HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-06-12 - Orange Coast Pilot'I
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 12, 1973
VOL. 1tt: NO. IU. I SICTIOHS, • PAelS
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Coastal Vote
( _f ro~ontory Bay
1 ~P·ro1ect Okayed ·
Dy CANDACE· ,PEARSON
Of IM o.llY ~llet St•ll
'The Irvine Con1panY got the go-ahead
on two Ne"1>0rt Beach waterfront proj-
ects ~1ooday but was temporarily stall-
ed on a third by the South Coast Regional
ZOne Conservalion Commission.
Orange County·s largest single land·
owner was granted an exemption from new coastal permit proe;edures to Jinish
its Promontory Bay development.
ExemptlOM are given to projects that
had necessary local permits and were
already under way when Prop. 20. the
coastal initiative. became law Nov. 8.
missioner Rimmon C. Fay of Marina de!
Rey abstaining.
The project needed eight votes for air
prO\'al because it involves dredging 0£
the channel to remove built-up silt.
"It's been impossible for marine
organisms to establish t h e m s e I v e s
because they keep dredging the bay con-
tinually," Fay, a marine biologist, ob-
(See GQ.AllEAD, Page %)
Costa Mesa .
The company had necessary approvals ~fl970 to create 61-watei'front lots-With
tWp "public plaws and an I l·acre bay on a
---26=&-cre-slte-alorrg-Baysld~-Drtve:--Work
began in 1971.
Stakes Claini
On Airport ~
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A nearby, ne1v Irvine Company project
-60 condominium units and 77 boat slips
called "The Cove" -also won a permit Costa ~1esa is staki ng its claim on
!run the South Coast CommissiQJl. Orange County Airport.
l'fie 12-member bOdy, which has permit City councilmen Monday night an-
a~rlty in the 1,00> yard coastal zone of . nounced their intentions of annexing the
OraD~e and Los Angeles counties, airport by petitioning the Local Agency
UD10nnously approved 1he live-acre proj· Formation Commission (LAFC) to place
ed,.near the Balboa 191and Bridge. it within the ~ity's "sphere of influence ."
It \\~II feB.ture a public waU~way along The LAFC will hear the petition at 2
the bayfront to the brklge and 'a center Wedn sd p.m. e ay.
Vie\v corridor from tile street. Mayor Jack Hammett said today t~
The company's proposed ·reconstruc-unanimous action or the co u n c i I
ntironea. owaf B~ayasthofresl-l ~dlcarln1'edna biny ,'tttihe., sacomem-represents the city's desire to place iLs , ., boundaries around ~ airport "at some
mission. The vote \..·as 6 to 4 with Com-futdre · date-""He declined, to speculate
-~ -----JitiiDlOO anr.txation woiild-take Pll<...C.
,.------------·--.., Key reasons supporting the "sphere or
.:Out· \;nnUence" petition are that the county· 'oraage
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. ~a\ed airport is· contiguous to the
bOOndqries of Costa Mesa and that it is ·
served by·the Costa Mesa County Water
·District , and· the· Costa Mesa Sanitary
DistriCt.' ·' Weather PlaMmg Director \Villi am Dunn said
, the airport represents a large tax base,
'• It'll be. mostly suMy on ~~es-making annexatiOh desirable for ,Costa ~llJ~--if...you..Jlve_ln._tbLiW•.n<L. .......A!esa._.EurtJ>er-bc...:.bel~yes _l![acing_j!
·areas of Orange CoUnty. otherwise under municipal jurisdiction would &Ive
. .: mostly cloudy and Jiazy alq the , · (See ANNEX, Page !)
. beaches wilh hlghs of 70,, rlsin, to · ~ ,
., 75 inland. Overnight lows 1n tlie
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• INSIDE-TODAY
"Britisl& medium claims ·Lex •
·Barker ho.$ bee11 contact d and
that "l1e's alive and weJl it&
1-~~1-.,..mtotlrendorld:"''-Se~-itor , Page-.. -r2.
NM's Miss Nucl,c
To Be Clothed
CORRALES, N.M. (UPI) -Among
other things, the winner of Ne-.v Meii6o'a
only nude beauty "mtest will g!t llO!Tle
clothes.
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Rex Comer, manager of an ~lbu·
~<rucrqUC clot_hlng store, ·has promised he
wt:! g!Yeilrce i!OO wan!robc to anyone
entered in the 1973 Miss 1>4nbather
Contest, scheduled June 24. ·
.. Contest spon90rs said the winner also
wilt reet.lve $500; a reconlin& contract
and a movie role.
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·-;••·········-Af esa ·Stalae~1 Its Claiin
• '-'-"'--""'-"'----'·~·-'· . . ·' -...:-=· -'---~-~---~ On~-~c_oun-iy Air Facilirtil -----·
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Into Train. • Ill Irvine . -
·Train~--Auto .l;ollide Driver -Hurt
i • .· .... _. . .··· -But. Lives
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After Crash
A .woman who drove.her station wagon
into the' side of a 75-<:ar Santa Fe freight
train in 1rvlne Monda'y night escaped
. 'vith her lile, but not by a large margin.,
A few. seconds-·sooner and Mrs. Gay
Clark, 34, of 5122 Skinner Ave., El Toro
wOuld. have been direcUy in front of t~ ,
·.: · locoh m)o~veed~ _piefi/C~J-~. t~~-.a~-~~!1Y as c aim one e.
The victim, whOse car sustained major
damage when It skidded into the fourth
car of the train, was listed in fair con-'
dilion today at Tustin Community
H<>spital.
... r: 5!11~.~Jf_!!~~ mliiu.~thiP.~.~l-~~~~s .~Un~ a 1rac ureu wrist t e co1 lSM.111 at Je rey
Road a half mile north or Moulton
Parkway .
Irvine Police Officer Jack Watson said
the engineer, Gene L. Patton, SiB, San
--Bernardino, told him he failed to see the r. car prior to the crash but felt a sli ht
burop::.from-:t hej mJ)a·ct., .
Investigation rev·ealed Mrs. Clark's car
skidded only 10 feet bef.ore rammlng the . . · · r. iron undercarriage of thi freight car
. • o.,., '"Milt 1''" • ..W. ~ 11 1ct1•~ f'.H111er , ~ which was· traveling about 35 miles pef
ROBIN .~L ARK 51,)RVEYS wlilfi:KAGE. OF HER .~!?THER'.5 .c~R _Al"i'.iJ ·cg~i;J$1 01i' .. :_~ l hour.
Ir.vine.Woman Comes Off Second Be'st' in Tangle With Train at Jetf~CreslinS · · -· \Vitnesses .said the crossing's wig-wag
---sig'nal. device which clan~s 88 times per
Four Seized in Coast
'Mea~ ·Hi.jacking <;aper \
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By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of the 0.ll'f' l"lt.I S!llf
A qua)'tet of susj>ected meat hijackers
a~ in jail today in, Connection with tl:ieft
of a truckload of 2<l tons of beef .steaks
worth · $1~,000 and delivered to a
Newp6rt Beach frozen food locker Mon·
day.
The rendezvous arranged ror sale of
. lhe Colorado-bred-beef-at what in-
-vestigat"brs· aescri~-ar-the-ridiculousty.:
Jow price or $1.50 .per pound was raided
abOut 4 p.m. by detectives on slakeout.
~ewport Beach police, FBI agents and
Or~e Counly District Attorney's in-
veshgators swooped down on the
suspects at the Harbor Food Locker, at
30th Street ana Villa Way.
cd over to FBI agents to face federal
charges .
Investigators in a team headed , by
Newport Beach Polite Detective Capl.'
Don Oyaa s said the meat caper -one ot
the larges t in rectnt southern California
historY -originated about one week ago.
A local businessman told o( befng ap-
proached ·.vlth an offer of 40,000 prime
steaks for sa le at $1.50 per pound, about
half-the going comme~\al1 rate.
ni.e 'ma chinery for the raid was set 1n
(See STEAKS, Page I)
YOUNG ELEPHANTS
RUN TO DAYLIGHT ..
Stans Testifies -·--
• ·He Was Una,vare
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. Of V}ola~ion~
WASHINGTON (AP) -Maurice H.
Stans,· blocked In an effort to avoid
Watergete testimony now, today denied
\knowledge of the· wiretapping ·raid,
Poli~ical sabotage or violation ol any
campaign laws.
The' ·foniler se<:retary of . Coniinerce
Md fundraiser for President Nixon con-
ceded only that there might have been
Z)EGLER ADMITS ERROR
ON BRIEFl~G-Story, -plll" 12
"some unintended technical vlolations··or
the new disclosure law. (Related story,
Page f )
m~nute had been o~rating a full . two
mmutes before the collision.
-'l~y.toJ.d police Mrs. Clark showed no
indication of slowing or stopping as she
and lhe train aimed siinultaneously for
the crossing point until she slammed on
(See CRASH, Pqe I)
D_rug Cas6_.Admitted
SAN FRANCfSCO (AP) -A
~lal~ysian car salesman pleaded pllty
~tonday in U.S. Oistrlct Court here .to
possessing .f4 pounds of heroin with ip-
teot f,o distribute it. Tang Kuang· Heo~.
33, could receive a maximum penalty df
15 years in -prison apd '!-$25,900 fine.
S£1botage Case:
Sail or Freed
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Stans appeared at the televised hear-SAN J:RANClSCO (AP ) -Navy
ings of the Senate's . Watergate in-Fireman Patrick Chenoweth, 21 •
"estlgating comnlittee, which rejected was found innocent by a court-
hil lawyer 's plea that 1St11ns be spllred · nwtial board of c11arges he
the "Inevita ble klieg light .of publicity" sabotaged. an aircraft Carrier ·last
befure his New York trial. July .•
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The location where the four suSP!!Cts
were taken into custody and the stolen
rrieat and hijacked" refrigerator truck
recqvered J1, 1bout tlp'e~ blocfs fro1n
pi>ll~e-headq1larters. ,
SHREWSBURY, Ma,ss. (AP) -Tllree
elephants were. loose tQday:ln the woods
•nrouod Shrewsbury. ' Earlier, the CornmiUee.hear.d-a-rocmcr....-1-...xoe.:c·:verd.ic:t wa returned .,~r-t----
Nlxon campaign worker lrom Orange lnly three. hours of delibenu.1 · BOOked on suspicion or thefC from an
interstate shipmtnt wer~ An~re "Bill ''
Harvey, ·31;-of't 1020 Cabrlllo Park Drive,
Santa Ana· Jeffrey Gilcllrist, 2!1, of 220
Clly Blvd. Wesf. ·Orange; mid Henl')I
. Quintana, ·40,. and Georgt: Saldana, 20;
botG h of. '13271 .,...._A~rifJ:' .• Circle. Garden rove. _
. Th•r were· booked' at" llllrby·Ne.,pOrt
Beach police headquarters and then turn· ,
State Police said
0
ltle elephants.
described variously as babies or medlum-
sized, esca~~ from their ov.'tler Ma1iday ·
night.. and wandered off~into.Jhe \'foods.
. Police snld the elephants were bQlng
transported to, an 4\muaern.~nt. park In
'New Hampshire tiy Mlcha<I Rice, a:
·Saraoota i'la. TeSldenl.--
County t~stif)' he had been told. that John ~1o~ar afternoon and tltls mew.
N. Mitchell,' while still attorney general. 1ng.. ·
had been showir fllmed e<1ples of private j ., Chenoweth .wa s n~used of dnlp-
correspondence from the campaign-of ping a paint ~ra~r and bolts ·•
Sen. Edrnund ~.;Muskk, at that th:ne an· .engine gear 800ant the tJm ·r~·onlr"'1!}t't'(or;t,be:bemocr&tiClft!SldCn··· Ranger requlrlng.-nearly fl mW' m;
t1al nomma\{on. ,in !.~irs.J!.nd ,delaying the ...
In couri. u.sf'ilislr!C. Judge John J . ·depa~ure ·_for Vleinam 31> mOdtfao.' •,
!See STANS, Pqe 11. 1
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•. _2 O,A.ILY PILOT T11tsd1.y, June 12, l97l . -\
U.S. Paid for San Clemente Repairs J'rot11 PqeJ
STEAKS ··· .•
mot.ion at that Ume, while Costa MeP
oollce sold today they had also reeelvtd
\\'ASlilNGTON !AP ) -1'hc federal total IJ9.784 COfil of installing a six-inch
goV-ernment paid nearly SI0.000 or t,he ~wer line serving the Spanish-style
cost of install ing "'at er and sc"·er llries home, GSA spokesman Terry Angelo
at President Nlxo11'1 Snn Clc1ncntc eistt te old.
soon after he purchased the property in Angelo said the sewer was built larger
I9et, officials said Monday. tl1nn normally would be neces...ury "to
Mosl of the expense, $6.260, was for a accommodate the federal personnel sta-
sir-lnch \Yater line installed at the Stcrel tioned there at all times,'' and the
servic~·s request for rlrt: prote<.:tlon. a government thus !hared the coe:t.
General Services. A d m l n I st r a t i on The nearly $10.000 in expendjtures is in
Newsday, a Long lslan~ ncv.·spaper,
reported S u n d a y had been spent for
estate land.l;caplni: at the request of the
ll«rtt S.rvlco.
The sewer and water lines were built In
the summer of 1969 as -part of "Operation
Sunrise," the code name for the cras h
federal prosram undertaken to prepare
Nixon's house and grounds for occupancy
by the f irst Family.
As to the water line, Angelo Said, "The were obtalned for the work. 'although a inrormatloo abOut a sueplciouis meat
U.S. government paid for that entirely at map in the Ille shows the route or the line trarisaction In the works. •'
the request of the Secret Service. It was stre.tchlng 270 feet from the edge of the 1'her passed that lnformaUon on to ~~!~~l~r ~~. Og~~n:.r.t1rant and water =~111!'1 proptrty io the Vleln!ty or blo ~·1,:1 J!7::.':l~"'iow:'.:l: =:Ii
AJ1geto said the sovernmcnt paid about A s..tet S.rvlce opolttsmaii uld th< dtllvllry 1pot.
one-third of the cost of the aewer line to agency wa1 not conaerned tbftt lhe lnvettlg!Uors said the beef ahllleld
"supplement the sewer cepacity, above Prealdtnt's swhnrnJng pool waa linked to h'ont ~toofor\ Pac klng co. In Grtiley,
what would be neceaa.ry for presidential the 111-lnch water m&l.n. I& requested. Colo. wu dlltined for food bt'Oktr
use, to accommodate rederal persoMel 1"0Ur only interest ts thll It tie .utttctont Dtrutl l111C01; OI Burbonk, who 1tri111td
spOkes'man said in response to inquiries. l\ddllion to the $100,000 in gov~mment --~-.::-sourtM reported--the•'water·,lin~liO ... f\lnd v.·hich--the-Aaaociated-Press
serves a S\\'lnunlng PoOI that Nixon bu!lt reported tVl'O weeks ago had been spent
~he qsA first refused to answer ques-
ti°'l'-a~t-lhe-lines.-La.t.er..---afteWhe..
same questions we re asked of White
House officials, Angelo acknowl edged
that the government had pald ror part of
the work.
~~~d ..Ille ~~l "!Se'fY'!' !l....Jllb the m~J\tlt· ,-,,,,'i'M~l":ilnt lltt! WU btlDI .ehltl1114 IO l
stationed there at all times." Tor hte }ltotect.IOrl," the-;; Aid Ill 1ale to a Ntt>tcue rt•t&orant chabi.
had requested expansion o! the sewer 'l"til"nrt ~ran nk-MIIBrWli reltiW'ai\lCl\ililtCif""Mtift41Y_,dl
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at his expense n~ar his San Clemente for im provemeats on Nixoo's property to
residence in J uly, ~969. ~ improve presidential seeurltY,.
system. used Jn lt!O whltl a ulty r piece cou.. wh•n It w•• 110lt111 over the 'Wftktlltl Jn
Records in the San Clemente City Hall ed 1 blue wblcb da apd tho tnltrlor 01 Burllank. The ttliclOl'U'IUer ....ulnlnr
'11\e government also pald $3,200 of the It also is in addition to f78,000 which do not indi cate that buUdln'g permits the Pmldont'a hoult. the mut, htd been porittd oil tht 111tel not rar rrom the drl .. r'• home.
Co111aty ltlur--ders
Police detective Reed Gloshen told lhe
Daily Pilot lhe loc_al ~loe~sman had
been offered the large supply of prime
meat for $1.50 a pound, a price only haJJ
Eckstrom Found
East Coas1' s
In Swelter,
Power Taxed
_lliiLgoing_ rate.__ _ _ _ . _
The inrormaiir wa s again caned· on
?>.1onday. He was told by the caller that
another party had a large aupply of meat
and "wanls to move It now.''
Guil!y ~ ~y Ju~y
The police were Informed and by thiM
tune reporta_....ef the Burbank heist were -eoiiiliig-iR"TO verify that Indeed 1ucb a
large shipment bad been 1tolen.
'By the Associated Press 1be invettigation team beaded by
The East Coast sweltered tOO>iy for a Capt. Oyaas and lncl udlng Sgl. Don
second straight day ""Dnd ·power-com=-==Pi~.:=det.ective _Tom h arn -and
It took an Orange County Superior
Court jury just 69 minutes late Monday
to find that Carl Ande rs Eckstrom ·was
guilty Qf fir~t degree n:iui::der in the
slayings last Jan. 4 or two l...Qs Angeles
County lawmen.
The panel in Judge William C. Speirs
courtroom quickly rejected the theory
tha t Eckstron1, 23, was in a state of
"diminished mental capacity '' when he
used an au tomatic rifle to snuff ou t the
lives of sheriff's detectives Donald
Schneide r and Carl Wilson, both 40.
Judge Speirs ordered the jury to. return
to his courtroom \Vednesday for the
opening of a he_aring th~t will determine
Eckslf9n1's sanity at the time or the kill-
ings. , He ha s additionally pleaded not
guiJty ·by reason·of insanity.
Ec.kstron1, · cahn and ~ ··c o m p o s e d
throughout the trial. displayed no e1n1>
. tion at the announ cefnent of the jury's
verdi ct. He began discussing aspects of
hJs defense in the sanity hearing with
r:>t;puty ·Public Defender Ron Butler
be fore th e }ast juror had left the
courtroom.
The Mid\vay City man faces two iden-
tical counts of first degree murder fi led
in l.JJs Ange les County fo r his alleged
killing of two persons in a Cerritos shop-
ping center. Trial is sched uled for Jwie
27.
It is alleged that Eckstrom shot three
persons in a parking lot before driviryg
off to .his Flight Street home where he
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Ne'v Groom Held
In-Tahoe Rape
_ SOUTH LAKE TAHOE (UPI) -Terry
Leroy Cassidy, 20, who police said was.on
his honeymoo:: with his bride of 1-.,l.an
one week, has been arrested on charges
or kidnaping and raping a _ Nevada
~·om an.
Authorities said the un identi fied victim
was hitchhi king in Nevada when she was
picked up by a man who drove her across
the state line to Californ ia to an isolated
area, where he raped her.
Cassidy was arrested about an hour
later by officers acting on the victim's
description of the man's car.
From Page 1
CRASH ...
. • Gloshen began <o fonnulate a plan for parues struggled to meet the demand for t ·ng the ................ ed meat thieves. assembled an arsenal of we aJ'.)Ons and
boxes of ammuni tion to prepare £or the
visit of lawmen.
I . . . ~-.i.: . nd rapp1 ~· e ec tr1c1ty to run air \.viiwboners a The caller teJephoned again, sugg'esting
other coolin g devices jn addition to this time the merchandise could indeed
Schneider was shot through the screen·
door as he tried to kick open the front
door of the Eckstrom home. Wi190n was
tracked across the lawn by the young
gunman and cut down in a hail of bullets
from the automatic weapon.
regular appliances. have been stolen. .
As temperatures in New York City ap-When he was told the pohce alrudy knew of his offer, he agroed to aioperate.
proached the record 93 de g r e e s , He rclayed an order-of 20 ooo pounds of
Consolidate<! Edison Co., serving the city !neat and scheduled the N;,wport 'Beach
and Westchester fumty, reduced voltage delivery.
in eome sections for the second day. Con Detective Shearn was to pose as the Eckstrom was then dropped by a single
blast lrom Orange County Sheriff's
Deputy Andy Romero's shotgun. He bas
fully recovered from those wounds.
Ed said at 10:45 a.m. that pcM'er had_ bu~:ii~ did not dlsclote the identity of
been c~t bf 5 per:cent at manually the local businessman or the contact man
operated, older s u bs ta t t o i:i s in \Yho agreed to help trap the meat
\Vestchester, Queens and Staten Island. thieves.
Fr~Pagel The New York State Po\\'er Pool -in-They said shortly after the ap-
volving eight utilities _ said powe; had poinllnent time, Gilchrist and Harvey
STANS ... • drove up in new luxury cars,. fo!lowed been cut by 5 percent in 1. percent of the almost immediately by Quintana at the
system at 11 a.m. and said the rest of the wheel-()f the st-Olen truck, accompanied
Sirica cleared the 'vay for, the committee system would probably be involved by by liis hel per, Saldana .
to take testim ony, under immunity. from noon. Federal in\'cstigators wrapping up the
two key witnesses, ousted While ·House Con Ed 'reduced voltage Monday by 8 probe tod ay have revealed a · second,
counsel John W. Dean III and -former t similar hijacking involving 40,000 pounds Nixon ~campaign Cleputy Jeb Stuart percen -the maximum before the com-or pork heisted from a Vemon packing pany resorts to aelectlve blackouts. It
Magruder. said two of four plants (bat Vl'ere out of plant. '
Sirica also denied a request by the service ~onday were back in use today. The theff from Hof£1nan Brothirs lnc.,
special Watergate prosecutor. Archibald Two .other plants, one closed for refueling ir.volved a $20.000 Joss, investigators said,
Cox, to prevent Jive rad.Jo and television and the other for overhauling, rertiained
covefage of testimony from Magruder, u'( T•leflf!IO" shut, however.
Dean and other key wltneues. 11th c ommandtnetlt The public Service Electric and Gas
Sta ns is tinder indictment in New York Co .. New Jersey's largest supplier, cu t.
in connection 'vith a secret· l972 cam· With temperatures in the n1iddle 90s for several days, this On1aha voltage by 5 percent for several hours
palgn contributio n. and his lawyer asked church sign proclaims what might be an a_ddition to the JO comn1and-starting at 11:00 a.m. on l\fonday and
the Senate Watergate committee t o t f b 1. th h 1 said it expected another volt•-cu· t t~
t h. · -1 n1en s, or one or ea mg e ea . "'O~ ,,_ poS pone is testimony unu after the day. The compjllly said the reduction was
trial. vi rtually undetectable to customers.
Sen. Sam J_ Ervin (D-N.C.), said the In Connecticut, where temperatui-Es
committee unanimously ruled against a Frottl Pflfl8 I _were in the 90s. for the third day, several
delay, but wouldn't ask him anything in· minor power cutbacks were reported ;
volving the New York case, which stems GO-AHEAD GIVEN • some school systems said they were clos-from a contribution by financier Robe.rt • • ing at noon: and four roads buckled ,
Vesco. Mitchell has been indicted in the because 0( the heat.
same fund-ra.isihg case. jected. He favored building single-family -New Yorkers had double trouble. p~
While Stans asked not to testify, when · The commission later agreed to homes on the site. The company proposes pie trying to beat the heat illegally open-
he was ordered to do so he told the com· reconsider the project wh'en the compan y 132 lboat,slips and a 99-car parking lot in ed a thousand fire hydrants 1t1onday,
mi ttee he had a 20.minute prepared brings in more info~tion on existence lhe remodeling. causing a severe loss of water pfessure
statement to deliver before facing quea--of marine life. and hampering fir e-fighting efforts.
tiontng. Larry Moore, Irvine Company general Moore said the reconstruction has been \Valer Resources Commissioner Martin
-The panel agreed to hear that, and planning administrator, said ·he would approved by Newport, Beach, Orange Lang said pressure dropped by a critica l
Copies of the Stans' text were distributed "like the opportunity to ... have them County Harbors, Beaches and Parks 20 powlds. Thousands of residents recei.v-
to newsmen before he delivered it. (biologists) look under the water and Commission, the federal Environmental ed muddy, sediment filled water from
Stans' statemeiit made these three come back." Protection Agency, the National Oceanic the bottom or em ptying pipes and hun·
principal assertions: Voting initially against the marina and Atmospheric Administration, the ct.reds of thousands temporarily were
-"I had no Knowledge of the Watergate were Commissioners Carmen Warschaw state Water Resources Board, and the withou t water. ,
break-in or any other espionage efforts or Los Angeles, Don Wilson of Torrance, U.S. Department of Interior fish and wild The metropolitan area bomnved elec-
bcfore I read about them in the press, or Robert Rooney of Hun tington Beach and life division. tricity Mooday from other p 0 w e r
of the efforts to ~ver up after the event Don Bright of La Habr8. The final green light must come from systems, including the Pennsylvaina-New
-"I had no knbwledge of any sabotage Sailtn 'th the U.S. Army Corp9-of Engineers, he Jersey-1\-faryland Pool and the New
P g m t di ·-· t the pal. b g w1 · the company's idea were -ro ra o .x .. p cam gn Y Co . . said, which is awaiting okay from the England Pool. Donald Segretti or anyone else. mmisstoners Art Holmes. of San coastline commission . -"To the best or my knowledge there Clemente, James Hayes. 'Don Phillips A spokesman for the PJM pool, "''hich
'\'ere no intentional violations of the laws and Russ ·Hubley, all or Long Beach, The three largely su~Cul a~ serves New Jersey. the' District or
Frot11 Page J
ANNEX •..
Costa Mesa greater· control over fli&ht
operations.
Donald Mclmb, tna)'OI' " Newport
Beach, was not available lhll morning
for o:mment on Costa.-1'-tesa-'s .. peUlloo
""'it,h the LAt'C. Newport Beach also
""'ants the airport within its zone ol in-
fl uence . .
?>.1ayor Hammett, who joined in the
unanimous claim-staking vote, said the
ai rport could be "lucrative" for Coata
l\!esa but that he was also concerned
about the possibility of Increasing federal
and state regulations affecting general
aviation .
''General aviation amounts to 87 per-
cent of the airport's business and if It
should drop off , there would be no
revenue and we still would ha ve an
airport to worry about," he said.
The airport was included in a "sphere
of influence" package · whi ch includes
unincorporated portions of the Santa Ana
Heights area and aouth of 16th Street
below the proposed Costa. Mesa marina.
Old Pensions Halted
relating lo campaign financing by the Judy Rosener of Newport Beach an~ plicatlons were the first Irvine Company Columbia, Dela\\.'are and parts of
the brakes at the last minute. finance committees for which I had Louis Nowell or Los Angeles . Absent projects before t?e new commissio~. !\laryla_nd, Pennsylvania and Virginia, DES 1i10INES, Iowa (UPI) -The
Th.e ca r bounced off and careened lo responsibility." from voting was Rona ld Caspers of '"Ille Cove" project is at 'the. former said today: "PJM is in a rel atively good Iowa llouse voted .?i-1onday to end pension
the easterly edge-of-the-road:--------'he_testimon}'.Jbout_Mitchell came_~w~rt Beach. _ --,-.--.--__ loca~ion _of the_ Vil!~ Ma~~ Hote l, position. l!owever,_ir w:_ are requested by pa)'mf!!tS for vete~ans of the Frooller
The owner of the old El Toro general from Herbert L. Porter of Laguna A few oruie nega 1ve comm1ss1oners te~ed llr1970. WI~· a dens1ty-6flr--ollr"1l~tgh!Xit.rfor help aryesterday-we---c;uaras OOUlChell's--Cavalry of 1atif,"ii;;e---t--
store was kill ed Several months ago when Niguel, former scheduling chief of the were swayed less by Fay 's "microscopic units per a~ and, heights of 28 feet, it may have to rtake a voltage drop again in Spir it Lake Relief Expedition of 1857 and
his bread truck was shattered by a Nixon campaign. biota" than by Newport Beach resident meets all city requirements. order to supply them ." the Northern Border -Brigade.
speeding freight at th at location. He said ?>.fagruder ha d given him 35 Oon~ld Reagan's argument that the 1-;:;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m-
Trvine City Council members have millimeter film copies of memoranda marina should be removed complctelr.
placed high priority fo r \Yidening of the that had gone between Muskie's Senate ~~~an. or . ~ Bayshore Drive,
intersection and installation of ba rrier- office and his campaign hea dq uarters. cr1t1c1zed debris m the .harbor, noise
type crossing guards. This \\'as in November 1971. Porter said from boats and commercial use of the
Speed limit for trains on the Santa Fe he didn't know how lheY were obtained. land, which he said "discomboobera tes"
line is 90 miles per hour, while cars are a resi dential area.
limited to 35 miles per hour on Jeffrey '1::r i:f {::{
Road at that point.
OIANGI tOAST IT
DAILY PILOT
flit Ortr>O• COtll OAtLY P ILOT,·<wltl'\ 'Wlllc:ll
b comilfntd tl'\t Ntw1.P•tu. IJ 0111>llSl'>ed l>'f
tt>t Ottl'Dt ~ottt Plll:lll...,!ne Coft'llNlnY. Stpa-
rt!t lclllion1 t rt PY1>U1htll, Motldt 'f lhro119h
fr .. ey, lo• C011t Mttt, Ht wpOrl 8e1ch.
Hllftllngton 81.-ch/Fo..,.,11111 Vtllt 'f, LtVUM
8etctl, ltYIM/Sfddl_c_ t tld St n C~,,_nlt/
i.n J11111 C1p111r1no. A 1rng11 r~1on11
tdlllO!I It 1>11bfl•ll .. S1turdty1 t r.cl Svroctt~I.
Tiit 11tlrw:l119I pllb!l11!l119 1111111 11 t i JJO Whl
l ty '""'• Co.It Mnt. Ctlllornlt, .,.,._
Aobtrl N. Wee ..
Ptl'llde!ll tl>d Publl1Mt
J 1ck R, Curley
VIC• jllrttld«ll t tld "Ml'll Mt nog.tr
Thom11 Kee¥11
EGllor
Tholl)t~ A. Murphi111
,.,.,,,.,1110 ecmor
Che~•• H. Looi IUch •••'P. Ni ll
Anhttnt M111t tltl4 Editor.
No Appeal Seen
To Limit News Cove1·age
\VASHJ1"JGTQN (AP) -A federal Lawyers for Dean moved l\Ionday to
judge today denied a nlOtion by special quash a summons directing Dean to
prosecutor Archibald Cox that '>\1oold testi ry before the grand jury, In effect,
ha ve reslricted news coverage of the. Sirica denied their motion.
1es1i1nony of kc) ·witnes.ses before the rn oral argument on that motion Mon·
Senate Watergate conunittee. day, Jawyers for Dean said he \YOOld
Cox loter issued a statement saying he plead the 5th Amendment privilege
.. viii not appeal the judge's rullng. against self-incrimination to all questions
"I regret lhe outcome, OOt to press the from the grand ju ry if forced to appear.
leg al argumenl further would risk imduly Cox asked Sirica to require that the
delaying proceedings and divert attention Senate committee hear testimony from
from essential tasks." Cox s.1\d. potential \Vutergate def..:ndants either in
A WORD TO THE WISE -
There is a· tendency for meny cerpet slor11 to ·u,...slrictly~a
warehouse concept. One 1dvant19e is weing c1rpeting in rolls rather
than samplos.
MOny<liildvanll'gonire-avident ...,;mosh>perationt-ol-thi,...type
buy only Off-goods, so that tho customer only goh 'to stt old p1ttorns,
or corpets the mill• couldn't sell to rogulor outlets. Also, this type of
operation 9 en e r 1 11 y fe els that experience is unimportant, and
consequently the salespeople·know~ittle or nothing about the products.
Finelly , most will fa rm out the instillations to the lowest bidder,
guaranteeing a poor installation. (Mony of those installers are contracting
illegally without a state liconso.j
At Alden's we maintain a happy mocj_ium. We carry ~ l1rge
inventory, ond the larges t ramplo selection around. We hav.o experienced
11lespooplo, and our installers wore trained by us. Fln1lly, we are 1
stale licensed contractor.
.
.-
-i
I
Co1!• Me ... : UG Wal ''r Str11I
Ht..-pod '"'"i ma ·N•W'PO• eouieve"' l.tOllM 8etdl; "2 ,Ol"t ll AYlllUI
H""'li"OIOI! 'l tl(ll' 11f1S l etCI toultYflO Un C';l111'!11'11•! .»J Nortfl I! Ct mlllO 11:111
,.,.,._. 17141 Ml-4J:l1
--:--a.tftti u o •• 11.,..--um n
,_ c.Mf111 .,... .... " ..........
4tJ-44JO
U.S. Dist. O>urt Judge John J. SlrJca closed sessi on or at least without radio
issued his ruling in connection wi th a re-and tl'.'levlslon e-0vcrage.
quest lrom 1he commltt~ for Immunity Slrlca's rulirig denying Cox's motion
-for-ousted-White-HOU!e-counsel John-W. pened-the-way--for-reaumpllon..oL.the._ --1-----
Dean. Ill and Jeb Stuart Magrudcc, hearll1gs toQay within -the format under
_ALDE~S~-_m---;..,_
,._ • .,.. 0•"'9t (ltllliY Ctm-lt1ft
'40-112'
c.,-r111111, 1'7l. Or•f!O• CNtl P\ltH~lne C:ll<fl .. ftY, Jrlo M'WI ,,., ... , Ut1111re!loM. ,..1..-111 ,,.."., or H~orll....,,..,,tt 11.,elfl
f'NJ 01 flOl'OllhKelf WI,,...,. 1P1Clel W
'". ot cooYi'lef'll .-.i'Mf' ~ CllN "'llClllll... ..111 et Cot!• ilMM•
C•llflllrn!t, '~i.tliorl -w carrltr a .U
l!'lllfltl'ltri tw 1Mtl Q,1J fl'ltl'ltrlfrl mm"rr
flllll11t1l!Mw Sl~l'(.
former deputy director Q( President Nix· which they .have been conducted since
on's campaign C()mmittee. they began late in ~1ay.
Slrlca anted immunit os-. The 'udgc sald he beUeved attaching
ecu ion or an a · agru er on x s con ons o M"Ltolldttt' or-the;-_ 1-11-----
basls of the testiTT1-0ny eit her mAn gives -Senate 'hearings would be beyond the
t!'e _eomtnlttee. And he refused to attach scope of hls court.
coodJtlons reques1b<f by-o.ix. . -l~e said lie would make no comment on
At the same tln1c, Siricn ordered Dean the i~suo of requiring potential defen-
to go befort the Waterga te srand dants 10 f~tlry Jn optrt ~committee
JU?'Y wtthoot bnmunity. sessions. ---~-
. .
CARPETS e DRAPES
1 ~4~ Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4138
Moo.• Tflurs. t to l :JO ; Fri. t t9 t 1 s.t. t :JO to I
"
•
• • • -·
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TueMJay, JtJrte l~, 197) s DAILY PILOT 3
Grads Save· a Year
Sfiarp Juniors F-ace Chal'lenge of College
By JOHN ZALLER
Of h o.11'1' ....... 11•11
~tidway through ber junior year,
Beverly Gross decided there would be no
point Jn sticking around for a fourth year
at Newport Harbor High School.
tried to or fer them in ibis district," he
says. ., """""""''"""!--oonTIOurotlh~--Niwport•Mesa-Unified
School District is another administrator
\\'ho questions the wisdom of early
graduation, though he still woul~'t o~
pose it for a stl!,dent who wanted it. "'nlere weren't many classes I still
\vante4 to take," explains the 17-year-old
"antfl didn't anj JQ_be like ~~
peop e us reeze -through senior
year without putting out any effort.
,;People hurry enough in this_ world as
tt-i!;..,"he--say~hate. to--see-1i.-develop-4~
to the point \\'here kids fel t pressured to
try to graduate in three years because
TO SEVEN' WATER AGENCIES SAN JOAQUIN RESERVOIR-REPRESENTS EMERGENCY SUPPLY •
Fa.ct That It Is Empty During ~epair Raises Questions About Paying For Non.existent Capacity
I
"So I figured if I didn't have to stay
around, why should I?"
Miss Gross is typical of the increasing
number of Orange Coast high school
students_ who are deciding to graduate
one year early.
Like hunc4"eds of other coast graduates
this year, she v.•ill meet all of her
schOol's formal graduation· requirements
-with the help of two summer sessions
-and then be out one· year ahead of
schedule for "the next thing in life."
In her case, that \viii mean t\VO
s~mesters at Saddleback. Corrununity
C',ollege, where she will begin· studying
for a degree in medical technology.
"I'm not hurrying past high school
because I didn't like it ," she stresses.
•·10--:fact, -J' thought it was-a:.blast. But-1
just thought it \vas time to move on." DlilY l'llot Sl•ll Phtlo
everyone else was."
~lout says that this JW\e about 10 per·
cent of Newport·Mesa's graduates will
have taken just three years to complete
high school. Within the roreseeable
future. he believes that figure could in·
elude 25 percent of all students. And if
that .happens, he said, ther.e. would ~
pressure on schools to revise their
(.'OUrses of study to accommodate those
wanting to pack all their study into a
shorter period.
But the larger numbers of students
now graduating early indicates ·not many
changes may be-necessary:· Take· ~he
case of Beverly "Gros~.
To Pay or Not to Pay
SChool idministrators are not com·
pletely sure why more and more students
are making this de:cision, nor are all of_
them sure that early graduation is
always a SQUlld idea.
EARLY GRADUATE
Beverly Gross
\Vith the exception of one semester.
she took six classes a day for three
years. That worked out to 12 courses per
vear at five units per course, or 180
Credits. Since she also took a band class
after school for credit,. she was a~
proaching the 200 units· needed to
graduate without even going to summer
·school. And with four five-unit summer
school classes, she exceeded re· 1 quirements. Joaquin
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
61 !tie D.ilY Pilot Stiff •
Should a liuntington Beach electronics
\\'orker about to sho\l·er or a San
-Clemente housewife ready -to fix dinner
have to pay for a guaranteed water sup-
ply when the guarantee just went dry?
~t question is ~ing pondered toda)'
by seven Orange Coast water agencies as·
the result of a major crack that has shut
down the billion-gaJIOn San joaquin .
. Reservoir in Irvine. ,.
To the coastal '''ater agencies, San
Joaquin represented that guaranteed
\vater supply. They paid for storage
rights .representing a 3Cklay emergency
supply in the event the rriajor feeder line
from i\1etropolitan \Valer D; s tri ct
(MWD) should rupture.
The reservoir also serves as a backup
.supply during peak daytime water use
hours and sumnter months.
No~ San Joaquin is dry for repairs but
the coastal v.•t1ter agencies are still being
a!lked to pay for their storage space.
Agencies affected include the Costa
Mesa County Water District, HWltington
Beach city water department, Laguna
Beach Gounty Water District, South
'-c:oast (South Laguna) County Water
· Mother, Three
Children Found
Bn1tally Slain
WILTON MANORS. Fla . (AP) -A J l-
vear-old mother and three of her children
have been found · slain, all with their
t!lroats slashed, police said today.
Police said Linda Smith, her daughter
Karen, 7, sons Christopher, 11, and
nmothy, 9, were also brutally stabbed.
The bodies v.·ere found by a 14-year-old
son, William. \Vbe-n he returned to their
botne in that Fort Lauderdale suQu.rb
shortly before midnight Mond ay, police
~ said.
Water Debated
But the consensus on the Orange Coast
-is that if a student puts.out the extra cf·
fort required to graduate early, the
school· should· permit him or her to do so.
"I don't see how we can stand in the
\\'8Y," says Glen Dysinger of the Hun·
tington Beach --Uhion High School
District and Tri-Cities Municipal Water , Simpson said his board would meet on District.
District in the San Clemente area. the question Thursday and expressed the "Some students are bored here, Md if
The question of th'e coastal agencies hope that the payment problem can be that's the case, .it's ofte~ bet_ter to get
resolved by negotiation. t~ out and mto ~' s1tua_t1on V>'here
paying for v.·ater storage sp.ace that isn·t The same chord was struck by Bill.,... theY~_llfe.el ~ballenged:-he_says. ~.
there .co~ld lead ~o a legal battle. HUI1St; manager or the Irvine-Ranch This ye.ar _the ~unt~ton Beach High
Some coastal district directors strongly \\later District, \Yho maintains the School D1str1c~ ""'.Ill tum out a~t 175 ~uestion why. they should pay· and in problem can be settled out or court. three-year gr@.duates. plus about three
fact, some have passed up current bi.II· HWlsl explained that his district has times as -many who took just 31h years.
ings:-· the objecting customers under contract. That. means about . 25 ltJ'cent of all
On the other hand. the Irvine Ranch "'Our futerpretation of the contract is st~.dents are graduating early.
\Vater District, (lRWD) controllers of that they have a legal obligation to pay," These students are not all the types
the re~ervoir, says the others should pay. he said. .
you would call 'whiz kids'." Dysinger
says. "!\fany of them are_students \\"ho
may want to gradoote so they can get a
full-time job and start earning money."
Darrel Taylor, principal of San
Clemente High School, agrees \\'ith Dy·
singer on most points, but he expresses
more reservations about \\'hether it is
really healthy for most students to
graduate ahead of schedule.
"For some . reason. this generation
seems to be in a hurr-y to get on to the
adult real world." he says.
"And if they finish all their:_ re-
quirements by the .end of three years, I
don't think \Ve should stop them.
"But frankly, it bothers me somewhat
~use in leaving early they miss the
opportunities for exploring 'that we've
"Actually I wouldn't have needed as
ntuch suntmer school as I did if I had
known from the start I Wanted to graduate
early," she says. "But I didn't start my
planning until prettyr·late."
Administrators say that Miss Gross'
class load Was not unusually' heavy, and
that many students find them~lv~ . in
her position at the end of their JUruor •
year. -
."?\-1oSt of · the1n just take it easy
through their senior year," says Dy·.
singer. ·
"But vou've got to question whetl)er
there ari!n't better things a student ~ld
be doing at that point in life than relax-
ing in school:"·
After all, a contract is a contract. The Irvine Ranch \Valer District
Cu rrently, the fissure in the big San manager indicated that the Capacity
Joaquin Reservoir is being repaired at an right holders may \Vish to make their
estimated cost of $.149,000. The Jrvlne payments "under protest," a legalism
district must pay for that -this part is which \\'Ouid protect their rights in the
clear. -event of court action.
Nursing ,Grads Due Honors
But w1til the inlet valves are re-opened Not invo\\'ed in the dispute is the city
-probably in OctOber or November-the of NC\\'}X>rt Beach which maintains four The first 36 nursing students to finish Local nursing graduates by community Laguna Niguel -Patsy Call
reservoir near UC Irvine remains a dry acre feet of storage rights -in the the registered nurse program at Sad~ are: Mission Viejo -Marf Lou Binn·
hole. reservoir. Ney,rport does not pay fo r its dleback College will be honored in a pin· Dana Foint -Maureen Hamilton, ingham, Pat Kelly, Marilyn ·Lyon, Gisela
Alvin Pinkley. director of the Cos?a capacity 1;ghts because it has obtained ning ceremony Thtirsday. Helen Slenning and P8m Ziegler. !\1athisen, Susan Shulmistras and Sharon
Mesa CoWlty Water District that holds the1n through dedication. !\1ost of A dinner to fete the first class is set for ••· El dobe n-.-..-· ~-El TQro -Lynne Guilliaum, Marilyn Walker 600-acre feet of storage -in the t.i'volr;--Nev.•port Beach's emergency wate1· is 7 p.m. at'·"~ A i~wurant-m IXIR •
sums up their feelings I-bis \\'ay: stored. in the Big Ganyon Reservoir. Juan Capistrano. Long and Fran Schramel. San Clemente -1018 Busch and Pat
"lt'S unfortunate that the slippage The San Joaquin Hescrvoir receives its The event ends two years of st~ies for lr:vine -Diane Va"sley. Creighton. . '
caused the crack and that the Irvine \\'Ster fro1n the Colorado River through the students,-ill one.oLihe~scboo~s 22 CIC· Laguna_,Beac~-Kathryn _Blair, San . Juan ~piStrano .:... Denise
Ranch Water District has to spend all the 1.1\VD. It v•a s emptied in January cupaticnal career programs. They will EUZa~. pro~igh, Judith George, DelColle, Joanne LiWe-,and Debbie
that money to repair it. But it's not our when three "slippages" in -the asphalt receive Associate in Ans degrees at Phoebe Interlandi and Pam MacMahon. Reilly. · · . · .
fauJt we'i-e not getting any v.•ater, either." liner were discovered. co1nmence11lent June 22. Laguna Hi!ls -Claudia Lindgren. · South Laguna -Cheryl ~fer.
Pink.Icy said his district has refused to I jiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;iii•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-Oiii;;;;;;;;i;Oiii;;;;;;;imiiii••ii;;i•••••••m:••••••••••imiii
make the last $60,000 payment and llas
tume<I to its attorney, H. Rodgl!r l
Ho..-.·ell, for further advice.
Eric Lovejoy, \Vater superintendent tor
Huntington Beach. said his" department
also h8d not paid'it,s. bill for 400-acre fi>-et
of storage capacity, and like Costa Mesa
has asked for a deferred payment. "It
has become a very difficult,situation for
us. I personally don't kno\\" what the
right or wrong of it is,'' he said.
Donald Simpson. chairman of the
board for Coast.a.I ?i1unicipal, said his
water district has an overdue $20,000 bill
for ZOO.acre feet of storage capacity bu t
that the decision whether to pay it is still
"up in the air." Coastal is a "paper"
agency that "'holesales v.•ater to the
Laguna Beach, South Laguna and San
Clemente area districts.
Johnson & Son
'
20th Anniversary
Officers said Mrs. Smilh, a di vorcee .1. ,., _ M d•
1---..-,..-.,..husband-irtn-the-Navrin--A -1ens~t-e · 1eal'e-11·--
l
. CaJifornia. was found in the living room · -
near the body ofi:ine son. i\IlAMI (UPI) -A federal court ruling
Karen's body was ln·a bedroom an<t" the lilonday made ahout 18,000 eklerly Cuban
.foiJrth in another bedroom. refugees and similar alien residents
; Four bloodied steak knives \Vere ·round throughout the nation eligible for
: in the house, jnvestigators said. ~1cdicare benefits.
~ Health Service Urged . .
Outgoing Student Leader
Cites Saddleback Needs
By JAN WORTH
Of "'9 .,_11'1' Plllt Stiff ~ More iMovation and cooperation are
~ needed at Saddleback College, the ~ 1chool's outgoing student body president
~ told the board of trustees Monday night. ~ -In a summ'ary repart of his year in ·of·
t flee. Larry Carnahan also called for on· ~ campus health service, a parking fee
~ ·fl.ind used for betttr access to the cam·
{. pus, and more contact between the board
: and the students.
rOr programs of health service, maybe
just a campus nurse at first."
He ~id if a fee of $7 .50 per year had
been charged of each student over four
years,at an average of 3,000 students per
ye.ar, a fund of $90,000 would no\v be
available for health service.
Carnahan also suggested charging $5
per quarter for parking, which using the
same formula as the health services
could raise $l'l,OOO in fou r years to im~
prove access.
Clyde· ,
AI ARK IV • • • • • •
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL
A'IERCURY A'IARQUIS • •
AfERCURY AfONTEGO • •
MERCURY COUGAR • • •
MERCURY CO!\'IET • • •
MERCURY CAPRI • • •
Big Savings!
Big Savings!
Big Savings!
Big · Savh1gs !
B. s . ' 1g . aVlllgs.
Big Savings!
Big Savings !
Dick
NOTE
. $ee Ou r Big Ad In. The PlloY•
Cl11sified Section Tomorrow
With Anniver51ry Speci1l1 On
All Our Used Cars As Well.
EVERY CAR IN STOCK • BIG SAVINGS ' ' • • • •
• • • ENTIRE MONTH-OF JUNE • • • -,-
~ ur urge you to ~come involved with
ti . ~!:de:* C!rn~=le~~~~. ~.~~ e ~n~
~ atJ\Uctlon · here is so1ne of the best
~ ~ aval1able -but teachers see1n to feel
11e also recommended that the board
look into transit system for st~ents liv·
ing on the north end or lhe diStri'C't, in-
cluding Tustin.
Cl!fnahan1s report was greeted with
applause from bolh the board and au·
dlence. ' -•
"Orangi Countu'.t Fomitv of Tine Cor111
ohns.on _& son --l ;-restiJCted-ll1-their use of innovative I-+--+' ~-hnl_gues. __ ,-"!]!Ope at the 60ard-won't cl.,. iU ___.,_ __ ~.,._to ,new ·ways··that,.wlJI-.Jri\prove the
; aystem," he 11aid.
; Carnahan said students had told him
; they wanted better health services. ·
.-"We're told we don't n~ a health
.. centtr because there's • a hospital
: (Mission Community) a half mile down ·
'tbe road, .
_; "\IVe'reJ9fJL 1.baLouunenlalpn>blems :are our parents' reapon.sibllity. But we're
'not asking for treatment. We're asking
I
Acting Chairman J ohn ~und, silting: in
!or absent trustee Patrick Backus, tofd
Carnahan the t>oard .was In ~mpathy
-with ms rema rks 11nd asked . him tc>
deliver a list of his pointB to each of them.
"I'd be more than happy to institute a
parking £ee, If you think the students
would favor that and a health seNice
fee,'' Trustee Alyn Brannon said.
A simUar attempt by the board several
.-_ago_lojuw.u.$LPotklnL!ee..m
student oppG.11tlon and Was voled down ,
ttrannon said.
. I ,_
..
}Jome Of The New Car • , •
"'Goldei1 r-~· ·. -
.
l
-
llf'.,((Jl\:
2121 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA
{ -
Home Of The New Car •••
-•-'GOiden ~foach.''
• ..
I • I
. 4 DAILV PILOT
Secretariat.
Rides Again
HA.YBUR~'ERS DEPT. -Daughter is
a hor.;e Jover. If it stands on four legs
and whinnies, she loves it. No nag is too
humble t.o draw her attention. She could
fall for a fugitive from a glue factory.
~ far as Daughter is concerned, she'd
rat.her be out at some smelly '$ble.
shoveling, than off in fancy clothes to
some hlt·shot party or dance. People
keep telling me .,.t her affection for
honies will ·wane lffi'I a--bit~aging.
So far, however, I have seen no sign of it.
LaJt iligbt was a good example.
DAUGHTER CONFRONTED me in lhe
living room upon my anival from \\'Ork
and hardly before I'd gotten the seat
wann in the big chair, she "frowned and
declared:
"You haven't V.'ritten anything about
him."
"AboUt wh~?"
"You know who. Hirn. You haven't
written a word in your space."
"Okay. I give up. Who ammg your
heroes have I ignored now?" "Oh. Daddy. Sometimes I really worry
about you.. You have Ignored the greatest raclni horse that bas ever lived and you
doo't even know it. I mean Secretariat.
that's who." . ,
"Aha, l lhould have figured it. Another:
one of yoor favorite hayburners. Look.
why lhoUld J w.rite aboui Secretariat?
That stuff is all on the sports pages. '11le
nag bas eveu been on the cover of Time
Magazine. The Big Red ... The Super
Horse ... First 'triple Crown winner in 25
years since Citation. Everybody's \\•ritten
about that allimal.
"HE'S GET11NG more press than the
\Vatergate hearings. Every time he gets
a bath there are four reporters and 1hree
photographers on· hand to record the pro-
ceedings."
"Look Daddy. Maybe you could make
up a mythical race for Secretariat with
other winnen of the Belmont Stakes. Yoo
could select the fastest of them and put
them in the field with Secretarial."
"Like which ones?"
-"Well, you could talk abOut a field of
seven others. They would be Whirlaway
(1941), Coon! Fleet (1943), Assaull
(1946), Cilatim (1943), Native Dancer
(1953), Nashua (1953); and Sword Dancer
(1959) ••• "
"Flne, Daughter. If that will, make you
happy I might do that.
"Don't ·bother."
"Why aJ"i? y~ saying that flO\V?"
"SECREl'ARIAT wooid beat them all.
Secretariat ran the Belmont in 2:24 flat
None of those horses ran faster than
2:28. It would be no contest. Daddy.
You'd look silly setting up a race like
that"
"Oh."
"Maybe on the other hand y~u could
set up a mythical horse race between all
the winners of the Triple Crown. That
would be Secretariat against Sir Barton,
Gali>nt Fox, Omaha, War ,\dmiral.
\Vhirlaway, c.otmt Fleet, Assault and
Citation."
"Fine. Maybe l 'll try that. .Have you
aeeo where 1J left my pipe?"
'1DADDY, YOU'RE not very sharp.
Secretariat would beat all tho8e horses
too. He's the Super Horse of all time."
"Okay, daughter. Maybe it would be
better if I don 't write anything about
horses. I ttreak out in sneezes when I get
around barns anyway. But I'll make you
a deal. You think about your homework
and I 'II think about Secretariat.
"But I'm not going to write about him.
So there."
LegalFe~s
On tl1e Ri se
For GOP
\VASHINGTON (AP) -President ~IX·
on'1 relelectlon cmunlttee bas spent
neariy-.11UarteM!lllllm·dollan.J:or-lega
fees ln less than a y1ear, mos• of It to de·
fend top officials fn lawsuits \arising
from the Watergate break-in.
In its quarterly report to the General
Accounting Office, the Finance Com-
mittee to Re-elect the President said
MOl\llliy it had spent $148,639. on legal
fees in the past three months alone.
A CHECK OF all the committee 's
repc>rts since last July shows the total
spent on legal fees so far is $2.17,725.
In a statement put out lvith the latest Co1n•ale•ch19
Doctors removed the second
bullet from sen. John C. Sten·
nis Monday, and predicted a
four to six weeks convales·
financial report, the committee said its
-budget oommittee in April appr-0\'.ed pay-
-cence period. T.b~ Mississippi
Democrat was shot in a ·rob-
bery last January in \Vasbing-
ton.
Red Troops
Using Toxic
Gas-Allies
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -Cambodian
military authorities said today that Com-
munists used "toxic gas" in three days of ·
fighting outside Phnom Penh that killed
four government soldiers and Q.isabled 75
others
· In a. special statement, the military
command called the use or gas ''another
flagrant violation ol international .con-
ventions.''
BUT~ FIELD REPORTS said some of
the gasing could have been caused ac-
cidentally by rounds of w h I t e
phosphorus, whi ch is Wied by mortar
and artillery crews ol both sides and by
spotter planes for marking targets.
These reports( said officers along
Highway 4, where the gas was allegedly
used, have i$ued some of their troops
with gas masks.
The command said the gas casualties
\Ve re reported on June 7, 9 and 11 In the
area between Ang Sooul and Thnal
Totung on Highway 4.
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said
the embassy could not confrim or deny if
"toxic" gas was used on Highway 4.
I
IN SAIGON, military spokesmen said
today thafl Conununist truce violaUons
(ell to their lo\Ve$t level in a Week, but
reports showed 32 persons killed in
hostilities across the country in the past
24 hours,
Amoog the casualties were 25 Com-
munists reported killed in fighting ln the
coastal highlands and five civilians who
died in a mine explooioo.
A Saigon command s poke s man
reported 97 Communist truce violations
in the 24 hours ending at 6 a.m. today,
dolvn 20 from the 77 reported the day
before the fewest since the &5 reported
Wednesday.
SOUTH \'IETN.UIESE infant rymen
killed 25 Communists in five skirmishe3
Monday near Ille coastal h1gblands town
of Dong Xuan about 250 miles north of
Saigon, the mil itary command said.
There were no reports of government
casualties.
Meanwhile, efforts by deposed Prince
Norodom Sihanouk to negotiate peace in
Cambodia have been turned down by the
United Stales, State Department officials
acknowledged ~1onday.
Sihanouk waS quoted during a visit to
Yugoslavia as saying he had approached
a number of African and Arab leaders tO"
extend a peace offer to end the war in
Cambodia without a winner or loser.
-ment of "legal fees iand costs in con-
nectiOO With matters · which are not the
subject of formal criminal charges in
perfonnance of fWlCtions by {employes)
arising out ottheir legitimate du!fs." .
The reference to formal criminal
charges apparently left the committee
clear to pick up the tab f<r its officials
represented by counsel before federal
grand jwie1.
Although the oorrunlttee did not say so.
the seven-man budget group is knowil to
include among its members finance com-
miltee chairman Maurice Stans. former
commiUee chairman John hfitchell and
Jeb S. Magruder, former deputy cam·
palgn.director.
ALL THREE HA VE figured prom·
inentl,y in Senate testimonies, civil
suits, or criminal investigations arising
from the Watergate break-in and other
campaign activities.
Between them, .r.tagruder and Stans
have run up legal bills ol $53,000 in the
past three months. .
No fes were listed for Jawyers
repJ-esenting Mitchell, who resigned last
year a month after the June 17 break-in
at Democratic headquarters at the
\Vatergate, but who remained as a con-
sultant to the election comntittee.
Tu-o Washington law !inns represen-
ting Stans have been paid '$37.700. -
Stans has been indicted by a New York
federal grand jury in one case involving
a sea-et $200.000 campaign contribution.
He was called to testify ·today before the
Senate \Vatergate committee, is a defen-.
dant in a $3.2-million civil suit brougtt by
the Democrats because of \Vatergate and
has filed a counter·suit
l\lAGRUDER'S LAWYER, Jame s
Bierbower, has been paid $15,000.
~'lagruder also is scheduled to testify
before the Senate committee . and
reportedly hu agreed to plead guilty 10
Watergate cover-up charg~s.
Lawyers representing former cam-
paign treasurer 'Hugh Sloan Jr. have
been paid $17,557. Sloan has given
numerous depositions in v a r i o u s
\Vatergate proceedings, but he resigned
from his job shortly after the Watergate
break-in and is not expected to race
criminal charges.
Yucca Thea ~r
Cuts Off Jan e
MIDLAND. Tex. (UPI I -The
Yucca Theater closed Monday
becaUR: it didn't have anything to
show but a Ja11t Fooda movie.
'Ibe marquee above the theat er's
entrance said "Closed. Refused to
Show Jane-Fonda Picture" and the
theater's daily newspaper ad-
vertisen1ent said the Yucca was
closed "For want of something bet-
ter to show."
A spokesman for the owners said
the onl y film the theater had was
"steelyard Blues" with Jane
Fooda and !))nald Sutherland and
the theater could not get another
film to show because distributors
were closed during the weekend.
Storms Cool Eastern U .s.·
' ---
Record Rains Hit Cliarle stori, S.C., Coastal A reas
J
•.
J'mi"'ll" ~$NOW ..__ ,.,,. ~~OWftS ''II: PIOW
Coa•tal We•the r
Mostly 1unny ll'.ld1y. Llvtlt v1rl1bl•
wlllds night 1nd mornllliiJ hollra 1>e<om-
l1t11 wetfM1.Y·• toJl kOOU l11_ilfltrnoon1
ldtl1y alld WIOl!Hd1y. HIQh fodl'f 7.S.
C°"st1t ltmpet"lluret rangt from '' to lit. lnl1nd hl'mper1turn re"'" from
60 to 13. W1t.r t.,,..per1111r1 "'·
Sun, ltloo11 , 'l'lde•
TUISOAY
s.c;~ Pllofl ............ 1:26 p.m. T.l
SKOl!d low ............ 7:500.m. S..I
Wl'DNESOAV Flrl t l'ilal'I .............. r:.-a.m. l .• Fltll low .............. J:Of 1.m. O.•
S.c:ond llloft ............ ''"P-"1· • S.t Stcond 1oW .. • .. .. • . • .. 2:01 p.r!'I. 2.l
Sun lllMI 5:,11.m. Seti 1,05 p.m.
Moon II/Ml 5:41 p.m. sets l ;ll 1.m.
DAll.T PILOT
OWVERY SERVICE •
-" ... D'1il ""' ........
,.......,...,. II "',It 1111 ..... ·-,..., .., ,,,. ""'°' •n ..,. .,.., ..., -............ c... .......... ,, ...... ....., ... ~· ",...."",..,..... ,__,.,.,..._~.w i t""' .......... -............... . ,.,...Clllt ____ ,. ....
•
NIXON, ZIEGLER
DINE ON Y A..CHT
WASHINGTON (AP) -Proo!dont Nix·
on and hla pna oeonllry, Ronald L.
Ziegler, dined aboonl lbe Navy yachl Se-
qlJ!lia on the Poiomac River Monday
cvcn!n.g.
Spaee Tests
I
Skylab 'Orbiting Factory'
SPACE CENTER, HOUllOll (AP) -beam wtl',JJI and erperlment wtth ~-
Sky!Ab's as~ulS Ure up an eiectrlc Ing gallium antnide elecllOnlc ceyalala.
!~ and an eleclml be11m SW' 10d1y Late in ll>e mllolcn, the .-1111 wtll •
lo rt a ltries ol materiaJa.proc<Olillg practlc:o malntenance tecmlqueo and try
I thal could i .. d 10 a opace manulao-lo make perfect apbenis, VarlOUI ano,., -
Pildt, Copilot
Groun
I
Probes Landing
MIAMI (AP) -The government bu
grounded the pllol and copilot ol an
airliner that wu bound-for Miami
Intematlonal Airport but landed at a
smaller field eight miles away.
The Federal AvlaUon Admlnlstration
said Monday that the pilot ol the United
Air Lines Boeing '127, Capt. Jam'" Boue,
and copilot Charles Melbourne would not
be alloW,ed ti> 0y unlU .an investigatloo of
the incident ii completed.
Jack Barker, FAA public affairs of.
Cicer in Atlanta, said the investigation in·
to the inCldent should be finished within a
wek or two. lffe aaid Bosse and
ri.1elboume face possible charges.
"It cou1d be very serious," Barker
said. "The pilot landed at the wrong
airport. Fortunately this airport had a
runway 200 reet wide and 8,000 feet long.
It could have been an airport a lot
shQrter, and many things could have hap.
pened." •
The Boeing m with S2 passengers
aboanl landed Sunday night at Opa·Locka
Airport after receiving clearance to land
at Miami lnternationaJ, said James
Frazier, FAA area coordinator.
luring business. • compooltes and vaocinel.
E"JlOrta believe the lesl< oould llp&Wll a y.., oalety ...._ the u1roa1u11
ti· · liai .Ji!!l!D'81 Jate::Jn lhiJ ~lllL•pert..J. by~
century Wflll orbiilng !actonea produCliii 1ro1 inside a protected chamber.
higb quallly electronic d • v Io• 1. Daniet J. Fink, a vice l>l'OliQenl ot
supentrooc materials, perl.ectly l'Olllld General Electrtc Co., which h.u lnveoted
ball bearlJ11s, prteision optlcal 1..,_ in opace materials _.,.m, llid: "It
and pure vaccines. has been esllmated Iha!, by Ille end of
THE PIONEERING maler!als -
bqtn u Chari'" Ccinrad Jr., Dr. Jooeph
P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weill: whirl
through the 19th day ol their 28-day
space ~y.
Also m schedule today were OJDtinulng
medical experiments and an earth
reJOUrees study that will concentrate on
utban development, water poUuUoo and
land use in the Chesapeake Bay '"'I!, in·
eluding Baltimore, Md., and. Wlishinpo,
D.C. • ---;-
The space travelers were in . .t:xcellent
health . Except for a few minor problema,
their patched-up space station was perk-
ing along. "We've got a happy hoole up
here," Conrad reported.
Whether spare manuftR:turing becomes
a reality de~ds a great deal on the
tests to be corlducted by Skylab 1 and to
a greater extent on those by the Skylab 2
and 3 crews v.1lo are to inhabit the
laboratory for 56 days each later this
year.
THE INITIAL tests late today were to
study the behavior of molten metals in
\\'eig~tlessness. evaluate the joining and
cutting or various materials by el ectrot__l
Ibis ""1tury, the 10tal value ol electronic
materials and biolocicall llllllUlootlred
in ll(llCt oouJd nm upward ol llCI billion."
WILLIAM 0. AllMSTl\ONG of lbe Of. nee ol Mallned Spac:o FIJaht ...,,..u.i
that work -to date "bu eoovinoed us
that m.mwfacturlna: in SJ>lce I s
technically leuible and !hat oplCI!
..-rch in maleriala aoience and technolGIY ii likely lo pay off ..
"In space, we could preipare .electronic
90iidl and other maletWI we can only
daydr<om about m euth beoaU50 ·ol Jn..
terference from gravity."
Nixon Ouster Urged
LIITLE ROCK , Ark. (UPI) -The
Arkansu Gazette, winner of two Pulitzer
prlaes, has joined Sen. J . William
Fulbright (0:.Ark.),' in asking ~resident
Nixon to. resign. The Gazette saidJn..an
editorial the Watergate disclosures
"leave the clear implictlion that 11\e
President of the United States was not
telling the truth, or anything close to the
truth."
June 17, 1973. . /
1Jads.fiuthentic Day.
"" ...
.. . •· """ ---
•
-"White 10be1· -··--DEWAR'S .
BLENDED SCOTCH WHISKY
,100% SCOTCH WHISKIES
ftOOUCT 0 ,. scoTL.AND
~ohn ·newai&'sons ~ Dewari neoer llarie•.
..... .,:N. .. ,...,, . P•l(p
~ .......... 90Tfi«9 "' --
I.I,_,_ , .... !NAil I e 1111 ().&II. -· ~· ~-"-1·--
'Dewars ''White Label:'
'DadS jl_u1henflc Scotch.
•
-'
tUNMD Sto'rCll'WllrSQ. "·'PROOF •OstlllNlffiMrom:CD .. •.r.;w.Y.
. ' )
, .
-.
'
Ex-Whim Hous e
• I -
' • ~T~~~~~~·~Ju~··~·~11~·~1~97~3~l ----;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;A;IL;Y;P;IL~o;r;;;5 L
Santa Cna:: Suspee~
Cannibalism Told
Stripping
'Artistic'
SAN FRANCISCO {AP)
Supersp}·
Satellite
Launched Adie Subpoenaed
••
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A affidavit duri~ the Pet>tagoo
CAPE KENNEDY (AP) -judge has · ordered !""""1" paf)<n t.ial that he appnived
A Titan-30 rocket roared tnto White House aide ~ "Bud" pllll'l5 for the b r e a k -I n .
the black sky at 3:15 a.m. 1<>-Krogh, who has admitted that Charges of esp{!X>llge, con-
day, taking a auperapy he approved-plans for the spiracy and ~ agalmt
satellite to an orblW ou1J>O.'l burglary of Daniel Ellsberg's Ellsherg and Anthony Russo
aod aha~Jlwake many area psychlatrist's of r l c e, 8Ub-were dLs.mis5ed: in that trial
SANTA CRUZ (UPI) -Ed-while talking to S3nta Cruz·
mund Emil Kemper III, ac.-police.
eused of kUling eight v.'Omen 0 HE PRIDED himself on including his mother, "ate the
flesh or at tea.st one of bis vie-hls meticulous de ta i 1 ,
tlnui 11 his attorney said ~ion· remembering names, ages,
day ' description "Of clothing, bodies
within his rules of operation."
The transcript a 11 e g e d
Kemper .. 1d he cleojded to kill
his mother two days before
Easter Sunday.
Nude performer carol Duda
says her shows are "arttstfe ,.;
cOOreographies" enjoyed by
families and should oot be
banned by the CallforrUa ,
Alcoholic Beverage Control
•1HE FELT HE was going to agency. •
--n..idents; ---1poneee.Uo:""1Uy· at~ ..JihortlyJfle::..l! ..w3.1.Jlis<J01. ~~
U.S. Air Force spokesmen jury probe into the break-tn that the governnlent w>\s ~fu-.a grand--iur-~anscript • ~ .~at~~~u~~~! l~:C~
also released Mon d a.y , lflcs," Scherl!:r said, ae-
Kemper was quoted as saymg ~ing 10 the transcript.
be callgbt SOOf1 and tie wanted Last week the ABC advtsed
his -to-avc>!d-'Sliffertng·-lho-Condor-nigtMclub.-W"""'--'--
embarra.sslpenl. He decided ~11.M Doda works. t~t her l
and iUJed only a short otate-' Los Angeles SUperior Coort /tended t0 secure Ellsberg
gave no warning of .the launch here. responsi~e for the break.In, ~
ment aftetWllJ'd. :. Judge James Kdla signed the psydllatrlc reoordo.
But it was learned that the &ll~na late Monday. He was A ~n for Busch sai UPI ,....,...,.
rocket, the moot powerful tn actingooa?<GUeslbyDist.At-a depd!y dl.Wlct attorney /tl1trdered
the Air For<e space tnventory. ly. Joseph lloJlch, "1lo had !U-would llanckaJTy Krogh'• sub-I
was carrying a satellite that is ed. a statement saying Krogh's poena to W~ to insure Jon E. Tarantino, 36,
expected to give spilt.second testimony was needed "to that it is acted on promptly. world champion fly
(IN SHORT···) Ship • ID
notice of mtssUe launchings in prove ~ ~ of 'the 01!1-Krogh has refused to testify caster and member of
Russi SJ*acy behiOO the break-in vohmtarily--befcre-tJie g1aud oht'San-Francisco--fam·
a. and. to establish who all j!!!l._!i<re. Busch, ~ thal ily, was sh.at to death e Officer Out participents were. Jlrog!I be llUbpoenaed, said, "it in tpeir fish and poul-
SAN DIEGO (AP) _ The Aoother subpoena for David i.s alleged that approval for try {market Monday in
youthful commanding officer YOllr\8, a former National the lreak-in came from in-an apparent robber;i at-
of the guided m.issUe destroyer security Council employe, was dlviduals holding high govern-tempt. ... ... ,
Buchanan has been relieved of expected to be taken by Busch ment positioo.s. '' --~-----~-
his comma.pd arter a shl~ to court here today for paesi· ble approval by the Judge. Port
Extortion Target Retur1is board inspection, the Navy
says.
U. Cmdr. Jo hn R.
he attac~.~ hltchhikmg .~ One of his rules of opera-
because 'it\w~ so easy. uJ; was that he wanted his
:nie tr,anSfript was based on viclirN to be of an
Keml>':r. s stateme!lts . to alistocracy, of upper middle authonu~.s made after his ar· class to upper class " Alufii
rest April 2.4 .. about an alleged said. '
year-loog k1llmg spree. The detective said Kemper
paid a visit to the home of one
of his Victlms, after he .had
beheaded her, "to see U she Cit
the best ~h • lo do would be show violates a regulation pro-
to kill her,' Aluffi said, ltibit~g entertainers f r o m
The tr ript said Kemper showing sexual organs and
went to · mother's home pubic hair on premise$ where
struck •her with a hammer and alcohol is served. \
stabbed her l''ith a pocket "I want you to know that
knife then cut off her head. \vhat I'm doing at lhe Condor
"what's good for my vie-is .a family show,'' ~fiss Doda
tims is good enough r0:r my said at a Monday news ron-
1 mother." Aluffi quoted ference.
Kemper as saying. ..,.,. _ _....,,. • ...,..,,. .... ,,,., ,
K-EMPERlS-d-e-f-e-n-s e at-
torney, James E. Jackson,
who appt,oved release Cif the
94-page transcript, a d d e d
another aspect of the case not
contained in the testimony.
"He ate the flesh of at least
one of his victims. It was one _
of hls fantasies, so he tried
Senate OKs Loan Control.s
it," Jackson said. SACRAMENTO (APJ principal in a lump"swn "'·hen the 12 largest oornpanies have
The g..foot·9. 280-pound '.Kem-With backing from the Reagan the loan 1erm-is up. been 1'esponslble ·f<lr i'virtually 1
per once indu1ged ijn a fantasy administration, a bill to clamp Late payment charges of all of the complaints." ~
of kUUng every person in his tougher rules on _ mortgage more than $.i or one percent of In a statement distributed to !
neighborhood in a single loan brokers has s a 11 e d the t hi "" · la\\makers. Whe<·more listed . weekend, the transcript said. paymen . \\' cuever is
Much of the testimony was through the Senate on a 32--0. greater, would also be forbid-the foUowing case histories of
DaJrymple, 32, was demoted
to . a staff pooltioo Solurday
and was succeeded by Capt.
BQTII KROGH and Young
were named by f o r mer
presidential ad_, J<h> D.
Ehrlichman as the men who headed the White H O U s e
speci&I investigative tmit , ''the
plumbers squad," saJd to have
plamed the -iln!akin.
provided: by Santa Cruz police vote. den, and ~ would have borrowers from mortgage loan
LOS ANGELES (AP} -The "Nobody really knew what U. Olarles Scherer and detec-, 'lbe bill by state Sen. James to give ~rs a lQ..day lrokers:
mllse ship "Island Princess," was going on. We'd just see tive Mich a e 1 Aluffi, who Wbeuoore (R-La Habra ) , "grace period!' before a late -Sausalito resident Belle Krogh admitted tn a. sworn
Tom l. Kolstad, 43, as skipper----------
o{ the 437.foot ship, a ·Navy
spokesman said Monday. "It
was not done as a disciplinary
measure," t h e spokesman
site of an extortion plot while these men popping out of brought Kemper by car from would forbid loan payment charge can be made. Shaw received f7;:H6 from a
at sea during its latest rooms, and out from behind Pueblo, Colo., where he was "pyramiding" -the practice loan and Wound up owing
voyage, has returned to Los arrested in a phone booth of adding a late charge on aU MORTGAGE loan brokers $27 ,096 after six years.
said. e Defiance Told
LAS VEGAS (UPI)
Newspaper publisher Hank
G""""""" said today he wouJd defy an order to hand
over his confi(lential files ·on
Howwd Hughes to t h e
Internal Revenue ·Service.
G"""'J>Wl. publililer ol the
Las Vegas Sun, faJled Monday
in an attempt. to get a federal
judf!e to quash the IRS sub-
poena on grounds il violates
O:>nstitutional guarantees-of
1.-,,o1thepreos. e Project OK'd
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Acting agalnat a otaf! recom-
mendation, the Sooth Ola.st
Regional Coastline Com·
mission has given its approval
to construdioo of the $39.9
mllllon W..t Beach redevelop-
ment project near downtown
Long Beach.
The ect.im on a 7-5 vote was
!Uen Momay and erempts all
11 parcels ol the project !run
the State Coastal Zo n e
Conservatloo Act.
e OEO Head Bit
WASHINGTON (API -A
federal judge has struck
another blow at the Nixon ad.-
mirllstration pla.M lo shut
down the Office of Economic
Opportunity, but time and
money continue to run out on
the antipoverty program..
U.S. IMtrict Court J udge
WiUiam B. Jones ruled ~on
day that OEO Aeling Director
Howard J. Phillips is serving
illegally, and enjoined him
from any further actions in
that eapacily.
e Move Crucial
BEIRUT (UPI) -Experts
said today a Libyan decision
to nationalize ooe U.S. oil
rnnanv w a S significant 1---lbec:a""~~-if(;OiiiaUC<l----wlth-
negotl ations between t h e
North African state and three
other larger American com·
1'8."ies Libyan leader Col. Moam-
mar Khadafy announced at a
m• rally Monday tn ,Tripoli
that his 1<>Vernment was se1z·
ing control of the Bunker Hunt
Oil Co. of Dallas to deal the
United States "a blow in the
face."
eBurlal Set
LOS ANGELES (AP)
A w a rd-winning playwright
Willtnm Inge will be burled
· 'J'tfUtsday-m hlt hometown of.
Jndependence. Kansas, follow-
ing a memorial service here
Tuesday.
Inge, &O, was found dead !n
his Hollywood home Sunday Ill
what-police llst as a suicide.
His body was d1!JCOvere~
behind ~e wheel ol hl,s car.
which was .idling in a closed
garage. lnge won the Pulitzer
Pr1ze and New York drama
critics' award in 1953 for his
play "Picnic" and an
.Academy Award tn 19111 for
his ocreenplay "Splendor in
the Grass." • -e Premier flult•
ROME (UPI) -Prtmler
Giulio Andreotti tn!ormed his
· cabinet today he had handed
hi• resli!natlon to Preoldent
Giovaml LeOne, a declolon
that enda his-weak-r!ght-<>1-
cmter government and will
give Jtafy a new left-of-center
govemsiL'nt.
Andreotti'' deolslon w a a
virtually dlcfa ted to him al the
'r..,.nt Ch(isllan Democratic
Congre" after he had ruled
ineffectually for a y • a r • Pollllcal IOW"ce.s said 1-e
Wll cerlttn lo offer the
premiership to Inter Io r
Mlnl11tr Mariani> Rumor.
GO VERNOR
VN BUGGED
Angeles Harbor from Mexico. curtains, and running up and loan installmmts that follow a do not lend money. They are -ROSEVIU.E . resid ent
The vessel arrived Mooday, down stairs, looking f 0 r single la1e payment. usually real emate brokers Walter McCune re c e i v e d
six days .after its operators so~ng. they finally told Peo le Quotes Whetmcre's measure would who arrange, for a fee, a loan $1,020 and at the end of three
received a bomb threat and a --• .. -unday allow "balloon paymen~" only between a borrower and a years owed $2,958.
nd { M~ 000 which led everyooe over the public ad~ 11 ~ lende -Juanita Juarez of. South
SACRAM. ENTO (UPI) dema or """"• dress what bad happened, if the loan periocl is at least r. .Co the arrest .of former major FllQnA V" six years. Undef' a balloon AOOses exist in only a "very Gate received $3,200 and owed California Gov· R 0 n 8 I d league baaeball player Gerald everybody groaned at once. l &:Jn. I payment ocheme, a borrower small ·~t of the in· $12,316 at the end ol 18 years.
Reagan ••;d Monday tliat his was reliev'ed as hell, though, · ~e···-· -her •--'-••h ...... "Jerry'' Priddy on an e1.~ pays only·~-; ... •-""'er "e "'--·,'' 'Whetmae. · told tbe She lost uvnJC t ... vue offi .,; lect · to know everything was ·,n the l lN!fl;U!tJI 1.1.e .,.ia-...,. "'' ... ._,.
ices are ".ven e roruc -tortion·dtarge. ~o~k~ay~:: .. :_:_:::~:_:_:_·t:::=~~:~·~·-~·-~·~ .. ~·~·Ljperiod~-~"_of~a~loon~~aml~_!pa'!·~ys~tlle~~Senat~~e~M~o~nda~y':_·~H~e~add~ed~tha~t_.:l~orec~. ~""'""'~~·:...-~~~-~ac~lid~1e1~d. sweeps to detect · hid d e n Eric Bjurstedt, captain of 1. eavesdropping devices .. Reagan made 'the disclosure the ship, said its 6 0 0
d passengers were not told. or during a questman ·answer the incident until two small period wit h political science .students from the CoUege of packages believed to be bombs
Marin, Kentfield . were fount! and l hr own
Later a governor's aide said ov~~ngers sett I e d
the sweeps were made "fie.· down quickly," he said. "They
qllently" but to date OP bugs. went back to their dinners and
have been diScovered. their cocktail parties."
N(}w Theft
Tactic See1i
By Jogger
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
morning jogger ran of! with
$3,200 in weekend receipt.
from the Calt!omla Academy
ol Sciences in Golden Gate
Park here, poliQI! said.
Jean Friti tol d officen Mon-
day ehe was about to drive to
the bank with the money when
a man v.·earing a hooded
wamwp suit, dark glasses arxl.
tennis shoes jogged up to her
car.
The man slammed his two
bands on tile hood ol the auto,
trotted around to the driver's
seat and pulled a revolver
from the sleeve of his gym
suit, she said.
"Hand: it over," he ordered.
Mrs. Fritz surttndered the
paper bag CCl'ltaining the
receipts and the gurunan jog·
gee> off into the shrubbery and
vanished. .
Union Sued
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
group of carpenters who
retired before July 1, 1971,
have sued their u n i o n ' s
pension fund on grounds they
are b e i n g discriminated
agalrut. Attorney Fred M.
Duman filed the class adioo
suit in U.S. Di.!trict Court on
b'ahalf of 5,000 r et i r e d
carpenters Jn N or t h e r n
California.
00~1ENTING on t h e
search for possible explosives,
passenger Frankie S h e a r s
said:
Youth Held
Mter Rape,
Knife Dea tit
CO LTON (AP) -A juvenile
was arrested after he alleged·
Ii raped and stabbed his 18-
year~ld neighbor and then
killed the girl 's grandm.Other
with 40 knife wounds.
authorities said.
Police said the 16-year~ld
boy was arrested. by de~ee
tives in a re s1 dent1al
neighborhood here Monday
afternoon.
The injured girl, Pauline
Perez. was reported recover·
ing ~1onday at San Bernardino
Community Hospital .
Colton Police Sgt. Lynn
Clark gave this account of the
incident:
The suspect had gone to the
victims' home to borrow some
stereo records. Asile prepared
lo 1e11.ve, he confronted the
girl, and then carried her into
the bedroom where he raped
her and stabbed her eight
times.
T h e grandmother ,
Guadalupe Borao, '53, was
stabbed after she had awaken·
ed and gone to the girl's
bedroom to investiga\e. She
died of the wounds on the
carport shottJy alter her
granddaughter locked herself
in the bathroom.
Santa Barbm·a -Student
Stalls Condominiums
MONTECITO (Al') .L A SS
million ocea n fr o·n t con+
domlnium project here has
been stalled by a 23-year~ld
Santa Barbara City-College
pottery tnslructor wbo con-
tends the development -re-
quires approval of the SOutb
Central Coastal Conservation
Commission.
The suit -brought by
f'redertck C. Schillinger -1s
the first such action !lled by a
private citizen under the pro-
vlsk>ns·of Prop. 20, the coastal
environmental lnitlatlve which
call!omla voters put tnto ef-
fect last November.
Marc McGinnes, aU.omty
for ScW~llnger, said Monday
that work on the 119-unit Vista
del MootecltO project will be
halted pending a • s I a I e
supremo Court rultng w!1Jch
could take from ooe to dirtc
mooths.
TopodynamicS. pfflVided the
supreme Court upholds Schlll-
lnger's contention that the
project requires clearance
from lhe commission.
Before passage of Prop. 20,
a private citizen filing an en-
vironmental sUlt·was responst·
ble for his attorney's fees,
even If he won hls case.
Schillinger filed an appeal
with the state Supreme Court
after Santa Barbara County
Superior Court Judge John A.
Westwlck ruled In favor of
Topodynamlcs, )V h I c h con-
tended that its project did not
need commission clearance
becau,,o comtructlon started
on van. 15, while Prop. 20 ,
panels were not set up until
Feb. I.
Also pending tn lhe state
high court L, a similar case iir
valving e 76-ID\lt condominium
project at Pacilic Beach,
which has been halted on ap-
peals !Ued by the San Diego
'
A moblle home loca1 mid the Gussmans.
Special se,rvlces for SF eckll P•oPI•.
T/14 followingU! a transcript of an inter-
view held with Mrs.Jean Gttssma•~
"Sure I think it makes a difference
where you bank. We bank at Security
Pacific. We have this bcautifullot ••• and
we wanted bl put a mobile home on it. We
wereveryfortunate to find a mobile home
that had to be moved right away. We
called the bank, and in half a day we got
our loan. And that's something special!'
We think tM ~ C1N aon11
thing special too. Just like all°""-
tOTMTs. That's who.t" we .,._ toTIM w
81ly~ue offer special M~ fin'.,...,.,
people. And that includu VOii. Wo Mp..
(
SECURITY . PACIFIC
····-SOM ETHING SPEC
IC
McGINNES SAID his fees
will be paid, as provided. by
Prop. 20, by the developers,
Coonty Coastal Conservation
Commlssldn. '--------,------------------,-------------------..
• • • r
. • . •
. "'
..
I
I.
•
\
• -' • . .~
6 DAU.Y PILOT EDlTORL\L PAGE
Comf·ort · Well arned
The brave men were rewarded for their efforts Presidential contact even before the Watergate scandal
with a hot meal and bot showers -'their first in two broke.
weeks of circling 270 mites above the earth in their 80· A former congressman himself, Laird yielded to
Sl-A<I< IS WI'~, I.JP
JS t'o\W, SQ~~ ;s
'f?tJUNP ...
ton Skylab space home . I their pleas only after being assured of Ca binet rank and
For four, hours, out there in the voi(I, astrDnauts _ a _s.eat on the. N.a~onal ~ecuri3t~ouncil. He thus will '!
l1ar-les....Co1wad-J17-and--Joseph ... Kerwin;-huffinJi-and1---~ar.ry-mor~we1gliWn national--s .than..de•1>9mt:,' l<r<,.._ __ _
puffing all the way, rigged up a makeshift hand rail, idential aide John D. Ehrlichman.
shinnied along it lo position a metal cutter and finally Chief Kelley is backed by 21 years of perfonal FBI
succeeded in clipping the "one little, lousy single bolt" experience and a well-known ~devotion to the, agency.
that had come close to scrubbing the $2.6 billion space During his 12~year tenure as head of the Kansas City
missio n. police department, he had to deal with serious race Prob--
\Vith a stuck solar wing thus deployed to capture le1ns, involving riots and fatalities.
the sun's rays and turn them into electricity, the occU· But he emerged with a reputation as a fair, i! tough
pants of the space home could begin to enjoy some of administrator, steady and unemotional in a crisis. A
the comforts they'd been doing without. leader in the use of such technical innovations as com-
They'd al~eady solved one major prol;>l~ by spread· puters and police helicopter patrols, be _could provide
ing a sunshade to replace a demolish~d heat shield and the firm leadership needed to restore the disrupted FBI.
reduce interior temperatures to a livable range.
The efforts of the space trio, commented jubilant
officials back on earth, have proven that men can live
and work in space -and, most important, that it still
takes that "great co1nputer between the ears" to fi gure
out bow to cope with some j>robleins. · ·
. As a result, what promised to ·be a costly failure in
our -.!!p~ce_ eff orts~a.lre.ady stands,__as one ... of.the..spectaau-
lar tnumphs. -
Toward Equilibrium
President Nixon's appointments last week of former
Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird as his chief
__ counselor for domestic affairs, .and of former Kansas
City Police Chief Clarence M. Kelly to bead up the Fed-
eral Bureau of Investigation may-help restore a little
equilibrium in the nation's capital.
Laird, who bas been a voluble critic of recent events
"around the White House, was literally recruited· for the
post by GOP Congressmen who were seeking more direct
Personal Bus Service
•
The phenonrenai $.1,!.Ccess of the· Orange County
Transit District's Dial-a-IUtle bus system in La Habra has
led to official approval of plans to install it in other
Orailg~County com_!llunities.-
Operating a fleet of six, 17-passenger mini-buses,
Dial-a-Ride has just about reached its ·daily capacitY of
600 passengers in the La Habra experiment. The radio
dispatched vehicles respond to telephone requests for
service, picking up passengers at their doors and deliver-
ing, them to desired destinations for a flat 50-cent 'fee,
witb children under 12 riding free. Other passengers
board or get off along the way as the driver receives
his radio calls.
The service, first of its kind in the western United
States, can serve both for short·haul trips and as a feeder
system to fixed bus route~. -Its initial success could
presage a major move toward widespread use of public
transportation.
1 i
Inflation Crisis State Setaators Shield Their Finances ·
Still Unsolved
\VASHlNGTON -The paralyzing im-
pact of the Watergate crisis on the Nixon
administration has become dangerously
Clear in the on-again, off-again indecision
over \vhether to tighten up the disastrOus
Phase III anti-innation program, no\v
once mofe under lo~level review at the
White House.
1'ime and again in
lhe past five weeks,
outside economic ad·
visers have been in·
structed by -pres:
idential agents •to
prepare various es.
timates. both ec---
onomi c and 1X>litical,
on hov; to handle
the \~·orst inflation in this century. In
each case, they were told at lhe last
1ninute action would be delayed.
True. a decision for a new gas tax and
tougher price controls, so <'ften delayed
by a distracted Mr. Nixon, now is ex·
<pected at any moment. But even so, the
valuable time .already lost has eroded
consumer (.'(ln!kfence in Mr. Nixon and
brought \Vhite Hous$ a4viser John B.
Connally nearly to the: point of quitting.
SO ISOLATED has President Nixon
become from the workaday business of
t!1e economy and his failing anti·infiation
progra m that even the illustrious Dr.-
.c\rthur Bums, chairman of the-Federal
Re~erve Board, has been unable to ar·
rznge a meeting between Mr. Nixon and
Rep-:' Wilbur ?.-fills. -
Mills, chainnan of the House \Vays and
Means Committee,. finally took the floor
of the Hou~ to lay out publi cly what he
normally wou!d have given the President
in confidence: a new anti-inflation pro-
gram pegged to a· price freeze.
li.1r. Nixon's refusal to see Mills on the
rising crisis of the economy is entire ly
consistent with other p r e s i d e n t i a I
omi ssions apparently forced on him by
\Vhi~e House preoccupation with the
\Vatergate scandal.
( EVANS·NOVAK J
THUS, before. leaving the ·country for
his summit meeting in I~land , Mr. Nix·
on gave his top economic advisers carte
blanche to come up with a hard anti-in-
flation plan for the President's study -
and presume(j I approval -when be
returned. lncluded among .the_ advisers
was the e_resident's new part-time con·
sultan!, John B. Coonally.
Wilh Herbert Stein, chainnan of the
Council of Economic Advisers, presiding,
this presidentially-ordered meeting duly
took place. Sitting in for Secretary of the
Treasury George Shultz was . deputy
secretary William E. Simon, the fonner
Wall Street investment banker. Unlike
laissez-faire Shultz, always a hater 'of
price controls, Simon is an activist with a
Wicks
'How's it coming?'
Dea1·
Gloon1y Disclosure Bill Bounces
Gus
President Nixon wanted so desper·
ately to1live in the Wl}ite House.
How come he spends so very little
time in it?
-B.B.R.
· OloomY Gw coinments ••• iubmltted bl' rff6tis and d• not ntc:HNrlly r.llect ,,,_
¥1-. ol HI• n~per, s ... cJ t our HI
' P-r. Gloomt 01!$o 01llt P'llol.
shrewd understanding of the politics as
well as the economics of infl<;i.tion.
BUT ON retumi~g .. Jrom-I"celand, Mr.
Nixon once agafu did nothing -except to
call another to~level meeting at the
\Vhite House. Still unwilling to order a
tightening-Up of Phase Ill following the
second meeting, the President ordered
that yet another session be held, with
himself present.
At this writing Mr. Nixon's ad·
ministration appears to be trapped in a
staJemate making it impossible to break
the vicious cycle of inflation. What
makes this agonizing for political ac·
tivists like C6nnally js irrefutable
evidence that lack or voter confidence in
Mr. Nixon today derives from inflation
as much as Watergate.
Randolph Collier, D·Yreka, th e 7~year·
old dean of the,-..S.tate Senate, popped his
cork the olhef'day. For one fleeting,
hopeful mome-nt 'It appeared he might
even pack his bag and leave this place.
It happened v.·hen the Senate Com-
mittee on Govern·
mental Organization
held hearings on .SB
311.
That v.·as the bill
authored by Senator
Craig Riddle, R·Riv·
erside. Biddle wants
to bring ne\v stand-
ards or ethics to the
legisJature.
His SB 311 would have.required elected
offic.eholders, and county planning com·
missioners, to disclose any financial in-
terests that might connict· with the power
of the office involved. ,
Actually, Biddle's bill was not as
strong as it could have been. It did not
apply to all appointed boa.rQs and com-
missions. It · did not require full
disclosure of an officeholder's financial
interests; only those holdings that might
cause a conruct or interests.
ELECTED officials would have been
reqqired to report any financial stake
worth more than $1,000. U a particular
investment were valued at more than
( __ : _R_u_s_. "_· 'i\_r:_:r_o_N__,J
ONLY ONE Senator voted for SB 31 l ;
Howard Way, R-Exeter.
The eight senators \Vho voted against
disc losure of their personal financial
holdings were:
Collier, Lou Cusanovich fR.sherman
Oaks ), George Deukmcjian (R·Long
Beach), Ralph Dills (0-San Pedro ), J oe
Kennick (D-Long Bea~h), Jack Schrade
(R-San Diego), Larry Walsh (D-Downey)
a11d ~Wedworth. _
Just what was it about that bill those
eight senators did not like?
What do ·they have to hide? Fin8.ncial
in terests that could pose .a conflict of in·
terest? Gifts of stock in savings and
loans? Special investments in land deals?
What?
Senator Collier, for example, is a
bigwig in. the Yreka Title Insurance Co.
He is also a member of the senate's com·
mittee on Insurance and Financial
Institutions.
IF THESE ~tEN have nothing to hide,
let them prove it. Let them disclose their
holdings so the public can know.
Or, is it simply that lhese. legislators
resent the idea of an informed elec-
torate? That they feel they are above ac-
countability?
Somehow some of our !av.makers gel
the idea that they are endowed with
divine · and special rights. That they are
untouchable, unanswerable.
Well, .no one forced them to run for
public office. And, no one compels them
to stay in office . They do us no special
favor, sitting there . in the seats of the
mighty.
THOSE WHO seek and hold public of-
fice should accept the proper demands
such office makes .
Senator Biddle reminded his colleagues
th.e image of politics and politicians these
days is poor. Poor? It's lousy !
We must, he said, we must clean up
the system :
"Obviously, ne\Y la\YS alone won't
purify the sys tem. We are going to Deed
a whole new morality in public service, a
v;hole new mentality about political ac· ,
tion and political ethics." ;
With the lone exceptiOn of Senator
Howard Way, Craig Biddle found no new
morality. on \hat committee. ·.
What he did find was a senator who
swore he would resign before he disclos-
ed his financial holdings. And, seven
others who agreed.
CONS,UMER pollster Albert Sindlinger, $100,000, that fact would also have had to whose surveys are avidly studied in the b been rted ' \Vhite House Oval Office, recently ave repo · . , ..
reported to bis clients that conswner con· If a county . plannmg co!'"m1s~1oner
fidence reached •1recession levels't..by-the--o~ p~pert;)'. m the coun!)' _m which !_l~ Hard to 'Breed' Humans
end of May -the first time it struck bot-liel<I office, th~t wguid have bel:n .
tom m 19 months.. The reason · inflation repoz:f:able. But, 1Lhe owned 50 a~r~s 111 Ol~tering about _~ ~ ~Las I
and the fear that Mr. Nixon is.nor doing an a~1acent colijlty, that.was n_ot cov.ered was the other day, reminded me that
enough to-stop-it-. --: Sll!_~---1....w_o_ul<f:.not~a.v:e__conflicted---people-are always-wonderini:r why-we . . w1th the power of his office. . , .. . ,, "' .Th~ Wh~te House 1s well aware that Those· were the provisions of SB lit. cant breed people the \\'ay we breed
Sindlinger s surve~s, plu~ others, show What was so bad about that? Such re-dogs or racehorses -to pro1note ·certain
that an overwhelmu;ig !atio of voters, up quirernents are long overdue: desifable traits, and to discourage
to 78 percent, now insist on a return to Senator James Q. Wedworth D·
son:ie form of Phase I or Phase II anti-in-Inglewood, was the most persiste,.;t 0~ others.
flation controls pn::>gram. Whatever the ponent. The whole trouble
merits of economic conflicts between the But Randy Collie r he just exploded with "breeding" as
Shultz-Stein team, and. almost every "Rather than sub:Oit.·to thi s J'd rc~ign applied to human be·
other e~llOmic voice Mr. Nixon hears, from the Senate!" ings is that we ~·t
the political case for Immediate He didn't have to· eight of his col-really know which
presidential action is beyond disput~. leagues iook him off ~at hook. traits, or combina-
. · tions ol them, are
~mNEY J.HARRI~
massive 'brains ouxl vulnerable bodies.
The Little-known Burundi Massacre . . .
most desirable for
our survival in the
future. . ..
We breed a racehorse for a specific
Pl!!'PO'< ~ Jbe optimwn of s]!eed 8nd en;
durance. We breed dogs for different
purposes -sporting, or working, or
guard, or simply esthetic qualities. What
is called "Best of Breed" is the one
closest to the standard !<Jr that breed.
OUR SURVIVAL as a species, in fact ,
may depend upon th e fad !I.hat humans
run the widest gamut or traits and
abilities: that we alone are generalists
rath6 than specialists; that some hunt
best, others work best, and still others
gtintd best. lf we were all alike, as lions
or rabbits are Pretty much -i.Jl..
distinguishable, any sudden change in the
world's environment might wipe us iill.
out In a single ePQCh. ··
r...1an's greatest need is for monil
education, rightly understood, .not ~for
biological breeding. We are still a race of
moral idiots; n10st of us are neither sane
or insane, but what Korzybski called
"umane.'' We have not yet'-reache.d s&ni·.
ty, and no .amount of genetic pnr '
gram.ming can build this into us. When
we reach it, if we ever do, then we will
be SUpenn<ll in the only lasting and
Thousa1ids Slauglitered As D.S. Looked tlie Otlier Way
\\1ASflINGTON -far' from the tumult
or the American political campaign, in
the African state of Burundi, the
massacre of a quarter million people y,•as
reaching· full horror a-year ago.
(JACK ANDERSON)
From early May through Augu~t, the tMI statuesque Tutsi funded by the prestlglot!s Carnegie Endowment, has reconatructed the sad
nobility undertook tale of U.S. inaction in the face of mass
the s Y s t em a ti c ge nocide. Project director Roger Morris,
:;laughtering of their a ronner aide to Henry K.Ls,,inger ori
ethnic rivals. lhe ~ African affairs, describes the U.S. poUcy
Hulus. The Tutsis as. "largely a record of indifference, in·
literally \vent crazy ertia .. and icresponsiblllty._" \Vllfi -revenge over
the otte111ptod Hutus THE UNPUBLISHED study siJliles out
coup. When am· lwo SUlte Department ~"11 -Assis·
-milnition ran short. tant Secretary David-Neweom-and cen-
1he Tutsis used sledgehammers and even tral African Affairs Director Herman ·
bull doters .to massacre the Hutus. Goben· -ftS the policymak~ who "made·
• Some-lfulua-Jl)aM8ed to nee the coun-the crucial ~~isioos. '' .
try l)Qt moet were not so_tortunate. Men, llere :are ·~major chal'!• aptmt. the
· \\'Omen Md children were murdered at a -two officials. ,
rate of more than a thousand a day. --The policy makers .. rejected out of · , · hand" a proposal lo place an emborgo on
IN WASDINGTON, meB11wbile. both ·American Imports of Burundllln cof(ce,
the White Houee and · the State.. Dcpa.n.-even though some SE1nct1on of Bl.lrUOdian
men1 \Yere aware of"t.he. eno~mily of the ooffee could have been u:ted as a strong
carnage,_ but li}llde~ .w~I~ PMttsl. _ bargaining tool U.S-"Offee purchases Inst~. oUlclal Washington...chose "quiet account tor 80 percent ol Burundi's ex·
dlplorna tle preJSUre" whi~ lailod'llttcrly port earnings. "The coffee proposal
10 alleviate the traaedy. . nl.\ver received a serk>w hearing," the
'A'3S not even discussed informally with
Folgers Coffee, lhe main purchaser or
Burwidlan c o f f e e . nie Nixon
Ad ministration, however, would "have
enjoyed ready actess" to Folgers "had it
tried," says the report. For former top
White Hou se aide Bryce Harlow was then
in charge of government alfairs for
knew from the start their "quiet
diplomacy" had "little chance or reliev·
ing the tragedy." Adds the report:
"Though that failure soon became 00.
vious, potlc)'makers then stood by for
nearly four months while the Jtilling went
on."
Proctor ond Gamble, the parent com-RATIIER TIIAN moke the "lo1Jih
pany of Folgers.. choice" ·and involve itself. the United
-. , . . States pers1sted to try to involve the -TRE POLICYMAKERS ignored their Organization ol African Unity various
own legal adviser for African affairs, African heads of state and the United ~cith Huffman, who adViSea-itlOriger ac--Na tions. "None d. the efforts to involve
uon. In mid-August, Huffman _put his the Africans was suceessful ...• U.S.
argument in writing In an internal officials were not p&rt.lcul'arly surprised _memo. ·~Whlle inaction-in tbe.Jace of-a-by-this 'railun." --~ -
human rights crisis might be ratiohaUZO!f Throughout the summer, U.S. reaction
on the grounds « political .expediency, to the klllinas was dOICribed by the State
such exl"l!!lence cannot jUJUfy U.S. ac-,Deportment officials them!elves as
Uon .:.. • • • , "l'O\lt.ine."
.:.The Polley makcrs"'repealed!Y" mis
led Congress." As one example, tl'ie Footnote: We were unable to retich
Carnegie study notes !bat Sen. Ted Ken-AJslstant Secretary David Newsom lor'
hedy, 0-Mass., was assured Jn mld.'June comment, bot his MJbordlnate, Herman
that "the clvll strife bad ended." A week Coh<m;"told us that the White House "was
later, from Bunmdl, U.S. Charge d'Af· very much' aware" ~State Department
faire&-Michael Hoyt descrJbeck U>e-.kJJI--'i>ollcy tow.rd.Burundi. "We-dld~what-we
tngs as •jselectlve genocide." And the thought was riglit," sa"id Cohen. He ad-
kllllngs c on 11 nu e d unabalcd through dcd that he thooght no pollcy.....,hort of
August. military intervention -~d have stop.
ilirr THE standanl for the bilman race
bas not been established, and cannot be,
by the very terms of our nature. Indeed,
it ls -preci~ly our variability that .PJ'O"
vides us Witll SW"Vival·value. Man can be
anything be c:booses when the need
arises : he can attack like a I~ run like
a !'\l'bbit, hide like a .oole, take to water
or air like a fish or btrd.
We are not locked into one fonn er
mode oC behaVior, and are the only
species that ls able to work with the
evolutionary process1 es it were, ·<Xln-
tlnualJy adapting ourselves to changing
ext<rnaLconditions.
AND TIDS ls why all the agencies talk
about "breedin(I" a new · race of
SUpennen I! 10 muc:h ~opoioglcal
poppycock. We J~ don't know what a
biological Superman ooght to ""1Sist or. r
Since you can't broed everythipg Into one
creatwe, we would have to decide which
qualities W< !t"\fl de>lred. .
beneficial sense of the word. '
DAILY PILOT
Rcib•rt N. w .. d, Pu6U.h.r
Thomas Kttvil;-.Editor
Barbaro Krtlbfth
Editorial Pog< Editor
The edt!or\al~--•J.Jl>o.. Dall)I . Pilot ,;.eeks to Inform and nUmult.le
tffdtn. by ~ on tn11 pqe
divenie •commentary· on (WIC!J Ot ~
tenst _by tYndlcattd <.'Olun'lnilt1 and
cartooNrts. by provkHng • tonun tar
rndm1 view• and by prnmtlnr this
nC!WSpapeor' • ~lnlortl and fdeu , on
current topka. The edl!Orill oplnlont
()f the Daily PiSot appear only tn the ,
editorial column' •t the top o( 1he
pqe. Opinfont e.xpreacd b)' the coif..
umntstt and cartoontita and letter
wrtt ... are ~own Ind no~
"""' " ...... -by u.. Dall)l-Pllot -be.-.
Tuesday, June 12, 1978
I.
-Th~ pollcJT(lakers. ovP.rly cynical, ' ped the killings. ., ----.--------Now, a )'.e8t l&teT. a lpcc>AI task rorce, report ctlarges. The proposal, in fa ct,
't r ..----
U we bre4 for physiClll size and
'Siren8th,-we~rrugfil pemo -like--tile-
d-~ bodlff vew too·btg'and
cumbefiome for ~ li!t/e brains to hafl-
dle. If w~ bred for nte leclual powm,
we mi8ht fall into physical ile~lllty with ~ -. \ ~----------... ~--,,,___ ..
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13 'S.,...ma Cum. Lattde'
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Fo1· the
Record 157 Ho.nor Grads · at UCI
• Academic hoflors will be Dissolution awarded ·1o 1~1 graduating Of ~arriage senl..-s at uc Irvine's eighth amual commmcement SaUJr.. llM ,,.,., u
M.lftlOU, An M. •nd DOl'l•ld H, day at 10:3() 8.m, in campus
MtlCtndry, Vlil.t A'"" •nd P•lrfCk p k l"r•nc•• ' ar . ----,,..,. .. --.w:.,"'"~ltladM....a.llit\I.-~---stuaents-Wl11
\ l onnenfMI, Donn• It. 1nd M1u.rlct M. \ • ~-•
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w 11111n1. E11nlc1 v, lf>d,J.,.ry Ln receive w.io hiChest honor,
lrytnt, CtrOI AM 9lld WIY!\e A1tn " Jaude u ~• EdWt'd .. 5a!Mlr1 Ind Stmllll EdWtrda. SWDINl CUln , •1uf'ty-
01:Jd11111, P1me11 """ •net 1e_.1n seven will be g r a du a t e d
L-" ''"''""''"'" and 108 LOftOhoff, Gtrtlynn tnd Dennl1 Ctrl magna cum .........,
80'J'er, P11rlt11 A.. Mid Wiii~ M. will ~ ,. .. _ " laude" GtslUll, JWTI A. Ind Rlthard c. • .............. \UICi cum
MOntvomeJy, MOllY 11\d lllobtrt Earl "'~~--rn..-' · ted s11p1es. ""'''"" ~ 51n'IOfl c;ii.. 1n.-AJC. •ueY were nomma
~~~~·~ 1::1n:tI..."°" for commendation by their
"'!'!~l!;ill!'l!'!!~~!l!!!,-'f-sdiools Oil ~basis oL ocholanihi1>.--1'. __ a n d _
·Otl~er
Deaths
i RSCHENHAUSEN,
Germany (AP) -Fonner
-Field ~shal Erich voo
Mab1teln, 85, the man who
maaterminded N a z i Ger-
many's 1940 blitzkrieg con-
quest of'France, died SWlday.
EL PASO, Tex. (AP)
HUary J. Sandoval J r., 43.
fonner director of the Small
Business Administration, died
Mond:iy. He served at the SBA
from 1969 to 1971, when he
resigned for health reasons.
NEW YORK (AP) -Fran·
ces Starr, 87, a leading
Broadway actress in the early
pact of the century, died Aion-
day. She was discovered by
.David Belasco and played in
scores o! plays for him and
others. Her only film was
"Five Star Final" in 1931.
LO NOON {AP) -Sean Ken-
ny, U, Irish-born designer ol
stage sets for "Oliver" and
other hit .musicals., died Mon-
day.
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) -
Roy J. 1'1roer, whose oilfield
explorations took t.im to the
poor Muse and the Oklahoma
st.atehoose as governor, died
1'tonday. He was 78.
Death Notices
other academic achievements.
The stud<nts are "JTIC!l18 the
1,228 who are candidates for
bachelor· <A arts and bache!Ot"
of. 'Science.degrees al the com-
m encemen t. Aavanced
degrees will be ,granted to 262
other studfnts, including 1Z2 candksaTuS !for~lhe inasier•s
degree, 67 for jhe .doctor of
philasophy and 73 for the doc-
tor of medicine degree.
F~llowing Is the list of UC!
students from Orange County
who will receive booors at
graduatioo. 'The Jtst is by
I . Coun~y Fair
Scheduled
July 6-15
hometown and Includes the
student&, ack:lttss, academic ·
major and honors.
County OKs
Y outli W orla.
For Summer
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TutSd~1 June 12, 1'17)>
PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
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DAILY PILOT 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOIJS IUSIN•ss
NAM• STATIM•MT lollowlno pwson 11 dolno bWlnts•
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QUEENIE
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Tutsday, Junr 12, l 'J1 J rt
By Phil lnterlandi He's Ba
B1-u11dage to Wed
German Princess
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Censure of Two
Judges P~oposed
fosr. f1'orough, GuortJnP1 •·cl
Real Esta t e
Solt•' CJnd ot Btolf ,., t n • "' r
TRAINING
Phon<.• for fr ('I' fo/do·r
I ANtHONY SCHOOLI
HAllOI CINTll SAN FRANCISCO f AP) -any money or other tangible 1,. M•rWr Ct11ttr
The eanromla Commission on consideration," said the com· p;:'(,14;' ,c;;~;·:, miaalon report "What-Judge • Judicial Qualifications has Sanchez did appears to be 1111 s ......... ._... ''·
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Or. " B nd --•ed t th t t d 'ud A~ ... 1m, Cal, ,_,. CHICAGO (AP \ -Avery and the 1ent, ru age recomm""'.... o e s a e re.wit of incredibly ba J g-Ptl. 17•141 JJ6-llOO
Brundage, 85-vear-olcl fonner said. Supreme Court th.at tv.'O Losl:~ment~~a~nd~in~a~bili~ty~!o~sa~y~·no~'~~~~~~~~~~~---pres\dcnt of the International , Angeles judges be censured. to his Sriend Joey Barnum ." Olym pic Committee "'Ill niar-BRUNDAGE, "HO made The""~""!!li~on.-
1 -rf 37..,.ellN>ld ' mian---lllLf~ocld .
"CUt that out!"
L. M. Boyd
Budapest Breeds
· princess who served as a \Var I t~gh i:eaI estate day thai .Superior Court J udge
· hoslf'~s at the 1972 Olympic development tn Chicago, owns Leopoldo Sanchez should be
games in ~1unich . the Chicago La Salle Hotel and "severely and p u b 11 c I y
The bride to be is h-lariann has e~lve real estate censured" and 'Mun. i c i p a I
PrinceM Reuss. 8 descendant hold!zlgs m Santa Barbara, in~ "' ,...... Court Judge Antonio E .
of a royal family and related eluding_ the Monteclto Country Chavez "censured" for willful
to m-t of the royal hooses of Club, Which he frequently has BETROTHED IS 37 mlsconduct. In <iflce orxl pre-Euro~. used as a headquarters. Avery Brundage judicial conduot in bringing
the judicial office i n t o ANNOUNCEMENT of the disrepute. ~~·:~n:,e~t w~ ~det jo~tl~ S.ior1· e.., u.· 4 -THE Plil>CEEDING steln!
multimllllonaire Chicago hotel, I-~ I-froma-imLoi Afi8eles grarxl
owner and the mother of the . jury investigation.
future bride, S t e p h a n I e C z E d v • B d' The commiMion said it
Princess Reuss, of Gannbch-QJlp es U . p JU e . found that between Dec, 1,
Partenkirehen, Gennany. 1969 and Oct. 15, 1972 Judge
"The princess and I h'~e Sanchez regularly furnl!hed
rommon int.erests," s a 1 d LONOON (UPI) A twO ·years go to combat sex ball bondsman Joey Barnum e
Brundage, a strapping 6-footer p h y 8 i c i 8 n says t h a t exploitation. large number of f\o r m
wbo.loob hall hil age. "She is · te I t I s -oNE MAGAZINE, he said, <locuments entitled..!fOrder-f« ~ an excellent skier. I have been -passiona ove s or-e-the Release of Prisoner on f published · maga·•---for advocated trial marriage. uwclated with sports most o m ,.,uc:~ Bail " which were blank except
my life. · teerl-agers can lead young "Wooten are now in a very Jor Judge Sanchez' signature.
"This is not a June· women to sexual promiscuity. difficuh position,'' E 11 is on It sald Barnum and his
December wedding. The "Stories now increasingly said.. "They are led to think employes used the documents
princess and her family lived ~.!!.._ theandy take .btilihtye, and also oold to independent through a horrible war, and end. with the couple in bed y .......... uuvu.., 're9pOllSl bail bondsmen services which
she ls very mature for her together, ~ if that was the everything will 1be all right. included the releMe orders
age. People .say I am young natural and only end to a rela-"In fact , the v.-omen who presigned by 'Judge 5anche1. for my age. l think instead of tionship," said Dr. Stanley plans to have children "''ill
Who
You'?
A lot Of pecple Mal yo.a.
"""'-"""""' _ _.,....,, • ....i,_.w I ~Al;TED1NICIANS.
-Leamttrlghd---. --~eon... " .,_,t & o...o1 c-J o1ua ocdeni c:outM1 1or DENT~ 'IECHNICJANS. Yam
get ~ pro'eMk>MI lnltrucUori for an exciting career lll, ,
ibe db1lill fteJcl ~
Leamltfutl
Thlt .. • 'no-nGnllrlR' cour9e. Cramn.ed rih aitlcel lnb•
mation. You're uiught quk:kly. ~ 1-1. YIM So •
work-tut! -
-i:eatn1t ncM!
CAU. 635-'1450
Dolt right~ You11 get fl'IOfe iok>rmaiioa -..-d -yoe'I
dlCO'WI' }List bow naany people really do DM:d you!
PlACEMENT ~STANCE FOR GRADUATES AT NO
EXTRA COSTl .APl'K~ FOR \IEIEIANS.
SOUl1iERN CAUFORNIA COUEGE OF
MEDICAL & DENTAL CAREERS
1717 SOUTH BROOKHURST,ANAHEIM Amorous_ Hippos
Young lady, when you talk about your beaiuty sleep,
you are supposed to be referring. to tba~ sleep )'.~ get
before midnight, if any ... To discuss either pohtu~ or
religion in almost any nudist gathering is con!idered tsk
tsk bad form ..• Was none other than Victor' Borge who
·said "U the good Lord had Intended us to-watch tele-visi~, he'd have gi\!en ~s s.quare eyeballs." ... Am asked
It being 8$-37, it is more like Ellison, chainnan of the · need and want the support of-a "THERE IS NO evidence
55-46.'' . ..'.Responsi~~~·~b~le~Soci~.et~y~,~fo~rmed~~~l~as~tl~n!g~bond><lllC~.'~'------'t~ha".'t~Jud~g~e~Sa~nc~hll?e:.z .'.rece~~iv~ed~====================-p R 1 NC E S S Mariann,
635-~50
slender and 5 foot 8, speaks
six languages -French, •
Gennan, English, G r e e k .
· Which Ianguaie has the most' words. English, ·no doubt
about l.t. With more than 490,000 plus anothei:: ~.ooo tech-
nical terffis ... ·One y/Orking man in every six, who's due
-~
)··=~ ~ ~ •' ~ I
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a vacation th1s year, won't take it,
the industrious fellow,
Most railroad' men of old owned
red signal lamps. They lugged said
lamps just about everywhere, so dls-
.patcbers. looking for emergency cre.ws,
could fmd · them. Where those dis-
"-patchers found them mostly was in
the habitats of the night ladies who
set up tents near construction camps.
Credit therefore the early railroad men With the origin
<i that term "red light district."
OSCARS-Q. "How much does one of UKl5e Academy
Award Oscar statuettes cost? l mean to make?"
A. About $75.
A University of Houston medico contends his studies
indicate just about all compulsive 'gamblers appear to have
been compulsive liars as children.
Why I don't know, but research shows men tend to tell
you what sort of foods they do llke while l'l--Omen are more
apt to tell what kind of foods ·they don't like. ..
TO GRADUATE -To graduate from h1gh school in
the state of Oregon.now, a student" must pass tests to prove
he or she can: l. Fiii out an income tax form. 2. Balance
•a checkbook. 3. Compu te the Interest on a loan. Excellent.
'Do you see any reason why all states shouldn't-require
such? Neither do I.
Nobody yet has explained exactly Why it is that the
hippopotamuses which frolic in the thennal spring water or Budapest. Hungary, breed more vigorously to produce
more offspring than hippopotamuses anywhere else on
earth. Medical researchers are studying the phenomenon,
however. With great intensity.
When she's 42 years old is the age a wife is most likely
to run away from her husband if ever she's to do so. Run
away here does not mean divorce or separate. Just take
off, fly, disappear. Make mention of this becaim:; the num-
ber of runaway wives Is said to have risen rapidly in re-
cent years.
Address mail to : L. Af. Boyd, P.O. Bo:c 1875, New.
port Be ach, Calif. 92660.
Italian and Spanish. She and
her family, who once ruled a
little kingdom known a s
Reuss, were in the 'Ea.stem
zone when the country was
divided arter World War 11.
Her father was a German pf.
fleer who served In both Den-
mark and Russia. 'The family
was stripped. of all possessions
by the Communists.
The princesS was 8 ~d her
brothel-10 when they were
smuggled into the Western
zone by friends of their
parents, who followed later.
Her father dj_ed in 1~7.
Brundage said he did not
know when the marriage
would take place.
"IN EUROPE, marriage is a
tradition which requires a
great deal of !onnal JX'epara·
tlon," he said.
The robust former toe chief
said he had been besieged by
report! of an impending mar·
riage for several weeks.
"] have thousands of clip-
pings from all over the world
and even have some con-
gratulatory messages from .
such places &I South ·Africa
WITNESSES WANTID !
"'"' WtltttoM .. l'lrt<lul A!Tnl '°' '•tic• ,, • mtfl ., ClttlVl llKl'lll
"""bl •I :Mt Vlcllli• SI., c .. i.
M1M 911 A'lil I,, lt7).
l"t.SASE CALL -213-487•2400
•FmU.Tm• <•r SAYS: .. ,.. ...........
fttl'*'WIATIA Cfll tlll Lwsnt M4
.... ,. ....... t ... e•• a.. CtMt.,.. ....... 24 ••c. -••UAIC. OUN•I COUNTY
1714) 835°2220
10 OIUUlm-llO COll1IAtr
*m minimum b9l9rce.·
· .. *m limit number of
ch3cks writtm
*m savirgs required.
*ro e><Pratbn date.
* rYl .f('V'\l'1rg For our Semi-Orand Opening we're offering I 11.J JLA.J • FREE O>ecking for Life to Charter Deposltcn.
Open y0ur per$0081 cOOd<ing account oow,
and y0u'll never pay another cent for servioe
charges. Which can save )OU $25 to $40 a~
!his year. and ~ery year y00 bank wilh us. ·
°'"'9 see u_s al our temporary facility (while
our new building is under construclion) at
Brookhurst and Garfield in the Village
Shopping Center. Get goodies and giw-11Wa)'9,
open )'9Ur FREE Lifetime Checking account
(and ask about our new Check Guarantee
· Card). ~-hurry I This Is a limited tirpe offer.
' . -~!~!..ltBank . -·
• 19006 -(II Oortleltl). IU0.,,..1-1!714) 98:J.6e51
EXTENCEll HOURS: OPEN &\TUROl<Ya / 10:00 o.m.·1:00"""
• 'ft• c. Mond•>•lluoi/ 113l ...,...5tl:)...,. --· ~ .... -.....
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1f s0mething in your hotme goes on the blink,
you better hope it's your telephone.
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It's annoying to have anything break. But it's less annoying when it's your telephone.
Our repair service Is ~ood. ·our price is even better: no charge for repairs.
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GEAERALTELEPHDnE
An equal opportunity employer. · t.;------'---~---~
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' Tutsd1y, Junt 12, 1~73 DJ.ILV PILOT 9 ------· ·ovER THE COUNTER ~
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Ticor
Co1111lru1y Styles
Image ii1 Name
LOS ANGELES (AP 1 -Tl on T\cor.
Corp . thinlis Ticor Is a more
distinguishable name and the
LosA n g eJ e s-h {I !I ed con-
----...glomer8le iS-sl'JCMlflg-!500,000-
to get the public 10 agree.
A ne\v logotype. an abstract,
highly stylized Tl also n·as
designed, but this , too, turn ed
our10-bC a OOmp iCatoomat-
ter.
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A spokesman for the firm,
Title Insurance & Trust . says
the name change a1\d the cam-
paign to publicize ii is the
result of a year's planning,
begun after officials of ihc
firm-reviewed their varied
com panie s and their
·diversification plans.
1~\\'E SAW A collage or \\'hat
v.•e looked like, but that "'as
nothing like u·hat v.·e are."
-said John E. Flood , the firm's
senior vice president for
n1 arketing.
The first step taken was to
hire Saul Bass & Associates,
-an industrial design firm also
based in Los An geles. lo study
the problem.
Flood said the ba sic problem
was that the company 's image
lacked a cohesivei1ess since
each entity in the corporation
had its OY.'n image.
"The first dec ision was that
v;e needed a nev.· name." said
Flood. explaining that officials
felt a nick name y.•as needed,
such as Alcoa for Alun1inum
Company of A1nerica.
"WE FELT Tl Y.'as still im-
portant to the nan1e and y.·e
did n't want to lose that ident-
ity. So v.·e tried names using
TI both as a prefix and a suf-
fix:.'' Flood sa id in a recent in-
tcrvie,\v.
Using braii1' and co1n puter
J)C)\.\-·er, officia ls ·caine up "'ith
a list of 7.000 nickna mes, in-
cluding Tica\, Ticon Timax
and Tit ran , and finally settled
"At one tinle, v.·e had a 10-
by-U)-foot wall covered with
designs. Strangely, it was one
of the most difficult decisions
the company has had to
n1ake," said Flood.
HE S,\JO THA7 the new
symbol and type style is being
used to identify corpOrate
subsidiaries, which include ti-
tle insurance, financial print-
ing, relocation management,
1nortgage insurance, property
development and arctiiteetural
services, .
Flood.explained that a well·
kno\vn suhsidiary such as Jef-
fries Banknote Co. now bears
its O\\'O han1e-but also carries
a cle.1 r !abel : "A Ticor Com-
pany.''
He said 1he names of lesser
knOY.'n subsidi aries have been
rechristened. such as Tl Home
Tr:insfer Service Corp. bei"ng
renamed Ti c or Relocation
~1 anagement and Tl
ProJ:Erties beco ming Ticor
Properties.
TICOR'S ADVERTISING
can1paig n to spread its new
name is being directed by
G u mpertz-Bentley-Fried-
Scolt of Los Angeles.
"We hope that the ads come
across as fun and easy to
read. rather than self-serv
ing," said Steve Scott," a prin-
cipal of -tbc ad gency,
•le said he and Flood
''detcsied most c orp orate
advertising as dull , self-serv-
ing, pon1pous and trite."
A1'lnual Report Jzist
Kid Stuff to Firm
NEW YO RK (AP \ -The
average annual c o r p o r a t c
report" is pretty heavy stuff lo
alnfost anyone but accountants
and stockholders.
Not so the latest fron1
~tacmillan Inc.
T.111-: EDUCATIONAL
service firm ha s published a
special ve rsion of its annual
report for ~·oung people. It
tells \l'hat thf' comp.:iny did the
past year in ~veryday
language. \\'r itten so a fift h-
. gr;idcr can understand it.
It lea\"CS such tcrn1s as cur-
EXECUTIVE
WM ene.ai•• fl'I01toge1M•f
lt«lltrff•4 lt1 Rltlter5-i oM 114.
lllitlk".ri•• ..,.., cllollet19i119
,..tfto• wl9' ''6f'"ll\'9 COIR•
,. .. , locetff I•. Or ... • Co••ty.
AHre•otjou of fflly Me·
woy drlwhtt to LM A119.W. for
"'" yeen lta•• RHlly proMpt-
ed o ell•" ...
Writ• AO ::; .... D1llv ~1101
~.o. l o• iuo. co111 Mtw. c ~. nu•
SEMINAR ON .......
BONDS
ARE YOU EARNING 7Yi% to 8% ..
ON YOUR MONEY
MANY PEOPLE ARE . . IN BONDS
One evening seminar on bonds given in clear, concise
non-technical lan9ua9e. The session is for both new
end e xperienced inves tors. Materiel includes:
~ GOYEINMINTS ' COl,.ORATIS • MUNICIPALS • CONYllTI·
ILl!S ' HOW SAFI All IONDS7 ' IOND FUNDS ' HOW TO
IUY AND SILL • RATING$-SAFITY A.U.--A·lll " WHAT IS'
CALLAILI ••• ' SINKING FUND •.• ' HOW MUCH INTlllST
AND HOW P.t.107
ht 1....-..m.11 p~• l~dkoNi '-'e olHf .. n coo,.. INJ.w ., -
coll {714) 644-2442.
I Thu rs., June 14th, 7:30 P.M.
cw1 .. win .. s.n.41
S•t., June 16th, 9:30 A.M.
!Coffee lu1cl o .. m Pt..,t4eclJ
I AM UNAILE TO ATTENO : I would likt to h••• 11rn i"•r
lilt11tu,1 on 8o"d1.
N1m1 ••••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••.••••••.••••••• ,
A.ddr111 •·•·••··•·•·;·······••·············•·······•···
Ci!y ••······:··········• Sl•I• •••••••••• Zi_e •••······•
7
When
' a -
Family
Needs
a
l=riend ...
Let a
Sylvia
pages
friend
Porter
of the
drop on you toniqht. ' 1n
can visit you
DAILY PILOT
from the
delivered
right to your home. You will get your
_money's worth from Sylvia Porter's col-
umn and all the other special features
the financial pages of the
' 1n
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Complete New York Stock List
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June , 1973 s
Monday's Closing Prices-Co1nplete N~w York Stock Exchange List
lnvesto1·s Take
Wait-see Stance
J
NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market fell back
Monday as Wall Street took a w11t and see attitude
regarding President Nixon• plans for a new eco-nomic policy -
•The market 1s waiUng for an announcement
-~.1 the J'tes1dent on...measurea he wl!Lteke-kl-Com
bat lnfiation " sud Monte Gordon of Drey!Us Corp
•The low volume indicates some disappoint·
ment at reports the new program will have less 1n·
tense controls th a n Wall Street would like, ' he added
The market, which had been ahead m early
tradJng lost most of its ground after the \Vh1te
House said the President would not announce an
ecomonlc decision Monday.
Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List
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DAILY PILOT !1 •
i~ v.-.J~Y J-U.Or Tue$day, June •. 12. 1q73
f'r.111il ;1 C!r<'UN b11 Bii Kenn e --r--.:.
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Wfts Lex Barher
' NEW YOHK i~Pli -A
British n1ediu111 floy,·n in ror
the occasion wen! into a
labored trance ·at the \Valdorr
Astoria and claimed she got in
contact \Vith Lex Barker, the
rormer movie TarU1n who
died exactly one month ago.
Medium Marjorie Staves
suid i\'lond~~v that Barker v.•as
"happy and alive in another
\\'Orld, ''
by Barker's "'ldow, Zan. who trance, quoted the voice which spiritual leanings -Robert On May 11, the to.II bronzed 'sealed message o.nd the fact
cried during ii: his son, AleK· she said was B:-irker'1r in dis-Cuminlngs, Arlene Dahl and Barker collapsed on a J\.1anhat· that lt was written in 8 loost•
ander, a restaurant owner: joined phrases: Rhonda 1'"'le1nlng -to \\'fite tan street and died or a heart looped scra\\•I. .
Hollf\\·ood parapsychologists I secret sealed per s 0 n a J attack at the age of 54. The Enquirer said it y,•oul
and several friends including Ht SPEAK OF love and a messages, known only "lolO ~1onday's event, \\•hich took take several days for them -to
::ictress Joan Fontaine and life beyond. · .it has been th~msclves, and to tum them place exactly one month to the check the 'vords Mis~ ~tavel,..,_
Ne"' York socialite pa I necessary for n1e to accept 'over , to the newspaper for hour atfer his death, was held mentioned with the envelopc;li~
Uchitel. this .ne14· life. . .there is deposit in 8 Florida bank to test the experiment which in the vpult to see if they co~';.
They sat in a circle around forgiveness here ... l 'speak Of \VOUld , accordini? to the En· responded. . ·
A1iss Staves and listened to deep regret and heartache." THE FOUR then signed Quirer. "once :ind for all prove J\.1iss Uchietel, whose )l~~t<I!
personal m ess a gA! s front The seance was sponsored agreements whereby eac h if thel'e is a life after ~eath." the Bark~rs w:ere .. visit.1n1i1::
Barker purportedly s ent by the newspater The .Na-would attempt to contact . when he died, sa1d his frlen~ thJ:~ ~·liss st,:a,::ve,,sc._. ~--~tl:;ona,.,·,,.1 __ "E"n9,,.ue.ir,,e!.r_;;w_,,hi+c"h-"la,.t:-_.,,med~iu_~-~ ~!nces. on.e l\USS S!AYE!i_ ho __ ~vever. and family ~g~ to ·the 1 ..
--l\1-1ss .... S aves,-"l11!i ai ms and . January · eniiSlea Bar er an mon fi after t ~1r deaf,hslirSafa'Sli'eWas a e-10-di!elphcr-~~tf"'because--htFmemofYl"
head jerking while in the three movie stars with transmit the messa·ges. only a few words out of the haunted them all. F.
!-----------------------------------------------------------~-~~"
---YflE.,.~CE at the iffied
New York hotel \Vas attended
"But I told all the guys that when school was out
you 'd let me stay up to wotch-~n-y Carsc,-i1,"
'Not Nixo1a'
Ziegl_e1~ Admits
E1·1~or 011 Call
\VA~HJNGTON IAP i -part,'' Z~egl~r said. .
Prcside~tial Press Secretary tie said it was "my 1m·
Ronald h. Ziegler concedes he press ion " after meeting with
erred in1, telling n~\.\'Sn1en Nixon and Haldeman at Key
J\1arch 26 that President Nixon Biscayne, Fla. that "the
had given \Vhite House counsel' President spoke directly with
J ohn Dean Ill p erso nal John Dean."
assurances or con f i den c e He added that "it "'as a
following news reports that \Vrong i1npression on my
Dean kne\v in advance of the part." but that it "did not
Watergate burglary. con1e fro1n anything that v.•as
Questioned Monday at a stated" in the rneeting "that
\Vhite 11ouse briefing about \l'o uld have misled n1e."
the-2 ~~-month-old incldent, The incident occu rred after
Ziegler said ·a call to Dean ac-the Los Angeles Times quoted
tually was made by then · \\'atergate defendant James
-\Vhite Jfouse chief of staff" \V. McCord as having said
I-L R. Haldeman rather than by Dean had prior· knowledge of
Nixon. the June 17, 1972 break-in at
"THE E RROR is ori nty Democratic party national
Last Time .
l1i Public
--Co1iglili1i
headquarter~s.
ACCORDING lo Ziegler,
•Ialdeman·s call to Dean was
made as the \Vhite House
sought to ascertain ~'hether
there might be any truth to
the story.
At the time; the \Vhite
House spo k es man told
ll':?\vs111en that Nixon telephon-
ed Ojian because of the Los
DETRO,lT (AP) _ More Angeles Times report. and than~l ,200 people crowded 'into referred · to the· President as st. Mary's catholic Church having "absolute and total
here for what the Rev. Charles confidence" in Dean.
E. Coughlin says was htS last Dean since has been fired
public appearance. and Haldeman has resigned.
Fath~r ~?1,1gh.lin, t.he "con· AT J\10NDA\"S briefing.
trovers1al· radior.pi~ ofr , Ziegler said his comments to
the 193l!s· told .. the },a~med newsmen about Dean 's denials
church Sunday night, I m loo of involvement had been "bas-
old. I haven:t .~oo long to go ed on repeated ~surances
and I know it. from Mr. Dean to fue that he
DURING HJ s 35-minute had not been involvt¥1 in the
sermon, the 82-year-old priest \\ratergate matter." 1
called for a "battle against the Asked by· a newsma1' why he
new devil, which he said v.•as let the "wrong impression~·
··the intern a t i o n a' I in· stand for so long. Ziegl:er said
Llustrialization with its \l'hole he had no t really considered
n1ateralistic concept of life." the matter until queried; about it by Ne\vsweek n1agazine dur-
Father Coughlin said, "Save ing the ~·eekend. He said that
the rich class from paying as far as he \Vas concerned .
taxation is its philosophy. It lhe essence of the storV ,vas ·
ha s its o\vn philosophy of lust the denial of the stor.Y that
instead of purity, sex instead Dean had any prior kno\vledge
of soul."' of the burgl!J.ry.
PEOPLE STILL are \vor-Ziegler defended hin1seU by
rying about a "com1nunis111 saying that in I.800 briefings.
that's shot its bolt and that is he has not had such_a thi!lg
surrendering to the money or occur orten.
1----r-l!'he~±'!in"\\dustrialists. of the oil . The spokesman has been at
r barons." IIB3cJiJi . ·--odds--\Mth--rtrr-"press--o
"Comn1unlsm is pa_sse ai:id numerous occasions and . has
you don 't know it. It 's not been forced to correct or
passe in its philoso phy. !l 's declare "inoperative" several
still the same 1naterialistic staten1ents con c e r n in g
concept.'' \Vatergate during the last 10
He said the United States months.
must revive its devotion to
God and fight continuously
against the new ''anti-Christ."
.Gal Zippecl
l1ito Jail
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If you've ever had second thoughts about the brand of cigarette you smoke,
here's a quick way to find out if it really delivers what you want. -
-.
These five simple tests will tell you a lot about quality, freshness, and taste.
And if you make these tests with aWinston, they'll tell you why Winston
smokers can point to their bran4 and say, "How good it is!" ·
.. .
Tes~l_Sniff It
Take a whiff of the tobacco.
Does it smell ri ch arid fresh
and appealing? If yow ciga-
rette is Winsto11, you'll recog-
ni ze the aroma of costly
Vintage Leaf Tobaccos.
Winston chooses the most
nea rly petfect leaves money
can buy. Then we age these rare.
tobaccos in wooden casks. We do it
for tl1 e sat11e reason you'd age a fin~ wine. Aging
makes ou r tobaccos mellow and brings QUt that
extra dimension of natural goOOness. -~
Test #4 Light It
Does it bum evenly? Here's a .. •. '
critical test of the way yo ur ~·~ '•'."
cigarette is made. A cigarette ) >I~, ,._.
Test #2 Feel It
Roll the ciga rette in your hand. Pinch it slight!)'
Does it feel stale! A cigarette that's been wait· n . _;«4{'--ing in a warehouse, or on a
v-,,:;;:;--::-": , . shelf, can lose so me of its
i . ;.<
1 f·'~\i'; freshness. And some of its
· -~' ') ; tas te. But, because W u1ston
sells so fast, every pack
comes to you fre sh. The fact
is, on any given day, Winston
is likely to be the freshest
cigarette yo ur mone y can buy.
Test #5 Smoke It
What could be simpler? That's .
the real test of a cigarette. Can ~ ~
it deliver good taste and real 'l\ C:_ .
Test #3 Take a puff •••
before lighting
Take a puff -without lighting it.
That's a good way to-learn
abou t the tobacco and the .,
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tobaccos without lighting
up, yo u know there's rich'
ness up front. And that
the filter doe sn't get in the
\vay of tl1e ta ste. Wi11ston's
exclusive Filter-Blend, a
top-sec ret blend of different \o baccos,
-worl<s witl1Winsron's moilem white ·..:
filter to deliver sa tisfying t.iste in every puff. : ~·
FA THER COUG JlLI N dre\I'
an audience .. of mill ions before
\Vorld \Var II \.\1ith hi s ag-
gressive radio broadcasts at-
tacking the "Ne\v Deal" and
President F' r a n k I i n .. o.
Roosevelt. com 1nuj is n1. Czechoslovakia (AP) -
A 46-year-old \\'On1an was
caught smuggling zippers
into Poland, the Czech
ne1vspaperNoviny
repo rted.
rolled fresh, packed full and ~ .. ) \.,'.;/
. made with care will bum ... ~ .f ' '.! evenly, draw easily. Winston &;
satisfaction every time yo u light );if,-.;:~~
up? Winston-can. Ask a ,;;/ ·':~ .
•---.-::intcrnationaLbankcrs" -and
Je\\'S.
He rt!tircd in 1966 as · pastor
emeritus or the Shrine of the
Little t'lo\ver in nearby Jioya l
Oak.
~--·-
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e 'fil FORD for sale. Runs
good, for $100.
e f<"LY OVER TI-IE \\'AVES
.... ·tth thi~ l(ite :113. It has
a_._boul CO\'er, illol in good.
<.-ondilion an<l n~s 'a llttle -
paint.
• '11 0 1\TSUT" 1200. It has
48,000 n1iles ond ill ~etllng
101· $1100.
always oes. How 0oe5ylll'lr;::;~-
brand shape up? \':~
. ~
·~ska Winston smoker.
. He'll tellyou
Warning : The Surgeon ~eneral Has De1ermined
Thal Cig~rene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your ·Heallh. . .
\
Winston:6 tpoker. Any time:
He'll .. tell you in four simple
words: How good. it is.
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20mg. ''1ar. iJiiii. mcoune av. par cigarana. FTC RapOiilEl73. ------
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\ Play Group P:int-Size,.....
By ALLlsON DEERR
Of ltlt O.Ur ,llot lltl!
Ii v.·as l\1onday morning, just before
10 a.m.
Fourteen airplane cngill(!s "·ound up
_v.;th a roar inside the Colony •rom cs
t1ubhouse and landed safely wi1h a
satisfactory hum.
The sound effects y,·ere pro\•idcd by 4-
ycar'1>!ds from I.he Pixie Play Group. One
boy had brought an aif1)lane for sho\\'·
and-tell. ·'·~
Sho\\'-and-tell follo1\•ed a rather solemn
fl3g salute-"Do you:--know v;h.ich is your
right hand?" -despite a couple of gig-
gles. Then the group broke into smaller
grOups for free play, cutting·, pasting,
painting and a clean-up S\1.'tsn in a basin
oC'fioapy v.•atcr.
The Pixies are somewhat unusual.
Toni Harkins. mother of six children
frotn I to JO. explained that the Pixies
began about t"'o years ago.
•j\Ve discovered that the at-home
population ln the neighborhood during the
<tay was mosUy young mothers and
preschool children. We thought this group
should have first crack at usl'ng the
cllibhoose during these houn."
BEGL~N!NG
Sbe distributed flyers reading, "Let's
do something with the kids in the
clubhouse."
"Something" became Pixie P I a y
Group. basically a supervised play pro-
gn1m for_ the lrand~ year-olds with their
mothers. '
Da·lly Pilot Photos
B't Richard Koehler
• ..
It is a fi ve-day progra m. Three-year-
olds attend three days for a total of about
six hours. The£C are j ust more than a
dozeil children in each group.
The group is made up of non-\\·orkill8
mothers.
.. \\'e Ire! a mother should be with her
many preschool programs the parents
don't participate. In some, you aren't
even u1vited to visit. Il's-their preschool,
not yours.
SUGGESTIONS
"We really know wh3.t•s going on here.
We can make suggestions for activities
children," Mrs. liarkins said, "8'1 this or field trips. Last Halloween we tooi: the
y,·as a chance to bring the mothets in to kids to a pumpkin patch to pick out their
y,•ork ~ith the children, keep the. children ov.11 pumpkins."
in the neighborhood and encpurage better It is a good chance, another added, for
relationships between mother and child... mothers to watch" their children interact
The program was organized on the with other children, and watch other
mothers'· initiati ve . A \'ery low tuition children in the same age bracket.
and an occasional fund-raiser provide "You find out that your child is just a
a teacher, an aide, children's fumiture nonnaJ 3-year-old."
and sup\lllcs.' . ' ·· · For ~ 3-year~d, erpJiined the direc-
SUPERVJSED tor of the program, a credential«l
11-fothc:rs are required to bring their . elementary school teacher and mother, it
children, although all may not stay every is basically a play program. But they
time the child does. "We make sure learn to socialize in a group for perhaps
there is at least a 5--lo-l ratio. children to the first time.
adults," she added. ··often it is more like For the older child, it offers a bit of
A lo-I." ..-kindergarten readiness as we1J. They
These neighbors feel that "one value is • learn about listening, paying attention
that the children make nice friendships and following directions aJong with cut·
with children they will go to· school ""1th ting, pasting, painting and rhythms. They
later on. It should make the transition to make friends other than "the people who
kindergarten a little· smootller." Uve just next door."
"Many ol 'us," added another mother,
1'could not afford any other preschool pro-ALL CONTRIBUTE
gram. Even part-time prognuru; are ex-"\Ye aJI contribute what -we can," one
pensive. And the children would have to . mother ~plained. "One mother is a
be bused to Tustin or the other end of .. 1 nurse. She ta1ked to the kids about dmtal
town." hygiene. Another is very creative, very
The group is successful. another said, artistic, and she does many of our
"because it is ours. We have a voice. ln posters and props."
The Pixies are not "'just a cooperative
. baby-sitting service" although many in
the neighborhood do co-op sitting as well.
"Even the most simple thing you do
with a child can be educational in
nature," Mis. Harkins said. "We've in-
troduced the Children to science ·by look-
ing at 'bugs' and" showing them how
water expands when it becomes lee.
"We simply want to make the children
aware ol what's around them, arome
their curiosity."
Along with the play program, this year
the Pil:ies began a monthly parent
education night. Discussions center
m basic child de~elopment and
topics ranging from toil~ trainll!g to
sibling rivalry. .
INVOLVEMENT
"We meet one night a month for a
more intellectual involvement with our
children," Mrs. Harkins explained. "\Ye
review ideas on child psyc:bology, do book
reviews as a basis for discussion. It
makes for a lively exchange of ideas.
"Some ol the mothers "Whooe children are now old..-still participate in the ·
parent nigbti"
Another mother added, "We get a lot of good answers -from the 'experts' and
from the good common...,,. of. others."
' Airs. Harkins feels that "these are the
mothers who will be teachers' aide$ later
on. We think they'll keep up this In-
volvement, this relationship with their
children."
Mothers from the Irvine tract
supervise children et play.
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well during morning sessions .
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~· '• II Tutsday, June 12, 19/J ..
·caucu.s Brims With Women"s fiats • Ring 1n
8)' LAURIE KASPER Angtles cha pt~.
Thtv di!banded last sum·
mer. ·Reportedly, lhe time Can 20 \\'OITu.'n change the then "'as not right. t.1embel'll
tide of politics ln Oral1ie found thtm!lelves too busy
County? with other actlvltiee and lack·
Those fonnlnC a . cwnly lng ln leadership.
chapter or the Na t·i on a !. • "We're l0,000 years t<x> \\'omen's PollUcal Ca u cu 1 th. k hue," said f\ts. Ferrell . But ~~C so. ,0 d then she believes, "Now is the
But, 111s. Ferrt.U sakt, they ning until you wtn."
are ready to work and run in
political campaigns. This, she EMOTJON~L SUPPORT
e:cplained, is worth more than "I Ml I lack of pertiltance
if 100 women showed up but amonc women but 1 think that'• ......... io ..6.....-e," llld oone "''as willing io ~wk and ev... ........
run. · Joy C<morl, I poll pre1ldlnl
Besides, she ex-· more of the Orana:e County tbapter ~--or NOW.
women to attend the nen Often women come clOM to
\
run u lncwnbentJ, ludi• STIRIOTYP!8 , <!eVaJop and encoura1ed lo ume role they -In
aeern mo1t dltncuJt to urweat. 'lbe "cultural ttereotypa la develoj>." But men'1 lnstlncu men. hlvt been diverted Into other Thll II wily tlhl balllvU . But Ml. ·Ftrrell 1l10 noted IO •lnln&." ahe 111d, a .,..,, ahe llld: · remlnl.ll 11 Iha ball candldl~
the Jud(• d-.nlne dllld _w:rfltMy probably ,... her "'nle ld11 o/ 1>olltl<J u a llllOl1i women.
aupport and alimony and JOal name, decldld It -a tel'Vlct to Iha eommwllly, to A J...omlnllt, ahe•
dlarJed tllll 11Why86 parcll\I .mlltalce and chlnctd It. tha cltlaen of the communlly~ Iha orlor anal)'lll
al Iha f>OOllle on wtUll'I are She admlllad htr ,.llOl\lni II Utd ·In with tJtJa kind ol car-know whit fa llllt to bl
polltJcal -.lflce come• out 'All women need to do la••· and to lave a bettor '
·• ;1!1 ., -'>''omen ° rigtit tl,me ... bcca1.1se I think a~yth~._ ll o-!!!t t_ook 12 m'E.__wa1.ergata is-...golng fo make
? ~l'l!:e The "orta for Cflrls-unseating of incuments a little t1an1ty. .answ~red Dolores easier.'' Ferrell, oraaruzer of the
NWPC here. "Are you llylng
20 women couldn't have a
r..,olutlon In Oranre County?"
•QUAIJTY' WO~IEN
'!'he con"""'' of the Lacuna Beach chapter o/ the National
Organilltlon ror Women ai.o
waa plealed with the
"quality" of the womtn who
attended an organlutl.onal
meeting for the caucus.
meeting, whlcti is scheduled winning 11y it wu a
for._Thursday, June 14, in the.._maml~ f1:perl11r:tt _b..u.L
lsland louse, New,port refuse Q, run again. she ex-Fashion Island, at 7 p.m. plained.
Although the purpose is to But oho bell .... the NWPC
pt wornem elected, sh ~e ~ wiU ottrr women Ult emo-
p:::itMed out, "whether you get tional 1Uppol1 Dlldfld "IO they
elected or not ii not the point. "·on't burn themlelv11 ou& the
You'v. Sot to start sometime, first llmt."
women 1111 chlldrm. !or the need al ,..,.,.n In ~ women "" ,ive." mtmber of 1 mll1olt~
Ir • woman allomey did run aowidln(l llka • -ype. But tend tbe boundarlet ol !he ca,... tlvo or wh>I aoa• oa Ill
N Lln.!! I J!!dle. ~ abo..ballevaa..11-ll.ttia...jlolLaL...l!li.l!.• alnajly_'!' hoW to ult~ ~
-·· "lliii -... ra1.. aenerallzallon which II true. do," llieiiPiamcc . •TA . r.mliili •••
lnl uptctl ol It art mind· Admlttq to -at the llllVICE politics iJ &•Ina to ~ , blowq.'" l!lMl1nr tl>tt lhe II bitter <Nftr very nature <I: polltla.
. Sha -Iha fact lhll comipOoo _, In Iba poltical Sha belltvea ......,.. \!iill iel· ahe beta there will be a lot
there are cumntly no W<llMn l)'lltm Ind reel~ "deprived Into polltlcl 11 o aervtce. "rt ch>llfet In the naa 10 yean.
judpo In ti>& county hu ever ol the prlvil«lce to be prwd," won'! be Jwt an •ao trip or Many lemlnllll, abo llld,,
been noted oulllde ol fen>lnlll abo called for more carq In method ol l•lnlni pononal will nm ror ofClco lmoWllC
IOmt pl.ice." Althoup they .... loollni I I sroupa. · govenunmt. power or prtotifle." And tlliJ II they will IOM.n.ty will do It;,
With the aupport or the
<h>pttr. whloh I• pol ltJcal but
nonpartl11n, 1he ho~ to have
a women n.in for every office
available 1n lhe 1prtng.
The N\\'l'C hu bttn In the
county be fore. But thete
v.·omen apparently operated
more 33 a branch of the Loi
AJ an n:planation, she cited every political omc-. womm
Thomas · Bradley~s r e c e n t at the fitat tneetln& fOCUled 00
mayorll campaign in Los Superior Court ~Pl.
Angele. which "''as successful over half d which will be m
In Caci, she believes 11· Women, she IUCIHled, l14ve what llhe bellevta It 11 for ahe explained, to mlllt tllfi
tomeya are 1tUI thought ol. u a "heaCI •tart" tn olftt~ the moll mile pollrtcl&na althouab way e1sitr for othtr WonMO ·
men cmly. A new ottorney moral leadership which she ·!here are IOme "who really by belolna the publlC pt~
hentlf, lbe.,recCl'ltly recelvtd _believes la now needed. care WKJJ It hurtl them.'' to having-a woman canctida&ll. There were only 20 women,
the number needed to charttr
I Chapl<r. . ,
oOJy the MOOnd 'ime around. the next ballot. .
And , ahe added. "Nixon Becaute the nature of their
proved you juat keeping run-appolntmenta -bl• tl>em to
an appllcatlon for the Orlllfe Beoauae ol the culture, she There II, oho admitted, a A woman can Win a polltleal
Cotmty Bar "-latlon •d· explained, "our lnlllnct1 C0< dancer that a ~ •• ~"':'lei,; orrlce, llkl Pat' H...,., a drou to Mr. John F. Qinoon. lovln& have been allowed to 1et elect«I and ~ (lies CAlJCUI, P11• 11) • \ ., t •
·Exas·peration
I
Fits All Sighs
By .ERMA BO~ECK
1-s the houaawlfe's' friend, I
have betm crusading since 1965
to (a ) bring back ankle-length
girdles and (b) get pantyhose
manufacturers to tell what it
is one size fits all of.
The problem is a classic
one. Jt j9 clearl y a case ol.
men producing a product worn
primarily by we>tnen. · A man
who Is btlllt like a tra ffic .sign
canni:tt be . ei:pected to un-
derstand the basic anatomy of
a woman whote figure often
deterlorate1 ' into that of an
avocado gone bad.
AT
WIT'S
END
looked like ·the wa1 wearing
an inflated llfe j1ckel.
• ~tore recently, I savt the
an$wer to .• a · stO).lt .>M'oman's
dream ... pantyhose that ac-
tu3Jly "hugged you" as you
walked. I tried them and felt
like I wat being "hugged" by
a boa constrictor in heat.
CORINNI CULLIN
Laguncins
To Marry
To avoid disappointment, r,ro1pectlve,
bride• are reminded to have the r wedd lna
atories ~1th black and white g1011y P.hoto-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s D ..
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time '"'ill not
be used.
For engagement announcemcnlJ it ts
Amperative that the story, also accompanied
<j,y a black a.nd while &lossy plctun , be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. 'If deadline is not met, only a story wil)
be used. -
To help fill requiremen ts · on both wed;t
dinJ, and engage1nent 11torles, form1 ~ av~able in all the DAILY PILOT of!kes.
Further questions "'ill be ansll.•ered by
\Vomen's Section staff members at 6'2·4321. After a-recent column on the
subject, I did get some en·
couragtng news from tin ex·
ecutlve of a packaging fir m In
Nonh Carolhla.
You are dealing wi t h
sensiti\•ity and no one in her
right mi nd is going to grab a
pair of pantyhose off the
grocery cal"OU8el with a name
like "El Tub-0" or "C.l\U-
TION: WIDE LOAD."
C<rlnne Mar ie CUl1en and '-----"'---------------'
Island Paradise Rewsited
MIS91on Viejo Women's Club wlll transform lhe Ml.,lon Viejo Swim and Rae·
quet club Into a Tahitian setting Salurday, June 16, for a Polynesian Lu au.
Getting In an Island mood are (left to right) John Carlise, Linda Dacus and Mrs.
Carll••·
All-day Conference
Fem.inists Revue Year
"We are working on the p~
blem,'' he Ii.I.id, "and you are
right. 'One si~ fits all' does
11tretch the credulity. I would
go fUrther and sa y it often
strangles your credulity. The
claim is now ·being replaced
by a more reali.!ltic pt-.raae,
'One size flls you.' There have
already been challies In this
direction.
"The p o p u J a r pantyhose
packaged in a chlct:eri ega bas
come out with a little number
called the Quetru1lze and is
May I suagest a few namt1
for pantyhose for the supple
>M'Oman: Ho~ about "Gentle
Persuasion" or "Be a Sport !''
or "Penance" (for the woman
who'• real healthy from the
hips down).
A!J for "One size fits yc1u."·
don't be too surprised if you
get letters that read, "Who,
me? Not on my credulity it
doesn 't!"
Randolph Jeffery llenniger
plan to be married in St
Catherine's Catholic Church.
Laguna 8each.
~fr. and l\ir.s. l\llcbael Cullen
and Mr. and ~trs. Richaril
Wagner llenniger, all of
Laguna Beach, are parents of
tile affianced pair.
The bride-to-be graduated
from Rosary High School in
Fullerton v.•h«e .she received
an acadentic award in art . Her
fiance is an alumnus of
Laguna Beach ltigh School.
packaged in a dlnosaur egg .1;::===================::;1 Another manufacturer has put
out a brand celled 'Big r.tama'
Ythlch leaves little to the irn-
aginallon and I per!Onelly am
working on a new pack1re to
be called, ·Chubby Run'.p! "
Let me wam you. Sir, just
becau&e \\'Omtn wear pan-
tyhose they are no one's fool.
You are going to have to do
better than tha t with youf'
phra~logy. A few }'E'e.rs
back, someone trled lo con us
with lhe "woman with th':
well-endowl!d figure" Hnt. l
aaw a woman In a commercial
wearing a new bra for her
"well~ndo\ved" figure and ll
-~!\, OVEltWEIGHT?.
56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS
·under Medlc1I Supervltlon
at th1
\Omega Clinic
HOURS: 9:00 • 7:00
• CALL FDR AN APPOINTMENT Ill
COSTA MESA ANANllM IAHTA ANA Fll\ ........ LtHttrl
1,,... W ...... 1'"2Tll"lllA¥t 7J.O W. Lt H1•r1 llllt. .... ....... . . (714) 870.9347
646-1633 7714841 547"6329 1213 ) 697-1791 National Organlz1Uon for
Women, Orange County
Cha ter will a sor tta tee·
ond a ay COiilerence. f!ll-
lltled The Women's Move-
ment, Orange O>unly-1973.
titled flfyth Amerlca -1-Jow mettee: the hl1torlcal condition-
Far Have You Really Come7 Ing of women and men to sex·i----------'=============================:;:::==-'1
wlll-beiln-at-8:.30 in the ism.
chur<h. For those attending Sandwiched In between the --JIJJ//J'J JIJJ/l/ /111/I ///!.' ''/---. the day sesalon admlsslon will word• of many people from ••4
be $2; others will be ctiariied ancient Aristotle to a con-
$3. temporary astronaut a r e The workohops wtll begin at
9 a.m. Saturday, June 16, lri
the Unitarian Church o I
Oranae count y. Anaheim .
Keynoter will be Ev,.
Nonnan, 1tate coordinator for
NOW.
Morning workshops will deal
with nape and SeU-dcfoMe,
chaired by Betty Urooks. seJf.
A selected collection. of songa that run the gamut from
material from B I b 11 c I I • "We Won 't Waah Your Dirty
pa11ages to current com· Clotht1, Mister" to t h e
merclals, sequenced to movf' Beatles' "You Better Run for
from the-obvious to lhe subtle Your 'Life.''
u·lll be presented In !he revue, Producer-director is Mr.
Myth America '"·hlch dell· Abrams.
defense teacher at Cerritos 1 -,;~!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I College: Child Care. 1t1s I
Norman: Education. Ed1vina
\Valsh, special e du c a t I on
teacher for the An11helm
8Chool dl 11trlct, and lntr6duc-
tloo to the Women 's Mov•·
mcnt , Ro68lle Abarrn.!J , past
prr1\dent of the county NOW
Toplct and leadcr1 for arklr·
noon 1e1slon11 wlll be Women
in the Modin, a panel of area
reportt:!r1 ; lfeallh Core nnd
Abortion. F.lcanor Snow and
l.orratne Rothman, Feminist
Wome n's Health CCnler: Older
Women's lJbernt lont-Ator)'
EIJ1abeth PowCll , llbrerlan,
and I..gal RJght" a """'' or femlnlat attorneys.
That evening, a program en-
YINE BTATIONElt Y
euDUATION e1fltl -CAlDI
,..TMil'I DAY
911'11 • CAIH
·ll tlf,CIAft ..... ,. lll•ltll .
ltHU Ml l &l • £NWllllll IAlllll
'PatJiel'"s <q)ar
'Pamilr CJJinner at
GJflmato, JV!:wport.
.. Soup • Sunomono Salad
.. Shrimp Tempura
.... Chicken Te rlyakl
... Beel Terlyakl
... Lobster Yamato
... Freeh Asparagu s
.. Rice • Tea
$5. 95
ltfvtd tor Pa]tltt of :t Of' Mor• et t'1meto, Newport, only. . .
EARLY RESERVATIONS SUGGESTED
PLEASE TELEPHONE (714) 644·4811
VllDtlltli : •60 fASHION ISLAND, NEWl'ORT CENTER
•
I
CHEESE OF THE WEEK
MAMMOTH
CHEDDAR
Regular
$1.99 Lb.
20' .
OFF £$1~!
ltfftr t•MI J1111• 12 "'"' Jvit• 171
Th-boaullful 150 lb. whMla of 10ldo• chtddar art Wi 1con1l•'•
proude1t chMH. A9ed over 6 monthe, It'• • mouth·w•ttring d1llght
for cooking or 1n1clc:ln1. Stop by our 1tor1, taste ind buy this 1xc1I~
lt•L <hNM, -_ 11cca., t•!!!s.
COSTA M~1'-rf:~ ?iaza~t~;~~{il>M
--
•
Great Suggestions
For Father's Day Gifts
Froth flf CUt7 '4r11s.01 Ohio
Dad deaervn 1omething 1pecial on hi1 1pecl1l dey.
Gllt1 from Hickory Farm• of Ohio hive a •p•cl•I IP"
ptal for inen. They lib tht BEEF STICK, t•1 ty ch1H1
and other fOod llJ?ll Clallle1 many p11ka conlaln. Afl•t
you make your choice, t•ke it with you or we will
mall If Dad llve1 oul·of·lo\Vil. Out frtendly clttb will
11al11 you.
FAMILY FAVORITE $8.88
One lb. BEEF STICK, Mu1t1rd1 Smoley
(Smoked Cheese Bar), 1even ounce Gouda,
B•ll• Fleur Chee11, Hor1er1dl1h Sauce plu.1
lmporltd c1ndl111.
DELUlO! SNAK PAK $10.88
MUcl Mr811t Lonfhom, l dui l1r, I Cli tffl
8pre1d1, Gouda, Smoky (Smoked Ch••••
BtrJ, Muttud, · Btllt Pl•ur Cht t tt, Ol4w
fa1hloned Cr1ck1rt, Cht11ml ChJpt 111d 1111~
por1td c1ndl11.
Other Gift Paks on Display
For You. To Seel
ffctt''' t•rmr.
_-&oath-to
C ~ 'Pl ~0-P l_N_D_A-IL-Y = Ill c~=·rJ1~t •. '"° ... ......,. '--·----Low•• CA•OVll L MALL-l•l•TOL AT THI IAN OlllO ........
•NDZCn LWmell_t»cm rram
T
'
I
,
, -'
•
, ·Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Pisc.es: . I
Dont
WEONESQAY TAURUS-(April 20.May 20 1:
JUNE 13 Cooperate with Arlt!s. Be flex·
ible. Social gathering might
By SYDNEY 01\.tARR lead tO meaningful contact.
..
Tuesday, June 12, 1973-D'1l Y PILOT f :J
Wait for Inspiration
rect. errors tn your o~·n back
yard before telling others
what they should do. rtteons
strive to be n1ore diplo1natic.
Many adn1irc you but 1nany
also have recently b e e 11
rubbed the \\'rong y,•ay. You
y,'ill understand.
\'IRGO {Aug. 23-Sept. 221:
of security. ~loney situat ion PISCES fFeb. 19-~iarch 20 ~;
is brighter. Aries rnoy be in· Be aware and thorOtl gh. And
vo/\'od . Others t-ome to you do something about it. !\lean~
"·ith their problems. act on what you k no \I'
SAGITTARIUS l~ov, 22· to be corre<.1 .. \Va iting for in-
Oec. 211: Benefits indicated spiration would be an error.
lhrough aid of neighbor , J\.1(thodica l and steady ap-
relative. Basic tasks require proach is required. Di g in and
attention. Be a\v.are of fine get job done.
special for l 1 _ y e a r . 0 I d Cycle is such that you succcro
Cheryl Delaney of Chicago, by putting forth original pro-
111 .: Your classmates soon will posals. One in authority is on
catch up to you. It is not a your side. ~ a\vare o( it and
matter or the other way be confident . _
·~· . ery--GE~HNr-(May-2t:JUlie-20 ·.
delightful, precious Virgo and Philosophical ~ u t I o o k. is
these rebuCfs, whicli seem so necessary. Don t take things
hw1fu1 are serving as the cor· at surface value. Look deep nersto~s of 'Your character for valid answers. Sagittarian ,
and pot e nt I a 1 . Your is likelr to be in pi~ture. ~c
classmates do not intend to pe c~nt . is on . hospitals. . lll-
You-afi abJe-rcrcttscovc
mistakes and to correct thcnl.
Pisces plays significant role.
Key now is to define. refine
and perfect techniques. You
get rcas;J11s for recent hap-
penings. ''ou are in better
points:-appattnt mioor1Jetai!So.~~1F TOD'AY-10;s.....,""'o"'"----• Ge~ lG heart of nliHters. You BJRTllDAY you have sense of
niay have n1uch to do V.'ith Leo humor and could also have 8
person. 1veight problem. You are fun-
CAPRICOflN tOt.'C. 22·Jnn. ny and versa tllc. \'ou ha ve af-
19'1: You collect \vhat you finit y ror language and you
need. You are able to build on are fond or travel. You often
more solid structure.-\'qur fincl-youself...1.>talkiil.g-\vi1h~your
chances for ndvancc1nent in1-hands.'' July stands out 11.s
prove despite a pp a r ~ n l your most significant month of
obstacles . Cancer pet'son is in 197.~.
-cruel..but,-like-so-many_of.Jis •• .s!1tut1QD.S, chanta.b.le...9rgfillJZa:_
they often talk and act without tions.
J~.l'ilion t valll_alc.._ _
LIBRA fSept. 23-0ct . 22 ):
"\' ou ge t needed supp6rt. You
are trusted with additional
responsibility: Potential for
profit also is greater. En10·
lions are very much in picture.
Love interest is accentuated.
1\leaningful experience ls in-
dicated._
GETTING, THERE FIRSlf -Nancy and Mike DeNicola ge,t a head
other children who will participate in the 0·We Feature Cre~tures"
reading program in Orange County Public Libraries.
start on
summer
Reading Stars Animals.
.Creatures Featured ·
"\\re Feature Creatures" is
the theme or Orange COunty
Public Libi·arics for the sun1·
"Art is Fun '' by Bonnie Grum-
mett at I p.m. Saturday,, July
7:-Pal, the performing dog , at
l l a.n1. Saturday, Julv 14:
n:ie r.. . Ra ggedy Ann r~turns ai 10:30
Prizes. SP,CC1al progra:ms . a.m.· TU.e sda y, ·July ·t7 :
V.'ith fil ms and guests. rtin.and Beatrix Potter's Birthday Par·
lots of_ n'IOnstrous creatures . ty· at 11 a.m. Saturday, July
are planned ror children 28: l\fag ic for Everyone ilt 1.1
participating in reading pro· a.m. Saturday, Aug. 4, nnd
grams in each or the Oranoe Snake World at I p.m. Satur·
Coasi branches. .. day. Aug. 11.
at 2 p.m ., beginning July 3.
Specia\ events there include
a Crazy Creature Co~test,
Creature Crcµi.tion Craft Day.
Name ?\jrs: ll.1e l ch'e r ' s
Hamster and an End of the
. ~umm~r party ....
Children. grou~d acc,ording
to Qleir schools will compete
to make the biggest creature
in the Mesa Verde Library.
thinking. CAr\~ER (June 21-July 22):
• ARIES. (March 2l·April 19): Friend coul d.cost you n1on~y.
pictu re. Creutive abilities are
in spotlight.
Avoid tendency to be ex-Key now is to pere~t\•C
travagant. You can please on~ necessity of basic chang~.
c I o s e to you w i t ho u t Gemini, Virgo persons are 10
smashing budget to smither-pic.t1:1re. G~in shown through
eens. Know it and proceed ac· ~1hn~. Joint eff~rts are pr~f
cordingly. Taurus person could 1tal,>.le, ~f you. obtain. fa.~t~;.:al 111-
ptay k e y role. Plan ahead formation.
for security. LEO (J uly 23-Aug. 22 ): Cor-
AQUARIUS (J an. 20.Feb.
'18): Elen1enl of liming is on
yo11 r side. You can make the
right decision at crucial n10-
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21·1: n1ent. Kev nO\V is to rc1nai n
14
Legal agreements can be flexible Be free to decide. 10
finalized. Pron1ises are made travel and to experin1cnt.
_____________ fj1:m._You compJe!e · proj~t._ -.Sagittarius nnclLoo-arcJikely.
From Page There ciln be greater degree to be involved.
J
Rites Solemnized
• • • Caucus
NewJX>rt Beach attorney and cornmunity. And, she said a
another speaker at th e · candidate shou ld find someone
Coast Couples Marry
meeting. But then sJ)e :idded. el se ta ask for the money. TOUCHON.HERBSTE·R
"I suppose my story'is not so She w·ged the \Vomen to go . . . ins piring." to cfty council m e e t i n g s J _Making their home m Costa
She ran for the state Senate because "th1S is our grass A1esa will be Skip Touchol! and
in 1964 and Jpst. roots government." his bride, the former Tuanne
TACTICAL ERROR \\'hat can be done in the Herbster who were married in
She sal'd she probably com-conununity js .important. she d h a gar en ceremony a~ t e mitted a "tactical error" by said, and the council tneetings
I Whe poople a ·c Irvine heme of her· .parents, running as Patricia rather are a P ace re 1
1·han Pat Herzog so .some en~o.w-aged to. express their Mr .. and ~rs. L: A. Herbster.
people may not have voted .for 0~1,n1ons. . · . Mrs. Gu~ Gottschalk and
her because she is a woman. -~m~times JU~ som~ne .... Laurie Herbster were bridal
, Although now women are co.nung Jn and S?ymg !he nght attend~nts and Michael Roth
sens.itlzed, she said, "One of thmg at .the ;,1ght time can was the best man.
the major sources o f change things.
resistance to a \\' om a q_ A{ld before a woman ru_ns
candidate is another woman." for an office , Ms. Herzo.g said,
Since a candidate only she .~ to have an idea .~f
WISEHART-WILSON
San Juan Capistrano Co1n-
munity Presby terian Church
was the setting for the· wed-
ding of Wendy Lee Wilson and
Rodney Scott Wisehart. •
They are the daughter and
.son. of Mr. and 11-frs. Gordon
Wilson of atission ·Viejo and
Mr .. and ?\lrs. Harold \Visel;lart
of San Clemente. Officiant was
the Re v. Robert Schwenk .
Attendants . \':ere B e c 1c y
Wilson, Mark Clancy. Steven
Turnbow and Mark Stavron.
The newlywcets, who \i:ill
reside in D3na Point, are
graduates of San Clemente
New Queen
, C~thy Ann Connelly,
daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. B. J. C o n n e 11 y
.of Costi 'Mesa, was _, ~
cro,vned honor queen
of Newport Beach Beth·
el 157. Job's Daugh·
ters. She is a soph<r
more at Estancia High
School.
Several or the libraries will
conclude the su1,11mer v.~th a
party and full length feature
fi lm , ''Th e Ph a n tom
-Tollbooth .. '.'
Films will be screened at 4
p.m. every Thursday from Ju-
ly 5 to Aug. 16 for children
aged 5 to 12 in the Laguna
Library. These include "Red
Ballcon ... ''l\l o nster of
Highgate Ponds", "The Hound
That Thought He Was A Rac-
coon " ··Alexander and the
This ibraneh also is sponsor·
ing a CreatUre'Mask Contest
and a f~ature film TueSday,
Aug. 21, at 10 ~ _. !!1 ••
Participants Will also receive
special creature posters.
· · if' t rt' her own worth and value. I meets an ~gn ican po_ ron thirik women are inclined to
or ~ p~bhc, . she advJSed, underestimate their qualifica~
The bride received her
schooling in Glendale, studied
for two years at UCI and is ·a
. graduate of Humboldt Stat~
University.
High School :Jnd attended SEjd-1 __________ _
dleback Collge.
publicity is an lJ!lportant ele-tions.,, Her h11Sband;son of Mr. and
Mrs. William A. Touchon of
A weekly storY hour at 10:30-
a.m. Thursd<l}'S and a Jilin
·progr·1m Saturdays, also at
110:30 :1.m., arc scheduled in
the Costa ri.1esa Library.
Films will be shown every
'Vednesday at 3 p.m. in the
Fountain Valley Library.
~nt of a ca~~· Although she said she is
xour qualifications f!lean "uncomfortable with the idea not~ . - . If you can raise e you vote for somebody just
suff1c1ent '~nt of ~~ey beciuse she is a woman,'' she
for any kind of adverttS1ng contended 'there a r e \\·omen c~P,3ign, you can probably qualified to hold ~ public of-
llayward, is a graduate of·-------------1
lfayward High School, studied ~~~
at · San Jose State University ~·
' MAD' ~\Or.s 'o~UNnN•OTON
llACH . '
. ' Car \\1ith the h1issing Head· and is a graduate of Hum· .\ 3 Full Service
boldt. 1 ; Locations in
' Special programs there in·
elude Alexander's Circus v.•ith
IJolly the cl0\\11 from JO a.m.
1to 5 p.m. Saturday, JlUle 23;
light" and "Paddle to the Sea.·
San Clemente, Dana Point.
and San J u an CaJ)istrano ,,;,u also be featuring many
different creatures throughout
the summer.
w1n. . lice.
To obtain this money, she
sugge'jled they look Jo Jhe
, · Huntington Beach
' PRESCRIPTIONS CUl~ENT
l;:ASHIONS Mission Viejo Library plans
story hours each Tuesday and
' film presentations Thursdays numerous groups active in the.---.,-------~-U f fELL'S-MINIATUAES J?LD DOLLS
e Clllt111• Act-he Oellveries
Lt! Ul ,...-111 yOUr IH'9Nnl
pres(fi,. ....
AT
DISCOUNT PllCES ' ' .
1T oo Weak Cripe Put to Rest
• )DEAR ANN LANDERSo My sister and
her husband are planning a two-week
vacation soon. Since they will be going
qJU!.e a distance by jet -it 1\vould be dif·
ficult to take their two children. (They
are uod~r five years of age.)
. :~tom is gOing to use up 'her two-week
\•I.cation to stay at home and care for the
ywngsters. I feel that since Mom has
~ked hard all her lile she ls entitleCI to
htr vacation and should. not be using her
tine off v.·ork running alter my sister·s
kids. They are a handful.
,,The problem is thaf Mom will not allow
a stranger to care for the children ll:l t~ir parents' abse nce and .feels obligatf4
~take them. ls there some way of ~v
~ I.his problem v.·ithout starting a fami·
l~-war?--JNNOCEN1! BY-STANDER
· l>EAR J. B.: You don't sound like an
"imocent Bys~oder" to me. Yoa ' IOOnd
lit.,e a warmonger. flt your mother would not allow a
svanger to watch after 1l e r
gtandchlldren ancl !ttls obligated to take
c•re of them, what business Js It of
urs? I don't see YOU olfertng to take
m. And while I am not suggesting that
should, I am suggesting Utat since
mother wants to, buU oat, Sis.·
EAR ANN LANDERS: My husband
and I have been married four months. We
grew up in the same town but never got
to' know ~ch other until he finished col-
leg~ and came back here to Jive. We
dated a year and then married.
For a while everything was ~·onderful.
I really love the guy and. I believe he
loves me. But about t"''O roonths ago his
friends began to tum up -people I'd
never met before , and it's apparent to
mC that they are all.gay.
For the past three weeks we have not
had one evening alone . Hi:! friends are
here every night. When we go out to eat
he invite$ two or three to oome along.
for a new groom to want to ·be· sur-
rounded by friends every night
As time goes on you will probably
disco,·er more evidence that your suspi-
cions are corrtct and tben you nwst
'decide what you Want to'llo about tt. For
now, some cowneling mtgb& help to
relieve your anxiety.
Two of hi,_s closest pals have rented an DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why don't
apartment next lq ours_aqd if ~~Y don't some men ~al~_tha__t aff_~lon during
·drop-in ~or dinner he.g~ ~g~tsJ~ie.m---~x~isri! _ oough?-~1y husband never_
They aOOre him and have a million touches me outside the bedroom. I'd give
Laughs. I seem to be out ol it. In fact,. I anything if he'd give me· a squeeze, pat
sense some Silent hostility toward me. my rump, or put his arms around me
Our sex life is fine but ho.w ll()l"J1lal can once .in a while.
a guy be wh)en he is SlJl'f'OUDded by We 've been married· 15 years and he's
homosexuals all the time? I am only 23 a great guy, bilt he's a Touch-me-not.
and must be a lot more lDlSOphisticated Please don't say "Tell him." I have told
than I tboughl I keep telling myself I'm hi m, several times, and it hasn't helped.
imagining things but deep down inside Am I expecting, too much? Maybe I
I'm terribly ytorried. In the meantime should C9W1t my blessings. -TACI'lLE
I'm ~ incr ... ingly doubllul and TILLIE · \
tesent!ul. -HOPE·l'M WRONG DEAR TAC,,A«:epl lbe !act that he's
DEAR HOPE: Sorry, but I'm afraid not a.. toucher and don't make a pest of
)'our fears are well foaaded. It's very odd yourself. Yeah -coot your blessings.
Safety Regulated .. -
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
Food a n d Dru g
Administration's -Bureau of
:Product Safety is dra!Jlltg the
final form of a proposed
regulation covering b a b y
cribs.
The regulation tvill be the
first attempt by Uncle Sam to
slandardlz.e Jhe baby crib in;
dustry.
Aci:ordipg to ·bureau oillcials
the proposal will eliminate
hazardous features of baby 't
cribs, some linked to injufy or
death-in the past. I
The regulation will
establish, a max i m um
nllowable slat 'pa c i h g
dimens\00, among o t be r
things. This will P"""'!ll boby
from· getting caught between
slats and possibly getting
strangled.
Golden Needle's I s~ o1 ·de 111,_
----
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I
' • fl DAILY PllDl ,../uesday, June 12, 197.3
P·hils'
--
Gives
. . .. .•,• .. . ., , .' • • ••
I
'
-Quick~. / Lesson-
Bill BLOOM
Peppe1·dine
Hires B loo11i
As _4ssistant
By GLENN WHl1'E
OI'""' D1lly·~lot lllff MALIBU -Bill Bloom, fonner
Corona de! Mar High basketball
coach, today accepted a pool as
assistant hoop mentor at Pcp--
perdine University. the Dally Pilot
learned exclusively today.
,_,,. Bloom, former t\\'G-time captain
under the la te Forrest TWogood at
the University or Sou th c r n
catlfom.Ja, molded Corona del
Mar and El Camino College into
solid basketball schools.
Bloom 's best record at CdM was
-28-2 in 1968. In his thr~ years there
his teanis copped two league titles
. and finished second the other time.
After leaviilg to try his hand in
the air freight business Bloom
' tetumed to coaching and tumed
things around at El Ca1nino
College.
The year befo re he , took the
reins the Warriors were 2·2'Z and
their spacious gym seldom had
over a handful , ol people for _ a
basketball game.
But Bloom soon turned that
aroWld. El Camino was molded into
an annual title contender: in the
rough Metropolitan Conference and
twice finished second . . . behind
eventual state champion Santa
~fonica and state runnerup Long
Beach.
Pepperdine coach Gary Col~n
was jubilant over the hiring of
Bloom. "I'm charged up over that
man," Colson told the Daily Pilot.
"He's got me so fired up J'm ready
to take oil the world. Bill provides
our program with what it needs -
a good recruiter aild a good
defensive man.
"He'll be totally in charge of the
defense." ·
C.Olson will have four starters
returning from a team that record-
ed. 8. 15-1 1 record last season. Miss-
ing, however, is Bird Averitt, who
led the nation in scoring as a
senior.
"He was so much of our offense
that he'll be a tough man to
replace," Colson said. ''But we do
have height returning -four guys
are 6-8 and fou r others are &-7.
"Our guards arc the big question
mark. 11hey're good, but in·
experienced."
One of the retun\ees Bloom will
. be v.'orking \\'ith is one of his pro-
teg.es at Corona de! Ma r, Ouis
Thomps011.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Philadelphia
Phillles' ~i.nacer Danny Ozark hopes
rookie pitcher liiek Rutht en bu l .. rned
a-lessoo from Loo Arc!les IJodCert
veteran Doo Sutton.
The Phillies' young mrle< blew up
under pressure In the secood !nnlni'Moa·
day night and fell into a l\ole he couldn't
--escape, loolng H . ·
•·rm sure Suttm knew he bad a no-hit-
Dodgers Slate
. Aft ••1tttt 1111 Klll 1'40
J111tt ll l.°' ~!es •\ Pllll1~h>l'll1. J11n1 1$ L.oa An111I• • Monlr11I J11nt 16 lo. AnotlM If MontrMI
t=goingi~.l!l!JIO'.
changed his pitching pattern. The big
thing is maturity," sakl Ozark.
Sutton himseU agrees.
"It's a fair comparison," said SUtton,
~·ho had his no-hitter spoUed by-a Larry
Serious Talks
'
OnNetDisputes
·Planned Today
. LONDON (AP) _l T..tis sqlllbbles
threatening to erw>t into a boycott of
lv.lmbledoli by 96 leading stars coold
come to a head in the next 48 houra.
Jack Kramer, executive director of the
As!ociation ol Teonis Professionals, Is
due In London today to thnlsh rot the
problem .,r Nlldd Pilic, the suspended
Yugoslav star.
Kram8r w!l1 meet wlth Allan Heyman,
preoident ol the lnternatlooal Lawn Ten·
nis Federation 1n an effort to avert -a.
threatened boycott by the ATP unless
Pilic is allowed to play.
Pilic was suspended because he declin·
ed to play for Yugoslavia in a Davis Cl.Ip
match.
Cliff Drysdale, South African star who
is president of the ATP, spent the
weekend in L<indon in futile talks ·~ith
the ILTF.
Drysdale left for N~ to com·
pete In the $75,000 John Player'Toom•·
ment saying: "I cannot believe that bcd1
sidea will be so stubbcn u to undermine
the greatest tournament iin the ~."
He was refen1ng to Wimbledon, Which
stam June 25.
Piiie, backed by the ATP, has claimed
he never promiaed to play lo r
YugO&lavia.
One crisis, expected to explode Moo·
1day, blew over. n.e ATP had said it
would boycott a tournament starting at
Hamburg unless Pllic was allowed to
compete there. But an ILTF IOW'<.'e in
London said this WU all a miltake
because Pille hadn't entered anyway.
___Meanwhile, llle.N..-.Clf-Ronwtla,
winner of tho. Frend> and Italian titles,
angered BritiSh olftclals by clllncll1I his
mind a second time and pulllDg wt ol the
NotUngham event.
Four Pro G1·id Players
Linked to Drug. Dealing
NE\V YORK -The New York Times
reported in today's edition that at least
four Nationa l Football League stars are
under surveillance for traffic in illegal
and dangerous drugs.
The information v.•as galhered from
fed eral; state and local narcotics agents.
according to. the story by sports writer
Dave Anderson.
Tv.•o teammates, the Times said,
reportedly are suspected of dealing co-
caine 1n a multimi llion dollar smuggling ting. Last season, when rumors involving
the teammates began ciradat.lng, ' the
Times story continued, NFL Security
Director Jack Donahy caUed them a
"fairy tale."
"The NFL knows this drug tralfic
v:o uld be iii Watergate," a.n agent said .
"It could etplode anyjlme."
Aaron Homers
2.856 for his career and moved him
ahead of Jim BUMing, who bad 2.865.
'Valter John.1m 11 the major le.,ue's
career strikeout leader wit.h 3,508. ·
Court Contract
TUCSON, Ariz. -Prolesslonal tennis
star lt1argaret Court ·has signed a multi-
year cx:ntract to pJay under the
sponsorship of the Tucoon Rocque! Club,
ov.ner Joe Totel said Monday.
The contract also calls for Mrs. Court
to conduct temis clinics for si:c weeks
each year at the Racquet Club, Tofel
said.
1-11'5. Court, three-time Wimblt<lon
champion, has dominated *11J year's
Virginia Slims Women's t81nle tour,· win·
nlng elcht tournaments solar.
Chiria Bound
. UlS ANGELES -n.. NatlOflll
ATLANTA -Hank Aaron of the AUan· Amateur Athletic Unlon'1 1\:t11M11'1
ta Brave.t moved cl*1' to Blllle Ruth on cbampionlhlp basketball team f1un John
the all>tlme home run· l~t .when he slug· F. Kennedy CoUege in Nebnska Is
ged No. 889 of his career In lhe fourth in-scheduled to leave Los Anaefet today tor
ning ol Monday nighl's baseball game • a. t"-week tour of malnfand Otlna, an
with the ·Pittsburgh-Pirates. airline spokesman pJd Mmday.
Aaron's lhr ... nm blast his 16th homer The team will play ei,hl lll1Mf In
r ..,
Bowa alngle Jn the sixth and loot bis
shutout when Grog Luzinski blasted a
pair of home runs.
"When I first came up I'd get rattled
and try to strike everybOdy out,'' said
. Sutlon. "The kid w!U ~earn our guys feel
he has an awful tot· of talenL"
~ Cey walked to open the Dodger sec-
ond and took t!tlnl when Hutl<KI threw
wildly into left on Von Joshua's grounder.
Bill Rusaell's ""'ri!lce fly scored Cey and
there .• ·. but that'& the difference
between a· rookie and an eXperlenctd
pitcher."
Pete R1chert came on to get the final
out--ror-Sutton-an<t"plcked ·up hirsixth
save d. the season after Del Unser doubl-
ed following Luzinski's two-run homer in
the ninth.
The two round tripQers give Luzinski
eight for the sea.son, and 30 nms batted
in:
Sutton, 8-4, lost his shutout when .
. .
Luziruiki blasted hi s seventh home run of
the season. Luzinski added a two-run
homer" in the ninth, when the Phillies col·
lected three hils and knocked the right·
hander out of the box.
es," explained Ozark, who feels with a
little luck Ruthven, now 1-5 would have 4
to 5· wins. "He's been the inost urt-
fortunate pitcher on our club," the skip-
DODGERS' RON CEY IS SAFE BEFORE BAL~ REACHES PHILLIES' LARRY BOWA, LA WON, 5·3.
per said. ,
"lt'a ~ one thing here, llllQther
Joshu~ crossed on.a wild.pitch after Silt·
too •111iled. Dave Lopes s~led home
Sutton• and, alter "Wtllie DaVIi' Walked,
Joe Fergu.500 singled off reliever Bafry
Lench lo make it 4-0.
The Dodgers added their final run in
·the filth when Lopes.singled, stole s_.i,
took third oo a grounder and scored m a
wild pitch by llwTell Brandon. .
LM Allt.._ II) · fltlllldel,,,.t Ul ••rh,,.,. ••rflrM
LOpee. 2b J 2 1 1 Tfl'Ar; 3b ~ o I a 811Ckr1er, lb ~ 0 0 0 OorJt, 2t1 . l I 1 O
W.O.vll, e1 :S O 1 0 Mon1tnt1, rt ' o o o ..lrll~ C 4 0 I 1 LutlMkl, If 4 I I I
W.Cr1wtord, rt 3 o O O Hutton, lb ' o o o
C1v, _. l I II 0 Un11r, C'I' ' 11 1 O
JOll\1111,lf •IOOB-,c •1111 0
lll111Hll,1t.1 J OT18oW41,St 30 10 Sltlton, It .~ l 1 o ll:ulhvlll'I, p o o o o
ll:!cfl.rt, ' o 11 o 11 Lench, p 1 o o o
11togd1lruk!, p11 1 o o o Brendon, p' -o o o o
Schmid!, ph 1 o o o
Sctri;1, p , o 11 11 O TOfll~ 33 J 1 J Tott!~ 33 J ' l
L.11$ A,.gtles Colll aoo 100 -s Pll!l1C1elphlt • 000 000 102 ...;. J
E -Hutton. LOS -Los Angeles S, Ph!11dtlphi1
4. 21 -Uflltl'. Hiil -Lu1lrukl l "'· Sil -Locits 2, ... -lt\llMll,
WHlt&lllllSO
Sutton (W,t..lt l·l /3 ' l J I 6
lltlChW't 1/3 • 0 .. 0 O
lllulhYWI (L,l·SJ 1·2/.l • 4 2 2 I ltrKl'I +1/l I O O I J
lr•ndot1 '1 I 1 O o 1 Sc.re• 110 0 01 S.Ye -1ltlthrrl 1'). WP -lhifhven 2. PS -loone. Tlmt -2:.». Atltndentt -10..U.
Longden, 66,M~y
End Retirement
Stop ASU, 3·1
·Trojans Near Another
•
•
-College Baseball Crown
O~IAHA, Neb. (AP) -The percentage
mo\'e in college baseball just doesn't
work against Southern California.
Top:ranked Arizona State found that
out :P.londay away from elintination in the
26th College World Series.
JJTht intentional \Valk ·has backfired
against everY team that has used it
against us this season," said USC catcher
Ed-Putman alter· the 1'r0jans scored a 3·
1 victory over Arizona State.
The sophomore knocked in all three
Southern Cal ~ tncruding tv.·o in the
-fifth inning after the baseS were loaded
via walks -including an intentiooal pass
to bring Putman up.
Arizooa State {igured it had Putman's
number, He \Vas (l.20 in five previous
games this sea$00 between the tv.·o col·
legiat(} baseball superpowers. ·
Defending champion S out h e r n
California, 4!HI, Is the ooly unbeaten .-e-
maining in the doubl~llmination toorna·
ment and face.s ~1irmesota, 31-IS-2.
round game to then favored and No. l
rated Arizona Stale last year in the
series. but came back to take an un-
precedented third straight title wit h 3·1
and 1-0 victories over the Sun Devils.
"The \vorst thing about losing this
game is lhat it takes away your margin
!or error." said BrOck. "Bul if we can
get by Texas I kno\v \\·e have a ch<lnce.
Pitching is no problem, \\·e have
(\Vestminstl!f' High's) Eddie Bane. Jhn
Olten and Doug Slocum all pretty well
rested."
Russ ?ticQueen, last year's serles most
· va luable pl ayer, spaced seven singles to
earn the victory for Sou'lhern Califo1nio.
"Leroy (McQueen's nickname) \\•as
superb," said· Southern Cal coach Rod
Dedeau x. ""Re ' didn't make
a mistake. fle's never going to be
overpowering but can pitch to splts. He's
gonna make them beat tberns¢ves."
FORMER OCC ST All
UlS ANGE~ -Johnny l.algden. '~a stayed alive by ousting SIGNS PRO. PACT
onoe the wtnnlngest jockey In racing Georgia Southern 8-2. Texas ri pPed '-,
_history ~and now a 6 6 -y e_a r...'.'....o Ld _Oklahoma l0-2 to stay in and will test Fonner Costa l\tesa Hi~ ~ Orange
grandfather, 18)'1 he may come oot of Ar' Stat 53-7 . tod , the Coast Coll ege ba.seball.,,star Dan Clark
retirement to ride again this summer. 8~ e, ' m ay 8 0 r has si~ed a professional contract with
"Y " Lm den -'d · · g · the -- -•1 Tri-<:ity, W.ash. of tilt.Northwest !.eftgue. es, .. r . -.... . m a recent m-T_ex~ saw pe~tage ~e. v OW--Clark, who jWlt concluded his ooUegiat.e
terview, I may nde III a few races at ~Pm its face Sunday rugbt, and troruca~Jy career at La Verne College, is 8 second
Longacres when I aend aome of my 1t was Putman who received the ~n· baseman. He was not selected in the re-·~ up to Washington. this summer. tentional walk. Fred Lynn followed with cent major league draft. .
My ~.are not '?othenng me at all a t~run homer -the margin in a 4-1 Clark batted .!33 ·during the past
anymore. . , . U~ VJctory. . " -season and was-named -to the-All· .Longden quit ndm~ seven years -ago 'We wan~ to play USC again, em· . Southern c a J if or n i a Intercollegiate
\Vttb. 6,032 victories ti) a world record. phasized ArtZOna State coach Jim Brock . Athletic COOJerence and the NAIA All· 32,408 race1 · over 40 years. He began "so we have to get by Texu. We'll try to District teams k
tralnlng thoroughbtedJ and working do to USC what they did to us la.rt year." He is a 5-11 · 175-poqpder Ionpr houri thin he did as a jockey. Southern C&li!oml> lost a 3-0 early ' ·
A11gels Po11der
Shal\.eup; Rya11
Faces Red Sox
~ranagcr Bobby \Vinkles may shuffle
his lineup tonigh t to break a California
losing string when the Angels open a
three-ga1ne series v.·il h Boston in \\'hat
shapes up as a battle of flame thro\\'l'i'S.
\Vinkles indicated he might get Bob
Oliver and \Vinston Llena$ inlo 'the lineup
as Nolan Ryan, 7-6, goes against Boston's
Luis 1'i.1nt. 6-6.
The flu knocked Oliver ou t or the
A11gels Slale
All GlmH H kM,.C ftlll
Junt i2 8oi•on 11 1•11!0...,T,, Jun1 l J BM!on 11 a lllornl1 Jun~ 1• 805!on .i 11 !ornl1 Junr \~ 8Mlon 11 t i tornla Jun~ S New York 11! C1litor111 ..
"ll "' .... 1: J 11.m. I: S l),M, 7:SS p.m. 7:56 p,m,
starting linC'ttp in the las! l\'.'O game.s as
the Angels dropped tht:ir fi fth and sixth
contests in the last e.iglll. The return to
health of Oliver. 1\'ho knocked In 26 runs
in ~l ny. could help lht" club. .
Ll1..'11.as' insertton in the lineup would be
more C1f a surprise. Llcnas has batted
only 20 times but le-ads Angels hitters
with a .350 average and is thought by
many baseball men to be an ideal candiJ
date for designated hitter.
The Angels may n~d all they can get
from· Oliver and Llcnas against Tiant.
\Vhen he is at top form . Luis baffles hit·
ters with a blazing fa stball rel ease from
a variety of positions.
Tiant's catcher, Carlton Fisk. has been
leading the Red Sox at the plate. His.
t_hree-run homer in a Red Sox viciory
Sunday gave him four homers and 14
rurn batted In 1n the last fi ve games.
The Angels host Boston t h r o u g h
Thursday night and open a four game
series Friday against the New Yor~.
Yankees. leaders oi the EastITll Divisi~
~
UCI Netters ~
In Early Wins .
EAST STROUDSBURG. Pa. -All !ou
UC Ir:vlne singles players advanced t
the third round of the NCAA colleg
division ~ham pjonships at Ea s
StroUdsburg State College here Tvtonda
including the tpurney's second-see~
Bob Chappell. . ~
. _Today's action fi nds the•four singleii,
play.era returning for.·o single match wi~
. lhe doubles coml:Slnl!s also begiMin '
-pla y. -
The matches . on Monday were play
In 96 degree weather which ta the blgg~
con~m for coach Myron McNamara a1-1
the Anteaters go about "seeking thett...-
fourth slralght NCAA tennis chan;;:;
plonship. , :;'Q
Chappell drew a first round bye therr3
defeated Paul Noerenberg .,r Ea9t •
llll nols, 6-3, f·t. He is seeded second in
the IOUmament· bebll>d John Lowman
Rollins College in I'lorlda who fin ished'
second a year ago.
AcUon In the college divis ion event co
tlnues thrcugh Friday Of this week.
In a aurptlae move, McNamara tool§;
•ix ployero to the NCAA meet. ChaP.flll!:
will team wllh Glenn Cripe u the th~
seeded doubles t .. m wbUe Gr 1 I>
Jablonski and l>llke Fishback will play
the second:ateded spot due to Jablonski'
previoua succeu In the nationala ill: ·
doubles pl•[.· -~.~~1~0~~:~,,g~~u:~r · 1
this year. moved him 25 behind Ruth's Shanghai, Pek!Jjc and canton bel.-
-714. une II ilid;luly r,:ilfcl linice SonllJIPllO
of NorthWtlll Orient airllntl.
,_
Strikeout J{~g
CINCINNATI-Bo&..Glbilon .,,r Ule SI.
1..ou1s·c.r<11nal1 move<f Into aecond place
on baiebatc• all·llnle •tdkeoot.U.t when
he ranoed Clndnn1.U_pllcher Ed Spriiue
in the second !Ming ol Ulelr Monaay
11ight glme. · n.o thlnl llrlkeoul of tho game for
\;fboon r•vo lht Cardinal-rlghl>bander
J
•
U.S. Willa
BECKENJIAM, England -'Ibo United
Stalel stzll wm )he 111t lwo doublef_
matdles Monday llJd beol Bntotn t-l·ln
. an under-21 lnlemelkillal. ~ ...., ••
~tlon. ·'-" . 'Ibo teiml ...... ' tied 2·2 when the
doubl.ls ... tied. ..
... .... ,.~ ...... ,
-1'1r1L •Mid llllfltt -~-
J eoo '""""u iucu "'IW . tt.J•· Sc.oft Ct rllfllen•( Cl) Cltf. ~rl "'"fl'ltn IU, tit
"' O"tol ... r•· I Gr.ti J•&lonflt IUCll"-cltf. NOl"M ltlch IHtrltrfilnt Ml•eourll M.'"" . ·-t• ~"'') lc~Otr IUCll ott.-Jc;!'n-1 ... ~
Co I... ,...t, .. • ,..,.. ....... ~c""'* <"f'P"l fil cltf. l"•uf Notr....0.•1 tlhltr'tt IHlllOI J. 6-a, ... , •
t.f•rn•Mn UI fff. Ott"f Oudtl•~r tl(tllMtl•I •t.
""' T....... .,,_,., ,,, ftt, Den l.tnrl'tfl'-(UC O•v••l "' , •.
AIUZONA STATl'S-CLfNT MYIRS .SCORES AHEAD OF T.HRDW '['Q_ED.J!_UTNAM. TROJANS WON, 3-1._...;•;..;· \'c.:;t"_'"' 1'1 "'· '" 0 """'"" 1'""""""'1 •
"
-·
•
'· . '
.,
Good Spri1ig Drills
Uni Coach-Hopeful
By HAN K IYESCll
Of tfMi D•llY l"llot 51111
"He'n ti~ve monror a line ln
front or him, and hopefully •
better rushing attack, so even
though.we proba bly won 't pass
as niuch, I expect Mike to
have &"Super year," Redman
says.
Tile line is an area of ques-
_,
•
University Hlgh I o o t b a 11
coach Jerry Redman looks
back on what ·he ter1ns "the
best spring practice we've
ever had" and toward lhe 1973
season with cautious op-
-timisfl\• •. • -------'--"""
tioo untll·cootact work starts,
but"-with-five-seniO!'S"'!lated-!or"i'~""'"""'1'o!"<I
''We'll have more depth r.n
·the line than we've ever had,
and I think we'll .have a better
rushing attack next season,"
duty, the Trojans \1-'ill be Joog
on experience at least.
Seniors Ted 0-.go, Kurt
Schulten, Randy DeLapp ijnd
Redman says. "But you can't i..,;..,
tell until the hitting starts, and JERRY REDMAN
Mike Ecclestone all a r e F.<,,.'%;~
retumees,-and all are 10 to 20
pounds heavier after working
v.•ilh weights in the off.season,
according to Redman.
our two scrimmages and first
game are going to be critical."
"I thought we had a good
spring last year, but the
season waS dlsappcWnling until
the tinal few games."
University won only two or
nine games last season, but
the holdovers from that team
have ,aJI show n hnprovement
in the-spring, and it's on that ·
basi s that Redman can smile
tentatively.
Chief among the returnees is
quarterback Mike O'Looghlin,
who set several school passing
reeords last season, and whom
Redman feels could be the
best quarterback in th e
Orange Leag ue next year.
Returning lettermen Jim
Greene ( 180) and lr1urray
Graham (155) worked well in
the backfield during the spring
and Redman feels tha t the
progress of Greene could be
a key to the team's season.
Spring Foo.tlJall
Both or O'Loughlin's·r egular
receivers from last year will
be Jost to graduation, but able
replacements .are available in
senior Tony·Gr3bam (160) and
sophomore speedster Chris
Stark (145 ). Stark showed
good ability in ithe spring, and
will give the Trojans a deep
threa t according to Red man. Depth Problems
Over-for Oilers
University · will experiment
with a two-platoon system in
the early fall , and Redman
hers hopes of mainta ining the
system through the ~.
By RON EVANS
Of Ille Dilly Pilol SMfl
Depth has been a \\'Ord
absent from the vocabulary of
Huntington Beai':h liigh foot ·
ball enthusiasts of late. But
tha.t commQdity, v.•hich· has
consistcnUy beaten th e Oilers
the ·past ithree years iS becon1·
ing a .reality on the Oilers
campus.
"We're a lot better at this
poi nt ·than ·we were last year."
says coach Roy !Bru mmett.
"Last year. we had 40 boys out
for 'varsity and 18 for the
sophomores. Now we've got 60
out for \'arsity and 45 out for
the sophomores. Football is
becoming in1portant ,'' adds
Brummell.
His squad V.'l'ap1>ed up its
spring drills Saturday with an
intrasquad touch game that
ended up 8-3.
The \\'hiles S<.'Orcd on ~like
Mid get Cars
Race Ag ain
Westminste r's Lo\ve lJ Voss
\\'ill be among a field or 40
U.S. Racing Club midget auto
racers competing Saturdny in
the first race in over n n1onth
at El Toro Speedway.
Voss ranks in a tie for 10th
place in 1he USRC driver
points standings. the current
leader is Ken Gidney of La
Habra v.·ith 464 point s. Chris
Cumberworlh of Santa Ana is
second. and John Redican of
Cypress is in lhc third spot.
The eight. .. card event begins
at 7 p'.m. with.. time trials. A
trophy dash. four heat races. a
semi-main event and a 30 lap
feature follow .
~-.. --J
~·lcAda1ns' four-yard TD run
and a PAT '~ass from
quarterback Greg Nitzkowski
to John Potter.
The Blacks 'tied 'it on a 46-
.yard run by Loren ~1ickliit and
a pass from Ed Eldridge to
Joe Techau.
··Last year \\'C were able to
v.·ork on our defense ·only du r-
ing the spring, but this time
\ve've been able to concentrate
on lboth offense and defense,"
says Brummett.
"We hope to have no -one.
going on both offense and
defense, but we'll see how it
u·orks out in the scrim-
mages," Redman says. "We
haven't done this b e r 0 r e
because of the small squads,
but .it gel~ more people in.
\"olved in the game. simplifie~
things fOr tile players .and
mak es adjusting to injuries
easier."
BEATING HIGH FISH .PRICES -Laguna Beach's
Keith Gaede (right) shows off 762 pound Pacific
blue marlin caught while fishing off Kona Island
in Hiiwaii.~ It's the largest marlin caught in Hawaii
this year but took Gaede just 40 minutes to land.
With Gaede are the boat captain Ted Dejaegher and
crewman Tioni Judd.
"And we "'Orked on finding
dept h and 1 think ~-e'Ve found
what·we're looking for ," adds
the Hunt ington Beach mentor.
Cochran
Competes
At OCIR
Fergiµon ~~~nds
Looking sharp at 'tackle arc
~1ark Duval (200). Roger
\\1aile ~f210), John Kitto (225)
and Jeff Gappert ( 190):
Teamwork, Sa'l?'Vy
Other linemen c a t c h i n g
Brummett's eye inc I u d e
guards David McBeth 11951.
John Nilsson i l65J. Chris Kent
1175) and Ron Reid (155l
along with centers ?.fike Biss
'1851 , Richard Clapp (1851 and
Mark Holden (175). "
At light end 1lhe leading can·
-didares are Scott ?\fallory
12001 and Gary Erpcnbeck
(185) while N i t z ko ,vs k i,
Eldrid ge and Keith IHenKlon
give Huntington depth at
quarterback.
Running backs inc lude Hugh
Rolx!rts and Loren i tic klin,
t-A·o v.•ith ~xce!Jent showings
during ·the spring.
Also Harley Hill figures in
that department.
\llide receivers in t h t
Houston veer attack are Paul
Gassman (Huntington's kick·
ing game), Tom FreeJnan (ex·
cellent speed), Dick Bullar.
Charlie Whit~ and Bob Duffy.
No injuries or transfer3
\\'ere noted.
The Gary Cochran of Foun-
tain Valley \\'ill be among the
top fuel entrants Jn the Lions
top fuel and funny car cham-
pionships Saturday at Orange
County Inter na tion a l
Racev.•ay .
Proceeds from ad van c e
ticket sales will go to the Sad·
dleback Valley Lions Club lo
be used for. various area youth
activities.
Cochran's competilion will
con1e from the likes of Jim
\\1arren, Rich Ramsey, Dwight
Salisbury and Gary Burgin.
Burgin, who was the All·Pro
champion last year sold his
Vega , and arrived to qualify
last weekend to "in the Jim
Thomas dragster ""ith a 6.40
clocking.
Hang Ten funny car champ
Joe Lee leads the field ~·ith
Supernationals v.•inner Jim
Dunn and Merl Littlefield of
Long Beach also entered.
Qualifying starts at 2 p.m.
"'ith elimination races at 7:30.
B~seball Standings -··
NATIONAL LEAGU E
Chicago
Montreal
St. Louis
Pittsburgh
New York
Philadelphia
East Division
W L
34 2J
25 25
28 29
24 27
23 29
23 33
West Division
San Francisco 39 23
Dod gers 36 23
Houston -,1.1 27
-Cincinnati )J 26
Atlanta 24 34
San Di ego 20 39
MOl!dl'l''I Gt mn
Dtftlf1 S, Ptllt1alphla 3
An1nte f, "Plt11burth 1 St. t.ovl1 12, Clnc.h1n1H 4
S1n Fr.nclKO 2, N1w Yor11. I
Onlv 111mn 1chfdultd.
Pct.
.596
.500
.473
.471
.442
.41 l
.629
.610
.550
.544
.414
.339
GB
5" ,,
7
7
8 ~2
IO I\
T9dl¥'t 0 111tn
O.-. {M•Mnmllt! t-JJ 11 P1ii11dt1Phl1
IC1rlton t-1) Sen OlttO tC.ldWttl 3·11 11 Morltrul !Torr.u
HJ S.n Fr1nd1CO IM1rlthlt ._.I t i Ntw Yofi(
!Perktr 4-41 Plmbu!'9h {Welk~ 2~) t i Alllnll CNltlr.ro S.21
SI. ~OVIJ !((leveltl'ld $-4) 11 ClndnMU fGrl,.,._.
1ln M l
Cl'llCHO (A.ulCfltl M l .t Hol.l.ton Cl'CM'KPI ~I ·~· ...... tlefffii tt Phll.0.ll'!lll
Sen Olfvo 1! Man"ffl
San "Fr•nclsc:o 11 New York
Pl!!Ullw1h II AHMlll
SI. LOvlt 11 Ch1d M1tl
Cl'llU'lO 4it Houltor\
.,
-
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Nev.· York
Detroit
Milwaukee
Baltimore
Bostoo
Cleveland
Chicago
?\.11nnesota
Kansas City
Angels
Oakland
Texas
East Division
W L
30 26
29 26
28 27
25 25
26 2G
21 35
West Divilloo
3t
30
31
27
29
18
21
23
28
26
28
34
Mo!MllY't G1-n1
Mllw1ull.11 10, Mlnnttotl fi
' Or!IY 111mes schHlulfd.
TH IY'I GllTI"
Pct.
.536
.527
.509
.500
.500
.375
.596
.566
.525
. 509
.509
.316
GB
,. " 1 ~2
2
2
9
)1 ~
3~1
'41,-1:~
4~2
13
TtKll (8roblto 2-5) •I C!lt'oltll lld !WllCO)C 1.JI
kel'!WS City ((IU$by ).1) 11 81111~ (P9'1mer ...
Clllcaoo lWOOcl U·Jl 1t De1rolt (Loik ll ~)
Mflwl\lkM (llt!I W) 11 Mtn""°"I (81YlW8" • ,,, OI'" Otclttr 1<4)
N-Yort {Kline 4-SJ I I Olkltllll nnue 4-Jl
80110n (Titnt '"'l at •11t-" (lll:y1n 1-6)
w.llM'ldt r'J OM1e1
Tots 'ilf Cltw+ll'ld
1(1M11 Cltv 11 8•111ft\O""
ChlCMO ti 0.h"Oll
Mllw•ukee It Mll'IMWll• 8o5!0fl II ...,...,... ~ 'l'ort 11 0tl!.t11111
Fish Report
•
,,
luestJay, June 12, 1973 CAIL¥ PILOT* :J
Los Alamitns Race Results ' .,
~f• J 11M 11, l tJ)
(t.Af . "'''
n.ao 1.t0 .. oo ,,., 1.20 ...
IH«NI Dl..,1'IOlll. ""°"'· MooPI JllO CWtti.onl
Ml11 "It Pie fMyl11I
10.«I •.611 , ... ... '"'° ~ ... c .... rvtn Cl)lc:k ITTMWr91
Tll'tll -17.•.
Al9' •tn -lltM"'TfnY"Cio."Nh.di" ~ -~
FIY••· O.tl Doll, You Alrlgnt. Ml-.olld '
SICO•D aACI -110 y1rd1. 3 y11r
oldt a. up. Cl1lmlng, Purwi 11900. Cl1lmt1111 prlc:t IUOO,
Tiie Vtri.t
IAdelr) 3.00 3.00 ,...,
"-60 3.60 .... Ctth arOtlltfl (ltlch1rd1J
rftll'9 fltfl"W-'(,.~)"'-
TllTM -46.t4.
Alto rtn -Swtn Ltktr, I To Go,
.Gimme l t r.
TNllD IAC• -UI y1rd1. ) ye1r
olcl1 &. up. Stertff1 etlowenc•. PurM "'"' Pelf Cerln' lAdelr)
Girvin Counl'( !Smith)
1Nvt90 (Tr11t111"e)
Time -21..51.
AJ1o11 ren -R1,1e Fer", My •omen
llldl1n. tdeho Go. P'1rr Cl•~-
f'OUITK •Ac• -2 Y••r Diets.
IJ ••ecll -1•SCootllf' Skip .. •·Sir
N--4, P'ald $415.$0.
SEVENTH llACE -3:50 Yll'ds. 1 yur
olct1. Allowenc1. PurM! S6CIOO. Tile L19
lllk~···
It.OD 1.«I •.O 1,111 4.CIO
""'
NINTN •Ac• -110 Y••dl. 3 y11r Diel• &. up. Ct1lml"'11. PurH 12100.
Clllm/"'IJ prlc. l:HO:I.
Llllt• Miu Bux
{Myle1J l•M> 7.ao 6 . .0 MICIWIY Tom (Dreyer) t.1111 6.60
All S•ll I RICh.lrC11l 4.IO
Tl,.,. -4'.ot.
AIM! r1n -AllOl'l G1l. Speedy S.vtn,
T® Eagle, RllUMI Win, KJ\lle Pro.
lS •••cl• -l·LLnle Ml» '"" a .. Mkl••Y Tom, P'1ltl IJUJO.
Alamitos Entries Marina _.i\.ce
·wi11s CIF· l ff Al•ml"" •nlrfff fir TMW1y • .111111
It. 1~• lltlhl "' :rt-111•111 1ummer
_....,_ Ct.ff a Int. Plr•t ,_1 7:4J
,,,... u 1uct1 M llrtl r•u . u 1x1ct•1
.............. '·--•OA'--·
.. 1'1•1T a11c• -.oo y1rd1. s y11r
olds &. up. Clalml"I· P'lll"M 1>11,«111.
Cl1tm!fl9 prJc1 11,600.
Com1whlrll1>11 (J. Rlch•nlsl
Al1mll01 Step f l(, Hirt)
On 11\1 BHm (S. TrH1ur1)
Nuttier Bllfl"Y ID. l(nlght) Jlcbll (J. Dreyer)
Mr. Astro ZtslH (ft. Adllr)
Bal:ttl1 (l . Wright)
Kerr McGlt (0. Mol'rlsl
Terrific'• CQWboy (J. W•rd) Dynamo P•lrol IR. 81nk1I ~
0Sl:COMD •AC• -JSO v•rd:i.. 7 year olds. crelmlnt. Put:H 11.aol'.I. Cl•lmlno
price 12,JOa. L1Clllt1 Sis {C. Smith)
Ett1bo Miss Ut . ACl•lr) Sparty SUVtt CJ. W1rd)
Mlu TOQ Link (H. P'agl l
Felrffl P11leo IE. Garul
,.roi>k•I l!l•r fO. Knight)
Lii Niner (IC. Hert)
Wlnklh Moon (J. Or1y1rl
Fly Mtt Fly fl . Wrlghl) Swflt Alyce (J. Rk llerd1)
THllO IAC• -CID Yl rd,. 3 YH r
ofC11 & ._ Cl•lmlng, P11r11 SI.WI.
Clelml1>9' prlC'I Sl,600.
C:uln"'• Allbl (J, lltlcht rdsl Custom Art (0 . Morrill
Gold lnoot CL. MytH)
MlllOW' Moon (R. Ad1lrJ
Lott11011 (C. Smith)
Mt David (lit. s111m) Panto Ro.d (J. W1rd)
Cocky Kid (!. Tr111ur1J
A"l1111 Surt Miki (R. l!lenk1)
l'OU•TM •Ac• -~ Y•rCIS. 2 Ye.if old1. Allaw1nc1. Purn U.000. Miss AprU Lav1 UL..Adelr)
E11y Flyer (T. Mc'ttlritlck)
Mack's Maondrop (J. W•llOlll Ch1rg1h11ndrtd (R. Salem)
N-.1rry ll1r Ml11 (.t. Or1v1r) HltkMY Smoke (J. lltkhlnl1)
Winds o1 Sprl"I (C.'Smllh)
~ FIFTH •ACE '-350 Yl•dl. J YIJr olds. Cl1lml111J. Purst $2,300. Cl1tmlng
pr1ce 11,scm.
I
Sim's Wonder A(l•n (J. Rfctial'ds)
Sprlnlln' Mbllr iS. 7r11i urt)
Sneak AUock {J. WarCIJ Covr1111rw1. Kip fC. Smll~J
Fine 'N' Fancy fl. Myle1) To·N--OllC<:l!I (J. Or;e.yerJ (
Gt! ti On (R. Binks)
Thffle hHll CR. ACl~Jr)
Aiure e.,r Go (K. Hart)
Early Ch1r11e (J. WiHMlll)
' SIXTH fl:ACE .-J,J.O yarC11. 3 vt ar ohh. Cl11mlno. Pur!.I! Sl.800. "Claiming PrlCI U,500. Jovaus V•lent;ne CJ. W11lon) Teto Chic {J, Richards) Flam• Jrs1er (Henrv PaGt ) HllllOU• (0. Motrls) Scoralo Bar {R. l!lanks) FIYI Joy (I(. Hirt} Oh So Good {L. Mv!esJ Farward Pau (J, Ward) China Win CM, Bkktll F1i1 2 (R, Aaalr)
.SEVENTH RACE --00 yards. J year D1ds & uQ. Fllllr• & mare~. Allaw•nc~. Purst $3,SOO. The OullY'I
JuclY'S L0\11 (J. WarCIJ Rebll'I Queen CR. A411rl Truly Spat \T, McCUntlckl SuDltr Cer1 s. Treasu~l l!I• Sur• Moon {I(, Harl) Ruby l erf'ICllll (I(, StartY) I Kl'ICIW That Glrl (R. Banks)
BAKERSFIELD -Tony
Campregher of Marina High
School is the CIF individual
golf champion for 1973 after
wjnning the crown in sudden--
death from Richard Friedman
of l\lonte Vista at Bakersfield
CoWltry Club Monday.
Campregher shot rounds ol
68-72-140 to tie with Fried-
man over regulation. On the
first sudden..<feath hole, Tony
fi red a birdie v.·ith the aid of a
IO-foot putt to win the cham-
pionship.
Other area entrants and
•1GMTH •ACE .... a y1rd1. J rur their scores: Larry Collins
~1~,mt.v ~~tc•c~~'.IV· Pl!'" $2.600. (Estancia} 75; Graham Cowan
Go 1s11 Go CL. Mvle$l (San Clemente), Tom Martin Ovn~o GM tll . Adair! r1~· si.~~o:r•~JJ;,.."-;t1~'J3;/ (Mission Viejo )' and Gary
Most Rova1 co. Knlahl ) Lesha (Fountain Valley) 76: Lee Btr Wtlth (S. Trrasurr) Ogn•1 Look B•ck (L. Wr1oh!l Dennis Luschen (Dapa Hills ) ~~ ~n°dF~~~tkCfj.5~~~1,..;., 77·; t.fark O'Meara (Mission
SQur cuv <K-.t!:r~1191bl• Viejo) 81; and Paul O'Shea
1nm1o's Leo Two !R. Banks) (Ne1vport HarbOrl 84. DOI.Ible P DCO 9!11 (Iii. Banks)
NINTH f\AC E -350 y1re1s. 3 r"rlP ___________ l
:r~Ce c~~~· Purit $1,800. Cl1lmlng NEWPORT LEASES
Jim Dool!" {H. Pa,.el 2400 w .. C-H'-.. w-Tom's Bar (R . S1leml .,,.. -•
AnCIY Done II IK. Hartl l I II V h" I LU Amla IS. Tr10111rtl 881 ftl 8 e IC es
Rxket H:l Nf'la (R. ACll1r)
Bldev!led J. Rkh1rd\) 645-2202 Ol'lney C1 CR. Bankil _ Cvna•Pffd IL. Mvlti) f.\1 :,ttJC. Sml!hl llocke~r Chltlt (J. Warol
••
If you need a few thousand dollars or more,
consider the people who make individual loans
worth millions.
At Commercial Credit we lend millions of
dollar.s to some of America's largest corporations.
For things like huge oflice buildings. Power
stations. Freighters. • But for all.the millions we lend business, we
lend Just as much to people like you. Because we
feel the reasons you need money are as Important
es the reasons a big company needs money,
f:or cash to pay off bills--<>r whateverthe reasai
•1 -see the peopl e who Understand all kinds of
inoney problems. Commercial Credit
• ~molt---·-__,
11'o-.. , to borrow a thousand i. t1oin the poopto who lfnd ml/lion&.
8'IO F.oet 17th Street • Ph•:~'
-Ulo~•-a•d•.lwlllll.t.~htw••ata...t.._. ·. ~ •~ar.a:rta-.~ua
........ -
,
•
PORC CONTENOERS -Dick Deaver of Balboa
Yacht Club skippered the new Ericsoll~31 one tan-
ner Dandelion (left) to an overall WiJl in the fourth
race of the Pacific Ocean Racing Conference ~Ion
day. llandicap leader in the series is Al Cassel 's 50·
foot Chance-designed \Varrior, Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club, which has won the previous three races.
{\Varrior photo by Beckner).
' • • --i
... . ... ---.... ••
Sex Shows for TV?
Hiigh Dow1is SeeliS Honest Prese1itatio1i
. 4 B y JAY SRARBUTT Each show ""·ould ha\'e ll'Uest put it in the hospital for
NEW YORK <AP) --Hugh experts, a. "moderator who rl'pairs \Vhlle the 1nan 1tay~ in
Down! was In tO\.\'n the other knows tbe differenct bel\\'teD the bar drinking."
day to talk to a network about knowledge and opinion" nnd Another rea10n , he said, 18
a .new TV series he has in possibly some dr am at l c lhat the potential shock of
mind. B~t the proposed show vignettes to illustrate the topic \'iewers should be cushioned doesn't involve make-bell~ve . under study, Do\\'OS said. ·
Jt CODCems' ~ank diSCU1s1ons He said "-ere ht direct!)' in-lfy putting the problem .J..21 '-:!~~-of the_ sexual and emotional ••. volyedJn tbt-sho\\'o ~ct.pr.efer sei'Ualit "within a broad
":"'\ -p-robl~t'bJ""Aiifer~aDs ace tn to produce it -not moderate spectrum of uman re it.ions :
real life. it -but he V.'Ould do \\'hatcver it "'OUld redu ce the hostility
Before you get the idea the was necessary to make the "'e'd get if we simply did a
former star of NBC's .. Today" show effecli\'e. show about sex only.''
sh:ow has gone ~ft, a few He said the problems of Do\\11s said a n o t h e r
things need explauung. In re· human emotion v.'Ould be an network, which he also deelin-
cent years, Downs has become integral part or the series for ed. f.o name. had been serious-
increasingly concerned about two reasons. Jy interested in the series. But
the population explosion. he said it backed off during
It's led him to join the na· ONE. HE said, "is that r ve the recent pubBc an d con-
tional board of the PlaMed come to belie\·e more and gression-al outcry over'""'90-Cal
Parenthood Federation. And more that you can't Separa1e ed •'topless rcdio'' shows. He
right now, he 's national biological sexuality froin the condemned those sho\\'S as
cochairman of the Citizens' emotional components any •·tastele!is an d exploltalil'e"
Committee on Population and more than you can take an and a "reprehensible use or
the American Future. alcoholic's damagtd liver and the airwaves."
The latter group was (ormed ---~~~~---~-------------
to keep alive last year's find·
ings and recommendations or
a special commission -
created by Congress at Presi-
dent Nixon's request -that
studied America's population
problems.
Deaver, Dandelion ·cop To-n Race
THE WAY Downs sees it, an
educational TV series about
sex and emotion would be or
great help in carrying out the
task of the citizens' com·
ntlttee, rormed by Jolm D.
Rockereller Ill, head of the
original commi s sion on
America's population growth.
''In all honesty, I think the
:•
lly AL'.\ION LOCKABEY
... 1111111 IOdl!or
Dick Deaver anc.l his crew
aboard the Ericson-37 Dan·
delion ll>d a gfoup or One Ton·
ners to a ·clean S\Veep ci( han-
dicap honor s in the 100.mile
Marina ciel Rey to Newport
race l\-1cnday.
The race \\'as .the· fourth
feature of the Pacific · Ocean
Racing Confererice which con-
cludes Saturday with Ne\\-•port
!~arbor Yacht Club's 26-mile
BOATING
UCT-5a ilor Place~n<l
1'o Johson
~ORT WORTH . Tex. tAP I
-O~obson or New York
fl1aritim Jege successfully
def ended his "llt in the sin,:!"lr·
handed championShips for the
Huntington Tidelands race.
The fou11h race of the series
started Sunday from Del Rey
'\'acht Club. Bahia Corinthian
Yacht Club was the hOst club
at the lenninal end of the
race.
l\f;\RK JOHNSON'S famed
73·foot ketch Wind \ra rd Pass-
age. !lying the colors of Nev•
York Yacht Club. \1•as fir st to
finish the race at 12:30 p.m.
for an elapsed time of slightly
n1ore than 22 hours.
The race started in light airs
1hat ne\•er exceeded 12 knots
around Santa Barbara Island,
the \\'indward mark of the
!=OW'Se. ~
The PORC "'a's patterned
after the f a m e d Southern
Ocean R a c i n g Conference
I SORC J off Florida which an-
nually dra \.\.'S the top yachts in
the ,~·arid. II is known as a
designer's sho\\·case and is
sometimes termed the world's
52 BO<!Js Compete
l 11 Ccitalina Regatta
Newport Beact't y.•as the p.m .. v.•inning honors for his
weekend scene. of one of the class.
largest trailer.able sailboat Trophies were a\\•arded at
regaUas ever held as the the awards ceremonv he.Id at
North American Sa i Ii n g the Gatalina Counti-y Club.
Association hosted 52 boats at Other cla ss champions were
its second annual Ne\\'JIOrt Jean Allegre, froin Huntington
Beach to Catalina Island Beach, Aquarius 23: Don
Regatta. The boats are all Golding sailing the Susan K
trailerable s \Vin g keel from Chico. Aquarius 21 : Dick-
sailboats ·prOduced by Coastal Coons in Raccoon , Balboa 20
Recreation Inc., Costa Mesa. from Santa Rosa: Phillip t.ind
This year's reil;atta also Alvin Knowlton sailing To.ld
se rved as the organization's Sucker. Ensenada 2Q from
national com~tition for the Santa Ana.
fi ve classes of boats. The cfass NASA. a family oriented
competition was held for tbe sailing association. held a din-
Aquarius 23 and 21 , the Balboa ner meeting Friday ·fl iitht at
26 and 20, and the Ensenada DCYC for all attendin~ .. \fler
20. the skipper's ml"-~ting' the:
Boats \\'ere trailered from group awarded donr prizes in-
as far a\vay as Chico, .in eluding a new s:dl donated by
northern California. All boats Coastal Recreation . book s
rendezvoused at the Bahia donated by Sea and Paci ricJ
Corinthian Yachl Club, where ~fotor Boating end ''achting ,
they held a rafting party Fri-magazines. and a l·Ii-~-t)ri
day night. Launching System dunated by
The race for Catalina Island Te\Mtyne Aero-Cal.
bega n at 10 :1.n1. Saturd!ly, An~cnc desiring Rddi1io11:1l•
anti finished inside the in for mation rcg:H·d it".! f11turc.l
greate!t "outQoor test tank."
THE RACE from l\tarina del
Rey to Newport via Santa
Barbara Island was ~ first
PORC event in which Al
C~l's 50-foot sloop Warrior
hasifailed to score a handicap
victory. The extremely light
airs of the race made it a
sinall-boat affair from start to
fini sh.
Cassel, however, v.ill use the
race as a throw-out. The
series is based on a best four
of five. If \\'arrior places high
in Saturday's race she appears
to be a certain series "inner.
The One Tanners did not sail
the first two championships
series out of San Diego.
R~ULTS OF S.1nta B:i.r·
bara Island race :
OVERALL -(I l Dandelion.
Dick Deaver. BYC: ( 2 )
'-----Glcnn-5-...Eos.tcr tro.pfiy:-.itL in:. Oreakwat6t--Of--l\Valon-Jl;u.1>on01<C---'NASAul.ctiv.itic.s..sho_uld..conla.Cl ____ 1 ___ _
lercollegiate sa iling l\fonday.. The first boat to finish was the Gerald L. Patrick , Com-i
He \\'as followed by Danny ' ~een Bee, a . Balt;>oa 26 ski~ rnocjore of the group, :it 417
Thompson or the U(liversily of pcred hy Doyle Blagg or Vlstli Suerte, Newport Beach.
California. Irvine, wi th 81 fresno.-Blagg finished at 3:24 92660.
I
points and freshman Bill
Leary of the U.S. Coast Guard
Academy \Vilh 89 points.
Jobson completed the 14-
racc series u•i1 h a Iota! of Iii
1X1ints.
The others in the top 10
were:
Peter Com1ncl!c. Tu 1 !>a
Uni\'ersit y. 97.
Augie Diaz. Tulane, 101
J>h il Leitch. Universily of
.Brilish Columb ia. ll2.
Fred fl·lartschink, I h c
Citadel. 116.
Jeff l\fcDernlliit!. Uni vt~rsily
of Califo111ia al lr\·ine. 119.
!\'lark 1>1och. University of
Texas, 130.
'l'hc s:.iilin~ con1ests continue
!hrough anolhcr week and a
half.
Dad 's Day
Feed ·Slated
The Or:-:n~c County Boating
(1uh i! having u F:ilhcr's O<iy
Urc<11-°f;"1st Sundny al \\l .O
ll art i\lemori{1I J>ark. Glassel!
:ind f:11rdcn (;rove Frcc"'llY in
Oran1o:~ Uret1kfns1 \\•ill hl,.1
served lro1n 8 tu 11.
• lJonations for lhc hrt·1:1kf:is1
111·c a.dul ts. l.!i;; <..>hlldrcn.
1----1um~r 1a..yeaJ:J) -Hient.s.-The
! re11kf11st 1ilCnu is ham, eggs.
p:1nc11kes. 1nllk1 coffee, nnd
i>l'ti ngC jvlce.
Thcr \Vtll be n drit"·ing for
door prizes at approx-lrnately
II a, nl.. 011e tic kc I for this
th 11111ng \\'Il l be given "'Ith
b1 r11 kf11o;1 don iuioo The public
I.!! ill\ ilCd
s~11ooner Ba~k
Old Hulk to Sail Atla1itic
THISTED, Den1nark (AP )
-An old schoonl'r \\'hich
creation of the Bc:1vcr II is
cos.ting coos.iderably m o r <'
than it cost a Danish owner to
have the \\'ooden schooner
built at t.lan.1al. a sn1aU Sk.ip-'
per . tO\i.'11 on the island or
Aeroc, back in 1908.
nt'rer vcntW'cd beyond Scan-
dina\'ia 's coostal \1·aters is
nbout lo set sail here for a
1rans-Atlantic crossing and
enn11>lete -transformation into
lhe good bMg Beaver II. one TllE SCllOONER was
of three British ships raided launched there as the Aeroc. a
by colonists in !he 1773 Boston decade later "'.as sold ti:i
Tea Party. Swedish ovmers and plied ,
It is an ugly duc kling story Danish. S we d i s h an:P
\1•hic h 11·i!J eventually take the No r\vegian \1·;11crs n'i the (;ulli
Danish-built vessel up the For1 under the S\\·edish fla g Unti l it
Point Channel in st\·le. for returned to Dcn;nurk and <in
mooring bct"·een .BoSCon and uncertai n fate in )963.
South Boston as part or the A retired Urlti.5h naval man
revolution:iry \\'a r bictn· bought It and renamed it the ~nnial celebrations. Victoria, but' never got arou nd
to tak.1ng it out of the har)X>r TH OROUGDL.Y repaired of Hobro. Jutland , \\'here it
\\ ith ne '.I· planking aod rebuilt was laid up until Keen found it
"'ith 11\'Q ne"' Douglas spruce in 1971.
masts and a full rig. the 75-ton "'Rlere wa! a lot or rot."
vessel has "·on a new lease t.n recalls Keen. y,•ho has been
llrc aflc·r lying' h8J(.forgotten overseeing the repai r and l
nnd slo\\•ly rott ing in a small rebuilding work .
l);}nish ha rbor for several ,;:;;;;:::;:;:::;:~==='-----,!
years. !
It "·as found tlttrc by Peter
1 11 presentati\.'._e of the
Old TW ide. Inc. of BQ.!ton, a
1irl vate group which plans to
. prese1rt a replica ·of the
T1eaver II to the publlc and
eventually give it to the city
of Boston onee admW-icn !cet-J
ha\'e paid back lnvc~ior!.
\\'Ith t.o ta I Investments
For
\Veekender
Adve1·tising
Phoue .
6424:!21
f"<i:lin1u1cd n1 ~lS0,000, the rr· '-----------'
•
print media has been more
Ambush. Ed Perry. AffiYC; forthright about these issue~."
(31 Ganbare, Doug Petel'90n; Do\\'T'IS said. "It's true that
SDYC; (4) Boat t-'o. 1, Tom television has displayed some
B_lackaller and Gary hfull. real courage in areas of con-
NHYC; (5) Crisis, Charles troversy. Hope, SDYC. "But in the area or human
CLASS A _ (l ) Windward sexuality, it's been strangely
Passage, ~fark J 0 h n s 0 n , s~lent. da~n nea.r ~ompletely _
l'iYYC; (2) Brushfire. Gene silen t._ I think t~1s 1s because
Trepte. SDYC; (3) rnter-lude, _sexuality ls co.ns1~cred su~h a
Forrest Olson NHYC. ~ot potato. \\'h1ch 1t needn t be
· . if honestly presented." _CLASS B -( 1) Lucky PUff, Dolvns, v.·ho declined ri ght
Dick Foxx, BYC: (2) Blue now to naroe t,!ie net,vork \\'ith
Streak, G3!f Myer!, NHYC: \\'horn he's discussing the pro-
(3) Sanderling, Bob Poole and posed series, said he'd like the
Jack Johnson, BCYC. show to run five limes a v.·eek.
CLASS C - (ll Nemesis, E\'en at that pace. it would
Tom Tobin, SDYC: (2) Blue ne\'er lack material, he added.
St a r , clfrter/ . .o\lford/Garra.
BCYC: (3) Kari II , Dick
Kelton , L.AYC.
CL.ASS D (One Ton I -j 1 •
Dandelion; (2) Ambush: ~ 31
Ganbare.
THE TOPICS could range
from ra pe to the pros and cons
of abortion or fed eral fu nding
for contraceptive research, he
said.
•
TJae Big .Jerk
Alex Karras. former professional football star.
heads the cast of ''The 500 Pound Jerk." about a
hillbilly \Veight. lifter who falls for a Russian girl
j?ymnast at the Olyn1pics. tonight at 9i30 on CBS,
Channel 2.
•
i!le Ql1<11)lS
61\ ved
t,cx;, wl1f1tc..
GO I 11\ally
"'°~ .,.~""-
-+ht. oi I 'i:l o;<fo>'l:!
'i~.I dQr\,:. bmi.Vv...
44 fashion island, riewport center 644-5070
•
•
.' .. . . ,
TONIGHT'S
TV IDGHIJGIITS
NB C II. 8:00 -"Diary of a Mad HOU$twife."
Carne Snodgrass was nominated for an Oscar for
her performance in the title role of this 1970 movie,
with Ri chard Benjamin, Frank Langella.
' CBS IJ 9:30 -"The 500 Pound Jerk." A big
city ad man (James Franciscus) grooms a genUe
hillbilly giant (Alex Karras) for an Olympic weight·
lifting meet. Hope Lange also stars.
TV DAILY LOG
--
Tuesday
Evening
JUNll2
l:COIJDO ellllllil Ill Nm rnajo ... ~
e1on1111•
Cil eo.rt1111p If Eddlt'• r1t1ttr a w..w .,.., .. Altw m 111t n•t1tt1111 mstar TM ..
m Alfrtd Hlldlcocll Pmnta m n1 UntHctltbla
m "'' ... "°' eor.ie ED Wlttf11t1 Ht1rlap m [dlfldt de Ellfrlftte
(0 C.ntl'I lbn Allerlcallt Ill _, (11H)~'i-'lht ...
lab(' (com) '40-Eddl1 Albert.
l:lO B (j) Hawaii fhil.0 (R) McGarntt
attempb 11) crack 111 utortlon rln1
preyin1 on 1111111 l11nlnmmt11 on ,
the lsl1nd •
" 1,....,, Junt 12, 19n
Pianist
Cheer eel
In Russia
Valley's Theater Rescued
The Fount-.in Valley Com·
mu.nlty Theater's most suc-
MOSCX>W CUPl) -Andre ce.ssful production ot the
Watt.!, a 27-year-<>ld bla.Ck season Is one which never nc·
American pianist, has drawn tually got on the boards. You
the kind of applause that once might call the real-life drama
marked the' S o v 1 e t ap-"Saved from the Jaws of
pearances of Van Cliburn. He Insolvency."
Intermission
Tom Titus
• DAILY PILOT 19
inbad Film
HOLLYV{OOD (l!Pl),
Columbia is filming "The
Goklen Voy1ge ot SJnbad"
wilb special ellects by l>ynar-
runa.
~made his. Soviet debut 5atur· ~ theater group, which
day niglil ~Le n i n·g raa--;---speclatfzes iii chil<lren•s -prt'r
playing with the San Fran· ductions has been operating
cisco Symphony orc~tra. on an $a,ooo ~ant irom the
Opening the'olate·!J1 October
will be an "adults only" com·
edy, "\Vhat the Buller Saw."
Following in Oe<.'ember will be
Edward Albee's "Everything
in the (iarden," with "The
First Fish" scheduled for
February. The final two pro-
ductions • will be an ariginnl -drama~· ·~~1onday's Hero;il-in -·Q·--.
A st.anding room only au-O>mmunity St?Tvices Project have a place in which to put it and "The Pharmacist."'
cUence of 2,000 applauded the under the Department of on or not. For Tarzan fans, the vintage
orchestra and Watts for 20 Health, Edu c a t Ion and "We just cast the show a"ld theater house plans a showing
minutes at the end or slx num· Welfare's youth developmen t crossed our fingers,•-P.trs. of Johnny Welssmullers sec·
April ;i.nd a famil y-type co1n-
cdy, "l-larold," closing the
seasoh in June. Guest direc·
tors are Ron Albertsen for
•·Butler" and Herman Booe.I·
man for "?11onday's Hero."
b e r s , a m o n ~ t he m and delinquency prevention Peck explained. ond ape man film, ''Tanan
Tchaikovsky's "Piano Con· program. But the grant was · and His Mate," from 1934 and
certo No. 1," Rush's "Cloud onlJ--i!J2d_(q_r on..e year, and * scenes from the very first 'Godfall1e 1~'
Messenger" and B a·r to k' s the expiration date was last--JORN WAYNE ti;as spefit --,.anan fll , statrlng Elmo
"Miraculous Mandarin." Wednesday. long time in the sadcUe, and if l.Jncoln. This program runs l
The government a ge n cy you don't realir.e just how loog, from June 27 to July 3. Filin Dela ye<
"Dlln HAllY• Ill
"kLUTI'' tll
had, however, agreed to suir YOU might check out the serial other weeks oil the swnmcr
ply half that amount for next starting next Wednesday at ··run schedqle will feature even· HONG KONG (A P) -The
season -if the Fountain the Old Movie Theater in Ana· in gs with Laurel and I-lardy, Hong Kong government has
Valley Players could come up heim. the Marx. Brothers, the Little po.stJ)!'.)ned screening of the
with the other ball. ·.Qn Tues.· The title is "Hurricane Ex· Rascals and the T hree Oscar-wiMing film ''The God·
day , one day before the jig press" circa 1932 some 20 Stooges. The theater is open father'' until after con1plclion
• ..-.,W.!!5-MP.-~ · F_ountajn Va]ley _years' belore~eJijgb and seven ~ays a week, wlth in· of a $1.2 n1illion campaign C~ty Couilc1l came through the Mighty and nearly 40 yeifs -1onnabon· being -dispensed at against violeril-erlmes. ~
with the needed $4,000. before "True Grit." It's 3 956-4070. 'Ibe film, which already
"It was a real cliff hanger," John Wayne most movie fans , * was passed by the Hong Kong
said Dawn Peck, president of have never seen. board of censors. was to open
the theater group. "We're . . THE mVINE C.Ommunity J une 28 in seven city theaters.
really grateful t9 the city The serial cbarJ:ges episodes Theater is the second .local A government' spokes1nan
fBLM Ttm1
fll""-p!Mp a»--
0 (l) (])Ill A1C T-.......
(CJ (90) ~ Qnct" (R) (dr1) !·~~~~;~;~~~! '71-B1i1n Klith, Ellz1betl'I Ashley,
Juliet-Prows•, W1Hi1m Wl~ A
rid!, ulcer1ted stockbroktr buys 1
rtiost ta.n i nd turns It into 1
boomin1 community for thMI who
w1nt 1nother th111011 to make some·
thin1 of their lifts.
council. They've given us weekly, along with the pr~ group to announce its com· said cinema managers and
tremendous support." gram at .the ~ld Movie plete 1973-74 schedule It'll be 11·ln1 d1'stn'bu'·rs ha'e '""" Theater, which this week of· · w .....:<: The play~rs currently are fers· a. W -C -Eields_festival a season of Orange County asked to reduce the shoWing of
preparing for a production of Included ~n tlus ·program at~-preriiieres--With--nve pro--"violent OlmS" during the an-
"Peter Pan," Y.'hich opens Fields' first movie "Pool _ ducti ons heretofote unseen in ticrimc campaign, y,1Jich ends l:!O@ -·--o-:·ltOI._.,,.._
(tdv) 'S3--How1fd Our!.
(I) CIS News Walttr Cronkll1
(iJ Mrn C1111 Wiii Trwtl
(ig) Mll'I' Criffi1 ~
m Mirr liriffill SbN m.,.1.
m .W, Crltlltll m Silt fu11 Tl~. , .. m JollN Canel lllow
t:oo m 0r11net
fENl111
q)-T-m•""' a> TIN rran• "°""
IJ) Ut11t .......
7:8'1J CD D m-
11 hwll111 f0t Doll"'
Wednesday,
DAYTIME MOVIES
•
..t...Atan Ladd, Glenn Corbett, Sidney
l'Oltltt. -
l:JOIJ (C) "Twe W. lf&llMr" (WU)
'61-Jam .. Sltw1rt.
3:00 Cl) (C) "'Sll••r Ii s-11•" Conti.
''Dthctllt Slo'1" P1rt I (dr1) '51
l :IO D "WINI In Hldin(' (drt) '50--Kirk Oou1les. Elt•nor P11ker.
Id• l11p!no, Howard Dulf. ®l (C) .......,.., Wm" ( ... 1) '52
10:00 (I) ''Stpt.btr Stonw" (dr1) ·ro--Rock Hudson, Robt rt Ry111 .
.lo1nnt D1u, Mark Slevens. 3:30 Q "I Alli • frilttft frM I a.hi D "Su ef ltllt Stlrf"' (wes) '53 1111(' (dr1) '32 -Geor1• Rift,
-Keith Llr11n, Don• Df•k•. P111I MunL
JZ:ODD "Dld: Tr1cJ'a Dllt1111M" (mys) 4:0011 "S.,.tltt ltblts" (dr1) '57 -
'41-R1lp/\ Bpd. (C) "'Swonl et £J D1vld Nlvtn, Burt llrte1st1r, Dtbot·
Cid"' (ldv) '62-Rol1nd C.rey. Ill Kart, Rlt1 Heyworth.
1:00 m "Al the Y111n1 Mel" (dr1) '60 4:30 (I) It• a lOAlil ldq
KOCE, CHANNEL M
Orange County's UllF television station, KOCE-TV, has
sche:luled lhe following special pro&f&ITll today. Detailed
Ii.stings of ChaMel so's programs are catritd in the Daily
Pilot's TV Week each SUnday.
-
•:OO Mlllll'" ""'"' M1""1•rMM (Cl V11!ely tor tl'llklrtn, hotted by
fllrtcl ltoo•t,t· • • •:» a1ectrtc c:~11y (Cl Ed11C1tlon11
Pf'OQrtm tor pr .. Khooler1.
S:OO .... me '''"' {Cl l!)lfff"latnmtnl, td~111on, •1111 mu11c !or ptlm1r1
Khoo! tl'llldrtll,
'!00 Tiie lttl1IM1 C:llllf (C:) Tflt ClilMlr _., .. ,ll'ltM. .,,. pr ... tnnon o1
1w1nllt ff!llMIV•M.V, n1rr1!td by
Jo. G1,191of1.
·~ Omnlllln M fCr ''Ll"W Oly'' Dl.c:w.i1111 of cr1m11111 lutrlc1,
llolttd by Jim Ctoptt'.
J:llO Ortlltt Ct1111tr "....... IC:) CJIY 1""ofli.t of f'.lllltl'IM. ,.i.c.t!tl1, w .. 1m1n11er, ind Sl1ntor1. Ph• •
July 20, alUnWI they didn't Sharks," from 1915, al~ng with this area. July 14.
know when they b ega n "The Golf Specialist " "The"p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
rehearsals whether t h e Y ' d Dentist," "The Fatal Gtass ofll
Beer," "The Barber Shop" ('(f"'\'19 67J-6 ~-~.~!.~~! LI Do NEWPORT
BEACH
ENTll:ANC£ TO tlOO ISLE
673·8350
"FATAL GLASS OF IEER"
"THE BARIERSHOP"
"THE PHARMACIST"
-PLUS-
6 "Betty loop" Cort-•
7:)0 and 9:30 Mch evtnlng
WllNTJ I:~.
t.l.l., WM., 2, J!IJ 1:)0
."nUS IS A HUA.CK" P.O.
WllNn J:tt, lt:IJ,
1 SAT., Mt 1:4J, 7:90, lf:IJ •
HMLKNIML"
••• ....
• • • • •• • • •• •······················· • • •••CH IU .. ¥D •t r l..l.I. • -·· co••• """"· • "'"" 011.00 •"""" •11'•9 .0e • HUN UNOfON ,..AC
ALSO CALL 8'7-6017
2nd HIT lurt •• ,,.,,.
IN
"SHAMUS
-• .. I.I.-~~ • CINEDDME 20 ••
".-...!.;...c._1::.1u:.~
,.., -.....
CINEDDME ?I •
"-~ .... ~.::..-::~=·
TOO• ·-"r •••v-n .. ., .. .., ...... -· . .,.. .. . ,,. .. ,
INDS· TONIGHT
·''CLASS of '44" -"The Geng That
Couldn't Shoot Str1ighf''
WEDNESDAY
T1oo M--"The Little Cigars"
Also nh T.,,-Jfrt'lt ..... s.., ._ Drftl!
"SISTERS" R
BARGAIN MATINEE
WED. I PM
Fiii l!FIUHMENTS
ADl,IL TS 1.00
W•W MUSICAL V&"SION
"Tom1"Wyer"· CG1-
w1111 """9y W111!1ktt
=~ PAT GARRETT
CO"ONA OlL MAil
Liz• Minelli
"CABARET"
and
Dian'a Ross
"LADY SINGS
THE BLUES"
Both in Color
"HIGH PLAINS 0"1PTER" !RI C:olor
Allrld Hlkhac:k'I "FREHZY"
Dl1n.y C1rtHn F11tlv1I Sal; & Slln. 11 llam & 1 ::llll11m
°"" C ll"l•ma
lrl.ltll lardol (. C1rdln1l1
Mlth1el 1"'101rd
C:•rol lllrMtll
W1llttM1tt1iav
"PETE 'n'
Dlli1V
(UC. Sun.
& Hol.)
l1!4S lo •
"LEGIEHO OF
""•NCHY • °'"'91 C..scott :~ l(IHO" "Hospll1t"tl"O ) :::::
....p111-L~IY T\11111 ·:·:·
"EXTREME Fiim F11Hv11I ::::: CLOSE·UI"" hi .. & S-..Jk -::::· I") It & 2:15 1'.M. :::::
.. ~1:~ ~~':~~~ ... .]¥~1 KIHG" & 0,.,.ry PKk
"SHOOT OUT"
80111 In C1lorl {RI
Jam.-Cun "SllTH•R" ~:::
. .. :i
·' t; EDWARDS
< l\f\f\Ll.\11 R
•• ·i
• ~~~n't:i:r~(~;. ~;~i;
LMMY T-Film l"•tl¥11 .,.
s.1.&s.1111.11111&2;1s11m ::::~
1.,., ., KAllOI
'""' · "FUZZ" •t:YNOlOS IN
IPl-HARBOll: SH°"'lf'IG C:lMflll~,
~DWAADS
HARBOR c:.:;1:.-1
_s1118t.~
w.IS CAAN PCTER BOru SAW KillfRMAa
•• t""l~bOll A' 11.llAV~
(Q',TA -.A!\A • <:17?~1 41
{l!G! MtJIOCOLOI
2fMI AT CINIMA CINTtt
KUNG FU • KARATE
"DEEP CR)
THRUST"
IHI HAND
Of DIATH
•
S•nl• An• , ...... , .... . Cl>••"'•" .... . ssa.1022
EDWARDS
( 1\111\t f\lfl\
'"\.~~ '~ /I• /l\,A ... •\
'0',lA ".lf)/l • )J1 l l~I
I
•
) ..
-
-·
'
Tuesday, June 12, 1-, •.
SOQRV TO MAVE
IMCONVENtEtCED YOU
MA.AMBLER, WU'~ ~TO PJO:EEQ SIR!
TUMBLEVIEEDS
I CALLE~ nns PR~SS CONF!:RENCE,
GAL~Yi 'JO ANNOUNCE 1111CPlllPA16N'JO61Vf:
IF YOU'LL WAIT A MINUTE, I'll QAOI() AME AO
TO TME JUNCTION ANO CLEAR V0U
THROUGH ... WE HAI/£ ANOTM£R
CMECl<POINT SET !..PTMERE!
r
· '.Jy Doug Wildey
. by Tom K. Ryan
. . ..-._ .;.,. ...
h
DOOLEY'S W ORLD
SAL!.Y
. .
.. ..
'·
•
/ID WAV!.,. x 'tl-11..,1<.
ROPIS•JUMANG IS ,DUMB ••• 11T!i A
WASni. OF TIM.G
AND, r"R,>ifUSli I
"lo P>-RnCJPATE •
GRIMY 6ULCH A
NfWLOOK L =·~~~--1-
MUTT &-JEFF
-DOI? MAHA!
OH SOY, I'LL
"'\SAVI DO,
ALL THE
\' ·TIME!
FIGMEt·lT:i
nwti E£. *"'· 71' !
l-1~ ;,
" !'
NAfJCY
"1' .; ,,,_
~
I 'LL BUY THIS NICE
CARD' IN CASE I NEED
ONE SOME T IME
WELL
CARDS
TODAY'S CIDSSWDID PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Clc1triic
5 Man's name
1Q Sign
14 81ver1g1
15 Have····· in
one's throat ie Change th•
decor-
17 Wind·
menttring
instrument
19 Small
amount
20 Make 1till
21 Ending wilh
pen and cent
22 Play• 111 role
23 Go to ruin
25 Going apart:
Comb. form
26 Container
30 •Swedi1h river
31 Did wrong
34 Flirtetlous
sta1e1
36 Mikes
unpleisilnl
noi1es
38 There: l111n
'39Pr111:2
50 Make an
ell on
51 <lreek
island
53 Card
55 Adding
machine
product
56 Milita1y zone
61 Fish
62 Steel·m&k ing
-furn1ce
64 0111 herb
65 Use 1 saber
66 Cairy
67 Accoun1c;nl's
concern
68 lJS lur
merch1nl
69 N. American
Indian
Yesterday'• Puzzle Solved:
S J.J.R R OID
1 R E A E II A '.? B
Pl t BLIZ
11 01 merchan1s 37 fl.1 iniscule
12 Blue·pencil 40 Treiling plant.
13 Heads: Slang 41 Fireplace
DOWN 18 Not up·tO· p1oj1c!ion
date 46 Meetings
1 Sore 24 Chlli con·-· 48 Correct:
covering 25 Records Slang
2 Geometric 26 Juniors to 51 Fools
solid juniors: 52 Behold
3 Herring lnlormsl 53 Duck
<I ltin-g of 27 Be of the 54 Fame d
Thailand same mind gambling
!5 Wedged on 28 Bodies of cen1er
6 81ewma11er'1 patrons 55 Furnitur1
words produc1 29 Man's item
42 ···Haw 7 Concord: nictcnafl'le 57 Roman
1<13 ··-• b&r111I 2 words 31· Watering ·soldier
44 Firm 8 Polishing place 58 Gait
45 Guard ma1erie1. 32 A Fotd !59 German king
<17 B.P.0 .£. 9 Nimble 33 ooCuments 60 South
memba1 10 Confer holy of conveyarce Ko1ean VIP
49 lntects orders upon 35 Tale 63 Serg ., for one
I .-..,,.-,,3,..-r.-...., r.-.,,-''-i.,-,r.1--...--r 11 1 1
I •
' 17
•
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WELL, HOW CAN YOU.SAY
'/OUG~ALONG sowEU.:
lF YOU DISAGREE WITH
EVERYTl-llN'G SHE SAYS?
by Al Smith
OH . i DON 'T
TELLHER1
by Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
GRAB IT /!.S YQU GQ BY
PEANUTS
Al~ s;011oa11 FACES EAST. AND
50 l COilt.D 5Ef THE 51,11 CQ\\INo
UP ... ONL~,IT WASN'T THE SUN-
IT WAS A HVGE BASEBALL!
c.,
JUDGcPARKER
MISS PEACH
•
DICK TRACY·
l 'M A LITTLo
Nf.ltvOU5
ABOUT
ALL THO§&
5HOT!> ...
FF:ANKLY,
:t'M !YiN MOR!
AFF:AID TO
TtLL TH!
DOC T °"' :t'M AF/t.AJD ....
'
. "
GORDO
,..._
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
by Charles M. Schulz ...... ~~~--,~~~;.....,
I THINK l •Ml!St ll€ aAQ(IN6
or ... I THINK I'll\ FINAU.V lD5jN6
M~ MIND .. .ANDONlill'a' IT PJJ., . 1 FEEL T£!006l~ ALONE .•
JT~
YotAlt
TUF:N, .
A/CTHl.llt ...
AltlN"f
'!OL(
stAICl!07
by Mell
y5;, &I.IT I~ 'IOI.( HONIS'T'l.Y
TILL THli OO<:TOlt Y~'ll:I!
AFll:AID OF TM! SHOT'f, IT
~oes earrt" l'Olf '>II'!.(.
-JN C1flolllt WORDS,_
I~ VOL( T/ILIC, M&'LL jifANT
yO(,l IMML(NJTY ...
' I ( ... ,. ...... , . .... . . . -
'. -
.... J.~-
l
•
•'._,_ ,, .. •' .
... y Rci9er Bradfield
by Gu5 Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
by Roger B-ollen
TO '100," l'M ;J'U<:>T A I
&1\.1-tdlt>-COO Os:!ECT ~
THE GIRLS
. -
' .
"I always make a list of tblap I bav& to \IO eacb day-
11topplq ud a moYJe are so mucb more....enjoyah\J wbea
I CM aee euctly wl&at I'm gettla1 out of."
DENNIS THE MENACE
'
..
'
,--!/ .
Ii· " '
-,
Florida Chief Wins·
Askew; Son, Take 1st but Dad's · Buslied
I Frem'Wlfe 'Services flhn . ··~ Super Cops," .in _ JnOA. celebrat~ defectors, ~ 'IO; Lut yeaf', Kevin Askew Il~~lyn, said the weCfding Rodolpll Nveyev and Natalia
came in tblrd ln his Cub Scout "'ill take place In two weeks. &labrova, danced together at
1 pack's annµal father-and-son A spokesman for ~1etro-.
project, despite his entry of a Goldwyn.~iayer said the two Covent Garden 10 London .
~.mod rocket to the moon . have known each other for 14 'Phe Royal Ballet brought
'Ibis year, Kevin, 10, und his years. Miss Young is a former the two together on stage fo.r
father, Gov. ReMbln Askew' of slOry editor ror Parks. the first time since Nureyev ~lcrida, took flrst place, reach-left the 'Sovll! Union In 1961. !~--~',.°'-~c~ Il]ore than u century_ _ . 2 = * .. ,;., .. MataroY&...-who..Jiefected .
,
...
I • DAILY PILOT ZJ
Nevada Platatwrs -I
3Ne,fLakeTahoe
Hotels Proposed
CARSON CITY, Nev. I AP)
-Proposals for three new
hotel~aslnos on the south
shore or Lake Tahoe -tolal-
i more than 2:000 rooms -
2,4.S.T until the Environ-
mental Protection Ag-ency
h61ds hearings en the chtmlcal
this fall.
In a split decision, the board -"'i.'Onitl'Uc-.-model-oh SWe<lish actres'l B r 11 > --"'"~
primitive 1 8 5 1 l~e-1naking Eklund is rQCkabyi ng a ne,; 1970, d1~11Cflt ' ' ~ r I n.c es. s
machine, a }orerunner of baby boy \Vho's been named Aurora for the f1.rst .hme·1n
'--.:..----ih:.lali.ve:.:'..be~cn. tnk.i'n ~under stu1y
by a Nevada Tahoe Regi onal
Pl<11U1ing Agency pane I
(NTRP,\~.
\·atea-3-<ro !"to-submll-tf:l~-r·.:----1
quest to the Forest Service,
modem .~errlgeralion and air Nicholal Eklund Adler. London.
cooditiorung. . The father is reco!'d-and The Daily Telegraph said
The governor .stayed up unttl film producer Lou Adler, l\1iss her dancing with Nureyev was ~
3:30 a.m. the night before the F.klund's constant companion "a wonder to bel!old." The
,--------..., for two years. Times said the partnership
( P Op 1111 J ~flss Eklund has R d(l ught:?r was "Interesting, although E L1:1 b~, her ex-husband, British ac-possibly too co1npetitive to.
.., ______ _..,..__.,---: -tor Peter Selltrs. last."
. * * I .
project \V<JS due. The next day,
he failed to make a schedulei..I .
public appearance, sending a
stand-In.
An1erican pianist v a n Track star Jesse CN·eos,
Cliburn arrived in l\1anila for describing himself as "an
concerts at the C u I t u r a I American first and a black
the Centerofthe "PhilippinesFri-'man second,'' said "I was just bushed,"
serilor Aakew reported.
' Ul"I TtlffltOltl
Pool Pool da.v and Saturday. predominantly black collegeS J
P re 1 Iden t and Mr1. "are not necessarily such a After. a helicopter ·dropped a new pool table into tile 17-foot depths of the De FerdlnliDd E. Marcos honored good idea." ' *
111e proposnls fJ r
al!hoogh thz board has no
jurisclicticn over forest ser\'ice
activi ties. t~e ~9.t-The action came after the
,.---------.. board heard Crom David L.
( ECOL.OGY i~rank, chairman of t_h• F rcsno Committee.. for Sc1en--
. -i'.ifie-lnfonnation, and-Richard
Haas. a biology professor at
Cal State Fresno. Both. told
the euperviSQrs the chemical
has caused birth defects in
la boratory anima.ls.
e ClarlflcatloK
SACRAMENTO (AP ) Th•
San Francisco Bay area. and _ The-White !louse .fonnall}'
• annOunced that President Nix-
,:. ... will fly to Pekin. Ill. Friday
ottbum with a dinner-at. the u'I'he black scbools.=were-8 Ama College pool in C_upertino, Calif., scuba dlvers Leslie Smith (port) and
Presidential Palace with a natural outgrowth of blacks , Ari Lambert (starboard) -t6en adOresseUthelableJ n a S\Ylrt-o-f bubbles. The
r'X:m l'ark Tahoe Hotel. I.000.
r!lotn Hotel Oliver and 560--
roorn Tahoe Palace Hotel
\\·cre rcfe1Ted to a sub-
committee for e\,aluation of
such data as environmental
in1pact and traffic problem'!
involved in the Stateline c:::n·
struction p\'ans.
The Dooglas-e.tmty--€om·
mission has appro\'ed the
hotels on the candition thnt
traffic problems along U.S. 5ll
in the mountain resort area be
solved before the n e w
buildings are occupied.
II l!tli:t.-"~ _rt ion~ 7o ~-
California rivers v.wld be
fu r111ally excluded f r o m
co\'crage by California's new
-t oastal commissions unde?-a
to ~veil the cornerstone of ltie EY'°ett McKJlllley Dirksen
Co D gr essional Leadership
Relearch Center.
-Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said Nixon will make
brief remarks at the center .
lht>iled number of guests. .searching for some sort of an event presaged the' college's annual comn1unity sport.S fair.
Pi1rs. 1-farcos invited the identity," the four-time goJd -----'--~-----"--------'-'--------,---
Arnerican artist wheri they medal winner in the 1936
met In Washington thiS year.. Olympics told 273 graduates or R ·1 · p E . . . 1 / ·, * OtterbeiliCollegeinOhio. u n1g uts BYirOilmenta '
Tu•o of the Soviet Union 's * _ _ .
lbiU sent to the Senate.
./ · e _WaJer C11t
\\
1hich will be a repository for .----------. reference · material on
Adm. Elmo R. Zumwalt,
chief of naval operations, was E c • • · c fl• ~J~~·re~~'"'le;~:O'~ . nergy rises Ill ·on 1ct LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A
state appeals court has
ordered Los Angeles to cut
back consumption of water
Assen1blyman Alan Sieroty
~ D-Beverly Hills) said his
1neasure was a "technical
cleanup·•-to Prop. 20, the
Coastline Initiative approved
by voters last November. Congress and congressional
lea.den, when it is completed
in the summer of 1974. ·
The center is named jor the
late Republican Sen:ite leader
In whost home town it is being
bullt.
* 1i)e most \\'idely ~no\\'n
member of the graduating
_ class of 1908 at Kern High : j; School in Bakersfield rf;!turncd
';.., to reminisce with six former
;:~ classmates. !!,~ Fornier Cl:iief Ju'ltice Earl il$ Warren. 82. attended the 65th
aMlversary of ~is hi~h schqol
' ~ graduating · cta'Ss prior to
\' delivering the commencement
exercise addre!!s at Cal State
BakO!l'Sfi•ld. ... * Gordon Parks. director or
the movie "Shaft," plans to
_ marry Genevieve Young. \'ice
president of Lippi.ncQtt
!·Publishing Co.
Patks:-wno-is directing the
*
..
\
Pretty
Chicke1i
COTATI I APl -A pro-
posal to run city cars on
methane ~as fro1n chicken
manurt is being con· .
sidered by the Cotati City
Council.
The council endorsed a
plan by six Sanfn Rzy.i-.
Juni.or College students
"'ho "'ant to establish a
meth11.ne plant. But the
body denied .a request to
give a quarter acre of the
municipal compcund to
build a pilot plant.
The students contend
i7 ,000 can be saved each
year by converting huge
?mounts of chicken ilrop.-
pings into methane to
operale the city's 12 of-
ficial vehicles.
, .
graduation exercises on the
Elliott campus or United
States"lnternational University
in San Diego.
The honorary degree \l.'ilS.
presented by USIU Presideilt
\Villiam C. Rusi:"who cited the
major revisions Zumwalt has
s p ea rh eaded .in Navy
discipline.
*
\\'ASHJNGTON (AP \ -The
environmental movement ap-
pears bound for a head~ col-
lision with the. energy crisis
because of ~1onday's U.S.
Supreme Court defense ol pure
· air. •
At the urging of the Sierra
Club and o'ther en-
Heart transplant pioneer . vironmentalists, the Sut>reme
Cbristiaao Barnard has put Court upheld a .lower-court
the ·scalpel to politics In South decision that the Clean Air Act
Africa. of 1970 f or.bi d s any
It had been reported ~everal "significant deterioration" o{
months ago that be might be existing pure air.
willing to run for Parliament. 7
But Barnard confirmed that SPOKES~tEN F 0 R err
he had become dejected over vironmentalists and industry
politics and would ttick to said the ruling m'y bar co!l-
medicine. struct\on .of coal-fired electric
He did not elaborate o.n his generating plants, at ltast Ull-
disillusionmtnt. but added: til n~w technology can be
"'MleYliiven'tinvente<l a par· develOped·to clean them.up.
"ly for me yet." 1.iafry Moss, vice president
J
WE'VE GOT
IT ALL
TOGETHER
from the !M'ens Valley -the
of Sierra Club, said en-Association. said Congress source of one-third of the
vironmental groups anticipate must revise the clean-air law city's water supply.
a major effort by the coal and immediately. The 3rd AppeUrite District
J>l)\\'er industries to get I.n the meantj.nie, ·non-Court in Sacramento issued
Congress to ameod the Jaw degradation is the law, and the the ruling. ordering the cit~ to
and remove t h e "non· . E n v i ronmental Protection cut pumping at its 70 \Veils in the Bishop-Lone Pine area to
...£-• Agency is d~wing up regula-the level on Nov. 23, 1970, the
(
. ) lions to carry it out, expected date the Ca 1 i for n i a NEWS ANALYSIS to be effective sometime alter EnvironmentaI1Quality Act of
_ ·! , June 30. _ 19i0 took effect.'
degradation" st'andard, wtiiCh
the courts say it OO\V imposes.
Said f\.1oss : "This is probably
the most important ell-
vironmental decision in the.
history oC the movement. We
are prepared to go t o
u'flatever extent is necessary
to make sure this is not
reversed in C.ongress." ·
EVEN. BEFORE ~toss was
jnterviewed, Carl E. Bagge.
president or the National Coal
•
A spokesman for ~PA ~id The appeals court upheld a
the agency must s~I _d~f1ne suit filed by Inyo Counl)f
the .amo~nt of ~1gn1f1c~nt demanding tha{ Los Angeles
deter1orat1on of air quality · curtail its pumping oi:eraticns
that may be surpassed. pending the filing of an en-
~toss SAJD the Sierra Club
and its allie~ have suggested
that additional pollution in
relatively clean-air regions be
limited lo no more than about
10 percent of existing pollution ·
levels, dov"n to a minimum
allowance of about rour or five
mK:rograms per cubic meter.
vironmental j m p a c t state-
ment, as required by the act.
e Curb Asked
FRESNO (AP) The
Fresno County Board o f
Super9isors has asked the U.S.
Forest Service to hold off us-
ing the controversial defoliant
•
Sieroty said, his !ollowup bill
claii fieJ portions or the ill-
itiali\•e \\1hich foes said would
bring broad ·pieces ·of inland
property · under the permit
authority of the nC\v coastal
commissions. 11:;
e Paper Pickup
BERKELEY (AP) -The
Berkeley City Councll ·has •I>"
proved a recycling plan "'hicti
calls for the ·n10nthly col·
lection of curbside newspape't
bundles.
An environmental group,
The Ecology CeOter o f
Berkeley, \\'ill operate tht.
recycling project. 'lbe center
said it negotiated a six-month
contract to deliver t he
ne\vsprlnt to a local paper
mill.
The colleqion is scheduled
t!l start Juhe 18 and stipulatt1
that the bundles 'be no thicker
than-12 inches .
DAILY PILOT
*THAT INCLUDES EVEN NEW CHANNEL 50, SAN DIEGO'S 6, 8 AND
I
'
10 AND -s-ANT A -aA~-BAR·A·S-~· CHANNEL-3· ~ '-'fOTAL -TELE·V-ISION'. ~
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•
Yes, TV .WEEK now cjives v.qu ·a weekly summary of upcom1n'Cj "'programs on Orange
County's new KOCE-~V (Channel' 501 every Sunday, along with hour-by-hour listings
of what's doing on San Diego's channels 6, 8 and 10 and Santa Barbara's Channel l -'
(VHF listings also . appear in . the Daily Pilot's daily television listings). With the help
of. our friends at TV WEEK, the Daily Pilot got it all together. Now we offer read·
ers, 'especially those In the South· Orange Coast a,rea and all others on community
cables who can P'lll in .all the signals there are In the Southland, 'Total Television',
.. ._... L --<
he most comp ete newspaper listing of television fare ayailable. , -. ' • . . .
Iyer~ Sunday· in .TV We~el(-E·very Day in .Daily TV i.Q,g . ·.)
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22 DAILY PILOT Tutsd•y, Ju~ 12, 1973 . .
' •
Announfemcnt' • • • ~ • • 500 • 524
Au!Otl\Obila •••••••• ~ -990
led• & Morine~ 900-914
The Biggest 'Marketplace on the· Orange Coast ' . MobiM: • ...,.,. for .. • • ' 1'2.S • M9
P•nonol1. , • . • • . • • . SlS • 54~
P111 ond ~!ft .•• • • ·MO -199
Rtol E"ote c;.-oi. • • • • ISO • 199
Idol . • • . • • . . • • • :JOO -499
Scnool& ond !Nhut:tiorl ••• SlS • S99 *""" ancl Repair• • • • • 600 • fR9
(u~nt , , • • , • • , 100 • 799 DAILY PllOI CLASSIFIED ADS
Flnonc:ial • • • • • • • , • 200 • m
ttcir.n.H for Solt • , • , • , 100 • 114
LOllt & Found • • • • • • • 5.SO -574
~thondise ••••.••• 800. 849
You Can Sell It, Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678} One Cal I Service
Fast Credit Appr~I Tronsportotion. • • • • , • , 9lS -949
ERRORS. Advertisars should check th•I,.
1--l~ly.-I..<-' ~~l~ Tho
DAILY PILOT auumes .liability for the first
Incorrect insertion only. Genera l
l~! _,,._
l
Hol.ul for Rw.t '~---[ ...... _ ...... _,~
Gen.rat
A"4t<M-SM/d
~ ~ASSGCIATIS
REALTORS
c~ EAST'COllSTHIGHWAY-, * CORONA DEL MAR. CAUF. * * * * * 644·7270 * TAYLOR Co * I •••.••••••
. • e FOREVER VIEW .
BIG CANYON C .~.-4124,500
Spectacular open beam ceilings. Large
rooms & a terrific floor plan in thi s 5 bed·
room borne. Family room, formal dining
room & 3 baths. 3 Fireplaces & 3-<:ar garage.
Fine c;arpeting & drapes. Quick possession.
Watch the boats by day and harlior lights
by night from your liv ing roon1. The ULTl-
AtA TE in FEE ownership, luxury on·the--
water living. 2 Bedrootns, 2 bath condo in
prestigious CHANNEL REEF. Pool. securi-
ty' guard, boat sli p available. CALL FOR
appointment, $95,000.
''qur 28th Year" • • • • • • • • •
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors• WANT TO BUILD? '
2111 Son Jo.oquin Hills Rood . ROOM TO BUILD second UNIT on this
"Overlooking Big Canyon -Country Club" large corner lot. 2-bedroom house, carpet$,
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 drapes. fenced yard in Newport Heights.
General General · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ! · • • • • • · · · • • • • • $33,500.
"A HOME FOR ALL REASONS"
Excellent Mesa Verde Cul-de-sac \vith room
for boat or trailer. Bright and cheerful with
dream kitchen,. large fa1nily room, 3 big bed-
rooms, 2 baths and covered patio. Don't
worry about the. gas shortag~ here -walk
to shopping, schools, bus, etc. Ready for your
· inspection. , . ·
WOODLAN.D ••. KAISER • • HARBOR
if yo·u like these schools, we have the home
for you -large 4 bedroom, 2 bath, family
room home with beautiful front kitchen,
drive-thru garage, boat Or camper storage.
1800 sq ft, in excellent con.di tion. Price only
$38,900. First time advertised -won't last
..,_,.,,. HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
General
BAYSHORES
This is the real Ne\vport!
Private stre£'ts and privale
beaches. Cozy \vell n1ain·
tainell hc1n1es each loaded
v;ith 1·h11 nn and in-
dividuality. This I \\' o
bcdrootn • "l'ulie.. w o u I d
make a grca1 rental or your
pernvu1(•nt hon1e. $56.500.
2S51 BayshorC"s Dr. 0 1>e n
Sal. l -5 1>.Jll. 67a-72"..5.
YOU WON'T
BELIEVE IT
till you see it. 3 be<lroo ms •
l1.t11:CSt kitchen in Costa
l\·lesa. R-2 lot $23,950. Call
646-ilil for proof.
OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN TO BE NIC£1
THE REAL
ESTATERS.
Need a "Pad"? Pl:.1<·e :in ;id'
546-5880
Open Eve5.
General
ALL .WE ASK
is you sec what we feel is one of the
finest Lu sk 1·1.V. 3 Bdrms., offered in a
Jong time. $88.000. Fee. It's a beaut. Call
now. Jim Muller
, BUY-LEASE-RENT
Good assortment fee bayfront homes.
$!97,50!f. -$79,500. Lease 4 BR. -den year
round $2,000/Mo. Rent 3 BR. $400/Wk. Bill
Bents
PRIVATE ~PRESTIGE
J\e\11 Lake Forest Li sting. Popula r Deane 4
bd rm. 2-story chalet, on select estate sized
lot. Ai<·conctitioned, tool $.55,000. P. Hallock
OCEANFRONT!
Surfside colony. Private, gated comm. T\\•o
huge rock fireplaces, interior wood panel ed.
I Bedrooms, 2 baths. $82,500. Carol Tatum
IVAN W,ELLS -Bj\YCREST
Lots of charm in this 4 bdrm . ., forn1at din·
in g rm. home. Bright !am. rm. overlooking
pool. 31> Ba. Courtyard entry. $87,500. Va-
cant. Mary Lou Marion
E XCLUSIVE IRVINE TERRACE
A tpvely 4 bdrm.,•4 bath supe r sharp family
h0;tllc.' Huge poolsizcd tot. Lovely gardens
ti play yards. You own the land. $94,000.
Gall Geo. Grupe
83J.a700
644-2430
--I Coldwell.Banker
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR ., N.B,
•••••••••
SWIM ... in• this IB'x36' heated POOL.
Great EASTSIDE location! Close to West-
cliff shopping. 3 Bedroom, convertible den,
2 baths, fireplace, plus ROOM TO ADD ON.
tO t?O down -owner will carry 10% -2nd
T.D. $39,500. Call for appointment.
•••••••••
I OKI\ I L Ill \II\
R • 4 , c' ~· '
OLDER ~ t'J4 500 * BUT SO NICE ~ . oil I 2m "I· fl .. 3 br. homo -not
Out-ot-tawn owmT S(.'CkfnR just a holL<Je • \1:ith (uJI di n·
lmn11-d.latc sale en his EAST· ing room on quJet trcr·llncd
S!OE 3 'bedroom, 2 bath ~l'Cf'I . Owntr lt'l.Y• '1ttll" Ill
homt! "1th all ~ conven-$30.IXK> ienc,... Splllcloos yard w/ \VAUCER & LEE Rtaltors
almo!ct 10,000 eq. ft. Anx1ot.18 ~
_,,. ..
A U/'llllClUI: tl()MI:
PEACEFUL RETREAT. A beautiful .pool
and picturesque gardens make this a serene
and secluded three bedroom home, yet per-
fect for enterJalning. High ceilings, garden
atriums and dramatic skylights add to the ef-
fect. Definitely roomy. Prestigious Dover
Shores location. Now presented a t ,1~:500.
UNl9UI HOMES OP: NEWrOIT llACH, '45-6500
A llstl111 of IGrt Joe.obs...
'
Ullli!l()UI: tl()Ml:S
REALTORS,
General ~enerat
' .JJa1·bor Uew ..Jh/~
3 BR-family rm.-ocean view, pool. $9~,000
We have listings of many other homes
Call us f~~ your needs J
-CORBIN-MARTIN
' . REALTORS Call Anytime 64 .. ·7662
Gener el
TREE SHADED
ROOM TO
ROAM
Cozy, ideal, 3 bedroom home
on quicf. set·luded tree-lined
cul-de-sac street for boats
or can1pcrs. Quality copper
pluinblng, stainless steel
rl ivifled sink \\•ith ne\\'
disposal. Neat clean, move
in ready. $26,950. Call today,
don't delay. 546-;J13.
~eneral
LIDO ISLE
New listing on Lido Soud
A small
l\ff!dilerranean villa
with 2 bedroonu; and
3 baths
Nice sunny patio with
complete privacy
55 ft. Jot
Furnishing s can be
purchased
·1100.000
HAl'tllOl't
[Irvine I -··--1!¥1 .. ~11,c-p • ., I
HI °""1 Ditw Mt•HH ,.
OUR 24TH YEAR
Offering Service
Only Experience
Can Provide
SPACIOUS 4 BEDROOMS
Newly carpeted & decorated, with lge. fanli·
Jy rm. Carpeting is luxurious & the wall·
paper expensive. lmmac. in & out with beau-
tiful landscaping. $64,500 .
NEWPORT BEACH· 2 BR·· $29,SOO
Corner location on ~ge. street to-alley lot.
Recently completely painted inside. An ex-
ceptional bargain for this area.
* * SACRIFICE * *
LA CUESTA VERDE HOMES
in Laguna 1-Iills has 2 homes back on the
market because of credit reject ions.
Both have cozy kitchens and family rooms_
plus 3 BR's. & 2 BA. One has a fireplace.
Quick. possession. Excellent conventional
financing av]!il able. ..
$31,000 ond $31 ,SOO
MAKE US AN OFFERll
Call J erry H a rd in or J oe Wilhit e
714: 544-8012 • •
Gener•I
DEEP BLUE SEA
JUST A SHORT BLOCK from this near new
Newport Duplex. 3 & 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
upgraded owner's unit with ocean view,
shag carpets & beanl ceilings. You couldn't
replace it !or $105,000. Just listed.
JUST LISTED
QUALITY BUILT Eastside Costa Mesa, fresh·
ly redecorated 3 bedroom home. Hardwood
floors, cozy fireplace, new carpets, near
shopping. $30,750.
#,.-HERITAGE
, • REALTORS
General
540-1151
Open EvM.
G'neral
-$32,900
CLOSE TO
EVERYTHING
General
HIGH ON A HILL
OCEAN VIEW
Ho11• v.'Ould you like to O\\'.n
U1i:s n1agnlflcent home that
!:leis on 11 private. street with
Purk-llke surroundings over-
looking the Pacific Ck'l·!tllt"
1.Yoo i:ntgbl eJ1:pccr-to pay a
king's 1'1U1.SOn\ but you would
he surpri~ 10 learn that
it's only $29,500. l-Jurry and
call 842-2535.
li.11~~$fii
RENTERS SPECIAL
Large 4 Bedroom lfome with
2 Baths and l'ireptace . Ne\\'
Hot \\'11.tC'r Henter. Walk to
Schools and Shopping. CUI-!
ile-sac Street. LDw f\1ainten-1
1 nn('c Yard. Space for Boat
S1ora!{C'. All for S25,600. Calll
nnytin1c, &16-{655.
HOME & BUSINESS
4 &~lroon1, 2 lialhs, double
garaJ;e. $30.000. • Besl of
tern1s.
LARGE FAMILY?
5 Bedroom, 2 baths. Close to
shoppl n,1!:. S31.500.
NEED SECURITY?
3 BNlr00111 honu~ fully car-
JW'lcd, rcccntly p11l11ted.
Lnrge f'nelosNI sunporch,
fencl?<I front & hack ynrd ,
roon1 for boat. Qu ie t street.
$27,500.
Roy McC•rdle Re•ltor
1810 Ne\\'port Bl"d" C.]\f.
541-n29 .
Ultimate in
California Uvincl
\\'e h av<' .V('l(J ~I· ft. Of
cu~ton\ prestig<' and qua.llty
on l, •·~ 11c1'.'. OlrPring total
privacy \vith 1n"Ofessk>nal
J an<ls c apln£. 6 b~
b<'<ltoon\s, 31:'.t bath.!, 2·1ove-
ly fin>pl11('('S, Lriple car
garagf' and a ,;cw of
evt'rything. \'ou'vc got to
see this hon1e~ $73,900.
Phone 545--0465 for showlng.
NPT. HTS. AREA
CORNER DUPLEX
$41,500. DREAM
COME
TRUE
Golt course, schools, and
shopping are close at hand ..
The owner is ready to give
up thfs sunshiny home
located on a blg \\'ell-
landscaped lot. so take ad·
vantage! Call 847-«110.
('NUF SAIO-CALLl
Newport
at
Fairview
646-1111
(1nytlrno)
Dream Home
EASTSIDE· C.M.
4 BEDROOMS, new carpets,
repainted etc. SPARKWNC
Convenience
Private l(lf'>:arcl, t~nnisJ pail<. \\1iil o 9rn001s.,S hop-
ping and bicycle lo the
beach? 4 Bedrooms "'·ith 2
luJI baths for only $25,360.
Or assume FllA loan with
payments of S209, includes
~~sher/drye r &
r cfrigerator. Immaculate
hon1e inside & out! Pho~
545·(M65 for more details.
C wALl(fH p, Lll
*** GINNY ...... M* MORRISON ~w.:.:: REALTORS
....... 557-4130
N EW TRIPLEXES
IN COSTA !\t ~SA
3 Bdrm., 1* Bath
2 Bdnn., l \.i BaU1
1 Bdrm .. % 8111h
10% 00\VN
Orongo County
Apartment "
RH I tors 547-6791
$17,000.
NO MORE
In gorgeous Irvine Gor'lteou.t Very clean 3 b1·/dcn & work
yard . 3 bcdroorm, Pat io. BALBOA ISLAND shop In , l'<!11r. Lots of
Modern kitchen -w Ith You'll be proud, to own thtf 3 prlvucy '11 th ch1tln·llnk frn·
buill-11\8. Pining room. Cen· br, 3 ba home. Inter-com cc around lhl• chnn-nlna
fl'fl.I air conatUonlne. Cu thru-<MJt, centrally located home! Price is nrm -but
BBQ. Oen wtrh bullt 1n b&r. paUo, larse br1c:k tirplc In et11Y flnan<:lng. •
Bcaulltul interior. $29,950. tl\lll. rm. 4 room)' double WALKER & LEE Rcl\ltors
Brk. 54().-1720'--ga~ + l bl'. -Apt. ~ ...
' '
• contc and ~ • 1111bmh Any dny la Ule BEST DAY to
1er1ns. CAU. 6~5 ·8 4 24 !'Un nn Adi Don't delay ••
St>ulhCo Rtaltors. · ~ .cftll loday 642-5678.
114411ot1t:Al1lltlr IU•ltOO
Newport ... ch,C1Ur0fnl11281S TARBELL $134,500. ' . The .. nnow p._..,.. ol
want ad re1un:i •.• 6'12·~711 Berry Rea lty 67~5179 clas11lticd, ... 6'1~. -•
~----.. . . ,~, '
'\
•
' ' futsd1y, Junt 12, 197S.> OhllV PILOT 23 ••• I -I
I~ I l~I i~I I~ [ ]~ [ ..A.. ''!. S.•le )~I Re.! l1tat.. I~ _.., .... _ ..... -"" .... HouMilotSM c.w• [ ~lrt:>EX }-1-,.....( --.. -, ..... -...]~ I
~;;;;;;~.:.1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i:;;;;1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;11~iiiiiii~~;ii;;;;;;;ComrnercJ1I
[ Ro•r ..... for .. J[e j ;;;E;l;,T;:o;ro;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;E;;l;:T;;o;;r;;o;;;;;:;;;;;;:= \ Huntlnglon Beach -.. "' ••• · ···· · ·· ·· '" fi t 1
1
GI NO DOWN ....... ,,,, ... "'" ""'-• .. llt
_,. "'m" "' '"' · · '" 5 p ", • poo $27 750 .. _ ... N •••••••••••.• >M ..... 0 • o
•rt-n ,., wl• .......... in 3 BR, 2 fl BA. rco.lly &in ll'lill"I PNIM'f)' .• ·.".. •• •• IM , c-.twy ~11crrM• , . . . . . . u• . home or. a nice cul·de-sa.c c.m-rd•1 ,,.,.,,.,. ........ 1.M Elegant 2 story home with gorgffUS dHp slreet. \Vhc.q you drive up c.......w11111m1 hr .. ,, . , .... ue h 11 1 d · lo• sunny •"-1--" · · Dvtt1U..,.U111 .... h ........... 1'1 , I 19 Cll'fM ng, CUI om riper , u.., w1u!leap1ng u1 s uper
"''"" .. " _., ............. 164 kitchen ind pool tibia 1111 f1mlly room siuirp, and in the back )'llrd
llK•-,...,_.., ······· ....... 1" I _, I ~a lrg cov'd palio f0t· B·B-Q ,,....,,..., ,.,.'9n.,. ........... ua overloak sparkling he1ted ind fl ter9U poo • T I
L..t• ttr .., ................... 1" Thi I 1 d h S 1 & relaxing. o a vet \V no
MitMlt N•Me1Tr1U1r '•rte• ... ,, s ' 1 1tunn ng ecor1tor ome. ee o do\\•n on loan the paynl'!s or
Mtv11••111• o.....r. lteMrt .... iu appreciate. $56,900. $225 '"'ill cover n.11. Cl.'PISS & Or•lltl Cl. '"'""1 .......... Ill 837 9400 0111 If 11111 '~rtv ........ 111 Bkr. .. drps a~ in gd 1,.-ond. A tun. ••"'*· "•'"'" .,.y" . . . . ''°r!!"!!!""'l"'""""""""""""""O!"'~"':~~""""""""""•j~~'a~·~"~"-'·m=r~ ~ .... ,_ ...... ••~111•~. n od
11111 •••••• W•"'"' ·••· •••·• 1'4 Gener11I Cost• Melli t a.y. =:::::=:::::=· 1•' . 531·5110 ( r.::J 531·5108
1llage Re;il Estate '~-'-"""_"' _ _,J~1
PROBLEMS _ .~ SELLiNG YOUR
•11•1Mt• o""""'""" .......... too HOME l 1t1ln"1 Wl'!ll.. .. •........••• ii• TRY llivnlrlllfll OP,.rhrnlly ..... , ttO
lnff,l!Mflt W•nl" ............ 1~ -_,, • .... , ····· ········· '" "E"'UITY M-'I' W1n1M ............... 110 ,, Mesa Verde Speclel
4 BR & fem rm for only M ......... TN" ............ ·~ 1' PUR"CHASE
-PLAN"
R.,lals J[ ,S 11 $33,950
c_.._ _ __, l\°all.e» Coll 963-5611 I Picture yourself
COLLLC:F. P.i rk -1\ssume
I
living in this
Meredith Monsion
ONLY $49,950
3 BR, 2\S BA , laund1-y roon1.
lgc fan1 rn1, brklsl roon1.
ronnal dining, 't>ntry hall,
inuuaculate grounds. Call
963-5611. '
'j!.11 GOOD\\'IN
j COMPAr-.,v
7',i.. V.Ji. loan. $3000 tot.al tln. ~-·11n.
$.harp :: HR. 2 BA,. fllll1ily 1n11 lroakhurst St.~ --
nn, frplc. $33,900. O\\'l"ler. f04lntain Vittley Ca. 92708
Gl6-Jj\4 nr l~l'.:l 6Sj-9T:iO. 714 963-5611
BR home. ~·rouidcd hy • RY o\\1ier -1'\11\y up;.,'l"aded 3 i •-:;:;:;:;::;:::;~:;:::::
~----~ 1"'" "'"'"~''·· n ",.,.' ' JUST LISTED -" 11iiJ1 ENJO"\' OUR \fEH.1· O\VN S.tl.950. 5\G-46-18 .
. PARl-i:, pools. 11 u t t I n g El Toro Glen :vl:tr 3 BR. 2 BA, firepl.
gi't'f!n5, etc. Spa"ious nil fan1 rni, bltin rangi:o. dbl
Anno.inc1<n.nt1 HO I ·-· 3 B 2 ba -ndo O\l°NE:R. transre1"rf'd, nn1st o\·en, dsh\\·shr. pll'nty of C•tlll •' "Tll1lllr1/lft M1metiiii.,;" JOJ e ecull", r, "" t
L."•I Notkt• .....•....•• s10 hon\(> in csct>I adult con1· sacrifit"t' inunetl. Io\' e I y cupboards, llC\\.' \\'/W crp s
L--
Auto tr•"sp0rt•110,1 ....
"e•111i11111 •.•.•.
Secl•I Cluh• "Tr1 v1t
niunity. Lux u r i o us ap. :mR 2BA fani rm, frplc, & drps. c.'1Jvcred pario,
pointnil'nls. Call Denison a.tc 1y,•ate1-' softener, dbl gar,
1
ldscpg. X.lnt c.-ond. $30,900.
1-l•l Assbc. lx·l111-e it 's too late. 111a~v 'xtra features, 2 fnced fo'P. Sl5.1() total d11 paymt.
67:'rTJtl ("O\'f'i·l'd , patios, I us h Payn_11s lt'ss than rent. Xlnt
lnd.~cpini::. ~~ ncrc. Sad· I locallon.
I Victorian Manor .. 11lch:tt:k VU, n1· schli;, !1111111'.'d ., •
..• ·.: •.. 1~.~.·, 1 2 Story $21,000" ()(..'Cup. El Toro Rrl to ·• , 1 • • i\1uirlands, No11h \Vest lo • •••
···· '4~ I ~l~ls.~i\·t· '1 s1ory Victorian .. 5 J-:,ltrallos, Ri~ht 10 24572 t6Z..4471 ( '""'· J
Ued1oon1 s, parlor & n1us1c Co11a Cresta Or Open lr-------,J[gj ~1111. F1J!1nal dining. \Vi~d· house y,·eekends. ~ THE F~'!KNCISCAN-
1 I.oil~ l 111~ s1a1rcase. Park·hke ,.,. A peep thru the .dra.Pf'rics
'1 gro1n1d!';. Agl'n1 &&-0."'.ffi. Fount•in 'V11lley re\·enls a Champagne style
I :-iLPER, 1740 sq . ft . j>ool . Attached to the '°""" Ur" -"•I .. ., .... ··· SJ! 101\·nhousc--O('('an \•ie\.,·-good draperies is a 2600 sq.ft.
L.tJt ···•· •· ...... " · ss. ·al1.•a·S45.000. Ct1rdiff. Ca. home ,,·/green shag carpet,
J ! GUNTHER REAL TY forn1l din. a hu!o!c fam :rn1. l{l•l 71-1·75.1·63~:-i or il-l-T":>.>-1151 Reducl'<l to $55,900. IMtructlon For PERFOR~IANCE I ~------1 B:~•~<ko...::B~•~Y_____ 96.1-56~
~=~k~ .1~11r~IOtll\ ·.• ... ~. ~~ i BRAND NEW HOMES ,~~:is~u!4a~:~~Tg!'at
' . . A RARE FIND! IJC11ne for the young exa"U·
' t;1·l•at t-:a~!srd.-. l..ocation I . tiv.-. \\'ho cn!ertains a Jot,
[ ]~ ! 2:>2. 26"2. 27-l'. 22n<l St., C'.\t V•ry Exc;lusive Ar••. lrg fnm rrn. a fonnal dining s.mc. and "9pWt Large J BR. 2 B.\. fan1 rm, This ~l~l' has everytlung. rni. Only $46,950. (,UJ... •
. . !pie. .Approx 1800 sq. f1. <>ven a llbrary 1\i th pal~t 846-13Jl. or 847-S531
S11"1'k1 Dlre<Mry .............. .oo C1 p1:1. drps, lnd:o;cpcl. fncd. floors, dble. BBQ, overhead "'========~
All inl·h.1tlt'<L 90'; ill11UlC· hlrs In pat_io, heated/t!Jteryd -
Ing!? Dl"t\'e by ! ? ! sci! c!ean111g pool and Jn· , . =---..:
J111 W•"'"'· Mtlf .....•..... 100 64t).~(12 or &i;;.UJii cuz:r.i. 2 !\la.~ter bedrm11, _4 • ,
JM W•"'"'· l'•m•I• .. ·· ..... 101 Coron• del Mar batluoon1!1, )'1JU must see 11 = /. , . , . -..:: Jebl W•"'"'' MAI' ·· ···· ··· '~ 10 belJC'\'c it!! All of this -
H•IJ ••"'"'· MAI" ....... no * NEW DUPLEX *I is orrcr'Cd for only IMMEDIATE
Huntin9ton Beach L119un1 a..ch -Newport &e11ch Property 151 * ALLEY ENTRY Top Of tho World OCEANFRONT! CORONA
Ila.ti blw: parkillJ::, pad for Illgh above the Pacific. ! Tyv-lcAJ oldrr beach /ront du· DEL MAR
extra \'ehlclcs • Freti:h £: Uedroo1ru, ~ 'baths. ,Louye ptcx • oUei-etl at· 1.Mud value
clean! 4 BR, 2 BA home. lrultlaci!-ped itl'()Unds. ~ an1l.ly only. O"'tlert Ott! \"~ ll\0-Build "·hut you v.·a.nt on this
Close to beach, 11Chlii & m1 .. fireplace. Orean1 kit· i1vu1 .. d. Pllm$'-' fiUbmlt ult rut't" 1ZU' fJ6l't.'f:i. Good cor.
s lx>ps, Best buy at $2~.950. 1.:hc:n. l...ot1 oC p1·!\'n<·y! ollt>I". au 675-72'25. nc.r locallun S'>uth of 1-llgh· ~~HPET, REAL.TORS, $J6,000.T~~~~i..T3~ IA'ay. Call lod&y! 67~72'i5.
B'l Owner-Prestige !\Iodel * OCEAN \'LE\V • POOLS 1800. 4 hr, extra v.•it:!e lot, lluge, ocean view Uv. nn, * LA CUESTA, BIG 4 BED· side guies for boat or \\'/fl'pl: din. area. 2 BH,
I can1,..,..., Nr. schls, -.it crse. d••> + guest rm \\'/IV "00,,1 3 "-th, San ?.ligue, .,... ....,.. · n uu bch, park. 17ln Greenleaf Ca•~ tl·-·out Cental kit only 18 months old. Quality ,.. "" · ·
l«tl ~-ompleto \\rith &lide. I ~L='~":':· :840-0:':':'~'::'·===== \V/ran~, oven, . dl11h"'shr. nre11-can111ev"fn·e-ck:lng:--Ex; !'" -See--t111..oner $:>3'500·----i
c1"';ve. CALL 968··1:'56· Irvine Mi.slon n .. 1ty 4'!--073! -::F'"'A'"'S=cCINATING
• BIG PRIVATE 15" " 35' L•gun• Hiits
POOL with k>ts ot n.ekmi:, IMPRESSIVE! NEWPORT
B·B·Q,· and ,,,,.,...,, patio. Spaclou. 2·>ty. homo ;n ""' SECLUDED
goes \\"ilh lhis \\'ann paneled of JM,.ine's nev•est planned \\"alt until l'Ol1 see this fa 11. CHARM . f'AP.Kl...I KE ~rroundir~g.:
3 bedroon1 hon1e. Sprinklers comn1unitics. Lge., fonnal t11.1>1ic bu)' • a large ~bed. 2400 sq. rt. of chann :11 pool, NB, 3 BR. 2 BA.
and even a vi~v·all for dining nn., fan1ily m1. \\"/ rooni house l,\lth plush in· .Ne\\"port llei~ts not fill' $13,000 or \\'Iii. rent ,\·/opt.
$34,900. CAW.. 968·4456. Crplc., bonus rm. could be terlor decorating. TI1is lo\"e· (but _not too cl~.l to H?ag lo buy. &12-36-1,)
:>th bdtm., 2~• baths. Pren1· Jy home Is localed °'' a lfospllal on C:;~a~1~ Dri\·e. Income Property 1661 PRESTIGE
LOC4TION
PRESTIGE HOME
Inunaculate adull OC'CUpit'd
3 bedroo1n \\"ith ro1111al din·
ing. step dov•n li\.ing roo111
ant.I a pri\•ate enclosed
atrium. !.a~aped grountls.
$·13,950. CAU.. 9GS·4456.
COUNTRY KITCHEN
l-'an1ily problenis . priced
under n1w·ket. 4 Bedr1ns. 2
b:i.ths, P\' :Stone tire.place,
lonnal dining. block fence,
heavy shake roof. Prime Jo.
caHon near Douglas, free·
\\•ay & shopping. CAU..
893·8533.
$30,000.
4 Lo\·ely bedrn1s, 2 baths,
rone-on·lone shag. J ack &
Jill n1odel Stardust. !lard·
n-c1ocl floors. bllins, block
"·a.JI fence. Our best listing
at thi11 price. O\\"ner tr.111s-
ferred. CALL 893·8533'.
ium location &. O\\'!!.er \1•ill large i""1,'Ula.r pooL&Ue k>l. 4 Br. f~r1unl duu~ J1ugt1 ____ ~,_..~,...,~--gi~ifum((f. occupancy. P lentr of t'OOn1 tor tht' t't!1.·1·ea1~u iwn~. ~·i:1111 & 40 GAR DEN I $5-1,000. can1p;:-r or ll"ai\er. See for bar~ v1e1,· •• , \\_A LKF.;.:R & Vision-»"""""' coll "8&-0zn "'·" '~~~~c~·' UNITS
1-:-.:ecptionttl hon1e, 3 BR, 2 8 d h•11 BA, lrplc, din r111. Front & • . re I bnck pa liO. c 0 Ill pl et e \\c ca n !11.lbstantiate p & .L~
. . p1ivacy ""/slun1p s t 0 11 c flgul"es on !his ~ne .. as ~1e,
\Vall, "'!'Ought iron gatt'S, n1nnage !t. Beautifully m1Un·
REALTY prof. ldnscp'd. \Valk to tal~cd tn C\·~ry respecl.1 Univ. Park Center. Trvine \\"C'slcliff Plaza & schools. $-195,~'(). Principals Onl)'. .
Call Anytime. 552·7500 ~-==;~""~""""~:--! \Vil.I sllCI\\' by opp't. P rin· S 1 OttiCe how~ 8 Ml to 8 PJl.1 ~ . .. .. . cipals onlv. \Vknds or Aft. 6 parllng nve1trnent
3 Bf'.t, r 2 BA .. Cord?\"a, 1n \.rkd\'s 646-4219 · Corp., 631.-5662
Ow OUSE popular "]'. 111slo111>i' nrcn.17.0,.-0~· ~·cioc--:7":--::---;:;-,; IRVINE T NH Lg lot $30, . 61~6900. Bkr. 401 FELIZ. N.R .. <!>c Bl"fl<. DELUXE 4-PLEXES . * UNDER $30,000 • 1 Condo,· 3 BR, ·~ff't. bar, J.xoaut Only 3 Left! Best rental area.:
Like nt?'\\' 3 be!ls. 1.l50 sq.L ~~·=o~u~n~.O.;..o~~l~g~u~•c...----1 c\cCO\'· cor unit on lg 1\11 units ha\'e frplc's. dsh··
leet, air cond. shag cpij.::, CONDO. 2 BR, 2 Bi\ 011 Golf g1"<'enbel1. 0pen lf o u se \\'hl's forced air heat air/I
red\\"ood patio, near pool course. bltns. beaut vu, ten· every day 11-6. 0\1."llCr, cond.', closed garages.' Poolj
and park. Ch\1ler selling this nis club. lO•,O dn. $36,900. 6-l(}--1397 ava.il. \Valk 1o shop'g, schl.s
unique. A IP in e ·st yJ e 83!-0638. HARBOR Vie1\' Pa1,len 110, 4 & park. i
lov.'nhouse in \Va In u t hr, 2~; ba, 2S' mast suite. Sparlins Investment i
Square, amidst the Orange Lake Forfst Upgraded shag, wet bar. ex· Corp., 63'..5662 I
Grcn'e in North Irvine. ---------elusive.slump, block fence & .
$29,900 firm. Please. no TATUS courtyard. ranc1Scpd . Im· SIX UNIT -apartments 1.1:11hj
agents. 551·5151. S nled. possession. 6-H-5569. ()('f'an breezeg. ~paclous, Sj
e ON BEL.AIRE. )"OU 0\\1l This large.4·befiroon1 ho111_e is llARBOR \·u Honles, ii Bl?, B~ .. 1%.~~A, blt1_1a, crpt d,1
1 the land. 5 BR 3 Br\, AO' ~ntcd m the Pl"l'Stlg10us 1 sty. Lge; Vu Jot. }~an-<hp cl •• 65 x 300, close _ 10
sv.·im. pool. $55.500. OPEN Lake Forest area. Plush t ti 11 u ded Priced grammar ~hool. $1050. in· 1
$3o,950. Fri.. Sat., Sun, 1de'(..-orating \\'ith many other i:i:o~ ~kt~pen ·Sat/Sun con11c. Ask1m1g IK!ll5N.OOOG~··~..![
Poo'L _ POOL fantastic comforts of home. l-6 6#--?344 l)ta. <e nn o er. nJU\.1.1 • f d You !\1UST see !his hon1e. ' · R.E. 642-2222 '
3 Bednns, 2 bath11, fo1::rna1 Uln ar Pricl'd for a quick sale. DUPLEX. oceanfront, 1 )T DELUXE Duplex t2) 3 bdrm
dining roo111, Jot!I of deck· RI.ALTY 586-0222. old .. c!ose. to school, all • 2600 ,sq. n .. 2 baths ea. All
ing. Priced fOr quick sale. Since lf46 a1n en2t1ei;. TI4: 673·9091 ~f.ron1 ainc nitll's included. ilenr
C.o\LJ .. 842·9371. Dow,.t .... c.t. Melli 9 to ::>: after 5. 673-1305. shopi1. 514 Clubhouse A\"e.
1171 Waterfront' Property_ $90,IXM>. Nelson S. Robiroon, so;. DOWN HA•.•o• 642-2991 3 nn. 2 BA. pdv sHp, bouch, Brokor. 675-8210. I
Payments less than rent! IJy O\,·ner, l:Jalbon Co\•es. CLOSE to ocean. 3 BR,.2 ba.
Sharp 3 BR. l '.I. BA, 11·!th 675...4217 (Qr i.J.ppointn1ent. & 2 BR, 2 ba. duplex .
Urepl, 2 cove.red pat101s 1.L --•~g~u_n_•_B_•_•_<_h_,___ Duptl'.l(CS near the ocean $73,500. By O\\'lier. 491.>17 <JUif't street. I-furry, t 1 s -N n-h
* CHOICE ·* l\1iles ·Lnrson." Realtor River Ave., ewport·.po:-&e . ~\~n;~-,'1ast. ! $29,950. CALL * 673-8563 • Prine. only. 675-3906 Eves. ~ Laguna Homesitt1 d I
COUNTRY LIVll)IG
Huge Jot \.\ith tall trees
rustllng-in the ocean breeze
surround a gorgeous con-
temporary 4 BR • 3 BA
home. Country Club living
v.i th comnlunity pool CALL
TODAY to see this one-<>f·a·
kind 842·4451.
LOTS.O.LAND
V3 acre· on quiet street,
spacious 4 BR. '2 BA home
\.\'ith 2 patios. Lots of room
lo ramble. Price just re·
duced, huny on over. CAIL
84z.4451.
srn.EE..'T to street lot in xlnt LI o 11 • S•n Clement• DANA J>9INT -6 AYfS _ . ...h'-.... ~ all und _ __,._.....;.______ +s garages. $89,950.
neil§."UW.11\JUU• er· Enjoy This Summer Webb Realty 493--0761 ~mf1·i , ~~ plans s.;:~1~ Z~tt.' s::~~t4 ~~t Rb%~7ro~:!~3se&~ ~ tndustrlal Property 161
IN one of Laguna's better baths. 3 Car Karage. Sandy Ba. v.·/conv. den. •Ne\\'ly[;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[
areas; lge. lot, close in, \V ' beach/ocean vue. $225,000. painted lnsitlc and out 4. ACRES unobstructable ocean & LIDO REALTY carpeting lh1'104t both coastline vie\.\'5. An e."<ccp-stories Good for rental too
tional buy at SZl.000. 3377*Vla 6L71~7·300N'pt Be*ach $38.500.: , . \Veil located comer. Presen
RARE bomesite in private ' GH.UBB & ELLlS CO. ,·nco·•• 11400 per mo Great oceanfront con1munity. 1',an-REALTORS " · · tastic vit?Y.-s. He"" the _Mo __ ••_V_•_rd_•_____ 2S63 E Cst H ~ Cdl\t potential • v.111 di\ide. Ap-""" . ' v.,,, Prox SI.25 aq,·tt. ~aavc'h'. cra.shA_.;.ISt~P6t·s to!..~~,· 4 BR. 2 ba, crPt, drpt>, bltns, . 6T.r7(8) Roy McC11rdle Re•ltor .....,. •'-'u ""' ,...,.... 2 ca.r ;:ar. lrg yard. $36,500.
·plans-incl. $55,000. Owner, 5-19--0744. Sant• An• 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. \\'OODSY & private; on dead· I -~-~-------1----------541-7719
end street. ~ l...ge. ocean· Newport &Hell BY Ov.ner ,-3 BR, 2 BA,; i"'""""'""""""'""""'""'~I \".iew Jots v.ith lots ot trees . cpts, drps, o r. n a m e n I a I Lots for Sale : · 170
&. plenty o~ privacy. Both NEW BALBOA fence, gas·lit frnt en--·-------1 '°' S4Z,500. tranco, "'"' '1 "a c · EXCHANGE FANTASI'IC. large ocean· 'DUPLEX R.l'-dec., encld ,patio, 2 C
front lot, one of U1e fi nest Prinic Nt!\\.•port Penninsula gar. $29,900. 979·5'ro7 ('11,fsg. Rr-2 LOt/will take 6 Unit~.
properties in lhe Laguna location. 8..,.,.lot.ts 4 and 3. 5-l5-3003) Hw1tlngto11 Bench,
area, on a beautiful cove & ..-l''OR: 10 to 15 Units in llnn<ly beach. J\.fust see to Deluxe features inotude Ooor Ora~e Cow1ty. [§] ;\1,1\\' undf"r <'onstrucllon. ~· $67,QQQ 1 I
-J l'!tr.,. 1 luxe :; txt rni., 2 baths: 2 This palace l!I shown by ap.1 POSSESS ON V h(h11\., 2 blllhs. T~l1 -ins.: 2 polntnicnt only, call 963-5611. 1 VACANT 4 BR near the sea,\ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' '-------~ rrplc:11 .. .Jiundeek \\'l1h ''1f'w. com C"r Joi, C'Xt'Cutive nbr· Amenities Galore
apprec. $115,000. to ceil ing b1rl~lek ,nr;_yJtchace. , If• lj J SIMirllng Investment 1 ... "lvlsh use o 1.i n ,... en ..... ...._ ~ •'. : ~-. , =-· and baU1s. ~~k in ~· _ J:;t2 ""'14ru•• .................. lot T1•1Tifi\' proJ>l.•rty! hn(>ct hu"c (am rm. Room !:/:!i11t9'.' .:::::::::::::...... ::! MORGAN REAL TY for l>Otlt o~ 1ra ilc.r. Appraised
•111i.1119 M•t1r11 .............. '°' 1 673-6642 675-6459 a t S3i.OOJ. HUM'y! 01\"llet ''""'"'' • a.-1,,.,.,.1 ......... IOI • anxious. """r"1.,,,. •..•.•.••.•.•... , ..... ''° 9 e DUPLEX e e ~ ·im. 01r1t1 s11e .. . .. • .. •• • .. •• • • •n , I 1n11 .,_.,.,,.. St. H•WMtltl<I ...,., ............ •u ~-o .l·BR. \\alk to i.w>.ach Fountain Val~ Co. 9270I Jtwtlry ... ········· . llJ ~ j(O Agent 673-8500 n4 -· 56 ' M1t~l..-ry ..................•. 11• __ • --
MIKtU111-• ............ ., ... Ill CAMEO SHORES 1 ........................... .. Ml"'"'-' W•~IN .. , • . . • . 110 b 21 hfl I M"'tk •I 11 .. 1r11m111h ..•.•.••.. 1n By Ov.·ner. 3 r, :1 , n m
Offlc1 '•nUture/l'1u1, ....... 111 rni. pool. $1 15.000. 675-1097. 1'11-.10,.... ................ "' ........ Mld!Mtt ••• , ... , ., ... 111 ,,.,,.., ..... ······· ···· ····· •• Cost• Melli
'""' "-Ml•1i1r•"'' l•r ........ 111 .:.c;..;.;.o-'-""------;-::':.iii9," "Ni.";j,"1iWM' ".".".".".". ~ j $.0.5.
_....:,t=I ~="="" -~·__J· I~
,111, 0-11 ... , ............. IJO
C1t1 • . . • . • . . . . · • · · • · · · · · tJJ 0.,1 ..... ... ......... ..... 151 '1111 .. ... . . .... .. . . . . IJJ "'"'' .. ....... .......... •s• L.1¥ .. IKll. .. .. .•• I M
Fun-loving people
~lo\·e 10 Tlbliron. If you've
Jived ''Con<lon1lnium siyle'"
and loved it. move up lo
Tihw"On \\'hCrt' real toorn·
hou.~e I i \' i n s.: is in full
!i\\'ing! J( you h11\'cu·1 tried
h. iu\'est n li1tle lin1i;; to
lfJl'lk it O\'t"I". ChoiL-e 1"-.-su lc5
a v a i la h I e no\.v! \Ve
specialize in sellinl!: condos -
Try 1111 ro:r rl'nl nc\ion!
P:roperlle!! needed • bu)'ers
v.·aitlng. Call us. •
l' 1!l,10e Re.11 bl~te ·' 962-4471 ( ::::.J 54MIOJ
EXEC. TRANSFER
Sho\\·s like a model. 4 BR., 4
ba.; formal ~dining rm. &
taniily rn1. U p grade d
l'<tl"pC'IS i' drapes. Excellent
H.B. )O('tttion. }19,950
Call: 673-366.'l 675--8886 Eves.
associated
8R OKER S -REALT OR S
701~ W Bolboc 6 71 16l1
\Valk·in closets, !111ag crpts,
dining, ultra modern kit·
Chen, shake roof and gar.
den·likl' corner lol highlight
!hi.I sen...a.Lional 4 br, 2 ba
dandy. Eager O\\ner asking
$34,500 . take O\'er VA loan!
Tenns or trade in your
pl't'M'nt horne! ! CA l... l...
6-15-8-01.
'" v. E. Ho.~rd & Co. ..............
. . . open ~am ce1.....,..,.
1...1.un<lcy area l or each--miit. * A LOTS * Sto!" to tho beoch. 1100,000. Mobile Homos R-.
494·5671 '499·2100 Call 646--TITI. For S.le 125 3 Adjoining Jot1 60x300 ea.,
Ol'ENTIL o. "'S FUN 70 BE NICEt Easts Ide Costa l\Ie11a, 7,oned
rwo BlocKs •.. ill ~ Motor Home Rentals ~·:~Lun1t~ 132·~.~~ .. .•. lo beafh; ttris quaint 2 , ,.~ ~
bdrm. horn• t. the portect SALES & LEASING ililll,...,
bl' a ch cottage. In1maculat~ full &en ice facility ;;A7 TY
ly cl('an. open beam ceilings, Da u... •• H
cozy fireplace, plus extra * WATERFRONT * lll3f' lllUlUI M8S N1•r1Newport P•11 orr~ce
"bonus" t00m tor guests Channel Duplex BEAtITIFUL ocean view
'("11th separate entrance.) Balboa Coves home 53• 6800 LAGUNA R-1 lot, cloee to
Home is built on R-2 lot to * OCEANFRONT * 1 • city. Sacrtnce $16,0CO.
enable future expanskm. if Homes & UnitR OWNER n1ust sell ' 7 2 494-7508, 49&-22'18
desired. S55.00CI. BALBOA BAY PROP. Sheraton l\1anor 2 4 x65 C-2 LOT, xlnt loc., approx. BEACH LOVERS AG,t. * 673-7420 * w/""'*'n & !am. nn. .< 50XJ80 on f!arbo< Blvd.,
$36 500 "°' .,,, #9 mDDY.....many other extras. C.M. rnust sell, owner. • -... _,., STEPS"TO OCEAN --,485,. Jeffrey Rd. Sp333. (Zl3l 79/.-1028
!\fan1n1oth two story Calif. REAL E$TA:rE , , . TENNIS, POOLS, CLUB s.A. 551-2828 alt 6 & Mobllo Home/
Rnnch v.'ith glass garden II"\ Ve.ry clean .3 BR, 2~i baths. wkends. I p ,j
kitchen, \\·alnut cabinets, 1190 Glenneyre St. Family nn., frplc.. bllns, . NE\VPORT BA y Tr11l er •r"t big pantry a11d patio pass· 49-1-9473 ~9-0316
thru. Huge ranch·1ltc fo.mJ· carp., rtrapes. $47,500. CUstom built beauties. 5 * ~fOBILE Jlomc Parks.
172
DistrC'ssM seller ll0\1· in Kcn· 1'
tuckv duC' 10 trnnsfc.r. tn1·
1ned: po.<;s . .-,n'this new 1:l';
"ll\Cf. ")'OUngl 11-30 ~· ft.
Greenbrook "r.tarln" · 4
BR, 212 BA. large fninily
rn1.. firf'pl:ice, p a nt r y ,
erptg. nnd dr a p ei;.
J\s.sun1Able 11;,ll'!-loan. Ask·
Ing onlv $44,900. Q\,·nl•r's
mrnpnnY art"'\ious • n1akc or.
I I~ )j fC'riarwin realty inc·.
J11rwln re11lty inc.
968-4405 (24 hrs)
I>· rooin v.ith roaring DUPLEX BY O\VNER CAYWOOD REALTY 2 BR, l Bth, $16,500. So. QillJ'. Bkr (213l 686-1740 LOVE ITI I fire:r,tace. \\11ndlng staircase Close in. ~1in to beach, shop-* SU.1290 * 2 BR. 2 Bth, sundeck $26,500. or 646--0-IM after 5
I t •t Ith r,ing schools. Just upgraded Adult park 540-3672 a11fl "OU '"'ii! "·hen "'"'U set' en 9 10 mas er flUi e ""' 149 500 111 * OCE'NFRONT * IOx•T ,1'081LE · H 0 m, Mount11Jn, D.,.rt THE s .. ~ \"lltlity b11th. 4 Big bedroon1s o.rge ge.r. • · or "'' " this near.as-a.pin 3 BR, 2 21 ~. hnths. Heavy Jilush con§ider exchange in LB. PARADISE w/l......,... cabana, xlnt cond. Resort 174 BA + lrg bonus. Lovi'ly Call after 5 pm. 494-8647 v ...... v CO\·ered patio \\"ith fi:repi1. carpets and de c n rat or · 7d.0001Sq. t1J;,,e.t000v.-ood. & chaim 1741 Pomona, Space 41, LARGE ctt.bin 2~ acres.
. 968-4405 (24 hrs) FRIENDLY STREET
:::::,•• M;iai.ih~k·;.. =
111l1/M1rkl1 ~-ul,. , "'
l1at1, '""' .. , • "' I Hll, llM11/Cll.lrt1r •. • . . . . tOI
... ti. Siii •... . · ·• .. tot •••ti. 511,,(Do<.-~ .• • .. ' tll
loai.. ,,_, A S-1 , ...... 9'11
I Nh •• Sttr1t e ....... , tll
A1 rcr111 .••....•.•...•.•... , , : .• tn
C1mpen, 111a111 ... 1 • . . . . . . • . • t 20
Cye1 ... 11111i.' l c11111r1 •••..... tJJ
'llClflc C•n ..• .,,.. . t.xr
Mobll• NtmM ........... · ·• · · tJJ Mt1111r Hl"'tl .• , , , • , .......... 140
Tr1IJlf1, Tr•v•1 , ,. . . . . . . . . . . t•J "Tr1U1,1, Ullllly . . ... . t•7
Aul1 StrYlc• A '••I• , tu
_CLASSIFIED ADS I
642-5678 I
t1•ntures this 4 BR fan1ily O\\'NF.R !'narklintt •I Rt!. 11; honll' v.ith eal-in kilC'h.
Rn plus large 14 x 2."i fl. ii.1n111 I: 01111 v.·ill enjoy the
Fan1ilv l'Mlll \\'. firepliu·e, prlvncv of th!• klngs\ze bullti1l~. ft1r~d air, full:-" ii.1ns1ei-bcdrn1 '\\"/fl pri\'ate
callX'lf'tl .~· dral>C'J~. l:u-gC' b;ilh. There·.~ 11110lhcr bath
fenced yanl. Clo~ in to C'Cnt rally located 10 1he
RC"hools. r hurcht's and shop-othl'r bf..odt·ni11 ond 10 tile lrg
plng art'aS. Only $29,900. fn.n1Uy r1n. Thl're is roon1 lo
838-1157 gn:rdC'n on this large loL
HURR\'+-l~ N.a.v.' p o-t-t $35,900. -. .
Helghtii: area. neo,11ly rf'dec'3 For PF.ll FOit l\1Ar-;"CE
br, 2 bu. P\' 11to11c tirplc, 9G3-."i621
Anthonv Pool. Botti ncccss TRADE 2 BR TO\\'Nl-IOUSE,
,\ Rtor8.g:e yd. l\1ll«h n1on>. 20:.:.Z"l fttn1 n11, xlnt cOnd.,
$.17,950. nv O\\'llC'r. Pri11C'. lncatcd in prhnc Fountain
otily. 64C-G~2S Valley ru't'u, ln1n1cd oc·
NEWLY DECORATED cupanCY, as."un1ttblc 7 1 ~~;. loon. s.t;oo e<1ully. fl'QR boat .'\BR. 1 ~1 bn. $27,tiOO or P\'lrsche nf equl\I vnl11e.
BALBOA BAY PROP. South Bay Roalty, 002·2!40, * SS~ * ~nl/Chvncr.
l en. ;,;f;I Hamilton, 7...one I "iiiiiiiiioiRlliiE;;;~;;j;;;· iiiiiiiiii•
R-4. $19,000. Do not bothev
tenant. Call Art 842~1 or $750 D WN ~:158 Broker. 2 or 3 Bfl Townhouse, hge
1"l.1n1pu11 roon1 rlble a:ar,
S\rim pool, fe\v Jen. Jlurry!
557-91•14 or 842-4•121
First Plonffr Re11lty
Bonu!I & patio \\•h'f!'d ror drape!!. Still 1n1<'1l11 brand COASTLINE VIEW up ex. OUAJ. • c .:r.1. View, Orchard. pa 1 i 0 •
slt!.reo, rtish\\-Shr, sprinklers nen·. Bh."R !l62-55ll NORTH END a L l_DO . R~L TV LEASE w/ opt« to purchase. Su11deck .. ·Box ~. Pinon1
w1d a J\"ell·kcpt low nlaiJll -WINNER'S-CIRCLE 2 B .• 2 Ba., O\\TI your Q\.vn 331 7 V111 L1dof N pt Beach CUst blt n10bill' honie. !\Iust Hilli. ca 92372 ( 7 14 ) I
Cn>nt & l"t'ar ylJ.J'd. $36,950. 111i11 one is No. 1, at S37,500rt. aJJa,rtment ;52,500. \\'allacc * 67).. JOO * .we to apprec. Call for nppt. 249-3647 l
for PERFOR!\IANCE Thi~ lnrge single story 3 B l.... Neff Realtor. 494-831.8. KEWPORT SHORES 962-7300. BEAC1 1 trailer Roea.rito Mex.'
8"7·3584 i11 extremely sharp. Lovely BLUE Lagoon condo, j~t in BY OV.TM!r. Sharp-3--br,2-be.. ~DY-12x bdn1\ :...ottn.n-vu-patio-BR-Bb,oj---j MEREDITH ldscpg front & back. If tln1e for season, pnvate $38,800. Prine. only. 646-JTI8. turn. Costa l\fcsa Adult Kit lh• nn, $1400, 64&-92881 GARDENS you 're f u 1 s y . c a 11 beach. pools, tennis, 2 Sr. 2 OCEANFRONT Park_. $4500. • or "645-3448. [
PERFORANCE on this one 113 Ba,' $67,500. ()y,'tler Amencan 5ij7~390 . Cl\ 1 • Lak . -.. ~ Upgradt.'(I, thruout: spliLlevel 847-3$4 499-1101 •Duple.x 0\\1ler/agent 673-!r.m · ~· -Lll.ke Cre~ry a et -el
3 BR, 3 ba; family nn. & ;===::::;,=:~~:;:~;:;~;:::~=:;~~~~~· ~~:;='="== '69 SKYLINE ~52 bdrm, 2 view 2 BR I~~ BA fr/pl dining nn. \Vlred for Ste.too. l>nth. Costa J\.tesa Adult furnished $2ti.500 821-tl.42.
Jmm ac. !GEM C.fril'O .i\'-{ -f)-C' ~ .. s" :~1can ''"·~'l90 R•nche•, l'orml, 0~ J.'Qf.1 ~).. (,!) J.j (/~ SAN J uan Capo. Adult Pk. Grovts llO R~~~~~;'"' '"'~.;~ik, That Intriguing Word Game w/th o Chuckle t97'2 2.Jx6tl. 2 BR. 2 BA !nm MOST boa uillul <anch rn -------'Miff,. lty a"AY' •· '°ll~N nn •. din area, cpt!l/drps, all Victor Valley, JWlt a Jong 5
1
REPOSSESSIONS 0 11.eoriango tellers of !ho applrances. O\\•Mr '1~3-4!0'1. iron shot r.ron1 Roy Rogers"
~>'iii-inforn)ril\on anrl locntion four sc1ombled word, h.· i·· 8 x 35 FURN. Musi !K'll! Best pl ace. Tilree parcel d~tl
of 1h•·.sc F ii:' ,i:.: '11\ home11, low 10 form four alrnplo words otfer. 2 BR. a\Vning, good 28, ~ and 17 acres. ~
. j~"~,ud~.~A~d~l~t ~p~11.r~k~.~Sl3--098<l~~~· ;I v.·eUs, stocked lake. I a r 1 e ~:::~~~!BIA:,4644 11 IT I· "11T i y I I I ... IE.tot•, l•I ~~f£~~~!~"'.:
' · · • · • • · Gtneral pool, gas cooled: enclOled
CLOSE TO BEACH , 1 1~~-iiii!--~~;1 patio, tcnC<d. irrloated al· •I BR. 3 bu. 2·sly. lx>me. Big t I D A K D v · 1 . r11Jra ttclds. ~11\Y be mid
fan1 . n~. $-44.950. · 1 I' 1 1 . .~. 150 separately. Total p r t c e BALBOA BAY PROP. I l'A_c_ro_•_,s .. •_fo"'."""r_• .. • .. '·==-:-11200.soo.oo. Candlc .. ood In-* 556-8800 * i BUILDER'S ATTENTiqN vcshnt>nt Pl'opertles. the.,
O\VNER • Exec hoine. 2300 ~ Q101s.-e location, TWjlln. ~ 18107 ll"'"Y· 18. Apple Valley,
BR 2'1 BA I f •24'x22' FAMILY RM• I G I H E O I .', d pro\"ed for 45 uni1s. 92307. 2-12-365.t or 245-8527. !'ICJ. ft. 4 , . • i: run A dreamer: "He Sol oroun 0 NI 1 RE.IL~-co
"\\'htle Elephant.·· O\'l'l'·
running yow housef Turn
tht•n1 Jnto "CWlh" .--: . ~II
thcn1 thrU A ~l>all)l Pilot
1'11.1$'-JJ.k:tl ad -, -----
r
nn l\'/f1>lc + boriu». Prot 3 Bedroom -p!Ul'.h -Shll~ I' I r I d of h h A1 I ' '. • U&.\UTIFUI~ l(>-::1cre Valen. hl<li.e1xl. $47,00l. 968-(&12. cnrpet•. clc11n1 $25,000. C11ll I so ong rtoming w.!en Is • 642-6560 * cia 21'0\"e, Lovely home llte
CONOO 3 BR + den, 21 ~ bt~. R 4 7 - 6 0 6 1 L KA TEU.A . . • • -. ship would come in, his saloty Commerc1111 & 1'l'ti!'fn1cnt Income.
'rlbumn. 20 mos JlC\.\·. ~tany REALT\', H.u. got-." ,_,1 Property 151 ~~~ ... ~mJ23,000 .
xlms, by rm•ner. $35,500. ~=--==-;=:;:-r. 0 E R l A C A Complel• tn. chV(lde ciuctod
968-42'.26. 3 SR., nr. heacl1, fireple., 1 I I I I I v by f!ll!nv In th• m!uln; word-* M-1 * Re11I Est11te W•nted 114 ~ BR, 2-100 5(1· fl .. J~ ht\, pl'ltio, w/w sh~. &pl, ""U d1v•1-... from st.p No. 3 bolcw. 123' x l&l'. (.'hoi~ Location OUPL :X blt •• ~ .. ~-rt , !pie Cabana Clu\l privileges. Call · · · • 'y 'VJ' * c 1 * E •
• ...... ' '-' 1""' · ' 't · 7l3/~-orTh1153G-019S. -• &ach 1..vnunw\lt)t -du pf ax 2·atory, $42,00J. 008-6216 -8341 f.tun11ter, "Pacl!le Sand~. PRINT NUMBERED Lf.TTERS IN 2 srin~~ :~:lus "·untcd to buy. l\tust be
Huntington 8e1ich PRESTIGE 3 br. 2 ba, ~l THESE SQUAii.ES RIVIERA ftEALT·Y ~~~~lYs!>ty )~~ 1~~~;: 1 -
BY owner -ti\ O/lS, save door. Nr. lll.lblle; & Ca~ll<' a UN SCRAMBLE ABOVE U.Tftis I -I 1= j I I I ~49 Brot'ldwA}'. C.l\J. Cdi!it, cllil {flOl) lS-190tl
$3400 ·fct. 4 BR, b.'l11Crnt>nt Sehl!I, high k eollei0. S%. 'A: W 1 70 GEf ANSWER • • • . • • • 642a7007 645-5609 £vet Like to tntlef Our Tra.dcr• + 1 ~iOOO ~ umb. In. $36,300. Ov.-ntr, -I col b I l!f.mi.:;..~·· 1it.00ti'.' · 1 9 27 2'-M&-0333i-"'i=.:·=,,..==-::tt SCRA. o-•.• "9<lt ·a .,SWERS IN ·CLASSIFLCATION 800 Nc~1~1~~12··~·: Place an ad! ~=~ ... ~:;.! ~1
\\'n1'L'°>'lor 1.n. 002--0GB6 1 Nffi.1 tt !.!.?itfl'!.'1--P.lfH"f' 1tn Aril _____ m_,.,.. __ •~-------------------------• ... o· -·"·"0 • • • ,......, • -I
·-
•
Tutsliy, June 12, 191' ;
. 1~ ! --~ l~I --
1st TD Loans
UP TO 95%
2nd TD Loans
2ND Trust Deeds
PFµVATE FUa'l'DS AVAIL.
Any Amount * Call 675-4494 BKR.
Mortgages,
Trust Deeds , 260
PUT YOUR MONEY
TO WORK FOR YOU!·
Earn 10% inleresf on \\·ell-
Sf!Cutro 2nd Trust Deeds on
Orang!' <'.ounty real es111te.
SIGNAL i'110RTCAGE "CO.
(TI4) 556--0106
4500 Canipus Dr .. N.B.
HS -1. BR collage, \Valk to
"''aler, ,,i;:ar. $125, a lso cot-
tages $35 mo. $75 mo. & $110
mo. Util pd. on a ll. Agt. fee
979-8430.
•
" .-3 BR ,,Z Ba.~2 car gar., bl.tns,
D/\V, pool, kids OK,· on.l,y
$24;;. mo. Agent 842-4421
Huntington Beach
'l.111!1 l\·iltl.
---1 l.rnllo r
' '
FRONT duplex, 2 BR, un-
furn. gnr., quief, no dogs,
cat,; or motorC'y c l es.
$18-2720
11 '
ocean
Ca 11
--
Trader's Paradise·
i
lines
times
dollars
8 Uniu ln,Pewood. 6 • 2 Br.
I: 2 . 1 Br. unfun1. for boot
Shop, center, b01'AC ranch,
or ! $40,000 equity + cash.
Owner~
F'REE & Clear 10. lla"{I
producing orangc-grow;--on on rtimp tor unhs, commer.
eltt.1. or·tt79,500. lu1-C118h.
Owner 673-6200
18100. lgt 'T.D. 711%, 182.
n'IO, $131. -lllO 4 )'I'S. Due 9
,,,... doubly Guaran. t'or '13
El 'Dorado, .Mark I::'.,, low
priced hm. CM, Nll •1 .. 1311
•
. '
•
...,,., __ I~ I -I~
;;;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
365 Apn.,Off =;;;l<;•;;;R;ont;;;•:I :;;;;;;;;;;;;440;
1 Fum. or Unfvmli JJ1 •
PRESTI GI
OFFICIS
Fountain Valli!)', Beauti.
rul new buildbtg, 1round
Jloor, 3,000 111uare leet,
will dlvide Into amaller
o(ti<.U. 50c per &quare
fool, lnclude1 carpets,
drapefl:, nil utilities, Jani.·
tor se1vice. Call fl.flllilyn
Stovall (714) 832·5440.
Escape whh us to the magical wo1c~l11nd of Vista del
Lago, whBft 1h11 emphasis Is on the nautlcal, and 1he.
way of lif1t is as 1ranqui1 or excltinp o' you care to
make it. Lakoside living mal(es the dilftrcnct for tho••
enjoying boating,~ cascading foun11Jins and swi mming
at close as your petio<leek. Lond lovers will Al>f)reci11t1
• acres of ex.qui1itely landscaPod gro\lnds and walkway1. I-A.,,-Each apartment-home includes e11erv conc1i11able lu x.· lC/.l ury &~ointment, like air-conditioning •~d speci•I
sound proofing to insure your cornfOrt 1nd pr1\r.Jcy.
The Yac ht Club ollars handball, gy1n and Nunas, g3rno
anc;r social roomr.
Llvlng anywhere else is out of tt1e ques1lon t ll"r
seeing Vhtt-del Lago. '
Etfici1nci11, 1 .• 2, 2 plus den, from $190. Furnished
and unfurnishtd models open daily nine 'cil d.1rk.
From the S.n Oiego FrHwtV 1ak1t. H11bot Bllld. to
1Adams1nd MeM Verde Ori111. &40·1800 •
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Schools
-F----a-n.d
Instructions
0
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This var~ety of fine schools
could introduce
you-to a new -~omorrow. -
•For further inform•tion regarding plecement of
adve rtising in the Daily Pilot School s end
Instruction Directory'
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CALL 642-5678, EXT. 32~
I
. are worth tr~ing for
• TRAVEL . I
• ADVANCEMENT
• SE,CURITY
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Learn How You Can Qualify
Call 543-6655
610 !. 17th St., S•nt1 Ano
ACCREDITED SCHOOL
FREE
ORGAN LESSONS
FOR BEGINNERS
You do not hive to own en Instrument
''" pr1ctlce Time Av11f1ble
Start Thursday, June 21st
REGISTER NOW
Six Week Classes
: FUN • ENTERTAINING -..KNOWLEQGEABLE
Rent Organs
Available
During Term
, '-Of Coune. • l
R09illtr NOWl Inquire for dot11i1
iHammonifOrgan Sficfios
2154 E. Coast Hlghw1y; Coron• dol Mtr
·644-1930
·-~-.. I
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i1Mu~trl1I Rentel 450 Person1l1 -~==;;;;;;; 530
t , :NOW LEASING
' :Huntl"lton Beach
'· NEW .M-1 ·i \ 940 Sq. ft. &·UP·
1 •Hamilton &: Newland
J ~7or~Sl9
11.
· COUPLES 11-35 +
Parties, or meet cpl to cpl
Call "Leah" 2-8 . . m 638-1511. p •
IB~NIX
TUTORING
CLINIC
READING-MATH
SPELLING
DIAGNOSTIC TESTING (No Chorgt)
Your Child Wiii Receive
Gu1r1nt1ed 1-to-1 Instruction
At EBRONIX-Whtrt RHdi"ll
h Enjoyable
27l 0 Horbo< Sulte.78 C.M. 979• 1626 .
ONE . SMILE-A~WHILE
DAY CAMPER
fOlt HAVING TOO. MUCH PUNI
\Vhere: 14582 Baach Boulevard
\Vhy: Switn School .• Sports ... Craits
Cook outs • , Tri1> •. Overnights
\Vho: Boys & Girls 4-14 Regardless
of school placement
l--...l3l.ben.:-S:ou.c...Cbn!oe• B)' nay, Week,
.Jl..1onth or \Vhole Summer
Special Education Children Welcome
FOR llWAID· & INFORMATION
IM-U12-CALL-5»-i240
Wouldn't You Enjoy A rew Summer
Days To YourseH?
Enroll Your Child
In Pre-School
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THE .DANCE· STUDIO
ICE CAPADES CHALET COSTA MllA
2.Z01.Har.bor Bl'ld. at Adam~
Tel:l79-UIO
CLASSES STARTING NOW
\Classes taught by accre~lted Professor of oanc1.
All ages 3 to 93. Beginners through advanCed.
ORANG r cdUN1'Y
VOCATIONAL
TRAINING SCHOOL
LEARN
AUTO TUNE-UP
*·TUITION FINANCING
AYAILAILI I..
* MOINING
AFTllNOON I
IYINING CLAllU
* MODllN DIAeNOSTIC
19Ulf'MINT
* PllPAIATION IOI
CLASS "A." IMO• LICIN~I INCLUDID
* Jotf Pl1cemtint As1i1t1~ce Av1ileble * Cla1111 Forming Now * Speci1I Courses for Mech1nlc1 who
I ne«I Cla1s ''A'' LICenH
,----FOR INFORMATION ---, I CALL 714/646-~5 , __ _..__ ...........
. . ' 2120 PLACENTIA AVE.-COSTA MESA
SAODLEBACK
i--WlltflNG-CEllTER1--
-Will Off er A ·
' Special Summer
Reading Program
Individualized Program of Instruction
Diagnostic Testing &. Evaluation
Licensed Educational Psychologist
All Credentialed Teachers
27601 Forbe1 Rd, Suite A
Laguna Niguel
BAL ISLE SWIM
, & HEALTH CENTER ,
lotlYIRell1td lo11ruet1 ..
,. Tut5GfJ, Junt 12, 1971
Interested In· • . . [ ..,_ .......... ]~
A Real Estate Car~r? .. ,y,1111,,.
IN FOUR WIEKS
l'REl'ARE FOR STATE EXAM
LICINSING PREPARATION l'Ollt
• Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers
• Employment Assistance For "
Graduates With
R.EUABLE oldtt mother
wlll babyalt rREE tor aum·
mer mot. +6 yr. old u
companion lO $ yr. old. Nice
home BrOokhutal &: Mama
96:1--0162
l\tATURE woman will cart
for. your home A child:rtn
while you vacation. Xln't
refs, Drive•. ~74 •ft. 6.
BABYSrM'lNG aey qe.
Lott of Tl,.C, 6 to 6. Leadlnc Brokers. /1
eilay~And £Ylnillf~lass-es
• Braker Refeml Program
1 Mon.-Frl. Some n l t • 1 ·•
541'381'1.Ar..616.563(.-• -·--
Bu1lne11 S.rvlce
. • $110.full Course /
Por Information-Brochure
TYPING
Libra Otc. S..rvlcu. 645-88SO
Corpot Service
J OHN 'S Carpet 6: Upholstery
Ori Shampoo free Scotch-FrM Guest Lecture
Newport, 325 No. (Old) Newport Blvd.
548-1192
EDMOND F. JACKSON
1uard (Soll Retardants).
Degreuen 6: all color
-brtghte~~-· 10 -minute ~
bleach for white carpets.
Real Estate Education Since 1964'
ACADIMY REAL ESTATE
CONTltACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS
Gl-Masfer Charge & B of A
Save your money bt savin&
me extra "trips. \Vill clean llvini rm., dining· rm, Ir
hall $15. Any rm. $7.50,
couch $10. Oiair $5. 15 )Ta.
exp. is what counts, not
method. I do work my1elt.
Good ref. 531-0101.
Astrology ;., Classes
STEAJ.1' cleaning c a r p e t ~c .. 3:1% this wk.-t.Rd•!--Fttt eiti:--Wi'st, bef 6 pm,'
494-7018 '
NOW FORMING
BeglMers ... Ad vanced
Offers CompletL Astrology
Service•
. * PIRSONAL HOROSCOPES
*i ASTROLOGY BOOKS·
*-UNIQUE GIFTS
*·CLASS INSTRUCTION
Burton Mon e • Judy ZlnU
712 I!. llALBOA BLVD.
. BALl!OA PENINSULA
Hours 1l A.M. • 4 P .M.-Clo1td Sundoy
675-6661 • 675-2140 • 493-:atn
P. -Newport Air Associates
flight School & F~illl Club
·LURN TO FLY
$500.
Cablnetmoklng
Carpenter
,NE\V, remodel, ·fnme I:
finish, stores, oUliCH I:
homes etc. custom •'Ork.
Ucensed. 962---1961
WOODWORK, ca b lhet s ,
partellng, sen tepa.in, Duke
Da Durka, HJ-7008, 84&-9t95
Ceritent, Cen~rete
PATlOS, walks, drtvn . Saw,
brtak, renu>ve a: ttplace
concrete. 548-8668 tOT est.
Child Core
LICENSED Oilldcare in ltl)' home in Harbor &: Baker.
~T-lOOT
JACK TaUlane -Repe1r
remod., addlt. XI yrl exp.
Lic'd. My Way Co. ~r--
[)r~ill'! ·
DESJGN/dnlt. plam homo
I: com.ml. addf t 1 on 1 ,
~~,...., liz<I Job .
Electr(cel
E L ECTRICIAN, lice-.
bonded. Small joba, ma1ftt 6
repairs,~.
Plotro
DAS Floor main~ tut, Na.
ttl. ~~ ~_M,LA. _ r
Gordeni"I
EXPERil':NCE!> JapaneM
Gardener Complete yard
·maintenance;--Schtubber,y,
trff1. Free e s t \mate e .
645--0341
EXPER. JapoJ\eoe Glldintt.
Know how. T rlmmtna .
Clean-up. Small landlC&p-
lng 963':3486.
COM P L E T E Jandleapt malnt. aerv. Comm'I, tnd,
resld. Sprinldn, cleamip. * FAA APPROYID * llE..:.:~:::::p98:::;:.J-R .-·-A-m-er_i _con
COllne lnClucles: g~;:!u•pn er.\ :;;:
16 Hours fli9ht tim.l· in 'Ces1na I &O's with Call 6'>19l>.
20 hours duel instru~tion. Club membership. llcYocARp='='"a"'•'"'.....u~p-, -m-a'"'t n-,.t.
l Month's free dues. lndlvldu1I instruction, Comm. -Rt1. Opening new
tailored to YOUR ability. route. Exp. J a p a nes e
15· AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT Garden.r. 530-1&22
LOWUT llATU IN OllANGI COUNTY ~~~~ • .;'~:;.~~
L .. m to fly new - -end hive f_un I neat. Fl'H eit. 842-U89. * Fly Mexico & C1n1cla Gcu-dtnlnc Ii: ol.ean·up& J.1---"..;~lol Roteo for Commer~lol or "4-0657
nlfrumonf S In 1. Gordenlngf Lon41tc°"""
Per Complote Dtt1ll1 Coll NOW Expert, reliable, ~1. !!!!
!Ml--
979-1155 H:'~J:•to Nuner'""""""'
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32' F'UR.NITl1RE \'an tor
[SJ local .fUm hauls Ac pn1
1Mt """_ I hau1!111. M&-1862·
• _ SKIPLOADER i dump true!< work. Concrete, .,~t
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I 26 DA.1~'r' PJLOT Tuesd•Y. June 12, 197J ·\-'-~ 1 .. ' -~~~~-~~~~~ ~~~l ~~~~~r~~·I · I -:.i.,.. • ...,.. J~ ~I _ ...... ,_ ...... ,~J[Il] ~I ;;;"';;;""'";;·" ;;;;[ffi;;;IJ;:..I .. ·-.. -~llllJ~iJ I ----lfm =r-;;; .. _;;'""";;?;..JITTJ..;• i~I ;;;-.:...;;.,_m;; .. ,-;;Jfm;;I*~~ •e..,....-, .... ~. ~lrm~-J [ -....... Oiiil-11 1 ":-
Painting & -. --P•perhenginp Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W1nted, M & F 7 t0Htlp Wanted, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M I. F 7t0 J anitor Wonted Help Wanted, M & F 710Help W•nted, M & F 7 10 Help Wanled,M & F 111
G.~,, ... 1.,.,,,11 .. ,•. i~-,.-,, .. I B.\llY,Sl'rfE:.R. I•'""·· ,,,,. \ CARRIERS NEEDED Hoston Wa n ted "'301'"'""''"'· """'" "'"""· M I · I t ' * PRODUC~ I ."" f" ," .:~E:·~ ~v ... h•)Oll, COSltl ~1 c ~ n . but \\•lll 1t»dn. x Jn ' I ac llll s s • ;
. nt l'.'1,1<1r & x1"1,~u. ·roC':!!/Thurl' i1<~1n Ht ti. S111.1 FOR DAILY Pl•·OT ~1011. Hu11 F1·1. Apply in h1.•11C•fitL4, 84:i.-OGU, t•:-.'1 2·16 GENERAL MACHINISTS Curu·1u1 l'i'C! Tor) 0 11dll~'. oll Ouv Oirn Iran~ uc<:. ~ pcr:;o n JJul'lfiela l111siiit;;i l JR79'J ~~kZ~~\~~h~7~~'.-'~·-~~~. 0:-A-~-~:t-~t-,~-"-E-R~ .. -.,~,,-.-m-,-. -1 MALE OR FEMALE 21 :~t~~a~!~~l\'E J:~.~~~:~.i.~l1 :itne~ru11 To set up & operate mills & engine lathes on CLERKS l
N ,v t" ('hild . ·r r u s 1Vo'0 r1 h y & MOUSEKEEI>Ef-t, live in, tlrnc, evcni11:;11. locnl, e"-l>f'r short run produ ctioti. Require 2 years ex· 1 \
* WALo LP8A"P""ER * re/lahl~. 96:{-21~ eves. MUST BE 10 YEARS OF AGE OR OLDER '-"XJJ'<l ,r,,. ('('fl\ nee·. No imlok· adults onl.Y. $2.40 ix·a· ht· pe r1·e 11ce 011 all common shop machinery. E>:JICrlenc('d, 1m 111 c di a·i.
B Ibo B Cl b lr~. :; i•li lldn.'n. Jll'i r1n & ba 979-3923 -Oix>n.ingi; ln Ill'"' C-011111. M'i '"hen yoo call "!\lac" a a ay Y HAVE A DEPENDABLE BIKE .'< 'l'V. 5 da~' 'vk, lo v r I y JUNIOR SALESMAN: \Vork from blueprjnts. 0\Vn ha nd tools. JOIQrl'. FULL aritl PAI , 5'1.~·l+l4 i·vt'"S. CLERK TYPIST \\·atcrlront Newport Bch •
lNTER. Exler. A''°'· '""1< Mnourc, f/tin~o. Type "'"" GOOD PROFITS! home, "1"''Y open, 673·5'"36 ~~~rh••12~;fi!~ :,:;,.,";;:i~ MACHINERY ASSEMBLERS T*IME.ALSO CASHIER"';. stor,v -expet'. S:129. All ,v,)rk 60 "'·P·111 • .. l:il! lu .. ·l~.1f~J~ b~! l·IOUSEKEF:PER, Lido lsle, on Salui·d~i; !,lCllU!S f1nw \)'.
-------1-t011Y-.iffi.t!@ll,--LI .. iw.t:-f.J;IQL.ncc:.Ci::i. sec 1™1ltlJJl 1--N•_wp_•rt_leeclll , ...... ft .. _,,J~Sf.d&.,.Otll...St •. _ .SI~! ·~ lo@l-1'1;>i~s.-$00 cu.sron\'t'-.rs .... ro! i'r1t;-y}ai"1:y"--·A~s~s-em-";-,,ec.1-. 1nt-r lca•"• 1nec•iihTcaI-asse1nblte., * ALSO BOXBOYS''; -847-18;)1 01· 1213) 860-9789 ~lrutu.gc>r. CALL 642~321, Ext . 211, Ask for G1ry Jarrett \vc-ek. 67:1-'-J IS9. p 1 lh '"' ~~· ·" ·, , 1 ~>2'1 \\I. Coai;f I-hvy .. N.B. H 1 W M & F 71 1 -7H--k---~1~1 ~.--1 ot. is Ls nol a. pap<>i· (Machi11ery) including fittjn g adjusting & ~~:~~;~~~\~ l'l'~~ti~'. 35T~,1~~ Ba lboa Ba y i:Jub e P anted, ·--~ IH ·;e;lo;;;;W;;;;a;n;tod;;;;';M;;;;;&;;;;F;;;;7;IO; I ouse r:1:~oo"i t ime ~~~1i1~cl:i~~ d~;~ 1:~1:~:i~~l: align1nent.. Work ~rom bluep.rints , sketch es 1;
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ad\'11.nh1g:c of tny cxp. Ladies Spa Attendant ~. , , I"'"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"''"'"' \Ve have openings iu South· & verbal instruc tio n s. Require 3· years ex· Cull for Appointn1cnt :
;J3fJ--7f.fJ6. P• till\<'. Sat & Sun !) Blll·1 CLERK TYPIST 1 1~.;~~~ l ~_ch to $1?!'\ Hospil;l1 ' \~est .Costa Mesa nnd South p erience in assembly or precisi911 machinery. (213) 860-7213 :
''PAINTING pn1 P1·inr ex°"'., in \vhirJ. l::i.c i ta11c~ $050 l-t1u111ngton BC'ach only. Own hand tools. pod ctlo•'Control ' · &:>, l-\ . Sides order cil'pt. Accui·at~ i,c-y puuch " to S61)0 SION 'Apply 110\1•! 96S-9&11. r u '' •
fl p..'lys 10 call proft:"~iona.ls. !~f0\.~n~:1.*:'1~~/1.~~1,~111~ ~Jvg~~ typing. 60 \\'.p.111. electric Acctng CJc-1·k S:--iOO MIS LADIES , MECHAN c L INSPECTOR A To_i;cht'<IU!t• niwn.tfuctw·e. For frr-" t'S1. 646·5178. .;? '\\' • ~ ~, 1 · type~,·rite1·. ~l':'s order pl'o-B.~cprionisi $:i50 I A ~· !i!hlpplng of sailboats. : 1 Plaltter , P atch, R apair J •• l · COllill Jlli)-., N.B. t'f'sstng, lnvo1c1ng S.: other Girl Frlduy :0:5:J(I P:t111.ll' •.'1·0,rk Coi-;t~ 1'1~~ , M a cGregor Yacht Cprp ·
Balboa Bay Club adn1inistrutivc functions. As~1 . Bklqir Sj(){) !)~1b;1cation1s hquSf' opcral1.ng 'fo inspect inachine parts a sse111bHes sheet JG.11 Pl1u·C'ntln, C.r.1. ~ t
1t PATCR· PLASTERING *-
All tyr,w:!s. Ft-ec l's1hnutt!s
Ca 11 54(}-6825
,Mens ·spa Attenda,,nt Call For Aprt. :~~s1~1-fi~·~~r;inan ,~s..~ Comm· un' .e .. , io h~·~) ~tl~)--1;~l~~nla!~,~ 1netal, h ard ware; castingS & fei\V stoc'k-. ·1~e-. • rl
Nl'ed yoiuig nian O\l·er · Pl l ndusll·i;:tl R('latio11s " " · " J · · · I · · PROOF OPERATOR tinte only 11 arn-7:30 pni lteecptl 1.'yp1st to S?UG jobs. C:u~ ,,.e cull you 10 CJ.Ulre m1nnnu1n 5 years n1ec lan1cal 1nsp ec-! ,
Stit .~ sun~No expe_r neccss. {714) 494-9401 Stat T~~p1st S500 11·ork p/tnTI C'.' at hou1-s 1\'l' t 1on experience including working 1nec h an-No E:·i)('i'. Necessary i ~I
&e Pci-sunn<'l :\lw1ager. Sa!c:s Sccrctru·y ·~6!!0 HOSPITAL e:11~.arrange? \\'e _11·il! trnin isms. 0\VIl h a l'td.\t ools. ,
L.R. OTIS PLU!'.-rBINC l:l?I \\' Coast 1-lli·y NB TELONIC Design Dral't!>-rnan -Electon t<' J you. If Y.OU arc 111tcresrcd Api.1!y in JH.'l'SOll : :
Rcn10tlt'ls ,'{; Rt'[lllil'S. \ValC'l' -. ' ., . • Control Equip. 10 $~fiG jplcase call. 5-10.-9712. WELDER A . .1·0 1\lrs. s,akc1· ',·'
Plumbing
hea~t~. cli~pusals, turnaces, 1-----------INDUSTRIES Pur•~has. Cl~rk $.175
tlsl111·ashrs. G4~-6:lfi:; !\1/C .'?:. B,\NI'\ I Pc-1·sonnel C!rk s;i7:> . t7~l Puc1'13 Real Leasing Security Pacific: :, -~!A. c0111plc!e Plunihin1.: ''S th• l.aguna Be ach ~~Y~~~.\~ • ~~ 1\Jissiot1 Viejo Repre senta t ives 'fo fabricate n1achine parts & asseip,blies for National Bank ~,
---\l.~\tJCES'"*"{,-u;:----· ,~1-."'"""'"'"""'"'"''"''"'""''"' Ct\l\\'11 Va.Jlcy l.u k\\uyJ -.-. -~~,·x~r._leasiug-.J'CP lo \.York_frora:blueprjnts.-Jlcquire-_minjmum 3 iMl202 C!'O\\'ll Vul.lt•y 'Pr11;wy$i
,.,..,.,,ii•('. ome . Ing Equal Oppor. En1ploye1· t NEWPORT iEast or San Di;~?. r:~·11'Y The Irvine Company construction of m ediun1 h eavy rnachu1e tools. ,_. _ _J •
·Plumbing &. Rr.pnirs "Spec'ial'' . -COOKS. t!:.;[)('r. Broill'r :-.1a11. -33P3e rDsOnnl lDAgenNcyB (714) 495 4400 s1ho1
1t· .~ lease! Par1its in thl" years combinatjon \\'elding experience. O\vn ~-110.1~1,:rN~~~:loyei· !,·
i116--0!)77or G46-JS09 , ruH & p/fiuic,'i\pply in over r., . • • 1vne areu. easant ha nd tools. '' ,~.. ,
PLUl\'lBING P.F:PAlR Jl<'l'~Clll, NP\vpo1·1 Bc11 ch T1•n. 642-3870 personality. Typing 60. 1\1usl M l
No job !O'J small For ~i.h~uh. 2601 Eastb!urf Dr. -ELE.C. TEC~H· NICIAN (714) 831-2300 !:eke~~~'.'ig to \Y,o r k DAY & EVENING , R~~l~~~JJ"n:l~1l i--,~t~o~·f '. * * 642-31'.!8 * * Excellent \1·orki11g conds. co. Acctng Clrk $611
S · /Alt t' S • COOh:-p/lin1e. Cott ch e ' s Your choice or developmenl be. f!
ewing e ra l'>ns ecretar1es Corner Restaur<int. s 0' or Jlt'l'-produeiion t ('" t RN's "BCc•tc.' •. ~~1,, -,,,,,".·,89""°'' INTERVIEWS BY 'APPOINT~ENT ONLY , .... ·l,'1'",''°·:·'.~~~-;,.1'1,',·.~,l.',•.'.,'.'."'s'·' .• ,, . ':;' Alterations-642-5845 Tellers Coast Plcii n, Cl\! :-,.IG-7955. assignn1enis. Bo1h depart-~" . v "' _
2 COOKS 111cn!s off1'1'1 i:1ierf"~1ing 1 t?.f"ark [fl C£'1t!cri
NQat,-accuratc,. Ov~a~sexr.. , Proof Oprs ill ls\ Cln.ss broiler n1an .t \\"Ol'k \\'/ar!v<inr.cd dij;i:cl LEGAL SEC. CALL 71.4: a·g14 ... 471·1 "'2-"~·,.., '!
1·on1n1unh::alion:<: systeni. e SURG .,~ '""'" . New A~~ts Clks . IJ) dinnc_r cook \V/rxpcr in • r l J b d I r I I l[IJJ ...... heav.v roorl p•·erJ.1ra tion. Call l'\no1vledgC'.' of con1pule1· . S_UPERVISOR i•ec-JX. o i·can11·; o ~,, -MACHIN' E TOOL DIVISION ~fillb1t ,. 1 I OiPf F'red, 644_1700_ l'Ornnurnications ofiezued -ling? TJ'D.in into p;u·a lt>_l.!al. PURCHASING
T_1 .These positions are syslen1 htolpful. Al!rac1 iv<•1 e MED. SURG. Xlnt skills · 71J..ty1>-shr1hnd
ava ilable at various C 0 0 K -R :\ I e ! g h 1-li!ls iJL•nefil s & 1vorking envil~)n. 3 t 111 l I t 1 S~li0/1110., Also fre positions.
Job Wanted, FeTale 702 I
NEED help ut hon1<!? \Ve I
have aides, nurs c•S , 11
ho u s l'kprs, <'01111x1nio11s.
tlon1eu1akl'ri1 . U µ j o I: n · I
547-fitiSL -1
loca tion s in the . l-lospil1\l, J501 L. ~fi1 11 St, n11·nt. EVf' inlervie1vs avail. I 0 , ° Call Elly El!i;; 5.Jt:i-.':l30:i, Conrac Corporation CLERK
I r-:e1,·po11 Beach, tiiL'>-5707. Control Da ta Corp. e MED. SURG. AIDES Cnnti'Ol Car1.'e1· En,11y 1\gcy, ; Coastal a r e a of S"e Dottie 3~00 Irvlne Blvd., Nf3. • 1 • · · C0:?1n1unicalions 3 to 11 , 11 to 7 9200 8 I A W t ' t ' Orange. County. COOl'\S · :;i·avl'yal'<l shirt. G Devc-lflprucnt Division LEGAL SEC Q S3 .ve. 8$ mlRS er Previous e·x pe.r. as pur·:
da)·s a \1k. Apply in pcrSl.ln, :6 19 \'/. '\-Va111cr, ~.~\. e ICU-CCU E I k.I ..., ·xp., gooc s i ls. l girl offi,•e, A E 0 • chas1'n9 clerk h t'ghly de-'
Holp Wanted, M&F 710 i
A var ie ty of skills
could qualify you
for these positions.
We would p refe r in.
Gividua ls w ith a t
·least 6 months ex·
perience in a bank,
savings and loa n or
finance company.
Acctn9 Clerk $650 I
Costing e:-.1JC1'it·11tl' '
Split fee/Also F1~ .JobS 1
, _.,\Ves•cliH .'
1?c1'SOnnl'I Agency
11:i:il E. Edinger, S.A.
(f\1ark Ill CcnLer l
542-88:«>
ACCOUNT A.NT
Fun Chg Bookkeeper
Required for No. Long Rl':tl'h
CP1\ !irtn lo \101·k on
\'nrious ,t,:Pti'l k'dgr·t· ~1e·
<'OUllt.~ · salary open. !21 3i
:J95-lli5a.
A P PREN1'IC1'~ 111ccha11ir,
able lo v.·ot'k par1s l'O U!lll'l",
1\1°lte . invoiCC's ,i:, a11s'\'CI'
phone. Pd benerils, 5 days,
7:30 to 5:30. $2.!"J() hr. Apply
in person, 11'17 Anahcini
Ave .. Costa. :ti.·fl'sa. ,
ASSEMBLERS
Varian Data Machines
A leader in !he n1ini cofi1.
puler inrlust1•y has scverul
ilnn1 cdiate openings in our
production area for
.<\ssen1blcrs a l all levels 011
1st & 2nd shirts.
If you're looking for a posi-
tion 11·ith a growin~ Or;1ngl•
County eon1pulcr con1p11ny
Sr. n1cel thcse <1ualifications
Plensc Appl~· In Per~on
llilon-F1·i 8:3oan1-lpn1
To The Personnel Dl'pt
Or Contact 1
B. Kra fka
2722 Miche lson Or.
Irvine
8JJ.2400, e xt 336
ASSEMBLERS
(i l\tos. exp in prhl!C!1 eircuil
boar d & chassis 11'iJ"ing, ;1p·
ply in p e r .~1,n. Coni·
1n u n i c:ltions/Con1ponl'nZ~·
Corporation. ::oo .Aii·11·<iy
Ave.. Co~1a i\IC'sa. EfJllHl
Oppllrtunily En1ployr•r.
APPLIANCE Repair ,\,!nn.
l\:Jusl be C'XJX"r. Apply, Tll{'
Earl'~ Plun1bini::-. 1 5 2 6
Nc\vport Blvtl., (7..1..
AUl'O
SALESMAN
TOP SSS ·
Expanding new car ticriltr·
ship needs 6 men to round
out !heir proft'ssional sales
staff. Ex~rjcnce hclps _ ..
but \\·c will thorooghly train
n1C1"'1 \\"ith good potcnlial, Jf
you sold rhree1 or door ro
rlol,>r ;uwl u.ril an1hitious and
v.·&nt to en1'n 1011 cjoUars .
then• is oo limit. Our bcne·
fil.!l it'IClud" free demo va-
' (_•ati<>~. OOnu .... plans, 'h06-
p1tc;.Jivi.tion, ,(-insuranCI'.
t::-,_1n while you learn. Apply
in pe~n ltl i111lr>s ntanager
9-l ri.m. Cu.-.tafMn Llnc-
,\ferc. 16.~.() Beatil Blvd ..
ll11n11neton P..1•:1c:h.
AIJTO
SALESMAN
Nt.1t."<I I tt1l1·11 m11 n, t-'X-
µt:l"ic11r!t>d, &ill l::llC. Jter•
nu·i, lnr~t· lt1y1•nfo-I')' '>f usOO
cin·11. f n_•1· 1lr-mo, c-\'.c'l'llt'nl
••orld ni::-1·uncJititin11, Set• Jjud
R)'dCr 01· 1'0J11 Aikin $i i
We offer f ine start-
ing salaries, a n ex-
cellent ne w bene--
fits pro g r 1a m,
pleasant contemp-
orary working en·
v ironriltnt a n d
plenty of opportun·
ity f o r . advanc•
ment.
Please Call For
Appointment
644-0113, ext 257
SEClJR-ITY
PACIFIC
BANK
I Equal Oppor. Employer in/!
Bi\NKINC
• TELLERS
-Con1 n1c1·ci<1I Banking
E)(Pl'I'. l"equirt"<I
CE~TIN ELLA B:\NJ\
]'\('11·1w1r1 l~h Rt><.;ional Ofc
l\lrs. Rio~
!il11l 646.7121
f:qua l Oppor. En1plo~·er
13/11! ~'!AID -O\"er 21. part
tiln1• (01· collcge . bce1· ba1·,
8:::;...SJ ~!l af1l'r 3 pnl. ask fOJ'
01\'Jl\'I',
BOOKl\F.EPEP.. girl fr iriay,
n1us1 havi' c :-.: c (' ! I e n I
t<'lf'ph<1nc pcr~nalil.V. good
salar1 and IX'ncfils 5:i7--03l2
BOYS
12 • 16
\\'.1nT Cd In lh~· l luniln~ton
B.~:1(·h !ll't'a [OJ' p1u·1 tin1l'
j11hg th is sum111cl'. I need
20 boys "'ho art." ll"il!ing lo
\\Ol'k ·I hl'S !X'I" day this
su1n mer, & \11011ld like to
n1akc S~'O. to s:;o. per 11·k.
Al so enjoy trips. go-earring.
n1iniature ~If. l'lc. If this
sot1nds lik1' you. e:1!I i\lr.
Don. 97!)·.~1 ·19 lx•forp 4 rn1.
BOY~. J:i-lG, [(1 s e l l
.. -LQ\1/EHS, llu_nt. Bch. C~I.
Npt l:lch. Sn ntn 1\ 11 a .
Sl;J()/hr • I· i10n11!1. .John,
<197-1:!95.
CAHPET l'ICaner h l' I !) l' r
1\·11111cd. Nl•at, (•11('r~c!ie,
\\'11i,:es open. St.can1 i\1<is tcr
Cflrpe t Cll'lll'nf'r.~. .174 0
Superior Avc, Ci\T 1 ,
Career Secretaries
Al't'l'l•C:C-c11nge $500·!7~. Top
S. i\<J FEES. N.B .. C.:\·J..
ltvln ... Ort111J.:c & S.A. Cull
l1nn1t·diuT cly . . e P .P .S .
P acific P e rsonne l
~ervices, Inc.
;;!)(I N~·1\·po11 Cen11·1· Or.
SullC'.' flOO. N.13.
t'".40·1fl7fl
2·1 Cen11'{ll 1'nv.•'·r. Or11ng1•
fl47·01 \6
£<1unl O_r1p•1r l·:m ptoy('l'
CASH IER
Ladles ready 10 \\'l'<lr SfK'Clnl ·
ity fl'htip. 5·15·07'24.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V, Coa!il llv.-y.: N.n:
642-9405
CL.ERK-'.fyp:lst.-. Ll'a...i u ~ e ,
!/time. /lfust have ior..1ne ex·
pc:r, tin t\-IT$T. J.11"' firn1
O.C. 1\lrrx111 sroa. 979-fi900
BAD~Im:i:t -·arttHI, ru,.,.
for 3 ('hlld1wi 3):t(·~ !.'.:. 11 & .to. My honic-nftn~ nr1lv. ~lust h&vt ow,n tt·oNOp. \Viii
conskltt nutlure lcullij{cr • 968-l!iOll.
COOK
J.'"uJI or p11ime. No long bair.
c .arl's Jr. R9st .
No Exper . Ne ce11
,\ppl)' in pc1·110n, bef\\'ll 3 k 5
. "'kdYI at Carrs, 3.101 New·
pon Slv•I.. N.B.
Jack in thl! Bo.-.:, 1203-Llaker .• 5~.0.--2S20 II s· I \ • I I E I
St .. C.7it ENGINEINSTALLE,R . ' n1e11i;u1·a1c 1v aliilirv."'"',.=-2-~=-="",!:---~--~,,_,'-== -I 3 to JI to 7 an fl I na. !'.'a >ll)' COil\· n qua pportun1ty mp ayer ,,·,.bfo. Requ1'r•• 1-2 Y•!'
COUNSc:LOJ{~ ""~1!e.:ll for l\1ust have 1 yr rect>nr exi_;cr, e E.R C111J il I: "'.'.ii7.fil.81. • Help Wanted, M&F 710 Help Wante d, M & F 7·10\general cler-ic:al exper ..
C(;\n;·ia1 ~tn1rsha!I · }' i .C: t~,;·.~ in boat~. 11 to 7 Ll\TE-lN Con1pani?n 10 .carr i\I A 1~ 1 NJ.· i\J,, • 1 & · ience. Typical duties in:
ontro ._:i on r.c\,·port. 1 Islander Yachts · I for cldcrl\· Judy 111 Leisure . • · ~ 1 · NURSES Airl;:o .,. Qrtil'r~y. f'x p C:lude t yping of purchas:
lrt!iJl. i\Inst b1• allraclive, _ , ~ e PEDIATRICS \\"orld. 1\.l st k 1 •. , n1«-ha1ncally Ol"l f'O l t'd not rX'C. Opc n1n!,!:s 011 r!ay~. 1 have 11·ini figu1·t·. 1111d enjoy ,,7 \\. Jllh SL, C.i\I. _ . \' u coo· <ll\t> Pel'sonnel 7-:;; niitlnite 11-7. ·CtOOd 1ng. documents, tel.-
11urkln;.: · \\'if h pc op 1 e. [ !::XPERIENCJ'.:D 111Pc!11u1ic, , 11 to 1
1
~fi4~1!1t house,vork. Call * 6·1:1-::B61 * IK'nl'fil.1<. i\lakc :1pplie111ifln J;»hone contact with ver4
llilati.rrc \\'Oinan prf'f<'rrl'd. 011·n 1ools, paid benl'tits. I & OB RN & l VN KEYPUNCH a1 1 !J.) Su.111·rlor .Ave .. N.B. dors and account folloW•
Hou1-s 2·9 pn1. Call &12-363U ~10'.: labor. Apply in person. I· ' I I 7 1 MASSEUR o'."_·~111_ &12-_,2110 · u~. Applicants sho.uld ~' fol' appoi11tn1c nt. 17·17 Anahl'i111 Ave, Costa J' to 0 C ·
COUNTER Girl fot· cl~' ~fesa e CENTRAL SUPPLY Xln't bunC'.'tils. Apply btt11·n !' F 1 F~ \l.Jt.R , ~ , _ highly organized 1n ord; ., OPERATOR 9::m a.111 S: .i pin. r ULL Clf,\r.C.J·, O~} ICE er to h a ndle heavy wor'-~leaners, \\'ill train. Apply • C1\L FRID,.\Y \\' i l h MERCY G nlGH fvl' Nf'\\' c n !' -• "' Kusrcr's Cleanei·s. 1.)34 bus/kno\\'·llO\\. for ia i;t TECHNICIAN ENERAL Dcalc-rshi p. You kno\\· thc> load 1n busy purchas1nq
NC\\·port Blvd .. C.!\1. ii growi.J1_g-n1n.ll order L'O's _ 7.3 '\'e are seeking expel'. kl'Y· HOSPITAL 1•x/k'l'il·11c1• you n1ust huye. offfce. 1
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;; lf nr-1\' plant. Gro1rth oppty. punch operaior for Sl\'ing. 2701 So. Bristol Pl1•1,\~e 11 11ply in JK'l'SO!l, or ·
D• I A J b' 835-1098 MEDICAL shill. 4 pnl-12:30 an1 on th•' Santa Ana rho111'. 6-ri-7770. !·I a r hp r Excellent working con. 18 • • 0 • I~~~~-----~-TRANSCRIBER Univnc 1701-1710. \\I{' a.re (714) 979.3500 , i\1o<>r1t<111 nlotors. ditions and fringe bene;
NO\\I Orange Coun1y's n1ost
progrcssiv!' & innovalivc
tl'lllJXll'111-Y hel p sl't'vice dOL•s I it at::ain. Tl1l11JIO offet'~ a trtt·
GENERAL LABOR
B-4 :30'Tues thru Sat \l'illing 10 ll'ai11 on lh1• 1:11.> OFFICE CLEANING fits . f ,
11un1·h Vl'rii'l<'r. Locnt icn <>f F.qual Oppor. J•:n1plo~i'1' Ct)Uplt>. 11 1:111 1\'ile ('l\llt'I'· ! , DIETARY COOK
Hospital exper. Split
Shift. 5:30 am to 2 pm
I. 11 am lo 7:30 pm
ll.:c kt'y i)UUCh riC'l)I. in the _ ' · ienet·il only. ;\pp111;o.:11n;·11,•!y .\pply 111 l,e.-son j
11.:::.r ft;t ure \\"iii be Fashion MATURE lk1liy !<iltPr H.B.. ;: ht•.-; t·Vl'nings. N.B. 01· CJ11. or Cull: :I
I !y uniqul' ,'<., llnie saving 01r
port unity for skil!('(J
SECRETARIES
Newport Seach
Costa Mesa
Santa Ana
Orange & Irvine
Island. Nc11·port Beach. 0\1·11 1:ar 1·c ff'r. requir1•d ;i r<·a.~. S:>JO n1onth. Ca ll
5.16-1721 l:tl:;1 9:!7·011.'l. r~lf'nse call l\1rs. Ros~
101· an appointment
(7]<1) 5-17-7571
MECH/ELECTRICAL 2 OFFICE~G~IR~LS~
Dona Leverett _!
111111 :wl)..'.iOOO, Ext :c...o :
' I SECRETARIES
SECRETARIES
\\"ho \Vant dignified &
stin1ulating long or sho11
tern1 assignn1ents -l or 2
days, couple v.·C"eks or fc\v
niouths • you decide. No1v
yo u can ..
No "Fees . *"1eeK.ly -'Paycheck
6 Ai\i sbifL Day shifts, 2nd
shifts and gra veyard.
,Laboratory -
• MEDICAL TECH SAVINGS
GREAT WESTERN
Background. l\1ust have I yr NEEDED HYLAND
rcu•nt c~r»r. R •· I · .a.110 IC' ephone dispatch l
Islander Yachts i\lusl b(' 2'J, able 10 drive _., 11 3 to ·11 :30 777 w. 171h '1.. c.11 ,\pply '·" P«r•m JABDRA TORIES '
I YELLOW CAB CO. .,I'
APPLY BY PHONE
APPLY BY PHONE
APPLY BY PHONE
Call TEJ\-ITPO"S bffiCC'.' at
540-1450 & Let us k1101v
11that your skills a1'C. No nc>ed
10 con1e in personal!;" -until
1\·e have the "just right' s1}()t
for your
Your time is valuable.
Don 't waste it. Invest
it wi sely with Tempo
ai hi hourly ra·tes $$
NEVER A FEE: AT TEi\·lPO
Tempo
T emporary Help
•• P. P.S.
Pacific Personnel
Services, Inc.
500 Ne1\•port Center Dr.
Suite 900 Ne1vpo11 Bch
640·1970
24 Central To11•e-r, Orange
547·6446
Equal Oppor. Employer
GENERAL OFFICE
Local rapidly gro11'ing firm
nC'edS versatile individual.
Lite accurate typing & good
con1n"l()n sense will land 1his
great position. Start $520.
Call Linda Ray, 540-6055.
C0<1stnl PcrsonnC'.'I Agl'ncy,
2790 Harbor Blvd, Cn1.
e WAITRESS,
Country Club
' experience
Excelle nt Benefits
& Working Conditions
An equal Opportunit:y
Ep1ployer
1413 N . .i\lain Sl., Santa Anti
1\n Equal Oppty Employer
KiYPUNCH
DAY SHIFT
MEDICAL
'f.RANSCRIBER
S nin-4:30 prn TUC!!,!(-S11t
Xln'l bcnerirs & 1\'0rkin"
1;011ditions. "'
MISSION
· 6 f\lo's actual 1\·ork c.-.:J)l'r. ·COMMUNITY
I 011 keypunch, kcytape or key HOSPITAL .
I ~..,..,,....,..,..,..,,.,...,., d
0
!sc device. 27302 Puc-r1a H,,nl
----------n11ss ion Vil'jo A1>ply In Thc 1J::as1 Of San Dit•_g:n f'"l'\l'V Personnel Dep1u1inl'nt c v ·
Monday-Fri. 9 anl-l~ Noon rov.(]1 4)114~5 ~44~'·ay• l·IOSPITAL NEW
PACIFIC MUTUAL C714) 831-2300 A. · ~Mercy Gmeral Hospital 700 Ne\\"J>Ort Center Dr. F.:qual Oppor. E1nployl'r ~Tl !:::!~N;'~'~'"°!i'';l ~B~o!a!d~•!:l!:l:/l~~~~~~~:i"':'e~ NOW OPEN J\-1EDlCAL Assislant, part tin1e. CP's oHil'e. Exp"d
2701 So. Bristol LABORERS ,~·ith phone .f!.'. h1uulling pa-
Santa Ana (714) 979.3500 !JC'.'nts. En1phasis on back ln1med. Assignments office, will give so111e Appl)-· Bct\\·c<'n !) a1n & 4 pn1 Top $$$ ·RN'S I .· · · · ·:H()-<14.jj) .tJ~ining. J\-lission Vi c j 0
----------------GENERAL office g-irl. con· l"\:uic-17802 Sky .Park :irC'a. ufttr 5!30. 6i3-521S. -~~ struction bkkpg exp essen· ICU, CCU ,'\:'L\1'!' 11-7 ·NEVER A ... EE AT TEMPO J\-fEN or "'on1"n add to yQur nl·A· A ·o~n• ~ial. Pl'epare 2!!~~"~"~"'~°'~';...--08--DEPf. po-!femporai:y-..Jlel ,_ . . :.. ' 'cs.. "V ~ r...: reports, Alfi, a·nswer recruiting & 1rainjng. \\'c
phone-, son1e typing. .no LABOR-~ DELCVERY. Relief , LADY \\'ilh inanageinent train )'OU. 642-0528. l.iz Hc1ndc1·s Agcnc:y
·l,)O) Cn.n1pus Di·., !\.B.
557-3401
smokin~. i\1on-Fri. 8 hrs MED SURG day, s.12-1412 ability !1) ove1~ office MOTEL housekec1Jin~ innirls,
RN 11·7 b11ilding. Apply rn1. 305 Lido tu11 or part tin1l', l'xccllcnt
GIRL FRIDAY SURGERY RN 3--lt Building. 3355 Via Lido, \\'<>rking cond. Good training ~~w' !\lust be good typiSt, . OOok PEDIATRICS Ne,vp6rt Bcach, 673-1156. in a job 11·herc demand for
Delivt'l'Y or DAD.,'{ PIL07. kce-ping-, handle phone & MACHINIST cxpcl·icnced, traincd IX!I'S?nnc>! is .. cOn-
S UN DAY 0 NL Y, Io flunt l'l'ccptionlsr. Interest· RN 11·1 sci-up and Or,w:!rate Lathe, stanL Call :>~!Hl171 \ag~·
]sti E. 16th. Costa l\lf'~:i 3300 Hyland Ave·. '-,
OPEll.,\'fORS, t•x1w·r. only. Custti Mesa. Calif. 92626.,-..i
single-ncedl(• & overlo1:k. r
Top rates. RoU's i\·h1nuf., i'.:<11uil Oppo1·. Etnplo)'l',:
rii~.....{l~iucti•in 71.,._. NB.
1
... ~..,·~lt~•l~e~&~· ~F~c~m~a~lo..,..,.,~:!ii :
REAL ESTATE SALMI
FREE LICENSE ': OPTOMETR~ TRAINING ,
'i\lu!il tx• n1aturt'. This i.~ a ~a111011;'{ l~ea.I F:sta!I' L~ce~~.1
J'l'Hdy n1adt• pi•nt·tit·c. Nn in· ing Ct1tJ'rSC' no\\' ava1lati'lb'.
Vi'S1nll!nl l'l'qUircd. nt•al thru Ti11·bell H.ca~tors. })'('{ n1on~v· rnak(•r fui· sleilrh· ~ll~l'!l~,...nt Service. F'l-et:
n,a11-~on a 111onlh to nionth Tr1~11nng Proi:,'l·a1n. Earr
h'asc. Jl!ione 1 il·I) 641.!r,-i:;:; ~·h1le ~~ 1I~:u:r_!· _ CalJ .;\
nftc1· 7 pm ivkdays, all day Sloan I' 1__ S:i:.!-5:140.
Sun. REAL J-.:Sl"A'i'E: SALES
PART-Tli\1E. Early nlorning S~CCE~ CAREEI~
tTiutc dc!ivcrv. L.A. Times. N~'v 0 1. experienced. Join the
1\pprox. 21:i ·hr. per Lnoi·n-\\orl~I s J..argesl and fastts
iiii.:. Call 5"36--l772 0 r g1:0\1·111g rC'i;ale organlw.tio
968-R!lIB 1v1th a nct1\'0rk or over ·30
olfi!!C'!I and beco1ne .:i
POSITIONS OPEN 1nendlt'1' .1r our 1\lillio1111.irc Club. l\tulti-1nlllion dollru
FOR NEW BRANCHES nd1·crtislng-pmgran1. Free
.'tttt-&-Pml·'fi1n" ~ rnntt!Cd"tirensi11i; school
SAVINGS ·DEPT. Eio:c('\lent iiales !raining.
Savings & Loan E.~pl'r. \Vhat is you1· lieenS<! \Voctt
Jln•f'd. Apply Jn Person. lo you? CJH.'<·k OU~ mQllt~
Mariner's Savings & bonus proi;:1·1u11 \\"/11ch n,eam
L A . . $SS 10 you~ Plc-a.sC'.' di oa n ssoc 1a t1on Virgini·i Jon~·g 835-4..'!11 1.
1515 \r,~sh.:Hrr Vt"., N.L:. R E D CARPET ' • 642-'1000 R ealtors ' ne111!par,w:!1· carriers in St\i'\1" ing \\'Ork ,vith good potcn· DIET ARY J\-lill, Service grinder, etc. bond Motor ,l\lorel, 31.Jl
CLEl\"IENTE area. R('(1ui1-es tial. Salary comn1cnsw·a1c Opportunity to Ieani Dental Harbor Blv<I. C.1\1. PRESS OP-ERATOR REAL ESTATE
U-of St·•••·o1> \\'ago•• .,,. Cook, flo~pita! exp. pref'd. yn. C ' J\-t H ' 1,·i1h f'xperif'nce. CaU fo r s::io M t·l t~M & Orthodontic ins1rumcnts. MOT EL maid, neat \Von1e~ 10 11·01k" r~i~ pla.'ltie SALES MANAGER • c-.?~· 03~10tac~V ~ rBa rus"?' app't hC't1Vl'Cn 10 am & 12 Dessert makC'r &/or past-.-u Call E.A. Beck & Qi. energetic, Laguna Beach , n1old1ng pl11nt. o46·.i370. Resale Office ll('(':ri" mn""g"'
.x:ecy, ' es Y ·• nbon. ti45-6133, ask for i°l'trs. 1 ·~ 64.'l-4072 for interview, rcsort,6day\\'l'ek . .1n.1-11«. PRESS O S 0
·-"' Costa ~1csa. G42-1321 1nakl'r. . ";J' "" MAN; FF ET with 2 yoal"s of Heal Esta)
, Clark. t.~~.,."ll0"l 8•1>ef,·1 8-4:30. E 'rl A < 'I AB D' k pc ' N I 0 • DELIVERY l\1an, p/1in1c GIRL FRIDAY ., ..• ._"' ,_ ._ s M,<tt;i'i'i;N";;;:;r.c-.,;;;-<,~.I·----------,, xp qn ~· 1• or .. 1c Pl\: riencc. 'l'WJJOr °"'ac f•ir furniture store worJ;. ~ & \Vorking Conditions MATNTENAi'lCE Man for NURSES equiv.. 11,HI train on auto <1rea. Expanding compruif
Over 18 & must be neat & '*** Cdf\I Really & Ec1ual Oppor. Employer exC'.'lusive, own your""OWTI ·12 ~ · 111TSS{'S. 2nd & :Ir1l ShiH Exet•llcnt opportunity f01
clean. ?.lartin l''urniturc, Consln1clion Cont pa n'Y I Z=:i=:i::::l=:i~ u~it hayfront npt. Musi _he ,c>PPORTUNITIES opening!'. Oppty for advance· profcsslonnl gro"'1h. App! JSf,) Harbor B! ... d, Ci.''! secks young lady \\'ith iiiiiiiiiiiiiii honest, dependable & wlll· · incnt. i\lr. i-1(•11•i11 5W-9772. in co11fid('nc:i!. Send resum'
:-1.J.-.;...,'Jt3L -RE~\TED experience ln INSURANCE SALES ing to do a good job without FOR I<> Classified ad no. 6.18, r:i c bookkeeping, 1y1>ing. r)hOncs, su1Jervi~ion. Must l.ivc Qn . l'R!NTlNG Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560
DELrvERY, 5 day:;, lllOI'n· etc, Sa\a1)' open. Call for P!'emises in beau~. apt pro-STAFF NURSES C~ta ~1esa, Calif. 92626.'\
ing pa1>er l'OUle, in N.B. upl'V\inlnlent, 675•6900. v1dcd free w/ut1I. PC'\'11). fBINDERY 5:30-7:30 a.rn. $1·1ll'/rno., •-No exp nee., earn "''hiI{' you future .. good salacy, xln't
p1·crerl'ed n1arri('(f man, GRQCEH.Y Cli.;rk, ,full & lcru·n, pai1 tinie, eves & \\'Orkin~ c:onds. Ph<> n c ORANGE 1HELP 'REAL ESTATE SALES
f{esuk•s in Newport. ·Bca~I "'/l'COnoinv car. 979-7516 p/timc. eve shift. Neat ap· \\•knrls, full tin1e whl'TI quali-673-8711 or 675-3366 'Iii COUNTY
. pear. Mw;I be 18 or OVC!'. fiecl. 9PM .
DELI'{ERY ~tan, t' a r I y I A1>PIV bctwn 7am-2pm 7-11 r·armers (nsw·ancc Gt'<>UP . MEDICAL 1nor111ng. 21 ~ hrs, $220 per 1'-ood· Store, 1515 G lslc;, CM Ed L..wi * 5'llJ..lS34 MAID for Laguna Reef
IU't'O. Expcrl('nccd . or lralnce to HARBOR VIEW •
('Ollnte, drtll and !Stitch HOMES
1110. + bonu s. Call L.A . ?.1oteJ, 30806 S. Coast l·hvy.. CENTER
'fi111es, 642-4800. 1 llAVE in1n1cdiale opening Laguna Beach. 499-2005. · printutl pagcs. 'Nighl shift
1829 Port Sheffield Pince only. .. . for good OOCl't'ta.ry. Trlng, INSUR~\NCE, personal lines II I I DEPENDABLE d r ~ v er s shorthand. hkkplng, _girl undcrwriler, N.B. agency, MAN to work fu I me JI
n1ust know ~.B. & C.M. a 1, Chi l !' c 1 u l' a 1 of.fice. * 548-ll89 * rental yard. Neat in ap(X'ar. Stimultiting Univ1.•rslty
Environment
FUll-&---P/timC Positions
Ncwpott Beath 833~
'11k-rlays only, PRESSROOM
nrca Apply Pma. l\.1an a r1 f:u;;;;;;;~;;;;;~i;;;;:;;jj w/neal handwriUng. \Viii ' • -• -gm:.,1ffffi 11• • "• .. ""¥ft. A ; •n'>ll 4. • ·v P-·v ""ti train. Apply morns, ....,,){/ Multi Operator
Dl.SH\V A S H ER and
A,ushboy, Appl y Ce 11 a r
P.csn1urant. 2'x.l Forest Ave,
L.B.
HEALtI-1 Joocl store desires Ncwnorl Ulvd, Cl\1. e Critical Ca re
expcricnceri nta!url' \\'On\nn· l"'""'E ncrtt",.....n...ICI MANAGER TRAINEE e P sych. la tr 'oc Care , l\11n 1 yr experience, . ror full lime work. 548-95.17 "-v11"" ESr<~~;!'y~ 1 'ft
HELP . CC0\11( •/"4\.JU,..'-OutstandJ,ng J.opportunlly t!> e Gentral (are su •
JUV advance to mnnagcrMal pos1· 36'' M iehle Pres s Needed imntt'Clintc:ly 'for wel· Co1nm'I ArtisV Ad'V to 1l2t< lion in 3()..60 days. Our cur. Ne1v en1ploy<'s s!art ()n rvc11-
REAL ES.TATE -SALES• ..
d \Vhy 1101 work In ll"IC hottd nf• nrl'11 llunllngt(l
Bench/Fountain Vnlley Cn 1
Phil MCNnn1cc, VllJ.,~G
REAL. EST ATE, 003-1567 Dr's Assistant sui1 nnwufru:Lurcr. ' F/C.Bkkpr-(r<rtaiJ:l 104850 rent nl Ct n agers earn ing or nilt' sirts: Trnnstc\' to Operator1 * GLUERS . will tr3in. Tnd/Comn1 Loan Proc $8.50 $.IM-$1500 mo. Must hl1vc days. Xln't trlngc l)(>nl•Hts. i\llnlmuni ilifC<' ycu{·s exPt'1._ REAL ~ST~TE $Al:1!$
Young:' Indy <JS-28) ro ::i~slst * EXPERLENCEiD INDUS. Ins ltlilcAVrile $700 direct Ralcs experience. Slaff dcvclopnicnt p1-og1·1un. iencc. Night shift only. Top comm, split; all the ti.6·
In heal1h spn. \Viii train, no 'l"ftJ,\L _SE\\'h'lG MA· Acch1g Clerk/EDP 10 $700 Call l\tJ'. Ncwmnn ~ vnntages o( a sniall otc.
e.-.:p, nee. l\pply ln~t-ron CJlJNE OPERATORS, llnc Legal/Ox-p Soc'y to $700 C111l for J•1tcrvic\\~: GENERAL Xlnl leads lfun1. lnlmcd.
nny nft or' eve. \V. i>lticl1. Secretary/CPA to $625 JIME FOR Oin>ctor or Nuriir11g i cxpcn!les at all I<> Mic
<::t>ru,1 llwy., N.B. *-$l f1Pf'INC CLr-:RK, c.:<· hfnlntcnn1ttc Man to $600 1 ~714) i;:~a9:t ... Do• >blfl only. \Va-l"'u~ .. 1;.oopla. ',
pertenc:cd or wlll train. &..-crctarinl'I'mc.ii to $560 A Ext. 336 or &10 ,..,. '" ""' BALBO' BAY PRO ...
lJRTVER r 0 I' P,.rc-school. A111>ly: "Payroll Consfl'UCtion Or.icn QUICK c SH <tlld llltllnlenant•c y,·ork. l\tusf "" r-: Clean driviJU? record. Ptt· SEA SUITS-Design Grnltsm11.n $996 __.IOLCity Dr. ·SOuth orerafo forklift ond perfornt 642-7491 548-29'n EvM
ltfl"tlt .~ mntu1i.i. D OJ" s: R25 \\~. 18th St., cOsta 1'-1C!ln: Inventory Olerk S450 Ortni~C:. Calil • inist-elltrntou!I. l'ttrd. build· RECEPTIONIST . ~1t~~: Ev c !I/wk n d Ii -",.,--.---..+. ,--""'--,;-'--Pcn>nl Lilll'S Unchvr to S600 THROUGH A An AffinnativP ing t1nd 1nnc:hine n1alntcn· IU!pidly b'l'O\vlng tlnn need'i
H elper·M9;Cha nlc:al $qc'y $Utt Typ • 5675 Action Emj>loyct· nnce-. Prefer oldcl' pc1•i;on .. • indiv. ,vl outgolng _ .pcl'l'Onal
DOG Croon1crs, <' .. x Per I l\Iu~t have C'!<prr. \\'/hand k R C'pl/Typlng to $55(J ' ''"'"'"""'l"'l~'"'"""'"'"''" I pp y IN PElt~N lly LO h~nctlc front dosk w ,
tra!nhtR. LN1 11111s. Sorne power tool!(. 0t1>ablr. of ac-Mait c1c-1'icl'I'ype $'133 DAILY PILQ-tlf! NURSES AIDS. A ML_ARTE._C.-..v flll'lc.· Muat be accurate t)'"J)
f•),·per. pref'tl. Send resume curnJt• \\:ork, Toputron, Inc. CALL TR!S:H JIOPKINS I' & ORDERLIES jlSt. Coll !Anda Ray, i.;-· •
01• call. G<G-6101. P.O. Box, 5'1!1-U18. JERRI Wfl!T'l'EMORE WAN' T, AD Will lrnln. lntervJ..,, Weds. REPRODUCTIONS CoQ""' PoJ10"""' A~•n7 1366, Costa l\fesa. 92626. Hf·FI ~J 488 E. l71h SI. tat Irvine) G-1 9 a .m .• l p.m. No pho~ 2790 flarbor Blvd.}·C1'1 •
00l\1ESTIC l·felp Geol'f:'.P COnlPONENT SALES Suitt «24 '6142-1470 1 t:allJ. Park Udo. Flagship L577 "Placenti11. Ave. 1--'Tt=u"'l>"°"t~-,-,,-,-;nO-to'"""c-as°'h-,·l -~cn Byland Agency. 106-B Snhtry. Co!tA Metlll UJ't.'n. Call ~ 642 5678. Convalescent Center. 400 N~port &tlch ·weecH~ Rcap-1--,.= ~
16th St., S.A. 5'17-0l!'fS J\fr. Rann, 12 10 2 rm O•llYi -• . • · 1 h'l!tgs:hlJt Rd. N.B. ~ulll Oppor. F;mploytr ' From trtttsurcs to trash'.~
-
.t:Cfaltl=:::lfl:=od=''=•,..':::·,,··=-· ""'='·l":.:111=: NMVI a "Pnd''? rln~ s n nd! Sell ldlr. Items ...... 642'-t.i6T8 tll3J 6.'l5-85tt I \V1111r arl n"i;ull.o: : .... Gt2-."Jli78 Chu::UUed AdJJ •••••• 6-12-5678. CALL Dnlly Piiot ~~----.. ~~~·~·~~·~---·~· ~~·-'-~-·~~·~~~-·~~~-'~-~~~~-~~-'-.L-T.~~~·.._l ~._-_.:_·~~:~·-·-·~·~---~~~~_::~~_::~~=~--·:::_~--~~~-.~--~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·-=-~··~~~-·~~-'-·~~~~~·~·~~~"
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Tutsday, June 12, 1973 O~ll V PILOT 2
__!r s _• -t '-1::•; l(lll [ -::•• l!Illli -1),..,, .. ,, l[i]I Moodw.•• I~ I ---l~I -I~ [ --I~ .._I _ ...... _ .. ··-!~~
W . iiola i1nlJ ii 7f8 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ H I W od M & P' 71 0 -! •nffd, M & I' fl ~ S~t.lt'l'ARY '· H.1£ W1nlod, M&I' 71 0 • P 0"1 ' Apeli•n.c.. 102 Mlocoll1noou1 lllMlscelloMOIK 818 Olflct Furniture/ I TV, Radio, Hl~I,
•tCEPflONIST Admlnlelr1llvt Au't TE L EPlJONE A1U1wtrbig AUTOMATIC wa""'"" GE, ••• ••••••••••••••• 'Equip. 124 -;,;;S;;t•;;''°;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;U;;6!
" Career opply 1or tnt~laent Servk.-.1, Beach lll'ea. Profc>1· UNSKILLED lulu n11Xlcl, xln1 '-''nd., $65. pftOFESSIONAL. Jl"Q ( 1 In lt •
Day Or nlaht, no exp. nee, nl0t1v11,tod, orpnlzed ln<lt: over 30 yrs. of nge, Vnrl«I 1''rlg, good t'OIM"I. $.15. Kl'n· $5000 REWARD $5000 llOttrd 4 1tool i---ned n RENT TO OWN !PY• tun job. Will lntn, no vktual wtth proven t«.'Ofd how11. \Vee.ke11d11, 673-U6G. n101·ti, xlnl cood. SG.l. Jo)'\.'(' -' -Cnk:.lua1or, Th c' r n1or~e1': ~I ot ahortll&nd, etc. Qt~-. Require butlne11 TELEPHONE Sates. Work ASSEMBLERS (le llvery/guar. S.16--8672 or Copier, 2 10 key adding T V 'S & s·reR I O
App y I~ ~ any aft or w:rttina and l.l'Plr>i aklll• from )'OUt own home. '""84'-7_-8"1-"15~·------machines. C:t.IJ anytime, $10 eve. at mo Wtlt Ctt ll\\•y., plUJ ability to nieet d@&d· HlJhNt comntlulona. Ex· Rent Waihert/Orytrl For the recovery of all 642-2563 .. N.h ltlonlnet.~ce0 Utnt compen1&• perle!'~ not neceia&ry. Ftm•I• 32. \Vk. Pull malnL IND~A J EWELRY Pl1nos/Or9•n• 126 No cr~tt Chnck•No Dl'Ooltt
·-.,. • II end cha!!..,.. ft9U,_ · No l'Hs.-Top $$ * 639-121>2 * I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;; ' n..""-ADLE b a 1>r, at t t er In 811 e-xcep'tionat envtron· TELEPHONE .:ilicliora 1• r~e Df!'llvery • 1i·re• Repair
within walklng t1 81ance ot n1ent. Please submit your needed. , Cull !nnnediaJely FRIGIDAIRE "'a1hcr & 1 ORGAN SALE 1\tonthly R1mtali1 ;>vallable Pen")' .$choot, Rer. 12-5:30 rw1111e *1ld hl•-or .. -. Call ••• =3 Weoko11d1 Included dryer cuatom delux, Xlnt easily ide ntiflati stolen fro1n Navajo 11·urt11,er F• •tory ' tl-M r o-n Eves. S43 4444
d .. ..i.... -·1 """" ~"'.P · ~~.. 1169 50 11 5 Tradrn· "• 2432 Ne wport Blvd., Costa · ( ' u "' T.i'r ,. ... ....... •um.mer IKlhool. S. tnaa l1 )'OU qualify, Your ~~. · · a pni, ~ St1!C' on rnany n1r1d1•l•. Other /!:00 IUmtner time. 8 yr Old letter of trarwntttal thou.Id TIRE 1alell &. lflrvlce, Brake ._ n D ~'Iese. All Information strictly confiden-t11•1uul~ Ill~ on sale priced -* Summer Speclal * -~1'!-L 1W: and-deM:.cib&...how: your A Allgn!1t'~~,~~~ ~ I -. r:.~r-. FREE..-eick.-1.lv ••• Ri:lt· , . Jial._caJ M2:.22Sl hunl-S29S. . Rebullt~Ptctur.9-Tub.-
1no,,t vali.llble 1kll11 \\'OUld or . •11ll'l!· ~11 Pus A!)pl. Runnlna; or not. o d W 11· h M · C't •• 7•5~21,, or 25'' Color·l---
REPRO TYPIST
lMMEblATE OPENING S in
Newport Beach l Fullerton
arells. S3. 'i5 per hour A
bentftt8.
contrtbot• 1" the/"'"""" of ""c!:.'.!'1"A",1
11°0n.Se£".!!.. &1Ce4-nS022ter • Pacific Porsonnt l car S.111 or tcrAr> metal. ·················-• IC
5
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51
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Dtalgn S.rvle1 Co.
lOlO E,. tlm Fullerton
A11k tor Jackie 879-MOO
Yi'etkt\ay1 only
Mon-P'tl 8-5 pm
RESTAURANT
MANAGIMINT
a dynamic orran z11t1on R'" """"' ........ ' s I I 67!5-5258 South 0 111$l Plazn 540-2830 • 2 \~EAR \VARRANTY
ply In 1.Uifldence to: ciant. TOOL & Dll MAKER erv ce1, nc , FREIGHT Dan\llge Sale on HouMhold Goodt 814 IM~l1'.!:c'!e~tl!•!!•!:•o~u~l!._ __ l~l~l~I~!!!:~::'~~~~ ... ~ In.11lnl!Atio n AvailAble
ftM ad #616, Dal,., Pilot, New Growlna Co.' """"'Newport' Cen••.r Or. 11ew llotpolnt ' Whlrlpool .:. -STEI NWAY-JtlN?'!I Televlsion Service p ~ . .., """" '"' ' "" 14'.'1' YDS. of gd. !!hag car!)lilt l\10VING this wk . !\fuRI 11ell . ro1·rnerly l\lf'!Ut North Center
C.0 • ..!: 1500, ewta Mesa, T~ rtiWaa:e1, Co. Benefits. SUite 900, N.B. r e fr i K / wa shcn /dryers reduction, \Vrong-c 0 1 0 r . hy 6112, Watl"rill'd, l'•·frig., \?r,p1ano <"Ont10l1111,eur ..• !\todel 1 Bick s. ot Saker 5·'6-0002
a • .,_, Jve me. A. L. lndusl.t'I H, 640-.1970 Mf>.-0780. 51 .. 25 JX'I' yrd . &J&-8679 ff lltereo, h!/!I \v hug~· l\~ Gri.nrt 7 1'1. :Sa-note. open 9-:i IS rlaysl
S,_RETARY l&p E. St. =-ude, S.A. 24 Centr11.I Towtor, Orange e DISHWASHERS, wa1herJJ, .spcakcl'. niehd o!f!rc r111Jk'. .i. I liogany, fltllnu·d blnck. -5-,,~C~R~IF"'r~C~F.-S~A~LE~!-1~9~7~3
5,_. * 979-* 547-M46 dryers, reblt, lfll~.rn & Mi1ctll1neou1 818 13/\V TV, klng bcd11prell, '!llche,:t Otfl'l", ~•nr~lnit 111 tturmn.n l\nrdon receiver, NtwpOrl lhch Th I I C . dt>lv'd. 839-7620; 5-16-5218. SunlX'arn n1ls1 hnir .<1clt~r. ~.l~J1Y uppo!ruiu ent ouly. 121 15., ~-~·uy ,:peakers, PE n lt 1 C • rv ne ompany , Equal Oppor. Employer RECOND. APPLIANCES 2 PC. rorncr couch: 12,600 1·ru· bike l'n('k, many nu gifl ~:.·~=.·'--------idunJI turnt:ible. originally s~rtt:,;e-".~~~~-5aee;! Ha$ 0Ptl~:r1 l>'or \VA!l'ER 21 full & ilCIJwred . gllar. Dunl11p-r;,-B11J alr~nll : V\V ,rulll!r--i1cm.'l:-55H1.84. or1'75-3159; GU t.nRft.NSE.N splnct •. ,.·,,ro't!T !5668. Now s:IBU. Never uaed.
exp.er. BflekJ(round In coni-ecre r 11 . ovet· , 1fU5 Newport, CM :>18--77~ hltl'h. floor woxer; 2 . 9x12 or con1e to 17735 Acacia co1vt. lle11:«11'lnhlc af12-J_ 1'£•n-n~. 89:1·0501.
niuoity relationll dealrable. \\'/2-3 yrs related f'X1>er. p/t1n1e. Two Guys From c1111)f-"ts: Crartsn1an 18" ri inl-1'r<-"C Ln, lr'\rinl!. • 1·tx-orrli11;::. ans lv nu1nlx-"r
Tiie perlOJI we .eek muit be Marketing Sec'y Italy, 2267 F'alrvle\\' Rd, 0.f A~~~!,~: F_:~:ri~~t ~~: acUust nimvC"r: !'('(:I rdger SUPER Sf.1 J\.fovle camt>ra & SPlNET-Consolc-\Valnut
able to Mat4t Wt'.!U to all Age E~_per,_ w/resed 1:1.rch oraanlza'.-WAITRESS dltion. SOO. 646-5848. ~~00·t.•!2: 40" table lamp. ca.Ke, likl' new, $-l5. Poluroid $450. Ll kc nl.'\\'. \V iii trnde
groupg w/"'atmlh & dignity, twn t1e11lre . Hvy stat typ· ""°" J • ltuKI can1era .... ith flash at· for Baby Grand. 646-5240 Free 10 You Accurate 70 w.p.m. typing, Ing. 70 typing, 8h 80. Counr-ry Club Ex}"lel'. Bulldlng Materials 806 f'OR SaJe: One upi'ighr 19 cu. tnchn\Cnt like n~w $4&. l\~fF STIDO Piano, best ()tfer.
Intft'nted In .&n opportunity Sh 90-100 & xln't grammar. PI ea san t t e I e ph on c Excellent Be0l'flt8 & • Surplui . Building fl.. jreezt'r $60. OM<l ('(In• h011·1ing ball "'!lh told oul * 673-8457 * ,_ -• -•11t a ,·.., mov. ~Jn't workln& conds &: co per10na.llty req'd, \ .,.,·orkinJt tvttditions. di llon, al!IO one refrli:tcrator ro111ing ·cut1e, con1plete ln-
51i,11(' _. ...... , w• beneflt11t. · · Secretary MISSION ltfATERJAL · 1000'1 ot NE\V s:io. o ne hlue sha~ 9 >: 12 eluding ghocs rwo.rn 4 Sew ing Machines l28 3 Linea, 2 Times, $2.00
-lfi: ~------c
1nl ftftaurant chain. Good Call Mr1. Smoot BackJll'OUnd in land develop--ITE1\1S! Doors, lumber, ply. t'llg, userl Jess than a year limes) Ilk~ nr.1v. 1'1t>n s slzc1--~'-------~. v. acatlifl, A pron[ -~ "144 3319--ment co:--E.~per:-Jn-com· COMMUNIT'V wood.__alum..shi.:.ethi&",. llli)ld· $.50. 1929-B Anaheim st. -:91,-iM!Ehol:ie:.~7 = ·BA·ROA'IN HUNTERS---;\fOVINf. .,I) n!it~frff'"'flrgood ___.,
tlhulns: plan. Send resuml!' "'!'~Be"!"'"!·'!een!'!!!'9!!1!am~11•!!1!4!ipm~~ ~U~~a~r 1~:~a: ti~d.uT; 27a~0~J':~1':'Real ~0·1 l'~~0R$ ~li RPLUS Collta Mella. * AUCTION * sf':t-: THESE F'IR~f! hor11t', Thot'OUghbrect bellgle,
.or .. -1 .. in --at 1700 ""'s1c21TARsY7SALl.Ss !111: 70. ¥h 80. Min 2 yrs t'Ol-M" I VI I 2100 So l\f . St s A o R JENT AL Ru c; s, F1n Furnittll't' \\'hitl• Zg Zug Jn wal ('ah. inale-2~~).Ts old. $.IS-&.;69 -t't'V -·-· Pl • leje. Ill on e o . f\lon ·11~1Sa1 'io.S · Ht\NDMADE, IMPORTED, & ~ Ii only .................. S'\9.95 F'RE°ii: KITTENS
Gillett., Irvine. !ntfttfltlng tecre1arla1 tml-Adm Secret1 y (Eruil of Srul Diego .frwy 714· 546 10.12 NE\\I & OLD. Auctldn~ ~i~a~nc;.;, ~ m SingC'r Tou<'h & Sew " SS0.5Q male~ l fem~ie t\on In MI09 departrnent Of • r Crow11 Valley Parkway) · . Akhavi Orientnl Ru~s W ' d , A 't•. . . Singer 2'.ll 1''i.-"aU1er \V. ~().q,95 * after s·OO· 6'16-35Tl *
RN'·L needed lor p/tlme. Electronlcjl firm. Located in Expel'. In a bank, savinga A (714) 49>4400 C1mer11 & 814 No. La Clenegn Blvd, IM lft y S UC ion ern S!njl"cr Portable , .. , .... S9.95 · '
Attractive conv. hOsp. Open· Irvine Indusl:rii.I coniplex. loan, title co,. esc1,lw oo., (714) 131·2300 lqufDmtnt 808 Angeles. 213 -6.'?9-4480. \Ve 20751,~ N~rt, Cl\f 646-SliSG ,\LL GUARANTF.ED! J.'~EE 2 nulle fluffy \V'hlte
lngs tor 7-3 lo: 3-11. Please MUlt be independent v.-ork-lllnd develo1K!r, or la\\' office F,qual Oppor. Etnp,loycr .t;.. al...a buy used or1en1al rugs. Behind Tony'!'i Bldg !'.fat'\. NO Gll\'11\tlC.."KS! kittens.
call, &fo:i-ittO Ir. atk for 1'ffi'. et, good typtna .kills I: xlnt. proce~sing real e" ta 1 e NIKON DEMO STERF.O: Sacrillcc J:lale! R<'pai1· Hll &.>w ing ~lac•h!nes Call 5.1&-23?.S
Snyder. phone penonallt)'. Age 2'5· docunients. Typinlit 70, d.ic-WA-fiR-ESSES Thur1t-June l4--all d11.yl · Garr{lrd model, 11ystemized CARPp salr.. Car f!C .' & Vact1un1s, in Costa l\fesa 6 rREF. klttf'nlJ., 2 Sla1ne1tt, 2
, £ALESLADY, women' I 35. Starting lllillll"Y range is t11phone. lndividua\ selectecl E.-:per. only net.id apply. See See latC!st equipment! ltfodels C'hanger. stC!rC!Q receiver, air layer s \vUc \h.as ell 81t:e," OVt'l' 11 y1-a1"11. Sln~·ero $c-\v. gray & 2 bla.;:k.
f&AhlQ' "'· E~'d ,.1111_ • ~0650 • per month. y,•iJI be a self itarlrr .... ·illing Pei-.• nnol Manager. to nhotOfn'apht ._ speakers trioe deek jnektto-.re, mrnm1JL~11, LiiJ1g&fQTtr ICM• Ir)!( '1\Iachlne & \7acuum, 1878 Cati 646-9280 ~r "' • to accept l'esponsibility & ,,.., PHOTO MOOE LS Sill! . bo. l.. 11 00 ow pr ce ll. cc. 1urs., Harbor "~s.9-42 m~rchlndlae. Full/part. nJ.833-8314 1\·ork i,ndependenlly. Balboa 81y Club , in_ x, c~mpare · · 11 :3:30. 3.'3023 C!llle Perfecto ·'" 4 • 3 1\.10. old r. O>cker /1en"ier,
8.fT-5169 bet 10 A?d A aft SECRITARY·IXEC. Excellent benefits & \\"Ol'king 1221 \V, Coa!lt llwy N.B. t~ri & Sat, June 15 & _16 No\i $8;>. Or lei ml'!. 893-0501. s1, in back of Rayn"e Soft SINGER Slant Nl!-e(]le, hse. brolct"ll. 8152 Opal No. A,
7:30 PM To marketing V.P. A Chill· conds -' tactorv representahve1 REALSil.K, Inc. Now in ,the Water, near San J uan portable ae"·lng machl~. 11.B. 842-9274 SALESMAN !P.nglng poeltion requiring -./Call 644.3389 \VAJTRESS, Coffef' Shop, ex· 11arbor Photo, 31Zl E. Cst. Hnrbor. Areo. M e ,n s. Airport , San Juan Se~s beautltully. $4 a. ~~~•,...,3'°'P"u"pp""Hte_,s-*:---I
top lkUls Ii: organlzation. or 644.33l7 per over. 2l. No phone cllllll. Hwv Ccll\1 <Park:lna behind \Vomen s nnd Children s Ap-Cnpi~trano. 645-6.\12 to good hoinea a;;:l~ ~f.:1enlni de.pl. Marketin1 expel'. pref'd,, l<ona Lanes, 2009 Harbor, uc"Bn nk l.' • IJIH'C~ brough1 to ~'(J~r hon1e. STEREO: Qundral!Onlc 200 Sporting Goods 830 ~1after5 PM
Kerm Rima Hirdwar• but not mandatory, Attrac· Between 9 am I. 12 only Coi;ta J\.le&a. • . HANIJ\fEX Prak1ica. "'/thru Since 1920·. Te 1 e~1 h 0 11 e walt recclvcr. Gar rn rd _ · ~
-·· Har· bor Bl·~. ~1 live talary & benent.11,'A.pply \VAITRESSES, Hoo11ekeepe~s len11 focu11jna, internal !!~ht 979--0007 to sre our hnr.. mode I . S vs t e n1 i1. cd ·12-·73 . J{NEISSL S up e r t2l BLAO\ kitteni; 8 \vk.11, l i -~ '° & "·undry Help Apply •• C · s C M. 1 F, \ve1111ed lt:'hsebrkn . ~-~SAL_ll_LADY. _. _ ~~Wi.~~M~a:u~ -TRAINE.ES pei:-';f!.~l'.· N~·P.Oi:.t Vi!l;: ·$Jo;~~~71 lens, case, 1ioTIN!cm~~111~~unr~'7 ~:~~ ~u;J!b~ee r :~pe N~~k, i . ;1~~i:r.<1.180~"'1ro~~~ ~':! l\folhei' Rus11 Blu 642-17G8 . ~enced. Medium to bet· 1111 co .. Irie. 1505 E . Warner, 4COO Hilaria "'\vay, N.B. t -Call 675-34211. guaranteed <st t g-h t I y $190. Nt>1v $L21J. ·12-·13 Kas· FRE~ KITTE-NS
th l?.•ady To Wear Shop. S.A, Equal Oppor, Emptoyer \\'lll'train dependable wonien WAITRESS EXPER. Furniture 810 SAVE..-me rron1 the chftln scratched,, Com par~ $400. tle CPJ\t , 70, 1 9 5 ' s *¥53&-6995 * ~. SEC' Y-BOOKKEEPER lo become plasdc injection i'1lll 4 p/time. Mu11r be over !Iii\\'! Brnzilinn Pep~ tree No11• SHI(), Tcmu1. 893·0501. .,.,,/So1onion 50~1'11. Ne\\' $210. NINE yr. old M Sam~
SALISLADIES Xlnt opportunity w/irowt~ ha,~el~n ~:r&1:'·abt~u~ 21. }.1n't hours. Surt & Sir. QUEEN si7.e sorp bed, ]0x1 5 foot tall n11'1st go. PICASSO l Jtho sr~i:;., Dali Now $l2S. 979-l34l alt 6 pm. I dog) to gd. hOme w/lotl
i:..._,d drtnet A .........+ll\'eU, Cotta Mesa co. fOf' Gal f'rl. stand tntlre shift i 1 loin, 5930 \V. Coast HWf, NB. Scotchguarded, green & \Vould enhance L'IOmcone Etching $75., ~firo Lllho TV, Radio, HIFI, ot yd. 979~9009
LM'lp .. ,..... ' day v.•tstrona typlna, sh & necel8&ry. Opening& on Day WANTED niature \\'Omen to .,.,,hedal 00
11ve75nbeng, very! 1~1 e11'e's yard. \'ou dig. Call $150., Rembrandt Elching Stereo 836
• •PP'r Gloria, 5-15-6524, bkkpng. exper: Cole lnitru-08. f 5 hild 5-eon . I llt o e·r . ~2279 alter 5 pm. $600 Olhel's. P\'t p t Y •• KrITENS •• :~ 8• 23M l!arbor Blvd., nc-;,
1
n ,,~2_.,;.;,,."¥JEq34 Palla<:<
0
ntla, ~tt·1:.1tt95~~ =~ft~;· tO-~5 3~Y• ; we"J." g.T;.m. COo;sU.2'JC!l7·~-•-· 1 1 1 -r\rtN m11.tt~ees & !!prings, 535-55!15 SHE1R1\\'00D1 _ru1odcl S 11100 •9 ·.·k!l.:l~~f.f: ~ng•
.1•. t>'l ---· u ppor. fJl:art . rtaille in--30 -da'Ys,·.-' _,_Summer.only. to . .Start.6/J8. _ "' iu~e S!'!B, a mOll $20.00: hand la,\·n t'<lger, l\nl n1 1110 t111 ex reee ver,
S}:;CRETARY. p/thne for Employer. ·.. Aiiply 9all}·Uam ot l-3pm $40. a week, C.M. area. Call ne11•, scoTcnguarded, yellmv $6.00: pink girl's lnmp, Miscellaneous 2 qu&clraflex 6G spea:ke1.:a, 4 PUPPIES--
,law ott1ce·1n Fuhton Ialilnd, ~S°'E'°'C°'U~R°'ITY=~0~,.~,.~1~C~E~R=s *Orange CoRl!lt Pla!llics * 546-8456 after 5:30. plaid pattern,-· $200. takes $3.00. 646-1287 Wanted 120 yr. "'aJTtl.n!y left, S300. DobcnnM-Lo.brador
N.B. Call 6<14-5040. 850 \1.'e!lt18th St. \\'ANTED babyalttl!r, both. G4G-S679 WAI.Nut trl11nglc end tabl<" 645-5247 altl•r 5 p.m. -6 1111-ks. * * 493-0188
..., SECRETARIES $500-$100 ~k:'dk~~u~~~~~~! Costa lttesa, Calif. Sunflower&: Falrvie"" S.A. • SOFA & LOVESEAT • \\•Ith llht:U $15 Gold anti AO\'IOUNT NQ OBJE(.'7 --~ ~ ---aw---a-sra Let&I Sflc')'l!I $U5<rH7S nlen over 21. Pl~t in 1rvlne 556-8498 n<-"ver used, both ror $160. CryS'Tal -cttnndelier s 4 0 OLD ORIENTAL RUGS azawraw>..LWL _iWL --
Clttk Typl1t1 $400 complex. u. \\'.ar r en ; WHO WANTS TO \VORK? ~7910, Usually home. 891-8178 ur:a:entl:v needed! An:v size. 100°/o FREE 833-ml, extl!ll, 10 am·2 pm TYPIST DRIVE A CAB! . WANTED 1• buy like-new WANTED-u•ED (714) 63S.1125
Liz Relnder•1 iW!ncy Mon thru Thtll'fl. ClJOOSE your hours, work fUrniture & lamps, nice & ORIENTAL RUGS OLD ORIENTAL RUGS.
4!500 Campus br. SEMI or retired nlan for aoU Newport Be1ch for yoursell, be your own reuonable. 644-4687 \\'HI puy cash. Please ca 11 \Viii pay 5-10'1c more cash
546-2118 Newport Beach range, iMlde or outside. The Irvtnc Compsny seeks boss. Men or 'romen. Ca.n TilREE 80lid teak low·line 1213) 874·2842 collect. lhan top S paytt1. Eves.
Al90 mechanlcallk tncllned nutomatlc t Y p e w r I t e r be slightly handicapped, chaiis with cushion& $22 545-5070
Ira! t (!TEL) N • ~1 A "A" "-""' SONY TC-35.1. Super scope -"'"-".'-""~=-==~-!
SECRETARY ~:~~~ t~~1 • =~ neFl•LopeEraCorLE. RK vt=a~r!r /..geP~0X:'7cJ each. 1J'ro-aolM l'iteroo, tRpcreoonter, brand ORIENTAL RUGS
.1 ·=-=='~c..==---Sup'p!ement · """r Income' FULL din. rm, & br 11u\!e, ne\\'. 1 on TV, Retail value, \VANTED. Pay top cash, = 00 Fair Dr .. C.f\I. With 2-3 yrs typing legal . ~~M ' \\'asher & dryer & several $-IOO. Sac $250. 962-1-164 644 """" an SERVICE Sta. needs 4 pump document• + expel". w/fil·i Drive a cab 6 hn or more a-antiques. 968-6772 ·MJVU, ext . Island i;alesmen -A•/lube ex-trl I day. Apply In person, t)!UST sell I 6-18, Antq, chr. WANTED to buy, like new
R ···• 2 • T.'"'' tc Ing I'@ eva. • Y • t em 1 Ye!Jow Cab Co., 18G E. 16th STROLl..-0-Chalr complete sin. marble tbl. n1irror. turni'ture ·~am 1, -•-·• equ1.-·• I • per. Full or ~/time. Also nect1sary. MUAI be detail · t kl $~ Call ., "" Jll\."C a:
t I I Ith I I & St. Costa Meaa. lK! • as n~ rr.1. auer Bookcs. t'I C. Art . 6. 645-5632. -a••nable 7 re er 1 exper ence w rnan ". smo1 c. 10me consclOUI & metlculously ' 5 30 PM 552-1:>22 '"' ""
a m In Im um of 60 lite mec:h. exper. Apply R1.,"CU1'ale. 60 \\'.p.m. typing Wholesale Nur1ery G : 's r 812 4" TV & rarUo. Runs on hal-BUYING gold & silver US w.p.m: typing. Candi-Arco Stalkm at 17th I.: Xlnt ~J'kina: conditions & Superintendent arage I • tery or elect. Al!IO tape, coln11. Call for appralW I: d te t h bllily Irvine, C.?.'l. co. ben.ftts. Lnrge wholemle nursery in GARAGE Sale -Lady Ken-r.rc. b@_k!'!, records. _S36.8539 .pick up. 673--03'7, prt pty.
• 1 mus IV• • SERVICE 11.aUon 1alesman. Cell 644.i319 So. Orange Co. i~ expanding more washer elec dryer HAVE you lost your Shaklee Office Furniture/
to handle varied •••It"'" Full time eves Mln 2 )Tl.. Or '44..J317 & needs gen'l nursery like new. Garden toolw· ~!~tr24ib0u1t_o.r? C~l ?\larilyn, Equ ip.
DMnt1 with • minimum expe1;_ence. Ute mechlnlcal Between 9AM & SPM supcrintendant. Must have 3 lllbles, lamps, clothing 82'. ,,....,.. "" ~-""'°""-----.;;'"
1upervl1lon, ! lmo"·lNlge. Neat ap-Equal Oppor . Employer yrs supcrvlliOry t! x P e r · , 10, dlshct, Jrg elec ran, SHAG CJH'J)f!fs. drapes, hang-E~ S\vVI chr11 $15--25 Sec
For an ad In Woman•s, World
Call Mory llolh 642·5671, nl. 330
~ight . Great Tops Success Stripes
7336
~arance, ~ly ll}Otns, 2500 kno\\·ledgable In fill phases hairdryer, etc. 10165 Oriole, Ing and floor lam 11, dinette, chrs $8/24 Desks $20/90 Ott
Excellent working ~ ,:,o•:;.WJ>O""'"'rt"°, ~=-..-~--of nurSC!ry production. X1ntd ~F.iouiiiinti; . .;V;;lyii.;;i!16ii'-'iii230i&.iiiiiiii..:,oinii· 'ii'scii·,;,· ii"'io' .i"ii"iibiil.ii. i!iii. ii'26iii.7 .... .:..·iisuilpiil iiS'ii'.i'iiV;ili.9 iiCiiMii&lii02-ii3ii408ii.;
1
/ j dltlon1 and frinte be... SERVICE StaUon Sa.le11mM TYPIST salary & benefllll. Send!I
, *'Its. full or pldme.. Over 18. lttaturro tndlvidua.l \V /nlin. resu1ne to Callssified ad no. . LOOK --. Neat appear. \\'ill train. Ai> ryp· ·••u 1 ""' 879 c/o Dtt.ily Pilot, P.O.
Applci'r 1~.Jr1"°" ply, riiO Newport Blvd., ml\~n~:'. J'te 1;h ~=bfe~ ~~ 1560, Costa Me&a, Ca.
C.M. \\'ill be retponJlble tor l\11 .:::.~:cw:::..· -------·II
, Den• L•v•rett
(714) 540-5000, t XI 250
Hyland
laboratories
UDO Hyl1nd A .. c .. t• Mesa, C1llf.
'2i26'
------
• Stcrot1rlt1 e Typl1l1
• Un1kllltol AMmblro
' Otn'I L1bortro ·,: VOLT
ln1tont Ptrsonnol
'J'empora.ey lervtce
.3848 C&ml'\ll Dr .. Sult• 108
Niwport 8Mdt · ~111
,Equal Oppor. Employer
~ -
Service ata. nta:ht attendant -
2 or 5 ntiht• wk. Apply at
Shell. 17th A Irvine, NB
typing, OOITe'lpOndence, tllet \\'IG -Stylists -Exper. S2 -
Ii: telephone. Small Qfc by $2.50 hr. Sal + Bonus. 7$00
O.C. AirpOl't, Hrs. 8-4:30. ,Eo:d:::iO"ng,.ec'..r!.., "H:Un::;t;. . .::Bc;:;h:::·---11
SF.RVfCE Sta. Attendt.nt, Good starting aalary + paid WOMEN needed for part
exper., n.at1_}/tlnle. Apply lm, vac 4 protil sharing time \\'Ork tor cleaning
In r.non, JW E. 11th St, plan. Apply Mon-n1C9-3 :30. M"rvice. Call Robbie's
Cos a i:.tesa. Communications o m • Rag-a-mop, 673--0819
SERVICE Sta. Attendant, ponentt Corp., 300> Airway iv'°'o°"11N"°·"a~m~an'-'--"oLoc=ac,t-re~si~d.·ll
9--5 6 d k Ave., ' Costa Mesa. lNear Deslan & lnatall windo\\' en'...4294. ~ E."'~teffr;;; .B_Ak_e_r_&_R_edh_i_ll_i.___ shad~. F/t1n1e. Car turn.
CdM ----------1 Custom Shade & Drapery Shop, 3535 E. Coast Hwy, VDM --CdM. -------
Anllquu aoo
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
• •
IT'S GARBENSTANGEL TIME!
USED GAABENSTANCEL
Mu1t have rlrht·handed·
zoenstlft with power diP-
poleck. Would accept ear.
ly model with battery op.
er at• d plddlebottom. Write: Cluslfled ad No.
174, DAILY PILOT, P.O.
olC 1560, Costa Mesa, CA
'
I ..
' I
I r ,
'"8 DAILY' PILOT 1-Tutld1y, June 12, 1973
............ I~ ;.I ..... _ ... _ .... ;;;;:l§J~QI
990 Auto1, Used 990
1\.0UNG n1ttl" ntl.~f!d dog. 'T2 2t' SKIPJACK. TifE CA~tPJ-.:n. Sliell -fh• f•or(I \f\V. E11g1~ 1600 '-'<'• reet;t1tly MAZDA VOLKSWAGEN . MAVERICK llsebrkn, \\'(•11 1 r ai ned , SI!'Jt:\VINDE,n, tlyhrld~~ Courier, Toyota. Datsun, rcbu1ll SIM. CAPRI ---------! Preff.!r u.~11~e gii-l or young 2'.l;:I hp. O~tC. 135 i:a.L fuel, ~lf.Wla P .U. $150. 968-2K>I * 5J6..9819 * BOB LONGPRE 68
I
\\'OlllllM. M8-S37:.! full cu11vas CO\'\'.l'li, Bhn.inl c I "k ~ '69 V\V Bug \V/'70 hi , . CA~fAltO, P/fl, 11.UIO., 19TI f\:IAVERJCR. Qr I e 1011 & rurtalnll. extra hat· I ye es, 81 es, l performance e .. ...i .... , Empl vmr.1 top, low mlleag'e. Ex· owrlcl', auto pQwr til('ClilJi, 'I
,!-"REE to dog lover, JD n11m tl.'ry, ADF'. M t , Vl-IJ", CB, Scoot•r;J 925 c..oquipped, vws'~hifter. ex-eel . runulng condition. New .19,500 ntl. 4 neW Ut~ '
l•Laild, n11•U. sz .• h i a c k ~a tenip, wni log, trhn l AulosforSo11e JIM·/ • MAZDA tras. Alust be driven. $1150. t ires. \ViU .saci'illce (or $1950.,831-1383.
IJIS<'lll•I° pup. ll 11) ~ tabs. broodbtll ('hlllt, rod John'• Racing Cycle1 64~a'.X.I days, 64~7675 eves. $1500. Call wk days between i ..:::::::::!..=.:,,.:::::;:,==--
5l0-30SG: E'""· &12-2820 l~td•rs. ootri<ll""'· deck * BULTACO * NOW OWN THE NOW' XLNT COnd '70 VIV B 3-5 p,m. 897-2472 MERCURY
A . BEl\UTTFUL i::hocolatc lighl 'I, P.IC. Bristol f,.'Olld. HEADQUARTERS FOR Recre1tion1I FABULOUS 1973 OPEN Red/whl, 36,ooo nti. ca~: CTIEV. '67 Impala O~g. '68 eoLON'{ Park Siu ! po111t ,,.,3 1it1le kiUC'ni:, kit· ,. '. 5-lf>-11l5 or 5J1-l379. Qt;"SERT, J\fOTO X TT CAPRI ping bed tnune lncld. $2050. owner, very cleun cnr, $750. I ~2~11~1usl i;:o \l'/1n11n1a, SJ·'• .t'K 21), '72 cruise or ... Aecessork!s. ~~iclet 956 \\'Ith 2,(XX) 4 cyHfldllr or v~ All Models Ready 963-5353. Prlv. po.11y~ ~~~l.n~; I~~·! ro$1J~
rnTE F"I ff 1 •. 1 ·ski. lo~~~· Slee~ 4. head, Harbor at \VllMn, C.~r. '73 GLAZE."R, 4 \Vhl drive. cnginl', with 01· ,,\'i lhout Fo IMMEDIATE ·n V\V Sta, Wgn. Radio, air * 6 · -56 * 673-2006-e:::.· ~~~---I'"'~_ u Y ,1 1\_•ns, \\'1•1111-N1•11· $;ioj,)IJ. N0\\'-$7500.; lf 646-4655 or 646-2428 7000 1111i. Xlnt cond., inust dCf.-'Or group, sonlc \\1tl. !!Un f cond. Very clean, Less than '67 CHEV I1npal~ Sta \Vtti;un, •7iM-ERCUR\' a.larnu.is, JO -&.t.!.J " tra lnt•1t. ' i:i;orl('d I· Vhal r 'R'~r or ,7• vAMAH-A-•• ~.c,..,.-u i:Ml:.·~1:.1 roof or 1· ndau top D iJJ,000 ml, $().-Jin. 673-"'•:;. xlnt l'O~. Inside & out. ·•
!Ors. s.·1°, ..... ~.6 ".·p \;m"n t<", ""'-•' :· '"~M ~L a ~\i·c .. r, ___ , eU-·--~c-'-='-'""'"-~;;.,;,;.;..:.~=·-1a k I ·" t '\V !ill 1-1 Mn,.,;-'t"·'61• ~-·· ""' " " ~foto Cro!ls. Good co11dillo11. '72 BLAZER v s. 4 \VO, .... tt·a dt~ -rrtak~;-S ij-lc SleeT -··--·,.-.... ac ,-pwtr'-a ,,...., .• uw · · ·~·~~-.... ~-. •1 ~teering, oarlocks, $'150.
111
... , wheel, radial tires, bucket 2001 E . 1st &\NTA ANA VOLVO ml. $ll50. 496-0708 xlnl. rot ., niany extras.
'BEIGE 1nnleo ro<'k11poo. 3 67:'1'-193.1. -nke offer. Can be seen at set of wheels & ti.res. Xlnt. seats. ORDER YOURS 558-78n SALE/trade '64 Im P.a I a , f>IS--6.-'i36
mos. old, harl puppy ,.;hots.
1
1966 ~· r~ISHING BOAT . ~lll1f:~~~!Y D~l.: ~~~' 'T"4"9MW~k-''~··"'""'-c..:;1397=--~9~6~2 1 NO\V. "Ea$;' to Reech" VOLVO nstro-supremes 6 cyl. Runs, MUSTANG
Good J)<'rsonality. \li9-j"*2:,, G!asn\'ln \V I Trailer. 150 l\Tesa. Ask for l\1rs. Green-rue s GUSTAFSON MERCEDES BENZ ~~~gd.: '64 Lel\'Ians.
,* PRF.'TT'i' Clllll'o fcniolc hpChevyn1otorl\1er-c~iser. -"cc'.can'--'6~'2:,~~3:;21:;.·~~;:'~'·:,,.:m=·-1971' Jo'OHD Ran~er XLT. L" I M 17th A • " '65 MU.STANG ,
C'al, llllJ~l flnd hOlllC soon. Occp-V hull .. l)('pth f1n rler, ;, ton truck a nd "11!~ fl. 1nco n-ercury 50 USE nn1versary '68 CHEV. $MP,\LA. $350 .
Call ()1.C1-71J'.!. live bai t ta.ok. $3.500. can * BICYCLES * ,\1nerlgo riberglass and 16800 Beach at \Varner D SALE AIR. COND. NEW T IRES U46 Ch11rleston, Cl\f
·Fl\11 .. DANE. Nfls l'OOn1 tn liJ0-1710. After 6 call 633-9264 NERWaPleOigRhT&CPYeCugoEt a!un1. camper. Both loaded J-(un1Jng1on Beach MERCEDES & BRAKES $TOO. 675-6Ul0 I ~.,~,-','=ru"s~To-Ac,Ncc,G=co"n"',-,e~,.,-":.-v~s7.I
run. Xtra lo\'1'. 7 111ns. 17' CARIN a:ul~er. ne"•ly , L RY "·ilh exi1·11s, fully :sclf·con-842-8844 * (213) 59,2·5544 °66 CAPRICE station \\'agon, Perr. cond. Only 42,000 1ni,
I G~·nt le. hs(·. bro kl' n . !iuilt. O"•ner n1u!lt sucriri~ 2116 'Ne..1-por\ Blvd., talnecl. Like nt'w condition "Home of the Viking" ON DISPLAY Huge Savings ! good cond., $6.iO. •>ric. ov.•ne. r. $1000. &l·l-l2'16
586-1$69 du<'-10-injury. Best off('T; On The 'PPninsu!a-Jn ·ND • 540-3"l38 * :.!00'..I s. G1·eenville, Snntn ST::>-1700 · -~~\/~.:. 1~ ~e~~fe~ ap. 1972 YELLO\V Capl'i, vinyl Sharp New Car Prices Start Al OLDSMOllLE
l;E:Rl\'IAN Shf'1>h<'1'!:I I Husky
l\lix. F'en11. :l l\Tos. Fr'<'e to
good home. Call 536-22:!2.
Ami. 5'15-1484--.-BICYCLE SALE •Phone 'a49-4348e·-~o21~lv..e~~,_•·a9s1,7;21XlO cc eng. Trade-ins $4260 '12 CtlEV, Capri, xlnt cond. ----------
\s · 18. "--,, Cl · •11 ., .,,_,., .,.., .. Coming In Every Day All exb·as.
1 is ' L/\_"-'P assic. '~ NE\V 10 SPE-ED. ITALIAN '68 CHEV. ~~ Ton with * 5-JS-1315 1r Sales & Servii;e
n1t1l1C>g. T\\'in la's. tandPnl BfC)'CLES $59.!)5. Beach ca~per shell. V·8, stick shift, DATSUN Ask About. Qur Unique f\f()(lcl 144ES (1446344-3.%1G6l OLDSMOBILE
lrail<>r. S~ La1·kport , JIB, Bic).>cles. 806 E. Balboa rarlio. Ca_inper sfiell fully Used Mer.cedes Lease \Ve make overseas deliveries CHRYSLER ' GMC TRUCt'S ~ ~it-Sun Sa.nt-8pm. Blvd .. Balboa 675-7282. paneled & i11sulate(j. Vel'yl-------~--Plans SceJt ·You'll Buy It --: HONDA CARS
I P•t• o•d Su .... 1ie1 Jl "L,J 1·1' FISJ1, ski, or iiu1about. l\1UST sell 2:io SuzUki prin10 good conditiofl, has anly $ SALE $ House of Imports 3) l '6.1 CHRYSLER Ne-"' )'orker UNIVERSITY OL.DS " .,.... ~ ~Ohp Evinruclc ele('t, ron1pl 42,000 n1ilcs orig: 01vne1-. DATSUNS · t4Jl f.llli&• · Full P\\'l'. ~i~e nc\v, $400.
equip. """"1·"' · -rc!inhle, git kit. $450. or bf· .,~~~=-------tJ Sa ~ "'""' 11--~-~~il~m;;m;;;;;_i · •r.o~ '"0--009J cond. Vccy fa sf, v e r Y :oAA .,.,-,,. l),g62 J\Tanchcster, Buena Pat·k -962·a-188 •><>:on l·l""'-r Blvd. -
Boats, Rent]Ch1rt'r 908 fer, 492-7662. ·12 FORD Ranger XLT Cani-NEW DEMOS 1973 on ie nta Ana Fl'\\')' YOLYQ CONTINENTAL ~sta ATesa . 5'10·9640
.Pets, Genera~-850 -CH•RTER 57, KETCH '70 LAVERDA IJ(I. 5 spd, per Special, ~~ ton, a.Uto; ---' -510's -
5
23-
7259 -1----------1 G.S .TORONAOO.~Ait.-1>1.croo.
{"" t:" \\'{bags ,'-: \Vindsltleld. Days J>/s, p/disc/b, split \Vin-Pickup JIM SLEMONS 1965 J·larbor, c .M. 646-9303 ·n CONTL. 2 di·, all '(!J~c1 , 1'~~1, !rlr hitch. l,.rnv nil.
1 ATTr.:'.'TION J>E:TS! "TIOGA'' 5 3 9 _ 4877/e\"es. 541):.,_1234, do1\',. dbl tanks, $100 (ii take 610's IMPORTS .72 VOLVO l&4E Dk Green, ah:• 1 0~111r. xlnt coucl., Jo P/W, 1:)/S. Nu r.adiuls. $1400.
I Jlon1c" U\\'ay from hon1e, Noii· bookin" for siiriJiro ,& San · Ho L over payments. to.Iusf sell! All l\Iodels & Colors to Saddt• •-aUt•r t'nt. ru·r.. mi, $4295. 492-4001, (2·1 hN .) 830..6709
built just for you? ~"mriieor l'r~is"s • -:;:92'' ::.'"~c:· c:·"'·-,,-=~=-.Jl.H>.=::.267=6.::'"'"'-' ::.•..:P..:':;.'---1 Choose f'rom. MERCEDES BENZ " ~ '73 OLDS CUT' ASS "" .... 1 72 HONDA CB 350 -:-A~'l/f't..T. '1!el inj., 29.!XXI 1972 LINCOLN C•lntinehtal. ...
l3ootding/(;roon1lng 5-16-2~~ Chet SalislJLiry II 4 cyl. Cui.iom hcarlei·s. l .GOO (21 6' Utilit y 1001 bQxes $6() AUTJ-IORIZED nii. _ Jn top concl. $4500. Fully equipped. Beaut. cOnd. SUPREME. po,,·er & ex·
Dogs 854 675-8344 or Tioga, Box 316, ea. lo.la.nual lift gAte $75. SALES & SERVICE 645-8288. Must seU. 642-985.5, &12-.6857. tras. $'1600. &J!H:ri02 9 to
1 {) Bal!'IOa Island 92662. nii. E.xcellent cond. $900. \\'ill fit Datsun, 5:16-8672 J" SI 6 pm StCVf'
OBF lf""Cf' I 645-2342 aft. 5:30 or 546-0038 847-3115. ' Im emonS Autos, Used 990 * '64 LrNC. oonvertiblc,
• "' -c-as~ hl start NE\\' '57 diesel n1otor yacht btwn 12-3 John. I · . \. good condition. $450 or best PINTO
June 20, \\letl 7:30 Jlnl. for charter. Part day or 'TI BLAZER, PIS, P/B, mpom~ AMC tf &16-621
I Nt>11·pnr1 Bcachl hvine ar\.'a · '12 KA\VASAI..::1 125 t'C. A-1. ne\v tires, extras, sltru~.' 1973 DATSUNS 1301 Q ll 0 er._ 5 aft. SPl'\.I ~16-492,, I rip, \•ery r ;e as o n ab I e. ,71 ..._. ,.. ua CORVETTE ..,. " Yachtin" Assoc., 6.ir.--""'·~t. i ~amaha 175cc, Sharp. 2 645-8382 N "-_., ~ rail auto cycle rack. &15-4374 =~~==-~~-~-I ALL MODELS eivport Dt'.'itCh Dogs 854 Boats, 'Sail 909 '63 CORY.AIR P. Up, xln't 833-9300 ~ "1 USED BICYCLES cond. Ne1v tires. $495 or best IN STOCK ENTER FROM l\facARTHUR ·~ \'ET Fsbk., P\\T.
BEAlITIFVL n1 i 11 i at u r e . . All ~-* "2 1~2 oU"c "l"l""1 aft 6 • autp, $2400., bst. ofr. p e di., r (' e d G e r 111 an BF.AU. 3:1' Trunaran. l\Iult1-,_.v= '>' • '" ~-·-·-~-~-~~=-"· ---1 BARWICK IMPORTS 1967 SEDAN v,·hite, beautiful 646-8941 days.
'72 J>IN)'O. Lo n1lles, xlnt
cone!. 1st $1650. takes it.
556-8508 str.1 -'::.:..:=::;:_ _____ _
PLYMOUTH
' 11 Shephe~d. inalf'. 3i--_. nl""". pie raCf' \\·inner. Rigged for l.ATE 1.'Iodel '72 ~'1 X 'GS CHEVY 11~ ton U'UCk, \\'ifh .,.,. rond. Ret.'Cnt eng 01•erhaul. •• t "· . 1 y 1. ll & · .-175 Camino Capistrano N · , COUGAR C O " ~R' T Had 2 shnts SJO. :>1$-jlll:J p er 011nancc. r....-.:tcns1\·e y
1
_a
00
n1aha 251kc mo!orcycle. ~~~n104s.~e · cabinet. $1Jj(), Snn J uan Capistrano e1v radial tires. $1995. 70 AMERICAN I--·--------L.A...l'•'-Jv s reasure:
IR!stl ~lier pu ppies. 7 v.ks cruised. 1 , aft 6, 5-i8-5002 l.:i-o a 4!lJ-:lJ75 or 831_1375 •192-9498, after 6 PJ\·J :.938 Plyn1outh \\\'l(){f ly bSt!11.
Id C · <7t4l 9G3-20J5 HONDA 350/4 1972.' In1n1ac. ,;--;?'~"".;::..='-"'"---I '72, 450 SL, ivoru. Lo HORNET COUGAR XR-7: Look at IOn "'agon, one 0 SJX UL t
Io . -AK 1·1•g1stered. · v 963 '72 DATSUN sta \1•ag new 'J what ,.,. 1 Del · for Borrler Patrol. Sound, _ Chrun pion stock, 6 rnale, 2 1973 26' CLIPPER ~•larine, $923. Mr. Lang, 540-1301 ...;.•_n,o• ______ ..:..::; $3300. Sell Sl!:J9:;. ani/fm 8 n1ileage, all xlras. 492-9667 Landau top Jll'""et steering s go : 11x 111-soHd,I original engine and
ri•rn:ilcs. SIOO each. 554-086. 1 sips 6. Outbrd, s t ove , \\ffkdays evenings. power brQkes, a utomati.C terior, console and cockpit refrig 3 1110 old $5000 ·71 OODGE Tradesman 100 track s1et'C'O, 1\11!0 trans, dashboard I 1 d trl\nsmission. Spate pnrts:
J
GEP.:'llAN. Shep. nup fen1ali>. 6~~7~;1 s · ' ,. '71" llOJ':l'DA CB' 17:> * ·v_g rear n·"g'. ,,h--'s,' xlnt con<!. 5-10-43-19 or OPEL lra.usinission _ 1764.AUK) \\' over iea ron· Needs .exte1ior \\"Ork. Have " -,.,... .,.. Re bl .,_ "' _.,,... ' $1·889 · tro.ls: factory air. radio,
I !'l 1110 trlp hlood line, x.1n1 . .;:;=....:;c:.====--.-cJ .asona LJA.15't:.·-· _ -~ed.-ice.. ·-box.-fully 979-7320~ _. _ . _ swin ·aw ~~~~:;"i~':t-!SloOOO.-.ilHnvested. \Vill.sa,;"';;:'!,_t"';.::·~ >-------~
t"'''P· s-. . 842-~ •• JS · • * SEA QUEST * Call 545-0879 aft 6· 30P,,J "Pl <I foW do --.--.. ..... 1~1 °t .. ""' ...,., • · · · "; _., wn rear scais, '72 240 z, air c.'Ofld, tiutg '71 OPEC. Pe-'~-""ndt'tion·. GUSTAFSON exce lent engine and y "'•;1-n-,. .... "' 111
., •
GOLD . Sips 5, gall ey, Jiead, n1otor .12 SUZUKI TS 90 1299-'' n=• "" di . 1 , C-ta"it'"" early <V"tti~
!
•
EN Rett·1evl'I' pups, cushions. hinged mast. Xlnt. . .... r.:~o. -"' s, leaSQi:for S~ mo: or .. 22:00) nii. Asking $2000, t.'011 hon. t s a ·~. but only "" " "''• .. --o-·
1
niale .~· tl'"n1ale. 7 1vks old. $S500. S46-Z439 ZSO miles $300 ,; * ,,..,,....2674 * sell! 963--5008. 494-6837.• "' · Lincoln-Mercury has ~.ooo miles! ·lJ"he lo\\' 1972 340 DUSTER. 4 spd. Gd
/\l\C Si5. 552~8
1
Lik~ Nev.•! 83~1912 alt 6 '67 FORD van cainper V-8. .72 2.10z· 16800 Beach at \Varner price v.i ll shock you, and a tires. Lo milcag\!'. i i ust sec!
BLACI( male Pooclle. 11 ., rti-d~al, t.~~11P~'Ot!!d. ~a~t ~~: '70 SUZUKI 2j(I Savage, good $1~ or best offer. SLv, sink -I ,.;pr!, air t.'O ncl, ii29.3. Call I.. POR,SCHE 11 tingt B h personal inspection w i l 1 $1500 & paymnts. or best
I
yr r-. AH::C reg. Xlnt \vitli '"'lltOl"''. '"~II. 5 4 6 _ 4 9 9 0 cond., many extras. $325. & ice OOx. 645-2297 -846-&l-17.· 842 •• ~~ * (0
2°131r.5a92e 5 .. _._. s"'.ar you. ~lust ,;ell. Call offer. Call; 552.9473 aft. 5 ciilldr.en....Cal.L96Sd!13 '" J .,,.,.,.,... 963-1626 '1'.I:. SPO 3 PORSCl.fF 914 12 oco i --• ~ or iginal 01vner, 524-5655 p.m.
----1.. • • wkdys. --+=~~==~~~--1 'N, -ifil_.Yan, __ -191. 2-WZ...--inul1ec.--:c\'.ln1 _ k ·-rr1··t.-·;,;,::.,~ --~-=-''LI--• of th• Vik1'nn'' .~---------AOORi\Bl.E nih.:ed pups, 6 LTDO l.t/trlr. Boat, sails, '71 ZiO Y AHA~tA Endro. ex-Auto._ 1nake offer. cond. l\lags, air, orange, 1\·1ags, ;~1 /r l\1 tapt', llOO'.J. -AV'ITI --••• --'--10'-C0l:J6AR · XR-7, -dlx .. f\fl:JS'f 'SaQi!it-'t' 169 Roadrun·
\vecks. $j. To good hoine, t:rlr, :xlnt cond. Sail No. eel cond, lo\v ntiles, e..xlra~( 642-2120. neiv lires. $3895. 673---0793 t~e o\e: pymts, ask !or BUICK loaded. Orig .. O\t·ner. \Vhsl ner. Eng. perfect, body very
I ·11 1 1 f 1 8'1 '"'8 •~toU•r "12-71'" alter · '65 Ch y $JOO Jim. 642-5274. BB + $100. 536-2"55. good. Lots of "xl.1~~ ... G-at .'1·11 o s o ovc . ., . ..;,.-, .. 2737. $1 195. 540-5550,"""" . ..,. ..., ;,, •vy an '70 ST.-\TION\Va.gon510,4 , td ' "l""o':-.: .... 0::=7:;;0
Al\C Old English Sheepdog 497-1007 Motor Homet l'lfuSl sell 1 673-8815 spcl, lo n1iles. Xlnt cond. 73 P~RSHE 914 2.0. l~d-1968 SKYLARK 2 dr. sport DODGE 0
nve. ::I' v--ootN or...::; -•"°'t
pups. SlOO. & up. 836-4476 or 12• KITE No -06 1 1 Sale/Rent 940 * .72 FORD . 30 000 . Asking S1475. 846-5929 t"'CI, 1.1nn1aculate. n10v1ng cpe. V-8, air, Pl\T. XJnt.1 _____ ;:_:..;:;_ '66 LEl\'1ANS 2 door hrd-top, S!l3----029J . • 1 • x n · t van, .. nu., , , , .. causes sale. 64;>-3517 aft 6 cond o · M iii' -Auto., PIS, PIB, air. New '· . · cond, fiill qovers. 2 sails. --"-~"----'C..::: mags, paneled, SJ000 firm. 73 2-10 ~· 1\/C, mags, pn1. im ~ n~ owner. ust se '67 1-IONACO sta. \\-gn. 383, brks. bait, nluifler. $.J.2i.
!GOLDEN Rctri•·ver !''ups, , yrd. dolly, $59J. 962-6772 or • SALES • l 833-1912 aft. 6Pl\I A~IIFM,_ lime-green, 19,000 1964 p 0 RSC HE ed m · l049. disc. brks, air, clean, xlnt 548-0007 ~~1..a'!11P67 sired, Al\·c, O.F'.A. li7?.-1-l'.":2 • SERVICE • 1Autos W1nted 968 1111• $'l69J. 5-16-2774. 'v/brougharn, nu tirers 'GB RIVl~R-1: ·Lok fi mi, full cond, $.~. 644-5834 '68 PLY. 9 p>ss ""'"· f"/,\,
.:-.;;J-:J LIDO l4, F'ullv. •quippeo, ----'11 D\TSUN 1200 S<SI ·11 "''1621 ' power, air, -..an inancing. '63 DODGE 9 "''~ sla '''a•.. • • RENTALS • --.--.1 • 1 • 11 v-r't-or 644·0927. 673-3700 .. ~~ -ne11· tires. Xlnt: c'Ond. 1
ST. BEH.NARD, n1 alr, AJ{C, cover & traile.r , $1000. or INSTANT CASHI. ~.,·.,l,~l·l·.'.n1. $1100. Aft. 5. "'!*. PORSCHE. super 90, · 01ig·0\\'1Jer. 71>.000 nil. S.'.00. owner. $1149. 557-Si71. 11 ~ yr~. Good natuL'ed. SfiO. best otfl'r. :>J..l-521 3. -...,...., ., '6:\ BUICK LaSabre, fair phone 64G-786-I
h. 1 842 =g r~1dster. 1961, conoours, bod good 1140 h PONTIAC or a<e. -.,..,., · '71 HOB IE 14 \V/tr l r . .EXPLORER '71 2-1UZ. blu1'. auto, n1ag ~J!-9173. ~~ns . · -ca.s · FORD
BEAUT. Cocker puppies, l\1cKihbin~ sails. Grl cond. OF · WE ARE IN \1·heels, excellent conditiofl . ...,,~'-"71,.;s=""p'°o'°RSCH==E~Otr~-
1\l-\C, 1\•/papers. Call after Slru't"d inside. $1000. 673-l&":i.S HUNTINGTON BEACH O·ESPERATE NEED ·~17-00 1? CADIUAC LEASE OR BUY
1 P~t. 714: 826-8295.. HOBlECatl4',2~ils,2sets OF_ GOOD, CLEAN . . ... lik(:!Jj'v f\\'/~speed. -----·-··~~-----~-~ '71 thru '73 I)ontlacic J~ECIS. :\ mo old fen1. Pl! J-lalliarrls, tl'lr/e;o.\ra \\'heel. 18801 Beach mvd. 842-8803 FOREIGN FIAT a~ tl)
624--5600 EL DORADOS DAVE ROSS -
4"'2982 HUNTINGTON BEACH CARS '10. 911 E '. c, ... · Sig Orngc, • PONTIAC Bull Ten·icr. Shots Paid. '1"t"" TOP' DOLLAR p "d 1200. Seit SlOO. &41-7011 MOTOR HOMES -at xlnt rond., 33 M miles, alter 14 TO CHOOSE SANTANA 22. Fleet chan1-For Or Notl l\lOVh~G. must sell. Fiat ·71 5:30, S.17-7073 2430 Harbor Blvd., ut Fair
IHISl'I SETI'ER PUPS pipn. 0\\'_ner anxious. $3500. Apollo,Pa~esetter,Baron, Call or come in to see us. good-124 S~htd.CooA~J:~. ',',·',· RENAULT COUPES.CO:VERTIBLES '68 FORD Dri\'t',,Costa Mesa M6--8017
AKC. 'ho" C•ll >14-5.12!. Jrun~r-Rob'•nhood N.....,PORT THUNDERBIRD • 962·Zl68 * ~ ""• · "n rond. 68&-620S. --------DE VILLES '66 LEMANS 2 <loor hnl-top CAL 25, racing sails. \\'e've got 'em at
AKC Sprin~cr Spaniel pup. ritany xtras. Slet'ps 5. KENDON . IMPORTS ·71 &10, 2 dr, \\'hite, stereo, 'G5 R-8 over 3D mp;. 38 TO CHOOSE 2 door. Fm rad.io, po<.1~r b~~~: ~»a~i. pi!·m~:.· ~~
pies. Chain. stk. huntt pc!. Xlnt cond. 492·2431. 14,(XX) mi. 35 mpg, like nc1v. Runs good, $250. COUPES steering & brakes, automatic .,.......,
B. l\lay 10th. ti 73-2-145. F' L I P p ~:H ... ..S' fiberglass. MQWR HOM.ES 3100 \V, Coast H\\'y-., N.B. 51175. 546-2774. 494-3'429 SEDANS transn1ission. (R00054J. '°'51S-660"-=co;'==----~I
' Full . I M'~ 10 ~--64_2-_940_5 ___ 11968 HAT 850 Spoct c -. TOYOTA CONVERTIBLES $589 '67 FJRicOIRD, uoto, xlo 't y CCJUIP, c ean. ~· 7 N. H~r. S.A. -"" , cooo. 11350 of' best offer. Horse.• _______ B_S_6 Call 673-1933. -554-0033 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR Gd. ·mileage. ·Lo n1i. Sac. ----'-------1 ~tany excellent colors --Call YM !WI.
2 Gen1IC' CrhJings, :iprJ\'lx. s K~ :~~.13·ne':: :~~: • 25.2~1i~vv~~ER J1 ~! ~: ~S~~tr~~~an, l---•~8.J6.~;5~"'~3...;:.*--TOYOTA ~7~~~ :f /~~~r:~s GUSTAFSON ·v.1·3001 G. ~~:.D ... -·Pror''d"ers'.oadm0e<l11•
yr::. old, S2."i0 ea. One reg. S"25 D ,.,_,776 .,,, see us first. HONDA Fact~nir t--onditioning Uncoln-Mercury v\~,.,._,.., _
I Appy Geld ing 5 yrs. 16H. .) · ays Vt • •·1'-22' COi'rfINENTALS • B UER Foll ~-· f 16800 Bc-acl>-at \Varner sell.~~ af! 5.
20. PH111E & JOYS A ~ BUICK 17th An 1"versary poi.vet· ..... ,1<.11cc o : RAMiltR I ~I disposition, 11· e 11 LIDO 14, Fully equipped, • 2925 Harbor Blvd. '71 HONDA, 600 car, SfShitt · . ft Stereo Al\l ~I radio •1untington Beach
star ted, good p J e R s ure cover & tr.:i ler , $1000. or VAN CON\ r:rlSJ)NS Costa l\Iesa 979--2500 19,000. n1i. $600.· Afto 5. ·, SAL[ Cri.Jise rontrol 842-8144 * (213} 592-5544
horse, good potential sho11·he> ·='c.o:::'.::'•::.rc. . .::"'l::..c4::562::....__ ~-le• • Se1vice • Rentals 536-67·15. Trunk 0.........,.r & more ''H of h
I ·~ 1 8 1 -* D I * IMPORTS WANTED ~·-_om• t • Viking" '67 RAMBLER A rt lOrse. -J<J<N• A so yr 0 rl JG' HOBIE Cat w/lrailer, an mar nc. JAGUAR AU in Immacul ate' conclltion me can, I T horohred J un1per, good in :x1111 cond. Rea90nable. 1330, Harbor Rlvd., G.G. Orange County's Prices Start At Largest sclecUon in * Statjon \VQb'Oll * goocl C.'Of'I(\, best offer.
lhc Dal . ;;:Int jr. hol'SC' * G4()..-0tGS 1r TOP$ BUYER $2399 Orange Cooilty 1970 Ford LTD 8 pass. coun-_6_.1c.'-..-'.c'°.o.5c,. ~==---I
lG.l Hands. TALL y 110 · · 531-6800 BILL l>fA..XEY TOYOTA '62 JAGUAR 3.8 l\.1ark II -I dr N b C d"ll try squire. Full pv.T, lac T BIRD
F':ll1ll!<, 17262 N e \I' 11 0 p e, 17' Saillxial. Xlnt cond, trlr, Nex1 to G.G. Da tsun 18881 Beach Blv.:. sedan, amlfm radio, auto. G ers Cl I QC air, very clean, pticed for •
I F<>ttntai n \'alley, 9'ffi...9175. 2 set~ sails. $750. Dennis 1973 Disco,·erer and Sundial H. Brach Ph. 847·8555 disc brakes, ft.Jo-8262 or ·73 COROLLA (l(E200712S5-l l AUTHORIZED DEALER quick sale. $1900. Call
TAlJ :Y Ho Farrn~. offers 2lJ: :;9:i--l G!13. s.>7-ms. J\lotor l·lomes for r ent, n10.ke Autos, Imported 9701-'-64""41...:..:.::16:._______ 1.600 IIARBOR BL., 673-M94 or 5'1&-4155
finest in hunter & juniper GLEN L 10', fun for 2 peo-reservations for Summer '70 XJ-6 Sedan. PIS. AIT. ~Iii.II l•••-=.I COSTA li1ESA '69 FORD Country Squire
i ira.ining & lessons by E ple. Ke"· lr~ls cRrry on ctu' llO\V. Phone Mi$ Bennet at e THE Flf\IEST IN disc brakes, ail', .A.i\·I/Fl\1. -~TOYOWITA"' 540-9100 Open Sunday "'ng. Clee.n, 1 ov.'Jler, air,
l'lla.r<.'Y 1 Approved AHSA' c'cc"".::'.c· -"$500=.-'826-"'=='":.::..· ___ Bob Longpre P on : i a c. USED IMPORTS • Lci\v n1i. good oond. $5600. '&8 CAD. Cotlv. \\•!tile w/Red 1'00f rat-k~ stereo. 10 pass.
judge. \Ve haYe bCaut. ney,· Boats, Slips/Docks 910 892-6651 or 636-2500. e THE FINEST IN l -''4"4-<llt~=·------leather interior. Exe. Need fast sale. $1595 .
I 12xl2 box st.alls. \'isii us a1 ~IUS'I' SELL ·n Dodge IMPORT SERVICE • 1960 JAGU.AR ~50S. not t!l!ifi •larbor, c .AJ. 64G-9303 Cond. v 979-1907 4M-2Zl7.
17262 Ne"•horx> Si, n r SLIPS available. 35' sail or Sightseer 25' fully self-con-Do tr 1 d old English Junk. $1200. '69 Cad epe DeV gold '6.."i FORD LTD good con·
\Var TICr. Fountain Valley or fJO\\'er. 673·fi606 .tained, sleeps 6, $18,700 nu . yoorse . a avor an come 673-1644. TRIUMPH w/"·ht top. $it50.' Call dition, good_ body. !\lus t i::ell! • oaJI !fm 94-,,, Ac::k.ing 112000 or best off ·see Us fu·st. Open Tues. c:;:~7.....,,.,, ,,,--.,,o.---,.------------$400 64~ ~· f 5 00 ~ ,,,.... " Boats, Speed & Ski 911 -· er. and 11iurs. ti! 9 Sat-Sun JAGUAR XJ·6 71. 1m--979-5642 or eves 552-0144. · .rv•U"I a ler :
·r.EG. Ar ab-l\1organ. 4 )T &12-5l58/&W-1323. lil 5 · maculate \\'hite/black in· TRIUMPl-f TR4A, '66, Super '70 CAD ILLAC Conv. Ex-E";:.·m~.""'-=--=~~-=-
filly. Beaullful1 da pple g-rcy. ~!ARI-\ 1'\VAIN .18' cleep v ·n EA"PLORER, 26, air, seU r, · terior._f Priced Iqr qu iek clean. Ne\V top, uphol, ceptional cone!. All xtras. '69 FORD LTD Squire Wag,
! ch1.ss 1\ sho\V prospect. hull, J/O l\.1crc engine, 165 cont 'd + ample storage. \BJR0PEAN AUTO) sale. 642~3.121. radials, lrans, c 1 u t ch , Price re;duced 673-S:i07 10 pas., fact. air, {JO\\·er,
) St2-5!H:l. h.p. Tandent trlr, very good ~195 \\'k + 6c mi. Avail. s-. (wKA<s) s-.c. MAZDA '·alv(i's, brakes, radiator, ,73 C D V'll rack, xlnt cond. In tire,-t &
2 J~OitSES both 10 years old, cond. $2800. 546-3465, after 6 .June only-selling -l-S o on. 2100H9fl:lorfl'.o.emia ,,._. Ms·"""° I----------$795. O\\·ne.r. 540-10.1.i C 11 pe t I e brakes. Best otter 642--0G:H.
1 011e I-'emale, pne Alalc.1-'"""'-' c.&4::48.,:::28=,.~-~~-54&-2886. ·70 TRiillfPH Spitfire, OO\Y a Aft 5, 557.9271 '70 FORD Conwrt XL al
I f~2-8510 after~ p.m. 1s· TROJAN 185 hp, inbrd ski NEW, Explorer. 24', full '65 R-8 over 30 n1pg. nuns * Mazda '73 Rotaiy *· radials, lo nti's. $1595. call '59 CAOrr;LAC gd eng n~s c-ond, bucket seats'. Mtin.f
j "\'E,\R olcf Sorrel i\l;i l'l', boat. 8 eau ti fu I . Call equip Sips 8, air/gen, good, $250. $66 MONTH 979-9280 trans $100 o_r make otter radio, p/windw'S, must sire
1 ~l disposflion. g.'IQ-2 11~ j.18-{l223, 645-4325 IO\\'e.~t rates, no mileage, 494-3429 36 ?lfONTl-IS 0.--'EN LEASE VOLKSWAGEN 642-2869 evenings· to appreciate. 545-73$ eves.
i 14' CHAMPION Ski boat 50 552-8292 ALFA ROMEO Wm accept trado-ins CAMARO ·~ F~RD \\'.INTED En;;l i•h '"jl;llo, CALL MR. FRY 842·1"'66 ~ ·v
I for\1•ard ~l'iil. usM. ll·lfiJ~ h.p. Evini~a.e.15017/B zs,· TRAILER, acros/Bs llt. Hunt. Beach '71 vw Bus. NC\\' heads & ----------nuns gooj. $100.
17'1.,...., rom Bay. N.B. w A. 1 Alfa Spyder '69 v<ilves. Ne\V tiJ'es, $1900. CAMARO '68 SS, 350, -4 speed, 543-4162
~~Imo +util 's, "Tim -L«_@!,..1 o\\o·ner, 1 mcch. car. 642-7930 $1250, must sell. 557-563.1, '67 FORD Convertible. XL
Body beaut., n1cchanically MAZDA '64 VW Sedan, gutted for off call bcrn'Cm 12-7 am. 500. Po"-er, auto. Top· con-Rent A Motor Home meritorious, top telTible, road racing tow tquip. $400. ·~ RAU.YE Sport, 6B,(XX) dltlon. )146-1323.
for Your Vacation ~r:..Tri7rilfic, S 2 5 5 2 · 2 ::> • 6-12-4747 art. 5 ml, · R/H, air, vinyl top, '66 FORD WIW'n. 9 * 531-6800 * '60 V\V BUG. $300 645-5247 xlnt cond. $157?j, 831-am.. panenger .nir, p/s, $4{a
902 Ai re raft 91 S 0m=R-"-,..-0..:,::,;,7;3=P;a:.ce_ .. _,,A_rre_w ___ _:B::M:::.;W::_ ___ 11;;1;;;33;:1;;B;:eo;•0;' h"-OBO:t.:-=:":;2;;;-0066;;;::_;i';;'l;•'=r ;05~p.::im".,...,.====--'":;' '":;;:;' ;:•;,d ,:"';:';::":::It:;• I-':' ;;· ;:· ;;";:':=·56~78 I * 549--0165 * 17' s J s s C Free t .. '69 FORD Country Sedan, 10
----------·59 CESSNA 150. ' p s ' . ' m' LEASE A 1973 pass. ale dlc/bks: rack,
Boats, Maint./
Service
1\1.Allli\'E to.lECHANIC E . air, gen, stereo, 833-2588. Good '''Ork . Fai r prict's. Save s-:~· Reasonable price. "13 PACE Am>W -27 FT. BAVAR IA ~~ :W ~ $1500/n\8.ke otr. 8-1&-nHS "°'' mooey. Call Ba>T's >t<>-7796/>IS-4037. Loaded ~ii);;i[A\,STAR GAZ.ER:1<:f'.1 JEEP
l\lurinc. 6i~i77. Campers, Sale/ Rent 920 -'"'''"'x:O:tr;;•~s.~F;,ree~~l~ne:s·c..........,-GOOD !'-''-"'-"'""-:,.'---By CLAYlt FOIL\N ·
B f /',, • •25· E SELECTION OF -jjl '"u :Ji.-.1 . .., :Ji.-"'" oa s v.ar1ne ·71 1, To N F 0 r d . XECUTIVE m o t o r ~A~.11 Yovr.Dn.' y .Actlvily Gui"• SI.fr. ZJ rh. ~·u..;iP:;·c.... ____ 9_0;.,;4 chai;sis-inount, camper. 17• home for rent. Fully self USED BMW's ~A,~. 11 ... J_.~1ccorJrng to lhforo·Sw'"~ .. --ocf.2,_~fi@
... CUS!Onl bit. selr---contalned, t'Onl. &42-1150 1973 BAVAR IA ... 11·16-1 1 0~ op mcssoge '""''IO;¥JUf, 4-1 .S:2J.34
'.\f,\RINE-Fuel Tanks • nt'\\'. 10--ml!. like hew. $'15lXl. LANDAU '72, sleeps 6, 25'. 1972 BAVARIA :C>: .i!J..S8.63 teodWordscorrespondlngtonumbers SJ.87
never used. 2-Teinpo BIA 18 213-142-4450 or 693-5743 413 Dodge, Jm.Jnac. dl.lal 1971 BAVAfilA ofyourZodiocbirthslgn. · ~al. sadclle IRnks, height 14 roof air 11 3 ~ 6~7123 1969 2;)()(l 1 Be • 31 Relotlon5
5 •" I 8' TELESCOPING • full • •"',,.."· ,,,_ · -2 "-·' 32Stotti.... , I , engU1 ~" -S6:i each. 1969 1600 ....,.,., q ... J-~l [rnx RlA 18 gal, bo"' u('ud roon1 -Icebox, ir;tt\'e, REl\.'1' our new Ltl-xury CREVIER BMW 3DpporMlty 33Thot
ta.nk, heigh! 111'\", li•ntt lh 38" sink, "''alt.•: & pro. tank. LIFETlhlE! sips 6,·alr, lm· ~~ 5~~udy
;;: 2.~" x g _ $40. 833-11 71 or Readt IQ :..a1np. $ 3 5 0, niac. P\1. owner. 838-0000 Sule11 • Service . Leasi ng "1, · 36 Bring
640-JJGS 51S-5t11 D•luxe WlnneDago 208 W. l st St., Santa Ana 7 !<t('!'lt 37 Ari""
19n Mercury Outboard CA11fPER. ~ C:-tbOver. 8'. Rent. 27'. 640-0482 NB · 835-3171 :~~ 3g=
Uul;lne 1cc box . 3 burner ORANGE COUNT 101• •OW..,.'°99 20 HP. Good Condition stove, oven. E'lectrlc &. Trallers, Tr1vel .~945 Y'S 11T1.m •\Now
$300.00 Call•645-6927 1ft ~er hook-ups. $~4SO.-16, TRAILER. sleeps 6 OLDEST ~~~ ~it::hlna
'66 JEEP . PU. 4 whl drive,
VS, 7' 1>00. Very clelUl,
11695. 548-3733, oil 5
. '68 FORD Bronco, I o ~mileage, extras. $ 2 1 9 5 •
213'/442-4450 or 69J..5743.
UNC.OLN
~~
'.66 LINCOLN
4 door. V-8, power windowJJ
It scats, radio with ti\pe
t9G!I T·BffiD. Loaded, full
po"·cr, AG,_ PS/PB, vinyl
!op. Phone 546-3307.
'65 SPECIAL Landau, load-
ecl, likr Ile\\', must see &
drive SS:-JO. 67:>-6261 ~ves.
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
Auto1, New 980
,B_o•-'-';.',.P_o_w_ ... _____ 90_6, ~rc~~:1ERA1sre11,',,.'~~.sa1&e $195. •·• • 831-1541 . . ;,l,~, r•:_ ~,~;m S P .M. ZW-1. ' Relrtgerator, oven, toilet G 14 Todoy A.i H«lf'
-1· • """--"m AIRSl'RE . rnttrma--~ · ytf'\.,,,. • ""' ·n c:oBXr~T lR' l.6.1i ~ICl'C'. 57 moOe.1!· 2!_j.f1 Crace Lane, ti t 21' I Alt tr llChoim A8Forth
-sywtem, It· wt~. r -
Rid< G c M ona , ar, ex a•. l9At .r19e. hrs, rully equipt, brake trlr, · ' · · 642--057·1 or 492-S:ll!J. SALES-SERVICE·LEASING 20 Hollf'I SO Pkotorlt ;~~·l~O)tOftl£.' Agklng $·1750. \~;. l~~rf~~~~c:."~~ Auto Service, Perts 949 OVERSEAS DELIVERY *~tt ;~~~
t7l FramG~ o.vcr."ooc1~ ·~'1''"6la~~~•r"~.:·xli,:-~~rti;.:o,mptt'tt .RCllil~~~i~~R Inc. __:.;,,:··"""··::.'Y.;;r;:::;; ·i}i5: ~~r~k--*~~ ff·~·
50 Jlo~ l:.Vinrudc, 20 Jtl. · ' ~ spcdi.l hi pert engine ·,. '~I. 32·4 26 Gl"lt "'56New "UTeiS<iy -61-71 -
J[.'L<t ts.nk, bit.i t lank. c..'Oll-HEALL 't clean '63 V\V Oun· 1.cOOs crank kit. '70 Ch.eve UC Ccxna ilcsn 546-41+1 viaao . 21 ThicVlold 57 IMP!Mo • 87 Club
-1n:ils, Me. S-100. 6t~-1"401. per \'n.n. New e n ta: 1 n e , blg-h}()ck hcndcn . '71 • 350 1967 B1d\V, 2000 cs Clas.Ifie '1fA ~U3;-i1 ~8For 58Cito1!ve MTo u.~s· CL;\st'MN l'l{J\\rirler, ~'illS.5 !Jr 002-8.S628ilter S. block, 327 heada • have oow 2R.~ orir-mi. Beautiful &1.1<.~un-: 1, ·~@ctr1 ~i'o~ ~ ='"""
50 bp • .Marc. E.'(tras! New * 8 1ei ' , E L D·O RX o-o valve job. S4Z..UOO or 1 •uto, ~. 832-5990 or l • · · \ta\ 6'\_.-6111.
1la.tlll0n trnller, bt1etol-L01id... .CABOYER v,·Jlli Ja c k-11 , 542-3843. ' 513-9100. t.i..n M1'7 Gaod \8/Adm:te ,._;Ncutltl
f l!JOO. SI0-2713 or 5 11-1379. c lt!An, nillk<" (ltfcr. !).l3...15;,9 ~II ldhi ltcmt ••. 00-6678 Need a "Pad"? Plot~~ an ad!
•'
I I, • •" . .
I
rteerlng & braket, white
..sidewall tires. (005EBE).
$889
-GUSTAFSON
IJncolW·Mercliij:-·
16800 Beach at Wruntr
Jlunt1ng1on Beach
• M2-U44 * (213) 592.5544 . "Hom• OI th• Vlklnt"
Ci'Wffied A_d8 •••••• 642..5678.
•
. . • I
j
San--Cle1nenie
•
' Today'.s Fin~' i
Capistrano , EDITI ON N.Y. Stooks
' V~. 66, NO. 163;-2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
.
TUESDAY, JUN& 12, 1973 TEN CENTS
tt-8· Paid-fur We~---wtiire-Huuse R-epairS .
Wl,SHINGTON (AP ) -The federal
govCrnment paid nearly $10,000 ·or the
cost of installing water and sewer lines
at President Nixon's San Clemente estate
s001f after he purchased the property in
1969,'officiaJs said Monday.
Mcist of ·the expense, $6,260, 'wa·s for a
six-inch water line installed at the Seeret
Service'l request for fire protection, a
General..'sei:viceS A d m j-n:i s t r I\ t i o n
spo~sman saidJn response to inquiries.
1 Sources reported the water line also
1 scD'es a swimming pool that Nixon built
"' ---
•
*-* -£::
'St11detats Suffer'
at his Cxpense near his San Cle mente
residence in July, 1969.
The government also paid $3,200 of, the
total $9,784 cost of installing a six·inch
se\fer line ~.mig the Spanil.h-style
home, GSA spokesman Terry Angelo
said.
Angelo said the sewer was built larger
than normally wouJd be neeessary "to
accommodate the federal personpel sta-'
tioned-there at all times," and the
government thu.s shared the cost. ·
The nearly $10,000 ih expenditures is' in
addition to th"e $100,000 in government
fund s which the .-'\ssociated Press
reported t"'O \\'eeks ago had been spent
for improvements on 1-\ixon's property to
improve presidential security. '
It also is in addition to $76,00Q which
Newsday, a Long Island newspaper,
rePorted S u n d a y had been spent for
estate landscaping at the request of the
Secret Service. .
'rhe sewer and water lines were· built in-
the summer of 1969 as part of "Oper~Jon
Sunrise," the code name for the crash
federal program undertaken to prepare
ac
Nixon 's house and grounds for occu~cy
by the First Family.
The GSA first refused to answer ques-
tions about the 1ines. Later, after t6e
same questions were asked oC White
House officials, Angelo aclmowledgi d
that the government bad paid for part of
the work. '
As to the water line,' Angelo said, "The
U.S. government paid for that entirely at
the req'uest of the Secret Service. It was
installed for a fire hydrant and water
stand for fire fighting ."
ax
Angelo said.the government paid about
one-third of the CQ.st of the sev.'er line to
.isupplement the se,ver capacity, above
what would be necessary for presidential
use, to accommodate federal persoMel
stationed there at Slf times." ·
Other officials said the Secret Service
had requested expansion or the sewer
syst~m ..
Records in the San Clemente City Hall
do no.L indicate that building permit.s
'vere oQ.tained for the work, although a
map in the file sbov.•s the route of the line
• I
stretchin g 270 feet lrom the edge of the
1:.residcnt's property to the vicinity of hi5
house.
A Secret Service spokesman said the
agency was not concerned that the
President's s\vimm ing ]X'-OI was linked to
the six-inch 'Valer -main it requested:... --
''Our only interest is that it, be sufficient
for fire protection," the spokesman said
of the \Yater line.
The fire hydrant link to the line \Vas
used in 1970 \\'hen a fau lty fireplace caus·
ed a blaze '''hich damaged the interior of
the President 's house.
ue?
.
~---Bargaining. To__...ol_=
Tent~tive
Budget Up_· _
$4 Milliom Denied by Board
' Should collective b a r g a i n i n g be
legislated as a tool for negotiations in the
academic \Vorld?
No. according to a unanimous vole o(
the Saddleback Community College
Board of Trustees Mondaf night.
-.. C'ollective bargafuing and binding
a~itration sei"Ve prolit-maklng concems
well, and the cost involved can be passed
on to the consumer. But~ a university,
C11f product is lhe student, and tbat's who
CVSD Board
suffers,·· said Trustee Hans Vogel.
The boa rd was asked to take a position
in !he form of ·a resolution to be sent to
the Cali!orna School Boards Association.
· Bills proposing that c o 11 e c t i v e
bargaining be made a tool of school
employes have been proposed by Robe rt
Morelli. a state assemblyman, and
George Moscone, a state senator.
·Dr. James MarsbaU. a trustee from
the Laguna Hills area,· said he recently
attended CSBA conference v;here he said
spa~es-men for East Coast distriits Who
tried coUective bargaining reported "it
caused headaches all around."
Community colleges no\v fall under the
\Vinton Act. which requires that ad·
ministrators and employes "meet and
confe11." Arbitration from an outside par·
ty may be sought, but the decision is not ' . '· . . , C>•UY ,lltt Sl•ff ~ .,_ Jtlcll•ff Kfflll1r
Hails 'Cut'
Budget Bid_ binding. .. ,
Under the proposed legislation of
~foretti and ~1oscon(l. an arbitration ~
decision \'IOUld be bind ing.
ROBIN CLARK SURVEYS WRECKAGE OF HER MO.THER'S CAR " AFTER COLLISION
Irvine Woman Comes Off S.cond Best.in T ".n&I• With Train at Jeffrey Road Crossing
' t --
By JOJI N VALTERZA
01 ltlt Dfltt ,,_, Sretf
A tentative, balanced budgcl reflecting
$400.000 in "heartbreaking cuts" from an
earlier deficit version was hailed t.1onday
by trustees of the Capistrano Unified
"School District.
Capo Valley's
General Plan
. , . .
W o.man Rams Into Train
But ~Spokesmen tor the . district's
teachers, who at present are nearing an
impasse in negotiations· over larger
salary and benefit increases -criticized
the $12.S million document because it
n.ssertedly "doesn't place teachers and
tbelr needs as a top priority."
Issues Studied
El Toro Driver Escapes Death, by l1iches iri lrvi1ie
. .
Supt. Truman Benedict introduced the
second edition of the ne\v document by
stressing that d~spit~ ·ttie major cuts in
erpenSEls •. the past tv.-o weeks of daily
slashing sessions did not -affect the
educational program prd)ected for next
r.ear.
: "We made substantial cuts -we hack-
ed and ·Slashed a"'·ay - at site im-
provement , maintenance and capital
outlay items.'' he said.
; 'J)e cuts "·ere ordered by trusters
several weeks ago after the preliminary
version of the document was unv eiled
'yJth a $400,000 defi cit.-
•
: County officials as i,•:ell as architects
and consultants will be on hand in Dana
Point tonight to unveil advance work for
the new version' of the Capistrano Valley
. General Plan. The 7:30 session '"'ill be at
Richard Henry Dana Elementary schooL
The meeting, sponsored by the Dana
Point Citi1.ens for Action, is to generate
citizens comments on the elements of the
planning document which will be com·
pleted later this year.
Tonight's issues will include density,
building height, transpo rtation routes.
parks and open space , rezoning and
' development.
The project is calculated to yield a
modern document \\'hich \YOuld replace
the planning guid elines in effect since the
late 19405.
A woman who drove her station wagon
inlo the side of a 7S..Car Santa Fe freight
train in Irvine Monday night escaped
vt'ith her life, but not by a large margin.
A few seconds sooner and 1'1rs. Gay
Clark, 34, of 5122 Skinner Ave., El Toro.
'would have been directly in front of the
locomQtive i~t_!le ~rossing_ that already
has claimed one life.
The victim, whose car sustained major
damage when it skidded into the fourth
car of the train, was listed lo fair con·
dition today at Tu stin C.Ommunity
Hospital.
She suffered multiple lacerations and a
fractured wrist in the collision at Jeffre'y
Road a ha!( mile north of Moulton
'Bang in There'
Parkway.
Irvine Police Officer Jack Watscin said
the engineer, Gene L. 'Patton, 58. San
Bernardino , told him he failed to see the
c.'.lr prior to the crash bu t felt a slight
bump from the impact.
Investigation revealed Mrs. Clark's';car'
skidded only 10 feet before ramming_the
iron undercarriage or the freight car.
which was traveling about 35 miles per
hour. -• Witnesses said the crossihg's wig-wag
signal device which clangs 88 times per
minute had been operating a full t\\'O
minutes before the collision.
They told JXlliCe ~1rs. Clark showed no
indication or slowiflg or stopping as.she
and the ·train aimed simultaneously for
1 the crossing point· until she slammed on
t~e brakes at the last minute.
The car bounced off and careened to
the easterly edge of the road .
The owner of the old El Toro · general
store was·'killed several months ago when
his .bread truck" ·wB:S shattered by . a
speeding freight at that location.
Irvine City Council members have
placed high priority for widening of the
intersection , and installation of barrler-
type cr~ing guar&.
Speed limit for trains on the Santa Fe
lihe is 90 miles per hour, while cars are
limited to 35 miles per hour on Jeffrey
Road at that point .
. At that session trustee George White
le((I the attack by sta tin g that "ex-
pecting us to cut $400,000 from a budget
is asking too much ."
At Monday's session White and fello'v
. (Ste CUSD, Page Z)
Walter Adams
Among the speakers at the session will
be county Envirorunental PI an n in g
Director \Villiam Cunningham a n d
Thomas Moon , an archit.ect and planner
serving with the Newport Beach ·firm
d!'veloping the planning document -
Danielian, ~loon , Sampieri and Ilg.
Originally the new general plan was to
have been completed by July t, but
\
spokesm<!'n ror the project have said an
exlension will be sought front county
Laguna Beach Previews
Pagea1i~ of the Masters _
Hearings Slated
011 13 Projects
111 San Cleme11te
A total of 13 major pi.Jblic hearings
representing several major apartment
and condominiu1n projects •.viii greet
planning commissioners in San Clemente
Ylednesday.
supervisors. A pe1 riod or ~hree lo six: By JACK -CHAPPELL niedal \VOUld normally be on vle'v before months more wou d be required. 01 '" D•llv '1'°' s1111
Citizens for Action President . fl•rr1·s an audiene ... \Vatter Paul "Skec" Adams, a resident "Hang iii there, baby!" ff of Capistrano Shor~s. Number 59, and Angell. said th at through sessions such as A glittering and gilded 13.year-old Clay Asked w at "'as hardest., contr~lling
owner of a La MlraCla rubber firm , died tonight's meeting the tone of the docu· Hutter drew one more deep breath and his breathing, 111aintaining lh'e cramping
S d l h. h · s Cl 1ncnt could'be ''crfectively-innuenced .'' tb f ga· · t th L B h posture demanded by the. rv><::e, or holding un aya 1s .omc111 Un e1ncnto. "Atlastil seems thatlocal Citizens cnn en rozc a Jn 1n o e aguna eac ,...... ~lr. Adams, 43 . leaves. his wid0\'>1, Pageant of the Masters reproduction -of-still , Hutter · replied; ... M\ls·rt--y
Loraine ; a son, Craig Ad an1s of San take a substential role in setting guide· the Congressional Medal or Honor. ! eve rything.''
And as an example or the commisSon's
feeling Rlward the massive amount of
business facing the P<l'l~I, chainnan Roy
Garbarine said last \veek that "any man
who d~n·t !iring along hls--tiWl'i
breakfast will be 1naking a big mistake."
By JAN WORTH
01 th1 D .. IY Pl191 St•lf
A tentative proposed budget 1 of $12. t
million for Saddleback C o m m u n i t y
College, requiring· a ~ax rate increase of
22 percent, was approved Monday by the
board of trustees.
The lax increase, from 65 cents to 84
ce~ts on $100 assessed valuation,· will
'mean. a $20 per year hike lo the owner of
a $40,000 house in the di strict. .
Most or art increase of $4 million over
· last year's bqdget is ·for l'e000Structto0
and the general ftmd, which includes in-
creases r:anging from $500,000 to $1,000
in ev._ery category but one.
Natura) sciencea -Will receive the big.
gest lx>ost, with a haJf million do118rs
allocated to equip the science·math
building now 1llnder construction. Comple-
tion is expected'in ·1974,
State taxing legislation limits school :
districts from lazing over . their .rate' of
last year unless the taxing is ror con-;
struction. .. 1 After Saddleback's building program is
finished, the tax·i:ate applying to building ,
\\'ill drop, Melvin Mitchell, director of ·
college and community services. said.
Part of the increase will be spent on
planning phases of the pro~ music
art building and working dra"•ings for a
utilities building .,... part or the overall
schedule of replacing the portable cam·
pus with permanen t facilities on the 200-
acre site.
Also receiving a hike is the extended
day program, with $90,000 added to sup-
port a new home_ecooomics_ program, a
medical assistants progrp.m, and a
library media technician program . ·
Other six sizeable increases are pr1>-
posed for the buildings and grounds
department, up $70,000 to help landscape
the school's two neWbuiklings; and voca-
tional technology, up $82,000 with the ad·
ditlon of two new programs.
Final budget figures will depend on
passage of Senate Bill 6 by the state
1egislatur~. If passed, it will add $100,000
more in· st~te aid to the district.
The final figures, to be decided by mid-
August, wi ll also depend on the outcome
of employe salary negotiation begun at
~rood3y's meeting.
•
Repre~tatives of the Saddleback
Classified Employees Association ~
(See RATE HIKE, Page 2)
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll be mostly suMy on \Vednes·
jay -if you live in the inland
areas or Orarige County, Othenvlse
mostly cloudy and hazy along the
beaches '"ith highs of 701 rising to
15 inland. Overnight lows in lht sos.
INSIDE TODAY ~ente ; four daughters, Stephanie A. lines that will form our rapidly develop-Flashbulbs po~ from a battery of He is one of more than 800 persons
Adams of Santa Barbarn, Suzette M. ing area.·• he added. photographers as more than 2 5 o from all over Orange County v.110 volun·
Pr1eston, StacY 1'. and Shelly M. Adams, All.Capistrano Bay area residents are members or the local and national t:iress teertotakcpartin.thefamousPageantof
Besides standard variance requests,
lhc hearings \\•ill include a Potentially Britisli mediuni clai1ns Lex
controversial bid by the Fairway Seavie,v Barke r has been co1itacted and af or San Clemcntei his parents, Mr. and welcome to tonight's meeting, AngelL and broadcaat news media got. a snellk the ~tasters this year ruMing from July apartment project near the city golf tliat "he's ative aiW wet! in
-.
&1tt. David A. Adam.1 of Gardena, and a said. J~vlew Mondi!)' of t~ 191!1 F.estlval or __. 13 through Aug. 26 at the lrvine Bowl con-
---&f'anddaughter. ~Ind Palt!Mi of Lhe Mnsters1-----<ur.r-entl.Y--wilh the-Feitival-of-Arta-ar:
Mr. Adams was the. mother or a rub,ber Ca Ad d · Young Hutter or El Toro is a live-year exhibition by more than 175 atrists and ..
course to shiJt to a condominium use. d !f.he~project.-<M)e-ol-the-highe&t-denalty-l--10112'-01'-/t-'e_r..;w'-o'-r-'l'-.'-"..;S;.;•c:•c,•;.;lc:o;.;ru,,,-'P'-'o"g"e:_l---
mulUple developments-to be rt(ently
buUt in the city, is.currently unde:r con-
struction.' ...:
--,
manufacturtng nnn which bears his Drug-se . mitte . veteran or the llving pictures p11gcant. crnrtsmen. •
namejLLa ~llrada. · . ' -"Palntt?d from toe to topknOt in. gold · The press wa s shown five works. the .
Rosary wlll be reelted and requiem SArl FRANCISCO (AP) A makeup. oo repreoented the ·"force of Coogressional Medal. "The Puppet,' 'by
>---l---11-....,.'!ebntcd"aNO q.m. Woonel(lay 11 ·-•111t11a:l!ialt"'tlll'-"§elesm~ ~Y vliu.be!ng-d<lv~y-Mllltl'•IHll!-t yir,"Jlathing-!rnho-Seinc" b) Seur•t.
- --0ur Lady--of'-Fatima Cathoiic-----Church hfonday in U.S. District Gourt ~re to 20-root high GongressionaJ Medal. ;'The Gardinal's Portrait'' by Rosenthall
whh the Rev. Joseph Karp offltjating. possessing 44 pounds of heroin with in· Hutt.er had received• bis 1'hang in and "Dcesis," n blS relier sculpture. '
Ourlal will rollow In As~nsion Cemetery. tent to distribute it. Tang Kuang lfcok . there," encouragement Crom one of the The public will see 27 productions.
El Toro. Leanes.ki Morhulry-Ml in charge :l8, could recei Ve a. matlnlum penalty of press observers as the photographers many consisting or as many as 10 dlf~
of 1rrlllfJeinen1.. 5 years in prison "and a $25.000 (lne. kepi him Posed much 1003er ·•hon Ill< IS.• FllSTIVAI., fage ZJ . . \
-
• , , _)
,
Although adhering to code. the projcd
i:tc:<:ut · drew-the couc.e u• of city
tlcials at a jo,int study sc.sslon and after
the 1alks the commissioners and city
councilmen agreed to 'OOSln hard changes
in the zoning which t\~lowed · the high
15'LADV~NCE._ Page Zl •
•
L,M. 11~11 .... ,,..
CllllWl!Jt c1.,.1n.. c-1ct
Dl•lll Noll<IS 1
•111t.r111 ''"' • llllM'llllll'llllll 11·1•
l'lllUC• ""
fflt "'' lit~•·• , HltlKl•I 1S . .
.,
AM L....,.
M•-IK .M111v1\ fl1ffltdt
Nllltflll Mt.-. Dtl_. c .. "'1
II " I• • -,
111<11 Mlrllllt 1 .. 11
• T1leof'lileii lt J~i.rt ,. .w .. tMT • • w_.,., .. .,.. 1a.11
•W'111 Newt 4
,
..
•
•' ----'---
Pa.rk Issue
Subject of
2 Meetings
San Clemente city councilmen and
parks and rcereation commisstoners will
hold special meetings this 1,1.·ee k -both
for essentially the same reasefl.
l•--,,J.ll~~mlss1on ·pl!l!S a ·~cial session tonight .at the clUbOOUSC roTuOOa -ror a-
tinal study on priority parks. projects
which could be funded through the ipltiul •
$81),000-plus in revenue-sharing income to
1he city.
On Wedn esday night the council \\'ill
study the comrnlssion suggestions as well
as other major items y,•hicti are cont·
peting for fw1ding under the progran1.
•
• --
Stans Utters Denials-,~
,Efforts to Avoid Testimony Blocked . •
WAl!HINOTON (AP) -Maurice H.
Stant, bk>cked 1n an effort to avoid
\Vatergate testimony now, today. denied
knowledge of the wiretapping raid,
poUtlcal sabotage or violation of any
campaign laws.
The fonner secretary of Conlmercc
:and fundraiser for President Ni.xon con-
ceded only that· there might have betn
ZIEGLER ADMITS ERROR
ON BRIEFING-Story, Pa~ 12
"some unintended teclmical violatlons"o( 1the new disclosu~e law. (Related story,
Page 4)
before bla New York trial.
Earlier. the committee heard a former
Nixon campaign worker from Orange
County testily he had been told that John
N. Mitchell , while still attorney general.
had been shown filmed copiea of psivate
correspondence from the campaign of
Sen, Edmwid S. Muskie, at that timu
frontrWUle{ for the Democr1otic res den-·
· 11-nomifllltt .
In court, U.S. District Judge John J.
Slrica cleared the way for the committee
to take testimony, under immunity, from
two key witness~, ous ted White House
counsel John W. Dean 111 and former
Nixon campaign deputy Jeb Stuart
Magruder.
Dean and othiµ' key \\'itnessd. '
Stan.sis under lndlctntien t I.it New York
in connection with a secret 197% earn·
puign contributJon, and his ~wyer asked
the Senate Watergate commlttee t o
postpone his testimony untU after the
trial.
Sen. Sa.m J . Ervin lO.N.C.), said th<
commlttee •nanimo~l;'J'.Uledjgainl~ •
del-ay, but wouldn't ask him anything in-
volving the New York <:,11se, whlch stem.c.
from a contribution by financfer Robert
Vesco. 'Mitchell has bee.n indicted in thtt
same fund-raising case. ,
While Stans asked not to \eltify', when
he was ordered to do so he told the com-
The special con1mission session will
start at '1:30 p.n1 ..• as will Wednesday's
--:---COll!lcil-meetll'fg:
Stans appeared at the televised hear·
ings of the Senate's Waterga te in-
vestigating committee, which rejected
his lawyer's plea that Stans be spared
the "inevitable klieg.Jight.ot pubUclty"
Sirlca also denied a request by the
speeial Watergate prosecutor, Archibald
Cox, to prevent live radio and television
coverage of testimony from Magruder,
mittee he had a 20-mlnute prtpared
statement to deliver before facing ques-
tioning. ' '
Councilmen have until June 20 to ap-
prove the use of the fi rst revenue-sharing
cash, or the city will lose the allocation.
Besides parks, a Sl3 ,000 parking COil'
sul tant study js 90 the top of the shop-
ping list. .
The only other major items on the rnre
The paneT agree<C lo heartha~ an.r
copies of the St:ins' text were distributed
to newsmen before be delivered it.
Stans' statement made lhese t hree
pr incl pal assertiOos :
-··1 had no knowledge of the Walergale '
break-in or any other eapionage efforts
before I read about them Jn the press, or
1--adjourned-action session oUhe....counci''-"'--
_a fin!ll review of the · teotativ_e budget
calling for $4.6 million in expenditures on
Power Firms Struggle
Durmg 1f:ast -Heat Wave of the efforts to cover u~ent •. ~-~
"{ haf! no lgiowledge of -!nY sabotage.
program to l!isrupt ·"the campaign by
Donald Segretti or apyooe else. a balanced fonnat.
At this point no plans are in the 'vorks
for a tax-rate Increase. The rate is ex·
pected to hold at $1.55. tor $100 in assess-
ed valuation.
City Manager Kenneth Carr said he
d~ not foresee a final approval of the
budget on Wednesday.
l\-1ore fina l .decisions could come on the
city financial document at the J une 20
session.
From Page l .
ADVANCE .. :
density construction.
Among..other major items on the list
for hearings are: ..
-A bid to rezone three lots at 125-135
Palizada from R-3 mul tiple zoning to C-1·
A (central commercial apartment) the
same type of zoning which affects the
. Fainvay Seaview complex. ·Billy Lee
Holder is the applicant.
-A-rezone of property at Camino··de -
los Mares and Calle Agua from
unclassified to R·2 PRO zoning which
would allow a cluster-community
development concept. ·
-A request by UriiOn Oil Company to
allow the refurbishing of a station at El
Camino Real and Avenida Presidio.
-A bid by tbe Moose Lodge for the use
of a building at 3817 S. El Camiho !Real
for a new headquaners.
-Review once more of tbe city's five-
year, capital-improvement program in
advance of budget actions by the city
coUncil.
-Study on a tentative.tract map sho\\··
ing 9'l condominium units on the 9.2-acre
site on La Esperan1.a once destined for
the San Clemente Med.teal Center, a proj-
ect which was abandoned. ·
-An application by Byron Marshall for
the cooversion of the P a n o r a m a
Apartments into condominiums located
at 420 Monterey Lane.
-A proposed division of 48.S. acres in
the Presidential Heights area into 20
single-family estate lots as part of the
Douglass-Pacific master plan.
-Yet Mother Douglass-Pacific bid for
division of acreage, 4..6 acres of land into
48 single-family lots.
AEC Promises
Oosure Appeal
CH ICAGO (AP) -The chairman of
the Atomic Energy Commission says the
-AEC \\'OUld appeal immediately if con-
sumer advocate Ralph Nader obtains a
COllft injunction closing 20 nuclear power
plants. fnclu.d.ing the One at San Oiio"fre.
Or. Oixy Lee Ray declined Monday at
a news conference further comment on
the suit filed by Nader. ,
"The nat ion can survive'' the closing of
the plants, she said, since only four per~
cent of the nation's tota l electricity is
produced by nuclear power plants.
OU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
,.~ 0<1no-Coefl DAIL.Y .. IL.OT. wll!I WhiC~
11 (om111nec1. th• Ht•o-P•e11, 11 Pl.lbll"1td 11,
Ille Dr1og1 C111I ~llbli1hlno Comptny, St!M
r111 .Olliom ••• PU~Hshed, M-•~ lhtOUg~
. FrlOtv, for Co111 Met•, HIWllOrt •uct..
Hvnll"!llO<I ll•1>eh/l'"ovn111n V1111~. L.1!11.Hit
llNch, lrvlne/$.ecloflee.rt and San (~mtl'lt/
S.n J..,.n C1plllrtne, A slnOI• reglon1t
edllion Is 11YOllt11"11 Slt1,1rd1~1 lftCI Sund•~'·
Tiie prh~INl llUOl~lno Pllnl 11 ., llO Wet!
·B1y 3trtel, (0111 MtM. C.llttrnle, tHH.
Robert N. We.d
l'rnialtll fllll P~o!l1ll•r
J eck R, Curl•'f'
\'l(t "11tidlfll ll'ld Gtiwr11 Mtntltlf'
l homai ICe•vll Efl«ir
lho11111 A. Mu1ph1n1
M.tntlllno Edllor
Cherlet H. Loot Rlditrd P. N1tl
"4altt•n• M•ntOfflll E•'llO•t
S. CMMtlt• Offke
105 North El C•mlno lte•I, 92672
Ottt.r· Offfcft
Co111 M•••~ n~ w~• ••Y '''"t H""'poff 8e-'Cll; UU HtWpopt ao...i.~~•11
HurlllnefOll Budl: 1111$ '911dl to~lrv1r11 UOilrlt .tkll! m "11f"nl AVl'!Wt
, ......... 1714, Mlo4J21
By the Associated Press
Oil1Y .. ilot Sl•lt .. llelo ·
proached the reeord 93 d e g r e e 5 ,
-"To the best of my knowledge there
were no intentional violations of the laws rela~ing to sampaign financing by the
finance committees for which I had
responsibility.''
FINISHING TOUCHES -Last minute preparations are n1ade in Pag-
eant of ~1asters reproduction of Goya's painting, "The Puppet." From
lef.t to right are Terry Cournoyer, Huntington Beach; Carol Romer-
eim, Newport Beach; Beverly Klages, Laguna Beach and Kathy Cra,v-·~
ford of l\1ission Viejo. Suspended is Mark Klages, 1 ~. of Laguna. At
ri ght givjl'ig"directions is Peggy \'lidn1an.
The East Coast -sweltered today for a
second strajght day and power com-
panies struggled to meet the demand for
electricity to run air conditioners and
other coolll1g devices in addition to
regular appliances.
As temperatures in New York City ap-
f'rom Page l
· Conso lidated Edison Co., serving the city
and Westchester County, reduced voltage
in some sections for the sceond day. Con
Ed said at 10:45 a.m. that power ·had
been cut by 5 pe:~nt at manually
operated, older s ufb stations in
Westchester. Queens and Staten Island'.'
The New York State Power Pool -in-
volving eight utilit ies -said power had
been cut by 5 percent in 1 percent of the
system at 11 a.m. and said the rest of the
system would probably be involved by
noon.
The testimony about Mitchell came
from Herbert L. Porter of Laguna
Niguel, fGrme.r scheduling chief of the
Nixon campaign.
He said 11agruder had given him 35
millimeter film copies (lf memoranda I that had gone between Muskie's Senate
lrvirie Girl, 17,
Relates Escape
From Abductor
A kidnaper with a crucifix dangling
from his car's rear view mitt:_ar abducted
an Irvine tefnager-Monday"but the girl
told police she escaped finaUy by jump..
ing out and hiding in an orane grove.
The 17-year-<ild girl was not injured in
the orClcal, which she said happened
about 1:30 p.m. while she walked home
from lJniverslty High School.
The victim said her k.idnaper, about 22
and wearing a neat, military-type
haircut. pulled up at University Drive
and Culver Road and offered her a ride.
She declined -repeatedly. as he
became more adamant - and said
the young man then jumped out and
dragged her into his light blue 1972
foreign car.
She said he did not make overt sexual
advances but held his hand on her leg
during most of the meandering ride down
into the Mission Viejo area via the San
Diego Freeway.
She told Officer Jack Wat.ron the ab-
ductor seemed extremely nervous and
kipt trying to seduce her, but made_ no
attempt to force sexual relations.
She said the man. clad in blue jeans
and a T-shirt . did not attempt to chase
her dov.•n When she made her decision to
jun1p from the stopped car and flee into
the orange grove.
I
Da11a Hills High
Pla11t Sale Set
Members of the Dana Hills High School
horticulture class v.'ill conduct a com-
munity plaht sa!e Thursda y at ·2 p.m. in
room 401.
The products or a semester of \VOrk
\\'ill go on sale - some planted in ter-
rariums, hanging baskets. dish gardens
and as dried nower arrangements, said
instructor ~1arv Sherrill . /
Among the types of plants on sale at
mQderate prices "''ill be organically
grown vegetables, plus q u a r t · s i z e d
specimens of fuchsias, begonia s ,
petunias. marguerites, coleus, spider
plant and miscellaneous succulents
grown fron1 cu ttings an.cl seed . ~
All men11>crs of lhc cornnlunity arc
\\'e!comc, She rrill said.
Curtiss Elected.
Cliief of Lions
Capist rano Bench accountant and com-
1nunity leader Vaughn.. Curtiss has been
elected prcsidE!l'lt of the N i g u e·I
Capistrano Lions Clu b.
Curliss. a fonncr president of the
Cap istrano Beach Chamber of Com-
n1erce, currently serves on the board of
the South Coast United Fund.
Olhers installed recently as officers of
the service group to serve through the
next fiscal year are Emerson Stanley.
firs t vice president; Merrill Fahy, se~nd
vice president: Stuart Noble1 secretary
and Stan \Veissburg, treasurer.
Fresno D.A. Probed
Fro1n P11ge l CUSD ...
. office and his campaign headquarters.
This was in November, 1971. Porter said 1
FESTIVAL. • •
. . . Coo · Ed reduOO:I voltage 11onday by 8 trustees shifted to· praise for the staff percent - the maximum befor the . work e com
I he didn't know how they were obtained.
Porter said Magruder once told him
that he was gong to show the material to
·Mitchell, and· said that it. appeared to
him.that Magruder bad done so. "Jt;s a good budget/' White said. , ~a~y resorts to selective blackouts. Jt ~Wes or art works __.,. "l'd-Uke-t9 congtatulate-tbe_ad-said two of four plants~!~ were oot of
The pageant uses human model.if' mh}iStratlon, because the job they have-m-vtar1mmt!l;'Werel>licK 1rt use ~Y.
painted costwnes, painted backgrounds done .. is no easy task. 1 don't like the cu~. Two other plants, one clos~ foc refu~hng
~ After Judge Slricu.JUlini,Jhu:<Xn,~· _ __,__.
mittee scheduled Magruder to appear·
later this week, after Stans. Dean was
scheduled for an appearance rte1t week. and a· book of lighting and technical but 1 know that you (the administratOTS) and the other for overhauling, remained
tricks to turn the three-dimensional Jike them even less," he added. s!>"t, howe~er. . ,
forms into represent.ations of two-Benedict said that the goal _ besides The public Ser;v1ce Electric ~ Gas dim~nsional famous paintings, statues, or the slashing of expenditures _ was to Co .. New Jerseys largest suppher. cut
·relief sculptures, or other-art .works. find enOugh reserve money .to amount to votta~e . by 5 percent for several hours
It is the pageant's 38th annual pr<r 3 ptrcent of the total budget. st~t~g at 11 :00 a.m. on Monday and
duct ion and as for the last 13 'years, is That SUPl, he said, was a bare said it expected another voltage cut t<r
sold out. minimum for the district. i. r -day.
11ore than 250,000 persons annually That reserve fund as projected at this
Stans arrived late. The committee
wai ted for almost three mlnute5 before
he and his three lawyers entered the
hearing room . Stans, with the trace of a
poli te smil e -0n his lips, oodded to the
conunittee members, lhen listened to fiis
lawyer appeal for a postpunement.
visit the Festival of Arts. point is about $327,000.
The Festival of Arts is a nonprofit White and fellow trustee William En-
organization governed by a board of quist were most outspoken about the
directors elected by the f.e s ti val crisis areas in the school fiscal situation.
membership. -\Vlllte benloaned the fact t b a t
Over the last 10 years, it has dor,ated transportation costs ne:;tt y will soar
more than $1.5 million to civic and ·by about 32 percent, As3istant
cultural causes. More than $50,000 has Superinteqdeot far Bus Sam Chicas
been given In scholarships. , stressed t!Jat beovy growth in the large
In the early days, circa 1933, admission district has caused the increase. New
Capo S(ream Polluters.
Get Fine From Judge
was 10 cents and local merchants chip-contracts with bus semces and the ad-
' ' '
ped lin, .and the festival collected an 1 --dition of more diStrict di"iver.:s and adding A Soyth County Muilicipal Court Judge
amount from the sale of paintings. First to their hours are the i easoos for the has slapped a $12,444 fine on Owens
profit was $475. sudden increases. · Illinois Inc. for polluting two ~ streams
silica and used oils and •chemicals to
isolate the silica from u n w a n t e Jf. minerals. · ~
~st year the city of Laguna Beach Enquist focused on improvements at ,._
which actually owns the Festival grounds, the San Clemente High School campus near San Juan Capitdrano with oil and Before it can operate again Barnette
ordered that the damaged creeks be full y
restored to the Satisfaction of the
Department o(• Fish and Game.
collected $88,000 in rental,. based on a 3Ild questioned tl}e budgeting of nearly greasy silt earlier this year.
percentage of gro.ss admissions. $8,000 for fences at the football field as Judge Blair Barnette further required
The Festival set up 'housekeeping on well as pathways and other construction the silica mining firm' along Ortega
the present grounds in 1941. · on the visitors' side of the field. Highway to Clean up the mess caused, by
Eventually, the mining firm plans to
redesign a system of ponds which will
hold water that could be totally recycled, 1
instead of discharged.
ln the pageant's history, orily -0ne Benedict defeneled the expendit ures, oily runoff water into Trampas and San
J?Crformance has been rained out. the Ju-saying ipey \vere needed.-the fences to Juan Creeks.
ly 29, 1965 performance. ' assist in crowd. control ind the visitors' The condition first was noted last
The 1973 Pageant is produced by Don bl eachers improvements "as a matter of February when workmen dumped waste
Williamson. Ed 'Miracle is background common courtesy." ' water fouled With oil and chemicals into Triton Booster Club
Recruiting Members
~rtiSt, Hap Graham, narrator ; Victor Often. he added. visitors to athletic the creeks.
Schoen, conductor and composer or events have had to walk through ankle-Several weeks later a dam holding
special music; and Carl Callav.·ay, deep mud to reach the· stands. more of the water as well as a large slit
technical director. Of .all the maintenance cuts and im-deposit burst.
From P"fle I
RATE HIKE. • •
• proVements slashes to distrtct campuses, That mishap caused the flooding of A gener~ membership meeting of the
the least occurred in the San Clemente Ortega Highway and further discharges Triton Booster Club servtnrr Sa n
High account into the creeks. Clemente High School will be held Thun-
At that campus, Benedict and Chicas 'The problem at that time was blamed day at a p.m. in the ·campus teachers'
said, maintenance has remained a top on heavy rains. dining room.
priority item. Then, on May 4, more asserted viola· The election of 1973-'74 dirtcton and
"We have long believed that San tions occurred . other otflcen will be held at the seukms
posed a 6.8 increase in salary, based 00 Clemente High deserves a major alloca-The firm , which has been shut d.own and all members of the club are urged to
the cost of living escalation and 1 _t~io:n=fo:r:m:a:ln:t:ena=n=ce=,'=' Ben:::edi::.ct::s:ai:d:. :::::':inc:~'-':the:::d:a:m::b:re:a:k:, :mm:.:"':::hi:·g:i>:gr::ade::::•:t:le:n:d:the:::m:•:jo:r:ann:::ua:l:m::ee:Un::g:.:::; c.alculated disposable income increases.
A proposal by the Faculty Association
did not make a specific percentage -----·---
recommendation . though an increase
comparable to the SCEA request is ex-
pected.
A trust~ committee of Alyn Brannon,
Donna Berry, and Dr. James Marshall
was appointed to meet with staff
representatives regarding specific pro-
posals.
Capo Beach CofC
To Hear Planner
' Members of the guests of the
Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commeree
will hear a specialist in business planning
discuss the servlce at a noon meeting
\Vedncsday at the El Adobe in San Jua n
C:.ipistrano. 1
Glen 11agnusen. the head or a business
planning firm, will be the guest speaker.
Wednesday's meeting will be the laat
general membership meeting of the sum-
mer for the chamber.
The monthly sessions \viU resume in
September; chan1ber spokesmen said.
I
Fatal
•
' A WORD TO THE .WISE -
There is a tendency for many carpel stores lo use strictly a
warehouse concept. One 1dv1nteg8 is seeing carpeting in rolls rather
than somples.
Many disadvanlege1 are evid,nt -most operations of this type
buy only Off-good1, so that the customer only gets lo ste qld patterns,
o; carpels the mills couldn't sell to regular outlats. Also, this type of
operation g e n e r a 11 y feels that experience is unimportant, and
consequently the selespeople ~now little or nothing about the products.
Finally, most will farm out the inst 1 II 1 Ii on s to the lowest bi!ldor,
guaranteeing a poor instellation. (Many of these installers are contracting
illegally without a stale licenso.j
Al Alden's we maintain a hap'py medium. We carry 1 large
inventory, and the largest sample selection around. We have experienced
salespeople, and our installers wore trained by us. Finally, wa are a
slate licensed contractor. 1
" ALDEN'S
i---1·-_!C~'-'!!"Jlft .. "'ILJ>A-.l.l .... U2ol'71-I--=::--:;===,,-,=,,--.,:-~-... ·-•• ..,. __ , SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The state
Auto Injuries
To EJ Toi·o · arme .---G-AIWETS--..ORAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
CdSTA MESA
646-4818
Moo.· Thn. t 1e 1:ao: "'· t 1e t: Sat. t:JO 1e s -.
, ........ 492-4420:.. _ Attornt.y General's office said,~1onday it ' Pvt. l\11chacl \V. Steinmetz, 18, o!
C•rr!ol'tt, 1n1. °''• to.ti\. .. utitrfl!111o is i nves lig11ting "allegations involving l\1ound, Minn., an El Tor6 Ma:r1We died °""""'· "'0 -. 111r1n. 1r11a1+~ ...... t ·bl · d t c · · I d t" 'lo da·y of lnju les •· d I ' · -~ e •11tt1111 """" or ..iv""n'""'"" "*'-Ill ' ,...,..s1 e m1scon uc or r1nun.a con uc o n r rect.yt as. t.:Vn s->---1-;;;-iil· .. _._.ftOalllllttll-.U"""'_...11t1r0..--1-b lhe--F'resno County district. attorney. day. when he wa struck by 1 c"ar. 1 U.16ilir~fltllt --,, · ' "The fact th.at such investiga Oon is belng-· lnvestigat9rs said Steinmetz, 1352 Fruit
l«Mll $U '*'"" ,..._ ., COl'lt ...,,... d ~ d I d. I I s <· •• A k s c1nl#Jl11. ""'-'lttion lrY Ut1T1tr .,,..; con· uctt.:V oes not n 1cate any op non t.. 1')(JnWI rut, was stnic on Jst lreet .. """th"'' lrY m.11 1i.1J monMl'l'i m 1tt,., on our part as to Whether or not the nea r Mountain Views•-·• in ~·-t1·n by a lill•llM!lllM U.t.J ll'IOr!llU~. 1"' --~ I Ull alleg11tion~ are true," said a statement car drl1Jen by Raymond L. Wlllscy, 77, qf .
by fhc attome.y general'S oUlce, Santa A.an. Willse y wu ~t cited. . .
_., ___ . -• .. ='=--••
• '
I
• <
J f) "DAILY PI LOT TueSIU)', June 12, 1971
Dist«df · Carpe11ters
.Janet I-fu ck tle!t) gets instrucli on in use or a circular power saw in New York
froni founder and teacher of L.a dy Carpenter In stitute, Joyce }-Jartwell. The in-
stitute is gra dualing its first c.:!ass of 34 st udents Thursday. All th e women
we re beginners \V ho knew not hi ng of carpentry. ~1iss Huck is a magazine re-
porter by trade. --------------
Selective Price Controls
Probable, Sources Predict
'
TH E SOURCES say Nixon is • expected to turn IO llltlO·· 0 • z
datory. sclccth·c c ~ n Ir O ! s f,
rather than t1. s"·eepn1g acro~s-Fir111s Accused
the-boarcl rrccze on prices.
\\'ages. interest rates and
dividends. l·Tov,.ever. I h e
:-;ourc:cs s<1id the program the
President ls devising in the
face of steadily increasing:
prices is exJX:cted to .. go
beyond "•age-prize stab1li za-
Of Faking Shortages
ti.0:n,_., ,
There had been s o m e
~peculation lh'1l one of the
devices Nixon mi£bt use to
co1nbat inflption -and at the
sa111c thnc to red uce the henvy
drain on the nation 's short
gasoline su pplies -''·as a 4·
cent tt g,d lon increase in the
federal gasoline tax.
EXECUTIVE
Whtl •-"-''• ma11 ... me11t Hclatfo11td 111 m0te1J.I eH •41·
"""~i•• ..... c.tt.11 ... ,1.,
petltl•• wi"' ,r .. reul" c1111°
pa11r laccttff hi Orute C•1111ty.
Affrowatlolflt of dDlly frff.
•• ., •1wt .. , ..... "•'" '°' I
"''• pan -.... """' proll'lpt· 1 ed o clrlollf•·
.
United Press lnternatlti ual
The price CJf crtidc oil u·as
raised in four stales Monday,
and the_Stalc of Elo~l~.~-i!C_:
cusl'd big petroleum fir1ns of
<-'rcating the fl_lel shortage just
lo dr i\'C prices up.
Else\vhere. Kansas farmers
1\·ere in doul>t u•hcthcr they
had enough gasoline to etim-
plL"le their u·heal harvest,
pcl\\'Cr companies in the
Norlheast rl'<luccd ou1put by 8
percent ~ in lhc n1idSt or a
record hent v.•a,·e. one senatpr
s.1 id laying the Alaskan oil
plJX!linc would eaoe the prob-
len1. and lhc Libyan govern·
mcnt took over a U.S. Oil com-
pany and called it a punitive
ac tion. t . Sll ELL. Oil. Co. meanwhile
pos ted a price increase or 35
ecnls per bnrrel for erude oil
W•ile All ='-'!•, 0~11~ l"llot
l".O. Bt• n6'0, Ctll• Mew ,, ... tllU I
in ·rcxa~. l.ouisiana. ~fontana
:ind North Oakota. citing a
~~~~~~::"~~~--~:.,_~n~ccd 10 retain its existing level
.*SILVER*GOLD*"
. 999% PURE SILVER INGOTS -MEDALS -COINS
PLACER GOLO s1is PER OUNCE
979-0642 • FREE BROCHURE • 979-6343
3Ali0\ff\i1NE (Nur ATrpolll~SUITE 115, Nl"i8!ACH 9 2660
.. UNIV_l~SAL TRADE.
SEMINAR ON
BONDS
ARE YOU EARNING 7Yi% to 8%
ON YOUR· MONEY
MANY PEOPLE ARE ... IN BONDS
One evening seminar on bonds given in clear, c:oncl•e
non-technic:•I lan9u•9e. The 1e•sion is for. bot h new
•nd e.1eperie nced investors: Materi a l include•:
• GOVllNMINTS • COlrc>IATR • MUNICll'ALS • CONYllTI·
ILIS • HOW SAFE ARI IONDS? ' IOND FUNDS ' HOW TO
IUY AND SILL ' lATINGS-SAFETY AAA-A·lll ' WHA_T IS
CALLAILI , •• ' SINKING FUND ••• • HOW MUCH INTlllST
AND HOW fl.AID?
,.., ....,._,I•• ,1 .. se lltdlc9'9 M f'W
••II' 17141 644·2442.
) Thurs., June 141h, 7:30 P.M.
1w1 .. Wiii h Sor"Clll
I Sat., Juno 16th, 9:30 A.M.
ICoffw A11d Do1111n Pro•ldodl
f ·1 I AM UNABLE TO ATTEND; I would lik e lo ht"• ttmi~tt
l!t•'•turt on lond1.
___.._ __ ~I---~ N·-~-.-.-.-. , • •, •, , , • , • •., , • • • •, • • , • , , . • • , , . , • . •, , • , •, , •, ,
Adair•" •• , , ••••• , , , • •" · • · • • · '. ... • • • · ·-· • • · • •·• • • • · • • • • • • •
Cltv •••••••••••••••••••• St1t1 , .•••• , •• , Zip ••• •. • .. • ·~
Home Phon~ • : •••••••••• • • · • •• • •~•· • • • • • • • • · • • • • · • • • • • -SHEARSON HAMMILL & CO.
of fuel supplies.
In FOrt \Vorth , T e x . ,
Champlin Petroleum Co. an.
omi.rn.:;~ i.t i() if"!_crea_sing its
posled price for Oklahoma
sweet crude oil by 45 cents per
ba rrel. to $4 .30, effecti~e illl""
madiatcly.
T\vo big questions ~·ere rais-
ed by government oUiCiills.
One': Did the oil companies
create !he fuel crisis or in·
s tead is the public at fault for
not heeding the oil industry's
"'arnings that the shortage
\ras com ing? Second: Should
the c o u n t r y sacrifice stand-
ards for a clean environment
to ease the sho rtage?
Florida assistant attorney
general Daniel S. Dearing said
the power crisis is a plot by
big oil finns to discredit en-
\·ironmentalists and eliminate
competition. lie prom ised the
state would sue the oil com-
pan ies on those grounds, alleg-
ing violation of rederal an·
t.itrus~ la\\'S .
* * * Gas Su1>plies
Not Critical
In Soutltland
LOS ANGELES !AP I -
Southern Cali fornia is the
least affected Sl'Cl ion of the
country in terms or gasoline
supply. ticcordi ng to surveys
by the Southern California
Auto Club.
The club reported A1onday it
has started a series of y,·eckly
· surveys or the gas supply
situation in metropolitan Los
Angeles a n d surroun ding
areas. A spokesman said 1hc
surveys ind icate there is no
serious shortagf or gasolin e In
the area.
T
Tl1is Sign -
Not Fuelin'
I
Ew·opean
Dollar
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Complete Ne~ 'fork Si0ck List
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Tutsday, J~nt OAllY PllOT 9
OVER THE t::OUNTER1
Olt 12.~ 8" "·' If 16.1 Olf 14.1 Cit 1)..) ff 12,5
11.S
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IJ ,, •.o '" "' '·' '" ,, . "'
_:£/II.JI,.. t....J • ·~ ftl¥ • £?' ............. -~~ ~,,...,. .......
MUTUAL FUNDS
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' z -DAll Y P.Jl:Of.
Ff!mlly Ci1•c1t• bu BU Ke1111e, -~-= Was Lex .. Barler-
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trance. quoted the voloe which
she said was Barker's In dis-
joined phrases:
NEW YORK !UPI) - A by Barker's widow, Zan, who
British medium flown In !or cried 'during It ; his son, Alex·
lhe occasion "'ent into a ander, a restaurant owner;
labored trance at !he Waldorf Hollywood parapsychologists
Astoria and claimed.she got in and several friends including "I SPEAK OF love. ~ a
contact v•ilh Lex Barker, the actress' Joan Fontaine and life beyond ... ii has 15een
former movie Tarzan who New York• socialite p a.t J necessary for me to a~ept
died exactJy one month ago. Uchitel. thls new life. . .ther~ is
~1edium 1'1arjorie Staves They sat in a circle around forgiveness here ... I speak of
said i\londay that Barker was A1iss Staves and listened to deep regret and heartache."
"happy and alive in another personal m essages fron1 ~ The seance was sponsored
u·orld." Barker purportedly s e n t by the newspaper The Na·
through Miss Staves. tional Enquirer whic_!l last
....c.-..JJll"'-SEANCE. at_the famed...._ Miss Stavu, .ber...arms araf___.Ja®IQ'. enlisted. Barker and
New York hotel was at-tended head jerking while in the three movie stars wltl\
"But I told all the guys that when school wos out
you'd let me stay up to wotch Johnny Corson."
'Not Nixon'
Ziegler Admit s ---------
Er1~or ori Call
WASHINGTON (AP) part," Ziegler sa id.
'.Presidential Press Secretary . He said it was 1;my im·
Ronald L. Ziegler concedes he pression" after meeting with
.e:rrcd in telling newsmen Nixon and Haldeman at Key
March 26 that President Nixon Biscayne, Fla. that "the
had given White House counsel President spoke directly with
J ohn Dean III p e r sona l John Dean."
assurances of c o n f i d e n c e lie added that "it \vas a
following · news reports that wrong impression on my
Dean knew in advance or tbc ·•part," but that it "did "not
\Vatergate burglary. come from anything that was
Questioned l\londay at a stated" in the meeting "that
• White' ~louse briefin~ about would have misled rue."
,
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.spiritual leanings -Robert
Cummings, Arlene DI.hi . and
Rhonda Fleming -to write
secret sealed p e r s o n a 1
messages, knO\YD only • to
the1nselves. and to tum them
over · to the newspaper for
deposit in a Florida bank
THE FOUR then signed
agreements whereby eac h
would attempt to contact
mediums at seances one
month after their deaths to
ansmirtnelill'sS<tges.
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Oil May II, the tall i>r<ln1ed sealed me,..g ond thej
Barker col\apsed on a r.tanhat· that it was wrltfen In a 1
tan street and died of a heart looped scrawl. .
attack at the age of 54. · The ~ulrer id it w
~!onday's event, \vhlch t09k • take several days, for tt~m ~
place exacLly one month to the check the words Miss Sta~
hour atfer his death, was held !11-tntk>ned with Ule envel
to test the experiment which m the vault to see they ·
would , according to the En-resPonded.
quirer, "once and foe all prove Miss Uchietel, e ~
if there is a life after death." the Barkers were vl~ltt:t}:
wben be died, said his rl~
inss STAVES, however, and family agreed to tM
said she was able to decipher seance becall9e his m' '
fi!W'"'irords-oot"'oHhe-birunted·tllem al .
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the 21h·month-o\d incident, The inCident occuITed after
Ziegler said a call lo ~an ac· the Los Angeles TilfleS quoted
tua!IY ·was , ma~e by then Watergate defendant 'James
~House......cJ:µcL.oL stafL-W.-t.1eCord ..a having ~ uid
ll:R. Haldeman rather than by Dean had prior knowl~e of
Nixon. the June 17 1972 ·break·in at
------------· -___ __. ---~-·-__ :_ ___ ~l-
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'. . . • "THE ERROR is on my Democratic pprty national headqu arrers.
..
Last Time
In Public
~ • Coughli1i
DETROIT (AP) -!\fore
than 1,200 people crowded into
St. Mary's Catholic Church
·here for \Yhat the Rev. Charles
E. Cooghlin says was his last
public appearance.
' Fattier Coughlin,. the con-
troversial "radio priest" of
the 1930s, told the jamn1ecl
church Sunday night . '"I'm too
old. l haven't too Jong to go
and I know it..,
DURING ll IS 35-minute
sermon, the 82-year-old priest
called for a battle against the
ne\Y devil, which .he said \Yas
"the international .in-
dustrialization with its whole
..rnatcralistic concept of lire."
·Father Coughlin said. "Save
the r ich class from paying
taxation is its philosophy. It
has its O\vn philosophy of lust
instead of purity, sex instead
of soul."
PEOPLE STILL "arc u·or-
rying about a '·co1n1nunisnt
that's shot its bolt and that is
surrendering to the ntoncy of
the industrialists, or the oil
barons," he added.
"Communi·sm is paS!e and
you don 't knO\Y it. lt's not
passe in its philosophy.' It's
still the same materialistiq,
concept."
He said the United States
must revive its devotion to
God and fight continuously
against the new "anti·Christ."
FATHER COUGHLIN drew
an audience of millions before
Ytorld War lf u·ith ~is ag-
gressive radio broadcasts at·
tacking the "New Deal" and
President Fr a n k I i n D.
Roosevelt, co mm unism.
"international bankers" and
J ews.
He retired in 1966 as pa stor
emeritus of the Shrine of the
Lillie Flower in nearby Roya l
Oak.
ACCORDING to Ziegler,
Haldcman 's call to Dean was
made as the \\'hite House
sought to ascertain \\•helher
there might be any truth to
the story.
At the lime, the \Vhite
11ouse spo k esman told
ne\vsn1en that Nixon telcphon·
ed Dea n because of the Los
Ange les Times report. and
referred lo the President as
having "absolute and total
confidence" in Dean.
Dean since has been fired
and Haldeman has resigned.
AT l\lONDAY'S briefing.
If you've ever had second thoughts about the brand of cigarette you smoke,
here's a quick way to find out if it really defivers what you want.
These five simple tests will tell you a lot about quality, freshness, and taste.
And if you make these tests with a Winston, they'll tell you why Winston
smokers can point to their brand and say, "How good it is!" / . ]~· ~
Ziegler said his comments to
newsmen about Dean's denials ...,=
of involvement had been .l-'bas-~ t #} s •ff It '
ed on repeated assura,nces .1.es . m
from Mr. Dean to me that he '
bad not been· invOlved in th.e
\Vatergate matter."
Asked by· a newsman '''hY he
let the ''\\Tong impression"
stand for so Jong, Ziegler said
he had not really considerect
the matter until queried aboui
it by Newsweek magazine dur-
ing the weekend. He said that
as far as he was concerned,
the essence or the story was
the denial of the story that
Dean had any prior kno\\·ledge
of the burglary.
Ziegler defended himself by
saying that in 1.800 brie fin gs,
he has not had such a thing
occur often.
The spokesman has been at
odds "·ith lhe press on
numerous occasions and has
been forced to correct or
declare "inoperative" several
statements concerning
\\'atergate during the last 10
months.
Gal Zipped .
Into Jail
Czechoslovakia (AP ) -
A 46-year-old u·oman was
caught smuggling zippers
into Poland, the Czech
nev•spaperNovi n y
reported.
'
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e '59 FORD for salt:!. Runs
good, for $100.
e FL\' OVER THE \\'A YES
\\•Uh this Kite 113. It has
• i
Take a whiff of th e tobacco.
Does it smell rich and fresh
and appealing? If your ciga-
rette is Winston, yo u'll recog-
ni ze the aroma of costly
Vintage Leaf Tobac cos.
Winston chooses the most ·
nearly perfect leaves money
can buy. Then we age these rare
tobaccos in wooden casks. We do it
for the same reason you'd age a fine wine. Aging
makes our tobaccos mellow and brings out that
extra dimension of natural goodness.
Test. #4 Light It
Does it bum evenly? Here's a
critical test of the way your
cigarette is made. A cigarette
rolled fresh, packed full and
made with care wi ll burn
evenly, draw easi ly. Winston
always does. How. does your
brand shape up ?
,_
Aska Winston smoker.
He'll tell you
Test #2 Feel It
Roll the cigarette in your hand. Pinch it slightly.
Does it feel stale? A cigarette that's been wait·
· _,,.;;..·-4-ing in a warehouse, or on a <k '\, . . shelf, can lose some of its vw-., '· ·.) '~~' freshness. And some of its · . r. · taste. But, because Winston
, -·· .;;c · " sells so fast, every pack
comes to you fresh. The fact
is, on any given day, Winston
is likely to be the freshest
cigarette your money can buy.
Test #5 Smoke It
What could be si mpler? That's
·the real test of a· cigarette. Can ;1i; a
it deliver good taste and real \ -/~~
. sa tisfaction every tim e you light ~!~~--\ f.
up ? Winston can. Ask a .P"" ~" .
Winston smoker. Any time.
He'll tell you.in four simple·
words: How good it is.
..
•
Test #J Take a puff •••
before lighting
•
Take a puff -without lighting ir;•
That's a good way to learn '
about the tobacco and the.
filter. If you ca n taste the ..
tobaccos without li ghting
up, you know there's rich·.
ness up front. And that·
the filter doesn't get in the;
way of the taste. Winston's
exclusive Filter-Blend, a
top-secret blend of different tobaccos •.
works with Winston's mode m whit.;.,
filter to deliver satisfying taste in every puff.
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a boat cover, Is In good ----...,,,dition•and....,,..a·lktl<!-fl---~-----------------,-----------------------------;--------_j paint.
' '
e 'Tl DATSUN 12X>. It haa
48,001 miles and is stiling
for SUOO. •
T -. .
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Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined
Thai Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Health. ;
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20J11g.."11(', 1.4,mg.nicQtlne av.per cigarette.FTC Repon FEB.73; \.
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Laguna ·.Bea~h
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
*---*-
VOL 66, NO . 163, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE c9UNTY, CALIFORNIA . TUESDAY, JUNE 12,' 1973 TEN CENTS
Fan1ed J-a·geant Previewed • ID Lag Una
By JAcg-CIJAPPELL preview ri1onday of the 1973 Festival of nledal would normally be on view before
Of th• 0111, P'11o1 s1111 Arts and Pageant of the Masters. ;;in audience.
"Hang in there, baby!" Young Hutter of El Toro is a five-yeJr Asked what was hardest, controlling
A glittering and gilded 13-year·old Clay veteran of the living pictures pageant. his breathing, maintaining the cramping
Hutter 'dreW ·one more deep breatb and Painted from toe to , topknot in golcJ posture demanded by the pose, or holding
then froze again into thetaguna-Beach-makeup__be....r:epr.esented_the " orce-9;£-s.till,-Huttcr. eplied. · ' ' M~ly_
Pageant of the Masters reproduction of evil " being driven out by Minerva on the everything ."
the Congressionai Medal ot Honor.· 20-foot high Congres~ional ~edal. . He is one of more than 800 persons
Flashbulbs popped from a battery of 11.utter had received hlS ~ng 1n from al) over Orange County who volun-
photographers as more '·than 2 5 O there," encouragem~Lfr'Ptn one of t~C teer. to take par:t in the fam~s P{lgea11t of
members of the local and national press . press observers as the photographe rs the Masters this year runn1~g from July
and broadcaat news media got a sneak kept him posed much longer than the 13 through.Aug, 26 at the Irvme Bowl con~
State . 'Panel
, .
currently with . the Festival of Arts art
exhibition by more than 175 atrists and
craftsmen.
The press was !iihown five works, the
Congressional Medal, "The Puppet,' 'by
'Geyi;''Billiliig iiltlieSeliie'''bY Seurat-. -
"Tfie Cardinal's Poiii'alt" by Rosenthall
and "Oeesis," a.bas relief sculpture.
' The p_ublic will . see 27 productions,
many consisting of as many as 10 dif·
-(See FESTIVAL, Page Z)
Irvine Ranch Beach Buy :
-·
Carpenter's __ ,_ ~-·--
Ullom Will Take Bill Moves
San Jose Post --·-· -T-oward 01(
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
Ot ,llM o.nw P.1i.1 s11tt
Ousted Laguna Beach s c h o o I
superintendent William Ul!Om \Viii be
hired toni ght as the top administrator of
the Mount Pleasant El ementary School
District in San Jose.
...
fi eld of 100 applic an ts for the job, the
board president said. He rece\ve)t top
marks during an extensive selectioft proc-
ess-involving considerable community
revie"" ·
A bi!J authorizing the state to pay $7 .6
million for 3.5-miles of Irvine Ranch
beach and 1.600 acres of coastal sector
lands. between Newport Beach and
Laguna Beach cleared the state Senate
natufal resources and wildlife committee
today. The'vote ~as Unanimous.
FINISHING TOUCHES -Last minute preparations are-made in Pag-
eant of Masters reproduction of Goya's painting; "The Puppet." From
left to right are Terry Cournoyer, Huntington Beach; CJ_rglJW.mer-
eim,~Newport Beach; Beverly Klages1 Laguna Beach and Kathy Craw-
ford of Mission Viejo. Suspended is Mark Klages/ 11 , of Laguna. At
rimtgtving,dire · ons iB•Pe&gy Widm~q. ·
Or. Ullom. fired by a bloc or three
• trustees in December, began work Mon·
day 'in the northern California district.
Ullom \\'ill .receive a three year con-
tract. ·He called the job ''a professional
advancement ," noting he will earn more
than the $27,750 \\'hile superintendent in
Laguna Beach.
·I ilii1eJ.solt '.fltilltiiE. ~ft' .. .. ~· . ,.~~~' .
Newport. Beach) authored the-measure
w~Uch ·-b· upected to clear the senate
finance· corrimittee by July t, according
lo a Carpenter aide in· Sacramento. '-.:t~\.
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Behind " Seen es
1 Ullom said today it \\'ill be "a real I challenge" to take the helni of the 3,SOO.
j student system, based in a community
much different from Laguna Beach.
"It '''as a long haul." said Ul!om,
reflecting on the five mooth search for a
(See U_LLOl\I, Page 2)
TAKES NEW POST
.William Ullom
'
Ir approved by the Senate and later the "'-.__ 1
Assembly, SB 1089 \VOU!d authorize state
~ par ks director \Villiam Penn Mott to buy
the ocean front property valued at $15l
million from the Irvine Company. The
purchase would pennanently assure
Neiv Experienc.es Grret Actors
"The community _is.,_ d i v e r s c
economically ,and racially," explained
Garvie Owensby, president of the school
boanl.
~2% ltacreuse
ranchers on the hill to the flat lands
where they collect \\'elf are checks." said
Owensby. j Ullom \\'SS the top applicant from a
• Laguna Plcu11iers
W a11t to Spe11d ·
Saddlehacl{ College Ol(s
Budget Asking Tax Hike
Fu1ids for Spn<'e
Ry JAN 'VORTH
01 !~1 Dilly ~llol Stiff
A tentative proposed Judget of $12.l
niillion for Saddleb3ck Co nl m u ni t y
College. requ iring a tax rate increase of
22 percent. was approved i\1onday by the
I.aguna Beach should spend half of it's board of tru stees .
$475,000 entitlement of feder al Revenue 'The tax increase. rrom 65 cenls to 84
Sharing for purchase ol open space. buf-cents on $100. as seSsed valuation, y,•ill
k!r strips and parkland, planning com· 1nean a $20 per year hike to the owner o!
missioners decided i\1onday night. a $40,000 hou se in the district.
Planners said th e balance of the Most of an increase of $4 million over
federal fund s should be used for a new last year's budget is for recon struction
recreation facili ty. $100,000: expansion of and the general fund, which incl~des in-.
city h:ill, $80.000: data processing creases. ranging from $500,000 to $1,000 systel)l. $25,000. and environmental in· fonnation system, $25.000. in every category but one.
Commi.s,sioners struggled for more Natural sciences will receive the big-
The final figures. to be decided by mid-
Augu st, \\'iii also depend on the outcome
of employe salary negotiation begun at
~1onday's meeting.
Representatives of the Saddleback
Classified Employees Associa.tion pro-
"J)osed a 6.8 increase in ,r;.a.lary, based -0n
the C<lSt of living escalation and
"calculated .disposable income increases.
A proposal by the Faculty Association
did not make a specific percentage
recommendation, though an increase
comparable tO the SCEA request is ex-
pected.
A tru stee committee of Alyn Brannon ,
Donna Berry, and Dr. James Marshall
\.Vas appoi nted to meet with £taff
re ptescntatives regarding specific pro-
posals.
public access to the prime beach land
and proposed canyon parks.
Included in the purchase price is land
for:
-Five beach parks, including two
acres or rock and tide pools.
-3.5-miles. 9f beach fro nt, including 44
acres of sandy beach.
-A total of 1,600 acres of coastal land
of \\'hich 1,200 acres is planned to be
devoted to regional parks.
-Inland parking areas serving the
beaches ao4 the regional park facilities.
Carpenter's bill cleared the committee
unchanged. Its . draft form agrees with
plans of the Irvine Companf for the pub-
lic developm~t of portionS' of its 110,000
acre coastal sector ocean vie\v ranch
property between the beach and the city
of Irvine boundary in the San Joaquin
Hills.
Drug Case Admitted
SAN FRA NCISCO (AP) A
~falaysian car sa lesman pleaded guilty
ri.1onday in U.S. District Court here to
possessing 4'1 pounds of heroin \\'ith in-
tent to distribute it. Tang Kuang Heok.
38. could receive a maximum penalty of
15 ycal'S in prison <ind a ~'25.~ fine.
.I ..
By CAROL .MOORE
Ot tllt Dfilly 1"1i.1 Stoff
Mark Klages, 11 , of Laguna Beach,,
walked like the Tm Man out to the _patio
to dry his grease paint, careful not to
smudge it en route.
Douglas Keene of Irvine had a com-
plaint. His shirt that looks so summery
cool in "Bathing in the Seine" feels still
as a straitjacket.
Margaret Jackson of Costa Mesa hoped
her hay fever doesn't flare up this sum-
mer, at leas t not during the l\.\'O minutes
the s~tligtJt ls on "Deesis."
, She said "Thailk you'' 'vhen addressed
by name during conversation, having
been called Number One all night to.
designate her position in the picture.
These were just a few of theo ad-
justments mad e backstage at the
Pageant Of the Masters as the volunteer
cast becameraccustomed to poses as art
· masterpieces.
The "actors" were among those chosen
from 800 men, women and children from
Orange COuilty and beyond who signed up
to appea r in I.he sell out riightly shows
from July 13 to Aug. 26.
No\v they were. discovering how it feels
to be smeared with gooey make-up that
looks like calamine lotion, to treeze in a
lunge. position on a 4-inch platform than an hour to ag~e on the fin.~l r_ccom-gest boost, with a half million dolla rs
·mendations, faced wi th requests from the allocated ·to 'equip tllc science·n1alh city staff, Village L8guni -aricf jteveral citizens. building now under construclio1,1. Gomplc~
The propo sed uses for the money now lion is eXpected in 1974.
Sun111aer Recreutio11 Popular
will go to the city council for action at its State taxing legislation limits school
June ZO meeting. districts rrom taxing over their rate of
· In a proposal prese nted at the meeting. last year unless the taxini;: is for con-Village Laguna asked the funds be used
entirely for purchase of a "linear park" structlon.
between Top of the World and Arch After SaddlebaCk's building Program is
Beach Heights. finished , the tax rate applying to building
The park should Contain a one lane \viii drop, Melvin Mitchell,_ director of setvice road tor use by school buses and emerge ncy vehicles as a solution to Arch college -and community services, sa id.
Beach Heights access problems , the pro-·Part or the increase will be spent on
posal stated. planning pha~eS Of the P:~ JilUSiC
Commissioners, ho\vever, shied ,away art building and working drar;ings for a
from a total commitment of the funds to utilities building -part of the overall
the hilltop project after hearing a sc hedule of replacing the portable cam-number of appeals for support of the city recreation department. pus ·~t.h permanent facilities On the 200· acre site. · ~ The department must leave its present Also receiving a hike is the extended offices on ~fain 1Beach Park in October, ...
Lagunans Line Up for. Fun
One man arrived at 4 a.m., set up a
portable chair and broke out a thermos
bottle of coffee and waited . , .
A wothan fed her 5-year~ld boy and
arrtved-at-6 :45 a;m~more than an hour -
befofe the doors were to open. She was
154tb in line.
took in," Fowler sa id. unavoidable. Many compla in "there must
He said volunteers from vie Junior be a better way."
\Vomen's Club registered people solidly ''This is the fourth year and every year
I h 8 · t 1 bou we ·ve improved it," Fowler said noting rom I e a.m. operung o noon a a t this year a number system was used.
110-persons· an hoar Satu~ay.~ --••By-rirriving-earlYt tliey-cait-get Umi r
Most popular classes seemed to be ten-number then go and get something to eat
nis and swimming and whlle many and return. It seems to be the only way
sessions closed out early, Fowler said we can do it," he said. ·
some tennis and some swimming classes Suggestion$ 'that a mailed registrallGn
were sun open as o! Monday .. current in-program Qe used \\'ere impossible due to
formation Is aVaiJ&blt from the recrea-the high cost of postage, Fowler said .
\Vilhout moving a mUJjcle cir to find ~heir
\Vay upstairs in the dark.
Behind the scenes is another sho\Y in
i~tf.
There's Bloomers No. 7 still \Yalting for
pickup.
Or the barebacks and cut-offs attire or
people whose faces and anns only appear
in pictures.
Jesus, Mary and Joseph compare how
~ar th eir hands have Callen asleep,
suspended by the stiff sleeves of their
sculpture costumes.
Costu1nes have been in the wctks for
seven months -but reheafsals are tAe only
time to see-if pleats need more \Viring or
if a loin cloth Y.'iil stay in place \Vithout a
belt.
And while . they have to appear cold.
stiff, aloof when "framed ," the cast and
cre\v are a helpful , fun-loving family
when the curtain closes.
A boy climbing inlo position on what
appe.ars to be a lush river bank cringes
as his foot knocks off the last few inches
of greenery.
"Don't you realize how long it takes to
grow pJy,vood grass," be is kidded.
"Do yo u have a makeup card?" asks
the stage manager, mockingly scolding
a per~ who comes to the rescue.
A sun hat is moved a quar ter turn. 1\
"bronzed" .foot is pushed over two ioohes.
Jesus is asked to lo\\•er his eyelids.
Afte r ·hotirs of paying such close-~
(See ACl'ORS, Page !)
Orange
Weather
It'll be mostly sunny on Wednes-
day -if you live in the inland
areas of Orange County. Otherwise
n1ostly cloudy and hazy along the
beaches with highs or 70, rising to·
75 inland. Overnight lows-In the
60s.
INSWE TODAY
when park dcvelopmool will begin. day program, with $90,000 added lo sup-
PlaMers gave a number one priority to port a nc'[I home economics program, a h~-_....,._,.ICUWL>li.Jl'P'lril:aenLP!>Ulbh! 19 mtdlcal assistants program, and a
be built on etty O\\'TICd land in Reister library media Wchrucian program. -
The occasion wasn 't the Rose Bowl
ticket sale. Jt was the first day of
registration for the Laguna Beach
Recreation Department 's summer ac~
tiv1ty program.
Whtn"'t got here;-the line-was already
around the buUdlng," George Fowler,
rccreition director,' said f\.fonday.
·Fowler didn't have all the figure s ad-
ded up from the SalUrday reglstratlOn,
but, he "id that-mo"' than.. '19,900 ln registrat~ fe:es beet•• ~n collected. EaCii, Cla..,. nonnally ~ulrts;a rcglslro·
lion 1ee ra"liQi rrom $4 to $8.
tion depannient office. "lf anybody .carf'tell mo any other way
Tennis classes were expanded 20 per-to do it that wo~d run smoot~el;', I'll bC
cent .this year over the number offered glad to try It." he said.
las t summer, and swimming classes He said ·tha t most of the programs
Britisl& mediurn claims Lt!r
Barktr lias bee11 contacted 011d
that "1lt'1 aliue · and well i.n
a11otlier world." See 3to ry, Po9e 12. • .
•I
Park or Riddle Field. Other Six sizeable increase~ are pro-
City sttff requests rejected by c:om-pose'd for the buildings 'and groWlds
missioners included rClocaUon of the city department, up $70,000 to hel_p_!!_tt<l_~~-
malntcnance ynrd and nur.sery ($300,000) the school's two new bulldlngs;. arid voca-
and ab· ocean rescue V"essel ($15,ro.ll·· tlonal tcchqglogy, up $J2,000 w1tb the ad-.
Commissioners also balked at a recom· dition of two new progranls.
m<Jldatlon by City Manager r.llwrcncc lJ,--FlmiH>o~~· li!p11!rwllhlcpcnd~
Rose ta supplement Revenue Shadng passage of Senate Bill 6 by .the state
wilh $187 000 from the sale or city prop-legislature. U passed . It w!U add 'ttl),000 (~e REVENUE, Page 2) more·jn state aid to the district.
..
tf
•
"You ,citn m4!aSUre tile number o!
regiitratiOM . in the amount.of money we. . .
were Increased 15 Percent, FoWlcr said. were restricted to -residents ·of the city
. Also opem are surfing classes. bridge. and uni(ied school distrk:t which includes
golf, guitar, needlepoint, ybuth drama the county areas of Emerald Bay and
workshop, yoga and ballet. Fowler saJd. Soutt'I Laguna due to use of the sthool
The director sald~thc department does , proJ?Crty in the recreation department
have waiting liJts for 90l'l'le claMe ~ions~ progran1.
and that openings occur as persons Nonreskle111s are eligible to participate
become 111 or take_ impromptu vacat.lons. in S9tnC larger c.lasses and Fowler said
f.~~wler aid the long lines And the Laguna .Nlguctand El Toro-participat~
registration wait appeared .lo be in Laguna's pi'ograms was gretll. •
.._J .~
l .M. I OYC I
.. ltlflt II
C1Nftl'l'lllo S
Clattllltel U·Jf com1c1 ,.
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L8 T1.1tldlJ, Junt 12, 191.J
Stans Utters ·Denials
Efforts tq Avoid Testimony Blocked
WASHlNGTON (AP) -Maurice H. from a contribution by finantjer Robert lies U11t ,\·ouid help Nixon win re-elec·
Stana, blocked ln an ettort to avoid Vesco. Mitchell has been 1Ddlcted In the tioo. He said there v.1a.s no llJCh fund.
Watera:ate testimony now, today denied same fund -raising case. 1be reported fund was the 1Ubject of a
knowledge of the wiretapping raid, \Vhlle Stans asked not to testify, when • July. 28, 1971 memorandum from Ma~-
po\itlcal sabotage or violation of any he was ordered to do so he told. the com-der to Mitchell. But Stans said it mi.1st
campaign laws. mlttee he had a 20-minute prepared have been based on a misunderstanding,
The fonner secretary of Commerce ~t~ent to deliver befo~ facing quea-"If 90'll\ebody is implying that we had '
-and--filndralser-for Presldent-Nixon--con--·tlorun.g,-------------ll--millionJll. .. the_..-JleparUDent. ol.....Q:irn.,. ____
ceded only that there might h{tve been The panel agreed to hear that, and merce set aside to hel pin the electloo
·ROBIN CLARK SURVEYS · WRECKAGE OF HER MOTHER'S CAR AFTER COLLISION
Irvine Wom•n Comes Off Second Be1t in Tangle With Train at ,Jeffrey Road Cro1sing
Woman Rams Into Train
El Toro Driver Escapes D eatli by l1iclies iii Irvine
A woman who drove her station wagon
into the side of a 7!kar Santa fe freight
train in Irvine t.1onday night escaped
with her life, but not by a large margin.
A few · seconds sooner and Mrs. Gay
Clark, :W, of 5122 Skinner Ave., El Toro,
v.•ould have been directly in · front of the
locomotive in the crossing that already
has claimed one life.
The victim , whose car sustained maj Or
damage when it skidded into the fourth
car of the train, was listed in fair con·
dition today at Tustin Community
Hospital.
She suffered multiple lacerations and a
fractured wrist in the collision at Jeffrey
Road a half mile .north, of J1,1oulton
Parkway.
Irvine Police orficer Jack \\'atson. said
the engineer. Gene L. Patton. 58, San
Bernardino, told him he f<!iled to see the
cJ, prior 'lo the crash but felt a s(igh t
bump from the impact. .
Collective Barg_aining
Nixed by College Board
Investigation revealed ]l,1rs. Clark's car
skidded O!JIY 10 feet beTore ramming the
jron undeccarriage of the_ freig!lJ.. car,
• \l:hich was traveling about 35 miles per
N s~&°<iJJective bar g a In in g be 1cg1,Jat~-as a tool for negotiations in the
academic world? "'
No, according to a uiianimous vote of
the Saddleback '! Community College
Board of Trustees !i.:1ond.ay night.
"Collecti\.!e bargaining and binding
arbitration serve prolit·making conce...rns
well, and the cost lnvol\.!ed can be paS:Sed
on to the consumer. But as a uni\.!ersity,
our product is the student, and that's who
suffers," said Trustee Hans Vogel. .
The board was asked to take a position
in the form of a resolution to be sent to
the Californa Schoo! Boards Associalion.
Bills propos~g that co 11 e ct i v c
bargaining be made a tool of school
employes have been · prOj,osed by 'Robert
Moretti. a stale assemblyn1an. and
George Moscone. a state senator.
Dr. James Marshall. a trustee from
the Laguna Hills -aria, said he recently
attended CSBA con~nce \\•here he said
spokesmen for East Coast districts who
tried collective bargaining reported "it
caused headaches all around.'' ,.
Dana Hills Higl1
Plant Sale Set
Community colleges now fall under th~
\Vinton Act, whic h requires Uiat ad-
ministrators and employes "meet and
confer." Arbitration from an outside par·
ty may be sought, but the decision is not
binding.
Under the proposed legislation of
l\1oretti and Moscone. an arbitration
decision y,·ould be binding.
From Pagel
ULLOM • • •
RC\\' job.
-"'This year \\•as a very poor year in
le:·ms of looking fof a superinlendcncy.
he added.
llis first lv.·o days have been spent
meet ing \1•ith district administrators,
principals and working on the $3.25
n1illion budget for the upcoming fi sca l
year.
J\·lount Pleasant, he said, is considered
a "poor " district. JaCking_a hig'h assessed
vaJuation behind each student.
"But the exciting thing is the cross
section of society. something that docs
not exist in Laguna Beach," said Ullom.
The superintendency in the elementary
district opened in December when Dr.
Theron McCarty resigned. stemming
Members of the Dana Hills l·ligh Schoo1 from "co1nmunity problems." He had
horticulture class will conduct a C<UJ;1;.._ held the job for 11 years.
munity plant sale Thursday at 2 p.m. in Appli cations for the job were screened
room 401. down by a committee of one teacher. one
The products of a semester of work administrator. one professional educator
will go on sale -some planted in ter· and one community member.
rariums, hanging basket s. dish gardens Of the I I na1nes submitted to the board
and as drled flower arrangements, said for consideration. four came oul as
instructor Mar\.! Sherrill. finalists. Community coffees \ve re held
Among the types of plants on sale al for each of the four top applicants.
1noderale prices will be organically Board members reached unanimous
gro"".11 vegetables. plu~ q u a rt -s i. z e d agreement on hiring Ullom basetl on spee1~ens of ru~s1as, beg on 1 ~ s, communily input , staff evaluations and
peturuas, marguer1tes, coleus. spider their oY.n personnel intervie\vs.
plant and miscellaneous :succulents "\Ve are verv satisfied ... very ex-
grcy,•n from cuttings and seed. . cited about Bill Ullom ," commented
All members of the community are Board President O\\'ensby
y,•elcome. Sherrill said :.-. ·
•
1
ORANOI COAST LI
DAILY PILOT
nw 0 ••"9• C••n! O .. ll 'f PILOT. Witt! wtlldf
'-ComblnoM Ill• Ntw1.P•l1t. It Pllltlllh.a by
t~t Oc•no.I (0.11 PUOlltMflll (Ct"°Pl~'f. $ei)a.
'flt edltioo>t •rt Pl.lblir.~911, Met""•'I' lhroug~
l'rkl~y, to.. CO\l1 . Me,,•, HtWPOrl lleidl
M~lillflOn ltta<ll/l'eun!•ln \lllltr, llllun;
BotCll, l"'l»e/Saa.ci1el»(c~ ,,,., S•n Clt..,tnlt!
So ti Jutn r •1>•1tcofl0. ,. •lnvl• regl0fl3I
t<lil<Ol'i II PVb•ll"-S..!11rdtYI •nd S\iridoyi
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R.ebert N. Weed
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•
Last Rites Held
For Mrs. Olsen
l\1cmoria l services \vrrc conducted
l\fonday at Inglewood Park Cemetery ror
Helen M. Olsen of Laguna Beach \liho
died last 'veek. She \\1as 84.
A nati\.!e ot Ohio, Mrs. Olsen lived in
Calffo rnia 73 yea rs. She is survived by
her daugher, l\1rs. l\1arjorie 0. 11ur1t or
L..1guna and -a brother, Charles Gray or
Glendale.
Rev. John Hlnklc or Christ Unity
Church in Los Angeles officiated at the
last riles. f\.JcConnick Laguna Beach
l\lortuary handled arrangemenls.
Acciderlt Victim
Dies of In.juries
Phlllp Ralnono,.39, oC 1159 Sooth Coast
Hlgbway, Sooth J,aguna. died Sunday of
injuries sustained ln a Laguna accident
June 3.
Ralno11e was a passenger In sm111l
foreign car that went out or control at
the curve of Broadw~y at Acacia Street.
The driver of the car, Patrick C. Mon·
ion. 24, of Hollywood, told police offie<rs
he ~asn't aware of lhe curve and lost
control. .
t.lemorlal services are pending.
• , I
I •
hour. ·
\Vitnesses said the crossing's \Vig-wag
signal device which clangs 88 tin1es per
1ninute had been operating a full two
n1inutes before the collision.
They told JXllice J1,1rs. Clark showed no
indication of-slowing-or stopping-as she
and the train aimed simultaneouslv for
the crossing point unUI she slan1med on
the brakes at the last minute.
The car bounced off and careened to
the easterly edge of the road.
The owner of the old El Toro general
store was killed several months ago v.·hcn
his bread truck was ·shattered by a
speeding freight at that locati<ln.
Iri;ine City Council memDers have
placed high priority for widening or the
intefsec.t\on and installation of barrier·
type crossing guards.
Speed limit for trains on the Santa Fe
line is 90 miles per hour, \Vhile can are
limited to 35 mil~s per hour on Jeffrey
Road at that point.
Fro1n Page I
REVENUE ...
crty and $.50,000 from a special deve~
ment tax fUnd.
The only recommendation Lhat failed to
dray,• a unanimou s decision from the ' . . comm1ss10R \\'as the !245,000 plum for
open space. oppcsed by commissioner
Larry CampbeU.
Campbell v.·anted lo expand the
category to include development of
reorealional facilities. such as little
league facilities in Riddle Field. But
fellow commissioners refused to support
the change in word ing .
Over thl'" next fi ve years. Laguna is ex·
peeled to receive $475.000 from the
government progra1n to give money back
to cities and counties.
Th(' city face s a June 20 deadline to file
;1 s!atement of intent for use o( the third
s.54.000 share of the funds. \\1ayne 1\1oody .
di rector of plaMing and development.
noted the city the statement of intent "is
not hard and fast" and may be altered at
any time.
Government criteria for the use of
Revenue Sharing include problem Soi\.!ing
ability, visibility. crisis avoidance, future
costs, future re\·cnues and iruiovation.
Flag Pagea1ii ~
Set W edriesday
Laguna Beach's annua l patriotic Flag
!)ay pageant y,•ill be presented at 8 p.m.
\Vednesday at Irvin e Boy,•J.
· The pageant is free . Gates open at 7
p.n1 . for !he presentation featuring a U.S.
Marine Corps unit dressed in historical
costumes and • carrying the flags of
America's history.
The 2S-minute program Is sponsored by
the Laguna Beach Rotary Club and Jn·
c:Judes a musical background and nar-
ration explaining the Flag's history. Flag
Dwy is Thursday.
Fro11aPcgel
.ACTORS ...
tention 10 details, sighs of relier arc
jubilant.
The painted frown reverses Into a grin
befor~ It Is \vashN.I away. And Puppet
ri,10. 2 glndly shakes her· head as wais t·
lcngfh hair cascades from under a skull
cap. ,
£xct?pt for the prestige or lhe Paaeant.
It's more fun to be a person than a patint·
ing •
-· '
ZIEGLER ADMITS ERROR
ON BRIEFING-Story, Pogo 12
"some w1intended technical violations"of
the new disclosure law. {Related story,
Page 4)
Stans appeareQ at the televised hear-
ings or the senate's Watergate in-
vestigating com1nitlee, which rejected
his lawyer's plea that Stans be spared
lhc "inevitable klieg light of publicity"
before his New York trial.
Earlier, the committee heard a fonner
Nixon campaign \\'Orker from Orange
County testify he had been told that John I
N. r.1itche ll, while still attorney general,
had been shown fihned copies of private
correspondence £ron1 the campaign of
~n. Edmund S. Jl,.fusk ie, at that lime
frontrunner for the Oemocrc:.tic presiden-
tial nomination.
In oourt, U.S. District J udge John J.
Sirica cleared the way for the comn1ittee
to take testin1ony, unde r immunity, from
t"A'O key Witnesses, ousted \llhite House
counsel John \V. Dean I fl and forn1er
Nixon campaign deputy Jeb Stuart
l\fagruder.
Sirica also denied a request by the
special Wate rgate prosecutor, Archibald
Cox, 10 prevent live radio and television
coverage of testimony Crom i1agruder,
Dean and other key witnesses.
Stans is.under indictment in New York
in connection with a secret 1972 cam-
paign contribution, and his lawyer asked
the· Senate Watergate committee · to
postpo ne . hi s testimony until after the
trial. .
Sen-Sam-J. ErvilL(D-N.C.). said the
committee unanimously. J'\lled against a
delay, but wouldn't ask him· anything in·
vol\.!ing the New York case, which stems
From Pqe I
~ESTIVAL ...
,ferent statues or art Vi91"ks.
The pageant uses human models,
painted costumes, painted backgrounds
and a book of lighting and tedmical
tricks to twn the three-:dimensional
fonns into representations d. two-
dimensional famous paintings, statues, or
relief sculptures, or other art works.
It is the pageant's 38th annual pro-
duction and u for the last .JS years, i.s
sold out.
More than 250,000 person.s annually
visit <the Festival of Arts.
The Festival of Arts is a nonprofit
organization governed by a board of
directo rs elected by the f es ti v a I
n1embership.
Over the last 10 years, it has donated
more than $1.5 million to civic and
cultural causes. MOre than $50,000 has
been given in scholarships.
In the early days. circa 1933. admission
\vas 10 cents and local merchants chip-
ped in. and the festival collected an
amount from the sale of paintings. First
profit was $475.
Last year the city of Laguna Beach
which actually owns the Festival grounds,
collected $88,000 In rental, based on a
percentage of gross admissions. --.J
The Festival set up housekeeping on
the present grounds in 1941.
In the pageant's history, only one
performance has been rained out, the Ju-
ly 29, 196$ perfonnance.
The 1973 Pageant is produced by Don
\\'illia1nson. Ed ~firacle is background
art ist, Hap Graham. narrator; Victor
Schoen, conductor and composer of
special music; and Carl-Callatvay.
te~hnical director.
copies of the Stans' text were distributed campaign they are off," he said. "1 don't
to newsmen before he delivered it. know what it means."
Stans' statement made these three T,he testimony about MltcheU came
principal assertions: rrom Herbert L. Porter of Laguna
-"I had no knowledge of the \Vatergate Niguel, former scheduling chief of the
break·in or any other espionage. efforts Nixon campaign. ·
before I read about them in the press, or lie said ~1agruder had given him 35
of the efforts to cover up after the event. millimeter film copies of memoranda
-"I had no knowledge of any sabotage that had gone between ·Muskie's Senate
program to disrupt the campaign by office and his campaign headquarters.
Donald Segretti or anyooe else. This wa, in November, J9'71. Porter said
-"To the best of my knowledge t11ere he didn't know how they were obtained.
were no intentional violations of the Jaws Porter said ~agruder once told him
relating to campaign financing by the that he was gong to show the material tD
finance · committees for which I. had Mitchell, and said tbat it appeared to
responsibility." ~ him that Magruder had done ae.
Th is af'temooo. Stans testified he knew After Judge Sirica's-ruling, the com-\
nothing of a 1971 political memorandum mittee scheduled Magruder to appear
r~rting that he set aside $1 million at later this week, after Stans. Dean was
the Department-of Comm.erce for activi-scheduled for an appearance next week. }
Ireland ~omb Explosion ~, .
Blows Villagers to Bits
'
BELFAST (UPI ) -A bomJ>.laden car
e•ploded in front of a newspaper in the
town of Coleraine with such force today
that villagers \\'ere blown to bits.
A police spokesman said at least six
persons -four \\'Omen ~gd l\VO men _-
died and 31 persons v.·ere injured in the
bl~t.. But a doctor "·'ho attended the vie·
tims said: "There may have be('t} more
dea·d but ttlc mutilations were "sq horrible
·that it's dif(icult to add up the piece&.''
Police said the bomb was planted in a
car outside the Coleraine Chronicle in the
center of the town, 50 miles north of
Belfast.
''A v.·arning v.•as gi\'en in terms so
vague and lime so short thllt there was
only 10 minutes betwttn the warning and
the blast and it was impossible to clear
the area ." a police spokesman said.
Another car bomb e:ii:ploded five
minutes la1er, y,•recking a gas station but
!his time there was a v.·aming and there
y,·ere no injuries, police said .
The deaths brought to 823 the number
of pe~ killed in almost f~ ye~rs. of
strife among Northern Ireland s ma)O!JIY
Protestants, minority Roman Catholics.
British troops and the lr:i sh Rfl>'Jblicsn
Anny (!RA). -
Until recently, Co I e r1a in e. a
predominantly Protestant toy,·n, has been
free of strife, poli ce said .
Meanwhile British troops battled with
Protestant snipers throughout t.-fonday n~ht in Belfast in t~e second. night of
fighting and troops said they hit at least
seven gwimcn.
V els Day Bill
Gets Solon Okay
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Calilomia
v.1ould observe Veterans Day on the
tradJtional Nov. 11 date under legislation
clearing the Assembly on a 57-2 vote.
No debate preceded Jl,londay·s vote on
the measure. It v.·ould alter the state's
present ·ctJebraUon of Veterans Day -
\\'heh occurs on the fourth Monday in
October -the reby creating a three·day
y,•eekend for some employes.
The date-changing bill by
Assemblyman Ken MacDonald <D-Ojai),
"'as sent to the Senate without debate.
• •
Anny officers said at least a dozen 1
gunmen, nitting from place to place
using modem high velocity rifles, fired at ;
troops. i
"This is just about the heaviest gWlfire
I have seen since coming to Northern ,
Irelana," one OffiCCr said. -Hoy,·~\.!er, officers reported no soldiers
v.·ere hit. · 1
'
Lagu1ia Planners
Approve Sphere
Of l11flue1ice
· \ '1
Laguna Beach should keep a watchful
eye on' lands Crom Crystal Cove to Aliso
Canyon and inland to the rim of the
Laguna watershed. 1
Those boundaries will mark the city's !
"sphere o( influence" to be submitted
following adoption by ithe city council to
the LocaJ Agency Formation Commis!ion
(LAFC).
Planning c oom m Is s Ione r s ga\.!e
uffti.nimous approval to the sphere of in-
nucnce map Monday night.
According to Wayne Pt1oody, director of
planning and development, the sphere ~n·
eludes the entire Laguna Beach County
\Vater District and nearly all of the
Laguna Beach Unified School District.
The bouflds of the sphere of Influence,
Moody said, Ill well with the topography
and include both the Laguna Canyon
v.·atershed and areas designated for the
Laguna Greenbelt.
Plioody stressed the boundaries o[ the
sphere of In fluence should not be con-
ceived as the ultimate annexation
perimeter of the ci ty.
Robert Vasque.z, an lnrine Company
planner noted. howe\.!er. that the go,·ew
ment code de!ines a sphere of influence
as lhe "probable" ultimate boundaries ol
a city.
"Annexation is implied,'' said Va9(fUez.
The plaMlng commission has received
a proposal from the Laguna Beach Civic
League to move post haste with an-
nexaUon ol lands within the sphere of in-
fluence.
The commission has not yet discussed
the proposal.
A WORD TO THE WISE-
.,.
There is 11 tendancy for many carpet stores to use strictly •
wereho~• concept. One advantage is seeing carpeting in rolls rather
than sa'!'ples. . • _ _ _
-fAany disao va-nlagos ... 'evi dent -most oporlfions-of-this type
buy only Off-goods, so tho! the customer only 9ets to see old peltarns,
or c•rpels the mills couldn't sell to regular outlets. Also, this type of
' operation 9 en ere 11 y feels that experience is unimportant, and
consequently the salespeople know little or notHing about the products.
Finally , most will form out the inst a II at ions to tho lowest bidder,
guaranteeing 1 poor installation. !Many of these installers are CQntracting
illegally without 1 stole licenso.j
Al Alden's wo maintain a happy medium. Wo carry a Iorgo
inventory, and the largest sample soloction around. We have uperitnced
salespeople, and our installers wore trained by us. Finally, wo •ro a r . slate l1consod contractor.
ALDEN'S
C-ARPETS e DRAP~
1663 Pla1=entla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
M'"' • Tiiton. t r. S:JO; Prl. t to t 1 Set. t :JO to I
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'Saddlebaek
VOL. b6, NO. 163, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAG ES
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OR!-fllGE COUNTY i CALIFORNIA
. '
Today's F inal
•
N.Y . 'St ocks
• TUESDAY, JUNE ·12, 1973 TEN CENTS i
--·-,.-.L~e~g-is~la-~t1~.v~e ~P ............ a~n-el-Set Up for UCI HOspital
' )
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• ' By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of 111• D•llY P'll1t Sllff
Ch@ces that UC Ii-vine's <>n campus
teaching hospital funding will bi in ttµs
year's $9 · billion-plus state budget
brightened tOday as legislators set up a
secret study committee.
Three of the six members of the joint:
legislative conference committee on the
1973'-74 budget 'were membeis of the
Joint Legislative Committee on Teaching
Hospital Siting. That body chaired_-by
Assemblyman ·Willie· Brown Jr. (D-San building at UCI for tbe•California College
Francisco), recommend~ legislatw·e ap-of 'Medicine.
proval of: UC bond spen~ing on a 200-bed If the hospital pla~ moneys are
campus hospital, $2 million worth of kept in th.is year1' budget, the remaining
community cW\ics ;md $9,imillioD .oLim-$15 _million-for~the.carnpus hospital would
provCments of Orange County Medical Jollow next year, UC officials expect,
Center, pending 'agreement between UC 'based On past budgeting history.
and county supervisors qn a long term The $9.5 million for upgrading OCMC
agreement for UCI use of OCMC. by cutting its 515-bed actual capacity to
Budgeted for this year are .. $925,000 of 315 beds depends ·on the UCI-county
hospital" plaMing ti.Inds itnd $'6".5 million agreement, according •to· the recom-
o[ bond . moneys to begin the first mendation of the siUng committee. That
~~rmanent labora and.lci.aSjroogl~~t-~~~to be:.Jnclud~ iP
'
ROBIN CLARK SURVEYS WRECKAGE-OF HER MOTHER'S CA.R AFTER COLLISION
Irvine Woman Comes Of~ jecond Best in Tangle With Triin af·Jeffr~y ROid Crossing
• -··
, Irvine District
Decides on Site
For High ScJ1efol
.EITo"°o Woman .. , ... --
Car-train Accident
lll;j1;1res One ·in ~hvine )
"
Irvine Unilied ,School-District-trustees
!.1onday deci~ on a _!ligh school site\ but
not on ~ many schools to put there.
.Trustees voted 3-2 to begi.n site design
st'Udies for a location south of the Santa
Ana Freeway, -west-of Yale Avenue-and
n6rth of Walnut Avenue.
. But ~y delayed until June 27 a
decision on v.ilether to put one large or
two small schools on the site. 1
A woman who drove her station wagon
Joto.the.side.of a 75-car Santa Fe freight
train in Irvine Monday night escaped
with her life, but not by a large margin.
A few seconds sooner and Mrs. Gay
Clark, 34, of 5122 Skinner Ave., El Toro,
would have been directl y in front of the
locomoti ve in the crossing that already
has claimed one life.
the crossing point· until she slammed on
the brakes at the last minute.
The ' car · bounced oU and careened to
the easterly edge of the road.
The owner of t~ old El Toro general
store was killed several months agO when
his bread truck was shattered by a
speeding freight at that location . :rile site chosen was one of six sug-
gated in the North Irvine area where
Ii-Vine C.Ompany planners said more lhan 8.i.000 residential Wlits )Viii be builtjn th e The victim, whose car ~ustain~ m~jor next few years. damage when it skidded into the fourth
Irvine City Council members have
placed high priority for widening of the
intersection and installation of barrier-
type crossing guards. The only high school in Irvine now is ca r of the train, was listed in !air con-dition today at Tustin Community University High, in the southern portion Hospital. .,
Speed limit for trains on the Sanla Fe
line is 90 miles per hour, while cars are
limited to 35 miles per hour on Jeffrey
Road at that point. of the city. ~ She suffered multiple lacerations and a
Although the site is bounded by a fractured wrist in the collision at Jeffrey freeway, the board said the school or IChools wouldn't be immediately ad-Road a half mile north of Moulton · to · Parkway.
JICent it. Irvine Police Officer Jack Watson said 1be board is split bet\\•een building one the engineer, Gene L. Patton, 58, San Bill for Sale
1,850-student high school or two 1,000-stu-Bernardino, told him he failed to see the d~nt schools \\'1th shared athletic faciliti es 00 the site. c:.. prior to the crash but ·felt a slight Of Irvine Rancl1 . , th bumJ? from the impact. : During a study session be iore e Investigation revealed Mrs. Clark 's car
regula r meeting Monday, both points or skidded only IO feet betore ramming the B h S d
view ~ere. represented. . iron undercarriage of the Creight car, . ea~ upp0t'le
: Craig Mi~chell and Joni \Vertz~ student whicti •w8.s traveling about 35 mileS per
represei:itahves to the board, said a poll hour · · · · taken at Univetsity' High on the pro-: . . , , A bill authorwng the state tQ..pay $7.6
I I ed the _ bool t . W1tnesse~ ~1d . the crossi ng s. wig-wag 'million for 3.5-miles Of Irvine Ranch ~ s avor one SC _ concep : SJgnal device ·which clan~s 88 limes ~r · • Only one:sixth cf ~tudents who-. might --minute·li.ad Deen -opefating a -full two -beach-and-1':600-acres or-coastaJ-sect ~~the.-North-irv1oe-school answered -minutes· before. th'€ ci51Usio~::--:; -----lands--. between,, .,~e'f.?,'.>tt -Beach-and
(See SCHOOL, Page %) They told police Mrs·. Clark showed no Laguna Beach cle~r'M the st~te Se!'ate
. • indication of slowing or stopping as she natural re90Urces cpld wU~llfe committee ~------------·-~ 'and the train aimed sirgultaneously for today. The vote was unanimous.
Orange Coast
Weather
It'll be mostly sunny on \Vedncs-
day -il you live in 'lhe inland
areas of Orange County. Otherwise
n1ostly cloudy B!ld hazy along th~
beaches with highs of 70, rising, to.
75 inland. Overnight lows in the
sos.
I NS IDE TODA\'. -
Britisii medium. clai1'is Lex
r Barker ,ta& been COlttacted 01W
that-"he's olive a1~l well in
anotlier world.,,.. See story, Page 12. •.
=,~,~-1~ Mwtv•• ~--'" 1• N1tlll•11 N"11 4
Of1111• CtvlltY 1 .,..,.. 1f.1J
llte:ll Mll'tllll ... 11
T.i.Yltloll lt TllNftrl It WHfllfr 4
w.kltt1'• "'"*'~1>-11
Wttl« Nl'W' 4
· State· Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·
Reaga1i S!:'-s pe1ids
Restrictio11s
Jn, Smog Siege
Newport. Beach) authored the measure.
which is expected to clear the senate
finance committee by July l, according
to a carpenter aide in Sacramento.
If approved by the Senate and later the
Assembly, SB 1089 \Vould authori ze state
pilrks director \Villiam Penn Mott to buy
the ocean front property valued "at $15
-mi\Uon Jrom the Irvine Company. The
purchase \Yould pennanently assure
public access to the prime beach land SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald and proPosed canyon parks.
Reagan announced today he lifted Included in the purchase price is land
restl'lctions on use of state Cjrs which he tor:
Ordered last week in Los AngeJes, -Five beach parks, including two ~ange, ·Riverside and San Bernardino acres of rock and tide pools. • .
counties beeause or scvete smog con--3.5-mil es of beach front, lnc1·udlng 44
ditio:ns. ncres or sandy beach:
The Governor said in n statcn1cnt that. -A total ot 1.600 acres of-coastal land
while high smog levels have passed in or which t,200 acres ls planned to be
Riverside aod san Bernardino counties, de\•otcd to regional parks.
"there; is a long' hot summer ahead.'"--Inland parking areas serving the
tie called on motorists ~ VOiuntariiy beaches and the regional park facilities.
re.strict auto use, saylng thaL cutting .Clirpenter.'s bill cleared the committee
"unnecessary automobile trips du~g unclwur:ed. Jts dr.tlll for~ agrees with
severe smog condition! can help the en\•· plans of the Irvine Company ror the pub-
tire fou r-county are&. '1 -._;_lie developm::nt of Porttons of its 10.000
On June 7, Reagan ordered All travel tn acre Coastal sector ocean view ranch
state autos in !-he four·county area to be_Ptoperty between the .beaeh and the ci ty
held to a nUnhnwn because Of cxpeeted of Irvine boundary In the San Joaquin
1-t-------heavy smog ·condition.~. -ltl~.
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this year's budget, a UC spokesman in mittee. According to the state con--Senators Randolph Collier ( D -
Sacramento said. stitution the legislature must act on the ·rrckal, \Valter· Stiem (0-Bakersfield l,
The joint conference committee was final budget by June 15,-Friday. <ind Fred t1arler (R-ReddingJ. Marler set up when budget amounts voted by the Scnate-and~Assembly differed.-The legislators hammering out the served on Brown's committee as \veil.
Gov. Reagan submittA;d a $9.25 billion Spending priorities difference s in the next -Since the fegislatiVe siting committee
budget last January. The Assembly pass-few day~ in the closed conference com· voted unanin1ously to endorse the UCI -
. ed. a $9.39 billion version and the Senate a mittee meetings \viii be: CC~l expe nd itu res, it is expected the
$9.24 billion version. On Monday, the -Assemblymen Brown, Frank Lan-three \viii continue to support them a~
Assemllly rejected on a 3 to 72 vote the tennan (R-La Canada ), and Charles th e confererice committee tack I e s
Senate's versi~. · · \Varren (0-Los Angeles). Lanterman \\'as budgetary disagreements exceeding by
The action automatically required the a member of Brown's teaching hospital millions of dollars the amounts urged ror 1
establisbment:--'lf the-conference·-com-=sitin~ittee-. --=~ -~therlrvine-campos,_ ~---=--_.,_==-
• '·• • • ' Mesa Malies Claim:
Council Wants Airport in City
. ' Costa J\{esa is staking its claim on boun-daries-around the· airport "at some making annexation desirable for Costa 1
Orange Coun~y Airport. fu ture date." He declined to speculate 1\Jcsa. Further. he be'lieves. placing it
Ci ty councilnlen Monday night an-.·. \Vheh the annexation would take place. under municipal jurisdiction ""'Ould give
nounced their intentioils of annexing the · Key reasons supporting the "sphere of C t ?vi 1 n· h airport by petitioning the Local Agency infiue11oe" petition <ire thitt. the county-os a . esa greater cootro over ig I
F-ormation CommiSsion '(LAFe-) to place-------operated atrpon-trl::OOtiglrom:-nr thc-operations.-·----
it within the city's "sphere of influence." boundaries of Costa ~1esa and that it is Donald Mcinnis, mayor cf Ne wport
The LAFC will hear the petition at 2 served by the Costa l\olesa County \Vater . Beach, ""'as not available thls morning
p.m. Wednesday. District <U)d the Costa ~Iesa Sanitary for COlnment on Costa .l\1esa's petition
Mayor J,ack Hammett said today the District. \Vith the LAFC. Newport Beach 3150
unanimous action of the c ou p c i I Planning Director \Vil\iam Dunn said "'an ts the airport within ilS :cone of in-.
represents the city's desi re to place its lhe ·airport represents a large tax b3se, (See ANNEX, Page_ 2)
Saddleback
Budget OK'd
Tax Hike Due?
,....,.., ~ ;;,_,, ..... 'e-t ....... ./.J'I.~ i .. J ..... , ~f
!. f'1 ! :-~~3AM'lWORnf'~ ' ;f-1
• Of_ .. a.Mr, PMM SI ...
'A ·tentati~ proposed budget or $12.1
million~-ror si<imebact co mm u nity . ' . College, reqUiring a tax: rate increase of
22 pei;Cent, \Vas approved Monday by the
boatd Of trustees.
The tax .increase, from 65 cents to 84
cents ori $100 assessed valuation, will m~a~ a ~ per ye3!'1li~e to)he oWner of
a $40,000 house th u·.e district.
Most of an increase Of $4 ffiillion over
last year's budget is for reconstruction
and the general fund, whitjl includes ~
creases ranging fro m $500,000 to $11000
in ev~ry category ·but one.
Natural sciences· will receive the big-
gest boost, with a half million dollars
allocated to equip the science-math
building now under construction. Comple-
tion is expected in 1974.
State taxing legislation limits school
districts from taxing over their rate of
last year unless the taxing is for con-
struction.
After Saddleback's building program is
finished, the tax rate applying to building
\viii drop, Melvin Mitchell, director or
college and community services, said.
Part or the increase will be spent on
plannirii phases of the proposed music
. art building and working dral?ings for a
utilities building -part of the overall
schedule of replacing the portable cam-
ISee TAX HIKE, Page !) Dlll'I PllDI Sl•ff PMto
FINISHING TOUl=HES -Lait minute preparations are made in Pag-
eant of Masters reproduction of Goya's painting, "The Puppet." From Irvine Girl, 17, !~ft to right are Terry Cournoyer, Huntington Beach; Carol Romer·
e1m, Newpo~ Beach; Beverly Klages, Laguna Beacl> and Kathy Craw·
ford of Mission Viejo. Suspended is Mark Klages, 11, of Laguna. At .Relftt~~JE~~qpe __ ~~-r-igh_t_g_iv_in_g_d~ir~•c_ti_on_s_i•_P_e_gg_y~W-i_dm_a_n_.~-~~~-~~~~
. • l
Fro1n -A.bducto r -•na11g -iu·"-Tli~re~--
A kidnaper with a crucifix dangling
from his ca r's rear view mirror abducted ~:id1'~ll~.t':.a~.~~!1~\~~"~~ Lagu11a 1'agea11t U11veiled for Press
lng•out and hiding in an orange grove.
The 17-year~ld girl was not injured in
the ordeal, which she said happened
about 1:30 p.m. while she walked hOine
from University High 'School.
The victim said her Jddnaper, about 22
and wearing a neat, military-tyPe
haircut. pulled up at University Drive
and Culver Road and offered her a tide.
She• decliiied -repeatedly, as he
became more adamant -and said
the young man tl;len jumped out and
dragged her into· his light blue tm
foreign car.
. ~ said he did not make overt sexual
advances but held his hand· on her leg
during most or the meandering ride down
i11to the Mission Viejo area via the San
Diego Freeway. .
By JACK'CHAPPELL Asked what was hardest, controlling
ot • ~"' ,P11o1 st•lf his breathing, maintaining the cramping
"tlang in there, baby!" posture demanded by the pose. or holding
A glittering and gilded 13-year~Jd Clay still, liqttcr re plied; . • • Mostly
Hutter drew one more deep breath and everything.'' ~
h f He 'is one (If more than BOO person~ t. en roze again in~o the Laguna Beach from aU over Orange County \\•ho volun-
Pageant of the Masters rtproduction of teer to ta ke part in the famous Pagean t of
the Congressional MedaT of Honor. the Maste rs this year n1nning from July
Flashbulbs popped from a battery "Of . 13 through Aug. ~6 at the Irvine Bowl con-
photographers as more than 2 5 O currently with the Festival of Arts art
members of ·the locnl and national press exhibition by more than 175 btHsts and
and broodcaa,t neWs media' got a sneak craftsmen.
preview Monday of the 1973 Festival of The press \\•as sho\Yn live \\'Orks. the
Arts and Pageant or the ~tasters. Congressional t1edal. "Tbe Puppet,' 'by
--Y~ng Hutter of El Toro is a five-yCar Goya. "Bathing in the Seine" by Seurat.
veteran of the living pictures pageant.--~ . .:"l'he Cardin nl's Portr~it" by Rosenthall
Painted from -toe lo topknot in 'gold and "Deesls." a bas relief sculpture. •
makeup, be fep~~nted .ttie "force of The pUblie~·w·ursee 27 productions
evil" being-driven out by l\tincrva on the n1any consisting of as many as 10 dlf:
•
She told Officer Jack Wal90n the ab-
ductor seemed :extremely nervous and
kept lrylng to seduce her. but made M
attempt to force sexual relations.
She sald the man, clad In· blue jeans
nod a T·shirt, did not attempt to chase
her down .when she n1adc.·hcr decision to
jump (rom the stopped car and fl~ into
20-foot high Congressional l\1edal. rorent statues or art works.
llulter had received his "hang in Tho--pageant uses-human model~-.J-.
there," encouragement from one Of the painted costumes, painted backgrounds
the orange grove ..
. ,.
press observers as the photographers and a book ·of llg htii1g and technical
kept hhn-posed much longer than the tricks to turn the: three-dimensional
me<lal w9uld normally bt on view before (omis into rePrcsentatlofis of tWO:--
an audience . 1Ste FESTIV,\L. Pngt !)
.......... , ... ·--·· .
l · I r
J
...... LI PJLOl J)
Sta11s Says
Didn'tKnow
Violations
·WASHINGTON (APJ -Maurice H.
St.ans, blocked ln ap effort. to avoid
1--"IV"atergate esttmony now, tod3y--dt:nled
knowledge of the wiretapping ra..ld,
poUtical sabotage or violation of any
campaign laws.
The fonner secretary of Commerce
and fundraiser for President Nixon con.
ceded only th&t there might have 1been
ZIEGLER ADMITS ERROR
ON BRIEFING-Story, Page 12
•·some unintended technical violaUons"of
the new disclosure law. (Related ·story,
Page 4)
Stans appeared at the televised hear-
ings or the Senate's Watergate in-
''esligating committee, which re)ected
his lawye r's plea that Stans , be spared
the "inevitable klleg light or publicity"
--before-:!iirNe.w York trial.
Earlier, the committ~e heard a Conner
Nixon campaign worker from Orange
Q>unty testify he ,had been told that John
N. 1'-1itchell, While stillattorney gene ral,
had been shown filmed co pies of private
correspondence from the campaign of
Sen. Edmund S. P.1uskie, at that time
frontrunner for the DemoCrt.tic presiden-
tial nomination.
In court, U.S. District Judge John J.
Sirica cleared the way for the committee
to take testimony, under immunity, from
two key witnesses, ousted White House
counsel John \V. Dean III and former
Nixon campaign deputy Jeb Stuart
Magruder.
• Sirica also denied a request by the
special V.'ater,.gate prosecutor, Archibald
Cox, to prevent live racUo and television
coverage ol tesUmony from Magruder,
Dean and other key witnesses.
... Stans is under lndlctment in New. York
In -&nilectiOn-Wllh3secrei f9'2C .inn ....
pa\gn contribution, and his lawyer asked
the Senate Watergate committee to
postpone his teatimony until .after the
I rial.
Sen. Sam J . Ervin (Jl.N.C.), said tile
committee unanimously ruled against a
delay. but wouldn't ask him anything in-
volving ihe New York case, which stems
from a Contribution by flnancier Robert
Vesco. Mitchell has been indicted ln the
same fund-railing cue.
While Stans asked not to testify, when
he wu ordered to do so be told the com-
mittee he had a 20-minute prepared
statement tq deliver before facing ques-
ticaing. .
The panel agreed to hear that, and
c6p1es of the Stans' text were distributed'
to newsmen befoie he delivered it.
Stans' statement made these three
principal usertioni: ~ .
-"l had no knowledge of the Wat.ergate
break-ln or. any other espiooage efforts
before 1 read about them lrt the press, or
of the efforts to cover up after the event.
-"I had ho knowledge of any sabolage
program to disrupt the campaign by
Donald Segrettl or anyone elae.
-"To the best of my knowledge there
were no intentional violations of the laws
r!lating to campaign financing bz the
finance committees for which I had
responsibility."
The reported fund was tile subject of a
July 28, 1971 memorandum from Magru-
der to Mitchell . But Stans said it must
have been based on a misunderstanding.
''If 90lllebody is implying that we had
$1 million in the Department of Com-
merce let aside to hel pin ltie election
campaign they are off," he said. ''l don 't
know what It means."
The testimony about Mitchell came
from Herbert L. Porter of r..euna
Niguel, fonner scheduling chief Of the
Nixon campaign.
He said Magruder had given him 35
millimeter film copies of memoranda
that had gone between Muskie's Senate
office and his campaign headquarters.
This was in November, 1971. Porter said
he didn't know how they were obtained.
Porter said Magruder once told him
that he was gong to show the material to
MitcheJI, and said that it appeared lo
him that Magruder had done so.
After Judge Sltlca's ruling, the com,,
mittee scheduled J\1agruder to appea r
later this week, .after Stans. Dean was
scheduled for an appearance next week .
•
OUN•I COAST If
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--
Behind Seen es
••
I
Sabotage Case:
Neiv Experie11.ces Greet Actors Sailor Freed
By CAROL MOORE
Of .... 0..tf ...... ll•tf
Mark Kloges , 11, ol Laguna &.ch,
walked Uke the nn Man °"t lo the patio
to dry his .,..... paint, careful not IO
smudge it en route.
Or the barebocks and cut-offs attire of SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Navy
people whose faces and arms only appear Fhalan Patrick CheDoweth, t2,
in plcturt.1. WU found Innocent by a courl·
JelWI, Mary and Joseph compare how martial board of charges he
far their bands have fallen Weep, sabotaged an aircraft carrier last
sUlpeflded by tile sUfl 11 .. ves ol their July. _ y
sculpture com.wues. 'Tfte verdiet was returned aft er
Coci:tumes have been in the works for ooly three hours or deliberation
seven mont.M but rehearsals are the only Monday afternoon and this mon1-
• C0tm.~11 ·Murders
Eckstrom Found
Guilty by J~ry
tt took an Orange County SUperior Schnelder was shot throUJb the screen DoUglas K'eenc of Irvine hnd a com-
plaint. His shirt that' looks JO 1wnmery
cooUn ""l!filhilli in the · lne" feels stUI
as a straitjacket. -
Margaret JaCkson of Costa 1'-tesa hoped
her hay fever doesn't nare up this sum-
mer, at least not during the two minutes
tbe spotlight is oo "Deesis."
tlme to see lf pleats need n1ore."•iring or ing_._ ·
if11 loin cloth-will stay tn place-withotrt a-l~~enow~"'w•s ~...oLdrop. belt. ping a palnt scraper and bolts into
And while they ha\'e to appear cold, an engine gear aboard the USS
stiff, aloof when "framed," the cast and Ranger, requiring nearly lt million
Court jury just 69 minut es late Monday door as he tried to kick open the front
lo. find tbal CarLAnders..Eck&trow~'"~·-"doo""'"r. oL..Ule..Ec:ki~WJlloll,.wu•-
gullty of flfst degree murder In the 1racked acrou th:! lawn by the young
alaylngs last Jan. 4' of two Los Angeles gunman and cut down in a hall of bullets
She said "Thank you" when addressed
by name during conversation, havlng
been called Number One all night to
designate her position ln the picture.
These were just a few of the ad-
justments made backstage at the
Pageant of the ~1asters as the volunteer
cast became accu.Jtomed to posea as art
muterpieces.
1be "actors" were among tho6e chosen
from 800 men, women and children from
Orange Coonty and beyogd who signed up
to appear in the sell out nlehUy shows
from July 13 to Aug. 26.
Now~tbey-were·dlaco9.ering-how it::feels
to be smeared with gooey make-up that
looks like ca lamine lotion, to freeze in a
lunge po6ition on a 4-inch platform _
without moving a muscle or to find their
v•ay upstairs in the dark.
Behind the scenes is another show in
itself.
There's Bloomers No.· 7 still waiting for
pickup .
J oaqui1i Board
Will Consider
New Schools . -, ..
Actions on oomtruciiM of new · CChOols
ifi TrV!rie Bild" Siiddlelii<k""1•Y <Xlll!iWe
to confront San ~Joaquin School District
trustees, who will meet in one of their
last sessions Wednesday night..
The out-going boanl will meet at 7:3'1
p.m. in room F-5 at Los Aliaos
Intermediate School, 25171 Moor Ave., El
Toro.
Under a· unlfication plan approved by -
voters a year ago, San Joaquin ceases
operation June 30. Three new ooified
districts -Tuotln, Irvine aod Saddlebac:k
Valley -take over July 1.
San Joaquin's final board meeting will
be June 18.
Trmtees Wednesday are 1Cheduled lo
award a contract for site 25 school, the
""""8i elementary aclml in Univendty
Parlt, Irvine.
Authorization lo advortile fer bids on
sit.e 30, an. eltroed.ary ICMol in Mission
Viejo, is alao expected. M-constructlon adiool -carpeting
for College Part School in Irvine and
pcrlable walla: f(r the Carrillo Drive
School in Ml!si<lll Viejo -are on tbe
agenda.
1'nl3teos will hear an updat.d repcrt
on the financial atatus ol the dtstricl dur-
ing its final days.
crew are a helpful, fun-loving family in repairs and delaying the ship's
when the curtain closes. departure for Vietnam 3th months.
A boy climbing into position on ·what
appear" to be a lush ri ver bank cringes
as his foot knocks oU the last few inches
ol gre=y. ''Don't ou realize how long it takes to
grow ply grass," he is kidded .
"Do y,_ou have a makeup card?" asks
the stage l'f!an&ger, mockingly scolding
a person who comes to the rescue.
A sun hat is moved a quarter tum. A
"bronzed" foot is pushed over two inches.
Jesus is asked to lower his eyelids.
After hours of paying such close at·
tention to -details, sighs of relief are
jubilant.
The painted frown reverses into a grin
before it is washed awav. And Puppet
No. 2 gladly shakes her ·head as waist·
length hair cascades Crom u~der a skull
cap.
Except for the prestige o! the Pageant.
it's more fun to be a person than a patint·
ing.
From Page 1
FESTIVAL ...
Park Hearing
Opens Tonight ·
111 Irvine
Irvine city--COWJcilmen tonight will
fonnally open hearings on the city's pro-
posed interim parks and open space .plan
providing an increase from four to six
acres per 1,000 people in tot.al parks
acreag~ in the city.
Councilmen meet al 7:30 in city hall,
4201 Campus Drive.
The public l\eking involves both an en-
vironmental impact statement on the
open space plan and the plan itself.
ltav;orth and Anderson plaMing con-
sultants in late 1972 began the interim
general plan elements. They are required.
by state law, in lieu of a completed dimensional famous paintings, statues, or general plan.
relief sc;ulptures, or other art works. In December, ·the city's adopted
It is the pageaJl!'s 38th annual pro-geoeral plan, being prepared b~ Wilsey
duction and as :for t~ last 13 years, is and 1Iarn COMUltants ~ ~-':'J~Kln wtth
3o1d out. . _ _ _ c_!!y _e~~~ _l.~e col1Uzethens,.mlgh~ \\'ell" c1MSuge 1-.ue p,vYl.:llOftll presen~ ·
More than 250,000 persons aMually proposal plan.
visit 1he Festival of Arts. The recommended park acreage in-
The Festival of~ Aris is a nonprofit crease includes 1.5 acres per 1,000 set
organization governed by a board of aside in 9Cbool playgrounds. Amounts o( and to be dedicated by developers or directors el~ed by the fest iv a I bought by the city total 4.5 acres per
membership. 1,000 people, jult-two-acres-per_l.OOQ_
Over the last 10 years, it has donated .more than is presently required under
more than $1.5 million to ' civic and county ordinances adopted by the city.
CulturOJ causes. More than $50,000 has Irvine Company Planning Vice Presi· • dent RiChard Reese bas mailed COWl· been given in scholarships. cilmen a lengthy study done by a San
In £he early days, circa 1933, admission Franclsco urban design consoltlng flml
was 10 cents and local merchants chip-Sasaki, Walker and Asaociates.
peel in, and the festival collected an ..Th.at study "concludes that recrea-
tional needs can be met in local and com-amount from the sale of paintings. First munity parks at the rate of 1.7 to 2.5
profit was $475. acres or land for every 1,000 persons,"
Last year the city of Laguna Beach Reese said, The 2.14 .acres per 1.000
which actually owns the Festival grounds, average does not inchxl.e sc h o o I
collected $88,000 in' rental, based on ·a playgrounds; ·
percentage of gros5 adml.s&ions. The difference then b e t w e. e n the
The Festival set up housekeeping on amounts of land the city and Irvine Com-
the present grounds in 1941. p,Bny Te(.'Ommend be set aside for parks
In the pageant's hi.story, only one totals roughly two acres.
performance has been rained out, the Ju-
ly 29, 1965 performance.
From Page 1
SCHOOL ...
County lawmen. from the automatic weapon.
The panel in Judge William C. Speirs ·Eckstrom was then dropPed by a single
courtroom quickly ·rejected the theory • blast from Orange County Sheriffs
that Eckstrom, 23. was ln a state or Deputy Andy Romero's shotgun. He has
"diminlshed mental capacity" when he full y reeovered frorh those wound!.
used an automatic · rifle to snuff out the
lives or sheri£f's detectives Donald
Schneider and Carl Wilson, both 40.
Judge Speirs ordered the jury to return
to his courtroom Wednesday for the
opening of a hearing that will determlne
Eckstrom's sanity at the tim~ of the kill-
ings. He has additionally pleaded not
guilty by reason of insanity.
Eckstrom, calm and composed
throughout the trial, displayec! no emo-
tion _{l.t_)be announcem!!l_! ~ the jury's
verd.Jct.rte began discussing aspects or
his defense in the sanity hearing with
DepUty Public Defender Ron Butler
before the last juror had lefl the
courtroom.
The Midway City man faces two iden-
Ucal counts of first degree murder filed
in Los Angeles County for his alleged
killing or two persons in a Cerritos shop-
ping center. Trial is scheduled for June
27.
It is alleged that Eckstrom shot three
persons .in a parking lot before driving
off to his Flight Street home where he
a,,,sembled an arsenal of "'el'lpons and
boxes-or ammunition to prepare for the
visit of lawmen .
From Page 1
T AX:.cHIKE .• -~ .
pus with permanent facilities on the 200-
acre site.
Also receiving a hike is the extended
day program, with $90,000 added to sup-
port a new home economics program, a
medical-aililtanta program, -and a
libr~ media teehnician program. _
Other six sizeable increases are pro-
posed for the buildings and grounds
department, up $70,000 to help landscape
the school's two new buildings ; and voca-
tional technology, up '82,000 with the ad-
diUoo oC two new programs.
Final budget figures will depend on
passage or Senate Bill 6 by the state
legislature. If passed, it will ·add $100,000
more in state aid to the district..
The final figures, to be decided by mid·
August. will also depend on the outcome
of employe salary negotiation begun at
~1onday's meeting.
Representatives of. the Saddleback
Classified Empldyees Association pro-
p:>sed a 6.8 increase in salary, based on
the cost of living escalation and
calculated disposable income increases.
A proposal by the Faculty A$.soclation
did not make a specific percentage
recommendation, though an increase
comparable to the SCEA request is ex·
East Coast's
In Swelter,
Power Taxed
By the Associated Press
s!~d E~s:a~st d~;el~en't ~~~~ ~;m~
panies struggled to meet the demand for
eleCtrlcity to run air roncl.itlonen and
other cooling devices In addition to
'regular appliances.
As temperatures in New York City
again reache;d a record t3 degrees,
Comolldated Edison Co., serving the city
and Westchester COunty, reduced voltage
in some sections £or the second day. Con
Ed said at 10:45 a.m. that power had
been cut b.v 5 percent at manually
operated. older s ubstations in
\Ves1ches ler. Queens and Staten Island.
Later, other sections "·ere cut.
• The New York Stale Power Pool -,in-
volving eight utilitle!! -said power had
been cut by 5 percent in 1 percent of the
s,rstem at 11 a".m. and said t.be rest of the
Systenl follOweQflii! artemoon.-
Con Ed reduced voltage Monday by 8
percent -the maxlmwn before the com-
pany resorts to selective blackout!. It
.yld two of four planta that were out of
service 1'-fonday were back in use today.
Two other planta, one closed for refueling
Md the other-for overhauling,-remalned
shut, however.
The public Service Electric and Gas
Co., New Jersey's largest supplier, cut
voltage by 5 percent for several bouts
startin,a a! 11:<» a.m. on ~londay and
said it expected another volt.age cut to-·
day.
In , Connecticut, "''h're temperatures
were in the 90s fOl' the third day, sever.el
minor power cutbacks were reported;
some 8Chool systems said they were clo6-
ing at noon ; and four roads buckled
because of the heat.
New Yorkers bad cblble trouble. Peo-
ple trying lo beat the heat illegally apen-
ed a thou'811d fire hydrants Mooday,
causing a severe loss ol water presaure
and hamj>erin(flre-fightq ellorta.
r ..... r .. el
ANNEX •••
Henry Quigley
Wins GOP Post
As Precinct Chief
The 19'('3 Pageant is produced by Don
Williamson. F.d_ l\t.iracle is backgrolD"Jd
artist, Hap Graham, narrator; Victor
Schoen, conductor and compaser or
special music; and Carl Callaway
technical director. ' the poll. Those that did expressed con· pected.
cems about a weakened sports program A trustee rom miltee of Ai}1l Brannon , . flue-. ,
and the --'ty to -•--build·n Donna Berry, and Or. James r.1arshall '""""
Irvine City Counctlman HeJl!:Y _Quigley
Monday night 14·as named precinct
chatrman for the 7lst Auembly District.
The precinct auignments committee of
the Orange County Republican Central
Committee unanimously selected the
Irvine vice mayor for the organizing role
in the district represented by As-
semblyman Robert Badham (R·Newport
Beach).
Qulcler will head precinct workers In
cities from Anaheim to San Clemente, in-
cluding all the residentiaJ areas of Irvine.
the Saddleback Valley and most of
Ne"JlOrt Beach.
Under present apparti"oronent redistric·
tip.a plana being con5ldered in Sacramcn·
to, trVtfie would remain within the 71 st
"*"1bly District and Badham woold ......cecle..lland-~rtions of his district to a
-new A...m&ly-=.!ilin~ stmOhing·from.
Anaheim to Oce~ide and taking in the
Cleveland Nallonal Forest.
Niguel Thieves Get
$4,125 in Stamps
lntruden who apparently were unsuc·
ce.'>sful in a search for cash settled for
the nut best thing Monday night In the
Laguna Niguel olflcu of Ille Mloslm Vie-
jo Compaey -Blue Chip stamps valued
at $4,125.
Orange County Sherill's oflictrt .. id
tile stamps wer< taken from the mall
room ol tile company at 2!531 Pueo de
Valerlda. They said there .. u no sign of
forced entry at tbe premlaea.
Lindsay Bares Plan
NEW YORK (UPI I :_ Dectorin1 that
virtually all private cars should atay out
ol midtown Manhattan, Mayor Jom V.
Undsay announced Monday a plan
designed to clear up IOl1le of the
pennanent automotive cone' tlOn iii lhe-
;area. The "uJUmate strategy," J,JfldslY
,.id, "LI tq dlsoou111ge entry of j>e10Ji!>cer
vehicles into the central buslntss dlalrict
and lo encourage the UM: ol mass
trunsl l."
lrvi1ie Appoi1its
Firm to Prepare
Park Bond Pla.ns
......... ....,..,. :o11w:ue 1 gs ~1ayor Hammett, wbo joined in the Under the t~school Idea was apjlOl'n1ed to meet wtlh staff .. .,.. · unanlmous claim-staking vote, said tlw Some ~-·· at the -·1·00 at Irvin· repre9etltatives regarding srw>riflc pro-r--·~ ~ e ,...~~ ai rport could be "lucrative" for Costa
School contended the large school \YOUld posals. Mesa but that he was also concemtd
provide more opportunities for students. about the possibil ity of lnCl"f;lling federal
Trustees Nonn Glmburg and Sharon and state regulations affecting gemral
Sireello voted against the r«ommended Dig Funds Approved aviation.
site. Mrs. Sircello is t.be main board pro-"General aviation amounts to 87 })er·
ponent of the tw<Hdlool idea. SACRAMENTO IAP ) -A 1110.000 ap-cent of the alrport"s bullne&s and II it
She said it '4'00ld give more students propriation to conduct archeologlcal ex-should drop off, there would be no
the chance to become leaders and to cavations on the site or the proposed new reve.nue and we stlll would have an
1rvine community s e r v i c e s com-relate to each other. governor's mansion in s u b u r b a n airport to worry about," he said.
missioners ~1onday night selected a firm Board members Olarles Boulanger, Cannicbael won approval 56-4 Monday In The airport was Included In a "sphere
they feel city councilmen should hire to Elizabeth "Lee" Sicoli and R. Dean the Assembly. The t I-acre plot overlook· of influence" package which includes
complete plans for a parks bond ballot Olson voted to go ahead with site studies. ing the American River is believed to be. unincorporated portions of the Santi !.na
mell!ure. University High is already at its the site of an ancient Indian burial Hei ghts area and south of 18th Street
BIRdibere1 •1 nd Sue or 1111662 l~oll1aCJ\rlhur ca pacity of 1,850 students. ground . below the proposed Costa Meaa marina .
v .,. rv ne, were se ected owing a ~===========::::::~::::::::::::::::::::;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;~~==~====;;w two-hour executive session and public in· I
terviews with three finns. The public in-
terviews preceded the private, person-
nel session held in the absence of legal
rounsel.
Community Services Director Paul
Brady today released the name of the
firm the commission recommends coun-
cilmen hire -tonight during the city coun-
cil meeting set for 7:30 in city hall .
Chairman Sally Miller will present
commls.sloners' recommendations which ,
Brady said, leave open . for council
d~Sion the-'1aoope!' 0£-the WO!'k to be
completed and the contract price.
The Riberf! and Sue estlmate remains
within the $30,000 to $40,000 range, Brady
noted, and the finn has said It can re ady
the ballot measure by Nov~mber, ii ask·
ed to. The firm would prefer a late
January or early February election date,
however, Brady said.
$1,350 in Home
Appliances Gone
A bur1lar who broke Into an Irvine
home while the occupants were away for
the weekend and stole tt,350 worth of ap-
pliances took just about averything but
the kitchen si nk.
Cynthia D. Artinger, 5131 Dutcber
Drive, dlaoovered the complete air con-
ditioning system and a 1,soo-1alloo hot
water heater stolen upon her arrival
home Monda y. ~
Officer Jack Watson said the lntnidcrs
entered by cutting a scretn and prying a
kltcllen window. apparently shortly
before mlchllght Sund•y:-
A neJgbbor reported bearing the sud·
~den hJu_ of a gas )eat 1t 11 p.JTI., ~P<
perenUy wllen ·the ·burglari broke the
water heater's fuel conncctlm , but failed
t'o t't'poM It to anyone nt th:lt time.
A WORD TO THE WISE -
•
•
There is • tendency for many carpet storos to use strictly a
w1rehous1 concept. Ont 1dv1nta9e is seeing carpeting inr rolls rather
than samples.
( Many disad~1nt1gas aro evident -most operations cil t~is type
buy only Oii-goods, so that tho customer only gels to see old patterns,
or carpels the mills couldn 't sell to regulor outlets. Also, this type of
oper1tion 9 en er a I I y feels that experience is unimportant, and
con11qu1ntly the solespeople know little or nothing about the products.
Finolly, most will form out the ins I 1 II a Ii on s to the lowest bidder,
gu1r1ntoeing e poor insl1ll1tion. (Mony of those in•lellers or.e conlrocting
illegelly without 1 stale licen•e.J
At Alqen's we maintain a happy medium. We carry L largo
inventory, and the largest simple selection around. We have nperlenctd.
salespeople, end our instellets were lrolnod by us. Finelly, we are a
' state ncensed contractor.
ALDEN'S
·--•
CARPETS e DRAPES . /
1663 Plac111tla A••·
COSTA MESA'
646-4838
.. .......
M"", T1lln. 9 ta 1:10; Pr!. 9 ta 91 s.t. 9:H ta I
I
•
,
7
I
\
~.' ~ .-
Bun: 1niton Bea~h
--F-0untain .. V-al e
VOL. 66, NO. 163, 2 SECTIONS,.28 PAGES
' .
ORANGE. COl:JNTY, CALIFORNIA
-
Today's-Fl11al
N.Y. Stocks
.
TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1973 TEN CENTS
Official,
Aide Called
1.)e-nies AI
7 .
-'
'Slickers~
By TOM B~RLEY
0,"'41 o.llJ l'llM S.-tl
Westminster 'city officials Derek
McWhinney and Tad Fujita were brand-• egj()$y 11S "city slicker.s who. took on a
naive fann boyu by a prosecutor who
urged ·an Orange County Superior Court
Ju.t:Y to return a quick verdict of guilty
against the-acrosed pair.
Deputy Dis tr i ct Attorney Michael
Capizzi. concenlralin~ n1uch of his final
argument £ire on forn1er mayor _Mc\Vhin·
neY. 40, told the jury in Jbdge John Flynn
Jr.'s courtroom that the two week trial
"realry boils dov,rn to "'hom you care to
believe."
· "Do 'you believe th~ story of Gco1·gc
Murai, a· simple farmer who had a lot lo
Idle and nothing to gain by telling h.is
tale before th e Grand Jury or do you
believe the story of a man (McWhinney)
who brazenly said he and six other per·
50llS control the Orange County Board of
Supervison?" Capizzi asked.
Capizzi tcld the jury he relt he had
-pi-ov~beyond--any-dOubt.'.!-that-str.aw_-_
befry. grower A1arai was w8med by bo!h
defendants that it \Vould take a $10.000
payment if he wished to retain any hope
at all of continuing to !arm the rich 215
acres of l.1ile Square Park.
~1urai testified during the trial that one
of ~°$sPl!:)'ments \Vas made in the form
of Ii. ,000 check i.o favor or county
Supen•isor Robert Battin's can1paign
fund.
The second, in cash, v.•as handed over_
to Fujita, 34, shortl y before district at-
torney's investigators moved in to arrest
the city planner before going on to book
McWhinney. .
Both men were later indicted by the
Grand Jury on charges of grand theft.
bribery and conspiracy.
Battin. was cleareO <1f-any possible in-
volvement in the Mile Square Park scan·
dal after testifying before the Grand
Jury.
Capizzi stressed today •·the tremen·
dous difficulty'' the prosecution had in
persuading A1ural to tell the story that
allegedly began a ye ar ago this \veek
when Mc\\rtiinney visited ?i.1urai u'hile the
fanner was work ing his strawberry
crops in Fountain Valley.
"The boys downtown are unhappy \Vith
you," Capizzi quoted McWhinney as tell·
tng the bewildered ranner. "You're not
making enough contributions."
11Murai, as naive as they come. \Vas
thinking in terms of the $\ZS he had
earlier paid in to Battin's election fund
11nd wondering if he hadn't e<1ntributed
quite enough,'' Capizzi said.
• "'But he soon lcamtd tha01t~i~t ~"'~h'c;~ $10,000 for him to have 'I
kffping the land and he was Id by
McWhinney 'we got. you in there and v.•e
can get you eut'," Capizzi told the jury.
"Murai has told you that he was told
by MCWhinney that he u·ould 5'1Ve at
least $10,CXM>. by paying $10.000 to the lv.•o
ffien here in CQUrt." the prosecutor said.
"What they meant by that threat was
that they CQUld manipulate the acreage
price al Mile Square to reflect in his
favor -or get him out by splitting up the
land into three lots."
Final argument by la\vyers for
ti1cWhinney and Fujita are scheduled for
delivery late today.
,Ca1npus Spyiug Told .
WASHI NGTON !UPI) =-The-Federal
Bureau of Jnvestigati<1n ordered its
i.lgents in 1970 to set up a netv.·ork of
campus Informants to spy on suspected
~tremist groups inch.1_ding black ac·
·;~vist,._accorct.lng_to fo'Bl.merrw;>s obtail2cd
>Jonday by NBC..Ne,vs.
.o .. an11e C:oast
Weather
trll be mostly sUMy on Wednes-
:lay -if you live in the Inland
areas of Orange County. Otherwise
mostly cloudy and hazy along the
beac;:hes with highs or 70, rising to
75 inland. Overnight Jows In the
60s.
INSIDE TODAY
British medium claints Lc.t
Barlttr liar bee·n. cmttacted and
tl1at "lle's alive and u1eU in
another world." Set sWry , J>age
12.
L.M. It•• • I
ltlfillt· -11
Ctllltr11I• .S Ctet1ltlM 11·11
(efl'lkl 20
CtMlwenl :t0
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11'111\llCI t-11 jllltf" .... ,. .. ,. ,
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..
KAREN HERSHMAN AND HER GREAT .DANE, KELLY
New'!\!''~ Fou~tain Va ll ~:.E.111Jrr}JrP1 nt Quietly
"'' -
She Didn"t 'l'ry
Quee1i 'Just Plaifi Old Karen'
Karen 1-lershman had no real thoughts
about entering the ~·Iiss }o'ountain Valley
pageant.
She was tillked into lilking an 81{"
plication ho1ne, but left it blank and skip-
ped "the first meeting of potential con-
testant s.
"I didn 't seem like the l\tiss Fountain
\'alley or Miss anything type . I'm ju~t
plain <1ld Karen." she says.
But her mother and you nger sister had
other ideas. They fi lled out · her :ip·
plication and took it to the chamber of
commerce.
Even when entered, Karen kept it pret-
ty much a secret. not telling any but her
c.losesl Jriends in the junior class al
f'ountain Valley .l-l igh.
"I'd rather be able to say I won , than
have everyone asking me how I did ...
says the daughter of ~1r. and .f\-1rs.
Gerald Hershman ..
Now she can tell everyone she \Von
because. l\1ay 27 she became the city 's of-
ficial queen. winning <1ver seven other
girls and succeeding the 1972 queen ,
Alesia Speir.
Like most winners . she CQu\d n't believe.
she \VOil. but is enjoying every minute of
it and is looking forward to the ex-
perience for the CQming year. .
fn Fountain· Valley's cOntest, the.-girls
are judged not only on pojse, beauty and
chann, but also on talent.
Karen Is a ballet dancer v.:ith six years
AEC Promises
Clostu·e Appeal
-Cl!ICAGO lAP J -The chairman or
the Atomic Energy Commission says the
AEC 'vould appeal immediately if con·
sumer advocate fu\lph Nader obtains a
court injuncllon closing 20 nuclear pQ\Ver
planls, includ;11g the one at San ·onorre.
Dr. Dilty ~ Ray declined Monday at
a ne\vs conference further Comn1ent on
(he suit filed by Nader.
"The nntion can survive" tile closing of
Ahe plants , she said, sira only four per-
cent of the nation's total cloctrlcity is
produced by nuclear power plants.
"There would be an effect on certain
rcgiops," Dr. Ray added, but she said
st>c did ii<1t hnvc -sufficient information to
be spcclfi~.
D1·ug. Case Ad1u iited_
SAN FRANCISCO !AP) A
experience behind her and at least two
hou rs of daily practice as a constant diet.
She hopes to study ballet and modern
dance at Orange Coast College and
perhaps UCLA, if she can find the
1noney.
Work with a professional ballet coin·
pany is her goal. "Ballet is prettier,
there's more to it than some other forrns
-of dance. You really have to v.·ok for it.
so V.'hen you're good you knO\V you
deserve H."
~fuch as she entered the cil y's beauty
trials. Karen enters a baUet career with
conside~able trepidation.
··There are a lot of things against me
for a ballet career. rm too short at fi ve·
feel·l\VO. Most dancers are about five-
reet-five.
"I'm also not frail and little. r.ilos t
ballcrinas·are taller and skinny. If I don 't
make it in ballet. I might pick son1e
olher dance rorn1 as an alternative:·
·She bell'eves in trying to do what you
want because you only live once.
lf Karen"s judgment about a hallct
career is as poor. as her assessment of
her o·wn beauty pageant potential, sh~
could v.•lnd up as a b.!!:llerina.
Fundraiser T estif-ies
WASHINGTON lAP) -Maurice H.
Stans, blocked in. an effort to avoid •
\Vatergate testimony nov.', today denied
knowledge of the ., wiretapping raid,
politjcal sabotage or violation of an y
carhpalgn. laws.
The fonner secretary of Commerce
and fundraiser for President Nixon con·
ceded only that there might have been
T 7 ll n· ..J .ZIEGLER ADMITS ERROR
.-J[ a ey Ollf(,t__. ON BRIEFIN~Story, P•g• ~
"some unintended technical violations"of' To Take U ~:g:e4~ disclosure Ja\v. (Related story. P Stans appeared at the televised hear-
ings of the Senate 's \Vatergate in-N • bl C vesligating committee, which rejected te fLS ase l1is lawyer's plea that Stans be spared
the "inevit able klieg light of publicity''
Bl' TO~I GORMAN before his NC\\' York trial.
01 1111 oa1tv ,,i.t si•n Earlier, the committee heard a forn1rr
f•'oontain Valley School ·o i s tr i c 1 Nixon campaign '''orker from Orange County 'tesiify he had been !old that John
·rrustees will meet tonight in an attempt N. ~itthell, while still attorney general ,
to resolve the c9nflict that_ ihas arisen had been shown filmed copies or private
between the principal of Niebla.s School correspondence from. the campaign of
and his teachiilg staff. Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, at that time frontrunner for the Democrc.tic presiden-Trustees have indicated thel• will m<1ve tiaJ · 1· • . edi 1 . osed . oom1na ion. 1~m ate y into a cl -door session to .~ court, U.S. District Judge John J.
dtscuss the PSObl~~ ~1len th~y meet at SJrtca cleared the way for the committee 1;~. a~ !he d1~tr1ct s Educat~n Ce~tei:,_ tcL1ake_testimony.-unde.cimmUnity, from N~.mber ·O~e L1gfilhouse La.ne. , ' two key witnesses. ousted \Vhit e J~ouse
. l 1~ert~1nly hope we amve at a.~oh.\.· cOunsel John \V. Dean Ill and former·
li on, said Trustee Roger Belgen. Tius Nixon campaign deputy Jeb Stuart
mirunderstanding has to be resolved." tdagruder. ·
The problem surfaced during last Sirtca also denied a request by the
Thursday's meeting when ~each.ers at ~he special \\lalergate prosecutor, Archibald
school confront~d trustees in private ~·11h Cox, to pre\'ent live radio and television
a list of . complaints about Principal coverage of testimony from 1'.1agrudet,
James Keize r. Dean and other key \Vitnesses.
Trustees spent more than eight hours Stans is under indictment in New York
in private _dlscuMing the problem, but in connection with a secret 1972 . cam~
took ~o action. paign contribution, and his lawyer asked
. Claims by ~eachers !_hat they. were ask· the Senate Watergate com mittee t 0 · 1ng trustees 111 executive session to fire postpone his lestimony until after the
Keiz er were not true. trustees ha ve trial.
revealed. Sen . Sam J. Ervin (0.N.C.), said the
"The staff at Nieblas was not asking (See STANS, Pa4e Z)
• fot.;:..the~en· or ith&o.•1rii11pM11~ 4' ,_ : . \ "
, servic.es, '' ~Jgen said. "Their req~t
-\'las that-he be transfered. J think that's
It~ 1'8iletnent."
He said last Thursday·s meeting v.·as a
··fa ct-finding" session, and that trustees
hope to secure additional information
u·hen ,they meet tpnighl.
At ,the earlier meeting. teachers from
the -stbool filed in 011e-by~ne with their
complaints. What '''as said behind closed
doors was not disclosed.
"It v;ould be unfair to state what
!pecific problem areas there might be,"
Belgen said. "We know we have a misun-
derstanding that needs to be resolved in
the be.st interest or children, the .in-
structional program and the CQm·
munity."
Trustees Bel.lien. F'Ted Voss and Shiela
~1eyers each said 4.hey hope a "statement
or resolution "' would be issued tonight.
"l would hope for some resolutioo or
the problem," said Mrs. Meyers. "I'm
not real arndous to keep this up ."
Both Keizer and Superintendent Mike
Brick have been silent on the conrtict.
A di strictwide teacher attitude survey,
presented last v.·eek to trustees, Js not ex-
pected to be discussed tonight. That
survey reported, ilmong other findin gs,
that 97 percent of the teachers polled
believe morale is ··on the decline" in the
district.
Complete results of the survey are ex-
pected to be released !his week and will
be discussed with representatives <1f the
trustees at a later time, school officials
said.
District Baiks-
Poetry· Volume
Labeled Obscen.e
Huntington Beach Union High School
District administraton say they will
back . the use o( a poetry anthology
described as obscene by an Irate distriot
resident.
Doris Allen of \Vestminster appeared
before district trustees two weeks ago
and read all of the dirty words from
"The Young A1nerican Poets" in protest
<1f the book's prese nce in three high
school libraries.
Al the time, adm inistrators told
trustees the book. \Vhich is at
V.'estminster,' Edison and Marina is
restricted to use by students \vho have
the approval of their teachers lo check it
out.
Board men1bers ordered a review of
the pook a nd district staff members are
slated to make the report backing the
p<>etry volume at tonight's tnistee
meeting.
According to a district spokesman. the
staff report will be that !he book is
"educationally sound."
The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m.
in the band room of Huntington Beach
High School.
!\1alayslun car salesman pleaded ,guihy
Monday in. U.S. District Court here to
possessing 44 p0unds of be.rei n. with in·
tent to distribute it. Tang Kuang lleok . ~-could rectlve a:..ma1imum pen<y o(
15 years in prison and n $25.000 fine.
TDW 11UCK DRIVEltS STRUGGLE T\) REMOV& OVERTURN&~ RIG FROM RAMP ·
Accidonl Tlils Minll""li<k1'11rll0khurll hlt"of 5-n Diogo Frww•y in-Fovntoio-Vol'lo¥~----•,
•
J '\ • ••
U!"I Ttltthoto
DENIES WATERGATE ROLE
GOP ·Fund Raiser Stans
3 V-alley Family
Men1hers i11 Jail
After Big B1·a,vl
Three 1nembers of a Founta in Va lley
family nre in custody and three Fountain
Valley police -officers are mending
themselves and their unifofms following
a brawl early lhis morning.
The altercation brought eight Fountain
''alley policemen to the Vargas home at
18687 Las Flore_s St. about 2 p.m .
Police said the i~ident was sparked
11•hen Officer Jack Dav is attempted tJ
take a man into cuslody outside the
residence for alleged drunken dliving.
Davis said that the man started y~lling
and ·occupants of the house came out and
too k his prisoner away from him .
Davis said he radioed for help ilnd
v.•ent back to the houSe.
. Thi s ·tilne, he asserted, he was dragged
1nlo lhe house and att acked by the family
rr.entbers. lie rei;t>rtedly got free v.•hen
he hit one on the head with his flashlight.
\Vh~n olher officers arri\'ed . according
ro p:>hce reports, mem bers of the familv
argued or scuffled with them while rh·:?
alleged drunken driver escaped by clin1b-
ing out a back windo\v. ~
'faken into custody for resisting arrest
an~ obstr~cting an ofticer, assaulting a
po~tcc officer and lynching (taking a
pr.1soner from a police offi cer1 \1•erc
Alfonso Vargas, 54 , and Georgina Pau lirl;i
Vargas. 21. A I5-year-0ld boy was taken
in to custody on the same charges.
Officer Davis wa s treated for cut.s,
bruises and bites at Fountain Vallev
Community Hospital. T1A·o other officer's
had their uniforms torn, a police depar!·
mcnt spokesman said.
Trailer Flips ,
Blocks Free'wa ·y
•
Qffra1np .Traffic..
~ . '
A truck trailer. carrying a full load of
gunite overturned this morning blockin~
the southbound Brookhurst Street off.
ramp of the San Diego Free\vay for
ubout four hours.
The driv er of thr truck, Eugene E
.\'toore. -17, Whittier. escnped injury in the
mishap, but Calirornia .. lighway Patrol
officers said the overturned trailer led lo
another accid ent in 1vhich .'.1 college stu·
denl from Co1npton \.\'3S injured.
Cl·IP officers said ?.·loorc "'as l{'A \'irl!.\
the free"·ay on the south bound Brook·
burst ran1p aboul 6:30 a.m. v.•hcn tht
tr~ilcr ovcrt~med . blocki ng the .c:itll.
Officers said Susan \Vatcrs. 19. \\'as
tr0t1•rling M>uthbound \\'hen she saw th<.'
cnrs nhcad or "her slO\Yln g to look at the
0''er1urncd trailer.
\\Thf!n she hit the brakes of hc.r
\'ol ks"·agen. the cn r went oot -or control
nnd smashed into the divider (enet:!.
p:uroln1cn Sllld.
Shr \Vas taken to Fountain. Valley Com·
1nu11lty l'los pital whcrt 'ahc was listed In
batlsfnctory condition lhis nrtcmoon.
The CllP lssut'<f a sl&alerl on !he clo .
Ml exit "hlch remained in c(fect until
J():JO n.nl. whffl the 111l1t.r WI.! flnall \I
cleated rrom the rttmp.
;
•
., •'\litlLV PILOI --::_:__'.'." __ __::::=:::r~u.~sd~ay, Uune 12, 191.>
MenSougl1t
h1Cargo
Hij~ckll1g
Orange Couniy Sherif'f"s offlccrs are
\\'Orlcing v.·ith Compton police today to
track do~'fl four men involved in thr hi-
1<---jpcklng ~tonday night or a truckload q!
clgareoCS trom -a-n ossmOOfShopping
center.
Deputies said t~·o or the four nien
v.·hose descriptions are being circulated
this morning grabbed truck dri\'er Rudy
Sando val, 26. at gunpoint as he left his
veh icle 111 Los Alamitos Boulevard and
Katella Avenue to malie a delivery at a
liquor store.
They said Sandoval was forced to lie on
the floor of lhe truck while his atxluctors
drove the $2,500 ca rgo to a location in
Compton. SaDCklval told orficers__.tbe two
n1en •·ere then joined by l\\'O companions
v.•ho helped them to unload the cases o{
cigarettes.
The empty truck was later recovered
from the perking lot of a Compton shop-
ping center. Officers said th_e vehicle was
driven off and parked there after the hl·
-jackers-released~Sandoval unharmed.
Telephone Finn,
Union Sued Over
•
Equestr-ian
Sire Plans
Doubtful
..
f'ro111 P•ge l
If -STANS ..•
committee unanimously rultd against a
delar, but wouldn't ask him anything m.
volvmg the New York case, which stems
from a contrlbuUon by fipancler Robert
Vesco. !411Qitill l\al btea lndJcled 1n the
11111e fliod, ... ilJN -· While Stans asked not to testify, when
•he was ordered to do so he told the com·
mlttee he had a 20-mlnute· prepared
statement to deliver before facing ques-
~ •
Meat H;ijack
Suspects
Held ,By-F-BI
lioolng.
Jt now appears thtte is little chance a The panel agreed to hear that, and
proposed 29-acre, $100,000 equestrian copies of the Stans' text were distributed
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of JfM D.llllY Plitt t11tt
center y,1ill ever be built next to the Santa to newsmen before he delivered it. A quartet or suspected meat hijackers
J.na'l!rver !n 'l!ulltlliitt<ifBeocli: Slallll llatemeni-mad..-theoe-1hree--.re-in1all-todayin conf!ectlon with tfielr --
City Parks and Recreation Director 1 prin~llpalhadanosse~~nsled: 1 the W ter t of a truckload of 20 tons of beef steaks
-•uvw ge O a ga e worth $120,000 and delivered to J I Nonn Worthy said today the Orange break·ln or any ether espionage t.Uorts Newport Beach frozen food locker Mon-
County Sanltallm District will need all of before I read about them 1n the press, or day 1
· flab! land f · of lhe efforts to cover up after the event. · IJ Jts ava e. or expaMIOO. -"I had no knowledge of any sabotage The rendezvous arranged for sale or
Worthy had hoped that equestrian' in-program to disrupt the campaign by the . Colorado-br~ beef at . ~hat in·
tc rests, or the city, could lease some va-Donald Segretti or anyone else. vesllga.tors described es the r1d1culo~sly·
cant acreage along Brookhurst Street, -"To the best of my knowledge there low price of SI.SO per .pound was raided
just east of the sewage treatment plant. were no intentional violations of the laws about 4 1.1.m. by dete~t1ves on stakeout .
'"Right now, the. sanitatim district just relating to campaign financing by the Newport Beach J>:<>llC.e, FBI agent,s a~d
finance committees for which I had Orange County D1stncl Attorneys Ul · can't grant a Jong enough lease to make responsibility." vestigators swooped down on the
it worthwhile," Worthy explained. "But The reported fund was the subject of a suspects at the ~arbor Food Locker, at
l'd still like to see a permanent Jul y 28, 1971 memorandum from Magru-30th Street ~nd Villa Way.
der to Mitchell. But Stans said it must The l<><:all<?n where the four suspects equestrian faciljty developed in the . third have been based 00 a mislinderstanding. were t.aken· m.to cuatody · ~d the stolen phase~ the central park." "If somebody is implying that we had meat and . hlJacked refr1geratQr truck
No specific equestrian plans have been $1 million in the Department or Com-~vered it about three blocks from
developed for the central park because a merce set aside to hel pin the election police headquarte~s .. -~al st Udy 00 the feasibility 6f blillding campaign they ·are off •! he said "I don't . Booked on susp1c100 of theft from an .,.,..~, 1 know what it mea ns "' · interstate shipment were Andre "Bill"
a golf course in the third phase has not The lestlmony abou t ~1itchell came 11arvey, 32. or 1020 Cabrillo Park Drive,
bce1.1 completed. from Herbert L. Porter or Laguna S~nta Ana; Jerrrey Gllchrlst, 29, of 220 ,
Worthy said he has hOpes an equestrian Niguel,-former scheduling chief of the Cit.Y Blvd .. West. Orange; and Henry
Nixon campaign . Quu~tana. 40, and <_::eorge. Saldana, 20, center might somehow be built on t.he He sai d ft1agruder had given him 35 ~th of 13271 Adnan Circle, Garden periphery of the golf course. .11. t 1.1 . 1 Grove
... ;.::;( Huntington Beach colipte. ~fr. and mi ime er 1 m copies 0 r:i~moranda The}i were booked at nearby Newport
Alleged Torment
General Telephone Company and a
lelephone employes' Union were sued for
$1.5 million Monday by a Huntington
Beach woman who claims the company
failed to protect her from union harass·
ment afJ.er she reported the allegro
misconduct of an ernploye ..
FINISHING TOUCHES -Last minute preparations are made in Pag-
eant of 1'1asters reproduction of Goya's painting, "The Puppet~" Fron1
left to right are Terry Cournoyer, Huntington Beach; Carol Ro1ner-
eim. Newport Beach; ·Beverly Klages, Laguna Beach and Kathy Craw-
ford or 1"1ission Viejo. Suspent;led is Mark Klages, 11, of Laguna. At
right giving directions is Peggy'\Vidman. --• ·
th~t had g~ betwee~ Muskies Senate Beach police headquarters and then tum· r1trs. Richard L. MacGregor. 6132 off~ce an~ his campa1tn headquarter~. ed over to FBI agents to face federal Softwind Drive, had proposed the Santa This was 1n November, 1971. Porter said charges
Ana River complex. he didn't know how they were oblained. ·. .
Mrs. MacGregor, who planned lo run Porter said ~fagruder once told him , Investigator!\. 1n ~ lea rn headed by
it , now says the chances of building SUCh that he was gong to sbow the material to Newport Bea~~ Detective Capt.
an equestrian center in Huntington Beach Mitchell, and said that it appeared to Don Oyaas ~aid the meat caper -one !>r
are slim, because of the lack of a large him that Magruder had done so. trye largest t~ .recent Southern California
enough piece of available land. After Judge Sirica's ruling, the com· history -or1g_1nated about one week ago.
The MacGrei<n had planned a stable mittee scheduled Magruder to appear A local b1:1~nnessman told of being . ap-
capable oC. handling aboyt 240 horses, later this week, after $!ans. Dean was proached w1.lh an offer of 40,000 pr1.me •
Toll office supervisor .Berthamae Man-
aj_ng -names !be _ company, .the Com·
munication Workers of America. Local
9510 Pres ident ·Jack Brantley and union
shop stewards Richard Robin.son and
ft1ary May in her Orange County
Superior Court action .
~.Hang Ill \\•ith large peddocks, a limited pasture, scheduled for an appearance next week. steaks for ~le at SI.SO per pound, abiOu.t
exercise rings, a show ring, offices. ·This afternoon Stans testified he knew half the going comn1erclal rate.
c!a.t.VOOms, a clubhouse §lo_rage ar3!8S no!hin~ ol .. a 197.i .polltical .memorandum ~-ftiachinery. f9t.Jh_e .raid '{{lS ~tjn __ ,
There~
and a hunter course. report1ng that he set aside· $1 mi)lion at mo~1on a.t that time, while CosLa Mesa
The MacGregor proposal was made the Department of Commerce fOr activi4 oollce said today they ha_d also received
·last Februai-y. · At that time Mrs. ties that would help Nixon win re-elec· informal.ion . about a suspicious meat
llfacGregor said she believed It would be lion. He said there was no such fund. transaction 1n the v•orks. Laguna Pcig~ant Unveiled fo'FT'r_ess
Mrs. Manning claims she \Vns sub·
jected to a campaign or "hoodlumism
and terror" after she reported to seflior
officials ·that an employe \vas illegally
receiving toll rree calls from an East
Coast area.
She claims that lhe company, acting in
fear or the union , "knuckled under lo
hoodlumism," and failed to halt reprisal
tactics that allegedly included on-the-job
harassment and Jc"•d and obscene
tc lephooe calls.
Rotary Planning
Floating Banquet
The Rotary Club of liunt1'1gton Beach
Nort h will add a nautical twist this year
to the standard install ation banquet.
Rotary members and their wives \Viii
board the pleasu re yacht Buccaneer June
26 at Ports o' call for their fi rst float ing
banquet. a four-hour cruise of Long
Beach harbor.
New officers to be inslalled for the
year are: Dale Aseltine. president; Vic
Stella, secretary ; Charl es Woodfin,
treasurer: and directors George Davis.
Randy Besch, Fred Appleford, and
Dudley Boyce.
Bv J ACK CHAPPELL
• Of ftll Dtllv "llol SltU
"Hang in there, baby!" ~ i
A glittering and gi ld ed 13-year~ld Clay
llutter drc\v one n1ore deep breath and
then froze again into the Laguna Beach
Pageant or the ft1asters reproduction or
the Congressional r.fedal or Honor.
Flashbulbs popped from a battery of
photographers as more than 2 5 0
members of the local and national press
and broadcaat news media got a sneak
preview ~fonday or the 1973 Festival of
Arts and Pageant or the Masters.
Young Hutter or El Toro is a five-year
ve teran o~ the~~jying p7es pageant.
Cable Television
Fh·m Asks More
Time on System
A request that cable t c 1 e v i s i o n
operators be given another three months
lo develop a propooal to install a cable
system in five Orange Coast cities will be
made Thursday morning to the board of
the Public Cable Television Authority.
The request is being made by
TelePrompter. a Newpo rt Beach-based Dog Scores 'A' cable telev ision operator which is ·con·
sidering a bid on the estimat ed SIS
' ---~muiwllion-project. ·o H k The P.CT A is seeking bids for a cable , ,, 0 me·wo r . television svs tem that would link the
MILLERSVILLE, Md . (UPI) -Moose,
a •\Vest Orange, N,J. police dog Jtt schooJ
here learning to track people. bolted from
class Monday and led his master to a 60-
plant marijuana patch.
Three teenagers standiog in the patch
\Vith shovels and rakes were charged
wilh n1anuracturing ni a r i j u an a .
n1anufacturing with intent ro di stributd
and possCss ion \\'ith intent to distribute.
i\foose. a Bavier Des Flandres dog . and
offi cer John Doc kerey "·e re attending a
training session for police K-9 teams.
"
DAILY PILOT
homes of Newport Beach, Costa Mesa ,
Fountain Valley, 11unting ton Beach and
Westmin ster.
The organizalion, a joint pcnvers agen-
cy co1nprised of the five cities, was
formed in 1971 to seek a cable franchise
to serve each of the cities.
A deadline for bids of June 26 had been
established by the board, which will no\v
consider extending it lo Sept. '6 on the
recommendation of l)CTA consultant
John Bateman.
TelePro1npt er said the extension is
needed lo consider provisions in the
specifications which "~·e frankly have
not encountered" before.
The board \\'ill meet at 7:30 a.m. at
f\1anny's Restaurant, 740'l Edinger Ave .,
a good investment because tightened cily_ They passed that information on ti) Painted from loe to topknot in gcild restrictions on horse stables were mak-Newport Beach police when the beach ci-
nlakeup. he represented the "force of ing it difficult !or established stables to J d t p k ty wa s determined to be the intended evil" being dr iven out by l\'linerva Oil the continue. Jf, US ry ar ctelivery_ Sp:ll.
20-foot high Congressional Medal. When the city -c00ncil passeijTne\v Investigators said !he beef shipped
!·!utter had received his "hang in equestrian law. t"OUl'lCilmen promised an 0 G h d OK' l from Monfo'rt Packing Co. in Gretley,
there," encouragement fro m one of the audience of horse owners and riders that U Ot UT (. Colo.. v.•as destined for food broker
press observers as the photogrilphers suitable stable sites would be found. Daniel ~facce. of Burbank, ""'ho arranged
kept him posed much longer lhan the So far, the city bas not made any . ·its sale lo a barbecue restaurant chain.
medal would normally be on view before definite pn>!>0'13ls. Ii· Hu· nti"ngton · an audience. " The prin1e beef was being shi pped to a
Asked v.·hat was hardest. controlling restaurant chain for Monday delivery
his breathing, maintaining the cramping B J Huntington Beach city councilmen ha,·c Y.'hen it was stolen over the weekend in
posture demanded by the pose, or holding uiJuer lO Ask agreed to pave the way for construction Burbank. The tractor-trailer containing 1 still, Hutter replied ; • ' Most I y of a ~acre induslrial park on Gothard the meat, had been· perked on the street
everything." Street which will include a small man-not far Crom the driver's home.
He is one of more than 800 persons Apai1m.enl'S OK made Jake. Police detective Reed Gloshen told the from al! over Orange County who volun-' . The city wlll advance SSS.IXK> to Widen Daily Pilot lhe local businessman had
teer to take part in the famous Pageant of and build curbs and gutters along been offered the large supply of prime
1he 11asters this year running from July For· Hun·ti"n:;:tOll Gothard, near Ell is Avenu e. 10 help S])ur n1eat r.or $t .so a pound. a price only hair
13 through Aug. 26 at the Irvine Bowl con-~ the ind ust rial development. __ the g~ng rate. .
currently with the Festi val of Arts art Bill Back, the cily's economic develop-The lnrormanl \\'as again called on
exhibition by more than 175 ahists and A development company's allegations ment coord inator. said the ad vance J\1onda y. He was told by the caller that
craftsmen. 1hal the city of 11untington Beach drove money v.•ould later be repaid to the anot~~r party had a l~rge SUP.ply o[ meat
The press \\'as shO\\'fl five _\vorks, the it into bankruptcy by askin g general fund rrom money the cit y hopes and ~an.ts to mov~ 1t now .
Congress ion al Medal, "The Puppet ,' 'by ';iruignilicant and triVial questions" over lo acquire from the federal Economic . The police \Vere informed and. by th~
Goya, "Bathing in the Seine'' by Seurat, an apartment house project will be ai red Development Administratio·n. (EDA ). t1n1e. re~ls of l~e Burba.nk heist were
"The Cardinal's Portrait" bv Rosenthall Jtme 25 in Orange County Superior Court. lluntington Beach. working lhrough coming !n to ver1ry that indeed such a
and "Deesis," p. bas relief scUJpture. American Empire Builders. Inc., will county Supervisor Davi d Baker. has ask· large s~1pme~t h~d been stolen.
The public \Viii see 27 productions, ask Judge Robert P. Kneeland on that ed the EDA for about S2 million to spur The in,vest1gat1on . tearry headed by
many consisting or as many as IO dif-date to issue a writ that would, in effect, industrial growth in the· city. C~pt. O)aas ~nd including Sgt. Don
ferent statues or art works. enable the firm to build the 170-unit proj-The city already plans to extend Ellis Picker, detective Tom Shearn and
The pageant uses human models, ect rejectl'd by the city's Planning Com-Avenue from Gothard Street 10 Hun-Gloshen began to formulate a. plan for
painted costumes. painted backgrounds mi.s.!lion and City Council . "'lington Strttt as the southern boundary trapping the suspecled meat thieves.
and a book of lighting and technlcal Naming both agencie5 as defendants. or !he 30-acre' complex. :nie. caller telephoned again, suggesting
!ricks to tum . the three-dimensional Am erican Empife claims their insistence Half the 30 acres will be used ror this time the merchandise could Indeed
forms into representations of tw~ on a:n environmental impact statement leasable industrial buildings. The Jake have been stolen.
dimensional ramous paintings, statues, or when none was needed and a succe.s.!lion and an optical company will be built on \Vhen h:e was told Uie Poli<:e already
relief sculptures, or other art works. of "trivialities" cost tbe c 0 mp any tbe other half, Back said. knew 0£ hts offer, he agr~ to cooperate.
It is the pageant's 38th annual pr~ $300,000 ai1d cut their units from 170 to The Jake will only be temporary, until lie relay~ an order of 20,000 pound.t ol
duction and as for the last 13 years, is 114 and then down to 98. the optical company feels it needs the me~t and scheduled the Newport Beach
sold out. Those unlawful actions, the la\\·suit rest o fth e land for expan sion, Back ad-delivery. A-tore than 250,000 persons annually clairm, have put the company into ded . Detective Sheam· was to p6ie as ·the
visit the Festival of Arts. tmnkruptcy and increased its cos ts on the This "·ould be the first major industrial buyer.
The Festival of Arts is a nonprofit Hunt in gton Beach P,roject by at least complei1: along the southern portion of Police did not disclose the identity of
orga nization governed by a board of $00.000. Gothard . Back indicated. The industrlal the local businessman or the contact man
directors elected by the res ti v a I The company additionally demands de velopment would replace the old Bolsa who agreed to help trap the meat
n1embershiP,.. $25.5 million in damages. Tile Compan y. no\v on the lend, · th ieves.
Over the last 10 years: it has donated [-'-r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;:;;;;; more than $1.5 million to civic and
cullural causes .' More than $50,000 has
been give n in scholarships.
In the early days, circa 1933, admission
\\'lls 10 cents and local merchants chip-
ped in. and the festival collected an
amount from the· sate or pa intings. First
profi t ivas $4i5. •
Court Date Set
A WORD TO THE WISE -
" ,,.
Th1r1 is a tendency for many carpet stores to
w1reho1.11e concept. One advantage ii seeing carpeting
than simples,
USO strictly •
in rolls rathor
•
Tht or111Q1 CHU DAILY "ILOT-Wll'I Wll•dl
;, comD•nt'll tne Htws·Pren, is l>UDll.i<'° oy
n.t Or•nge CNsl PllOUslllflll Comp~n, ~tff•
•flt MHllons t•t j11jbli1M<1, Moncl1y lhr111111n
Frldl y, lor Co1!1 Mt1t, HIW!lllfl Sett~.
M""llflOl<>rl fl••Ch/l"ounltin Vttley, LtDU'rl•
S.&en, l•vlntl1Hcll1batk end Stn Cllrnen111
S~n J 111n C1pi1tr11no. A 1lnQle r"°i""•I
fll ,tlon h 1111011,ntd S1t11rc11,_ end S11nlltl"I
Tne 11•!nc:l1111 1111Dh1ntn11 pltnr 11 ti .QI W••I
fl1y $!""· (O•lt Mttt. C:tlllorni•, 91616.
Huntiugton ~each:....
~. ~or Driver .After-.
... ·-. -\
Many disadvantages are evident -most .;perations of this type
buy only Off.goods, so that tho customer only gets to see old pattorns,
or c1rpeh the mills couldn't sell to regular outlets. Also, this type of
operafion 9 en e.r a 11 y feels that experience is unimportant, and
consequently the sales people know ,little or nothing about the products.
Fin1lly, most will farm out tho ins t 1 I I 1 ti o n s to tho lowest biddor,
guaranlooing a poor installation. (Mony of these installers are conlrocting
illegally without a slat• liconso.j
Ro\>1rt N. Wetd
Prn lClt nl t nd Put>lllntr
Jee~ It C111l1y
V+ct P1"icl1nl Ind G•n~ttl Mlf119tt'
Tl\0111 11 Ktt•ll
Ea1tor
Tho,.,.11 A. M11•ph in1
M•ntD~; Edotor
Ch1,l11 H, Looi R;chttJ P, N1!1
Atlllr.nl Mtifttl"f Ea1~1
f111y Cowill t
WHI 0rf,..I C-11 Ed•IO•
H1111thtftn keclrl Offlco
I 717S l 11th l o11l1w1r4
M1ilin9 Addr1u ; l'.O. 111 190, tZ•'41
Otliot Offlc"
Fathers to Have
Day on, Court
In H u1iti11.gto11
Father's Day will be celebrated by the
Huntington Beach Recreation Dep:1rt-
men t this weekend \\'ilh a two.day,
fat her-son basketball tournament.
Any dads or sons who would like to
enter as a team -competition wUI ln-
\'Olve '"'<>-On-two, half-court games -
cn n phone the recreaUon department
between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. any d3y this
\\·eek.
Games will start at 6:45 p.m .. Friday,
and 9 a.m., Saturday, in the gymnasium
At Huntington Beach High School. Entry
Crash Kills Two
A Long Beach man is scheduled to be
arraigned Wednesday on charges or
manslaughter and felony drunken driving
in coMection with a crash which cl'aimed
1wo lives in Hun tington Beach.
Stephen Allen Rowe, 18, was arrested a
week ago when his car smashed into two
parked vehldes on Paclllc Coast
Highway al the bluffs. He wlll appear In
the West Orange County Judlcia l District
Court.
One victim or the crash, Deborah
Z)olkowskl, 18, of Glendora , burned to
death when she was trapped In a van that Rowe hit.
At Alden's we maint1in a hippy modium. We carry • largo
invontory, and the largest sample solocllon '1round. We have experioncod
11lospeoplt,_1nd our installers wore troinod by us. Finally, we ••• _._
1l1to lic•nsed controctor. •
ALDEN'S L-011111 flNCl'I : 7U l'Dl'ttl A•trtllt Co111 MtM. HO Wftl It~ 51tfft
Htwlllltl fltl>(tt > J»J NfWllff! IOlllt•l fd
$1n (~11< llll NO<lll II Ctmlnt ....
,.,.,.. .. 17 14) 642-4fJI
Cl..Hlo4 A'"'91tlitt 642·$671
,.,_ 1'1"111 01•n•• ,_,, c. .... _llltt
140·1220
fceis l t ' •
Trophies will be awltrded In .. ch or
fi ve categories according to the age of
the son.
She had been sleeping In the van with
• her husband Darryl. He was rescued
from the flaming wreckage by Signal Oil
Complny employc David Berdine. CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plaeentla Ave. c .. v•o0n1, 1t1.>. o •• ,,.,. '°"" ""°'1~'"' C...,....n,, No "'"'' llMifl, 111~1,,•lfont. tfl~lll ""'"' er 1ilv1t1l1l""9ttti 11111111 .,,_., M •t•rtd'ucld wl1neu1 tntei.I I"''
1'\<UllM ol , .. ~·lfll• ·-· '"°""' (!tit -t ... M!l:t"-' Ctt11 MtN, C•H-nlt. l<IOt<tl.i..... II~ (l••ltt n" ~"' w .-11 H tt·-mirr mllrrtN-._,,,,..,'*"'~" -"'"'"
•
Age ~ivlsio!'IS are: sons In third and
fourth grades; fiflh :ind sixth grndcs;
,;eventh and fligbth.grndcs:; 'high school ;
Q\1er 19.
-l~S---A-single ciUrnlnaUon tournament,
wi t lt-csclt-fathtl"""'-comblnatlon '])laying
three games In ;i malch. -
.,
The iCCOnd fatallty was loni·lime Hun-
tington Beach resident Byron Thornton,
11. JloJlce said Thornton had parked his
c~r fn front of the Ziolkowski van. lie
was getting his fishing pole. out of the
trunk when Rowe'ua I mn1 d In J1s · _
fN THI
HAllOI AllA
llNCI lfi7 ' . -==----
COSTA MESA
646-4838
Vlln;-tll'IVmrtnntnhe parked cnr aM1-1='·'-" Moo •• Tlltrn. t to 1:301 l'rt. t to t :·5"'. t :JD t• 1
'Crushing Thornton. '--------------------~;,;.:; ______ ..:...._: __ .....:_:.:...:..:......:.:..:.:....:.:._::.__1
I, , •
I
I
I
I
I
-.'':.:':.:"'..:''::;· ..:J:.:'"';;:...:l..:2•..:l:.:•..:7:.:3 _...!HC!.... _____ _.:D::~:::IL Y Pl~OT :J
Sla il!g_ of Law men·
I DellY ,llotf Sh1fl PllOI•
TO SEVEN WAT~R AGENCIES SAN JOAQ_UIN RESERVOIR REPRESENTS EMERGENCY SUPPLY
F•ct That It Is Empty During Repair Raius Que stions About Paying For Non-9xistent Capacity
It took an Orange County Superior
Court jury, just 69 minutes late tttonday
to find that Carl Anders Eckstrom w8.s
guilty of first degree murder in the
slaylngs las t Jan. 4. o( two Los Angeles
County lawmen.
The panel in Judge William C. Speirs
--courtroom._,quick.l!l-£e.jected.....lhtL..tbeocy_.
that Eckstrom. 23, was in a state or
''diminished mental capacity" tvhcn he
used an automatic rifle to snurf out the
lives of sheriff's detectives Donald
Schneider and Carl \Vilson , both 40.
Judge Speirs ordered the jury to return
to his courtroom \Vednesday for the
opening of a hearing that will determine
Eckstrom's sanity at the time of the kill--
Bo1nb iii Ireland
Ki1j§ 6; People
Blow1i to Pieces
•
Convicted
in.gs. He ~s additionally pleaded not !t is alleged that Eckstrom shot three
guilty by reascn of insat1lt)'., pcrsoiis Jn a. parking lot before driving
Eckstrom, calm "l.nd c m P o s e d off to his Flight Street home where kt>
throughout the trial, displayed no emo-tion al tho-announcement of the jury'ii assembled an arsenal or wet1pons ;i.nd
verdict. He began discussing aspects of OOxes or anununitlon to prepare for the
his defense in the sanity hearing .,..,ith visit of lay.·men.
·Deputy w· .Defende Ron-.Butl•«-" ~Sdlneider \\'as-.Shot lbrpugh the scree
before the lasl juror had left the door as he tried to kl.Ck open lhe"fion"I--~
courtroom. door of the Eckstron1 home. Wilson wa s
The t.1idway City nlan faces two iden· tracked aCross th.! l~nvn by the young
tieal counlswof first degree nlurder filed gunrnan and cut down in a hail or bullet! rro1n the eutonlatic weapon.
in Los Angeles County for his alleged Ecks1ron1 was then dropped by a single
killing of two persons in a Cerritos shop-blast lroin Ora{lge Count y Sheriff's
pir~ center. Trial is scheduled for June Deputy Andy Ron1ero's shotgun. He has
27. fully recovered lrom those wounds.
Hopes Briglate1a
Secret Committee Set Up ·
-For UCI Hospital Funds
To Pay ot-Not to Pay
BELFAST (UPI) -A bomb-laden ~;r.
exploded in front of a nev.'spaper in the
town of Coleraine with such force today
that villagers "'ere blown to·bits. By GEORGE LEIDAL 1his year's budget, a UC spokesman in
Joaquin
By RUD I NIEllZIEl.SKI
01 tf\ti Ol llY Piii! 51111
Should a Huntington Beach electronics
worker about to sho"'·cr or a San
Clemente housewife ready to fix dinner
have to pay for a guaranteed y,•ater sup-
ply when the guarantee just Y."ent dry? .
That qucsl ion is being pondered today
_jy_ sevi;p Orange ~oast 'l\'atcr agenc:ics as
the result of a major crack th-irt ha1l shut
down the billion-gallon San Joaquin
Reservoir in Irvine. ·
To the coastal water agencies, San
Joaquin represented that guaranteed
v.'atcr supply. They paid for storage
rights reprcsCn ting a JO.day emergency
_supply in lhe C\1ent the major feeder line
from ~-lctropoliian \\'atcr-D i s t t ic t
(M\\'0 ) should rupturr.
The reservoir a lso serves as a backup
supply durin~ peak da;ytime \Valer use
hours aud sum1ner 1nonths.
Nov.· San Joaquin is dry for repairs but
the coastal y.·atcr agencies are still . being
asked to pay ror their storage .space.
Agencies affected include the Costa
i\tesa County \Valer District, l~wilington
Beach city water depart1nent. Laguna
Beach County Water District, South
Coast (SOutb Laguna) County \Valer
District and Tri.Cities ?\.funicipal Water
District in the San Clemente area.
11le question of the coastal agencies
paying for \vater stor!!gc space that i~n.'t
there could lead to a legal battle.
Some coastal di strict directors strongly
question why they should . pay and in
fact, some have passed up current blll·
ings.
On the. o1her hand. the Irvine Rant;h
\\1ater District. (J R\VDJ control\Crs of
Water
A police spokesman said at least six o r th• Dilly '"1'°1 51111 Sacramrnto said.
persons -four v.·omen and tv.'o men -S hances that UC lrvine·s on campus The joint conference committee was
died and 31 persons were injured in the teaching hospital funding v.•ill be ·in this set up \\'hen budget amounts voted by the
blast. But a doctor who attended the vie-year's $9 billion-plus state budget Senate :ind Assembly differed.
tims said: "There may have been mofe brighten d-toda I ·I t t
Debated
dead but the mutilations were so horrible t! y as egis 8 ors se up a Gov. Hcagan submitted a $9.25 billion secret study committee.
the reservoir. says the others should pay. Si mpson said his board "'ould meet on that it's difficuJt to add up the pieces." Three of the six member! of the joint bdudget la st January. The, Assern.bly pass·
After all, a contract is a contract. the ·question Thursday and expressed the Polic~ said the bomb was .planted in a legi'slative c0nrCrence committee on the e a $9.39 billion version and the Senate a
Cu rrently, tn.e fissure in the big San hope that the payment problem can be car oulside the Cole raine Chronicle in the $9.24 billion version. On Monday, the
Joaquin Reservoir is being repaired at <Jn resolved by negotiation. center of the to""11• 50 miles north of 1973-74 budget were members of the Assembly rejected on a 3 to 72 vole the
estimated.. cost of $349,000. The Irvine The same chord· .,..·as st ruck by Bill Belfast. Joint Legislative Committee on Teaching Senate's version.
d'·s1n·ct must pay lor that -th•'s pa"rt is H"•st_ mana•er of !he lrvm· e -Ranch "A warning was aiven in terms so Hosp•'tal · s1·1••g That body chatr' ed by Th . 11 -... ,. " &' .. , • • · · e action automatlca y required the
cle'ar, . . •. •· \Voter Di'stn·ct, \••ho ~·,·ntai'ns the vague and time so Short ,that there was . Assemblyman w1·111·e Bro"n J r (]).San • ..... · " · establishment or the· conference com· But-until ~hc'inl~t valves are re-open"C"d problem can be settled out QLcourt. ._only 10 minQtes between the warning and Francisco), recommended legislature ap-. .
-probably iA-October~or -Novcmber,,,,.the Hunst-explai!U!d that his .district has -the blast and-it-wa.HmpOssible--:-to...clear -proval 0r-u.c bond_spen0ing1ln a 20()::_bed m1t1ce. According· to .the state coo·
reser\'oir near UC Irvine remains a dry the objecting customers under contract. the area," a ·ponce spokesman ~~. _ campus.Jl05pilal, _ _$2 ;.ni!U_gn_ _v.:orth T _s 1 utfo1\-tliC1CgBlature-:most-act-Dlt'ibo,--.I
hole. "Our interpretation of the contract is Another car bomb exploded five community clinics and $9.5 million of\Jn. fThalDUdgeruy-June JS-=--FMday:-
J\lvin P inkley. director of the Costa that they have a legal obligation to pay," minutes later, wrecking a gas sta tion but prov·ements of Orange County Med ical T'ne \Cgislawrs hammering out the
htesa County Water District that holds he said. this time there was a warning and there Center, pending agreement bel\veen UC spending Priorities differences in the next
600-acre feet of storage in the J"elll"*, The Irvine Ranch \Valer District were no injuries, police said: and county supervisors on a long term few days in the closed conference cOm-
sums up their feelings this way: manager indicated that the capacity The deaths brought to 823 the nwnber agreement for UCI use of OCMC. Jnittee meetings, will be:
.. It's unfortunate that the slippage right holdCrs may wish to ma~e their of persons killed in almost four years of Budgeted for this year are $925,000 of -Assemblymen Brown, Frank Lan-
yiused-the crack and that the Irvine payments ··under protest," a legalism strife among Noz1hern treland's majority hospital planning funds and $6.S~µtillion tennan (R-La Canada), and Charles
Ranch \Valer Di.strict has tO spend all '''hich ""'ould protect their rights iii the Protestants, minority Roman Catholics, of bond moneys to begin the first \\1a~en (D-Los Angeles). Lanterman was
that money to repair it. But it's not our event of court action. British troops and the Irish Republican permanent laboratory and classroom a member oC Brown's teaching OOspita l
fault we're not getting any water. either." Not involved lfl the dispute is the cily Army (IRA ). building at UCI for the California College siting committee.
Pinkley S.'lid his di srrict has refused to of Newport Beach y,·hich maintains four. U t'I ti C I · Of-Medicine. -Senators Randolph Collier ( D • ·, mflke the last $60.000 payment and r.as n 1 rccen y, o e r a 1 n e .. a med . . acre feet ol storage rights in the predominantly Protestant town. has been If the hospital planning moneys are Yreka), \Valter Stiern (D-Bakersfie1d).
tu to its attorney, H. Rodg~r reservoir. Ne,vporl does not pay for its free of strife, police said. kept in thls year's budget, the remaining and Fred l\.1arler (R·Redding). Marler
Howell, for further advice. capacity,M0nhts because it has obtained M hi! B .. ba u · h $15 ·u· f th •·· ·1a1 Id ed B ' ·11ee U Eric Lovc,·oy, y.·ater superintendent !or h ean\v · e n t1sh troops t ed wit nu ion or e campus uv:.pt woo serv on rown s conuru as we . I cm through dedication. Most of Protestant sru·pe rs throughout 'londay follow next )'ear, UC officials expect, SinCc the legislative siting commlttee
l luntinnton Beach. said his department N " o ewport .Beach's e1ncrgency v.·atcr is n1·ght '" Bellast ·,n the second ru'ght of ·based on past budget;'"'" history:· voted onanimously to endorse the UCI-also had not paid its bi'll for 4~ acre f-t ed •• ••• I.IV' "'"" stor in the Big Canyon Reservoir.· r· ht' d t ·d th h't t l t The $9 5 nu'llio f d'ng OCMC CC!\! expenditures it is expected the or storage capacity, and like Costa Mesa Th 1g mg an roops sa1 ey 1 a cas . n or upgra 1 1 -, h<is asked for a deferred payment. "It e Sanf Joabequin Rescr\'oir receives its seven gunmen. by cutting its 515-bed actual capacity to three y,·ill continue to support them'..,
b'
•s become 8 \•cry d•'fli'cult ,,·tuat•'on for wh·ateMr Wrom t Color;ido River through Anny officers said at least a dozen 315 beds depends on the UCI-county the conference committee tack 1 es I e D. ·It \VEIS emptied in J anuary fl 'tt ' I I to I t . rd' t the bud I d' •a -....1; ..... by us. 1 personally. don't know what the he h . gunmen, 1 1ng rom p ace pace agreeme.n , acco 1ng o recom-ge ary 1sagreemen~ ex~
right or wrong of it is,'' he said. ~~·ne~ ,~~:Cdi~~~::~~s'' in the asphalt using modem high velocity rifles, fired at mend8tion of the siting. committee. That millions of dollars the amounts urged Cor
Donald Simpson. chairman of the lf';;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii.;i;;,;ii;i;ii;;i;:;,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~tr~oo~p~s~. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;mon~~ey~is~no~l~e~x~pcc~t~ed~to~be~i~nc~l~ud~ed~~in~~Vl~•~lr~v~in~e~c~a~m~pus~~· ;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;i;;;i;;;;;o
board fo r Coas tal ~1unicipal, said his ll
\\'Iller district has an overdue $20,000 hill
for 200-acre feet of storage capacity but
lhat the decision \\'het her to pay it is still
··up in the ai r." Coastal is a "paper"
agency thrit \Vholesalcs v.·ater to the
Laguna Beach, Sooth Laguna and San
Cle1~cntc area districts.
' Johnson . A Son
·.
Capo Stream Polluters
20th Anniversary
Get Fine From Judge
••
A South County !\1unicipal Court Judge
has -slapped a $12,444 fine on Owens
tllioois Inc. for polluting two streams
near S:ln Juan Capistrano \vilh oil and
greasy sil t earlier th is year.
J udge Blai r Barnette further required
tt-ie silica mining firm along Ortega
Highway to clean up the mess caused by
oily runoff water into Trampas and San
Juan Creeks.
The condition first was noted last
February .,..·hen "'orkmen dumped waste
water fouled Yt'ith oil and chemicals into
lhe creeks.
Se veral weeks later a dam holding
more or the water as well as a large silt
deposit burst.
Jury _Sel~tion __
In Officer Death
Trial Continues
Jury se\ectlon continued today ln the
Orange Ccunty Superior Court trial of a
man charged with fi rst degree murder
after a Tustin policeman died from a ri·
lie bullet fired by a challenged prowler.
Gary William Johnson, 37, Is ch:arg'ed
with the killing la!t Dec. 6 of patrolman
Waldron Karp, 31, one of two oCficen call-
ed to~the-Dlamond-Head Drive..are.a by ~
woman who said Johnson had fired a
number oC shots into her home.
It is alleged that Johnson used the
11ame rlne lo cut down Karp who by that
lime had been reinforced by two Orange
County Sheriff's deputies:
A shot fired fronr Karp's gun as the of·
fleer fell latally wound<d struck deputy
'flm Stewart, 27, ln the race Inflicting
minor wounds. •
Karp died 32 days later Jn a .local
ho.'pltal. His widow and Stewart have
11ued J ohnson In a Superi or Court civil
action for $7 million.
TI1at mishap caused the floodin g of
Ortega Highway and further discharges
into lhe creeks. -
The problem at that time was blamed
on heavy rains.
Then, on ~1ay 4, more asserted viola-
tions occurred.
The firm, ""'hich has been shut down
since the dam break, mined high-grade
silica and used oils and chemicals to
isolate the silica from unwanted
minerals.
Before it can operate again Barnette
ordered that the damaged creeks be fully
restored to the satisfaction ·of the
Department of Fish and Game.
Eventually, the mining firm plans to
redesign L!ystem_ct JX>nds_ which will
hold water that could be totally recycled,
instead or discharged.
Mother, Three
Children Fou11d
Brutally Slain
WILTON MANORS, Fla. (AP) -A J I·
year-old mother and three of her childrci:i
ha ve been found slain, all with their
throats slashed, police sal~ today.
Police said Unda Smith, her daughter
Karen. 7, sons Christopher, 11, and
Timothy, 9, were also brulally stabbed.
The bodies wc r fou nd by a 14-yeii.r-old
son. William, v.·hen he returned to their
home in tha t Fort Lauderdale subu rb
shortly before midnight Monday. police
said. ·
Officers said ~lfs. Smith, a divorcee
whose ex·husbend is In lhe Navy ln
Cnlltornia. l'.'OS found in the Yving room
near the body of ooe son. -,.
Clyde
l\IARl\. -lV • • • •
LI NC OLN CO NTI NENTAL
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' MERCU RY l\fARQ UIS . .
MERCURY .l\fONTEGO • •
MERC URY COUGAR
MERCU RY
l\fERCURY
COJ\'IET , ·.
CA PRI •
• • •
• •
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Big Savings !
Big Savings ! ·
Big Savings !
Big Savings !
Big Sayings ! -Big Savings !
Big Savings !
I
Dick
NOTE-
see Our Big Ad In The Pilot's
1Cl•ssif ied Section l'omor.row
With Anniv ers•ry Speci•ls On
All Our Used Cars As Well .
BIG SAVINGS ' ' • • EVERY CAR IN STOCK • • •
• •
llom• Of Th• New Car •• ,
"Golde n rOMcN'
• E NTIRE MONTH OF J UN E
HOronQ't Count1ls Tomilp of Fi11e Cari"
• • •
Home Of 11\t New Car • • •
''Golde " J'oae ch''
• ' I ,L
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/\ISO named aS defendants in that sult
are operators and employes of two Tustin
~l~--rettaurant:s who are accused ol serving
Jonnson drinks on the night of the klUlng.
Karen's bOdy was in a bedroom and the
fourth in another bedroorn.
Jo,oor bloodied &tea~ knives were. fi>und
In the house. Investigators said.
l
2121 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • 54;0-&130
Legal Fees
On the Rise
For GOP
' NIXON, ZIEGLER
DINE ON YACHT
WASHINGTON (AP) -Preoldeol Nix·
on and his pms ~. Ronald L.
Ziegler, dined aboard the Navy yacht Se.
quota on the Potomac River Mmday
evening.
, ~
Spaee Tests
Skylab 'Orbiting Factory'
SPACE CENTER, Housjon (AP) -beam welding and eiperiment with grow·
Skylab's astronauts fire up an tle.ctrlc i:n.g gallium arsenide electronic crystals.
fum~ce an<! an electron beam gun today Lala In the mission, the utronaulll will
to start a series of materials-procesatng practice maintenance techniques and Uy
Pil Co• · iJ tests that oould lead to a apace maoufac-'° make perlect spheres, variodS aU-,
I
t
WAsfuNGTON CAP! -President Nix-Ot p Ot luring-·· " . cunpositas and vaccines .,. · ' Erperts believe the test& oould -wn a · on's re-election committee has spent , multi·billion-dolla busJn 1 le..,-this For safety reasons, the astronauts . nearly a quarter-million dollars for legal . r ess. 8 m • ~ tbe experiments by remote con·
fees in less than a year, most of it to de-G-...,.unded• V A A century with otbltJng factori.,'Jll'Oducing ttoJ inside' a l>l'Olec!ed cllambel'.
• ecretar1at -r.nd4op-dficiat.-in-lawsutt arising-u..v . ,_~uaJlty____.,_.O.., • ...,. h lliru;ff.'Fli!li, ICii reoillOi\tOf-
f rom the Watergate break-in. supers~ maten~ls, ~Y round ,J;eneral Electric Co., which has invested
In it. quarterly report to the General Probes T ..!ndi·ng ball bearings., precJSlon optical ,...., m apace materials .,,..arch, 158!d: "II
Accounting Office, tbe Finance Com-JAi and pure vaccmes. · has been estimated that, by the end ol
mittee to Re-elect the 1President said 11IE PIONEERING materials teats this century, the total value of electronic Rides Again Monday it had spent $146,639 on legal MIAMI (AP) -The government has begin 89 Chari .. Conrad Jr., Dr. Joseph materials and biplogicals manufactured
fees in the past three months alone. grounded the pilot and oopilot of an P. Kerwiii and Paul J. Weitz whirl i,n space could·nm upward d. $50 billion."
airliner that was bound for Miailli through the 19th day of their 28-day HA '\'BURNERS DEPT. -Daughter is A CHECK OF all the committee's
a horse lover. If it stands on four legs reports since last July shows the total lntemational Airport but landed at a space odyssey.
and whinn·,·es, she loves it. No nag'is too spent on legal fees 50 far is $237,725_ smaller field eight miles away. Also on schedule today were conUnuing
The Federal Aviation Administration medical experiments and an earth humble to draw her attention. She could I . ul'I Ttlt11110to In a statement put out with the latest said Monday that the pilot of the United resources study that will coocentrate on
fall for a fu gitive from a glue factory. Conva e1et11g financial report, the conunittee said its Air Lines Boeing 727, Capt. James Bosse, urban development, water pollution and
As far as Daughter is concerned, she'd Doctors removed the second budget committee in Apl'il approved pay-and copilot Charles Melboume would not land use in the Chesapeake Bay area, in-
rather be out at some smelly stable, bullet from Sen. John C. Sten-ment of "legal .fees ian4 costs in con-be allowed to fly until an investioution of eluding Baltimore, Md., and Washington,
shoveling th fr · fancy clothes to nection with matters which are not the -o-D c • an ° in , nis J\olonday, and predicted a the incident is completed. · · some -oot-shot party or dance. People k al subject of .foniial cri.minal. charges in Jack Barker, FAA public . affai'rs of. The space travelers· were in ex""Oellent ff I r four to six wee s conv e~ perlorm·ance of functi'ons b ( I ) he 1 keep telling me that her a ect on o~ · · Y emp oyes ficer in Atlanta, said the investigation in· a th. E1cept for a few minor problems,
horses-will wane with a bit more aging. cence period. The Mississippi arising out of. their legitimate duties.'' to the incident should be finished within a . their patched·up space station was perk-
So far, however, I have seen no sign of it. Democrat was shot in a rob-The reference to formal criminal wek or two. IHe csaid &$se and ing along. "We've got a happy home up
Last night was a good example. bery last J anuary in Washing-charges apparently left the committee Melbourne face possible charges. here," Ccnrad reported.
ton . clear to pick up the tab for..its officials "It could be very serious," Barker Whether space manufacturing becomes
DAUGHTER CONFRONTED me in the represented by counsel before federa l said. "The pilot landed at the wrong a reality depends a great deal on the
living room upon my arrival from work grand juries., .. . airpo.rt. Fortunately this airport had a tests to be conducted by Skylab .. I and to
and hardly before I'd gotten the seat d T · ... Al~h the committ~e· did not sa,.v. . .so~. · rjm~;ay "200' feet whte-end a,lJ6o .feet Jong .. ··· a greater extent on th·ose bY the· ~kylab 2
\\'ann in the big chair, she frowned and Re . roopS the seven-man budget group ls known to lt could have been an airport a lot nnd J cre\\'S \\'hO are ·to in habit the
declared : include among its members finance com· shorter. and many things could have hap-laboratory for 56 days each later this
"You havoo't \VTitlen anythfng about n1ittee chairman Maurice Stans, former pened." year.
him " u • T • conunittee chainnan John Mitchell and The Boeing 727 with 62 passengers
"About \Vho?" -s~ng oxic Jeb S. Magruder, former deputy cam-al:>o:lrd landed Sunday night at Opa-Locka THE INITIAL tests late today \vere to
"You know who. Him. You haven't 11 paign director. Airport after receiv;ng clearance to land study the behavior of molten metals in
written a "':ord -in your space." -: ~at: -Miami 1hte·matiooar, said James \VeightleSsness·, e\'aluate the joining and
WILLIAM O. ARMSTRONG of the Of-
,J ice of Manned Space Flight reported
that work done to date "has convinced us
that manufacturing in space i s
technically feasible and that space
researdl in materials science and
technology is likely to pay off.
Hin space, we could prepare electrcriic
solids. and .otbe<. qiaterials we can-ooly
daydream about on eerth because of in-
terference from gravity.''
Nixon Ouster Urged
.,Ll'M'LE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) -The
Arkansas Gazette, wUu1er of two Pulitzer
prizes. has joined Sen. J . \Villi am
Fulbright (D-Ark.). in asking President
Nixon to resign. The Gazette said in an
editorial the \Vatergate disclosures
"leave the clear implication that the
President of the Uni ted States was nol
telling·the truth, or anyth.ing close to the
"Okay. _I give up. Who amoog your G A zz · ALL THREE HAVE figured prom· Frazier. FAA area coordinator. cutting of various materials by electron he.roes have I ignored now?" as-ies inenUy in Senate testimonies, civil 1.:..:.:...:.:.. ______________ _::_ _______ _c_ _________________ _
"Ob, Daddy. sometimes I really w_orry ' suits, or criminal investigations arising
h1.1th."
about you. You have ignored the greatest from the Watergate break-in and other ra~ horse that has ever Jived and you PHNOM PENH (UPI ) -Cambodian campaign activities.
don't even know it. I mean Secretariat, military authorities said today that Com· Between them, Magruder and Stans
that's 'who." munists used_ "toxic gas" in threeda~s of have run up legal bills or· $53,000 in the
"Aha, J alloold bsve figured it. Another fighting. outside Phnom Penh that killed past three months. "
one of your favorite haybumers. Look. four government soldiers and disabled 75 No fes were listed for law;v..ers • .__,vhy-.Shou,ld..l..MitiL.R.b!2Y.l~ta,!'iar_ _others . ·-• _ · . . . · representing Mitchell, who resigned last
-·"l'hat·slllfH!Hlll erl'the-sports-pages.-'llie .. ]jj'.".a-speciaLstateme~theJllilil,ary -·-year~•~<i!li!r·'1!1o'ilil!!i!"i'nirealf-in .. · -----~fune:IZ1973._~ _
1)adSjluthentic .Day. nag bas even been on the cover cJ. Time command ~lle.d the u~e of ga;i "another at Democratic headqliarters at the
Magazine. The Big Red ... The Super flagrant violation of rntemat1onal con-Watergate, but who remained as a COO·
Horse ... First Triple Crown winner in 25 ventions." sultant to the election committee.
years since Citation. Everybody's written ~vo Washington law finns represen·
about that animal. BUT FIELD REPORTS said some of ting stans have been paid $37,700_
the gasing could have been caused. ac-Stans has been tindicted by a Ne\v York
•1HE'S GEmNG more press t~an the cidentally by . ~nds of w h 1 t' federal grand jury in one case involving .
-Watergate hearings .. -Every time..he-gets~pbosph_otus.__wbich_i,s used . by m(rtar a..secret_$200.000..campaign_ cootributioo.-
a bath there are four reporters and three and artillery crews orliiilliS1Cles an Dy He was called to testify today before the
•
photographers .on hand to reoord the pro-spotter planes for marking targets. Senate Watergate committee, is a defen-
ceedings." These reports( said officers along dant in a $3.2·million civil suit brouttt by;
"Look Daddy. Maybe you cou1d make l-lighway 4, where the gas was allegedly the Democrats because of Watergate and
up a mythical race for Secretariat with used, have issued some or their troops has filed a counter-suit.
other winners of. the Belmmt Stakes. You with gas masks.
cwld select the fastest of them and put The conunand said the gas casualties
them in tbe field with Secretariat." were reported on June 7, 9 and 11 in the
"Like which ones?" area between Ang Snoul and Thnal
"Weli. you could talk about a field of TotWlg on Highway 4. .
seven others. 'lbey wouJd be Whirlaway A U.S. Embassy spokesman said
(1941 ), Count Fleet (1943), Assault the embassy could not contrim or deny if
( 1946), Citafioo , (1948), Native Dancer "toxic" gas was used on Highway 4.
(1953) Nashua (1953); and Sword Dancer t
(1959): •• " JN S . .\JGON, milit~ry spokeSff!~n ~aid
"FiM, Daughter. lf that ~·ill make you today that Communist truce v10labons
happy I might do that. fe ll to their lo,vest level in a week, but
"Don't 'bother.,,· reports showed 32 persons. killed in
"Why are You saying that nG.\v'!" hostilities across the country 1n the past
"SECRETARI.l\T would beat them all.
Secretariat ran the Befmont in 2:24 fia t.
None of those horses ran faster than
2:28. It would be no contest. Daddy.
You'd look silly_ setting up a race li ke
that."
"Oh."
"Maybe on the other hand you could
$Ct up a mythical horse race between all.
the whmers of the Triple Crown. That
would be Secretariat against Sir Barton,
Gallant Fox, Omaha, War Admiral.
Wbirlaway, Count Fleet, Assault and
Citation."
"Fine. Maybe I'll try that. Have you
9ee11 where [ left my pipe?"
-"DADD\', -YOU'RE not very sharp .
Secretariat would beat all those horses
too. He's the Super Horse of all time."
"Okay. daughter. f\faybe it would be
better if I don't write anything about
horses. I ~k out jn sneezes when I get
around barns anyway. But I'll make you
a deal. You think about your homework
and I'll think about Secretariat.
"But I'm not going to \\'rite about him.
So there."
I
24 hours.
Among the casualties were 25 Com-
munists reported killed in fighting in the
coastal highllinds and five civilians who
died in a mine explosion.
A Saigon command spokes man
reported 97 Communist· truce violations
in the 24 hours ending "at 6 a.m. today,
down 20 from the 77 reported the day
before the-fewest since the 85 repc>rted
Wednesday.
SOUTH VIETNAMESE infantrymen
killed 25 Commw1ists in five skirmishes
Monday near the coastal highlands town
of Dong Xuan about 250 miles north of
Saigon, the military command said.
'There were no reports of government
casualties .
Meanwhile, efforts by deposed Prince
Norodom Sihanouk to negotiate peace in
Cambodia have bee n turned-down by the
United States, State Department officials
acknowledged ~fonday.
Sihanouk was quoted during a visit to
Yugoslavia as saying he had approached.
a number of African and Aral> leaders to
extend a peace offer to erni' the war in
C8mbodia without a winner or loser.
MAGRUDER'S LA WYER, J a m e s
Bierbower, has been paid $15,000.
Magruder also is scheduled to testify
before -the ' Senate committee, and
re~y has agreed to plead guilty to
Watergate cover-up charges.
· Lawyers representing former cam-
paign ~reasurer· Hu'gh Sloan J r. have
been pajd $17,557. Sloan has given
numerous depositions in v a r i o u s
Watergate proceedings, but he re.signed
from his job s hortly after the \Vatergate
break-in and is not expected to face
criminal charges.
Yucca Tlieater
Cuts Off Jane
MIDLAND, Tex. (UPI) -The
Yucca Theater closed it o n d a y
because it didn't have anything to
show but ·a Jane Fonda movie.
The marquee above the theater's
entrance said "Closed. Refused to
Show Jane Fonda Picture" and the
theater's daily newspaper ad·
vertisement said the Yucca was
closed "For want of something bet·
ter to show."
A spokesman [or the o\vners said
the only film the theater had \Vas
"Steelyard !Blues" with J ane
Fonda and Donald Sutherland and
the theater could not get another
film to show because distributors
were closed during the weekend.
Storms Cool Eastern U.S.
~7Jrd -Rains-Hit· Ch·arle-ston, s~c., -Coastal Areas· -
•
Coastal Weather
Mos11y $Unny ttlday. Llllhf varlabte
wlncb nlQht and morning l'!:OUrs bac:om·
Ing Wtslfrly 8 10 15 knoll 111 lfftfllOOhl
!Odty and WtdnlHdly. Hl111! tod1y 75,
Coaltal ltmi>trllurtt rartQe from •1
to 6f. 1nlalld lfm1>tr1tu•a' r1not from
60 la 7l. Wal~ lemoerarure 64.
Sun, ltloon,, Tides
TUESDAY
Stcand l!IO h .......... 1:26p.m. 2.1
Sl!'COf\d low ......... 7:.SO p,m, .5.1
WEONISOAY
Fltst_h!~_!I ._;········~·· 0:40a.m. l .• ~'" '!OW .•....... ., ... 3:09 •.m. O.' SKO!ld hlf" ., •. ,,.,.._. 1:10 p.m. 5.t
SKOl'ld law ........... , 2~01 p.m. 2.1
Sun llllMI l :•l a.m. Sfb l:OS p,m,
Moon IUMI S:•I p.m. ,.,, 3; 13 1.m.
'
,
"
. .
Dewar Ir never varie•.
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'Dewars ''White Label:' . -. -
'Dads jluthentic Scotch.
~..: .·
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i " ... I •
VOL. 06, NO. 163, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JUNE 12, 1973 -
. Coast Caper -. ,~ .
Meat Hijacking
.
Suspects Seized
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Quintana, .40. and George Sald<IJla, 20,
0t .... oaity ,.11e1 sr111 both of 13271 Adr ian Circle. Garden A quartet of suspected 111eat hijackers Grove.
•re in jail today in connection \llilh theft oC a truckload of 20 tons or bee( steaks They \Vere booked at nearby Newport
worth $l20,000 afld delivered 10 a Beach police headqparlers and then tum·
Newport Beach frozen food locker ·Mon· cd over to FBI agents to face federal
charges, day.
The rendezvous arranged for sale or Investigators in a team headed by
the Colorado-bred beef at what in-Newport Beach Police Detective Capt.
Vtstigators described as the ridieulously-Don Oyaas ~aid the meat caper -.one ~f
Jaw-price of-$1~50-,,er pound-was..,,.aided t_t!J_ej;lrges\_1~ .~!It Sootl!ern Cal1~0.!D_.!_8 . -~-,poui _4 ;).m.J>y d!!ect_ive.s on stakeout. history -or1~1nated abo_ut qne w~Jr: ago.
Newporf BeacJi pOJfcc, l"Bt'lrcnlS"'llnd 4 -loeal ~nessman-told..of-bemg .. ap..
Orange county "District Attorney's 'in-proached with an offer of 4-0,000 prime
vestigators swooped dov;n on lhe steaks ror sale at $1.50 per pound, about
suspects at the Harbor Food Locker at half the going commercial rate.
30th Street and Villa Way. ' The machinery for the raid was set in
The locatlon ·where lhe four suspects mo!ion a_t that time, while Costa ~esa
were taken into custody an~ ;the stolen ~hce sa_1d today they had ~I~ received
ome
Rooftop Bla:e
meat and hijacked refrigerator truck 1nformat.1on . about a susp1c1ous meat
recovered it about-three blocks from 1rans_j.ct1on_ 1~-the \Yorks. .
police headquarters. , They pas.sea th~t lnfonnat1on on --t~
Booked on suspicion of theft from ao Newport Beach _pohce when the ~ach c1-
inters1ate sl'lipmcnt were Andre ··Bill" ty _was determined to be the intended
Newport Beach fireman battles blaze on· roof of
-Mrs-,~Ru_th Capjerog;-1700 Highland Drive. She said
she· was working in her kitchen shortly before 3
_ p.m. ~day when she noticed smoke billowing past
the window and went outside to investigate. Fire
caused an estimated '10,000 in damage to attic and
roof of Harbor Highlands :irea. home. The cause is
still under investigation. '
Harvey, 32. of 1020 Cabrillo Park Drive. delivery_ spot . _ -,.,-()
Santa Ana: Jeffrey Gilchrist, 29, or 220 l11vest1gators sa_1d_ l,hc De.er snipped
City Blvd. \Vest. Orange; and 1-lenry rro1n ~1onfort P~ck1ng Co. 1n Greeley .
-----·----...... Colo., \\•as destined for food broker Ne,vp~rt to Tap Rese1·ve "' ~ Daniel A1acca, of Bur'bank. who arranged
Ull'l T ..... le
DENIES WATERGATE ROLE
GOP Fund R•iHir-Stans
Stans Testifies
He Was Una,vare
Of Violations
WASHINGTON (AP)·-Maurice H.
Stans, . blocked in nn effort to a\'oid
Watergate l estlmony noW, today denied ·
..t1lowledge of the wiretapping rai~,
'political sabotage or violation of any
campaign laws. . -
1'he former secretary of Comme~cc
and fundral ser !or President Nixon con-
ceded only that thete might hove been
ZIEGLER ADMITS ERROR
ON BRIEFING-Story, Pago 12
"some unin.tended technical ''iolatlons"of
the.new <1isclosure law. (Related story,
Page 4)
Stans appeared nt the televised IU?ar·
logs .of the Senate's \Vatergate in-
vestigating committee, whic.h. rejected
his lawyer's plea that Stans be spru-cd
the "inevitable klieg light 0£ publicity'!
be(Qre hi1 New. York trial. .
, Earlier, the comn11lte& heard a former
Nixon campaign worker Prom Orange
County testify he had been told that John
N. Mitchell, while atlll attorney general,
had 1>een1 shown !limed cople3 of private
correspondence Jrom.Jhe._cnmpalgn or
Stn. Edmund~ S. Musk kl , at that time
lrontrunhcr for the DemocrL.tic. ~re!ldCq·
tlal nomination. .
ln court, U.S. Dlstrlcl Judge ,John J.
Sirica _clcarcd the way ror tire com.1nittec
tQ.._tak~ t.e.stimony. und.cz: ltl),rnuriity, rron1
two key witntsscs, ousted Whtie Hous~
counse l John \V. Dean 111 anrl rorn1cr 1 ·Nixon ..campa ign de)lul)' Jcb Sluart
!See ST1\NS. Pnge3 .1
I
I
its sale to a barbecue restaurant chain.
The prime beef was being ship~ to a
restaurant chain for Monday delivery
when it was stolen o,1er the "'eekend io
Burbank. The tractor-trailer l'Ot'ltaining
the meat. had been parked on the street
not f11.r from the driver's home.
~ -~ ' ~ 1~.,,.,. .\,..., -• • ... "J'
To Balance .'7.4 Budget
Police detective Reed Gloshen told the
Daily Pilot the local businessman had By L. PETER KRIEG
been Offered the large supply of prime · or."" Daltr ll'n.t s1.n
meat for $1.50 a poWld, a price only half Reaching int.o reserves to balance the
the goi~g rate. . - - -budget Newport Beach councilmen Mon-
The 1nfonnant was agatn called on d 1 'ht ed I 7 5 ·1r d Monday. He was told by the caller that ay n g approv a 1 · mt um spen -ing program for fiscal 1973-74. another party had a large supply of meat The bUdget is .., million more than the and "wants to move it now." .,., The ·police were in!onned and by this current Year, and is $1 million more than
lime reports or the Burbtlrlk heist were the budget originally proposed by City
coming in to verify that indeed suCh a~ ~tanager J;lobert I;. Wynn. --
large shipment had been stolen. Negotiat'ed salary increases costing
The investigation team headed by $800,000 and ad d i t i o n a l capital im-
Capl. Oyaas and including Sgt. Don provements approved by councilmen
Picker, detective Tom Shearn and are responsible for most of the boost .
Gloshen began to fonnulate a plan for The largest· single expehditure in the trapping_the.._~ meat thieves. budget is $1 million for a new police sta-
The c:fller telephoned aga111. suggesting lion-on Jam~ --
lh is time the merchandise could indeed The new · budget will deplete city
have been stolen. surpluses by $600,000 in all funds.
When he was tolsf the police already although-the general fund surplus this year of $'800,CNXI is expected to be about knew of his offe r. he agreed to cooperate. the same next year. The money will be
He relayed an order or 20,000 pounds of put in a new "stabilization fWld ," sort of
meat and scheduled the NeWJX>rt Beach an emergency savings account.
delivery. Overa ll, 'however, city reserves arc ex-
Detective Shearn was to pose as the pected to drop from $4 .5 million on June bu~~fi~e did not disclose the identity o[ 30 to $3.9 million as of June 30, 1974, ac-
the local businessman or the contact man cording to Finance Director George Pap-. pas.
who agreed t.o help trap the meat Pappas said this is partially because
1fileves. $1.2 million will. be transferred into rhe
They said shortly after the ' a~ general fund from other accounts.
pointment time 1 Gilchrist and Harvey General fund mooey is used for various
drove up in new luxury cars. followed operating an<t capita] expenses.
almost immediately by Quintana at the In adopting the budget, councilroen
wheel of the stoleil truck, accompanied also approved 1973-74 pay contracts for
by his helper, Saldana. the city's nearly 600 employes. Pay
Federal investigators wrapping up the raises ranged from about five percent for
probe today tmie revealed a second, nremen to 7.6 percent for policemen.
similar hijacking involving 40,000 pounds .Pay raises . for departm ent heads
or pork fieisted from a Vernon packing awarded by Wynn averaged about 7.2
plant. · pereent. -~----~-
The theft from Hoffman Brothers Joe., \Vynn, himself,.was given a 10.8 percent
ir.volvcd a $20,000 loss, investigators said. boost by councilmen Monday night as
they raised his salary from $31,600 to
f35.000 annually.
City Attorney Dennis O'Neil got a raise
from $26,500 to $29,000, better Ulan nine
percent, and City Clerk Laura Lagios
won a hike from $15,600 to$~, better
than 12 percent.
Pappas said the tax rate for next year
'"iU remain at the current $1 .20 per $•00
assessed valuation, although city officials
\Varned that taxes will go up be~use
assessed valuations will be raised this
year by Orange County · Assessor Jack
Vallcrga.
This prompted Councilman John Store
_to urge the city to go to the
lntergovcmmental Coordinating C.Ouncil
e1nd encourage all government agencies
to try to cut taxes next year to give pro~
erly owners some tax relief.
" ince _a.s_~s.s.ecL _'ialuati ons a n d
therefor e taxes are going up," Store said,
"! \\IOuld like to see the city through the
Intergovernmental Coordinating Council
hold the line nex t year so a drop in ~
lax rate can be effected next year
throughout the county and the school
districts."
Councilmen adopted the budget after
an in~epth review that began shortly
after Wynn submitted it April L There
\Yas no one in' the audjence Monday night
\Vho had anything to say about it during
the ronnal public hearing. that preceded
adoption.
Most capital projects this year., besides
!he ne\v Police station, involve road con-
struction.
BalOOa Boulevard will be widened from
West Coast Highway to 44th Street and
San Joaqu in -Hllls Road-will -be widened -
from MacArthur Bou I e v a i: d to
ISee BUDGET, Page !l
Irvine Firm Wins 2 of 3
Promont6ry Bay, Ariother Project Gairis Approval
-Dy CANDACE PEARSON ·
Of ,... DlllY ll'ltlt , ....
ThtY trvine Compan.Y got the go-ahead
on two Ne,vport Beach waterfroot proj-
ects rt1onday but was tcmporartly stall·
«! on a third by the South Coast !t•&!ollil
Zone Co~rVatlon Commlssloo.
Orange County's largest tingle land·
owner was granted an exemption frorn
ne• coastal permit procedures to l1nlsh
!IS Promontory Bay· development.
Exemptions .are given lo projects that
had necessary local · permlta .and were
al rcadr under way when Prop. 20, the
coa~ta Initiative, became law Nov. I.
The-company had necessary approvals
by 1970 to create 61 wnterlront-lots W1lh
l\\'O public plaias and nn J l·aare bay op a 2G-acr~ S:ltc -tllong B1y11idc Drive. Work
• began In 1971.
A nearby: nc \v l ~\line Compa~ project
t
-so condom iniwn units and 77 boat slips
co.lied "The Ccve"_. -also won a permit
from the South Coast Commission.
The 12·member body, which has permit
authority in the 1.000 yard coaslal zone of
Orange and · Lo,, Angeles counties,
unanimously approved the nve-acre proJ~
ect, near lhc Balboa Jsland Bridge.
It wtll feature a public walkway along
lliC bo)'lront to the bridge and a cenlcr
view corridor !rom the street.
The compa.ny'1 proposed reconstruc-
tion of .Baysbores Marina ln this sa1ne
area was at first denied by tho con1-
mlsalon. The vote was 6 to 4 \Yilh Com-
missioner Rimmon 0. Fay of Marin:l d I
Rey abstatning. -,
The project needed elg'ht votes ror np.
.proval ~AUSC it in vo lves .dredging o(
th o c.han.nel to remove bulll·UP slit .' -
"1l'~ bcCn· impossible for n1arine
organisms lo establish t he ms el v es
because they keep dredging tbe bay con·
linu~lly," Fay. a !Jlarine biologist, obi..._
jccted. • ~
The commission later agreed to
rccoosider the project ·when the company
brJngs in more information on eiistence
cf marine Hfc.
Larry ~1oorc. Irvine Compaey general
planning administrator. said he "'ould
"like the opportunity to have them
(biologists\ look---under th&-water-and
come back."
Voling ln!tlally against lhe marina
l\'Crc Commissioners Carmen Warschaw
of Los Angeles. Don \Vllson of Torrance.
Robert Rooney of Huntington Beach and
Don Brighi of Ln Habra. . •
SJU!ng with lht company:,S. idea were
Con1ml!.c;lonrrs Art tlolme$, . ol · San
IS.. GO.AHCAD, l>agt !I
•
Costa Mesa Puts
€la~· on_ County
Air· Ji'ctcility
Costa Mesa is staking its claim on
Orange County Airport.
City councilmen Monday night an-
nounced their in tentions or annexing the
airport by petitioning the Local Agency
Fonnation Commission (LAFC) to· plcice
it within the city 's "sphere of influence-.\_'
The LAFC will bear t"he petition at 2
p.m."Wednesday.
~layor Jack Hammett said today the
unanimous action or the c o u n c i 1
represents the city's desire to place its
boundaries around the airport "at some
future date." He declined to ·speculate
\Yhen the annexation would take place.
Key reason s supporting the "sphere of
influence '' petition are that the county-
operated airport ir; c:>ntiguous to the
boundaries of Cosla Mesa and that it is
served by lhc Costa Mesa County \Yater
District and the Costa ~tesa Sanitary
District.
Planning Director \\'illiam Dunn said
the airport represents a large tax base.
making annexation desirable for Costa
Mesa. F'urther, he believes placing it
Wlder municipal jurisdiction would give
Costa ~1esa greater control over flight
operations. · ·
Donald . Mcinnis, mayor ol Newport
Beach, was not available this morning
for comment on Cosla Mesa's petition
with the LAFC. Newport Beach also
"'ants the airport within its zone of in·
fluence .
Mayor , Hammett. who joined in the
unal\imous claim-staking vote, said the
~irpo___1 could be "lucrative" for .Costa
1\iesa but that he Was a!So cOrfctmed
. about ttie possibility of increasing federal
and state regulations arrectlng general
aviation.
"General a\'iation amounts to 87 per·
cent ot the airport's business and 'if it
should drop off, there 'vould be-1lQ
revenue and \\'C still would have an
ail"port to \YOrry about.'~ he said.
Cotmty A 'vards
Com1 Contract
A $2.465,500 contract for construcUOn of t™: Harbor Judicial ,District's Court
budding 1n Ney,-port Beach was awarded
loday by the Orange County &.rd or •
· Supervl.s<>ra.
Coasttte Builders of Long Beach were
the low bidders for the structure ,to be
erected On Jamboree Road north of Cam·
pus _Dr:lve. _:_-
The board also voted that COMtrnction
will be financed through the use of
federal revenue sharing runm which ~re
now .available.
Tho project Is to bo completed by
SCptembcr or 1974. There will be ~ighl
courtrooms, iudges' chambers, jury
rooms and orrrce1 in !he t\\'Oottory slruc·
ture. •
•
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~
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
N TEN CENTS
lrviI1eBid
Overlays
--'
Park Offer
8y \VJLLIAl\t SCllREIBER
'Of 1111 D•lll' ~Ji.t 51111
The Irvine Company will file next
month for . special pklnned communit y
residen1ial zon ing on nil its vacant land
around Upper Newport Bav in Newport
Beach. it was learned todaf.
The planned communilics \viii incl ude
v.·ctlands and shoreline the company has
already offered t~ public agencies to buy
as a permanent 'vildlife refuge. But com-
pany officials insist the zoning move is
not an .attempt to force government's
hand to bUy the land. . ·
'
..
Larry Moore, Irvine general planning
administrator,~ said all -the-zoning will -:--
coi:iEqrm_ to .:.the -recentfy. adopted_ re-~
qull'cments of ·the· city's general f>lan • •
land use element. ~
"N(!w~ that the city · has indicated
general plan zoning on that previously
ur:iclassified l~nd, they have to come up
with the zones," Moore said. "We are
\\·orking with the planning staff to zone
the property." ·
Moore -said the company~s planned
community proposals \Viii probably be
fileQ with the city during the first part of
July.
The property that will get new zoning
includes the 7~acre Castaways Point
parcel on Dover Drive, all the vacant
land above Westcliff and Dover ·Shores
and tbe large piece or land between Park
Newport and the Newporter Inn.
Planning commissioners .at lbeir last
meeting rejected an. Irvine Company re-
qutst to buJld a seven-ac.re commercial
strip along Dover Drive at castaways
Point because it didn 't conform to the
general plan.
The plan requires zoning that will allow
some hotel and restaurant use on lhe
Castaways site but llmil! the residential
density to eight units per acre.
The company wants to b u i I d
apartments and townhouses that would
come closer to 15 units per acre density
ii bUl!t. -
The. large open area. above Westcliff.
which includes the proposed \vildtife
refuge land, will probably be zoned for
singl~family residential µses in the plan-
ned community document . Moore_ said.
Rodney Gunn, Newport Beach ad-
vanced planning director, said the
general plan shows !he desired use for
that land is open space but the open
space requirement is conditional.
""We said that jf it is impossible for the
land to be acquired as open space that it
be developed with the most desirable
private use ," Gunn said . "In that case. il
would be houses with a density of six
units per acre or less."
' '
•
strictly as open space beca cent /
Gunn ·said the parcel can·~· zoned
court rulings have made it illeg l to ~___./ l~d for anything but legilhnat resi"'aeh-
t1al, commercial or industrial uscS':"' '
Moore sakl the requirement to put a
legitimate zone on the y,•est bay land
makes it tmlikely that lhe planned com-
mwlity zoning effort could be interpreted
as a move to force the county or stale-in-to buying the land.
Gunn agreed, saying 1.he company is
doing a job the city would have to do
an)'lvay. "
"Their offer to keep the land open
depends on lf the public Y.'ants &o buy it "
Gunn ~id. ·~y aren't zoning it wifh
(Set BAClt llAY. Page ZI -
Orange Coast
Weathel:'
It'll be mostly sunny on Wednes-
day -if you live in the inland
areas of Orange County. Other,vise
mostly cloudy and hazy along lhc
beaches "'ith highs of 10, rising to
75 inland. Overnight lo"·s in !he
&Os.
INSmE'\-ooA y
Brltl.$1L mtdiun, claftn.s Ltl
Barktr l1as bctt1 {011tacted and
that ''ht'! nlti:e a1W well ;,,
a.110,ller world.'' Ste stor11, Page 12.-
All!! L....,t lJ Mtv1•• ,,
MYl11al ll'llfMlt II
NlllMl•I ......... 4 °'" ..... (tlllll'f ,
·-·· 1 .. 1, Ji.di M••left 1•11 '-"l•tfrfl It .,_.,,,.. ,,
w,11Mr • 4 .... ,. .• ""'' ,,.1, w,, .. "'""'' •
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11
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•• DAILY PILOT N -
Woman, 75,
Unscatl1ed
-
Tuesd,.1, Juno 12, 197l
DRIVER GETS
A.LL THE BRAKES
llD!I l&teslas drove all the woy lrom
Sanoa Ana to her job In Newport Beach'•
Beacon ,:i: neighborhood Monday ·and
found e pouring from the rear
. -
Off·icinl,
Aide Called
. ~. . . .. . . . . -·
Newport Council Action
H.,.e in brief are me)or actions taken Monday by Ncwporl Beach cowicil·
men:
' Judge Bars·
Rest1·iction
h1 C1·ashes • wheels of her car UPon arrlval1 The distraught woman eallea the F~e
Department and men •rrfvblg on the
scene quickly dlagn~ the problem and
elimina ted it. They 5howed her how to
'Slickers'
BUDGET: Told City Manager Robert L. Wynn he can spend lt7.5 mllUon
next lllcal year, f3 million more than this year.
' Of Coverage
A 75-year~ld North liollywood woman
miracu1ously escaped injury Monday
•---~~·hel)..her big lflXU!l'. sedan r.oomed out or
control across East sr 1-ngKway 1
Corona de\ Mar -twice -colllding with
lhree other cars and a tree .
The police rCport descri6ing the series
0£ crashes, y,•hich left Jessie L. Hatfield
lra'.pped in her car "''1th the doors sprung
shut, listed her direction of travel as
north-south.
Jnvestlgatcrs said the messy mishap
\\'hich littered Janes of East Coast
lligh1,1,•ay \lo'ith bent metal. gla~ and
other debris. began about 3 p.m. as l\.1rs.
Hatfi eld backed dov•n Jasmine Avenue.
She entered the busy highway, police
said, resultirig in a ccllision ,.ith a car
driven eastbound by Gene R. Cocco, 28,
of Cardiff by the Sea.
Shaken by this, police said, f\.trs. Hat-
field's ca r continued on southbound
across the highway, jumped a curb, skin-
ned 12l ncties of bark ·ofr a ·pa:rkway"tree
and ca.me 10 a halt. ~ Shifting from Reverse · rive,
however, the car shot back a Coast
llighway again -this time northbound
--careening off another eastboWld ca r.
The l!atfield auto smacked the second
car, driven by Steven E. Graser, 19. of
2942 Alla Vista Drive. Newport Beach.
and then crashed into a parked car
v.·hose owner was not named.
1'amage-·io the parked car ~
moderate. while all other vehicles in· •
volved sustai ned major damage, ac-
cording to police.
..,-·.·--0 oBy, that was a mess," marveled of-
. -rrcer Gary Lee.
Newport Beach Fire Department
personnel rescued Mrs. Hatfield by
prying agart the \\Teckage of •her car
with a device called a ram bar.
•
release the ca r's emergency brake . Uy TO:'tl BARLEY 01 lh• 01Jly ,lltl S"lf
\llestminsler cllL o!ficinls Derek Two ·Q.ele-cte·_,J -r.1c11'1unnei3n<1 TacfFuj1ta were ran · ..,:, t U cd today as "city slickers \\'ho took on a
For Newport
Pla1ining Vriit
naive fam1 boy" by a prosecutor who
urged an Orange County Superior Court •
jury to return a quick verdict <lf guilty
against the accused pair.
Deputy D i .s t r i c t Attorney ?-.1ichael
Capizzi. concentrating tnuch of his final
argument fire on forn1er mayor ~tcWhin
ney, 40, told the jury in Judge John Flynn
Jr.'s courtroom that lhe lwo week tria l
"really boils down to whOm you care to
The appointment of tv;o planning com·
mi~ioners and changes in the makeup of
al: city comn1ittees "'ere made by the
NeWTVV"l Beach City Council ~londay ··,..... believe." night. Attorneys Hall Seeley, 37, 2833 Carob ''Do you believe the story of George
St., and James Parker, 39, 2327 Arbutus Murai, a simple farmer who had a lot' to
St., \\'ete appointed to the Planning Com-lose and nothing to ga.ln by telllng his
mission to replace Commission Chairman .tale before. the Grand~ Jury or do you GordOn GIUS a:nd~Commlssloner-Wltllam B. Martin. The appointments are seen as believe the story of a man (McWhlnney)
an attempt by the council to balance off who brazenly ·said he an·d sis: other per·
an anti-developer trend on the com· sons control1the Orange County Board of
mission. . . . . -... Supervisors?" Capizzi asked.
Th.e COU!1cil also appointed. utility e~-Capizzi told the jury he felt he had ecutive Bill van Esch , 49, of 110 Via ,. Orvieto, and ~1rs. Evelyn Hart, 2916 Clay proved "beyond any doubt that stra\\I·
Street to the Parks, Beaches and Rea-ea-. berry grower Marai l''as \vamed by OOth
lion Commission replacing David Tingler defendants that it "·ould take a. $10,00Q
and Rolly Pulaski. payment if he wished to retain any hope ~fr:;. Faith Vogel, 404 ll2nd Stree~. was at all of continuing to Cann the rich 215 appct1nted to the Board of Library
Trustees replacing Olarles Sword, and acres of ~file Square Park.
Oren L. King, 64, o( 406 Riverside Avenue Murai testified during the trlal that one
was re-appointed to the Ovil Service . oI th9S6 payments was made in the form
Board. King is former City Manager of of a ss.ooo check in favor or county
Downey, f Supel'Visor Robert Battin's campaign All appointments were ror our year fund.
terms. . The second, in cash, was handed over
PAY llOOSTS: Told Wynn he can spcnd 135.000 on himself, boosting his
salary $3,400 from $31,600 a year: hiked-City Attomey Dennis O'Neil Irom--
$26,500 I<> 129,000 and City Clerk Laura Lagl0$ from $15,600 to 117,SOO,
NEW OFFICIAl.S: Made appointments to various city eo-mmiaslons whicb
included the 31i~&. 2.f. twi Ja~.r.ers toJ!:lDnning commbsion....The)'.JU'cJQrmc
par :SOOSn.f c a1nnaiilra11 seely anaJames Parker, a direclor of the Newport
lfarbor Chamber of Commeree.
' INSPIRATION: Delayed action for two more Weeks on proposed construc-
tion on lol adjoining Inspiration Point in Corona del ?.tar.
COl\U\1mEES : Ordered si\!e of all ad hoc citJzen committees reduced to
seven memben, one member to be appointed by each councilman.
OYNAl\tITE: Ordered immediate ball to all dynamiting In Newport Beach
pending s1aff review of ways tG regulate explosives.
Hard lolJ -io Fill
Second Mru1 Turns Down
Newpori Traffic Post
Vic\\' :ilso dccided\the: move "'asn·1 \\'Orth
his \1•hile.
WASHINGTON (Al'! -A federal
judse todey denied a motion by special
.ll¥<£U\O(. 4!;~ < t~t _ Id
have restricted news coverage ot the
testimony of key witnesses before the
Senate Watergate committee.
Cox later issued a statement sayln,I he
will not appeal the judge's ruling.
"I regrcl the outcome, but to press the
legal argument further would rl11k unduly
delaying p~ngs and dl\'ert atttntion
fron1 essential tasks,'' Cox' said.
U.S. Dist. Court Judge John J . Siric:.i
issued his ruling in connec1jon with a re-
quest from the conunitt.ee for immunity
for ousted White !louse couruiel John \V.
Dean 111 and Jeb Stuart Magruder .
former deputy director of Presldent Nl.1.-
on's campaign committee.
Sirica granted immunity from PJCS·
ecution for Dean and Magruder on the !
basis of the tcstin'IOl'ly either man gi\'es
the committee. And he refused t4 attach
tonditions requested by Cox. -~
At the same tilne. Sirica ordered Dean
tt1 go before lhe \Vatergate grand
jury \\'ithout immunity . •
Lawyers for Dean· moved Monday to
quash a summons directing Dean to
testify before the grand jury. In etfect,
Sirica denied the ir motion. \Vith all the hue and cry about soaring
unemployment rates, Newport Beach city
officials thought it would be easy to find
a new traffic engineer !or about $18,000
per year:
In· oral argument on that motion ~1on-
The problem in finding a traffic day. lawyers for Dean said he would
engineer who \\'Ould be responsible for plead the 5th Ameqdment pri\lilege
But the task of filling the post left \la-
cant six months ago by Robert Jaft'e
proved itself a major headadte this week
wheo the second man to accept the job in
a month turned it down at the last
minute.
finishing and implementing the city's against self-incrimination 10 all questioi:t~
general plan traffic study has forced from the graod jury if forced to appear .. .1.
Wynn to reassess the entire office. Cox asked Sirica to require that the,
Wynn said the city has several Senate committee hear testimony from .
alternatives. p:itenlial Watergate def ... -ndanU either in ,
"If the position is to be filled, we have closed session or at least withoot radio
to start recruiting all over again because and lele~ion coverage. \
our list is oo good anymore,'' he said. Sirioa's ruling denying Cox's motion
"We can also re-evaluale the whole of. opened the v.·ay for resumption · of the
--.. -..._.
The~ncil ch!'"!!~ its ~e !or to E'ujita._34, sboi;!ly before. dlstJict at,
_ making ~~~~~!'ts· ':'nd~r_Jo~y_'..l! investi ators moyec:L in to a"!st
lhe new sysfemi', memliiii'SliljJllirthe the city planner before going on to b0o1C
Harry 'Itlomas, a 30-year-old civil
engineer for the city of West c.ovtna, told
lhe city last week he'd take the job for
$18.100 per year -lhe very_ top ol tho
··_scale....... -· _...,.. ._
fi<:.e to see if the duties can be reorgan~-hearings today within the format under ed~without a ttiffi,C. etlgiDeer bl!.l .'-''ilb.: ~hishJl>.£Y · hav1~~)>een-~-~~;=
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From Page 1
GO-AHEAD ...
Clemente, James Hayes, Don Phillips
and Russ 1'ubley, all of Long Beach,
Judy Rosener of Newport Beach and
Louis Nowell of Los Angeles. Absent
from voting was Ronald Caspers of
Newport Beach.
A few of the negative commissioners
were swayed less by Fay's "microscopic
biota" than by Newport Beach resident
Donald Reagan's argmnent that the
marina should be removed completely.
Regan. of 2588 Bayshore Drive,
criticized debris in \he harbor, noise
from boots and commercial use or the
land, which he sald "discombooberates"
a residential area.
Re favored building sing)e-family
homes on the site. The company propose!
132 boat slips and a 118-ca.r parking Jot in
the remodeling.
Moore said the reconstruction has been
approved by ·Newport Beach, Orange
County Harlxlrs, Beaches and Parks
Commission, the federal Environmental
Protection Akency, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Admini!tration, the
state water Resources Board, and the
U.S. Department of Interior fish and wild
life division.
The final green light must come from
the U.S. Army 'Corps or Engineers, he
said, which is awaiting okay from the
coastline commission.
'lbe three largely successful a~
plications were the first Irvine Company
projects before the new commission.
"The Cove" project is al the former
location of the Villa Marina Hotel ,
'removed in 1970. \Vlth a density or 12
units per acre and heights of 28 feet, it
meets all city reQuirements.
It was praised at the commission
meeting Monday · in Long Beach by
League or Woen Voters representative
Ida Bliss •as a "first-class job."
Prisoners Rampage
BANNlNG (AP} -Windows were
smashed and fires were set in three bar-
racks and a re(:reaUon room by inmates
at the BaMing Road Cam p before 20 of-
ficers quelled the disturbance, authorities
said MOnday.
Oll:AN•I COAST N
DAILY PILOT
Tiit .Or.,._ CM" DA1LY PILOT, •fltl wltlc:tl
it comllt ..... th• NllWl·Pta .. If PUltlldlMI 1rY
Ill• Or11>99 coa11 P111:1u,~1no c-nv. s...
fllt tllllloM lrl P\1611111111, MIW'llUY fllrOYtfl
Frlcl•Y, for Colli Mtw, NfWC!lrl 119¢11,
HUfttlnttor1 ll1K hlf1111n111n v11i.r, LHurlfl
B11ch, 1 .... •n•l '9cld!1otck •llCI San Ct.Ml'n"/
Ian Jul~ <:eo!tlr1n11 A •lngt1 reelan•I
fdll;o.i lt Pltbltthfd $1turo1v• 111C1 $unct1v1.
Tit• prln<lpel PUOll ... !no 11l1nt It II JJO w~·
llJ $1rMt, COit• Mftl, C1llllirnl1, '262,,
ll:•li•rt N, W1.J
l'r11.a1nt •!Id l'u~11.ncr
J1ek II:, Cur l1y
Vkl l'rhlcl"11 11'141 ~1111111 M~lt
Th111'111 IC1• .. il
E•ltor
lliott1•t A, Mu•phin• ,,,,.,...i,.. l •ltor
L '•f•r Krl1{ N~ &IKll City fltqr
"...,.,, IMclri Offk•
JJJJ N••r•rt l•ul•••••
M•lfhit ~r1111 r.o. l o• 111s, t266J _ ........
Cott• M.,.: >a wn1 ••1 "'"' Ltt-l .. tlU nt ,Ol' .. I '"''""" • 1~1"'""' •••di~ 1n11 •-~ lou~ird l9ll C....,ltl J0S N91'11'1 l l '9mltlt ll:MI
T ........ r7141 642-4121
~ ......... ,w,..,.,.,, '4M671
CIOYrilll', 1111. °''"'"' Cetn •111>11111"'4 c-,..,.,. ff• _.. _,i..., Uh1ttrftl111t.
.. i!WllJ INl't9f' 91' ...,,..,.,~ ..... ifl
_., "' r""'11tUC" WllllWI tMC'ltil "'' .., ..... ., tllll'rl1flll ..........
~ u.w ....... H iii o1 Cnl• 1NM. ceiitiW.l.. ~"" "' C.lttlitf It.&$ -'~!~,__,,... ~ .,,,, """'°''~' 111111~ -.fl1191~ ..... INfl.lfllJ',
committees will }le. limited to seven McWhinney.
persons with one appointment made by Both men were later indicted by the
each counCilman. The members will Grand Jury on charges of grand theft ,
serve at the plei1St!fe of the entir'e"'coun· bribery and conspiracy.
cil, and will be reviewed annually by the Ba\Lill was cleared of any possible in·
council. volvem't!nt in the Mile Square Park scan·
Committees will consist ol only oae or dal ·after testifying before the Grand
t1vo council members, and the mayor and Jury.
vice mayor may participate as an ex-Capizzi stressed today "the tremen-
officio member if needed. dous difficulty" the prosecution had in
All ad hoc or special committees will persuading Murai to tell the ~ry that
be revie\\·ed by the council and an cnabl-allegedly began a year ago this "'·eek
ing resolution from the council used to when McWhinney ~ited ~~urai while the
gUKle the committee in its affairs. farmer was working his strawberry
All standing cbmmittees and ad h9C crops in Fountain Valley.
committees will report to the Council "The boys downtown are unhappy with
during the study sessiOO at the first you," Capizzi quoted McWhinney as tell -
regular meeting of the momh. ing !he bewildered f~rm~r. ·:you're nol
Formal applications for membership making enough contribul!ons.
on any of the oonunittees must be "i\1urai, as naive as they come, was
presented to the appointments corn-thinking in terms of the $12.S he had
anittee earlier paid in to Battin's election fund
The ~lignment of committees left the an? WQnderin.~ if ~e )ia~'t contributed
status of two city panels uncertain . qu.'te enough, Capizzi said:.
Both the Transportaton Plan Citizens 'But he s~n learned that 1t would take
Ad · Comimttee -·p mastermind-$10,~ for him to have any chance of . VlSOry . ' e·...... keeping the land and he was told by
mg . the t r a f f 1 ~ study• an~ . the McWhinney 'we got you in there and we
EnVll'O.mnental Quality Cmtrol Citizens _ can get you out'," Capizzi told the jury. ~nuttee now have more than seven "Murai has told you that he was told
active me~bers. by 1'fcWhinney that he would save at
The trafftc panel has se~en members least $10,000 by paying SI0,000 to lhe two
appointed by the oounctl and two men here in court " the prosecutor said.
members ippointed by the city's two "Whal ~ m~t by that threat was
cllam~ of commerCt'.. that they could manipulate the acreage
Valene Murley, chairman of the en-price at Mile Square to reflect in hi s
vironmental panel1 argued before coun--favor or get him out by splitting up the
cilmen that existing panels should be land into three lots."
allov;ed to remain intact until resign&· Final argwnent by lawyers for
tions dropped their numbers to sever:i. McWhinney and Fujita are scheduled for
Councilmen ignored her plea, however. delivery late today.
Collective Bargaining
Nixed br College Board
Should collective b a r g a i n i n g be
legislated as a tool for negotiations in lhe
academic world?
No, according to a unanimous vote or
. the Saddleback Community CoUege
Board ol Truso.,.. Moodaf night.
"Collective bargaining and binding
arbitration serve profit-making concerns
·well . and the cost in\'olved can be passed
on to the consumer. But as a university,
our product is the stu4ent, and that's who
~sUfferS."'sBld Trultee.HW Vogel.-
The board was asked to lake a po8ition
in the form of a resolution to be sent to
the Califoma School Boards Association.
caused headaches all around."
Com munity colleges now fall under the
Winton Act, which requires that ad-
ministrators and employes "meet and
confer." Arbitration from an out.side par~
ty may be sought , but the decision is not
binding. •
Under the ·proposed legislation ol
1.foretti and Moscone, an arbitration
decision would..be hlnding.
From Pa:ge J .
BACK BAY ...
the: idea or building immediately and the
zoning really is a sep.irate thing from the
land sale offer."
But il'I a letter sent to City Manager
Robert Wynn thiS w~k. Thomas said be
....was sorry but that -West Covina offered
him a promotion and a raise more at·
lractive than Newport Beach's offer.
Tbomas was hired after the city's fir st
sc.lection. Robert (:'olpitts of MOWJtain
Cable Television
Firm Asks More
Time on System
A request that cable tele v ision
operators be given aDother thr~ months
to develop a proposal to install a cable
system in (ive Orange Coast cities will be
m?de Thursday morning to the board of
the Public Cable Television Authority.
The request is being made by
TelePrompter, .a Newport Beach-based
cable television operator which i~ con-
sidering a bid on the esUmated '15
million project.
The PCTA is seeking bids for_a cable
tele vision system tliat would link ~
homes of Newport .Beach, Costa Mesa ,
Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach and
Westmlnster.
The organization, a joint powers agen-
cy comprised of the five cities, was
formed in 1971 to seek a cable franchise
to serve each of the cities.
A deadline for bids of June 28 had been
established by the board, which will now
consider extending It to Sept. 6 on the
recommendation of PCTA consultant
John Bateman.
TelePrompter said tbe extension is
needed. tO consider provisions in the
specificalions which "we frankly have
not encountered" before.
The board will meet at 7:30 a.m. at
Manny's Restaurant, 7402 Edinger:_ Ave.,
Huntington Beach.
some added personnel to do the work,'' they began a e n ~!ay. 1 he said. ' The judge. said he-believed attaching-•
Wynn said the city could hire a civil
engineer "ith less expertise but more
political and social "common sense" to
direct operations 15ut not hold the title.
"The other choice is to coast along as
\'fe have been and 'Yt'hen the technical
aspects Come up v.'e ~'OOld contract ~·ith·
a consultant," he said.
\Vynn said offering more money is out
or the question because "'it \\'ould cause
SOOle internal conflicts."
Henry Quigley
Wins GOP Post
As Precinct Chief
Irvine Ci ty COuncilman Henry Quigley
Monday night was named 1 precinct
chairman for the 7lst Assemb ly District.
The precinct assignments committee of
the Orange County Republican Central
Committee unanimously selected . the
Irvine vice mayor for the organizin g role
in the district repre sented by As·
semblyman Robert Badham (R·Newpart
Beach).
Quigley "'ill head precinct workers in
cities from Anaheim 10 San Clemente, in·
eluding all the residential areas of Irvine,
the Saddlebatk Valley and moot of
Newport Beach.
Unde r present apPortionment redi..!llric·
ting plans being considered. in Sacramen·
to, Irvine would remain within the 71st
Assembly District and Badham would
cede inland portions of his district to a
new Assembly district stretching from
Anaheim to Oeeanslde and taking in the
Cleveland Nationa l F'ore5t.
Cox's conditions to the conduct of the.
Senate hearings would be beyond the
scope or his court. ,
fle_said he v.·ou ld make no comment on
the issue of requiting potential defenp
dants t.o testify in open commlUee
sessions.
-tr * * Fro•P.,el
STANS •..
Magruder.
Sirica also denied a request by the '
special Watergate proeecutor, Archibald
Cox, to prevent live ncilo and leleviaion
CO\lerage o[ testimony from Magruder,
Dean and other key witnesses.
Stans is under indictment in New Yorlf\·
in connecUon with a seer!t 1972 cam· •
palgn contribuUon, and his lawyer asked
lhe Senate Watergate comrnHtee t D
poslpone hi! testimony until after the
trial. Sen. Sam J. Ervin ' (0.N.C.), said the
conunittee unanimously ruled againlt a
delay, but wouldn't ask-hlm-anythlngin·
volving the New York ca!e, whlcb stems
from a contribution by flnancler Robert ·
Vesco. Mitchell has been indicted in ll\<i
same fund-ralaing cue.
While Stans uked not to testify, when
he was ordered to do ao he told the com·
rnittee he had a 20-mlnute prepared
statement to deliver before ladD& que&-
Uoning.
Old Pensions Halted
DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) -.The '
Iowa House voted Monday ro end pensiOl\
payments for veterans of the Frontier
Guards of Mitchell 's Cavalry of 1861, the
Spirit Lake Relief Expedition of 1857 and
the Northern Border Brigade.
A WORD TO THE WISE -
There is a tendanc.y for m•ny carpet stores to use strictly a
w1rehouse concept. One adv1nt19e is seeing carpeting in rolls rather
than samplos.
Bi!IS proposing that c o 11 e c t i v e
bargaining be made a tool of school
employes have been proposed by Robert
Moretti, a state assemblyman, and
George ~to.scone , a state senator.
Dr. James ~farshall, a trustee from
the Laguna Hills area, said he recently
attended CSBA conference where he said
spokesmen for East Coast districts who
tried collective bargalnlng rtported "It
The third planned community will
..cover the site bet,vcen the NcWPortcr lnn
adn Park Ne"1'0rl Apartments along the •
bluffs.
Many C:lhadvantages are · evident -mod operations 6'I this 1'ype
buy only Off.goods, so that the customer only gets to SH old patterns,
or carpets the mills couldn't sell to regular outlets. Also, this type of
operation 9 en• r a 11 y feels that experience is unimportant, and
consequently the salespeople know littl e or nothing about the products.
Finally, most will farm out the inst e 11 at i o n s to the lowest biddor,
guaranteeing a poor installation. (Many of these installers are contracting
illegally without a state licenso.J
'
New Groom Held
In 'f al1oe Rape
SOUTH LAKE TAHOE IU PI) -Terry
Leroy cassidy, 20, who police aald wu on
his honeymoo1: with his brl~ of less than
on-e week, has been arrested on charg!s
or kidnaping and raping 1 Nevada
woman. Authorities said .the unidenWled victim
was NtChlilklng in Nevada when she w8s
picked up by a man wbo drove her ICf9SI
the stalo line lo C..llfornla to an bolatcd
area, where he raped her.
Cwldy was aJTtJted about an hour
l&tt:r by officer, actln' on the victim'•
description or the n1an s. car.
The general plan calls for the site to be
developed to ts units per acre or less -
half that of the Park New po r. t
apartmen ts which approach 30 units per
acre.
f\foore said something like the attached
family dwellings in Eastbluff are a
possibility for l.00 area.
.f'ro111P.,eJ
BUDGET. • •
1'-targ:uerite Avenue.
Unlvenity Drive will be built from~
Jamboree -Road to the re a 11 a: n e d
MacArthur Bouleverd.
Bayside Drive will be rebuilt beow .. n
Beyside Place and Marguerite Avenue.
Newp0tl Beach wllt nJso get 14 new
police officers. next year. Funding for
Miven ol lhcm-wtll eom-e· trom JtattJUn&-
earmarkcd for the· cr~ation of a traffic
dlv~lon within the police dcpartmcnl
, r • ..
At Alden'• we maintain a happy medium. We °""Y a largo
inventory, and tho largest 1amplo 1eloct ion around. We hevo uperioncod
11lospooplo, end our instollen wore trained by us. Finolly, wo oro a
slate licensod contr1clor.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e-DRAPES
1663 Pla~tntla Ave •
COSTA MESA
6~6·4838
MM.· 'lllun. 9 lo 5:30; "'· 9 lo 9; Sto!. t 1J6 lo I
• • l
·-· /
. ---
Ora .. de Coa8t 8 EDITION
Today's F inal
N.Y. Stoe k s
-~-~--~-------TUESDAY, JUNE 12, T973 VOL 66,·NO. 16·3, 2 SECTIONS , 28 PAGES ORANGE COUN TY, CALlFQRNI A c TEN CENTS
Costa esa, Fair oara-Courf 1-ia ttle een
A question over· zoning rights on the
Orange C.OUnly Fairgrounds may draw
the fair board into ·a court battle wlth the
Costa M,.. City Council.
Couricilmen Mond.3y night instructed
CitY Attorney Roy' JUne to draw up legal
measures · -ineluding a lawsuit -to
. detennine "once and for all" who has
juriMlictlon o.ver the 2 0 0 • a c r e
fair~.
-The · f81rgrounds, councilmen insist, is
r.oned institutional and recreationa1, and
therefore 'closed to 00.tright commercial
_,ventures such as the swap meet and
'
Tl' Hea.-ings
vehicle storage. yard.
But since the property is owned by the
state, there is some doubt whether the ci-
ty of Costa A-iesa has any zoning jurisdic-
tion over the fairgrounds.
Fair Managei James Porterrield could
not be reached this morning for comment
on the zoning question but Bob Krohne .
president of the fair board, expressed
su rprise about the council's stand.
"\Ve've tried our best to work with
the m. I don't know why they don't come
to talk to us about these things," he said.
Krohne added that to his knowledge:
J
'
the fair mrutager had instrudted all of his
lease holders to make application fot the
necessary zoning permi~ bef.ore opening
business.
It, Is the clty'1 position, hoWever, that
the' S\vap meet, auto storage and a
nursery are strictly commercial ventures
which are not permitted under the in-
stitutiooal-recreatiooal zone.
Several other fairgrounds businesses,
such as the goU drlv4lg range, go-ca~
track, and motorcycle races qualify
under the zone because they are recrea-
ional oriented,· In the council's opinion.
"We zoned that to instiutional·recrea·
tional years ago and the fair board ac-
cepted il because they never protested
ii," Councilman Alvin Pinkley argued to-
day.
In Pinkley's opinion. the fair board has
embarked on a palicy or doing whatever
it wants on the fairground,, and "telling
us to go to hell."
"I'm not happy about being told to go
to_ hell," he added.
Krohne , on the other hand, mainta ins
the fair board's policy is one of
coopet.a!ing \ri!h the cHy while at the
•
sa me time attracting businesses to help
sustain the operation of the fatrgro_un®_.
But Mayor Jack Hammett backed up
Pinkley by alleging the working rapport
\vith 'the fair board has deteriorated to
such a point that the fa ir board is Sho\V-
ing ~·utter disregard and abandon" for ci-
ty concerns.
"We ha ve tried to \\'Ork \Vith them and
they just decided they don't need us," the
mayor commented.
C.ouncilmen are partiCularly concerned
about what they claim is the general
deterjoraling appearance af l he
fairgrounds . Specific objections center
around th e ~turday and Sunaay s"·ap
meet s. cars stored in empty fields, and
the tire-lined go-cart track on Fair Drive
across from !he glass-"•alled multi-
n1iltion dollar civiC: center.
Pinkley suggested today that the city
might ]Ojk for other means of restoring
cooperation \\'ith the fair'" board such as
\\'ithdra\\'ing its police and fire protection
or sending building inspectors to the
fairgrow1ds to "check out same of th6se
rickety old buildings they have out
!here." ..
-Ir or \ .nnex_
•
•
•
-----s~ca~-nd-aI=-~~hai-g~s-
Denied by Stans __
City Sets
LAFC Bid _
. , ·.
Wednesclay
Cos~a 1\1-esa is staking its claim on
,.. Orange County Airport.
)(ASHINGTON (AP) -l\'laurice fl.
Stans. blocked in · an effort lo avoid
\Vatergate testimony now , today denied
knowledge -of the wiretapping raid.
Political sabotage or violation of any
campaign laws. .
'Mle former secretary of Commerce
and fundra!Jer for President Nixon cop-
ceded only lbat there llll_ght have been
ZIEGLER . ADMIT$ ERROR
ON BRIEFING-Story, Pogo 12
"some unintended technical \'iOlat!o.ns"of
the new disclosure Jaw. (Related story,
Page ~) .
Stans appeared at the televised hear-
ings or the Senate's Watergate in-
vestigating committee, which rejected
bis lawyer's· plea that Stans be spart'd
Two Mile Square ·
Figm·es Called
Cit y Slickers
the "inevitable klicg. light of publicity"
·before his New York trial.
Earlie~. lhe committee heard a former
Nixon campaign worker from Orange
County testify he had been told that John
N. Mitchell, while still attorney general,
had been shown filmed copies of private
correspondence_ from the c~paign of
Sen. Edmund S. Muokle, at lhal lime
frontrunner for the Democr..tic presiden-
tial nomination.
In court, U.S. District Judge John J.
Sirica cleared the way for the committee
to take testimony, uqder immunity, from
two key witnesses, ousted White House
counsel John W. Dean III and former
Nixon campaign deputy Jeb Stuart
ri.1agruder .
Sirica also denied a request by the
.. special Watergate prosecutor ._Al:chibald
Cox, to prevent live radio and television
coverage af testimony from Magruder,
Dean and other key witnesses. ·
Stans is under indictment in New York
in connection with a secret 1972 cam-
paign contribution, and his lawyer~asked
the Senate Watergate committee to
postpone his testimony until after the
trial.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin CD-N.C.), said the
By TO!\f BARLEY committee unanimously ruied against a °' ,.. 011ry '""" Stott delay. but wouldn't ask him anything in-
\Veslminster city officials D erek volving the New York case, which stems
Wh b from a contribution by financier Robert ~1c lnney and Tad Fujita were rand-Vesco. Mitchell has been Indicted in· the
cd today as "city slickers who look on a sarnc fund-raising case.
naive farm boy" by a prosecutor who While Stans asked not to testify, when
urged an Orange County .Superior Court he was ordered to do so he told the com·
jury to return a quick verdict of guilty mittee he had a 20-minute prepared
against the accuseq pair. statement to deliver before facing ques-
Deputy D i s t r i c t Attorney P.fichael tioning.
Capizzi, conceritrating much of his final , The panel agreed to hear that , and
argument fire on fonner mayor M9Whin-copies of the Stans' te.xt were distributed
ney, 40 , told the jury in Judge Johrt Flynn to newsmen before he delivered it.
Jr.'s courtroom that the two week trial Stans'·· statement made these three
"really bolls down to whom you care to principal assertions:
believe." ' -"I ha~ no knowledge of lhe Watergate
"Do you believe the story of George break-in or any other espionage efforts
).tural, a simple farmer who had a lot to before I read about them in the press, or
lose and nothing to gain by telling his of the efforts to cover up after the event.
tale before the Grand Juv. or do you -"I had no knowledge of any sabolage
believe the story or a man lMcWhinney) program to disrupt the campaign by
w.bo brazenly said he and six other per-Donald ScgreUi or anyone else.
sons control ·the. Orange Coilnly Board of · -"To the best of my knowledge there
-Supen-isor1?''-Capiu.i.ask.ed. _ __. _ wcy nojnt~r_:itj_on@!.,yiol~tlons ar t_!!_e law!!:
Capizzi told the jury he felt he had rclating to campaign financing by the
proved "beyond any doubt" that slra\v-financt commJttees for which I had
berry grower Marai was 'varned by both responsibility."
derendanl!: that it wou ld ti.ke a $10.000 The reported fund was the subject of a
payment if he v.•lshed to retain any hope July 28, 1971 memorandum f~m .Magru·
at all af continuing to farm the rich 215 der to Mitchell. But Stans said it mwt ac~ of Mlle Square Park. (See STANS, Page!)
Milral testified during the trial that, one
.
R~ftop Bm:ze
Newport Beach liretn.an battles. blaze on roof of
Mrs:-Ruth Cameron, 1700 Highlind Drive. Slie said
she was working in her kitchen shortly before 3
p.m. Monday when she noticed smoke billowing past
the window and went outside to investigate. Fife·
cau'Sed an estimated $10,000 in damage to attic and
roof Of Harbor Highlands area home. The cause is
still under investigation.
PR -Man, Motor-ey cle U-nit.-U~p_.pe r NewpQrt
Bay Rezoniiig
May Be Cut From. Budget For Homes Ey ed
, By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of ti.. 0111r ,.,.., llfff
Requests for a public relations man
and a six-man police motorcycle squad
appeared in jeopardy Monday night as
the Costa Atesa City Council studied the
city's 1973-74 budge t.
The PR-man proposal. advanced-by Ci-
ty Manager Fred Sorsabal, was caught in
a cross fire between Mayor Jack Ham-
mett and City Councilman Alvin Pinkley.
Neither thought I.he $12,970 per year
expenditure v•as needed.
Hammett was of tbe opinion that Costa
l\tesa's public image was satisfactory
and that the council coula~ contract out
some of its publicity needs, if necessary.
Also questioned was the expenditure of m.ooo for six patrol bikes and officers to
ride them~ The attditlOn of a mot9rcycle -
squad is supported by Police Chic( Roger
Neth as a means of providing polic e al-
licc.rs with added mobility on Costa tl1esa
streets.
Again , Pinkley picked up lJlc gauntlet
declaring that lhc advantages o f
motorcycles did not out,,..•eigh thei r
Hazards.
Neth conceded that there was an ad-
ditional hazard posed by riding a
n1otorcycle but that "w hen the guy puts
a badge 011, he accepts the haiard."
The police chief justified the motorcy-
cle squad as a means of improving Jaw
enforcement on Costa Afesa's traffic-
chok arterial roads.
said clogged conditions had made it
i ible to chase down vlolators
ithout endangering the public. As a
suit. traffic actidents have increased
39 percent over the last fo9r years while
citations have dropped 30 percent, ac-
cording to the chief. '
"l'm not an advocate of motorcycles
either, but I think they are a necessary
-evil, "·-he ·said:-'
No ofricial action was taken by the city
council to strike the two items from the
budget.
Sorsabal's $13.• millian budget proposal
has been scheduled for a public hearing
June 26.
By WiLLIAM SCHREIBER
01 IM D•llr ,1101 Sl•FI The Irvine Company will file next
month for special planned community
residential zoning on all . its vacant land
around Upper Newport Bay in Newport
Beach, it was learned today.
The planned communities will include
wetlands and shoreline the company has
already offered to public agencies to buy
as a permanent wildlife refuge. Bot com-
pany officials insist the roning move is
not an attempt to force government's
hand to buy the land.
Larry MOore , Irvine general planning
administrator, said all the 'ZOning will
Conform to the recently adopted re-
quirements~ of the city's general plan
land use element.
"Now that the city. has indicated
genei'ar pla·n-roiling 'On that-previously
unclassified land. they have to come up
\\1ith the zones," f\.1opre said. "We are
working with the planning staff to zone
the properly." .
City councilmen 1\'londay night ~n·
nounced their intentions of annexing the
airport by pelilioning the Local Agency
Fonnation Commissi9n (LAFC) to place
it \vlthin the city's "sphere of influence."
The 14\FC will hear the _petition at ~
p.m. Wedn~sday.
Mayor Jack Hammett said today the
unanimous action of tbe-. c o u n c 11
• repttaents the city's desire to place its
boundaries around the airport "at some
future date." He · declined to speculate
when the annexation would take place.
Key reaSOQs supporting the "sphere of
influence" petition are that the county-
operated airport is contiguous to the
boundaries of Costa l\1e5a and that it is
served by the Costa Mesa County \Vaier
District and the Costa Mesa Sani~ry
District. -
Planning Director \\'illiam Dunn uid
the airport represents a large tax base,
making annexatiori desirable for Costa
Mesa. Further, he believes placing j1
under municipal jurisdictioo would girc
Costa Mesa greater control over flight
operations~
Donald Mclnnis, mayor of Ne\\1>0rt
Beach, was nat available this morning
for comment on Costa P.lesa's petition
with the LAFC. Nc\vport Beach also
v.•ants the airport \Vithin its zone af in·
fluencc.
Mayor Hammett, who joined in the
unanimous claim-staking vote, said the
airport could be "lucrative" for Costa
?11esa but that he was also concerned
about the possibility or increasing federal
and state regulations affecting general
aviation.
"General aviation amounts to 87 per.
cent of the ·airport's business and if it
should drop off, there wauld be no
revenue and we still would have an
airport to worry about." he said.
·The airport was included in a "sphere
ol influence" package which includes
unincorporated portions of the Santa Ana
Heights area and south af 16th Street
~low the pro~ed Costa P.1esa marina. .
Orange Coast
Wea ther oC those payment& was made in the forn1 -
of a SS,000 check in favor of county
Supervisor Robert Battin's campaign
fund.
The second, in cash, we,s handed over
+ \CJ Fujita, 34, shortly before dlstrlct at-
'°mey'1 lnveatlgators moved In to a~t
the city planner before going on to book
ldcWhlnney.
Ecology Pack.age Approved
f\.1oorc said the company's planned
communily proposals will probably be
filed with the city during the first part of
July.
The property that will get new zoning
includes the 70.acre Castaways Point
parcel on Dover Drive, all the vacant
land above Westcllf{ and Dover Shores
and the large piece of land between Park
Newpart and the Newporter IM.
li'll be mostly sunny on \Vednes-
:tay -i( you live in the inland
areas or Orange county. Othei:wJsc
n1ostly cloudy nnd ha:.:y along the
beaches 'vlth highs of 70, rising to
75 Inland. Overnight Jows in the
60s.
Both men were later indicted by the
Grand Jury on charges or grand then ,
bribery and CONplracy.
Battin was cleared or any possible In-
volvement in the Mlle Sauare Park aca
dal arter lestlCylng belore lhe Grand
1 Jury. .
1 Clplui stl'flssed today "the tremco-
' doua dUClculty" the prooeciJUon hod In
•
•penuadlng Murat-to tell the story that
allegedly began a year agO thl~ week
when McWhlnney visited 1'1ural while the
lanner was worklni his strawberry
crop.a In Fountain Valley.
"Tho boys downlown are unhappy with
~u," Caplui quoted McW.hjnnCy as lell·
IS.. Mcll'llI!'NEV, P•cc I)
•
'
Cosw Mesa Plaiuiers OK A mendme11t to General Platt Planning commissioners at their last
meeting rejected an Irvine Company re-
quest to build a seven-acre commercial
strip along Dover Drive at Castaways By IULARV KAVE
ot .... o.111 '""" .,.,,
Awlde-ranging environmental package
II-as unanlmous!Y approved Monday nlghl
by lhe Costa Mesa PlaMing Couunlslllon.
The commission accepted the amend~1
menl l<> the g.,,...al plan, thereby 1dill111
elements on oonsentation, open space
and ICCfliC highwayJ.
Th~ new amendment does not demand
specific environmental ilnprovement.s bul
Is 1tn "educational document" offering
suggestions al)d recommendatlons as to
which areas of Costa Mesa n«d atlcnllon
Bria wh~l can bC one.
INSW E TODA l'
Several areas of the city are pinpointed suggested. Point because it didn't conform to the as "primary elements" -tQo.se areas The resol.ulion was prompted by a new general plan . Britisli ttiedium claims Lo.t
that cannot be replaced or restored if state law rcqlilri.ng' the add ition of the~ The plan requir~s zoning that will allow Harker 114s been contacted and
they are destroyed. ' environmental clements. Under the ne" some hotel and restaurant use on the tllat "he's altue and we ll ht 1 , ri~ :lu:Jt ~~~i!ve~~~k, !~:: ~1~~ °Q,~t:il~misa'slon:,:;,..;and;;a.-·,~~;~~=~ll~ .. t,,lle.e:.;.r!::':.:1~:.:.•.;.nl_i•_l _l-•:.:1 2:.:.'o_th_•_,_'_"'_._'_'~ ~stOnJ, Page
Falrvlri:. Part-~1-areas-and ;.-·amendment":-lrelffitr'lin.f" o 80, 1 The company wants ao bu i I'd LM. ,,,. , 1<1111 L.....,.. ,,
vle-.ys aod vistas from public parks and cllv's authority to issue building ~Its apartrnentt and townhouses that would ~::~"~. 1; ::: ,11,,., ~:
streets. .. ~--will be frozen by the st4te. 1be resoluHon romc closer to 15 units per acre density c:i. •• 1,.,. ~ n.n Ntt1Ma1 """' •
'Ille plan aL\O suggests several streil!f' is schedu!OO t" come before U1c City ;r built. • , -~:'~~,,11 : :!.": t""'' , .. ,:
and major t>oulevards as possible dur-Council next week. T\lC \nrge open area above \Vestcliff, t>t•lll ,. .. ,c._. , 11e«11 ""'.,_"' 1 .. 11
dJdates for mnic hJchway desii;natio..,. The entire plan has been drawn up In \\'hlch Includes the proposed \\'ildlife :::~:i~.::J• 11o1: ~~"!" ::
together fomrln1 a mmplete "Scenr<f an attempt 10 integrate lhe dJffl!r~l\t reruge landt will -probably ·t>t: toned ror ::-=-,.".,11 : =• Nowt 1,..,:
Drive." Harbor Doulev•rd. 191h StrCtt open spac:e. conservation and scenic stngfe-f amJty residential U$CS In the plan· ...__ 11 wot111 N.,.1 4
i\d'Mesa Verde Oriye <re IOme ll1ttls !See ECOLOGY, P•,e ll -IS.e BACK· BAY, Poge l)
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_'.l DAIL Y PILOr' t
Meat Hi jacking .
Suspects Seized
By ARTl.IUR R. \'ISSEL v.·ere taken Into custody and the :;lolen
Of lhe 01Uy l'Jltl $1111 [ d h" k d . mca an IJaC e refrigerator truck
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~ .JudgeBars
Restriction \ ·~ ..
Of Coverage 1
t/• f I
A quartet of suspec1ed nleut hijackers recovered it about three bloc ks fron1 ~ r · ail tod~y in connect l~n _!:'.Ith theft_police headquarters. l
of a truck!Oad OT 20 lons ?I bCCfSrms e on susp1c1on or theft rrOillaO
WASHINGTON (AP ) -A fe(fera l 1
judge toda y denied a motion by :ipecial
proSecutor Archibald Cox lhat would
have restricted news coverpge of lhr
tesUmony or V WililCsSC'i l)fJOrl-ftl t ->-'·---1
wor~h $120,000 and dehvered to a interstate ship1nent were Andre "Bill "
Nev.port Beach !rozen food locker ~1on· Harvey, 32, of 1020 Cabrillo Park Dri ve
day. Santa Ana; Jeffrey Gi lchrist 29 ()f 22ti
The rendetvous Arranged for sale of City Blvd. \Vest. Orange· ~nd· JlenrJ•
the Colorado-brt'd betf at v.·hat in· Quintana. 40, and George' Sald ana 20
vestlg11tors described as the ridiculously· bolh oC 13271 Adrian Circle. ca'rdc1;
low price of $1.50 per pound y.·as raided Grove.
about 4 p.m. by dete<;th•es 0111 slakeoul. ·They y.·ere booked at nearby Newport
Newport Beach J>:Oh~e. FBI agen~s a~d Beach pOllce headquarters and then turn ·
Or~ge County D1str1ct Attorney s in· E'd over to FBI agents: 10 face feder I
vestigators swooped down on the charges. a
suspects at the Harbor Food Locker, a t In · 1 • / 30th Street and Villa Way. Ne vestlga ors in ~ team h~aded by
The location y.•herc the four suspects wport Bea~h Police Delecllve Capt. Don Oyaas said the n1eat caper -one of
the largest in recent Southern California
Mesa Okays
Condomini1in1
Exe1nption
The Costa Mesa Planning Commission
granted a 1.one e,..empt ion permit to Art
A. Stone Monday ni ght by a .. to-I vote.
but t~e commissioners expresSt"d n'isgir·
ings over allowing Stone to build a 17-uni t
condomini um com plex v.•it h only 29 pt>r·
cent green space.
Stone's hlueprint indicates an .abun-
dance of parking -seven spaces beyond
the required tv.'O per unit -but falls IQ
meet the 35 to 40 percent green spaCe. or
open space, standards usually imposed
history -;-originated about one week ago.
A local busine.ssman told of being ap-
proached with an offer of ~0.000 pri me
steaks for _~ale at $1 .50 per pound, about
half the going commercial rate.
The machinery for lhe raid was set in
inotion at that tin1e. v.•hile Costa Mesa
oolice said today they had al so receivf'ri
information about a suspicious n1eat
tran saction in the y;orks.
They passed that information on to
Newport Beach police when the bea ch ci·
ty .,..·as determined to be the intended
delivery spot.
Investigators said the, beef shipped
from 1'.1onfort Packing Co. in CreeleY
Colo., was de sti ned for food broke;
~aniel Macca, of Burbank. who arranged
its sale to a barbecue restaur.IUI~ chain.
The prime be~f was being shipped to a
restall!'ant chain for 1'.1onday delivery
when tt was stolen over the weekend in
• h:y the commJs~ion \V he n Conditional
--L:.Per~wning is in etf~ _ ~ _
· Burbank. The tractor-trailer containing
the meat, had been parked on the stree t
not far from fhe driver's home.
-Porrce-deteetWeRieCI "GloStien -iord··1ne
Daily Pilot the local businessman had
been offered the large supply of prime
meat for $1.50 a pound, a price only half
the going rate.
1 Stone's property •• at the intersectioo of
.. \\"ilson Md Colun1bia Streets. Jails in the
111ulli·lam ilY·condit iona·1 pern,it zone.
causing Stone to adhere to the more
stringent Conditional Permit standards.·
4
Conditio nal Pennit standards allow the
City lo require "'h<:1 tever fu rther con·
di tions they frel arc necessary. ·
Commissioner Nathan L. Reade. y.·ho
cons istently favored-granting the e,...
emption, argued that theJe is no
ordlllance specifying the percentage of
green space neede<l . }le added tpat the
Commission varies greatly in the percent·
age they require. on any given project.
1be other commissioners, ho\\'ever.
maintained that ·lhey should try to secure
as inuch green space as possible.
Because the planned parking area e:t·
ceeds the amOWlt requJred, Chairman H.
J. Wood sugges ted that the extra seven
spaces or parking be turned into green
space.
· "I'd much rather see some green
there." \Vood said. "J\.1aybC even a little
putting green.'' 1
"'.ice J\.1ayor \Vi ii Jordan. who
represented Stone. stressed the need £or
more parking to accommodate con·
dominium dwellers' guests. He argued
that. the 29 percent or existing greeo
space was ideally located. but that the
parking spaces in question \\·ere at the
rear or the buildings. not visible from the
condominiums' \V i n do \Vs or Crom the
street.
Commissioner Ed w a r d l\1cFarland
pointed ou t th.at in the past, \\'hen the
• Commissioo had reduced the amount of
, . parking, parking problems hnd resulted.
· · Perhaps the Commission should gi ve
n1ore thought before reducing parking,
j he suggested.
• 1 Chairman \Vood said. ''The Planning
,,; Staff should .Jiave found a way to give
•. 1 stone more parking, but also include a
higher percentage of gree n space." He
! added, howe ver. that in vie\V Of lhe loca-
l lion of the 29 percent alloted gree n space.
. l the poor location of the seven parking
... spaces and the fact that a less attracti ve
I bui lding could be built there instead, he
understood u•hy the plan.ling staff's
1 certification was 1nadc.
The Plann ing Com1nission cautiously
: granted the exemption request last night,
but the request races another huidle at
; next week 's City Council mee ting.
OU.N•I COAST CM
•• DAILY PILOT
' . 1 ---Tiie Ot' ..... CMH DAILY PILOl.i wllll ~
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11 ton'IO!Md Th• "'-••·Pr•n, ii llllbllth«I W
~ Or1nge C..11 PubU"'lnO Cornpony, S.pe•
flJI ..:111111111 ••t Pllbll)-, Mond.oy lllteUOll
F•IO•r· ffl• (Cit.II Mew , N"•iior1 ae1cll.
Hunllno!Ot! 8t&ClltFOUnlllll Viii..,, LIOllN
I HCll, lr.,ln•/$1<1cUtDoltll Ind Si n (19..,.nlt/
5•n J1.11n C111l~tr1na A 1;n9l1 reo!On.1
.inio.i Is P<1bll1hM S1!urd1r1 ,.,., SvflCl1y1.
The princ:lp.11! "1blld!lrlf .,._,,, It fl UO Wu l
t-IY SlrHI. Cost1 Mt.a, Clll!Ornla, fl6:1t.
Ri btrt N. Wt t ll
Prnlcl~r Ind Pybll1her
J1c.k II.. Curlt y
\I'(• ,'rtt~t -Q.e.,.rt l MtfW9tt"
Thorntt K11~11
'dllor
Tllt1n11 A. Murph!111
MM\at~ E:Oltor
Q.11!11 H. l101 Rich1r4 P. Ni ll
AHltllnl ~Ina l!:f !*I
CetN M ... Offkto
JJO W11t l1'f Stt11t
M1ill111 A44r11t1'P.O. l n1 1560, '2616 .._ .......
NtWl(IOtf 1 .. c11: UU N~ •w1tvtrf Ltt-IMCll: :m Pornl Av-
lolvollll!llOll 1 .. (11; l"FJ I N<l'I loult Yl l'd
'4-n Clfnltftlt! )OJ Htt111 fl ''"""-... ,
, .. .,..... (7141 641-4121
c....,._~'6•1.1111
C-.r)flll, lt1J, Or•,... eo..i l'Vtllall'"' ~. No """'' 1tori.t, l!h111"1'-, Ollll1'0rltl m.lltt W Nv"11........,IJ llttilft
INV bl t .... Odll(-9 W!lllOlll 1.-Clfl Ill'• "'"'*' or "'"'"~' CIWl'llf", ~ CINI !"Otlffll .,,.1111 t i COlll M1w, c111..,.11i... ~rJM 111 e.rrllr tt.'f
,.....1ft tyJ IW ,,..11 U.U ll'lt!llfllVI ll'llllh r1
-.11N110rK U,.&I ll'lllllhlY.
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The informant ·was again ca lled on
1\tonttay. He was told by the caller that
another party had a large supply of meat
and "wants to move · it now." ti'
. The poliCi! were in(ormed and by this
lime reports of the Burbank heist were
coming in to verify that indeed such a
large shipment had been stolen.
The investigation team headed by
Capt. Oyaas and including Sgt. Don
Picker, detective Tam Sleam and
Gloshen began ¢0 fonnulate a plan for
trapPing the suspected meat Utieves.
1be caller telephoned again, 1Uggesling
lhist :Jme the-merchandise-crutd 1~
have been stolen.
When he was told the police already
knew of hiS offer, he agreed to cooperate.
He relayed an crder of 20,000 pounds of
meat and scheduled the ·Newport Beach
delivery.
Detective Shearn was to pose as tt)e
bu yer.
Police did not disc.lose the identity or
the local businessman or 11\e contact man
\\"ho agreed to help tra p the meat
thieves. ·
· They said shortly after the ap-
pointment time. Gilchrist and }larvey
drove up in new luxury cars, follo"''ed
almost immediately by Qu intana at the
v.·hee l or the stolen truck, accompanied
by his helper, Saldana ..
federal investigators wrapping up the
probe today have revealed a stCOnd,
similar hijacking invol ving 4-0.000 pounds
of pork heisted from a Vernon packing
plant.
1'hc theft -from Hoffman Brothers Inc.,
ir.volved a $20,000 loss, investigators sai d.
Fro1nPage 1
BACK BAY ...
ned communi ty document, !l.!oore said.
Rodney Gunn, Newport Beach ad·
vanced planning director, sa id the
general plan shows the desired use for
tha t land is open space but the open
s~ace requirement is conditional
"\Ve said that if it is impossible for the
land to be acquired as open space that it
be developed with the most deslri!.ble
priva te use," GuM said. "Jn that case. it
w..011ld be ho_uses with <J ~ensity of si x
units per acre or less.''
Gunn said the pa.reel can't be zoned
strictly as open space because recent
court n11ings have made it Illegal to zone
land for anything but legitimate residen-
tia l. cosnmercial or industrial uses.
~1oore sa id the requirement to put a
legitimate zone on the \\•est ba y land
makes it unlikely that the planned com·
munity zoning effort could be interpreted
as a move lo force the county or state in·
to buying the land.
Gunn agreed. saying the company I!
doing a Job the city Yt'Ould have to do
any .... ·ay.
"Their offer to keep the land Open
depends on if the public wants to buy It.''
Gunn said. "They aren't zonlQg It with
the idea of building Immediately and the
zoning really is a separate thing from the
land sale ol fer."
·The third planned community will
cover the site between lhe Newpon er lnn
adn Pork Newpor.t Apartment& along the
bluffs~
The gcner.al plan calls for the !ite to be
dc,·eloped to 15 unill per acre or less -·
h.nlf that or the Park N e w p o r t
apa rtments which approach 30 units per
acre ..
Moore said 10melhlng like 't!ie aU1cliod
family dwelling! In East blulf a're a
posslbili.ty for the area . -
Senate \\'atergate conlfllittee. \
1 Cox later issued a .statement saying he I
will not appeal the judge's ruling.
"I regret the outcome. but to press lhf'
legal argun1ent fu rther would risk unduly I
delaying proceedings and divert attention
from essential tasks," Cox said . j , ~
U.S. Dist. Court Jud11e John J. Siric8 j
issued his ruling in connection with a re··
quest from !he coinn1itlee for immun ity
ror ousted While llouse coonsel JoM W.
Dean 111 and Jeb Stuart Magruder ,·
fornler deputy director ti! President Nii ·
011 's campaign oommittee.
Olill¥ I'll., Stiff l'lloM ~ ll:lclllnl KMl!lw
ROBIN , CLARK SURVEYS WRECKAGE ?F HER MOTHER'S CAR AFTER COLLISION
Irvine Woman Comes Off Second Best 1n Tangle With Train at Jeffrey Road Crossing
EIToro Woman
Ca1·-train Accident
Injures Orie iii l 'rvine
Cal>le Television
Firn1 Asks More
Time on System
Sirica granted immunity from pros·
ec ution for Dean and Magruder on thP I
basis of the te stimony either ma n gi ve.c; l ' 1
the con1mittcc. And he refused to attach
conditions requested by Co1. '
At the san1e Jime, Sirica ordered Dean 1
to go before! the Watergale grand ,
jury without immunity. ~
Lqwyers fc." Dean moved Monda y to •
quash a summons directing Dean In
A request that cable t e I e v is i o n testify be fore the grand jury. In cffeet , '
operators be gi ve n aoother three months Sirica denied their motion. l
lo develop a propooa l to install a cable In oral argument on that motion 1\too-~
A \\'Oman who drove her station wagon has claimed one li re. system in fi Ye Orange Coast cit ies wiU be day , lawyers ror Dean said he 1'Wld
int o the side or a l>car San ta Fe freight The victim . whose car sustained major made Thursday morning . to the boa rd of plead the S!b. Amendment prh'ilege
train in Irvine ~fonday night escaped damage v.·hen it skidded into the fourt h the Publi c Cable Televisi on Authority. again.st sel!-lncrimination to all questions
with her life. but not by a large margin. car of the train. was listed in fair con-The request is being made bv from the grand jury If forced to appear.
A few seconds sooner and ~1rs . Gay dition today at Tusti n Community TelePrompter. a Newport Beach-based Cox asked Sirica to require that the
Clark, 34, of 5122 Skinner Ave., El Toro, Hospital. cable television operator which is con-Senate commltt~ hear testimony from =~ot~~e :C~e 9~~~t~rogin i~~~n~1~~~~Ye~ ·. She suffer~d i:iuJtiple lacerations and <:1 sidering a bid ®'the estimated $15 p01e'ntial Watergate def..mdants either in · • fra~hired-wrist Jn the ·coJUsioQ,at Jeffrey Jllill !on projcCt. · ,. ... . closed ~ion .or at least :without radio· ~ ·---~ ·-~ --·--Road-a.-.half-mile~north o£-M0ult0n._ Tlnr PCTA-is:-seeking bids for 'a-cable .and teltrislon cov..er.ag_e_,_.~·---· .
Bill for Sale
Of Irvine Ra11cl1
6eacl1 Supported
A bill authorizing the state to pay $7.6
million for 3.5-miles of Irvine Ranch
beach and 1,600 acres of. coastal sector
lands between Newport Beach and
Laguna Beach cleared the state Senate
natural resources and wildlife committee
today. The vote "°·as unanimous.
State Sen. Dennis E. ·Carpenter (R·
Newport Beac h) authored the mea sMr.e
wfi1chls expectea tO clear the sen"ite ·
finance committee by July I, according
to a Carpenter aide in Sacramento.
If approved by the Senate and later the
Assembly, SB 1089 would autho rize state
parks direc tor William Penn f\l ot t to buy
the ocea n front property valued at $15
million from the Irvi ne Company. The
purchase would permanc111ly flSSure
public access to the prime beach land
and proposed canyon parks .
Included in the purchase price is lend
for: ' I ,
-Five beach parks, including t'A·o
acres of rock an d tide pools.
-3.5-miles or beach front. including 44
acres of sandy beach.
-r\ total of 1,600 acres of coastal lar.d
of which I.200 acres is planned to be
devoted to regional parks.
-Inland parking areas ser.•ing the
1x'2ches and the regional park facilities.
Carpenter's bill cleared the committee
unchanged. Its draft form agrees \\ri(h
plans of the Irvine Company for the pub-
lic development of portions of its 10,000
acre coastal sector ocean vie\v ranch
property between the beach an d the city
of Irvine boundary in the San Joaquin
Hills.
Parkway. lelev1sion sys em lliit WOUIC"Tl'iilf1He-·~ru11ng-~~ion1-·---
Irvine Police Offi cer Jack Watson said homes of Newport Beach, Costa 1'.fesa , OJ)(!ned the v.•ay for resumption of the
the engineer:.;-Gene L. Patton, 58, San F'ounla in Valley. l{untington Beach and he-<.1 rings today v.·it hin the formati under
Bernardino, told him he failed to see the \\festm inster. \\"hich they ha ve bet'n conducted since
c:.. prior to the crash but felt a slight The organi zation. a joint powers agen-lhey began late in May.
bump from the impact. cy comprised of the five cities, was The judge said he belie\'ed attaching
Investigation revealed Mrs. Clark's car formed in 197 1 to seek a cable franchise Cox's condltiorui to the conduct of !he ~kidded only 10. feet-before r.amrning th~ 10 serve ea~h of the cities. Senate hearings would be beyond the
iron undercarriage of the fre ikht car'. ;\ deadline for bids of June 26 had been scope of his coo rt .
which was traveling about 35 miles JM:; established by the board. which "'iii now He said he \l.'OUld make no comment on hour. · co~sider <ext~ding it to Sept. 6 on the the issue of requiring potential def en-
Witnesses said the crossing's wig-wag recommeQClatlon of PCTA consultant danls to testify in open conunittee
signal device which clangs 88 times per John Bateman. session s. m~ute had been operating a full two TelePrompte r sa id the extension is
mmutes before the collision . needed to con.sider provisions in the
They told police Mrs. Clark showed no specifications which "we frankly have
indica1ion of slowing or stopping as she not encountered" before.
and the train aimed simultaneously for The board· will meet al 7:30 a.m. at
the crossing _po.Jnt..uptil~sbe...slammed on MallJJY's_ficstaurant, 7402 Edinger Ave.,
tfie brakes at the last minute. l:luntington BeaCli. -
The car bounced off and careened to
the ea sterly edge of the road.
The owner of the old El Toro general
store was ki lled seve ral months ago whe n
his bread truck was shattered by a
speeding freight at that -location.
Irvine City Council members have
placed h!gh prior~ty for widening or the
1ntersection and 111stallation of barrier·
type crossing guards.
Speed limJt for trains on the Santa Fe
line is 90 miles per hour, while cars arc
Iimiled to 35 miles per hour on Jeffrey
Road at th.it point.
. North l\fesa Residents
Set Wednesday Meet
i\lembers oC the North C,sta l\1esa
Ho1neo,vncrs Association \viii meet at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday to elect new of.
ricers.
From Pagel
McWHINNEY. •• -
ing the beWlldered tanner. "You're not
making enough contributions ."
"Jl.1urai , as naive as they come. was
thinking in tenns of the $12.5 he had
earlier paid in to Battin's election flind
and wondering if he hadn't contributed
qulle enough," Capizzi said.
"But he soon learned that it wou1d take
SI0,000 for him to have any chance of
keepiog the land and he wa.s told by
McWhinney 'we got you in lhtre and we
can get you out'," Capiui told tbe jury.
.. 1'.turai ha.s told you that he was told
by Mc\Vhinney that he v.·ould save al
least $10,000 by paying $10,000 to the two
men here in court," the prosecutor said.
''What lhey meant by that threat waa:
that they could manipulate the aCT'eage
price at Mile Square to reflect ln his
favor or get him out by splitting up the
land into three lots."
FromPogel
TANS ...
have been based on a miSWlderstanding.
"If somebody is implylng that 'A~ had
SI millkwl in the Department of C:On1·
merce set aside to he! pin the election
campaign they are off," he said. "I don't
know -what it means."
The testimony · aOOut Mitchell came
f~m Herbert L. Porter of Laguna
Niguel , former scheduling chief of the
Nixon·campalgn.
He said 1'.la~ruder had gi\'Cn him J.S
mill imeter film copies of merrio randa
that had gone between ~!uskit's Senate
office and his campaign headquarters
This_ was in November, 1971. Porter said
he didn't know ho..y they Wert obtained.
Porter said Magruder once told him
that he was gong to show the material 10
~fitchell, and said that it. appeared to
him that Magruder had done so.
After Judge Slrica's ru ling. the com·
mittee· scheduled Magruder to appear
later this week, after Stans. Dean was
scheduled for atn appearance next ~·eek.
The meeting. sc:heduled for Bear Street
School. \'.'ill also featu re a presenta tion
b,v the Citizens for Open Space on the
$5.5 mtllion pa rk bond rlection planned
for September.
1--
Fina l argument by lawyers for
McWhinney an d Fujita are scheduled for
delivery late today ..
This afternoon, Stans testified he knew
nothing of a.1971 political memorandum
reporting that he set aside $1 million at
the Department of Commeree for activi·
ti es that would help Nlxoo win re-elec·
lion. He said there wa! no such fund.
Mesa Off eri11g
Dancing Classes
Wan t to _do something run ?
Enroll in round dance classes now
being offered by the Costa J\fesa Depart·
ment of Leisure Services every Tuesday
and Thursday evening.
Thu rsday beginning .~lasses are held
from .7.:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. at the
\Vilson SC~J audit~n:.ium, 801 \Vilson St.
Tuesday night intermediate classes are
scheduled ror 7:30 p.m. to 10:30 p.n1. at
the Pomona School auditori um, 2051
Pomona A\·e.
There is no advance registration. Jus t
sho'v up "1nd pay St.25 for each session.
f'rorn Page I
ECOLOGY ...
highwa ys areas of the city. J\1any 0( the
goals are Jong.range but some may
possibly be implemented in the near
futu re.
Commi5.1ioner E d w a r d McFarland
called the plan "an c1cellcnt approach to
environmental cooecms'' but added that
funds are needed to Implement the
recommenda tions.
"The means o( accompllshing these
goals will be left open l-0 you, the I
citizens," McFarland lold tho.se In tho I
audience J\1ondey night. ''There i$ a bond
election In the !aU. 11ds Is ll'here the
n\oney can come Cr01n to acco1nj)tl,,h
these goals."
A WORD TO THE WISE -
There is • tend•ncy for many carpet storts to use strictly 1
warehouse concept. One 1dV1nt19e is seeing cerpeting in rolls rather
than samplts.
Many disadvantages ere .evid.ent -most operetions of this type
-bu y-only Off•goods, so that the customer only gets to-·sff old-'pattem1,
or carpets the mills couldn't sell to reguler outlets. Also, this type' of
operation gene r • 11 y feels that experience is unimportent, end
cons~quenJly the salespeople know little or nothing ebout the products.
Finally, most will farm out the inst a II at ions to the lowest bidder,
guar•nteeing a poor installation. (Many of these instillers ere controcting
illegally without a slate license.)
At Alden's we maintain • hippy medium. We carry a large
inventory, an.d the largest sample selection around . We hove experienced
sales people, and our installers were trained by us. Finally, we ore 1
state licensed contrector.
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ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
"106 acentla A••·
-c61111nlssioner John C. Leonhardt
disagreed, hd'wevcr.. "Thtrc are othcc
ways and means of obtaiillng money
needed for this. We are only pQssl~ the
genera,J..~ plan . Let's concern ourselves
with ttu:it," he $aid.
COSTA MESA
·646'-4838
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M ... • TIHm. ' to 5:30; Fri. ' to 9: s.rt. 9:30 i. 1'
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