Costa Mesa Golf
Course staged a pair of
tournaments during the past
week.
It was ·a partner's better
ball event on guest day with a
tie resulting for first place at
63. Erma Havens and Alice
Derby were on one team with
Gerri Watson and Martha
Ciampa on the other.
Connie Lonergan a n d
Marilyn Celli were next at 64
followed by Sandy McFarland
and Norma Voyles at 65.
says.
Art's Landing sent a boat to
Catalina for squid b a i t
Wednesday, then embarked on
a yellowtail run along the
coast with the prized bait.
Generally, fishing has tailed
off for bonito, barracuda and
bass with water temperatures
rising and falling with the
overhead weather.
Davey's Locker out of
Ball~a Pavilion reports a good
run of yellows on the Del Mar
Sunday with general fislling at
a pretty good level.
McCullah's Hun t i n gt on
Beach Pier three-quarter-day
boat is hitting bass and bar-
racuda with success. DANA WHARI' -112 anglers: 151
bass, 36 blrracuda, IS bonito. 1 halibut,
76 yellowtall, 511 rock cod. NEWPORT (DIV•Y'I Locklf') -83 anglers: 1J barracuda, 22 bonito, 131
sand bass. 3 yellowtall, 1 rock cOd, 1 halibut. (Art's Londlnt) -66 anglers : 126 ytllowtall. 60 bOnlto, 162 bass, 27
rock cod, 3 halibut. SEAL llEACH -64 englers: 306 rock
cod. 118 sand bass. 5 hallbul. Barge -52 •nglers: 520 bonito. 12 kelp bass, 25
halibut, 2 while sea bass.
JC Track Leaders
Top U.S. J1yctt Spl~t M•rk• Esse• •O.S: 3. Los Angelos cc .0.8; 4.
100_1_ Abraham (New Mexico JC) New Mexico 40.9; 5. Mt. San Antonio 41.0n. 9.2w: 1. Grlsbv Clake City, F1lLl 9.3w; Mlle relav-1. Essex 3:12.4 ; 2. In a guest day tournament 3. Cilbr•alh (New Mexico) 9.3wn; ... Bakersll•ld 3:12.4; J. Bakersfield Hammond (Cisco, Tex.) 9.3wn; 5. O. 3:12.9; "· Chaffey 3:13.2n; 5. Laney at Mesa Verde Country Club Thomu Clo• Angele• cc1 9.•. 3:l3.•n.
this week, competition was on 210-1. Cllbre•th 20.e; 2. Thomas High lump -1. Milos <Long BHch> 1.
a three-best balls Of foursome 21.0; 3. Bracy (New Me•lco) 21.0n; •· 1: 2. Underwood (Glendale, Ariz.) 7.
1 Abraham 21.0wn; 5. Brown (Essex, NJ) 01,.: 3. Winston <LACC) 6·1012; <i. b · 211 Oliver (New Mexico) fi..10'1• (six other~ aSIS. j,0-1. Farmer CLA Sovlhwesl) 46.8; tied at 6-10). First gross winners were 2. Penney (South Plolns. Ttx.) 47.S; 3. Long lump-1. Brown (Lake City.
Sllirley Kinder and Phvllis Alexander (Ch1ttev) •7.6; •. Tyler (San Fla.) 25.01'>1 2. Duncan (Sacramento)
J Diego CC), Prested CGlend1le) •7.8. 2+-101/.; 3. Horris (Golden West) 24-81 Smith of the host course with 860-1. Robinson (Laney) 1:'9.1; 2. •. Bradley (Seminole. Fla .) U5Vi; 5. MOf"gan (San Francisco) 1:49.ln: J. Robinson (Florida JC) 2+-4~. Ronnie Blair and Pat Lehmer Tuitt !Essex) 1:$0.3; •. Kem (Spol<ane) Triple jump-1. Byrd IChabOt) 51.0; of Yorba Linda. They fired a 1:.10.1; 5. otoo (Spokane Falls) 1:51.0. 2. Krebs !Foothill) 51·11'h; 3. Rob(nson Mll._1. Lu• (Groumont) 4:06.1: 'l. <Florida JC) 50-1; •. Triplett (West 255 lO win by SiX strokes. Walker (Citrus) ':07.I; \1. Buenrostro Valltyl 49·9341 5. Fairfax (Flor, Mo.) In second place at 261 were !SJ Delta! •:o7.s; •· 0100 4:09.2; 5. '9-m. Others -11. Horrts c-n Conzalu CEasl LA) 4:10.0. Wasl) 41-1\ls. Dora Donaldson and Alice 2-mi10-1. 0100 9,sg.6: 2. Hall Shot put-t. Adams cs1n Diego Mesa>
Derby Of Mesa Verde WI.th (Fr•sno) 9:01.1; 3. Hammitt (Lane. 56-11'>: 2. Morotll (Fullerton) 5+-5; 3. Ore.) •:OU; '· Palclc (Palomar) Rogge CChabOt) 50·1; •. Hill (Centr1I. Florence Keller and Ginny 90S.6n; s. Gram (Lane, Ore.) 9:05.6n. Ore.) 53-7\;; 5. Miiier (Redwoods) 53-7. J.mfle-1. Mend oz ii (Grossmont) Pole vault-1. Selzer (Glendale) 16-6; Coffing of Santa Ana. 13:<3.0: 2. Hall 13:.S0.6n; 3. Lux <Gross-2. Sandoval (Mt. SAC) 16-2~; 3.
In the net Compet1"t1'on 1·t montl 13:5Un: •· Dulaney (HarbOr) Herman (M .... Ariz.). Jollnson (Glen-. 14:02.0n; 5. Skiles (Berks, Pa.) 14:03.2. dale), Jueret (Mira Ccsla), Ripley was Betty Bretting and Jane 170 HH-1. Romes !Lake City, Fla) (Cypress), Vtrllreppen (San Jose) 16-0.
Bo f M V d "th v· 13.8; l. Robinson !Mlaml·Dade South, Discus-I. Kuehl (Worthington, Mn.) Wers 0 esa er e WI I Fla.) 13.9w; 3. Williams !Harbor) 13.9; 115-5; 2. Whitaker IMesa. Ariz.) 17""6; McLaughlin (Old Ranch) and •. Colbert (Compton) 14.0W; 5. Pierce 3. Hardin (New Me•ICO) ln·lO; 4.
Doris McCoy (Santa Ana CC) ~~j1\~Jwn1.•0w. Royal <Long Beach ?:~11';;°onlc:~~u in-1: 5. Murray
first at 217 "'° IH-1. Rambo (Mloml-Dade Javolln-1. Tennis (Bllltwl, Wash.) · South, Fla.) SI.Jn; 2. Roland (Eastern 2«.0; 2. Gormon (Fullerton) 231-10; 3. Second place went to Bobby Oklahoma > 52.3; 3. Haynie !SD Me..,> Goldi• CChottey) 237 .. , ._ Wkks (Lane. Wasco and Mary Ratekin with 52·4' .._ Tolbert Compton) S2.9n: s. Ore.I 235-3; S. S11oem1kor (Now Mexico Wyatt (Skyline! Sl.On. JC) 227·5. Others -11. Cla,..IM (Or-t
Vivian Vallely and Helen _j"'°;iiiiiiiiiireiiii1aiiiiyiiii-iii1.iiiiiiiMiiiiniiii1,iiiiiiiAiiiirliiiiz.iiiiiii.oiiii.1iiii1 iii2iii. --c~oo~s~1~1 ~21iiiH~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimBallentine of Irvine Coast CC
at 218.
Phyllis Kaliher and Marge
Williams teamed with Ruth
Hoppe of Braemer CC and
Alice McCredie of El Niguel
CC al 219.
14 FASHION SQUARE
SANTA AHA• $47~45
a
an
. '
c 1'1J Ul( .... .AJI llOllOA -OTOll t;OllP'Uf, llt. .•
Get behind the wheel of
a Honda Civic and give it a whirl
around the block a few times.
You'll see what front-wheel
drive does for cornering. What rack
and pinion does for steering. What
4-wheel independent suspension
does for road-holding.
Test drive the other economy
cars and the new Civici:i And drive
your own conclusions.
Introducing the New
Honda Civic: -----
e
•' ...
.-
MIL1E 'PER
__ ...... B~IG•s•E•LE•cr•1o•N-•1M•M•ED•1A•T•E•a•EL•1v•ER•Y•!....__.
' I -
The Dana Hills baseball
team will be honored al a ban-
quet tonight at 7 p.m. at the
school cafeteria. Naming of
., • the varsity mo.st valuable
player will highlight the pro-
ceedings.
Tied for fourth at 222 were
teams of Betty Potts and Bet-
te Hamre with Helen Wilson
at¥I Betty Brignall of Old
Ranch CC along with Georgia
Fanner and Cele Brown with
Bea Freebaitn and Jean
Taylor of Irvine Coast CC.
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
,.
Estancia
The Estancia High tennis
team will stage Its annual
banquet tonight at 7 at Adams
Elementary School.
San ClemenCe
Goll and track teams from
San Clemente High will be
honored at a dessert, schedul-
ed for 6:30 in the high school
cafeteria.
Westmhamr
Westminster Higb'1 tennis
players will bokf their annual
lmnqud ~IPR at 7 at the
IChool's cafeteria.
Rancho SI
Members of the Rancho San
Joaquin Golf Course women's
group staged a most pars
tournament this week.
In A flight Fern Sproul was
the winner with 15 followed by
Zola Bartholomew with 13.
Irene Thomas and C8rolynn
Walbridge tied for first In the
B flight with 13 with Betty
ligittwolght
S"°"'e"ts of Madros, S.-ct., ·
u.,.n ud Collon &11nd1 "-$75.
for ll1t
SUMMHOF 71
I
1
FACTORY AUTHORIZED HONDA CAR SALES & SERVICE "
2850 HARBOR Bl VD ., COST A MESA 540-9649
•
"WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS"
m
m
PUBUC NOTICE PmlLIC NOTICE
He.arings Planned
PICTITIOUS IUSINllS PICTITIOUI BUSlll&ll
llAMI STATIMlllT PUBLIC NOTICE llUMI ITATaMmMT ' • Tiii following -II doing bllslllHI Tht -.. -Is dolllll IMlslnns PICTtTIOVI •us111ns
It: P'ICTITIOUS IUSINUS ... NAMa ITATllMlblT
• ·~MEllltll'IELO TRUCKING COM-NAME STATIMINT . UNIQUE HOl.IOAYS, 2121 C-~ ~-.. per-,11 _,. IMI,_ •£NY •-O The ~· Ori .. , SUl19 E, .......... calltorftll '*' ... ' ' "11 •• 'c.".""tisi v•l•nd Drive. L.aevna bull-. ·;~~Ing -· ••• "°""' ASSOCIATED TAAVEL SERVICES. QUALITY SHUTT1'R co.. 1525
Wright Merrlfleld, 2'922 0-land OUR FAVOltlTE HEROES. 3270 &. INC., • C.lll••illa CorPorallen. 7121 Mac/\rtllUr Brv.I., C--"'26 Ori .. , L19vna Hiiis. Ca. fU.13 Bristol SI., Santa Ana, Clllf. ft1IM c..._ Ort-SVll9 E. lrvlne, Call· Eute E. y-:JIMO arl•tol, Senti
",."1'111• buslnes• Is conducled by 1 safe Chorleo L. Leffter Jr .• 2121 Drib -• nM4. ~.;;lll_ y-111' Menlle ....,,.. ~lelorshlp. Ave., Cost1 MeM, Cafil. 92616 Tiiis ....._ b anducted W I -· S.11111 Ana Calffomll 92701 Wrtollf MttTlfteld Ce1 .. 1e M. Loffl«. 2121 Drake Ave POratlOft. ' This •lalemlnt WU tiled With the Coun-Coste Mffa, Callf. fUU " .Usod1ttd T1'11vtl Thll bual'*t I• conclllct9d W • Cleft.
, ~Clerk of Orange CO<lnt;o on Aprll 25 Thi• l>lnlntu I• conducted by an lfto ServlclS, Inc. eral PlttnenllE I Elpy.
PUBUC N<mCE
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Public
hwings will be conducted in-
to • propmed regkml airport,
with crltidsm of. a con-
sultant'S< recommendation ol a
site near Del Mar apparently
growtnc.
The need for another airport
was questioned by directors of
the Comprehensive Planning
Organization, made up of
'1f/J. ' dlvldu11 Patrlcf1 Brumm u • · oung '•-'·' · I'·-Chlrlal L. Letftor, Jr. Corporate S.Crltory Thi• stat-I WH 1119d wllh !be Coun. _, ___________ )
1m-oc Thia 111tement wa• flied wttll the (;0<1n· This stat.,,_! waa fli.d wllll the Coun· ty Clertc of Or1ng1 CCM'lly .... May 23, (
Publl-Orange Cout Delly Piiot. ty Cieri< Qt Oronge County on M•'I 11, IV Clerk of Orange County on May I•. 1'73. ECQ'TOGY
Mey 11, 24 31 Ind June 7, 1973 1S2'-7J 1973. P2S441 1973. fltml Publlshell Orange c ... t Delly P= :LI PUBLIC NOTICE Publllhed Or1nge Coa.t O..lly Pllol Publlshed Orange c .. st O.Dy Pilot M•Y Mey 31, Ind June 7, 1•. ti, !1973 IS.0-73 ... __________ _
Mey 24. 31, Ind June 7, 1', 1973 154-Jl 17, 24, n and June 7, Im 1-193-73 ~~-=:~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~
.~· NOTICI TO CONTllACTOllS
' CALLING FOii llDI PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC N<Yl'ICE
UkNlhoolFIEDD I• t r I c I 1 NEWPORT-MESA FICTITIOUS IUSINISS P'ICTITIOVS BUllNllS ~Id Dffdllne: 11 :00 o'clock 1.m. on lh• I -HAM• STAT•M•llT NAMI STATIMINT C1fli day of June, 1973, NOTICI TO ClllDITOlll Thi following person I• doing bll•lnoH "?>• following '9r-. b doing buslneu
.!lace of Bid Receipt: 1157 PLACENTIA SUPllllOlt COUllT OP' THI! IS' 11• "'A•ENUE, COSTA MESA STATE 01' CALIFOllNIA FOil • LIDO DOORS, INC. 32• N. Newport HUNTINGTON VIEW HOMES, 19'52
, !Jf'foltct Identification Name: PUBLIC THE COUNTY OP OltAllGI Blvd., Nowport Beach, Clllf. '2'60 Slci.r!..~ Uno, Huntington lffcll,
AQbRESS SY~EM MAUDE DAVIS NL A·7-LIDO ELECTRONIC DOORS, INC.. ,_ MlDDLE SCHOOL Eslale of MILDllED LEYVA, OtcttMd. 32' N. Newport Blvd .. Newport l11ch. Donald L. Bl"lfl Company (Sltl9 of
·..;'lllace Pion• are on Fiie· 1IS7 Pl.ACEN NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to lht Callf. t266J Callfomla Corponllonl, 15233 Ventura
TIA AVENUE, COSTA MESA · credllon of !be above nomld decedlnt Thia butlneu ta being conclllc:Nd llY A BIVd.. SMrman Oaks, CA 91'°3
1'10TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thil tho lhll all persons hiving cl1lm1 ogalnst the C.llllll'nl1 c..--1Hon. Thia bll•l'*I 11 condUcled llY I COi'· ,~e named School Dlslrtcl of Orange Slid decedent •r11 r11C1Ulred to file them. LIDO ELECTRONIC porlllon. CQCinty, Callfornl1. aCllng by and thro&19h wtlh tht ntceuary voucher., In the offl.. DOORS, INC. DONALD L. BREN CO.
11*. Governing Board, hereinafter referred of Ille clerk of lhe above enlltled cO<lrl, or By J. WM. Johnlon, ~lml E. Smellwood,
to os "DISTRICT"'. will receive u to blll lo present them, wllll the nocoHary Secret1ry/Tr1... ce President
PUBLIC NOTICE councilmen or mayors of the
13 cities In San Diego County.
The other sites under con-
sideration include Miramar
Naval Air Statklo, which
would be purchased from the
Navy; one near the Mexican
border at Tijuana and a
realigned Lindbergh Field,
San Diego's downtown
munl~pal airport.
not later lhan the above stoled ti::,• ~al vouchen, to the undenltned ti m1 Thi• •l•-1 flied wtth the County Thia •ta-t wu Iii.ct with lhe Coun-ff. bids for lhe award of a contra~! ,.; Or1ng1 Ave .. Costa M ... , Ca. 921627, 17141 Clerk of Orange County on : May 14, UT.I. ty Clerk of Or1ng1 County on May 4, 1973. • B•n Lfftefi
. ~above project 6'6-76111 '37-1161. which I• lhe place of By Tiier ... M. Ward, Dtputy County P·Ulfl
" Bids shall be r.;,elved In the place Iden· bllslneu of lhe undersi9ned In •II millers Clerk. PU>ll•hod Orange Coast Dally Piiot May
''""'"" above and lhlll be OPlnld Ind -'•lnlng to the estate of Hid-· """' 10, 17, 24. 31, 1973 l.Ul-73 publicly read aloud at the above stated wltllln four "*'"" otter the firs! public.-Publlsllld Oranoe CoHI Delly Piiot Mly1 ____________ _
1fme and place. . tlon of thla notice. 17, 2'1, 31 and June 7, lm 1504-73
" •There will be no deposll required for Dated RMa1 ~J~N
• u~h HI of bid documents. · • PUBLIC NOTICE • lf!och bid must conform end be Atlorney for Rtpr-letlve PICTITIOUS IUllNl!SS
· , ~POll•lve to tho contracl document.. of the Wiii of the aboVe "OTICI TO C:U!DITOllS NAME STATEMlllT ·~ch bid shell be accompanied by the named. -SUP'ElllOR COUllT OP 11111 The following per-. I• dol119 bull-. "· itcurlty referred to In the contract R. P. H•UMAN u· documents and by the list of oposld 11l6 Otl ... A.,.., STATE OI' CALIP'OINIA P'Olt . FAii WEST FUNDING COMPANY.
subcontrlciors. pr c1m1a ,'!, ... 1 • ca. 91621 THE c°':.~-~~ .. ORAllOI 303 Goldenrod. corona dll Mar. Calif.
Mr. Jeme• M Hel•tand Director ~ 6111 W-41'1 92625 1 Facllltles M 1 1 • Attorney ter R-tltlvt Estate of EVADNA E. CALHOUN, N-l-<:<>ota M-Mlft----' "" , an enance Ind Opera-Published 0 C D 1 Oec:Hsed ...... .,..... .... ,,...,,,, wlll meet Wllh those persons In· M1J range OISI • ly Piiot. NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN "' "'" c..--etlon (Calllornla Corponllon) 303 . ' ed In touring lhe sllo at the Maude Y 17, 2•. 31, and June 7, 1m 151•·73 credllon of lhe •boVfl nemtd decedent Goldenrod, Coron• del Mar. C1llf. m2J
.Pe.vis Middle School, located at 1050 Ari· that all -· hiving claims tllllMI !be This bllslne" 1• cenduct.d by •n lfto
lll!lton, Costa Mesa, •t 10:00 1.m .. June '· PUBLIC NOTICE said dtc-t are r-lred to file thlm, dMdual. 'ltn. wllh lh• nlCISSllry .,.,.......... In !be office dlvldual. ~-'·Costa Mesa ,,._
The DISTiii CT 1'11HrYeS !be right to ,... of the d•k of Iha 1boYe onHllod court, or menl. ,
any or •II bid• or to waive any Ir· l-Sl2f2 to p..-t tllam, with tha lllCftHry Kon Tesslor, Pl'ft1dont
larltln or lnformllllllos In any bids or NOTICI TO CltllDITOltS vouchers. to tt>o undtni9nld II the oltlat Thi• sta-t WH flled wtt~ the Coun-blddlng. SUP'llllOlt COUllT 01' THE of hit attorney, PAUL A. HANNA. Al· ty Clortt of Ortnge County on May 11.
DISTRICT Ila• dtlermlntd the STATE 01' CALIPOltNIA FOil torney •I Law, Hart.or Law Building, "9 1971
ln'talllng r1t1 of per diem wages THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE EHt 17111 1-, COiia -· Callfomle PU4U loaillty In which the work Is to be Ho. A-1'12t 92427, wllk:ll I• lhe place o1 bull-. of l'Wllllled 0..-Coest !>lily Pilot, May ..,.ormlii for Heh cratt or type of Estate of MARGARET AL 1 c I! !be undaralgnecf In en matt1rs ptrt1lnlng 24 31. •nd June 7, u , 1973 155'-n ,,..n -ed to oxeQlle the contract. LEVOltA, 1.k.1. MARGARET LEVORA, to lhe estai. o1 uld ~I. within tourl-------------
reln 11'11 an file It 1157 Placentia Dtcoased. manlha -Iha first publication DI 11111 PUBUC NOTICE ue. CGll• M .... Coples lnlY bl.,,. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN fo lhe """'"'· 1-------------.an requt1I • .t, CORY of these rem crodllors ol lhe above namld decldlnt Datod May 30, 1973 STAT9MlllT Of' AIAH-MINT OP'
I IM pooled It the lob site, . lhlt all ,......,,,. hlvl119 claim$ aoalMf the JOHN MEllJE CALHOUN USI OP' P'ICTITIOUS IUSllllll llAMI
PUBIJC NOTICE
WASlllNGTON (AP) -'nle
federal quarantine for the
Newcastle poultry disease is
being lifted from about 130
square m l I e s of San
Bernardino County, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture bas
announced.
Only 400 square miles in
parts <I. San Bernardino and
Riverside counties r e m a I n
under restrictions on the
movement of poultry and
eggs, the USDA's Animal and
Plant Health Inspect 1 on
Service said. .
caus~ a health huard.
The San Diego RegloQal
Water Quality Control Board
ordered the Santee Sewage
System to stop discbargtng ex-·
cess effluent Into the san
Diego River.
Officials said the e.xcess was
as high as three million
gallons a day during winter
months. 'Ibey said t h e
d~e keeps ground water
at a high level the year
around, forming nmnerous wet
areas where mosquitos could
breed.
e Gold Sovglat
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Ap.
· plicatlons for dredger permits
from weekend gold miners are
swamping the c a l if o r n i a
Department of Fish a n d
Game.
The department said that a
standard permit Is needed to
operate any suction dredge
with an intake diameter of up
to 12 inches. A special permit
is required for larger intakes.
And hydraulic sluicing ls pro-
hibited.
e Rap Dropped
WESTMORLAND (AP) -A
judge has dismissed on a
technicality ·a criminal com-
plaint against an Imperial
Valley lettuce grower accused
of harvesting a crop too soon
after spraying it .. with a
pesticide.
Justice Q)urt Judge Colin
M. O'Brien ruled that the
complaint against California
Fann E:rchapge, Inc. didn't
state that the . company had
seen the manufacturer's label
it was accused of vioiatlng.
Tllunday, Ma, Sl, 1973
Bral Weather
Jean Gallene, 18, of Ab-
secon, N.J., officiated
at the opening of new
Atlantic C i t y beach
bathing areas. Life-
guards were out, but
55-<legree water and
rain caused few others
to brave the surf. '°'= IClltdul• of per diem urd decedent ar11 rl<llllrtd to file them, Executor of the Wiii The fol._lng penon his abanclonad !be Is ._, • wor1d119 day DI wllh !be nec1S11ry vouchers. In thl of. of the above named cllcedent uee of lhe fictitious bUsl,,... nam& SERY·
I (I) ......... The rate ~ holldly end flct of lhe clertt DI the ·-entfHed l'AUL A. HANNA ALL RBFRIOEllATION •I 1312 w. wor1t 111111 bl al 1ee1t llma end court. or to prosont lhlm to Iha under· A-Y at Law Collins. Or_, C•lll. ~7.
11. · ' •lgne<I at Ille office of hla atlorney, --Law •wlllllnt The flctfttous bUslneu nama nftrrecl to
Originally, the quarantine
imposed in March 1 9 7 2
covered ~.~ square miles ln
eight Southern C a Ii for n I a
counties. 'lbe quarantine was
initiated to halt spread of the
virus disease to poultry pro-
duction areas of Northern
callfornia and the rest of the
nation.
The complaint, filed by ----------
Imperial County Dist. Atty.
lhall be mandatory upon 11111 CON· WILLIAM E. FOX, Sullo ns. IO South 419 .... 11"1 Slrtot -lllecl I 0 County I CTOR to whOm the cantracl I• L•k• Avenut, P11adena, C1lllomla 911Gl £-1• -. C.H...,,.• 92627 1 wa• n range on Afll 1
• •nd upon any subContr1clor which I• the pl1ce of bllslneH of ,...; rel: (n4) -191'1 1' 1:.{!rv1n L1Roy Johnson, 11512 Tr11•k, him, to IM"I not leaa than the said undersigned In all matters pertaining to Attemey fer h-Westminster Cellf
fled ralH tO all workmen employed the Htllo of sold decedent, wllhln fO<lr Published ~ Coast Dally Piiot, Thi• bualne~ wu· concluctld by an In.
. , them In 1111 executfon of lhe contract. month• 1tter the llrsl publlcotlon of this May 31 and Junt 7, 1', 21, 197l 1-73 dlvldual. ~· blddor may wllhdraw his bid for a nollce. Marvin L. Jolin-. ~od of forty·ltve ('5) dan ofler tho Dated May 15. 1973 PUBUC N(Jl'ICE date sit for lhe opening of bid•. ALBERT F. LEVOltA,
A payment bond and a perform1nc1 Executor of lhe Wiii of · bond will be required prior to 1Cecutlon of !be above namld dtcedent SUPlllllOll COUllT 01' TH•
the contrlCI. Thi payment bond •hlll bl WILLIAM E. l'OX STATI Of' CALll'OlllllA P'Olt
FSolt'I
Pvbll-Orange Coa•I Dally "llot, Mey 24 31, •nd June 7, u. 1973 1ss.n
PUBIJC NOTICE In the form .. 1 forth In the, CO<llracl Suitt 115, It South Lake A,,._ TH• COUNTY Of' OllAllOE
documents. • "-""·Calif. 91111 I u-1e1 -HNl~RA,·'!.~OP P-ON·--------------1 Governing Board Tell (tli) ~ ....,, ...,.. ~ -' 5 "" PICTITIOUS IUSINISS
By Dorothy Harvey Fl•her A-y ... •xtc11lor P'Oll l'ROSAT11 OP WILL AND l'Olt HAM• STATllMINT
,.,,Published Orange Coast Dilly Piiot, Published Or-c .. st Dally Pilot May L~ri.~:~ "?~~~~:NI Deceased Tiie followlnll -I• doing buslnes&
ay 2A and 31 . 1973 l61J.7l 17, 24, 31 Ind June 7, 1973 1531-7:1 NOTICE IS 'HEREBY GIVEtl tllai M :
PUBLIC NiOTICE MINOR~ Hl!OAfO ha>,flltd htrtln 1 poti-THE TitOU.'S GALLERY, 1JI• S. tton for,,,_,. o1 win anc1 1or luuaric• c_,,ffw'f,. 92651 -------::::==--===-==-------.:..:: ___ ,of Letters Tnt1mentary to lhe petltlol* Wa,,..., Hopkin>, 1085 lluoblr.1 Catl'fOll -NOTICE INVITING a1os ON •M.M• .-.nee to which •• midi for further Or~ L-BMCll. Calll 9'U51
PUBLIC NOTICE
e Permit Halt
SAN DIEGO (AP) -All
building permits have been
halted in the San Diego County
communities ol Lakewise,
Santee and Alpine by a water
quality board which says a
aewage treatment system is
pUBUC NOTICE GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS OP partlailtr•, -!hat the time and pllCI Thi. bullMll •• candUctod by aft , ...
lllVINE UNll'IED SCHOOL DllTlllCT of -r1111 the-hi• -Ht for June dlvklual ·-------~-------· 110.-~oT:,;; ~:1.,.H;:;::i ~~;.~ ..... ~ 1,.. -~, .. et ~9i.°!'imcii •:.:-~,; Thi• :.=ont":':~~i.ci with the ceun-''i:JI'.0:!A:l:.'::I'
of Or•nv• County, California, will be 'R<O!Ye.i , the Cl !be a!~trf~ Civic Center Drive W1St, In !be City el ty Cleric of Orange CaunlY on Ml¥ 2', n. fdlowllll penon 11 dollll -•nns
Superylsori Of llld Covnly at lht pl•c. fl>d UP ' time •peclfltct: Slnle Ane, California. . ' 1m IS: ···RCHl-llARUS ASSOCIATES 222 TIME: Tue.day, June 19, 1973 <ll 11· Qfcloc:k r ylfilhl Savi Da1*1 M1y 311, 1973 P'2U4I ""' ' Time. ·~ . .., ii.I ng WILLIAM E St JOHN PublllMd Ora ... Coa•t Diily Piiot, foretl, Laguna Beech, CA 92651
Pl.ACEi Office of lht Cieri< el !he: of su~lsors orange County Count;. Clerk. ' May 31 and June 7, U, 21, 1m 1672-n Robert ..!r, l:~66l 90I Mll'Ml\lr,
Admlnlstrallon Building, Room 501, 515 Norlh Sycamore itj! ' la Ana Coll· NIESIRVI, MUMl'Elt AND HUOHIS ~-• '~ ~·-td ..., 911 1,,_ fornle. • ,.. • Att....,. at...-. PUBUC NOTICE T .. a uvMftlU •• ~-N~• ~,
MAILEO BIDS: Clerk of 111•·~"1 ~ ' . ~Cou..ty Mr IY• .... Crtry dlvldu•I
mlnlslflltlon Building, Room SOI. 515 Nliilf ~ SMtl', · ' Cillfomle '1l s.111 ,._ St....r PICTmOUI BUSINhS · Thi It~...!;, llanrlllled W1111 the Coun-
ISSUE: $10,300.000 consl•tlng bf 2060. !bonds. numbered 1 to llOIO. bolti Lea ........... C•-1 *17 .. ,,_ ITATIMINT er!: of Or w~s ty on May s 1m
!:ic•uslve, ot the donoml~,tlon of SS.000 llCll, elf deled July 1, 1973, and dBigMlod Tel• CIUI OH* The following -It clollll business ty -""" ir-e Election 1973, Serln A. _ A""-9 fan l'wtln-as· lsflad c t Dally Piiot
MATURITIES: The bonds Wiii matur~rutlvo numerical order In Publl-o.._. Cont Dally Pllof, • THE DANICA P'ASTltY SHOP, 514 W. ,!1111lo 17 ~l~m oas 1316-n the 1mounls tor each of the -•ral YHrs u , .,. May 31 and Ju.,. 1, 7, 1m l&IJ-72 Balboa Blvd .. N-1 lllCll ,_ 1 __ Y __ • _• --·-------
YHr Of Mahlrlty Amount , r if Matvrtty. Ameunt Daniel ,_ MOoMy, 1117 W. llalllca PUBLIC NtvmCE July 1, 1974 $ 360,000 · rJ.lilr 1. 1917 t "25.llOO PUBUC NOTICE Blvd .. Newport a..d\. Calif. nwo vu
July 1. 197S ~ . • '.1)11)1-1. 1911 ' A2S;J)OO Thi• --I• condUCtecl by ... ,.,. -------------· July 1, 1976 360.000 ' . July 1, 199t .OS.000 SUPllRIOW COUllT OP THll dlvldual. PICTITIOUS BUllNftl
July I, 19n 360.000 Ju,, 1. 1990 42MOO ITATI °" CALIP'OllNIA l'Oll D1nlol Peter "'....,.,. NI.Ml ITAT&M•ll1'
July I, 1978 360,000 July 1. 1991 A2S.OOO TH• C:OUNTY 01' ORAllOI Thi• 1t1'9metlt w11 ftl9d with the Coun· The fotlowlnt person I• .iolng business July I, 1979 .Q.S.000 July 1, 1992 •25,000 No. A·7'51l ty Clark of Orange County on May 28, u :
July I, 1980 45.oOO July 1, 1993 •25,000 NOTICI °" HEAlllNG OP' PITmON 1m. . 1.AMP'CO MAINTENANCE. l H 0
July I, 1991 C5,GOO July 1, 1994 425.000 P-011 l'R08ATB Of' WILL AND FOi P!SAI Logan Ave.. Costa IMll. C1llfoml•
July 1, 1912 45.000 July '· 199S •25.CIOQ LllTTWltl T•STAMIMTAllY Publl>hed Orange Co11t Dally Piiot, t26H. July I, 1993 425,000 July 1, 1996 425,000 &tale of JOHN H. GOIRUEGGE, May 31 Ind June 7, 1'-21, lfn 1'71·73 ic.nton IC. leros"'°'"• 350 Canonl19 July 1, 1994 425.000 July 1, 1997 '25AOll -Drive. P-1ftbtook, Call!Orftla 9202I
July I, 1985 425.000 July 1, 1Ht 425.lilO. NOTICE IS ' HEltEBY GIVEN that PUBIJC NO'J1CE This business Is conductod llY an ltt-
July 1, 1986 425.000 ELMEll A. GOaRUEGGE ANO LOUISE dlvlduel.
. SIGNATURE ON BONDS: At, lellt -DI 111• •lg'11turn on the band> W. BINMORE t>ave filed flereln a palltlon l'ICT1TIOVS IU•NESS Kan!M K. 8-tl'om will be manually affix«!. ' • fllr PrWat. o1 Wiii end tor _...,. DI Tiii• 1t1tament was flied w1tlt t11t c .....
INTEREST: The bondl "'"" biaer lnternf II ....... or rat .. to bl f-Letlln TISlamentary to the Pltl-The ,.,,,~"'f1 STAT11MEllT ty Otr1< of or-c:-il'f an May 10,
upon lhe sale thereot but not to acted 7> per lllllUm, payible innually Jor Ille retwenc. to Wflldl 11 -for further '!"'"" persons •r• clolllQ lm
first veer and 1eml-onnu1lly !hel'Mller. partlculan. and fl>ot the lime end pl-_,,... "· 1"9211 PAYMENT : Said Dandl Ind lht lntlrHI thereon .,. PIY• ... ltt .... DI heUllllll ofllt same llU -... fW June OU• GANG l'OTTEllY, 2 0 0 s 1 l'Vbllsllld °"'* ~ O.lly l'llot.
money of the Unlled Stain of America -ot Iha office of the Trea•urer of Oringe 19, 1973, 1t t :OO a.m .. In !be courrr_... of ~151~~ ""':~~llfAl~ell_.__ May 17, 2ol. 31 -June 7, lfn 145'-73 County. D•rlrMnl No. 3 of Hid court. ti 7llO • --·1_..;._ ___________ _
REGISTRATION: The bonds will be coupon bond1 reglsllNlble only as 10 Civic Center Drtve Wesl, In lht City of C= dl~~1111o:'r~!Y 20os1 PUBLlC NOTICE bolh Prlnc1p01 and Interest. . Santa AIM!· Calltornla. ' ' NO T CALLABLE: Tho bonds ore not csll1ble before m1turl1y Oiied ,.,..y 30, 1'73. C~s, Senta Ana, Calif. '2707
SECURITY: Said bond• are general obllgallons of uld schOol dlstrlcl, WILLIAM E. St JOHN, Th• buslne .. I• conducted by an unlft. PICTITIOUI IUSIN•ll
peytl>le both princlpol •nd interest lrom ad valortm taxes Wlllch, under tho ltwo C0<1nty Clork O\>f11Gntod auoclatlon othtr then • NAM• ITATIMIMT
now In force. may be levl<d w:thcul llmltalio' rs !o rale or omounl upon all of DAVID I'. D• U.NCY partnen~r.;,... D E ell Thi following person It doing but"-
the taxable properly. excepJ COft•in persO•lPI D'Oi><rly, In said •ChOOI dlslrlct. All«MY ., Law -n-·rt" ll as: o• ·N~E COUNTY A"'P CA .. TERMS OF SALE -laat CIA•t Hllllw•Y ~v•n -ey ~~ v """' ....... INTEREST RATE: Tht maximum rote bid may not ••Coed 7,. per annum, C-• ... Mir. Call,_. t242S This •l•t-t WU filed Wllh the Coun· PANY, 1366-F L-ft Slreat, Cotll
peyablt annually the first yur ond soml·ennuelly therNller. Each reto bid must Toi: ln41 6,,._ IY Clerk of Orange County °" May 2t, Masai Calll<>'nll 9262'
be • multiple Of 1/20 of 1%. No bond shall b•or more lllan one In-I rott, and A-Y fer C.,.tll11Mtt'S ltT.!. lllcn•rd MortlMt. 2'IS5 Solinas L.n.,
111 bonds of the same maturity &hall bear lht same rate Eich bond must bier Published Orange Coa11 Delly Piiot. P-tM.19 Mission VloJo, Calllornla 92675. lntertol •I Iha rate specified In Ille bid from lls date. to lb fl•ed metUl'lty May 31 and Junt 1, 7, 19n 1614-73 Publlsllld Orange C.... Delly Piiot, Thia bu>lneu I• conducted by an In·
dalo. Not more then four lnt•r .. t r1tt1 m1y be bid, -lhort &11111 not bl • Mey 31 and June 7, U, 21, 1m 1"9-73 dlvldutl.
spread of more than l'lo between the hlghosl and lowul lntereat r11tws bid The PUBLIC NOTICE lllchlrd Martinet ropelltlon of any rate wlll not be con•ldored tho bidding of an lddlllonol reti. PUBUC NOTICE Thi• 1t1t-I was flltd with Iha COUftly
AWARD: Thi bonds shall bl sold IOr cash only. All bids must be for not Clerk t11 Or-County an M•Y It, 1m
1 .. 1 thin all of lhe bonds hereby offered for .. le and Heh bid shall •tai. Iha! the B IM1t NOTICI OP DISSOLUTION fl.tm! blddW Offer• per •nd accrutd lnlenst to the dale of dollvery, tho premium. If NOTICI TO ClllDITORS OP' P'AllTlllllSHI" "ulllll!Md Oranoe Coesl O.lly Pilot.
any, ind tt>o In-I rate or rein not to excltd 111011 specified herein. at which ~¥~T•1•100: cc•t'f~:rA ~~= Public notice I• hereby atven thai AA.-, 17, ,., :n Ind JUN 7, 1m 145f.7l Iha bidder often to buy llld -s. Etch bidder 111111 ••••• In hit bid lhe tolll ~ ~ .-Yft OAVID G. MARTIN, and JOSE .. H !.
net Inter•! coot In clollers and the a.,.r_ net In-I rala dotwrmlned -Y· THB CO:I:T!jr.,ORAJIGE WALSH JR .. heretoior. clolnt bullMI> PUBIJC NOTICE
Whlcll 111111 be consld•ld ln-11.,. Oftly •nd not a pert of the I*. · under the flctltlou• firm namt and •lyl• -----1 HIGHEST BIDDER: The bond• wlll be awonled to the highest responsible O Esta::.i ol THERESA MALARKY, of M &. W SEWEii lo ORAIN CLEANING PICTITIOUSIUslNlll
bidder or bidders considering lhe lnter•t ralt or rolH apaclfled Ind the premium ;;~;ICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN to Iha Sl:llVICE, at 2Slt Wiiiow Lano, City NAMI ITATIMBNT
olflrod, II any. The highest bid wlll be dotormlntd by dtductlng !be amount ol crO<lllors of tht abOvt namtd dlatdenl of Cost• MMI, County of On119e, Slate of The followtllll per-. I• dolntl butlneu lhe premium bid (If any) from lhl tolal 1mount of lntlrflt Which lht dlstrlcl 'h•• ••I "orM>ns hovlng claim• 1,,.1 the Calltornla, did on lht 29th dlV of Moy, 11•
would be required lo pey from the dale of &aid boods to 1111 rHpecllvt malurlly ..,10 de<.ede 1 •re roqul1'11d 10 ~ them 1m, bV mutual cen!ltnl, dlUolvo tht Hid · LAGUNA RACQUET Ct.US. m Glenn-
dltn lheroof at lhe ~oupon rate or rem 1pecltled In tho bid Ind lllt award will 'Nllh 11 • n"c~sary vouchers. In lhe olff~ partnenhlp Ind termlnata their rolallon1 rfr•• L-BelCll. Cllll. "'51
be made on the basis of th& lowest net lnttrtst cost to the district. The IO'We!!t of the cl rk f the bOW entlt11d court ·or 11 p.ertMt"I therein. MlchHI Timothy Ad•ms, 170 GI•~
net lnterHt cost •hlll be compuled on a 360-day yter 1>11•1•. The purchaser muot 10 pr..!.i •them• with the _.ary Said busl'*I In Iha Mur11 wlll bll con-oyre Laguna Bllch Clllf 92651
pey accrued interest trom the dale of lhe bonds to the date ot dtllvery. Tht cost vouohers, to Jh• u"nderslgned at th• offl .. clucttd 'a'( DAVID G. MARTIN, who will Thi; bllilneH I• c..:.tu<ted llY a -· of prlnllng the bond• Wiii bl borne by tho district. I ' • • ., y GOii HAM e. P•Y Ind dlachlrge •II llabllltles Ind ..... ,. poratlon RIGHT OF REJECTION: The Board of Suptrvl1on reserves tho right, PAUL 9025 'wu h ' Bl~d Penthouse of tht firm Ind receive all monllS Mld!MI Timothy Ad•mt. Presldtnf
James H a m l It o n , said
California Farm Exchange
sprayed the pesticide Phosdrin
on la field near Westmoreland
March 1 and ordered the
harvest of 240,000 heads of let-
tuce the next day.
e Free%e Off
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
development freeze on 775,000
acres of private land in unin-
corporated territory ln Los
Angeles County was lifted
after county officials sub-
mitted an Interim space land
plan to the state Resources
Agency.
Superior Court Judge David
N. Eagleson imposed the
freeze Oct. 18 because the
county allegedly had not com-
plied With the state Open
Space Lands Act. 'lbe act re-
quired cl ties and counties to
submit Interim open space
plans by last Aug. 31.
5 Seniors
Win Awards
Five hlgh school senlol"B
have r e c e i v e d $1,000
scbolarshlps for their lntereat
in urban design and en-
vironmental planning from
'lbe Irvine Company.
Recipients from Corolla del
Mar Hlgh School are Jeff
Chamley, 605 Jasmine Ave.,
O>rona de1 Mar; Jeffrey Scott
Dyer, 'd/Z1 Blackthorn St.,
Newport Beach; and Mark
Edward Thielke, 21817 Vista
Ornada, Newport Beach.
Winners from University
IDgh School are Sarah F.
Jayne, 17731 Oak Tree lAne,
Irvine; and Marianne Dow,
Tustin.
Mesa Student
Is Graduated
In Its discretion, to r11leet any and all bids and to the ax1en1 not prohibited by B iv H'll C '11;'0 90211 ·;.i,1 h 1 ,.,. payable to Iha firm. Kfflt1' Spas Inc.
llw to wel•• any lrregularlly or lntormellty in 1ny bid. ever ' " 1 ' c 1 Fllrlhtr notice I• INll'1lllY given thll lhe Thia •lit-t w s fllld wllll Iha Coun-Vicki Selma k-"'-baa PROMPT AWAllO: Thi Boord of Supervisors will t1ke acllon awarding plate ol business ol lhe undor.igned In Ill unc»rll;ned Wiii not be Nlpanslble, from ty Cltr1< DI Ori ~ on May I, Im. e C _....,,Iii
tho bond1 or roloctlng Ill bldl not later thin twenly.slx -. alter lhe expiration matters per! >lnlng to Iha ntate of 18~ lhll day on for Illy ollllgatlons Incurred nge "2SNI received a bachelor of 9Clence
of the t1m1 heroin prescrlbtd tor !be ncelpl of P1'1JPOMll1 proyldtd1. 11111 the iecr'""~11 w;:hln 1'°.~~ ""f.!:• """' 1119 bY DAVID G. MAltTIN In his -n name Publish«! orange (0011 Dally Piiot, in education de-with a award may be made aller lhe expiration of 1119 apecllled 1flne It Iha blG<llr shall r~af.':t ~:v 2'.l 01973 s no tw In the name of the firm. May 10. 11. 24. 31, 1tn l.IOl-73 &&~~ not have gl-to 111d Board notice In writing o1 Ille wllhclraw1I o1 llUCh proposal. DON A 'LADENBl!RGER DATEO AT C0>t1 Mffl, Callfornlo, 1111• _ major in Speech and drama
Pl.ACE OF DELIVERY: Delivery ot 111d bonds wlll be mac1e 111 Iha 2tth dly o1 May, 1m. UBLIC NOTICE •uccto•ful bidder at th• offlat of lhl Counly Tr••urtr ol Or-County E•tcufor of lh• Wiii of D1vld G. Marti" p from Concordia T e 8 c h e r s
PROMPT DELIVERY, CANCELLATION FOil LATll Ol!LIVllRYi It Is IM lbOYe namld d-I Joseph E. Walth Jr. Coll Seward, N b ~·~~ thll 111d bonda wtll ,,. dtll-ed to the •uccoutul blddlr wllhln thirty GllAY, GOlllHAM .. l'AUL Publllhld Or-• cout Dally l'llot, l'ICTITIOUI IUllNISI ege, •.
;:i from "" date Of .... -eof. The IUCctHtuf bld!Mr 111111 hive Iha t1ght, -Wllllllre ........ 1'1*"-8 ""'" :11. ltn 1684-n NAME STATIMENT The daughter of Mrs .
at his option, to canctt the conlract of purdulM If the 1Jond1 .... not -rid BtY#IY "1111• Calll. "21l Tllo following per>on I• doing bull-. Fr Stra %744 Fr
tor dtll-y wtlhln'lllly dan from the dalt of Ill• sale th.,.,, and In -h •vent l;~w :::~,_ ' PUBUC NOTICE as: IUlcel cner, e-
thhl•" b•lduc.CH•fUI blddor llhall bl entNled to the rellll'n of Ille "-11 ICICOlllHnYlnlr l'ublllhld Or-c .. •t Dally Piiot ~ BESKE'S JANITORl"L SERVICI, mont Lane, Colla Mesa, haS a l \ IJ.7) NOTICI TO CRIOITOlll IOOO W. MacArthur No. 61• Sonti Ana, tea~poeltlon at St. MaJ'lt' FORM OF BID: Each bid. !ogelher wtlh the bid dltcle. mu•• bl In • 31 ..... Junt 7• •• 1• 1973 IW· SUl'llllOlt COURT 0, THE C111f. t'11'1T s
Meat Price
Violations
Number 23
Orange County had 23 viola-
tions of the federal meat price celq regulatlonl over a
three week period ending May
17th.
The violations were detected
through compliance verifica-
tion checks by the Internal
Revenue Service, the meat
price regulation enforcement
agency.
IRS spokesman Ken Sutton
would not ideiXJfy the 23 agen-
cies stattna that government
policy prohibited Identification
of violators when their viola-
tions had been corrected.
Though not specifically Iden-
tifying the violators, Sutton
noted they were mostly small,
independent dealers. ' ' T h e
violations have been the result
of lniufficlent information,
m isint erpre ta ti on or
mlalmde~ of the rulea,
but not wl1lful violations," a.
ton added.
Solton sakl nine of the 23
complied "on the spot" with
minor recommendatlon1 for
adjustment. Another 13 were
given notices of apparent
liability which tell what steps
are needed for compliance and
gives the store 24 hours to
make the changes.
All 13 made the changes In
the alloted time. One letter of
findings on an agency has
been Issued over a contested
item ln the regulations. No
decision has been reached in
that case.
Mortician
Not Bank
FORTALEZA, B r a z 11
(AP) -A funn parlor
that o f f e r e d flrlt-class
buJ'lals in return f o r
monthly payments of $1. 75
was closed becaU1e the
government ruled It was
functlonlng as a savings
bank without complying
with bank regulations. envelope, addross!d to the dlttrlcl with tfte enveloPO Ind bid clterly mertced -PUBUC NOTICE STAT11 0,-CALll'OltNIA P-Oll Roy E. Bratton. lOOO W. MacArtllllr School, rooklyn, N.Y., for the
· "P,._I tor Irvine Unlllld SCt1001 D11trlct Bonds." THI COllllTY 01' ORANGE No 61, Santa Ana, Calif. 92101 1"""74 --i.....l yel1".
BID CHECK: A carllfltd or cashier'• check on I rtspOnslblt blnk or Ne. A.J""7 Thi• butlneu It c-llY .,. In-....:.:•:.:.•".:.:...:""'=JUV=:..:=:.:..----~=~========== trutl company in Ille •inount of ~of th• prlnclpil •mount of Ille bond•, .. .,.bl. • ..... Est••• of SIDNEY N. SUCHAllD, Aki dlvldual,
to the order of the County Trtosurer must occompany each proposal as I guaranty "OTIC• TO ClllDITOlll SIDNEY NATHAN SUCHAllO, aU !toy E. Brtlfon * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * !he blddtr, II •ucc:esaful, Wiii tee.pl and ~' for llld bonds In ·-nee SU .... IClll COUlllT OP' THI SIDNEY SUCHARD. •k• s. N. SUCHAllD, Thi• .,.,_, WH ftlld wtth l1Je Coun-
Wllh Iha term• Of his bid. The proceeds of lh• dMck accompanying 1ny ec:coptld STAT& 0, CAL.,OltNIA l'Olt Dec11Hd ty Cler1t of Orange County on May 3. lt7l ** M E RC u RY SAVI N G 8 propooal 111111 ba ..... , .. on Ille purct1111 prlu or, If •llCll ..,_. Is accepled ' TN• COUlfTY OP ORA.... NOTICE II HEIU!BY OIVl!N to Ille l'lllN
but not pwfOrmed, unlop IUCll l•llure ot performance >11-'I be caused by any act No. A-1'174 crtdltora of tl)a •-named dtc9dtnt l'vbllsllld ONnae Coatt Diiiy 'lto.!.t or omlulon of the dl1trlcl, shill then be ret1..lotd by t61d TrHsurer for the bonOflt E•talt ol llONALO LEAVY, Dac:Hlod. that IN .....-M "8Yltlt r:1alm1 ao1ln1l the Mn IO, 17• 24. SI, Im l17S.n -.Id loan 1$SOClltiofl
of "'• dlatrtct. The dJack actolll,."ylng MCll llnec:<:tP!ed ~I Wiii be retiimld NOTICE IS HEllllY GIVEN to the ,aid ~I .,. ..-trtd to file tlllm, PUBLIC N,,,...CE promptly. crtdltors Of tllt_......,. N'!'td declolMt wtttl 11111 ~ -.cfwrl, In 11\t offlc• vu
Ct.IANGE IN TAX EX8MPT STATUS! At 111Y tlm.-. Ille bonds 1rt !hit 1ll ......... M ..... r:11lm•-IMtllle lfffltclfl'tt,of ,fhe ..... anttll«I court, or1 ---------~---
tn•ld tor .. lvtrY 1he •-fut' bidder nlay dflafllnn and wllhdrlW lhe -Uld ,..._, ~ .... lrld to Ille -· It inMftt. -· Wltll 11\t n"8Hry l'ICTITIOUI IUllNHS pout 11 Iha ln..,_I ~ by prlilale holden fl'Din ...... ef the uma lllld wl"1 11111 ~ ¥6uchors,· hi !be olllce "°'ldlftir 16 tM \ll*"'lllltd 11 the ofllff NAMI STAT9~•11T
character ahlN bl cHcllNd ..... taxable lilalma under ~I ...... el Illa -ol tllt -.. -......... of ..... --· PAUL A. HANNA, Al· The folltWlne .,..._,. ... ""'"' tu laws, ti-by a 1'111'"8 of the Internal R-~ 0r by • dtcl•lon of 19 pr1..t tt>om. -11111 ftlC8Mlll'y lllmlY al Lew, Hl!W jAw Bulldfnll, '1t IMlslntll ••
any ,_II court. Of' -.n ... lleclartd l1x1ble, ., be rt<IUll'ed to.. be !Ikon Into ~~J""os"'Enlt"M.ed .. FEthalNB .. Er:'o .... 17111 srr.at. <:et•• -· Calilarnl1 DANA LIGHT. 3"' llrtll SI,...,, Juli. account In computing lllY fodenl 1-tans, by 1119 i.ms of 1ny *1ertl "' ••• ... _,_,, .PH = t1127, 'lllNc:h It 1llt lllec* of buslllHS at ioi. N"°"" ... ell. C1Jllornl1 tl660.
Income IU llW --=Md __....t to Ille,.,." 11111 tlOlfe•. 204 w~ •• ·~ Ori ~~lv~-:107 •• ~ ~ '" tit _ .... ptrtllnl.., TH! MEllllDIAN GllOVI'. • L&OAI. Ql'INIONi The unqualHlld Ot11n1on ot O'Mel--r & M'fl", 1t-lltleh,..., """a•-_,, 1 •-to the .. 11i. t11 Ml4 ftdadent, wit'*' tout C1lllornla ~ WOO llrtll
tomeys, epprmftl the v111c111y of 11141 ""'* wlll be fUr11~ aucc-ful Mdffr of""''""' el the ~•"91 .'..M!.'~J!' ~ l!lenfht 1flill' 11tt·flnl ;ubucallon of ""-ltrott, Sul.It Im. NtWPort le1cft.
al or prior to the di'-ol dillvwy of the toondl, •I the~ of the dlltrlct. A ten ...,,tlnl~ "~ "•~"' --1<1. C1t1ton1l1 t26tO. copy of Ille legal oplnlOn c1r11fltd by Iha County AUllltlir by ftll faalmlle 1l9na-~· wlllllnof nJ ""\".:9 tll* Ille fin! Dlled May ;Ill ,,,, · TUltCO of CALll'OltNIA, INC. an
IUN wlll be prlntod on the beck"' _.. bond wllhoul _, '9 lllt •-fut bidder, ... ~2u,.Jlotl • ,'..::' • MAllOI SUSAN SVCHA~O Arizona C°"COll«t. -Nortll c:-··· 11 r.<lut<d lft hi• bid. ' ~ -MOY • .... EMClllrt• Of IM Wiii ~hOtnl•, Arliona, l.!012.
HO· Ll1'1GA't10N CEltTIFICAT•• Al Ille time ., Pl'"*",.., eM dtllWY LtullnlA.trlAavV•tor of. ....., ... .. ..... .. "'" --dtcldeftl Thi. bull-•• ~uclld ..., a Ctr• of llfd llOtllll m. IUCCltllfUI b-will be ~ wtlll 1 e«ttflcat. !hat tilere Mml • "~ " ,,.. "' ,,,. PAU&. A. .HMlllA POl'ltlaft, .. no 1111 .. nan panlllno •lftcllno HM Vllldlty of IM banch. -nemtd -·· All....., 11 LBW THI! MEltlOIAN GROUP CiVEN by ...... ti 1119 ....... of """"'11of• ot Or-County, Calffornla, JOSll'H M. fllNHltO .._ l.IW I--Wiiiiam G. H ... n. Pr .. ldlnl ...... ,,,..., 1!. 1m ~ ~ Dr .. IUI .. 7111 41t .... 17111 Slntt Thi• .,.,_, WIS llled wllll IM Coun·
W. • JT .IOHM · 11..,..-t Medi cMlt. nMI, Cetta fMali, C1fti.nill !f'U17 ty Clerk ot Orange County on May lG, ~Cleft 111 Ot'anga C9uttty1 Callflll'ftle, Md Tth 1"41....... Tall (7141 ... 1M1. ltn '
M -Oft ol 1111 rd ot lvplrvleora -.ot. AH......, fw Mtllllllltral• AtNnia'f IW I ..... · ,.atU ISIEALl lly June A'4o\atldW, D1tMY l'ubl11Md Or-C-Da!IY Piiot, l'ubllsilW era.. Clia1t Oally l'llof. Pubtlsllld Orange C.... Dally Piiot, llMIMll'l'ld Orange c..st Dally l'llot, Me'/ ii • .,... ,_ 1, 1m MJO.n fNl'f 10, 11, :u. ai, 1'n 1"7-73 ,,.., al. tnd J-7, 1~ 21, .,,, 1'7t-7l May 11, 2•. a1 -June 7, ma 1'6WI
> A
NOW OPEN
EVERY SATURDA'V
,.,·~. ,. 10 t\. f'Vl.-cl f--"J. M. , ·, . -· '~ ,,
I ---------'1' 1!•1 ·1
• 1 • o;.n Meft..Thlri. 9 1.m.-4 PAio! Frl 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
IUPIA PAU Mercuty Savings BldQ., Valley View It Ulcolft 1t
llUll11llTOIC llACH Mercury SavlnQt lldg., Edlngtt at 9tach '* * Tmlll Mercury SaVlngs Bldg .. livlnl Blvd. It NewportAvt, * * ~ llOIA·PllLLEIUON Mercury Savings lldg., lm,erltl Hwy. It lllrllor '* * Mercury laWIG• Bldg~ Avalon llvd. It Biii Diego Frwy. *
**********************
DAILY PILOT
Widow
Sets lD s:
$380,000
. ~ ~~. ,(\J)'J) -
A widow :w:ho .signed up fer
~05~es~frun~
after her huabmi's death has
filed a $3Sl,OOO damap suit
charafni salesmen took ad-
vantage <I. her lonellneu.
Agnes Forsyth, 52, San
Francisco, charged that studio
(CONSUMER)
employes ''Une<mclonably and
fraudulently" took advantage
of her while she was "lonely
and ol pliable mind" follow-
ing her husband's death.
Her sult, filed in San Fran-
cisco &lperlor Court, said she
rec:elved Ill hours of lessons
tmder the contract.
e 'J'laelt Cla•rge
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Walter
Hempel, M, and Edgar C.
Baillie, 50, were dwqed with
grand theft and corporate
securities violations in the
operation of a real estate sales
and development firm.
Hempel was identified by
the district attorney's office u
brotber of Jdm E. Hempel,
chief deputy assistant real
estate coinmWloner for tba
state of Califo.mia. 1 ~~
e Blu Sult ~
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)
Three black barteaders filed • federal court suit against
Golden Gate Ftelda, 1eet1na to
close the racetl'aclt becauae <I.
alleged racist employment
pollcies.
The bartenden said the
track will not even Interview
prospective bartenders unleu
referred by B a r t e n d e r 1
Intenuitlonal Union, IAcal U,
which they alUd refules to
refer blacks.
James E. Gray, 28, Harold
E. Chrisman, 33, and Wiilie
Hanis, 48; all <I. 0.tland, said
in their suit that only about l
peroent ol the local'•
memberahip is black. ·
e BUI St.ii.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
move to require that "pull
dates" ai food p-odtactl be
=i:.5~ mittee on Health.
Assemblyman Henry Wax·
man (!).Los Angelea) ~
ed a vote on h1a bill after It
appeared be did not have the
five votm e band to get the
meuure approved by the mne.
member committee.
A slmllar W&mJlU bill Jut
~ WU not aucce.ruJ.
Waxman's meuure woold
order f.ood peckers to abandon
the use of codes to tell
retailers when the product'a
treahne9s no out and it
should be removed.
e 2 .RearalllN
LOS ANGELES (AP)-~
Wesley Dana Agency and Tri-
dent Enterprises Inc., have
been ordered not to make un-
founded promises to pro.
spectlve modela.
Superior Court J u d g e
Campbell M. Lucu haued the
temporary Injunction against
the f1rms, which are operated
by Michael Lee Degnan.
The lawsuit, brought jolnUy
by the city and state, seeks
the return of money ~
fully collected from custom-
ers.
eAreo Sued
STOCKTON (AP) -A gu
station owner sued AUant1c
Richfield Co. for $1.5 mlDloo,
contendlng the current fuel
shlrtage la pb:)ny and due to a
"conspiracy" by the oil com-
panies.
Richard Terry says the fuel
shortage wu broutht on In-
tentionally by conspirlnc oil
f.lrms to trlna public JftSSUl'9
in favor of the cootroverslal
Alaska pipeline am ofi4b<n
oil drilling.
Terry, 3.1, said his gas SQP-
ply waa cut off May H when
AUantlc Rlchfteld claimed be
exceeded his allotment ol
20,000 gallons a month. Terry
said hla station did 52,000
galloM of bu3iness from May
1 to May 14, when his puqis
ran dry.
eF ..... OK
SACRAMEN'ro (AP) -A
plan to outlaw flares en
California highways hal been
killed unanimously by the
Senate Transportation Com-
mittee.
Sen. James Q. Wedwwth
CD-Hawthorne), said the flans
are "dangerous and wmeeded
... items that have ou•---.
their usefulnus."
I '
I
/
Thlndi1, May 31, 1'73 ... ____ ,
Gener•I Gener•I
IRVINE TERRACE-$185,000 The Best 3 Bdrm Magnificent view of bay, ocean & Catalina!
Custom quality thrUout thls fine home with $31,950. Boat & camper
3 large bedrooms, formal dining, paneled access. v e r y lovely
family rm & 3 baths. Terrific new sauna off master bath. 3 Fireplaces. Beautiful pool landscaping, park-like.
in private front courtyard. Shown by appt. 2 b a t h s • Forced-air
"Ou 2 ,, heating. Dining room,
: r 8th Year built-ins & dishwasher.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors Fireplace. Large stor-
2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road age area 54().1720
Lovely Setting
$30,500. Secluded rear
living room. 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths. Plast-
ered walls. Formal din-
ing room, Modern kitch-
en built-ins. Fireplace.
Two patios. New car-
peting. 54().1720.
......... I~ I ......... I~
Gener•I
PAINT & SAVE
WESTSIDE 3 Bedroom Free-
doin Home on large tree
studded Jot -needs little
fixin' and paint. Illness
forces we only. 1000 Grove
Pl., C.M. {l-Blk So. ot Vic-
toria on MonrOv:la to Oak -
3 Blks W. to Republic. So.
2 blks to "Gme Pl.)
$23,950
HORSES!!
. . . allowed on this ¥.. acre
ranch with 11111:e custom
home, fenced corral PLUS
a 3 bedroom rental at $200./
mo. Custom home is va·
cant -quick possession. Will
exchange for bay-side du-
plex.
$65,000.
VACANT &
READY
Gnral General
----@1,----
. BRING CALCULATOR AND IMAGINA·
TION. Thi.s 3 bedroom gives a Unique im-
pression from the curb; it's different! And
inside there is unliuuted opportunity for ex·
pressio:n ...:.... ·s'unken living room, central
atrium and formal dining area. Owner set
price at "fixed up" condition iand is about to
start. You shoµld buy now, fix it up yourself
and save. Fixed · up price is $81,500 4Uld
that's fair. · "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" · ·
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-49101-----------------Owner anxious! .Redecorated UN19UI HOMl'S OF NEWPORT IEACH, '45•6500
A llstlnt of Nod.Irie Croul Gentral General
2,000 SQ. FT. -EASTSIDE C.M.
4 AND FAMILY ROOM -Only $37,500!
Double garage plus carport. Huge 114'xl53'
R-2 lot with many lovely trees & shrubs.
Here's a lot of house! For complete details,
CALL 546-5880
MESA VERDE . '
SHARP 3 BR, 2 BA located on pr~tfy cul-de-
sac, large corner lot with driveway, gate, ··
and pad for boat ·or camper. Lovely shag ·
carpeting and lots of TLC. Well ldscpd, and
3 blocks to all shopping. CALL 546-5880.
-r~ .P'~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
546-5880
Open Eves.
General
-----~-. SIMPLY
BEAUTIFUL
"SPANISH"
In Mesa Vedre For (the Executive
$42,950. For the large $45,750. Near the Santa
family. 4 bedrooms, 3 Ana Country Club. 3
b.aths. _Huge covered pa-s p a c i 0 u s bedroom
tio. Victory garden & suites. 3 baths. Formal
fruit trees. Lots of room .dinling room. Family
for a pool. Boat.& camp-room fireplace Tile er access. Family room, ' . · fireplace. Formal din-roof. On a .qwe~ cul ~e
ing room. Deluxe kitcli-sac street. Shows like a
en. 540-1720. model home. $40-1720.
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 540-1720
General General
~n&.!Jjfe
3 bedrn'1 &: family rm home
on huge corner lot • room for
boat or trailer, King-size
covered patio & private
yard. Quick possession. Low
down. 744 Center St., C.M.
J27,250.
CALL 642-1771
READY FOR A
TREAT?
~~~--~--~~~
: UNl9UE HOMES OF
LAKE ARROWHEAD
No such office, not yet! But if there were
we would certainly list this beautiful A
Fhlme mountain home just across from the
Country Cluo in Blue Jay. Four bedrooms, ·
3 baths, 3rd of an acre lot and Realtors in
the Arrowhead arE:a are . excited a'l)out this
one! It's completely furnished. Priced at
$42,000 and the Doctor is anxious!
201 NORTH GRASS VALLEY ROAD, LAKE ARROWHEAD
UN19UE HOMES OF CORONA DEL MAR, '75-6000
A lhtl119 of Phil lrown
This greenbelt l o c a t e d
Carmel model in Harbor
View Homes spells real
comfort. Corner lot, three
bedrooms, 2 baths, lovely
family room, f i r ep la c e
formal dining room, a
gorgeous kitchen t w o REAL TORS
private patios. Lovely l~~~!""~~~!!ii~~i!ii~~~~~~~
up grad ed . de c o ra t i n g General Genera1
thruout. Priced to sell at I ;~;;;;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;; 69,900. Fee Land -Callilll
673-85fi-O for appointment. WATERFRONT CONDOMINIUM
OPENTIL9•TT'SFUrvTOBE.NICE! • WITH BOAT SLIP ·-New 2-bedroom. 21/2
1. QUALITY BUil T EAST SIDE
General
· Maliit -.--rar s. . . . m -""
~. • • • • • • • • ; • 52.S .. 549 '
General
~-Siii/ti. ~MO~
REALTORS.
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR. CALF.
644·7270
•••••••••••
' . '
e FOREVER VIEW .
Watch the boats by day and harbor lights
by night from your living room. The ULTI·
MATE in FEE ownership, luxury on-the-
water living. 2 Bedrooms, 2 bath condo in
, prestigious CHANNEL REEF. Pool, securi-
ty guard, boat slip available. CALL FOR
·appointment, $95,000.
••••••••• e MOVE IN NOW ,
into this two story, custom built, with many
deluxe extra features. Open beam ceilings,
fireplace, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, .GOURMET ·
KITCHEN, built-in sewing center and study.
Two decks-plus 2 landscaped terraces. It's • ·
a real value at .................. $79,500.
•••••••••
::t.1foi:iY\ >-·:-. ... in this 18'x36' heated POOL. Great EAST-
SIDE location! Close· to Westcliff shopping. ,.
3 Bedroom, convertible den, 2 baths, fire-
place, plus ROOM TO ADD ON. 10% down -
owner will carry 10% -2nd T.D. $39,500.
Call for appointment.
I •••••••••
3 bedroom Spanish beauty
with Imported Italian tile
floors, gorgeous kitchen and
family room, formal dining
area, beautiful tr o p i ca I
atrium, wet bar plus much
much lll<Jre. Squeaky clean
to boot. This is a "m11$t
see". Priced at only $46,500.
Call NOW 842-2535.
PRESTIGE ·w A "f.ERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
LINDA liSLE WATERFRONT
Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of
main channel.-Soft colors, rich wood panel-
ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel-
ing. Waterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath,
sitting area, view deck .......... $295,000.
i ·· ! batfls, ready for oceupany. Fuii price $87,500
., CLEAN, SHARP 3 BEDROOM, hardwood
floors, fireplace, enclosed patio, new carpets
and fresh paint. Wide, corner lot-walk to
shoppin~. Ju~t listed at $30, 750.
j AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES · i
1 REAL TORS • • • . • . • • • 644-7270 ·
· General General S
LARGE BAYSHORE HOME
Spacious family home near private beach.
Lar~e mstr. suite upstairs. 2 Bdrms. &
family room down. High beam ceilings.
$72,500. Mary Harvey.
NEW LISTING LIDO BAYFRONT
Lovely & immac. 5 BR., 5 ba. home on Nord.
Paneling. Parquet floors. Lots of charm plus
room for large boat. $279,000.
Charlene Whyte.
EXCLUSIVE DOVER SHORES
One of the most delightful homes. 4 Bed-
rooms -family room -living room with
beamed ceiling. All this & a pool & view.
$139,500. Eileen Hudson.
NIGUEL SHORES -PRIVA'l'E
Charming, immaculate 3 BR., dep, near
beach, tennis. Move-in cond. Completely
furnished. Priced to sell now! $74,900.
Bob Yorke.
IT STEALS THE SHOW
Enjoy bayfront view from this tw<>-story 6
BR., 4 bath nautically oriented home with
pier & slip. $37~,ooo -Comp. remod.
Gary Knox.
·DOVER SHORES OPPORTUNITY
Make offer! Owners have purchased smaller
home. 4 BR., 3th baths, formal dining room
& family room w /fireplace. Fee land. Kath·
ryn Raulston.
833-0700 ~ ,Banker
644-2430 ~
550 NEWPORT CENT R DR., N.B.
For Complete Information "LEASE 'LEASE I .
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: OPTION, Ol'BUY"
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Baysid• Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161
General
VIEW HOMES
LOVELY MONTEGO MODEL .
4 bedrooms, family room, formal dining; carpets,
drapes, super landscaping, covered patio, wood deck.
HARBOR VIEW
REALTY
833..0780 .
HOMES
~~~HERITAGE
•. -• REALTORS
540-1151
Open Eves.
MACNAB
IRVINE
BRIGHt.-BOLD & BEAUTIFUL
Un11s\lal desigb in this dramatic 4 BR Big
Canyon Custom Home overlooking lakes
& golf course. Lois Miller 642-8235. (~) ·
ONE OF FEW
available lots in Big Canyon -will afford
you 125' of Fairway living. $62,500. Carl
Butler 642-8235. (S26)' . . . .
IRVINE TERRACE VIEW HOME
Picturesque 2 BR. + den, pool home.
Ocean, Bay & Fashion IslanaViews • • •
one of a kind! Located on q,Qet streel
$74,9$0. Tom Queen 644-6200. ($20)
[Irvine I
901 Dover Orlv. 942•1235
114' MacArt IU•l200
~t lt!c!I• ca lfornl• 12111
"
DOVER SHORES -VIEW
5 BR. -pool -Bay View $159,000
. TOWNHOUSE-AIR CONDITIONE
3 BR.-furnished-Community pool-$32,900
.: .HARJ()R VIEW HILLS
3 BR-family rm.-ocean view, pool $95,000
We have listings of many other homes
Call us for your needs
CORBIN-MARTIN
Call Anytime
$31,-000 I: $31,500
Call Je:tzy Hardin
or Joe Wilhite
714:~
MANICURED
BEAUTY .
536,450
located on a large cul-de-sac
lot with boat room. It has
4 bedroOms. a lovely ef.
ficient lcltchen. fonnal din-
ing room and pretty shag
throug:hoot. You'll want to
see this on <>day while it
Is stnt availabl ! 847-$)10.
OPEN 'I'll.. W • lt'S•/UN 10 IE NICE/
~E ltEAL
TATERS ___J
.·
uy a
Border
Bargain
Every classified want ad in the DAILY
PILOT appears in every edition. every
day. That means your ad will be seen
in papers delivered to homes and sold
from newsracks from border to border
all along the Orange Coast • • • all the
way from
Seal Beach
to
San Clemente
You
Get
It
All
OT JA :::J!.l
Huntington ·Beach
Fountain Valley
Costa Mesa
Newport Beach
.. L~gona Beaeh
Irvine
-Saddlebaek
San Clemente
·Capistrano
(Plus the daily
newsrack edition.)
,,
For One Price
With A
Classifted Ad
Phone 642-5678
YOU CAN CHARGE IT, TOO
Thu~. May 31, i-.13 DAILY PILOT J ---. --. -~ -
G ,.,
;;;:;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j"=========-OWN E R rel t> ca t ed · 1---------· I PresUgloua 4 bdrm. Shake CAMEO SHOIIS
Outstanding conte.mporary designed four
bedroom ho.me with magnificent white water
and canyon view.· Three unusually arranged
separate bedroom wings. Lovely indoor plant-
ing with skylight. ·sparkling pool and relax·
ing sauna. Gracious living room, dining room
and breakfast room arr~geqi~nt. Three car
garage includes boat storage. Next to private
beach. Call 675-7225
OUR 24th YiAR
Offering "rvlc• only experience
~n provide
EASTSIDE COSTA M A
Six 1-bdrm. furnished units; one of the sharp-
est complexes in the area. A garage for each
unit; property always rented;. located 2220
Elden Ave. Please drive by & call us. $95,000
root, encloled 11&tlo. Gas
built-Ins. FamDy • r m ,
CclM Duplex fireplace. Fruit t re e s .
Beautiful brk $ 3 7 , 5 0 0 .
Cute 3 BR, :I Ba front hou e _962_' _-1_373 ______ _
w1rncd priv patio A: yard. OWNER moving. Park-like
Immed. OCCUp'. 2 BR, 1 Ba yeard. 4 banns. 2 bath .
rear house, xtra wide 42' Patio. Dining rm. family COUNTRY CLUB
lot. rm. Picture wlndoWll. Fore-ATMOSPHERE
ed air heat: Must see! brk 4 Bedrms. 3 baths, 11,i yean
$31,500. ~1 new, Approx 2100 sq ft, 1or-- . ! . I •, ,\ •
I ' . I \ ~ ' ( .1 O'tl-'NE.R leaving. Cathedral mal dining, gorgeous car·
beamed ceiling. 4 bdrms. pets, drapes. elec kitch, sep
FHmily m1, fireplace. Large laundry m1. Choice toc.
l'Overed patio. Built-ins. quil't cul-de-sac street. De-
NumC'rous fruit trees. brk signed for the particular buy-
FOUR BEDROOMS
-$28.750
Completelr redecorated In-
side and out· which makes It
better than new, because
it's seasoned .. Tilt? Queens
kitchen boasts a Corning
range top you can wipe
clean like · wfping · th e
counter top. Bit-In Bar-B-Q
on pltio, sprinklers and
fully grown landscaping for
easy care. Hurry and call
now.
Real Estate
7682 Edinger Ave.,
842-4455
Open ev~s.
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
·AREA ·-.
CambridCJe Homes
Modern, shake roof. 2 car
gar. 3 Bedrm, H~ bath,
double fireplace, dining/
family rn1, new carpets.
Corner (can put boat or
trailer storage). $42.950, As-
sume approx. $32.000. V.A.
loan. Assume V.A. loan
balance.
ONE-OF-A-KIND
EASI'SIDE 3 bedroom & din-
ing room, Big rural style
kitchen 18' x 20', big yard
with dog run & boat door
off alley, covered patio.
Only $32,950. Excellent fi·
nancing. e CALL ANYTIME e
646-3928 or Eve. 541-9416
Lochenmyer
Realtor
BROADMOOR -WITH VIEW
A prestige location for the growing family.
4 Bdrm. home with convert. den & SY.I baths
... also, a 3 car garage. Convenient to beach,
shopping & schools. $115,000 .
* DRIVE-B"*-
Lovely family home in
Corona Highlands. You own
the land. 3 Bdrms.. 1 ~
baths, brand new carpets;
paneled llvlng rm.: lots of
storage. View. All this for
$62,500
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
~o.ono. N2-256t Cl'. CALL 968-4456.
As1umable 7.2% Ln
Prime F'ow1tain Valley art'a, _ . $28,000.
close to schools, parks • .> Minutes to beact1. Co\111-
shopping Cf'nters. 2 BR, 2•~ yard enu-y. 3 bedrms. love-
BA Townhouse, cust drpS. ly shag carpets. Beautl!_ully
upgraded crpts, priv patio ldsepd, lovely. pe.uo. e.l r====~=========----=---.-. FEE OR LEASE HOLD w1gas BBQ, 20:<22 ram rm steal. Convemenl nbrtiood.
1
4 BDRM, 2\2 BA, ram rm, w/gas fplc, 2 car garage CALJ.. 968-4456.
modern kitchen w/self clng ' /elec d~r opener, sauna, COUNTRY KITCHEN oven, m i crow a r e , Kit-pool, teruus, tot lot.
chenaide dshwhr. New crpt. SOUTH BAY REAL TY Family problrms · priced ~========~;::=:==:;:======-! $72,000 lease hold. JRVINE 962-3002 * 968-TITI under market. 4 Bednns, i TERRACE. Owner 673-3007 eves: 968-4004 bAths, PV stone fireplace,
---------BY 1 t ff · c 11 formal dining, block fence, owner, s o enng. ozy ~ssumable 7.2 Yo Ln heavy shake roof. Prime Jo. PRIVAT£ BrG BEAR corner cottage, 3BR, 2BA + Prtme Fountain Valley area, C"ll'nn n"'IU' Do""'n., '---.
Pr. ed only $9 600 00 · • nu 1100 sq ft unit. 2BR, IBA .. -"' -·-u.,., CLUBHOUSE ic at ' . . its & frplc. Top qua 1 it Y • close to schools. parks, way & shopping. CALL
AND POOL hard to beat! Just short $'lG.75Q. 5 0 0 Poinsettia, shopping centers. 2 BR, 2•,:, 893-8533. walk to tile lake in this va-644-7Jll or 646-9079 BA. cust drps, upgraded
General
Why not live whei·e your cation land. Ben Franklin crpls, priv patio w/gas BBQ, $30,000.
FOR THE children can enjoy the neigh-fireplace and the living e SACRIFICE e 20x22 fam rm w/gas fplc, 2 4 Lovely bedrms, 2 baths,
bol'llOOd. Large 2 story 4 room is 15' x ~·. Phone to-2 BR; pool, 2 car gar. car garage w/elec door tone-on-tone shag. Jack le SWINGING bedroom home with plush day for location and more R-2 Lot. Only $56,500 opener. sauna. community Jill model Stardust. Hard-
carpets thru-OUt H 0 m e info1·mation. 586-0222. Occanview Realty 673-S500 pool, tennis, tt>t lot. wood floors, bllins. block SINGLE shows and iooks like a RUNNING SOUTH BAY REAL TY wall fence. Our best listing
$16 900 model. Act now. 842-2535. SPRINGS Cost• Men 962-3002 * 968-7177 at this price. Owner trans-
• -Price only $44,500. eves: 968-4004 ferret!. CALL. 893-8533. $136 PER MONTH OPENTIL9•"'SFUNTOBENICEI Two-bdrm. cabin on ~Im ?f $250 • VETERANS •
Not a condo, cute & beautiful I -! the World. All electric kit-RENT 'TILL YOURS $30,950. _ new carpeting & the · chen adjoining the living Heated 15'x40' 1:ustom pool, 4 . POOL _ POOL
furnishings remain with this .... ~~~I· I room,. also a large wood-] + GUEST + bedrms, 2 baths. Only 3 Bednn 2 baths formal
home. Perfectly situated on · · ~rrung fireplace. The lot $.12•500· NO down. JlEAL dining ~m lots of declc-a large lot & the gardens . is over JO,OOO sq. ft. Phone POOL ESTATE FAIR, 536-25Sl. ing Priced for quick sale us today !or location oo f 2•L ba · · · are lovely. WALKER & ---------586-0m ·IRON GATES to South Sea 5 BR, 24 sq. t., n · CALL 842-93n.
LEE Realtors, 546-0022. O\llNER anxious. Large · Island paradise with wood bltns, DW, crpts, drps, Jplc,
kitchen with bu i 1 t -ins. deck patio, swaying palms 2 story, $42•900· ~ FRANCISCAN *6 UNITS* Heated & filtered pool. 4 and volcanic rock gardens. 3 Huntln.....,n Be•ch FOUNTAINS.
"". bdrms. 2 baths. Rear living bedroom inclu<ling s p 1 i t -;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;;;;;;'w;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: Spiral staircase, 4, bednns
, . rm. Dining rm. Covered level master suite, separate • plus parent's retreat. New
two triplexes on 1 lot. All patio. brk S39,500. 97S-2390 guest facility with private COUNTRY CLUB carpets, new paint, custom
2. BR. units w/mod. bltin OWNER moving. Rich I y entrance off pool, cozy den, drapes. Shows better than
kitchens. Income $920/mo. paneled. Corked entrance. 4 used brick fireplace, rugged 4BR, 3BA, custom designed a model. CALL 842-53n. Roo~ for. 2 or possibly 3 bdrm~. 2 ·baths. Patio. beam ceilings. Gourmet HW pool, Seaclift Golf
more. .units. Out-Of-town-Family rm, fireplace. Rear kitchen with built-ins. Ban· Course. Walk to the ocean. 2 EXECUTIVE
owner needs ~med. sale. living rm. Large yrd. brk PRICE $26,950 quet formal dilling. Step Firepl's, 3 car gar, 1rg fam TWO STORY ~:~tO~S-8424, $37,462. 540-1:io· YOUNG FAMILIES l!:"ing~~~~~te~~~ ~";· 1:F~A~· s:~1·s~~~ 3 Bednns up, 1 down ~or
---------OWNER leaving. Best loca-. . . dance ""villion and kl self~lean oven. Separate privacy, 3 bath. s.. family tion. Walking to schools .. 3 Will find this to be the per. .--spar -~ ADULT DELUXE bdrms, 2 baths. Family rm, feet starter home. This 3 1ng pool. Owner desperate. lawidcy rm, gas B-B-Q in room, f~rmal dinmg room,
HOME & .BUSINESS bed TAKE ADVANTAGE Call f1're rina low malnt ldscpg huge llvmg room with ca-fireplace. Covered Patl·o. room ho.use is o.n a 18:1"1:e 64c n303 · -.... ' ed CONDO ,,.., upgraded w/w crpts & th.edrel ceilings, UJJKl'lld 4 Bedroom, 2 baths, double Forced-air heat. b r k comer Jot 'irl a qwet neigh-custm drps. Lrg master thrUout. Assume 6'1l. % loan.
garage. $30,000. -Best of In Fountain Valleys finest $34,900. 540-~720 borhood close to schools. bedl·m w/His & Hers sep Extra large home ln super
terms. community -near new City Call today 842-2535. wardrobe. First time on nbrhood. CALL 842-4451. LARGE FAMILY? H~ll. Model unit, gas BBQ OPENTILO •IT'SFU1'/TOBENICEI mkt Sho b t 1 5 Bedroom, 2 baths. Close to with huge bonus !hobby) 4 Bedrm 2 Bath ! $69,sOO. wn Y app on y. APPROXIMATELY
shopping. $32,liOO. toom over large double . I' 1/3 ACRE
3 NBedEED Sllo~C URtul1TY1 ? ~:lt~F;~nlf ~in~1:: FRE$E2D70M50HOOME . --2-BE~D-R_O_O_M__ co,rner ard1ot wlth4 Bednn2 separate2
. room . me . Y. car-546-0022: . . • • . f6" .... 71 ' - ) 546 11 OJ P ay Y s. s, peted, recently pamted. , Big corner lot with an added HOUSE ON R·Z ""''" " rm. • baths, brick fireplace, elec
Large 'enclosed. sunporch, Copper Kettle family room off the kitchen. kitcb with dishwasher, Int.er.
fenced front' & back yard, K" he · This model is scarce and the LOT ASSUME HOUSE of GLASS com, fire alarm, water--room for boat. Qulet street. ltc ft · "PRICE • IS • RIGHT." Fant as t l c UNIVERSITY 1 softener. Many more extras.
$27,500. Warm 8t glowing, clieerful Who·s first? PARK IC>Cation. Chancellor FHA LOAN Spanish house-o!-glQSS. H1&h Only one-of-a-kind. Terms
Roy McCardle Realtor frplc, lmmac, 3 BR, 2 BA, Home • Popular 2 bedroom This Costa '.Me8a ·house with cathedral celtinp, roaring arranged to suit. CALL
· 1810 Newport Blvd •• C.M. manicured grounds. Wik to Newport plus den, or 3. b. e d -beamed ceilings and huge ~~~ A~:08:,; pa~io u :i.~ 842-4451.
548-7729 schls & shoPlJ. T-his won't •t room model.. ·Beautjfully back yard is an ideal starter chen with soda fountain bar
ATIENTJON
INVEsTORS
last. Hurry! Only $35,500. decorated, 2 fireplaces, wet home. Note the FHA as-0.,,,,,.,.,,, Owner/bkr • • bar + 1 ,,,..._, d and view of r a m b 11 n g ,,.,.,...,,.,,.,, · F11rv1ew · .. separa,e a~.~,, an sumable loan + R2 zoning grounds. Large master sulte Corona del Mar 64La· 811 atnum: ott maste~ bedrm. Priced at $25,500. For de: with private bath. Man-size .,.. Be quick on tlus one -tails call 646-71n d Dup. lex ) $45,500. CALL 5 4 5 • g 4 2 4 , • en views flower gardens
Great potential! 5 separate (1nytime SouthCo Reakors. OPEN TIL g • "'S FUN ro BE N/CEI and courtyard. Right out of
homes, all In gOO<kondition, Here is hol\le an!i income ~ "HOUSE & GARDENS" on R4 lot. Located near pro-in tltis most sought after COMME RC. IAL LOT magazine. 6 Blocks to beach, I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'
posed Marina. Listed at area. Close to stropping, ·ON COAST HWY. on quiet cul-de-sac among
1
________ _
$100,000. Owner says make B}llple parking, ~th an ex-NEWPORT HEIGHTS NEWPORT BEACH exclusive exec. homes. Un-HUNTINGTON offei:: ·or present trade. cellen~ rental recxml with ., , ~-fl T d believable price or $32,500. sU13. · long term tenants. Each uni.t CUSTOM 45 x. 20 pool In a ~ or ra e ----------HURRY! Inspect . today.
has . three spacious bed-~pletely private yard go $17,500 CATHEDRAL CEILING BKR 962-5511. SEACLIFF
rooms and 1% baths, built-WJth this 3 bed~m home on George Williamson family room w/raised hearth WITH POOL
in kitchens Bl)d separate one of the .choicest streets Re•ltor 548-6570 fi~e~lace, great for enter· su~ SHARP . laundry areas. ShOWJI by ap-in Newport Heights. Bftins, taining, and room for pool-r'll:I\ Here ~s a .beautiful 3 BR 2
pointment. A great buy at firepl· and treehouse add to $17,000-NO MORE table too, leads to a romantic $24..000. BA home, 2 flrepl's • 1 in
.••••.••••.•••.••••• $82,500. the •charm. Call now Very clean .3 br/den & work swimming pool in low main-Here 1.t 's 'ol'·-·. 3 BR, clean-fam rm & 1 in master BR,
C F C I rth 6'6-7221. shop in rear. Lots of tenance yard. Living room ' ,. ru> step-down ~hi rm w/forml
• • 0 eSWO Y · privacy with chaiJ1·link has separate fireplace. Walk as-a·pin. Real nice area. All din rm. Just super clean, and Realtor~ 640-0020 0ntu9' fence around this charm-to schools from this 3 BR elec kit, fonnl din, front rm, delightful yellolf & gold )iiiiiiiiliiiiiiifijjiiijiii.-iiiiiiiliiiiiiiijjiiiii · ing home! Price is firm -2 BA home. , •· 2 BA & big bedrms. Patio, shag crptg. Xlnt 1rg: home I 21 but easy financing. CALL FOR DEI'AILS-2 car gar and all fenced ft11· ent.!rtaining, nr 2 golf ~ WALKER & LEE Realtors larwin rtalty inc yard. $1,250. down If. pa,ymts courses & country club .
·DON'T PINCH
YOURSELF
(You're Not Dreaming)
But You Can
SELL
WIT.H
IT
A
DAILY P·ILOT
WANT AD
For Fast Service &
Expert Assistance
YOU CAN
DIAL
DIRECT
642-5671
~ I I 546-0022 968 4405 · (24 ' hrs) less 'than rent, $69,500.
1733 Westcliff Dr., N.B. EASTSIDE MANSION IJ I' 1llage Re~I btate "SPECULATORS" 2800 Sq. ft. 4 BR, 3 BA, for. HARBOR BLVD. 140' tront-
mal dining, lam rm plus age, potent C-1. Fine 3 BR 531·5IOD ( =.J 531·5800 531•5110 .< :::J 531·5100 den. Death In family forces house, pool, $38,500. Fixer Cattail'? on huge R-2
lot. Wooded setting. $17,500.
Owner . financing • . . sub-
onl ination OK! Two 1D
choose 'from! Submit your
trades. Agent 645-8400.
"White Elephants" over-
runnin~ your house? Turn
them mto "Cash" ... sell
them ttiru a Daily Pilot
classified ad!
Just Say
·'charge It'
WHEN
sale. Ni~e years new, $44,700 Newell Assoc., -$23 500 FUL.L PRICE run pnce. Assume 7'h% Brokers '
Gov't loan. Call Bkr 645-6646. 481 N rth Coast High 3 BEDRM, 2 car gar, c;orner
* NEWPO o way lot near schools and shop-RT HTS. * Laguna: Beach <n4) 494-6594 ping. Submit your terms.
Sharp duplex on R-3 lot 846-1351 or 847-8531
You own the land BY Owner -5 br, w/fam.
$42,500 rm. 3 ba, Island kitchen, ap-Gib Walker Realty prox, 2400 sq. ft., bltlns,
3355-G Via Lido, N'pt Beach patio, Prof. land s c pd ,
* 675-5200 * ~~~/fy. ~~2 loan, n o
* 15 UNITS* BY Owner, sharp 3BR. on REPOSScSSIONS
One & two BR. units. Court-West Side, Jrg lot, fruit : ·/Jr information and location
yat'd entry. Carports for trees, quiet street. prlnc. or these FIIA & VA homes,
BACHELORS &
BACHELORmES
·AnN:
Why rent when you can own
your own Condo Y{ I th
payments cheaper than
rent, and get the tax shelter
to boot. Call us now for full
details.
C WALl<f:R & LEE
each apt. Near shopping. only. $26,900. 953 Union Ave cor.tact •
No vacancies! $175,000. 642-7501 ' Real Estate --GEM COLLEGE PARK 3 BR, KASABIAN 7682 E~Ave ..
1610 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. Anthonk Pool, HIF, l~ BA, Real Est•te 962-6644 Open eves ttn 8:30
REALTORS 642-4623 needs o\'ing care but only OWNER leaving. 4 bdrms, 2 WINNER'S CIRCLE $32,000. Exel. Kingaard baths. Close to the beach. Back B•y Real Estate '642-2222 Rear living rm, family rm, Thl~ one is ~o. 1, at $37,500.
FOR sale by owners, GI loon fireplace. Dining rm , '.J'hlS large smgle stocy 3 BR
BRAND NEW HOMES at 6%, will take 2nd. Mesa built-ins. brk $ 2 9 , 9 O O. is extremely sharp. Lovely
del Mar corner Jot. 3 BR & 962-5566 ldscpg front & back. If
2 BA, beautifully lndscp'd at OWNER sacrillce. Richly Yo u ' re f u s s y , ca 11
Great Eastslde Location $35,5000. Alter 6 PM, 557-40n paneled. No wax floors. 4 PERFORANCE on this one
PLACING
A WANT AD
IN THE
252, 262, 274 · 22nd St., CM MESA Verde super sharp 4 bdnns. Fa m 11 y rm, ___ _:84.;;.7:...;-3584:=.::..:~---
,, Large 3 BR. 2 BA, fam rm, Br + family rm, freshly fireplace. Built-ins, dining BY OWNER, s pa r k I in g
(pie. Approx 1800 sq. ft. painted & crptd. $51,500. By rm. Covered enclosed patio. Dutch Hav~n Marina. 3 br,
Crpts, drps, lndscpd, fncd. owner 545-4954 brk $37,200. 962-8865 2 ba, tam rm, all elec .kit.,
f
ORANGE ·
COAST
>.
DAILY PILOT
JUST DIAL
Ali included. 10% Down .•. --~· -------LOVE ITI I many x tra s choice 7% % Int. Drive by ! ! ! ! OWNER, 3. br., 2 ba., cpts, neighborhood ~xt to new
646-9432 or 645-6111 drps, patlo, clbhse/pool, and you will when you see city park. Call 847-5170,
BY OWNER, 3 br, trplc, Cloae to schools. 545-8038 this neat-as-a1>ln 3 BR. 2 $33,990.
red Id EHt Bluft BA + lrg bonus. Lovely1 ...:..:.:.:..:..:..:_ _____ . __
cove patio, new tchen, covered patio with firepit. OWNER .anxious. Bnck &
640--0l6G or 640--0227. . *_5_B_R_._3_B_A_,_2_f_lre_p_l_accs-. Bonus & patio wired for wrought-Lron accents. 4
B•lbo1 l1l1nd • 3-car garage, large family stereo dishwshr sprinklers bdr:ms. 2 . baths. Patio. rom $83Jl00 644-5086 and a' well-kept' low maint Built-Ins, dining. nn . Boat * BRAND NEW * · front & rear yard. $36,950. acceRs. Forc.-ed air heal. brk
Drive by this beautiful, new _E_l_T_o_ro_______ for PERl'"ORMANCE ...:.$.:.:33.:.:.•000:.:..:....·-------
duplex; 3 bdrms.1 2 ba. up & ARIZONA OWNER Must sell 847-3584 OWNER desperat~. Large
l·bdrm., 1 bath aown plus 2 3BR 2BA fam. rm !4 acre COUNTRY DOLL HO USE play area. Cathedral ceil·
bdrm., 1 bath rear unit. tt-eee gard' en poo. 1 .,; 'th i·t all f 3 Ing. 4 bdrms. Built-Ins. Patio sundeck FA h at ' • · ~ WI sp 1 r ence. Family rm, fireplace. Rear
frpl • • · · e • cond. soft water, AM & PM Bedrms, man size study, living rm. Assumable VA. c., carp. & drapes. A patios. 24572 Corta Cresta roaring w o od -bu rn ln g 1 b $4Q 800 o.,, """"' =~: ;,!~~!& ready Dr, nr El Toro Rd. & fireplace, ranch size kitchen oan. rk, · '"""""""
MORGAN Ri:AL TY _M_u_lr_land_e_._____ with all the latest gourmet LARGE 8 BR atrium home
673-6642 ,7,. i. .. 59 Fountain V•lley appliances, 2 d luxe vanity w/pool, fa.mily + 'formal ~ baths. • $35,750. BK R dlnJflg nn, low maJnt. )lid,
Coron1 del rMr 3 BDRM Condo, by owner,
---------near shoppln , llehools, pool
NEW DUPLEX -Great bay use. Take over FKA. Low In-
view plus extensive green terest payts or new flnan-
belt -$100,000. Prln. only. clng. $24,000. Vcant. Make * 673-9239 * oirer. SJ9.4635, (1) 494-2859.
962-5511 $52:SOO. ~1055 .
3 BR, 2 ba, stone comer Irvine
nreplc., din. rm, Jar. garl---------
· "Make Room For Daddy·· 3 BDRM, 2 BA, prof. 642 5678 I . . . clean out the garage landscaped, fully c r p td .
w/bo&t dOOr, garden & lots SMOG FREE IRVINE
of I.reel. Nr. ewland & Immaculate 2 BR townhouse
Warn r. $34,000. 16m Irby In Walnut Square, air cond ..
Ln., 842-8194. 2 BA, $29,000. Red catpet
BY owner, Franciscan Foun-Realtors. ~
•
1
· · · turn that junk into cash Many extras. $34.995. By
with a Dally Pilot Classified owner. 11605 Marigold Clr,
ad. Call 64H678. 531~
~~~-~-~-~
talns, 4Bll,. 2BA, patio, fam 'I'URTLEROCK Bro dmoor 4
rm, w/spanl h fr p I c . BR. 3 BA, 3 car r, land.
$43,900. 842--8454 $59,000. Owner 8.13->
..........
.
1
IEST BUY IN TOWN • • • $65,000
Enioy your Sund•y brHW•st Ir watch t~e
SaJlboats 90 by. Open beamed ceilings, with
red brick fireplace. 3 BR1 2 Bath. Sp•c:ious
fam. room hH p~rquet floors plus 2nd Fire-
place. Huge decll overlooks city and white'-
w•fer view. Walk to BH c:h. Call for •ppoint-
ment to luy.
Mobil• HofMI For le
Motl' Hine Rentals •
SALES la LEASING
full service facility
Damnar Motor Homes
531 ·6800
305 Aptt. .Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn.
2ND Trust Dffcls
PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. Ally Amount
4. ACRES * Call 675-MM BKR.
Costa MeN Costa Mna
MESA de! Mar -4 BR. * NEWPORT SHORES * Casa de Oro Bltns, new crpts, new paint, 1-sTY. 2 BR, ·conv. den, cpt.
bleed yard. 839 Santla&o. drps, bltins. Pano. 2 car Au, UTILITIES p AID
Refs. $290 per mo. By gar. Avail. June 16th. $325 Compare before you rent
Appt. 54>-7359 Mo., yearly lease Cuatom \'le&Jgned, featuring: ~!1!!!!!!!1!11.11!!!1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ $175-E/slde, .1rg 2 BR house. 3BR, 1-sty. 1% ba, bltns, • Spacious kltqien with in-11.a-.. W _.__. 250 Adul 1 cpt/drpL Patio: 2 car gar. direct l.igb~ Well located comer. Present ...... .-y .... _ Patio, ind. gar. t cp. 1 Avail. 711. $360 Yri7 Jae. • Separate alD'g area
income $1400. per mo, Great WELL est. N.B prof. man infant O.K. no peta. 388 W. Caywood Realty 548-1290 • Home-like storage
Costa Mesa
potentlal • wlU dl~e. Ap. aeekl to borrow $15,000 for Bay, CM ~1317· CUST built home, overlook-•Private patios PINECREEK
CENTURY 21 REAL m 'A'JE :im2BR BDe~Epark~: prox $1.25 aq. ft. 2-4 yrs on 2nd trust deed on ~~R, 2BA, hotme, dbbl ~ar, ing Back Bay in older sec-0 Closed garage w/storage LIVES UP #
"' ' n, ,....,.,y ' UT Roy Mc(:ardle Realtor N.B. home w/$15,(0) equity ~~ mo, ex er. em g tion o1 Blutts. Beaut dee -• M.arble pullman TO ITS NAME •• I 4,Af 794 owner. $16,000 or offer, -will pay max. legal in· Pa i n t e d SC.ml. (DIJlg mirrored walls _ a-yatal e Kmg-sz Bdrms •
..-~7368 aft Spm & wkends 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. terest rate but no points. 646-9666). chandeliers -Jge terr • Pool . Barbecues • sur-Over 500 tall trees 1
1 1000 N. Coast Hwy., uguna 8Hc:h l2x60 Star mobile home. Xlnt 541-7729 'PJin. only. Write Classlfted 5 BR, crpt.s, drps, bltins., w/gu lites, Cantiel & Chat-rounded with plush land· andt rflO lsltream;:ew~th ,----------:,.,,.-----:-:::---::-----=-<.-ond. Awning, carport, frost ad No 890 Daily Pilot PO Swim J b ai $295 fin dra rle IC t ...,,,,. 11Caping. wa e. a s ere Irvine Newport Beach free refrig., $3850. Must be Lots for Sale 170 Box t5so, Costa Mesa, 'eaiil: ~9056 C:: ~4. ., ' mo. ./:ar sie~'. e ~ Adults. No Pets. relaxmg st>tllng for1 moved. See manager to in-92626 644-4652 LARGE 1 BR $185 your spadous new -or
YEAR ROUND spect. 2766 Bristol, CM. EXCHANGE LARGE 2 Br. Encl. garage ~--------365 W. Wilson 642-1971 2-bedroom apartment. Small ' LITTLE CUTI E VACATION HOME 979-3893 lBt T.D. on Newport Heights avail. 1 Child ok, Call 2 BR home, Newport Hgts . pets ok From $170 Furniture
Garden atrium and large PE HO SE 2-S PM -----'---,---,,..,.....,,.,,-,:-=-:R::-::2 R-2 LOt/will take 6 Unltll, prop. Will pay 10% 642-1656 or 97!r79'16. area, lmrnac . .Adults. Water LOW WEEKLY ~ATES availab.le. Models .open 9:00
I patio add to the pleuure of O FRN I-SAUT-s'UN. BEACH living, 24x55, 2 B ' Huntington Beach. Agt. 675-4524 675-0144 4 --B-R-.-ne-ar--=P-ark-,--:in-Coata.,,.--1urn. ~. mo. Refs ex-Executive Suites to 6:00. 2300 Fairview Rd.,
.._,_ 3 bdrm 2 ba. horn BA plus den. Golf, pool, FOR: 10 to 15 Units in Mortna-1, Mesa. $275 mo. Call eves: changed 642-6622 2080 N rt Bl d COO M Ph 545-2300 v.... " e Pool. 4 BR, 2 tam. rm/den. etc., immed o c c up an c y Orange County. • •-ewpo Y • a esa. one: ·
I with greenbelt iocation. It's Boat yd, 2 driveways. 100' Srrioo. 53&-0321 Snarllnn Investment Trust Deeds 260 543-7375 AVAIL June 1st: Custom Costa Mesa DELUXE
'just like new, near pools ~tage. 2600 sq. ft. Nrly 8ic:4l 1 BR SHAG thru-oot, r-··• Dana Point :i~sa~a~t. r.::;; f~; ~ 642-2611 APARTMENTS I ~~ =:n~ced ~:~ancey ~~y ~S:: CMdra.. a=.g, .,,c;:rn5784er loort, 6~5:62 PUT YOUR MONEY FABULOUS ocean barb w . 4 or trlr. Gardner pd. STUDIOS & 1 BR'S Air Cond. Frplc's. 3 Swim· ' v· . ..LO .. , ~ ----------TO WORK FOR YOU! Br 3 ba f frpl $450/mo lse. 556-8868 or • FREE Lin1ms ming Pools . Health Spa . 1s1on-646-17Z4. EARLY B54G-3'1.9AYSID3E v·u N rt ~~~.~-e~!.~ E:w:~o/2n~n!;::::0eonedswe~~ crpt/drp6.·$445~:;:'167s-1.tf4 4'_642-4387..........__..,.2 ______ : ~f~i~~~es ~fS~:d c~:~ .. Grune and
' d h•11 ACHARMERMEICARN IDx55 2 br, 12agi::;, e~~ clples only 642 -0844 • Orange County real estate. Fountain Valley ~~·Har:-~ ~~Ho~~'. e Heated Pool 1 Bedrm. From $165 Je I location. Owner. 675-1069 494-9907 SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. 644-5477 (213) 792-4824 e Laundry Facilities 2 Bedrm. From i205 I 4 tar. br, 3 ba, huge d VIEW LOT m4> 556-0l06 FOR LEASE, F.V., 2 & 3 $490 or · e TV & maid. serv avail. MEDITERRANEAN fam/dln, 2200 sq. ft. Pool DELIGHTFUL Ba Y 8 i e Newport Beach view of bay BR, encl 2 car gar, 20x22 --·--------e Phone Sel'Vlce I REALTY athl:OO!andcorne. r. ~~tum&abyoleu VowA ~~hlf:• H~::!~ B$1~' ~{f & ocean. $.57,500. 979-3194 4500 Campus Dr .. N.B. tam rm, priv patio. Com-HARBOR Vu Hins, Carmel, $30 WEEK & UP VILLAGE ~ ......,, "-If R 1 Lo munity pool, tennis, sauna, 3 Br., Fam, Br, 2 Ba, Near I Univ. Parle Center, Irvine loan l!Th-5743 158, uv 15cothurseT -f Mt child play area, South Bay Pool, $425. 640-1768 e Studio & 1 BR Apts. 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M.
I Call Anytime, 562-7500 · -on ee, o esa e TV & Maid Service Avail. (TI4) 557-8020
• Ottlcehours 8 AM to 8 PM $56,950. 1748 Bayport Way 10X40 TRAILER Home' Verde C.C. Fantastic view. Realty, 962-3002, Owner HARBOR Vu Hms, Carmel, e Phone Service-Hid. Pool RENTAL OFFICE By owner 64&-2724 comfortable, good cond, c•c '""" / "•"l926 ffcua for Rent Agent Sharp 3 BR, fam nr pool good I ti-0 El N.do p k ,,..,.....,.,., .,..,... . ' ' e Children & Pet Section OPEN 10 to 6 DAILY .......,.,., "'""""AY·. M~-'ve HARBOR VU MONTEGO oca n. 1 ar • 3 BR, + Rumpus Rm, ;l car inc gardener, $475. 644-1791.
"''"" ""'., ...,,...., """' lo ·c M .,.,.,55""' Mountain, Desert Lik D h 23~.!"9e755wpoortr ~}~d3967., CM * RENTALS * Queen Mary master bdnn. 4 BR, lrg cul-Oe-sac vu L :ij"iii· ivii'""iii·~· jiiiiiiiiii gar. e new. s whr. 5 BR/3 Ba, lg FI R, DIR, 2 .....,. .....,.
Yard as pretty as Swope Fan ta 1 t lcally ur,eded, • __ R_e_so_r_t _____ ,_7_4 Houses Furnished 300 Pool. Kids ok. $265/mo. frplcs, nu crpt + drps, Ad Good For $5 on Rent YEARLY
Pant. nigh-On-to 2 yrs old. 11 Island kitchen, peedl !tile, ~ CABIN at Crest Line. Ac-Agt. 842-442!. comm. pool. $575. 833-3S94. LARGE studio room, bath. From $650 Month ' Owner i. ... agreed to pay us foll paper, tint g ass, lle1l £stfte. ,a 1 BR house alone on lot $100. MODERN Waterfulnt 2 Br.
4% fee 1':8ell this veritable panel1ed g~r. Much, much General .RI ~:=~tCai19545-~k or Also 2 br mobile $130. & 2 Huntington B .. ch Comp! remodeled w/new ?~et, 1Private. all Employed SUMMER pe.radjse of green. tree more. Don t miss this one, br country home on land __ _....._______ dock 673-4335 6""' ·2354 a Yon y. $90. C weekend From $1200 Month
loveliness. Owner has put In open Sat/Saun 1-5, Owner Out of State Prop. 178 $185. Kids, pets, OK on all. e 3 BR, 2~ BA, 2 story · • ·~ · or after 6. 54&-5148 BILL GRUNDY
$8 ooo of extras. (Take ..;644-~7.:..:344~-=---=--:--A __ cr_e_a..:;g_e_f_or_s_al_e __ 1_5_0 40 ACRE COLO RANCH Agt. Fee. 979-8430 . home, finest area, fam rm 4 BR, Back Bay, 2 car gar, BEA~T. ·FURN 2 BR $175. Realtor 675-6l6l oiJver to Walnut and East Oceanfront Duplex Costa Mesa w/fplc, pool & pool maint. Nr school, pool, gardener Bit-ms, w/w, Htd pool., _________ _
to Ravenwood, to 4282 Old world charm but brand BUlLDER'S ATTENTION ASSUME PAYMENTS $350. pd. l351J. 64G--OOOll Adults, no pets. (infant ok) More Room-Less Money
Brookside. Quintard Realty, new, intricate woodwork & Choice location, Tustin. Ap-$8400 original price may be 1 BR house $190. 2 Br. $230. • 31 BhR, 2. BdA apt,alkfpltc, WATERFRONT • Newport 642-9520 COME sre a real garden
642-2991 ceilings,. glass & rock. 4 proved for 45 units. assumed by making 2 back Close to bus & stores. Pus crp.s, rps, w 0 Island. 3 Br, 2 ba upper NICE 1 Br dplx. Quiet. Sep apt! Like Jiving in a home
Bdrm. up & down. Gracious DANIA i:2~~~ CO. ::a:= p~ci:·1~~ 646-5337, 962-6435. • LgHun~gton ~~n~rBR$23Si duplex. No pets. $295 lse. by garages. Employed adult for $162.50/MO. 2 BR, 1'~
La9una Belch living in Newport. $210,000. * ot $6604.0'1 at 6'h% int. no e ag cp ap 673-2256. over 30, no pets. 548-1021. BA. 2 prk'g places, priv
-HORVATH REALTY Cemetery Laguna Beach w/bltns, walk to school & *_$_3_'1'5_._3_B_r_._3_1_6_C_ed_ar--SL-, =-=-:--=--=0::---:-c:-:-=::--:-:. ,.......,, patios & rec areas. Wilson * CHOICE * Ask 1or Dave Lots/Crypts 156 down payment. .Just off park, $135. Call 893-1351. Newport Shores. LG 1 Br S150 & $160., ideal Gardens, on Wilson St., W.
Laguna Homeslt.s 675-1972 494-0615 __ ....._ ......... ...._____ ~~tly ~~ ~o. ~: $185 • util pd, 1 br apt w/ Phone (TI4) 493-0761 for bachelor, adults, S/pool. of Harbor. No child./pet.
STREET to street lot in xlnt * 2 UNITS * 6 LOTS in Harbor Rest, will Near fast growing La Junta, gar, walk ito bch. 1993 Church. 548-9633· 2283 Fountain Way East
ne!ghbortlood, aH under-Plus full size R-2 lot. 'h Blk. sell all or part, R.easmable. Colo. and the 1amous bun-$225 • utll pd, a. br, firplc, Newport Heights Nice 1 & 2 BR Trailers. $75 64&-2846
-·""' ut!l.·, house plans to ocean. $97,500. 642-5101 j ting fishing & ski areas of view home, So. Laguna. & up. Mature adults. l33 E. HARBOR GREENS ~"""~ $400 til pd 3 d f 16th St. CM 642-1265 incl., $9500. * ALSO-* Commercial Colorado. €all collect for • u , + en + am. 2 BR, flreplc., din. rm., 2 car --------'----Furn. & Unfurn. Fr $130. IN one of Laguna's better1 3 new duplexes $115,000 ea. 158, John (303)384-7739 rm, view. Flex. lease. gar, NO PETS. $275. Cal l Dana Point Bach, 1, 2 & 3 BR's. Models
areas; 1ge. lot. close in, w BALBOA BAY PROP Property • NU-VIEW RENTALS 548-fMO-or 537-1346 Open 10 'ti! 1 pm. 2700
unobstructable ocean & • 29 OQ Ranches, Farms, 673-4030 or 494-3248 Condominiums LIVE in the all new Dana Peterson Way, CM. nr. Har-
coestflne views. An excep-* 673-7420 * * $ ,5 . * Groves 180 Newport Beach ~~~~~~~~~ Unfurn. 320 Point Harbor at the beautiful bor Blvd. & Adams.
t1onal buy a t $22,000. * DUPLEX * 2 BEDROOM, 1 Bath, --------Marina Inn Motel, 34902 Del 546-0370 RARE homeslte In private · BEAUTIFUL 1<>-acre Valen-YEARL 2 BR 2 ba 215 be t"f I d B Ibo .,,_ Obispo St., ( 4 9 6 - 2 3 5 3 ) . . oceanfront community. Fan-Plus vacant lot. $97,500 2 Bedroom HouM cla ..,.,...,.,_ Lovely home site Y. " · au 1 u u Pg r a • a • .-.nln1ula Kitchens, efficiencies and 2B~. 1%ba spll~ level, nu
tastlc views. Hear the 24X34 . Ft. Shop & ~U~ment inc 0 me. 30th Street. $300 Month ed townhouse, inc. re-apartments, heated pool, pamt, crpts &. tiles, enclsd
waves crash. Steps to priv. BLOCK TO OCEAN Downtown Costa Mesa Sacrifice at $ 2 5 , o o o. Bay & Beach Rily. 675-3000 frigerator, w a sh • YEARLY. 2 BR., 2 ba. direct dia 1 phones , patio & gar,. ideal Joe. nr.
beach. Architect's house Beach Cottage · ~7,500 RIVIERA REALTY 2218 RM. for rent in hse, male er, dryer, dishwasher. Bay/ocean view. 600 E. television, sauna bath, laun-bus & sho~pmg, adlts, sml 0 494-7508, ~ d It y I re tal $175 mo Oceanfront. $475 Month cl I re I $16 5 plans Incl. $56,000. BALBOA BAY PR P. 642-7007 645-5609 Eves. aRoun. 'c./ l.01 onr 6.;., o~cc. • Like new, good loca· Bay & Beach Rlty. 675-3000 dry facilities, me e ting og cons1c e <. • . WOODSY & private; on dead-* 673-7420 * .,..._,., •.>-O<JOU $ A k fo room, close to San Clemente 540--0942
end street. 2 Lge. ocean-TWO adjoining income prop-tfouses Unfurn. 305 tlon, 225• mo. s r Mission Viejo and Laguna Beach. Come $1_65-_2_B_R_, l-~-\,000B-A-.-S-tu-di-.o-o-n
view Jots wittJ lo!B of trees Newport Heights erties, center C.M. $75,000. Dale, 962-4471 Agt. -· play in our sportfishing, cul-de-sac. Priv. patio, pool,
&: plenty of privacy. Both * SPANISH * by owner. 645-2020/64U560 General 4 BEDROOM, 211:z Bath, 3BR, 2BA condo, enclsed at-shopping and restaurants. c-rpts, drps, bltins. Nr.
i $42 500 Condominiums tac gar, crpts, drps, d/w, $50 week and up. Bring this shop'g. Children ok, No • F~Airrc, large ocean-Swiss chalet w/Spanlsh motif. PRESTIGE A R E A , self cleaning oven, patio, ad and receive $5 off on pets. 735 Joann St. CM
front Jot one ot, the finest 3 BR. 2 ba, remodeled to _fo_r _i_a_i. __ ~ __ 1_60_ pool. $350. per mo. swim pool privl. $250. 1irst week's rent. Last 2 64&-1450
properties in the Laguna perfection! Extra lge, yard, CONOO _ Park-like sur-Keith Snider, 962-4471 830-087l days to get in on these -2B-R-.-cr-pts-.-dr-ps-.-b-lt..,.in-s.
area, on a beautiful cove &: room for pool Hurry! roundings-pool, NB, 3 BR, 2 RENTALS Agt. San Clemente rates. Quiet Joe. nr park & shop.
sandy beach. Must see to BALBOA BAY PROP. BA. $43,000. Bkr. 673-5221, Apartments 3 BEDROOM _ LEASE $250 Huntington Buch ping. Perfect 1or mature
apprec. $115,000. * 642-7491 * 642-3645. Duplexes CRPTS & DRPS. N R Presidential Heights person. No pets. 675-1573
EUROPEAN artisan hand Houses SCHOOLS New 2 & 3 BR, 11At-2¥.. BA, ; :$145-n65 ... : BKR
crafted this view site dream lncom• Property 166 KATELLA 847~ sell clean ovens, dswshrs, BA~LO~& 1 BR1 patlos,OC -..,...,..E_A_N_B_r_ee_z_e._,.A-pt-s---S""pa-c-
home in the tree tops. Mov-____ __._.....,.___ 433 W. 19th St., Costa Mesa SHARP 3 BR ts t enclosed gar, swim pools, frpl~ s P v. gar ges -ious 3 Br, sep lndry rm,
II T 40 GAR DEN 1854 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna . • crp • wa er $225 unn •""'mo D1v1ded bath & lots of $180. No pets. Max. 2 child-:::i;~ustfe:ires ~o m!fsf. pd.. pr1 yrd, ,J 2 9 ,o • . to """"· =v . closets. Rec. hall, pool & ren to 6 yrs. 2'l86 Canyon
come See _ Only $79,500. COSTA MESA OFFICE Children/pets OK. ·~ .. _: .. :. Townhouse Unfurn. 335 pool tables, sauna baths. Dr G42-Z222 UNITS Serving.Q)Sta Mesa, Newport 4 BR Condo, cpts, drps, dble · See for yourself. 17301 --·---· -----YOU Broker, 646-400. Beach, Huntington Beach. gar., pool priv., lease $265. Huntington Beach Keelson Ln. (1 blk W. of $165. 2 BR -Beamed celling.
• • • 2 BD COTTAGE, w/w crpt, I II •I $115 • 1 BR, furn duplex, 2 ~2375 Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). Nu carport. 204!t-D -. • • can see forever from new drp&, frplc, massive lot w.e can substan. tiate P & L flnariciar 1 $l25 1 OK. VERY nice clean 1,2,3 842-7848 Wallace, no pets, l child.
thiB lbeautlfully designed w/2 apricot trees Super 1st figures on,:this one, as we , peope, ' sng s Irvine Bedroom, Townhouses, stve n40 _ ULTilA NICE Apt. 6 _64&-888 __ 3 ______ _ multi-level home. Charming home, $37,500. 846--0742 eve manage it. neautltully main-'"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiim $l25. l BR furn apt. all utils. & refrig, crpts, drps, frplc, 1 stru ti • paid, f d ti Pools. 4 · ~ardens. Sauna. 2 IBR unfurn, crpts, dra., wood & g ass con c on tained in every respect. Business $125. Sm house, E-sid~, part-4 BR. 2'11 ba., , ......... $435 s1~•210 P~2~S7Slrec area, Tennis. Private patio . gar, laundry :facilities, no with sliding glass windows San Clemente $495,0<0. Principals Only. O rtunlty 200 •·· turn, ··~an pref, Avail 3 BR 2u ba. faro nn ~on " Adults. Ph: 846--025.9. pets: Older adults preferred. leading to outdoor deck. 2 ---------Sparllnn Investment ppo '-J nv•u ' 72 ' • • .,,,,., N B ..., ... __ 1 __ _._. ·t GENTLEMAN'S HOME • 6/6. , 3 BR. 2'h ba. Deluxe ewport .. ch Laguna Beach $L50. 548-9735 . ..,.... .. .,.., arge "·"""''"'' 8Ul e Corp., 6"8 5662 $95 • HB, Furn. bach. all Bluff N B u75 , looldn aim Lookln i iv & · ...,. , s, · · • .. •• ·" · • .... TS-SE SMALL 1 BR, Eastside, util overi!i $5gl 900c ' serene 35 beg or pr acy1. view? • Coc:kt ail-xlnt buy utils. paid, man only. 4 BR 2 ba avail ..... •• • $385 ADUL LEA 1 BR & den, 1110rth end, walk pd. 1 adult, no pet, Yrly
Pac c, • · ' am ceiling iv rm, 2 TRIPLEX e Mfg.2 kinds $165 . HB, 2 BR hoUSe, encl. 4 BR 21h ba avail 8/1 • • $425 2 Br. 2 ba., C(U'llOrt • • $250 to beach & stores, gorgeous $140-$145, 642-8520, 336 E. '4 large BR, full tile BA. Spa-· s t e C ff Sh L d ye! for k1"ds & pets. 4 BR 2 ba T R Hills •475 3 Br 2 ba. gar pool $300 · nd k J 15 J 20th St Ope ho · h kit 2 fr 1 Three 2 BR umts on co t o ee op o n · · · · · • "' · • · •• • view, su C'C , une -u-, n use ~ ·~ ~ CIOUS c en-y ·• P cs. h $225 . CdM, n·1ce 2 BR apt. 5 0 6 BR $375 REALTOR 642-5333 I 1-4n• '251 V ._,,~ Magnificent ocean vu from PL., C.M. Modern & s arp, e Apt Rental, 2 Bdrm r ............. Y J. """"" • NEW 2 BR, 2 BA, drps, REAL ESTATe Jiv rm & BRs. Architectur-pride of owncrshi}1. good in-nr. heh., sm. child OK. Duplexes Furn. 345 Newport Beach crptg, Pool, BBQ, Gar. IMI ally integrated to lndscp. 2 fl11tion hC'clge. $470 mo. in-HOLLAND Bus. Sales Avail 6/15. Adults only, no pets. 376 w.
1190 Gienneyre St. blks to xlnt swim bch, 180' come. $47,900. 645-4170 or 54o--0608 eve. $275 • NB, yrly, 2 BR hse, Newport Beach SUMMER. RENTAL -1 br Bay.
4M.9473 ~0316 frontage. Can build apt or ? CALL 'e\ '46·2414 1716 Orange, Costa Mesa all utlls. pd., l-yr. lse. Oiild/ furn, Park NCWlJ?rt. View 2-B-R-.-Carpo--rt-. _N_e_ar_s_ho_p-
fllness forces . sale. Priced ,, ':I-' sngl OK. Ava.ii 711. BAY VIEW of back ,?aY· Avail July & ping. Utilities p al d • Laguna Niguel right at $54,500, will trade. ~.... ICE CREAM PARLOR CALL S«H>m 4 br, 2 ba, upper, CompJ. Aug. $395. mo. 533-6550 or $l5.5/mo. 5.3l-850ll
108 Ave Del Reposo. Open .R EALTY !Main St, Balboa. Priced to LAGUNA BEACH OFFICE "SINCEl946" furn.Re-dec,2blkstooceilli. eves.644-8813 2BR f ts drp CONOO. 2 BR, 2 BA on G<>II Sun "'3 376 2814 n•,...,., 1947 N N t P t Off I 11 I ed $13 500 C t 44th St Yrs lse A~all $35 Wk & 1 BR 2 ' un urn, crp · s, course, bltns, beaut vu, ten-· .. , · · • """',,. u r twpor os '" se mm · • · oas Sel'Ving Laguna, Dana Point, 1st Western Bank Bldg. • · · · · per up. · range, oven, refrig, no pets,
nls club. 10% dn, $36,900. DELUXE 4-PLEXES I Properties, (714) 673-5410 San Clemente, Capistrano . . p rk I . 6-25. days 543-5820, eves. BR . & Bachelors. Color TV, $145. 968-1455 WALK TO BEACH M • 240 University 8 • rvme 832-9478. maid serv, pool. The Mesa,r-----,-----:--831-o638 Only 3 Left! Best rental area. oney to .. oan $215 · Laguna, 1 blk. to bch., Days 552-7000 Ninhts 415 ... N rt Bl NB 2 BR ~""-stove retrlg Attnctlve 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 1 BR t fri pts • Duplexes Unturn. 350 "· ewpo ·• · •_,... • • Lido Isle story on oceanside of hwy. All units have frplc's, dsh-----·-----• , s v., re g., c " ~====~=~=~ 64&-9681 cpts/drps, htd pool. Adults,
nds d . 1 . & whrs, forced air heat, air/ 1 1 TD L drps., Adults. ti -n--IL ___ -11-1-a-n-.. ----OCEANFRONT _ Open June no ""ts. 645-8965 I S La cape , new pam m 1 sed Pool s oa ns $225 D Po" t 2 BR 2 $325 IHI UUtl .. "'" Enjoy Th 1 um mer c . 1 cond., co · garages. • ana in • • 2 BR. 2 Baths • • • • • • • • • • $l•" 2 B 3 B 2 B out. arpeting t 1 ru OU t · ·1 Walk t h ' hi BA frplc bltns cp•-drps 3 BR 2 "--th '""""' & JuJv. Former owners "' up. r., r., a. Solidly bullt, baytront \\ith ava.t · o s op g, sc s ' " ., "'·• . · "" s '• • • •" "" • .,.., ~ LEASE 3 b 2 b . . I ard $38,SOO. & park. UP TO 95~0 $225 • San Clemente, 2 B. R, 3 BR., 211 ba. !Bonus rm $425 r, a, pier, Unit. $200 & $225 wkly. Pool, hit-ins. pay y . pier & float. Spacious 4 BR/ GRUBB & ELLIS CO. S I' I t n frpl ard I k d 72 $350/ waterfront. $425. 214 Grand 675-8531. 1996 Maple. 642-3813 baths. 3 Car garage. Sandy REALTORS par 1ng nvestmen 2 d JD L c., gar., Y or 1 s, 3 BR. 2~ ba. ••• ••• 375 Canel, Bl. 673-3838 beach/ocean vue. $225,000. 2863 E Cst H CdM Corp 638-5662 n oa ns pet, 4 BR. 2~ ba. • •• •• .. •• • $375 Newport Heights * 2BR. IBA, Mesa Verde LIDO REAL TY . . wy., ., $300 · Laguna, 2 BR, furn., We Have summer Rentals Corona del Mar upstairs, lrg closets, n50, 675-7080 5 CHARMING units in xlnt encl. gar., pet, ,sngls. OK. v• • CLEAN 1or2 BR. Adults, no no pets, 833-8974 3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beach LAGUNA location, close to Lowest rates Orange Co. ALSO SUMMER RENTALS 1s1on-VERY NICE LRG 4 BR, 21h pets. Lgl' kit. $135 -$150. 1 BR d lt •. $130
* 673-7300 * Santa _An_a______ everything, always rented, Sattler Mtg. Co. CALL 494-9491 ba, frplc, dbl oven,d/w, 2421 E. 16th St NB 646-1801 mo. • $f5. u ~~~a~~ i:fe~: Cali
Million Vl•lo 2 exterior just painted. Call 642·2171 545-0611 * LANDLORDS * crpts, nu drps, gar, 4 blks to A t U f 365 642 5168
OWNER, 3 BR, BA, tam RED CARPET 497-1761. Servi H bo 21 Fl'"~E RENTAL SERVICE i.·· ·.·,···.:· reel h·111 _oce_an_. __ $3;...65_m_o._64_' -~--3,_no_ p • n ur n. , =-==-·-·------::-...,.-,.: rm., completely upgraded. ng ar r area yrs. '"' pets. ,, 2 BR Adults no pet• BAY 2 BR. 111. BA CONDO, air TlME FOR BalL--Island . • '· cond., ~pgraded cpttdrps, Shag cpts, cental air, bltns, CA$H IN A HURRY! · LANDLORDS! Huntington B .. ch UUt1 MEADOWS APT. :l87 w.
covrd patio, view 101 · ~~~~~sac& Nr~l, fls.~J QUICK CASH ~~~ ;:,~. b~rt!0d~~~ :~~ We Specialize in Newport ELEGANT 2 Br w/ga.r, nu Bay St., CM. 646-00T.l.
$25,000. Assume 7~% FHA 557-2611 THROUGH A •Olidate bills; improve your Beach e Corona del Mi.r e REALTY NEW 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, 4 shops/bch, Yrly. m.3437, LRG 3 br, 2 ba, crpf/drps, loan. Will carry 2nd TD. liome, buy n• , .. property, or & Laguna. Our Rental Ser-A Company With Vision blks to heach. No pets. eve/wknds 548-7398. bltns, encl pat, nr OCC. $185 '""'7340 6 BR plus immac pool, sweep • ~ C I · •03()()/mo 84q .,., 557--0350
,J<1'r • & heat, fam. rm., 2¥.i BA, DAILY PILOT for any good purpose. Con-vice is FREE to You! Try U11i,·. Park t•nter. rvmc i ... ~~~·~~..-..,o<t~~· !i~~ Balboa Peninsula m_o_. ---· -----: Newport Beach new w/w cpts & paint. 3. ridential, fast service in Nu-View! Call Anyt!me. J52-7500 ----------2BR, crpts, drps, bltins, prt
*OCEANFRONT* cargar.So.Co.Plaza,cul-CLASSIFIED AD your home or our office. NU-VI E W RENTALS Ofticehours8AMtoSP:\1 \-Apr! ts f Rt j/9 l 3BDRM, 2BA, bltns, $325 patio, gar, couple pref.
de-sac, $50,000. Pvt. pty 642-56 78 SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. 673·4030 or 494-3248 -------1 men or en ~ · / mo. Avail. June. 1_548-5 __ 71_1 ___ -:-:-""""~
PARADISE .::.842=-24~14==-:-:-:-;;==:;;:_=====::-:::===:....=(:::TI;;::4:::) ;;::556--0==1:=06::. :-:::=== ALONE on Jot. 2 brs, gar, TWO BRfrp, NI earl~ & h SA .,,.----::6-:7"~,....3308-=-=-----1 BR, quiet area, $159. Util
7,000 Sq. ft. of wood & chann -$110. Also 2 br, swim pool. ~;::::.· 551_~ ·att1\ was er, Apts. Furn. Corbna del Mar paid. Adults, no pets, 241
duplex. $.120,000. $160. Also old huge 4 br, 3~ 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _A_v_ocado __ &lG-__ 1_:»4 ___ _
LIDO REALTY Q.lrJ-04U'-'-f)"C ~Q. e tam rm, on acreage. $150. Laguna Beach Balboa Peninsula • SPACIOUS Bach. Nr. Schls
3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beach \:)~ J." ~}. -~ pq• \:} Kids, pets OK on all .•. gt. TOP I ....,.,, & Shopping. $130. a mo. util. * 6.,.. 7300 * Fee 979-8430 $25 WEEK & UP ~ pd """ "134 ,.,. Th -' I t . . w cl G "th Ch '-/ 3 BR I sh t• FP OF THE WORLD . ~·""" "SUPER HOT" g r n rt gum g or ame w1 a UC1t e , w w ag, pa 10, • •Sleeping Rooms n.
------Editeol i., CLAY R. PO\LAN ------Cabana Club, Pac. Sands at Shaded by tall trees; lge. 3 e Housekeeping Rooms • .._. Dana Point
Rustic 3 BR, 2 BA charmer. O Rearrange letters of the 8341 MW!Ster. Call (213) BR. & fam. rm., 2i,s ba., e Ocean View Apts ---------
Open beams, fpk, bltns. four scrambled words be-794-1027 frpl. Swimming pool. BALBOA INN ON TEN ACRES BEAUTIFUL new 2 BR,
Newport Heights! Just re· low to form four slrnple words. Colle~• Park $400 mo. yrly. lease 100 Main Street Apts. turn./unfurn. Lease cpts, drps, heated J1001.
leased at $.14,950. Low down I I MISSION REALTY 494-0731 675-8740 Fireplace I priv. patios. sundecic. $195. Acllfs, ro
OK! Hurry! V. E. Howard ,~ · ,Uj S IE LI p I FOR Lease. 3BR. College 3 BR, 2 BA, 1\11 extras, waJk Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst. pets. 494-3388, 496-9594 . 1
& Co. Realtors. 64~8400.1 .. Park. $275 mo. Kids & pets to beach & town. $450 mo. Corona del Mar 900 Sea Lan, CdM ~-261l 2BR, 2BA, bltn stve, re1rlg,
$140,000 Ocaanfront OK. 557-9234 lse. Ownr 497-1022. 'GARAG:E: Studio apt, w/pri !!(!!!!M!!!!!a!!!!!cArthl!!!!!!!!!!!!ur!!!!!!!!nr!!!!!!!!!Coas~~t!!!!H!!!!!wY~)I cbhlllk dreffnCok, cHrpts, 4d96-~0•51
Duplex i-,.-r--.--..--.--tl 11
1
.. Corona de f Mar 1 BR, patio, lge fenced yd., 3 entr., avail month of .June 0 oast wy, ...,.. · Brand new w/all the goodies I l E E B Z blocks to beach, utll pd. $210 only. $90. 644-4309 2 BR, din. rm, frplc, new Huntington Beach
for a little more live on the 3 $150 -Util pd, nice fum. lbech, mo. 1st & last. 497-2591. LG Bachelor pert. furn, no crpts & drps. $285/mo. Call
water. I I ,.. I 1 bll< beach, full kit. Laguna Nlguel pets, $l35 inclding util. Call Mr. Beals, 556-8790. WALK TO BEACH
HORVATH REALTY . . . . $200 · Sm. neat 2 br house, eves, ~737 2 BR. $265/mo. Crpts, drps, New 2 BR, Crpt/drps,
Ask for Dave 11 bltins, gar. $190 • 1 br Ocean view house, C t ._._ Gar. Crpt, drp. Call Mr. dshwshr, frpl. 205 15th.
675-1972 494--0615 I F E l A Y I ,. $250 ·Redec, 2 br gar apt, Victoria Bch. 01 a mwoU Beals, 556-8790. 847-3957.
PRI beach, (Dn•-hore) 2 BR h--.-... --.....-'T"--1 • Husband's complalnh "If gar, patio, child ok. $225. comp. redec, 2 br apt. . * SU CASITAS NEW 2 BDRM famil 2-B-R--2-BA.....,......,.$21,,.,..,..0-Ad...,.ul...,.t
""""-JOS I I r I f *'ti NU-VIEW RENTALS dee. view, nr bch. ~ • !,l!l_l)' rm, • • . Ir Ba, Cozy cotmge w/patio, . my wi e'1 • -c can opener 673-4000 or , 494-3248 $275 • 2 br, 2 ba, all bltins, Furn Bachelor&: 1 BR'S. crpts, drps, bltns. $350. mo. Poolside Garden Bungalow. yrd, boat storage, priced to ever -Q -, I'd starve to 3 ..,...... vi Model.I Open Daily. Avail Sept. 675-3308 Near 0<.-ean. Frplc. Lrg ·-'' ,.••7311 or ~9079 --------~ death," 5 ... , * T HE BLUFF S * new & nice. """~T ew. CM patio 6 "~ls Sauna Ten-' """· .,..... . r ., NU VIE W RE N A LS 2110 Newport Blvd., SHARP 2 Br, 1 ba. So. of · cvu • · 2595 Crestview Dr. W E C S E H 3 BR., 2 ba.; 1450· $3115 • $100-$1.fS Nicely furn. 1 & 2 Hwy. Yrly lease avail. 1_nla_._~-'--_9 ___ _
Duplexes near the ocean I I I I' r 0 Compleht the chuckle quoted 3 BR., 2 be.., 1-sty $385 673-4030 or 494-3248 br trailers. Mature adlts. BOYD Realtors 675-5930 LRG 2 Br. Studl?, 1~~ Ba. Miles Lart!on, Realtor by filling In the missing words 4 BR., 2\.!i ba., 2-sty $425 NEW Sea Terrace Twnhse. ·~" W W"--CM C ... ___ $157 50/mo Marned cple 1 * 673-8563 * you develop from atep No. 3 below. 3 BR., 21At ba., grblt $475 Ocean view, 2 br, l'h be., ~. • WIVI•, • • Oita "-~hlld ok. No pets. 84i-454S.
OCE ANFRONT All vacant, mov~in! dra, crpts, 2 car attch. EAStSIDE 2BR "'"" 3 BR 2 ba t dra bltlns A PRINT NUMBERED 2 I 4 BLUFFS REALTY , garage, patio, Pri. Seach, e SHARP 2 BR. • $160 e -s,....., cpl, • • ~8• ' ' Duplex, owner I 8 g e n t V LETTERS IN SQUARES 644-1133 pool, tennis court, frivacy, Nice film, shag crpt, no pets. drapea tr/pl -trig & stove, no pets. $ • mo. lease.
673-9266 ·t $335 2265 Maple · 540-4434 ~-645-1517 673-2370 , A * OCEAN Vu Home. Fully secun Y· · ea 8 e · Small OK BAYSHORES OWNE R ~ UNSCRAMBLE FOR' I I I j A I j I j I maint'd pool, 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 644-1757 Fat Profit Is attained when * DELUXE 21& 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 BR, garage. pet '
• BR 3 BA ~1900 642-3494 ANSWER . frpl ..... l / I 4 BR 2', ba 1.-... ·-..,. ""'' raell througl1 result-get· frplc, cloeld prqe. Nr. So. n45 per mo . ., • ' .., ' • c, Au& g. gar w e ec. , 7ll ' -e.~ ,,.~u, ti;;. DaJ1" Pilot Classlfled Coast Plaza. 56-2321. * 847-8149 *
Fast result.II are just a phone SCRAM LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 dr. Crpt:a, drps. Lile $425. p~yacy, unobstructed view. """ y 641-$78 call away 642~. • • 673-6635, Courtesy to brokers ~· mo, lea.ce. '831~ Ads. 64i-58'18 Need a "Pad"? Plao..oe an adl Cluslfled Ads · •• · ·. ·
.. 4-5671
•
. .
i,..•L-•·-~ I(!]
--Apt. Unfum. 36.S •• A
Huntlniton ~h ·--
370 Furn. or Unfum. 370 1r Unfurn ·rn
Costa Me~
WAlTING
I LIST
i OPEN
I for
' 1, 2or 3 BR Apt : at the
VILLA YORBA
EL PUERTO
MESA
Huntington Beach
' (714) 841-9622 FOR
I '
Off
ORANGE CO.
AIRPORT
3 man Jaw firm has space
avail in Ila new, attractive
suite for economy minded
young attorney. Furn/un-
furn, all services avail.
m3622.
-OFFICE SPACE
Newport Beach, building
•
M1y 31, lm DAtl.Y PJLOT
530 I Found (f,... ads) 550 Schools & G1rd911ing
---------Instruction• 575·---......... ----~
VETERANS
Eam $4.58 to $7.00 per hour
guaranteed by uail1ll )'OUl"
G.J. Benefits whlfe at-
tending Santa Ana Oollege.
Call now -
547-9561 Ext 370
FUU..Y LICENSED * SPIRJTUALISf *
FOUND -Young while -------~--A Prof ional, uniform female kitten (Must go l gardening team. Se1vlng
Vic. o1 Albert & Orange, ORANGE COUNTY a11ly lg estates, apt &
OFF Mgr/FC bkiir all acctc
&-.ec"y fWlCtionai.
552-7964 eves l wkends
Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 Cost a Mes a Be f . VOCATIONAL Indus complexes. Free est.
9am~7557 TRAINING SCHOOL Cnstom Landscape Malnt 1----------
GREY Calico, 7 weeks, Le•rn Auto Tun.up lT14\ 5.n-7280 COUP~ wan 1 s Apt.
female, beautUul. Vic. Vic-CLASSES NOW FORMING "A Frank M. Nelson Co." management Harbor & ·~ Costa Mesa area. :14 yrs. toria Blvd.{Nati . C.M. Special smog class 1or GARDENER of 22 years ex-residenu. Good r r. 645-0C4'l
MIHll!09. mechanics ~rience seeks 4-5 ad-btw. ~11 am
FOUND I haired smalC 2120 Placentia A\'e., C.M. d1llonal maintenance jobs. :-:--:1--:=--......,.~~-=-=-
male dog. Found near 52nd Call Now TI41646-5065. George Hampcon Hep Wanted, M & F 710
St., Newport Bea ch . * 549-2015 *
BEDROOM, bath ·2 1 BETTER·
~
overlooks Balboa Bay.
Prime area. Various size
suites, rent or lease. 3700
Newport Blvd., NB. Mgr.
6T:>-1220.
Spiritual readings 10 am-10
pm. Advice on all matters.
312 N. El Camino Real, San
C I e m e n t e • 4 9 2 -9136,
492-9034.
~7362 aft 6 pm Ebronix E x PE RT Japane se Accounting Clerk I
T to • Cli • Gardener. Complete Yard COST CLERK LARGE tan male puppy • u ring n1c servicl' Free eslimall's Bkkpng tramed. good typ-
bulltins, fully carpeted.
Children OK. $145. per
month. Ca II DALE,
962"'471.
*MOVE IN TODAY*
Spa. 2 & 3 BR. $149 & $199.
Kids welcome. Pool. Gar.
17361-A Keelson Ln (1 blk
W. of Beach Blvd., off Slat-
erl. 847-4260.
1..ARGE 2 BR, bltins, drps,
shag, carport, no pets, $155.
S-47-5384.
Laguna Beacll
LAGUNA estate Jiving on
acres of gardens. Wide
ocean views. Lgc., custom
decorator apts. F rp 1 c s . ,
close to beach. Swimming
pool soon. 2 BR.. 2 baths.
Only 3 apts. at $450 to $6.iO
monthly, incl. util.
Considerate adults. 494-4653
or your broker.
LARGE 2 BR, new drapes &
shag cpt, range & re Cr.,
frplc, walk to downtown &
beaches. Adlts, no pets.
$260. 494-3.W!, 496-9594
1 BR in north end, ne\v
cpts/drps, walk to beach &
stores, view. $215 inc. util.
Refs. reqd. 494-1251.
Mesa Verde
DLX 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba. Encl
gar. $165 up. Rental Ole.,
3095 Mace Ave. 54&-1034.
Newport Beach
"Rent A Piece
of a Palace"
OCEAN and
HARBOR VIEW
Elegant apartments designed
with a Master's touch, su-
perb house security. exclu-
sive Versailles Club and
· pool with unique Aquabar,
fountains and fonnal gar·
dens. All part of the South
Coast's finest apartment
community.
1 Bedroom/studios from $195
2 Bedroom from $305
Models open 9 A.M. lil dusk
~
ON THE BLUFFS
AT NEWPORT
From Newport Blvd., turn at
Hospital Road (1 block
above Pacific Coast Hwyl to
entrance. 900 Cagney Lane,
Newport Beach, Ca. 92660.
Telephone: (7141 645-0060
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
on the bay
I.wrury apartment living
overlooking the ,water. En·
joy $750,000 heal th spa, 7
FULL SERVICE ' ~I I U'' ~~ Westcliff Bulldlnt
PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-t id en t , s y m pa th e t I c
pregnancy counseling. Abor-
tion & adoptions ref.
APCARE 642-4436 l ........ ~;.;.._ ~~ Corner Westcliff Drive &
ADULT LIVING Irvine Blvd. Newport FEMALE, 27, married,
Beach Mr' H o w a r d physically disabled wants
FOR LESS 645-6101 . girl. married or single to
I
· help with my problem.
PRESTIGE OFFICES Non-smoker pref. ~ • 1 Mi. to Beach e Sun Decks & .----------. New prof'~ bldg, F~ntain I H OM O'S EX UAL IN-$130 Valley. ~ per mo. melds FORMATION
l'eeept. rm; r c c e p t ; G Swit hboard H tU • UP' imswer'g service. Secretar-ay c o ne Patios
• Carpets, Drapes
• Loads of Parking
· • ial service avail. Ph: 1714) 642-4253 or 833--0238
• Garages -Pool
ALL UTILITIES PAID 847-8989 or 962-8955. PREGNANT? Thinking
1 & 2 BDRM'S. C-1 Zone, otfice & work area, abortion? Know all the facts
c & U f A ·1 1200 sq ft bldng, plenty of first! Call LIFE LINE -24 . urn. n urn. va1 • pr..,.,~ ~200 ..,n W hrs, 541-5322. • Rec. Room
714 / 646-6505 . nui;. ., mo. """ .
1959 MAPLE STREET, COSTA MESA
Also Garages for R•nt
Wilson, Costa Mesa , REWARD Help me find.
642-2020 Bartender job. $25. If hired
DESK space available $50
mo. \Viii provide furniture
at $:> mo. Answering service
Apts., I I available. 17875 Beach Blvd.
Furn. or Unfurn. 370 I I~ Huntington Beach. 642-4321
Rentals ,. 3 RM deluxe suite, adj.
Balboa Penlnsula '---------'· j Airporter Hotel & O.C
OCEANFRONT $175 I ~!rpo/frt. Full! s e r vi c e21s72
V · I S R t I 420 .nC t., no ease req. 1 e w s tud I o , ne w y ummer en a s DuPont Rm. 8 833-3223 deconated, best Balboa loc. • ' '
Adults only. No pets J BAYFRONT Balboa Penin. 5 Business Rental 445
673.-6_372 Br. pier & slip sleep 14.
Corona del Mar Weekly June: s~ .. !uly $400, Aug: $500. 67~ or
VIEW apts, 1 BR.
bachelor apts. CdM
Seaview. 67;H;443
Also (l J 682--015:1
2530
Costa Mesa
2BR, 2 BA, furn, Nr. Bay &
ocean, across from prk.
Newpt Bch $200 wkly.
673--0473
THE F.:XCi"!'ING SMALL, nice place for quiet
PALM MESA APTS. single. s;,o wk or cheaper
MINUTES TO NPJ'. BCH. mo., 33rd, Nwpt Bch.
FURN. OR UNFURN. =-5=-36-8868=----,...----
Unbel!evably laree apts , STUDIO apt, tiunt Harbour,
·huge pool, Jacuz-:1 elect bit-beaut furn, rec facil, across
ins, shag crpts. drps, sawia from ocean, $150 week.
etc. Adults, no pets. 879-2061· 8TI-7013 eves. SINGLES From $150 :-::::-::--::'-:---:c::--:---:-----, 1 BEDRM From Sl6S LIDO Isle Waterfront 3
2 BEDRM: From $185 BR/2 BA. June/July $1250
Unfurn Apts k;aiJ .l"rom $10 mo. Aug. $1500. 673-8886 .
to $15 LESS. LIDO ISLE BA YFRONT
You're right, they're nnder· • 4 J}R. Pier & Slip
nriced! 1561 r.tesa Dr. $2500-$3500 Mo. Rltr. "644-6111
(5 blks from Newport Blvd.) LIDO Isle, 4 BR, 3BA, home 546-9.~ July $1200, Aug, $1400, days $140 & UP 962-1356, eves 6T;r.8766
1 BR apt. & patio, comp. 1 BR. FURN. & UNF. furn. June 1-Aug :n. $75 wk. You Bet it's underpriced! inc. util. 494-6449. That's why these apts. won't
last Jong. Crpts, drps, stove
& refrig. Lots of green
lawn. Covered g a r a g e s .
Adults, no pets. 2020 Fuller-
ton Ave. (l . .blk E. of New-
port Blvd. & 1 blk. So. of
Bay-., C.My ~-8690.
LIDO Isle, waterfront, 3 BR,
3 ba. July/Aug, $2500.
673-1337 eves
NR ocean, & channel, 3BR,
2BA, $250-$275 wkly. .Days 6T;r5366, aft 5, 548-3226
Vacation Rentals 425
145 E. 18th St, C.M. ::luitable
for stores or ofc's. (a) 684
slf, $190/mo, (bl 362 sit . $100/mo. (cl 1069 s/f . $265/mo. C.J.S. Re a J
Estate, 548-1168
. .
"'The t'actory" has Shops
Avail . Ideal for bookstore
leather shop. etc. Starting
from $110/mo. 425 30th St.
N.B. 673-9606
STORE/office nr. N'pt. Post
Office & Greyhound depot
587 Sq. Ft. $160 Mo.
Agent 64(>...2414
STORE, good )oc. nr. N'pt
Post Ole. 940 Sq. Ft. $250
mo. Also avail. adjoin. 1350
Sq. ft. shop. Agt. 646-2414.
CUTE ADOBE HOUSE, 1000
sq ft, adjoining busy corner
Costa Mesa. 645-2020/642-6561! .
Industrial Rental 450 .
.
1300 SQ Ft M-1 space
w/front offices, lrg rear
door, $180 mo. rnn Whittier
St.. CM. 64(>...5033 days
64S-0681 eves
Rentals Wanted 460 .
t
548-0017
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous.
Phone 542-7217 or write
P .O. Box 1223; Costa Me!la.
SWINGING SINGLES
Call "Leah" 2-Spm. 530-1250.
YOUNG COUPLES 18-35 +
Parties or meet ·cpl to cpl
Call "Leah" 2-8pm. 638-1511
Social Clubs 535
'PARTNER' INTROD.
Personal Service. Low Fee
548-1479 or ~1271
I ~lo-•t_and_Found _ _,I aJ
Found (fr" ads) '550
CLUTCH p u r s e with
prescription glasses. 19th St.
Costa Mesa, 54S-9387 aft.
1:00 p.m.
FOUND medium stnan red
female puppy, 1,a golden
retriever. Vicinity Corona
del Mar 6"73--0363
Large German shepherd, ml.
Vic. HBHS. Black &, tan.
Friendly. 842-6478.
SPAYED fem dog, 7mos.,
fox terrier mix, wh w/blk
face & e81'8, vie Arch Beach
Hts, Laguna. 494-9815.
FOUND bike vicinity
Sandcastle & Seacrest,
Corona del Mar, 644-5.579
FOUND pregnant cat. Vic.
Santa Esabelle & Santa Ana
Ave, Costa M.sa. 548-1729
OLDER Great D a n e
Brindle fem. Fnd Vic.
Irvine & Mesa Dr. 5.57-7861 * CASA \itcrotuA *
1 & 2' l3R. riiin & Unfurn,
Carpets, drapes, D/W, 'IV
ant. Pool, etc. Come by in-
.
OBED. trained Sc o tty
Mature owner will guard
your home while you vac. or
will rent room, ba., ki
privil. for Summer
642-9933, after 5pm. BALBOA Peninsula house or =-::-::-::-,:-.,....,..,.....,.....---,.,--FEMALE Great Dane -Vic. apt, sleeps 8. mo. week up. R 0 OM-kitchen privileges Santa Ana & Del Mar. !162-SGSO sgl. lady. Close to Fawn. 549--0223 quire .. about oqr Move-in
AllO\Vllllce, 525 Victoria St.
at J:la,rbor, C.M. 642-8970
Huntingtot\ Beath
• "! .
LA QUINTA HERMOSA
SpaJlish Co\Dltrv Estate Liv-
ing & Spacious Apts. Ter-
raced pool, sunken gas
BBQ. Unbelievable Living.
1 BR. UN.FURN $165
. Newporter Inn for July 1
Rentals to Share 430 815 N. 52 St. No. 116
LOOKING for 2 girls to Phoenix, Ariz. 85008
. . share BR, beautifully furn FE roommate, 24-30, non
apt in Irvine area. $72.50 smoker, to share 4 br, 2 ba
incl. utils. Call Jane/ Kay Newpt Sch-front, w/2 girls
545/5390 Sept.-June, $1~. mo
675-6846
3 LOOKING . fur 2 girls to
share a 3' BR furn. apt. on WANTED to rent or lease -
Balboa Island. $105 Includes br, 2 ba, Sp. for 3 horses
Utils. Call Kay 545-5390 Will consider older home, in
WHITE cockapoo p u p p y ,
Fountan Valley are a ,
531-m1
SMALL black klt&JI with
flea collar on Avocado St,
Costa Mesa 645-4124
MAY 13th. Irish Setter.
645--8997
FND. Shutters Coast Hwy.
492~7
Foond vie of Hrbor & Vic-READING 54S-Z66i 111i:: & 10 key adding ma-1
toria, C.M. ~fay :Qch. SPELLING --«11111(' rcq·d. Learn switch·
9'19-4431. MATH EXPER. Ju.pane~ Gardt•n,•r. loard. Apply L. M. Cqx
SMAl.J... black & wh i t c I K.now how. Tr 1 m m in I: · Manufacturing Co .. !nr .. 15051 female puppy. Calle Hogar, Free Dia~nostic Testing Clean-up. Small lan<lsl'ap-E. Warrll'r, S.A. An Equalj
Mission Viejo. Call 837-933-t. 979-1626 . mg 968-3486· Opporlumly ErnployC'r.
FOUNb blond female (6 mol c OM p L ~ T F. lar~rlsl'apc ACCTG C l-=-1'.:l{l---_-C-h-al-le_ng_·
CIQCkapoo with red c-aollnr & mamt. sei_v .. Comm I, lll<l, ing posiliun for a sharp,
bells, vicinity Orange & I~ resid. Spi mklrs. clcnnup. youni:: lady in rinancinl depl.
2()th, Costa Mesa. Days Servic:et and Replin 645-6AA7 or eomp11 11y wilh growing
548-2884, eves 64)-.3573 E.'<PER. Japan<'"' Gar<lC'ner. pnins, F:xC'C'llC'nt opportunity
FOUND large altered male Compl<'IP yarrl srv. Rl'lia. & for carerr gal. Call for ap-
cat, grey striped, 4 Seasons oiaib ltt· neat. f'rrP rs!. &42-42.~9. pointmrnl :~16-7781 . An
Mobile Park, Costa Mesa, t y:i mg E X P E R . A 111 P r 1 ,. a n cqual oppty Employer.
64&-6841. Owner p I ease BABYSITTING My home Gar dcner. llfainlenanre, A PA RT M ENT Mana.gen.
claim. No pets allowed I c. Mesa. Vic l7th & Tustin.' Cleanue ,i. Landscaping. Retil'l'rl coupl1• t·a pable of
here! I Ages 4 & under. Hefs. Call 64;r1930. assummg run managem~nc
FND young sleek exotic 5~8-7048 3eneral Services re 5 Pons 1 bihty . melding ---cleaning & Mamtenance black c.at w/chartruse eyes I WILL do babysitting ror your . . . 54S-2407 w/2 kit~ens Vic. Har~r chil<l. Loving carC'! Mon. JNDOOR/Out~oo1 I,'. h ~.1 .' _--:---c---:---:: View Hills Please claim thru Fri Laguna Hills area clean mg, }a rd 111 o.1u Is, AIR-i\IP clerk. Al least 2 644-2979 aft 6. 830-S722 mamt. Very rcas. rules. yrs exp<>r. Newport Beach
FOUND Siamese kitten CHILD CAR.<: i11 my home. &l&-3798 ~~:>~lary $100-$150. Call
vicinity Shakey·s Pizza dependable & reliaille. Child· Captains Car Care
Parlor, Newport Beach. ren from 2 to 5. 546-4145.. W11xing & Det11ilini,: fo~~~~on s;:_~~~ for in-BABYSITTING. 24 hrs a 6:'5--1791 or 64~32
day. Licensed, Reliable, Al· Hauling TRI-colored male Basset
Hound wearing heavy black
leather collar with broken
rope, vicinity Bolsa &
Springdale, H.B. 892-3840.
FND fml grey w/white cat
vie. Fairview & Baker.
C.M. 557-1900 aft 7.
FND ·May 24, small male
brown poodle w /flea collar
vie. El Toro. 830-3119
FND May 24 male blk Lab \
puppies w/wht blaze. Vic
El Toro. 830-3119 ------FND: Mesa del Mar tract,
C.M., little blk fml poodle.
Very lovable. 54&-36TI
tention. Hunt. Beach areu.1_G_E_N-..-H-1-.--T--l-S_h_b Phone 968--0887. ~ au mg. ree ru trim. Gar & Yd cleanup.
Businass Service Est. 5.'\1-6377, 557-6904.
COMPARE . q;ality & cost. 32' FURNITURE Van fo,r
You will select Automated local. furn hauls & gen I
Typing for your repetitive hauling. 548-1862.
letters, wills, trusts, term SK!PLOADER & dump truck
papers, resumes, etc. Fast, work. Conrretr, Rsnhalt
accurate, IBM MT I ST . sawing, hreaking. 8~6-7110.
Mailing ~rvice included. LOCAL moving & hauling by
3001 Redlull, Bldg VI, Suite ~tudent. Large truck. Rens.
102, C.M. 97~9754 534-1846 or 5.14-2164.
Typing Specialists
reas, rates, fast service.
Pick up & deliv.
645-8850
Y Al}D. garage l'leunups.
Remove trees. dire ivy.
Drivewys, grading. 8-17-2666.
Housecleaning
Carpet ··strvlce
----------O.C.C. student will do JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery housework -Cosla Mesa,
Ori-Shampoo free Scotch· Irvine area. $2.50 hr. 4 hr.
555 guard <Soil Retardants). minimum. Call Diane Lost Degreasers & all color 642-3342.
FND -Orange Jong haired
cal Vic: Marquerite &
Coast Hwy, CdM, Male.
675-4944 aft 6
IN Costa Mesa Park. Blue brighteners & 10 minutes _U_P_E_R_e_f-li-c-ie_n_t -C-al-.-s-tu_d_e-nt
denim jacket with large bleach for white carpels. s e e k s N . B . _ c . M .
butterfly embroidered on Save your money by saving housecleaning. $3 hr.
back. Please return _ $25 me extra trips. Will clean 544-5677
R ardl J k t living m1., dining r rm. & --cc,.---t-c-=-1--=·:----
ASSEMBLY
Experimental
Assemblers
Will perform as-
sembly w o r k of
highly skilled na-
ture of experimenf..
al proto-type sh"t
metal components
and close tolerance
auembly struc-
tures. High school
education required
plus five years' ex-
perience.
Apply In Person
3333 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa, Calif.
ew . ac e very sen-h'all $15. Any rm. $7.50, arpe eantng
tlmental. Thank Y.0 u ·1 couch $10. OWr-SS., 15 yrs. Floor Care & Windows C
545-3457, ask for Ronrue or exp. is what counts, not Dutch Maint Serv. 537-1508
$25 REWARD for our lost cat Good ref. 531--0JOl. Dedicated Cleaning leave message. I method. I do work mysetr .
named Kjocsh, gray tiger * WE DO EVERYTHING * Equal Oppor. Employer m/1! neutered male w/slightly Carpenter Refs. Free est. 646-2839
bowed back legs, vie. Los NEW, remodel, frame & LEI' me clean your home l~;.-;-=:;-::::;mmm~!!!!f!!I ~l=~~n ~l';s. Niguel. finish, stores, offices & while you work. Reliable. ASSEMBLERS
homes etc. Custom work. Local refs. 548-1627
LOST -Brookhurst & In-Licensed. 962-1961 . Xlnt Housecleaning
dianapolis, RB, Small red· By Day. Own Transpo1-tation
dish-brown elderly fem. Cement, Concrete * 836--0648 *
dog, short-hair, "Heidi"
$10. Re\"8rd, 962--6343
SMALL black I white poodle
mixed puppy, long curly
hair answers to Cindy. Lost
Mon. 5128, C.M. 642-5176
5-24, Blook Cat, M, yellow
collar, nr Wilson & Plact!n-
tia, CM .Please phone
833-8219
VIC Springdale & Doyle,
H.B., black & white female
cat., both ears crinkled, flea
collar. 846-$4
BRICK veneers. SJumpstone Masonry
& concrete, block fences ----------wrought iron, store front. QUALITY masonry wo~k .
Cus. work. 963-1855 Brick & block wans. Patios
a specialty. 6-10-0887 PATIOS, walks, drives. Saw, p . . :t& break, remove & replace amhnv·
concrete. 548-8668 for est. Paperhangln9
CEMENT & _B(ock Work. No Wasting
Wall, pati~, sidewalk&, etc. * WALLPAPER * By hr. or JOb. fl4(H;9l5 ,.
FOUNDATIONS -Artistic Whe~ai~~~~Mac
Planters, concrete & brick _ · ,
patios, etc. Lic'd 644-0687. Georget'ilnting & Decor ng
Precision
Mechanic.al : 1
Assemblers ;.
Wiii perform close
tolerance auembly ,
work on missile r• ·
lated hardware.
Must be able to :
work from blu• ·
pl"ints, sketchn11'·-......,_. -t--i
specifications.
swimming pools. 7 lighted
tennis courts, plus miles of
1 BR. FURN $185
2 BR. FURN $215 MAN 40-60 yrs, shr 2BR, ~5-~ar Orange C t Y
2BA, furn. Oakwood apt.
Interior & Exterior SMALL white teddy bear. C 0 N C ~ E T E Driveways, Guaranteed Top Quality,
FOUND male puppy, part Lost 5/13. Reward! Pa t I o s •. , Block ... wall Workmanship & Materials
Shepherd, approx. 3 or 4 842-5061 Masonry. Lied. 645--0595 Free estimates Lie. & Ins. Apply In Person
. gic cle trails, putting, shuf· ALL UTILITIES PAID
Adults, No Pets y J . 1' t fieboard. croquet. un1or s
. $ 1 6 O m o . N e w p or t , QUIET adult seeks year
673-26311645-3761 round 1 BR furn. ren
FE. student r o o m m a t e tal/lease, on Balboa Perun
. ..cm.:.co_·_s . ....:.536-...:......._23...:..98.:... ___ _..,.-11~GOLD charm bracelet Child Care l-8W-8574 3333 Harbor Blvd. '
SML Reddish brown mal keepsake -REWARD! ID -PAINTING & repair, 35 yrs Costa Mesa, Calif. · ·~ from $189.50 monthly; also 1 -t .'\lid 2-bedroom plans and
f2-story town houses. EIPC· 4 tric kitchens, private patios
( 4 blks S. of San Diego Frwy
on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt
to ·16211 Parkside Lane.) wanted to share 2 br house or !stand . 675-8826 aft. 7 PM dog nr Warner & Grand Ave IRMA. 548-2342 aft. 5 CHILD CARE IN MY HOME workmanship guar. Take
Under slung lower jaw. LOST male cat, Orange & I have -an opening for one advantage of my exp. (714) 847-5441 in Balboa. $86. per mo. yr]y, 3 OR 4 ·BR unfurn home in
incld util. 675-84321499-2750 Newport area. Mld.JID!e . 892-7188 aft 5pm white stripped. n a m e child, week days only. 536-7056.
(Tink ) De H Private sleeping room for -=~,.........,,......,..,.........,.....,.........,-or balconies, carpeting. dra·
peries. Subterranean park-
ing with elevators. Optional
maid service. Just :10rth of
Fashion Island at Jamhoree
and San Joaquin Hills Road.
Telephone <TI4l 644-1900
for rental infonnation
EXCLUSIVE
BIG CANYON
Luxury Golf Course
Apartments
N'EWPORT BEACH
$475. $730
Phone 714/644-0509
THE NEW
HAYWOOD APARTMENTS
in Newport Beach are
ready. The sales office is
open daUy from 10 AM to
6:30 PM. MacArthur Blvd.
& San Joaquin Hills Road.
644-5555
EASTBLUFF; beaut. new
apt. 2 BR., 2 baths. Bltins,
frplc. 2 Patios. Pool avail.
$305. 644-0355
1700 WESTCLIFF DR.
2 BR, 2 BA. Bltn appliances.
Pool. 642-6274.
$300 lX>ND0-3BR, 2 B A ,
crptd, trplc, bttlns, 2 car
gar, l yr lease, 962.:.7221
NEW Bayfront-prlv Bch &
Pier 3BR, 2BA, $550 mo yr.
ly. 979-0031. or 644-4510.
NEXT to bay & park, lBR,
Front duplex, no pets, $175.
Lease. 67~2256
Newport Heights
LARGE 2 BEDROOM,
bulltln kitchen, dish-
washer, w/w carpets,
drapes, closlld g•r•ge.
$250/per mo. Adult5-
no pets. REAL TORS
. 642"4353
Newport Beach
OCEAN VIE\'\: modern, all
electric, crpts, drps, bltns,
'1alcony, pool. 1 BR., furn &
unfurn. Lease. Adults only.
MaiTal Apts. 1510 W. Bal·
boa, N.B. (714) 6~.
WINTER, Summer, Yrly, Anita's Rentals, Bkr. 2005
W. Balboa Blvd, 673-2058.
I Rentals I~
Rooms 400
ATI'RAC rm, BA, w/or w/o
kit. priv. business woman or
teacher, non-smkr, central.
loc .. Ref's. 64&-1979.
ROOMS $18 w~ w/klt $30 wk up apts. · dren & pet
section. 2376 Newport Blvd.,
CM. 54S-975.5, 64>3967.
ROOMS -$25 & UP. Overlooking Harbor &
Ocean. ~ blk to ocean. 2500
See.view, CdM.
ROOM w/klt privll. $81. mo.
Mature employed female.
Near Shops. 536-8095.
STUD,ENTS pn.'fl!tre*. 2
br's. Kit privil, farn rm.
Util pd. S75 per nn 55t-1067.
1 BR, F /BA, lrg closet, pr!
patio, & entrance, 3 blks
from beach & bay, 64~
Furn Room with bath &
ldtch. prlv. Non-smoker.
Nr. OCC. 5.57~
NICE room 1or working man
w/kltchen privg11 . No
smoke or drink. 642-0227
Guest Home 415
SENIOR Citizens, you will
start living again under my
care! Priv or seml-prlv, 721
Sballmar, O:llta Mesa.
PRIVATE room, lovln( care
Sept. 1st 644-4756. NEW in area, graduate stu-dent desires roommate, male WANTED to rent 2 or 3 Br
or female, Jg 2BR, 2BA house or apt. Very good
N.B. aft 5, 646-1757 ref's. 673-9177, 675-8994
PAIR prescription glasses
found in parking lot 3432 Via
Oporta, Newport Beach,
673-4172
* WANTED Male to share 4
Br hse, H.B .$80/mo. Quiet.
Mature. 962-S668, 979-~7
Share APT or HOUSE
Call 'HOME-PARTNER'
836-1194 or 54S-1479
FOUND mixed B ea g I e
female White Front Store,
Costa Mesa. Wearing red
collar. 642-2.189
FEMALE tQ share 2 Bi-turn Announcements 500
FOUND male collie, blonde,
vicinity Gill School, Hun-
tington Beach. Well behaved
& very friendly, 894-9979
apt. wilh sam.e.
SlOO 646-8736 ALLEVIATE anxieties, fears
4-S-.C-.-Ci-~.--lif-e_.,'_gu_ar_ds_,_l_oo_k· guilt. Be healed tlirough
ing for se or apt. s .C. suggestive ·meditation. Call
545-2529. area. ( j33-2004. .
HORN-Rimmed prescription
sunglasses in case found on
median of Alicia Parkway,
Mission Viejo. 497-1763
FND; 5/26 Orange Plaza
Fml black/tan yo u n g
German Sherpherd. Owner
identify 53(h3794
Garages f~r Rent 435 Auto Transportation 525
ALLSPACE
Self Storage
Mini Warehouses
Various sizes from $7.50/mo.
U lock it . U keep the key.
On site mgrs • 24 hr. access
No move in • No move out fee
Security Patrolled
Open Dally for lns)Jection
Hamilton & Newland St., HB
833-0519, If no ans, 646-0697
Office Rent11 440
PRESTIGE
OFFICES
1Fountain Valley, Beaut!·
ful new building, ground
noor, 3,000 square feet,
wlH divide into smaller
offices. 50c per square
foot, includes carpets,
drapes, all utilities, jani-
tor service. Call Marilyn
Stovall (714) 832-5440.
OFFICE spi..::i> lor rent.
Newport Be ch, Westcllff
111'\!&. 1,000 sq. ft., sharp,
call Gene Hill, 642--0200.
1617 WESTCLIFF-HB
19!KJ, 1294, 7'j6 &: 540 9q. ft.
Ample prkg . UtlJ.
Baumgardner, 541-5032 .
. TRANSP. wanted • T~
amahal Bldg to New
World, Lag. Hills 4:30pm
Mon-Fri. Call aft 5pm . FND light colored Pekinese
w /blue collar Vic Co11ege
Park CM
586-5942. 54H400
Announcements 500 Announcement• 500 •·•·•:••·• .. •·••·······~··4; i PARTY!!! f
• FUN FOR ALL I •
• TE I • • t:VERYONE INVI D •
• Rock Bands -Drinking -Dancing •
Contests -Door Prizes i Meet New People And Join In For' An
Evening Of Dynamic Fun And + Entertainment
WIMn: AHhl•'s 11..,.. I•'" ........ 11¥4.,
2 111b. M9ttl .f Dlwu1lwll
• • • • •
'& nutritious food. Lovely ---~ pal.Jo ,rear stores &: ~ "'.'k.1 600 sq.ft. OFFICE w/llv'c
S•n Clemente 540-256'.l qtrs $155. Also 600 sq.ft.
APl' for young •en I o r SfORE, $155. C.M. 64&-2130
2 Br, vu, adults no pets, Call citizens With meals & care HUNTINGTON Beach, Im·
492-7345 after 3 pm. Walk If nece~. 642-9278 mac. 2 room, cpt'd, pvt
f W.-: httlcry,J• I * ha SNrtl At l :JO ,.... *
to Beach. ____ ;:....._____ bath, prkg. utll pd. 3.'10 sq.
San Juan Capistr•no You don't need a gun to ft. $90. Mr. La.ng 540-lJOl _
"Draw Fut" when you Vacancies cost money! Rent
BRAND new 2 BR apt, pool, place an ad In the Dally your ~. apt., &tore
plenty parking. Rent $240., Pilot Want Ada! Call MW bldg., etc. thru a Dally Pilot
lease $225. Call Pat 493-4739 -642-5618. Claullled A'd. •
Cotti $J.OO fw t•YI -$2.00 fw 9ai. -ID'1
cltedled et th d-
COME ON DOWN AND GET IT ON I 11 ......... ,:
a ane omes area. naps, hot lunches and plenty HOM~. Residential~ Apt.
Reward. 586-ro74 of loving care. Lake Forest Quality Work. Int . E x t .
REWARD! Germ. Shep. _El Toro area. 58&-$50 Reas. 54S-9548, 645-1574 C
mix, 31,\, mo. Male. Vic. CHILD care my home hot BUY W.P./hanglng . contract
Maple & Hamilton. 61.>-1882, lunches, fenced yd., Green by home appt. 1000 s smpls.
54!Hi045 Valley area, 968-7205 The Hangmen 547-5846
SMALL 2 yr old Sealpoint C t t CLEAN Professional Paint-Equal Oppor. Employer m/f Siamese cat,. female. Nr. on rac or Ing Int/Ext Free estimates. ____ __ ~:.~~~ ~~64~.B. JACK Taulane -Repair Call 557-74.).5. ASSEMBLERS.
remod., addit. 20 yrs exp. PROF. painter, honest work. EXPERlENCED . GREEN & yellow parakeet, Lic'd. My Way Co. 547--0036 reas. Int/ext, tree est. Pr ~ c is 1 on . electro-mech In Eastbluff area, call Refs. 548-2759. ass y,. soldering, dnll press
644--0220 -Important! Drafting operation. I $50 REWARD -· PAINTING & Paperhanging. Cole Instrument Corp.
Shaggy, tan Cairn terrier DESIGN/draft. plans home Cle:in ~ork done to your 2034 Placentia Ave., CM I
1 5125 . Edi H' HB & comml. addi t ion 8 Satisfaction. 540--0167 642-8080
ost •vie. son 1• • garages any size job'. Pla~ter, Patctt, Rap&ir An Equal 0 pp or tun i ty
968-7530• j 842-3400 -Employer ~=e~ :i~ths:S-Jt~ Electrical *PATCH PLASTERING* AUTO
Vic: de! Bispo, SJ. 496-0840. ELECTRICIAN, licensed, All ty'C:i1 ~~timates SALESMAN
LOST dog, Corona del Mar bonded. Small jobs, maint & Plumbing
Sm. Yorlalhlre Terrier. repairs, 543-5203. --~-------TOP s s s
Reward. 673-9098/546-544l Like to trade? Our Trader's L.R. OTIS PLU~BING
Daily Pilot Want A<lS have Paradise column is for you• Remodels & Repairs. Water
bargains gal.ore. 1 5 linea, 5 days for 5 bucks. · heaters. dispoRBls, furnaces. Exhpandlngds n6ew cart dealerd·
dshwashrs. 642-6263 MIC & s 1p nee men o roun
Bl A. Complete Plumbing out their Pr:ofessional sales
Se1vire. staff. Experience helps . . .
PLUMBING REPAIR but we will thoroughly. train
No job too small men with good potential.. If * * 642-3128 * * you sold direct o~ . door to door and are ambitious and Trader's Paradise
!!O ac. · No. San Diego Cnty
15 ml. -Rancho Celi!. (val.
5650 per ac) Will trade all
01' part for O.C. property or
? . 548-5525 or 548-9TIO.
OWNER desires exchange
2-4 unit bulldings In Bell for
3 or 4 br. house In Hunting-
~on Bch, Costa Mesa area.
Call ZlJ...869.8346.
SIX·store junior sllo!>Ping
.enter, Pomona, $175,000.
Trade Cor almllar in beach ·rea, Long Beach to San
Diego. Ownr, bkr 4~
HAVE $40.000 equity In
N"pt. Beach Income prop.
Want free & clear house in
Orange County. Agent
~ 675-0144
lines
times
dollars
Roofint want to earn top dollars.
ROOFING-rock & shingles,
free estimate. Do it now &
save. 84&-1098 Eves.
!;111wing/ Alter all ,ns
: Alteratlons-642-5845
Neat, accurate. 20 years exp.
there is no limit. Our bene-
fits include free demo. va·
cations, bonus plans, hos-
pi talization, & Insurance.
Earn while you learn. Apply
in person to sales manager
9-5 p.m. Gustafson Llnc-
Merc. lsroD Beach Blvd ..
Huntington Bearh.
AUTO
HAVE travel trailer & 5th I lllJ) SALESMAN Wheeler tak hou I. t d ~t • e se n ra e .. .,,...., Need 1 s a l e s m a n , ex.
!or down paymenl. 8352 perienced. Seit BMC. Fer-'
Garden GNve Blvd., GG. rarl, large inventory of utled
::all Herb (7141 534-6686. Job Wanted, Female 702 cars, Free demo, excellent
::AB-OVER camper. '71, working conditions, See ud l'~' for sell contained trlr. NEED he~p at home? We Ryder or Tom Aikin at
rrade my wife's Palamino have aides, nurses • NEWPORT
. ,nink stole for 5x12 utility h o u s ekpn, companions. IMPORTS r.aller. 645-6826 Homemakers U p j o h n ,
CoMMERCIAL. lot 159x62S 547-&>el. 3100 W. Coast Hwy., NA
from st. to st. Close to B A B Y S I T T I N G , LITE 642·940.S
Ontario Airport & Frwy HOUSEWORK IN YOUR 'O"":'=,,.....,,....,...,-=.,,.....---
Clear Trade for lncom~ HOME Available weekends AUTO SAL S
prop,· o.c. 8»6498 aft 6. only, pleru;e call alter 6 PM Experience preferred. -Mil
COMMERCIAL lot 159x625 T642-YP~G7· f :;!91~:11j~ 1:':'·
from st. to st. Close to "' 0 any papers, comm! ion and demo n
Ontario Airport and Frwy. school or buslne!!!I. Coll. Good benefits A:J: 1 •
Clear. Trade tor lncome grad. B.A. in_ English. Low pel'tOll~· Mr. ~d h~
prop .. O.C. 830-6498 aft 6. rates. 58G-6800. 1969 Harbor Blvd., 0.1&
You'll find It In Cla lfled Mesa.
' (
U-DAILl' PIJ.OT -·_, M11 Jl, 197J
· Hele W•nted, M&F 110
I lo.. _i._, ... _,-_._ll lJ I[ __ .8_~·· Ifill ' IM~)llM .. )(DJ_( _i ,,_, .... _,J[fJ] ~( ~l .. ~1c, ... ~J[fJ]~J 1 1'--~-ID·...,_Mllll~)[fJ]I __ .... ,_ .... _mJ 1 llDl ( Ifill ( Ea,,,, ...
H.ep WanNd, M & F 710Help Want.d, M & F n Hefp WanNd, M&F 710 EXP'D Lube man. Ford H9 p w~. ~-' 710Help w ~-.. -~' ~-!!! !!!~.!~~· ~·-~ p 711 Help W.m.d, M,, F 710 Help Wanted, M & p 710 j ,
CARRIERS N DED
FOR DAILY PILOT
CROSSING GUARD Producta Clua A Smoi CITY OF IRVINE license. All bnftt/Penmon
$2•29 P•r Hour plan. Tom Stamp Ford 535 N. El Camino, San The city of Irvine la l?resently Clemente 714-492-1137.
MALE OR FEMALE
accepting applications for FACTORY hel will train the position ot crossing p, •
guard. The baaic function Start $2.10 hr. Rapid ed-
of this position is to help vancement for alert young
elementary school chlldren woman. C.M. area. 545-0401.
cross s;ifely at heavily FEMALE help p/tlme 16 yrs
t r a v e I e d intersections. or over. Food takeout. 515
GuariJs are needed from E. Balboa Blvd, Balboa.
7:45 AM until approximately fl.ORIST, min. 5 yrs. exp
4:00 PM. All nece~5ary w/fresh flowers. Full time.
equipment furnished by the Top pay, designers freedom
MUST BE 10 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER
HAVE A DEP ENDABLE BIKE
GOOD PROFITS!
Ne _,.rt .... Pr 'md e, fr-JM It. te Miii St.
CAL L 642-4321 Ask for G•ry J•rrett
Helo Wanted. M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 City of Irvine. Applications 675-6291. ,
AUTO
MECHANICS
Toyota or Jaguar. and lube
men. Ask for B o b
Tbompeon. Laguna Beach.
SfG-3100
AVON SAYS
"&. Your Own Boss"
Earn an Income of your own,
right In your own neighbor-
hood. Be an AVON Repre-
sentative. Call now:
546-5341 or 541).. 7041
CHECK HERE
WITH THE
JOB KINGS
may be picked up at the -----------
Irvine Police Department, FRY COOK, EXPER.
19002 Zee St., Irvine. or if Full Time. Must be clean &
f u rt h e r information is neat. Xln't working conda.
needed contact Mrs. Joan & pay. Apply Surf &: Sir.
Gumina. Public Information loin, 5930 W. Coast Hwy., NB
Clerk, 834-5238. Trainees •..• -• • • to $3.00 hr Class I Driver .... $3.50 hr Delivery of DAILY PfLO't'.
Driver-Ship Chic •••• $2.25 hr SUNDAY 0 NL Y , to
Order Desk _ • • • to S'rrJO mo newspaper carriers in SAN
Cr. Accnt . _ •...• _ ..•. $open CLEMENTE area. Requires
E Sc to SJ 00 hr wre of Station Wagon or xp. reener . . . C M H Warehouseman ..•. $2.50 hr Van. ontact r. arry
Exper. Compressed Seeley, :130 West Bay St.,
Costa Mesa. 642-4321 Gas Man ........ St $2.75 hr I---------
Construction. all skills DELIVERY man for early
Union scale morning L.A. Times home
GENERAL LABOR
Newport 9each
Costa Mesa
Santa Ana
Orange & Irvine
No Fees -Weekly Paycheck
6 AM shift, Day shifts, 2nd
HOSPITAL
~Merry General Hospital
2701 So. Bristol, Santa Ana
Phone ( 714) 979-3500
Full Time & Rell•f
Applications AcC4tpted 9AM -4PM
RN'S
House Supervisor -3 • 11
ICU/CCU RN'S -3-11 & 11 ·7
RN'S All Areas -3-11 & 11 ·7
Relief Supervisors -3 • 11 & 11 -7
BABYSrITER. for 2 ach>ol
girb. Good pay, 7:30-11:30
a.m. & 2-6 pm, Mon thru
Fri In my home CdM area.
m-81176
--deliv. route. Must have
Asst Bookkeeper to S125 wk economical car. Over 23 yrs
Factory Trainees to $2.00 hr old. No soliciting or col-
Receptionist ; ... to $500 mo ~~29~. Westm.-H.B. area.
shifls and graveyard. DIETARY DIET TECH, Experienced !me !.:!-~· TRAY LINE PERSONNEL, Experienced BABYSITrER needed for 1
yr old baby 8: 30 to 1 Mon
thru Fri. 979-3412
BABYSIT Tues. & Thurs.
9:30-5:30, my home, own car. $1.20 per hr. 56-4197
S.lbN Bay Club
Ledles Spa Att•ndant
Secretaries . . . . . • to $600 mo
Order Dept Clric • • $400 mo
Typist • • • • • • • • • • • • • $450 mo
Cost Clerk •.•... to $450 mo
File Clerk .......... $2.20 hr
APEX
EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
lRlO·C Newport Blvd.
DELIVERY Men, permanent
part tlme for early morning
newspaper delivery t o
homes in Newport Beach.
Must have dependable car &
be reliable. ph 642-4800
Services, Inc. CAFETERIA TRAY LINE, Experienced
500 Newport Center Dr.
suite 900 &10-l9~wpor1 Bcti DESSERT MAKER, Experienced
24 Central Tower, Orange
547-6446
215 E. Commonwealth
MEDICAL A.istant wanted, -
exp In lab, X-ray l EKG, PART TIME
.~ Attenti·on ~ppro~ 3%35?1" .=;k,co~ NE w AccouNrs ~ mensurate with exp. Call CLE RK
The Followlng
Job Opportunities
Are Avalla ble At
KAYNAR
~42
MEDICAL Lab needs lab 50 W.P.M. l;ypbig, sh prefer-. :
assistant RN or LVN, exp'd red.
In blood drawilw &: ge~I -UNI TED-
la.b . knowledge. For In-CAL IFORNIA BANK terview Ph 633-&>33
MEN & WOMEN 1~27 201 Avenida Del Mar
Eam to $342.30 salary per San Clemente
mo. while we teach you a 492-5123
job skill in Electronics Me-Eq I O E lo e SCREW MACH SET-chanics or Administration. ua ppor. mp yer
UP OP ERATORS Alter training, earn $45-60
Minimum three years ex-per lllO. for 2 days work. PART Time Employment,
perience setting up and Call TSgt Young Callt Air Nlght.s only in c I d I n g
operating davenport &/or National Guard 979-1343 weekends. Mature & depend-
Brown and Sharpe screw · able o/18, Male & fem.
machines. Molders & Assemblers Apply Paulo Drive In, Colsta
For growing fiberglass boat Mesa, Fri, Sat, Sun & Mon e TOOL & DIE co. Prefer exper, but are aft 8pm.
MAKERS willing to train. Apply Clip-P E=R"""s""'N.,_L_,c=L-=E:-::R,-:-K=--
Minimum three years ex-per Marine, 1919 E. Occl-F Paid F ' al
perience of maintaining and dentai St., S.A. ;:ployer ~~div~
repairing progressive dies MOTEL MAID can communicate well w/
and large presses. Call 642-8252 the public. Some typing &
eSET-UP MEN NEED MORE MONEY?" 10 key adding mach. Salary
Minimum of two years ex-Distribute Amway ~ome care to $550. Also Fee Jobs. Call
perlence setting up small products & Nutrillte food Sally Hart, 540~. Coastal . supplements fro Personnel Agency 2790 Har-punch presses for precision ho Ca,ll .,,c 7853m Y 0 u r bor Blvd., CM. ' work. Must be capable of me. .,...,... reading blueprints and in-1N'""E=-E--D-:L,..-E"-'.J...-po-'-"-ln-'t..:.:..:_c_an_va_s PE~N.NEL CLERK
spection tools. painter, exp'd. Part ~. Fee paid. Like People? Type
842-9494 aft 5• 968-5268 40 wpm & handle confiden-e s PR I NG WINDING NON-DIDN~. age 50-60 ~~it~1eshs.ar1ngGreatSalCo. ~ MACHINE SET-UP Assist ti · ary ...,.,.,. gen eman, Also fee jobs. Call 'Cln •• Ellis MEN 960-1420 ~8505. ""'V
Experience in setting up and NEWSPAPER Auto route CONTROL CAREER o~r~ting Torrington Spring approx hours 3:30-5:30pm: EMPLOYMENT AGENCY
Wmdmg machmes Xlnt perm. p/time situa-3400 IRVINE BLVD.
eMACHINISTS tion. tor housewife or SUITE 109-B
. . . retired person 540-3006 NEWPORT BEACH M1mmum three-five years . . . experience on all tool room NURSES Aide-. 01derly, exp PAINTERS Apprentice. Must
machines. not nee .. O~rungs on days be clean cut, hard working,
Prior exper ln spa proced-
ure. Must be over 21,
knowledgeable Jn use of
whirlpool & sauna. Contact
Personnel Manager, Costa Mesa 645-4320
DELIVERY Men, permanent
part time for early lnorning
newspaper delivery t o
homes in Newport Beach.
Must have dependable car &
be reliable. ph 642-4800
DENTAL RECEPTIONIST,
office manager. Preventive,
progressive, general prac-
tice in Huntington Beach.
Jniative & enthusiasm a
must. Pleasant office with
all phases of general office
work. 962-3'319
Suite F Fullerton
870-1833
Equal Oppor. Employer
7-3; m1dmte 11-7. Good no exp nee. 64&-5178
These openings are available benefits. Make apptication * PIZZA k & d · .. and offer excellent com-at 1445 Superior Ave., N.B. coo s rivers ·
MAINTENANCE MEN
l2'll W. Coast Hwy., N.B. Chemist degreed $800
Analytical
BANKING
UNION BANK
Has an ·opening for a
CUSTOMER
SERVICE CLERK
Exper. desirable. Please a p-
ply in person,
Fee Nego/ AIM> Fee Jobs
Westclltt
Personnel Agency
1651 E. Edinger. S.A.
(Mark 111 Center)
542-8836
CLERICAL
DENT AL assistant, fu I I
time. 1 year experience. FV
area. 839-9660
Teresa Wales
610 Newport Center Dr
Newport Beach
Equal Oppor. Employer
Hyland Laboratorin A
LHder In Medlc•I Diag-
nostic Produds; Has
lmmedlat. openings for
Department Store
J. W . Robinson
Newport Beach
DISPLAY TRIMMER
Must be exp. F /time
FURNITURE SALES
F/time, exper. Decorating
not necess, but helpful.
* BARMAID * skilled individuals w•nt-
Full or part time help ing to associate with a
556-950'l 897·9575 firm offering top IMne-
BEAUTICIAN wanted for fits and working envi-busy salon at S. Coast
Plaza. Paid vac. c a 11 ronm•nt.
54&-7186.
BEAUTICfAN wanted with
small following. Eileenc · ~
Beauty Salon, 792 Center,
CM 642-ffi11
BOAT hardware assemblers.
exper. Sol Catamarans, 1.932
E. Pomona, Santa Ana
541-2285
BOOKKEEPER·
Penn. position, 30-40 Hrs. per
wk. Exp. not req'd, but
helpful. The Singer Co.,
Huntington C e n t e r , HB
897-11>41.
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
BOOKKEEPER
Use your exper. to land this
high paying position. Some
typing. Start $600. Call
Gloria Gray, 540-6055, Coast·
al Personnel Agency' 2790
Harbor Blvd., CM.
BOOKKEEPER, full charge,
experienced thru financial
statemenlll, pay r o 11 &
reporting. Familiar W/ac·
counting pr o c edu re s .
83S-1491
BOTIQUE salesgirl 20/25
11J>Ortswear, s w i m w ea r ,
beach area. Good personal·
ity, train for mgr. Must be
exp'd. Gn-7569 between 10 &
5
•SECRETARY
Typing 60 w.p.m.,
sh 80 w.p.m.
• PURCHASING
CLERK
Exp.rlence preferred,
excellent typing skllls
required.
•CLERK
TYPIST
•. J
50 w.p.m. required.
Appl) In Person
Or Call:
Dona L•ver•tt
(714) 54G-5000, ut 250
Hyland
Laboratories
3300 Hyland Ave
Costa Mes., Calif.
92626
Equal Oppor. Employer
nurle & female
CLERK-TYPIST
Temporary parttime open-
ings. Assignment will include
narrative & statistical typ.
ing -applications available
City at Irvine, Admin.
Offices, 4201 Campus Dr.,
Irvine. 833-3840. Boys
12-16
Would you like a part time CLERK· TYPIST
job this summer? (even If Shipping & receiving, type 55
you are going to summer WPM minimum. Salary
scho<i) You can make $20 open. Good fringe benefits.
$25 a week plus enjoy hips, Hours 7:30AM-4PM. 5 days,
prizes, et c. If you are neat plus every other Saturday.
&: dependable caH Mr. York Santa Ana area. 546-9842
NOW! 979-8149• COLUMBIA YACHTS
BUSBOYS
HOSTESS-CASH IE R
Full-Time
Apply In Person
HOCHMAN'S DELI
428 E. 17th Street
Costa Mesa
Equal Oppor. Employer
CABINET MAKERS,
framers. & detail people.
for camper factory. Apply
858 W. 18th, Costa Mesa.
Career Secretaries
Average rang1> ~$750. Top
$. NO FEES. N.B., C.M.,
Irvine, Orange & S.A. Call
Immediately. e P.P.S.
Pacifi c Personnel
Services, Inc.
500 Newport Center Dr.
Suite 900, N.B.
640-1970
24 Central Tower. Orange
547-6446
Equal Oppor. Employer
CASHIERS-EXPER
Paid vac, ho!, lick leave. life
Ins, medical, dental &: profit
sharing.
NatioMI Lumber Co.
19122 Brookhurst
(Comer of Garfield)
Huntington Beach
CHEF wanted for Cellar Restaurant, 220 Forest Ave.,
Laguna Beach.
"Weed it &: Reap"
From lrea.sures to trash
TU.m them into caah
CA1L De.lly Pilot
275 McCormick, CM
Custom Boat Div.
Expansion in custom
boat field creat.s im·
med. openings fo r e CARPENTERS
e ENGINE INSTAL-
LATION MEN
e BONDERS
4 Day, 40 Hour Work Wr~k
Paid Holidays
Paid Medical
Bonus Incentive Program
Many Otht>r Benefits
Expcr. Only Ne«! Apply
No Phone Calls Please
Apply Mon thru Thur&-
Contact Noel Kelly. Supt.
Equal oppor. empl~r ml'f
COOK. night lead man, din-
tlf'r exp, call bet 3 & 5 for
appointment. 640--03°l2
COUNTER Girl. Apply in
prrson after 1 pm. Kentucky
Fried Chicken. 2929 E.
Coast Hwy, Corona de! Mar.
COUPLE wanted, mo t e 1
work combination desk and
Maintenancf', 49&-235.1
C 0 U P L E wanted for
janitorial route, exp'd pref.,
own trans., 646-4546
• Cron country
Drivers
•Foremen
• Managers
•Assemblers
•Molders
• lnsp.cton
• Gel Repairmen
All ~ Shifts
We Will Train
MacGregor Yacht Corp.
1631 Placentia. C.M. I
COSMETICS
Full·Time
PBX OPERATOR
562 Multiple. Must
be exper. p/time.
Apply in person 10-5 pm
No. 2 Fashion Isl., 'NB
Equal Oppor. Employer
DEPENDABLE young man
to assist gardener. Good ap-
pear., hard worker, start
$1. 75. Call 8.17-2258 aft 4.
DESK Clerk Maintenance
man, Maids. The New
Marina Inn Motel, Dana
Point Harbor. Call Gene
496-2353
DIAL A JOB!
Llx R•ind•rs Agency
4500 Campus Dr, N.B.
557-3401
DINNER cook & general
kitchen helper, tnp wages.
Ben Brown's, 31106 Coast
Hwy, South Laguna.
Dr's Assistant
Young lady '18-28) to assist
in health spa. Will train, no
exp. nee. Apply in person
any aft or eve. 2930 W.
Coast Hwy., N.B.
DOMESTIC Help George
Allen Byland Agency, 106-B
E. 16th St., S.A. 547--0395.
DONUT Shop, p I t i me ,
female. Age 25-45. Apply in
person, Mr. Donut, 135 "E.
17th St, C.M
DRAPERY workroom help
exp<>r. Hem or overlock or
mark . 5-16·1153.
DRIVER, Part Time. Male
or female over 21. Clean
cut , economy car, Must
Know Orange C o u n t y
83!>-3140.
ELECTRONI C ASSEM.
1''emale for day & night shift.
No experience necessary.
1583 E. Saint Gertrude
Place, Santa Ana, 714.
556-8940.
EQUESTRIAN
HORS E RENTAL
STRING SUPERVISOR
Newport Beach
Seek individual w /C'xper. OJ>-
cratmg rental horse string.
Must have full working
knowledge of horsemanship
anrl ability to deal effectively
wi the public.
P<'rmanent !/time posltion
w/xln't salary & benefits.
Call 644-7464
WePkdays bl'twn 8nm & 5pm
Ask Jor Sally or Wes
Equal Oppor. Employer
EX CELLENT opportunity
for reliable ronsclentious
young man in expanding
business. Learn many skills
& advance at your own
pace. Gen'! mechanical ap.
titude Important.
Woodworking exp.
desirable. Apply, Fr I .
Betwen 3 & 6 pm, Walton
Corkwood, 934 W. 17th St.,
C.M.
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
FOR ACTION •••
~ALL 642-5678
'
GENERAL OFFICE
Must have good typing skills
& figure aptitude to handle
orders & billing on Friden
computer. Wiii train. Small
ore. Tapmatic Corp, 1851
Kettering St, I r v in e •
!J79...WJO.
GENERAL hlmdyman for
'private preschool, jack of
all trades, perm. part-time,
must have own t o o I s .
546-4647
GENERAL Office, typing,
accts. rec e iv a b I e &
telephone. Exper. he'lpful.
Cail Storer Cable TV, Lag
Bch, 494-8595.
GENERAL Help, p/time
eves Irom 5pm on. Drivers
& Kitchen. Over 21. Apply
in person, Me n Eds, 410 E.
17th St, Costa Mesa
GIRL FRIDAY
All Around Hospital Experience
Excellent benefits &
Working Conditions
E qual Opportunity Employer
pensation. Our excellent or call 642-2410 over . 21. 16532 Beach Blvd. . . Huntington Beach benefits program includes: NURSERYMAN wanted • liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
-Group & Medical Life In-min: 2 yrs. ex~rience In POSITIONS OPEN
surance retail nursery business. Call FOR NEW BRANCHES
-Paid Sick Leave ~~:i~/0~ bet. 9 & 5,
-Paid Holidays & Vacations e Tellers
-Profit S~aring I Retire-NURSES e New Accounts "'!!!!!!!~!!!!!l!!!!!!l!!!!!!J!~!!!!!!!~~---·!!!!!!!!Jl!I~-~-ment Plan e L p S. ' '."' -Credit Union oan roe. c Y
Help Wantesl; M & F 710 ~_!~, M & F 710 -Excellent w 0 r king con-OPPORTUNmES • Receptionist
INSPECTOR LABORERS
3 Yrs recent exper. In-proc-Immed. Assignments ess, machine shop, 1st Top $$$ ••••
articles. Production & final Irvine 540-4450
inspectio n of machined 17802 Sky Park
parts. Xln't co. benefits & NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO
working conditions. Tempo Temporary Help
ditions FOR Savings & Loan Exper.
Apply Employment Office
KAYNAR
MFG. CO., INC.
STAFF NURSES Pref'd. Apply In Person.
.... Mariner's Savings &
Loan Association ORANGE 1515 Westcliff Dr., N.B.
COUNTY 642-4000
MEDICAL Apply in Person
SHUR-LOK CORP.
1300 E. 'Normandy Pl.
800 S. State College Blvd CENTER 2nd Shift. Women to work
LADY companion for mother Full•rton for plastic molding plant.
at Leisure W or Id . 546-3370.
I Santa Ana
(1 Blk N. of McFadden
~ Blk W. of Grand)
Equal Oppor. Employer
Non-smoker/drinker. Share INTERVIEWING HOURS: Stimulating University ------.----
work & tun. Room & board Environment ' RAPIDLY growmg boat co. sa1 f hanged Monday thru Friday Full & P/time Positions seeks exper. A/P CleI'k. ~I ~7J: ~~~~ngs 0~ 9 A.M. to 12 & 2 to 4 P.M. Irvine Indus. Park location.
evenings only. After hour interviews may be • Critical Care Phone 493-4~ ..
INTERESTING full time op-LADY needed for 1 girl of-arranged by calling • Psychiatric Care REAL ES'lATE SALES
portunity for s 0 me one fice, duties incl. phone, J. H. Fredrick (714) 871-1550 e G•Mral C•re SUCCESS CAREER n & bkkpg New or experienced. Join the w/varied office ski I I s · payro some · An Equal Opportunity New employes start on even· World's largest and fastest Engine Distributors opening Salary commensurate with . sal ~ft••ft · c•o 2541 Employer ing or nite sifts; Transfer to growmg re e o.5 .......... tion
. .
Must be good typist, book-
keeping, handle phone &
front receptionist. Interest-
ing work with good poten-
tial. Salary commensurate
with experience. Call for
app't between 10 am & 12
noon. fi4&.6133, ask for Mrs.
Clark.
nu office·, reqs exp'd woman experience. ..,...,., or '!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Ith f 300 646-5797 days. Xln't fringe benefits. w a network o over
to fill girl triday situatiqn. ---------====-=-Machine 0,..rators Staff development program. offices and become a • (Receptionist, secretary & LIVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER .. -. r "'" · member of our Millionaire
bookkeeping background.) older woman wanted to Plastics. Openings on 2nd Call for' intervieW's: • Club. Multi-million dollar
Please send resumes to live-In; keep house for & 3rd shifts for ex Per· Direct.or of Nursing advertising program. Free
Classified ad no. 881, Daily elderly woman, cook 2 operators & trainees. Clean, (TI4) ~9393 '•' guaranteed licensing school.
Bo 1560 lite work in modern new GIRL Friday-Need sharp at-Pilot. PO "' no. , meals daily. Priv rm, tv, Shif bo . Ext. 336 or 640 Excellent sales training. C st M Cal.f 92626 ho · c · trano Be h bldg. t nus prellllum tractive gal for 1 girl ofc. o a esa, 1 me m ap1s ac · Op f Please call Virginia Jones
Top pay. Hrs lo.·30-3·.30 Mon Jll Call Mr. Lawrence daytime for nite work. r,or. or 101 ~ Dr. South o>~ ••11. "~ .a""°" J'I"-• advancement & xln t fringe "'-~Calif """""" thru Fri. Sh so+, typing -v -v 496-9385 -monthly salary. I In v... RED CARPET benefits. App Y person An ative, 65+. 548-4144 or 548-7834. ..,,. _ ,,_ MDC'.'QNNEl LVN, f/time 7-3. ·Oiarge 9-11 am & 2-4pm. · Action Employer Realtors
GRILL cook, exper., male or IK.VINt. r-UV Nurse. See Mrs. Taber, Calif. Injection Molding .
female. 497-2550. Carmel's 5i:mnrcc•AGfNCY H.B. Convalescent Hosp, Irvine Indus. Complex Nurses REAL ESTATE SALES
Dining & Pie Shop, 628 N. 1:1'\Jl\..L.J 1881 Florida, H.B. 200 Briggs Ave, CM RN-LuuAIDE Resales in Newport Beach Coast, Laguna. Sa:les/Mktng Engr to $18K 847-3515 ..,,.....
Sec' Bookk r to $900 MACHINIST -GENERAL 11-7 &: othet shifts. Top pvt area. GRILL Cook. PI t 1. me . Y eepe LVN -Easy, pleasnt work. T t hlne hop f . HARBOR VIEW •-Girl ........, t $700 o opera e mac s or duty pay. Immed. ""v for Wknds. holidays. Newport u"". :ruuay o to $600. Omega Oinic, (TI4) ~·~ft~ Costa M C ,..,, Cost Acctng Cl...... t $680 ,.;•vwu.., esa 0· floor d""" County w l de HOMES Beach Tennis Club, ~ "'1 " 0 547~29 T I d ' & hort .. ..,, Exec. Secretaries to $700 ----------00 5• ie~, s r:un Intrvws. Mon-Fri 9 - 5 · 1829 Port Sheffield Place GUARDS 1 Girl ofc/Constr $650 prod. Exp d lathe, mill, Lescoulle Nurses Registry, Newport Beach 833-0780
Full & P /time Positions Maintenance Man to $650 MACHINISTS surfacec 1 Igrlntrumder, ettcCo. rp ~! Hospital Rd., NB (Lob-wk-days only
open in Long Beach, La-Asst Bookkeeper to $600 ° e ns en · by Park Lido B 1 d g )
guna Niguel in Laguna & Gen'! Office $500 E • t I 2034 Pla~Ave. CM 642-9955, 541)..9954. REAL ESTATE SALES
Compton areas for qualified Payroll Clerk $498 xper1meft a An Equal opp or tun I ty NURSES Aide, 7-3 shift, ex-FREE LICENSE ,
applicants who desire Recept/Gen. Ofc $450 h• • Employer per. prefd. Hunting t 0 n TRAINING ,
steady employment. 18 Yrs Secretary Trainee $450 Mac 1n1sts Bea h Co H ital l88ll of age or older. Apply in Free & Fee Positions MAID -MOTEL. Apply Ex-c. nv. osp • Famowi Real Estate Licens-,
person, 326 So. Lemon St., CALL TRISH HOPKINS ecutive Suites, 2080 Newport F1onda, H.B. 847-3515· Ing Course now available • ,
Anaheim, betwn 9 am & JERRI WHITTEMORE El h Blvd .. Costa Mesa. NURSES Aides, day shift. thru Tarbell Realtors. Free •
1 pm. 488 E . 17th St. (at Irvine) CM g t years gener-MAID -Full time. Motel & Wiii train. Mesa Verde Place!'1Pnt Service. Free '
ADT Sterling Security service Suite 224 642-1470 al machine shop ex· Apt Hntg Beach Conv. Hosp, 661 Center St, Tralnmg Program. Earn
An Equal Oppor. Employer~ ~ peri•nce in manu-' Call 536--04il. C.M. 548-5585. whlle ynu learn. Call Al
f ' ' ' NURSE p hl tr· Sloan (714 l 832-5440. GUARDS actur1ng prec1s1on MAID work in exchange for -syc a 1c exper. •
JANITORIAL, perm. p/time parts and tooling room. 4 hrs. per day. 2376 p/tlme. Personnel de Pt REAL ESTATE •
eve. work. 4% hrs nitely. 5 required. Will per-Newport Blvd. 548-9755. Haog Hosp, N.B. SALES MANAGER l
Day wk in beach & other form the layout and MAIDS WANTED NURSES Aides, 'l':xper. req. Resale Office needs manager :
FULL OR P /TIME
NEWPORT BEACH &
SANT A ANA AREA
Wells Fargo Guard Service
Div. Baker Protec. Service
1352 West Commonwealth,
Fullerton or ph : 525-2386
HICKORY FARMS
So. Coast Plaza
Has opening for
Sales Personnel
See Mr. Thompson
So. Coast Plaza Lower Mall
HOSPITAL
Nurses Aides -3-11
Laundress -WJrnds Only
Housekeeper -Days
Xln't pay & benefits, vac,
holidays, sick pay. Glen
Haven of Newport, lffili Su-
perior Ave., 'N.B.
Hosplt•lity Hostess
S•rvice
Is looking for women to wel-
come & Interview new resi-
dents. Sales or advertising
exper. helpful. Must have
car & typewriter. 547-3095.
HOSTESS Cashier over 21,
Days, nltes & wknds. Apply
Daily, 10:30 am-lpm. &
4:30-6:30pm, Mi Casa Mex-
ican Restaurant, 296 E. 17th
St, CM.
Housek .. ,,.r, f/tlme
549-3061
HOUSEKEEPER, babysit-
ter, live In, exp'd & refs
nee. No smoking, 3 children,
prl rm & ba & TV, 5 day
wk, lovely w a t er fro n t
Newport Bch home, salary
open, 673-5666
IMMED. employment avail
for gen'l car wash help.
Apply in person, Lido Car
Wash, 481 E . 17th St., Costa
Mf'sa.
Don't give up the ship!
"Ust" it In class~. Ship
to Shore Resyltsl ~·
•
areas. Must be neat ap-machinlnn of com-496-2353 H7-3B f/time & 11:7 f/tlme. with 2 years of Real Estate
pearing. Apply Tues thru ··• · · area. B42-55Jl. experience. Newport Beach
Fri, 409 N. Harbor, S.A. plicated parts from MAILIN~ DEPT OFFICE MGR area. Expanding company.
J AN IT o RI A L , par t dimensional pr.inti Expandmg maJOr direct mall FUIL CHARGE OFFICE Excellent opportunity for . ,
time/full time, local. Eves. or sketches. & printing ~m f!1 C.M. MGR for New Car professional growth. Apply '
Exp'd adult. $2.40 hr needs exper. & me':'per. Dealership. You know the in confidence. Send resume 9~39'l3 Apply In Person help. Mechanical aptitude experience you must have. to Classified ad no. 6.38, c/o
JUN I OR SALESMAN .• an asset & gd dexterity Please apply In person, or Daily Pilot p o Box 1560 3333 Harbor Blvd. req'd. No layoff problems. phone 645-7770. H a r b or Costa Mesa Cafil 92626 •
Earn $20-$40 per week Costa MHa, Ca lif. Oppor. for advancement. American Motors. • · ·
working after school and Please can for ap Pt· 2 OFFICE GIRLS
on Saturdays getting new 540-1854 NEEDED
customers for the Daily L i Addres!ll) Print Center Inc. Day or night, no exp. nee,
RECEPTIONIST
Pilot. This is not a paper r L --.;r MALE hel ted p/time Radio telephone dispatch easy, fun job. Will train, no ' . P wan • Must be 25, able to drive route and does not include Ce t!BC!L.1 or f/time. Kentucky Fried Apply In Person typing or shorthand, etc.
deliveries or collecting. -• Chicken, 2929 E. Coast Hwy, YELLOW CAB CO. Apply in person any aft or
We have openings in South-C CdM after 1 pm. 186 E. lSth, Costa MAsa eve. at 2930 West Cst Hwy., west Costa Mesa and South 3 ~ N.B.
H ti t B h I ~,,.:1..,•.J-• MAILING Clerk 2 to hrs OFFICE I . /ti '"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!1!1!!!!!!!~ 411 ng on eac on y. JJ -••-It'• d Appl In person c eanmg p me.1 = Apply now! 968-9641. tr t ayCatam~ 2 0 2 6 Approx. 1 hr nltely in CM RECEPTIONIST to answer
KEYPUNCH Equal Oppor. Employer ml t M~ Irvine ' Exper. only. Top pay. Call phones. 2 Aftns per week. aw, · (:n3) 9ZT--0115. Start $1.90 hr. 548-$25.
MAN train for window tint----------liiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
OPERATORS
We are seeking e x p er .
keypunch operators f o r
daytime & swingshitt. 4 pm-
12: 30 am on the Univac
1701-1710. We are willing to
train on the tab punch
verifier. Location or the key
punch dept. in the near
future will be Fashion
Island, Newport Beach.
Please call Mrs. Rose
for an appointment
(714) 547-7571
GREAT WESTERN
SAVINGS
1418 N. Main St., Santa Ana
An Equal Oppty Employer
KITCHEN Help, operate dish
machine & util clee.n up,
F/time, Must be depen-
dable & looking for penn.
work. 10:30 em-7 pm, Mon-
Fri, $2.27 per hr, Apply ln
person, C o s ta Mesa
Memorial HOl!pltal, 301 Vic-
toria. CM, See Mrs. Dunlap
Equal Opportunity Employ-
er.
MACHINISTS
Must do own lathe & mill
setups & have own tools.
NITE FOREMAN
Secondary operation
Setup exper req'd for notch-
ing, tapping, drilling, de-
burring, broaching & other
machine operations.
DAVENPORT
Set-Up Men
BROWN & SHARPE
Set-Up Men
Good wages. Steady employ·
ment. 1st & 2nd shift open-
ings.
Excellent fringe benefits In-
cluding company paid group
Insurance.
REXNORD INC
Spec:l•lty Fastener Div.
3130 W. Harvard
S.nt• Ana
714Mli-5100 213f'585.2184
equal oppar. emt;'!oyer mlt
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
CLASSI ED AD
ing installer. Start $2 hr. OPERATOR for Burrough! R!N'S
Raises monthly to $4.50 hr L - 5 0 0 0 Bo o k k e e p In g
within 1 yr. Over z. Tall machine. We will train if ~ .,,._,,,94 ' you have several yrs. ex-11.J ...... , GtntmZ H.....-.A1 neat. VTrVt • perlence In o 1 f I c e a.c-•YM::l•.Y """""'
MAN wanted to bu I Id counting. ~ 2701 S Bristol S A. nursery boxes. Use of saws Ou b h • ' ' preferred. Apply l 7 s 5 2 t rd Motor Mee anlc (714) 979-3500
Gothard St, Huntington Bch Summer or permanent. Move . 1()..5 to beautiful Lake Ar· F /time & Relief Appli-
• 1 thing rowhead. Call ( 71 4 ) cations Accepted 9 AM-4 PM MANAGER men s ic O • 337-2501
ei!Cperlenced, to operate ---·-------
leased dept. In hlghly sue-OUTBOARD Mechanic, sum·
cessful discount 9tnre, C.M. mer or permanent, move to
Pay in c lud es frirlge beautltul Lake Arrowhead.
benefits. Call Mr. Wilkes, Call 714: 337-2501
!213l 860-7315 Parking Attend•nts
Muketing S.C:Ntuy 18 & over1 .tu!! & part time
RN'S
Houn Supervisor
3·11 Shift
ICU/CCU RN'S
3-11 &: 11-7 shifts
RN 'S All Areu
3-11 & 11·1 Shifts
Relief Supervisors
3-11 & 11-7 9Ufta
Excallent 1Mneflt1 &
Working Conditions
Responsible versatile &: ma-ope~s m CM. $2. hr take
ture. Capable of self diJ'ec. home, Start Immediately.
tion & oritanizatlon. Sh + 60 Must have transportation &:
w.p.rn. IBM Exec. 1YP" phone. Well groomed ap-
ing for rapidly growing sail-pearance. Call 213-451-1603,
boat manufacturer. Knowl-Ask for J. Hamson or ap-
edge of merchandlalng, ad· ply be,31nnlng Fri, after 6
vertlslng It PR helpful, but P::t, at 1670 Newport, CM. Equ:ll Oppor. Employer
r.e:i'J exper A: aood llkllls Springs Parking, Inc.
more Important. 1if2.8961. PARKING Attendant 18 or SAI..J:S, Of!lce products &: ,
MECHANIC, pneral, new over. Neit annear. Full or mar:clng. Full or p/ttme.
car deater, aoocl 50/50 split. p/time. 494-5762. Wo:ne:i or retired men. 270 '
'Start Immediately, 8 to 5:30 PART time messenger girl Brlags (oor Redhill) PM
5 days. Phone Jonn Boyle. 18 to 2:1 yrs. Must have own only.
66-mo. car. MU age allowance. Call A good want ad 11 a sood in-~ will aell It! Jenfllter 8.'B-l390'1or appt vestment. •'
. l
·.
·'
Thursday, MIJ 31, 1973 DAILY PILOT
-~Eets_•~'~'~ _·:ts_•_I~_, _P1¢1>_1_f~I~---'~' •t , I
Help Wented, M & F 110 tWp w , M & P nt tture 110 o.r..-s.1e 112 ·Doll .-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;A;;;;;;;;; I~;;;;;;:~;;;;;;;;;; Wenhd l20 • • WELDER w/ tal LIQUIDATIONI GARAGE Sale -Uits of ADORABLE klttenl, 6 wb, 2 6 YR. ~» thoroualilrtid, "' •
SECRETARY RETARY Jrm exper. Mike's Sllcrillce! Due to ~. ~ .. ~te~Fri~~ WANTED: U.S.Coinsl964or fe, 3 ma. creY blk/wht, quarter. Bay ~eldlna, Ena. '
N BMch Omamental Iran Works, Prote58CJI' must sell all new Sat ..,........,_ _,. ,,......... older, will pe,y 16c tor dimes, blk, fluttY. N~ love. or west rn, :Jumpe. $425. nu. is an exciting & ~port 7Z% Laguna en Rd., Lag ~ cwslDm tumiture: 3: Dr., Hunt. Bch. <2 blks S. of «le for quarten, 80c tor ~7604 67>1725
challenging opportunity for The IJVine ·CGmpany seeks Bch. tlM-.Q16 piece sectional paid $1700 Wa.mer, 2 blks E. of Beech) half dollan. Sliver dollars, FAT, cute. healthy puppies, 6 SCCYITY====-...,,fe-mal.._,..e-.__,..AK~C.,,...-14 :::W ~tl:a:: :~ 1"':~ 1~ Requ s 2-3 yHrs MC· ~ :: C::. WHO WANTS TO WORK? sell $600. Dinirig wt w/~ DEALERS we I c ome • $2.50, goltl coins 35% over weeks old, Cocke.Merrier. wka. champion baclqp:ouud.
In ..& I I • Ith .. n~ relatloos desirable DRIVE A CAB! denza & all linens, pd $2100, garage full of clothes, all list. 496-1580. Nd homes by 6/2. 536-1301 $125. 56-7361 ,
reeogn1zed company the r •• ar • experience w ~u._, _.must ~ CHOOSE your boun. work sell $500. Gold engraved sizes & household goods. Office Furniture/ aft 4 BEAUTIFUL AKC Beagle ~~ ~t f1:1~1e T~ .• .pm.mi.ntyi mpl!. m•ndof 6080 able 1:::9 well to all age for yourself, be )'OU? own glass mirror, paid $450, sell 8969 Nlgbtenple, Fountain Equip. 824 HEALniY beaut if u I Puppy, 10 wka, male. $50. •
reorganize our entire sales • .., groull& w/wannth & dignity boss. Men or women. Can $150. Recliner chalr, pd Valley, Sat&: SUn. . shepherd-Bloodhound mix. 2 * 833-1526 *
effort for' vigurous growth, w.p.m. shorthand. Can. Accurate '10 w.p.m. typing: be sllgbtly bancl'c•pped. $299,sell$150.Clrcularglass MOVINGtoHoooluiu.Gigan-OFFICE .turmture: Desk, yl'll, male "1 man dog." COLLIE PUPS. $30.
contribute substantially to didates must heve abll-Sh !l(>-100 & xm't grammar Ne a t-Oean Appe~. top table, pd $399, eell $115. tic garage sale, JWle 2nd & files. chairs & small Items. 56-1837 7 wks Id 545-T16l
new product application, na-ity to handle v•rlecl as-Xln't woriti.ng cmds &: co. Vts, retired. Age to 'IO. Plus misc. hou3ehol.d fur-3rd, 10:00 AM. 18 2 2 2 Good cone!. 83!H!944 ITE MALE POODLE o .
.,_A, sales plans, shows, • t lth-r • • ~ts · Supplement your lncome. nisbnlgs. Call~ alter Baybeny Way Irvine EXEC I ..... _ ~"-25 '"--WH AKC Lab male 7 mo's. UUI..... s1gnmen s w a m1n1 ucin=u • Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a 6 PM ' swv "'u" ...,... """ W/papers tree to good aiam lo • Lines. Att etc. & effectively motivate a of I • • Cell Mrs. Smoot day Apply m person · GARAGE SALE • SUNDAY &: chrs $8/24 Desks $20/90 Off home H~s had all shots. np10n J er 5
conuni.&sion sales force. Ex-mum superv 11on. 644 3389 Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. l6th LAR5'Xl?,Ehand~~~eewoodtble.. MONDAY ONLY. 334 Vista SUpl 867 w 19 CM 642-3408 557-lS13 ipimi,i~iiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiii
perlence in our, or a similar Previous activity In Between 9 am & 4 pm St., Costa Mesa. ...., vcu Madera NB 644-8676 FORTRESS 4 Drawer full HA VE ibVE _ w 1 LL
commodity field desirable, convention plennl"" Is !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' glass top; cost S 2 5 O ,
1
· filing. b 1 ~, r-------. but t A-• ...., WIG Sty"Ats -Exper. $2 -sacrifice .... 00 . "' Ft . le-try 815 suspension ca , ee;o.i TRAVEL [ •~ _... ll-L I no a must. "Eo" is no highly deslreble. AppU-SEC'Y LEGAL wo .... ., -· $85. ~l . --barrier. We have an at. $2.50 hr. Sal + Bonus. 7800 credenza, walnut, 3 sliding sz. · 2 desirable ml k:itt.em wtSh lllrtne Equipment
tractive c 0 mp en sat ion cants should heve ex-Edinger, Hunt. Bcb. doors, cost $125, sacrifice DIA. Sol. approx .. 1 ct. "A" I Pianos/Organs 826 pos. in gd hom<', &!5-8009 ::iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiil
P a c k age for t h e cellent communications Legal Secretary ·(to asst gen'! WOMEN _ Need 4 attractive $40. Harbor View Hills. qua:l. $450. Earrings 1 ct MOTHER & 5 babies to good •
results-oriented individual. skills. counsel) needed for large women for up to 5 week Newport Beach. 640-0388 $.125. 638-2313 ll-l pm BABY GRANDS homes. Frientlly, lovable. 6 Boats, General 900
Send resume & earning co. 'located in Orange Co. At public relation project to in-MOVING from Lido Isle _ wks old , 548-4739 --··-~-· · ~A-
history to R.W. Easter, 523 Excellent working con-least 10 yrs exper, xln't troduce bank servire to Selling all. Corner beds, Miscellaneous 818 Now save up to $1000 on ~r-BABrES allergic must give ON Shore Mooring -Balboa
S .. W~and St., Orange, ditlons end fringe ben-secretarial skllis Ir: heavy Laguna Niguel residents. dinette, sectional, cedar lain floor models. , Other away or destroy 2 male Island. 18' Gla.sspar -OMC
Californ18 92669 ft contract work req'd. Please Salary. No selling. Work 9 chest, typewriter, chairs, 8' * AUCTION * Grand Pianos from $729. neuter!'d cats. 552--7288. Inboard -Outboard, lllp.
e 1 s. Apply in pel'SOll write or send resume to to 3:30. Call Mrs. Carl.son, camper awning, cameras, These and many more at: . 673-9023
or call: Cl8;Ssifl~ ad no. 875, c/o 495--0l.'iO clothes <size 9). Misc. FRIDAY 7:30 P,.M. Wallichs Music City ~~~ g~te~m:. ~ Jf~ 1;;;3;-, ~FI;;;SH=IN::;G;::;-:boa~t:--. -mo-..,..tOl'.'-&~1
Daily !Pilot, P. ~· Box 1500, WOMAN to care for polio Phone: 64Z-ll75. JUNE lST South Coast Plaza ~2830 5 PM &42-$06 t ra i I er • ~. 19931
Costa Mesa, Calil. 9'El6. lady. No smoking. Lite ESTATE SALE _ trad1.tional * * BEAUTIFUL OFFICE ' . Gloucester Ln, H.B. Equal Oppor. :Employer hsekpng Mon thru Fri. 7 CUTE kittens,. 8 weeks old, OUTRIGG , . din. rm. set, 1 J-T. old: FURNITURE: Desks, Con-Sewing Mechines 828 weaned & lramf'd. ERS -19 Anglers SECRETARY for nursery am-3:30pm. $300 mo. H.B. hutch; tble, 2 leafs; 5 ference Table, Office Cre-548-46l5 Specialties side mount.
Sales Engineer degree $18K
Dental Fmt Ofc to $600
Inven. Clerk $450 Done Leverett Secretaries $650 Recept!Typist $550 (714) 546-5000, ext 250
·' •'
·'
school. Full time. Apply area. 962-4997 attei;noons. chairs; Wing bck chair; 23" de nza, Executive Desk, complete. Sl45. 646-1378
2:>15 W. Sunflower, Santa WOMAN to work in Do Nut 1V; 2 velvet barrel chairs; Chairs, Secretarial Chairs, WHITE Zig Zag in walnut PLAYFUL( loveable kitte11S. B..--:--:o:Ma;---;-------1 l .,
Ana shop, afternoons, no phone 968-7898. High Quality New Divans. <'abinet .............. $24.50 Gray, blac_k or orange. oats/ rlne
SEC/Girl Friday, p e r m I calls please, Winchelis, 2947 MAHOG china <·abinet, table. Hideabeds, Chests, Dinettes, Pfaff Port Zig Zag • • $69.95 • 546-3870 • Equip. 904
Clt>rk Typist $450 Hy I a n d Keypunch to $600
Acctng Clerk $500 ~;uA~~~k to= Laboratories p/time, good ski 11 s , I Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 6 chairs, rollaway bed, Color TV's, Stereos. Wash-Kirby Vacuum ........ $39.95 FREE dirt, you haul. 2035 SEAGULL 3 h t~-'
responsible, w/drafting or YACHT CREW h misc it 890 w ers, Dryers. MISC. and All guru-. NO GIMMICKS! Baltrn Pl. CM. P1:ione: • P OU ........,,"•
artistic ability. 64Z-7032 or . . col"thuc 'St s ems;,., N · MUCH MORE" * Over 11 vrs in CM 556--0790 after 4 PM near new, $13:). or best of· 673-2185 Cook & engineer needed ~ · pace "°• .B. fer.
Sec'y/Constr S650 3300 Hyland Ave
F/C Bkpr Constr $700 Coste Mesa, Calif. Sec'y Recept. $550 92626 Sincert:' Sewi~ Mach & Office Manager $750
Receptionist $500 F/C Bookkeeper $800 Equal Oppor. Employer
SECRET ARY -knowledge of
yachting equip. or will-
ingness to learn. Typing &
bookkeeping nee. 642-2932
aooaro large yacht. Slip 59, 646-6226. MED size 1 year old female 838-7:.m after 6 PM • ..
Lido Yacht Anchorage, New-MARBLE Grune table . dog, black w/white spots. MOTOR Johnll.!IOll 50 elee. . . ..
port Beach. Round continental heights CO To good home, 556-8158 start. two tanks, complete & '
WINDrs AUCTION Vacuum, 1878 Harbor ,
646-9742
P/time Sec'y $520 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!mal!!!!!!e !!&!!!!fe!!m!!al!!e!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Secre~::~ORT ro $800 SECRETARY I Girl Friday
Per$onnel Agency Part time, 10 8ll1 to 3 pm. Regional sales office needs 833 Dover Dr., N. B. girl Friday to handle
642-3870 phones, type, & other office
duties. Must be self starter.
Sales
SECURITY GUARD
Exper. F/time. Contact Ml".
Ford, Security SUpervisor, I~ ,__ _____ _
Balboa Bay Club I •------~ 1221 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. Antiques 800
ME BROWSE AROUND
w/4 black naugahyde club LEAVING for Europe. Need :running $225. 96&-1712
chairs. $275. ~2 aft 6 B a loving home for pure ------------l
pm. Co white fe. fixed cat. 675-S214 Boats, Power 906
CARPETING/pad. nrly new, MOVING -good home for 2 ----------top quality, approx 85 sq yr old dog, brindle female, GIVE HER
yrcJs, mixed green shag. loving pet. 644-$06 SUN AND SEA
im min. 673-1967, Lido, MALE Apricot Poodle, inside 1'11,i,' Wellcraft, F/G ~ hp
Island. dog, edits only. AKC reg -Johnson. 45w 4 ch SIS, tilt ..
l
2075¥.. Newport Blvd. Sporting Goods 830 ehind Tony's Bldg. Matl's.
sta Mesa * 646-8686 GOLF Clubs, MacGregor,
llC\V, Nicklaus Heritage,
WANTED complete. Cost $450. Sell
$250. 548-4189, 548-2442
COMPLETE set left hand Wilson Staff Irons. 2
TICKETS TO wedges, perf cond, bargain, WORK WHERE?
ALL ORANGE CO AREAS
Expanding record·tape retail
stores accepting applications
for full time sales, mgmt
trainee, & full mgr positions.
Write Classified Ad #688,
Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box 1560,
Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626.
Salary open depending on
experience. Interviews dur-
ing week of June 3rd. Send
name & phone no. to
Classified Ad No. 687, Daily
Pilot, P.O. Box lfiro, Costa
Mesa, 92626
SECURITY guards full or I SCRAM LET'S ~~: f;g>~~e~~3 •
or Room 223, 3151 Harbor,
* HIDE-A-BED. queen 968-4514 trail, navy top, curtains ii:
size, worth $550, sac. $230. * FREE KI'ITENS* back drop, 2 tanks 8r bett. 1 ·Near new! Also Herculon 1 Calico, 3 black, 1 $1689 or offer thls weett. •, LED ZEPPELIN 546-9378
sofa & loveseat. 675--0869 Siamese. Call 96Z-3807 (714) 962-0091. i: C.M. ANSWERS CONCERT SURFBOARD 6'8". lnfini~
Please call clear with red rails. A -
SERVICE station salesman.
Full time eves. Min. 2 yrs.
experience. Desire to p
salesman, light mechanical
know I edge, neat ap-
pearance. Apply mornings,
25911 Newport, Costa Mesa.
I SIMMONS hide-a-bed $40, (2l BLACK kittens 8 wks, 1 1966 ~· FISHING BOAT • •
Supple -Bezel ~ Leafy -chair $ID, recliner $10. M, 1 F, weaned Ir: hsebrkn. Glaxstron w!Trailer. '150 ' "i 548-7881 justable box fin. Just like
new, $70. 642-4096
Eschew~ BLEW a 'FUSE Yellow shag carpet 12 x 18 Mother Russ Blu 64Z-7768. hp Oievy motor Mer-cruller. 1 Husband's complaint: "If $40. 644-5426 0 SOCIABLE k Deep-V hull. Depth ~
* For Cost Only * BUMPER pooltable, 36"x51" NL Y AUTHORIZED like new, all accessories in-e Secretaries
• Typists my wife's electric can opener WATER bed frame· king Kir look..aJJkes, =::e 3m1:~i:r1~ ~"! bait tank. $3.500. CaJi : :
ever BLEW a .. FUSE, I'd size elevated on leis. ~. Cos multi-00101'.' tortoise. ~7675 u.w-lTIO. Mter 6 call~ ~I
· by Vacuum Distributor in eluded. _ Original price $135.
ta Mesa • Will be happy Asking $50. &12-4782
SANTIAGO BANK
e Trne Assem~lers
• Gen'I Laborers
VOLT
SERVICE Station Attendant
full or p/time. Over 18. Ap-
ply Brown's Shell, 990 E.
Coast Hwy. NB 644-4131.
starve to death. Call 644-7598 t ADORABLE kittens 1ree to 14' FIBERGLASS ski, flab, !
WANTED: 19th century ***SOFA & Lqves,eat, stra good tromes run • a • bout, w/35 hp
o arrnnge a home demon-GOOSE OOWN sleeping tion. bags, l:OIXI to • 30F, 5 lbs.
Experienced
TELLERS
Contact Mr. Lorenz
714: 832-5200
Instant Personnel
Temporary Service
3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106
•·ship paintings -top prices never used, both for $155. Call ~ Evlnrude & trailer. Must J
paid. James S ma I Id on , usually home, 968-7910 sell. 646--0885 ·! Call !m-5222 convert to dbl. $105. 642-7814
or 919-5469
Nautical Antiques, 422-A N. S 4 DARLING tabby gray male CUSl'OM 18' ski boat '401
Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach. G S 1 812 c 6 kittens, 1 tabby brwn fem, 7 Buick, trailer, .,800 .; -... _.'I SHAMPOO GIRL ALE: La.dies, 1 girls & TV, Radio, HiFi,
hildrens clothing in all Stereo 83
Newport Beach 546-4741 Wed thru Sat. Must be
licensed. 1610 W. Coast
Hwy. NB
497-2950 or 4<lA9579. arage • e wks old. Free. 831-0684. ,.._vy p•...... .,. · 710 .. ~·
;rr s """' ,__.,. up, new un::s, "~ wi FEMALE 6 mo. part Dalma-$550. &IG-lm or 644-1534. GARAGE Sa.le, 6662 Gatehill
Circle, HB, 6th unit of
Seacliff, Clay & Golden
West area, Oak bookcase, S
BR set, old dishes,
crocheted bedsprd, 66 Hon-
izes. Hats, shoes, bags,
wedding & '73 MODEL clearance on Equal Oppor. Employer
Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! CLASSIFIED will sell it! Sign Painter, exper.
548-0044
Appliances 802 mo ti?n. Has all shots, loves SKIPJACK 20 1972 Uk :, kids 557~7 • • e I,;
gs, gowns
tiler of the bride outfits. RCA & Zenith TV & stereos.
The Two-Timer, 4.l5 W. 19tll Lowest prices of the year at
SPAGHEITI Bernier has
openings for ho s t e s s ,
waitress, part-time cook.
Call 645-0051 or 2 1 3 :
59'1-2606
FREIGHT DAMAGED
WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE
Reduced up to $100
washers, dryers, retrig.
erators, freezers, TV's,
stereos.
t, Costa Mesa, ~
1 MAHAL oriental rug, 9x9,
00 yr old patch work quilt; 1
cham
po
hers stove-old; semi
rcelain En g 11 sh • wa r e
d ishes, set of 10; twin beds,
pie; Other items.
A OONYENIENT SHOPPING AND
SEWING GUIDE FOR THE
TELEPHONE Sales. Work
from your own home.
Highest commissions. Ex-
perience n o t necessary.
89Z-5l84
Sears Roebuck & Company
Adams at Magnolia
Huntington Beach 962-7781
Rent Washers/Dryers
$2. Wk. Full maint.
da 305 Scrambler, bltn dlb
oven & sw1ace un i t ,
wrought Iron tble, 4 chairs,
sewing mach, golf clubs,
bags, cards, skis, girls bike,
unicycle, botb, Magnavox
stereo, old ac c o rd i on ,
gameg, dolls, bric-a-brac,
junk. Sat June 2, Sun 3rd, 9-
ma
~ -RIENTAL 0
HAND
RUGS,
GAL ON THE GO. MADE, IMPORTED,
NEW & OLD.
For an ad In Woman's W"'d
Call Mary Beth 642-56781. -r 330
THE Show Off, 10 merchan-
dise assemblers and
hangen, interviewing Wed,
June 6, betwn 10 and 3. 350
Clinton Ave, Costa Mesa.
* 639-1202 *
FREIGHT Damage Sale on
new Hotpoint & Whirlpool
r e frig I washers/dryers
545--07!W.
3. Akhavi Oriental Rugs
14 No. La Cienega Blvd, Los 8 HA VE WE GOT A SALE Angeles. 213 -Q)9-4480. We FOR YOU! also buy used oriental rugs. 9uick Caftan Topi fOr Girls
REFRIG ,Frigidaire, 12 cu
ft, 2 dr, brown, clean. l1h
yrs old, $145, 842--0141 aft
5pm.
ECORATOR has
new/willow
King size bed, complete with D
new frame & casters, $50.
Kenmore 800 electric dryer,
$75. Cabinet and bookcase
unit, customized for stereo
and tape rec<>rded, $75. Plus
numerous household items,
maternity, baby, women's B
and men's clothes. See our
72 yds.
heavy
~,.....lll"l9os2
S-10%·12'h
. M-1o4Y.rlf% . L-18%-llO'i..
,,., 1ff,.,.; .... 11Tt.oa-r' ....
TOOL &
DIE MAKERS
Experl~ in~ & ~-LARGE O>pperlone G.E.
struction of high s~ m-refrigemtor. Excellent con-
trlcate progressive dies as dition. Modest p r i c e •
well ·as repair & main-673-7248 tenance ot existing tool-SEARS ------...,w;..--~-W-ash ___ &
ing Excellent c o m pa n y .n.enmore er ~ts & working con-Dryer, 1 yr old. Avocado
dltions. green $250. 842--8586
A:pply in Person WESTINGHOUSE dbl door
SHUR-LOK CORP. retrig-treezer w/lce maker.
1300 E . Normandy Pl., S.A. 1 Yr old. $400. 675-3308.
(1 blk No. of McFadden, • DISHWASHERS, washers,
~!. blk W. of Grand) dryers, reblt, guarn &
Equal Oppty Employer delv'd. 839--7620; ~5218.
TRUCK DRIVER RECOND. APPLIANCES
$2.50 per hr. to start. Pay on ~ve:r1 -~~tii· ability, not seniority. Apply ___ e_wpo~-·----=--
1800 Newport Blvd., Costa AUTOMATIC washer, elec-
Mesa. Irie dryer. Excellent con-
TRUCK driver for camper
manufacturing. Apply 858
W. 18th, Costa Mesa. * TY P I ST , M on -Fri,
12-SPM, temporary, June
18th -July 14th. 536-3455
UNSKILLED
' ASSEMBLERS
Femele
dition. $90. 646-5848.
PENNEY'S washer I dryer
set. Very good condition.
$150. 644-1968 after 6PM .
Building Materials 806
• Surplus. Building
MATERIAL. 1000's of NEW
ITEMS! Doors, lumber, ply-
wood, alum sheeting, mold·
Ing, windows, etc.
BUILDERS SURPLUS
2406 So. Main St., S.A.
Mon thru Sat 10-5
714: 546-1032
ad in Dime-A-Line 'for more.
Fri-Sat-Sun. 10'.m Oriole
Ave, Fountain Va 11 e y.
963-2187
green
shag/plush carpet. 43
yds/olive, 60 yds S\D!Shine
yellow & remnants.
54S-4654.
RUNSWICK Gold Crown
pool tables, 4¥.i x 9. Snooker
5 x 10, offer. Pinball &
Arcade games $75 up. Com-
mercial slot car tracks noo.
Can vendor $150. 548--81.24
MO. old 8' Deluxe Gem Top
Camper shell for pickup, GARAGE Sale • Saturday, 3
June 2, Moving East •
everything must go. Furnl-
ture • dining .room set, vinyl
sofa, desk, SIX oak captains
chairs, barstools, lbaby furn..F -
iture, misc. chairs • An-
tiques • Wicker table, um-
brella stand, mirror, oak
youth chair, etc .• Large
House plant, outdoor pots
~ lbaskets • Bikes, toys.
perfect shape, original cost
$350. Owner sacrificing for
$285. 646-6581, 4pm-8 pm.
EM Blk poodle,
thoroughbred, no papers 5
mo. Aquarium, 26 gal
w/stnd &: hood, $35, Apt. sz
stove $25. 97!Hl073
WANTED· USED
10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 17862 ORIENTAL RUGS
Mann St., Irvine. W ill pay cash. (213) 874-2842
collect.
* ORIENTAL RUGS * ANTIQUE oak & Walnut
furn, old fiddle, antique gun Se
collection, wash bowl &
pitcher, coal oil lamps
unusual iron hall tree, old
scales & lanterns. Plus M
other items. Thurs-Fri-Sat.
1572 Indus St., Santa Ana
veral used. Needed by
private party. Also
handmade tapestry. 675-8773
OVING -pair lovely table
lamps, large globe base
with ecru shades, $25 each.
Heights, 546-4047. 646-40 32
DODGE 4 dr, V-8, auto,
. runs good. $300. Childs
·b $~. playpen $10, high
hair tbl $11>, 9'19·2986.
No FH1-Top $$
GARAGE Sa.Je-2 fa m i I y '64
Antique oak dresser, oak & air
Fruitwood tbl tops; 7' down CTI
sofa; 3 spd girl bike; head c
skis; tennis rkt; Cassett PO RTABLE Protectall F1oor
e, 18Xl8X28, $60. Letter PLYWOOD remnants, sires player & misc. furn . Saf
'.4 thru %. Paint grade, 20c household & baby items. 717 s ize Pronto storage files, $1 Call Immediately sq.ft., stain grade 30c sq.ft. Poppy, CdM, Fri. 12-4, Sat e QUICKIE vests are perfect Weekends Included 1700 Superior, bldg-6, CM 11}4. all through the year. 548-4063 ----::::-:-:c=~--.---
Crochet vests for the girls e p p s GlANT SALE _ join hexagons for top style Furniture 810 Apt size Servel refrig &
or choose potholder version. • • stove, plumbg & elec fix. & W
use knitting worsted. Pat-P•cific Personnel MOVING -pair lovely table appliances, doors, windows,
ach. 644-6133
EMBERSHIP -Dana Point
Yacht Club. $400
213-545-5294
ATER Softener, Refiner,
M
tern 7045: child'• sizes ~; lamps, large globe base antiques, collectables, tools,
QUICK ALLURE! Sew this girls' 8-10; 12-14 included. Services, Inc. with ecru shades $25 each. fu mi tu re. drape 8 .
graceful caftan In an hour or 646-403!· Everything must go. SAT E
tam sz. Lifetime trbgls. Sell
cheap. 543-7581 24 hrs.
SfATE SALE: Natural
two for dances, patio parties, SE\IENti·FIVE CENTS 500 Newport Center Dr. CURV sectnl din w/6 chrs ONLY lG-4. 1003 E. Balboa Autumn Haze Mink Stole. poolside! Just 3 main parts -for each pattern -add 25 Suite 900, N.B. vac rot & end this, tble Blvd, Balboa Penln.
use voile, chiffon, crepe. cents for each pattern for ~l970 lamp, call before 2:31PM GARAGE Sale • Moving out TWIN
Printed Pattern 9082: Half Air Mall and Special Randi-24 Central T Oran "'" "'"1 s i z e s S ( 10 ¥.a -12 % ) ; Ing; otherwise third-class ~ ge _.,,..,.,-v __ ...., _____ ~-ot Town • June 1-2-3 -Kit-
After 6; 552-9TI5
beds (ma t ch ing l
quilted Ortho'e $45. 138 E.
18th St CM 548-4485 M(l4'h-16¥.il; L(181,2-20l,»). delivery wlll take three 547~ DANISH modem 4 pc. Drex· chen items. Lamps • Lug.
Medium 3 1/8 yds, ~in. weekll or more. Send to 215 E. Commonwealth el bdrm set. $300. Before 9 gage • Whee'lbarrow, saws GO
All .,__,,_ the DAILY Sul F Full run call fl6i..9~. after 5 pm & garden tools. Miscellan-LO loveseat $ID. gas stove
$20, Vacuum $10. 138 E. 18th Iabrlc. ~ ce °"""""• te erton eous Items • No Junk! 384 SEVENTY·FIVl!l ..,.,.,, .. ., PILOT, 105, Needlecraft 87~1833 _55::"'.:2-8==7risc:=:--..,..-..,..----,...,.,.. fm each pattern -add 25 Dept, Box 163, Old Cbelsea F.qual Oppor. Employer ANTIQUE oak 'bureau $90; Broadway, CM. s
cents for each pattern for Station, New York, N.Y. Oak swivel desk chair $40; GARAGE Sale, June 2nd &
C.M .. 548-4485.
MALL decorated pot1ery.
Air Mall and Special Handl· 10011. Print N-. A~. WAITRESS, Walter, o/Zl, maple canope bed $50; Free 3rd, 19632 Waterbury Ln. 9~1496. 2322 Palisades,
Santa Ana. ing; otherwise third-class Zip, Pattena Number. Dishwasher. Two Guys from kittens. 842-6881 HB, Chevy van rear !Cat,
delivery will take three NEEDLECRAFT '72! I ta I y , New I t a I i a n Honda bike, 4 Chevy 8 lug, E
weeks or more. Send to Crochet, knit, etc. Free Restaurant, 2267 Fairview, OOUBLE chaise chair, like split rim & tires, reblt
LECTRIC water heater $25.
3 yni. old. Good condition.
• 673-3983 . Marian Martin. the DAILY directlotl.9, 50c. CM ~~·~1'::eee~J:;; green. Corvair eng. Nu m e r ou s
PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., l.Dstut Macraine Boot. WAITRESS, dining room, other goodies. H
232 West 18th St., New Basic, fancy . knots. pat-lunches, over 21 ex-GAME table & chairs, paid M 0 V I N G S AT A M !
I-back swivel seats for
vans.
York, N.Y. 10011. Print terns $100 rienced Gold Bu 11 $l<XKI. Take $330. Call EVERYTHING G 0 ES .
NAME. ADDBESS with Jnstdt . 0..t Boot -~unurt_ ~ 545-3857. BARGAINS! GOLD COF-N ~ and l5TfLlll Learn $1.% pl.cturf's! Pat· WAITRESS. Dinner house KrOCHEN tbl, chr&, teak FEE & END TABLES.
* 547-41()9 *
EW shag carpet, re-bond
SEE MORE Q u 1 ck terns. plete i.cut Gift Boolr experience preferred. MUst cocktail tbl, occasional 15761 SHERBEJCK LANE,
Fashions and cboolle one -°:n than 100 gl1ta -be 21.. 84.1 w. 19th, Collta chl's, mac. Eve 67>1917 HTG. BCH * NEAR MALL 50
pattern free from our $100 Mesa. HOUSEHOLD furniture, very SAT. & Sun. June 2-3 10 to 4,
pad Ir: labor ~· From $5.25 yd. 642-TI am, eve.
gal barrel c u st om
aquarium. $50
551-3936 gpr1ng~ummer Cat&Jor. All n..;p1ete ~ Boot -WAITRESS _ part time. niw~I.-~ ,_,&:3 llv nn. Sat. & Sun. June 9-10, 6062
mes! Only 50c. $1.00. . Over 21, Call !162-7212 or """..,r. ~ . Summerdale Dr., H.B. AIR
INSTANT SEWING BOOK ~· #tffJ B• Bookl • 50c. 968--0365 between 1 &: 3 only 1 COMPLETE double Maple SML Garage Sale, June 2nd,
compressor 80 gal.
sew today, wear tomonow. "' le llf u Pris& Af&fWla, for appt. bed. $2n. 10.5, 1949 Port Ramsgate
$1 50c. , 67J..8l97 Place, Newport Beach. INSTANT FASHION Qwlll boot 1 _16 patterns. WAITRESS wanted, Cellar
needs work $75
Eve~ 6~261
scellaneous
W•ntecl 820 BOOK -Hundreds o f S(k-. Restaurant, ~ Fore s t , 2 LARGE vinyl cba.lrs, 1 GARAGE Sale Friday, 8762
fashion tacts. St.· Mueam QalH Boolt 1 ~ Lqum Beach. Apply 1~1. large Mom>co0 rug. 1 area Nightl~e, F o u n ta I n
LD ORIENTAL RUGS. It's a breeze ••• sell your 50c. WANTED part t l me rug. Other Hems. 551-1067. Valley. A.F.S. 0
items with ease u.te Dally Quilt• tor Toda1'• Uvtnc • bookkeepeT small business. Like to tradeT Our Trader's SQUARE oak table. Old
Pilot Classified. '60-5678. 15 beautiful patternL 50c. Xlnt working conditions. Paradise column la for YoU! fa11hloncd dresser. PH •
Will pay 5-10',o more cash
than top $ payers. Eves.
Call 646-4633 after 3 p.m . 5 lines, 5 days for 5 bucks. ~ after 6 545-5070
' .
..
Orange County's largest
d ea I e r. Z e n i t h 1 9 ' '
Chromacolor $349. 25" con-
sole remote $598. RCA 25'
new, many extras, trailer, FREE three 8 week old kit-I/O Mere. 673-1933 I
e 540-0685 e .. RUN-A-BOtrr, · 1st $125. takes 1t. ..
tens. -:1:-:.-:-, -;;:wooo==-==--:-::,.,,-----1 .
1 SHEEP dog, 8 mos, well Call St&-5898 •
3 discipline. Needs room ID .. __ t "'-II 909 ·· run. HBB shots. 548-8749 DUt1 I, _,
Solid State consoles from
$525. 19" Solid State $389.
yr picture tube, 1 yr parts &
service. Cash 90 or terms.
9021 Atlanta, H.B., 962-55.59
or 19046 Brookhurst, H.B. !168-&29
~---~~-------· YNG blk male boxer/lab, * SEAQUESI' ~· *
gentle, loves children to Sips 5, galley, head, motor
resp. fam. 557-000 cushions, hinaed mut. Xlnt.
$5500. MB-24.19 .
i!••·-·----1LIDO 14 Compl w/trailer ,__.._.. !(~I =!or~ ~ RENT TO OWN
TV'S & STEREO
$10 •••••••••IUOO 14, Fully equipped, ·l Pets, General 850 cover &: trailer, many ex--tru. $1000. or best otter.
_., ATTENTION PETS! ~. ·! No Credit Check*No De
Free DeUvery • Free Repair Home away from home, VENTURE 21' Must .eD "
4 built just for )'l)Ul Best offer by Jtme 3 · ::
Boarding/Grooming ~2848 772-5948 •j
Monthly Rentals Available
Open EvH. 543 444
Cats 852 8' SAILING DINGHY , rn; . Omlplete with sail • • TWO Siamese kittens, 1 $]00. 56-3015 ·j
STEREO: l9'f3 Quad System
Garrard model, full s
changer, 4 Quad speakers,
AM/FMtMPX receiver, male, l fem., blue eyes, 18• SIUIOUTI'EE K I ,• _heaJtb)'_&:_sas.sy $25 ea.. . , e e ,
It. 644-2979 alt. 6 . ~. Sips 2, 673-1337 eves.
-tape-deck-p-lug bl jack .
Was left unclaimed, still
brand new in box and
guaranteed. Was $260, no
$125, or take over small
~ ~';1:. ~· 16' HOBIE Cat, xlnt cond., w ~ · Mu.st see to appreciate. '; * 847-1416 * . pymnts. 893--0501
*SPRING SPECIAL*
Rebuilt-Picture Tube
$85-21" or 25" Color
* 2 YEAR WARRANTY
Dogs 154 LIDO 14, fully equip. Cover ' ; e PUPPY WORLD e &: trailer. ~ champion. : $USO. 640-1510. :
100 MIXED PUPS. Open FLIPPER, tun for aail, good '
Installation Available
Rice's Television Service
formerly Mesa North Cente
Eves. Irish Setter, Dober-cond all equip No. 413 I ~:·T!:e;~r;:;~ =::: ~1933t" Sil /..:_._-ti. .
r Chihuahua, Lab., Boxer, uu. 1, pt -I ,
Cockapoo. SWAP Shepherds , 1 Bick S. of Baker 546-fi002
open ~5 (6 days) for ?? Stud Serv most WANTED: Slip 40 Sport
STEREO: 197:>-240 Wat
Garrard model, prof slz
breeds. 531-SllZT. Fisher, day 8 9 3 -2 4 7 9 ;
t C . S 646-54TI aft 5. ed AK Insh Setter wk pups. Bo:.-et-:--S=p-1-1--:d:-&-=-s=k~l~tl=I
changer, Jensen air Top breed & health. Ch & s, 1
Int'l Ch lnle. $100 & up. , suspension s p e a k e r s
AM/FM/MPX receiver, 8 Recommendations fro m SKI Boat, xln t cond. 16'. 95
now former buyers on request. hp Evrd. Trlr, cover. $1295. track deck, orig $410,
$180. Was left unclaimed.
Still brand new in box and
guaranteed. Cash or small
pymts. 893-0501
962--2768 644-2999, 644-2119.
IRISH Setter puppies. AKC 151/2' Studebaker VI
registered. Ch amp Ion $600. 536-0346
23" CONSOLE TV, beautiful
Stock. Born April 21st. 18' TROJAN 185 hp, inbrd aid
Ready secoll<I week In June. boat. Beautiful. Ca 11
th !D4--0861 548--0223, 645-4325 mahogany, B & w wi
sliding doors. $50. 548-33ffi. OBEDIENCE class to start WHALER xln't cond. 35 bp ·:
* * 21" COI.DR Console June 20, Wed 7:30 pm. motor. $975.
Newport Beachnrvine area Call 646-1510 1V, $65, or make offer. 546-4928 Good picture, 645-6851.
ZENITH black & white, 18" MTNIA. Schnauzer pups, 1 be AKC champ. I in e s . Tt•liPCll tatioln portable. New picture tu
& tuner. $50. 642-6251.
RCA 19'' color portable TV
just over 1 yr. old. Sacrlfl
$70. 968-7910
Reasonable. Stud Setvice .
968-1390.
ce AKC DACHSHUNDS Cempers S.le/Rent 920 ·. Champ. bloodlines. Wkdays ' I '
aft 3:30 pm 968-9332. 3 MO. old. 8' Deluxe Gem ..
I FrMtoYou IS AKC Irish Setter pups, 8 Top Camper ahell for · .
wks Champion bloodllnes, pickup, perfect aha p e , ·
pet ' & show stock. 968-2971 original cost $30. Owner · ·
aft 6 sacrificing for $ 2 8 5 • !
3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 AKC COLLIE, female, 1% 646-al, 4PM-8PM.
years old. Good w I th 3 mo. old 8' Deluxe Gem Top
children. Son allergic. $50. Camper shell fOI'.' pickup,
586-Qi45. perfect shape, original COit ----==----.,..-$350. Owner sacrificing for * IRlSH SE'ITER pupp1e11 $285. 64EHi581 4 pm-8 pm.
FREE KI'ITENS
Adorable!! 6 Must Go! • 615-6801 .
BEES W/HIVE
546-2539
$35 each. ~756. 638~ ~:::-:-::-::=:---:::' :--=::-'.:-"'-:-~ . Center St. CM * CAMPER Shells for sale
or rent. All makes &
* FREE KITTENS
. ADORABLE 6 weeks old models. 2941 Grace Lane ·; * Doberman pups. $15. 138 E. Bldg G C M ' 18th St. CM 543-4485 ' . . • 842-2425 .
2 MALE kittens, gray tlge
-------~, -MAJORWAY & Half Pint r DOBERMAN puppies for Campers lz Slleils at fac.
. ~. ~~· Champion tory prices. 858 W. 18th. striped, 8 wks old
Housetrained. 64&-7648
LAB pup, mixed breed, need
good home; 3 mooths old.
C.M. ,.
s SCHNAUZER Pups, &bots, KANGAROO C8.DlJll' fila top
stud ll!rvice, tenns. cars, lieeps 2, one )"e8I' llM.
49'J..5592
WHITE Shepherd/Malamu
(TI4) f)2Z.-8366 $5'15 best offer, mat .ell.
te HORSES Boarded, riding 536-3878
arena & trans. 21271 Acacias ::i.t""':-cH==o=u~o,...,A"='y=--cab~-Oflet-mix, Hsetralned &: shots
Likes kids. &16-2923
B E AUTIFULL Y groo
Siamese/Burmese kittens
. St. S.A. Heights. 644-5307 amper. Jacks, boot, etc.
med AQHA Bucksldn r o I d In g , Nice & clean. $700. 841-7~
Protfessfonally tnllned, gen-CAMPER & trailer repairs &
' tie, $800. 7l4-628-140l !lUppUea also van coo-to preferred homes. Free
963-1482
MIXED breed Beagle pups
male, blonde & brunette
very cute, 531-8038
PEKINGESE PUPPIES versi<>Jls. 858 W. 18th, C.M.
AKC Rm SHOW srocx s~· EL OORADO camper. * 842-ll28 * Xlnt cond, $800. · "
WANTED: Small *54.'Hl246*
Like to Trade? Our Trader'
Paradise column Is for YoU
5 lines, 5 days tor 5 bucks.
9 Dachshund, blk-tan r 0 r OPEN Road cam,per.
! Stud. AKC not nee. 64&-7384 cab-over, BW bed + extna.
Sell Idle Items ... ~ Call 96i-3l39 -~-~· --~~-~~~~-n
. '• /
T~, May 31, 1973
---------~
970 Autos, 1-llll'hl""
John'• R.clng Cycles * BULTACO * HEADQUARTERS FOR
'71 MERCEDES
BENZ 280SL
2 Tops, low, low JJJil~e.
(n4CHV). DESERT, M<Yl'O X Tr
Acceuories. .__Autos_1or_ .. ___,)§l
· Harbor at WU.00, C.M.
646-t655 or 646-2428
'72 BULTAOO Alpina, like Recre•tlonal
new, $850. '68 Bultaco Vehlcles 956
Pursang $400. Both xlnl ---------
cond. Consider o f f e rs . FIBER glass Dune Buggy
NEW DATSUN PICKUPS
ALL COLOIS TO CHOOSE FIOM
IMMIDIATI DILIYHY
BUY or LEASE
Call
JIM GOODWIN, DLR
* 282-8406 * 1970 MERCEDES Benz 280
SE, air, pwr windows, llhr,
stereo, very clea11, $5950.
675-7751 642-2749 (street) $350 fully enclosed
BICYCL"" SALE trailer good fOI' bikes and "" sleeper $350. 531-3851
NEW 10 SPEED ITAUAN MEYERS Manx Dune Buggy
• BICYCLES $59.95. Beach perfect cond, st. legal
Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa w/many xtras. 673-3742
Blvd., Balboa 675-7282. DUNE Buggy Rall, Corvair * 1973 HONDA 350 CL * eng 95% complete, $550. Immac Cood. Lo Mileage 8'1i2663
$'150. *** 496-1909 ---------
USED BICYCLES Trucks 962
All Types * 642-1272 '68 CHEV. •,:, Ton wi!I).. JAGUAR
MGB
'71 MGB-GT. Blk. int. Needs
palnt, touch-up. AM-FM,
H.T. SunrL $2500/otter.
642-3925
OPEL
'70 Opel GT
'71 TRI 500-Xlnt cond. Must camper shell. V-8, stick shift, ------------------
see-Bored & reblt-front end radio. Camper shell fully ORANGE COUNTY'S
4 Spd, Orange, Low , low
Miles, Nice Car. (775FTL).
ext 8" Make off. 6T;Hi889 paneled & insulated. Very OLDEST
good condition, has only & * HONDA Mini Trail 50cc, 42,000 miles orig. owner.
xlnt running cond., $100. 544-8874.
64&-8566 after 3PM -------'---1973 FORD % ton, ~ whl '73 TM-250 Suzuki. Xlnt con-drive, P/S, auto trans,
JAGUAR
AUTHORIZED SALES
AND SERVICE
WE BUY CARS
$2149
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555
HUNTINGTON BEACH ~~£i1lake over payments. camper, beds, crpts, :S mo. SALES-SERVICE-LEASING
·10 HONDA 50, z50K Mini ~ltJ26st $61!60. Sell $5500· RovlcARVEirl~c. i\!.!!~P!il
Trail, blue. Good cond. $125. '55 FORD 'h ton PU, Olds --~ ~-__
644-0275. engin<', hydro, new paint. Costa J:,~aE. 17th St. 546_4444 1972 JA UAR '.'(PE
• '69 Opel G.T. Tires &
engine in good c on d .
Reasonable. 499-3275.
PORSCHE KAWASAKI l'15cc. Late '71, $550. 548-5122. 2 + 2
1500 miles. Must see to ap· 1965 J-300 JPep pickup, lEASE A T t I F t E · '70 PORSCHE 911 T, 5 spd,
mag whls. $5400. day
645-0640, e v e s I w knd s
497-1077
-•ate! 551-5327 ° a ac ory quipped, """"' w/half cabover camper . NEW CAR ( #3703).
'56 HARLEY K-Model. Chop-$750. 641H807 1973 BAVARIA $8765.43 ped. Needs rings. $975. Call l~ CHEV. 6 cyl i,., ton PU.
846-9237 Gd cond. $250 or best ofr.
1969 HONDA CL 3.50, dirt 542-0372 tires, runs good. $300. ,-57_DO_D_G_E--,h-T-.-P-.U-.
call 54S-7901 aft 6pm Truck. Xln't running c.-on-
HONDA 350/4 1972. Immac. dition. Asking $400. 54&-7146.
$925. Mr. Lang, 54()...1301 Vans 963
weekdays
10 SPEED DA WES
Simplex, 531 t u b i n g ,
beauti!ul! $100. 556--0212
'71 DKW. Akronts, plastic
tank, curnutts, shift kit, new
engine $470. 54&.-0437 '73 DODGE
CREVIER BMW
Sales -Servi<:<> . Leasing
208 W. ]st Sf., Santa Ana
835-3171
CAPRI
NOW OWN THE
Motor Homes
S•le/Rent
3/.4 Ton Surfer Van FABULOUS 1973
940 V-8, automatic transmission. CAPRI
MOTOR HOMES
Radio & heater, Power With 2,000 4 cylinder or V-U
steering, power brakes, engine with or without
Apollo, Pacesetter, Ba r o n ,
Jamboree, Roblnhood -
We've got 'em at
(80429N). ' ·
$3989 decor group, some with sun
roof or landau top, power
KEN DON
MOTOR HOMES
GUSTAFSON disc brakes, style steel
wheel radial tires bucket Lincoln-Mercury seats.' ORDER 'YOURS
16800 Beach at Warner NOW.
707 N. Harbor,,S.A.
554-0033
27' TflAVCO
25' DI '.":< ·ovf;RER
2"1'·22' CONTINENTALS
20' PHii >E & JOYS
VAN CON\ ... :nsr:>NS
:-rJn o Se1vice • Rentals * Danmar Inc. *
lJ.10' Ilaroor Blvd., G.G.
[)2J-lj;;QO
Nrxt Co G.G. Datsun e SALES e
• SERVICE • e RENTALS e •
EXPLORER
OF
HUNTINGTON BEACH
18801 Beach Blvd. 842-8803
HUNTINGTON BEACH
ILLNESS in family causes
sale of 1972 Luxury Balboa
Motor Home. Purrhased 9
mo ago; Chevy V-8 eng,
PIS. P/B, shower.
Monomatic toilet, a i r
Huntington Beach
842-8844 * (213) 592-5544
"Home of the Viking"
WANTED
TICKETS TO
LED ZEPPELIN
CONCERT
Please call
548-7881 * For Cost Only *
'71 CHEV. Sport Van, .long
w.b., v-8 ,disc brks, ·10 mi's,
xln't cond. $2750. Flash-Of-
fer. 494--4006.
'72 FORD Van E 240, 123
Cargo Van, V·8 p/s, p/b,
Xtras! Less than 6,000 mi.,
$3450, 536-3828 aft 4
1971 Dodge B-100, 6 cyl. air,
auto, R&H, custom bit.
cabinets, mags, Xlnt. cond.
$2800. 831-2229
'71 FORD Chateau Van. All
extras. 29,000 mi. Asking
$4000. Xln1 cond. 675-3590
$2789
OR IF YOU PREFER
'71 CAPRI
(237COR)
$1789
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner
Huntington Beach
842-8844 * (213) 592-5544
"Home of the Viking"
CORTINA
"68 CORTINA, needs engine.
work. Best ofler.
963-2498
DATSUN
'71 Datsun
Pickup
& Camper
(331DCF)
$2749
BILL MAXEY
furnace & extras. Xtnt cond.
Still ynder warranty. Piticed
to 11ell now at $8200. 1624
Antigua Way, Dover Shores,
Newport B<'ach 642-9980.
'65 !-'ORD Van. CarpetP<l, TOYOTA
paneled. Rblt. eng. $625/o[-HUNTINGTON BEACH ler. Must Sell! 646-268:; ~--------18881 BEACH BL. 847·855G
Autos Wanted 968
19i3 Discoverer ancl Sundial
Motor Homes lor rent, make
reservations for Summrr
now. Phone Miss Bennet at
Bob Longprt> Po n : i a c ,
892-6651 or 636·2500.
NEW, Explorer. 24". full
equip Sips 8, air/gen.
lowel't rates, no mileag<',
5.52-8292
Re nt A Motor Home
for your Vacation * 531-6800 *
'73 21' FIREBALL on 1-ton
Dodge chassis, s1 ill undl'r
warr. 5.100 mi. Priced to
!!ell. :>4:>-3766 E\·es.
• 'i.{ Lifetime M H 23/25'
"plush" lrrc mileage &
insur. Pri. pty. 8~33
'72 20' ESCAPADE rn~1om
Dodge. air, all extras. Sale
or trade. 494-2742.
Deluxe Winnebago
Rent. 27". 640-0482 NH
Trailers, Travel 945
INSTANT CASH!
WE ARE IN
DESPERATE NEED
OF GOOD, CLEAN
FOREIGN CARS
TOP DOLLAR-Paid
For Or Not!
Call or romr in to Sl'e us.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W. Coast llwy., N.B.
642-9405
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CAnS
If your car is extra clean,
see us Ci rst.
BAUER BU1CK
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Ml'sa 979-2500
IMPORTS WANTED
Or:inge County's
TOP$ BUYER
BILL MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blv :.
SMALL CAR 0 W NE RS. H. Br:ich Ph. 847-85!;5
Looking for a roomy, COM-WANTED Porsche 914 1972
PACT TRAILER? Head for Silver non -a pp ea ran cc
a full sizP camping vacation group. 714/847-9461 alter 5
with the Ladybug -design<'d p.m.
for small cars. Specially -0----------=-
priceci tlu·u May only. $324. Autos, lmportea 970
493--0711 . 32981 Calle Perfec· e THE FINEST IN to, San Juan Capistrano
197Z-27ft. ~ith wht>el traill'r USED IMPORTS e
wi t·h or without 1!172 Ford ~ e THE FINEST IN
ton pickup. Sacrifiec IMPORT SERVICE e
Because of Health. price nt>w, Do yourself a favor and come
$14,000. i;omp!PI<' uni t sre us first. Open Tues.
$10,000. Trailer alonr $6.500. and Thurs. ti! 9 Sat.sun
Ph. 492-5142 til 5. '
'64 BOLES Aero, 22", 100"'" reum AN AUTO~ sell-coot. Tandem, clean I.! '.J $3.'!%. 638--225)! 5-(Wf!RKS) -.,
15' Aristocrat Low Liner 2'lO .....6or-eo.ta Mooe 645·1<•0
Excellent condition!
$1350. • 548-1395 ---'68 KOMFORT 16\li', xlnt
cond $!!%., awn, cycle rack,
sl ps Ii, xtras 54l>-:m5.
VERY Clean 15' camping
trailer, 8x10 cabana, nu
tires, $Sill. 642-1918
Trailers, Utlllty 947
ALFA ROMEO
'69 N..FA G1V. Xlnt. Private
party. Stm.w, $2675. See at
Road & RruJye. 548-3569
'69 ALPHA ROMEO
Spyder Velore. Private pty.
675-8638
AUDI
SMALL CAR OWNERS. Looking for a roomy, com-'72 Audi lOOLS, 4-dr, air,
pact trailer? Head for a fuU dean, Riviera blue. $3295.
size camping vacation with ~548-5=::....;;.,..122:;.:c,.. ------
the Ladybug • designed for 1971 Audi
small cars. Specially priced lOOLS, auto, lltereo.
thru May only, $ 3 2 4. 586-0087 for information.
C9:wnl. 32981 Calle Perfec-Sell the old stuff. Buy the
lo, San Juan Capistrano. new stutt. ----=--------
1973 DATSUNS
ALL MODELS
IN STOCK
BARWICK IMPORTS
33375 Camino Capistrano
&in Juan Capistrano
493.3375 or 831-1375
'72 DATSUN 6-Pack
C"ab-Over Camper Deluxe.
Many extras! 16.000 mi.,
$3000 548-ti397
MUST sell "69 Datsun. Xlnt
running cone!. Radio &
healer. Best offer. 557-2568
'j2 510 STA. Wgn .• Orange
w/white interior, 4 spd,
$2100. 6T:r2~J63
'69 DATSUN Pickup. Mu~t
St' 11 by weekend. $1050.
6~1()-1346
2. 1971 Datsun SlO sedan
$16~)5 $1495
644-2603
FIAT
'68 Fiat 850 Cpe
Low Miles, A Real Nice Car.
(XDA224l.
$899
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEACH BL. 847-8355
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'69 FIAT SPIDER
Roadster. Orange exterior.
(YDA713l.
$1399
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
l&'lRl BEACH BL. 8"17-R5.i5
HI JNTJNGTON BEACH
'70 FIAT 124 Spider. Xlnt.
con<l. New top. Must see.
Asking $2000 call 644-2931
1971 FI AT, Sport spyder, 5
spd, xlnt cond. $2700. or
_mDke offer. Call 58&-2813
1971 FIAT, Sport Spyder, 5
·spd. xlnt cond. $2700. or
make offer. Call 586-2813
'71 FIAT 850 2 dr, white.
stereo, 14.000 mi, 35 mpg,
Uke new $975. 67i>-2JZ)
HONDA
HONDA, 6 mo old, 284 HOB,
Bal. of Fae Wrnty, 5(XXl mi.
Prlv. prty Eves 557-$)50
CLASSIFIED • • • • • • 642-5678
~lll~tnmir. tltutm:;
llM!A & IACOOI · SA\!S I Slil'llCI
1111•, <>f,,' •'A• tAl.liNA kfr.1.>< -41 !~~
'63 PORS, nu pa.int, rubber,
chrm, radials. 5K on reblt,
nu uphol, 540-0024 aft 6.
$2800
JAGUAR XJ-6. '71, im· maculate white/black in· 1973 914 2 litre. Moving
terior. Priced tor quick caUSl'S sale. Fully equipped,
sale. $6700. 642-3121 lo mileage, 645-3517
1967'h XKE Roadster. Quiet, TOYOTA
clean. fast. Gentleman's ---------
sporting machine. $3,100. TOYOTA SALE
f\40-1608. AT
MAZDA Pre-Devaluation
PRICES BOB LONGPRE BRAND NEW 1972 I MAZDA Auto. tra.ns., radio, fact. _air j
cond., W-S-W tires. tint.
1 glass. (TE210061507).
NOW OPEN $A~5~~w
All Models Ready AT
For IMMEDIATE J)w, le.wi&
Delivery! • TOYOTA
2001 E. 1st SANT A ANA
558-7871
"Easy to Reach" * Mazda '73 Rotary * $66 MONTH
36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE
Will accept trade-ins
CALL MR. FRY 842.S666
Hunt. Beach
MAZDA
17331 Beach I.
MERCEDES BEN
JIM SLEMONS
IMPORTS
MERCEDES BENZ
AUTHORIZED
SALES & SERVICE
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-930
~
'69 TOYOTA
2 DOOR
3
4 cylinder. 4 speed transmis-
sion. !ZWA938L
$989
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner
Huntington Beach
842-8844 * (213) 592-5544
"Home of the Viking"
'70 Toyota
Land Cruiser
Hardtop, Warn Hubs (222
CIF).
$2999
BILL MAXEY
Jim Slemons
Imports
1301 Quail
Newport Beach
833-9300 TOYOTA
ENTER FROM MacARTHUR 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555
50 USED HUNTINGTON BEACH
MERCEDES
ON DISPLAY
Sharp New Car
Trade-ins
Coming In Every Day
Ask About Our Unique
Used Mercedes Lease
Plans
House of Imports
6862 Manchester, Buena Park
on the Santa Ana Frwy
523-7250
'72 Merecedes
450SL
Deep Blue with matching
interior, F ull Power, 17,000
carefull driven miles.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W. Coast Hwy .. N.B.
TOYOTA
AUTHORIZED SALES
AND SERVICE
WE BUY CARS
~lltar11t1hi lllnhn:;
10!011 & JACUAR • SA°uS & SIRVICI •tilO S l (lo\.<.;T KYIY lll.GONA PFM'H '""0 JIO!l
'71 TOYOTA Corolla,
Economic, Good transporta-
tion $900. 9S8--0sS8
'71 4 DR. Corona. Radio,
white walls. Need quick sale
$1200./best offer. 640-8308
TRIUMPH
'70 TRIUMPH Spitfire, excell
conrl., lo miles, best offer.
Wkdys alt 5:30, 551--0660;
wknil• anytim<'.
VOLKSWAGEN
642-9405 '60 VW.
1973 280 SE. 4.:i. 6,000 mi., Nrrcls work ~200. 545-2531
$9995; 494-4829. Private par-[For that item under $50, try
ty. Irvine Covr, Lag B('h. tlw Penny Pincher.
YOLKSWA EN
VW's
NEW & USED
2 lg Locations
5 MINUTES FROM
COSTA MESA
2114 E. lST ST.," S.A.
835-6531
(4 Miles No. ot
So. Coast Plaza)
15 MINUTES FROM
MISSION VIEJO
AREA
1442 SO. BRISTOL, S.A.
546-0220
(S.A. Frwy. East on
1st St. '!4 mi.)
Commonwealth
Motors Ltd.
Santa Ana
1970 VW Sta. Wgn, Adventure
Camper, sink, pre s su re
water, elec. refrig, dual bat-
teries, dbl bed, air shocks,
oil cooler. Orig. owner.
$2350. 557-1801
'65 VW Camper, orig. un-
believable interior. $1500, or
best offer, must see to
believe. 492--0184
• '67 VW, refit eng. & trans,
oil cooler, $710 Priv. pty.
675-8476
'71 VW Bus. New heads &
valves. New tires, $1900.
642-7930
UGLY '62 VW, mechanically
good, comp! eng overhaul,
gd tires. $325. 842-2007
'63 VW Bus, 1500 reblt eng,
body good cond. $650,
642-U723
1966 VW, lite blue, good
mechanical cond, $ 5 0 0.
673-4005
VOLVO
VOLVO SALE!
HuCJe Savings
'72 & '73
ONLY
12 .
LEFI' AT
PRE-DOLLAR
DEVALAUTION
PRICES!
We make overseas deliverie
See It -You'll Buy It
~to1tlWJi4
• YOLYO
s
CADILLAC
4C:> I (l5].
'70 CADILLAC
4 DOOR
~. 1970 MAVERICK, 6 cyl, l2Sj P/S, auto, air, nu tires,
'72 MARI( IV eng., trans & shocks. $1500.
V.S, automatic tranan\iSSion, 645-6305
radio & heater, power steer-• _.:..:c,:....70.:..::FUIJ..-'---Y-EQ......,,.U-IP=P"'ED""'"e-:o
Ing, power brakes, Vinyl top, air con<!, auto trans, ps, rib,
air conditioning, white side-32,000 mi., nu tires. ·
wall tires. (965EHSl. MAKE OFFER. 644-1480
V·S, automatle transmission, $7489 '70 MAVERICK t dio
radio &: heater, power steer-GUSTAl:SON ' au o, ra • ing &: brakes, air condition· ,.-good tires, xlnt cond. gold. $1450. 551-Sffi
ing, vinyl top, am/fm stereo. Lincoln-Mercury MERCURY ~~~.lndows 1 & seats. 16800 Beach at Warner
Sl 89 Huntington Beach , 6 842-8844 * (213) 592.5544 67· COLONY Park, 9 Pus.
GUSTAFSON "H f tL-V'kl ,, Will· .full power, a/c, good ome o ~ 1 ng con<Ution. ~after 6:30
PM ' Lincoln-Mercury CORVmE .65 PARKLANE. 4 DR_-
16800H Bet. agtch atBWarnher '69 CORVETTE 427 4 spd pwr., air, radio. Clean. Low un m on eac mile<>ao u"" """ ""76 842-8844 * (213) 592.5544 conv., air, mags, immac., __ ...,...::-~-· .,..,.,;.._;_· ""°"""----
"Home of the Viking" pvt pty $3400. 837-3978 eve MUSTANG
'72 COUPE DE VILLE COUGAR '68 MUSTANG. 289 V81 42,000
Fantastic Shalimar Gold with miles, 1 owner, good con.
vinyl top. Beautiful leather ~ dition. $1300. Days 846-3375;
& tapestry interior. FuU ' • eves 846-4324 power. Factory air cond. -.65-MU_ST_AN_G_._N_e_w-engme-.-
stereo, tilt & / telescopi~ & tires. $500. Private Party.
steering, door locks. Sold ·& '71 COUG.AR 642-9413 a!ter 5pm serviced here. (852EDJ). $5444 2 door hardtop V·8 radio & "66 MUSTANG convert., 8
NABERS CADILLAC heater power 0steerin <553· cyl, xlnt cond. $900. Cail 5 to
2600 Harbor Blvd. CXL).' g. lO pm, 642--0956
Costa Mesa $1889 1967 MUSTANG Conv. V-8 540-9100 auto, xlnt · cond. $ 6 7 5 ~ , ·GUSTAFSON 842-1889 , '72 SEDAN de Ville, loaded. Low mileage, show room Uncoln-Mercury '66 MUSTANG 289 engine .• clean. 646-7227 Auto. Trans. Good cood. ·
, 16800 Beach at Warner $750. 545-4594 aft 5
70 FLEE TW 0 0 D Huntington Beach
Brougham. Take <> v e r 842-8844 * (213) 592.5544 OLDSMOBILE
payments. $2'l3 mo. :,',•.,',".5 "HtNne of the Viking"
CAMARO COUGAR XR-7: Look at ~-j
what it's got: Delux in-
1972 IMPALA cust. Loaded, terior, console and cockpit dashboard w/overhead con· p/s, p/b, p/w, etc. $3600. 1 I f t . d. '71 OLDS 524-9780 aft 6pm. ro. s; ac ory air, ra 10, swmg-away steering wheel,
'71 CAMARO, 307 cu. in. 3 excellent Pngine and body TORONADO
spd, 51,000 mi. Nu radials, condition. It's a '68, but only V 8 t ti tr · · $1900 or best otrer. 49z...7475 has 26,000 miles! The low · .. au oma c ansnuss10n,
'69 CAMARO, VS, auto, Must price will shock you, and a radm & heater, J?OWer ~~r,
II b J naJ · ti · I 1 mg & brakes air cond1tion-se Y une 5th. $1400. or perso mspec on w I i g (142EAZi
best offer. 54&-2854 s~a:r you. Must sell. Call n . 5. 31·89 '68 CAMARO ,SS 396. Vin 1 original owner, 524-5655
top. Beautiful car. M~t '68 ~lJGAR, mint c.-ond . GUSTAFSON
sacrifice. 544-8041.. Rad, air cond, auto trans. •
CHE tuH pwr. Cust. sunburst grn Lincoln-Mercury VROLET metallic .. Rec .. overhaul ;'l02 16800 Beach at.Warner
eng. Owner desp. $1500. Huntington Beach
96&-1797. 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544
'70 COU~AR lik~ nu.. wht "Home of the Viking" • w/blk vmyl top, mt, a.Ir, nu, ____ _
tires, brks, etc. Leaving for Sales & Service
1 Europe $27:i0. 673-7629 OLDSMOBILE
71 CHEVY '67 COUGAR XR-7. Full GMC TRUCKS CAMARO COUPE pwr, w/air, Xlnt cond. HONDA CARS
Pnvate party. 96S-28S4 UNIVERSITY OLDS V-8, automatic transmission, '69 COUGAR.
radio, power steering, air $1250. Convert. 2850 Harbor Blvd.
303 conditioning. (260EIUJ. 3 spd ;>tick. 646-7878 Costa Mesa 540-9640
ts $2989 --'-D-"-O-D_G_E ___ '67 OLDS Cutlass Supreme
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9
'73 VOLVO. 1800 ES Spor
wgm. Back from Europe
must sell, extremely lo mi
stick, AM /FM radio. Own
er. 213-592-5227. $5950.
Autos, Used 990
AMERICAN
'64 CLASSIC 770 Amer
GUSTAFSON P/S, P/B, auto trans, r/h, '
lite green, w I blk int, bkt Lincoln-Mercury '68 DODGE Polara, A/C, seats, aft 6 call 548--0066, $975. Low Blue B o o k . $850 or best offer I
16800 Beach at Warner 979-2026 after 3 pm ,=---------Huntington Beach . 71 OLDSMOBILE 2 dr. 842-8844 * (2l3)·592•5544 ·~ DODGE Station W~on, Cutlass S. Racing stripe,
"H f h Viki ,, $500 R/H, a/c, good tires, mag whls, air cond, radio. ome o t e ng p/s, p/b, Clean. 644-1!806 $2100. 64<>-s:IDS
'68 CHEV CAPRICE FORD '72 OLDS Tomnado, low
Rad, htr, auto trans, pwr str, mileage, xlnt 'cond, vinyl
• pwr win, pwr brk, lac air, '& roof, comfortron, many ex-
vin top, buc seats, console tras, low price. 586-3236
sharp. Orig. owner, $1250'. ~ • 1968 OLDS DEL MONT 4 dr,
963-3678. air, P/S, P,'!'l. $995. Ph ~
'68 CAMARO, P /s, auto., .~83_9-84_88 ______ _
Motors, 8 cyl, 4 new tires
gd gas mileage, $200
546-7945
BUICK
• vinyl top, low mileage. Ex-'68 FO•P '64 OLDS 98, Hr., all i c_ell. running condi~?n. New MUSTAN'-~er trans, shot $75 or tires. Will sacrifice for _ 'lip' will part-out. 548-1627.
'66 BUICK Skylark, all pwr
air, R & H, nu tires.
owner, Exception. $725
962-83.17
'71 RIVIERA -$2700. Im
maculate cond ition. Fu!
power, 68,000 mi. 96S-1896
1965 BUICK Electra Conv.
Excellent cond. Best offer.
Leaving country '67:H>215.
$1500. Call wk days between V-8, radio, power steering & '65 OLDS 4 DOOR, fair con-
3-5 p.m. 897-2472 brakes, air conditioning, dition. $3'50. or make offer,
'59 CHEVY P.U. High Perf. vinyl top. <FQP632J. 642-9244 ·
409, cams, 4 spd. Blue-e.1089-r.r printed + balanced etc. ~ ' TORONADO, loaaeil, lo\v
FAST. $700 firm. 644-2513 GUSTAFSON mileage, private Party • $5800. 551-2428 or 546-71'12
'67 CHEVELLE-SS396. 4 spd. L" I Me· ury j Bucket seats, mags, rcblt 1nco n-re PINTO '
e eng $850. 673-7564 16800 Beach at Warner
'67 IMPALA convert. S7,000 Huntington Beach 1972 .PINTO, 21,000 ml, 200Q
'65 BUICK Skylark Cpe, v~.
pwr, auto. Good con<!. Mak
offer . 64:;-2537.
CADILLAC
mi., fully auto, radio. De-842-8844 * (213) 592:5544 e~me_, dJSC brks, .4 spd, ~
pend. transp. Asking $375. "Home of the Viking" out wl!ldows, trailer hitch
494-2362 new ~s. $1800. 495-1779
d ~ Mon-Fri. , '69. NOVA 2 Dr. Orig. owner. '72 PINTO, stick, air, vin ~ Pis, new tires, clean. $1250. • t Sh $ ~ 89Z-5724. op. arp. 100 cash 'l< T.0.P. 644--1791
y
WONDERFUL 9-pass Ca
LIMO 1961, black, pwr &
air. Best oU over $400.
644--0002.
'56 CHEV sta wag, recent ,68 FORD 1971 CAD CDV, Immac, full
power, ·air, stereo, tilt &
lthr. $4975. 83'3-1316,
673-8873
'70 CPE de Ville, all xtras,
new tires, estate sale,
highest offer over $3,000.
644-2199
1956 CADILLAC. needs
trans, $150. or best offer,
962-8695
MAKE offer! Make offer! '69
Cpe de Ville, must :iell.
$3195. Hurry! 531-5364
'68 CAD. Conv. white w/Red
leather interiot'. Ex c .
Cond. 979-1907 * '69 ELDO, silver/blk.,
Xlnt condition. $3500 or best
offer. 962-8244
'70 C.D.V. Convert., white in-
/out, xlnt cond, $3600. Eves.
586-7275
reblt eng. $175. 2 5 2 4 PLYMOUTH
Westminster, CM 54&-7147 TORINO -,---------'
1972 IMPALA cust. Loaded, y.8, automatic transmission, 73 Plymouth ~ustar ;.
p/s, p/b, p/w, etc. $3600. radio & heater air condi· Black with black vmyl roof
524-9780 aft 6pm. tionlng. (XXBl42). and black interior, 6 cy1,
'65 CHEVY Il wag. Orig. $1189 Auto Trans, power steeling,
owner. Reblt. New paint. · radio, heater, air condition-
Clean $750. 892-5724. :GUSTAFSON ing, still under fact?ry war-
CONTINENTAL . ranty, only 1,500 miles.
Lincoln-M rcury $3099
16800 Beach at Warner PRICED TO SELL
Huntington Beach
842-8844 * (213) 592-5544
"Home of the Viking"
~llbrq11i !i lll11t11r!·,
IOtOTl t. JAi)~lR \Ail~ ~ )!It.It! • ~ , ~-.~r •: , ,,i 11~. •t " ,.
'66 FORD 289. auto, P/S, ,72 . '70 LINCOLN new paint, & e ngine. Good PLY. Cnckett Deluxe . tires & brakes. $595. Call 17,000 m1. v~ clean. $1400. MARK IU 1
eves, 549-1058. · 96S--0686 wkdays aft 6 PM
V-8, automatic transmission, * '67 FORD Country sedan. PONTIAC
radio & heater, power steer-p/s, p/b, air, 20,000 mi on ---------
ing & brakes, white side-motor, xlnt cond. $595. LEASE OR BUY
wall tires, vinyl top, leather 54&-5247 '71 thru •73 Pontiacs
interior, !J?Wer wind~v~ & •71 ~'ORD LTD Country DAVE ROSS
seats, aJ.r condlt1011mg. Squire. Fact. air. Pis, pwr PONTIAC
(ZSN408) · disc brks. Best o f fer . $4889 54&.-0472 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fllir
GUSTAFSON '72 RANCHERO 500 302 V8 Drive, Costa Mesa 546-8017
• eng., air, r/h, auto, Jbrgls .'70 PONTIAC Grand Prix ~pt , Lincoln-Mercury shell, Jo "!~~Call bef 2 PM, Cpe, 37,000 act. miles. Mlnt
16800 Beach at Warner 646-5791, $.;1;J1JU. condition. Air pwr windows,
Huntington Beach '68 FALCON, R/H, auto, xtra sport wheels, Landau top. '
842-8844 e (213) 592 5544 clean Xlnt mech Below Immaculate, .$2850, $500 • Book· ""n 7215 · below blue book. Oall I
"Home of the Viking" · ,,..,. · 968-7949 aft 5 m --------=--1·~7 FORD Convertible. XL .. 69.. GRAND P PRIX _ SJ
500. Power, auto. Top con· Model Full . ~·
dition. $795. 846-13Xs'. Gold wtblack Vin~ufop ~
• ~ MUST SELL. $2,000 or bes( offer .•
'72 MARK IV • 552-75.52
V-8, automatic transmission, * '73 GRAND JPrix, Model
Im radio, power steering & '73 FORD SJ, low down. take r
brakes white sidewall tires, payments. 642-8233
air coiidltlol\lng, vinyl top, UST ANG '64 PONTIAC Bonne v l p e ,
power windows &: seara eonv. Gn!tt buy at $325, or
leather Interior. (865ENS).' Landau, V-8, automatic 1ran3-of1er. 6~1494 eves
GUSTAFSON =n, st:lng con=r '65 PONTIAC Ca ta l 1!!,a...1
U I M brakes (370GMT) clean, automatic, p/1, ,.,.,., nco n· ercury 53689· 642-4122 or 548-1292 • ·
16800 Beach at Warner '68 PONTIAC 4dr HT Bonne! 842.st4~(21 f>5~_5544 .GUSTAFSON !nr.1'$8oo.~~ne, "' ~· Of th• Viking" Lincoln-Mercury T ·BIRD
'63 <X>NTINENTAL 1-.,door 16800 Beach at Warner
full power, air', black 84~ * (o2l~) 5~544 '67 T-BIRD. JDll power, xlnt
leather Int. New tires, xlnt "H . of L-V 11 cond. M t sell. best !few, coro. . 4 oma t... Ud 673-2383
..
7
I
·1
, ,
EDITION
VOL. 66, NO. I f'. 5 SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNlA THURSDAY, MAY 31, '1973 TEN CENTS
~------------~...,..-----------·--------~------------...... --------------------------------------------......... ..---------------------..---------------~-----------------------~ ..
Clemente High-densit)r Zoning Takes Beating
By JORN VALTERZA
Of .. De!IF Pl!Dt Sqff
The city of San Clemente's most severe
high-d~~ty zo~in,g .look a beating by
both city councilmen and planning com-
missioners Wednesd~y.
"l11e C-1-A '(commercial apartment)
ronlng which presently allows one living
~ for each 500 square feet of floor
se~ was described as archaic and
~table during a joint study ,session
between councilmen and city com-
missioners.
And in the middle of discussions on the
density. issue the officials learned from
Director of Building and Planning
Richard Ahlman that plans are already
in the works to cut the allowable density
in half.
Ahlman said that if the officials accept
his proposals for a roUback in some zon-
ing densities in the city, the fears of con-
gested ronstruction in C-1-A zones would
be allayed.
The object lesson for the officials was
not far away.
A few feet away from Wednesday's
meeting place at the city gQ]f course lies
a new apartment project which drew
some jabs from the . delegates at the
session.
Although it conforms to the code, the
project at the corner of El Camino Real
ltlld Avenida Magdalena known as
Fairway Seaview dreW, concern because
of; its "crowded look."
qtty Manager Kenneth Carr -cited the
project as an example of high density
and remainded the officials that the
apartments -while appearing crammed
-were actually less thfn half the densi-
ty the code would allow.
The apartment prqject lies outside the
l,~yard permit zone set up by the
.a er ues
New Well
Gets the
·Rust Out
The. siege of rusty water in some taps
in San Clemente has apparently abated
this week, and the reason could be a
change in the use of city well water, City
Engineer Phil Peter said today.
Peter said that for nearly the past two
weeks Par\S of the city plagued by the
poor water have reported improvement
and that one main problem is the iron
evident in water coming from one of the
city's wells.
· "We think we may have isolated the
problem in Well Nupi9er P'~but riJl)l
now we need more 1iine to evaluate the
situation beforttwe-nrtillY lb: the· cause," ;
he said. , 1
~idents ~ong .Avenida A1euandro
and surrounding atreeta be~ clty
counciirnen two weeks ago with J"11. of
red goo which they said comes from · their
taps on occasion.
Peter blamed archaic water filtration
systems as one cause.
For Entire City
Clemente's Bus
Routes -Unveiled
The specific routing for a suggested
San Clemente bus service to link with an
all-county system was unveiled Wednes-·
day by members of the city's traffic
* * * $11 Million
C~,.iy~ R·TD
GrantOK'd
and parking commission.
The routing would serve the entire city.
and members of the commission said
that it would have a good chance of-im-
plementation if city councilmen would
submit a formal application immediately
to the county's new transit district.
The proposal was submitted at a joint
study session between _city councilmen
and city commissioners . and won unof-
ficial endorsement by the C91lllgl_,
aliliough fornlali,actiOn .WUiliive to wait .
until a regulaJ' ~~ sess1on. • ·
The route WGttld statt at ~ortb ~ ~ Real at thii city limits and bead
down,~t on ibe main highway to
Avetlichi Magdalena.
From tbe~e ·tt would link ,-1th Avenida
Dolores and then run back to El Camino
for Its northward run.
On the last half of the circuit the route
would travel along Avenida De 1
Presidente, then swing down' to Ola
Olastal Initiative, but city land mned for
high density within that strip in the city
might never be developed to its limlt,
said Councilman Arthur Holmes, because
the Regional 1.cme Olnservation Com-
mission bas looked askance at such proj-
ects ln recent. months.
Holmes stressed that the city should
shift the density in the zoning so that
some developers would not be lured into
-
spending planning funds for projects
which would have no chance of passage
bcrore the state board.
"We shouldn't lead them down the
primrose path," Holmes said.
The rest of the delegates at the session
agreed, informally.
A more official version of the sug-
gested change is expected to come before
the council within a few weeks.
·an
Says Coast
Generators
Peril Lives
WASHINGTON (AP) -The San
Onofre nuclear generating plant is one of
20 that consumer advocate Ralph Nader
seeks to close by means of a suit filed to-
day in federal court, claiming they
threaten the lives of millions of
Americans .
In a sult against the Atomic Energy
Olmmission, Nader and the Friends of
the Earth (FOE), which claims 20,000
members, charged that the AEC bas
violated the atomic energy act and · ns
own power-plant ~~ty r~ -·-
Speciflcally, the~ charged the eom-
mlssion with "illegality in oontinulnl to
pennit the operation ·Of certain nuclear
power plants without requlrlng adequate
protection for the health and safety of
the puljlic by war of effecUve and re-
qu!Nd safeguards-against the con-
sequences of an 'uncontrolled Jost.of-coD-
ant accident' ......
He said another reason for the problem
may have been the lack of personal
supervision of the water blending and
treatment systems bf city personnel.
Confirniatlon of an $U million grant by
federal officials to greatly expand the
Orange County Rapid Transit District
fieet and operation$-. came from Sen.
John V. Tunney (R-Calif.) in Washington
Wednesday.
The approval by the Urban Mass
Transit Adqllnistration came after Sen.
Tunney appealed to the agency urging
that funds be provided to reduce county
public-trai;isporta lion problems.
Vista . ,
It would leave Ola Vista at cazador,
return to El camino Real and head north
turning inland through the Sborecliffs
colony, thence past the hospital complex
along Camino de los Mares.
. Newport Company Producing It
In San Diego, a spokesman for San
Diego Gas and Electric Company said if
the nuclear power plant at San Onofre
were shut down; "losing the 7.6 percent
of the energy in our system which it sup-.
plied In 1972 would mean we would have
to make it up through our fossil fuel
plants.
~ince then employes in the water
department-have stood watch over the
old system to make sure no problems
arise.
Peter stressed, however, that the
ultimate soluUon to the chronfc problem
of rusty water is the installation of a new
filtering sy5t~.._!rut that will ,cost-in ex-·
(See IWSTY, Page Z) ·
S. D. Grant Drops
Building Request
For Capo Beach
The S. D. Grant Olmpany has
Withdrawn its aJ>i>Jication to build 14
apartIDent units. in the Capistrano Beach
~ it was dis_91osed this morning in
tong Beach. ·
Melvin Carpenter, executive director
for the So!Jth Coast Regional Conserva-
tion Commlssion, told commissioners to-
day that the company has withdrawn the
request pending an update of South
Orange County master plans. f,
'!be coastal commission ha'd . ~lier
denied the Grant Co. request to build the
apartments, but tbe commission had
agreed to give the matter a second hear-
ing due to a tecbnlcallty. ·
· Commission Chairman Robert Rooney
of Huntington Beach said the new Grant
C®lPflDY ®cislon to withdraw its-ap-
plication WllS "a small \lictory."
Commissioner Ronald Caspel'!I, also
chairman of the Orange County BOaf'd of
Supervisors, saw the withdrawal in a dlf-
f~rent light, however. .
. "In other words, he (the developer)
smelled defeat," Caspers observed.
;Freeway Crash .
Injures Marine
~ young Camp PendJetm Marine suf·
red bead cuts and a chiJli>ed elbow be-
fDre dawn today when hfs bOUthbound
car slammed Into the centet dlvlder and
~.abutment guard rail ill. Uie DJego
freeway near the W · White llou8'e.
Police said David Rocktguez, 20 1fB5
alone in hl&car In the 5:21 a.tn. eoiDt!M.
The driver WU treeted at Sm Clemen
General Hospital and then tl'81118fe1Ted
lO ~ base hospital for fUrtber trea&llDellt.
He said in a letter to the panel that
such action would help balance the
availability of low-ccm mobility, plus. alle~g related problems such as
heavy traffic and exhaust pollution.
Largest individual portion of the $11
million allotment will be the purchase
price of 162 new buses, air conditioned
vehicles seating 40 to 45 passengers each.
• '1lbe fund will also provide 195 locked-
box fare containers to guard against
anned robberies of bus drivers at slack
hours when their buses are carrying few
passengers.
Buses will also be equipped with two-
way radios, with 205 to ~ ordered.
Remaining equipment or work to be
fmanced-with the federal funds includes
land' tor. a headquarters site, a com-
munications base statiein, 12 service
vehicles, construction of maintenance
and service facilitil!I, plus miscellaneous
office and maintenance shop equipment ..
"I am ~d that Orange Olunty
w'ill receive these funds and I am happy
to have joined the effort to bring such a
. far-sighted bus system to Orange Coun·
ty'" Sen. Tunney said.
He added that 1he county's rapid
transit district has been respouslve to ,
needs of ifs urban populace and that this.,
is reflected In community· support.
Somewhere in that vicinity it is hoped
the mute would link with one being
prepared by the district for the county
portions of th~ South Olast area.
The route was drafted, commissioners
said, after extensive requests for in-
formation by local citizens.
Changes are still possible, however,
because the route has yet to be heard
formally before the city council.
The city at present is low on a priority
list for funding by the transit district, but
commissioners said they have the im-
pression that the cities which submit
final plans edrly will win higher priority
when it comes time to implement lhe
routes.
San Clemente citizen$ already are
paying a special, four-cent tax rate' to
help finance rapid transit in the county.
Rubber Accord OK'd
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Negotiators for
the United Rubber Workers union and the
B.F. Goodrich Co. reached tentative
agreement today on a three-year con-
tract which would end a strike that has
idled more tlian 10,000 workers at seven
Goodrich plants since May 9.
By WILLIAM SCBREIBli:R
Of. Ille DellJ' Piiot ltd '
Hughes Aircnift in Newport Beach is
producing a r&volutionary •new
wristwatch with ·oo ~'workings,
no hands and no 1dfat: I( 'wlUr.:lle on the
market this siunmer; ·~M officials
say. I
Hughes ei!perts believe , the new
timepiece will eventually spell .the eiid to
mechanical w,atch i n d u s t r i e s , con-
ventional watch repair • ·and lucrative
worldwide distributlon of watelt parts by
,Swiss and Japanese oompanies'.
The computer-age -watch is totally ,elec-.
, ~JOilie, displays ~lPcile tinle in hours,
rnliiutes and> se00nas and· the cjate In a
flash of lighted digits whicti appear on au
otherwise plain, black face.
Top management ind m a r k e t i n g
persOfll)el at the Harbor Area plant, 500
Superior Ave., said the watch has
already been sold to a nll.I1lber of major
companies and claims other are clamor-
ing for the new design .
"We will put together the electronic
package and then put it into cases
designed and suppliechby customers who
buy the workingst said W i 111 a m
Weakland, associate djvisiOI) manager of
the Hughes Mitroelectromcs Products
Division. ·
Weakland said Hughes will ot market
Two Paintings Identical
Discovery in M~gazine Startles Lagunn Curator
By JACK CHAPPELL
ot tllt DallY Piiot Stiff
Just imagin& owning a vaJuable 19th
Century painting, and. While leafing
through a magazine, you see an identical
painting offered at auction •
"We've already started to investigate
the whole thing,.. said Tom Eunman,
curator of the Laguna ~ Art
Museum. · . 'lbe .painting is ''FUn ai'lc! Fright": by
the Italian artist Gaetano aiterlci ( 1113&-
1921). . .
'I1le Laguna Beach Art Museum was
given its painting <>f Fun and Fright
about a y~ ago by Ruth Brlskin cf
Laguna Hills. At the tilbe It wu valued
at •15,000. E~ wtlila peruslag a copy of
Olnnoisseur recently spied the identic:at ing was authenticated as to period it
painting in llD advertisement f o r was painted by the J'..os Angeles ~unty
Christie's of London May art auction. Art Museum, Enman .'laid.
"I immediately wrote to Christie's 8nd The Christie's painting was signed and
asked tor their catalogue," Enman said. dated 1874.
The painting was sold by Christie's for 1be J,.aguna painting is not, bow~ver,
9,500 guineas, about $25,000 tbe day of the Enman notes that the museum's work
auction. bad been restored, and that the signature
'l'1le two paintings are of the same size, and date may have been lost in the
28 inches by 41 inches. restoration. .
Judging from photos in the Christie's He said the artist Qlierlj:i's paintings
catalogue ·there are small differences in are "t'OlleclibJe' and are sold
the painting'' perspective, in the smile of for between '15,000 and ,000.
the hoy, ~ hg hanging on the door, in Cbierid is of the Itallan n school of
the bellows in front of the fireplace an • painting in •hlch eadl work was
pots hang)ng on the wall. carefully designed and t down. "They
"I'd like to• Investigate further to find labored over their canv , .. Enman said.
out more about u and d out If there is Enman said the artist was exciellent
a history to tbe palnttnp,'" Enman said. 19th Century painter. Part of bls in-
'lbe Laguna Beach. Art paint-' (See PAINTJNG, e Z)
the wa\ch under' its own nam~. nor will it
fonn a subsidiary firm to market and
manufadure the watch. . ~ would not
reveal which companies have brught the
watch.
"We are in · the electronics business,"
he said. "We're not out to make watches
to sell."
. The Hughes watch is the most
technologically advanced member of a
growing family of electronic watches
already ,on the fl\lll'ket.
But the .Hughes -product utilizes an en-
tirely different internal · fystem than
those -now available, making it the most
efficient and most accur•te -sup-
posedly within one to tbr~ minutes per
year -in the 500-year . history of
watches.
Marketing Manager William S. Eckess
said the watcb represents the natural
outgrowth of 10phisticated military com-
puter technology that Hughes has
(See NEW WATCH, Page Z)
Suspect in Rape
Will Face Trial
"This would mean an incrt!ase of 1.3
million barrels of fuel oil annually.
Hopefully, thls would come from our sup-
pliers."
The utility owns 20 percent of the plant
located near the Western White House at
San Clemente. Southern Cal i f or n I a
In a . supplementary s t il t e m e n t
distributed after the suit was filed in the
U.S. DistrJct Court for the District of
Ollumbia, David Brower of San Fran-
cisco, president of the FOE, said:
"Overwhelming scientifi~ evidence has
shown that the lives of millions of people
are being threatened by the operation of
these plants. Each of these plants con-
tains a quantity of radioactive material
equivalent to the fallout from several
thousand Hiroshima-size n u c I e a r
weapons.
"Yet the safety systems necessary to
prevent release of this radioactive
material into the environment are crude
and untested."
Some of the AEC's own scientists have
(See ONOFRE, Page 2)
Orange Coast
·~.-~-
A Camp Pendleton Marine arrested by
San Clemente police ofter he allegedly
raped a 16-year-old girl be met Feb. 24
on Calafla state Beach has been ordered
to face trial July 25 in Orange County
Superior Court.
Judge Kenneth Lae ·accepted the in-
nocent plea filed by James Turner Joy-
ner, 22, and ordered the defendant re-
turned to his courtroom July 6 for pre-
trlaJ action on the rape charge.
San Clemente police said they arrested
Joyner on minor charges March 23 and
then realized that he answered the de-
scription furnished by the victim in the
beach attack. Police said she bu since
identified Joyner '8S her assailant.
Sheriff Probes Theft
' .
Of Golf Cart, Clubs
Orange County Sheriff's officers are
investigating the theft of a motorized
golf cart and clubs valued at mote than
$1,100 fl'om a San Juan OapJstraM home.
Victim Edward Thomas Sherrick, 56,
of 2706% Paseo Burledero, told deputies
intruders entered his carport and drove
off with the cart and clubs while he was
busy 1in the home.
Weather
The weatherlady sees more
dri:r.zle In the air for Friday, par-
tially clearing in the afternoon
hours to hazy sunshine. · hs af
the beaches 65 rising to 75 in
Overnight lows in the mid-50s.
INSIDE TODAY
Swede Savage is alive today.
The Santa Ana race car driver
survived what track veterons
called the worst single-car cras/1.
in Indianapolis 500 history
Wednesday. Gordon Johncock
went on to win the abbreviated,
twice-delayed race. See Sports,
Page 25.
SC
Id
• 1soners Slay
Warden, Deputy
PHTJ,ADELPmA (AP) -The warden
and deputy warden at Hobnesburg City
Prison were stabbed to death today and a
guard at the institution was Injured. .
Two Inmates, who city Police Com-
misslooer Joseph O'Neill said had betn
incarcerated on charges of murdering
policemen, were being held in connection
with the ~bblngs.
O'Neill said the incident was over .
He said the two prisoners requested
permission to see Warden Patrick Cur·
ran and got into his oUice, appamitl,,y
carrying weapons.
The commissioner said the deputy
warden, Robert F. Fromhold, was at·
tacked first. "When Maj. Curran attempted to come
to the rescue of Fromhold, he was also
stabbed," O'Neill said.
The police commissioner said the in-
jured guard, capt. Leroy Taylor, was in·
jured when he attempted to subdue the
Newport A.~ks
Help Paying
For Tourists
Newport Beach is going to find out If
Orange County and the State . of
California will help pay the cost of caring
for the tourists who visit the city each
summer.
Councilmen, reacting to a report that
says the city spends $1.5 a year to handle
the swollen summer population, have in-
structed City Manager Robert L. Wynn
to look at three potential revenue
sources.
He will meet With State Sen. Dennis
Carpenter and Assemblyman Robert"
Badham, both Newporl B e a c h
Republicans, to see what state aid is
available. He also will meet with Orange County
Harbor, ·Beaches and Parks Director
Kenneth .Sampson to see what county aid
Is available (the county now pays $98,000
to help defray lifeguard costs).
And he will review local fees now
charged beachgoers. Those fees now are
limited to parking.
In a report delivered . to councilmen
Tuesday, Wynn said police, beach
maintenance, lifeguard and capital im-
provement costs total $1,442,000 annually.
He said revenues from parking, beach
concessions and the county lifeguard
grant total $475,000 a year.
"That means we are losing about $1
million a year to service tourists," Wynn
said.
Councilman earl Kymla suggested the
three funding avenues for Wynn to follow
and called the figures "more acute than
most of us thought it would be."
Wynn said there are an estimated 10
millioo beachgoers at Newport and
Corona del Mar beaches each year, with
82 percent of them non-local. The figures
come from the Marine Safety Depart-
ment but Wynn did not say how the
department arrived at the figures.
"For us to have to pay $1 million a
year to take care of these people, that
doesn't seem fair and equitable," Kymla
said.
Councilman John Store said he is con-
cerned with "the potential overload of
some facilities our friends and visitors
enjoy at Big Corona be11ch."
Store indicated some m a x i mu m
number of people on any one beach
should be established.
"Big Corona has been filled to the brim
and then some," Store said, "It could get
to the point that it would be so crowded
nobody could enjoy it any more."
Councilman Paul Ryckoff of Balboa
Island said he is also concerned with
crowds at the bay beaches and what they
are doing to water quality. He said water
quality control is getting more and more
costly, too.
""'here are things that can be done
w.t•. Jt putting toll gales at the city en-
trances to recoup our costs," Ryckof£
said, without elaborating.
OliNGI COAST ST
DAILY PILOT
Tht Oran;e Co11t DAILY PILOT, with which
Is combined tht Ntwt-Prttt, 11 published by
the OrlnQI Coast PubH1hlr19 ComJ)lny. Sep.a.
,..,, tditk>n1 ert PVblflhed, Mond1y ll'trovgh
Frlcl1y, tor COii• Mtu, Newport Beech.
Huntington B1Kh/Fount1ln Vtlley, l1guM
&Heh, lrv1nt/Sectdtt0acll: .and San Clemente/
S•n Juan C.pltt,..na. A 11ngt1 reglOMI
.s111on 11 pu11111Md S.tvrd•YI end sunc1evs.
Tne p<lnc~I publlslllnt pllnl II •I UD Wtll
•• , Jtrttt, Cotti Mn1, C•llfornMI, tM2'.
Robert N. Wtod
Prnldent and Put>l~h•r
Jock R. Curley
Vk.I ,, • ....,, Ind Gf!net"ll Mlrt•ttr
ThomH ICtovil
Editor
ThOnJll A. Murphino
M1n19lng Editor
Chorlt1 H. Loot Rich•"' ·p. Noll
A11l1ttnl M1noglng Editors
Off'"9
Collo M..,: )JO Wnt !lop Strttl N_.t 8Hc!I: 3Ul ·N-rt BovltYlrtl ~ IMdl: 221 l'omt A-·
-Hunt"""'"'l-h: 17175 •-IOVlevtrd
'"" Clemente: SS North II Ctmlno llMI
Ttl••••11 C7141 '42-4121
Cl1 Ctd A4_,llltlt Hz.1611
....... CMotll - -If i...-.... 4tM4l0
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"1111191\ .. _,.,., ·-·
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,,_1h1Y1 11'1 .... 11 ll.11 _ty, mllltart _.,.,_ SUI -..,,Y.
two inmates.
Taylor was taken to Nazareth Holpltal
where his condition was listed as serious.
The two inmates taken Into custody
were identified by O'Neill u Frederick
Burton and Joseph Bowen.
He said they both lllJffered Injuries and
were taken to Philadelphia General
Hospital. Police said they recovered two
knives.
About a half hour after the attack took
place, a communications supervisor at
the prison said, "As of now everything Is
quieted down."
About_ 100 city police in riot gear and
wearing bullet-proof vests were posted
around the prison waJis. They were arm-
ed with shotguns. City fire trucks a1ao
were brought in.
From Pagel
NEW WATCH • •
specialized in for years.
The watch deslp eliminates all mov·
Ing, wearing parts and instead of a
mechanical balance wheel -or tuning
fork In some watches -It uses precise,
Wlvarying vibrations of a tiny quart:i:
crystal w tick off its minutes and
seconds.
The crystal pulses more than 500,000
times per second and that rapid beat is
cut down to one per second by a tiny elec·
tronic component that makes tbe Hughes
watch unique.
The tiny part that comprises the heart
of the watch is a chip of ceramic one-
tenth-of·an-inch across and sdentlfcally
imprinted with more electl"Ollics and wir-
ing than Is in the average television set.
"The chip bas more than 1,500
transistors on It," said Ecltess.
The average haJJd.slze transistor radio
bas less than 20 full-sized transistonl.
Tbe chip -·1cnown In tbe electronics in-
dustry as a Complemehtary Symmetry
-Metal Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS)
feeds the ultrastable output of the
vibrating crystal into tiny lighted digits
under the blank crystal of the watch
To get the tbne and date, the wearer
pushes two buttons on the side of the
watch. The numbers flash on the screen
momentarily and then go out until the
next push.
Weakland explained that the push-but-
ton operation is necessary to conserve
power In the two tiny batteries that
power the watch. If the digits were
lighted all the time, the batteries would
wear out rapidly, he said. Now they last
a year.
The c o m p a c t , hermetically-sealed
design of the watch makes It almost in-
vulnerable, accordlng to Hughes officials.
It is said to be shock-proof, dust-proof,
waterproof, heat-proof and never needs
'cleaning or lubrication.
Hughes management Is confident there
is a large market fot the watches, which
will go on the market under various
brand names starting in August. Fuli-
scale production will get under way
within a month.
Weakland estimates the initial cost of
the watches at about $175 but said that
within only a year or two, models will be
available for "under $50." The watch
costs Hughes about $35 to produce.
Weakland said the conventional watch
industry is in an uproar over the new
watches.
By 1980, Weakland said, the worldwide
watch market will be 300 million watches
per year and Hughes officials think the
new design will slowly take over a good
piece of that market.
Weakland and his marketing men said
they fully expect their watch to go into
competition with less ex p e n s i v e
mechanical tin1'epleces now on the
market once the initial demand for the
watch subsides.
A by-product of the new Hughes prod·
uct is the volume of business it has
already produced at the Newport Beach
plant.
"We are already expanding our space
and probably will need more to keep up
with the demand," said Eckess. "The
shortage of defense contracts won't be
felt here, that's for sure."
Weakland said virtually every major
watch company in the world is "pounding
at our door" and he said tJtere could
easily be loo much business for lhe new
watch.
The prospective buyer of the Hughes
igital watch probably will have no idea
It ls a Hughes model when he buys it,
W akland said. The companies who have
ght the new system probably won't
ertlse the fact Hughes made the
w ings, he added.
Bu Weakland contends that when the
watcb tarts appearing in the stores this
August and when the prices begin drop-
ping supply meets demand , the
mech cal watch and the corner watch
shop may become things of the
FronaPage 1
RUSTY • • •
cess of $100,000.
The red stuff which emerges on OC·
casion is an iron compound which settles
out of the water and during low-water-
use periods lies in the bottom hall of
some water mains .
When the warm weather comes and
cltlr.ens use more water, Increased flow
picks up the goo and brings it to the taps.
The real solution, Peter said, Is to set-
tle out the iron before It ever reaches the
transmission system.
"And that will take a new filter," he
said .
THERE'S ANOTHER PAINTING THAT LOOKS LIKE THIS IN LONDON; WHICH IS REAL?
Work, S,upposedly That of Italian Chierici Gae tan, Was Given to Laguna Beach Art Museum -----
Mossier Theft
Report a Hoax
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Police
have labeled as a hoax Candace Mossier
Garrison's report last month that an in-
truder broke into her 'hotel bedroom and
stole $200,000 worth of jewelry. .
"She was under the influence of pre-
scribed -be sure to use that word, pre-
scribed. -drugs and we've <lropped the
case as unfounded," Maj. W. R. Philbin
said Wedni!sday.
In 1966 Mrs. Garrison and her nephew,
Melvin Lane Powers, were tried for . the
murder of her wealtl\y husband, Jacques
Mosaler. · A jury found them Innocent.
Mrs. Garrison claimed April 26 thaf· an
Intruder slipped into her hotel room here
and threatened to strangle her with a
bathroom tawel before taking her jewel· ry.
Pentagon Cuts Cambodia
Bomb Raids by One-third
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon
said today it curtailed B52 bombing raids
over Cambodia by one-third, in part be-
cause Congress has not acted on a re·
quest to transfer money from one mili-
tary account to another.
As the Senate prepared to vote on a
move denying the AdministraUon any
funds for Cambodian bombing, the Pen-
tagon disclosed a number of cutbacks it
said were necessary because of the de-
lay in transfer authority. <Related story,
Page 4.)
An amendment, by Sen. Thomas F.
Eagleton (D-Mo.), to a $3.6 billion sup-
plemental military appropriations bill
would deny any funds for U.S. hostilities
in Cambodia or Laos .. The amendment,
scheduled for a vote later today, is al-
most certain to pass the Senate.
Also tied up in the supplemental ap-
propriations bill is the $345 million re-
quest in transfer authority. -
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Fried-
heim said today denial of transfer au-
thority would mean delaying and cancel-
ling promotions of some Navy and Air
Force men, killing re-enlistment bonuses,
delaying some military transfers, early
release from active duty for some Navy
and Air Force men and officers and
holding up ship repairs through the end
of June.
FINAL DAYS
Fro111P .. el
PAINTING •••
~
vestlgaliot11 will be to detennine whether
ci'a · Unp have be c om•
valuab enough to establish a fat
market-.
He said thal Mrs. Briskin bad purchas-
ed the painting in Rome in a major
gallery there about 20 'years ago.
"First, we'll gcf back to Christie's and
get whatever infonnation they can give.
Then I'll write to a major museum m
Rome for further information," Enman
said. .
She donated it to the Laguna museum
after movln~ to a Leisure World
residence, he said. He said that even if it turns out the
museum has a copy, the painting will
still be valuable.
"H's a good example of 19th Century
Italian work," he said.
"Its a great drawing card for
children," Enman said of the sprightly
painting depicting a boy scaring his
yowiger sister to the annoyance of their
mother.
He said while fakes are fairly common
in the art world, this is the first time a
conflict has occurred within the museum.
The painting is on view from 11 :30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. daily at the museum 's upper
lobby.
FrotnPagel
ONOFRE ...
made cautionary statements about the
emergency core-cooling systems, but the
AEC contends that its exisVng safety
criteria regarding such systems is suf-
ficient.
An AEC spokesman said in a statemen~
that "While we have not yet studied the 'I
petition we know of no basis for suspen-
ding operation of nuclear power plants.
"The commission presently has under
way a comprehensive public proceeding
to consider whether p r e s e n t re-
quirements for emergency core cooling
systems -a backup safety system in ·
nuclear power plants -should be
modif\ed in any way," he said.
FDA Head Appointed
cmCAGO (AP) -The University of
Illinois says Dr. Alexander M. Schmidt,
43, dean of one of the institution's
medical schools, has been appointed to
head the r .:xi and Drug Administration.
There was no confirmation of the report
from the White House.
j .~6 tJi j11n[f!e(Jarq Sale
. ~ .
WWA UH N
GIANT 1B11u:ap. WASHER
Wiih 3 AUTOM~TIC Cycles
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12"di19on1I ADVENTURER
PERSONAL PORTABLE TV
~ :~:OWAVE OVEN
L..P ADDRESS
We have the LOWEST PRICES·
In the County on Admiral
Refrigerators ,-. ~,.~i
t.aJ :
L .J
COMPARE
OUR PRICE
WE TAKE
TRADE·INS
:.;_.1:~~ ·~: ; COMPACT
. .;·:-./:" l RlfRIGIRATORI , .. •, ·.•• '
Lowe1t price In
~~~)'••County ·
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....... 369 88
WE DELIVER
WE SERVICE
WE INSTALL
90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH
EASY-LOADING COMPACT
PORTABLE DISHWASHER
1 2 lfYll Tha10-W11ll
• Quoet '-•·Flo Wnh
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• •Built-In Solt Food Disposer
• Autam1tic Dtt1r11n1 Disptnse1
'Ft1et1·flo s 12800 Unicouplt
• T11n Tub
Inter••
BIG SPACE -S AVING 4051b.
UPRIGHT FREEZER
1 St0tn •P 11406.1 lh,
t J Rtl1ip11t1d Shltn1
plus fOf Cold '1111101
ftll f'"liot 1 lulk Sto1tp Rsck
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Rosch
BIG 14.7 Cu. Ft. 'NO FROST'
REFRIGERATOR·FREEZE6
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Supplies Complete New York Stock List
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WASHINGTON (AP) -= i)~t I :: :m 6114 "-·1 = 2= Ii 1~ f:'4 r:~ tt\4-"' 'i!:~~·11 i 1~ 1 I ti" 1~ 1".~ ii ~1 ttt ::-SN m:+:··
nation's t supply plum-ef "c. °1 I •• 1"' 1"'-='n j 1 ,: '~ l~ .!~ -.. . nl : 1 1oi. l -",........ ·" I I im ~ 1~ t: lOb 1 i\ 1514 ~ I~ 'Iii hmNY 2U 10 3' -$0 ~I'> ::r . t JO 1 Jrr/Mlg 1.<IO 11 14 29'41 -·~ ~ meted 12 percent in April ~~ j~ 13 ft ~ ~ 4W.-111 !.'!?2 I .~ ' •1 ~ •114 '1 '14 F n 1. ' ll 11 .!_t:; 1(-AI 50 1;-K,"lsva UV. lm.-~
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• I ,_ • ' '1 25 25'4-'Iii In 11111 1.30 9 Xl6 191'> 191/o I"'+ Vo F:.. Mlnrl . " •Yt 4'19 • .,., • Kout&lr .12 15 51J ,..,., lm ·-la early ID April WIS intended to AllAml. 1 j5 ll'l 1\lo --\Ii In Gel s 1.'4 10 21 241'> 24\lo 2417+ \lo FoottMln of . S3 U\4 11 12'4+ I> Kaweck .20 12 10 ll<w 119 I.,_ ...
Al I 1 "' II'> ft'>-'Iii CtnM la 1.«> 27 2 -~ ---low Ford M 2 to 6 53lf 511 S1 51-111 KoyserR .60 5 6 12"4 12 12\• . increase meat ....... 11-lmtetd "' I 1 25 ti I ~-llo ~IT Fin uo IO " "° 3'1'> :m.-For ;IC ... 1 ao 14\4 1)14, 1' + \, KNbler .70 10 5 23~ 22'\t 22-'lo .... ,..,...... ~ ~ a 3 3"fl :io ui.ssv l.JO 11 n 45'lt 45\lo .sv.-Ya FrM 1 IO 5 2'~ 26 26 i<.....C:p 10 , 15 s~ 5V. 5\lt-1-a and thus drive pricel' do , ~~I: ·; ~ m~ I'> 1Al!+ Iii l~~~vl~ 1~ l:n ft~ ~3331~ ~Fort I ::12 25 !} mt ~ mt: ~; Kiiier In Ao 6 4 121'1 121'1 12~ '·•
But In many cases farmers ~!!ll.,C_'!_ 111 " 1~1 ~~ m: H"':j: i }~ l~~ Pr'I n J:Z it~ J~ l? ~:=111·~ ~ :: ~~ L)\li ~r'-~· ~::~ 1:~ 1 1! ii~ a .... Ills -i
lflaeelin' and Dealin~
also held back tbeJr products. 41idMiij~ .75 12 1 It lt ft City Storn 15 5 514 514 514 ~~:.,~~ ·20 15 "' IN 121'11 11"1 • v. K~:C~/1 ,·~ 1 1J I'> u.... -y, Beef T,~~·_..QD ~•down I Alklf'rod M 6 Xll ~ 15Vo 15-'14 ClerkkEOql l\'J 13 27 "21'> 4 \4 ~ 14 FronklSI :., 20 }17 32'\t 31 J2'1t+ \~ y u'ih 1:14 9 4 "' JN -... r'IVUll\:U .. ..., AilledSI l.«> 1 4 2514 25\4-Y, Cler II .«> 11 ... 19~ 11'4 1-._ '14 FreotMn ,IO 1t 75 ~ 21~ ?2 -.._ err Mc .60 11 n 621'> !}'14 U-1 15 percent from April 1972, Alld 2upmkl 10 " J 3'111 31'> ~c~~ if{ 2A;J 1l i: J"• J~ J~~ Fnie~ul l.~ I ri ff'" 2{:Z n:t: ~ errMDI 4Ya '. 1 lij Ir. 114 -.\il
d k 9 t le§. ~"r':t.Jo -~ l~ r, ut 1mr! ttt: ~ IOl"OX :S? 11 ~ ·21'!4 19~ 20•.4-114 FUQUAlnd ._, ~ I ~rn!~ :~ t J .~ 1:1'> l ........ f_1'4 an por was percen All>lla ,. ·• 1 3 t' 1 va 12Y>-"' 1uett P .90 10 21 13 12'19 12=11. -v• g•bl• 1ndst , 2 16 16 16 KjddeW pf. ~ 51\lt 511'> s 111
UP'ITlllllllOll
The city of Scottsdale has rented four bicycles to be used by city employes on
short errands from city hall in an effort to cons«'J'Ve gas in Arizona. Riding
the bikes are, from left, Roy Heissner, personnel director; Roberta McCool
and Mary Todd, public works secretaries, and Chad· Cowley, finance director.
the department said in a Ala. 1.9' i2 114 5 51\4-14 ClueltP Pl 1 11 1314 1314 13Y•-~, AC Corp . 44 ~ ~ J~-'4 I( m Cl 1 ! 1r "fl'! 44~ 45 H o Amble 50 8 ~ m 9~ CMI Inv C~ 14 55 29Vo ~ ilV.-1 AF Cp .0 1 ICIS Im 12'11 1~ '~ Klno1D~ . 7 1;t ffi ,_ ~.
report. =-~ ·:!i 1i I ~ ~~ ~~+t: ~~~:,in 1:10 .6 I~ m; l~ "'l~ -I'>~~~ g~ ::~ ., .~ ~~ ~14 ~111+ ~ ~~lrscA ,;, r I ~l ~7 m~ m'!+ ~~ Ame<Pf 2.60 2 3~ J7\'J ff \'I Coost St G• 5 2934 10 '111 9'19+ Ve G•Nli!ll 25 JI 70 37V. J71'> J7V.-"1 Kn hi N .21 20 49 41 l'o ~. 't+ \1
• n--•6 r-••-, Am H~ :JO 22 119 mi. 32~ l'i ~st5Gpf 1.19 . . 117 11\'a 151'> 1ra+ 'I> GordDell )o 12 21 11\lo l~ 11'4+ y, K ra .20b 1 1 1>111 1~ 1 .. . .,.,.;ft; ....... A HQ 31> 45 nv. 12 >M+ I'> c:•tSGpl 1.13 " 24111 23 2•~+ i . GorlQCk .. • 6 Iii-la 1614 16Y•-14 ~oehr pf r.;,. . I 33 33 .. .
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -· ~:::"~1r ~,,: ~~ Jl I~ l~ 14~..:: ~ ~c~:~~\, 1:~ g ~U it:'~ i~ 1~2~ g~s·c c!J~ l; : ':': lf.Z i~t:-"' :rc~P1 i:.2 1{ 13311 o fl "" .~ s v. : .
Gold Jumps
To $115
In Loridon
LONDON (AP) -'The priej!
of gold jumped $1 an ounce to
a record $115 at 'Thursday's
openmg of the London gold
market. But by midmorning
the five main dealers had pull-
ed the price back 50 cents.
Dealers said turno:ver was
moderate in London, the only
major European center open
durmg the Ascension Day holi-
day.
The U.S. dollar weakened
further in relation to the
British pound. The pound
opened at $2.5650, then moved
up to $2.5680.
In Hong Kong, the price of
gold jumped nearly $4 dollars
an ounce to close at $115.31.
Asian markets, although they
open and close long before
those in Europe, generally
follow the previous day's trend
in rlondon and Zurich, the
world's two biggest bullion
markets.
The dollar dropped off
slightly in Tokyo also, from
264.995 yen to 264.85.
.._/
New Brand
Introduced
By Tib1iron
WINDSOR (AP) -A new
national brand of premium
table wines under the name
Sonoma Vineyards will be in-
troduced by Tiburon Vintners
Inc.
The brand, which will in-
clude classic varietal reds,
whites and brut champagne,
will be produced at the firm's
new winery here, 65 miles
north of San Francisco in
Sonoma County, said Rodney
D. Strong, winemaster and
board chairman of Tiburon
Vintners. '
MAKE LIFE EASIER
'
11iJr nRIY GIANT, I.Ph
Our pharmacy Is your ·
neig hborhood healtti station,
always r eady to help satisfy
your regular and emergency
needs.
We supply the health-aids
that add safety and satisfac-
tion to your daily living.
What you get from us bet-ters either your health or ·
your comfort. And when
sickness strikes, from our
preserlptloi:i department you
get the medicines to make
you well again. Life can be
less difficult. when you de-
pend on a pharmacy, ours
we hope, 'tor your medicine
and sickroom needs.
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US when you
need a delive ry. We will de-
liver promptly without extra
charge. A great many peopl
rely on us for their healt
needs. We welcome reques
for delivery s e r v 1 c e and
charge accounts.
PARK LIDO 'HARMACY
351 Hnpltal Road
Newport Beach 642-15r1
,,.. Delivery
Ground Beef Content
Hit for Water, Fat
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Oonsumerir are not o n 1 y
paying more for ground beef
these days, but in many cases
they're also-getting less, sa¥S
a group that surveyed loeal
supermarkets.
'The California P u b 11 c
Interest Research Group said
Wednesday eight of nine San
Brault said one stOre's
regular ground beef had a 34.7
percent fat content, which ex-
ceeds the legal standard of 30
percent. Another store in the
same chain had 22.5 percent
fat in itS' regular grotind beef
and 26.1 percent in its "lean"
grade, he said.
Diego County market chains THERE WERE "tremen-
surveyed were guilty o· f dous variations" in fat content
mislabeling some of their of hamburger meat among
ground bee[ In one store, and within chains, Brault said,
ground beef labeled "regular" despite use of the standard
had less fat content that categories regular, lean and
"lean" ground beef costing 20 extra lean.
cents more a pound, the group He also said some markets
said. may add water-to the beef to
PROJECT COORDINATOR increase its weight. One sam-
Steve Brault, a University of.,.. pie had 68.4 percent .water an~
Califorrua student, said the 12.8 percent fat, so 1t couldn t
meat was bought and tested have had ~re than 18.1 per-
earlier this month at an in-cent protem, he said.
dependent laboratory. He said customers at most markets
the group won't disclose the can ask to see a listing of the
names of stores in specific fat content in each grade of
cases, but written to eaCh ground beef, but the figures
chain listing the survey's find-are g e n e r a 11 y inaccurate,
ings. Brault said.
* * * * * * 10% An-oss-tlae-board
Meat Priee Cuts Told
By Supermarket Chain
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
major supermarket chain in
Northern california announced
an across-the-board cut of
about 10 percent in its meat
prices Wednesday.
Other markets are cutting
meat prices, said Chuck· Coll·
ings, the president of Haley's
S u p e r m a r k e t s. Raley's
operates 19 stores in eight
cities from its Sacramento
headquarters.
COLLINGS "SAID Raley's
reductions range up to 20 1XI 30
cents a pound for cuts in the
$2 pri<:e area:
"We're trying to reach the
demand of the consumer,"
Collings said in a telephone in-
terview. "Of course, we ·want
to get the prices down enough
For example, R a I e y ' s
advertised 89 cents a pound
for "7-bone roast, center cut."
The same price was ad-
vertised by Safeway, but
another store was asking.$1.37
for the same advertised cut.
While the exact equivalent
of cuts is difficult to judge,
Haley's "chuck steak, center
cuts" at 99 cents a pound com-
pared with 99 cents at
Safeway for "USDA Choice
chuck steak" and plain "chuck
steak" at Tom Thumb and
Lucky, both also for 99 cents.
ALPHA BETA priced its
"well trimmed, blade cut"
chuck steaks at 89 cents, the
same price as Farmers'
"steaks, lean tender chuck"
and Stop-n-Save's ' ' USDA
Oboice chuck steaks."
26 Plastics
Amh .20 . 6 mi ~ 6~ oklwBk .29 7 9 13411 13~ l:Mll+ ~Gemini tap 7 11Vo 11'4 n-... nllco .n • -~-'9 Re--+J".. "sufficient .-v«.. All<• 2.31 9 41 · 39Vo ttt=14-v. o1eco1n .06 21 :i. 1S w .i. uv.-.,.. Gem In .56o · s 1'\"o 14 14v.+ y, r-.20 J7 211 ~1 .,,_ J1~ J61~~ I"" loU't§ l" v·· AmBrcst M 11 641 2s:i. Jlh Colgate 13 lNO 2'Vo 211'> 21-y, G"'1 A I v . . 2' 112!'o 12VI 121.,_ " roehl•r ·1 6 16 .,,:, 6-I H ~-ress" jn dock contract talks. Am 81da • I Ill'> 11'~ 1 ~-II> Coll&Alk .56 9 26 111'1 ma 111'1+ ... G'i:' AO'°r .ii. 16 16 36 30110 34~a--I.,_ Kroaer 1. 137 5'J 161~ 1161, lf~ +19
1 ho Am Cln 2 I n 33 32~a 32'• . Collin• F_, 11 19 l~ 10\4 10\lo-~ GonATr 1.61 12 115 ~V• '1\4 "2 + ·~ KYIOI" In . 1 ~ 1 • ~ ·· the West Coast ODgS re A~I pf I S ;l'J ?~ i•l'J vi Collin Radio 39 lfu 19 19'4+ "' Gen Banc :76 7 10 IJ:V. 1)1,1, 13>.io . . . Sn 1 9-L4 ~ 13 13
union and shippers Say they ~ C In llf,! :91 ln f% iill ~I~ ~:on'1rn1.~ J~ ln tr.!: t:~ ffV.:: ~~ g::cca~ 1:~ : 1t! I~ l~~ l;r:-_:z t=~~r i:~ 1,1 tt ~:z m; m~ ~
A ;1;\11 l 1 16 ~I'> iv. -c~fplr 1 ·l: 7 1f ~ ~ ~~+ , Gn DewloP 8 391 I~ 8 l '.4+ I'> L:fr%11: "'Jfi l 1 ~\a 71/1 7~ ..
KI lV ' T~ .f.l ~. 1°3 4~~ 41~ °'!~= ~ ~~t~n pt 1 ': ;; ,1i ~~ ll...., il" -, ': g~E1~°l'.~ ~ 5?3 lm m; 1t.,.,.-'19 t::~~ ~ :i?! .1 IO~ 2f~ 2~t: zm= ~ 't t.. c el: 1.-0 9 2611 26111 26 2fYt C B 5 f 1 --GnF-l.«> 11 161 2"14 73'lt 2~a--'•• LHICO C .«I 4 111 9'14 I~ 9 -\9 ~ Am Exoort . . Ht ..... 1 -,,.. ol G:':'1 90 °9 .l 3025 ll~ ll .• -1 ~ G111Gro .•lb 2' J 16 16 16 [HICDI 2] m 26'1'1 25\'J 25""-"" Ara Eur pt 'J 41'> 4'4 •'h +l"I ~ · -.,_ '"~ Vo Gn ttosl CP 10 S 11~ llltO ld''o-\a Leuwv . 13 67 34 33 :mt.-to STOCK A Fl11Sv 1.10 ·; 1 161(& 16'/a 16!-o C~s'6~t~r;~ ·9 ~5 256~ 2•y. 25 +""Gen Instr 2k 12 90 1-4'/o 1'1'o 141,.._ 1/o toeds&N . 10 21 111'> ll'fo 119' .. A Fin pt l'h II~ 11\lo ll\'o,-'19 · • ~ 6 .~ 6'111+ Vo Genlnst ct 3 2 35~ 35'h lS'~ .....,. • 9 15 12~'o 12~ 12"' A ~Bd .10b : ; «I 25" 2~ -. Vo Comb E 1.51 11 56 69'!0 68 68 -1 Giii Med .12 20 21 241.4 22V, 22h--2 oh Pt C . 1 il 14\1 1'1'1 1--·~ A vs .76b . . '5 11 17'111 -~~mes.\\' l._!g 18 61'.4 1' 11Yo-l1/1 <;en Mill• l 23 150 61»'1 ~14 6G'4 + \4 Leh VII 1 . . :G l~i ,.... 1">-,,
will continue secret negolla-~ ~ ~'\" 1:U 1 * ~ ~~ 1~ ~ C~Edv 2:.00 13 i1~ ~m M~! mtt ~ qM11~,Df2 J.: . 9 .J 15\;, ·-I~ .:!:. ~ L=r 1 ·'J~ . I ~4 mr-~
tions in efforts to avoid a crlpL ~m=t ~ ~~ ,l9 ll~ m~ !rEm ~~~gl~ .• ~ : ~ ~ ... m: ~1~ + 'Ii ~:~f' 5 •• 4 !r' ~ ;1"'" .;-!,: ~f.d'" s"f.. iJ ~ 9.,; ,. 2g'l•=1a
piing dock strike like one ~~~p pf 2 39 11 l 1~ 1~ 1~.,.,:: ,,., ~~~ed ':I : . lt ~&U ~3'\t ~~ -\\ lf:p'l>~u /~ , 1 m ~"" ~ i~ .,.. ~r. r,; · ~ u J W tt~ m~ ~~
which shut Pacific ports for ~=,·~ :f, 1f J 1n? i:'\ 1:t :z l~~118W .; 1.J l~ 1r' 1~~ :_:t ~ ~:1rac1 19 u 5~ ~ ,v.-2~ E~vJt• '1~ 10 ~ !"' ·~ ,m~ :t 134 days in 1971-722 A ~1c~·rp 4 194 4:ie 4~ •• ,._ •4 ~wo11p1 1.n 10 20v. 201/o 20•,;,-.,., ~~·Jr~i1 1·~ 18 "jS 4~~ J 3;~ .,., ~FE 1S' .so J 5•;, 5'19 v.+ .,..
On May 15, the 1n"ternational ~~,~~ ~ 1 ~ 1~ m~ r,~ l~2~ l~~~\r s5c'1 19 ~ i ,~ ,~."' gr1 ~f 1j~ 11 J.lf ~I: m~ ~~ ~ ll'P4.1 2.4~ ~ ~~ m: 74~-1'1·
Longshoremen's and~:::rrG~02.4I!.., 1117 ~14 ~ m'~t:c~:.ti j~ i 5 l1 l#"' 11'4-:ia~~F·m.1 ·~ :5 rm i~~ ll :~ -~L'1'~~c~~ ·1 U 1::2 ,ftZ 1,:ov.-·~
W ho , U • nd Am ~t 72 11 I 101/o l \"o ConnMI .88b 14 29 231'1 23 23 -1,1, • .34b 6I 1, l'>ti l'4 -\"o L brtyln .60 7 50 io~ 10 -• are usemen s ruon a Am 'f :61 1 IMO 16" ,,., conracc .60 9 11 1ra I ~ t. ~::m=r 10 ·, 1 1J: l6'111 16~ v. L11111 Mv f!la 12 w 311~ J7'14 311-~.
th I P 1 f i A Sm 1.20 11 17'14 i1~ 17-1/o Con Ed 1.80 II 305 23\!a ~ y, • •. • • LlggMy p 1 z1100104 104 104 il e emp Oyer 8 C C Am Stnd .SO I 56 11~ 11Vo lrn=i '.4 ConsEd of 6 .• 1 n17 Y, y, ... Genup~ncP ... ?3 100 r.'li J~ 311~1~~ Liiiy Ell .76 4 123 11 -16\'J V• M •t• A • t' be AmftdOt ~ I llll-2 59VI '4 ConsEd Pl 5 I U U '4 Ge .IO!I 15 2r. 32 r. ~ L ncNll l 01 9 U JI ~ :JO;'o 'llo arl Ime SOOCla IOn gan Am terp . is 21 21'4 ~IV. '14 . ConE pf 4.65 .. 1130 ~ 60 60 -i;, g:f/'" i wg ~ J 12:1'> 1lf l'J 1J~l ~ L ncNI f' 3 . 19 """ 64 M\'J ~
negotiating a new contract for~;:: 't~12:--ii 1J !l .• u14 !h.,.= ~ l:ft.t'lit 1.i~ 12 4f 92 ~ ~ ~ ~"ipf i.20 . 1 20 20 20 .. LI~ ~~ H ,J :~ l"" l~ v.
15,000 ILWU mem~rs. The ~WprI "l.J : : ~l ~ 52\lt ~v.+ ~ ~::.~~· 2:~ ' ~ ~2:: ll~ u~-~ g1~nl~ -~~ ., I~ if('.; if~ 1~+ a t~,~~.s~ p~.l : ' t lr' 1(1 :& = t? '.
current contract expll'es July ~:::~:;~ r.t ·; 2f if .... 1f .... 1fv. .. : E::sm ~w.J 10 ~ ~ r w--Vo ~,t Fl~~~ .5 g I~ 1;;(: 1Jtt-. . ock-1 ' J n 2614 ·14= ~ •
1. AW1trpf i 14 . . u 1~ l~V.--1 ~onlr lir Ln i:i R 914 M'I ·-. ~ G ffttlll .2Ab • 1 16'1i il>'li 16-Iii =s,, :M 1~ fi ,m n~+ 'lo AmerQn .65 , 14 1 v. 1 a-Vo n con uo 9 2714 26~• 21 _ ,4 GllbtFl•x 5k 10 ~Z 16'1i 16 i6'.4-~ LomM 1 39b 12 10 44i;. 44 44 .. AmesSt 10b 5 13-4 61'.Ji 1 -4" on CoPr,r 2 4'11 4'14 4-~ Gillette 1.50 21 1~ 5'~ ~ ~ ~ London MIG 6 1 I~ 12'4 I,_ v.
• Nstural Gas ~~rJ1~ ~:~ 1i ~ ~~~ mi ~m::·tt E~.i~p PU~ • u m:: mt 3m-;,., ~=' ~.J 1~ 2' m~ 1r:1 H:Z= ~ t::'i.: t.:ind4J .1 1'f a.,., ~ a + ~ Aml•t .64 7 96 15YJ 15 IS -'!(a CttlllRI .I.lb 10 I 17411 17 .... 171/1 ' Gleason .44 16 11 221'> 221'1 22v.-~Lon StG .... 11 27 JOV. 29~ 29411 . '. WASHINGTON (AP) -The AMP Inc .69 ..., 41 120~ 118 111 -21'> Conllnvsl 21 1 ..., 5'1o Pi! 5"'-'.4 eloblul M~ lg' 71 1,J\ 1126~ '12""6,. -li LonalLI 1.46 10 19 21~ 21 ~ 21~+ I\ AMP Inc wl U <IO'h 391/• 391/4-1 ConMt9 . .lolb 9 13 10 9'lll Dbl n ·-I " y~ •• LIL pf j 5o/t 1 M11t Ml'> 14.,., Federal Power Comrnissioo AmpcoP .36 · 1 1 a • 1 .. Conti on lY> ' 169 31~ il'o 31•;.-"' ld~•th Fc,1 16 l 12i., ~~ ~-+ ~ Lona1 p 1 ' :: J70 61V. 61 61\lt+2Va . • A c 170 41/o J~I 4111 . Eont ~II pf 2 2 ~ 4~ st-'.4 r c -·-~ .... ~ ~ LongOQ .56 311 I 65'1< ~ 65-"" has appr-OVed an IIlcrease AI) A:::~ Cor~ ·3 22 6'li 6 6 -'!OconlrtllO'f 1~1r>6CW 3I n;; +1~=~~~7·~ ·, Z~l~I~ I~ ~Lor•I pr~ 16 10 2'11--2'1o m ..
the price of natural gas !it the A~~~~ ~:~ .1 ~ ~t ~~ ~t= '!! ~E~ 14~1
; 110016 : ~"' ~~ ll~I~ 8:;?3"1~:21 : ff m: ~ ffl3 = ~ t;L·~·~,u ~ H ~ffi rit! \i=:: wellhead that its chairman Amstr pr .68 · · 212 !'(~ .!~ ~~1.,.. oo1c un :s2 5 1 ·;~ 741. ~ v. Gf•c• w ,.,., 10 u2 22'1• m1 .,.__ •;. t°"G~:t ·90 13 1 1 ~ fi .. fl~\'.; Amsted 2.60 I -r• ,,_ ooo Ind .80 11 4 29\4 29 29 -VI Gnnd U .IO I 19 11711 11-111 '14 L W c · 5 91 I~ ·~ I~ says could cost conswners Amtel 1n .:ao 20 26 t. 1~ 151 ·;~ COOPOr L•b IS 21 15.,., 14'11 u-uranlY 1.20 6 14 22•,. 22 23 --111 LTV or:'l 5 9.._ 9v, ,_.\.lo
T to N Engl d Anaton .25b I 162900 l~ ,.,, -"~oooTr .So4b 1 21 16 15'4 151/•-.,., Gnni W Ph 6 5<IO 17h 16'i 17•.4-\"o ~ 5 I . . 1 31 1' ,1-~ ., from exas ew an Anchttc 1.oe 1 23 23'llo 23'11 23'1>-~ _,nd .32 u 5 20'14 20•4 201;.-'" i.;ravPr 1.20 1 1 161'> 1~ 16\'J-''• t!~,1,~1 ~ 21 100 31~ l,~ 1_ ~ *"1 mill" year And Cl1yton 6 4 11'14 18'.4 111/•--opp R811!l0 16 14'14 14 1414 -GIAMI l.57b 10 212 JOl/1 29\'r 29¥1-~ t k St 054 12 134 12 11~ 2 + '!(a T" JOn a • All!llllta 10 14 21 10~ 10 lOYo · ~oe>wld 1.21 5 . 21 23'4 22'1> 23 + 'la Gt A&P Teo .lol 12'.4 11'14 12 + y, ~i.:'., !'OI 9 x6 l•~ 14y, l'""-~ Approved Wednesday was a AllSul Co . •I 9 4 14\4 1'1'1 14-~ ordvre CD 4 14 61/• 5111 9,;,_ 1,. GlLkD l.20a 23 6 2•'>11 24 ..... 24V.-~ tukenSll "ao 9 19 21'14 21 21-'Ml Apache .320 I ' 13111 lJ 13 -14 orn<ill 1.12 29 93 95 '14 941'> 9•V.-l'IO GIN Ir 1.lOd 12 4 lO'h 101;, 10\'J . v 0 Corp ll 45 ·~ 4 4~ +Ill 73-percent increase in the Al>CO 011 4k ' Jl 1J~ 1J iJ --111 cous111 1.12b 12 36 15~ 25 2~+ v. GIN 1r 1.1ocs 12 4 1ov1 1oy, 10\'J Lvk• Yostn 17 ~ m I-Ill ,_ ,.
price of natural gas to be sold ~Pc~ 1~ ~ 1~14 1~ 1~ -."' ~~;r,.?fs \1 ~ 2~~ ~~ 2~+ :i;, !!l,~w~~fn 1u:~ 1~ !1 ~I'> 11"" tt~ ~ t~~~l~~ 1, 1i 2i'" 2l~ 2tt i:· · · t Ii Applied Mg 15 11 51'1 4'1o 5V. . CPClnll 1.71 10 U 29'1o 29\lt 29'14-Yo G 11 n . 21 5 4-111 5 -,.,._ to a In8JOl' mter,sta e supp er ARA Sv l 22 26 10 126 124 115 + 1fJ ~roe-er 1.66 I 15 26 15'14 157,;,-1.li §trtWWatUhn pf . . 9 15 l~\4 15 + 'llo MacAF .0711 6 7 11 l~ 10'/o-..
b thre · d nd t 0-Ar t N °14 7 1cn 6'11 6~ 6~ :i;, rouseH . .lol lJ 2 18'14 11'14 11'4-'14 a• In · J J J J . MA<Oonld 62 14 3\4 3~ 3-,,.. y e Ill epe eD pr Ar~~~D '.sCJ 14 58 JW. JO~ JO~ '14 ranee .llOG 6 45 16 15\lt lS'h-\'a rnGGpfilant 1 10 lJ 2l'h 22 23-'la Macke .JO 1 '3 no m 71,,_ 'It
d II E I 4 124 4'11 4¥1 4-,,,. rown Cor~ IJ 61 211'> 21111 21-'lo rn 1.11 . I Jl¥o Jl~ 31~ . MacMll 05b 1 41 ~-61--~ ucers. AArtl ~s lnl~ 9 27 21:\'o 21V. 21-.... Credit Fl .38 8 21 • Pit 7'lo-v. Greyhhdd 1.04 ' 107 14'11 14'4 l~I . Macy R H l 9 X24 211;, 2 26'/o-'19 r z • 12¥1 12,,.. l:Ha-~ Crwn ZI l 20 11 101 21~ ~ 27'11-1/4 Grey n wl . •5 J 2'1e 21'o Mad Fd '°" ff 1o114 10 IO ~ Ark Best . .io 6 101 rn. .. L 4u+ '.4 c Ts Corp 1 JI lS'h 14\'J ·~1/11-Jlh Grolier .90 6 55 11)'111 10~ 10\4 . Mad5Q1r wl . ... •L-
• l'L-Fl Arlen RllDv ' 58 ·-"" ~ ~TS Corp 7 31 15\'J W h Wh -l'h Grumman . 55 10.\ti 911 10 -Yo lcC -I :~ "'K<1'rqn fte Ar.-1• Cp <IO 26 J:~ 225,'~ J,'~: ulllgan .JO iJ 15 111;, 11 11.,._ ~ Guardian In 18 9 21¥1 21~ 21V.-'14 ~:navh ·~ 1i i11 1f¥; /}jl" ll....,:: ~'4. ArmcoS 1.20 9 73 ,.,, ~ • .,.-umlns 18• 14 15 3l'h 30'!/o 31V·+ v. GUMIQ 2.0'lb 9 17 38'14 ~7!;, J7~ Mall ·~ 9 1 1 1 I ?+ I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Arm pf 2..10 12 29 lt'IO 29 · Curtiss Wrl 26 40 191/o 11 11 -1 Gull Life .90 6 7J 29 VI 281'>-i • orv • 114 . · Arms Ck .IO 14 27 15>.io 251,. 15•4-'14 CurtlssWr A 12 2 2611• 2614 26'1• GujJ 011 1\'J 10 1793 23~ Ii 22~a--y, MalonaH · 19 I 2flll 2flll 3' + · Chevron Cbermcal Co. was fm-ArmstR 1.60 6 J 2ffi 271'> 2PI< . Cutlerli 1.21 9 1J7 291/• 2914 291/• Gu Re&Ch • ' 6'14 6:\'o 6-.... ~~~ -~ • ~ u~ lr" l'h-r ~
ed $ ,500 fter l d. Aro Cp 90g 8 1 161'2 16V. 161/o-1/4 Cvclops(p l 5 6 22'1• 22111 ,,,,.,_ '4 GllRplb .6Sc . IJ ~ IJ + •;. M H 1·5' 10 30'!0 -1 a pea mg no ArvlnJnd0 .52 11 23 lS'h 15114 15"'-Vo Cyprus Ms 1 9 39 9 28'h 28'h--l'J GullSIU 1.12 13 217 20fl 21W1+ Vo M~~c8 ~ 20 J: )2\\ ~ ~-1)" •
te t to t counts of ship-"5A Ltd 1 lM ~ IO'lo 12v.-7/1 -D D--GulftW• .... 6 1119 22"'4 2214-14 Ml "' M 1 191'> -~ • con S WO, ASA Ltd wl : . 262 '2'11 40'la 41\4-~Damon CP 30 .1o1 31'4 37\'J 37-1 Gui Ws W5 • • 16{ 5\lo 4'IO 4711+ l/o M•~aoif"I 60 10 ,.:: ~1~ ~ ~I~ •
ping u n reg Is t ere d and Ashl 011 1.20 I i32 25 ,.~ 25 +ii;; DanRlvr .40 9 2• 8'!0 '"' 8''o ~1~: g: 3"" . ~ n~ n li +2,.. M!rcor '° I "" 194'o F 1"9 -~ •
misbranded pesticide products ::"~ ~~ 1i 1i ~14 ~ ..... ~;,,.+'It o~:~r)~ ~~ I~ ~ n~ ~'.4 ll'"= t; S~WC:.~nm ;~ ii . 1~~ 1:~ 1:~ -.. ~=~~I~ ~· :Jf ~~ !..-=f 14< : .:-~ the En. 1_ Al Spr 1.20g I 2 24'11 2~'1> 24-'la lrlnd pf 2 14 J7 361.4 1 -.ff H--1 • MorMld 1.IO 30 27\la ifr-. •
8Cn>SS State awe:>, Vnuu-Athlone .-40 5 1 11~ 11~ 11V.-1-2 4yco l.U ' 15 16\lo 15"' 161/o+ Yo ttackW 2 36 9 2 36'14 \lo ,4 MarlonL 021 i 30f9 30 30 ·..;, ·'
mental Protection Agency Al~Mk Ii~~ l lJ Jl: ~m N:.. ..... m~~~n -i: 1~ 4~ I~~ 1~"' 1~'!:!: ~ HajlPrl .ioa 1 1 1717 ffv. ffv.+ 'y, ~"l:"c 1:11 36 . 35\t 36 i" ;
says . ~ ~hf1ci 2 23 m 14'"' :1;: :~1.,.. B:Y>tLl f~ n i?: ,gn; 1gf~ i~ ~ ~=~p i:.li U I lfit0 ittt i~~ ~~Q~ c~ ,, ~ J:1 ~ i" : ~ EPA said the charges ~t~Jf iJ°'g ·: ~ i~~ 1411;i" 1411~-1~ g::~£lt 11.. '9 t'n ~~ r~ :J~ ~ ~:ncTie~ ~ ~ I~ ~~ 9~± ~ ~~~ '12 ff 111 JR mt ~+ ~
fro . terstate hi Atlas Corp 9' 94 2 Vo ,,_ ,. IP&L . I ttandy H .n 13 9 201'> 20v. :acm+ ~ MortlnAI . .io 60 13 ,.,., 7111 71/o-ii stemmed m lD s p-.t:TO Inc ·" 6 146 6V• 6\4 ''"-1~ g:. Mnl Ht ~ ~ m~ m: lt:t: t? HanuCp .60 6 12'14 121'2 124i-~ rlMr 1.15 1 °' 16\lo 16\lo 1614 •. ments of Ortho Parathion 8 Autom D•ta 39 268 "~~ ~ 56 -.,., DeltoAlr :so is 109 5111o 51 51-~ Hanna rtl.J5 199 296 441/o 441" 44'4-~ M cu11 .so ~ 14 1114 11 11~ --\tr Aulamt Inds I 59 --~ Deltec lnln 4 23 6"" 6'MI ~+ V. Harcou II I 23 2214 22'4-l\lt lltllCP .20 -11 .. ~ -.--'14 FJow Concentrate and Ortho Avco COOi 4 M ~ 91'> t•h-+ :-! •lion• CP 6 36 l2'14 12~ 12114-"' ttar"-.1, 15 56 ll"' 11'14 nt0+ ~ MalOftlte .Q 15 92 27lt av. :n~-\II • Avco C• wt• •• ' 21'1 2 2~ ~ nlsn 80 1 12 23 22'14 22'4-14 Horn&tg 1.20 6 6 i1'4 22 n -l/o Ml~ .16b 7 21 1~ Im 19\lt+ ti
Vitamin B-1 Up Start PI.an, ~~i:'r ~-Ir :ii iaI ~ ~ lli.-"" nvs :o, IS 50 1~ 101-2 IO'h-\4 ~:~r.~~1o·2l lf !' !~ f19111 2fh-l ~iMI := 11 ll W' m~ m: ...
Starter from Chevron's Rich-Avl•ef'nc AO 12 IOlj ~ 2~.,., 2~:i': ~~~\~ :~ 1; 1~ 1g~ ~ Ir'-.~ ~:WMx ~ 1~ 2~ lm 6~ It-4t ~lr.'E ·Ml: 9 201 ~ 21~ 2:t·~
mond plant. Chevron entered ~:0,~~1:!1 J 1:, 1J1'.4 i2"111130\'J-1\'J "'~':: Hi 9 ~ 1~ 1~~ 1=+ 14 ~·rt•~1 ·l~ iT tt, J.L~ it~ io'A=.,.. M:v 1Js i 60 ·, i:J 30'14 ~4~ _,.._ yt 'ts pl Wednesday in US AzMt:Oll 6k 53 9 l8'ttl Ill'> 1-14 ete pl 7 61 z630102 IOI\.'> lOl'h+I owo ·-,,.,. 27-~ Maylll"()s .65 l~ 4 24'.ll ~+ \• l eaS • , -8-etE of f'5 · zlOO 98,_., fl'h 98....,+ 'h ~IYH Alb I 7 xlO W't ~'lo 14~ ~ MayoJW .50 1 4 ~ 7 ~+ ~ District Court B•b&Wil .to 1~ 38 26\l 151'1 26 + Y• at E pl .iy, · · 5 17,4 161;, 71,1, v: ezeltlne 1' 5 "514 m 6V. . Mavlw<I 1.JO 13 J7 21 ttl't 11 _ "' • . Bache .151> 14 54 J 4'14 5 xtr Cp .25 16 10 16411 l6Y• • w.+ ~ ~CA Martin 13 1• l'"' 17'14 17'14-.,.. MCA Inc .64 • 33 22'.4 22Yo 221' -'41 Baker In .16 24 49 2-1411 24 2A -1\'J '"' Fin .54 12 9 20~ lf'f& ~ _ ,4 H ec:,~).,.~ ;1;: ~ 2/ 1m /k,.. /~ ..,. McCord .u 1 1 uv. 16'.4 m~-,4
• Ta% Lawsuit !:~l;'df D ~ ! E~ ~~~ ~ 1Mnl~b1 _; ~ li~ ll~ lit-: ~~~~"It" 1:3: ,: lf ll\lo lJ .... l2 f·= ~~~~~ic1 ~t j! ~ ~~ r~::I~
CARSON CITY N (UPI) Bandaa Inc 41 29 21'1• 211'1 28\4-•;; 81aShpf 1 20 1 15'11< 1ra 15'4-~ W'•neR ·7f 52 ft lf"' J5, 3.S 114 McDollO . .io I 101 2-1411 W111 W.a--1 , eV. Banoor Pn 4 26 ~ 2A~ 2!,~ + ¥1 Dlctaohn ·.JO 11 49 8'!0 11/4 8-~ H~~nfu~4 i6 46 32~ f~~ 3:1~+ ~ ~~rEd l ri 11 20 ~ 2914 20'.4-'t
-The Nevada Supreme Court g:~::, "l.1 : : ~ 15~ l51/o m: . 81~~-~ 2~ t~ ~"" ";~ ~"':;: .,., HelmePr :60 9 10 W'• 2•}'\ 14V.-}'\ MGJ1;11:2'D 9 , 20 ~ ~ ·• 1 •
Wednesday affirmed a $100,000 R~o1v:Y.J 1~ 1~ r,:,: ~\; ~ ~ BIH1~h E~ i~ 1~ 81'14 •tt 14~ ~ ~:::i.:a~ ~2 x~ 2•4 ~.~ 2~~.:!:. ~ ~~~ ~ 10 17,: ~ J"> 3•"'=· :f
j .. .i ........... • against the H & R ~~·' .! 10 "'? s.21~ ~:Z ~~-~ o ulnah pf 2 2 ~ mt. mi.+ :v. ~:'iu\~ ·11 20 ~ J~ 36,..... ~~ -~ ~~~~ .35b 11! 3 ~ 21~ ff~ -•r! ""15k""".. d ·ti-'--' Ba·~·~ •~ • gmonc .toa 15 22 29 21~ 28-Vo ttenhv 1.10 11 109 15~ 15 15 _.,.. ~n ,611 ~ ' -., ., _'Ill Bloc Company an cr1 \;u.a& ft:'~RI~ 3: ~ m~ ~y, ~ ~ l•nevW .12 "' 3'2 ,,.,., N~ 8Wo-3'h Heublein .92 20 l"' '1h "°'" 41 -tO ~~:y,th ~,~ J «I 115!4 1$~ m•-:,t
the firm for fraud and Bo~ln pf 2Yt 1100 2m '= 2:::+ ~ ::,·,~. -~ 1: Ji Ji» J1~ J1:-." l;\~V~~ E~ ~ I~ 12~ If" 1l:Z-Iii~~ Cp ~IO 11 6~ u.,.. I~ u~ :~
misrepresentation t . B1..,.M~20 II 1~ 1~ 1~ j-.·i<> ~1lld In lJI ffi 2" 7'f&+ l'o nul•nbr ·4f 13 ~ 22~ 22\lt fiV.+ "'--=" 2.IS .. l lf~ jt~ jtllat1
The suit was filed in Reno titt't ~ ;? 2" n: n,;: 1"+2~ ~l>~~-4-~ ~ m I ~ ~~~l =rtt:.iuJ li t: j11o ~~ ,.~1tt ~,e,. ci"P ·i u ~~ ,,. ~:_.a
by Mr and Mrs. Patrick H. 81xter L .IS 51 566 al'I ~ ~1... Fd .89b "' 1Vo 11/• 7Vt+ Vo --:,, t ' 2Wi -~ -~Sha. .G 21 156 25V. 2.! 25-.. • 8Nrlngs AO 13 1 ~ ~ ·~ -ulJ .12 a 2 6!lo 6!lo 6'o+ ,11' Hoff Elecfll 7 4 1 1li a ·,,.. •mor•• f 41J 41;. 3~ 4 :=:e ag~ :ter~all~fess i ll -:U r1!,; tl'.4 rl~:!:~ rc~I~~ lf ! f ~: ~:=\Z=~~ ~ 2fl rm_J~ !~~ !F_tf.~~MM:~~11111\fe~ l:~li:l~"1d1 +·~
lalned bout Ar .10 1 19 #,. 13"1 .,.+ 1" rsevC .10 6 5 6'-" 6~ 6~'1+ 19 Hon I J 0«> n sfi 103 l~ 1-~ "-.70 1 I 13~ 13~ 1~-·i,4 Sparks, Who comp a r.1coPet lk 1 1'6 10'\9 9" 9'1<+ ~ ovorCp .8• 11 J ~ 35"/o 36 . tt~:r f.21 I U 21t 21'14 ~'14 -'.4 ~orrl~L .21b I 93 13'1'1 IJ:W. 1cl-,11
the method by Which the taX a::=. .1: 1! J ~ 21m ~ ~ ~~c~ ~ ~ 5'14 41~ "!~-21/o ~~l~~I f~ l ~~ 1r" ~Vi 7V..-:1o M:::blet .&lg \~ I09j5 sm ';~ 5~ · · •
Prepann· g company handled Bell ttow .45 1 ,. -26'14 26-\11-Vo Or••• iv. 1 4 26 25,. 25-\'I-~ ttos..Cp 06I> 12 15 14 13~ j~ -~ :.'l'tJ• •• Mach . 1 121.4 12 u _ w. ~I• 1.60 f 51 3614 35'la ~1'4 gr-r 1.40 lJ 41 J7l'o 37 JP.II+ \4 Hosl Intl. 36 11 3' 12 11'14 12 -l'l(a Met m Inc 10 7 15:\'o 151'1 j5-'/,
returns related to t heir ~~o ~ ,; 07 n: m: ~~ ~t ~ o~=.~~ r.Pf . . 1~ ~ = W:+ Iii ttoudelle :60 6 15 12'.4 1H4 12'1•= .... M3f2 In~ '~ ,tt ~\l f1i .,.. ltv.::'"' business activities. BenCPPI 2';, .. zl70 32 32 32 -14 Drexel .:!Ob • lJ 19 II~ II-14 ~= ';l.t:t 1~ m I~~ Im 1~ ~ ~11CliGrodo1 1.04 11 11 lAO 714 i}l4 Illa a.ne pf •.30 . 12 661-2 " 66 -2 Drovfu•Cr. l 5 12 ' ·~ 9 . Ho.iHFn 16 ' 136 24\lo 22'14 23 1 c I .44 6 2• 11~ Ill'> 11\lt-"' , . Be1111uet Inc i 214 3 2'/o J + \4 Ouk• P .411 12 «> 21'!0 207(& 21 + l'o House pf 2:i;, 2 53 53 -1 Mjd C Tl .'6 11 17' 16'\ 16\4 16111+ ~.
• Jtfc{; Hoch Oil &erttev Pho 1 :t 10Yo 1011o 1ov.-v. Duk• f7f 1.10 .. z100 109 1oa11. 1oe•.i.-''• HOUIF~t 2.,., · · 5 4 41"" lf~1~ ~lg~u 1.10 12 135 2414 :w1o :i.ev.+ 14 ti :f.:"J5lncl·~ 1: ro:i = ~~ ~~I~ ~~:gt 87~ .. '':'llm\~'lo ~t.. l~ 1~ ~°"~1G 1.~ lils 4157 4127 ~m 43 + \'I M dR:. ~ l 1! u: m• a~+·~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Blad< .. Ok l " 59 110111 IOI 1111¥1+ "" o.;,Brd 1.61 27 lOJ 151.4 74'14 7-4'14-1;, H~G ,J 2Y: 3 .1o1lZ ....... ~++ ~ ~ldRlaf 4'14 1 65 65 I 65 + ,, 9Wifr Jn .... 5 59 1 674 6"/1>-.,_ OuP11n Cp 12 '1 1 6~ 6-'IO H aJ 16 ll 360 l f: " mlllHLb 1.29 Id 3' 45 44"'4 45 _ 11. restatement of itir financial BJockHR .:i.e 1 J764 1i;. m 5'/a--1'19 DuPont 2•,.,b 11 m 113 110 m -3 Hg:~, ·70 9 1 1f y,"" 1f:Z Jm.t t" ~i"°'M8lM.u tJ u 1~ 11 11~ ~:
results for the past 10 years l::.t'f:11Brr. t ~ 1:'11 I=~ I'~ ~ 8:l:~e~1 14~ 10 J ~1.lo g~ t?1µ .. ~:',g~~·15:, 1i 1\ 1~ 1~ Im+ ~ MMl::::PL 1-.~1 3[ 2~ t:~ mt mt: :~:
to encourage the housewife to ,.
shop in our stores. Also, we've
felt some bacldtlg off of
wholesale prices -not much,
but some."
Some of the low prices ac-
tually went" into effect last
week, he said.
ul ed . f eco Boeing C .40 13 46 19 im 111'11 ... OUQLht pl 2 . zJO 21'4 2714 rm+ 1/• H hH TcioJ 21 lit .. -V.-1snEq .2' 12 1 11'!0 17411 17-'Ill has res t Ill a cut 0 ..... Boi .. C•Kd I 131 ,,.... ~ ~ '. DuaLpf 2.07 . Z200 21'4 211f.o 27'h--I H:::lt Ch lo 20 4 14 I~ tfv. ~ MMol11PRIY ·'° 10 21 15.. IS'li 15"'-.,. F• F m"lllon In pre-tax profits for I:: 1ncru1 . 5 4'.4 4\lo 414+ 'II Dvmo In .20 9 f 16'h 161/o 16V.-I/• Hulton E ·o41> 5 32 t'l(a 1 t'l(a +"" P ac A J s 3 13 n'IO 72-"° IrmS ace MlcCulloch Oil Corp of Los 8~~ rn l~ 11~ r.: ri~ ri~·;,. E••I• Pl .'7 ,-712.S'IO 15'"' 254'1-:1 ~~~~~~ :?: 2: I~ 2ft: 2:~ 2:~-~~ ~)t~ 1: .. 13 1I ~ m:: Wt..~-
A COMPARISON of
Wednesday's grocery ads in-
dicated that Raley's price-s
were lower than some com-
petitors but matched b y
others.
. Borg w i.35 I 54 15'14 25V. 25'14 . Eascoe .20b 1 11 ln"o 1114 11'11+ "' . I 1--... MobllOI 2.IO 11 312 65\lo ~ 6414-v. Angeles Bormans In 15 16 J~ 31'> 34'1-'II Ee11ern Air .. lolll rov, 10 10 -'l'I ICN Ph•rm 15-59 ll\._.l~ l l't-,. Moh1to 1.20 • 19 19v1 19~ 19V.-Vo • Dosi Ed 2.44 11 16 33'.4 32'iJ 32'11-!'> E111GesF 31 14 19 23~ 23~ 2-.. '>i Idaho p 1 76 lO J7' 2914 1*~ 2I-y; Mohawk DI . '° 5 4'14 4¥• FfcChar~ao'S A company spokesman said lri~ri~1r 1~ 1f 21f 1i ... 1314 1i . ..:: ~ ~:.·~11\.Ji': ~: 35~1~;::1M~1~ _"' /deol~ .. :~ 1 J 13.,. n 1J . =r.~c~":' 1Ja 7~ ~ \~ im::·r
'-"' Wednesday that the restate-Briggs l.20a 1' 15 53\lo 53 53 -~ EatonCp w. • " Jlllo JOY, ~l~ 1"o's· Rrr 15b ,f \1 ~ ~ ~rt-re Monogram ' 32 6~ 6411 6'11o+ v: 8111 My 1.32 22 47 6 59'111 59-.... EchllnM .J2 20 1J 2' 23~ 23'14 I I ·1 ~ ..,,. -.~ Monr11eA ·" 11 12' 11\'r 17'IO 1771o-111o ment was made to comply Brio My pf 2 1 ""' o12v1 42\'J-'" Eckd Jk .20 JS 121 32VI Jl'ltl 32 -,.., 1j1~:::1~1A·~ ' ~ ·~~ 1~ 901•~+1 :" Monsn1 1.to 12 1n sm 5114 51-~
WASHINGTON (AP) The "th l d ted · llrllPel .27b J2 134 1-4¥1 141/2 141'> · Etkd NC 24 19 U 23 22 227(&-V. lllC I J · .,. f017 ., .4 Mons pf 214 1 ~ 63'lt 6314 ,,., -Wl new y a op aecountin~ aroct H11 .10 17 • 33.,., 32'!4 J2-1~ Edsnllr 1:0. 10 10 29't. 21411 21i.+ "" 111 ~~~ 2 ~ 12 l: ~ 45 ~ ... -~ MontDk 1.94 10 14 33'!0 33 33111+ ~ Fed al Trade Co • ' I 1 panJ BdwyHI Pl 2 f 57"" 5' --IV. EG & G 10 16 31 1114 11 111/o-1,1, p ~ 2 3 N 29 .. ~-'"MonlPr 1.80 12 11 33 32\'a 3 + :\a er rruruss1on rues 1or oom ea engag Brock Gr .1s 6 13 uy, 11~ 18¥.+ ~ eiect Asioc u 11 5,4 s11o s•1o+ v. ilh:J'w ·:J ·., ~ ~ ll H -.,, MonvM .51b 11 57 Illa lll'I 11~+ v.
Wednesday alleged that 26 in retail land sales g~ 2.:. 1~ 1$ 23~ ~ 23,_·~ EDS Corp 31 9 38\.'> JN 37'14-1 lmperlel Cp ' 163 10~ "" ~ ~ = "'f~ I~ J4 I• lJ\la lJ'h-1-2
Chemlcal firms falsely ad-• 11'rGm'°'!"p II'> ll J ro.11 ro~ rov.+ l: ~l~ :-~ .9 ~ ~~ ~ ~ ~ :~~ln~P ~ 1 171 fi~ fiv. mr+ ~ MorMorM'";El.200P 1' ?. 51:~ 511, 5l,1.i.-.ii $Ilic .20 • 33 tt -Elaln NII wl 5 11'1 1"" 1'1\.-'!>Income i.1 ·· 5 64" 6lo 6lo r i ~ 16 lm+ V.
vertised Oammable plastics as r------------,18r~-... rJ :~ 1:1 ~2 b~ le w: ~ ~\~~NJ"'l ~ = 1= 1m 1~\r""' )~~.·.d 1:~ ·,, 11 L~ ll~ ll~+ ~ a;.r.Nr~.o~ ii 1 !11m'"' 11~ 11~;,+·~
non-flammable or s e if -ex-8i!•n ~ 1·;o 12 25 29"' 29~ 29-'A E1tracg 1.21 1 s 21 27'14 27""-14 1nc1PwL u2 67 ffa 24~ 25~+ "' ~· or. ~ ~· or· sv. w.+ ~ tinguishing. Slowdoia•,n I 0 °«1 5 34 12'4 12 12 -·14 emer ii' ~ JI 16 17'4 16'1• 16114-1 1nauNa11 ·" r. 2l: 211411 21111 2_t,Va-.... Mo1::o1. :r 52f 1'91-\ ~ :;~
It -1-named as defendants w i rg 11': 10· ;: '"' ,: Jt!: ~ ~~'~ .31 5~ 1~ ~~ 6011'! 'i'f: '1ngRR':I Hf 4 J ~"' ~"' ".,.,:: 1! ~:fir.I l·J: '1 101 72% ~ ~·~ ~ tulcllv 1J2b 10 23 f.h j1'4 21'h + ~Emhart 1.20 1 <IO 21'4 201'> ~ t. ::f cont 1.60 II 29 3114 31 38 -'h MSL lndUal 5 , i~"' n; n-vi the plastic industcy's trade ulovaW .611 I 60 m~ l'h 111'>-~' EMI LI .Nb 15 22 4 4 4 . Inland Sii 2 9 JS Jl~ JOI\ Jll.ot ~ Muntord ·~ 6 14 71'> 7-!to+ , · ti and t"A testin p d • d unkor Ra 6 127 I~ 9"" 10 -'Ill EmpO 1.18!1 11 4 27"" 271.4 71\4-\4 nmont .12b 6 79 7'111 1'1o 114+ l'o Mun1na 1. 7 2 23 ~ ~ (;
8SSOCla On ,.., g re icte , B::f\:' I~~ i.i ~ mt ~r~ mr.v.. :~:ir.lnG~ : ~ l= l~ lg.. ::. l~:ll~Cop~P~ j~ .7 3: l:'lll 1!~ I~\? ~~~~81 1:6-4 ~1 ff n17Ya n l6'!4\4 !:~1 114
firm that set the flammability Burl No 1.,., I 41 34'14 34'1• ~ \4 E11gelhd .G i2 55 lm 16'14 16-""lnop P 2 10 5 .IC) '14 -'°'1a-¥1 Murr O .60g 10 l 4\'J 414 2'•.4
Standards used by the in-BurlN Pl .55 1 1¥1 1'h 1\'J ••• Engle pt ••4 2 109'h 106 106 -<I 11n1t lnY .7~4b 10t 6 l)'l(a 12!'1 I~+ l/o MulOm .71b . 15 74'o 71'> 17'111 · ··m ButlldyC .70 12 211/o 20•11 ~·-\.'> Enni• Bus F t 27 5'19 sv, ~ nleoon 4 2 9 9 9 Myer& L .IO 12 6 12'" 1Hi 12 . dustry NEW YORK (U.cl) 8urrvh1 .IO 45 168 22414 221'4 221-2¥1 Envirotech 20 s.. JO 29''7 ?9-11/t lntorco I. 10 26 37\'J J71'o 371?-v.. -N N-··· . White H 0 u s e preoc-8ush U11ivr .. 2 n·. 8'111 8""-'I• Equlmrk .IO 7 ' 15\11 15\• 15\(a lnlrl•k• l.IO I 5 2'~. 24'111 241"-'.4 Nabl1to 2.30 14 51 ..... « u v. Named in the complaint -c c--EQUG11 2AO 1 13 32111 32:\'o m -,+ ~~ 1 I! M Corp 35 m 31'~ J14 Ji.74--4• Nalco~ .q 21 j -11 211/>-,,.
d cupatJOO• WJ"th Waterga•-~abLT 1.121> 11 12 UJ: 23~ ~Vi EqLlle 1 29b 11 Jl 24¥1 2•>;. Wh-~ lnFlovr .J2e 72 32 ~ n v. n-1v. N•rco .60 IJ 16 16 16 _ 1,. Were the fo.llOWing firms an "" lbot Cp .M 1 2J 26'll 26Vt 2M'I-% ESB Inc j 21 t 19 24"• 2314 24"•-•, Int Harv l «> 1 159 27\lt 2m 27-'I& Nolhua .$2 21 l ~7V.. ~1\4 47\lt +•• may mean the U S odence Ind ~ 17 4'11< 4'111 • . Ei1Nrk . 75 17' 24,1 2"'.4 ~4~•+ l'o In Hold l.Jlb . 6 13''> IJ'I> JJ •,, Not Air .lOb 6 76 14V. im J4V.+ • • "SSOCiatlons: . . .... ,. Wd ' 11 3•,, 31'1 J14-11'1 I . ,' 6' 6'' lntlrnat Ind . . ..2 H'o 1Va I'll+ '• NllAV 1.051> . 9 l5Vr l --.. .......,...,,,..y f"""'a a more lljl Flnonc 5 36 4>;, 4» 4.,.,_ Vo ESQU nc .J2 J 61' 14 ·• • lnr lnaus Pl 11 511 4~ 5'.4+ » Nat Can AS ' 24 11 \4 ~ 11-\a """'"'"' """"' •I •Nin 3k ;.. ~· 9'/I 9% N+ .... EEsu pl 2.8' 2 ., 39'1o '1 -fol lftMlnCh 40 11 71 21~ 20"'4 20"'4 '!(a NI en Pl l \lt 10 24~ D ,.. .... The soc1e1y 01 the 1'1u11cs .1~1ry, severe slowdown next year om B 1.J7b , JO 15V. 24'14 247.11+ Ee•thter11c1n .301 116 2~ 256'(:_ 2'6,, 265,,_ -.. 1n11 M1n1na . 165 121'1 ll'lli 1m~. Na1CHh . .io · 311 ;w114 111 J!-:.."' Inc., New York City; Amerlcon laly omRL .soa 41 in 16'.ll 64 65'iJ+ J'i Y orp • " " ~-., lntMulll 1114 f 2 15'14 iw. 25'.li-v, NI Chem .3' 51 17 13\lo \lo v.+ 'Ml
i ~11..i!=1~ ,.ril:. ~~lt.r ~J:: than previously an-•m•a~ U 3\1 lll? J~ J~"~!!'l,W.. ~ i 2J ~ ~"" ~-111:J 1'~l'il'~~kfv.! \~ 2~ 21:!''• ~~ ~~1l'-m~tr'IL2~·· I ft "ll tt 11:~
Morristown, m·' BASF Wyolldoti'e tlcipated, a Cb 8 8 e .,,p ~ j! 113 1ltJ: 11 17'11 .. , E•Cell 0 .fO 12 " 16 15''111 16 -'.4 nl Rttllllar 12 «> 14 s 5 _ -NtlOl1tll , 11 29 ~ 1.+'111 'Ila
Con>., P•rtl I N.J.; hYClltm Manhattan "DA-" -M-'ys'· ., 1 l' IOI 3' JI 31 -'!4 Extndcora 1 11 71h 11lo rn+ Yo Int T&.T 1.2• 1 ~ \It ~ 33 -~ ~Dl1t DI 4 .4 ~ 1 h Corp Now York ty; Cook Point Ind Dtll... ....... ... ' uo ~ u lWI+ v. Exxon 1.9011 12 QI 9'•,ii '3~ '3-Vo I Tl.T plH ~ 2 64 " " llFull ·~ f "ij. ~nYt~ .. r:;:J~ .. Cl~icl'::cl. published Wednelday said. ::i. ~1;11 11 ~ f~ u .. n-= ~ Faberge . .io ,-=. "-.;-7'lo 7!'1-.. I lit-Pf.it}~ : : 1l tl"' :g ~ = ~ ~"o':' 1. d 1 f ~ t: MICll.1 E.1. <IU -... N-. -'lbe analysis published ., f ~ 1100 65 '5 65 +"' Folrth Com 17 "' '11'> llll'> -~If '+ I.lie: • . . 22 ffl'a 59 ; -1 1 8-i -"' Co Inc., Wllml'll!hlll,_Oel • F ·7 f1 f'lt f f -\'l Falrlncr .JOd II 22 614> 6 6V.-"'I I.PfN 21.4 12• Alllo ., «>'4-1 N•J 1~. 1 :r,..; l'llfttUt• Go. ,_, •w..it. ~-by a Ol83e subsJdlary, a,.,.L 1 ' 1' ,. .. ™' a + Iii FolrmtF .so I 11 ,... 9 • -\4 T pt() $ I' 651-\ " 65\ltt l ~~ 1ri lOo 1 1 "!\ N.V-:; Pooler Grant Co~··-'1"S1·. ch a I e E c conometric "'Tedi 7 12 B ; -. F•lsl•ff Br 10 4 Jl'o 3¥1-... lnlerl>Ot• l 1 1• 15'" 1' ... u , ... e'l ,1 ... "\\ Leominster, Mau.; The 0.-1 T,. r 13 .. ... l~ "' FomjlyF .n 1 4 IO'lo I~ lO'IO-llo ln!PblGr .80 • 14~ ~~ i~-y. Ii' I .... Ill -1
and Rubber Co •• Akl'On. Ohio• w. R. c b E t . ... "' 3.S\lo raMl•I .IOb ' I lOl.4 l~ l(A(.-"'',!!l!,rJ:. llfnd ll z 1'"' , ... _ ~ r SI~ . ~ ~-I\
T•ke Actu.I POIHAio-.9" Purt Sllnr
lnt~Mtdalllon.-Ctlnt
~~~i#lt:t~~!::~ :a=:l:w E Su: ;~'! iJ! 1! m :m J k" Iii~~~ l. ' 1 t4 l~ nm-H~ !~:'lrii i ~ n1 21,.~ dl: .. + t: ==!~~ ·n d I ' ~I~ ~: ~ . ' Mini S.r.tv .l.llPll911Cff Ct., lmpoi:tant e C 0 n 0 m iC C I Corp ! Jll' ~N~MI . 9 ~ m 4'111 lowallG 1.44 1 11 l"" t~ t,i:: % I i 5: 17fl l:!r.i=' ~'!, ~~:· ~~ policies of the past three ~-,: ,J ,', ~ li\lli~ 11~ 1 17-1"' 11 ~f-~ 9 ~ '"' JI -'!(a 1::;~ i::: l~ ~ ~ W',14 ~~-~Ir r 1! n tl... ! . ~0rnh'9 Fl!1e;rii·i~''C;li.,-fii10Clo, Olllo1 lex Nb B H\IJ-'Iii ldO ~ 1 1, 1ij tt" 4~:V. JV' +l•t. l~o ttosp 21 2• 11 4 3,1 lto-Vo ,T. • ~ l\'J 1 + ~ •P!~G Hlnduslel trl0n., IP~li....!,ftlbUtiiil1~al ~'lncll4toam r· years &re dylng 011 the H~ j.O 7 'lo +Yo °'"'CD · 6 0 'h Im ~I I e Im .60g 9 t 21 20"'4 :IO'IO-\-\ Nwrnnt 1° 13 123 Hu 1~ U 1' ·~ C I'~ -1Clalr-• be f Pr ldent II 60 10 14 ti lS\.\'llo i•••+ ,.
1
..,,brd : 6 7 •'llo ~ 4-14 :tek Corprtn 1' 236 2•Yo 23 23-1 NwftW\pf :II'> 1 y, I,\ e:Jt,t, -.
1 ~=~~Is,~~., ::~ .... 'c11)' ..• -..co Vllle cause 0 ell ~nil: l:! g "' 2)ll mt-,Z ~ dMCI 1,z13 t 2~ 29 ll -b IU Intl .15 11 61 2J'll1 23-141 234'1-'la ~aG 2.16 10 If \4 ~\-\
l•nh>n ralbkle cor11,, New Ycirll c1tv1 N ix On ' s preoccupatloil llMPw 1 ii JO !l 23 "· lW' 1m +_111 i ~u1,~t f:40 11 !6 ~ 16 1;":: ~ J•.-F .36 t~ 'lo;,; 10•; 10.,..._ ~ ~lq~'-' 1~ ' 1}; ~. fm fW. ·
Ulllltd '""'-""' .. ..,,~ l'llfsburGh1 with other matters." tflf sowist 4 !ii ~ ~ 2!11.11 r,· -5k J • 13"" J:r~ J3-'-i J•PFd u1~ 11 1m lJI'> 131'>-NlaM'PT :uo tlo W2 5211o n\r.il UnlroY•I, lllC,, N-•tvck._ COllft.I tM r Sov1 l f lJ 25.,., 15\4 25'4-'I< 18 on .16 1 l 1 NO ,,,.. 91,._ .. JtffPllOt .H H 71 59'1< 5''114 59'14+ 'Ir.. NlaMpf •.10 .. 1100 79~ Uof-<.O., K1l111'111roo,_Mich.1 ""° 1M Tor ·" lJ 232 ~ :It,,, HI'>-1~ • h•rtr 51 I '5 lf'" ~ lf -.. Jtff Piiot WI . ' JO .... 30111 '°"' . NllShlr• lb 7 l 1 17 -Wlfco Chemlcal Corp .. -York City. ·------------corro .80 5 62 U\'r U'.4 UI'> +•1. Fl hie 1.62 ll • s "• s h 5 •;...... "'J Cnl'pf t .36 zlOO 110\, 110 110 NL lndu•I I 9 IJO 13\t U\4 13'h-
WHLTH P'IOTICTION .I.NO l'OTINTIAL t.t.IN-1'111 HOCHUll
'7f•l642 UNIYllUAL TIA co: f7' .. J4J
-lllYINI AYL INIAll AIRPORT! $UtH IU llllWl'OllT HACH"
I
.I
sks Delay
On Emission Rules
WASHINGTON (AP )
General Motors a s II: e d
Congress Wednesday to delay
ml relax 1'16 auto emission
standards and systematically
monitor the company's efforts
to curb pollution.
GM President Edward N.
Cole said if Congress doubts
the finn's good-faith efforts to
reduce polluting emissiorui, it
sbould establish a watchdog
over GM.
AT 'ftlE SAME time, Cole
told a Senate subcommittee,
Congress should initiate a new
study of 19'16 standards with
an eye toward relaxing them.
Meantime, Cole s a i d ,
Congress should "consider
freezing into law nationwide
for several years the 19'15
federal interim standards for
talifornia." ·
Those restrictions would be
'°mewhat tighter than the in-
.terim 1975 standards for all
Xevstone Savings fs more than a
place to save money. It's a place to
make money. We're here to make
your money grow.
Stop by Keystone soon. Open
your savings account, choose the
free services you want, and get your
Money Machine card.You feel richer
at Keystone. With good reason.
Certificate Account•. $5000 minimum deposit.
Term: 2 to 10 years.
*53,0l Certificate Account*. $1000 minimum
74 70 deposit. Term: 1 to 2 years.
*51,0l Bonus Account*. $1000 minimum deposit
7410 Term: 6 months or more. •50L Passbook Account*. Deposit any amount.
70 Add or withdraw at any time.
•Annual Interest. Accounts Insured up to $20,000 by an agency of
the United States Government.
OKEYSTONE SAVINGS
JlPID LOJlPI HSOCIJlT10PI
Ronald W. Caspers, Chairm an ol tho Board
Enntln olllce: Wee1mln1lot, 14011 Beach Blvd., nr.xt 10 Ha'Penny Inn, Phone 89>2491. Allllllehn Olllcet 555 N. F.ndld-
OJJPOllle Broadway-llobtnson·s, Phone 772-7440. Airport Cenler. Newport olUce: 4301 MacArthur Blvd1 Phone B3Hle7
.1 Assats overS60 mlll lon.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
California investors, like their
counterparts j u s t about
everywhere else in the coun-
try, have pulled out of the
stock market in droves.
That is evident from a look
at trading. volume figures of
the Pacific Coast Stock Ex-
change, biggest of the regional
securities markets and No. 3
behind the New York and
American exchanges.
From Jan. 1 to May 15,
trading on the Pacific totaled
88.7 million shares, a 14 per-
cent tumble from 103.3 million
shares in the like period of
1972. For all of the 1972 the
total was a record 260 million
shares.
THE PICTURE was much
the same on the bigger ex-
changes. In the first 4'h
months of this year, volume
on the New York fell to 1.5
billion from 1.68 billion a year
earlier, and on the American
it dropped to 310 million from
530 million. The record year
on the New York was 1972
with 4.13 billio11 shares, and on
the American 1968 with 1.43
billion.
The small investors have
been the great defectors from
the market. This is shown by
the size of orders and the
predominance of sell orders
among odd lot -less than 100
shares -transactions on the
Pacific exchange.
"Disaffection with th e
market has 'been due in large
part to a feeling that Phase 2
of the administration's anti-
inflation program was ended
Ben G. Bromberg bas been
elected executive vice presi-
dent of Mc-
Donnell Dou-
glas Astro-
nautics Com-
pany and a
corporate
vice presi-
dent of Mc-
Donnell Dou-
glas Corp.
llROMBEstG Dr. Brom-
berg bad been serving as vice
president-general manager of
the Astronautic Company in St.
Louis. He will move to Hun·
tlngton Beach, headquarters of
the McDonnell Do u g I as
Astronautics Co.
* Richard J. Agnello of South
·.. .
too quickly and that Phase 3 i3
not doing what it is expected
to," a Pacific spokesman said.
Thursday, May 31, 1973 DAIL V PILOT J3 I
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Llstl"fl for Tuesday, May 29, 1973
Laguna has been named vice
president for district ad-
ministration with Bank of
America's Orange County-Los
Angeles coast regional head-was formerly assistant trus~
quarters. officer at that location. A na-MUTUAL FUNDS
A 20-year Bank of America tive of Kansas and an alumnus E'il!raldWBlnDml!IR~mu.i=aamli'!ioss:&v..CP· niWlllF':·."'!!!·!!'ml•~st
Veteran Agnello has Served as of University of Missouri he ~ ' . . . . ' New York -Fol·DREYFUS GRP Ivy Fund 6.31 6.11 Rlnfrl 12.ff ... assistant vice president for JOtned Secunty Pacific Bank lowlna 11 a 111t ot Drvf Fd 10.6' 11 .66 J P Gw1h a.12 9.4 sa~111ar 2.~ 2.2}
district administration for the as trust administrator in 1968 ~~~ an~ ••k~ufu'~i f.,"7..J-~ 1H~ 1U\ l~~"n' J;~ 1~:U 1::1~ ~~11~: ~g ::61 ;:~
ft I · th U 't d Stat Funds as quoted by 3rd Cenl 9..3810.28 JH•n Sig 1.42 9.15 SCUDDER FDS! past year. Prior to that, he a er eavmg e m e es the NASO inc. E&lf Mu 3.23 3.23 Jalmsln 23.50 23.50 lnlr Inv 16.5116.51
was a commercial lending of-Marine Corps with the rank of ~11\l~~'i. 6'92 7·51 KtuifTg1N~~.29 20.11 ~~nc 13:~13:~
ficer at the bank's Santa Ana colonel. wed_..., H.f:O,A F~· 9.'8 10.36 ~~:I R~ ~:ll 2i:!J sW1i1l1TY29Fcgs~·05
m~;n off1'ce. * May 30, 1973 Gwth F 13.37 14.61 Cusl Kl 7.18 7.17 EQUllY !.21 3.52 a.o lncme 6.1; 6.71 Cuot K2 5.66 6.20 In-I t·" 1.~ * Huntington Beach resident ADMIRALT-'fd Alie ~~11 I.. 1Hl 1Ht ~::!I ~i n:~ ~t# s~'t°tlcf1D ;~s~·
Fountain Valley resident Julia B. Hildreth has been pro-~~~ ttt H~ ~~W~& ~:ff!&:~~ ~~:I ~ ~:~ B1 ~ s~:i i:~ J:~
Robert W. Mort has been ap-rooted to IIH1nager of United .JJ~r~"r ~:~i tn E[~.,'"GrMT7_yr:. ~gr~~ ~-~ H~ 5~11~" 1i·l.60 li:~
pointed vice president at California Blt.lk's Laguna Aetna Fd 7.96 8.70 Eatv Pr 2.93 ., ntckr 5:97 '~ Stnlry F 13 14..46 . • Alulure 8.99 8.99 Fnd Am 7.37 ' Knkr Giii 6.87 7.52 SHARl!HLD RP :• Security Pacific Bank's Irvine Niguel office. GE Fd 4.89 4.99 Eare1 Gt 12.0913.!4 Len~ Fd s.11 5.11 Comst 3.11 3.• ~'-: . Allstate 12.08 12.99 ilfun Trt 16.<M L•X QROU~: Entrpr 5 . .W 6.00 Indusuial Center branch. Formerly assistant manager Alpha Fd 12.119 us.097 m.ni 13.t79141.0191 CD Ledr 16.0011.51> FH1erbrt Fd 3.78 4.13
f th b k' Ed' d Ame~ F •.6' .01 neniv 1. . Grwtn 6.10 6 67 a 7."7 8.16 Mort, who served a s o e an s mger an 1m ovu 9.68 10.se auitv F a.29 Resrcn u.n u:33 ~11111 1-c •.12 '-''
mifnager of the branch for the BeaC'h office !n Huntington A~ ~ll\rREtf 4·77 ~~rf~du,. t:~ ~:~ tlr:' 1J~ ~:~ t~~ sH~R~N ifs?-"
past year, continues in the Beach, Mrs. Hildreth joined "c~~P.l' r..1 ,.16 Frga~':#v-'.31 .. · t11~~ i~~ ~:~~ t~ jrl'~ l~:~ ll:H
same capacity with his new ti-UCB in 1967 as a management I~~~~ xNJ .:~ 0.l'n~u~~b 9.02 9.86 t~:.r 3.2' ... ihnvt:!.. u~ ;:~
tie. He joined the 'bank as a trainee. ~~~ U8 ai ~~l~! 1aJ 12 . .Jast~LEO; 12661766 sl~~d ,J;.'&!·62
mana.gement tram· ee in 1966 Before entering banking she Am Grth 5.71 6·2• v ssec 7.31 7.63 Mutual 14:.56 u:.56 Cap snr 7 . .is ii.1• • Am !nsln 4.86 5.31 est 5.86 . LORD A88· Inv 10 3511 31
The DAILY PILOT is proud of its corps of young salespeople who deliver the newspaper to your door. These
y_ou_ng men. and women are the cream of the community. Each month, the best of them will be selected for
listing on the Honor Roll. Each carrier lis ted here has obtained at least four new customers during the past
man.th, has had no more than one cus tomer complaint for the month and must have paid on time his or her bill
for the newspaper bought "wholesale." Numeral in front of star (•) preceding each name rndicates number of
consecutive months that carrier has been on the Honor Roll.
~ and received his r i r s t was co-owner of a wo;nen's ~~ ~~r gg #:3Y ~~.~~. l8:~ 11.85 ~::;'1:us ~f, ':ll ~~·fur rn f~: r'1 managerial appointment in apparel store in Huntington ~mN,\ Gr 2.30 2.s1 ~~~a., 1i·~ l&·~ Bnd deb t.n 1i.'° sm1111 B 9:68 ,:61
i B ach GNC,UOP'!l Salem F 398 ;j5 lulhern 10.'3 11.40 ~ ta.Gr 11.<M 11.04 '·.J }968 e . RO · T · 09 Lultln In 9.7710.a 0.nF 11.6812.23
I ___ • -----------------------C•ol•I 4 . .U 4.19 rend 22.96 25. MAGNA P'UNDS: wot Inv 8 22 8 89 ,,J1· Fnd In• 7 68 1.42 FI NANCIAL. Capta! 3.'7 4.02 f!" Inv G 6:35 6)6 I.. Grwlh 7.71 !.~ l'~OGRAMS. lncom I 74 9.55 r,;vr In 11 2'112 M ~~t'::'r ~:i! ho ~I~ ~~~ :J~ 1.34 Pl!grm 1:09 U4 ~· 4:93 5:;o . Wa Natl 11.9913.14 Fin Inc 5.27 .27 ~:~h~wl N~ n: i AT~n~N~·l>JR~~ ! 0 § Astron 3.61 3.95 Venl 3.~ l-83 MASS COr . . am r,d "57 ";,
Mike Saia
Gre9 Wh ite
Dou9 Herm•n
Don Grisham
Roger Shodderdon
Craig Fairbanks
Mork Krieger
Stove Storr
Iron Ch .. hire
Norman Tucker
David Boin
Tod Wallace
Mike Severson
Cra ig Konrad
Robin Yould
Troy Kuyhnd all
Bruce Romono9no
Don Robinson
Rich Leonard
John Gilchrist
Joy Jon11
Sieve Corsey
Corl Sokera
Craig Waterman
John Willard
Joe Hindman
Ron Glove r
Dan Salgado
P•ul Hotuluk
Gro9 Show
Todd Show
Wade Freier
Billy Huston
Scott StTigl
Sheri Renero
Mark Donohoo
Rondy Wouman
Jon Murali
Dale Robison
John Schoff
Doug Potter
Creg Zeboray
Ch ristian Dehlin9er
Jerry Donahue
Gory Williom1
Mike Bobcock
Rhea Babcock
Merk Newbreck
2' Linda Crofh
2' David Knox
211 Kevin Minnick
2' Greg Greene
2• Jeff Groen
2' Jerry Munyer
2' David Parmenter
2' Alan Tracy
2• Steve Cory
2' John Berlin
2' Fred Bowers
2' Todd Gerard
2' David Flores
2' Neil Freidkoff
3' Keith Dobbins
3• Curt Barnes
3° Glo ria Garcia
J" Liu Clerk
Carriers of tlie M 011th
Gloria Garcia, San Juan Capistrano
Scott McGuire, Corona del Mar
3' ... ... ... ... ... ...
4'
5'
5' s·
6'
6'
7• ,. ,.
10·
10'
14'
22'
22'
27'
21•
Tim Hooker
Sieve Trottier
Scott McGuire
Bill Sparks
Chris Ron
Gary Miller
Rory Miller
Tom Hi9gley
Tim Clawson
Hal Harmsen
Mike Cowan
Kenney Roberti
Bryan Wold1n11
Brien Walker
Jock Oslan
Lyle Fletcher
Mike Busby
Chris Boulter
Dennis Stalon1
Fred Sonchez
Tony Sanchez
Bryon Stolons
Gregory Daym on
Gloria Garcia and Scott McGuire have been chosen as Hqnor Carriers of the Month. Glori• Is espaclally
congratulated as the first Deily Pilot girl carrier to be selected. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
• Anselmo Enrique Garcia and an eighth-grader attending Marco Forster Junior High School where she
belongs to the Journalism Club. Her profits are used for clothes, shoes, and family expanses. Scott i1
tM son of Mr. and MrL Merle R. McGuire, 1607 S.abell, Corona del Mar. He Is a member of the Boy
Scouts end enjoy• playing football.
l Y 1 0 0 ~~· F 7.80 I.SJ j!,1!3T Ya 10. I .IO Freem 7.89 us P ,_I 5.05 s:s2 . HOUGHTON· INtiESTORS• lnd1> F 7.4.5 1.16 s rr,rf; ·4.63 S.06
I Fund A • 66 s 01 Disc Fd 5 21 s.11 ~"tl fNcrt4012·49 si F~ In~ ;-~ •9.5u9 OR.DER >:~": .. _ft Fund B 7.06 7.67 Grth Fd U2 7.51 MIT 111712 21 Slale Sir 45'99 41;37 ., Stock 5.74 6.27 Stock F 7.'IO 8·"" MI G l2°96 lil6 STEADMAN . FDS• ~ .
.. '.. D t"fu l Axe Sci 4.07 •.•2 j•t Multi ~-35 8.35 MID 13.65102 Am Ind 291 2•i '!"eau I Bli~s..Y'" l~-~ l~ ~ ,.Sl,R~i~rr GRon' .. ~·06 MFD 12:u 1,:oa Asso Fd 1:24 1:u
St·ick-on savroc 1:21 7.67 100 Fnd 10.u 10.u ~r~ Iv 1g~ 1~.2,5• s~en.1 Ro~·::lDs1:31 Bavrk gr 5 59 5 95 101 Fnd 8 30 1.30 •Ill 10· · B 1 · ~ Yo Rs Beacn HI 9.18 9.18 Colum I '1 8.41 Mid r_:. 5-!0210.80 c" ~if 20.69 20.69 " u Beacon 110811 08 25 FIHld 5.80 5.IO M m .; 5.92 SOD 9.77 '·" ·' LABELS Borger K 11:2s 11:25 Fdn Gr 4.62 S.05 Monll vBFGd 1~0-1~ 110.31 111toc.kROUP1~.6114.61 t' Btrkshr 4.07 4.45 FOUNDl!RS n -~ I ·n ; G · f" Bondslk 4.69 5.13 GROUP: MIF Fd .62 I. 4 Grw1'1 5.97 6.'9 J sosi Fdn 9•6810.511 Grw1h s.2• s.13 MM1F&i:Gro •.28 4. 1ncom 1.11 '·u
'li·j·,' Brown 3 38 3.M lncom 11.14 12.9" u gl 4.73 s u Smmlt 8.U 9 1 . I BULLOCK . F Mlu•I 1.85 9.67 MMuut mSh!n 1'·~ 9.89 Ttehnl 6.12 6)
-Bull Fd 12.6513.85 Fou~~ F 8.45 9.23 ~:r 1.!f• ~· 1.~ fM~ Ap l.2f '· TODAY FUNDS: F SDeCll 11.0912.11 rs 5. 15.09 Syncro F 6.12 7.
• 51~ t.~ 21:u 2l:M ~~at .. ~1N ":T SI~ ,.;s, '· T:.pl ~G Hl r
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order For Yourself or a Friend·
M11y be usad on envelopes as return address
111.bels. Also very h11ndy as identific11tion
l11bels for m11rkin9 personal items such 11s
books, records, photos, etc. Labels stick on
9l11ss and m11y be ustd for marking home
c;anned focd items. All l11bels are printed
with stylish Vogua type on fine quality whit ..
gummed p11per.
INVW~ .. la·~°' 1~·99 B~Hc sr HJ ::I B0~1"1r !::~ t11W t~'c.~ ::u #. mtrm f. t Fr ncm l~ 1· v dn 3.66 4. Travl Eq 9.72 1 G FUllCI t· 10. US v S 1J 1 . r.™ Slit 6.1, 6. Tudor H 10.60 10
g-m,,rvs ~i I: ~~!11i• p 41 ·~ s~ sr :~ ~:l! m" ~? j:31 l, D ~hr• 5.4 s." I!• E~ 4.12 4. Grwll1 6.64 1:U Un~fltd 1.tt 9.
D r!!' 10.5211.50 Fl<I h!Eq 11.'712 yw, l!PIG LFr unllund ··" 9.74 tl'i""'rN012.32 13A6 ~~1 ~df"c~.21 ' G~~ 11~.~ 11r~ KHlr~.· .. v•c• 'lJ0NDS: G Z,ljp, Side US 1.21 Brd S Iv 13.5614 .• B•l!IC~· IOI 1,.7J amm J·fi t71 NEA Mt 9.46 us N•H Inv e32 t .Of ~nd d 9. 1 .ff 11mpec 1 1 • 1~. ~Ntu Cent 4.64 4.6' vn C•'I 1.112 &r.· om lk 1 .A ndu• r ~· 1UW1h 8.30 8.30 Whlllo 12.71 I rw1'1 ,. 5. Pilot · · twton 13.05 14.26f UNIU PUN : lncom ... 7. Gal~ ~ 7.'2 Nw Ptrl 13.3714.6 ACCUrTT 7.01 7j SPtCI .6' 1. §; S· P 3.U Now Wld 12.40 13.55 Bnd Fd a 08 I V:TJ"' U2 7 . .C.S n. 6.4 6.41 Nlc hlas . 15.2" 1152" Cont gw '~ 10· ~~if~N AIOUP .,s•~: '3 6 l ~I lvtr 15.74 15.74 Cant Inc 10.07'11.
Fnd B~' 8.00 1,74 B~xSnd r:n 11:,f ~"": ~~ H~ ~~~om 1i:#: 1#:,1 Fron a ~.?O H~ Com Slk 11.16 2.20 Ne I fd 11 51 jUl V•n 6 73 7_. l~1 • J:!t t'1? 'i~h st::.i 1HJ u:i} ~ ... w aM I~~. 6.00 ~SA ~~ ig:~ 12~ ~ata.r.1L 10.D 1 .$.l ~~\i'\bON22GI Pi": 8~ ..,,m 10.01 10.U vl~8~ LIN if J~
Er: l3:1 10:r1 = 1 : 1&: :~r~': J;a 1,:11 J.:lc : i.1, to '1UNDl1 'i1i67 ~ ,,.0 1.21~ 't: UJ i:P. ~:1 Li~ ~1 ~j;
rw1h . ,.s •rt Lv . 7 1. • Mut tU 21' slND ••• lncam . 1 11 ~bell · 1· enn Sa 6 st 6 i! Bot Jn<I 715 7-!! ~imti 11° 1 :G ~11:. 1 · : r.::.· srd J.1: b• J.:.C)°"' fj01 l':°'
I ;.,;::;:-.;,,::,;::.::.:;;;;:;----1 ~N·inn.1.1 1.1• ~ic' 1'i· ~,· l1'1'1.::ilj~ J~ 1 . ~~nv~rcl.. l ::l
I Pilot Prtnll119 LOii DI•~ P.O. lllX 15'0 I C 1 J· ~ ": · 1°" Fd l·" 12~ ~r,rred'"l' 3. [I
I COSll Mau, cant. '2W omo fi nd Am • • ,=., II i !· w:irs, Gr ,. I·
I I := ~ .31 . nig ~;11 : ~~'1c\Rio !ft ti wuh J~ 18:1H~~
omo d J7 !: ~ if :o; :I Grwth \3·1 \l·M w11j:; ;: 12 j711.5 I I I ~ 1J nv .~ c ;~ Nw w, 0. o. i)u~"mli
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'
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I PILOT PRINTI NG I g~p , var •Y '· f· C!Utv •·if'· rt •l,.'7l11 I L _____________________ ,.J ~t-1 ~ J!~{Ji '"en~· ~~ tD ~ ~:nn\l ~1d r,:J31 t:
.r.....,_.-.~~~~~~"'°"~~...,,...,1;~cD 5: 45. ;ar:ut ~:1 ,. vi:,." !·_. l 1 ,., :i ;· ._ ISOd<ibi J4 J4 Sh l . 14.U 0'(911 f.7 i a ... ir.<flv • Ortxtl I! o. O. l•I Fnd . 19.73 • ..,.,.. P 1.00 .6Sz..,.anll1ole.
8 DAILY PILOT TIMwsd.tr. May 31, 1973
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
" ourse I'm depressed. I'm told I've JUST entered
my 'tired years'. .• "
L. Jtl. Boyd
Wall of China
Trap for Enemy
To describe a girl as "cold" is to characterize said
feminine party as unromantic, not just in English, but in
all known languages. A universal metaphore, that one.
Make a point of this because there aren't many such that
· translate into every single tongue.
Hardly any, in fact.
Q. "Where'd the ancestors of the
Australian aborigines come from?"
A. From what's now the state of
Rajashan in India, it's believed. At
-least, -the baekwoods souls-in that Meli--
still UBe boomerangs and musical in-
struments similar to those of the ab-
origines.
Am asked to name the first man to hold the rank of
fleet admiral of the U.S. Navy . That was William D.
Leahy. He was the fellow who said the atomic bomb would
never explode, never ever, just wouldn't work.
REGULAR BATHS -Surveys show one out of every
four girls starts to bathe regularly before she is 13 years
old ... Was none other than Oliver Wendell Holnies who
said, "All of our other features were made for us, but a
man makes his own mouth." .. .It just isn't true that the
town of Plus, W. Va., cancels out the town of Minus, Ga ..
. . . Suggested the only thing Doris Day and Marlon Bran-
do have in common is they were born on April 3, 1924 •••
Did I mention that small anlma1 hospitals are multiplying
nine times faster than people hospitals?
Sir, if you're an aV!ll'8ge· c:t#fee . drinker, you can
figure it will take the entire '}x'oductlorrbf 14 coffee trees
annually to turn out enough beans to supply you suf-
ficiently.
GREAT WALL -Average height of the Great Wall
of China is 25 feet. Was built to keep out invading cavalry.
But not invading infantry. Clever fellow, that Chinese
Emperor Chin. He could have made the wall higher, much
higher. But he purposely kept it to a scalable altitude.
The wall became a cunning trap. Everytime the assaulting
Huns sent a batch of climbers over the top, Chinese horse-
men closed in behind them along the wall road. Massacre.
In track and field competition, that ball known as the
shot always should be put in an easterly directloo. So con-
tends one athletic expert. Rotation of the earth will give
ii more distance that way. In theory.
Among mental patients, it's the woman rather than
the man who is most likely to rip off a skein of obscene
lingo when upset, say the psychology boys.
Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box ~
port Beach . Calif. 92660.
Job Unit Extended
Capitol News Service
SACRAMENTO, -A job·
finding program for
unemployed engineers. scien-
tists and technicians laid off
by defense and aerospace cut-
backs, due to end April 30. has
been extended through June
30, according to D w i g h t
Geduldig. director or the State
Department of H u m a n
Resources Development.
The federall y-funded
gram, known as l h e
Technology Mobilization and
Reemployment P r o g r a m
(TMRP ), began in April, 1971,
at the height of aerospace and
defense cutbacks, Gedu-ldig
said. Since then, more than
10,000 displaced professionals
in California have been helped
through HRD to find new jobs,
he said.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e SUPERFIA T! '71 Fiat 850
for sale, it's a 2 door,
white, with stereo and
14,000 miles. Like new.
e CUSTOM CRAFI'ED: 18'
ski boat, 401 Buick with
trailer. It's $1800. There's
alM a Half-ton Chevy pick-up for ae, it has new
tires; $550.
SAN DIEGO <AP) -
The National Organization
for Women rates its latest
sl!Be show G, but says the
subject, e I e m e. n l a r y
school textbooks, get an
F ..
NOW.'s San D i e g o
chapter has prepared 40
minutes of slides for PT As
and other groups showing
pages from 10 reading
texts used in the first six
grades of C a I i f o r n i a
schools.
THE PICTURE that
emerges from boo ii
unf aJr to gide and not
much kinder to boys, aays'
spokeswoman SUJan Nel-
son.
"These books Instruct
boys to dislike girls and
teach girls a )lflteful aelf-
image," she says.
One book had a list
showing 147 oocupations
for men and 25 for women.
The jobs for women In-
cluded "a witch, a fat lady
in the circus and a queen
-hardly a fair picture to
shoW little girls," Bile
says.
"WE FOUND a single
worting mother pictured
in ~ readers. and she
was cited to show why her
boy · bad a b e h a v i o r
disorder.,, .
Boys in the boob don't
· show affection to anybody
·or for anybody," she says.
The state Board of
Education is r e v i s i n g
school bo,ob to give a dif-
ferent picture of ethnic
minorlti~ and Wot1J4!11-
Low
Ship Getting Too Bi .
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Navy is holding its bre:th
these days. . ' Two big cruisers being tranSferred from Long Beecb.1
to San Diego are 41most too high to pass under the Cor-
onado-San Diego Bay Bridge. ·
The ~7-millioo bridge, which ~as opened In 1?8't .
sµmds 195 feet 11bove the water at high tide._ At tow.u
there's 205 feet of clearance but then the cnusers Chi
and Liing Beach would scrape bottom because low ti&I ·
leaves only 30 feet of water. .
But the Navy is moving full-steam toward a soluti
The channel will be deepened by five feet next· year a
a cost of $9 million. And, acc<irding to the SJlC:lkesman1
"the Navy has ordered all new ships designed so they cau1 paSS" under the Coronado Bridge." ,
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Screws into any
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299
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Wall Panel~ng
Beautiful prefinished 4'x8'
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Choose popular Portsmouth
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•
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plants.
1 Pint sac
Super-Stick
Panel Adhesive
' e Easy to •pply e H11 •rlr• sticking
power that lash and
lash e A little goes 1 long
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tube
7~
Kerm's Tool · Table
An 1uortment of ell ffie most nHdd
tools • do-it-your-selfer or profeuion·
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Nylon BrusheS ·
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Your choice: 3", 3V• ''or
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EDITION
.J ...
L. 66, NO, ISi 5· SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ORAt-;IGE ·coUNTY .. CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1973 . 1
TEN CENTS -·1
• ;i
aron row ~a1n 1
TH~RE'S ANOTHER PAINTING· THAT -LOOKS LIKE · THIS-IN LONDON; -WHICH IS REAL?
Work, Supposedly Th.t of ltaliaft ct\Jerlct·O.•.tan, Wa-s ~n'fv ,Lagun• Beach Att Mu~m •
.1 ·1
Irvine · Cove -------------'\
Burglary
Uncovered
The Irvine Cove cat burglar again
prnwled through the exclusive walled
ocean-front community . as two residents
reported hearing strange night noises to
Laguna Beach police early this morning,
and another burglary was uncovered.
The two residences were on Monaco
Drive. The first prowling report was a
"popping noises" outside the bouse at
2:36 a.~. The serond report et 3 a.m.
was of someone "testing" the home's
doorknobs.
The theft of a watch and a ring from
Charles L. Binb, 20, a USC student, was
reported from the home of James Irvine
133 Monte Carlo Drive.
)t is .believed the crime occurred in
mid-March but was only recently
reported. ·
It was revealed Wednesday that a Dally l'llOI Stall !'Mii
cat burglar has hit at least nine homes in 1IUr · S • W .-.
the private (.'Ol?Ullunity, with another five 1r ... anages mt~
attempted burglarie,,l being reported to
police.·
Heavy patrolling and d e t e c t i v e s '
stakeout over· a month-long period failed
to catch the thief, although detectives
chased one black-clothed suspect on foot
Despite suffering a broken right leg when thrown from a horse in
Laguna Hills, Paula Shouse, 24, of Torrance manages a wan smile
as the ambulance pulls away. Firemen hiked into rough terrain to
rescue her .. Additional pictures on page 3.
l .
.':.~I ~ 'iJi, '·,sprinted a ~aw · "ll~~llf
·~· _ -q: EJiMla]d Bay from Irvine
_. ___ :_ fretNamed·b) Suit
Discovery ·in ··Magazine Slilr~s Lagu-mt · Cur(ltor
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of NII .DallY PllOI Stiff
Just irilag:irie .owiliilg 4 valuable l~h
Century painlirig, • Jllld while, leafing
through a magazine, you see ~ identical
painting .offered at auction.
"We've already started to investigate
the whole thing," said Tom Enman,
curator of 'the Laguna Beach Art
Museum ..
The painting is i•Fun and Frigbt" by
tbe Italian artist Gaeta®, Cbierici (1833-
1921). .
-The Laguna Beach Art Mqseum \\'.BS
given its' plj.inting of Fun and FJight
about a year ago by Ruth Briskin of
taguna Hills. At the time it was valued
al $15,000. ·
Enman while perusing a copy of
Connoisseur recently spied the identical
Laguna Church Wants
Property Tax Refund
A Laguna Beach cbu~ch wants ~134
back from Orange County Jn a superior
Court action that cbatges the asseSSOI'
. with o~rtaxlng the faclll.ty in the·· 1t72-7' fiscal'year. .
. St. Paul's I,utheran Churtb, 429 Cypress
Drive, demands the property tax. refund
with the clajm that the Bsses'sor 'has , ·
f'1}ed to recognize, exemptions to ··whlch Uie chutcll is entttted. . ,
Orange
.
TIJe · weatherlady sees more
drizzle in the air for Fttday, par-
tially clearing in · the afternoon
hours · to llazy -sunsbine. Highs at
the J>eaches 65 risiJig to '15 inland.
: Ovefnight· IO~s tifl.the mid-503. .
. INSl.0£ TODAY ,.
painting in an advertisement f o r
Olristie's of London May art auction.
"I immediately wrote to Christie's·and
_asked for their catalogue," Enman said.
The painting was sold by Christie's for
9,500 guineas, :about $25,000 the day of the
·auction.
'me two paintings are of the same size;
28 inches by 41 inches ..
Judging ~m photos in the Christie's
Laguna High
Revue Tonight
'.lbe talents of some 200 Laguna
Beach High School students will be
on. display as " '73 · Revue" is
presented beginning at 8 o'clock
tonight at the high s c h o o I
auditorium. ·
The program will also be staged
at 8 p.m. both Friday and Saturday
at the auditoriwn. Tickets are-$2
for adults ·and $1 for students and
are avallaj)le at the door as well as
from a students.
·Rock .rtiYtbms of ••l:{alr," lollies
glamour Ol "Cabaret,"1and ''Sj)OOn
,River Antbology" :rii¥e tip 1he. J>rO"
gram wfil~ includes also · excerpts
from 1"~esus Chii$t ' s·-· .. " .,. ' '4.t:')i"' o;J"4W-'
"Godspell," '• Tohl.~·Y, '1 and •
barbershop quartets:.
catalogue there are small differences in
the painting's ~tive, in the smile of
the boy, Ute. rag hanging on the door, in
the bellows in front of' the fiftlPlace and
pots hanging on. the wall. ·
"'I'd like to investigate further to fil!d
out more about it and find out-if there is
a history to the paintings," Enm$ _said.
The.Laguna Bea,eh Art Museum paint·
ing was authenticated as to period it
was painted by the Los Angeles County
Art Museum~ Enman said.
The cliristie's painting was signed and
dated 1Jl74. ·
· The Laguna painting is not, however,
·Enman notes that the museum's work
had been restored, and that the signature
and date may have been lost in the
restoration.
He said the artist Chlerici's paintings
are "collectible" 1and are commonly sold
for between $15,000 and $35,000.
Chierici is of the Italian salon school of
painting in which each work was
carefully designed and set down. "They
labored over their canvas," Enman said.
Enmarl said the artist was an excellent
19th Century painter. Part of his in-
vestigations will be to detennine whether
Chlerlci's paintings have b e c om e
·valuable enQUgh· to establish a fake
market. ·
He said that Mrs. Briskln had purcbas·
. ed the painting In ltome in a major
· , ·gallery tJ\ere.a)>out .~years ago.
· "Fjrst, W&'ll ,go l>ack to Christie's and · get whatever infol'IJIB ion they can give.
1ben .ru :lvrtte. to a · major museum in
(See -PAINTlNG, Page!)
W'1teh Of -Ftitnre
Newpori Company Producing It
By ·wILLIAM 1SCHREIBER ··Ing for the new design.
•Of 1111 DtllY P11et1Staff "We will put together the electronic
:flugbes • Altcraft in Newport Beach is package and then put it into cases
prottucing a, rev o ~ u.t ion a r y new designed and supplied by customers who
wristwatch With no mechanical workings, buy the workings," said W i 11 i am
liO bands ,and no dial. It will ·be on the Weakland, associate division manager of
\tlafket.tlU summer, company oftielals the Hughes Microelectronics PrOducts Sat · . Dlv.isi.oo.
HugbeS experts believe the new Weakland s&id Hughes will not market
tlJnepieoe will eventually spell the end to ' lb& watch under its own name, nor will it
rnecDani.cal '!"atch i n d us t r I e s , con-f(B'Jll a subsidiary firm to market and
Swede SCWQf18 iii UV. ~
The S'"'ta AM . race oar dri11er 1 ' sunnvea what trjlOJG t)f!teram
caUtd the wont. singtc.car crash
in IndUmcipoZ~ 5(10 hi.ton/
Wedne!(l0111 Gordon• loh'llcock
went cm to win .the abbret.liated,
twice-delayed race. See ,Sports.
Page 25.
ventional watch ~ and lucraUv manufacture the watch. He would not
· worldwide distribuU of watch parts by reveal which companies have boughf fhe
Swiss llDd=• CQmpanies.· . watch. · ·
1..M ... yd 16 Mlltlet 21 •
CCi=IH J -l'llllda 14 ~ -...-.... ~=~ g ::;-c_,~
DMlll "4itlc:a f S-...: "'8rlllls 14'11 E'""".. ..... ' T...... ti EllWl4 ~ ~ ti • 1>11 ....... •
""''"" ._. f I .__. ...... .,. • ...... IClill "'If Wtl'Ni 4, I
MA MlllMn ''
~com age watch ls totally eleo-"We are in the electronics business," tromc, the preelse it.me in hoQn, he d. "We're not out to make watches
mt•es and secoods and the date In a to sell ...
flash of lighted digits'whfcb appear oo an The Hughes watch is the most
ot.het:wlle plain, black face. recbnoJogJcally advanced member of ll
Top manqement and m a r k e t I n g growing family of electronic watches
pen...,el at the Harbor Area 500 the market. •
Superior A • the watch t t11e aupes product • an en-\readT been sold to a number of major tirel)' t mal systtm• 1ban
..eoa:ll)IDl:es and claims other are clamor· ( WA'l'CH Pai ~I
..
• \ ! . .. • Cov .~ , ... · · , ~ . .._,. ;. ,.
Det: Nye--a
Be8cJa, ~·lias .:..~ to deterinfue Jt the-eat \urglat lias also hit
nearby Emerald Bay Jiomes. Sheriff's of-
ficers said no ~tts of C3!. bur_glaries
have been niade from Emerild Bay
residents, Nye _said, · · .
· Etnei'alcf'Bay ii in unlncorJIOr'8ted cdui-
ty territory, while. Irvine Cove 1s: parttl f
Laguna Beach. ' ·
The ca,t ,burglar·enters through unlock-
ed dOQt:S or -Win!lows.-and thea r goes. to
bedrooms wbeie occupants sleep. There
be steals ,c8sJi lroni ·WaJibtS, 'dresiler
drawers and ·pu;Ses, Sg. NeU'.~ell
~id. :. ··I .
Purcell called Wednesday for citir.en assi~ce In stoppbig tbe btW.Jar. He
advised ·reskkiits to make ~all · dOors
and windows are seCured for· the night,
and report all .prowling noises or
burglaries immediately to police.
He said rel!idents should ~not confront
the burglar if they awaken and be is ac-
tually in the same room, but shi>uld wait
until he leaves and then call police.
SHE WEAVES WELL
WITHOUT LICENSE
. FAIRFIELD, Ohio (UPI) -Police
asked Nina Young, 24, of LaFollette,
Tenn., if she had a driver's license after
they spotted her car weaving from side
to side and pulled her over.
"No" she replied, police said "it
never 1helped my driving a bit." '
. .
Clirlnmig Nnclear 'flire3t
WASH{NGTON (AP) -The San
On.o~e mlclear generatil)g plant is one of
20 that consumer adv~ate Ralph Nader
seeks to close by means of a wit ftled to-
day in federal court, claiming they
threaten· the lives of 'millions of
Americans.
In a suit against the Atomic Energy
Commission, Nader and the Friends of
the Earth (FOE), which claims 20,000
mem,bers cjlarged that the AEC has
violated the atomic .energy act and its
~ pow~-plant safety regulations. C sptctfically, they charged the com-
mission with "illegality in continuing to
permit the operation of certain nuclear
power plants without requiring adequate
protection for the health and safety of
the public by way of effective and re-
quired safeguards against the con-
sequences of an 'tmcontrolled losS-Of-coll-
ant accident' .•. "
In San Diego, a spokesman for San
Diego Gas and Electric Company said if
the nuclear power plant at San Onofre
were shut down, "losing the 7.6 percent
of the energy in our system which it sup-
plied in 1972 would mean we would have
to make it up through our fossil fuel
plants.
"This would mean an increase of 1.3
million barrels of fuel oil annually.
Hopefully, this would come from our sup.
pliers."
The utility owns 20 percent of the plant
(See ONOFRE, Page ZI ~
Fire Kill,s Deputy's
Family After Th.reats
GARDEN, Mich. <UPI) -The wife
and two small sons of a sheriff's dep,tJty
died in a flre here today. Three bTocks
away, firemen discovered the deputy,
Dennis Murphy, handcuffed to a traqtor.
Jn.the area where MUl'phy was fouiltl, a
message written in red crayon or llpstick
on a large board, read "I will kill you
Murphy, first your wife and kids.'"
Authorities in this one-acre town of 380
said they had no motive and no suspects .
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Firemen recovered the body of
Murphy's wife, Janet, 20, and one of the
couple's sons, Randy, 2. 'nley searched
the rubble of the borne for another son,
• •
Robbie, seven months. ,
"The entire area bas been cordoned off
and state police crime lab experts have
been flown in to help us in the in-
vestigation," said a spokesman for the
Delta Cowity sheriff's department .
Authorities said Murphy was haQd·
cuffed to a tractor behind the Garden
town hall The sign was on a large board
in. back of the hall.
County prosecutor Tony Marcintewcz
said Murphy, treated -for cuts and bruises
at a nearby hospital and released, said
90llleone came to his house at 1:30 a.m.
today, told his wife there was a bad ac-
cident an4 said Murphy should go to the
to\vn hall were "ipneone would meet
him to take him to the scene."
Murphy told · autOOrities somtone
grabbed him from ·bebltld when lie got
out of his car at the all.
"They grabbed my Shirt, threw it over
my bead and pinned it," he told police.
He said bis wife fai(ed to identify the
man with whom she talked.
Marclntewci said all the gas bad been
drained from the. main fire truck parked
at the town hall.
He said a tanker truck parked to
the tractor to which Murphy I
handcuffed was missing spark I
plugs and Murphy's own car, barked
froot ~his home, "had tbe lani
pulled from it."
Thursday, M~ 31, 1973 I r: Tw Held
E
tbose now available. ma\in11 It the most
etfident and most accuraU! -sup-
posedly thin one to three minutes per
__ t Age ' • I
'No r1 oners
·.
-ln d.
watches.
Marketing Marlager Willlam S. Eckess
said the-watllb ~ the natural
OU~ d aophisl!cated military COUl-
puW technology that Hughes has
specialbled in for years.
Aut ority Told,
The watch design eliminates all mov·
ing, wearing parts and instead of a
mechaDical balance wheel -or tuning
fork ~ isome watches -it uses precise,
unvarying vibrations or a tiny quartz
crystal to tick off its minutes and
seconds.
The crystal pulses more than 500,000
times per second and that rapid beat is
cut down to one per second by a tiny elec·
tronlc component that makes the Hughes
watch unique.
tiny part that comprises the heart
o the watch is a chip of ceramic one·
~tb-c>f,..incb across and scientifcally
llilprinted with more electronics and wir·
ing thaJi la Jn the average television set.
"The chip has more than 1,500
transisiors on It," said Eckess.
The averase band-size transistor radio
has less than 20 full-sized transistors.
The chip -known in the electronics in-
dustry as a Complementary Symmetry
-Metal Oxide Semiconductor (C-MOS)
feeds the ultrastable output of the
vibratillg crystal into tiny lighted digits
under the blank crystal of the watch
To get the time and date, the wearer
pushes two· buttons on the side of the
watch. The numbers flash on the screen
momentarily and then go out until the
next push.
Weakland explained that the push-but-
ton operation is necessary to conserve
power in the two tiny batteries that
power the watch. U the digits were
lighU!d all the l!ime, the batteries would
wear out rapidly, he said. Now they last
a year.
The c o m p a c t , hermetically-sealed
design of the watch rrfakes it almost bl-
vulnerable, according to Hughes officials.
It is said to be shock-proof, dust-proof,
waterproof, heat-proof and never needs
cleaning or lubrication. .
Hughes management Is confident there
is a large market for the watches, which
will go on the market under various
brand names starting in August. Full-
scale production will get under way
within a month.
Weakland estimates the Initial cost of
the watches at about $175 but said that
within only a year or two, models wlll be
available for "under $50." The watch
costs Hughes about $35 to produce.
Weakland said the conventional watch
industry is in an uproar over the new
watches.
By 1980, Weakland said, the worldwide
watch market will be 300 million watches
per year and Hughes officials think the
new design will slowly take over a good
piece of that market.
Weakland and Ills marketUtg mf!P said.
they fully expect their w'ltch to iO into
competition with less e x p e n s I v e
mechanical timepieces now on the
market once the initial demand for the
watch subsides.
A by-product of the new Hughes prod-
uct is the volwne or business it has
already produced at the Newport Beach
plant.
"We are already expanding our space
and probably will need more to keep up
with the demand." said Eckess. "The
shortage of defense contracts won't be
felt here, that's for sure."
Weakland said virtually every major
watch company in the world Is "pounding
at our door" and he said there could
easily be too much business for the new
watch.
South Laguna Couple
Sued Over 1966 Loan
South Laguna resident G. Dominic
Shelton and his wife. Rosamond, have
been sued for $6,700 in an Orange County
Superior Court action that charges the
couple with non-payment of a loan made
in 1966.
George F. Reid claims the Sheltons of
Three Arch Bay agreed to repay the loan
at $1 ,340 a year until it was cleared in
1971. He states no payments have been
made on the loan and he seeks the full
sum plus 7 percent interest.
OIANH C:OAn La
DAILY PILOT
Tho Oronge Cont DAIL I' PILOT, with Which
11 combined Ille Howt-Prn1, 11 publlllllld by
tho Orongo cout Pvl>llslllng Compony. '-·
"'" ldltloM ire llllblllltld, -•Y 1"roug11
Frhf•y, tor Colt• Meu, Newport 8Mdt
HunllngtOft . B-11/FOVfttaln Volloy, usnini:
BOid!, lrvlne/5-leblCl< and $an ''°"'""'"'
$In J-<"•pl1tr1no. " &Ingle 1""9lo.lil
edition Is published Saturdop Ind Svndl
Tho prlnclpol publlslll119 Plant Is at 3JO w::;.
Bay Street, Coate Mna Collfomlo -~ ,,_l.!' * ........
Robert N. Wood PrM~ent •nd PubllsMr
. J1ck R. Curley
Va President and i;.norot Man1gor
Thomu Keovil
EdllOr
Tho"'" A. Murphiht Mln1111nci fdllW
Ch1rl11 H. Loos Rlch.,.cl I'. Nall
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222 · Forost Anhut
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H1111t""IOft ltodl: 1717J BOktl llOu,.,,ard ..,. ·Clel'Mhre: as N-11 Cimino 11 .. 1
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c.yrlght, 1'11. Ot-C.0011 Pullliolllng ~r. No -ateri.. llluatrat'°"",
---,..." ... Of' -IMmtnlS ...... "' -r .. , ... d aio1 .,_, _,.1 _.
"''""" fJf CllllYTllM -·
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of llN Deltr ..... Stiff The coastal comrnlslions created by
Proposition 20 have the power to deny
projecta even though the construction has
local 1ovemmen1 approval, Deputy State
Att«pey General Jeffrey Freedman sa1d
today Jn Loog J,Jeach.
Freedman, the deputy state attQrney
advising the South Coast Regional
Conservation Commission, said be would
issue a formal written opinion on the
question.
The South Coast Commission has
permit authority in the coastal 1-00e of
Orange and Los Angeles counties.
Newport Asks
Help Paying
For Tourists
Newport Beach is going to find out if
Orange County and the State of
C'#lifornia will help pay the cos! of caring
for the tourists who visit the city each
summer.
Councilmen, reacting to a report that
says the city spends $1.5 a year to handle
the swollen summer population, have in·
structed aty Manager Robert L. Wynn
to look at three potential revenue
sources.
He will meet with State Sen. Dennis
Carpenter and Assemblyman Robert
Badham, both Newport B e a c b
Republicans, to see what state aid is
available.
He also will meet with Orange COUnty
Harbor, Beaches and Parks Director
Kenneth Sampson to see what county aid
is available (the cotmty now pays $98,000
to help defray lifeguard costs).
And he will review local fees now
charged beachgoers. Those fees now are
limited to parking.
In a report delivered to councilmen
Tuesday, Wynn said police, beach
maintenance, lifeguard and capital Im-
provement costs total $1,442,000 annually.
He said revenues from parking, beach
concessions and the county lifeguard
grant total $475,000 a year.
"That means we are losing about $1
million a year to service tourists," Wynn
said.
Councilman Carl Kymla ~ested the
three funding avenues for Wynn~
and called the figures "more a /
most of us thought it would be.
Wynn said there are an estimated 10
million beachgoers at Newport and
Corooa del Mar beaches each year, with
82 percent of them non-local. The figures
come from the Marine Safety Depart-
ment but Wynn did not say how the
department arrived at the figures.
"For us to have to pay $1 million a
year to take care of these people, that
doesn't seem fair and equitable," Kymla
said.
Councilman John Store said he ls con.
cerned with "the potential overfoad of
some facilities our friends and visitors
enjoy at Big Corona beach."
Store indicated some m a x i m u m
number of people on any one beach
should be established.
"Big Corona has been filled to the brim
and then some," Store said, "It could get
to the point that it would be so crowded
nobody could enjoy it any more."
Councilman Paul Ryckoff of Balboa
Island said he is also concerned with
crowds at the bay beaches and what they
are doing to water quality. He said water
quality control is getting more and more
costly, too. .
"There are things that can he done
without putting toll gates at the city en-
trances to recoup our costs," Ryckoff
said, without elaborating.
Mermaid Lunch
Tickets Offered
Tickets are now available for the an-
nual officers installation luncheon of the
Mennaids, Women's Division of the
Laguna Brach Chamber of Commerce, to
be held at noon Monday at Ben Brown's
restaurant in South Laguna.
Chris Hopper, associate director of the
Orange County Council of Women in
Chambers of Commerce will install the
Laguna officers of the 1973-74 board of
directors.
The luncheon program is "People and
Things Around the World" presented by
Eloise Fulmer.
Luncheon price is $4. Reservations are
required and may be made by contacting
the Chamber of Commerce office 494-
1018. ,
FrotMPage1
ONOFRE ...
located near the Western White House at
San Clemente. Southern C a 11 for n I a
In a supplementary s t .. t e m e n t
distributed after the suit was filed In the
U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia, David Brower of San Fran-
cisco, president of the FOE, said:
"Overwhelming scientific evidence hu
shown that the lives of rnllllons of pe0ple
are being threatened by the operation of
these plants. Each of these plants con-
'-" clea _t.,. 111111 .i c:.ta -·
C.H-~Ion 1Pt contor --.itlfrr lllr lftlll P .11 ,,_lfllr/ mnltMV
dnllnollana SUS ll'IOnllllY.
' tains a quantity of radioactive material
equivalent to the fallout from several
thousand Hiroshima-size n u c I e a r
wea pons.
(
policemen, were being held in connection 1be opinion was requested by Com·
rnl881ooer Judy Rosener ol Newport
Beach, who said officials "in a particular
city" doo't wx1entand what the new law
says.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -The war~n
and deputy warden at ijolmesburg City
Prl;son wen stabbed to death today and a
C\l8rd at the institution was Injured.
with the ~tabbings. · /
1be Newport Beach City ~ Tues-
day criticized the denilll of three pennit
applications in the Newport Beach area
by the commission. Those requests by
developer Dana Smith met zoning codes
of the city.
Freedman said that "until it is ruled
otherwise by a court, the commissions
can overrule local decisions if they find a
proj~ would have • • adv er s & en-
vironmental effects."
Mrs. Rosener, who lives on Lido Isle,
objected before the meeting that she
wasn't quoted correctly by the city coun-
cil.
Newport Mayor Doo Mclnnls said Mrs.
Rosener contended that the propoeed
duplexes were in the middle of an R-1
single-family zone that the city wanted
dOWll1.0ned.
From Pagel
PAINTING •..
Rome for further infonnation," Enman
said.
She donated it to the Laguna museum
after moving to a Leisure World
residence, he said.
He said that even if it tums out the
musemn has a copy, the painting will
still be valuable.
"It's a good example of 19th Century
Italian work," he said.
' Two inmates, who city Police Com-
missioner Josepb O'Neill said had been
incarcerated on charges of murdering
O'Neill said the incident was over.
He said the two prisoners requested
permission to aee Warden Patrick Cur·
ran and got 'into his office, apparently
carrying wel!J>ODS.
The comtlrlSSioner said the deputy
warden, Robert F. Fromhold, was at-
tacked first.
"When Maj. Curran attempted to coma
to the rescue of Fromhold, he was al so
stabbed," O'Neill said.
The police commissioner said the in-
jured guard, Capt. Leroy Taylor, was in·
jured when he attempted to subdue the
two Inmates.
Taylor was taken to Nazareth Hospital
where bis condition was listed as serious.
The two inmates taken Into custody
were identified by O'Neil as Frederick
Burton and Joseph Bowen.
Park Restoration
. r.
Mrs. Rosener said · today that her
transcript of the meeting shows that she
said the area is "mostly one-unit single-
family residences." She added the City
,Council hadn't voted yet on whether to
change the zoning in the area.
At that time Mrs. Rosener and other
commissioners said that public access to
the beach would be impaired by in·
creasing the density of the area.
"Its a great drawing card for
children," Enman said of the sprighUy
painting depicting a boy scaring his
younger sister to the annoyance of their
mother.
He said while fakes are fairly common
in the art world, this is the first time a
confilct has occurred within the museum.
The painting Is on view from 11:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. daily at the museum's upper
lobby.
Now Under Way
In Laguna Beach ·'
Six ' more permit applications to
Six more permit applications to
demolish single-family dwellings and to
oomtruct duplexes in their place by Dana
Smith were on the oomrnlsslc;in's agenda
todlJy. All are in the Newport area.
1973 !
CLOSE-1
OUTS 1001 nan
. 10 , OVER .
COST
LOW COST HIGH SPEED
AUTOMATIC DRYER
o S,oclll Ot-Wto•klt
Cycle • ,,,..., Cyc:te IOf ft\jftU~
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nt11'Ntf1 4i1y1ftt lllM
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We have the LOWEST PRICES•
In the County on Admlral
Refrigerators
·:-:r.--··-S-1 COMPARE
·• .'.ij1;;J:t._. J OUR PRICE •' _,,
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WE TAKE
TRADE-INS
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90 DAYS
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UPRIGHT FREEZER
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plu1 T., CoU l'late '°' Fast Ftffli"t I •·1-StOf• Racll a Foool1 lesy·t•·Stt llltl
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BIG 14.7 Cu. Ft. 'N O FROST'
REFRIGERATOR·FREEZEl' I lttlltf NINI ., 11 tan• WITH
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VOL. 66, NO. 151, 5 SECT)ONS, 64 PAGES. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1973 TEN .CENTS
San J@aqt;rln l(ids . Ready for ~t-Music Fest
,About 3,000 San Joaquin School District
students thls week are tuning up their
artistic efforts for a combined music-art
extravaganza Tuesday.
The district's second -and last -an.
nual music and art festival Is set lo open
its dOOfS at 5:30 p.m. at the Anaheim
Convention Center.
All 19 district schools are involved In
the eveliing.
Art exhibits from about 500 students
will be on display in the grand lobby of
the c nter from $:30 to 9:30 p.m.
The "I Believe in Music Festival,"
featuring_ about 2,500 student chorus
m~s. string, band and guitar
playerll', will run from 7:15 to 9 p.m.
The concert will be&in with an in·
troductlon to the history of music, from
the dawn of time when the "caveman"
supposedly beard a heartbeat and started
playing rhythm, a district official said. ·
Students will take turns describing why
they believe in music and what it means
to different persons es a "melody or
life."
The district "honor orchestra" will
perform from 7: 15 to 7:30 p.m. Following
that, instrumental and choral groups
from individual elementary and in-
termediate schools will take center
stage.
A special tribute during the evening
will be made to Ralph Gates, district
superintendent emeritus, who is retiring
(See ART-MUSIC. Page Z)
Communiversity?
/
AMrich Eyes · Civic Center at UCI
DllhY Piiot Staff Pboto
' SAN JOAQUIN ·SCHOOL DISTRICT'S ARTISTIC SWAN SONG WILL BE TUESDAY IN ANAHEIM
From Left, L1 P11 lnf9rmedl1te School Students Brl1n Bl1ckburn, J1nlce Med and Nancy Fischer
U.S. Funds Apartments to Scoot Out
M~yBuyPark D· .... '· .. ,. '.' .-· S .1 UCI
F. . . 1 T . :-Qr~~~ry : .: c~ne ~
(J , · oro 1 ·~ · .·, .; -i, .. ::r; .. . ·~ ... .. .~" · .-~ .,'.. , .. ~ • ' ~ ' "• -' , ,~ -• .... ,Tl ,. ...
.. · ·• • . , . .At U.:C .. ~i U,.. " DUiy, ~ students want.the privacy apartments af· -...11'1111'11.._i'WM.: for .... Pt...< in El Toni lbocst.to ~~~ ' 1Jr¥t f<id. "At UC Sailta Cruz where each col-~~wb¥ ~ ~· 1~~ _: . . l'Jfe .,~~~. ~. , ~Mb ~ lulg 19 is aria,nged around ~e living unitl!,
Tue Orange. COuilly Harbors, BeachU, . balls. witE ~ .~ e3ch ·other In students continue to" rent apart.Ihents off
and Parks Department has reconl-neat rows: nevet llas made it at UCI camp1,1s." 'nle trend means empty stu-
mended to the Board of Su~ ~t where ~y 25 percent of'the students· are dend1oµsing in Santa Cruz when Irvine
approximately $300,000 in re ,d e r a 1 · bou:iecf-0n campus. . suffers shortages.
revenue sharing funds be · used.1o buy ,· Vice Obancello~ for Student AffatrS
park lan'd for El Toro CommQl}ity Park. John C. Ho.Y predict~ ~.r today that
The purchase would buy a rectangular-the last uruts of housing sunilar to Mesa Laguna Curator shaped · porti()n between . Rocl5fi~lll Road Court "dorms" are S09ll to be built on ._,.. • 1i ll campus
and the Santa F~ ra!Jroad 0 owing If 311y other student housing is built on R • Q •
A1is1> ~near the Aliso greenflelt ~ campus in the remainder ot this decade, aISeS UCStiOD prov~ ~IS week by the county planrung "it will be apartments,'' Hoy said.
corruru".1?11· • • · "APattments are what students want ·
A decision IS expected by Dlld..June by now. 'I'bey'll live in ~ts off cam-Ahn.t•t P. aintin. g the board. · · if the buil and' int d ... "¥ Ac•tlon of t~ 30 e,cres ca6ld' be pus, Y ~re. . •: . we en "' ~
:part of a 7~ICl'e ~ll)lelt aiq Aliso build ~unit.~ 1? the Verano
Creek if other land!J)uying projects by ·!'~ce .a ts, ~C?Y· said •. .._ n-.i ............ 1 di ...... .u ..,.,... Yerano ace ~ 351 apartments
urc ~ty ~ ""''~v · "~'"' f!UC ... ...,,... for -"uate and married students. Appr8i:sals sre now being 1llade for· -• · .,. -· ""'"~--~""' 1 200 • ~l-of he Mesa Court ,_.. ..........,r. , purchase of• 35 ~~· u~ ....... · · t undergraduate · students in single and
park for, a re~~g baSlll •. The county . double rooms arranged in "suites" shar-
,flood cQPtrol district woul!i bUy the land ing lavatOry and . loUilge facilities on a
over a two-to three year period.· acale more intimllte than the typical·cam-
'Ibe basin, which wOllld be dey an!l pus dorm
usable 1nost of the .year, is across the Nearby ·to Verano ~Place, Hoy noted,
railroad tracks · from the park sl,te· ~ will be built the finalTeSidence halls like-exte~ .to the propdsed extetislon _of ll(to be built in the 1970s at UCI.
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of 1111 DINY Pilot Staff
Just imagine owning a valuable 19th
Century painting, and while leafing
through a magazine, you see an identical
painting offeted at auction.
"We've already started to investigate
the whole thing," said Tom Enman,
curator of the Laguna Beach Art
Museum.
The painting is "Fun and Fright" by
the Italian artist Gaetano Chierici ( 1838-
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of 1111 DllllY Pllet Slaff
UC Irvine Chancellor.Daniel G, Aldrich
Jr. said today that land might be made
available on the UCI campus for an in-
novative civic center serving the city of
Irvine, school district, cultural, student
and university inter-ests. .
A pooling of university building funds
for · a $1 million lecture hall with
resources of the other public agencies
was suggested at a press breakfast
ll)eeting ..
"I believe if the city, school district
-and university were to get our interests
together to do the job right, we would
have the wherewithal to do it," Dr.
Aldrich said .
The remark · followed discussion in
which the cbancell.or djsclosed for the
first time .~l>ts tba'~-. '1!el ci~jc center
serving the ultimate-<:1ty of Irvine should
be located in •Town Ceoter across cam-
pus Drive from l!JCI:
That's ~e°;u'<itlitect William Pereira
envisioned the seat of government for 1l
10,000-acre city surrounding the UCI
campus.
Aldrich noted city plans have changed
since then . He wondered if the 212-acre
Town Center area would accommodate a
city hall and cultural complex "of the
scale" needed to serve a city projected to
11ve a population from 300,000 to 500,000
on 53,000 :aeyes. ·
Those are population projections put
forth by the Irvine Company for their ·
master-planned city.
Presently Irvine houses nearly 30,000
people on 24,000 acres or 41 square miles.
Suggestions that the Town Center site
might not be appropriate for the long
term location of city hall originated with
announcement of the Irvine Company
general plan for the 53,000-acre proposed
city in March of 1970.
When UCI moved to Irvine in 1964,
Irvine Company plans -drawn by cam·
pus architect Willlam Pereira -en·
visioned a smaller city.
o ht ; a .. , .• !)!! _; s
Gerommo Rbad. 'lbe 1iflal apartment units also are cart Nelson .. assistarit chief ~neer In under ~tioo -.l:Jut.-rising con-
(See'PARK,.·Pa'F Z) stcuetion ,Costs :suggest _they will be so
1921). '
The Laguna Beach Art Museum was
given its painting of Fun and Fright
about a year ago by Ruth Briskin of
Laguna Hills. At the time it was valued
at $15,000.
NEW DIGlTAL TIMEPIECE RUNS ON COMPUTER CIRCUITRY
At Hughes ln Newport, Consumer Applications of Space Technology
costly to rent, students will not rent
UCLA J~ws Protest them. ~
Cbancellor Daniel G~ Jr. said
negritlations with a private developer are
LOS ANGELEs (AP) -$9ine loo nearing fruition. ' . .
Je\Vlih• students demonstrated at UCLA "For the first time it appears~we will
to ~t the sched" of com-have a private finn build apart_ments in
mencerilent ~xercises this year on Satur-the inclusion .area on•canipus witbout,re-. ·
day, lliliie 1J 'lbe deIDONtrators · sald qqiring us· ~ gua~ ·I'" IJ*set oe-
Wednesday ' t h !I t sabbath-oDservµig . cupany level, ' he said,qiday., •
studeotS wolildhot be able"to'-attend. . Aldrich -echoed •Hoy's riew·. that . . ..-)
Fife· Kills Deputy's "
. . '
F aniily A'fwr Th.reats
GARDEN, Mich. (lJPI) -_Tl)e Wife
and two small sons of. a sheriff's deputy
died in a fire here today, Three blocks
away, firemen · d.ls_coveted; the deputy,
Dennis Murphy, handl!Uffed to a tractor.
In t~ area where Murphy wu found, a mesS&~ written in red crii)'.on or llpsllck
on a large ooard; tEad "I~ ~ ·fW .
Murphy, fl~ ~wife ~ kids;"'
Authorltles tn UUs-toWn of .•
said they ha~ no Ive JIO ~
Fireinen ~erect Ult. laoif1 1. of'
Murphy's w,ife, Jimet, · 20, <8.lld one ol the
couple•a.· , ~.· 2. ~ ~
the rubble of the hoine. for another aoo,
Robbie, se\'e~ rttonr&i. ·
'"lbe entire area blls been cordcdd Off
and state police ct'irtle lab espertl bate
been flown in to belp us in. tbe in-
vest.igationi" said a a:pokeliiliD for the
Delta Couoty riff' de~
A11thc:iriti Nld MLB'Jlhy WU
cuffed to a tract« behind G.
town ~. WU GR a Jlrp boatd
in bacr of the hall. ·
' County prosecutor Tony Marcintewcz
saJd.~ •. treated.for cuts a'14f bruises
a a.nearby .bospital and released, said
someone came t@ his "house at 1:30 a.m.
today, told bis wife there was a bad ac-
cident and 'said MurpJly ,sbould go to the
town 'ball were ,"tomeQQI would meet
him tO take" ~ to tbe--sceoe ...
Murphy tolcl · autliari dneolle
·li'lbb!!d ~.mm behh)d When he got of, car· at .the ll811.
"They grabbed mt slllit, threw it over
mf bead'..and pinned it " be told police.
He said his wife failed to i~tlly the
-man with wbOm.sbe talbd. -. . ~ ~ saiil·litll the gu .had ·been dtl!fued from the main fire truck parked
al the town billl.
He said a tanker ·: parted to tbe tractor to w Murphy was
bando!ffed WU· millille three
pl1111 Miupby'I own cat, parbd Jn
hu!l of • "bad tlclll
it."
Enman while perusing a copy of
Coonolsseur recently spied the identical
painting in an advertisement f o r
auistie's of London May art auction.
Wateh oJvFntnre -
· '.'I i.JnmOOiately. wrote to Christie's and
asked for ·,their catalogue," Enman said.
The painting was sold by Christie's for
9,500 guineas, about *25,000 the day of the
Newport Company Producing It
auction. · ·
The two paintings are of the same size,
28 inches by 41 ll¥:bes.
~udging from photos in the Christie's
catalogue there are small differences in
the painting's P.el'&peetive, in the smile of
the boy, the rag hanging on the door, in
t4e bellows in front of the fireplace and
pots hanging on the wall.
"I'd like to investigate further to find
out more about it and find out if there is
a history to the paintings," Enman said.
'1'1ie Laguna Beach Art M~um paint·
lng was authenticated as to period it was painted by the Los Angeles County
Art Museum, Enman said.
The Christie's painting was signed and
dated 1874.
1be Laguna painting is nol, however,
(See PAJNTING, Page %)
Community Group~s
By WILi.JAM SCHREIBER
Of 1111 DllllY PllOI Staff
Hughes Aircraft in Newport Beach is
producing a revolutionary new
wristwatch with no mecbanical workings,
no hands and no dial. It will be on the
market this summer, company officials
say.
Hughes expert!! believe the new
timepiece will eventually spell the end to
meclumical watch i n d u s t r I e s , con-
ventional watch repair and lucrative
worldwide distribution of watch· parts by
Swiss and Japanese companies.
'Ibe computer-age watch Is totally elec·
tronic, displays the precise time in hours,
minutes and seconds and the date in a
Oash of lighted digits which appear ont·an
otherwise plain, black face. ·
Top Dl4118gl?Jllent arul m a r k e t I n g
personnel at the Harbor Area plant, 500
Superior Ave., said the watch has
already been sold to a number of major
companies and claims other are clamor·
Ing ror the new des gn.
Club B I · • d "We will put together the electronic . urg arize package and tl!en put it into cases
. delllened and supplied by castaners who
A second-st<ry. man has stolen petty , buy the workings," said W 11 l lam
cub flld communications gear worth Weakland, ~.divtslon manager of
nearly $600, entering the Unlvel'll.!ty <:om· the Hughes Mlcrbeleclronlcs Products
mut\lty' AsSoclatlon's Irvine clubboule . Division. . ,
through ap upstairs wbtdow. Weakland said H will not market
Frank Godoy' called 'police to the faclll· · the watch under lts·own name, nor will it
ly at 4530 ~r Way, where it • fum a ary rm. to market and
d ered w er took the money d manufactur& the watch. He would not
a pair ot \lj d pried · 'Y l cb com ·have bought the
inside. tch.
"We are in the electronics business,"
he said. "We're not out to make watches
to sell." ;
The Hughes watch is the most
technologically advanced member of a
growing family of electrooi.c watches
already on the market.
But the Hughes product utilizes an en-
tirely different internal . system than
those now available. making It the most
efficient and most accurate -sup-
posedly within one to three minutes per
year -in the ~year history of
watches. ·
Marketing Manager William S. Eckess
said the watch represents. the natural
outgrowth of sophisticated military com-
puter technology that Hughes bas
specialized in for years.
The watch design eliminates ~l mov·
Ing, wearing parts and instead of a
mechanical balance wheel -or tuning
fork in some watches -it uses precise,
unvarying vibrations of a tiny quartz
crystal to tick off its Minutes and
seconds.
The crystal pullles more than 500,000
&Imes per second and that rapid_ beat is
cut down to one per second .by a tiny elec-
tronic component that makes the Hughes
watch unique.
The tiny part Uu!t comprises the heart
QI the watch is a chip of ceramic one-
tenf.b.of·an-inch across and sclenllfcally
imprinted with more electronics and wir·
ing than ls in the average television set.
'"l'tie chip Tl filOre than 1,500
(See NEW WATCJlf Page%)
Aldrich said today he wondered If the
university could relate In scale to the
buildings needed to ho11se a govemment
for a larger city.
There is ·a growing demand on campus
fl'r small shops and services, convenient
inexpensive housing and cultural and
other evening recreational offerings, ad-
jacent to the eampus.
City plans for Town Center develop-
ment presently provide a mix of com-
mercial and low-rise, low-cost housing Jn
Town Center.
Few acres remain for any large IClle
civic center complex. _
Aldrich's suggestion today that the
university might provide land for a joint
purpose facility may offer renewed hope
for preservation of original concepts ol a
city governmeM which relates by loca·
tion to the university and the nearby In-
dustrial complex.· Thole concepts were
the basis f Perelra's original· 0 com-
muniverslty" plm.
* * * ·Regents J;Jougl,tt
•'
510-aere Traet
For UC Irvine
Four years following the inillal gift by
the Irvine Company of 1,000 acres o( lan~
for UC Irvine, Regents purchased
another 510 acres at a cost ol $4.5
mlllion.
The purpose of the purchase was to
assure land on which to build student and
faculty housing and services and other
"universrty·related" buildings, such as
an iilterfaith center.
Today, UCJ.._ Chanl:elior Daniel G.
Aldrich Jr. sugg~1hi8 acreage might
be put to use by means of a joint powers
agreement to the advantage of the city of
Irvine, the Irvine Unified School District,
UCI and possibly a civic cultural agency.
'nle land, designated in the Pereira
campus plan as the "inclusion area," is
not a lump of acreage set apart from tbe
campus. .
In fact, Aldrich explained today, it was
once known as "intrusion areas" in
designaUons ol the first campus plan.
'Ibe "intrusion" label was attached
because the land was intended to jut into
the sJ)okes of the starshaped campus
plan, providing a mix of ~mmunity and
campus with no distinct boundaries
separating the two.
Aldrich said intrusion was deemed to
be "too negative sounding" and was
replaced on published plans Of the cam-
pus with the word "inclusion."
WeUlaer
The weatherlady sees more
drizzle in the air for Friday. par-
tially clearing in the afternoon
hours to hazy sunshine. Highs af
the beaches 65 rising to 75 inland.
Overnight lows In the mld-50s.
INSIDE TODAY
Swede Savage i.t alive toda11.
The Santa Ana race car driVer
survived what trac1c veUrcml
called the worst single.car croah
in IndJanapolis 500 11.istoril
Wednesda11. Gordon Joh'l&COC1c
went on to win the abbtttrioUd,
twice-<Ulayect race. See SpMtt, ·
Page 25.
LM. _. ·tt -Mevl• • Calllonlle J M ,_, 14
Ctaallltt -.U --fJhW9 4. I Ctoftl~ tt ~ c..-iy t C......w.N 21 ._.
--lltllCtt ' lltcill HllMlll ,_ ' Telhl.._ bltl't-.it t>M ,_....
.. ...._ l>U W..... 4
,.,. llM ·~ f ..__ .._ INI llernnn ..,. _,,. ..... II. • Alt• L...-rs lJ
..,,.,u. I t-u .. U t I)
m .Land
Tax Break
•
. ,.
AJtboQ&h land ,xit in agricultural
presen-es doesn't produce any children
to add to local school districts, it doesn't
produc:e· much tai money either, some
sc1 ... ~1 officials feeL
Irvine · Unlfled School District officials
are ClODClemed about 'the loss in revenue
from the lower taxation on agricultural
preserves, which they estimate comprise
about one-fourth the land value in the
new district.
But tbe administrators failed to con-
vince Irvine trustees Wednesday to ask
the county Board of SUpervisors to levy a
county-wide tax to compensate for the
loss of income.
Trustees Nonn Ginsburg and Charles
Boulanger expressed rears that such a
tax might cause farmlands to turn Into
housing subdivisions at a faster rate.
"People aren't financially able to hold
onto land in agriculture anymore,"
Boulanger said.
One reason for moving to Irvine is the
open space, he continued. "You 'have to
realize open space will cost money."
The state's Williamson Act pennlts the
establishment of agricultural preserves.
In return for ~ol.developlng the land for
u;> to 10 yeara, the property owner isn't
assessed for taxes on its "highest and
best" use.
Superintendent Stan Corey pointed out
that the act 1Uelf bas a provlslon for lev·
ying a countywide tar.
It is designed to offset loss of monies to
individual agencies for the open space
e!ljoyed by all county residents, he said.
The proposed resolution was tabled for
further discussion until the board's June
11 meeting. It says that current San Joa-
~uin and Tustin Union High Districts
"have lost several hundreds of thousands
of dollars in needed revenues" because of
the preserves.
Uni High Group
Sets Vocational
Education Meet
\" ocatlonal education will be the topic
•f the University High School Parent,
li'aculty and Friends 0 r g a n i z a tl o n
(PFFO) meeting at 7:30 o'clock tonight.
Speakers at the meeting will be A.
~tanley Corey, superintendent of Irvine
Unified School District; Raymond
!:dman, deputy superintendent; and
Karylou Gougeon, director of work ex·
:>erience ai Uni High.
The meeting in the faculty lounge at
!he high school at 4771 Campus Drive,
Irvine, also will feature election of of-
'icers for the next school year.
Nominations will be accepted from the
audience.
Discussions will focus . on how the
newly-formed district, which takes over
operation of uea schools July 1, can best
>rovlde occupational training for ils
1tudents.
Viejo High Sets
Student Concerts
One of two spring concerts featuring
student musicians and conductors will
take place at 7:30 o'clock tonight at Mis·
sion Viejo High School.
The second concert, which will include
a music awards night, will take place at
7:30 p.m . Friday.
Both events will be in the school gym-
nasium.
Performing will be student groups of
mixed chorus, concert choir, madrigals,
advanced band, wind ,.ensemble and
orchestra. Student conductors are Andy
Adams, Jim Benson, Liz Jenkins and
Shelly Norris.
Admission is $1.50, adults; $1,
students; and free for children under 12.
The high school is at 25025 Chrisanta
Drive.
OU.NGI COAST IS
DAILY PILOT
The Or•~ Coast DAILY PILOT, wlftl Which
is combined the Newt-Pren. Is published by
'the Of'enoe Coa1t Publllhlno ComPtny, Se~
r1te editions are l)Ubt1$htd, Mond1'V through
Frlcter. tor cost• M-..., N.wporl Beach,
I .. unflngton 8t1ch/Fount1tn V•lle'(, L•uun•
I lwch. lntlnethddlebeck •nd Sin Cttmente/
1 s.n Juan Capistrano. A slngle region.I
I edlllon i1 pubtl1h«I S.turd•ra ond Su-vs.
I The principal publlsllint pion! 11 •• SJO WHI
t•Y 11,..1, Coato M.... C.lllornlo, n.M.
I Robert N. Wee<I
l'rea-t ond Pul>lllhor
J•c• R. Curloy
Viet 1-r•ident and ~ntral M•Nittr
Thomu Ke .. il
Edilor
Thom11 A. Murphino
M1n1glng Editor
Cherfot H. loo1 Rich1rd P. Nall
A11l1tant M1n1ginQ Etlltor•
Offkes
Centi MU.I ~ 330 WHf 81y StT't1t Newport Be1d't: Jl3J Newport Boulh'lrd
UpUN Boch: 212 'or"t Avenue
Hunllnt'°" leach: 17175 ll••ch 80\ll1v1rd '°" C-tt: :10S North &1 C.mltto Rul
, • .,..... 17141 '42-4321
c1-1tw Achertbltlt MJ.1611
5• Cr.-tite All hp lw .. :
, ... , .... 492-4420
l;opyrlthl. mi, Oronge Caeat Pu1Mh1ltlnt
Coml'ony. No ntwt 1torlu. llluotrellon ..
oc111or1o1 matt•• "' ec1-11.-11 htreln _, .,. rtl"Oduud without apK!el per •
.,1111on ot COll'"illhl ow-.
._ cleu .,..11111 Plld •t C.St• Mele. , c.11,.,..11. StlbKrf Piion l>Y carrltr *2.•S
!MftlllfYI Ill' "'"" a .IS monllllYt ""~'·"'
tlnllnellofll ·•US ""'""'"'·
. ,
Thindiy, ~ 31, 1W3
Co ue
As Major Threal;1
By JAN WORTH
Of 111<1 n.11, Pllel Slaff
Flooding Is a continuing threat to the
Saddleback Valley, even in years con·
sidered "dry," according to Carl Nelson,
ass~tant Orange County flood control
engineer.
Nelson commented on the threat of
floods during the fifth in a series of six
lectures on the Saddleback Valley
Wednesday night. PrOgram coordinator
Ron Yeo also presented Ed Camerina ~iate air pollution engineer for th~
Orange County Air Pollution Conttol
District. ·
Nelson, in his p~tatlon noted that
in the 100 years since ~ar rain
records were begun, floods have oc·
curred not in the wettest years but in '
some of the dryest.
Front Page I
4
Floods are categorized in size ac-j
cording to how often they are likely to .
occur in one ·century. '
So far in the 20th century, four 25-year i
floods have ben recorded, but no 100.year j
floods have occurred.
According to past history, the chances ·l
for a 100.year flood happening within a I
few years are good, Nelson said. 1
The disastrous 1969 flood was judged a
3!>-year occurrence.
The main creeks in the Saddleback
area are the San Juan, Trabuco, Aliso,
Oso, and Serrano. They flow south and
west from Santiago Peak.
Rwloff from stonns into the cr~ks has
been greatly effected by rapid cfevelop-
ment in the area.
''11le two rules tfiat illustrate the ~
lem are tl)at water always runs .
downhill and sand soaks' it up better than
concrete, Nelson said.
A half-inch oi rain in an ora'nge grove ·
produces much less runoff than the same
amount in a housing tract.
THERE'S ANOTHER PAINTING THAT LOOKS LIKE THIS IN LONDON; WHICH IS REAL? ART-MUSIC. • • The average rainfall in the flat land or
ti:~ Valley is 13 Inches per year though it ·
has reached high and low peaks of 31 in-l
ches in l!H<Hl and 3.6 inches in 1960-61. 1
Work, Supposedly That of Italian Chierici Gaetan, Was Given to Laguna Beach Art Museum
From Page 1
PAINTING •..
Enman notes that the museum's· work
had been restored, and that the signature
and date may have been lost in the
restoration.
He said the artist Chierici 's paintings
are "collectible" and are commonly sold
for between $15,000 and $35,000.
Chierici is of the llalian salon school of
painting in which each work was
carefully designed and set down. "They
labored over their canvas," Enman said.
Enman said the artist was an excellent
19th Century painter. Part of his in·
vestlgations will be to determine whether
Chierici's paintings have b e c o m e
valuable enough to establish a fake
market.
He said that Mrs. Briskin had purchas-
ed the painting in Rome in a major
gallery there about 20 years ago .
"First, we'll go back to Christie's and
get whatever Information they can give .
Then I'll write to a major museum in
R~me for further information," Enman
said.
She donated it to the Laguna museum
after moving to a Leisure World
residence, he said.
Re said that even if it turns out the
museum has a copy, the painting will
stJll be valuable.
"It's a good example of 19th Century
Italian work," he said.
"Its a great drawing card for
children," Enman said of the sprightly
painting depicting a boy scaring his
younger sister to the annoyance of their
mother.
lie ~aid while fakes are fairly common
in the! art world, thls is the first time a
conflict has occurred within the museum.
The painting is on view from 11:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. dally at the museum's upper
lobby.
From Page 1
PARK ...
the flood control department, said buying
the area for a retarding basin would re-
quire a ~oll!1tY service district or help
from a city if one exists by that time for
additional funding .
Orange groves now covering the
acreage would be removed and the land
graded to receive overflow water during
the creek's winter flood season.
Ten acres surrounding the creek have
been secured by the flood control district
downstream from the proposed com-
munity park. ·
SEC Accuses
Smith of Scheme
To Acquire Firm
WASHINGTON ( APl -The Securities
and Exchange Commission today ac-
cused California financier C. Arnholt
Smith, two persons and several com-
panies of engaging in a fraudulent
scheme to llpproprlate the assets of a
West Coast conglomerate and a San
Diego bank.
In a suit filed in U.S. District Court at
San Diego, the SEC sought a temporary
injunction against Smith and the other
defendanfs as well as appointment of a
receiver for the conglomerate, Westgate
California Corp. of San Diego.
Smith is a long-time Republican con-
tributor and owner of the San Diego
Padres major league baseball team.
According to the SEC, Smith and the
other defendants engaged in a scheme to
appropriate the assets of Westgate and
the U.S. National Bank of San Diego for
their use.
The suit added they created ostensible
profits for Westgate and published false
and misleading statements of these prof-
its to camouflage the unlawful activities.
Reward Out for MIAs
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Rewards are
being offered In Vietnam, Laos and Cam-
bodia for lnfonnatlon about American
servicemen missing in action, the com-
mander of U.S. Pacilic forces says .
From Page I
NEW WATCH DEVELOPED • • •
this year after 28 years in San Joaquin.
Jim Mitchell, principal at de Portola
School, is directing the presentation
honoring Gates, who gave Mitchell his
first teaching job more than 10 years
ago.
Now a flood plain zoning act has been
adopted by the county prohibiting
development In the vicinity of a creekbed.
unless adequate protection is provided.
transistors on it," said Eckess.
The average lumd-size transistor radio
has less than 20 full-sized transistors.
vulnerable, according to Hughes officials.
It is said to be shock-proof, dust-proof,
waterproof, heat-proof and never needs
cleaning or lubrication.
San Joaquin held Its fll'St music
festival last year at the Convention
center because the district's music pro-
gram had grown beyond.expectations. Irvine. Planning
Board Meeting
' i ". t '
The chip -known in the electronics in-
dustry as a Complementary Symmetry
-Metal Oxide Semiconductor (C-MOS)
feeds the ultrastable output of the
vibrating crystal into tiny lighted digits
under the blank crystal of the watch
The district will be defunct after June . !
• To get the time and dilte, the wearer
pushes two buttons on the side of the
watch. The numbers flash on the screen
momentarily and then go out until the
next push.
Weakland explained that the push-but-
ton operation is necessary to conserve
power in the two tiny batteries that
power the watch. If the digits were
lighted all the tiime, the batteries would
wear out rapidly, he said. Now they last
a year.
The c o m p a c t , hermetically~sealed
design of the watch makes it almost in·
Hughes management is confident there
is a large market for the watches, which
will go on the market under various
brand names starting in August. Full-
scale production will get under way
within a month.
Weakland estimates the initial cost of
the watches at about $175 but said that
within only a year or two, models will be
available for "under $50." The watch
costs Hughes about $35 to produce.
Weakland said the conventional watch
industry is in an uproar over the new
watches.
By 1980, Weakland said, the worldwide
watch market will be 300 million watches
per year and Hughes officials think the
new design will slowly take over a good
piece of that market.
30. . •
Three new unified districts, Irvine,
Saddleback Valley and Tustin, will take
over July 1.
The "I Believe" festival is free to the
public because of financial support from
the Irvine Company and a parents' music
boosters group.
The Irvine Company also helped fund
last year's event, when a small art .
display accompanied the concert.
That effort has been expanded this
year, with each school being given space
for its own exhibit.
Student ceramics, macrame, water-col-
ors, prints, pen and ink drawings, wood·
cuts and spur-of-the-moment creations
will be shown often in unique ar·
rangements.
Irvine city plaMing commissioners will
discuss development standards f o r
hillsides during their meeting set for 7: 30
tonight In city hall, 4201 Campus Drive.
A review of the present city standard
banning development on hillsides greater
than 20 percent in slope is expected to
result in a more flexible standard in the
more pennanent general plan text.
Tonight's meeting is a study session. It
is open to the public.
Other items to be discussed include
rezoning or a commercial parcel at
Culver Drive and Walnut Avenue near
the Santa Ana Freeway and setting of
planning department priorities.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~
FINAL DAYS
'J 26thjH!lllJf/'Jfll1/ Sate
1973
CLOS&.
OUTS
MO'r'OllOLA non 10% ·~VER
C:OS"r
GIANT 181b.cap. WASHER
With 3 AUTOMATIC Cycles
I Fillll·fl1 Wnllint 1 Thrft ....,,/1W1
Systt"' '''* ""'"''""" #,, ~,..· • Tluff W1tt1 lftt:k • Ptrmanent Pr111
llHUDU
1 Acti¥11'<1 $o1k wutl
1hu1-Coold-
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COLD WATER,,CRUSHEO ICE Dr CUBES
WITHOUT OPENING THE DDORI
12"di19onll ADVENTURER
PERSONAL PORTABLE TV
l
~ :~:OWAVE OVEN
i:.p ADDRESS
We have the LOWEST PRICES ·
In the County on Admiral
Refrigerators
·-: .•• ~·l •·~~.J~·~! COMPARE
OUR PRICE .. .
.....
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WE TAKE
TRADE-INS
COMPACT
RIFRIGaATORI
Lowo1t 19rlco In
Or•nw• Co•nty
• DU'1e 369 88
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SAME AS CASH
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BUILT-IN DISHWASHER
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1Stortup to 05.7 Ill~
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VOL 66, NO. 151, 5 SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFOR~IA\ THURSDAY, MAY'. 31, 1~73 TEN CENTS ~----~ ........ ~..---~~~~~~~~~~----~~------------...... --------------------------~--~~~----~~~-------------------1 I
Skylab Periled by Two Major POwer Failures
.. ;i
HOUSTON (UPI) -Two new power
failures struck America's orbiting Skylab
today. They forced major flight · plan
revisions and added urgency to b<ild
plans for a spacewalk to free a jammed
solar cell wing and double the space sta-
tion's dwindling electricai supply_
'1be lat.est troubles cost Skylab
another 6 percent of its limited power
supply -making a total of 12 percent
apparently lost permanently, and robbing
the 100-ton space station of any margin
for absorbing future losses without
serious mission impact.
In aQditlon, another 24 percent of the
station's electrical batteries . shut down
temporarily. This placed a heavy load on
the remaining batteries, depleting them
and forcing reduced operations today to
provide time for recharging.
There w.as never a threat to the safety
of Charles "Pete" ·Conrad, Joseph P.
Kerwin and Paul J. ·weitz.
But mission control canceled an im-
portant earth resources survey originally
scheduled for today and said the scope of
all such surveys plaMed by the crew
'Would probabJy be recluced.
The problems occurred after Skylab
pointed its nose earthward Wednesday
afternoon and made man's first ex-
aminations from orbit of terrestrial
resources during a 17,114-mile per hour
sweep from Utah past Mexico and
Brazil's Am87JOO Basin to the farmlands
of Colombia.
Changing the space station's position
forced it to switch from its good solar
cell . electricat generators to batt-ery
power because its solar cells no longer
were facing the sun. Engineers said this
maneuver triggered a chain of events
that producecf the problems.
Flight director Neil H u t c h i n s o n ,
meeting with reporters in a midnight
news cpnference at the Johnson Space
Center in Houston, said engineers still
did not fully.undentand the failures.
"1bere's going to be a lot of ell8ineer-
ing analysis dooe tonight," he said.
WJth the latest electrical failure,
Hutchins<Jn. said, Skylab's problems in-
clud~ "three or four biggies that we're
chasirig 8nd a myriad of little ones."
'lbe other "biggies" included recurring
difficulties with one of the space station's
-stablfu:ation gyroscopes, the failure of a
telescope the astronaut$ tried to use
Wed!lesday to pbotograph the Milky Way ,
and an overheated cabin .
Among· the little problems was one
reported earlier in the day by Conrad -
a dripping cold water fa~t in Skylab's
kitchen. Conrad said "it's obviously got a
bad 0-ring in it" and asked that time for
some orbital plumbing repairs be
scheduled soon.
But despite their problems, Hutchinson
said, the astronauts had a very suc-
cessful sixth day in space. They shot pic-
tures of flames streaming two million
miles out from the sun, and tested
themselves for motion sickness by whirl-
ing in a device like a barber chair.
6th Suspect Held
Plwne Case Figure Seized in Mesa
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. n.thr Pllet Steff
One more suspect in an alleged armed
robbery ring :accused of 15 Southern
California holdups -some engineered
over the t~lephone by the unseen
Telephone Bandit -was captured in
Ci>sta Mesa Wednesday night.
The arrest ' of William F. Rounds, 26,
occurr~ dqring an 8 p.m. stakeout at an
apartment building in the 500 block of
Victoria Street, · according· to Detective
Sgt. Sam Corde~. ·
Rounds, a transient, was booked into
..orange County Jail on armed tobbery
charges, joining five other alleged prin-
cipals in . the novel case featuring ex-
tortion-type threats of shooting arid bomb·
ing.
Criminal complaints were being issued
this morning naming th" six arrestees on
cluJrges of ,~ed. robbery ~ -' the ·· ... ~::&--·· . ~· At l"i'° ' ·~· · ~. ·~jil '&lmi , ' tent to · Wlt'fi· I
'·· .. ~-.-4'icala. 18, _ 55 Victorli St., Costa ~~is~ ol@ntidi• pl~ bomb t6at ~·•.'1 in the" :toof ot The
SfzZler steak house in Huntington· Beach
tl1ree> days atter it was robbed.
THERE15 AtfoTAER . PAJlrtttt.G THAT LOQ"S !.ll(S .THJ$ IN LON~ WH"'°' l,S REAL? ~
Worlc:,S ppo11clly Tbat<of'-U. · •dhl.l'lcl Ga•tan, WH Given· to Uguna BUch Arl M um ·
Two Paintings Identical
Discovery in Magazine Startles Laguna Cur.atOl'
By 'JACK CHAPPELL
Of 1111 D1llY P'Uot Steff
Just imagine owning a valuable. 19th
Century painting, and . while. leafing
through a magazine, you see an identical
painting offered at auction.
"We've already started to . investigate
the whole thing," said Tom Enman.
curator of the Laguna Beach Art
Musewn. .
The painting is "l"lln and Fright" by
the Italian artist Gaetano Chierici (11138-
1921).
The Laguna Beach Art Museum was
given its painting of Fun and Fright
about a year ago by Ruth Briskin of
Laguna Hills. At the time it was valued
at $1S,OOO.
Enman while perusing a copy o(
CoMoisseur recently spied the identical
painting in an advertisement f o r
. ·Christie's of Loodon May art auctiorl.
"I immediately wrote to Christie's. and
. asked fqr their catalogue," Eilman said.
The painting was sold by Christie's for·
t •
Haldeman Nixes Cove~
. .
Involvement in Bugging
WAsHINGTON (UPI) -H. R.
Haldeman Insisted today·that "at no time ·
did I, in any way, ·direct, suggest, or
participate in any coverup of the-
Watergate inve.sfigl!tl.on."
Haldeman, wtio resigned April 30 a:f
White House chief of staff, issued what
he maracterlzed -as 'the categorical
denial to reporters after testifying for
nearly three hours at a closed' meeting of
the Senate slibcommittee on intelligence
operatioos.
The subcommitee chairman, Sen. John '
...
I • l '
CIA oper~ons might . be ~promised
by an -wirestricted· Fl31 ·inv~$tigatloo in
MeJico of some funds:f(lr :Ni~on's re-elec-
tion campaign. .
Some of· those "18undered" funds
attei bejng transfeil'ed through a Mex•
ican~ 'bank, apparenUy were used to fi-
nllh~ the Watergate plot. ·
-----· l ••
9,500 guineas, about $25,000 the day of the
auction.
The two paintings are oC the same size,
28 'inches by 41 inches.
Judging from photos in th!! Christie's
catalogue there are small differences in
the painting's perspective, in the smile of
the boy, the rag hanging on the door, in
the bellQws in front of the fireplace and
pots,> hanging on the wall.
"I'd like to investigate further to find
out more about it and find out if there is
a history to the paintings,'' Enman said.
The Laguna Beach Art Museum 1>flint-
ing was authenticated as to period it
: was painted by the' Los Angeles County
Art MllSeum, Enman said. .
The Christfe's painting was signed and
dated 1874.
The Laguna painting is not, however,
Erunan notes that the museum's work
had been restored, and that the signature
and date may have been lost in the
restbratlon.
He .Said the artist Chierici's paintings are ".i:ollectible" and are commonly sold
lot between $15,000 and $35,000.
Chierici is of the Italian salon school of
painting in which each work · was
carefully designed and set down. "They
labored o~er their canvas," Enman said.
Tile FBI entered the case .as a result of
that blast which ahattered the dinner
llOl,l1' for scores of patrons, none of whom
was injured by some lucky quirk of fate.
Detective. George • Wilson -ironically
-conv.IDced tbe alleged bomber to come
to police headquarters and surrender
him!elf by:-pbone after developing in-
fonnati°'1 on .&be Uleplalne-Bandit case.
Investlgarot"s . ~ this ~ that
<qnge CountY 'ClejJllty dlstribt attcrneys
. issuing tile compla.lnts are urging that
$50,000 bail be set to keep the defendants
in jail. '
Besides Alcala, they include Paul C.
LaJoie, 18, also of 525 Victoria St., Costa
Mesa; Todd B. C!lappel.ow, 18, of 18151
YellOWBtone Drive, Costa Mesa, plus John
P. Diener, 19, and Jeffrey D. Welch, both
transients.
·A· seventh youth was actually in police
custody this morning for questioning in
connection with the pickup of Rounds
about 8 p.m. Wednesday.
His name was not teleased because in-
vestigators said he was actually just de-
tained at that point and not yet facing
any specific charge,
During what gradually grew to a three-
week reign of terror to s om e
restaurateurs and market operators in
West Orange County, the notorious
Telephone Bandit struck seven times.
A mystery caller woold wam the
manager who answeret. the phone that a
high-powered rifie was pointed at his
head and a bomb inside the premises
would be detooated if he failed tO turn
over the mone,
Cash was placed at a pre-arranged
drop point outside the establ,lsbment and
picked up by what appears to have been
an accomplice of the actual caller.
TWO MORE BREAK-INS
HINTED-Story, P•ge 4 Coast Panels' Power Told
city" don't undegrtancl what the new law says. ,
The NewpOrt Beach City Council Tues-
day ·criticlZed the denial of three pennlt
applicatiCWI$ in the Newport Beach area
by the oommission. Those requests by
developer Dana Smith met zoning codes
of the city.
Freedman sald tbat "until it is ruled
otherwise by a court, the co~
, cau overrule local decisions if they :find a
·project would have ' ' a d vet 1 e en-
vlromn tal effects."
Mrs. Roeener, wbD lives oo Lido· 1 ,
objectl!d b'ef ote the • meeting · t
'C quoted cotrectly by the clty
cll.
·.i
~
Federal charges of intent to injure with
a destructive advice were created after a
wave of U.S. terrorist acts in 1968 and
1969 and could send defendant Alcala to a
federal penitentiary for a minimum of
five years.
Investigators say information that led
to the series of arrests was developed by
the Los Angeles Police Department's
Foothill Division a'tld grew out of a
burglary case.
A pistol taken as evidence was similar ·
to one used in 11 string or holdups believ-
ed to have netted around $3,000 In total.
. NEW DIGITAL TIMEPIECE RUNS ON COMPUTER CIRCUITRY
At Hughes in Newport, Consumer Applications of SpaC9 Technology
Wa-teh oi Fnt·ore
Newport Company Producing It
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of 1111 Dlll't' Piiot lllff
Hughes Aircraft in Newport Beach is
producing a r e v o l u t i o n 11, r y new
wristwatch with no mechanical workings,
no hands and no dial. It wi:l be oo the
market this summer, company officials
say.
Hughes experts believe the new
timepiece will eventually spell the end to
mechanical watch i n d u s t r I e s , con-
ventional watch repair and lucrative
worldwide distribution of watch parts by
Swiss and Japanese companies.
The computer-age watch is totally elec·
tronic, displays the precise time in hours,
minutes and seconds and the date in a
flash of lighted digits which appear on an
otherwise plain, black face.
Top management and m a r k e t i n g
personnel at the Harbor Area plant, 500
Superior Ave., said the watch has
already been sold to a number of major
companies and claims other are clamor-
ing' fOl' the new design. ,
"We will put together the electronic
package and then put it into cases
designed and supplied by ·customers who
buy the workings,'' said W i 11 i a m
Weakland, associate division manager of
the HugheS Microelectronics Products
Division.
Weakland said Hughes will not market
the watch lUlder its own name, nor will it
form a subsidiary firm to market and
manufacture the watch. He would not
reveal which companies have bought the
watch.
"We are in the electronics bualne!IS,"
he said. "We're not out to make watches
to sell."
The Hughes watch 1& tbe most
technologically advanced member of a
growjng lamily of electronic watches
already on .the market.
But the Hughes product utilizes an en·
tirely different internal system than
those now available. makilig it the moat
efficient and most accurate -sup-
posedly within ooe to three minutes per ·
~ -In the SOO.year history of
watches.
Marketing Manager William S. ~kells
said the ·watch· represents the natural
outgrowth of sophisticated mllltary ~
puter technology that Hughe! baa
specialized in for years.
The watch design eliminates all mov-
ing, wearing parts and instead of a
mechanical balance wheel -or tuning
fork in some watChes -it uses precise.
unvarying vibrailims of a tiny quartz
crystal to tick off its minutes and
seconds.
The crystal pulses more than 500,000
times per second and that rapid beat is
cut down to one per second by a tiny elec·
(See NEW WATCH, Page %)
Oraage
Weather
The weatherlady sees more
.drizzle in the air for Friday, par-
tially clearing in the afternoon
hours to hazy sunshine. HJPs af
the beaches 65 riaing to 75 Inland.
Overnight lows in the mi~
INSIDE TODAY
Swede Sa1'a{}e is alive today.
The Santa Ana race car· driver
survived what track veterans
called the worst single-car crash
in lndianapoli& 600 hiltorv
W ednesclav. Gordon Jehncock
went on to win the abbreviated,
twice-delayed race. See Sports.
Page ~5.
I
. t
A roajority of Huntington Beach
rMliMllts contacted by the city ap-
parenily favor the purchase 0 r
Meadowlark Golf Course to preserve its
trees, grass~ open space.
nie· city h¥ llellt 1,000 ~ to bomea and apartments picked •t random
by the finance department computer.
Four questions are listed on the card
concerning Meadowlark.
The first question : "Would you favor
buyitlg Meadowlark Golf Course for
perpetual use as a golf course and open
spaoe?"
City infonnation Officer Bill Reed said
today 39' postcards have beet;t returned
with 212 favoring purcnase o r
Meadowlark and 82 opposed.
QUesUon two asks if purchase ought to
be made with bonds, or paid by property
tu:es. Question three recommends a
combination of bonds and fees charged
golfers using the course.
Reed said he hasn't tabulated those
questions but at a glance most residents
apPl!fentiy prefer the combination pay-
ment.
The JaSt question simply asks how the
resident wouJd use Meadowlark, as a
golfer; .(or open space, or not at all. .
"Most people seem to /ust enjoy 1t as
open 1pace, just having t there," Reed
said.
The information officer said more
cards would be received this week and
Monday, with final results presented to
the city council Monday night.
The post-Card survey was suggested by
Mayor Jerry Matney, who wanted some
method to tap the public pulse regarding
Meadowlark.
Councilmen are in a quandary over the
96.S.acre country club.
If the city doesn't. make a sound offer
on the-country club by July 8, It wlll
become the property of s, and S.
Construction Company. 1be land Is wned
R-1, for single family housing.
Councilmen have made It clear they
don't want that to happen, but the $4
million price tag on the course is the hur-
dle in the city's path.
City Admlnlstrator David Rowlands
frankly admits he doesn't yet know
where the money can be found.
A bond .election Is one possibility,
which was the reason for Matney's
postcard survey idea.
Seal Beach Not
Aft,er Annex -
Of Sunset Area
Seal Beach city councilmen say they
wil! not annex SUnset Beach and will not
stand In the way of any plans Huntington
Beach may have to absorb the seaside
community. ·
The council decision is a departure
from earlier policy. Seal Beach Had COO·
sidered Sunset Beach part of Its sphere
or influence -unincorporated territory
that a city Indicates it may want to an-
nex.
Both Huntington Beach and Seal Beach
had considered the Sunset Beach area
under their spheres of influence.
Huntington Beach has no immediate
plans to ann_ex the 115 acres, located ad.
jacent to Huntington Harbour, said Dick
Harlow, executive assistant to City
Manager David Rowlands.
"Our city council has no plans right
now to annex the land," he said. "But
since it is in our sphere of Influence, It
may one day come into the city."
Four years ago Huntington Beach at-
tempted to annex Sunset Beach but the
plan was killed by protests from Seal
Beach and landowners in Sunset Beach.
The annexation of Sunset Beach to Seal
Beach would not enhance the city, said
Seal Beach City Manager Dennis
Courternarche.
"Geographically we are already quite
spread out," he said. "}3ringing in Sunset
Beach may present more problems than
it is worth. There is no malice in our
decision , though."
OIANel COAST Ha
DAILY PILOT
Tht Orange Cout DAILY PILOT_ with which
It comblntd-lht News-Pren. I• Put>•-br
,... Oranot Coast Publllhino Compeny. S~·
rate edl1'on1 art publlshfld, Monday through
Frkl•Y. for Cotti Mttl, Ntwport Beach,
Huntington 8eecti/flount1ln V1lley, Laguna
11-h. lrvlne/Saddltbock and Son Clemente/
San Juan CIPl1tr1no. A 1lngl1 reQlon1f
odltlon la pobllallod S•turd•l'S and Sundeya.
ri.. prlnclPol 1>Vbllal>lno ptont I• tt lJQ wn1
••v llrMI, Colt• -.. Ctntom1.. nlK.
R•bert N. Weecl
Pt'H°ldMlt •nd Pllbllsller
J1ck R. Curley
v;ce P'rnldetlt Ind Gtnerel Menoer
Tlto111H Kttril
Editor
TliomH A. M urphi •• MaMgln; Editor
ci,.,1" H. 01 IUchud P. Nill
1t1nt Ml Int Editors
T •rrv C •Ill•
W11t Or•noe C t-, l!dltor
Halltlllft• OMce
17175 IHch lou ..I Mallin; Allclrua: P.O. lox 790, 92641
. <>"-~ L-1-: 222 l'-1 ..........
C..I• M-: ~ Wttt ley Street Newport .... ell: UU N-' Bovltvud
-C-1•! 3llS Not1h II Cimino • ..,
t ......... (714t '42-4121
. a-lf!M ~-'4Z.H71
-~Or .... C-,~laa 14to1Jl0
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tfllorlol INl!llr 9f -·--..,., llt rwndwdt wt-.,.. .. , .,... rn-OI aprrteM -· ~ ~ ......... lllld ., c.t• Mao,
C:.lllenlll. ""'°""'"" Ill' center SUI -trr 11\1 mall A.11 "*'llllYI fllllltlty
-tntllilll• UM rnontflW.
Thursday, May 31, 1973
i:-.llY Piiaf Slaff ,_
New Eagle
Huntington Beach High School
senior Chuck Cady, 18, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Cady, 606
9th St., has earned Scouting's
highest rank -the eagle. He
is a member of Huntington
Beach Troop 1.
Newport Asks
Help P~ying
For Tourists
Newport Beach is going to find out if
Orange County and the State of
California will help pay the cost of caring
for the tourists who visit the city each
summer.
Councilmen, reacting to a report that
says the city spends $1.5 a year to handle
the swollen summer population, have in·
structed City Manager Robert L. Wynn
to look al three potential revenue
sources.
He will meet with State Sen. Dennis
Carpenter and Assemblyman Robert
Badham, both Newport B e a ch
Republicans, to see what state aid is
available.
He also wlll meet with Orange County
Harbor, Beaches and Parks Director
Kenneth Sampson to see what county aid
la available (the county now pays $98,000
to help defray lifeguard costs).
Sunset Beach
Parking Permits
Get C.Ounty Eye
Prevailed upon by Sunset Beach
residents who want 24-hour parking
privileges on the new county beach park·
ing lot In the community, the Orange
County Board of Supervisors Tuesday
decided to try annual parking permits for
eight months during the "off season."
Residents will be able to purchase 24-
hour permits for the period from Oct. 1
to May 30 for about $54.
Supervisor David L . Baker of Garden
Grove suggested the compromise solution
on a trial basis after a spokes,man for
Sunset Beach residents explained their
problems.
Bill Bodenlos, vice presidenl of the
Sunset Beach Community Association of·
fered a petition signed by more than 600
residents requesting annual parking
"open to anyone."
Baker's motion calls for a limit of 300
permits which can be Issued beginning in
October. There are but 674 parking
spaces on the narrow beach parking area
being built by the county between North
and South Pacific avenues between
Anderson Street and Warner Avenue.
Bodenlos assured board members that
U1ere would not be 600 people seeking an·
nual parking permits. There were about
200 perople who rented spaces before the
lot was built, he stated. "In addition,
most of our residents are working people
and the rented space privilege would not
be exercised in lhe daytime when there
are more beach users."
H u1itington Aide
Says Forecasts
Will Be Revised
A six-year budget projection which
forescasts an $18.8 million deficit in Hun·
lington Beach will be sharply revised,
says City Administrator David Rowlands.
The six-year financial plan was
scheduled for a public hearing Tuesday,
along with the 1973-74 budget, but city
councilmen granted Rowlands an ad·
dltional three to four months to revise It.
"Outside of the message itself, I'm not
too proud of this particular document,"
Rowlands observed. "The figures are too
large, out of balance. It will be rework-
ed."
Rowlands explained that the city staff
had to put It together hurriedly and the
$18.8 million represented the city's
operating cost at Its highest potential, not
Its actual potential.
"At least now we're seeing how much
Ln debt we could go," commented Coun-
cilman Henry Duke. "This certainly
gives us an Idea of the future."
Councilmen agreed fully with Row·
lands' request for more time to develop
the six-year plan.
The mystery black beetle' bualDI
bathers on Newport and Huntington
Beaches for the past three days has been
identified by a UC Irvine scient!St d a·
"predaclous gnxmd beeUe."
d
3 Guar
PHILADEIPHIA (UPI) - A convicted
eop tiller and u lamate awaiting trial
on the same offense mbhed the warden
and deputy warden to death and injured
three guards today during a meeting in
the warden's office at Holmesburg prison,
authorities reported. The _two convicts
were wounded and tubdued by guards.
Mayor Frank L. Rizzo, the city's
fonner police commissioner, and police
e uty · Sia .... · .....
cements rushed to the n0rtheast
Philadelphia prison immediately. En
route, Rizzo radioed Police Com·
missioner Joseph F. O'Neill to "go in
there with clubs and all the force we
need to put them back In their cells.''
The outbreak in the office of Warden
Patrick Curran was ,quelled swiftly, but
not before Curran and Deputy Warden
&bert Fromhold were stabbed to death
one rs
and prison Capt. Leroy ".l'aylor and two
guard! were Injured. The suspects; .Jos-
eph Bowen and Fred Burton, were Sl!tzed.
First reports indicated that Bowen and
Burtoo told guards they had a complaint
and received a pass to see Curran. The
warden was stabbed first durlng the
meeting, and Fromhold and Taylor were
stabbed during the ensuing struggle.
Gordon Marth, acting curator of UCI's
Museum ·of Sy'stemie SlolOO, uys the
beetles are generaDy hannles:i to
humans -although they may bite if pro-
voked -and sboUld live only two weeks
at the most.
Congregating by the thousands earlier
this week on the hlgh tkle BUrf line of
Newport and Huntington Beaches, the
beetles disturbed many bathers, ac·
cording to lifeguards.
Parks Commission Okays
$340,000 Project Grant
Taylor was reported in good condition
at Nazareth Hospital. The two prisoners
were hospitalized ·at Phi 1 ad e Ip hi a
General Hospital with undetermined in-
juries.
Burton had been convicted of the fatal
August, 1970 shooting of Fairmount Park
Police Sgt. Frank Von Colin, who was
killed at a guardhouse desk. Bowen was
awaiting trial in the slaying of patrolman
Joseph Kelly in the city's Roxboro sec-
tion, also in 1970.
However today lifeguards at both
beaches said their numbers seemed to be
declining.
Marsh said the beetles, which hatch
from eggs laid in gravel and under logs,
may have developed from la.rva sta,es
rapidly because of the recent warmmg
trend.
He noted that the insects which come
from the genus Calosoma, are generally .
beneficial because they eat the eggs of
other Insects that are more hannful to '
humans.
Occupational
Hazard?
ROANOKE, Va. (AP) -A form-
er dancer who claimed her career
was destroyed because surgical ad-
hesive used to affix pasties burned
her 'breasts has lost a $25,000 suit
against the adhesive company.
Hustings Court Judge Ernest W.
Ballou Wednesday ruled in favor
()f Davol Rubber Company of Prov-
idence, R.I. _ .
· Tella Jean Roberts, 42, who lives ·
in Florence, S.C., said it took nine
months for her breasts to heal
atfer she used the adhesive Oct. 26,
1966.
She said "It burned like fire,"
and that she never danced in pas-
ties again because she was afraid
of breast cancer.
A tentative grant of $340,000 has been
approved by the Orange CQ\mty Parks
Commission for development \~f the 40-
acre Edison Park in southelHWl-
tington Beach.
Final approval must come fr the
Board of Supervisors, but parks ,com-
missioners have recommended the Hwl·
tington Beach project as one of several
park Items to be funded from '1 millibn
in federal revenue sharing.
Huntington Beach submlt-ted three
other requests which were turned down
for the first increment. City officials ask·
ed for:
From Page l
NEWWATCll • •
Ironic component that makes the Hughes
watch unique.
The tiny part that comprises the heart
of the watch is a chip of ceramle one-
tenth-of·an-inch across and scientlfcally
imprinted with more electronics and wlr·
ing than Is in the average television set.
"The chip has more than 1,500
transistors on it," said Eckess ..
1be average hand-size transistor radio
has less than 20 full-sized transistors.
The chip -known In the electronics in-
dustry as a Complementary Symmetry
-Metal Oxide Semiconductor (C-MOS)
feeds the ultrastable output of the
vibrating crystal into tiny lighted digits
under the blank crystal of the watch. '======================-~__:___..:.....
Curran had been assigned six.months ....,n:ro,ooo to help buy 20 acres in the ago to Holmesburg, a city prison whose
third phase of the central park. inmates have either been convicted or
-$397,500 for acquisition and develop-~crimes or are awaiting sentencing or
ment of Adams Park, next to the old trial, following the removal of Warden
Newland mansion. Joseph McGowen during a hunger strike
-$17,500 to help build bicycle trails. last December.
Dick Harlow, executive assistant to the The prison was the scene of .a major
city administrator, said those items may riot July 4, 1970. That fiol was quelled by
be Junded in future revenue sharing allot-police Jed by then-Commissioner lliµo.
men ts.
The $340,000 county grant for Edison
Park is not as much of a boost as it
looks. Harlow said the county money will
essentially replace · a state grant of
$325,000 which the city apected, but did
not receive.
Total cost of building Edison Park, in-
cluding construcrtlon of a large com-
munity center, is about · $1.2 million.
Much of the work has already been ac-
complished; and Harlow said he expects
the park to be finished by December or
January.
Huntington Beach has already been
granted $230,000 by county supervisors
for work in the central park. -
The $1 million in grants considered
Tuesday by county parks commissioners,
was an excess share whict. supervisors
told the commission to divide.
Edison Park is on Magnolia S;treet,
a~ss from Edison High School. It will
be the city's second community park,
after Murdy Park.
The park utilizes some land wider the
Southern California Edison Company
easement. Park developers hope to fill It
with trees and small trails, in addition to
the standard picnic and playground
areas.
' Valley Receiving
Revenue Sharing
Fund of $98,000
The. city of Fountain Valley has ·been
notified that a. check for '9&,000 in federal
revenue sharing funds will be delivered
for the first six m!/flths of this year.
' According to city officials, the money
is earmarked for parks, recreation and
beautification projects. Most of It will go
to the $1.25 million recreation complex ·
the city ili building at Mlle Square Park.
Because of the nutnber of variables in· -
volved In i:omputing each city's share,
Howard Stephens, city finance director,·
said he does not know what their share ·
for the second six months of the year will
be.
He noted that the city received $214,000
in 1972, but he explained that that sum
included an initial payment in addition to
the two six-month payments, so it Is pos-
sible that the 1973 entitlements will not
be as high: -
FINAL oav·s
..
J 26thJ_n11i1JerJar,q S(lle . -.
1973
CLOSE-
OUTS
~
1001 ROii.
_ 19 OVER •
GIANT 181b.c1p. WASHER
With J AUTOMATIC Cycles
COLD WATER. CRUSHED ICE or CUIES
WITHOUT OPENING THE OOOAI
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withC1111 .. Dtt,t-TAKE •• r. 1 f,...., Hehln, It
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wftchtn of u' to 140
m1nvtn dryil'!t lime
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1nd 1hum
12"di11onll ADVENTURER
PERSONALPORTAILE TV
~ :~:OWAVEOVEN
~ADDRESS
JET 70 PHO~
DRAW I NG ...... J~U~NE~""•fi!'!N'!!D-----
YOU NEED HOT BE PRESENT
TO WIN.
COMPARE
OUR PRICE
WI TAKE
TRADE-INS
O•UTO 36988
WE DELIVER
WE SERVICE
WE INSTALL
90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH
SUPER·OUIET Z CYtLE
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BUil T-IN DISHWASHER
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EASY·LOADING COMPACT
PORTABLE DISHWASHER
• 2 Level Thoro·Wash
• Ouitt Power-Flo Wtsh e lu~t-ln f
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• f•c ... flo s 12300. ' Unicaupl1
• T•ff Tu-
lntt1i11 -
lllG SPACE ·SAVING 40$ lb.
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$11 Mi1Ji(ln
OC Transit
Grant Bared
. O>nfirmatiOll of an $11 million grant by
federal officials to greaUy expand the
Orange Qiunty Rapid Transit District
fleet . and operations came from Sen.
John V. TUnney (R-Calif.) in Washington
Wednesday.
The approval by the Urban Mass
Transit Administration came after Sen.
Tunney . appealed to the agency urging
that funds _ be provided to reduce county
public transpi>rtaUon problems.
He said in a letter to the panel that
such actlon · would help balance the
availability of low<Ost mobility, plus
alleviating related problems such as
hea"l'.~lc ·and exhaust pollution.
Largest Individual portion of the $11
million allotment will be the purchase
price of 162 new buses, air conditioned
velficles ~tjng 40 to 45 passengers each.
The fund will also provide 195 locked-
box fare containers to guard against
armed robberies of bus drivers at slack
hours ~ their buses are carrying few
passengers. .
Buses will also be equipped with two-
way radios, with 205 to be ordered.
Remaining equipment or work to be
financed with the federal funds includes
land for a headquarters site, a com-
munlcaUom base station, 12 service
vehicles, construction of maintenance
and service facilities, plus miscellaneous
office and maintenance shop equipment.
"I am dellghted that Orange C'A>unty
will receive. these funds and I am happy
to have joined the effort to bring such a
far-sighted bus system to Orange coun-
ty," Sen. Tunney said.
He added that the county's rapid
transit district bas been responsive to
needs of its urban populace and that this
is reflected in community support.
H~er Dies in Nepal
KATMANDU, Nepal (AP) -A
Czechoslovak expedition has abandoned
its attempt to scale Mt. Makalu, the
world's fifth highest peak, after one
member was fatally Injured In a fall .
HHH Backer:
'No Cont;est'
NEW YORK (AP) -John L.
Loeb, senior partner of a stock
broterage, pleaded ''no contest"
today to federal charges of unlaw-
ful, indirect contributions to the
1972 presidential nomination cam-
paign of Seo. ·Hubert H. Humphrey
(D-Mlnn.)
Loeb faces up to three years in
prison and $3,000 in fines.
He insisted be bad not known that
$48,000 In campaign donations made
through nine employes of Loeb,
Rhoades and Company, whom he
reimbursed, were illegal.
He is to be sentenced in Man-
hattan federal court.
Younger Rules
Lobby Ordinance
Constitutional
By JACK BROBACK
Of Ille O.ltt ,..., llatf
An Orange County ordinance regulating
lobbyists which never became law has
been ruled CC>nstitutional by Attorney
General Evelle Younger.
The Board of Supervisors last Sept. 12
approved the lobbyist ordinance by a 3 to
2 vote but at the same time asked County
Counsel Adrian Kuyper to check the con-
stitutionality of some provisions.
Three weeks later the board voted 4 to
1 to rescind the ordinance, two days
before it would have taken effect.
Kuyper had told board members that
the proposed law would have required·
persons who. actually were not lobbyists
in any sense of the word to register and
divulge their expemes and who theJ
represented.
The original ordinance was propMed
by Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa
Ana after be was indirectly accused of
involvement in the Mlle S q u a r e
agricultural lease scandal last summer.
It would have required almost all
pesons appearing before the Board of
Supervisors to list their employers and
file monthly ~ accounts. One in-
terpretatioo of the law was that it would
have even required news reporters
covering board sessions to register.
LA Star Obscenity, Fraud
Trials Slated lor July 23
Separate trials Have been ordered for
fraud and oMcenity allegations filed
against iiie Los Angeles Star ln Santa
Ana mtmicipal Court action which does
not rule out the pos&bility that both sets
of charges may be aired in one oourt ac-_
tioo.
Judge Paul Mast indicated Wednesday
that he would have no objection to
amalgamation· provided lawyers on both
sides can reach agreement well before
the July 23 trial date he set for both
cases ••
Star operators and owners named by
tbe district attorney's office in both ac-
tions pleaded innocent Wednesday after
Jlldge MaSt overruled a series of pretrial
objections filed by the defense.
Star editor Paul Eberle, the IIlgh Class
Publishing Copipeny of Los Angeles and
40 vending ~chines in Or.an«e c.oun-
ty" are among the defendants listed by
the prosecution in both adioos.
The newspa~r-is accused in the fraud
action of publishing an article that was
characterized by District Attorney Cecil
Hicks as "an open invitation to defraud
tbe Pacific. Telephone Company."
The 'article, "Call Me Anytime,
Telephone Credit Code for 1973," analyz-
ed the system used by the telephone
company to log and record credit card
calls.
fficks claims that use of · the in-
fonnation contained in that article of
April 11 may. already have cost many
Orange COunty subscribers millions of
dollars.
Obscenity allegatioM against the
newspaper are based oo a. number of
stories and advertisements carried by
the Star prior to April 11 and are in no
way linked to the fraild cbarge, "defense
lawyers have pointed out.
..
e
Pentagon
Cuts Raids
lnCamhodlli
BULLETIN
W ASBINGTON (UPI) -1be Senate
voted 13 to 11 this afternoon to cut eff
all fuels for die bombing of Camhedla,
paUlag both bouel of Congress oa ree-
ord aplnst eentlnaaUon of lllle air war
U..i bs raged there l1nee the llldodllna
~Jan.ZS.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon
said today it curtailed B5Z bombing raids
over Cambodia by one-third, in part be-
cause Congress has not acted on a re-
quest to transfer money from one mili-
tary aCCOUDt to another.
As the Senate prepared to vote on a
move denying the Administration any
funds for Cambodian bombing, the Pen-
tagon disclosed a number of cutbacks it
said wer necessary because of the de-
lay in transfer authority. (Related story,
Page 4.)
An amendment, by Sen. Thomas F.
Eagleton (D-Mo.), to a $3.6 billion sup-
plemental military appropriations bill
would deny any funds for U.S. hostilities
in Cambodia or Laos. The amendment,
scheduled for a vote later today, is al-
most certain to pass the Senate.
Also tied up in the supplemental ap-
propriations bill is the $345 million re-
quest in transfer authority.
Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Frled-
beim' said today dooial of transfer au-
thority would mean delaying •and cancel-
ling promotions of some Navy and Air
Foree men, killing r~nlistrnent bonuses,
delaying some military transfers, early
release from active dnty for some Navy
and Air Force men and officers and
holding up ship repairs through the end
of June.
Despite the reduction in B52 flights,
Friedheim said there would be no re-
duction in the number of targets hit.
Asked if the same job could be done
under budgetary pressure with fewer
flights, Friedheim said putUng more
B52s in the air each day had only given
the Air Ferce "greater fl.exl.bility."
"We're just doing it In a little differ-
ent way," Friedtteim said at a morning
briefing.
About 200 big B5Z bombers based in
Guam and Thailand have been bombing
Cambodia for almost three months. One
flight bf_ one plane from Guam costs an
estimatea $31 ,000; from Thailand, about
$18,000.
UP'I T11tPllOte
IT CAME FROM OUTER SPACE? SCIENTIST WONDERS
Dr. Tom Gray Examines Metal Sample From Texas 'Space Ship'
Airship Real?
1897 Crash Recalled by Oldster
AURORA, Tex. (UPI) - A 91-year-old
woman says she remembers the night on
April 19, 1B97 when her parents went to
the spot where an airship crashed into
Judge Proctor's well and later when the
.pilot was buried in the community
cemetery.
"That crash certainly caused a lot of
excitement," Mary Evans said Wednes-
day . "Many people were frightened.
They didn't know what to eii:pect. That
was years before we had any regular
airplanes or other kind of airsh).ps."
The Wright Brothers made their
historic flight at Kitty Hawk, N.C. in
December, 1903.
Some believe that the airship that
crashed at the Texas well was from
another planet~ U Indeed such an airship
exists. Mrs. Evans has no doubts.
·, 'I was i>nly •about 15 at the time and
had all but forgotten the incident until it
appeared In the newspapers recently,"
she said. "We were living in Aurora at
the time but my mother and father
wouldn 't let .me go· with them when they
went up to the crash site at Judge Proc-
tor's well.
· "When they returned home, they told
me how the airship had exploded. The
pilot was torn up and killed in the crash.
The men of the town who gathered his
· remains said he was a small man and
buried him that same day in Aurora
Cemetery."
The UFO advocates have combed the
Aurora area with metal detectors, radia-
tion meters and scientific devices in re-
cent months in an attempt to get some
tangible evidence to file with a court
order tp .exhume the bady .. of the alleged
pilot. Pieces of the metal taken from the
area have been sent to various scientists
and metallurgists for ezantination.
A physics professor at North Texas
State University tested one piece and said
h f it was unusual because If was 75 percent Mossier T e t Fish.er Hooks Body iron but lacked ·many of the properties common to iron. The prof~s:;or, Dr. Tom
· ZEPHYR COVE, Nev. (AP) - A Lake Gray, said it was not ·magnetic and was Report a Hoax .. ~. Tiihoe fisherman has told authorities shiny and soft inStead of dull and brittle
here he booked and pulled up the body of like iron.
NaderMov--
Nuke Plant
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The San
Onofre nuclear generaUng plant Is one of
20 that consumer advocate Ralph Nader
seeks to close by means of a suit rued to-
day in federal court, claiming they
threaten the lives of millions of
Americans.
In a suit against the Atomic Enero
Commission, Nader and the Friends of
the Earth (FOE ), which claims 20,000
members, charged that the AEC has
violated tbe atomic energy act and ltll ·
own power-plant safety regulatlons.
Specifically, the~· charged the com-
mission with "illegality in continuing to
permit the operation of certain nuclear
power plants without requiring adequate
protectkm for the health and safety of
the public by way of effective and re-
quired safeguards against the con-
sequences of an 'uncontrolled Joss.of-coll-
ant accident' ... "
In San Diego, a spokesman for San
Diego Gas and Electric Company said if
the nuclear power plant at San Onofre
were shut down, "losing the 7.6 percent
of the energy in our system which it sup-
plied In lm would mean we would have ·
to make It up through our fossil fuel
plants.
''This would mean an increase of 1.S
million barrels of fuel oil annually.
Hopefully, this would come from our sup-
pliers."
The utility owns 20 percent ol the plmt.
"Yet the safety systems necessary to
prevent release of this radioactive
material into the environment are crude
and untested," FOE claimed.
Senne of the AEC's own scientists have
made cautionary statements about the
emergency core-cooling systems, but the
AEC contends that Its existing safety
criteria regarding such systems is 111f·
ficient.
An AEC spokesman said in a statement
that "While we have not yet studied the
petition we know of no basis for suspen-
ding operation of nuclear power plants.
"The commission presently has under
way a comprehensive public proceeding
to consider whether p r e 11 e n t re-
quirements for emergency core cooling
systems -. a backup safety syatem in
nuclear power plants -should be
modified in any way," he said.
"Friends of the Earth ls one of the
public participants in that ~
with full right.. to p-esent technical
evidence and to question the uperta of
AEC and other. participants."
Charles Robbins, president 'If the
Atomic Industrial Forum, said In t state-
ment that "a moratorium on mclear
power would deprive the nation of its
best hope for meeting energy demuds In
tne precarious decades to come."
"l-
Reward Out for MIAs lice a man while, fishing from a boat near "I don't mean by my co~ts to in-
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (Ae_) -Po. -here-. -Tracy Vincent told the Douglas dicat.e whether this is of terrestrial or ex-SAN DIEGO (AP) -Rewards----have labeled as· a hoax Candace. Mos,,Jer · bu h -~ Ganisoil.'s report last month that an·in-County sheriff's office he pulled the body traterrestnal origin, t t at the physics being offered in Vietnam, Laos and cam-
truder broke into her hotel bedroom and to within about eight feet of the boat of that much iron being not magnetic bodla for lnformaUon about Amerie&'l
stole $200,000 worth of jewelry. Tuesday before his line broke and the stirs my curiosity as a scientist," he servicemen misstng tn action, the como
"She was under the influence of pre-body sank back into the lake. said. maniter of U.S. Pacific forces says.
scribed -~sure to use that word, pre-------------------------------------·
scribed -drugs and we've dropped the
case as unfounded," Maj. W. R. Philbin
.said Wednesday.
In 1966 Mrs. Garnson and her nephew,
Melvin Lane Powers, were tried for the
murder of her wealthy husband, Jaaques.
. Mossier. A jury found them innocent.
Mrs. Garrison claimed April 26 that. an
intruder slipped into her hotel room here
and threatened to strangle her with a
ba1hroom towel ·before taking her· jewel-
ry.
I'
Forget Gas Hoard N9tion
It's Illegal to Store More Than a .Gallop, at Home _
By JOHN SCHADE County regulations require stOrage in
6t 111e 11e1rr ,.,.., 11•" · metallic containers With a p p r o v a 1
Anyone ~g about bqerding · guo-stantps. Plastic containers llJ'e not sp-
line to survive the current fuel shbrtage ~.ed hl:Cause of possible seam leakage.
bad better think again. San Cl te fir ..... _ ...... _ . Orange County and Its incorporated emen e '"'6'"' .. ""'' reqwre
cities have strict regulations governing al! gas ovet one gallon he stored un-
the storage of flammable liquids ·in ·the derground and pumped · by a remote
home. pump. Fire engineertoDon Hodgson said
Deputy Fire Marshal ·stan Boettcher . _anyone wanting to 11 re more than the
of the Orange County Fire Department gallim limit must obtain a permit which
..._ which serves all unincorporated areas requfres an exacting storage and building
In the county and seven cities, Including ~pection as well as a strong justifica-
tivlne and San Juan Capistrano .-said . · tiim for need .
peraooa can store up to one gallon 1be Costa Mesa fae department also
tJ. peoUne In their dwelling without a works under the 1971 Uniform Code. Fire
permit platoon commander Gary Golson says
Anr more than . one gallon requires a resident dwellers may store. • up to a
"rea need" permit in which the. fuel galR>n without a permit, but only 10
must be "absolutely necessary" for the gallons with a permit. ,
operation of the facility. Such a permit is Golson added that most permits were
hard to attain, Boettcher added. issued to businesses wit~ priyate dwell·
Boettcher laid ldany of the jUrl' in Ing .Inspection not a normal procedUre.
the home are caused t;y "the proper la&Uance of a permit depends on the
use ol guollne Jn clole proximit)' to ap-hazard posslbllity and how the fuel Is
pllan ~ a or " stared. Only safety approved metallic
Gasoline is especially d a n g e r o u s contalnen are permitted.
becaUll! Its fumes may crawl along the _ Fountain Valley Fire Marshal Floyd ~ and reach a flame, Boettcher did. . Warr &aid that gas up to one gallon does
("When Ignited," be added, "one pint ot not require permita for private dwelling .oaoUne P>Wer l.s equal to 10 stfcu of -storage. Fuel muat be 1n sealed, metallic
dVDIJDlte." . containers. Approved glaaa aiid pluUc
ty Nglllatloos are hued • contalnera are allowed, but not recom-
1'11 UDiform Fire <:ode fw the mended.
We t Coast. ·Most community f1re Warr attributed many of the fire in-
departments have lllelr own rulel b8led juries to perllODS using guoline to clean
on the code. grease off thetr garage ftoor and to fill-
•
h!g lawn mowers near pilot light flames.
Newport Beach Fire Captain Jim Top-
ping foun.d it "very unlikely that a permit
for more than one gallon in a -Owelling
would be issued."
Newport just completed a home in-
spectfon program in which residents re-
. quested a check of their dwellings, Top-
ping added. Though gasoline power
boating is a major part of Newport life,
no appreciable number of gas injuries
have been reported.
L(lguna Beach regulations come under
the 1967 revised fire code. A pennit is re-
quired for more than one gallon of gas
storage. Fire Manbel Jim Presson says
the storage of 55 gallons of diesel fuel in
specially approved upright shipping
druma plus pumps· have been approved,
but "regular gasoline, never." Presson
admits enforcement of private dwelling
requirements ls "tough."
The Huntington Beach code allows
single resldellt dwellings to store a gallon
of ·flammable liquids for maintenance
purpoees only. Fuels are prohibited in
apartments exCept for building maln-
teoaooe. Fire captain Roger Hosmer
says the department averages about one
aaollne fhle a JlM)llth, mCJBUy caused
'When the fuel is used f« non-fuel
}IW1IOlli!I.
"There Is no authority to check single
dwelling for vJolations except upon r.
qUlllt or obvious bazardS that are code
'
y our favorite decorator kere to assut you.
H.J.GAI\l\EfT fURNlfllRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
•
Open Mon.,
Thurs. & Fri. EvH.
' 2215 HARBOR. Bt.VD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF. ~~'"j-~~~~~' ,,,..__,
violations," he added . .....----------------------------------·-------•
.. ,,
LIAJL Y PILO I
Anyone Want
A Jet Airport?
WILD BWE VONDERS: The presi-
dent of Orange County's home-grown
alrllne was speaking only yesterday in
Newport Beach and his view seemed to
suggest that Orange C.ounty Airport just
Isn't going to make the grade by the year
1980.
He Is Bob Clifford, the head man of Air
C8llfomla, an ouUit that everybody
laughed at only a few years back when it
cranked up aome used jets and declared
1t would fif to San Francisco.
A funoy thing happened to Air Cal,
however, m ita way into the sky. People
started rtding the big jets with the
orange and gold stmburst on the nose.
Lots of people rode them. Air Cal
h1stae-started booming. Local folks
started calling it "our rubber-band
airline'' in an identification ol. affection.
SOON, HOWEVER, a lot of other air-
lines noticed all those folks Air Cal was
bauliDI to and fro from The City. And
evetybody wanted to get Into the act.
Lots of big jeta began flying out ol. our
county aerodrome and that started the
cries from folks who live beoeath the
takeoff pattern that we ought to Ban the
Jets.
Now lt It Interesting that Air Cal'1 Clif-
ford casts his eyes ahead to 1980 and
clearly doean't envision Orange County
.Airport 11 being aufflcl.ent to liandle air
paseeoger demand. By then, Bob sug-
gests 14 million people will be wanting to
ca~ jete out of 0r811ge Coonty foc
someplace else.
IN BIS TALK before the Newport
Harbor Omnber of Commerce, Cliffoni
suggeated that our good Board of
Supervison isn't doing everything it
could to find 118 another airport which we
are going to llOl"efy need. We reported he
was highly critical and assailed the
board's action and Air Cal Bob kind of.
takes exoeptJoo to that. Clifford figures
he was simply pointing out that despite a
couple of rather expemive a i r
transportation studies, we doo't seem
ip.qdi ,closer to finding a ~ jetport.
Well, despite the interpretation of
strength you put on his early-morning
remarks, you can understand why the
good supervisors appear to be stuck pre(-
ty much oo dead-center in finding a new
airport locatlm.
ALL THE HA VE to do is start looking
at ~c real estate, and right away
the citizem in that region begin fonning
up in a tocchlight parade.
When supervisorlal eyes cast envious
glances at El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta-
tion, the whole Saddleback Valley gets its
back up. 1.-0s Alamitos Naval Air Station?
You can raise an immediate fight Jn
HWltington Beach, Seal B e a c h ,
Westminster and Fountain Valley, not to
mention 1.-0s Alamitos itself.
Talk about a big jetport on Camp
Pendleton's range and you've got enough
oposltion to fill the new San aemente
Clubhouse, as Fifth District Supervisor
Ron Caspers learned just before he fled
that scene.
SOME FOLKS HA VE talked about big
jet operations out of Olino Hills up Brea
way or down on the ranchlands behind
Mission Viejo. Little community en-
thusiasm has been generated by these
suggestions and a lot of opposition.
Which brings you back to Air Cal's Bob
Clifford and his notion that Orange Coun-
ty's airstrip "can never be anything ex-
cept what It Is -a little, tiny alrpcrt."
And assume Bob is correct, that brings
you back to 1980 and those 14 million peo-
ple who will want 'to fly from here to
there.
You have the feeling they may be in a
permanent holding pattern .
tt
"Life Saered~
Two Senawrs Want Abortion Ban
WASHlNGTON (AP) -Sens. James L.
Buckley and Mark 0. Hatfield today pro-
poeed a constitutlooal ameudmeot wlilch
would ban abortions except In cues
where pregnancy threatens the mother'•
life.
"Abortion is a fmn of violence that
cheapens tlunan life," Hatfield told a
newa conference at which be and Buckley
announced the amendment. Buckley Is
SponlOl' ol the amendment and Hatfield
is chief llDlpOD90l'.
Asked bow be and Hatfield, who have
divergent views on many other issues,
joined for this proposed amendrnellt,
Buckley said: "What bind.I us together is
the premise tbat hmnan life Is sacred."
HATFIELD, AN Orepi Republican,
said that as an alternative to abortions
there should be broad-ranging sex educa-
tioo and more access to contraceptives.
Buckley, a New York conservative said
he would "prefer abstlnenoe for people
out ol wedlock and if not abstinence then,
I would prefer contraception to ldlling."
Buckley added that 10 states have peti-
tioned Congress for an amendment IUCh
as his Human Rights Amendment and l~
• states have petitioned tbe SUpreme Court
for a revel'l81 of 111 abortion dedalon.
The amendment would establlah that
fetuses are penoos entitled to con-
stitutional and legal protection. In lta re-
cent decision on abortions, the SUpreme
Court held that fetuses are not penolll In
the whole sense and that they do not possess the capability of meaningful life.
BUCKLEY TOOK ISSUE with the
court's fmding and said the terms of the
amendment would specifically establish
that unborn children are penons within
the meaning of the 5th and 14th
amendments to the Constitution.
In discussing the one exemption to the
amendment which would permit an abol'·
tion lf the mother's life Is ~eatened by
pregnancy, Buckley said:
"The exemption is severely limited In
scope, and most emphatically does not
cover those spurious c1lims of risk to
maternal life and health which are a
transparent cloak f<X" abortion on de-
mand.
"THE LARGER question is not miy
Newspapers Tell 2 More
Possible Break-in Cases
By United Press International
The Los Angeles Times and the New
York Times today said authorities are
looking into reports that two separate
burglaries may have been carried out by
agents of the FBI or the Committee to
Re-elect the President.
The Los Angeles paper said the FBI is
investigating the possibility that con-
victed Watergate conspirators G. Gordon
Liddy and E. Howard Hunt "or their
associates" broke Into the Manhattan of-
fices of the National Association for the
Teens Numbering
2,000 Run Amok
In New Jersey
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (AP) -About
2,000 teen-agers roamed the city's main
business 'Sector, hlD'ling rocks and botUes
at pedestrians, motorists and police cars.
Police reported that a patrolman had
been stabbed. He was treated at Atlantic
Qty Hospital and released.
Several pedestrians and a taxi cab
driver were reported injured during the
Wednesday night disturbance, which oc-
curred during a "merchants' festival."
At least a dorzen youths and one adult
were arrested on charges ranging from
inciting to riot to attempting to free
police prisoners.
Several streets had been blocked to all
vehicular traffic for the festival, which
Included band concerts and the display of
antique autos and motorcycles.
A police spokesman said trouble
started about 9:20 p.m., when pollce
began re-opening the streets. The
spokesman said hWldreds ol youths at
first refused to allow traffic to flow and
then began their aSMult on the police
when told to disperse .
Blast Kills Woman, 7 4
NEW YORK (UPI) -A 74-year-oid
woman was killed end her 69-year-oid
friend critically Injured when what may
have been a pipe bomb exµloded In a
Manhattan apartment Wednesday night,
shattering windows and s pr a yin g
furniture about the rooTTL The woman,
Edith Tenner, was pronounced dead on
arrival at Bellevue Hospital.
Advancement of Colored P e o p I e
(NAACP) legal defense fund the same
weekend the office of Daniel Ellsberg's
psychiatrist in Beverly -Hills was
burglarized.
THE NEW YORK TIMES said it has
learned that FBI agents broke into the
office of an underground newspaper in
Washington shortly before President Nix-
on's Inauguration in 1969 to look for in-
formation linking the paper w i t h
subversive groups.
The Los Angeles Times said it learned
the investigation was begun at the sug-
gestion of Jack Greenberg, director of
the NAACP fund. Greenberg said federal
prosecutor Earl Silbert told him the FBI
had been ordered to check Into the
possibility the break-in at his office was
connected with the Watergate burglary,
the Ti.mes said.
OFFICIALS OF the NAACP fund said
they found on returning from the Labor
Day weekend last Sept. 7 that desks and
a file cabinet had been broken into but
nothing was taken, although there was
$100 in cash in one of the desks.
Greenberg said the fund keeps no
secret information In its office. At the
time ol the break-in, the fWld was in-
volved in a number of politically
sensitive cases, including the defenses of
Black Panther leader Bobby Seale and
New York Times reporter Earl Caldwell,
who was fighting subpoenas from a San
Francisco grand jury Investigating the
Black Panthers.
In its story the New York Times said
two former Army intelligence operatives
revealed that they took part In the FBI
raid on the office of the Washington Free
Press at the request of the FBI.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
D'llv'ry of the Daily Pilot
is guaranteed
Mond•Y·llfrld•r: If vou do not t11v1 v•ur
piper oy S:lO p.m .• call and yoyr copy will
IN brouglll lo you. c1111 ire t'k•n until l ::M p.m.
S•l11N1y •nfl SUINlaW' I If yev • "°' rtctlY•
your CtPY 'Y t 1.111. Sllurt11y, er I 1.m.
Sundl'f, call 1nll 1 copy win be t1rou1ht ft
you. C•llt art fllileft until 10 1.m.
Ttlephones
Moat Or1ngt C1un1y A1'91t ....... •42·4121
Ntrrttwest Huntlntlon •••ch •n4 wntmintrtr . . . . •• • ... s••1210
kn ClerMntt, C1pJ1tr1no 111ch,
San Juan C1pl1lr1ne, 01n1 Point,
Sovtft l•gun1. L11un1 Nl1u11 .... 4t1·442t
Twister Lashes Oklahoma
Thunderstorms Hit Soutlier1i Plains Area, 1 Killed
tlgfoft
If .s. Sumtnaru ., Tiit .. _ ..... ,_.
Ufl WIAlllll IOtOC-'Sl.
-"-11 ot Otdlllom1 City. Or. John Rolllng1 uld Oougl11 Elmer
T1ytor, 21, w1a dMd on 1rrlv1I 1t
-r1Jy Purcotl Momorf1I H .. p1t1I.
tverybody 11ld. The front wott 1t1rt9d
going lorwtnl, •nd everything 111rted
coming toward me.
"Thi next thlllll we knew. we wtrt
sitting out thtrt In ,,,. yard."
MMt of tho notion had mild temper-
atures Undlf' cloudy skies. Showen. end
thunderstorms wtre scattered over thl
Northeatl and mount1lnou1 West. s.ve,.. lhu-rstorms 1wtpl fllt
Flor1d• penlnsul1 Wtdnnday, but they
,.,.,.. not far enough south 10 help ••·
ttngullh flrn burning out of control neor !tit Ev1rgl1d11 National Porlt •ftd Big CyproH Swamp. By midnight ttM
reins had moved ofl1hort.
Coastal We•f.her
P1rtl1lly sunny today. Light varl1ble winds nl;ht and morning houn becom-ing -ttrfy 12 lo 16 knot1 In .,,.,_ • .,_,. tod1y and Frldly. High tod1y,
upper 60s.
Coa1111 ,_...1v,... range '""" '° to '3. lnlaftd i.ntPll'llllrtt r1111111 from
59 lo 67. Weier femp1r1lvra 64.
Sun, JUoon, Tides
THUUDAY
l4COlld hloll . . . . . . . . . . ''°' p.m. .. , Second tow . . .. . .. 2:42 p.m. 1.1
"UDAY
.... l'llell
SEEKS AMENDMENT
Sen. J1mes Buckley
what we do to the unborn -although
that is bad enough -but what we do to
ourselves by killing them."
Buckley said the amendment would
establish that the test of whether a
person is entitled to constitutional pro-
tection is biological and not legal as he
said the Supreme Court determined.
J
e ~wart
Saigon BeUeves Action
Doesn't Mean Offensive
SAIGON (AP) -The South Viet-
namese government-thinks a Communis!
tank attack Wednesday near Hue was
only a probe and not the beginning of an
offensive against the former imperial
capital, a government spokesman said
today. •
It was the first Communist tank attack
since the cease-fire four months ago.
The Saigon command said North Viet-
namese or Viet Oong !nfantrymen with
three Russian BT76 amphibious tanks
crossed the Rao Nai river and attacked a
gov~rnment position 18 miles southwest
of Hue.
WHEN 'l1IE ATTACKERS were 300
yards from the defense perimeter, the
South Vietnamese called in artillery that
destroyed one tank and killed 15 of the
enemy soldiers, a spokesman said. He
said the other two tanks fled back across
the river. One government soldier was
reported wounded.
A government commWlique a l s o
reported Communist gunners fired 115
rounds of artlllery and mortar fll'e at
three other positions west of Hue bu'r •
there were no government casualties.
Earlier, military sources said they
were trying to determine the strength of
the tank force to assess whether the at-
tack heralded a new offensive against
Hue.
The attacked post is part of a defensive
arc running through jungled mountains
west and southwest of the city. Ac<iOl'ding
to field reports, the whole network has
come under continuous and Increasing
North Vietnamese and Viet Cong
pressure in recent weeks. American
sources report at least one government
position has been given up, but the
Saigon command has not annotmced this.
To the west is the A Shau Valley,
where a big Communist military buildup
has been reported. Tue area is said to be
protected by missile sites, and a road-
buildlng program Is under way.
In other developments:
A reduction d 40 percent in B52 bomb-
ing strikes in Cambodia has been
ordered by the Defense Department, the
Washington Post said today. B52 flights
have averaged 50 to 70 a day for nearly
three months .
U.S. jet ~ighter-bombers struck 14
mlles southeast of Phnom Penh today
along the east bank of the Mekong River
where government and Communist
troops clashed Wednesday, military
sources said.
The head of the canadian delegation to
the Intematiooal Commission of Control
and supervision, Michel Gauvin, said he
would take over the commissioo'1
rotating chairmanship foc June as
scheduled but would call no meetings
unless a deadlock over reports of North
Vietnamese infiltration is resolved.
d avis~brown
TELEVISION e STEREO e APPLIANCES e SALES e SERVICE e SINCE 1947
CLEARANCE
FLOOR DEMOS!
DISCONTINUED M·ODELS !
MANY ONE-OF-A-KIND
••• BE HERE EARLY!
COLOR TV NOW DRASTICALLY REDUCED-!
RCA COLOR PORTABLE, 17" dlav. pic-
ture. Accucolor. Price 5'ashed. Remote
control model also for only $30 morel
RCA PORTABLE 18" dlCICJ. picture,
Accucolor. Now drastically reduced.
RCA PORTABLE 19" clrCICJ. picture,
Acc11color. Priced to clear.
$32888
$35888
$36888
RCA beautifully styled CONSOLE XL-100, color.
Big 25" dlCMJ. picture. Drastlccilly $59888
reduced. 1 only-El Toro Store.
RCA PEDESTAL, swivel base XL-100
with giant color. 25" dlCICJ. picture.
1 only-Costa Mesa Store. Huryl
RCA handsomely styled XL-100
with tlant color. 25" dlCICJ. picture.
1 only. El Toro Store-Save Now!
RCA AVANT GARDE styled with bJ9
COLOR. 25" dlag. picture, XL-100
1 only. El Toro Store
RCA XL-100, Spanish style,
bl9 25" dlCICJ. COLOR plctwe. Priced
to clear. 1 only-Costa Mesa Store.
RCA XL-100, contemporary styled with
big 25" diCMJ. COLOR plmire.
1 only-El Toro Store. Save Now!
RCA XL-'100 COLOR.
$628'8
$59888
$62888
smartly styled, gla:nt 25" dlag. picture $
598
88
1 only-Costa Mesa Store.
RCA XL-100 Spanllll style COLOR
with giant 25" db;. picture.
1 only-Costa Mna Store. '62811
RCA XL-100 Spt!'lsh styled wllft hinged
doors. Big 25' dlCICJ. COLOR picture. $
668
88
Drastically reduced. 1 only. Costa Mesa
RCA XL-100
WITH REMOTE CONTROl s54911 H•d11•ly styled -left•
wltlt •• 21" llJel, -. pie·
tllre. Acclffler. 1 Hly at C""1I
M-Stwel 1 •Ir 91 II Tere
Storel HUUYI SAVE $100 !
RCA HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER XL-100 wltll
Remote Accucolor TY, Stereo PhonocJraph, FM/ AM/FM
Stereo Radio. The flnnt In viewing and listening
pleasure. 1 only. El Toro Store. $148881
Greatly reduced.
<l SYLVANIA PORTABLE COLOR TY
with 17" cllGCJ. picture, talN)erlne
cabinet, perma lock tunlnCJ.
SYLVANIA contemporary style with bit
25" dlOCJ. picture. 1 only Costa Mesa
SYLVANIA S~lsh styled COLOR Console
wilft big 23' dfav. picture. $49888
1 only. Costa Mesa.
SYLVANIA REMOTE CONTROL, Spanish
1tyled COLOR wllft bit 25" dlag. $59888
picture. 1 only. El Toro. Price slashed.
SYLVANIA Early American styled, solid state.
Bit 25" dlag. COLOR picture. $69588
1 only. Costa-Mesa Store. .. .. . :..·
SYLVANIA. Esty American style with Remote .
with big 25" dlag. picture. $59881 1
1 only. Costa Mesa Store.
SYLVANIA Contem~ stflecl wltll lttHte
with b1, 21" dlag. 'picture. 'Sta•
1 only. Costa Mesa Store.
WE MUST MOYE THESE sm FOR NEW MODELS NOW ARRIVING
SO WE'VE CUT PRICES TO THE BONE ••• SAVE PLENTY!
AMANA MICROWAVE OYEN
DetnOMtrator, used YWJ llttle. RR3 Mo-'37588 def. Huny for this terrific buy-1 only!
CORNING SURFACE UNIT
Electric Cooktor now at
Terrific Savln9s $1 98°
llFllGDATOR for bar, det1, patio.
3.4 cu.~. Prlcecl to Clear.
SKINNY MINI LAUNDRY CINTER,
Washer and Dryer, price slashed
1 0.ly-Hurry
TELEVISION e STEREO e APPLIANCIS e SAUS e SERVICE e SINCI 1947
2 Years of lntegrit11 & Depelldablllt11
COSTA MESA e HARBOR ARIA IL TORO e SADDLEIACK VALLEY
411 EHt SoventHnth StrHf El Toro Roe4 et FtHw•y CN.xt te S.v·Onl
D•llr 9.9, Seturd•y 9·6 646°1614 D•llY 9-9, S.turcl•y 9-6 IJ7.JIJO
$9881
$328"
RADIO DISPATCHED PACTORY AUTHORIDD TY & APPLIANCE SERYIC PHON 548·3437 Vlolont ~arml IHl19CI Ille
southem f"11lftt Nr1Y !Odly, wndlllll • -.ily 4wf1lw fllrough 1 rur., .,...
One mlft Wll killed lftd four other
~ ,.... lnlvl'"ld -• Lul11gton,
""'"·• wi..... flll -dlltroyed lour mol>lltl hornet on • form.
One women 11td .... WH IWlktntd
by fllt 1torm •ftd "II w11 lust ttkt
First high . . . . . 10:52 a.m. U
First low . .. . .. .. . . 4:2' 1.m. -U Second high . . . .. . . . . . t :SO p.m. U
Second low .. .. . . . .. . 3:31 p.m. 2.0
Sun RIMI l :CI 1.m. '"'" 7:Je p.m. Moon RIMI 5:00 1.m. 1111 7:55 p.m. ,..._,,....,,.,,.-..... _...._,...._,...,..,,,.....,....__..,,_,.._.. ..... ,,.._,.....__..,,_,._ ..... _...._,..._,...,._,,.....,...._.....,_,.--..,,.....,......_,,..,_,,.--...,J
•
' '
I
7
..
vot.:. 66, NO. 1s1, s SECTIONS, 64 PAGES ORANGE CO\JNTY, CALIFORNIA
Mr~. Rosener Defends Coast
Mrs. Rosener, Newport Beach
member the South Coast Regional
Conserva n Commission, said today she
will ask C&lifornla Attorney general
to rule the authority of her panel to
overTI piunlciP.al 7.0lling codes.
Rosener and the commissioo. were
a ed '.fuesday night by Newport
:Qj! Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis and
o r councilmen because, on a 6 to 5
* * *
vote, the coastal group told a West
Newport developer he must provide four
parking places for each of the three
duplexes he plans.
Councilmen had required only two
spaces for each of the 29th Street
buildings. .
Mrs. Rosener also . sald she was
angered by a personal attack: oo her by
the mayor at Tuesday night's council
meeting. . ·
Mcinnis had said Mrs. Rosener "is
_ either blind or she deliberately distorted
the facts!' by telling commissioners the
proposed duplexes are surrounded by
single family homes.
"The mayor was in error in his im·
plication that I misled the commisslon or
was .uninformed," Mrs. Rosener respond-
ed.
She said "It's .mostly one unit single-
family residences and the zoning allows
it to go to R-2 (duplex), and the city is
right in the process of deciding whether
to downzone it so that they have to re-
main single family ... "
Mcinnis, however, said he walked the
entire area and found only two single
family homes. The rest be said, are
duplexes.
Mcinnis had also been critical of her
downzoning remark, pointing out the city
bas decided to leave zoning alone.
However, Mrs. Rosener said she was
not aware -at that April commission
meeting -that the city was dumping
N
Zone Override
downzoning plans .
"I ~as not aware at the time of the
meeting that the council would reverse
itself 360 degrees and decide after a year
of study to throw out all efforts at con-
trolling density.'' she said.
Mrs. Rosener also pointed out that
Newport Beach is the only community to
question the commlsSion's right to over-
ride local 7.0ning ordinances.
"Obviously if we et..uld not, there would
be little reason for us to have been given
the power to issue permits. To my
kno •ledge, Newport Beach is the on1;y ci·
ty that has questioned this responsibility
of the commissioo," she said.
In her statement which was written
and hand-delivered to the Dally Pilot to-
~y, Mrs. Rosener also claimed she wu
available for comment on the mayor'•
remarks Wednesday morning.
Mn. Rosener also criticized Mcinnla
for allegedly failing to contact her befGre
fSee ZONING, Page Z)
Override Supervisors Seek Answers
Of Zoning
Approved
By .CANDACE PEARSON
Of the DallY "'°' Sllff
The coastal commissions created by
Proposition 20 have the power to deny
projects even though the construction bas
local government approval, Deputy State ·
Attorney General Jeffrey Freedman said
today in Long Beach.
Freedman, the deputy state attorbey
advising the South Coast Regional
Conservation Commission, said he would
issue a formal written opinion on the
question.
The South Coast Commission has
permit authority in the coastal zone of
Orange and Los Angeles counties.
The opinion was requested by Com-
missioner Judy ~ner of Newport
Beach1 who said officials "in a particular
city" don't .understand what the new law
says.
The Newport Beach City Council Tues-
day criticized the denial of ~ pennit
applications in the Ne!Jl0l1 Bejlch area
by the ~ 'l'bose requests ·by
developer Dana Smith met miing codes
of the city~ F~ aafd that •tunut ft Is ruled
ntberwlse by a court, the commissions
can overrule local decisions if ·lbeY find a
project wo.uld have • ' adv e rs e en-
vi romnental effects."
Mrs. Rosener, who lives on Udo Isle,
objected before the meeting that she
wasn't quoted correctly by the city coun-
cil.
Newport Mayor Don Mcinnis said Mrs.
Rosener contended that the proposed
duplexes were in the middle of an R-1
single-family zone that the city, wanted
dowmoned.
Mrs. Rosa1er said today that her
transcript of the meeting shows that she
said the area is "mostly one-unit single-
family residences." She added the City
Council hadn't voted yet on whether to
change the zoning in the area.
At that time Mrs. Rosener and other
commissioners said that public access to
the beach would be impaired by in·
creasing the density of the area.
Six more permit applications to
demolish single-family dwellings and to
construct duplexes in their place by Dana
Smith were on the commissioo's agenda
today. All are in the Newport area.
SEC Accuses
Sniith of Scheme
To Acquire Firm
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sec.urilles
and Exchange Commission today ac-
cused California financier C. ·Arnholt
Smith, two persons and several com-
panies of engaging in ·a fraudUlent
scheme to appropriate the assets of a
West Coast conglomerate and a San
Diego bank .
In a suit filed in U.S. District Court at
San Diego, the SEC sought a temporary
injunction against Smith and the other
defendants as well as appointment of a
receiver for the conglomerate, Westgate
California Corp. of San Diego.
Smith is a long-time Republican con-
tributor and owner of the San Diego
Padres major league baseball team.
According to the SEC, Smith and the
other defendants engaged in a scheme to
appropriate the assets of Westgate and
the u .S. National Bank of San Diego for
their use.
The sult added they created ostensible
profits for Westgate 81'1d published false
and mlsleading statements ol these p-ot-Its to camouflage the unlawfnl activities.
Rubber Accord OK'd
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Negotiators for
the United Rubber Workers union and the
B. F. Goodrich Co. reached tentative
agreement today on a three-year ~
tract hlch wo.uld end a trike tllJt n
idled more than 1~000 workers at seven
Goodrich plants since May 9 •
Upper
Value
Coµnty Supervisors decided Wednesday
to delay efforts to set a dollar value on
Upper Newport Bay .until they find out
how much development will be allowed
on the land surrounding it.
NEW DIGITAL TIMEPIECE RUNS ON COMPUTER CIRCUITRY
At Hughes in Newport, Consumer Applications of Space Technology
Supervisors then asked the city of
Newport Beach to provide answers to
five specific questions regarding the zon-
ing and open space requirements it would
impose on the bluffs and lowlands sur-
rounding the estuary. W ateh1 of Future The process of appraising the value of
the area, now owned primarily by the
Irvine Company, had been slated to begin
immediately as a prelude to possible
lJy WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of t11e Dally P!llt 11111
Hughes Aircraft in Newport Beach is
producing a revolutionary new
wristwatch with no mechanical workings,
no hands and no dial. It will be on the
market this summer, CQmpany officials
say.
Hughes experts believe the new
timepiece will eventually spell the end to
mechanical watch i n d u s t r i e s , con-
ventional watch repair and lucrative
worldwide distribution of wale~ by .SWiiS anaJapanese comparues. -
· The computer-age watch is totally elec-
trollie, displays the precise time in bo.urs,
minutes and seconds and the date in a
flash of lighted digits which appear on an
otherwise plain, black face.
Top management and m a r k e t i n g
personnel at the Harbor Area plant, 500
Superior Ave., said the watch has
already been sold to a number of major
companies and claims other are clamor-
ing for the new design.
"We will put together the electronic
package and then put it into cases
designed and supplied by customers who
buy the workings," said W i 11 i am
Weakland, associate division manager of
the Hughes Microelectronics Products
Division.
Weakland said Hughes will not market
the watch under its own name, nor will it
form a s.ubsidiary firm to market and
manufacture the watch. He wo.uld not
reveal which companies have bought the
watch.
"We are in the ef~cs bushle$5,.:'
he said. "We're not o1it to-D)ake watcbeS'
to sell." ,
The Hughes watch is the most
technologically advanced DJeriiber. -0f a
growing family of electronic watches
already on the market.
But the Hughes product utilizes an en-
Dump Reappears
public land bases.
~~=.!11.~~nrgfllr'lW~:r~~'IJ,t_~a~p-~'
prai9ers ~ "more 3')lld 'll'otmd than
t'lre ~eretlt Internal system than ;ust • assbm~ · ~ ~". •t
thOse now available. making it the most lutur,e development aJ'Ol,IDd the Vflper
efficient and most accurate -SUI>' Bay ,before they could detennlne a fair
posedly within one to three minutes per value for it.
year .... in the ~year history of Clark, along with Supervisor Robert
watches. Battin of Santa Ana, represents Orange
M k · M Will' s Eck County on the so-ealled Field Committee, ar etmg anager iam · ess a unit Involving state, federal and county said the watch represents the natural outgrowth of sophisticated military com-offic,lals in an effort to achieve public
puter · technology that Hughes has ownership of the Upper Bay.
specialized in for years. ~though the vote to delay. the ap-
The t h d · Ii · t an _ praJsal pr~ was u n a n l m o u s , . wa ~ esign e . mm~ es mov Supervisors Ronald Caspers of Newport ~::imta::·=!1 ~ ~~trani!!>ivKI Baker of Garden G~e
fork in some watches _ it uses precise, both objected that the slowdown might be
unvarying vibrations of a tiny quartz ~e~sary. .
C"'Stal toi tick off its minutes and I think we have gone from high to low ~. gear ~ this," ·Caspers eatd. "I think the
'11te crystal pulses more than 500,oilo appra1~al on the Uppe.r Bay sho.uld be
times per second and that rapid beat is ~ne .~imultaneously with any other ac·
cut down to one per second by a tiny elec-!Ions.
tronic component that makes the Hughes Caspers and B~ker . repr~nted th.e
watch .unique. county on the Field Co!DDllttee until
The tiny part that comprises the heart three weeks ago, when they were
of the watch is a chip of ceramic one-
tentb-of-an-inch across and scientifcally
imprinted with more electronics and wir-
ing than is in the average television set.
"The chip bas more than 1,500
transistors on it," said Eckess.
The average band-size transistor radio
bas less than 20 full-sized transistors.
The chip -known in the electronics in-
dustry as a Complementary Symmetry
-Metal Oxide Semiconductor (C-MOS)
feeds the .ultrastable output of the
vibrating crystal into tiny lighted digits
under the blank.crystal of the watch.
To get the time and date, the wearer
puslies two buttons on the side of the
watch. The· numbers Dash on the screen
momentui!y and then go out until the
·next push.
Weakland explained that the push-but-
ton operation is necessary. to conserve
(See NEW WATCH, Page%)
One Less Trip
For Firemen
Charmian Lyda didn't panic when
smoke and flames began to erupt in
the back seat of her car due to a
dropped cigarette Wednesday night.
Firemen at Newport Beach's
Irvine Avenue station said Mrs.
Lyda, of 112 W. Coast Highway,
just stepped on the accelerator and
drove directly to them.
They hauled the srnol4ering seat
out of the sedan and quickly ex-
tinguished it. ·
Developer RRises Stink
On a hot day, you can smell the Leader-
ship Homes condominium development
in West Newport for miles.
That is the complaint of people who
live, work and go to school near the 200-
.unlt deyelOpment being built on the old
Newport Beach city garbaae dump site
at the west end of 19th Street at the Costa Mesa city line.
What bas apaprently raised all the
stink ls a trench digging machine that
k turned up IOPle-of the thousands
of tons of clty garbage dumped in the
gully belo the bluffs rroin 1953-11165.
-•'OJra.·tio -r, it s si htf • pig
farm here," S8lQ Betty Kretzle, principal
of costa Mesa's Victoria School which is
percbed on the blufftop near the Leader--
~ t. " t's ally bad
1i the first days of this·
ed. "It's not bad when it's cool."
Residents of the nearby Freedom
Homes tract in Costa M~ have also
voiced oomplaluta, some of them direct-
ly to the Orange . Qlunty Health Depart-
ment.
MJ"s. Howard McVicker, 1015 Grove
Place, Costa Mesa, complained "We
couldn't eat dinner before. 9 o'clock
Tuesday, the odor was bilious."
Officials at the uadership Housing
eorpor-ate ofUcet In Santa Ana today re-
fused to comment on the problem. Lea4~ closed escrow on the 4(1. te three mon s ego, paying the
city $610,000 for it.
11ie sale was. cooditianed on the basis
~denihi'1p WQU]d ~I an elaborate -
expensive ..... and testini
system in the trash fill area to control
~as leakage. There was also a stipulation
the 12-acre area used specifically for
garbage fill could only· be park land.
Orange Cbmty Hea:ltb J:>eiW1ment en·
gineen who vJalt.ed the site Wednesday
said the smell bas been caused by the
very project d lgned to control gas odors
tn the future.
"We determined that the odor source
is excavation of a trench around the
perhneter of the fill as the firat part of
construction of the gas collector system,"
said county Environmental HeaJtb Direc-
tor Robeft Stone.
"The plan had been to dlg the trenches
just outside the trash fill to prev t later-
al escape of gases," he aid.· "But on
one slde, the fill was so close to the bluffs
that the trtn.cb had to be dug tnw the flll
itself -and that was smelly."
Stone said his omce ,will contimle to
(See SMELLY, Pale Z)
Bay Dollar
Gets Delay
dumped on a combined vote of Battin,
Clark, and Third District Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich of Fullerton.
The questions asked of Newport
Beach:
-How much, if any, land around the
bluffs will be designated as unsuitable for
development due to the possibility of
geological hazards from the cliffs?
CRUD'S NEW LOGO
Citizens Gro~p
Plans Upper Bay
'Nature Center'
By L. P~ KRIEG
Of Ille DlllY l'llet Sltfl
Plan<J to develop a Nature lntt!riretive
Center in Upper Newpcri Bay were an-
nounced today by a Harbor Area citizens
group in charge of the communities' three
recycling centers. .
The Citizens to Recycle Us~ble Dis-
can!B, (CRUD for short), said today all
profits from the recycling facilities next
week: will be used to start a fund for the
center. .
Both Newport Beach Mayor Donald A.
Mclnnis and Costa Mesa Mayor Jack
Hammett have proclaimed tile week of
JWle 4 Recycling Week. It is cHpoosored
by CRUD and the Corona del Mar High
School Ecology Action Group.
"Creation of the fund at this time is
seen as an example of the grassroot s.up-
port for use of the Upper Bay for educa·
tion llnd study purposes,'' said Mrs.
Valerie Murley, CRUD spokesman.
Mrs. MID'ley said she hopes the Nature
Interpretive Center will become pert of a
proposed wildlife preserve in the Back
Bay.
CRUD will kick off Recycling Week with
a cremooy at the Westcllff Plaza Rec-
lamation Center Monday at 4:45 p.m.
Mayors Mcinnis and Hammett are ex-
pected to head a list of dignitaries present
when CRUD awards a · $50 prize to the
winner of its recently completed "logo"
contest.
The group had asked local residents to
submit designs for a permanent insignia
for CRUD. The winner Is Werner W.
Weiss ol Newport Beach.
Vobmteers from both Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach will be present to stall
the three recycling centers during re-
cycling week. 'lbe other two are at the
Harbor Shopping ~ In Costa Mesa
and tl)e Eastbluff Vlllage Center in New-
port Beach. .
Other civic group1 normally staff ~
centers and uae profits for their various
acttvltles, Mrs. Murley eiplained.
She also stressed that the reclamation
of discards serve. lleVtral other goals.
'"lbese Jnclude the saving of. land.
necessary to bury our trash, the saving
of energy to manufacture such materials
as alwninum, the reduction of litter and
the more efficient use of natural re-
SOurt'eS," she said.
"Reclamation, r e and recycling
bring the responsibility •for solid waste
mtnagement full circle, r turning it to
4See CENTER, p ~
-What, it any, areas would be given
flood plain zoning?
-Can a determination be made of the
amount of land Newport Beach will re-
quire for park dedication if development
occurs in this area. Can this land be
zoned in advance as open space on the
city master plan?
-What kind of development will the cl·
(See UPPER BAY, Page%)
!'
Warden, Aide
Murdered b
2 Prisoners
PlllLADELPHIA (UPI) -A convicted
cop klller and an inmate awaiting trial
on the same offense stabbed the warden
and deputy wan:len to death and injured
three guards today during a meeting in
the warden's olfJce at Holrnesburg prison,~
authorities reported. The two convicts
were wounded and subdued b}' _&!lards .
Mayor Frank L. Rizzo, the city's
former police commissioner, and police
reinforcements rushed to the northeast
Philadelphia prison immediately. Ell
route, Rizzo radioed Police Com-
missioner Joseph F. O'Neill to "go in
there with clubs and all the force we
need to put them back in their c:elll.,. ,
The outbreak in the office of Warden
Patrick Curran was quelled swifily, but
not before Curran and Deputy Warden
Robert Fromhold were stabbed to death
and prison Capt. Leroy Taylor and two
guards were injured. The suspects, Jos-
eph Bowen and Fred Burton, were seiud,.
First reports indicated that Bowen and
Burton told guards they had a complaint
and received a pass to see Curran. The
warden was stabbed first during the
meeting, and Fromhold and Taylor were
stabbed during the ensuing struggle.
Taylor was reported in good condition
at Nazareth Hospital. The two prisoners
were hospitalized at .P h 11 a d e l p h i a
General Hospital with undetennlned in-
juries.
Orange
Weather
The weatherlady sees more
drizzle in the air for Friday, par-
tially clearing in the afternoon
hours to hazy sunshine. Highs af
the beaches · 65 rising to 75 inland.
Overnight lows in the mid-50s.
INSIDE TODA.Y
Swedt Savage is alive today.
The Santa Ana race car driver
,urviveJ what track wteNm
calle~ the wprst aingllf.CM crash
in Indtanapolis 500 history
Wednesda11. Gordon Johncock
went on to 1Mn ~e abbreviated,
twict-<iela11ed race. See Sporll,
Page 25.
pow in . two tiny batteries that
power the atdL U the digits were
lighted all the tllt!e, ~ batteries would
wear , )llJl aut. tbeJ
•year ... ,
The c o m p a c t , henneUcally-seaJed
design of the watch makes it a1most in-
vulnerJb~e •. according to Hughes officials.
lt ls said ~ tie shock-proof, dust-proof,
waterproof, be3t-proof and never needa
cleaning or lubrication.
Hughes management is confident there
Is a large market for the watches, which
will go on the market under various
brand names starting in August. Full·
scale production w111 get under way
within a month.
Weakland estimates the initial cost of
the watches at about $175 but said that
within only a year or two, models will be
available for "under $50." The watch
costs Hughes about $.'JS to produce.
Weakland aald the conventional watch
Industry is in an uproar over the new.
watches.
By 1980, Weakland said, the worldwide
watch market will be 300 million watches
per year and Hughes officials thtnk the
new design will slowly take over a good
piece of that market.
Weakland and his marketing men said
they fully expect their watch to go into
competition witll less e x p e n s i v e
mechanical timepieces now on the
market once tile initial demand for the
watch subsides.
A by-product or the new Hughes prod·
uct is the volume of business it has
already produced at the Newport Beach
plant.
From Page 1
ZONING ...
mi..:.~ . .; his statements.
"I am sorry that the mayor, who I con-
sider a friend, did not take the trouble to
phone me several weeks ago a_nd ask. for
an explanation of the cornmlss1on actions
or mine, since he obviously did listen to
his friend Dana Smith's (the West
Newport builder) side of the application
story," she sai<t: "I think that having heard both sides
he may have better understood what took
place,'' she said.
Mrs. Rosener also accused the mayor ol
"venting bis anger at a law which he
does not like, on me personally."
Mclnnls Tuesday night stressed that he
was not critical of the law itself.
Mrs .. Rosener said "I have taken an
oath to uphold the law and the law says
that the commission shall deny any
• permits which result in adverse en-
vironmental imJl'ct and the limiting of
public access to a public beach by virtue
or denying psµiking comes under that
category. . .
"He may disagree with my decision or
that of the commission," she said, "but I
resent hls questioning or my motives."
Counctlmeh Tuesday voted to send
representatives to thi p1anned)appea1 by,
Smith of the regional panel'S· action. If
the appeal to the state commission fails,
councilmen r. · · they would then ask for
an attomey general's opinion.
City Manager Robert L. Wynn said this
morning Mrs. Rosener's vow to as~ for
the opinion should help settle the ISSUe
quickly but he said he agreed with Mcin-
nis' charge that she distorted the facts.
Parolee Jailed
After Accident
A Sailta Ana parolee whose pickup
truck smashed into a power pole in New-
port Beach faced arraignment today on
charges of felony drunk driving and driv-
ing under the influence of drugs.
Robert L. Barnes, 25, of 1234 Karen
Lane, Santa Ana, and his passenger,
Judith M. Brochard , 23, of 12532 Keel
Ave., Garden Grove, both suffered minor
injuries in the crash.
Miss Brochard was also arrested on
drug charges as a result of the acciderrt.
which police allege left pills scattered
in the street.
Barnes' truck rammed a power pole
at Riverside Avenue near West <:oast
Highway, across the street f~ the New-
port Beach Post Office, drawmg a noon
hour crowd Tuesday.
ORANGI COAST II
DAILY PILOT
Thi ,Orono• co .. t OAllV PILOT. with which
i1 combined the News-Preis, It publis.hed by
tht Orange Co.st Pub1l1h\ft9 Compeny. Sepa-
r•t• ldlllons •r• PUbllt'*f, Mordav thrO\lgl'I
Friday, tot Cost• M..... News-rt leach,
Huntington BNC.h/Fountaln VAiiey. L•gun1
Beach, lrvlnets.dtft•dl W San Clemenlt/
San Juan Caplstreno A 1ingl1 reglonal
edition Is po,Olltlled S.turdl)"I tftd Sund1y1,
TM prlnciptl pUbllllllng Pilot 11 It JJll Wnt
111 Street, Cntl MHI, CIHtornlt, t26l6.
Roi..rt N .. W .. d
,.ralCIOlll tftd Publlslltr
Juk It Curloy
Vite ,,alettnt ond Gontr1I M11119er
Thomu Koov il
Etllltor
Tho11u1 A. Murphino
MlntQlllO ~dlPor
L Potor Krlt;
Newport IMdl City tdltor
Newpett ..... Offld
.,)U Newport loulovord
MaRlnt Aclclmtt P.O. In 1175, 926U -°'"' Offlcel
Cott• Ma.1 : m w .. 1 a.v 51"" ~ hocll• m t'lortst "-·· Hllftl""'°" UKll: 17175 Bllcll 80ult¥1rd
.$1• Cl'"'.""''' aos Nortll El cam1 .. 11q1
Tel••••H C7141 642-4321
. C'-11114 Atlwrthltlt 642-1671
~I, • lf1J, OrlnOI t.ISI P""ll"'lnt eompony. Ho -1torlts, 1Uu11retton1, ~ .... -., "-" .. "'""" lllNln IMJ M ......,.., wl-t -Ill PW· -.. _...,,, _.
._... ci-.• ,... ...... .. Colt• MtM.
C.ilfonll&. """""'°" Ill' c.trllr SUI "'6fttllly1 w """ IUJ monthln lllllltlrt _ .... , ........ , mofttlllY.
'
..
nunuy, May 31, 1973
ty'
Wife, Sons
DwinFi~
GARDEN, Mich. CUPll -The wife
and two ima1l sons of a sheriff's deputy
died fn a fire here today. Three blocks
away,' firemen discovered the deputy,
Demm Milrpby, handcuffed w a tractor.
In the area where Murphy wu found, a
message written in red crayon or lipstick
on a large board, read "I will kill you
Murphy, first your wife and kids."
Authorities in this one-acre town of 380
said they had no motive and no suspects.
Firemen recovered the body or
Murphy's wife, Janet, 20, and ooe of the
couple's sons, Randy, 2. They searched
tile rubble oi the home for another son,
Robbie, seven months.
"The entire area baa been cordoned off
and state p0llce crime lab experts have
been Down in to help us in the In-
vestigation," said a spokesman for the
Delta County sheriff's department.
Authorities said Murphy was hand·
cuffed to a tractor behind the Garden
town hall. The sign was on a large board
in back of the hall.
County prosecutor Tony Marcintewcz
said Murphy, treated for cuts and bruises
at a nearby hospital and released, said
someone came to hls house at 1:30 a.m.
today, told his wife there was a bad ac-
cident and said Murphy should go to the
town hall were "someone would meet
him to take him to the scene."
Murphy told authorities someone
grabbed him from behind when he got
out of hls car at the hall.
"They grabbed my shirt, threw it over
my head and pinned it," he told police.
He said his wife failed to identify the
man with whom she talked.
Marcintewcz said all the gas had been
drained from the main fire truck¥Jarked
at the town hall. .
He said a tanker truck parktlll next to
the tractor to which Murphy was
handcuffed was missing three spark
plugs and Murphy's own car, parked in
front of his home, "had tile ignition wire
pulled from it."
From Pagel
SMELLY .. ~
study the problem and review the Leader-
ship environmental impact report to see
if any provisions were made for gas
leakage during coostructioo. _
NeWporl Beach Public Works Director
Joseph Devlin said the Leadership tract
plan shows an extaislon of Balboa Boule-
vard that will rtin right over the center
of the trash flll.
"Aecording to their plans, they will
have to remove all the trash fill where
the road wlll go and replace it with pure
dirt fill to meet the requirements for
roadways and sewer line installation," he
said .
Devlin said removal of the fill will
mean digging through 20 feet or rotted
garbage that has accumulated since the
dump opened. The trash fill is nearly 40
feet deep In some spots, he said.
Since the dump is a sanitary fill site
- a layer of trash followed by a layer
of dirt -Stooe said it is unlikely any
bacteriological problems will arise. But
he said his men will keep a close watch
on the dump site work until it is finished.
He also said it is unlikely any legal
action will be taken against Leadership
unless it can be proven the company
purposely left out potential problems in
its EIR.
Mesa's Annual
Fish Fry Begins
Friday Evening
The stage is set for one or the Harbor
Area's biggest summertime crowd
pleasers, the 28th annual Costa Mesa
Fish Fry and Parade.
Things get under way at 5:30 p.m. Fri-
day under the trees of Costa Mesa Park
with the serving or fish dinners by the
Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions Club,
hosts for the three-day event.
Dinners will be served through 8 p.m.
Friday for $2 each. Hot dogs, ham-
burgers, sort drinks and home made pies
and cakes, as well as peanuts and pop
corn will also be available.
For entertainment. there is a carnival
with merry.go-rounds, ferris wheels , and
about 30 ot·her rides and midway booths.
The carnival will also be open for the
duration of the Fish Fry.
saturday activities begin at 10:30 a.m.
with the Fish Fry Parade, a tw~and-a
half hour spectacular, involving an
estimated 1,500 participants. Grand
marshal for this year's parade is Les
Josephson of the Los Angeles Rams.
Fish dinners will be served from noon
through 8 p.m. Saturday. Drawings and
stage shows are scheduled throughout the
day.
On Sunday, the Fish Fry is scheduled
to get under way at noon. Highlights in·
elude a baby contest at 2:30 p.m. and the
Miss Mermaid beauty pageant at 3:30
p.m., both on the park stage .
The Fish Fry ends at 8 p.m. with the
award of the grand prize, .a 1973 Ford
Pinto sedan. All persons buying fish din-
ners are automatically entered .
Members of the Costa Mesa-Newport
Harbor Lions Club hope to gross $100,000
for local cbartUea from this year's Fish
Fry.
• • •
U?
ry
and the fJood plain bet the tldel•Ms
MacArtbur Boulevard.
_ l &ra~AI 1r1iunaniee
11allt ol · llJBa'IOI
-that WGU1d ~ b1fo woulcl tliJa be desirable.
Supervisors asked a sixth quettion In-
volving possible recreational mes ol Up.
per Bay waterways and tidelands.
Clark stawicbly defended the ·need tO
have these questions anawered before an
appraisal of the Upper Bay was made,
although be admitted It might cause
some delay.
"We 're simply talking about slowing
down something that was beading over a
cliff," Clark said. "I think that ls a good
idea. We're talking about an evaluation
of the islands and Back Bay Drive wblch
have to be brought In to determine what
the land is worth. We don't need· assump-
tions, we need facts."
From Pagel
CENTER •..
HOUSTON (UPI) -Two new power
failures struck America's orbiting Skyla~.J
today. They forced major flight plq
revisions and added urgency to bold
plans for a spacewalk to free a jammed
solar cell wing and double the space sta-
tion's dwindling electrical supply.
The latest troubles cost Skylab
another six percent of its limited power
supply -making a total of 12 percent
apparently lost permanently, and robbing
the 100-ton space station of any margin
for absorbing future losses without
serious mission impact.
In addition, another 24 percent of the
station's electrical batteries shut down
temporarily. 'Ibis plaCed a heavy load on
the remaining batteries, depleting them
and forcing reduced operations today to
Occu-pationql
Hazard?
Wll dllltroyed beeatlle ~cal ld-ve used to attl:s: ~ burned her breasts has lost a tu,ooo suit
a1albst too, edbeslve company.
lfUlltings Court Judge Ernest ·w.
Ballou Wednesday ruled in favor
ol DavoI R\lbber Company of Prov-
idence, R.I.
Tella Jean Roberts, 42, who Jives
In Florence, S.C., said it took nine
months for her breasts to heal
,atfer she used the adhesive Oct. 26,
1966.
She said "It burned like fire ,"
and that she never danced in pas-
ties again because she was afraid
or breast cancer.
Regents Purchase
510-acre Tract
For UC Irvine
provide time for recharging. Four years following the initial gift by
There was never a threat to the safety the Irvine Company of 1,000 acres of land
the point of origin, the manufacturer," of Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph P. for UC Irvine, Regents purchased
Mrs. Murley said. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz. another 510 acres at a cost or $4.5
Mrs. Murley noted that any civic group But mission control canceled an Im-million.
wishing to earn money at any of the h · · Ii CRUD centers should contact either New-portant eart resources survey onglllB Y The purpose of the purchase was to
port Beach or Costa Mesa City Hall. scheduled for today and said the scope of assure land on which to build student and
Mrs. Murley said the $50 prize money all such surveys planned by the crew faculty housing and services and other
f d d b th H would probably be reduced. or the contest was onate Y e y-The problems occurred after Skylab "university-related" buildings, such as
land Division of. Travenol, Inc., of Costa pointed its nose earthward Wednesday an interfaith center.
Mesa, a hospital supply firm that she afternoon and made man's first es:-Today, UCI Chancellor Daniel G.
said has contributed more than 28•000 amm· ations from orbit of terrestrial Aldrich J ested this · ht pounds of glass for recycling. during l14-mil hour r. sugg acreage rmg
The two Newport Beach recycling cen-resources a 17• e per be put to use by means of a joint powers sweep · from Utah past Mexico and f ters were opened by CRUD in January Brazil's Amar.on Basin io the farmlands agreement to the advantage of the city o
1972. The Costa Mesa center was opened of Colombia. Ii-vine, the Irvliie Unified School District,
three months later. Changing th space station's position UCI and possibly a civic cultural agency. CRUD was founded in Ami 1971. Its e -... • forced it to switch from its good solar The land, deslgnaied in the Pereira
members come from various Harbor cell electrlcal generators to battery campus plan as the "inclusion area," is
Area civic groups. power because ita solar cells no longer not a lump of acreage set apart from the Mrs. Judy Tracy or Eastblurf is the were facing the sun. Engineers said this campus.
current chairman. She explained that the maneuver triggered a chain of events In fact, Aldrich explained today, it was
purpose of Recycling Week, besides the that produced the problems. once known as "intrusion areas'' in
fund-raising project, will be "to educate Flight director Neil H u t c h i n s 0 n I deslgnatloos or the first campus plan.
the public concerning the merits of rec-meeting with reporters in a midnight The "inirusion'~ label was attached
lamation, re-use and recycling." news conference at the Johnson Space because the land was intended to jut into
Mrs. Tracy pointed out that CRUD is Center in Houston, said engineers still the spokes of the starshaped campus
supporting proposed state legislation did not fully understand the failures. plan, providing a mix of community and
that would place a minimum five-cent "There's going to be a lot of engineer-campus with no distinct boundaries
deposit on all beer and soft drink con-ing analysis done. tonight," he said. _ separating the two.
tainers. With the latest electrical failure, Aldrich said intrusion was deemed to
Both Newport Beach and Costa Mesa Hutchinson said, Skylab's problems in-be "too negative soundJng" and was
city t'OUDcils b:lve endorsed that legi~ elude "three or four biggies that we're replaced on published plans of the cam-
' 4
Not Involved
J· .:I • ~~ ~·· .I
In Coverup , :.~
WASHINGTON (UPI) -H. ·R. :,1
Haldeman insisted \oday that "at no time ·
did I, in _ any way, direct, suggest, or
participate in any coverup of the
Watergate lnvestigatiOJ."
Haldeman, who resiftled April 30 a~ ~
White House chief of st r, issued what ,
he characterized as t categorical
denial to reporters after stifying for
nearly three hours at a clos meeting or
the Senate subcommittee on telligence )
operations.
The subcommitee chairman,
TWO MORE BREAK-IN
HINTED-Story, P•se ..
McClellan (D-Ark.), told reporte(S
he saw "very substantial ronfli
between the testimony given previousl
by top CIA officials and that given today
by Haldeman and Wednesday by another
former top White House aide, John D.
Ehrlichman.
McClellan added that only President
Nixon could now give a Culler picture o(
what occurred at a crucial White House
meeting June 23, 1972 -six days after I
the break·in of the Watergate head-,j
quarters of the Democratic national com-~
rniUee. i "No source other than the Pres!·
dent could give a fuller answer • than
Haldeman has given," McClellan S8.ld.
Haldeman, in response to reporters'
questions; said it was John W. Dean,
former White House legal counsel, who
apparently first suggested to Nixon that
CIA operations might be compromised
by an unrestricted FBI investigation in
Mexico of some funds for Nixon's re-elec-
tion campaign.
Some of those "laundered" funds
after being transrerred through_ a M~
ican bank, apparently were used to f1·
nance the Watergate plot.
Meanwhile, Sen. Edward J. Gurney (R-
Fla.), today urged colleagues on the
Senate Watergate oommittee to seed tile
storm clouds of the scandal by calling
key former presidential aides Im-
mediately to testify about President Nix-
on's role in the affair. lation. chasing and a myriad of little ones." pus with the word "inclusion." ~~~F~. ~IN~A~L~D~A~Y~S~.~~~
j 26 thJn11WeCJarq Sq_le _
. ' .
1973
CLOSE-:
OUTS . ROii 10% OVER
GIANT 181b.up. WASHER
With 3 AUTOMATIC Cycles
1 F~lll·Fl1 W ...... e Tltlff -/two
Sys-""" """"'"'"' 1 Th'" Wlltt llnh o ,_,.,_•t ....
I ActiwllH S..k Miii
t h 111 w.11 C10!11W11 olitschD;,,t..,
COLD WATER, CRUSHED ICE or CUBES
WITHOUT OPENING THE DOOR!
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m1nutn ll•v•nt h""
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12"dil(Dflal ADVENTURER
PERSONAL PORTABLE TV
c
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~ :~:OWAVE OVEN
~ APQ§FSS
COM PA RI
OUR PRICE
WE TAKE
TRADE-INS
OUl~36988
WE DELIVER
WE SERVICE ·
WE INSTALL
90 DAYS
SAME AS CASH
SUPER·OUIET 2 CYCLE
BUil f.IN DISHWASHER
I $oon4 l•wl1tff
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t 11•-·Glt 01-
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·• V:r.~~· . $ 19888 hlllrllf
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EASY·LOADING COMPACT
PORTABLE DISHWASHER
1 1 lrvel Thoro·WISll
1 Qu111 P'-r·Fl1 Wtsll
• Sudt-ln F
• 1 luilt·ln Sell Foo4 Oispo•r
1 Automatic Dtll'flnl · Oisp1n11r
1 FMtt·Fl1 s 1·2800 Unic111pl1
•Tiff Tu• lnlffitf
BIG SPACE·SAVING 40Slb.
UPRIGHT FREEZER
• S!Dm up to 411$.7 lbs. • 3 R1f1ip11hd $helm
''"' T °' Ctltl l'lalt l1r Falt Frtttint elullr 5111.,.Rllli
• Ftlll1Eay·t•Slt11141 Risch s.t79's
BIG '1'4.7 Cu. Ft. 'NO FROST0
REFRIGERA'rOR·FREEZEtt
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s32495
) hursday, May 31, 1973 fa
•
omeLoan evise OK
Changed Mortgage Broker Law to Senate
SACB.AMEN'ro (AP) -A m 1 j or
m1sion ol callfornia'1 mong..ie broker
law, Jntended to curb abuael In reel
estat.e loans, advanced to tbe Senat.e
fioor Wednelday.
'Die plan would cutlaw pyram1ding ~f
loan chargei, limit balloon payments and
outlaw various "service fees" and
refinance fees w h I c b witnesses said
iOUled low-lncomfJ bcrrowers.
Bahet €ase
TllE M VOTE ol the S«late Business
and ProlessiOlll O>,nmlttee dlmaxed aeven months ol bQrlnas aa loan prac-
tices.
'lbe latest version of the bill is backed
by 8UCh dlvel'lle groups aa the Cali!omla
Real Estate A~lation, several loan
companies, the state's Consumer Affairs
and Real Estate departments. the
Western Center on Law and Poverty and
California Rural Legal Assistance.
A key provision would o u t l a w
numerous "service fees" added to home
loans by some brok~ 14) boost net In-
terest rates. Another provision would
prohibit the "pyramiding" practice of
charging high fees for refinancing loans
to pay for previous loan charges.
Balloon payments -large lump sum
fiual payments -would be outlawed on
loans of Im than sil years. 1be same
restricti<n would be placed on "lnterest-
only" loans. They are loans in which the
borrower makes monthly payments only
on the interest and has a lump llW1l final
payment ol the full IJDOUDt oi his loan.
THE COMMlTl'EE heard in months of
previous testimony that the balloon
payments had trapped some Olll!IUIIle ·
into virtually perpetual payments.
They were told some consumers faced
even bigger loan~ after making years of
payments than they originally borrowed
because of a combination of balloon
payments. stiff fees for financing new
loans to pay off the old balloon payment
and the pyramiding of late charges and
service fees. ·
r-Sen. Anthony Bellenson (D-Beverly
Hills), who was an original coauthor o(
the measure, said he removed his name
from the bill because of compromises on
the ballocn payment Issue.
"One ol the major evils was balloon
payments. 'lbe f~ct of the matter is, we
have done virtually nothing about
balloon pa)'IJM!lli..'' Bellenson said.
. BE CONTENDED IF balloon payments were prohibited oo loans of less than
eight years, rather than the six years
proposed In the bill, It woWd cut out 90
percent of IUch loans. 'Ibey presently are
prohibited.en loans of less. than one yeAr.
Spokem\en for various mortgage com-
panies opposed the limits on ballooo
paymmts and Interest-only Joans, saying
It would be hardship on some bo!TOwers
if these loans were outlawed .
Female Softhallers
Sought for Practice
The Costa Mesa Department of Leisure
Services Is attempting to round up a
team of female sluggers for a morning
softball program.
Sophisticated Approach
This is a step form paver at work on new section
of Newport Freeway bein~ constructed between
Bristol Street and Mesa Dnve in Costa Mesa . The
elaborate machine lays down concrete roadway
24 feet in width. That's equivalent to two normal
--· freeway lanes. The machine's speed is about 300
feet an hour, according to a spokesman for the
Griffith Company, the contractor doing the free-
way work.
----·-
Newport-Mesa. Trustees
Approve Policy C~.nnges
The way was cleared Tuesday night by
Newport-Mesa school trustees for final
approval of district pol:icles permitting
corporal punishmen~ of students an:!
formal grievance procedures f o r
employes.
Ttu3tees unanimously " approved the
first reading of minor revisions in
district rules and regulations which were
streamlined by a committee of teachers
and administrators working for more
than one year.
rreeting but is expccte:I to voice his op-
position when the policy comes up for
final approval next Tuesday.
He has claimed in the past that the
idea of hitting a student is obsolete and
n:,t appropriate tJ mo:!ern cducali :n.
All trustees stressed that such punish-
ment should be used only as a 1·ery last
re.sort In the most incorrigible cases.
Trustees also changed a policy govern-
ing release of student files, making it
necessary for federal, state or local
police officials to obtain a jmj-ge's sub-
poena before gaining access to the files.
Property Worth
$5,000 Stolen
At Plaza Site
Construction site scavengers stole took
and equlpm.ent worth more than $5.000
Tuesday In various thefts and burglarler.
around the South Coast Plaza area h~
Costa Mesa.
Robert J. Taylor, of R.H. RobertSCJl
and Company, told pollce a tw~wheeled .
trailer-mounted gas welding rig wort!·
i.3,000 was towed away .from the shopphl{,
center.
couple use shopping cart to haul gear to beach in Newport. They
found rough sledding, however, because their borrowed vehicle
preved unadaftable to deep, dry sanci. They were part of Memorial
Day throngs a beaches all along the Orange Coast.
Practice is held at 9 a.m. Wednesday
mornings at TeWinkle Park, 970 Arling-
ton Ave. Women over 18 are invUed to
bring their gloves and join practice.
Registration fee is $7.50. Games wlll be
played Friday mornings with other
women's learns in Orange County.
The corporal punishment policy, which
pennits a teacher or administrator to
strike a st~nt with parental consent
and in the pr&ence of witnesses, was en-
dorsed with little debate.
The policy's chief opponent, Trustee
Donald Smallwood, was absent from the
The grievance procedures available to
district employes were also endorsed
with little comment. The policies were
streamlined to make the grievance proc-
ess move more rapidly and with less
red tape.
Emil Greve, of Burns Electric, sale'
someone also :irled the rear door of 11
company van at 1100 Sunflower Ave ..
hauling off 16 cases of electrical plugs.
sockets and ~r mmponents.
Several other Incidents of breaking and
entering or tampering were a 1 s o
reported, some with no loss reported.
. \
*
f.'\.
'
WE'VE GOT
IT ALL
' TOGETHER
I
DAILY PILOT
*TH~ T INCLUDES EV-N -~EW CHANNEL 50, SAN . DIEGO'S 6, 8 AND
10 AND" SANTA BARBAR·A'S CHANNEL 3 -'TOTAL TELEV·ISION'
Yes, TV WEEK now gives you o weekly summary of upcoming programs on Orange
County's new KOCE·TY <Channel 50) every Sunday, along with hour-by·hour listings
of what's doing ~n San Diego's channels 6, 8 and 10 and Santa Barbara's Channel 3
(VHF listings also appear in the DaUy Pilot's daily television listings). With the help
of our friends at TV WEEK, the Daily Piiot got it all tog +her. Now we offer r ad·
ers, ••peclally '"-os• in the South Oran9e Coast area and all others on community
caltl•s who can pull in all the s 1nals there are in · the Southland, 'Total Television' I
the most compl te newspaper llsting of' television fare available •
•
Every Sunday in TV Week.;..Every Day in Daily TV Log
... . ' ' ' I I ' I ' \ ' . . '
• . ~',
II
" • !
.·
TUMILEWIEDS
SHERIFF, l'M 'flNG HARASSfi? W HIJ.Ql:GAAP HAMHOCKfRl.u
Mun & JEFF
WOW/wHeRe'o
YolJ GET T-HAT
BLACK EYE?
FIG'MENTS
N~NCY
. .,
31, 1973
I W.ANr10
SWl;AROOf A
COMPl.AINTl
T~E BEST"Tl-llNG
'FORA SHINER
IS TO PUT A
?IECEOFR.AW
BEEFSTEAK
ON IT!
by Tom K. Ryan
1HERE'S A LAP\' PR~SEN'f
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
-£1/fl</1 .... RUN BACK TO BVS/f,.,lt.~
THE CLUBHOUSE
AND BRING ME
r----. ATEE
PEANUTS
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID rv.zZLB
ACROSS
1 Stage
presentation
6 Cuts into
· pieces
11 Hindu month
14 Synthetic
fiber
15 Usage
16 Adjective
suffix
46 Make foul
48 Ancient
Asian
kingdom
49 Divert
50 Treat with
scorn
52 Neighbor of
Idaho
66 Sesame plant
57 Mike
Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
JUDGE PARKER
SALLY BANANAS
MOON MUWNS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
0
by Charfes M. Schulz .---,n!!!li!m
by Hcirolcl Le Doux
17 Possibility
19 Took on food
20 Compess
paint
unmvoid1ble
60 Letter
61 long for
62 River deposit
63 Alglera
IF I 'M NOT TAKIHG HER OUT
TO DIHHER, I MIGHT AS
WELL TAKE ·eETSY !
AS A MATTER OF FN:,T, eETSY AAO l'~I. DO THE :TOWH TONIGHT!
21 Ship's timber
22 Feminine
nickname
24 Atoner
26 Kind ofaheep
Zl Come Into
view
30 Celestial
being
32 Keen
33 Time
periods
34 Young men
37 Shadeof
green
38 Curve
outward
39 Haul
40 Plant pooch
41 N...American
plants
~'-Sing softly
43 Newspaper
official
45 Dance of the
'208
govemor
64 ln•rt
66 Movie ewerd
DOWN
1 Attncted
2 Speak wildly
3 Affirmative
votes
4 C1nadi1n
city
5 Emmet
6 Place for
sitting
7 Put a stop to
8 Death notice:
Informal
9 Kind of trap
10 Oesignt!rs
11 Shade of pink.
12 Undo a knot
13 Guidea
11911581
18 Over:
German
23 B1bylonlan
aungod
25 Egypt: Abbr.
26 Existed
27 Play divisions
28 Appeal
29 In a ca.Im
manner
30 Dye
31 Embraces
33 Victor ···<
French
author
35 Jot
36 Refuse to
believe
38 ····noire:
Bugbear
39 Declarations
of respect
41 Absence of
aound
42 Rolled tea
44 Away: Comb
form
45 Moans
46 Old hat
lt7 Mr. Zola
48 Thinker
50 Leave at
once
51 Glacial
snowfield
53 Fine·grained
mineral
54 " ...• boy!~
55 learn
58 Sea eagle
59 Ceremonial
vow:2words
MISS PEACH
Il"A , YOU '5AY A ~ECENi FAMll .. Y CONFl.IGT
HA~ Pl.t.INGEO YOL.i INTO A OIF'#C&§~ION '? A"•
YO\A EMOTIONAi.i..'( A!JI.! 1'0 OISGU~
~:---. THE ~f!.A~ON FOPC 'THIS
r:AMll..'/ CONFL.IGT '?
DICK TRACY
FOUR-'nllltTY A.M.l<ID,
WMAT!S TM~ ID!A?
~ POLICE ARTIST ...,_..
•04•Nfl(
""'°°•\.IMO ~
' • • ' I ,
. ·~· ....
'\Alfi.-
A~ IAflLV
A~ '1AIC/NG-
C.ANDV
Fl'.OM ~
MP! ...
.. by M .. 1
c
[,,
by Cheiter Goul~
by Ferd Johnson
HOU> OH 'TO ')t)t.JR MAT,POMEO-flll¥
COMK ~I! sceNe WMEFIE ')it)tJ ff&1b
MY AANb#l>S®e%SP ITTWICS·
.. . . .
by Roger Bollen
... COLl-E«dE. IS A L0~4':1 WA4 OFF I
~~~~~
·=~".:-""·"·..__... ....
"My trouble i..-by the time I'm rested enough to do
something, I always t.el t~ good to do it."
DENNIS THE MENACE
i
I I I
I '
' .VOL 66. NO. 151, 5 SECTIONS, M PAGES ORANC?E CoUNTY,-CAUJiORNIA THURSDAY. MAY 11", 197l c TEN CENTS
Development Raising Big Stink • Ill Mesa
On a Mt day, you can smell. the Leader-
ship Homes condominium development
in West Newport for miles.
That is the complaint of people who
live, work and 'llO to school near the 200-
uilit development being built on the old
Newport Beach city garbage dump site
at the west end of 19th Street at the
Costa Mesa city line.
· What bas apaprently raised all the stink is a trench digging machine that-
thls week turned up aome of the thousands
~91Involved
In Coverup
WASHINGTON (UPI) -H. R.
Haldeman insisted today that "at no time
did I, in any way, direct, suggest, or
participate in any coverup of the
Watergate investigation."
Haldeman, who resigned April 30 as
·White House chief of stliff, issue4 what
be cbaractemed as the categorical
denial to reporters after testifying for
nearly three hours at a closed meeting of
the Senate subcommittee on intelligence
operations.
The subcommitee chairman, Sen. John
TWO MORE BREAK-INS
HINTED-Story, Page 4 -·------------McClellan (D-Ark.), told reporters that
he saw "very substantial confiicts"
between the testimony given previously
by top CIA officials and that giit'en today
by Haldeman and Wednesday by another
former top White House aide, John D.
Ehrllclunan.
McClellan added -tbJt only President
Nixon oould now give ll fUller picture of
what occurred at a crucial White House
meeting J1me 23, 1972 -six days after
the break-in of the Watergate head-
quarters of the Democratic national com-
mittee.
"No source other than the Presi-
dent could give a fuller answer than
Haldeman has given," McClellan said.
Haldeman, in response to reporters'
questions, said it was John W. Dean,
.former White House legal counsel, who
apparently first suggested to Nixon that
CIA operationsDiiglit-becompromised
by an unrestricted FBI investigatioo in
Mexico of some funds for Nixon's re-elec-
tion campaign.
Some of those "laundered" funds
·after being transferred through a Mex-
ican bank, apparently were used to · fi·
nanoe the Watergate plot.
Meanwhile, Sen. Edward J. Gurney (R-
Fla.), today urged colleagues on the
Senate Watergate committee to seed the
storm clouds of the scandal by calling
key former presidential aides · im-
mediately to testify about President Nil·
on's role hi the affair.
In a' lengthy letter to the other six
members of the special panel that began
televised public ,hearings May 17, Gurney
complained things are going \oo slowly
and not cutting to the heart of the issue:
whether Nixon was involved.
He said the committee could "get to
the heart of Watergate" in short order by
calling .seven one-time Nixon lieutenants
-H. R. Haldeman, John D. Ehrlichman,
John W. Dean III, John N. Mitchell,
Maurice H. Stans, Herbert W. Kalmbach
of Newport Beach and Charles W.
Colson.
SEC Accuses
Smith of Scheme
To Acquire Firm
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Securities
and Exchange Commission today ac-
cused California financier C. Arnholt
Smith, two persons and several com-
panies of engaging in a fraudulent
scheme to appropriate the assets of a
West Coast conglomerate and a San
Di.ego bank.
In a suit· filed in 'U.S. District Court at
San ·Diego, the SEC sought a temporary
injunction against Smith and the other
defendants as well as appointment of. a
receiver for the conglomerate, Westgate
California Corp. of San Diego.
Smith 1s a long·time Republican con·
tributor and owner of the San Diego
Padres major league baseball team.
According to the SEC, Smith and the
other defendants engaged In a scheme to
appropriate the assets of Westgate and
the U.S. National Bank of San Diego for
their me.
The suit added they created . ible
profits for Westgate and published false
and misleading statemellta of these prof 4
its to camoufl.ag the unlawful adivities.
, r
of tons of cily garbage dumped in the
gully below the bluffs from 1953-1965.
"On a bot day, it smells just like a pig
farm here," said Betty Kretzle, principal
of Costa Mesa's Victoria School which is
perched on the bl(Ifftop near· the Leader•
ship project.
"It's especially bad when i.t's bot -
like the first days,of this week," 11be add·
ed. "It's DQt bad when it's cool."
Residents of the nearby Freedom
Homes tract in Costa . Mesa ' have also
voiced complaints, some of them di~t
ly to. the Orange County Health Depart-
ment.
Mrs. Howard ~cVicker, 1015 Grove
Place, Costa Mesa, complained "We
couldn't eat dinner before 9 o'clock
Tuesday, the odor was bilious."
Offielals at the · Leadership Housing
corporate offices in Santa Ana today re-
fused to comment on the problem.
Leadership closed escrow on the 40-
NEW DIGITAL TIMEl11ECE RUNS ON COMPUTER CIRCUITRY
At Hughes in Newport, Consumer Applications of Space Technology
Wateh of .Ful11re
. .l. •. ' ' ' ~ • .. -.
.. .. • l' .... ?--·· . .:r· '-·./ '~ ~\--. ~ • , ~ ~
Newport ' Com~n~:·p~~g It
By WILIJAM S~EIBER
Of Ille Dli11' PW Staff
Hughes Aircraft in Newport Beach is
producing a revolutionary new
wristwatch with no mechanical workings,
no hands and no dial. It will be on the
market this summer, company officials
say.
. Hughes experts believe the new
timepiece will eventually spell the end to
mechanical watch· industries, ·COil·
veotional _watch repair and lucrative
worldwide distribution of watch parts by
Swiss and Japanese companies.
The computer-age watch ls totally elec-
tronic, dlsplays the precise time-in hours,
minutes and seconds and the date in a
flash of lighted digits which appear on au
otherwise plain, black face.
Top management and m a r k e t i n g
personnel at the Harbor Area plant, 500
Superior Ave., said the watch has
already been sold to a· number of major
Redevelopment
Agency to Meet
A special meeting has been called fOr
7:30 p.m. Tuesday by the Costa Mesa
Redevelopment Agency.
The main purpose of the session,
scheduled for the first floor conference
room in City Hall, Tl Fair Driv~. ii to
discuss the downtown redevelopment
plan with consultants Wilsey and Ham.
Sitting as members -of t Ir e .
redeyelopment agency ~~.,·be Mayor
Jack Hammett and CltY ~ilmen
Dom Raciti, A. L. P.inkfey. Robert · M.
Wilson, and Willard T. ·Jordan;
• com~ ·and clainis ,oiber are. clamor-
.mg Jor tlie new design.
"We wiH j)ut U>gether the electrooic
package and then put it into cases
designed and supplied by customers who
buy the". workings," 'said W i Ilia m
We~and, associate division manager of
the Hughes Microelectronics Products
Division.
Weakland said Hughes will not market
the=watcb 1ll)der its own name. ·nor will it
fonn a subllidlary firm to market' and
manufacture the . watch. He would not
reveaJ 'wtilch oompmpts have bought the
watch. :
"W~ are hi the electronics business,"
be said. "We're not out to make watches
to aen.••
Tl'le Hughes watch is the most
tedmologically advanced me~r Qf a
growing family of electronic watches
already on the market.
But ~ Hughes product utilizes an en-
tirely different internal system than
those now available. making it the most
efficient and most accurate -sup-
posedly within one· to three minutes per
~ -in the 500-year history of
watches. ·
Marketlbg M&m11er William S. Eckess
sa,ld the watch represents the natural
out.growth Of aopbisticated military com-
put,er technology Ulat Hughes has
speclaliied In for years.
1be watch design eliminates .a)) mov-
ing, weating parts and instead of a
mechanical balance )'Mel -or tuning
fork in some watches -it uses precise,
unvarying vibrations ·.of a tiny ·quartz
~ to tick off its minutes and aecloods.
The crystal pulSes more than 500,000
· (See NEW WATC:B. Page I)
•
Lagunail ~ees· lhnlble
Got
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of 1111 Dllllf' PllOI Slaff
Just imagine owning a valuable 19th
Century painting, and while leafing
throogh a magazine, you see an idenUcal
paintinj offered at· auction.
"We've already started to investigate
the whole thing," said Tom Enman, curator of the Laguna Belch Att
Museum. . .
The painting is "Fun and Fright" by
thelltallan artist Gaetano Cblerlcl (18.18-
1921). ~
The Laguna Beach Art Mliieum was
given its painting of Fun and Fright .
about a year ago by Ruth Brt kin of
Laguna l:IUls. At the time it was valued
at $15,000.
Enman while perusing a copy of
isseur recently spied the idenUcal
painting in an advertisemellt f o i .
Cbtiltie's elf London M8J art auctlail.
"I Immediately Wrote to Christle'• and
'Fun,
acre site three months ago , paying the
city $1110,000 for it.
The sale was conditioned on the basis
Leadership would install an elaborate -
and expensive -collection and testing
system in the trash fill area to control
gas leakage. There was also a 6'tlpulatlon
the 12-ecre area used specifically for
garbage fill could ooly be park land.
Orange County Health Department en-
gineers who visited the site Wednesday
said the sm~I has been caused by the
very project designed to control gas odors
in the future .
"We determined that the odor source
is excavation of a trench around the
peri}neter of the fill as the flnt part of
conStruction of the gas collector system,''
said counzy Environmental Health Direc-
tor Rebert Stolle.
· "The plan had been to dig the trenches
just °'1tslde the trash fill to P!'llvent later-
al escape of gases," he said. "But on
one side, the fill was so close to the bluffs
that the trench had to be dug into the fill
itseU -and that was smelly."
Stone said his office will continue to
study the problem and review the Leader·
ship environmental impact report to see
if any provisions were made for gas
leakage during construction.
Newport Beach Public Works Director
Joseph Devlin said the Leadership tract
plan shows an extension of Balboa Boule-
vard that will run right over the center
(See SMELLY, Page Zl
.:,
6th Suspect Held
,-,.,,
Phone Case Figure Seized in Mesa
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of 1111 DallJ PllOI Stiff
One more suspect in an alleged armed
robbery ring accused of 15 Southern
Cslifornia holdups -some engineered
over the telephone by the unseen
Telephone Bandit -·was captured in
Costa Mesa Wediiesday night.
The arrest of William F. Rounds, 26,
occurred during an 8 p.m. stakeout at an
apa$1ent building in the 500 block of
Victoria Street, according to Detective
Sgt. Sam Cordeiro.
-connection with the pickup of Rounds
about·a p.m. Wednesday.
His name was not released because in-
vestigators said he was actually just de·
tained at that point and not yet facing
any specific charge.
During what gradually grew to a three·
week reign of terror to s o m e
restaurateurs -and market operator& in
West Orange County, the notorious
· Telephone Bandit struck seven times.
Rounds, a transient, was booked into 1 Orange County Jail. on armed robberinry J.-\
charges, joining five other alleged p • ~ cipal$ in the novel case featuring ex-
tortion-type threats of shooting and bomb· •
in&.iminal .~mplaints ·were being issued (.. I + · · I .i· this morning' naming th1. six arrestees on -
charges of armed robbery and -in the L~!!~~--~~~· ~·!!~·~~~ case of one, Mark A. Alcala -an ad-.
-AitioRal ~J ot ~tept to .~ e a · · ti~~.~ r' '7~ ~ . ' tll'·tffr J'.,.
, ~iB,:.ot. 525 .,V~ SJ., odsta . . ·-
; i•.~~of~ a ldnb GJ . . . ~.o r'. '
.that· ~ '~ "Jloli!~ffi :m ' '"" D; . ;D .• smier steat'C ii" Hull~ ~., · · r
\htee daYs aft.er ~t WllS<~ , pt,_...._ _ U B
.'nJe FSrenterect the "Iii• result or ituU§ p,ner ay
that blast which shattered the -dinner . r
hour .for ~res of patrons, 1'clne of. whOm
was injured by some lucky quirk 01 fate. 'Nature Center' Detective George WUson. -Ironically
-convinced the' alleged bomber to come
to police headquarters and surrender
himself .by phone after developing in-
formation on the. Telepoone Bandlt case.
Investigators said this morning that
,orange Countj :cJejidty dlstrl~s
issuing the complaints are ur.Jinl that
· $50,000 ball he set to keep 'the defendants
·in jail.
Besides .Alcala, they lnclude Paul c.
LaJoie, 18, also of 525 Victoria -st., Costa
Mesa; Todd B. Chappelow, 18, of 18151
Yellowstone Drive, Colta Mesa, plus John
P. Diener, 19, and Jeffrey D. Welch, both
transients.
A seventh youth was actWlllY in police
custody this morning for questioning in
Pmne Crashes,
75 on Board
By L PETER KRIEG
Of ... 1141111' Pllet Slaff
Plans to develop a Nature Intetpretive
Center in Upper Newport Bay were an-
nounced1odq-by a Harbor Area .citizens
£l'OUP in charge of the ~unitiel' three
recycling~. •
The Citizens to Recycle Useable Dis-
cards, (CRUD for abort), said today all
J;l'Ofits 'from the ~ f8cilltles next
week will be used to start a fund for the
center.
Both Newport Beach Mayor Donald A.
Mcinnis and Cos~ Mesa Mayor .Jact
HammeU have proclaimed the week of
Jilne 4 Recycling W~t; ltlis ~
by CRUD and the €orona .del-Mar Hlgh -
School·~ogy AcUon Groqp.
"Creatioli of the fund at this time ii
seen aa an example of the grassroot sup-
pcit for llR of the Upper Bay for educa-
tion and study purpoees," said Mn.
Valerie Murley, CRUD spokesman.
Mri.ldurley said she hopes the-Nature
NEW DELHI (AP) -An Indian Interpretive ~ter will become part of a
airlines Boeing plane with 65 p8asenaen JX'opaeed wildlife preserve in the Back
and 10 crew members crashed in Dames Ba
tonight while coming in to land here, the cfiUD will kiclt off Recycling Week with
airport con~ol tower said. . a cremony at the Westcllff Plaza Rec-
Some, residents .of the Vasant Villar lamatloo ·Center Monday at 4:45 p.m.
colony m south New Delbi said they saw Mayon Mcinnis and Hammett are ex-
a huge ball of flame streaking from the pected to bead a list of dignitaries present
sky. There w'as a blinding dust ftorln, ~~when CRUD awards· a $50 prize to the
the time with. ~ht rain showers. . winner of its recently conipleted "logo" It was not munedlately known If there contest
were any foreigners on the Olght. The irouJJ had ldked local residents to
Fright'
submit designs for a permanent Insignia
for CRUD. The winner is Werner W.
Weiss of Newport Beach.
Vohmf.eers from both Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach will be present to staff
the three recyding centers during re-
cycling week. 'lbe other two are at the
Harbor Shopping Center in Costa Mesa
and the Eastbluff Village Center in New-
port Beach. .
Other civic groups normally staff the
centers and use profits for their various
activities, Mrs. Murley explained.
She also stressed that the reclamation
of discards serves several other goals.
"These Include the saving of land
~ to bury our trash, the saving of energy to manufacture such materials
as alwnln~, the reduction of litter and
the m«e efficient use of natural rer
80lll'Cell," ah& said. "Reclamation, reuse and recycling
briq ihe respooalblllty fo~ IOlld waste
management fUll ~ returning It to
the point °' origin, the manufadur ," Mn. Murley ai<L
Mn. Murley noted that any civic poup
wishing to, earn money at any of the
CRUI'.> cen sbould C<lltact New-
port Beach or eosta Mesa ,Qty Hall.
Mrs. KurleJ llld the prtzie money
for the cm · ,,as "1 tilt Hy-
( R, p e I)
t
A mystery caller would warn the
manager who answerec: the phone that a
high-powered rifle was pointed at bis
h~ad and a bomb inside the premises
would be detonated if he failed to turn
over the mone.
Cash was placed at a pre-arranged
drop point outside the establishment and
picked up by what appear!i to have been
an accomplice of tbe actual caller.
Citizen Unit
Vows Battle
For ~~gn Law ;
The SOS s!Pl ~ been ~ fGr
tbe Costa Mesa ~gn ordinmce.
A (((~ g~ .llllllf tbole=-tMy stabll for; Stn OJ:dln.ance -
today aMowicect l&. Will wOr:k ag any
attempts to scuttle sign reform plans
drawn by the city planning department.
The proposal calls for adoption~f strict
sign standards and the phasing out ol ex:·
isting signs not conforming to the new
regulations. .
During two Informal hearings before
the city council and planning commissJon
the Initial draft of the new ordinance en-
countered considerable criUctsm from '
local buslnesamen. '
Maureen DlDomenico, spokesman for
SOS, said the group's main purpose is ta
let both council and commission know '
there is support for the ordinance. The
SOS organization lists about a dcnen
members.
"We feel this document (the proposed
ordinance) represents a positive ap-
proach to solving the sign pollution pnlbo
lem in Coeta Mesa," Mrs. DlDomelllco
said.
Members of the new organizaUon,
formed Wednesday night, are Jack Hall,
Dr. Al ·Painter, Tom Murray, Michael
and Ann Mound, Kathy Blank, Marshall
and Elizabeth Cowley, Wayne Tenant,
and Art Martinez.
'Mrs. Dt'I>omenico added that the
membership of SOS is in favor of the
draft ordinance u it is written and that
it is opposed to revisions.
"We're planning to appear at each city
council and planning commission meeting
and to tell our side of the story," she eald.
"Bue we don't want to give the appear·
ance that we're lining ourselves up on the
other side of the businessmen either •.
We're willing to work with them."
or..,e
The weatherlady sees inore
dri.zile in the air for Friday, par-
tially clearing in the afternoon
hours to hazy sunshine. Highs af
the beaches 65 rising to 75 .b*fld.
Overnight Jows in the mi~.
INSIDE TODAY
Swede Savage is alive today.
The Santa Ana race car driv.r sumved what track wterans
called the worst single.car crash
tn IfldfanapoHa 500 historJI
-Wedusday. Gordoti Johncock
went on to win the abbreviated.
ttDkfl.delayed race. See Sporti.
Page 25.
•
I •
I .
I
a
timc:s per
cut down to .... .,..,..
tronl eomponent that
tll the atch is a chip of ceramic one-
tenth-of•an-incb across and scientileally
Imprinted with more electronics and wir-
ing thau ii in the aver.age television set.
"The cbtp has more than 1,500
transistors on It," said Eckess. ·
'l1le average hand-size transistor radio
has less than 20 full-sized transistors. ~ chip -known in the el~cs in-dusfh' as a Complementary Symmetry
-~tal Oxide Semtconductor (C-MOS)
feeds the ultrastable output of the
vibrating crystal into tiny lighted dlgits
under the blank crystal of the watch.
To get the time and date, the wearer
pushes two buttons on the side of the
watch. The numbers flash on the screen
momentarily and then go out until the
next push.
Weakland explained that the push-but-
ton operation is necessary to coruierve
power in the two tiny batteries that
power the watch. If the digits were
lighted all the td!ne, the batteries would
wear out rapldly, he said. Now they last
a year.
The c o m p a c t , hermetically-sealed
design of the watch makes it almost in-
wlnerable, according to Hughes officials.
It is said to be shock-proof, dust-proof,
waterproof, beat-proof and never needs
cleaning or lubrication.
Hugbes manaaement ls confldeht there
Is a large market for the watches, which
wUI go on the market under various
brand names starting in August. Full-
scale production will get under way
within a month.
Weakland estimates the initial cost of
the watches at about $175 but said that
within only a year or two, models will be
available for "under $50." The watch
costs Hughes about $35 to produce.
Weakland said the conventional watch
Industry is in an uproar over the new
watches.
By 1980, Weakland said, the worldwide
watch market will be 300 million watches
per year and Hughes officials think the
new design will slowly take over a good
piece of that market. ·
Weakland and his marketing men said
they fully expect their watch to go into
competition with less· e x p e n s I v e
mechanical timepieces now on the
market once the initial demand for the
watch subsides.
A by-{lroduct of the new Hughes prod-
uct is the volume of business it has
already produced at the Newport Beach
plant.
"We are already expanding our space
and probably will need more to keep up
with the demand," said Eckess. "The
shortage of defense contracts won't be
felt here, that's for sure,"
Weakland said virtually every major
watch company in the world Is "pounding
at our door" and he said there could
easily be too much business for the new
watch.
The prospective buyer of the Hughes
digital watch probably will have no idea
it ls a Hughes model when he buys it,
Weakland said. The companies who have
bought the new system probably won't
advertise the fact Hughes made the
workings, he added.
But Weakland contends that when the
watch starts appearing in the stores this
August and when the prices begin drop-
ping as supply meets demand, the
mechanical watch and the corner watch
repair shop may become things of the
past.
From Pagel
CENTER ...
land Division of Travenol, Inc., of Costa
Mesa, a hospital supply firm that she
said has contributed more than 28,000
pounds of glass for recycling.
'!'he two Newport Beach r(!(:ycling cen-
ters were opened by CRUD in January
1972. The Costa Mesa center was opened
three months later.
CRUD was founded in April 1971. Ils
members come from various Harbor
Area civic groups.
Mrs. Judy Tracy of Eastbluff Is the
current chairman. She explained that the
purpose of Recycling Week, besides the
fund-raising project, will be "to educate
the pu\tlic concerning the merits of rec·
larnatio~, e-use and recycling."
,.
OllANtU COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
Tllo Orone• Cooat OAILV PILOT. with ...,,ell
it combined tne News-Prins, is publlshed bv
ttle Or•"9e C011t Pubjlthlng Compiny, S•PA·
rift tdlllon• oro PllbllJ!led, Mond1y thrOuth
Friday, tor Coll• MM, Ntwporl !each.
Hunlinglon BtKh/Fountl"1 V1lley, L•OUM
Buch. lndno/S.cldlolllck end Sin Clemonle/
Sin Juan Capl1tr1no. A slngle 'f'Vlon-'I
Miiiion Is PUbllshed Saturo1v1 1nd Sundays.
TM princlPll PUbll1ti1no p11n1 Is If UO Wnt
lllY StrHI, COii• MtU, Calltornla, "'"·
ltobtrl N. w .. d
Pret.ldtnl 1nd Publlthtr
Jeck R. Curley
Vitt 'r•tictenl tnd G.,..r•l.M1n101r
Thomos Keev il
Ed1Jor
ThomH A. Murphint
M1nagln; Editor
CllutH H. looa Richrnl P. Noll
Ai1l1tent M•n•~ng Edllors
Ceste M-OHie.
llO Wetl loy Stroot
M•illnt "'dreu:'P.O. 101 I 560, 92626
OtW Offkff
Nnport •-= 3JU N-lloulovard .... --: m ~Orftt Avenue MuntlnflOn 1-h: 11175 B•och Bovlovonl
S.n Cle.,,..le: ~5 North El Comlno Aul
, .. .,.... (7141 642-4321
a.1n.11 ~11-9filet 642-H71
ad¥rftllf, 1rn. Orenoe tout Putillslllftt ~. Nt -ttorlot, lllYftrotlaM. edllDri.1. metter ,.,. ldvertl-Mr9ln .... .,. .. ...,..__ wtlllovt -ltl ......
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lfaM claat ~ ..... at Cotti Mtw. Qtltllltl... . ••a i.tltn try .. , ... , IUI "'°"""" try ,,....1 u.n "'°""'It'• rn1111ory --lltM tUS ownlfllY,
\
•
Thunday, May Jl, 1973
D1flt P'flol Sllll ""°" Lead• J Uflt!ees
Don Bull, a 30-year-old real
estate salesman, has been in·
stalled as 1973 president of the
Costa Mesa Jaycees.
Mesa's Annual
Fish . Fry Begins
Friday Evening
The stage is set for one of the Harbor
Area's biggest summertime crowd
pleasers, the 28th annual Costa Mesa
Fish Fry and Parade.
Things get under way at 5:30 p.m. Fri-
day under the trees of Costa Mesa Park
with the serving of fish dinners by the
Costa Mesa-Newport Har)lpr Lions Club,
hosts for the three-day event.
Dinners will be served through 8 p.m.
Friday for $2 each. Hot dogs, ham-
burgers, soft drinks and home made pies
and cakes, as well as peanuts and pop
corn will also be available.
For entertainment, there is a carnival
with merry-go-rounds, ferris wheels, and
about 30 other rides and midway booths.
The carnival will also be open for the
duration o( the Fish Fry.
Saturday activities begin at 10:30 a.rn.
with the Fisll Fry Parade, a two-and-a-
half hour spectacular, involving an
estimated 1,500 participants. Grand
marshal for this year's parade is Les
Josephson of the Los Angeles Rams.
Fish dinners will be served from noon
through 8 p.m. Saturday. Drawings and
stage shows arc scheduled throughout the
day.
On Sunday, the Fish Fry is scheduled
to ~t under way at noon. Highlights in-
clude a baby contest at 2:30 p.m. and the
Miss Mermaid beauty pageant at 3:30
p.m., botti on the park stage. .
The Fish Fry ends at 8 p.m. with the
award of the grand prize, a 1973 Ford
Pinto sedan. All persons buying fish din-
ners are automatically entered.
Members of the Costa Mesa-Newport.
Harbor Lions Club hope to gross $100,000
for local charities from this year's Fish
Fry.
Myrle T. King
Services Friday
Funeral service will be held Friday in
Santa Ana for longtime Costa Mesa resi-
dent Mrs. Myrle T. King , who died Tues-
day at the age of 91 in Fallbrook, where
she was living with her daughter.
Rites for Mrs. King will be at 11 a.m.
in Smith and Tuthill Chapel, foilowed by
interment at Pacific View Memorial
Park in Corona del Mar.
An honorary member of the Costa
Mesa Women's Club, Mrs. King made
her home in the Harbor Area for 25 years
before moving to 3909 Reche Road,
Fall brook to live with her daughter, Mrs.
Thelma Martell, widow o( Santa Ana at-
torney John Martell.
Mrs. King also leaves a son, James E.
King of San Francisco and another
daughter, Mrs. Irene Goode, of Florida.
.TONIGHT
"THE CLOWNS" -South Coast
Repertory Theater. 8 p.m.
'THE FANTASTJCKS" -UC! Drama
Workshop. Fine Arts Village Studio
Theatre , May 3l-June 2. 8 p.m.
FRIDAY. JUNE l
COST A MESA FISH FRY -Costa
Mesa Park, Fri., Sat., Sun.
MOTORCYCLE SPEEOWA Y RACING
-Fairgrounds, 8:15 p.m.
"IN THE MIDST OF LIF'E" -South
Coast Repertory Theater, Fri., Sat., Sun ..
8 p.m.
Phone Cables Sliced
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Three
telephone toll cables were severed ac-
cidentally Wednesday, knocking radio
station KCBS off the air and disrupting
calls to and from Novato, Pacific
Telephone Co. said. Service to KCBS was
restored by switching to an FM sul>-
carrler lifter the all-news station was off
the air 55 minutes. ,.
Wife, Sons
Die in Fire
GARDEN, Mich. (UP]) -The wife
and two small sons ol a sheriff's deputy
died in a fire here today. Three blocks
away, firemen discovered the deputy,
Dewlia Murphy, handcuffed tO a tractor.
In the area where Murphy was found, a
message written in.red crayon or lipstick
on a large board, read "I will kill you
Murphy, first your wife and kids."
Authorities in this one-acre town of 380
said they had no motive and no suspects.
Firemen recovered the body of
Murphy's wife, Janet, 20, and one of the
couple's sons, Randy, 2. They searched
the rubble of the home for another son,
Robbie, seven months.
"The entire area has been cordoned off
and state police crime lab experts have
been flown in to help us in the in-
vestigation," said a spokesman for the
Delta ColDlly sherilf's department.
Authorities said Murphy was hand-
cuffed to a tractor behind the Garden
town hall. The sign was on a large board
in back of the ball.
County prosecutor Tony Marcintewcz
said Murphy, treated for cuts and bruises
at a nearby hospital and released, said
someone came to his house at 1:30 a.m.
today, told his wife there was a bad ac-
cident and said Murphy should go to the
town hall were "someone would meet
him to take him to the scene."
Murphy told authorities someone
grabbed him from behind when he got
out of his car at the ball.
School Records
Spring Concert
Estancia High School musicians will
cut their first record album at 7:30
o'clock tonight during the music depart-
ment's annual spring concert.
The performance, scheduled for the
campus Forum, is open to the public
without charge.
Participating in the concert are the
Chamber Orchestra, symphonic wind
ensemt>le, concert band and the Estancia
stage band.
Orders for the record will be accepted
at the concert. Price is $4.
2 New
HOUSTON (UPI) -Two new power
failures struck America's orbiting Skylab
today. They forced major flight plan
revisions and added urgency to bold
plans for a spacewalk to free a jammed
solar cell wing and double the space sta-
tion's dwindling electrical supply.
The latest troubles ccst Skylab
another six percent of its limited power
supply -making a total of 12 percent
apparently lost permanently, and robbing
the 100-ton space station of any margin
for absorbing future losses without
serious mission impact.
In addition, another 24 percent of the
station's electrical batteries shut down
temporarily. This placed a heavy load on
the remaining batteries, depleting them
and forcing reduced operations today to
provide time for recharging.
There was never a threat to the safety
of Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph P.
Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz.
But mission control canceled an Im-
portant earth resources survey originally
scheduled for today and said the scope of
all such surveys planned by the crew
would probably be reduced.
The problems occurred after Skylab
pointed its nose earthward Wednesday
afternoon and made man's first ex-
aminations from orbit of terrestrial
resources during a 17,114-mlle per hour
sweep from Utah past Mexico and.
Brazil's Amazon Basin to the farmlands ·
of Colombia.
Changing the space station's position
forced it to switch from its good solar
eel! electrical generators to battery
power because its solar cells no longer
were facing the sun. Engineers said this
maneuver triggered a chain of events
that produced the problems.
Flight director Nell H u t c h i n s o n ,
meeting with reporters in a midnight
news conference at the Johnson Space
Center in Houston, said engineers sUll
did not fully understand the failures.
"There's going to be a lot of engineer-
ing analysis done tonight," he said.
With the latest electrical failure,
Hutchinson said, Skylab's problems in-
clude "three or four biggies that we're
chasing and a myriad of little ones."
The other "biggies" included recurring
difficulties with one of the space station's
•
s
stabilization gyroscopes, the failure or a
telescope the astronauts tried to use
Wednesday to photograph the Milky Way,
and an overheated cabin.
Among the little problems was one
reported earlier In the day by Conrad -
a dripping cold water faucet in Skylab's
kit<:hen. Conrad said "it's obviously got a
bad 0-ring in it" and asked that time for
some orbital plumbing repairs be
scheduled soon.
Warden, Aide
Murdered by
2 Prisoners
PHILADEIPHIA (·UPI) -A convicted
cop killer and an inmate awaiting trial
on the same offense stabbed tile warden
and deputy warden to death and injured
three guards today during a meeting in
the warden's off1ce at Holritesburg prison,
authorities reported. The two convicts
were wounded and subdued by guards. .
~yor Frank L. Rizzo, the city's
former pi>iice" commissioner, and police
reinforcepientS rushed to the northi:ast
Philadelphia prison immediately. En
route, Rlz7.o radioed Police Com-
rnlssloner Joseph F. O'Neill to "go in
there with clubs and all the force we
need to put them b3clt in their cells."
The outbreak in the office of Warden
Patrick Curran was quelled swiftly, but
not before Curran and Deputy Warden
Robert Frombold were stabbed to death
and prison Capt. Leroy Taylor and two
guards were injured. The suspects, Jos-
eph Bowen and Fred Burton, were seized.
First reporta indicated that Bowen and
Burton told guards they had a complaint
and received a pass to see Curran. The
warden was stabbed first during the
meeting, and Frornhold and Taylor were
stabbed during the ensuing struggle.
Taylor was reported in good condition
at Nazareth Hospital. The two prisoners
were hospitalized at Ph i 1 a d e 1 p hi a
General Hospital with undetennlned in-
juries.
FINAL DAYS
p
Rome fo
id .
§!:le donated it to the ~, ...... {11Ullellll!t!_
moving to •
rellidence, he said.
Re, id that even if it Oil the 1
museum has a copy, the peigting wil
still be valuable.
"It's a good example of 19th Centwy
Italian work," he said.
''Its a great drawing card for
children," Enman said of the spriptl{
painting depicting a boy scaring his y6fuig~ sister to the annoyance of their·
mother. ,
He said while fakes are fairly common ·
in the art world , this is the first time a
conflict has occurred within the museum .
The painting is on view from 11:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. daily at the museum's upper
lobby. ..
~. •.IL . •. '· ... f . From P119e 1 · ,.., _ ·~
" SMEUY ...
' .~;~
of the trash fill. .r • , •
"According to their plans, they will
have to remove all the trash fill where
the road will go and replace it with pure '·'
dirt fill to meet the requirements for ,;
roadways and sewer line installation," he ·
said.
Devlin said removal of the fill will
mean digging through 20 feet of rotted) · ·
garbage that has accumulated since the'
dump opened. The trash fill is nearly 40 ·
feet deep in some spots, he said. '·
Since the dump is a sanitary fill site
-a layer of trash followed by a layer ,
of dirt -St.one said it is unlik'ely any , ;
bacteriological problems will arise. But . ·,
he said his men will keep a close watch '
on the dump site work until it is finished .
He also said it is unlikely any legal
action will be taken against Leadership ·
unless it can be proven the company
purposely left out potential problems in ,
its EIR. ·~
Race Baffles Reagan .
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan said Wednesday the Los An·
geles mayoral race in which city coun-
cilman Thomas Bradley defeated in-
cumbent Sam Yorty was "confusing" -
and the Issues were never clear to him.
But Reagan refused to comment on the •
outcome of Tuesday's election, saying ·
only, "The people have spoken."
~ 26th JnnitqerJarq S~k
. I
1973
CLOSE-
OUTS
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