Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-06-21 - Orange Coast Pilot, ' 4 I ' 1 l • • 17 l I . THURSDAY AFTERNOON, JUNE 21 , 1973 VDL, U , HO. 172.. 4 SICTIOfilS, n PAOlf • • • • • • • • • ,. ' eare . -- • • Katate .Expert Be ates Be.,.ise as Hired ood I • • • • • • • • • • . Jews Rally at N. ' ix.on s Coast Home .. Mexica1a Exc11rs·io1a Pro1e~t Ca~dleligltt . 27 Feared Dead I l·n Plane ·Crash PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (UPll -Rescue teams reached the wretkage or a ?\lexican jeUlner on the side of a 1,500-foot mountain today and reported no sign of life among the 27 persons -14 of them believed to be Americans flying· frQm Houston, Texas for a ~texican vacation. Hired Hood's Demise Told 'n Testinion)' I By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of t11e C>ellt' '1111 Sll ff Born to conservative parents in Atlan- ta , Ga .• raised In a rigid, fundamentalist faith and testifying in a precise, almost prissy tone, he does not resemble a hired hoodlum. He bdlnks his eyes and purses his thin lips on the witness stand. lie parts his fine hair down the middle. Ga ry f\11chael Rollo, six feet, four in- ches tall, 23$ pounds and with a black belt degree In karate. re--tived in court \Vcdnesday the night liis world of illegal intrigue crashed down around his ears. One hour of the Jl:hour reoorded in- terrogation by District ·Attorney's Jn-- vcstlgators was played at a preliminary hearing for Fullerton a.ttorney _Ml.dl..!I~ K. 1 Remlngton1 t h e former Newport Beach rcslaent accused by authorities. of hiring Rollo to carry out murder co~­ tracts. Rollo, a big kid with big ambitions, bad just been arrested when the tape was made and has since pleaded guilty to so lli:iUng for murder. - '1You 're a little fish In this v.·hole thing .•. you're a HiUe, 20-year~ld boy who wanted to pl•y big time," said the recorded volcc of investigator Jim Daugherty. The tape characterized Rollo as a col- orlesa kid who braaged of alleged gaaglandll connect.ions, d r i v i l'i g a Ptterced es-Benz , taking 1 trip to Portugal on a moment 's notice and paying of( lawmen to get underlings out or jail. None or it wns true. ' . llls · Urst and. only prior arrest was a child steilling rap brought by his Juvenlle girlfriend 's parents and resulting ln p~ batlon and a court order for the pair not to a.ssoclatc. Rollo Is now tesUfylng against Rem· lngton. as Inept wollld·be assassins Bobby Joo "8.J.11 Hart, Chuck J~ulett and Charles Barnes testified earlier against him. The prooecutlon witnm looked across , ·l~,K',utATE, P11e J) I The DC9 "Of Aero-f\fexlco was within sight of the runway at this resort town on the Pacific Coast and the pilot w a s chat ting with the conlrol to\lo·er when the night sky was filled with a great burst or orange light as the plane hit the peak and exploded. Tht pilot's last radio con tact with the toWer gave no hint of trouble ap- proxim atel y 10 minutes before· its - scheduled landing time. He had reported he was ~scendlng from1 14,000.Jeet for the landing and the control tower advised him the wind was calm - ideal for the . landing in the molUltain community. Then c a rn e disaster. The wild Pacific coaslal area is almost inaccessible by land. A flotilla of 30 to 40 small rescue boats led by a yactht went by sea early today along the coast to a land ing at the base of craggy hilltop area and sent rescue teams into the mountains to search. for the wretkage. Dally l"lllt ''5111f Plloll -A passenger list Issued by the Aero. Mexico airline indicated that at least 14 Americans boarded the plane al Houston, but the list \\'IS incomplete and the exact number o fAmerleans among the 23 passengers aboard was not known. ON EVE OF BREZHNEV VISIT, JEWS STAGE CANDLELIGHT PROTEST IN SAN CLEMENTE N•1rly 500 Demonstrated Age inst Soviet Policies on Jews Who Wish to Emigrate 1\\'0 of the Americans were Identified as Daniel Hillard and his wife SusaMS of Houston. They had sent their two children to summer camp and \\'ere going to l\lexico for a vacation at Puerto Vallarta. Hilliard, about 38, was the of· fice manager of Zytron Corp., a microfilm products company. Another passenger w-.s Identified as Mildred..T. Hall, J Housl<xl_J!'idow in her mid-50s. She was an insurance Un- derwriter en route to a vacation in Mex· · !co. Pedro Vega Padilla, commandant of Puerto Vallarta police, said ''That is ex- tremely rough and rocky country and I (See JET CRAliH, Pqe I) · Several Ba1iks Up P_ri~e. R.!tte NEW YORK (UPI) -Several more banks today announcfJCl a ,boos t In their prime iendl"I rate lo 7% percent. The current round of quarter point ·1ncrea,.. atuted Monday with' a move by the Firs t National Bank of Chicago. Wednesday, Girard Bank ol Philadelphia follow. ed suit. • The latest banks to move theJr rate to 7~ percent were Chemical Bank and Marine Midland Bank, both of New York , and Harri• Tnlst and Bavljlcs Bink p! ChicllO· .Ohs~enity Curbs Backed Mesa f rackdow1i Figures i11 Higli Court Decisiori WASIIlNGTON (AP) -In a 5-4 decision reversing a decaj:le-long trend toward permissiveness, the U.S. Supreme Court gave the states much greater authority today to move againSt obsce~i­ ty. One of the casts on which the decision \vas ba sed involves Costa Mesa. FIRST NORTHERN SCHOOL CASE RULING-Story, Pago 3 Jn an opinion "Tiltcn by Chief Justice \Varren E. Burg'e.r, the court held: -Local community standards rat her than national standard s may be used in determining whether material Is obscene and therefore QOt protected by the Constitu~ion. -That juries and courts no longer need to find that material is "utterl y" w~t redeemin g social value before they declare it obscene. Instead, Burger wrote. they n1ay determine whether the wor k "taken as n -ladtl wtouJ literary, art~tic, polltlc:1I, or sclcnUflc value." 7he obooenity dcc:blOO.. involved two catea from catlfornla and one from Georgia. In the Costa Mesa case, l\1arvin J\.lillcr \vas conv icted in Harbor Area Judicial District Court in Newport Beach of mall- ing fi ve advert ising broctiures found to be obscene. In the other California ca se, l\1urray KaQ~n. proP.rietor of the Peek·A~Boo B!>okstore in Los Angeles, \\'8S conv icted 1'1A RTHA URGED JOHN TO TELL ALL WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Ma rtha Mitchell has agai n used her favorite means o( communication -th e telephone -to say she has urged her husband to reveal anything he knows about White I-louse involvement in the Waterga te scandal for the sake 0£ their ·fa mlly . "I've told him repeatedly that l may not be·hcre many years, but Marty.(thel r daughter) will be and his grandchildren,'' ?\1rs . Mitchell said· In a telepllonc call Wednesda y from her New York apart- ment to UPI White House reporter Helen Thomas. under the state obscenity la\V ol~siUing a plain-covered, unillustrated book con- tainlng descripti ve material of an ex· plicitly sexual nature. "·Hard core " pornography \vas the target of Burge r's opinion . "One. can concede that the 'sexual revolution' of recent yea rs may have had useful byproducts in st riking layers of prudery from a subject long irrationally ke pt from needed ventilation." Burger '''rote. "But it does not follow that no regula- llon or patently of!ensive 'hard core' materials is rieeded or permissible: civilized people do not allow unregulated access lo heroin because it is a derivative of medica l mo r phin es," Burger continued in lbe majority optn iQn. He 1,vas joined by the three othe r ap- pointees or Presi dent Nixon. Justices J1arry A. Illackn1un, Lewis F. Powell Jr. and \Vi llia m H. Rehnqu ist, and veteran court 1nembcr Byron R. While. Burger noted that for the first thne since the oourt declared obscenity to be bc)'o nd the protection or the First Amendment In 1957, "a majority of tl\ls court hRs ag reed oo concrete guidelines !See OBSCENITY, Page %1 500 Pet~sons Hold Candle Procession Dy JOHN VAL TERZA 01 l1le Dlll1 P'llet S'91'1 Nearly SOO persons demanding that Russia free ils Jews marched to an area of the \Vestem \Vhite House in San Clemente Wednesday. The peaceful l:iemonstration sponsored by the Southern California Council for Soviet JeYt'S involved in a candlelig ht pro- cession followed by a rally and a petition presentation .to Secret Service agents at the compound gate. The 8 p.m. display of _dissatisfaction with the restriction against emigration by Soviet Jews in Russia took place about two bloc ks from the gate to the enclave. Speakers reiterated the need f(X' Americans to support the campaign to lift the. immigration restrictions. ''Soviet Jews U'llpt solidarity ... they \\•ant demonstrations from the people of the Uni ted States," said council Executive Oirettor Zev Yaroslavs ky. "If Soviet CommuQist Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev is here (he arrives Friday ) and ·1oothing happened, he'll think it doesn't matter," he added. The top ranking offi cial plans to arr ive at the presidential compound late Friday and remain through Sunday. Th e group \•.'hich marched in opposition to him \Vednesday is planning a repea t trip sometime during the Brezhnev stay, spokesman said . During the rally \Vednesday the group heard a n1ember read rrom a letter sent by an imprisoned Soviet JC\\'. then. after singing and chanting the group filed past a petition table and each member signed a co py of the petition \\"hich \Vas to isolate 'ha rd core' porn ography from (See PROTEST, Page !) . -Coast. ·1---1 Weatlaer It's going lo be bli stering hot in inland portions of Orange County Frid ay. but sUghUy cooler right along the coast. Highs in the lK>s at the beac hes ri sing to 108 de- grees in Santa Ana. LoY,.5 in the upper 60s. INSIDE TODA. Y Nixon ca1npaign aide Fred~ -ertck C. LaRue li(lj d t 11 i t d wrongdoing in connection with deolh1gs wi tlt a now--bankrupt llo1i.sing Jir11i. See story, Page 1.1. L.M. 1.-.i• 7 C1Hton1l1 lJ Cll•til1911 M_.. Ctmlc.• ll c ... ,, ... ,, n Dtl ttl NtflC" 11 ••11..-111 "'-'' ' 1.n ... r11lnlMlll n4l f lM MI U.1S ""' ll'tt lttcw• , 11 """'-11 Mn lllllltn 11 I Mo\'111 t.l·U Mwh;tl '""" M Nl llCll\11 H.w• 4'J Or1M1 Cwnt\' 1e •~11111 '•r1•t ,, ,_,, 1'NI JMU. Mlrkttt M-U lllt"'~ 11 l ... lln -.n Wtd!W I w-·• Ntwt 1M1 Wfflll ,...._ ... .. •, ~,,__D_Al_LV_P_IL_OT ___ S ·: - Thursday, June 21, 2q73, ---- • Mitchell To Admit Covenlp? GARDEN CITY. N.Y. (UPI) Former AttorM!y General Jn N. f\Iltchell is prepared to tell the rvin committee that he authorizejf pay ents to the Watl'rgate defendants to 'cov:er up the scandal until after the presidential clectlon, Newsday said today in a copyrighted dispatch. Quoting "a sourre close to Mitchell," the report from the n e Yi' spa per' s Washington bureau said that ~1itcbe11 in· tends to deny flatly, bo\\'ever, lhat heap- .. From Page 1 OBSCENITY . • • expressiott protecte d by !he Fl r1t " Amend1nent ." Critics of i1 s1andard bas£>d on local community uttitu<lcs have con)1>l:1ined thanrwoutd require-publl!!hers, motion picture producers and others to produce material that \YOuld meet the standards of the nation's most 1>rudish conimuuity. , In his opinion, Burger offered the~ specific guidelines for juries and judges \... to use when trying tO dcter1nine \\'hat Is obscene: BREMER BREAK0IN ORD=-E=R-"S'----, -----TOto=Story, Page '" "'J'he basic guidelines ... must be : (a ) 11·hcther 'the average person, applying contemporary cofMlunJty standards' WilU!d find l hat-the work. taken as a Whole, appeals to !he purlcnt interest ... (b) whether the work depicts or describes. in a potently offensivt• \\'ii.I'. sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state la\v <ind iC) \1•hether the -~,..;,.o"-rr.taken-as-a'1vhol . nck!-striou1<. --1 literar~r. artistic. pol!tical or srienli£ic value." rove< a pni-n-to put listening devices in the Democratic National Committee headquarters. Ney,•sd3y reporter Anthony Marro, woo signed the dispatch, wrote that the -s~l<Ulil<belLwould:admit that,be-· knew about the cover-up plan and that he approved payments to the defendants .to "~p the lid on" WlUI after the NO\letnber election. MRS. RONALD REAGAN EMBRACES FORMER POW, AIR FORCE CAPT. THOMAS HANTON Another' Former Prisoner, M/Sgt. James Gough, Looks on at POW Reception The S\\'Ceping decision came in one of l.l number of obscenity cnses that havl· ·t>eellpendillg before the high court . Burger· chose as a vehicle for his major :Pron0Wlce1nents -a-Galifornia case in \Yhich Marvin Miller was convict~d undef a state la\\• of mailing unsolicited sex- ually explicit materjals. Burger's opinion greatly bolsters the authority of local prosecutors in 111ovlng :igainst pornography. Thry n e c d 110 longer grapple \1•ith the conce1Jt or a na- tional standard on Sl'XUal candor, b111 1nay rely on tbe reac.tions of local juril's, A fonner deputy of Mitchell, Jl!!b Stuart Magruder, told the Senate com- mittee investigating the \\'atergate affair that Mitchell approved bugging the Democrats during a meeting with men ~Ose to--the-White House and the Com- mittee to Re· elect the President oo March 30, 1972 at Key Biscayne, Fla. Sen. Sam El-Yin (D-N.C.), is chairman of the Senate investigating group. . •.· . P ass~n gers, Crew Listed In Jet Crc1sli El Toro Captaiti Steve1i Hanso1i Declared Kille<l ln a case involving fihns shown at an "adult theater" in Georgia. the majority fejected the notion that pornography ac- quires constitutional protection "'hen it is displayed for c9'1senting adul!s only. CANDLE POWER Jews in Protest From Page 1 PROTEST ... ~ presented to White House security a ides. The full signed version, spokesman ' said, \\'Ould be sent to lhe.\Vhitc House at a later date. ·• 1'he document urges Nixon to "end the .. discredited and unnecessary subterfuge ,,. of behind-the-scenes negotiations and speak out openly in behali of Soviet ' Jews." -'11he petition states that Nixon's silence "embarrasses and upsets us." "We urge you to tell Mr. Brezhnev that the United States will not support the economy of an oppressive and ntorally bankrupt society until 'and unless its ,.. leaders decide to permit free emigra- ·tion of those who "'ish to leave," t~e petition continugd. Higl1 Court Says 'No' to Probe Of Olrio Guard WASHINGTON (AP) .:. The U.S. , Supreme Court today refused to order an • investigation into the training of Ohio National Guardsmen sent to the campus of Kent State Unjversity in May 1970. · The court, by a 5-4 vote, reversed a 1972 appeals couit order directing lower courts to make the review. Dissenting justices held that the suit should be declared moot. Four students v.·ere killed when . Guardsmen opened fire during an an- . tiwar demonstration at the Ohio school. · Ohio officials opposed the inquiry, ·saying the training and weaponry of the guard should not be subject to judicial review. , Speaking for the court. Chief Justice \Varren E. Burger said the situation has greatly changed since Kent State .students filed the suit in 1970. : None of the students is still enrolled :and none of the original defendants is ; hold ing offices \vith authority over the ; National Guard, he said. .· OlANCiE COAST " DAILY PILOT Thi Or1ng1 Co11I OAll.Y PILOT, wll!I whld• 11 comolned tto1 News.Preu, i1 put>U!.heo bY 11'11 Orange CO.II Pubt111'1lng COmo1ny, Sepa r1i. ectlll•m1 art Pti~ll1htc1, M«>01y lhro!J9l'I Frld1y, lor Cettll Mt~, NIWllO"I !l••Ch, Hwntlngton f"e1<hfl'ii"unlilii" Villty, L991ii'ii 9ff<ll, 1rvln1/S1C1Cllet>eo:k and ~n Cltmen!tl Sin Ju1n C1pl1lftNI. A 1111911 rt;IOllll tallion II pl,lblllhecl S.fU!'dlYI Ind $11f\cl1r11. rn• prltlcl0-1 P\llllllih!l'IQ' pl•nl II It lJll W11! !Uy Slrfft, c;o111 Maw, C1lllorn11, ti.ii. R.ob•rt N. w.,d Prnlcl1nt Ind Publl,hl• J1ck It Curl1y V•(t Prnldtfil ind G1Mr•! M1111oe• Thorn11 K••vil £Cl!IOr Tlo.0111•• ;.., Murpliin• M11\f(llng Ee1itor Cli•..111 H. Looi IUcli1rd P. N1U A111l1llnl Mln-Ofl'O ECl llor• OHie• COlll Maw: UC Wttt lll•y S!ret1 Ntwoort •••ch: )Jll ·N•WPO•I 9GUlt¥•rCI LtfllM eff</11 212 l'orat "'~•nut MUl'lfltlcl!tn'!leKh: f/111 ... ell I Oultv.,O ... ti c1-•1: Xl5 NOrtfl !.I ClmlllO R11I Tel ...... (714, MJ-4121 a..HW A4,....1•t 641·1671 """' C..IMI Af'ffl ,_lfl 14 ~ lttdl C92-4421 ' flr.-----Or"fl-(-"f C.Mnw>l!ltlft 140.111• (a.yrllfll, 1'7.1. 0Ttl'l§I CINI! "llt!llfl"'t ConiO'~.. Ho Mwt Uttrln , flh11tr~lion1. telf!Oti.I l!Y"tr or <MIY1rll1fmt'n1t i..,.111 """Y M r~.:I WIJf\tUI iMClll l>lf '""'"" of ,.,,.,Ith~ ... ...,. ~ CllM ,..Ifft Nllf II (°'II MfM, C11lfwrilf, lublcf.,lltn ..., c1rrr.r µ,., <nll"lihlt/ IW 1'1111 U,lf monlh1Y1 mU1t1rr •1ll11el'9>M UM !Nl'llhty. ~tagrudcr testified that Mitchell, after five of the \Vatergate conspirators were arrested, v;·as a party to efforts to cover up inyolvement of the Nixon re-election committee which allegedly included at- tempts to conceal large sums spent by 1he co1nmffice on the bugging projecl and pay1nents to the accused,.. con- spiratoi:s to keep them from implicating higher ups. Nev;•sday said Mitchell reportedly does not implicate the ·President in either the planning of the Watergate break-in or the later cover-up. * * * Sw1is, Kal1nbacli Eyed ·iii Fun,d Extortio1i Probe WASfllNGTON (AP) -Spec i a I \Vatergate prosecutor Archibald Coi: is COf\'~ing.A_grandjuzyjnvestigatioo to determine if President Nixon's campaign fund raisers used extortion in collecting $S0 million in contributions last year, a Qix aide. said today. Thomas F. McBride, a special assis- tant to Cox, said that the Nixon cam- paign finance committee's fund-raising practices are clearly within the scope or lhe inquiry being ·conducted-by the \Vatergate prosecutor's staff. McBride said that the prosecutor is ad- ding staff members and considering the possibility ol empaneling a special federal grand jury, probably in Washington, to probe whether extortion and other illegal fund • raising practices were used to fj. nance the Nixon campaign. "We are moving as fast as time and resources will allow," McBride said. Among those \Vhose activities would be investigated are fonner Secretary of Commerce Maurice H. Stans, the chief 1972 Nixon fund raiser, and Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach, the President's fonner personal attorney and Stans' 1968 deputy. Such an inquiry "-'Ould embrace all possible criminal violations connected with fund raising, including violation of income tax Jaws and whether corporate contributions were funneled through in- dividuals but not properly reported for federal ta;c purpoo:es. Allegations which McBride h a s ac- cumulated include material which in- dicates that presidential fund raisers dre\v a list of corporations and in- dividuals ""•ho had problems with the government" and solicited funds in late 1971 and early 1972 on that basis. The problems range from pending federal income tax cases of individuals and C-Ost overrun disputes to pending Securities a nd Exchange Commission matters affecting corporations. · • Honolvh1 •• .. b HAWAIIAN 18 , •• CIAl" Sl11 CRASH IN MEXICO 21 Furod Dud From Page 1 JET CRASH. '. ' • • don't see how anyone could have sun•iv· ed." He said the plane crashed and ex- ploded, according to eyewitness reports received by authorities. The plane, air parently preparing lo enter it• landlng approach, plowed in\o El Morro hilltop between ChJmo and Chatala, he said. Puerto Vallarta was the ·second . scheduled stop of the flight, No. 229, and then it wa.s to have gone on to Acapulco before ending its run at Mexico City. 'Dr. Feelgood' Pleads Innocent ... PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (UPII -Follo1ving Is list of cre\V and pa ssengers reported aboard Aero-htexico DC-9 which police said crashed and ex- ploded south of here last night: Ct~t. C1rl01 Ftrnanelt l Oel11r1; co·pllol JO!ot Enrl-av1 fer,,.ndo Ongay; slewar~ ~on! Avlla; st•w1rd E. C11t1ntd1 f'ASSENOE•S llo•rdillg 11'1 HO~'.OI•! 1. 01vld llurelett 1. EMeb<ln P1lorn11es J. c 1111rre1 Burn~am. 1w~band •· R•qu1I llurnh;im, w!!e s. Cll••lt'S Mo111vero, llVSban(I 6. Carol M..,gavaro, "lie ], NelaCI Jamil. husb.>nCI I. Diane Jamil, wl!e 9. LtUI J1mll, I, d•vghltr 111. Mllclreel M1ll 11. Olnltl HHllrd, hUltlanCI 11. Sus1na Hfll~rd. wile IJ. Guillermo Guerr1 l~. Mrs. Cl•r Porlls IMf'llllll 111 MlllTWITf' IS, M111rtclo LMI 16. Magcs1l9n1· 1.111, w1fl 17. Ju1n L,.I, M>n 11. R1111 Martinel 19, Narrnl Gonlllft 20. Ptlrkll lortonl 21 Marte llo•lonl :ti. J __ ,l«tanl 231 Mtrt1rlt1 llor!onl Girl, 19~ Raped; 3 Men Sougl1t i\larine Cor ps Capt. Stephen Hanson of El Toro. listed as rnissing since hi s helicopll.'r \ras shot do\\'n over Laos in 1967. has been declared killed in action. The Pentagon has informed Hanson's \vife, Carole. or 24112 Birdrock Drive, E l Toro, thal it interviewed a helicopter pilot \\'ho saw Hanson's craft crash and said there was no char.cc he lived . The pilot interviev;·ed \vas one of the returning pri soners of "'ar (PO\V l, but "'as not identified. And, the court continued. there is no requirement for expert testimony in determining just y,•hat is obscene. The films themselves provided the best l'vi9cnce of \\'hat they represented. 1Burger said. "This is not a subject that lends i1sclf lo the traditionr1 t use _ or rx1x.>rt l~timooy. Such testimon.r is usually ad· nutted for the purpose of ~xplaining lo !ay jurors \\•hat they 11•ould other'-l·ise not understand." Burger said in a rootnotc. From Pagel KARATE ... Mrs. Hanson has been active in i\a· lional Lcn gue of Fan1ilit•s of J->Q\Vs and the l'OUrtroonl oecasionn lly al Hc1n111gton a." the tape played . l\1 1As {missing in aciion ) in Southeast "You're in deep deep troubli'. littl·· Asia. · ~ man," Daugherty \\'arned the hulky As past pr~sident of thl' group, she youlh as he l~.id Rollo"s grim situation on n1ade many cross-country and in-the line. ternational trips. seeking inforn1ation "I think you \\'ere taken in bv soinc and maklng speeches about her husband fast-talkers,,. Daugherty continued. and other servicemen. · Slie visited with President Nixon. "They are going to do 10 you just wha! India's Indira Ghandi, Pope Paul and you did to B.J .," added the investigator noting that the lo\v man on totem pole ts government officials in Laos, Vietnam. always expendable. Tokyo, Russia, Stock ho Im and · "\Vben you're rotting in jail and being Washington, DC.-~ fried 'and going to· state prison. rht.-y'll be Gov. Ronald Rea gan \\'Ore a sil ver out getting more guys like yo u. PO\ll bracelet bearing Hanson's na n1e for "6ecau,,e there's 10,000 B.J .s in this 1nore than two years. urorld and ten-hundred Gary Rollos \\•hu Nancy Reagan pl aced her husband"s all \\'ant to be big dudes,.. OaugJic rly bracelet in a -disp!ar case at the Capitol conclud('d. -, building in Sacramento Wednesday. The youthful prison('r had not yet seen Mrs. J-lanson, whose son, Todd , has ~is ou'fl attorpey and re!used to reply tu never seen his father. had told Reagan 1nvestigatgrs' questions about his in- Huntington Beach ·police are seeking that her husband is now officially dead. \iOJvement In a dull. h}'pnotic routine. three men who raped a l9-year-<>ld He y,•as shot down June 2. 1967 v;tii!e "No answer." "No ansu·er ... " Westminster woman who they had of· his helicopter ~·as on a medical evacua. Daugherty then !urned hin1 over to his fert!d to drive home early this morning. tion mission. partner, Frank Oxandabourc. LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 56-year-0ld Tbe woman told police she approached · The HanSons v;·erc married Feb. 21. . Oxandaboure completed roufinc ques· doctor called "Dr. Feelgood" by many of the three men shortly after midnight at 1962 and lived at first at the El Toro lions ~bout . ~Ho's family background, his customers has pleaded innocent to 30 the Huntington Beach pier, asking them Marine Corps Air Station. where he was ccfucat~on. his Job as a hosi)ita\ physicHl charges ol issuing unlawful prescriptions for a dime 50 she could call friends to based. She. 33. is a former teacher in the therapist and the~ left hiin alone to aw<Jit from his Venice office and is free on give her a ride home. San Joaquin School District. the attorney \Vho Yi'ould advi•e him hoi\' $2,000 ball, authorities said. She said the trio offered her a ride, but The captain first shipped out to Viet· to proceed in his predicament. Dr. Morris Abraham Goldstein entered instead of taking her home they drove to nam Sept. 7, 1966, only 10 days before ll.ollo's Jo_ud rasping cough and !h~ O<." the plea Wednesday .after the Los a vacant field. The woman said they took Todd was born. cas1onal Jangle of an un!uisii·ered Angeles County Grand Jury returned an turns holding her down while one of them ~!rs. 11anson thought Todd was too telephone had punctuated the recording. indictment against him listing nine raped her. young at about t.hr~e months to go with The Jape concluded v;·Hh the slamming counts each of prescribing drugs not in When they finished, she said, they took her in Jan .. 1967 lo Ha\\'aii to see Hanson , of a door. a reney,•cd C'Qughing fit and a the regular COUf&E: of his profession. her home. for what turned out to be the last time. hoarse y,1hisper: "Jesus ... " prescr:lbing drugs for habitual users or I-=-=:-:=-=-=:-:=-=-:::-=----------------------_..:._-__:_=::..:___:_ ___ _ addicts and uSlng a false address for I" - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --------, lt~'.:!Ei:.:i··th"!"'B~~:~ ':::~ ; Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For less Than"Duh(aP Dept Dist. Atty. D a v i d Disco said surveillance indicated G o l d-I stein may have Issued as many as 140 prescriptions during one two-hour period. I Thai Alien Convicted LOS ANGEI.ES (AP) - A Thai national has been convicted of smuggling more than 44 pounds of pure heroin, with an estimated street value of $14.4 million. ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:··.;.·.1:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·1:::::;: I I I I I I I I I I I I Without Opuing Tiie Door 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA REFRIGERATOR FREEZER Ice lilifftorea ·1a-11is., allOut 2eo-- cubes ; automatic lcemaker re- places Ice aa you use It. • Freezer holds up to 297 Iba . • Convertible 7-0ay Meat Keeper. • Adjustable, tempered gla11 --·sh-.lvea:- • Rolls out on wheels for easy cleaning. • No defrosting ever 1S------t------t-~~----f-~~~- I I I I I I I I I I I TFF-24RP WE TAKE TRADE-INS I I I ·I I I F>AClfl'IC oceAN SKYLAB f I ISO Jo11rney's E11d Ill 110 Map spots area where Skylab I astronauts will splash down Friday at approximately 6:50 a.m. PDT, ending 28·day miS$lon In space. See story. Page 4". · I 1815 ·NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa "--------------- Authorliod GE SERVICE Mtmbtr of C11lfornt1'1 La rgest Cooptratlvt Buying -Group·Wlth-Th Vclumt Buying Power of 110 Stora• -Phone 548· 7788 90 DAY I CASH-I WliH .... 0¥11 I CllDIJ I I•: _______________ _, • • ' ., • • Viewing Inner Workings Of the Irvine Comp~ny By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .. DlllY l'lht 11941 THE URGE TO BE a land baron does not run in my family True J bad a ~otty .un~le who.once bought a section of south Dakota becai.ae h~ didn't ~heve in insurance and wanted to leave his widow a hedge against infla· tton. And, I'll confess I once mail~ In a cereal bo1 top and 25 cents to purchase • one square inch . of Alaska. It was purely a speculative purchase, and like my uncle's "investment" not v,.rv fruitful. _, Thus t was wit some awe wonaer.-dresse:aliilnY best "board or directors" casual attire '1 entered the inner sanctum or an Irvine Company sha~holders' meet· ing, the other day. I "'·as there because 1,000 shares or stock had been nssigned to my name that day. _. For the record, the shares bek>nged, and still belong to Tht1rt.dtY. Jt.int 21, 1973 ·v --L•i DAL · Mrs. Joan Irvine-=-smIIh, descendent of the -c0tnpany's -~ _ • D~ll'f P li.t Sl~ff Pltolt ·CUllANS DEMONSTRATE NEAR-WESTERN WHITE HOUSE ·WITH PRE-CASTRO FLAGS Small Group Prote1ted U.S. Restrictions That Prevenf·Fightiflg to Regain Their Homeland founder James Irvine II. Sl;IE;_J)WNS OR CONTROLS, give or take a few thousand shares, 1.6 mil- lion oJ the-·eight million shares. · . It could be said she -bad a few shares to spare that day. Share them she did. Three newsmen, including myself, each were assigned 1,000 share proxies. Depending on whose valuations of the stock you believe, the lent shares are ~worth $22.500 or $11111.l!lO._ A Los Angeles Times reporter has done this regularly for four years, but thls was the first ti me all three of the reporters who regularly cover Irvine happenings were invited to sH in on the private meeting of family and Irvine Foundation stockholders with the management of the Unn. The company, which hasn't exactly been on friendly terms with Mrs. Smith for quite a few years now, received the invited guests inost cordially. Now. that doesn't mean we were introduced to all those elegant looking people on the foundation side or the room. Nor dld anyone offer us a member- ship in Big Canyon Country Club. Orange County Lincoln Club Getting Shaky By AsSO(lated Press The Republican fund-raising group JUST TJIE ESSENTIALS. A pencil. A pad. and what every reporter on a known as the Lincoln Club of Orange deadline desires more than anything else in the worJd - a free telephone-in-County has been plagued with apathy, a private place for use in phoning in the scoop. delinc1uent dues and drops in mem- Now . about the scoop. A director was elected. A chairman named in priv· bershij>, according to a Los Angeles ate session. Times account based on some of the · Mostly we were treated to a lot of nice pretty pictures in the annual repc>M. group's papers. and on a screen. The lights kept going on and off a lot as the latest company -.The newspaper said today that it has brainwashing effort flashed by. been provided with Lincoln Club While one film showed and talked about Irvine's \'villages," strains _of documents for 1969, 1970 and 1971 in- Beethoven's Ninth Symphony "Ode to Joy1' stirred the soul. eluding membership lists, financial Another, shown to company executives in Keokuk, Iowa (only in mid-statements, minutes of d ire ct or s · ~·inter), extolled the clima te, the planning or the Irvine Company and the meetings and speeches of Arnold 0 . homey atmosphere ''Southern California as it should have been" will offer Beckman. past president or the group. executive "X" and his 500 employes. References in t'.1c papers include mem- Thal one ends with a learjerking children's chorus that could be a bit ree-lion of aid given to President Nixon 's ord. if the lr\•ine Company were to launch another new subsidiary_ 1968 and 1972 campaigns. One quote from minutes of the Feb. 20. THEN CAA1E THE FIREWORKS: Mrs. Smith, who thinks her shares 1971. meeting or the 18-man board of ought to be earning her more money, decides to ask management some ques· directors. said : tions. · "Dr. Beckman reported that !\Ir. William R. Mason, president of management, answers some, declines Robert i'"inch. CQ!.!nselor to President others. Mrs. Smith presses him. Nixon, has asked him to convey to the Then, wooder of wonders, this captain of industry, the bear of a man one Lincoln Club Board his request that the would expect would risk his life for a fair damsel in distress. loses hi s cool. club. as "'ell as directors as individuals, · lie bark! at the demure lady from Emerald Bay and P.liddleburg, Va. rclrain from making fund-raising com- Surprise of surprises. She barb back. 11 ihnents for 1974 campaigns until after An exchange not unlike two out of IOl1a PekiDese tborouabbredl ensues. 1972. to avoid ocmplications in President Cubans Protest Anti-Castroites in~ Sa ri Clemente A1ore than three-dozen Cuban exiles, calling themselves "militants" over the issue of the right to fight for the ir home country, opened this week's series of pro- tests near the \Vestern White House Wed- nesday noon. The group - a wing or the militant Alpha 66 group -carried pre-Castro Ctlban flags, large placards and one member carried a dummy to represent Soviet Communist party leader Leonid · Brezhnev as the overlord of Castro's Cuba. He is Sergio Lepez, ·who identified himself as head or the Southern California youth delegation for the Cuban group which demands U.S. lifting of restrictions to keep deported Cubans from fighting to regain their country. "' Lepez said the group specifically pro-- tested the Soviet domination of his homeland. Another group leader . Menry Briggs. added to the comments by his younger countcrpar1: - "Its not really unusual to demand the right to fight to regain your country. How \vould Americans feel if -God forbid - they \Vere turned out of this nation and forbidden lo return and right to get it back ~ Both spokesmen said the group '-\"ould .have been larger. "but it's a \\'Ork day and a lot of people si1nply couldn·1 come down lo San Clemente." The march lasted Jess than an hour and was quiet and almost totally un\vilnes.sed. The group confined the ac- tivities to the palch oJ roadside near the J.J . Blmore Thourghbrcd ranch on Avenida del Prcsidente. The group returned later in the evenlng to join a larger 1\nti·Brezhnev protest sponS'ored by th{' Southen1 California Council for Soviet Je\\'S. County Legislator Warns Of Dangerous Antibiotic Others In the rOom.-Utter.e---------~~~-------1-----M.xon'5 197% reelectl6r'I campaign." The-Times sald"-tlie pape s rontained SACRA?\-1ENTO (APl -An antibiotic amen e the provision out becauseor op.. WHEN IT'S ALL OVER, Atrs. Smith "gets on the record" certain denials or other commitments from a management of her largess she knows full ~·ell she does not in 11ny \vay Influence or control. 1bat much is clear. lists of members \\'ho \Vere late in payin g named chloramphenicot. which a n position from within the medical pro-- What is surpri!ing that after viewing-the fitm. ""Charting the history or the ranching and development empire replete with anecdotes about the lady's grandfather. one would ha.ve expected there'd be more respect for the "·oman. It seems she inherited the old man's spine, you think, wondering how the late Mr. Irvine could have left members ol his family so bereft of control of the firm. Then. you think about the 54 cents per share you might ha\·e earned this year. Md you owned-1,000 shares that let you in on this power struggle. That's S-40 bucks-Income. Now, if I owned 1.6 million shares ... I c<1n'l even bring myseU to multiply 1.ll00.000 by 54 cents. If 1 knew how much a year that would be. l might do something dumb, like buy a section of South Dakota or another inch of Alaska. High Court Airs Ruling On Denver Segregation From Wire Services WASmNGTON -The U.S. Supreme Court ruled today that Northern ocbool distMcts are susceptible to · sweeping desegregation just as those in the South even if no law ever decreed ieparation of the races. In a case from Denver, the court said that official action to segregate tbe races creates an obligation m -the part of courts to demand a nondiscriminatory system. The vote was 5-S. In Ute Denver case, lower courts had found deliberate action by the school board to segregate ethnic groups, but refused to order d<oegregatlon beyond those specirlc echools to the entlre system. "In short. common sense dictatet the "°""""Ion that racially Inspired school board actlOM have an impact.beyond the particular ochools that are the subj«ts "-actloal," J\lllice.\l'Wlam J. lln!n-nan Jr. wrote for the court . · Exceptions could exist, DreMan said, ~~~'( ~~s~~~ '=e::~~l~nsi substantial PorlJoo or · the district will suffice to support a rinding by the trial court of the ea:Jstence of a dual system," he wrote. ion in which four justices joined. The others stated various conculTing views. Justice Byron R. While, who comes from Colorado, did not participate in the decision. Brennan said U.S. District Judge William E . Doyle of Denver, who already has written four opir¥ons in the complex cue, now mu.st detennirle whether the Denver School Board's de 11 b era t e segregation Policy respecting nor1beast Denver 3Chools renders the whole school system Illegal. Proof that authorities have pursued an intentional segregative policy · in a ~subfJtanlial-porti(lll of the-Denver~system will 1upport a finding by a trial judge ol the existence or an unacceptable dual 1ystem mies,, authorities can show that the district ts divided Into clearly un,.laled units, the opinion said. The NAACP Loga l DefenllO Fund (LOF) inlUaled the Denver suit on behalf ol black parents. Brennan 1&ld If Doyle finds that the .. ~nver 8Chool 'ystei;n ls a dual system, then the school board "has the ar- flrmallve duty to desegregate th< entire sy1tem 'root and branch.' " their $500-a-year dues, some or them fall-assemblyman called dangerous, would be fesslon. ing behind by as much as Sl.000, and studied bY, the state Board of Phannacy He said the drug "is dangerous," and repeated ilOtations or declining mem· under a bill appro\'ed in committee he fears doclors treating Medi-Cal pa- bership. ~ group was reported. to have \Vednesday. tients "are prescribing it to poor people never numbered over 140. Assemblyman John Briggs ( R -tJ treat just any Utile thing." He said it Oespile reported influence in high Fullerton ), told the Assembly Ways and should be used only for serious ailments, places, the group apparently had trouble ?\-1eans Comt(llttee that the use of and "''Ith supervision. getting name speakers to appear at Its chloramphenicol has recently "soared The measure would requi re the Board Lincoln Day dinners, the papers reveal-rather dramatically, especially in the d'r"Pharmacy to submit an annual report ed. ' l\·ledi-Cal field." to the legislature on the manufacture. In 1970-71 , the group listed con-His measure first demanded that distribution and u t i Ii z at ion of tribulions of $10,000 to Goy. Ronald chloramphenicol be placed under the pnr chloramphenicol. Reagan's "''inning effort: $15,000 to lbe visions of the Unifonn Controlled The committee advanced it lo the fl oor losing effort of fonner Sen. George Substances Act. But Briggs said he on an 11-2 vote. It is AB 626. ' Afurphy (R-Calif.I: $28.000 to the losing ---------------------------- candidacy of \Villiam J . Teague for Congress in the 34th district ; $20.000 to Bruce Nestande, who lost in his bid for the 69th Assembly district, and $1,000 to the lo.sing candidacy of Henry Boney for the 40th state Senate district. "We would have been -·happier, of course, if more Republicans had won , but let us not be too discouraged " . .. " Beckman \r;-as quoted as telling a membership meeting. In short, the Times said. the group's papers show it to be an orthodox Republican club that bas coosistently raised thousands of dollars, though less than is popularly perceJved. San Diegan Held In Rape, Murder SAN OTEGO (AP) - A San Diego man has been .charged with m\lrder in the 1970 slaying of a door-to-door encyclope-- dia s a I e SW o m a n found raped and s trangled · "1\flChlret D. Keeyes , 26; had been ar- raigned earlier Wednesday on two charges of rape and and of assualt and was preparing to PoSt bail when he was called to another courtroom to face the murder charge. He was accmed of klJUng Diane Bristol, 21, whose body was found_in a driveway in a residential East San Dlego neighbor· hood, polic< said. JI. J. (Jarrell~ 22nd SEMI-ANNUAL Now in We invit• you to attend H. J. Garrett's semi-ennual sale. Each ye•r et this time, we offer our re9ular sto·ck merchendi5e at fabulo·us reductions. It is an opportunity for you to purchase c e ref ·U 11 y selected pieces from the most eom pre· hensive collection of truly fine furn iture and eecessories in the Herbor area at e reduced price. The sele be9ins Thursdey, June 14. Ra9ular store hours will prevail. Fair traded items e11• cepted. Progress - s DAILY PILO I 3 Boat Burns After · Blast; One Injured Gasoline fumes trapped in the bilges of a 25-foot cabin cruiser exploded Wed· nesday as the vessel was nearing the Dana Harbor bait receiver and one of four men a board suffered minor bums in the fire that followed . , llarbor patrolmen said the explosion and fire a board the unnamed cruiser cn1pted at about 8:20 a.m. John Rader, 51 , ()( 115 Ro5a, San Clemente, y,•as burned in the explosion, but his hurts were described as minor by harbor patrolmen who transported the men to S"an ctemente General H05pital. The boc:it Was being operated by WiJliem·-Ger.ken.--39,-ot-2989-Millbro, ---1 Costa Mesa \\•hen the accident occurred. Besides Gerkin , his son, Bill, 14, and Jack Lile, 4.5, of 139 \V. Escalones, San Clemente were on board. Officers said all four men abandoned ship \vhen the fiz:e erupted. A passing vessel_pic.k~ up the_ me1t and harbor patrolmen rushed to the scene in the patrol fireboat Doheny volunteers also arrived. TI\C .. vesse~ by !hen was totally engulfed in flames. Firefighters used water hoses and foam to quell fhe blazo which was.made fierce by a leaking gas tank on the starboard side. Damage to the boat was set at $2,500 <1nd the frame and other major struc- tural components were heavily damaged. Brezhnev Host At Anniversary 0£ First Family \VASHINGTON (UPI ) -Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev will be host at a din· ncr at the Russian embassy tonight to ' honor President mid Mrs. Ni1on on their 33rd wedding anniversary. The Nixons' daughters and their husbands -Julie and David Eisenhower and Tricia and Edward Cox -will also attend the event. There was no indication whether the Nixons. who were married in a Quaker C{'remony J une 21. 1940 at the Mission Inn at Riverside, wiJI receive any an- niversary gifts at the Soviet embassy but there was sure to be a champagne toast from Brezhnev. Nixon was a young lawwer in Whittier and Pat was teaching commercial sulr jects at Whittier High School when they were married. The Ni.J:ons and Brezhnev will leave for lbe Nixoo home at San Clemente Friday. The Kremlin leader will return l<> \Va shlngto_!l Sunday in preparation for his lriJJ home but tpe Nlxons will stay at San Clemente for some two and a half weeks. Land Measure Stays WASHINGTON (AP) - A national land use planning biU survived a~ crucial test today when the Senate-rejected a move lo strike a section designed to protect areas or critical environmental concern. The Senate voted 63 to 20 against an amend- ment 'vhich one sponsor of the bill sa.id would reduce the legislation to "a devel· opers' measure." l Th< court, .In Its first decision on a school de"'Cl'Ol'lion .... rrom a north<m city, ruled that lntontlonal racial dJ&erimlnaUon in part ot a &ehool 1ystem leaves the entire 1ystem taJnttd and subject to court action. Ir th< system.ls tiot foond to be dual, the board will have an opportunity to rebut the blacks' •lleaatlona of Irr tenilonal segregallon In the core city schools raised by the flnding or 1 .. tenllonal secreptton in -the Park 11111 ocE<>ols~ he added. Beer Ca1i Tosser Corralled Again, Your Jo.vorite interior designer will be hilPPll to assis t you •.. In the long-awaited opinion concerning Denver public ichools, the court majorlty said that where Intentional segregation ha1 been shown w1th re~pecl to a signifi· cant portion of the system, authorities muat prove that their actions involving other segregated schools were not Ukewl .. motlvoted. BrtMln spoke !or the ~r1 In an oplo- ' Jn that iltuaUon, Brennan sald1 the board will then have the burden of show- ing that Its l'Ollclea with respect to con- struction, site and location of schools, student traMfers and other factors such as the "IC><lllled 'otlghborhood acbool' concept," were not adopted to Ina In ta In segregation bi the core city or "were not !actora in causing the ui.tlng tondltkln or segregation In these ocbools." .. SACRAMENTO (UPll -Th< State F!Jh and Game Department reports that a beer-drinking fisherman was :irrcsted twice in 18 months for tossing iin empty can aside at the same spot on a Riverside Cou.nty cnnal. Robert Frllz or Blythe waS nrrestcd both Umes by Game Warden John Ortman •"'-lined $25 by Justice COurt Judge W, S~ewart ~fiUer on each oc- casion. 'Mle department 1nid he. was even drinking U'IC same brand of beer. ' _H.J.GAI\l\ETT _ fURNl1URE PROFESSIONAL Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thu11. & Fri. Eves. COSTA MESA, CALIF. - 4 DAILV PILOT Just ·~ Coasting,~~ J : '\@ . ,.,,._. "•h .'.'i;.~· Wis ·:<> ·• Tom ''·· urphine ' And Suddenly It's Summer . . EARTHQUAKE \VEATUER? Herc it is the longest day o( 1he year, the first day of summer and the heal has finally_ turned on. Already our coastline has sunk two inches. This was nol caused by any 1---<art-hquake-.-People-did-il. The coastline has groaned and dropped to a lower level because of all the inland visitors who, in their rush to escape lhe soaring mercury. have overcro.wded our region . There is no scientific basis to prove that the coastline actually· sank.t\vO __ incllesJrrun..this_overload-lt's just a fet:-1-· Ing 1-have-. - Any\vay, it is hot. Santa Ana admitted 103 degrees yesterday . L o n g · t i 1n e y;atchers of the County Seat ha\'C son1e rationale for disbelieving thl s report. It was· likely hotter thai1-lhal. UP'TIIERE IN Santa Ana, they take the temperature by running a thermometer ~p a flagpo le en top of a tall building. The nagpole ls usually refrigerated. Never mind \\'hat the temperature is doing dov;n there on !he street. Any\v<ly, one of our Cou111y Seat reporters stepped ollt of his San ta Ana office at 5 p.m. yesterday and reported 1hc temperature \Vas being recorded at 101 degrees at that hour. This gives you suspicion that it probably topped off somewhere close to 110 up there. Meanwhile. here on the b l e s s e d coastline, it was only 86 degrees at 5:4\J p.m. in Corona del ~1ar, aCCC!,rc:ling to the . time and temp placard displayed. on the high\'-·ay there. IT IS ™POSSIBLE to tell you how hot it. was in l~untington Beach. This is because the place is so large and ranges so-far inland. Gall the lifeguard people do\vn by the pier and they 'll tell you it's a balmy 85 but H's a different story if you repose in l·luntinglon B c a c h somewhere back by the San Diego Freeway. Summer refused to arri\'e upon us gradually this year. II lurked under cover all during May and the top part of June. Then '''hen it came. \\'e got it all al once . ALL. THE INLANOERS are con1· plaining about how hot it is. Even Beverly I-Tills admitted it \Vas 99 degrees \Ved· nesday. Th ey "'Ouldn 't feS·s !,IP to JOO. mind you. But 99 they admitted. Heavens. the ocean "'ater here "'·as almost that hot \vith temperatures rang· ing above 73 degrees in Newport Beach. That's almost warm enough to get me in. Some long-time California \Vatchers. however, insist all this heat means \\•c're getting into earthquake weather. The ex· perts, or course. insist 'veather has little to do with any shaking of the ground. IT IS TRUE that some chaps up at Stanford University insis~ that '"e're due for some quakes. One Professor Robe rt L. Kovach at that learned institution has a theory that a good jolt. mcasoring 5.8 on -the Richter Scale, 'viii roll through the town· of Hollister in the central sector of our state within the next·t\\'O \.\'eeks. Another S!anford n1an. Or. Thon1us C. Hanks, predicts shakes of 6 or so on the Richter measuren1ent (or Southern California places near San Bernardino and th e Borrego Desert. He has no timetable. WELL, .4.LL TlflS carthquake-predit· ting may be nice but the hot weather- \Vatchers still think they know more about it. Since sumn1er is here, however. a little shaking of the ground \Von 't \vorry me much. Those shudders \\'ill just be all the in· landers on our beaches. turning over to .get sunburned on the other side. Eastern JUA "LPERON CHECKS ON WIFE.AS THEY SII IN HELIC.OPTER ::... -First Public Appeara nce of ~trongman Canceled-by Shootout1· lflassive lt'elcot11e Death Toll~May Reach 20 111 Pero11ist Gu11battles BUENOS AIRES (UPI \ -Hund reds of spcciCJ I police today guarded former President Juan D. Peron 11·hose return fron1 18 vcars of exile has been marred by bloo<!Y gunbattles between dissident Peronists near the airpor t \\1here he \vas to have landed. Sporadic fighting continued for three hours, claiming 14 dead and some 225 in· jured. according to spokesmen at fou r hospitals. Buenos Aires ne"'spapers said as many as 20 may have been killed in the battles involving right-\.\•ing Peronists and Ma rxist-oriented Tr ot s k y i t e Pt'ronisls. ACTOR-SINGER Leonardo V CJ v i o. of· ficial spokesn1a n for the "·elcoining rally. accused Interior Police J\1lnister Alberto Rlglii of respons ibility for letting the 1nasst's get out or hand and said he sho\\'- ed ··little intelligence" in handling the situation. He said the fight erupted after Righi said police would refuse to put down "popular demonstrations." The gunfight forced Peron to land at a milit'ary aifl>Ort instead of Ezeiza lnternational Airport \Vhere the largest cro1ved in Argentine history -several million persons -had gathered to ,,·elcome him. As many ias 100,000 persons 1\·ere reported still stranded to- da.v at the rally site 18 n1iles from the ci- ty center. Astronauts Solve New Problem-Garbage Dump 1£0US1'0N \UPI ) -A· bag jammed in Skylab's vital airlock trash disposer on the ·aslrcnaurs· -final day of fl ight today tut thcy·managed lo free it and ·save ttie space sLa tion fro1n \•:hat could have been a massive garbage problcn1 . "Boy. is that ever good ne\\·s," said grcund communicator lienry Hartsfi eld when Paul J . \Veitz reported that "a judicious application or muscle" cleared the garbage duinp. "You ought to hear the sighs or reBef do\vn here." Ha rtsfield said from the mi ssion control center. "It \\·ercn't nothing compared to the sighs here. Babe," Weitz said. DAILY PILOT DE LI VERY SERVICE Orlivery of llie Daily Pilo t is 9uaranttl'd Mond••·Frodt•: II '"" do not ll1Y1 vo"r 1>•1>t• Dl' S•lO p.m .. c111 Ind vo~r copv won Ot t ro119111 I• you. C•lli i re t1•t" un!U 7:JO p.m. S1111r1>1y and Su"Gay: II ytlU d• ,.., •tCliYt vour copy by t 1.m. Sa1urd1y. or I 1.m. Sundov, <Ill •r.d I '"l>l' will bf llro11,111 le you, C•ll• ~rt T1~1n unlll 11 1.m. Telephones Mo31 Or1n1e Co11n1y Ar115 Horrhwtll """""'"" ltlCll •nG Wt,lminttor SI" Cltmtnlt, CIP!ttr•M ''''"· St" '"'" (IDlllrlno, Olna Point, So11tll t.1911n1, l.1911n1 Niglltl ... OJ·Htt Seaboard THE PROBLEM. AND its quick solu- ti on, came as Weltb Charles "Pete" Conrad i nd Joseph P. Ket\vin clean~d house and finished packing for thelr return to earth Friday after a record 28 days in orbit. The pilots plan to leave the space sta- tion at 1:45 a .m. PDT, fly their Apollo ferry ship around the lab for ooe last look and then gradually descend to a Pacific Qcean s plashdown at'6:50 a.m. Conrad reported the trash trouble as Skylab swept over the California coast. •·\Ve've got some bad news for you , Houston," he said. He reported that a bag containing a charcoal air filter and lour spacesuit gloves got stuck midway through the 14-inch diameter cylinder leading to a large tank that serves as the sole container for the pilots' garbage. BEFORE LAUNCH. \\1eitz said failure of the trash dump was one of his main \\·orries. He said then, ;'if that thing breaks, \\·e'd be in a heap of trouble." Failure to operate the airlock woUld have Cl'eated trerpendous garbage disposal problems for l\\·o more crews scbeduled to ·spend a total of 16 weeks aboard Skylab. ' Conrad said it Y.'Ould be "pure luck" if they couJd free the januned bag. But 15 minutes later. they had managed once again to save the space station from potent ially serious trouble. ';The trash airlock is operative one more time," rePorted Weitz. Soaking • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • •••• • • ••• • • • • • • •••• • • • • • • • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • 135.00 • • • • • • • • • ••• • • ••• • • • • •• FAMOUS TOWNWAY• • • • •• • • • • ••• • •••• • • • •• QUALITY SUITS • • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• I-• • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• DOU.Bl[ KNIT, AND W0!15TED • • •• • • • • • • • ••• • • •• • • • AS LOW AS 99,00 • ••••• • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • •••• • • • • • • • • •• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • ••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •••• • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • •·• •• ... ~ .. • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• • • • ••••• 75.00-85.QO DOUBLE KNIT SPORT COATS 59.00_ 27.50 DOUBLE KNIT amER DRESS SLACKS 19.75 2/38.00 14.00 DESIGNER LABEL SHIRT JAC'S 7.99 12.00·14.00 SHORT SLEEVE KNIT LEISURE SHIRTS 6.99 5.50-S.50 HIGH FASH.JON DESIGNER NECKWEAR- 3.99 3/10.50 1.50·2.00 ASSORTED FAMOUS MAKER HOSIERY 1.19-1.59 23.00 TERRY VELOUR KIMONO ROBES 16.99 36.00 BOSTONIAN BURGUNDY BREVITT 27.99 38.00 BOSTONIAN LOAFERS 29.99 Values to 12 5.00 DESMOND'S QUALITY SUITS 89.00 30.00 DOUBLE KNIT BETTER DRESS SLACKS 23.75 2/46.00 6.50·7.50 DESMOND'S "GUILDHALL" DRESS SHIRTS 4.99 2/9.50 16.00 P£RMA·IRONEO WASHABLE PANTS 1t99 V•lues to 5.50 WASHAB[E POLYESTER NECK WEAR 2.49 3/7.00 2.50 IMPORTED OVER·THE-CALF HOSIERY 1.69 3/4.89 8.00·1'0.00 lONG SLEEVE, LONG LEG PAJAMAS 5.99 60,00 JOHNSTON • MURPHY BENGAL BOOT 44.99 22.95 FAMOUS MAKEft BOOTS 16.99 7.50·9.50 PERMA·IRONED SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 5.99 35.00 DOUBLE KNlT BETTER DRESS SLACKS 25.75 2/49.00 FAMOUS MA KE R SHORT SLEEVE LEISURE SHIRTS 4 .99 8 ,50·12.50 LEATHER BELTS 4.99 13/4.00 QUALITY PERMA·IRONED HANDKERCHIEFS 13/3.00 1.75 IMPORTED ANKLET HOSIERY 1.29 3/3.75 7.00·9.00 SHORT SLEEVE, KNEE LENGTH PAJAMAS 4.99 3/4 .00 100% COTION FAMOUS MAKER UNDERWEAR 3/2.99 Values to 3.00 PERMANENT PRESS UNDERWEAR 2/2.79 WOMEN;S SHOP SAVINGS Reg. 50.00 Bl azer pant coat ..................................................................................... , .. 39.99 48.00 Polyester ottoman coat .................................................................................... 23.97 All weal her coal s ............................................ , ..................................................... 14 lo 'h off • Reg. 54.00 3·pc. Seersucker weekender·········!-······,·--·---··-············-······················ .. 39.99 2, 3, 4-pc. pant suits ......................................................................... , ................. 14 to 'h olf Other A reas of U.S. W et Also-FromPerspiration • 111 -1i;e bf'Klff'C'Wltll 11roe sw1rms '°' l\OlllV bteJ 11ckll119 lo Ille ""°'' of 11'.0H 111 Zum• 811cl'I nnr Malibu. They t lh:I at l11s1 25 11trSl!n• wer1 111.il'IO •nd fW!D of Jhtrn ntldtd emtrgtney l\Ol.plltl ''''""*"'· T~ WNlller tt<Vlct ortdlch reglonll hl11l'ls Frlllav from 15 Oti1r11e1 11ong ttM CO.II IO Ille fOI lnllM. v.s. S••-r" •v Tiii AnocitfH .-,..,. Thundersnowtri <11muet1td tnt flrll cu1v of summer •l°"A tlle E111ern Se11>Nrd fOCllV wlllle w~rm and l'lumld condlllon1 QrtvalllfO over mosr of 1111 other settion1 of tl'ltt nation. A new storm front mo~e<I Into tllP Pacific Nortl'l.Wl.t tl'd ~Ctlltrtd rain Ung!ll'ed over Thi Ohio River V1Ury. A 1nu1111erstorm We<1nesd1y llYtnlf'llt clown~ Jrees aoid pawer Unn In C1rth11<1e, Tenn., tnd dum~ 2.J lncll11 of rain on Pin.on, Al1 •• Jn lust o...er tn llOor. TtmO<"r1rur'' btlort d1wn rangtd ''°"' Al II A:1wlln1, wvo., "' 93 •• NHdle,. C11lll. c o ... t al We ather Mo.lly wnny lodty. L.IOl'll v1rl1t1lt winds night 1ftd morning l'lol.lrs 11-c:om· Int wnltrly $ to IS knots In 1n.,_,1 ICMllV ~nd Friday. l'l fOl'I lo>d1y, upper ,,.. Cotilal t1m11tr1turM rtf!09 trMt 6l I Reg. 34.00 Polyester pleater dress ..... '. ......................... : ........................................ , 23.'99 j Reg. 1'.00-20.00 ·Famous label blouses & panlS ................................................. 9.99 & 11.99 Select ion of misses sportswear ..................................... _ .............................. in to 'h off Robes & lounaewear ............................ ..,, ............................................ -·-----'h to 'h off Reg. 6.00·9.00 Famous label _gown~ & baby dolls, pastels ......................................... 3.99·5.99 Reg. 4.50·6.00 Famous label bras ........................................................................ 3.50 & 4.99 _Pantie sale, briefs, bikinis, nylon tricot ............................................................................ 99c Reg. 11.00 Summer handbags, white & colors ................................................................. 6.99 Jewelry, Sca rves .................................................................................................... 'h to 'h off ND MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS Pl.EAi[, ENTIRE .STOCK NOT INCLUDED. ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR ult. CHARGE IT: USE YOUR DESMOND'S CHARGE CAllO, IANKAMERICARD, MASTER CHARGE OR AMERICAN EXPRUS CARD. I •ASMlfN !~LANO, NIWPOIT CINTll, NIWPOIT HACH -- ~n. l~~nd f9n'l!*'IN,... ,.nttf,.,,. ============================::================::===~= 6-) IO 101. W6'W ,.,.,..,.,.1ur1 "· S un, Hoon. Tide s Stcond' 111111 ....... ,,. 2:.Q p.m. I.I $1CONI low • • .... .. .. 11$4 p.m. 2.6 _ lll•IDAY Flrlt 1'11011 .. :.. ..... 1:1• 1.m. l.G ,lrll ICW • , .. ,, .. • l !IS 1,m. 0,, Try Saturday's New s Quiz TMUal OAT ;\~~~~~~ Stcond high ........ )111 p.m. l,Jt================================================: S«Olld low .... : •• · •• f:J) p,m, 1.J S11" lllMt J:42 1.m. l•I• 1:07 o.m. MOl)fl lllMl 11 :4' p,m, ftll 11 :02 l ,rft, • -· - • h Cambodia U.S. Intensifies f:verglade Air Crash Bomb Onslaught Fatal to 3 MIAMI , Jo~la. (AP) -A four- eng\ne cargo aircraft with three persons aboard crashed and burned in the Florida Everglades today shortly after takeoff from Mi ami lnterna- tiOnal A I r p o r l , authorities said. fo'rom Wire Senlees WASHINGTON -In the few n1onths since the Vietnam ce~irc, the United States has bombed Cambodia s hea ily as it dld in the pr Ing three years ac- cord g to just-released' Pen- tagon statistics. \ The bombing statistics also show that in the seven years or Indochina war, the United States pummeled its ally South Vietnam, fou r tllnes a~ hard as its enemy , North Viet- nam. • The Pentagon Wednesday night declassified for the first time 12 pages of documents detailing month by month the number of attacks flown and the tonnages of bombs drop- ped on each of the four states of Indochina. In the past the Pentagon has released the total tonnages dropped each month but has refused to break down the figures by country. THE FIGURES show, for example, how much the air war has escalated in Cam- bodia. In the three years before the January cease-fire, U.S. aircraft dropped 175,000 tons of bombs there. But in just the three months of ~farch, April and May this year, 140,000 tons have been dropped on Cambodia. The Penlagon has said the bombing this mooth is c on- tlnuing at roughly the same rate as before, so by now the tonnage should have surputed 175,000 tons. The 50,000.ton a month rate compares with 36,000 tons dropped on fiorth ,Vietnam last December_\ In- cluding the heavy Chrlltmas period B-52 raids. While U.S. bombers were making heavy attacks around Phnom Penh Wday , the Cam- bodian government said Its troops were battling to reopen two more highways leading from the capital. . The l_atest fighting was reported 30 to 40 miles north or the here along Highway 7' the way to the isolated pro- vincial capitals of Kompong Thom and Kompong Cham, and along Highway 5, to the rice growing province or Bat- tambang. Bgth roads have been c u t almost a week. In Saigon, th e South Viet- namese command said today there were only 65 Communist cease-Ore violations in the 24- hour period ending at 6 a.m., the lowest since the same number \Yas recorded May 31. The number of attacks has dropped steadily since the se- cond cease-fire went into ef- fect June 15. However, there was no indication the fighting would stop altogether. The Federal Aviation 1 Administration said the three occupants were killed. They were identified as the pilot E. Peyno; copilot R. Danz, and W. Gregg, all of Mlam L 'The plane, a propeller- (IN SHORT ... ) driven DC7 owned by Transair Cargo Se~lce, Inc., of Miami, disaepeared ,from the airport radar scope Shortly after its 1:48 a.m. PDT takeoff. e Trlul 'Sl1un1' WASHI NGTON (UP I) The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU ) has asked U.S. District Court to set aside the convictions of the s e v e n Watergate defendants and to order a new trial against "all" of those r es pon s ible "regardless of their station in life ." Police Agencies Oash in Mexico In a "friend of the court" motion filed with Judge John J . Sirica Wednesday, ACLU said justice was "abused" in the criminal case in which five \Vatergate defendants pleaded · guilty and two were convicted in a lria\ last J anuary. It call- ed Lhe trial a "sham." e FBI Pomer WASHINGTON (AP ) -Sen. Robert C. Byrd ID·\V.Va.), wants the FBI to be granted Increased independence and Cla r ence M. Kelley, oominated to head the bureau, agrees there may be ad· "antages to the proposal. CIUDAD ACUN A, ~1exico (UPI) -~1exican federal narcotics agenls have shot and killed a suspected drug pusher during a raid in the city's rcd- li ght "zone of toJeranCi!" but were then engaged in a 30- minute shootout with city police. Wilnesscs in tbe city said lhe outnwnbered narcotics agents , called Federales, SW'· rendered lo the city police followinK the _pitched battle Wednesday and were held brleOy despite t h e i r e1- planatlon that they were police officers. "The Acuna Police hollered Pacliyderm Chauvi11ist? PORTLAND, Ore. IAP I - Portland zoo officials have discovered that a J.day.old, 22>-pound elephant is a male. not a female as they thought earlier. The 13th member of the zoo's herd . was born Sunday, bringing the count to five males and eight females. At the official weigh-in Wed- nesday, the J&-inch tall baby was found to have a 2(1..inch tail, 9-inch trunk and 4.f..inch chest. to the Federales duri ng the gunbattle that they did not care who they (the Federales) were," a witness told Casey Gotcher, manager of Del Rio Tex .. radio station KOLK . · "The city police said it was illegal for them ( t h e Fecterales) to carry guns in Acuna and that they (the city police) were going to take care of the city." But Kelley, the Kansas City police chief. said \Vednesday that he would v•ant to study the suggestion before en· dorsing it. He to ld the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is con- sidering his nomination, it may be beneficial for the FBI to have statutory authority within the Justice Department vt'ith Congress keeping an overview of the bureau. One of the Federales , MJguel Hernandez, 25, was lfO'lllded by the city (1(11loe and Was held in good condi'l.ion late Wedne sday at Val Verde e F 111 Poahed Memorial Ho.spital in Del Rio, WASHINGTON (AP ) _ A located just across the Rio Grande from Mexico. rongressional con1mittee has 1be dead man y,·as h1ario voled to continue production of Aguilar Perez. 38, a resident the t'ontroversia) Fil swing- of Del Rio living in Ciudad wing fighter • bomber, ap-A · parenUy trying to override ac- cunGot,,he 'd .-. Fed 1 ling Derense Sec re I a r y c r 531 un:: era es William P . Clements. were allowed to cross the river into Texas a sliort time Clements had ordered pr<r after their arrest by city duction of the F ill halted, aad police. They called the hte:ii:-Rep. Samuel S. Stratton (0- . Ar · · c· d d N.Y.). charged that through ican my garrison in au a this action Clements \\'as Acuna and the army promptly placed the city under martial trying lo twee Congress to ap- law and arrested the city ~._Pc_ro_v_e_t_h_e_n_ew_B_t_bo_m_he_r_._1 llicemcn. 1- Late Wednesday the Zone of Tolerance y,·as barricaded by Mexican soldiers carrying Ml rifles, Gotcher said. He said he was turned away from the prostitution district by the soldiers. UFFELL'!; UPHOLSTERY W... Y•• Wm ....... 1922 H9'b« lhtd. C_,. M ... -141.0159 -.::r~~· ......... ~... !i:F....,.. ".~~·~ -... ---· . ___ ...,,. • "i -.-r-: .... "1ifr ~?r ii'·#' ;; .i w ~· *m mi nimum baBnce. *m limrt number of * ch:d<s writtm m sav1rgs required * ro e><Pratbn rnte. * .t, ,. I\ For our Semi-Grand Opening we're offering m ()() 1rg, FREE Checking for Life to Charter Depositors Open ~ur per$Qnal checking account now. · and you II never pay another cent for service charges. Which can save \OU S25 to $40 a year this year, and every year you bank with us. Come see u.s at.our temporary facility (while our new building is under conslruction) al Brookhurst and Garfield in the Village Shopping Center. <;>et goodies antl givEMrNays, open your FREE Ufetlme Checking account (and ask about our new Check Guarantee Card). But hurry! Thia la a limited time offer. llJ~.!!'...f!J~.1' .. Bank igooe Brookh1.r1t (at Garfield). HootlngtonBeoch/(714) 963-5651 EXmlOEO HOURS: OPEN SATURDAYS I 10:00 Lm.·1:0Q ~m. Monday-lhuraday I 8:30 a.m.•S:OO. p.m. MMlbtr, l'.D.l.C. Fridays until 6:00 p,m. Newport Beooh/lnglewood/South Bey /Piay1 Doi Rey /H...,tlngJoo Beach ' • • ThurMlay, June 21, 1q1) OAIL Y PILOT 5 : 'Bre·mer E;ntry Ordered' WASHINGTON (UPll - The Wuhington Pc<I said to- day Watergate conspirator E. lioward Hunt has told Senate Investigators that r or mer special White House counsel Charles Colson ordered him to break into the home or the man suspected of trying to assassinate A1abama Gov . George C. Wallace. The Post said that HWlt told the Senate Watergate com- mittee that within one hoW' after the attem p t to assassinate Wallace on May 15, 1972 Colson ordered hlm to fly to ~1ilwaukee, illegally break into the apartment of Arthur H. Bremer, and bimg back whatever information might be useful in linking Bremer to left-wing political causes. HUNT, WHO 'MIEN was a White House eon su 1 ta nt, reportedly tokf the Senate committee he never went to Milwaukee because he told Colson he could not get there soon .enough without a high risk of being\caught. The Post reported that Colson absolu tely den i e d l·lunt's allegations. go into Bremer's apartment. .. I don"l have a clear recoUec- tion of the reason why he wa.a to go out there. I don 't recall whether the word brenk·ln was involved.'' nomination, But the coogres!iman aafd ''It really isn't a surprise,'' that during the campaign in said ~1cCloskey when told of· New llampshire, he and his Dean's testimony to in· staff wl!rc unaware of Whit e vesligators for the Sena1e J·lousc snooping and "I didn't Watergate Committee. · ha ve any suspicit'lns." HUNT, A FOR~1 Ell CIAl1~~:::i~~=::::::::::~~::;:;;:;:;::;::;1 agent, pleaded guilty I n I January to all charges against him in the \Vatergate con· spiracy and is serving a ~ year provisional jail sentence. h1eanwhUe. fired presiden- tial counsel John V.1• Dean Ill says in testimony giYen In- vestigators the \Vhite ~louse used a Political snoOp to survey the Ne\Y 11ampshire presiderltial pr i m a r y cam- paign of Rep. Paul N . h-1cCloskey <R-Calif.). Dean said Anthony T . Ulasewicz, a former New York City police detective. was ordered to observe the campaign in early 1972 in which McCloskey challenged President Ni1on as an antiwar candidate for the G 0 P Preacher Hns Torrid Topic • HEENE, England (UPI) - ;elUIUU • 7"'*" • e \ I e '18,&&T 8181& TOP RECORDINl ITARB AND THEIR IREATEBT HITS lo"" C"'o.,,z.,,.uN 4ucr c00 E\,o" PROCAL HARUM E ¥.\"6 l'Elf .,.o\ JEFF BECK c;.. ROLLING STONES ·1o1us111J. L066111S • · Ott. "1J11: ,. -MANY MORE -l'(E ~~···I Tl1eu1er-goers Canadian Prime l\1in- ister Pierre Trudeau and Indian Pri1ne l\1in- ister Indira Gandhi al· tend p1a y in Ontario. Mrs. Gandhi is on week goodwill tour. The Post quoted l~unt's at- torney, William 0. Bittman, as saying his client v.·as ordered by Colson to obtain in- formation about Bremer, 21, the busboy who has been con- victed of the shooting of \Vallace. "There is no question." Bit- tman told the Post. "th a t there was testimony about that. .Colson asked h i m (J-lunt l to go t~lil\vaukee and The parish church's magazine is expecting circulation to rise wherfthe Rt . Rev. Tony Potter writes about his r ec ent Yugoslavian holidays in the next issue. The article will detail the foul-up in reservations Lhat stranded hinl and his· wife on an island nudist colony, Potter) 217J f1lrrlt• c11 l1ltr) C1111 1111111 said. I t... .... :.;.;..;.;;o:.;:.;;...~~.....;..;;..;:;.:.;.:.:~~-~.:,;.:;:..:;;.:;;:....• ' -------- lsdt it about tune you spent a ~t vacation instead of a great deal of money? I l : • Spend It enjoy!"!! scenic Seattle and majeS1ic l\1t. Raln.ler In a Hertz Pinto with eccommoda· dons for6 n~hls/7 da,'s at Royal Inds. Only $208.50' (complete). Maybe start by renting a boat and sailing aiong Puget Sound. Drop anchor anti do some fishing. Or just float lazil y along, enjoying the beau ty of the shorl!line and sunning yourse lf. When you 'vc had enough water, come ashore and visit the site of the 1962 \Vorld·s Fair. H ave lunch at the top of the Space Needle. Or just take a lei surely sight-seeing tour of Scatlle. When you've had your fill of the ci ty. jump in 10 your Hertz Pinto with unlin1itcd mileage and head for Mt. Rainier NationaJ. Park. Breathe the fresh, crisp air and take in the breathta.king beauty. Maybe even hilte or climb a bit. • At day·s end puU into a Royfl Inn . You'll be wclcon1ed with unforgettable accon1n1odations and service. The price includes ai r fare. hotel accommodations at a Royal Inn and a Hertz Pinto based on per person/double occupancy. (United Vaealion IT-UA·Rl·H·73B.) $267.66 (complel•) for 7 days/6 niPU Ill Wliklld. There's something for everybody in Hawaii. For people "''ho like surfing and sunning, son1e of the most beautiful beaches in the world. For honcymooners1 golden sunsets, captivating moonlit nights, romantic places to dine and scenery that takes your breath away. And for families. special Fan1ily Plan U-Drive bargains th at let you explore the islands at your own leisure. Come sec bow much of your kind off un Hawaii has to offer. The price includes low mid· week air fare and hotel accommo- dations at the Outrigger West. Round·trip transportatio n between airport and hote l. A flower lei greeting. And admission to Sea Life Park. (United Vacation IT-lW-UA-738.) Prices subject to change July 6. Prices do not include security charge. SJOJ.OO• (<omplele) for 7 dJiys/6 nighlS In Wuldngton,D.C. T ake advantage of this low- cost United vacation that lets you see as much of Washington, D.C., as you want. From your comfortable accon1modations at Barbizon Terrace. you'll tour the White House. tbe U.S. Capitol and other government buildings. You ·u see the historical Lincoln Memorial and Washington Monument. Then you'll visit Mt. Vernon, Alexandria. Georgetown, the Library of Congress and the Pentagon. You'll also have Lime to explore the city on your own, seeing and doing as you please. The price includes :ur fare and hotel acco1nn1odations based on per person/double occupancy. Plus all above-mentioned tours. (United V acation IT·UA-AFW-2.) •Special discount air fare not available Friday, Sunday, 2:00 p.m. to Midnight. ,----------------------------------------~ Pick.one oftheto b1rpin vacations and coll us nt 482-2000. : Or contact your Traw.I A cent and ask him to book you on United. Thele lte only aamplet of lbe m1.ny, money-u.vln1 vecations we have to offer. For more informal Ion fillou1 and tend for our free, full.color brochur<s with all the delalls. Unlttd Alr Llau. Dtpt. 16, 111 N. Canal St., 1Jtb Floor, Cllkqo, 111. 60606 AW-611 Nun•'-----------------Address _______________ _ CitY------------------ State ____________ ZiP'----- My Travel Aacnt-------------- ·----------·------------·-··-------------J The friendly skies of your land. UnltedAir Lines ' • " I 1 I I -:-\ I I . • • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ·Reb uild the C ~pitol The California Legislature has a space problem - a mulUmlllion-Oollar space problem. About half the Sacramento Capitol quarters that serve as working space for the state's legislative_ and executive branches has been declared unsafe. It wall be vacated by Sept. 15 because engineers said substantial parts of 'the 104-year-ol d building could collapse in a moderate-to·severe earthquake. ~ Temporarily, the space problem ls being resolved by leasing private qyarl~.rs_in...nearby oilice..buildings. __ Legislators, understandably, are seeking a longer-term answer. . , •. Governor Reagan believes the present buildmg ·" one of the handsomest, most historic state capitols 1n the nation." H_e wan ts.J.L...re.built .. Estimated cost: $40 mil· Ron. A _leading architect warns that Reagan's plan would mean less space and st ill would destroy the Capitol's ''historic integrity.'' . . . Others are holding out for a new leg1slat1ve office building -in effect a new Capitol, at a cost ranging from $40 million to $100 million. . And still another plan call~ for convers1~n of !he present Capitol into a museum if the new office bwld- jng goes up. Cost: $18 mi)Jion, . · . So, California taxpayers are goin~ ti? be shell1~g o~t anything from $40 million to $118 null1on sometime in the next three to five years to provide safe qu~rters for legislators, their staffs and the governor and his staff .. Assuming some prejudice on the part of t~e archi- tect who's against rebuilding the prese~t Ca~1t~l (he'.s head of the firm designing the new office bu1ld1ng), !t would appear ·at this stage that ~ov. ~eagan's plan is the most attractive. Surely the basic design of. the struc· ture could be retained and if the rebuilding means less space some state workers who don't need to be that close 'to the power center could find office space some- place nearby. . And, of course, the governor's proposal is far less expensive. Meanwhile, the Legislature and tb,e governor will cram themselve$ into the relatively new east wing of the Capitol while various other staffs fan out Into Sacra· men to. . , Operating under thos~ conditions, it's a lair bet that both branches will work a\ a record -and non-partisan -pace resolving the problem. \ " I ••• Another Hairy-'I::..::ss_u_e ___ 1 __ And speaking of Gov. Reagan, you'd never guess with whom-and over what-he is shaljng a personal problem. . The problem is long hair and the person ls liberal ssemblyman John Burton (!>-San Francisco). Burton wants~ a law passed forbidding busil}esses om using hair length to screen customers. The Afr semblyman was....refused service last December at the swank San Francisco Clift Hotel because of bis own hair length. This week the governor conceded that he and his son, Ski pper, would be treated likewise since~ Skipper, like Assemblyman Burton, sports a shoillder-lengtb coif· fure. The Clift remains unbudged and Reagan won't sup. port i3urtnq's bill. Just a Coincidence? ·The California.Railroad Association· is-enthusiastic in spreading good words about state Sen. William E. Coombs' bill which would reduce large holding corn· panies' state t.axes by about $40 million a year. ~ Sen. Coombs told his hometown paj>er in San Ber- nardino that the $1,500 campaign contribution he got from the railroads has nothing to do with his sponsor- ship of the bill. Of course not. • Donation~ Prove Lincoln Role Still A propQs For You , Pop • ln,apeaehment . Do11ble Edged Good Investment WASHINGTON -Sources close to President Nixon's fund-raising effort last year say government favors were ex· changed for campaign contributions. A donation over $100,000, they say, would entitle a contributor to a quid pro quo. We have turned .. • .: ow-information over ~ to Sen. Frank Moss ' (D -Utah), whose : consumer subcom- : mittee has started a ! quiet investigation : · into the impact of : secre t campaign ; deals upon the con· • sumer. i From oor files, here are highlights we t have supplied to the Senate: l -PRESIDENT NIXON'S person a 1 • i lawyer. Herbert Kalmbach, was turned t down by the milk industry w h e n be • couldn't promise quid pro qUo in return : for campaign cash. , ? The dairymen made an end run around ! h'im to the White Hoose, where a com- tributed to Nixon's 1968 campaign. The Price Commission, just before the elec- tion, allowed Kroc a 10 percent increase in the price of his cheeseburgers. 'Ibe commission explained it had okayed the hike because Kroc was aOding more cheese on his burgers. --{; A R P E T MANUFACTURERS donated nearly $200,000 that we can trace to Nixon. One major contributor, Coronet Industries president Martin Bud Sc.re. Lean, gave $94,000 in 30 separate dona- lions in mid-August. The money poured into Republican cor- fers at the same time the carpet lobby was desperately trying to postpone the enforcement of new flammability regula· tions. Finance Committee 013.innan Maurice Stans arranged a White Hoose meeting for the carpet men . Result: Enforcement was delayed. ! mitment was made to raise money for ~FALL THE UNIONS, the Teamsters the Nixon campaign. 'Ibe day after the "'raised . the most money for the Nixon [ first big contribution was delivered, campatgn. They got favored treatment, t dairy price supports were increased over a~C?rding to. in~!ders, from the Cost of • the objection of the Agriculture Depart-Living O>unc11. The Teamsters are coo-! rneot. · One source told us Agriculture sidered the in-house union here," a COUJl. Secret>a.ry Earl Butz got his instructions cil la.wyer told us. Th: Teamsters' ~ey •al. a meeting right in the President's oval man is Don Cagle, a uruon representative l office. -on the wage stabilization appeals panel. ~ The increased supports brought the "Ca~le'! op~ions always,.get ~mpt at- .. dairy farmers an extra estimated $500 ten~1°':1, said our source. . ! m.ilUon fr om the taxpayers. Dairy tycoon S1m1larly, the ~ooey poured m from t Willianf Powell, in a personal letter ex· bankers, bro~ers, msw;ance tycoons, real ; plaining the deal, ooted: "Whether \\·e estate ope.rat.ions and ~ilmen who respo~- ._ like it or not thi s is the way the system ed to Maunce Stans appeal that rtch ·i" \\'arks." ' Repub!icans donate one percent of their gross tncome. ! -J\fcOONALD'S HAMBURGER KING What the senators want to know is : Arthur Kroc donated a whopping $225,000 whether the housewives are now pay1ng l to r~lect President Nixon . This was 225 back the big contributors tenfold in the • times more than the $1,000 Kroc had con-form of higher prices. • • Thoughts at 1:-arge: The father who is silly enough to re- mind his teen-age son that when Lincoln was his age he was already splitting logs deserves to be reminded by the son Lhat when Lincoln was the father's age he u·as already President. • • • Fanatics who can't tolerate the ex· istence of opposite views would do well to keep in ntind the old Talmudic reminder: "lf everybody leaned the same way, the whole world would collapse." • • • Each of us shares a common madness with the others who are like us; and ~YDNEYJ.~ those we officially certify as "mad" are merely the ones who are the most in- dividualistic in ttieir insanity. • • • If women had writteo the Bible, can it be doubted that Adam would have been extracted from a rib of Eve -which, since the female is the procreator, makes more sense. . ' . Speaking or the Bible, it has aJways seemed to me that a really clever' Devil would not deny the existence of God. but would stress His compassion at the ex- pense rl. His justice; urging, "Go ahead and sin -He will forgive you!" .. . . r. How can the gauche and pJinply-faced boy who wasn 't nearly good enough to marry your daughter turn out to be the fat~er of the cutest, smartest grandchild in the wQrld'? • • • tn war, everything we call a "vice" in peacetime becomes a virtue, and everything we call a "virtue" becomes a vice; is this alone not enough to suggest wnat a monstrous perversity all wars necessarily are? Douglas Next After Nixon? WASHINGTON -Those leflist and ult ra-liberal Congressmen unctuously clamoring for impeachment proceedings are heading for a big and jarring su rprise. Tihey 'll get a lot more than they are bargaining for. Ready and \\T8iting backstage is a bipa.r· tisan resolution for a S"'eeping investi · galion <!:f Justice Wil- liam 0. Douglas, long · controversial radical lvho openly advocates revolu· ti on. The moment the iinpeachine n t agitators formally move against the President, similar action will be launched against Dooglas. 'Basis of this strategy is simple: If there is reason to start impeachment proceedings against the President, then there is more than ample justificatioo for doing the 1same thing regarding Douglas. THE RESOLUTION on Douglas spells out numerous charges C9'Vering a wide range of monetary and other operations over a period of years and involving "pcssible dealings with known criminals, gamblers and gangsters." One probe of Douglas was made, but It was patently a protective maneuver. That 'inquiry was suddenly sprung by fonner Rep. Emanuel CeUer, D.-N.Y., 82· year~ld chairman of the House Judiciary COmmittee, just as the House was on the verge of ordering an exhaustive ex· amination of the 74-year-old; fuur..urnes- married Douglas' affairs by a special six- member bipartisan committee. More than JOO Congressmen signed a petition demanding that examination. Celler, loog·time personal and political friend of Douglas, then named a special judici~ry subcommittee to make a probe and installed himsell as chairman. THE INQUIRY was a blatant sham. No subpoenas were served, no witnesses \\·ere questioned unde! oath, there v.·ere no hearings, and no Interrogation of Douglas. The 50-allled "majority report" bland- ly alibiing and exonerating him of im· propriety or wrongdoing, was an out-and· out white\\·ash. ~lost sensational of the long list of charges in the backstage Douglas resol11- tion are: (I) That he was the well-paid president and chairman of the financial committee of the Albert Parvin Foundation at ' a time when it forked over some $200,000 to recently ronvicted mobster M e y e r Lansky. (%) That Douglas look money from a litigant who had a case pending before the Supreme Court. Much of the Parvin Foundation's funds came from gambling interests in Las Vegas. As head ol the crganizalloo from Dear Gloomy Gus Isn't there something wrong wilh a system that has a man winning_ the mayorality ol Los Angeles and then admitting a few weeks later that be did it with money he did not have 8fd sUll hasn't got? -A.J. D. G....,.'1" Out CMll!ltl'tt W. wllmlttM W ,.....,. ........ Ml' ...... ,It'/" ....._. ,... vltwt of "'9 .............. StM 'l'Mlr "' -• .. OIMmf 0... D•ll'I" l'lltl • 1961Hl9. the jurist was paid "at least $85,000." During that time, the foun- dation "'as investigated by the Internal Revenue Service. THE RESOLUTION charges that Douglas, although a member Of the Supreme Court, "'did in fact give the foondation tax advice with particular 'reference to matters known by him to be wider jnvestigation by the IRS." The litigant ~ith a case before the Supreme Court was Ralph Ginzburg, con- victed of sending obsCene literature through the mails. Douglas was paid for an article in Avant Garde, published by GinZburg, at a time when the latter was appealing his .conviction on charges of malicious libel. In aoother instance of lucrative moonlighting, the resolutioo charges Douglas served for pay a.s a dlrtctor of the Center for the Study ol Democratic Institutions, Santa Barbara, Ca 11 f., recei~irlg more than $6.IX». Denouncing this, the resolution bolds: "Paid activity ol this type by a sitting Justice of the Supreme Court is contrarJ to his1--oath of office, violative al the canoos ·of ethics of the American Bar Association-"and is believed to constitute misdemeanors of the most fundamental type. . .. as well as failing to constitute 'good behavior' as that term appears In the Conslitution." RINGLEADERS OF lbe presidential impeachment agttation are two ol tbe most radical and vociferous members of the house-R<ps. Bella Alnug (0.·N.Y.) and Ronald Dellurns (D.-Ca!U.). They organized and staged the three hours of haranguing last week by a small clique of fellow extremists demanding an investigation preparatory to initiating impeachment proceedings. AU House leaders were prominently absent, 111d only a handful of Con.gresmien were on band -some known to be there to guard aga'inst any "funn y business." Significantly, prominent Democrats are going out of their way to denounce the radicaJ 9' impeachment clatter . ' I ilmagine! Craig Hosmer and Bella Ahzug in. Agreement! . . ' WASHINGTON -Tbe Foo<Land Drug ;-AdmTuistration, an outfit with as poor a • " .record as any regulatory agency around, l has at length wccceded in scoring one :. triumph, Jt has brought about a mar· ~ rlage between Rep. Bella Ab-.tug, the lady "who wet1rs her : broad • brim hats : puHe:d far down over : her left eye, and ~ (..Talg Hosmer. the ;. rigbt·wlng Republi- ,. can who once sug· gested that \VC could E scare the Nor tb Viel-· ~ nmnese Jnto sWTen· · · • dering if the Alt ~ Jo~orce \vould only drop, not lac nukes, • but voodoo doll.s, on our enemy. . : Congresswoman Abzug has joined wi~h ~ about J50 other tnembe.rs of the llouse 1n • sponsoring a bill authored by Hosmer ,! "'blch wouJd prevent the FDA from pot- ! ting into force a series of regulations ; making vitamlns and food mipplemerits ' less convenient and more and more ex· pens!1•e to bl(y. Ten years ago, maybe even ftve yean .,.., the FDA could do tbis and the Cllly objedi<Xl would come ·rrom daft old ladl<s In badrnintoo shoes who hang out In bealtl>food stores and lll'Q nddicted to cam>t juice and pu's milk. tlo more. 'Tbousands cl grandmothen ( VON HOFFMAN J have been joined by tens of thousands of grandchildren in lhelr conviction that good health starts with good nutrition, nutrition ..which they believe they can't gel at the shopping~ter supennarket. That is why a num ber of Congressmen report they're being hit by so much p~ testing mail. Some say they haven't received as much mail on any subject except the Vietnamese \Var. IT'S NOT ONL y the proposed rules lbat upset those who ha'"'. come to sU>'pOCI the quality or their rood, but also such swe<ping statement& by the FDA as " .•• loss cl nutrient& from the ordinary ellecla cl cooling, )X'OCOl!ling, transport&- tlort lat1d 1'1orage has n o t significantly Impaired the nutr!llMal quality o( load ID the .United States ,,. Vltam.in or mineral deficiencies are unrelated le the great majority of 1ymptom1 like tll'l'dness. nervoU.ness and ruodOWn condition • • . it is llr nocurale to stale that the quality of soil In the United Slates causes abnormally low c:onoen.trations of vitamiM and mineralr In the food supply produced In this country ... There is no nutritional difference between a vitamin provided by a synthetic source and the same vitamin provided by a natural source ... '.' Forgetting that nooe of the above prop. ositioru have been proved or disproved and therefore can't be regarded as fact but as opinion, there are countless Americans or_ all ages, po I 1 t i c a I persuasioos and professional competence who will dlspule them wilh a rury born or a desire to live long and healthy lives. When these same people recall the ig· norance of the physicians who fail at ministering to them, they react with something like rage when the FDA declares, "Lay persons are incapable of determining by themaelves wi1ether they have, or are likely to tlevelq>, vitamin or mineral delidenci~." A GENERATION AGO -le were cowed by such uoertklllll ol sacerdotal prerogative by the alllanoe o( govem- matt power and medlcine, but now too many docton have killed loo many pa· !lent& with too many dangerous dru g;• for welHnlonned-poople .lo~•CX<Pt such claims. Our mortalitY ra~ are too high and our level cl health care loo low and people know It. . · The FDA baa mounted a campaign that suggests anyone who oppooes i~ the _medical cartels and the dnig companies, limidated-by old dogmar. .and old_ dogmatists even if they are enforced. by the power of the state. People want more and ' :tter than the FDA ~ve them ey will give even the outland· il'Jj~il!ni ideas an attenti heering. THUS the small but soon-to-grow In· teiest in such wild things a11 the work. of Dr. Eugene Jonas, the director ol the Astra R .... rch Oeoter for Planned Parenthood at Nitra, CzechosloYakla. Dr. · JOl\as, who at one point had to visit neighboring Huncary to get a certificate of sanity, has apparently been able to ecllieve 95 percent success 1n a ~t of B.000 ":'omen who wanted maJt babies. -He did this -and hold on to your hats -~ith astr:ological calculations, (For more 1nformalion, please do not inquire here but consult, "Psychic Discoveries Behind the Iron Curtain," by s. Ostrander and I.. Schroeder, Prentice-Hall Englewood Cliffs, N.J. 1970.) ' Other, even more di9lurblng SUC<eSOeS In oontraception, fertility and sex choice are claimed for Or. Jonas and his unusual methods. Wllcther or not his work bas IT'ltrit. It deserves a hearing as do lhe people supporting Ute Hosmer bin. Ir Ibey get "'t we may all leoro aorneth1ng , even tne t+'DA. ~;;:;.._-r-===============-~~~~---. 7hfl menc of apptDwl la for tha lllball' ""' kooks, faddist& and 9'C!'et sym- pathizers wilh the John Birch Society. People once thoiight much the same o( Louis P.asteur, for it has been the peculiar tradition of medicine in the last two or three hundred years lo prefer ex- orcism and excommunication of new hypolheset lo the sclcnlllic testing of them. , The non·MD'1 and evoo some of the physicians of thlJ era will not be ln· OU .... COAlf DAILY PILOT Rob<rt N. Wud, Pubfilher T"°"""' KtelJll, Edilor Barbara1 K1'eiblch Edl<orlal PaQt Edit' ThWllday, June 21, 1973 • t ' .. QUEENIE ' O .ll:r..F l • - Phil lnterlandi Ibow ' like he does.'' 1 L. M. Bqyd Si11gle~dareer Wont~ Unhappy · Question arises as to w~ ls typically the more jeal- ous:, the husband or the ~Ue. Our Love and War man says the h~band. lfe. base1 hjs ~ on studies of polygamous socielies. Whcr•in i!I hu~bapd is allowed lo have more than one wile. And a wl'e la allowed to have more lhap ooe bua-- band. When wlv• •tJ#lrl J ~-n. they rarely right. Bat when busba11d1 ·~~re p wJt~, they oftentimes wind up kill- ing Ollt anorber. lll•ll>rY r~d• Jli!IJ, repea"'<!ly. lllllwr, yQ\I uan dooble tnsybe triple mi~lie quadruple lhe numbtff pf jftjVtJ• 10\I ordinarily 1<1 out ol a rolOP blll!IO . If Yllll IOI!•@ lhe thing biettween •~v•• lq !l small cootalner; ol boby oil. Ti)tl is Ille plalm ol p ll'IP'!"l~bl~ pllenl. who II~! .,.. --he witl 1lake-h11 ttetN on It. j ~~ The hiihfr a single woman cllmbt --in punul( bl lief career , lbe le" ljappy • she Is apt Jo be. ln !act, belP:U!l' .. happy _Is ;what tends to push Jipf lift- er. Or IO e°" ends • fetmnine ~holar ~'ho has m _ I study of lady cucuUves. Am now advised it was ,ione other thiaQ~ J\.tay Alcott who Invented that e}derly article of Underwear known as the union suit. 1 ' A ~e bum.1 up more eoergy when lying down than wbeo standing up. -,_. ~ f .. ~ -. MEDICS -Q. "A~ hel't Is »~helher our medics . in the ~rvice overseas ever. carried guns?" A. Jn Europe, no. In the South Pacific during 'Yorld ,__ War ll, In Korea. and in ViftMR1, yes. The Geneva Con- vention allows medics to be'r arms for self defense. . ' ' Resean:hen. at the LaF,yette Clinic ~n Detroit -ran a statistical st udf of • e"°"'ionally disturbed youngsters. Most of lhose wllb the aever.est trouble. it turned out, had been cooce1ved In June. Jul~ and August, bom U, M•rch, April and May, <;olnctdence~ Possibly. 'Still, 191111 1n1ly1ll quick to jump to conclusiofts thhtk this findlng--tndlrttM conception ln the hot summer months might be risky. I ST!TCHF..S-The soldier'P1ralGJ onto! llmdut11 -·t oelax bile· or ill slrong Pin[' IVlll when dec1plt1t.d. 'Ibal ·_, why Indians !S1berea ' l.flf yun have u91!d said ants to sulure nesb . _ " et yourself. P e1actl y O\.'er the lacentl . Uw "'t1~tl, thul ~loeln~ wound somewhat: llodi'I' <if the 11111 "'" lwl11ed 611. What's left is a row of stitches. . Addrets mail lo f t:1 M. B~yd, P.O. Bo~ 1116, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. 't R01JBX TIMES' ARE CHANGING 1 These beautiful ladies 14 karat gold ·tir~celet watches by Rolex reflect changing fas hions of ihe day. A. Te.xtured dial, S360. e .'•Collinl" design wit h,. champagne dial, $575. C. Pierced brecelet In bes relief, with diamonds, $72_5. Do Som'ething Beautiful.'·"· . SLA~ICK'S . ' Je1"elera Slncel 1917 18 FASHION IS ANO NEWPORT BEACH -644-1380 Wiit\ Ioctl'°'* et: TMrlM•, Ort119t, LI Cerrl!9', LA Hlbtt. AIMI s~n Dll'llO •nd ... , Vto••· " , " . • 99.95 l99.9S • • Thursday, Junt 21, }q73 UAJLY PILOT 7 • keep your cool with general eleetlc aJr conditioners . • • ' g.e. 4,000 Itta portable -ler 99.95 Whe n General Electric built thi s portable unit, they meant it to truly. be "portable." It weighs only 43 lb s1 Micro-mini rotary compressor, slide· out window ponelsJ plugs into sto n- d'o rd 11 Sv ou tlets. Uses on ly 7 amps. g.e. I 0,000 btu air eondltloner 219.95- Unique ai'r-wa sh filtering system wit h spine fin coils keeps airborne dust and pollen outside! Rotary fit,a vy duty compressor, plugs into }tan- dord 11 SV outlets, cools large erea> qu ickly. Reusable air filter. 1 g.e. l 4,000 htn eollii.f ..... le Moler ·"··· Ju st set ii nnd forgtt it! Thermostat ka;ps ropm cooJ,d to select•d tem- ,S•rii tura tonstfntJ)'~ Features air- woih lilfar system,. rolory ~orripre s­ J6r, ultra-quie t i~siJfotion , plu9s "into standard 11 Sv outlets. two ways conserve . • energy (yours) . ,_ 1.e. -•erM .. ter .u. .. w ... er A lripff lave! wl,hing system assures so~itory d ishes, Tu ff-Tub interior re- e:f~t1 st.o ins, rus t and corrosion. Fea- tu_re,'"f'in~ agent dispenser. soft foo d dis~r for no-rinse loadi ng a nd two cycles. Normal replacement insta l- lation available at nominal p(u;.es. kitc!heaald undereonnter dishwasher 289.95 A forced air drying system , two ~"' utton c ye le s •no gold 5""' he avy duty motor m•ke this m•chi .. on example that Kitchenaid is "built bettor, not oheoper." Price includes normol replat41ment inttallotion. · Convenient terms ovoilable . Ma ior Appl iances , ,so Mail ond phone orders invited. ANAHE IM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON IEACH ORANGE, MALL OF-ORANGE CERRITOS ' '4'44 N. Evclifl 171-4 1 515-1121 '47 F•thio11 h ltnd 171 41 644 -1212 7777 Ed in91r A¥1rlUI 17 141 191°]))1 2100 N. Tu1ti n Str••t 171 41 ttt-1)11 500 lot Ct nllot M•ll 12111 l.0·04 11 CLOSED TODAY FOR HOLIDAY. SHO P 10:00 A.M. to t :JO P.M. TUESDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY I0100A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to 5:00 r.M. ' - l I I \ • ' . flUARANTEEI> r .. u. •"'11>V(I$ C•R~• .... .-Of<DIH,,.,.L -·· ••C• ll\JAKA~flf EVERYTHING ALWAYS SOLD \\'ITH AN UNCONDITIONAL MONEV·BACK GUARANTEE! URJ1RICEc ·39c GAL. COMP. RETAIL 5.9& .. ~ SPE"clldJM--. " 20011 ---r~- :, VINYL CUSlbM MIX •FRE'E CUSTOM MIX·ING TO ANYONE OF 2000 PAiRI' TttiNNER OUR PRICE c GAL. ... • " • DUR PRICE 55c 71NCH ROllER & PAN SET COMP.' RETAIL ' 79c .. . . ~ . . . eve You see, we have more services than other banks. Not that you'll use - them all. You won't. But it's nice to' know every banking need imaginable is covered. And under' one roof. More li kely, you'H be i.nto things that m.ake day-to-?ay li_v.ing simpler. 1 Like the senr1ces we describe below. Of course, of greatest importance is how we view the banking relationship. It colors everything v.le do. · courteous pe~ce: ' .... j '• "I We feel banking is ,a pet'So1'·to-person matter. So we 'lalmu~eli,.uman touch. With us, your needs a~e as ip1dividual · as you are. That's.wh · persqpal service 4 has always been imp rtan~at Bank of America.1 • Personal Choice . Checking and ~gs: We have fouz:.checkibg·plans to choose . from. Beautiful sceniccchecks, too. And we offer man~ different savings I plans. For example, our regular , savings account gives-~ou ih-and-out fl exibility. And our three.Investors Passbooks earn you 53/.i % annually for two years, 51/2o/o for one year, 5o/o annual interest for 90 days. $500 minimum•deposit. · Simplified monthly statement: This ~tate~erit si~lifies balancing your cgeck1ng1 accou:pt,We call it the Timesavete Statement. It cah even include a,11.ummary of your savings accounts and1other information if you wish. You can tell at a glance where yot!_ stand. Thr,ee ways m: . finance your car: ' Only Bank of America gives you three different ways to finance your car.-Ask your auto dealer about our Auto-Magic Financing, the rock-bottom monthly payment plan. 0rabout leasing. Then there's ourregular auto loan. We've made more of them than any other bank in Californjl!,, See your dealer·or tocal·Bairk·oft~meriea. · ' . Of course, we m:a:ke loans for just about anything else.you.can think of, too. I J_; . 1 • . .. a.ed Carpet Service: Our own special system to serve you promptly, save you time. And nobody peers over your shoulder when you transact your business. Most of our offices have it. • AutoOl!ltic liansfer Seroce: Makes regulal'.~:ivings deposits or loan payments for you automatically, from yo1,2~·Bank.9f Ameri?, . checking\iiceount. Saves tune; simplifies things. Especially helpful when you're ill or out of town.· ' I I I I ' . ·' I I I I I I I I 1 Suy anf,limountof Bank of America Travelers $5,000 ofTraveJerw Cheques·woufd be $50.00. WRh eques LIP to 15.000-pay no·more than a $2.00 fee. I his coupon-g'ood at arw Bank1of AmerlCll oftlee !ft, ,for·'8:ilmpJ8. the normal 1 ~.charge for puichas!ng Caltfornla-you•would save $48.00. . ~ , · OFFER•EXPIRES SEPTEMBER M.·t973. Your ftrat order of 200 checks ls free-with this coupon-when you open e new Bank of America J)<lrsonal checking account. You'll a)-_o enjoy the, convenience of our easy-to-use Tlmesavar Statement:-• Valid only at Bank of America offices in California. Only one coupon pef custome r, -~~ ........ I ' ·1 I I I I I I More offices uP. and down the state: No•other bank can say that. Wherever yo u live or shop or work, you'll always find us close by. So you can cash a check whenever you want. Also, we can transfer your checking and savings . . accounts wherever you move-in '-- the state-save you time and red tape._ BankAmericard:" For everyday shopping convenience, special occasions or emergencies.· Good throughout California, the United-States-and around the world. One monthly bill helps you.keep q:ack of expenses. 3~.~~np~rs: The8e ~uw.n~.~fuserit'!>Ome real bankieg. v~lu'es.' ' . " ' ' ' ) ,, ., . ' , • Big savings: oh'B'!lnk·of.Ainerica -·Travele1."8i8fu!ttlie~ -;-,-. :. ttil' . " ' "ol~' .,.~ .. 4 ~ .,. lf.t• r -..~•~:j{; V • (t.~rree 'rf it}':-'1i~~tt.1it{ P_lanning K1t-:firs¥.-1:ate;help 1q.pT11nnmg farrtily:g0a:ls. . ,..· . ' . . .. • Yo'!r-~,t ci,~ez:.Ot 200 scenic or other preiiinmt checks-free. You can see.why we think you shou,ld bank with·us. More services mean grea}er scope to meet your needs. As you grow, we're with you. Every step of the way. Let's get better acquainted. m BANK . OF AMERICA u the busines.s cir · ~ • • • • • • • • i . 1 • . • . . . . -• . • • • . . . • • -. . . . . • l ! • • • • ' . . . • ~ . . . .. • r • . . • ., f. ., ------------ ' ' • -~l~t,__D_A_IL_v_,_,_LO_T~~~~~~~~T=hUf'ldlf::.::::!...J=u="'~2=1:..:.:.:1•73 ' . . - ~.County Open Space "Plan ~s~iled As Futile Exer~1se By JACK BROBACK Of *' DtU_f ~ Si.ff SANTA ANA -County PlllMlng Director F' o r e s t Dickason tried lo allay the fears of private landowners. Wednesday that their land would be confiscated IJ the Orange County board of Supervisors adopts the pro- posed Open Space a n d Conservation elements of the new Orange County General Plan. "open space applies only to lan_d the government owns or acquires. Of course, some landowners and developers w\ll see4 this as an implied threat to their property rights, but it is not, because, to .ac- quire land except throu gh reg· . ular pro<.oesses would be in· verse condemnation, and ii· legal." and other "compatible" developments in the trt-county area north of Fullerton and Yorba :Anda was one skeptic. "We represent 200 pro~rty owners in Chino Hiils who hav,,e he.Id their land for 25 years. It is worth $60 million if developed and we want to pr<r tect the rights of t h e s e o~·ners," Leary compl11ined. "You take a wide brush and amount.! to confiscation of 1 private property without ju.stJ compensatlbp ," he argued. "lt is unconstltutlon1il. T h i s splashing of the county green is an exercise tn futility. There is no way to pay for it. 1lready )l'oried out a plan to fl•• up 500 acm for a state ecologlcal prtserve. Only the 500 acres should be shown as ·O!!t" space on your mapo.'' Dlckaaon roplied ll>al the green at-eaa,~on the county map 1100Jy Identify resource area• and do not preclude deve!Opment. The text of the future general plan will iden- tify actual open space/' he said. Scientific of Beverly Hitls, representing CEEED, a coun· ty organization of devcloptrs, labot-unions a n d en· vironmentallsts, argued that landowners and developcr~are being u ked to "nocept vfiue concepts on the hasls of speculative benefits. Your Ian ls ideaUstic, not praclica . It would force clusters of home development in heavy density. acres, atmoSI one-third of the county'• entire 500,000 acres. A re50UrteS management plan calls tor settlni up 3 11~\\' county department to acquire an& develop the open space Btrr DICKASON failed to mark that whole area green, convince everyone present at reserving it for open space. I the supervisors' second hear-am asking you to stop injuring Norman Wagner, executive vice president of S i g n a I ledmark Propertles1 a n offsprlllg of Signal Oil Com· pony, objected to lho)"ing all of the Bol&o Chica lands plan- ned for deYe'°pnlent by his company u ,epen space. 0 '11:1E Jf\'TENT of the open ing on the complicated and private property rights." space plan is to review county-controversial open space plan. 11 JTTAKES AWAY the pror).. SUP~RVJSOR DA V1D L. Baker told Dickason. "You are ·asking us lo idopt a plan then refme it later. You are putting a cloud over private land. The owner has no idea v.·hat is going to happen ln the ·1ong "TUE, ONLY WAY you can reconcile the wants for open space with lhe realities Is to deten:nine the county's ability to pay for such . luxurie s," l\loore charged. owned properties such as A third hearing will be LEARY AlSO attacked the erty ~ rights of Signal and parks, greenbelts, etc. and to \\1ednesday at 9:30 a.m. cost/benefit rindings or the ~·oold precl'ude develbpment,'' eventually negotiate with Leo Leary, repre5entfng the cou.nty·s .o~n space con· Wagner said. "There are 1,900 l------..1vate-owrrers-fol'--additlonal-Reg-Wood-€otnpanY--which-sultant._.\Vflliarns.-Kuebelbeck.-acres1n-1he ,property on Coast There were supporters of an all-out open space plan present at the hearing, too. open areas," Dickason said. \l.'Bnts to build the Chino Hills and Associates. Highway surrounded by Hun- "In essence," he added, jetport, a national cemetery ""nlc cosUbenefit analysis tington Beach and we ha,:e nm." Other Deatli,s SEA1"11.E (AP) -Pet<r DtBore, re!ident manager of Standard Oil of California in Juneau, died \\'ednesday in Seattle's Providence Hospital ·after a brief illness. He was 58. Marriage liceltses Death l\'otlce• •IDDL• Elvtn A. Bkldlr. Allf Sf,; •9tldenl of Hun· t111111on BrKh. Date ot oerrn. J1,1r>1 2D, 191l. 5wvl....ct DV wlf1, Jotien,..; ,_ IOl\I, CNrlH elld A.oo.r1, bo111 of Hun1111111on 81..c;ll; D rotMr, Mlrvln Biddle. of Ha(ll1i.t-; ild9t, Al-C>Hn, Hfftlor Cl· tvi two 1••ndchHdr1t11. S.rv!cr1. SllurClar. 11 AM, mllhrC~. SmltM Mofldr-y, OfrKlora. •OOA•T Debor•h J. &ovtrl. Ave 20; former re1l-dlttl$ ot 224 N--1 A.vi .. N-siorl Beech. 0"9 ef -.th. J-». 1r13. Swvlvtid oY '°" ........ , IN. end Ml"I. Cerl E. 8091rl Sr., of Bllllllf!I•. Mlcr.lo•n. s ... v1c111 al\d vl1ttr tion, seturd•r, l PM, Bell BrOlldwev Clla!MI. 11111rmen,. 81f1Zonl1 Crmelrrv. Mlch~n. Btll aro.dw1v Mortu.rv, ~lf9< s. SUll:K• - Jl:ou E. Burki Rr1l11tr11 ol s ... 11 An11 .,." ol dfttn. June 20, 197J, In L-IMKll \ltter1nl Hos11lt1!. Survlv.cl bv wife, P~trlci..; wg SOOI. ROii E. Jr .• of New York; 1lmothy Burk,, Wa1hl1111ton O.C.1 d11111h1tr, Su1ln Mllltr/ Kt-•: .Jltl)(.hlldr•n, Mtrcl• M-rtr1. oron1 del M•r; Ca!ldy A.or••, Mlnnuo!•: Heidi M.,.,. 1n11 Rober MYtrl. boffl of Sltflfl An•; moltler, Helen a ..,rk1, P111ildene: brotMr, Walt.r E. a ... rk1, San c11men11; 111111', Htltn Edmond1,S1nll B1rb11r1 ; lowr nleoi:es: -nephew. S1rvke1. Sal..,r· (lay, 10 AM. Sneller L1og_..,n• ll••Ch Ch•oel, wl!n Df. Htn•v G1rnard of-fldallno. Pdv811 ln11unen1 111 El Toro Clml'lilt'Y. SMll1r l89U'f'I a •• ( h Mort11arcv, Dlreoi:tors. HAMD 1.-M. HilnCI. Rl'ldl1n1 of L119un11 HIU1 Dilll of dfflh, J-If, lfn. Survlvtd bv hvsbend. Arthur R. Hind. FUM••I wrvlct1, Frkl•1· 2 PM. Mceormkk LMlllWI Be.ch h&pe!, wllh R..-. M1rk ~r1M. of 1t1e United M1thodl1t Cliurc:h of L"!lun• Hlll1, ofllcl•rlng. lnlerme"t prtv11te. Mc:Carmldr. L111un11 B ii I c h Mort111rv, Dlreoi:1ar1. HliRPOLSHl!IMER Je1,.,,,. C•rol HHflOl~mer. Aoe '· of 133 Ullcil Ave.. Hllflll!'!llon Bt•ch. 0111e of c1t111111, Ju"' 11, lt n . Survived by ••lhlr. Oon1td. of An1Mlm: moth•"· Nencv P. H1r11obhelmt'r. Huntington Buch; .r111r, Robin <;1rdrwr; bl"Mller1, R lc h1r(I l;.1 on11rd; o.AAll 11!>11 0-10 Ht•POllMlmer, 1U ol H11n1lngton Beach. Ch1oel 11rvlc1 and ln11rmen1. Frld1v, 12 Noon, Wt$1mlnJttr M1morJ1I P1rk Mort111ry •l'ICI CtmelffY. RIPLl!'I' Mllwl T. Rfp!ty. AHll;lenl ol NewPO•I Baa~h; d1111 111 d11th, Jur>e 20, itn1 Survlvfd by ton Ch1rle1, of NtWPOr el.'"~; lwo "1•"1~1~''• B ~·b~·a Furn'''· 4 •a.hln;ton, O.C.; lreacotl Rl11ley, New Me>1lco1 !Ive 11rend-d1uqhle•s: lour ,.e<:Hi one MJ;ll\tw. S1r11lc1s llef'<llllil 11 ;.11ff1r L111un• r:;c;,"'r111ry. t'....,1111 Etllr111ton S1roent. A.!H n , ol 100~ t COllst HlphWI)" Coron• del Milt. Dalt •I d••!h. Junt 20, 1113. SV!'Vl\'f!'d bl' wile, •e11d1; two 1on1, eor., of Cost• Me11; ••119 ·S.111tn1, Hllf\tlnaton 8 t • c h ; • '!UOhler, Dl•ne VCIOt'tw!otl , Hunll"!llon •.. 11ch: fW!I b<'orhltr1, wmr11m, ot Mt~lr ~: Ob S1roent, OrtQorl; two 111!1>1, Sis Donl\IQhe. ~ R"'": H t I e n Wea!broo,e, Mlilw1v C ty. Prlvftte f1mllY memorl•I wrvlce• I(' bt Mid. Bell Braedwav Martuery, Dlreeton ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY U7 E. 17th St., Costa l\.tesa lll CllS • BALTZ-BERGERON ' FUNERAL HOME C'Mona del Mir 17l-t4SO Cotta l\.tesa Stl-!424 • BELL JIR9A!lll'A Y MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa i\lesa LI 8-3133 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beach Blvd. HU!!Ung(oa _lle•ch ~ml Uf Redondo Ave. ,Looi B<ach !13--'38-llCS • McCORMICK LAG UNA BEACH MORTUARY J7M Laguna Canyon Rd. 4tf.9415 • PACfflC l'IEW ~IE~IORIAL PARK Cemelery ~lortuary Cllapel UM Pacific View Drtve Newpert Beacll, caJUornla • 14+17H • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 'llfl llolA Ave. ~1e1&ml111ter m JUI • SMITHS'MOR111ARY 1t7 Milo SI. llllllllop>o lltlclo - J . Jamison P-1oore or Atlantis Opting for vast open space 'Outsider' Etuforsed County .. . SA~TTA ANA -Jn a 3-2 vote Wednesday, Orange County Supervisors endorsed a pro- p o·s a I b y County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas to hire an outside firm to manage the county's computers. negotiating team consisting of T h omas, Auditor-cootroller V.A. "Vic" Heim and County Counsel Adrian Kuyper to find a management firm for county data servicel!i. Thomas said the committee' Thomas' reco1n1nendations. projected m1n1mu1n cost by solicited proposals fro:n data Baker also colit radicted an the fa vored oulsidc firm processing manag e m e n t assertion by Thomas that (Electronic Data Systems) v:as firms. The proposals received d h · b I ted b th CAO' t fl OpenM01.·Th•"s.91.m.-4p.m.·,Fri.91.'m . ..&p.m. included. outside firms would o 1 e JO eva ua y e s s a u• for less money than the county as $3.5 million higher tiian * tu£•• PARK Mercurv Savinns Bldg., Valley View at Lincoln * -Data Services Depart-dePflrtmcnt. Data Services." -·• "• ment (county ): A first-yea~ :-'•"Ibere were 00 prices given Farmer also argued that * HUNTIMITOfll IEACH Mercury Savings Bldg., Edlnoer at.Beach * · SUPERVISORS D A V I D Baker and Ronald Caspers op- posed the move. They were outvoted bySupervisors Robert Battin, Ralph Clark and Ralph Diedrich. ALL THREE steps were recommended by 'Thomas and all three were hotly contested by Supervisor Baker and Robert Farmer, the county's data services director. cost slightly higher than the so how could Thomas say such over the seven-year period, * TUSTIJt Mercury Savlnos Bldg .. Irvine eivd. at Newport A.vt. * =~r~ 1i;g74 ':doooget a thing," he demanded. Data Services Department * LA llAIM·FUWlTOM Mercury Savings Bldg., Imperial Hwy.11 Harbor * costs would be $8.8 million less * CARSOll Mercury savings Bldg., Avalon Blvd. at San Oi81JO frfrf. * recommendation-by the ~AO. FARMER SAID, "It should than that proposed by Elec· _ COMPUl'ER SCIENCKSl~be"'._'re'°'.'.'.m'.'.'em~be:'.r'.':ed'.'.._"th~a"..t _'.'ev_::en:'!_:_:lh~e ~··t::roru:::· <:_:D:::•:::ta::_:cSl:_:'':::'•:::"":;:.::'::f .:D.:•:::11•:::•::· _*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_*_o·*-*-*-*-*-*-* The board majority also ac· cepted T ho m a s ' recom- mendation that IBJ\1 equip-- ment be used by the county in· stead o! the Univac equipment recommended last February. And supervisors appointed a Waldie Set To Guest At Luncheon By O,C, HUSTINGS Of Ii. D•WV Pu.t Sl•ff Cong r es s ma n Jerome Waldie (D-Walnut Creek), who wants to be gO\Pernor of California, will be the guest of honor. Satur_~y_at a brunch in Newport Beach. It will be at the home of John Black, who ran for Congress last fall against the GOP's Andy Hinshaw. Anyone interested in Jnt"!etin g Waldie is invited to lhe brunch. which will be followed by a meeting of the Harbor DenlOCTatlc Club. Call 642·&145 or 673-0787 for details. *'* * \\'Al.DIE-WILL join other D e m o cratic gubernatorial hopefuls Saturday night at the so-called "D e mo c rat i c fkvival" at the Mission Viejo COOntry Club. Expected at the $25 per person tffair are state Senate Democratic leader George J\'loscone, San Francisco l\'layor Joseph A 11 o to , Secretary of State Edmund Bro~·n Jr. and Assembly SpeakCT Bob ~1orctti. * * * TifE S 0 U T II Coast Republican F,orum plans a !rip to Anaheim Stadium June 29 to see the Angel! play the ~·linnesota 'llrins. Ticket in· formation can be obtained by ca lling 832.--0798. In February, a report by tbe Data Services Department recommended that Univac equipment be pur c h as ed because it "would provide t\vlce the computer capacity at $2 milli on less than the IBM proposa l." Farmer said an $85,000 in- dependent study ordered by County supervisors reached the same conclusion. The proposed p.irchase of Univac equipment to upgrade the county Data Services Department was s c u t 11 e d when Supervisor R a I p h Diedrich said studies should be made on the possibility of fanning out the county's com- puter work lo a private firm. TIIOl\tAS SAID a blue rib- CorpOration of Loll A\11•1 .. propmed to manage the coun·' ty's computer department us· ing Univac equipment and a minimum guarantee of $23.6 million over a seven·year con· tract period. The firm agreed to use IBM equipment if the county so desired. -Electronic Data Systems of Dallas proposed facilities management using IBM equip- ment. No price was given. The flnll offered to hire all present county data serv ices employes. Thomas said the blue ribbon committee waS "strongly im- pressed with the facilities . management concept and the tv.·o private competing pro- posals." bon committee was assembled SUPERVlSOR. B A K E R ·consisting of c·i t~y a~spu!eo-.tbl1~t19o." . ministrators, university pro-·~1 «;becked ·a1t .rQe•s on lessors and corporate data the ptlfUible uae.of an·OOtslde 1«1rvJce• rnanagen. -ftnD~·~~ ~Id to Silting with the group were stay;wt~.qul";freleilf eodnly supervisors Diedrich a n d data servtces;" he argue(). Baker and several county · He Said this know~ge caus· departmenf--.ll.eads. · 'ed hmt. ~o·<l9Ubt the va lidity of THE FINEST IN ENTERTAINMENT THE • BENNm BRO$,. Ndw Appe1rlnv Every Thurad1y -Frld1y & S1turclay NI.to 11 PIGGY'S FIRESIDE LOUNGi in HUNfllfGTOFI LANE'"'s""·=-.-' 19512 Beach Blvd., Huntl"lllon kich· A Topnotch Show With :.-; .. " · A L11 Veg11 Flair • , ... •,I• ' ..---BEFORE THE SHOW_..,.....,,... Enjoy A Champagne Dinner For .2 _ .... TOP SIRLOIN DINNER with CHAMPAGNE ' 6.95 ''SUMMER WAREHOUSE SALE'' EVERYTHING 2501-DISCOUNT GOES /0 OR MORE l CARPETING --SURPLUS PllCIS-CUTS -ROLLS NAME BRANDS -BERVIN • BLAINI -HOL YTEX • MAND • TRIND VINYL FLOOR COYJRINCi AlMITION• • CON90LIUM p" •:·;::•,:;·';_· ,:ftl=•:,:m=.~----~~-, ALSO AT 20°/o DISCOUNT .,_.-,,_-,.. - WAL~APll •DIA.PIS. CllAMIC flU J c:.letlt_lelf Cl11nl11 ..... ._..._ SALE ENDS JULY 2. 1973 VISIT OUR WAREHOUSI AND IHOWltOOM TODAY 11 Uu your 81nkA1Mrlcanl or MutertChar .. wtLltt• I -MONDAY ttWu IA TUllDAY A NO-WAX HAPPINE-f-f 1-f VINYL KITCHEN FLOOR For Only 3944 · .. 9a12 FT . •OOM COMPLETE HAPPINE-f-f 1-f A LUXURlOUS -SHAG TILED FAMILY ROOM Fo r Only ..... ,, '"' , .. , •• •h• 6 3"' 2 film bacli .. nd 1ti1 k !t downl ., ~ I 12.12; .. _1a ••. 9 a1 2 FT. ROOM COMPLETE HAPPINE-f-f 1-f A GLEAMING MIRROR TILED WALL AREA For Only a.. •• _,,;_ ~; ... , ,;,,, 6 6 1 0 ....11. "" ·-looll light· l ,,, 1 • .,,.1 10.101... . 10al ft. WAll COMPLETE HAPPINE-f-f 1-f A •EAUTlfUL CERAMIC_ .TILED BATH For Only ........ ;,h> ..... i;,;,. 3 9 1 1 lllt i o•t '"'monenl find , w•te•proel! 4'A•4 1.4 in1h. 3 W~llS A•OUND TUI ~IS ~EEK ONLY WITH THIS COUPON AT COLOR Tl!.£ HAPPINE.r.r 1-f A H!,~D..S~!w ~?SAIC 'D ENTRY Wf1\' 'N"' ..... ··-;, H•y 3 3 1 ~1:~'.'h. ,,d ,~t•h. . 3x5 FT. FLOO• COMPLITl T.HJS W.ErK ONLY WI TH THIS COUPON At COLOR TILE .. .. , 11 HAPPINE-f-f 1-f ~ A'·qLQW\NG QAK PARQUET TILED BEDROOM for Only .............. -· ........ 6746 llit, .,, r~y 19 wetk • .wit ~'Ir 11 •'Ir ;net. Ml•· -9J: 12 FT. •OOM COMPLETE nus WEEK ONLY WltH THIS COUPON AT COL.OH TIL Costa Mesa 2221 Harbor 8lvd. 645-1126 STORE HOURS: OPEN SUNDAY-fl o.m, • S p.nt. . THURSDAY, FRIDAY-ll o.m •• 9 p.m, MON., TUIS., WI D., SAT.-3 o.m. • S:JO p.m. ALWAYS PLENTY OF.r-Ra! PA RKING A1ichael J . Davis of La- guna Niguel has been assigned to the Santa Ana office fo llowing his recent Graduation fro1n \ the Cahrornia Highway Patrol Acade1ny in Sac- ramento. Veterans' Bomh Threat Re..,_t Tighte1· Security To Be J1xpected Clll'llll•n Sd•M• M"Elw ''"let LOS ANGELES A bomb threat to a ""'est st-based pleasure cruise ship may lea d to stricter security regulations for ocean voyagers. Cruise promoters a r e n ' t talking about security measures. for rear that run- ning a tighter ship could lose them customers. But precau-- tions now are bein g taken and more could be on the horizon. Among them: -BaM.tng on-board b On voyage parties completely. -Strict surveillance and search of all coming aboard, insluding passengers, crew, and visitors. -Installing IUdden cameras electronic con tact with the Jo'e d e ral Bu\r e au of Jnv~tlgation, located the ei- ploslves and threw them overboard -after a '250.000 ex.tortion plot was uncovered . Few of the 856 passengen and crew were aware of the incident until after the bombs were disposed of. 'Ibere are still conflicting reports over whether they were "li ve" or not. AL 1110UGH 'MIERE was no visible panic aboard after the bomb plot was surfaced, pas- sengers . expressed concern about reports that !amilles and friends in the U.S. might receive. In the wake of the crisis, only emergency mes- sages were sent off the ship. .,,. , .... s ........ SPOT ON CALENDAR Suun P1trlck Televised Law Course Of f ered ... Girl Has Painting Selected Many arti.tls use mUseums ' and 100ws !or display of their wort, but sixth ul!lor SUsan Patrick pre!en w c1JM btra oft• & caleadar. ' ' suiu•.s ..... cOlar' pain- .UDI, "Father Serra'•' Dream Come True," will be repn>duc- ed on the Jouuary -of the Equitabie Life Assurance Society'a art calendar. s.is.,.n. a student 1.t Fred Moiola School In Fountain Valley, submitted he.-painting in JIDUary, competing agawt hundreds ol other s I x t h efDrs ror a spot in the ctlendar titled, "My Com- munity In the -ly 1770's". Th1.1rsday, Jullf 21, 1973 DAILY PILOT J1 lt11 get you more than you got From now ttll the ena of June you can get Amerlca"s l>eSt se111 ng whiskey for only $4.99 a fifth. Seagram's 7 Crown. It's Amerlca·s whiskey. • tr,~ . . '.:Advance and detection devices. ·-Shoring up on-board s~urity -detouring pas- sengers from the engine room, ki~hai, and shi·p's main· terance areas. "'Jbe passengers and crew behaved beautifully. I was proud of everybody," Captain Bjurstedt said. Golden West College ts of- fering a 10.week coune in law, but the students need not go any further than t h e I r television set to "attend!' the classes and earn three units u college credit. The daughter " Mr. 8nd Mrs. Ml<hael Patrict, 18173 Santa Eugmla St.,. Fountain Valley, woo $100 fer he.-scene of a misskln, adobe house, courtyard, moUntains a n d -. in abades ol brown, yellow and orange. ' 'Possible ~ _Adva nce payn1ent on G.I. Bill benefits will be possi ble this fall for veterans enrolling at Golden \Vest College if they request· it by Aug. 1, it has been announced. The advance pay1ncnt. is ex- pected. to alleyiale some of the problems veterans face before their first cheek arrives. Veterans will be able to pick up checks covering September and Oc tober at the college 11.fter they co.mplete registra· t'6n., said Donah,t L. Randol,' assistant director of educa- tional services. To request-the advance pay- ment, veterans should contac t the veterans clerk in the ad- ministration build ing before ~ Aug. 1 deadline. PASSENGER SHIP o!- fi cials, ho.Wever, admit they are reluctant to completely batten down the security hatches. "People go on cruises to have a good time -get away from ~t all. A lot of restric- tions might get them wwried, uptight," confides a cruise line official. Spokesmen !or 12 - lines contacted say smne leCUr- ity pnca\dica are aJread1 in effect. None u the apokeom<n was willing to discuss them in detail or to say whether tighter procedures are plan- ned. Strict security ,... lolpUled upon anival at the Mexican ports. Passengers were re- quired special cards to board and disembark. Vr.Itors were bouned from the ollip. And the docking area was heavily poli<ed to dtacourage time who bad no business oo the The coone, "L a·w b-Ibo 70'•,., will be broadcut 00 KOCE-TV, channel 50, which operates oot ol the Huntington ship. ., Beach campua. THE J8LANil P r i n c e s s Tbo first talevl!ed class wlll- started Its j~ -ui w be aired over Channtl 50 June Los Ancelet, leavlrig Matltlan 25 at S p.m., with Ol1Hour seven hours earlier than lessons planned M o u d a y ICbeduied!' P-era ....., through-Friday for the follow- told that nJUt!h weather eoo-Ing 10 weeks. dltions neceuitated the · cl>ange In plans. But une believed that the earlier departure was for aecurity ......... forestalling the prob- lem ol nlc!>t ....... to the ship, among other thlnp. On arrival In Los ~eles, FBI agentlliomleil iiii1 --ed _.... and crew mug shots ol the man alleged w have perpetrated the extortioo and bomb plot. ON SA.nJllDAYS lhe w.ek's lessons~ be repeeted from 3 p.m. w 5:30 p.m. for persons who may have missed one ol. the week's l :m. Anyone can rgeister for the class, and there is no fee, a spokesman said. Tbooe wlshlng w ..... u may do .. by calling Gcl<len -College, 1134-7711, ·or Orange Coast College In Coota Mesa, 1134~- Susan, who. bu taken art lessons and baa painted In otls, went to the lihl'ary for ideas coogruent with the calendar's theme. She spotted a picture of a San Diego mission wlllch inspired the ~- Equiiable, which In the post hu relied on professional artl!ta to depict national scenes, distributes over 100,000 copies ol the calendar ~ tbe United States. · Retired Group Meets Friday The southern Orange ~ Chapter of the National Aaooclation or Retired·Federal Employes will bold Its next meeting at 1 p.m. Friday at ~-Park. In Huntington A discussion OU SOC I al Security and Medi-Care will highlight the meeting, open>!<> all lede<al retirees and their r elatives. IOlllll DISTIU£18 COIM,M.Y.C. UIUIW •'lllSUl'-A 8Ulll. BS NOOF. The amount of the check will be determined by the number ot units the veteran enrolls for. Ad justments can be made in the November paymen t if the class schedule is changed, he said . TIIE ~ Princesst __ a popular lus:ury cruiser on the West Coast, was a day out ol. Los Angeles sailing south m a week-long junket to the Mex- ican ports ol Puerto Vallarta and '.Mazatlan when a radio reiiort Informed the captain >I.hat there were two packages with bombs aboard. Police atTeSted Gerald Prid- dy, an advertising man .and fonner major leagoe baseball player. He pleaded not guilty aud was released on $150,000 bond. A regillration card and pamphlet will then be sent tor---------------------------------------- Captain Eric Bjurstedt and his Norwegian crew, .in cJose the student, eliminating any need for the person ·t.O visit the!.------------------------------------------., ·campus w registet. TREAD LIFE PROTECTION Wo rxilld Into e'lery RaHArlda9 lho aala traction lndlcato,., Thay •li- nal when your Ure allould be repl11cad, ti your tire weirs out (••c.ept tor 1nco111et 11Ugnlft«tl) wa will maka an 11How11nc~ blMd on origin .. pt1rch11se p1lee, a1clu4ing applicabla Feaeral E.lc11a T11, 1ow1rd ttMt puiehue ot a new Ure. Wa wl1L ajlow 1/3 during Iha llr1t hall or 1/4 during the 1econ4 111111 of the alaled montha ol guar1n1ee. Federal EatlH Ta• ed11lstment anowa~ca will be mada on lhe b11I• ol the percent ol the 01tg1n·a1 tr••d raTaJn!ng. 1 Rl!llA.AIOE.• TIRE PROTECTION GUARA NTEE . Your Ra\1Arlc1e• tlfe prOHJCIJon gu11ritnlff covert all ReliA11de• paa· H"9ll' Urn 1a1c&pt 1peci11I appUcatlon 1i1a1 wllfl 1epa1ate guar1n· IH•I ngllin1t all road ll1t11ta or det&el laflu1aa~ You are pro!et•ed !or the anUr11 a1111od months of gu11antee. If your llre teill1 during thl guaranlff ~rjod, return II to ua a~ Wt wilt,. at our opUon. ra1:>ltr your tire or make 1n auownnce b•Hd on Iha or1glnlll purthaaa 1)1'1Ct, ea.olud+nQ 11ppllc•blo Fedo11il E•olao Tax, towlrd 11141 pu1chue of 11 ntw tlra. Wa will allo~ 100% ol 1119' orlglnsl pu1 cll1•• prlct, 1111clud!ng 11ppllcabte Fade111I EJ1clse Tar, d1.1ring the 100'1ii aUOwt nea oerlod. Thereafter, w1 will 111Uow 50'11o or 25% or 11\t 01igln .. purcti ... ,,rlc., exelu(llng opp!lc1t>l1 Fed1Jr1I Etclit• T1x, towa1d lh• purchau oJ..! e Great cornering e Great traction e Great stability e 44-month guarantee e 20 months 100% performance allowance 37.25 Was 49.95 GR70x14 lits 825x 1' 3.06 F.E.T. No trad•ln necessary. Sleek whitewall styling. 70 series profile (iflustrared} --S'2• Fiii .._. w.. ...... T• FllT0.14 775a14 35.75 47.95 :t.• GR71i.14 125•'' 37.15 '9.15 a.m HR70•14 155•14 St.SO 52.95 3.S3 Fl'170•15 775•15 35.75 47.95 !,14 OR70•15 11!>/125•15 37.25 •t.95 3.08 HA70•15 14511~a1 5 :St.SO $2.95 3.3.~ .Jltrorts-8115J15 43.25 57.ts 3.55 LA70l:15 +4.75 59.95 3.70 78 series profile for import c ars (difterent tread design than shown} -~ .. "" -·-,,,,l. Alil71•1:l 600•13 ..... :w.as 1.SI 8R78•13 6Ml•1:l 27.50 311.15 ... , IR78J14 645•14 ..... 31.IS . .... AA7811S ..... 31.IS . ... 30.50 .o.ts 2.11 AH 1)rlC•f 11t111 F,(,T.11 llho•n. No l•lo.hl 11t~d. O\Jr AllllAridt• Ritdi"• •Ida I• our -n n1"" lftd CI0.1 not rtitl•ct an~ n1!1on•ld• 1t1nd1,e1 of 11u1!ily, "..,, 11,1 Federal Excise adjuitmtnl 1Uow1nc• wnl be mldll on ,,.. h bae'I ol ·ll~I percant ol lhll 01lgln1I Ir.ad r1m•lning, Thl1 01H1r1nlff II t reasu rY not.tran1tt 11bl1. It 11 only for p1i'l1t1 pa.aenger Cira or pnMnger e alallon w11oon1. • w)1n tha pu1c111111 01 R11UArld .. t1r11 vou gei: family store and supermarket t . .FAee11r11 1n111t1111on. 2.FReeu'()Pi'N'0AIL;'j~3o to 9:30 . SUNDAY 10 10 7 GRANADA HILlS 18'10 Chatsworth St. WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd. l lVIRSIDI 3520 Tyler St. SANTA ANA North of Sou th Coast Plaza TORRANCE Sepulveda and Hawthorne BUENA PARK Beach and Orangethorpe ORANGE-Garden Grove Blvd. and M~nchester LAKEWOOD Carson at Paramount Jimmy Benson is about to learn a lesson in competitive distribution. ~every buslnenmsn his lo learn. Leuons taught to him by the consumer. Jimmy la wlnerabfe to the consumer !he moment he decides lo go Into busineu. Does he have ttte right product? The rlghl qu11ily? The righl price? The right location? He'll soon find out. The COMUmerwHl lefl him. And he'd better listen, If he w11nts to 111y Jn business and become an asset to the oommunlly . Thlt't what being In business IS 111 about-tesponding to lhe consumer. Meeting people's con- at.Mtly chlnglng needs. Al Independent t>tmnessmen. we believe In competitive distrlbullon. The reta il automobile bulineu ls bulh on II. So la every bt.lsiness ldvertlsed In !his newspaper. And because of coml)e- UUon, rou11 never be fOf'Ced to buy one brand, 11 one price, from one store. Comr>etilion gives you e chok>e. TM reautt la greater variety, belter quality, better service. And, would you be lieve, ewen lower Pf'ces? 1 You CIH ~ ahots. You, 1M COr\lumer. We wouldn't haye It any other w•y. After all, we're con-_,., _ N8lionll Aulamobh Dealers Anoci8tlon -----··--.. ---·--.o.t. ) Pre-..! as a Public S.rvlca by Iha Dally Piiot and Or1nvo County Motor ,Cor Doalora Aun. ' i ' l ' l ' I I i I ' PUNCH. .,Gentlttm.n, I think it;s high time we t11elckd'.lhe problf!m of abunc..am .... " Lamh•n . Says British Wives 'Understanding' _ NEW YORK (AP ) -Lord Lambton, a casualtv nt the latest British cabinet sex: scandal. says oeonle Mu ld lea!""I from the publicity sur· roundin« hi~ involv"fnent with cAII lltrls to be more careful and not aet Cllu«ht. He also aald Wednesday the calmness and symoathv with which his wife accepted the situatk>n showed the dif- fe rence between American and English women. "ENGLISH WOMEN realir.e that their husbands are not ideal, and that Jt is male characteristic to wander and st.ray upon occasion. But lhe American woman thinks thlt her husband must be faithful alwava to har," he uld. "The ooclal reoult Is. of course, thalminy-marriages break up in America. which simply wou1dn't break up In England, because the tn- cidentaJ infidelities w o u t d simply not be thought im- portant." Lord Lambton, f o r m e r undersecretary in the ministry of defense, told Barbara Walters on the NBC "Today'' show that there was no securi- ty problem involved. ASKED IF getting him mix- ed up with the girls could be the work o( an International spy ring, Lambton replied: "I think that ls nonsenAe really. Casual r elationships . . . are almost the last oc- casion when you discuss secrets. 11\ey are oceasions for physical activity. They're not for mental conversation . '1'he danger of people giv- ing away security is not to casual call girls, or the equivalents, whatever they are,. but to mlstres1e1, clever friends and when they drink too much." LOllD LMCBTON said he felt no bitterness about the ex- posure and had no intention of suing the newspaper that photogniphed him in bed for invasion of privacy. "1bere has been no invasion of privacy," be said. "There is in this country nothing to sto a newspaper being uked into a house ·and tak ing photographs of anyone there." Lambton eald that it wu not possible to eet up special moral standards fOt' publlc, as opposed w private, lndlvlduals because "men with put am- bition very often have w:lth It a strong sexual urge that isn't sati.!fied euUy." BUT, HE SAID, "lf you are put lnto n posltk>n where you make a fool or younelf and consequently the government of which you are a member, there is no alternative but resignation~' Reminded that he was an attractive lord and asked, "Why would you have to pay?'' 14.mbtm replied that a person In his position "always likes going oui.Jd< of the con- fines Jn which .Jje lives." "Is there 1111' letsOll lo be learned frun this?" Miss Walt.en uked. She was told: "WEU.., I suppose then! .are always lessons to be teamed from everything. I mean , peo- ple want to be more cartful. And above all, people don't want ·to be round out." 1be interview WU taped in Londoo l>St week. - •nest Clients' Call Girl Likes Tories HAMBURG, Germany (AP) -The high-priced call girl im· plicated in BritaJn's recent sex scandal says she voted for the Conservatives in the last elec- tion "because they were my best clients." The woman, Norma Levy. was interviewed by Stern magazine at St. Tropez on the most chic stretch of the French Ri viera. She is s taying there with her husband Colin. THE R ED-HAIR ED prostitute told the magazine in the interview published Tues- day that she is "a woman like any other" who enjoys cooking and val ues marital fidelity. The Levys told Stern they fl ew from London to Madrid J\.1ay 20. Casabianca, Sao Paulo, Franklurt, J\.funich and St. Tropez were the other stations during their fl igh t from Scotland Yard's ques- tions. The call -girl scandal brou4!;hl lhe resignations of two British officials, both 0£ whom ad- mitted having affairs with prostitutes. n 1e tu·o were Lord L a m b t o n, an Wlder- secretary in the ministry of derense. and Lord Jellicoe, government leader in the Hoose ci Lorda. Lambton, who served 22 years in the House of Commons as a Conservative representative, admitted to a casual affah' wi th Mrs. Levy. PRINTED WITH the stern magazine article was a two- page picture purporting to show J\.frs. Levy, b a r e - breasted, m bed with a client, whose face was blurred. The caption says: • 'A oa.mera was foeu8ed through a h:ile in the wall when Norma Levy received prominent visitors in her Londm. apart- ment. Behind the camera stood her husband, Ciolin .'' Stem said the couple were interviewed at a $200-a-month, tine-room house they renled on the French Riviera. SllE SAID Lambton "gave me Ups on investments," In an electronic company w h o s e name she had forgotten. "I ln\'ested a couple of hun- dred pounds. I don't know if the stock value went up or dOV.'TI." Mrs. Levy said she "'&rked in an eJtclusive London call· girl ring run and operaled. by a woman in her late 40's, who collected one-fourth to o~ third of the payment for each engagemart. .. . Childbirtli Happiness -SHE SAID clients of the ring Incl uded royally, presldenlS. ambuadorl, industrialists anj blnkers. Mrs. Le vy said her fees ranged from about l70 IO 1120. K . COMPLt!TE l!DDINQ PAC .............. ••fftJJI•~··--........ • lo..-llM °"''"' ...,._ ·---~·,_ ...... JI .... ;.."'"' -~ ... •• ,.-.111 ......... t ,.id .... . . ~ . ' ~ In our opinion tho HUNDEVAD it lht mo.•t flexible, high quality wall 1y11_om productd in .. D•nmarlc. Illustration at l_eft 11 on• of many combination• available. Visit any of our stores to 1ee other po1s lbi litie1 fitting your specific needs. '.:_E PLUMMER'S C•D •6 Fa1hion Isla nd , Newport Beach Mo11. & Fri. I 0 • 9:10 Tu 11 .. Wed., Thuri., S•t. 10 · S:lO 644-2330 SA VE LIMITED ·-· UP TO 500/o TIME OFFER! e tllYltlA CONYtlTllLI CHA.II IED. ON PISCONTINUED ROOM OR NARROW IDIAL FOi THAT SMALL $117 SPA.Ct ....... -.............. NOW 1!!.:: :;~:=~:J· :~:~ }~'.~:~:·:w $127 CORNER GROUPS CHAIRS• HI- RISERS • CABINET BEDS • TABLES AND LAMPS • FULL SID, TRANSITIONAL SOfA, HERCULON 01 VINYL, EXTRA LENIOTH MATTIEiS, SLHPS 2 Here are just a few of over 200 to choose from Twfo -4 Ftin Sbo Molli"' or lox Sprlo9, luy -.. 111 aH Wt Will itlcludt Med• ---· I POSITION RIE,CLINER Look. af L••ther FREE DELIVERY • FREE WARRANTY • FREE SET-UP ! - INSIANlll CIEDIT AYAILA!l[. -· Al thot'1 r•q1.1lr1d 1, yo1.1 tnull bi 2.5 COSTA MESA SANTA A'NA BUENA PARK , .... '1 ....... .,,,,. Colll. "'•w• LONG BEACH lic1n•• and on• oil co111po11y or oth•t 3015 So. lrlotol 425 f. 4th It. 127 le. Mein IS3t1~~= A••· "'*' 0 •""'"" 979-5040 435-6309 547 .. _519 WEEKDAYS , 1:30 to 1:00 • • · 1€o ro'bl s I rsts SATURDAYSl:30tol:OO ,a0. ..... .-..... ~"''"''"'"""'' n~U'! OlPJTAICNT ~{ fOR ~g}~ I mu~-:;!l"~~::i:.t.c;i>.t'.:,~ SUNDAYS 11 lo 5 ROME (AP) -An estim1ted 19 percent or Italy's mothen1 t h I n k childbirth was the hap. pl t d.ty In thei r Uv.,, ac- cor<lln1 IO a survey. · Mrs. Levy described one of her reguh!r clients as "a famous duke, •mof18 tht richest mtn In England. Heo1~==~== always trled to lmprm me in bed with his family tree ... · but eve:rytfme he came to me in bed he had dirty feel." Try Saturday News Quiz We Da~e You! ,. \ ' ' I I I • • • ., • • .. 0 II c f p c J s I --F•tnllll Circus by Bil Kea11e I I/ '/ / , ..... ft, 11.,, ... .. ''"r, ....... ., ...... . "This is the house that Jock buUt. This is the molt that lay in th.e house that Jock bu ilt. This is the rot that ote the mol t that lay in the ho_yse that Jock built. THI S is the col 1hot kil led the rot that ... " ·---------------------- Rent, Rides Ex-Nixon Aide -- -binked to -Firm j\IASHINGTON i AP J -Nix- on campaign 11idc J-'rederick C. LaRue accepted re n l 1noney nnd airplane rides frOm a failing housing con1· pany for which he unsuc· ccSsfully interceded \Vith the Administration, according to J>4btic records and' interviews. LaRue, ~e a special assis· tant to campaign chairman John N. Mitchell, declined to speak publicly about tile mat· ter on advice of his la~er. He has been accused in s\\'om testimony of helping appro\'e and cover up the \Vatergate wiretapping. LARUE HAS denied any v.1rongdoing to federal in- vestigators looking' into his connections wlth the housing finn, tile' now-bankrupt SUr- ling Homex Corp. of Avon, N.Y .. informed sources said . •'rederlck LaR11e luu 1>eet1 acc11aed in w ·atergate c:Ollei"Hp. LaRue. 44 . a wealthy oilman \\'ho-div.ides his_time between Jackson and Washington, was in charge of the South for Nix- on's-1968 presidential cam- paign, run by J\1itchell. He worked "'ithout salary as a consu}fllnt at the White House~ his duties never ofticially ex- plained. In January, 1972 he joined the Committee for the Re-election or the President as an unpa id. special assist.ant. a post he retains. l-lon1ex \Vas a pioneer in the rield of fa ctory-built housing, once the darling of federal housing chief George Romney. The compan y's stock soared on \Va ll Street during 1970 and 1971, but by the time LaRue interceded it was well along the road to financial ruin. It filed for bankruptcy July 10. lts chief problem wastan in- ability to sell its . r mass-- produced housing u n I t s • About 81000 unsold Homex modules are · still scattered about the country. E\'EN AS IT skidded into lliSo!Vencf, Hom.ex w a s negotiating for a giant new housing plant in Gulfport, Miss. The project had the public backing of many of the state'• tpp elected officials, in- cluding Democratic S e n . James 0 . Eastland. The plant would have employed 2,000, makin g it the world's largest housing fac· tory and the third-largest employer in job· hung ry Missiasippi. The local Har· rison co u, i t y govern ment agreed to lease Homex the land ana 'factory and offered to finance the plant through a $5-million industrial develop- ment bond Offering. The project depended on the com~y's ability to sell what ·it made. To demonstrate such an ability, Homex proposed to ship some of its units from its upslate New York plant by rail and sell them, through a nonp:i:ifit housing coopera· live set up for the purpose. to the Farmers Home Admini· sb1ttion, an arm of lhe Agri· culture Department. FARMERS HOME turned Homex down Oat on grounds of high price and w h a t Campbell called poor quality. The company sought a price of about $22 a square foot , which officials said was almost dou- ble the going rate.for locally built housing of more tradi- tional coutruction. ' A former vice pres ident of tlomex, Ruble Phillips. said in a telephone interview he paid LaRue $200 a month for sev~al months, possibly as Jong as a year. for use of LaRue's Washif18ton apart- ment, where he stayed fre- qu.ntly. The apartment is located, ironically, in the \Vatergate complex. Phillips said he charged mucjl of the --fCt11 expense directly to ex. Phillips is a law ye r . busiiiessman and politician from Jackson, Miss., who ra\l _.PUBUC RECORDS show twice, unsuccessfully, as the that LaRue and former Atty. Republican candidate f or Gen. Mitchell used Homex governor. bUsfness jets on a Florida trip An appeal was made to last year during which the two campbell, the no. 2 man in the allegedly approved plans to Agriculture Department, to wiretap Democratic targets reverse the decision and bu.y including the p arty 's Homex's high-priced uni ts as a Watergate headquarters. way of giving MisSissippl LaRue obtained a rare, high-needed jobs. Campbell recall-. Jtvel review in April tm of an ed in an interview that LaRue Agriculture D e p a r t m c n t contacted him several times, decision u n favor ab I e to rinally ananging for a _llomex,J!ut _Ag r i c u I t_ u r e m .. Ung attended by himself, Undersecretary J . Ph rl-LaRue 'and Arthur Rosfeld, CampbeJI s8ld he refused to the Homex rejX'elentative in reverse the decision. Washington. I See by Today's Want Ads 8 fl.10NOPOL.Y ANYONE? You'U enjoy~ wlnnJng on 1hit moOOm decorator p.me table. It's 48" high with 4 barrel chairs, like new. 8 PLAY YOUR SUMi\tER RECORDS on thla Zenith AM/FM J~roo console. It's a walnut cabinet in ex• cellcnt condition. e NOT LUXURIOUS. but It ""Ill keep th<' min otr • 7 x 15' tent trailer. • Thursday, Ju"f 21, 1973 OAI LV PILOT l:J &<U•~ '""" SCM/l (IJ 1/ut4! c •. '' • ' -• ' .. " ' Sale Prices Honored Thru Sun., Jurie 24 - HlghNl ..... on LIQUID FERTILIZER ~'You'll Get Resulh In A Hurryl'' • A green booster for all plants and shrubs. • 13-/. nitrogen content. • Gallon coven 2000 sq. ft.-eosy to mix and apply. REG, 88c Non·Ar•Plc SNAIL & SLUG PELLETS • FOr waging your bottle against garden pests. .• A profeutonal gardeners formula--contoins no arsenic. REG. 59c -39~1> 1f~ox Shell's NO-PEST STRIP ''A Proven formula for ln1Hf Controfl'' • Specially prepared insecticide formula controls flies,·gnats, mo1quitoe-1 . ' Aerosol • Attractive gold foi1. holder looks well in any room or on porch & patio. REG:'-$1.r9 $1~! FREON • Convenient aerosol refrigerant! • Use for recharging all automotive oir-conditioning un its. REG. 97c 67' Sturdy S-1 JACK STANDS • Sturdy, heavy stffl con~truction. • Non-slip lock k•y & choln to prevent occidental slipping, • 12 inch 1pon, 3 position, #ST-12 REG. $2.89 $1 66 ;'Spectacular Sarings on Top Quality ConHlrs!'' • T~'ins, Bicek Pine arid Dwarf Golden Arborvitae ---landscape size plants with lush foliage. . . •Almos~ big enough to call 'em 5 gallon___e lants ••· --.liey're actually 2 gallon beauties. • Quality seen at only the best nurseries. e All 3 varieties grow 'Nell with very little care. & in most any type of soil. • Don't miss out on th js bargain! REG. 54.99 Patio UMBRELLA • Colorful, flowered vinyl fobric- trimmed with 4 inch fringe. • Tubular aluminum pol........add this beauty to your polio. REG. $19.99 $16" ., ., RANGE HOOD ''SP.claf Purcha.....,_,amou• Miami-Carey* Q~~lltyl11 • Complete range hood with rouftd vertical outlet, 2 1peed fan, light & filler. · • 35 '4 inch•• long-white only- update your.kitch•n today. REG. $19.99 $12" SAVf i1.oot Steel STORAGE UNIT Whit• lnam•l•d LAWN ' FURNITURE "lufll lfl<e A lalfle1.1tfp/" ' "'C.0.1.t./ro-An All American· 'avor/lef" o Styled to b• oi homo iridoon or out. • lnclUde111ittee, ~rm chair, occationol chair & coffeo table in the traditional white enamel grope leaf pattern. • Buy only .what you need or save more on ·the complete set. REGULAR $7900 ·$103.96 If PURCHASID •-p _5 SIPAllATILY " C. it . Thia Wffkhoturlnt ''l..-1• a ....... , ...... Cllill1'' alVIUIDI • TUIS., JUNI H ANAMllM • WID.1 JUHi 27 roUNTA1N YAWT. THUii .. JUNI 21 MONTNll • Pll. JUHi ff Plton• or 1lgn up ltOW· 11 your n•trtsr LIN· BROOK 1ror1 /Of your cl1ss reserv1tlonl Fiil IMSTIUCTIONI Fifi DOOi: "'DSlll Fnl llFllSHMINTSll •Stackable, 36" high x 24" wide x 12" deep three shelf unih. e Strong-holds up to 300 pounds per shelf. • loll units together or stock. • I I T ' 1 1 • " " . 1 ' • J 4 DAILY PILOT t Thllrsday, J11nt 21, 1~7.3 Ba~ing All Topless Gals Hit Sa1ids Actress ) Accuses Ex-mate • PARIS (AP) -At first you could see them at St T~ ~ pez, that French seaside test base for the scantly drfssed. ~t "'~k, they sprang out on the heart of more con· ser\•ahve Ntce. ooly 60 miles up the coast. NEW YORK l~Pi Actress Sy lvia ~1lles has charge<! in court papers that her former husband , disc jockey · Ted Brown, i s threatening to kill her in a dispute over alimony. NO\\'. they have come to light in downtown Paris - -"'omen Y>ho sunbathe without .a bra in public. \ . A ~'EE~ND OF CI.EAR warm sunlight had them rl ~. disca~d1ng their bras at t~ Oeligny swimming pool, only a ..:' stone i thro\v from the National Assembly. The accusation \Vas disclos- ed Tue~ay in State Supreme Court as Miss ~tiles filed suit against Brown for $60,000 compensatory a11d punitive damages for allegedly falling behind in alimony payments and obligations to pay her in- come taxes. • Same thing at Molitor in the fashionable west end of Paris. One day there was one woman , next day there were , 10, reports the manager. ~ 't. There is a regular "bare breast" comer now at both ·~ S\\'imming pools except for days set aside for school chil· ~' dren and. there has been no public protest. Officials at the French v.•omen's liberation movement 1 said the bare-breast look is fl_!_eaningless. [ii "Bur JF ALL \\'OMEN, young and _old , becorne free t'. to. dress or undress as they like, then it v.•ould be some- " thing else." said one libber. •I 0 . ''er at the International Nudism Federation. they ' said the cause would triumph when women took off the bottom half of their bikinis as well. :.:; The la'v so far has not pronounced itself .. Statutes pr1r !, vide for jail terms· of from three tnonths to two years for • actions .. out rageous to public morals." ' AT TJIE OELIGNY POLICE station the other dav a man came in complaining he \Vas outraged at the sight' of bare breasts. He could see them clearly from his \vindO\\' ·be~~-' Someone was sent over to inv:estigate. Yes. he reported, t. ,_ the man could see bare breasts -through his binoculars, U· f -l,OOO~feet away. The-complaint was dismissed. •j ·--~ Q , , ,._,_ ........ ;:;ll,_.trz~~ ·ro~ '.""~ IN COURT papers filed by an attorney. the red-haired ac- tress said Bro\vn has been making "threatening. harass- ing and vicious telephone calls. "In recent telephone con- versations, he has repeatedly threatened to kill n1e, v•arning !hat I \vould not live to enjoy the,...benefils of the sepa ration agreement if I co nti nued ip nly refusal to accept his in- adequate lump-sum settlement offer," Miss Miles said. THE COURT papers did not gi~'.e . specific figures for the alimony she is reCeiving or the lwnp-sum offer. • 2640 Harbor Blvd. ulri$}trs 546-5527 Giant .. COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6:00 SUNDAYS 9 TO 5:00 SUMMER SALE Buy Two at the Regular Price Get a Third One Absolutely FREE' Sale On All I, 5 And . 15 Gal. Nursery Stock. Here 's one of Many Tree Specials ... WHITE BIRCH TREES 9.95 Graceful, distinctive Birch trees will enhance your yard, White bark, bright green foliage. Especially effective plan"ted in clumps of three or more. FREE. ORTHO-GRO \•··--- ' • Versat ile 1~ SALE g iDECORATIV E, 011Ho-G10 011 ,,., ... iDEt\\\\~1\~ ·""•'!~~~~•• •i- pla1tt toad • or GIEENOL CL '"' V-~ M•lch Koopt weeds o•t ll111dd lr.11. -rti' B A.""~l\ ~ and helps retal11 Moish1r• f*-aro111'1d plants. ~:;: 4.98 : " i, 1.98 oKh .. , Two 4.99 . .g '; FRUIT TREES Stottdorcl sl.. trMS, lo~ sterri•t to boor l11clows ff11lt. 7.95 .... 'loyal' Apricot 'So11hl loto' Ph1M 'Y•11hllro' Peocll ft'ffeh """'"" Pr1111• 'Sats11nt111' Pitt"' 'hv. Hiiis' AppJo 'Gotdnilno' Nectt1rl11e 'Col'ladrlo' R9 Aho 'flOfY' PHch ·w11 ... , lciiiie' .. ,,,. ' J IAGS 4,98 9.95 eK h Gteat for conning, niaking ja1n, jelly and plain good own trees! eating Tiglit from your AZALEAS--Coast Area Favorites HHlfhy, hotdy p'9ftf'I wfffl ldt ,.ti f911Df9, ptofuslo" of flow•n 4•flll9 blOOfll MCIMfl• flO" 2.25 Buy now and save. Get 3 fo r price of 2 PETUNIAS--Su1nmer Color PIMr la f~I .,.. l"ioY tllolr ••111 ctlen e11ll .,...,.llC .. 5111ta. -" 11001 • ..., .. ,aes. '' ,.. Pfff ,. •. 79c .. , ' ,.., '"1'• Got JN .. Fiii ll. ldir•-WM •• J•• 2Jtll.J Service muJ Quulit11 for 'Ove< as )'ears. Skindiving T .. ra1n1ng . - Scheduled A skindiving course will be offered at the Orange Coast YMCA in Newport Beach beginning June 26. The class,' I ... ~ four weeks long, will meet between 5 and 7 p . m . Tuesdays and Thursdays. Minimum age is 10 years old, and intermediate level swimming and skills must be e x n I b ited. Oceaoography,, marine ure, underWater navigation, underwater physiology, spearfishing and skindiving skills will b e taught. I Ice Hockey Ttyouts 10-v-s~-­ As•• 6 To 19 · Tryouts on Saturd1y June 23rd Dale McNulty, certified YM· CA, LA County, Undenvater Scuba instructor, will teach. Students are as ked to .rumish their own mask, fins and snorkel after the r j rs t . MESA VERDE CENTER ) meeting. 2701 H•rbor Blvd., Cost• M••• Further information i s I ~======='c;71;•;J ;';";·;lll=O ====;;:;;::.! available at the YMCA, I. 642-9990. Next Vp A $3.9 1n~Hon 1nathematic-science b~i.lding is under construction at SaddlEback Community College in ~he shadow or newly CQmpleted li'bral)r. Math'. build- ing, second or school's permanent buildings is scheduled for 1975 co1npletion. ' • • • Cliallenge tlie News Quiz on Saturday's Family Page SYLVANIA ........ , .... ~~·-]--~• Features: Choose from four magnificent Sylvania models in a variety of furnitur~ finishes. All with these exceptional perform- ance features: 25"diagonal ChroMatrix.TM picture tube. Gibraltar 90n 1 chassis -for solid- state reliability_ Perma-Lock;rM the anti-goof color tuning system. Instant ColorTM for a picture in seconds. Remote tuning control optional extra(not available on model CL2243N). Whoo-eee! You'll boot for joy when you see how much you '11 save on a discontinued Sylvania model. If you '.re a wise buyer and act quickly you can own_a magnificent Sylvania for much less than it's·really worth. We have to make room for next year'• 'stylel-and these discontinued 1973 moqels must go. Hwry in before t~e wise buys are gone. It will give you something to hoot about for a long time to come. · SYUIANIA COLOR S!llllANIA . COlDR-· save over •40 ~ Conlempory style Sylvania model "'111111 CL2.241W in Walnut grain finish. F.arly Am erican style Syl"Yanil model ...._ CL2243K in Maple eraln finish .. This Jl1"' mo~el is also avlilable In a h1t1dsome Pine grain finish (CL2243N). ,,,.. Mediterranean style Sylvania model "'111111 CL2247P In Pecan grain nnlsh. This model Is also available In a Dark 01k grain finlab (CL2247DA). 1- llalllc style Sylvania model CL2248BT ..._ 1'r Bultemlli cnt• llnllh. ..... SYUIANIA COLOR . TELEVISION e STIREO e APPLIANCES e SALIS e SERVICE e SINCE 1947 26 Yeal'ir of INtegrlt• & DependalJl~ltfl COSTA MESA e HAllOR AllA 411 E•st s .... ,nt•tnth Str••t D•Hv 9.9, $1hird•v •·• 646·1614 EL TORO e .SADDLEIACK VALLEY El Toro lo•if •t Ft••W•Y IN•xt to S•.,·OnJ Dilly 9.9, Stlurd•v 9·6 817-JllO • lcADIO DISPATi:HID PACTOI\' AUTHORIZED TV & APPLIANCI SIRVICI PHONI S48·3437 , • I • I 2 Ves sels Collide Off Baja r LOS ANGELES IAP) -The ($rei;k rrt•lghter 111co K'ector's inking of£ Baja California in · ~oltlslon with another Greek c!rgo vessel tame amid fog so 1itk lhnt ViS<.lbility W3.S t practicntly Zl.!ro." the Coast Guard s.ii d. +All 37 c:rew1nen aboard the heo Kcl'IOI' were rescued '" cdneSday. 1'hey were BRIEFS ·- j Tijuana Jail I ) Break Eyed ~ By Co1trt , ' SAN DIEGO IAP) -At· ; torncv Robert Lee Grimes, ~ miss{ng since a mass prison f breakout in Tijuana, Mexico. \ on June 10, has shown up in c·ourt as a free man, at least for the moment. I Grimes. 26, testified for 30 ) minutes Wlder subpoena at a \ ('\osed-door rcderat grand jury • hearing here .Wednesday, and \ lrrt afterward in the company of tv.•o attorneys who brought ~ hi1n to the federal court building. Grimes said only that the session "wasn't bad" before he v.·as '!''hislced away by his law yers, who would n ot • ansy,·er <iny questions about { the testimony. Assistant U.S. Atty. Dave CUmow refuted to ' comment on Grimes' status. \. tt1cxlcan authorities s a y ( Grhnes was one or 10 men. ' eight of them Americans. who dug a 30-foot lu1U1el und er B ~ wall and escaped frop1 Uie Ba· I ja. California State Pcnlten· Hary. Officials on both sides of the border hnvc said they are ' convinced that most of the 1nen are Jn the United_ States. l but only one, Clyde P. Evans, has been caught. Tlierapists Set Boycott BERKELEY (AP) -About 50 members of the Massage Therapists Union urged a ! boycott of 11 Berkel ey ~ 1nassage p:irlors Tuesday. The grou p plarui to clrculrite a petition calling on the City Council to I n vestiga t e : "!rauduJent business prnctlc- . ( es" by some n1ass&gc studios, : Ile C<iuture told ne"·smcn. , -·For the p:lst month the : , unk>n hus been picketing some p:1rlors dcmnndlng, R mo n g other thin gs, the right of 1nasscuscs 10 refu~c lo give massages whllc nude or semi· nude. ..... Lemonade SIZE FIT$\ smt f 71114 Pr9ject Goes So11r smL 20S/14 '34" 678114 STIEL 215/14 '36" H71114 STIEL 205/15 '35" G7111S 6.45/14 6.50/13 878/13 . E78/14 7 .35/14 7.75/14 'f78/14 1.25/14 G78/14 1.25/15 G78/15 8.55/14 H78/14 • , Where • IS It~ T o·iv1i A tvaiting Eartliquctke '19.95 '19.95 Owr cw•t•••r ••lier i1 to'''''' ••n• rou. H .,.. HY. • •••tio• c:o11corftlftl pro· llwch or senlc:11 ro•rff .. '"'•I•••• coll awr OlrKtor of (a1u11m1r Aff1lr1, Mr. S. Ara•i•11 (213) 17M737 or 391 · 1711. H --.w Mii evt of p1r 1ia1, • "laift (Melt" will •• i11114 0111rl111 • lot1r 4tli••'Y at the •il••rlhttl •rice. • Thursday: June 21 , 1q73 DAILY PILOT JS 2 Firemen Hurt In Brush Fires 185/14 ER78114 ..... •:;:-::\!'!' 195/14 FR78/14 s53,. 205/14 tiR78114 '59" , 215/14 HR.78114 205/15 tiR7811S " 215/15 Hll!lllS '69" 235/15 l.R78/IS s95 .. -full 5111·-- G70/1S £70/14 170/14 f70 /14 f70/14 G70/14 f60/15 205/15. 115/14 '·"'"··········: 175/14 7,00/16 ... ··;·""" J.S0/1'····"""' 195/14 6.JOl1S 0 ••"····" f71/14 7.0011s ••••••••••• 1.00/J6 .S ····•···· 205/14 1.u1u.s ..... ~·· 10.001:16.S········ , 160/15 12.00al6.S· i.;;;.~.1 .. ~·. .... :••"'' ' I I $ Wlllll Wl .. IOU U,lll&, l "°'t IOUUU lllOOI 'Ota Va Ue 437.S •w••••uu.111u1a.1••-•••1•<--·-••<••'' .... u •. --------------------------·o. ... ~ ......... Mt<t ........ NEW SANTA MONIC:A STORE 1610 Wilshi(• Blvd. ICOIHJ of Wl ... lr•. llttil 11•-11•1 170-6151 LA HAllllA . COSTA MESA •A"lllDIN G"lOYI tUtNA PARK FULLERTON 1t0.0 ll'Mlltiuro ,.. Wllllll., ....... tMt U11celn II••· IJ11 t o11111 EllCllO 3005 HARBOR ILYD. (corner Wfllml"1ltr {Comtr t i Wll ltt!tr 1<orn1r ~ Llnc~ln ti O!C(~ NO"~ o! Cc°'"" of lahr ...i "-'""' •!Id Bn1olltlvr1ll •!!Cl llNCll ) •ild KnolO "•vrr1.111 Ftct.,.Jy! Oll:ANfo l 110 N. T-lllft Ave. (714) 517·8000 1714 ) SlO·JZOO •74·)''' 17141 126-lliO t114) 110.0100 • " u.s. C1r1 R•C• DR!JM TYPE I • • • ' ·- 18 DAILY PILOT * Thursday, Jura 21, 1973 \ \ " Graham: ATLANTA (U P I ) -. Evangelist Billy Graham says he ''1vould like to see the Ten Commandments read in every classroom of every school every single day. "It seems like Jew s, Catholics and Protestants in our society could at least agree on that," Graham told a crowd of 41,000 which braved rain in Atlanta Stadium Tues- day night to attend the second night or his Atlanta Crusade. A~IERJCA. llE said, is not a Christian nation. 'America Not Christian' Fast, Thorough, Guoranr<-1 d Real Estate lie said yoong people In Amerlca are unhappy because '4there's nobody to tell them what to do." INSIDE, GRAHAM told !he listeners, America is ''still the richest nation in the world, but we have conveyed to our young people that money is God." \Vhen he told the crowd to choose the god they woµld serve, nbout 1.350 people came fonvard for Graham to pray for them. While Graham spoke to his second predominantly white audience or the crusade. about 30 black pickets outside pro- tested the evangelist. Graham is a raci.lt" ind •·watergate ls a sin." Tyrone Brooks, executive director of the Southern Chri s- tian Leadership 1 Conference's Altanta chapter, said his group tried to contact Gra~§lll to discuss the Issues of tfie11r griev~nces. These also in· duded the evangelist's supPorl of the Nixon adlninistration, which Brooks said reprtSStS blacks. llE SAlD crusade workers called him Tuesday to su Y they were trying to arrange a conference, but he intended, to continue the de1nonstrnt1on until they meet with Graham or until the crusade ends Sun- day. Soles and or Brokt!t li<en~e TRAININ G Phone for Free-Folder a ANf HONY SCHOOL$ HA l lOI CIMTll J)OO HarMr C•,.l•r Cttl• Mnt, Catl!M,.I• "'· f71 CJ 979·2Jll 1111 5. •nallhvnt SI. ""•K•lm, C•I. t 2N• Pl!. 171 41 776·1100 JOIN US THIS WEEKEND 0 . C. Fa ir QuHn Contest Sund•y, noon South Coast ?tua 'EITHER THAT OR LIVE COVERAGE OF THE ANTI-SOVIET ~ROT.Esrs_\'O~U.J'LAY GIN? ''Tbe civil religion we have is not a Christian religion," he said, noting that p e o p 1 e worship money, science, food and themselves more, than God. TIIEJR SIGNS said "Billy ~~~~-~~~~- Ma•·lene Splits No Pliotogs for Dietriclt From Wire Ser\•lccs _Organize.rs let in photographers during the final moments of a Paris charity concert featuring ~1 a r I e o e Dietrich. She promptly stalked off the stage, protesting that her con· tract specifically for b a de photographs during her performance. hospital thought there might be a story behind it. . There was. Thirteen or the names were those of the firs team players apd manager of -his ravorite soccer team - Liverpool. The two others - Kirk and Lee -u'cre picked by his vdfe. * Rep. Bob \\tilson (R·Calif), member of Congress since 1952. has been granted a divorce after 37 years or mar- ( PEOPLE J ~age. \Vilson and his \vi!e, Laura _ Jean. were married in San Diego in 1936. The petition ';God knO\lo'S that I love said they separated in October France," d e c I a r e d the 1971. German-born American inovie * star, ';but I'll nver come back San :Francisco's mos t again to this country y,·here famous jogger, Larry Lewis, • the wishes of a performer are ·celebrated his 106th bi rthday 'ilot respected. I don't un-by taking his daily .six-mile derstand how such things are run as usual. possible... • John F. Rich a rd so n , \\lith that. she locked herself regional Social Security com- in her dressing room. missioner. presented Lewis, * an ex waiter, with a sweat Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin shirt inscribed "Larry Lewis, crowned space station com-Social Security's Oldest Jog- mander Charles '·Pete '' ger-106." Conrad the "butter cookie king of Skylab.'" Conrad has made several colorful complaints about food on his space menu but has almost not let a day go by "rithout having a few of his beloved butter cookies. DcSpite bis voracious ap- petite. Conrad assured flight directors there are plenty of the cookies aboard the orbiling space home for two 0U1cr crews "'ho will ny up later this year. * When J\t lcbael Sutton of Liverpool, England, decided to christen his ne\vborn son Kirk Lee Keegan Heigh,vay Cormack Toshack ll u g h e s Callaghan ~!all Lloyd Smith Linsay Lawler C 1 e m en c e Sbanky SUtton, nurses at the Lex Barker 'Located' At Seance NEW YORK (UPI) -On June 18, the ramily of the late Lex Barker, \\'ho p I a y c d Tarzan in the movies. held a seance to communicate \Vilh him through British medium 1-Yargaret Staves. At that seance. h-tiss Staves reportedly d ec iphered a message Barker had \\Titlen before his death last month. Barker·s \o;oidow, Zan, and his son. Alexander, a re "satisfied that 1'1iss Staves had made contact wilh Barker and had caught a glimpse of the message," '''hich had been lockccLin a bank vault, said Stuart Lich tenstein of the Na- tional Enquirer, sponsor of the seance. ' * President Eamon de Valera, 91 and virtually blind. cki:sed the book on a lifetime of public service and retired to an old folks home. "1 just \ranted to slip away quietly," he told nuns at the Lindon nursing home, on lhe outskirts of Dublin. \- De Valera, whose term of office ends at midnight June 24, moved from the splendors or his official residence into a home run by the Sisters of Charity. * The two sons o( Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, the con- victed spy couple executed 20 years ago, have filed a $3 million damage suit against author Louis Nizer and his publisher. The suit, brought in Ne'v \'ork, charged Nizer \Vil h copyright infringement in his book about the Rosenbergs' controversial trial, ''The Implosion Conspiracy.'' The sons' suit charged that the book quoted from letters written by the o Ider Rosenbergs that l1ad been turned over to a corporation with copyright to serve as a trust fund for the boys. * American feminist Betty Friedan says Israeli v.·omen are 10 years behind their sisters in the United States in \\'Omen's liberation. ''Israeli y,-omen claim not to \Vant equality with men, they i't'OOld rather be feminine," she told a meeting of the \Vorld Association of \\'omen Journalists and \Vriters in Jerusalem. But !I.ls. Friedan predicted that the world femin i ne revolution w i 11 eventually overtake Israel, des I!. i t e Premier Golda Meir's Jlf'O- nooncement that v.·omen's lib is "nonsense." We WJll Be Open 7 Days A Week ~innitMJ Sunday, June 24 AN AMERICAN FAMILY RESTAURANT SPECIAL EVERY DAY llEAKFAST e LUNCH e DINNER from 6 G.l'.ft. to 8:45 p.m. llANCj)UET FACILITIES Aw•llllbl• For Private Panlu or Clubs COFFll SHOP e RESTAURANT 512 W. 19th ST. COSTA MESA • 548-0366 ' SO. COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA Bddol •t Son 01190 Fruway .MONTH-END =-' lel & Howell ..... PROJECTOR - regul•r $179.95 LIMITED QUA NTITIES CM1eras e Wlos • Stereo Systems • Re· cortlen e color teltvlsioa • speakers • zoom lffs • etc. BELL & HOWELL STEREO SYSTEM •1561 , ... $209.95 KODAK CAMERA •M" ........................................... . CRAIG RECORDER., .. , ......................... : ............ . $169.81 $39.95 $29.95 ARGUS KIT .,.,. .... su.11 ... ................................... ... $18.25 PULSAR RELEASER .... 11.,.. •.................••.•.•.•....•... $99.95 $13995 ROLLEI COMPACT 35 CASE, .. sh.so .................... -$9.97 i\\n1-AIREQUIP-T TRAY CASE-.... -.12 .......................... _$J._95_ KODAK #M105 PROJECTOR R.•1ular $1H.50 AWIA #ARMS POCKET RADIO R-siular $1.95 ELECTRA #ITRSOO STEREO SYSTEM Rttul•r $139.95 CRAIG ~2611 RECORDER Regul•r $41.97 NIKKORMAT SLIDE PROJ~CTOR ....... ..,s ...... $139.95 . . - CRAIG STEREO SYSTEM .,,., ,... ,, ..................... $159.95 CRAIG RECORDER ..... ,...sn.n . .-................ : ......... . NORELCO RECORDER .,.,. , ... s ................... , ...... . PANASONIC COLOR TV PANASONIC COLOR TV #-CT-192 r99. $179.95 .;.············· #CT021 ret· S299.9S •••.• , •. , ••••••• BELL & HOWELL STEREO SYSTEM #JJSO r.g. $199.95 BELL & HOWELL: STEREO SYSTEM #1450 ,... $239.95 AMPEX MICRO 52 RECORDER ,... ""·" ........... . VOICE OF MUSIC STEREO RECEIVER 1110 speekerl , ... 5179.95 VOICE OF MUSIC STEREO RECEIVER Re9. $146.95 $69.95 $35.95 $283.97 $226.97 $161.50 $196.41 $110.97 $65.00 $65.00 FISHER STEREO RECEIVER ,, •• ,..,fi, .. ,. "",. ........ $150.00 BOLEX SPEAKER•·•·'"·"........................................ $35.97 AMPEX DECK ... ., .... sl7•.u ..................................... . SUN ZOOM LENS #19Ml0MM Rt11. $215.95 •••••..••.....• , ..•... ACCURA 35MM·2.8 LENS .... '"·" ....................... . A CC URA 135MM-2.8 LENS ... '"·" ....................... . A CC URA 200MM ,,.. ...... , .... "'·" ............................. . $100.00 $214.95 $44.95 $44.95 $44.95 BELL & HOWELL MOVIE CAMERA .~:~-::s.',,.u $10.5.97 GAF SC-92 S/8 MOVIE CAMERA .~~:l!.so . .... ..... $49 97 SUPlirt "a. ~·ovm f;'-'IJIPMENT: ' NORELCO '#1570 RECORDER Rttul•r $69.95 ' CANON CAMERA W/CASE .... ~~i: ... $225.97 BELL & HOWELL PROJECTOR.~~:~:: .. $139.95 KODAK PROJECTOR • .:.M~::.... $129.95 . CANON CAMERA :.:~·;:"·" $136.95 AMPEX •1411 RtgUll r .. 7t.tS RH L to IRL SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA ·J_=.:!: , IJ . ,{,~J> •• ·' •• F.un • • ra1s1ng_: A -Am erica n t Stories by JO OLSON turies in ti toduy 's multibinion doll:ir· Of'"' D•l•v ''*'' s1111 height Is 11 typically Ame1·ican story. Fund-raising is blg bu.<;i ness in "This evolution has had a profound ar- AmeMca. rect on American philanthropy, on the in- Girl Scouts sell cookies, churcht.>s plM stitutioos .it supports and on the Jn. dime-a-dip d j n n e r s, womcnis clubs creasingly broad segment of the public stage bazaars. lhl' Cancer Society and invo lved tn tbe getting and giving tll other organizations send c n v e Io p es funds. nroond the neighborhood and solicit by "The publlc re lations expert and the 1naiL profession al fund-raiser hav~ play~d key Universi ties and Institutions think in roles in this evolution. The groWtb of tern1s of gifls worth millions of dollars American philanthropy in the 20th cen- and hire spec:inlized companies to help tury has been nothing short of spec- find donors. tacular." he says in the preface to his · Each 1evel of fund-raising has its joys book. and problems and each is representative JIARVAJtD EFFORT of a totally American phenomenon. No other country has developed the spirit of According to Cutlip, the f i rs t giving as .4.merica has or established the systematic effort to raise funds in same traditions by \vhich the niooies are America was for Harvard COiiege. "111 dona ted. 1641 the Massachusetts Bay Colony sent 1--1-~i--,,,.!W!.!.i .ct !Lill!. '-""'!d:raising-aetiv ttr-ha,.s-. _.1whree-clcrg-ymeo-to.-England-t.o-&0liei come a ser1es of tax hl\\'S tha t so ·fat 1noney foi' the college so th at it could, '· , • ' • ' ' have \vorkcd for the benefit of all re· among other endeavors. 'educate the • heathen Indians. 1 " cipicnts but which UO\V are being cha!· leng·cd by legislators in Washington One of the first experts at fund ·raising in the United States was Benjamin A~1ERICAN \VA\' Franklin , CUtlip notes. ''Ben franklin That fun.d·ruisi ng is part Jll the vtas._ a creative-and highly-successful- Ameri~an ,.,.ayor Hie is emphasized by fund·raiser because heS hiewdly planned . Scott 1\il. Cutlip. a professor at the his appeal and carefully catalogued his University of \Vi sconsin in his book, prospective donors. He would prepare a "Fund R<lising in !he United States." list of special prospects for each ca use "'rhe evolution of fund·raising in the and then. personally call upon each one." Un ited States from the individual 'beg Cutlip believes that "the ·roots of ging miss ions' or the nation's early cen-America's development in ch a r it y , ·--· \\'CUarc \\'ork and fund-raising extend back to the soil of the molher country, England" 'and he cites th1f YMCA as the first fund-raising transplant ( r o m England to America. Nearly everyone in An1erica gives to some cha rity or church, from the Pen- nies for Pines project oC the Califomia Federation ,of Women 's Clubs to the gigantic grants made by wealthy in~ dividuals and foundations to hospitals and schools. BIGGEST DONORS \Vho are the largest givers in America? According to records or. the American Association of Fund-raising Cc;unsel, Inc., ·" mcricans \Vith incomes of Jess than $5,000 and over; $100,00:> were the biggest givers, proportionate ly. ~ The largest individual gift in 1971 was gi ven-by-R.-Br.inkle-y-Smithers---$10 million -to Roosevelt Hospital. The sec- ond largest contributors were Harvey S. Jr. and Raymond Firestone -$6.8 million -to the Episcopal Church Foun· dation. Other substantial donors \\'ere the ScaiJe-F.amily, $8-million, --Sarah M. Scai.re Gallery ; Nathan w. Cummins, S5 million , Aft. Sinai Hospital; f\.1r. and Mrs. \Villard L. Russell, $4 million, eight Tex- as colleges , and Roy C. Carver, $3.5 mill ion, University of Iowa. The remaining 16 donors on the list, all of whom gave a million or more, • eannarked their gifts for 11 different col· leges and universities , the Roman Catholic Archdiocese 'or New York and the Long Island Jewish P..1edical Cebter. Four girts were gi ven anonymously. GIVING INCREASES Foundations provided "an average of 9.5 percent ol total philanthropy during 1966-71, com1>3red to its 9.7 share in 1971," said AAFRC. _B!undations now are required to have a 4.5 percent payout factor and by 1975 this 'Aill increase to 6 percent, so total giving will increase substantially. The Ford Foundation is the largest contributor with the Robert Wood Johnson, Edna McConnell C I ark , Rocke!eller, Andrew W. Mellon, Charles Stewart l\1ott, Duke, \V . K. Ke!Jogg, Carnegie, Alrred P. Sloan and John A. Hartford-.foandafions-following. Where doe.S the money go? Most is given to religious ca1!5es. Second is education; third is social welfare ; fourth is health, and fifth is civic and cultural endeavors. 'Ho"' do universities. churches and in· stifiiiions sucfiaStiosp"itals go aboutr ais- ing vast amounts of money? Generally, outside counsel is hired. CONVENTl(JN SPEA KER Discussing the role of fund-raising.coun· sel dW.ing the 1973 annual convention of the National Society of Fund-raisers in \9 Campaign Strategy Essentia.I , ' I What kinu.<; oi oraaniialions benefit from a fund-rajse~· sociei y'! The ~1.arch of Dime~ is a good ex· ample. Dorothy SUtherland, A·Jarch ol Dl1nes director and prcside01 or the Southern California Society ol P:und Raisers. lnc .. said, "ll's a great oppC>rtunity to mccl with peojifC in othc~ 11re:ts and learn about such thln,g$' as·rcstrlctivc IC"gisla· ti on. "'We're a nickel and dime organizut ion but anything lhul ulfccts., the big donor will alfect us. "It helps us impr(IVe our techniqu<..>s of rund·raising. For example. look what the cost of postaq:e has done. When is volWlteer help too expensive? When should you stuff envelopes ~Y-machin..e..? "We hear excelleiit speakers on topics such as computer changes and educa- tional television -how it affecls the community and its application to philanthropy.'' The Southern Cillifornia society 1nects monthly with half its n1eet.ings in Orange County-and half in bos Angeles. GOALS SET In 'tin organization such as the ~tnrch or Oilncs gonls are set each year. with the budget ba!iCd on the progran1 plans for the year. Moo has been building a new image ror the past 15 years. since the paUo vac- cine was put Into u~ and a new dJrection was needed for the foundation's research. "'llhe Income ls not as good as In polio years," Mrs. Sutherland sald. "You do a disse rvice to volunteers lf you set too high a goal. As ,public a'varcnt>SS or our program expttnds we can develop more programs." ProCcssional Cu11d·raisers are valutible. she believes. because they can bcc01ne the ;!authority"· to keep a campaJgn roll· Ing to ~u<:cess. "too often the volunt eer Is hesitant to assess giving potentlnl. My personal philosophy is that you ha\•e to have something that is program-oriented. You have to give them (donors) the /P- porlunily to give in the \Vay they lik to give .'' SPECIAL EVENTS March of Dimes utilizes special events such as horse shows. kidnap breakfasts, variety sho,vs. the Mothers 11arch and \Valkathon as 'vcll as direct mail and canisters in stores. "One woman gives $500 each year through an occupant mailer ,'' Mrs. Sutherland said. "SM wants anonymity. "'The real initiative comes from the successful volunteer. For example, the Costa Mesa Explorer Scouts have led the ctm'UfiunitY iifPUt(ing out-containers whlc:h bring In ~$900. They have been delivering and picking up tbe containers since 1960. '' ~1rs, Sutherland stressed that "cduca- ·tion is part of our serviL~. It is J:l3rl of flmd-raising. -You're making people n"«'W'e or what-you're<loing. 0 She adnlitted that "it Is no! e:.isy to raise funCls. You Mve to e<1 rn everytlµng you get. You have to train volunteers to be economical in buying and planning .. , and do a lot ol praying. INSURANCE "People have to be asked. They're not willing. They have to be motivated. Some people give for COJ19Cience or for 'insurance' that th ef won't get the disease . "Some things tum pco~le on more than Otil<!rs. It depends SOmet)mCS on how they w re treated -bow a nurse treated them as a patient in the hospital." t11so coocemed "'Ith finding donors and worried about legislalit11t concen1lng tund·rnls1ng are ·oollcges, unlvcrsltlcs nnd affiliated organizations such as Claremont University Center in Clure· moot. Its director of development is Jiin Greenfield, who also serves as legislati\•e relations chairman for · the Southern California Society o( Fund Raisers. His job is to keep abreast of leg,islation Dnd keep the socie ty's n1embers in- formed. LEGAL XIA1TER .. The most urgent item of concern," he said, "is a bill in the House \Yays and J\fcans Committee' "'hich \VOuid change the character of deductions allo1ved . Atost fund-raisers think gifts are a ·~egal matter. These iuclutie transfer of securiiies and property, bequests and gifts of appreciated secllrities. "The proposals are various ideas to Cllange attractions and do away Jwith the incentives to give. It would cut in half the amount of funds that might fld'w to charity." Greenfield st~ that these arc "very complicated issues because of the \\•ny the Internal Revenue Service puts la\VS ifito-rorcc." Anoth er concern at the college level is Presi dent Nixonis in1Poundlng of-funds- thnt haye been voted by Congress f<lr l<laJls and educational funds. 'Greenfield explained Uw.t students now are applyi ng· for next year and with loans uncertain, are uncertain if they \\'ill be able to at- tend. "It's down to the nitty gritty," he stated. PERSONAL vrsrrs His own job at" the Claremont Universi- -ty Center Is that of a salesman. he said. "\Ve motivate through personal visits . publications and alumni ma.gazlnes." (The center is responsibl e for raJsing funds for all of Uie Si)( Claremont Colleges.) • At tho other end of the spectrum ore the church groups and the community organizations that are social yet devote a Iorgo PJlrl or their Ume to fund·rnlsln g. Instead of v.·orrying about legislation and incoffie tax deductions, these groups may \\'Orry about whether there is enough ham to go around at the fund- raising Easter breakfast or \Vhethcr enough tickets will be sold to a theater party. Typical of this category is the Junior Ebell Club of Newport Beach, a group \\'ith less than 30 :rnembers which raises n1ore than $5,000 each year through various functions. BOUTIQUE POPULAR The club has staged all kinds of events to raise funds in the past but has found that one major event per year (a bou- tique) is the best an right now. "We have had wiile-iastings, garage sales, raffles and mercbandJse parties," sa id Jan Murar, past president. "The big gest problem is trying lo come up with so1ne~ unique. · "11'11s year ever)' other organization had a Christmas bootiQ!:!e. In the end it turned out \\'elr 6ecause lve~re \veil known. \Ve underprice store~ . \infortunntely·, you cannot sell items for the hours you put into the1n." n1ough 'members sometimes quibble o,·er prices. they are proud to contribute handiwork that has been a source of scJf. satisf acUon. 11J've learned a lot (fn mak- Jng boutique items)," f\1rs. Murar con1· mented. "I didn't realize I could be creative." Traditionally the club donates small amounts to many groups but this year limited Us recipients ·to four. A free VD c.Unlc which will open next week re- ceived $900, the Environmental Nature Ce nter got $1,000, $50 v.1as given to MardM School of Educational 11lcrapy nnd $150 to the Orange County Indian Center. RAP SESSION "There arc so many needs tll'oogMtlt ,_ the Disneyland J~otel was Jack SChwa.rii, president of the American A&soclaUon of Fund Raising Counsel, ht;:adquartcrcd in New York. Ills topic \\'as \Vhal ls f'und Raising Counsel Paid to do? "The answer is to raise money for clients," he sa id . "Some people lose sight of this." His group is the only group lo keep figures on national giving, be said. Jn 1972 a total of $22.5 billion dollars "'llS donated to various causes. The AAFRC watches campaigns across the United ::itates as they unfold. '·Some are successful and some should nevei· have been started at all." Sch\vartz said . "What exists in every succcSsful effort·?" Before ans\vering the question he described the association. It \Vas founded 38 years ago with nine charter fir ms. 0 We-set high Standards and \Ve maintain them." Today. there arc 30 members. most of whom have worked for nonprofit agencies. MAN HOURS Some companies are \\'CIJ over 50 yea rs old, he said. Fees charged the.I.000 agen· cies and institutions served annuall y are based on man hours, not on a percentage of the funds raised. These professiona l firins help the agencies raise $1.5 billion per year. The five essentials in raising n1oney are having a case (what ari;: yoU selling) - the C01.nmunily," said Del-Thc<i (~old. "'ays and means chairman. "\Ve have a rap session at thotbeginning of trio yeur and evaluate the success of our projects last year and survey the 1 community's ncOOs. We try to limit fund·rai'slng to three difCerent club departments." The club members last year donated a total of &700 hours of work. promptin'i( one hu sband to comment , "If you'd all get part-time jobs nnd donate the nloney yo u'd save HIJle." '"The fun part is wh~t co1nes bi:ick to you as gratU ication." ~lrs. Murar said. "You don·t reallze until you join a club the net.'<is .in your O\\'U c:onlo11.lnity." added ~In. Gold "Juniors "ivcs you a c;.l!ance to gel Involved \\'Ith a probl\!U\ but you arc not obligated to give time to ea • giving lendershlp, rocrWting volllntef'."s. finding a constituency and organlz.in gl campaign dynamics -the budget, lime schedule. deadlines and goal s. '"fhere is no secret, magic formula to raising fWlds," SCl1wartz said. •;J"\l e never nlct a cow:isel who could walk on 1 water." The counsel can, he added, "appraise the po tential and sharpen priorities." And, "'\ve keep fighting the charlataos." Bringing the AustraUan viewpoint on fWld·raising to the coovention was Keith A. fl'laher, a representative of the Na· tional Fund Rajsing Counsel of Australia Pt y. Ltd. in Sydney and the only intema· tional delegate. . . I-le said the tradition and heritage of Australia is innuenccd b.v its history of having convlct settlers. ·• 'Get out frorn under those chains and do it yourself' is the spirit in AUstralia," Mah-er saiCI. 1\F'FLUENT SOClETY The philanthropic climate in Australi a ' has never been an open one. he added . "In the lasl 10·15 years Australia has become a pretty affluent society. Most people nO\\.-have-available funds to give. '"fhere are people in the three-car, twD-home and yacht category. We are beginning to match America's affluent scen('s . The community conscie nce is beginning to assert itself to help the poor. (See FUND-RAISING, Page 19) BEA ANDERSON, Editor Thur~~Y. June 21, lt7J - iust one project " ,, ... 17 Daily Pil ot Il lustration s by Staff Artist Tim Petersen Tbev ugr('()d that bcing a n1cnt bcr uf <l vo'ulllccr group is expensive. Mrs. l\.Iurar rc1n1ncnted that "son1etin1es l feel our men1bers are be.iti g nickeled and dimt."tl 10 death. There's al\vays something to do." But the fril"ndships forn1ec! within the c'ub r:s !ht ~:'.'llbcrs \VO'.'k on projecls m"I:°" th" toH rc\qnrding and e.ven in~ ~-!;::-!?. ,..,.n1""1tUCf' m~r>tln"!! offering .a hance to hJve a cup of L>offee and chat · ·i'h 1"Q~1 friends c,1'1 hardly be cork ~irJercd r'ru11,),er)1. 1 n1 the kno\v!c1ge that the work I' helping beU~r lhe condition of mankind makes it "'o~hwhile in the long run. ·•ttr oin't !ieavy. F'athe r. He'1 .m b1·otl1~r." I B DAI LY PILOT Thur5day, Jun! 21, 197J Is Hair Shortcutted? By BEA ANDERSON Of IM Dlllf IJ!Mt Slaff II Norman Zapien had his way the beauty salon business ..-·ould be revolutk>nized . First. he sald, hairdressers ..-·ould have a profesisonal &ta· tus, like they do in Europe. •1But. b e fore they rouJd achJeve the status, they woukt hav• to BE PROFESSIONAL," he emphasized. Zapien feels mo.st are not knowledgeable enough. "They don't know enough about hair prodocU -what they will and Y'tll not do. Their styles are not 'with it.' And, they don't pay enoogh auentlon to the condition or type of the customer's halr." He claims too many are more interested in self gain than they are in their clients. "When a car or rent pay· ment is due," he criticized, "they concentrate on pushing : sa1es d conditioners, coloring · .: iand pocmanents to make more , ;money. :Ibey don't care iwhether the woman needs the ise.rvice or not. : 0 1 think moot women are ,being cheated." , As Zapien sees it , a primary fwtetion of the stylist is oeducating customers. "They (customers), should !know the kind of conditioner , or coloring that is best for :them. They should have this 'information so they can either ;do it themselves, or if they're ttravellng they can tell other •hairdressers what to use." · He also advocates teach.ing lhe cilent bow to care ror her ha.ir in between appointments no matter how infrequent they are. Zapien, ..-·ho claims his policy is to do what's right or not at all, admits that he. too, baa been guilty of not giving the best service. "I'm not perfect. I know I have lel customers talk 1ne in- lo doing styles or color that are not complimentary. Ordi· narily, I don't." He feels that he also is lack· lni in know.flow. So, be is turning his salon over to his assistant manager while he sWdies with in· ternationally known stylisls for a year. Zapien. who has worked in the county for seven years and has own ed the Lldo salon, The Submarine, for the past three. plans to spend a few months with Vidal Sassoon in London. While in Europe, he will travel to Paris where he will learn more about coiffures and how they complement the total look by touring salons and couture houses. A few more months will be Spent with KeMeth in New York City and he will end his trip with stops in several U.S. cities where he will observe hairstyles and fashions along with make-up trends. When he retu'rns, he has no plans for revolutioniz ing the btlsiness. He only v.•ants to utilize the knowledge he gains and share it with young stylists. NORMAN ZAPIEN BRUSHES TINA FLAHERTY'$ HAIR '.!Forecast: Vanity Fair, Costs High " •: By JO OLSON Of !flt D1llr .. Ullt 11111 . The suntanned 17·year-old ol '!today is the wrinkled 50-year· •old of tomorrow, according to t 0r. H. George Brennan of -! Newport Beach, gues t speaker ; for the final meeting of the : year for The Fashionables. :: His topic for the meeting in J the Newport Harbor Yacht : : Club was the Concept of Total : : Facial Rejuvenation, and his : : audience was characterized by : : great interest in the subject. :: Using a series of before- 1•after slides, Dr. Brennan ii· : : lustrated his concept of total !!facial rejuvenation: using :: surgery, proper cosmetics and :a becoming coiffure, the • • " • woman is made new. The growing popularity of plastic or cosmetic surgery was noted by the doctor. In 1945 only 15,000 women were treated; but by 1972 the number had grown to ap- proximately one million. Cosmetic surgery has one obje<:ti ve, he slated. "to make the patient look better." It is not necessarily to make her look younger. Before doing a surgery he ascertains that it is justified. There is a large variation on how Jong it will last. Factors are, he noted, "heredity, skin care, general health. emo- tional state, nutrition and habits." HAVE .. ARRIVED! Dr. Brennan cautioned that anyone considering cosmetic surgery and weight loss both should Jose the v.-eight before und ergoing the operation. He is...concerned about three areas of the patient's faCe: her facial structure, skin tone and any excess skin that might be unattractive. For skin with problems in appearance, such as leathery or \vrinkled skin, he considers using a chemical peel, which will confine a patient for about a ..-·eek. The age of a patient has "litt le or nothing" to do with the success o[ a surgery, or. Bre1man said. He does many "nose jobs'' for teens, re· Now At Unbelieva~le Prices PANTS • TOPS • SKIRTS VESTS • BLAZERS DRESSES • BLOUSES LONG I $~01T SKIRT SETS PANT SETS SWEATERS SWIM SUITS HOT PANT SETS • JPJ CALIFORNIA 18] FASHION FACTORY OUTLETS M.._ ... Fri., 10 aM te t P"'· s.t., 10 °"' te 7 ,.... SH., 11 o"' re 5 P"' HUNTINGTON LA llA8IA 9586 HAMILTON 1 J64 I . IUCUI AL,HA lfTA 11•,UIAL CENTIR I II~. So. of '"''"rlel H.i,y. AICADIA tt W. l•• T11"4" 0.-. 2 ILOCKS WIST OF l ltOOKHUIST LOS ANGIL1$ J I ll S1" Fern1ndo Rd . BEACH GARDEN GROVE I Jlft llOOKHURST I Block South of G1 rd1n Gtow1 Blwd, -------l lLLFLOWll •204 Alondr" llDONDO l lACH 614 Torr1nce l l-d. juvenates the area around the eyes for patients in their 20s and does face lifts for women in their 305. And the price tag for beauty? A "ball park" figure for a CO.q1plete face is $2,000. Dr. Brennan revealed. Hospital costs can add another $600. A chemical peel costs anywhere from $200-$800, again in "ball park" figures. What price vanity? High, he cautioned. The Fashionables, a support group for Chapman College's Fringe Benefits Worl d Campus Afloat, has donated $10,000 to the ship's scholarship fund since its in· ception two years ago, ac- cording to Mrs. William H. Mead, founder. Special guest at the meeting was Mrs. Patricia Hi t t . founder of Chapman College's Town and Gown and former assistant secretary for Health. Education and Welfare who has returned to her home in Lag~ Beach after serving for SlX years in Washington, D.C. Petals Coming NEW YORK (AP) -Bangs are blossoming for fall hair· styles, and the look is lightly longe r than the shaved-turnip image of this spring. "Don 't call them bangs," ooe hair stylist said at the In er coiffure America show, ..-·here hcirdressers f r O m 1 across the country presented their ideas for ran. are still going for very short styles. The bangs also are combed lo the side and flipped up, as Otto shov.'ed. them, on a side-swipe version calls less attention to a big nose than a full-nedged ruff of petals across the forehead, says Tony Ross of Chicago. He turned the bangs under He explained that the short with a chin length page boy. forehead wave is turned out-:-which accents pretty eyes. It's like flower . petals and not also good for chubby cheeks, brushed straight down like an as it covers them slightly. The old Buster Brown rendition. side part also works well for Tut; petal l~k often needs full fa ces he says. touchmg up with hot curlers. ' . . It's lovely. But if one petal is Many stylists say that hair askew it looks old. will be a little longer for fall Fe..; of the fall styles are to balance with the bulkier severe. Most are soft and clothes. Rene G~s from gentle-looking fl.tontreal modified the very "Bangs are· a younger look short look by keeping the and give the face a lift, in· bangs longer and very fluffy. stead of hanging, dragging ''The longest length is in hair. Every age could wear front. Bangs give it a softness this," says A. Olto Katke of and make it new looking" he Kansas City, where the young says. ' LOST OUR LEASE I ANTl9UE Ll9UIDATION AUCTION * No Limit -No R ... rv• * o ........ "" ..... Ntall ................ '" Celffonle Is l14tt!ld ...... Tlllo ~ Ma a... ..W _. rho MIWI .. Is a...., ton ._. l__,,.,.ty. All ~ l11• .. t•1f elNI •II ..... flm ret wlll be Mid witfl .. •-" "41 .. NMtW. 14,otO IMI· h. of •11•ICW1tM -H•IH:lrMt of 1 ..... AMh lCAN -IUIONAN -Olll NTAL -PllMtTIYI$ au.s-PICTUAIS.-ITC. -HUNDllDI OP Ml$C. ITIMS OF AIT GLASS & lllC-A-llAC STORE FIXTURES '.c.M btflttn -A44hf MKfl .... -C.tc•leter -0.. Dm ,. .. C:.. -CWn -N ... L5'Mt -Ptyw.M hH ... _,.,....,,,etc, AUCTION PARTICULARS SALE: SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ~~~JUNE 23 & 24 -1\:00 A.M. INIPICTIONi p,...,11w l19in• -Tue-..f•y, J11n1 19 - Until Sil• 01y -10 A.M. to I P.M. PICI UP: All M•r,h1ndl1• m111t 111 r•m•••d within 41 Hr1. •lt•r Sil• TllMlt C1•h or Ch1,1t SITI: STANTON ANTIQUE FLEA MARKET & GALLERY I 0802 leach Blvd., Stanton, Calif •.. IKATILLA Ii IU.CHI • ' J Li bra ry Pol ice Book Marked By ERMA DOMBECK AT WIT'S END May Readers prisoner who asks, 11Wbat you in for?" "Wheels," says the new prisoner. · "Stol en?'' "Yeah. !lad it out !or about ' '-' I • I I hadn't been to a library ln several years and was quite surprised when t went to leave. l was photographed, laminated, interrogated and " se.arcbcd by an electronic beam. two and a half yean." ! At first 1 thought it was because they thought I was going to hijack "Jo:i.athan Liv- ingston Seagull.'' ·Then I called my librarian friend, Joe, in Denver, and he assured me that some of the nicest people ln the y;orld steal a couple of million dollars worth of books a year. I don't know when larceny infiltrated the book stacks, but Joe said about 10 years ago in East Orange, N.J ., the libraries got pretty sick of the thefts and had police roust people out in the middle of the night and demand · the i r overdue books. They were well within their legal righls to do so, but had never really invoked the law. Frankly, people weren't too crazy about the law ham· mering on their door demand- lng, "Okay, Buddy, we know you've bad 'The Lov e ~1ach!ne' in there for three years now and we 're here to put H back into circulation." And lhe ovordue pleading "Give me a break, fella. I'm a slow reader." So libraries initiated an elaborate ( a n d expensive ) security system by putting a piece of synthesized metal in the spine ol every book. If the thefts still continue to be a problem it is possible to ac· tually jail an offender. (This isn't Minnie A1ouse stuff. One library reported 13 , O O O outstanding in films, 54: books worth $290 and two rare books at $550.) It sounds absurd, but can't you see SOOle bloke in the ex· ercise yard of a penitentiary being approached by another "Whal did you draw for jt?" "Six months and my library I card revoked." "For stealing a car?" "What car? I checked out 'Wheels' by Arthur Halley." Joe said lhe problem i.s a . serious one and I believe him. It's a sad commentary that one ol the n1ost workable systems of honor left in this country is being abused by more than a few. Care. Look around your own house for books and irccords that don't belong and instill in your children a feeling of integrity for something they've bor· rowed. As an author, I'm probably 1nore sensitive than most. If anyone ever gets a jail sen- cnce for possession of any of my books, when they get out, they'll get me for it! d avis~brown TEL01$10N e STlllO e APPUANCIS e $ALI$ e SEIVICI e SINCI 1•47 -G Halo-of-Heat ® ~i\(J You can SAVE ot1 a Maytag Washer •2--speed operalion•Cholce or waler temps•Unt fllter•Power fin agitator. You don't have to sattta for less than Maytag quail~ to get a low price! Maytag dependablllty bullt into every rugged Inch! d avis@brpw Tllntl lON e ITUIO e A,,LIANCll e IALD ti SllYICI e llNCI 1 f 47 COSTA MESA Harbor Area 411 '· S.•M INll .. St. D•hY t-t1 hf. f·6 646-!IM EL TORO Saddle back Valley I I Toro J:d. et FrMW-v , ........ S.•0 111 h lfyi f.f; lot. f ·I 837-3130 • Singing F0r Summer Singing for tQeir break- fast are A1arty Kuehn, Bob Oesterreich and David Smet (left to right) whlle chef Tony ltanrique prepares pan- cakes for a fund-raising breakfast Sunday. June 24. Proceeds will se nd Father Coughlin's Boys Chorus to the Air Force Academy and other points to sing during t he summer. Breakfast will be serVed from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at St. John the Baptist Catho- lic Church, Costa ri.1esa . From Page 17 • • Ounce of ... Fund -raising DEAR ANN LA NDERS: I an1 a physical therapist who has treated ·twti "The Aborigine is an e:t- ample. People :ire now CQn- scious ()f the need to do something positive to alleviate his needs. Our country is very patriolic -lhere is a growing nationalism. People are cx- toling the vi rtues of the coun- try now . "In art and music there is an awakening as well as in other community agencies.,. O>mmenting on the National Socicly or t~und Raisers' Inc .. was its President, Norman C. Smith of Atlanta. Smith, vice president for ' . patients who wei ghed nearly 500 pounds d~eveloµ1ne11t_ and. planning for each. 1 have treated fi ve patients wbo El!1ory Un1vers1~y .. Atlanta. weighed over 400 pounds. J am now s:ud tht' organ1iat1on was treating a teenager who \veighs over 300. founded by Dr. Abel l·lanson. a rd like to ask all vour readers these fa c.ull y .n1('1nocr at Columbia siinplc questions: If You broke your leg University Teachers College toinorrow would you be able to pick up \\'ho wits one of the first to your body and w31k on crutches? If you start a class on fund-raising in broke you r back. \Vould ANYONE be able college. to lift you in and out of bed. or off a ''This organization is for in· Qiithroom commode. or in and out of a dividuals not fo r firms and car .. or push your wheelchair up an in- other g~oups. There are cline? . · ' chapters a n d members-al-Are you a'A'are that 11 becomes harder large. It is a grass-roots to breath~ _when fat chokes YOU!' hear.~ organi1.ation. There now are and lungs. Could}'.~ sleep standing up . 1500 members -nationally and Do you know that 11 s dangerous to have it is groy,•ing rapidlv.·· surgery y,•hen you are gross I y i _ · overy,•eight? Ask any doctor. Or ask Ann Landers.-M.N., R.PT. Fla .,..,..,..,..,...,.,..,..,...,...,.,...,,._.,...,..,. ......... ~-"ii DEAR M.N.: Your letter raises so1ne WE HAVE: ENTHUSIASTIC ANO HARDWORKING un settling quesllo11s. Thaak you for a \'aluable cootrlb'ulion. DEAR ANN LANDERS : You h<i vt~ printed 1nany informative letters .on homosexuality and 1 congratulate you for handling the subject so skillfully. What I Prevention have to say \Viii be, hopefully, an added dimension. I am a retired construction ·engineer \vho has seen his 70th birthday. I fathered a family of five and always con- sidered myself a nomtal person. I now have gran·dchlldren whom I e njoy im- mensely. However, one experience in my life bas always baffled me. In 1941 I was sent to a remote area for technical work on a war contract. 'There were no women in or near our camp, just men, which included one very attractive young £e11ow who was assigned to me as an assistant. After a rew weeks of working y,•ith the lad I \vas horrified to find myself physically a ttrac1ed 10 him. He kneY.' nothiflg about it si nce I managed to keep my inclinations concealed. I said I was "horrified." but more than that, I y,•as frightened. angry and disgusted ·with 1nysclf. Nothing like that had ever hap-AVAILABLE AT MOST HOURS -FOR AS FEW AS THRE E HOURS. OUR U.NIVERSITY STUDENT EMf'lO't'EES ARE CARE- FULLY SC REEN ED. BONDED, INSURED AND ARE COVE RED IY sot AND WORKMENS COMPENSATION. UNIVERSITY HOUSEKEE PING. CAlt 616·1100, MON., WED., FRI . ONLY: HOURS I A.M. to 12 AND I to 5. He Keeps Track~ng Engagement Announced SUMMER NEEDLEPOINT CLASSES! Samplers. Si•-week 1•11ion: Tlt1ir1d•'f' IO· I 2 or 1-3. Julv 11 tlt1u Au9u1t 16. $)5 i n~ludin9 m•leri•I• Children's Classes Four·week 1e11ion; Mondev 1-1 o• ).•. July 1) thru Au9u1t I]. $10.1 Bargello f our.wee• 1e11ion ; Wedne,dav morning 10-11. July 11 th•u Aug ust B. $25. One Day Basketweave Workshops Wedneuf•'f' •fternoon,, 1-3. •• •• July II , 25; Au9u1t I, 8. $7.50. e 26211. Co.st Hwy., COf'OM' _. Mw -'44·7904 NEW YORK (UPI l -For \1irgil Sturgill. age 75. the motto "run for your life'' is y,•ise advice. a daily discipline and way of ilfe. According lo a report in Uncle Sam's magazine, "Ag- ing. the Asheville, N.C .. retired man runs a four-mile workout six days a week and competes regularly in track meets as fa r afield as Florida. Ca 1 i for n i a . Maryland. and \Vnshington, 0 .C. Free Failure Permissiveness -a1lo"1ing students to decide what and ho~· much they are to leam - hns produet.'CI not the hoped ror "free and happy student." but lrua"nts, droPouts and vandals, behaviorist 8. F. Skinner said. YOU CAN AFFORD TO CARPET THE WHOLE HOUSE WHEN YOU BUY AT I • StlAGS • 100% Nylon Plush Shag • Polyester • Sculpture! • Plush Shag • Tri Color Shags VALUES TO $12.95 NOW • SHAGS• TMtds • DuPolll 501 • Anlroft • HI-Lows • Nylon • Soffds • Common:l1I VALUES TO $1.95 NOW • LAYAWAYS I THMS AVAILAIU IANK FINANCING I · HO ,,,,.SSllll 01 COMI ONSI PINO IH 'l'OUI IOOM MIASUllMfHn ,ADAHDLAIOI UNCONDlflONA&.l'l' GUAllAHfflDI ~1r and Mrs. Thomas \V . Stone of Huntington Beach have announced the engage~ ment of their daughter. Vickie i\1arie Stwe to Ed\\'ard Wnyne Thacker. The betrothed are graduates of ~farina High School. He is the son or ~rr. and Mrs. George E. Thacker of Garden Grove. No \\'edding date has been set. ... INIATURE$ CIVIL WAii: OLD DDLLl!I DLD OUN8 - MANNING'S COLLECTORS S!iOP ~ Thursday, J11ne 21, 1973 DAILY PILOT 19 School's Out Again Illness Skips Holiday- Summer n1eans that the kids are outside all day . . . no wintry day activities to dream up .•. no need to get 'them out from under •.. right? Wrong! of Lunch." "Brown Bag is Beautiful." "Gourmet Snack Sack." or "This Party's a Pie· nic." shapes they've created and see what they 're reminded of _ flowers. animals, blrds, people. There may not be snow in the summer, but there can be rain. And there are summer colds, tonsilitis, and long vaca- tion car trips. What to do with then1·~ llow to keep them bu sy? Pul simple arts and crafts ac· tivitles to work. With a few f(laterials, like brightly oolored paper and pens, you can cre<!le hours of indoo.r fun for children of any age. ~ How about a picnic indoors? \Vhen they're recovering from a minor illness, or when weather is bad, bring the park inside. Spread a blanket, prepare a After lunch, put them to work on "blobs,"' nothing more than tempera paint, pens and imagination. Have ~ach child fold a piece ol white paper vertically down the middle. Open the paper again and lay it Oat. Along the tolded line, paint "blobby" shapes of coJor, very moist and loose. Quickly. before the paint dries, refold the paper along the original fold and firmly press both sides or the paper together. Open the folded paper and set aside to dry. After the paint has dried. have the children study the W•IM'll's Appor.e br • llerle e Her,... Wl•tt e AM SHOD Notwelh•~ Clop ~ So11de~ 1117 E•it Co11t Hwy, Coron• del M•r 673°4740 picnic lunch. and put th1.1t \iFr~~ lunch into lunchbags the kids can decoratein themorning. Larg .. si·zes Use regular brown lunch-~ size bags and colorful ink draw what they hope their 1' markers. Have the children G lunch will be -a special ~ _ f .:I! sandwich, salad, cookies or a SIZES shiny red apple. Help them draw their zodiac -sign o.n another. Or encourage- them to create lunchtime slogans. like "Munch a Bunch Weighed pened to me before. After a short time I requested a transfer back lo the home of- fice on the grounds of health. Never again did such ideas occur to me. rhis incident has raised some questions in my roi nd thnl have never been re- solved. Does this sort of thing happen to others? Just how wide and deep is the '"·all that divides homosexuals from heterosexuals? Would you care to com· ment'! I enJoy your column and fee l sure you could add to my enlightenment because when you don't know the answer you aJy,•ays Jmo\v someone \Vho does. - STILL PUZZLED fN DAVENPORT DEAR 0.: There are very few things in lile that are 100 percent anylbing - and this goes for sex uality. It Is enti rely normal for a male, or a female, to heve flashes of "interest'' in a member of the same sex. Your experience is an excellent ex- ample of "'hat goes on behind prison \\'all s. When females are un available, males sometimes become substltulH. ~ .. Jany ex-convirts have reported that they !urned to Jello"' prisoners for sexual gratilication while in prison, but after Ibey were 'released they never again had the slightest interest in a homosexual relationship. 36 to 46 Cool it in slim-fitting seporo tes._l,gts of sleeveless tops to choose from -prints, solids, knits, and more. Plenty of bosi~ shorts ot Ello Nor's, too. Great mixers! Tops from $8.00 Shorts from $5.00 Sunday Shopper? Fullerton I. Huntin9fon leach Open 12 to 5 COSTA MESA 1105 NEW,OltT ILVD. I Nortti of 18th Street I Sirnilor To Morchondiso In Stoclr HUNTINGTON BEAC!i 14 HUNTINGTON CINTllt I Next to lctrk~ ltos.1 FULLERTON-224 Orontefolr Moll, ot Or9 .. etllorpo I. Horbor Mo•. • Tl111rs. • Fri. I O·f -T11n. • Wtd. • ht. I 0-6 Ba11kamerlcord • Mastercharge •• D · ~~;(f~~it.I ·. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL PRE-OPENING PHASE #4 OFFER. And reduce the cost of re· ducing! Pick up the phone an d call today to see wha t's happening. CALL NOW 979·4800 •This is the total average cost if you enroll only on a course designed Individually for you. ,., tenffll -'1111 Mtl ._..1r111 ... 11 9111i.1Hct • llltl •rt ntct,Mry NOW SERVING THE COSTA MESA / SANTA ANA COMMUNITY. Physical Fitness Spas for MEN Figure Control Salons for WOMEN Dellghtful Swimmi ng Pool Hydro Whirlpool, and much morel MIKE'S 3611 SOUTH BRISTOL Construction site at corner Brlslol and Ma cArthur CARPET WAREHOUSE 124 L 17 .. n. (•I lo ..... ) COSTA llUA • 645-4310 ....,., M.T,W.S. t4-n.r. & fri, f·t-SV11. 12.s ""-MIKE'S t ..Qll , Fory~~,a~~~?i~lg~: JACK ' lA lANNl'S lui<i/uv111 HEALTH SPAS A u .•. INOUe"T .. 118 C:O M ~ ... N V, ..................... _. _ ...... •ft··-·· WORl.O'S LARGEST AND FINEST CHAIN OF HEAi. TH SPAS FOR Mf.N AND WOMEN. Over 100 locati(!n& co•sl to coast. Owned and ope1aled bv He11tn lndu 1t~1, inc ------ I l ! ~C lub Projects· Grow ~;Under New Leadership -.- Fashions A Fashion Flalr fashion -showing -and luncheon arc 'planned for Saturday, June 23, ,from 11 : 30 a. m. in the Casa <lei Sol recreation center, Mission Viejo. Florence Smales will nar- rate a showing of fashi ons from area shops for tots, teens, men and women. OCAPA monitor, and Mary Jane Dix- on. lecturer. United Nations The a n n u a I membership meeting of the UNA-USA Coastline Chapter is scheduled ror Sunday, June 24. at I p.m. in the Villa Swede n restaurant, Corona del 111ar. Speakers at the United Na- tions Association of the USA meeting 'vill be UCI vice chancellor John· C. Hoy and ~trs. Betty Sanford. CaJifornia State Council U N I C E F chairman. - Soroptimist Club of Laguna Beach. Serving with her are Marilyn Wheeler and Mary Krcntzlin, vice presidents: Joan Crooks and Elizabeth Townsend, secretaries: Ru th Bajorin, treasurer: and Rose de Rose and Roberta Gauthey, directors. Town and Gown Mrs. Brian Zenz has been installed as president .of the Orange County chapter of USC 1own and Gown Junior Aux- iliary. Officers will be installed Saturday, June il, when the Orange County A d o p t i v e Parents Association marks its fifthanniversarywith a dinncr · Niguel Artists dance in the home of the Tom Winners in the second an- Other officers are the ~1n1es. Joseph Rose, Dirk Eastman and J;:imes Kollenda, vice presidents: Bruce Galey and Richard Hun sa ker , sei::re.laries. <ind Bern a rd Leckie, treasurer. Lewises, Santa Ana. nual children's art exhibit Installed .as officers wjll be sponsoreQ , by lh_c Niguel Art Lewis, president; Bob Koppel ·Association included Patrick and Joyce Alderson. vice.--Whan, oil : Susan Lotgering, prelideots; John Van Son'. watercolor; Dav id Brug- trtasurer; Sally Hu th and german, mixed media: Paula Georgann Moore secretaries. Jones, crayon and colored ' pencil, and Rand y Kipps, . Business Women !\1rs. Robert Finnegan has been se lected Woman-of·the- year by the Newport Beach Charter Chapler, American Business \Voman's Associa- tion. 8 y C graphics. Others were crafts winners Angela Advaryu, Leslie Mapes and Sue S pan genberg . Scholarships were presented in various categories. A family cruise is on the qenda for the Balboa Yacht Club for Saturday and SUnday. Jme 23 and 24. Members will cruiSe to the Catalina Island Station at Whites Cove. Reunion Former residents or Morris County, Kansas will meet Sun· Soroptimish Jane Westbrook was s\alled as president of ;n. lhe She was cited for her ac- tivities in the chapter. the community and progress in her field . She is employed by the Costa 1\fesa Water District as an a dministrative secretary. day, June 24, in Bixby Park.[,=====================ol __ J.ong.B.each for tl.!eii:,Jlng~.~! ~. --·------~'! _ reunion, beginning at noon with a basket dinner. D11ughten Catholic Daughters o f America. Court of Blessed Sacrament 20'l4, will install of· Jicers Sunday, Jwie 24, at 3 p.m. in the parish hall, Westminster . Installed will be Mrs. Julian Bacon, president: OVERWEIGHT? 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Under Medical Supervision at the Omega Clinic HOU RS: 9:00 -7:00 • CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT • MW Ida Di. Pasquales and Mrs. Francis Steinway, vice presidents; Helen De Luca _and Beverly Krutell , secretaries; Cecelia Wilhelm, treasurer ; Gloria Verduzca, COSTA MESA ANAHllM SANTA ANA l'UlllrfOl'l·llHlbn 1169 Nnpef't 1U4 W. l dwr. Ut22Tu111!1Av1 (71 4) 87~9347 646-1633 778-4141 547-6329 (213 ) 697-1791 7M W. l 1H1br1 llWI. YOU ... may be as slim and trim as your teen-age daughter ... C.lr f0t Ml0tm1tion Of COtlf/dent/aJ lttt•rvt,w In Ofl' oltlce ,, .... ,, .. r1t 0 1to1 NOW ... YOU can have a beaulilul new alowinli compl•11.ion to match hers in just 11 da)'I. YOUR fac iil .;,,inkles and aae line1 c1n dlminl1h Of' di11ppear. YOU can look 10, 15 or 20 ~ears youn1e1 with lhis provtn reaentration Pf'OCH .. 'Forever Young 6JJ w ....... ff.104J c.,. .-.... c.11,.,.1. • ·- Golden Date Circled ---====BALLET ~ I i ' SUMMER SCHOOL Marking their 501h wedding anniversary wi.lb lellcnv. rgembers of tbe Harbor Sen- ior Citizens Group Jllere Mr. and Mrs. P..e.m l,.ancl, Newport Beach. Married June 12, 1923 In SeatUe, the couple re- tired to tbe beach area six years ago after careers ll!J pharmacist and real estate broker. The couple are active in Senior Citizens, St. James Episcopal Church, Udo Players and the Y. Element•rY thru lntermedlite & Adv1ncecf Char1cter Faculty Modern Jau \ Mona Ffanee1 Stefon Wenta -Loli Ellen -Shann• Can• (P11 de Deux -Adv1ncff d1ncer1 only) Mona Frances School of Ballet 363 N. NEWPORT BLVD., NEWPORT BEA CH Tel : 642-4068 for inform1tlon & enrollment-Brochur11 on R1qw1t KINGS Giant klng-eiz8 stretch-out room. Genuine Ortho qualltyl Wtth smooth Scroll-Quilted CO\ler. Complele with Mattress, 2 Box Gprlngs, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus! OATHO TENSIQN Finn SUPpot'I, with buoyant l.yers of Urethane padding -top&. bottom. A great buy! Complete with Mattr~t;. 2._ Box Springs, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus! OR™O FtEX NOW ONLY s111 NOW ONLY s111 1QuEENS OATHO SIESTA NOVfONLY s121 NOW ONLY s171 A labulous \lalue at this low price. With beautiful Quilted co\ler & Tempered-Steel Innerspring. Comes complele with Mattress, Box Spring, Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus! ORTHO-TENSION Superb fea1ures like Crown- Flex center for added support lo back & hips and sisal padding foundation. With Mattress;-Bo:rSprtng, Orttlo- Pak & Double Bon1;1s! r~b.e>-Pak & De>ubie Be>:n.u• With every Orthc; king or queen you get the Ortho-Pak: Fieldcrest No-Iron Top Sheet, Fitted Bottom Sheet & 2 Pillowcases • 2 Bolster Pillows • Mallress Pad • Metal Frame on ~Oii Castera. With 8¥0l'J Ortho mattr-Ml you get 1 opeclol Double Bonus: King or Queen -Padded·Vlnyl Headboard AND Qulhed Bedspread. Twin or Full: Heedboard AND Metal Fr1me on Eaey-ROll Castera. ORTHO FLEX A rugged matlress set, with Tempered-Steel Innerspring & reinforced borders -in your choiceoftwinorfull size. s I 5 Wllti Mattress, Box Spring & DOuble Bonus! NOW ONLY OATHO SIESTA With reinforced borders !or greater sag-resistance & blllowy layers of thick filling tor $ B added cushion-' Ing. With Mattress, Box NOW I Spring & Double Bonus! ONLY ORTOO BAl.AHCE OflTHO l'OSTUOE LUJUf)'in~deta\ll WlthhelY)'-duty sea •11a TI'll11umptuoutmattrwfeaturMhe9\'}'dUty MMrsprJng & caver Multl-Oullted to bUgyant NOW NOW lnner.pring, c;o\IElr Mu HI.Quilted to foam owr toem. Comes oomplete with MattrMS, Bot. · thick layers o1 Ureth1ne padding. With Spring & Double Bonus! ONLY ONLY ~attreoa. Box Spring & Oouble Bonuol Ortho products are manufactured by Ortho and sold only through Ortho Factory Showrooms .FREE DELIVERY THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS ORANGE SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM LAKEWOOD 24'45 N. T uslin Avt. FOUNTAIN VALLEY 1811 We•tlincolnAvt. 4433 C•ndltwood Avt.' C•tt•H ff .. Or11191 M1lll 16131 H•rbor dive!. l•lw1t11 lucHcl •nd l1oo•h~1tl Cendlewood Shop• A•1111111 ,. ... 6J1·0511 l•1t111t •f Ml11911I N1•t It Z1cfr'1 J~1t 11tl of fi ef Mo rt t1cr111 ftl191 L1••••otl c,.,,,,, ,...1111 119·4510 ,~011•' 11•-1s•o ll''i.111•1 •••·4114 - \. I .. Thursday, June 21. 1973 DAIL y PILOT II . Horosco_Q_e: Aquarian • Scorpio's P.ictur.e 1n -• FRIDAY JUNE 22 ' GEMINI (May 21.June 20)· Surprlae accolade Is due. y.,', coold get raise In pay, pro- mouoo, aas1snment to special civic duty. 1'8W1ll, Ubra persons could 1'4W'e prom- inently. You gam tllrotlgb diptomacy. Win )UllT way. Remember special arr niverNry. tensllleo. Clprlcon is In- volved. By SY.ONEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): You _could !eel bloc ked, restricted, cooftned. Don ' l J>!lnlc. Sit uation li.s temporary. ~ promise to one who is l~pacitated. Val~ you r ip vac~. Know thht belng a 1s not ~lily the sa es being lonely. URUS (April 2().May 2tl): CANCER (June 21.;July 22): Accent is on tra~, educa- tional pursuit., the ability to oomrnunicate. Ideas. Be oure your~ ere made clear •lo thme at • -.C.. You get faV«able ~ tfom one who seemed "out of touch." VlllQO (Aug. 23 .• Sept, 22): Do pleUy ol llllentn(, _,._ toe. Malntaln low pnillle. Empbasla ta on opeclal agree- ment, cootrect. PIJcel in- dividual -to be very nwch involvod. Get !Inger on puloe ol publlc opinion. lmpn>,ve rolattona with of. lldals. LIBl\A (Sept. 23-0c!. 22): Strive to ·-)'QUl'l<ll tJroucb accei>tod chamtls. Be teeeptlve. One you care for r edt pr ocates fecl~~ Romance . affection' a Te featured. If pe rceptive , desires can be fu lfilled. Gentle approach brings results. Yoo LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): can win friends and inrJuence Nothing now is apt to be people. Popularity is on up-l~e~anJ!; i~ J3 a ll or_nothing. swing. · Don't ~tart anythlng unless you intend to llnish it. Stakes are apt to be high and "for k e e p s . ' • RelationshJp in- M8M18 avoid e1""". Stick to what you ·1<mw. Cloe who shareo your ideaL9 could be wilifug ally I! you .,., carelul oot to ollood by .......... 1 metho!la. CaXact Leo. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Enu:tlaw can eerve now as reliable 11111de. Means what you !eel is likely to be valid. Couples Recite Nuptial Vows _ CALKINS-C_OZZA Kathleen Cozza, a teacher at Cyr1thia Marie Leeds and Univer~Ui Park Elementary Craig Birch Feller, both of School and Dennis L. Calkins Huntington Beach were mar- were married in the Episcopal ried in the Church of GOO in Church of the Messiah with that city. The Rev. Art ie Stam the Rev. Robert L. Bonhall of-officiated. ficiating. Their parents are Mr. and The bride, daughter of Mr. Mrs. Kenneth W. Leeds of and trtrs. Don A;-~eoua of Huntington Beach and Mr. and Upland, was attended by Mrs. Lee R. Feller of Las Mrs. Charles Kitchen s. Vegas. Heed Inner voice. lief use to be bullied by ooe who hurls ap- parent !acts, figures. Aquartau (.'OU.Id be in picture. SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22- Dec. 21): &>ciai activity ..,. celerates. You could be gettillg .messages, calls, invitations. But it is best lo expecx nothing I . nothing. Do your en- t \ning oo lamlliar ground. C( Geonf\iilllilO.iis sincere but lpl to be . Exhibit sense ol C RICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): A call or lIIle9.'lage shook! be dou b l e -checked. Be scrupulous about d e t a i I s . Relatives tend now to be careless u n 1 e s s they are directly concerned. Know it and protect --your-own in- tenwts. Aquarius, Leo and MRS. CALKINS Scorpio could be involved. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): AO<:ent ts oomoney,ablli- ty to pit ldeu into ....;Jng ord<r. Del>ts are pate!. col- lected. Take -k ot financi al BmTHDAY you ~ on yoor o wn ear ly , p os•l bly psycho~y e a tr a n g ed from lamil,y. Yoo alwa)'3 have been willing to tear down In • order to rebuild. You are unJ- que. Yoo could be famous. You could also co mp ile wealth. In July, you get going with new a>ntacta:, projects. You will be man':' ' and thmt will ... ... . your cnllllve -.-. Ycu draw to you l1IOll1 bona mllr' Scorpio ud -' oltuation. Doplmtyolcom-_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,1 parl8on shopping. II youu-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,' browl!e, you could obtain Jegilimale bargain. Act ac-IN TH' GOOD OL' SVMMERTIME c:ordirlily. • ~~£%-. .;E~E. ~rn .IE ~c~ G ~O~'RRlM ~ . attract opposite sex. You c'l" . 1111., I::: ~ " g:Ji!SL-1'- make your lite mo ri e ~ I j , ' beautilul-andoomlortable. SHOPPING ARCAOE•4~ 30"'StnJet•THE C.ANNERY•--rtlleech I PurclWe ol luxury ilem \s ' \ ravored. And do somelhing WE IS OPEN TVES. TllRlf SVN., 11·5 ahoul your record or book col'l~==========================:==!j lecUon, too! .., IF TODAY IS YOUR MRS. FELLER MID-SUMMER Values: 40%-50% .OFF ONETARKDOWN-O~LY!- Karen Cozza and C I et a Attendants were Bonni e 1 :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 :~::!~vi~~~~:h~~ ~~~~z:=:;e?~j -~D'l'------E~R...---.l'~ s PE c 1 AL GROUPS $5.00 • $15.00 . $25 .00 W. J .. • H..,-, ,,_,. et•fl•••• fro• Ddlio, lrelnll 4Jt 32H St., ..... ,.,., IHcll • 67J·S030 '' and Bob Dawson. Joe Kaelin. The bride is a graduate of 1 The bride, a student at UCI where she earned her Orange Coast College, is a teaching credential. She is graduate of. Fountain Valley pa,st pr~Jid_ent of Psi Chapter. High School. Phrateres International and is Hef husband attended -high a director of the UCI Alumni. school in Barstow and is & Her husband, also a UCl graduate of OCC. A member graduate, holds a teaching of the Air Force, be has credential from that universi~ received scholarshipe from the ty. He earned a masters state, the Daily Pilot and hn- d~egree at the University of maculate Heart College. New f\Ie xico and is affiliated·f-· The newlyweds will reJide in with Chi Psi fraternity. Huntington Beach. AIR STEP -BERNARDO - SCHOLL SANDALS -PASSPORTS MAGOES IAN -MISS AMER ICA VINER CASUALS -HANDIA6S - "HOSIERY Edw•rd• -Gtrbtrlch -Robin Hood PF Flyer• -U.S. Ked1 -S11mm1r1tt•• C•peiio D•nce Shoe1 D•nc• Weer bv D•n•kin Cornett.. U... fer c•Hllrn 225 E. 11th ST.-COSTA MESA 548-2778 • IAfilllCAMllU(AID e • MAST~I (HAIOE • • · I I . No L_,...,.. Ne ....,_ th·e re-asury r~cord-dept;-has -the '-n-ewe-st dynamite sounds you're looking :for. Best Sellers Stereo A lbums 8-Track Tapes We Specia l Order Albums & Tapes New Sounds brought to you on A & M Records & Tapes Stereo Albums 8-Track T1pes s33s1 s499 ON COLUMllA ITIRt:O ALIUMI • TAPt:I ,.,1s1mon Ttltft Goes Rhymin' Simon ODE/CtrOle K.int • f"IMllV 901""~·· 3:69 _ • Music Writer Ah'tf'* 6 A....,. TH.E All WINT.Ell GllOVP THEfONLrCONEOUT ATNJGHT ~-,,-.... -.i..·.\l.......,'Urldooc....,MM '••"""• W.•1-lflt ... OoodT ..... '--il" . ON EPIC ITEftEO ALBUMS 6 TAPES Edger Winter Thi"!' Only Com9 Out At Night ........ """'AN You Now,Mv Son Other Hit LP's 3.69 COn1e from Shldows • ON AH'LE STEREO , ALIUMS 6 TAPES P1ul McC1rtney Rtd Aose Speedw..,. lilly Prllton • MUl!c Is My Lit. Other Hit LP's 3.69 I Wrote 1 Simpll Song I!!! Jt lll ·!~\'I ' ,~,. j ... , ~ ON ATLANTIC STEREO ALIUMI 6 TAPES The J, Geils Bind Bloodlhol ca,..... .. ,..,....,...., other Hit LP's 3.69 Thi Cerl:>tnt1rs Sof9'FotV°" 'Olforinf CIOll To YOfl Special Albums & Tapes Priced to Save Our accessory area offers everything you need to keep your phonographs 299 .44-159 We carry Golden Oldie 45 AMP'S that are hard to find. All past charts hits by original artists- Come see our selection! and tape players playing. The Clean Sweep e Woll 1'101 W1.'~I Olll e Adih Vflff 10 VOii! 11COntJ • Htlp,. wund ·•~<o;lut11on 249 Music Master Tape Head Cleaning . Cartridge .99 ON APPLE STEREO ' ALIUMI 6 T.VES GIOf'9t H.-riton Living in tht M•teritl Wortd ......., ...... You'w Got It a.ct Girt Other Hit LP's 3.69 W1lkln9 in SPKC Gule M1t1ri Sm.ckWltlf Jack ON RCA ITIRIO ALIUMS 6 TAPll John Denwr Flrt'Nt!tl Andt'Ol'Mde lpoolty Tod! You•Dll;eMy ..... , S.l ..... Your,,_ Other Hit LP's 3.tl8 Spooky Tood'i c... ..... , LMt Puff Tobacco A09d W e carry Music Books. Browse our huge selection f--r~itlJr1rKJ Cnrly S1n1or1 . Bes t <lf Br•'.1 11 Jol111 Denver. Paul Sin1on. C tlrpt·11tf'r-.. Cat Stevens to n.1mr <l few We have a variety of artists collections books & instrument instruction books from $1.25 to$5.95 OPEN DAILY "9:30 to 9 130 • SUNDAY 10 to 7 GRANADA HILLS 1800 Chatsworth St. WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd. RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyler St . SANTA ANA North of South Coast Plaza TORRANCE . Sepulveda and Hawthorne BUENA PARK Beach aod . Orangethorpe ORANGE Garden Grove Blvd. and Manchester LAKEWOOD Carson at Paramount. ' " • I .. ........ . ;ii. ..... ~ 0.111 PilOI 5ltlf Photo , - Bike Trail Aids Kids At School Jligh schools offer driver education courses. so V.'hy not offer a bicycle riding course in klndergar·ten? Mrs. Miiiie Gilbert, a kindergarten teacher at Meadow View School in 1-lun- tington Beach, figured it was n~t thno such a class was offered . So she decided nine months ago to spearhead a drive for a bike trail to wind lhrough the s c hoo I 's playground . LAST WEEK ii.ms. Gilbert graduated her first bi'cycle -class--36-rive-and1ix-year~~~ olds who "'ere certificated by the lluntington Beach Police Department as qualified bicyclists. San Juan Chantber Fete Set San Junn Capistrano servic:e stolion owner Forrest Dun!Vln will 00 installed new presl· cf£'nt of the chamber or com· 1nerce at the group's annual dinner dance F'rlday. Dunivin succeeds Pat Toner lo the top chan1ber post. Others set to be installed as offic('rS of the chamber for the ('()ming fis cal year are B~ce Sw:irtort. vice president; Rita Casteel. secrctnry · treasurer and directors George Bozzo, Ed Cornwel l , Leon.ii Fitzpatrick. 11ugh Gray, Rupe. l·lartmann, Paul Hunter, Jean .,,.,~.,;.Hi-~Lacouague, !\1rs. Toner and ':: ·1ar1lyilWil1iams. --- O.lly PilOI Sltll "htlo Former chamber president Bill \Vebb "i ll serve as Jn· stalling officer at the 7 p.m. event at the El Adobe. No-host cocktails will start the evening and dinner will begin nt 8. Dancing will follO\V, ?i.d chamber 1nanager Maggie Olsen. Reservalions at $7.50 52 YEARS OF EDUCATION HISTORY END AS TUSTIN DISTRICT HOLDS ITS FINAL MEETING Each child spent the past three months challenging the 250-yard course which was equipped with stop signs. pedestrian crossing Jrarnings ;ind other traffic signs si milar MRS. to what may be found on any MILLIE GILBERT CLEFT) CHECKS 0,UT ROUTE Specia lly-Built Course Aids Kindergarteners per . person arc. available th rough chrin1ber offices. -. Seal Beacl1 Bus Ro11te Establisl1ed Increased bus service in Seal Beach's College Park -----East-wilLbegin_J_u.ne 25 and \\.·ill continue through Sept. 14. ' city street. _ ~ --End of Tustin Era .. The fi rst thing I had lo teach thc1n was which was their right hand," Mrs. Gilbert said. "I{ they did n ' t remember \Yhich was the right side of the path, they would have been in a lot, of col· \isions.'' School Board Meets for Last Time By CANDACE PEARSON With the rap of lhe gaVel, it was-ov • Fifty-tv•o years of school district history 1Were ad· journed Tuesday when Tustin Union High School District trustees met for the last time. THE FINA,L meeting took an1y a hair hour. There \vas little businw> Jert for the five trustees. board members and guests who filled the board room at district other small head· Ralph Gates, 2.8 years the superinte-ndent of San Joaqu.in Elementacy District. THE PATH, five feet. wide. "\\.'3S striped for two· way bicycle traffic to familiarize the children with oncoming quarters. --------------------rraffic;-she-said. SAN JOAQUIN. like Tustin, The teacher also had to ABOUT M PERSONS ca1ne goes out of business June 30, teach the children how to read to see the end and to jQID in according to a unification plan traffic -signs and, most im· rounds of applause for those approved by ·voters a year porlant. teach some of the who played parts in the students how to ride a bicycle district's life. ag;hen three K-12 unified to begin with. "Many students were ready Principals from the five high districts. Irvine, Saddleback for two-w heelers." she said. schools in the Tustin District Valley and Tustin. take over "The tricycle just doesn't do ii were there, including Vic the schools and the history. anymore for them." Sherrcilt. Universify High in The Tustin board was often Inherent in the lessoos "'as lr~·tne : Robert Bos an k o . the target of criticism that it a develop1nent or coordination formerly Mission Viejo, now was too conservative and too and motor skills. "she ex· Huntington Parade Cuts Out Traditio11 ORUV..' LANE ANTIQUES 223 ... , •. hi .. ... s-cs. ... .... The traditional Huntington Beach Fourth or July parade v•on't be so traditional this year, and organizers claim it 111-bc all the better because of the change. "It \\.'ill have quite a dif· rerent look this year," said 1'.1ark 1-Iammarquist. chaim1un of the Huntington Beach Jaycees project. "IT \\'ON'T BE as iong as in previous years -\VC'rc cut· ling it by more than 100 en· tries over last year," he said. ''And '>''e'll have a lot more music than before, with 24 parade roulr. ~·hi ch will begin at Lake Park. move south on ~tain Street. turn on Sth Street and head to \\'alnul Avenue . ARE MOVING IN JULY- Wttch for Ahno11nc1rn1ntl FR0~1 \\'ALNUT the parade!'::======::::::::==! will wind back cast to l\1ain, Kid L"k head-north to Pecan A\'enuc S ] e To ,\sk Andy and '>''est to I.akc Street. then north on Lake to the disband· ing area at I Ith Street. Call Laguna Beach Adult Education 31 SUMMER CLASSES • The routes will begin at 10:35 a.m., 12 noon, 1:30 -p.m., 3 p.m., and 4:30 p.m. with stops at the comers of Tulip Street and Ironwood Avenue, Ironwood A v e n u e and Sunflower Street. Sunllower Street and Fir Avenue: Fir Avenue and Heather Street, Heather Street and Elder Avenue. Elder Avenue and Ironwood Avenue, Ironwood Avenue and Candleberry Avenue. Candleberry Avenue and Aster Street. Aster Street and Basswood Street. and Basswood Street and Lampson Avenue. A1though new Wlified dis· tricts don't officially begin un· til · July 1, the Tustin Union District has been winding·do"'Tt its operatlon for months. El Toro High: and Don Ames, ~tant from the schools. plained. Mission Viejo High. The district had trouble bands and drum and bugle VOCATIONAL Am AND CUFTS, LANGUAGI, . SWJ!\lMlNG LAPS in be.r corps," he said. IUSINES.S IDUCATION, FAMILY EDUCATION, Silting in the audience were passing recent bond issues and building halted. d e s p i t e fO!'n:ier Tustin Superintend~t. overcrowding at Mission Viejo More information about the route-may be obtained rrom The city "hall , (213) 431 ·2527. lnstead, much of the time Tuesday was taken by i'n-- troductions -ol administrators. former superintendents, -ex· \V1lham Zogg, now . super1n· . tendent of the_new Saddleba_c:.k -~~ capac1t~ enrollment at Valley Unified District; and University-High. . None of the new Irvine Unified trustees was at the 280 Graas at Saddlehacl{ Some-280 Saddlcback-Com.-Rlcl>.trd-0. _Hayden, Penny Ann Hum· M;evin J. P11lnr. Ron11ld E. Paul. Bonila • • mel, Jofln Charles Lynam. Alcfl•rO-Jcm ~R--P!elar. -Ron1ld Lee_ Rlcharcb<>n. mun1ty College Students Will San11lfiw, Helen E. Sl.nnln11, .,..:i $teven Anlhon1 Ruslr, P11ul Rler111rd graduate in CQTilmencement Pamr!a Anne Ziegler. S11nd1tflll, Su•1n . Gill Shulmlstras, . . DANVILLE J1mn V. S~rock1. Mrlanlr H1H11a CeremonteS at 6 p.m. Friday. Oary le Ly1111 Pllsk1. Start. James N. T11lor and Shtrcn Lff The graduates O( the tWO-II. TORO Wilker. T. El!>ebelh Amrt. L11rry ... Ian Nl!!WPOttT ll!!ACM year COilege have earned an Aus!ln, Alla lradlleld, Joel 0. Eg111r•. Prier J. Bow1r an.cl DOl.IQlitS Ed.,.1rd Associate of Arts deuree Ro.emarle Etcheberrl1, Tl'IOmlS R. Wiikes. e · Gtlf!H , Joe Gtllndo, Judy €11"1'1 ORANGI: Many are completing one or Htu.auer. Tl'IOmas L~ HOPk lns• •• ..,.-+.,..-~., Lotl•r>d ind Robert Rov • 22 · J Kathltt11 Anne Llnos.ey, M"r!tyn w .... the campus s occupat1ona Lon11. 1rene M•rle L09t1, 11151 J career progran1s. M1n~w'I, Nancy Ann Nevley. c Ann Norman. Robe•! C. O'Br n, /'i.l Jea St aS ffi8n)' more Alchlrd Antl'lo•w Prier, LI Y ne sophomores did not file for Rot1lns<ll'I, Frencn:'~· Scnr1me1. Chery l AM Shafer an.cl W•lhitm Lloyd Spevlda. degrees because they "'ill be FELTON transferring to a four-year col· ~•h oiane Brttke. , GARDEN GftOVE le·ge to complete a 1>a.chelor s P111r1c11 Ann AtWh enc1 Jerry o. degree. a college spokesman Hohtlen. 1ftV1NE said. LIMI Mt!"le Belmonte, Leriore Friday's graduates are: Katharine c .. rr, Oou91•s v. Chapm1n, CA .. ISTRANO SEA.CM Rober! Arias. Bell'I Ann lllf'lon, Chrls~er J. C1{'1rr. Rov MellL1rne1. Gtrv McKnlgh!, Oetira Anne l!llllv, Nancy Mey Russell. WllUam G. Stockd•le , 011vlcl EdW1rd 5lr1111t•• 11;1111er111e EllMll Wll$Ol'I. end Lvnn B. --OANA .. OINT viwna F. C•rey, Leo L. Oel1n1y, $!1v1111 G. Orlscoll. Maureen Hall'llllGll, REFLECTIONS ., Reyn Sheffer "It 11 lmpo11lbl• to •nJoy Idling thor~hly 11nlH1 ono h•• P'9'lty of work to do .•. " J•rom• K. J•rom• l\1osl or us fec-1 that \\"c not only have plenty of "·ork 10 do, but also that \ve'll never come cl06t! to ge tting caught up. This may bt' \vhy we tend to i·cgard id leness tu1 an Ideal stnl<'. "If \\'C only had noth.ing that hod tQ be don"'', \\"C' 1hink, "how ~"·eel lifc "·ould be." AM Co•. Joseph W. M1rch, lt!chard Allen Hat!'lilw1y. Tlmoth1 I(. Jti"ten, Miry Helen Keller. ll'l!lebOrl M. Lrt!nerl. Ak,,.rd G. Llttle, Jahn G. Lcn11. Su.an A. McNamara, John WllH•m Mohar, Mitrllyn JNr> Monl•ll· Robert L. ~. Jr., G111en Lee POlll!IO'I'· Judl!h Gene Simon. kalhleen M1rl1 T11lo.-, Dllnl' M.ilrl1 Vts1ev and M1rk Stepllen Wickham. LAGUNA •EACH Richard S. Dirr. l(athrYl'I Anl'IO Blair, Wiiiiam 0. Brown, Oon1ld wa1ne B1e. Ellabe!h Ann Cromlelgh, Berlhl E. ~•leis, Renee Yvonne OuMOl.lchel, Judith Anderson George, 81r1N1r1 Allen Gltaion, Francis Scot! Hunt, Phoebe ln19rlandl, L~lle Jenison, P1mel1 Jtn.e Mac Mahon, Gary Edwtrd Mel>111r. JtmltS Andr"' Moore, Jr., J1nel Moore, Yvette Mo.-rls, S1ephen A1m!n11. Gttftldlne Y. Scribner, Thomas JO$eph Shobeth, Mlehilet Aiithony Sl991t, J1mts Edwtrd Slephens, Gregory OL.tlnn Upton ancl WUU1m B. Webster. "· LAGUNA MILLS Herber! S. 81lr. Jr., M11rclt Anne Bigelow, R1lph Cn11rles Bond, Chitrl•s Overton Christle, Htaltltr Eiieen Cole. R1ymond Lff JOMson, Cl1udl1 B. Lind11ren. Lori Otnlte PelerlOn. l<tthy Rv•n Ind ·-" L. Woodll'l!I•· U.OUNA HIOUIE\. Oitvlcl L. Brown, Ptlrlclt Lff Ctll, Jodff L. Grimes. Ml:ht~ ... K1l1111er, Jr., Jiwl Lynn P11lermo •rid Vklorl• Evelyn Stevens. MIS.SION VIEJO LIW.-l!'nCe Frl'd Abboll. Slevlft Audie Ashcre!I, Charles Arthur BtJiter. Judy Lvnne Banhtm. Joan M. 8trker. Oevld E. Bec~er, Marylou 8trm111111111m. Ooriald Joseph 60l"ldl, O«ek Clltlord llowen, Gertiyn IJrertOKke, Mar1lou l lrml119h1m. Oon&ld JOWPl'I Bondi, Derek Cllf!ord Bowl:fl, G 1 ,-, I y n BrHldecke. OOMa F1y1 C1tvl!, kennelh Johi:i C1rey, Rel)etce A. D&!gl1, Debor• R. 01v11. Arlhur J. or Luca, Je11nne Y. 0Llbl)llrty. Htns Giibert Ovnc1r>. Marvin J. Edstedl, Jr., Marl• Flnlev. Ol11ne Elltln Gr1n1, Jamu Dort1ld Grey, Mtrk JtrntS H1lev. Jolm Thom11 Herold, G•rv W•ller Hlolls. Jartt H. HOimer;, l<tnnell'I Delh Hon1~er. V1rnon L. Houde, Hal F. Ltmb, H1rold Jf'rornr's. observation "'&mi. c. L1wl0n. wrl!yn H. Lyon. GIH1• 5AN eLEMl!NTI!! C1rol Anne Biwnl119, Mllehell 81ar>da, Gtll An" l urnetr, John AndlrlOl'I Burnell, Lola E. BUKh. TOn! P. Cline. Pelrlcl• Crllgh!on. Patr1da A. Currey, Mar;1r!l"I Aflll Oel1ney. Ale•anllrl Fraser. Tim Gtudlr>eer, LvMa I.. Glese<ler, IC11thttt11 Emily GoOdflO, LBurt Jeiln H1rvey, J1tltre1 Loc:k1, El,.Ynl MM.beth, J1....-i Luci11n Payne. Alan J111 Alce, AUSHJI R11ymond Rice. Ct!flerlne Slncl•lr. Don E. Somer\IUle, Ler1h Stlrllng, Wllll1m B tr n • r d ThomplOl'I •nd Patricia Ltt Untied. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO Malcolm B11lm, J11mn A. Biker. Naricy Sharon l(uhn, Jo.11nM Llllte. Ob- ed Orl1ndo Lucero, Gr•I• Marchftlto. P11mrl1 McBelh, Paul Vlr>eHll MeHugh, Wllll1m N. Riddle. Ind Teri V•11ce. SANTA AMA How11rd Ail!IOC:k, Lindt Su 1 t n 811rtholomew. 1Ctr111 Arline B1yl1S'I· L1wrl'fl(e M. l lshop. Llr>da Ruth Bl•c~. Vltlrt"'KitV Bl•c-, Glenn M1rsh11I I Bo:iarth, An.drew J. Buford. Jr., OIUn B. (r0$1, Oebor1h Ann Cru>e, Mark stepner> Devine, Don Michael Edward$, M8rf Beth Elder. Oonald Andrew Fa1. Miehe~ 8. Fltn11gan. Lvnne Gullllavm' P11trlclt Joar> Htwkll'l!I, L•urle Kay Hay nes. Palrlcla Henry, JOl'ln Aon,,ld Hepper!. Jr .. B11rtllllr1 JOln Johnson Pl•y Marlt Ju1~1. Chr!1tl1111 L. Klh!il, Ron11ld Ed.,.lrd L"'ls. Robert W. Lln-dluH, Timothy 0. Llne19ren, Sharyl Lynne Manlt1• Mtnny Jolln M11rg11retl~, M1rnvn Louise Miiier, Lind• Mot!I. Paul• Mcno11, MtlocM• Lynn Orlon. Deborlh Ann Parkiw, Irene V11ler1 Pom1no. sn.ron Mlcfl~lt Prtlh.,., Lee K. R1mlo. ......,rl•nn• Chr istin• Schmid. Ol•lr G•ll Scotl. s1 ... 1 w. Seely, John ShCW'alt~. Martt s1111nv, Herb s1oe11e1, Belle B. Strtrter, Hel.n Turnbull, 1Cani.erl111 G. Vtrl1n 1nd SU1111M1 Ml rlt WUlltmsorl. SOUTH LAGUNA Sunn Ir-OOrrl1, Charin E .• Joyce, J11mn E. Rhln1rd, CMrtl Anr> Sehrein· dorler 1nd Miry J•ne Von Harl. TUSTIN 011nltl O. Ad11m1, Lezlle Louise Brown, Richard Prlt• l urrOWl, L1rr1 Oetn Ctr111ntn, $~ndr• 'J. Co.tie, ~n­nls Mlch1el Cobtl. Arne Robert Crumte1, A11mond A. OeAngelo, llltt Miry Oe Pro.I, lrld F1hrlnj, Marlin Farkas , Arnold Ln Franc $, Jolln Gorm11n, Aon111d Ctrl Guerriero. Robert Elrl'den Gu1hrl1, Thom•s w. Hall. C1rolln• Hlno1ow, Donovltn o. Hively. Peter JOHPt'I Klrxh, Pr111on P. Mar· qllft, Jr .. ("'.lcn11al McCr11r1. Miry L¥ Meyer, Critlll Niil, Oruc:e Cr11l11 Pertl!e, cnrlsllnt M. Plpllone. Andrew Puonl, Oo.-ls L. A011r1r, Philip John Aose"ow. Mich••• c. RotHllrllH. S!epher> J. S1r>1oro, Jtnlc• l<•Y Stew1rt, Jiil M1r!e srewtrt, Ann Tflurston. Linda J111n Twe-dl, Leslie Underwood. M1rk Andrew Urb11no¥1l cJ tr>d Jamts A. Van Hu1n. us that "·h<·n ••e arc even-Li.ti Mithlw.n, Dffr• $111 Mttton. M;rlsline M. M11t10n, Donn1ltll'I Mir>OI, VliNTURA finale. ONLY ON 1'.: Saddleback Valley trustee, Chet Briner. also a member of the high school board, was there. But the occasion was almost festive. with flowers placed on the board and refreshment tables. . Chairman Paul C a I ho u n thanked the admhlistrators, principals and parent-teacher groups that "have helpe<l the district all these years." Supe ri nte nd en I Jack Schumaker. referring to the standing-room only audience. declared. "It's beautiful." Former trustees and a few parents reminisced and con- gtatulated the district's last board and then, it was finished so quickly. WHILE .J.E afternoon sun beat down~till·wann, those inside shook hands, perused early district ledgers, ate refreshments. talked old tin1cs and looked to the future. League Sets Luncl1 Meet The relationship be.tween employers and t h e OC· cupational safety and heallh act (OSHA) organizations will be discussed Tuesday at the quarterly luncheon of the Greater Irvine Indu.strial League.· Don Brown. manager o( the safety and security division or Boyd and Associates, In· du strlal security specialist, will speak at the 12:30 lun- cheon in the Airpo~ter Inn, Jrvine. Reservations are required for the $5.50 event and n1ay be 1nade by calling the GILL of· lice at 83.'J.8182. tually o.blf' to loo! \\·ithvut Jaann.e I(. Ml.leller. s1111 JtM Omdthl, L.;clnd• R. B111e. lim it, \\·e ,,·vn't enjoy it! The 11~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I best plfln, it ~C'f'rTI$. is io enjoy thOll<' pi 't'clouS; mo- m<'nts of ldJenes!I "'hich v..·f' arc able to sand"·lch be-· 1\\'fY'n end.I~ mountains ot uncompleted work. COMPLETE NURSING CARE Our g tn ff ha.a· becen care· fulJy selected and trained lo render gym pethetlc, penon- a.lized ~t>rvi~ to tll \vho seek our uslsU.nce. A Indy _ Jlflcndant IJ available. Q':HBFFBR. ~ mo .. TU ... llY LAGUNA IEACH t7• SOUTH COAST Hl6HWA Y 4t4-15Jl SAN CLEMENTE t.Sll NOATH EL CAMINO AEAL 4tl..0100 Whether for short-term postoperative convalescent care or long-term care for the chronica lly ill or aged, you can be 4ss ured that Beverly Manor maintains the highest standards in the provision of skilled nursing care. licensed nurses are on 24.hour duty, and all nursing care is super- vised by skilled rog idered nurses. Physiciens are on call around-the-clock. -··~· -............ ... ' ..... ~ -1.U!' • ..,.,f YI....,. Ahr.,. W•lfflM .....,, M•R.,-C:.""9ftuttf H"plhtl )1410 c..IR• C.phff•flO, .,.,_ -· .. , .. ,., . h helped k But Hammarquist says the HEALTH A.ND PHYSICAL EDUCATION. pool _ every .n.'g t h~~ two-hour parade will display .SOCIAL SCIENCES AND HOMI ECONOMICS. her 1n _condition to run be 1": more quality thl'ln ever before. PHONE 494-1546 FOR INFORMATION t~ children~~ bal~~t~-~~ch _of the-J34-entries. in~ bikes, ?-.1rs . G_ilbert a · volving inore than 4. O O O JUNT2~AUGUST 3 1'he s_chooJ-s PTA dona~ed participants, have bee n 1~~~~~~~~""!'~~~~-~--~~~~~~~ $500 to finance the ~ands~pmg personally in vited to l'lttcnd l: --------·-- and the asphall tra1l. wh1_Je ~e this year's event. Ocean View School Dtstr1ct purchased the four bikes. Huntington Yot1th Job Plan Told Huntingfyn Beach y ou t h between )4 and 22 years-old \\.'hose family's inco1ne is sub- standard will have top priority in the city's summer youth program. "\\'E'RE AtlER quality, not qua'ntity .'' he said. "I don't want just a bunch o( people out there "•alking." The parade \\'ill kick off at JO a.m. with the Long Beach !\1ounted Police -the same group "'hich lead the 1{ose BOwl Parade . Behind them will be Grand !\·larshal\ Air Force Lt'. Brian Ward of Huntington Beaoh, a (ormer prisoner of war. Among the 24 m u s i ca l groups "'ill be the 30()..pierc ~1usic .!\1an Band of 1-lun· tington Beach. a composite Oa·nd made up of musicians in the Huntington Beach Union lligh School District. a 125-- picce drum and bugle corps from .Racine.. \Vise. which performed at President Nix- on's inauguration, the Marine Corps 3rd Air Wing Baml from El Toro and the Army band (rom Fort McArthur. There are many job open· ings this summer for public en1ployment u n d e r the Emergency Employment Act Summer Youth Program. To qualify, disadvantaged persons must be either s c h o o I dropouts. a member of a minority group, under 2'l years of age, over 45 years of age or handicapped_., HAmtARQUIST SAIO there The person must be a will also be about 30 com· n1en1ber of a family whose in-mercial and non-com1nercial come is below the minimum floats and abOut 50 equestria·n state level v.:ho does not have entries. suitable employment. Parade theme is · ' 0 I d Members or families receiv· Fashioned Fourth," and ing cash welfare payments participants will he vying for will also be considered as dozens or trophies to be qualified. Participants must a"'arded to those groups which reside in Huntington Beach. best carry out the theme, he Interested persons may con-said . tact the Huntington Beach More than 250,000 spectators personnel office at 536--S491. are expected to gather along ifti!ti~~~~I TAILOR SHOP Tux Rentals Men's Wear 5030FF ALTERATIONS •o• ••• & wo••• SLACKS LINGTHlNID OR SHOlllTINlD, Plal11 •. SLACKS WAIST TAllN IN 'OATS TAKIN IN, Pl•ltt .•.••• .. --·-· -'fMll COUPON MUST IE l'RllSINTIO WITM TNI GARMINTI AT THI TIMI THEY All Ll,T l'Oft Al.Tl.ftATIONS, VOIO II' •RI• SloNTIO AT TIME 0, l'ICM;UP .•• ---•C OUPON GOOD THRU AUG . '7 3--- TAILOR SHOP S~HO EDINGE R AT SPRINGDALE HUNTINGTON BEACH 8-k>-0911 SCHWINN VARSITY SPORT Al ltllt Price TIU Jt,tl~ I • 10.Sf)eed derailleut pan • Sports style hand&elwn • Dual-Positioa calit>ef .. ,....,. • TwiD~,.I~' t• $10595 At h°"'' O!I the c:~mpus, i• tow•, °' .,, 1 eounhy 1 ... Sehwinn 's outsl,.ndin9 l19htwei9ht bi ~1 with ft•hirtl d° equipll'ltnt usu•lly fouhcl on bik•1 co1tin9 m11th "!or ... T;~. Siik™ goer 1hift co!l!rol1, du1I positio~ ctlip1r briki '•"'• Diot11ond styli c1rbon d11I fr1rn1 . G11111w1ll tir1s. Co.. ;.; tad1y -you'll bt 9!1d yot.i did. ONa 0" <5.L,: ... llCVCLEI .... a M '"' u.~::a;·$ PA"TS Ii ACCESIOftltl Dl'ff M l llTAILa•S ~ HOlllY ...... Ill = ... °" CRAFT MATl,.IALI . '--l •• , .... IMO .. l"otl TM• SIRYWCU .. OJI AL\. •llNfD llCYQ.a VALLEY BIKE lHOBBY [ ,. - 17071 Ma9nolla c .. w .... 1 545.01n • a42.11n - - .. -----. .... .. I I Thur5diy, June 21, 1CJ73 DAILY Pll,OT ' .. PUllLIO N<mCE PUlllllC NOl'ICIJ PVllUC NOl'ICI! B I f p t 0.:~=-·;;r~~'::\r.~::,,..,.,. ,,.~:r-s~=~? .... _ , .. ..:.=~:.: .... _ a ance o aymen s OVER THE COUNTER I -•< W o.::;i. 111 M1cHAr1. J. 11t0f'HY, THI T1t0LL'' oAl.L.ll1tY 111, ., • ™" c:onAOE co,,.., '~· sa NASO L11tlng1 for WNne..,.y, June 20, 1973 Non:ii, llerffv fl-to u.llton .i C-• Hwy., l...tolN hkll. (tilt ,.., W;,,,~1'~ ~· ""*' ~°"""" s J pw.om h•vlrw c.ltlfM. .,.1"" tn. .. 14 W.rr"' 14crfaln .. 11111 llwO!r111 CatlyOll C.-:;r MY-:'~ 1,e h I :,:~~·=:-.10,fll~~1c.wi: f;.·;":.'r~~ ... ""~ ... lrlo .~=w.:.=,,:C1Uf.t2* me t O'TC 110CKS ~=•c: Si SlVi ~a:J ~ iJ!'l~ ~· m n: t~r ,~w:wt~:~ =~;.;; ·=-~~"=i~ ~~ .. ,_ to!~J.,::-,:. ~ ~ · '°" ow s mpr o v e n ~.J.\l:i'l.,Jk.lir._.·:.· ~;.,· ... : ~ ~ ;,!D0_.,,,.,~ ~~.~! ii.l·~ 11: ,:~: of C:ll1'1t1 \., 1( ....... 211S Torr•nc• 11\ld~ ~,Clerk • Or•ACM CfMlhl -May :tr, Thl1 .~.": .,. ,..., wttt. ttM CM!,., .. "" ... 1Ml '~ ", c •. "" l!~ ff w u~ ~\i l orr111e1. C1ll!Or11l1 toSOl Wlll(h II ttM j ~ ,..,. • Orlt!M C-1Y.., JUN ••• ltn. ""°'" ,,,.,.,"" ,.. :" lf:i ·~ w l)lltt ot bvllflftl ot Hie ~•19nM 111 Ill "Wll.iwd Or•• Cohl Deity J'l\ot, Publl .... °'"""' , .... DlllV Piiot Junt :oi,pllf' •111r1 ~ '", 11 ' -., 1.. ,.:i~ , iT:1.IM!.~!~~rt111o!! •:,,.~~,,~"~'ti:! Mty,, •nd June'· 1•, 21, 1m l•7>n 21• •and Jtlt'f J, tt. 1'11 1""13 WASiilNGTON (UPI) lntercompany transfers ," the = otlltr te.':.tt~ It:~ ~ ~1'"' 1~m : N 1111 oc '~ ~· 1110~:,b~~~c;,,o;,~· notk l . '\ PUBUC NOTICE p LJC NOTICE The U.S. balance of payments department said. :1::;· dO TJ: I~~ f!I,, ~ ~ I md 11fz::1lt" owl• t!:;' I~ ft AL.F1eo H. e11:0PHY UB s l tu at Ion Improved During the first quar'"r the :!~ ":."'~~!!. n ~~!'i 1'~ rt 1 rtJ; Pl: 4:1 ~~118:1" 1~ il1• ~d~1~1~::.:. fti. fll1l1 _ IC• ~-~llDn"OttS PICTITIOUS IUllN•U signillcantly ji\ the fir St 1 ""f ' 1ioll1 Ind 00 not n ,..u,.,.. }.t I :'°fltc: ~ jm r~ rn f \.o\ l c11a"" L K .. 11, llJf'M!!._ coun 0, '"' ... .....,, sTaT•M•WT uart ol lhi but dollar was the object of [::'°~. "'1111 "rinf':t.l 1 ~A:~ Lf.?1v , u~io,, Ct~ 1JU 1 tt' tllS Ttn'lltll l!W., tTAii °' CM.tlll'OllNIA POI ~~. ~-.... -, Ir. .. ,.. q er !J year u re-cuJ r and If tel INDUlT9:1AU Id Mtd 2Vt u: =:n i:r • \Ii llArt Yh ,~ I: Ttrnll(t, C1UI ... ,.. , ... ·couNTV °' OIAM•• ALLIED ol,Q'/EltTlllNO AOIENCY, mained in deficit $1.2 bl ion, spe a M>ll u Jma y AND UTILITllS rtpll ~ 't.. 11 =~ ~ li"" ft ul ·~It: NL. t l :~ ,~: 1.11.,...-t ftr Mt11h1lltr•lw 1 .... A-1U'1 12" VICT-11 , C•lt Mts1, ttllt, ttd1 the Commerce J;>epartme, Rt WPS devalued 10 percent in J~~. 1,Y "~'\ AJhV t \11 10111 oiifl 1 \~ IS!h Univ Fd1 l•t~ 'IS 1-.C Ell I It of THEIESA MAL.AlltV, p,_.. L.M Otvlt, 710 e.. Montwoa:f, "'" ... ll'S tell .. 1111') >II Olllnl lJ I' Utiv Mob! 5~ Pllfllllllotd 011n9t COllll OtllV Piiot J-O.CuHcl, • -Mo-'·'I"• ""· HO. 1111 .. 1 rtported Wednesdi:u i. Fe•-·•-• Olo •·• thll EW l1 It ~--C.o l!l! lE HM Ha ~ ,l,21•ndJulyS,t2.1'13 IJ..0.13 NOTICE IS HEA:EIV GIVEN to fM .... ,u,;..:i::s1"""°"' 1111. MOii!· ---department~lssued .......... r . Ac:UllW11 It ii ~Ill Fnk l3\li1•1i 1tOWtF1t1 12 11tiv1nc3.il .S'A ,f\" cr9dl10rt OI tN lbl!Yt IMl\'!Mt~t weed, U HW.. c.111. •ldO-1.0. SUit. 1 ll'C '°1111 Al~ 191'1 lO\lo 1tnh Ir ~ -1.1tkr Pll l• lll 11 -------------I '"-' 111 ptf'$11ftt., 1Mvl110 c11lflll 1n.1 tt1t \, • statistics showing how the THE DEP ART~lENT I "'k• l..nd u v. lS\\. .1r1v11 P •"' s'°' 1111 srov tt "'E It: 1\'I f' PUBLJC N-CE 111d dtt.ld«ll .,.. ,.qlllr.i to 111 "*"'• , •. , .,.,_, 1, __ ,, _, -·· tecl a so .,11'° '\'v 2"° 111 t41r11<1r fl '""' ~ ~ .,, Jl:' j,16o v JOrlt" 'r,~ t 0 vu 1,_ '" ...... -.......... , ... Uni St,_ doing 1·n .c . !''''" ,1 ,,.,, "'w111 F• m. 1ft ·~Cl> Vdell ;vs • -------------1 with 1111 °*"'.ll'Y 'llOU(l'lll't. tn IMo Ill'.....-,.,,_ll'llp a,,,_ wa5 said net foreign puruwseS 0 .t.!lyn 81 tV. s H-c:llno C I I \., ll'Tl*"lt lolOI Vlau.11 lk m su••1101 couitT °" ™' al '"' citr11 ot"" ·~·'""'*court. Of' p,.itlll'I L .. 0•\11• terms of its current .ace-0unt!J d .t.m i\.Pf)I 10 l~ Halll<I Mt 7'1 I\~ lltr•r i S.\.'J vo1 snoe ll 1 •• .T.T ••• CA 1 111 "''""'' "*"· w1t11 ii.. 11te11wry fll<"-nll t." $ltnC1'°" U.S. st~s rose to a rccor " 11.r1cri1 l\~ • 'HeulOn 111,., 11 t1o1011 11n 24 XVJ Wat.II NG I"' I L POIMIA •o• vavc11tr1, 111t11e~"'*'11111111111~1 Tiii• ,,,._....., w11111.1c1 w1th,.,. COU!'I-and its long.term capital ac-• 'mE• L.ll 111 2\,H1J<tet c 1lv. 1' o "" 1 11,"w",..!!..M1 14~ ,, TH• COUNTY Of' GI.AMO• ol hi~ •llOl'llft'I.. I GA:,..'f,' GORHAM .. tv Ct ark of Orlf'Ot COllllly 111'1 Ju!M u. $1.3 billion , during the flrst 'm Er,11r M11o 5!1,j, Hlll'llwd I .... • ,","•L G 11' 'rt' ,.",""' ••' ~~ 41/o N•. A-1u• •AUL, --1·"•• "''-,, -., ••..•• , '"'· c:ounts in the international •m F ,,, ,, .. ,,,, •-••• "'' \::r. " ~ HoT1c1 OP HliAllNO Oii' ....,.,1v_';iiiii.:C..Lt0:21 ~J;'.!l'..;;"'1h. _ _ _ _ _ P·UllJ ---.ro.arke1 ... 1 ..... e quarter, an Increase of $200 "m Furn 1 1t' • 1 i-o;:i100 M,oo 1101~,, ',' .. "" ~ 11W,.1J J" ~ ....,:r:r•w1 11"' 11~ •'•'•'•"o'ON-0 ,,••n•1·'",,•,•0•,•,~-2,'•WTIAL1L.., 11l1c:• OI tMnlMlS ot tilt utMJtrtfliiiil fii"'\11 p1111n.n.:i 0roriji""t0ilf·o111r·P11o1 Ju111 ~ • --11u .. but '"" •m I Gr•• 3llV• :19 'iV~ • 1 v Mtrch 12'~ ll\tt wtfrna M l.S'~ 'I~ -, • mitt.r• .,.n11111no -1111 "''" ot .. Id 21, • •nd July s. 12, nn 1t1s.n 111.i on, -'r''"re was_an_ o.M! t -sv ~~ lJltiHv~r!' c 1"' 20• m 1,1r n 2' Wilc5t Pl 6\'o "'' E•l•!!it ol JOHN eoo NOORFEA: Otclde11t, whtoltl fol.If tnOll!fll '"" tN -mESE IJ'<Kl.UDE trade in FINANCE ofCsetting decline in new is.:::; w~r: 1~ 1 1 v.1~: Z":.-;ri;·~ ~~~:-,~n~ ettr~~M.,'t-1\!ti"- DKt• · 11r11 11111111ur1°" o1 Thi• 11111Lcit PUBI.JC NOTICE old abroad by u s cor· .. 1111euir ""''" ""i.o "'°"•~ ,,,,. ''' _..w 5~ I\' 1111"" l 11 1 111 NOTICE" IS HEltE8V GIVEN !Nol 01tld Mey"· 1'13 goods and services, pensions sues s . . An~•n 1n r ' l(o til•I C111 31-~ 3J~• lml)l(WI 10\.11 1 \.\ U1t1 H 12 ~l Vil HENltV GOA:OON ti.1 !lied htrll11 I 11<111• OQN A l,.l.OfNIEltGEfl ·d US ti " l.PMllt e 9'ilo 10\ro nllrC En Pt Y.11 Toi SJ'li 54\IJ Pll:T 11'4 11 !IOI! FOil PA:08ATE OF WtL.L. ANO FOR E•1tutor ot llW Wiii llf I 6ntl to Overseas reSI entS, · · pora on!'. .t,P$ tnc11 1J\, l•V. ntml Gi. ll~, I•\~ f#' P1: )S lS\.'I :: P~I 1,..._ ltU ISSUANCE OF L.fTlEA:S TESTA.MEN· tht lbOYt --dlUdtllt MUMICIJ'AL COURT OP CALIPORNIA. government grants and In revis inrr 1 i quid it y .. rdn My! l_, 3 1111 Alum •'\!i S\~ pe(:lrl IS """ IJood L. I '""' ll'.9 'fAlY TO H:TtllONEA: ...i...1111:1 ta OIAV, OO•MAM .. PAUL. COUNTY OP ORAMOI . I . t> ,.,,, Aul 11 U1) II ·-w .. ··~ .~. l1111d11 I 15 15Yi ar1d v 10 10*-""lllCll II Mldt 1,,,. lurtl'lff .,.,"'IC"""''· 1nd,... .,11111,.. llW~ p.....,. JtlG c,_ V.tllV PMWaJ, private long·term cap tal ln· balances the departmenrs A•row H• '' 1•~· n1rst c11 n 121. td 1t1111 1•"-1 1'1'16 r!ahr w 1..:. ~~ ttlel 1111 timo nd ... ..:.1 ,._I ,_ The f' t · th f' t 8 ter [ ' . . Ar-...ida t't 9•o!rtllnd R ~ •w lk N "I• n 21 amx f,_P 6'11 7l6 • ... at• ,,., ..... r"' ......-n Mlllt. c101. ttu1 "-' .,.....,. vestments 1gures ex· accoun in e 1rs qu r o Bureau of. Economic Analyms -.s10 cora 11\li 19~. •mt~b •"' 10V11 l'kN erw n 1, 'f'tlto rt •''\I "" MMI 11.11 bllfl Mt lor J•..,. l,· 1t1J., 11 Tth !fU) 2"'J1J11 m.... •--C--· Dllttkt -. . • 'd -• •oo G I o 1•" 01 I o ~F• .. , S' , ... N S I -• Zl .. 1 C I t" ·9:00 1.m. hi t!\I c111,1rlrOD111 w~ Otoltlll'lltll A.....,.• !tr ••k111w _,, -w• MUMl•I 17" elude the VOlat1\e flow Of hQUI 1972 .was 10 times bigger, said 'the defiCit 'WDS $6.9 billion Auto ~Trn_12i; 131!. l~v M 17 11J\ !rat TIC 1214-il~ lotl: uifi-u v....aa •• Na, 3 11 Mid court, ti 1W Civic C.ttiltr Pulllt"*' Or1nge COilll Dtlly Piiot MIV IUMMONI funds which tend to reflect • · t d ( 16 8 b'jj' rted B.1lrd l'la ·~ ~ iC1ls SI 11\'i Ill• OrlYI Wtsl. In tflO cnv ot $11111 Aria. 31 •nd Jllnt 7. ,., 21, 19J? ,...,_,, P'llltltlff: DUANE w. ,.LB!A:T - f . ~·-kt however. IRS ca 0 ' . l ion repo Bllrd Wr u 17''•(dlV•I' c l \'J l '•l-------------- C1Ulor1111. Dtftnd•n•u 1oel!:A:T e. SL.ATl!:A:. dbl ore1gn ex .... 01auge mar e pres· "The domuiant factor was a in prellmlnary data. The g:~e!11 "~ ?!'" ~~i;. ~:~1';!100Tk 5n",~ 61., 10 ~lo•t Actf1'e 011.ci JUNE ll. 1913 !!:!._BLIC NO'.l'ICE SL.ATl!A:'S CQ.\ST LANDSCAPING sures on the dollar department said the deficit in Biiiy MU 10 •1 !(en <oh!! 10•1 11 ,d--------------WIL.LIAM E. St JOllN, • COMPANY. •rid fl' s E fl v I! tN· . $1.4 billion increase in d irect . • ~nk BldQ 1111 ,,,,Kev 0•11 "• 61• cou11rv c1~• 1 41116 su1t1.NCI! <;o .• • earpar1tl011, 1n11 The first-quarter deficit on the off1c1als r eser ves transac· e111k Rt1 '6\li 21•4 !Sev•$ Fb 1j~C 1 ~~1 NEW voA:K iuP•)-Trw 10 mosi 1,11.,.. s111NW•1N • STANTON NOTICI TO c••DITORs SURETY c. o M,." N v OF THI! cur 1 -··t and long term investment outflows to $2.1 !'ions balance was $10.5 billion 6,',',",,"00 ", ,",0,, ?!1., ~:~u c~n111 12\:. 13 1 1toc:k1 1r1dl'd °" 1ne or c m1rk11 wl'd11e1· UI so .. Slll'RINO ST. Ht...114 IUP•llOlt CO\IRT OP TM• PACIFIC,. corpor11l11t1. Ind OOliS I ren a ...... """' • . $ b 'U' ~·v•t11 ,, "' lli\KMS Ind JI• 4\\0.IV II IUl)lllltd by NASO. t.OS •N••t.1s, c1.L1..-. ""' sTAT• °" cM.1lll'OflM11.,.. ttlf'Oll9ll x. 1nc1v.i.... capital compares to de ficits of billion, most of which w as instead of 10.2 1 wn as letlln• F •"' s•'i -c.111111 111 ,.~~ 1""' 1,,,1_ 01 0 v~1utn1: 110 AllllMI CM. Tllf1 Ctlll ... _.. TMI COUNTY Of' CMtAH• Ta ttM Otfendlnti· A cfvll COll'llllllllf • -la h I C OGfr Pr 11\'z 19•~ ~· !.~ 1 ~+3-1' Altll'wlpl tor ,...,...... N• "''"'9 ,..,..., 1111c1..,. "-p1,1n1111 "'11111 you $1.5 billion for the last quarter reflected in volatile short·term reported st mont · t•,tnr.1 ~ n~ 2~ "<,_.,. ru_ ~'• •J:: Dni11 ., Th'S ·11w lji" "' Pllblll/lotd Ortnt• c11111r 0111v ,.~ J-Eitito of c HA 1 L. Es L. VON " ,_, "'"' to dtftnd thh 11wwi1. vou of 1971, $2 6 billion for the s tt1 ~; l6 37¥:1 ~m p~11 I\' I~ ~~ru1E!i!'K11 ioo ;t~ ~ U, 16, 21, 1'13 l ..... 1J CHVICMtL.L.. ''' CHAllL.E$ L.. IT!Ulf fllt Ill rt\11 court 1 wrltttll pMidllll third ... ~ . of l9'12 d l3 7 Btlt l lf ""''' 1 1 :i.. s61!n 0!1$11 oOD Joli Y,, CHUllCHIL.L.. OtcttMd. • 111 .......... to ttM COITlillOlnt (Ill' • Wfln.ti .q\WU'.er an . B!btl c 7h ··~ •nc• 23\\ 21•11 1nkt11'1tr j.11100 ~ ~ Vo ____ P_UBLJ __ C_N_<m __ CE ____ c:!::.E ~s ~£:.!!: :.:::"~ : ~~.pl=:T.;1!' ~ f.~": billion in the first quarter of M , ..., rth :1~d r:. ~~'II ~!~ =~~ ~tz rr.4 H~m~r.-~ S•nclll ..3il:t1Aw la 2f+ i; thll ell wwo ll.lvlt19 cllltnl ... IMl lfll 'l'W· Of!IWWIM, yOUr dtl'Mlll Wiii bl 1972. oney s ...-o Sob EVlll 11\IJ 26~\ IOQtl Pl 12 Ul~ PtMIOll L.1TK 3J 21~1• 31·11 ...... -------------,.....-. rM lo fltt ft11rn .,......., 1k<f1 p1o1 lff 1ftCJ -~OOlh Nr 11t~ 18 , ll"r!V H J'4 1~ Ol-ii11111r 0111 ,200 I f -l'/s lll'~lk,~'1:1.::~i:::s ::1~ ~:~ =lltl'i, In 1t11 otikf the C04J,. ,::;nc.:tar 1~=-t'111ln-t ~ department Said . the a:r::: 111 7~~ n~ Linc cid: t J': ~~ NASO Volllmt TodiV: '-*"'°' Tiit lollowlM1 sier_.1 .,, lkllllill of t11t c1tr11of11111boYI "'"tlld "'1f'I,., vou 1or t11e -v a<' othtr rel ltt r.. deftctt in goods and services D d L G d erawn Ar '"' 1v. L.t011 CtS• ·~ s\~ Adv•ncts m buMllt'I• ••• la pr-I """'· with llw lltC .... r:Y llUllltoCI 1111111 com11l1lnl. t I' . ted . th amage· ost 00 s Buckbt n~l 12 «Ille 49 .so 0.CUllts m C 0 M ' '' • H •• s I ' E MEDICAL VOilCl\tl'L to 1111 11nMnl•Md ., ,,, II ,,.. With .. -k "" MYICI tf '" ,,. accoun 5 was e uruna 1n e ' • B!Xkey 6~~ 61'1 lllWI <o SIV. Sl Unth11111ed 20 .. T Id llrMt ..,... lfll ltll f1w ' tt!MWI .. 11 fir t d the def' · · ~urn11 SI 1)io 13':f I.ltd Gea u"' 1Sl4 Tot11 1106 GROUP, 9021 ICtiott ........ .-. 9vllll Rllt'llld H. Pl'tflllel'. SIS w .. 1 "' • ~ • -• ,,.,._ It st quar er an IClt 10 &U111r M 35\• 36V. IA•\ ~lly •U s Ptrk Ctlllort1l1 f0620 S1nh AIM, C1Ulol'flll '2101, wllltll 11 llw Mow W 't M tlillt VMt ,it ' lftV, t d d Jined b ta f 11 :am T1g 13\" U IAt lckl 38~') 39•;1------------- lrvino t.o.o.kowiu "'0 4201 L.111'11 pl1oe• of Mlrieu a1 '"' urldll'•l•fllll 1n 111 "'°w flleiil • """· ra e ec su s n 1a y. :1111 sow ti• •'IO ....,~,a Fri 11 11~., Gainer• _._ • -•ers &1a<:n e1w .. su111 Na. iot:' L.oni ''""· m1rtar• pt'rtal11ll'IO ta 1111 "''"' Of 01"'4 Jtn. '· tm. :e11 V!l'S 16'IO 11\'o M~rv Kv 21~~ :l9V. ._, IUV CA tOI01 llld dectdenl, wll'!lln tour INMlll'll 1ttw Jtll'lft 8, H1rT11, Cltrtt :hm11 Pl 10'1 11'11 Mc Cmck :It'" ll ------------ -R ........ A•-~,-M,O .. MOO Al11n= lht·flrll 9\lblklllan ot-IN• natlc».. -_h D. o. HUTMACHlll:. Dtouty -NET LO.NG-TER!\ol capital_ I M . . I do :Ni11ce A H'• 2(1 McOu.111 IS \C.\io tic: AvtnUt, L.ont 81Kll CA fOIOj 0.111d J-19, 1973 ISEAl:r -OUtfloWS shifted in the Other n -0-v"ln-g ·n"'ure '--. e= ~: ;i;~_:i:i' ~~7:. ll~ !1~ N-York fUPI ) -The toll~ll'l9 1111 H.1rptl' L.. Doll, M.o., 16'11 S. VIRGINIA EL.LEN CMUlC.HIL.L. N•MNl•AM, aVTT•IWICI( ... ~I -, .-•111 Ir It 1' IO Mllr~lri-I'll 1'k :a _ll\tl"llOC:ll.s-1N I l\f<_YIJi!.lll'lld 11\t Colorldo """'111, P1rtmoun1, CA te1U E.aeco.nrl~ ol llM win a cL.•Pl'•fl direction, however, in the first :: 1 5 !',',"I" Fr 1'" It¥. m1111 11\d 111111MITiilill""bOiid 'on-Dlt"tWnti------I H•ITl' John111t1, M.D.> IOO f.ltl ,,,..,11.. of llM 1b0Yt 1111T11d dtc:tdelll ""'"°'" " L..lw I din def" · f .llr 1 K 11 lllCll' .,·• 50 ot chtnP• "" 11M ·o....r-tti.-e_,,.,. Sir"! L. .. 8tlCll .-. -IONALD M. l"RINNllt -T ..... Slf'Mt quarter, ea g to a !Cit 0 -111 U A 15/,1\ 1,."~· Dh G1s 211/o 24_.. mert.11 1$ Ql.IO!td bv !ht NASO. ' ' -'UW RI-CA --••N'I. 'U' ed t -r 1 11111 F b s1~ o Ntf Ind 11<1«:9111 ... ctwi:;r.: .,. lhe e1,,.,lll11 Jllf'te, lo\.O .. , ... u s. c-.. .-•• -... :.,,_ ·-T•o '"'' _ • ..__, •UV nu lOO, compar 0 8 :11vel)k IOI~ l!l'tto I • dllflffl!lc:t bl'-"! Tiit p(IY Ol.ll Ill! bid A I" , CA tom ... '"'"• fou"~uar'"" 1972 surplus of t :1ow e rg 11v. 1•14 e"2 '1', ~~io ,"1" pr c1 1nc1 11M cur~111 l••t bid prlt• . ....,.ua, •r•mo1111 • ......, ...., c111"'""' t11t1 ,........,. ,... lll't.1IMtt1 •"'""'I ..,.. By SYLVIA PORTER such items needs an exper Coc:•C L• 11 1n.\ v.acw-" 5 ::: ,,.. •1.1N•11 c~:.-"'!:' "~~p:~;~; c1.t'~· T...-1 u-1•114141 ,,""' ........ 0r.,..c .. ,,," otttv p11at,,"h"';; f181 milllon. The deficit Jh this Wh k' E~1s11~ ~~~ ~ w....r.i, • fl ., ... i ~-•1111 i"tu" 2~ .. t v. uo 2S.o Wllll•tn Rlllllck. M.D .. lMIS s. ,.,,_..., -• I Jiiiy s. 12, I • (Fourth in a Series) ~tion coverage. en pac 1ng, :on!llll p U'/i 151.li \\Xl'°' Cl 101,!, 11 ,, 3 u~~lll'llm~ m+ ~ ~= i!·l Cal«ldll AYlflUI. Parimo1111!, CA twn Pllblllhld 0r.1f'191 CO.it Diiiy I= k d t 'led · :ousln1 11 17"4 Dali S"i 1 •• I ~SCO Inc .20 10 1 1\'l Uo ft.: Thll bvsl-•• clltldue:lld 11'1 • otnar•I Jl,IN 21, 11 Ind Julys, 11. 1m PUBUC NOTICE When you move to your new ma e your own e al In-:ros1· Co UV. H'1 ~~' tivSt m 9'11 s I• M.1rl1 lllt; TI4 ~ U11 1~.· P•l'lflll'illl• ,. t ·rult~ R •l'o 51'1 ·o Mo'1c" ••A ~ 6 l'l!lrDll M•rl l % Uo 'Ii '""'"' M-•"1-M,D,, PUBLIC NOTICE s • I ven ory. ~11r1 Noll 12'11o 13"41 NI P.11-10 1:!. 10,Y•, 1 Alll'll 1M11r1" 214 \to ua G_r .. ;;.,·... NIWl'OtlT-MaSA UNIPllO KMOOl uspens1on home, you will be com!ortoo ... __ k each carton 'h 1· Dini 11111 ~·~·~~-rm· til 10>,t I i"'":Hlntr:p • 1 U11 1 . Dm•ICT hy the k iedg that l\'ld.J Wit a 1st 0.11IV M I\~ 114 twl Ca 1~ lit~ I tvr .Cllb 7'3,~ '14 UO 11 j Tiii• 1111-1 w11 11tM w1111 ""' c.,.... • 9INI Mllln 111'11""9 •!ft now e your 01r1 or11 s 511, EnQ GE 16,. 1... 11tr11¥ onvr " .,. uo · ty Cltrk OI OrMCtt C111.111ty. ,_ .. ltn NOTICI TO c••DrTOttl NOTICE' IS HEIE8Y GIVEN thll ttM of its contents and, as your O.IT• °" 21~ 3 NJ Nil! G IS~ 161~ 11 Kui!om Ellfn ~ •• uo '8· lll'·ISHI sulll'•••ott cou1T °" TM• IOlnJ ot Educ:1tl0ft ot tM NIWPlll'!.Mtu Q{ All Cal mover is respansible' f o r 0a11 Gen 3, :n"' kor.r 111 '" 1" II D1msanD11 ca •It> '!\ uo 1 .o 11i1.oc 1r1.n OP CAt.•~MIA lll'Oll Vflltlld School 01s1r1ct ot Or•nt• c-1y. • .. possessions are being unload· 0rc11 01 1~ ,,,. ~11111,. A :11111 3•~• , H•11 F;•11_.r1~ 1~ 1111 tl; l0~ Plll>lllMll 0r11191 ca.11 Dlll'f' Plkll. TMI CDUWTT °" OIAH• ClllW!>!•. w111 rlCltlw -1• ttld• .,, ta damages or losses you su(fer Orear tn 4\ti s 111'°" s JI J.11.t ls r.,:i,.11 Intl ~ ~ v11 1SJ J11t11 1. 1 .. ,1, 1'. 1m 1m-n .... 1.-1'-ltt 11,00 A.M. °"tilt 2t111 •Y of J11111 ltn 11 ed, have them placed as near Dl'!t11 AR '''~ •-1·~ Non:1str II'-!. 1•\lo ,, w111,. St!l•ld c 2''o :1 uo.. 9.J Eitii. of FRANCES Gii.ESKE, Dtcto .. ttw aHlct °' 11ld kl'Dlll Dl1!1'1tl, loc:1!9d during the move Up to so·centS as poSSl"bie where y OU 8::l~~11"l:1 ~t! .~'' •• :::,.u""t~ ~ ~ 1 117 ~~~l~r ul: :~i a ~: :1 PUBLIC NOTICE lid ,, IW PllCtnll• AYlllUI, Clllll MIM. T d E d pound per article But an • 011m Crs 12'\ 11"' \It r •• I~ l ilt Gu.rdn Clllm l''o v.. Uo • 1 No11CE IS HEIE8V GIVEN lo ,.... t 1111or1111. ,, wtllch tln'll llld bld9 wlU tit per . 11· t I 'II t them Diam 1-td 10~-. 11 :l•kWd H ' '\~ '° At• •ndA .361 19V.i 11,/J U11 Ii cr ... ltor•·OI 1111 llll:Wt 11tmld Ol(tdlfll putr.llcly °'*""' 11\d rtld for : ra e n s. insurance liability limit O( 60 U tma e Y WI Wall ·Dick A 8 781~ :Ml\ tllll Dr 61"41 J1\lo 21 MerrJAm .1, 10\~ ~ Uo J,t I ... tll.lt •JI par$1111$ ll.IV!119 d1lmt. 1Q1l111t tM Automoltvw a.p.1, 1'11'11 ind Su1'11'11tl y I ht k k h ( Dh•" Sci ''"• Ill\ Hn l:x 1 ~ :n I.fl, tcfll\010 1 Vr Uo 7 l t110T1c• TO cl•DITO•S uld dKtdtnt .,, re®lr.cl hi 1111 thlf'll. ..11 111<11s 1r• ta 1;11 In 1ccordtnc1 w1111 cents a pound won't be much OU mg ma e a s etc o bocuttt :u~~ liv. Jffs"'t: ,Mr 3 3~'1 2:1 GU or 1n1 l.111! 1 V; u11 1:1 SUPlllOlt COUIT Of' THI' with 1111 nte ... llry vavc:lllr1. In t11t ofl1et CaMUlan1. I ti 1 I r u c 11 on 1, Ind Oollr Gin 71Jo 1•• :Jo <II 6~\o 7W Z• lnd111I FIJtlCP jlll U. U11 7.T nan°" CAL.IPORNIA J'OI o1 me c11rk"' the 1ll0\'• 111t1110c11 t'Olirt • ., s•1t1c111at11, w111c11 ,,.. MW °" 1n1 1ri Although the Securities and consolation if you find vour set the floor plan of your new 0a1111d1 U'• 24•• ~vv to1 161'1 11 u TOllY L•m.Co v. \4 u11 1.; THI COUNTY OP ·Ol#>NO• 10 prtHfll """"' wllll 1111 l\fC'tslAfV 1/\1offlctof11W Purt1111lnt A .. nl OI 11ld E cha Co ha { · • · Dow J""'• '~ 30tf. Oh F t.OSllS Nt. ,._,.,,, · . . -....~ .. -•• ta lllt ...... ,,$10* ,, 1230 North kllllol 01.1riet. 1157 Pl1etn111 Av..,ua. x nge mmi.ssion s of Met'ssen ch ,. n a ,·n home with notations on which 0av11 OB ,.,.,, •"·'-0nt1 ,erro0 1,1:~ e 1 cabt L1br11or ts'h-' 11 19.\1 E .. Go.DO 0 0 F ._..,,... "'--1 ' 'll!n~l11 n 7l.I ~ 0 111 -• 1•'• 2 girt Orw .13 s -I f 16 ' ''''' N e . sT L.r F , 1k.1 ,,.,.1,. s1rM1. 51n11 A111. contom11 .... u . c11111 """'· c111klo'1111. lifted a 4().day suspension of items s hould be placed where Etat1 L11b :16'• .. ,,,, ~i:'/..~,• ,~,~ ,,~ 3 111<111""'' 01 • -1v. 1s1 GOIDON ELI STOl..ZOEF, I~• G.I!. ~l<h 1, -~·ea OI bU1lnt11 ol It.I llocll bl~ m~I submit I bid deposit OVer-th~••ter lrad'•g for smithereens When it arrives. "'due F.~ '°'" 3~'" r '' 1'\o l ~ Coait C1t.1ma l -h •n "•-'• SlOL.lOFF, Dtcelfed, Ulldlf1loft.ld lri :tll~tn-.rttn'""fllll'f ......... "' fllt-form. •I • (torf!fl.ld or c11111... ~· ... •w nd . t th -1 n1io ll" ,... ven. NA 3~ r. ~ ~ ... ddQM Tiii ·-~ N011ce. is HE•£•Y 01v1EN ta 11W ttM......, ot Mid dtUdfnl, wtll'lln '°""' c11tt11: 1r .1 bid ·bOfld 1q111I tQ five Pll't lM Alr--Cal-ilonua· , the Ne..m.-t How can you help prevent -a give a copy O e ~1 Nuett ._..,: <'l '11' C•o 5'' s~. 'i:11v'1run S•111 3· -v. ~<; c...ol~ °' ,.._ .lb0¥1 t11l'Tltd Ol(ldtnl -thl ill« tilt llr•l P'111tllCIHtn tf thh (S~) tf 1111 •-I ot lllt bid. mlClt "t""' , -EM.pv C .,.It-,•:~ I r '''"'•!t,i 7~/ncel SCl1 l'!;i ·' !Nol 111""''°"1111vlnt ct1lflls .,...,.., !ht Pt~• ta Tiit ordtr of It'll NtwPOrt-Mts1 Be·~ c •• _. -~•y 1's sUU and how can you '•sure mover. =,..., s,1 ''"' '"'" P.cc'o' ?l 34 1 tar Inc • -n--111, llO!k• ca..~ ......... ,...... ... . . c · , •tn in-. is•• 9 G T1c:nn.otv '""'-v. I • uld • ..,.,.1 •rt t"®lrtd 10 11 thtrfl. oih.t '-11. 1tn u kllolll 01m1c:1. A Plrlorminc,.• fivln• 00 '·•truments today aga'•st iosaes'. hand and this lS genrally your •1h•n 1' 211 \ 1',~~ •"• L"tn 32 \41i;, lO rt f""r•Orv 1~ \lo j· wtlll lflO 11ttt1Mry vouc. ....... In llW of'lkl CROCl(EA: N"TIONAL. IA.NI( IOftd lllO't' bl ...aulrld II !I'll dll('ri111111 I ---& "~ • .,, ' -"tell n '" 1 11 Brd I t I' Ntln CSS Inc 21 -M 1 ./ DI 1111ci...ka1""1ll0\'1111tt11.ci co.irt. or •Y W.ldl L. sr""'twr Tiit District, 111 .,.. e'ltllt a1 fin.,,. TO res ponsibility. Also among ~!1, Pt~ ~~ ~! ~:~1 O.ff.J \h~ \i~ J ~m",oo"''~~ f~ 1.,.. Ig1. to "'""'' Thim, Wllll """ 11te1t11ry 'AM.lit.Int tMt Ofl\cll' 1111tr Into Wtfl con1r1d, 1111 proc:eed1 al THE SEC ISSUED IF YOUR be! · 'bil't' . -1rlcwl 11;1 2:'1'4 ?•Vi P1ll41v p ~" 1 ]• ~'r:..c.•t Cp A no.--\41 t VDUCfl0!'1.·t• '"' ~ •t •lack. ,J:•vtototlfllEll•tt t1>tclttck'ldll""ftrttl11d.orlnc1 .. o1 1 a warn-on~1ngs are your resporuu 11es: rnovingir1r111 11r 111~111~ vh~ c.11 151416~\ sfNCll Photo .s l~ l~ 9 ~~"i:'.' :,!::'...,.~~":,.:t~~.'i:.i: MAI.tor,.";.~="~ =IM"':..=~~ ofwt~,,:: ing Tuesday al~ with lifting worth !M"e than this , declare small items of relatively great:(,;';..,?"' .~:i 1~ ::1..'1 5.Z :~;: l:1r \' 1;~,:cT:,:•F~ it l? 1::' ~~$J';,..:,"'111":•-~;:~1,.f111 ": -:..:.=-:=-!:!".::. "" 1• ca;ro~ fl'llY w11hdr1w 1111 bid far , the smpeMion, le ling brokers realistic tctal ~:~ obef ~he value (jewelry, furs). ~~t ~~I~ ;;~ ~~~ ~Ti~~Ht~ '~~ 1l'" 11 ~1~~"~~ ' I -t f'. '"' ttlllt of Mhf ~. wlll'llll ~ IAlllUI Ml-tlll llfi'lod ot tony-flll'I i.Ul dlVI lftff tlll and deaJers to realize that it is g\.ll,IU:I IDg Id Will= •to "'• c,. S1v ' 7 20 Mv Tov Co l"'-\1i z..: ~ii,~.' •II•• '"' llrrt Pt.lbll~lllll'I ot IM•~..!':::" C-1 OlllY PllOI. ·T~ ..ilol~ ':E~!~°"~ Nawporl· a federal crime to quote a stock shind~• the I SAVE MONEY by doing at !i~:!~~~ !b. l~t1$~~~ ~N :;ti n'~ s=-~~i!i 1~F u ~:; 011.ci Juna 11t 1t7J J 1, 21 • ~ Jllf't' s ,.73 1.,..n Miii Unlfltc11 SCMo1 0111r1ct ,,_.,.. t11e price oo a Cinn that is not cur-a t--.r 1 1 f th kin ~11...,1 I'll 1,iti 1~ P11nc1 Mk 12~ 13,,~ Strloto ll'ICOl"JI tt;: ,,; ,•,·-M1r1111 A. s1o1111t1, E.ate\lll't• U111 • ' ' • r1t111 ta ,.I.Id •nv or 111 llkl•. •nd 11111 rent in :ts reports to the SEC. t char eas some o e pac g Frink !r tt' 9-. Peon llro 4'-\ sw. SaroPrl11111 .30 iv.-i.& o1 lflO Wiii aLk--...-LJC N,__ '*"""'"' KC• 1111 ._., bid. ind 10 ex ra ge If y 'bl lir.i:•"""""""'n"",.,.,.111,..,.llil.,. .. ,.,..,..,.,. ••• •bctvt n•"*' ~ r1o.1P v••~L ... 1 .... MY 1n1erm.1111 ., lfrt0ui1r11y 1n ti.fax vanoordted:i.t, Vice-1 50 t yourse . ou_are respons1 e ,, 1L0<1t. 1•te••1•" LOP1N, *· 111v 111c1 Ml!Yld. ---u-• ol f'•·-f--',_ 0 cen s ir what you have paacea ·is IJH .... '""""'., MOTIC• TO c••DIT'Oltl Dlltlll J-I•, 1'73 ... c:DOUQ1'< .......... -...-.... ~ for each $100 hlllt1 AaL a . ""' su•••lott CCHJRT Oii' TM• NEWPORT-MESA uN11"11'0 califomia, says the company damaged in transit unless you , ........... , 1n•1 DHMl ITAT• °" CAL.IPORNIA J'Oll SCHOOL. OlSTA:ICT did fi)' e an ·-ual ,:............ d. value you have booght that added valua-AlfttMr• fW ••te•"1• THI COUNTY Of' Git.A.... ot 0r11'191 C-ty, C:.llfwnil -,..,... ...... .,.., decl f PllOll"*I 0r1111t c .. ,, 0.111 P11o1. .... A-1•111 ey DOto1t1v Hlf"Wi' FllMt -port with the SEC In April are or .1•••••"8il0ll•••••m.., .. ••••••••••• .. J-14 tl, .. Md J ..... s. ltn 1 ... n E.1111t ot EVAONA E. CAL.HOUN. l'V!'"dlulllll ..... I ... . full added-... ""''" H the dlt Ale1 YOUR KEY area in which ~ °""_.· , owever, au on, -1 t harg , , h t NM vor11 -Fa1· l\i°" 1.11 1.i. 1vv Fufl(I •.n •·u v .... eo '·'° 10A ' PUBlJC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREIY O~N ,. !ht PWll"*I °'""" COl•l 0.llV ~tot. ander Grant and Co. withdrew va ue pro ec-to compare c es IS 1n w a lawl1111 ll • \Ill ~ & p Gwlll l.'3 9. ~-r• F 1.11 7.A· •-------------cr9ill1on of the ...... 111 ~· J11111 ,., lftCI ,_ a1. 1t1J ,.,..1J POllTll tion. movers c 8 I I .. accesson"al bid 1nc1 11111d~r1-6 1 J.1nu• Fd 11.ts 1•. A:lnJrt 12.,• 2 1, fllot 111 .,......., 111~no c111mt ,r,111t1 "-certification last month, along ~•• °" M u11 1 n Fd •i 10 21 H.1ri ltti 7-! 1.» 111r /~ , IUl'•llOl·C=T OP TN• ~II~ 1.:":'!.:.7,, ::: •. 'T11 ~: PUBlJC NOTICE with financial reports for I It is quite possible that Y,~ char~es." These ar~ ror such r~"t'A:~ '~ DV =. p 'j· 1:.ti l=••nl• J11at:n '$ ~: ,.1 :1~ 'TAT•°" c1.Lt1"0RH1,t. 111'0. "' rM c1trk °' 111111111 ..... '""u" court. or Westgate-California Oxp the homeowner's insurance po icy services as pa.ck in g .' un-w-•• -'1-,'ti~ ~~u~ 1 . , 'j1:il :•vsT:r~~.• l'·!l i Df,.~116 n '1•.r TM• couwrv ol' oaAH• hi •"Ml'I' tMll'I, w1t11 int 11tt_,.., MllWPOl:T'M•IA ut111J'1•0 ICHOOL. airline' f. ·• covers your belongin gs while packing furnishing con'"•ers J11r11 • '., bfrstd . 1 ..... i"',,l e to.13 22 \r,r.nc 16.0i 1•.~ Nt. A-11111 'IOUChel' •• 111 11W Vl"ldl1'$lffflld •I Hie olflc. DllTllCT . s parent 1rrn. • ed Or :t ' • Lau• I II AM DIE So· 19 1 .611 I 8• 1,7 t .06 Com 10.2910.2 MOTIC• OP HUllllG 0111' J'ITITtOM ot 1111 lllOl'TllY. PAUL. ... HANNA. Al· Mlllw l11vt1•.... they are bemg mov . ' u lugging pianos up and down ADMllAt.TY1 ... c 1MT ell"• ~. ~I 1:0& 1.n SPKll 2t.1?2&.l Poa PIO•ATI 0111' WILL AM• ,.. lorfll'I' •I L1w. Horttor L.IW •11lhllf11, •It NOTICI! IS HEltEIV GIVEN lltll "" your employer •'• absorb1'ng Orwtll '~ '·" ,.-' l" . 0 d'~ • "Sbd Liv 4,. 4.l· L.nT••• o fl 1.0M1MIS:T9:ATION Eiit 11t11 Strwl. c11111 "'..., CMIMttll• laotd ot EM.ltlan of lht N•wport-M111 VANDORDRECIIT does steps, etc. The charge for lncam l. ' qt; r : : :!:1 1 :S1 .,.: •ct.Jl1TY iiosi w1TN WlL.L ANM•x1D nu7. w111c11 11 1111 111te• of w.111111 Ill' u111n.s lkllolll Dls1t1c1 ot 0r1,... c_,1y, not ~·w when Ai'r Cal wt'U be the costs of )'OW' move, he tho · " 't" Jrisr,m " I 1· tld Am :ft Uttt B n 11 . Eciuliv J is j" Esl1!1 ot COA:NELIA o. SCHAIL.l!IN, ""' Vllldll'M911M In •It rnali.rt "'111Mflt Clllfwrlll , wl" ,... ..... _._ blcls "" ta MIU ha . 1 . se IS on a per uni or Adv Mr I '· lrfu" GI lt~ 12.M Ull l 1:1t 7.17 lnYltl • S2 .1 alto •-" •~ colHELtA DALE '° 111e n t•t• DI 111d dlttOWI•. w11111n fvlll' 11:• A.M. o 1'lltlt ltl1'I Mv a1 J-1m •• trading in a normal fashion m ay ve specia insurao~ "per servi~" basis and must ~:fl:: ~~ 1?:~ 1tl ~ Trt 1 .11 3_., A::lio li?' 1~l' 1V..1/:lc:f10 1;13s~i SC.MAllM..E IN. 0tc"Mc1. moriltt• 1mr ''"' ""' llWllc•tllln of thb "" o1nc. ot 111d khOOI Olttrlct, klcltld d the ·u be policies to cover you. Or yoU be separately Itemized Thus AA"'~·•ur•,, ,1,Y, '•ti MtOv 1 :o711;01 hl•r• 1.~ i.111 Am stw 1.M 1.1 NOTICE IS H£A:EIY. GIVEN 111.11 l'llllltt. •' l•P Pltctl'lll• ,, ... _. (11111 Miii. again. "No oubt. re W1 I b • • ·'· oultv E-1.07 !1!11kkr $.It , .. ~ OOP Fd ... , ·~ suSAN JEAN L.E UNO. rilmld 1~ ttM" wni Oiied "--Y 10. 1•n c1111or1111, ,, wllkll """Mid Old• w111 1;11 some. tradi•"' '"'""""'nh brokers may be ab e to a ve a you need not pay for upacklng "1 11.111 l1·'1 .'J 1 11r:l/ o 'i 1.s. <nkr ~111 1.12 .41 5o1 Shr• 12.:111u II .S\lllll JMti kll.l~tl II.II lllto:I """"" • JOHN M!flL.E CAL.MOUN , pubUdr ""'"" Ind reld fllf: ''e ....... ""'& r1·d-added to 'llnlH' homeown-,. Oil.I l"d 2.69 l 1 Ftn Uri '· t ,t, \Jldll'lt ' ,, •. n SlfltlMI 9.C lO ' 11<1lltklll far Probllt of Wiii l fttd fllf f~tcutor al' 11\t Wiii Tlrff ~·ithout quotes," he said. ...., ~,,_ When your goods aft picked :-.:,r, fl 4.~ "'1 f.O--It I ' ' 11111 d l ,'1 "-'7 StfllN f' 13·°' lU ls1111nc1 ot L.tttar• Of Adll'lllll•fl"•tt°" oi 1111 11111v1 n•mld OtCldtflt "" bid• ,,. ta bl 1n 1oeconStnc1 w11n "Tltls '"'Ollid event u 8 11 y er's policy to cover your move th drt th m ~ • Tfa:w oo •D•LITV •ll 01ou1•,=111,., MAl•Ht.Ol •,r•1, Wltft.lfllowUI -•Id ~net to wlllcll PAUL A. "ANNA ClllldlHOl'I•, I n I Ir"'' Ir D" I . 1nd .. u.... up e van ver or 0 er ie iqty I I 71 GlOUP; Sii LIClr . . illfl\Jl • • . 1. ll'lld• tor ""ll\el' Pll'll<llf•n., 1nc1 1t111 ""'""v" L-Sptelt1c11r°"'· w111c:11 ,,. "" 111'1 111. 1ri establish a market price." at lower cost than '-!JI;:. extra rep' resentatlve of the mover •• ·~... , f:nd .~ 1f:t: 1;·g i~-::~11,, ,\~ 1~:r.0, ,,",'1'111fa 1,l.1 1 11:,1 tt1t 11ma ind p1oc. o1 ,_..,.11111 "-.. ma ......., ._.. •1t1....,. t11e °"''' oi "" Plll'chl•lno .....,., 111 uld of full coverage ! ~ I'" j-I I "'' b6tf'I "'''°"Jury s. 1rn. 11t:oo1.m .. 419 ••tt 11111 '""' Sclwlol 0111l'1ct. 11S1 Pl.1et11tl• AvWll,ll, The federal law does not expense will make a written inventory f:'.!;. 11~, t:U :"~tee: J. 1.a. t. 1 1v .'5 '.l6 ~~:f \.. s. l f' In ""' cour..,._.,. 61 Dlflotr1mlfll No. J of c ... .,..., C•llf'lftl• nu7 C•11 ,....., Cillfarn1•· prohibit private transactions. throogh the fl10Ver. o( everyth1'ng you are hav1·ng '~•,m ,, I"' ,.!, I' , nc !~ !,I! '".• ""A•"•'•·'7 1 .. 11111 CllUl'I, 11 1'00 Clvk Ct11ltr OrlYI Tlfi !n41 ... tftl IKl'I lltlddtl" mull tubm!I I bid dlpDSll ~ ~ ..-"" MIA IO 1DI w .. 1. 1n "-c11y ot S•nl• .AN. c1111om11. -.""""" tw 1...-111 t111 '°""' « • c111111111 or c111111r1 A U .S. District Court judge lt your belongings must be shipped -with notes on items Am _ !' , •,· F~~·· ti: 1!1.~J L \1 A= ~17:fl ~::! o.tl'd Jimt it. ''73 ''*1"'" °'""" Coo•• o.iiv Pll ... "*• or ' bid ban<d ..... , 11 11"" Plft'"' in San Otego will hear a mo-stored. ask t hat they be held hich .. rred and "" · · P rltn 9 1 ~ c'°' °" 'l J6 It,. ~ 1 1 •' WILL.IA.Yo E. SI JOHH, Mr( J1 .... JtitM 1, 1•, 71, 1'7J l..wl 1,,.1 « 1111 llftOlllll ot ttM blf • .....,. W are ma scar• :~ \~i~i ~· 1·n 1tfarn F 3; • 'gK~I 1 :.11•:•1 11~11 10'~10] JOMN iT~~~'Sk ~=~-i:.rtr~.~N~=:;',;::: tlon by the SEC for a tern-on a "storage-in.transit" red." Ask for a copy of the "'"Jr"')., t •)I 1'11\d 22 . ..s1 •. AH1r.,"••1u 1 •'3 •J.J ,u'N 1!·! .., •Mt,..,_'"'-' POBLJC N0'11CE .._. _.,.,. req114,. ., ttit dltcAtllll'l 111' pora.ry injunctkln against Air basis. Otherwi&e, the mover complete form ,and be sur,e :~m' ..:.' 2 ~~~c'~!, ,., = = \.~ 1f22!1 e,',•,o .stir ,i:111t}, <•t.1 MMt. coif. ttUt 1111 Dlllfkl. 111 "" .....,.1 ot '°11"" "° Cllifornia and We 1 t gate -may not be co n s t de red unc1~·-d t ~-k his on: r:n " ff ••» 11 • Tali 11'14)...... 1-..0C .... tltte wcl'I ntilrlCI, !ht '""""" If you ,., ;,wu1 1 . \;Ill:\.: t CIOI• ·~ ... 'I" ,.. 1· 1:u ~.ll!!""1 t .ff 10'.B Tr•t 7"' ·, ,....,_, .., ,...,.._, suP••IOI: cou•T Ofl nt• "" d'teck win bl tom1ttc11. or "' c•• ., • California and a request for a responsible for damage oc-inventory and note 00 It any Fl'lll iriv !' J 1' "n Inc · ·ff iiiNA 1ruNoS: Yf111¥ e &:'H i~ ~Olltll1111d Ortnge (!)OJI OtllY P'lltt. STAT• °"CALI""'"''""' band, !ht Ml IUl'l'I "*'"°' wlll bl ........ -...-ed Ive for the I ()rwtll ·ll Vt11I . l· • .,.. '50 3 ... ~tn 10 10 M IOJ JllM 1., 1s, 21, 1tn , .... 1:1 TMI COUNTY 0, Ol:Alt91 1ort111tt1 1o .. 1c1 kllool 011trtct ot Orlf'lll """" .-nam rece r curr ng In storage. d isagreements you m i g h t ~ncam ·a 1•1ff. v1 1 "" 1 a 1"'°"" ~,b ,:., •1 ~F 11·11 i2: N•· a-1'Mll c111111iv. parent firm on July 23. unless you ordered it. have w't"~~u 1j:~t JIM ~~Qll~Tilt1 Pll•rm 1 111 >wst 1riv 1.os •-~ PUBUC NOTICE MOTK• oP NtA11 ... oP Pnmo" No....,. ""v wtlfldt'•w 111. bid tot ••1;:::::;;::;~===='====;i · Ast Ii .11 llC F 1jj "jM•r1111t1 1 t."" ------,.-.,.-------1 POI oaDll• D•••cTU•• COfl· pwlod OI IDm'-llYI l.UI MVI •"-'"'11 Ha v e !l ppr 0 pr i a t e: A ·~ F :53 .22 rtl'I F 1: i·4 \\~' Gwt ... .u w '"" G •.Of 6.' • VITI.NC• 0, ltlAL. PIDl'llTY dm ... lot 1111 optfllft9 tMrlol. I t d " tock ,, ~ All COi ovr '" lO ·~ 11 · •111• ,,0,0, ,. LY••• CHAflLE$TON, .11" Tiit 11.1n11 o1 Edllc.11ton o1 tt1t NtwPOrt· liAM111.INft_ servicemen d sconncc an BE ON HAND to supen•ise M •HTON• 111 Muttl I~· "!!'m, !"•'• 11 ~~ '}'itr• ~,·!', )•: SUl'•llOI: COUIT OP TM• M u '' -01 1 , -DO YOUR w . . u* A 4.S• t.H st s11rr :i 1 lllvP · P lnO · • • TAT• CH' caL.i•OOM' .. POI known •• MRS. MILTON CHA•t.•STON, "' 11 " Sc....... 11'' ,, .. ,......, ..,. service appllances such as delivery and check each item u e 'n 1. P'~UM 010 ,.1 M•11 ' [ .31 12 AT• IND o• .., 11111 known •• t.VNNE McCLEAN rt1ht ICI r'll1tl 1nv or .111 bllh1.•nd not IN LAS VIG-AS . toe: !*? 6 1 Fnd 12 10.~~I! f'NC 1 nm r,d 4.~2 4. TH• COUNTY 0111' OltAH• CHAILESTON. llM It:-.II MltS. -llrlly ICWlll ttlt io-11 Did, Ind ta refrigerators, room air con-against the inventory as it is XI Sci ·61 I 5 1 Fnd 7 ,. Mb 1,ol'ft1ifi Div••' ~·~ f·, HOTICI 0,. NN•"A:i~'~7·v f'HITIOM LVHN C14AflL.esTON. '''° k11twt1 •• wolw •riv 1"tor""111v or 1"""''''11V In dilioners , stereo sets -as unoacked Be sure that the blll IL.c Gtti l ·.s Ji~ ~c 11·~ s.11 s' Mo 1 • ri sf'1'~o '~ •' POI PIO•ATI °"WILL AMO POI. LVN_~ ... MCCLEAM CHAflL.EITON. "'&.'::~:1rn . ~lbllOll 1'os 1' ~-FGr 4."2 i ~F8 I . jl' \ ~~I~ ,. ,. L•TT•ll nlTAM•WTAIY ~Ofici: IS HEflEIV OIVIN tlllt NEWPOJtToMfSA UHllll'IEO well as )•OUr telephone and d lading indicates the agreed-:~~r qr !.lt 1 i n cj•1S . l".C 1 .U .:,~ 1~\ Sir 45. 2 1£ •·•~11 ot IL.MA v11G1N1A 1oa1ooux. GRA"l'CI! M. SMITH 11.11 fll«I lllrtl" • SCHOOi. 011T.a1cT electricity before the upon pickup and delh1ery "';,.Hi 1:.'.j 1I: J Grwt11 1 fJ1 jfs 'i'.!~r111 1 :f:1i:u Im Pr!""1.•2"r ar::~~E: IS HElll!•Y GtV!M !hit r~llOi'i.,:::r :..,'-= c:v:,..~ ~ f ;', °D:.~1~,~C~=I• movers ft r r i Ye · U nhookJ.tlg dates, times, OOSIS. r ~r IC 1!:i 11~, !.f'C&1 1g.J l j1 ~A~~ 1i'.1l 1i'.9S ~n':si"d l:~t ?·, JAMES 0. PL.UNICl!n "-• "ltd lltrelll I rnOdt tor f\WI .... porllculett. .... tl'llt tlll Pwct\ltlnl .....,., 11--"-'--·'---------..::..---'----'-ill:r•~n 14:t2 1: l~ :~~ 1,;;J ,,;;J .=n• e11& 1J::: \I-?! , ..... ~·'!.. •o'lo.~rll- ptHllOI\ !or Ptlltllll of Wiil .Ind for Timi end plKtl Ol l\elrlf>O 111t llmt hit ..U.'100 if I JI" J<d Jj 1:ff" 111•"' )9 ,. llMllll(I OI LtlM!"I T .. ttmtnlll'Y ta fM bllll Mt far Jvty 5, 1'71 11 9100 1.tn .. 111 ~1~ Or1ngt C .. 11 0.llY l'li.t. li°lt11lt" ' 3•.ft O ~l~~tll IF Oro -4. 4:~ s~: 1t'2 14.'. .,.11111111« rtfll'lllC• '° w111c11 11 midi lot 1111 caurtrfMlf'l'I 11 Ololrtrllll'll ,... J of JVM 14. Olld JUM 21 , 1tn llG-13 UND 1 ~re i·•l 1.M ~ I' 4. 4. It •lllOUP\ t11rtt.lr ptr1ltul1r1, Ind tNt lllt !lint ll'ICJ .. Jd court It 700 CIVk cem.r Df'IV. ---•111 d 12 '5 llff ti Sr .7' 1·" M 11 I, • t. Grwtll .n 6.. pita of flKl'lllO 1N: 11m1 Mt bM!I Ml W.I In tM Otv Of s.1111 ""'· Ctlllotnl•. PUBUC NOTICE c n Fd 21.:W a r '"cm ·'' .13 ut llrl ltti 14. ·-,&I ••• ,,,,. Jwly 10, 1973. 11 t iOO •;m;i-1r1 "" ooi..I J\11'11 12 lm o v Sllr 11" , ~s Oy s 10 00 1 11111 T~ 1 l. 1 !mml\ 1 13 I! cCllKfraotn 111, Dtplr111'1111t No. J 01 .. Id WILLIAM E. SI JOMN, Natwd j I • S 111111• S 34 • N~t ln<l\I t . tcl'lfl ~ ..... -· t t 100 Civic Ct !tr 01'1 1 Wt1I In M•WJ'Olll.T-M•SA UMl,l•D NV Vin 10. I • I II C.10 ~ •· ~ •T t•c I" I f'tr{' P 6,Jll •: tour . • " v • CaunfV Clark sc-OllTllCT ~(nlH'ft '·u rii •• ·~... •. ' ~. 11111( '·" t.n Ml Al! •.13 It. I/It CITy °" $1nt1 "'""· C1lllOf'1>11. DONALD J. ITllfil ·--••. -,.. ...... -TIRIY •IANT, a.n G Flltld I I Fk! Lf 0 11 12 11¥1 ,, "'-'° lj -G 'il .. 01tlcll Junt ••• 1m. ' , ... '"""' VIM ·~· "" .... .., 10 1r!i\ 1 ; I .• Ir~ m I .: t.O IV!lln !·" . ,._ c S• . WILL.IAM •• SI JOMM, ..... .,_.... 1111. HOTICE IS MEltf8V GIVIN lthll !I'll No, this la certlll.nly not a Cuswm Tailor and tnl SllJ I ,.,. .. i.. NCI' rll Sill . ., '" Trlf\ e10 •. ... CllUll\V' Cltrk Mtlt'l'WMll c ..... -l11rd « EdUC•llOll of 11\f ~-M... Shirtmaker n~'&HINO 0 0 I ncam 4 . .0 ~ ,.~,.vt E,, • 1•1 MAfl1.u1 PL.UN:•" Tf:!!...!.!!.11~.....,. r.i:1t',.~.~~~:~o:_.ari.::-:rc.;':''ro travel ad but just our ~ 811nc~: '!ll'i f:"~ J:n l·l! ~~11_5' 6t.:! ,; .. ~..,.,,.GH 1i:~11: •it oiiw Aw.. .o ... .., ·~~ hl'I"-' • in sneaky "-'lY "Of Kcttlng your .~ J!'! Fd • o. ~rw;11• tr 'j·n 1 ·~ rw ,,.. Pi ..,. c1 ~ ~ ,,. ;:.111~:;-.=+ ~-::..= J!:,1! 15 1~r,J: ca.11 0111y 1:)~ :~~:'.::~~·vi:.,~~~:!.,;: attention and making a ~tnStk f l. o;· ~· ;: :.o ,:g li~ \t.: :;:,:~ l ~ t:' "'*"" ,...1 , .. "*"' .1:::::..::..::·:..:::..::::..-,.,,,..,.~-'-'---,ot tUJ PllCll'lll• A'ttlll.ll, Catt• ,,.,.... point that you 1hould not 1ncam !' t P ,. ... 51'1• 11.ll,I·°" ,.,,,",, ... vie• PW!lllllcll Or11111 COltl 0.11tw Pllal J11111 PUBLJC N,,.,,..._ C1llfot'l'll1, 11 wfllcl\ 11"" 111d bid• ¥1111 M ....,mble ...,•lth "OUr health. S111c1 · · 1... l!A Ml .U ..U •Ol•P; !~~-:::;!:..::''!!~-----_:'~™"=n:\.--...:.~...:.:..::-,,Vc:::"c~::::o:---• .-ntlV ..... Ind rMd fw: ,._... ii \"!'ntc!IH Plat• Vtnrur • 7.lt ov • I Ml (11\I 1·" '·" ., ... s Iv 1) lt It ....... ' c...,_,, P"'llllv,. • r or, th\11 Is \\1hat hftppcns • St~•tilHnlh 1116 lrvl11e . ~~t~~N ~~",. t !jN•UWTll .I• '·'' N•" Inv • IA PUBLIC .. -CE NOTICI TO CllDITCMll Alldlr-lllll'lll'll•rv y.·hcn \H\U Ustt-n U> doof<otO-e t l ' ,· 'l'KI ' """" 1 .19 13.s.t U11 CMt 1.tt 9 ~.. • ....... cou•T OI' 1MI All~ 11'1 to "' I" ltcOtd•~ Wllll .1 ~ 64$-1072 ,·~ ~ ,fl•,• ~,11k 111 . Hw 1'1<1 ll.19 1•J I "'"''"'~' 17'\1"1, .. • ._ door sotcsmc11 who p--••" "'" 0 .oo 1 "" 1 Al'!\ • •. '"''"'" PUt11D' ".".. StAT•Of'CAL.IPOR:"IA"t ....... o lri•truc11ori1, •11111 ....... ... 111Tr I 1·3 7. t rttl Ind 1 i:·Y4 1!"¥Wld \1.lilll l110 il«vm lo,t) 1. TNI COUMTY 01' OIAMel l!*UIC•tlen-1. wlllch .,. ,..... Ill n11 Ill curative b e n c r It I rtom ~-------------------------•\" otel . -5. nl -t1 ... N1Clll•, '·"' 1'.t.> "~" ~ '·'· ll MOTIC• TO ca•DITORI .... A-Jtlf7 ftt1 "*'ke.91 ttM Pvrtllllfft9 "°"'' ot uld h Ith f &J..A a I\ d vltllminl r-~~tl'!I Fd 10, 11,IS ~JL TOf' . j" !111)! rvtr lj.•1 lJ,l' C11til <rW t 11(1 lit IU~••IOfl COUltT OP TM• E1l•I• .. SIONIY N. SUCMAl.O. ~· khoot DIH,kt. IW J'ltc:tl'lll• A""""", ea ""'"""" n 'ILONIAL. ~ 1· ii .,,. .10 "'0 ,..,..,, Int •.1,10, tTAT• °' CM.•tJORMIA flOI: s10NE'I' NATHAN 1ucHA11:0. 1k• c.. "'"'· co111om11. they are •~lllnsc. W A NT E D I :.,~.~' 9~1l31 ?~~ :~, 1~:4 N":'~" ,t·~ 1{:!: ~~!: u,.n1;. TM• COUNTT Of' DIAM•I .S!DN!Y IUC.H,1,flo·, .11t:1 I. N. IUCHAflO, 8 11cll ....._ mw1 tuMlt 1 bid cltpot,lt C OUN E E UT! ES 11u1111 j.1 .c2 H1r!Wt-I I , 1 .1 f wm 1 ro 1s.1o 11t'llotl .. ti ;: 11111. A,..,. 0tc11ffd. lri thl tarrn OI 1 carnntc1 "' t11t111rt It ls da.ngt!lrous to follow A C T X C V ·· ... ·-urid . 1 ... H~rt l.v , ' . 11eNMM ,,, •• ,. .. c~ ,~ .. 'I' 11111• oi KATHRYN TAVL.Ol1 .. ~1t6 NOTICI IS tt••••Y G1Vl:N .. ttM t1•11. or• bid Wld 1C1Ull 11 11v1 Ptt'ct111 uru;kllled ftdvlcc. To rtlleve ·G0.:.r;?!!! I' I il'll "•-:111:.' '•' ~ .11"" t.10 10.611 us r.>tt$ 10'111 '. kMWll 1• KATt4flYN I . TATI.Olll, ett111ltor1 o1 t111 .lllOV'I ,...mH 4KMlltll lM) ot .... 1mou"t 01 TM bid, ('llldt ... ~-.... • '""'" ' · · Jllld •!'Cl 1"' ~I U• LINli ,,,.,. DK11..o. 11111 111MfMlll•111v1111 d1lnw ... 11\tl tlll ,..,. ... IO 11tt orHr OI th• N.IWPDfl.,..... or curt lllncs11, the-L'8.UllC •M •f tft• ltnt .... ,_, "''"'""*"' ""' Y••'n '""· iVt11lu•, 1'· I ' r41r l . .U 1· lJM ~·,~ 4'<(1 V•• \"' ''' t NOT IC.I 15 HElllE8Y QIVIN 10 lt!t Yid ffcldlttl .,. '""'""to ti .. "*"+lMlfllcll kllOlll Ol•trlct. A J'trlot'mlnce mus t 1 ... dett'l'Tnlncd. Only ~~UUl'noNwe M ' l(I 11·111 1 . e he t.n1o's7 "~' ..... ,·,~ crlclll!Oft ol tilt 1111DW 111tnld .....,,.. w1111 11111 '*""'V ""°"""'"'In tM Mllri IW ':k:" ....,irtc11 •t ttM dlKrllltfl O\' .,,. e Regl1tered Rep1 I IT mprtGCo-•.L r ':Jm•' 1."° 1 ... Ltv r.t11 A.OI ~ t1w11 •U 1*'111111• llavlnf c111m1 ,..1nt1 "" ot ttM clertl of !111111o¥t "'""" Ctl!Wf,., ttM 04 • In '"" .....,., OI 1111m '° a physician hns the know l· " Ii lj \·M i:ol~"' I :ll 1!' ::. ••; f~ I:U ~~r~"' l.02 J.. llld cltC«ttllt ,,. l"lq\llf'tCI I'll 11tt "*"•to prl'Htlt t111m. w11t1 lhe '*""rt ..,... 111n. •11Ch c0ti1t1t1, "" prlC.Wd• ot Nae tn dlRgnoa~ and prt-e NASO lrokert i~" or • • '1"' •mm• f 10 · P1 ~ut 1.1' 1.14 •Nl'Jg1t'1 w1111 1111 ""''"'Y vavc111r1, In 1111 tine. \IOlltlllf•· to 111t ~ •t 1111 Miia iM O.ll wlM tit ""'-''ad. or 111 c•• " • scr1be t ree.tmt:n1. J I 1· net M · ~ ~"I. ~.o tu """ Fn11 6., 1 ofttMcllfltofttMID!ltl'ttnlllltd~l,orot•lltr ttlofN't', J'AVt. A. HANNA. Al· .......... Ml till\'I tlltrtOI wlll bt • Life lntur•nce S.IHmen :;:: ~ !''! ~l~"f:: 1 ·~1Jt' Pr.II• ,d j .10 ~ "S-rOOll (i! 7. 10 pr-1 ""'"· Wlllt' 1111 ...,..ry l.-111'!' ,, L.1'#, Hff'W l1w llllldll'll • .it larlllll'M" Miit k llo04 Dl••rkl. °'"'" YOU on "0'"' oocron lllTlll d ., • 'I.._~ ' ~-I~"' 'J ·tf ... SMtl 7t'lt l' vouc!Wts. lo in. UIMllBI"'"' '' ""tftlot l••I 17111 StrM!, Cot•• MtM, Clllfo11!10 Ct'1rrtv. 1 '"'" If Y•• .,. l ... l11t ,.., • ,......_ tllet will pey p•.,.., wtll hr DllCrd il \i ftY cc I . , P:'ONe1t\ r;J ~~';4~ ;-;; •' 61 /\Ir •llorMV COL.ONEL. Hl ltllNO s. "621', wtllc/\ I• !IN pcltcl ot Mlllnt If • Na ........ m•v 'Ml1Mt1w hit bid fW • CAN PHONE US \Vllerl )'OU ,._ ef ......._ ti ..... It Olis Inv 1 .111 nv . . l"IOll !I'! ,~·1 , 1 v""' !OtO ( ... lll'RANICLIN 10$ ••• , 11111 lirft!, Catlll ""' lll'ICMl'tl(IMlll In Ill tn•lltt• jllltffllnlfl9 ........ llf lorty.ftvt 1'51 MY• '""' "" need a dtllvery. \Ve \\'Ill d e-.... It .,.. .. ,... ... y '' '" ... .. ~. ·~ j:\I !:" f"'-" 1,~c 1 :i1 11.Jt p."" .. Fd II '11:u 1 V11r1tcl I 3.11 .. M•••· c1nf0tri11 t'H27, whltll I• fM ""' ta ""' •1t11t_ot Mid ~'· wllllll'! """" .. ,. ... tor "" °'*''"' lhlrlof. 11· ti Ith I t • ,..,..., ..... Mt, ..., •• , ..... Ollf(ll1 j ii ~ ••••T COUNS• r fl ~ 4J """"" Gr \ ,, L 01 bU•IMtt of '"' unctotr•lOMd 1,. ,11 ""'' ll'lllltll• ''"' 11111 ""' ·1M11t1le1llOl'I tf t11lt n. '"~ ot ld11C111on .. "" ""'*'' ver promp Y w ou ex r 1r ~ 'g · · '"""t ·~ t.s1 ""•lls1 _ •' '·i { ltrl Plf'llltill'IO ta IM ttllill ot .. " ltlC .. rto1 ltt. MIM UnlflMI ktoOOI Oltlrkl ,...,_ tlll charge. A grtBt m11<n)' people Wa -. •ff9rlat ,....... I• • Cl,.,...., ,.,..., l•Mll=-°" 'J.. ~ ~ 7 '*'j 1~ l'U C~I" 111i.. ll.•t w;j" Mu \11 I : d•"' Wlthl~ '°"' ""°""'' 1t11r '"" ftrtl O.t.d Mev 3l!t lftS rlfllt to "'tct •rw or 111 bldlt Intl Ml nly on 1111 for their ht llth ...-1 ........ 1...,... ...... .....,, ..... It .... ............... n'ti •·• : I·., 'i·~".l, !··r'io •• ~··"". •• ,., •. 0 ··i·!! =.·.·.oi'l:y,. -~~o•Tg IL p1,1blititl11t1 Of th!1 ftollc.. 1,\1.A:Gll IU$AN IVC.HAlO --.rllr ICC>tOI 1111 IOWlll bid, IN to • .-..1. ,1, l ,.....,.,_ ..j n ·~ •• ~ .. i.ci ~lll't 1, 1m l•Kulrb If 1ti1 w111 w1~,,. •ny IMlrrMIJty o-r 1,,..1r11y In n~. ~,-e we conn~ TtCIUCl ll fllf Mtt ......... .U tM ...... ,. or ff ... • w '° !'l MAll:OA~lf A THENOUll: of ,,,. •blMI n11'1'11d OtCICtlrtt ..,., 1111!1 rl(.ll'l'ld, for dc llvtry • e r v I c e au4 1 i't · 1"" ""' ' · l ' ' ' l•IClltl'\• 94 IM WIU PAUL A. !fl.MN" °'*' JUIM , .. ,,,, Chl r"e accounu. Wt .... '"""' "9ffl111 .......... ,, ...... Clltl,~ ~11JpH : 1 • 11.11,:ii Pr • ,i:l;, =~I"' ,:\' .,:n "l'::b~ '·t' 11: 11 ""' HOVI llll'llM ftCtOtl\! A""""' 11 uw-NCWPOltT~ISA UNl,110 ti efftc+l I• N..,.,. ...... l11rMMl; eH W......... 1• T J M 11~1 l ~" • !\= .... N COLON•L Nllll ... I. lll'IAMtLIN M.,..,. t.nr 111111111111 Kt+OOI.. Ol"llCT p••~ LIDO PH••M•CY 1•11 ,: 'f·" l : 4 :zr.~ .. tit 10, 411.0I ~"' 1 t(1't, 111 IMI l"91 '""' tit 1111 lnlt lfrwl of CJriflll CtNnty, C1lltorft\1 "'"" "'" "' ,., hlrttllf ... ,..,...... t. ....... ""',...,,cal: Oll9C C• ~ ,ti · ''(llll'Ul/D 1 tz:i;:i;;jlv 1l•ij 't. c ... 1 ,.... C.M!f, nnr CMt• _.., C .. ilnltt ,_, l't' OClr'llllT Ho,....., '11111!' '51,Hee,ltal ltlMI ut1:1, \~-t 11:~' 1,,V••,,•/°' :11 3t r~~ ... ~r 101.7'0 11m Wl, -.J 1J:,," 1,:, T111 1n~1 Mt-1111 ""' tno ..... '"' Pwt11111111 -""" -... h M2 tlll Ntwport lloach 111 •1 1•• """2 1•v.-ll " ""' ~ •• ~ ' Alt9tM1' tw •••tlrlrfl A""""1 tw•••'""1• 14F1100 ...,.. .... ,... ' 11-.c • "' H"VF' !."1 P'il J . 11.ij if~ 'j 4.-0 11 ,._ \ Cl< M • Publllhtd Or•• COIJf Dilly ... uot, PU011""4 Ot•not ClllO D•lly PUii, P•1111td Or.,.. C.ottt Diii'( Pllof, WntWood ~1 Lv ~.• II. OfTI 4. 4 . .0 •Wit\ lO ~ -tcol'll " ... J-11, 11 Ind JlllV .s. lf, lt71 1'4$.13 MIY 31, 11'111 JVM '· '" 11,'lm 1•7'·7' J-14, Ind J\1111 ti .,,,, , •• ~n ,,... O.llverr ·-------------·'2-13.1 ... •~7·11.Q-1·13·----.11 ~ 1': I I :' ~l v~ 11. U.M nv 1'' t1.:i.:r~161rtd~ ... Mii , lllfl 1tne1 2'. :I0.12 Vl11l , 1 .b 'V!llY• l•bl_y MUTUAL FUNDS ' • ' 2 ·1 DAILY PILOT s Junt U,I Ttl.,l\elo FORD MOTOR CO. ACKNOWLEDGED IT DONATED LINCOLN CONTINENTAL ______ D_o_rk_Bl~e $8,500 Sum~it Gift ts Simil•r to Model Shown 1 • Shortage Of Fuel Recorcletl WASHINGTON (AP) -A \\'Orscning national ( u e I shortage was reflected in a spot survey that indicated !!ln1ost half the gasoline sta- tions in the United States are operating at less than norm"al capacity. The American Automobile Association said Tuesday its third \\lcekly spot check of l------~2~92=~atioos on-main .travel routes round 47 p e r c e n t curtailing operating hours. ra- tioIDng _gasoline to motorists,. or both. IN A StMILAR survey of nearly 2,000 stations a \veek ago, 64 percent reported normal operations. The week before that, it was 7_5 percent. The AAA says it undertook the weekly checks in an at- tempt to determine accurately the extent of the gasoline shortage which may become worse as the sun1mcr 1ravct season progresses. It s latest repon said no ·Crisis areas"-were found to oxist but the situation ~·orsen­ ed in the Middle Atlantic states, the l\lidd!e West and in most \Vcstern states. In all of these areas, il said, _station operators by and large are , curtailing hours rather than rationing gasoline. ~GOLD~ PIOSPECTOI NIEDS 52,500 FOR GIUISTAKE-KNOWS WHIRi IT IS! WrJte lo• 1711 H••tl"9'1N ...... Ce. 92647 PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOR REAL ESTATE LOANS 11t •2nd TRUST DEEOS .S1.500 To $250,000 ut"TO 80% L~ OH TRUST DEED COLJ.Al'fAAL lllEWl"Olll'T IQUITT "*DI NOWpOr1 Con!Of tl20 Mewl)Oft Centor Dfiwe No\ll'pon 81.i:h, Collf.171•) ~4 AUTOMATIC GARAGE DOOR OPENER SALE ORANGE COUNTIES YOLUME DISTRIBUTOR LOWEST PRICES ! lni1a1latio11,,. SorYkt< Garn;• Door Ho1dwar1J" Rtoploc:cd Fo1·cl Takes Credit For B1·ezhnev Gift DETROIT (UPI ) The $8,~ Linc oJ n Continental presented as a sum1nit gift to Soviet leader Leonid J • Brezhnev was donated by Ford Motor Co. "out of courtesy" to the White' House. Ford reluctantly took credit for the donation after White •louse spokesmen confirmed Tuesday the automaker picked up the tab. U W.AS THE-second lime in a year Brezhnev has been lh" GM Cites Sh11td0Wli Possihilit'r DEmotT (UPI) -General l\~otors President Edward N. Cole, speaking less than two ntonths after the auto industry won a delay in clean air stan- dards, says his company may shut down ir another an- tipoOufion standard is not ·SCl back. Hearings will begin Monday in Washington before the En v i ronmental Protection Agency on requests from Gl\1 and Chrysler to delay for one year.., the 1976 standards for emissions nitrogen. or oxides o r TllE EPA IN April granted the auto industry a ooe-year delay in meeting standards for hydrocarbons and c a r b o n monoxide emissions. If implementation or_ the nitrogen oxide standards is not delayed. Cole told an en- vironmental activities week dinner Monday al G M · s training center. "You're going to have one big company, l think, out of business." L\! ITS application for suspension of the 1976 stan- dard. GM said it "might be faced with a total shutdown of its plants \•:hich would result in the unemployment of hun- dreds or thousands or in- dividuals." Gl\1 has recommended that standards set to take effect in California in 1975 -calling for no more than 0.9 gran1s per mile of hydrocarbons and nine grams per mile or carbon monoxide be m a d e permanent nationwide f 0 r several years. recipient cf an American lux- ury car. I-le received a Cadillac Eldorado, in the same pri<:i! range, compliments of General ·Motors Corp., during President Nixon's s um mi t visit to the Soviet Union 1n 1972. GM cha rged the expense to sales promotions, but it \\'as not known how Ford would handle the matter. "ALL 1 KNOW is that it's being dooated by Ford as an act of courtesy to the office or the President,'' said a Ford spokesman. Both GM and Ford dona· tions were arranged by the protocol office of the State Department, according to a \Vhite House source i n Washington. "The State Depart1nent goes to the manufacturer and they rthe manufacturer) make the car avai lable," the source said. "~ly understanding is that \\'e pay soine kind of token price. but I don·1 knv\v ho\\' ntuch that is." TH£ ··TOKEN price-· \V<JS put at bet\11een $50 and ~100 in a later statement by \Vhite !·louse spokesmen. 1'he Conttnental. a dark b I u e , ·four-door production model, featured a dashboard engraving extending to Brezhnev "special g o o d ~·ishes -greetings," as 1vell as a number of undisclosed options. U.S. Booklet 01i Freeze Se lls Well \VASHINGTON IAPI -One of the hottest selling items at !he Government Printing Of- fice is a special book oo Presi- dent Nixon's 00-day price freeze, officials said Tuesday. For 90 cents, the book, en- titled "Freeze and P hase 4,·· can be obtained by mail. At a government book store, it goes for 65 cents. Since the book came of( the presses last week. the printing office has sold 5,600 copies of the fir st run of 7,500. JI is ordering another 20,000 copies printed. Like all products. the book is covered by the [reeze but. the printing oUice could pick almost any price. since there u•as no comparable book in ex· istence prior to the freeze. .. w v~• •u•" _ •• ~~~pie~ New .. ! or~:~~~~<!. j t •• i~n ""' ,_ L""~'. ... fc0& Oii l'\t Htw YOl'll Sloc.k if11dil•; I"·• 1Mt1 Hklfl ~ Litt Chi, )9 I~ Jl1'-1)"6 ~... -IW -.llOlt 1 ll '!"' l t'i 11\i-""IK"""1 'I l 41 ~ .. ~~. '~1'.1'fl~ .. ~ I• -, w lA -\1 fl'·f. !Nhl HJoll Low 1.•tl (NI, fl lllC , n 1141 iaYi+ le F thr I" IGlt 1F! i-:e .,~1 .lill i r f~• ::: e' .. t !! 11m .. 11f ~I 13j 15'111 11a > •tn F=k ·\ 1~ 1'~ 'v. 1 1•ai "'I aMMl1 .kl .! ~1, ffl'i• ,, • -• ..,_ "' ,,, 1. .. .1-1r."' 'n illi' _. '••"'m~' . l ,, •I , 14-,, ~~'•'\ "I' •, ~ ,.~. "' ,,_ ~ '"OO>•L >.-ll '' •••, o>•• ''''' .._ Cll Ill_... • >! -''" I o " 'I' , •--It So M I !I• ACFuio 2 . .:0 12 ) :""'\i... tS f)I•'".,. CnmQSP _... 1'2 )" I ~ I + f'lo1dVot1 i. 1 21 ~ ,... "' -Gt l.Sj 'I 2 lo 1,..,, lS~+ '• AunoCIY .j.O 9 1 1 l~!I llfi t Yi flllrtCll .llli2 0 ll l'\11 It 1 + \i,, ,OJlntkOI I Of :I\ "~ lf' ~'~"'It ~=~Hdl J.1 II t \~~~ W. 1..-.. ¥o ~~o~.'o~ 11 ~ lit't~ 1~1~ ai: ~: c~~vn::~a-2 .' )I) 2;~· 7::: 'tr. i, ~1: ~.f~:i ~ •l 1,, .. 13~ jJ!r 11 ~:r:L1'n0~-!T 1 : 11 >"-'~"" 1r·± ~ Ad Mttll• ;/U II -;..., 'l.S--'t Cll•WM1n • 1' a\, •l!'t 'lli± l! l"llPwr I.ill 10 ~ IT\l 'i'" :111•-,.... KflY o• I,.. 1 I ~:\lo u... 21111+1•-. Acaros •. .o ii s.a 13. 12,,. 13··~ , .. -~1MQ 2.n 1t1 'J ~~ fftt 1tiC i4 ~l:,.'1h \:}J 1\ » ~:~ In 1 • ._.,. , •• ~="-'&~r ·IJ tJ ~ 1 ! I -'' CLE\'ELAND. Ohio lAP) -::r~::~.1 1)~ : r;~ ~. J I• J(•.:1,; [.;:~!.'; ~ 'i' ,, ,~ 1\~ ,~\.lo Fluor Co Sk 7G ,",•, 314• 311• ~-·ti. l(.y .. ,R ' .0 s ~· 121.< 1 \lo I \.lo ....... The• uno·ted Rubber \Vorkers "°""'' 1..0 111 l , ... 9'• •·• c11emr1n .80 15 1'"' ,,"" 1~. . F1.....COQf 3 ,., ",, ~., ~3,,, ,, KHOil' 10 10 ,' '•'"• 2~~ ,,1~ ~. Ahm:in .JOO 1 63 13~-I)<• II'• I• !nmNY 2.U t •J 12 41:i. 41 + 0.:. FlyTJ{lr ·'°" 15°'1 ll:t~ne\.O 0 It 0 ' llj• I ~ 1, 'truck <'"orestone T'1r• & Ruh ... , ...... IMP l) 11 .i\1 ' , ...... , NI c. I.Ml !t I ,.,. •,1111 3,1~r+.~ FMC'"• •. ~s 1 .s; ~t~: ~~ 311.' '• l(~ltt In ,fl) ,,s ,: ~11" )) • a~+'• J' " <r Air Prod .20 2i H2 ,fll\) '9"4 ~ htiPd 1.12 .,.. r. 1J•• ,,., "' FM P • 1 1 "'""°o -» • " ~~, ~ .. + '• '1 o OQ y ~-11111 11~ 111 H ~ssl I ISb t ,,'-.,... •2\a-\~ FoodF• -~ JS 1 > •1 l(illV >~ I 30 1 '"' , berCo.µ1onts across thccoun-..,j'01,:uSrri, 1 111 2 ' ,• "en E111'·/' 1 1io~1 1011 10~. · Foore Mtnrl ?j! ,,s,, 1~L. n»..-'•l('""'"~u ·*' 10 ,,:: l'~: 2,l"' j•'.:t"' Aklon• 1.10 II lU 24 '• 24 21 .. ..., en Mllw II I J1 1 ~. n, 1~·t "'FooteMln pl ' !-4 '• .. «•ntOU 1.IO )Y s 211; 1'111-'• I try early Wednesday after a At• c;,, 1.1D 1 , u~. 16v. 111. t ... n,1M1ic11 ot2 2 1>it. '!11o •~ "' F0td M 2.t0 • 1 ' 5~!~ f',... 13, • .• l(y u111 1 11 ' ...... ,. 54,., s 1 ~~ , , . Alofl ol l.J~ 1-«llG-l•l104i11041l l>A011m l1 f9 ~ ]4" J2 Fllf'~\clC .t.l 1 lU JJ .. -, 1$•; •,K11rMC .tO 25 '"i l17"11 1111'1 11•i,,+2•l marathon barga1n111g session Al0Wt1 1n••• 1' 101 "~ 19 29 -t. ~!i,1~1 N1,.w !! 7 lJ'l iu. 131·i P FrMPf 1.80 13 Jsi. "!;• lit' KtrrMol 4'' , II" 1, ,, -• .. AILJ.er-loC .]5 I ll 10 ~fin 9'.-Ii ·-F · 13 Sit )'• S... -F0t!H1'1 .37 2fi 10 ,.,,,_ ,,,-,.__' Kt•\ln .JOO ~. 0 0 OO"-.+ 1 ded ·1h t -' l t 1.lbl :i.o ~ 11 n~ 2 1'1 -' hrlli Crill 33 ••• :l'o 4\-. \11 FoattrW .ao I> S5 36\1 il-i Kl«lf W tO f! • ' .,. _. en •'I OU 3 Cvn rac Alcll~15A1· .iO IO 16 m, 19,._.;. ~1 hromo .60 6 14 lflli 11 1)14 \o F,,.i.rWpl 1 lS lSlio 111·1 '''•' "' i-20 I ~ 39 3~ -'' ' " ,, +' hl'\llilr l.fO ' 101' 2•"1 2) .. 1 i.o-\-Fo•borO AO 2i lt ,,,. 6'• 1••·-... ~1,i::ct: 1·~ IS lll 39'· )9 3'tli+ '• agree1nent ,!,ICO• loj .:i. 6 7' ' -~ .., • •~ hrY1lor wt . lOJ .... l \.o 11•-0..' •••" 20 13 J3 Il l,,, lO'o 11 ~ '1-·-"t ·~ I ft I 11• I f" \, , · .l.lc:onlb .J6 •9 I 39 '41• • _,,~.,.,.. !M•o 1.IOto J 11 19\.'lo 191• 1', ri, ... ,., · 00 31~-20., ~· .... ,,_ 1 13 ,,,,lit'"" 1•~•+ '' The union represents 18 000 Al• .. •n .1o.:r JO •l '~ t \'r .. n §on 1 >D , 11 l9\o 19 19 'rit01Mn .IO 1: )2 16:;: 20., :tt•-i... KlrKn · 1 1 1 :it:w. :11.._ lilt ~ ' Alli.on ?.no t 26 17 "" ~+\'I In 1, 1·" ltl \ 3' 24~ 11111 ,,, • ..,. lo."'"'""'' 1.70 , •• , 001, ~1 .. 10 -•1 ,',l.", N ~H 19 '9 )9'!., ll'~• '9\.o1 o.. ------------f•UAmll .2• 11 116 ui, I 1111~ h Cln £ p/ 4 , 1110 SS 51'1oi SS <!· FllCIUOlnd 41 -~ G -· ! 6 '31 1:,,,, 12 1214-,_.. ( K 1V J. AHOllC1> .100 I 21 f~. ., Jh~\\ CIT Fin 2.10 9 \ 31 37it 31'• 17~ \'o 1~~ 1l 1e 11 ~~~~ ·1~ 1 1) )l\r llto 3f\'j-f 1• 'St. I ' G All11L11d 1.20 I •310'1 70 \ii '•cnliSo 1"50 17 38 3-1, 32'• »i.:.-oac;able ln<llil u J•, )\i 3•· ,,_rcot 1 lllllll.i'~ S4"' Jil/o+' AllOludpl l 15 37111 11 31 -\l c11v Inv' .ti S :12111" 10'1 11 ~'>+ ioGAC Co<'f' 0 OO' I-"• <-•<••• ''' j ,-tlo '"-llt-t '• l.JIQ Pw l . .w 9 16 20:1 20'1 701~-~' ly In" wts 29 ,,.. p. 11 •• GAF Cp .IO • 61 I'• t " , -1 llJI.. 14 _,,_. STOCK AllonGrp 51< 9 • ltl•t lQ\1 J0'-lo-'It llY nv pl l .. 31 2S 2111 n t l'i GAF pl \.:.>CJ I It 11•1 ll''t -1(1•t1C:O 111 11 16.'.l 4 3' Allld Ch 1.31 12 •• na, 31!< l2'·+ '• l&rkE 1~. ll 1'2 Q~'J •2~ •l "' C..m SI< 1.)(1 • ,. 13\1 2)\s »11 ' ... l(fMlll -'° "» t/9 JI'. ~ • ,,,_ '• ---~;:;..::.....:;_;;;;;;.;;_ __ AlldMa~ 45 It 39 ,, ,, .. 11••+ ~ l-r~o11 .olO 10 .. 11\~ II ll''o \'> Gamblol l'lo:I , 2S l' ,'.' ,".~".',N ,·," ,,' ,,,' ,•,•:,• li': 16\<wo•l '• , Alh::IMIUs .15 15 ~ ui1 24'h 21-h LC of Am .S 11 Sh S"' 511 . GamSot 1.6(1 ~ 1• t ...., 30 o o \ ll'• • 1 AlldProa -" 6 s IS' lSl1-1541-\o !vCIUI 1.92 11 s 61 ti 61 + It Conntrll .~s 29 130 J5.".~ li" .».. ' KYl<;• tn . .-i • 10 I . • 11'orkcrs at 13 Firestone plonts Auled,st 1.40, ,' ~,, ",:• 2337• ',',,_..-11 l•v e1 2.12 11 36 n~ lJl'I JJl~j: •,~ or<rOefl .10 12 21 1••• 16~'. 1,•,:·.-1·, •• •~~-,., 1-•,c,;;-,, ,.11 20 _CA . A.lid 1,1g1n t • w .. • lotl>• .52 22 Jn :M\o 2S'j 2 ' 1 toc:i. 14 1 l 11._. I).. ,___.., ' "'i< '· Jltl'QSS_lhC nation.____ '°",',fll..l.6tl lO,--"--.. •,;•, J:.i-I.I_.. i::n-~-to---. 11 ll~"i 111. 1 1• ••• G!~svc 1·11 I t lt\1 14'• 14\o ·L•rnll\Sll I 1 3 1 I 12'1 ~..:-': ;i.u; .,, 50 111 ,,_.~ ~, utTIP p{ 1 , 12:i:.. 1211 17'• , Ciatow•Y ·,n ~ 1 6 6 , '-t...1tlllt11 .ti.n 10 .I :101.• 101• n:.--'• A Firestone s p 0 k e s in a 11 /\ION! Pl .Ii • } 11'1:; IHt1 llh , .. CM I hi ... (p 14 n 32~1 31\o 37'11+ '!:. GCA CllfP 11 19 ·~~ 6\1 ~. lerM I l.38b I "16 23lo 221.o -A.lco.t 1.94 ll 12 591• YU 51~. ' !NA Fin .sa • 111 13 1m ll:i.r. I c T 1® lj'ir-10.,__._ •• ~:11'!11:11 ,,. ,~ '· ~'19 , ... blamed the uruon for th cAn•••su I.Ml ~ 11 1211 12Yr 211:1-'• NApl 1.10 r.i 11 1,11~. 1n.+ \i,Ciemln •P 1 11 •• 1 '• ll'•-'•Le1rSPt ,,. '26• 16'• 161• '• . . • Amcor ,IOtJ 10 5 Sit I\• 5~1 . W:iiCO\ l.i'O •l 18 l'l"-1 '1.S•1421>+U"l Ciein In .)61, 11 12~t 12\o "'• L~ilKl>C 49 4111 ii',• 111 I'->-1' brcakoff 1n negot1at1ons and A~•c 1.20 1 11 19i. II~• 11111i+ l•C11C•80 1 .1' 2' 1• 201r ?O'• 20• .. + 114 Gtn,t.m ..,nv 17 1 lJl. 111. ll'•-•• 1.Nosc:o otw• ..o 20\. ,~,.,. ~ '• sed h UR\v r ,. k' Am Hes$ ,)) 7t 102 36 35 35 -~. odw8k .?I • 11 12 .. 124" 11'• Cn AOI · ) ,1 ~~ .Olo 110, t ... L"s.cl)I 7.)0 I l'\~ " 14l'J-'• iJCCU I e . 0 see mg A H!S pi 3\lf UU 11 IOU IOU-~. olecotn .06 21 lj !(\') l]lo 141nt .s .. Ge<1A.Tr 1.61 12 2 -Uttl ).>'• li.t4,Wu .50G iJ 61 JJ lf JJ i \t Ill I be d th I AmAlrFI .ll '!\• 21 21 20+. 20lot ~tCOlglte ll $90 '9 2&1\ 21"9t '1 GRAT pf 2'• 6 51'' 13,, I] .... I •o 1.e•:di.&N .~ 11 0!0 llloa llll U"-• :l llC emell yon e pa ~ Am Alrlln11 JCl9 11'"' ll?"1 12111 .. Col!i:Alk .SS 10 12 13 l,~. 13 .s. Cien8i11K .16 I 1 1~l! 910 ~·,~ •.1..,..1on• .«I ~ U 't 12'" 17 .. -1-). lcrnsalre'dyeslabll.ShCd Wl.lh "'m8;11k .70 $ 61~ 6\1 6\1 ... Coll111 FoodlO 23 ~ 8't 9~•+'•GnCeb\t.50 9 2l6 ll'·\111 LdlPt C 6(.11 u u•,1• ,,_,, Al'lra~d 2.38 9 42 39•• 38~ J9ll-+I ~olln R.1dlo 17 lt{• 16\• 16;, '• GnCgr 1.20 I 14 is;o i~ _\..utr Vol 1no .., 1'1 l\lo 1~0 . • OUr three principal CQlll-:::::ee;~ :~ 10 ~ n~: 21\~ 21'.lo-l.i. gl P\M-t' l6 96 ~ «'" .u•,•+ '• Gn Dtvtlop • St 1'• 1J 1~'• Ld1m 1.~10 I~ I ~ 1 1.0t 11\::i'"' pe!itiOrS" Am Can 1.~ 16 S2 l.I Jrt :if..:=~! :1f"l1n~ 1'.10 ; !; l ~'• j~,~ {!,,+ -,~ ~E1~l';. 19 ~ u~~ i~:1 SI'.: ~ t:~rl; \lj 1~ ) ]j« ~ '1 )• . ACan!ll l'l. 11 ,,I(, 23'• 14 -'<.CollplA 1.60 I 201• 20!t 20\-_.\ GnFOOd 1:.0 11 110 'S'• ,,~ 2,,'.,•t LevFd Ceo 10 9t 1'1 I.,+'• ACnM 1.16tl I 80 17 161 161•-'•C1>llln111 4•.. 2 4'I .a>.. oll<l-\; c; nCiro •lb 1) 5 15'• ,,c ,, 1,_.,v inc ./)1 )) jl !1•l j21• , • 0 1.lffi'd• AChein t~ B lj 21'• 21'< 2H-ioc 8 s 1..u 10 112 31.t\ 31 31'• G• 1·cp 9 o 10'" • ,o . 3 ,a 10 16 · 210.. 2'•-1'• AmCv11n I \<o 10 19 23<• 23~ ZH\+ ~i C 6 S 1>rof 1 2 21'• 711~ 21 • ·-'• u. n nH1:,,r 7k 17 65 If! 1 13:• " '• t:~lu "] ~;.,. 9 :.: loll 6~ NE\V OHL E:ANS tUPll l.m 01,1111 I IS 16 19'~ 19'• 19\1 .. Col ca, l .tO 9 77 2'~ tt '9 -•• • I • l , b '• l) I J~ 11.FE CorD<1 -• ' ,., -AOlsrTel ."3 25 12' "3~ "3\~ '3\lo-,,. OI Plctu•ts ·-l~I • 5'• V1+ '" ~n 1!'.'..! ult 6lt II'• II{_ 1, . ', .... ,o . " f -"' ))'1o J..f'"' 0 ·1 panics offered a ,-.mo1111 Vi-! 11 61• ffi •-+ >n 01s Oh t.t'l ' 111 26'• li"'9 nl<I~ ... ucn ~ ...... • 1 s11 16,, s.. , -· .. "" , •' 1 rdco~i2 b·1r· -,. d ... ~ot i'l'O 10-51~ ;:}1 ~~ ~n~-;;E~~o~v 1:~-l~ ~ tt~, t~~ ~.,!~;~M~11~~os~ 2~ ~s 6s~ "w ~~::• ··t:~i ... c~'":C J ;; 1:• It•!-•. l'C('{l · I !On UeS ay Ill A~ ·~~!>Ort "1 1 ° lS-16 1 +1·16CmwEd 2,lO 10 \S7 31'1 31~. 31"o+ \• (;nMOIPl ,"', 1 ~)'~ ~~" 7, ,. '¥ L•llrl ~Ln -•O ~·' i!•. 1:~ :: Obtain dri ll ing r ighlS lO 104 Am E~Pr pf iJ0 • ' 4 -ltt CwE pr 1.11 116 f6'4 96V. %1•+ Vo GeoMol 0 · 10 1 4 10'-< 1~\.o I l.•l><'r i;I I ' o\--1 . A Fl~sv 1.10 ID 7 11"1 17'h 1111:1+ i . Com Ed II' 2 IJ 26\'o 2.sl:. 26\,_. \1 u'n Por11.:g ~ t~'• 19\a 1~·· ~ ': i.l~y "'' 1 1 i!'; 16'--11 sections of offshore territory AGn8d .9611 3S """ 25411 ,,._ \•CWE<rOI 1.12 a 20v. 20i .. 20"+ GPu1>,u, -, 11 11~ r. s•. , , u uv E11 1·•0 _.: 3p ,, 31~-• • South 01 Texas and Loul·s·oana. •' oc0,•,!,·'.~ 14 1,•,,··.· 1911 1'\to"I' i. c-pr 1 fQ 72 2fu 25 U\\t-V. GM e r•c 11 " tl fl -•,, i.h,(Nll '.'! 1,_. l'•-'• .. :u 17 ll'iil u>;+ Vt ComwEd Wt l 1~ 1011 IOl• -Vt 3nsk1n1L .6S 1• 3 1, ·r L•on~l 1..~•P ·~ J" h I . De I' AGr.111 l.aD 2,,s 'll'i 7S'l4 2Sl:t-~iComEd 8wt 3 10\lt ltll'! 10'-'i nSteei lnd 2111t1, :111·· 2~..: Ll11on 1•,1 ~ i.J 0'4 I-·· d·~,_ ... T e nl er1or partmcn SAmHot11 .,.o < 11 \i! 11\1 11\.'!+~•comwoll lk 1oo 15110v19,.,1o!•+·~ TE 1.60 11 110 11:, d" 11 _•,1.Hrr1c ·~1 'l '1• • 1• B ' r'-·-d '1 I AmHom .60 37 J25 '2rili •1'"' 42 CwOltOl 1.72 13 21v, 20\li 21t\+:1frCil1Flnl 1.10 • t11 19 lB~• ll'•-•o L11tonir1 pfA 1 1{;1.0 IO'• 10'11-~• ureau o .....,, 1• anagen1~n . A Home 01 2 . 6 190 . 1ss1. 111v.+21'! c .. init .S6 11 31, ,4r. •l'lr .u•~+1:w. <!"t" Tlr• la 5 lliJ 6 ,~ ~·--''• '-"'~'"°"d , ~ ~ o ~ • ~·. h' h ducted1'lstho'rdGulr"mH()Sg .28 38 ll9 38\.1 l T'n l!~o+I ComP!llrSCI "° 2"9 2\'I 2"'1 (;eMSC .l.lo -""]( 33\r )l\~-·•1.MW~L 1 ••• I •J 1> '"' 11 >1 '· W IC con Amln.,,.st .SO I l I'• I'~ 8'-~ConAqr .31b 6 , 1314 ll 111.+ ~ Gonulnf' ·" ~· 1SJ 11_ JI\> ~11 1 1.omnsFI .32 9 t ''1 9•• •••" '• of ~1exico lease sale in nine ! ~~/,,;:,2 ~ 109 13~ 1~ 13t;-\oil conoMI 1.m 6 11 16ft 15.;, 16"1! Ci• P•c -~ 14 ia20100 "' 100 +-711 1..oonM 1.~b 11 1' •110'.•, '°' 40'•-1'•· 15 '•. ~I 4 .... CnnMI 1.47b 12 1S l'O 19-'lo 20 + '" ¥•l'WOI 1· 10 31 I~ 11 '• "'·-'• Lcornlo" ..... Q ~ 6 ltl'1 10·1 • months, took all bids under ~,x;r~7 :}: 10 "' 29 ~. ily, m< · · · conr•cC .60 9 11 163~ 1ss;, 1•ll.+11' Uerl'>fr 1·3~ 29 10 lll\• 1;1•. 122 + i. 1.<1~~ s t11<1 1 1 ,, 1)' • 15' • '~ • .-.,., 'I.Udy and WI.II accept the high Amer Molor , 2l: 8~ v,1 ':'• '': econ f.d l.81l 11 1.s '231,. 1J n -I! ge:iv p1 1l~ 1 1U 'JO ~ •1 1.011 ~,c; 1 46 rn n 26•• 26' • 'lth..-;( A NG 2.il I 2B 36 JS\o't 3S''1 CgniEd pf' 'l 71!~ 11 71 -I c;i 1:," 10\I 38 39 ' 5•• S'h-""' \.onQl\.I 1. .. IU ~ 2'l1• )I ... , ....... b'.ds pro .. ·oded they mee·1 orA:!:sJ.1 ·,.. '' , 10 9'• 10 consEdot s 'toll• 61 Us\--1.t , ,.,·00 1 11·11• ,, 11 LILP•J 111 ,100 104'•1041>104 '>-• ~ .,.~ J 'l 1•'• 16\\ 161•+ '• ConE OI 4.6S 12!1 59'• 59'• St\t+ '•Gi~ f in! '.st. S 4 It lSl• 1;\o't' l'1 LOllill>g .:. l9 I' ti Mli M'J-,· surpass the govern1ncnfs ad-~~.;:ii:i1:~ ' 11 u•. 111;, 111.f •1 ConsFd 1.lO 11 1, lO'<o 211•0 JO +11'"Gidd Lewi~ 1 )'• ) .. )'• 1.01 .. 1 co1:i u 1 ~ 3• l 111"' ''" Air SllKI so b '' 1n. IT 11'• 1. ConFdpl I\~ 1 8P4_ IO IO ---3\1 CUIHlll _,40 I ' 16 lit h -'• l.IL .. ncrt~ I ~I )t> le·' 16 lb ·~ '• \·ancc estin1ale. Ams1oco1 (~ 13 581'! 51\lo 51\~ '•Con Frql .J'l 6 !BS 11~ 11 111<+ •t. ~,11ene 1 so ;1 110 S)'• s..:i. )•""-•La i>~~.uc 9 ~.:.o 1.S<.. ~J\1 ,.~ .. AmSterll ,16 ·~ 'll II'• 11..,. 11'<+ V. Con1NCi ,,D.l ' 24 78 71~.\ 'll + 10 Glmbtol e r" 1 1• s:w 'l'll.o 22~• ?2\o-1 • 1.ouG,)i I.Sil 12 2 !D JO lO -1 • • C 11.mTl.T 'l.IO 11 622 50'1 -.$Mi »:• . Cgnsm Pw , 10 l4 27'• 11 27 -'• G!MK l!l(o<' 1l n IS 114 h I L-C•">t .l'O ' 10 I)•· l}'I.. 15"<-., Aftlpex orp. AmT&Tpt 4 1l160lo60 60 -'hConPnf l.16 t$05$ $1 $1-1 CiltaliOll . .U 16 u ;1•.2\1..,?\l ,~ •1.rv Corp~ 1& •• 11'0 !'o-t'•, ATTDfA ].61 -18 '1.\o Sl'-'I 5lVi ..• con Pol 41, .. llG 60 60 60 vtOIWll M.J• 10 :;a Ill• II~ II•·-'0L1VCOfp.. J ~· •••• ~·· RED'NOOD CITY (A P \ -AmT&T wJ . 513 h ~-5\., .. -conPgf 1.n 160 100 """'00 -ll>c;1ctieun .60 I I 16 li l•16 , Lllf \.O s111 l JO'" »I• '\0•1 ~ d I I AmW1lr .6.1 7 1"91~"" Jl \• l~lot1i,.conPpf o.5? i.40 u i; 61\IJ 6'\\. uo1coW•• l'<I' 2i 11'• •• I• •11."1.or l:o1 ..d 'S '6 14 • :M :M4'r ,, Ampex 1.,.orp.. eve ope rs o AW!r ot 1.13 . . ' 1 v' ,', s• -1, conu Air LI' 12 60 9 ''" ''• .ioOdrltn 1 6 326 2u1 21 21 __,.,. 1-~•Y :..1 ~ 11 ol '"'', 10 101 • • d d, · 1 AmttSt .1tlb .~ '' •-' '''' ,,,.-CnC•n 1,60 9 '' 71\lt 27 ,7'i+''<Gaoovrr .91 H .ot 23 '22:\'o ~1'•4 ,..,l ud-1Ci a 16 1 3·~ I), 1)~ soun recor 1ng eqtupmen ArMtek .60 ' ,,. 2~~· n•~ n:i..-.,, c°" coppor . . XI ''• •l'i 1lti+ ·~ c;ordonJ .l• 9, ,_n,,~ 121,. 1~1.z ;: 1.u .. ~11>11 .'llO • 11 ;. • i:i • 71\, and video-tape, sho"•ed net "!~~,,1n .l:..°' 1 tt 151-15" 15 + ~ c C09 o1 iv. . 1100 111/J 1w. 11v, . Gou1<1 inc ' ... ..,. 20, \ 1 L Yo Corco lJ ?1 •-. j • ,1 132 ,,~ '1 \~ 41:w. l l~ContlCg 1.lt 1 171 ~ 15.\li 36'-+ 1'1 GroceW l'l 9 396 20'• ... • 11 1.vi.e Yvt1n-1 • ~' ''• '• J_. earnings of more than $3 :~~pc~J 8 1 1 8 1 ; ,.. cn11cco oil''> . . JG •1114 '°'~ '~+ t~ l.>r1nov .60 ," ,~ 1~~ .. ~Do:• f~••+ ,., 1.v~ pl J.11t ) ?S • 11 .. 1; ·11· r h r· I d A c 61 l&S 5''o ,.,. s ~ ,. c CoDfR 2~) ' .ov. 40'~ t01.+ '•Gri nd u .80 s 1 11•1 211•. 21•• LYt\tn~v ,,a l~ 4 , ... ]~11 , .. m1 ion or l e 1.sca year en • A:!:~~ cor~ 3 9 534 s~ ~-.: c11n11u .t5b 10 37 11 T••~ 11 ..-"'c''"lv 1.20 , ,,, '''• 11 18,1..,. 1, -• •- 1.ng Apri·I 28, the prcs,·den!Am••or 1.10 1 12 23'11 Zl\'> Zll'!+\1conunv1t 21 1 :IO ''" ••• •~•+\lfCr•n•W 1'.'I , ,, '''·' ,, 16._, •iM.ocAF .llb & , 10'• 1011 ltl •-'• ' '' '" ''' ConMlq .llb t 38 lD 9~ 91~ ,.;rovOr l.21) 1 .i.:>nlO 1, JI ) i l ... Jlo Aln6Trpl .61 · l 40 t ~.:_.•.,, "'Cllt!llOll 1\.1 f 1$9 32.,. 32 n>1.+1 t•CilAMI l.liSO 11 ,fl) l1 31ft )3 "1''''"' I I I 1 says. Amtltd f.60 I ' -""' . Cont011pl1 s tS\'> .UV. 'S\+l•~Cil A&P Tt• \l'i \J:i.. 11. It•; 1.,M..t. .. •· )(I :,. ••. ,. 6 • ' d A h • .. Amtel In .XI XI 32,. ,,s~ ,~, ,•,,_ "-}'.', Cont Tll ... l• 14 m-,,.~ n~+ lo Glt..~O l,20I 21 I ll'• 22' • " ·-• \'\~i.Mol · ·~~ ' ' ' l•' -.... Presi ent rt u r n . An•c°" .,so • .. ·-,_ 1100 11 1 \~,, 1v-.. ·~ • .. , .. ,1" '' • ' .. '" • • ,., '• A-OH<'°' 1 '' 1o••" 11 -\11 Contr1 Oat• f 75 33,1 36'> ,',' + •o.,1NI< · '' " .. 11 ,,,~ ... ,,'•I·.,,., 4 • z,10 "1 :16 .)9 -< H ·d T d th "' ' '' ,,• ,.,., 01 ' '' C:onDlof 4\~ ilo SS CilNNek 1.60 _,.. -'" ... _, ,_, ttl ¥1'. +o , ausman sa1 uesay e~n<1tfic1 .tg 1~ u io1.1o io ltl'~+·~conwd ,_90 , 6 "',0 ,6 26 _,~..:;.wFln . ..o 7 1111 •,11;-11 .... -... .i ... .,.., ,1~.: / 1 1 firm had "turned around" a A~ Z ·..i 1 . 1 11 · u•~ 11~ coo1c Utt .s1 6 26 p;, 11. 1$\-•o<>t Wes1 un ·· l • 13 • _,1_' """'" ''¥"'~ 0 ~> ,. 1 , ,'. A lie l2Q I 131~17'·1 -ll'-•~ COOP lnd .IO I 1!123•·,~~·otif WSl\J"llt-ll l'l·~ i J.-·-'""-"-!i,11 l1t liJ.~~Y•) di sastrous financial situation A~ 011· ,i. 6 16 12,, 12~~ 12..,_ 1 .. cow1 01 211t 1 « ., ,, -2. •°"•-w0M,.~, ·~ ,0 J 1~\~ 21'.~ 2~:: .... 1.~':" ~ .. ; ·~· .1 1~ i. • 1a • I ' h A lo $100 AotCoCo 16 1• 66 ''• ' ''•T '• Coooo• Lllb 1• II ... 9 9 ..... " -· ) 1l' . 1 1· ,J ,j.. ·.·J -•• \\' lJC saw mpex se A f' \. cOr11 5 0 9., 9 ''•+ ·~ CoooTr . .S..t> ' 11 ,,,. 14••, u i,, -c;,e~hO 1.0I I 1721 u 1 ' .• ,,.,,,_,.,, ,J, , ~~ " 11 n1illi~n during the previous !~~1~ 1~Ji1 ?J 1J~1zt,,12f•=1~l:!1"!:1,;J~ 12 11 l~ ... :r~ l~ .. -1.2~~r1~~ .~1 1t 2i30•o 2~,,!'•,,!~ .. ~::'.~~:·ti,~ u ~? ~~. j~ ... -, t\\'O fiscal years. Arc.iaN .14 1 3, 61< 6~ il~-+-\'o COPWld i.u 5 1s n>~ 12 i? ••G•umri1~n :Ii 9'• 1" ''• " .,.,.,, 1 -· ·' 11•, i··~ .... ~~~~roE.;: 11 ~ 2!~: 2!., 2!~~ t •1 l:~~= 1~1] ~ ~~ :;-,\'l: ~:!; ;: g~f~8i.1l: It ~ ~.: ~': ll.:~ :: ~::.7~ ~ 1; r! ~.: ~!~ t~:\~ • PSA Hiii• Ar i1 PS 1.16 I IS 204. Xll,, XI~.-"-Coinin 1.1111 12 29 2.(• 15'• 2\'o-* • Cull I He .90 ) 1().1 ?J 11 11 -•Mttr {,•! l.tQ IO :~ 16 ,, 11 11.,._ '• .'JI Ar~ Be" .•O t 11 12 12 12 -c, (OWlfs (gm 13 I 5\: S~• i' •-+ 1: ()yll 0\1 1' 1 10 •52 i1 .... ;2>o 11"f' '• M1rcgr 1 \IV f II ;n 1 lf' 1 li'• , SANDIEGO-'rhcboardofA•1enR.11ov 11 u11 s .•'' S ·t·•,Cn•Br11 .J~1 1 1N 24'•7.l'•'''•-...1\•Ciwn Re&Ch • 41 1~. 1 1 i~··••cv.o ·11 1 ~ lJ•,lJ~•, ArmcoS 1.20 a J9 20'l:. 20'1 20''>+ \1CPCtntl 1.17 10 •j JO 1'.l.. l't!:.t 1 CiullS!U !.r'I 1l /1 11'• '°'' 20\, M.'rrttn IOI'\ to·; 1,-, 1~t1-.. 1 dircct~rs or P~A Inc. has :~~~rpt1~1.~ 11t J;,. l~~ ~l!=~;~~:.i"l',Fi'°"411 ~ ;~ 1:~; 1:i• 1r·-1 ~~::t:z:;:: s 1~ 1fi: ~~: 11" .. ~r.i:.1:.. 1ri ~ ~ l!: li: ~~~:':O: adudt~r1zed1 1r00)s~~o phurchase 1 a 1 n ~~~~ j~ ,, 11~ 1:1! ~:': ~::.! ~: ~~~:'1< ':= ~ 1~ 1;~: 7;:.: ~;~+ "G111ton 1n<»1 •s-~• .. ~ •' • 4 •-•1~;::: 1 ~ ,, ,[ ~ : 1fl.'t ~~'.: ~ a ltlOna •vvy S ares 0 I S ArmslR 1.60 6 1 11 167'1 16'•-11 els cp .iO 6 61 ll'~ 13"• 13 .. f-'o Hac kW l.lt 10 2 JI'> J1'> JI' '• "'"'''." ~" ;i,, lft J:>, 1~•1 jM>itt '• k · Aro co 90Q a 12 1sr; IS 151. CulllG•n ,JO 13 is JP, 10s, 11•,,. •t Hall pr! .llOA 1 ?2 1~·· le'o 16 • ,~~.~~:: 1 :~ ., l•, ~''• .i., .. '• Common SIOC • II W<IS a n-"rvln ll'!I .. S7 10 16 u > o lJ'" 11' •+ >; Cum!n1 .8a4 ll JJ JO' o '9<, 'l9'• -', Halhbln 1 12 31 Be 1~1 1U'-, 111 ' 1' 1 M.rt1nl'I '•!! ~~.. ~ 1 , I I -'• nouneed Tuesday bv. \Villiam "'.~~. 0L,•,d ·~·''' 111 ''~ •II• 111->4 '• cunn Oru<1 • 10 s •\. ""' -'• 111mr>•P .ill 11 )I 11 •1 11'• 12-1 1-ni .. 1 ') 1 ~1 1~ • 'l'' 1 ~'• J .,. v• 771 2'P 711l 'l9 -I~ CurllS• Wrl 'l9 120 71'1 70 'II'.,.._'~ HlrndCO ~ 7 ~ I I I Mo 1.,:.C, 1'0 1 t l~·_. l · 1 \S~ o R. Shimp. President. "'•"'••'•°"' ',·.~ ,, • s1•. s... s1•.-•1 <llllttH 1.78 • 11 25•-. '''· ,,_ •, Hinaiem -~ 1 s1 1 ''• 1 •• '• " ... ~ ..... u II' )J ;.,i 11 06'• "' ... 1 y" ~ 11 33'1"n··· l2'•-<1CYWi,1lM• I ' 1 30'' J0!1 :IO''•+ '•H•MIY H .n n I 211'• 70 ?a '··1M4.on1 10 '3 •• Jl ?1 .. l• ui.,,-.. '• PSA has purchased <in. A.•,.',~!.""".•• •, 5 ,, 2J~. n>..-~. -D 0--, 11 .. nesc1> ,o 6 1 111. 1,.., 11'-< .,, .• , ... ~ 11c 1·1 1,.,, 1, .. 11i..-'• I' "~· J IOlO 10'1 IO~t \•Dimon (p 3l 11 41~ f014 •1••+1'• H•hllO 1.lt It 11 14~ U\._ .W-lti-~. M)COI ~ efll \ It'-19i.. "\Oj ... proximately IS0 .. 000 shares A•'•'•'•",,','•".•'• ,' • 16~• lo"" 16b Oan1Uvr .io 10 1~ 5h ~,., ,,,_ '· Hartwr1 11 1 1 1 :io it·• 20 t 4 11.,. 1n1v .JI• '' 131, ll' 1 11·-""' h 10 2Ho 21 'J 2H\-1~ D•n1C1> 1-36 1 40 l8to 77•~ 73•~+-•. Ha•dM:S .1. IS 3-1 11\o lf"t 11l1 i"""""lql~ \ti 1\ 10 21' ?1'• 1 \io-' • previou sly authorized by t c At !cnlld 2 n 116 15\'I M t. uu-1,d11rt1ndot 1 61 Ji.._ :ia•, 3111,_._ '•Hirns•g 1.20 6 4 fl'• 2l n -'•Nt•!wE 1•0 ' 10. 11 ,,,, 21•,I '• board. Alllcll pf ]\:, •• lllO S2\'a S214 Sll•-1''7 Dayco I.I • • 13 16c:i,, 16'" Id••-'• Hl"lhs 72 IS :it 1•tt 16 lo'•-'llM!lflfl ll'lh 1!1 ~ f't s -• Al Rt of 2.80 61 SI'• Sn.lo SI'•_.. I• 01Yl~ln .U 15 I 'I 7-"it l~,-,.. '• Harr .. tntp. I 11 172 )7', 'l1~• 21 t-"' ~· 05 °).(1(1 It 11,_, :11•7 31' 1 A!IRC:hPrl 3 l lft\~142~1•21-'o + "'041'1 H .SI ID 1 11 16'0 16 ~ Harsto Ip I 21 16~• \S'o 16 1' l4 Mivort l&Q ) JI ,:u." ~1 A!ll5 (O•D 102 lS , 11.1 1 -D•vP I 1.66 11 SS 12\lt 22'· 221,;+ i.Her'ISM• ... I •l 14~• 1)>.. ll -.. !./\averC' ,,, IJ ) it.I'• Jl 2:1 .... , • Lev iS_ales ATO ln<: .16 1 ::t9 , •• 6~11 6~1tb O .. PLpf 7.70 . z300 102~1ot~10'Ji1 H1rl•H 10rr. 11 9 l\o 9 • ''Ma•UW "' I I I', I'• f\'t..-'• Autorn 011& 36 311 S2•4 S2\11 52.,_l'l.it Oeert 1.08 I 177 'S7 lt~'J ]6>,..,_ '• HIWIEI ·1 )(I II , ,,,. ,,,., ,,, __ '• Ml•t•i ()I 11 ,jQ Z6 > 16'> 11t\.o SAN FRANCISCO -Levi Auloml Ind• 10 O P9 4!1 ~•+ \• OolP&L 1.16 ' )I 16'~ l•t1 16'• -'• HtOH Alb. 1 1 1 131, ll\o 13'•-'•MCA Int •• I ' 'lO XI 10 -'•• Avco Corg ' '24 ''• 9'1 ,~ .... \; 0.1 Mnl 1.10 t 12 1•v, , •• ~ 11 .. _.._ '· H•ioU!ne ll l l--i<'• µ., ~--•..Jh:C....<.1 ·"--J s IC-' ,I•'-' l•l.at.-'...o-Strauss & Co. Tue s d ayAvaicow11 .. 20 1 H• 1"1-•'tOeltoAlr _.so 15 »so ~ .,,.,...,_,,"'' ''"'''" ,, , ,,., 11~. 1,.. .. '•Mtbro~ 110 i to 11. ' 1 11\-~ -1 Avco pt 3:!'0 1 ll~'I 38'} 31!11-.--. Dellff lntn 4 20 O~il t• 6~ 1 l~ 20 OJ" 61 6] •-" reported secon(! quarter Sa eS AYel'\IPr .2S 31 19 39 38~':1 39 +\'I 0.tr<Hlll C1> 5 U }I• 101' ll · 1 Htc• Inc .12 9 12 11'• 12 .. 11.. '' ·1'l f"•r!OI " )'I ir.: ' ' _, ,. 0 ' •• • • • -.. • HOCl•Mn 1k ll :19 11'• llt'ti lt'• •.• l'l'tgon•<I lP "". 1,jj '°'• + rs159 333 ooo up232percenl Avslnc.t0 11 2 ... _-1 1•20'<+1• enn_1n · 2120~~201•70'•-'•H••••m-•. 1 10 ,,,11,~1 1 1 MconO iu "n 22"' +._ 0 • , • · Avlll'll nt .lO 6 &6 1•• 7" 1ltit '• Oonn,M\ Pf I ' 17 17 11 I •• ·-fAc,G l-d l II ;) ?i'o )l'o j,_! ', Over lhe $129 327 000 for the A'lllf"Pr l • .fO St 2'14 llO\• 121~.1:io1 .... 7 Q!!rnY$ ,G.I 15 lOi lo<O 10\., 10\.-H•lnl H I.Cl II '1 11'1 fl'1 11 "4 '·IA..:.~ HI Ol ' I] • ' I. ----• A1tttOU 61< SO 11 11•o 11'" 11~-,,.,,,.,tsply .61 lS IS '''• lt 19"t 00 H11onalll .16 US 1' )6 l~ Joi -ti litc;,eor o 9 2 J'• l 1 j'-• a period last year -.a• Desgtol n 60 ' 13 10>., 1111• 1011+ ~ H•ter>e cun 16 3'• J l·· .._.{1n1 ... 1 P 11w ,,1., s~ s • _. s me · 8,..b&~'t'U .ao 12 14 n;: 22,1 22,,_._ ,, DetEdl1 1:"5 10 ., '°'• 10 10 H0Ue-r1n1 -"' 1> 11 JP. ll Ji•. •·,,. M. e l'o ,2 1s n 11, ,,.,._ ,, Net '"Come WftS $6 593 ()()0 Bacn.e .151> lO 11 51, 4>0 S'o1' 1, OelE Pl f.32 1100 111V. ll7"o 111\:+1\.'I HOl1n4'Pr .60 IQ Vi 161J. l6 ll''' l11'<\~i..:11., 0o I~ J ).jl, l.I , l' '• ... · • 'Baktt •n .1610 51 20.,20 20 T'•o.1Eo11.01 1601~100 uxP..:. Ho11neP .20 1l 1924 lJ'•11·,.•-,,,tLo11111!.11' •1tr•16 If•·• 0l'60Centsa share.dOWflfrOm B•kerOil .J7 2S 19 21'• 21'' 1t'o+1•&:~~r~p 7·;il5 11°'l I~ ?{ r~ -lo~=~~.:sc.~ 11 4SJ J'• 3}:: 11"-1 M':'<,~ICOO ~~ 11~ 1;0;i l11~i° l!~': "74-04000 or68centsashare B•11"•' 1·9610 •2 21~' ?r"4 11i•..-'•01111F1n .'ii 11 2 1~ 191• 19•, ... •,H111b.lein .n 11 "4l'l •Z'• ,, ,,~;int i'l'O 10 1l~.1.:11_.., ..,, · · ·8enca1 1.:M11 '2s 2s Oi•1n111.ao • 1121•~2t1'•21 .• +l•Hcwl11P 1G •'l 1s1s .. 1s /}• 'l••olB•tO 11J> 'll'1 3i· for t972's record s cc on d BondlQ 1"< '7 11• 29-• 21 19'•"'11 " Oi1m Slim 1 • •2 11 11'· 17l ,_ '• H1~~vo11 En 'l~ ll •·• &'o '• M•cou•~ 1• 1 11 , ~i•, 11'·· • l ::~,~p "t~ 4 2! ,~ •• 2~~ ,~ • .,. ,,. o",'.·,s~~. ',' ,,2. 4 261.f :u.~ U ' •+ " Hll ont>r ·') \J Vo 21' I 11 11 M E I c ..... 11 I l'' 1-1' I-''• quar er. ClnkotNY l 6 1 341. ].I''• '•'•+'•O••···~" .• ,·, 4 1S'lli IS'!tl l ~•-o HltlonHll I ID I :U'· "" • ''MtlS·-•J 11 .,., 2'• JP, .,. ,.. . ., U l'n l \1 l'-1 HMW lnd~I 11 l l '• 3_.,. l \\t,,....tJ. 11 ~' • , .• ''•-'• l'llnkVlf .$11 13 :i629' .. 29't•29'•-1•0llbold . .i)v20 31'C3 •l .U .,.~,t-rlM ,ltllS 3011 2!1t71 'M•r\l>CO II 1 I'• 1•1-'• llanklr1JSI 3 10 67 Sol>• Sol s..·.-~-OIGIOf'or .Ml r 3" ... ,, 9 -~. Hllltrll~ .t1 I I ,s>. 2$~. l> -•1 Mtr( !'.It '° II I •l •1:U 61\o-1 • B•rberOI 2~ 4 21"" 211·~ 211\\+ '• OJQll.i El!Dt 4S .. an~ "~· 801~ tlOll floc!n 6 11 I•• I'• I I ,·,l 4 1'• ~ N '• l•'t--1•· 81rdCR .u XI 19 211'! 21~• "'·T ~ Oilllnqn .~ 13 15 lt't 6"" 61,-+ ,,, Hot 1nn• ,30 13 t.S II'·• ,, ... 11 . ~. ~:~"" 10 t I 13h ll,,, ll.._ '• l'l••net 1.291> 9 • 251• l)\• 2si.+ ••OHUnqhpt 2 '21\.': 24 21~---•1HoltyS11 .500 I • 13 12-. 1; • ' 1r1 !f ... 14'• 14\o-'-'• Ba•IC In .IQ ll 9 6'14 6 6 -~I OllnttYW .12 5d lO)l BHi IJ~i !}1,1->.; Hof1'11'1fk .60 16 10l '6'•15\a lt'• '1 .,.,.,,,II, '11 >II,_., 61 t.l'o-2' .. Bores Ml .20 19 l 10 10 10 Olntbn .D6b 9 12~·1 J·\9 1 ~ .,.. Honvwl l.IO 2-2 89 1011... 101 103 • ~ ;-'.'~oPet 20 10 ~ . 13, • OJI'~ !Jr>4.,,1•. 8•Tlllnd .lO 1 li 20'• '101'1 20'-+~1 0lvenlld In 10 ~ 1" ~. HCIOVfl' 1 2' 1 1l Vi \"'I 2)'.! 2'', •1 ·'~~~1 1 91 9 9·, t BlllKllL f l lt T.14 72\l 11 22 '1\41 OtvMI l '2b .• 96 l'lt• .•. Horiion ~D 2 )6 11. , •• ,.. .• Y.h•bi ;4b 10 B1xte.rl. '.IS .$6 11 '6\'9 '5\o 4ll'r'T . Mn .It 29 20 9 '11 9'1J. 91 :· "°'Pllll All 7 11 '11 ' ~·.~ •,M,•11 NA.n T ri l~•! l~~: ill:!,:;:; 6Hrlno;;t .60 12 5 Jl\1 ~1 ~·-11• DotnFd .9Sb JI 7'11 1 1 -'• HOMICP 12b 12 &6 If,,_ IJ"ll ' I• '• l.ltt•o .!Oo ,,. lO•o ""'. ._ 1 Be.it FdS .62 11 112 23 l'l~I 12~ \ Don\..11IJ .U I S 7 1 7 ..,_ \1 Hoil Int( .3' 9 II 10\• 10 10 •-'• l.l~lfpl ),'1(1 .., ,,.,... 8&<:kmn .50 16 6 2t' 1 2•W 1l\!t+ 1, OQnno!ly -18 It • Z3\~ ll 2 314+ •1 H®daile .60 • 2l 11>\ IP• II"-t '• MC.IC In IQ 41 1~1 61 6~'0 N +1 .. 8«10!10 .)S 26 toll 3'\') 34•, J.H1t \'> ~Oflc c .3'.! 1 2• 1511 14\:0 IS";ii+ \, Houon M ...... • 21 !lit .,.. t'i • ~ •• •1;c<1Ci! I 1).1 10' !O l~ IS•• n••-'. BttcllA' IO 1 141 lJ 12" 12'• Dorr llvor • I l'I:. IM .:... .... \•House F1brl 11 4\1 I\~ ,. e -'-.,Ml(··O(tg1 .u 5 2S "'• 11 11·-'• Los ANGELES \AP\ -• ·-0or.. 10 5 ,, 6Lo ' 61-\1 HouseFn ... ID m Y''> n..., "'~-.,,,., d (.Tl ft I? •O 11. lt'-! ...... '· I 81lcoP~t )k 6 s ,. •1. 9,. .. .. :u 11 l 37~1 JI 3J\.'J1 '• Houw pl 11. I 1'. 5111 "'~I ' -Mi,,~.,v I 10 11 69 1)-1.o r.;1, n•. Times l\1irrorsaidTuesdavils lkl<l!MI 1·20 8 1 20,,,, 19~ ''~•-i,.o-c11em 1 2• 110 Jl 501'1 51 ~HousFot l'• 1 •1• 42•~ '1~., "'l~.11··1 1;1 ~ ~ , IS'• n1.o U'•~ '1 • 8tlOQH .JOQ lJ 11 8~1 t•t · OPF IMP 1'' J ... 6V. 1 •o Houi.LI> \,ID 14 2l fl\o olO'o IO 1-·•.Y,jd~~I 10 I 1] ll't 11'1 11 ... subsidiary Publishe[S Forest B111H-.IJ 1 61 23~, n 1J -1• 11ronor 1...0 12 lll ltVi J.t ,,.,,.+ ~ HouNtGt .1' '' 141 2111 :n 21•1• ·• 'A1rrR 1c1 '"" 1 61'--, 6<'• t-1•-.. ' BemlsCo .tlO 1 1 11"1 16" 1610-h ,-,s gt ~ 10 l• 31149 j1~ j1~'1-~1 HCING ol 21.'r 16 •11• "6~0 •6 r-'• ~111\lt> 1 111 IS u .QI, fl 4)' o ~ '• Products Co of Oregon. Inc .. Bondi~ 1.60 • ll ll'b 3H• 31•~-+ i•oro•.i 1.3211 'It\~ 911. 914+ 1,HGw1rdJ .16 17 tt 16" 16 1'"~ ,_. v.nonll' .. 11 11~ u •t u•, 11•• ·red . · ls J Bendix pt J lo 51 511> 5J -1 DrmusCco I ·s II t 1~1 f t \.o HOW"'l'fl .10 I 2 10"' 10., lD'' M.1,,,,f•t.M' 1 31 191 IJ•1 121• 821oi.-, acqu1 cena1n asse o Bfll c11 1.15 •S<I 21\'I :W• ,,,,_ '•Ouk•,. ,_..., 12 "1 211.i. 20" 20t,+ \'II l'luObd 1.1sb ,1,1 13 1t1~ "' • lY'• ~ 'Ml~"")._ 1 4\ 1 • 1tlo i,,. 101.o Cascad'·a Lumber Co and its BenCPQt 2• • 1 . .io Jl 31 31 -11o Diii<• ot 1.10 i 1so 1Dtv. 111t 1Dt -114 H11e161v 1.20 • 21h 7,.,. 2• • ~ .._ M nnl:o;i 2, 11 n 1p , 11,, 1~·· . 8cnC pl 4.lO 1l 6S\li 61 " Ouk• ol l .:lll J'4 10.CVi 104 104\.':+IVI k11QllO•H .olO 1 I 7 I I ~ l1 M1 RI '911 lD 111 ,. HI\ 16 I rf'I' I y . B T' be ••• , .. ,, ·--.• •• '" ,.. '" D······ ' .. ,, '! , ..• ,, .• ,, .• , .. H·-~· T-1 21 l•• ., 46'• "6\• I H .... -• a I 1a e, , aqu!na ay Im r eor·k;y pi,~ 1 st 1QV: 10\i: 101:-\'I o\;o!•n 5 11 3 a. .~ t•:-.::: I~ H\;M1 Cll '.'it 12 i6 15l• IS'• 1$'·•"1' '• Mo Pi< A 1 ~ : ;i • ~'• ~~It..,. '1 and logging Co. B~thS! 1.IO.l I lllO 27"9 21 ,7•,1+ " 011Pont 2\ltb II 1Sf 162\lt 159\'J 1'1 ..... t 2i.. Hunon E .olO S 9 I I o 1' •-'• ~~~'.bs !.~ 1: IJ 16 t~lti 16 , , Blqltnd )1 16 '31"11 3t l6 -••DuPnr f \'J 6 67V, ii1' 67VJ+ ·~HunkCP .1•"' .. XI 2tl~ lO +J Mobll01 7tl0 11 11• 61'• t(,\, .,.,~ "1 The assets acqui red for an B1.ck&Dk ·1 .a 1011ui ,111~~112 f.11 °"""'°0 L~•,.n, 10 -~ n,. ",, ... Hvdromt ·1' 1_110.!.:_• 1 1 -i...Mol\Ko 110 8 ,. 11·0 11•1 11· •• '· • • B1111r Jn .'8 s 21 7 oV. '"1-V. UCI "' ,..... M 01 i. 11, 41, 4lft.o. '• undisclosed amount of cash 1n-s111sLoh1 'I • 2 is~ 1~ 15""+ "'gw,_LAn1,Kpt J . 160 fJ•Ao uv. !'1t:o+ VJ 1CN Pflllrm 1s » '" • • 11.,-+ ·~ M~~!'~,, , , 1 ,,., , , 0 , a ' ' '' ' '' """ .. .-t 1 t 16 t ldll!llOP 1.1' 10 IS 27~, 79'• 19'•-\'0 ,,,,, .. ., 61 t'1-'-• I I ·11 1 Toi d IOc:kH .1 lo ' • '• • · -• •-·· 100,1180, .IO 1 20 12r. 12'" n 11i-1. Molvb co'" 9 11 ,,~ ,,., 12··-'• Ocuce a13000sawm3oc 5a or •1.m0' =~~:''are! t /~ 11,.-1!':• 1~1.+t:E-411!)'1 ,;!7 1 , 21,,,. 2,,~ 2~1Jo 1de11ep1 •to 1 """ 61'h 611->--11n M01vo• 1.11t 1 n " ,, -'• re.. , re 1 -•-•-c • ,, ,,, ,,,, , .. ,.,_.._ 1 Eaac ...... .ioo 1 t 1n" 11'-11~ · !lh!•ITor 41 ·, ' ,,, ·~ ..... 111 Mona•<n .60 611' J 1j..I. u" 1s1~-'• ~ .,.., ·""' -. "'' "-.-• Eoitern Air lu jOYI 10\lo lf \Jo-\• OS Al .I.st! 12 6 21"" JS''\ l)\t-t-"t .Y.onociram 21S >1 .. S S'• berlandS and timber CUlting Bolio C•scd I 200 ,.,,, 91,,, 9"• · E1i!Ga1F ll j3 •S 11,_ ~V. 2111+ t1 /llConln 1.22 6 10 11•• 11•1 11.._-f '\ MonroeA .44 II 41 17'-. \t1. 11\1 + '• -ntraets ft:::illM;"f.'jl ·1 : 1:rt 1:~ 1;~-."'E•stu1111 v; 11 • 1914 19 19\lot 14 1teono1.1. • 1 '°'' 90>< 90u Monin• 1.M i1111a s31 , \1•, )J•,+i•1 ... ., . 8orllen 1.20 ltl 61 i2'-~~ 12'# ,., E•l Ko 1.0I• JI ]JO 133114 131'111 132""-i... lllCfll DI llh . . 10 ,,l':I " ., •.• +-\1 Mon1 pt 7:14 I " tl 61 I.,.. Tl.mes Mo'rror Is publi'shc r ol Bo•u w 1.3s 7 ,9 2,v. i~ 2p, ..,_1• E,•,!"", -Mo 1~ J, 16 31'4 3! Jll'-$ ._ 111 Pwr 2.20 12 111 21~ 21''-,,,~ Mnn1011 1.•~ 10 13 ~'''" lH\ l1'-1, 60fman1 In 15 II jYI :Lio 3~i ••Un~ .~, •~ 9S 2m 2S~ 2~ 114 lllTOOIW .36 19 21 Vi 1$ l$ -'\Ii MontPr l,IO 12 17 331, lf'i )2't .-\1 the Los Angeles Times Bo$t Ed 2 . .w 11 "' ! "il?\1 32'9+ l't E,•,•,•, •"c ",, ",, .M 32¥. 32 'jl't " mllfl'li•I Co 6 " !!i~ v1 .. '"' MonyM .Sib ll ~8 11'.h ,.., 12 -'• · 8ostEpf 1.M . 1101 1 13 111 +1 · t 22114 21\.\ "'!\Vi NA Co Ph I IJ ' m, 33 + YI Mooro Mc:C S 11 12 111, ll'•-Ill Bourn.s 11!~ , 1• 12 IH• 12 1-1~ E01nBt I.QI 10 I ~ lOh ~ 't l'IAlnS .•lb ' 20'• 20V.-I'll Mor9JP 1.06 16 S6 54~· SJt. !.t\o..,I•-. Firestone Plants On Strike TM Firm Expands 642-3490 Sea Coast Builders Supply NEWPORT LEASES 2400 Wett Coest H'9frwoy Leasing all Vehicles 12 Percent Increase Br,tnlfAlr JI 1 91 t~ 9\lo 9'i'i+ \I EC & G .10 17 30 11'111 11r, 11\11 I.. MOIM CttO o 611 J" j'• Mo••1K .tOl;l ) ::t9 l)\; 15 1~\f+ , Brll!CIS l.20a IS 20 S4Yr SJ'>:, 54n -+11-Eitel AQOC 11 10 <IV. <l\tr <1\11-\Ir MC IM .Sllb s f\, ~ ~ Mor1t et Pr ' " 13'1o ll 13 -.... g~1: ~~ ptl.~2 fl ~12 • .Jt~,2t.!"·,,t.~v. ~l'fJ .. "t°1: • 21 j.~ ~Vo ji•+ ~ 1:i!:~e:f 1:~ ., zll ~~ 1 ~ ff-........ t,~ ~?;t':5~ o~~ ~. :.. ,·~ ,~ rot .:.. •• 8• 1P1t .21b 22 lJ 1"' u111 l(\!a e1111n t.111 w1 .. 1J 1111i !h ,._ ~ l~~N'ii1 1.tz ~ Y ... 126.., ,:_.. -1o11 MortNo• · ·'' 1 :rot. 15" 1s 151,.__ , "•\HI pf f f1 SS"' SJVt-2~ Elh1W tnc1 4 61 SY) \.1r Jt~ 'h Ina Rnd 1.ij IJ 109 ~\• S'• St Mo!orolo .ill 2J 115 "'"' •I.._ 4 1,-0 '• Broe Gf .7j • im lt'llo lt=k ElPotoNG I 7 140 lffi l•YI 1•~"" I R Df ·3 14 t\ :JeV.-+ 1._ Ml Full I.ID It 'I .a N\lf •1'9.f.ti. 1651 F>lacentin, Costa Mesa 645-2202 SAAB • 4 wheel power assisted brakes • Rack and pinion steering • Front wheel drive · • Sh~k absorbing bumpen • 25·miles to the gallon • fold-down rear seat for station wagon space nowac: 1Jmput15 we::c:s· .'l:ls In Food Costs Seen 8rUnGI 1.1 10 • ~ :r.l\.o 22'4-Vi Enr•C~ 1,211 1 11 27'!1 27 ,,,.Ii_ ... ~'°"' ' 11 'l l'I ,,. ~lo'I+ ... Ml!)ITll l .~ 9 lS ~01'1 10'-:x11.-•• Brown Com ii 13 9l-. 9\-~ En'llr I l\lo 30 <llt 13\lr II~ 131'+2 ~Jind St( 1 ~ \lo 19:it Vt-~ MSL ll'du1t ' 52 19"1 19111 19\':I+ \• l'lrGrouo IVt I lJ 24 2<1\'. 24l•-\Ii Emry.I. r .54 "1 6 58 51 511 -I'll n ont .Ub t · 1\'\ 1 -\'\ MunlOfd .:/I 1 2 8 11 ! Brn !;nro .10 15 ~I 9•,io N 'o--\tr Emorvln .31 H 4 914 1v. f\(o .. nz.11<0 c· .70 ! 10 •YJ '~' +.-. Mun1n11 I.DI 1 i 22'" 21\i 2 ~ 11 l'F ... rll .12 11 11 ls:\11 14! USl'o+ Emr.lrl JJO 6 711 11\lo 1 11'1*+ "'lnlO(OPO 2 1 S •lu <11 11 ~t \lo MUfll\.I) l.l'() t 9 111• 111.1. 16'-I• '"",'"w' .·tf ,' qO Ill~~ 1:'!"~ ', t ~ EMm00 u ,.'lt°'"o'o ( 4i.. 4 <I\•+ '4 nleQOn .21 9 ll I 114 I Vt Mu•lll'IOI m" If 19 U'' s:H .. S..>.o-1 ... IWli -12 <IY, E D I 21¥ 21\:1 25~ 111 n!ffl'O 1.l! t i ~ " 1 Murr 0 • 11 t U(l 26 261~+ ~ WASHINGTON (AP t Retail food prices will average 12 percent higher this year, even with the fi6..day freeze and a promise or ne\Y Phase 4 controls by President Nixon. slys the AgriCulture Oepar1- 1nehl . Further. the depart1ncnt repor.ted Tuc!day. farmers may not produce as much meat. milk and pauhry as prcdlc1cd. PRODUCTION OF such key crops as com and soybeans also could be reduced by late planting this spring, lower yields and sbortagts or ruel and fertlllzer. the report said. The analysis. by t h e department's outlook a n,d situation board, spells further trouble for consumers and Administration economic plan- ners . "The imposition June 13 of price aciltngs' on· all retail and wholesa le prices means thal retail rood prices for 1!173 will probably &\•erage aboul 12 percent above last year," report said. 8ut-Y E 1.20 lj i<I ll tttt + .... Emo Fin 4 j n. 1~ 1""°--n!rlllkO 1, 1 ii I 21"i 7.11'1-'~ MutOm . b , 37 lff• 16+'1 16"°-\lo I ... " w n 11• 11~ 'IM ~· Emplr• Cai 5 1 9\lo ·~ 9\1. . ' n M '""' j5 :n 2 317~ 321,,...+l\.'I Mvor1 l. .$0 10 lS 1 10h lli\i-- h IHMK:ll DI lSO '!YI 631'! t I'! -Enar.hd oQ II 112 17\lo 14'111 171'!1 \"J n laYI' .32$ <I im !51') -H N-·~ I C ~ti 11'1 102 ' 7~i + iMi Ena o l>f .414 , l 106 10$ 106 V, n tt1rv l,«t 1 211 " j'Ji-'Ii N•til!K'o 1 JO 13 ll 46\'I 4" lud Piii .60 I 7 ff " ~nnh 8"" F t I ~ S14 ~ Vt n old I.lib . 1t. ~\lo N4tco Ch .'3 JO JI jl!'lll 311'1 n~ ~, 11t1ro 1.70 11 l 201'1 l'O~ ~$oo t::nvlrotecll 21 1 )I.ft l1~ 31V. ·~ niorNt Ind .• j :U y, ,_ 1•NorcoSc: .6010 11 3\'11 12\\ 11'4-1 ukllv 1,5~ '°, 00 fl j7 -V. EOl/Gu 2.<IO I 10 32~'o 3Wli 3n.-nr.11,11 DI fV. 4\" .. ..,, NMl'lu•C Sl 21 17 .II 'll:' 4 ; , BulovaW -11 214 1 3114+ 1.1. EQlllo 1 29b 11 1 bil9 ""' 2)h-,. n nCI! 1.40 11 j•,~ " flit-lll Nltl Alrl :20 6 .. 13" ' o>•-C, ''IN TlfE ABSENCE of 1~r:, ·l \ • 11! ,;t ,;~ 1:C u ESBlnc i.:it ' I 2"\'J lfV. 24~+ I'll n Ml~, a Ii 'll: 5 a.., 1 03' ... .... ' . , . I food "I 'n 1 ~ 11 39 i;:• 21\li n + " E1m•rk .2s 1 SJ 2' 23'1t 23~ v. n Nicki .,,. I', l 11 2t ~J iC N::i~n 'lf 1 • · ., 1~0~~ ,.1:",01 '~, price ceilings, reta I "' No i'?. , 67 i, 3S'h »Vt ~111u 1i .22 J 1 ~· ~ st•~~ n ,..,, ,11111 14 3~,, "' N1 S.n...11! l\li .l n·~ 1Jl4 nv.-"• prices, would probably have ft~~.:~ ·u 10 li 11t! ,,~~,~I: E:::.1~ 13 IJ Sf 11: 1lv. 1t~ -~H\rR~~'!·'i 11 59f w~ ll'-' ,,''t,'l\Nj~ '.~" •r, :r· ~~ :r-:,·· 3dvanced further the next few e~!I""'u.1,,,'",! •~,"', 2it,_ ,.__,.1~ ~l~~.,I~ ' 12 26'n 26"' ~v.-i.1 •Vi · -11 61\11 '°"" 611 + 'C••vL .911 o • 12r• 1"° 1nii-·• ....... '"" -· l:YO>UP . 't ~i n=. ~ 12 _-;~ DfJ ' .. --~1 511~ m. f?"llI 1'" NtO&:r1, 2.l:t 7 1 ~1 $.o •llit 11 i.;1 t• months," f.he board said. lot>L T l,12b 11-i9 Cq~· 14•0 2SV.t t'I E11Coll 0 ·~ ltl 14 11~ 16~1 17~+ .. t Ot~f'),f $4 rn"~ ~~~ ~!! . ~ ~rl~u!l 11.'iO l~ t: ql:~• ~~~ ff1!i!+ ,: Th.repo.rt ·iiidlc"lcdas<-rp •.!!'!!.!=,'1Jfi· •,'•, ~:2·,~."~ ~c-•ndC•rt / • 7-h 111 1i.--i.. &roioi' l" 'l~ l,N•HGon .~ $ n ~;a,, 1-~ u Ila ""'"" .• 4 E11•on l.90tr 13 30l ·~ t5to tl'h+ Vi n OfOICI 7 u. ,, l ...... '~NH ()yp 1 05 1 t:S ~ "" ·~I.to an -t! · · · USDA th· k' 01J1rs s u r:· 3 a .,. 114 --• •-"lr.!f1~ , , f ~ • fl"-"nt H01TM .20 ID 11 . ~ s J reVISIOn In 111 tng 4111 Flnonc: S 'l9 !t 1!' 3~ l"fiM'.-00 .«t • UT 7'oll _, 7}'1 • n r .90 J ,, m ~ 1\•+-\.\!'lat Incl .OS. 12 l 2'11 ! >• about (ood prices and .the '•'m"'•'"•.iJ!•2: ~~2 ~,f~ n:+\!o F1frcnCom1' 110 11\li a.-\lli,,_,11 ernlf ~ 1 "" ''l-\1 NotlolB H. 112 1 12 i•, I ?J1 \ 1$ +j't l"olrln d.1itr 11 ll 6 l'!t It + Ml nlit PW l 32 10 I 1 -'II I ._ NP<Ot 1 llM 5 2 29 2' 29 over-a ll farn1 produ<:lion pie-·.~L, ·,,,, •,, ,'l ~\~ ~ • 29 F•lrm/" .so 1 51' !I! l • -\lo n1r1tll• $tr 1 j 1~ 21" Nit 5om kl>" 31 11 2914 ,. ,.1,., lure an"'ero-r n (\It ~' 4~ ~ F1111r • tir ,7 .o ,, Vt 3'"-W. nrrt11to up· 'j IS J•+ ,,. N•t k•Y .10 • ~1 n•. 11 'j'l ._ .: -conP8c .14b 12 ,, .. t~ 111~ l~t+: ~ ~:~~,:r .1~ 1 ' 1f" l~" \f'-, :=: lf*t30 il 1f~ 1~~ I ~~ ~f,f!~n: :ll ''i' 1! ll:: .U~ le!':+ 1 On May 8 the department ~·.~,,•,•,,,,'·1.! li Jo 13Yl · FMW"'" ~ 1 11. w. '\~i "" -110 1 ... 1 a ;~111 111 '• Httst"1 2i't n 15· u~ ,..~ ,• C :f m ~:: ~ r.:::+i~ F1r1n M:J a 1 6h t'-\It -•PL ~·M ! tt U~ t<f.-VI N11t T•i• CG lj S"-S\.t ~· • predicted that food prle4!S ~·~: 1·.to t: 1 4 ._. 11 .. ,.. ... F~ ·. 31 ~'t; l}tt itro= ~ 1-•ri~·~ i : .~ •Vt 4141• ,,. N•IVn t .to 1 '°" ~\): tW-•• would rise 9 percent this year, rBs1e°".82 ' .. 1 ~'141 ~t l~ ·v. ~.. l.l8 : i ftlir re~ fj~+-:rti'1 ·~ : 1s ~ ~~ L'?r ~ ~::.:' j·' 1~ 'c.; 1~ ™l 1~:+: ~: With ffiOSt Of the iOCre31e ~o~~~I .:J 01 ., 2tl'.J ~ J::t VI ~::~~;.r~ ~ i1 1J:Z j~ l ~+ ~ 1ak IEcnfl"~1111 ~ ,,~ ~ l\ 'Uttl ~ ~l"n::i \. ; ij" ~•\\ ~k n, already accrued during the ~f,J,5i ' I~ 20{: '°" ~\Ii : ~:~,·~·~·:r :: ~ 1'1 ,: ,1 _·y; .~ :~:l..'i01v. :: } rJV; r~ M '' ~~r. 2 '2 t 3: .. · ~ "\:+ 1• first Utree months rtltrt. ,Q 14 31 fl 20lli 10\ll+ \\ Fod ' 'h 71,'Ji 7\lt -J J_._ Nwmnt 1 It 2 Ito ' " ~ • rt WI ,m ' 10 , 1'11 11 11 -Vi mOOSI 1. l' I 4 ~ 41 + " JomH I" .U f \0 1•n ijin ~m---"'JiW'tnnllf .\'J .:\.'I \'I \-. ~K.~fi.' .tt 1 ll~'f t" 11-U od DI o " I" 1"-\ii J~ntron .60 I 2 j 5 + '' NVSEO t 18 10 1s 2'~ l,'i -· FURTHER, TUE Ma y 8 ·~!1-~' i~ l~ 11i l:"" '" ~~t ~ tio':J,, .~t ~ 1i lm ~ \II lr'+ ~ ·~~1101~~ 13 t: 1~,,_ NV•~ t,1t1 . ,,., 11~ 1 o , _ ": report said, retail food prices ·~ ~omcoS: 3 ~ P,: "' ur Yl ~~~-12g .• Js, ~, "" :11w.-1\\ 1'&.~:Wrwt . . ls\ 1%u 1 '~ u0t1~ ~l:tllf J:M . 1 ,/36 lt" ,r . ~ ... 1• were expected to begin level-:t;t1• .•1 ' 111~ lfv.. 1s . r:u1r1~0 i.• 10 !B 'iU 1m 1itt ji:i :# J ~ r,a r' 'n::t ~ ~!:~gi ,:f: .. ;Id~ ~"" ~ .. §i~l·,;· ing off this oummer and then .~~~ . .! I ,!j !1!! lll': n~+ ~ ~~.,,::' i" I ,., \1!1! 11~ !!;;; ~ j ~w.1l'i.J 1 ~-'I" h-1: .~::::::.'I ' ~ ~~ fi~+ " stnrt declining next fall and l::l!~ ·~ 1J ~ Htt ""-~, . .= :: F!~~l''1 1 :f sir, s1h smt 11r ~'!"~, ~ ~: 1-20 ~;Joi':°'."'! 'J ,, mi , · Winter &flcr larger farm pro-~ rnL "'° 10 ,li !l,. jilill~ ft-+'> i,~~~'1-<lO lo " "~ '1'> '1~.f ,. j or• Im I ' ,,. l;\l-:•!""""''° ! ' J r.. n· ~~+ o ducUon reaches the mnrket ~~i11~ \~~ 10 ,, ti11ll • U'f.tt .. ~~~ei!. \",if : ·1 [''l: ~" ft;;1':: ' 1 nrJn ':so J :,, , 111~ 11«;+ .; ~r~~J 1:;o 1! 1~~ v. ,,,-I~ • onLeE .OI 13 4' ~ l"J!NCllV .?l n t6 !1~ Jo!lnjvc IO • 24 I" 19'° ~\Iii N~Mto l\4ti 11 • JV. j!• 11\o+ , But In the new report of· nMPw 1.H 10 IA 1 "' 1 i ,.,,,.s enc 2 • ~· l! John ~ p( 2 . 1 v. :11•11 3 1\'o ~ ..,,,..,.,,H 1 1 u n 2 ~ ~• ~ ficlals said farmers are not in-:::11 ~"f 1i ft U'' Jk~ 7r.1 1~ ~:~~~~ '~;t ~'1 .·, r.n I& ,,., l: j:!1°t"' 1·l'l ' f~ t mt n t.J. 11• ..,~:l),t'~ I 2~ :~ 1U' 1~ • t t 1 11 ~itn' Yi! ·" 1• ?l n'141 /Hl' \:. -. ~.,.M, JMib 1 in lf"' ,,,.._\ti -LotA'1 ·~ tAD JI._. SP-1'4 H~•n11 '·°' • n 1.,., 1, 1 1~1 " Crf3!11ng OU pu 0 some ems erro Ill J 11 't,,,_ r; ft.,._.,~::~:~~ :!: 11 J J,¥ l11U !t~ n J::= 1.'ll 1t ,: \It ~:.:: lJ - ' U9hfA~'1 :# : J u~ J1't l9'.,'+ ·~ as much ss believed eorlie.r. :,~",~~ :l ' 1 ~'""' ll'-'" 31!/'r-t, F1wi.e 11.1 t , ""' .t$li 1-. -K tt-Notnf's 1,)t 11 H ~.r: 21~. r,:;11 \ ., ( ., ,, " .. " ,, • ' • • • ., • " • • • . . • • • •• '• • ' •• .. • t' .. •' • •. " ' ·wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Wall Street Up Again Slightly back NE';j 70RK (AP) -The stock market drifted an . ortb Wednesday in slow trading as the rn1dket paid httle attention to any econornic news an seemed lo be lookin g for its level. "W e would have lo be seeing one hell of a Jot more than we're seeing now to be able to sa an news is affecting the market," said Buck KJl.r o1 Paine, Webber, Jackson &\Curtis. 1 . ~'The market ts aimlessly wandertn\i and mean· d0enng over the countryside," said Monte Gordon of reylus Corp . • • Junt , 197) s DAILY PILOT Kids Like To Mk Andy esECAetlon SAN FRANCISCO -Of. ficers of First cautomla Co. Inc. Tuesday repcJ<ted tllat ii has lligned a stipulation and consent with the Sealritier& Exchenge Coouni,,loo, .- First California CO. Inc. did not admit-or deny the allega. tlons made by the SEC in tht case of SEC vs. Westgate- California Corp., et. al., but consented to the entry of a permanent decree enjoining violations of the Securities Act of 19113 and tlie Securities & Exchange Ac! of 1934. ~ ._ e Slalp11ard SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The Huntel'8 Point Naval Shipyard, due to be clO&<d next June, plans to double the amciunt of work it gives cut to private firms, the shipyard commander said ~Wednesday. Capt. George P. Jones said tlle increased load is expected to total $20 million. "Begin. ning in micW'uly, we're IOinC to dump a tot·or work on loca1 industry ," ht said. e Bora: Appeal FRESNO (AP) -The Fifth Di!lncl Court of Appeals here has alflnned a Kem C<>unty Superior COIA'I ruling that United States Borax and Chemical Corp. miner a 1 depo<lts w. r.• improperly assessed. ! \ \ • .- ' . %8 DAILV PILOT 17 4 Co111plaints 'Feminine Spray Warnings Urged WASHINGTON iAPl -The Food and Drug Adminiskation has proposed that feminine deodorant sprays be reql!,_ired to carry health warning labels. The agency said Wednesday jt knows of no medicinal or , hygienic value of the sprays, -and would cOnsider misbrand- ed any product using the words "hygiene" on "hygi- enic." . I ' ".., ~CONSUMERS and industrv have 60-dayt to comment on the proposed regulation before the FDA makes a final decision. . During the last four years, the FDA and Federal Trade Commission have· received 174 unsol\ci~ complaints from 'vomen and physicians of itching, burning, blistering and urinary infections after the sprays were used. The reports increased from 14 in 1969 to 20 ~ 1970 and 89 in 1971, then dipped to 51 last year. presence of a condition f<>r which a physician should be consulted. If a rash, irritation, unusual vaginal discharge or d' ort develops, discon- tinue . . ~mmediately and consult phy\ician." The DA lS said to believe that the adverse reaction com- plaints repreSen~ oi\Jy a smaU sample· of those experiencing trouble. But the ~gcncy said they do not indicate a. signifi- cant-health. hazard-except possibly for 23 report s or in- fection . · FOR THAT reason, it said that the decision was made not to remove tQe sprays from the_ market. A spokesin:an fo r• Atberto- CUlver Co., maker of FDS, said, "We are prepared to conform with any regulations they may propose ... The spokesman said the company does not accept, however, the FDA's finding that lhe sprays are of no --&AST-SEPTEMBER; t h-e-medicinal-or--hygienic-valu.e. - FDA banned the use of hex· achlorophene in a 11 non- , prescription drugs and cos- metics, including feminine sprays, because or fhe germ- killing chemical's toxicity. The FDA proposal would re- quire the following warning on the sprays: ''CAUTION-For external use only. Spray at least eight inches from skin. Use spar- ingly and not more than once daily to avoid irritation. Do not use this product with a sanitary napkin. Do not apply to broken, irritated or itct\ing skin. Persisterit o·r \Dlusual odor "!!ll____~di_£~te __ th e "WE CONSIDER the sprays to be a va luable toilet article," the spokesman said . "Our suc- cess with them has established this fact." Feminine sprays, introduced in 1967, have climbed in an· nual sales from $3.8 million to an estimated $55 million. -The FDA said it also would extend to feminine sprays its March proposal requiring au aerosols to carry labels warn- ing against inhaling the con· tents. The agency said it received numerous reports of heart difficulties and sudden deaths of persons .who inhaled aerosol fumes. In Sunday's Family Weekly: By Mrs. Jimmy Stewart: In Africa With My Absentminded Husband Jimmy loves lo go on safari for another reason too, rvhicl~ seems to be peculiarly his. I I e thinks it li.elps . /1.ini concen.trote! You .ciee, my husband has a ·celebrate<l ien.denCy toward obsentniindedness. l 1/on't think he's qui.t.e a . .; absen.tn1.in.ded a.~ so 111 e 1Jeople hove niade out , 'but it is true that 111/ien onr girl.~ Kell)' nn<l Judy 1ttere born, lie come J.o the lto.~11ir11f '" l1ri11 g, n1,. hon1r. und then dr ove off 1vitliout. 111.t'. In an entertainingly biographica l report, Gloria Stewart relates the background of her husband 's lifelong fascination with Africa. The amusing and touching incidents she recounts from their several visits to the Dark Continent offe r intri guing insights into the real man behind the personality we all know as the world.famous actor Jimmy Stewart. She traces his great love for animals and the out· doors back to his boyhood in Indiana, Pennsyl· vania, where he planned his "fir.st safari." And reveals why Jimmy is so convinced that trackin g big game in its natural environment is certain to sharpen one's powers of observation and concen- tration . .-01rs1GNS you CAN COPY -Paris·based fasb1on expert Genevieve Antoine-Dari aux of· fe rs Instructions for copying the haute couture of French designers. lUu str ated story has pre· cise directions for how to do it. e YOUR OPINION COUNTS -Nearly 20 million Americans will have !be opportunity 'to sound off on 29 questi ons considered to be of strong significance. Join them by taking the Family \Veelily poll on timely topics. All· Coming Sunday With The I DAILY ~PILOT I • ~·--- " Germain's 'Kolorcoat' Dichondra Seed Cooled ~eed promotes fo ster growth, p revents fungus dis- ea se. Handy one lb . size. " Kerm's Go·t ·Gooa-rimin~. . ' ' and Some Gre·at Ide.as , , ,' I - ' l\l'i ..... Black & Decker Grass T rim~er l Does the wo rk of hand cllp· pers ... much more quic kly o'nd easily . Dou ble insulated. Model 8200. · 1288 :;.. 1~J . • ... ~: t Safety Caps -For Wall Receptacles Prevent children from injur ing themselves by pluging th ing\ into wall outlet. C~p fits right into outlet so it's not accessi ble. 6 cops per pock. 39c Scotts 'Plush Silent' 16'.' Lawn Mower Su per q uie t ... u~e it early 1n th e morning ~ Stoy sharp blades. Easy grip handle~ . Bu ilt to los-t'. · ~ · 4995 Adjustable Aluminum ~i~~~==;;=~yt 1--Food-S·teamer Qua li ty a luminu m French stea ming basket a djus ts to fit any pot 5" in diameter o r Always Useful ... Plumber's Helper This is the quick ond easy wa y to unplug sinks and toilets with suction ... n~t ·chemicals! Convenient Redwood End-Table Bench It's a bench ... ond o table a ll in one ... isn't that g reat! Use it for sea ting when you need some ... or os a snack table. Dura ble redwood lasts o nd la sts. • mo re. 188 __-;,: #AHl~BIH. -..... • • ! /~,/--- ;;. ' @' " ' /1, f:--::7 ; ,r , -~;~ -) '·. 'V-' .,, • -f!.__~ ~ : ... ';;,,(I --__. ....,,;;j Rainbird Economy Lawn Sprayers . lake your pick: One model covers o 25' square oreo ... the other, two overlapping 25' circles. Both of rugged zi nc. 13 88 • Ice Cube Tray Makes Giant Cubes Unbreakable plastic troy ol· lows you to remove one cube or on entire trayful. 6 colors. Big, Beefy and Sturdy 36 Drawer Steel Cabinet A storage organizer with 36 see· through drawers. Holds oll your odds ond ends ... keep's them where yo.u con find what you need ... in a hurry! 6 88 Complete \ ..... ., __ ._. ~· . , .. DAILY PILOT !I G_a111e ·of Bn111ps~-Bruises 1 LA's Yeager Certain He Can Fit Right In CUBS' RICK MONDAY CRASHES INTO PITTSBURGH'S DAVE CASH ~~~~~~~~~~~ Tumble Kill s Veteran Jocke)T Robinson, 46 VALLEJO -Jack Robinson, "'ho began riding at Caliente in 1944 and ..,.,on mets al C\'Cry track in California , is dead at 46 -trampled by a horse during a race at the Solano County Fair. Robinson died in Vallejo General Hospital \\'cdnesday aflerooon , 4 5 1ninutcs a(ter he \\'BS spilled during a $900-claiming race of 300 yards. Robinson. riding Chic Pleasure In the first of four races he had entered on the third day oC the fairground meeting, fell in the path of Deckarena and was run over by that filly. Doctors at the hospital sa id he died without rega ining conscjousness and that his lungs and heart were punctured by the horse's hooves. As the field left the starting ga te in the second race. Deckarena. with Jorge Cruz: up. S\ver ved sharply and bumped Hobinson's mount hard, then. a! the jockeys "'ere just regaining control Oeckarena again bumped Chic Pleasure hard, throwing RoblnS'Ofl to the lrack, the stewards reported. • ''Deckarena appeared to run right over Robinson although -Cruz-made every er- rort to straighten his mount and was absolved or blame," the stewards said. Ma tch Race Off? ALBANA, N.Y. -The proposed match race between Triple Cr0\\'?1 winner Secretariat and t"'O other 3-year-0lds has plunged back into an atmosphere of uncertainty with the announcement that Linda's crucr Vioold not participate. Neil Hellman, owner ot Llnda 's Chief, said Wednesday night ·that his horse ;would nol run against Secretariat and ~ Native. the other horse in the special I ~i-mile, $125,000 match race proposed for Arlington Park June 30. Florida Leads STILLWATER, Okla. -Ben Cr~nsha\v notwithstanding, host Oklahoma 1 State, Florida and Houston made it evident Wednesday that Texas will not. have an euy time winning an unprecedented thin! Jitnllglrt NCAA Goll Championship. Florida led the pack after the first round or the 76th annual tournament with 1 five-under-par team 'total ~f 275. The .Gatol'3 were led by Gaey Koch 's three- under·par 67 and Andy Bean's 611. Oklahoma State wa s one stroke buck. Texas. "'ith Crcwnshaw shooting a 69 along with 11 others, was fourth at 2&4 rolloWcd by Georgia Southern 1nd New Melicb al 285 arid Southern Cal at '28II. Evert Wins LONDON -Chris Evert downed Sharon Walsh 7-5, 6-1 Wednelday to .move Into fourth round play in the Loiidon Gfasa 'Courts ChampionsbJp al Queen's Club. In other lhlrd round women 's matches, Marita Redondo be•t Lindsey Beaven or 1\ritaln M , · 6-4, Evonne Goolagong of AuStralla dereated Ingrid Benlzer of Sweden 7-5, M and Aussie Kerry Melville beat Pam Teeguarden, M, 6-4. WHILE OAKLAND'S REGGIE JACKSON, TED KUBIAK COLLIDE. -. - Walko11t Lis t Increase s Nastase Big Favorite In . Wimbl,edon Tennis LONDON (AP) -Even w h e n \'llmbledon is being boycotted, it1s an ill \Vind that blows nobody any good. Ilic Nastase ol Romania suddenly has becotne an overwhelming fa\"orllc to .\vin the \vorld's most coveted teooi s title. And a bunch of players who \vere rated outsiders a we e k ago could be. listed among Ihe seeded plac... Jimmy Caspers ·of Belle,ville, Ill., Aleunder ?.tetreveli of Russia, even 17· year.old Swedish teen"1(ll!r Bjorn Borg could be among lhe top seeds when the poetponed draw Is made Friday. Plans tor Wimbledon, which starts Mooday, wern wrecked when the militant Association or Termis Professionals call- ed on its members to \'-'ilk out in sym. pali\Y wilh Nikki PUie, the su..pended Yugoslavian. . . More than 30. men had joined the \\'alkoot \Vcdnesday night and the number 1s expected to.gro\Y to 70 or 75. \Vlmbledon , because Nastase is one o( the game· s most popu lar idols. Cro\\·ds of girls !have pursued him aro1ind Queen's Club this week. \Vhere he has reached ·into the quarter-fiqals of .the }Andon Grass Court Championships and never appeared in danger of losing. Connors, a surpHSe quarter-finalist at \Vlmbled on last year, is not a member of ATP. "Jt looks-like a big chance for me,'' C.C:nnors said os he strolled around Queen's Club with his constant com· panion, Chris Evert o( Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Chris laughed oU suggestions of a boycott by women players who think they shoold g~t a bigger share or the prize ,money. . ;'NOlhiog could stop me from playi ng,'' the 18-year-old American sa id . LOS ANGELES {AP) -It was a year ago, at Albuquerque in the Pacific Coast League, \\•hen Joe Ferguson sustained an injury and Steve Yeager stepped in ns catcher. Yeager's catching and hitting was so sound that when Ferguson ~'S'S able to return Yeager stayed behind the plate Dodge r s Sla te All G•"'" t11 KFI t'4Cll June 21 All1nl1 II Le. Allltt1ff ' JuM 22 C1nc:lt1n.el1 11 LC. AtlcMlltt J une n Clnclm1tl 11 Loi Al'\ftle1 (2) J une 24 Clnclnnlll 11 Le. Ano•I" and Ferguson went to the out!ield. 1:55 p.m. 1;" p,m. 4:55 •.m. 1 ;~5 p.m. Now, the Los Angeles Dodgers are hop- ing history will repeat. Wednesday ~ight, "'·hen Los Angeles defeated Atlanta 6-5 in 11 innings, Ferguson surfered a broken right thumb ·In the top half of the 11th and Yeager replaced him. It was Ye·ager',s hard grounder \1:hich handcuffed third baseman D a r r e 11 Evans, enabling Dave Lopes to sprlnl home with th e wlnn.ihg run as l h e Dodgers built their lead over San Fran- cisco to three full games in the National League West. But the win, the Dodgers' filth straight and 10th in their Iasl 13 games, was over· shadowed by the loss of Ferguson who ,. was expected to be placed on the IS-day disabled list sometime today. He was the clu~ leader in runs batted in with 49 and game-wiruling hits \Vith J2. He was batting .284. "I'm . sorry to see Joey get hurt." Yeager said. "I think l can do the job. The same thing happened last year St Albuquerque. He started the sea.son and 1 went in and got three ·hits the next night. JOE FE RGUSON \Vhen he came back he went to the out- field." Ferguson sustained the injury \Vhen he took a foul off the bat of Chuck Gogg in in the top hal~ of the 11th. In the bottom of the I Ith Lopes walked with one out and, took second on a single by Bi ll Buckner. \Villie d.>avis, \\'ho slug- ged a dramatic homer in the bottom ol the 10th inning to tie the game, grounded out as the runn ers advanced .. Yeager then hit a hard grounder to 'third which EYans juggled, letting Lopes score the winning run. "I broke my bat on it," Yeager said. "It looked like it took a bad hop but it Wriglit vs Bly leve n Angels, Minnesota Begin 5-game Set BLOO~UNGTON, Minn. (AP) -The California Angels are on a nine game trip, and they're spending more than half or it visiting the Minnesota Twins. The Angels opened against Chicago taking t\\"O of three games from the White Sox then moved here for.... a five game set opening tmight and winding up with a doubleheader Sunday. Clyde Wright, 5-8, goes for Cali£omia Oa. T V Ton ight Channe l 5 a t 6 against Garden Grove's Bert Blyleven, 8- 7, for the Twin!. 1be Angels have "·on the only two meetings between the clubs this season. Wright, who lost his fll'St five games of lhe season, has won his last two with a six-hit shutout against New York in his last outing. California took the first t w o games from ChicagObut the Sox came back to "in the third 8-3 Wednesday and STiap a five-game losing streak. The loss dropped California 1112 games behind first place Chicago }n the American League West. TI1e game also marked the first ap- pearance at the plate this season by a pitcher in the American League since the designated hitter rule took effect, It was not a-milestone as reliever Cy Acosta struck out Acosta speaks no English and respond- ed with a shrug when asked what he thought of his perfonnance. "J didn't realize he was the first one to bat for himself,'' Chicago nianager Chuck Tanner said. C•llftmll Ill Chlc:lp fl) lb rhrbl Alom1r, 2b J o o D P.ke\ly, rt Llen11, 2b 1 0 1 1 Mu1er, di! Plnsoo, If • O I) I) 0.A!", lb F, A11bln1Pn, dh • I) 0 0 • AcPSfil, 11 Ep,steln, lb • l I I) C.Mil'/', 11 Scl!tJl\blum, rf 4 o 2 o Alldrews. lb 8..-ry, cl 3 2 1 O H.Allen, Jb G1H191Wr, lb J o 2 o Leon, n TPf'tlOrg, c 3 O O O Htrrm1nn. t A.Ollwr, Ph I o o o Stlllrp, d Meoll, I I 1 0 0 1 Alv1rMlo. 2b McC r1w. Ph I o 0 o Stone. P OllVl'IOI\, 11 1 0 1 0 N.Av1n. p o o o o hrbef. p 0 0 0 0 Hlnd,P 0000 •II r II rDI 5 2 1 l 5 0 2 I l I I O 1 a o a • 1 1 • 4 a 1 1 a o a a l o a o 2 I 1 I ' 1 2 0 4 2 2 I a a a o TOlillf 3ol 3 I 2 ll)lillf JS I 12 1 C•lifornl1 010 000 IOI -J Cllicffo 00'2 000 60ll" -I e -Ltorl, DllV111on, P. kllly. DP -C1Uf0ml1 1, Chlc:lfO l. L06 -C1Ufl0ml1 '· Chlct90 7. 26 -Hfft!'l'lllll'I, Atldttwl . HA -P. Kiity (1), sa -P. Kiiiy, Mvstr. SF -Hetrm11nn. 11" H II Ill II SO N.Ay•n (L •• ,., •·1/J 10 1 , 2 • a1roer a 2 1 1 o a Hine! \.'Il l 0 0 0 l I 'S!Pn~ 6-2/J 1 2 2 2 • Ac°'" iw.2-n 2-113 1 1 a 1 a Time -2;.M. Atttnd•nc1 -lt,14 . ··r \\1anted to take Dick AJ!en out and put Tony Muser, the designated hitter, at first. In order to do that Acosta was left in to bat for All en. A pitcher must bat in place of the substituted defensi\·e player," said Tanner trying to explain the move. Pat Kelley's three-run homer off loser Nolan Ryan keyed a six-run seventh in- ning that carried ChicagO tO victory. Acosta .allowed only one hit in the 214 innings he ~·orked and got the \Vin. Tanner said, "There seemed to be a feeling we 'd end our losing streak. "I think a team gets up when it races a great pitcher like Ryan. I know our ~ ponents are up when we pitch Wilbur Wood." Ryan vtent 6 1/3 innings, giving up 10 hits and seven runs. He walked only two and struck out six. Ryan was puUed ror Steve Barber In the sixth. The six strikeouts boosted his major league lead to 155. Ryan, now 8-8, said "I'm thro .... ing hard as ever. But I just haven't put it all together SO far this season." UCI Doubles Duo In Quarterfiii~ PRINCETON, N.J. -UC Irvine's Mike Fishback and Greg Jablonski made their way into the quarterfinals in doubles of the NCAA University division tennis championships by defeating the seventh-- seeded doub1es team Wednesday. Fishback and Jablonski defe ated 1'1ia mi of FTorida 's Bob Rasgado and Bill Zeilman, 7-6, 4-6, 6-2 in third round ac· lion. UCI's other doubles learn. Bob Chappell and GleM Cripe were eliminated by a North Carolina doubles tea m, 6-2, 2~. 7.S. UCLA's Jeff Austin whipped Paul Van Min of 'fennessee 6-0, 6-1, in the fourth round of play at the tournament, which """ through Saiurday. Top.seeded Alex Mayer of Stanlonl kept his team within a point ot leader UCLA by eliminating Mike Cahill or Ala· bama &-2, &-3. Southern California was one point rarthcr back in third place. The Trojans Rre led by second-seeded Raul Ram irez. \\'ho .beat John Burrman of Trinity &-4. 1- 6, 6-2. doesn't matter as long e we win." Three times the £>o!:tgers had to come from behind, marking their 20th come· \ from·behind victory ol Lhe year. Down $-3 in the 10th after Da\.'~ Johmon had slugged his 14th home run In the top half of the inning, Buckner led off the bottom or the JOth "ith a double. Davis, \\'ho Tuesday night joined the 2,IX»-bit circle with a 1home run, hammered Rorie Ha rrison 's first pitch high into the , rightfield pavilion to tie the game. . "I was going d'or a homer," Davis said later. "I think he (Harrison) got tired and I got lucky." !Tonight-the Dodgers-aruLBrav.:es WI!"-" ----1 elude their £ou!'-game series "'hen Claude Osteen. 8-3, opposes Carl Morton, 6-2. Henry Aaron, who has missed four straight games. probably will be back in the lineup. He had a boil on his leg lanc- ed prior to \Vednesday night's game. . . . At1111!1 IJI LK A ....... ('1 Hrhrlll Nrhrttl Garr, ti S 0 I 0 Lopas, 2b ~ I 0 0 M.Perei. s1 11 o a a Suckn...-, 111 6 1 2 o Ev11ns. Jb ~ I 1 O \\l.Dllv!1, cl It I 2 2 8•ker, cl ' 2 2 o Ft1'9u1on. c 4 l 1 0 D11.JOM5on, 2b $ 2 J 4 YMOfl". t 1 0 0 a Lum, lb • o I 1 W.Cr1wlord. rf t 1 1 0 Os.Brown, If J O I O Cey, 3b 4 0 1 0 Te11«1lno, HI a 0 a 0 RUISlll, IS • 1 2 1 Oltfl, c S O 3 O Jc:.hu.t, II • 0 2 2 H•rrllOn, " 3 o a o Brewer, p o o O 0 Frl1ail•, p o o o o 00Wnlf'l9, p J a o o Gogoln, ph 1 o o o Hovgh, 11 o a a o Schuelw, p O O O O PIClordl. II l 0 0 0 Tot1l1 "1 5 n s Tot111 .o ' 11 s Two out wnen wlnnlf'l9 run 1co•N. A!l1nt11 102 OOD 000 10 -S Los Anotles \ 020 100 ooo 2 1 .... • E -Garr, Oil. Johnton. LOB -All1nl• ,, LC11 ArllJC'les 11. 28 -Da. Johl!IOl'I, W. D11vl1, Ottn, Svckn•r. HA -o.. Johnson CU I, W. Dllvls (11). se -J°'hUI 2. 0$. arciwn. Hltt lfOn, Oow11L1'19. SF ~ Joshu•. ••• H1rri!oOl1 '·2/J 10 S frl••ll• 2/3 o a Sthueler (L,2·31 2JJ 1 1 Oownlrt11 ,.2/J 12 S Hougti 2/J 0 0 Brewer (W,4-1) 1 O o Tim. -3:10. Alll'tldlnc• -14.1 ... I ll: 11 SO . ' ' . . ' ' l ' 5 • ' ' . ' ' . , Wottle Says Mile Record Within Reach EUGENE, Ore. (AP ) -"I knew I had him after three laps," exulted Dave Wot· tie, victor over Steve Prefootaine Wednesday night In a sizzling mile clock- ed at 3:53.3. Another Olympic gold medal-wlnnec, Rod Milburn, equaled his_ own world record in the 120-ySrd high hurdles at 13.0 seconds. No one was within 10 yards at the futlsh. ..LL _ How fast could he have gone? "J tnOw it Yr"OUld have been under 13.0," said Milburn , lhe J:;CAA 'champKln from Southern ·Univieraity1 The performances of Wotlle and f..Iilbum wer~ the highli~'ts in a nearly im promptu track and fieTd meet attended by 12,()(11) delighted fans. 1be meet was pulled fi)gether-during 'tbei>'iSt Jhre.· weeks to raise funds to restore the west grandstands at Hayward Field, where the University of Oregon has developed ro many distance ruMers. Wottle, formerly of Bowling Green but now serving a 91klay tour in the Air Force, called it a perfect race. Prefon- taine, winner 'of Ihe NCAA and AAU three miles in the past two weeks, set the pace with Wottle a half stride behind. "I was waiting for the -rig_bt time to kick," said Wottle. "I relt 1 had him going into the last lap. lie tried to break it at the three-quarter mark, but I hadn't even started to breathe hard then." They were timed at 2:56 for three quarters, five seconds faster than Wot· Ue's previous best. "I round out "'hat I always had thought," said WotUe, "that I can kick after a 2: 56 or 2: 57 three quarters." can he go faster? "Yes," 1'Plied Wot· tie.· But can he beat Jim Ryim's worid recon1of3:51.l? "I would never say that ... I'm pretty sure I couldn't have run a 3:51 today," be said. "But if someone had come up on my shoulder, I had something left and could have gooe raster." Wottle said Prefonta ine, ,.,>flo was tim· ed in 3:54.6, also can run faster. He pointed out that Pre has run five top long-distance races in the past t\\ov weeks. \VotUe and Prefootaine leave together tor Europe this month for a swnmer's campaign against Europe's best. Only l!yun and Kip Kelno ol Kenya have run the mile faster than WotUe, whose previous best was 3:57.1 at the NCAA meet this year. He also holds the «IO-meter world record at 1:44.3. Six runners were under the once-fabled four minutes in Wednesday night's race. John Hartnett of Villanova was third at 3:54.7; Paul Geis of the Univel'3ity ot Oregon was f<iurth at 3:58 ; Len Elmer of canada was fifth at 3:58.5, and Jlm Johnson of Club Northwest v.·a.s sixth at 3:58.8. 1 Ille Nastase Of llomani, and Alex A1etre.vell ol .. tbe _soviet Union ·advanced to the fourth l'OW1d tn the men's com· petition, Nastue with a &-<I, S.2 vjctory over Ray Moore of South. Africa and Metrevell by topping New ZealMder Brian Fairlie 6-Z, 7-5. Jn ~ round aetjon, Jimmy Coo· '"°rs scored a 6-4. 6-4 triumph over John Cooper of AUJtralla ·and Eddie Dibbl edg- ed Mike Estep, 6-3, 7-9, 6-3. Nastase, winner of the Forest Hills. Fre~h and Italian UUes in the last clgbt month.\ round himself left almost alone. Slan Smith ol Pasadena who beat Nastase !JI tbe 1m Wimbledon final , had ~· So had Australia's John Newoombe, Ihr....time "1nner of Ihc ti· Grid Power Shifts to West--·Jordan Wells Acquit~ed BERKELEY ~ Wamn Welb, former a&ar wide receiver for the Oaldand Raiders of the Natlonal Football l<l!•guc, 11as 1cqu11Icd-6f a d111ti1Cdflvlng charge 1n Mll!llclpal Court WednesdRy. But Judge \Yllllani J_ McGui neSJ itehcdulcd another ·hearfn 2 for June 2J on charges· or dlsturbl.1g the pctc~ tind resisting an offi cer. tie; veleran campaigner Ken Rosewall of LUBBOCK" Te<. CAP) -Aubum-OllllCb AustraUa' and Arthur Al'he of 1\khmond, Ralph "Shu!" Jonlan reets the balance of Va, . collegiate foollJ\lll power -Just like Of the 16 original 'seed.I, Ollly Na stase' \J'ICk, bOseball a,nd basketball -is shll· ahd J lio "odes ol. Ciechoslovakla were Ung to tbe teemlna: populations of the lcll. WW Col\sl. Nastase 1s a member fl( 'ATP and had '''.For o nlll11bel' of f."a rs Ihe Pac Eight pledged to join in the boycott II Pille wu wn.• dowp, b11t lhcy ve .-.nded tn a no! allowed to play; But the ll0mnnian1-m.mg war .. , I wouldn't be.aurprlsed IC Nntiorinl Tennis As90Ciatlon t'Jephoned the balance· or power Is shifting to tha~ Nastase Wednesday ~nd gave hlln place," said Jordan. \Yho Is tile East crdcrs. coach In Sllturday night's 13th an nu al "I shall play," he Id. C0'1chcs Ali·Amcric. footbnll game here. fl will please the girls who flock to "l was out 1here lCAliro111\R) th.ls sum· I mer end they've got somelhlng like 22 million people," Jordan said. "That's compared with 3.7 mlllion in my state (Alabama I. Thert are bound to be great athlelel. They've got great coaching and great weather. "Track has always been a phenomena.I sport out there. So has baseball. Some of IJlei r_basketball playen aren't from califomla buT'lhej sure -do-a-good job or re<:ru!Ung. "1 Jordan said, '11 know we have substan-- Iial football in the Deep Sou th. It's good in the Big 10, the Big I and the Southwest Confertflcc, but all those people on the West Coast kind ol ~ yoo." Jolm McKay, coach ol the nailonal cha111t1ioo Southern California Tro- jan's. LS the mentor for the West. squad. McKoy has brought five of hb playrn wllh him for this game. 1'Now, thnt John ·Is a One person and a great coach,'' said Jordon ln a drawl. u1 hate to put the heat on any coacll, but he ought to be Iavored In this game. II•'• got some of his own playel'1 and then gets his pick Imm Oklahotna, Tex as. and Nebraska. I'd ••Y Io ma ke the Wc9! the favorile would be a step !JI tho right direction." Jordanl, it might be noted Ls a master at psychology. His club upset Colorado in the 1972 Gator Bowl to culminate a l~l Cinderella season which also included a victory over arch rival Alabama. ·i1n a game like this, It doeSn't hurt to try to. fire your t'am up," Jordan lliD- ned. '"l'hey already know how to lilock arMl tackle."' The Ells! StWU1Cd Ihe favored West u. 20 last year to draw the 11Cf1es evm II sl• game! apl.... . \ I • • -- Decke1·'s I Wharton Glides Into Final Tumble J Kills Bid A Study in Confidence, Poise, Ability ~·~~;,·1 ... . By ROGll:ll CAllLSON lenslve tbr<al, Steve Sincock, maMln( • lorword poet Satut· Corooa de! Mar had • By STEVE BRAND .. .. o.tty "11111 Sl.tt 1'1ary Decker's plan of recording a sizzling 880 tin1e In the AAU 'Girl's Cham- pionship! and then relaxing in the Women's Championships were left on the track Wednes- day afternoon at UC Irvine. The 14-Yeat"<>ld G a rd en Grove numer, who has the fastest 880 in the nation thiS yeflr, was en route to another swift time when, with 150 yards to go, She suddenly fumble<fto the aU-weather Tartan track as four pursuers sped past. She got up to finish third in 2:11.1 and her coach, Don De.Noon. who just 24 hours earlier had predicted a world recor.d for his top athlete, an- nounced she would be fit ror the Women's champiooships starting Friday morning at 8:30. Robin Campbell v.·on the feature race in 2:08.3 and Miss Decker barely missed catch- ing Lynn HoUins for second. "Robin ticked her with her spikes," says DeNoon. "li.1ary was furious with herself but vowed she'd be back for the Women's championships." The fall put a damper on the competition which saw 15-- year-old ·Cindy Gilbert of Oceanside come with in an inch or the American record in t.he high jump, soaring 5--10,-and fonner La Jolla Track Club teammate Karen Smith win her third consecuti ve javelin title in a meet record 177-0. • •• I - "lt was great," said a surprisingly subdued M i s s r-~:r--'--A> ,JU~· Gilbert. "but now it's in the past and we can't live on past accomplishments. All I want is the Women's championships MIKE BERRY (40), TODD COLLINS GIVE THE SOUTH A REBOUNDING EDGE °' "' ..., -"'" a ~Int •vttage player for day, b Ucktltd for duty at history of winning one-polm C«lfldence mean> a tot In 1wo year1, to six counters. guorcl at Lo)'Olo University. gallltll In ltls .26-2 II<-' and •--•~u ~-d I J fl hi of g f the The pobed M, 180-pounder Whartai 1wns up the Sea ~and~-• Mar " e t 13 I rom lsn~ worried~ the traml· kings' winnlnl ways thb way. m,h's Jeff wtwton ls an ex-~: J!;.~t i!~as ~ t~ uon, itaUng, "J've been "When ll came down to the cellent example ol what It can something else for us," says working at guard durinfl' the Jut shot we knew we could do do for• player, South coach Tandy GUlb, spring.summer seam and l It. And that'• probably why we As a jwilor he was the sixth know my assigrµnents. lt's did." man on Oorona d e I Mar's "Thal Millikan game pve Juat a motl« ol dolng II." His collegiate studies figure vanity. But as a senior be me \my confidence," says The Corona del Mar whiz to include a bualness major. made h1a mi.rk in his first Wharton, as he prepares for credits his coach, Gillis, for but a.nythlng past that Isn't outing end It gave him the the ellhth amiuat Nortb·South being contemplated at this most of his succe11, but aJ> tlrn confidence and Impetus to go All-star game at Orange Coaat e. oo. to capture 9eOClllll i.om All· College Saturday night, hls parently will min some of the Although he appean to be CIF AMA honors In the Sea final. sppeorance under Giiiis. defensive action qalnst the the mUdeot tempered playe<on Kings' Irvlne League cham· "I re'Rliud I'd be relied on a North'• Mike Dunn Saturday. the court with his matter or pionship campaign. lot ffiOfe as a senior and I just "I wu hoping to gt:t a ·shot fact ways -chances are he'll In-the opener a g-a-i n 1-l-went out-and-did it," add1.--at Dunn defenslvelyrbut coach_____ be the hJ h scorer of the even- ?lfllllkan he scored 218 points Wharton. wants me to guard Magnolia's ng, too, wltlfl'iISflUJd-style-or-- and held MUllltan's No. t of-Wharton, altho111h he 'll be Bob Holgale," says Wharton. play. Can Anteaters Duplicate Banner Year in Athletics? UC Irvine has had a very successful year in NCAA athletic competition. The Anteaters have ~·on the baseball and teMis championships on the college level and have finished second on two other oc- casions and fourth in another during the year. Ed Newland's water polo team finished second to UCLA in the finals at Belmont HOWARD HANDY • say1 with confidence. rtlcNamara'1 reflectlou 01 tbe lltb auual NCAA college dlvl1lon &ouraament jut com· pleted at East Stroudsburg State College : "The tennis is 10 macb better DOW than It ba1 been tbat tltere II no comparison. I wa1 talking with the referee of the meet and he told me that nooe of dte leeded playen In the t• toarnament at Eut Stroudsburg could bave made the top 11 IA this year's event "nil k the same mu wlM .wu rtferee at both touraamenta," Myron acids. "Wltb our new courts and wltll the people in Ule area 1upportlq 111 Uke tbey do, I>m sure the tournament wlll ~ .1 treOModous IUCCHI next INIOll.11 UCI bolts lite tennis cbamplomblpo la 1171, How ·-Ille Alllulen ud lbelr lourlh 11rat1ht cbamplomblp1 JEFF WHARTON and I'd like to go 5-11 or better ---------------------------------- there." Plaza pi>ol io get the year siarted. The UC! swimming team also finished second in the coJlege divtslon competition and Jerry Hul- bert's golf team did a tremendous job in placing fourth in the goU championships just completed. "They're all nyta1, 'tlMlle dad-pmmed Anteaten. Tltey rull7 1Uek &oset.ber'," tltt coacb sa)'I. Yankees In 65-54t She did not jump aftCr clearing S-10 Wednesday, leav- ing Eleanor ~1ontgomery·s American mark 0£ 5--1 1 intact. Competition starts Friday morning in the Women's championships ~ith semifinals scheduled in eight running ·events and the discus in the _ afternoon -sectiOn at 4 p.fu . All or the finals are se t Saturday starting at 1 p. m. 100-1. AlndolDl'I CSpofll lnltrn.B· llon1ll lll,7, 2. C.l1y (Ml.,.O!" H•tc!'tr'I YF) 10.1, 3. Abolrl (Mickey•• MllJllHI 10.t , A. Miii« (R1vtn1w00dl 10.t , S, 01nlelt (MOlor Cltv, PALI 1C.9, 6. Wiison (New YO!'k City PAL ) 11.1. 710-1. Ab1r1 ~Mick..,..._ Mlulle~l 24.7. 2. l!l•v•nl IMurdlf...itn 12•.3. 3. Bl•• .. .,. !Motor c uv"Tc1 2•.3, .._ A't-1•r· rill lo.l•w•rt l :U.•. j , Wllll•m' (Ml.,.111' H1h;1Wr1l 74.... 6. R-•Klrl fL•Motl TCJ 20. •41>-1. WM!lln IWIWs S<plkfl+et) SS.ti, 2. Hudeon (Albu<w•nw-orvmPl!lffll SS.ti, l. C1ml!IM!I (Splf'l1 lnltrnat!onet) JJ.•, 4. Roben.on (LOI An;t1fl TCl SJ.6. J. Vtller tl!llue Rlllbon TCl )6.A, '6. RelM•rntn (NW Sut:Klr'Hn TC, 111.) $6.1. aeo-1. C1mpbell ISpor!• lnTtrn•· tlonal) 2:0l.3, 7. Hollln1 (Spor!I Unlt!'dl 2:Ht.S. J. ~~itr (Blut Af>Qlh TC! 2:11.1, 4. G•ll•h« f"""*'I• TC) 7:11.J, s. Doi. v1ner c••ue ruooan1 2:12 .... '· OI. Vtllll' (Blue Ribbon) 2: 16.J. Milt! -1. O..,,tler (Un1lll "!>3.7. 2. f:nnl1 {NLll1tY TCI 4:5•.1. J. Ant~ [WUl'1 5plktt!tll 4:SS.6, '· Eberly !Sa!\ Jose Clf>lltrD•lsJ S:00.5. J, J1rvli 1Ke1- l1trlt1t1 Slrhse..1) S:00.6, 6. Scllllly !SYrK\IW U. TCl S:Ol.0. lflG.Me!er Hurdln -1. 1<ru<;1 (LI JoU1 TC) 13.tw, 2. Nffl (Phllecltlpt\11 H1wt\1) 13.t , 3. MC:Mlllln CUn1111 U.I. I. Whffl.,. (Fllft!Nd VllltY TCI U,4, J. Cl1rke (Lii JofJa TC ! 11,I, " Poirier (l'r9derlct TCJ 1•.S. .ao-Mller HU<'Olt\ -1. Crowder ! l• Mlrlcl1 Met-1) 62.J (MH1 rtcordl, 2. See TRACK, Page lO . DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS '71 Chrysler Newpot"t "•rdtop, tult lrlf!S. •Ir cllMlilioni,., po-"""'"'· A y1rv CIMn C••· Only 1977°" (5140(11 '70 luick E1t1te Wagon ' P•11 .. ••to""r>c: IT1n1. l1ctorv etr, 11f conllllltnlrt1, powtr ""'int· Only 2777oo (1t1ESPI '6f Ced. Eldorado ll'lltly 1w1,p..i, O.rt-• Cir Only 3277'° IYOLlUI '6f 'ord y, To" , SH .. VI, C•rnotr TOP. "'W '°"""· .... ., 1"1r A Trl•. Onlr 177700 (J7SUOI '6f Dodge hl•r• 4 OR, "INltl,, ••tlnMtlc lr1n1, •Ir eonfltlillllnt· ........ •fMriltt, 111 ... T11nt-1 11., Mllclll. 1111, Only 7.77" 40 Coast Area Swimmers To Compete at S,anta Clara A contingent of 40 swim- mers from three Orange-Coast area AAU aq uatics clubs will be comPeting thi~ weekend in the ~ta Clai;a lrttemational . swimming and divirig 1nect, • beginning Friday. Eleven foreign countries have entered swimmers in the meet~ incluqmg Australia'S Shane Gould wh<l "'on five medals at the A1unich O!ym. pies. Fountain Valley's Shirley Babashoff , who hos waged some great duels \\Tith Miss Gould in the Olympics and subsequent meets, heads a contingent of 20 swimmers from the Huntington Beach Aquatic Club "'hich will com· pete in the meet. Dave Barron. a collegiate A 11 -A m c r i ca o in the b r e as t s l r o kc fron1 the University of KentuCky who has been "·orking out with the Mlssion Viejo Nada dores will lead a 13-swimmer delegation from that club , and seven more are scheduled to com· pcle from the Newport·Irvine-- i\-lesa Aquatics Association tcan1. Other top Olympic medalists who will participate include Canada's.Leslie Cliff l400 JM), Bruce Robertson (100 but· terfly) and Donna Atarie Gurr (200 backstroke); Ea st German double gold medalist Roland Mathes and Sweden's dou ble gold medal winner Gunnar LarSOll. U.S. medalists scheduled to compete include breaststrokers John Hencken and Cathy Carr, free-stylers Rick DeMont and Keena. Rothharnmer, and back· stroker Melissa Belote. A rundown of local entrants: M11nllntfM •Hell .....-ua J.ck l!l•b•1lloff -100, 200, .00, 15(11) lrH1tvl1 ; KIYln BDClll.,. -100, 10D bl(k,""100 IM1 Ptl.,. SP11ntm -100, 200 lrH '. 200 11.,.1 S•m Fr.1nlllfn -100 W(k, 100 llY1 l!lruct Furntts -100 W(k. 100 lrM, 200 frM, 200 IM ; 11111 Miiier -100, 200. a . uoo. trH . 100. XIO Uy ; 100 IM; Ktn Wllll1 -200 11.,.; Witt 01YIS -\Of), 2!111 llrll ll; Ktvln WUH1ms -200 bruit, 100 lree, 100 1>r1111; 1!1111 Kl119tt>urv -100, 200 lr.e: J tfl Aol1n -100 frM, \Of) 11.,-. Shlrlev B1be111ott-100, XIO, 400, 1..lOO ''"· 11;111, 200 bfMtl. :KIO, AOO Im; Susi• Whll1k1r -100 beck, 100 l rH. 100 fty, 2«1. a IM; Vl llrll' Lie -100, 200, 400 free; 100, 200 11!; S!acy Pltfl -ll!'i 200 brtl$1; Oil* e Holf -.iQCI lr"9, '.lW lrtt1 Kelly H•mmllt -100 frff. :KIO lrtt1 Ttrrl Cltrkt -100 frff: P•m Baughman -100 frH. Mi ...... V .. I• H11!1 ...... 01ve Bl rron -100 br11i1; Alck Wlndt1 -20), «IQ, UOO 1 .. 1; T1.,.1or Howt -r111vt: T1rrv Stoddtrd - r1l1y1: l!lol:I JOhnlon -rtllylJ Mlkt Suchy -r111r1J Peouv Totd.61 -100. "' "l' 100, 200 fret : Cllh_y Howt -«IQ, 3)t) lrtti 0 11111 TOOJflf•r - rell Vli' VlclOl'I• Rf'll .. rd -''""'" Amy MOWI -rl!layt; J1ntl Mltltr - rel111; Oottlt GrHnltl1I -r111vt. HfW,.,..·MIMl•lrvl!ll' A111tf!fllln Mlkt C1rn1h1n -100 fly, 100 'f"· 400 medlt l r1l11, 400 lrtt rtll VI Im RID•" -00 lllCk. ml'ClltY rt1•v; L••· TY Glllt -r1l1y1; 1(1yln 111111 -rel•YI Mi ki Y1r-.:I -100 brltll '"d -mtodlfY rtl•.,.1 M1rk Otlmoncl -no11YIO AmY ROii -HlO Uy, Baseball Standings Ai\lERICAN LEAG UE , East Dlvillon w L Pct. GB Ne\v York 35 30 .538 A'1ilwaukee 34 30 .l\11 l,~ Baltimore 30 28 .5 17 11,~ Detroil 32 31 Boston 31 31 Cleveland 24 41 \\7es t Division Chicago l\1innesota Kansas City Oakland Angels Texas 33 27 33 28 37 32 35 31 33 30 21 39 W""""dl'l"I Glrl'ltt Clev•l•nd 7. D11roll 6 Chlc•go •. An1111 l N.w Yorlt 2, 81111~ 1 .508 .500 .369 .550 .541 .536 .530 .524 .~50 K1nw1 City s. Olkl•nd 4 !1 2 !Mint•) l!loslon ). Mllw•ulle@ 2 Tt~11 J, MinnetOI• G ThurtdeY'I Olmtl 2 2\l II C1t11el1nd (Perry ••l 11 Mllw1IJllH (1!1111 7"11) ~roll (Lone~ , .. J ,, NtW Vor1r !Doblon 1-1) B•lllmort CP1lm1r 7-4) 11 ll0tlon {T11nt Ml Allttll 1Wri9M J..I) If MlnMtoll fl!llylevtn 1-1) O•kl11nd (Holt1m1n ll·S) el Chltl!IO (!t•hnten ,., Only Dlrt>H ICfl«luled. l"rlfl1''t t;.,.,., ~troll et New Yo•k e11Umort at Boston, 2 Te~•• •• 1<1nsa1 CllY Cltvel•nd 11 MUw11,1kH ot.111tlt 11 Ml"l'lflOll Otkl•rid •I cn1u110 • NATIONAL LEAGUE t:ast Division w L Chicago 40 28 f.1ontreal 31 28 St. Louis 30 33 New York 28 32 Philadelphia 29 35 Pittsburgh 27 34 West Division Dodgers 42 25 San Francisco 4-0 29 Cincinnati 30 29 Houston 37 31 Atlanta 28 311 Ssn Diego 21 46 Wtcll'lttllt't Glm11 Cll'l(lnnall 1, Stn FflMiKO S Pl'll1'61lohl1 '· Ntw Yorli: l Ch1CIDO s, Pllhbureh , Monfrffl s. $1. LOUii , Sen OINO .6, Hol.rslon 2 DHttrt " ""U•nt1 J (11 l!1nlnt1! '""'"""'· ·-· Pct. ,531l .525 -478 _467 .453 ,443 .627 .580 .SM .S44 -418 . 313 GB 4'> 7~? 8 9 91,l: 3 5 51,~ 14 21 Montrtll ll!onemtn 1'31 11 It, Lou11 (Glbton .. , Clndnntll ll!lllllflQtlem t·J or Gflmt11Y •·SI •I "" Frent;IKO {l!lrldllV S-.J) ' Houslllfl (Wiison Ml 11 Si n 01"!1 IA•lln 1_.J Nirw Yor1i: (l(ootlnfln IMJ •I PUtlburell CWllk· ... 2·J) A!11ntt {Morion •Sl •I °"''" 10.lttn ... ll On!.,. 111mt• KlledUIH. 'ricll'fl OtnMt PhllaMlpllle •t Monlr111 N&W York II Plt111)ur111 Cllluto 11 SI. LOUls Allenl• 11 S•n Dtl90 Clnclnn1!1 ti DMttn Houtton •I Sen ~•nc:l1co • J\fcN1mara .. proad of tlall fact ud 11)"1 bl1 ·sroap wu oae of tlte few In attenduce that ate to1etber, worked oat together and stayed to1etber durlq lite toura1meat. Conquest A banner year in athletics for the Ant· eaters and one that may not be topped too soon !Jy UCI-or by any other school for th.at matter. A few switches have been made by UCI North coach Tom Danley ~ball players for the summer. unleased his 1-2-1·1 zone press Jerry Maras decided to remain at home in-in a practice game at Orange There are those who feel the UCI program has moved ahead enough since-its inception to move to the university level. But basket· ball, and If a football program b IMllgaled, takes a bit more time for development than most of the other sports menUoned. stead of reporting to Fairbanks, Alaska. His Coast College Wed n es d a y ptace_wu taken_b~ G@!l'J'f!!telvl:k. ____ _w,a!!t andjhe lacUc reslllted !!!__ Gary is in training in Hawaii with the team a 65--54 conquest for the North now and In his ftrst relief stint pitched two u it prepares for Saturday'• innings, sbikinl out five ol six batters. "1beir. general manager called me to uk skirmish with the South ln the Whatever the future, the nation knows of the prominence of UCI athletic teams and will be cognltant of the program for many years to come. if Rich Molina wu available to play center· eighth annual Orange County field for Fairbanks," coach Gary Adams All-atar basketball aame. says, The North, a fiye-polnl ~follna is married and 'l'Wking during the underdog to coach Tandf summer months and hid to pms up the "Everybody 't com:1 &o ta next June to compete ln Ute NCAA eollele dlvilkla teaall cblmjlOUblps," coach MyroD McNaman chance to play but chances are good that Gillls' South contingent, relied right fielder Clark Schenz will pll)' wllh on the press defensively and lhe'teiim. a potm\ low poet otrense allllfld. arowid Katella High .standout Versatile Sea King Thinks About Future All-star Nines Mix Tonight llflke Dunn. When the Yanks turned 10 other things than DuM for their offense il was built around the passing game wllh aeveral players shining or- ByHANKWE!Oi 01 ftle ~'Y Pl ... Stiff ~1att Keough sat relaxed in "'hat is becoming his natural habitat -a baseball dugout - and talked about his past, present, atrd future. The phrase that kept crop- ping up in the conversation wal'""""very forlwlate." But if fortune has smiled on llfatt Keough. it is mostly in the wake of skill, a cc:mmodity \Vhich he possesses in spades on neatly any athletic field . Keough will beatarting tonight for 1he South t~am In the county all·slar baseball game. On Saturday he will be In the outfield for the Southern Callfomia all-stars In the state North-SOuth basebell game at Candlestick Park in San Fran- cisco. In order to pracUce for the two baseball games. he had to give up a spot on the South team for the county All-star basketball game which will also be played Saturday, After Saturday, he'll ponder whether to accept. an offer to 10 Into prolessklnal baseball, or attend Arit..ona University, where he has signed a letter of In lent. The son of former major league star Marty Keough, Matt's athletic prowess could be taken for granted by !IO!lle, but not by Matt, "I was very fortunate in that even though my dad was a great athlete, he didn't say 'here IOI!. you play basebell too,' " Matt recalls. "He let me chooAC whit I wanted to do, and although he offers advice. he doesn•t push m<. "I WI.I very fortW)At• t4 move to Corona del Mar, wbert I think they hove the best hlllh school coechet and the bell athletic J>rOlr•m at\' school tould hove. "And I "'' really honored to be picked lor th• three all· star teams. Any o n e "'Ould hove been. areal opportunity, but all lhfff Is unbellevable ." To earn lhe honors, Keough was an all-league and all-coun· ty selection In boskelball, MATT KEOUGH Its roster girded with four Orange Coast representatives, the South hopes to end a tv.·ir game losing streak in the an- nual Orange County All·star baseball game tonight at La Palm$ Park in Anaheim. Game time is a o'clock. Orange County's top hlgh school players of the 1973 season, divided into North and South unill, will vie in the sixth ann~I game. The South won the first three conte1ll, but the North ha• captured the lut two games and Is a slilht favorite to even the .series tonighl Pitching and power hlttln1 rtln 14 7 abound on both 9quads, ond spo g 8 · average. In coaches Henchtl Mu 1 ic t bueball, he hit .407 In league play, and pitched a ~hitter (Santa Ana Valley) of the against Estancia, eamed all-South and Bill McIntire league, all-county and all.C!F. (Western ) of the l'lorth like A strained elbow hindered thetr chances in what looks to be a close game . hls pitching th.11 season, and Corona del Mar atandoul probably wss the main ream Mall K"""fb wUI -be I/le he was "only" a seventh-round 1tlrtlnJ pitcher for the South, pick by the Oakland Athletics while Sooon rlahl·hander Jim in the major league draft. He Petersen draws the 1tart for has been offered a falr bonus the North. to sign with the major tea1ue Both pltcb«1 _were All.CIF team, but has hesllaled to sign selectloos, and Petenon was since the A's will not agree to the AA ployer of the year two provide for hi s educauon as years ruM~. Keough la part of the contract slated to play nrst base when "I'd like to see that l get he Isn't pltehlng. guaranteed ati education, so Other Orange Coast area I'll be sure to .get -one,"----othlelel ln·lhe South lineup lo- Keough says. "The money elude first. bueman st.eve really doesn't mean anythlnl Deeter (FOlmlaln Valley), lo- to me.1 • fielder .Ron Swanton (Marina) His plans. if he doesn't sign and ouU!elder Srotl Bradley a professional contract, Include (Westml111ter). studying law and playing Two other Orange Coast baseb311 st Arizona, athletes who were on the And Keou&h hed one im-South rooter but signed pro- portant plan In mind for to-lmlonal conlrocts are Brian day, S101le CHlmU,.ion Beach) ond He wu golnc to miss a Bob Palmer (Corona dol practice with the state te&ll' to Mar). ' tour lhe county Children'• Following Keo u I h • s ex· Hospital with the county peeled openJnc rtlnl of thrM buoballcrs. That was one irlp JMlngs, 1he South will pllc:h he hadn't been fortunale Charlie Phillips of Lo Quinta, enOU&h to make last week with Tom Webb of Santa Ana and the bnskclball learn, RDd Jett of Pacifica . fensively . , A mild surprise was the tenacious board work of EL Dorado High's Jeff Van Winkle . Van Winkle scored 15 polnt3 in the second hair of play and was o n e oC the 1nainstays Jn an attack that generated a 19-4 outburst in the lblrd quarter to put Orange Coast away. The North had a two-point advantage at the half, but the press, combined with nirty play from Tim Tivenan, Dunn and Van Winkle, turned thlngs around and by the time the third quarter was over the islue was decided at 51-34 . The press accounted for 14 Orange Coast turnovers In Ux- flrst half and It was Tlvenan who Was doing most of the damage u the safetyman_ OCC would break the press and appeared to have an easy bucket coming to It only to soe Tivenan st~p In and transform two poinui into a h.tmovtr. He did it four times in the first half. Only a poor s hooting performance from the field by t'1e North In the fir>t ball kept the score close. The Yankees offense ap- peared well oriented and Danley hod hit crew looking for the good lhot In -lhe physical lell with Oronge Coul. Donley hu hit teom schedllled for a morn lnJ workout at Katella Friday in the final tuneup b e f o r e Saturday's club with the South. The South mnalns a flv•-polnl favorite. ,, . Le9lo1a Baseball . ' • 011e-lritte1· Paces Westminster, 13-0 1'1111 Jiichard~ pitched <• oni:-the eig:ht innings before action hitter, to lead \Vcsltninstcr's \Yas halted because 0 { A1ncr1can Lc~ion b a s c b a I I darkness. teu1n to a11 easy 13-0 viC'lory Wcst1ninster is undefeated over host Fountain Vnlley in Legion play and had a ~ '· \Vcdoesday urtcrnoon I o lead going into t., sixth ~ghl ight uclion a long tl1c fra~. range Coast. D_a~ Accomando opened the f\1ission Viejo lost. :inothcr inning with a triple and the ·hcartbreakcr, 5-4, to Plucenti:I Westtninster team soored nine in inte1·Jeaguc play while the times bcrore the final out was San Clcn1cntc B tcum was los· rt.'t'Orded to increase the ~~g to visiting So.ddlcback, 12· n1argin to 13-0. ~11ssion Viejo played in '11\e San Cll'mcnte A squad tough luck again, dropping a "'as forced 10 postpone its one-run decision on a ques. schetlulL'<l ~a1nc \1,tilh Garden t1onable call and some weird --Gro~e..for-laclc..or ~ ficld---haie..nmning------ l~1~hurds had hUte troub}c After sPotling Placentia a 4-- 1now1ng down the Fountain O advantage, Tim Taylor and V.fllley balt~rs a11d had a no-!lick White singled to set th e !utter for fi ve frames before stage ror a thrce·run homer by \~1atle jJQrsman singled in the Carl Sandstedt to bring the sixth. count to 4-3. The. }' o u n g \\'t.•stn1inster 'tn the. ·seventh.J T o 11 y hurler hu d 'l•I strikeouts over Hjchardson doubled and scored on a single. by White to ' ! Fisticuf fs close the 1nargin to one run but the scoring ended here. . ;; ( DAILY PILOT Woolard Paces FV; Mesa, Rick Woolard, a sophomore left-hander, picked up a win in a relief role . and ln addition drove in the secood run as Fountain Valley def cat e d Estancia, 2-0, in a night game at Costa Mesa city , park Wednesday night in the Harbor Area summer baseball league. In other games, Co6ta 1-fesa defeated Newport Harbor, 7-2, ·~ Cerw11• Ml Mir C•> Mrllrllol Johnson, ~• 2 1 a a ~0<10.,.1, lb • 2 1 1 Bellrent. rf 4 a 2 J Moll,111 •011 ollnl-d -2 • 0 t Grfllev, ti 3 O o II a':rti:1n"n~: lb l ? ? ~ Moor•,c • lOIO Wllklnson, p 1 2 o o Tot.ii• 30 ' 1 s Hlltlll"lfM a .. dl CSl .. , .. ,..,. M•n•ollno, "hi l o o o Freem1n. rf J o l o Col<!m•n • .»-< ~ o 1 o Ttrrv.lb 4000 Sllmmllll" ,ct l t o 11 Nuctirone, cl 1 O O O VanTIQlltft, II 2 O O O R•lql•r II ! 1.1"'0 O !(lml>•I!, SS 3 a 1 0 Llnd.ir,c 2000 Lucc"911, 3b 0 1 o o DoOO!t5, p O O O O 011S1mor1, If 2 l 2 l Tol•I• 21 3 5 I Scwt IW IMl!lp ' .. Co•on• de! M•• 001 Mii 0-.. 1 3 Huntlnolon IHdl 000 102 ~ s 2 C•I• M-. (7) Corona Win ~nd Corona del ~tar stopped Huntington Beach, 6-3. E<liSon drew a bye and currently ls the only undefeated team in the circuit "'itb a pair ol. wins. Woolard took over f o r starter Bob Patison in the fifth inning with Doug Ziessoer finishing the game and strik· ing out 0.1e side in the seventh. It wa1 a sooreless deadlock for five frames before Dave Bienek belted a home run to leadoff the sixth. Corona de! 1-iar put together a four~ fourth inning on the Huntington Beach High dia- n1ond to post a 6-3 verdict o.re e Oilers. Fred Moore brought one run across after a pair or walks with an infield out Tv:o more "·alks loaded the bases with Ken Nogawa 's in~ fie ld hit getting another across and Jim Behrens double scor· ing two more. Paul Dugmore had a homer for Himtl/lilon Beach In the fourth. Costa P.iesa scored five times in the second to Ulke a commanding 7~ lead ln an early game at city park witb Steve DeWildc's single getting a pair of the markers. In the inning, Brian Phelps doobled and Dave Bernhardt had a bunt single, then stole second with Phelps, scoring on a wild throw to centerfield. After-:John-Caldwell-walkedl~. ----.11 DeWilde singled for a pair with the other tv.-'O crossing the plate on an error. Rustelers Top Marines; Metro Mark Now 5-0 Fred 11oover's S e n 1 k the tying marker. Stop Play Mission Viejo had runners on fi rst and second with no outs in the eighth but a pop bunt in the air brought a doublcplay and ended the threat. In another instance during the gan1e. a ~1ission Viejo run- ner reached first base on an error, n1adc a turn and began to run IO\\'ard the dugout thinking he was out. lie \vas tagged out and then the fi lission Viejo tcan1 scored its fourth run. JEFF MALINOFF SHOWS· GARY BRAHS OF COSTA MESA PROPER GRIP. C•ldwell, rt O&WllClf, II Ofol•llV· (: •It r fl rill 0 2 0 0 4 I 1 2 ' 2 t l l 0 t 0 2 0 0 1 4 0 II 0 3 l ' 0 ' 1 1 0 3 0 I 0 l D l O 0 0 •• 21 7 ' ' Rustlers posted their fifth straight victory without defeat in Metro!Xliitan League sum- mer baseball play Wednesday night, ooming from behind with three runs in the seventh to defeat lhe host ~iarine Corps nine , 5-3. Gordoo Blakeley singled to put the Rustlers in front and Curt Peterson doubled in an insurance marker as the undefeated Senik team came from behind for the fourth time in five Metro circuit games this year. In Op en Bl;'lck1cs rollt.'<I lt1 its second straight Costa ~l csa opl'n sun1n1cr 1 l' a g u c buskclb:ill 1riun1ph \Vednesday nigh! with a 61·41 t'Orl<!UeSI of \\'i\son Ford in n gan1c hall.Cd by fis1icurr:s. \Vith 4:25 rcm11ining in rcgu- l;ilion play the g<unc was call- ed when a ph1yl'~ from Wilson 'Ford tangk>d v.'ith former UC! p\;:iyl'r Truy 11olfc. The opener at F;stancia lligh found the Or;int;c Cons! Alum- ni keeping pa<'c by y,·\nning its S<•cond g21ne of the sl!ason. 83- 67 . over Novack. Olackics v.•as paced by · the trio or Jeff Cunninghan1. Jim Kevcs and StC\'l' Sabins. "'ho c..'Oitnectcd for 12. t2 and 11 counlcrs. Brian An1brozich led \V ilson y:ith 17 points. but ii wasn'.t enough lo of fset th e depth of Blackies. Steve Jacobson and-cratg Fak"Qncr led Orange Coast Alu1nni Y.-ith 23 and 20 points, after Novack held a 37.33 hnlftin\C lead. Jacobson scorE.'d 13 counters tn !he second half and Jo~alconcr. currcn1ly uss1sting in the Est<incia Hi gh baskcl· ball program, lallied a doU'n in 1he second half. Novack's scoring leaders were Don Newt on, ~1ark Ramsey and Bob ~1C'Corlnick with 18. 16 and 14. Tonight's l>..'l.ttles include Really and A & ·c at 7: 15. folloY:cd by S a d d l c IJ " c k College and Nads at Cost;.1 1-tcsa lligh. NOVll(k (671 1 '!'t\~ ~ ~ ~ ~ l 10 t 11 1 0 I I \ j 1 u 0 0 I 0 Nc..,1111'1 RolfV Nov.C~ R•...,tc-r Mclee Mt(orMlc~ Sr•uUenti.tn :• 19 L• •I occ Al~ll'lfll llU Tot111 'I ", pl Ip ~ l'.\anc•bo a J 1'-ilt;on.r u, o' >' '4 AolHn\ l• JKOl>~on 10 l .I 1.1 ~alvor ' l • 'I Ac~crman $ 0 J 10 $cnermerhorn 1 0 1 2 ~h~ 31 t 11 IJ 11.i1ttlm•; Nov.it•. J1·J3. , •• ,-.. , (61) Cun"!r><ill•m P~r~t'r ·-Rollt' 7 " • ' . , ' • • t ~ ' , ' , 11 !l Sabi"' 6ur110111m narnt't Gto•Ob To!•ls WolMlll Ftnl t0 ) con-lln AmbtO!•tll ~ .. Gillew•• ,O~IO< '1 '~ . ' ' . I ~ " " ' " ' • ' " l • " • ' • ' ' • .. .. " " ' • • " ' ' ' , • • •'• lt1n-er • • • • ' . ' . ' • ' • •' " '• " ' • • O!•~n Pavne "'-' Total• 1-11U!lme ' • " ' .. Bl..c:-\e11. J).22. Deep Sea Fisl1 Report . . ~ .. ' " Taylor. a -high ·s c1J ·o o 1 sophornorc. looked good in a relief pitching role for ~lission Viejo. ••rtitbl ,._ccomal\Clo, 11>-lb 5 2 l J ~11oonmo•e, lb II II II o ROltn, cf l 7 1 1 Hi!le,rl '7?1 lf\lflQO, lb ' 0 1 II An(l...ws, lb l 0 O l Hl>YI!!, C 3 l I 1 t<;ublrc~I, t 1 o o o iq1c11•rD,, o s 2 1 a ~wlftlll•, 11 s 2 2 a rwlu.~1 5132 1.Aotnct. JI> 1 0 0 0 Ture.111 11011 TOii!$ ~ 13 1~ 111 Fovnl1ln llllltY (ti •brllrtli •nrm.in, 1t1 1 a o o Kt>n.m111, II o 2 O I O G,.r!leld, rl·P l 0 O O 11.till\Cr, C·P lb 3 I 0 0 7•m""'" It 1ll J O o o H"lfleld, .lb-•! l o O O S:llllQt", e>-lb I 0 O O Mi!Uler,p 10 00 Jordill, 11>-c l ' 0 0 ll.ordm1n. ~~ J o o II P.J111lllonl', ct l II II n T~ 5corw 111 ~,.,,.,~1 17 II l C • • • We,tmonller llll 009 00-IJ 1' • Founl11•n v111ev ODO ooo 00-0 1 ·l ' .. Pi.cenua on 010 ooo-s 1 1 Mlulon Vit ia CW 000 IQC...-4 1 ? Malinoff to Play In Japan ·Series Fountain Valley Falls To Lakewood, 53-44 LONG BEACH -Fountain Valley i-ligh's basketball team 106t its initial game of the Long Beach City College sum· mer league program 5).-44 to Lakewood here Wednesday night. Returning All-CIF tonrard D •a n MalBlle pumped in 20 Points for Fountain Valley, but the absence of 6-5 forward Tin1 Hiii, who \Yas playing vol- leyball. proved too much for th e Barons to overcome. .Cycles Back In Action- Lakewood, with four Speedway motorcycle racers Monarcl1s Unbeaten, Win, 42-35 starters returning in the fall, haven't had much success in came on strong in the fourth catching the Bast brothers, quarter, outscoring the Barons "t..r.t. and Sle · 1 21·12 to snap a 32-all deadl~k .wui.e ve, 1n the week y B d 'I Ca he and put the game away. competitions at Costa Mesa's ren on n c ug Y paced Orange County Fairgrounds . coach Jerry Tardie's Maler Steve Dorsett and JefJ Joi· But Mike Curoso feels its Dci ,.1onarchs basketball team ley scored seven and six points not an impossibility. to a 42·35 victory over Pacifica 1ba0'1 Fountain Valley with the "Mike and Steve arc good ance of scoring spread out 1 · ht bu the be • High Wednesday night in San. between four other players. Ca rig ' t Y,feanh be beeat.' ta Ana City summer league Fountain Valley employed a uroso says. ' ave n action. m a n . t 0 . m a 0 d e ! en s e sorting out some machine McCaughey had 13 points throughout lhe game in con· problems for the past few and tied with teammate John trist to a characteristic zone weeks. but now that I have fin· Stemmer with seven rebounds which they have been known )shed, I will be out to get some each as the rwtonarchs won ror in regular season play. of the big wins.,. I heir second straight decision The Bast brothers have been to lead ,the circuit standings. -i:l "/Jr "'(:.r fixtures in the winner 's circle Tardie praised the work of 1 aU season, with ~tike taking young Pat Pritzl who gathered "ou1111111 tv.i•'1. c.w,~ ,. ,, the honors last week by wln- in five 1009c b a 11 s for im-M••ano ' 2 2 20 ning the scratch mal\"J event. Donett 2 3 ' 1 port.ant turnovers in favor, of Loe1.,,,i.1n o , , :r Jeff Sexton, who suffered a Mater Dei. ~':eti::~ l g ~ ! broken back last ye11r1 showed ''We 're just trying to get ~111. o l 1 :r he bad regained fol by win-··• I . V•IOV.1'1• 0 1 0 I he UM..-u to p aymg together as a lot•I• 11 12 13 .u ning t handicap in . team," Tardie said following sc-11v Ckl•rnri Racing gets under way Fri· Swimmers Honore£] Brown, p s, lernll•rdt. 2D Cr11ndfll\ » Phelol. b O. l•rnhardl !lb T1regl1, ti l r&ndt, rt Tryon, o Toi ii IS "..,..., tu 811 r llrM Pier.ti !020 P•uTsch. II 3 0 1 0 H1nt&v, Jb 1 o o o ~ll•rd, ,, ' l 0 0 ulsson&tte, • 3 I . l o Ou-et,o 0000 Abl>Ott, P t O O O Sore&, lb 3 o o 1 Rot>er1Mlll, rf 1 O O O 00$1•1, 2b 1 i •• l!ll.i11eh•rd, Jb 1 11 o HOO-, 21> 1 0 0 0 Tol•lf SC.N '1 lllllflllt 21 2 5 t Costa Mn• NewPOrl Harbor ' ' . 150 OC0-7 ' 2 010 100-2 J 3 \Vinning ·p i t c h e r Pat Espinoza posted h i s third triumph of the summer, v.1ork· ing 6 213 -inhlngs b-e-fore needing relief help from Kirk Ellison. In lhe seventh-iMing, Craig Kennedy drew a walk to get the inning started with the Rustlers trailing, 3-2. Jerry Brown sacrificed and Rod Brown walked. Both runners moved up on a passed ball befo're G a r y Run~o's sacrifice fly scored s..i• l wtl&n IJI .. . ' . ~ ' • • • • ' . I -: ! • 1 ~ J ; . "' • • . ' . ' • • • • : l ' . • • • • • • • • • • ' . POOL TABLES '39500 -~ .• ;::and up TO ·BE . THE BEST • • • LEARN FRoM THE BES"r 1973 ANTEAilR SUMMER BASEBACL ClMP Three, T--Wffk Sessions Starting July 2, 1973 Learn techniques of good hitting, fielding, pitching , baserunning and other aspects of the game, Instruction by UCI coaches Gary Adams and Tom Spence and play· ers from the 1973 NCAA National Championship Team. Morning Session: 9 1m -12 Noon COST: $40 for Heh two wffk H1Mon, which includ11 Afternoon Senion: insur1nct ind T·Shlrt 1 pm . 4 ""' u . c. IRVINE IASEIALL STADIUM plt•H c1ll Co1ch Ad1m1, 833.6745 or the Recreation Office, 833--5346. ·Th F-.taln Val. 12 I 12 12-.u the game. •· is is a young L•kewood , 11 11 n-SJ day at 8: 15. bunch or .kids and they are\r~~~-;;;;;;_,;~;;;;;...iiii.;iiii;i~;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;oi1jl doing very well so [ar." Air Conditioned M11tr Dt1 IQ) For ' Weekender Atlve1·tisiug Phone 6424321 ' FOR BOWLING BLUE CHIP STAMPS EVERY FRIDAY 6 P.M. EVERY S·ATURDAY 6:30 & 9 P.M. M.ny different ways to win from SO to 200,000 111mr. Call 963-4517 For RONNI! on1 I Hum1m1 u10--~n:,.~~'::. :~~i::H / ,. For further inforrmtion 1 9 7 3 ANTEATER . SUM MER BASEBALL CAMI' L11t N1me: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . • . . . Fir1t Name: AVo: P1r.nt'1 Name: ' ......... , ... ' ............... ' . -' -. ' ..... ' ..... ' .. ' Phono: , .. . . .. . .. . .. .. .. .... Addre11: · · ;..~,;,~~· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · si.:.-.t' · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · c'1iY · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·1,,· ,,. · ' Enrollment fn e1ch Miiion 11 llmlted to 20. Plo110 m1ko chock p1y1blo to REGENTS, UNIVERSITY of CALIFORNIA and 'return to: . AntHfttr Summer Baseball C1mp Rect .. tion Office -............. c..,., .... ------........ c ...... ,JU4 I (Clrclo Senion) SISSION 1 JULY 2·13 2 JULY 16 ·27 ---~-·l JULY 30 ·AUG. 10 ... • DAILY PILOT ThLWS411, Jurtt 21, lt7.J Checking Out Area Alamitos Racing Entries 2 County Players All-CIF j _ _.'..PUB~LIC~"'11;::11Z:.---!~ • •tCTITlout IUll .. 111 IU,lllll tTATIMlflff ~-• Tlw froliwWI JltrtGll I• de!"' - ,...,.. T•"' 111 OIXll Wit.DINO l •AllUCATIO Two Orange CoW'l\)' baseball league ~ay lO the fmal.s Of'-Doll•llW. st. o.n.vi .... , ••· m ,,,., vicwl• ... .,.. H1111.U.Mfl ttK Gals' players tamed A I I -C 1 F agahut eventuaJ champion El o'-H°""', ••ntlaeo "· .w ''•"::i'· !!"",. ,11,.tr1,11, 1u.i1 Vk1W1 --•u I "A I I"· Se undo oF-~•r~-~· Min ~~111 !" 1tt ... c nt tHtl 1 """"&'., Or\ n n.n C 115 Ju.:I• g , . lt-Hcwm.n, V I I tri I '• • • Hunt ntlon IMCll. 1 • I lion a.s selected by the Cittuns 'At..WI, MA ~~v111, L•w •, ,, • Tiii• ""''',...' 1, cnw1.i iD'f 111 Sa I ' Athl ti F · .. ·••t' l"M. itlt...., 'fi:~.!:i'"' Yr. Mlt1t ~~"'E181~,.:ont. :: ;J~ dl\llclut li:-11., l(Jlptltlck y ngs e c \P\llJUO IOI\. Of-1(1,,1;.:;; _ G••r•MOnl • f:· ·.'l't T'-Dei.11r11?:" LYn~ '· ·''' Tiit• lllt-' Wit filed ""'"'' N c"",'"~ Golf Results SemlfinaJists ln the annua l pretldeot's cup c:unpeUtlco at Coou Mesa Golf and Country Club for the women's group have been detennlned with MmJs to be played Friday and the c hampionship round on Monday . In the president'& flight. ~farion Voss defeated Nina Danielson, +and·3;-· B. J. Newland stopped Frankie Durst, 4·and-3; Rosemar y Skillion defeated B et .t y Walthall, 4-and·3; and Betty Brown \\'On over Barbara Morton, 4-and·3. ,,_ __ InThe v1ce presJCleilt'S flight. Came lle Kennedy \\'as a \Yin· ner over Sybil F oster in a sud· den-death playoff on the 20th hole; Ann Keenan won by forfeit ove r 1.f a r & are t Kumagal; VI H05kins defeated Vonda Adams, 2-and·l ; and Del Gustkey stopped Elise Stipes, S.and-4. In the secretary.treasurer flight, It was Connie Neskey defeating Eleanor Green, 6- and·5; Ann Pappas over B. J . Sle va, Z.and·l ; Alice Hubbard defe;atlng Noreen Grady, l- and·3: and Phyllis Barnes s topping Donna Costello, 6- and-5. Rancho SI In a m1fteh \'ersus par tournament-for-members~ al the Rancho san Joaquin \vomen 's golf club, Dorothy \Vright v.·as the A flight winner at one dO\\'fl. Alamitos Results ~ ............ Ju11e 20, UIJ Cl11r .. f11I ftlllT llACI! -3~ y1ro1. l yr1r olds • 11p. Cl1lmln;. Purse S1llOO. MtJ« Rein (Hi rt) fO.llO 11.80 5.10 Ano-ii Sure Ml•e (CtrdOU) t.60 3.60 OH-Lotti_, (Smlltll 3.60 OH-Mtlklw' Moon (Ad1 lrl 1.20 Time -11.'7. Also ren -Clludll'1 llOll, Ttit11 Vege, '•lleo llOld. S1fn1'1 l1nlo. AprOPO$. l1bt Pt rr. kr1lc'*l -Nutlltr lunny, SPOll«I ,,1 •. DH -Dred""t It l!Klcll -S·M_.. 11111 .. 1·.l.llltls SllA Mike, ''" UM.IO. SECOND 1;.l.CE -350 Y••Os. 1 yuor olds. C!11mlng. Pur~ 11100. Wlnkln Moc;n (OreverJ 7,00 •.70 l .•O WIMll LOii (Mylllll I ... 6.00 Un Al'lcl ()r>ly (it.O•lr) 3.SO Time -11.70. Atw fllL.., -Sweet .l.IYCt , Trlple Aelurn.,-Lll Niner, Belle's SIMH:low, Ml~ Ledet!• Sis, Moon1!1r. Scr11t11N -Mil Cl•.,......flne, Rf'd Rl'o'lr Ru1ty, Pride's Fl.ew1rd, Llttl1 Jimmy Leo. TMlllD IA.CE -.WO v•n:b. 3 ftlr oldl ._ Ujt. Cl•!ml11g. Pur11 S2\00. 111..,11 Sliver l•r (Myln) 7 . .-o 3.• 2.40 Rockll Mick (Mtls...O•) •.IO L60 OH-lllfl• Dick 8M {H1rll 1.10 OH-Pluglld In (Rlc1Mrd1) 2 . .0 DH -DNcll\Mt Tlmt -20.ll Alto ren -Mld 'olM, LUVff, Rocket Dlll Jr. No Krttchft. "ou•TM •AC• -3$0 verd1. :J ve•r olds .. UP. Clelmf11g. PUtsl l2400.-Hook ' Um Tel1nt ( l(nlghll 2'.1.20 t.10 5.60 Clltlned Aoc-tt ICerdotl) 11.10 i .!C Spur City (Hirt) 1.IO Timi -11.15. ALIG r111 -Hr Slr1~r, Parr &1r, ltoc:ky lucll Hink, Mr. Ups11, "p&eM '•uum, Wonder How, Mr. ~r1 Str. kr1tclleoil -luli.d Up, Mool1h 011· -· "ll'TH ltACI! -"° y1rd1. 3 vu r n1ds. Allowence. Purte sr.ioo. Im FOi'" Yov ~"O•lrl l.IO 3.10 2.«t \Y'9ch Ml11y G.o {Wat,:or>J •.ol!I 3,llJ W111n1 011lr1 (Kn!gtrtl 3.10 ri .... , -11.03. AIM! r1n -flrsf Shllfllt, ll.1cketr1 Perr, Tnt N111t1 Look, Srnol<I Rocktl. W1tc~ Z'1 F&ncr. Maon Topper-, Jet Comm1nOer. Scratched -COPPI<" COJI, Surm1n Shin, Al1medtll1. SlXTM .... ca: -110 y1rd1. , Y"' olds I. up. Clelmlng. P11r11 $'ll00. Tori E111le (81~k1I 11 .«I S.10 <1.60 Speed COllfll tWehOnl S.IO ,.60 Rulllll wtn (Trl tM.Jrl) J.20 Timi -'6.16. Also r1n -Foxy N..,1e, Ju!l tMrb, Atl Silt, Thru Ttlklr>g, MldwlY Tom. S<;rt!Cl'led -$pffdy S.Yefl, AltmUos Phi!. IS Ex1c11 -J•T., •1111 .. ,., ....... C01111t, ,aid U04.00. SE\IEHTH llACI! -3!0 y1r.a1. 3 ye1r old.t I. uo. Cl1lmlng. for ffllt11 Ind mires. Purse IJi,IOO. Clel mlng. TIM Saint Mary'J Ho1pll•l Guild. &usy Wiiiow 1wer10 ,,.., 2.10 l . ..a Flying G1leity (Ad1lrl 3 • .-0 1.411 When Yurlool Yurtiot (Orlyst) 2.IO Tlmt -11.~. Al.i.o r1n -Fine N Finey. Super C1M, My Tues \111'1dY. No -.:r1tclln. •IOHTH 111.1.Cli -«IQ y1rd1. J y1er old._ Ct1lml119. P11r:u snao. Frlt.eo f l1Jh (Or1Y1rl 16 • .0 1 . .0 $.60 OllPt'I Niner !Knlgh!J 1.IO L10 l•nk Of Oreogon {W!lrdl 6.10 Timi -20.39. "IMI r1n -Covr1e-,11 Kip, Snea~ Alteck, C~ J l•rs. E19111t1 Wonder, $1tn's Wondtf Man, Good C!Mrllt . Scratclled -Ml» Honeymoon 2, Dl/Pldltdoo. Du1ty'1 Clown. IS EXMlt -•tJrhC:I flllfl a, t· DIJtll'• NI_.. P•ltl ~.SI. NINTH 11:.1.c• -350 yenb . 3 ye•r Oldl '-up. Cllllmlng. PurH UIOO. Cocky Kid fTru1urel 1.00 "''° 110 Go Misty Jot (Smltll) 16.MI 9.olll Sp.a,.flh Love IHtrO 6.«I Time -11.32. AL.i.o r1n -lllOl>lt, Mr. "sfro ltllM, All Crkkttt, Ltvbtn'• Merk. Merion G\ly, l'M Berlo. Spea N~ Screlcl\td -Gold tnoot. Wtt Chit Two. Sir Tooltr. ·--U ••Kf• -6-Coc:ky Kill & 1-401 Miity J•· Pe .. W7.te. What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC Yellowtail action continues at a red hot pace along the en· tire south coastline. Schools or yellows are being found every- "'·here, from a few 100 yards off the beach to the outer chan· nels unde r the kelp patties. The average yello w is now running close to 11 Pounds, but tac kle bus ters in e).cess or 2S pounds are also mixed in with the smaller fish. In the a bsence ol anchovies, anglers using live. fresh or frozen squid are hooking onto the game fighters. Straggler jigs trolled near kelp and through breezing schools of fish are also bringing the fish to the boat like albacore. Bluefin tuna are also being caught in the coastal \vate rs off San Diego. Large schools of the fast moving tuna are exciting anglers as they \VOrk through schools of yellowtail. The bluefin are reported lO be hook and line shy. and prefer lines in the IO.to 18-pound class with number six hooks attached. 1be scrappy bluefin are averaging better than 20 pounds, and that's some ac tion on light tackle. When the ye llO\\'S don't show (and that's not olten) pa r1y boat anglers a re picking up mixed catches of bass, bonito, bar· racuda a nd halibut. Fishing in general is comidered good and most all passenger s are lea\'ing the boats with plenty of fish for the freezer. Nem Report on Albacore No further word bas been received on the longflns from tile scouting boats out some l1 to 1,SOO mHes. The albles haven't ...... tklr swing up yet, aad unUI they do It's going to be dif· flcalt CO predict jui;t bow far they will be out "·hen they pass ..,, Ille Jelly. B•Ja lt'aters Dram Top Angler• Bil 1ame fishennen from all O\'et the lvorJd ha\'e gathered at the cape to compete in two back·to-back billfiah tournaments. During the tournament, anglers should be able to establish a pattern and profit by time on the water. Normally at this time of the year , resorts: from La Paz to the cape report ellcel- ltn~ fiabing for marlin, sailfish and dolphin. For an update on flsfttng cmdition in Mexico, phone Anglers center a t 673-7091 . Neo0port Angler Win• Big Lake Derb11 Vettrin Newpor\ Harbor angler George Lobaugh walked off ~ e.p flslalag h6aor1 la!lt week at lhe annual Tahoe Keys fhlllac conlest. Lobau1b topped all other competitors by UmJclag oat • Liile trout on 1wro consecuUve days to po1t a top score tf some IJ5 pelnt•. Kokuee au 1cbeduled to s ta rt bitting on Tahoe, \\'bile the feHtr 1treamt ud inlets should be good for browns and raln-- bolr•. B••• f'bhing Red Hol aa.. fllhtng at all Southland lakes is red hot during the ...,.... hoUn cl the day. Bucketmoolhs are bilUng on !he surface In all llrulby covtS. Bass avereging better than t\\'o pounds are belna taken Jft such popular Jakes as: Irvine, Hens ha w, Whol· ford, 81'1 woad and Vall. BluesiJJ and catfish are also cooperative with bolt ang le r s stringing tbe larges& number of fish. Crappie are scarce due tod warm \"aler. • As (or trout in the Southland, heavy plants 11re necessary to produce any good catches at a ll. Most lake• will proba bly dis· continue thelr~ weekly 1tockJng !IOOf1 due 10 cUmblng wa ter te rn· penll . Big Bear Uh is g<lOd for s ma ll trout Jlshed eit her from lban Of (f'QM 8 boet Baa fKtion is fair for lhrOWbaCkS, \Vhile loll al blueciU are lllllmC for wet ru .. lisbed with flyrod!. La Qulnta 1-Ugb's Charlie OF-••ro. -• v111e¥ s» c-1,....,._ Hor" v1111 Jr, .MO "" ctt rk Df 0r1no• cou111Y " J1o111t c:~ '"' Tn-J Phillips repeated as a first ?l.:-~~1~i. l~n::c' ~: ~ ~=~:!~'"i'/ii!:~'"'111 j~: 'ti 1m. f ,..,...,i •--nd pla-went lo ~ay ,,,.f~6t1d ,M. team selection and Santiago's JS~0·1 ' Hmi Sr. ~)S P-St,1tnt1 1 11 0 ' 1 ,u1111r.11ed or111M co.st 0111~ '11" J~, .x\.V ..... ... -D-Htf ~~. ~NIOI Jt. -.UI J_J, n •nd Jwtr i, 12.-lt1J ltl7·P.~· !::~!:;;~1~iJ"i.rEW;~ ~:~~.:;7·1.l.l"'co~•~; ~1:7 .. North Is a lhlro team tt~]t~j,f'£i!f It: ;f, Brown Gaius \ PUBIJC Nln'ICE , at~~ow~well !was the 8 ~~7=·~ ir:§~rd"c~tl:s"l lrn' The Garden Grove League ~~;ai.:~·,i'fi,,. r. I ·l C;EVE ~ ".C!!.'~o:.:.:~~·:::• .. 1!'!!.~ '' ,,. \"""~' Stars are representatives from ~~r•kt. 111r11io Jr ..01 .,. LAND _ Im Brown '"' ···o--,,. ,_IOl'I 11 c1o1, ,,. ...._,. flight winner, 1-up; Bobby ~.-c .. sm11111 1 the only AAA league In Orange -W1'1\lng1°"' Moo'ntno1kle Jr, ·''s 1 h Cl -·--· Chartier finished second and rM!'l'.~ "1~1tl(,,,,.lrJ Jl~ County, i1.:-f':~~:fl:~t1G~ f~; ::~ 0 t e eveland ' Wlll had 11:,fLICAH O!STlllltUTO•s. 1•J•t was e \'en; Phyllis Stafford E1::"'s1~ 1rdJ . H ~ p fthe 28-l rew.ier, S•n l rdo. Jr. -'4l 58 games In hls 1968-65 career 8o1u Clltce. lull• H. W-"'!llwf'lt. was third at one down. ' rrow•Y ~ ::, to 1~der 0 Y:.f ~aurels go t\~~~~~!.~~ l1~: \~f during which he gained 100 c:~~·Ms c111por1r1on. • C•llfW'rtl• nr- In c flight it was Pal =.it:,fr:d!rrf' 1 111 gevrood ."I 's Gary C-M~oc:k. N•ll r .. lit yards 01 more. In all. Brown "°''"°"· uws AltOflCIUl11 •1·• :~ ... Lackner, Marjory Thatcher s•cONo 11AC• -t10 y1rd1. , Yt•r :=iC:et~0 ... 11! ~~: ~~m11~~1~~:;vn;~ ~~: 'il Bgalned 12,312 yards for the =-~1f111'· ""'~::'.., , _, and Peg Roberts: Ued for first l\:fm1~ :J·I' ~\~Ing. '"''" '1'°°1-------''"'--------'':-:':":'"":::·_•::.:••:-:=:•:_ _ _:":·c..:':'·:'_:.:,r0:w::::n:•·:_ ________ l~~r'1on~•1ntt• 1• ~-... · · T 'lr• If ltNlr1 Spiro, COf"P. 1ecrtt1ry Place, all three dO\\'n. Go,,,., ... ,~·M','" 1~. HHMS (orpol't lton Millie Stevens \\'On the D El Ar•t• I " lit '"' 1111111'1.,,, w•• flied with thf Ctufl.-Ltnir'• 81r Y TrM111r1 I 111 c .., ., ,.,. 1• flight, even; Helen Hebb was M-Slur. n''11 lit ty Cltrk of Oren11 "111 • next at three dO\\'n with b: ~r J."4:~i IB 1 '13• 'I:. Estelle Robinson third, four 1 To c v'1U. •\"'"' 1~ ,.~~~ .. 1~ ,?,=:'Ju~:-tit'?:111 ,,...,; d • Eden'• Folly t/IT!llh own. -F_.,·wii.-· Rk11t,..,.1-122 Se--llll J.MIRP, Rt.c• -390 y-~d•. 2 vt•r _.. "':t<' C l lll'llllQ. PllrM S1ICIQ, Cl•ltnll'IQ f.r,i' JW·· Jon Sr1tn (Tr111ur1) 120 Huntington Seacliff Country Club of l_;luntington Beach was the scene of a mixer tourna· m ent this week with members or the men 's and women's golf grotips com J)eting in a partner's better ball event. A Ue resulted for first place at 61 with J.'ran Sommerville and Gene A-teacher on one team and Betty Peterson with Paul Moro on the other. Tied for second at 62 were June Fitt in with Jack Kintz; Pat Hood with E r n i e Williams; and Rosemary Erickson Ylilh Angie Mollica. Mbsion Viejo It was a dry holes tourna· ment for members of the "·omen's golf group at 1.1.ission Viejo Golf Club this week with players using half of their regular handicaps while scor· ing the nine dry holes. Virginia Bramsby finished first with a score of 31 i,2 with La Rue Lowe .second at 32~2 and Cece Coury third at 331h. Third place honors at 63 were shared by Kay ?tfoser with Jim Thompson and Siu Dudley "·ith John Gardiner. At 64 we re Edee Nannes "'ith Tom We flen: Cheri Thomas with PaUI Seymore: and Aileen AJlen and 1.terle Smitlt - /ties" Verde 0 I'• Poctltl (Morr\11 111 f y NI« fly !WrlOlll lji Mllf\ltl f11nd PIClll Mr. Wlll•tt. ( 1rdo1•) 1 1 F1lr91t P1llto \G''':I rn $11t"Ut1 lien 8tc:k > Ill Trvolul Sir lhntc.al 1\1 Even Vo l~tr) I 1 - -lie •11tiai1 MIU Too LUI (Pt11tl. 'OUltTM 1;.l.C•~:JSO yenl•. 3 veer okl• 6 uo. fUU" 1rt1. PurM UXIO. "Tiit Doi.Mil•• A rcreft Com11t11y • Mllllllltmtlll Club. No Rntrtlnt (Meir\ .. Sure MOOl'I {H111rt Wiii 91oom tWlrdl NMtrlt1tlon t81n1Ji hYGU &er aeJw_ Mvlts) Miu 'ok.lt Chlo lif1«1) 111 'll"TN ••c• -=s5o Y~rds 2 vi'' old•. Atlow•nc•. '""' S2QOO. tllt P n Creetc .1.Nmntnts. OUllll MJ1s (TN11111"1l Ll"ll Ttnr, Go ICl'QlbYJ Elmer Gl ~k C,'911 Nelh11tllt QOV (Se11k1) s_._ (mlll'll P4Clf Mtker fRld'lltrdsl Ml11 Abbi tOreverl I "m t Said (Wrlahtl SIXTH RAC:l -.kt v1rd1. 3 \ONt Olds I. uP-AllOWlllCt. f'llrlt ,2100. ZlllYllQO (Trt•11t1rel 111 Garvin CO\ln!Y fSml!hl 172 H1dd• Be YO\I (Morrl1) 113 Mv Roman l . .cll•n tAd•lr\ 1~ Aot>l'°ll (Or.vi~) 111 Rlck!RY (Ctrdoit ) 111• o<ol p,randy IH1rtl 1 9 Ooob e Poco &Id ( Benksl in 11r1e11nq creek 1Mvt •1 ) ',n Perr Cl1btltr {Wlrd) u AtM •lltiltll LIM PtliMr tWerd) s•VIMTH ••c• -3.50 Yl fdS. 3 '('f>llr old1 I. \IP. Allowenc:e. PllrH UIOQ. l'l>e MK.Donnell ~"· Go Go JNnl1 { 1nk1l 111 Jl,ldy'1 Wonder "fruwr1l 1~ KIMI elrd (#1,\'lesl ,' Ven.tau• (Hll'll A1wred COOY cw1tsonJ 1 ~ Witch 8oY (Smltt'I ) '•n' 5"1mroc:ktt (Adlllr) •IOMTH ll:ACI -.IQO verds. 3 Y"•r old1.. Allow•nc•. Purse s?lOfl. Sun,hlne Roe~•"-!Trrts\lrtl 11111 Altrnedtlll (Smtthl I Thrt• HNll *ld1lr) ·',", Chic Per Go ltol'I) 1. F1t r'1 F"11lr I 1n~1l 111 GllllSll (Wert!) 11' c111»1r Co• (Or1,.rl n2 8unny'1 Golt! (Ptgtl 1"2 AlUre &er Go f.,._rt ) 172 01' O&n (Fl.lcll1rdsl 119 A1M •lltl"• r.l1111n 1wet1onl E11rlv <ll1ree \W•t~onl M1 \or Threat e anks l F"1mllv ""•Ir Rlcll1rd1l Erny Burckle and Phyllis I · NIHTll ltACI[ -«IQ v1ro1. 3 Y•l t Smith tied for firs t p ace In 8 olds. Cl•lmlnQ. Purse 11000. Cl1lmlnq putting contest at Mesa Verde ~~~ ~~Y• 1we1tonl 11,: C t Cl b t•· k 'th flttl Rulllh (Smith! 1 oun ry u ,.is wee WI Gvp's ciote 111r fH•"'l 1111 26 Ltl'bt~ Quick (Morris\ 1 ' . Lllll• Go Flett 1Tr111ur•l i\'; Lupe Sutton, Darlene Bouse PM s1ae IRlcMin:l•l 1 0 M!n1trel (Mv!nl and Cecelia Br O\\'Tl each had Stllo fCr~vl F"lrlChl'"GI !Cll'CIOll ) 27. Nlokl (PIQI) Al.llll l!llt!Mt Georgia Fa rmer and Shirley, -~M"-:::.o'o'"c':..:.:"o'c"'='='------I Callaghan won the s econd 1· flight with 28 putts each PUBLIC NOTICll .follov.'ed by 1.fary Wanamakerl------,.,------1 and Jose Tipping with ~o and su,t:R•o• s~:~T o" TM !!: Peg J acobson with 31. STAT•°" CALl,OltNIA FOR In the third flight, 1'-liml TM'-'~o~~:.;r,,.,OR•HoE Smith W8s the WiruteF° °"'ith-26 NOTIC:t 0' HEAWllllO 1'0111 pao&.1.TI! • 01' Wtll AMO 1'0111 l..l!TTl'!lt~ 011' AO. with Hortense Carlin second at MIHISTUTIOll wtrH·THl·WllL·AM· 27. Winnie Nichols, Doris :::1~~' E"Fl.L K. MCNUTT, Dece1Hd. Buckles and Ethyl Rosenthal NOTICE 1s HEREllY r.1vEN 1t.t1 . . d • · f lhi~ 3(1 JOHN p KtNG JR hi' filed lllreln • fml.she ffi 8 lie Of IU &t • petition ior•pr~tt Of w!I! 11\d fllf lellstl The nine hole swingers held o1 tc1m!nlstr1tlon with-1he-wlll~nne~llCI · t rlftrence to whkll Is made for f\lrllltr a two-day ecl~tic tourna men P1rtlcul•r•. i nd m11 tht llmt •I'd pl11<1 u•lth. J ean Mabee the '""'-SS "'hffrllli! ttl• ~,.,. II•• 1>1tn Mt tor Jutv . "• '.' 3, lm, 1t ':00 e.m., ln !!'le cO\lrlroom pf winner at 50 afte r dereat1ng OeQtrtment Nn. J of said court, 11 ?oa Sylvia Campbell in a playoff. c1vtc c1nttr or1w west. 111 the City o1 Sanit ""'' C•llfomf1. Net winners were May 01t11C1 Jy,.e 14, 1t1J Gara botti (28) and Phy lli's t~~~,e~k ST JOHil. Nehrenberg with Fra ncine N.1.Ctl!L. Rl!:O.l.H .. OAVIOSOM . 1011) Ho. Mtln $1. Ha. J11 Stewar t bed at 29. se .. t• i1.n1, c•Hf. Sylvia Camnbell "'on most Ttl : c11•1 J41"'6tl . !' A"M'llt'll few: 'lilt._.. improved gojfer O( the year Publ11hed D1111<1t C:ot51 honors for the nine-hole group l'~'~M:.C.:"~· _"c"c'_-'_•_n _______ J as she dropped her handicap 16 strokes. TRACK ..• PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS •USINE'J M.l.Me ITAT•MIMT Tiii follow!ng potrMtnt ere bVlineSS 11: it.&M OIMl!N510NAL GR ... PHICS, 1'19 83 W11I l"h SI., C01!1 M11t, C1lll. ,,.,, Roblrl G. Anderson. Jr., 9561 ConUnued From P age U Ft1er1caurt Or., Hvnung1on Sud!. ' Ctlll. t26"6 Amtl•!• {Ft. WayM, Ind.) '3.(, · Rlcllird F, Moon, SUI StldgtpOl'f, Henrv CK•lltrlng, Ohio) 6'.2, '· Hunting ton Beech, C1llt. t26't M11r1!\1U (Phll ldelphl• H1wkl) 7•..S. s. This bf.rl.lntu II cOl'ld\IClllCI by. ;ettvr•I l<allt~I (Bouldtr, Colo.) 6'.7, '· portn1rsll!p. GIUll1nd (Oukl City) 74.9 , YF llllchllrd F. Moort UD Rt11y -1, M1yor Hllclllr t Fl.otierl G. And..,.on. Jr. 11.0, 2. LOl A~les J1h 41.3, 1 NYC-This llt ltmtfll wes flied wilt! the C:oo.tn· PAL ,7.1 •. •. Rawntwood (7,!, 5. 1y Cllrk of oreng1 CO\lnty on Jun• 11, Mlllbr•e ~•ons d .l. 6. T1nntt.1M $!. U. lfn. TC d .8. "·260ll 180 MllCl1t v RtllY -I. Ntw Yori: C:I· Publbhtd Orl"l!f Co.It Otlly Piiot Jun1 ty PAl 1:•6.6. 2, LOI Angetn Jfll 11, 2f1 1no JUiy 5, 12. 1973 la&a-13 1.47.1, J. Tra~rlers AC 1:''·'· '· l'-C::-'-'-'"'--"---------Orytdtl SI. YMCA 1:41.t , 5. Miit Hlgll Dtnvor TC 1:4t.I , 6. Frederick T&F PUBLIC l'\OTICE 1:"'1,1. '-------------Mlle Rel&y -1. AlbuQu1rciu.1-0lymP9'tltl 3:4t.7 (Meo! Record), 2. 'ICTlTIOUS IUSIHllS Du~t Cl!y 3:~.7. 3. Atoms TC. J:Sl.f, Jf.1.MI ST.1.TIMENT '· Sp0rts Unltld J:S'2.7. s. Long 811eh Tiii lollowtno person II doing b\ltll>IU Cornell 3:53.7, 6. Ory1dts St. YMCA ~" 3:$7.1. COLONEL. &Oll'S MH0181ECS,11._!tl11 ?·Miit Fl.tl•Y -I, Slut RltlbOn t:l6., HlrbOr &lvd .. Coste IU, • ,.,,n I IN1w Ewntl, 2. S•n Jose Clndll'tll• "'21 t :20.6, 3. Sh» AnMIS t:i.J.t, •• l<tt• Ct11rlts Fl.. OO'o'IMI INI Edit!! C. terln0 t:26.0. 5. Dutlt City t :tt.4. '-$en Downl, 2.00 Eldtll '4Ylf'lllt, COlll Mt11, Jose Clnd111t111 "9" t :•7.2. Celllornl• ~7 Shot Put -I. SnW.r !Robinson H.S., Ttl!I buslnlll II condlleltd Dy I 9entr"el Tl!•.) '1·3V., t. Mltclltll (Un11!) '""11~. p.artnlrsl't!P, 3. 01Vln1 IStn 019'0 L1nctr1tt11) 6'-Cll1r111 R. Cowns IU, '· Ltnt (Wiii '• Stilkllt") '44, 5. Edllh C. Oownt Dole flt Mlrld1 Mtl-s) G-2\o'I,. 1. Tiii• sf1t1""""I Wtl llled with lllf C°""' Yu~rkll'l<tl fMIVOt" H11lchtr'1l "'"°'· ty Cltrk of Oreng1 County on JI.I,.. 11, Long J111T11)-l. kl\Ofl1ld ll"Mrlt TC) 1t73. 11·2\'tw. 2 wtncll11 (LATCI l .. 2V., 3. Grlflln IL. Jolla TCI lt·7~~. 4, Elmore Pullll•llld Or1nge Co.11 Delly Piiot Ju111 (M!Hbf"1•l u .11:u,, s. Henry fMlck•v'1 21, 2t 1nd Juty s, 12. ltlJ 1S91·n Ml11lln! ll-101h, 6. H•cketl (O,.yldf1 $1. I 11-J, Hl911 JUll'll'I -1, GllDtrl IU111t1.. PUBtIC NOTI CE 0Ct.tn1ld1l 5·10, fMttt l:KOl'd), 7. H11nl·J-------·-.,...= II'/ !Unttr .• Ort.), 5·t , J, Frieson (To-"ICTtTIOVS IUSIJfl!SJ Otll• TVI S.7, '-l0-W1r Tie I I J.s. MAMI ST.1.Tl!~E"T J•~enn -1, Smllll !Vn•lllCl'tfd) Jn. Thi fol!OW'lll9 per_,1 are 0 fMnl RKOrd ), 2 ..... mllPOflO IHous!on bullntll II: A1troblll11l 1"'1. ). Lengtv•tn (So. GE EltS PLUMllNG. 1'11 Ad1m1 n11e .. Co.st TC:) 166-1, •· SvllnMll {Mlllbrtt) Huntington &Nch, C1!1!or11t1 IU-1, 5. Polk {F1nnl1111ton) l:Jt-CI, I. C1Mrle1 S. Gttf1, I011 M1rm11d Pulkl !C1ctus Wrens) 136-9, HUfl!lnglon 811cll, Celll111nl1 01.cu• -1, 1:1""1 lloulh C011t l CI M1rl1 E. Gffr._ 9021 Mtrm1ld U-J, 2. $nldrr Otoelnton H,1 .. Tix.! Huntfnoton &11cll, C1Hlornl• 1.)6.6, '· UM fwtll'• Splktlln) IJ.S.2, '· Thi• bulfnH• II cOMutled bY I gen.tr•• S1b0! (Sovth Co.11 TCl U+IO, 5. p.1rtner11'1lp . Ml!cMll (UM".) 13'-I, 6. Le119 .... 1!n CMirl" $, Oltf'I (SOUlll Co.11 TC) 11t~. Tiii• 1t1t-I Wtl flltd wl!tl !tit (°"""'" Mlle Welk -I, 9rodocll !Spotll ty Clerk of Ortnot COlllllY on J\1111 11, U"llllCI) 7:$t.I !Ntw E¥tn!I, l. OotNfll 1t1'3, fMeyor HllClltf'll 1:05.t, '· Mlf'QIHJ 'lffft ISPOl'lt Ullll'ICIJ 1:117,•, '· "fllofnMn IOx. Publl1111d Or1• C:Htl ~lly P'Ltot, n1rdl t:n .t, J. Gtrtll fSflO't• u l'l!ltdJ J-''· tl, 21. tncl Jiiiy 5, 1m 111 .. n 11.xi,1, 4. Dimick !S.tn JOit Clndtrg1,I) 1:32..0, • J.-Mllt l:Ul'I -I. llWl'!'llft f'llotnl• TC! 10:•1 ... J, Anu (Wiii'• SOlktttt•) lO:W , J, ff)flll IH11llt Y TC) lh03.I.' Ellett "'" (Untlll U :02.1, •· ShrMtt IEllClflc Cll)ll 11:1,,0, '· Cr1ll'IOl'ICI l"OC) 11:20.•. TE AM SCOltll -I. Wlll'1 Splkt'" uotes rl111BAY' ,. 1110, t. SPOtt• untlld •· 3. S.llOf'blnrirn•tt~I tf, '-SOUtfl COt1t TC 21, J. M1yor H11dltf1 10, 6. Al~ in ~ l1Mlt.Ql(1)i 11U1rQVI Ofym(lltn lt 7/lt. 1. L•t!::::~~·;:"'~·~-~·-~·~·~·~·~·~I Jolll TC It t/10, t. M!CllfY't MIMflft 11, t. H'l'C~AL U, 10, LA Jttt 16, HUFFY "CATALINA" 10-SPEED.---.RE~G. A 27" mod:I with olifh• deluxe 7-996- feotures, ot o pr•devoluotion prke, normally. now .,. • HUFFY "GREEN PICKLE" loy1 or gid1 20" bike with oll the "dragster" styling ond features. ' ., PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUI euru1111 ll"MI tTATIMINT The iollowlnt ptr1«11 •r• liMfllf bUllMll II' OU R GANG 'OTTElllY, Jflf 1 · CVPflll. S1nlll AM. Cell!. "'97 MICllttl 01vld Eiz•ll, ~lt Hiii~ Coren• otl-Mar, teltl:..~ _ 21111 Fl.yen $Mrwood ..-11¥, _ CYP<""•••• S1nhl AM, C:tllf. 921111 ·,,· Tllt1 11<,1tln"1 11 tonducttd br •11 VII • corpot•lld· utOc11tlM Oll'lfr 11\111 • p1rfMr1lllP. .. Mltllllf O. E11.i1 ltytn Gourl•Y Tlll1 1l1llmlM \llltl fti.d wl!ll the c-. ty Clerk ol Or111t1• C-ty on Mar 'ltrf ltll. . ,.~ ,ublll'*l Drtntt C01i1I Delly ,,..., fAtV 31 1n4 Junt 1, 1•. 31, ltn 1 ..... 1t PUBUC Nln'ICE . ' • P ICTITIOUI IVllNlll MAM• ITAT•MINT Th• followlne ,...-•r• ...,., bull~• 11: PlttlM GRAl>H1CS, 11111 "I " Yktlf1I i Strffl, C:otll M"' n.11 aerrr s. Manti!, 2013 N. C•"'lllt \! Cm11 Meu,~ l Shtrry G. Moffett, '°'' H. C .. I .. Co1t1 Mffl, '2•2'. Tl'ILI tiu!lfll9• 11 tlltnt c.,..,un. •r '" L!ldlvldu•I. ••rrv s. Moff•ll Shlrry G. Mofl11t Th l1 1t1ttmtnt flied With lht (-ty Cltrk of OrtllOI Coo.tnty on J-.. Ith. • By Tiier-M. Went. OlfllllY (IU!lfY ; Clerk. .. ..,.. . P1,1blllhM Qrffllf (Nit Dlilfy "*·• J1111t 1, I'-II, ti. 1m Mlt•l'1 ' PUBIJC NOflCE • . 'IC'rlTtOUS •UtUl•U MAM• lft.T9M•NT Thi totlf\111~ ....,_. art ..i1111 bu•lnn• 11: SCHAEf!R, l!AaO a. .USOC:t ... TIS, 610 N ........ Ctnftr OrLYI; lvlt9 111. H--' .. lefl. CeUfllll'nl1 ftiWO John J . khtlflr. STlt N. ly--., 1:11111, C•lllernl• mn 1 c;ereld w._lffr'h___MO OllY9 ,.,,_. • 11111110. Ctllfornl• nl16 1• Thll bu'llMU II cClf'ldl.letM •r f ....... a-rt ..... lhlp. ~ Jahn J . SC:Mltftr • - Tlll1 1t1ltmtnl we1 ftlld ""'"' ll'lf Clllill!-ly Clff'k f1' 0rlflfl COUll'IY 111 J-I. 1913 WIUl.l.M •. IT IOMN. C-tr CWL ly Thlr1t1 M. Wini, Dlltiuty. ' ""'' PUBUC NOTICE PIJBUC NOTICE ... ICTfTMKll 8Ullllinl M.l.M8 ITATIMlhn' 11~111 tollOWltlO Jltl'Mn It dolnt Mfftf~~ TH• DANICA ,AST•Y IHOP, 114,WJ ••11M11 11...,.,, N.wport hlell ...... , D1nltl ....... ,,,._..,., 1111' W ... _ llllld,. Htwporl IHCll, Ctllf. ""' Tlll1 .._ II Cll'IClllC,_ "1 M ll't> dlvld11tl. D•nlll "et•r ~ Tllft •ltltmlnl w11 ftl .. wOll fllt C11111< "" a.rk at or.,.. c-iy .. .,.. a. 1tn. ... Plllllllhtd Or1n11t C11111 DtiU~ PU1l, MIY 31 11111 Jlll'll 7, I'-JI , 1t1' IR1_,, PUBLIC NO'l1CE PUBLIC NOTICE ,tCTITtOUI IUll.ftl MAM• ITAT•M•lfT "Tht lotlow1119 Oll'l«I l1 doll'll bu!lneu 11: TOY WOAt.O. IUI On Tiit Mi ii. &Ut-nl Perk. Ctlltornll to620 1;1CHARO !. IOlll!JllMAH n1M, Car Mte ~vr. Whtlftft, Clllf, fot$O ' Tlll1 11111111111 11 tlfll!llllC:ltd Dy t ft ,,,. dl11lctutl llltclltnl E. toe,.rm111 Tlll1 ltlllrftlnl w11 fl*! wltll Illa C- ty Clff11 II Ol'tf'IOI COUlltY t11 J• •· ttn 1-.0C NaW '""''""" OAMt C..lt Delt¥ """" J1M1 1, ,., n, a , tm .,...,. PIJBIJC Nln'ICll ' ' AMBLER ' ·TUMBLEWEEDS 'LOOK WHAT LIMPIP LIZARP 6AVf. Mf.1 FA'fHER: A ROCK PAPf.RWf.IGHT MUTI & JEFF FIGMENTS "NANCY .. BANG- .Yo u 'RE DEAD ~ .. • • by Doug Wildey .---......-----~ AMll.ltl1TMAT CllC1<iN l<ICl<ER'S IN TIESE Flllm? HOW. l!NCHAN1JH& ! '.1111: CLASSIC Ml!l!PSAK!! WHA'f t:Vff\Y GIRL. PfttAMS OF: HER V!l\Y OWN ROCK rM!R~I ANP SO USEFt.11.! ... I DID NOT-· YOU'RE DEl'\D 1 AM NOT l3Y THE WAY-HOW ABOUT THE: DIME YOU OWE ME? t<ON AIN'T .Illl!I A 5'.RPRIS.E! by Tom K. Ryan WHV, IF YOU RUN our OF PAPt:R 'IOU CAN PRACTICE: SHO'f-PUmN~! by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS J, Junt 21, 1973 DAILY PILOT :Jl • by Roger BrGdfleld .A f'OPUL.AR MIS.CONCEPTlON, • OCQLEYI AolJIJJ.V 1H'<El; >I< ENP!.liSS ROlt' Of' Moot<S >J,I. MOli1MG IN 11<• SAMIO piRi;c110N. w,; M•RJi!.V S~E A N~W OHG MC.H NIGM.T! by Charles Barsotti __ ~-------,--..-. So""°, KID, 5URe· JUST IMaGiNe f0W ™RltLeD HeR AJNT ~llY tJlll e€ ... ... To HeaR ""2T <IN e NnRe COUNTRY IS GOING To DRoP BY F"oR _"'-Tu. _ a. by Gus Arriola _ .. ~---rHERE1S ...--,.,,..-.,..---, )'OIJltHALF OFTHc -Bl~LS ... by Ferd Johnson H,Ai:F OF WHAT :)t>OlllE£ GOT·· NOT H,A.LF OF\llW<i; 'YOJ.J ClllE. ,.. PEANUTS ,. by Charles M. Schub .-------.:... THE GIRLS. SO MERE I AM b:==~Oll A 605 601N6 tDDAY'S c1ass1agD PUZZLE' iO ~r- ACAOSS · 69 Nol very Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: \ f 'lncllned often passage eJ lined up 6 Mere child 64 Cooking lB GeM device 16-Jnter -66 Actress - 1s,ooc1or'• Foch r:: patient 67 E)(p1ess 1! 'Respiratory much Jeering sound 68 Genus of 17 l aboratorv climbing instrument !lhrubs 11t'lends ii hand 69 Avid 20 Laundry 70 Eu1opeans • "necessi1y 71 Wasted no 2t•American 1ime politician 2f 'lndignations 25 Coin of Iran 2'6 ,lf\.a spot 311 Raises f•\lpright 31.ii:;reek letter 35..k:indof mi» 37 Small mistake 38 Go, but quick 39 ~aver·endl•g 4~-Arab garment 43 l.l.S. slate 45 Functions 48'f>ae100 48, Rodent killer 50 Be the head • r(IBn. 5~''So king" 54-·Treaty 5&.Make unfit to f. df~nk • " ' ! . • r. q_ • '~~ .. •• " • \l DOWN 12 Noted 1 Bumps into soprano heevflv 13 For fear that 2 Got oll a 18 Botanical horse sheaths 3 Mineral 22 Row er's aificate implement 4 Golfing in 24 Refott regulation 26 Pigment tigure1 27 Nebraska 5 Household 1 city appliance 28 Sond m011ey 6 Relative of 8 29 Removed burp 31 Miss Bow 7 Alleged force 32 Asian area 8 Outcast 33 Shovel's 9 C•nadian relative provincial 36 Ancient · VIPs author 10 Infallible 40 Nourished judges 41 Maceand 11 Poker hand nut"Jeg • ' 1 .. 44 Ontario citlien 47 Deer features 49 Consume 51 The-·-'-: The comma. -~ 53 F'agraMe 55 Chilly and wo< S6 Indian language 57 Not Oflfl 58 English to..." 60 Godown in volue I 61 French river 62 Lake behind Hoover Dam 6S Mineral 1uffix 112t/71 MISS PEACH HOW'f THE TliAM C>OiNG 1 M~•51!1.MAN ? ! I I • DICK TRACY FOR SCl\\EONE WHO HATE> 6<JIN610 C/llltP, I SORE Sl'END A LOTOf11METKERE-MA~6E I WOO 10 lllE WRONG ~ .• by Harold Le Doux ~-----~-----=~ • YOU DOl'O'T LOOK ONE 0 1T ~APPY TO SEE ME, 0E'T5Y, MY LOVE! I WANT TO KNOW EXACTLY WHY 'YOU CAME TO TOW';"! I by Mell ,.HA'T'6' IF WE CAN FINOA FOOTML.L- "Tll~M WITH l!NO!JGI•" GUT~! • l .. ~'t261 '1(J' "I'm afraid l'Ve reached the point wbere no matter what I wear ll's TOO revealing." DENNIS THE MENACE J_J DAil Y PILOT Thursd.ay, June 21, 1973 TONIGHT'S TV ffiGHLIGHTS KTLA Iii 6:00 -Angel Ba,seball. The Califor· nia Angels take on the !.1innesota Twins. CBS B 9:30 -"Petulla." George C. Scott and • Julie Christie play the lop roles of a recently di· vorced doctor and a much·married woman Jn thi s 1968 drama with Richard Chamberlain Shirley Knight and Arthur Hill. ' ' \ Two World Premieres Share SCR Stage ... One crlg1nal world premiere Is certainly 90ll'lething to shout about in local theater. Two original v.·orkl premieres - both of them home grown - playing In repertory at the same thenter constitute a mn· jor achievement by any stand- ards. South Coast Repertory, long the creative capital of Orange County theater. contin ues to orlglnal music to Throiuon 's lyrics. Performances a r e given Fridays through Son· plays the ctntral role. lt ill· eludes sequences wltb four old time silent movie comJcs - Charlie Chaplin. Bu s t er Keaton, Laurt.1 and Hardy - and a 1'slapstick symphon)'" orchestra. - The curtain goes up on both SCR shows at 8 o'clock in the Third Step TJ1eater, 1827 Newport. Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-1363. Intermission Tom Titus has put out a call for directors ror Us 1973·74 1easoo and those interested should apply to theater president B o n n i e Juds011 at Box 265, S3n Clcnlcnte. . . .six plays are presented ench season at the Cabrlllo Playhcu~. along with a :summer show .... all direc· torlal resurne.o;; must be ·receiv~ ed by J une 30. . . . ' ABC 0 9:30 -Jane Goodall and the Wild Dogs of Africa. Hall Holbrook narrates this intimate look at the social structure and living habits of the wild dog packs of Africa. ~ present its double-barreled "firsts" by a pair of SCR· 1 spawned talent s. :'Jn the l\1idst day and Saturday at the ELSEWHERE along the Humanities llall Playhouse on Orange Coast, there are con-the UC Irvine c a m p u s . tinuing performances of Reservations 646-3178. evenings. Reservations 834· Tryouts have been an- 5300. nounced for the third annual Holdover performances oJ All Orange County F'inc Art~ "Butterflies Are Free" e;on· Workshop. sponsored bv the tinue at the Laguna Moulton Newport-Mesa Unified School Playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon District and Orange Coast Road, Laguna Bcarh. Iinp College . . .They'll be hi!Jd Graham's production stars P.1onday. JWle 25. In !he Costa \\lllliam Cullen. h-f i c h e 11 e i\1esa High School lyceun,t Brown. Annabelle Quigley nnd beginning at a a.m.. . .The Jack Bingert and plays tonight -program will culminate in pro- through Saturday at 8:30. due.lions or "West Sid c Reservations 494--0743. Story," "The Fantasticks." 11a"""'..._,,......,r.,.,~&1D.,......,.,.,_,,.....,..,,.,,,..,.,.,.~ TV DAILY LOG Thursday Evening. JUNE21 &.-00 8 DD &I fl!) llil QI...., ma- • Mpl llllNll Callfornl1 An11!s '4. U. Mlnnuat1 Twin" (IJ~" (Mii'• ....... aw..i-.. ... ·""-..... T ... UILM fll'r111 fl!)-........ .. Ill""" .... ... l :Ja @ •1111'1 ... ,... D MM: ('°l "Sllditra 11trn• (111¥) '51 -D1vid Niven, Stew1rt Gr1n1er, Robert N1wton. ()) CIS Ntft Willer Ct0nkit1 CJ Nm l11a wt11 Tm.I ;ti Merv lrittlll S111w m...,,,_ fD Sut Yu11 Yl1t1 YM 8' Tt It AalltHC*ll ml)NMll• &') Uttll lllClll ''°' II CJJ D fl!J ""' (I) Ttd If CH-.otnct1 m--... OMtt'1MrU11t? 111 Lew LUCJ Cl) I DrN• II Ju1111il fB 1.,.. ..... llllril mr11cwct·-111·--U!JT•ll•ilil Miika! 1111.lon'CI .. Ill-- Ch1mbi11in, Shirley Knl1ht, Arthur HUI, Plpp1 Scctt,;-Jos~pll Cotten. A much·Jnlrried ~nd vtfJ we11thr wom•n &eh 11,r slahts on 1 f'lctnt· ly divOJUd youn1 doctor. D t1Jm h11UWt "Sll1dow Sol· dier'' (R) Chief Ironside visits 111 old friend 11 Scotl1nd Ytrd i nd finds hirnulf ttyin1 to aol'll 1 po· lice kiUin1- 0 (}) {j) PJ i JPIC!ll I Ian• c.ul Mii 1ti1 WIW lip r1 Africa (R) Hal Hofbmok n1r11tes thlt inti· ll'ttll tooll 1t lite aocill struci.urt a.id 1i'ri111 h1bits of !ti• wild do1 packs of Africl. l ht sptdal is !flt result of 1lmost two y11ra of study by line Goodall, 1 world 1uthority on v.uious form! of 1nim1I behlV· ior. 1nd her 1>hotogr1phtr hin;· bind. Ku10 van Lawidl. fl)lli• 111 ll ..... Altjtndl'I .... l:lO a Tiit """" W11•1r111 Slim '"' Kerriet11 host '°"" 1host1I a-cm ........ n.11111• llil"-'l 10:00 El t1i m Dul lll1rti1 .._ (R) .lotJ I i.,, 1nd Jllrtn Bliek pst. em111-u CD (j)-&> Sin1b et 1111 f,.. tlset "The House on ttydt Street" (R) Lew Ayres 1u1ats as an 1ldtrly recluse eh1r1ed witl't murderin1 1 youn1 bay who broli:1 into hit home. Alter he's 1rrested, Ille old mtn rtv11ls the prestnc1 of hit brolhtr Donald, wflo hid lon1 110 been .11p0rtecl d11d ind wflom th• old """ Ill• piotlded Jina ht suf· fend • lllfltll brukdowll 1f11r ,..r1 KllW. ·-(C) 11'<1 _ ... (sci·fl) '60 -Wini bl!lllf, rtu1 luUtlllr. • , ..... s.cc. lli)M- 7:JO 9 Y•111 Dr. KIWaft (R) ~ldtfl lnrns lh1t • whit• sir!, crilic.llty lntur.d fft 1n 1Ufo 1a:idtnt with h'r bltck bo}friend. is prtfntnl (I)Hlp1111 ... , ... O Tiit Adwlnt1m G111t lr1dler 10:3111 Tll. IM:t 1rr1n111 to have himself 1rr1sted • a...,i.nn• Fid1in1 IS In 1111111 1rms dealer ln Ill ti· fD TtlirtJ Minvtn Witll , • , fort ta !lush Ollt Ill 1111111 Wll IE AcMp111111t m1teri1ls optrtlion. @ Tel~tlMT!utW , IENtws/s,.ttl ~ :.-:::. "$':,;., (!In) """ II,., IJ D D 111 llH!l - lriwt '7 ffilllt" (dr•) '4G-Humph· ~ (J) (fl l1i""' rey Boa•rt. Geor11 Ritt, An11 Sheri· 8 °"' Step ...,..4 41n. Cl) lilmllll IMIM (f9l llt't M1M' I Dul 18 Trwtll If ~ m""'..., Ill . 111 lfaprt """'· (C) "'flit lnt " .,. @I Accill ewe.. Chlc111t JDlt$ ~ (cl1uic) ·~R1ndo1ph Alurlst1 tnd Riclnlo Slllthll pre· Scott, Bruct c.bat, Blnn11 B1rnes. u nt their wotb tcCOlftPlllltd bJ 11:15 Ill a.it• l4 lh1 LC15 \11los locos musicll trio. m .. 11•· i1:11 '-' oci us ut• Mn: 1c, w1" 0) hlkt SWl'Jfffl .. Cetl If tilt DIJ" !dr1) '63 - &J Aidt•• f1iailf J1111 Fonda, Pet11 Fineh, M111l1 l1nsbury. 1.10 II Cll TM Wtlttn (R) G11ndp•l 0 (jjJ m .i.11,.., CNlllll Joey W1l1on st1s 1 shoolint star just is Bisllop 1u1st hosts. • pein llits his chest, convincin1 g ... CIHf him ht h&s received I sip from Q (I) (I) aJ Wiff WerJf ff l1t- he1ven th1t ht is toln1 to die. ~Miit "Cri1111 Wittll" Tht 0 Qj m lt11rh·l11 (R) Al11 Kit· colltluiion or 1utllof T1um1n Ct· 11s, M1rtl11 Mllntr, Kent McCord, ~1·s ttv11lin1 int1rvl1ws and Vin Stully, ind How1rd CC15ell rir•st. round·bbl1 di~eussions with la'# 0 (J) Ci) aJ MM SquM "Sine· 1nlor12m1rit experts. tu1ry'' (R) Julie phato111phs the m Tt TtH Utt Trutll records ol an interna lional syndieatt 1nd is scheduled to testilr be!Ofl 1 1%:00 IJ Mtdr: "Llw If W1r" (drl) '61 Grind July. but 1 truck pub her in Mel Ferrer. Ptter \1111 Eyck. Ille hospit1l. GI Altrff NitcM.ed: l'm8tt. GI Hor•n'l Mertn ti ..... ''"' ... °"""" @) LI Solfl "'911 m ..... , ... ....,. ., .. _ m•-• * ,_ m- 12:JO 0 M"""'1 Pltf'Oll 18 -..: (C) "lt11 Wt11W M11" (wes) 'SS -Randolph Scott, Rich· 1rd Boont. 1:45 II MIM: "hr rl flt MIW" (WM} '59--Robert Ry1n, lu1I lvts, ~·a 11u111. ·10flt1, 14ous•" ID 11111¥ 5111111 .., Ill) NMll 1.-tO QI All.fllitil SIMiw: "Wkl11,..~" " "SI ti I bytn" t:GOIJ (l)ClS '""''" ..... , (C) -• (2111) .. ,.,.. ..... ldrt) '68 -Jutl•I J:ll IJ Mtrit: "M111 Afr1W" (drt) '57 Cluislie, GICll'JI C, Scott, Rlch11d --Geor1e Nadtf~ f'hylll1 Thuter. , ·Friday DAYTIME MOVIES 1:• a ..,.,_"' """"' <11r.> ·s1 -M n ront1l111, .>DHph tott1n. 10:00 iJ) "llltrll If 1111 Mnl" (ldV) '51 -Sfd11t7 Poititt, llrttit Kitt. 0 "1111 f9f U. Nlllt" (com) '53 -Sun111 t uflt. 81rbara P1yto11. IZ.ttU .... .,.,, ,_. <•"> '54 -tlo7d Bri41t1 .... Wttt flfll!'I ..... (com) "l6-M11 Wat. 1:11 ID..,.., Hlr (mus) '35 -fred Ast.ire, Gin1er Ro11r1. l :JO a ..,....,. " lll1111lntt" (dr1) '44 ":"'" Humphrty Bot.•rt. Cl1ud1 Rains. ):00 ()) "'Tiit Y111..._ liq" (mu1) '56 -Orettt, K1thryn Gr1yson, Rita Moreno. !Ii (C) "llsi If firt" (dr1) 'SS- Jttk P1l1ne1. 81rb1r1 Ruth. l :lCI O "111111" (sci·ri) '54 -J1mc.s WhitJ'l!Ole, Jo.ft W1!4on. 4:GO 8 "'Clllill U1Mlllll(' (tdv) '50- Humflllrey l otlrl, [Je1nor r11ker. '"° ()) -• IOMI llllil& KOCE CHANNEL 50 ,- ':IOMI.,_, • ...,., lh"""""'M CCI lnttn1lnmll'lt ,.. efllhlrtft, l'IOll..:11 11y frtlld tletff'I, 4:» ·~· c....-r fCI M1111c. ~. Ind vtrlttr "9 tH<I\ IW .. Kl'IOOI dllfrd,..-i, 1:00 .... _ ,.,.... (C) ld11t1llot11I .,......lfWl"fftf ._. dlltclr91'1. 160 tnlnl 1100 i..19MY /Cl l"9flHIJ ··0r1"!! Tl'ftrl" ~'"" twr' fll ,,_ mtl•tlk n'!MtltJN et IM Ot'M'lll Tel~ f:JD 100MI IC I Cl'llldrlf'I cr11te ll'ltlr OWJ! "'0'°" llY Wbl'!'l)lllnt ••mt .. N llQJ, de~. 1nc1 Potrrv. 7:00 A-.1t111 <HrsMY ICI •·01rk es ~ 0""""°"'" )II U1!1nt WICtnttHy, Ji.1111 '° ., t ~.lfl. u.o "11ft) 1:00 '"\tlrl'lluM H-Ywll ll9lr1,11v (() "SO<r1tt•" Of1"11ll1l4 !tom Ir.. 0!110011~ ol J'lllO. !tD min). t ;M J1tt Jttr !Cl "l illy Ecllslwl11'" Tl'lf ''"*"' ~slyllfl In 1 Df'ogr1m DI old •"4 "'* l1'°'lifl. tJO ''"". I of Life" and "The Clo"'·ns." this ~-~k and next at its Costa l\lesa sho~·place. Continued ticket demand has extended the 1Yto productjons through the end of June. "In !he J'vljdst of Life'' is playv.Tight R o n Thronson 's salute to the legendary San Francisco columnist of the 1890's, A1nbrosc Bierce. v.1ith Toni Shearer and Bryant McKernan supplying t h e ' M. J. PAllll(S, llllCKAllO DOYLI! IN Kll'S 'MIDST O~ Ll~f· days under the direction of ~lartin Benson \\'ith ~1ichael Douglass heading an ense1nble cast in the role of Bierce. Playing on \\lednesdays and Thursdays is "The Clowns.,. a pantomimic produ<..1ion con- ceived, written and directed by Ronald Boussom, who also Angela Big Hit In London 'Gypsy' By J. W. t.Al\IBERT Cllfil"I" SClltfl(t Mlil\llW Strvlc1 sturdy-shouldered. gives !he terrible Rose not only the furious energy. the rage. the resilience, -the outrageous disregard for. or unaw:ireness or. other people's feelings but also the pathos of failure - failure not merely around the "Surprise" at the Irvine Com-Bernard Simon is the "L.1st munity Theater, ''Last of the cf the Hed Hot Lovers" in Red Hot Lovers" at the Gusta Costa h-1esa, \\0ith Di a n a J\fesa Civic Playhouse and Sher.wood. Helene Briggs and "Butternies Are Free'' at the Genevieve h-1urray playing his Laguna l\1oulton Playhouse. would-be ('(lnquests in the Neil "Surprise" -is played strictly Simon comedy. Pali Tam· for . laughs, with Jo an n e bellini directs at the Coin· \Volcott . D.D. Calhoun, John munily Center auditorium on Loughman, Lois Farah and I ,t h f! O r a n g e C o u n t y Sorrell Wayne suwlylng most Fairgrounds with curtain nt or them. Curtain is 8:3q Frj-8:30 Friday and Saturday "Romeo and Juliet'' and a BACKSTAGE -..,.The San children's sho\11, "The Hob- Cle1nenle Comn:uinity Thealer bit." Wayne Oater Pre11aieres ENTERTAINMENT Westerns Lured to Seattle SEA'ITLE (AP) -This ·city's push for prominence as a celluloid shooting gallery became a shove with !he world premiere of "Cahill , U.S. P.1arshal," replete with a s c h e d u I e d in·the-flesh ap- pearance of John \\'aync. the \\-etk of June 1-16 John didn't havt-use sex in film!, Wayne Week in Washington because •·they accomplished for ·'his rontributions to the more through nuance. double- 11 a t I o n ' s entertainment in· entendre and suggestion.' Sex dustcy and to the state's just isn't a spectator sport." economy.'' The 1969 Academy Award LONDON -For most poo. ple in the United States, that old Laurents-Styne-Sondheim- Robbins musical "Gypsy" is no more than a faded memory and a few more vivid images of the dynamic Ethel l\1ennan. dying vaudeville circuits of 1he '----------; 1930's. but inner failure, long The showing of the John 'Vayne western 1n<1r ked a first for Seattle and came during the shooting of two full-length That didn't sit too well v.•ith winner added, "I invented the the Advocacy.SUCVival o r way they do fight scenes now; American Indians (A-SAi ). Violence. if it's also in good The state group said it \\·asn't taste. never hurt anyone lo joining in the observance and see. Lu sty violence is a lot or called \\layne "the nation's fun ." number one Indian killer." For those \\'ho may havt A few years ago. spirited er. forts were made to ;bring ii to London, but nobody with the right sort of money was at all inter'es ted, even .with Miss ~ferman. Now at last it has arrived, with a leading actress as di£ferent in character as she could be -and is an un- mistak:1ble smash hit. This can't really be at- tributed lo the ract that the leading actress in question. and lhe composer, are bo1h London born, delighted as we are to see the prodigals returning. The last time we saw Angela Lansbury y,•as under the elevated auspices of the Royal Shakespeare Com· pany, playing opposite Dame Peggy Ashcroft in Edward Albee"s "All Over.'' thrust a\vay but at la st brought home to her by the desertion of her daughters (Zan Charisse, neice to Cvd. gives a slinky glamour to ihe emergence or the butterfly \\'ho became Gy psy Rose Lee ). 1t takes an out-of-th~m­ mon-run musical, and an out- 0£-the-common-run performan ce. to set one talking about its central fi gure as though she \\'ere a human being rather than a peg for a person<ility or an excuse for so1ne rou snig Nutines. But, though not offering the factory-siren splendors o f Ethel Merman, A n g e l a Lansbury is no slouch when it comes to song and dance; and "Rose's Tum," that last solitary daydream. sees her Violinist Says Bias Cost Job ' productions whlch city"fathers say will pump $1 million in· to tl\e city's economy. Filming ''C inderel la Liberty" \\'ith James Caan was 20th Century Fox. 'Varner Brothers has "l\'fcQ " on the The A-SAi charged Wayne missed "Cahill," another with overt racism tov.·ard world premiere, "Harry Never natil'e Americans and said his Holds," "ith James Coburn movies "have created the Im-and Wal ter Pidgeon, i ll age of the good noble white scheduled in Seattle r o r settler ... and the heathen. _A_u.;:g_us_t_. ------- Indian "oho raped women, scalped men and murdered children." ATI..ANTA, Gl'l. t A p l docket, starring \Vayne. Three 1 d - Frances H-e n· rick s 0 n other movies ha\·e been filmed "'" YNE, WHO recent Y is· Bossidy. 56, has fi led suit here in the past t\\·o years. coui'lfed 'Vatergate as-"a pan- against the Atlanta Symphony ty raid," said he is ~<:'.lscd to Orcheslra. charging that age TllE &-FOOT-I . 66-year-0lcl efforts to limit cbscenity and sex discrimination caused \\'ayne said or the fil m. because "if "''ould be un· her to Jose her job as a ·'Cahill may be a "·estern. but constitutional" b11t h<> addt~ \'iolinist. · it's a personal story that could he could never do an X·rated She claims th.at several be set in any time.'' fil!ll "becaus-e they affc t·t my r . Dan E 1 · ed sense of good taste." "young and inexperienced"' vvv · vans proc aim He said earlier dire~tors violinists were moved ahead of r::::::~::::O:::::::::::ii~~~~~~~~~~~~11 her in the orchestra and that I back from the first rO\V of ~:U:O ******** --mEN TO; she had a great spinning down the catwalks success _ as \\'ell she deserv· out over the orchestra pi t with tremendous verve. sbe \\'as systematically moved • 34s9vw1,111o ''iolinists . She said she was not offered a contract for the 1973-74 Return of the All Time Gre•ts Clessic of the World's Rock Fests HIGH P\AINI Dltml 111 '""'--'-' YOU'LL lllll MT M01"11 ed to, since her performance ·-----------, season. ~·as one of immense finesse; but it ll'as relafi\'elv a suc<:es d'cstime. Not one in 2,000 of those. who are going to revel in her vitality in ''Gypsy" will even have heard of, let alone seen, "All ·Over." And 1 mu.st say that if 1 had to choose between seeing "All Over" once more, or seeing "Gypsy" again, I should unhesitatingly go for "Gypsy." .... t....,.i "DRACULA" work of a straightforward song ''TIN flOM THI r rk f st · ht r w , .. "' .n,11111 -111 .... rMMi '""" ramewo o a ra1g ·or-SHO Of HOWS" itJI. Phn i t1"-• ,, ""' ,.._ rd nd d + "A NEW LEAF" IPGI V.'tl song -a - a n c e MATINIEl!S SAT. & SUN. sho\\', Arthur Laurentsl:~=========~l!~:;::i~~~iiiiiii~~iiii: (who also directed in London ' has prepared the ground for a ~ portrait of one of those grasi:r DAILY MATINEES I · • 67J-62Mf ing mothers '\'ho a re 2 HITS o~ ALL , ••• determined that their children F "' ...., shall live for them in the Ji ves AGES TO ENJOY I that they have failed to live 1 • ~ 2:"0~1:' 0t.;,~''.:;.;r·. for themselves . "CHARLOTTE'S . -= rr IS QUITE. amazing to see ho""" l\fiss Lansbury. a big woman, round·faced a n d NOW PLAYING llSEIVED SEATS no !>11 UI 'Iii 8'30 fn., SJ1., ~111. Moo1 MARLON BRANDO .itL I . 'j>8i1s ll(J<)Oo(""Cll" (X, ""°"''"l" ll111tt,d ~fl•SI' , ...... M_._ ... &-w••-"-' ltllr el 1:1t. J:JO, t;•S "IAnll 'OI PU.Nfl Of '-'ti·• D911y J:JO, 7!11, I01U "ltG JAICI" '-G. -... Nllf At 1!114-li.ti / .. , • ., ... nt• \ l Sl:NSUOUS LION"'·'· 1 -"' ., J-4:4J.Jt1• j ' "JOIY" .......... _$<•-J ~-. ...,,,..1 WEB" ••• "WI LL Y WONK A GREEN l'woplt Dml II ... In Ille year 2022. ND THE CHOCOLATE ' FACTORY" ~wtfM 7:00 .... 10:JO ALL SEATS 75c ~Only ...•• , ··-··-· 1iiG1 lllllROCOl"' ...... G 1:40 Call n..t. '-' 5•11. Sc._... '?;{11 Jbuth Coast Repertory PIHAL Wf:ll(JI TWO •lllLLIANT SNOWS "IN THE MIDST OF. LIFE" A tesir, v111r1nt M111Ke1 "'"'' t11r1 s-.r "THE CLOWNS" A s .. ,.,.,11: ''"''""' of MkM, Mnlc •IHI L••tltt*' Wt41tftd.., &-'R11rtdoy 1127 NIWPOIT IL'fD., at H..Mr lnlorm1t10r1/RQtf'Vlllo!!S '*'':llJ I P.M, C11rllln ·"' CIN!DDM! 20:.~; .... ..... • .. :J.!.I(.UO -. _,,,, .. CtNfDDMf 21 ;·, t. ~ • '"11..:•.•u ,, _ .. -.... SIAD/UM ' I.:·~. t. ••utl•l.ct11•1.!'1'"°.Jll' "' . ,, . SIAD/UM "l ."::. ' At '.1 .. v1·1i.11c~ -..... -.... SUDIUM •J ,:.. ' A.Ulttu.:.Ll .. UIJ.;;i:;ll MUSICAL VERSION "Tflcotrc of llood" ... "Daughten of Sataft" = "H"" Plojoq _., Ill . .. "JM 1144*' I,.) 'WOODSTOCK" Oo"'t Mi1s Th• ITH AMNIYllSAIY PAln Fe1tvri"9 Uw1 "S.lhMI 011 S.•"4" Ohlils Id ...... Nltltt Sunday is F'l1 tlE>A Y' ··- DIANA llOSS "THE LADY SINGS THE BLUES" !Rl .... "CLASS OF '44" (PG) NOW TMIU TUISDAY UY ULLMAN ••• • ..,... c. Jc"" "THE HDSPIT AL" -; - Costa Mesa .Civic P.layhoose , ' PIDIM'R ' "LAST OF THE RED HOT LOYIRS" by N~I Simon • · Jun• 1.S-16 22-23 29-H WIST aATl-'OaAN•• COUNTY , ..... OUNDS IJ1'9 '·"'-MIN ...... UM. l'lt ,_.etllM c•H •™Jll, ltflff' 1 "" $"" U.A. tlTY AHO 50UTM COAST CtNl,..,.S-TUISDAY * tLADlll ANO GOLOliN AGlllll -O .. IH Tl\. l 1 .. 1P.M, It, N..,_O, Ml r1• "SMOW'OOWH'I . ..... ll"""'9n ''WIM,ONO" ltflil fft Cellrl !POI ' '"Jl•Atllllt,TMe llllSOUt LIOH'' •· J. TIM!'MI "JO•Y" •tlll 111 Clll~I CJIO) .Mtt Ontrl -''WILLY WOJlllCA"-(0)-,. "CH ... ltLOTTl'S Wll" 1¥1 Olllyl "HIW LIA'"" "lllOTHI" SUM lllTI• MOON" 1"01 OOUIU 5MOCl AMI St10W! LlnLE CIGAIS !ftl SISTllS 10 s ... o .• ,.,.,, ·~ ••11kh.unt !S..I 16.1:·?411 ................. FRASlll THI SINSUOUS LK>N !1'5) & JOIY !NI hnoor+•I ~-'•'" •••<h It•'· 'H0<bor a1,,, 111·1 2 IEAIH fU.llU"I MClfT flASlll THI SINSUOUS LION '"° • _!OIT AU 1111 W1' LAST Of SIHILA "°' t DADDY'S OONl A HUNf1NO ,. ..... . ., • Thur5day, J11nt 21, l<J73 DAILY PILOT 33 I • .Julie· in a Pi~kle?-Big Band Y outltlul I , Actress Defends Role CflrtttfM ,.._ ......... lffVICI NEW YORK -Many of Julie Harris' admirers have condemned her new TV 1bow, "Thicker Than Water," as a demeaning vehicle for a star of her atature. in. New Series Herman Keeps ,Up · to Date A kind ol aophlstlcated com- edy for the "Hee.Haw" set t b i 5 Wednesday summef . aeries (ABC -'IV) about a " pickle factory Is already show- , · ing signs of finding a regular alot for Haell on the chonnels ol Mlddie America w h er e the realiUes oC American taste are often more ac c ura tely ' 1 reflected than in the overnight ,.!ratings In Los Angeles and sob whlch rnllllons o l Americans have ,co m e to recognize as her v o c a 1 trademark in such movies as .. East of Eden" and "Member of the we&ung," such TV dramas aa ••IJttle Moon of Alban" and 11Jobnny Belinda" and such Broadway ~ ENTERTAINMENT ductions. as "Member ol the "--------~ Wedding," "The Lark" and, most rcently, "The Last of Mrs. Uncoln." She is a four- time winner of Broadway's Tony Award and a two-time winner of '!V's Emmy Award. What would she like to do In ietter .TV For Deaf Clll'lttf .. StllMI MMltor Sff'llCI . On /azzman Woody lfmnAn s latest album jacke~ a huge black bird pen:lles In dramatic silhouette across a vague, multicolored backgroond..lmpressive. Noth- ing oldUmey or nostalgialsh about it. Put the record -"The Raven Speaks" -on a tumtatble, and listen. Yes, that'i1f -the tbneless sound ol a aolid big hand. But wait a .minute. Hear those rocking wah-wah guitar rUfs on "Fat Mama" and the -title tune ? And check SC.me of · · New York. The network, • ·which originally scheduled ' ·eight summer sequences for lhe plckJ .. ractory series, has ._...,l,.T'S NO PICKLE tentatively ordered eight more r:··-'scrlpts to be prepared. the theater that she has not already done? ''There are so many roles J'd still like to do .. :' 1'1tere's Peter Pan which U d W .those songs -Gilbert Il er 8 y O'Sullivan's "Alone Again I feel slipping away Lrom me. WASHINGTON (AP) -An (Naturally)," Carole King's "It's Too Late." Not to men- tion .,Summer of '42" and "Safklla Chicano (Watennelon Man)." Miss Harris refuses to make any excuses for appearance on the show. She defutitely does not reel ~ haJ_]lee~u@!.in • 'IV pickle barrel. , - "I'M OOING it because I love lt. ~talnly it J>ays well, but I'm really doing it because I'm an actor who loves to . work. Even before the show , ·• started, people were saying • · 'Why are you doing this kind • ·~·of thing?' Before they even knew what it was! Well, I try • . to IJllulate myself from that .,:·kind ol cr1ticism. Not that I .. · don't care about it, but u·, the ti. only way I can kieep on work· Ing. "c.rtalnly I'm fallible and l can make mistakes. We're all capable of that. In the theater . in particulllr, if you do • something and it's terrible · •tbeer are always people who • say 'Oh, lhe'a through.' And then the next season whe'll have a marvelous part and be -*fur and the aame people ; -=· .. Julle Harris And . Lady Macbeth. And Constance Iii 'Klng John,' And experimental program has Hedda Gabler and Oiekhov. been launched to flash cap- wil !acclaim her. That's a I've never done Chekhov, you tiom on the television ICl'eeDS great comfort to me. I have -know." And lhete's a slight of the hard-of-bearing so they this stubborn belief that note of despair in her voice as_' can enjoy televj.sion better. nothing really harms you as if she is suddenly 1-ealizing Under the program ail- long as you _do your best. how much there istyet to do. nounced by the Public Broad· "On ttUs show I ~njoy tbe Will i~ ~e a miracle to IC· casting System, a coder will pOOple I'm working with. It's complish Jt all? be attached t_o the sets of the stimulating and we're a very hard-<Ji-hearing so that other happy group, We have to work "WEIL, I SAY from time to viewers will not be dlstracted . so fast. Five days to a do a time that I'm waiting for ·a whole episode! 'lbe writers personal miracle in my own are almost always with us and 1 it1s like vaudeville _ we Im-ife. And maybe it'll take a provise and rework constonUy. minlcle to get to do aD tho rolelJ l want to do. But, there "! SAW THE show for the are other Important thlnp In flfst time the other day and I my life, too. Like Emily was sure l would bate myself Dickinson, I'm not looking for in it. I usually cringe when I the hereafter, I'm looking for watch myself perfonn, but I the now." round myself believing it. I Miss Harris lives alone in thought Yle looked so real, not ' her home near New York City. hokey at all. I-believed it !" She says she loves Los ?.1iss Harris' voice is filled Angeles as well and finds with that . incredulous an. working there very pleasant. tlcipatlon mixed with an'ever-Her 13-year-old son bas just present --dluckle or finililled high sdiool. 1be National Bureau of Standards and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare In! lllllncisc the e<- perlment with • 1215,000 grant. Dr. Malcolm Norwood, chiel of Media Services and Cap- tioned Films ol HEW's Bureau of Ecjucatl<M) for the-Han- dicapped, said: "Television has played a major role in serving the general populatim, but its im· pa.ct on the deaf has been minimal . because there are few, if any programs, that can be understood.'• Top hit tunes and sophisticated movie themes? How "now" can you get? But look at the photo on the back of the jacket. Yes, it's the same Woody Hennan·who baa become a jazz legend -and a lot of his current fans weren't even bom when he set a na- tion on its ear with a colossal 'to's smash called "Wood· chopper's BaD." DERMAN ref111es to age. The same goes for bis music. Today, as ever, the Herman band continues to explore a new possibility In soond and style -from the original Hennan blues to symphonic experiments, rock influences, even free-form jazz . Through this attitude or growth and change, llennan imaginatively strives to keep young audiences -as well as older fans -in toucli with the growing.and-changing j a z z P. ~ NOW! ·~. G/!flE HACKMAN AL/. ~· g "-: r i 1-- i' I 'I ;fl ~- -TOI UUGllJ( • 00.IHS 1111.0R .• _ ... ,..,. -.. -..... -·----···-1olt-,--.. ~-. ..-.. !HJ ·----•••• ('. E' & Ii: ~ '· a '!i ~: <I.. ' [ f ' • ' I ' . • . ' I ,_ • • Wliverse. And Hennan himself stays in close contact with the world ot young ll:lUSkians, through a continuing se'ries of working visits to the groves ol academe. Herman's enthusiasm for the upcoming generation or jazzmen permeated his con· versation during-a-recent in- terview. Right off, he repartcd that "the most most In- teresting thing we're doing now is visiting schools. 1beY include high schools, junior colleges, colleges. Jn rn:any of them we hold a ·seminar,' and also the boys in the band work as 'clinicians' wilh t h e youngsters involved in music." AS HIS FOLLOWERS koow, Herman has been a 'clinician' of sorts for many years, but in a different way. He has always encouraged. y o u n g musicians, and from the old Hennan days have come such talents 3s Zoot Sims,· Stan Getz, TelTJI Gibbs, and Al Cohn. Through the seminars; Hennan ts only formalizing and streamlining his long-time function o f encourager~f­ youth. "All of us, including the guys In the band, find this work very gratifying, because there's an awful lot of talented young people around who are really into it. Which I think is a very healthy aign. To Hennan, the big-band framework can incorporate almoat anything. "We 111' not to ever get to suCh a stagnant paint, where we're not in· volved in trying things beyond the usual_scope of ~hat a band ' plays." The current He.rpl311 band is young in years. Workil)g with young musicians has become NO NOSTALGrA· TRIP FOR WOODY HERMAN Bandleadtr KHplng Up With the TllMI standard practice for the '\Vhat are you dolng with all veteran leader. "I've always-these kids?' The truth of the had young bands, for the past matter is that l had' a band 35 years: It's just ·that I got when I w~ 22, and we had old in the process of ·having ' already m.8de sOme kind of young bands," he gt-ins. majl)t sUccess wt th-a-thing ' . called 'WOQdchoJ>PElr's Ball.' "PEOPLE OF mY· ilk, or So I don't think: Of these cats somewhere near me, say as be!Dg· that yoong." : TllE ~T OF •Lil - • 32 DAILY PILOT Thursday, June 21, 1973 TONIGHTS ·TV IDGIDJGHTS KTLA II 6:00 -Angel Baseball. The Ctllfor- nia Angels take on the Minnesota Twins. CBS II 9:30 -"Petulia." George C. Scott and Julie Christie play the top roles o! a recently di- vorced doctor and a much-married won1an in this 1968 drama with Richard Chamberlain Shirley Knight and Arthur Hill. ' ABC .a 9:30 -Jane Goodall and the Wild Dogs of Africa. Hall Holbrook narrates this intimate look at the social structure and living babits of t the wild dog packs of Africa. r, .... ...-. ...... -~------,,........,._,,-.J --YV DlltY LOG Thursday Evening JUNE21 ''°'II DD &I Bl llil ID..., rna .... D Aapl lulNll C1Hforni1 An1els w. the Mh1r11tot1 Twina. Cl)~ .. £Mil'•, ...... Dw.tNDIM•Aht .,.,_ Ill ... , ... fBLll r ..... m-"'""'" m """ stoeaes l :>O{j) Kt1111'1 ... ,... D Mnll: (90) "'Seldiln Dree,. (1dV) '51 -David Niven, Stew1rt Gr1n1er, Robert Newton. (I) CIS Nns Witter Cronkit1 0 HM lin Will TIMI !Ii Mirr lrlth S11tw m..., ""''" Im Sue Yu11 Jiii( YH m Te It All......C llil-· UJ Uttlt ..... 7"811 CIJ O m .... (I) Trdl er C.."'°'11e1t (I) A..nc..,i Advelltll1t G W111r1 Mr u111r GJ I LM llltf II) I Dru• ti .te1111i1 f11S..-- fD1'M Qi Q'- IEM-m r• ••11ta 11.o1 EB""" a .. m-•- C111mbtrf1i11, ~lrl!J' K!llrhl. Arthur Hiii, PiPP.I Scott; Jos1pll r.otten. A much·.m1rried ind very we1ltlly woman sets her sl1hts on • rectnt· Ir divorctd ,Ounr doctor. 0 lliJ ft! lro"'*'t "Sh1dow Sol· die(' (R) Chie1 lronslcM visits 1n old frl1nd at Scotland Yrrd and finds himMll tiyin1 to aolvt a po· lice killina. D CIJ(l)('Jtl•l<WI JM. hMll ... Ille WIW lip If Alrlai (R) Hal ttolbruoll n1rr1tes this Inti· mdt look at the soci1I structure ind livin1 h1bils of the wild Oo1 pteka: of AlriCI. Tht specie! is !hi result of 1lmost two y1i11 of study by Jane Goodall, 1 world 1111thorltJ on Ylrious form1 o/ 1nim1! beh•'f'· ior, and her pholo~r1ph1r hU'S· ll1nd, Huro ~1n Lawid. &I•"' IE 0 ._ M Altj1Mre 1461,. t:JO a De ...,,, W111Mftn snm ind Hf11ri1tt1 host IDllll posb! a•-m llllCUdll lttlilMI Iii)- lD:OO 0 !Ii a;, DNll llll1tti1 ._ (R) JotJ Bitnop 1nd Kl"" l l1ck ruest. emm..., a 00 (l) m stntts "S.11 rr11· cla "Tht HouH on Hydt Street" (R) Lew A~rei ruesls as 1n tldtrl)' re<:1UH eh1r1ed with mu rderin1 1 younr boy who brnt1 into llit homt. After he's 1rr1sted, !tie old man 11ve1ls !tie prestnct of his broth« Donald, who htd loll( 110 .bHn .repc)rted dnd and wllem th•- old nn he• protected ai'llCI he cur· ,.,.._ I tlltfttll ·~---l ltlr r.r1 Haitlor. a-IC) t2lwl __.. J:JO 8 YMll Dr. ~ (R) l lldm (sci·fl)·'&o -Wlli RllllllJ', Pllll !terns that 1 ,m111 liri, critiCllPy Lubthlf. Injured In 1n auto 1a:ident with fl r~ her blKk boyfriend. is Pfl(nlnl m.•lllial Cil llep•'• Mlrlll -- 0 Tiie Adwllttrlf G1111 Br1dlew 10:30 8 Tllll I.a: 1rr1n1es to 1!1ve hlmHll 1rr1sted e ~111,i.nt11;, Fisllin1 IS 1n ille11l 1rms dealer in 1n el· fD TWftr Mi1utn Wit• •• , tort ~o flush o.ut 1n ille11t w1r IE: ... ,..,1111 matenab Ofllr•hcn. ~-- (!)Te 1111 llM Truttl tB llews/s,ertl ~ ~~=-s.i;i::wi.: (2\r) "T1llf 11:00 e o a e m m""" Driwl ~ Mstlt"' (dtl} '4o-Humph· ())(()a ...... ttY Bo11rt. Geor11 Rall, Anll Stitri· B OM st.II 11""4 din. Cil lllirlllll NIM QI Ld't Malll I Dul 18 TMll If C....llMCU m "" "" IB ~ m Dr•pet Mwle: (C> "TM I.Ill "' the tJ'j) o\cciet ~ Chic111t JIDttS Meltlc8M" (cl assic) '36-Ranclolph Scott. Bruce Clbol Binnie B11nts. Alurist1 incl Rlc1tdo Sanchez pre. wit tlleir works 1Ccompanltcl ~ 11:15 Ill CIH1111 J4 the Los V1tos locos musial trio. m Rolhl' 11:>1 fJ (IJ CIS Lite MW: (C) "111 m '°'le• Surlffll .. c..i ..... Dri(' (dra) '&! -1B Addi•• r1• J1n1 Fonda, Ptle1 fi11th, An11l1 lansl:lury. 1.1IO ii Cl) 1111 W11ten (R) Gra ndpa 0 (fg) m Jehi_,. C111H Joe)' Wilton MIS • shootln1 star just as BislloJ suest hosts. 1 pain hits his che1t, convincin1 D IH ea..,. him ht has recerted a slffl from D (])(I) (B WW. WNW If bo hl1wn th1t he is 10ln1 lo die. tertaill....t "Cf'ima Witch" The 0 9) t?1I L1111P·l1 (R) Alu 1(1r· conduSion of 1uthcr Trumen C1· r~s, M1rtln Mlln1r, Kent McCord, pole's rtvei lini inltrvi1ws ind Vin Scutl1. 1nd How1rd Ccsetl rv•st. round·llble discussions 'llilh law 0 Cil 00 a> Mid Sq<Ul4ll "'Sane· 1nforcem1nl experts tu1ry'' (R) Julit photo1r1ph1 the m11 Ttll !ht Trut~ records of an int1malion1I syndltltt 1nd i1 sclledul•d to ltstify belon 1 12:00 O lhwil: .. Ln tf W11" (d11) '61 Gr1nd July, but 1 trucl pub her in ~et ·Ferrer, Peter V1" ~k. the hospi111. m Alftld MikietQ "ttetits .......... ...,... ID-,,..."'°"""' (J) la llHfl Jnttt llJW.--IE ....... Q9D ""-.. JM fl•111 m- l :XI D IMIN• '1.onetw m---a;i ..... ,.,.,,.. 1"811 CIJ CH TII-M°"'' t<I (Dr) .. ,.,.Ill" (drl) '68 -Juli• Christle, Glof11. C, Scott, Rlch1rd ·Friday DAYTIME MOVIES t :lO D ...,_"" AffaU" (lfr1l •51 -Join rontalne, Joseph Cottan. 10:00 CJ) ..... rl " die " ..... (ld'f') '58 -Sidn11 Poil1tr. £1rth1 litt.. II "I~ let the HUl1 .. («>m) '53 -Sunny Tufls, 81rbln P1ytofl. U.• 8 "111 Dtldtr , ..... (mr1) 'S4 -lkryd flrldp1 ..... Wut , ... ..... (a1111I 'l&-M• West. 12:10 D Nl&iWay Pllfol 1911ew1e: (C) ..,.,. We•W M••" (wes) 'SS -R1n6ol ph Scott, Rich· lld BooM. 1"8 (})090(1) .... 1:45 IJ llMlt: .... , " .. htlew" (wet) ·s~Roh!rt Ryan, t urf tvu. 2"8ID"''"'"' _, "Wlhl'"\" "SIMI el ltb,..." 3:10 IJ lhvll: "M11 1\111~" (dr.) '57 ~or1e N1der1 Phrllis Th1xt1r. l:OI m "Ttp Ktr (mus) '35 -rred Astaire; Gin1tr Ro191s. t:JO a "hlu1• ... .,,.1 ...... (dr•) '44 -Humph111 Bof:1rt. Cl1ud1 Jl1ins. J;IO (I) '°nt fall~ J:ln(' (ntUS) '56 -Oresl1, Kethry11 C11~10n, Rill Moreno. (ft (C) "lks tf flA" (dr1) '5S- J1ck P1l111«. ll11b111 Rush. J:JO fJ "1~11" (lci·fi) 'S4 -.!Imes Whhmore, Join Wildon. 4:00 8 "Cll1ill UPtriill" (adv) '50- HulltJll'lr•w 8ot1rt, U11nor P'11ke1. C:JO (J) S-• IOMI 1•1 KOCE CHANNEL 50 .. . . I Two World-Premieres Share SCR Stage One original world premiere ls certainly 110mething to shout about ln local theater. Two original world premieres - both or them home gro\vn - playing in repertory at the same thenter constitute a m::i· jor achievement by any stand· ards. South Coast Repertory. long the creative capital of Orange County theater, continues IQ present its double--barreled "firsts" by a pair (){ SCR· spawned talents, "In the ri.tidst of Life" and "The Clowns." this v.·eek and next at its Costa ti1esa shov.'Place. Continued ticket demand has extended the two productjoos through the end of June. "In the Midst of Life" is play\l.Tight-Ro n Thronson'.s. salute to the legendary San Francisco columnist of the l890's, Ambrose Bierce. with Toni Shearer and Bryant McKwnan supplying th e origlnal music to Thronson's lyrtcs. Performances a r e given Fridays lhrougb Sun- IN SC:R'S 'MIDST 011 LlflE' play1 the central role. Jt ln· eludes sequences with four old lime silent movie comics -. Charlie Chaplin. B u s t e r Keaton, t..:1urel and Hardy - and a "sJap&tick symphorty" orchestra. The curtain goes up on both SCR shows at 8 o'clock in the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport. Blvd., CO.Sta Mesa . Reservations 646-1363. Intermission Tom Titus day and Saturday at the evenings. Reservations 834· E~EWHERE along the Humanities l·lall l)\ayh"use on 5300. Orange Coast, there are con· the UC Irvine cam pus . Holdover performances of tinuing performances or Reservations 646·3178. "Butterflies Are Free" con· "Surprise" at the Irvine Com· Bernard Simon Is the "Last tinue at the Laguna Mou lton munity Theater. "Last of the ol 1he Hed HQt Lo\'ers:· in Playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Red Hot Lovers" at the Gosta Costa Mesa, \\•Ith D i a n a f\oad, Laguna Beach. Hai> days under the direct ion of ~lesa Civic Playhouse and She'rv.·ood. Helene ~riggs <ind Graha1n's produ,ction stars ri.tartin Benson l\'ith ~1ichael "Bu11.ernies Are Free" at the Genevieve ftlurray playing his \\'illiam CUilen, rt1 i c h e 11 c Dou~lass heading a~ ensemble Laguna ~ioulton Playhouse. \\'OUld.-be-conquests in the Neil Brown. Annabelle ~u.igley and cast in. the role of Bierce. "Sur~ise'' is .Played strictly Simon comedy. Pali Tam· Jack Bingert and plnys tonighl Playing on \Vednesdays and -ior-raugfiS,W1th J \8 n n e-bellini-directs--nt the -€om·-lhrou~Satur:da;r-a 8:30~ Thursdays is "The Clowns.'' a \Volcott. D.D. Calhouri, John munity Cente r auditorium on Reservations 49+-0743. pantomimic production eon'! Loughman, Lois Farah and t h r! O r a n g e C o u n t y ceived, "'rilten and directed Sorrell Wayne supplying most Fairground! \\'ith curtain at by Ronald Boussom, who also of them. Curtain is 8:30 Fri· 8:30 •'riday and Saturday BACKSTAGE -The San Cle1nente COmmuni y 1'heattr has put out a call ror directors for Jts um-74 season and those interested should apply to thcuter president Bonn l e Judson nt Box 265.J San Clc111e1110. . .. six plays are prese nted each season at the Cllbrillo Playhcusc, along with a summer show .... all direc- toria l resu1ncs rnust be receiv- ed by Jw1e 30 ... 1'ryouts have been an- nounced for the third annual All OrAnge County fo~lne Arts \Vorkshop. sponsored bv the tj.ewport·Mesa Unified School District nnd Orange Coast College. . .Tlwy'll be b~lcl tiionday. June 25. in the Costa ~lcsa High School lyceum beginning at 8 a.m .... The progran1 will culn1innte in pro- ductions of ··West SI d t Story," "Tile · anlastieks.- " Ron1eo and Jullet" and a children's show. "The Hob- bit" Wayne Oater P1°e11aieres . Angela Big Hit Westerns Lu1·ed to Seattle In London 'Gypsy' SEA'ITLE (AP \ -Tills the 'reek c( June 1·16 John didn't have use sex in films, \\'ayne Week in Washington because "they' accomplished for "his contributions to the more through nuance. double-- n a ti on 's entertainment in· en tendre and suggestion, Sex dustry and to the state's just isn't a spectator sport ." By J. W. I.AMBERT Clll'il"lll Sdl'fKI MMlllH' StnlCI LONDON -For most peo- ple in the United States,. that old Laurents·Styne-Sondheim- Robbins musical "Gypsy" is no more than a faded memory and a fe\v more vivid images of the dynamic Ethel Aterman. A few years ago, spirited ef- forts were made to ·bring it to London, but nobodY with the right sort of money was at all interested, even .with Miss ti1erman. Now at last it has arrived, with a 1eading actress as different in character as she could be -and is an un· mi stakable smash hit. This can't reall y be at- tributed to the fact that the leading actress in question. and the co mposer. are both London born, delighted as we are to see the prodigals returning. The last time we saw Angela Lansbury "''as under the elevated auspices of the Royal Shakespeare Com· pany, playing opposite Dame Peggy Ashcroft in Edward Albee's "All Over." city's push for prominence as sturdy-shouldered. gives the a celluloid shooting gallery terrible Rose not only the beca1ne a shove \\'ith the furious energy, the rage, the world premiere of ''Cahill, resilience, t h e outrageous disregard for. or unawareness U.S. Pi·larshal," replete with a of. other people's feelings but sch e du 1 e d in-!Jle.nesh ap- a\so the pathos of failure -ENTERTAINMENT pearaoce of John Wayne. failure not merely around the " The showing o( the John dying vaudeville circuits of the \Vayne western marked a first 1930's. but inner failure, long thrust a\vay but at last for Seattle and came during brought home to her by the v l the shooting of l\\'O fuJl-length deS(rtion ot her daughters io i11ist productions 'vhicb city fathers (Zan Charisse, neice to Cyd. say \\'Ill pump $1 million· in· gives a slinky glamour to the S B • to the city's economy. emergen~e or the butterfly ays U1 S who became Gypsy Rose Lee 1• .. Filming ' ' Ci nd e r e 11 a It takes an out-<>f-the-<om-C J 'b Liberty" ~·ith James Caan mon-run musical, and an out· 0St 0 was 20th Century Fox. \V arner of·the-common·run performan Brothers has ·'~lcQ" on the economy." The 1969 Ac1tdemy A\\'ard That didn't sit too well \\'ilh \\'inner added. "I invented the the Advocacv-Survival o r \\'ay· thcy dQ light scenes nov.·. l\fnerican tndia.M t A.SAI \. Violence. if it's also in good The state group said it v.·asn't lasle. nc,'rr hurt an}·one lo joining in the ob-servance and sec. Lusty \'iolence is a lot or called \\1ayne "the nation's fun ." number one Indian killer.'' Foi:. 1hosc \\'ho may havc- The A-SA.I charged \Vayne missed "Cahill,'' an o I he r with overt racism to\\·ard \\1>rld premiere. "Harry Never native Americans and said his Holds," "'ith James Coburn movies "have crCated the in1· and Waller Pidgeon, i s age of the good noble White scheduled in Seattle Io r settler . . and the heathen;·. _:A_u,,,s_:us:_I_. ------- Indian who raped \\'Omen. scalped men and murdered children." ce. to set one talking about its ATLANTA, Ga. ( A p l docket. starring \Va yne. Thfee central figure as though she -Frances H en ri ck so n other mO\'ies have been fil med WAYNE, \\'HO recent\~· rlis- \\•ere a hu1nan being r::ithcr Bossidy, 56, has filed suit here in the past tv.·o years. counted \Vatergate as "a pan· than a peg for a personality or against the Atlanta Symphony ty raid." said he :is OJ:O:'.lscd to an excuse for su1ne rousnig Orchestra. charging that 'age THE 6-FOOT -4, 66-year-old efforts to limil cbsccnily routines. and sex discrimination caused \Vayne said or the film, bocause "it v.•ould be un· h I h Ca"'ll b constitutional" b11t h!.' addl·rt But, though not offering lhe · er to ose er job as a " 1u may be a u•estern. ut he could never do an X-rated factory.siren splendors 0 r violinist. It's a personal story that could ~ . · .. fil'll "because they affect n1y Ethel Merman, A n g e I a She claims that several i;oc: set in any tune. sense..of good taste." "young and inexperienced" Gov. Dan Evans proclaimed He said earlier din.•etors Lansbury is no slouch when it violinists \\'ere moved a.bead of r::::~~=====1iii~~~~~~~~~~§;l1 comes to song and dance; and her in the orchestra and that I solitary daydream, sees her back from the first row of ,:;:~::;::O "Rose's Turn," that 1ast she wa-s' systematically moved • sttt• vu. 1.wo mEN TO; she had a great spinning down the catwalks violinists. success_ as u•ell she deserv· out over the orchestra pit with She said she was not offered ed to, since her performance __ irem __ e_n_doo_s:_v_er_v_e_. _____ , a cont ract for the I97J..74 "'as one of immense finesse; 1 ....:'~'~'~'°~11~·---------I but it was relatively fl. succes d'estime. Not one in 2.000 of those who are going to revel in her vitality in "Gypsy" will even have heard of, let alone seen, "All Over." '"TIN FIOM THI SHOW OF SHOWS" + "A NEW LEAF'" I 'G) HOllllllOI OF 19)1 I "FRANKENSTEIN" •to11 L..-sl "DRACULA" hlll •r1tlllal MClll 'f't"'*'"' fnm 1tl1. Pin 2 <1:lrteMI el t11t '>IL And I must say that if l had lo choose between seeing "All Over" once more, or seeing "Gypsy'' again, I should unhesitatingly go for ''Gypsy.'' work of a straightforward song framework of a straight-for· u>ard song. and. dan ce I who also directed in London 1 MATINEES SAT. I SUN. sho\\', A r t h u r Laurents1 ~==========:1i=:i has prepared the ground for a w portrait of one of those grasp-DAILY MATINEES • 67J4J60f ing mothers \\•ho a re 2 HITS FOR ALL , ••• determined that their children ~ shall live for them in the Jives AGES TO ENJOY that they have failed to live ~ ~.0E,;;,1 0c:;~·r,,,.::r· for themselves. "CHARLOTTE'S = IT JS QUITE.amazing to see how Miss Lansbury, a big woman,, round·faced a n d OW PLAYING RESlltVID SEATS n, s~. UI 'Iii "30 t11 .. Sal •• .>u1. M0111 MARLON BRANDO .ilL 'j>BUs (-ll[l()lo!Uo;Ol• X1 1t-•11tu 0111trd ~"•~!<: ••ON. THRU THURS. 8 PM. fRIOIY 1 I 9,45 SITUROIY 2-1 I 9,45 SUNOIY 2-S I 8 All Sli\lS "·00 1•••l .. -•-· ·-~··U!o .... hllr .. ,,..., 11>0. 11•J "IAnll 'Olt ,UrNll Of AHS" ,.G, hilr l:JO, 1:11. lt 1U ---.... , Af 1r1W4: .. I "IRASIH THI \ SINSUOUS LtoN"'·'· . l MILT At M~J-10.JO I "JOIY" _,/ '' r ~ < ,, , , . ' '. WEB" ••• "WILLY WONKA GREEN ND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY" People ll.lld II ... ln!Myear2022. Sliowtl .. 7:00 -4 10:JO ALL SEATS 75c I ••::;iOnly . ...... ······-· m lm!IOCOlOft ..... G l.i,40 Coll n.ut. fer I••· k ...... ~ Jbuth Coast Repertory "INAL W•l:KS! TWO aRILLlt.HT SNOWS "IN THE MIDST OF LIFE" " 1ttly, Vlbr•"' Mutk•I flrlt•r tlltU Sltl'llfar "THE CLOWNS" A SJopttlck Sr111plto"' of M'-e, · M .. tc •rtcll Lntftttr w...._.._,,n.nc19y 1127 NIWPOIT ILYD .. .t HllrMr l11kl~m1t1MIR1Mr'lllllM!t "*1>6J I P'.M. Cvrlll11 -•• -.. 1•\ S FAD/UM " I .~~ . ' A''..IP1~t. l!.1'<' l':• -. . ... S FAD/UM " 2:;., '-A il••'i".11 !.lW!l',._ ,_ ....... . SFADIUM ·3 .-.~ .. .... •J•.U.;t.l,lll• '"Theatre of 1tooc1•• ... "DaU<4hten of Satea" "Hfth Plel11 DrlfMr'". Cll ... "JM KJIU" ,,.., Return of the All Time Gre•ts Classic of the World's Rock Fe1t1 'WOODSTOCK" Don't Mi11 Thi ITH ANNIYllUIY PAln F,•t11ring Ll•• "s.-4 o. s..,..., .. 0141n l1tt ....... N'tM Sunday is Fllll&Af in the l1JJ!ijijl!1ll 1 M • NIWPOIT 141-1111 DIANA ROSS "THE LADY SINGS THE BLUES" !Rl ____ AIM_ "CLASS OF '44" (PG) NOW THIU TUESDAY UY UUMAN ,,. •-.e· C .. Sc.on "THE HOSPITAL" CGPl Costa Mesa .Civic PJayhouse •• 1 PIBINTS "LA:ST Of THE RED HOT LOYIRS" by NoU Simo" JuM 1.S..16 22·23 2941 WIST GAU-OlAffl COUNTY •AllHOUNDS lt :)t •. I'll.."''"'..-, tUL ,_ nNl"fltltM <Ill~ atMr ,'1 ~111)1.sm U.A, r lTY AND SOUTM C0'41T C:IN•MAS-TU•IDt.T-;- tU.Dl•S AND OOLOIN ,AGIRSI -51r•N TIL 1111 'P.M, 11.M~,Mlttlil "IMOWOOWM" • ,a11 NfWNll "WINNINO" hffl M c.IHI l'O> "LOV• & flt.IN a TMI WMOLI DAMN TH ING" ''I IS A LOflllL Y fllUMllR" leffl 11 C...,1 Ill·) "'!'A 1111,TMt SINIKtUI LION" t , J. Tl'lofn9t "JOl!:T" llllt IR Celtrl !PG) Mat Oftlrl "WILL T WOfllK'4" 1•1' "CNA~LOT'tl'S Wll" '"' 011tr1 •'fi1w L••'" •"lllOTMll!: SUN t11T11l MOON" IHI I SoftO••••'•'· .. ''"""""'" lS..1 t62·Z"ll llAltl ,...., WUft' fllASlll THI SINSUOUI LION ,.., I JOIY ll'OI "'""""' LAST <II SHllLA "°' t DAIOT'S OOfft A tMmNG S111i. A111 _,_, .... , ..... Ch''"''" A~•· 551·7022 I Thursday, Junt 21 , 1973 DAILY PILOT 33 I .Julie in a Pi~kle? Big Band ¥ outltlal I 'I~· .. c ............ MM! .... hrvk• Actress Defends Role in New Seri.es Herman Keeps '.Up· to Date , Nll:W YORK -Many or Julie Harris' admlren; have r,-condemned her new TV show , "Thicker Than Waler,'' as ~ .; · demeaning vehicle for a star . of her stature. ; . A kind o1 JOphlstlcated com- edy for the "Hee-H aw" set t h l s Wednesday summe~ . ' sen.. (ABC -TV) aboot a " j>lckle lactory ts already show· ' ing iJgns of finding a regular Blot for Itself on the channels o! Middle America w h e r e the · • realiUes of American taste are '1 often more accurately ' ' reflected than in the overni1::ht · 'ratings in Los Angeles and " New York. The network, sob which mll1Jo113 o r Americans have c o m e to c~lfi•• Jdt1K• M11111 ... ser•k• recognize as ·her v o ca 1 ~ On J a.z z man Woody trademark in such · movies as t{erman s latest aJbum jacket, i.East of Eden" and "Member a huge· black bird perches in ot the Wedding,"' ~h TV dramatic silhouette across a dramas as "Little Moon of vague, multicolored Alban" and "Johnny Belinda" nnnTA .. lllnlT . blcltgnlund. Impressive. Nolh-Qtl '-ftl lftlll(.ftl lng oldtimey or nostalgiaish and such Bro~dway pre; about it. ductions as "MOmber ol the '---------Put the record -"The Wedding," "The Lark" and, Raven Speaks" -on a most rcently, "Tbe Last of turntable, and Usten. Yes, Mrs. Lincoln." She is a four· Better TV that's It -the thneless sound time winner of Broadway's ot a solid big band. Tony Award and a two-time .. But wait a minute. Hear winner of TV's Emmy Award. F De { those rocking wah-wah guitar What would sbe like to do in Or 8 riffs on "Fat Mama" and the the theater that she bu not title tune? And check some of universe. And Hem1ian blmsell stays ln close contact with lhe world of young musicians, through a continuing series ol working visits to the groyes of academe. • 1 ·which originally scheduled ' ·eight summer sequences ro.,,~-..':"''.'.";:; ---lthe-plckle-factory-serie9,.h~ already done? .. There are so U d W those rongs -Gilbert Herman's enthusiasm for the upcoming generation ot jazzmen penneated bis con- versation during a recent in- teniiew. Right off, he reported. that "the most most in- teresting thing we're doing now is visiting schools. They include high schools, junior colleges, colleges. In many or them we hold a 'seminar,' and also the boys in the band work as 'clinicians' with t h e youngsters involved in music.'' ~~~-.many roles I'd stlll lilce to do Il er 8 O'Sullivan's "Alone Ag a In .•• ~'l'here's-erl<t":f'an-whlclt~=~~----~·--iNaturallyr," Carote-King's'-~======~- I feel slipping away from me. WASHINGTON (AP) _ An Hit's Too Late." Not to men-AS IDS FOU.OWERS know, tentatively ordered elght more " "scripts to be prepared. Miss llarris refuses to make any exCU9eS for appearance on the show. She definitely does nol. f_ee). she has been caught in • TV-pickle barrel. · tct'M DOING ii because l love it. Certainly it Jlays well, b_ut I'm really doin_g it because I'm an actor who loves to . work. Even before the show i ~-started, people were saying , ·'Why are )"OU doing this kind •... -.ol thing?' Before they even knew what it was! Well, J try · .. to lmulate myself rrom that !· kind ol criticism. Not that I ,: don't care about it, but it's the 1.. only way I can keep on work- '' lng. "Cena!nly I'm fallible and I can make mistakes. We're all capable of that. In the theater . in particular. U you do • • something and it's terrible · 'tbeer are always people v.·ho , say 'Oh, she's through.' And then the next seasoo whe'll tllve a m&n'elous part and be wmderful and~the same people Julle H1rris # wil !acclaim her. That's a great comfort to me. J have !hi$ sM>lm!! be®! th a t nbthlng reaJly harins you as long as you do your best. "On this show I enjoy tbe pOOple I'm working with. It's stimulating and we're a very happy group, We have to work so fast. Five days to a do a whole episode! The writers are almost always with us and it1s like vaudeville -we im- provise and rework con.stanUy. "I SAW 111E show for the first time the other day and I was sure I would bate myself in it. I usu aUy cringe when I watch myself perfonn, but I found myself believing it. I thought we looked so real, not hokey at a.II. I believed it!" ~liss Harris' voice is filled with that incredulous-an- ticipation mi1ed with an ever- present repressed chucl<le or NOW! . f I ' I '· GENE HAIXMAN AL/. .. , , And . Lady Macbeth. And tion .. Summer of '42" and Herman has been a 'clinician' Const,ance in 'King John.' And experimental Jl'OgTam has "Sandia Chicano (Watennelon of sorts for many years, but in Hedd.il Gabler and aiekbov. been Jaw>ched to flash cap-Man)." a dillerent way. He has I• d ....... _ ..... _ ol:--the 1e1---=--1-always encouraged young ve never one u...:a..uuv, you -..-.a oo t:"v~ tcreens Top hit tune s and k " And the • light 1 he hard r musicians, and from the old no~. . ~es a s . . o t _ -o -bearing so they sophistlca1ed........movie themes? Heml8n days have come such note of despa.ic, m her-volce as-.can enjoy television better. How "now" can-you get? But If h · dd l lizl talents as~zoot Sims, Stan s e IS su el'! Y rea ng Under the program an· look at the photo on the back Getz, Terry Gibbs, and Al ho_w ~uch there ~~yet to do. nounced by the Public Broad-of the jacket. Yes, it's the Cohn. Through the seminars, W1Jl it tak.e a ,miracle to ac-castirur sy~--. a coder will same Woody Her'man. who has H · onl I ai· · pli h t 11 --& ai.eiu errnan is y onn 1z1ng com s 1 8 · be attached to the sets of the become a jazz legend -and 8 and streamlining his long-time · hard-ol~hearing so that other lot of his current fans_wer:en't function 0 f encourager-0f-"WELL, I SAY from time to viewers will not be distracted. even born when he set a na· th time that I'm waiting for a 'I1'e National Bureau of tion on its ear with a colossal you · personal miracle in my own Standards and the Department '40's smash called "Wood-"All of us, Including the ........... 8 Ball." guys in the band, find thts Jife. And mayhe lt11 take a ol Hea)tb, Educatioo and .....,....... wo&very gratilying, because miNcle to Rel to do aD !lie Welfare uo llmncing the ex-HERMAN refuaes to age. thle's an awful lot of talented roles I want to do. But, there periment with a $215,000 -· 1 hts . yoong people around woo are are.other tm~·nt ,., __ In grant. 1111: same goes or music. really -mto it. Which I think is ...,.... "'.IU'P Dr Malcol Norwood chief Today, as ever, the Herman a vorv healthy sign. my Jife, too. Like Emily · II\ • band continues to explon! a ·-, of Media Service• and C.p-new possibility in sound and To Herman, the big-band Dickinson, I'm oot looking for tiooed Films of HEW's Bureau style _ from the original framework can incorporate the hereafter, J'm looking for of . Education for the Han-Hennan blues to symphonic almost anything. "We try not the now." diCapped, said: experiments, rock influences, to ever get to such a stagnant 11-fiss Harris Jives alooe in "Television has played a even free-form jazz. point, where we're not in· her home near New York City. major role in serving the Through this attitude of volved in trying things beyond She says she loves Los general population, but its im-growth and change, Hemlan the usual scope of what -a band ' Angeles _as well and finds pact on the deaf has been imaginatively strives to keep plays." working -there very pledSant. mlniinal . -because there are young audiences -as well as The CWTent Herman band is Her 18-year-otd son bas just few, if any programs, that can ol~ fans -in touch with the young in years. Working wilh f111i.siJed high sdlool. be Wlderstood." growing-&Xkbanging j a ii · young musicians has become T ~-- l 1 • • ' \ • ~I -. ltll LAISU( • DEl(J![S T•"Tt.OR ·1o-a.MM.1 _,,_ .. ,..._... ___ •••. -.. ~t- ·--'--...... ~ lBJ ---;..--~'OH.--.... NO NOST·ALGIA' TRIP FOR WOODY HERMAN . B•ndloader Knping Up With the Times standard practice {or the '\Vhat are you doing with all veteran leader-. "I've always these kids?' The truth Of the had young bands, for the past matter is that I had a band 35 years: tt)s just · that l got when J was 22, and we had old in the proce&S of ·having · already 1)18de sOme kind of young bands," he grins. majOr success with a thing • ' .. 1 • 11PEOPLE. OF m)' ilk, or somewhere near me, say called 'WOQdchop~'s Ball.' So I don't think of theae cats as being that young." Tiii ~T Of 51111~ • • I 1 , j ' I '· . I ' 3 1J DAILY PILOT Tbin5Cl•Y, Junr 21, 1973 ~iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ~ ••••• ,500 .. 524 The Biggest Marketplace on tht" Orange Coast Mobils Hon.I '°' Soi. • • . "25 • l49 Aufor11GbMs •••••••• 9SO -990 lmp&oyrnont . ,• •••••• 700-799 rll"IClnCial • • • • • , • • • 200 -299 ~ for ScJle , • , , , , 100 • 124 La&t I found • • • • , , , S50 -S7<1 "'-" d ..,,id&:i,e. , • , • " , , IOCI -149 DAILY Pl•Oi CLASSIFIED ADS r.nonob,. • • • • • • • • • Sl5 • 549 ,._, rod Su,:.plift • • • • • • a.so • 199 hoi fstoi. c;.n.al ••••• ISO • 199 • """" . • . • • • ' • • • • 300 .... You Can Sell It, Find It , Trade It With a Want Ad ( 642.-5678) One Cal I Service Schook ond IMtr'UCtion • • • s1s • m Srticn Ol'd ~,.. • • • • 600 • 6'9 Fast Credit Approval . 9IS -949 fl'Dft'PO"tofat. • • • • • •• ERRORS, Advertisers 1houtd chock -their ads 'dilly & report errors lmmedl1tely. The DAILY PILOl 111umo1 ll1blllty for tho first incorrect lnMrtion only. _,,,_ I~! Houlnfor .. I~ GeMral ** ** ** * TAYLOR CO. * . IRVINE TERRACE Magnificent view of bay, ocean & Catalina! Custom quality tbruout this fine home with -S large bedroom_s, fo.!'mal dining, paneled family rm. & 3 baths. Terrific new sauna off master bath, 3 fireplaces. Beautiful poo l in private front courtyard. $185,000 ''Our 21th Year'' _ ....... A UNiqUE HOME ONE OF THE BEST l;IOMES : IN MESA VERDE-A trim and tidy 3 bed- room in excellent condition; famous Pace- setter model 550 ·whose ow ners have pur- . chased elsewhere. AJ1 electric kitchen, mast- er bedroom suite and family room adjacent to kitchen. Presented in the 40's. INVESTMENTS TRl-PLEX ScJl(.>r liquidating. Sho,rp! Fresh paint. 2 lx!droon1 units. Possible 8% ';0 financ- ing. Low vacancy ractor. Ex- cel.lent Costa Mesa IO<'ation. $49.!f.iO. Call nov.· -546-1600. COMMERCIAL -FRONTAGE &I feet on Bristol in Santa Ana and 75 feet on adjoining street. Over 16,000 in1proved sq. ft. ready for small mar- ket or professional ~.hlcig. Owner needs capital. Pri<.."Cd to go no1v at $47,000. Ge.II 546-1600. "TWO-FOR ONE" Grea! luncheon lllld cocklall j 1'£'s1aurant plus an enl(.'r· 1 tain1n('nt establishment at night, both on tl1(.' san1(.' lot.! Good leases and retu111 \vith low do\vn. On~ a qre C-2 zone. Excellent Costa Mesa lo. catlon. Call now -546-1600. General OUR l4TH YEAR Offering Service On ly Exl!!!'i_ence Can Provide EXCEPTIONAL ESTATE BUILDER 6 very nice I-bdrm . apts. Furnished ways r~nted . ....Entire·-property ·Shows o! ownership. $95,000 • 'l •• LARGE &,LOVELY & al- pride -Located in country club area among beauti· fut, e:g>ensive homes. The 4 bdrms. ia.re large, as is -t he family room. Owner fias .iust had the entire home redecorated, with fioe wa ll· papers & luxurious . carpeting. $64,500 Ea.r.1 .a+z.d k'•ad'" T'ca.!t</ · !'no. ?.:107 ~COAST HWY· CORONA DEL MAR·6/S _.JOO WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Jo.quin Hiiis Road ''Overlooking Big Ca~yon Country Club'' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 UNl9UI HOMES ARE THI llST HOMIS IN THI IEST AREAS FOR HORSES I ~==;====;===;:==== General General .-•-··- COOL POOL 5 BR 3 BA Me sa Verde pool home. New ankle deep crpts thruout, large formal living & dining rooms opening onto beaut. oversized pool. "'11 bltin kitchen w/separate dinette. Truly a magnificent f amjjy home and priced only ·$59,950. Ready for you r inspection - CALL us for complete details. GOV'T REPOSSESSION $25,950.-Sharp 3 Bdrm 2 bath, new paint, shag carpets, large covered patio, yard needs some work but check this down paymt.- only $905. Bids close µ,is week, so CALL us immed! ·-.:,,,, HERITAGE REALTORS' 546-5880 Open Eves. UN19UI HOMO OF MDA Yl lDE. 546°SffO A lhtl .. of M .... ..,._ AND KIDS Over 1,~ acre lot. in rapidly ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; U~l()UI: tl()MI:§ REALTORS enera COLLEGE PARK 3 +POOL NO QUALIFYING enera 10 ·UNITS $105,000. i\Yode1Tl apts.. located in the clry of Orange wi!h $1200. a 111onth consistant incmue. \\'ho's first? Nestted among t 0 \V e r i n g Newport trees, this 3 bedroom Eng. developing Santiago Blvd. area allO\\"S horses and kids expanse to enjoy country ~t­ nmsphere. Seller has decidOO against horse,; and 1vants ·out at $14. 700. 546-1600. 546-1600 INVESTMENT DIVISION SUPER DUMP-FIXER UPPER of the first order, needs paint and lots of cleanup. 3 Bedroom, large yard. Quiet street in very quiet area. Great qpportunity at $24,900. ON THE WATER -WITH BOAT SLIP - New 2 bedroom & 2\h: bath luxury, carefree condominium . Custom decQr, ready for QC· cupancy. Full price $87,000. ~o.-. HERITAGE . , REALTORS 540-1151 Open EvK. General lish cottage oozes "ol.d It LIVE IT UP •~dd charm." Huge pub $250 style i;v;og/di"l"g room • Folrvlew Build your dream home i" RENT 'TIL YOURS n1assive beam ceiling. Cozy this most beautifully plan· antique brick · fireplace. 646-8811 ned con1munity. Really -3 + GUEST •+ ·~~"'"l""""'""'""'""'""'~!""""'~""'""'""'""'""''"i Country kitchen, park like (enytime) Rancho La Costa has every. 'Giiiiral landscaping !.1.1rrounds tree thing! This localion is only POOL G.~.;.ne...c_r_•_l ______ I form JXIOI Jar.ttzzi. Just take I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ~~G,~ for location to-IRON GATES to South Sea 4 BDRM, 2 BATHS PRICE REDUCED. Ch1-ner says, "Sell !his houst' im- 1uedia1ely." l..'lose to shop- .ping &: Estancia H.S. Needs some TLC. $25,950. _ ....... General General i2._.-;j~'A~-s-HI. ~ MOASSOCIATis -REALTORS 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. 644·7270 e FOREVE;R VIEW CHANNEL REEF -Watch the boats by day and harbor lights by night from your liv ing room. The ULTIMATE in FEE owner ship, lux ury on-the-water living. 2 l{edrooms, . 2 ba th condo. P ool, security guard, boat slip avail able. CALL FOR appointment, ~.000. e DELUXE CORONA DEL MA R UPLEX Beautiful ... tree-lined street i1 1 .... d Corona del Ma r. BOTH DELUXE UN ITS HAVE 3 bedrooms, den, fii·e place, 2 baths,. builtin kitchen PATIOS, 2 blocks to s hoppin g and schools: Choice location ........... $98,500. e ATTENTION BUILDERS ROOM TO BUILD second UNIT on t his large cor ner lot. 2-bedroom house, carpets, drapes, fenced yard in Newport Heights, . ............................... $33,500. WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, • SELL, OR TRADE A HOM E . ANYPLACE IN THE NATION ~nJa J~fe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT Linda Isle Waterfront JUST USTED! WOW over. Hun.,,! ~-I' RAY·N HO. C LIF hla"d paradise '~th wood SUPER SHARP Convenience C A . deck patio. S\\'aying palms 3BR 2BA bon1e w i 1 h Most tmusual home high on a INVESTOR. S Invest and ...,,....., all private and \'Olcanic rock gardens. 3 J-IARD\\rOOD FLOORS. 2 New 5 bdrm ., 4 baths, with 50 ft. dock. Beautifully decorated, w/marble mstr. bath, crystal chandeliers, fi ne carpet & wallpaper. Blt-in vacuum, recircul ating hot water, dumb waiter & many other extras. $285,000. hilltop with Vt"Onderlul "Old Private courtyard, tennis, club pn'vil-;g;; of your bedroom including s PI i t car garage, lush landscap- Worid" atmosphere: 3 iA LERT! park. \Valk to schools, shop-!-....,,_ hon1e. Swim, fl-", level master suite' . ..,...,...,.ral(.' I ing and n1uch more. CALL ~·--and ho'-.. "" ping a nd bicycle to the uu.u."' ,.., ..... .,... NO\V for appo· lmeot 10 Fpr. Complete Information UCUnlUI''-.,.,y room. ""'··----~-'. One 2 br~ ·-~-h 2 ride, end camp at Vail Lake guest facility 1\'ith privu\(' Ul (or 4th bedroom) built 1wv-wruic-1U• 1• beach! 4 oo:wvums \\·it rr 1 ,,_ see. Priced ·way be.low -~_... channl _..._, bath {2 yrs. okll rents for full baths for only S25,360. \\'hile plans for this cul-de-entrance o poo, cozy cn::n, ark I $27 5ru BILL GRUNDY REALTOR <Uuuuu a ng '-'Ouuou $150, secorxI 2 br/1 bath, m Or assume FHA Joan with sac home site take 'shape. Used brick firt'place. n.tgg(.'d ni eCALL &i2-IT7l .. 1 On All HOme1 & Lots, Plouo Call: patio of brick with 900 thing, rents for same. Both only payments of ·s209, includes Full p rice $9.900. ChvtiC"r \viii beam celllngs. Gounnl"I Ontu 341 Bayside Dr., Su ite 1, N.B. 675-6161 bubbly fountain and fire pit. ....,.,. 500 "i · • J e~a co1•~ide .. a 2nd T.'D. or trade. ki lchen 11,·ith buil!·ins. B1111. Ocean view, hand-crafted ., .. ,, . uve m one • et \\·a sh(.'r/dry e r & "' • • °' ~uoden gate at entrance someone clse make the pay-u r l'frlge·raior. Immaculate 1\lake an offl'r. 58&-0222. quet formal dining, Sll'p -21 Genera l Gene~al and family room with peg-ments! / home inside & out!· Phone down rumpus tWnl ovei: ged floors and authen~ erde S..1:,..0465 for n1ore. detail~. looking giant rock 1vaterra11, ~ Swedish fi,..place. Ma"y •>-dance pavillio" '"d '1'"'k· ~ I I VIEW ·OF HARBOR LIGHTS -featu-s. Make an a-E ling pool.. O\\·nC'r <ll'spcrate. i:o"1ntmenl " now to ~. Realtors S46-0062 5 B ORM :;:~ ... ADVA.i'>JTAGE. Call ''HARBOR VIEW HILLS " 673-8500. SHARP• NEW ~ "Park Huntington" Located high on the hill, offering lull enjoy-°"'""''''" 'UN"'BE ""' CUST6M• HOME Fant .. lic home i" 'P"kii"g IMMACULATE POOL $52,950 ment o! the view of Newport Bay & Pacific ~ ~ condition. DeC'p sha g HOME If :you're k>oking for a large Ocean. Lusk blt. 3 bdrm., family rm., dining H.ige corner lot located in carpeting. double fireplace, Lovely decorated 4 Bdr .• l -~C':ii:"'i:~;T.~~~ 4 bt-dn:>om 3 bath home ..,...;th rm., with a btd. & filt'd. pool & jacuzzi ; on a prime Ea.stside Costa Mesa. modern builtins, and quiet rumpus rm, 2~ baths, pool DO YOU UKE a 16 x 2'l family roorri. a profess. lndscpd . lot. Offered in fee ~t $99,000 Picture th.is builders dream tree·lined location. Qne'{lf-a-hon1e. Located in one of the 22 x 26 bonus room. finished, home. 4Bdr., 3 bath. huge kind, come and sec -$42,500. lastcst development areas 1GREENERY? :::::::::::::::::: a fonnai dining room. and MA NEWPORT HEIGHTS-raised hearth fireplace, top Call 545-8424, SouthCo in Orange County. This If so this manicured beauty a 3 l..'ar ga~. pick up the CORBIN RTIN VIEW HOME of. line kitchen 1vith gas Realtors. home is better than new. will turn you on .. The .large *NEARLY NEW* phonellO\VandcaJJ 842-2535. • BeauUful vie\\ or bay with ~~~~; ~~ a~d:n~::r~~l--,-N-V_E_S_T_M_E_N_T__ ~I~~ s~oseppi~o •. So~r~°"!'~ cul-de-sac lot \\'lll pt'ovlde Cu!e Spanish style hon1e. O'·e• ~sq fl of tiv1·"g 3 n_.. lots of 1oom for .1·0.ur gr·"'" , .. ,.,. beach & •hoppi'"g. 3 ' L.MMV • • " • sell fast at $45.000. Call 1u..-u sell fast at $49,700. Best In " " " Bd11n., 3 bflth home for only carpet, Realtors 546-8640 ORIENTED?? see U1is one first. Call Red thumh. The hon1e 1tsell 1s. a1 BR. 2 Im., din. r m. f'11)1c. Slt5,ooo. Call Red Cal'J>(.'t · to()C'n ('V(.'nings) \\'e have many nc1v & older Carpet, Realtors • 54&-8640 !'<'al beauty 1"1111 rormal din-1 lieart of Ball>o..1 S69, TOJO Realtors 546-8&1-0 (by ap-18 aparl.t ll'nls for sale Some (O"''" cvenin•s). ing a.t"(.'a and 4 bedrooms. Call · 673-366.1 l®-7914 Eves poi nlment only). Classified Ads .•••.. 642-56 . 1 . • . -=~"'"~-:-=~--,---Priced at $.16.4"'JO ... it \Von't · · have never bt'en 1.ulvcrt1sed. Ulti • last ~ <>all noiv. 847-6010. General General Give u~ a call and we will mate lft OPE.N TtL 9 • IT'S FUN 10 BE NICE/ associated Jet you brousc tttrough our C l"forn" Li "llCJ 1111111!19' .. ~!Pll[l!!•ftl inventories. RtX! Carpet, G I IG YI . Realtors. 546-8&10 (open \Ve h ave 4000 sq. ft. of THE REllL ESTllTERS WORLD AT YOUR FEET View the yachting action-bay & ocean, from your ringside seat. Newly decorated hom1>-3 view bdrms. & ba. $195,000. Mary Harvey. CLASSIC VIEW-PRIVACY-POOL For that special famJly \Vho needs studio, 3 BR. & enjoys nature· -dramatic home \V/incompar. day & night view of Laguna coastline & city. $129,500. Bob Yorke. IT STEALS THE SHOW Enjoy bayfront view from Ibis 2-s tory, 6 BR., 4 Bath nautically oriented home with pier & slip. $375,000. Comp. remodeled. Gary· Knox. LUSK HARBOR VIEW .4 J!drm. Sandpiper-view! ........ $97,500 3 BR., spectacular view! ........ $92,500 3 BR. pool home, jacuzzi ...... , . $79,500 5 BR., 2-story, pool, view ........ $125,000 Lavera Burns '--' OU TSTANDING VIEW Dover Shores-for1n er model home. 4 BR. plus family rm. plus pool. Large formal din ing rm., living r111. \vith bea1ned ceiling. $139,500. Eileen Hudson. LARGE LIDO ISLE HOME Exciting home designed for family living. Children's ar ea separate with own family rm., living & dln.'rms. with par quet floors. Six bdrms. Two lots. $179,500. Charlene Whyte. ............. Coldv1811.·Banlcar W.0700 -....... 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. evenings). custom prestige and quality 'NEW TRIPLEXES on L ~i acre. Offering total privacy with professional IN COSfA MESA l andscaping. 6 big 3 Bdrn1., 1-lt Bath bedrooms, 3~1.i baths, 2 love- 2 Bdrm., 1!h Bath ly fireplaces, triple car 1 Bdrm .. ~~ Ba!h garage and a view of lO'lr 00\\'N cvel'ything. You've go! to Orange County see this honie! $73,900. C WALl([H & LH Apartment 1 Phone 515-<»65 for showing. Realtors 547-6791 SeU idle lten1s . . . t'42·fl678 General G:o-no_r_a:-1 ------ 1-IARBOR VIEW HOME S MONTEGO MODEL 4 bedroon1s, family room, formal dJning; carpets, drapes, super landsc3ping, covered patio, wood deck. $76,450 PORTO FI NO MODEL 3 Br, bonus room/sleeping loft, formal dining, lush carpeting, lots of Spanish tile, cbarmlng Br ick patio w /overhang. Adjacent to park. $19,500 • HARBOR VIEW REALTY 833 -0780 HOMES r I .. BROKERS -REALTO'lS 102§ W 8olb<HJ 6 7) Jldl WALK TO SHOPPING BALBOA OCEANFRONT Beautifully decorated & partially furnished 4BR, 4 bath, Every built-in imagina ble! Must see to appreciate. ?tfagnificent ocean VIEW. Bob Owens 64 2-8235. (V32) H.V. HILL~RASTICALLY REDUCED Choice Broadmoo~ -4 BR's & FR. Com· pletely fenced, close to pool-attractive ly decorated. Open beam -high ceiling LR. Many extras. NOW -$88,000. J oel Smith 642-8235. (V l9) I COZY & COMFORTABLE Park view home. 3BR-spj1cl9us master suite. P eninsul a 1cook center w /la.rge breakfast bar. Beautiful stone fi replace. Located in quiet area. $40,950. Lois Egan 644-6200. (V25). SO LAG J..A ACR EAGE l S.96 acres abov~ So. Coast Community Hospital. Zoned ·FJ.1 & R-1. Sale or trade. $17~,000. Amy Ga~ton 642-8235. (V30) -------.... -·--·- [Irvine I IOI dowt Drive _.2·1231 1144 MteArthur IU•l200 OCEAN VIEW 3 +Guest $25,950 644-7662 HOME & BUSINESS 4 Bedroom, 2 bat~. double gtU"R)ilC. $30,000. • Best of ICl11Ui. QUIET STREET 3 Bedroom ho1ne fully car. petC!d, recenlly painted. Large enclosed sunporch, fencctl tront & back yard rormi tor bout. Quiet street'. $21,500. Roy McCardlo RHltor 18"10 Newoon Blvd. C.M. 541-7729 ' Private clrcu1ar street of fine homes. PJ and save t housand11 . Sweeping grounds with for boat. 3 bt.td1wms Including hide-a-way muter 11ul1c, acparate g\l'r'Sl faclllt)'. dun with '""'"" ..... "°"" CUSTOM 2 BDR to 25' enter lntrs pr1!lo. Breathtaking viC'\v of can-EASTSIDE yo" ftM blue P•d <k. Bf:f. I T E R J-1 U R ll Y ! Ca 11 Aro :you ready for lhi1 o~? 645-0303. Cu.~torn hardwood cahlnet8• bcautilul h11rdwood pegged floors, f~ air ·tuma<..'f'. bu ilt In Vl.\cumn l)'ltem, In: tC.t' com 8f•lem, built rn blender. all olectrle kllchc'!n indirect lighting sy1lem, Rli 101!1\I L 01\0 \ /.' t 4 I <i I" _I $17•000 • th~ plu• a •mall '"",..., ;n mar lo ~Ip pay your rent11. r,o MORE. Only S<O.OOJ Call Red Carpel, Tkaltors 546-8640 l Vary ~ 3 br/dt'n & \\'ork· (open rvenlt!Kll stiop 1n rttr. Lo111or prlvti.ry •1f AM T OO SMALL" wl!J) rhain-Hnk fence iu·o·.ind for my prc~ent OWOf'.! I t this chonnl:nsr ll61Y1,..!. i,:rlt't1 just rlgh! :or you \VII~ ~ It firm . E~y flnunc1n,... 4 BR, "Pfl•'kllng pool, If&: OOV ()l'llio. IJnmt'd, OCC. nvall. S11bmlt 0•1 S42,50(), ll<ull""' ~iHlO'l.I •GI NNY MORRI SON• t ro1111lt.11 am .tu111a111101.e .REA LTOR-5S7""41 3t- C:::WAll(fR & Lff I n "PBtl '1? Place an ndl f"1tst rt'tuha lll'l':_JUlll a phone Call fll2-SG7S. rnlt 11w11y 642-.5578, ' . " • .. - • Thursday, Junt 21, 197} DAILY PILOT ~ ------- -- [ I~ I _.__ l~I HowetforS. ]~ (· _ .. _ l~~[ -_"'_"'"·~!~[ l~ 0-rol ~----I ~-'-~~~~~1~...,_'--"~·~~~~- SEE USI for the r1¥ht ho1ne for )'OU. Complete 11electlon of homes In lhe ~ach am. HARBOR VIEW HDMES REALTY ll:l-0780 STEPS TO OCIAN .•• TENNIS, POOLS, CLUB Very C'lewt 3 BR, 2i,t baths. FantY.y nn., frptc., bl!M, ~vw'Wo·~lr'tv * 541-1290 *\ GOV 'T REPO. 132.500 *BALBOA ISLAND* For thl11 ah\\Otil new 3 13ooutttul, new bo.ylront 3 • 2 heclroon1 , 2 hath hcnuty in BR. duplex. Fanta¥tic \\'airt bcllUlUul f\1\sslon Viejo. Only Vil"W! ACl'OW from pavilion, $1,500 down -should !iCll lm-$209,oo:>. moolately. BALBOA BAY PROP. 0 WA Ll<lH /I. Lf I REALTORS 646-7711 »13 \Vt11tcllff Drive Open Ill 9 Pl\1 (~nax] I ............. -l[ie ! Ho1,11n '9r S•le , . . .. . . .. .. . Jot ~r/l'r••ltlll HOIMI '. 110 MMIM Htrn.1 l'tr Stl1 • , 12J Ac...... ftr .I•~ . '-!.···. .. . . . UI A.-rtll"lllll fer lllt . .. . .. . . .. IJl lll'llllHI l',..,...IY ......... ,. • 1J4 Crmtltr~ Ltt•ICrypt1 ........ lU Ctll'lmtl'Cl•I 1',..,.r1y ........ 114 C011c1trnMl11m• l•r 1•1• ..•....• 160 ov,.lbtt/Ul'dlt Mio. . , • . . • . . 1f2 MW-le ff -Yid . , ....... , 1'4 lllC0"'9 ,.,..,.ny . . . ... . . . . . . .. . '" lllfvllrltl 1"1'9,_,,., . . . . . . . . • '" Lob ..,_'"' .. ·········.. .•.. 111 MMlle M•mt!Traller 1"1ri11 . . 111 M_.talol, Deurt, ll•lOl't 174 Ot'lllf9 Cl. l"ro,.rty ........ 17' °"' el Siil• ..... ,.ny . . . . . . . 111 lllnclln, ,1rrn1. Onivei IN lttfl •111te E1<11·111a .. 111 ll .. I •s~te WMI.. .. . • .. . . IM 1 '-----~-1 __,11•1 ·-·~·'·· ···* l11MNtl Wllll ,, ...... tll ....... ,_, o,,. ,1, . . . 221 l11¥esl"""I W111tllll , .... , .• 1>1 ~MLNll ....•....•. 141 M9fteY W111IM .• ,. • .. .. .. • . • . UI Merltat•• Tnnl DHcl1 ..•... 161 , .__I _-__,I~ ltWMt l'llrilllllM .•.......•..• -1tauu1 1111lum. •. , ...... JO.I ltOVt.ft lllf'll. er unh1m •. , ••.• Jll c..-mlllkllM !um . . .• . • . • . . • JIJ C.,.tnl11h1mt uni um. . ••...•• nt Celllle.. teni. er ...tvr11 ........• m T .......... him ............... »I T .......... ...iel'l'I. ······•···•JU T....-..., him. 1r ""'"'"'· .. 141 D9tlleK• '""'· ... ' .. .. . . . . . . . • MJ ~ .. -...f"ll ....... ., ..... lit ::rr-::;..~"':".:.~~ .. ~:.:::: = ..... """'"'· • ................. Mot A,n.; hlnl. et illftf...-n •••..•..• 111 •-....................... ... ·-& ... ,. ................ tll ~ Metell .................. 411 0-1 """' .................... OJ s.m-lltllllll5 ............... .,. VKllloM lltllll .. · · ·• · ·· · · · • · ·• 4U ."'"'' ,. $/!••• . . . .. .. .. .. .. . •• Clar.,... fer lltfll .............. 4U Oftlc• ......................... '* '""''"'' .... ,.. . .. . .. .. . . . . .,. ... ,.,. ............... _ ....... us llt!11111 WHtM ................ 461 Miu .. ._ ll"'taho •• •••• · • 4'S ~-"-"_11_"_c•_•_•_•_~11-1 "" __ ................ - (I,. 11 T1'11111!1/ln MllMf'IWn IH L111I N•llCtl , ............. : ..• UI I'---,--,..,._""_' ~I~ ....... '"I •. . ... J)I ..... JlS ...... ,, .. 11 .. rfllfWI l'tnon~•~ 1-Klel C1ulu frl¥tl , .. , · .. ............ 1~-Loot_ ... _-_ _,l[S] l"..und "'" "'" ..... . ' ..... "' ... j ~NC·· I~ S<""l1 & ln1lntell4>!!1 •• .. • \1$ T11Nlri<1I . -• . • . . .......... * 111·vlce Dlrectery ••.•...•..•... * Jolll W•nled. M1i. . . . . . • . . . . . JM J•ll W111ttd, F11Mlt ...•....•. 712 J1t111 Wl'\IM, M&I' . • . . •. . . . . 1M Mtl• W111tM, M&I" . . . . . . . . . • 11• .__-___.I~ A111""6 ............ ·••··· .. "'"'-" .................... ., Awc11911 .............. .... .... "4 •1t1llllllll Mlltrlltl .. . •• • ... . • . 110to C•"*". I~ .......... M ""'"'"lln ...................... ,,, 01r ... '-tit ......••.....•...• llt " ......... 0.-. .............. 114 , ... ,,. • ... .. • . • . .• • • . • ... • 111 MKfWfttr/' .. , .......... , ..... , ' 114 MIK9'~11f1WI .................. 111 Mh<llff-• W111l9d .. •• . . . • nt Mu1kal 11111,,,_h , , • . • . . • . • m otllct '•'"lhlrel l•ll", ........ ll4 '""""'~ ................ 116 lewint MMlll-,. · · · · · • · · • · • • 111 , ... ,, ........................ .. Stere. •est-Mii, 8•r · · · · · · · · IU , •• ,. ........................ U4 rv .. 11 .. 11, Ml-•&. ,,., .. , .•.•. t:M 1-~-1~ 1"11f, Geitlf'll • • • • • • • . • .. • • .. • • • tM (111 ........................... '" Dell ,. ......................... IU •1111 ........................... IJS Mlnft ................ ,... IU LIYHTGC.11 , ...... ,,, ......... , Ht I -eooi=-I~ 0 ... .,..1 . .. .. •. ... . ...... " ... ,.. ... 11, Mllnl./1'"kl , . . .. . . . "1 IHll/Mlr1rll 1,._i,, .......... "4 ... h . ,..,., •• .. • . . . . . . • . .. • .. "' &Ml1, lllfll/(Mrtet ••.•...•. , .... IMll, WI .... . ... ,. ........ ... ••• ,,, 1111"1/Dklll ............ '" IM!t. SHM a Ski ........... t ll I Hh, Sl*I" ..... , •• , •.••• , ., ., tU 1~-'-..._ __ ._._··-~](i] Alrtrlll •. , .................... tis C•"'""' S1M/ltllf ....... ". tM c.,tlff, l atf, k:Mlln ........ t1S l lttlrk C1'1 .... , ......... ·· ·• t• fl'IOllllt "'"'" • •.. • •• ••••. •••• tJS MIMr ... ...., , ••.•••••••••••••• t• Tr111tn. TrlYtl ................ '* f ratltrt. Ullltf.-, , .......... • · ''' Aufe StrYlc:t & •1rh , , · • · • Mt 1'---._ .. _-~l§J ...._.., ........................ ... Ant...-./Clltlkt ........ u•••• flt 011111 .... i. .,. ............... "" S119rt•, ltH .. llMI ·••'""'' fjf TRK~t , ., ,, "" ....... " .... Hi V•M .,.,. •• , ................. td AVl9 L .. tlllt ....... •• ... • "' .. ff.4 ,. .... $1tvlc.1 .. '''" ........ ·"' ,. ..... w ... ,... ................ "' ....... ,_11Mi ......... ~ ..... ,,. All'"• Mtw ·-·· ·•••·········· 911 •~'"-.., ....................... ,,. * 673-7420 * I I I c L A 5 F J E -D 6 4 2 • '.5 6 7 8 , XAYI tA·SH!· SUl'EILATIVE CHARM JUST REDUCED Great Costa ~1esa location, larit covered enc Io .s e d patio/rumpUA room New · rice $32,500. ----~---eRANCHSTYLa 3 BR, tiving room w/lirepl to a beamed ca'thedml ceiling, formal dining room. quiet. green, park-Ii~ be.ck yard. N('QJ' UC/lrvme. $36.900. CAu. 645-7221. Sip S:u1.grl11 In thi8 3 BR. 2 BA Spanish chnr1ner, large courtyard. densely land· 5eal)Ctl, bltns, knee dC"Cp ghag carpets, dmpts. gt'ent location! Amllllng financing at this low price $33, 750. Call ~ 8400. Get The Paint DUPLEX Each unit . 2 bedroom with brick Fireplace. -Built-ins • Dining arm . Laundry Room and R&:im to expand. $18,500 • 109'0 do\\n. 64&.7171. ru v. F. Ho.aid & Co. ... __ SMILE! Selling your hon1e Try "CASH PURCHASE PLAN'1 (72 hour evaluation service) By 0 W,\llilli F, Ill * $19,900 COZY 2 bedroom on East· side. Immediate occupancy with 10% down. CALL Mr. Day, 545-8 424, SouthCo Realtors. . Back Bay BY OWNER. 3 br. frplc, covered patio, new kitchen. 64().-0166 or 641).-0227. Bolboi Island 3615 Sausal110 Drive (off Margarite). Priced to sell. Open 4 p.1n. 'ti! dusk. Call 6i5-i'fl-5. Great Eastside Location 252. 262, 274 . 2'2nd St., CM Large 3 BR, 2 BA, fam rm, !pie. Approx --isoo sq. fl. Crpls, drps, lndscpd. fncd. All included. 90% financ· ing! ! Drive by ! ! ! &16-9432 or 64$-6177 TRf.l.EVR, $44,000 4 Bd; 3 Ba, 3 car gar. Den w/wet bar, 6% asslUMble 1loan. $251 per mo: Owner will carry 2nd. Other houses from $25,00>. Call Bier. &r.;<646. * $950 DOWN. lk Newb'" decor., outstanding 3 BR., 2 ba. New carpets. Bonus rm. Dbl . garage. Lots or trees! A top vaJue at only $25,950. BALBOA BAY PROP. * 556-8800 * * E'ostslde-$39,500 * 5 Yrs. young. Light & airy 3 BR., 2 baths. 2 Private patios. Parklike yard. BE"ITER HURRY! BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642-74_91 * *NEEDED* SALE.5~JEN For our NEW office BALBOA BAY PROP. lllOO ?.1esa Verde Dr. East * 5561800 * BY Owner -Fully upgraded 3 BR home, surrounded by lush greenery. llu r r y ! $33.950. -· OPEN house Sat. & Sun. 10 M.1/2Pi\t. 4 BR. 6% 1st $198 PITT. 3298 Iotva St., C.M. 639-6714. Low down. Dana Point OPEN House SAT 10·1, Sun 12-5, 33582 Bremerton DP. 3 BR, 2 BA, immed poss lo down. Must "sell this wknd. 714/728-8590. Brush VA hon1e • $23,500, 3/b1· & REAL ESJ'A'l'E one mile f.ron1 South Coast 2231 Sou~lol Ave. HOME PLUS INCOME OCEAN view & pe.tlo, 2 br, 2 ba, 'A11lk to bchs ol Marina. By owner. $33.500. 34081 ~tazo Dr, 496-2179 . Pl111z11. KhoppiflSC t:cnlcr. No ~~~~~-----Just llstccl, a duplex l'esiclence B\' O\VNER, 4 BR. spnclous down & sellPr "'ill pay tnost EASTSIDE C.M. Y:il·h a ruonty 3 hedroo1n 2 \\"ilh view. $47,500. or .!:Ub- of your dosing t.mih1. I io . \ BH. + 2 . 2 Oil . fu rn. ll(llh groun<I floor oo'TK'.r'11 mit, Open Sat ,\ Sun. 11122 Top n~iual aroa near ll"MI!. unit Rnd dC!llrnblc l bro room Pa.lo Alto, DP. 49G-205S. O w,\il([H I\ Ill & Mopping, H/I" pool. Good r('otnl 'vil h scpara1 c • c~-2 BH., 11.! IL\, 2 story, close Rcalloni S4l).OO'l2 net lnconlC. A renl OOncaln! trance. A\'l'OS.111 rrom tenni s to nlarlna. cpt /drps, lg sun C ,1 Bo B I e CALL ANYTIME e "'"'"" •n<l1,li'.~"' pari<. deck, 137.500. 4$3.5029. S29.950 .• ~lcely le.n:!o.pcd 4 '46-3t21 or Eve. 645-4375 CAL.L 644-72ll Fount1in· Velley bedroom "'llh hRlf·clrcu1ar t;hive. Pa.I.lo, 2 befhs. Dlntng roonl. Big family 1'00m. A.Ir· een<11t1one<1 . brt<. 540-mo. TARBELL CONDOMINIUM -EXPERTS - \Ve lij)Ct.-inllze In selling con· dos • l~uycrs welting no1v! Our snlel!nl(>n nre bonde<i! UNI (llT>leclion for your Mn1r or int•orne prO!X'rty. U hour 1>ervlcl» larwln reelty inc. 96M405 Clll.!i.'4lllod Ads · ·.,, .&ti-0078. Lachenmye Rcal•or MESA VERDE , BEAUTY Bcauttrut t"-o story col'TK'!' /Jxi Nl l,f l UAILlY & AS Slll IAlES e e DUPLEX e e 'h·n l·Un. \Vnlk 10 beach 5 BR. 2400 S(J. n., 2~i bn, bltn11, O\V, crpts. d~. fplc, 2 story, $-12.flOO. 008--6216 hotno lOcntcd on one or lhc nlcesl l'ill'CC.'ta In Me1111 Verde. This l'lonie I 1 cvt rythlng you ever wMll'd. <I Bdr., 3 baths, hugo lot sri9.~ i\jlen1 673·8500 3 Br, 2~~ Ra., fam, frplc .. "''" •wtonmlttg ""°1' OnlY CAMEO SHORES l<J().500 Call RNI Carpel, Rcoltb~. MG-8640 (optn B>• °'''M'l'. 3 hr, z1'l hR, tam cvtnlfws} I rn1, JXJOI. $115,IJX). 6i;).1097. M8.1\Y many cxtr11s, $33,900 (hvncr S.'ll-5ri0 1\ good \\•nnt ad 1$ :1 good l.1· \.'eltmenl. 0 \VNER ~SFERREO VlE\V l~ome. Beautl.f\d St. ~stusi:shs~ ~-BR, 2 BA, 494·5•71 499-2100 JAmt. .. Pl Clift Haven J Br pa.n1 .,,.,e,iur, near · ' · · bench & ahopplng. BKR, 00. BEAUTtft1JL location • Spht lc\'f'!. ~' 8 1 , 5 0 0 . ly $29,950. Call 96J..56U. SOUnt. LACUNA. 1 block Ch\iu~r/age-nt. ~O BY owner , 4 BR, 2 BA, W/W ~o ~l~: ~:~~ ~~~ :~~~~~=~3 n lO crpt11, condo, $1000 do,,•n, .<Jeck 1.\'fOCean view. Gue11! •N'?T 1-Tti! duplex vaaiint .as11ume 7~1% loan on bfl.lan· apt. $62,500 firm . By O\Vn('r. Ownt-r/Agent ' 6~ te of $22.~. No ari:cnts. Call 4~120-1. \Vou ld con-1'°'",""-'=='-~-'=-="I 963-4212 slde..r summer rentals tUtxi. I \tplexe11 near the octan SSu E • y .\1Ut!1 LltritOn, Rl'flll.or A M 6'io loen, 00dc1 * OCEAi~ VIEW • * m-8ri63 '* home larwl!ICapln,g, 4 BR. 1 H vi 11 mile to beR.ch. $37.500. il4 : UR<'. ocenn cw , .. rin, -OCEANFR NT no'!o 'Y...e., w/l'rpl: dln. artn. 2 Ult. . :7UO~...._. d~n + gues\ r1n. ·~•/"' carp. Duplex, °"·ncrllli nt &i3-.• BEJ.JEVE It or not 2 houte1 thntout. Ccil')tral ~ k i I , Oceenfront Duplex on l iol, 3BR each, income 11.•/rangt', 0\l('n_. d1sh"t1hl'. R l!t'Oloc Hcnltnr 6TJ.30l Pi5 per mo. Bolh lor on.I)' St.'e this ont! $53.500. • · $32.900. l\g!nt. ~19 ~U•\on Re.111ty 49-H>Dl Nt¥\I" "Pad"! P1Ace AO i!' . " ' ' t ' ' ' ' ' : I . " ., ' I i I I ' • • ,. j I ! • Thursday, Junt 21, 1973 r 38 DAILY PILOT I~ 1_1 __ ..... _1~_ ;mml iiiiiiiiii":..iiiiiiiiii~: ... ~l~~,I _, ..... l~I -----1[:)1 ~ ... -1~, _ ...... )[!] l~I -_,.,_ ;,.;N.;;•w=por=t_Be=•;.:•c;h ___ 1 _1;;;nc;;;°';;;m;;;te~P~ro=po~r1y~;;;;l;;;";;j "~-~IJ~n~-!!:~!!!--~200~j -Fumlshod 300 Hou•H U nfUrn, Hou.-Pum. .. Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfum . 365 Apt. Unfum. E ASTBLU FF 1· o _,..,.lty L ·--h Huntln•ton llN<h Unfum. 310 Balboo '"""" c"'"='a:..::.M;;:"';;;':.----N aw port Booth COTTAGE PACIFIC BUSINESS aguna -• • --'-l BR, 2% bo, nu X Pl1tn, PLUS INCOME ~ .. LES JI pd LOVE~' 't' 3 Udrm l bath ex· Hunt ...... Harbour l Bft + lo" t #-.I Sl65-2 tnt, 11,ii BA. Studio on ''Rent A Pleet 1 July lst. t....~ for $5.15. or ~ $150 -UI s. .. unrac •. 1 A.o • • 11, un um., u t"'c., cu1-de-¥C· Pri•. patio, pool, I ,, full l>Utlo wl~. n.eady (;reat opportunity to :162 N~ Bl., O>lta fl.tl!llll Bit, nr. bcb, Avail now. l'CUlive _hOnMI for leaJC~ S BR. 2 BA. family rm. Ap-on canal, Rm loC' 16' boat, crp~ ... drpg, blt.Jhs. Nr. of • P• ice quit.it .ie price $61,900. i>tllrt lo"OUJ' real cstatu 833-ll4l Phone &45-lTlO $155 -Utlls. pd., ocean fronl Isl. Vdlii. Puclrtc pllance1 tor -.le. Call for $300/mo, 613--3814. shos>'«· Children ok, No CN.·rwr. 5.5l·l4S8 or S45-l52G. Investing \v\th th\~ bach, tK>uul. loc. 1 ncnr tennis coon a &c pool. details: 84&-4332. ELEGANT 2 Br w/gar, m pets. T3S Joann St. CM v.·c.11 IOC4tetl cott<igc * • S32S -Channing 2 BR. 2 13A $.125 prr. n'IO. Mk for Ro•, C~I I sllo1>1/bch Yrty 835-°3437. 646-1450 1 !4~~~!!.._Heitht1 on1n lntllc R ·2 lot Donut shop . Cr. $4000 mo. hoU&e. view ! AVkil 5-6 mos. 962-4'1TI . AKI. ··~:":""·:r n umt /~ 673-8484 ' ,=::::.,:.:::._~---""'"7 i''ull price S:l:0.950 Broch a.reu NU-VIEW RENTALS CUSJ'Ol\1 built 11ua11 ty --Unfum. 320 evt · 2 BR, ll~ BA, new paint, \ Low Dov.•n * * 6T.H030 or 494...32"8 mobile hon1e, vAll leaae on I 1 Ce,el1tr1no Be1ch cpt.s: M ps, oven, ran~, 1 DRIVE BY DMI • ltaljan Eat In 1 t to qualified rv ne g~bage disposal, Pvt pat ' 506 AIIRO And call for app't to Tak ou t Lo t H~,, .. , Unfurn. .305 °~ Cl1Tl~ 11 f ()CEMi view -New duplex 2 CIU']'>Ort, stotage s P ace. 3 n _,_ 2 '·· e · ren --~ ' lC>nnnl:1. a 0 r ap-2 BR 1'' ba twnhse central br 2 ba dishwsr re'""" Adults. 548-9573. m~· ~;w~ c:.L~':Parie~ $l2.r:;u *F.P. General ~intment 91:;2-7306 air, -iot:er extras. F 0am, rm $225. ,M. 496-9D ' ...... ** 3BR. 1% BA ** 365 ' I. OCEAN and HARBOR VIEW 1 a lley. $44,950. Cull Lois OllckL-n Brooster 2 UR. amrmer just min. to pool, xlnt location. ca.ii 3 nn.. 2 BA BJt.lns Ocean Large, newiy decor. encl. Vogcl, Realtor. 548·i.13't6. COMP'ANV Nets $1 ,IXXI mo. beach, nu carpet &: pa.Int llJ3..-0719. "" view.' $'l50 ~o. Call; 'oo.nss patio, bUns, crpt, drps, 1 REALTORS Asklng $14,000 submit Dn. sc~ned sun porch, " bop Townho\lte Unfurn 335 Or 493-6228 Close to everything. $170 · 1 SINCE 19-14 * • Jll'IV. yrd. $24(). 968-4339• • • mb. 868 No. 1 Ce nter St . Son Ctomoni. 67 3-4400 caie . Seob 150 RENTALS ~BR, 2 ba, l\i blks bch. $240 L•@una N iguel Coron• dol Mor $1<0 UP 2 .Be. 3 Be, 2 Ba .E;Jeganl 81mrtmenhi ded&ned with a Mastc1"• touch, !U• peril house security. ex cl~ ~Ive Vcnalfll'S Club and poo l with unique AquaOOt, fountains Md lonnal a:ar- Jcni. All purl of the South C.out'a UncsL apartment C.'Oitlll'IUnlty. • 1 Bedroonl/111u<iloS front $195 ., ,•, I : $2,000 INCOME Ndll $.1000 mo, Apmtnwtta rylO leMe. Call 646-5921 or DELUXE Pool, bltins, play yard. 1996 POSSIBLE? * 4100TS * 125·~·°"· = ,~:=· S:·c~~;:d~;;i~~ APARTMENTS ~f~e ~::'.\= 2212 2 BOOroon1 from $280 l\loc,le\s open ~ A.~t. tll dusk ~ 1.Argl! 2 Br, hOme. Gorgeous Beer ban 3 accesg lri priv area, lse. Alt Cond -Frplc's • 3 SWim-NICE 3 BR, lll Ba, -•·· 2 Blocks IX! h Brand new, Spanish motlf. 496-4618 Ing Pools H al'" -· ·-ocean vu, ac _, Eastsi~ Costa A1eA. \Valk Beach area 433 W. 19th SI., Costa Mesa • 111 • e "'' .,_ · crpts Ind floor $175 rno aft can build 6 units, $65,000. 10 niarkets & peril:. 3 BR., * * 1854 s. Coast Hv.')'., Lagunn 2 BR. 2 ba. • ••···· ··•• • $715 LEASE, 3 BR, ~% bas. Ten.nil Courll ; Game and 5 pm'. apt No. 1. 357 w. Vic-. ~~· handles. 0 w n er 2 ba. deluxe owner's qtrs. Liq_ StOl'e Gross $16,500 mo. 4 BR. Culverdale .••••. $315 Ocean vie\\', &ecunty, pool, Billiard Room . toria 1 or 49'FOO.tl + lhe iocome from the other $30,000 On. COSTA MESA OFFICE 2 BR., den, 2 ha ..•• · • • $215 pYt. beach, $500 mo . 1 Bedrm. From $16$ AU. ' I 2 BR l BA l S1nt1 An• 1 It SllO 000 * * $135 .1 br, turn, gar, enclosed 3 BR. 2 Ba. • • · •· •• • $265/315 586-2568. 2 Be:drm. From $n> child e ~· f17S • •120 ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT " un s. ' ' l\1achine Shop Nets ~.000 yr. yd. 2 BR., 2 baths • ·• ••·• • .~~ N•wport Beach MEDITERRANEAN Albert 0 :..., .. ~,. ~~ nlO. From Ne·"po"I Bl"d., tum at BY Owner -3 BR, 2 BA, CALL · 0 . ,,,.2,1• * * $165. 1 br, Jurn, all util pd. We ilave Sun1mer Ren~ --• "'" 11 ~. " • • cpts, drps. 0 r nam e n 1 al A.. . Surpl"5 store Net $20,000 $1(l;. 2 be, """" crpl, dca, Vision-ADULTS • LEASE VILLAGE Coel•lreno Beoch ;·:~!'~acl~g,,.\1H.~lt. ~:e~. g~~1 ~r;ittr 8 ~~· TR. ,_:1; TY~ Asklni i;;·~ Terms gar, ~~ ~Jiii 2 BR, 2 ba; pool $250 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.At. 3 BR upper duplex. Orean entranct>. 901 Cagney Lane, 'Jte.-Oec .• encld patio, 2 C · Ntar.Nt•port Po 1t Offlc• Pr1nttng Shop . Laguna Bch --. 8 red h·.1·1 REALTOR &32·~ R~lr.55~~E Vu. $250 mo. Open Wknds, Newpon.Beach, Ca. 92660. l~~~ar!S-!·3003!129!1!,900!!. !979-!!576!7~(M~,.~· 1 J UNITS-$75,000 $35,000 wit' f'•OOO On ~c.u:i~~~C:.~~r l:D~u~p;l.e!xjo~1~F~u~m;.~-;:::=-=1•iOiPiENi.ilOitioi6iJDjjAjj!LiYiiii j ~~~~~ ~~-~¥~ ·pTelAeplR<>Kne,N(E71W41 64.>'2PO:T BilliardParlor .SanOem-untum, child/pet. l~olboo Poninsulo ::."o,;"c;·--~-~~~ ~ Excellent starter or retire· Net n,ooo + mo .• Submit $15,; • Ooean Frot bach, furn, REAL TY I BR. freshly painted & APARTMENTS I ~~·-,_ I ment units, 1 block from * * icteal for ......,.,._ singles. A Con1p•ny \Vith Vision 2 & 3 BR sununer & winter ~ ..Y draped. No pets. 1150. 26139 -ill' ,..-o 114 E. Balboit -Blvd. th~ bay 9>ast 1-hvy. \Val k i n g Exclusive Tee Cream Parlor $200 ·Studio type, 2 br, bltins, Univ. Parle Center, Irvine 6TJ-052S ~ Victoria, CB. Oft ...- distance to all schls & Leisure World ·. Net $1,200 1no. gar, tot OK. Cull Anythne, 552·7WO ! ! !! Dani Point Luxury 1"1 •rnt living shop'g * * $330 -Spacious 4 hr. 2 ba, o rn ce hou rs 8 AM to 8 P~l Duplexes Unturn. 350 -:..:::::..;.;c;;:;______ overlooid11 1\'alrr. En· Mobile Hofn•• For Sile 125 Motor Home Rentals Sparling lnv1stment firplc, gar, yd for kids/pets. ON TEN ACRES LGE. 2 BR. 25091 La Cresta joy Si50.1 11th !'pa, 7 Corp. 6 38--5662 Pacific Business Sales ALSO SUllf1.1ER RENTALS Balbo1 Penin1ul1 Apts. fum./unfurn. Leue 'B'. $190. mo., tnq. 1030 s. isv.•huinint. . .,, 1 lighted TERRIFIC CRAFT SHOP. CAU. 494-9491 5 Or 6 Bdrms. ········--$375 Fireplace I prlv. patios. Coast, Laguna 0 1' call tennll' t'Ot:r ,,, 11lus rnl!C's of Industrial Rroperty 168 Xlnt location with outstand-* LANDLORDS * 3 BR., bonus roon1 •·•• $400 2 BR, 1 BA, upper, cpts. Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst. 4st-6848. bicycle trails, putting, shuf· ing traffic flow $52 IJIXl an· FREE RENTAL SERVICE 4 BR. 2 baths ·" ····' • • $100 drps, bltns, garage Avail 900 Sea Lan, CdM 644·2611 OCEAN views, ·wlk to bch, 2 'fleboard c1'041uet.'Junior l 'a nua1 grogs sal~ ~upon UNIVERSITY PARK 4 BR .. 2~~ baths ········ $42Sl ;N~o~w~·~YJe~ar~iyt.~67~5-<>1~:96~=:l!t!iM!!a~ciArlh~ur!i!!i"'~C~oa;uit~H·wy;1)1 BR. turn ·'or u n r u rn trom s189.50 n10nlhly: also l SALES & LEASI NG 50 to oo~ marl< up. owner Altractive 2-bedroo d l~osta Meta '$22()-.$250. mo. Bkr. 49G-5Tll and 2·bedroom plans and full service facility ~ arooous to make move, Olancellor home (p' riv!~~ NEW _ BAYVIEW 2·story lov.·n boUses. Elrc- Damnar Molar Homes Well located corner. Present ~ $25,000. J'enns nego. dwelling) 2 baths, double LRG. secluded 1 BR• 2 BR 2 BA DECK Huntinttoft S..Ch trlc kitchens, private pa.tiol 4. ACRES income $1400. per mo. Grtat tiable. Call &G-2133. lireplace. Dining 8 r e a , Eastslde, pvt. fnOO yd, utils $325 mO Yr.Y 673-i239 or balconies, carpeting, dra· potentiaJ • will divide. A~ zwm §E!MNG'tQ!JICffHTll 9 built-ins and senn-porch. pd, $180. Avail 711 ~ 2~B~R~N-·-~~,~~-WAITING perics. Subte1Tanean park- 531 6800 11 25 ! I I ., Nowpo ( •·--h . u •. 1tove, re .• carpL, I I'" I to Optional • J prox · sq, t. V. E. llot.'8rd & f.o. Re~r yard has cove~ r _... drapes view adults t LIST rl8 w u• e eva rs. -Roy McCerdle Realtor patio t bed fro t "SINCE 19t6" $195 ,,:,.., ~ nope s. OPEN maid service. Jmt :x>rth of NE\VPORT BA y R..I .:-.....,_ ' s orage s ' 1 1st Western Bank Bl""'. YEARLY, 3 BR, 2 BA, stv & . ""~' F• .. •hlon !slan..! nt Jamboree 1810 Ne\vporl Blvd., C.M. trees. Front yard has com· "to for ..., Custom built bcau1jcs 541-n29 GOLD _ Prospcc.lor needs pletc; privacy-. .P 0 0 1 aOO University Park, I~ D/W, frplc, only l yr old. SHARP, ocean close 2 BR, 1 and Snn Joaquin llllls Road. J ' 2 BR, 1 Bth. $16.500 "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ J $2,500. 1 ni nl e di a t e 1 Y _ tennis ~rt privileges. CJose D1ys 552·7000 Nights Quiet. Pre!. adlts. 67:\-2512. bft. Avail. on you.rs lease, J 1, 2 o~13 :~Apt T('lcphoni:' (11•11 644-1900 ;: . ~:u~l p2 a~~·s:=~ $~,500. lots for Sile. 170 Knows v.•herc it is! Write lo shoppuig center-. $.1~0 per $285 mo. Agent 675.6930. to1· l'<!nlal infom1ation ' '~ _ Boxl7B8HuntingtonBeach n1onth. CA.11 even1n gs EXEC. llome, beaut. Turtle [ l~C 1 .... ___ Vllb-A YORBA ' THE NEW- BEACH homes on Lido ATTENTION CaJif. 9'2647. • 6!3-6568 or 642--0200 any Rock, 4 br, fan1. nn, formal ApwtmlnllfwRilnl -os a ,._ Jluntington Beach BAY'\rooo APi\RT~tENTS I Perlin. Mobile homes with ~'::;'m:::•:;·--------din. rm, custom dra & crpt. T Mo R (714) •-~22 -~ larg ban .n. l'V'I<:. Money to Lo•n 240 -l•'rplc, •·11-1ean. O"en. N•. re oo1n..Le1s Money . -r"7V • in Ncwpo1·1 Bench are ... ,..,,,,,. e ca aa, ~·=J to BUILDERS .;>!.: .. • · ., ·~-'fh<• salt-s ofUte Is open $12,9!5 HUGHES, 530-0200 1 TD L good schls, child. park, COME see a real garden * DOG RUNS * dally f\'(11n 10 AAI lo 6: 30 WOODY 24X60 air cond, cor-Eastside. Costa Mesa. One st oans sllOpplng centers. Poo l Apts. Fum. 360 apt! Like llvi. in a home Spa. 2 & 3 BR. $149 & $199. P.f.1. AlacA11hur J!lvd. & i •· I ,. ,. " ,·,. •• -. ' ' ,. " " - -! ;,1 { -" ' '·1. 1.·1 ;11 I. I, : •· 1:t'i. ... ,., I '1'1 I· "· 11[1! -b-,_ I ~~ I"',.. , ...,. ,_ ' '--; ,w; •t:. I:;; ,,_ I' ' ·--.f; •• I ;~ I ,r ' ' ' ' ' ~· • • lot xi d I k parcel 180x300; zoned for a membership lncld. ~"25 mo. for $162.50/MO. 2 BR, 11,ii K1'ds ok. Pool. K•0 100n Ln. I ner , nt a u t par • 8 ~ BA. 2 ........ place ~ •A "" San Jnnnuin HUl11 toad. .,1 995. Near Costa Mesa. tolnl of 1 units. $95,000 UP TO 9S% Deluxe 3 BR, 3 BA, owner's Avail. 7/21. 833-2325 BalbOI Island ..... C s, v ,ll blk w. Of Beach Blvd., ~ ,.,.= •~ ·t · d•....! I patios & rec areas. W 110n ()'fl-~ ~~c:~oA 1 Br~;::, cALA$?~;;;;"" 2nd TD Loans ~~~-~.re'.": ·~~c~~~~:i~£=;o;~~~ ~~'.'"N:'"~d.~.;;..w. ~ltn~•er>. 963-4-029 oe ~Y[~"~y'."3~~2\l pool. Teenager & pet O.K. ~ ......... pets ok. $29S. 586-lOTI . bay. $250. .mo + t util. 2283 Fountain Way East 2-BEDROOM, 1 bath ba. $l!l5 mo. 2 Story wniv Lido Village, N.B. $2500. Ntar Ne:~~:t~:~~7 orrle• lowest r•t•s Oreng• Co. 675-5666 646-2846 builtins, fulty c1rpeted. rms up, bt'ams, trplc, patio. 67>-2ll9. EXCHANGE Sottlor Mtg. Co. ~uJ:.J,'::,l'"'p,~~k:iro~ SUMME~ rental, deluxe 2 HARBOR GREENS Childron OK. $135. per See at 822 W. Balboa Bl. BAYSIDE Village· Newport. 642-2171 545-0611 837-9115 or 543-1429 BR, plus garage, June rate Furn. &. Unfum. Fr Sl30. month C 111 DALE, 213/476-6783 ~ 8~. ~1~ice R-2 Lot :zoned for 6 Units, Serving Harbor area Zl yrs. LANDLORDS.I $150. per wk. P ~on e Bach, 1, 2 & . 3 BR's. Afodcls 962-4471~ CHARMING 2 BR., 2 ba., 2 Huntington Beach. CA$H IN A HURRY! Liguni S.•ch ~. _ Open 10 '1U 7 pm. 2700 =~~.:..:.~-----car gar.; some HplJ. w/fpl 1973 GENTRY, new. Awning FOR: 10 to 15 Units in Borrow on :your home, paid \Ve Specialize in Newport 3 BR YEARLY S250 Peterson \Vay, CM. nr. Har-CHARM! 1-BR. du p lex. &. beam l!('il's. ,\vail. on & s:ldrting, 1 bdrm. $5750. Orange County. for or not. u se funds to con-Beach e Corona de! Mor e $190.-1 BR hOu.se. Victoria 0717 w BAY · bor Blvd. & Adams. red('C., new cpts/drp!, etc. lease· S28S to $300. American, 557-9390 Snarling lnv•stment solldate bill• Improve your &: Laguna.. Our Rental Ser-Bch. Zoned bwµneas, Yrly. 67>139.3,ir.492--0491 546-0370 Infant O.K. No pcls. $135 f;ot;l-793'2 6T.>-59:r> . )~ Acreage for 11le ISO l 1/3 ACRES A-2, comer lot, Corona area. $U, 750, $2500 down. MS-8749 Cemetery Lots/Crypts 156 MONTECITO l\f e m o r l a I Park, two graves, Redwood tract No. 4405 choice sec· lion. Call Coder, 9~5446. Commerc1a1 Properly 151 CORONA Del 1'1ar klcatlons. South of Highway. 126' cor- ner location, si.ibrilit any offer . 47' lot with O\Vner will ing, to build to suit. Bkr. 675-7225. ls! TIME offered -N'pl. Blvd. 9.21' Relu1'1l spend· able income. Rea l1 o r 675-0100 r--..., l\1o.; avail 7/1. Owner Corp. home, buy ntw proprrty, or vice is FREE to You! Tty $225-2 BR ocean view apt. UPPER 2 br, Elect. bltins, 833-J-206 QUIET 2 BH, cpts, dtps, 6••5662 for any r.......4 ..... ......_. Con· Nu·View! deck, beaut cond., .2 blks Balbo1 Pentn1ul1 lri 1 ,:::::...:=-~-----1 suudeck, nr \\'('s t c 11 t f -•-~~-N"VIEW RENTALS bch re g, gar, 140• to FOR ren1 ~~mo 3BR 11 tidential, faat service in ..,.. • • · responsible adult. No pets. ....,., • un • shoppg area, adults pref. C-2 LOT, xlnt lOC., approx. your hom@ or our offlce. ~ or -49f...3248 ~Spe.ciou.9 4 br, hrplc $35-WEEK A UP References. 646-4224. Range & r.etrig, V ic : 646-4U2~-~~~-~I 50x180 on Harbol' Blvd., SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. 4 & 5 home. N~. f.'11 c r s e., e Sleeping Rooms Yorktown &-Beach. Ph. 2 BR, 1 ba. f'rplr. St('ps to c,21·','1· .,.!!1U1028st sell, owner; I -.i(iiTiii4)i;;i566-0ii;iiilii06i;. iiiiiiiiiiiim homes .:,~Anv~-~~nt' LagunaN VI NE•WgueR. ENTALS • HQUSt'kee_ping Rooms 3d;3pRs, a'dw~' nolrg., ._ cpQut. . ", 893-3.278 ocean. '"early; S300 mo. ,..,.,_ 11 • ·-...-,,, ... ...,, no: NU-V • Ocean View Aets ' ..,, pe.... K! WALK to beach, new roomy Ask for ~like 1-lUNTINGTON Beach, sev· ~0· r ~ "'200feea. (l) 673-4030 or 494-3248 BALBOA INN ~a. $200 mo. &ar4939 & 2 BR. 2 BA. bHins dsh/v.'Sh, JONES REALTY 673-Ql{l era! small hoose lots, c1... 2ND T t D d ~ lll> M·;· s~t "1&-1689. • gar, '""" crpting, 4%-8322 rus ff S CHARMING 3 BR. 2 BA. n,, -· •= SPACIOU 2 -LUXURY Baylronl high n·., ·to beach & new Civic Cen· heh, I 8 e I 0 pl, .•~./mo. 675-8740 V rde S BRblapt., ~tesa * 2 BR, 2 be, plush, tJect. I $ ="" "-'· PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. Corona del Mar ........, e .,.._ ,_ bl"· I d 11.pt. 2 Br., 2 Ba .. hoot i<llp er. """"' ea. agt1 u111., Any Amount ____ .;.;..._;._ ___ ,Now Dec Upper 3 Arch a BR ZBA d 1 area, u ... , cp.,,, ..... r o,crpts, ras,adulls pool I • •• $'50/•••o 536-3409. B 0-·Am 494~•-1 • ' coav •. en, frp c, drpr., $160 mo. Avail. 7/L only. S210. 536-5192 · ca.... a · * 2 Bedroom, 1 Bath * ay. wner ~·· .,..;:, front & rear poh!hts, 1 blk 962-!G41 or 541).6919 c6:.:'1?o.~.=1c:'f.:._ ____ _ Mountain, Desert * Cell 675-4'94 BKR. $250,mo. lease Lagun1 Niguel beach & ocean. Adults only. 2 BR 1 BA · WALK TO BEACH Son Juen top1-1trono Resort 174 ~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!'• 1 ==;;=;640--0899~""';,·;-.,,---:::,,,:::=.;:.:!!.::.:::.----I $400. per mo. yrly 646-8211 • ~ studio apt, pvt New 1 BR Crpt/drps gar. - ---------~ NEW Oo T Twnhse . patio, !>mall child OK no 205 15 h ... , -1 ' NO ! al CHARMING 1 BR, hse, un· 1 ~8: erm.ce · Corona del Mir t SlliO 730 ' 1 • -.»J • J BR uppe r duplex. Octan EXTRE~Y r lne op. ap;!i:: iO:C~at~~· f~~ furn. $2'l5 sgl, S:SO cple. No Oced an vi~, 22 br, l~ta ~· ~;3611 · Joan n · ** UNFURN. 2 Bil apt, Vu. $250 n10. Open Wknds, por t unit Y for good, 1 t Thrif 63!}.64: child or pet. 640-8078. ' ra, crp ... , . car a c · GOING TO EUROPE · . near beach. $150. 10..2. 34443 Via Espimza . klee1ly-flo\\' business. ideal nves ors t 11• garage, ~llo. Pri. ~ch. 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, patio, tn-SMALL 1 BR, Eaatside, util 9624'549 Ca pistraoo Bch. STI-0666 fo1· the young couple v.•ant-Mortgages, Costa MIM pool, tenrus court, pnvcy, eluding dishes linens color pd. 1 ~dult, no pet, Yrly LARGE 2 BR,·unl $140 1-1 1_;,.c,;V•;;•,,_. ~~~~--- ing to work for a com· Tru&t ft •• ,1 260 securlty. $335. L e as e TV ia .. .....1-. 1' ell v•~-ok $140-$145, 642-85al 336 E . · o. l I ........, VACANT • VACANT .. IM· "~"---'l757 • ........._.,, a • n.M.l3 . • 31th St n....n hous.! --. Clean? Near slores 3 BR. 2 BA duplex, pvt pa.tio, artab e rncome now and I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, MACULAT. El lldnn., 00...... u-rr $400. mo. 1st. last & deposit, • VII" Realonomi""" "''·-o= ~ -~ · 1~ 31911 a secure future, or middle l 1 In · 'I v rd 1 ··~ NE\V Sea Terrace home. 4 avail J uly 1 lo Oct. 1. Refa 2 &: 3 BR + patio, •-. quiet ~ ... Dile, •• ,.. .. nvv nr new ... ...,.,ping u.J, age couple \vanting a Mr & PUT YOUR MONEY Uotf.nm;~t::c eco~i:~: BR, Fam Rl\f, 3 car gar. requlred. 6 44-19 69 or nr Baker & Bristot•Immed DUPLEX, 2 br, crpts, dras. Via Bf.lardt'S, 493- 7937 · l\1n operation. Liquol' store, TO WORK FOR YOUI !% bath. and only $335. per fenced yd. Private tennis 6'1S-2:9'M. occup. Mlll'.. lC>iO A Va.lenda, ~s or slngles. Call We~tcliff groceryl be store, Shel undroll Station Earn 10 % Interest on well· mo. inc. gardener. can Mr. beach, pool. Ga rd i:, n er ' ruRNISHED Apt -$195 Util 557-7766 ~~"O·,._~-----$185. 2 BR., Pool, qultt adults, no pct,, w/ u room, a mat, secured 2nd Tru!lt Deeds on Day, 545-8424, Sou t h Co Assoc dues paid. $650 mo. paid. l,i: blk to ocean. NO 3 BR. 2 ba, c.arp/drps, bltns; Mesa Verde ice house. barber shop ren· 0 C Realtors. 493-6655. pets. 2500 °-.,ew, ~·1 ti'·· -... Mat·-actul~· -tal plus 2 bedroom house. range ounty real estate, NE\V 4 br A ·1 Le ~.. .......,, _. ....... """" ... ·-MOVE into home with spec· Pr! __ _.. to .,... ,.t IU0.000. On SIGNAL A'IORTGAGE CO. * COu.EGE PARK. 3 · VRl · now. ase Costo -dogs. $200. 277 No. 7, 16th t ul ·"-.. I ligh L"'-1 .. y '' {7141 556{1l06 Bdrm 2 ba'" 1 s:iso. Will consider lease op-Place . .A .. f. 646-2414 ac ar view o . ls at State Hwy. 247, 9 mi. N. of ·• ... ., poo • home, oon 496-2419 ·~ night. From this second Yucca Valley on o ld 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. large patio, low main-· 1 • $30 WEEK & UP •SHADY ELMS -POOL story 2 BR apt, you can see \Von1an Springs Rd. tTI4) te~. Good condltion. ·Newport Beach e Studio A 1 BR Apts. • e Adulta Poolside Sl45 up the twinkle of Santn Ana by 364-23ID 40% DISC $60000 wcll l'Jec'Ul'ed $325. per month includes ' . e TV &:: Maid Service Avail. e Otlldren dead-end St. night and the mountains by t st Apple Valley pays $&W pool service. CaJI 546-5880 cusr built ho~e, overlook· e Phone Senrie@-Htd. ·Pool 177 E. 22nd St. CM 642--3645 day. 2 balh~. 1 a u n dr y ~j~ Gfg~~ f~al~A-~~~~ mo. 10'/,J; B" J Apple HERITAGE REALTORS. i!1g Back Bay m older sec-e Children & Pet 5"ctton LARGE 3 Br. ·2 Bo.. carpet, facilities, private location THE 1:.--XcrrING furnished $26,500 821-4142. ~V~al~le~y~, ~TI~4~' ~24~2-3~1~44~-~~ TWO bedroom house. Clean tl~n cf Bluffs. Beaut dee • 2376 Newport Blvd. O.f drapes, upalalrs, near OCC. Mesa Verde 'area $155. PALM MESA APTS. · 'd & t Carpet mUTOred walls -crystal o:Ao 975S -.,,3967• 1179. 5S7-""~ 540-2'l79 ~•t sp~1. MINUTES TO··NPT1·BCH:· ~··- out of SI.I. Prop 178 insi e ou · s, chandeliers. lge terr w/gas ;.no-v• lJ"W' ~ "--' " f'URN OR UNFURN • drapes, garage. Ad u l t s llt•s Cann•! & ~allin (Ad Good tor $5 on rent) LARGE 2 BR, 111 BA atudlo, DLX 2 & 3 Br 2 Encl · · I~ lerred A ail S1?5 .. , " "'' " Ba. Unbelievably ll\1'£'.e apts, OCEAN Prop. ~i acre $7,500 ...._,.,.,. f8 ~!:des ia~ ~a~:nancc: draperies, etc., etc. $550 HOLIDAY PLAZA uUlltles paid, Sl75. Pool. gar. $165 up. Rental Ofc., huge pool, Jacuz:i elect bit· Oregon gold coast, sandy ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~~ &35-121.3 rno. Year lease. 644-40961 DELUXE Spacious 1 BR. 1978 lofaple. 645--6647 3095 Mace 'Ave, 546-1034. ins, shag crpts, drps, aaunu b ch . Utilities, stK>pping, • 6#-4652. furn. apt $140. Heated pool. NE\V 2 Br, 2 ha. drps, crplg, N•wport Be•dt etc. Adults, no pets. """'rts vie'''s, 968-7813. 3-2 BR homes avail., $140, $225 • 2 BR, ch"""""' frnt, Ample parking. Adults, no pool. bbq, gar. Adults, no SINGLES From 11~ * 642.2514 * Apts,. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Costa Meu .,.._. Houus Furnished 300 S145 Sl50 Also 1 BR house ......... 376 JV Ranches, Farms, HB '$125, waik to water'. gar, boat tie. Avail yrly. pets. pets. W. Bay. 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. 1 BEDRJ.t. From Sl65 CONDO V 1 treed gar-Groves lBOG c:;•:::•::•'-r•:.I:_______ Kids, pets on all. Agt. fee. $275 -12 BR . housei 2 blks 1965 Pomona Ave ., C.M. 2 BR s1:;:;..etove, rerrtg, 1 & 2 BR, Bltn appliances. JJ..~~~~~ A·•rlllf'f,::n ~ d pool • acan 3 B. R 2 BA -979-8430. .~an a"''s''·Rgar2. yrBAy 1 1 $160 LRG. 1 & den upper, cpts/drps. htd pool. Ad ultJ, Pool. 642-6274. to II"' LESS. em, • • · 80 AC. or lll Ac. -4 BR Hse, 1 BR house HB 1100 util pd. "-"'='"='~~~--~-I <fJolV -• • rp c, Oean, quiet, 1\-fature adll, no pets. 6'15-896.7 SUB-LEASE p k N $43 000 Low drnvn or \viii 3 BR Crpt. & drapes lge r deck 4-doon; ocean ar {'1a,•port You're r iJ:h!, they're under. Condominiums for 11le 160 rerrt w/opt. 10 buy.' 673-522!. 2 bas. Split lev('J. Located Also walk lo water 1 BR, !e~ yrd., sp&ce fo~ boal gNLi-VIEW RENTALS no pe~, gar. 2234 C Ru,tgen 1 BR. stove, refrig, dl'h/v.'Sh Apl, 2 BR. XLNT LQCA.. nrlced! t5Sl lole~a Or. ... °'!5 Bkr Oroville, Calif, 6 mi from gar. $125. Al90, 1 BR homes trlr l l 90/mc> Shown Sat & Dr., .lot balcony. Sml child ok. 703 TION, Avail July 7lh-Oec. (5 bl"-from N'""m'"' Bl"d.) O'W'.J'l1' • • town & Lake Oroville. Three In Costa Meaa, CdM & Lag. ' • · 673-4030 or 494-3248 * * STIJNNJNG 1 BR Shalimar, 962-8936. 3:-=lo,, ~644-6838~="·------I "Ill r:•" n~ .... •• ~ I P t 166 access roods -great view or Bcb Agt fee 979-8430 SUn only. Water pd. 924 Vic· gard 1 :::-. .,.,..."'""" ncome roper y "'~cramento VaUey. Ph· 916 ="""-' ="'-i""'..:.:C'-"=·:.__ toria C.M. NEARING COMPIEflON, n :/' 18apht. s"°°si~c area, 2BR. unfum, crpts, drps, NEW Bayfront-priv Bch &: * CASA VICTORlA * ""' B1lbol lslend LGE &S'd 4 b fined yd l u x u r I o us executive O • t t. -· ranee. oven, rebig, no pets, Pier 3BR, 2BA. $550 nlO yr· NORTH Idaho City. Small -982-2108. Tenns. 1 e r w townhouse, 3' Bedrooms, LRG lBR upper, kitchen $145. 968-1455 ly. 97!H'l63l or 644-4510. 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unturn engine sales & i;c.rvice. 7 Rul Estat• Wintld 184 4 BR. next door to bayfront. + .21hi ear gar., $275. mo. electric Kttch, st;lf·clean bltins, &tits, 00 peti. call REDUCED 1 tor '~ht Carpets, drupes, Dl\V. TV agencies and distributorships $400. Yearly lease. BAR· Call alt 6 pm, 548--4669, own, fireplace, pabos and alt 6pm 64z...tlM4 ren ug OCEANFRONT new 3 Br, 2 anl. Pool, etc. Come by tn- Jor chain sa"'S, lav.."Jl & gar-CASH BUYER lll!Cds in RE'I'1' REALTYr 642-5200. 54S-249S. P r ofesslonally dcoorated. H ti,.;.._ •-··h ~tiesbl.ll3' br, llil !!· ~· caC/rD garagebl"--' ,'!f!J1. ~!Y.,A~,q lo~~ .. !.bo, 525ut °"v'ic'tor1'°va"s'nt,A•tl. den cquipmcnl , AAO\\'· Costa l\!('sa. Area 4 BR.. REAILY sharp Easts.ide, 2 Harbor lli & Enstgn Schools. un .... -•• -w .. , 11!1, poo • ~·-• ...,...,, .... ., c. V'I~ '"'""" mobiles, go-carts. 4100 sq. lamily twtn + guest room Balboa Penln1ul1 BR. 1 ba, home. Shag crpt, Lease s.m. 646-7555. Agt. $145-$16S LGE 8eCludcd 1 BR. duplex. NEW 3 BR, lge llv It din rm, l lnrhor. C.M. 642-8970 tt. bldg, \\ilh living quarters, -~ pool fron1 private party. 4 BR. with ba.y vtew, steps f!1'·1l56pa.tio, yd. $225 ITJO. HARBOR VIEW BACJ-. IEWR • 1 BR., Ea.s1-10'.-n '"" .•• garage2-1Ul6 ',.A.,. ~~I. fplc, gar., urn. 812 \V. Thi! "Ycllow Pages.. ol on 2 plus acres fronting a S 6 O, 0 0 0 n1a.x. Quick from ocean, lat 2 wks in Ju· ~ -HOMES-patios, frplc's priv. garages _;;;:~~:;~;;-""~·-=-:="-';Ba:==lboa~;8:,1"";,=;·..o~"":="::=,,.=,:cl:;"'=':;'1;11;"':;1·::·,,;·c:·~84~:1-2"678~~· =:.. major llK>rofare. Grcr.ving possession. \\'ill he in lown Jy avail • .__ wk. or both LARGE 1 Bedroom, enclosed Oi v'ded balh & \ t f -gross. Good nf·t. Excdlcnl July ls!. Rf>ply with plwne ks ·-~·-I ... •'"l Palermo Model 4 Bed--1 0 5 c t. $1'" 000 C I I no. to Class1'J •'ed Acl No. ~. w . ...,..,,,. .uw. • J'l...-vru garage. f il • $525 closets. Rec. hall, pool & repu1a IOI\. MJ, • on ac . (>11 Doria llope. 642-9338 r m ., a m Y rm, . pool tables, sauna ;baths. f~) ~~~atilt flealty, &;~~ ~~~·. :i6°:fil. Bo!( l560, 'OBA=LB::,.:,O::A.:P::EN=~!N~llaylro~--111-1 3 BR. 2 ha. garage, fanlilie.s per mo. lease. Agent See . for Yourself . .., 17301 5 BR 'BA Pier • t Ohly, $235. 2260 Federal, 644-7270. Keelson Ln. (1 blk \V. or 4-PLEXES -1 WILL-Mall Mid iune-.1Ui~~:.. C.M. 641H728 EASTBLUFF Beach, l 1;'.~~848' Sl~ter). GUARANTEE TO SELL Also Sept. Wkly. 673-3139. Dano Point 3 b ~, ba x 1 1 11 YOUR HOME r, .. 71 • nu P an, u $140 -ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 I:.et ti.! show yoo how to begin • · • BAYFRONT Balboa Penln. 5 FABULOUS ocean ~ .... b w . 4 patio ,v/vlcw. Ready July Pools, t •Gardena. Sauna. ~-·r investment P"""'"""l L" 30 DAYS. Br. pier & Allp sJel?p 14. ... Jal Lense for $535 Of quick ~ one 01 lhesc "dcli7X~ Cash advanced. \\'eekly ,Tuly $400, Aug. $500. Br .. 3 ba, fam mr. trplc. sal~ price $6l,900. Owner. 1\Aenduf!!· PhP.rtvale . p n t I o . '4 • pJ.exea. A 11 amenilk'il Agent .............. 847-41612 673-6055 or (1) 682-0155. crpl/drps. $425 mo. 675-7414 1 _!55~1~-~1488~[°'iW545-~152S~;· hO;;;;;-l:~·~~~~-!!!~·~846--0259:::~· ==I plus l'Xcellent loc:ltiou. Only 1 3 BR, 2~ ba. summer or Fountafn Valley EASTBLUfF view home Lido Isle 1 5 0% clownll · 164 1 ,500t t I I~ winter. 305 Montero. Call 3 BR, 2 BA. gigantic rumpti!I 3 BR. 3 Ba .• famlly rm . 2 WATERFRONT fNI' ng nves men F'inancilil _ 67J..-053; nn. all bltns. OW, swim FrpJ-:s. Prlv&le gankn Lrs:. J BR. 2 BA. $550 ptr Corp. 638-5662 . Corona d •I Milr pooJ1 kids OK, only ~ n\o. $550 Mo/yetttiy IM~ month. Lease. 673-8886. SIX UNIT -a,ptu1:menb; v.•llh No le<I. AKent 842-442t \Vlnmn R.E. 675-3331 ... _ po I •··ch ........ 3 COTT •GE •mall 1 BR, SEE OWNER ,..w r -ocean bn!eics. SJ>(\......,..,. Busi nes' " · • Hunt1--a...n. BNch BR. 1% BA, bltlns, crpt'1l, 8unk room, lge J*-lio, year· ''W"" Fri. Sat. sun. tr!. 1111 Colton. CLS to 8ch. lgtl 2 Br, beam drp'd, 65' x 300'' ~ lo Opportunity 200 ~1~f.r summer, 409 Iris, SJ IARP 2 BR, much privacy, Un!um. upper duplex. 4 eel~ vac systtm1, aar dr grammar school. $1000. In· £.XTP.£l\fELY rtne op-::,~==-~~--~! fenocd, frplc, at>ll. drp1, Bctnns. yeen leue. operator. Adul tl, yearly t.'OIJ1l'. AJ)dng SU5,oo:>. but PtJ rtunity for 200d BACllEl..()R unit, furnished, slO\'C, dSh/wsh. $2 5 0 . Jt"'OR leaae 3 br 2-A ba 2 $285. 642-3490. ma~e nn offl!t", ·KINGAARO stcady~flow bu.slness, Ktcai NlL-e kitchen & ha., $140 mo. 536-7127. tireplca, fam ' rm, ~U WESI' Newport 3 BR , R..F-GC-2222 for the )"OUJ'K • coopla v.•D.DI· lease. Utll lncld. 640-089IJ, 3 BR. Ira tam nn, wlk to 1 and a cpd . $350. mo. upatair& duplex, Ub 'p&nel· TRADE J.2 unit&. O.G. F.quJ. ~ ltJ \\'Ol'k for o com-Huntington BNCh sChlt le lhooPlna:. Xlnt. Gardener. ~ lng, ocean w, sundck, yrly \)' $74,000 tor hOUle ln fort able it'l(Ome now and '-' c o n d • ~ $ 3 0 0 · m o • JIAR. vu p8J,rmo. 4 BR 1.ee only. 548-698'1 or...,... Jla)bos. ~ Carpet, ~al. M.'Curo fu tutt; or middle 3 BR, I •~ ba. Avnll. 7/1 for 6 846-1353.1842-l9rl e'WI FR, 2~ BA. wet ber, 2 $35 • up. l BR. 2 BR le (7.14) ~ ~e oouplc wanting ll Mr & lo R wks. $215. per mo. + t.EAS,EI. 4BJt. p;o. Carpetll, trplc.g, ttnt w/gard'ncr $550 Uache1ort. Color TV, maid 4.Pl.EX, ltuntlngton Beach, n operation. J.Jquor 1tore1 dt!p)!it. No pc-ta. 847-5015. d rape IJ , c LE A N 1 per month. 64+'7181. seiv. pool. The Mesa, Al5 N. C.ood <®<(, $11S,lllJI!, f!!OOO """"" 11orc, Shell Stollo• QUICK CASH KATELLA. 8fr-«J61 itARBOR Vu lln1', ·Carmcd, NewpOrl Bl., NB. 646-9(;81. t10Wn. by oW"nl!'f, ~J . ~l~~;ix!:~~~1;':~~ $l25 1 BR bOUle, pr., al80 2 $1m.rp. 3 Bit, fom, nr pool, FURN. Bnch. N c w po r I EASTSIDE ~A MESA tal ph• 2 bedroom hou,.., THROUGH A BR $1.65, util. pd .. kid•, pets Inc ltllrd•ner, $475. 6"4.,1791. H•hll, pvt entry. gar. 3 t6• • 2 UR unl1 19211 Inc mo. Prie<d to go 8l IUO,OOO. On DAILY PILOT on both. Agt. lee. 979-801. Son' Juan Coplstr•no Mh'8lu bch. 644-2m/fi45.~ Owner. 187.500. 548 ~ Stale ltwY • .--147,-9 __mL..N -o1 Need a "Pad"? Ptace an ad! 1~•;:!lr!.:0..;G"'•"teo.""----~~ t'OliTA )!oa 10 unlt.t, Yucca Valky on 0 Id WANT AD It'• • --:-;-.-..11-y0ur NEW. Oeoah View. 3 BR. 111 The , ...... draw In tho w .. 1 . !.'::"i/~ Pril>c-= Sprl~ Rd. fTI41 1 __ ..:6:..4:..:2:.'..:S..:6..:7..:8~--' ~~ ~·Ully :"°d~,!: ;:;rv~~~ Ad.-:.=. Pnot O ualllGd S©~~lA.-l£"B~S " That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle 14iltff k CIAY J, rou.A'-'!";;:::::::::::::::::--0 ll:earrol'lgtl lett•11 of tt.. " fout lt:l'0!71bled word• b.o low to form tour '11'1 I• words. TOMS EL I HOP E R l it • I I I I _ ~_,.:L..;Y;..,.:;N.,O;:...:,P~, I ! Do •yov ever gel the fullng I I• r I that the only reo&On We hove elections 11 to flnd out If tlto I TU·LASE ,-oro right? '"1 ~-"~~'-;.:..;•-=-~-1 G eomp1 ... tti• c1tuck1. quot.ct 1 j • 1 j '· j by !Ullng In tM ml11rng word L. -.L. -.L. -.L--.L--"· -'· you develop from ST•p No. :i b.low. • u-;~·t:~N~~E lUURS I I I I I I • PRINT NUMBERED lf!l!RS IN 1• -r 1• ,. 1• 1 _ lH!S! §QUAj!S . _ • . • • SCRAM·LETS •ANSWIRS IN CWSIRCATION 700 I New Newport Village • Choice of loca1\on PANORAMIC VIEW Of all Ncv.11<>rt llarbor, &: oc.un. Completely furnish· ed. 3 8l'. 2 Ba honw, hu\:e Jlt'llo. 0\\'l>Cr lcavlns llOOn _fur sun1nl~l'. Any rea90nable offer o.cccpte<J. ~5-4162 or 6'12-2171 .. 550 Lost Thursday, Jun t 21, l97l DAILY PIL~l 31 --![Ill I;;;.[ _r. ... _,_ m;;;l[Il]~il 1 Job Wonted, Malo .700 Helo Wonted. M I F 710 . .;..;;..~=:...;;.;;.;.:.....;..;;.:; - fOUND 6/16 brown male! LARGE onuq."e 'cat wtnea ALL types Jlorne Repain1. 1-::AGER to \\u1·k colle(Cr 1.'l'Ud *CAREER-TRAVEL* Collie Shepherd, brown eolr t..'Olla.r & ~·1u·s on hind legs. At.1ual tlnm aiv.I mah·1~a1. ll«k., int~·N.$ting poopl«'· Katioci.al publishina C.'00\'*"1 lar, vicinity Satna Ana Vie ol Siulta A.na Ave. & f'ru;-1 Scrvjt.~. No job 100 oricn!NI 11ork oppty. Please 15 110w hiring J.oall 13 A. River & Son Diego Fwy. 10th St·. C.1\1. 6-tt..1938. &nail. F I.: B Home Repair call \Vnn·cn 49-1-79~ o\'er 10 rn1v1•I n1ajor c.1Ue., 9~2806 artcr 5 pm LOST niall' Sllky Terrier, ~1403 QU,\Llf'IED _Ory cln. nii;:r. Nc11o• Yorlc, 1tfiuml, FIAwaJJ. Now LEASING BEAUTIFUL male black & ~luntbolt island •!l".-.. u'd YARD & hseclC'aning, 11·in-Expcrti.ff' (Ion\. sc•r_ 1b<1ch. ='u ~XJ>l!rit..'fK.'e ~. 2 11ot1lle kltte:n· Part Persian.1 ~!16-~t.~:1;~7~~~"~'~~~:'12~1~-7~1~77~1 dow wshng, haulng, garden-qtl-s., orlices. boots. ~71~7 "eek f'.Xp(.'f!Se po.id training Huntington Beach i'dyr!lc st .. 1 .. ·u::una Bench. ing. Very rcu. rate1, F:XP . 1 -p1'0¢l·o.m. Mtw! be able 1.0 .~ NEW M·I ~•IUl\I find hon1t', Ca I I 646-3798 " · ¥..'t csnU1.n "·nnllli P"f'-stru'l lrnnu~diatcly. 1-,or IP. 49'1-73-16 ll5J . rin'IC job. Fri·S.1t·Su11· Eves pointn1ent for i111ervicw ca.II 940 .sc:1. f't. & UP ~ Servicm .nd R-ai-!'.11 C II A EL . :i JI 0 ~1 E OK. 6 14-l:iS l aft j n..'01! .:. .. ~, bet,,,_. .. ,, "', Tu- 11 .. ,,,,·11 .. ,, • N"'"iao"l f'ND ,, ... 1 ·A " "lk / 11 ._. RE J> 1\ I rt S · · L ITTL.E ~ ....... .,.., .,.,.. 646--0697 or 833!0519 che!it bum11 on nose. r>.1ale. \\"lUlts buby ilttJng JObs . • Tennh1, VOJl{'ybu.11. Pool e Ar1 s &. Crafts e Billiards t'OMFORTABL.E relit boo1e in l"ullerton for elderly w/beaut. surroundings. Pvt rm . XIJ1I food &: attention. Call fl) 525-5816. , 0 v ~ .. ..._ : tl••·...,..u '-' '1' \\'I 1 ;~------;;~;: JOBER" 6'12-1403 · ,\1ATURE ht y1· •>W .boy f'rt -s -Wcarin(; llea collar Vic Hauling llli.!llJ Villas arl'" ;,.~i l·I CHECKER, EXPER BAYFRONT OFFICES 2_l8'.Xl IKI · rr. Al-I spa~s. Harbor & Edinger 1-1.B. Babysitting Jl-icasnnl working conds &. Pn.'814:e ofti<."''· over kloking ,1•11h front offices. large ,,,_,===839-;;;;~'11;1:1~==== I GET RID or UNSIGHTLY Job Wanted, Female 702 xln'I l>L-nclits. ft.tr. Berman, e Clant llec Roon' \\·iUt a r..i player piano e AthleUc progra1n • Bachelor & I & '2 Bedroom Furn or Unf\1111 avail Adults; no pels Ne\\-port }\vy at Baker $1 . 2BR, ~ BA, furn, Nu. Buy & oce.an, across fron1 prk. Newpl Bch $200 "'kly. 6T.~7l Balboa Bay in Nt.'Wpo1·t reur door. ldC!al I 0 r fl:~tAJ.E Tcrrk>r mix BABYSITTING any age. TR,.\Sll ,t: DEBRIS $10 56-412'1. Ben 1 ch. Var 1 k>U 20 s illte sulles laboratory $245. ea. 1775 \\·curing flea. c <1 I I a r . Lolli of TLC, 6 to 6. LOAD. COl~Li':GE STU· lllGl1 school bu.~iness stu· ClllLO CARE _ (Very lite as cw ns 1 • per mon. In-\Vhittlcr Sl., C.M. Days White/gold/black. Vic -Mon.-Fri. Some n i t cs. DENT 5--18-6428 den! ,S(.>eks ~ u n1 n1 er housekeeping) f<IC 9 year old eludes drup, .cpl , utillllcs, 1464-5()33 or 64G-0081 eves. ll"Vine ilnduslrial area on 548-3917 or 646-5534. UlCAL n1oving &. hauling by ~~:itari~~te~~~;r ~ ~ ct:i.ug-hler o! proteasional, i~.1~~~~~13.:f~~~~1;1~J~~~ 4001 BIRCH, NB _Sal. 54G-48ll or 6~8327. BABY~l'ITfNG: r>.1y llo1nc. ~tudenl. l..a1~ge truck. Rea$. receplionist. Experlciu..-c<l ltl ,,.01·klng p1.1.rents in lovely N.B. 6Ta.l220. m>, 2000, 3600 sq .fl. or L'Qnl-~IALE kiuen approx 2 ~e~~'~ ~l~ ernte!!1'-l6~-t ~5~r' ;:i3<1~1S46 ur "'14-2l&I. catcula1!11g: and postin.i,:. ,"',,,'',~ 1,.h",,'",.~,·. 1190~ttmhe~~~~~: 714-557-0075 LOVELY 1 Bedl.'OOm July· August, Corona dcl l\lar. Clase 10 beach. $150. v.·eek. &lfr930J. * WATERFRONT * ho thereof. Ava.ii. 9fl/73 1nonlhs, unusual co Io r . ia • · ,,_. YARD, garage clcanu1>s. Rcfr1-cnces a\•,1ilablc. r,i;:.. ., • ,,.., .. ~I r. Baumgardnt'r, 541-5032 vicinity \Vllson & College. !'.11\.TURE, dependable, fenc-J{en1ove IJ'CCS, dirt l\'Y· ·12-10. and cnt.lre school year - Prime loculion, N ~ w p 0 r 1 Share Al"T or HOUSE Coslu !'.Tesa. call & identity, cd yard. My honM!. R.i'(S. Orive\\')'S, grading . 847-2666.N '~E~EO:;,..-h<_l_p_o_t -1-,.-,.-,-,-1-vc !::'tdn1i::,~t.c~Jd:.C~ 'd!~ Beach. Large lilUl!e. Cood Call ·HOME.PARTNER' :>t8-4681. Hot lwlChes· Mi>-l067. GEN ~lauliug. Ti"eC I Shrub ha\'C ni<lt'-s, nu r ~es , dable and happy pel"!IOMli· $135 & UP ~!001 ISLE. del~x <BR, IBA, " s y, wfga1'<llln & JJallo. GIGANTIC l & 2 BR. Avail July 14-&pt. 3, eves You Bt't It'•· undc1·prlccd! &14-4gro or MS-M70 That's why these npls. won't last long. Crpl.S, drps. srove STUDIO apt, 11w}t 1-larb, It retrig. Lots Q( grl't!n beaut furn, rec facil. across lawn. Covem:I g a r a g c. s . from ocean, $150. wk. Adults:, no ·pets. 2020 Fuller-,8~71'-~206""1~;~87l:c.:-...:1'l=ll~e~v~e~•'-· _ ion Ave. (1 blk E. of Nc1v· BEACON Bay, Newport pCJrt 'Blvd., & 1 blk. So. of Beach, 3BR. pilt lo, ll'nnis, Bay, C.~f.l &l2-8690. S275 \\ttk. 714-673-500-l / :!ll-8~1~7. Huntington 8Hch NE\VPORT on 01 a rn n e I , LA QUINTA HERMOSA •mall house, sips 6, woekly, Spanish Count-rv }'.;st1de Llv-"""''°""""'"hl'.!y,_, -"""7"-<"27"0'----- ing & S()llcious Apts. Ter-1 & 2 BR. Apt. from $150 to meed pool, sunken gas $250 ,,·eek. 514-6899 or BBQ. Unbelievable Living. 6T;,-Ta98 1 BR. UNFURN .$165 SEE OUR AD UNDER 1 BR. FURN $185 360 CORONA DEL MAR 2 BR. }~URN $215 "Going to Europe" ALL tJJ'lLITlES PAID LIDO Isle Waterfront 3 Adulls, No Pets BR/2 BA J /Jul $1250 (4 blks S. of Snn Diego Fn''Y · une Y on Beach, I blk \V: on Holt mo. Aug. $l500. 673-8886. to 16211 Parkside Lane.) (T14l 847-~1'11 Laguna Buch SPACIOUS i;:1udios. $l';"a-$1!G. One block fli1n1 n1ain beRch. &1=4=8478 &: 494:.fi!ll Newport llleoch SUMMER. Winter, Yrly. Anita's Rentals, Bkr, 2005 Balboa Blvd. 673-2058. 425 JtEsr & RecreaUon. \Vlfnds or \Vkly rentals, Big Bear ta kc -Ba I d w In Lodg<>. Reserv. TI4 : 585-4709 BAL80A-Veninsula house-or apt, sleeps 8. $UO. w~k up. 96>-SSSO 3 BDRM, 2 slry. + base· ment pla,yrm. Cabin $115 per v.•k, 962.7972 alt. 4 p.m. Rentals to SMre 430 parking. $350 moolh. ~119-1 or S<IS-1479 _.:.I =e~LA.o..;C~K""-~&-~i;i~l,-•-r_m_a~I e Builders trim. Ga.I' & Yd <.~le1111u11. ho u "ckprs. con1 punions. ly. 'Salary good and open. 8111 Grundy, Realtor German Shepherd found on Est. 5.11-6:'r17, 557--691);1. llon1e1nakers Up john 892...mAiO aft 6 pm. 341 BAysidc, N'pl. Bench Rentals Wanted 460 San Diego 1'~wy, near Culve1· \VILL . buil.d or re P a i r SKIPLOAOER & du111p truck 5-17~! ' f oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii: * 675--6161 * Ramp. Injured. 897-7290. unylhuJJt ;>Our hoine needs. ,,·ork. Concrete, asphalt RETlltED ol<ler \1-on1an. Ef-Civil Engr Constr SlBK NE\VPOl?T Center 2 llL>c· \\IANT S 0 ~1 E 0 N E TO CHILD'S prescription Crtll Gene, 547-l83S sawing, brcakifl,g. 846-7110. f i c i en t . Gcn'I Acclni.c J\ilgr to $15K . TAKE 'fENDER LOVING glasses round Mesa Verde Business Service 32' F"RNITURE Vru> , .. ,. 1 H o use kccpt.•r/Conipanilln· Elec. Technician to $15K W"IOUll olticeii overlooking CARE or YOUR H0~1E" . . u u D I K Big Canyon. Noiv available · area approx one month local furn hauls & ge n'! . r ve, shop. S.19-7380 Con1:rol Engr to Sl3 in run :;ervlce law firm n,;~~~i;sire ~1~~2 c""""''-.'"-01"'5-B0-"-12=. ~-~--TYPING tmulin,g. 548-1862. &cretaries 10 $650 llbrary & reception in'. or 3 bedroom, 2 bath un-FND sn1all \Vhite male poo-FOR IND./1'~1R~1'J)S l\-10VING. hauling, cl ean-ups.[Help Wanted, M & F 710 Audit Sec·y, S.A. .~o = t•luded, )(Cl'O.'< (lvailnble. ruii1ished honie in La1tt1na, tl~e June 16 btwa 16th & 17th i1CK64U~ ~.50DELV. ~eas. rates-Coll. Students. ACTIVITIES _ Coordinator, b!:-1 ~fg,1t~~t~~~ " $450 Call 7.14: 644-4610 Corona d('l Mar, or NeWpo11 on Santa Ana in C.l\I. ,,_.,, F rec est. 832-TaSI 1 person \\'/exJ)('r to conduct Reccpt. Gcn'I Ofc S450 C"M • 2700 E. c,t flwy, 41XMI ""a<.·h. Ne-' ln>m-"lfttcly, 548--5132 or 540-9396. I I u~ ... """" ..._..., ""' C 5 act \' ty prog:rnni in at-Clerk Typii;t _,., sq. (t . or ind. suites fron1 b·· July 15th is a musl. Phone ar pet ervlce Housecleaning u·acllvc conv. hosp i t:i. 1 , Pay1"UI\ Cle• • $500 50IJ.900 sq. It. From 37c Air •::;94-4"":;!10:.:1_~---~-FOUND tiny male-part A-1anK ,.. __ _. \\'kd S '". N. E'~·-:oRT cond. cpts, di,.,, pvt P""''" ~ kitten vicinity Victoria St., JO~~N"S Carpet & Upholstery o .C.C. student ,,;u do VYVU pay. ys :.-apin. ~ '"5 FEJ\IALE student needs a C M N---" I . Dr1 Shan1poo free Scotch-Please call 642-2410. Persor.o .I Anene' lot, set.'Urity, 6 7 3-4 1 2 o sinall funi. apt or room osta esa. ..._~s ov1ng house1\·ork. Costa A-lesa -A 1. . . 0 . 1 • Charles \\I. Ma.stl'rs owner/ c~. Housebroken. 646-8·198. guard (Soil Retardants). Irvine area. $2 :-io hr., 4 hr.. , C 1v1t1e s 1rec or 833 Oovlir Or., N •• bkr. ' ~~~ac~i.t ~~~~··5ili~'~ug. FND fnil small shaggy dog. Degreasers & nil t.'Olor nun1mum. Call Di a 11 e \\'c need a n1alt11'€' en(•rgctic 642-3870 OF>lCE 6'/13, vie. Paularino bt\vn brighteners & -10 n1inute 642-3342 & creative person \\'/a 1\·;u·1n j.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,., spa.cc -444 Old 3BR, l~ ba, unfum house, Bear & Babb, CM bll'ach for \Vhite carpets. . personality, ·n1is position ~~.wpo1rt1 Blvd. 3 blks No. of rtitired couple, H.B., Santa 5'16.-9211 Save your money by saving CGJ\L~ Cros~ 1 lnt~n~alionnl. req·s total INVOLVE.1"lENT CLERICAL Help, petm. 5 \.Mist 'WY L 3 drafting l"ms Ana area. 846-9136 n1c extra trips. \Viii clean 106 .. am ir s 01 ~1 in directing our !icl'ivity pro-& 1 recept. m1. All for FND: Surfboard on a living rni.. dining rn1, & home, ap.-u1111ent o~ of(1cc gr.un. day \\'k. Apply in person, no U'.)11/mo. · Ulll incl. 2nfi fir $~iit!r~~al'l'.l~ir a::ii.p1ta~~~ Neu•port Beach. Jdentlly hall $lS. Any rm. $7.50, cleaning. Bonded & insured. The Huntington ph. ciLlls. 1099 Baker St, C..\1 \\'/ocean view. S 4 8 -5 3 O O acc:urul('ly & ifs yow·s. couch $10. Chair .$5. 15 yrs. 6-15-6010. R 1. 1 R .d COOKS cvf's. house, yard, afl. 5• &U-9l69 6T:>-1l55. l'Xp. is \\'hat counts, not COLLEGE student \\·ill do • ire~~n ~SI ence: CASHIER NEW::-.b~ld~g-.. ~h-,-.-"-,~,~,-"~1~1-y FND in Vic. Mission Viejo method. I do work myself. housecleaning -So. 'Hun-l.8S5l Florida !or Coffee sllOp, E.xp'd only. decoralcd. Lge. office, heart I II ij!41 Goll Co"'""· Mone'"'°"' Good reJ. 53Hl101. tingl-00 """'" ""'"' 4 '""If""'· Belo 812-7788 El Too~. Ask lot' Jim. ot l.af,,'Ulla $each. For in-~ts Rec Cluh, large Collie. Carpenter minin1um $2.50 hr. Call Lin-1\uto sjo.0440. fonnation. contact: ~--;;;;;;;;;;;::;~~ 1 ___ :.:".::"::.l..::~::311-ecl'.:'.546::".---da 5..16-8932 NEW CAR SALES COOKS RIVIEllA REALT'f C I Cl • FOUND Collie mix-puppy, NE\V, remodel, fran1e & . arpe ean1ng Expe1ienced salesn1an only (I) lat Class bt'Oiler man & 49t-5678 49'J-2800 SOO male, beaded collar, vicini· finish, sto~s. oUices & Floor Care & Windows needed in one of Orange tll dinner cook w/~per in USO', IM~lED. oc"'Cupancy, Announcements ty ttamilton SL, Costa ~mes etc. Custom \\"Oti<. Dutch l\laint Se1-v. 5J7-15m Cou'!ty•s leading Ford dea.1-heavy food preparaUon. Call 1"-ill con.sider divkling-f<:lt' 2 NE\V SOCIETY OF LOVE ~tesa, 5i18-M18 Licensed. 962-11161.--,.. _ _.. eel C erstups. E.xceUe;J.t como1is-Che( ·Fred, &u-.l.700. 'Ot' more lenants. Coast H1\')' 1 lo . p FOUND 1 bl k & "' Co-nt, Concrete .-uicat leaning sions & bonus plan, insur· -=='-=-=°""'='-=;=.;.--- N I ntegrat n 111 u re , arge ac wrule "''I' \VE DO EVER G Cook & Prep Man at ewport B vd. FrC<! Perfl'CI, \Vhole Love Divine rabbit , I floppy ear. Vicini-* YTHIN * unce and denlO plan. Paid prkng. 642-4&14. • Younr Now Everlasting 1y Virginia Place, COllta PATIOS,-walks,~d1·ives. Saw, Refs. _ _f'ree_~t. 6-IS-2839. .vacations_ Sre Don Crevier. Apply In Penion, 2500l Dana ruu. SERVICE Be.ing Identity. No begging, Mesa. Call 548-7.869 break. remove & replace OOUG'S carpet c I ea n in g THEODORE ROBINS Dr .. Dana Point Harbor, Westcliff Building plate passing, Jovl' offering FND tml long hair cat. Tan concrete. 548-8668 for esr. evc-nings. 1v e ck ends. FORD D.P. ConK"r \\'eslcliff Dri\'e & or so I i cit i n g funds v.•/blk streaks. \Vhite pa\\'S CEMENT & Block \\'ork. hom~/oflicelapls. 962-8672 2060 HRrbor Bivd. 1''RY COOK. cxp"d for Ham- lrvine Blvd.. Ne"' port \\·hatsoever. Sponsored by Vic. Huntington Harbor \Vall, patios, sidewalks, etc. Huntington Beach. Costa ~leosa burg('r stand. Sum m er -I~ Beach. ~1r. How a rd the 20th Crntucy Oirisl s.<lZ-1736 By-hr. or job. 646-691;, Japanese Housecleaning Auto Mechant"c season, Laguna 4~ \\/ANT together girl to shr ~101. Charity 494-1003 FOUND l'orkshire Terrier, Child Care Expcr. in doing good job. C 0 0 K -niostly gr i 11 . lux. apt/Or find (ltnky cld "c~u~sr='. "-"D~F-~".~IG=N~l~l00~--~~._11_ Pho"" 645_0347 To \\urk on Bl\l\\"s & Breakfast all day, part or Rooms 400 NR 11~. pleasenl en1p. lnrly or col. girl. Very nice rm. Kitch & lnun priv. $i0. 548--02S1 am LOVELY nn & ba. spac closets, pvt cnt., enc pr. $85. you cleru1, $95. I clean. ~1821. hM•. No suings. Bob, --" ..... Huntington Harbotfl" area. '"' F · Good full tin1c. exp'd ST'a-7320 213/436-26.15 roll. OK. s. t.'Orner. Suitable :-tore/of-II'1l Eves. 846-9540 give sonic CHILD CARE. Age 2-5. De· Exp. reliable hsk'pr. nee-ds P~~e,,'gben .'.:,'tn;. · lUlll-COUNSELOR ,,_,,,.... fo• Bch. fic.-cs. rrunts 011 \Vc~tt'lilf· Pwsonalt distinguishing mark. pcnd~ble. malUl'C lady. Main day ,vrk. own trans. '"'" 1 11• u ""' • E Dr. NB. Air Cond. plen1 y FND _ ring _ Vic. S\\•ansons & Edinger area /Santa Anal. 5<18-372,1 CREVIER BMW Gloria J\ila rshall FI g u re NE OED \\'on1nn to aha.re 2 pkg. 18l5 \Vcstclifl 5--18-9586 541 1881 '""' Conlro\ Salon Nc\\1K>l'l. WU I Br Balboa Penn Apt. No --ltt Cream Shop. 67:>--2015 · -· EXPERIENCED lady for wo \\I. 1sl St .. Santa 1\na .lrain· li1usl IX' attractive, rent in exehangt' for oc-AIRPORT CENTER Personals 530 Contractor da~'\\'Ork. , $3.00 Hr. O\\ll 83>3171 Jui,•e trin1 fi~'llt'C, aria enjoy ca.sionul tQunscling or 2 [)co(uxe l, 2 & 3 room offiL-cS Lost SSS trans 5-JS-2313 AU,...,... \\'Orkin,.. '''ilh p e o p I e . boyi;-, 9 ,t, ll. 00-3500 adjacent Airporter llotrl. TAKE POUNDS 0 FF J1\CK Tnula.nc. r epa ir. . '•v BODY i\lAN, exp·d. ?.latll l; 1,·onum preferred. t-.fALE, 2'1. needs share ren-Lim·est rates. rull services. PEID.!A ... ~ENTLY the REWARD reniod. add, 20 yrs e"'ll· Lie Landscaping :~r s1,"°25P·, :~~I ~0..'"!:~g I-fours 2-9 pn1, Cali 642-3630 1133-3223 t9-12 weckda,ys1 sensible 1vay -1vi1hout pills, Nao1c your price! 3 pound S-1 269072. lily \Vay Co. · · ""'"'6""a ........ ..,.vn for appoinln1cnt. tal. Vi;c. So-C 0 a 5 t r"'~•·· ,... l•d do'cl• Mo'ke ,,·Iver gr"y m"i" -le. ''7 _,, LANDSCAPE G d Rd .. Call Ray 8.33-S966 aft 6 Phua/bus line. 6T;J-n95 I EXECUTl'VE olfice wilh i111-"''"'"" '" .. ·~· "' .. "' ,,.. ""UU,JU • a r e n 871-6810 ' 979-6.l8.1 presslve ocean vu & recl'p-Turin's P.O.P. program Dog muS1 have Insulin shots Electrical n1alt11., clean-up, sprinklrs. • AlIT · . e Cross counfry tion area. Fashion Island, \\-"Orks to get \\>eight orr and daily, Judy Young J.L. Lie. 13.1790. 646-6852 0 pamtcrs helpe1·, Drivers WANTED 2 straighl males, NB •1 1 b 1 t . keep it ott ,... and it's ap-ReW.ty, 16612 Beach Blvd .. EL ECTRIClAN. li'""nsed, must be exp'.d, and be able 10 share new home, in · "us 5 u -e ini· proved at Ora~~ Coast H.B. 847-1216 or 842-~. bonded Small .,. bs n~~nt & MalOnry to shoot primer. Cail for • Foremen Laguna Beach. B3J...9627 or mediatl'ly, 644--0!i35. CoJ~ge, Golden W ~st · · "·'" "'203 ' -' O'ap"!p"t;,. :;548-~7;,078~-~---MM! • 499-1200 BRAND ncv.• store!I, offices, ol ... S'-1AU. husky puppy, 12 repairs, ......,......, · BRICK veneers. slumJ>6lOOC1: • agers -"~=---==~-I C lege, Y.\V.C.A.'s ar..... k Id II' I · G d & bl k I BABYSIT-rER li\'e · e AsHmblers Fum. room \\'Ith bath Share APT or HOUSE Ind iv. air & heat, elevators. y ~f c A . nd b ed' al v.•ee 111 o \V/CO 1c co or1ng ar ening · oc ences, concrete . -in, &. kllch. _prlv. Non-smoker Call 'l-IOi\fE-PARTNER' 17301 Beach Blvd. H.B. d0ct0~. C~l~for ilrro~u~n \\'Caring fi~a collar & bead-patios. "'alks & drive\\•ays. 7114-7/29. 17 or o .. -er. $30. e Molders ROOMS $18 .« "P w/kit $30 v.ic up !\pis. Childm & prt section. 23i6 Ne\\'Jl0r1 Blvd., CM. 548-975.';, 645-3967. Nr. OCC. 5.i7-~ c 836-ll!M or 543-1479 .81=.2-.:283:::.:4'-. ------now! ~1350 or 6&7278 ed ycllo1\· & red "dog collor. * GARDENER * Tile entry ways, 963-1~ ~~ rooni .t; board. e Inspectors M ·r -"Josh". 5-16-4196 C 0 s Io h1o\v, ed1~c & gen'I garden-• • · 2 alter 5 pin. e Gel Repelrmen ROOMS S.'\5 & up. ~111 •-3 BR hou.o;e NB near High Business Rental 44S COUPLES 18-35 + l\iel\a Arca. ing car(.'. Expert & depend-Paint1nn & BABYSIJ'TER fot 8 yr old cent OCl'(ut Vi('I\'. 4i blk lo I School. 2427 E. 16th St. eves. Parties. or n\ect cpl lo cpl ., bo M t 11 c All 3 Sllifls ocean. 2500 SeaviN·. CdA-t. $ll.2 rno + \,· uW. • Call " UJST black male pood1e, able. l\tost ai·l'as. PaperhangirMJ Y· _ us ve near orona \Ve \Vil! Tmln STORES Leah" 2-8 P · m · area cf Spruce & ~Tarlgold Pr_o_mpt-FrH Est del ri.tar & .,njo)• goii:.'g to y ch GI.JEST cottagP, lo rent. in WANTED: strghl n1 a I e ~1aln S1rcc1. Courtyard and 638-l::ill . Fountain Valley \Vearing on-Pete 534-7117 RE NO.VATING, Painting, the beach. Call 675--021:>. MacGregor a t Corp. exchange for care of pets & :5-40, 4 BR house. 118 , Oceanfront Stores available --o-=~~~===-ly flea collar. Suffers ,,·ith Plumbing, EI e ctr l !=a 1 BABYSITTING / Housekeep, 16.11 Plaeentia, C.M. yard. Refs. a-19-1843 $80/n:io. + utils. 962-11668. at niodest rl'nts. 1'1.JLLY LICENSED eye infection· Reward, f213l YARD Clean-up, n1 a int. Coleman Valley Services, my l:iome aron-Fi·i S30co ·-""TE"'""",-1"""'""'""'"""'1 LAGUN A: R_oorn in p~t-Garanes fOr Rent 435 BALBOA INN * SPIRJ11.J1\LIST * 379--0856 Comm. -Res. Opening new 540-2Z70 , week Cost8. Mes; &16-io-2 UN R ie p, restaurant. 1,om.' kol pr1v. ~Ian pref d. ., Spiritual ...,,,adi 10 10 route. Exp. Jo panes e · · n 1 Male over 17.. part time. 105 Main St. •"' ngs am-LOST our male tabby cat Gardcnn". "34--l622 Efficient Painting Co. Babysitter own trans . nights. Apply Burger Kina, 494-6667. SINGLE garage Jor rent. 6i5-8740 pm. Advice on all matters. Smokey, 9 mo. old, blk & "--' .,,.. L<l\v Cost -Pro -Honest C ·~ ,R;.;.:-;;;.;m;_;&;_eo.-"_r_d ___ 40_S 1 l $20/nlO. _177 E. 7lnd St., 312 N. El Camino Renl, San gray w/orange under belly, * Creative Gardening 673-7307 * 54S-4065 6.ao--0166 or 640-0'l27 2015 Harbor, osta Me11a " Co!lta !'.tese,, 642-3645 "~~ co~=~~io1'~f :iho~~~~ CI e n1 en t e, 4 9 2 -9136, Vic: 32nd St & Oceanfront, Cleanup, !\faint, Landscaping, p A I N T lNG-Reas, clean, BABYSITTER, live-in, 3 CU'ITER-experienced tor Office Rental 440 492-0034· call a.fl 6:30 j.nl. 673-0717. Sprinklers ins:talled/reru:oir -lo'able, Lic'd, In•, '"/Refs. children, xln't con d s drapery \\urk room. Call stores, has shops avail. ·-· ... • 963-~' or fl 6 e '2 N>NI. 533-7161 or 962-3349. • ('OU.EGE Girl to \i\•e-ln for Sunlmt'r. \Valk to bch. Rm & boll.rd + f70 mo. In ex- change for da.ytlnie child care for girl 14 & hoy 12. ()v.'ll rm w/tv. \\ll<nd & eves tn-e. MusL hO\'f' en r , n orHJ110ker. TI4/641).-02.)5 alt 6pm DESK space available $50 mo. \Vill provldP furniture at $5 mo. AnS\1·cring service nwllablc. 17875 Bench Blvd. 111ulti11gton Beach. 6-12-4321 Fron1 .$110/mo. ln Cannery PROBL0.1 Pregnancy. Con-$100. RE\VARD. Black Cocker Con1n\ercial/Rc-sid. 646-HF2 F'ree Est. 67;)...5740. .,.,....,. a pm,.,... -uc.ovu Village, 425 30th St., N.B. ftdent. s Y n\ Pathetic Spaniel r-.tale, \vearing flea E..XP. Japanese .Gardener. Painting & BANK DATA 673-9606. prt>gn!ll\cy counseling. Abor-collar. Vic: Z..1oss St & Coast Con1plete yad ntatnt. Shrul:r Paperhanging Experienced Tellel' for the PROCESSING OPR RETAIL stores or offices, i~A~~doptionsref.642-4436 l-l\\'Y· Lost 6/13. hery, trees. Free est. also Bank of California, Nc.\vport 6..110 \Vcsl ~oost H1\)', N\\•pt . •1!14-17791979-2S80. Babysi tting. 645-0347. No Wasting ~ach 0 f f ice, ExecUenl Outstanding temporacy as· Bell. S 2 0 0 • S 2 50. mon· PRi!G·N~T? Th 1 n king RE\VARD valuable papers, Gardening/Landscaping * WALLPAPER * sruc:;ta~t ~f~~itStrecker ~~11~1;J~1'1\'Iust have exrrn£ thly/ll'asc. 61'3-3706 or "· rtlOtl · 1<.nov." all lhe fact!I in blue 1neta) box, Josi \\'hlle Expet1. reliable, local. tree \Vhen you call ··~tac" t _,7_..,91 · computer, \VANT Room & Boa.rd for 2 boys ages 11 & 13 s:iO. wk. penn. ~1 o t h e r deceak'd. .545-!1.K).1 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB 1980. 129-1, 756 & 540 sq. fl. Ample prk g. Util. Baumgardner, ~J-5032. 11UNTINGTON Bch. in1mac • 2 room, cpt'd, pvl bath, prkg, utll pd. 350'. $90. ~tr. Lang S.JG.1301 wkdnys. 213/Sfi:9..-59S5 lll"St! ~ calll ·-LIFE LINE -2-1 n1oving. in Dover Shores, t Tak N SUI 3878 548 1444 e "" ,., cx:per, sorter.--reproducer. 145 E. 18th st., c~t Suitable' -"-'~'·~"'----""'=~·-----\\lestcliff area, call 645-8676 es · ata ursery -' -ves. An Equal 0 PP or tun it y collator, Interpreter. Call for stol"t's or ofc. 362 ....... ft . FAMI Ly no questions asked. EXPER. Japanese Gardener. PAINTING & repair, 35 yrsl='E~m~p~l=oy~er;:.-------lmn1edNo'"','.1E~·E EVER ~ COU Complete yard srv. Relia. & v."Orkmanship guar. Take BAi'iKING _ $100111\0, & 1069 SQ. ff. $2801 NSELING LOST: minature Schnauzer, nPat. r~ree est. 642-4389. advantage of my exp. TELLER f ,.-:-------...,, mo. C.J .S. Real Estate, S.'l6-;i()60 or 548.J6.13 male puppy "Bismark". 536--7ffi6 t Guest Home 415 548·1168. ,PleaS(" Call J.1.rs. Butler O.C.C. Student will rlo light · Banking expcr req'd, N.B. ·oo son1rthlng 1vorth\\•hil<'. S48-l22S yardW()['k. Call o i an e * PAINTING * regional otc. Mr. I\ibala, -Girl 2112hhM Dr. .,..,... IJl.1111 NEWPORT I sland waterfront a pl.9. 1-BR $173 WK/2-BR sax> \\'k. Mon1hly or 10 \\·k !!peclal rate. Dode avt1il. 5'18-6..-i!J2 1100 SQ Ft, can be divided, STORE. 850 sq. It. Broad\Va.}' houS<.' a foreign student for 2 REWARD EW2-3342. It pays to call professionals. t714J 963-5651. on Coast J-l'''Y· Laguna. or .i \\'~ks, call E.G. Inge, F f " 0~s11s C 1· II B k Good trnfiic $300 per monlh. 49H934 ~1iniature poodle male, sha· E.'-per. An1eri can Gardener or ree e · ~ · en IM a an 494-0023 ved ofJ hair. smoke or slate ~taintenance, Cleanup & PROF. painter, honest v.-"Ork, Equal Oppo1·. Employer · ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Uu d · C 11 64. 1930 I / fr suitable off/slol'C. 5 1 3 Cent er, C.r-.t. BKR GU-58:>11646-TI 71 The fastcsl draw In the \Vest. ••. a DAiiy Pilot Classified Ad. 642-5ti'78. FOR Leftse, 650 sq. ft. Office .space. Cpt, drps. Do\\'OIO\\'l'I Laguna. 494-3028. COMMERCIAL APT. Phone 542-72.17 or write color, 645--3864. 1 scaping. a =>-reas. nt ext, ee es!. BARTENDER, exper. Age ON COAST ,HWY. P.O. Box 1223, Costa hlesa. LOST: Cement duck, retun1 Gardenln!.( & clean.ups Refs. 548-2759. ~'ll. Apply The Beach Ball DELIVERY '!'.'Ian. p/tlme CdM 673-3345 SWINGING SINGLES to 236 Agate. Balboa. S5 554-0657 PAINTER staurant, 2116 \V. Oc€an-for furniture store "'ork. ' reward No Questions. C 0 ,1 p L ET E la-d""ape Non· union. 548-2759 Cront. N.B. bctwn 4 &. 6 pni. Over 18 & must be: neat & Cu.II .. Leah" 2-8 pm 530-12JO. I c~='-'-"-'>=:""'="-~~ " -BAR • I f · LOST • sn1all fi:omale Irish n1nint. serv. Cotnm'l, ind, ?la:.1er, Patch, R:itp£1r • n1AfD, part Uine, over c ean. J\· a.rtin Fu1llilur<', Apta.., Apll Apt1 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Cosio Melo '. Costa Meu Cos ta Mell E1C1pt with I.It 10 1he magic,( wautt1and of Vis to dt t Lago. where 1he empha1ii is on 1111 neuticel, •nd Jhe way of Ille ls as 1ranqull or exci1lnn <i~ vou c11re to ftlllke 11. Lakeside llvlng m:tkes the difference fo r those enjoying boating, caseudlng fountains 11nd swimming 11 close a1 your pa1io~ock. Land lovers wlll appreciate tcrts of exqulsltelv lanctseeped g1ouods and walkway1, #w:.,.;'* Etch aPt1rtmen1-home includes every conc1lv11b(t lu•· [(;J: ury 1ppoln1ment , like 1lr-conditioning ond 1pecl11 tound proofing to insure your comfort 1n('I pr1v,r.y. The Yacht Club offers handbelt, gv1n end "u.1n1s, !}(line anti social rooms. Livlng 11riywhtre tlse Is out of 1he quo5tion 1her •eeing Vista del Lago. Effitiff'ltits, 1, 2, 2 plus den, from $190. Fu1nl1hed tnd unfurnished models 01>1n daily 1t1n1 '111 d•rk. From lht San OleQO Froewev t•ke Harbor Blvd. 11> Adems•nd MeJI Verde Drlvt, S.0·1800. Social Ctub!I: S35 Setter. Cdl\1 area. Call resld. Sprinklrs, cleanup. -25 for college beer bar. 1865 H!lrbor Blvd. Ci\l 675-7973. Reward, 645-6987 * PATCH PL.ASTERING * 833-8191 alter -I pn1, ask for 548-513L * INTRADATA * e Re<.-eive QUALITY com- patible matches from 1,000's in Your area. Each with URGE PHOTO + Pro[lle • Guarant~e d +con- fidential I CALL NO\V rol' FREE sample p1'0file on 1 pro- spective n1alch. 24 hrs). (TI4l SAl-3738 (213) 658-6283 ''Largest in Cnlif." Found (froo od1) 550 LOST long haired gray male LA\\IN r>.1aintenance. E.xp. 1\ll types. }Tee estimates 1;;0~"'~"•;•·=----~~-Delivery of OAlLY PlLO'\. ~fanx cat. Reward! 6-l&-,1()97 Japanese Gardener. Free Call 540-'825 BEAUTY operator, skilled, SUNDAY 0 N LY . to & 646-7662 estimate. 5-t~OO. Plumbing guarantee + oommission. ne11o-spe.per carriers In SA .. 'ij ';;:=:;:::;;======;.:_,;;;;;;;;::::;;;::;;;;:==;;;:J::;:=7:;::'.;:-;:;:::::-;::;:--hlerrcll Hair Design, CLEMENTE area. Requires ... L.R. OTIS PLUr>.mING Corona del ?.1ar, call e:ve use or Station \Vagon or Trader's Paradise lines times dollars Re1nodc!s & Repairs. Water -'~"'~--~""·..-"·-..--~--Van. Contact !'.-1r. Harl')' I hea ters, disposals, fun1aces. Beauty Operators Secll'y, 330 West Bay St.,. dshwashrs. 612-ti:.!6.1 li1/C & !2l No followhig necess. New ~Cos::=la=,~M~esa~·:_::.,~2-4:..,::321::.o~-I B/A. Con1plete Plun\bing lie. ok. Busy shop. &a:>-1000 DENTAL receptionist.I Sl'rvice. l\1on lhru Sat. Mission Viejo/Laguna HUii PLUJ\1BING R'£PAIR BEAIITY Operator, 1 sham· area. Experience required. No job too sn1all ~girl, 1 8.31Mtant tor busy 1...:°'=11cc83<>-=..:1::395=-, ____ _ * * &12-3128 * * s8lon. !'.tust be 11 c • d . DENTAL usiatant -pru1 TOTAL SERVICES CO. \\led-Sat. l610 W. Coast tln\e possible full tin'le.! !'.-!loor Plumbing & Repairs 1~1\')' N.B. &12-3970 ChairsJde &.swl. Experience 64&--0977 or 646-1800 BEAUTY Opr, expe.r, w/or nt.'Ceasnry. 495-460l 11•• .. t !II I XI 't DENTALJteceptionsl . ', Sewing/Alteretl '>fts \\' '""' 0 ow ng. n op. · I por. in Cdh-1. Call 673-0968 mature, l'..'(pcr. F/t1n:ic. Alterations--642-5145 ,;;•:::f1"6"'p::.:m::.. ~-~---Call 54S-8844 I '-------------------l!NPnt, accurate. 20 yea.rs exp. Boat Repairman DENTi\L aMistant. llunl. Bch. exper or tralnlOR 16" Lapstrake Bay bottl, \rILL. Tl'ade Water{ront expe.r. pref'd. req'd. Salary QPen. 979-3639 Co111p reblt. Mint v11l $500: 1969 Grand Prix Ponlia~ Penu, Ftrll time. li'lu8l hl\\'e l''ND Sun s1nall bluck/\vhlle for camern outtlt, varlooii ror Ski Boat. l(i I) sbo1·t ha.~r .tt clean record. tlog, ma.le, vie. Crest & tooiJI, oulbrrl niotor, or boat Call lMPMrrnMt f Blnckle's Bout Yard, New- hlain St., H.B. ~. 10 resto1~. 536-364i, 5j2-7552 port Beacti. Dr's Assistant Young Indy 118-281 to anist In hclllth spa. Will treln. no exp. nee. Appl,y in pcrlOll en.v aft or l'Vt'. 2930 \\'. Const H"•y •. N.B. l'-:/~caB~11~~ J~~ HAVE 37 unit Ba..Jd\\•in I-fills 5 Units lnglCVi'oo<l. 6 _ 2 Br. B 0 0 K KEEPER/Genernl -'· ,, (W'!,._n• 11rcn $150,IXlO equity. Want St 2 -l Br. unh1rn. for boo.I. Job Wanted, Male 700 i?ffk@_ Ute S/I~. 1 girl of- Pai-1\, H.o . :JUJr.i.ul. 65'-'l!i' lonQ: range crul1ing Shop. cc·nter. horse rancb, -(1cc· NC\Vport Beach. Sml l"ND • Black male {JO()dlc mHboat or ? Bkr. >r ! S'I0,000 equity IJ",ule up. SCRAM LETS ina.nutacturlng l'Dmpany. puppy. Sat. R&lphs 11th St. 615-7225 Ownt'r 675-6'259 • · 1 .::.642-~l,;;700::::_. ~----- 54;Hl(12.I or 546--4370. I HA~V=E-, °'J._;75;._::::a::c,...=-~N~,-v-a-,da-, ~~REE Ir: Clesr 10 ll{'l'CS B 0 0 K K E ~ p E R ' lite, FND gmllll tml Samoyed. free & t.-lcar, .$200 1>er acre producing orange grove, cn ANSWERS Pftln1~. $100 per m c. Vic Knox St., C.?it. illlue. All or J)Al'f. \\lant: J{f·ramp for units, comnier-I aclf1c Sands Cabana Club, 64(t..3«8, • 1mprovm Rea.I Est al c :ial or ? $79,500. Equily. ~lolest _ Pront: _ Pylou _ 8141 Atlanla. 1-1.8. Liz J\e.lndcn Agency t..tTTLf.: gray pointer pu 11 p. <\NYWl·lERE. Bkr. 673-6i56. t'radt> up, Owner 6ia-62S9. Salulc _ POLLS BUSBOY, Cook. \\la1tres11 cr 4500 C&.mpw: Dr., N.D. ft':m. Dona Point. Red 00 ar TRADE 2 BR Twnhse, XJxZ'l l"REt~ It clear commercial Do you ever g~t the fl!i'l inl' \V.all~r. !'.lust be c .. 1!.r 21. 557·3401 .~leash. 493-T;,86 ram rm. xlnt cond.1. f',V., Inc pmptttiC!'!I ncx110 Sen!"$ 11\at th~ only rtMOn "·r have \\·n!;\15 ae<.'()rt\\nsc to expcr. ,.,.....,_ .. -~~-~-•'-.--'-~"-""-"-•'-..,.1 l"ND: 6/18 nlOlhcr dog & assun10 7~yl/o In, $3SOO cq. Col/Ina for units com1nerc. ~\ectionl! Is to find out ii lhe Apply In '\>':"!On, Hambuttrtr --DISHW-ASHER pulJ!I. Vic National &. Vic-FOil. boat or Porsche ol eq. lr indUst $()5 000 eqty + POI I.$ Rt'C right' Hun1let. \Ma Adanls ,\,•e. I ~ CM ,,. "372 v~ ~'" 411 . ' ' ~. . Co~la ~lcsa . Akk for ~1r. 1-"ul\ Vl" p•time. Nltw ,. .. 1.:.. Or1fl • ""'.,...,,. val. Aien v\Vn~r ~ul . l'radc \Ip, Ol\'Tl<'r 6'Ji>.6259. RF.'I'lllEE n c e d ii t1U1> lf•"""· -~ , :.:::!•:::'"~'====--Call 67l-TT22 afttrnOOOI. 1-"0UNO sn1all s I am c II e 1962 au1CK Conv. Cltoan fn Uke lo CJ'ade? Our 'J"'rader's pltm~ntal lnoonle. Adn1\11·1· CA,ETERIA !(!n,a.le klltcn. Vie. Oak'YOOd &: out, needs val\'e job. Paradise co 5 1u 11 n 0 1.n,ts for )"OU! ~~·1m. 9trnnsp. bl\c.kground COUNTER/CASH I 6 RS -nJ~:V&.\Sl~~Rghop:aQ~~ ADI S. N.B. 646-8448. TrM.de for 6' CMlpct" llhcll. ........... \f GROWN female SlalJ\('91': frame tent or ? ? ? 5 days LICENSED mAlr nurse for 7 iun to 3:30 ton thru 1-·rt Coo!lt HW)' •• IAKUOO BC!llldL. cah 64;\.1168 for 5 buckl. prtv8te duty, dayii or nitcs, 1\ll ~Itta)'~ & 1~·\mck oft. Sell the old stuff Buy 1be tlr'W Call 3-16--0749 • ••••••••••••••.••••· xlnt ®re.~rs:'100-7Ulj C:tl\ s.~t. • r_:ot,,u:::IL,__ _______ , DIAL A JOB! ' ' ' _,,_. ' I I I • 11 I · . . . ,... -; .....,. .. . . _____ ... _J[ll] I l[ll] I l[ll) I l[Il] '--! ~-"""'-'-· IITTll ._ _ ..... _." ... _mJ! ][j]) ! L1QJ1c>"** \[ff [~ .. ~ ... --]-~ · H I W•nt·• M & F 710 H I W t·• •• & F 710 Htlp Wonted M&F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710HolpW•nlod, M & F 710 Hol•. "'•!!!...., "IF 710 C•""'.•' & 80I Holp Wonlod, M&F 710 Holp Wanted. M & F 710 • P -· 'P an_,~ · ·' j ;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;··::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;.l;~~·;;"-~=,_=~_,..::;:-7;;:: -~E~q!::":.!'P:;.m::;•::."::.t--:-:-I 01.:Ni\\'ASHllt I u 11 & JJ/li nic. lnt er\'1e1,1,~ NUn-411111. r.1t1n-t-~r1. r.1r-1.11 \'rrde Con\• HMp, f,61 \.'.l!Ul1•r St. cr-.1. l\IAN needed it days a l\'t"Ck OPt;U.ATORS, •·oeper. only, TRAVEL q;cnl up, 5 day llOSPITAl. LABORERS Lite ?otalnl. woric, niuat tie single need!!! & ovttlock. TRAINEES \\.'eek, Executive Travel •AKAl Vkil'O Ta.f~· NEW lmnlt-d. N.sii.;rutlf!I!~ ucat, t'('fcl't'nc.-et. 2!)1.)(1 s . To11 ratc1 . lt.oU '1 ).111.nu.f., NOW HIRING Servie(f, Un!Qn Bank Camera, ){('L.,Jrc~2 • "I Coast J-hw'""• 1 ....... na 10 10 865 PtOt.llK'ILon Pl, NB. G. B. INDUSTRIES BuUding Fashion h1land,1 CtiM.ri.!cr. $700..:_!_ -·-. Tov ff .•. ' a. ...., .__.... -'~"~'HI;.:o\llll:;:·~=~==--FUL T Newpor't Beach. Call lorl~Nfo~\' 16 n1nl BEU. .t: l1'\in,. ~~lu-4'!50 ORO ER DESK L IME PART TIME Appointment, 640--8300 JI 0 \\I f; LL PROJt-x:TOR. -DOG GROOMER i~\111.·l'l('l)L-.'(j only. 1''ull or llllll'1 11111..:. 961·1010. ii(Th1E:STIC l·lt·l1 ·, ·-,-.:1:-,,.-,..-,. AUl'rt RylAnd Ageney, 106·8 E. 1Glh St., 8.1\, ~17·0~~ Mtm1 Gmtml Hospi"!Jll I 1Th02 Sky l'.1d.: ~!AN or ~irl Jo'rlday. Ac· $458-$640 Mo. $..,.,._ it•10 Mo. "·•"'2·l" .. ••3 i\F:\'l·:J~ 1\ 1''1'.:t:: AT TF::\lPO t'Ul'a t(• £.· "harp. Mcll"'Y FUIC" !o ... al L'<1, 1Jl't'fl1 iIBlf'S 01-. L d S · ...-or ST • ~ """"-------;;;; NOW OPEN ·ren1po 'l'<'111p<1rary llt·lv 11hon('. Litl'.. bookkl't·11lni; & lf'nl{'(l l)l•rwn h) handle bw>y ea men~ upervisors TYPI Furniture 110 payroll. •ryp\ng, $'1()0.$550, a 1tt-gk. s.)nll: t'OtTt-:s11U111.le11<-e. 1 $820 & Up S•l•ry REPRO 2701 So. Bristol LATHE OPERATORS 1nnnlh. 642-3490 ~tlary 10 $!120. Call l(ay second shift work. No exnartence necessary. J\10VINC r.1W>t .'«'II ~roonl Santa Ana (714} 979-3500 \\'11'". a10.110:,r,, cn;al p,.,.. • I'" suili·. \V11lnut hy Prtxel. 2 MAID 11(-.,'(lctl. vacation ult<'L' ... ) bo T aining provided~if accepted. u 1 •ini;r; hacked fJONLn' SJ-IOI'. nilC shill + p/tlm1~. 1''f!rnnle , age 25-45. Apply tn 1)1.'1'.'IOn, J\1r. Donut, 1:>!> E . 11th St, Costa !\1C'sa. A11plyBch\'N.'n9[1rn&4prn !)tl<' >·ear. Stn.l't I' tier hr. i.:<11u11•l Ai.tc.ncy, :.7tJO i"l{lr i· TYPIST ov'1rstu e< \\ h d "" RN 'S N/C OPERATORS Blvd., CJ\l chnir11. 1,'(lld. \Vii.it r l')'"l'd• '""4\U, HB Call Friday, Satu day & Monday to make ,.,.,,10,,.., 100 Y"" o r.tAlD \1urk in exchange for l'i\RKING a!lcndaru. IS or appointment with 1personnel director -in Ott:an. 10960 Golder1 Eye, Mill OPERATORS roon1. j hr5. pt•r clay. 2376 ovi·r. neat appearam-e, S2. 11untington Beach a rea ~2591. l0AM-5PM . An immechate o[>('ning exists F.V, 968~772 NtY.'J)()I'! Hlv!l . ~JS-97~i1• hr. Call fo1· uppointn1e11t, I •!!!!!!!!!,.;;,!!!O!!O!!!!!O!!O!!O!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'"'"'"'"""''" for a repro typist. Expcrl.i-!~X~L.N;.,';T~~"~uy~-"o~h~•l~ng;;""CS<'iW.1-I ~. Mech hi $4 hr -'-='co11'.c·ic'oc·2------Halp Wanted, M & F 710 Help W1ntN1 M & F 710 ence required. ~lahogiuiy \V/lnlay, Chinn ICU rCCU & !.\IN OB DEPT. 11-1 OR,;\PERY \l'Urk roon1 nC'eds c-<perlenCL'<i bar tacker. J.13-7161 or 962-J'l.19. DRIVER . Nile Delivery. !\lust .,kOOI\" C.?<.t. & Newporr .irras. Pb:za ~Inn l!ra'.l llarbor Bl~...:.~1~~,.~ Experienced COMME RCIAL TELLER full Ol" Parl·Tirnt• UNITED CALIFORNIA llANK 3141 E. Coast Hwy ... Corona der Mar 673-9240 L.ABOR & PEl.1\f}'.R'i', llt'llL·f MED SURG RN l 1·1 SURGF;RY RN 3-1 1 PEDIATRICS llN l 1.1 H••gi~. Pn>-sh·al 'll1f'r:lJJis1 roi-\\'eek{'nd l'.:n1ployn1cn1 f':xcrllrn1 l~n<'flls & \Vorking Conditions E11ual Oppor. J::n1 ployL'r Top Wages Oay & Night Shifts Min. 3 yrs Experience Guar.a nteed Overtime Al'Pl."'l. Newport Controls Corp. 909 W. 16th St. Newport Beach 8 AM to S PM Housekpr-Motherless Home F..11ual oppn11un1ty 1'1\l(>loyC'r F/C Housekeeper, care for =='-''""-"""'"'-"--"'"'-o II'lplrt girls. Sal. 1u:go. Call • l..1.>gal Sccre!ary, U;::al 9f'.S4278. (Z13i 626-5144. Ask exp prcr. Siii. 91}1\·pm. t)-p- for Jan1es Ma,tthe\\'S. in~ 70. e Senior Sec relar~. HOUSE\VIVES. fl-1 o th CI' s , ii•/Frt'fl<•h ~JJt.':iking ability. Graduates. 1'1ake S:lO fur 4 · 70 s I' <• E I 0 E 1 h f • • I T)'lnni; , I~. ·"'· qu:i, ])por. lllpOyC'r \'SO \\'Ork SholVlllJ; JCl\'eS e J::xl•l'Ulh't' ::il'('l'l'IUJ'y, d by Park Lane. 645-?i!MG. l\lus1 S!)t'llk .~· y,•rilc fluent EXPER CLEANING HOUSE\\'ORR -4 hrs each Spanish. 1'yping 70. ~Ill. 00. \\'oLnan. For 1ncdical ofllL'l' niorning. ~1on U1ru Fri. $40 e Set·rt'tary. S/H 11ol req. suites. Nights. 40 hrs \\•kly. \\'1•ek. 0.l'n car. 644-7344. Good IYIJing, s1w.-ed .".t nc· &nefils, Rcferencei:; re-11\1:\IEDIATF.: opc:n111gs for !I curnC\'. quirC'll. Bondablc. Nc\1·po11. hl'au!ician & niruii('urist, • ClC'fk typist, good typing Be a ch ar c a · Pho n c full or part lune \\·ork, on speed S.-. accu ral'y. \\'t'ekdays, 61:1--0606. Balboa Island. 673-743S JCN Pharn1al'euticals Inc E:XP. \Vornan offit'C: cleaner, 1727 Can1pus Dr. Irvine l..aguna Hills Area, 5 day 8.1.l-2500 wl<. Utim•, pocn1. &'lh1321 INSURANCt'SAlES Equal Opportunity Employer f"'lW.Y. Counter p-tin1c, 1-talc LF.CAL Secrelnry, exp'd cqoks, lull or p-time. Apply 1 girl office. Santa Ana. Kentucky FriNI Chicke11, ~o C'XP nee., earn \.\•hile you $750 plus. 547-6181 IL'arn, parl time. c\•cs & ~d.~;...t7,'"-,""'='='-= 2929 E. Costa II\\)'. C~1. \\'knds, full tlmc \l"hC'n qu3li· LIVE-JN llousekeepC'r to F"F.J\1ALE fa rtory fmC'k.a~cTS, red care for 4 yr old ~irl, lite $2.00 JX'r hr tn stru·t. ,\lt'rit l~az.;,iers Insurance Group hskpng. S.i\. area. 839-97j0. raises. !"l lR-5125 Ed Lani * 54()..1834 ,J~i<~n'"-"Roc7'h~•~·~c--.,---* GARDENER * Machine Operators a·e your own Boss Insurance Sec'y Pla~tics Opc:n lngs on ind & r-utl 01· p/liml' in youl' P/time, 9 an1·l pn1. Xln•t 3rd shins {or c x J) er. 011·n a1·{'a. HiJZh int.'On)C. typist. sonie sh, ini1iative op1'rntors & trainres. Clciin, Guaranteed Customers a n1ust. B or A l'O\\·cr Bldg, li1c \\'ork In n1odl'l"n n\'W ~ No Cash Down Or.tngc. Phone bct1vn 9 & hldg. 1'hif1 hnnus prt'n1iun1 J'J "?J."""12 lo" n·,·11• 11·ol'k. Oppor. tor Earn !"011;-P;iy l.:1tL'" -· .,.,. "" , • I I . AL 534-7187 . -A._____.....___.,..._ 1 ad\'ancctnrnl ,\lo x n•t 1•1ngc -v--v--v-ll<'nefi111. Apply in person 9-11 a111 .~ :!-'I pin GENERAL OFFICE JR.VINE pco<ONNEL C;dir. t11jcc1ion l\·lolcting f"1·'f' Paid. AAA firm Joc.•a!r"fi LIV ll'Vine Indus.-Complf''< in l>l'ach iH't'.1 off~rs ou_I· SE.RYIC£SW-AGfNCY '.!00 Brh.:i:s A\'e., C:'I! s.1andJng op1x11:-\\ork Lil l After 5 Pr.t liy i\pJ)QlrHn1~·11I * * lt.'j:!<1J dcp1. 1~ss1!'1tant sccrc-~liero BiologiSt ro SJ'..'!\ tary ,Vt hf'lp 1~ l1tl\' l1b1~··, D<'l'!ign Dl'ahsnian $11.ti6 J8::ry t_~l\S<l~~l~lso 11~<.; Ind Con1n1 Loan Proc ~!MACH 1 N ISTS ~--Coasl~I P<'rsonncl 1,'1.1;.1,11! C(1nstr to Si~ ia, ' -. I ~i.: y to ControUrr $7~ ;.\g!"nty, 2790 Harbor Bl\d .. 1'~/C Bkkpr/Constr !o $700 CM. Secre<ari•~ 10$625 & MACHINE GENERAL OFFICE LayouVPaste Up ssoo Great PR spol for 1he bright outgoing indi\'. Avc:rage lyp. ing. !;un errands & occas· 1nnall.v Jn{·k up VlP's. TI1is postlion is due 10 promorion f1'0n1 1\'ith1n, ~rft1·1 $4.10. Call Si.l!,v 11:111 . fi.\0.(iOCii. Coa~taJ Pl·1·si111n<·I Al!t'nr:y. 2790 1101'· Mr Hl\ol.. C\l. e GIRL FRIDAY Denial frnt Ok !600 OPER ATORS Pl'rsnl Lino.'.'s Und\l"l' 10 5?00 Scc!'Clat)' U'OL'S IO $55() - PBX Recept.ionlst to S.">50 Rct'l'ptionist /Typisl 10 S5JO 1\1·1.'0un1111g CIL·l'k tu $j2:1 ln\'cn. Control Clrk: S·l.-,0 EXPERIENCED & TRAINEES fll'~"('rt Per:snl S~~>(l J1n111r>1l1alt• QIJ<.'llillg'l fo r Gt>n'I Ofe Ty111.,,1 S·i:iO 1':\flt'l'iC't1('('d and ll'ain('(' !\t>~ punch (i niv's t.'.\IJ to $j:l;"1 ni.;eh1nists nnd inachtn<' '"' ~J!l1J1Ch 6 1l1.:J's l'Sl) S·l50 Oll<'l'il lUl'S Oil O\lL' 2nd f'art lin1C', ~::xi IV 12::'.0, 5 Flit:' C1<'l'k S?.60 s!11f1. 1:: p.ni. l(J 11 IJ.ni.I d:ty 11·£'ek. $2.;'ll J)('l' liriur. C1\LL 1'RIS.H HOP~INS ;111d ::rd xhif1 t 11 p.n1. to f\ccurale lyping :uirl s!101·1. Jr:RP.!,'\\'HI'rfI-::~101-u=: 7 :i .n1.1 in !ht> lol!o"''ing hand. Contar:r Mr. l\'ic· .\!oi~ E. 17th St. tat lr\'1ncf C~l 1:1.rcas; Na mce, !Ai.'.l-4567. Suite 224 642-1470 •·Drill Press GIRL Friday, sh nol rt.'<1'd, ~·~··~s•-;;;'."~··~~-~::'!"~··~ .. ~·~'.'."'' e Deburring t.itc typiN; & sonic b!Jkpn~ ~ ·v> ·v ·w e Mills knoy,•ledge. Takala Nursery, JANITOl':, lite n1aintenancc, e Chuckers 7SD Bake1-. C.l\·I. f/tiL11e. Over 21. Apply 1n GffiL Friday, RC'alty/Cons1r person l-luntington Beach • NC Drills Co. P..L·la1ed ex per in hkk~ Con,·alesccnt Hospi1al, 18811 • Lathes • phnnl'o;. ~lary opPn 6i5·6900 1-·1orida St.. l-1.B 8.47-3."il5. e Hones HAJR!ITYLTST JANITOR/Gardener l'On1bo • Grinders Nrcdi'(i i•11 n1cd . ~Ii. ar("a. p/time. Apply bt•t11·n l'!.'\nl· ·rr.tHll'\'S Lll USI ha\'t.' ll\U• ehilll' shop rrr n1cta\ rr;irt.•s hackc:rnund in school. n1il1 l.'11') St'r\'i«t.' 01· l>l"i,,r «111pl~n1t'nL 644-ST."JO/E\'l'S 5.i2-o!Yl6 4pn1, J\lon·l"ri. l\k'S..'\ Verde lllGH Schoo! ~urll"'nls nf'<"'"I· \on\'. l·\osp, 661 Center St. NI -honor roll. \Vorth\Vhilc ~°'-"--------- 11t"<K:ram invul\'inq: plating foreign s!ud1'nl.<: in priva1c hOlllt'S, IC'!CphOllf' \~'O\'k. romn1i11,~ion paid. Call E· G. Inge 49.>-4!134 HIGH Schonl/Collrge ~irl Assisi \V/hou!<C'hold jobs. pern1. 5-Spn1 d11.lly, 6-1-1....f#JS l lospiral MISSION Community HOSPITAL :_rjXQ'l Pucr1;; rt<'al 1\Ils..q\on Vit>JO 1 F:.1s l of San Dil'i:;:o ~·l'\1·y CJ"(\11'11 Vollc·y Prtl'k\\a,l'I (714) 831 -2300 (714) 495-4400 RN's e SURG. SUPERVISOR JUNIOR SALESMAN: Earn S20·$ID 1>er ,,·eek \\'C' flffrr st11hl« long· 11·orkin~ afh·r ~~hoo\ and ten11 f'n1ploynu1nt pm\'· on Saturdays geuing nC'1v C'u hv Hllt' history of :\'O <'USlomers for the D11ily LA vbv~·s 111 rrur n1anu· Pilot. This is not a p~1per fac11.:rinµ :il·ra In :-10 rou!e anQ,_ docs not inc!urle ... year~. E-;t'('1!1·nt \\'tirking dclivei·ies · or collecting. t·onrl1!in11-: anrl .'lnlarit-s. \\'e ha\'c orcnings i11 Sou1h· lnt·lutllnJ.: lh•· ftollo11 1ng 11 est Costa J\lrsa and South I bc11efi1s. I lunllngton Beach only. Apply nfl\1·! 968·9641. 1 * Life Insurance '*Medical KELLY GIRL 1! ~~;;i~1 sharing $ SUMMER MONEY $ * Retirement Join the Kelly Corp J ! ~:1'f:~~~~:u~efund Jobs In P11ek<><ing, '-"""''"•·1 SATURDAY ,\Rsen1 hl)-Tta1nec 8: ~:xf)l'r. ~7ir~~;~g~1y ~i ~~(~~ii~~ & INTERVIEWS Op1.•ra101~ X· {\Jany rHOl''· I 1m. 2nrl .~· ::1d st1111 , • .:n. 1 June 23rd \\"kly Clll'JIU\~~. i\pply Ill lr1·in<'. Apply in person 1 ,2,0~/neBusiness c:;j.~~·, I 8 :00B aE.mR. !To !El NAoon Arn111s Jrort1 O.C. Al1'fl0l"l P.quf1l Oppor. r.:mp!nyt'!' KEYPUNCH OPRS & CORPORATION 18001 Von Karman I rvin e, Calif. 92664 833-1424, Ext. 294 Uictaph ~'i··y $6:iO PART·lime 11·nllress r or t•upl:xnu'<I, Sc r v t' r ·w/ \\'cstclifl Nt!wport 1-lw·lxir Elks Club. Apply In Person dniivt"'ts. burf<'I , Table & 8 l'r 1'<>1mcl '"""Y •n<;llO SALE ESCROW SECRETARY 3333 Harbor Blvd. charn>, w 1'"'"" made n'j;"' tGOt K f:<lingM'. S.A. PEOPLE ARE NICE I I poinl. 11 950. 96Q.t'95 cw 'I k 111 c 1 ·1 OFFICER Cost• Mosa, Ca 1" • t.• ar <'II c1 \\1hcn you call nn 1hcm us ,eu=nd::;·c,,..~~"'°,..--=: :;..12-88.'lG nn 1\VON Heprtsentntivc. l"OR SALE Dining roo1n :\IAINTENA~CE Couple, 2 You'll hnvt• fun & make Exc;ellent opportunity to join RM1uire1 2-3 years StC• tahlt"' & 6 chllirs in ~ br unfwTI apt + u11l + $300 lr1rnds S<'lllng our fan1ous one of the nation's largest ret•rial experience with 1."0rid. Solid Bin:h. ~1aplt• n10 sat. No pct~. '11".ll Com· p1'0ducrs. 'fo learn how easy Savings &-1:.otm Assoeiatioos. 8 minimum of 60 ~.CO • Uni&h. Jnclude.s 2 lcl!'{es. rnodore Cr, Ar11 1, H.B. it is to start. call: ~lin/ 2-4 yrs sale escrow t I C nd' ~ SI ~ Phone, fHS.-8.'*il. ~IAlNTEl"ANCE ~lan, npt ,,,.;cc..·.534::·..c.1 __ 0_,_· __ M<l-__ 71))~· I <'xpcr. required. Position lo. w.p.m , yp ng. I I• OVA L dininh nu. table, 3 1.'0mplcx, J>arl or full 1lme. RADIATOR Repair Man _ cated in our Newpor1 Beach dates must have 1bi_lity -lt"'avcs. .i t\C\vly uphol. 5m.-07X I. E..xi>'d 1nan to run shop in off.ice. Exe€Uent \\'Orking to handl~ v1rif(f a~s19n· Equu\ Oppor. Employer ni/f chairl\, $200. 673-5882 alt. 6 MAN.AGER T RAINEE Mission Viejo. conds & fringe benefits. ment1 with• minimum PJ\1. , Outstanding opportunity to FREE\VAY AlITO 831-1666 Ple8sc Call, ?<.tr. Rohrer of s~pervlslon. UNDERGROUND cnble TV LOVEI~Y II' J{iu1·1._'"1 llOfa ,(r 11dv1rncc..to nia.t111gcl'ial posi-1----------833 3600 or 644-5300 · eXp'd installCl's, trainees f'hair, e.-;ct•llL'llt l'ond $125. tion in 30-00 days. Our cur· · Excellent working con• c."Onsidcrcd. Apply 2624 \\'. Ping·pong 1able $."l. 552:0085 rt'nt n1 a n ag er s C'arn PLASTICS GLENDALE ditions end fringe ben· TcleprornptC'r, an t:'CIU.al op·1..::"::"..:'::.· ~~~~-c--= $1000-$1500 mo. ~rust have Set-Up Man iFEDERAL eflts. ply en)ployer. t.-10\llNG·single bt•ri, $15; direct sales t'Xpcricnce. UPl-101.SrERY &11n1 sh't'SS, t:ihlc, \1·hllc 11•<1od. $10: TV. Call Mr. Newn1an 979-5222 2nd Shift SAVINGS Apply in person full 01· part llme, hcnefit.s, '7:-1 nl()(lt•I. .. -... 1·1" scrt"l!ll, l\IAN/\GER Trai!IN', niaturc, ~·lust bf' able to \\'Ork Sat. & or call: Costa ?<.1esa, 642-8'!00 oclrts & r r • n !179-2699. over 21. \Vould I i k e Sun. Du.·"" off lo be ar· Waitress Wanted ,\Sil Blon• 11''1 dinette b I Ill .f" 500 NeY.'port Ct-nter Dr. Dona L.everett re!.1aurant exper, u \V ranged. t:>rkrr f'XJ)Cr. dcsir· tntc1'\de1vinq \\'1."CI & F'L'i 6-8pn1 1ablt', ,'.;S" s.":11d 57'' 1°'11: train. \Viii h"vc to undergo able, bul \Viii train nian \V/l """'~N~e~"~·po..,c~I ~""~~·~ch"'"'"' (714) 540-5000, ext 2SO ALLEY WEST ii•/lcaf, ·I grold vin\'I s\1·h·el a ~hort t raining period. n1ix·ha11ical rip!itudt'. Hyland 2106 \\'. Dl·t·iu1frout, N.B. f'hai rs $.")(!fur s«t. ll\G-1·109 Preft'I' son1e eol!~. Apply Apply 9 an1·11 a1n or 1·3 pm SALF.S T 1-lamburger Hamlet, 15-\5 C Pl · * · \f.\ITl{l·:ss. e:\p1.•r fnr Ital ian * SOFA .r.. l..OVE~EA • * Adan1s, C.l\f. * Or:~~e\\'c~~~~th ~-hl's RED CARPET, L RC'stau1-.tnl. Apply at jl)6 \\'. 11{'\'t'r used. lx)!~I fvi~.150. ~lAl"AGER, p/tin1e wan\ed Cosia l\1csa, Calif. REALTORS a boratories Balboa, N\\'pt. Bch 968-79lo, Usun y nic. for small recrC'ation club. \\'AITRESS EXPER. \VANTED lo buy like-new Hrs JC>-5, 3 days \.\"k, $2.25 PORTERS WANTED OFFER YOU 3300 Hyland Ave. e BLUEi DOLPHIN e furniture & hunp~. nice & ""r hr. Pacific Sands .__ F . Costa Mesa, Calif. ...... «5 vi·a Li'ilo. N.B. rvnsonable. 6-l~-'1687 ,.~ l\lust "'"'cxper. 1nme. MOREi .~. Cabana Club, Sl•ll Atlanta, Sc'C l'erw nnel ;.,1~. ... • 92626 \VANTED niature nta l e **1''rench P~~v lncial 1-LB. Balboa Bay Club 2 offices serving the l{arbor p/l1n1t' ~VC'nings. Appty nfl D.1ven1~1·1. $i.1. Ca l l l\IA~AGER Train{'(', tor 1221 \\'.Coast Hivy., N.B. area. 367 ornces in 3 Equal Oppor. Employer 7:30 pin. \\'arner Drive In1 o=>~t .. ~00l:~~·~-ce7===cc sn1all can\!as prod u c I \Vestern States. 4 separate :::m:a:l•:•:':':":'"':':::liT~hc~•rlre1;' ~7~36~1 ~l~V~orne;:r_A~':''~ILARGE \vulnut <ln.•ss<!r $60. 4 1uanuf .. '\lso. person to cut. PRINTER training programs. Hunt. &11. ' end lahlf's $30. Singer. •fit & upholster. Call aft 1 fct' Paid. One of Orange Television adve rti si n g WELDER portable S."IO. 6 12-9~2. p.111., &16-4f~13. County 's fines! c.'On1panies. on channels 2 & 4. l\tassive e Secretaries SO f A rood cond mce uphol \\'.ork 3 day •'k, 12 hrs a .. '11 lll"liare, a ~uni i Tl u n1 & · 'g . · ' l\1ATURE-lady-needed for •u page nc,vspape.r ado e Typists sta.inless. CertilicRtion not $14-0, chair, otto xlnt cond. ambl1lalory home. Live-in, day. satary to $600. Also f'ec vcrtlsing. Extensive local e Unskilled A1emblr• nccess, Progressive n111ri11e b.m:'ly useti SUO, 968-1582 l\1"ust haver e I ere 11 c e s Jo~. Cull Gloria Gray, advertising. Unprecedenled _. Room + board + salary. 540-0IY.>5, Coastal Personnel company Image. You'll earn e Gen'I Laborers hardware n1anuf. Pd \'BC, EAltLY An1er. end. rou,,., Call &l2-83Sl hc[ore 6 PM Agl"lll"Y. 2790 llnrbor Blvd., mot~. faster at RE o VOLT ins benerils, profit ~baring. eocktnl l tbls. Oinir good 0.t. CARPET, REALTORS. 2629 Instant Personnel SPARC RAFT oond· Allt•r 4 p.m. 962-2879 r.JATURE Couple lo nw.nagt• JtEAL ESTt\Ti:; SALES Harbor Blvrt. 277 E. 17th 770 \\'. 17th, Co~ta J\lesa * RDRl\-1. sullc, modern, quiet adult 20 unit in Costa St .. Costa M('sa, Call Steve Ten1porary Service 645-7ln solid wood, xlnl concl. $175. J\tesn. 836-9000 SUCCESS CAREER 3."l4S Can1pus Dr., Suilc 100 "A" """" New "" c.x""ricnc'.Cd. Join thC' Grannis al 5-16-8&1-0 fo1· in· \VHO \\.'ANTS TO \VOltK? or bt"'st of!('r, .no-•lnV· l'llEOICAI Sec t "' ,.~ · Ne\vport ilt'ach 546-4741 1 ~ • • ·re ary, e:.;pc'r. \\'or\d's larB:est and fastest tenVC\V. J.',..ua.1 Opnnr_ Enl"iOYtT DRIVE A CAB! ~I U~I sf'll , dC'1."0rator gnm•· Dictaphone & insurance gro\\'ing res3h:. organization SALEs l :::~:=:=:::;~z:=:=':=:::~ICHOOSE your houl"l!, '~rk table, likt' nt•iv. 48'\ t/\hlt-. 4 liu~y oft. Salary open. \vlth a neh\·ork of over 300 l 'l\'1 TIRED for yourself, bC' you r O\vn barrC'l l'ht'S, $185. 551-4.'lGG 6-iti-:t~l:I. olli~s and become a Tired of lalkin~ lo people SECRET ARY hoss. J\len or 1von1en. Can G 112 MEN & WOMEN 18-27 n1en11X'r of our ~1illionaire \\'ho are salisificd w/in· be sli~htly handicapf)C(I. •rage S•I• f.nrn to $342.'.ID SR.lRry JX'I" Club. ~1ulti-million dollar come under $1000 mo. An \V(• are looking for a top N e ti t-Cl('an A1)1Jear-d nc.-e , . . n10. y,•hilC' y,·e tf'ath you a advertising progran1. Free exciting & te\.\'arding futul't' notch se<:retary lo lenni tht' Vis. J'C'liN'd. Age 25 to 70. r-.10\rl:-.;G: n1ust sell fW!:llO joh skill .ill Elecll'Ouic.~. ~arant<.'ed. !iCt"nsing school. ..awaits .qualified..l.ndividuals ad biz. Tl you 1 a kt' Supplemt>nl your income. !urn. y,·s~·· di')'{'!-, CM1P:1ng i\l C' t' h a n i l' s o 1· E xcC'lle nt sales training. \\"ho really \\·ant to succeed. sh6rthand, lyfK' fasl & ac· Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a 1'f1u!p,. girls Sch\.\·lnn , bike, Ad 111 in j s tration. 1\HCr \Vhat is your license y,·ortl1 Call 833-4(69 fOl" intervw. curately & Y.'Ould like a day. Apply in person, O\'al k1 I. t.lll Y•/\\'ht formlca training, earn .$4~1-60 per to you? Check our mflflthl) challenge, send us yoor ,.ell:>w Cab Co., 186 E. 16lh 1?P ,t, 2 hl·h<lck l'USh. chrs. mo. for 2 days ...,·ork. Call bonus program whi ch 1nca11s SAL~ people \\'anted for resume todA,y. P.O. Box St .. Costa 1\-lesa.-Xn1R~ d~~· gar. tools, TSgt Young, Calif. Air Na· $$$ to you! Please call tcll'phonc soliciting. Salary 1691. Nl'\.\'J)Ort Beach, Calif. aqua1-, l\f1sc 1tcn1s. June 23, tional Guard 979-1343. Virginia Jones S35-4Sll. + commis:sion, 64~3260 9266.1. 2-'th . 17665 RockroUJ \Vay RED CARPET Telepron1ptcr Cable TV. •rorner of Seton, Roc:krose, ;\JEN &' \Von1en n1anagt"r SALES _ Prt time. Eves. \ \(~} lrvinc 1. lrainee's, & a 1 1 end a 0 1 s Realtors l\lqn. thru Fri. 5--9 Pr-.t $1.75 SEC'Y/ BKKPR MlrCNndiM . . GARAGE Sale Thur/f'rl '1:. 1-rantc>d for gasoline !i.'llcs S ATE SALES · only. Ideal opportunity fol' REAL E T hr plus con1n1. Call ?<.1r. Ft"'C' Paid. Outslanding Nc1\·. Sat. 9.'H F:vt'rgrren, C.J\;f, (W. nnibilious people. J\;lust hC' FREE LICENSE \Yilson 963-2·1";) port B<>ach firn). Ket•p books 191h to l\1onrov~a. right lo ahle to rt:"loeatC'. Experienl'" TRAINING su·ahiht &. do q~artcr\y t~x Antiques 800 1-:Vf'rgrt'('n.I Ev C' r y th In I not nt·~ssal'y. Send rcsun1c Fa.mOU!-1 !teal Estate L!l·ens· SECRETARY 1'C'port. Slnrt $!]~ w/rap1d fnnu n('\\' sofa lo elr-c. food .i'..t. picture 10 P.O. Box 5l.1, ing CC1ursc 11011. nvailt11Jle raiS<'s. Also 1'~L't' Jubs Ca!l ,\:'>lTJQUES & Curlp-.~: -""11· ~rincler, \'acuum clC'aner & Lrinon GrOVC', CA 921}.15 lhru Tal'lx.'U B.cal!ors. Fl't>C Sally ll1.1r1, :HO-!i05j, Coash1l u11-: cnt il'e lot puckagc. Dot1 · riclun~s. l'lr>CCl<"."111 Sc-·1·,.,.. "<·cc Pf'rSOnfh'I ,\J:CllC)', tro() Har· lJlt• •~an•<>e full C'llOUgh lol'S~P~E=C1:CA~L-g-ar-,,-.-,-,-,7le-·.·A7n-Li"°·.I ?.·IORN ING r>:ey,•spapcr Auto ,... • • ....... r bo Bl d C'I " ~ ' Rou1C'. Approx hrs 4-6 an1. 1'raining Progoam. Earn Requires two -three r v ·· 1 · · open simil;1r bu s i nc s s. (1ue furniturt', Oriental rugs, · h"I 1 C tJ Al t · I ~ Golden oxrtunity. By 1\·icker. -·c"·•. 1 h I es. Perm. p/tlmc situation. \\. 1 e )'fill earn. a years seer• •r1a exper· ........ '"' Prt'f fam rnan ovl"r ~ yrs. Sloan (7\41 832·5140. ience with a minimum Secl"{'tnries $500-$700 appt. -494-l 3, 4\l-l-1652 lamps, flxtutt~. pottery elec. X\n'I earnings. 54{)...3008. REAL ESTATE Legat Sec 'ys $550-$675 FINESf of an t iques, kiln, easel, frames. many of 60 w.p.m. typing. Can-Clerk Typists S400 cranberry hanging \nn1p, sundry items. 1189 Tustin .\! 0 TEL maid, neat, SALES MANAGER didates must be highly 100°/0 FREE table desk. lrg ?<.1ei~n com-Ave., Costa Mesa. fi.15.-3933 {'nergetic, Laguna Beach Resalt' Office needs manager • d • de t I ·1 hi 1 & resort, 6 day \\•eek. 4!*-1196. organize 1n or r o Lil Reinders Agency po e. 111 \'er, mar e sea l's, E..l\TATE SaJC', oil ppgs, furn with 2 years of Real Estate handle heavy work load Dini A Job .......... 5.li -3401 so forth. ~O 11lsi• Oak. Hosp be-ti, camn-a I .. , NCR OPERATOR ,,,;00. Outstanding !t"'mporary us.o,;1gnn1l•nL Call Cathy im· n1ftlial('ly. NO FEE EVER ZlnDtJ,_. Dr. ........ ll).12'5 experience. Ncv.·port Beach d · d • Office ............. 516-2118 ANT1QUE F'lca •1a"·•1 -"'"'Uip .. hri c-a·b ra c & Ex d. an var•e assignments " • ,.,. • .. area. pan Ln~ company. ~ June 2L"it, 22nd, 2 3 rt\ . macra1nr. Slit & Sun 10-4. Exc-ellent oppol'1unity for in busy sales office. SECRETARY Exenilive Thurs.-Fri. 12.9 pm, Silt 12· 1?16 So. Birch, S.\, 531-1572, prolt'!'sional gl'fll\'lh. Apply Previous e>i;perience in shrthnd & t.YP!ng a must'. 6 pn1. Y\VCA. 1~11 N. ~5'=2-8'03==·~=-~~-~ in confidence. Senf! rcsun1C' sales highly desirable. Ute bkpng. Pref. oo nstrnc· Broad\\'ay, Santa Ana. RE~10DE:I:-tNG l~tf~I to Clas.<:;lfil'd ad no. 638. c 'o Applicants s•ould have · 61"3l2t I k f Doors y,·11"1(1o\\"5 ITL'rula-Dnily· Pilol, P. 0 . Box 1560, n t1on esper. . v-. • \\'E ha\'C a al"gt' sloe o , . '><'"" excellent communica· SECRETARY English. C'arvt'<l "·ardrolx.·s, scrt'('n.•. nails; ~hutt<"ts etc. Costa :\lcsa, Calif. 9W.W_:_ tions skills. at 1550 s. Coast Ill\')'. Su~ only .. :il:il Tas1nan P.. E. S.:ilN> mgmt. 11 nC\\' & 1 girl office. 1'·or nt"'w Co. Laguna Beach Dr1\·c. Hunhni:ton Brach. g1"01\"lrn: ron1pany. :\!any Excellent Working Sant~&l~n~· St. Gcrtru~59-10 * \VESTERN . PAINTINGS. BICYCLES &: J)ftrts. Baby \nnova1lf.111S & lx-n1.•l11s .. \Jl Conditions & . bought and sold at J!j50 So. it{'n\ll. Bt•a111 hottlC's. Air areas. 5-11.&l:H. SELL BiL~i~H and other Coast Hivy, l..al,:una ~nch. c.'On1pressor. 2202 Haleigh, Fringe Benefits Shaklre products, full·timc . . CJ\1 YISleN or P<lt"T-time g 0 0 d <."Om· ANTIQUE SC\l{'t' c a r v e rl ;;:~.;::-:--;,.-,---,.-Apply in Person · lo 962 8421 1\'00CI rrdmP beaufifu\ !al> l\lovtng to <.: 11 Io I' ado, 'NEED babysitt('r, 18 or old('1' R I I or Call: miss ns · . · ric. 6i3·1616 · evt'rylhln.i: ll\ u ll t go, l blk from beach, 5 days ea ty' _n_c_. __ SERVICE Slat1011 Allcndru1t 1 .11 1 1 Sa 1 IS u 11 . 9.5, 609~~ \1·k. 7j l'c.n!!i an hr. or poss!-RF.CF. p T I O:..; IS T Dona Leverett full or 11/tlmc. Days & *'cl bo ~ I ;ave t ~5.so es ?<.1arh'\1Crire, Cdi\l. hi" e:.;change for room & Secretary. Good typist, sh. (714J 540.51.JOO, Ext. 250 nltes, cxpcr. prcf'd· Appl y s~ c fl s e 1 11 '· GARAGE snit', 7fi62 &I~ board. 6'12-261:1 Ahililv 10 1101·k under In pe~n. Gerry Parhnn1, Cons! Hwy, Laguna Bench. o· II B J z-~24 irt NICE ladiC'S \i·anll'(I for pnrl pressU1~ & 111 •1 int I a 11 HYLAND , 1'·1csa Verde Shell Scrv. 3131 * BABY GRAND PIANO * cldthcs, · ·nw~,i~ ~roJe:tor~ I linic rnairl ll nrl launr!ry plca.<;ant attitude & b'(}()(I llarbor Blvd, C.,..1 · $500. cttniera etc 11.01.k. rxper. not neCf.'ssar;.'. !clcphonc n1annf't'. l\1ust Ix-SERVICE .!>IATION CALL 673-3012 J.!OVING (11'.'flring out Fri Appl,v in JX'rson: Allb<iba nlcrr & flcxiblt•. $-lj() J>('r LABQRAJQRl£S 3 Pump Island Slim A I' 802 thn.1 Sun, 9 l\.m. to 6 p.m. '.\lutC'l. 2'l50 Ne11·Pof1 Bl\'rl., ,m ... o~. ~·~1i-.,.36S50ii . ._____ 1v lube cxpcr. Full or p1tin1e. PP llnces 1',um .. clothe.~. household Cosra ,lesa. RECEPTIONIST 3300 Hyland Ave. Alro man i\·/srnog he. &: KEi.'llMOH.E white washer & t"'tc. ll:l IJ1l'ki;pur, CdM *~UllSEllYl\IAN 1Q y,11rk at Costn r.resa, Calif. 92626 Stln11~ lite m~h e.-;pe:r. Ap-elect dryer. approx 10yr11 SAT .• r.. Sun elt'C't. adding t r c c fa r m , o p e ra ! e O;iy or night, no exp. nC'c, ply. Arco SlatKJn at 17th & old. \\'asher needs 90mc ma ch, buffe0r, furn., odds &: ru l~l"ellnnt'OUS t'quipment, easy, fun job. V.1il1 train, no Equal Opper. Employtt Irvine. work, dryer ok. Si j . e-nrls. 203 CRM I, Newport ' prr!i.-r 1 ~·ear experience. typing or shorthand, etc. l\1ale & Female I SERVICE Station Salesman 644-2591. Short's, R l2~'1.."66 Apply in persnn any aft or '"'"'"""""'"'"'"'"'"" full r /time Over 18 I .l "="°''°"'"""""'""'°'--,-~-1 eve. at 2930 \Vesl Cst lh\'y.. 0 P : . · \VASlfER & dryer or rryt'r JUNE 15-16-17. llotl!Chold _ .'iursM Neat appear. \V1ll tnun. Ap-only, under $300. 6 n1fJ. 11ld Stcrro -ExcrciM", boat & R N-l VN-A I 0 E N.B. SECRET ARY for C 0 s ta P,lY. 2590 Newport Blvd., Kenmore heavy d u I y . harn/Cli Nfuipnient. 277 11·7 t· .. 1hcr ::luf!s. Tt1p pvt RECEPTIONIST Mc:;a C.P.A. !Sinn. Excellenl c.~I . 8~1231. Ci•1:il l'l. Ol typist -tenorette · <let: 1.:1y ln11111'fl. pay for Great Spot !6 use your SJ)lln· Quallf\NI in geiieral oUice SF.RVICE !'ta. -n~ght at-AD~11RAL SPEEClt Club sale, book.,, l11~•r 1!u1y. C nun I y \Vi d f' riuties _ must ht' flexible & lt>n<IAnl - 2 or ;, n1ghts wk. REFRIGEllATOR furn., l;1nir~. etc. 16693 Jn11'\'11·s-. 1\lon·F'ri 9·5. lsh and lovtn~ l..'Ollct>rn \l'ilh Apply at Shell 17th & 2 o I I doctors p:itients. S!a11 $'\00. pl'r1'1>nablc. \\'rite Classified ' r cross op .rce?.er EvC'rgrocn F V 6/21-6/23 1 ... ·~eo1rlh· 'liui'•'l' l!t"'g!stry, E 11 s =" 0,.,..,. ad no. 695, Daily Pilot. ?. lrvlnc, N.B. $125 6'13-3012 ROCl"ER 1', ·1 · · ;:.·11 1r1,_;1n1,11 !:<! .. NB (Lob-<;au 8lly ·! "· ...... ~'"· 5 . A 1 t \~ . C'r.if\11 ruit. plant I B ) Control C:ar('('r Eniplov.. 0 . Box 1560, Cosla Mesa, SF:RV(CE tnt1on tten< an· Rent Washers/Dryers sland, 1lrnp leaf 1hl., Vic· h.1 j(Jl')( L1rJo Id g c Ill ~26 <· I " . Ap-'y ln Agency. 34IXl lrvint' Blvd.. a · """ ·· =~=~--r~xpcr. 900u ...... ~iaCon. •·,1 $2. \\'k. F'ull niulnL llYJln . 1n1Jt'I'. !il:1.,'\Jal f,l:!·'l'i:'.1'."i, .-.\1).!Jll.l~. NB SECR-ETARY pcrsnn~ .... ast wy, * .,~n-1202 • ~, I 115 I ·1 · • o I I ' · · N•·1>1 I"'. •ncl1. "'"' ewe ry :..1: {~ ·.'-; ,\ 1d··s ·" l't .. ·1· y n • -~ : 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I RECEPTIONIS"Jl for animal C<1~111 .l\lesa finn 11et.'(ls cs-. FREIGl-IT Dnmauc Sale on -------a111 ;it 11111 ,.;hif1 . \Vill 1rnln. S1'11 local business nee<ls 6 •·spi!a.I. N.B. 3 Da.vs 1\lk tblt' lndlv. to hnndl~ bosy · ,. · . new Hotnnint & \Vhlrlpool ln11'1'\'1f•11!!" 8nn1-•l11tn, "" · ""Tm gi<·I rr1day MUST ,~ * * * * * * Incl. Fri & Snl. Send 1'C'1umc otrice. \YU.I train to do sim-,.-· ' r e fr \ g f wa shcrs/drycni ~l(in-Fn :'ll•'t'tl V!'rdC' Conv. CJa.°'silied ad no. 892 c/o ple bookkeeping. Call Kay tnke lite sh, xlnt 1.11orklng 545--0780 DIAMOND SOLITARE llosp, li61 Cen!cr St, C.i\'I. 0 11 Pit 1 p 0 "·' 1560 w,·ng "'"" .. re.::. Coastal Per cond.. all the fr Inge · O CAltATS fiawlt.'8111 - (Jl .. ~IGR a Y 0 ' · · °"" 800 ne1 -;;;,;;;.:, 2790 H nr~ bcttefi ts. \Yrltl' Classlllcd ad 1 YR. Old Avocado refr\g. & quality fo~'f'd 10 11eJll 1 AJ; FLTLf. ClJ,\JtGJ·; OFFICE Costa Ptfesa, Ca 92626 Bl d c•t No. 888, Dally Pilol PO Box dlshwahller, excellent cond . Slo,001' of the moin. 'ht""'ly 1\ICI ~ for New C n r RECEJYl'IONIST -Scerctary v ., " ' 1560 Costa M'csa, 6\, 92826 545-4554 alt 6, selective jewelry i;e!.\ "''for D1·11lcr~hlp. l 'ou know !he for law oftJ(;e. Good !I.kills. SECRETARY Stall! experience and Salary AlITOMATtC washer and $30t:XI. • '''fll'rit'lll'e you l'nusl havl'. &11l-8:i10 Pc1'SOnncl director ncttls F.xpM:l(>(J, electric dryer S45 each. 67S.7521 e MEO. SURG. Jtoll,11to7 PBX OPERATORS VOLT lnltant P e rsonne l T11n1por1try S<·rvlt·1· ;•,111s Can1pus Dr., iluilP H~ .. .\c·y,·pnrt Bt.'l1t'h :-iUt.1141 I ~J1ulll 0f)ptJ1'. J>::111ploy1·1· P!1•11St"' ap11Jy in pcr!SOn. rJr s ALES MEN, Mens indiv. wh() can hn.ndlc per· STATIONERY $tore In CdM e 646-5848 e * • * * * An 11111111 oppn!'l1i111t:, rJlnnr fi45-7770. 1-1 arbor Sport .<:\\'Cnr ,~ F"umishings sonncl mitllers In n confJ· need~ 113lesl11dy f/Ume, 5 e OISH\VASHERS, wa;:hC'1'8,1~~~~"""""""'"""'"'*1 ' •·m1>ll)yl'r 1\1np1•1tn n ~lntnrs. riei){ir1rncnl. Neat, clean np-dcnllal niunncr. Goof! sh & d11ys. Xlnl 11"01'klng condA. dryers, reblt. J,{uan1 &IDIAf\fOND l\'cdd!ng act e ICU-CCU Jto11,11to7 \lull' Ari.I ~"'•ll!ilt' j)(':ll'llnce, Ex/I pref, not nee. fyp\ng Skf11'1. Sl\lary lo $650, j:;!!IX'Cia~\y lint' C11.£_nte!e. delv'd. 83~7620; 516--5218. Sct'\•11..~ llllln going owf. --tliAcifJNt!!i'r -2 OFFICE GIRLS Cnntacl f.1r.1''1clsc h e r, C11ll Slll1Y llu.rr. 540-6055, Phone f rancl,,;-Orr, 6•:>-lOJOWARDS dishwasher, y,•oo.-1 l!l'll'4. niui;t !1<'11. New l---;--1• PEOIATRICS i 11 to 7 l-A111omotlvf'. Exp'd men to I NEEDED llOf"'l!t(·hcn:, South Coast C'.oa.stlll P('l"'llOrll'H'I As:cnc-y , for nppnlnllncnt: top, al l ncr:cit."'1iie,;, :;._.8111 f1111,•lcss. Huvc uppra. at KEYPUNCH run shop In :\ll·-.1or1 \'k•,t0. lt;i,tlo 1elei;l10ne disp;:ilch Plw.<1 2790 l·l111rbor Blvd .. CM. STIL\\V !Int l"1zza Palace \V11tel"!JOUCntt. 842-2979. $1 2.")ij, rnu~t sn.c. $575. Call r f't• P1ud. 1111~ pu~1t1u11 io; \\ I Frc-c\\ay Auto, 831·1~ I l\liis t be 25. ;.ible to drl\'c S1\LLS tnslnllatJon, par l 'Secretary Wanted' nt1\1• laking appllcntlons for REGOND. APPLIANCF.S 543--!Y.il•I & OB, RN & LVN I 11101 Laboratory e MEDICAL TECH 3 to 11 :30 Ex .. llonl Bonoflll & Working Condition• An ..-qwd Op110r1unlty Em11Joyi•r ;-1~~"""'"""""""':'.'!:!'!!! StU ldll! jh•llttj 642~5678 (Jrl<' of our ftnc~1 ror panl1·~. MAIDS WANTED i\pply In Pcr1'0n rime, 1·v~. $2 per hr. No Secretarial position _ Rea I f\.111 or pt c1nploymenl. l\lu~t Delivered. gunr. Dunlap't1, I M''rril~C=lill~.-n-00-.-1---~.~l~ll ~1.utiful modC'~l of!\"('. {tui-1 ~latiwc. 1'.IU!i:I tJe t':\per F YELLOW CAB CO. exp. needed. will train. Eslalc lnvcslment [)iv11"on be 18 or older. New loc in lR15 Newport, CM 5"1&--nMJ ·-"O:.:::.;:;:.:.:;:::;:;. __ _::.:;: ~1a~w.Ung hc:n~·f11:s, Salary '''I llml' See Pt"'r!Onnel :i.tan· 186 E:. 16th, Costa l\fC'sn l\tu&I havl' own nutn. Gt'IJ in Irvine. Exp. pref. Salnr.; San Juan Capo. Call Ron B 'ldl M 1 I I06 J0.06 lllF't.E New M&llACJ' s.r.z,. ,\J~ l'f\• ,Jobs. C;lll nger. OFFICE CLEANING nl1<>1vor1<:c.". :\1nt for college1 open. AcCtJratc typing & Metzger for details 492--5175 _ UI ng a er1a I action bamil. llar"1 CM'Ved ~1i~~I A. ::"', .• ,"',.·,~:-,£.on1,1;o,.I 8 .. 1.bo_a Bay Club_ student. 1-"or Interview Cl\I S/H )"('(I· r,or interview TEL EPHON"E Answering • Surplus Bu11dlnt stock $00. 64S-.wn aft 5 r-.• "''""'' ,. ., "·:,,, .. P tlrnC' 1'VM:. NE""""'rl & C.M. 963-31176 I t ct r... Crone •·rvt-Be•ch orea Pre.fer I 1 ..... 1 \\· CO""'' lhl'Y ~ n .~ peasc can a VUJIC • "'-' ...... o!. ,· v--·,.~ "IATERIAL . 1000'• •I NE\\' ••TENT TR.All.ER, tx", 001' B vd., C:\1 '' ·~ "I •• _ Top pay. E.'>f)C'i , Ov<:r 21 l.ESMAN f all c M 155 30 K .... t."U 1~ . w MAIL CLERK TRNE I 21 •27 115 SA ~· or sm , • &ll-5 . over yrs. . 6:...1 66 JTEMS! Doors, lumber, ply. $125. J..ADY fr,r 1..'0unt•·• \i•ork In on y. ! 31 ,., ·O · rnc1nuf. ?<.1ust br ln1crc,11tcd • SECRETARY ~ Wreken&, 1.r l · wood, l\lum shee1fna. mold· •Ca ll 962-25631t dry cleanini:; 11111,nt. t.fu11t he Ide1tJ µo:o;itlnn for lh<" lntlll·. OPE:JlATORS for answering In c&lllnl! on lnd119tr\al a.c-?art timt, B:30 10 12:30, 5 TEI~EPHONE Salos. Work ing, window~. etc. 5 NEW llN!ll, 9.M. 16.5. I nen!. & fricnrih . A!lk for \.\h<I is 1'lU'l'(;I-Ol'fttltNI. r1nt• JWrvi('('. Mn1urc, tr.lcphono counts & ll'ltl~t. enjoy com· ..i wC'ek. 12_50 per hour. trom your ~wn ho1ne. BUILDERS SURPLUS plyA. With whcehi. M~Jl50 P;1t. R 9 2 -9 3 I I , ~l!70 c•o, Coi.)f! llC'11t'll1~. S1ar1 ,lG(I, experience [or r v c n I n g lnunlr·tt.ling w/Jl@Ofllll oL Ml \AA"""'...,r.:--• mtlill'l_....nd ""°"" Hl;~est c.'Omm1s.11lons. ~x· eves or nnytlmc Wkl'ncl~. ""'1i~1!tl.i nster ll!, \\'r ... m. <:1111 Liflllfl lt11.Y, !'>40-60:'15, huu-. Full or "''rt 1lm•. """'' (71<) G45-0S22 ............. ,t! '"1' " •• ~~en-11 o I <~ce,,.ry o.M So Mal11 St S.A -"' '" ,.. ·· · · hand. ContOC1 Mr. l\lc. '"'~18-1 ... · · · ....w · ' • . ., ' • 'llff<l'ncl~ co11 in:oneyr Rent "i'llflk(' Room For l)(iriily'' Coo ~IAI PPrsonnf'l A~ent.'f, S/!7-«176 SA l .. gSMAN & M11nagcr, ...,.') AU!1 " Mon thru Sat 10·5 ...... , •··· :noo 1101110r Jll vcl t'i'lf -Na.mec. :ll»"'W'I• • • 1At11M2 \'.'"' r1UU!Mt, nm.. 111oro ••• clean out the gariut~ _j _· '• • L1kr to Trade~ Our 'l'nldcr's mall' &. fem. S82S & up SECR£i.ARY pttimc for Telephone Soflcltor1 714: ~""' ol1l1t .. elc. thru a Dally Pllot ' . , . turn lh:il Junk lnto rash f)on'1 J::h'" v11 1111' i:ihlp! I PIU"Odisc coh.111111 1~ frrr you! mon1hly icuarn. if ftlltlllflcd. lllW office In Fuhlon INiand, No c~IJ('•'. n<".'('S811ry Oa.ily Pilot Want Ads have Cla•"lfle<I Ad. Sell Idle llcm1 with a..J),~1)),1 Pllol Claa~!Wd "~I'' II in claJSi fit.'d, ~hip I 5 llnt.'S, ~ dny:i r1u• $5. Call N,2.13""1 ~ ... ~3". 8S. Mr. Lee. N.B. r •• , .. ,. ~ .. ..,.. Call f>36.T.'i93 bara:all\ll aalote-now! Calt&a:-5611 N"WI _.......,_ ~cf. Call rrf2.J~78. lo Shllrr· rt<'_irult•! 642-rmR. 1rtt111y ••• fil2--;J;i~ 7Tirv.r. v.u .,...~ .. ' ' (" ' .t . Thunda~. Junt 21, 197J DAILY PlLDT -... --1 1• 1 • r.-.1~ J rll J1 )~i .._I _~_11oo___,,. I ,,.,.,,""'M l ~I I[§] I l[i [ --I~ i --1 -·d·-· ~I~~·· 1 !---.,'" .. v.. I-3 L!not, 1 Tlmo1, $2.ll i ;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:';1;;8; I Ml1cell•neou1 111 'l•not/Oraan1 126 Boltl, General 900 8o1ts, Sa il 909 Moto,. Hom•• Motor Home1 i• .:;;J! CyclH, BlkH MO fO!t Sale' M•m1"mlo In ORGAN WORKSHOPS WE!MARANER 211 YT male. II' RUNABOUT f '/B, 30 hp RHODES 19, Ex cond. 2 "'1' _s_<_oo_t_•_,. ___ ....c.9.:;;25,i _.::.S:•1::•'!.:/R::;•:::n:;t ___ :;940:::1_::5:.::•::1•:!./.::R:.::•::•:..1 __ .....;:.:.:1 * AUCTION * PRIDAY 7:3~ P .M. JUNE 22ND N 11 • 00 wpoCalrt area athle1ic club, Xlnt watch dog, oi~r Evtn. 8 .1. moor summer. 1&al111 w/.spinnakt'r. Seagull oh NEW 1973 NE\\', E.'xplore:r. i.· fUll • · I Ed, &10-0010. children, Lota of roon1. $400. Snowbird le trlr, needs O/B, tdr, w/nu tints. l\1ust J n't Ra cing Cycle1 equip Sips 8. air1aren. ' Wanted Oriental Rugs Wednetdaya 10 A.M. 96.\-.2972 \\-Ork SlOO. 9' DIJl8:hy $<19. scU . $1850 or bcsl ot1er4 11rl * ltULTACO * IO\\'tJ'I ral.H, no mileap, prl p!y 111.'t!d.Ji several w;ed Oon'I buy ant 011:a.n untll BL.ACK Kitten and li'1alteM" Salling paddle bool'd $95. ply. n4-6~0082. ____ HEADQUARTERS FOR EXPLORER 502-829'.! rug:-1. 644·5.126, 675-8773. )'OU can p.la.y! Non-pla.ycrs ?tf1U1X Cat , look without 642-12'12. CAL 20 DESERT, MO'f'O x Tr Trailers, Travel M5 • ':' Bf>aut Uedlin Sell!, Olvan!!, lovesent11, f\1a11h• J la1vei.t Tables & Chalni, t'hc11ts Comnlodtt, Bu[fCl8 Co1oi- TV'•· Ste1·~. Shari Wnv<! n et."Clver, Appllt1.1)(.'tS & MUCl-1 MOllE. l\·IOB ILE c1;1.r phone, CDJ'l In· \vel(.'01nc to attend !rre work ()bllgation. 26' FISllING boat, Buick 'Half...Qu'llenthip •I' 1><1!l', Acces®rles. 1 slall l'Cll.SOllllbly pr\ued. 11hopt1. ~·or lnlormat1on ===,.&l"'-"5--0""'13"7-,-~~ I motor fly Bridge, galley, Nt>v.·po11. B ca I.' h slip l!arbor llt WU!IOn, C.1\1. n4' GOUCHO '69 23' Ol'EN road fully ltlf· ; • ' 968-1797 Co11t11ct: Tom Dieterich GERMAN Shepherd. Good head, bait bag, a/s radio, ~--8488. 646-4655 or 646-2428 I. co1it., xtta clean, , ·, 642~2151 \1:/chUdren, 7 n10.s old. gd shape, $2500. aft 5 P'~· ,;;::;, ;,PC:;;::o::...,....-,,,~~,,__-. '72 Sl.350 H nd k b * 546-9()19 * Nf;\v \Vater bed fntmc .i:c C 1 M i 5 646-7293. \ l , r1;1.cing Sloop, all good • 0 a, no by & 01\ a 1 ion Chaii.'llio. 1-~un &•If . ' • manniadc 1ur 6pread, red ffl UI C trvlct purebred, no papers. Call ='-'-'=,,..,.~~,.-----< sails plus spinnaker, a p. ~trials tire for . rear, spare Contai\led including range 'TO AIH.$TREAM IntetnatiOn· ~·· fo'<. Best offer. 642_3273. Nt:wpc>rt Blvd. al llarbor ~J;l;.""°'5084~.'-~-----i 801t1, Mtint./ ' praised at $5000. Wiking nblcs, 1700 911. Xl~t (.'One!. and dven, shower, IOllf't. at ZT'. air, All xtnu, 642-0574 , .. Co•ta !\1eiia 5 FREE kittens. Prefer Strvlct 902 $3600. 616--5558 500. days 541-2285, C\'t'11 dual ~nks ,vardrObe and or 492.SZ1.l. ' DJAl\tONDS lOO Ptii. trailer park ttsldent1. 2 21' CLIPPER Marine, flush ll96-0l3S. " inc.-l ud 'optional equi1>-* * 16° TRAILER. 1leeps 6.: : CO!\IE BROWSF. AROUND Dinner ring $250. ORGAN SALE "'°'·old. 8'~79. T-!Opm MARINE MEOIANIC d k J J e BICYCLE SAL°' e 3 . 8 I I •-" ' • 207''I 638--0533 ~" cc w/lr r, x nt! Slip ~ 1nent, engine, PY t res, rerri~crator, oven, wue .. 01 a ' Nl'l\'pClrt Blvd. \\1urlltzer 1'~actory Authorized 1 APRIOOT rockapoo Feni. 7 Good Y.'Ork. Fair pri~s. Save avaU. smi. or.\ b e :s t , NE\V 10 SPEED ITALIAN extra gas tank, dual bat· $795. 831-1543' , BC!hind Tony's Bldg. l\1a.ll'io. GE \Vasher/Kenmore dryer. Sale on mnny nlodClll. Other wks old, 2 darlina kittens, 1 you money. Call Burr's 644-7873 BICYCLES $59.95. Bench teries, 11•il'Cd for srf'.1'00 with 1,.,. Tl"VE' TRA"ER ' WINDY'S AUCTION eci..ta l\fesa * 646·8686 Color TV antenna-Exec. .fii ds al t -0& Marint>. 675-8677. Bl v • ~ ~ ~wive\ chair. 67~. f~ S'l95":1 on Sile, priced blk & 1 gray, 646-1991 .Bo -~t-~P~~~---906-BEAUT. Trimaran, "Ka noa" cycles, R06 E. Balboa ,speaker~. arm chair sruts, CUSTOM AWNING $550. v· SUPER 8 M Mo"le <••••ere & 2 FREE KiHeltl, 1 black "'.. I 1, owtr • unique & proven design for Blvd.. 675--7282. Authorized center llir L'Onditioning VC'llt, • • 545-r::.06 9 , . '...__. • DIADEM Tourn1alino Mink Wellichs M 5• C'ty NISl-IIKI dt-aler. fire extinguisher, <•24150J . • p ~ ft•a -case, like new, $45. Polaroid stole xlnt cond., $300. u IC I white boots, 1 ca11co, 7 wits. ~ cruising & racing. $6500. $9495 Auto Strvlct ... ,. ~ i ' land cam<'l'fl v.•lth nash :it-* 979-4884 * South Coast Plaza 541).2830 Laguna, 497-1964. · <TI-II 963-2035. \VANTED 'Tl 01· 'it Honda ' '1 tachmen! llke Jl{'\\' $15 AMf' M11ctll•neou1 FREE to i09d homes, pa11 Oldie, 8Ut Goodie! hlTE No. 1005. 500-4. in flt'"'' condition. ,\LL Chevy parts. 396 .,; bov.·llng ball with fold out BURLED \\'alnut A n t I q , Shepherd & Dane ""Ppies. All attached ""Uip. Yellov.• Have '70 Triumph 250 J1a\\'k I & ll con1plc1e·engine $200. Heads . I Want·, 820 A trl ••Y • " $375. & 3 pc slate nnnJ l0bJn I> us tax \'. ffill. lntak•• $50. Block .,~. co1n1ng case, con1p l'le in· ,;,;;;~-~iiiii~;;~IJ."~'~•;n~~c~'"~n~d~. ~B~•~a~u~.1 Call att s:ao, 919-2146. 37 FT. FISHING BOAT hull. \\'hile topside. xint ·~· " • 1 o•' DOWN ·-• ~ .cludinLJ.rnc..J (\\'Orn 4 Cond. Sacrlfl(.'t' ' s g 9 5. cond $600 615-2300 $600. Trade one 01• l.ioth or t O J..'iO block $100. 327 heads limes) like new. Men'! siZC GER!\tAN Shepherd pun, S.. Idea1 for famll fun! Sl · · · sell. ~l. _ l:ZO-.rno &t-SiJO;-H7P.-heads-$.1..2.5:..-.i-~r-1 9,,.,1 Pho>"""·'·' A'"'1 WANTED 111onths. Female. 6. I-lea , gal ey, anc r ~f:OO lt;-Sha:rpr-Fullr.equlp, .73 \\'O'IBAT , .... 50 .,. ,,., "' <m-1<.>0 PIANO. Klmballctte, like 67~ 1~·in<:h bait tank Includes 1ncld cover, Certificated, 1~ l\laverio.'k $123.14 ..-u-ll : .,.._.>Q'W ALL Chevy parts. 3'96 TO BUY new, Light \\'OOCI, Nev.-port' nioorln.g. $2SOO. $695, 846-2164. shocks custon1 chan11x'r '67 VW Bug, wrecked, 00 Co 1 1 . S 2 "A• "".o JUST for you! Sma11-dog P.P .'s fast and reliable xlnt pc~ mo. . engine, $175. (41 lOXl&.5 B mpee engine 00. ** E~ATE JEWEi.RY 10, ----'-~"-'=~----l P"PPI••· •--the outdoo-. (I) 63J..32T.?. LIDO 14, No. 2934, w/lrailer _ _, Ca•h ~ n lud> t & GM He ds S90 I tak 150 ~· " ...... vc '" COnu ., tnuat sell 536--2779 . .-•• cc 1 c ng ax ply truck tire!! v.•/6 lug a . n es , . 150,000 CASH. We ha·-heen GR:AND piano S' con1p. re· 642-3848 ~-~--xlnt rond. must sell, $900 or llc $10087 75 Defc,~ runy I Sl.50 ••• •••! } Block S.100. 350 Block $100. ..., l.'Olld. drk. wa.Inut xlnt cond . ;;;;;,:;;;:,:;::--;c-,-~---bst off. 495-5689. 1971 SUZUKI 125. YC?\10"'· ' t · • sl5785 58"~A PrR· whee 8 · ~ 327 Heads $50 Hp He d paying top dollar for all 1800 ,17 6 KITIENS all colo1'S, free to GLASPAR Su11liner. 17 '11', 1800 miles. Wife'iii blkc. S450 men price · · · · · 5 NE\V tires, 9.50. 16.5, 8 S125 842-1·, .. .I\ ;...,, ·.,.;43 n s gold pieces, antiques, coiM, ·"' -7763 after 5 p.in. gd. home, 6 wks old Shore mooring N 4 Ba1. Is., 14' SUNFISH sail lx>at. Llke or .. _,, otfe<. 84"-1150 c••es lO.S2. O.A.C. plys. With wheels. 842-ll.50 ' . .-..;~ · gems o1Wlkinds._ · WULITZER S~net Piano •-64&-20a3-* 75hp,just0ve.c.huul~d •. nu new $400. Carl at 879-9211 uc ,. EXPlORER ANTIQUE Bon1hfty desk, 67 ,7528 . good oondltlon ,·. · ' IX>ot co·-'· ne•v hottom days.• . o·r anytin14! wkncls --, ~ . c•ve11 or anytime wknds M!(."Y degk, Pineapple 4 poster I ~~~~!!r!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 54.g...ij788 2 TIGER . KlTI'ENS .,,. HONDA 350SL Low .. n1I. $."125. * VW Engine Parts bed + refrig, w u s h Ing I: ~-=-~~~---TO GOOD HOME ~~~i4~~op, big whl. trailer. BALBOA ~ "'/trailer. :~ HP 1971 Honda 1971 lOOCB $225. OF * 548-'1425 * mnchlnc, coloi· TV + misc. \V ANTED: used complete set' FISHER SPINNET PlAi~O ==c-'e'--"&14-!!CCml~!.."'·'..,.-__ -N British Seagull $3600 • Firm. Lo ml. Aft. 6pm 979-0283 642--0619. JS.lj Anaheini Ave, of Golt Clubs. \Voods, Irons Cost Sl,000+, See & make I:~REE kittens to good hoine '70 CUSTOl\.1 l\.1 lni Sport, 0~ii;;lc.OP:Cl~um""'e'o:r.,.:C::·::":.:.·--~~ USED BICYCLES No. ~D. C.M. &-bag. ,,~ """" ofter! Sacrifice. 552-9776 n1ales only Flbgl.,Mpadded .seats, e!ect ·N·OT····'CKEl.Kite ·1,e..Rav/dollcery. 'no· £u59113y, All 'l'ypes * 642-1212 Hu nt1' ngton 2 75Qxl6 Truck lircs, I brand """""' 5.'l6--0l57 sui11, ere. cru1Se steenng, "-' 8 1 \VANTED to buy, like new S. '-"'w;.;i;.;llJ!.o..;M;c:;•c:ch;.;;;in;;•:;•....c._828 cover, SO hip 4 cylndr, $550/make offer. 545--000t USED bike .Da\ves Galaxy nu, never u,.._.._., P Y rating furniture & lamps, nice & ~ -DARLING brown, orange & Mercury engine t r a 11 e r , Excellent condition ?t1ounted on whcf>I , 8 bolt, reasonable 644-4687 * USED MACHINE & black striped tabby fen1ale Sl.500, aft 6 58&-3535 BRAND ne1v '73, 14' Hobie, 546-0018 Beach will fit Ford or Chev. $50, * VACUUM S kitren, 2 mo. shots. 83l-OM4. with trailer, must sell, leav----~-=--='----! U&ed $20. 67J.-7878, 116 4.lst \\!ANTED: '71 Triumph M.C· ALE 14' COMPLETELY equipped ing area, $1295. 97'-9558 BULTACO Alplna, '72, 250cc, RacrNtlonal St, N.B. Repair Manual. 645-3688, aft Good Klrbyg w/artadl's $54.50 skii1, flsh, or ? 40 horse p\\'1". Boats, Sllps/Docks 910 Xlnl cond . $800. Consider of-18801 Beach Blvd. 842-8803 Vthicltl 956 ' KENMORE auto wll!lhlng 6. Ask for Ed. Singer 6618 .......... $27.95 [ ll~I O/B. El"'tnc •hlft.& '1a<I. fer. 642-21'19. • r HUNTINGTON BEACH _::.;::;::::,::::_ ___ ...:,:;.;: l machlne $50. Xlnt cond. Musical ln1trumtnt1822 New National Adwrtised ma· Pttsn...... tilt lraller $750. or offer SLIPS available, 35', Sail or LIKE new Schwinn Stingray SAVE BRAND NEW Twin Maple bed 11 t ead s , chine, zig-zag, nlakes button . ,540--0l>l3""'-~"="~~-~--Power Boats. 3speed delux fastback. Cost c~i1t A nlte stand. S2S. OLD Fender Telttasier vdlh holes, com pl w/c-ab & d1r 20' INBru;> Cabin Cruiser, 673.6606 $85, nov.• $50. 962-9749. NEWPORTER 673-609l humbucking pickup & $129.95. A machine that ideal for diving or fillhing, Boats, S--..i & Ski 911 1972 KAWASAKI dirt bike, $1000 1973 i'""OR SALE Rosev.ood finger Jxiard S250. ~~~~ .. ~"k so n1ucb of you C1t1 852 Head, galley, nu cushions, ..,_.. niany extras. $500 or best POO' T bl guJ 1929 Epiphone Electra $250. uul ~something for you: . • canvas covers, trier, Needs 14" SKI BOAT u I 3 =1 -CO .,. a e re alion si;.:e AU guar. No Gimmicks, Over P URE BRED S1mam Kits, \\'Ork. l\fake offer. 642-8961. o er. at pm, <N -,,1,11v. SAN MAR S 4'x8' with 1" 11late. Includes M9--2l 93 alt 5. Seal & Bl e l\f th CFA No engine. $145. JO SPD blk ~ -• •··JI Pr Off' F it / l l YNI In Cos!u ~1~ Sin· . u •. ~-er FUN BOAT 16' Mm" lat"-"'" 67"531 e, very I!."""' COuu, 20' p A ;;;'u:$:~~11C:i~~,7~1~. ice ICt urn Urt CC're St'"'" !\1iH·h. .~ Vac.. Reg, g.,,·ks, $3a. &;1-1179 aft parade winner 2SP .... Gr~Y, .,..... ·· $85 or beat offer. GC:8 rrow _;E;,,q~u:!ip;:.. ___ .....:B;;:..24 1878 Harho' &10-9742 5 wkd•Y'· Xu·aa. $000. 673·2242 Thure· Boals, Storaga 912 646-6760 Lot Demo BUBBLE TOP YAN Bll!GGS & Straiton 3 llJ" Sporting Good• 1 . 830 ~LE Siamese kittens, !:i,hots Sun. ,,,..29 GARAGE type building 1973 BULTACO, Pu1"Sa.11g, (Ser •30l2FOOS30'l!l1 ,. llolru-y Lav:nrTIQ'.\'<'r. Like CONFERENCE TABLE _ .!N""-''"e:.·b:::~.:;:c·c_!__!~f!;·..;~:!:·:!'"~"'.!__ i ~--------u • r· like new $975 Nu. $25. Wenzell Unillrella E.'1'.ef.', Cust., w/6 chairf, -~ ... ~ •t:U ...,.. ID' FRBLCS fish/ski boat. $50 .m'o, 6310 Coe.st HM; · 646-555s MANY EXTRAS , CONVERSION .. .. tent 9x9. Used once. $30. fully upllolsl'ercd. New $Sill). "T2·'73 KNEISSL Su Per ---. All~acc:eu. includ. radio: NB· ----S~7 3-3706 1'0 r --~;;-,~'=°=:=-=-----ARM RE-STS · e S45-(1(}1S e Sacriflce $'150. Uays GTa--0210, Shorts 180'1 v.·/Gaze Step Dogs 854 Bottom paint, tilt trailer. 213/869-5985 * '71 HONDACB175 * AUX BATTERY 1---~"'--"-'--'---t &11HJJ89at1 5 Master•. Good cond. New 1~$r~~~~~~~ -~~~;,;1 :~~~~~~~~~~1 ReaM>nable offer . " On a one Ion Dodge 01auis, \\!ANTED . USED "''="""-=~· '-~-c:-=-=-$190. Now ,$120. 979-3341 alt e PUPPY WORLD e ' vei ,..........,,. Call 545--0879 att. 6:30PM. 6' RE FRIG ORIENTAL RUGS EXEC"""'! ch.-. $15-25 Sec 6pm. . JOO MIXED PUPS. Open * 12' F IB ERG L ASS BOY'S 20" BIKE TINTED GLASS chr8 $8/2-1 Desks S20/90 OU US Eves. Irish get 1 er, FISHING BOAT, 1• 8 PLY Tl RES \ViU pay cash. Plea11e ca 11 Sup! 867 \V 19 CM 642...J408 * * WANTED: . ED Dobennan, Collies S 5 O , $125 * 549-0084 Transportition ,.a.. GOOD CONDITION $10. 1213) 874-28-12 colif'Ct. , OFFICE DESK, 34x60 '~~ARD 6'6" or 6'8'". Husk:ie, Bull Terrier, T·CUp 16' BOAT, 45 llP ele<: start, I ~iiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiij~~--~ --~·~-~'-3822~~·--413 ENGINE BRUNSWICK ""Id crown <\I $65, &15.5200 TV, D•dlo, HIFI, POO<l!<. _Chih,_., !..ah., t•~ 6 "81· """ tanks. Good ! '73 HONDA XR7l. UNI LOUNGE x 9 pool tables, s x 10 ''r Boxer. Cockapoo. S\VAP cond. $400. 496-9496. C •-1 /R 92 Call 642-3.115 FLIP SEAT snooker, arcade gan1C':o;, Of· Pi1nos/Organ1 126 Stereo 136 Shepherds for T? Stud Seiv ~=~===-"---1 •mptrs, ... • •nt O =-.,,.::::::..=="----SEAT BELTS le'· l<A" "I"' most breeds. 531-SOZT. •--R /Ch ' 908 '6$7150H. OaN!tD6A 160. 9,700 ntl $7399 ...,.,.-,, "" * * PIANO ** 1MH1tl, ent •rt t FORCED to sell , 1970, ll~i' For !hat Item under $50, try Sn1aU Studio Upright RENT TO OWN Obtdltnce Tr•lnJng Cabover Can1per, c r pt g, 586-3535 360 V·S, 117 .. wheel base, ~ automatic, power steering, ~ disc brdkcs, Jen~ Tollett ~'.:. \#248). $5995 plus tax & Ile. 10•;; DOWN &4 monhts a.t $97.63 " ' • the Penny P.ln·c·he·r··iiiijjiiilliSacrlfice * 492--0057 RuSSJ's CIUJ1 Starting this CHARTER 57' KETCH toilet, heater, stove, hydrlc 0•7~0-,H~O~N~D::A:.::..::::3500::0.,~SL~.-x~l-nt TV'S & STEREO SaJ;. June 23ro. All Iii"'· "TIOGA" l•1c1", many ""'!t Supe' cood. Only 3,(Jl,10 miles.~ CREVIER BMW Slo 10 LeSSOns only $25. 2 Lo. Now &OOkfug for summer c ean & sharp ...... st new 642-1')6 -&lies_ Service. Lea.sing euh Pri{..'t"-including-Lax...andl-!--1 cations. cruises. Xlnt rates! $2800 Now $1500. Best otter . ---,-10-N~D=lA=10~-op.--license $6364.75. Deferred \Vtll fl Call ft 7 •• 208 W, 1st SL, Santa Anu Fash. r~and. N.B. (2 P!\1J Chet Salisbury II nance. a er pm, .72 Uk 83S.3171 payment price $8800.42. 1'~ash. Square, S.A. (9 A~1 J GT~ or Tioga, Box 316, ;-:::,;798=2::.· -------ca'U M}.".;· A.P.R. 10.64. O.A.C. A CONVDNENT IHOPPINC AND Bf:WIHC CUIO( FOlt THE CAL ON THE CO. For an ad In Wom1n•1 World C1ll Miry Both 642·5678, oxt. 330 EYerywhere Dress! The Vest Is Tops! -7039 -fJJ No Credit Checlc •No Depo!it Free Dcllvery. Free Repair l\1oothly Rentals Available Opon EvH.' 543 4444 642-5622 Balboa bland, 9'"62 WE ,..nt cabo""n campers _..:::=..:.:::=:.::,.._ '73 VIVA EXPLORER SPECIAL Boats, Slit 909 forjplport & 8' trucks. Mesa T~i.is:lke street legal S1S _ 1 Germon Short Hair Pointer Camper Sales, :K:l36 Harbor, .=::...:::::: ______ _ Pupple~. $45. e1t.ch. Call Cin· 14' AU:ORT Sailmh, new C.l\1. 6464002, Mo H MOTOR OF A P ANASONIC sle~ tape. di 645-89ai or 645--692.l. dacron sail, dolly. $195. ·n v;..v Pop-top Camper. tor ome1 _ . recorder with automatic SAVE A HOMELESS PET 675-4452 am/tm radio, tent, xlnt S•l•/Rtnt 940 reverse. Uaes AmpeX ~. ba-b I' 2 m 1 n lat u re HOBIE Clll 14, all nu equipt. cond. 14,000 miles. Asking HOME Hunt1"ngton reels and tapes:, includes 3 dachshunds. G-at Dane, w/trailer ready to salt $2900. &IS.-7867 after 5 pm RENT our new .Lu.'<ury -'~, 2 t -~ " '" "768 LIFETIME! alps 6, air, im· •""""""' • • ereo s""' ..... "rs, Beagle, Apricot Po o d I c . ~ C 8 6' $100 l t Dodg Ch · " B h headphones, 15 pre·recorded 49-1-4853 •mper X 1nac. Pvl. 0\YllCr. SJS.-0900 Oil e &!SIS, r UJly eac t11pes and blo.nk reel1 -a ll i-=..:==-· ~-----* H~~Ita_~~; 16' • 613-2957 • 25' EXECUTIVE m otor Self Contained including \\'811 equipment is brllnd new. *GREAT Great Dane pup-xlnt cone!. $1600. 548-8017 Cycltl, Bikes, home for renl. Fully &elf thermosdtat, cacdbt . strt~ 18801 Beach Blvd 842·8803 Asking $210. (.714) 846-54M. pies. Black &. Blue, M &: F , Scoota'I 925 cont 642-2150 screen oor. m cine ca.,. · Cbamp lint11, 6wks old, fat HOBIE Cat 14' w/tra.Uer & • ..;;,oo.;c;;;.:... ___ _:,;:;o • , inet, aux. battery system, •lUNTINGTON BEACH ~.~~:P1~~~~~~ -~-~~l,!i~~~-Ternu_J ilOO~· fu~~.lttust sell. GIRLS~ s~.-$35: man's 10 A!f!~~ ~rF:~ ~n~I~; ~ a~fe ~~~~-YOOW~~~~ 4 STAR MAC.-1 $87 '"21" 25" C I spd, $4;,: like new. 54&-0068 1111\e. 675-5985. (VO-"A"). • .--or O or LOVABLE Springer Spaniels HOBIE Cat 14' w/h'ailer, & 90-m gu, ~!.iiit'1~\Vtv~~~y ~~~~6b.~~·· Hunt/ .~Swoo.~'~'""'~·~~=-u==~~t~ .. ,.,~'=13!:1XJ_n_1_co_od_. t-ifo~_J;~~~~Ie:a~c~~ Jlen&~~~ c~=Jm S.6.995__ MINJ-,OTORHOME Ric-e's Te.levlsinn Service GOLDEN Retriever pups Need a ··Pad"T Pla"-e an ad! 645-6244. You'll find it in Clllftl!led plus tax & lie. $8779 fo1111erly Mesa North Cenler Champ. sired. OFA. call 1 oo'o DOWN • • r ' ' • i -I • I • • • • • < ' • ' ... • ' ' " ' 1 Blck S. of Baker 54&-6002 83.?-5167 LOOK " open 9-5 16 days) :2::;YR.:;:::::.:.o"'Jdc-mal....,-•-,P'"e'"ldnge,.--se-. lOS mo. at STEREOS' 1913 DYN A· AKC ..... no chlld,..n 1 1 1 $96. 97 QUAD System. 200 watt l''"M pleue. Call 642-5.:lll slereo recel\--er, ~ Quad IRISH Sett . IT'S GARBENSTANGEL TIME I 1pealren1, 8 track tape dl"Ck, er Pu P P 1 e • · turntable & headphone plug Bc•utilul AKC reJ<iltered. • in jacks. Just released from $lOO. Call 96,2...2811 y,•arehouse. No1v $131.40. OOBEFL.\iAN Plfuicher pups 893.-0:iOL l't'gistered, top ~a1ity. c;] 546-0909 STE~~,OS. 1973 GARRARD l\1odel , auto tur n Ul b I e, \VO RLD'S Fastnt Bird do(f9. A?>.f/FM/MPX receiver, 3 R.egisfered, top quality. Call \Vay air 1 u s p e n s l o n I -'546--0lll!l""~~~=..,.,=~~ speakers. Just released• **COLLIES AKC ** Crush Price Including ta~ a nd lie. $1334. 15. Deferred Pay. men~ price $ll216.24. A.P.R. 10. 75. 0.A.C, EXPLORER OF Sleeps 6, Overcab King si. 1' bed, Extra Large dinette seats 6 or 8. Spacem8:9ter • Dush toilet with holdlnc f tank, 75 gallon water suppty, _ 1 38 gallon holding-tank, Sin-I gle 52 gallon gas tank, Air Shocks, Steel bumper with , , spare tire, rack and vinyl i cover, 10 gallon hot wal'a' • tank, 7' interior head room. i. 6 cubic feet gas -electric re-l ' from \\'&rehoule, 1t1ll boxed I Champion Bloodline! &: &:UW'. Mfr. list $464.90 * * 493-M07 * Now $192.'r.>. Terms. PEKINGESE puppies 893--0j(jl. Sho\V Stock. QUAD stereo cmplt. com· 842-1128 ponent 1et, AM/I:'"M tuner HorMI . .. 85' Amp1, rttl quad 8 trk casM'l· c.;.::..;.;;.;... ____ _;;::.; USED GARBENSTA.NGEL te tRpe decks P.E. changer, 2 Gentle Geldings, approx. g Must have rlsht·handfd. reverb 4 spkrl. value over yrs. old, $250 ea. One reg. zoenstlft with power dip- $1,500, sell for S300 96.)-l2'18 Appy Gelding 5 yrs, 16H, poleck. Would accept tar- ADMJRAL 19" c 0 J 0 t good dl1pog1Uon, we 11 b' model with batwry op- H t' t lrlgoratoo, Demand 75 "81· un 1ng on Ion water ,ystem.. $er. #012610-1718. Beach ' Air condltloirtd !8801 Beach Blvd. 8'2-8803 BILL BARRY HlJI'll'TINGTON BEACH: 11 --"'"'e~S;::A;;L~E;,S~.~!._ IGMC Motorhomo Contor • Sl!RVICE • (t.t St. at S,A. Frwy.J e RENTALS e • DX! E. L'lt St.L...Sunta Ana 558-lWJ '65 INTERNATIONAL portabll', new picture tube, . started, good p I ea sure er ate d plddlebottom. "'mote control, xlnt cond. horse, good potent1al show Wrttt: OUlifled ad No. EXPLORER Sl50. 833-26.56 horae. $800. Also 8 yr old 174, DAILY PILOT, P.O. OF L.. (. A6<&. 13~ ZENmt AM/Fl>!. """" T,~,\'.';"1. J~J:.'rjr ""°" i.or!:: ox 1580• Colt.a M .... CA HUNTINGTON Bl!ACH ~ eon~le "·alnut, 6 yrs. old, l&.l Hands. T A L L y HO 18801 Beach Blvd. 842-8803 Top !!klrtl!. pants. dresses xlnt. cond. $95. Ca 1 l FlltrM. 1® New ho p e ' HUNTINGTON BEACH WALK THRU CHASSIS MOUNT wHh th;, vivid vesl. ;J0.6690. Foontatn Valley, 97'>-9475. MOTOR HOMES Bcgiin1ei-s' prkle! Crochet SCCYI'T S.-., AM /Fr.1 stereo TAU.Y Ho Farms, offers 1 V·S, Automatic, Power Steer· 9147 a.18 r.., 11f ,,.;,_ 11f~-fruihkinable vtst easily all ln receiver, llke new, l yr old. finest in hunter & jwnper A.J::,,o, Pacesetter.Baro n , Ing, Alr COndllloning, Stereo ~Ingle and double crochc't. $1~. Call after 6:30, 64fr.38S8 training & leSIOnl by E amlxlree, Roblnhood • nnd Tape Deck , BU<:'ket --r Choose a bright or basic BRAND new 11 Cl'alg tape Marcy (Approved AHSA) I We've got 'em at Seats. F'\llly Self Coota:ined, color ;,, knlltintl •""1cd. deck, c••"""'· 2 spoakera judge. We have beaut. new If you truly understand garbenstange s KENDON Look> •"'1 """' like new. Love variety? Then, \Vhip Po.Hem 1039: Misses Sizes $49, call 644-64"6. 12x12 bo:t stalls. Visit us at MOTOR HOMES sleeps 4 $3(N•295 1 S6'29 i. up eewral scarvea In -.lnging 10-18 Incl. 17262 Newhope So. o 1 L colors to 11tdc thru the ta~ 8EV'ENTY·FTVF. CEl"fTS \Varner. Founi.1n Valley or it's time to gars;ien 707 N. Harbor, S.A. bed neckline of llkllnmer. tor each p.ttern -add 25 i[L ______ _,11 s, call 979--9415. 554 · 0033 EXPLORER Prlnled Pattern 9147 : cents for each pattern tor FrMtol\:MI . AQHA Yearlln& filly. Beaut. If d 't d t d 't I d ~7' ·1r.1\VL"O Mlloea' Slzea 8,10, U, 14, 16, A" Mall and Special Ha"'11· . & ready for halter clu,.1• YOU On Un erS an I may a rea Y 25' L•l,)'IW!:RER 18. Size 12 (bull 34) dttll 2\li in~ othe'rwite thlnl-clasa Shld bring home all blue 2'1'·22' CON'tlNENTALS OF yards ... 1nch: "'"''1 sis ylt1'd ~e,.:""or w~0"'ta1<;.,,:i'"'i:; i Lina•, 2 Tim••· $2.oo nbbon•. ieoo. s•s-ss o•. be too late but, what the heck, send 20· r1ull~ • JoYs 39-inch le.bric. Alice Brooks, thCl DAILY 540-6900 Ext 256 v AN CON ~ 1·:flSJ )NS :-:::~= -:r;1 PILOT. 105. Necdlecralt FREE to""· hOme lovcahl• REG. Arab-Morgan. 4 YT • th *. D'. Setvlce ·1 Rental*• Hunt1"ngton centa !or each patt<m for Dtpt., Box 183, Old Chelaea male dc>xle, perfect pct. mly. BaauUful Dapple fl?<Y, In 8 COU pon a nywa Y onmar nc. , Atr ru n and spee1a1 Handl· ~~~n~te;~~~; ~·~~~·A5~p1~iLAb. ~s~ •hOw prospect. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l~o' i 10~~ ... d .• G.G. Beach tna; otbtrwlle thlrdoclt\as 7.lp, Patten l'fmnber. bl·~. male. ••·-& a1-~. 5 "0 -•d A ~-1••·· • • deUvery wnl t&ke three NEED ECRAFT '12 ~ ~--.. ..... -........... reg PPY \.:11:! ..... y I ·11 b 'Id b I I h Next lo G.G. Dllll!Un waek• 00 mo,., Send lo L ! good hunler. ,,,._2052. Good color, Needs exp'd • es, WI Ut 8 ger enstenge -Or 8UOC a • ILLNESS causes sale ol •72 18801 Bcoch Blvd. 8'2·8Slll Mltlan Man in. the DAILY Croche~ knit, etc. ,_ EXTRAORDINARY-'11''" t'ld<r. ei.:iee. • search for one I can put in shape for exhibition at• 20· 1..uxu~ Balbo:l ""''"' HUNTlNGroN BEACH PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., din.-ctlons. ~. ~tallcse, calico & black kit· •.r 232 w .. t 18th St .. New •• , ............. ,,.. .. ton• m&I 8 wka --• the' DAILY PILOT.South Coast Plaza Build A Better • home. Pureh•t<cd 9 "'"'· '71 vw k NY 10011 Prl t Baile, fancy knoll. pat· ' • · · l I~ 1\go. Olev. V8 eng, !>!'. p/b. Yor. • . · n ten ll, $1.00. FREE lo aomoone \\'ho lom1"d _ • G b t I C + t d I t t' I R II a shO\ri"r, clet-1 . toil~!. Air Wntphalia NAMll •• ~oo:ss.;: t •tant Crochet Book _ cares, ~ble calico & ~~ ar ens ange On es an n erna I Ona a ye . cond. f\iMUI('(' &: extra!.. Xlnl c ·· m, • t.aam by 'plctllrffl Pit· t111er kittens. 64&-1581 . : Please tell me more . •. coud. 10 mt. rrtce<! 10 ..,u amper f(UMU:L Q I 1t tem8. $1 .00. 7 TINY POOly-G&tot. One ~w at $7900. l &il Anlril\ LVIUPlt"tl" \\1th tent (!ITTDUDI ~ M~.,? .,.,.,..: ~ne _ eo;~ ~ta~~m~~ ~~. ~C.r c ... _.. Boats, Ganer•I 900 • NAME ·---. "''· ···-·-_ ......... . ... _._ .............. __ . -· • ~~mi~" Shores, .s. BILL MAXEY r.tttrn free from our 11 00 ·-"""=""'·-o::.,.._.~11~~ 1311' eml V ~om Fl~ • • TOYOTA SP11t11.Summtrr Calllos. All · · 1 YEAR Muw:u. CO le, ml\le. IJ '"'''l • "li•I ADDRESS 1973 DiS<'O\·ertt" anrl Sund ial ""9! ()n1y aoc. sf.:.S)llote Afa~n Boot .. ~: ~=: Needs gOOd ti;~~~ ~~r:rud!: • .... ·-····-········ .. ·······-" .... ....... ._, ............................. -........... -............... • ~lotor llomts for rent, r11i.l(c l&~I Bt-:AC!i Bli. 841·8$).S JNft~ SEWif!? BOOK It Jnry t\u, 8ook11 • SOc. MINIA'l'\JRE SheltlePoollle forward controls, tr-.ller, • ZIP • ~~~~~~ ~11~~ s!~~~,~~t .·-H-U_;""_IN_C._.'~l'ON-'-'B~EA"'"Cl=l -t lllW .......,., wear wmorrow. Book of u Prise Afahans.· · • ' 11parc 11.re, '73 ltcensed, quick • CITY __ ,,. .... ·-·-······-··-········· .... ~ .................. ,... ............... . ............ -............... • Uob Lonapn· po n : IR c GO \&. Ton, DoOar.-"4,........1 si. 50c 2 c11. ·mtiles-8 wk 11, ,_ .. .1 .. •r.N1. 39~ Calle Ab~I. ctrlw Q,. r .. ...__ JN~ANT F A SH t ON Q~Ul Boo"' 1 _ 16 -uems. 645--0423 1~ree! "' iliJ\IV .., '' • PHONE AGE • ~!Y.?·6651 or 1116·2500. · .---vwc "'1'~on, ''"""' BOOK H -•~, 1 • "-1 f"R'"~ Bl k ft'!•=--Sa.J\ __ Olemente }l .urbo r .,.. . .. ··-···-·--·-~ ·-·--·-·-.. ··•······· -AM 1 H \Vni:o11, Needs v.wk. $900 gr -u11u1-.u o !K)r, i.::r. Ae .. c.. Estatet,·496-58ll • • R Jnt ~or _omt hf>•t ()jftr. 6'?3-<H6l 1 fuhlon fltct1. St . l\lui.t.tim Qullt-..DooLI .. to KQOfl ho1'1r.. M II f V catlo -' ••v ••• •· t•· BE'-DA Y to 50c. · 6·16-fttn btfof1l S. 'TRAlbE blr-1or-t7' boftt • • '-1 --• CJ__r_your • " 'T. C1tmpcr S~laL 1A.I 1 "'v , ui •ro ,,..,, ssoo lbe IU""' brakes used • ,., ............ ,,DA ILY PILOT, P.O.••• 1560, c .. ,. ...... C.. tU26 • * Sl1 ·l>200 * ml a. Cl<.'1 n loa~. $3600 ·1----i.L+.l""1 an ad! Don't de , , • C!11llt~ flll' TDda)'\11 tJvlnic • }o"llEF:! Friendly ex·ml:llf' 20 m1 •73' p;~'tet ~'"7-'f1!1R -ww7 Pl 'c~ . . l51)j!auUfiir pntte.rrus. 50c. f'llL Plf'nY tnkr hln1 or I · ~ · "" ,,., ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I 0;11Y P1tclt\r11nl Ad' Nn't .)() um~r. · t. ···············--·-· lo~ 11 lrns<'. 64:>-3952. CLASSlfo"JED will Sl'll It! "·----------------------------_.: \~l\:1tln11 1:11lnrt.' N,.~r1 !\"Pad"! Place an Mi' I • { -----------• <JO DAILY PILOT Thursday, Junt 21, 1973 'I -..... 1§1 1 -· .. l§J l _ ..... J§l 1 ··~·«-l§J I _.., .. l§J l .. w. ..... 1~1 .......... l§J ! ........... l§J I -·-1§1 ~--~,;~--~·~,~~~ Rec,..t lon•I Vehic.le1 956 Gl\1C J hnni.y 4whl drive, '72. ~\ill pv.'l', olr, :i.ulo, dt'.'lux int, an1lfm. fil'e rack, $1.250. &12-3103 Spor t.s. ~ace, i<ods 959 SflELBY '67 C1' 500 SO~I 1'-11. 4 speed $1500 UOK J31 Pri. Ply t7141 646-7925 Trucks 962 '73 CHEY % SHORTIE DEMO $4795 ~AVE $1500 of! Ne\v Price Custonl \\lindows, Radio. Spanish Gold, Air condition- ing, Po\\'Cl' Steering, SPEC· 970 Aut .. , Imported 970 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 A u tos. U•ld TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN CAMARO DODGE PINTO .;.V;:.•::.n•:.... _____ .:.963.:: I Autos, lmpotted '11u Autos, Imported' 970 Autos, Imported 990 '72 CHEVY % TON BEAUYILLE SPORT YAN 350 V·8, Auton1a1 1<:, ptr.vcr stecrln;c, fuctory air, 125" \\'heel bftsc.. CLEAN AS A PIN. t21GELGJ. $3395 EXPLORER OF Huntington Beach BMW LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA GOOD SELECTION OF USED BMW's l97Z 2002 1973 BAVARl1\ 197'.! BAVARIA 1971 BAVARIA 19b"9 2500 1969 1600 CREVIER BMW Sales • Service • Leasing 208 \V, 1st St .. Santa Ana 835-3171 CAPRI MAZDA BOB LONGPRE "MAZDA ~~~~~~~~-1---------------,~--1-~~~.-~~~~·1-~~~~~~~~l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;I 5 0 '69 DUNE Jluigy, Gm . MU '6T CAMARO clean, low 17... Anniversary w· E BUY PINTOS Fk body. h~•h motor. mlle ... , llOOG or best offer. m top/side curtains. 714 : .;,64;o:i--:32'c-73;:;·:,,,,~=~--·I SALE 84h7592 '68 CAMARO 327 V8. auto, 557-1975 '71 vw Camper, :<Int eond., air,Jo\v mi .. cleo.n •L9 Dod"e Polara ~~~~~ .... !'!!!!~~! N FM~ttc, O\US! sell Im· * 536-2686 * u '"2 ~ ew Toyotas ~u' 4!23503 8·, .• c,•. IMt OS1ul~Frln.n4: CHEVROLET 4 dr. JtT., A. T., P.S., A.C., ·1,1~il:i.'Ne".r~;110R, ~~:u.tM= ' In Stock o.J.r R & f-L Vinyl lop, )'i."liov,r e:<1l. offer . 962-7859. .- All Models Ready '&1 vw BU< .,50 '73 GMC SPRINT M~FERJ.ONLY .::::::.c-=='~~-1 Beat Price bet. " 646-$40: .;i.. 4 PLYMOUTH For IMMEDIATE Increases! 642--0904 1 ·$577 .00 NOW OPEN Del"tveryl. '66. Best otter ooer $230. $4175 Full Price l ~ l Needs engine over ha u I . -'f\IAlll 111.:f 2001 E. 1st SANTA ANA ft,.,.... 1iN.1 $45-0117 or~ S•ve $1200 lU~ lliUIW ;;s..7871 -W.. WllD vw .66 c._r oery good Executive Demo TOYOTA • "F.asy to Reach'' TOYOTA 1 + oondi.Uon. $1150'. Air condillon.i.ng, Auto Trans, 'I * M zd '73 R t * · 673-90111 Power Steermg, Power Disc '6 7 p~ YMOUTH a~a MONTHary 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '66 vw. Xlnt rood. Must sell. t:~· ~"'.' ~\ue. Bucket -HW'bol', c .M. M~9303 FURY WAGON 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE • 68 T Call after 5 pm. B 8' · pcl poH • Wide '69 PO LARA 9 pass. 'vag., .,_ __ ... JAL TRIJ\I, Auto Trans, V-8, ~350;-camp-ruick, ce-Bo . Carpet Linf!d, Dual Speakers '&r # ll5473 Sl'h.'1575. 18801 Beach Blvd. 8·12·8803 'tUNTINGT'ON---BEAeH-- '72 OODGE \ran, 17,00l miles. V-8, ·3 speed, 11cv.· tires , $3400. 675--08.~. Will accepl trade-ins La d COYO~ 548·57ffi \V~ 1.tres·~l53~, ~ln.t cond., lo\v. n1i., radial V·8, ,radio. JI0\\1il' steering, CALL MR. 1-~RY 842-6666 n rus1er VOLVO BILLI' AR . tu-es, PJS, ra~10, A/C,_hig-ptll\'Cl' brukl.!:>. tVEHU4), -·• -H I D h gage 1·ack, $t3'0. 8'12-84>t. "'680 -un ;-veac -~'.ooo'mn .. ~1Farp· THINK G~CMotor"-oConter FORD GUsr"'A"'F:"s~O~N~~t---I NOW OWN THE MAZDA $2099 tlsl SI. at S.A. Frwy.l . ., FOlm L.T.D. Good ..... Lincoln-Mercury BILL BARRY GMC Motorhome Center <1st St. at S.A. Frv.~) * '71 FORD Chateau V1:1n, 29,000 n1i~ l\-1int condition!! $3800/offer. 675--3590 FABULOUS 1973 BILL MAXEY ECONOMY 2000 E. Isl St., S::u1ta Ana dition, good bo<ly $Hl0 01· 16800 Beach ,11 \Viu•nct• ,. CAP~I TOYOTA 558-1000 best offer. Days 64!)..1031 ltu11tin:,;ton Rt•ru·h \\ tth 2,000 '· cyhndcr '.'' V-6 17331 Beaoh Bl. 84"6666 18881 BEACH BL 847-8555 WHILE WE HAYE 40 '70 CHEVY allcr 5 p.m. 645-67&1. 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544 • 1000 E. 1st-St., Sant4 Ana- -558.1000 '64_ CliEV. __ .Yan, Atwt-FM. Mags: VinyLroo!. Nu eng. lires, trans ~875- engine, ,1vllh or w1Utout. · ·· '6!1 LTD Countl'y Squire SIR. ''Home of the Vikini'' decor group, "'"''·with ""' MERCEDES BENZ HUNTINGTON BEACH • _ _ • CAMARO Wag. G_ood ~d. Rack, P/S, I •iiOiiiii .... Oiiii~iiii~I '70 CUDA '63 CORVAIR VAN runs ~ $35-0. 642-6351 ~l 01· landau top, power '72 CORONA MARK 11 NEW YOLYOS-IN~ \ 1.1a<led, lo niilertgC, (6VSBEU) t~~J~. Disc brks. $l495. d1se brakes, style st~l 50 USED 4 Dr Sedan, Auto Trans, Air • $2699 1;::'-"==..::::•:<:ys".:.-----\vhecl, radial til·es, bucket . -Cond, (Ser #0556). '67 GALAXIE 500, landau Wp r'\uto & air. Must sell. seats. ORDER YOURS MERCEDES DEMO STOCK 54M. V·S. nuto 1'""'· """ 2 $2150 557.1975 Aut.o ,Leasing 964 '72 CHEVY • LEASE • PICKUP '73 PontiRc Granville Sedan 6 cylinder engine, automatic , 30 1'!16· at $13.5" per n10. u·ansnllss'on radio ""'-•·er TI Lincoln Continental Sedan. . 1 • • b,::,::._ 24 mo. at $139. IX'r mo. st~ring, pcl\\·cr 'jU\""· '7:1 Torino 2 dr. h.t 24 1no. at (95567L). $69. ~· 1no. $3589 The /cfbOve a.II ha\1C po\\·er GUSTAFSON '&,~;;; c"""' c,,· Lea';"g Lincoln-Mercury 545.2182. artel' 5 pm & \l'knds, 673-8269. 16800 Beach at \Varncl' Autos Wanted 968 !>lOW. $"'899 • 1vks ago. $750. 645--0:lK> GUSTAFSON GN DISPl.A y -"" ---- . e1-uce -. . . Sharp New Car 'n L . l·i::g Cl·IE.V I al '72 GRAND Torino, 8,000 Lincoln-Mercury 16800 Beach at \Varner Huntington Beach 8424844 * (213) 592.5544 i'Home of the Viking'' DATSUN Trade-ins 811111 81~• " : tnp 8 1 custoni n1i's, an1/fn1 stert'O. a/c, - WA CUl'IG hun:l!.op tpe. ~50 \S. po'vc;r p/b, p/s. Best Cond in SC Coming In Every Day YOLYQ steering_. 1'ad10. auton1at1 c $3400. 673-6915. · Ask About Our Unique '72 T ota lrans 111 1.:onsolc, stratol""~~~~c-~~~ Used Mercedes lease oy 'bucket seats, vinyl top, B.F. '72 l\·IAVERICr~. :.!dr. V-8, Plans Celica 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 Goodrich radial ti r cs auto trans, pi s, deluxe int, H 4 $pd, Factory Air Cond, Autos, Uwd 990 644-4687. • pri ply, $1995, ()42-412·1. . OUSe Of -l"'ports ('l53EKR). 'TI CAMARO zzs. AM-FM, 1973 GRAND To1·ino \Vagon, 6862 Manchester, Buena P ark $2699 BUICK lo\v n1ileage, like n c\\'. Pr 10.-:ri,..11, ~'Ul~k &_g<1ugc.~. 7700 on the Santa Ana Frwy pty. Call after 6 p.n1. n11lcs. S:-,99;1 8•1 r-7627 523.7250 BILL MAXEY 17 h A • 557--0329 1963 GAIA'<tE 500, ' '"' Huntington Bl!ach 1424844 * (213) 592•5544 ''Home of the Viking'' JIM SLEMONS TOYOTA t nn1versary '68 CHEV Y Cnp,;ce, Air. hao~top, 390 •I """ t "'""" SALE vinyl roof. $1400. Ci.II car . $195. 96l-IG24. TOP 510's IMPORTS 18881 BEACH BL 847-85.55 \\ttkdnys afl 6 p n1. '70 1'"0RD LTD Brghni , toad- Pickup MERCEDES BENZ HUNTINGTON BEACH 646-l021· ed. vin top, air, Jo n1i. One DOLLAR uo·, AUTHORIZED _ .• 70 Corona '70 Buick Est. ·1p EL CAMINO sis 3'16. o"'""" s261'J. '"'· &1Hl>w ~·--- $SALE $ DATSUNS NEW DEMOS 1973 17tli ~n,n~versary SALE . '69 Ford 112 Ton : 3 sp., VS, camper to p. Ne·w paint. Ready for a triJI. (37j23G ). All Models & Colors to ~IC PI S -P/B. • Pr--PAID SALES & SERVICE ,Wanon · · · · niags. 1 196:1 FORD Fairlane 500, nc'\' Choose Erom. 4 door, auto trans, radio, ~ Party.~ !\lus! sell. 633-2902 tires, xl nt eonlffiule car. IMMEDIATELY' Jim Slemons hearer. Like new. $t295. 9 r.,,., Auto, Fact. A.C., after > pm. $425. 552-007<. I rts Pete's Foreign· Car Senriee -P.S., 1701ESFL 1967 CH~ In1pnla, !-~ORO Galaxy 4 dr. ht. 1FOR ALL mpo 2073 }{arbor, Costa Mesa ONLY hrdtp, orig o~er. Tape Air , 11/s, disc. brake~. Nev• FOREIGN N~:,:i"s':,~,. 642°'373 $2777.00 ~ a/c. "'"t rolld. th-c,. $850. 962-3560 CARS 1973 DATSUNS 833-9300 TRIUMPH .. '71 FORD Oiatcau \1an. . ENTER FROM MaeARTIIUR • · · 'l2 CHEVY, Moote Carlo, 29,000 m L >n"' co"d;tiao!! 1'RAN£____ VnliH! \'invl car·. t ~~c. 19T2 uto Lrans, _ires. Shul'p ~I:. ; I Fu1·y III ('OUJltl, 1.,. , .IO\\'er ,".: air, bll('I\ l>l.'::11, $j7~. 5'10-9-134, 10-5 pn>.c _____ _ ·u;, PLY.\IOU11{ llnrrucudn. G 1')'1, j!ood 11·ork cat·, $400. F.l'CIO, 'j'.~19·1. PONTIAC LEASE DR BUY 'Tl lhru '73 Po11liacs DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2480 llarhur Blv1L, at Fair Dri\'c, C'osia i\lesu 5-16-8017 '66 PONT. Lc '.\la11s-O\\'ned by Airlinf! Pilol, kept same l"ond. a!! plarlC'. Air cond, auto, rad, t·ust paint, new ti res. bt~ck Sis. Ill .~ ntl's. pert in/oul. 9b'2-75&i. ONLY $1777.00 ;t)UA lwri& -TOYOTA .. WE ARE IN ALL MODELS '63 TRIUMPH Spitfire gd. 41"'•"" [•...:1 like flC\ll deluxe-, Beautiful, S3800/offer. 675-3590 1970 MERCEDES Benz 280 IUWA UlllO-must sell. 838--1437 DESPERATE_NEED · IN STOCK SE "" auto I th st"-cond., must see to appr. '6' PC'"rl\C , . ,1 OF GOOD, CLEAN ' ... ., ' ea er, =""'• $550. 963-2162 YOLYO '6j CliEVELLE. sport, 2 dr JEEP a •' ' LA' i. an s B Rwl P/\V, P/S. Stock Broker, auto., 6 cylinder, r/h. $400. ---------Con\'e1·1, ·~:Int l'Onri .. 1nusl FOREIGN CARS A CK IMPORTS n1ust sell. l\.Iakf! offer. bst SC(', sacrilit'I.'! Aft G P11. TOP DOLLAR-? AID 33375 Camino Capistrano 675---7751 VOLKSWAGEN 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 or offr. S-16--4-0l-i '65 NISSEN Patrol. Con1 p. IHS--083·1 FOR OR NOT! San Juan Capistrano PRIV. Party wants 280C or --------'69 BUICK GS 400. Wi fe's '57 CHEVY. 4 dr. VB, Good rebll i\1any Extras. Xlnt -,6-9 -1.-IR_E_B_I~R~D=l c.1t--.-,. 493-.3375 or 831-1375 280SL .70 •71 979-3480 '71 YW car. Beaut· eond. L ow condition. $250. Call 842-0076 eond. $1300 offer. 6:1a-7969. • u Pl\T, ....... J =• l!••bo", c .•r. ••-:9303 Call or-comc~in-10----see-us.---='-"'c:.:..,::..:o=,='--1 . or • or ntll Mak u c AA 297S 61 CHE auto, spo r,y extras. XJn1 .;11}1} <U , " VN· DA~SUN 552=9200 cage. e ouer.,........ . , .VY. Station \\'Ilg, gd. ·LINCOLN n1ai11t. Rc..'ds avnil. $18j(). Pvt ·70 EL CAMINO Supo<' Spo11. NE.WPORT ·M. ;EN~ '66, 2.10 s. bnmw. Westphalia """'PD;,~\ pa11y. 842-43000:.·---- -0 ea11 & caref~JI n1ileage, IMr:ORTS •. 71 Datsun· auto, power, perf in & out, Camper. CADILLAC "-~==~'---1 '61 LlNCOLl'l runs xlnt, '6.~ PONT. caialina. conv .. auto, p/s, p/d1sc braKes. -$22fi0 or-best offer. 53&-fi662. '63 CHEVY II, R/H 1nakc offer. $hu1·11. ~lctalllc turquoi$C, AM=FM, vr/s/Y.'. tin 1 3100 \\'. CQ<!~t H\vy., N.B. p• k -PORSCHE complete with-tent (977DUD) · EL DORADOS $21'.Xl.-•--675-537-7 * 673-5117 • below·blu bk1 $7::.0._4!)9..2128, gta"· fact. ak. For Im· 642·9405 IC up. BILL MA·XEY CHRYS <92 ·m: - med;ate sale. S2200. P..t ply TOP C SH w/Perris Valley Camper I--------14 TO CHOOSE LER MAVERICK ~ · ore. 213:926--4407 or hon1c · A (995CXl) '68 PORSCHE 911, new TOYOTA COUPES.CONVERTIBLES 1---------1--------.,.-'6 I l~ON'l'J,\C Grand Prt~. 714:536-SrJG. for clean late model cars $2699 Konies, ne1v semperils, new 18881 BEACH BL. 847.855.5 ~• -17th Anniversary FOR sale, 1971 LuxW')' Ku bl'l\kL·S, 81-.·ood tires, l 1966 DODGE Van. J\'lodcl A and trucks~, paint, lo miles, amlfm. HUNTINGTON BEACH DE VllLEC Ma\·erick Grabher, \\'/f!'"t.-O\\'ncr, $3:!j. 46-1391 100., VS, air -cond., One Howard Chevrolet BILL MAXEY ~htrouge r fx.~t.' :J_,eo'.o Pe r 1 . '69 VW, 6.000 n1i 's bn new ~ SAL£ tras. Perl. coutl. Bargain ·72 PONTIAC Vt•nlum many O\llner, $850. (below hook), TOYOTA ce==o==-=-=~=--c~-N b •·-4 31 TO CHOOS~ Uecause -of depa.rtW't'. Best -custo.n1 c.xt~11s ;ili: _bklS. Sac. Good condition. 494-00ll. MacA1·1hur and Jamboree '60 356B, runs very good. New eng. cw r,._,,, new tires. COUPES offer. Sll-0833 Leavi ng: !ltAtc 213t.J9'2-:.1334. Ne\\'port Beach 18881 BEA •11· h ,. ood . 1 N t Immac. Cond. $1450 . SEDANS '71 c1..-a.-MERCURY '67 PONTIAC l "m"•>•, l11It '59 CHEVY l~-~ ton. 12" new 833-0555 CH Bl... 8.il 8555 •• c e ins, g in . o rus. 545-8703. '" ,_., .... " .. bed Jo t . rts ~~~.::::::.::::::=----I i.tUNTINGTON BEACH Needs paint, $1500. Take CONVERTIBLES Ne port HT J)O\\'t'r ,air, X1nf 1.-,,nd. J\tu:.1 Xln . PndY ueeBes~ng.-11'!. · \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR older pickup or van as part '69 V\V Bug. A/M radio. 1'1any exceUent colors W • • i\[f"RCURY" •• .,.. •• 1 . sell. $87j . 5:J7-{).105 . . "-~"-\l24co · st ouer. FOR TOP USED CARS '73 2.JO Z. A/C, mags, payment. 496--0285. Green. Xlnt cond. Orig. Choice of interiors A.T., A.C., P.S., A very clean " . 1 " "arquis, l96::. ""PiJN-1'1.AC 'i + .2, i\Iov\n,.. -~ If your rar 1·, ""lr•clean, AI\-1/FJ\1. lime·green, 19,000 ~~---=---O\\'ne r. $1,000 546--0791 Bef. 5 (Cloth & leather) car. t574DLSI. Brougha1n, 2 door, gold, air, ·• --· $46'°~ "A" .,..,.,.4 '73 PCRSHE 914 2 O toad O"d· alt ext1·as s "7 • o l\tust ~II. Best of f el'. '65 GMC 1,ii ton PU. ;c,ooo f rst mi. ,.,.,, .,...,...,.,. -· · -P.M. _ _ F:_acto!)' air cot15Utlo~ ONLY' · " ;;i • 9G2--.-';\b:l. miles. Runs good. $7;xJ, see ~~A1tiER BUlCK 'TI 240Z. blue, auto, mag cd, lrrtm1aculate, \moving '70 VW Sq. Back. Brand new Full power-Choice ot: $-19. 77· -00 6E--807'1--c.c=.=::..,,,~~~---1 64:>-5124 2925 Harbor Blvd. 'vheels, excellent C.'Ondition. causes sa e. G45--35 7 aft 6 tires, air eond, runs super, Stereo AM /FM radio • '6S MONTEGO \\'agon. Looks T ·BIRD -'63--YORD Van. 65;000-ml, ·eosta Mesa 979-2500 557-9043. ,c,,.,p'OmA:::·~~~R~S~~-~ Beaut. inside & out. 833-1087 Cruise control n l • $~;runs good. Ail~.•~ ,0::7 Ne''. pa•'"' & p·,--X'"t •69 DATSUN •10 w· ~ PO CHE, red or.6T:>J!"-U:after._6pm. trunko~ner&more t41l a1Mil ~ ""-~ ,,..,,. '"' 1~1PORTS\VAl\'TED ~ ago~ new w/broughafn, liu t i res , -~ --WIUI engine. Good gas rni, & 0 ...,n"e.County's brak~s & tires, 645--8960 .,,A 1621 or .,, ~27 BAJA Btig, 1300 cc eng, new All inJmmaculate condition 1966 l\fERCURY 4 . do o 1•• tires. Needs good hbme. TOP~$ BUYER anytime. "'"" '"*""" · clutch & brks, gd. tires &: Largest selection ln VOLVO Radio, Good trans. car. S.100. or best offer. 546-2440 BILL MAXEY TOYOTA '59 POriSCHE. collector's body, nds. paint. $525. Orange'County S22>. 673·2319. ·n FORD vs Super Van. 18881 Beach Blv :. FIAT bargain. ~~~em4 , 968-8915. Nabe'5 Cadillac 1993 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 Auto trans. long \\·heel hase, H. Br'\ch Ph. S47·8555 -'70 VW Sundial Camper, AUTHORIZED DEALER MUSTANG CONTINENTAL .GS T·BIRD,-xlnt-cond-.lo-mi. ps, pb, fact air, lilt \\'heel, blk Jealhl'r Int. ~1ust seU $1600. 496-56<Xi. '64 T-BIRD, V·8, nulo, p/s, p/b. air, good transporta- 11011, needs sornc Y.'Ork. Call "' aft 5 pn1 & 1\·knds. 53&-1!168. nu belted tires, clean. \VE 15UY , 69 • S • TOYOTA sunroof, nu engine gd. All 26CXl HARBOR BL 675-7070. TMPORTED AUTOS fiat p1der around $2400. Call 84&-7800 COSTA MESA " '65 CHEV. Van. 6 <'YL eng. BEST PRICES PAID! Roadster i71 TOYOTA MARK II or 4688 Madrid Way, H.B. 540-9100 Open Sunda)' 1972 LI NCOLN Contin('ntal. '70 MUSTANG T-Bllt D '56 Xlnt cond. Steel \''ood paneling, lllag \11heels. De an Lewt·s Import> orange IWDA713) WAGON '68 V\V Bus. w IS afar i 17th A • Fully -·•pped Be au t Must Sel• ~1795 radial tlt'cs & ne\V engine. Clean, runs great. :J!IS-4668 ' Auto Trans. (903CQQJ camper, radials, mag whls, ftftlYersary L'Ond. ~fu~l seiL &12--98::.5: 557-1975 8,12-8836. all 6. 1966 ~::;CM. BILL MAXEY $1999 rad;o, Sl<DS. Catt 83<J..1765 SALE &IH857. '"'"!'!!"'!'!~~'!"~~"I '68 T·BIRD. tonded ead;ars, MUST sell, nu van 011 the TOYOt:A '71 V\V &{·Bk-Be.ige, auto, '&!-LlN_COLN_ ~nvertlb¥.1 -.69 1\-l USTANG, $1695 leathe r inter .. SJ800. f>~9-Al32 \vay, '69 Ford, ElOO. ?i.12 Autos, Imported -970 l88S1 BEACH BL. 847_8555 42,000 mi., Radials. $1595. Good Cond. $·150 or bcSt fully .equip'd, one Owiwr. evc/558M34 days. engine, auto trans., su1>l'r e THE FINEST IN HUNTINGTON BEACH 833.9234 or 499-4091. 69 CAO. EL DORADO oriel'. 64&-6215. Super cond. La &·u n a. * * '63 THUNDERBIRD, van gd. cond, $1795. 540-3566 '69 V\V Bug, auto shilt, t CORVmE 497-1260 aood transportation, $150. E-300 SufK'r Van, '72, 8000 USED IMPORTS e JAGUAR owner. Fresh e ngi n e . Fully equipped, gorgeous car. '67 FORD !'.1ustang, air' ~·1""-80=79.o..o""cc'"'''c..· ---- mi, pis, p tb. paneled, e THE FINEST IN 169 TOYOTA HILUX 54&-n:Jl or 644-7329. (YOl.825). 'i2 VET. l\.1idnog· ht blue, % auto, V-8, ne\v tires. Xln'i VEGA crptetl, w/xtra seat. IMPORT SERVICE •· JAGUAR PICKUP '69 V\V Can1per Poptop :ONLY .~vhite vinyl top, auto, 26,IXXJ , cond. $1050. 673-4574. 968--9515. Do yourself a favor and come Ex. Condition -Extras mi. Xlnt cond. $ 5 2 o o. 67 li-fUSI'ANG, 289 V-3, Xlnt '69 FORD VS, E300 Supel' sec us flrst. Open Tues. !ZVE52'll $2200 * 1)45.5402 $3277.00 64f>-8803.' cond. $90(). WE BUY VEGAS . \ran Camper. P/U trade. and Thurs. !i.! 9, Sat-Sun NEW and USED $1499 V\V '64 Bug, green, clean, ;t) l , COUGAR Call aft 5:30 pm, MS-2336 54a-3215 til 5. XJ radials, n.1. Dependable. -W. t"'4 '68 ?wJUSfANG Vs auto a/c Vans 963 (EUROPEAN AUTO) 2+2 . $375. W.7671. OTA , pwr str & brk' '/h $U5tJ 557-1975 .. _, __ · r.w~--'\ .,_.,__ CONVERTIBLES '69 vw Bug, exlnt con<!., im-JOY 69. COUGAR yellow w/blk. 963--3730 Private Pty. · -'""""""""'""""""~J '73 C t ....,.. \..~ 11:.........::i, ---.-. vutyl top alr cond. auto .~~:;;;;.~~~"-~~ " on empo 210Cl .... berl!IY(J.Co&u+,,_ 645·!•40 . READY TO ROLL maculate, eves 6-9 pm. . R/H clean 53&4U).\ 69 AtUSTANG. Red w/whitf! '7:.l VEGA GT, hatchback, Sportsman 'TI TOYOTA corona Mark 646-1415. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 .68 COUGAR 0 . . 1 vinyl top, p/a, p/b, radials, 19.000 01i. Loode<I, orig II R/H, air cond, new tires. '66 Sqbk, reblt eng., Needs AVAILABLE ~·ocr. Good t'O~~.g ~a~e , V8. Xlnt cond, 675-&'m ' ~~5.s A1nt, !Jest of(cr, CHEV 1 TON YAN ALFA ROMEO 27 mpg. Just overhauled. some body work. $ 5 4 5. •71 2 DOOR olfer. 644-8073 67 MUSTANG Fastback 390, ~-~·------t ~llfanntt~• ll\11t 111~; Al .FA ROMEO Berlina '69. 4 dr, Exe. cond. , S 1 6 0 0 . , $5995 l50 V-S l..iigu na, '19'1-6692 Po\\•er Stl.'ering. Po\\' e l' AUDI , Brakes, Radio, I-feater, Auto· --------- ' Trans. Two-tone Spanish 1972 AUOI, 100LS, auto, 1 Gold, Trim Chocolate Bro1\'n, am/fm stereo. air, nu tires, Sleeps 6, liaul 2 Bikes, lee xlnt rond. :r-.tust sell in1med. Box, S!ove, Pressure \Va1e_r, $.)'695. 546--0Ta4 days, Mag \\'llet>ls 8 Stud. \Vide CS30Cl'--28=75:..:e:.:V.::"::·=---tl--~t--875 by 165, Tires, Se' AUSTIN #ll7192'-1614. BILL BARRY GMC Motorhome Center (tst St. at S.A. rr'Y.·y.) 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana 5..'18-1000 '72 DODGE SURFER VAN AUSTIN Cooper S. Ne"·ly l'eblt. l2T.'1Cc en g I n e, Straight body, xl nt cond. J\'lake offl'r. 6fj--Z213 AUSTIN HEALEY Al-I 3000. 1966, $l966. You'v(' ,'<('en 1hC rest, now see tht• bc!IL Stu. 612-6900 BMW ORANGE COUNTY'S O LDEST 834)..6797 Eves. 6T~7282 days/673--2491 eves. COUPE DE VILLE DODGE ~. spd, best offer. Cnll Autos, New 980 . 72 XJ 6 Ja""•ar. 4 Door '69 CORONA, 4-dr., xlnt. '67 VW Bug. V~ry clean. Blue \\'/blk 1op, p/b, p is, a,11~980. --'--"'----'-:.: TtllQTa l inWI >t\•1 ~ llV.ll .. . ... ' "" ' . '··~. ~ .. Sedan. 25 000 . 1 condition, new tires, R & H. Runs strong. Make offer. Jl/\\', p16-111ay seat, lilt OLDSMOBILE • m 1 es· Must sell ' 846-4332 545-2636. \\'heel, a/c, auio clln1nlc ·~· · l\.11uron. $7.000. Ca 11 · .59 vw · bl 1300 t 1 · -1 u· t 962-2577 or 644-1860, Mr. 1970 TOYOTA , Just re t. . con NJ , en.use con .... , n • Burke •I dr. • , • .. .. • • .. • • . Mark JI Good shape, good tires cd all-around glass, clock, "\Vhite E lephantb:" over. SllOO. , ............. 496--6303 6.12-9144 Ai\-1/rM stereo, \Vhite side· . L'k '68 VW Bus, e•'"•e -m-\\'alls. $3800. firm. \Vest Inc. '68 DODGE running your house? Turn 1 e to Trade? Our Trader's ''&-· .. v 38~ s · h St N B 54" ~·o th · t C h" tt P dt I f t>letr.ly 0~1111. ma"y ,,....... "" ire " · · ..,..,,,... · em 1n o " as ... se arn se co umn is or you! ~ ''"" them thru a Daily Pilol 5 lines, 5 days for $5. Call $1795. 5-~196 SACRIFICE $3795 CORONET classified ad! today ... 642-:i678 -~f!erl a "Part"? Place an ad' '71 <;ad. SOOan de.Ville, fully 2 door, v.s, automatic trans- '71 OLDS TORO NA DO £:m,fS TAR GA'ZEEi<-1'~ A~llS By CLAY lt. POLLAN H v O 'I ,.;.. ' 'J }f. '"" MA•. 2r "'r .our O• ''"'""'Y UUI • Sfl'T JJ.m A.~i 1, J..ccotding fo Iii• Slon. ,· , ~. 6-11-12· To develop messoge for Soturdoy, oc:. ," ~ ..0.00.81 rtodwordscormpondingto numbers 2-g. 1-26 of your Zodiac birth si.gn. .sJ-67-09 l Do 31 Tod 61 Todov 2 MHt 32!1'1 62 T•ffit~ 3 Someone 33 NllO!llOIY 6l Nei:encry ASomt 3AYou MFCI' 5 Sr:welhing 35 Some 65 Yw 6 A. 36 VJ,, 66 Mok• 7 f.,.. 37 Helpt 67 PrOll'lises cqu1pt. Garage kept. Im-ntisskm radio & heater mac~lalc.. Boug~t boat, It pmver 'steering, vfny! top: V-8, . automal1c transmission, \Von t f1! aboard! 1'1r. air conditioning. (:20432&) radio & heater, power steer- Porte:, Lido Shore~ Hotel, 5889 · Ing, power brakes, air con· 617 Liclo Pk:. Dr. NB. ditioning. (142EAZ·). GUSTAFSON $2989 Uncoln-Mercury GUSTAFSON 29,000nti, bl'and nu stl belted 16800 Beach nt Warner Li I M. tires, till whl. am/fin. n/c. J-lunting1011 Hench nco ft• ercury 19TI Eldorado, The best Cadlllo.c color combo ever. coco \V/i.an landau top, p/w. only $5600. 54ft4119 142..8844 e (2ll) 592.5544 ls&x:l Bl'ach nt \Varner days S:»6:00 644-0637. ''H f th v ·kl ,, 1tunt1ng1on Bctich '73 Cpe DeVllle omo 0 e 1 ng 1424844 * (213) 592-5544 call Alt s. 557.9211 17th Anniversary "Homo of tho Viking" '72 CAD tj;C de Ville Stereo, SALE Sa.Jr.s &: Service am/fm, silverw/landau top, OLDSMOBILE I v.s. Autonlfilk:, 101\' 1n1lcage. one O\\rncr, c:.u·1x··1 t'rl and l ~~;~·m;5 "'" 12i i 0 8 ~,_j' 38 Unro...el 68 Ccl~io.,s 9 ln11n1G1• 39 SMuld 69·!>n:ttnpt1r 10 T>. <10 5orne 70 KHA 110.-All.ft 71Tc 12 Stort A2 Be-72 Cool 13 8".t AJ Holf 73 119 IA ()Id AA Tolled ]A 8oclilflg t51Clds A5R"!Uil9 7SWlikk llhr'I"'. xlnt. 494.2906. IMOCI. ...,. ·-.. _ . • .GMC TRUCKS "1'J CADILLAC C<mv. WMte 69 Dodge JlolGra HONDA CARS "'1w'2.~t';R;, ~'l.\Ql'ior. 4 Dr· H.T. UNIVERSITY OLDS '68 ELDORADO all powr A.'r., A.OJI r.s., ltad. :rurq. 2850 Harbor Blvd. EXPLORER OF Huntington ~·-:Jeach • , IS!Ot 8<6cll Blvd. Wo8ll03 • llUNTJNGTON BEACH ' ~ ~ ft5U1l.I ant Ju11· • pbOne ; .oal=l_;•:;•;:'t<Y,._·..:&e..$671.=="--- ( ~ALES.SERVICJ.}.LE.:ASING OV£1{$E.AS DE UVEltY ROY CARVER, Inc. 234 l~. 17th St. CO!rta 1.tr111t s.iG-4444 QUICK CASH THROUGH-A DAIIY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 .. -~ .......... .. , cl'uise 1..'0ntrol.' 59.000 ml: ext., ma cltlng int. CZMM· Coa ta Mesa _, Srro-9640 $26ri0. 551-2305, 492-397\. 738). '67 ctrn.ASS. Good con· 'GS CAO. eonv. white w/Red ONLY dition. Clcnn. Need!! minor leather interior. Ex c . $777.00 c!1glnc work._ S600. Call Cond 979-1907 5a7-GS.';1 bet 6 pn1 alter 6 '71) C~D Q'"vt, perleet cond, 4\8All I •. :.! • es, m~·..:'"''~"~~l:o<Sc,. ,,...,.--- emorald gree", $3 61 5 . -~~o 69 OLDS 0.lta Otstom 61;;-.3183/673--78q IUl.t Roya.I 88. Full power, , ~ leather inter. -A J\1 J FM 7XIO te ADnd. Dellc':!~olfe!. ~E • J.966 Hft.rbol': C.'M..-=G-'IG·9.~f\3 (tet-eo, Jo 1111, Plivalc Party. " C0 • O< U• ' t •W -911SO~-~-:m~~·~~~~ 646-68l'l/871·8850 ~. Put a little "loot" 111 your , ,7 · · SAC!ill"Ic;; \9ii8CAD!LLAC, L~vl>-•ell lbose !Muhl" tor 6l LDSMOBILE LOade<I!: •••• $1795. "IJ\Jckl". Call CJ ... llled 5571t50 64+-1722 &12'!>613. I -1651 16To A60f 76 Yw'~• 17 Poy A7TMt 77~;,,.,., 18 R~ht A8[.-pe•ltnce 78°""'r 19 U:.. All Your 711AMcl11 20w.11 ~Probltmt 80Yw r ::Zl Obltoot~ SI Gulde 81 Ol$!Cll'M;f 22f'robi-52You 82lnt 23 e.11, SJ l\1ltitl 111 Lona 2•0t SC Y04 8AW11h 25 Motttt 55 You !$ A.QO•h~ 26 N>d 56 Yw 86 £nd1 ••.::~~~ v 111,GO %1 °!' !17 Sc>K1ol 87 Fun r- AUi:ll :t..Giwt--= 58 Bo 81 A-111G ..... J.: 29~ !illh'1 ''"'Of'lkr4~J " un:n · 30W111 ~~hot qgn,,il jg~ ./JJoood @Auv,rs~ ()~~J~ ' 7 7 San Clemente Capistrano ~OL. 66, NO. 172, 41SECTIONS, 52 PAGES EDITION - ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Today's Final N.Y. Stocks THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1973 Supreme Court Backs Obscenity Crackdown \VASHlNGTON (AP) -In a 5--4 detennlnlng whether material Is ~e The obscenity decisions involved two decision reversing a decade-long lrend and therefore not protected by the cases from California and one from toward pennissiyeness, the U.S. Supreme--Constitutioo~--~---~--ceorgta.--- Court . gave the states much greater -Tha t juries and courts no longer --'------------ authority today to move against obsceni-need to find that material ls "utterly" FIRST NORTHERN SCHOOL ty. One or the cases on which the decision without redeeming social value before CASE· RULING-Story, Pig• 3 '''aS based invclves Costa Mesa. they declare it obscene. ln an opinlon wrUJen by Chief Jll.!tlei: \Vari:en ~·Burger,~ court held: ..... Local comrriunity standards rather than national standards may be used in In the Costa Mesa case , Marvin Miller Instead, Burger wrote, they may t\•as convicted in Harbor Area Judicial aetennlne whether the wort.!'taten as a-.;-Dlstrict O:lurt in 'Newport-Beach of-mall- whole lacks 'serious literary, artistic, · ing ·flve advirtlsing brochures found to political, Or scientific value." be obscene. Merlcan Excursion 27 Feared Dead • In Plane Crash PUERTO VALLARTA. Mexico (UPI) -Rescue team.s reached the wreckage or a ~1cxican jetliner on the side of a . 1.500-foot mountain today and rePortcd no sign of life among the 27 persoos -14 of .them bcJ ieved to be Americans fl ying from Houston, Texas for a Meilcan \11cation. The DC9 of Aero-Mexico "Wis within sight of the runway at this resorftown' on the Pac ifiC Coast and the pilot w a s chatting with the control to"'·er when the night sky was Oiled with a groat bunt of orange ligh t as the plane hit the-peak and exploded. The pilot's last radio contact with the tO'A'er gave no hint of' trouble ap- proximately 10 minutes _before its scheduled landing time. mountain community. Then disaster. came The wild Pacific coast.al area is almost inaccessible by lane!. A flotilla of 30 to 40 small rescue boats led by a yacht went by sea early today along the coast to a landin& •Ube base of craggy bllllop area and sent rescue teams into the mounlains (See JET CRASH, Pap I) Desert Air Prevailing Along . Coast In the other Cali£ornia case, rwturray Kaplan, proprietor of the Peek-A-Boo Bookstore in Los Angeles, \vas convicted under the state obscenity law of selling a plain-covered, unillustrated book con- taining descriptive material of an ex- plicitly sexual nature. "Hard core" pornography was the target of Burger's opiD.ion. "One can concede tnat the 'sexual revolution'·of recent years may have had useful byproducts in striking layers or prudery from a subject long irralionally kept fi:om_ _needed ventilation," Burger Y.TOIC. "But it does not foilow that no r!'gula· lion or patent ly offensive 'ha rd core' materials is needed or pcnnissible; civilized people do not allow unregulated access to hero in because it is a derivative of medical m o r p h i n e s." Burger COl]tinued in 'the-majority opinion. He· was joined by the three other a~ pointees or President Nixon, J ustices e J-le had repOrted he was descending from 14,000 feet for the landing and the control tower advised him tht wind was calm -Ideal for the landJng in the By JOHN ZALLER Of .. ~ '"'"' ... " oau1 l"ll1t ss.tt PMrw ON EVE OF BREZHNEV VISIT, JEWS STAGE CANl),LELIGHT PROTEST IN SAN CLEMEN·TE . Ne•rlY SOO Demon1tratld Against Soviet Policies on Jews Who 'Wilh to Emigrate · * * * Passenger List For ID-fated Plane Released PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (UPI) -f'ollowing Is list · of crew and passengers reported aboard Aero-Aferico OC-9 which police said crashed and ex· plodcd sooth of here last night: C•PI. C:1t!DS ,,.,Mlnd•t De!1r1i c~lol JOI• Enrl· 011• Ftm1ndo Ong1y1 1!1w1rdn 1 Soni Avll11 1ttw1rd £. C1t!lnl'd1 ,ASIENO•lll llN rdlllt 111 Hws~tn: 1. Otvlcl l urGrtl 2. ESl ... n P11otr!Mfl l . CIWlrlfl lhrrllh•"'• l'Mnti.lrid '· A.ouel 1ur111W1m, wllt S. (Mr'" MVOf!Vitl"O, ltvsti.lnd •· C1rol M1191yero. wilt 1. Neltd J1mll, llv$""nG t. OllMI Jemll, wlft t. Lt!I• J1m!1, I , d4olighl1r lO. Miidred Hiii 11. 0tnl1I Hiiiard, h~blnd 11. SUNNI HUl1rd, wllt ll. G11lllenno Gultrt 1•, Mtt. Clay Porth 1 .. n11,. Ill Moftl"'"11 lS. M1ul"lclo Lffl 16. M~lefll Lt1I, wlfl 11. J!Uln L111. lot! lS. !1:1111 Ml!r11Mt it. 1<4orma Goni11er 70, P1t1kl1 1«111111 21 ,_,., I llOl'ICM'll ~ n. Jou 1or1or11 n . M1rt1rlt1 Bortenl in The Orange Coast C911tinlled on this first day of sununer to.~t' a battle of the titanic air masses, tht Pacific lo\v pressure system versus tbe desert high pressure. As everyone can tell, the desert high .pressure clearly has the upper band IO far. The desert system, centered over Utah, has met the cooler Pacific air at the coastllne and is preventing the cool ocean breezes from penetrating to the swelter· ing inland areas. 1)e batUe itself I! oot unusual , because the two air pressure systems are Jn con· slant competition for dominance of Southern California weather. But oormally at this time of year, the Pacific low pressure system is t?fe dominant force, at least in the coastal areas. The fact of ita defeat this June hu taken many coastal agencies by "surprise. In San Clemente, students are still in achoo!, and were forced to sweat out final exams today as well u the bot weather .. In Newport Beach, a city road widen. ing project has blocked a critical portion of Newport Boulevard during tome of the peak beach traUic loads of the year. And Southern California Edison Com- pany in anticipation of a ~I June, had several of its biggest generating units wound down for routine maintenance. When the heat wave came -tem- (See HEAT WAVE, Pqe !I Tears Se1itH01ne, Too Poor for Ne'w Dress ' 500 Oemente Marchers. Seek Jewish Freedon1 By JOHN VALTERZA Of ftle DlllY Plltl SI"' Nearly 500 persons ·demanding that Russia free its Jews marched lo an area Dear -the Western White 'House in San - Clemente Wednesday. The peaceful 0demonsllj_ti0n sponsored by the Southern CaliforU1a Council for Soviet Jews involved in a candleJight pro- cessk>n followed by a rally aod~8 pelitioo presentation to Secre_t Service ageols at the COll\pound gate, The a p.m. display of dissatisfaction with the restriction against emigra tion by Soviet Jews in· Russia took place about two blocks from the gate to the enclave. Speaken ~ted'the need for · Am ericans to suppart the campaign· to· lift the immtSratkm rei trtctiOos. "Soviet Jews wanL. solidarity : _ .. they ,\·ant demonstrations from the people of the United States," sakl council Executive Director Zev Yarollavlky. •'Jf Soviet Communist Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev is here {be. arrives Friday) and t.othing happened, he'll think it doesn't raatter," he added. The top raokin& oCflcL&l plans to arrive at the presidential compound late,,Ftlda y and remain lhrough Sunday. · The group wblch man:l!Od in opposition to him Wednesday is planning a repeat trip sometime during the Brezhnev stay, CLIFTON, Ariz. ( AP) -A teen·age girl whooe parents said they spo~~·~h!"~i1y WOdnesday the group were too poor to buy her a new dress was sent home in tears from heard a member read from a letter sent her eighth grade graquation ceremony because iler clothing did not by an Imprisoned Soviet Jew. then, arter conform with school rules. , singing and chanting the group fil<d past School prfncipal Billy C. McDowell said Wednesday that he had 8 petltloo table and each member signed no alternative but to send the girl home because students "bad been 8 copy of the petition whl~h was given their Instructions long before the gnduatlon. lo Isolate 'hard core• pornography rrom "I felt a girl who did not abide by the ,requlred dress should not p,..,.oted 1o White House security aides. participate.'' The full signed version. spokesman The parents of IS·year-old Eleanor Stacy said their daughter said, would be oenl to the White House at • • • " ' was ordered to leave her class mates May 30. They said she was told a laler date._ she could not march in the graduation ceremony of Clitton Elemen· The document urges Nixon to "end the ewiut ,11t1 '"" ,,... ' tary School because her· yellow.fiowered dress had not been ap-dlacredited and unnecessory 1Ubter£uge· CANDLE POWER ' proved by school o!flcials beforehand, or behind·thc·scenes nego tiations and Jows In Prol11t "We're kind of poor rig ht now ," sald Ed S\acy. a carIJenler. •pe•k,, out openly in behalf ol Soviet L "Our fin ances have been a HlUe tight We couldn t alford to buy a Je~ 0 1 tat tha t Nix , 11 •cc dress " · -'-• 11\J pre ton s des ,~n 1 s ~!.'. • ~krupt. aociety until a ·unless its · ' k be! th I I bo-d J 4 ,--'embirra,.., an upsets "'· I d d · r I .Stacy said he too the matter . ore e sc 100 ar une "We urg you to tCll ~tr Brezhnev that ea ert ec1de to penn1t rce· em gra- but "they treated It as a joke. more tha11 anyth(ng." the United• States will nOi support the lion of t h o s o who wish to leave," economy of an oppresslvc ond moralry the petition continued. ' • Saddleback V nit ·Expresses Alarm Over Expansion · By JAN WORTH Of t1tt C.11'1' Plitt lletf Talk of expanded Spheres of influence by Laguna Beach and San Juan Capistrano dre'v an alanned reaction from the Saddleback Arca Coordinating Council \Vednesday night. Terming proposed expansions by the two cittes "serious inrringcmen ts," SACC president Bart Spendlove, recently ap- •pointed to the Orange County Planning Commiss ion, said "This may lead to the biggest fight we've seen in the Sad· dleback Valley." The Laguna Beach city council \'Oted \Vcdnesday night to apply to the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) for an extension of its sphere of influence to include parts of Laguna Hills aod the 10,000 acre-h-1oulton RBncb. These boun- daries roughly follow the Laguna \Val ershed. San Juan Ca pistrano has proposed an extension whic h in its most aggressive form could include all of hfission Viejo. A sphere of influence !or the Sad- dleback Valley crealed by SACC has received unofficial approval from the Local Agency Fonnation Commission (LAFC), but non -city entities have no of- fic ial po\ver. SACC members recently wrote a letter to LAFC asking that a precedent be set on allowing unincorporated areas to have a "holdi ng sphere ." This would tide over the Valley pending activation o( a proposed municlpnl nd- vi,.ry council (MAC), . SACC milmbers are hopeful that once the MAC~ an elected advisory council to the counly, ls set up, LAFC "'ill grant its S'phcre of lnlluence officlal status sinlil ar to that granttd cities. · "'lbls la just a word or warning." Spendlove ·told SACC. "\Ve· "ill have to ra lly a lot or support -lood nl1d long. We'd beltcr be preparOd to g<t busy." A sphere of 1nnuence is a hol ding nc· lion to keep other local government units out. IIarry A. Blac km un, Lewis F. Powell Jr. 'and \Villiam II. Re hnquist , and veteran court membe r Byron R. \Vhite . Burger noted that for the first time since the court declared obscenity to be beyond the µrotec tion of the _First Amendment in 1957, "a majority ol this court has agreed on concrete guidelines expression protected by the Fint Amendment.'' Critics of a standard based on local (See OBSCENITY, Page %) Worl\:ers Accept 7.5% Wage Hike San C\emente'3 police and lifeguard personnel -represented by their lawyer -lost a major bid for new fringe benefits before city councilmen Wed- nesday, coming away 'A'ith a 7.$-percent increase in wages which had been ham- mered out in a contract a year ago. The action by city councilmen came after sometimes scathing debate ~ween Santa Ann lawyer stephen Silver and councilmen Jed by Thomas O'Keefe, himself a Jawyer. The issue -one which has not been resolved despite heavy bargaining and mediation -was the request that the ci- ty pay half the cost of healt·h insurance premiums for officers' famtlles. " The package which councilmen a~ proved with one dissenting vote -that of Dr. Wade Lower -was a down-the-line approval of 11 program which City Manager KeMeth Carr recommended. ll includes the 7.5 percent increa!le which is related to last year's negotia- tions when a two-year wagt: package WM approved. The city also will pic~up a 22-percent Increase in the health premium for employes only. Four detectives will have thei\ 42-hour v.·or k week pared down to 40 hours withou t a loss in pay. And a committee will be set up to sur vey the chances for changing health , insurance carriers neXt ~ar in an effort to bring premiums dawn. Silver, . who launched a barrage of argwnenls in favor of the fringe benefits related to health insurance, sporred most often with O'Keefe. The COWlCilman insisted that the re- quests for the benefits "surprised and shocked me" because he believed the 7.~ percent increase was enough: • Silver asked specifically that the coun- cil give its reasons for refusing to con- sider the added benefits. But despite repeated demands for a ra· tiooale from councilmen, he obtained none. No disc ussion of the city's fiscal con- dition accompanied Wednesday's deba te either. "They've never told us they can't af- ford what we've asked. "The whole package of benefits wouldn't cost them more than about $20,000," Silver said, Visibly angry after councilmen voted, (See WAGE WKE, Pap Z) Orange Coast Weatller lt's going to be blistering bot in inland portions oC Orange County Friday. but slightly cooler right along the coast. Highs in 1he 80s at the beaches rising to l08 de- grees in santa Ana. Low:1 in the upper 60s. INSIDE TODAY Nixon campaign aide. Fred· erick C. LaRue has den t c d wrongdoing in co1u1ectfon witl~ cleali'ngs wl tl' a now-txn1k-rupt hou~b1g firm. See story, Page 13. 1.,M, ••~II ' MaYI• ... ,, (1111 ... 1111 " Mliliv.f "~-.. CMnlllH "-:! ,,..,..., ,...., •• (t l!llu o, ..... (..ty .. , .... _ ,, SYIYlt Ptner " Del lll Ntllc .. ll ·-..... lllltorllJ , ... • S'9di ..,..._ ,..,, E~tfflllllfMflf ,.,, T_ .. • Pl1111Kt ,.,, T ....... .... Ftr 1111 I Ktrll ll w-• -·-" .,_., ,._ l1"1 AM l l .... '11 " -·-.. ' l -- 2 DAILY PILOT SC "ThurU!ay, Junt 21, 197.3 .===========::.,---::Claaages E1ed '\ f· .. • .. Several Ba1iks Up Pri1n e Rate NEW YORK <UPI\ -Several more banks today aMounced a boost in their prime lending rate to 7~~ percent. The current round of quarter point increases started ~fo~y with a move by tt\e _First Natio al Bank o( Chicago. \Vednesd , Girard Bank of P.hllodelphia fo\\ot' ed suit. The latest banks to move thei r irate to 7~• percent were Chemical Bank and Marine Midland Bank , both of New York, and Harris Tru st and Savings Bank of Chicago. "L-------------· :. Pa11el Delays • . , Condoniiniuni :· Consideratiori A hearing on Fairway Seaviews Com· ... pany request to build 60 condomi niu m .·-uruts in San C1emente \\'as postponed un· .'• tll July 18 by_ State . Coastal Zoo_e_ -Conservation Commissioners Wednesday ' in Torrance. The delay came at the suggestion of "•Fairway and Great Oak Managen1ent Company representatives. \\'ho said they ,i ' baJ new information which \\'OUld war· rant an appeal. . 1beir request for an exemption fron1 ne.w controls of Proposition 20, the coastline initiative, was den ied by the South Coast Regional Zone Conservation Commission. They then appealed that to the state commission. At first, state eommissionen weren't going to hear the appeal. Executive Director Joseph Bodovitz said the developers had raised "no substanti al isi:ais" iIKl the regional decision·sbould stand. The developers argued they have ne\v information about the project at 2501 S. -·· E~amino Real and \\'Oil the extension. \' BUilding permits on the project wer_e · obtairJ~ Jan .5, 1973, long after Proposi- tion 20 became la w Nov. 8. Ott-site construction. a n o t h e r re· -~:~quirelfl~llt to obtain an exemption , a_lso ' began in January , after the effec uve ~ ... date. .. Funeral Services .. Held For Two ·''Accident Victims Funeral services were held Wednesday for a 19-year-old Costa Mesa man and a 17-year-old S~n Juan Capistrano girl kill· ed last weekend in an automobile ac- . · cident near Ensenada. Buried at EI Toro Cemetery "'ere Robert RObertson, • College Ave., Costa Mesa and Rona McLaughlin, 30888 . De La Vista, San Juan Capistrano. Both died "'hen the car overturned and crashed into a hillside on the road rrom Ti juana to Ensenada late Saturday. The driver of the car, Danny Becker, 18, of 17219 Santa Barbara St., Fowitain Valley, aod Shannon McLa.ughlin, 18, also of San Juan Capistrano, were injured in the accident. Miss McLaughlin, sister oC the dead teenager, is undergoing treatment at San Cleme.nte General Hospital for a broken jaw and dislocated hip. Becker, a professional motorcycle racer, was reported to be recovering . from facial cuts and other injuries at . home. 1 Robertson is survived by his mother, , Jo Anne Robertson, of Costa 1'-Iesa, and · his fa ther, John, of North Hollywood. ' Rooa lt1cLaughlin, a senior -at San ; Clemente High School, is survived by her I parents , Mr. aild Mrs. Phi 1 i p : McLaughlin. San Juan Capistrano; two r brothers, Phillip and Matthew of Costa ! Mesa; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. L. • M. McLeod, Phoenix, and Mrs. Virginia " Wiatt, Anchorage, and Charles Revello, ~ Los Angeles. OIA ... I COAST IC DAILY PILOT .. TIM Ot'8f!CMI C0.11 OAILY PILOT, wllll Wf\IC:l'I i. C9ft'IOlnld "'-News;Prtt•, Is "1t>U1llN . ty ..,. Ot'•llOe co..i Pll!l111111111 com..-"'· ie.,. r•ll •1t1ent ••• ""'°""'*'· ~r """"'" l'rfll•Y· IOI' Co.It Mnt. H-.,ort •Nd!, H11ntl1111e" l eacltlill"-1-ln Vt!lty, L~llM a.tdl. lrvl!>tfStddlftt.ctt Md S." C'-'>!tf hi! iJtfl C.plt11-, A •1111111 "flefyl •Ilion It ll\llllialHld S.twPrt and S~•rt, TIM lll"IN:IHI P\IDllfl'llnlll pi.M It 11 llO Wnt ••r l trNI, C..lt Mnt; C1Hf11mr1, '2,M, , • • • ,. . ' ' • Jlebtrt N. Wtff Prn ld1o111 •1111 l'lolCl!1111tr J1ck Jt. Ci.rrl1v Vk.t ~rttlcltr!I ll'ld G•fllrt J Mt'lfO« Th'""'' Ktt•il l dlMr Th o111111 A. M11tphi11t Mt,..1"'9 lhll'Ot Charl tt H. Laot Al9'1r4 r. N1U •. ·-AiilP1nt Mt fltelnf Ell'110>1 S. Cle•••••\OHIM J OI N•rth El C1 1111h•• A11I, t2fl1~ --"''• Mftt l i:io WHI II• $111" .,....,, k«f!i: ~ ....... " ...,, .... ,, ....... ,,.. IM(fl; "'" .ffdil tovlf'I•~ U.-htcft; 22:f flor"I A- , ..... 111 t71•• 64J-4lJI Cf1111fW A4Ntfl .. "42·1671 S. C...... Al ... & 1J1a1t11 ''' FJf I 11 4fl.44JI c-......... ,,,,, ~ °"'" lt'*lltflll!ll ~. .._ """ ,,., ... , 1nuair.ii..., ......... .-....... .... .,_..IM!Nroh """"' ""1 ... • ,. ...... WI"'°"' ._._, Hr· ................. ...,...,. ...... dMt fl9'1fff ... Id tf COtll MtN, ea ...... 1111. ""*"1111i. i. d""' u.u ~J .., -II U,lf ,,..,.Wilt'/ !ttUINir)' ........,...,_, .... l\"IOl'lffll'I". Clemente Budget Session S-Iated . ' A final special session d e a I i n g specifically with the San Clemeyite city budget has been scheduled for Friday of nex t v.•eek and several major additions to the document are contemplated, Councilmen \Vednesday took another survey of a list of budget changes and agreed to keep $150,000 in "'ater fund reserves in the docwnent to pay for a water filteration system. A $23,000 allocation for 3 consultant survey or tra ffic and parking also re- nia ined i11 the tentative budget. Parks items affecting Linda Lane and Bonita Canyon Park remained as'well. Councilmen agr~d to set aside 000 for BOn:1 a. anyon Mpifii t t county grant funds from revenue :sharing might match that dmount. Smaller projected additions . to the . . From Pqe I HEAT WAVE • • budget fared more poorly before the council. The panel agreed to delete a $12,000 proposal for an extra em ploye on the city manager's office. They &l!IO cut several travel·and· !raining accounts by a few hundred dollars apiece and decided-to forget an allocation for a Jelevision system to serve the sanitation cre\\'S. The ap- paratus, which has often appeared and been deleted in recent years' budgets, would have allowed city crews lo inspect sewer lines by remote control. A final version of the balanced docu· .u:alllng:!OCJlO increase in Ju r.a .. !f: '}--1 is due in advance of next Friday's special session :starting at 7:30 a.m. The document will show about $4.8 .million in expenaes next .fiscal year with the tax rate proposed to stay at $1.55 per flQO of -assessed valuaUon . Jurors Express UPI TtltPflolo peratures in some inland sections of Orange County soa red to Jl3 degrees Wednesday -everyone turned up their air cond iliooers and the company was in trouble. Co1icer1i Over Data Solutio1i MRS. RONALD REAGAN EMBRACES FORMER POW, AIR FORCE CAPT. THOMAS HANTON Another Former Prisoner, M/Sgt. James Gough, looks on at POW Reception Reserve margins fell lo just three per- cent as Edi son se~ a new peak power de- mand record -9.815 miJUon kilowatts. The Orange County Gra nd Jury v.•ants "We really were surprised," confessed the Board of Supervisors to take another an Edison spokesman. "It's supposed to look at a solution to the county's data be cool and foggy this time of year." services problem. J. Sherman DeMy of HWltington Supervisors Wednesday accepted in Beach, an amateur meteorologist, ea:-concept the hiring of a computer rum to .. l\arate Expert Relates Demise of Hu~ed Hoodlu1n El Toro CazJtllin Steven Hanso1i. Declared Kille<l plained the situation this' way : handle the data processing, as suggested "The high pressure desert system ls by County AdministraUve Officer Robert completely-minating-·the-weatern---Thomas....(l!ee~ated alol'y,-l'age-10)--~--By ARTHUR R. VRiSEL_ United States. Right now, It's meeting Severa} hours after the board's 3 to 2 01 "" Dfillr '"" •t•ff the Pacific air light along the coastline, vote, Grand Jury Foreman Marcia Bents Born to conservative parents in Allan· . and it won't let any of that Pacific air of Newport Beach released a letter ta, Ga., r:aised in a rigid, fundamentalist get inland." stating the jury if "most concerned" faith and testifying in a precise, almost The standoff between the two air about Thomas' repart . systems causes a further complication, 'ft)e j~ry is as1?ng for verification of prissy tone, he does not res~mble a hired Denny says. In pushing up against one Thomas evaluations and for furthe r hoodlum . another, the air pressure is raised -in study of alternatives by a new blue-rtb-He bdinks his eyes and purses his thin the sense-tbat-alr is compressed -and bon-committee of experU. Ups on the witnesSstand. this causes a further rise in temperature. Mrs. Bents · complained that the jury He parts his fine hair down the middlP. "It usually takes until September was ·~wiable to obtain adequate in· r before the desef\ air is strong enough to formation and was denied access to a .Gary Michael Rollo, six feet, four in· bring this kind of heat," Denny says. closed-door meeting on the matter." cbes tall. 235 pounds and wiUt a black The last time a similar situation oc-Tbomas recommended the county oxt-~It degree in karate, re-lived in court curred was on Jwie 17, 1957, according to sider bids in two weeks from two com-Wednesda y the night his world o{ illegal Denny's records. At lhat time, the desert puter ~rvice companies, Computer intrigue crashed down around his ears. air was so strong that it pushed right Sciences Corp. and Electronic Data through the Pacific front, creating a ~ Sy1tem1. He contended either would be ta Ana wind condition a:s it went. superior lo the county'• Data Services · That pushed the merC\D'Y up to 99 Department. degrees. Denny said it was 88 in Hun-Mrs. Bents abo said *1ae jury had tington Beach Wednesday. thought.Thomas' Rport and the findings The hot weather.was producing several by the bJ1,1~bbon panel of independent unusual sltuationS. In San Clemente, computer e~rt.s would be in ap-eement police reparted a high incidence of rat· and contended they weren 't. tlesnakes driven out of the hills to &eek The Grand Jury letter was filed with shelter in cooler residential areas. the board. Jn Laguna Beach, lifeguards reported a high incidence of nude sunbathera:. And ih Newport Beach, water:.. tem- peratures were driven up to a new rec'Ord high , 73 .5 degrees. The old record was 71 degrees, set an J.une 30, 1931 . If the sun's heat was causing an energy crisis for Edisqn c.om'pany, it wa4 oot doing so for the oorthern hemisphere of the earth. Today is the longest day of the year, with the sun rising at 5: 42 a.m. and not settin.8'. until 8:07 p.m. "There may be an energy shortage but not as far as the slDl's rays are con· cerned today," said Ji m Seevers, assis-- tant astronomer at the A d l e r Planet arium in Chi cago. "The rays are stri king the northern hemisphere mor e vertically now and delivering more solar energy per square foot." The seasons are determined by the position of the earth in its yearly path around the sun . OBSCENITY. • • community attitudes have complained that it would requiie publisPers, motion picture producers and others to produce material that would meet the standards of the nation's most prudish community. In his opinion, Burger offered theae specific guidelines for juries and judges to use when trying to determine what is obscene : Housing Tracts To Be Discussed By Airport Unit Residential tracts in Irvine1 Dana Point and Mission Viejo .will be discussM. at 7:30 tonight by Airport Land Use Com· mmissioners. 1'he meeting is in the hearing room at 400 Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana. 1be commission is an advisory panel to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Developments near Orange County Airport dre referred to it fo r comment. Tonight's agenda includes an en- vironmental impact report on Turtle Rock Planned Community in Irvine; an industrial developro<>nt at Von Ka nnan and Main Stree~:!I in Irvine; con- dominium s proposed on the Street of the Blue Lantern in Dana Point : request to build a private school at Alicia Parkway near Jeronimo in Mission Viejo; and residential develop ments in Aegean Hills, Rossmoor Leisure World, in Laguna Hills. "'~ Qne bo.ur o.f _the_ -12-hour recorded_in7 terrogatlon by District Attorney's in- vestigators '"as played at a prelinlinary hearing for l-"'ul/erton attorney Michael ·fC Re1nington. the former Ne\\rport Beach"resident accused by authorities of hiring Rollo to carry out murder con· tracts. Hollo. a big kid with big ambitions, had jus·1 beCn arreslf"d \'.'hC'n the tape was made and has since pleaded guilty to soliciting for murder.~ "You're a littie fisfi-1n !h is \1·hole th ing . .. you 're a little. 20-yea r-old boy who· \>/anted to play big time," said the recorded voice of in vestigator Jim Daugherty. The tape characterized Rollo as a col- orless kid who bragged of alleged gangland connections, d r i v i n g a ~1ercedes-Benz. taking a trip to Portugal on a n1oment 's notice and paying off laY.'men to ge t underlings out of jail. None of it "'°as true. Flis first . and only prtor arrest was a child stealing rap brough t by his juvenile girlfriend's parents and resulting in pro- bat ion and a court order for the pair not to associate. Rollo is no1v testifying against Rem- ington, as inept would-be assassins Bobby Joe ''B .J." Hart, Chuck Hulett and Charles Barnes testified earlier against him . The prq.5eCUtion witness looked across the courtroom occasionally at Remington a.c:. the tape played. "You're in deep deep trouble, little iiiii•I." Daugherty \varned the bulky youth as he I; id Rollo·:; grim situation on the line. . "I thi nk you were taken in by some fa st-talkers," Daugherty continued. · "They are going to do to you just what you did to B.J .. " added' the investigator noting that t~ lo1v man on totem pole is always expendable. "When you're rotting in jail and being tried and going to state pri son. they'll be out getting more guys like you. Marin e Corps Cilpt. Stephen Hanson of El Tor0,-1istea as'-miSSirig sTnCe his helicopter was shot dO\\'n over Laos 1in 196i , has been declared killed in action . The Pcnta;:on ha:; inforn1cd Ha nson's 1\·ifc. Carole, or 2~112 Birdrock JJrive. El Turo. thut it interviev.·cd a helicoplt'r pil ot 1\'ho s11w •lanS-On's crart crash and said there v.•as co char.Cl' he Jived. The pilo! intcr\'.iC-1"<ed \1'as 011c of thf' rctui·n in g µrisont•rs of 1\:lr 1PO\V 1, but "·ns not idc11tific<l. i\·lrs . •lanson ha s been active in Na· lional League of Families of PO\Vs and r..t lAs lffiissing in ae1ion 1 in Southeast Asia. As past president of the group, she made many cross-cowitry and in· temational trips, seeking inforn1 ation and making speeches about her husband and other servi cemen. ' She visited with Prcsiaent Nixon, India's Indira Ghandi, Pope Paul and governmenl officia ls in Laos. Victl1am, Tokyo, Russia. St o ck h o t m and Washington.-DC. Gov. Rona ld l<~:i~·1n \\.'Orl' a sil ~·er POW bracelet bearing 1-lanson 's 111Jn1e for more than tv.·o years. ..- Nancy Reagan placed fler husband's bracelet In a display case at the Capitol building in Sacramento Wednesday. ~irS. Hanson, whose son, Todd, has never seen his father, had told lteagan thal her husband is now offic.ially dead. lie was shot dO\\'n June 2. 1967 "'hilo his helicopter "·as on a 1ncdjcal cl'acua- tion mission. The Hansons "'ere married Feb. 21. 1962 and live d at first at the El Toro ~farine Cor ps Air Station, "'here he was based. She. 33. is a former teache r in the San Joaquin School District. The captain first shipped out to Viet- na m Sept. 7. 1966, only JO days before Todd was born. ?vlrs. Hanson thought Todd was too young at about three months to go \\'ith her in Jan .. 1967 to Hawaii to-sec Hanson, for \Vhat turned out to be the last time. Earthlings do not feel the earth's orbital speed of about 18Y.i: miles-a-se· cond, bu t they do notice the sun ap- parently changing its PoSition in the sky from season to season. "The basic guidellnes ... must be: (a) whether 'the average person, applying cootem)Xlrary convnunity standards' would find lhat the .work, taken as a whole, appeals to tbe'purient interest ... (b) whether the work depict• or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law and (c) whether the \\"Ork, taken-as a whole, lacks serious Uterary, artistic, political or scientific value." r--------------~--------------, ; Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators-for Less Than 1>ult(a,f>; Technically, this means that at the sum- mer solstice the noon sun reaches an altitude of about 72 degrees above the southern horizon. By comparison, at the winter solstice -Dec. 21 -the· slUl peeks only 24 degrees over the horizon -and that is when persons shoveli ng snow realize the sun's ene rgy shortage. .floOm Pflfle I WAGE HIKE • • Silver leveled a blast at O'Keefe. "I'd like you reporters to ask Mr. O'Keele what he makes every yt!ar as a lawyer, then ask him if he'd be willlng to do police work and Jay his life on the line for Jess than $10,000 a year/' he said . During the discussions in sweltering council chambers Silver asserted that some officers earn so little pay that they would qualify for food stamps and \relfare. "They 're too proud to accept it," the Jaywer said. Carr replied tha t under the new package no mnn on the force would be earning lesa than $10,000 " year. But Silver was adamant and em· phasized that , the raise 1n pa y notwithstanding, the local force sUll would be at tho bottom of a county pay survey. "It's pitiful," Sliver said. Although ncgotlatlona have broken down completely and tl/e city bu octed on th~ wage Issue, Silver declared that the battle is not over. "We're planning to continue to fight for these benefits. 1·1 \l.'on '1 say whal lt is yet. but we are planning further action," he said. The sweeping deeislon came in ooe of a number of obscenity cases that have been pending before the high coort. Burger chose as a vehicle for his major pronouncements a California cue in which Marvin Miller was convicted under a state law of mailing unsolicited sex- ually explicit materials. Burger's opinion greatly bolsters the authority of local prosecutors in moving againlt pornography. They n e e d M longer grapple with the concept of a n.a· tional standard on :sexual candor, but may rely on the reactions of local juries. ln a case involving rums shovm at an "aduJt theater" in Georgia, the majority rejected the notlmt that pornography IC· quires constitutional protection when It Js displayed for consenting adult! only. Front P .. e I JET CRASH • • • to searcl! for the wreckage. A pauenfer list lasued bY. the Aer<> Mexko airline indlc1ted that at leut 14 Americans boarded.the plane 11 Houa1on, but the list wu incomplete and the eract number o fAmtrlcans am o n a the 23 passengers aboard was not kno~. Two of the Amerlcona were ldenUlled •• Daniel Hlllard and his wife SUunna of Houston. They had ...,t their two children to summer camp and were · going to .Me1IOQ. for a ·!_A~tion at Puerto Vallarta. Hilliard, about 38. W8' the of· fice manager of Zytron Corp., a microfilm product. company. Another -ger wu Iden tified as Mildred T. Hall, a Houston widow ln her mld-50s. · She wa s an Insurance un· derwriler en route to a vacaJlon In Mex- ico. •• I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I ' I I I Wiu.t -.ning n, Door 23.5 Cu •. Ft. AMERICANA REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • Ice bin stores ·10 Iba .. about 260 cubes; automatic lcemaker re-' place• ice 11 you use It. • Freezer holds up to 297 lbs . . • Convertible 7·Day Meet Keeper. • Adjustable, tempered' gl111 shelves. • Rolla out. on wheels for eeay clean Ing. • No defrosting ever TFF·24RP WE TAKE TRADl·INS 'Author1J4d GE S!ORVfC& Mtmhtr of Ca1lfornla'1 L1rgett -Cooporotlv• Buylnt "' Group_Wllh The Volume · luyln• Power of 110 Storts Phone 5481788_ 90 DAY CASH WIYH .,,.one Cll Dlr I I I I I I I I I I I _______________ .. ....,. I 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown -Costa _Mesa ~-------------- ' .. 1 .. j I I j 1 \ I ' l ' ., - New Dlrector Howard P. Allen, bas been elected to the board of directors 0£ the Irvine Company. He succeeds retiring chairman N. Loyall Mc· Laren. He bas been an executive with South· ern California Ediso_n C-ompany, and is ·a sen· ior vice president. Corporate ' Profits Up In Quarter IV ASHINGTON (UPI) Corporate profits made their biggest jump in h i s t o r y between January and March, the C.Ommerce Department said Th ursday. ' ' . ~ , Thursday, Junt 21, 1973 Dollm· On It's Way Downward LONDON (UPll The dollar inched lower on In· ternational currency markets Thursday. losing most of the small galns It chalked up Wed· nesday. ln Singapore. • w h l c h withdrew its support of the U.S. dollar on Wednesd11y, the Americali currency was worth 2.375 Singapore dollars ... niurs- day, a de facto revaluation of the Singapore dollar of 6.4 per.- cent. Thursday the govern· ment of Malay joined Singapore in withdrawing its support for thl\l dollar. DEALERS S A ID the American cuf.rency nlight be stabilizing in value after two weeks of declines, but the dollar ·o p e n e d fractionaJly .tower Thursday in London, Zurich, Amsterdam, Hong Kong and Singapore . In Ku.ali Lumpur, the foreign exChange 1narket \\'as suspended \vhile government of£icials debated whether to fo l!O\\' Singapore's lead and flo::it the ~"1alaysi'an dolla r. The Singapore d o 1 l a r , floated Wednesday. moved sharply upward T h u r s d a y against the U.S. currency, meaning 'the American dollar lost value. The price was 2.41 Singapore dollars, compared "'ilh '!.53 at the time of the Wednesday anl}OUflcement. • UPI T"""llot• .Jovial Agree11ie1it Soviet tlf1n1ster of Foreign Trade Nikolai S. Pato- lichev {left) shares a laugh with ·rreasury Secretary George Shultz after pair signed an incon1e tax treaty between the lJ.S. and Soviet Union Wednes- day. The treaty \vil l el11n1nate tax d1 scr1mination and encourage trade between the iwo countries. Co11sumer Prices WASHINGTON (AP I Highe r costs for food . clothing The rise in dollar terms was the biggest quarterly increase on record whether measured on a before-tax or arter-ta x IN EU ROPE the. dollar and gasoline pushed consumer dropped .23 percent i n prices up sharply again last Amsterdam, buying 2 . 7 t 4 month, the go v e r n m e ~ t guilders cc.mpared~with -2.7213-reported Thursday.--Th~ at Wednesday'S close. crease wa~ at a ~lightly slower The Frankfurt market was rate than tn Apr il, however. basis, exceeding even the pro- fit spurt in the first quarter of 1971, when the econoqiy~ was rebounding front the effects of a strike against General ~1otorr.- The department updated. figur es it issued last month in a preliminary estimate of first quarter profits. e Wage Baeked closed for a national holiday. The dollar also dropPed in Zurich, buying 3.0·19 Swiss francs compared with 3.062 \V('dncsda) night. In London lhe Brilish pound O!X'ned at $2.-575, fractionally- more expensive than \Vcd- ncsday's $2.57375 closing price. THE LABOR Department's Bureau of Labor Statistics reported the rise in the cost of living in ~1ay at six-tenths of one percent. This works out to an annual rate of 7.2 pcr~enL do"'" fron1 the 8.4 percent an- nual rate or increase that was projected in Ap1:il . In a sc pcirate report, the bureau said th'e purchasi ng power of workers declined l3sr month becau se of price in· creases. WASHINGTON (AP) -The senate labor subcommittee \Vednesday approved a bill (ixing a new n.zo an hour minimum wage for about 51 million American workers. Gold 's price was unchanged in early lra din g on the big Loodon bullion market, but il rose $1 an ounce in Zurich to $120 an ounce. Gold rose slightly in Hong Kong. \... F'ood again accounted for a 1 )._Q}g rise in the CQst of Jiving, The increase from the: present $1.60 floor would take plice in a year for most employes but some would not get the lull $2.20 for three years. GOLD PIOSPICTOI NllDS 52.100 fOI ••unTAKl-KNOWS WHDI IT ISi WriM lox 1711 Hutl"ttff IMc•. C.. tl647 Electricit)· Taxed in LA By United Press lntt rnatlonal LoS AngeleS used more elec- tricity Wednesday than any other June day in history. keeping l\om('S and buildings C'OOI in 1()6.degree '''eather. The city's electrical con1· pany \VitMtood the tt'st, but. orficia ls '''orrled about meet· ing future energy needs. Dentand on lh(' Southern Ca lifornia Edison Co. for elec- lrlcal powtr set a record at 3 p.m. when the system reached A.915 mill ion kilO\\'atts. The previous record \\'BS 9.815 mil· lion. set last July· :n. the com· pany said. The Los Angeles Department of Water and Po"·er said the city used more electricity than on any June day in history. A spokesman for Edison said the C'ompany expected to meet power demands in the coming season of high air"<:onditiooer use, barr:iniz any unforeseen problems. but that power shortaites \\'ill occur by 1975 or 1976 Wlless the company is allowed to build ne\V generat· ing facilities. NEWPORT LEASES 2411 w ... c..t Hltlnwl9f luslng •II Vohiclts 645-2202 SAAB • " ' ' • 4 whMI power aul1ted brake• • Rad< and pinion steering • Front Wheel drive • Shock eblorbing bumpen • 25-111iln to the pllon • Fold-down rear ••t for lltlllon w1gon space~ now a• increasing nine-tenths of I percent in May to a level 14.5 percent above a year ago. On a seasonall y adjusted basis, grocery prices rose 1.1 percent in Ma)'. off from the 1.3 per· t.-ent jump the previous month and a record 3 perc~nt boost in March. Hi g li Court Tells Wan.t Ad Ru.ling , .. I _:_Complete New Y-ork Stock List • • . . . i Thurwt.u, Jul'll! 21, 1'73 DAILY PILOT .23 PIJBUC NOTICE PVllUC N()TTCE PIJBUC NOTICE Balance of Payments OVER .THE COUNTER NASO'\.l1tln91 for WoclnMCloy, Juno 20, 1973 llOTICI TO ca1.ot,01t• PICTITIOUS •UllNllS ,ICTITIOUS '"''"''' fllo • .4 UAll lrf&MI tTATaMINT llAMI STATIMlll'1' $1111t<'"lor (-1 M fM> Si•lt Qt Gtlltornlt Tiit lollowhlll l*"IOll t1 aol119 IMl""I TM fdlowlllf ..... 1• flllll lllltlllll$ for fN ~ of 0rff01. ••; ... 1 l.ll•M: .. totlCH .. El J, 1110,,HY, THI TROLL"I GAl.l.f.RV, 1S11 •• THI COTTAGI! co,,e, SHOI", .Ml DK....._ Cot•' Hwy., ~ 1Hc11o C.ilt, tMI W. ttll\ II,. CO.ti MfW .,.16 Natlu I• '*IOY 9llrttt'I ta crMlt0t• _. Wirr1n HOl)ltl11t>, lml •11Mt11r-d C.n'l'(ln Dll'tf'\lfieO Aclvfll«d Dt•~•••••-"'•1101, IWIOM ""'"lntl cLIJl'lll •Intl IM wkt Or .• L111ut11 It.er., C1lll '26$1 COf'OOll'•nOl'lo t C.lltotflle Corpor•llon, IN d«edff'I ,,... rtQlllrtO la Ill• tlWfll, wl111 Tiii' Di111,.. .. 11 conducttd ""' •n I.fl. I•~• Wt.y, ANhtlm, c .. 11. ,,,_ ,,.,. 111cn .. ,.. vouctllt1, ,,. llll Olllc• of cllvlDVtl Trilt 1111.1,.... i. conchl(ttod lly • CCII'• !M Cltttt of !hi 1\Jllft enllllld (aur1, or W•trfll HOPkln• PCll'lllon. to ~.-nt !Mm 1111111 1111 n«••1•rv 1flli "'''""""'' Will llltd wrtri 1111 COUii· HM H. Alom1r VOIKNI" IO TM unaer1lfl'lld •I lllt 0Hlet1 l'f Clerk 01 Or•not CounlY on M•Y Jf, Pr"'4ent o1 Cri•rltl L. W.ftltr. ti I T«r•n<:• Bl\ICI., 1t7S "Tnlt tl6tlfl'l'lt!lot WM flltd wl#! 11'1t County "Tarrf!IOt, C.lltornl• '"°1 wlllc/I It lhll • C1-"t. or Ott"'°' to\lftty Ofl Jun. U. 11'1. '4.C:• ol llutlntlt Of "'9 unct.r11QMD 111 •ll l"uOlltfttd Or•-Cotll OlllY f'UOI. Plltllhhld Or~ (OH! O•llY PllOf J- '""""'' ptrltlnlnt 10 lllf ftf1t1 of 1•ld Mty .)\ 11111 Jun. 1 14.. 21. 1t1) 1672• ti, 21 •ncl Juty S. 1%. tm 1199-71 O.CIOerit. wllllln tour """"'"' 11tft" It'll -""-''"-''-='-"::c-'-' -'-':-:::--::o---i .------------------1 Shows Improvement :;.:-,·.1,~ •• c.~~.r:i ..... ·.~.~·:.·""'.::"".",·.· •• ( ~~~\,·mt ;m;i~,~~lt ,m·n -. •• 1'-' I ~ ... "'l~ A"'.1; .~~~ •M~ll Ill 111 lrt blO. I ofifl"t 1,1lt.1 H IOh IOI\ I' o ,"' l!l'I 'i:l"'m W .ii~ .. \ IUOlld "~ O'ltr·1,..._ u11• a.. IJ 1m kr II t ,.. I"" "' f: i:C'.,. ol~··-:: !,. lu/, c •" , IO'lo In~ ff•llY 1 I lnltrco"'...,"Y transfers," the :i.. 1E•1l1r11 r.1or 11 SJI• ~ •llv 1 •'-no lme oc f • t1r•1 P110llc•llOt1 of !1<111 llOllc1. P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC N~CE c.1ote1 Ju'1t lt, 1tn. v 11 ALFR£D H. IROPH'I' 1------,,-.,c::-----·1.--__:_::::::.::..:_:.:_:_::::= __ ~i Aamlnl1lr•lor ol '"' Etlll• • JM7t •ICTITIOUS •utlH•ss ot Mid OtctcMnl NOTIC• TO c••OITOllS NAM• STAT•tot•NT CMrMI L. l( .. ttf SUPaltlOll COVltT O• TMI: Tiii tollarwlng llft'ADtll •r• Doll'IQI tllJ T"1'•n<• •tll'll., lT .. T& otJ CALIFOllNIA flOll DullnMI 11; TetrllKt, C•lll ... ,., THI. COUNTY 01' OllANGI! At..LIED ADV ERTISING t..GEHCV, t.11..,,..y .... A4Mli.111rllr Ne. A-1•211 tM Vlctorl1. Colli Nttw. C•UI. '2621 1-.0C E1t1lt ol THEllESA MAlARKY, PrnlOll LM D1lri1, 110 e. Monlwool:I, Putlllllled Orti119• Coa1t 0•11Y Piiat Jun1 Otcfflfd, L1 H•bt .. c.llf,. 914g. 161), Sult1 1 21. 21 •nd July S, 12, lt7, JtM).13 NOT ICE IS HEAEBY Cl\IEM 10 11\1 R1cl\ltd LM $1'""aon' 210 E. Mont-crtdllor1 ol ll'lt lllo¥t n•!Ylld dtc.""'11 wood, U H1t>r•. C..Uf., 1109. 160, Sult1 ------.---------1 tri1t 111 Ptt"IOnl Mvll'IQI ~l•lm• •g•ln1I fM 1 PUBLIC NOTICE wld _..,.,,, 1r• r.qulrld 10 1111 tritm. Trill tlu1lnn1 If cnnDVC:lld by I 9'fll'l'll "'It" 11111 l'llCll»rY vouc""'•· I~ the offlc• P1<'11Mr1nlp, ---------------1 ot IM d•rk of tlM 1bo\'t tf'!llltd cour1. or Pttt!Otl LM Dlv11 SUP•lllOll COURT 01' TM• lo Ol'tHfll ti..m. whh 11•1 ntctlll'V AlcMrd LH SI'"'"'°" STilo"TE 0" CALIFOll:NIA 'Oii: vauer.1r1, to !Pit uM1r1~ ...... 1t llM Offlc• Thll 11•Temlf1I wil Iliff 1111111 11111 Coun- TH E COUNTY O• OltA.OIE o1 h!1 •llotn•y1, GRAY, GORHAM II. ly Clt<'k o1 Or11ng1 Counly on Jun• 11, NO. A·7•1llO PAUL, t0U Wll11\I,. Blvd., P&llllloulf, 1913. NOTIC• o• Hl!:AltlNO O" 8•verly HUI•. c.111. '°211. wNch I• ,,.,. "·260l1 l'llOITIOfrol "0111 "llO•o\Ta 01' WILL PllCI o! llullMlt Df 11111 UMtrMOnld In Ill 1'1tt1U1hld Or•ng1 C011I D•llY l"llr>I Jur>t ANO FOii: LETTl!llS TESTAMaNTAltY rnAllf<"t Ptt"lllnlnQ IO' 11111 t1!1!1 nl .. Id 21, 21 IN:! July S, It, lt7l ltlS-73 E11tte ol JOHN llODENDOllFEA rteCildlnt, wtlllln 1011t mon1ri1 lltt<' 11111 -·----~----c-cc--- Dtc.tlied. t1r1r P11bl1Ullon ol 1ri11 no!lc• PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN t~t D1ltd M•Y ll, 1913 HE HRV GORD01'"lii"111"0 .Mtlln 1 ~ll· OON A LADENBERGER llOll FOR PAO&ATE 01= WILL ANO FOR Execu!ar of 1111 wlH of I •1111 ISSUANCE OF LETTER$ TESTAMEN· !ht •tlOV• namld demcllnt MIJMICll"AL COIJll:T 0 1' CALll'OttNIA, 'fA llV TO PETITIONER r-tt.rtnc:• lo GllAY, OORHAM 11. PAUL COUNTY Oft ORANG• wtll<ll 11 mtO. tor furtMr Jlo'rllculan, ind .,.,, Wl\6hl rt llYll., p.,.lfllllll Jtltl C...-w \lall•r ,..,..,.,,, 1n11 lhll time tncl piece ol l\Nrfll\l 11111 lt.....,Y HHl1, C•!ll. tclt\1 Ue9M N ..... wme ,.., ti.en Mt tor July J. 1913, •I Ttl; Ullll V1·Jllll1 1114641 s...-OAfttt. ~ JMktll Ohlftct t :l)O •• m, In !!'It eour!room of Dtplr1menl AUMMYI IW l:•Ku!W CAI• NUM•l!lt 1111 No..) ol wold caurl, •I. 100 Civic Ctnl•r PubllJhld Or, ..... C11111I D•llY Piiot tot•Y IUM"'°NI Drift w .. 1. Ill ttlf City of S111t• AM. 31 •nd JUM 7, ,,, 21, lt JJ 1 .... n l"l1lntlff: DOANE w. ALilERT Cellloml1. ,. 0.ltncl•nf"I: RO&t!RT E. SLATER1 <11111 Oiled JUNE 13. 1913 PUBLIC NOTICE SLATER'S COo\ST LANDSCAPING • WILLIAM E. §l JOHN, COMPANY, •nd II ESE R VE IN· County Glfrk • ,7116 SUll:ANCE CO,, I corl!Of'•llOl'I, Ind SISIENWE1N t. STANTON MOTICI! TO CltEll!TOltS SUAETV C 0 M "AN V OF "THE 451 SO. Sl"RINQ ST. Na. ll' SUl"IRIOll: COUll:T DI' THI! l"ACIFIC, ii CCll'pCltlllOl'I, Irr<! DOES I LOS ANOaLli$, CALU1• ""J STATS OF CAllFOll:NIA FOR througll X, lnclu1!W Tel: ltlJ) ,...,,._. THa COUNTY 01' ORANG• To IM Dtttfld•nls: A cJvU COl'llOlll"' A"'"""' fwr P9tl»-r Na. A·1 .. lt r.11 blfn flied try tl\I nl1ln1llf •o•ln11 you. Putlllltl«I Or•not COii! Oal1y PllOf Junt E1•••• of c H A A L E s L VON tr you ""11111 IO aelffd lhll l•wwl1, YOU 15, 16, 11, 1913 lM+-73 CHURCHILL, •kl CHAllLES L . mutl n111 In 11111 court I wrl"-11 pl19dfnt CHURCHILL , OtcffHd. In <f'IOOllW IO IM cnmplalnt for I wrllten -----,,-,.-,-c:-=-,,.,----1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 10 It.I or or•I OIH<llng, II• Ju1tlc• Courll Within PUBUC NOTICE crldlton of 1111 1b0v. n1mld dtcldenl )II d•Y~ 1flft' 11111 1vmmon" 11 wrved on 1hll 111 P1rK1111 ri1vlng cl•lmt 1o•!n11 11111 you. Otl'ltt'Wti.., your dt11u1t wilt tit ---c,c1oCTo1c1c10=0o5-,c,o5c1o•c•c•os---1111a Decedlfll ••• rrciulrtd 10 flit tl'ltm, Mtlf'td on ,pp11c111on by 11\t J)l1lnu111nc1 NAM& STATl!Ml!NT wlm IM neceu•rv voucMt<'s, In lhl olflc• ltlt court m•v lf11t<" • ludQml!'ll! agelnsl Tiii! follOWIJ\11 pttKllli •r• dolog of JM tl•rlr. of the •DO¥• •nllltld court, or vou lor tM l'n<llWY or oll>er reU1f , ... buslnn• 11. 10 or•s111r 111tm, wllh 11\1 11tcts11ry CIVISled In '"'complaint. c 0 M p' A E H EN s I v E MEDlCAl V(>l.Khll!S, 10 Ille uMltrtlgnld "' c/O If YOU Wltll '' W>tk IM •dvlCt If I n ii· GADUP t021 1(11(111 .-.v1n111 auen• Aon1td H. Prl!'llner. JIS Weil Third Streel, l«MY In lt!IJ m111.,-, you sllMlcl da "' P•rl c'illfornl• 90620 ' Senft An•, C11lfC11"nl• •210L whlcll 11 It.I ~Y M IMI y11o1r ,a11ctl1H1, 11 •11y, tniing MMkowlt1, M.D.. 4201 Long Pleet of llu1ln...1 of the undtttl11ned I'll •II 1111y 11>1 !Hid ton tllM. &tech Blwl .. su111 No. a , l ong &etc.II, m11!1r1 pert1lnlllf ta !Ml nta11 of 011111 J•n. •· 1911. CA tclll01 u td dfCf<1911!, within lour mnnlhl 1fler J•'"" 9 . H.,'l'h, Cltrtc Robtf1o ArOillmtn•. M.O .. 5600 Alli~ tile llr1t PllDllc•llon ol !Ills rtollc1. Br D. 0, HUTMACHElt, Deputy ti A Long Bt h CA 91»45 O•lld June '"· 1tn fSEAL) ~.;;:;:.111·L. Oon.K M.o.. 1.,15 s. v1RG1N11A ELlENw1c,1HUACHILL a""c"•"•'•"•'•"•' •11TT••w1cK (nlCll'ado .,vtnllll, P1r1mount, CA "11'23 Execurr • of lne H1rrr JClllnlOll, M.D .. 100 E•1t M•rk•! r>I It.I abo'lt n•!Ylld Dtc.e<llfll ""'""''' 11 Uw Strtel Lortg &Hell CA 90105 ltONALO H. l'•l:NNall ... T...itl StrMI -Cil 'tn J M'o 1 ... 1ss c• 11c1t AttorMY 11 uw 111:1"'"*' c .. n111 m o lltVI•. • " ,-Olf 115 Wetl tillrll Sli"Hf Teh (714)--..-. Awnut. 1"1•1mou111, CA 90723 lMI• ....... C•lllonlilo nnt A"--ri .... J"Wtllflff C•mllle MD11Cllllw1r, tot.D., 1'41S S. 1111.._, C7l4J 541..USI l'ullfl1hld O~ (Old D1ily Piiot June Color•Oo Avt,,,.., P1r•maunl, CA 90n:J A~Y IW •.-cull'tJ 21, 21 •N:I July 5. U, lti'J lt'1·1l Wllll•m •fllllct. M.D .. 1 .. U S. p bllll!ld Or~ Cotll Dlolly l'lfot,1---------------Color•do Ayff'ue, P1ramounl. CA tom U -nd J 1 5. \l 1971 1 .... 7' Tlll1 t1111I""• I• condvcltd bv • 11tn1r1I June 21, •• 1 u r ' PUBLIC NOTICE ,.11nersh1p. NOTICE ln>lllf Moskowllz, M.D.. PUBLIC N•WPDltT·M•SA VNU'll!D SCMOOl G'""111 h '1'1'11r I -------~,,-------1 DllT•tCT Thh ll•ltmitnl Wit ntfd wllll lhe Coun-• MS5i N.tk1 lnvltlwt •Ids ty Cltrt: ol 0r...-County, Ju ... ~. 1m NOTICI! TO c•SDITOlll HOTtCE ts H&REIV GIVEN th1t ll<t l'·U7f1 suP••tOlt COUll:T 01' THllE l o.rd of Educ1!1on ol Ille N~-MHI 1!11-0C JT .. T• OF CALIFORNIA FOR Unlf!td School Dlllrk l of Orengt CCIUll!y, l>t.ib!flMd Or1nge COIJI O.lty PllOf, TM• COUNTY 01' OkANO• C1lllorr\le, w111 rtc.11"' H1lld bids up lo June 7, 14, 21, a , 1m lnt.7' -Ma. A·1Uf1 11:00 A.M. on IM 29th day of June 1'13 •t Et!1t. o1 FltANCES GAE8KE, Deete .. the olllc• of said School Dlllrlcl, loc1ttd ..a. It ,,,, Pl1c1111ll• AYlll!Jt, Co!IJ Mn•. NOTICE IS HEAE!IV GIVEN lo flll C•lllotnl•, al•whl'h time .. 1a bldJ wlll tit PUBLIC NOTICE --------------·lcrf'dl!Cll's of 11\t aoo¥t named D~I P1Jbllclv ac>ened 1nd rffd tor : .OT''. ' ....... , •••• , ••. , 11111 •II JMl tonl r.1¥11'111 cl•lmt 1og1IMI 1111 Au'-""' lt•lr l'1rn 11111 $WPl lH wld cltceditnl ere required In 1111 """"· .1111 bld1 l ft 10 tll In 1c((M'dat>e1 wUh SU,.ERIOll COURT 01' TME wl!ri tM ntctlllr'Y vouCl>tft, In llM: ofliet: Condlllons, I n I I r Uc 11 0 n I, Ind STAn 01' CALtFOllNtA l'Olt 01 ,,,. clerk of 11'\t 1DOv1 111Tflled cour1, or Spec:Ulc1t(ons. wh!cll •rt now on 1111 In TMI" COUNTY OF-011 .. NG• 10 prfll!'lll tlltm, with IM neceu•ry Ille offlct ol IM l"urcl\11lng A11enl of 111ld Ne. A-7,HI voocher1. 10 the undel'"1lont0 11 1tl0 Norlh kP\ool Olslflct. 1•s1 Pl•Cl!'lltla Avenuii, E!t1te nl GOADON E. STOLlOF F, •kl Mein Slrttt, S1nta Ant, C•Utornl• '2701, Ct»!• .......,., C1lllD!'nl1. · GOllDON ELI STOLZOl=F, 1~1 G.E. wnlch 11 Ille pl•ct of tluslMll of llM Eecri DJOdtr mu1! 1uDmll I bid dtl)Ol1! • STOl..l Ol=F, Otcttwd. unD.r.ID.-d 111 111 l!Wllt.,., Pf<"lllnlllf la In tl'ltr form al • et1r1llll'd or c•1ril1rt '. NOTICE IS HEJIE!IY GIVE N IO' tl'ltr 11\t nf•ff of Mid 0-Cld..,I, wllllol11 fol.Ir cll«:ll OI" • bid bond tQ>Utl lo fl.ii P.,.cenl • credltnrl of It.I ·-.... med dtc9dtftl monlll• •II« ""' 11 .... 1 pvllllc•llon of 1111• ,,.,.., ot Ille .mount o(_IM bid. mldt • JMI •II Olf'10lll l\t¥fnf d•lm1 1G<1ln1! llwl flOlltl H Ytbl• to the ordet" .. ol the N~·MKll ~lj:t d.codent 1re r"1ul<ed lo 1111 ll>tm, Oitio June 11, 1•n Unlllld Sct'lool Oltlrlcl. A Ptrf'P"tNllC• wl!h ll'lt ntclt,lty voucri.-1, ln !he offlct CROCKER NATIONAL 8ANIC Band m1y Dt rl'Qulrld 11 Int DIKr•llon ol r>t Ille d•rk nl IN abOvll! t111/lled court, or av We.cl• L 8r1Wl<ler Ill• Dlttrlct. 111 11111 '"'"' 'Of l•llur• 10 to prtwrrr tri..n. will! "" lllCflUfY AHlll•nl T;.,,.,, ()f!IC9!' ent1r '"'a •llC" cori lr•t l, lh• ptDCMdt of vove1>er1, to '"• u"<lerilollld •I Bloc:k. Eietu!Of' of '"' Eititr Ill• chtcli: 11/111 ,,_ fCll'ftllld, or ln c11e of • llrlck!'Mlf t. Loph\, loc,, Attom.,-1 11 L•w, ot !I'll '"°"' niomed dteldolnl Donel. 1111 full t um thereof will bl '"' No. llrr>edWt.r. So1t>I• Atwo. c.. tlt7()1, MALCOLM •• sT•WAltT forltl!M lo Slld Sdloot Dblrlcl of Dr•llll• wlllch 11 tn• ptKt of bul11119$ of ft\f -s ,...,..,... IWll'l•O'd Na 1• County. Ul'ldt<'llll.-d In •ll 1111tten J)lf't•llll na to LOI ..,;....... c..i,... *" · No lllcldtt' mtY Wllhdrt• Ill• bid for • Ille Hiii• ot ..,Id Deddlortl. 'Nllhln four (llJI 6'1-1111 IMfkd of fQl'ly.ft.i• {il! days •l'I« lht "'°"'"' 1119!' "" llrSI PUllllc•llon er! lttl• M1onlrf .... ........ d1t. Ml for '"' 0ptonl119 ttlt<'tof. nollce. Pul>lllohlcl Cots! Diiiy PHol, Th1 llotrd ol EDvc•llon of TM N--1· Deled June 12, 1'11 JllM 14 21 a nd Jvt" s, ltn 1126-71 tot ... Urilflld kllool Oll""cl rt1ervts 11\t M•r'11• A.. $!olfoff, E'llec;lllrt~ ' ' ! r~hl In r1!ect 1ny DI' •II l>ID1. •nd llCll of 1111 Wiii _of 11111 IYMCE lltcflUrltr •ccept !ht krwtst bid. •N:I lo li)v.I• ~ dlcldtM Nv • • w1lvt •nv lnform•111y or lrregul«lty In RLOCI(, •lllCKNEll a LOl"IN, INC. 1ny bid rte•I""'. 12H Na .• ...., •• ., .. OTIC •fC••o tTOllS Dlltorl JUM u , Im s.ma ...... c •. ""' IUP••to .... T 01' TH• NEWPORT·MESA UNll=IEP T11<1""'°'": f1H) lhJ .. stl STATS O" C Lll'ORNIA FO• SCHOOL DISTRICT "''°"""' ..,. t1ecwrrt1 TH• o• OltAN91! of Or•nge County, C.11"'"111 PubtltMd Or•nge CoaJI Dilly Pllol, . A·7'1.S ly Dorotr.y H1rv.,-Flsller Jur\i! It,. 21, :ti, 1na July s, l•n lt.ft.n E1l1I• of EVAONA E. CALHOUN, DVl'thllll'IQI A11111n1 Dtc11.-ct. Ms-1100 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTIC E IS HEAEl!IY GIVEN to "" l"ubll"*I Or•llf• c111111 Dilly Piiot, ---------------crlllllor• of "'-1tl0Vt n•"*' detedel'tl Ju.,. u. •nD Ju111 21, 1tl3 1w-n m.t 1u llft'WI$ l\lvln; cl1lm1 11t1lnst lht•i---------------1 t -.Ml .. 10 oec.01111 1r• requlrld IO' Ill• lhllm, PUBUC NO'l1CE SuP•ltlOR COUllT 01' THI: wuri '"' ntcltlaly 11WCIMt'S. '" 11111 offlct \TAT!' OF Ct.LIFORM IA FOii: ol IM cl•rk of ll>e lb0¥11! t ntlttld cour1, 111''1---------·------I THI! CDUNTV OF OllANOa lo preltfll !Nm, wHI\ 11111 ntc ... l•tY NIWJIORT-MISA UNll'l•O SCHOOL ND. A--7•71J vCIU(lltrl• tg Ille 1tnd9!'llllnell 11 IM of!ICt OISTlllCT HOTICIE Of' Hl!AltlNG 01" l'ITITIO .. o1 1111 11to1ney, PAUL A. HAN NA. Al· Matlct l~vlllflt •1• WASHINGTON (UPI ! The U.S . balance of payments si tu ation im pr oved signir~antly in the r i r s t quarter of this year but re- mained In deficit $1.2 bilUon, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. The department i s s u e d statistics sho"•ing how the United States was d oing In terms of its current .accounts and its long-term capital ac- count's in the international 1narke tplacc. THESE IJ\U.UDE trade in goods and services. pensions to ove rseas r esidents, U.S. governme nt grants a n d private long -term capital in· vestm ents. The figures ex· e lude the volatile flow o! liquid funds whiclt. tend to r enect foreign e xchange market p res· s ures on the dollar . The first.quarter de ficit on current account and long-term capital compares to deficits of $1.5 billion fo r the last quarter or 1972, $2.6 billion for the third quarte r of 1972 and $3.7 billion in the firs t quarter of 1972. The d epartment said the d e ficit in goods and se rvi<'es accounts was e limin ated in the first quarter a nd lhc de fic it in trade d eclined substantia lly. NET LONG-TER!\f capital outflows shifted in the o ther direction, however. in the first quarter,' leading to a deficit of $120 million, comparLod to a fourth-quarter 1972 surplus of $781 mlllk>n. The deficit !n this Suspension Of Ah· Cal Trade Ends Although the-Securities and Exchange Con1mission has lifted a .fO...day suspension of over-the-coWlter trading for Air California, the Newport Beach-based company is still flying on instru1nents today. THE SEC ISSUED a w arn- ing 'I'Uesd8y a1ong with lifting the SU9pef1Sion, telling brokers and dealers to rea lize that it is . a federal crime to quote a stock price on a f irm that is not cut· rent in :ts r e ports to the SEC. Max VanDordrecht, vice president cJ finance for Air California, says the company did file an annual finance report with the SEC in April However, the auditors. Alex· ander G rant and Co. withdrew cerlilication last month, a long with financial reports for Westgate-California Corp., the airline's parent rum. FOR P•O• .. TI! OF WllL AND FOR 1orney 11 Lew, H1rbCll' LIW BvllOltl>fl-11t NDTtCI!. 1$ HEAEl!IY GIVEN llwll The Ll!"TT£RS 0.. AOMINISTRATION E1sl 11111 Slf .. I, Coll• M .... C11llloml• lolrd of EcklaollOll of tilt NIWPOrl-MIH VANDORDRECHT d 0 es WITH WllL ANHl!XEO ttU1, wr.1<r. b me pttct of bYilfltU ol UnlHlll ScP\ool Dl11fkl ol 0.-•nge CDUnly. Air I "U be Etl•tt ol CORNELi .. D. lCHA8LEIN, IM UTKltfslgntd ·~ ... m•tttr• ~rt1lnl1"111 C1Uforni•, will r-tetlft Mii.ci bl1U ~ 10 not know when . Ca V.'I •ho kMWn I I CORNELIA OALE 10 IM ..... ,.°' Hid decedent, wllNn laur 11:09 A.M. Cl nllle 291114•Y Oil June 1'73 ., """4i .... ,·n a normal fashion SCHA8LEIN, 0.CuSt<I. lllOl\1111 1!11r lilt llr1f publlCt.llon of tlllt !hi offlc1 of t•ld School D11lrlcl, loc:llld '~-.....'6 NOTICE IS HEJIEBY GIVEN lh1t no!lce. II lt51 Pl•cet1ll• .. ¥9f'lllt. CO$" """'·· again. "No doobt, there will be SUSAN JEAN LEUNG, n11rnld 111 tlM will D•1ed M1y JO, 1973 C•llfornl1, •I w111c1111mt s•ID tll<ls wrn Ill some tradi"ng through brokers It Sv51n Join Scr.&Oltln l'\ti tiled her1!n • JOHN MEAL( CALHOUN publicly O!'l'Md •nd 1Hd for : pcitlllo~ for P1otllle ol Wiii •!Id tor E•tc.Ulor o! !ht Wiil Tlr" Without quotes," be said. lssu1nce ol Lt lters of Admlnltlrllloti of TIM ebOvl 111mld lll«:IOtnl .,rl blot •r• to Ill In Keonl•nc1 wtlll I wltri.lfll.wlll •ttnt•fd teftftr>el IQ """'(" l'AUl A. HANNA Concllllono. I n s Ir u c 11 0 n • • ind "This Y."Ollld e v e n t u a I y !1 rrlild1! lor furlhtf" parllcul1r1, •nd 11111 AlllfMY •I L•• SO-CUlc•H-. wlllch 1r1 now an fll• In establish a market rv"ice." ,,,. l]mt •nd ollCll of .... ftng '"' HIM H•rtoor LIW lulldl"11 ,,,. Cllffk• ol ""' Purcn.11119 AOIMI ol .. kl r• n11 t1ttr1 set tor Ju!y 3. 1973, •t ''°' '·"'·· "' E••• 11111 s1n<11 Scllool D11tr1c1, 11J1 Pt.c ... 111 Av1nue, The federal law does not r~ Ille cour1room ol DE1>1rtm1nt No, 3 of co111 M1..,, c1Hfonll• "617 Cott• Me ... C1lltorn!1. h "b"l · t I t" ,110 cou11, ~' 100 Clvl( C1n1e1 Dri ve Tel: 17141 14•1901 E1e11 bidder mvst svb!T\!1 a bid D"l'Ol>ll pro I l pr1va e ransac ions. west, In 111e Cllv o1 s1n11 An1, C1llfornl1. Attorn1, ..,. E•tc.Yltr rn TM ltltm or 1 certified or c1ihl1r1 A \J.S. District Court j udge 0•11'<1 Junt U. U)J Putillillecl Or•fl!I• Coen! Delly Piiot, ct'lkk or ' tlld bond 1qu.I 10 livt p.rc..,1 • will WILLIAM E. s1 JOHN, "''' ll •nd June 1, 1•. ~1. n 1i 16'0-n (5%1 o1 1111 •mount of tM Did, m•D• in San Diego · hear a mo- county c1..-11. ------P•Y•ll<I• 10th• arc!¥ o1 11111 Nl'W!Xlrl·MtW ti"on by the SEC for a te rn JOHN A. HUGHES PUBLIC NOTICE Unlllfd knoo! 01.wkt. A P•tfor,..,.nc• · • IMS w .. 1 1t111 "'""' Band mar 111 reciulrl'd ., 1111 DIKrttlan or porary injunction against Air C•t• M .... c1111. tt•U the 0111r1c1. 1n 1111 ,,,.,., of 11Jh,,-1 10 Cali"lo rnia and \V es t ., ate. Tth 11141 ....... ,. ll..OC tnl9!' lnla tucll cnnlrKI, llwl 11roc:Md1 QI !> Alll!lr'ftty 1« "'"tlantr suPl!RIOR. couaT o" TH• '"' clleck wiu 111 torl•lltd, DI' 1n <•" o1 • California an.cl a request for a PutllltMG Dt•ng~ Coa~! D•U1 Pllo!, STAT E 0 1' C .. LIFOllNIA FOii bond, 11111 lull 11/!Ti '"'''°' Wiii I'll! courl~amed rece1'"er for the Ju1'4 14. IS, 21, Im 1141·73 TH• COYNTV 01" OltANO E torffllld la ukl Scllaol Ol1trlcl of Or111111 .,, ' N•. A--"'" CDUntv. parent flrm on July 23. PUBLIC NOTICE NOT1CI! 01' MEAll:INO OF "llETITION No Dlt:lcltr m.y wllhdr•w llii Did for •'>;::::::::::..:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;, .------,cc=cc------l'OR ORDER OIRl!:CTtNG CON· llft'lod ol lortY·fl\"t t'5) d111 •ff« llltl I 'n" V•YAMCIE OF R•AL ,.llOPl!llT'I' dill .. , for 11111' OJ)fl'llng llltreof, fUPllllOll COUll:T 01' THa Eil1!e of LY NNE CHARLESTON, 1lt0 Thi! 80.td ol l!duc•llnn of the N.wport· STAT• 0 , c .. 1.1FOANtA FOii: known •• MRS. MILTON CHAALESTON. MIN Unlfttd Sclloal Obll'ld ,_, 11111 THE COUNTY 01= OR t.No• 11!1-0 ~-•• LYNNE Mc-CLEAN rlgftt to t•Jtcl •ny « •II Did•. Incl llCll NO. A·7•n 4 CHAllLESTON . 1JJO k-•• MllS. ntcllWrlly K«t>I 1111 low9'1t bid. •ncl to NOTICE OF HaAlllNG 01' "l!TITIC* LYNN CHAllll!STON. •llo knowtl •1 Wl1¥t •nv lnlortNllty DI' lrr .. ul1rll'f In l'Oll l'RO& .. Ta OF WllL ANO l'Olll: LYNN McCLEAH C H AR LE ST 0 N • •ny bid tectl....O. LfTTl!RS Tl!STAMENTA•T 0.CHtta. 0•11d J-14.. 1m Etl•tto of ELMA VIAGI NIA AOBIDOU)(. NOTICE 15 HEA£&Y Gl\IEN tl'ltrl HEWP09tT-ME$A UNIFIEO Dec Hid ' GRAYCE M. SMITH Ml n1111 htr"tln • SCHDOI. 015TR ICT N~lcE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhll pt!lt!on tot «Dir Dlrttlln; eon,,..,anc• of ol Or•l'llJI County, Catlfooml• DO YOUR GAMlllNG IN LAS YIGAS FINANCE account in the first quarter of 1972 was IO t imes bigger, however. •'The dominant fa ctor was a $1.4 billion increase in direct inves tment outflo\\'S to $2.l billion. most of v.1hich \Vas rcllcctc.'<1. in volatile short-lernt .. .,._. 'I!!?!· TIM: CllMI• • 111\l im ittt lt.•vcm 114 1n .. !:!r. Mt ~ lOI departm~t ~~ ~ill ~.::'""°~"'~~ :,. Le; u·~ ~~. ~~'tr'Ptc :i: i~ !;~"'~~~~ Im ,I,~ During the first quarter, the = :0 ~m~ A:::J. .. 1 A::'\•~ • •1• r11 r1"' • in dollar was the object Of r~::ri!,.,_. k ll.IAI 2hl<ICr:.1 1 :ft ~~'fv 'ht 1:~ ihtcio~ 1 ~ 1:~ cul lion and '·' 1 1 • CM.Ill 1c1 Mid i~ f uVI'! ~a· 40" .,14 nAr1 ~ .. l'J 6\ spe a wt mate y .to UT1~\~~·· tot• 'It 1 r~.1 fl' r.· ~ l Ill N I 2r. 3~ •Dft k Old r. tll L lilt I~ wu devalued 10 percent in ,w.a~y •1 Aov ' 1' oor1 • 4~ u111v Fo.. 141'o 1"• ~une -· ltn :J: Cll 2111 ft Rollln1 I lL Unv Mod Slit. February. o\c11tMt 1'110 :i1-.. :u 1-:_ !Z_. ,:1~ == f:, lit; ~= t ft! f• •1•• AIK ~~\to •mil I r 244' ~ruc•r 1"11 ~YI I 1/111 DVk" tf""' 1., TllE DEPARTMENT al.,. ., 1co Uld u'" u1~ •r•vn P '~ •a •u~1 s 10.i 1 ~ v,n &M~ 11~ ~ •11., "'' ,.. !'' o•-R 0 0 '"' Adi I' l/lclorl l l t 1G "d t f . -·-·· f .:1ueo Ttl 161.; l .Wiii Fl 7fto ' ~·1~ CD ~ \lldtG $.JI j l' 41 sa1 ne ore1gn .,... ....... ses o •Uy~ a. ,v, s Htti'lllf c ' •l'>{!C!!"11 15'• 1~. v11u•1 .st t.~ e U ,S. stocks ro&e to & record :m A~r.ll 11'11 I~ t=.'ro.i Mi I~ 11 ~li0/1•r In Pi~ tt~ V~ltl ·~ l'rn l~ · I d ••-fl 'ml!I LD H1 2+. H••tel C J3i:. I• KOfl Ill!.' f~ ''"" ,, .. Ml I ,,., 17\ $1.S b1l lon urtng ~le" rst t.m EJ<Df .UV.,, .. HOMwd • t sca1l•L G ,~ ' ~II l 1 \t 101 ' Am Fir.cl 11~1 1f'tHOOY9!' ":IOo,\~krll(ll ~I l lNW. II• '• ~\ quarter, an Increase of $200 'm furn 1 ... I Hunl MID ll't lr'tt;. °'~,~ ~it~ W• r'w1 1:1 I~: million, ''but there was an ::1rtG7: ~tt n1' ~:::!r CC lf~ lnff 5¥ M•rcri 11\~ llV. N p~ M IS'i 1$) • I 'I 'l -, Wol •tt•• 1 Ii Svm•1lr 23 !" w, n DI 41~ •J offsetting decline in new ls-.. ~ W.~ iG-\t 1 111 iid1 Nuct t11)? n~ sr,:,~ ~: 2tl~ 2~ 'Z:lttPti>J ~'4tt~~ ... -sold abroad by U S cor t.nhll11ST "''" ~ "1111'•~ ... i... "'°"..... s\li 1t:o W1t11mf'J "" .><.n;~ • • • AMen In »~ 1, nlll Crp 31~ :n-lmpton fllh 11~~ llln H l '\,olJ> porations" ·~l\e E t:U IG\, Olt<'C E~ ,, si:. n'Q Toll " Sllh Nini PkT ,,,~ 17 ' t..PS lncp \3V• I•(~ otml ~ 1~ 14\io Ind P•P UV. NIK l"LI l,.._ 1'P I · · 1·ng 11· q u 1· d 1· t y t.rdn Mvt 2'1to 3 1111 Alum 4'14. 5\'J SPt<lr• 'l /l'lol Nood Liit 1ra I'' 0 reVIS t.rro .. ul 14 1$°"' n 8kW A l\lo ,_,, St•nldv I 1 l'll WOf1d \'IV IG I)> balances, the department's t.rrow Hr 11 11"'1. nt,.1 C11. ''"' n1~ 1'd ""'' u~ 1~ Nr111111 w 4'~ ~ . t.rvld • 9.ltlo 9-..1r1l•nd R Jil 411. lk N Al• 2) 2• Xomx Cp ,~~ to Bureau of Economic Analysts o\1•a co11 11'1. l'\lo JanwtD ,_ 1n ... ~tilN-Brw 11 n 'l'•Ua Frt • '' •1' . . iu· t.11 ~ 1 1 U'I 1! '" o\lrFr •\Ii I" l••k N s 111i '" !'~•r co .~,, , said the deficit was '6.9 b ton t.vto Trn 12~ 1 \\ 1~tvrt M Hv. li:t troe Ttt 13" I• 1on1 uni 21i'I 21 Instead of $8.& billioOreported :::~ ¢)~ ~ 11" 1Jv, (:,~o;. st •\t "'>1------------- in preliminary data ... ~e ::~Ft n~\ n1• :r.~Tk s:-:_. •,, 10 ~lost At"tl:ve deparlment said the d e ficit 1n l!lat1v Mlf ..ci •1 1C111 co11n 1nr.t 11,.•------------. . Rnt a111q '""' 17\lo K•~ 0111 t.. .1 tile ofr1c1als reserves transac-e11nk Re! ~ 11u. ~•Y•1c F' 1jl; 1r~ NEW vo111e iuP1 >-Tio. io '"°"' 1,11" lions bala_nce was $10.5 billion l!~~~ ':= ~:y, 1'JH" '<:~!' I'::. ti\.'' n S1oc:k1 tr•ct.d on 11\t 01c m•rto:.11 Wtt111111 l(M N:I l~ •'• d11 •I iUPPilfil l)y NASO. instead of $10.2 billion ;:is ~,•"v111~1 F 1!l,i, ,'~, "'" vt I'"" ,.,, "·•ume •1D A1kM c111 ''"' _, Pr IYI It·~ Ctlnlon 011 •· 00 2 2\1+3·1 rcl)Orted la st month. ~·!!r,,c~1 ~ ,~ ,ueg,.. N av.; ••nk c>nin 'J! 11') 1H.+ 1 .. · 3\.l u11m Et o'4 7\to Arui.u, l uKh l .UV.. 4'~-= 8tt! Prd l6 37V, 6~ 1~ Amer E}IP ., t l.S', Sl~+ > l!lttt L•tl J :It :~.:itl U 1 1.11 Pen~ OllRI ,l>OI) l~I s.i..+ 1 Bibb Co 7lJ '°" ~nc• 2l\io 24V• ll•nk•m•r l.<,lllO <!IHI 40--• '1'g Dim 12 12\0L•wter C 3-1 \io )6 011 Sr.•!t 33 • ..00 --3~1 •"-+ 1 a 1d Soni 2J~~ 241~ •iv 6ov 1jU. 27'' Hemllton 8!nc.ii l!l~ ":IOI~ \' + ' Botl Ev~s 2Sl1 26\:o i:f'Olltl Pl l U l; Pe<>nlOll LI • ll,.IW 2 15·10 J ·16 . Qoolr. Np lJ\O 11 llltlh H '" '"' 01aonost D• I )S.l'Oll ' • -1 • Money's Worth Da1nag·e d, Lost Goods &•1n<:o 1 '11• 111. 11 crimci 7•, t B1l11ks In 10l) 11 •.ii L nt aas I 6,.., 7~\ NASO Vol\lllM Tod•v: 4,xi.MIO l!lroWfl Ar ,._, 1~ tlon CiS• 4~ S'• ~::"·1~n m B..ckbt 11'' 11 oc!lte •• M ,,..,t rwt 4'I Buck•¥ 6'i 6f0 L~_,, Cr> !I''• ll Ur.cn•!IOl'd '*I Qurnp SI 1l'• 7Jlo \\Ml G11 1~\i U'i Toe.I llO. Buller M 35"0 :161'• V.•j ttl!.i 40\i S :em T.J11 1J•;, 1• '<11 lckl 3811 J11•1l-------------- Gah1er• &: Lo•ers In Moving Insured? :a11r Sow ·~ •U M1rl1 Fri U U\'t :111 VIPS lt>;; 171',, M1ry I(" 21''1 '911 :"""' ~' 1ov, 11 1;. Mc Cmck 3'\.1 ll :r.1nct A 1111 211 Ou•v u II'\.. :~nl Co •'fl •!~ Mt«l'IL llll4 l!l'I N-VarM CUPll T .. -··:r.:= 11<' ~"''" Cp )$\) )IV, tdl!rn 46'4 •1!oo -"" ~r.1 Br Ir .,. IO Merld In '11 71~ Mlow1 llM llOC~ I~! lllft QI Th :.=hr II SK Mfil1t' Fr '''• It\< :;o'' c~'1..~~1 on '=' "&v'::.~~: ·111 u Al~\. l~i-~g(t~ll ;?v. ~ .. m1rt•t II QllOltd b?£' NASO. • By SYLVIA PORTER (Fourth i1z a Series) \Vhen you move 1o your new home, you will be comforted by the kno\\•ledge tha t your mover is responsible I o.r damages or losses you suffer during the tnovc up to 6t\J:Cllts per pound per artic le. But a n ins urance liability limit or 60 cents a pound v.·on·i be much consolation if you find your set of i\1e iss e.n c h i n a in smithereens when it arrives. ~J l.... 10'' 10'11 lnn Fltl Sl'J ' Net Ind ~n:ent • Chl!Wll .,. Ill' w .~..... • ul (p 17"4 11i. dll1-HICI 111r-n PflVI~• 1•$1 tll• Clow Crp 13'M U V. Mol•x 1 r. 3 11tlc• •na the cvr••n1 1111 ola prier ~uch items needs an expert ;~1c...5~:· Jk ~ .; · "" 1 ltow•n ind..n,Ant.1: ~ .-i, u;. u.7 · Wh k' g tinwTI P 21" tt\li V.O..rltn I.A It j c-J:rirc°'" 21 1 Vt1 !!:; lion C9yerage. e n pac Jn • :onuin p l•'• IS'\ 0,~! 'Iii 111 u1a um .t4 .U: u o • make your own detajled in· ~GV11111 11 11"' 11 c1..s, •l.'J •th • "lsc l11C .20 lG 111 uo I , .rotl (n 11i' It"" 11 L DIV ~ 6'l.o J T • 1rl1 lf'o( )~ ll UO S. t :rv1c11 A 4~ J~-!Ill totDJCr t \.O 10, • OU!llrllh ~rl 3 ~, U1> 1...,: vcn ory. "ur1 Notl 111~ ll\li NI Pit.ni s st' 'Al)rll lllditrlt1 11.~ '• Up 't . . 01"1 1"11 2•'-n•\ NMDll t? 1 • Conceot lllC.fll ' t ' uo I . ttfark each carton \\'lth a hs t o.n1~ M ,,,. '"' ~•wtt fl'ICQ 1~ \Y~ ! B•vr Mnci .G11t1 1• • •· up . Dtr1 DrQ s .. , l<(EllQ GE , ... ~ If'/ 1 EntfOY con.ir l'•1" loo Up 11· or its contents and, as your :'.>ti• 0.s 114 1 Jli'l'' G 15~ i6•, II Kintarn Enrn 11'.ot " UP · 0.!t Gtn :n 1'\li I ti In l \;i 1,., lj D•m1on0il Co tit .. Vo I .• possessions are being unload-o..;1, 01 7~ ''"Nit kn ... :u1::. uu 1 H•ll Fr•nlc. .JJ ll'I< 1•4 UP 10.• :>«r In ,1, J "ll1la.n 8 )I ll< 1' Omeo! Ah:il'll !'• t '• UP 1g.• -• h th · I ed·as n a °"~'ti 11.it 4l'~ ,,,~Nordsrr 11141 11J IJ P-110 11111 l,t· 1•, uo 1 .• '""· ave em p ac e r o.inr rni r 6, ~,...wi NIG "lll •• 16 w11u, Shltld c 7'•" 1. uo t .. . °" c ~ • No~•ll c ~·, ' " BlutCh!oSt u ,,,... "" Uo '" a s possible \Vhl'r c \' o u 01~~· Cr' 12:; ~"-"411Crr 11: ":~ ·~ .... JJ ~..,.r'dv C~ u!• 1· ' :• ~o :·- I • 1 -11 • h. "I'~"' 1-<<1 in·~ •1 11•wc1 H , •1, 1 2(1 Ar,~ • .::. ... '.;:.' ,~.~: 1 .~ u: ,· u t1matr y w1 "ant I em. '.)lck A e ,.., ,.., t•" Dr .s1114 'i:111 21 MIJ!r ciArn ~1• 1n1 .... .._. Up 1~ Y . k k ch f D!.irs Sc i 1 7'~ 131, ••n E• 1 H "I. Ttc:Mokl 1 t 1-. Vo , oo m ight ma e a s el o 0ocute1 J.ill. u·~ n"i: 1tott J ll..., GU or01n1 L•Oi 1 ·~ uo 1. Dolli G•n 71~ 1'1o I Qi ~· "• • llldutl F~ICD l'l ~ '• ua '· the rloor plan or vour new 0on11.ts , ••• ,.~~~vv M 111"111 u Ton1 Lim.co J•1..-'-uci 1 home wllh notation s on wh1c eo..1~ Dl!I , ... ~ 1,•\ "'' c'''0 ' 1'~ • 1 cot1t l•b•••o• 15' •-' Dll I'·' il em s should be plnced where Fco" L"~ ,,~ ~"\ ~~"' '"" 1•. l 0111ci11"1Clic 01 a -I'> 11 1sJ ' · ,.,.,~In n· ''~ • Oii 13'• U"• t Oorl Dr1111 .ll J ~ I §' •. How can you and ho"· can agains t losses? . , • . h Dow JM• :\" :Mil\~ F LOSERS "'rtur F ,. '"'' l'l' \ "' ,.., 1' • • COii! C1ttm1 l -'• I! 1'.' -a nd give a copy to the =1 o·~"' 11•. ,,,,• ,1~;' cNA ':-'' • s C:er t•ldot T11e Y.--"" 111 ~.: p revent "I .,.,,.,,, .,, '" P~tli! &" f,' v. 6 Envlt<'!'I S•sr ' -'" ~I "' mo,er e.,.,gu c ,., " 1••cte r ~,, • ~''• I ~1n1,.1 kltn ,,.._ 1-. H Ill . l·ou 1·ns•1re · .... , s~1 1,., ,, .. , •• J l.< 1 encor Inc • -'• t rt. ...... em Ir·, 11 ... ' G Ttc!\J>olY ,, l 12 ' hand. and this is geJJrall): yoor :~~;. I~ ';i1 1::~ ;~Q LB':d 1: ... ,,t, IG rt-r~l·Drv 1~= i': i,' ii} help JF YOUR belongings are worth more than this, d eclare a realistic total value or the good> being shipped •1 p~;.,, ,,, 1-, p11 Oc ' If N11n c~s inc l -11 .t responsibility. Also a m ong ~JI• L~• ~~ 1,1. P1:1 .i>J lJ~·! a~ lJ ~·~llnvlCp f..:: It ·: l&:~ "b"ll · · ~1rlon El 1'~ 111~ P111!1~ p JJ 1 U c •'1°t, ~ fil= 'l n 0 ; your respons1 1 hes :-movmg "''"' B• 11•1 I"" •vt11 c1• uv. !It) 'l e~ p11ofo S 2 1.. " .:1 I . f I "•"1 Dr1I .. ~ f P,v N 'I lTo ,.,.. I TrOOl tTl)OI st -,, I· I.) sn1a1 Item s o r e aUvely great "'"''~' ,,,, u PeG1o\ w ,.,, 1,. 1 h1Lrnc:a1" F111 , .. _ '• 1 1..; . l'"d TIO•tn ,~ ""'Pt! HltH , ••• 17\.o 11 Stoll• l loGold •n-'• II 1.1 value (Jewelry furs). "' .,..1=1n '''' 'X'\ •'''a Lw 1"' 1 ,, M1'11'19•r-• Lci l -1... ff 1.1 ' 1<1 WitF ''i ''' l<N S.v 6 1 JO M.Y Tll" Co 11+-\1 I i·· e-11co Inc 10 l~ Pi:,rtn 2~ )6\, :ti So11st1.,, l"n 1' •-v. f .. SAVE MONEY by doing al ~:~ck!~•o 1~ !~i~"lotrr r~ 1i" Jj·~ jJ 2::11:.i~sc"?i 1~ a 1 J I t f th k• 1'11r-t1! f'll 1~1 ; 1J•o Pl•nD Mii 17'\0 'l U k~ltl'IO I~ 11,.._ )) 7.1 eas some o e pac 1ng Frink l!:I ,,~ ,,. 0011 Bro 4•~ J'·• u Sot0Pr11111 .JO J~'J-'• 1.1 yourself. You a re responsible ~ ~.=.. ~ if "'hat you have packed is damaged in transit unless you have bought that added valua· MUTUAL FUNDS a nd pay tJie extra charge of 50 cents for each $JOO of value you declare for full added· YOUR KEV area in "'hich·lo_..,_ .. ..,..,. ___ ...,...,_,.""''""'"""""'•""'"' value protec h · · '"l New Vor'll -l'ol·w;I• Gr '"' 1.2~1 .... Ful\CI •n •n VGYaa t .1010,i.o • to compare c arges is m "'ue1 1ow1no 1, • 11.i 114 ATON a P Gw1h 1 . .0 '·I! t..,.,,, F •.11 7 . .w ..O•Tllt lion. movers c a 11 "accessorlal ~.! •ndon 'w..':u~i ••in"~~: J·40 1(1.21 J~~~ I~~ 1tU 1#:it Rin trt 1J·;1 2,12 lt is quite possible that your charges." These are for such F_,. ·~ t,:tld Dv 0"'111 F l ·:t l•.1• 1H•11 io 1 n J·il Fd 1.1 ·•·" homeowner's insurance policy · k · i11e NA~llC. !:C"'l:' 1= ,~ t·f'l 10111>11" n." · ri.l"~osla Ifs , '·11 bel . h"I serv1c~s as pa c 1ng, un--w---.r ~tck FD lj 13.s:i <1Vs1g1N~~!flt.tt in1t Inv 16 7111'9 (.'(Ivers your ong1ngs w I e pa<'king. f~rnishing container s, Jv .... "°.;/\'Jl Alk IBfl'\o 1t:U ii:~ ~~i! l! 20.:u 2\.3I r::llC *:ri lg:;.: Yt~~~ ae~p1;:y"'; "::,':1,~~inigr lugging pianos up and down "l~l:"L ,_:Jg ··u ·,~Mt/.-T1 '1"' tl:i ~I' f ... !.~ 5~·~.v ,:~' 2:·~{ steps. etc. The oharge for 1~-t, •,· 111Y Pr 2:n . • !~' Il n .31 ~.12 •cu•1TY "' : the COsts Of Your m o"e he ho · " .1,, n,um · I · ~N:I Am 7 .~, 1 10.72 11 4 foullY J. 3.6 • • I se IS on a per uni o r AavlM• •.1 •.SI or•• Gt 11:.112.M ;K1 3 1.1• 1.v 1n ..... 1 •·» 1.1s m ay ·ha'e spec1"al insur ance .. · " ba · d st .... 1111 Fd '·' 1.31 11111'1 Trt 1s.Jt .~, )11 4.14 unr• F "1' 1.11 per service SIS an mu o\11.v. In ll.1114.,S ~ lf, llM ... 00110 t.l: "lo l:L•CTIO l'OS. policies to cover you. Or you be se"""M>lely itemized Thus .. ,"•'""•• ~·st ~11 ner11v 1 11.01 Pot•r• ,, "'" Sh• 1.11 '·• be bl t ha t'-" ' ' ~ ,14 l°"'"' F I. , . (nk kt ·" I IS a.. Fd 1.17 1.11 may a e o ve a you need not pay for upacking •,:,.":"Fa l~·~ 11· ~ .. 11rtta '·es '""" cn«r Giii 1.11 '·',', s111 _ "''' 12.• ,','·"n "d dded t h m~· · · .. m l ure tj21 t.21 LtM1m1t I II '· Stnllnel t '3 r1 er a o your o .. v.vn· \\'hen your goods are pi<'ked A•rnc•o F ""' ,.11 Fld A•s • s • .t.nx Fa •.•1 4.V irv 11 1J.0t ''· ' 1· to m m O'lr"I P'IOILITY •X GllOUI": MA••HU) Giii' : er s po icy cover your ove up, the van driver or other .fS '·!'~io::n o•ouP: ~o L.m-1s..1• 11u com•' ~.u 3.~ a t lower cost than the extra iepte9etttatlve of the mover ;&NJ?'••s' ~,,,,.., 1T:l': 1;:~ .~r'~~c1 1~.,, 13,! ~1~oi;:.s tfi i:U expense ol full coverage Wn7 'truike a written inven tory f:o'!: ,,~ t:U r'{k 'J 7.M .!!J,1111v i1•·,3~ 1, .... ·:w r::r L '·',', f:T through the mover. f yth" , h · 1n.,11m :ii f., • I· '"'" 10 · Pt.~ Fd •· · o ever 1ng you are av1ng io-c• 6:,, :14 ,,.. . . ~ 11c1 • •• H•A•SOI\ F~~60 If your belongings mus t be shipped -with notes on ite m s A.i:.ll(irt!I I::l !:R F:it" l1;tl 11j::J ~AVL~l : ~:"~ 1 I:i~ l.:,2 stored. ask thilt 1hl"y be held which are "marred a nd scar-•m iniln '-SI '· Purnn t.H .ot c10 Ov 12.>6 17..36 111~1 1.1, t.Y Am 1n ... 1 • SJ • s 111"'1 F J ... (.J) Mu;r.•1 ,.,,, 14.0 h " 10 Ot 111.M on a "storage-in-transit" red." As k for a copy of the Arn Mut 1•" !:" Tr«ID 22..u 1,.s.. .o.•, A••1 SlGt F '·" -, ... AmNt Gr II ..:,, •tN~CIAL A •1 •.11 1·u UG..U. •UMOI• basis. Otherwise. the mover complete form and be sure ANcm• · "'~ AMS· Am 8111 ''1 .12 C•o Siii" 1.n '.ft may not IJe C 0 n S i d C r e d you Understand it. Check thi!! OC~~~1f ' A.25 '·" ~ ~ l)Q j1•"u ~:ttu ~·""'r.v.t ~ 1i:~,.1~:u ~~I 111G:~ 1i:'"a responsl.b le for d a mage oc . I nd t ·1 Fnd Jnv 1.4 •.Iii f< n nc . ~ .!I. •• •u•ot v.,1..,r '' " • 1nvenory a n oe 00 I any Grwll! 1·.ff f·1 Vir,t ' l' •olll j501J 14 r 11rt.G' 1 ·.10' currin g in stor age. rli sagrccmcnts you m I g.h I ~~~r :f4 1:' 1>1'fttTV• IGMI ·" "7fom l:r 11' Gtnf. 1 :r,1:~;: unless "OU ordered It. -ha"• W• N•ll 1 J7 1 . rNva5TOltSI Cl~ t 1 ,1 .... wit ln¥ • . , • Ao1rm j·4' . R!•c Fd .13 I,., 111... ·C ··~ ~~ Have a ppr o p r i ate ~~J• F .SJ 1· Yi':tFi ~~ :•i •1 1~1 ' 1 ·14 i.w~nTnG 1~1tU servicemen discoMect and BE ON HAND to supervise AaU01tTDN1 l'I Mu111 ~ 1·I! """' f·" I"', Z:.Ctr• 4·61', l·,',' Fllllll A '·ff j B • Sltrr ii rid!' F • .S .11 \~I" lnO 6. • ser vice a ppliances s uch as delivery a nd check each i tem ~,.. • ,. . FOllUM 0111: P: •1,• '!...t,J1 12.it ''ATI •NG,,.••,','• • , 1ock 'fi I· 100 Frid 1 . 10\11 1s '""'101 ,......., Fa .02 :,.., refrigl'f'"alors. room air con-against the inventory ~s It Ill x• kl . ' . Ill~ Flld . , . .., ~~ \1·: ~a ~·-" •·w I·" JAMES O. PLUNKETT till 1111'11 Mr-tin• Rt 1I Pr°""ty relerena to wflfcfl 11 l!ly Ooroll'ly Htfyt'f Fhhllr petl!lon lar Proti.al• Qf wru end tor m!Klt for lurtlltr p1rtlcul1n, 1nd 11\11 1111 Pll"(.l\Ql"' .-.int Unit •nd pl1c1 a4 11t1rlng TM 11m• Mt .U-1100 l11u•r.ce of l•llf<'I Ttllt.mt11l1ry to tM Min 111 !or July .!I, 11n. 11 t ;OO •.m., 111 ,.llllll•hld Or•l'lll• c,,.11 01ttv Piiot. ptlltloner rtl•rtnt• lo wrilcll 11 ,.,,.a, tor 111 ourlfoom of D~rlmtnl ..Co. ) of Jvnt 1•, •N:I June 21 1971 11G-7l fllrlll« ~rHcu11,..,, •N:I t~t llM 1lmt1 •nd • c .... 1 • ditioners, stereo sets -as \JnDac~ed .. Be sure that the bill 1:~111 lf ll~'. ~c ~ i.ll {U ~ 1 :n ifU : 'tr~~ i:llw ttt•" well as your telephone and of 13ding 1nd1catcs the aiueed· ,.,..T., l.s. . c.•• MC 1 ·~ u .t1 ''"' sir tS. •~. electricity befo~ th e upon pickup and delivery 1r:nfl1 1&:111: ,.:1 1.1 ... ~=r1w 1 ' 1&:U I!"'r:""N2.11F . i · U hook" d · r1ltl'" K 11.H , 11c:om 11~ 'l·fi "'Id All\ 1· 1 '1 A-!"ct 1.1t 1.j• movers arr 1 v e . n 1ng ales, tim es, costJ. .,.11w '· '· " M~ ,. . ._,,, ~d t . 111, \!'rri' 1.~1 • 1 11--------------=-------'-INJl!drl 'i:· •! rifj~;! , ,,: "'f,' •a 1 :!11: .:1.l'IC•0~.1i'?i~" L'lwv ·1' ·"' o 1'31~1• •• I~ rfro .,f& S:ff f~':' 1:.: tc:G b¥,-~ TC • '·I! •-uom ot ·~ 4. .,, ftt10Ul'1 ~ Bvlt I'd 12.'5~.ft wtl'I Sr 7, !~ UOm 111 j· 9.!J. Grw!I\ ~73 tit lll•ot ot Mtrl119 •I'll! ''"'"' ""' ,,..... Kl l"ld courl, 11 700 Civic Cent.,-.,, w for Jiiiy 10 l9n. •I t ·OO • m In Ille Wnt, In "'' C!IV of 511111 /l.N, C1lll«nl•. PUBLIC N011CE ' • • '' D•lld JuM 12, 1'7) courtrOCWTI of Q.fp•rlmelll Na. 3 ol ••kl WtLLIAtot E SI JOH N J---------------court, •T 700 Cl.,lc Ctnltr Ot"f.,. Wttt. In County Cl k ' NIWPOltT·tot•SA UNll'llD Ille City DI Santi An1. C•lilornl1. l>ONALO J ITI=~ SC+tOOL OllTRICT •Y TlllY GU.NT, l ... D•lld June 11. l'7l. • Notice 1n.illt111 •lo. WI Ll tAtot IE. SI JOHN, 1 ... Nor1~ VIM 11'"1' NOTICE ll HEREBY GIVEN 11'iel lh• coun11 Cl••~ fullt MU111Mr 111:. 1o.sra of EDuc111011 of 111o NtwWl·tote•• No, this J.11 certainly not a MA Rlt.N l"lVHKE TT HGllYWOIMI, cin..,.,!• to02I Unl"ed kl'IOOI 0 1,1rlc1 o1 Or•llDl C:Oltlnly, tJ·avcl ad but just our 411 Ofift AYI I" 0 II• U• T•I: ltlJ) 41--'4fi C11/laml1, wUI rtct!W -1111 blch up ia ttw11111t11o1n .~~,.; C11u . .,.,. ·~:1>1~~ ~!~:"''(°'" Oeltr l'lla1 ll:DO •.M.. on Iller '°"' 01,, °' Jutr Jtn ,1 sneak y \\'&Y Qf getting your T•I: ffl•l ~ • "**" JV11• 11 u . 21 1tn IM1·~ '"' o111c1 o1 Hid Scl>Ool 0111t1c1, loc111d altcntlon a nd making a Att"""" ,.,, """'--~-·-11 us1 l'ilocenrl• Avtnue. c~t• Mtu, point lh!\t. you should not 21::.1;.~.~·· Co.ti! Oillv l"lkl:,~.i;; PUBLIC "'011CE. ~11~;1~;..,w11~~ ~= ror~ Dkl• Wiii I'll! Jl;&!l'lblf' \\•Ith your hel\llh. c111arOOl'tl FurnlM'• • For. this l!t \\·ht1L happC'fl!I PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITD«S AllCltrlHl<I Elrmtntarr v.•hf'n "OU ll~tcn to d oor-to-S\11'5RlOR COIJltT OF THI: All Didi •r• to tit In .c:((M'(f•nee wllll ~ aUll7 ,.,.,,IEOl'C.,L•"OR NIAFOll Condl!loro" 1nitruc t l on s. •lld d oor snlC'!lm cn \Vho promise NOTICI TD ctt•OITOllS THI. COVNTY OF OltAllGI! SP1Clllc•llon1, whl~fl ,,. -an Ill• ~" curative be n ('tit. f'n:lm Ne. ,...,..., ""'ottkt o11t1t .. .,,.chl111141 .-...ni ot t1kl h 1 h r~.. d Jtamlns suP•••oa COUll:T OF THE E1!1le ol StDNEV N SUCHAlt D, ..... S<llODI DlttrlCI, list Pltctnll• A¥ftl\lt, ('fl L VU\» ftn v STATE°' CALll'DltNIA l'OR SIDNEY N .. THAN SUCHAltO. •k• CO.I•"""'""· c.llfarnlt . they arc selling. TN• COUNT'r Ofl OllA ... GI 510,.EY SUCHARO, •k• S. N. SVCHAll:O, Eote:ll l)IDOtf mutl 1ullmll • bid ""'It Na. A ,..,. 0tc111..i. 111 11111 fcfm ., • Cft'lrn1c1 or u 1nler• 1• t• •·n••r o us •o follow EJ!•fw of l(Atl'IJl.,.N TAYLOA, •ho NOTICE! IS t1EREBT GIV!N to 11\t cneck., I Did Dan.cl ~uel to t'lw perctttl • , u.n ' ' '"D:'~·J.' IC.A"Q111!!4 •· TAYLOR . u.au...-1 of 11111 •l)v.I• fllnlto cHctdllrl Ct':llol of IN •mount o1 tl'ltr 1!14. mectt unskUled odvlcc. To relieve · n..1 •II 11•oon1 "'"'1'111 c111,,. t0•itrtt 11t1 "l'blt 10,,,. orotr or 1111 Newport.,,,,... or cure Illness, the cause NOTICE IS HEllEJY GIVli N i. '"' MIO CIKtdMll •r• rflWl•td " fllt """"· VII !ltd kllool Dl1tr1ct. " Pertonnlnc:1 mUJt be determined. Only credltcn • lfW 1oboro1t '*'*' dlc.otllt w1111 TM ne<•n••Y vwcllf<'s, lfl 11111 olllct &Ond mey Dt ,...,,.,.., 11 11111 dhcrt!lon of tt..1 a11 ~ M.Cno cl•ltN ... 1n11 '"" of "" clft'lt o1 11111 •boW tt11ttttd cowt. w n. Dh frkt, 1" 1111 """"' of l•lluro to a physlt l!ln h fL'I th~ knowl· ukt ~ .,. r"""!'9cl N fHt ltwrn, 10 11rf'ltn1 ,,,...,, ... ari "" n11: .... ry 11'11« Into 1uc11 C"Olltrtct, 111t proc..01 of edge tn dlapiote and pre- wllll "" f'lf<•....,., .iwc""•· In 1111 offlct "°"~"','· 10 lhl ll!'!Cltr1ionote1 11 the offlc.. !ht cl'Mlck wlU tit torltl!td, Olf Ill ttM DI• acrlbe tN!e.tment. of 1119 dWti: .r llw ADIYo """""' c-1, GI' 01 "" tTIOf'~fy. Pt.UL A. HANNA, .Ill· IMllld, lf'lt t\111 1um 111...ot WIH bl '° "'""" !'Mm. wt111 IM f'IK ... ~,Y 1ornty 11 L1w, H1t11ar L'"' aulldln.g, 41' lomlttd to ,.kl Scl'laOI D!t1rLC1 of OtlllH YOU OR YO'~ DOCTOR "°"""'"' .. -. lllldlrlf ..... at tlMI afffff lfll 11th $rrHf, Cot1• Me.a, C1tllornJ1 Ceunl'f. v n. of rw • ..._. CCM.ONEL HllllRtN() 5, "'''· ""'l<h '' Int ~'" ot t1U•lnt1• of Na trlcN« mev WllllCl••w hi• bid tor t CAN PHONE US }Yhen )'OU fl"ftAJt1KLIN, to ll:ttl 11111 SfrNt, co.I• 11\f llnD•••ltnlG 111 111 m11ltf1 Pfl'f•lnlrit Pl!'lml of tor1Y·flv1 1.u1 .,.,, .,,ft' 1111 nttd a d ellvery. We will de· ~ (•11 ... nl• '2"1' wl'!lcl\ 11 N Oltct IO tl'lt f Slalf ol Hlcl dtCtdtftt, Wltlllll four .... HI tor 1111 Opclt'll"9 lllfrlof. -" _.,... I/If ""' ~ In 111 -•· "'°"1111 1111r 1ri. nra1 OllDlfutlOfl 111 11111 rn. INrd o1 l!Duc•llon °'""' ,...._.., liver promptly \Vl thout e:ictra '"'' ...-ielnlllf to tl'lt ••lllt ot ulct cl«., nollce. #Mu U11lftld SCl'lool 0111rtc1 ,.,,.,...,., 11111 ch11.rge. A great many pc!Ople clltllr ..t•ln '°"" '"°""'' trt•r tht fll1t O•ttd M•y >t. 1tn "9111 10 ••lect •ny or 1n bld1. •nD 11111 rely orl ua for t h e ir health puDllttlllll fit f'lll l\Olkt. MARGIE iUSAN SVCHt.111:0 N>C .. 11rlly tcCtpl 1111 llM't11 b1111 •nd 'a Ot.!f! J\lfll. It, 1m lhteurr111 ot 111t w111 weiw •ny 1n1orm111iy or lrt19v11rity 111 needs. \Vt' \YtlComc n'!(fur1lll MA'lllOUl:T ATHl"HOVll -u " Ir.: •tiov• n1"'"' OKldlnf lllY blcl rec:itlwct. for dell vet')' • er v I 0. and E:J14<WI• of"" wu1 PA LA.. kllA DlltD Jun1 t,, 1m Ai.. • ..,,0 aocoun•• . ., N *"" "'°'* Ofttdolftl A"'""' II LIW Nl~T-MUA UfOl'IEO ""IG.•• .,. ckOfd'.L N•llRlfllO J. PllA .. KLI" ,..,,.., Lew l lllollflt SCHOOL O .. TJllCT w ••t 1• ''"" ~1• IMt 11111 S"9tl vi OtlllClt '°"""'· C•ll'°'111t PARK LIDO PHAlt..-ACY <tar• ..,.., (19!, l>fft1 c,-,,-,,, ... "",-',"*' m 11 I t Oorotr.y H•r...., "1tlltr HI H-.aJfel a...i T.t1 fnt> .,..nu 11 1 .. P1KC11.1t.1no """' • .., .. .,. ·~ AltwMT f« ••KVtT't• A...,,.t for lliKt!rl.l '41-1100 ~ ... ch '42·1SIO .....,.INd a.-...,. C•l1 Dtlt1 fltklt, "'"'°'ltllld 0rll!flt C,,.11 O•llY l'llfll. PUDl!tl'!>H OfilllOt Cotti Dat1Y ~UOI', lill'Ot JI,,.~ Ill,. s. It. .. ?) ,..,.n Mlrl 11 ..... J-i. k. II, ,.,, ,.,..,, Jllne 14.. •!Od Jvn• fl, ttn IMJ.7' ,,.. 0.1...., ~~~~~~~l l-~~~~.:._~ t ~ &f.n FD 21~ , r lncm l. 4 • uh l~n 1 l•jj Ille~ 1.114 tf ~t· ltllf ·/1..1 •• 1.~'" : 1: ).i.,r.r.• 'rn'i: ": •... ~ rn bl•:~;: Jj·' :·" .. Y. .11../g_ NV ven 1 , . • n c~ •11 4. AT sac "fJ.l .._.,. ,. ' 1·1! ·--ol Ntwroi-1 IW~h--• Hrntrr""'° ,:Ii ·f·ln' kr ~1'&: 11•:i: ,~:P. e~::,,,~,r tu ·,~H t~or "J 1~: :Y o Trln 'j· 11 fl:d totl if ti t:o1 r.ron 3. . ,._ c w1 C u1tpm Tailor and 111 $M t . l . ~NDS lllCP ••I s1k s. .• "Tr1!n c~o w.11 w.tJ MANN/NI 00,l lnr.orn •,to \ !J f•tvl f" • n •11 ~? Sh irtmaker \/NOii omm '! ,.tt Sloe:\ Sr ~ 41 • ''"'"" H lft '' tn.M ·"' 1'111nca ltl.l Jlt ~ ,'3 Grwtll. tu '·"' rr, ~.,,.. ~ ,1 • "' gncs Fit ' • Ir • tr 10 1 .7' llW •N• flt ('I , ... ,., -s~ l· • • '· ·" ""• 'ttJ "·" . .,,,. tl' •·• ~" t: II......., 7, AO Orwlli 1 n . .v 1111~1110t l t 32 111(0"1 f , I 5.Jl' jf I_ 5"" I . It.Oii INU'lto S'R ICI!. >00<1 ':II . IC. -'•NE.\ Ml ·~ t . .S.t 1•0llP'1 \Vt.idlff Plit• V111Jtur I. • OU f I I °'lfll C"tnl •· •.t' ll•tt I Iv lj I' 1•.1t CHA I!' ADii! F 1·· !""""" I ' 1.1• Ntl'I '"" 'I • ..., •S1v,ntttntlr.•11dh.ilne • •~ON: rl•t l=nd ~ · ~~"'1 l .~11.1.1 011 etot ''1 f"" MS-107J 8os ,j l:l!" 'ri Slit 1 . 12. w ...... 13.'1 I ll \11'<!1<,• .,., l ·As Co S. ~FAtll 4. 4, Wl>'ll lltflTl!O f llNOS• r 81 6 'ff ,.'':..}! I•.. ew,1W1d j'·~"·!l Accum ,fl f,.t •----------------------------•' I '· s. rt. IC~ II 4 1•. 'In~ "" ,,~ I" -~~.f.it..10. 11,4 .,,JL .tift~1 H~vtr , •• ~, ll~ ~=: ~ :'if JG'.: WANTED! ACCOUNT EXECUTIVES ... _ ef ... Md,..,.... ..................... ,.. ........ • Registered Reps ' e NASO Brokers • Life ln1ur1nc1 Sal11men tf .... ,.. 1 ... , .. fer • '"'"" .... ~n ,., .,.. """ .. u t.f tti. ....... ef ~ ..... Yff ON pNMltf' ffl .. , .,.. eW9 ~ ti ......... ............... ..,.,...,., w. .. ......... ,..... .. • c.,....,.., pepet,, , ........... _. .. tHt h ,....,. .. tM c•"""· Mtot It •• pt"efl.,..,. .................... .,. .... . w .... ··~ ........... """'· ,.... u.,itttly ~··,,.. .,,._la Ntw""" ........ ..._. •-4 Westwff4. fer .......... w.. ... 1o. ti Ht :•.,..,ca,...,•••: Nowport Besch Westwood 1714) 833-0922 1213) 4714113 ,UNC s1 ()rwtll .41 Ml • 1..i4 tnc:em 1~·,., i•" ': l•fff 'j·!l ~=1 • ~ •J• "":.~ U: IH: ~--· ljl j~: . 1 ,;; •rl LY ' . tt•NHM "II ·~·""' (• 10., I .. i: 11j:il ;;: , gg $~ ': 1J·f. tff1.8i"L1~tl~l·m; ~~.:. ii•ll• .il":;:r , :~·~· rc 'l:1 jl 11~ ~:I\:: i·ll l· MMONW\.TM miw Co •rttnt , 7'" ~ f'llt! ,.,. · ""•' I'' M•.r, ' . ' • •ul .... £''741·3, V:Oi ~DC '°' , •• i·a · f'oC m · IM.111' r, .. 17lllH"'! • C , .ll ~ ol1 .lt P• M j,14 :14 •Ofrt•1t11 == !~ : t'.;, ri'~m 'I : P~?r~ J~ :1~ ~~ .~;' f~ t·.~ ~!! ~g J~ i:ll i: 1 ~~~ ~· ,•' ;I~• 'trt •tf f.'4 '~ .. ~~!• ~-I; 'jll oncrd 1l 1 n.i• ~ '-j· 't f'IN••l!I D\ V•owint 1·n ' ""f. Inv , .ti l ftV . • "/:: l!n ~ 4 ,,, \tR~· lOWI ~·-:~,~ ~:ff I:' .:: ',,.c ~ou~~~ ~1on,"nl1:• lz:~~"i.'!,c~ ~;·~·~~'I :::1~~c J.~ i l~"' T .,t~~-o • ,',".,~:~•:•tr ',· 7 1' = 'b''! -: F=t,r . jj JJ':!X•, 1 ',~ ..... ~r.1., u l::. ~,\II . I i'&.t'e,.1. Pt ,.~ l"fll lj 11,.., i.llt=1 " ' •11t· I, 'I::& £ ·ll •ir.l-:~ !:ii J:S., ~~" j~ ~ '· 'J ' • ' .,f'0\111 ,,, I i U Tcllnl'f ri" Jt , . , :i. : r~u: 1.: , n:oe ~~;... 1;, '»"' .~ ~ i,: 11•, . ~~J l:I tJ 1~ 11. 1 : ~~· . : rm t 1 : ~ ,n,J ~:I :&:n v'l:,, ,, :. l . :=:ir::=~ I l I l / I I I I I Thun4J1, Jun. 21, 1'17J Tliilrsday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Exch nge list Dow Jones Ind~~ . ·Falls 11 Points Nl'W YORK (AP)-Stock market prices drifted ~!her sharply lower Thursday In very slow trading at saw most Investors yawning on the sldellnes. Analysts !"lid sellers were havlng ·trouble find- ingdbuyers, with _the result that prices were filling un er t.be1r own weight. With the temporary suspension of Ute publlc Watergate :hearings, some of the edge bas· been ;~.n of! 1nveslo r co ncern in. this are·a. brokers ~owe~er, worries over the sagging dollar and !nllation still abound, they added. I SC DAILY PILOT z;; l1Hlijijl!1ll Finance Briefs e OH Contrt1et LONG BEACH -Petrolane Inc. bu signed a contnct with Sonatrach, the Algerian QO I oil complDY, to ~ a a minhnum of 950,000 metric tons {approximately 5 o o•r millim gallons) ol Jlqadled ' petroleum gas over a t'k-yeaJ period. ~ The price was not dllcklo.J. Under the agreement ~trach will b)ltially supply approxunately 80 m i 11 i o n gallons or )'.l P ·gas lrom Ocloher 1973 through 1974, and a minimum of 5% mllllOn galloos In, subsequent year.; • Pert Fa«!llltti · J.. OAKLAND (AP) -Stanil· ant ,Oil Co. or Calilornla b ~1!iering building an or1soore d~pwater port facili· ty for supertankers near j,t.s existing facilities at the north end of Estero Bay, a compe.ny spokesman told an Army Corps ol Engineers hearing.. The present f1cllltl's receive a limited supply of Oil and ship some crude oll lo Slandard's rclineries in Rldl- mmd and El Segundo. Jules Mayer said at Wednesday's public meeting. / 0 Furniture Plan• DREXEL, N.C. -A new plan( near Loo Angeles will begin producing Drue! and Jieritage upholstered furniturt for the growing w e s t e r n market early next y e a r . Howard H. Haworth, presjdent of Drexel EnterprJse:s, reported. Wednesday. Drexel En tt rp rl se s . a division of Champion lnterna· tlonaJ, has signed an agree- ment to lease a 80,000.squ.are- foot laclllty to be built In tho w,lsoll lndll!trlal district near Carson. 0 Skell" Cllange LOS ANGELES (/\P) - Ernest B. Mille~ Jr. has reslgntd as president of Skelly Oil Co. to become executive vice prt$ident, chlel operaUng officer and a director of Gt!Uy 011 Co. Miiier was ctmtn by Get .. ly's boo.ro· or dlre<:lors Tue.. day to succeed George F. O.i. ty II, who died June l . Miller has beaded Sl<elzy &inoe llfll. .. •• • " • • ., .. -.. • .........,._ ...... . .. .. .; . . ' . fl8 DA.ILV PILOT ;'; ._ "Ttwrsd<1', June 21, 1973 , 4 . • • . . . • . . 174 Compltdbts , ·' ., v •) ' FeroinW~· Sp~ay ..!"/. • ~ • ~ . . ·. . W arnillg~ Urged . -, WASHINGTON (AP) -/iw.. presence 00£ ... a condition ror : Food and Drug Administrailoil • .. which a p)ly~iciatl s.ho~ld . be has proposed that feminine consulted. V. a. rash, 1rr1tahon, : . unuso8.I vaginal d.!seharge .or deQdorant spray~ be required discomfort deve"tops, discon- • to carry health warning labels. tinue use inrinedla tely and The agency said Wednesday conSult physician." · it knows or no medicinal or hygienic value of the sprays, and would consider misbrand- • ed any product using the words "hygiene" or "hygi· t!llic." The FDA is said to beli eve that the adverse reaction com- plaints represent only a small sample ot those experiencing trouble. Bpt the agency said CONSU!\IERS and industrv they do not indicate a signifi- have 60 days to comment !JO cant health hazard eii:~t ~---lhe-propooed-regulation-before-possibly~s of m· the FDA makes a fmal fection.. • • • . ' decision. During the last four years, the FDA and Federal Trade Commission have received 174 unsolicited complaints from -women and physicians of itching, burning, blistering and urinary infections after the sprays were used. The reports increased from : 14 in 1969 to 20 in 1970 and 89 'in 1971 , then dipped tO Si last year. LAST SEPTEMBER, t h e FDA banned the use o{ hell:· • achlorophene in a I I non- prescription drugs and cos· metics, including feminine . sprays, because of the germ- killing chemical's toxicity. The FDA proposal would re- quire the following warning on the sprays: "CAUTION-For external u.9e only. Spray at least eight inches from skin. Use. spar- ingly and not more Utan once daily to avoid irritation. Do not use lhis product with a sanitary napkin. Do not apply to broken, irrita ted or itching skin. Persistent or Wlusual OOor niay incUcate t h e FOR THAT reason, it said that the decis:ion was made not to remove the sprays from the market.: A spokesman.. !or Alber!!> Culyer Co., maker of FDS, said, "\Ve arc prepared to confonn with any regulations they may propose." .....The....Jpo.kesman said the company does not accept, however , the FDA's finding that the sprays are of no medicinal or hygienic value. ''WE CONSIDER the sprays to be a valuable toilet article," the spokesman said. "Our suc-cess with them has established this fact." Feminine sprays, introduced in 1967, have climbed in an- nual sales from $3.8 million to an estimated $55 million. The FDA said it also would extend to feminine sprays its Maz:ch __ J!roRQ§al requiring all aerosols to carry labels wam-· ing against inhaling the con- tents'. The agency said it received numerous reports of heart difficulties and sudden deaths of persons who inhaled aerosol fumes. In Sunday's Family Weekly: y Mrs. Jimmy Stewart: in Africa With My .Dsentminded Rasband Jirnm.y lotle! to go ou ~afari for an.other na:1on too, which. seem& lo be 11eculiarly his. lie thinks it helps Aim ooncen.lratel J'ou see, m,y husband has a celebrated Undency toward abse11tmindedn.tss. I don.'t 'hin k IU!'s quil.e ~ absentTtiinded as some people have nwde our, blll. 'ii is true that tfJhen our girLf Kelly and Jud.v ioere born, lie came l o th e liuspital l fJ brin{!. nre honi e, n,,d Ur.en. drove off roilhcut "1c. In an entertainingly biograph ical report, Gloria Stewart refates the background of her husband's lifelong fa sci nation with Africa. The amusing and touching incidents she recounts from their several vis ~s to the Dark Con tinent offer intriguing insights into the real man behind the personality we all know as the world·famous actor Jimmy Stewart. She traces his great love for animals and the out· doors back to hi s boyhood in Indiana, Pennsyl· vania , where he planned his '1tirst safari." And reveals why Jimmy is so convinced that tracking big game in its natural environment is certain to sharpen on e's powers of observation and concen· tration. e DESIGNS YOU CAN COPY -Paris·based fashion expert Genevieve Antoine-Dari.au x of· fers instructions fo r copyin g the haute co uture of Fr ench .designers. IUustratOd story has pre- cise directions for how to do it. e YOUR OPINION COUNTS -Nearly 20 million Americans \viii have the opportunity to sound off on 29 qu estions considered to be of strong significance. Join them by taking the Family Weekly poll on timely topics. · All Coming Sunc lay With The I D~ILY PILOT ) .. • ~ ... • Kerm's Got GQod Timin' . and So .me Gteat Ideas \ \ FGlllOUs lnter11 .. 1ic . Ti111e= All· Timer\ .. The outomotic servant that t~urns '--;;'Ft;~~~'-<lights or Oppliances On or off [..,..-f''-<o:--H h'\,-JLj-! ·l---4J ,. 1-pr~-t-r-So-mony-u• ... -----,~ around your t)ome. Use it tO start a roast before you gef home,~or to turn on lights at dusk. Germain's 'Kolorcoat' Dichondra Seed Coa ted seea pro.motes fiister growth. prevents fungus dis- ea se. Ha ndy one tb. size. --·~-I Convenient Redwood End-Table Bench It's o bench ... and o table all in one ... isn 't that great! Use It for seating when you need some ... or os o snack table. Durable redwood lasts a nd Iasis. Rtg. ,99 2.99 . \ •/f!llt. \ \Viii r 1 :--. _ _,, I"''" J.l Black & Decker Grass Trimmer Does The work of hand clip· pers ... -much mo re -quickly ond easily. Do uble insulated . Modeljl200. Safety Caps For Wall Receptacles Prevent children from injuring themselves by pluging thin·gs in to wall outlet. Cop fi ts right into outlet so it's not accessible. ----'--l-0-1oRI-J5eLpfilk...= · Adjustable Aluminum Food Steamer Ouolity aluminum French steaming basket adjusts to fi1 any pot . 5'' in diameter or more. 188 _.....,.:... #11111/:l.lnlo, I . Q );-C-~ '. /,,' (!; -').;:-1 I / f'lf '; , \S;:>"'r-t:;,2~' -;;;7 Rainbi rd Economy Lawn Sprayers Toke your ,pick: One model covers o 25' squa re oreo ... the o ther, two, overlapping 25' ci rcles. Both of rugged zinc. ·13aa \ 39c Always Useful ... Plumber's Helper This is the quick and easy way to unplug sink s and toilets with suction ... not chemicals! Ice Cube Tray Makes Giant Cubes Unbreakable pl a stic troy al· lows you to remove o ne cube or on entire lroyful. 6 color\. Scotts 'Plush Silent' 16" Lawn Mower Supe r q.Uiet ... use it early in he-morning ! ... toy s orp blodes. Easy g rip handles. &_vi_lt ·to lo st: • • l1995 Big,Jeefy and Sturdy 36 Drawer Steel Cabinet A sto rage Orga nizer with 36 see· through d ra wers . Holds oll your odds a nd ends ... keeps them where you con find whot you need ... in a hurr y! 6 88 ComplttJ L 17 17 .. ' Laguna Beaeh VOL. 6/>, NO. 172, 4 SECTION 52 PAGES ~ • • I ORANGE C::OU NTY, CALIFORNIA • Today's Final N.'7. Stocks THURSOA Y, JUN E 21 , 1973 TEN CENTS · Supreme Court Backs Obscenity Crack.down WASHINGTON (AP) -In a 54 decision reversing a decade-long trend to\vard permissiveness, the U.S. Supreme Cour.t-ga\'&-the-stales-n1uch-greater authority today to move against obsceni· ty. One()[ the cases on which the decision \vas based involves Costa Mesa. determining whether material is obscene The obscenity decisions involved l\\'O In the ottier California case, l\1urray prudery from a subject long irrationally .and therefore not protected by the cases from California and one from Kaplan, proprietor of the Peek-A-Boo kept from needed ventilation," Burger Constitution. Georgia. Bookstore in Los Angeles, was convicted Y.TOte. That"1urfes-and-courts-no-longer.:___::~::c-~<T.;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;::;:::;;;:;:;:;;;<:;::=--~un~d\!•!r.ttbe~s!JIJJ•l!le!_!o!lbs~ceru~·t!l'.)IJ!aw)LlcSl!L!~tl)lll!)gn.JlaL~·'j·B!!JJut it does not follo\v that no regula- need to find that tnaterial is "utterly" Fl~ST NORTHERN-SCHOO p a1n-covered, unillustrated book con-lion oTP3leiilly orfensi V"e'?fard-core' without redeeming social value before CASE RULING-Story, Page 3 tatning descriptive material of an ex-materials is needed or permissible; they tleClare it obscene. plicitly sexual nature. civilized people do not' allow unr~gulated In an opinion \vrilten by Chief Justice \Varren E. Burger, the court held : In the'. Costa Mesa case, Marvin Miller "Hard core" pornography was the access to heroin because it is a Instead, Burger wrote, they may was convicted in Harbor Area Judicial target of Burger's opinion. derivative of medical morphine s," determine whether the work "taken as a District Court in Costa 1\1esa of mail-''Qne can concede that the 'sexual Burger continued in the majority opinion. -_Local community tandards ralhel'- than national stanelards may be ·used in whole-Jacks ser.ious lilerary,~artisti1;, ing Uve advertising brochhres found to revolution' of recent years may have had He was joined by the three other ap-QP~itlcal, or scientific value." be ~S®oe. usefUI:'""byproducts in striking 1ayers or pointe~s ot ~President Nixon, Justices una Mexican Exc111·sio1i 27 -Feared D-ead In Plane Crash PUERTO VALLAriTA, ~lexico tUPI ) -Rescue tean1s reached the wreckage of a ~1exican jetliner on the side of a 1,500-foot mountain today and reported oo sign of life among the 27 persons -14 Desert'AiT P-revailing Along Coas t o! them believed to be Americans flying from ~louston, TCxas for a Mexican vacation. The DC9 of Acro-~1exico was within sight or the runway at this resort-town,on the Pacific Coast and the pUot w a s · chatting \Vith the control to~·er when the night-sky was~filled with.a great_b:u~t of orange light as the plane hit the peak and exploded. Tbe pilot'1.Jasl J'ldio contac:Lwith the . tow er gave no hint of trouble ap- proximatcl}--11 mlnutM_ bef_cn..:.::._it$ scheduled landing time. lie had reported he was descending from 141000 feet for the landing and tbe control lmver advised him the wlnd was calm -ideal for the landing in the . By J OllN ZALLER mountain commun ity. Then came 01 1t1t oa11Y ~iltt s1•11 disa.iler. --- The Orange Coast continued oh this . The w~ld Pacific coastal ~rea is almos t first day of summer to host a battle of 1nae<:css1ble by land. A flotilla o[ 30 to <tO -the-titanic air-masses.-the--Pacifie--lo,v-small-rescue---boatUed..hJ...A-Yacht went pressure system vcrsu; the desert high by sea early today along the coast to a pressure. landing at the base of ~raggy hilltop area AJ everyone can tel1, the desert high and sent rescue teams tnto the mountains pressure clearly has the upper hand 30 lo search for the wreckage. far. (Related s.torics, Pages 4. 15 and 22) A passenger list issued by the Aero- The desert system, centered o~er Utah, ~1exic.o airline indicated that at least 14 has met the cooler Pacific air al the America~ boa~cd the plane at Houston. coastline and is preventing the cool ocean but the bst \\'as in.complete and the exact breezes from penetrating to the swelter-number o !Americans among the 23 ing inland areas. passengers aboard ~as not kno'~n. . . The battle itsel f is not unusual because TY"o o( the Americans were 1dentlfled the two air pressure systems 3~ In con-as Daniel HiJJatd and his wif~ Sus_anna ?f slant competition for dominance of Houston . They had sent their two Southern California "'·eather. children to summer camp and "''ere But nonnally at this time of year, the going to ~fc.xi.co for a vacation at Puerto Pacific Jo\v pressure system is the Vallarta . H1lhardt. about 38, was the of- domin:i:nt force nt least in the coastal fl~ mana ger of Zytron Corp., a areas. The fact ~fits defeat this June has 1nicrorilm products company. -- taken many coastal agencies by surprise. Another passenger \!.'BS identified as Jn San Clemente, students are still in ri.tildred T. Hall. a Houston widO\V in her school, and u·e re forced to S\\'eat out final mid-50s. She \Vas an insurance un- exams today as well as the hot weather. derwriter en route to a vacation in ?wlex- ln Newµort Beach, 3 city road widen-ico. ing project has blocked a critical portion Pedro Vega Pad~lla, co~anda~t of of Newport BouJevard during some ot the Puerto Vallarta pohce, said That is ex"' (See HEAT WAVE, Pqe I) (See JET CRASH, Pqe I)' aws' --.ee . ' Se-.. ~. -..,..-. -sf'irst .. cangon .Blfl%e . Orange County firefighters extingufsh a small qwir- ter-acre brush fire which broke out \Yednesd~y Jn an isolated Jrvine Ranch Canyon a mite east of the intersection of Laguna Canyon and El Toro Roads. The blaze was sandwich~d beiwee1.1~-dyt road And a creek bed which kept it from spreading before firemen reached the scene. Laguna Beach and Or· allp Cou~o/ firemen responded to the. ~all -the season's fu-st area brush fire. Trespassmg campers were thought to have started it. ... ' ~-~ Laguna SpheFe Expanded • Council Acts Despite ·Pleas From Property Owners- An expanded Laguna Beach sphere· or influence running from Three Arch Bay · to Crystal f:<lve and inland to Jrvlne and Laguna· Niguel was approved Wednesday night by the Laguna Beach City Council. The coUncil's action was taken despite protests from some· South Laguna prop- erty owners aod residents who said they didn't \vant to be part of Laguna Beach. No Saddleback opposition was voiced in Lagw1a. establishes the city's concern with the f~ture of the area within the sphere. -·-------~---~--------- The Laguna Beach action only ouUines "''hat the city feels is · Che area which needs to be planned in coordination with futW"e city and unincorporated area development, councllmen,said. Franli; Cankar, president of the South Laguna Pi:opcrty Owners Association, told the council his group oppased in- clusjon in the l.'4guna Beach sphere of in- fluence. Cankar said . a number of factors in- cluding service by· different water and sanitary districts, adequate police and fire protect.ion, bonded debts, and \Villershed differences would eliminate Hobo and AlfSo·canyons from the sphere. • While a sphere of influence may serve as a guide for .future City annexation, Vice ~tayor Roy Holm quickly stressed "this doesn't mean we're going to go out and annex it.'L "l got a call today from somebody wondering why we're interested in an- nexing Mission Viejo," PlaMing Director _ Wayne Moody joked. He e1plalned the sphere of lnnuence Orily officially . Other speakers disagreed. · William Leak, chairman of Village Laguna,' told the couhcil that by ter- ritories' very proximity to the Art Colony, they became mutually influencing. Leak said adjacent areas "smack dab (See INFLUENCE, Pqe I) 500 Demonstrate for Jews • At Western White House By JOHN VALTERZA 01 1'111 Dtillr ,..., lteff Nenrly 500 persons demanding that Russia tree.Its Jews marched to an area near the Western White House in San Clemente Wednesday. TOO peaceful demonstration sponsored b~. Iht ~tbern C.Womla Council [or SOviet Jews Involved in a candlelight pro- cession followed by a rally and a petition presentation to Secret service agents at the compound gate, AmerJcans to support the campaign to lilt the immigration restrictipns. "Soviet Jews want solidarity ... lhc.y v.·nnt demonstrations from the people of the United SI.ates,'' said councif Executive Dirtctor 7.ev Varoslavsky. "If Soviet Communist Party Chief Leonid I .. B~v is here (he arrives Friday ) and 1.otblng ]lappened, he'll think It doesn't matter .. • he added . 'nle top ranking of(lclal plnns to arrive at the presidential compound late Ftiday ond remain through Sunday. ON o.n., 'lltt '''" ,.,... EVE OF BREZHNEV VISIT, J EWS S rAGE CANDL ELIGHT PROTEST IN SAN CLEMI NTE ' NHrly 500 O.mon1traled Against Sovie I Pollciil on Jowl Who Wllh to lmlgrato 'The I p.m. display or dlssati1[ac\1on- wlth the reatrtc:tiou~ agalmt emi&!'llon l>y Sov!e1 Jeliilil RuuiOIOOk place about two blocks from the gate to the enclave1..Speakers reiterated the" need (or The grouJn which marched In opposition to him W esday Is planning a repeat trip sometime c\_urlng the Brezhnev st:iy, • (See PROTEST, P1&e %) ' • \ > I •larry A. Blackmun. Lc\Vis F. Pow~ll Jr. and \ViWam H. Rehnqu.ist, and veteran cou rt member Byron R. \Vhite. Burger noted that for the first lime stnce the court declared obscenity to be! beyond the vrotection of the First Amendment In 1957, "a majority of this court has agreed on concrete guidelines expression protected by _Jhe First Amendment." Critics of a standard based On local (See OBSCENITY, Pagt Z) Councilmen Eye Strict Enforcing By JACK CHAPPELL Of tllt 0.llY Pllet ltafl' Laguna Beach dog !ay,·s need a little more bile, Laguna city councilmen decid- ed Wednesday night as they mulled the rTiany and varied transgressions of man's best friend. \Vhile holding off formal action, the council gener.alfy agreed to stiffer en- forcement funded by a· 500 percent hike in dog impound-fees;-anti ln"Crtases in the fines for leash law violation. The city finance director was ardered to evalua,te the income produced by Ip- creasing impound charges Crom '5 to $25 and hiking the slreet leash law vlolatkln from $5 to $10. The tme for Jeash law violation on the ·beach is $25. The council's order was given following a comprehensive report by City Manager Larr y Rose on the ''dog mismanagement" .in' the Art Colony and angry speeches by several residents. "The city council has asked ·for a report on dngs al large in the city. Hav- ing dls}lOS'ed-Of cats \\ilffi a resolution , and birds with a sanctuary, it would perhaps be appropriate, and even con- ~tent, if u·e could dispose of dogs with a rejlort. But that is unlikely to be ac- ceptable to those who view the problem as no frivolous matter, aJHj they are n'umerous." Rose's repcrr. read. RMe said the Society for Prevention of Cruelty to· Animals (SPCA), city's animal control agent, had logged 5,437 dog complaints during 12 C"Cmf:CUtive months. The SPCA handled 2,424 }iv~ miimals, 350 dead animals, and impounded m stray dogs of which 465 were redeemed . 16 were placed, 305 destroyed, and 99 held at the time of the study . - The SPCA wrote 129 citations for leash law violations and handed out 474 "'am- ings for leash law violations. Tile issuance of warning notices \\'as the only matter which seemed to divide the council, with Mayor Charlton Boyd and Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney saying the courtesy \vaming system should be retained 1vhile other coun- cilmen "·eren't so sure. Rose told the council that regardl ess or lrhal additional enforcement steps were taken, the city should embark on an education program too. "llo\v would you do that." ~ayor Boyd as ked. He suggested the $25 impoWld fee (See DOG LAWS, Page Z) Orange Weatlaer It's going to be blistering bot in in land portions of Orange CoWJty Friday, but slightly cooler right along the COllSt. Highs in lhe 80s at the beaches rising to 108 de- grees in Santa Ana. Low.s in the upper OOS. INSIDE TODAY Nizo1l cam.poion aide F'red· crick C. LaRue has den i ed wrongdoi11g in co111Lection wit/• dealtrlQ& 1uith a 11ow.Qankntpe liousb1g jir1n. See story, PClge 13. l .M. 11¥11 1 C•HWlll• 11 CltillliM ,._.. Cl'"k t )1 crouw.N ti Ofl•tll MotiCtl lt allltori•I P•ff ' •"ttort•llll'llflll n->1 l'IMll(I U.ll l'tl' tlll ...... 1• """"-t1 Allll lt!IMn It Ml-fin J:Wl MlllllM 1111-..t tt M•lltill•I NeWt .. t Or•nt• c-tr 11 $YIYl• Portlr ,, ·-•t ,,.,. ltodl Mtrltttl t&>tl T1M\lf1iofl • '""*' JNl ·-. ·--·· .._ ,,.,, . ---.. ' :Ghost Town :Enlivened -. •. ~ 0eadwood Gulch is a dusty \Vild \1t1est tov.'TI complete v.·ilh a casirld and bangin' tr ... Deadwood's population .,.,.ill S\\'ell to 2rwl tonight when the Laguna Beach I llgh School Class of tm arriv~ immediately following 8 p.m. graduatl~ ceremonies at Irvine Bo\\·l. The "49ers and \Vild \Vest" all-night ~ · J)llrty v.•ill feature a s\\·eet ba r, cracker ' barrels, a geOcral stor e, jail, square dances-and-old time flicks starring ' Laurel and Hardy and Fatty Arbuckle. Each graduate will receive gambling · chips for roulette and other games. \Vin- . nings will be used during an auction at .. lhe end or the party as students bargain • for trips, dinners and tv.·o 10-spced . -bicycles. • The board front Loy,•n v.·as built by · parehts of the graduating class on the high school sen ior patio. Donations of prizes and materials were made by local merchants. Al Simmons. one of the sP:OJlSors, said every effort has bee n made to keep noise to a min imum during the au night party. ·i Deadwood Gulch will retW11 to a ghost :·town at 6 a,m. Friday. St. Mary Cl1apel Gets Reprieve For Nine Months Historic St. J\Jary 's Chapel received a nine-month. reprieve from ··abatement" by action ol the Laguna Beach City . · Council early this mom_i.Qg. The council agree:! to a request by · • Gene Bedell of the Episcopal's church 's · Jay building group, to hold off on any ac- , tion \Vhich would either require im- mediate safety improvements -or demoli- !ion ol. the circa-1930 chapel. Bedell said that geologic sludies un- . der way for the last six months showed ~no slippage beneath the shaky chapel. ·· Additiooal time was needed, Bedell · said, to continue tbe studies through ~-rainy season. This would allow . the church to determine what steps . would be necessary to restore, or replace the d)apel. The chapel has been declared unsafe -. and oondemned by the city building department. Jt is boarded up and . declared off limits to the public. · Tbe chapel has been declared a ~'historical landmark by i h e Laguna Beach Hist.frical society. From Page J PROTEST ... ' spokesman said. · During the rally WedllMday the group heard a member read from a letter sent 'by an imprisoned Soviet Jew, then, after : 's1nglng and chanting the group filed past a petition table and each member signed a copy of the petition which. was · to isolate 'hard core' pornography from presented to White House security aides. The fu ll signed version". spokesman said, would be sent to the \Vhite House at a later date. The document urges Nixon to "end the discre!dlted and unnecessary subterfuge of behind-the-sce nes negotiations and speak out openly ln behaU of Soviet Jey.•s." The petition states that Nixon's silence "embarrasses and upsets us." "We urge you· to tell Mr. Brezhnev tliat •the United States vi'ill not support the economy of an oppressive and morally 'bankrupt society until ~d unless its ,leaden decide to permit free emigra· 1Jon of th o s·e l'l'ho Wish to leave," tbe petition continued. DAILY PILOT Tiie or.,.. CM1t OAILT '11.0T, "'111 Wlllcll It tomlllfltd !tit N..,...,.rnt. II Mllll'lfd bf fllt °''"" c .. ,, P...tolllllh'lcl Com11tnf, ..,... "''-w n1o111 •re JOUllthlltd, 111w 1., lht0t,ogfl 'ri.s.J, ,_. (OSll M..,., N-sl0!1 1111(1'1, ""'"""'-· ll1ac:fl/Fwnt1k<I .... 1,..,. Uo\lrle IMdl, 1t1rlnt1S..ddl1t1e,k I nd kn (l1mtnl1/ Sin J...., t°1r>htr1ri11. A 1ln;11 rfllklntl .aJtlorl II PllO'..,... .. tllll'Cll'f• tlld 5'.n:llfs. '"" prif>ei..I M lltlllrlt lial'll II 11 lJICI West· .. ,. s in.t, co.11 Mita, 0.1tnomi., rn11. •oll'orf N. W1" Pr•lflnl IM Plolbl..,,,_, J11• It Cur!1l Viet l'r•lci91'11 .... <HM<1 M.tNtlf Thom 11 IC11¥il llfllllf" Themtt A. M w1J1hin1 ,..,... .... llflllf' Ch1rle1 H, leo1 •lch1rill JI, Ni ll AM.llllftl MINtlt\t l dlto11 W.-..... OHlte lll Fe re1! Aw111u1 M•illllf ~,. •. u ,.0 . ••• •••. •2•s2 --C..tt Melot: ---•• , '''"" N..,.,, 9-dtt JW W""""i levlf\'ltl """ll'lrtflfl itffdli 17171 leta'I ..., ....... d .. ·~1 -llNrltl 11 ""'"" 111: .. 1 111111 ... 111 t714f Ml ... Jl1 d .,,_, .Woa 1 I I MW•?I ............ Al lap IZltll ,.,, p ff4."'6 ~. lf71. Onol'llf C...SI ~ltllltlf c~. .. ,....., ....,~ 1uw1r1t._, ......,lft ltW1'fW flt .,_., __ ,. Jltttln ., .. ,......... ~ .-Ciel ..... ..... " .................. . ...... , ... 9Mtfltl Mlil .i '"'' ~-. C.llflrM.. ~lllf\ W u rrltr U.61 • ' ,..,,..,,,, • -.ii U..IJ ~' ,,. .. ,,.,, ----., ... ,,_..,, Thursd<l)', Jjln! 21, 1'173 Several Banks Up Prirne Raw r;i:w YORK !UPI) -Several ml)N banks today aMounced a boost lo their prime lendJ.n& raLe to 7'~ percent. The current round of quarter potnl increates started Monday with a move by the First National Bank of Chicago. \Vedneaday, Gi rard JJ3nk o! Philadelphia follow· ed suit. The late st banks to move their r:llc to 7~:i percent were Chemical Jlnnk and Marine '1.1ldland Bank, both of New York, and llarril Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago. OBSCENITY. •• community rittit ud cs have complained thal It would require publlshera, motion picture producers and others to produce material that would meet the standards of the nation's most pi:udlsh commwiity. In his opinion, B~ger offered these specific guidelines for juries and judges to use \\·hen trying to detern1ine \Vhat is obscene: ...., "The basic guldelines ... mu st be: (8) \\'hether 'the average person, applyinJ: contemporary community standards' w6uld find th.al the work, taken as a v.·hole, appeals to the puriect interest ... (b) wh.ether the Y..'Ork depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state lay.• and (c) whether the \\'Ork. taken as a whole, lacks serious li te rary, artistic, political or scientlCic value." The '"·eeplng deci sion came in one of a number of obscenity ca5es that have been pending before the high court. Burger chose as a vehlcle for his major pronouncements a California cue in which Marvin Miller was convicted under a state law ,of mailinl WllOlJclted HI· ually explicit materials. Burger's opinJon greatly bolsters the ,. ......... 1 1-NFLUENCE • • • up &1aln1t Llc1llll Beach are bound to be within our 1pbore ol Inn.-. whether they lilt• It or we llke tt so much. ,.They're wit.bin OW' 1pbere or In--: n ...... 'Ibey',. 11>e ... " Lea1i Aid nollnc that It would be lnf.,..lble to uclud1 lit· Ue pockets of land. One SouU1 Laguna re1Jldent was un- convlnctd. "I personally don't want to _.fall under inOuence of Ll\guna Beach," he said. Cankar, a land developer who has bat· tied again.st the South Laguna General Plan, saLd lhe maMtr in Which the city drow Its sphere following Laiuna Beach Unlned Sd>ool Dl.ttricl llmltl, didn't make sense. He said he repretented the op- position of the Blue Lagoon community, a1 well as his own group's. Councilman Carl Johnsoo pointed out that the city's only requirement Is to tell the Local Ageil<y Formation Comml.talon (!.AFC) what Laguna think• ill sphere should Include. The opposition will get Us chance to op- pose Laguna in the LAFC hearings, CoWlcllman Johnson said. "What we 1hould do tonight is determine what we think It should be and let them (!.AFC) decide," John900. said. The city 1s operating wider a July 1 deadllne to file the sphere of inDuence with the LAFC which makes the final determin3tion. The city action \Vednesday night ex- panded from previous maps the South Laguna sweep of the sphere from Aliso Canyon down to Include Three Arch Bay, ao action urged by the South Laguna Civic AllOCiation. Letters from the South Lagilna Sanitary District and South Coast Water District noted thelt own spheres crossed that area, but neither agency expressed outright opposition to Laguna. * * * Saddleback Unit Expresses Alarm Over Expansion .. Laguna Council Action These are the prlaclpel actions taken by the Laguna Beach City Council me<llllil tn rtgular lffllon Wednesday night. MAIN BEACH GRANT -UlWlltnOUI I proval WU - 1ven to an .. - ment acceptln&' fl~ In federal funds for .~velopment of a portion of t.ialn Beach Park. Tbe f!aeral grant wi ll be matched with ciiy money used In demolition ot bWldlnp, t.'Ollatructjon or rccreaUon areas, restroo1ns, landscap- illll and paving. · LAGUNA DOGS - A formal decision was vo'lthheld, but council genernlly agreed to sUCfen dog im pound fees some 500 percent-from $5 to $25-Dnd double leash law fines to encourage compliance y,•Jth city dog lnw . Action ex- pected .at July 5 meeting. SPHERE OF INFLUENCE -The council agreed the sphere of influence for the city of Laguna Beach extended from Crystal Cove near Corona de! .r.tar to 1'hrff Arch Bay in South Laguna. abutted Laguna Niguel, encom· passed (I major portion of the Moulton Ranch and inland to Irvine. Final de- tenn.inalion on the city's official sphere is made by the Local Agency Forn1a· tlon Commission. CHAPEL ABATEMENT -Historic St. Ma ry's Chapel, 428 Park Avenue \\'as given a nine month grace pe riod in which the church may conduct fur· ther geologic tests to determine If ground slippage periling the quaint early Laguna structure has stopped. The chapel, declared unsafe, had been orde~ "abated," that Js ell.her made safe, Or tom down. It is now cloae.d to lt\e pubbc. FREE CLINIC -NoUfication was given that the Laguna Beach Free Clln~ ic, 460 Ocean Ave., received a $51,000 grant from Orange County Social Serv· Ices Revenue Sharing fund s. HIGHWAY PARKING ...:. .r.1erchan1s near· the Cress and Thalia Streets intersections of South Coast Highway told the council their business survival \Vas at stake in the loss of some 48 parking spaces on the highway due lo in- stallation of left turn pockets in the road. The council order~d all ~S!ible spae.cs restored, \Vhile retaining left turn lanes, and set a special meeting for 7:30 p.m. June 27 to consider lurther action. Laguµa Storage Rese~voir Runs Dry in ·Heat Wave .. Peak "'ater demands brougbt on by this week'~ heat wave caused an In- termediate storage reaervolr along Temple Hilla Drive In Laguna Beach to Nil dry Wednesday evening. be reset lo actQW\t Jor the higher demands. He stressed that there is no !ocal water shortage and that customers need not "'·orry about any type of water rationing. From r•se J HEAT WAVE •• peak beach trafllc loads of the yeac. And Southern California Edison Com· pany in anllcipa1\on ol a cool June, had several of lt.s bliiellt generattn& units wound down for routine maintenance. When 1hc heat wave came -tem- peratures in so1ne Inland seetions of Orange County soared lo 113 degrees Wednesday -everyone tur11~ up the.ir: air condi tioners and the company was in troubJe. Reserve margins fell to just three per· cent as Edison set a new pe3k power de- 1utu1d record -9.815 milhon kilowatts. "\Ve really were surprised," confencd an Edison spokesman. "It's supposed to be cool and foggy this time of year." J .. Sherman Denny of Hunting ton Beach, 1111 :imalcur meteoro logist, ex· plained the situation this way: ··11:Je high pressure desert system is completely dominating the • weltern United States. Right now. it's meeting the Pacific ai r righ t along tbe coastline, and it won't let any of that Paclfic air get Inland." The standoff between the two air systems causes a rurther compUcation. Denny says. Jn pushing up against one another, the air pressure Is raised -in the sense that air i! cornpressed -and this causes a further rise.in temperature. "It usually ta k es until Scptem~r before the descrl <1ir is strong enou gh to bring this kind of heat ." Denny says. The last ti1ne a similar situation oc- cu rrccl \\'as on Jun.c 17, 1957, according to Denny's records. At that time, the desert air was so strong that it pushed right through the Pacific front, creating a San- ta Ana wind condition as It Y..'ent. Thal pushe!d the mercury up to t9 degrees. De1my sa id it y..·as 88 in Hun· lington Beach \\'ednesday. The hot y;•cathcr was producjng several unusual situations. In Sa n Clemente, police reported a high incidence of rat· tlesnakes driven out of the hills to seek shelter ln cooler residential areas. tn Laguna Beach, llfeguards reported a high incidence of nude sunbathers. And in Newport Beach, water tern· peratures were drivCfi up to a new recofd high. 73.5 degrees. The old record was 71 degrees, set on June 30, 1931. authority of local proaecuton In moving By JAN WORm against pornography. They need no ot .. _., """,..,, Joe Sweany, eeneral manager of the LllUM Beach County Water District, said a malflmctlon of automatic pumps sent more water to a teCOOd storaae tank in Top cl the World . The general manager noted that the demand for y.·ater peaks between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. He suggested residents delay projects such as watering laWTll and washing cars witil after the peak period. If the sun 's heat was causing an energy crisis for Edison Company, it was not doing so for the northern hemisphere of the earth. Today is the longest day o( the year, w:llh the sun rising at 5:42 a.m. and not setting until 8:07 p.m. longer grapple with the concept of a na-Talk of expanded spheres of influence tional standard on aemal candor, but by Lacuna BeaCh and San Juan Combined with lncreued User demand Crom residents In the area, the lower tank lost Its supply. may rely on the reactions of local juries. Clplstrano drtw an alarmed reaction In a ·case involving films shown at an from the Saddleback Area Coordlnatlns "adult theater" in Georgia, the majority Council Wedneaday night. . rejected the notion that pornography ac-Terming propooed exponalons by the Sweany said the automatic pumps y.·il l quires constitutional protection when it is two c!tlea "serious inlrtngement1," SACC Adj U • displayed for conaentlns·adutts onl.y;.---prU1<·1e:nt Bart Spendlove, .-UY-•P.-·UStm@Dt lllt pointed to the Orange County PlaMlni Qmmlulori, aatd '"lbl.t may 1 .. d to the Laguna Council Studies Revenue Spendirig Change Laguna Beach city councilmen realign- ed some proposed allocations for the city's five-year '475,000 revenue &hlri!lg grant in action early thls morning. blu•t fllht ....... ...,, 1n the s.c1-To-Review Center dleback Valley." The Lquna Beach city council voted W-•Y nlsbt to apply to the Local Plan m· Laguna Ac"""! FonnaUon ~ (LAFC) f0< an extension ol ltl opheN ol ID!lumoe c to Include parts cl Lquna 11111.t and the The Lquna Beacb Board of Ad- 10,0llO ac:T&-Moulton llAllch. Tbele boun-juatment wlU rtvlew plans for a 15 dartea rouch!Y follow the Lquna million ahopplng c.ntor comp!•• "'11led waterahed. Village Buaar at ·7:30 toril&ht at city San Juan Copl1trano bu propoood 111 hall. extenllon which ln Ill !DOit l&lftlllve 111e project runs from Calliope to form could Include all ol Mlulca Viejo. Blueblnl .canyon Drive between South A ipbere of lnfiuence for the Sad· Coast ltJghway and Glenneyre Street. "If people will watch when they are using water, it w.ill help us," said S"·eany. "We 'd just li ke them to use the ir discre- tion this summer." Sweany said less use of v.·ater during the ~ak tim e wouJd help the district use ir» electrical power for its pumping system. as part of a voluntary reduction program of the Southern California Edison Company. Lower water pressure from the depleted storage tank, located at eleva- tion oC 600 feet was tePorted at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday, Sweany said. Manual control of w~ter llnes quickly restored service, he added. 'Dr. Feelgood' Pleads Innocent ''There may be an energy shortage but not as far as the Slln.'s rays are con- cerned today," said Jim Seevers, assis-- tant astronomer at the Ad I e r Planetarium ln Chicago. "The rays are striking the northern hemisphere more \'ertically now and del!verlng more solar energy per square foot.'' The seasons are determined by the position of the earth in Its yearly path around the sun. Earthlings do not reel lhe earth's orbital speed of about 18'2 miles-a-se. CjOfld. oot they do noUce tile sun ap- pari ntty. chansing Ill position In the sky from season to season. Technically, this mean{ that at the sum- mer solstice the noon sun reaches an altitude of about 72 degrees above the southern horizon. Councilmen worked over a recom- mendation shopping 11•1 made up by the city planning commission , reducing sug- gested allocations for a recreation center and upping the fund for acquisition of Qpen space and buffer areas between urban developments. dleback Valley created by SAOC ha• The propooal by developer Mark Gum· received unolllclal approval from the blnor calla for !Orne !O shops. a ma jo' LOS ANGELES !AP\ -A 58-y.ar-Old Local Agency Formation Commission restaurant andl three tak e-out food doctor called "Or. Feelgood" by many or From Page J JET. CRASH. (LAFC), but non-city entitles have no of· fac:lllties. his customers has pleaded Innocent to 30 • • ficial power. Th~ Board of Adjustment will bold a charges or Issuing unlawful prncrlptionS" SACC member1 recently wrote a letter public hearing on the request ror a from his Venice office and ts rree on tremely rouah and rocky country ~ J The council also decided to add en allocation of $7,800 for the city 's match- ing share of funds to be uaed in development of bicycle trails along El Toro Road from Laguna Canyon to the city limits. to LAFC uking that a precedent bl aet variance to cover more than 75 percent $2,~ bail , authorities aald . don't see how anyone could have survlv· on allowing unlncorporated areas to have of the lot area, and design review of the Dr. Morris Abraham.Goldsteln entered ed." a "holdlng sphere." plan. the plea Wednesday after the Los He said the plane crashed and ex- Thls would tide over the Valley ptodlng The Bazaar Is built with shops and food Angeles County Grand Jury returned an ploded , a~rdlng 10 eyewitness reports activation of a proposed mwliclpal ad· facilities on four levels and parking for jndictment agains t him Ustlng nine received by authorities. The plane, ap- visory council (MAC). 264 cars on three levels. coun ts each of presc riblng drugs not in parenUy preparing to enter Its landing l\1ayor Charlton Boyd said today the council agreement does not lock in pro- p,osals but merely represents suggested areas where funds may be placed. SACC members are hopeful that once The proposal is expected lo generate the regular courst: ol his profession. approach. plowed Into El Morro hilltop the MAC, an elei:ted advisory COWlcil to opposition from so me area residents who prescribing drugs for habitual uters or between Chlmo and Chatala, he said. the county, ii Jet up, LAFC wlll grant It.a have jn the past protested com-addicts and using a false address for Puerto Vallarta was the second S'phere of Influence official status slmllar mercializatlon of tbe area and en-prescriptions. He was also charged with scheduled atop of the (11ght, No. 229, and The sho pping list as revised. funds the following alloca ti ons : to that 1ranted cities. vlrorunental changes In Bluebird canyon three violations of the Buslneas and then it wa s to have gone on to Acapulco _•_d_i•_c_en_1 __ 1_0_1h_e_B_a_z_aa_r_. _______ Pro_f•_•_•i_on_•_•_QxI_e_. ________ _:be...:foc....:re...:•.:.:n.:.:dlng its nm at Me1loo City. -Re location of recreation facility on city-owned property; $70,000 (down from $100.0llO). -Dafa processing proposal !or the police and finance department.;; $25,000 (no change). -Environmental Infonnation pro- gram ; $25,000 (no change ). -·city hall space Increases; '8(),000 (no change). -Open Space, buffers and parks ac· qulsitions: , -El Toro bicycle tr ails, '7,800 (1dded item ). Mayor Boyd aald no priority 1ta1u1 was assigned to the Items, but predicted the allocations would Clnn up during budget talks. The next budget hearing Ls S(:heduled for 7:30 p.m. next Thursday (Junt 28) at city hall. Girl • ID ,.,....p ... J DOG LAWS. •• could prove educational In u .. 11. "We have to wake the sleepina mule , and II it takes $25, so be It," said Boyd. Vern Tischner, a frequent dot critic, told the council it should bar dot!• from benches entirely. Presently, the animals are prohibited on the beach from I a.m. to I p.m. from June 15 to Sept. 15. Alf do11 In the city have to be leashed u not fenced In. Ta1etmer 1ald ti waa "stupid" to retain the courtesy warning feature. 11Dog owners can1t seem to be educated, ther, have a pecullar Jack of conslderalloo, ' Taschner said. Tears SeritHome, Too Poor for New Dress CLIFTON, Ariz. (AP) -A tHn-age (Ir! whose parenti Hid they were too poor to buy her a new dress was sent home In tears from her eighth grade graduation ceremony because her clothing did not confor1n with school rules. School principal Billy C. McDowell said Wtdnolday that he had no allemaUve but to send the girl home because students "had been given their lns!nlctions long before the graduation. · "I Celt a girl who did not abide by the required drell 1hould not participate." The parents or 13-yea r-old Eleanor StacJ said their daughter was ordered to leave her class mate• May 30. They Hid 1ht waa told she cou ld not march In the graduation ceremony of CUflon Elemen- tary School because her yellow-flowered dress had not been al>' proved bf. 1ehool o!flclals beforehand. "We re kJnd of poor right now." Hid Ed Stacy a carpenter. "Our fi nances ha ve been a !ftt!e tight. We couldn't afrord to buy a dress." · - Stacy said he took the matter before the ochool board June 4 but "they treated ll as • joke, more than anythtnf." • ~-----------------------------, 1 Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than~."'']! h • I ~~"" I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I • I I I I I I I Wla.t .-111 n. D11r : 23.5 Cu~ Ft. AMERICANA • REFRIGERATOR FREEZER : • Ice bin 1tor11 ·10 Iba .. about 290 1 cube1: 1utometlc lcemaker ,. pl1ce1 Ice 11 you u1e It. I FrHZer holdl up to 297 lb1. I • Convertible 7-Diy Me1t Kuper. • AdJu1t1bl1, tempered gl111 I 1helve1. I • Roll• out on whe1l1 for 111y cle1nlng. . • No defro!tlng ..,., WE TAKE TRADl·INS 90 DAT CASH I t I I I I I I I AuthOrlDtl '" • 01 ~ref C11fler"fa'1 Lor ... t CHflllltlYI luylOI Grell!' With Thi V1lum1. luyl01 Powtr of 110 Storeo WliH ........ I Cllllt I I Sl!llVICI-- -l&MW~Mt•1tA~D I 1115 OPORT llYD. Dnntawn Costl Mesa ·-Pb111 548-7788 ~------------------------- I•:-----.. ' j l I 17 \• • ' -- Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. Stocks EDITION VOL 66, NO. 172, 4 SECTIONS,. 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA· THURSDAY, JUNE ~I, 1973 TEN CENTS ! Supreme Court Backs Obscenity Crackdown WASHINGTON (AP) -In a 5-4 decision reversing a deeade·long trend toward pennissiveness, the U.S. Supreme court gave tne states-mUCh greater authority today to move against obsceni- ty. One or the cases on which the decision was based involves Coata Mesa. In an opinion written by Chief Justice Warren E. Burg~r, ttv; i;ourt h~ld : -Local com1riunity ··standards rather than national standards may .be used In determining whether: material ls obscene and therefore not protected by the Constitution. -----:::.-Tfiit-juries and coul'ts~-1Wl·ger need to find that material is "utterly" without redeeming social value before they de.Clare It o~ne. Instead, Burger \.ro~·. ·they may detennine. whether' the wor~ ''takep as a whole lacks serious ·literory, artislic, political, or scientific vllue." The obscenity decisions involved two cases from California and one from Georgia. FIRST NORTHERN SCHOOL CASE RULIN~Story, P19e 3 Jn the c.Osta 1ifesa ease, lifarvin Mille_r v;•as Convicted in Harbor Area Judicial District Court in Costa Mesa of mai1- ing five advertising .brochures fowiil to be obscene. Valley · Fight Set < Laguna, San Juan · Expansions Opposed , By JAN WORTH OI .. Ddy Pll9t It.ff The Laguna Beach city council voted Local Age,ncy Formation Commission. \Vednesday night to apply to the Local (LAFC), but IKKK:ity entities have no Of- Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) ficlal power. for an exten(ion~ofJts.sphere-olinlluence ......_SACC __ me.mbers recenUt__ wrote a letter • Jn the other Cslifomia case, Murray prudery from a subject long irration ally Kaplan, proprietor of the Peek-A·Boo kept from needed ventilation." Burger .. Bookstore in .Los Angeles, was convicted wrote. under-1he-state-obscenUy-1aw-of-selling-a But--it does not follow that no regula- plain-covered, unillustrated boOk con-lion of patently offensive 'ha rd core' taining descriptive material of an ex-ma terials is needed or per1nissible: plicitly sexual nature. civilized people do not allow unre gulated "Hard core~' pornograppy was the access to heroin because it is a target of Burger's opinion. derivative of medical mo r p h i n e s," "One can 'concede that the 'sexual Burger continued -in the majority opinion. re.volution~of r.eccnt~y:ears_may .. have had---He was 'joined· by the three other ap- useful-tiy1?_roduCts~in striking .Jay.!1s of pointees of Presid.ent Nixon, Justice s Talk of expanded spheres of influence by -Laguna----Beach ~and~San.:· Juan C8pistrano drew an alanned reaction from the 8addleback Area CQordlnating Council Wedneaday night. to lnclude·parts of Laguna Hills and .the to LAFC asking that a pre~t be-se1- 10,ooo acre-Moulton R'anch. These boun· on allowing wUncOrporated areas to have - Terming proposed expansions by the two cities "serious infringements," SACC president Bart SpendJove, recently ap- polnted to the Orange County Planning Commission. said "This may lead to the biggest light we .. ve seen in ~ Sad- dleback Valley." daries rtiughly f9llow the Laguna a "holding sphere." watershed. This would tide over the Vall_ey pending San Juan Capistrano bas proposed an-activation of a proposed municipal ad· extension \\oilich in its most a&&,._ressive visory council (MAC). form could include itJI of t.fission-Viejo. SACC members are hopeful that once A sphere of il)fluence for the Sad-the f\.1AC, an elected advisory council to dleback VaUey created by SACC has the county, is set up, LAFC will grant its received unofficial awroval from the (See SPHERE, '.Page 1) I-Jarry A. Blackmun, Le\vi s F. Powell Jr. and \viUiam H. Rehnquist. and veteran court menlber Byron R. \Vhite . Burger noted !hat for the first time since. the court declared obscenity to be beyond the "rotecUon of the First Amendment in 1957, "a majority of this court has agreed on concrete guidelines expression protected by the First Amendment ." · Critics of a standard based on local (See OBSCENITY, Page !I 11 Turtle_Rock Plan Readied j l I I lrvi11.e Plii1iiiers to Study Revised Proposal • • -• .' Dlll"t l"'llol Steff Pbttet By GEORGI! LEID.U. ottM ..... Ptllt .... A rt\•ised Turtle Rock community pl~n . increasing optn apace, acreage and population wlll be brrughl !II dtr of Irvine plaming commiss(ons nett 1'11ei. Irvine Company officials said today they have been meettnirwitln:ommunlty- aSSQCiatjon representatives or the 4,000 present residents of tbe hillside village. The new zoning · plan they've been di~ing would · increase the future population of Tw1Je Rock Village from Jl.000 residents to J5,150. •. 'Ibo· propo.al ellmJnate. plans for an equestrian community and the related ooe-acre home lots. By doing 901 com- pany planners end up with a plan which provides 35 percent open -space and leaves hill rldgelines "in their natural state," a compoy spokesman noted. The current Jfurtle Rock community zone plan includes nearly 1,110 acres. At - the urging of tbe city planning ccm- missloo, another 329 acre parcel near Sand canyon Retenoir was. added to the p,_,..i zone plan. J( the J,400 acres in the amended zone plan are developed to the lull extent pro- vided by the zon.e .changes, the new max- imlDll population of the ,expanded village would be 15,150, Of these, 2,200 woold live In apartments. Up to 9,000 more "-ould live in detached homes valued from 165,000 to 1100,lltlO or attached dwelllngs estimated ·to Cl»t from $50,000 to $'10,00. Despite Cllaoges In _. opace pnwlded and the mis ot ~ housing, the overall demit)' iii Turtle l!AiCk Village wouJd remiin It S.5· unita Per acre,. a company spokesman said. , Approximately 0> ,acres of Turtle Rock are already developed In slnale family attached and detached homes. Of lhe remaining 1,000 acres, 350 are propooed to be len In oPell 1paoe. 'Development of the 650 acres' would be ·c ... t Weatdler 11·, going to be bliJteriDI! .hot In inland portions of ' Orange County Friday, bUt slightly. cooler rlgbt along the coast !Dghs in the 80s at the beaches ri~ 11!3 de- grees in Santa ~-I in lh;e upper 60s, JNSWE A'Y Nl<Oll compalg• olde Fre<J. erfck C. LaRue ha8 d e n ' e d wro,tQdoing in connection with dcol~•g• with o now-bonlcrupl holtilng firm, St• 1tor~, Poge 13. ....,,Pll!led, .... rr-of "!le•· Ible dwelling zooinll' ~ !Ol' the first time· to-the oew city . ..; ~. Ylao. --1 for reaidenllal ~·y lfi!l'!,JVli · QF BRliZHlill;V VISIT~ J.!WS $!'AGE CANDL~LIGHT PROTEST IN SAN CLEMENTE • ,.. 1 N1•rly 500 Dem"nstrated Against Soviet Policl11 on Jews Who Wish to Em.igr11te Company pJanneii .,. ukini the ~ty N llet I ilmlt "111 far the \otaJ nUmbe< Of -to ... bulli "permitting the flex· ibiUtY of a mllture of deos.ities from t"·o to eight-in-areas-designated-for-develop- ment," the spokesm~ said. . Custom lots at 2.5 units per acre. are also planned, They will sell in the $35,000 to $50,000 range. "Beclluse the Village of Turtle Rock exercise.! such a strong visual dominance over a great portion ol. the lnland valley and the coastal inountains and due to its proK.imlty to the UC Irvine campus and other major public developments, we- determined to seek an alternate method of land planning for this beautifully ccm- plex piece of land ," said Frank Hughes, develop.-,!. , -. ' !rljne Company planners call the fltemate metbod 0 residentlal enclaves." 1belle will be clusters of development - ~ units -tucked neatly out of, sl(bt In the bllls. ; 500_Demonstratefor Jews ·Afoit of the 350 acres ol open space ~-,_ --- . then will be tmdisturbed natural hill rt:At w t Wh"t H ridges whi!e 43 ac ... of it will be "aclive ' e~ ern . . 1 e ouse and passive" park area. Other of ~e open space . will· be the Sand Canyon Reservoir, ·University RigionaJ Park, a Lutheran College campus, the Turtle Rock rockJ)ile landmark, Half of the development land will be used for residential development. or the rest. 14 acres will be set aside for neighbOrhood shopping centers, five acres for churches, 92 acres for schools and _ four neighborhood parks o f unspecified size. By JOHN .VAL TERZA 01 1111 OlllY Plltr Stlll N"carly 500 persons demanding that Russia free its Jews marched to an area near the \Vestern \Vhite House in San Clemente Wednesday. During the rally Wednesday the gioup hea'rd a· member read from a letter sent by an imprisoned Sovjet Jew, then, after singing_ and chanting tlle group filed past a petition tatile and each member signed a copy of the petition which \\'3S 'o isolate 'hard core' pornogra phy from (See PROTEST, Page 2) Saddleback Panel Backs The . peaceful demonstration' sponsored by the Southern California Council for Soviet Jews involved in a candlelight pro- cession followed ·by a rally and a petiti on. presentation to Secret Service agents at the compound gate. The 8 p.m. disp lay or dissatisfaction with the restriction against emigration by Soviet .Jews in Russia took place about two blocks from the gate to the enclave. Speakers reiterated the need for Americans to support the campaign to lift the inunigration restrictions. W~.iting Ranch Proposal .. Soviet ,Jews \Vant solidarity ... they \Vant demonstrations from the people of the United States," said council Executive Director Zev Yaroslavsky. Development of the 2,7~acre Whiting · ranch In El Ti>ro aa prescnled by Larry Webb of J. L, Webb Planning received the veri>ll suppOrt ol the saddleback Area Coonllnatlnr eounc11 Wednesday nigbt. < The scenic ranch •bills t~ El Toro Marine Corps Air l\!atlOI!, Cleveland Na-; tlonal Forest and the propooed Canada FoothiU.1 property of B, P. Baker. It touches El Tori> Road on the southeast along AJiso. Cfeflk. Estimated cost of the development could nm as high aa $85 miJJiOn. The plan e11Us for 600 acres of housing for a projected pOp.ilalioi\ of 5,560 by J9t15, Single-Camily units and clU$lered (~t-1 tached town homea} are plaMed in the $45,000 ta MO,lltlO ronge. \Vebb. hired to plan the picturesque ranch for the Whiting family who have ovmed it for tome 90 years, said HWbitJng loves thil land want& to see Jt, Ftmain a.a natural 11 poulble." To try to aclllew that pl, Webb bas complelely lelt oat· the -mmost l ,300 acres· of lteep ll1d ecentc foothills in the development plan. · ,Al,. In Webb'• plan Is 1 3:4-acre lake, a 11&-acrc naturol patk, a nln .. hole golf coune, an equestriln center, 1 com- munity center, and a five-acre com- mercial ...,ter adjolnlnc five acreo of landtcaped. open space, \Vebb said cost-benefit analysis or the plan showed that over the next eleven years $1.5 million in net revenue would accrue to both the school district and <>range County government. · One elem.entary school is included -in the plan. The lower portion of the ranch cannot be pJanned for residential or in- stitutional uses becaUle its noise level from the abutUog El_ Toro jetport Is above allowable federal standards. This area thus is being used for the com- munity center natural park and goU course. - Girl • ID "If .Soviet Communist Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev is here (be arrives Friday) and 1.othing happened , he'll think it doeSn't matter," he added. The top ranking officiaJ plan s to arrive at the presidential compound late Fi"iday and remain through Swtday. The group which marched in opposition to him Wednesday is planning a repeat trip sometime during the Brezhnev stay, spokesman said. Tears Se1ii-Home, Too Poor for New Dress CIJFTON, Ariz. ( AP) - A teen·age girl whose parents said they were too poot to buy her a new dress was sent home in tears from her eighth grade graduation ceremony because her clothing did not con!orm with school rules. _ School prillclpal Billy C. McDowell said Wednesday that he had ho alternative but to send the girl home because students "had been given their instructions long be( ore the gtaduation, "I felt a girl who did not abide by the required dress should not participate.'' •• ' < 27 Feared ~Dead Irr Mystery Air Crasl1 Tu Mexico PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (UP I! -Rescue teams reached the wreckage of a l\1exican jetliner on the side of a 1,500-foot mountain today and reported no sig n of life among the 27 persons -14 o~ then1 believed to be Americans flying from ~louston, Texas for a Mexican vacation. - The DC9 or Aero-Mexico was within sigllt of the runway at this resort town on the Pacific 9Jast and the pilot w a s chat.ting with the control tower when th!! _night sky \Vas fi Ued \Vilh a great burst of orange light as the plane hit the peak and exploded . The pilof's last radio contact with the tower gave no hint or trouble aJ>- proximately 10 minutes before its scheduled landing time. He had reported he \Vas desce nding from 14.000 feet for the landing and the control tower ad vised him the wind was calm -ideal for the landing in the mountain community. Then ca n1 e disaster. The wild Pacific coastal area is almost' inaccessible by lan d. A flotilla of 30 to 40 small rescue boats led by a yacht \vent by sea early today along the coast to a (See JET CRASH, Page 2) Desert Pressure Holding County In G1ip of Heat By JOHN ZALLER Of lllt 0•11y l"t.i.t St•fl 'l'he Orange Coa st conti nued on tbis first day ol summer to host a battle or the titanic air masses. the Pacific IO\Y pressure. system versus the.. desert tilgh pressure. As everyone c::in tell, the desert high pressure clearly has the upper hand so fr1r. (Related stories, Pages-4. 15, and 22 J The desert systen1, centered over Utah, has met the cooler Pacifi c 11ir at the coastline and is preventing tho cool ocean breezes from penetrating to the swelter· ing inland nreas. The battle itself Is not unusual, because the two alr pressure systems are in con- sta nt competition for dominance or • • L.M. ~~· -,:-= ,-. ·: (all... l':_.,te ,......._,.... 4d ....... 11-or ..... Ctlilflfj ll . ..,.... ,.,..,. .,.: One of !be unuaual aapects ol the pto- pooal ls IOO acres marUd "li{lcultural", -"OUr hope II tbat resldfllts, Of lhe ma can uoe theal rolling hills for tho!r o..n ploll of field Cl'Of>I," Webb aid.··~ 'arrangements could beinade tlvwch tht cc111munl1y auoclaUon and co u I d perhaps even loclu~ space for dllcU.. and cows." The parents of 13-year-old Eleanor Stacy said their daughter was ordered to leave her classmates May 30, They said she was told she could not marth In the graduation ceremony o! Clifton Elemen· ta,Y School 'because her yellow-flowered dress had not been ap- p~ed br school oflicials befo~hand. ____ _ Southern C\lli[Qroia weather _______ , r;c,: ': :::: ;....;.. .... :: =-.JI ........ ,. ...... . ~!'!!:! • -.... .,., l"' ·-.1f Wllftl.... .. ~· I . I ' I "We re kllld of poor rl-bt now~· said Ed Stacy/ a carpenter, "Our finances have been a Hiiia tl&ht. Wt couldn't a lord to buy a ........... ....... ' . Stacy utd he look the matter before tile school board June f but "they lrealed· It as a Jolie~ 11!0ft than anytbllli," • • CANDLE POWER ,,_, In ProlHI But normally at this Ume or year, the Pacific lo\Y pressure syttem is l)C dominant force, at-le:rsr-tn the coa.lll nrcas. Tho fact or its defeat thls J'uno tu taken n1any coastal agcnctcs by surpitse . ln San Clemente. students are 11111 ta (S<c llEAT WAVE, rag• t) .. .. . . _f __ o~ PILOT IS Atataex 'G1cide' Laguna Approves . . Influence ·Area· ·• An expanded Laguna Beach sphere of influence running from 1'br-OO--Arch Bay to Crystal Cove and inland to Irvine and Laguna Niguel ~'as approved Wednesday night by the Laguna Beach City Counci~. The council 's action was taken despite protests from some South Laguna p~ erty owners and residents who said they didn't \Vant to be part of Laguna Beach. No Saddlcback opposition was voiced in Laguna. The Laguna Beach action only outlines \\'hat the city feels is the area which needs to be planned in coordination with future city and uninCQr ated area development. councilmen S' d. While a sphere of influe ce . e as a guide · for future cit annexation. Vice Mayor Roy Holm quickl y stressed "this doesn't mean \Ve're going to go out .~ ·and annex it." "l got a call toda y from somebody . -· Wondering why we're interested in an- • nexing Mission Viejo." Planning Director Wayne Moody joked'. lie exptaine;d. the sphere of influence only off1c1ally Frotn Page I SPHERE ... sphere of influence offjcial status similar to that granted cities. "This is just a word of \\'aming," Spendlove told SACC. "We will have to rally a lot of support -loud and long. We'd better be prepared to get buSy." A sphere of influence is a holding .~C· tion tQ keep other local government uruts out.- Pla111iers Study New Park Code Bid for Irvine rrvine planning commissioners tonight will review the prop;ised city park code which increases dedication requirements from 2.5 acres per 1,000 people to 4.5 acres per 1,000. The change \\'as approved by coun- cilmen last week and if commissioners act favorably on the change ar tonight's public hearing might become city law "'ithin the month. In order to require the higher park acreage of developers the park standard ' -must be city law for at lea st 30 days · prior to the filing of subdivisions. Until the standard becomes law, the city may _ only requi.i:_e park dedications in t h e amount levied by the county, standards applied before and sinae incorporation 19 months ago . City Planning Director Bruce \Varrcn \Vill present two alternate forms of the park code proposal. The l\VO drafts differ only slightly. Following the hearing, commissioners will participate in the Town Foruin general plan progress report presentation by Wilsey and Ham consultants. Commissioners meet at 7:30 o'clock in city hall, 4201 Cam pus Drive. Pair Attending Exchange Parley Bill Kohler and Ji1n Manion of the Sad- dleback Valley "·ere official represen- tatives to the Ca lifornia District Ex- change Clubs Convention this _w.ciLJ!t Lake Tahoe. Nevada. Other local club members planning to attend were Mark and Trudy Dietrick , Vince and Marlene Lavertu. Bob and Peg Dameron. Ed and Sharon Pelissier. and Bob and Lynn Brumfiel. Principal speaker for the four-day con- vention was \Vill iam P. ri1iller of Elkhart. Indiana, the national president of the Ex- change Cluh. 01.f.NGI COAST " DAILY PILOT 'I'll• o··~· Coal! OAILY PILOT. wltll wlllCll •s «>mblnM !~e "leW\·Pnrss. 11 rwbll~llM bl' 11\tt Or&<19t1 C0011 Publlllll"9 Com1>1n1. S!!'P-1· r1re· 1.:11110 ... 1 ore P\lbllll•lid. /111-•v lt!ro~ Frld.lly, tor Cotll Mna. W•wPll•• 8•.cll, "'""'tlnOtO<t Beac111foun11m v111ev, Lagu,.. •~11. lr.,iMIS•d<lletM'k lt>d Stn CleMtnlel i-#1 J-C10!11r11'1(1. A 1l110ll regi-t edit., i. Mlosh9d S.iurdlV' tl'l!I S.,,..,1.,.. f"e ptb1Ci1NI pu-&Jllol\111(1 llllM i\ M l.ll Wt1t ,., '""!. '"'' MIW. Cllifo•n••· f16U. Rob1rt N. W11d P•no61nl 11'1!1 Pl#Dlllllrt J1ck It C11r!1y V.c1 Pt.,kl'1"1 ,-.d G•"''"I ...... ntttr Tlio"''' IC11 vll tOINtr 'tho..,•• A. Murphin1 M• .... ""9 fl1tor -·---(;S..1A1•~. 1..0t Rlch1rd P, N i ll I . ,i.,.1111"! M1M0°'9 fd!!Ot1 OHkM co.-. Mtt.1: lJIJ Wttl ••v .111'.-.. ""._,, '-At .nn NNM'' eoui..·11• \.AtWM •ff(., Jn "orn• ., .. .,., ... HUl'l'I"°"""' •••c": 1111s ewe:" •eut, .. ,,. Sin Cit"'""~· ~ JiOfffl El Glf!lirll 1tu1 , ........ ,,,., 642-4)J1 C'-"*' A4;wtlll., 64J.f611 ._ C.._.. AR hpef'f•_,: le..,._. 4tJ-4420 ...,...,.,,, .,n. °'""" c....1 "llfll1C ......... .,. No MW. •IWl!lif; IMrr . ....... _,,.., ... ld\ll!'ll•f'M"llt ..,... .... ltll ,...,..;!IC.. WilflOl.lf tlM(lel .... .......,. flf cwrr""t .-,., ....... C'<l~I .. I! ........ ti Cotti t.\llt. f.llifflitfllt, ~fltf!Oll 11J c•rrltt . tf. .. -"'"I .., If"•~ tl II -O•ll'/ Ml!ll•'l' lln!IM~ U U """'fl!; establ.ishes the city's C()ncem with the future of the area within the sphere. Frank Cank ar, president of the South Laguna Property Owners Association, told the council his group oppo sed in· clusion in the Laguna Beach sphere of in· fluence. Can kar said a number or factors in- cluding service by differen t water and sanitary diStricts, adequate police and fire protection. bonded debts, and watershed differences wou ld eliminate Hobo and Aliso canyons from the sphere. Other speakers disagreed. William Leak. chairman of Village Laguna, told the council that by ter- ritories' very proximity to the Art Colon y, they became mutually influeocing. Leak said adjacent ateas "smack dab up against Laguna Beach are bound to be r within our sphere of influe nce \Vhether they like it or we like it so much. "They're within our sphere of in- fluence . They're there," Lea k said noting that it would be infeasible to exclude lit· tie pockets of land. One Sout h Laguna resident was un· convinced. "l personally don't want to fall under innuence of Laguna Beach," he said. Cankar, a land developer who has bat· tied again st ·the South Laguna General Plan, said the manner in which the city drew its sphere following Laguna Beach Unified School District limits, didn't make sense. He said he represented the op- position of the Blue Lagoon C<>mmunity, as well as his own group's. Councilman Carl Johnson pointed out that the city's only requirement is to tell the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC) what Laguna thinks its sphere should include. The opposition will get its chance to op- pose Laguna in the LAFC hearings, Councilman Johnson said. "Wha t we should do tonight is determine what we think it shou1d be and let them (LAFC) decide," Johnson said. The city is oper~ing under a July 1 deadline to file the sphere or influence with the LAFC v•hich makes the fin al determination .. The city action Wednesday night ex- panded from previous maps the ·South Laguna S\\1eep of the sphere from Aliso Canyon down to. include Three Arch Bay, ' an action urged by the South Laguna Civic Association. Letters from the South Laguna Sanitary Districl and South Coast \Vater District noted their own spheres crossed that area, but neither agency expressed out right opposit ion to La guna . Housi11g Tracts -' --- To Be Discussed By Airport Unit Residential tracts in Irvine. Dana Point and r.lission Viejo 'viii be discussed at 7:30 tonight by Airport Land Use Com- mn1issioners. The nleeting is in the hearing room at 400 Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana. The co1n1nission is an advisory panel to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Deve lopments near Orange -· co·unty Ai rport are referred to ii for co1nment . Tonight's agenda includes an en- vironmental impa ct report on "Turtle Rock Planned Community in lrvine: an industriAI developll>"'nt at Von Karman and Main Stretl1.s in Irvine; con- dominiums proposed on the Street of the Blue Lantern in Dana Point; request to bu ild a private school at Alicia Parkway near Jeronin10 in i\1ission Viejo ; and residential developmen ts in Aegean Hills. Rossmoor Leisure \Vorld. in La guna Hills. Froin Pqe I OBSCENITY. •• community :lltitudes have complained that it \\'ould require publishers, motion picture producers and others to produce material that would meet the standards of the nation's most prudish community. ln his opinion, Burger offered these specific guidelines for juries and judges to use "'hen trying to detemtine what is obscene: "The basic guidelines ... must be: (O ; '\'hether "the average pers'on, applying contemporary community standards' \\'OUld fi nd that the work ... taken as a whole. appeals to the purient interest. .. (b) whether !he work depi cts or describes. in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law and (cl whether the \\'Ork. take n as a whole, lacks serious literary. artistic, political or scientific value." From Page J PROTEST ... presented to White House security aides. The full signed version. spokesman said, would be sent to the White House at a later date. The document urges Nixon to "c.nd the discredited and uMecessary subterfuge of behind·the-scenes negotiations and speak ou1 openly In behatr of Sovtet ./cv.-3.'' TI11· !)(lt;ti.in :tatc! that N'ix1Jn'$ !llcnce c. ~ .. 1 ... :ist.J tin:! upset~ us ' UPI TllffllMtlo Fro"'P~l JET CRASH . • • lond ing at the ba'° or craggy hilltop art• and ~nt rescue teams into the mountains to search !or the wreckage. A panenger list laaued by the Aero-I Mexico :iirline Indicated tha t at least 14 • Americans boarded the plane at Houston. but the list was Incomplete and the exa ct number o !Americans am on g the 23 passengers aboard was not known. Two of the Americans were identified• as Daniel Hill ard and his wife Susnnna or1 Houston. They had sent !heir two' chi ldren to summer camp and were going tp Mexico for a vacation at Puerto Vallarta. Hillant" about 38, was tbt of- fice manager of Zytron Corp., a mi crofilm products company. Another passenger was identified as ~1ildred T. Hall, a Houston widow in' her mid·50s. Sire was an insurance-un- derwriter en route to ·a vacation in Mex· lco. Pedro Vega Padilla1 '1)mmandant vf Puerto Vallarta ppli~, said "That is ex· tremely rough and rocky cotmtry and I don't see how anyone could have surviv· ed." He said the plane crashed and ex· ploded, according tQ eyewitness re~rl! received by authorities. The plane!: sp... parently preparing to enter it~ landing approach, plowed into El Morro hilltop between Chimo and Chatala, he said . Puerto Vallarta was the second s.chcdule<l stop of the flight, Ng. 2291 ~nd then it was to liave gone on to Acapu1co before ending its run at Mexico City. MRS. RONALD REAGAN EMBRACES FORMER POW, AIR FORCE CAPT. THOMAS HANTON Another Former Prisoner, M/Sgt. James Gough, Looks on at POW Reception * * ..:, Passenger List KILLED IN ACTION Capt. Stephen Hanson . Fro111 Page I HEAT WAVE • • schooi. and \\'e r'e forced to S\Yeat out fi nal exams today as well as the hot weather. In Newport Beach, a city road widen- ing project has blocked a critical portion of Nev.·port Boulevard during some of the peak beach traffic loads of the year. And Southe rn California Edison C-Om- pany in anticipation of a cool June, had several of its biggest generating units wound down for routine maintenance. \Vhen the heat wave came -tem- peratures in some inland sections of Orange County soared to 113 degrees \\1ednesday -everyone turned up their air conditioners and the company was in trouble. Reserve margins fell to just three per· cen t as Edison set a new peak power de- mand record -9.815 mill ion kilowatts. "We really were surprised," confessed an Edison spokesman. "It's supposed to be cool and foggy this time of yea r." J . Sherman Denny of Huntington Beach. an amateur me teorologist, ex· plained the situation this way: "The high pressu re desert system is completely dominating the western Un ited States. Right now, it's meeting the Pacific air right along the coastline, and it won't Jct any of that Pacific air get inland." The standoff bel1Yeen the two air sys tems causes a further complication, Denny says. In pushing up against one another, the air pressure is raised -in the sense that air ls compressed -and this causes a further rise in temperature. "It usually ta k es until September before the desert air is strong enough to bring this klrid of heat," Denny says. The last time a similar situation OC· curred was on June 17, 1957. according to Denny's records. At that time, !he desert air was so strong that it pushed right through the Pacific front, creating a San- ta Ana \Vind condition as it went. That pusherf the mercury up to 99 degrees. Denny said if '.vas 88 In Hun· tington Beach Wednesday. The hot weather was producing several un usual situaliOns . In San Clemente. police · reported a high incidence of rat- tlesnakes driven out of the hills to seek shelter In cooler residential areas. Elks Get $2,100 I11 Palsy Drive Close to S2. 100 was contributed to children suffering from ctrebral palsy by the Mission Viejo Elks Lodge 2444. The ir donatk>ns \Yerc pre$e11ted to t.he national association by .John McDowell, leader of the loca l ch¥tpter. 1\1ore than $638,000 was raised th b; year to aid cerebral palsy victims by Elks in Callfomla and HaW11ll. This brings to 110 mJlhon the nmount which has betn donated since formation or the Elks' ctrcbral palsy project. El To1~o's Captain Hanson Declared l\.illed i11 Viet For Ill-fated Plane Released !\.farine Corps Capt. Stephen Hanson .of El Toro, listed as mi ssing si nce his heli copter was shot dO\\'ll over Laos in 1967. has been declared killed in action. 'The ,...Pentagon has infonned Hanson ·s· wife, Carole. of 24 112 Birdrock Drive. El Toro, that it intervie,,·ed a· helicopter pilot who saw Hanson's craft crash and said there 1vas no char.Ce he lived. The pilot intervie"·cd 11'as one or the return ing prisoners of "·ar (PO\V ), but "'as. not identified. Mrs. Hanson has been active in Na- tional League Of f'amilics of PO\Vs and ~1 1As (missing in actionf in Sou theast Asia. As past president of the group, she ~ . made many cross-country · and in- ternational trips, see kin g information and making speeches about her husband and other1servicemen. She · ... ~visited \Yith Presiden t Nixon, India·s Indira Ghandi. l'ope Paul and government officials in Laos. Viefna1n . Tokyo, Russia, S tock h. o I m and \\'ashington, DC. Gov. Ronald Reagan wore a silve~ PO\\' bracelet bearing Hanson's name for 1nore than two years. Nancy Reagan placed her husband's bracelet in a display case at the Capitol building in Sacramento We00esday. f\1rs. Hanson. whose son, Todd , ha s never seen his father , had told Reagan • Viejo Pilot ·Third Bill Gordon of ?i-1\ssion Viejo has won third prize in ·the Safe Pilot S\\'cepslakes sponsored by the General Aviation f\olanufacturers Association. Go rd on. one of one hundred third prize winners, will receive an aviation weath er band radio. MRS. CAROLE HANSON With Son, Todd that her husband is no\v officially dead. lie was shot down June 2. 1967 y,·hile his helicopter "''as on a n1E!dical evacua- tion mission. The !-Jansons \vere married }o"eb. 21, 1962 and lived at first at the El Toro M11rine Corps Air Station, "'here he was based. She. 33, is a former teacher in·lhe San Joaquin School District. The cap~in first shi ppect oul to \1iet- nam Sept. 7, 1966, only 10 days before Todd "'as born. ~lrs. •l anson thought Todd \vas too young at atx>ut three months to go with her in Jan., 1967 to Hawaii to see Hanson. for v.·hat _tUrned. out k> be the J~st time. . PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (UP!l -Following Is list of crciw and passengers reported aboard Aero-Mexico ; DC-9 which police said crashed and ex· ploded south of here last night: C•l!W C11p1. C1rlol F1r,.111d11 Dlll rt ; c•pllol J•• En•!· l:'VI Ft r111ndo 0"91YI •llwlrdl$• ~I AVlllJ lltwllrd E. Ct1l1ntd• PASSl!NOl!llll l .. l'(llllf Ill H.vtl1N11 1. D1vld tlu•dell, N•w OrlH!ll ) 2. El!tv1n P1lom•rt1, Chk •110 ]. Cllarltt Elu·~ll.itm. ""'bind •. ll:1quel Elut 11h1m, w111. bo!h ol P•lo Alto. !. (h11rle1 Mugllvero. hulblo~d 4. Carol M\1111¥91"0, lllt , both OI SI. Louh, I. Ntlad J1tnll, hVSblnd 9. D11n1 Jtm!I, wl!i' I. Lella Jlmll, I, dlllCtllltf, 111 ol New Or'"111. 10. Mlk;lrN Hall, Houi!on II. Otnltl Hfllard, hu•balld 11. su~na Mllla•d, wtf1. tiol~ of Hou'lofl 13. GulU1rmo GUftrrt, Mexico Cill' 1._ Mt•. Clal' Por1l1, M1mpt1l1 BN tdllll 111 Ml'li.n'll': lj_ M1urkio lNI 16. M'911111'11 !.:Ml, Wiii 17. Ju1n LNI, Min 11. R1u1 Mlr11ner lf. Norm• Gont11e1 10. P11r1c11 eor1DM 21 Mt•la ISMtonl 71. JOM 8ortoril ~ ~rQtri!• B••'ortl Memorial Feed Slated in Viejo A pancake breakfast in memory of a Saddleback Valley fire captain who dJed ~lay 4 \\•ill be held from 7 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday at ri.1ission Viejo High School. Proceeds will help defray medical bills left to the family of Captain Joe Camey, 26, who was Ill two years before hls death . CnpPin Camey served four years on the fire department. Tickets are available at all Orange County fire stations and Forestry Di vision offices. Anyone wishing to donate food '' is re- quested to take it to the Laguna Hills fire station at 24001 Paseo de Valencia. r-----------------------------, 1 Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than1>uldctf> • I . I I I I I I I I I : Witllout _.ing Tiie Dear : I z~.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA I : · IEFRIGERATOR FREEZER : I • Ice bin atorea ·10 lb1.,'1bout 290 I cubes ; automatic lcem1k1r r• . I placea Ice 11 you uae It. I I • Freezer hl!lds up to 297 Iba. I I • ·t:;onvertlble 7-0ay Meat Keeper. I . • Adjustable, tempered gl11a I •helves. I I I I I I I I I I I I I 1815 NEWPllRT BLVD.. Downtown Costa Mesa , ___ ,.. __________ _ • Rolla out on wheel• for e11y cleaning. __. No delroatlng ever ' WE TAKE TFF-24RP TRADl·INS • Mtmlltr .t Ctllfornlo't Ltrgttl Coop1r1tlv1 luylne 90 DAY CASH I I I I I I I I • Group Wltfi Tht Volume luylnt· Power of 110 Ster" WITH --I Au1horl1od GI! SERVICE -Pho11 541-1788 CUllf I . I ... t ---------------J '' 7 ., I .. Buntingto~ Be~eh Fountain ~Valley EDITIO * * VOL. 66, NO. 172, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES • .. .. ~ ... , Totlay's Final ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 21 , 1973 TEN CENTS Desert·· Air ·Continues to If ry Coast By JOUN ZALLER Of Ille DtllW' l"llltt Stiff The Orange Coast continued on this first day of summer to host a battle of the titanic air maases, the Pacl!ic low pressure system versus the desert high pressure. As everyone can te11, the desert high pressure clearly has the upper hand so far. (Related stories, Pages 4, 15, and 22) The desert system, centered over Utah, has met the cooler Pacific air at the High Court Rules On Obscenity WASHINGTON (AP) -In a :>-1 decision reversing a decade-Jong trend toward pennisslveness, the U.S. Supreme Court gave the states much greater authority today to Diove against obsceni- ty. One of the cases on which the decision was bued involves a Costa Mesa court ruling. In an opinion written by Ch1ef Justice \Varren E. Burier, the court held: -Local comrr1unity standards rather than national standards may be used in determining whether material is obscene and therefore oot protected by the Constitution. -'that juries and courts no longer need to find that material Is "utterly" v.ithout redeein!Jlg social value before they .declare it obscene. _ Instead, Burger wrote, they may determine whether the work "taken as a wbole lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." The obscenlty decillonl bovolnd two c.a.ses__from.. Callfornia ao_d one from G~rgia. FIRST NORTHERN SCHOOL CASE RULING-Story, Pogo 3 Jn the Costa Mesa case, Marvin Miller ""as con\icted in Harbor Area Judicial District Court in O>sta Mesa of mail· ing five advertising brocbures found to be obscene. In the other Calif:omia case, Murray Kaplan, proprietor of the Peek·A·Boo i6okstore in Los Angeles, was convicted uhder Lhe st.ate obscenity law of selUng a plain-covered. unillustrated book con· tairting descriptive Nterial of an ex· pticitly sexual nature. Miller. a City ol Industry mail onlcr literature dealer, was convicted ln Costa ~tesa. The court later was relocated to facilities in Newport Beach. "" On Oct. 12, lrll , Orange County Su· perior Court upheld lower (l)Urt convic- tions on at least three counts of malling iidvertisements for sexy books and a film. Some of the charges date to 1969. Details of Miller's trial and convic- tion in the Harbor Area cowt were not immediately available. A court spokesman said, however, to- day that as aoon aa the court gets notice from the hiih court of !ts action ln the case a date 1or sentencing will be set. "Hard core" pornography was the target of Burger'• opinion. "One can concede that the '1erual revolutim' of recent years may have had useful byproducts In striking layers ol prude ry from 1 subject long lrrlllooally kept from needed ventilation," Burger Ytrote. "But ii does not lollow that no regula- tion of pateoUy offensive 'bard core' materials is needed or pennisslble: civilized people do not allow unregulated access to heroin because it ls a derivaUve of medical m o r p h 1 n e s," Burger cantlnued in the majority opinion, coa~Uine and is preventing the coot ocean breezes from penetrating to the swelter- ing Inland areas. The battle Itself ls not unusual, because the two air pres.sure systems are in coo· stapt competition for dominance of Southern California weather. But normally at this time of year, the Pacific low pressure system is the dominant force, ·at least ln the coastal areas. The fad of jts defeat this June has taken many coastal agencies by surprise. On the Beach In San Clemente, students are still ht school, and were forced to,sweat out final exams today as well as the hot weather. In Newport Beach, a city road widen- . ing project has blocked a critic.Bl portion of Newport BouleVard during some of the peak beach traffic loads of the year. And &outhern California Edison C.Om- pany in anticipation a! a cool June, had several or its biggest generating units woUfld. down for routine maintenance. When the heat wave came--tern· O.lly ,/let Stiff l"tlol• This was the way the strand looked at Huntington Beach at 10:30 this morning as thousands of Southern Californians attempted to beat the record heat by beating a hasty retreat to the edge of the Pacific Ocean. Lifeguards estimated \Vednesday's beach crowds along the Huntington shoreline at 93,000 sunburned bodies. Karate Expert Relates Demise of Hired Hoodlum By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... a.ltr '"' Steff Born to conservative parents in Atlan· ta, Ga., raised In a rigid, lundamentalist faith an<I testifying in a precise, almost prissy tone, be does not resemble a hired hoodlum. He blinks his eyes .and purses his thin Ups on the witness stand. He parta his fine hair down the middle. Gary Michael Rollo, six feet, four in~ ches tall, 235 pounds and with a black belt degree ln karate, re-lived in court Wednesday the night his world of illegal intrigue crashed down around his ears. One hour of the 12-hour recorded in- terrogation by District Attorney's in- vestigators was played at a preliminary hearing for Fullerton attorney Michael K. Remington, th e fonner Newport Beach resident accused by authorities of hJring Rollo to carry out murder con· tracts. . Rollo, a big kid with big ambi~ions, had Just been arrested when the tape was made and has since pleaded guilty to soliciting for murder. "You're a little fish in this whole thing ... you're a litUe~ 20-year-old bay who "'anted to play big time," said the (S.. KARATE, Pl(e !) peratures in some inland sections of Orange County soared to 113 degrees \Vednesday -everyone turned up their air conditioners and the company was in trouble. Reserve margins fell to just three per· cent as Edison set a new peak power de- mand record -9.815 mlllion kilowatts. 1'We really were surprised," confessed an Edison spokesman. "It's supposed to be cool and foggy this time of year." J . Sherman DeMy of Huntington Beach, an amateur meteorologist, ex· plained the 'situation tbi9'-way : "The high pressure desert system is completely dominating the western United States. Right oow, it's meeting the Pacific air right along the coastline, and it won't let any of that Pacific air get inland." The standoff between the t\vo 3ir systems causes a further complication, Denny says. Jn pushing up against one another, the air pressure is raised -in Nixon, Brezhnev Sigrt Accord · the sense that air is compressed -and this causes a further rise in temperature. "It usually takes until September before the desert 3ir Is strong eoougb to bring lhis kind of heat," .DeMy says. The last time a simllar situation OC· curred 'wl'as on June 17, 1957, according to Denny's records. At that time, the desert air was so strong that it pushed right th.rough the Pacific front, creating a San· (See HEAT WAVE, Page!) Limit on Nuclear Stockpiles Vowed WASHING TON I AP) -Pre11denl Ni<· on and Soviet. leader Leonid (. Brtdmev this afternoon signed a compact pledging .their couatrte1 to reacla agreemtnt in 1974 to permanently llm.tt offensive au. clear arsenals. 1'ben tbey clinked cbam- pape glules In tout to the most 1lg· nlficant agreement to emerge from their summitry. WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on and Soviet leader Leonid I~ Brezhnev formally committed their countries today to reach an agreement in 1974 to permanenUy limit offensive nuclear arsenals. The deadline was established in the first of seveq principles Contained in a ' , d«t ; .ll!l ill Jti 111P>1ni ~ a t11o While ii~. . ... -,- Valley Girl Eiilogizea- A t Servic~s By TOM GORMAN Of 1111 O.llr ,,... Stiff It was the last day of spring, and \\'ednesday night's warm weather may have drawn Heather Anne LiddeJI to the beach or a neighborhood park with her guitar, where she might have sung a soft ballad about the world around her. Instead she was euJogized. as a beautifuJ girl who met an untimely death -the victim or a senseless automobile accident that left her small car in a beep and her young body lifeless. It was hard for the 100 persons who filled the mortuary chapel to accept her deaUt. · Heather graduated with honors from Fountain VaHey High School last week. She would have entered Cal State ctllco in September. She was interested in veterinary medicine. She loved sports and she loved to work with children. ~fOnday was to be her first day on the job for the Fountain Valley Recreation Department. She picked up a friend and went to a neighborhood park to pick up playgiound supplies. They loaded the car and headed east on Slater Avenue to McDowell School for the first day of the summer program. As they crossed Brookhurst Street, the last thing they expected was a pickup The declaration gives instructions to U.S. and Soviet negotiators at the nOVI'· recessed Strategic Arms LlntltatiOn (SALT) Talks in Geneva. The negotiating instructions had been -expected to flow from the Nixon· Brezlmev summit, but scttrng a deadline for conclusion of a permanent limitation on offensive arms came as something or a surprise. Nixon and Brezhnev left Can1p David by helicopter at 11 :37 a.m. (PDT). The sun was shining through and steam rose from the helipad in the wake of a heavy thtmder;;torm. Both' men wore raincoats and Brezhnev a .fi\lPP~ (ell hat. ~ · Amerlcari officials prletlicted the Nixon· ~ ~· actioO ... -will ~pdiwAy current SALT 'negot~Ung bartiers and rap.idly REMEMBERED AT RITES Accident Victim Llddell truck to slam into the driver's side of lleathcr's car. Her friend escaped serious injury. But Heather, her body receiving the full force of the impact, never regained con· sciousness. She died seven hours later of rilassive internal injuries at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. "I can 't amwer the big question in (See EULOGY, Page Z) accelerate the pace of the Geneva talk!. Presidential assistant Henry A. Kiss- inger. in discussing the agreement with newsmen, said one objective is eventual reduction of the l\\'O superpowers' nuclear arsenals. Asked \\'hether the limitation agree- m·cnt envisioned by the leaders would re- quire parity in the number of mis siles held by each country, Kissinger said "we will obtain what we consider strategic parity." ~ ' The-document declares that Nixon and Brezhnev reaffirmed "their -conviction that the earliest adoption of further litni tations of strategic arms woqld bl a 1najor co11tribution in reducing the danger of an outbrea k or nuclear war and in strengthening international peace and security." $1,000 Offer By Harbour Aide Told By CANDACE PEARSON DI the 0.6" PU.t SIMf A Huntington Harbour Corporation representative Wednesday offered to pay the State Coastal Zone Conse!'Vatlon Commission. $1,000 in exchange for an ex· emption from new coastline controls. At stake were 19 single.family homes the corporation has already completed at \\1alter Avenue and Davenport Drive Jn Huntington Beach . The corporation earlier was denied an exemption from Proposition 20, the coastline initiative, by the South Coast Regional 1.one Conservation Commission . Wednesday the company t0ok its case to the state panel In Torran..,, Tiie situation was confusing. The pro- ject wasn't technically quali!ied for an exemption, the commissioners agreed but the buildings are there. Denying it woulnd't get rid of them . Commissioner Ira Laufer of Ventura said he might approve an exemption in the tnlusual case. but suggested a token fine of $1,000 for violating the pro- position . \\1hcn commissioners dropped the idea , corPoration attorney Al Kaufer took lt up. Even though the commission ha s no (S.. OFFER, P e !) Orange Coast Girl • ID Tears To 'Beat the Bushes' • Se11tHome, Too Poor for New Dress CLIFI'ON, Ariz. ( AP) -A teen·age girl whose parents said they were too poor to buy her a new dresS was sent home in tears from her eighth grade graduation ceremony because her clothing did not conform with school rules. School principal Billy C. McDowell said Wednesday that be had no alternative but to send the girl home because students "had been given their Instructions long before the graduation. "I lelt a gjrl who did not abide by the required cjMss should not participate." The parents ol IS.year-old Eleanor Stacy said their daughter was ordered to leave her classmates May SO. They said she was told she could not march in the graduation ceremony of CUiton Elemen· tary School because her yellow-flowered dress had not been ap- proved by school officials beforehand. . ' 11We're kind of poOr light now," said Ed Stacy, a carpenter. "Our finances have been a litUe tight. We couldn't altord to buy a dress ." · Stacy said he took \be matter before the· school board June 4 but "they treated It u a Joke, more than anything." • • . . 2 Colleges Seek Students By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of "" D•lr. 'lltt SttO ----Officials ·of the Coast C.Ommunlty College District 1ay they are prepared to 1'bcat the bushes" ror addltk>nal students lor bolh Ormge Coast-College -and Colden West College to avoid running headlong Into a budiet deficit. · A five peiunt enrollment Increase Is required to obtlin llate !Wlds needed by the. ~,... dlllrlct to balance its Prwoeed 134.9 milllon budiet. The laitst enrollment forecasts In- dicate 1 dlstrictwide decline of two per· cent durlnc Ibo comina year. Dr. C4mllan 11oampoon, Vice chnn- cellor ol busloeu al!llD,..ald a total of "'luU-Ume cloy lluden(s and 312 even· inj ddenta will have lo be added to avoid running into the red . Early budget calculations by Dr. Thompson show that the 1973-74 liscal year budget would contain a deficit of S600,oo> mainly because of reduced state aid allocatioois prompted by the decline in students. \\'ednesday night, college trustees decided to balance the budget by ma nipulating S(Jme figures on the income side ol the ledger. This included the pro- jected average dally attendance. Instead or a two peroent decline, Ibey' are now calling for a 5 perctnl enroll· ment increase. What does this mean? 'Rte recruiters will have to work overtime, according to Dr. Thompson. 1'Wt're teUlng them to get out there one! beat the bushes to get a & perttnt In· creDse;' he said. A committee Is already studying \vays to accomplish It \Vithout resortiJfg to handing out Blue Chip stamps, accordia~ to.Dr. Thompson. District Charlcellor Norman E. Wat.son told the board that the state funds would be al located to the distrlcL at the begin- ning of the year on the attendance estimate. 1'tls means that the di strict would have enough money to start the year even if actual enrollment is under the estimate. But he cautioned that an ad· justment would have to be made later. "We V.'OUld be borrowing against the lutute," ho said. Included in the budget are o $1 ,9 million humanities. arts. o.nd sciences building: a ll.2.milllon stlil center : a $950,000 art center and lecture hall ad· iSe.e COLLEGES, Page !I ' Weather It's going to be blistering hot in inland portions or Orange Count y Friday, but slightly cooler right along the coast. Highs in the 80s at the beaches rising to 108 de· grees in Santa Ana . Low.1 in the upper 60s. INSIDE TODAY Nixon campaign aide Fred· erick C. LoRue Jtas denied tvrongdoing in conncctio11 with ·dealtnga uritl• a now-bankrupt housing firm. See atory, Poge 13. r...M. ••vf t C•lli.nMI lS (l .... llM ,.... (ll'l'llt• Jl (NII..,.. II ~-M"ltff II •dlfolr1•1 ""' ' •11,.rt•lllmtfll """ "h•flC• U.1S .. ., "" lttcOl'f 11 --. A/'111 l.11M11tt 1t Mnln ai-JJ Mtil~ PflNt t4 N•IMIWll '°twll '•I Or• .... c-1~ i• lrlw!• 1".mt tJ S•tttt ., ... St.c.k M•tlttts ..... l'•i.Yl'llfll • l'lltlt.r• ..,, ·-. Wll!Mfl'I MtWI 11 tl w...i. """" .., " ... 1 l'll01 H Mitchell To Admit :Coverup? r;ARDf.N CITY, N.Y. tUPll : Former At torney General John N. : ~1ltchell is prepared to tell the £rvin ; comln.itt~ !hat tie authorized pa)'ffil'lll S . to the \Vatcrgnte defendants to CQ\'C'f up : the scandal until after the presldcntl al ' election . Nev.•sday said today In a copyrighted dispatch. Quoting •·a source close to Mltch{'ll ," the report from the 11 ewipjliper ,'li Washington bureau said that f\lltch<'ll in· tends 10 deny Oat\y, ho\\'ever, that he 8~ BREMER BREAK.IN ORDERS t0Lo..:.s1ory, P•v• .s proved a plan to put listening devlc~ in the Democratic; National Committee headquarter" Newsday reporter Anthony l\1nrro , v.·ho signed the .dispatch. wrote that the source said 1.1ifchrill v.•outd admitl hat he knew about the cover-up pl an and that he approved payments to the defendants to "keep the lid on" until · aher the November election. A former deputy of Mitchell,_ JelJ Stuart r..1agruder, told Lhe Senate con:i· miltce investigating the Watergate affair that 11-1itchell approved bugg~g the Democrats during a meeting ·with men clo.. lo the While House and the Com· mittee to Re • elect the President on March 30, 1972 at Key Biscayne, Fla. Sen. Sam Ervin (0.N .C.), is chairman or the Senate investigating group. Magruder testified that l\litchell, after rive ol. the Watergate conspirato rs ~'ere · · arrested. was a party lo efforts to cover up iDvolvement of the Nixon re-election committee which allegedl)'I included at· terqpts to conceal large s~s spent . by 1he committee on the bugging proJecl . and paymen ts to the accused con· spirators to k~p them fron1 implicating higher ups. Fro111 Page J HEAT WAVE • • la Ana wind condition as it went. That pushed the mercury up to 99 degrees. Denny said It was 38 in Hun- tington Beach Wednesday. 'n.e hot weather was producing several UJ1U1Ual sjtuations. ln San Clemente, police reported a high incidence of rat· tlesnakes driven out o.f the hllls to Seeli shelter in cooler residential areas. In Laguna Beach, lifeguards reported a h1ch incidence of nude sunbathers. And in Newport Beach, water tem· peraturet w·ere drl•en up to a new record high, 73.5 degrees. The old record was 71 degrees, set on June 30, 1931. J Uthe sun's heat was causing an energy crisis for Edison Company, it was not doing 80 for the northern hemisphere er the earth. Today ts the longest day of the year, with the sun rising at 5:42 a.m. and not setting until 8:07 p.m. "There may be an energy shortage but oot as far as the sun's rays are con· cerned today," said Jim Seevers, assis· tant astronomer at the A d I e r . Planetarium in Chi ea go. ''The rays are striking the northern hemisphere more vertically now and delivering more solar energy per square foot." Girl, 19, Raped; 3 Men Sought Hu ntington Beach police are seeking three men who raped a 19-year-old WeSfnililSter-Woman who they had of· fe red to drive home early this morning. 'I11e woman told police she approached the three men 11hortlY arter midnight at the Huntington Beach pier, asking them for a dim e so she cduld call friends to give her a ride home. She said lhe trio offered her a ride, but instead oC takin g her home they drove to a vacant field . The wornan said they took turns holding her down while one of them raped her . Wh"tn they finished, she said, they took her home. OlANGE COAST Ma DAILY PILOT Tiit Ortnoe (NII OAILV l"ILOT wllfl wt11<1' K 11:0ll'lllll*I·-Ht-l"••u. I~ 11Ubll1-b'I' Ille Of"•"t• Co.it P"'bll1hlng COfllpa"y· l~· rete tdltlonl •rt P11D'll1hlll, MDnd1y ""°"'" llthlty, lflr CO•lt Mt11, N-rt tncll, H""llnglon 81tci'llll-ttln Villlt y, L'f\IM ""'"· lrvl11•1'41ddltNt~ t lllll "'" Clt1Mnl1/ St'I Jutn C111l•lftt1t. A 1!1111!1 •'9;on11 l!d ltlo" 11 iwD-1111\tC! ,.•urdtys end Sund•VL TM Prlnclt•I !11141111l!lftt 1111111 II ti :l30 Wt'I BIY S!l'ffl, CM!• Mtlt. Ctlllornlt , t2•2t· lto1>1rt N. W1•d ,., .. .....,, 11111 l"llOillftl• Joe~ l , Curle'/ \ll(t l"tttlltlfll •11111 tit114rtl Ml"lffr Th'"''' 1Ce1vil tor- Tho"''' /4., MMr11hl"1 Mtl\lllfti EOllCI• C1i1rl11 H, Looi kich•1i r. N•U t.n1111nt M•voirlll £dltw1 T eriy Covill1 W11t Ortnot c-11 fllter H .......... .._h Offlco 11171 l 11ch lo"'le•11illl Mo ili11t Ailllilllr11u P.O. lo• 1t0, t2~4t ~ """" LttWl'IO 9Mcfl1 m "r"' ,_,,_.. Ct tlt Nl .... I »I Wfl a1y Slrott "'-' aeKl'l l UJI N1w.,.n a1111\ .... IP'f .. ,,. t""*"111 ICIJ Nortfl It (tll"llM ... , , ... ,~ ... ,,,., '4J-4JJ1 Cl-' ............... 641-1671 ,.,_..,.Or .... C_.,, Clf!l_ll._ '*'IJJO """"'~'· ,,,,. ~ (NII Mllr.11!"' c..,..'"", Ht """"' 1..-1t1, 111"'11r111ot11, •llW~ ,....,,,... Of H'Wlllt lNl'lll Mrt!ft WY .. ·~· wll;loWI _... ..,, MIM.... ., iiHIYrlfM • ......,. ~ d tlt ............. •I C.-11 MtM, t11l"'"'11 "'"""""~ WI' c•••ltr »il ,.._.,IYI • W ,,.,j t,J,11 "'°"!lllYI lllllltJtT ... !I,..1111'1• .., ... ....,.lfll .. , lhur\day, June 21. J97J '· .... 11.1111111 ••• • !> HAWAIIAN IS. • .,. re •• Capt.Ba ... on El Toro Marine 1 Declared Dead bracelet in a display c111e at the Capitol building in Sacramento Wednesday . . ., Convicted Pair Out Of Office Derek McWhlnney and T1td Fujita, co11- vlcted Tuesday f!f conspiracy to commit grand theft and attempted grand theft, have been removed fro1n their govern· 1™!nJ. .PQN. In _jy_@tmi,1,11ter and Orangt u~~~~~-l-~~~~--1~~~~~-1-~~-'-- ~1arlne Corpe Capt. Stephfn Hanaon of El Toro. listed as missing since his helicopter was shot down over Laos in llM7, has been declared killed In actlon. 1 The Pentagon has informed ll&MOn's wife, Carole, of 24112 Birdroclt Drive, El Toro that it interviewed a helicopter Mrs. Hnnson, whose son, Todd , has never ieen his father1 had told Reagan that her husband ls nowO fficlally aeaa. ~ ... He wu shot down June 2. 1967 while his helicopter was on a medical evacua· tion mission. County. · State law mandates ·thal an olfi~ becomes vaco nt upon the incumbent'~ conviction of a felony. PACll"IC OCIAN SKYLAB I I t !O Tounaejj's End Ill 120 ' pilot "'00 saw HllllOll's craft cruh and said lhere was no chance he lived. The pilot interviewed wu one of the returning ~ rlaonero ol war (POW), but "'al not Identified. The Hansons were married Feb. 2l, 1962 and · lived at fir &t ·at the El Toro 1.1arlne Corps Air station, wbera he was based. She, 33, Is a fonner teacher In the San Joaquin School District. McWhinncy, former m1yrn· o t Wes\mJnster, lole1 his City Council seat as a result ol the law as wtll u bl~ memberships on the Orange County Transll Dist rict and Mldw1y City -5anllacy l>Jllricl boordl. Map spots area wh ere Skylab l astronauts will splash down Friday at approximately 6:50 a.m. PDT, ending 28-day mission in space. See story, Page 4. ' Mrt. Hanson has been active in Na· tlonal League of Families of POWs and MIAs (missing In action) In Southeast Asia. -The captain-first llhlpped-OUI to.J!l~ • nam &:pl. 7, 1966, only 10 days before Todd was born. Mrs. Hansqn thought Todd was too young at about three month& to go "ith her In Jan., 1967 to Hawaii to aee, Hanson, !or what turned out lo ho lhe lut time. Fujita has been remove<! rrom·-.,~-­ Weotmlnater Planning Commiulon and tho Midway City Sanitary l>Jltrlct board . Tho two city olftclala were coovlcted ~Y or an allempl to aollclt a bribe from farmer Georg• Murali-to fix a vote by the board ot supervisors on the Mile Testimony Coneludzng In Lawyer Case Quiz As pall preaident o! the group, the made many-Cf'Oll-(OUll.try and 1n· ternational • trips, seeldn& information and making speeches about her husband and oth« servicemen. Costa Mesa She viaited with President Nixon. lndla'1 Indira Ghandl, Pope Paul and government o!!lclal• In Laos, Vie""~D Sweep Tokyo, Ruula, St ockhol m and rug \Vathinaton, DC. Gov. Ronald Re&gan wore a 1il\'er POWbraceletbearlngHanaon'sname!or Rounds Up 12 Square Piirk agriCilltural lease in Foun· loin vaue·y. The 3¥year~ld friends were acquitted of con.spit~ to commit bribery and two counts of sOllcltlng bribery. The jury Cleliberated four days. · S~_r_ior C~urtludge Jolm FJynn Jr. has set July 10 for the heaMng of definle motions for a new trlal and aentencin& of th e duo. Testimony \\'as to conclude today in the case or a former New port Beach lawyer now of Fullerton, who the chief pros· ecution witness claims paid him $1,000 to kill an adversary in a civil lawsuit, bury him in the desert and deli ver his severed fin ger and wallet u proof. Defense attorneys for attorney .r..flchael ' K. Remington, 33, are doggedly at· t.emptiog to discredit testimony by Gary l\t. Rollo, claiming he is lying and was coerced into act ing as agent for authorities in return £or lenient pros· ecution himaelr. Tapes were played in Judge Paul G. Mast's Central Orange County Judicial District courtroom Wedneedly. Remington and Rollo -the latter feigning surprise -were arrelted May 31 outside carousel Restaurant Jn Anaheim, to climax an intrfgulng in· vestigation triggered one week earlier by a simple traffic violation. Rollo rarely looked at Remington \Vednesday while testifying he was out· fitted with a tiny transmitter so District Attorney's investigators staked out in a camper truck_ ne.a1by could tape the carousel Conversation. - They al'° 'reportedly !limed the bend· over of $1,000 in cash they allege was paid for the disposal of an adve rsary In a lawsuit against a vending machine com· pany headed by Remington. Evidence gathered by the Orange County District Attorney's office led to four counts of conspiracy to .oo~lt 1nurder, whlch could send Rtmlnaton to prison for Ufe If he is convicted. Defense attorneys Wllllam Marahall f\lorgan and Robert Green failed In the fourth day of their cllentts prellmlnary hearing to persuade Judie Mast to plar. the cafe rendeivous tape In chainber1 or some other closed setting. r.itorgan and his ·co-counsel claim Rem-- in~'• case has been 1ubjected to pre} udicial pre-trial publicity due to the testimony offered so far . From Pllfle J KARATE ... recorded voice of lnvesti&ator Jim Daugherty. The tape characterized Rollo as a col· orless kid who bragged of alleged gangland connections, d r I v l n & a r..fercedes-Benz, taking a trip to Portugal on a moment's notice and pa,ylng of! lawmen to get under!lngs out of jail. None of it was true. His first and only prior arrest was a child stealing rap brought by his juvenile gi rlfriend's parents and resulting In pro-- bation and a court order £or the pair not to associate. Rollo is now testifying against Rem· ington, as inept wouJd·be assassins Bobby Joe "8.J ." Hart, Chuck HuJett and Charles Barnes testified earlier against him. The prosecution wllness loo ked across the courtroom occasionally at Remington a~ the tape played. "You're In deep deep tfouble. little r.; .. 11 :· Daugherty \\'&rned the bulky vl'Uth as he I: id Rollo':; grim situati on on ihe line. "I think you \Vere taken in by some rast·tnlkers,'' Daugherty continued . Accident Victim Services Slated f'uneral se.r\•ices will be held Friday for 9-year-old Jeanne C. IIerpol1heln1er of lltmtington Beach who died Monday of injuries she rectlved in a bicycle ac- ciden t last week . The girl. her brother and a neighbor yoUngster were ridlni a bike aerou the intersection of Beach Boulevard and Yorktown Avenue when they were 1lruck by an automobile. The noon services wlll be held at Westminster .Memorial Park, with burial to follow. !\Jorgan, a specialist in croes--ex· amlnation, accused Rollo in rlna:ing sarcastic tones Wednesday of lying: and making ridiculous statements under oath. more than two years. · Nancy Reagan placed her husband 's - Westminster 1.1ayor Philip Anthony snid that councilmen hope to decide nex t week whether to fill the city vacanciu by appointment or 1pect1I eleetlon. During vertial testimony conducted by prosecuting Deputy District Attorney Robert Cbatterton, Rollo said he knew Remington for about 1ix montha and wu retained to perform certain tervices £or the tall, bulky-de!eodanl "I waa looking for perlOl'ls on a con· tractual basis to perform hits, killings and beatings," Rollo said. His hunt was in vain, however, since three inept prospe<:ta \\tio were ll'anted immualty from prosecution for lhelr own testimony !ailed to kill or beat anyone In several trlel. They did scare Chaffey Coll•&• In- structor Gordon Lockwood and hla wife by !iring a lbollWI blut Into lbelr ·cucamonca home, leavlni a lhrHltnlnl riote, and fleeing in panic. Rollo, who has pleaded guilty to sollciling for murder and faces sen· tenclng June 24, apparently never in· tended to get involved in the dirty work rum..11. He testified that he ai:reed to meet two or his-bungling henduneo 1t the-bolne ol Yorba J,ifld1 ·busin....,.. Al ~thllnr tiut never planned to ahDw up, while tbe pair assiined to kill Febllnc IOI loot mi the way to the .:ene. ~ Rollo also testified he accepted $500 !romRemingloo-to·eogineer the..l>eali!!g of a Fountain Valley woman who was suing the defendant's vencilq machine company !or $12,500 but llod lo Rem· ington in saying the job had been done. .He' also .faked an a__ptgnment to kill another foe cl. Remington setting U:p the Jitay 31 arre:ot at the Anaheim cafe. Investigators seated Remingtoft 111d Rollo in a police car after they "'ere ha ndcuffed and walked awiy, but the tiny trfltl!lmitter was still operatin1. "Did you say to Mr. Remington: 'You iruot. I have bis wallet on me,' " asked de fense attorney Morpn who had ob- tained transcripts ol. the investlgators' tapes . The document• showed Remington rtplied "What era you lalkini about? Be quiet." Rescuers Search Mexican Crash; 27 Feared Dead PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (UPI) -Reacue team• reached the wreckage of a Mexican jetliner on the side of a ' · 1,500-foot mounlaln today and reported n0 alp o! Ille among the 2'I perllOlll -14 or them bolteved lo ho Americana fiylng from Houston, Texu for a Mexican vacation. The DC9 of Aero-1.fexico was within sight of the runway at this resort town on the Pacific Coast and the pilot w a s chatUng ~·Uh the COQ,trol tower when the nig1lt sky was filled with a great bum of ora!'lge light as the plane hit the peak and exploded. k. The pilot's last radio contact with the tower gave no hl11t of ~bfe ap- prozimately 10 minutes before Its scheduled laDdlng time .. FrotttP .. el OFFER-•.. authority to levy fmes, isked the at· tomey atandlng at the podium, would It be willing to grant the exemption if the 1ppllcallt waa wWlni lo pe )'the $1,000? Amid the resulting laughter. Corh· missioner Ellen Stern Harris declared, smiling. "Bribery." Kaufer didn't mention the subject again. The commission finally decided there \\·eren't subctantial reason• £or a new hearin&, an action that ujile1d the regional denial. Kaufer said the corporation need3 an exemption or a perm it, which he com· plained ~wld take more time, to clea r lhe title on the homes, 15 of which arc sold. · Building permits for the project were issued Jan. 17, after Proposition 20 became law Nov. 8. tn raids ln four Orange Coast cities Wednesday Costa 1.1esa poll~ rounded up five adults ·and seven juvenUes and aCCUled all 12 or lralllcklnc 1n oarcotlca and dangerous drugs. Police said they alao confiscated $3.000 •'Orth ol drugs and lt,600 In cub durtng the raids in Colta 1.1esa, Irvine, Hun· tington Beach and Newport Beach. . Jailed on ~p~on of selling nart0t1cs and dangerous drugs were : -Vemon Louis Otero, 25, « Apt. Jl, 6700 Wamer Ave., Huntln&too Belch, a pbotOl'Bpher. McWhinney was first elected to the: council in 1968. the same year Fujita was appointed to the planni"i comrnlasion. McWhlnney was aervlng hi• fifth one- year tenn as--mayor untU he reatped that poal laot September. Fro111P .. el EU OGY .•. -Paul Alan Messamore, 19, ot 1m Republic Ave., Costa Mesa, an your rt -Why'" sald Rev. Bruce A. upbot1terer. • or the Pmbyterian Oturcb ol lht -Terry Mlchael Noah, 23, ol ~"-~enanl or Coata M111 . Monrovia Ave ., CO«ta Mesa, a· college "But God doesn't make mlatakes. student. Police declined to reveal the names of Although I can't undentand, and knoW the two other adult.s pending further in· you can't, this life Is a steppln1 atone for vestlgatlon. · • the other life, a better life," he told ta m.I· They ldentl!led Noah •• Ille brother or ly and frlendl at Wednelday 's mamorlal Gerry l\f , Noah. 24, who wis wounded in service. a shooting June 7 at 525 VictoriA St., Costa ~teu . Police are still seeking the "I don 't know a great deal of what aua.Uant. _ _ Heaven is like. But I have a picture of a All _.., juvenil .. are belnc -btld •l-plu lhot teenqen like Ue11har-llka "' Orange County Juv.nlle Hall. much -a place ol •lnilnl· '°"'' • placa Police aaid they dl>COvered IDlall or muoic. amounla ol marijuana, huhllh oil, heroin and barbltuntee durlni Ille raids. "We ramemher her for her 1ra-... Inveat.11aton estimated the total street love Of music. Her guitar and the ballad• varoe ai-13.000-. -he IUDll munt .. -muc11-1n-1Jer"lll';-- Arrestin1 orrtcero said Ille alleged drug There wu alw1y11on1 on her llpe. You'll dealen had been under po 1.1 c e h ·lia In survelllince for about three moo.tbs. remember er aa a very . PPY penoo her •lnclni· .. FromP .. e J COLLEGES ... dition: a $700,000 admi n ist rat io n building; a $500,000 student center, a t180,000 horticultural bulldlng, and a $140,000 food services laboratory. No fund s have been lneludcd in the budget for additional ernployes or for cost~r-llving salary increases. Adoption oI the budget as it oow stands , \\•ould raise the distric t's tax rate about 10 cents from 83 cents to 93 cents per $100 ol assessed valuation. The final budget wllJ be adopted during the first u·eek in August. · "And ~ was ao interuted in peopl~ • mankll)d." he said. "She liad • d .. p love for people. And what all the earth wu about was part of her life. "She wu concerned lor people and their needs. She Wal very concerned about ecology or Ille earth and Ila preservation.' OUU!de Ille chapel , her !ritoda bad few words to add. "She didn't like a lot ol !rills," ooe alrt said . "But I remember her becaUJe lhe always lrled to make people happy. She ~·ould go out of her way to do thlt." Othen didn't want to talk at all. They had km a friend , and worda could not replace her. "You've put 1 treasure 1n the hand• of God," Rev . Kurrie had sakl. "And 1 treasure In the hand.a of God la llfe." Stan,s, Kalmbacli. Eyed in. Fund Extortio1i Probe r-----------------------------~ ' Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than 1>ttldc1P • I -I WAS!IlNGTciN (AP) -Spec i a I \\'atergate prosecutor Archibald Cox is I considering a grand jury investigation to I determine if President Nixon'• campaign fund raisers used extortion In collecting I $50 million in contributions last year, a Cox aide said today. I Thomas F. 1.fcBride, a special assis· tant to Cox, said lhal the Nixon cam· I paign finance committee'• !und·ral•lnl I practices are clearly within the scope of the inquiry being conducted by the Watergate pl'QOeCUlor'1 1taf!. I McBride said that the prosecutor ii ad· I ding staff members and cONidering the poaslbillty ol empanellng a opeclal federal I grand jury, probably in Washington, to probe "'hether extortion and other illegal I fund • raising practices were used to fi. nnnce the Nixon campaign. I "\Ve are moving as fast as· time and re sources will allow," McBride said. I Among those whose acUvltles would be invesfigated are former Secretary of I Commerce Maurice ff. Stans, the chief 1972 Nixon fund raiser, and Herbert W. I Kalmbach or Newport Beach, the President'li former personal attorney and Stana' 11168 deputy. I I I I I I I I I I I Bicyclist, 7, Killed by At1to A 7·year-old S.al·Beach ll<I!' WH killed Wednelday afternoon "1ien h!I bicycle wa1 1trvck by a car at SUI Beach Boulevard and Electric Street. Police Identified Ibo victim u Dutty Dilbney, 217 eth St. The car n1 driven by_Donna Ma8'• !6, o! B-IOI Surl1lde, officers Iii . I I I I WiW Oplli11 ~-0. : 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA 1 REFRIGERATOR FREEZER : • Jee bin 1tore1 ·10 lb1., about 290 I cube1: eutom1tlc lcemaker r• places Ice u you use It. I • Freezer holds up to 297 lbs. I • Converttble 7.01y Me11 Kuper. • Ad)uat1ble, tempered gl111 I 1helv11. I • Rolle out on wheel1 for ••IY cleanlng. • No defroatlng ever · WE TAKE --'-- TRADE-INS tO DAY CASH I I I . I I I I · I w1iM ~'"m• I Clltlf I I · 1 I l She Is survlv1.1d by her rather, Donald lfer.polshcinler or ..Anaheim~ rno_ther, Nancy fl, llerpoh1helnler. 733 Utlea Ave., Jluntington Bea C"h: 1 sister. Robin and Ihm: br'other8, l\Jcbard, DoN.ld and Dennis. all of lllmtington Be~. The boy w11 taken to Loi Alamltoo 0.,,.,..1 llolpllal whera ho dlad • abort lime afte:r the 1 p.m. accident. I 1115 NEWPORT-BLVD.-Dmtawn Cam Mesa •. -- '4------------------------------~ I ( . . ~ . • ' . . . ... • ., ,. Th ursday, June 21 lq73 H DAILY PILOT 3 Jews, Cubans Protesting on Coast CUBANS DEMONSTRATE NEAR WESTERN WHITE HOUSE WITH PRE-CASTRO FLAGS Sm1ll Group Protested U.S. R11triction1 Th• t Prevent Fighting to Regain Their Hom1l1nd Orange County Lincoln Club Cubans Protest A1iti-Castroites i1i San Cleme_nt,e Getting Shaky ·· By Associated Press The Republican fund ·raising group known as the Lincoln Club of Orange County has been plagued with apathy. delinquent dues and drops in mem- bership, according to a Los Angeles Times account based on some of the group's papers. The nc\vspaper said today that it has been p r o v i d e d with Lincoln Club documents for 1969. 1970 and 1971 in- cluding membership lists. financial s tatlments,-nutes ~r=arrect or s • meetings and speeches of Arnold 0 . Beckman, past presiden~ of the group. References in 1::-te papers include mem- • More than three-dozen Cuban exiles, calling themselves "rililltanfs" over the issue of the rigtit to fight f0r their home country, opened this week's series of pro- tests near the Western White House Wed- nesday noon. The group -a wing o_f the militant ·-Arpha -66 group -carried pre.Castro CUban nags. large placards and one member carried !'I: dummy· to represent Soviet Communist party leader Leonid Brezhnev as the overlord of Castro's Cuba. He is Sergio Lopez. who identifi~ himself as head of the Southern California youth delegation for. the-Cuban gioup which demands U.S. lifting of ~ttictions_ lo_k_c_ep_~rted Qubans front ffghtiiig to regain their country. Lopez said the group specifically 'pro- tested the Soviet domination or his ho1neland. Another gr01.ip leader, Henry Briggs, added to the comments by his younger counterpart: "Its not really unusual lo demand the right to fight to regain your country. How would Americans feel if -GOd forbid - they were turned out ol this nation and forbidden· to return and fight to get it back? Both spokesmen said the group would have been larger, "but it's a work day and a lot of people simply couldn't come down to San Clemente." The marcb lasted less than an boll!' and was quiet and aJmost tot.ally unwitiiessed. 'The group confined the ac- tivities to the p_.!!leh of roatlside Dear the J .J. Blmore Thoufglibri!il nnCb on Avenida de_l Presidett_te_. __ The-group retumed~later in·the·evening lo join a larger Anti-Brezhnev protest sponsored by the Southern California Council !or Soviet Jews. tion or aid given to President-N~ix~o~n'~•----- 1968 and 1972 ~paign~. 8 . I C ll One quole rrom minutes or the Feb. 20. 1 O" 1 0 urt Te s Ruling 1971 . meeting of the IS·man board of ~ directors. said : 1 "Or. Beckman reported that f\1r_. 0 s Robert Finch, counselor to President n chool n -1•scrlllllll• • tio Nixon, has asked him to convey to the . a ll Lincoln Club Board his request that the club. as well as directors as individuals, refrain from making fund -raising com- mitments for 1974 campaigns until after 19n. to avoid complications in President Nixon'S 1972 reelection 'campaign." The Times said the papers contained lists or members \vho v.·ere late in paying their $5(l(Hl-year dues, some of them fall- ing behind by as much as $1,000, and repeated notations of declining mein- bership. The group \Vas reported to have never numbered over 140. Despite reported influence in high places, the group appar.enUy....ba_d trouble getting name speakers to appear at its Llncoln Day dinners, the papers reveal- ed. ln 1970-71, the group listed con- tributions of $10,000 ·to Gov. Ron ald Reagan's winning effort; $15,000 lo the _ losing effort of former 8'-n. George Murphy (R-Oalif.): $28,000 lo the losing candidacy of ~ Willia m J, Teague for c.ongress in the 34th district; $20,000 to Bruce ,Nestande, who Josi _ in his bid fo~ 1he 69th Assembly dislricl, and $1,000 to the losing candidacy of Henry Boney for the 40th state Senate district. "We would have .been happier.-of course, if more Republicans had won , but let us not be too discouraged ... ," Beck~n was quoted as telling a membership meCfing. Jn short, the .Times said, the group's papers show it to be an erthodox Rep ublican club that has consistently raised thousands.. or dollars. I hough less than is popularly perceived. \VASHJNGTON iUPll -1n a long· awaited Denver decision. the U.S. Supreme Court ruled today that in- tentional racial discrimination in part of a northern city school operation means _ the entire systent is subject to federal court desegregation orders. TI1e Denver case -the first involving a non·Sopthcrn city to be decided by the high court -dealt with school board policies which black parents said resulted in a discriminatory dual school system. There was no law on the books at issue in the dispute. The vote was 7 to l, \\'ith the majority opinion delivered by Justice William J. Brelman Jr. Justice William H. Rehn- quist dissented and Justice Byron R. White, who comes from Colorado, did not pa!_"f.icipate in the decision. Justices William 0 . Douglas and Lewis F. Powell, Jr. wanted to go further than BreMan. They argued strongly for an end o any distinction between de facto and de jure discrimination in schools. In most Southern school cases, the cour~ dealt with de jure segregation which was based on actual state or local laws. The Denver case presented the issue of de facto segregation where schools are racially imbalanced because of neighborhood living patterns or unv.•ritten policies. Brennan said that where a policy of in· tentional segregation has been shown as resulting from school board policies in a significant portioit or the system, the Grand Jury Seeks 2nd Look at Data Solution The Orange County Orand Jury \vant!i the Board of Supervisors to take another look at a aolutlon to the co.unt)l'!I data services problem. Supervisors Wednesday accepted in omcept Ule hiring of a computer firm to handle the data pr(')C(!ssing, as suggested by County Adrninistratlve Offlcer Robert Thomas. (Sec related story, Page 10). Several hours after the board's 3 to 2 vote~ Grnrid Jury Foreman Marcia Bents or Newport Beach released a letter staling the jury is "mosL concerned" aliouL Thom A51 report. ·• The jury-is asking Ior vertricntion of 11iott\I"! evaluations and for furthel' studf of altcrnatlvcs b)' a MW blue-lib· 600 !'Offimillee orcxperts. Mrs. Bents complainid th.at the jury was "unable to obtain adequa te in- formation and was denied .access to a closed-door rnfftloi on the matter." Thoma9' rteOmmended the county con- sider bids in two weeks from two "com- puter service cornpa'nies, . Compute r Sciences Corp. and Electronic 'D8ta Sysleltlll. lie contended either would be superior to· the county's Data Services Department. ~trs: .Bents also said the jury l'lnd Jhought Thomas' report and lhe findings by the blue-ribbon panel of independent computer experts would be In agreement aifd<:ontendl'd th·cy weren't. · The Grand Jury letter wat filed with lhe board. I authorities must prove that their actions involving other racially imbalanced schools were not likewise motivated. In other actions, the court : -Ruled 5 to 4 thal a newspaper can be prohibited from carrying help-wanted ads to 'indicate one sex is preferred to another for various jobs. (Story, Page - 24) -Uphel~ by a 7-2 -the rights of the states to require weliare recipients to seek and accept employment as a re- quirement for receiving federally~funded Aid to Families with Dependent Children. -Ruled that 12-member juries are not mandatory for deciding civil cases in federal courts. Frank Southworth, who took over as president of the Oenver School Board while the case w8.s before the Supreme Court, denied there ever had been any in- tentional segregation o! black and Mex· lean-American students . He said heavy ·enrollments of minority students in certain· schools in northeast Denver were the result of geography, "You put tbe schools where the children are.'' said Southworth. * * * Higl1 Cou11 Says 'No' to Probe Of Ohio .Guard WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court today refused to order an investigation into the training of Ohio National Guardsmen sent to the campus of Kent State University in May 1970. 1'he court, by a 5-4 vote, reversed a 1972 appeals court order directing lov.·cr courts to make the review. Dissenting justices held that the suit should be declared moot FOur students were killed when Guardsmen opened fire during an an· Uwar domonJtraUon at the Ohio school. Ohio olficials opposed the mquiry, saying the qaining and weaJ)Onry of the guard should not be subject to judicial review. __ ,... Speaking for lhe court, Chief Ju•ll•• Wmen E. Burger said the situation hns greatly changed since Kent State s~udcnts (l\ed the suit in 1-970. , None o( the students is still enrolled and none of the original defendants Is holdJng ofricts with authority over the National Guard; he said.- D•LIY l"llot Sl.tf PIMfof ON EVE OF BREZHNEV VISIT, JEWS STAGE CANDLELIGHT PROTEST IN SAN CLEMENTE ~ Nearly 500 Demonstrated Against Soviet Policies on Jews Who Wish to Emigrate • • 500 Demonstrate for Jews • At Western White House By JOHN VAL TERZA _Of the 0•111 PJIOI si.11 Nearly 500 persons demanding that Russia free its Je\';s marched to an area near the Wes tern White House in San Clemente \Vednes9ay .. The peaceful demonstration sponsored by the Southern California Council for Soviet Jev.·s involved in a candlelight pro- ~ession followed by a rally and a petition presentation to Secret Service agents at < the compound gate. The 8 p.m. display of dissatisfaction with the restriction again.st emigration by an imprisoned Soviet Jew, then, after si nging and chanting the group filed past a petition table and each member .signed a copy of the petition which was ' to isolate 'hard core' pornography from present~iftOWfiifi. House security-aiae-s. T.he run signed ve rsion. spokesman said. \\'ou!Q ·OOSent to tlfe \Vhite ffoUse al a later date . ' The document urges Nixon to "end the discredited and unnecessary subterfu ge of behind-the-scenes negotiations and speak out openly in behall of Sovie t Jews." The petition states that N.ixon's silence "embarrasses and-upsets us." _b ~viet Jews in Russia took place about two blocks from the gate to~lhe--B C T enclave. Speakers reilerated the need for eer · an OSSer Amertcans to support the campaign to li_ft_Jb___eJmmigration restrictions. "S6viet Jews want solidarity ... they \l':J.nt demonstrations from the peopie of Corralled Again the United Sfates," said council Executive SAC::RA.MENTO (UPI) _ The State Director Zev Yaroslavsky. Fish and Game Department reports that "If Soviet Communist Party Chief Leonid I. Brezhnev is here (he arrives a beer-drinking fisherman was arrested Fr-idayl and 1.otiftp.g happened, tMr.ILthink t\vice_l!l_J!_months for tossing~emID it doesn't matter," he added. can aside at the same spot on a The top ranking official plans to arrive Riverside Countr canal. at the presidential compound late Fliday Robert Fritz of Blythe \vas arrested and remain through Sunday. both times by Game Warden John The group which marched in opposition Ortman and fined $25 by J ustice Court to him Wednesday is planning a repeat ·trip sometime during the Brezhnev stay, Judge \I/. Stewart Miller on each oc~ spokesman sald. casion. CANDLE POWER Jews in Protest During the rally \Vednesday the group The department said he was --eVcn heard a me1nber read from a letter sent drinking the same brand of beer. JJ. J. ·garrell ~ 22nd SEMl~ANNUAL . No ·w We invite you to attend H. J . Garrett's semi-annual sale. Each year at this time, we offer our regular .stock merchandise at fabulous reductions. It is an opportunity for you to purchase c a r e f u 11 y selected pieces from the most c;ompre- h•nsive collection of truly fine furniture and accessories in the Harbor area at a reduced price. The sale begins Thursday, June 14. Regular store hours will prevail. Fa ir traded items &If• cepted. • Prog·ress in ----=---------~ Your favo-rite interior. dssigi.er wilt be >ioppy to assJst you. ... H.J. GAI\1\ETT PROFESSIONAL INTERIOR DESIGNERS Open Mon. Thurs. & Fri. Eves. • • " DAILY PILOT And Suddenly It's Summer EARTHQUAKE WEATHER? -Here it is the longest day of the year, the first day of summer and the heat has finally turned an . Already our coastline has sunk two inches. This was not caused by any Th11r~'1iY, June 21, 1'73 • • • • j ................... , .. -. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••• . . . . . . , ...•.•....•.•••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .l • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1---"oru"l'ua1ce.-P.eop1 ... did-it.------ 'lbe coastline has groaned and dropped to a lower level because of all the inland ' visitors who, in their rush to escape the soaring mercury, have overcroYided our region. There is no scientific basis to prove that the coastline actually sank two inches from this overload. lt.'.J. jyst a fee~ . "mg! nave. Anyway, it is hot. Santa Ana admitted 108 degrees yeSterday. Lon g ·time ''"atchers o( the County Seat have some rationale 10r disbelieving this report. It wu likely hotter than that. UP ntERE IN Santa Ana, they take the temperature by running a thennometer up a flagpole on top of a tall building. The flagpole is usually refrigerated. Never mind what the temperature is doing dO\\'O th.ere on the :street. Anyv•ay, one of our County Seat ieporters stepped out of his Santa Ana otflce at 5 p.m. yesterday and reported the temperature \vas bein g recorded at 101 degrees at that hour. This gives you suspicion that it probably topped off somewhere close to 110 up there. Meanwhile, here on _ the .b l e s S"e"d coastline, it was only 86 degrees at '5:4-0 p.m. in Corona del !\.1ar, according to the time and temp placard displayed on the highway there. IT IS ThlPOS.SIBLE to tell you how hot it was fu Huntington Beach. 'J1Us is beeause the place is so large and ranges so far inland.· Call the lifegu~rd people down by the pier and they'll tell ypu it's a balmy 8.5 but it's a dif ferent story if you repose in •Iunti,ngton B e a c h somewhere back by the Sru1 • Di.ego Fr<oway. Summer refused to arrive upon us-- gradually this year. lt lurked under cover all during May and the top part of June. Then when it came, we got it all at ' 1---'once. A.LL THE JNLANDERS are com· ,_ plainina: about how _hot it is. Even Beverly Hills admitted it \\'as 99 degrees \Ved· nesday. They y.•ouidn 'I fess up to 100. mind ,you. But 99 they admitted. Heavens, the ocean water here \\•as almost that hot with tempcraturewang· ina: above 73 degrees in Ne\\'port Beach. That's almo.st warm enough to get me in . Some long-time California \V atchers. ho\l.-ever;-lnsist an-tfiis beat means \\.·~re getting into earthquake "'eather. The e.x- perts, or course, insist weather tiaS little !<> do with any shaking of the ground. IT IS 11tUE that some chaps up at Stanford University insist that we 're due for some quakes. One Professor Robert L. Kovach at that learned institution llas a theory that a good jolt. measuring 5.8 on the Richter Scale, "'ill roll through the town of Hollister in the central sector of our state within the next tY:o "'eeks. Another Stanford man, Dr. Thomas C. Hanks, predicts shakes of 6 or so on the Richter measurement for Southern California places near San Bernardino and the Borrego Desert . ·He has-no timetable. WELL. ALL THIS earthquake-predic· ting may be nice but the hot \l:eather- watchers still think they know more about it. Since summer is here, however, a little shaking of the ground \.\'On't worry me mudl. Those shudders will just be all the in· landers on our beaches. turning over to get sunburned on the other side. Eastern U,I T ... IWN JUAliPE!iON CH.ECKS ON WIFE AS THE'l SIT IN HE~ICOPTER · Flr1t Public ~ppearanc1 of Strongm1n Canceled by Sbootout1 Massi·ve Welco1ne De~th Toll May Reach 20 111 Peronist Gunhattles BUENOS Al RES (UPI l -Hundreds of specia l police today guarded former President Ju an D. Peron \\'hose return frorn 18 years or exile h11s been marred by bloody gunbatlles between dissident Peronists. near-t.he....airport • ..wherejle was to have landed. f Sporadic !lghting continued for three. hours, claiming 14 dead and some 225 in- jured. acrording to spokesmen at four hospitals. Buenos Aires newspapers said as rpany as 20 may have been killed in the battles involving right,\li'ing Peronists and fo.!arxist·orientcd '(rot sky it e Pcronists. ACTOR·SINGER Leonardo Va vi o, of- ficia l spokesman for the welcoming rally, acc used Interior Police Minister Alberto Righi of responsibility for letting the masses get out of hand and said he show- ed "little intelligence" in handling the situation. He said the fight erupted after RliliiSiiapollce would -refuse -to-put down ''popular demonstrations." The gunfight forced Peron to land at a mililary alii>Ort Instead al Ezeiza International Airport where the large1t cro"''ed in Argentine history -several nlilliOn persons -had gathered to \\'elcome him. As many as 100,000 persons \\'ere reported still stranded to- day at ·the rally site 18 miles from the ci- ty center. Astronauts Solve New Problem-Garbage Dump . HO USl'ON <UPI I -A bag januned in Skylab·s vital airlock trash dispnser on the astrona uts' final day of flight today tut they managed to free it and save the space station frc1n "'hat could have been a 1nass ive garbage problem. "~Y. ... is tbat ever good _ne,~s." .said ground rommunicator Henry Hartsfield \\'hen Paul J. \Veitz reported that "a judicious application of muscle" cleared the garbage dump . "You ought to hear the sighs or relief do\.\1n here." Ha.t"tsfield said from the mission control center. "It \1'ere1l't noth ing compared to the sighs he re, Babe." \Veitz said . DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE t ry of th' Daily Pilot ·~ guaranteed M .,, II YOU d• not ll•Y• vtu• pl~r DJ S::JO p.m .. c•ll •nd vovr copy will ~t ~•tugn1 r. Jtw. Clll• Ir• liken Vfllil 1:)CI p.m. 5•1urdi y Ind SwM1y1 II 'I"" ff Ml r1tti¥1 v•ur copy Oy t 1.rn. 51turd1y, •• I 1.rn. ~untt1y, c1ll ar.d 1 cnpy will b• O"llfhl II you. Clll1 ••• Ilk•" un!ll l~ 1.rn. T 'lephonti M•SI Or1n9t County Art11 Nttll!w11I Hunlln~ll" ltlcll i nd Wt1lrnln'1tt Sin Cltmtnte, (~pl1!rlM ltic~. 1111 Ju111 CIPl••r• .... 01n1 ,..IM. Stufft Llf\IM , L19un1 NJ1u .. IO·ll19 Seah.oard ntE PROBLEP.f, AND its quick solu- tion, came as Weitz, Charles "Pete" Conrad and Joseph P. Kerwin cleaned house and finished packing for their return to earth Friday after a record 28 days in orbit. The pilots plan-to leave the-space-sta- tion at 1:45 a.m. PDT, fly their Apollo ferry ship around the lab for one last look and then gradually desoend to 1 Pacific Ocean splishdown at 1:50 a.m. Conrad reported the truh troable as Skylab swept over the C8llfomia cout. "We've got some bad newe fOr yw, Houston," be said. He reported that a bag containing a charcoal air filter IDd four spacesuit gloves got stuck midway rhrough the 14·inch diameter cylinder leading to a large tank that serves as the sole container for the pilots' garbage. BEFORE LAUNCH, Weitz said failure cf the trash dump was one of his main worries. He said then, "il that thing breaks, u·e'd be in a heap of trouble." Failure to operate the airlock would have created tremendous garbage dispo&ll problems for t\\'O more crews sdleduled to spend a total of 16 weeks eboard Skylab. Conrad said it \\'OU!d be "pure luck" if they could free the jammed bag. But 15 minutes later, they had ·managed once again to save the space station from pofentially serious trouble. "The trash airlock is operative one more time," reported Weitz. Soaking 75.oo.s5.oo I DOUBLE KNIT SPORT COATS • 27.!50 DOUBLE KNIT BmER DRESS SLACKS 19.75 2/38.00 14.00 DESIGNER LABEL SHIRT JAC'S 7.99 12.00-1~.oo SHORT SLEEVE KNIT LEISURE SHIRTS 6.99 5.50·8.50 . HIGH FASHION DESIGNER NECK WEAR ;3.99 3110.so 1.50·2,00 ASSOlfTED FAMOUS MAKER HOSIERY 1.19·1.59 23.00 TERRY VELOUR KIMONO ROBES 16.99 36.00 IOITONIAN IUROUNOY BREVITY 27.99 38.00 IOITONIAN LOAFERS 29.99 • Values to 125.00 DESMOND'.S QUALITY SUITS .-89.00 - 30.60 DOUBLE KNIT amER DRESS SLACKS 23.75 2/46.00 6.50·7.50 DESMOND'S "GUILDHALL'' DRESS SHIRTS 4.99 219.50 -16.00 l'ERMA·IRONED WASHABLE PANTS 1t99 Varues to 5.50 WASHABLE POLYESTER NECK WEAR 2.49 3/7.00 2.!50 IMPORTED OVl.R·TlfE·CALF HOSIERY 1.69 3/4.89 8.00·1'0.00 LONG SUCVE, LONG LEG PAJAMAS 5.99 60.00 JOHNSTON • MURPHY BENGAL BOOT 44.99 22.95 FAMOUS MAKER BOOTS 16.99 59.00 7.50-9.50 PERMA·IRONED SHORT SLEEVE DRESS SHIRTS 5.99 35.00 DOUBLE KNIT amEft DRESS SLACKS 25.75-2/49.00- FAMOUS MAKER SHORT SLEEVE LEISURE SHIRTS 4.99 ' 8:50·12.50 LEATHER BELTS 4.99 13/4.00 QUALITY PUMA·lllOIU'.D HANDKERCHIEFS 13/3.00 1,75 IMfl'ORTED ANKLET HOSIERY 1.29 3/3.75 7.00·9.00 SHORT SUEVE, KNEE 1.E.Ncmt PAJAMAS 4.99 314.00 100% COTTON FAMOUS MAKElt UNDERWEAR 3/2.99 Values to 3.00 PERMANENT PRUS UNDERWEAR 2/2.79 WOMEN'S SHOP SAVINGS Rag. 50.00 Blazer pint coat ................. : ...... _ ........ _,_·'·····---............................... 39.99 . 48.00 Polyester ottoman coat ................................... c ............ , .................................... 23.97 -c, Otlier Areas of U.S. Wet Also-FromPerspiratio1i All we~ther coats ............................... 0 ............ , .................................................... .1,i to in off Reg. 54.00 3·pc. Setriucker weekender ................ .,. .................................................... 39.99 2. 3, 4·pc. pant suits ........................................................................................... in to in off 11 1111 be.c:t\11, wltft l•rt• 1w1rrns of hOnt r Ille• •CICl/ftO lo ftlt wot1 of fhe~• 11 Zum1 Bll(h n11r Ml llt>u. Tiiiy 11ld 1t l••il 1S oer.on1 .,..,, 1!11ng 11111 twq of them l'lfldld Ml"9fr!CY llOlpltll lr11l~I. Thi WNllllr ltrV((I Prtdlel• r1GIOfl1l hlohl Frle11v ll'Ol'!'I 15 6ea r•1 1lor1g 1111 C~I to Ille JOI lnllfld, v.s. s ....... ..,, •r Tiii --.cfaflrf ,.,..,, Th11niUr1ho.,..r1 dlmpened th• flrtt div of 1um"'tr 1long 1111 E111ern S11bo1rd toc11v whl!• w1rm 111d humid e°'1dlll°'11 1:1rev1lltd ov1r ""1111 of 1h• Dlher stcllon1 of 1111 n1tl0ft, A ntw ttorrn front moveci lnlo lhl P1clli< Norlhw111 end Jclllt.-.d rain !lt19ertd over Ill• 0!11o R:l~r V1!1ey, A lhUllCltrSlorrn Wtdntlday 111enll'IO llOWntd frets 1nll IXIWtr linl' lo C1rth11e, Tt nn .. •lld d11mpeCI 1.1 nth•I of •lln on Pinson, Ali .. In llJ!t °"'' '" hour. Tem"•r1111r~s ~lo~ tllwn rlll(lld ft'om 43 et 11t1wlln1. Wvo.. kl '3 11 Nff<lle1. Cl lll. Cn11•r.al ffealfler MOtfly tullMY lodl y. l ight 111rl1blt wll!dt nlg~I encl mornf!IJI PIOurt Meom-lng ....,lffl'I ! to is kllO!I tn 1li.tt100111 lodly lllCI P'r1dey, H1th today, llPMI' ''" CN1tli '-""'Pf••lor11 """" from ,, Rec. 34.00 Polyester pleater dress ......................................................................... 23.99 Re1. 17.00:20.00 ·Famous label blouses & pants ..................... '. ........................... 9.99 l 11.99 Selection of misses sportswear ................. -·····-·---···-······--··-········· .. -···~ to 'li off Robes & loun1ewaar ................................................. : ........................... _ ....... -..... 'li to 'h off Reg. 6.00·9.00 Famous label gown• & bab~ dolls, pastels ......................................... 3.99·5.99 Re1. 4.50·6.00 Famous label bras ....................... 1 ............................................... 3.l!O l 4.99 Pantie sale, briefs, bikinis, nylon tricot ............................................................. r .............. 99, Rec. 11 .00 Summer handbags, white & colors ................................................................. 6.99 Jewelry, Scarves ................................... : ............................................................... in to in off NO M~IL OR PHONE ORDERS l'LEASE. ENTIRE .STOCK NOT INCLUDED. ALL ITEMS SUBJECT ~O PftlOll Mi.t. CHAllGE IT: UIE YOUR DltlMOND'I CHAllGE CARD, llANKAMERICARD, llAST~R CHAllGE OR AMERICAN IXPlllQ ~D. , •.UHION Ill.AND. NIWl'OIT CINTll. NIWPOIT HACH I to 1t. Inland temper1t11r9t t•"" from ===========================·~=============~==== 6l to 101. W...,, ltrnl*'llllf'• ... S1111, ltloo,., Tides THUllOAY ;~;.·~~;~~.;:; ;:~ ;;,\j~~~~~~~~ Try Saturday's News Quiz $ec:ond 111111 ... , ... Jill o.m. 4.Jt=========~=================================== S.COl'ltl-'°"".........-.. . .. f i»-IM'o--1.I 11111 ., ... J~4t 1.1'1. ''" 1:01 p.IT!. MOOl'I lltlMI 11:4 O.IT!. ttts ll;02 l~M: • .. l I ' 1 .. - . .. ·~ .. . . .. Orange ~~!!t Today's .Fl-I N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 172, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1973 N TEN CENTS Harbor School Wage Costs Up $2.5 Million . It 'i''iil Cos't Newport Beach and Costa ]1-iesa taxpay~rs at least $2.5 million n1orc . next year to pay the salaries of • teachers, administrators and other Newport-l\1esa School District employes. With the six perant raise o!fcred Tuesday night by school trustees, the starting pay for a teacher would go up SlOO to $8,100 and the average teacher's salary would climb l900 lo near(y 113,500. That's pres~g the district's two 'Hoodlum's' Demise Related By ARJ'llUR R. VINSEL Of lfle o.lb' ,llli llMf Bom lo constrvative parents in AUan- major teacher organizations ratify the six percent pay raise offer made Tues· day night by school trustees. With the slx percent raise, salaries next, year \\'ill cost nearly $26 mill ion. Last year, salaries cost the district.a total of $23.6 million. If teachers hold out for the 7.5 percent they have demanded, the increase wou1d cost another $400,000. Teachers originally demlinded 10 per\enr raises. The entire budget will rise next year from $34 million to a proposed $37.4 million.' _ Almost $1.5 million of the increaseJn- salaries for next year would come from the six percent boost the board wrote in- to the salary schedules this week. The rerilaining $1 million in salary in- creases will come from regular S;alary inorement raises. Teachers are on a rix- ed salary scale that rises eaCb. year ' automatically on the basis of experience. II the six percent orfC.r is accepted by the teachers in September, the highest paid instructor in the district will earn . $16,500 per year. '11lat's with a master's degree ap.d 12 years of teaching in the district. 1 Teachers with masters degrees will earn between $10,500 and $15,00, depend· ing on the number of ye a rs of ex- perience they have. Teachers with bachelor.s degrees will earn between $8,100 -the lowest starting wage -and $12,000, depending on how much experience they have.!_ The remaining $1 million oC the salary increase is compriSed of regular yearly salary increment raises. All but ~,000 of the six percent raise will come from a ~1.7 million piece of the undistributed reserves in the prqposed budget. The rest will come from reallocations within the budget. ™ salary expenditure represents the . Road Work Adds Co1igestion " major portion of the $37.4 million spen· di ng package for next yea r. Though the increase is substan tially more than Jut year, the district'! tax rates v.·ill actually decrease. Soaring assessed valuations on p~ erty v.'ili make actual taxes paid go -up but the rates \\'ill dip by a few cents from $5.08 to $5.01 per $100 in Costa Mesa and from $4.67 to $4.62 per $100 assessed valua tion.in Newport Beach, ~ccording to di strict officials. Hot Air Scorches ~ la, Ga., r1'i5<d in a ri_gid, fund~-;;.;,;;;~ faith and testifying In a precise, almost CoastaLYisit0-rs: prissy tone, he does not resemble a hired t>oodlum. Re blinb his eyes and purses his lhin lips on the witness §tand. He parts his fine hair down the middle. Gaey MlcHiel Rolio, s.i:l-!eet, four m-cheS t811~2.35 floUnds amt.With a bli& belt degree in karate, re-lived in court Wednesday the night his world of illegal intrigue crashed down around his ean. One hour of the 12-hour recorded tn- terroiation by Qistrict Attorney's In- vestigators was played at a preliminary hearing for Fullerton oittomey Mlcbaef K. Remingt.Qn, th e fonner Newport Beach resident accused by authorities of hiring Rollo to carry out murder coo- tracts. ROiio, ·a big kid wllh big ambitions, bad just been arrested when the tape was made aod bu lince pleaded lullty to • ooUcillng !or murder. •1vou•re a H;.tle fish in this whoie thing • • .you're a lit.lie. 20-year-old boy who wanted to play big time,0 said t?e recorded voice of investigator Jim Daugherty. . The tape characterized Rollo as a col· orless kid who braued of alleged gangland. connections, d r i v i n g a Merced<s-Benz. taking a trip lo Portugal on a moment's notice and paying-off lawmen to get underllngs out of jail. _ None of it was true. His first. and only prior arrest wa1_ a child sttaling rap brollght by his juvemlt girlfriend's parents and resulting in pro- bation and a court order for the pair not to auociale. R<>llo is now lesllfying ag•insl Rem- ingtdn, as inept would-be. assasslns Bobby Joe "B.J." Hart, Chuck Hulett and Charles Barnes testified earlier against him. The prosecuUon witness looked across the courtroom occasionally at Remington a" the tape played. "You're in deep deep trouble, little fiidji," Daugherty warned the bulky youth as be l:id Rollo's erim situation on the line. "I think you Were taken in by some fast-talkers," Daugherty continued. '"!boy are JIOing to do to you just what you did to B.J.," added lhe investigator noting thjlt t!le low man on totem pole is always ezpeodable. "When you're rolli"I In jail and being tried and going lo state prlooo, tbey'll be out getting more auys like you. . "Became there'• 10,000 B.J.1 m this world and ter>bundn!d Gary Rolloo who all want to be big dud<!," Daugherty concluded. The youlhlul prisoner bad not yet ,... bis own attorney and refused to reply to inVMllgators' questions about his in- volvement In a dull , hypnotic routloe. "No answer:." "No answer ... " Daugherty then turned him over to his partner, Frank Oxandaboure. O.andaboure completed routln< qucs· tions &bout Rollo's family background, education, his job &s a. h6spital physical theraplst and then left him alone to await the attorney who would advise him bow to proceed in his predicament. Coves Project Decision' Sought Newport Beech p I I n • I n I com· mlasloners lonlghl wlll hear a .-.quest by tho Irvine Company lor final approval of ltJ "coves'' ooodomlnlum project on Bayside Drive near the Balboa Isl1nd bridge. lso on lhe agenda at tbe 7:30 meellng --~J~n"c'-11"-y"i'-:a 1 is a proposal to adopt the spcclflc area plan for Newport Shores. 'lb• proposal already has bO<n 11udled extensively by commissioner a n d ,.,1c1en11 Of lhe area, moot ol whom have approved of lhe plRMed opprooch to Jufure development. By JOHN ZALLER Of tilt DtllY l"llOI Stiff The Orange Coast continued on this first day of suinrner to host a battle of the titanic air masses, the Pacific low presSure -syStem vetsus-th·e desert-high pressure. As everyone can tell, the desert high pressure clearly has the upper hand so far. (Related stories, Pages 4. 15, and 22) The desert system, centered over..Utah, has met the cooler Pacific air at the coast11n·e and-1s·preventing-1he cool o:cean breezes from penetrating to the swelter· ing inland areas. The batUe itself is pot unusual, because ~F•l'*'!'~llY ...... an 1n ·-. stant .competiUQn for ·4@1ln•nce. 'or Councilmen To -Be Shown ' Mariners Plan CROWDS ON HANO AT HUNTINGTON BEACH EVEN IN MORNING C•lifoml1n1 Seek to But RKord Heit With H•1ty Retrnt to P•cific The Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce Monday will present the Ne~rt Beach City Council with .its "Manners Square" plan which seeks conversion of Newport's Ocean Waters Hit-Record Heat of 73.5 one mile of Pacific OJast Highway into a central parking area and mall. The Chamber's Marine Division Mariners Square committee ~id it had proposed in a letter to the council the re- location of the Mariners Mile sectioo of Coast Highwa y [rom NewpOrt Bay Bridge to the Sea Scout base ne,.ar The By JOHN SCHADE Of Jiit Dt!IJ l"lfot Slllf Ocean bathers all fOt into hot \\1ater along Newport Beach s shoreline today. They weren't in trouble with' lifeguards. It was the water that was hot. The Pacific's temperature rose to a ream! 73.5 degrees just off Newport Pier Tuesday at 5 p.m., shattering a rec- ord lhlt has wsted •incl> June !O, 1931. Beck then, lops -71 degrees. The old ocean heat record was equaled again at 71 degrees Wednesday a!ler· noon. Jt was near it again today. In other recent days , the salt water has hovered in lhe high 60s, ae<:0rding to Newport Beach Marine Safety Depart· ment spokesmen. The lifeguards noted lhis is well above the oonnal 55 to SS. degree w a t e r usually ezperlenccd in June. Arches. being pulled under by riptides while surf-Councilmen fl.fonday will likely refer ing, he pointed out. the proposal to the Planning Commission Jellyfish are sometimes a problem for review next month . during hot water days. The current car-Mariners Square Committee Chairman ries them in to the shOre where they may Iiank Hill said that the state of California sting beacbgoers. Belshe says there ha s already O\vns several parcels of land in been no such problem thus far. · the proposed corridor thus eliminating Early morning beacbgoers were esti-the difficulty In attaining right-of-way. mated at 20,000 by 10 a.ril. today. Peak Under the plan, the present highway periods for the be a c b are normally right-of-w8y would be converted into a from ooon to 2 p.m. business mall with ceatral parking and ReaSOM vary for the early morning limited circulation. Traffic, according to sunning and surfing. the report, has been a limiting factor in Newport Beach resident Carolyn Hay-business growth and full utilization of the 'vard said she came at 1:45 a.m. because waterfront area. she had to go to work at noon and the . The letter said most of the area's sun camt; Oi,lt early. · • . • \ business tind property owners have Janis Guad&gno lries 'to make it to the shown an interest in the plan 's promotion beach every day, but "especially when of economic growth and marin e lhe sun is like It is today." . (See MARINES, Page%) ' - Southern California weather. But normally at this time of yea r, the Pacific low pressure system is the dominant force, at least in the coastal areas. The fact of its defeat this June has taken many coastal agencies by surprise. In San Clemente, students are still in school, and were forced to sweat out final exams today as well as the hot weather. In Newpart Beach, a city road widen· log project has blocked a critical ~rtion of Newport Boulevard during some of the peak beach traffic loads of the year. And Southern California Edison OJ m- pany in anticipation of a cool June1 had several of its biggest generating units 1fOUG4. ljown fp< roulinO malnleance. When the heat wave came -tern- peratures in some inland sections or Orange County soared to 113 degrees \Vednesday -everyone turned up their air conditioners and the company was in trouble. Reserve margins_fell to just three per· cent as Edison set a new peak power de-- mand record -9.815 million kilowatts. "\\'e really were surprised," confessed an Edison spokesman. "It's supposed to be cool and foggy this time of year." J. Sherman Denny of Huntington Beach, an amateur meteorologist, ex· plained the sitllatioo this way: "The high pressure desert system is, completely dominating t)le western United States. Right now, it's meeting (See HEAT WAVE, Page%) '-Barbor Area C:a!te r Suprenw Court Permit,s Obscenity Cra~kdown WASHINGTON (AP) -In a S4 decision reversing · a decade-long trend toward perrnlssiveness, the U.S. Supreme Court gave the states much greater authority today to move against obsceni- ty. One of the cases on which the decision FIRST NORTHERN SCHOOL CASE ~ULJNG-Story, P•g• 3 -~<~-~~-'--~'-~ was based involves a Costa Mesa court ruling. IQ an opinion written by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, the court held : -Local comniunity standards rather than national standards may be used in determining whether material is obscene and therefore not protected by the Constitution . -That juries and courts no longer need to find that material is "utterly" without redeeming social value before they declare it obscene. Instead, Burger wrote, they · may determine whether the work "taken as a whole lacks ~ literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." The obscenity decisions involved two cases from California and one from Georgia. In the Costa ~esa case, Marvin Miller \Vas convicted in ·Harbor Area Judicial District court in Costa h1esa of mail- ing five advertising brochures found to be obscene. In the other California ca se, ~1urray Kaplan, proprietor of the· Peek-A· Boo Bookstore in 4Js Angel~, was convicted under the state obscenity law of selling a plain-covered , unillustrated book con- taining descriptive ma terial of an ex- plicitly sexual nature. Miller, a City or Industry mail order literature dealer, was convicted in OJsta Jlrfesa. The court later was relocated to fa cilities in Ne""ix>rt Beach. On Oct. 12, 1971 , Orange County Su- perior Court upheld lower court convic- tions on at least three count s of mailing advertisements for sexy books and a film . Some of the charges date to 1969. Details of Miller's trial and convic- tion in the Harbor Area cou rt \Vere not im mediately available. · A court spakesman said. ho"·ever, to- day that as soon as the court gels notice from the high court of ;ts action in the case a date for sentencing will be set. "Hard core" pornography \Vas the target of Burger's opinion. Coast , Bill Craig, exterwion specialist for the Nat ional Marine Fisheries Service, said a number of factort have contributed to the unusually hot water. This has been an abnonnally wann year thus far. "This combined with a more pronounced D&vldJOD current which runs in a south· to-north direction along the coast haS broucht the water temperature up," Craig said. Dana. S1nith Units Delayed Weather The sunny weather bas also been a fac- tor. he added. Crow<b of 100,000 pcrions were pre- dicted ror today, a flaure well over the normal wee!:!t,;'erage of. 65,000 to 85,000. Hot croWds In Newporl are nonnally In e"""" of 100,000. .Operations capt. Buddy Belshe said that aome special provlstoos have lo meet the un...,.lly large week day crowds. Bclshe said 75 pen:ont or th• 35 guard towers have been manned. 11ilh lull guard strength expected lhls -kend. All seven of lhe patrol jeeps and two reecue boall are eumnUy in operatkm, he added. '- Belshe said he did nol expect lho number of rucues to increase because lhe surf ha s oniJI been two !eel this week. Many ol the .......,, come on people • By CANDACE PEARSON Of .... OellJ """ '"" Dana Smith and the city or Newport Beach have to "tune-In ln two weeks" to see if State Coastal Zone C.Onserva tion Commissioners think more residential park~ wlll aid beach access. Voting on Smith's requests to demolish singt .. !amllf homes and build duplexe• ot lhree Newport Beach locall<>ns has been ..t for Juli 5 In San Francisco. HJ• appllcallona were denied by the Sooth Coo.!!\ Regional Zone Conservation · CommllsJoo, which cited increasing denally Ind lnldequte parking 1$ · reatons. • . -~ The denials served es catalyst foi a claall be!\oeen the regional comml5'ion, which wanta two parking s~ce~per unit, Ind Newport Beach, which requires ooo. llurlni a .we hearing OI\ the proposals w-.y, Smllh told lhe state panelne could provide I: I parki ng al 20:J.29th St.: 205-2tlh St. Ind 107·271h St . . ·l Although'the city won't allow tandem or subterranean parking, Smitfi said he Would cut down square Cootage in the proposed duplexeS'. "I am asking simply "'hat I can do to please the coastal commission," the curly-haired developer said, "and be con· sistent w1th the city of Newport Beach." Tu.·o city officials demanded to know what the commission 's poUcy on Ha aulhority would be, indicating they thought duplexes in Newport Beath shouldn't be Included. Chairman t.1 elvin Lane of. S.in Fran- cisco tdd City Attorney Denllls "!l'Neil and P!Unln( Dlreclor Richard HOIJan to "tune ii\" July 5 !oi: an answer lo their similar quesliont about parking. The state COIJ)'1)1sslon crcaled by Prop. 20. the coastline initiative, normally hears an apPeel and votes on it two' ••eeks later. The July 5 meeting is in San Francisco. O'Neil said the city-fa vored Smllh 's original reques1s1 which met vt'ith city re- quirements, and W8$11't going to downzone the R-2, multi-family, area. He added that city officials feel the commission's responsibility lies only ln development of a mast.er plan for the coastal zone, due in the legislature by 1976. "I think he's telling us it's none or our business," Commissioner Ira Laufer said of the duplez Issue. Changing parking requirements on duplex developments isn't a "substantial issue as far as beach access" and won't really help, Hogan contended. He !Jlid the c;lty Is working on better w•(-1 lo get persons to lhe beaches eas ier. NewpOrt Beach doesn't have an occess problem, he claimed, admitting ii docs have a traffic problem. Commission Executive Director Joseph Bodoviti said Smith's olfer of more park- ing mlghl l!Olve the appeal, bot added he'd have lo •tudy it' It's going to be blistering hot In inland portions of Orange County Friday, but slightly cooler right along the coast. Highs in !he 00s at the beaches rising to 108 de- grees in Santa Ana. Lowa irl the upper 60s. INSmE TODAY Ni.zo n campaion aide Fred· t rick C. LaRue ha.t de -n i e d wrongdoing in conn~ctio11 wiih deattngs witlt a ttow.bcnk·tt.1.pt ho1ui11g Jinn.. See 1torv. Paoe 13. l.M ... ,. , C•llhmlt lt Clt1tltltll ,._.. Ct"''" ,, (,.....,.,. ,, Ddffl N•flttl 11 &tli.rlal ,... • ••i.rttlllll'IMI n.>I ""'"'t U-11 ,, ....... •eut• 1• "'~'" 11 AM L•Mltn It _... .... Miii.,_/ lfllflf• 14 N1tlt111I Nttt ... Ot'l!lff C-IJ It S1ifl1 'tntt 11 ._,. tt-• ·~ Mt,lt... M-lt T•'"""" I> '"-"" il•JJ w-• ._.,, New. 11•11 Wtttll flltwt "9 . ._. ...... _ Z DAILY PILOT N .. -""----------- Upper Bay Trade Foes • \\Fail in Bid :~ :~ ·op~lnents or the 110\V·dcJuncL Upper ::Newport Bay tidelands ellchangc bel"'een ::orange County and the Irvine Com· ·P,ny Wednesday failed in a bid lo get :.superior Court Judge CJsude Owens removed from the case. · · Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner re· :-Jected affidavits of prejudice filed 'against Judge Owens by San Francisco ·attorney and Sierra Club ofricial Philip "Derry, representing the intervenors. ~ The multiple motions woul4 have :prevented Judge Owens from-presiding at a bearing now set for July 13 which could force the lrvine Company to pay all legal fees incurred by the intervenors. They claimed that Judge OW'ens I displayed favoriti!m toward' the land firm in approval of the 450-acre trade of Its private uplands for 157 acres of"coyn- ty-owned tidelands in the Upper-Bay. Berry, representing five Newport Beach residents, succeeded in getting the Fourth District Court of Appeals to rule the land swap unlawful. The Irvine Company was ~orced by that move to pay $5,000 in fees for at· torneys and ·expert witnesses called to testify on the controversial Upper Bay ·property swap. Judge Sumner no\Y says in a minute order that Berry's mailed petitions claiming prejudice by Judge Owens were not legally sufficient and that their sub- mission after the trial was Untimely. Irvine Company altomey Robert War· . ren will continue to fight against his employer's payment of additional court costs at the July 13 hearing on the in· tervenors' motion for a judgment. "They are not entitled to any further payment," Warren has commented. 1---.. Even If they were, I would contend at that point that Orange County and the Orange County Harbor District. both represented at the trial, would have to pay their share." "' He said those fees will doubtless be greater than the $5.000 already paid bas- . ed on reversal of the land swap decision by Judge Owens. but he would n')t . • • speculate by how much. Not All Scl1ool Employes to Get ·6 Percent Raise Some clerks In the Newport·i\·lesa school district "'ill get less than the six percent raise offered by school tn1st~s this \\'eek but nearly 200 other employes will get a good deal more. it was learned today. Verlyn Soderstrom. director of .. classified personnel, confirmed today . that about 185 clerical workers and in. structional aides in the district will receive only a 3.5 percent ral8e. An almost equal number of main· tenance and ope.rations workers will get a hike of 8.5 percent . The nearly 400 employes affeded by the salary adjustment are more than a third of the 1,000 classified persotmel on district payroll s. Soderstrom said. The six percent raise will boost tota l expenditures for classified personnel kl $6.J million next yea r as opposed $5.5 million last year. Soderstrom said the adjustmen t was necessary because the sa laries of clericA I employes have gotten out of line with the average being paid to clerks in other ·local busi nesses and governments. "By law. we must pay our classified people the preva il ing rate for com· parable jobs in the area," Soderstrom said. ··They had gotten ahead of that and we thought it necessary to triin the raises.'" J\1aintcnance and operations \VOrkers. on the other hand, were lower than the ~verage for such jobs in the area and were given more than the six percent, Scxlerstrom said. The cutback and boost in the two sets of salaries balance out lo the overall six percent increase, he noted. OlANGI COAST H DAILY PILOT T~t .Or•nv• Coal! D,t..JL Y PILOT, .. ;111 .. nlCll IJ comtllnta ll•t N'""'·l'•tu, d Pllfl!l"'H bl' I'll• O••nu• Co••I Publl\ntno Compan,.. Sfpa. ,.,, .onion• ••• 111111111nta, Mo~r ttirouoll Frl01y, for Coslt Meu, Now1»1! 8e•cll, Huntlng!on 8tt1:ll/Fou11lll11 V1lley, L•<;iun• 8 N(h, lrvl•1t/St.Ultback t ncl 51n CllrntMel Sin Jutn C•Pll!r1no A t •no11 r19Jon11 llO!!klt! Is pVblflhld S1turlla11 1'111 5Urld&yt. Tiit prlnc~I P11t1!1111lno Pltnl 11 11 llCI we1! B1y Sl•Mt, Coslt Mn.I, Cl l•!orni., tU:>t. Robtrf N . Y{11~ Prtaidtll! 1rld PUblllftf t J•c~ R. Curley V1<:1 fl'rnlO"'f 81'111 l<-••1 Mtll89t' Tho11111 Koevll Et I rot Tlloll\lt A. Murphin• M•flfflf'IO l!.dl!or l . Ptl•r Kri11 Nt"'"'"t 8etcn Cll'f 1!"11•• N_,..t IMch Office lJJJ Nt .,,.port loultv••d 'Ylll111 A-'dr1111 P.O. l o• 1175, ~2661 o~ Offtcn CO.fl M"•: ))0 ,l'lttl l1y StlMI l....-ltKll! tn l'orn t AVM111 11~ilMM'I! I N<l'l r 1111J l!ltlCll leul"'t"' .kl! Cllnwttt: JOJ NOtttl El C..11\lllO ltNI , .. .,.... C1141 "642-4J21 Cl•1""'4 A4fttti.I .. 642·1671 COtiytflll\I, lt1l. Ot•rtUt c::nu '°""11\!lrnt ~"'""· Ho !\tWI llOtill, ll!uttr•llOM. •ltwltl -!Ml' ~ 'ltvt rl!ttmtn!'I ~'*" '"'"I' M ~-wl!f'loUI 1111t.l1f llf" lfllltllll .,, ceovrtt~r •-· 5"""" U.... ... , ... N ici II C•ll• MIWI, c .. "'"'i.. ..,..,._.ltrt br <errtt• tt.iJ rNt'll'fllt'I ... ~II IJ,lt IT\0111111•1 l'l\IUltrr •t1•f-SIM ..-lttr~" . -; • Thursday, Junr 21 , 1973 ' • ,, \' ' ,.,. ......... -!> Viewing Inner Wo~~~t.pgs· \. ~ \ ... Of the b~vine Compa~y · Dy GEPRGE LEIDAL .. 01 ... Dellr 'It.I Stell TllE URGE TO BE a land barori does not run in my family. nue_, t tutd a dotty uncle who once bought a section of South Dakota because he dJd,n't belie\'e In insu rance and wanted to leave his widow a hedge against infla· lion. And, I'll confess 1 once mailed in a cereal box top and 25 cen!s Jo purchase one square inch of Alaska. It was purely a ~~Uve , purchase, and like my uncle's "lnvestmeot" not vary fruitful, . •, .~ ' Thua it was with some aWe and wonder, dr:~st~cf'Ut:"'1Y best "board of director,s" casual attire, I · eqtered the inner sanctum of an Ir~. (;ompany ·~lders' meet- ing, the other day. ' 't. • I was there because l ,~ abates or·atbe hi!d been assigned to my name that day, ~ .., • • -~ , For the record , the shares J>elonged, ~nd...._ttill belong.~o LEIDAL Mrs. Joan lrvine Smith, descendent p~ lile. co1n~y S · .founder Ja1nes Irvine 11. : . -·... .. • • • . ' -• • ' ' , . ' • . ' Gpnpaign - .. r • . Extot·.tion " ' Employed?_ ' . (AP) ..,,.. . .§.pee i i ~. \\1attrg1te Prosecutor Archibald Co:r. is .cO.lsidering a gr_and, !uri investigifiOo. to detemnine-if Pres ident Nixon'• campaign fw:i.d saisers used ex.tortiop. j11reollectlng ~ million in contribiJtlotts: lut 1ear •. .a • Several Banks ]--, Up Prirne Rate . - NEW YORK (UPI) -Several • more banks too1y announcecl a boost In their prime leodlna rate to · 7~ 'percent. The current round of quarter point increases started Moncl4y with1 move by the First National Bank of Clilcago. Wednesday, Girard BMk 9f Philadelphia follow· ed siilt .· · -- ~ Co:r. ildk sai{I today. / • • Tho\'fus F. ~1cBride •• a special assis· !ant to · Coi. said that the Nixon cam· paiin fmaoc•• committee's fund-raising ~ractif~s ar€.~Jearly within.the scope of.. The latest banks to move their rate to 7% percent were Chtmlcal Bank and Marine Mldlall!I Bank, bolh of New York, and llan'ia Trusl and Saving~ Bank of Chlcag6: From Page l lhe jbqulry being conducted by the HEAT WA VE Watergate prosecutor's staff. • • McBride said that the prosef:utor Is aq. <link atalf members and consideting the the Pacific air right along the ...,!lint, posslblllty ol. empaneling a special federal and it won't let any of that Pacific air grand jury, probably in Washington, lo get inland." probe whether e:r.to.rtion ~ ~lhe.r lllegal _ The st8ndoff · between the two air 1und -.iralsing practices were used to fi-S)'Stems causes a flirther . compllcatldn, ' nance the Nixon campaign. Oe riny says. In pushing up against one "We-art inoving as faSt 'as 'time' and another, the air pressure Is raf!ed -in resource$ *ill allow," MeBride said. . the sense that air Is compressed -and ~ 'Among those "'hose activities would be this causes a furthe r rise in temperature. SHE OWNS OR CONTROLS, give or take a few thousand shares, 1.6 mil· inVestlgated ~re former Secretary · or "It usu.ally tLa k es until Septemt>er Commerce Maurice H. Slans, ·the chief', before the desert air is strong enough lo lion of the eight million shares. • tt could be said she had a few shares to spare that day . Share them she 1972 Nixon fund raiser, ·and Herbert W. bring this kind of heat," Denny say$. did, Three newsmen, including myself, each_were""assigned 1,000 share prOJ,.ies. 'Kalinbach ~ Newport Beach, the The last time a similar situation OC· • Pre9ident's·IOrmer ""rsonal attorney and curttd was on June 17, 1957, according to Depending on whose valuations of the stock you believe, the lent shares are -"" rw Stans 1968 deputy. Denny's records. At that time, the desert ~1orth $22,500 or $100,0IXI. ~ h oul do hi la I f f ..... , SU:c an ~inquiry w d .embrace all . ,air, was so strong that it pushed right A Los Angele,s Titl)eS repo rter bas ne t · s regu r y or our years, ?U• L"l • -this was the first time all three of the reporters who regu]arly cover Irvine PQSsil:)ie crimlnM violations-connec:ted through the Pacific front, creating a San- .happenings were invited to sit in on the private meeting of family and Irvine ."·ith'lµnd r,aising, including violation '.Of .ta Ana wind condition as it went. Foundation stockhOlders with the management of the finn. . income tax laws and ~'hether corporate -That pushed the mer~ up to 99 The company, which hasn't exactly been on friendly terms With Mrs-. Sroith contributiol'ls were fWlllf!:led through in-~ "de'grees. Denny said it WaS 88 in Hun. for quite a few years now, received the invited guests most cordi31Jy. : divicNals but not properly repo_rted for tington Beach Wednesday. I I kin fedtfal taz ~ -· . ; : . The hot weather was producing several Now. that doesn't mean we were introduced to all those e egant oo g Alfee:atioM 1"bfch ·McBride -has ac-. unusual 1ituatiom. In San Clemente, ~Pl.eon. the foundation side of the room. Nor did anyone offer us a member· cumWated includt··mat~-whi~ in~.' police nported a high incidence of rat· ship in Big Canyon Country Club. di.Cates that ptesideritiat fund taisers _ tlesnakes driven out of the hills to seek -1 A d d ha t · drew • a list of .. corporations and ·in .... ·. shelter in cooler residential areas. J~ST T~E ESSENTIALS. A ~I\CI · .Pa • an w t every i:.epor er 00 a . . dlviduals · "wlMr_ bad'4"p_ro!>leftls with · the In Laguna Beach JUeguards reported a deadlme de.sires more . than a.nything else m the worid - a free ~~ iR , , ~government'' -8nd J<>Ucifed: fwids jJf late high in id • f ~ bathe aprtvateplaceforuse 1nphon1nginthescoop. -~. ~-.. l9?land 1 1972 thatb . c.enc_e.o n e~ rs. Now. about the scoop. A director was elected. A chainnan named ~ prlv· _ .. • 1 . • !8f Y on ~~s. And lit Newport Bea~. water tern· ate session. · . · • " ... . • _ peratures .were driven up to a new record Mostly \Ve were treated to a Jot of nice pretty pictures in the annual reporl... • "'t• From p-~ I. high, 73.5 degrees. The old record was 71 and on a screen. The lights kept going on and off a lot as the latest company ' •· -.~ degrees, se~ «I June 30, 1931. brain\\•ashing effort flashed by. . MARINERS . If. the SWl s heat was causln~ an energy \Vhile one film showed and talked about Irvine's "villages," strains of , _ . _. . ~ -• , crl.s1s for Edison Company, 1~ was not Beethoven's Ninth Symphony "Ode to Joy" stirred the soul. ' do111g so for the ?Ort~rn henusphere of Another. sho"'"'D to company executives in Keokuk, Iowa (only in mid· the earth. Today 1s ttJ:e longest day of the winter}, extolled the climate, the planning of the Irvine Company and the . ch,::;:ct~~r:u~;ea~cknowl~ed the year, w~th the .sun rlsmg at 6:42 a.m. and homey atmosphere ''Southern California as it should have been" will offer linllted infot'ihition available on the not .settmg un\jl 8:07 p.m. executive "X" and his 500 employes. " , " _ 1.1tudy arid made tbree:rCcommendations "There may be an energy shortage but That one ends with a tearjerlring children's chorus that could-be.1 bit rec. for more actkln in -the matter. not as far as the sini's rays are con·• ord. if the Irvine Company Were to launch another new st.tbsi4J8.rY. · • , The committee asked that tht city of cerned today." said Jim Seevers, assis. , . Newporf;Beacb initiate a specific plan tant astronomer at the: Ad I er THEN C.UfE THE FIREWORKS: l\.frs. Smifb~WOOtbiriks htt:-s~ .fQr the "so-calltd Mariners Square area. Plaoetarium in Chicago. "The rays are ought to be eai:ning her more money, decides to ask management~ que1c -The plan would provide detailed land use striking the northern hemisphere more tions. · -.... ·. . ~cepll which prOQerlY -owners and verUcally now and delivering more: solar William R. l\.1ason, president of management, answers some. de(:llbu bus.ineuea ~uld r,ttlistically cbnsider for energy per square foot.··- others. Mrs . Smith presses him. · · future development·of. the .area> "' The seasons are determined by the Then, wonder of wonders, this captain of industry, the bur :of a .Dlliliabl The comril:lttee also s·u g gt s te d position of the earth in its yearly path ~·ould expect' would risk his' life for a fair damsel in distress, l*8 bi1 cool. alternate· proposals for traffic circula· around the sun. He barks at the demure lady from ..-Emerald Bay and MiddJeburg, Va. tion. The proposals wOuld indicate in Earthlings do not feel the earth's Surprise of surprises. She barks back. . detailed bypass alignments and an· orbital 1peed or about 181,2 mlles·a·se-· An exchange not unlike two out of sorts PekiDese thoroughbreds enllUel. ticipated expansion of present highway cond, but they do notice the sun ap. Others in the room titter. system necessary to meet future needs. parently changing its pasltlon in the sky WllEN IT'S ALL OVER, Mrs. Smith •·gets on the record'• certain denials or other commitments from a management of her largess she knows ful l well she does not in any way lnnueiice or control. That much is clear. \Vhat Is surprising that after viewing the film charting the history of the ranching and development empire replete with anecdotes about the lady's grandfather, one would ha ve expected there'd be more respect for the woman. It seems she inherited the old man's spine, you think, wondering how the late l\lr. Irvine could have left members of his family so bereft of control of the firm . . Then. you think about the 54 cents per share you might have earned this year. had you owned l,000 shares that Jet you in oo this power struggle. That's 540 bucks-income. Now, if I owned 1.6 million shares ... l can't even bring myself to multiply 1,600,000 by 54 cents. If I knew hpw much a year that would be, I might do something dumb, like buy a section of Sout h Dakota or another inch of Alaska. 27 Persons Feared Dead 111 Mexican Plane Crash PUERTO VALLARTA, Mexico (UPI) -Rescue teams reached the wreckage of a l\lexican jetliner on the side of a 1.50().foot mountain today and reported no sign of life among the 27 persons -14 o! them believed to be Americans fly ing from Houston. Texas for a Mexican vacation. The DC9 of Aero-J\1exico was within sight or the runway at this resort town on the Pacific Coast and the pilot w a s * * tr Passe11ger List For Ill-fated Pla11e Releasec1 PUERTO VALLARTA , Mexico (U Pl l -Following ls list of crew and pa ssengers reported nboard Aero-Mllr.lco OC-9 which police said crashed and ex· ploded south or here last night: C•E.W C•P•. C•rlOt Ft•fl•..001 Del•r•t COoll'llOI JOH fnrl- -~tn'ltlldO °"9•~1 Utw•tdtM So-nl Av!1t1 •1-•rd fi. C111•necl• -. PASSEHGIElllS I Ntdlnt Ill MtlllTIMI: I OtvlO' ""'"""· Ntw Otlt•m 2. Etlf'<'•ll P•lott'11r11, Cl'llc•oo ). Cl\lflfl Bu•Mam, l!USlllntl chatting ~·ith the control tower when the night sky was filled with a great burst of orange light as the plane hit the peak and exploded. The pilot's last radio contact with the tower gave no hint or trouble aJ>- prox imately 10 minu'tes before: Its scheduled landing time. He had reported he was descending from 14,000 feet for the landing and the control tower advised him the wind was calm -ideal' for the landing in the mounta in community. Then ca me disaster. The wild Pacific coastal area is almost inaccessible by land. A flotilla oC 30 to 40 small rescue boats: led by a yacht went by sea e'arly tOday along the coast to a landing at the base or craggy hilltop area and sent rescue teams into the mountains lo search for the wreckage. A passenger list issued by the Aer~ Mexico airline indicated that at least 14 Americans boarded the plane at flouston. but the list was incomplete and the C!Jact number o fAmericans a m o n g the 23 passengers aboard wa1 not known. FJnally, they suggested that public from season to season. hearing .by the Planning Commission be Technically, this means that at the sum· conducted on both the specific Plan and mer solstice the noon sun reaches an engineering proposals so that concerned altitude or about 72 degrees above the persons in the area could provide Input southern horizon. on the specific plan. By compariaon, at the: winter solstice Sumnier Basketball Program Announced A summer instructiooal basketball league for boys 7 to 12 years old "'ill be conducted by the Central Branch of the Harbor Area Boys Club. The program "'ill run from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. ·every Tuesday and Thursday, beginning June 26 and cootinuing until August 9. Boys may sign up at the Boys Club, 594 Center St., Costa Mesa, or may phone 543-9387. -Dec. 21 -the sun peeks only 2~ degrees over the: horizon -and that· is wh(ln persons shovelins snow rcallu the sun's energy shortage. Scott Scores Deau WASHI NGTON lUP I) -Se nate Republican leader Hugh Scott \\'ednesday said ousted White House counsel John W. Dean 11 I is an "embezzler." Dean reportedly has told Senate Watergate in- vestigators that he took $4.850 from Nix· on campaign funds to pay for his wed- ding and honeymoon, and later put a chec k for that amount back in the fund. State Heads Sign Pact On Weapons WASHINGTON ~AP) -Prtoldent Nl.t· on Ud Soylet leader Leonid J. B~zhaev lbll afternoon 1lped a compact pledgln r tbelr eouatrle1 to reach arreemenl In 1f'14 &o pennaneatly Jlmll oftellaJve. 11u· clear aneulti 1'en tltey clbaked cllam· pape era. .. , In loaat to tbo mtll 111· nlfiea•t •areement to emerge from tbel r summitry. WASHINGTON (AP) -Pre1idenl Nix- on and Soviet leader Leonid 1-Breitmev formally committed !heir c:ounlries loday to reach an agreement in 197• to permanenUy JimU offensive nuclear anenab. ~ The dtedllne ""' estal!liahed In the first, ol seven prtndplM aJ11talned in a dOCUJ!lent set for si1nin& today at the While House. • --( The declaration gives instructions t.o U.S. and Soviet negotiators at the now· recessed Str"ategic Arms Umitation (SALT) Talks In Geneva . The negotiating instruction! had betn expected to flow from the Nixon- Brezhnev summit, bUt setting a deadline for conclusion of a permanent limitation on offensive arms came as something of a surprise. Nixon and Bl'elhnev left camp David by helicopter at 11:!7 a.m. (PDT): Tbs sun was ahining through and steam role from the helipad In the wake of a heavy thunderstorm. Both men wore raincoats and Brtzhnev a floppy felt bat. American officials predicted the Ni:r.oo· Brezhnev action will aeep away currenl SALT-negotiating barriers and rapidly accelerate the pace of the Geneva talks. C.Onvicted Pair Relieved of Jobs In Westminster ·. Derek ,.fcWhimey and Tad Fujita, con- victed Tuesday of conspiracy to commit grand theft and atlempted grand tlleft, have been removed from their govern· meat posts in Welimin.ste:r aod Orange Cooniy. State law mandates that an offlce becomes vacant upon the incumbent's convictioo of a felony. McWhlnney, former mayor o r Westminster, loses his Clty CouncU seat as a result of the law as well as hls memberships on the Orange County Transit District and Midway City Sanitary District boards. Fujita has been removed from the WestmiNttr Planning Commission and the Midway City Sanitary District boml. The two city ornclals were convicted Tueaday of an attempt to solicit a bribe from farmer George Mural to fb: a vote: by the board or supen•isors on the ldllt Square Park agricultural lease In .ffoun. taln Valley. The 34-yeaN>ld frim:ls wtre acquitted of conspiracy to commit bribery and two counts of soliciting brtbery. The jury deliberated four days . Superior Court Judge John Flynn Jr. ha.s set J uly 10 for the hearing of de:Cense motions for a' new trial and sentencing or the duo. Westminster l.fayor PhUlp Anthony said that councilmen hope to dec ide next' week whether to fill the city vacancies by appointment or special election. WI TAK E TRADE-I NS I I 4 lt•autl lurnktlll, wllt, boll'! ol '•lo Alto. S Cll&•ltl MUO&Vtro, "lutlllnd 6. C1rol 6'111911111"0, !lie, bot~ ol $!, L0\111. 1. Nel•d Jom!I, huJIMlnd I . 01tne JtmU, Wiit t , L.i11 J1mll. t, d1uoh•1r, •II ol Ht.., Orl1•n1, 10, Mlldrtd Hl!I, l+ollt!Oll 11 01~111 Hl!11 rd. 11"'1)11"(! 1, S11s•no MllllTd. Wiii. lloll! of Mt\lflor> IJ. G11lll1rmo Gvt1r1, M111<.o Clly I', Mii. C!lv Porlla, Mtm~lt ••11"111111 111 ~"'""' Two of the Amerlcaru were ldentilled ., Daniel Hillard and his wife Susanna ol Houslon. They had aent their two children to 1umnir camp and were going to Mexico ror a vacation at Puerto Vallarta. Hillard" .about 38. was the of. flee manager of Zytron Corp., a microfilm products company. Another passenger was Identified as Mildred T. Hall, a HoultM widow In her mld-50K. She waa an Insurance un- derwritt r en route to a vacation ln Mex· lco. I I I I I I I I I I I Authorlztd GE SERVICE MtmHr of C11lfornl1'1 Lor..,1 Cooporotlvo luyl"I Group With Tho Volume luyln1 Powtr of 110 Storll 90 DAY CASH I I I ·.I I I WITHAmom • Cllllt -I Ii, M'1.1'1do Ltel 'I' M"'111tn1 Le11. ""''' 1 , J111n Lt"I, 100t \I. 111&11! Mtrtll'ltt f Notmt Oona.tit~ 2t, P1tt1el1 hrtonl )I M•tl• lor!Ol\I !':, JOM &or'!Ofll tl. M•ltl•il• l«IOI < Pedro Vega Padilla, commandant or Puerto VilUarta police, said "That II e:x· tremely rough and rocky country and I don 't see how anyone could have survlv· t!d ... ' ' 1 1 1815 NEWPllRTlCW:-lliilituwn CoM Mesa -'-----------.,,.,.--- I Phane 541-7788 'I -1 _______________ .. .. . . ' . • .. .. .22 DAil Y PILOT N T~11rsda1, June 21, J973 HUghes'!f Getty---2 Men Worlds Apart Editor's ·1~1.c -It's almost as lf Howard Hug1tef and J. Pa uf Ge tty cha1i9ed roles. Otie J-roni 111.ayboy to recluse; the otller from a1t01~yfltity to public fame. 111 any event. the billion- aires live stortli1~gty different ltves. By HUGJI ~TULLIGAN AP htcl•I C:1rr•.,....e11t LONDON -Only 17 miles separate them, but they live \\'Orlds apart. One, Howard Hughes. i.'i a recluse. The other, J. Paul Getty, is a public gadabout. Both Americans: both among the richest men in the \vorld : both part of an English society v.·herc eccentricity is ad· mired and frequently honored. NOW THE \\'ORO is going about Disbarment Eve.d -· . • • For Preside11t 111 Pape~·s Case . . PALO ALTO (Aj') -The Palo Alto Times said Wednesday the California State Bar is studying several letters ask· ing disbarment of President Nixon and rormer White House aide John . Ehrlich· man because of events in the Pentagon Papers case. The State Bar holds investigations in- to complaints against attorncy"S e;onfi. • dential and declined to comment on the Times' story. A spokesman noted, however, the bar associatioo got 3,000 to 4.000 complaints against attorneys in 1972 but that only 100 merited consideration. The Times quoted sources ramiliar v.ith the probes as saying several letters calling for the first steps in t~ disbar- ment process bad been received by the state Bar of'fices in Los Angeles and San Francisco. The Times cited three incidents in the Los Angeles trial of Pentagon Papers defendants Daniel Ellsbcrg and An thony Rusoo. U.S. District Court Judge Matt Byme dismissed ~iracy, espionage and theft ' charges against the tv.·o May 11. saying, "The conduct of the government bas placed this case in such a posture it precludes" a fair trial. The Times cited ( 1) reports that Erlich- man approached Judge Byrne during the trial about becoming FBI director; (2) the burglary o( Ellsberg's psychia- trist's office by Watergate conspirators. and (3) the fact tbat records of a govern- ment wiretap on which Ellsberg was overheard did not tum u · after Byme dismissed charges, a were nd ·in Ehrlichman's office s . Ehrlichma was Niloti's chief ic affairs ad- viser. The President "'as admitted to the bar in California Nov. 9, 1937 and Ehrlichman Jan. 9. I9S2. the Times said. Mayfair that · Hugh<!!, the penlhouse hermit. is about to rly hls ninth-floor c..wp overlooklng Buc:kingham Palace and head for yet another hotel on still another continent. •Us. second, three-month entry visa for Britain ex:pires June 22. No ef- fort, so far, bas been made to renew it. Since lhe Inn on the Park 11ever has acknowledged Hughes' ir~nce in suites 901 and 902. t~anagement declines to confirm any moi,loment in or out of the triple set or locked doors 1no11itorcd by TV cameras. They say someone is oc- cupying the quarters permanently leased to banker N.M. Rothschild , but they real- ly dori't knO\V \\'ho. Food trays are still left at the door. Maids are pennitted h! only th& anterooms Wirldow washers arc told to get lost. Meanwhile, 17 miles a\vay in the lovely Su rrey coUntryside, J. Paul. Getty, just turned 80, sits in the Loog Gallery of his Tudor mansion and talks more and more <>£-retiring to ·California. Tells Jriends he wants to be a beachcomber, get away rrom it all. GE'ITY HAS TALKED_ like this since -settling in England 13 >:' ar ago~ especially on rainy days. But intimates say he is now ·almost obsessive on the subject. It has been a v.•et spring. and the Britis h press bas been piqued at his plWlking dov.-11 $4,032.000 for Titian's ·"Death of Actaeon." which the National Portrait Gallery had to raise mon~y to buy back. · More so than the recluslve Hu ghes. Getty frets about what the locals think of him. Their differing attit.udes toward publlc opinion reflect their separate life styles here, which in a way have become as ac- ceptable a part of the British scene as Ice cubes ia t h e Chelsea pubs and American hamburgers in Knights bridge. Tycoons, particularly the Yankee brand. are expecte<I to be soiuewhat eccentric, each in !\is Ol\111 \Vay , or v.'hat's a bank reserve for? COMPARED WITH the ~Jusive ~lughes lurking behind the constantly drawn cur· tains or hi s JfYde Park aerie. Getty has become an al most public figure. He is known hereabOuts <as the World's Richest movie premieres, theaicr firsl nighls. book luncheons. art shows and royal command pcrfonnunces, of~n Mnr· garet, Duchess of Argyle, on his ar1n. It \\'8S she who threw his big birthday twsh al the Dorchester Dec, 15 at which he downed chan1pagne with assorted dukes and exiled kings and danced a creditable variant of the Charleston \vitP Tricia Nixon. ''l believe in living lire as full lll~ anyone." Getty told Aristotle Onassis over a New York's Eve glass. The Minneapolis-born oilman has scotched rumors about business deals 11•ith Hughes by letting it be kOO\.\'Tl he hadn't seen his old Tex:as friend in 30 years. Hughes. as usual..said nothing. Man. to distinguish him from Hughes, SlNCE TH E INN on the Park nev~r billed as the World's Second Richest beard of him, all cables and phone calls Man. were relayed to his Los Angeles. head- He has, among other things, thrown quarters, where he hasn't been seen in open Sutton Place, his manorial estate, .20 years. to the public for a charity ball, a fashi on In a town where lords of the realm have show. an exhibition of his art treasures trouble bedding dov.'ll beyond the and an open bOuse gala ·that drew 2,000 scandal-probing eyes of pres~ cameras, guests. Hughes has managed to keep an an1az- He ha..s been intervieWOO-oilBBC:Tv--ingly low profile-in the most public-of·· and writteri articles for a British places. Surrounded on all sides by Cleluxe automotive magazine (adviSing motorists hotels, gambling clubs and the daily nev.er to tip gas station attendants). crowds turning out for the changing of "I DON'T ·LIKE to lock myself up, J like meeting people," insists·Getty, 'vho enjoys chattiqg with telephone operators and hotel doormen. He is frequently seen about to\vn at the guard. he has never been seen, much Jess photographed. Besides a "six-man backfield" or trusted aides, all nonsmoking, 1101\· drinking Mormons. the Hughes entourage in London is kno\\'n to consist of several women. including a nurse. a cook and a masseuse. Harbor Area Boys Club · SINCE HE ARRIVED here Dec. 27. by his private Lockheed Jet.star from earth· quake-shattered Managua, Nicaragua. the comings and goings at the $2,500 a day lodging have been logged fa;thfully by the press, which once bad the lobby staked out in the fashion of an old gang· ster movie. Sc,hedules Summer Fun _ The Boys Club or the Harbor Area is abuiz \Vilh summertime activities and there is still time left (or boys to partici~ate in the bes t ones. TlllS INCLUDES two camp sessions in Running Springs scheduled July 30.Aug. 6 and Aug. 6-Aug. 13. C9st of e11ch session is $40 and includes transportation, lodg· ing and insurance. summer League basketball coru · · petition st.arts JWle 18 v.'ith games lo be played Mondays through Saturdays. Signups conclude June 14. Other games such as wiffieball. capture the flag and Eskimo football. are offered at the Boys' Club from 2 p.m. to 2:30 p.m. ~1ondays through Fridays. A WEIGHTUITING class is offered fo r boys aged 8-18 at I p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays, and on Saturdays there is free use of the gymnasium from II a.m. to 1 p.m . Special events in !he physical depart· ment call for trips to Dodger and Angel games through August. Other swnmer· time activities include crafts such as v.·oodworking. plastics, ceramics, mosaics, leatherwork. plaster of paris moulding and lanyard weaving. Low-cost swimming lessons a re offered rhrough Aug. 31 at the Central Branch of the Boys' Club. There are four different classes. ranging from non-swimmers to advanced swimmers. FEES RANGE from $10 to $'l2 for ten Jes.sons. depending on the age of the stu· dent. Reservations must be made in person at the Club on 594 C'.enter SL by paying a 50 percent depo.sit. Boys who do not want to participate in any organized instruction are in11ited to come to either branch, the Central Branch or U~e Upper Bay Branch on 2131 Tustin Ave. for, fun. Hours are from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon- days through Fridays and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays. Annual membership dues are $2.50. INFORJ\.1A TJON about all the sum- mertime activities are available from your nearest branch of the Boys Club or by phoning 64z.8372 or·548-9387. WE'VE GOT IT ALL ·TOGETHER Two world-famous heart surgeons sho\\'ed up one d ay; then an electric wheel chair. followed by rolls of plastic floor covering. undoubtt'dly to protect the deeJ>-pile Rothschild carpets f r om whomever was doing the wheeling. R~rs that Hughes might be getting ready to take off again began to circulate v.•hen London spokesmen for his Summa Corp. confirmed that the passport which expired while he \Vas in Nicaragua had been-renewed. Ambassador Walter An~ nenberg said he has yet to see Hughes in London and that his embassy. just a few blocks away, had no part in validating his t ravel documents. ''FORT_ KNOX," AS thcJioteLstaff now call the penthouse.hidea,vay, Jives up to its impregnable reputation. The fire stairs have· been sealed off. The elec· tronic elevator freaks out and buzzes for the manager when the button for floor nine is pushed. Callets who get to the tri- ple doors are told to go away by a loudspeaker voice right out of science fiction. Living their separate life styles in England, Getty and Hughes have a great AP P~OlO STILL A GADABOt!T ~ J. Paul Getty, 80 deal in conunon besides n1oney. Both hate to have their pictures ta~kcn . Both have an abiding premonition or being robbed, kidnapcd or murdered, and live in constant fear of fi re or natural disaster. They are endlessly besieged by beggars and adventurers. Sutton Place, 11•here yQ_ung 1-lenry VII I first lost bis head over Anne.Boleyn, who subsequently lost hers over him. was England's first unfortified great house. Getty, wliO moved out of a $100 a day room at the Ritz, has since fortified it v.'ith burglar alanns, fire sprinklers. floodlights. three resident detectives. a pack of Alsatian watchdogs and sliding steel doors that sl)ut off the house section by sect.ion likC the watertight doors of a ship. l-IE GETS 75 begging letters a v.·eek from people -tryi ng to in terest him irf a charity or a fiscal ouling. Hughes• Lon- don office, which never has set eyes on hi!Jl1 • receives calls frolll all over . th£ wo rld trying to coax him into renting oil tankers, buying an island or leasing out the TV rights to ·'The Outla"'." "Scarface." "Hell Angels'' and some of the other films he made at RKO. Leg~ds of parsimony surround them both. Getty is famous for waifmg-ror the prices to change at a dog show and entering a restautant after the orchestra has left, to avoid paying th e en· tertainment lax. He wears his clothing for so long that now his wide-lapeled suits have come back in style. Hughes, who used to mislay limousines and once wrote a single check for §23,489,478 to become sole owner of RKO pictures, now shrinks from direct • part1cipa 1lon In big dealt. S0i\1E \'EARS BA.CK, Getty installed a · Jll1.v phtuie in 1hc study just off hi.5 oak puncllcd Long Gnllery and claims. to have ~11vcd ~.OOU ti month ever since Ofl "cteudhents nnd spongers calling up Lon· dun nnd a lot of other places and charg· ing lt 10 me.·· Both are ci t.izcns of the night. While £nghind sleeps. C.etty i~ oftCf\ puttering abcut in his pantry cooking up a predawn snack of v.•afflcs and hamburgers. tlughcs, 67 on hi s last birthday, has been an insomniac since his 1946 crash land· ing testing his high-speed XF·ll. recon pl<1ne. He is notorious for1 call~g ~p aides. \Vho ha\'eo't heard from b1m in decades, at 3 a.m. In their later years, the t\VO billionaires sce1n almost to have exchanged roles in life . G ET'l'Y, WHO HAS lived abroad since 1951. \vas virtually unknown in the ranks of tycoon until Fortune 1nagazin~ bill~ him as the v.'orld's richest nlan in 19:>7. lfotcl rooms then v.·ere hi~ man!!_ion and the back 5<'31 or a Cadillac his office. Hughes. as ~ daredevil·' pi 1 of, moviemaker ind rich man about town. ,,..·as often seen in the newsreels receiving the keys lo a city, receiving a medal fro 1n Congress, climbing down from the cockpit of one or his own-design planes arter a test run or a v.·orld record hop or escorting one of Hollywood's Stars. NO\\/ in the \•linter or their· days, it is Getty who gads about and swings, while Hughes lives out his life in rented rooms. Boy Who Kicked Pot on Board FAIRFAX, Va. (UPI) -.Brad Shipp, a high school student arrested twice on marijuana charges, will serve as a voting me~r on the Fairfax. County Scboo1 · Board.· --- The county's Board of Supervisors con· firmed his appointment Atonday on a 6-3 vole after Shipp, 16, testif"ie1f~tbat he no longer uses marijuana and would not recommend it to anyone. He said bis marijuana experience led to periods or depression and loss or memory. Shipp 'viii receive full pay of $3,000 a year. WATCH THOSE FUNDS' FEELINGS liANFORD (UPI) -.A Kmgs County budget writer may have had the tax· payers in mind. The county supervisors found this line in their proposed 1973-74 budget: "Under Section 5. a grant totaling $96,589 was allocated to continue the 21 remaining positions. of which 10 are allocated to the county, until such tbne as those funds are exasperated." • • *THAT INCLUDES EVEN NEW CHANNEL 50, SAN DIEGO'S 6, · 8 AND 10 AND SANTA BARBAR·A'S CHANNEL 3 -'TOTAL TELEVISION' • • • Yes, TV WEEK now '-ives you a weekly summary of upcomin9 pro9rams on Oran9e County's new KOCE~tv CChcinnel 50) every Sunday, alon9 with hour-by-hour listin9s ' of what's doinCJ on $;n ~ie9o's channels 6, 8 and 10 and Sallta Barbara's Channel 3 • • ! " (VHF listin9s .also appear in the Daily Pilot's daily television listin9sl. With the help of our friends at TV WEEK, the 1>aily Pilot 9ot it all to9ether. Now we offer read- . ---"' er:s, t!Specially those in the South Oran9e Coast ar.ea and all others on c~mmunity cables who can pull in all the signals there are in the Southland, 'Total Television', . the most complete newspaper llsting_of television fare available . . Every Sunday in TV Week-Every Day in Daily TV Log • Horoscope: FRIDAY JUNE 22 GEMINI (May Zl.Jwie 20): Surprise accolade la due. Yoo could get raloe tn pay, pro. By SYDNEY O~IARR motloo, as.<ignmont to special ARIES (March 21-Aprll t~): civic duty. Ta....., Iba You could feel b Io ck e d • perSOrul could fUNre prom.- restricted , confined. Don ' t inenUy. You ra1n throulh panic. Situation is.temporary. diplomacy. Win your way. Keep promise to one '*''ho is Remen1ber s p e c J a l an- incapadtated. Value y ou r · niversary. privacy. Kno"' that being CANCER (June 21~uly 22): alone is not necessarily the Accent is on travel, educa· same as being lonely. tiooal pursuits, the ability to TAURUS (April 20-May 20): communicate ideas. Be 6Ul'e Be recepti\'e. One you care for your meanings are made clear rec i pro ca t es feeling. -to those at a diatance. You get Rom ance. a£tection a r e rawrable re.apome from one featured. If perceptive. who seemed 1'outoltouch.." · desires can be fulfilled. Gentle approach brings results. You can win friends and inOuence people. Popularity ;, on up- swing. LEO (July 23-Aug. Z2): Nothing now b apt to be lukewann; it is all or nothing. Don't start anything unless you intend en finWi it. Stakes are apt to be blib and "for k e e p s . ' ' Relatknhlp in- ' Thor>d.ly, Junt 21, 1973 DAILY PILOT tl Aquarian! • Scorpio's Picture tensities. Capricom b in- volved. VIRGO (A!!f. 23 • Sept. Z2): Do plenty ol ~. olioerv- lng. Maintain tow profile. Emphasl• b oo _,;al agr..,. mEU, amtract. Pisces in- dividual -lo be very much involved. Get finger on pu1ae of pobUc opinio n . Improve relatklls with or. flCials. LIBRA ~ (Sept. 2.1-0ct. Z2 ): Strive to e1press yoursel! tlrough accepted chamels. Me8n9 avoid excess. Stick to what you ~. One who shares yrur ldeols could be wilJq ally ii you are careful not lo <Jlfend by-8"'Sallooal methods. Olntacl Leo. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): ~ can eerve now as rellabie guide. 1t1ean11 v.ilat you !eel ts lli<ly lo be valid. Heed Inner voice. Rcl\loe lo be Scorpio could be lnvolvod. bullied by one who hurls ap-AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb. parent !acts, figur.s. Aquorlie 18): Accent boo money, abiJl.. could Ile In picture. ty to put ideas !nm ~ BIRTHDAY you...,. oo yrur order lo ttl>ulld . You are uni -You will be more lnde~ own earl y , po11ibly que. You could be famous. and there will be CKltlet ... peycbologlcally •st r • n g • d You could al;;(' comp t I e your mative energlel. You from family. You always ha~ wealth. In July, you get lolni drnw to yru many bom unler · been willing to tear down in wUh new contacts, projttts. Scorpio and Taaru1. SAGmARIVS (Nov. 22-ordtr: Debts are paid, col- Dec. 21): Social activity ac-lected. Teke"'°"kol financial celeratcs. You could be getling sitlllllloo. Do plEl!ly ct com------------------------------ mess3ges, calls, invitations. parison ltlopping. U yo u,,---------,---------------------i But it is best ito expect nothing browse, you could obtain for nothing. Do yrur en-legitimate bargain. Act ac-IN TH' GOOD OL' SVM/tlERTIME tertaining on familiar ground. oordlngly. Gemini is sincere but apt to be PISCES (Feb. 19-~farch 20): liil I I I ~f} ~ Rt'-Ir :!,~· Exhibit sense or ~~)'C~ •• ·i:: th!r~e.:'. l n i=. en G ~O. R ... Y-' g""". CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. atttaot oppl)Site sex. You can -i=--T 19): A call or message should make your life m o r e b c do u b I e -ehecked. Be beautUul-a nd comfortable. SHOPPING ARCAOE•425 30111 Street•THE CAl'MRY•Newl)ort Beech scrupulous about d et a i 1 s • PW'Chase of -luxury item Ls Relatives tend now lo be ravored. And do something WE JS OPEN T(}ES. TURV SVN., 11·5 careless u n I es s they are about yourW?COrd or book col· I'======:::=::.:::=:=:=:=:=:==:=::=:=:==:=:::=:::=::=:==::=:=~ direoOy concerned. Know-. it-rectton:-too!-I and protect your own _ in· terests. Aquarius, Leo and IF TODAY IS YOUR Couples Recite Nuptial Vows MID-SUMMER • n • 0 ~. •• . -· ~. . --· -. W. Joh• MCHJ•"• prop. er.rt ••• "°"' D•bll11, Ireland 421 l21td St., ...... port leoch e '1l·SDlD CALKINS-COZZA Kathleen Cozza, a teacher at University Park Elementary School and Dennis L. Calkins were married in the Episcopal Church of the Messiah with the Rev. Robert L. Bonhall of- ficiating. The bride, daughter oJ Mr. .and Mrs. Don A. Cozza of Upland, was attended by Mrs. Cbarles K i t c h e n s, Karen Cozza and C I e t a Dicltsoif. Serving a·s best man was David Bergevin, and ushers were Bruce Richards and Bob Dawson. The bride-is a graduate of UCI where she earned her teaching credential. She is past president of Psi Chapter, Phrateres International and is a director of the UCI AJumnl. Her husband, also a UC[ graduate. hold! a teaching credential from that Wliversi- ty. He earned a masters degree al the University of New ll~e:tico and is affiliated '"'ith Chi Psi fraternity. FELLER-LEEDS Cynthia Marie Leeds and Craig Birc'h Feller, both o[ Huntington Beach were mar- ried in the Church of God ·in that city. The Rev. Artie Starn _ officiated. · Their parents are ~fr. and Mrs. KeMeth W. Leeds of Huntington Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Lee R. Feller of Las Vegas. MRS. FELLER Attendants were D o n n i e I:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;: .;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I ~~;~~~l~~:~e?:f~~~ _D..._...,._.'l' ___ E__._-R....,...l'~ The bride, a student at - Orange Coast College, is a graduate ol Fountain Valley High School. Ker -husband attended high school in Barstow and is a gtaduate of OCC. A member of the, Air Force, he has ~ceiv~ sc_.Polarsf'Mps from the state, the Daily Pilot and Im· maculate Heart College. The newlyweds will reside in Huntington Beach. AIR STEP -BERNA RDO - SCHOLL SANDALS -PASSPORTS MAGDESIAN -MISS AMERICA VINER CASUALS -HANDBAGS - HOSIERY Edwtnh -Gtrbtrich -~obln Hood PF Flytr1 -U.S. Ktd1 -SummtrtHt1 Captiio Otnct Shots Otnc• W•ar by Otn1•i1t Correctlft Skn for Ct.ll••1t 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA -548-2778 e IANKAMERICARD e • MAITElt CNAltGt e Values: 40%-50% OFF ONE MARKDOWN ONLY! SPECfAL Gl~OUPS $5.00 -$15.00 • $25.00 • · I I N• L..J••• N• a..... SALE STARTS FRIDAY, JUNE 22nd r Numbtr Elevtn Fa~hoa Island, Newport Beacb California tzllO Ph. "4-UU the reasury record dept. has the newest dynamite sounds you're looking for. ---' Best Sellers Stereo Albums 8· Trac k Tapes We Special Order Albums & Tapes New Sounds brought to you on A & M Records & Tapes Stereo Albums S·Track Tapes $338iJ $4 99 ON COLUMllAITE .. EO ALIUMI a TAPES P'11.11 Sirnon TMft Go. Rhymin' Slmori ODE/C1rolo Kint · Flfttav A.Oiher Hit LP's 3.69 \CJ T apntry Music Wri1er Atlymes llr Re.Kon' THE EDGAR WINTER GROUP THITONLTCOHIOUJ' ATNICHT ON EPic STEREO ALBUMS & TAPES Edgar Winter Th~ Only CorM Out Al Nigh! Joain"'a Wh•,. Ar• You Now, Mv SOii Other Hit LP·s 3.69 Corne from Shadows I • I ON APPLE STER}O ALBUMS• TAPES Paul McC1r1nev A.ct Roll SPMd,•V lilly 'rllton • 11 My Life Other Hit LP's 3.69 I Wrote 1 Slmpl•Sont • .. tlfl J 1Jll:·d~\.'\1J Kh•INtl ON ATLANTIC STEREO ALIUMI a TAPES Thi J. G1ill Bond Bloodlhot C.rpen•n • Now • Thoft Other Hit LP's 3.69 TM Carpon11r1 Sonts For You Off•ring Clou To You Our accessory area offers everything you need to keep your phonogr~phs and tape players playing. The C e,n_Swee_p • \\loll no! wt~r t>ul • A.dill yetr1 rn VOi.i' ""''"' • Ht!llt 1uuncl tt011i<hie1iOn Music Master Tape· Head Cleaning , Cartridge \ .~ ON A"LE STE .. EO ALBUMS• TAPES G•Ofll H1rrlson Living in th• M1t1rl1I World Quincy Jot.. You'w Got It led Qlr1 Other Hi! LP's 3.69 W1lklng in Spice Gull M1t1ti Smackwa11r Jackr --------- ON "CA STl .. EO AlauMI •TAPES John 0.nv•r F•r-•11 Andromedi lpootlyTMth Youlf9koMyHw1, Sol ...... Your .... Other Hit LP 's 3.69 Spooky Tooth C1ttmony ' litSI Puff Tol>ecco Ro«! We carry M usic Books .. Browse our huge selection. FeatlJr11lg Cttrly S11•lor1 Bt~st l>f Rr1!acl .lohr1 Der1ver. Pc:ttJI S1n1on _ Carpt!tltf•r<:. Cat Stevens to r1an1e a few We have a variety of artists collections books & instrument instruction books from $1.25 to$5.95 OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 • SUNDAY 10 to 7 GRANADA HILLS 1800 Chatsworth St. WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd. --RIVERSIDE 3520 Tyler St . SANTA ANA North of South ~oast Plaza TORRANCE Segulveda and Hawthorne BUENA PARK Beach · orangethorpe ORANbE Garden Grove Blvd . an~ ~anchester LAKEWOOD Carson at Paramount. . and • • ., Today's Final N.Y. Stocks • VOL. 66, NO. 172, 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1973 c TEN CENlS ' ~esa G_roup Fights Billboard Blight By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ttlt 0.Ur PllOI $19" " ls Costa Mesa becoming a billboard alley? stall and the Costa Mesa Planning Com· two council members available today to mission recommended denial of the zone respond to that challenge. excep~on but were overruled by the "I've always been opposed to billboards l-lh1r-~~So;;m;;e residents are ~inning to think so an -Uie liree new tiill60irai under construction on Newport Boulevard has outraged them. "Costa Mesa is becoming .a cheap \Vo.man. T~. old~r she gets, the more makeup she puts on. She gets more at· tention, allright. But who wants her?" All three billboards were ael!oved. by the"COS a esa C y CO'UriCil .witti zoae exceptions. The two billboards on the Orange County Fairgrounds were ap- proved for a period of eiglit years and the outdoor sign near Bay Street for a period of five years; subject to renewal. 00~~ncilmen are not acting in the bet· an~ have want~ to eliminate them en· ermentor-theclt~anoworrthesr--tirely~he...saia~BuLLnexer..had.JmY. billboards," added Mrs. hiaureen luck doing it because I couldn't get three DlDomenico, c h a i rm a n of the votes." • "We bate the billboards. They're ter- rible,'' fufued Roberta Schmidt, member of the Costa Mesa Beautification Com- tniltee today. In all three cases~both-the planning Beautification Committee. "The city. Pinkley explained, however, that he doesn't gain, it's the private property believes in compromise. That, he main· owner that benefits." tains, is the reason he voted for all three · councilman Alvin Pinkley was one or (See BILLBOARDS, Page 2) . Nixon, Br~hne£ ·_Pledge_ Lilliit 'Hoodlum's' Demi,se Related By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 1111 n.11)' ,,ltf 11.n Born to cqns~rvative parents in Allan· on Nuclear Gi-rl-in-'rears Sent Home, Too Poor.for Ne ,wDress CLIFJ'ON, Ariz. (AP) -A teen-age girl whose parents said they were too poor to buy her a new dress was sent home in tears from her eighth grade graduation ceremony because her ·clothing did not conform with school rules. ~ School principal Billy C. McDowell said Wednesday that he had no alternative but to send the girl home because students 11had been given their instructions long before the graduation. __''l.illlt.A.girl who did n_ot abide by the r~ired dr~~s ~hould n.Qt participate." .· Tbe parents of 13·year-old Eleanor Stacy said their daughter Arms Flows Again After Fete WASfilNGTON (AP) -President Nb:· oo aod Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev -Dlll)' ,ilOI staff ''""" NEW BILLBOARD CONSTRUCTION ON NEWPORT BOULEVARD 'Is Cott• Meta Becoming a Che•p Woman'-Too Much Makeup? • this afternoon Signed a compact pledging C J _J_ T\ • -• -D • -ta .-Ga., raised in a-rigid,-fUnc1amentalist fa ith and testifying in a precise, almost prissy tone, he does riot resemble a hired hoodlum. · ==was-orderedctcrleave-..he=lassmates-.Ma}<=3°=Theycs.aid--..thtw :iQJd- "She could not march in the graduation ceremony of Clifton Elemen· tary School becall'4! her yellow-flowered dress ))Jld not been ap· tbe~countre• !Oreacaagrumeni In ~onege v1s-fr1ct neatmo- 197( to permanently limit offensive nu-_ ~---'------".C....---~1·--- . clear_a&llal~'lben:tbey..::rjinted-cJ;n~IP---' ---- . pagne glaues in toast to the most sig· B h · f N s d ,,,~!~~.;u·~· emef1ie -~ ' us es or ' . ew tu en ts . .• pl'OVM br. s<hool officials beforehand. 1W.'•· ~"\\'ere kind o( poor right now," said Ed Stacy; a carventer. He blinks his·eyes· and pul"9Cs his thin lips on the wit.neaa stand. He partJ his line halr _down the-middle. Gary Michael RoJlo, six feet; four in· ches tall, 235 pounds and wlth a bl~ck belt degree in karate, re-lived in court \Vednesday the night his world or illegal intrigue-crastied down around his-ears:- Ooe hour-ot..-ille U..hour recorded iir terrogatlon by District Attorney's in- vestigators was played at a preliminary hearing for FWlerton attorney Michael K. Remington, t h e former Newport Beach resident accused by authorities of hiring Rollo to carry out murder con· tracts. · Rollo, a big. kid with big ambitions, had just been arrested when the tape was made and . has since pleaded . guilty to soliciting for murder. "You're a little fish in this whole th ing •.. you're a Little. 20-year..old boy who y,ianted to I@y big time," said the recorded voice or fnvestlgator -J'iiD Daugherty. The tape characterized Rollo as a col· orles1 kid who bragged of a,lleged gangland connections, d r i v i n g a 111ercedes-Benz, taking a trip to Portugal on a moment's notice and paying off la\\men to get underlings out of jail. None uf it was true. "Our finances have-ibef!n a litUe tight. We couldn't afford to buy a dress." Stacy said he took fhe matter bef<>te-tlle SC!fool-W-ara Jillie 4 but "they treated it as a joke, more than anything." Harbor Area -case Supreme , Court Permits Obscenity Crackdown WASHI NGTON (AP) -In a 5-4 decision reversing a decade-Jong trend to\•lard pennissiv.eness, the U.S. Supreme Court gave the states much greater authority today to move against obsceni· ty. One of the cases·on which the decision was based involves a Costa Mesa court ruling. In an opinion written by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, the court held : -Local comrr1unity standards rather ·- than national standards may be used in determining whether material is obscene and therefore not protected by the Constitution. -That juries and courts no longer need to find that material is "utterly" FIRST NORTHERN SCHOOL CASE RULING-Story, P•ge 3 • \\'ithout redeeming social value before they declare it obscene. . isJimt and onl..l' prior arresl wu a child stealing rap biouihT by hiS JUvenn·---~ h }} 'R - gjrllrtend's paren.ls and resulting In pro-Mit. c e eady bation and a court order for the pair not to anoclate. Instead, Burger ·wrote, they ma y d~termln-e-whether1fie Work-"tiken a a whole lacks serious , literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." Rollo 1, now testifylng qatnst Rem-To Admit Effort' lngton. as inept would·he assassins Bobby Joe "B.J .11 Hart, Chuck Hulett and ~~rles Barnes testllled earllu •gainst T 0 Quiet Scandal The prosecution witness looked acro'Ss tbe courtroom occ,asionally at Remington • (Sff KARATE, Pqe Zl Orange Coast Weather _GARDEN CITY, N.V. (UPI) - Former Attorney General John N. Mitchell is prepared to tell lhe Ervin committee that he authorized payments to the Watergate-defendants to cover up the scandal until after the presidential election. Newsday said ' today in a copyrighted dispatch. . The obscenity decisions involved tWo cases from California and one from Georgia. In the Costa Me11a case, Marvin Miller was convicted in Harbor ¥ea Judici al District Court in Costa Mesa of mail· ing five advertising brochures found to be obscene. - Jn tbe other Caliloniia case, ll.1urray Kaplan, proprietor of the Peek·A·Boo Bookstore in Los Angeles, was convicted under the state obscenity law Of Selling a - plain-covered, unillustrated book con· taining descriptive material of an e1· (See OBSCENITY, Page %) ' WASlllNGTON -(AP) -President Nix- on and~Soviet leader-Leonid-J:-Brezhnev formally committed their countries today to reach an agreement in 1974 to permanently limit offensive nuclear arsen-als. The deadline was established in the first or seven principles contained ·in a document set for signing today at the \Vhite House. · The declaration gives instructions to U.S. and Soviet negotiators at the now· recessed Strategic Arms Limitation (SALT) Talks in Geneva. The negotiating instructions had been expected to flow from the Nixon· Brezhnev summit, but setting a deadline for conclusion or a pfrtnanent limitation on offensive arms came as soinething ol a surprise. Nixon and Brezhnev left Camp David by helicopter at 11:37 a.m. (PDT). The sun was sliining through and steam rose from the heljpad in the wake of a heavy thunderstorm. Both men wore raincoats and Brezhnev a floppy felt hat. American officials predicted the Nixon- Brezhnev . action will seep away current SALT___n_ego!lating barriers and rapidly actelerate the pace of the Geneva talks:. Smmuer Basketball Program Announced A summer instructional basketball league for boys 7 to 12 years old will be conduc ted by the Central Branch of the Harbor Area Boys Club. :The program \Viii run from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday, beginning June 26 and continuing until August 9. Boys 1nay sign up at the Boys Club, 594 Center St., Costa Mesa, or may phone 5411-9387. O~ficials of the Coast Community College District say they ai.e prepared tO "beat the bushes" for additional students for both Orange Coast College and Golden West C.Ollege to avoid rYIDJing~ -tieaOJOnginto a -budietdeficit. A five peFcent enrollment increase is required to obtain state funds needed by the two-campus district to halance its proposed $34.9 million budget. The latest enrollment-forecasts in- dicate a districtwide decline of two per· cent during the colnina: year. Dr. Correllan Thompson, vice chan· cellor of business affaiss, said a total of 6432. full·time day students and 212 even· ing students will have to be a_dded to avoid running into the red. Early -budget calculations by Dr. ThompsoD.--Show that the 1973-74 fiscal year budget would contain a deficit of $600,000 mainly because of reduced state aid allocations prompted by the decline jn students. Wednesday night, college trustees decided to balance the budget by manipulating some figuics on the inoome -side·of-the-ledger:-ThiS ifiCIOOCTtlie Pro- jected average daily attendance. Instead or a two percent decline, they are now calling for a 5 percent erfroll~ ment increase. What does this mean? The recruiters will have to work ov'ertime, according to Dr. Thompson. . "We're telling them to get out there and beat the bushes to get a 5 percent in· crease," he said. A committee is-already studying ways to. ~ccomplish -it without resorting to handing out Bjuc Chip stamps, according to Dr. Thompson. Dist rict Chancellor Nonnan E. \\'atson told the board that the state runds·would be allocated to the district at lhe begin· ning of the year on the attendance estimate. This means -that the district Would have enough money to start the ,Year even if actual enrollment is under the estimate. But he cautioned that an ad· i.ustment woulclliave_to.J>eJnade..later. "\Ve '"ould be borro,ring against the future," he said. Included in the budget are a $1.9 million humanities, arts and sciences buildin g; a $1.2 million ski ll center; a $950,000 art center and lecture hall ad· dition; a $700,000 admini.st ration building; a $500,000 student center, a $180,000 horticulti;iral building, and a $140,000 food services laboratory. No funds have been included in the budget for additional employes or for cost.af.Jiving salary increases. . Adoptton of the t;>udget as it now stands \VOuld raise the district's tax rate about 10 cents from 83 cents to 93 . cents per $100 of assessed valuation. The final budget will be adopted during the first "'eek in August. Several Banks _,______ - Up Prime Rate NEW YORK !UPI) -Severa l more banks today -·announced a boost in their prime"lending ra te to 7!!-4 percent. The current round of quarter point increaset started Monday with a move by the First National Bank of Chicago.-WedneSday; Girard Bank of Philadelphia follow· ed suit. The latest banks to move their rate to 1;4: percent were Chemical Bank and Marine hfidland Bank, both of New York, and Harris Trust and Savin~s Bank of Chicago. ll 's going to be blistcri~g hot in inland portions of Orange County Friday, but slightly cooler right along the coast. Highs in tho .80s at the beaches rising to 108 de- grees in Santa Ana. Lows In the upper 60$. Quoting "a source close to ~litchcll .'' the report from the newspapcr''s \Vashi ngton bureau said that J\.1ltchelt in· tends to deny flatly. ho\vever, that heap-- BREMER BREAK·IN ORDERS TOLD-Story, Page 5 U nseaso·nahle Weather, Isn't . It? INSW"E TODAY ., Nitort campaign a:fde Fre<f,. erick C. LoRue 1Ul8 de ta i e d Wl'ongdoing in connection witli dcali't1Q8 u.>itll a. 1iow-bank·rupt housinQflrm. See story, Page J3. proved a plan to put listening devices in Ute ~mocratic Natiooal Committee he adquarters. --Newsday reporter Anthony Marro, who signed the dispatch, wrote that the source said Mitchell would admit that he knew about the. cover·up plan and that he approved payments to tbc defendants to "keep the lid on" until after the "'November election.· . A former deputy of Mltehell: Job Stuart _Magruder, told the Stnate com· mittcc lnvesiigating the Watergate affair that Mitchell approved buglng the Democrflls during a meeting wltfi men close to the White House and the Com· mittee to Re • elect the President on March 30. 1972 at Key Biscayne, Fla. Sen. Sam Ervin (D·N.C.), is chairman ot the Senate Investigating group. By JOHN zALLER Ot fllf Oalir Pllit. lt9ff The Orange ~t conilmled on this first day of summw to host a battle ol the tjtanic air masses, the Pacific low pressure aystem versus the desert high pressure. AJ everyone can tell, the desert high pttssure clearly has the upper hand so rar. (Related stories, Pages 4, 15, and 22) The desert system, centered over Utah, has met the cooler Pacific air at the coastline '3nd is preventing the cool ocean brtezes from penetrating to the swelter· ing Inland areas. 'l1le battle Itself ls not unusual, because the £wo air pressure systems arc h\ con· stont COmP<!tlllOD for dominance O[ • I Southern California weather. But normally at thls time or year, the Pacific low pressure system is the dominant force, at least in the coastal areas. The fact or its defea t lhls June has taken n1any coastal agencies by surprise. In san Clemente, stude,.nts are still in school, and were forced to $weal out final exams today as well as the hot weather. In Newport Beach, a city road wide~ ing project has blocked a critical portion of Newport Boulevard during some ot the peak beach traffic .loads of lhe year. And Southern Cpllfomla EdlsQn C.m- pany In anticipation of a cool June, had several -or its-biggest generating units \YOund down for routine maintenance. When the heat wave came -tern· I r peratures in some inland sections of Orange Cowity soared to 113 deg~es Wednesday -everyone turned up their air conditioners and the company was in trouble. Reserve margins fell lo just lbrec per- cent as Edison set a new _peak power de- mand record -9.815 mVlion kilowatts. HWc fealty were surprised," conressed an Edison spok'esman. "It's supposed to be cool and foggy this time of year." J. Sherman Denny of lluntington Beach, an amate'J-r meteorologist, Cl· plained the situatioil this ·way: "The high pressure desert system is completcly dominating • the western United Stales. Right now, U's meeting thc Pacific air right along the coastline, and It "'on•t let any of that Pacific air get inland ." The standoff between the two air systems causes a further complication, Dcnriy s~ys-. In pushing up against Ol'lb · another, the air pressyre is raised -ln the sense that air is compressed· -and this cttuses a furth er rise in temperature. ' 1tt usually takes until September before the desert air is strong enough to \>ring this kind of h<iat,"' Denny says. The last .time a similar situation oc.. curred was on June 17{ 19571 according to DCnn.v's records. At that t.ime. the desert air was so strong that it pushed rtghl through the Pacific front . creating a San· (See H.t:AI WAV.t:. Page %t DAILY PILOT -"'"--t f'ro111 l 'age J BILLBOARDS billboards. • • • • • .. If "'e cnn trade three older on'es for t"'O less obnoxious ones the n I tnlgbt \'Ole :: for .it/' he said. "On some of those old •:\\'<>Oden ones the bac kside looks hor· : : iendous." .. ·Councilman Dotn Raciti Is agai nst : , biUboards and compromise. : "1be city council's antenna inust not : ·be turned up high enough," he said. :.:"Othe.r\\·ise we \l:oul d w1dcrsland \Yhat :: the people are trying to tell us. It just ~:makes me sick to drive by the : fairgrounds and look at those blllboards.'' :: l'he billboards on the fairgrounds •:represent the compromise agreement :·Pinkley SPoke or. They will replace 111·0 :•older billboards no1v in the NC"'IX)1'L ::rrec"•ay right-or-way. ThurMiay, J LJ11r 21, 1971 lO H•n•lulu • .. .. b HAWAIIAN IS . 1S Sl{YLA I .,~.;.. ·:·:·:<:-1;V-X.•YO:·'.'lm -·X~ ,...,}..,.·" ····~· ;-: :,:,.} UNITfD, • ·:;:;:;: ~8TAT1!:9 ~.E:~:' -~}, ~; :·:\':::!::?.: 1011 •••llCIM• \!':-:• ''"·"" .;., . .,.,.,.,. . PlAll•OWN <·~::~::. ··::;::· ·:;~:::::::: : ·;.:.:·:· .. :::~:.:: ... ·.·.· , ... l .. Ao,.lo•'·:·:·:·:· ·;:·~::::::::: -~~.;:~·:·:-:·:· 1 •• ·;. :!-:::.:.::~:::: • ' • s.e.DI• .. \: 'X•:·:·:· · "~-• ~ l!IA~',.~]'',;i .• ~ ·~~+,,; ~; •·22·7 ) •• - « PACll'IC OCfAN 8 ' . ~ • -J. .j Wages Up $2.5 Million i Harbor T axpayers t,o Pay T eachers Mor e It wlU cosl Newport Beach and Cosla 11.fesa taxpayers at least. $2.5 million more next year to pay the salaries of teachers, administrators and other New1>9rt·ri-1esa School District employes . \Vith the six percent raise offered ·ruesdoy night by school trustees •• the starting pay for a teacher" would go up· ~00 to $8.100 and the average teacher's salary \l'ould climb $900 to nearly $13,500. 1'ha1's presu1ning the district's tv.·o ,6" n1ajor teacher organizaUuns ratify the six percent pay raise offer made Tues· · day night by school trustees. earn bclw~n $10,500 and $15,00. depend- ing OQ the number of ye a r .s of ex- perience they hlve. - Teachers "'ith bachelors degrees wlll earn between $8,100 -the lowest starting wage -and $12,000, depending on how much experience they have. The remaining $1 million of Mie sa lary increase Is comprised of regular yearly salary increment ra11!g, ,. All but $260.000 of th e six percent raise '"ill come fr o1n a (1.7 million piece of th!! undistribut<'d l'eSi?rvcs in the proposed budget. ·rhe rest "'ill come from reallocations \\'ilhin the budget. 1'he salary expenditure repre~ents lhr major portiWl of the-f37,4 mll1_1on spen· ding packngc for next year. Though thP increase is substan(ially more_ than last year. the di strict's tax rates w1ll actuiyly decrease. SOaring ;1sscssed valuations on proi>- erty wil l ma.Ice actual taxes paid go up but the rates will dip by a fe \Y cents fron1 $5,03 to $5.01 per $100 in Costa t\1esa nnd from $4 .67 10 $4.62 per $100 ass.ei;scd valuation in Newport Beach. nc.:cord1ng to district officials. • But since both ne"' billboards contain a :.. display on both sides, they v.·ill contain ·' t¥.1ce as much advertising as the old :, billboards. hleanwhile. the old billboards : have not yet been removed, meaning~hat r-----'-~ttere 151.n~~rtect-a-tota·i--or-stx-billOOards on the fairgrounds now. ISO Ill 120 \\'ith the six percent. raise, ,salaries next year will cost nearlY $26 cftillion. st~y"ear._Warles cost lhe district a total of $23.6 million. Testimo_rcy_ Concluding~~i• Planning department sources Indicated today that the original wooden billboards were constructed without a city pennit -at least there is no record of a permit at dty hall. Map spots area where Skylab 1 astr~nauts will sp,la~h d?wn Friday at approximately 6:50 a.m. PDT, ending 28-day m1ss1on in ipace. See story, Page 4 . --~ ''fhose first two were up illegally;--Why would they , \\'ant to replace illegal billboards," asked Mrs. Di Domenico. "And those old billboards are still st.an· ding lbere. Why couldn't they tell them to take the old ones down first berorc 3.1.IOWinTtfiem-to put11p-i~-ne.w-ones'?" El Toro's Captain Hanson· The billboard near Bay Street is also a double-sided structure. It is meant to ~replace a single-faced billboard near Wilson Street, according to the permit· -Declared l(illed in ·Viet holder, the Carter Corporation of Santa ~tarine Corps Capt. Stephen Hanson of Ana. El Toro, listed as mi~sing . since his Although a Carter representative told helicopter was shot down over Laos in city councilmen earlier this year that the old billboard would be exc hanged for the 1967, has been declared killed in action. ~· ~w one, planning otficials say they may ,. The Pentagon has informed H_anson's not have the authority to order the old wife, Carole, of 24112 Birdrock Drive, El billboard removed. · Toro that it interviewed a helicopter -Nowhere-in the--~-exception-pe~t-pi ot 'who saw Hanson's craft crasli 3na are any legal reqwrements shown which . . would force the applicant to abide by the said there was no char.ce he lived. promise. The pilot iRtervi~wed was on~ of the BUt Carter ~rp. orficial Bob Van returning prisoners of war (POW), bul ~ostrand promised today that the old was not identified. billboard woold be removed as soon as the order is issued by the state Division of Highways. The state has already purchased the billbQard site as right-of· way. . Van Nostrand indicated rurther that the other two old billboards on the fairgrounds would come dawn "in a few days." One of these. he said, Would be tom down within a week while the other would remain up to advertise the , fair which runs July 6-15. The Carter representative said he did not know whether pern1its had or had not, been issued for the boards. L--.._ :A-billboard-ordinance "'as considered- 1n COSta'Mesa durin g 1971 but was not enacted by the city council. Since that lime a quasi-moratorium has been in ef· feet which prevents the constructi on of new billboards to .PrevCnt adding to the lot<:ll number of billboards in Costa i\lesa . Last October, l\1rs. ·oi Domepico and her committee conducted a studf which concluded that 20 of the 40 billboards may be up unlawfully. Seven of these billboards \Yere being maintained beyond the expiration date-of city pennits and the other 13 are in the city's red zone \l'hich supposedly forbids, billboards. City councilmen . on Oct. JI , 1972. asked for a detailed study to detem1ine \1•hether the committee's facts are cor rect and if the boards should come down. ' ' -· .... l_ " FRIDAY. JUNE 22 CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BAN- QUET -20th Anniversary of City ()f Costa Mesa , T\1esa Verde Country Club. 7 'p.m. diMer. : "LAST OF THE RED HOT LOVERS" -;--Costa-Mesa ei\•ic-Playhouse, F.ri . and : Sat..8:30 p.m. Ad1nission $2. : "IN THE MlDST OF LIFE" -South : Coast Repertory Theater, through Sun- : day, 8 p.m. • M(Yl'()RCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING :-Fairgrounds, S:J5 p.m. OIANll COAST DAILY PILOT TN()< ...... CO.II DAILY PILOT, with wlll'" 11 ~ tht lrH_...Prni, 11 pUbll'lhld w flll' ()r9nM C.0.1! P<lbllslllll!I comoeny, S1pa. r•M •I,._. l r1 PVttll,11.i, M°""y ttir...,ri FrflNy, ,.,. Co111 Mew, NIWPOM 8Ntll, Huntlne1911 hadltl'ountlln Y1U1y, LI~ 8"9dl, lrvlnt.i...,,,110.c~ 1..0 Stn cr.~111e1 Sin Jutn Gtpl11r1-o. A i lnvle reQiOfltl llOlllon t. IMl&IW!ld S.i11t1M~I <!il'w:I $vnd1y1. Tiie prlocl~I pubH1til110 Ottnl t1 ii HO W~t l1y S!r"t, CNI• Mnt, C•lllornlll, fUU. Robert N. W1!1d Prtt;IUnt tNI l>11Ull1"tf J•ck R. C11.r,., Vic. '•Uldffll •nO G"••t•• M•no~tr Thol'l'l•J K•tvil Ecll!Or TI.o"''' A. M11rphi"' M•llfflPO Ed!IOI' Ct-•1·1•• H. l •o• Rich•"" '· N,11 ~•llllnl MIM9illtl Editor• , c ... 9 M .. Of'fke J)O W11t 1., St•••' M11l/119 Addr•1•:·P.O. lot 1160, '2•2• "*'°""" Nt...perl llltlcfl! QU Htwl)Of'1 llOlllfVltd ll""°" •fKfl ~ m t"orHI 4vtnw H1,111tl!ltl0f\ •Nell ~ 1'111 •141<11 a..,i1_.,,,d $111 ~Ill SIS No'1fl l!I C.l!'IJlooo ltMI T ....... 1714 > Ml ... JJI C-ifW ~ Ml -1671 COOY(" .... I, It'~· On191 '°''' ,IA!lltlll!lf C...-n.,, HO M"" tlol'ltt, 1!11ttlr•lf-. ldllwl11I ,,,.11... ... t1oWtrti.-1t llw1l11 ""'' .,. ,....,.~ wl!l'llwt .-ier Mt· .iuieft ef '°"'''''" ,_,.. ........ «;W.11 llOll ... H iii ti c .. .a A¥N• 0 11_,,1.. Mtcrfotlon bl' urrlltr ta.u -"'"'1 ~ -11 u.11 l'l'ltl'I"'"'' 11111111"' *''"'-'*'' QAJ "*""'"· 1.1.rs. Hanson has been active in Na· tional _League ()f Families of POWs and l\tlAs (missing in action) in Southeast Asia. As past president of the group, she made many crOSS-OJuntry and in· ternational trips. seeking information and making speeches about her husband and other servicemen . She visited with President Nixon, India's Indira Ghandi, Pope Paul and government officials in Laos, Vietnam, +okyo.-.Russia.--S to c._k_h_o..lm_ and Washington, DC. G<iv. Ronald Reagan wore a silver POW bracelet bearing Hanson's name for more than two years. Nancy Reagan placed her hu~nd's bra.celet in a display case at the Capitol' building in Sacramento Wednesday. Mrs, Hanson, whose son. -'l'odd, has never seen his rather,· had told Reagan that her husband is now officially dead . He was shot down June 2, 1967 while his helicopter was on a medical evacua- tion mission. The Hansons were married Feb. 21 , 1962 and lived at first at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, where he was based. She, 33, is a Conner teacher in the San Joaquin School District. The captain first shipped out to Viet- nam Sept. 7, 1966, only 10 days before 1'odd v.•as born. Mrs. Hanson thought Todd was too yo ung at about three months to go with her in Jan .. 1967 to Hawaii to see Hanson, for wha t' turned out to be the last time. - F u11eral Services Held For Two Accident Vic tims Funeral se rv ices were held Wednesday for a· 19-year-old Costa Mesa man~and a 17-year-old San Juan Ca pistrano girl kill· ed last \\'eekend in an automobile ac· cident near Ensenada. Buried nt El Toro Cemetery were Robert Robertson, 2208 College Ave .. Costa Mesa and Rooa f\ifcLa ugblin , 30888 De La Vista , San Juan Capistr8!1o. Both died when the car overturned and crashed into a hillside on the.road from Tijuana to Ensenada late Satu~day. The driver of the· car, Danny Becker, JS, of 17219 Santa Barbara St., Fountain Valley, and Shannon J\1cLaughlin , 18. also · of San Juan Capistrano. were injured in the accident J\liss l\1cLaughlin, sister of the dead te<:n.:ige r, is undergoing trcatn1ent at San Clemente General Hospital tor a brok en j.:iw and dislocated hip. Becker. a professional motorcycle racc.t. \Vas reported to be recovering from facial cuts and other injuries at hon1c. llobertson is survived by hls mother. .lo Anne Robertson , of Costa Mesa. and his father . John , of North ffollywood. Ilona /\fcLaughlin, a senior lit San Clemente IUgh School, is survived by her purents . J\Jr. and Mrs. Phi J i p McLaughJin. San Juan Capistrano: two brother8, Phillip and Matthew of Costa J\lcsa: and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. L. f\l. J\·Jcl..eod, Phoenix, and Mrs. Virgin ia \\'i,1tt, Anchorage, and Charles Revello, 4>s Angeles. 1'hai Alien Convicted LOS ANGF.l.ES (AP J -A Tlial national has bttn convicted or smuggling more than 44 po11ntb or pure 'heroin. with ~n cstl1naled street vnluo or ~14.1 1ullllon. M RS. CAROLE HANSON- With Son, Todd ' f'romP .. e l · · OBSCENITY • • • plicitly sexual nature. Miller, a City of Industry -mail order literature dealer, was convicted in Costa Mesa. The court later was rcloCated to facilities in Newport Beach. OA Oct : 12,. 1971, Orange County Su· perior Court upheld lower court convic· lions on at least three counts of mailing advertisements for sexy books and a film, Some of the charges date to 1969. Details of l\1iller's trial and convic· lion in the Harbor Area court were not immediately available. A CQ_Urt spokesman said, however. t~ day. that as 'soOn' as the court gets notice from the high court of ~ts action in the case a date for sentencing will be set. "Hard core" pornography was the target of Burger's opinion. •1one can concede that the 'sexual revolution' of recent years may have had useful byproducts in stri.king layers or prudery from a subject long irrationally kept from needed ventilation," Burger \\'f'.Ote. . "But it does not !ollow that no regula· lion of patenlly offensive 'hard core' materials is needed or permissible; civilized people do ndt allow wireguJated access to heroin because it is a derivative of medical morph i n es," Burger continued in the majority opinion. From Page 1 HEAT WAVE • • ta Ana wind condition as it werit. That pushed the mercury up to 99 degrees. Denny said it was 88 in Hun· tington Beach Wednesday, The hot weather wa s producing severl\l unu~al situations. In San Clemente, police reported a high incidence or rat- tlesna kes driven oul o! the· hills to seek shelter in cool er residential areas. In Laguna Beach, llreguards reported a high incidence or nude sunbathers. And in Newport Beach, water tcn1- peratures were driven up to a new record high, 73.5 degrees. The old record was 71 degrees, set on June 30, 1931. If the sun's heat was causing an energy crisis for Edison Company, it was not doing so for the northern hemisphere of the earth. Today ls Jhe longesL day of the year, with the sun rising at 5:42 a.m. and not setting until 8:07 p.m. "There-"may be an energy &hortage but not as far as the sun's rays are con- cerned today," sRld Jim See\".ers, assis-- rant astronomer at · the Ad I er Planetarium in Chicago. "The rays are striking the northern hemisphere more ,·ertically now And dell11ering more solar energy per square foot." The seasons are determined by the position of the earth in Its yearly path nround the sun . If teachers hold out for the 7 .5 percent they have demanded, the increase would cost another $400,000. Teachers originally demanded IO percent raises. . . The entire budget will rise next year from '34 million to a proposed $37 .4 million .... In Lawyer Case Quiz \ Aln1ost $1.5 .million of the increase in. salaries for next year would come from the six percent boost the board wrote in- to the salary schedules this week. The remaining $1 million ~ sal3ry in- crC8Ses will cclme from regular salary increment raises. Teachers are on a fix· cd salary scale that rises each year automatically on the basis of experience. If the six perctnl offer is accepted by the teachers in September, the highest paid instructor in lhe district will earn Sl6,500 per year. That's with a mast'er's degree and 12 years of teaching in the district. Teachers with masters ·degrees will Testimony was to conclude toda~ in the case of a former Ne1,•port Beach lawyer no1v of Fullerton. who the chie£ pros- eCution witness claims paid him $1.000 to kill an adversary in a civil lawsuit , bur·y him in-the desert and-deli Ver -hiS severed finger and \Vallet as proof. Defense attorneys for attorney Michael K. Remington. 33. are doggedly at· tempting to discredit tesliinony by Gary f\t. Rollo, claiming he is lying and was coerced into acting as agent for authorities Jn return for lenient pros· ecution himself. Tapes were played in Judge Paul G. Mast's Central Orange County Judicial Dist rict courtroom Wednesday. . --*-* *-Not All School Remington and Rollo -the latter feign_iqg....fil!mrise -were arrested May ---'3"'1 .,outside Carousel Restaurant-in Anaheim, to climax an intriguing in· vestigation triggered one week earlier by a si mple traffic violation . Employes to Get 6 Percent Raise Rollo rarely looked at Remington \Vednesday while testifying he was out- fitted with a tiny transmitter so Distric t Attorney's investigators staked out in a camper truck nearby could tape the Carousel conversation. Some clerks ln the Newport-1\-tesa They also reportedly filmed the hand· school district \\'ill get less than the six over of Sl,000 in cash they allege was Percent raise offered by srhool trustees paid for the disPo..sal of an adversary in a this week but nearly 200 other employes lawsuit against a vending machine com· will get a good deal more, it was learned pany headed by Remington . today. Evidence gathered by the Orange Verlyn Soderstrom, director 0 f C:Ounty District Atto~y's office led t.o classified personnel, confirme<r tcxlay-. -four counts. of conspiracy to. commi t that about 185 clerical \\'Orkers and in-m1:'1'der. w~1ch. coul~ send .Remington to structional aides in the" district will prison for hfe ir he is oo~v1cted. --. ___ , __ . . --·•--Defense -attorneys Wtlllam lifarSHaU recelve..u1uy a 3.5:percent-'4UR·-. Ji.1organ -an·d-Robert Green-failed in the" An almost equa) nwnber of .main· fourth day or their client's preliminary te~nce and operations workers will get hearing to P e r 5 u 8 d e Judge Mast to a hike of 8.5 perctnl. play the care rendezvous tape in The nearly .400 employes affected by chambers or Some other closed setting. th~ salary adjust ment .a.re more than a f\·lorgan and his co-coonsel claim Rem-t~1rd. of the 1,000 class1f1ed persoMel on ington.'s case has been subjected to prej. d1str1ct payrolls, Sod~rstro~ said. udicial pre-trial publicity due to the The ~1x percent ra1 s_e. will boost total-testimony offered so fa r. expend~t~res for class1!1ed personnel to Morgan, a specialist in cross-ex· $6:3. mllhon next year as opposed $5.5 amination, accused Rollo in ringing nnlhon last _year: . sarcastic tones \Vednesday or ly!Dg aod Soderstrom said the adJ~stment ~as making ridiculous statements under oath . necessary because the salar1e~ of c~er1cal During verbal testimony conducted by employes have gotten out of hne with the prosecuting Deputy District Attorney average being paid to clerks in other Robert Chatte rton, Rollo said he knew local businesses and governments. Remington for about six months and was "By law , \\'e must pay our classified retained to µerform certain services for people the Prevailing rate for com-the tall, bulky defendant. parable jobs in the area," Soderstrom "I y;as looking for persons on a con- sa id. "They had gotten ahead or tbat and tractual basis to perfoi:::m hit.s, killings we thought it necessary to trim the and beatings," Rollo said. raises." His hunt "'as in vain. howe,•er, since t1aintenance and operations \Vorkers, three inept prospects "'ho were granted on the other hand, ~·ere lower than the immunity from prosecution for their own average for such jobs in the area and testhnony failed to kill or beat anyone in ·were given more than the six percent, several tries. Soderstrom said. They-<iid scare .Chaffey College in- The Cutback and boost in the two sets structor Gordon Lockwood and his wife or salarie·s balance out to the overall six by firing a shotgun blast into their percent increase, he noted. Cucamonga home, leaving a threatening 11 note. and-necing in p·anic. -- Rollo. ~'ho has p)eaded guilty to soliciting for .murdet and faces s~n· tencing June 26, apparently never in- tended to get involved in the dirty work -mmself. · --- He testifi ed that he agreed lo meet l\1'0 of his bungling hent'h111cn at the home of Yorba Linda businessman Al Fehling but never planned to sho11• up. while the pair assigne4 . to kill Fehling got lost on the way to the scene. llollo also testified he accepted SSOO rrom Remington to engineer the beating of a Fountain Valley \\'Oman who was suing the defendanL's vending-machine COO)pany for $12,500 but lied to Rem- ington in saying the job had been done. He also faked an assignment to kill anollier fo;e-or~Remingtorr-setting-up-the­ t1ay 31 arrest at the Anaheim cafe. Investigators seated Remington and Rollo , in a police car after they were handcuffed and walked away, but the tiny transmitter was still operating. "Did }'OU say to h1r. Remington : 'You idiot. 1 have hi s wallet on me,' " asked defense attorney Morgan \vho had ob- tained transcripts of the investigators' tapes. The documents sh<m'cd Remington replied "\\1hat are you talking about? Be quiet." J * -{:( From Page J .KARATE. • • a< the Jape played. "You're in deep deep trouble, little rr.<Ui,'' Dllllgherty urned the hulky youth as ·he I: id Rolln"'grim situation on the line. "I think you \\'ere taken in by some fast-talkers." Daugherty continued. "They are llOing to do to~yooiust what you did to B.J .. " added the investigator noting that t~ low man on totem pole is always expendable. "When you're rotting in jail and being tried3rfd goifig to statepi'isot1-;-they11 be out getting more guys like you. "Because there's 10,000 B.J.s in this ~'Orld and ten-hWldred Gary RolloS who a~I ·want to be big dudes," Daugherty concluded. The youthful prisoner had not yet · Sttn his 014TI attorney and refused to reply to investigators' questions about his in- volvement in a dull , hypnotic routlne. "No answer.'' "No answer ... " Daugherty then turned him over to bis partner, Frank Oxandaboure. Oxa ndaboure completed routine ques· tions about Rollo's family background, education, his Job as a hospital ·physlc•l therapist and then left him alone to await the attorney who would advise him· how to proceed in hiJ predi~ment. - ,, .. -----------------------------, I Nobody Sells GE Refrigerators For Less Than 1>tUl(a,f> I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I WiW Opelli11 n. DoQr 23.5 Cu. Ft. AMERICANA REFRIGERATOR FREEZER • Ice bin atorea ·10 Iba .• about 260 cubea ; automatic lcem1ker re- places Ice 11 you use It. • Freezer holds up to 297 Iba. • Convertible 7-Day Meat Keeper. • AdJi11t1ble, tempered gl111 ahelvei . • Rolla out on whe1l1 fo r 1111 cleanlng, • No defrosting ever TFF·24RI' WE TAKE TRADE·INS 90 ltAY I I I I I I ~ ~ Mombo of C1llfernl1'1 L1r1•1t Cooporotl.. luyln1 · Group With Tfto Volume luyln1 Pow•r of 110 Store• I I I I I I CASH -- Authorlud GE. SERVI CF: '· wriMc:=.._ 1 1 I 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa Phone 548-7788 ______________ ... ··: ~------~--------• • I I I I I I I ' ( \ \