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1973-06-22 - Orange Coast Pilot
.. • l Flawless Finillh .A -lter Poor Starl J , . --,. -I. ---. ---. ---' • • --. Eoast-S111.og. 4-bove- ••a·ng~~!' Level; -CaF Curhs-IJ~.ed-.·- • I . - Fireho111h Thrown- . " " . ' f! At Bon1e; Old S_edan Soug~t ' IXOD, rez nev FRIDAY-AFTERNOON, JUNE 22, 1'97:S-'°"' "" "°" an.• IKnotd. • .... ' • ' • ,, • .•. ._ • • ' • lo'. • ... ~ •• -.. ... " . ~ . ' ~ r' ' . -.. 1 Flfiwless l'inuli . oro . . ~ Landing .'. •sup~r' --- For 'Astronauts ABOARD USS Tloom>EllOGA· (UP.I) -Skyllb'1 aatrooauts landed ln '~aupet lhape" ba the Pacific Ocean today and walked lllaldly a few mlnultl lat• to tbe doclGn' ollJct to -· bolr well they irltllstood • record 211 day1 lit space. '!be bullaeye splashdown and quick recovery by thiJ veteran aircraft carrier marliiil IUl•w .... eod to a mllalon that llar1ed with failure. '!be ru,bt took a major .. p tow111d giving _man a place In. space ... ,. Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph p_._ Kerwll Bild Paul J. Weitz.retW11ed In tbe Apollo ciminand ship lil which they were launcbeil· May 25. • of good men ore 11110 ~ to lhO ,..,. ceas of the human 8dventure," the Preli· dent ..i.L Conrad,. commander of tbe natlan's fint 1poce strtlan -· rewured recarwy lonieo sewn! times that be and his cr.wmen ...,. all rtpt alter the !lreDIJoas rHIUy wl>lcb qulcllly built up ·deceleratlan lan:es u> times the 1wce of gravity. "Everybody'•-in super abape," -Qxirad .-aller . lbree or.,_and-wblte striped porlCbultl -the . command moclulo filto the aentlY rownl .... of the l'ldllc .. m11eo --of Saa Piego. (Beo'llULAB, ..... !J 'lbe big s p a c e station ~ lit --h-lillllt·ready for·1ts·ne11·cmrbrtm:•-~-wte~nt Nuon quickly sent .. Getaway Auto telearim lo the men who just completed an 11.l·milllon mile joumey and ·Invited So ht • M them lo Yisll hJih it SID Cemente Sim' ug , ID e8R day. "You have given conclusive evldtnce F;....,, Bomhm• g that .... with <tl>e glOll advanced -..... "' tlflc ID d technological ,._rt bl the world, the courage and mourcelulnea .. . . • -l .,. . ~-Coolittg:"f)lf • . - Police are loaklnc for a 1116H)· gray sed.ln wJth the partial Jlcense "&:Mi'' wlilch tliOy tielleve may-have been Ifie getaway car In a ljrebomblng li>ddenl at the home ol a Coria Mesa lnsuruM». apnl . Nan Jobqson, 17, of Onnp. combines· her desire to lbe Oran:ge. Coast this week and; allhougb tem- peratures are ex~ted to drop slighUy this week· end, local autbonties are girding for big crowcb at . the beaches. .. That expected coolinc trend will make itsell felt aklall tbe Oranc• Coost Saturday with low •Jaiidl lit the morning houn' and \iigha In the ' -70s at the beaches. Inland· temperature> will be near 90. That's cooler? JNSW E TODAY He '• feallt1 a '1ong w?ittr not a ''~er, but HarUm JennirlQ1, 2l, i1 finding i ii a Newport Be"h niglll club enga11<ment tltat sorMtjmes it's the singer and not the acmg that counu. llil sl0'1/ Is on l'agr Z5 of .to- doll's Wetkendtr. -. =--·»: .................. or... °""" 11 •on: ,._ 1'4' ·~ ,.,.., " """' , .... =--.. :: ·-. .............. , .. ,, ........... ,. .......... - for a lllD tan and Mr desire to keep cool.during· a beacblnc wtlng on th' Balboa. Peninsula. Re<ord heat has sent lnlnd SOulbem Californians flocking The. bombing accumd late Wednesday In front ol 7114 Sandpiper Drive, the borne of David C. Rulhrnore, 33. Police said a soft drink botUe rilled with 1Uollne wu thrown at Rushmore'• 1m iDodel car and~ lit a ball of !In!. The Molotov mlsled Its mart and nO damap WU done< .,..Eddie Lellanln, 13, . ol 2717 SolidpJper Drive, told orftcen be wu watclilng televlllon that nl"1t .wben be observad the car crulllna throuO the area and Nixon ·Home Costs Listed . saw the llnbonib t....a °'!I u II 1'Jlll1d· ed a comer. LeBaron '-'edly clwed the three youtha with hit own Cir )\It WU IDllble' to oveitJke them. WQ RKERS. STRIKE OVER CUSSING lly HELEN THOMAS w ASllINGTON (UPIJ -The federal government n~1 It bu spent' nearly 12 mlWoo Improving , Prerident Nixon 's -'In J'lorlda llktClUIOnila, ail of it relaUng to "aecurity." The eq>enses ranged from fire sprinklers to goU carts r.r the Secret Service. The White House ·also disclosed that bustnessman llobort H. Abplanalp, who helped the l'relldent buy his San Clemente retreat, bu been 1etting somo money c bacl: In the lorm ol rent DUNGENESS, Enlland (UPI) -Near-a~ with Nlloo's Key Biscayne, ly 2,000 -bulldb!i a inulllmUIJon. .f'la.,,plam. dollar _, power -"• n t on A inontb ago the White Hoose bad st~ todaymen ,..ov~.! :"", ~ wml.plc~et aald, listed $311000' in federal f1lnda for hn· ,,.. ~ )IC'Ovlnc the w-.i White Rouse 11 San when a llboplloor union lellder ""'" at • Clentellte llllce NillOll bou&ht It In 1169. -..,.,._ aod was fired -be Lui 1!eek, an. a !Urther ll8ltCh of refuoed to.apolosile. JR rocon1, tlllo IJCure was raised to $4!0,30i. On 'l'burtldllJ, General Ser v Ice 1 ' Administration (GSA), the government's housekeeping agency, sai4 a still more extensive audit put the. toJal federal ex· penditure at San CJemente at $703,367 over laur listal years heglnnllig July' 1, 969:- This inclDded only the residence there, not the White House office space. GSA listed for the first Ume the federal e1penditure for imptOvements, equiP"' ment; operatloo and malntenance at the White Ho""' complex at Key Biscayne, Including both n!lidence and office space -$1,lll0,522, spread over ftve fiscal yean beginning July I, 1911. lnclUcled In the Key Biscayne figure ,was ftll,463 for rmtlng two -.1n the complex for the Secret Service aod White tlOUM communkaliorul staff. The White House Sllld one of the,. houlu ls owned by Abplanalp and tho other Js owned in the name of Edwin H. Underwood, trustee for the Indiana Na· • tional Bani<, lndianapoll•. The White House aaid all of lbe. tax- payers' money s~nt In San Clemente and Key: Biscayne was for ~urlty related improvemenb: and thal all work was done at the request of the Secret Service, not the President. The GSA data showed items such as $53,644 in fiscal 1970 for interior security and communications at San Clemente. It also Included 13,303 in fiscal 1970 for golf carts for the Secret Service patrol at Key Biscayne. · TWo'Jears later there appears another item $5,230 for Ulree Secret Service golf ca~ there. Abplanalp, a Bronxv\lle, N . Y . , businessman , who made a fortune perlecting the valve which operates acrosol'spray can>, lent Nllon $62S,OOO In 1969 to help him buy the original 28.9 (See lZ MJUJON •' Page ! I • Clemente Re.ception " ' r Saturday ' Prasident Ni1ori and Soviet Cc:mmUDilt Party secretary LecMlld Brezhnev ano . due to arrln. an the SGuth OrM&O Coaat this evening to begin a . Whir- weekend that jjnliniles to be· W:-lrom the weet'a b-1am11tuP:·· talk.!. Tbe two leaders are elll'ded to - down at the El Toro MCAS at •-tbe SUPERPOWER CHIEFS SIGN PEACE ACCORD-Story, P ... 4 · dinner hour and after a brief night's rest the SU!!.1!11!.t .wi!l ~ IOIDOWbat al a spectacular. On Satuiday plan> call IOI: a major recepllon around the La cau Padllca'• pool with mariachis from San Juan Caplstraoo provldinc the music. And !lie fresldent 'IDl1 .... bani • rew Ilea at the piano. during the al· ' ternoon event. Local IOUlCeS have aaid lhe staff has cunmandeered a llD•ll • · spilmet lo be brwcbt to tbe pool ... -Satunlay. . Also on the -agenda for tbe ---' possibly for Siiturday -will be •.. short flight to Loa "8gela where the I"!' " leaders will t..r the nldblllon al Im· presalonJst printings oo loan to the U.S. bytheSorie!Union. 1be reception Saturday, howwer, will be the major social event. . Hollywood stars, and Ollw VIP· pMW are on the invitation lilt G 150 DUMI. ': '!'bey Include Gov. and Mn. ~ (llee llREZHNEV, Page I) • .------------... -· ·' S mog Brings Auto Warning Motorists were urged toUy to reduce driving to the mtnlmum necessary as smog concentrat\onl in Orange COUnty begnn clbnblnc Iowan! lev91s dan,_,. lo boaHh. A opokesman lor the Oraoae COUnty Air Pollution Cont r o I District said at 9:30 a.m. that lorecuters pndict ""'°' ox-levels wll lrbe to .4 parts por mtl- lloo. 'lbe level of .2 Is COll5ldend dangerous to bealth. The apobsman said the llea>y smog .... •XJ*led --el "stagnant condttlona" tn tbe s.dt Coast Air belln that.· would nit permit smog to lloet out to -, " ·- •> DAILY PILOT s Frldly, Junt 2Z, 1973 -------'"- Play Baclalires: Youth Injured I acre San Clome11te 1>ro1>erty for tl.5 i f 'r a11• P..,e J $2 MILLION ••• U~· JACK Cll.APPE U. • 01 "'" oau, P1101 s1•11 A •·co~ aud robbers" skit at the l..aguna ~.Cb High School all olgh< iraduatio9' p a r t j-endl-4 with tbe shooting of a volunteer entertainer in- jured when a wad from a blank shotgun shell struck hi1n in the head. ' lfal Louis Proppe, 21 . of 1385 SkyUne Drh'c ·was reported in sat lsfac«>ry OOfl. ditlon today at South Coast Community Hospital. tfe v.•as shot with a IO-gauge double barrelled shotgun during a comic skit at 3 a.m. today a t the high school. William :Allen, acting super intendent of the school districl, s..1ld his office was not informed that firearms v.·ere to be used during the traditional high school grad nigflt party. • Laguna Beach police seized the 10- gauge shotgun and ldentllied the !l1All who fired it as Gene Porter t.folway. 22, of 390 3rd Street, Laguna Beach, who was acting as the sheriff during the skit. No arrest was made. Police said the wad from the blank shell passed through a hat worn by Prop- pe and _struck him in the rear of the head. \\'itnesses !Old officers that the in· jured man "'as 20 IG 30 feet from the muzzle of the big bore sMtgun. Officers surmised that more seve re in· UPI Tll ..... to SKYLAB ASTRONAUTS RETURN AFTER LONGEST JOURNEY Apollo Command Ship.Hoisted to Deck of USS Ticonderoga ·Accused 'fu,stin POW Has 'Nothn1g to Hide' A releasea Tustin Marine prisoner of war today refused to comment on charg. es of rii.isconduct brought against him by a fellow POW. Lt. Col. Edison \\lai nright tlililler. 41. issued a brief sla tement-relayed to the press by the information office of Camp Pendleton-where it is believed-1\-liller will be based .. He is presently on "con· valescent leave," a Pendleton spokesman said. . ; A defense department spokesman in \fashin.gton ~nfirf!J~ Thursday that Lt. ' Col. l\Uller and Navy Capt. \Valter E. Wilber, 43, of Columbia Cross Roads, ~a .. had been charged with misconduct ih North Vietna m prison camps by Rear ti,dmiral J ames \1• Stockdale o f · Corooado. ! l\tiller said today. "I have no specific · comment on any charges at this time. I ijave only,recenlly Jea~ed of this iction .and have . no(,...yef hJ4. a, ch~ce tb ~etermine fi~~ctly )'jiar 1 am bclng charged WJU., ~ .. : "I reali~·this i~ «t aeriOu.s matter i.rld it will be a diflidilt tiffie for my family and frlerids ," ~Miller said. Attem~l~1io re~ch hili1 31 his Tus\ID flome thi> ·mo@lnC.Jhrough '<X>Dtllct.. at U1e VoiceJt l#iYl~~ri~>JVIVA) 101· tlce pr~~~· ·~.,_ · :J~ !}f· . A vrv ~ 'Ol'..r.inllitipn sp91tesman said Ws. l\1iJ.ter· \aa'(no comment ·on the vJ>~rges 1'1ti \l'Js lea!(ng. the , Mliier za1dence Wfth;,l.belr five sons, three d Whom are ~l"age and "lillve just iut- fered too mucfi from all of.thls." ' : During Miller's confinement in N<irth Vielnam, be frequently was the subject • <ti news ite~s and was oft en > brought ~fore televts1on cameras as an .es.ample ~( the humane treatment being given OIANGE COAST " DAILY PILOT U.S. servicemen by tbeit North Viet· namese captors. Miller said today~ "I have nothing to hide and have a grea t deal of confidence in my country and its system of justice, both civilian an d mil itary. j;I am-Proud -to be a member o(--the U.S. Ma rine Corps ·and have always con- ducted myself as an American and as a l\'.larine, '' MiUer concluded. Haig Reported ' Violating La,v As Nixon .i\ide WASIIlNGTON (UPI ) -COmptroller General Elmer Staa ts has ruled that Gen. Alexander 1'.f. Haig Jr. is •violating federal law by serving as President Nix- on's staff aide while still on active military duty. Rep. John Moss ([).Calif.) said today he has '>'1ri tten Attorney General Elliot L. Richardson demanding that Haig be ordered to leave the White House. Acting on infonnation supplied by Moss and in answer to Moss's questions about the lega lity of Haig's post, Staats said in a written reply dated June 15 that "it now is our view that a violation of the statute is indicated." Nixon announced May 4 that Haig, a four·star general who is vice chief of_ staff of the Anny, was succeeding H.R. Haldema n. Haldeman resigned as chief of the White House staff after disclosures about his possible role in the Watergate affalr. !\loss originally questi oned Haig's civilian role while Haig still was on ac- tive military duty. The White House then announced Haig would retire from the Army Aug. I. J\loss, in his letter to Richardson, said: "If the present status of General Haig is unlawful, and the comptroller general's letter indicates that it is, we are observ· ing a serious evasion of Jaw by our highest authority." • jury could have been done if the fly ing wad bad hll &l\)'OltAt in the Jae< area. 'lllel!le of the all·nlght party was "49ers and ~ Wild West'' and featurtd a town called Deadwood Gulch. Some 2$0 students were expected to attend, authorities sakl, but lt is uncertain bow many students saw the shoottng. Don Haugflt, high school principal, said he had no knowledge that a "shootout " involving functional firearms w as scheduled at the party. He said the party was directed by pa rents of students, and was not a school fWlCtion. FromP .. el SKYLAB .. • • • ~ Kerwin and Weitz reported some dizziness after sptasbdown and Kerwin infl11ted a pair of pressure pants to keep his blood pressure from ~i.ng to.the p:>ini ;here he might faint. · This temporary effect was expected because of the tendency of astronauts' blood to pool in their legs, away from the brain, as a result -01 heart lazinesa in· duced by Jong expo5ure to the Jack of gravity. Dr. Lawrence Diet1ein, a NASA physi- cian, said the astronauts looked in "quite good" health, "far better from what I personally expected." The spacecraft was hoisted aboard this ship with the pilots stilJ. inside, a switch from past procedures made to keep the astronauts' exertion to a minimum. Medics were ready to carry Conrad.· Kerwin and Weitz on stretchers, if necessary, fi;onl the it scorched ·capsule to the blue mobile medical lalxlratories 65 feet away . . · But the astronauts, smiling and wav- ing, climbed out of the Apollo under their own power. 'Ibey stood oo a wooden plat- farm briefly, chatting with Dr. Charles Ross, the flight surgeon, and then , carefuJiy made their w a y do'>'n some steps and to the special Skylab clinic. Conrad, wM has been iii space more than anyone, appeared the most relaxed. Weitz and especially Kerwin waIXed a lit· tie bowlegged and slightly hunched over. But the fact that they were able to walk as well as they did was s.ignificant. It meant the three Americans were in better shape after s~g 28 days in space tliin two RusSian cosmonauts were at the end Of an la.day fliglit in 1970. They had to be carried ~trom their spacecraft. J The primary objective of the Skylab marathon was to see how well men !are !or long periods of weightJessness and then adjust to the rigors ol gravity back ·on earth. Conrad, Kerwin· and -Weitz were un~ dergoing 10ng and df tailed medical tes ts within an hour after their 6:50 a.m. PDT . splashdown. Doctors said the first results would not be known until late in the day. The fate of two planned ~ay flights aboard Skylab hlnged~oo .the ·ftnalngi of the doctors. 'n>e next launch is scheduled July 27 for Skylab 2 astronauts Alan L, Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. I.oosrna. From Pagel BREZHNEV. •• Re agan , Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Red Skelton and others. On Sunday, the day Brezlmev plans to leave, the President will welcome tbe Skylab astronauts. The ¥tvitation went out today ~o the three space pioneers in a telegram from the President, "l welcome you home from the Skylab space ship 'Earth' and I also look forward to seeing you at San Clemente on Sunday," a portion of the telegram read. Brezhnev's.departure details have not been specilied so far. It is assumed that the staff will give more details of the Russian leader's schedule later this weekend. Such secrecy bas been the rule during Brezhnev's visit. 1 So far no details have been released either on a possible joint address to the people of the \J.S. and USSR by Brezhnev - simila r to that made by the President during his trip to l\.1oscow last year. Contingency plans have been made for such an address from the san Clemente compound, howe ver. Although Brezhnev leaves on SWJday, Nixon will not.· Initial re ports said that the President plans to stay on in San Clemente for a "'eek or more. lll• Of•P'IO• coeu OAlt.Y PILOT, wHn ....;Id> la «1mblnftl "'' Nt>n·Pr1i1, 11 PllD11'11M by f!ll Of".nee C••tl Publlthlr>1 c~nt. ~· r111 eclltion1 trt pUl)tlthtd. Morolt 'f ltlrMh Frlclty, tor eo.11 MeJI, Newport 8t•ch, 1-<tm!lf'lllon fltacll/Fo\11'1111' V11/1y, Ugvri• flM(h, lrYln1/S1dd1.Wc.k Incl S.ft Cllmen!tl '"' Ju1n Clpl1tru10. A tlftf ll rttlDMI td!I~ It puPlltl\111:1 S1Turcl1yt Ind Suncl1vs. fM prl11c:l~I puolhninv Pltftl 11 1t UO w .. t &1v Slrffl, C•ll Mt1t, C.litor,.Jt, t »M. Ovet•eoure by Fear · - . ' Robt •t N, Wied Prftldt nt 1/t/J Publhhtr Jeck R. Curley VICI Ptt11der>I •flod Gtntrtl MIMOtr Tho!Tllt K11~il Edl!O• Thofl)tl A. Murph!"• 11.1 ... 11r.o Eclll'Or Ch•rl1 1 H . Looi Rich1rd P. Nill -"•1t!tnl M1n19liio Edlton Offl<oo COtl• Me.-: uo w111 B•t Strtfl Nt"'Ji0'1 ll'IKl'll ll» -M .... POf'I flOUlf\'ttCI Llf\IM 8ffClll ffl Forni A~"'llf• ~llftllr!pton'&tacti:. IWJ hldl &ol:llfYtrO Slf'I c;.,_l•i JOS Nor111 l!I C.mlno 11:"1 T ........ (7141 64Z.-.JJ1 c ....... ,..,,.. ... 642·5671 ,,..,,. C-ltt Afffl lwlJI • UMIM 19Hll 4tl-MIO ""'"' NIH'lll Or..,.. ~ Qin"""""' ..... , .. Coo¥tll"• 1f11, 0•11'\ft CoMt .... ltlllllt ~: "-...... tlOl'lti, 11111'•~·*"· flfl19rlfl 1'19111tt ., .....,,ltflt""'llt Mrflft ~y M ~ff W""""' '111'(191 ,... ,,.,,...... .. coetftlthf ..,w. lol<Ol'll dtN .,., ... Mii f t (.~I MtM, C.lflornlt , ~lll'lltfl w '''""' 12.U ~ ---It tJ,11 ....,,, IN.II'#¥ •t1IMlllM IJ ... 1119111111'(. ~aguna Woman ~ound Unconscious .in Attack A 19-year~ld Laguna B~ch woman wns sexu11Uy attacked in her Cliff Drive apartment and found unconscious by her roommate early this morning in Laguna ll<och. ~ollce Lt. Robert McMurray said the woman lost consciousness aftdr her blouse was ripped and she was struck and knocked to the Ooor by an assailant. McMu rray said the young victim has no reca U of any events following the blackout and doe! not kno" If she may have been raped. Police listed the crtme as an attempted rape. The woman told officers she was resting In bed listening lo the radio when she heard a knock at the apartment door at about 10:30 p.m. Thursday. She told pallce she was expecting a caller, and -opened the aoor: A man clad in white sbortl or a swim suit entered and told the woman : "I've see n you before, I want· to see more or you," McMurray satd. She rold officers sbe atlmlpted to scream, but, was choked with fear. The man grabbed her blou,., rlpplnc II. Ind struck her tevenl times, McMUITly said. - The would·be rapbt ••-described 11 a man fn>m II to 15 year& of 1&•1 about Jiii pawlds with medium length hatr. I "It was not znanaged or supervlsed by the school itself," Haught said. He ,.Id to 1111 ltnowledge Ute diatrtct does not have a policy regar.dipg presence of firearms on the school grounds. ,,. He said if a gun were brought during ICbool day, It would not be allowed, but, .. that the use of the facilities by an outside group after hours was a different matter. "We don 't regulate except to the extent that something would be harmful to the facilities,'' Raught said, citing prohibition of smoking in the auditoriwn as an ex· ample. School authorities sakl. they were al· tempting to cootacj the parent organiicrs of the party to "find out what had hnp- pened .during the skit. POiice reported the production involved two men being chased by .a sheriff who had shotguns loaded -with blink am· munition. Blank shells have a wad or pla stic or fiber which compresses the powder back agai~t the firing cap, or primer. The wads normally fly some distance \\'he:n the. shells are fired. A IO-gauge shotgun is normally used tor hea vy· bodied !owl such as goose. Plane Sni~ide·. Test Pilots Shoot Down O'wn Craft Pe!NT MUGU (UPI).,-Two civilian. test pilots.flyin g a $20 mil· lion Navy jet fighter shot the aircraft down with one of its oWn n1is· siles, according to the Navy. The Grumman Fl4 Tomcat crash'ed in flames in the Pacific Ocean 'Vednesday about 70 miles southwest of the Naval Air Station here. : TJie crew, Grumman employes, parachuted safely and were picked up from the water by a Nayy helicop~r. · A Navy spokesman said Thursday that while the Ton1cat was test-firing an unarmed Sparrow missile "the missile did not clear the aircraft sufficiently and struck the bottom of the f uselage." Grumman did not make the missile or its firing syste1n. The Navy suspended firing the Sparrow missiles from F14s un- til the cause of the a_ccident is determined. · rJt was the third time since December, 1970, an F14 crashed. Reagan Cites Strength As Guarantee to Peace Gov. Ronald Reagan today put em- phasis on U.S. military and industrial strength rather than treaties~as-the best\ guarantee for pe,ce during a key address to the American Legion at Anaheim Convention ·eenter. "The dust bin of history' is littered with the remains of those countries which relied Qnly on diplomacy to secure their freedom ," the Republican chief executive said. "We must never fOrget -in the final analysis -that it is our military, in- dustrial and econoinic strength that of· fers the best guarantee of peace for America 1n times of danger," he said. 11we dare not. heed the counsel of those who would _risk America's freedom through one-sided-aisartnament pro- posals that our country would carry out honorably, but which the other side. might evade or ignore," Reagan added. "Our fll'St ~ommiJmen! fill!St be lo maintain and nourish in· the hearts arid tbe minds of our y6ung people the love of freedom that you and millions like yqu have el.bibited during times of crisis," he said ' The governor also urged support for his state tax limit-refun4 propasal ex· • pected to be the subject of a statewide election Nov. 6. .. we-must bring goverhment SJ>llnding under control if the wage gains our' peo- ple make are to be real instead of an endless cycle of pay increases followed by higher tax deductions, followed by legitimate demand s for even blgber wages so lhat the people can pay even higher taxes," be said. He said the proposal Woilld "provide ample money for government 's legitimate functions to expand" but in IS years would "leave more than $118 billion in the pockets of the people who ea.med it.•• "If people spend this ~money for their own ~~ thejr J>Wn priorities1 it ')Vilf ... provide 11 massive boost to our economY, it will stimulate investments and jobs and a more stable economic climat~" he, said. ' -. , The constitutional amendment \\'Ould clamp a lid on state spending tied tO a gradually decreasing pe rcCntage or gross personal income and delay imposition of a sales tax increase. Jt would also pro- vide a one-time 20 percent income tax rebate next year and an on-going 7 ~~ per- cent income tax reduction. n1lllio11. ~ In Hl70 Abplannlp bought 23 or thw , acres buck fron1 Nixon for Sl.25 milllpn , , C{lnccllng th e Io a n and leaving Ni.Im : with S.9 acl-es. the house, the enjoyment ; of the other 23 <il:J'tls, and an Inves tment • of hls own of $251,000. _ 'l'hc Whiltl I rouse snid the Ni.ions thcnu1elves pu ld fur $123,$14 in im· proven1ents, 1noking their net Inves tment $3N ,SH. Frun1 tllcSC FiRllJ'CI, the breakdown of v.')lu has what 1nvcshncnt in the San Clcnientc retreat is as follows' -1'hc Nixons: ·$:174,000. " _Abplanalp: $1.25 1nillion .. _ The taxp;.iyers: $703,367 · .. ... •. Marijuana Dogs Hit in Lawst1it ! ANCHORAfi E. Alaska. (AP) -The Alaska chapter of the American °:vii Liberties Un ion has filed a class-action lawsuit seeking to sto p the use of dogs to sniff ·out 1narijuana in lhe baggage of airline travelers. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Anchorage, alleges lha t the use of the dopc·sniffi ng dogs dcpriv~s ci tizens of thei r J>'ourth An1cndmcnt rtghl to be free from "unreasonable intrusion by the government into their privacy.". ' The suit, filed by nttomey Mtchael 14. • Rubinstein and ACLU auomey Robert H. ' \Vagstaf!. is asking the court for an in-· junction agai nst the use of lhe dogs by . state police. Transit Plan Told \VAS~llNGTON !AP) -Los Angeles l\1ayor·elcct Tom Bfa dley said. Thursday the secretary of Tr a n sp or t.a t i on personally assured him of assis.tance in building a n1ass·transit system for his Ci· ty and creating special l;Ugh way lanes for . motorists. Bradley, \\'ho o f f i c i a l 1 y assumes office July I, met wUh Transportation Secretary Claude S. Brinegar and acting Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Robert W. Fri. 2 More Seized l1i Sex Ca-per LONOON (UPI) -Pol ice said today they arrested J'>''O woffien in connection u'llh the Uii'd Lambion sex scandal. ~Both wt>men-were taken-to--New- Scotland Yard and interviewed by dete<.1iYes. a police spokesman said. They were not identified. Police sources said ooe of them is a friend of Norma Levy. the-call girl at the center of the scandal. La1nbton and Earl .Jellicoe - both govehin1cnt minis ters - resigned afte r admitting they were clients o( call girls. Summer Safe Confinue~ LEATHER SOFAS &·CHAIRS ON SALE NOW I Leather and Bran •re natural partners. With quality materials, good design and craftsmanship ••• the result . IS • furniture cl•ssic. Reg. $1320 SALE $999 Reg· $1470 SALE $1099 . Top Grain Glove Solt LHther -Fantastic Value -96" l~ngth. If you're looking for quality, upholstery, dining, bedroom, or occas·10nal f · urntfure1 now is your chance to purchase the finest at' sale prices. Stop in today. 1 , Free, interior d1si9n service 1v1ll1ble OREXEl--HERITA6E-4iENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASlAN INTERIORS WDIOIAYS l SATURDAYS 9:00 to l :JO -FtlDAY "'Tit 9:00 • • NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIFF Dlt . 642-20SO IOptn ,Sund 1y 12-5:)01 LAGUNA BEA!l:H e 34S NORTH COAST HWY IOp1n S1i1nd•y 12·1:lOJ 4t4.6SS I TORRANCE e 2)649 _HAWTHORN& ILVO. JJt.127t . ' -· ' I • At Your Service A Swlday, Wedaelday aad Fdclay Feahart Of Ibo Dolly Pilot Got a probltm1 Thm write Pot Dunn. Pat wilL cut red tape, get the • an.noer1 and action w o u need to ~ l rolve . iMquf... ies 1n gov- ernment and bu.tines1. MaU 11our ~s· tlol'l.T to Pat Dunn/ At Your Service, Orange Coast Doily Pilot, P.O. Bo% 1560, Cosca lfeJ"a, <..'a., 92626. Include uour Uiepho1ie numbtr. Dog Licenses DEAR PAT: I was all set to, mail in my $5 check for this year's license for my dog until I read the instructions on the back of the api)licatlon . 1 noticed-that l'm supposed to include <.. valid' rabies vaccination certificate and I sent mirie in · last year wilh that application. The vac- cination was good for two years aod I can't very well send in a certificate this year if the county already has it. can I just mail In the application and the fee ? K.C., El Toro YIM should have received tbe rabies \la~luUon certificate wllh your last year's dog license receipt. Check yoor recards for"t11.11 oruge and white receipt with tlae rabla vacclDatlon certificate at. tacbed to It. If you can't fiDd the receipt, ask your vetttinarian lo i11ue a· duplicate and send It along wltlt your application. In came yoa can't ob&ala tMI certiftcate btfore die Jane 31 license deadline, sead In the applbtioa_Dd fee, mating a aolatloll tbat yoa wDI provtde a thlpUcate vacelDatloa certificate a1 soon as possi- ble. Europe Wardrobe DEAR PAT: I am planning a European trip and will be staylng abroad for several months. Since I intend to buy clothing during my stay, will I have to pay customs duty even though I have worn the clothing? E.C., Newport Beacb Yes. An article acquired abroed la not ei:empt from duty because of ale· ud wear, acconttn1 t. tbe Los Aagelet Re1klMI Cemm111k1Der of customs. Tbe ~ cascom1 Jaspedor may, however. make aa appropriate redact.to. ID I~ valae tor UH ud Weu'. c-Slft09 Ce11trel" DEAi!' PAT: I have a ~968 car and '!fl"l to know what the schedule is for fit- ting those.special exha.ust ~trol devi~ oG older cars. It teems to me that l read tbe time limit ha! been extended, but I can't remember the new effective date tor this prograin to be required in California. D.C., Costa MW. Tbe AJr Reaowcn Board receatly 1Hpeade4 'tlle _....., requlrlq re!H· IDll of t•71 can "1lb nldet ol ........ <Mlnll devlcel aUI Oct. 1, 1m. 'l'Ws •1peuklm iadtldes ~ ffqlllremeat tbl I device be lutall<d II tlle th!>e of r...i. ud Ille -,-.. "-Ille program for all velaldes, prevtouly tcbedaled lo besio lo l•ly. The ......... w::.:t i.el4 •P becaae the board tomd con- Onmtitn m • diapottic center meartll. ttpert daat tltere ii a correlation between falllty ftCnm advance (u NOi: coatrll method) ud valved ete r I or at lo n . Tbertfon:, more time la btlntt allowed to evalute Ibo devlcet. D•"llglat Salling DEAR PAT: I thought Daylight Sa•· in gs time was the law in this country, yet I know some :itatcs are exempt from tbe time change. What government depart- ment oversees and controls Daylight Sav- ings Tl.me and what current laws are in effect? K·G., H•DllDP>o Beo<b Under tbe Ualferm 11me Ad, w~ became effeeUve la 1117, all 1ta&el, tM Dl8trlct of Columbia ud U.S. poneulOM llqlnalag 11 l o,JD ... Ille lul Suday Ill April ud ending at l II.Ill. M Ille 11111 Suclay ID October. Aoy state, by lep latlve actlo1, can es.empt · tlaelf from the law; Hawaii dkl so bl 1117, Arbon• la a 1168, Mlcblg•n in INI, and Indiana II 1'11. 'l'he 1172 ameDdmeilt to tbe Un~ form nme Act ••tllorlxes states split by time 10ne1 to take tbat Into consider- ation 1111 exe mpU11 tllem1elve1. As • reMult, Indiana's exemption law applies only io it.e eastern portion of Its atate. The Dtplirtmcat or Transportation, which oversee• tbt act, h a 1 modified dwnlc t111e llist tliree years some boan- darte1 tn Iadlau, Mkltlgu, Uta, North Dakota, Nebraska, Kan111, Oregon ud Tex1l1 dae to local prob'e.mt. . Tough 'Brothel Law for Vegas? LAS VEGAS (AP) -A propooed ordinance ' mandating jail sentences for persilns C<l!lVlc;tcd ol sollclling , or ac· ceptlng an act of prootllutlon h8' be<n In· tnxtuced be!ore· the Clark Coonty eom- mtssioo here. The. touah btll wa• Pros-I last -k by Dist. Atty. Roy Woofter and brought beforo 11),C commission· Wednesday by 8'81. Dist. A~y. Charlea Thompoon, who sn ld crtme elsoctated with prostitution ha& reached "dlsaslrout proportions" in Las Vegas. DtU'f Piiot Sl•tl Pholo Friday , J~nt 22, llf7J s D~JLY. PILOT :J Pot Charges 35 • Ill Nixon''s Guard· Accused . . ~. ~ •• WASHINGTON (AP) -Thlrty·five members of the Naval Ceremonial Guard, including 13 men who took part in f\.ionday's White House ce r emo n y welcoming Soviet leader Leonid I. Brezhnev, have been transferred because Bal Pavilion • Spot~ghted On Sunda'' • . ' Hete•s a quick look at what editors ex" pect to be "Sunday's Best" in the Daily Pilot: ... or alleged marijuana use, a Pentagon •• spokesman said today. l·j· The incident marks the third time in :,. • t'vo months that Navy men assigned Jobs f. near President Nixon have been hr ·.,· vestigated k>r ma rijuana use. 'i; The Naval Ceremonial Guard consists of 137 men whose duties include •, ·'-.. participati on in state functions, funeritlll and parades . The sailors have been transferred 1 to . other duties within the Naval District ot-;i \Vashington while an investlgaticm ~ tinues, a Pentagon spoke$man !Al~ day. Two other sailors assigned. \0 Jhe district but not in' the ceremonial ti' · :~~. were i"'.1'Ucated, lhe ~, Good Vantage Point PAVIJ,.ION PAST -The 68-year-old Balboa PAVillon has been renovated and expanded so it seems an appropriate time to look back on the glory years of On May a the Navy disclooed t!tal 21 Marines and 18 sailors asslped tQ.. the presidential retreat-at <;amp DaVI( Md were' reassigned pending an invesUpt,lon : into charges that some: were. snioldng" , marijuan·a. On May 25, lhe Navy said 12 ~· assigned to -the unit 1.hat controls Preli-- dent Nixon's yacht, ~ Sequoia, were? transferred after aame of them •. were;.;: discovered smoking martjoana. ::: An unoccupied lifeguard tower in Laguna Beach provided a good spot for these three mini-maidens to keep an eye on beach activities while soaking up the sun. And there was plenty of sun. The first day of summer Thursday wasn't a usual mild June day. High pressure desert air 'masses dominated the cooling coastal air, sending more thousands than usual to the beaches. · the Balboa Hop ·and the little red cars. Photos from eC1 rly 1900s will acoompany this nostalgia piece . In a related incident, four ~:: assigned to guard the Camp Davi~ retreat have been arrested on charpl of;'.! drag racing on a state ~way at 'lbur-'°:: moot, Md., state 1J91ke s8ld. ;): ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Bank Heist Note Revealed MORE HJSTORY IN PHOTOS -Staff \Vriter Hilary Kaye presents a 13-year- (Sunday's Best) Troopers ""Id i&y afre.tecl ~ R. ; Brown, Rlchard L. P'rosblesar, Carl~· Daniel and Erwin s. Hale 'l'bunda71111ht-! after receiving a citizen's ~ &ha¢: two cars were racffig on MarylaDd~ l50~: outside Thurmont, which .la 'lls. mil~ .. from Camp David. , : .::: Defendant Worried Frierul Miglit Leak Crime to FBI -old COsta Mesa boy's story in "History in the Darkroom" feature about his passion for priiitJ.ng old nega tives. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL Of !"-O.lly Plklt Stiff • A prison note released by investigators o! the $6 million Laguna Niguel bank burglary shows one defendant in the case was worried that a friend might spill the story about the crime to the FBI. The note wa s \\.Titten by Harold Diwson, an auto assembly line worker · from Lord,5town, Ohio. fie v.•as convicted last week-by a-federal jury_ of attempting to orfer a $25,000 bribe to a key pros· ecutio~witness in an earlier trial. Dawson passed the note to James Dinsio, an Ohio man convicted of con· spiracy and grand 1aiceoy in the $6 million crime, while the l\VO men v.•ere imprisoned at Los Angeles County Jail. lo the note, Dawson expresses concern . -* ·* * Second Burglary . . QI-Ba.nk PlaJllled "· For San Diego? Federal investigators believe plans for a second West Coast bank burglary had been laid out by the gan& v.•hicti_ last year looted United California Bank's Monarch Bay Branch of $6 mill ion. According to investigators, the con- v~ted chieftian of the Laguna Niguel crime, Amil Dinsio, and his nephew, Har- ry Barber, traveled to San D.lego Q.n March ZT, 1972, the day the wo rld 's largest bank burglary wns discovered. Said ooe '"SOW'Ce close to the case, "Preswnably they were down there plan-- ning for a second burglary." Both men returned to Los Angel es and returned to their home state of Ohio on March Z9 of last year, according to testimony during ti:.! trial which led to Dinsio's conviction. While in San Diego. Dinsic and Barber talked with real estate agents about rent- ing a house as a base or operations, one source ueerted. The-second piece or evidence that sup-.Porta tbi theory ol a second burglary is that a 1961 Oldsmobile }oeded with cut· ting torches, glove!, hammers and other tools was left at the Tustin residence of Earl Dawsoo, 15672 Pacific Dri ve. Da.WBOD is a )ong~time friend of coo- victed burglar Charles A. Mulligan. "Why would they leave the car. full or IDOis, out he.re if they didn't have something else in mind?" queried one in- vestigator. Plans for the second west coast job probably were aborted late in May when Mulligan, suspecting the FBI was on his t8il, came to California from Ohio to ditch the car. .. Dawson testified .that Mulligan \V3S nervous and said he was being followed. Mulligan's fears were realized when he walked into the hands of FBI agents who had enlisted Dawson to help them trap him. lnv"Ugators following the c a s e 'speculated th'at a second job In California couldn't have occurred until after May 5. 1972 -the d11te the team. again allegedly led by Dinsio. made off with $430,000 • from tbe Lordstown, Ohio. brMCh of the Second National Bank of Warren. Dinsio will stand trial in Oh.io in September on those charges. Another man conv.lcted of !he Laguna Niguel crime, PhHip Bruce Christopher, originally was Indicted in connection with Lbe Lordstown job, but those · charges have been dismissed. Mafia Boss Seized • ROME (UPI ! -Police Ioday arrested .. Frank '"lbree Flnger1'1 Coppola , onetime reputed Mana J>oss of Kllllsa• City, 'on charges ol engineering an · awnlnatlon attempt against a high police ometal. A police spokesman said officers arrested Coppola, 73, at his comrortllble honle in suburbon P01110i la •nd took him to Rome's Regina Cocll (QU<011 of Heaven) prison. do \Vilh it, just like Earl," Dawson wrote. ")that Dale Z\vick, an Ohio tavern owner v"ho alh!gedly helped in the bribe at· tempt, might give names and details about the burglary tQ. investigators. Earl Js the brother of Harold Dawson and target of the $25,000 bribe to change his testimony about a conversation in which Mulligan Confessed to his role in the \vorld 's largest bank burglary. LIFE _JN JATL -Several organi~ tions, including the Orange County Grand Jury, are looking into conditions, treat- ment of prisoners and training of guards at the Orange County Jail. Story will be .told by Staff Writer John Zaller in YOU Section. The ro~ were charged with violation or:.: various state traffic laws . and released • pending a July 17 trial, tl'oopers added .. 1 "I can't help it1 but I don't trust Dale," Da\vson wrote . "Tell the godfather he will never have to vl'orry about me," Dawson added. Investigators said they are not certain just \\otlo the "godfatberv is. But. they added , the title may refer to Vincent added, the title may refer to ano:t.her Ohio man . Amil Dinsio was con- victed last y e a r of the $& million Cleveland area. "Have him (the godfather) get a hold of Dale !' the note states. . According to investigators, James Dinsio received the note and was going lo show .. it to his sister, Viola Dinsio Barber. \\'ho would in turn. relay the message lo "the godfather.", .. The nole begins with a statement by Dawson that"the FBI was ~re to see· me ag<!in_,_ ~W.8J1t me to go in.front o the grand jury re: the godfather.'' ''They (the FBI) know I had not~ing to "They asked me if I know the welder's name that \\·orks 1for James Dinsio in Youngstown. 1 sat there and said nothing, that· I don1t know who or what they're ta.lkigg a12Qut," the DO~ st_ated. He added that FBI ageQ!s told him to give them "a call" if he changed his mind. In the note, D!wson said FBI a"gents v.•anted to know Zwick's role in the bribe attempt. . The note states that James Dinsio paid Dawson 3nd Zwick's fare to Los Angeles in January to offer the bribe. It also ~tales that Dawson was to receive interest in an Ohio tavern for carrying out the bribe attempt. D.iwson faces sentencing June 29 fo r his-eoovictioo....on charges of attempting to bribe a witness.-The-maximum sen- tence iS 15' yeftrs: lmpri!IOOment and a !20,000 fine. WHAT GASOLINE SHORTAGE? - Barry Goldwater says it's time to let the world know that Congress intends to Clo eve rything in its pov.1er to expedite con- struction of the trans-Alaska pipeline over the fastest and most economical route. This Y..-ould serve notice on foreign countries that we won't pay "bla.ckmail" prices for petroleum products, he sug- gests-in Sunday's Column. LOOKJNG BACK, SORT OF -She may be 74, and admit it, but Lillian Haughton, dancer, teacher and yoga practitioner, doesn't spend much time looking back - she's too busy in the here and now. Feature. story by Staff Writer Allisoh Deerr, illustrated by Staff Photographer Lee Payne, spotlights Women's Page. Doctor Indicted On 'Speed' Rap LOS ANGELES (AP) -A federal grand jury has indicted·a Woodland Hills physiciaa on charges of conspiring to furnish "speed", a dangerous drug, to female employes of a H o l 1 y u• o o d massage parlor. Dr~ Harry F. Larson, SI, and Donald Carpenter, 39, fonner openitor ot the message parlor, were named· Thursday in the conspiracy _count. Larson-is accused "'of supplying : Carpenter • with prescrlP,Uons lo r j ' . methamphetamine. Johnson & Son . 20th Anniversary Clyde MARK IV . • • • • LINCOLN CO NT INENTAL MERCURY MARQUIS . . MERCURY MONTEGO . . . MERCURY COUGAR .•. Big Savings! Big Savings! Big Savings! Big Savings ! Big Savings !- Dick ' MERCURY COMET • • • B. s . ' 1g avmgs. NOD Sn Our Big Ad In The Pllot'1 Classified Section "fomorrow With Anniversary Specials On All Our Usod Cars As Well. MERCURY CAPRI • • Big Savings! EVERY CAR IN STOCK BIG slvINGS • • • ' ' • • • • Home Of The New Car , " "Golden '.1'..,cJa.'• ' . ·ENTIRE ·MONTH OF JUNE • • • "OranO't' Count~'' ran1ilv of Fint Cari" ohnson&son Home or The Naw Ca r • • • "Golde" '.l'o,.cla" 2129 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA • 6'40·5830 ' • J O!~LV PILOT . ·" ·~ Two Pilot·s, One From Tustin~: • ' Charged in ActiOns as POWs I POWs. Tile accusations by liuy aM Stockdale 11re made as lndlVldual ~crvicemen c:hnrging· other lndividua.I se:rvlct>men under the military oode d justice. Y.'ASHINGTON CAP) -Tu·o fighter pilots have been fonnally accused of misconduct for actions during their YJ!:ars in North Vietnamese prisoner oC "'ar <-amps, Pentagon SO!Jrce5 tia...-e disdQMQr. They are the first officers to face· such charges, which "'ere brought by Rear -Adm. James B. Stockdale, ol Coronado. • SlOCkdale, a captain as a PO\\I. "'as pro- moted aller he returned home. Ul'I T.....,_lt lJnwmited Chicago Patrolntan Joh n Raetzman holds an hou rs-old infa nt he and his partner fou nd in a garbage ca'n in an alley on Chicago's west side. Doci<>rs said jt was one hour old when found and is in excellent con- dition. It ""i ll be put up for adoption if no parents are found . - ·-Hike for Aged 5.5% Benefit Increase Likely \\'ASHJ NGTON 1AP1 -The Senate Finance Committee has voted a 5 5 per- cent cost-of-Jiving increase for 28 1ni!Uon Social SC:'curitv benefi ciaries. effective ·next January . 0lndica1ion.s v.·erc th;H both the Senate and ~louse would acc.-cpt 11. The panel decided on an 11-to-2 roll call Thursday to add the provision to a debt li mit extension bill. even though Nixon ~administration officials bad objected to it. Comm iuec Chairman Sen. Russell B. Long (I>-La.J said he was certain the Senate would approve the rider when it acts on the bill next 11i·eck. A~I) rr \\AS !earned tha1 House Martita Clai111s Mitcliell Retu/y To Protect Nixo 11 \\'ASH IN(;TO,'I I UPI I :\larth;s !\1itchell said ·today her husband John Mitchell 11·ould '·go to jai l for 1\ichard '.'Jixon.'' - • Democratic )!aders were prepa red to get their branch to nccept it "'hen the debt li mit mc'asu re goes to conference. Th~ I-louse already has passed the bill. Long said the pnce of inflatioo has been so great sinct the last Social Securi· ty boost in October 1972 that Congress has no alternat ive but to gi\·e some relief to .. these poor people "'ho arc the bigges1 victims of inn_ation." The debt limit bill was chosen as the vehicte for the rider since the President must act on it by June 30. SECRET ARY OF the Treasury George P. ShWtz told the rommittee Thursday that Nixdo might have to veto the measure if it contained cost ly riders. But Long countered that Nixon ahvays had supported cost-of-li\•ing adjustments in Social Security. ··r don't see why he would v~ a bill that carries out "'hat he himself has ad· Voca ted." Long said. Present la\v provides for a cost-of-liv- lng adjustment but it would not take ef- fect until J anuary 1975. The Senate commit.tee also added to the bill increases in pay ments for such adult \Velfare ca tegories as the aged. blind and • disabled. ··ue·s protecting' the President of the-, THE FINA~CA._Commitlee ·provision t:nitcd States,., she declared in an early \\'OU Id raise minimum payments from 1norning telephone conversation .·· '130_ monthly to SI40 for a single person, ~!rs. ~titche!I said she harl a number of and from 5195 to S210 for a coup le. ·reasons·· to Cxpress !hose views bu t she The Social Securit\' hi kes "'ould cost declined to be specific. $2.i5 billion over a rUH vear. the 11i·elfare ··1 don"! know whv. but may be H"s increases $500 million . · ~ca use he had _So_,m.uch f~ilh in Nixon. The bill contains fl() increase in payroll (Ven after_ all this, s~ said. . . tasi:s to pay for the h.igher bene fits .. Long "' ~l~s. ~11tch.ell dec!1ned to say ...JLom-.. llid there were ampl e amounts i11.the hcie she "~ ca lling. Thursday, s_he Socia! Sc>~u.·1;y trust fund to µay the $2.75 11>as seen l~VUIJ ~r New York Cit y billic;,1 for on<!" venr. apartment house v.·1th tra vel luggage. · :\litchell apparently stayed behind. ~------------~ 1\~ to how her husband is bearing up after bei ng implicated in the \Yatcrgate ,candal. ~!rs. ~1ilche!l said, "l le's a hu rt persun. i\1y husband had more integrity on \r:iu Street than anyone else. He feels Pveryl>ody's got !heir tall bct~een their legs <111d is running no11•. ,. SHE S1\JD lfER husband tu1d lost a "ht'llu 1 <1 lot of 11i•eig hl." She once again sa id she v.·ould be ""l>erfrctly \.l'iliing" to testify before the \\latergate invesligaling. committee, but .idrle<l · 1he~· don"t \\•ant me ." . !\!rs.·. ~fit Chell said that "anyone 1\•ho .... a~s Hl\" husband 1\•as fired" from the Co1nm i11ee 10 Re-e.lect the President is \.I rong. 1!1• q u i I because or me:· sht· ~aJtf DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Otlrvtry of t ht Oaily Pilot 11 yu~rantttd Moft~···"•·O••· II you 00 ftOI ft•VI Y•U• pi per OJ J:JO p.M" <•II llHI fe11 r <OPJ •Ill I • lt0119M le JfW. Cllll l t1 lf-lft llft!ll I .JO '·"'" Sa!ut<Uy •ft1t S11nG•y: II 1•11 .. 1111 rt<•l•t YMlr (OllJ OJ t 1.m. Sl!urll•f, or t 1.m. SunlllY, <•II ••·II • c•Pr wl" Dot 1ro119M l<I )Ill, (•II• at• titl ft Uftlol IG •.m. T tltPhOMtS "'-tit Ot•ft't~ CO<lnlf .l•t•• "'"h'"t" H11ftll.,9!tn lliCh •nd W••lmm•ttt S•~ c11 ......... C•pi1lriM •••<~. S•n Ju•n Ci Plll••M, D•n• ..._,,,,, \1111~ L._, ...... L19un• H'9wl Fated Plane's Pilot 'New To Airport' PUERTO VALLARTA. Mexico (UPI ) -"Control to~·er officials at the Pue rto Valla rta airport said tOOay the fiery crash of a h.ierican OC9 that killed 'El prrsons may have been caused by the. pilo1's lack of familiarity with the jagged terraih near the airport. "Although the pilot "'as a veteran. he "'as not famil iar v.'ith 1his route.'" a SjX"lkesman said. "ntis is an area ""e call 'hardly practical' for landing.'' The pilot had radioed he was setting do\\TI for a landing "tien the plane slam med into a 3.~foot peak only minutes from a,safe landing. The Aeromexko DC9 cra3bed 20 miles south of·here Wednesday night Whi le pre- paring to make an intennediate stop be- '"·een Hou~on and Mexico City. All 23 passengers. including 14 American and four Cr"e\41'Dembe" -.yere killed. OFFICIALS DE~i:En rumors or ,an in- flight i xplosion. !'There ~·as an explosion \\"hen the f>Jane'hit and the light reflected in the sky," Vera said. "Preliininary in· vestigations showed that the pilot mis- judged hi s altitude. He should have made a bank turn 18 kilometers (U milesJ earlier." The ptani; crashed in10 a mountainside at an altitµde of more than 3,000 feet abo\."e sea level Vera said it appeared it slanvned directly into the mountain. The plasti c·'A-Tapped bodies of the 27 \•ictims \\'ere y,• a i t i n g identification before being shipped to Mex.ico City t<>- dav. 9 me ol them are unidentifiable, .. police spokesman Ricardo Vera told UPI. "They are just pieces of bodies.·· "The bodies and the "Tt(kage oC the plane were spread out over an area 100 meters by 50 meters," he said. "The bodies were taken do\\'R on the .backs of mules, and then shipped here in am· bulances." Salvage operations on the remote mOuntainside went on all day Thursday, hampered by heavy fog and jagged peaks that prevented effective coope ration from helicopter units. Federal air authorities sent accident expe rts to begin an investigation. 2nd Cease-fire's 1st Week Ends; Violations F e'v SAIGON (UPI) - Vietnam's second cease-fire ended its fi rst Week todav with alleged Communist truce · violatiOns at !heir lowest point in a mon th. The 5aigon command "repOrted 57 Com- munist-initiated incid ents in the 24 hours l'nding at 6 a.m. loday, the fewest since 51 \1•cre reported May 24. The four-party Paris communique to reinforce the cease-fi re took effect a 1reck ago today and Commuriist truce in· fractions alleged by Saigon h a \' e dimini shed steadilv since then. Jn the latest irlcidents, however, the command said five peasants -including t1ro children -"-ere killed Thursday in 1 1~·0 land-mine explosions in Quang Nam Province 350 miles norlh of Saigon. Fair Weather Holds Sway ' 1'/111nder.~lio1vers Jl1a r Pfl tt,ern on Gulf, Ellst Coasts . 1'e1r111crt1t11 re ... " " " r, f: ,, " ., " " " rf I h rcoaatal s-11mmorv 011d tldol data OJ>PMr today 011 Page ZO.J The t\•:o men are Navy capt. Walter E. Wilber. 43, of Columbia Cross Roads, Pa.. and Atarine U . Col. F.dison \\'alnright ~tiller. 41, of Tu.run. In Tustin, Miller said, "t don't know anything about it except what I've heard on the nev.·s, so it ~-ould not be ap. propriate to say anything at this time." WILBER WAS the executive olficer of a squadron of Phantom Fi fighter planes "'ben be "'as sh9t down CTVer ..North Vjet· nam Jwte 16, 1968. !\fill er's ~larine F4 Phantom ~·ent do"'n over North Vietnam Oct. 13, 1967. · fhC sources said Tuura:!.iYtli'i Stock.dale mailed the formal charges to . Na \'Y Secretary John \\lamer. Details of Stocltdale's accllsatioos Were n o t available. ~tacted at his borne. Stockdale said. '"I am not at liberty at this point to coo· (inn or deny tha l I have fi led -those charges. I. .. will not be able to talk about· it until I am &utbcniz.ed by the DOP (Department of Defense) to do so •.• You must Wlde.,und that no comment can be made in these cases until the men charged are advised." • • "MRS. DONALD Kolarik or CLin tOn. lov.·a, mother of Miller, said her 900 told her Wednesday tllat charges were being brought against hUn. She· said he did not know what specific charges would be made. On May 29, eight enlisted men were fonnall)\ charged by Air Force CoL Theodore Guy ol miscondu<.'t during the ir years of imprisonment. 1be eigflt men, all foo t soldiers cap- tured in South ·Vietnam. have denied any improper activities. Under a policy set out by former Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. the Pentagon is making ·no formal charges against any of the 566 returned THERE IS A good chllnc< many al the Charges ma y be dro'pped: Each of the mili tary service secretaries must oon- sider the evidence brought.. by Guy and Stockdale and decide_ If court5-martlal v.•ill be convened. i \\lil bcr has acknowledged malllg an- tiwa r statc1nents while in captivity. "I found out 1\•hcn I had time to think about · n1yself . where I was . what we ,v.·ere 1 rloing. I rou nd out that my con.SClence , bolhered n1e," he said in a recent in-j tcrview. ~ A Navy man .since ~968., Wilber is mar· J ried and has three SOOS and a daughter. ~liller ,a Marine-since 1949, is also mar- ried and J1as five sons. Powers Sign Peace Accords;1 \\1ASHINGTON tAP ) -The leaders of the ,~·orld"s t\\"O nuclear superpo\\·ers ~ged in a landrpark agreement today 10 regulate their relations in a way to reduce the risk or nuclear "'ar. President Nixon and Soviet Communist .Party Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev reached the accord in the fifth day of. their summjt talks and prepared to sign it at the \Vh ite House before heading on 10 Cali.fomia "'here they v.·ill coocludc their meetings on Swiday. In addition to its application to U.S.- Sovi et relations. th~ agreement applies also to th e relations of either party "i th other countries. In this •Nay, although technically bilateral, the agrrement has multilateral implications. THE T\\'O _LE..\DERS declared in the agreement that the...-"·ere '"conscious that nuclear ~·ar ""·qJild ha ve devastating consequences for mankind" and said they 'tl·ant OO ··to bring about conditic:is u1 "hi ch the danger of an outhr~ak of nuclear ~·a.r anywhere in the world "·ould be .reduced and Wtimately eliminated.·: They pledged their ('OW1t ries to ""act in such a \\'ay as to pre,·ent the dc1·elop- ment of situations ('a pable of causing a dangerous exacerbation of thei r rela- tions , as to avoid n1ilitary confrontations. and as to exclude the outbreak of nuclea r \\'ar between them and betw~n either of the parties and other coun"tries." Nixon and, Brezhnev also agreed that their countri('S •·y,·iJl refrain fron1 tht· threat or· the-use of foree against the other party, ·against the allies of the other party and against o!her rounlries. ih circumstances \\'hich may endanger international peace and se<.·urity." AT A .NE\\'S con (erence prior to the formal signing. presfd~nt!al assistant Henry A. Kissinger skirted queslicns on MARIGOLDS • 11i·helher this clause \\-'Quid forbid U.S. · bombing of Cambodi!l or . v.'OU~d ~~ , prevented the Sovtet 1nvaslOll 0 r C1.echoslovaki.11.. · _. Kissinger noted. hov.·ever, that U.S. m strikes against Communist forces in Cambodia 11i·ere under way at the time the agreement was being negotiated and that the bombing ··.,.,·as not raised as ap- pl}'ing 10 that particular situation.'' \Vhe>n a ne1vsm;in <1sked "'hether the ag rec111ent \\"Quid forestall any Soviet ac- lion agai.nst Chi na, Ki ssinger responded 1hat the accord was •·not conceived as pro tection for any country'' but added it 11·ould ··have tilt" practical consequence of :1pplying 10 the situation you deteribld." U.S. Al~LI ES in Eu rope have expressed reservations in the past 'about any :1grcen1l•11ts y,·hicl1 "·ould restrict lhelr use of A1neric.1n-supplied n u c I e ar 1~·eapons in the event of a massive, ~ ventional So\·iet attack. OPEN 7 DAYS GERM~INS PLANTER BOX ' 2' l0nt 8" wJcfe 5.50 val. 299 Marque rites 99' Y1ll ow I Wliite R19. l.~9. Mvstery Gardenia 99' D1lic1l1 doublt 91rdenit wltli d1li9htful Ir•· 9r1nce. R•9. 1.98 Mexican Pottery· 49¢ Wt hi¥t 1 l1r91 1tltctioft. A!I •h•p11 •nd 1i11 ~. Pric1t from Hanging Baskets $3.98 Ouh ltncl iftf F11chti11, be•utiful B19o"itt, l11ciou1 Crttpi"9 Ch1rli1. R.19. 7.95 "•lut . Petunias 39¢ 6 Ptck pony p•c. lltg. 7'1 ¢. Sun Fern 79f; Good for h1n9i119 b•tk•h. Gro1111d C0¥1 r - Pit"! i11 Suft or Sh1dt. lltg. 1.91 A11apanthus 99' Clu1ltr1 of brilli111t blut flowtr1 • foli191 •ltTiC · *'"• v1•r rou"d. R.t 9. 1.98 "'lut, REDWOOD SOIL IMPROVER Loosens compact- ed soil. Counter- acts alk•linity. Ni. tfo9en fortifi11d . larp 4 C!l ft. IMt , ... SlAt N<h NOW 2123 NEWl'ORT BLVD., COSTA MESA Dally 7:30 lo 6 Sunday 8 lo 5:30 (Corner of Nt WPo,,, and Victoria) ' Palla NurHry 642'41Dl ~s • • I d f' 0 3 d r ' l ' Motorist Kills LA Lawman VAN NUY~ (AP) -An in- tensive manhunt was un. der way today for a motorist who shot and killed a Loa Angeles police officer after he was stopped for a routine traf· fie violation in this Los Angeles suburb. Detectives said motorcycle office:r Charles C. Caraceillo, 35, a 14-year veteran of the department, was killed in· ( __ B_RI_EF_S _) stantly Thursday ni8ht with at · , least one gunshot wound in the • Uf'I ,....,.._ chest. They said the motorist p • K t drove awa y arte; the shooting. rmnise ep Authorities reported at l'east four shots were fired at .Tuditb, (left) and Ruth Leonardini, 18, of La Paz, Caraccillo, a l4-year police Bolivia, get a welcome hug from Pinocchio as the two veteran, as he Walked toward girls visited Disneyland Thursdar. The girls will the motorist after parking his study at B..righam YoQng Univers~ty after a prom- motor~ycle. The officer, ise from President Nixon 18 years ago of a college though mortally wounded , education in the United Slates. Nixon. was Vice- fired three shots at his President at. the·time. assailant but all reportedly ---------------------- went wild. e Sunshine Blaze Contained By Fire Fighters Censw·e ·of Fonda Rejected I LOS ANGELES (AP) -A City Council committee has turned down a resolution that would have condemned ac- tress Jane Fonda for remarks she made about American CALIFORNIA Friday, Junr 22, __:1__:9l:_:l:_ ________ ::.OAc:t::.L_V_P.ctL'-'0-T_,. Hell's Angels' Girl Held SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -who was arrested in San Jose 2 with Miss Walton In ... 111e glt-lfrlend ol Hell'.s Angels Thursday, with distributing Cruhlke's presence &o .., leader Ralph "Sonny" Barger drugs and conspiracy. aeingbOWlt ouncetce andof thaherolnt 5,'%!: has been arrested and at· All aflldaVit filed hY a · -- raigned on federal narcotics fedt:r.111 narcotics agent alleges later gave the informant ,. charges. that an agent Md informer grams of a •hlte JX*dlr Sharon Gruhlke, 23, a made arrangements last Aug. which contained heroin. former Livermore b e a u I Y "ij~--~---~----~iijjjiiiijjiijjjiiiijjii queen, was arratgned Thur!·I: THE FINEST IN ENTERTAINMENT POWs. "--------"" day before U.S. Magistrate Richard Goldsmith wbo set bail at $15,000. l ie also a~ pointed a federal P u b I i c Defender to represcnl her and set July 2 for a preliminary THE THE COUNCll.'S a t a t e , county and federal affairs committee voted Thursday to kill a resolution by Coun· cilman Arthur K. Snyder that accused the film star of characterizing returned POWs as liars, hypocrites-a n d pawns. Miss Fonda spoke to the . committee and said h e r statements about POWs had been directed against the ''hand-picked few who participate in pre11s con- ferences." A spokesman for t he ~ American Civil Liberties Union said such a censure would be unconstitutional and added that the council "had no right to intrude on anybody's beliefs." Long Hair Measure Gets Okay hearing. A FEDERAL complaint alleged that she did ''know- ingly and unlawfully distribute and conspire to distribute ·about eight ounces or a substance containing heroin." Miss Gruhlke told the judge she was placed on two years' probation-March -23-i-n Alameda County after being SACRAM~NTO (UPT) -A found guilty or possession of bill prohibiting restauran~ amphetamines. and o t h e r state-licensed Barger ts serving a · t minimum 10 years' sentence businesses from refusing . o in state pri~on for conviction~ serve long-haired customers on narcotics. \tpapan.s and was approved, 48-11, without forced impr isonment charges. debate Thursday by t l'I e THE FEDEltAL complaint BENNETT BROS. Now Appearing Every Thyr5d1y -Friday & Saturday Nit• at PIGGY'S FIRESIDE LOUNGE in HUNTINGTON LANES 19582 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach1 A Topnotch Show With A Las Veg•• Flair --BEFORE THE SHOW'---, Enjoy A Champagne Dinner For 2 TOP SIRLOIN DINNER wltl. CHAMP~NE 6.95 California Assembly. also charges Bert Santuel Assemblyman John ~ . 1 _~s~te~fa;nso~n;·~n~o~w~i~n~s~t~a~t~c~!=~=!~:!:~!!::!~~; Burton {D-San Francisco), custody, and Ani ta Walton, ~°'='" authored I the measure after the fashionable Clift Hotel-·in his hometown refused to serve SNYDER DENIED a charge by the ACLU the resolufion him because of hiS modishly was an attempt to censor Miss long hair. Gov. Ronald Reagan Fonda's First Amendment has said he opposes the bill ri8;hts of free speech. even though his son, Skipper. The committee also retom-14, who has shoulder length mended that the council refuse hair, couldn't join t h e to entertain such motions of governor and his wife for din- JOIN US THIS WEEKEND O. C. Fair Queen Contest Sunday, noon South Coast ?lua J , • • • • • ' • • SACRAMENTO (AP) -The 1973 "Wilson Sunshine Act", - which allows two hours or Daylight Saving Time instead of one -has been sent to the Senate despite protests that children refuse to go to bed until dark. Thursday, the bill's author, Assemblyman Bob Wilson ()). San Diego), said that wide-- awake children ~nd outdoor movies nothwithstanding, the extra two hours of daylight would be advantageous. By 'Ille Associated Press Soot-smeared fire fighters today contained the year's first major California brush fire and continued to battle a newer blare in the Sequoia Na- tional Forest timber country. worsened through the night in 1_;co::;nde=:'.'.m'.'.'.n:'.:at:'.:lo:n:_:i:;n~th.'.'.e'..:f:'.'.u.'.'.tur".:e:;· _ __'"'.'.'"..'_'.""..' ~th'.'.e~C:'.:t'.'.if::_t. ____ __1_ _____________ --::-___ -=:-_____________ _ the Sequoia National Forest. Stately stands of fir were burning and a Kem County Fire Department official said some 2,500 acres had been blackened by the blaze. Fire fi ghting conditions w e r e worsened by low humidity and high temperatures. e Secret Arm" SAN DIEGO (AP) -A man described by prosecutors as former state coordinator of the paramilitary Secret Army Organization has been placed on three )'ears' probation aJter pleading , gullty to possessing flammable materials. Je:rry Lynn Davis, 31. of Lemon Grove was released from jail Thursday and put on probation by Superior Court Judge Franklin B. Orfield. Davis bad spent more: than 90 days in jail awaiting ~ tenciol. eottA9ah1 LOS 'ANGELES _(UP!) Sam Yorty, who took a lol of kidding during his 11 years as mayor about ·hls penchant for , travel, will spend the last eight days or his lcnn on an ocean cruise to Alaska. -Yorty, defeated last month by city councilman Tom Bradley, slipped out of city ball unnoticed Thursday. Arf" assistant said he left word Ile would not be back. Yorty and his wife were scheduled to leave today on the Spirit of London for the voyage to Alaska. The ship won't be back unUI July 6, merutlng Yorty will miss Bradley's in- auguration. e Vnion SI rife INDIO (AP) Two Teamsters Un.ion organizers were charged with kidnap and assault with int'ent to commit murder Thursday, sheriffs deputies said. Picketing by other Teamsters and United Farmworkers supporters was regarded to be mostly peaceful elsewhere. The two men -identified as Guadalupe Tamez, 35, or Santa Ana, and Guadalupe Sausedo, ,. 26, of Salinas -were charged with attacking Israel Guad- jardo, 28, a foreman for Maag Citrus in Mecca. A_ U.S. Forest Service spokesffian said a 7,200-acre blaze was contained early to- day in the high desert eountry near Banning. They said they hoped to haVelt under contrOI by Saturday. ALTHOUGH THE Banning blaze burned some trees at the edge of the San .Bernardino National Forest. the main target was brush.. No structures were reported damaged and injuries were confined to mlnol' ""'*" <>< bum cue.s involving fire lighters. A lll'l!lll ol Jlres reportedly . . I ... Ex-solon's Wife Gets Jail Term SANTA MONICA (AP) Susan Marie Brophy, the wile of former Assemblyman Bill Brophy, has been sentenced to 11ix months in jail f o r vehicular manslaughter in the deaths or a Cudahy couple. ~ Superior Court J u d g e Laurence Rittenband imposed the sentence Thursday and allowed the 20-year-old former model to be freed on $1,000 . bail pending appeal of her con- viction in March. Mrs. Brophy waa arrested after Chris Panas, 48, and his wlfe, Elizabeth, 49. were killed when the Brop'hy auto ·crashed head-on into their car on July 18, 1972. t1le crash was on Pacific Coast Highway near Sunset Boulevard. · Authorities said ~1 r s . Brophy was driving under the influence of drugs when the crash occurred. JN THE BANNING fire, some 1,000 fire fighters looked like ·combat veterans after three days or action . "They had kind of a charcoal-like look about the face ," said Ed 1t1edina, a fire information officer for the U.S. Forest Service. He added that the men looked a uttJe like spacemen with the hard hats, goggles and bandanas across thelr eyes and noees. Meanwhile, the state of Calilornla of!erod a r<ward of $500 for information leading to the capture of suspected anonlsts in the Banning bl87.e. The fire was started on the Morongo Indian Reservation, officin!s slid. 11IE FINAL assault on the Banning fire w~ to have something of the appearance of an infantry and tank bat- taUon advance. In completing the fire \lnes at the edge of the blaze's hot spots, bulldozer• were to push down the heavy brush and :!lmall trees, follow- ed by fire fighters moving in to open up a break between the open fire and its fuel - more dry wood. Teller Fle<l For Lu1icli FREMONT I UP I) -When R new bank teller at the Fre- mont Bank went to lunch aQl'.I failed to return, a quick audit showed $7.000 was missing. Police Wednesday issued an all-points bulletin for Miss Carol L. Skodi, 21 , Newark, who began work only two weeks ago. Police said her car waa found abandoned and her apartment was empty. Porno Rule Reaction . - Court 1Jecisio1i Draws Praise, Dam1ic1tion By The A1soclattd Pre11 The U.S. Supreme Court's decision on obscenity and- hard-core pornography drew praise from :!IOme llite and county officlal1 and predic- tions of chao:!I and undue censorship from other Califor- nians. '· '. IN THURSDAY'S decision, the high court held that local community standards ralber than national standards may be used to delermJne whether rmaterlal Is obscene, and that •Juries and courts no lonler need to flnd that materJaf ts "utterly" wJthout redeeming !t()Cial value before It Is declared obscene. . 1 Tho.st two parts of the opinion written by C1llel Justice Wamn Burger dreW the most attention r r o m authorities charged with en- forcing obal:entty laws. The rejection of the test of t0elal -values as a con- stltutlonal standard should give impetus to California legislative efforts to remove the standard from state law, said Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Joseph P. Busch. e:rs • ' • - • I • ----!- . 1.- j • • • I .• • DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • I.nd~vidual Authority ,~ . 'r i. .. r\ ~-.~llers be represented by the same goVVlllDmW volce'U inlanders? · Ill tho light of recent events in the unincorporated coastal areas from South Laguna .to Capistrano Beach, the ~nawer seems to be no. Ouldelin.., !orf a' municipal advisory council (MAC) -an elected body and off1cial advisory voice to the • county -have been adopted by the Board of Super- visors, paving the way for a MAC in the Saddleba<k Valley. 11 If the ocean dwellers want to join that MAC, the Saddleback Area Coordinating Counci~ which has spear- headed th~ MAC pwb, is waiting to welcome them. nlty colleges. Since Its opening on 200 at:res of land donated by the Mission Viejo Company, Saddieback bas carried on in 20 relocatable buildings -leaky, creaky, and crowded. Outfitted with the best educational facilities, the library will offer students of tht! future advantages present graduatQs. haven't had . Like other community colleges which have grown from unpretentipus starts, Saddleback is on its way. Festival Surprises lt's~clear-a-bettervoice-is-needed-for-soutb-county -----unincorporatod areas. But coastal residents an facin g A sneilq>reV1ew-oftbe 1973'"edition of-the-Lagun•----1--' a myriad of unique problems and the plans of a differ· Beach Festival of Arts and • Pageant of the Ma sters eat ma~or d~ment company. " --shows the pageant people have great surprises in store This is a time to examine the pros aad cons of for everyone this year. That's gotten to be a habit with . a sepatate ,. C _to serve the needs of the unincorpo-the Festival of Arts. rated areu-of•tbe..OUth coast. At first glance, it appears to be a gOod•atietnattve. • -The Pageant of the Masters reproduction of ·famous art works iS]usUy famous for µs artistry,-taient and - 1, . · , COll~g~ _on Its Way --:-i 'o, &iiiime~cTtsarOelilgceto!liratod at-·Sad- ,dhlblck Comanlrl!IJ' ollege tonight -the graduation of 280 students; and the dedication of the $3.2 million James B. Utt Memorial Library. · Just as two years at Saddleback have provided the ~UateJ "Wi~a cornerstone for the future1 completion of-the school'a first permanent building -named after tbe late Orange County congressman -is a significant cO?nerstone in the future of the five-year-old community college. Humble beginnings are not uncommon for commu· adroit showmanship. · Even the naturally blase press corps expressed honest &Il}azem~nt after seeing the human models melt ~e background_~tLto bec9me living representa- tions of renowned paintings, bas relief, and even a de-- piction of the Congressional Medal of Honor. Backstage management of the Pageant has to be remarkable. The annual marshaling and motivating of the 800 volunteer mndels and workers is no small task. As in the past, th~s year's Pageant looks to be a great success. The festival does it all with straightfor- ward excellence, hard work, and dedication to excel- lence to produce a product that is enjoyable as well as cultural. s ·----• -· • Multiple · Cartse·s For Gas Crisis Who Gets the Interest"! 0 To the Editor: _1 Qldl kidding us on the. gas abortage. Any ,at<lent. o( the problem knows the stU'PIUI ii gone because of weather, fallul'll on the part of officials to MAILBOX j1lllp; and industry to plao.,-for-our- voriilous a'ppeUtes. 1be qlieiti.tArli no Lttttn Jrtom . ......,.. ,,.. ...._. fi"tr'ift•rlY WbO did it, bu( How can we live, with it ~ .._.. ._...,. """" _.._.. 111 • _., f the xi X . .,. ..... """' rtlftt .. ~ ........ fit -· or ne years. .,. 98M1Mte 1~ .., ,........ "" ...,.,. _., .... Can we be convinced that salVation lies '"* .._,..,... 1111111 -ii-. .......... w _. IW:h-.J' ~uuu, .,,.,... . .....,. ... Mt M ' l1 t 1 In .. •-•·-apeed rec1--~•-m;• car "'" • ........ 1111 ,....... " tlfftkltlll ,.._ •• pools, fewer unnecessary trips un mass · • transport is made available!" Or must we be forced away from the gas station by hlcl! ~-P,I,.. "keepaway" laxes? M '~-14:"""'""tec1 to 53 1. of'chide oil~ ID,1172, a 1or. reduction of ~ar ~~ "-'1e 9,M0,000,000 gallons ; vol/' GAS IS only one item of the energy criJi.s that we _have caused. It appears to ine·~ w'b!led a reminder to save -lip llMitonn ol ll\X&tion and'bigher ~-~veuse. 'JIOY higher taXes for !Jiaer and appUanceS. Convenely:, .: small cars and mtnirmms1 should pay less. • p'tlq' obvious now that ~ of 'fbO -·It fault, we are going to have lem . ..,; to use for a Jong time to com~ .t We bad betler "learn io'live with1t. .~'. . . '.:. -~. •· ' ~AN s,.FAIJIXNER A 'B.arril;.,an '\- ,..the fAi~ The Sidney Harris column wouJd, make me buy the-Daily Pilot if~l didn't read any other part. . How refreshin g to see something that says small children imitate-their P6(ellts and It's imporfAnt for< ~ts to know this plays such an im . -prt in cbUd behavior. Eveeyt!ling we J>ick up tile4e cblyi_ to read keeps hammerinc ·•way • a t dbdpilnt, discipline, punish, puniOh. Too MANY people crave reveD,e; loo mwbolievtpunilive m~ are the answer to mi,;thiol. !lo -......... -....tlliltored and lortund --'"":"'! . -- Studles are indlcatmt that \Iii! manner ot discipline and the tone taken with olltpring is US"8lly a repeat of lhf way the parent& Wert treated b1. ·t.befr parents. 1 • So what's the AnS\lter7 Good chlld care centers -for pcb and poor -would be a good first step. Ir the influence at home is good, 'the children would still enjoy the experience; if the home was undesirable, the ire-!Chool training example set by well choeen teachers might offset the ex· amPle• tel at home. MABEL PARKER To the Editor: , '!be Watef11ate Show, fealurin g the Soulbem Ham ' and his Watergate canaries, is , rehearsed it teesns. The aincen are interviewed undet'.oath prior to airing the main show 19 that the Democrati..-trolied comm1ttee can britlC out just the desind·poiots on the I l)r, can the President "'in? Doa't miss next week'r sboY.'. How can ,...1 JIM BOl.D!NG ~~"lee Totmir.illlor.iE-. ' Oft -4, J I -lll<rlpt in a 9'12 ....,.. .,. typed very l~lbly ill liillto 1 In Loe Angeles from ...... lloldl. I\ ii lllll .. nlllle today, - June 18. The return address was also given . .,\nother letter was alJO sent to the same address on June 13 and·nettber has been received. In the course of these two weeks that It takes a letter to go from Lagufta-Beach to Los Angeles, I _ reseived cor· respondence from CopenhaCeh (alr mail ) in three days' time. I believe people should know that sec- ond class mail will have no preference -may never get anywhere. 1 feel it is ridiculous for a typed piece of printed matter to take all this time to arrive. Who do we 1complain to about sucb kM.lsy service? SANDRA C. KENNER w......,Pretnbe? ~ To the Editor: l feel that your editorial "h-1isguided Planners" (June 15) starts from a pren¥se which shoul(l be questioned; it plact\ a negative value judgment where ~ ~ much to be positive about and contillue~lude witb an in- appropriate and 'unintelligent solution. Fitstly, thtl concept of zoning has in some mysterious way become Holy as well as being the lawful process now in existence for the control ol. development. In my opinion, zoning should not be regarded with any more respect than specifjc areas and projects indicate that it deserves. INDMOOAL community and neighborhood factors should be the im· portant factors which our planning stall and commissioners should use to help direct tbe developer -which in effect is what bas been happeninl but perhaps in an unfortunate way. For instance, a blanket zoning exists .in tile Lquna Canyon and many of those who wouJd like to anner'to Laguna wish to extend this manufactlll'ing zone. Frankly, I feel that this would be a big mistake and that in this case the zoning takes oo consideration for the en· vironment as a whole or the individual areas and properties in particular. I would favor a NON-WNE which would then utilize the specific pl~ aP" proach used under the gutdaDoe of the planning rommisslon and ataff. AS FOR THE specific plan method itsell. I feel It bas grea( potential merit. It Is the property owner who must inltiate it -not the planning commiJSion and who must do most of the work involved. I cannot agree with you or Mr. Leok tbat the planning commJssk>n must produce the plan, "°""'"'• I "'"lid agree that much lime, effort, money and bod feeling could be spared If the planning com· missloo established limitations before and during rather than after the plan b completed. The flellbillty 100uid certainly not degenerate into "loooe rqanl" as you in- dicate but lhl1 llexibiUty is what ,.. aa lnteJHgt!flt and concerned citizen• should allow by encouraging the specific plan In order to stimulate creative thought en-. cdurage projeeh which wW add t~ our commwll willy and in Uie Iona nm, which I conunue to make our town a lpeCial aDd beautiful place. ANDY WING Dear Gloomy Gus Irony is a land planner bragging about seeing a cougar on hills where 'he'll put houses. S.A. D. G......,. 0... ~ts .,.. """""""' ltY reMen •11111 • llOt --rir,. rfilec:I Ille .s... ...... ~. ,....___......._ .... ---=-•.:e1"m.,--::oin.~" "1.J!!t_ _ With Music Goes Money And Scandal "We don't want a \Vatergate in the music business," says David Clayton· Thomas, former lead singer for Blood, Sweat and Tears. But the popular record industry has been rocked by a widening scandal involving payOla, drugs. sex, booze and organized crime. One high in- dustry executive, CJive J. Davis, \\'as (GUEST REPORT J fired as president of Columbia Records for a11egedly misusing corporate funds and another, Larry Wynshaw, was bounced on charges of falsifying invoices. A federal grand jury and a federa l anti-crime strike force are investigating the whole recording business and one of· ficial. bas said: "We believe that almost every major record company is in· volved." The scandal does share one common element with Watergate: enormous amounts of cash which gave rue to temptation and were difficult to trace when misused. POMILAR MUSIC bas become a mulli-bilUon-doiiar industry, with reconl and tape sales topping $2 billion last year to surpass movies ($1.3 blUioo), network teJevision ($1 billion), pro~ssional sports ($540 million) and Broadway ($36 million) in revenues. Forbes magazine reported that at least 50 rock, pop and country music superstars now are ea.ming between $2 million and $6 million a year, making the salary of ITT's Harold G e n e e n , America's highe$t·paid business ex· ecutive, look like so much chicken feed . "It had to happen," one record ex- ecutive said of the scandal. "The in- dustry is just too big. there's to0 much money around , and there are too many people wbo got too greedy." IN TBE LATE Ill50s, another payola scandal sbool< the industry., It was reveaJed that record company promoCion men used mmey, liquor and free vaca- llorur to persuade radio dilc jockeys to play and prai,. certain records. The Fedel'ai Trade Commission in t960 said that 156 disc jockeys and other station personnel were inv<>:lved, and isSucd more than 150 CO!tlPlaints and cease-and· desi st Orders.1 Conaress tblt year approved several amenclments to the Federal Com· municstlons Act of 1934 rcqulMng run disclosure of jlDY payola by the recipient. · The same bill outlawed the rigging of =~::~:a~~ ~~~' ~igJ~ct1~~; have to go beck to the drawing boards to be amended once again. Edltorill Retelrcb • Profit Ill Rent Deposits Let's say you are one of the millions of CalifornJans who rent an apartment or a dupleA, or whatever. If you are, when you first rented your place you were no doubt required to put up a security deposit to cover any damage that might be done to the prop- ( RUS WALTON J terest on money tied up in thole advance rents or deposits. 1be 5 percent interest commences after Jhe tenant bu occupied the pr~mises and paid the rent for 90 days. Fair is fair. And, Mr. Garcia's Some financial prolec tion against such legislati on is fair. erty while you occu· pied-the--premJSes. n-addition-, you- probably bad to pay ~~y and vandaJ_is_· m __ is_c_ert-•i_nl_Y_ After all. ..\•hy should someone else I make-money_ on the tenant's frozen 1---B.U't. LT'S NOT the principle, it's the assets? - ~='Eil money· In fac t. the tenant stands to Joae in two the last month's rent along with the first. Some apartm~nt houseS also require deposits for such Utings a. pets, cieon- ing, and even keys. In one case, a couple renting a $285 apartment had to pay $599 in advance rents. ancL deposit!.: LAST ,MONTH'S rent, $285 : securilv deposit, $100 ; pet deposit: $100; cleaning fee , $50, and key deposit, $4. Plus a $60 deposit on the electro:nically-operatea garage doors. How's that for openers? Fro!" the landlord's viewpoint, such deposits and advances w e r e un- ders1:3rxlable and neces.sary. There are tenants who skip without paying the rent; those who depart leav~ ing burns in the carpets, dents in the walls and holes tn the windows. You pay your advance rent and your v.·ays v.·hen his money is impounded deposits and your money sits there -in without interest. the landlord's bank 'acCount. Jt stays there all the months and all the years you rent his property; or, he uses it as capital for otlfer ventures. Either way, the mOney works -.. for him but not for you. • Take, tor example, one giant apart· ment complex in Los Angeles. It has 4237 units. The insurance company that owns the complex requires a $200 .ad vance deposjt on each apartment. For those 4237 units the deposits tota1 $847,400. At 5 percent interest per year !hose deposits produce $42,350 -for ~ msuraoce company. ASSEMBLYMAN Alex Garcia, J>.Los Angeles, has introduced AB 1332 to pro- vide the renter some redress. His bill 'A'OUld require landlords of four or more units to pay renters 5 percent in· FIR5r\ the loos of the interest. Second, the loss o inflatloo, . Look what hnPJX!ns to the value of that money while it is held in the la.ndl<rd's deep freeze. Ta~e the yqung couple that put up the $§99 1n ~dvaoce_ rents Md deposits.._ Sqp- pose they occupy that apartment for fiv e years. At the going rate o[ inflation, in five years the purchasing power on that -$599 would be down to $420. They would lose about $1111 to inOatlon while the landlord was making at least SlSO on their money. What kind or a deal ii that~ Mr. Garcia's AB 1332 would. at Jeast, let the renter reaHze a return on hi..'I compulsory investment, and some kind o( a hedge against the tennites o( inflaUon. How Hookers Became Professionals The vigorous _,.efforts o( J\.·targo St. James in the spring of 1973 to organize the country's hookers led inevitabl y to a nationwJde sex boycott. Armed wii!t a $5,000 foundatiori graiil; the attractive, 35-• • yeaNlld Miao St. James -a former Jaciy o( the ....mg herseU -began .suc- cessfully eolisUng card-carrying mem- bers in her new "craft guild," as ahe called it. And there was no -questiOn she 1eriously hoped to improve the plight oi America'• borizootal ....-king girls - long the -ctecraded and abused par-' ticlponta ID"'.'!' free enterprise system. INmALLY, Miss St. James' cf£orts were dismissed in men's clubs and locker rooms with sniggering jokes about union labels and .sit-down strikes. But an off· Wlek• ( ART ·HOPPE J hand rei;n.ark she made dur ing a press conference sowed the seeds of the na- tional upheaval that was to follow. "If you take an apartment a resort trip ~r. candy from someone, it's legal," she saill or 'A'Omen v.·ho sell their favorr.. "But ii you lake $50 in cash, tlley'll lry to make a felony out of it." lT WAS ~1s. Bella Steinem Chairperson ol WOW, the W o r I d Organiza tion of Women who saw the possibilities inherent In thi s tot.ally un iair dictate of society. ' ~ "Females have been selling their favors for a million years,'' she told a cheering WOW rally. "Those who sell for pleasun or companionship are called loose women. Those Who sell for cash are call· cd prostitutes. And those who sell for mink. coats and diamond necklaces are called jet..sctters or movie stars. "But worst of all are the females who are trained from lnfancy to keep whtlt theY've got to sell untl.I some man offet-s them a. Ute-long eonlract Of fihahcial 6Up- port. They're ca Ued housewives. "l say that an)' wonuin Who has· e\·cr put on lip."llick or earrings should he ar- rested for l'Ollspiracy to commit a felony!'' .. TIIE UNARGUABLE )pgic of wovi·s mlUtant stand gradually sank 1-on the rwtion'1 women. Soon any. tag~r young swnin who knelt al biS be.loved'• feel to offer an engagement rtng1 was gree ted with a kick in the Jaw and rui ' angry shout of "What do you take me for!" ' Throughout ihc land,· sobbing 1•ivcs slnmmed bedroom doors on lrustra ted · husbands. ;Beauty salons and boutigoes \Vent bankrupt. And· , "Son of Deep Throat" last 12.4 mlUion at the box of- fice. • The nationwide sex bo,V<.'Olt was on. The man who oaved the day wu the " distinguished social scientist, Or. Homer T. Pettibone, D.V.M. "\Vhile it is true th at women sell their bodies .'' he said , "so do·men. Sclent~1s sell their minds, postmen their feet batitones their vocal cords hod carrier~ their backs, psychiatrists' Uleir ears Y.'riters their fingers and politiciam thei; tongues. · "\Ve are, let's face it, a nation of hookers. And there is no reason we should ap plaud the selling of all parts of the human body but one." ~ ONCE AGAIN unassailable log) c prevaUed. "lluzzah!" cried the city,... try ! both male and female. And e\·erylh.ing returned lo normal. Except. of corn-se, ·that proatltutioo became not only legal, but an honored and respected profession. . For, after all, as Dr. Pettibone so ri~tly Put it, "selling what you in· disputably own for an honest profit is the vJ?ry cornerstone of our free enterprise 111vst.em." OIAHM COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N, Wttd, hbU.Mr The>ma1 Ktevil, Edi~ Barbaro. Krtlbich Editorial Page Editor PilotThe, -·-of the 1>11'1 tttka to lnlonn and ttirm&late =.'~~on this pqe '"'" by __..~ on tQpies or tn-"Y'""""-columnists ...t ,.,.,_\">· by ·~ ......... ~ vlew1 anc:t by Pftllenttnr thll -newap.Ptf'• oplnlonJt and ldeu on current topics. Thct edttorllil op6rdont ol \lhe Da.U)' Pilot ·~ ... tn the ed torial column •t the top or tht 'oaat, Oplohma .,.......,. by the col- umnlsta and ca~1 ·and '9tttr Miten art tMlr-own and no~ matt Ol 'lhclr views by 'Ute Dal• .. Piiot -be -., Friday, June 22, 1971 t ' n 0 l ., e e • f er ir t, rs '· r of Id he c so he .. I ' ' • QUEENIE By Phil lnterlancll 01Cios f __ ....,......_1971W.W .... ---. I'm worried aboutY,ou'. You•re·begin.nlng to say 'thank goodness it's Thufsday. • '' L. Jfl. Bogd -Cals Have Own Tastes Catered Have you been told about that restaurant in Honolulu where nude male waiters serve the lunch crowd? It's com- prised largely of secret8.ries, sales girls, lady shoppers? Understand the place is usually packed. I don't know, Clyde,-the-ntea-or-dlning-out-1rr-a-room-i:lecorated-with naked men is unsettling. I need an Alka-Seltzer. One New Guinea tribe counts by dogs . Because a dog --has four paws. Works like this: There's -....... : ' . . , :.""' a i I . . I I -,\ a word for one paw and a word for two paws. Three is expressed by saying ooe· paw and two paws. :trut four Is simply a dog. And five Is a "dog plus one paw. Eight is two dogs. And 16 is dog dog. Am asked if there's· any truth to that old claim that you rest better . ., ,, if you sleep on your left aid:e. Some, evidently. If .you're right-hailded. The medicos claim the right-banded citizen tends to tire out the right sMie of the " body mostly. Thus. sleeping on the left gives the. right a better chance to recover. TIGER, TIGER -Q. "What's the worst natw"al enemy ol lhe elephant?" · ----.A......lbe:Upr. In Asia, at..any_ rate. Tigers are said to get one out of every four elephant calves in that part Of the ... _, world. .. Moot citizens outgrow moot fears. But ooe soc! ol pho- ' -bia that's said to get more intense with each passing year Is the fear ol having to stand up in front of an audience to give a talt. Except for those performers who go into the apeednnaking business professionally, the older the ~ son, the less likely said party Will Willingly address groops. NOw I'm told It's Canada that ha.s more lakes than all the resLol the _world-=n1"ned...Ph?_. DEPRECIATION -Sir, depreciation on that new car ol yours, if typical, might run something like this: About ZS to 30 percent tbre fll'St year, 18 percent the second, 14 percent the lhird, 11 pereent the fourth, nine percent the filth, six percent the sixlb, and two peiunl the seventh. Qukt, name the "'11Y country in the Western Hemi- sphere which once served as a seat of government for a European empire. That's right, Brazil. Royal famil y of Portugal lived there from 18118 lo 1821, ruling all the while. And did I tell you those pollsters who study television audiences claim men who smoke pipes watch TV the least? Addre.ss mail to: L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, Neur port BeGch, Calif. 92660. Massage Parlor ' Snooping Curbed SAN DIEGO (AP) -Police have been orifered by a judge to confine insptctions of massage parlors to "public areas" such as the foyer and hallways and stay out of , .. rooms in use. "'lbe room being used by a patron is not pUblic," Superior Court Judge Charles W. Froelich Jr. said Thunday. "PEEPING OR 11.stening at ·•· keyholes would be an Invasion of privacy of the room. Listen- ing in the hallway lo notlling \Vhich can be heard there is Froelich agreed with owners o( eig ht massage parlors that "the conduct or police in the last month or so is excess1ve." THE MASSAGE p ar 1 or opcraton have claimed police looked into rooms and showers while in use. Police say they bave been ooly investigating reports ol prostitutioo. In recent months, rt arrests have been made on pro- stitution or Ucense viOlation charges. ' \ ! I ' PANTS, SKIRTS, SWEATERS 49~ the e=isury ORY CLEANING HAflADA MILU 1800 ~tswort~ SL ~· 011.lfll(I Se1iutveti llld ff,_11*r. WOODLAND ltLLli lSOO Vlc!ory 81•d lAKIWOOO Ca$0n St. arid PMamDllll !lvt llVllSIDI l$201~!i! , IVlllA PAllt8iJClrinit ~- IAMT A AMA 3900 S<Mllll Biilt~I St. IAlltl G11den Gciwe Blvd. alld ._lllM O•tt1 w11k•ey1 t :)O It •130 -S•it••YI 10 te 7, WHITE FRONT • CATLITIER 4: 10 lb. bags o1 absorb- ent litter deodorizes sand box, leaves it clean. 50FOAMCOPS Pack of 50, handy 6·oz. si1e; may be used for hot or eold drinis. Slock up!- EMPIRE COFFHMAIER Big electric coffeemaker with keep·warrn feature. Avocado porcelain enamel finish. Big buy at reg. price! 1969 61 . • 111.UE ICE" CARTRIDGE flew Oivajex cold cartridge shaped like ice cube tray, is filled wilh refrigerant. Freeze. use like ice. c Reg. "' ... c Rf g. _...,_, llJ•Cli: 99 Reg. 6.97 c Reg. 1.17 Friday, JuM 22, 1973 DAILY PILOT f eoLo PRICE SLASHING ON MOST wri ITEMS THAT EVERYONE NEEDS ••• DON1 MISS OUT:, GN SPECTACULAR VAl.UES FROM WHITE F•Nlt .. , .1 CHARCOAL LIGHllR Quick stalling. fluid for berbecues, camp fires. Burns clean and with- oot odor, saves time and temper/ -· FOAM fll.LfD PILl.DW Bed pi llows filled with shredded . polyurethane loam; , non·afle1gerttc. • machme washafbe. I l"x2.3" si1e . ' MEN'S STRETCH HOSE Orlon"' acryl ic strelc~ nylon crews. !00% slrefch nylon ribs and cables, ·· 7 colors. Slrelch fit I0· 13. Nat at Torrl1ct . "BLUE ICE'' CHEST f1ee1e the lid. pop it on, you've a day's refrigeration in hand. No ·mess. weight. ~other. Easy to tole. LADY SCOTT FACIAL OR BATH TISSUE ' c .... 39, ... c .... 1.29 ... c .... "' '" so· ltt. s.•1 .. ' . Liquid delergent gels dishes sparkling clean. In lemon, green or pink. " • .. ,. ADHESIVE UNEB · '.::; .. 4·yd. roll of al l purpose adhesive •.. vinyl liner for shelves, drawers: de'. .,. corafives. Attracfive palterns. . ~ ,·r-i. . ,.. Applies slllftDthly wlfh brush or roller, leaves even finish,. dries in minutesr SQ!ff:·& ·':'ater " cleanup. Ready mi1!d colors."· •. · ..., •. ,.1 r·. PROPANE RBlll .. : :: Bernz · refill tanks for torches, out· . door equipment for campi~ or fishing :·" t1ip. Terrific buy. . . ' . ,\. ; FOR , .... ,., . .. .~ -. ' (OSJA--M-ESA 3088 BRISTOL ST. SA N DIEGO FREEWAY AT. BRISTOL tllARGl 11 . 10DA1 ' ! ' I r I ' 1· ~. DAILY PILOT F'rldif,J, Junt 22, 1973 of the Myths!' Nr~:::·Mo1iroc Story ~::b~~~:e~~i~ Marilyn 1\1~: "·She Arist.otle Onassis and Ted· dy Kennedy went of{ the was t~e !~st ol. the myths bridge at Chappaquiddick. to 1hr1vc 1n the long even· so the decade thal began ing of th<' Ame rica n with Hemingway as the tll'cam.'' monarch of Al;nerican arts . . ende4 with Andy Warhol So writes Norman Mad· as its regent. er in a new biography, "1\farilyn." Excerp t s, along with pictures, v;ere published in the July edi- t ion of the Ladies' Home Journal. MARILYN ,___.Tl=urJerylQnd ... noture1 PPr.tner. £or every bloomin' thing ® REDWOOD . COMPOST Jumbo 4 cu. It. bole or orgonic m~!ch. 4.00 2'' VALUE ... EA. LANDSCAPE SPECIAL PINK PRINCESS ESCALLONIA Co"e,ed with o mou of "i~k blono1111. E•lro large. 7.55 ]97 VALUE ...... EA. · · S G•I. ~.I PLANTING CALENDAR Helpful monthly hints on how to become a home garden e:ic,pert. NUR~ERYLAND IS PROUO TO PROVIDE 11 CERllflED CALIFORNIA NUlstRYME • . llOMf Of , .... •11ornUO•AU . I BLOOMING PERIWINKLE Brilliant summer color for borders or nccent planting. Bud and Bloom in .4" pots. 60c VALUE 29~ RETURN YOUR PLASTIC CONTAINERS FOR CREDIT Wf ISSUE 5c CRE DIT REfUNO FOR EACH REUSfABLE CONTAINER RETURNED , .. ! GAL OR LARGER , , • NO OEPOSrf NECESSARY DAY LILIES Spedoc~lor O<~tnf for garden or <Onloiners. 1.75 VALUE 9t. ...... "GREEN THUMB GUARANTEE" 1 full years guarantee on all l gal. and larger nursery stock ... only 10¢ cost per 1.00 purchase ... now you can plant your landscape with complete con.fidence SUMMER ROSES You• thoice of many popular 'f'Orietie1, VALUES 9nc TO 1.75 71A. llON·PAt. G•l. • • , A COOL SUMMER SPECIAL FERN GARDEN SALE YOUR CHOICE! ••• •Australian Tree Fern • Mother Fern • Rectofroclus Fern • Sword Fern :~u~~-T~. . 3~?. 20.I. • MASTIRCHARGI ANO 11,t,NKAMfRICARO SAll lnMs GOOD ntau JUNl 21th-OrEN 1 DAYS A WEEK 1:30 'tll 6:30 TUSTIN ANAHEIM 1 OSO IDtNO(I 1123 N. EUCLID ei N••PWi ,,..,., er lt ,.1,.., 138-9000 63s-a181 ; 'Boo1n' Expect~d Fink, Town of 6. To Hold Sh~dig WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY IY THE COMMlnf;i Of nOVtltO~AUY ACC•ED,.·.~Aff .,.. o~ (All,OIMIA tAI IJlAMINl•S OF · I FULL-TIME LAW STUDY PROGRA!>' NOW AVAILABLE 800 South Brookhurst An•heim 92804 17141 635:3453 'Gr.td111fe1 ,,.. eliglbl• kl lilk1 II•• C•lilorni~ Sl•I• Ii< (•~min•lion. APPLY NOW FOR SEPTEMBER 6th DAY, EVENING OR WEEKEND CLASSES Sf\IOINTS fllGllll fOI ffDf-IAllY IHWlllO SfiiOIMT lOAl'ft APPIOVlO FOi VfTEIANS Kids Like To Ask Andy .presents a ''New Look'' i.n-Lightingl Tired of the same "old look" in lighting? Here's your opportilffiiy"tochange to new and exciting fixtures at lowe r- than-ever prices. Come in this week and take adv1ntage of these "SPECIAL SAVINGS"! OPEN SUNDAYS 11 to S -<-------23"------- CreaCive Interior Pla1111ing At No Chdrg_e ' ' FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH ftS M. ....... IMl. l•1111a1tw;J 11SJ2 lffch 11"1, ' 17141 171-5720 1114·1 962-4477 -'!\. ,·;~!\ ·-~~\ YOUR <>-. 1 · CHOICE :~~- .;it,•' ., .. $99 .,:;·~! . ,,,, ~ .,., ' \i •If·. ...,t'h ·.r-,\. ~ . ' . •. .. ... _, .~· /. ·1 ........ ,. ..._-' -~ ~ ':' -~ ""' \.\~~~ \¥.,! INDEPENDENTLY ;<,~ OWNED-:~i'i' SERVING % ORANGE •:ff COUNTY FOR i,:,w 10 YEARS ORANGE 1UI M. TWiia Aft.11'\ llllt S.. 91 Or"'I' M1lf) 17\41 ~7-1420 STORE~OOllS • Open 910 9 p.m. •••ry -k nll• S.1. 9 IO S1SO OPEl'I SUNDAY 11 10 S p.,.. I ,o I • , ' f "Wow! PJ is almost 2 inches to ll!" Custody Tiff J a riet Leigli, Accused Tony Curtis accused former to Miss Hayward's wishes. wife Janet Ulgb of misap-, J\1 iss Hayward, who won an proprlating more than $100,000 Academy Award In 1951 for "1 in child support fuRm. Want To Live," frequently Curtis, 47, pet It I one d moved from hospital to Superkir Court in S a n t a hospital to conceal h e r P.1onica for custody of his whereabouts. daught er Jamle, 14, saying * Miss Leigh's home i s Elvis Presley, pr oml11 ed "~TOUght with tension and is fl,000 to help restock a. IUlft· othefwise an unwholesome mer camp cleaned out by medium for the emotio113I thieves this week. stability and \\"elf are of the Presley's manager, Co 1. chlld." To m Parker r relayed the pledge to Loulslana State ( . J· Police after the roclr: alneer P'""OP'TE read about the thelt during a L i.. coocert appearanc< In Mobile, Ala . He said Miss Leigh, who has remarried, falled to set up a trust fund for· Jamie, as she promi se d·, and misap- propriated Curtis' s u· pp or t payments for "unbelievable items" such as travel, liquor, clothing and limOusine rtntal bills. · * sen. Norris Cottnn (R·N.H. l aMoonced he wiU not seek re-. election next year. Cotton, who · has served 28 ~:cars in Congress -eight in the House and 20 In the Senate -made t\ls long-expected an· nounecment in a newsletter to hi's constituents. 1be 7J..year old Cotton said "naturnlly. this has been a bard decision lo make and, belng only human. J ma ke It with a· feeling of deep unhap- piness." ·* The prime 1uinister 's office in Otta\\·a connrmed that Margaret Trudeau i! pregnant and the second child of Cana- dian Prime Minister Trudeau, 53, and his wife, 25. is ex· pected near the end of the year. The brief anoouncement was made after reports circulated for weeks that ft1rs. Trudeau WU pregnant. 'I'tle Trudeau's first child, Justinr was born Christmas Day, 1971. * The son of actreM Sana Hayward says his mother has returned . home after being hospitalized s-.Ce early April. "'She looks good . She feels good," said Tim Barter son of the OS.year-old actress. Barker and close auoc.iates have nfu!ed to di1e}o,e the nature of her illness, acceding ·Job for P eanut.<J CERRITOS (AP ) -A burglar has pulled a job here for peanuts, Lakewood sheriff'• deputies said. ' The burglar apparently forced open a railroad freight car parked behind the All-Amerlc11n Nut Co. Wednesday and toolr: 200 pounds d peanuts valued at$5,000. au lhor I t I ea reported. nie camp, located i n Holden, La., is operated by state police volunteers. * P assen-by pawed to llJten in downtown San J>leeo U I loudspeaker boomed forth the words of an~ Marpret Mead. "Mankind has the potential to solve problems. . . " -ahe declared. "The b r i g ht e I t person we have ever produced used on]y one-tenth of his brain. By usln1 our bralnl ad technology together, we c.i.n recycle material and stop treating our air and aeas u garbage pails ... Dr. ~1ead's was the fll'St of U lectW"eB scheduled at the Civic Ceottt. Loudspeaken were.... used _beca~ ~ drew an o\•erflow crowd of 4,000. Hard Hats Worn by 2 Lawmakers SACRAMENTO (AP) Two assemblymen who wore hard hats to a floor sesskin were ordered to "cut out this nonsense.'' AM<tnblymen Paul Priolo (R·Paciflc Palisades) and \Yalter Karablan (J>.Montere Park), began wearing bright yellow hard hats Monday to draw •ttenlloo to tho eorth- quake rilkl In the IOl-yeal'<id Capitol: They say. they ..., trying to speed action oo planJ to replace er reinforce the building. BUT WHEN they appeared Thunday, AMemblyman Jack FentGO (J).Mootebello l. who WU pN!siding, told them to take off the hats or go out In the hall where he said he would have mJcrophones and speakers 1et up ao they could particlpote in A IS e m b I y buslness;--____._,. "Let's cut out t h ls nonsense," said F e n t o n , reminding mem~ d the long mes of blllJ to consider during the session. Bani LEP'r the Door. bul they returned later and placed Uie hard hats on their deskl. TWo englneertn& reporil have said the Wlrtinfcrced Capitol would problbly col- lapse In a moderate to .severe earthquake. 1'112 lwcllllN.H.I . • l,ICIAL RATll IN I P,I CT • 35C H I. IZ MIDNlft TO J A.M. SAT. 12 MIDNm TO J A.M. ,.,. .. _ SUN. I A.M. TO 4 P.M. O_A ... t.Molw----HMAJ • ,_ Friday, Junt 22, llJ73 DAILY PILOT 12.88 R09ularly 14.97 Treasury's.dwn 20 " 3-speed window fan. 1/15 H.P. motor, rotary dial. (Model N9708A). . Tilting lloor stand for 20" tan. {Model #9741 ) (not shown) 5.97 ' 119.95 •••month Fedders 5,000 BTU ~-speed High and low cooling. 8Uf installation with accordion·type 5'de panels. 9.SAmps. 115 '°"'(Model IACPOSF2EZ) Tl'llt ll'!IOUl'll NMMtnte tll• monthly ~nt ul'ldt1 the J, C. Pfnnty 'ft°"' P•Yll'M"I Pl1n IOI 1111 pull)h••t M 11111 Utm. No FINANCE CHARGE w!!I b1 1ncuntll II thl .. ,.._ 8111nc1" 01 1t11 •COOl.lfll In th1 liflt b!lllno '11t.,,,1nt !llClucHno tM pUrc11111 l1 p1 ld Jn 11,111 btl011 tM nut bltl!llQ d1t1 shown In 1111111111~1n!. Wh1n JflC1111tc1 •• monthlv FINANCE CHARGE will be det•r- ... rn.td ~ •PJlyfno 1110n1111y f)llrlodlo r1111 of I .:z~ CANNUAl PERCl!NTAQE R4tE 1~•"-l t1111h1 lf1tt 't.500111111% IANNUAL PERCfJnAGE RA.TE 12"') 13.97 Treasury's own deluxe 12" 2-speedfan with rotary dial and lilting s1and. (Model #5122). $99 or 5.50 •month Philco 5000 BTU "Space Mate" Cools and dehumidifies. Lightweigh t, easy to install. 8 amps. 11 5 volts. (Model IAM581M). 249.95 or 10.50 a month F,edders 10,000 BTU 3-speed Decorator styUng, controls concealed behind Sliding door. 12 Amps. i 15 volts. Easy installa.tton. (Model IAt T1 DF2E) OJ'l lfltl portion oYl r ISOO, 10 lhl "P1-VI011• 81l1nc1" wl!Plout ffducllng l)lyl!l~I• ind crtdllt. OPIN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 ·SUNDAY 10 to 7 Roll-about stand for 20" fan, (Model "9740). 9.97 18.97 Treasury's own . deluxe 20 " 3-speed window fan rotary dial, deluxe grill. (Model "9711 ). -,{ $299 or S12 a month Philco 14,000 BTU. S-yr. warranty.• . Big room cooling. 7 thermo.stat sett1ng1. 3 speeds.. 12 amps., 115 volts. •s.-yr. warranty from Philco-Ford covers a" parts and service. (Not includ ing installation kit. filler. weather eJtposed finish. cabinet seal. trim. No allowance1 made for product abuse.) 159.95 Of $7 .50 • month Fedders 6,000 BTU 2-speed High and low speed cooling. plus fan onty. Handsome styling. 9.1 Amps. 115 volts. (Model #ACR06F2EXJ GRANADA HILLS llJOOO Chastworlh St. WOODLAND Hilt$ 21500 Vic tory Blvd, llVIRSIDI 3520 Tvle r St. SANTA ANA North of SOulh Coast Plaza TOl:RANCI Sepulveda and Hawthor'nt-IUINA PAlllK Beach ~nd Orangethorpe OIAMOC Garden Grove Blvd. and Manchester lAKIWOOD Carson at Paramount • • t • I • • I ! • ' ' • ' ' ' ' l ' • ' • ' • • • ! ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' l l I I • ' • -' ' I ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ! • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' l ' I I - I UAIL V PILOT Friday, J""" 22. 1973 • PUBLIC NOTICE PV C NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOl'ICE PUBUC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS •USIMUS l'KTITIOUS •llSHllSI MOTIC• TO C910tTOlt1 f"ICTITlOU$ •UlllllU$ M.lMI fTATIM.DIT 11-'M.I ITATllMIWT IUflllllOlt C.OUllT o• nfl --~· n&TIMINf 'fltt lol'°"'>l\9 '*'°" b ..... ~I TIM f!Dltqwl"' Mt-.,.. Goll'll STATI Ofl CALIPOl.NIA lfO• t Tflt tolloorlllO Plf'Mfl' ¥t ~ ,.. -••· TMI COUNTY OI' OllAN•I -..Jntl& .. : • "TIM 'APOlLO WOllLD WI DI b · _. N .. .\. JUJ& MAGI( MOTOAS. 2'101 $, ~ hilt. b ; TUfllllSES. 1021 ""'•A. Wftf..... OIANGI tour ClllCU,T. 172IO So. EM•I• Of CHAlllL£'S L GEllMA.N. ... A,.., '2101 TIL INDUSTA/ll. UJt3 CarMll Slvd •. tltloo.., C"' ., .. , OrAftOll, ... nl• •;--(till, CHAllLIE$ ZOll ER Gl!JIMAM, Otc;:HMCI. J . ~ril11 tl.i1Tff', )OD $. R-. Solnte Gr-111 ...... Gtrdfn Grow ,,1,11 L L•neo-. ttl "5th SI.. ,/" .... ,,0• ~:~lt)ll '"°'' NOfl(fi! IS HEllEIY GIVEN lo Ille """· 92"0ol o.llol'M Tin~. 1n11 '""' Lui .. tl..,.porl lff(ll, CA .,.., ::=..: M H Tronultl ·,.,. "°"' Cl'9illll'Of'1 °' IM ·~ 11.1meo GKIOenl M, G. $mlth Jr.. u.n C.rntn. l"ounhll\,_ V1llft' lllh DUslll't)I 1. COM!Kttd w "' I• '''""°'* pt: Newoott 'a-.c:h '"'' •n ~ lwvl"' Cle!IM 19aln11 ,.... Mlulon vi.10 ,.,.,i Tlll1 bwllltM I• btint CCIMUCcled by en dlvltU•I Tlill bl.ltl.,.~ h (ONIU(ltcl lly In U.. &lid cH<MOtnl •t• AQUlrltd 111 Ille IMllTI. Thh tlYIJ_., II conduc:ltd In' • $ftltl'll INll'lldull P1<.1! 1.. Ullpane .illlfWJ Wllh the MCeu.ery voucllet't. If' 1iw oinc. 0trtnenhl1> °"°''h I . Tlnalr r Tt:J 1'-1tll't:lll W•I illed -ith "",_ jc,,,,,_ N Tr I OI '"' clri of,,,. .oov. l'!lllrled toun. °' M, G. S,.,,llh Jr, Thi• ••• ._nl 1119'1 Wl!h th• C:ovnrv tv OI•~ 01 Or11191 Covnly on JllN .s. 1m TN• 11,,_, .;, ,,.O:' ~ti! '"' c~ 10 or•Mfl' tl\ltm, with lllf 111(11411'Y Tl\11 t111tm111t we1 ni.ci with '"' Cou11o Clerk of Or•• covn1y on: J une 12, 1973 ,,Slit"' Clerk ot °''"".County MIY 29 "o'O\l(fle<"•. IO lhof lll'0.,.'30t*I II Ille olllcff ,., ~k OI or11111• Co..in1y on J1i1111 lt, WtUIAM E. ST JOHN, COi.iniy Cltrk. Pllbllu.4 Or.an;• COi .. 0111'1 1111ot, lffl. ' OI LlptlOlll, H"fflllll INI Offti,,--, Al• ltn • ly 'Thtrl .. M. W1rd. ~ty. Ju,,. 1. u. n. )t, ltll 11.0.-n f~I 1w111y1 11 Lew, m 1!111 11111 St., suite l"MH• ,,,.,, P!Jbllllltd Of".,.._ c:out o.n-, Pitel 111. C01l1 M..,., C1ltlornl1 '1•11, whlch P<.1bllthff Orlf\119 Co-11 Dall-, rllOI. Pullll.n.d Of"ange Coa•t O.llV l'!lot, p RJ..IC NOTICE June 1;1, IS, 22, 197' ! 16S1·rl ii ll\lt Dlac. of b1nl111t1 f11 1M Undi rll(lned Ju111 22. tf, Ind Jul-, 6, 13, l91J 1t1~1l June lJ, :rJ, 29, e nd J11ly 6, ttn 1131·7' . In ell h'\111.,.1 l)trtllnl"ll to Ille ttlale otl----:::::=:c:c:-::::=::::::----1--------'------· I -----c,c-c,.,=,=,-. -----1 PUBUC NOTICE u 111 d1cec1en1, within "' mon1h1 ati.r 111t PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE SUl"••to• COVltT OI" THI" flrtl i>VOllc1tlon f1I ltllt notltt, 1---;;;:nrnWiM;;;oo;;;.---1 ___ ..:._.:.._ __________ 1 ' Mirian L, Germ•n l"ICTITIOllJ'""IUSIJ~l"Sl s:~:Ecg~N~~L~,..0~=~\=R ''.C'!!.',",us IUSINl!SS E111CVltl• ot !hi E•l•l•/Wltl NAMI STATl!Ml!.NT l'ICTITIOUS IUSINl".SS 1'111. &·11111 ..... TAT•MINT of the •bov• n1mell dl(ltll1n1 The tollowtno 'per1ona .,. 11o1n11 NAM• STATl".MaNT llOTIC I OF l'IEA•LNG 01" PITITION ... !.~-· •o1,.~ng ~ .,, doing L ....... ".....,._•ltd Ohll!lllM' Du1l11111 111 TM tollowlno ptf"foOl'I Is doing Mlness •• '.OIATE 01' W'" AN• FOO "" ,..,,.. AtMn!WI II L-CASA· OE COIFFURE, 1U 0.1 Mer, 11: F .... HOOKER'$ GARIA.GE 01$P05AL ,,. ••• , 111t. Strwt, Suite 111 S•n Clemen1• c.. mn FOOT l"•EEOOM. l'.O. lox 1"9 ~:~e:,' ~?tM:~Te\\YR ETT, •~-· llEl"AIR ANO SERVICE CO., 17t'1 (Mtl Mftt. CtllMnllt 9Ml7 D•n A, W~kntch1, $23 E. Ave. S1n LIOC/nt &tKh, Ctl, 4111 Cenyan Acre&. ELMER EVE R!Tl •• ,. ELMEll EOWIN l rookllllral w~. GarOl!I Gr 11'1 •• T....,.._1 en•> .... "" Ju1n, San Cl-I•, ca. '2'12 LltWNI l1Kl\, Cal. "'51 ' C.i1tcirnl1 ~1 AttorMyl 1rtr ••1ci11rlx Oavld M. llfbll, l23 E. San J11en, San Ragar IC .... 1 Ven OI Vanter, 10l5 =~T, •U E. EVERllTT, Ito-, A. H-.... 3"'5 OtSolrt Shonl l"Wlbl-.cl °''""'Coat! Q.llly Piiot """' Cltmenle.. Ce. n.n '!!~,rd Canyon, Lff!Jlll 1111(1\, Cal. NOTICE IS _tu:•EllV GIViN tt!•I 0r1 .... Dffert Shot""-Ca lltvrfll• '227• u. n, 29 Incl July" 197:1 1..-.11 This l)u1lne11 •• btlng cOl\llUCltd Dy I ,·::", -·" ' , ... -.... -•• ' ELINA'INE E f'IERETT nc1 SECUlllTY H .. tft M. Hooker, llol20 E, M(Ltr...,,1---------------! 1"1rtn1r•hll). • 1 """'lllSI 1 "" vr n-. It ~ 11 N-11k, C1Utorri11 '°'so 0 .... A. Woaent.Mthl dlvkl111I. NATIONAL BAN n1'll led Ill< n • Thh busl11111 11 con411C•~ by 1 .-r•I PUBLIC NOTICE T"'• ,,,, __ ,, .. ""'' --...... R09.,. IC . Vin Ot Vanter petltiQtl IM Prllibllt ti WU! Incl for P9rlnerl/'ilp. "' '"''""'" m• "' '' TN Iliad hh tt1e C 1u111n« OI Le"•ra Tes I • man t • r, Roy A, Hoo1<er Cl•k ol Orenoe County on: J11ne 12, 1973. 1111~111 "''' w oun• r1r.r1nc:1 10 Whltll Ii mlde tor turlllef" Thli sttl•l'nlnl wit flltd with ""roun-• '11U By TM<esa ,.,., W"d, Deputy Cwnty ~mC11~~ ol or1noe COii~ on J!Jfll S. p.rtlc~r,, '"" 1n•t 1M t!me ind olK• ty Clerk o1 Oranoe (Ollfll'J' on J11111 s,'1S7J ~u,:~:1g: cC,.0L~=~•~A ~~ Cltl'k. •UtH · l"UIOI ol ~•""ii IM ~,.,. 1111 been 141 I« July L-1'11 H WtedWt"' Atty Pllbll Md Of C: f O 11 PH J. 1'71, ti 9:00 1 m .. 111 ll>r cDUrlroom ol •n f l"1 .... alWI. ' • THI! COUHT'f' 01' ORAHO• P\lbllsl'led Or1nge Coll! O•llY Pllol, ' an0t NS I Y 111• • Students Receive Degrees Ele\'en Orange C o a s t students have been awarded bachelor of Jrl.8 degrees from UC Santa Cruz, with one stu· dent receiving hls masters of science, and one student graduating with ' • c o 11 e g e honors." G. Douglas C l ark, Capistrano Beach, was award· ed his: degree "with college honors" in biology -en· vin>Mlental studies. H i s degree was conferred last December. TIIOMAS AUTCHEL I THE PICK OF Punch I c..ityt .... I lt7l. T•1111'9 Ml $)1'Mie.._. [j PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Otplt!mffll No. J ol llkl COUtl, ,, 100 S•lh 0111 Cliltonll• ,.,. NI. A·7•1'1 J-1s. n.,, Incl J11Jy •• ltn 11:;o.11 JUM •• u . 72. 29, lt'3 11ff·n Civic Cerilff Orlvt wu1, In tM CllV of im'.oc NOTIC• 01" Hl"ARING 01" l"l!TITION S..nla Ana, (llllornla. P"·tYlt l"OR l'R08ATE OF f Oll'EIGN Wll.L DI.It'd Ju~ ll. 1913. ~ubllihl!d Oretl{lt' Ca.st O&Uy PHct, AND l"Ollt Ll!TTEl:S 0 f AO-WILt,.IAM E. st JOHH, MINISTRATION ---------------1----::=:C:CC:C:C-:'.C:::::::::::--- ING, Costa Mesa, received a master of science degree. His ----------------------- degree, con fe r r ed last PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Counl'/ C!trk J ....... I, U, 22, 29, 1973 1751 ·T.I Eillle ot tOA MA'f' JENSMA, OKNJ-a J1J61 ,ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS &AaNES, SCHAG. JOMNSOll, 1 --------~-----· lltll' SU,ERIOlt COURT OF THE NAM• STATEMENT l(llllNEDY & e. •ANOOf.:.l"H MILL•ll NOTICE tS HEREllY GIVEN lhal STATE 01" CALlfOltNIA l"OR Tht fcllowlng ptrllOllto are dolnQ ar: 1Ern1~1 J. Sch19J ,f, · PUBLIC NOTICE OENN1S COOl'Elt his llled htrtln 1 pell· TK• COUNTY o' OltANOE binlnetl ••: •S!I Mii(Arl'lur e1,...,.f".O. aoic; OU 1----------------ltlon kif" Prablte o1 Fa.-1L11n Wiii 111<1 flN' . , Nt. A76nt MERlllTT MASTER ENTERPRISES, Newport 8t1Ch, Clllf. nw I JISlS tuu•nce ol L1tttrs ol Admll'll1tr1tlon IO N011Ca 01' KEARIN• 01 l'fllTIOM SOii Newport Center Drive, .$<.1lle ..00, Tai : (1141 tn·'100 NOTICa TO CllEDITO•S Ille 1111111-, r1f..-lfl(e lo Which II made FO• l'l:OIATE O, WILL ANO fOll Newport 8Hch, Cl '2660 ' Putillshld Or•noe Cotll Cally Pllol, SUl"tE•IOlt COURT OF TME I« further pnrllcullfl, I nd that the time L~E•S TESTAMl!NTARY Pawl Merr1tf CIW"ltlltllftn, A14 Ltur.I Jun. 15, l~. n, 19)) 11 ... 73 STATE OF CALIFO•NIA fOR Ind pl.-:e OI haarlng Ille '1&1111 hes bffn E1tate cf A.IAY ALLAN SIMPSON, StrHI, San Franc:lteo, Ce THE COUNTY OP OltANGI! Ht ICN" Jul~ 10, 197J, a l 9:00 1.m .. 111 Ille Dece&Slll WU111m Merri!! C:hllsfltMln, -'46 01 .. N1. A·7'4» coo.irJroom of Dt1>trlmenl No, ) of utd NOTICE tS t-l°efl:E llY GIVEN that ll'lond StrHI, Lagun1 lltKh, Ct. 92651 E11111 o1 DAVID E. ROOT, ~ls.o known t01Jt1, 11 71lO Civic C111ler Otl'll Vo(etl, In HUGH J.· RITCHIE h11 1111111 h.rtln o 'This IN1ltlllt It belhll conducttd by I es D. e. Root. Dec11stoc:t. !he Cl!y cl Sent• Ana, C1Ulornl1. petlllon /or Probll• of WILi •nd lor Gentral P1rln1rlhlp. 8·14171 NOTICE JS HEREBY GIVE'! 1o ~ D1tltll June 10, 1t'73 ltsuenct o1 L1tllf"1 Tes I 1 m • n I• r y Poul M,·Chrli!ltnsen NOTIC• OF T•USTEE'S SALE crfdflorl o1 tne tb0\11 n.11mtc1 de<:eo.lent WILLIAM E• ST JOHN, rtlertn(I lo which 11 mede I« turthlr This Utllment flied with tM .County UNDER DEED OF Tl:UIT 11111 all peri.ons hlvlnt c11lm1 119tlrisl llMI County Clerk p.arllcul•ri, 1nd that 1111 tlml 11!d p!1ce Clerk of Or11t11e County on M.ev,2•, 1'7'l TF S7t77 Hid <1ece01n1 111"1 reqwlrld I'll tll1. fl\ltm, •OIE•TSON, HOWIElt & GARLAND of Miring the ume ties been H I kif" J<.11¥ by Thtr111 ,M . Werd, 0.l)Uly COl,lt\ty LOAN NO. IJltlt wl!h 1111 nec:-ry v1111Chlt1, In The olflte a-,: Mldlolel Otrlntr ), 1971, 11 9;00 e.m ,, 111 1111 (OUrtroom' of Cl1rk. Notie1 11 llereoY t l'ltn ll\ltl $ElltRANO OI II• d.,.k of 1111 above tnltllld COUtl, Of' ~ C1mpU1 Drive Department No, 3 ot said (OIJrl, 11 700 f ·2"11 RECONYEYANCE ( 0 M P ANY, A !Cl ,,,_nl them, Wiii\ tht fllCfflll'Y N ......... c:h, CMll. 9'2"3 Clvk Ctflttr Drive WHI, In Ille City ot Publlihltll Orln;I CWll Oally Pllct JUfll Celllotnia tlN'POl"lllan 11 trutl .. , Of' 1\N:' 'IOllCl'llrt, 10 !he Ufldlril9nld •I Tiil 17HJ Mf.MOt Santa Ana C•llfornll . 1, I, IS, 21, 197.l l67•n (Hsor 1ru1tee, « 111bslllU11d tr11~ Robll"t1oon, KoW'Sff • 6-irllllO, AtllN"fllYI, A~I tor: l"tllll-Oiled J~ne 13, 1973. P11rw1nt 10 "'' dl!l'(I ot !t11'9 111ecvltd by '340 Ca,.,,llUI Drive, P.O. Box mr; PU!lllllhed Or11191t Cwst 011ly Piiot, WILLIAM I!. St JOHN, ROBERT P. BRANCH ANO BONNIE N. N""'""°"I ~l(h, C1ilkll'ni., Whldl 11 the Ji.me 22. 13, 1', 1971 lffO.TJ Counl'f CleTk llllANCH. HUSllAND ANO WIFE tr>d pltc:e of blnl111S1 of the vriclerllllllld In 111 JOHN C. McCALL l"ICTtTIOUI aUSlNl!SS recwdoed Fto. u , 1tn In book 10005 1>19' 1T1ttt.r1 oer11lnlng to the tstare ot said PUBLIC NO'llCE :a.t Wllsllll'I •I,.,., Sull1., HAM• STATIMENT 574 ot Olfldal Rec:wd. In !"41 ollkt of thl dk«lent, within 1011r mont11$ after 1111 LOI Ange~, CllHI. fCICllt T/\t loilowlng persons ;tort doi lll County RKOl"der ol O•lr>QI COUnty, first ~katLon ot lhh noll«. SUitE•IOI: COURT OF CALIFORNIA Tel:.Ulll •1...$JS1 blli.lnu1 a1: Ctlllornl1. 1rid P11rWen1 lo !hi Mollet of Oalltll Jllftf 5, 1tn COUNTY OP" Qtl:ANGI!: , Att-r tor: 1111111-r SOUTH COAST CLEAN·UP, 11116 Oeltull incl Election to Si ll ther11srlder IAMK OF AMEftlCA HATtONAt. 1tt Clvl( C•I« Drlff, Wnl, Safllt Ana Putoll1hed Orange (!)Ill Dilly Piiot, Vl1'9lnl1 W1y, So. Laguna, C•lll. 9'2677 tecOtdtd MIRh 1, 19T.I 111 book 10576 paoc Tit.UST & (AVIMGS A.!SOCIATl;JM CASE NUMIER \tnll J11n11 15, 16, 22.. 1973 1~73 Mark Wtrt"M Wiiiie. 31716 Vlrglnl1 6U Of Hiii Ollklal R91;Drdl.1 wfll SELL on Iv LllCltle 8. Elll1, SUMMONS W1v , So. Lt11un11, Cotlt. 9'26n July 6, 1911 •I 11 :OCI 1.m •• II ll>e Nori!\ Vice 1"resJdtnl·Tru1I Plalnllftl: OARftELL EOMONO SAM· Victor Sl"'tn Svlmoriofl, 31 7 1 ' Front 111trtl'ICI to 11\e Ora"'"' County Eweculw of lhtl wm Of FOflD, 1 minor, 0y and lti~h his 11111r· PUBLIC NOTICE Vltglnl1 Way, 5o. L1gun1, Cati!. mn COUl'"lhOuH loclted 11 100 Civic Crn1tr 11>1 aboYe "'IT>ld dleed•lll dlan Id lllelTI. All.WILDA SANFOiitO This bu1ln11s Is conducttd by I gerierel Orlv1 WM! formerly Wesl 1111 Slrffl, MICHAEL OERTNEI: o.fendanll: CHltlSTOPHER ALLEN NOTIC• INVITING alDS ptrlntrshlo. S1nt1 'An1 , C11!llornl11 at P...Ollc 1ucl!on, to RO•El:TSOfll, MOWSlll: & OARl.AND TITMUS, ARTHUR THOMAS PSALIOAS, Notice ts hereby 11lven lh•t 1111 Bo1rd of """"II: While Ille tllgMSI bl~r ICN" (llh (payebte t i U ... C•mpvl Drive DOES L through X TrwslHI cf the INlne Unlftltll Sc:hcol "'"' lllltment WIS flllll wllh 1hl COllll- December, was in astronomy. Other Costa Mesans (l'aduating were D o n a l d George Farris, b i s to r y , ChriJtopber Alari Hoyt, Arts · and crafts and their history, and · Jan Dare Pemberton, psychology, conferred I a s t December. Other graduates-incll\lde William Alan Shane, Hun· tington Beach, psychology, conferred I as t September; Mark A. Rohlffs, Laguna Hills, Phi Io s oph y ·psychology; Gregory Lehmann, sociology, conferred in March, and E~en Ann L<>see, biology,-both from Newport Beach; Rach e I Frances Goodwin , Seal Beach, music, conferred last Sep- tember ; Crilly Butler, Jr., South Laguna, psychology; and Pamela Ann Thomas, Westmlnster, asethetic studies. lhe tl1111 of $lie In l1wllll lnllM'f Cit Ille NtWl)Orl .. •ch. C11iflnll1 To rM Dlflfld1nr1: A clvll cornp!alnt Dls!Ticl o1 Oranqe C011111y, cellfor1111, will IY Clllrt of Orange Ccvnly on Jun1 11, Unlled St1le1) all rlghl, ll11e, and Inter•''· Tlf11>11ci111; 541·.wot 1111 bffn Hied by 1t•e otalnllffl egahut recel~e sealed bids up to ind lncludl119 ·Or.I. ,1---------------• con~yell 10 and"°"' hrkl Dy 11 under ••Id Att111m1ys +or E•KllllN' VOii. 11 you wish 10 dellfld this l1w1ult, 2:30 p.m, on llle 6th day of Ju!Y', 1tn. at FtStH d.-t In the prOP1rty 1llu1!ed In seld Publllhed Orafl(lt ca.sl Oally Piiot. you ,.,,u1t file In ltlli (OUrl 1 wrlllen llM o111Ce of Asslsiant Sllperinrlt'ldent, Publlsllfd Orenge Co.ill Oally Piiot PUBLlC NOTICE County encl Stare dtserlbed as tolL<7Wt: Ji.. 8 IS 22 29 1'73 1170.73 plffdlnt 111 r1spon11 lo lh• complain! (or FIKll Planning, oe~el~rnr 1 n d Ju111 IJ, 22, 2'/, encl July'· 1973 1Bl2·73 ---------------1 Loi Sl5 a<ld Ille Na.-!Masltrly one· . ' 1 ' ' ' a written IN' IN'll Pll"dln(ii. 11 • Justice Research, tocetecl •I 4542 Mlchlllson II.a.II, HOTICll 01" NON·ltESl'ONSlllLITY hall or Lot JM ot Trier Ne. 907, In 1111 Court! wilMn 311 da"" 111., This 1ummons 1,.,,,, ,,,,,_,,, -···. ot Which time a<ld PUBLIC NOTICE City ol Newparr Bitch. Co11n1y of ,. I def II • ~ ,.._. Ncllce Is hltl'by glvtn The! thl ~n.. orenge, Slate ol C~llfornlft, .,1 1>1r m~p PUBLIC NOTICE Is !Irv..:! on 'I""'· OllMlrw ,., 'IOIJr au place blds will be oublkly op1ned incl d..-ilgned wm "°' 11e resocn1lbl1 IDr e nv r91:ordld In Book 2B. Pagti :u 1a l6 111• will be tntertd on appllc11lcn bY the read aloud fa.-: · STATl!Ml!NT Of AIANOONMENT debls or Uebllllln conlf"1(litll by •nYont cluilve of mfi,eUi neooi mnp~, records SUl'ElltlOll cou•T OF THE plelntllfs and !ht court may enter • PURCHASE OF SCHOOL llJSES, 111 It· 01" USI! 01' orner l~n myi.ell, on w 1tter this dill ol Oiarigr Coonry. C•llfornl•. STATE OF CALtl'OltHIA f'OR lud11m1111 l(lalnst VOii I« tilt ,.,,onty or cordln(e with Biii lnSln1ctlont, Bid Con· l"ICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME Oaltd Thll 14th day o1 Jun•, 1913 AKA _ '°' VI• Mentone. Newporr J THI. COUNTY OI' OltANGI. otlM!r relfel rsquast1d ln tho (o,.,,plalnt. dltlans, and Specltlctllons on Ille and The tollowlll'll~er on h.as abandoriell the Twllla M. F. 'f'oorig Brlcll, Callfor"~ iii NO. A·!31,.. If you wlill lo Heil lti1 lllvlc1 Of '" •I· 1vaTl1t>le at the olllct of Anlifanl 11511 f1I !IHI oui business name '1079 Thurtn No. 2 ~Id >ala wUI De made, bu t wilhoUI NDT'KI! OI" SALE OI' REAL hll"rlt'I' Ill 11111 mtlltf", "fOll tftollld do IO Superintendent, Flscel Pl1nnl119, Dlvel!IO' EU.O.OltE C PANV ltEAL ESTATE Ci»I• MeH, Cel. 9'26U c:oven1n1 M werral\ly, e•pre11 OI lmplled, ... ltOfl'a•TY AT ll"RIVATE SALE "'"°"'"IV H !hit .,...r l"l•••I"" If •ny, ml!<ll Ind Research, loc•lell al of.S.ll DIVI SION II '" Dcvtr Ori~• Suitt 10 l'ubllw.ed Or11'191 '°'" 01lly Piiot, ttt-rdlrig 111r•. posi.esilon Of rn· ,b!MI ol M. M. McCALLEN, OrcN&fd m•v be 111111 "' 11-. Ml.chelson R~d. lr'llnt', Celtfomla '26". Newpcr:I !leach, C•llla.-nlt 92660. ' June' 16, 17, :rJ, lt1) 1•7t·13 CIHl'lbfances, IC SlllSIV the (ndebtfdn11' MOTtoe IS HEREBY GIVEN !hit sub-O•Ted Nev. 8. 19n "11 bids must be"" tonns •llOPllfd by Tne f'lclltloo1 bu1ln11s n1ri'lr rtferrlll-tol---------,=-=:--- H'CIKt'd by s•ld Oeell, lnchlCling !lie frt lrcl 10 ginllrmi!lon b'f !tie atxwe enlll1ed WILLIAM E. ST .JOHN, Cltrk !he Irvine Un111111 School OL1!rlc1. tbOVI wa1 flied In counrv on M.lrch 11 PUBIJC NOTICE incl e~Pll\n o1 !ht tru>lee Ind ct the Court, °" Juty 26, 19n, al 9:00-a.m., IN' Br DONN"' GIBSON, Depuly Tllf! rlthl to reJeft Dr wtl'll Ir· ltn ' fru111 C'l""ltll "-'.••Id deed, 1t11Yanc11 tlMlr"'"' wllhln ttoe tlm• allowed by 111w, iSEtij ADAI• revutarltlu ln •nv « 111 bids Is reseNed Ruth P . WILiiams, 167 N. Llncc1n1 ------·-------~. """"' lnl••ell II prll\lldld tile unde.-1lgnect, as CO.Xtt\lllN'I of lhe --. bY the Bwrd of TrlllleH. Pleet. MOntOVll , C11lfcrnla 91016 SLl' .. 11 therl!n, 1nd !he u11P11ld prlnclpll of the will ol M. M. McCALLEN, (!«eased, wUI Att-y at L•w By: Jol>n-M. Rlld<: This bUi.ltllll wes conducttd by '" In.. l'ICTITIOUS ·aUSINESS note w cured bl, u \d deed: le-wit sell ar prl~•tr 111e to the highest ind best 1•1 Wnltllff Oft"' S11lll ttt Asslsta111 Superlnllnclefll dlvld<.111 NI.Ml. STATIM•fllT 111..,.M wlln nrertll tnereon from ••tt bidder on 111e terms and conditions N~ •••ch, Ct~fonil• t:IW Publl'lhed Oranll" Coe•t Dilly 1f~ RuSH P. WILLIAMS The tollowll'll perlOtl b dPlnt Du1l1>1u Hov1mblr 10. lt71 ali provided In said Mrelnelle• ,.,,entlon"" •II rlpht, 11111 1rid AT!:_ 1714:0,...,.,,~lfl J11t1e n , 29, 1973 Thi• sl•l'"""t w•i 111..:1 w1111 the Cou~ 11: not1. ln!llf"HI Off M. M. McCALLEN. drc1114d, ""'""'• ~... 1 n . O II ty Cllf"I. of Orang1 COUlll't on June 1t, COOK DRYWALL, 9n5 El OvrlftOO 011eo: June L ltn. et lhe lime of hh dealh and •II rlghl, tltt1 P<.1111 ,,_, Oranoe C:oest 1 Y l'llot, ltn. Clrcle, 1"oun11fn V•llrf, C1lll. SERR A'IO RECO~VEYANCE tnd 1n11res1 1ha1 Ille eslll• hll 1cqulred J11ne :n, 29 ind July" IL 1971 19sa..73 PUBLIC NOTICE F1'Jn Cocllo.l.estellt. Inc.. A C1lltcrnL1 COMPANY ln .od<llHon to 11iat ol llrc.t!'lle11t at rho time Publlsl>td Df•noot Co-" Oally Piiot, Ca.-porallon, 9nS El Our1ng11 C1rcl1, •s suc11 'Trus!H ol ~;1. de11n. In thr rn1 prgpeny localed PUBLIC NOTICE SUPERIOR cou•T 01" June :rJ, 29, encl Jiiiy 6. 13.!lm 19l1·r.I F011nlal11 Vllltv, Calll. ' By WAYNC ~-IMTHEWS In !he County Of Ortnllt'• srale of Calllor· CALIFa-NIA, COUNTY Of Cl.ANOE Tl'lll flllllllftl 11 being eonduclltll by 1 Au1horl11d Dfll(tr nl•, dtscrlbell •• fl)flo...,: NOTICE 01" SALE OF ltEAL CASE NUMllE• m.oi PUBIJC NOTICE corpcr:11lan Pul>lliMd Newoor1 H1rbor N'wli Pre11 Lolli 'U incl tt. Blo(k ~11 of Hunllng· PltOl"'E•TV AT l'llt lVATE S&L~ SUMMONS LARRY L. COOK tombl~ IWllh 0 11!11 Pile! Nt..,!>Ofl Ion BN(I\, 11111 Slrltl!t !)e(:tlon. I S per No. A 7JW Plelnlilf; SECURITY FORE COit· FICTITIOUS aUSINl!5S Pre-.llloen! ••ac:h, C•Hl'llr .... a, J11N IS, n. '9. 1m. map rec:crded In. Bocil: ~. PilQe 10, of Sul!l•i« CCII.Ir! ctl IM·Stal1 ol cantornra PORATION NAM• !'TATEMENT Thili 1111..-nent 1111<1 with llMI c ounrv 11 1,·13 Mf1cell1neouli Ma!>". I« 1111 County ol Or1nge. Defendants: RONA.LO 0 . HOGELAND, The tollowlnQ persons a, re doint Cleril of Ortnoe CCUlllY on: Mloy 29' lt7l. ----------Thi tale· I~ wbiect le la,,;es and In !IMI M~r~r o1 the El tllt of MARION N~NCY E HOGE~NO DOES 1 1nrough bullllllS ai · WU.Ll.t.M I . ST JqHN, COUNTY CLll:IC, PUlll IC NO'n CE 1ue11m!'n1s not deHnqvent, covtnants, L. SPRATT, Ot'c11W11. v, 111('.tllslv"e -'. -• 'THE al.CK. RACK, 1~8 NflW!*"t By The'""8 M. W1rd, Deputy ' l ton dlt.ons. res lflet!ons, rt!olrv1llon1. Nolle• 11 hltl"tl>y Ql'len !hi! 11ie un· To rht C1elendin1t• A d vll compl1lnt 11vd Costa Mii• 92627 l'!Yn --------------·lol'lghb, rlghtli of way and eal1m1n11 ot. lllf'Slgned w!tl sen 11 ·prl'llle H I•, on« 1111 been tiled 1>y 1hl '011!ntltt 1g1ln1I yoo Pa;;.a Jean FO!la. •315 No. seo.. Publlshed Orano• Cati! 01lly 1'11of, ltESOLUT/ON NO. 4S·•·7' ,.ord. If 1ny. .,..,. !'le 6111 d•V of July, 197.I, ,, tho If VOii wtill lo d1fend 11111 llWIUI!, YOU IU1tto. Cellr 9237' Jun• 1, •• IJ, 22. ll13 161'-73 llESOLUTIOH OF" TNE IOAftl) Olt The property Is 10 be tOld "11 11" offlc. of B1LL OEAALBERRV {GEOAGE muit flle !n this COi.if! t . written p!tadll"l(I G1r1ldln1 A T<.1rn1r, 71t E. :Qrd, S....•• ---·------------1 EOUCATION Off Tlta M&Wl"ORT°"'l!S-W'ltlloul warrenty ot rll)l"l!lentaUon •s to CON RAO CO.), 100 S, E:I Cimino Real, Sen Jn respOnW to 11\1 c°"*llnl within 30 etrnar.slno C•tll. 9U06 1 UNIFli!O ICMOOL D,.,.RICT 01" !tit cooaltlon « l\IH1bllll't 01 ti. 'loll or 1wnent1. ca. '26n,, Co1o1rll'I ol Of-•· day& after fh•I 1urnmon1 It Hrvltll on you. 'Thi• bu1ln-.s I• conducted b"f • II~ PUBLIC NOTICE ORANGE CtllNTY, CALll!OllNIA cl any fmprove<'l'lenls thereon fDt" t on· State of C•llllN'nla ,to the hlglMlst tlllt'Wsl otllerwl1e \IO<.lt (jl.faull wlM bti l'nlerld an pertnerihlp ' • . .p111.J, ltn 11r11t1lon M o«\IPlrlon I ncl wllhol/1 bidder Ind 111blfct lo conllrl'Tllilon by appllcat!O:. bl !hi Pl•lnlllf •nd lh• court Pa..,.I• J FO!lll l"ICTITIOUI IUSINl!SS On motion of Mtmbtr Arltlu"r F. 11rm1tri:.111r111ce, termll1 ~k or other 1ald superior CoYf"I, .n i11e rleht,_llllt...•nd '"'Y 1111tr 1 udQmenl •lnll YOU !err lh1 Thll tltrern&n.I w11 !!led with Ille C®"-NAMa STAT•M•HT Tllc.ni~•c11, llu!y 1econ!l"" Ind unanimous· repair worlt to be petformtd tiY Ultlr. lnttresl of 11ld decea~ •I the lime ol money a.-other rtllif reque1tltll In !hi "' Clerk OI Or1nge Coiinty on Junt 19 Th loi! · Iii(! peri.on Is doing bllllnetl • l'I cerrleef, ltiJ! ll)f1owln11 .Rtsolullo~ was The pr~rty will ~ sold on !he lollow· d••lh and 111 tilt rlohl title 11t\d lntertst complelnt 1m ' e °"' ~dQl'I~· 1nQ terma: Ca.i. « 111rr casl'I alJd P•rl tn11 the 111111 of s.a1d'dece11ed hll 1c· 11 you Wlsh IO 11ttc'fllit11vl« of •n •I· nttif Ill JAROINCITOS, 2121 l"liceift11 Ave.. \'/HEllEAS. 111e New:>0rl·Ml~I Unified crKlll, lhe terms DI 1uch (tt'dlt 10 bl <'IC· quired by OP1r1llon of law or Olherwlse, llN'MY ill thlt melter, )'W ltloff• H "6 Putl/hhtd Otenge COl't Ollly Pilot c t M C1lltornl1 9217' School 0 !11r\ct is !ht w.ntr ol 11w1 cer· c111t1blf lo lhe 11ndersloned an~ to 1ne other lhen or In 1dd!tlon to 11111 OI 11ld pl'l:llTlplly liO "thtt y1111r pfot1tllftt, II anv. J<.1M 72, 29, incl July 6, 1), 1m 19tt-73 ':;',!.11._~51' HiPOflnln;i, 1.'.ic. ( 1 ta!n real prce>erlY loca1K1 In lhe County of Suoerl« Courr, len otrcen! (10'N) of 1111 deceesed, 11 tl'>I llm1 cl dra!h, In end lo may be med on """"' Calllwnlt cMJIOl'•llonl tl21 l"lklnlll Ofante. Stat1 ot C•lllornl1, hllrelnaU~r emount bid to accomp1nv Ille olltr by 111 1111 cert•ln rtal property 1!1u1te In 1"9 Oiled May 1 11n PUBLIC NOTICE A c t MIH C•lll.\'2tl1 described; Ind . , eertlllecl Ch«k and. fft e bll1rw:e to bl pnld CllY ot Sa'I Clem1nte, County ol Or11111t, WILLt~M E. ST JOHN, Clor!"k ,_..,, OI • 1 II 'ainciuetlld by 1 COl""- Wl-IER EAS, i<"lll property ls net -on ~tlrm1Uon of llll by SllJM!rlw Court. s111e o1 Cell!wnl1, p1rtlcu11rly describe!! e v FLOY ltAV, °""''¥ T~~!on bUslr11t needed, l\C!" .,.111 U be netdld by 111e Taxts. tnsur1nc9 ind r...,I, If 1ny, 1r1 IO 111 follow1, lc-w!I : SEIDEL, c•AIL & SEl:IE• FICTITIOUS IUSINESI p0r C11tEATLVE HAl'll"IEMING$, INC. Dl1trlc1 for school tl111roorn ~ldln9s 11 be pror"atfd IO dose ol ftCfOW. ElCtOW LOT •S In TrK"I tll In 11\e City ol S..n 1611 Wnlellff Or .. S11lll 10t MAME ITATEMENT Booth Thomtl. Ptlllderil tho l!m1 of trln~ftr Of !Ille: , (kergotl •r• lo be dlvldtd e<iu~ly bllWH'I Cll'f'Nftll, 11 per mep t111rlfol, r'Ka.-ded NIWIMl!1 IHCll, Cell!. ftlM Thlt fcllowlng persons 1r1 ooing <> TIW 1 ltmfl'IT WM flied by the County NQW, THEREFORE. BE IT RESOlV·. bu)191' Ind seller, excll)I !!loll 11'11! selllf In BocWot No 1, 11 p111e1 2J lo 25 ln.. Tel · 1714) 611...... bllllneH •s: • J (,, c ty Ml"f 29 1973 ED IM I !he Oisltlcl dat1 hlttl!v <llCl.trl ""111 fNoY I« OOCumet!lltY Slllr'ICK and Int clu1h11 Of M11telltlll0Ul Mtpi. Record1 All~rnt\'11 for "11l•itlfl l"ROOlJCE MAltT, 21«1 PIKtnllt, Cltrk inge Olin on ' Fut.n Ill l11teril lo Mll writ reiJI prcperty II till POik¥ °' !Ill• Insur.net'; l/\t bl.Iyer Wiit ol Or•rlll• Counly. Publlsned ()f1119e CWll 01lly Piiot, COii• MHI, Cell!. Publl1htd Or•11111 Ca.st Oetly Piiot, Cos!• Mew County wa•er Ol1trlct. upcn PIY uoon rec:otdlng tlMI '"· Terms ol ulr tail! In .l•wful monrv OI June IS 72 29 and Jwly 6 \'7l 1&59·73 JQHPll C. lnotrdl1, '2ml N~ Cr, J I I u n. nn 1'5'-T.I fhl terms and condlllon1 ntrelnat11r set 81cb m111t be In writing and w!ll be tilt United st111s on cantlrm111lon ol sal1, ' ' ' ' Hunllnglon Bltdl, Cel. ,.... """ ' ' ' fort!\. recel'led 11 Ille olllcn of HARWODO & a.-ptrl (l!ih incl bllinct 1vldeoctd by Stmi.iel P. l1191rdia, 1141 Kiner A'lr.••I ----~----------1 Seid real PfOPllfty b d11erlbed 11 AOK.INSON, attorneys lot Hid ca.•· note securld by MOO"lllaoe IN' Trust OHd PUBIJ. C NOTICE Hunlll'lllon BH<h, Cal, • PU-BLJC NOTICE tallows: rculors, a! 550 NIWJ>IN'I Cenlff Drive, on thl prOP11•ly so IOllJ. 'Ten pt<cenl Of This buslllftl Is CondU<ltd by 1 oener•t A oortlot1 of pr~tl~ wllnln the rnott Sufi• .Q.I,, Newport Beach, C11111otnl1, at amount ol tlld to be oePl)Slttd wllh bid. plrlnet"shlp. l----''--~-.,-ccccc=:-:----1 wn te<ly 30.9f7 acre~. me11ur"<t from Ille 1ny time Iller first publklllon of !hi• Bids IN' oiler& to be In wrlli1111 Incl wlll II Sl5ll Simuel I". lll!llrdlt flCTITIOUS IUSINllS sMf>tl"ly llnr o1 Su11llower Avenue, notlc1, 1ncl t>ekll'e maklrig well 1•lt. bl rec:tlvtd at 1"41 elor~u!~ Office 11 ~ny NOTICE TD CJIEDIJO•S Tl'lls 1!1!1ment we1 ftltd with Ille C:oun-NAMI! STATl!MaNT formerly W~kenam A'lenOH, a n d TM undersigned reurve Ille right lo ,... time 111er Ille flrit l)llbllcatlan herfol Incl SUPEltlOtl: COUl:T 01" THE ty Clerk of Ot"I"'" Clll.lnty on JIJll'll lt, TIMI loll""'1f"ll person 11 doing bllllnut me.sured from tlle 111l~•lr, u~e o! ject •nv and ell bids prlDr to etiltY of an bllol"e dall Of llle. STATE Of" CALIFOtl:NIA P"Ofl 1t7l es: Sm•ll•Y S!r"!, ot !h~I p01"1 Qtl ot t/\t ~ confi rming this sale. Dllell J<.1ne 11, 1973. THE COUNTY 01" ORAllOti l'M1M Blt'Y'AN BAX EN OEN COMPANY, Doi lend 1llolled to Jam" Mc,..~n. IS OATEO: Junt U, 1973. Wlllrell SChmlll Ho. A·7"'6 Pllblllhld Dnnge Cotsl O•llv Piiot, i 11t 171h 51rHI, Cosll Mela 92627 dncrlbe'd In !he Finni Decree cf Farli· MARCUS M. M(CALLr:"I , Jlt. Admlnl1tratw with Wlll·enneKt'd E1tate of MAUO A. C:AB~EN, 0tce111d. J11111 n , 29, 11'111 J11ly 6. ll, Im l,_.73 l ryt'I la1111'1d111, J3il Etll 17111 Strfff, !Ion of the 11111,hc San!i1go de Santa WILLIAM H, H. McCALLEN Of tho 11!1!1 of llld deeldlnl NOTtCE IS HEREllY GIVEN to llMI COii• MIH"9'26f7 An1, ""hl(h Wh 1111~'9<1 S4P1tmbo:'r If. HAAWOOO • ADKINSON WM. c , O'OONNl.LL tredlta.-1 cl 111e 1DOv1 n11ned deced1nt PUBLIC NOTICE Thl1 business I• conduct.d by •n In· , .. , In loOk "Ill' Pitqe: •iii ill -,: Ool'l&kf O. H1,..Md t1U E. Wl!lttltr, sune 10J thar all wson' havlno clafm1 11111nst me dl'lldull. J11ogme111s of the Oit!rltt Coorl ol !he At1orn1y1 Al Law l"IC• River1, Ca. s1ld dec""tn! ~·• ·~ulr"" to flll them. ·• I TYln Ba•llldln 17th Judicial Dl~!rlcl In end le• Los UO N1WPOf"I Cuter°""'· Sllnt 4' AttorMy lot" Allmln. W/WIU An111•lll wi th 1ne necessery \'OUChltS, In lhl ofllct l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS Thl1 lllTtrl'lt'nl w11 llLed with tM COllll· Angele• County, Calilornla more Post OUlct loK 1907 ot tM fflllt f1I aild clectcltnt • of Ille clerk of !he 1b0\fl enlllled cO<.lrt, M NAMI STATEMINT l'I Clerk. ol Orenvt County on June J p1rtlcutarly deacrlnrd a1 rollow1: NtWPOrl llea(n, Cllller!ILI ftMI l»M>C to pres1111 them. wllti the n1<:•1ury TIMI following oeri.on I• dolnt buallltll ltn. ' CornnienclnQ al the in1 crw.rlnn ol Tl'l~h-17141 ...,ltll P~bllilled Or1n11• C1111ll Delly Piiot, vQ11cl\er1, to the undersigned 1t IM Office 11 V•"AGE 1 -•·UIU Smalley Roaq wl!h 11\e ,1n11r1l 1M1 of .t.ltonMl'I fol' Ce-Exec111o1'"1 22, 23, 19, \'73 193'9·13 of his attorney, ROY S, GIORDANO, THE .... SMITHY, 63J Publlllled ()!"11191 Cotll Dally l"Llot, funUcwt r A~mue ••shown en e ""'' ol Publl1htd Of•MP COIA Oellv Pilot J11111 '"'., '''' N""' Moin St., Suitt a, No. A, Ohms Wy, Cos11 Mete, 9'U7' J -I 15 ll 29 1973 UJS.73 16 11 22 1973 IUJ.73 "'"' "'' Harr" A11111on" s.rerio, m 1 N1tlon•'••c'c'-.;..c'_' __ ,_. ________ .1 ra(I No. "637, teCOl"dt'd In &oof.; 20, ' • • PUBLIC NOTICE Snnla Ana. Callta.-nra, 'l<hlcn I• the piece ""' Cost• Ml $I cant 92621 1 PitOM .., end ~ o1 MIKtlllnlOlls M.ip5, • ol bu1h>11s ol the 11nder1l111ltd In •II Tht1"' bUtln11s Is' condUcted by 111 lfl· record~ of Or•nQe Ccwnryi menct, llOlllll met!.,., pert1!11lng 10 tl>t nl•ll of Niii dl'l!duil ' PUBLIC NOTICE Iii! centerline of Mid Sun!IOWl!r A~nue PUBLIC NOTICE • 11516 dlctdtnl within lour month• 1!1er lhl HAltllY A SEltENO Norlh a d~rH' s1• 50" E ~st, 11•.111 h.oel sJ',.0i~7:. T2o5:~DJ~0;~E nrs1 P<.1bilc1!1on o1 11111 notlc•. Th!i 11aten'>lnt w •• tlled With 111e COllflo ,1CT1Ttous aus1N•11 IO the n11rthe1~t CDrn~r cl lhe l1ncl NOTICE TO CONTRAC"T01:$ ITATB Of CALlfO•NIA FOlt OATEO June J, 1973 tv Clerk OI Or11191 County on J1111e lt, NAMI ITATIM•NT Gesc:rlbed llS P•t~el 1 Jn dt~.d lo CALLJNG FOi: llDS YNI 'OUNTY o• O•ANGE CHARLES W. CA.BEEN 1t73. TM _,, ...... ....,.son 11 ctcl .. .,,_ Newporl·M-lJnlloed Stl>OOI O•>ltlct School DI s Ir I c I : Nl!WPORT-MESA '-NI, ,,.76247 E~ecUl« of the wlll DI ,1117' e1· """"'' ,.... ~l?f'de:JJ A"'f"~11'f5• 1"6.J· In B~ 115~ UNtFIEO SCHOOL OISTll.ICT Etl•I• of> OLENE L, MI LLER, Decn1-The 100\le named decfdenl l'ul>llsllfd Ol"enge Co-II Oelty Pllol, • SCOTTY'S SECURITY SERVICE, •141 019' c 0 ' . ,;•1 NO~~~ lo i~' Bid D11dlfne: 11;00 ddcck B.m. on the ed. ROY s. GIORDANO. INC. Uni :rJ, 29 .. •nd Jll1'16,IS,1m 110.·73 w...-........ NI. 11.S, Hvntlneton lltch, ,:..esn::u.~"rr.:.e 01'~!d 5,_~,t:t i, ~~~~ 2tld dey ot J<.1ly, 1t 1J . MOTICE IS HIEllEIY GIVEN to the lilt Nertlll MtOn SI., Sllilt... Cell!. 921M7 00 dtgrees 51 , OJ" Etll 40 00 IHI rat~ Pli er of Bid RKelot. 1157 PlKt11ll1 ctldlkll'I of lhtt 1b0vl named drctllent S•nll Anii. c1111. PUBLIC NOTICE Geol"9' R11tull Hw1itlolll, '2-'1 Trvt Polnr 04 Beglnnl~o· · !l\ef\c~ con. AWnue. CO!ltl Mese !ht! efl Plf"IOnt l'llVlng cl1lm1 agarnsl Ille T•I: {1141 Ml·16't Werner Ave. N1. 145, H11ntl110lon B1a(h, I I her! 1 i 1· I Prolrcl lllerillflcellon N1me; Palnllflll, Hid d91;110enl 1r1 ttq11lre!I lo fill tnern, Alllnlet'I I« E•ecll'lor I '11» Cllffonllt mD ~;i'O:~~ee~ ;1~5.!'ed ~as~'OO ,~';;· NewllOfl·Mesa lJnllied·SchCOI 0 1,lrlct wll!I ltM neceu •rv vouchef"1, tn !he office Publl5hld Or1no1 Coast Ollly Piiot June NOTICI TO Cl:•OrTOl::S Thi• M1111S1 It conclvcttd b't' '" ln- lhllnC•, westerly pnrall:t•' .,,;in ~ Piece Plans 111e °" Fill; 11$1 Pl-ff• ot 1119 cterll: of the abcl'le entitled C011rt, Dr I, IS, n . 29, 1t13 1767·73 SUl"IRIOll COU•T °" THI!: dov!clull. centerlrl'll! cf Sunflo..,ar Avcnut SCll'lh W A~nuoe, Co111 Mtll lo prtMnl thrm, w11h !hi r>tcls~ry STATa Of CAl,,ll"Otl:NIA l"Olt ~ A. Hontk11tte OfVFHl il' 50" Wnt. 1000 UNI;. lherw;f NOTICE I~ HEREBY GIVEN 11\11 IM "'°""""' .. lo llM under1l111ltd al Ille cll)cl TM• COUNTY 0, OltANO• Tlllt .i1t.ment WIS 111111 with the coun· ::.i::: ~~=1J~1h~··lt~ra~e;;,~t~~ ~~~Y-~'!m'a.-~.".o:'c11~'1~1,~ '~= : .. ut~',:"e'"ft~ v!A.1G~~~L"°' w$'!:,~nH1c,nv~ PUBLIC NOTICE E t 11 of R':,'9,A.l~'L,.HE UJW ty c~or Dnnfl eountv on J11111 ~~ tl>tnct toillrly, nareu~1 'wlih tne Us Gc~,er11l~g B~[d· herefn!'tttr reltned St. Suite UGI, Lm Angelff, C1Ufotnl1, ~:Md. ' Publls'*' Dr•"'" CMll 01Uy l"llOI, ce..teJU"' of Sll!lllower Avenue Nc>rln ti to '' DIST RICT Wiii re<:eov1 VP to, but whkh 11 Ille plKe cl bullr>Hl OI llMI SUl"EAIO• lc~U:T OI" THI! NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN 10 llMI Jllnl ,, 15, 22, 29, ltTJ 1761·11 degrfft S5' 50 .. e 1,1 I'll IXI trei· to 'he nor liter than lhf 1tiove slattoc:t nme, 11111· unclef'1119Md In ell ·rne111n; pert1lnl1'111 lo STATE OF CALtfORNIA l"OR crtdllors of the •b<Nt n1rntd ~ Tr11t Polnl 111 Segl1111i:.0, ed 1110, for Ille '"'atd Of I cot1tr1cl llN' llMI nlell of ttld de<:tdtnl, Within fcvr THE COUNTY OF ORANOI. lhll 111 pertonl htvlnt1 dllms ag.alntt thl PUBIJC NOTICE The aboYe l)trcel contalnJ 0 08 dC1U· lne ubcve P•clrct. montl\1 ell.,. thol !lr1t l)llbtlcallan cl !hit N A Ul'tl Hid decldtnt er. r-.q11lrM II> 11 .. !Nm 1---------------1 The conClll\1>111 ol tt11 111• ,,",,a~ tollov~· !Ir:!::'';~:~~ bel~~e~-=:1 ln~hea:.:~1~.:i nogc~ J S ltr.I NOTICE O~ HE'A.1tlHG Of l"•TITIOM wltll llMI nte:es .. ry WUC:her'lo Fri IM ottk~ l'ICTfTIOUS IUSINISt Cl) rne ~Jr p•ltr lh$tl bl ,,,000 {lnrtl i:lllblicly ,.~ ~loud •• '"' t bovl lltlf'CI • A 11;: M1LLEfl JR l'OI:: l"l:OIATE 0, l'Oltl".ICIN Wlt.L of"" dri f1I""' •bOYI "'"lttd '°°""' f1lf N~· STAT•Ml'.NT t110<.111tld dona .. /. , time 1,-,d pl41;f. E. ec'iito Off 1~ wni 01 :ANO FOlt L.ln&llS of AO. lo Pf'IN"' tl'>ltn, whti thl nte'""'IY lhtl foltowltiO,,.......,,.. 1r• OOlntl b<.11!11t11 121 An IKIOW 1hall bf cp&nea w1rn In Th ·1 t10 l Ill ltll • r MINISTRATION 'lllUCl'lwl, ~the 11nder.i.ned ., the offk• ' 9'CIOW holder ac,t~!AQl<I ta Inf' terr t~~n :;/ o~i~ ooc:ii~:°t~ 111~~.~ee I IAltr-w:.':'..., ~mid <llCtdenl E11tle of. ELMER E. GRABER, OI Mr" lllOl'lllYl1 HILL, ~Altl:!fl & llUll• N . IJIONEER DENTAL CERA.MIC&, ... Obtrlcl, !ti · t I ood I I I hi )g • Pt«••ed • RIL~ 4'5 SOUl1l l'lllllf"W St., Los GO'lll'llOf SI COlll MI N Calif r26U t1) The t tcrow sh All clost-Wit Mn //j II e re 1't'n 1~ bfd crl'ld I °i' W I n l"AUl.INe It., WlllOl>IT NOTICE JS HEltEIY GIVEN 11111 Al)Ol'IM, Ct1llornl1 t0017, which II the Sltpl\l(I ·;.homll 8~~1~ ... days after the adoption o! 11111 Rt'WI~· 'l;t: 9~111 mu3~n ng, Ila,:. Ind 111 466 SMltll 011'11 ii., OENNIS COOPElt h11 lllC!d herein 1 pt'll· p!Kt ol bvl.lnn1 ol' 1111 undenTfl*I ln 111 Governor SI., COiia Mt11. Call!. '9'2626 !Ion uni•" e•ltllded tly ~ mulYI! rt•POn&lve 10 lhe (Ofll ':"r C:-oc: mentt IUlll llOI tlan tao-Prcbl le or FCN"t!gn Wiii •nd I« mttt•n pert11n1ng to !ht nl1t1 ol Mid J.,,.,y N1t11beuer "42 Pelm Ave .. 1oreem1nt. • i;1,~ b!ll ., 11 t>e r ' ~ llv. he Lot A•lll• Cttrl. 911114 Issuance Cit L<erJ of Admlnl1tretlot1 to deced'"t, wllhln loo.ff motlll\I after lht Onvt C•l!I 92.665 ' • (bl The buv1r &l>all ""Y .. 11 01 !l•e see~rliy ieier~~ ,:'f.:"llt.:1r edeor1trlct Tth (2UI •21•21:11 !IMI petlllciter reference to which !1 mlde llr1t 11<.1bllc1llon flf ltllt nollce. Thi• bi,11nft1 I• conductitll cy 1 ..,,.,.t ete:row fff1, lncludl"IJ lh1 d•-!wlng ot dO(umtntl e~d c.y rhe 1111 of propolied Alfwneyt for l•t(lllW for tvr!Mr pe1Uc<.1l•rt. end th.et !Ill llm1 Oetld Junt 20, 1t1l j)lrtM«hlp dcc11mtnt1, Ille pr11m<11m for !he iul)(oniractori Putolllht<t Or•llll• Co-11 01l1y Piiot J~nt 1ncf pl•ct of 11e1r1ng 1111 ume h11 llHn MARV JAYNE LUCAS si.P""' Tflon't•• Brottmll\ l)Ol!cy of tlflt l11iur11n<;t, It• rftO<d•"V Mr Jtme\" M Heis!lnd Olrrctor I, 11, 22. 2', ltn 17,f.7' Ml IOI' Juty 10, 197S, ti t :OO e.m., In Ille Ad1nlnl1t11trl~ ol :' tit::: I Thll 1111,""111 w11 flled w1lh lht COlll'I• ltet. tncl 1nv d0cumen1<1ry ·~~ 1!amp' SchoO! F~llillei. M11nie11ance' Ind Opera: c:ourtrOOI'!' ot Otoerlment N&. 3 Of "id KILL ,ol~~·.:~·.~~~ILLcttc: n 1.-Clolrll ct Or•Alll Coun"" on Jut11 12, Wll!dl mey bf '"u!rod. tlons. wlll mtt1 w!1n ll'laM pors.ons In· PUBLIC NOTICE (OUrt, t i 700 Civic Ceritlf" Otlvt Wffl, n ' IC...., ltn. (3) In •ccOJdance w!•., 1111 p1~vl1!0•., ol te•11l<'CI !n 1oorlno th• 1111 et Ille ottlce Cit 11>1 City ol Senlt Ant, Cellfornl•. !/1 1 S~-; ...... ,.. 11 al 1"'Htt1 eiucetlon COde Srcrlon 16103, thl1 kftool l'acmti11, 1oeettd 11 m ea~tr -011td J11ne :00, 1973 Wt Metlllo Cllll Mif Publl.ritd O!"•not Cot1t O tv. l"llft, 1t1to1unon •INlll bf DllbllMll'd in 1114 $lr9tt, Cotti Melli •t 10:00 1.m •• J une ·• ,..... w, rt.LIAM' E. ST JOHN, T.i ltl~I ....... . Ju1>1 1$, 22, ,,, Ind J11l'1 •• 1m 1to6-7' Orengo C:1>ast D•llY Piiot, • n-1111ptr 1!, ttn NOTIC• TO Cl:IOITOllS ~ry krk Art I for Ad""'91"'11frt of gtnffal ~lrcul11lon Pllbll'l'lod (n t~t The DISTRICT t!l't'"'fel the right ro ri• S Ul"l!•tO• COUl:T Of' THa 1t0••-1tTSON,-HOWS•J1 C OAl:LAND p~ Of"l'9' Coaat' Dell\' ll"llol PUBLIC NOTICE 011tf\CI, •I Ills! onct a ww• !Qr 1 1Kl 1ny ur &II ll-laf or 10 waive eny Ir. STAT• 01" CAt..1,0RNIA fOll ayi -a ft IN Jul 6. II lf7' lff2·fi lllCcm.JIY• w..u prlCN" to 1111 •·t<~T!Ot1 reou1•tlllt1 ~ lnlor"ll'1'1ltlt l In •nv blch Of" TH• COUNTY 0, OltA,..,: -,.....,.,. Df'1.,. • v • l'ICTrTtOUS 1us111•s• c1 • dttd. In llt bllldlng. "" A·1..,. N...,.,. a..dl, ca•H. ~ BLIC NOTICE ttAM• STATIM•NT Bl IT FURTHl!R ltESOLVEO lhll !flt TM OISTRICT htl 11oi.mi1neo: ttie E1tat1 ot MYRTLE EU.EN SMITH. Tll: m•• .... PU T follcwl II dolntll bullf>IM ,::.~:::d •::i, Vl~~111:r•:1:.:.;;!:rk,;.:: ~•"ae::11t1 ~~~~~y ~~'!i,i::, ,:rW:!'f: :!:..-~":'"M~1A~tVER~~~T~: ~::~~· ~-J.=~!st OeHy l"llol, I 611M ••::REEN .;: ... i::ROEN$, ~ M"trllt dlrKttd 10 lllCllll 1H ftlCftWty IO bl pertormld ror Mell «•II IN' l\'j:H! DI NOTICE II Hl!lllll'Y' OIViM IO .... J-t2. n. 211. !973 '''"'n IUl"•1t10• COUlll:T 0, TN• SI., L.egunl t..ch, Celll~ f2U\, l".O. dOC.11!1"111111. lnch.Mllng 1lvl 'IOI tlll'lfltcl l'O "'°'~tn11n llffdM 10 n11:ul1 111e CDnlll(f cr"'9lkll'1 of tfll tbovl nttntll dlcedent STAT• 01' CAl.ll"Olll:NIA l"Olt lox m, ltn J11tn Ctpletrano, C11H. ll'>I. ncrow ln.irvctl-Ind !tit Ot'lnl Thew •tits ••• on 1111 It 1W•PtK1nut llMlt •11 oenons Mvtnt cl1lmt llO•l!llt the THI COUNTY Ofll oaAH•• '2"51 dMd. A'ltftvl, CMt1 MIN. coi:oltl. me-, bl ob-Wld de<:tdtnt ere required I'll 1111 ''*"' PUBUC NOTICE Ne. A·767" _ftenk Mtlll"lct, m Myrff• $1., AYO: 111r"50fl. CIMY· ~lllCltri.on, !lintel on llQUQt. A (opy of lllfM r•ltt with lht '*"""" vouchers. ffi I~ otfl« NOT!Ca 01" N•A•INO 0, ll"•TrTIOll 1:-ouna llfKfl, Celli. t3ilSI • LMt&ton. MKMllll•n. 'Thon'llMOll 111111 Ill •r..t " "" IOCI II... ol lhoe clerk of !ht Above tn!Uted court. Ot JIOTICI! ~SAL• fOlt l'ROIATE OP" ,Oil.ION WILL Tllb l>\li.ln•• 11 Mint CondllCltd w en NOfiS . Non• • Tht lot~nQ 1'(1\1d\ll• of 1191" d!em IO Pl'tifl!ll 11\tt'n, Wftn "" M<:lllll!"I' 11'1 ac:torcs.n<• wltn Ille provisions ol tl'lt AND fOR LITT••s 0,.. AO. lndlvkl<.111 ABSEHT1 llTlllll""IX'd V.:19" I• lltMd upon • working dly of VOllChtri. 10 , ... \lndtfllllnld It !he offlm ClllfCN"nl• un1rorm COft'lfl'llf"(l•I coo.. MINISTRATION Frtnk Mllll"lc• $lATE-0~ C:At.liJ()RNIA ) llfltt Cll hDl.lr•. TIM rttt lort!cllffy e'lll of ..... tltorM'fl, IAltNES, S.CHAO. h\ftl blfrlO OU. 11f1C1 V!1Nk1 1tore11t IOt Elllll of LEVt Jl!NSMA, OlcHMd. Trill Sllltn'ltlll lllld 11/lfl! ·lhl C:OU111)' I n . """'I"" work Wit bl II ltlSI 1111'11 ltnd JOHNSON & Kll!NNl!OY, dU MtcArtrMJr !"Nell Ille San Cltmenl• van Ind SICN"tfl NOTIC! IS HEltlillY GIVEN !hit '"""of Ot•no<t c:oun1v on: June 12j IV'1 COUHTY OP ORANGE ) -htll. B01Jl1v1rd, P.O. Box 1116, Ntwllollrl 8Mf111, II llllllled l'O I !ltn et Wttthcuslf'nln on MI CHAl!L GE"TNl!ft, 11111 llltcl herein I • ., TIMlrtM M. W1rd, DIPUIY ~Oli!llV 1, Btv•rJw K. u1111i1on. v I c 1 II W.111 be 1ntna11orv uoon 'hi CON-C•ltlwnla 926tJ, which I• tlw Oltct of 1,.. oood• htrtlniner oucrrbtd ind <111t pellllon for l"r111>o1t1 ot lf0ttlon Wiii llnd Clttk. P•tQ<lent/Cter~ pro la!YI ol !ht awrll of lRACJOll to WPIOm 111e (ontrttl 1~ Mlnu1 o1 :11t llft'lhrr1l11ntd In •II mllllft notice nivlr19 bltfl Olvtn 10 parllH known tor l1s111nce ol Lett1r1 ot Admlnl~trellon l"Uffl £0\IClllOll o1 Ille' NIWPOt14'1..-Unll!fd 1w1rci.tt, Ind <.1P011 .,.., wec:on1ra,1or 01rt1!nlnf1 le Ille llltlt ol 11!p dKIClfnl, 10 Cltlm •~ lnttr•f IMreln end thl time to the petlrlontf r.I~• to whlcri Is l'ullllshed Or11191 COl•I Delly l'Holr !ochOOI Ol1trlcl ol Drllnot CGolnly, Ulldlf him, to 6t'f nol l"f 11\tn 1111 i1LC1 within lw r month• alter 11\1 ttral MllCt• •IJICllled In llJCh 11otlce 1or ptYIMlll ol rnt<t• tor h.rrtlltr p.11rtlcul1r'I, •nd lhll !IMI JllM 1$, 22, "' tnd J11ly '· 1tn 112'•13 -1-C•Uf0rnt1, l\ltrebV certify r1111 Ille •bevt \jll(llled rattt 10 •II ~ tmoltVtd non 01 th\1 ng!l''· •udl ht\llno 011plrld, notice It ntretry tfme and pl1(• f1I tre1rlftll tilt """ Ills ·~~:;;:=;;;;;;;9i~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;; . """ ltl'f0011111 11.11111111krn w11 d11ly encl by tham In 1111 IJKullon Cit !hit conlraet. 011ed ~Y ~. 1t7J. • o1vtn 11111 these toOdt wlll bf tol4ll 11 bHn HI !Or J111y 10, 1t7J, •! t rOO f ,11)., ~n ~.n, •OIMd bf' tM .Mid R01ril '' • No bld<ltr mtr. vr!llldraw hi• bid tot , LORlt.AINE M, MST.l one aut.:tlon ,, 20151/t M•"'"'' tllf courtroom f1I Dto•rtment No. ~ of ote '"""''' """'''"" !Wiit .,...,. on Ille Slh perlOll of ··~IV·"'"' {I}) d•vs 11111' '"' E•tculrlx OI th• Wiit ~011!1verc1. Ctly crl Cot•• ff\HI, Cownty IJI 1•IC1 C(ll,lr!, 411 700 Civic Cl!lltl' Orlw u • dlV Of JUl'll, 1m. Ind Pttttef 11¥ • 1111• Mt fol' 1t1t ooen!111 of ble11, • OI the el)Ov• named d•ctdent. oratlft Stitt of Calllon!I• on ttlt 13th' Wut. In 1111 City of S11111 Al'I•· Catllornle, I """''"'°""Wile ot uld Bo.r.i. A PllYmtnt bOncl 81'1d I pertorm1nc1 IAll:N•t. SCKAO, OIY of' JI.II'/ ltn. It 7 O'tl0ck '· M. Dtttcl JI'"' io. 1tn. I IN· WITNE~I WKClt.1011. I ,,. ... bonl ~II tit tfQ\rtrffl l)rlOt to •Jecu11on of IOHHSON & KBNNl!OY Tht 1o11ow'1ng 1111 II • Oriti deN:flpllan WIL.t.IAM •• ST JOMN. "°'fa!PllO llT ,,,,. 111.W al>d ... , 11111 Slh""' ( trac:t. The ,.)"l'ltnt bond ...... "'.,. lfll ~IST J, SC NAG. Ja.. 01 !hf or•f'Y 10 be IOld l eoun"" Clerk Ott/'OI JIJll'll, ltn. . 'f In ~ forM Ml fOf"lh In the conlrtcl oocv-'5li M1tArtll11t 111111., Neme of OWMI"? G. T. $irM1tr:, lllOllenGN, flOWS•ll & OAaU.ND ($IAl.J men11. P.D. llJI 17*" Amount Ou.t UOJ.U. ,,... c.,..,.. Dtlvt ,.....,.., K, l.anosklf\, OCIVl!'nlf!O OMl'd Ntw,_, a..c ... C•llf.tiU, 'Wl""'°'t .AUCllOl'I 11.,,..i leKll. CeMI. ti..a VI~ l'r"ltlelenl(C~rt". pro "'1" ., Dorothy H•nflY ,!lh« T-61 {JU) """" Dlllld ., Coll• MHI c1111utn!•. J\1!11 Tth m •I -.Met .i 11111 ._11 • e1111unon l'urchnl~ "'""' l"'t•111•r,• '" ••ec11trt• 21 1t7J Atltf'Mf' ftr1 l"llfliel!tl' fltlaf!Mtll DI'.,... C••I Dally l'lldl J-1"111>11.n.M In Dr111tt C.Olil 01111 l"llO\ 11111>1 .tltd Dtlltfll C0.11 0•11~ PJIOI, ~llOUIMd Or9flOI Co1UI D•lt• 1"!10!. l'llblll/llCI Ortnoe Cot•' D•llr l"llot, a. is, n. l't7l 1116-7' Jwne u •NI J<.int 22, 1tn 1wi.r> J-1, 1, tl. 11, 19n 169,.n Jun• 21, ,., 1m 1tM.n J11111 22. ll, tt, 1t7' ,,., • .,, r-l1DBAY in .the 1!"'1f".J"li"j"'ij111ii"'•i"I ·-·-' Nuelear Dispute Court Asks Halt " To French Teets TIIE HAGUE (UPI) -The International· Court of Justice as~ed France today to suspend nuclear testing ln the South Paci!iC, but the F r e n c h government denied the wOrk:I court's jurisdiction in the case. In an eight to six \'Ole, the court said "the Fren ch government should ·avoid nuclear tests_ causing the (IN SHORT .. :) deposit of radioilctive fallout on Australian territory." The court said t h e governments or Australia and France should "ensure that no acti:>n ol • any kind is taken which might aggravate or ex· tend their nuclear t es t s dispute submitted to the coun or prejudJce the rights-of the other party in ihe respe<t of the carrying out cX whatever decision the court may render. esc1e-erl NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Ted Patrick, a t:J=year-otd forrne aide to California Gov. Ronald Reagan, and four others 114ve been cleared of kldnaplng charges stemming from at· tempts to "deprogram" three members of a conservative religious sect . A Manhattan grand jury found insufficient cause to in· diet P.atriqt' and R o be r t DiQuattro, !O. and his brother James, 23, of Clifton, N.J .: Charlotte Sheinkln. 25. New York and Lawrenie Ragow, a 43-year-old Connecticut engineer. e Guar,,. BeW TIJUANA, Mexko (AP ) J..fexican federal authorities have arrested the director of the Baja California· State Penitentiary and 10 prison guards and charged them with complicity in the June 10 escape of 10 prisoners, of· flcials say. Acting on orders of federal proB<CUtor Allooao ~opez Quiroga, federal .police Thurs- day arrested Vlcto< De La Gana, 29, director ol the prison in Tijuana's La Mesa suburb since November 1971. e Parb Kt.ts PARIS (AP) Pol~"todoy arrested several members of the <;ommomlli League, a far· left groap which. took part In 'l'ta1nday 's bloody s t r e e t fighting in the heart of Paris. LeajJ\le olllcills SJid police raided their olficea at da¥:n ·and arrested a number of members. Police aald they lound two rifles, clubs and ax handles In the league offices. e S11b l-..fr" ·carbiln dioxide poisoning MOD- day while they and two (.'()JT)-- panions were trapped aboard the 21.foot minisub 351 feet down off Key West. e PeroK Spealu BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) -After 18 years of ex· '\ ile, fonner Argentine pr~si· dent Juan Peron is attemphng to \>Ull t oge th er his movement's feuding factloal.- realizing the military could once again sweep into power. Alter meeting with r)rcsi- dent Hector J. Campora Thursday night, Peron chasti!r ed militants "who try to in- filtrate the popular ranks" and cautioned, "We are not in con~ dition to continue destroying ourselves." Nader V1iit Opposing Cold Spray. WASHINGTON !UPI) ,- The R a I p h Nsder·backed Health Research Group bu -;; petitioned the governme~l to remove aerosol cold and breath sprays from t b e market. including one popular brand which it said has been Jinked to 11 deaths. DR. SIDNEY Wolle, dire<:· tor or the group, told the Food and D r u g Administration (FDA) that a fivt-year-old Cleveland, Ohio, girl died April 18 after "Pertussin Night-Time Medicated Vaporizer" was sprayed in her room. He said the death of the girl, Marcia Overfield, and that of one or tv.·o other persons among the 11 cases. may have been caused by freon gases used as pro- pellants in the aerosol devices. The FDA confirmed that It had. received reports or 11 deaths associated with the Pertussin spray, which is meant to be sprayed aroW!.d the room and on the pillows rather than in the mouth . But it said "at least eight ol lhe 11 deatha have been reported a,; abuse such as spl"ltying the drug into a bag from which It _ w~ then deliberat~ly inhaled. ! THE FDA SAID it hod ! formed a special team of doc· I tors. scientists and inspectors I to look. into the potential hazard and "FDA district of· flee are now checking the pro. du,cers and sellers of Pertusmo and some 17 or 18 similar pro-~ ducts. . .FDA Is ccnsld<rlng I data as 19pldly as tt. can be • collected to see If a basis ex~ } ists for regulatory action.•· It added that the death or VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP.) -the Overfield girl did not ap- A U.S. Coast ·ouard board of pear to be associated with iftqully into the dtaths ol two abuse of the drug . aclerit.lllls aboard the sub-I marine Sea Uni<-convenes Kids. L;J_ _ To : here today two houn after a 1ilre joint funeral service !or the I :~~ ~aterit, s:::::-"•Ask Andy 1· 110NCJ-~OMO-I c. s = r....,. ,. ......... ,. ,_,. "'---..·,., www _, ..... 1145 2Rlfl - SAYIJIPTO .IK o.c......-.~ ····--........ IMrtt. ' I I • • • For the . Record Grandpar~nts' Day? cOOnty and · S o ~ t b e rn s<J al services provided to the ... -·..i.-..1121_ ... __ By O.C. HUSTINGS Dissolutions ·r °' , ... o.i1r .r11" '''" Orange County's own Rep. Of Marriage i\ndrew Hh111haw rR·Newport ....,... ,_ 1 Beach) has introduced the w~i::.on. Arnold ••nton and •Gloria -granddaddy o( all ·OOls in the Meiltrt. w11f.r Gtr11c1 and Fr111tt l Co•••-· ' Allcl• "&'",,.., ~~f.i. i.':1~1~~11,.,~ ~".i~vouo He wants the fourth Sunday Pv e, JQM9t!IN "af'd wu111m "*" in November iu>l aside as Na-H•lkl1kh1, Mirr eun1c1 1114 JOlfl)h ry LJ;,~~,1\ n I •• ~ T .I G: tlQ,nal ~rtndparenta.p,ay.! Morrl50n, 'Qflma tlld J~ fli='n BW said the holiday Iran!, M1rc!1 Oli ne i nd J""" . . ir~:re~ndlO!'Qt Hl!'lr; •114 Jwl\ OCll'ortlv 'th's "'" d /.hemmr d haeaCh family Ar1111•, 1..v1111 E1 and W!IB•m I!., av .muc o w t they are s~·~~11r'1tr1c • N-.n ind Cll••1•1 they owe to those who built Perkins, Geor" 11:. •nd 0011 an~ sacrificed ?or lhem." Hiil, GIO'llf •nd Mlrv•ntll ' ' w1111rl'lo, Joa11~1l'lcr Oblrt L•t e said more than JOO H1111tlktr, Mary G. ·and Jay w. _ GrlHllh, srtv .... a . ancr c1t11tn111 "· Con gr es s men have co- 1"ttrt111• lt°"'1> J, •nd Jo.n J, sponsored the bill since tie ln- c1m1no, Santo Anthony •llO Vtlm• t od -· 'l . l d' 6 I • Merl• r u .. ~ 1 , inc u 1ng 1 out o l'l•van, FIYt Ellt n tnd Jtmt• r>arrltk 43 representat· e f eart>er, Sheron J, •nd Garr, T. IV S r 0 m &r1dl•v. e°\~•= J~::r1na E.' California . · Jen!f, Mlchtel •nd llrl!'l<la Ellttn * * * t1ordn1r, J1n•t Lt• tnd John Ptul c1m~1, ·e1t11 •~ i nd J1cob CONGRESSMAN Hinshaw' l!Ull'nl wn111mi. Deni•• 1'1u11 •nd Jltln also has intf04uced a bill he ~=:~:Mf;:~,·~.·:S ~~~~ M~ says will aid &Panlsh-speaking 8or11LM1r• e. ana c111rlo!T• J. c1't'1••'" of Ora·nge Count · v~n 111. C1rol Jin• ind Dot11ld Roy -''.., Y· Atl•n. Li na J11 Ind Cl1udt J, Ill The b'll HR 7728 'd' Oer•nle•u. Loren J. a11d Dor\111 L. I , • , , prOVI es ~~~~·1:;,~.,?n.,1~~dHJ!~~ M. th a t the administrative Grlnd$ll tr, Lolilltnt LM aml J l fl'lff Office Of LJ $ Courts shall pro-W1d1 , ' ' Hain••· Oorotl'IV end Ell!worth vide mterpreters for those Groaan, S1111n l I I b I 11 I Ind ho Henry lvtr1tle persons W (iO not Speak McK.n~!•, Gen 5· 1nd Kenneth M. English witlr-reasonable fac1'l1'. JohnMlll, Dtbra ean 1nd Chtrllt L. Oro11•nbacllfr, Jane K. 11\d G1ry w. ty and who may not un- CummlAJ.'· RlcMrd Lawr1nc1 and d ta d testiJn d M~~[' J.:t'e'F. 1nd N1c11ata1 A. m· er;,chn urts ony preseqte Gvnqlt, S111an L and Gordon L. <>u CO • Anwller, John G. ancl Su••n D. . · •. Van RV, Jtmtt C1rt and 8ellY Ann f-flns haW'll bilingual COurts ~~~'/i',;1!1•111e~11n•1~ ~1.i!~i'n1~·~~d J, hill requires the dlrecior of s.?.'1~~1Nancy M. al'ld ~1c,,.rd e. administration for U.S. Courts &ilrrv, M1ruvn and Aooer L•t in areas where at least 5 per· ow.ni, ll0$1m1rl1 11\d Donetd G. • f>IVtr, !utan E. Ind Jlmtl E. cent Or 51),000 Of the rCSldentS ~:.,}~""''Y'I Nornn •nd J imn are Mexican-Americans wi ll C•od•Ylll1, sutann• 1nc1 J1111 LoL• certify persons to serve as in--Marie . Hitchcock, Frtd M. 1nd TIJfTY !. terpreters. M111ot,11, John 'fl, I nd Antoinette M. Ma111tftl<o, Lfml) s. •nd 1t lch1ri11 T. The law if enacted would H-, ICfflntfh M1rtlll l lld Shella JO'I ', I wooc1ward, Dor• ve1r1 11>11 Edw1rd IC. apply specifically to Orange "' ... ,..,.... J11119 ' ' ltla., l1111el 11\d Lwll Callforrua, Hinshaw said. el4rly under the S o c l a I * * * SccUrity Act as amended last COUNTY C I! A t ii M A N fall. Gr8yson Walk.ins of t b e "The language in question American · 1n~ndent Part)'. stipulates that 90 'percent of says "Anyone r'emainiiiflii the social service funds s~nt the other (political) parties is under the act must be. apphed giving de facto endorsement to to those elderly, bhn~ or the programs that are ruining. diabled who' are actual ca,sh the colintry -fOreign aid, recipients of ..,..-eJfare, whlle wheat giveaways and higher limiting to 10 percent what taxes.!' · can be applied re'i::ipients not ·. * * * on welfare rolls." · 'BUT B A C K T O The congressman says the Congressman Hinshaw, who is law. as written, is . ~orcin~ sponsoring another bill design· states and -communthes to ed ~to reCognlze---the-nation's deny !arge nlll!l!>ers of elderly senior citi:r.ens. and disabled citizens access to He says his HR 3819 would social servi~es that are correct a "cruel inequity" in rightfully the irs. -Lawmen Receive . • Delays . in Trials . SANTA1 ANA -A pair of lawmen (·involved in the sbootlng of two Jt)en at the Tustin'• Bacl)elors Ill bar have received delays ln their trials. Susperuled ()'press. Police Sgt. Thomas M. Baroldi, 26, and Garden Grove Patrolman J erry L. Gray, 28, were scheduled to _go on trial last Monday in Orange County superior Court. The .proceedings were con- tinued becal13e one defen- dant's defense attofuey is cur- rently tied up in another murder case. Widely known crimi n al lawyer Matthew Kurilich is defending Sgt. Baroldi against a murder cha rge, while Of- ficer Gray is accused of assault with a deadly weapon. M~C1rtv, Dorothy Ann tlld G~e Sh111!1 J1mtt, •1r1>1r1 A. al>d Jtt" Gaffney, hl"Otl Lat Ind Gllblf1 J111tln Moro1n, Ct""'ll• L. Incl 11111 ll(l'OJ, D1vld Slllf>/lel\ 11141 Elllt JICk$Oll, Loh and L••ov W. UC Irvine Grad Student Investiga1ors claim Baroldi shot and fatally wounded Capt. Randall S. Robinette, 25,' a Phoenix, A r i z . , helicopter pilot, last Jan. 5 in a fracas apparently involving a dispute over a woman with a~ third party. Sam Campise, 35, Tustin, was also shot and critically woilli ded during the incident in which Capt. Robinette alleged- ly only attempted to assist law o£ficers he .observed to be in some kind of trouble. Llcllttr, Slamund J, a rid Ida I. M1t'k1. Sllll'llY A. and ltfcll1rd L-1.ion, Karll'I (. and o..,,.. 11:. Kina, l arba•a J. 1nd FrlOdla ~~~~.·~~ i~llll ".~:;. Nllion ll:ocltWllOd, VtllJflt L. 1"11 Johll M. Faulk, vlrolnl1 EILJtblll'I 1nc1 wnn111:1 Fr1nkllt1 Scale. Ell11btlll 1nd Aandolr.ill Sdlell, Gtnt'o'llYe E. 111d !'tit S. Herndon. Aicll1rd Etrl and't;Dln Ht l•n LaV11V, Y11tti. Ind Dtllf111 1yn1 ~ 81nt1111n, P'a!rld a I. 1nd •rltt N. Brtdl1y, l rfflda 111d Larry Van Tondl!'I. a1orle A. ,,... T.,,._ LH Llk!n, Elbtrt John afld .Ci:in1tt11ct Lorina Zt!!mtr, P11 rlcla and Oou;les Sch91,.,, M1rv E. •nd Aobl'r! F, C1ld ...... I, 0«111'1 Y. &fld Gl•Jld L, ~ommtr. Lfll ind l':lvdt Emll .. ----. SN,..t. M1ni.llt .,... 11td .....vmY !UriNltfh ~tew1rt, C1lllY J, and Gtr1ld D. Fet11VJOn, Oebr• and All11 Glenn Garlleld, Mklll1I JOI and1Vl~l1 Sue- H<'dott, P~QV and .... r'f'>d Cw..1 • Wise, t!IM lt•kt r alld Rob.rt t'rn'Wlulll lll...-r, aar'bllra ,t,, tnd 1tu111 A"lllolw't' erown, Slllrlent M. 1nd 8uddY E. eo•'\IY, J.,.nna M. l'nd Wl"!11m !', • Mlf!tti., CMdfl'll M. and JOMl'tl • Gor••llO. MlfVIM and JoM(ltl AnrtloftV Other Deatlis PORT CHESTER, N . Y . (AP) -'lllom• L. Perldm, 87. loogtime chairman ol the Duke Endowment, one oC the I a r g e s t philanthropic en- clowments in the nation, died Thursday. De•th Notice• ARBUCKLE I< SON WESTCUFF MORTUARY U7 E. 17th St .• Costa Mtsa· 111 11188 • BALTZ-BERGERON FUNERAL HOM~ •••• Corene del Mar '''""" Colla Mesa 111-1114 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Coata Mna LI IH433 • DILDAY BROTHERll MORTUAllll!S 17'11 Beach Blvd. Bllllllapa Beach Sll·Tlll 144 Redondo Aver ' U.r Bt•cb l lJ-411.1111 • M<CORMICK LAG~,:' BEACH MORTUAJh 17" Lllpoa Caa)'Oll Rd. · IN-NII •• PACIFIC VIEW 1 MEAlORIAL PARK 1Cemttery Mort1uy ,(:bapel . -4 :View DttVe Ne"' ....... Cllllonla_ /", T PID FAMILY .COLONIAL rUNEllAL • JIOMJli • M BelsaA ... · w..,.-: 111-1111 ~·MORTUARY ' 11'1 Malll St, · "-=:::.-· 'Assistant of the Year' A UC Irvine gradua te stu- denl "'ho formerly workef;I in the aerospace -industry has been named the outstanding teaching assls!ant of Jbe year in the School of Biological Sciences. David Grubbs, 29, a doctoral student in popuJatiop and en- vironmental biology, i is ~ winner of the $200 Steinhaus Award in r ecogriltiOn or his superior work u a teacher and also as coordinator of the u nd e r gr ad u a t ·e-ecology laboratory CWr'te"1 ·81\(l ams: tant . in Ii graduate-revel teaclling pnignun. 'the SteinbaUs AWlli'd is Ro1i Caspers To Appear On TV Sht1iv Caspers will comn,.ent on his view of Orange Co un ty government during a KOCE- TV "Omnibus 50" telecast on Tuesday at ·6:'30 p.m. and Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The Channel 50 telecaSt will iQClude Caspers' views on matters such as coe.stline preservation, clean air, rapid transit, improvements i n medical care and aatilfying the ~ltural appetJtes o f Orange County, Caspers is now serving his second term as chairman ol the Orange County Board of SuperviSOMI,. . given in memory of Edward A. Steinha us, fcunding dean of the ScOOol of B i o l ogica l Sciences at UC!. · Grubbs, married and the father of two, decided he Wan.ted to go into..,.... teaching after doing research iq the life sciences area of aerospace for three years. He also has work· ed. as a game wnden at Lion Country Safari and has -il COflsultant· on environmental impact studies. He has been a member or the citizent ad- vOOry C\lf['.IJ'littee ln popula- ·tion economics for the city of ·Irvine. Now rompleting work on his · dissertation in animal ecology, he will become an assistant professor o' biology at Cal State Premo this fall. Three other gra d uate students won $100 Steinhaus Awards f o r t h eir performances as t e a c h i n g assistants. They are Joseph Louis Achor of T us t in, specializing in psychobiology: George C. Stone of Palm Springs, developmental and cell biology and Cornella Rem- pel Thrash of Jr11ine, molecular biology. Honorable men tions were given to J ames L. Lucas of Garden Grove, Patrick Y. O'Brien ot Long Beach and Robert D. Rubin of Santa Rosa, populatim and en- vironmental biology; Joanne J. Otto of Troutdale, Ore., developmeotal and c e 11 .biology, and Rebecca Smith or Irvine, Oswald Steward of Boulder, Colo., and Margaret Sulko of Bel l flower , psychobiology. Campise, who was hit by a bullet from 0£ficer Gray's revolver that lodged an inch from hi~ heart, has since filed a $900,000 damage suit naming the lawmen and their respec- tive municipal e;mployers. Home-made Ice Crea1n Set at Fair A home-made ice cream contest ii being arranged by the Orange County Fair to underscore this year's "Good Old Days" theme. The contest will be held at the fair July 8,-on FlijllUy Day. Entrants may use their favorite recipes or Jet .. their imaginations run w i 1 d • Trophies and prizes will be "l"arded for first througb tfUrd place. The best part of the contest will be eating the ice cream, which will be given away free. The fair will reimburse all contestant. for the ingredients used. The contest will be held at noon and fair-goers are en- couraged to bring a filcnic lunch to munch on whife wait- ing for the prize-winning de- sert to appear. Deadline for entering is June · 1a. Application blanks are available from the Orange County Fair, 88 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, 545-1131. The fair runs July 6-15. ''SUMMER WAREHOUS.E SALE'' EVERYTHl.NG 2 50t. DISCOUNT · GOES · 10 OR MORE CA~PETING .. -SURPLUS PIECES-CUTS-ROLLS NAME .. IRANDS -BIRVEN • BLAINE • t!OL YTEX • MAND • TREND VINYL FLOOR .COVERING ARMSR,ON• • CON.OLIUM •• "•·-•;;,·•;.· ;;11;;,M;,;Tt;,;L;;,I _____ _ ALSO AT 20°/o DISCOUNT s,..,.,....., ... ~ J Caloric S.tf Clenl"' Ro .... WA1..LPAPll • HAPIS • CllAMIC TILi J Dr9po1t1 ...... SALE ENDS JULY 2, 1973 VISIT OUR WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM TODAY l I u .. your B1nkAmerlcard or M11t1r Ch1rg1 . ·NEW MOTIF l • ,. "'Nt• AHA 3 i DESIGN :, .. -·· .... , !I CiENTER 1 • ~ WILSHlll . , IDIM•ll . ' 1416 Wlilhln ·Ave. IAH t11eo PllVI' I • SANTA ANA CALIFORNIA " I Fr!day, Jl.ne 22, 197.3 OAILV PILOT J J i'You get it better at the Wher~house" , . §·\~TI-ll~l~l~I-IC)Jlfil~ Recor·ds • Tapes • tHEAP ·-• e CHEAP • CHEAP • CHEAP • CHEAP • CHEAP • CHEAP • CHEAP • Che~~est Prices in Calif~rl!ia -and Proud Of It! e LED ZEPPLIN-HOUH of tile Holy , e TOWER OF POWER-featuring . So Very Hard to Go e COLD iLOOD-Thrllltr , e J. GEILS IAND-lloodshot ,, e THE IEST OF IREAD e . STEVE STILLS-Down Tloe Road e DR. JOHN...:.in The Right Place e GEO.GE HARRISON-1.Mog In Ille Materlol WOttd " e PA~McCARTNEY-Red. Ro .. 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CLASS 1-C."S SELLING e HAYDN: MASS IN TIME OF WAR-L-d 1 ... s1ol.,_ Columbia M 32196 , _ e BEETHOVEN: SYMPHONY •S- L-d 1 ..... eln-Colwnbla M 31810 e VERDI : JOAN OF ARC C-e, Miines, Domlnt-"ngol SCL 3791 13 Discs! e RAVEL: PIANO CONCERTO IN G /PIANO CONCIRTO FOR LIFT HAN~ Colombia M 31426 e CHAIRIER: ESPANA-AND OTHER SPANISH FA·YORITES- L-lornsloln-Colombla M 31816 e ll%ET: THE CARMEN SUITES- L-IO<Mtoln-Cohimbla M 31100 e IEETHOYEN : SYMPHONY •9 G-. Soltl Lodoo CSP.a I~ Discs! · e TCHAIKOVSKY: 1812 OVERTURE .,-Leopold StalloW.kl-Loocloa Pliase 4·SPC 21041 e MARILYN HORN SINGS ROSSINl-Loodoll OS'26305 e STRAVINSKI: RITE OF SPRING- L-d ....... toln-Cohimbla M 31520 e RODRIGO: CONCIERTO DE ARANJUIEZ--Jullao Broam- RCA I.Si: 2730 e . JOHN WILLIAMS GllA TEST HITS OF THE GUITA- Columbl-M 31407 e VERDI : lllJOLmO--Sultiorlaod Pnoronl, Mlhlft LolMlon- OSA 13105 13 Dlsc1J THE BEA RES "Ln IT II" 2.49 JOHN MAYALL lock:M "-IHts 2 11 sn 3.00 e HITHOVEN: SONATA •I fPotflotl~uoJ, #14 IMoooilthtJ , •Zl IAppmsi_.a I-Arthur Rubeo1t0in-RCA LSC 4001 e DONIZETTI: ANNA IOLINA- lnorly Siii 14 discs! ATS ·20015/4 • scon JOPLIN : THE RED IACK IOOK-Tloo New Eogland c_...a1ory R...,11me 1inH01blo -Antol 36060 e SWITCHED-ON·IACH-Walter Carlos-Columbia M~ 7194 e HANSTEIN: MAS5-Leooard ....,.._,2 discs> ColU111bla M2 31001 e NOW, VOYAGER-CLASSIC FILM SCORES OF MAX STEINER -ChoriH GOl'hardt, Natl-I Phllhormoolc Orch.,tr.-RCA ARL 1-0lU • P.llR DISC 5.98 MFG. LIST e STRA YlljSKY: THI FIRDllD I Complete oritloal .......... . 19101-Sol(I Olawo, ~ Do Pari-""'"' S 36910 e THI SE.I\ HAWK-CLASSIC FILM SCORES OF KORNGOl.D RCA LSC 3330 e OFNNIACH: TALIS Of HOFFMA~ovorly - Audio Tr....., 20014/3 13 discs! e DONIZml: MARIA STUARDA- ltvorly Siiis-Audio Tr....., 20010/3 13 DlscsJ e ,DONIZITTI: ROIERTO DEYIR~UX-lovorly 510- Audlo T'"""Y 20003/3 (] Discs> e WA(,TER CARLOS-THI WILt TEMPERED SYNTHESIZIR~ Columbia MS 7216 DIONNE WARWICKE JACKSON FIVE MEMOREX BLANK TAPE 2 LP sns • hcodeOfQ.old e PNM Wlttiln 3.00 ..... Maybe Tomorrow 40% OFF THE .\\TI-11~_1~1~1-l()lJS ·J~ . ...... .,~ ....... ••C... • Tapes PRICES GOOD ONLY AT .. 468 E. 17th St. Phone 548·9115 COSTA MESA ' • . . , I • •• . ' .. • • ' :-. . • .. . -. • • • .. . J • -• ·-• • . • • • .• . "' • • •• ' • • •• ' , - DAI~ Y P.JLOT Friday, JL1nt 22, 1973 •. ·11 \. I " . 10 PACK PEPSI lt'a getting warmer now (not the Pepsi. the weather), Good price •.. stock up. /MIRROR TILE SMQKED-OR GOLD VEIN .. This atuU is 10 beautiful but the only thing ugly about it ia the price at most plac•s. Here, even the pric:e i,s beautiful. PENNZOIL MOTOR OIL At the gas station they writ• it down because they are too embarraued to 1ay their price aloud. .... ..},,.,. "' COOLANT ••• I ! ! ! 1 . RECOVERY • --· SYSTEM • -·-97c -• The water that overflows condetlHI in ·trua .and is supposed lo go back when the radiator c:ools. l hope ao. 24" AGA APPBOYED GAS LOii SET 6'7 This ii a aJeeper folks. They put it in to IH U .you're reading-the ad. (Should Hll out in three days or they throw me out on the fourth). · ' OPEN- FRID A JUNE 22ND AT · ~-NOOR- OK , So I. 'SELIE:\/E.. A 5161'-f" (;Ari- -rAi..l<. .. NOW · 1"Eil-l'\E... . WHE.Rt:'. T~ l"\E"N.$" Rel)!"\ IS: .. BLACK .&. DECKER ~" VARIABLE SPEED . DRILL OB HEDGE TRIMMER 8 77 YOUR CHOICE ---- If you nMd one or both and don't buy· it thia week, who are you going to get sympathy · from later? · -PROPANE T~NIS This ia juat the appetiz:er.becauH the "rest ot the prices are good too. For yOW" propane camping stuff aD.d toQ)s, PRESTO NE . II 157 GAL. In awnmer ii helps to lower your boiling point (not you, tM car radiator) and prevent boiloven. In winter it prevents hMzinq. GALVANIZED I DRAIN . . PAN 57c Uaed to call th ... "Hcrwg Pana" unUl some Red Ri•er H09 (that' a the real name) took ua to court. WOOD LETTEBS 66~ Got numhera too. got aome symbola. Some folb do their houae numbers. 90me funny aayinqt, aome lrind of aalea pitch here. SWAG · .. SHADE LAMP 497 This ia the one that loob-lilce, but ii not quite the &am• as. but could be U you nffded it to. 9 DUWER STORAGE . CHEST ·. -N~awera to p.ut.nine lcinda ol junk in. I sOTe atring,and old ahort pencils. what'a your nobby. (My bou ia saTin.9 old money). ~i' EXTERIOR . SHOP PLYWOOD 3 97 (xi Build yoUJ'..HU .an CJJ"k. or·build a buick. Good luck. Harry. .JILUMIDM EXTENSIOI LADD EB 911 It'a J.4 feet (when they don't put that in the heading I-worry someone miqbl think we're not telling •••rythinq.) . WJtb grip IHI and double rung locb. Biez choice oJ colora and pattema. It' a a name brand with proyen quality ... IO buy p1.,1y, • • IWll . KOVER SELF· ADHESIVE SHELF . PAPER · --.-- PREFINISHED PANELING 2 87 SHEET Choice of thrH shades. Thia one. that one, and the other right over there. Seriously. th~y look like more money. I I I , I -I I I I I I I I I I I • TERI ·TOWELS WITH~OUPON • Bina full, in choice of colors. By the way. all 0lhe atufl in the ad ia for cuatomers. not dealers I (and we can always •pol yoU dealers by thou pained expre.Uona.) LABEL CUN r . euTcG.UT COUl!ONS • ~ - r----~~----------------- 59c ! I I CONCRETE MIX .. H•r• it ia a grand 01>9nin.g and I am not 1aying the _comme'rcial right. HOW'Sthia: ··stupen-doua:.-makn new tri•nds. lowest price in town, blah. blah. blah". STP OIL TREATMEN'l' You know what Andy says, ~·a..nUemw, start your enqin" and brin9 the money.'' U you like the price. · . LIQUID PLUIB'R OB · 409 CLEANER YOUR . CHOICE TY·D·BOI. 47! W1Mrt about that TV c:owrdctl with the rr.:in the bq:at in the watt.r cleat. And n the lqdy puab" th• tank 1 qr ••• bye. . ' ' I I I ~ ,~, I -. --. I ---5·9! I . I· I I I· I WITH COUPON • Just add water. atir. and ut•. Or, il you bate lollowinq inatruciion1. do it the other way around. TIMn. try to explain the m ... to your wile. · • I · CUT OUT COUPONS t--------------~-----1 I I I I I 19" BOTABY • MO\YEI • I I I I I I 3900 wrrHCOUPON I Will· you look at thia mower. ~I a lot of I 1afety featur" not found in mowera co.ting I a lot ~ore. Four cycle en;IM. up top c:ontrfll. i _____ ~.s>.2!.~~----·-1 ' ~ t.... . • I 0 • ~It'' 3'.·s••i1. ~ , , FU'.' . . ·~7 WD'H:coUPON . ,, . i ' U YoU looked out the windOw oncl'oiaw lcicln'hcmgtnq doW11. dOQ)WOl!J' ,...1! ha .. plenfy forwHkl.oBut llllh bot, you'd -\ bttH•r hotfoot it down. " . •• / .. ' .. .. . • , . .'More .t:h ifolren + ' I ' ' ' ' 1· . :;die fjacH ' ···yea r from • 'I . ·, l' accide'nts ·, , r• than from ' ' . • • ______ ..,. ""hith-·~-+---- ' ' ' ' ' covses cqmbined .' •• -~--L- I .. SafetY: "f~e . FiFSt Priority have to lell him ·no no' and 'don·t eat cur. These itemS should be kept out of cleaning items be stored in a place \Vhere that,' and ·hot.' chiJdrcn's reach. Plastic bags covering they can be locked or made inaccessible By Ail.ISON DEERR Of IJW 0•111' 1'1191 IWf "This is \vhen you 1nust begin to teach laundry should be kn otted and disposed to the small child or be stored in lockable the n1eaning of safety becuuse you can-r.f because they arc a potential -··Ju!-containers. not \\1atch your child every minute. ··11.1ore children die each year from ac· Educate yo ur chi\<1 in lhc right \Vav 10 do foca1ion hazard. The garage conta ins a variety of cidents than tl1c other causes combined,'' things. safely. lie is developirig skills ror In the chi\(lren's bedroom, non-leaded hazards.-tools, flammable liquids like said _ Irvine pediatrician" Na t a I i e-use later on. ,,. p;_1inl ~hould be used on \\'alls, furniture gasoline , paints. insecticides. A n y Schuckn1ell. · '·Accidents 1nay hiippl•n bec11use he is ::ind all toy s. 'l'oys should be put a"·ay at refrigerator or freeier noi in use s hould ;'But many a<.'tidents can be prevented anxioy.s__Jo .PC.<!Uirc. skills and _c.urious ... ___ · .1{ight. Eor small--ehildren. toys .should be_ be locked QI have the door removed. if parents are a\\•are of potential hazards Teach hin1 hO\\ 10 do things \\'ell ." lnrgo enough so they can't be swallo\\·ed. Outdoors. play equipment shouid be and the time when accidents · are more Cl1 ECKL.IST Throughout the house. \vindows and kept iri ood condition and the yard pro- iket:V-to occur:" -.--:=-E-f-'-. ~-s11c reeonuTiend~ nlaK"ing a n1ental st't'ecn~---sfiOula tie=secure/fiaSlen~d.-Al per\y maintained. Rool-s should be fenced Acc'.dents occur _most often, sl1e sa<·d. checklist of 1>0ten!ial hazards in the sinall i~ems. which ~ight be swallowed, d d' I d · d he t · aild sharp_ i.tpin':r. should be made in-an . \\'a 1ng poo s ra1ne w n no 1n ~t"·een 'and 7 p.m. on weekends during iwmc, ro_oin by ~":!·_ . _ . . . acce&;i,ble .. <\lli,:J}ijt.lets should ·be fitted 1_lis~,: the school ye4r .llnd tpe · frequency in-The kitc hen ~s potentJfil~.Y tile· .most \rit-h safe_ty CO\'er{ • . . . ··AWARE NESS , .. ,,. creases during the summer months. huzardous rootn in the ho~~· sh~ li9 id.. A second major danger area is the •. ·: . - _ \\'are. of fle1nmable items. 1n~lud1ng '"Dr. Schuckme~ · added that ''af~r _ ' They occur most oft,cn.f\Vhcn mo.ther 1 ,i ap'pliances with dangling cords: bathroom where medicine ·and cleaning 1 fluids are stored .aWhile you l'.wJ out ~'hi&h places. But 'It ill. there is unusua . st~ess in I .~ • p03ea"clectric outlets: cleaning Muids : · is important to be aware of the hazards. ~sebold, when t)1e ch.1ld ts h~ngry .or .. Sharp objects like knives; spills on the IlATitROOl\'I SAFETY tired or when rnothet' •. Js, ~.P.1ed with floor and sl,ick ~·axed fl ooring. " , . ~ . You can't watch a child every minute other chores an~ th~ ~1\d !S WiacrfQOt. ''Appliances like coffee pots and irons N?.ver leave a small chi!~ alone in the and accidents are -bound to happen." ~ d I' rd.!'--can--t----... II ct-d b~th. Dr , S.ciU.!.dl:me.ll;-a_dyised,_bec3;use,--With-our"increasingly--automated-socie= Accidents are the greatest single threat to the life of children. • HAZARDS-·-• -~ -~ with--. ~ mg-eo ."'" t'u _e ,. 0"'11 oi th_e danger o.f drow.iung. Any ele~tr1c~I ty, 'she a dded, the home is potentially Falls are the greatest M'iard to in· 0~ tripped over by a curious child. she apphances_which-might-cause-electr.1c 111ore---d~ngerous-to--the....chil"L.Tbe.raotheJ:__ ~-~mir.-N~leave the baby alone on a said .. . · shock should be out of reach. has a harder job keeping ;r child safe. COUch' bed. bath table' Al"•ays keep one · .sta1r\\'a}.'S s~ul~bc· !ightc~. e, qu.1ppe. ,d, 1 1 .. g h d . 1 d , " th h d I I k ,1 n 1v1n room areas. azar s inc u e She reccmmends that. parents learn hand on the bab",, Put the baby on. a \VJ a a n. ra< .· n~ c_ovcr_u1~ ac., '' 1· l d r . . h h blanket on the nO'or or in a playpen in· down and kept f1.ee of obJCCt:> thrtt m_ght irep ac~~. an . urni~ure '"'11 -s arp,cor-basic first aid techniques -artificial stead." cnuse a fall. Children ~hould be trained ners. .1 ·'• • respiration, how tO treat cuts and burns. . . , how to properly use stairs. "'Sn1all children often suffer facial insect b'ite.s and stings, sprains versus \Vhen a cluld begins to ere\\'I. she sa1d. laceration .Ciom fa!Js against shap edged trsctures and poisoning. " he needs even more protection from PO,ISO.NING • coffee tables." Rugs, she said, should In case of pqisoning, she explained. the everything around him. The parent s' bedroom and bath. \Vhere be non-sliding. Breakable and fl ammable fi.rst step is to find out \\•hat the child has "The toddler 1noves fast and has no medicines and cos1nctics are oftep kept~ items should be inaccessible. ·swallowed, then immediately call the sen~ of danger. It's the time when you is another area \\'here poisoning n1ay ~ Dr. Schuckmell ' suggested that all family ph;Srsician. · • '' .. Daily Pilot Photos By Ric hard ~oehle'r • ' \. .. • , , r I 'Yo u can't · watch a , child every minute, but it'is important ; I ., 1---'--'--r..'->. ,,.,·~be aware of hazards.' ,- , • ,, ; . ' • • BEA AN DERSON , Editor Frld•v. J1111e n. U7l "t" 11 ' To a cl!l'ie>ll t ,' oddler deanin1J'ptC>d1fcl1 und er sink rn on loc~ed cabinet, · d~nglin9 'co~c:ls . pot h3 n-:i l~s are. ,a ccessible . 1 .~t , left,.'she delves into "'' own, drawer" Locked < ~':inet prevents pqte ntial - \ pOi1on in9 . \ ' ' ' ' 1-J OIJ~V PILOf Frioay, June £2 , 1913 • New Niche a Pleasant Spot Hy JO OLSON level in ~1aryland and squeu- Ot tt1e o.i1r ,.11.1 11111 ed in a summer trip to India There c.-omes a Ume in some and lndont.'lla •women's lives when flle Arter moving to Laguna, homemaker's role loses its whlch she selected because or challenge. , Its "natural assets (the sun)," It's tin1e to move tlUt into she beeame active in civic af- the world, to explore new fairs while raising her two areas and to •discover !he daughters, PeM)' Ley, 10 and possibilities for growth unique Kathy, 7. • 10 oneself. She was a Leagu~ of Women • 'Qli$: tin1e ctme for Joan Voters ~ffi<;er. co-<:hairm_an of :: C.OfOY ,iieartY If year ago and the Un1tar1an Fellowstu~ of i her uj>loca[Mns have taken Laguna Beach and a su~Ut~le , , her 'nto a raTher unusual field teacher bef~re the _reahiat1on !1 f r a woman electronics. came that it ~as . time to ex- 0 ,. . ' . • plore new poss1bihUes. . Now vice pr~1d~t of ChrJ.S. One of her [irst steps was to I ltansen Radio ~ La~a enroll at California State ---'.., .. Reaeh;-M~y-1s-leiim1ng--trnJveTS'1ty, F'UlleftOn, to study ~ the_ language . of the trade for a masters degree in (.while she . d~vers. t he library science. VICE PRESIDENT b a c k packing, bodysurfing, playing volleyball on the beach and reading,· carefully e.I· plained that she still believes the "role or the homemaker ls an excellent (){le if you are fulfilled lhere. It is in no way a lesser role. "But I am where I. want to be. I wlll grow with the com- pany. I'm looking forward to a long-range association with the company. I will take business courses to help get a solid base. ' "I'm very much an im- mediate person." ~·~59nal satisfaction.a ·1ob can :.. give. i-· · Adiienlure is not a new con- ~ cept for the La,gunan, who :f.treveled ~ Ausb"alia at the age 11-ot 9 when her lather accepted (..a "down under" post in the Then~ a part-time jdb open- ed up in the new radio firm, and at its in_corporation....she~ was m4de a .vice presideiit. ~foreign service. , . l; The family also lived in ~ Egypt and Ger?llany and JoM fr-learned-to speak ''French, ;,:.yermao and a scattering of Greek and Arabie." TAUGHT SCHOOL After g r a du il ting from ~tichigan State Univefsi· ty with a major in English, s he taught at the high school Why put a woman in such a key position in a• traditionally male-oriented business? "So mucl;i of the ~·ork is organii'.i..!Jg._'_'._ Mrs._C<lnro)'. ex· plained, "meeting deadlines, getting out materials, being in C<lntact with people doing· work for the company.· "It 's much more demanding of all the possibilities I have v•ithin myself." The executive, who enjoys · JcNin Conroy, looking ; 1t the 'mini-mounts' 1 ~•r comp1ny m1ke1, Ms proved 1 womtn ctn mike it in 1 m1n'1 world. Program Gear~d to Exceptional Child l " By A.lLISON DEERR 9:30 ·a~m. to 3:30 p.m. with horseback riding, Do lien y Of"-b .u,. f'HOI 11111 any needi!d transportation pro-Beach. Balboa Swim Park and A Frisbee, a robber ball and vided by a Boys Club bus the Balboa Pier. imagination. donated to the camp for the An end-of-program trip will run of t_he program. be made in to the Los Angeles T~~ 's all the leaders of Recreation leader J e r r y Zoo. a special summer day Kaban will c 0 0 rd in a t e •.• An example of activities playground program plan to assisted by S u s a n Hain: j:llanned is "hobo day" when . ~ as play equipment. mer.slag, Carla Seier.sen and the children dress as hobos. cook and eat '·hobo stc\1·.'· have related games and ac- tivities and hike to a 11carby ·park. .. It is designed as an a!l-day program,'' she. added, ''1'he children are dropped off at ' . , The program, offered by the Todd Collins. Philharmonic Society \\1hiltler in the morning and picked up in 1he afternoon.'' Vo lunteers interested in helping with the program for exceptional ct1ildren can con· tact her at the Costa Mesa Dcpartn1enl. of L e i s u r e Services, 834-5391. ) Cos~ Mesa Department of Using Whittier Elementary Leisure Services, is for ex-School as a base, the ceptional children -the participants will make a v 'et f . ~ trainable mentally retarded. var1 Y o excursrons. l educabl~ .menla}ly ~larded , . \ "~1.o~ of the trips wil.1 be. to l'. e·m o t 1 oi\ally handicapped.· 1acl1v1t1es that are free.' J\1tss aphasic. dear and hard of Lamb explained, "to keep the ·~xpansion Emphasized i hearing~ cosrnominal." •. Although Orange County music director conducting t". Debby Lamb, a city recrea-~ctivities will include hikes, Philharmonic Society reports f . tion leader, explained that it .. ~c~ons. swKnming, danc-show a very success' lul year ouTrh. f II ed will "hqpefully take the mg, skits and games. e u season. announc concrete and steel playground " . . Dona.Jd. Ferguson has no in-Los Angeles Philharmonic. equipment as much· as possi--The Fairview park area tention of resting on his Zubin Mehta, UC! Crawford ble. near Whittier and _19th will be laurels. "'ill include 200 mini-eoocerts. presented by small groups of musicians and are expected to reach 60.000 students. Music Enrichment Program, which started in two schools, "'ill be expanded to six schools next year. I ! . children &;way, bra 1terij~ ·~"t'A.RK SETl1NGS has ju.st been completed, J. John Vibert, wilT be Oct. 27. ,., "We will take tbem •baek to our 'wil.derness.' The kids will Accepting the presidency for Hall; Nov . 24, Los Angeles ~ nal.W1lJ · environmcnL for fish. hik~, make rafts, tie a second term, he has Philharmonic. J\lchta w i t h .. , eXperiences. All the equipment ropes, s:!d boats and have challenged his board to even Mona G<llabek. pianist, UCf. --r-we will use will be a rubber regattas. higher gools by expanding Jan. 19, Los A 11 g e I es .': · .~ e.arJicipants may make ex-various programs. Philharmoruc. Joseph Krips, Working on the boa rd \Vith Ferguson \v iii he Dr. Daniel G. - Aldrich Jr .. John Gettle, John "' aginations." curstoost "O-Santlago.-Partrin--The-coming-concert season-UCl;---Feb:-23,-bos ~n eles Santa Ana. Top of the World will include six played by the P h i I h a r m o n i c . rich SESSIONS Park 1n Laguna B e a c h. Los A n g e I e s Philharmonic Leinsdorf, 0 r a n g e Coast } i The progr~ will run from Pooderosa St ab 1 es for Orchestra v..-ith Zubi 1ebta, College Auditorium; J\-1 ch 16, :Ji'-·,. Oslo Philharmonic. Mi Oades F. Grundhofer, Allan E. Weid· man anCl~t.Oe Mmes. \VHJiam S. Holstein. Ralph Tandowsky. Schumacher. ~1. Lye ll Evans. Eric Durand and Riehard Davies. I: ,• .. I ' " ' ' ' 1 I , ' !'$.... 11 ,.J. ' · Candis with Jens H8:t-alft Bratlie, piarust, and April 13'. and 27, Los A n geles Also on the board are Allan Beek. Torrence Dodds. Clif· ford Hakes. Leon Lyon. Edkcr Pope. Da\'id Robertscn. John Scott Troller. Vibert. Dr. \Vilsoo Little and the ~lmes. John F. Porter. Raymond C. Dosta. Richard H. Lee and Richard Newell. .. I' ' · &nds are fer Vna~ng re:arem~nt easier. , ·u.s. Savings Bonds can help you • keep a firm grip on your future. 1lllce" . • the Payroll Savings Plan iti>dc" wM'e you·work, right now. Get hi~ a 8f*rt on yo~nest eglf and make ,...u ... -- 81119 there'll be some glitt.er in •• yuur·golden years. === • ' • Philharmonic, Mehta, UC!. Free youth COOCi?rts. ac- cording to t.1rs. E d w a r d Schumacher, are expected to reach 60,000 fifth and s ixth graders in Orange County - twice as many as last year. Eight concerts will be added. making a totaJ of 20 to be presented. Next year"s schedule also ' Executive secretaries are Newport Beach office .. !'vlts. Lucy Gaynor and Huntington !·!arbour. l'vlrs. Jane Dod. .. . -. Peering Around ATTENDING the 25th an- niversary of TOPS (Take Off Pounds Sen s i b I yl in Milwaukee beginning Tuesday. June 26, wiU be Mary Feger, queen of TOPS Costa Mesa Club 816, and Sophie club leader. The group meets Killybrooke School, Cos t a Mesa, Wednesdays at 7:45 p.m. LOST OUR LEASE ! ANTl(j)UE Ll(j)UIDATION AUCT .ION * No Limit -No Reserve * One of rt.e two lartnt ..-tcill 011tl1111• o•tiets 111 Collfor11I• h llq•ldetl111. Tlte property IMra boe-11 hl4 .-cl the 1>11lldlitt il behft toriil lllow11· '"'~latelY» All .. ~41 .. l11ffltf'ry oMI' oll ,,.,.. flmm: wlll be Mid with ito ll!Mt eo4 "· ,,_...._ 14,000 141. ft. of olltlq"' -'H111tlllrHs of l'""- AMlllCAN -IUIOftlAN -OlllNTAL -PllMITIYIS IUCJS -PICTUltl:S, ETC. -HUNDltlDS OF MISC • ITIMS OF AltT GLASS & lllC·A·llACV STORE FIXTURES , CiM 1 .. ltton -Addl11tt Moclllltft -Cokoletor -. Offlco 0..... At. Col>. -Clloln -N .. 11 LltMt -fttJw..4 Dolllet -,.,. lbtlfll., "'· AUCTION PARTICULARS SALE: ·SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY JUNE 23 & 24 -11 :00 A.M. INlftl CTION: frt•ltw ltgiM• -Tutuley, J11nt Ill - U11til s.r. Dev -10 A.M. to I ,,M. PICK U~: All Mtr,he110itt mu1t bt rtmovtd within 41 l·fr1. tfltr s.t. TlllMS: Ct1~ or Chtck sf ANTON ANTIQUE FLEA MARKET & GALLERY 10802 Beach Blvd., Stanton, Calif. IU.TILLA I l l ACHI Test Measures Impaired Sight cortex responds to the image seen by the patient. There is no discomfort Involved in the proctss. The VER can reflect almost any type of change in visual BERl<ELEY -A new type of eye examination that c a n accuralely measure v i s i Q n problen\a in infants or men- tally retarded children is now part of the regular clinic service at the SCbool of Optometry on the University . stimulation. Without the sub. oC ca.llfomia's Berkeley cam-jective cooperation of the pa. pus. tient, It can measure such Visually Evoked Response basic visual functions as acui- (VER), as the new method is ty, color ~rception, and depth called, measures electrical perception'. and can detect impulses from the brain while anomalle.s such as refractive error or defects in the field of the patient watches changing Items of l!ghts throu h vision. variOus lenses. ---ur the greatest-use for Although VE~ has betm. in VER is with patients who, for experimental use [or 15 yeers any number of reasons. cannot and ln Jimlted clinical use in communicate the subjective the e&'t for the past several responses required by the yean, this is the first clinical usual eye examination. use of the method in the These patioots 'include in- western U.S. -rants, older peOple surferlng The process is similar to an from st.rOkes, or children and electroencephalogram (EEGJ , older people who are austistic, which measures electrical im-ret4rded. mongoloid, suffering p.ilses produced by .actiVity in fro1n cerebrnl palsy, or . in the brain, or more-distantly, some other way unable to give electrocardiograms \EKGsl. subjective responses. · which measure activity in the The VER light patterns f'e'" heart. · quire no reading or decoding. Electrodes are lightly at-The patient sin1ply 109ks at 1ached to the scalp and ear light patterns 1>rojectcd on a lobes to pick up the slight wall of the exan1ining room electrical current leaked to "·hile different lenses are held the surface "'hen the visual in front of his eyes. YO~fe as slim and trim as your · teen-age daughter... · · NOW ... YOU ca" have a bfaut1lul new a1owin1 °comple11ion · 'to match hers in just 11 days. YOUR facl1I wrinkles and aae tines can dlminilh or · disappear. YOU can look 10. 15 or 20 yHt5 younp~ with lh11 proven rtteneration procesl . Call for informJllOtl or conf1denr111 '"reNiew In our otlice t7t 0 54JZ w t7t.Jtot 'Forever Young ~~ . I HAVE iRRIVED ! " Now At Unbelievable Prices PANTS • TOPS • SKIR-TS VESTS • BLAZERS DRESSES • BLOUSES LON• & SHOO SKIRT SETS PANT SETS SWEATERS SWIM SUITS HOT PANT SETS j--j JPI CALIFORN~ • -FASHION ·FACTORY 0U1].ETS MN. Mn M., 11-.. t p-.s.t .. 11-.. 7p.. s-., 11-'-1,_ HUNTINGTON LA HABRA 1364 S. IUCLID ALPHA IETA IMPERIAL CENTER I I lk. Sa. of lmporl1I Hwy. AICADIA 211 W •. Lei Tv lit1 Dr. 9586 HAMILTON 2 ILOCU WDT oP llOOIHUIST • LOI ANen.D Jill S111 F1rntn40 _,, llAllllA .... .,. .172 Wt1hln9to11 • ' -- BEACH GARDEN GROVE 1llff llOOIHUIST I llock Stvttl of Qorlllle11 6ro•• llY4. llLLPLOWll !204 AI011J,, llDONDO llj\C..- 414 Torrt11ce llvJ • • ~. • Frld11y, JIJnt 22, }q73 DAILY PILOT JS Matadors Washed MADRID (AP) -fashion news in Spain this year is be- ing made not In the swank salons of Pertegaz or Elio Ber. .hanyer but In tbo secoqd fioor , walkup ol bullfighter tailor Fennln Lopez F'Uentes. S!>eln sots thO ocyle 10< bullflghting, the new ckAhes are expected w .,.ad e- tually w Latin American rings. whicll foot they pul tbroogh a door flrOC, -.i who driv" Don't Horoscope:-Leo, Play Foolish. Games Fermin has made what he caUs the first suOOtantial change in desigr. in the bullfighter 's tradlt.ionat "suit of lights" since the 16th cen- tury. To the uninitiated, the chqe is hanily --But there are other factors. 1bc new Stlit weighs about . (wo_aod_a.ba~ poonda I<"'-o!J!I is washable. ln a profession where blood plays a kC,y role, this Is an important ci}ange. Bullrighters oo~y finish a performance with the suit stained elUler by the bulls' blood or ,their own. Now they can let .theiT uniform drip dry Fulton followed drawtnp of -· Egyptian and ()<eek gladiators in designing the suits. The tnlditional shape has not been • changed. To do so would affeet "the art of the fight," says Fermin. The pants, for example, mullt OCop juot below the knees like knickers so fans can have clear view of the matador's feet. ' The. ~L.and shouldera have sUgtt changes to give more ann free<bn. But there are still lhousands. ol gold ,threads sewn in to catch the afternoon sun. Bullfightel's usually are a suspicious lot, careful abou.t in the shower after a hard diay ../1 in the bull ring, says Ferm~ ' In addition, washable suits are expected to last for 19 or 20 11fternoons. The average life of a $600 outfit before was about four o.r five -performances. A leading butllighler taila- with more than 30 yean ex· perience, Fennin teamed with painter John Fulton o f I.heir car and how their clothee ft'"---./J ore laid out before a fight. But Fermin and Fultoo say they ,have """""'1len no buying resistance from the country's 14-0 WP matadors. A{DOOG their clients. is Ltils Miguel Dominguin , the vetenm comidered by many the .,.,. dressed bUJJ/lghter in ,the ring. i DomingWn broke traditioo last year by wearing stockings the -same color as his suit. Femlln, 'who tends to look down at this, acknowledges he is off~ 11!!11!~ hQoo.Jhl,, year instead ol the traditional plnk as a oonoession to chang. Ing fashion. • • "Bullfighters can w e a r whatever color stoddngs they wan.," he says. "ll's the suit that counts." 5plnl1h matador• who Mt fashion trend$ for their L1tin American counterp1rt1 ire said te be bullish on pro•cts for 1 wash 'n wear suit of li9ht1. ... SATURDAY JUNE 23 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19): Cycle is high-take initiative. Problem could arise £ro1n ooe \Vho is envious. But you cannot be restrained-it is ne(.'essary to f~d outlet for feelings, creativ~rges. TOOse who try to thwarf~ou may be in for rude awakening. · TAURUS (Api'n~Maj,20l : ¥QU may be golng 1~.r.et. for your own good. Pay ~ to advice of family meh'\,ber . Give yourself time to collt:ct thoughts, time to adjust to dlf · ferent home conditions. Libra, Aries persons fi gure pron1i· nently, GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Relationship ,that had been "calm" is likely to become ag- gressive. Events occur at rapid pace. Find time to lbe selective. Choose what is con- structive. Othery.'ise, you may pay dear priCi!. Message will become clear. CANCER (June 2t-Jul¥ 22 ): Yoo get opposition but you also obtain results. You are regarded as formidable. Those who previously may have dismissed your efforts now take a second look. Take long- range view. Mont: y, in· vestments are involved .. ''released ." You begin to know yourself. Member or opposite sex is involved. DOO't play gumes. You could be hurt. VIB.G-0 (Aug. 23-Sept. 22\: New approach to tax question , PISCES (Feb. !9-Man!h10): You may pressed 1 to make money decision. \Vait. Reruse to be emotiooally stampeded. investment proposal is in ========== order. One who claims 101~ know best is only half certain . LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0cl. 22), ~1uch that had been planned is subject to revision. Don't rear cha nge. Be willing to tear down in order to rebuild. RU Ff ELL'S UPHOLSTERY WMtl , .. w ... ,..._ 192! H ..... •lml. C•te M ... -14Mllt SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 1: !'====-======== Accent is on basic issues.J: relations with those who share @bl your interests, work. Your assignment is due to change. u \Vhat had been kept un - ve r comes out into open ffu A<i,ITTAR!US (Nov. 22· COi ·~es~~ Dec. 21 ~ .. L~n(fr aspect is such .t that you ~kl be involved m s . F & lovers' quarr I. Emotions run UD, UD up and down rive for bal· c •• ce. moderation. · Hair are CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan. 19 1: Activity centers" und 644 1 '""0 hcnne base. Plans are ot • 11 s t a b I e . Gemini. Pis c e s1j~~~~~~~~~~~ pe rsons are in picture. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 181: Avoid rushing, especially while in trafric control temper . Don't write letter in anger. Accent is on-how yo1.i deal with neighbors, relatives. Short journey 1is on agenda. · Philadelphia to prodUce the new suits. FUiton~ a n American wt}() has ·lived in Spain for 9e'o1!1"al years., also is a fully acaiditeit matadoc. The new suits are expected to be seen in many of Spain's bull rings this season. Since LEO (July 23-Aug .. 22): Vou I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;,' finish assignment.-You get-rid 11 of emotional burden. You are T ~en's Puppy Love Error May Hound Forever DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our 17-year- old son went steady for two years \1.'ith a .. nice girl." Now the girl is six month!! pregnant and she ·refuses to give up the baby for adoptioo. Marriage is out of the question. Neither one of them is dry behind the ears yet. \Ile are trying to be nice to the Kiii. even though we feel ~he did this intention.ally in an efrort to hook our son. We have known for a king time that he was losing interest In her and \\·e sug- gestt'd that they break olf the steady '&f'· rangement six months ago. This is all such a nightmare that I can't believe it is happening to our f.amily. Please, Ann, tell your teenage readers that even though they are still children emotionally. they have the physical equipment to make live babies. And this ls one mistake they will have to pay for the rest of their lives. Sign me -STILL NU~18 -~ - DEAR S.N.: I k~p telling them and I wU I coatmae to do so aatJJ my typewriter falls apart. Maybe YOUR leUcr will strike a responat"e chord. I hope so. DEAR ANN LANDERS: It is regret· table that you were misled into publishing thal letter sayinii: a n auromobile cannot be steered if the engine is turned off. Au Ford products can be easily maneuvered with the engine off. The ef· fort requ1red to steer only goes up at very low speeds. Even then, the car can be steered if it is rolling. , By tfle l\·ay, I !iW you on an airPJane once, busily working on your letters. l determined ,that your bumpers, c:baasiJ, transmission, dillerentlal and .accessories ~<ere just great. Cmgratulattons. -1 CHARLEY CHROME; FROM DETROIT DEAR CHARLEY: Nltt plag for Ferd, wllicb I daa't mu.cl, in \'iew of your kind remaru •ut my ace&orles. Rolph --~--... llberecolled yet, &0 I auume I'm in ptttty pod abape for a llll model. 'lbanb for' my laa1b for tbe day. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I really dig ttus dude'l'll call J eff. We are both 16 but he seems a lot older. He grew a motmache just for me and now he looks like Burt Reynolds. When I teU you I'm spaced out over him you'll luv:>w why your amwer is so important to me. · Jeff's parents split three years a.,.-and h~ lives with his mom. He getS~ a big allowance £i'om 'hiS did besides wliat his .\mom slips him when he's short. Jeff has given me lots of presents, ·like a portable FM radio, a ski outfit, several record albums and a miniature poodle. .Yesterday he gave me a gold braceJet ·"'ith rubies in it [or my birthday. I was like tripped out with excitement. Last night Jefrs mother called and said .feff Iiad accidentally given me her very expensive bracelet and if l 'd give it back she'd replace it with something "more appropriate ror a girl my age.'' I said, "Of course." ~ I am upset and embarrassed. ~Jy fGlks are burned up. Dad already took the bracelet back. He's plenty thumbs-dO\vn on Jeff. What should I do? -J!LUT· CHED. DEAR C.: Give everything back - inclading your: introduction. to Jeff .•. before be brings yo; ••samP.!_es" from a bank. - Groups Install, Adjourn for Summer Toastmistress ?.trs. E. C. Boardman "'as installed as presklent of the Lagw1a Toastmistress Club In Ben Brown's re81aurant . On her board will be the Mm~s. William Mammen and Neal RJckse, vice presidents: Don Wiiiiams, secretary; Irene McClure, treasurer, and coun· ~ cil representative, RJchard " ,Frisch. • Auxiliary l ... Women's Auxiliary to lhe Harder: Anna Justus, Learn-Installed as officers for the ing to Live With SlreSJ and coming year were the r.tmes. the Inllueooe of TV on ~lellan Cole, president ; Children: Dorothy Barry , rederick Atcheson, Harry Woman's Need for Identity; tz, Don Montoya, Gilbert Jess Hernilndeo, flTlll aid:. Hodges, Robert Hippe, Robert Mary Joyner, Parents Dwyer. Kendall Smoot, Erwin Anonymous , and R o n a Id Loth, C. \V. Adams, George Rinard, infant feeding. Clarke, Laura W i 11 i a ms , Further information is Robe.rt Souter and Jack Rowe. available from Pat r i c i a Hegner. 551·5438. Cancer Society Tickets are still available for the Night at the Races, Tuesday, June 26, at Los Alamitos Race c.ourse. The event is sponsored by the vice presidents. Also installed were the Mm es. Helen Lawler and Jacob Onstott, secretaries; John Crean. treasurer ; Herbert Allerhand, adviser, and Leon W. Rudd. parliamen- tarian. Irvine Juniors Members of the Irvine and El Camino Junior Women's clubs will participate in a get· ting to ·1mow you salad Jund> em Wedneslay, June 'tl, at 12:30 p.m. in the Irvine home of Mrs. Gerald Muzzy. PLEAD Mrs. John 'Page has taken the helm for P .L.E.A.D. {Promote Leaming and Education to End Abuse of Drugs). The group provides s~ls w i t h educational materials concerning drug abuse. Philharmonic Officers for the Upper Bay Associates, Orange County Philharmonic Society, are the Mmes. Allan Johnson, chairman. and otis Starkey, Lars Berg, Frank Posch, Stanley Mumford, William Eilers. Paul Nissen, Don Hud- dleston, Rob e r.t Saunder&, Robert Smith and Robert S. Leith . Others are the 111 m e s . Wilson Little, Lyndon Bro\\--n, A. C. Flegal and Dominic She.It.on. Orange County ArthrlUs Foun- : .. dation will end their club year ; with an installation or ofricers • ~looday, June 25, at 11 a.m. in l the Steak and Ate, S&nta Ana. Orange County unit of1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Installed will be the Mmes. l Ray Elliott Jr.. president ; Jack Torre, vice president: E. ;1 w. Dray, membership ; Fred Carter, treasurer ; 'lbeodore Maravlch and Roland Perron, __ ,, and Jooepij Shuff, :--parUamenlarian. Mommy and Me A new series of Mommy and Me exercise classes will begin Tuesday, June 261 at I a.m. Jn the University U n i t e d ~ Methodist Church, Irvine. Speak"' for the 8 p.m. nlghl meetln!I• will be Dorothy • Wenck., Work Smarter Not American Cancer Society. GOP Women Huntington Beach Republican Women Federated will hear a talk on the in- auguration ol. President Nixon at the Wednesday, June 27 meeting in the Murdy . Park Clubhouse. A salad luncheon Is planned for 11:30 a.m. Rivi era Club . A bUJ trip to S8n Diego's Pasqual WUd Animal Park is plaMed by members of the Riviera Club for Wedne.ctay, June 'El , ~fore they adjourn for the summer. . j OVERWEIGHT? 56 LB. LOSS ltt 40 DAYS I , • " :j I I Under Medical Supervl1lon ., the Omega ~linlc • CALL FORUAN: ;;,~MOO II COSTA MESA AJtAMllM IANTA ANA ,.,..,.. ... " .. 1169 ... .,..., 1"! W. hwy, 11'DT•ft11Ayt (714) 810-9347 . 646-16J3 nMMI 547"32t (213) 6'7-17'1 , .... ........,. ,, ..... • • ion ti No ""'°''"" 1or r,,., ... · Coit ,.of111Jon.al' tlto, .. .., ct .. nlng pt0<o111 lloe1n•1 ., ~lolm ,.1!1t1lo". they guoronlee ill Your dtOP''Y !""'''"''"' 11 pt'Olected, oll•• Colt ac:c11Jf1 yout tlra,.•111 fOf deo"lnfl. Tou can ta. ouv••d ol t\D 1htin•a9o1, p••IKI '''" ho11111 ond tleto.tolor pl .. 11 or ,.,.c1 100% teplac1mo1~1. Al Coil "Tovr Co111~1te Drop•f"f Co11 Cini•"' yo11 can ,.,.ct ...ihint 1111 tllon ~uollty •"' perlHUcu'. 10% DISCOUNT on co1" 0114 cor,.Y, free loon tlrapo1rle1, ,,,.,. ettlilllOlil.t , . , witllovl ottl>gotlon. T11m1 •. , ol cow ... • Mtw C11t10111 °'91"flo11 ' Alltl'Clli1t11 • llc111Mtl flo11to1 " .. fln9 • linvl'Ollce Cloh111. "World's /orgest exclusive guorant~ed drapery service" F ca· IT drapery cleaners 540 ·1366 JJ.. end service 642·0270 t 1.$.,.,.lltt .. 0l'Dllf9 Cownf1) 1702 N-rl Blvd. • ~t 17th St. Co1 ta Mou HUNTINalON CINTll -~···................ h tta.1101 ' HAllOR SNOPPINl'i CINTll 1100 H•rW IMI. C•M M• .. 14S.t41S WestcliJf P1au. 17th and Trvine, Newpon &ach,Califomia92660 Rock and Mineral Show Fri., Sat., Stin., JU.M J:2..2,S..24 See the 1th11I Moon aoeli tourte1y of N.A.S.A. ond 111.!" tho 2,190 co1r1t 11750;0001 "Ec:eo 'Homo" elr'l'od ruby of Christ. Exhihi+. 1po111or1d hv So1nt1 Ane ltoek ind Min1r1l CIUh. Moo od1nh1lo11. Hu11tintton C111tor, lo1eh ertd Edl'"J•r 1t Hie S111 Diet• Fwy. Fine Indian Jewelry N•vajo, Zuni, Santo Oomin90 Squash Blossom Necklac·es •f Exceptio~al Pr ices LENORE'S !MPORTS & ANTJljlUIS 16389 Bolsa Chica Huntington l1och Hrt: 10:]0 to 5:10 T1111. thr11 S1111d1y . . • . • Vlef·e 9 ,99\0 11.99 ••• • • • • SOUTH COAST PLAZA Coit• M1i1 FASHION SQUARE • S1nt4 A11t FASHION ISl..ANO Nowport l1o1ch HUNTINWTON CENTER Hu1ttl11tto11 l1tc:h • " t. .(. \ • ' - • • • If DAILY .iLOt FrlU,, Junt 22. 1~7.3 Leahy Was a ,. Legend In Collegiate F oothall I PORTLAND (API -Frank Leahy, • lesend 1n · college football coaching, is dead at 6S. 1be former Notre Dame ooacb, seriously ill for several years, -died Thursday at Good Samaritfn Hoopii al The hospital said Leahy died ol con- gestive heart failure. He bad been ailing with heart trouble and diabetes in recent )'ears. Leahy, "ho J>layed under the immortal ·Knute Rockne at Notre Dame and later came back to coach there, had been liv- ing in lhe Portland suburb of Lakt Oswego since 1963. Jt was a weet aao that Leahy, one or the Dl06t successful college coaches of all 1ime, did not attend an awards dinner iq hi.a honor in Chicago because doctors ad- vited him to remain home. "I was absolutely cruahed over the facl' that I couldn't partldpate," lie said II the time. Leahy played on Rockne's 1929 Irish natlMal championship team, He later become an aalstant coocb under l!Oclrne and accepted the bead coaching joti there in lMl. . Leahy's teams went undefeated , six times, four ol them winning national col- legia te titles. His overall head · ~cblng record wu 107-13-9, including 17-11.f at Notre Dame before retiring in 1953. 'A native of,Winner, S.D., Leahy wasil't well known whet lie first became-- coach at Boston College. A local newspaper bead.lined the story ol bis ap- pointment, '1B.C. Signs Unknown Leahy." It didn't t•ke him loqg U> chllnge that. His J939 team lost only once in the re(Ular seaaon and a year later Boston * * * 17•ftout"~.fL FRANK LEAHY College collected 10 regular seasm triumphs, the Eastern championship and a Sugar Bowl victory over Tennessee. When Elmer Layden retired as head coach at Notre Dame the following year, Leahy came home to South Bend. . As he returned, someone called him another Rockne, but 'Leahy objected. "lbere'll never be another Rockne," he' said. "We'll do our best and you'll be proud of your team, but the day of the Hard Work Made Leahy A Winne1· in Football NEW YORK (AP) -Frank Leahy never wanted to be compared to his predeCessor Knute Rockne. "There'll never be another Rockne," said Leahy who died in Portland Thunday at the age ol is. But in memory, that's where.he ended up. just a short step down from the Notre Dame loolball immortal of the late 1~ and!~ "No guestim about it, he wu quite a .guy," sa1d Red Blaik,. former Ariby coach whose Anny team bottled Leahy '• Jrilh to a score1ess tie in 1946. "Be was ooe or the great coaches of the last 25-30 years. He was a fun. damenlalilt ol Ille liletl order. ''He had a rapport with the men that is berdly dotlcribeable. 'Ibey looUd m bim both a1 a great coach ad M a character.'' When both men were still active in <oaching; B1aik said: "1 U>ed to think I wu the most intense coedi in the bullness. But I'm Obout ready U> C<ll!C<d• that Frazik: eats bil heart out even more thin I do." "Well, I had a serious operation, but l'm doing better." · · Leahy nodded and said "Fine." "She passed away this summer." Again he nodded and said, "Fine." Then the youngster said, "214," -and Leahy can1e back, "You 're foor pounds overweight." Leahy's head football career began at Boston College. "All you can say_ is that he wu a Wli~ que person," said William Flym, Boston College aUtletic d1rector. "He lost one game in t.be two years he coached at Bolton College, in 1939 and 1940. He wu always keenly interested in Boston College, even a£ter he left. We are all saddened .'· In 1927, Lea hy came as a student to Notre Dame. When alked why, Leahy said : "Because of Rockne." ' ~ It was on1y 14 years later that be was being mentioned in the aame breath aa the man he so admired. "Everyone here at Notre Dame 800 thousands of Frank Leahy'a friends, teammates and play_!rs mourn his~pa~ iog. \Ve have all suffered a penooaJ loss," said longtime Notl1!! Dame athletic director Edward ''?.loose" Krause. "We all cherish his dedicatloo, friendship and his Jove for Notre Dame." .... undefealed Notre Dame teams is over." He couldn't /lave Ileen more -.....,. The Irish went wibeaten lri his first seuon, and alter awltcbing to a T-lonna- tloo, the school woo 38 straight g8JM< in the 1M6-49 period before losing tilt so- cood game ol the 1950 ....... <Job' two Iles blemished that string. Leob,y, who spent t wo yean ID the Navy during World War 0, came back to Notre Dame in 1913 but collapoed during the second ball or a game with Georgia Tech. He was given the last ritea ol. the~ l church bJt recovered. • : Rockne's .897 winning ~tage u •1 coach barely surpassed the .888 martt Leahy put U>gelller In 13 years at -l CoUege and Notre Dame. He was an .assistant coach at both. Georgetown University and Mlcblgan State before going to Fordham, where• be helped build the Une that became known as the '..'.Seven Blocks of Granite."_ ...... One of his pupi!S at f'ordham was Vince Lombardi, tlle tale lormer coach ol the Green Bay Packen who showed that Leall)'•s llrlct dladpllnary syltem could be successful in the pros, I Alter working with variOUJ busitM)ss enterpriaes, ~ahy returned. to fclotWll for one year, in 1960, as general :.:-s· of the Lo& Angeles Chargers ol. American F.oothaU iague before t team moved to San Diego. He re-entered the insurance business the following year, then mcmd. to Lake · Oswego. He continued in-bUsiness as an executive vice preside_pt of Canteen Corp., a San Jose firm operating refresh- ment dispensing machines. The member ol the National Football Foundation's Hall of Fame is survived by ~is widow, 'F19fence, of Lake Oswego: five soru:, Frank-J r., Christopher and Jerald of Lake OIWego; Jamea: of Paaco, Wash., and Frederick d. Portland;-tbree daughters, Mary-t;eahyon.ake Oswego, Sue Moustakas of Chicago an~ 'Florence Harter of c;1icago. . l Funeral arrangements were . expected to be annmmced later today. Tentative plans are for services and interment in Portland. ~ Florida Maintains Lead in NCAA Golf Tournament STILLWATER, Okla. -For awhile Georgia's -l!m Kratmt Iorgo! be was playing in a. foursome Thursday with Texas' heralded. Ben Crenshaw. ~t the soft-spoken Georgia junior caught biJmeU just in time. After shooting a-,Sl»ltbe troornine, Kratz:lrt decided he had best concentrate on his own game and not Crenshaw's. The resu1t was a birdie explos ion and a 32 on the back nine for a round ol 67, vaulting him to a one-stroke lead ror medalist honors in the NCAA goll cbampiooships llere. '- Meanwhile, Florida took an II-stroke lead in the team battle. Florida wound up with a two-day total ol 558 followed by Oklahoma State at 569, Houston at 570 and Texas and Louisiana State at 578. Kralzert has a trio on his heel! at one· stroke beck including Crenshaw who carded a Ill Thunday for his 137. Match- ing that t o t a I w°"' Phil Hancock, nwida freshman , and San Jose State 's Phil Barry. Florida's Andy Bean was alone at 133. MEMORABLE MOMENT -Frank Leahy, 65, who coached Notre Dame to seven ,undefeated football seasons, died Thursday after a long illness. He is shown here being lifted to the shoulders of players after final game victory over SMU in 1953 -his last year with the Fighting Irish. Only a tie with Iowa earlier in the year kept it from a perfect fin· ish for Leahy. ,.. . Aaron No Match for Osteen; Dodgers, Reds Vie Tonight LOS ANGELES (AP) -Oaude Os- teen, the ace lefthander of the Los Angeles Dodgers, had a good hunch that after nµasing four games in a row Hank Aaron Would be in the line-up when he pitched against the Atlanta Braves. After all, Osteen rants No. 1 among active pitchers on Aaron's home run vic- tim list and It's not likely he'd miss a chance to add to the 13 he's already bit olf tile Dodgera southpaw. "Yeah, I kind of figured he'd be in the lineup," said Osteeh, "and I pitched him just as I would any other ·great hitter - carefully." Osteen won this battle -and a few others, as well -as he hurled a four-hit shutout, beating the Braves 5-0 ThUnlday night as the Dodgers ran their win streak Tops Angels, 1-0 totsix to retain a three-game lead over the San Francisco Giants in Ule Western . Division of the National League. The victory enabled the Dodgers to sweep the four-game series from Atlanta, Do ... er• Slate .u .. _ .... 1(,1 (Mel JufMI! 11 Cincinnati •t Los Anot'IH Ju..e 23 Cil'K'lnnttl •t lo• Allll•let. 121 J....,. 2• Clnclt111•tl •t Los Anvt:lft 7:55 p,m , .jj;" p,lfl. 1:5.S o.m. giving Los Angeles nine wins in 10 games with the Braves thb season. _Tonight Ute Dodgers_host Ci!lcinnati in the first of a 4-game Wies. Aaron, who had a painful boil lanced prior to Wednesday night's game. failed in four tries against Osteen, only once getUng the ball out of the infield. But he wasn't alone. Garaen-Grove's Blyleven" Becoming Super Pitcher BLOOMJNGTON, Minn. (AP) Sandy Alomar lined a one-OUt single to Garden Grove's Bert Blyleven, one of left, and heatedly protested umpire Jim baseball's hottest pitchers, offered to Odom's decis1on that he was thrown out carry MinneJOta Twin's game hero Joe by catcher Phil Roof trying to steal sec. Lis into the clubhouse. ond. Lis, whole pinch-hit single in the .ninth '-" "I beat the play," said Alomar. "He inning gave Blyleven and the Twins a 1.0 (shortstop Jerry Terrtll ) never touched victory over the California Angela and me. It was the biggest play ol the game. Clyde Wright Thursday night, polltely It would have been 1--0, with a man on sec- refu.ed. . ond and the start ol a big inning." "l told him to let me carry him off." Vada Pinson fullowed '"1th a double, -' '• No Bra ve got as far as third base as ': Osteen recorded his second shutout of the ' yea r and 31th of his career. It was his sixth straight triumph and during that /' spree ·his earned run average was 2.~ t For the year he is 2.98. "This was probably my best game," said Osteen after improving his record to 9-3. "I've had some luck but I've also pit- ched well." Willie Crawford hammered his sixth home run for one of the Dodgers' nms and Ron. Cey drove in another with a sacrifice fly. The Dodgers' three other runs were the result of bad defensive play by the Braves which was the rule dW'ing tht • lire series. The Braves made three er- rors in Thursday night's Joss and 11 for the four games. In contrast. the Dodgers played errorless ball the entire set. or Aaron, Osteen just shakes his bead in wonder at the Braves' star. "I know lt'.!1 tough on-him ," Osteen said. "I can 't imagine the pressu re he's facing and how it's going to build. "I know he's hit 13 home runs off me but I've probably faced him as much or maybe more than anyone else. "I realize the fans come out to the park to see him hit home runs, Sure, I can hea r 'em boo whenever I get two or three balls on him. "But like I said, J pitch him lik;}ny other great hltter -carefully.'' Alll•I• It! l" lil1119M (J) •II r11r111 Ill rllrtl 81ker, c:f • II 2 o LOPet, 2'11 • 2 o e tl Evins, lb l II 0 II ll~kn1r, lb ..i l 2 I De.Johnson, 2'11 • 0 I I W.DllYI" cl • I 2 • H.A1r1111,u •o ooCey,)b 3001 Dl1t1, lb l o 1 o w.cr1wtorlf, rt 3 I l 1 Os.Brown, •f • o O o Ruuell, 11 • o 1 I C111nov11, c 3 0 0 0 JO.llUll, 11 J O O I M.P1r11, U 3 0 0 0 Y1t1111r, c 3 I I 0 MOf'forl,p lOOD01tetn,p 2 111 Goovln, p!I I 0 0 0 '!be day after Leaby's first season at Notre Dame bt !Ml; lie fulfilled a pro- mile U> have dinner with the Rev. Wendell Corcoran. a pastor in SOuth Bmd, Ind. Leahy got into his car with Sullivan and Ed McKeever then his asslstant. "Let's itop at the college for a few minutes and study movies or our lut game," Frank said . Miller Gets Into Habit Lis related. "All I'd been doing was but was left stranded when Frank resting for nine innings. Bert is a auper Rob"tnson popped out to end the inning. Bob Darwin started Minnesota's win· ning rally ofl Wright, 5-1, with a one-OUt single, then stole second as Steve Brye struck out. P111flltr, p o 0 o o Total1 31 0 1· O Tot•t1 :JO S I 2 A!lan1a 000 000 000 -o Loa Ar1oele1 ooo 121 !Oil-s • E -Dietl. M. Ptrez. C.Mnoo..•. LOI -At-' ''Nothing would intrigue me less," said Sullivan. "If you Insist," McKeever said. "I must insist.° Frank replied. "If you get satisfied, the opposition will lick you. They're making plans for next seasui. So lllUBt we." Leahy '! 17-hoor·a-day dedication to football gave hJm a record which fell on· Jy slightly short of Rockne's. He had a career mark d 107·13·9 as head coecb. at a.ton C.OUege, and then at Notre Dame from lMI through 1953. That's an .183 . J>lrCmtage, barely below Rockne's .897. "His players at .Bost.oo College and Noire Dame held him in the highest reprd," Aid Jimmie McDowell, ex· ecutJve director ol. the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame, where Leahy waa inducted in 1970. "He was one of the most dedicated men to ever coach football and certainly oat of the -m o a t competitive. Li\e Rockne, be waa a master psychologist ." One of Leahy'• players recalled that the Irish coech always greeted each pgfer with three stock questions : "How are you? How ia your mother and how rmcb do you weigh." Otte p1.,er was ready and blurted"out: U..Cl'S SINGER WINS GOLF HONOR IUVERflpE -UC Irvine's Gary ~ hll-mmecl lo the second unit ol the NCAA College Division All--an pll-. ,,.. Olllt..-...,.. named to the sb:-m.n lint -· led by clxlniplon Cal State (Nol~) wllll i... players - JIDI a-Jefl ll&rritr. Pa ul Wise of Oii Siale (Fulllr!Ga>. UC Riverside's MIA 1•""4r, Eel Belier of LSU (New Orllusl MIC! Mitt Ford ol l!ollins Coflola Cl ..... t11t· .,..._ of lbe fint unit ' ' And He's Enjoying It AKRON, Ohio (AP) "'Th.is," munnured Johnny 'Miller, "Is a good habit I'm getting into." The lanky blood had just put U>gether a three-under-par 67 -including a bole in one -lor his first competitive round since he won the United Stat.et Open Golf championship with a record 63 last Sun- day. Miller's 61 on the long, tough Firestone CoUnlry Oub coorse Tbunday gave him a share ol the flnt round lead in the prestige.laden American Golf Clualc. He waa tied with 23-year-old Forrest Feiler, an on-rushing tour tqJbomore, who aloo clipped tht<e strokes off por cm the lush 7,180 yarda ol the F!mtone layout. Arnold Palmer and three •oc.ben were just one atroke ba:ck at ISi. "I'm encouraged, but not satilfied," the 43-year-old Palmer said alter JDOring• into a lie with big J. C. Snead, Jim Wiecben and rookie Tom Kite. been getting the absolute moet possible out ol my rounds. 'Ibis one wun't like that. I feel like it could have been a lot better." He mmect twn birdie putts of four feet or lea, Upped out another one on the 17th hole and a1most birdied the 18th from an end trap, the explosioo shot going in and out of the hole. • M!Uer, who played with Palmer, said Arnold cllatract.ed him wbile he waa on the tee on the filth, the 230-yartl, por S hole oo which be made m -with a lour -shot. "Arnold dropped bli ball ju.st u I was Jtandq ewer my tee shot," Miller said. "I stepped back. Amold said 1Excuse me, 1 1ben I got over it again, hit it and the bill trickled in the bole. I said, "'lbank )'Ol( Arnold.' .. lie allo 11ved par with a ~oot puU on the f1nt hole, birdied the .. r 5 teCOnd ln>m n .. 1ee1; went lo three mder par with Ida ace and matched two qeys with two birdies the -of the way. . -· pitcher. I bOpe if they ever trade me, Ibey teDd me back to the National League. I'd rather face Steve Carlton than Blyleven." Lis, a .170 hitter before his game·win· ning single up the middle with two outs, played with 'II -pme wlmler Carlton laat year at Ftliladelphia. "To be on a team is one thing," said Lis, who bit .245 !or the PhlIUes last year, "but U> llelp win a lllM - ' more IQ you -· n -you !eel a part ol llie team. .. But B!yleven, who was U earlier in the season, bu won seven " hla Jut eight decill0<• wtth his taat five 1(1ctortea by ahutouta U> lead the Amar!<an Leque IDwltltewub-Blyleven eoattered •lcht Ca1llomia bits to improve bl1 record lo 1-7 and lteep the Twins In . second place in Iba -divJsloo, a hair game back of CJllcaco. The Twins send Joe D.ol:•er. 1-1 , against Rudy May, 6-t, in tbe seccnd game of the Hl'iea tmigbt. The Angels1 falling 21! gamea oil the lead In the opet><r of a llve-pme eeries ID Mlnnelota, !ell they ahoald have scored off the :ti-year-old Blylnea bt the eighth inning. Steve Braun walked, and Twins' manager Frank Quilici picked Lls to hit for Roof. ''1 turned a fastball over on him," said Wrlgh~ "and be bounced it by me. It came at the right time and at the right place for him." Blyleven tMce worked out of trouble with two men m. In the first there were two on and one out before Mike Epstein grounded out and Rich Scbeinblum ,became the lint of seven Az;tgels to go down on strikes. CINfrlrMI fel Mlt111111t1 11 J .. , .. ,., AlonMr, ftl 4-t -I e Tt'l'l'toll, 11 ,.In-, II ..i 0 2 o Mlslt, cf ,,Rob!_, .. ..i t 1 0 ICHllb!'IW, lb .,. .. , ID ..i t 2 0 OllY9, 011 ~um, rl 2 0 I O O.rwln, rl ~. cf ..i I 0 0 W1tto11, If O .. Miitltr, • 2 o o I Brye, II DllVtillOll, N 2 o o D t reun, Jb Mc(r1w, Jiii 1 O O O ROiif, c ,,,_. .. " 0 0 0 0 Lil. ,ti Torlllft, c 2 0 I 0 M1111tatt, :ii, C.WrlOht; p ~ 0 0 0 0 llyl~, p Tot111 22 O I t Tlt1le ni.. eut ....,. wlnnl119 run llCWWd. Ill , It 1'111 .. 0 1 0 .. 0 • 0 •• 2 0 ••• 0 • I 1 Cl ·I 0 o I I 0 o 0 2 0 1 0 ' ... l I I I a t I O , 0 0 0 • 30 I f 1 Ctllfll"lll• 000 001 DOO -O Ml~I 000 11111 DOI -I OP -C:.llfWllM 1, M(~1 2, LOI -Ctll· forrll• •· Ml._... e. 21 -P•n-. se -o.rw111. S -Roof, tr-. 1PM•1•11so C,WrltM (L.S-r) .. 1/3 1 I I 3 ( ••~ cw .. 11 t 1 o o 1 1 time -a:lL Atffndlnc:• -1..11t. tent1 '•, LOI Anvtles 4. ~e -0.. Joll-, w. ., Dllvlf; 1. HR -W, Cr1wtord I•!. Se -Lotl'ft, S -,• Ostlll'I. SF -CtY. """••11:1at0 4 Morton '{L ..... ) 1 1 S 2 I I ~ '•nlber 1100111 ' Ost-fW,t-3) t • I I 2 2 ' TllTll -J:.U. ArtMlll11t• -20.Ji._ • ' "It was a very reined l'(ll.d'Wi," said Palmer. "I'm driving titet.ter and I even feel a llttle better with the putter in my hand." Jack NicklaU!, who bu collected a leading $190,000 and lour UUfl already this season, topped s big group at"· He reeled off one string ol three comec:utlve birdies but dropped bed< with a boley rrom a bunker on the final hole. Top .Olyi11pians in Santa Clara Meet "That's not a bad ~ round !or me htre," Kid Nicklaus. 111 usually mrt olf wllh 74 or 75. I played pretty well, but I'd feel better about lt if I hadn't made that hogey °'' 11." Bruce Crampton of Australia, winner of three titles thi8 year, ma(ched por 70 but st""klng Tom WelskOf>( tool< a por 71 and wu well back ln the field. Lee Tl"<!vino 11 not playing. "It was an easy 67," 1'1111cr said. "I've SANTA CLARA (AP) -The l·l-3 Olympl~ flnilher1 are rematched In ave races at the Se.nta CJara International awlmmlng ... divinl -1 lllday, Satur- day and $unday. Eigi.\ more iold. allver and bronu medaW lrom the 1m garnet at Mlll)lch are entered In the other JI individual races. Meet director George Halnet 1111 predicted this ,.venth annual meet, with 13 world ·record boldon partldpatlag, wQl be "the. best in lhe world In 1973." In Ille six previous meets since the East Germany who holda two -in tbe mun~pa,lly owned Slnta Oare Swim 100 and :iotJ.meter backstroke. Cenlor• DI bullt In 118', a tolal of ZI 'nlree ractS which have "1n1>.__ world nconlo wen oel. Ql)'Dllllc .-Immen wlU be ""' Frlda1 -re~.=-ar.:.:~== ~~ •• ~·~: day in bodl -·• IDd .,....n•1 ell-. met« broaitalrote. The Ill allllotu In the 'i""'petltlOll H-thbtb tilt men ~ como ll'ml IS coantrlel: TbO l«elgn con-eventa may pro9ldt IOmo of Ibo -1•1 ting~ 1 ii boldocl 111. ShanO ~ If. " rnotl m:ltlni -Utlm. J oh n year-ol<l Australian whO houlo tllree lftncbn. II, ~ _.,... -. -ind OIYJlllllc. IOkl -ID ~ ml (W1ller CllMIUno. Calif. hip odlool ota.r, medley evente, and Roland i.{attbes ol Is tbe rol4 medalist lftllt 1 World l!OOnl 2:21 .5:) at Munich. Against him will be 1 sllvcr medalist David Wllkl~ ol Scotland •nd bronze medalist Nobutaka TalUchl ' ol lapon. . Matthes, wilo set a 56.3-aecood -Id record for the IIJO.meter bacltotroke at Moocow prior to winnil1g In Munich will be challenged by sliver medalist 0M\b litlmm of tho Coronado Navy Swim -'-"llon an d b'°""' medallot Jn Murphy of Gatorade Swim Club of Bloomington, Ind. Stamm set a a American record er '7.7 at ?.1llnlch1 r m a se c D 01 t d E w hi t t I c t h c p p I f a I f c e Friday, June 22, 1973 DAILY PILOT J7' ~I Romanian Seeks. Third North Squares Se ries With 6 -1 Win ·· Title in Row \ I LONDON -llie Nastase, playing dazzling tennis and sweeping an op- position before him, 1J two niatches away from wtming his third straig~t tourna- ment. 1 The talented Romanian faced Alex- ander t\'fetrevell of Russia today in the semifinals of the London grass Courts Championship at Queens Club. Roger Tay lor of Britain and Owen Da vidson or Australia were rivals in the oth~ semifinal. Nastase jauntily went through all his tennis tricks spin and lob, volleys and drops to flatten Ismael El Shafel of Egypt, 6-0, 6-3 Thursday. Metreveli beat Juergen Fassbender or West Gennany, S.2, 7-2, and Taylor hit his way past Cliff Drysdale of .South Africa, 6-3.-6-3. • Davidson beat fellow Australian-John Newcombe 7-5, 6-3. Stanford Ahead PRINCETON, N.J. -Three California teams are waging a see-saw battle for the lead as they head into the semi-fmals today of the 80th annual National Co llegiate Athletic Association tennis tournament. . Stanford took the lead Thursday, holding a two-point margin over Southern Cal , 28-26, while UCLA, which had been pacing the tournament, slipped from first place lo third, with 25 points. Houston and Southern Methodist are a di stant fourth with 15 points each. U.S. Five Wins PEKING -Ronnie Robinson's shooting and rebounding and Kevin Grevey's second-half scoring _ lilted the touring U.S. collegiate all·star team to a . ~~ victory over the Peking men's basketball team before a crowd of over 15,000 at the Worker's Gyninasium. The AAU women's champioo team from John F. Kennedy College, Wahoo, Neb., lost its second straight game however, dropping a 65-46 decision to a Chinese squad from Peking he!ore a throng of _ 18,000 at the Capital Indoor Stadium.· Cager Killed BOLOGNA, It aly -Jerome Lademan, R 2G-year~ld Fairfield, Conn .. Univenity basketball player, was killed early Thursday in a car crash which also daimed the life of an official of an Italian major league club. Lademan, from Trumbull, CoM., was traveling with American basketball coach RiChard Percudani, 37, and two of· ficials of-the Norda llalian club fr om nearby Imola to ·Bologna after wa'tching a basketball game. Match Race NE W YORK -Triple C rown champion Secretariat, who hadn't been expected to resume racing until August at Saratoga, may run in a three-wpy match race at Arlington Park June 30, Jf officials of the Chicago track have their way. Track spokesmen said prel imi nary ar- rangements for the $100,000 invitational event had been completed and that they had received a commitment t h a t Secretariat would run, but the horse's trainer, Lucien Laurin, sald nothing had been finalized . '"Secretariat is coming here and he's going to run against Our Native and .pro- bably Linda's Chief," Jack Meyers, rac- ing secretary at Arlington Part, said. By HANX WE8Cll three c•meo aple<e. Soaora• pitcher Jim Of ... Dtllr ,..... stett .Petenon, who started for the North. was The North Ai1 .. 1an accepted four gilt named tbe game's outstancllntl player, runs In lhe final three innings to break and teammate Mark Carpenter of Loo open a H tie and defeat the South, 6-t, In AlamJtoo WU awarded the out&tandlng the sixth annual Orange County high h .. tler 1ward. school baseball game Thursday night at /Is . frequently ha1'1""'5 In AIJ..iar Anaheim's La Palma Park. ~.pitching was the dominant factor, A !Ull house watched the North Jump Iii !Jut, the South committed five emn In front with a first Inning run only to have the game, while tbe North pllyed the South tie things in the sixth Inning nawtesaly hehlnd three hurlen. and iheo give it away In tbe final three . '!be ~orth mounted it& winning raUy in frames. the" 1eventh, ·scoring three limes on just The victory was the third in succession one hit. Alex Gorgi of Rancho Alamitos for the North, and it evened the series at reached base on an lnfleld 1ingle ind • • . · Women's AAV Meet 880 Ra ce Highlights UCI Qualifying. Heats By STEVE BRAND Of ... o.lty '""" ..... Qualifying heats in the 880: feat uring Mary Decker, Robin Campbell and Wen- dy Koenig, highlight this afternoon's session of the AAU women's track and field championships at UC Irvine. Miss Decker, who fell In the Iii-fated finals ol the girls' 880 on Wednesday, returQS to the track for the r.LtSt time in the 8!11 heats scheduled at ~:40. Following a morning of preliminaries, , Polo Tourney Set Saturday At Newport Fonner Orangt C.Oa!t area stars Eric Lindroth and Garth Bergeson and their Phillips 66 mates are seeded first in the SPAAAU senior outdoor men's water polo c~banTpionships begiMing Saturday at Newport Harbor High. The Phillips 66 outfit Is roached by Monte NitzkoW1ki with assistance from Ken Hamdorf and Tom Hermstad.. Eight games are scheduled for Satur- day, begiMlng at 8 a.m. and running through 4 p.m. NIMA A figures to give Phillips M Its stiffest test. NIMA A is coached by UC Irvine mentor Ed Newland and Included on the N1MA A roster is former UCI star Ferdie Massimino. Ken Lindgren's Fullerton A team is seeded third in the nine-team tourna~ ment. Six games concJude Mle \l!ICtlon Sunday. Admission to the tourney is fl. · Saturday's schedule 8 a.m. -Phillips A vs Fullerton B; 9 -FuUerton A vs Phllllps C; 10-NIMA A vs IPSA; tt~M vs Fullerton B; Noon-NIMA B YI Phillips C; 1-PhllUps B vs !PSA; i:-Phlllips A vs r.dM; 3-Ful· lerton A vs NIMA B; 4-NIMA A vs Phillips B. - · Sunday's Schedule 9 a.m.-secmd team bracket A vs sec- ond team bracket B; 10:30-flrtt team bracket A vs first team bracket B: , Noon-second team bracket B vs a~nd team bracket C; I :~first team bracket B vs· first team bracket C; 3 p.m.--sec- ond team bracket A vs second team bracket C; 4 :~flrst team bracket A vs first team bracket C. the sernlfinals were set to start 1t 4 this afternoon with the last running event scheduled for 6:55. Finals in all 17 events, where the top two finishers in each race qualify for the national team to tour Europe later this summer, start Saturday afternoon at 1. "Mary is healthy," says Miss Decker's coach, Don DeNoon, "and although she was spitting nails she wu so unhappy on Wedneaday, she'll he ready for tbe women's races." Leading by a yard with just 150 yards "'malnlng In the girl's champiomhips, Miss Decker fell heavily to the tract, gamely rallying to finish third, which does not qualify for tbe naUooal junior team. In that race, Miss campbell, w~ is 14· years-old like Mis! Decker, won easily at 2:08.3. But now a new set ol challengers enters. 1tunners like MiSll Koenig, who ran 2:03.I hebind Miss Decker's natlon- leading 2:03.6, and veteran Cheryl~ Toussaint 1 who has run 2:06.1, make tbi8= the feature race. The meet· also features the javelin throw where Kathy Schmidt, who recenUy set an American record of 8-1, is going after the world reoonl of 213-5. She Is more than 311 feet ahead ol her nearest pursuer, Girl's champion Karen Smith, who registered her !Ue~ best '\'ith a heave of 111-0 Wednesday. OCC Smothers Cage Foe, 48-27 WILMINGTON -Orange Co a g t College upped it& record to z-t In tile LA Harbor summer bUketball league Thurs- day night with on easy 48-27 triumph .over Santa Monica. Bnree Mliler wu the only Orange Coast player In double figures, scorinc JO point&, whlllt Dean Bogdan led tbe re- bounding oorps with seven. Four others -J1m Worthy, Rod Snook, MiUer and ?.!arc Att1eseY -contributed with four rebounds each. "I thought we played well defensively as a tea~,'' iays coach Herb IJ.vsey. c~• _, Miii tr WM..., Tol•ll OtPM C .... C•I "." • 1 ' SnoOlt 226~ s 0,10 .,,....., 1 2 ' CMl'ltl"Clft H•tftlmt: Cir•-COMI, 22-1. "." • 0 • 1 1 • • 0 • 1 0 ' ft •• Baseball Stand.ings . AMERICAN LEAGUE Ea1t Division W L NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L DEAN LEWIS TOYO TA VOLVO THIS WIEK'S .SPECIA1S New York Balli more Milwaukee Detroit Boston ,Cle veland 36 30 3t 28 34 31 32 32 31 32 25 41 Pel. GB .545 • 525 t l(a .523 ll(a .500 s .492 31> .m 11 Chicago Montreal St Louis New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh 40 28 31 29 31 33 28 33 29 35 28 34 w .. 1 Dh11Joa Pel. GB .lillll . 517 5 .481 7 .459 31> .452 I . 452 I '71 Chtlpltr N-.,.rt ........ ••tnM. .. , ... '" ...... --A \19'J C ..... C•r. 0.1, 197r (1140Cll •10 aulck l1t•tt W•ton ' ,. ........ ,,..fie ffMll, • ....., ..,, •Ir ................ ,..., ........... Oftty 2777" 11"111') 'ffcM. ·-.... , ... ._ ....... ---Cllt Only 3277" IYOUllJ •ff Pont% T.n J..,. .. va.c•...,...T• Jlln ~91111. tlitMf '"' A Trt,. Oft 1777 00 tf ID'IUOJ • West Division Chicago 34 27 Minnesota 34 28 Kansas City 37 32 Oakland 35 32 Aqoll 33 31 Te1u 21 39 TfwnlllY't Olln•• Clt!Y.il!ld t, Mllwlllllff I N..., York .s, o.troll t, 16 lnnl11911 etHlmor• '' lolton i Mlnr..-1• I, ........ O Ctlk:HO 2, O•IW 0 Qnly •• ,,. ~-- .557 .ii48 l(a .536 I .522 2 . ~16 2l(a .350 12l(a T ....... , ....... Dltf'Oll 1'"-"Y NI ti lffw Yort ( ..... non .,. 9tltlm«t {J'"""°" o-4 9tld Mc:Ntl!Y Ml et lklltcln (Mcnf I.cl •nd Culo °"'I • Tt!!tt (tMl'Tl!I 0-21 •I K1111U11 CllY (Dr ... 1-S) Clll'ltlll'ld fKtleldl 1·21 •I MllW•uk11 (Colllotfl ... ....... (MOY ... , •I MlnlllWI• CDKktr 1·IJ Oeitl__, C""""9:r NII ti ClllcffO IWMf IHI -·-Dl!Nff •t MN Yn ........ 111 MlnMMI• Otkl9!14 .. CflkMo TtUtMK ...... Clt'r ••111mor. Ill .....,,. Cl1nltllf flt MIWMM Dodlen San Francisco Houston Cincinnati Atlanta San Diego 43 25 41 29 31 31 31 311 28 40 21 47 .llSZ .illtl .551 .545 .411 .3111 3 5l(a 6 15 22 took R<OOd 81 Valeocta's Tom Ricks gol aboard on an error. Willlanuof Los Alamitos and Corgi. Nfl111 1•1 S011tt. 01 •llot llrM .. ,,,.... carpenter then scot a bouncer to shortstop which got through for a1•mr which alioWed Gorgt to score, and wh<ft a • rel1y throw was wijd trying to nab Qlrpenter at seaind \base, Rieks also scored. Carpenter went all the way to third on the miscues and came home oo a sacrifice Oy by Rudy ontiveros ol Magoolla. l1le Rbels managed only three hits, R1c111, ct > o o o Nor i cf > o 2 • Cttt•.,..., cl 2 I 0 O fl •M , tf.lb f • ...,.. two of thn ·ln the tiix.lh inning wben they c1rptn1w, 111 2 2 1 o • '*' '• • I.! \ Pulll9tr1, If I O 0 0 1(-.f!, ~'1 .J 0 I 0 scored t\lr only run. A double to left M<Ktl~. rt ' o o o Pl'IU~. P o o • o Onll-. tf 0 o 0 1 Loffil1, Ill' 0 .. 0 o ..... center b; Gary North of Santiago, the l.«1r:.111r, , 1 o o o 0..1.,., 1b 1 o o o" longest h of the night, set up the score ~=:!'i1 c · ~ ~ g: f.~·PP ~::: which caie on a passed ball. V•n Ho• .... 11 1 1 2 o o..vis. 11 2 o o o 8ooi•,Jb 2 000 0 !tkff,lr l ,!OO •• ~ Mar's Matt Keough· pitched Ouftv: :lb 2 o o o art.,..r, 11 1 1 t o ' the nnt:•1..--Innings, gi'vm· g up an M1ck•1e, " 1 • 1 o Gor1Nn. u 2 1 o lb ~1 ~ • ~~ Ntwm•n, '' 2 I O O S<!\fv11tr. c 1 I 1 1 -i uneamed..i OD a walk, two wild pitches Soobbm. 2b 1 o o o RIHM'l. llf' o 1 • O' ... r• and a pa~ bail, but also struck out six· Ptlnt1r1 2b 2 a 1 1 s11111 .... ·2b 1 o o 0 , .~. _. eon1w1 1, p11 1 o o o Sw1naon, 2b 2 o o o "' 1be North added single runs in the eighth and nlitth Inning, only one oJ them earned, to put the game away. Y~ baers. P1ltr1011. p O O O O llll Petel'IOlbitched the first three innings \ ~!T:."p P ~ 1 1 : · ~' and facecfi.nJy nine batten. He hit one To1111 ll ' • 1 t o1111 n J > 1 -, , W -·~-. The South, meanwhile, looked futile at the plate agaln&1 • Peterson, Gal'J' · "' batter, ~lnster's Scott Bradley, but later plckethim off first base. Comp'fae Player Norll! '°'" ' 100 000 lll -' 000 001 000 -I • • • • 0 ·' "' ·~ -• ' ! -' Joaes Guid es Attack Fo r South Cage Team ""' . ,, ·•-·...i •• "' MIKE DUNN Dunn Sparks North Cagers Against South By 11,GER CARLSON Of ti Dtllty ~ ... '"" Corona del far High's Casey Jones will be ma~ his final appearance under the tuteige of coach Tandy Gillis Saturday nigh in the eighth aruiual North-SOuth Alstar basketball game at Orange Coast Ollege. Jones, a threiyear starter for Gillis at Corona del Mai twice named first team All-CIF AAAA, ' the complete guard. Perhaps J0011' best a s s et is hls shooting -hlsabilily to gun the op- position under \th the 20-foot jumper. Aside from hi deadly .shooting game, he finds the opeunan, he's unselfish and il you score on lm, you earned it. Defemively he second to none. In two meetings with 'roy High's sensational scoring wizard ?Irk Wullemeyer, Jones held him to seve and six points . But his story osuccess is in the usual mold for athlete who stand oot above others. Work. "Nobody," .sar,Gillis, "puts as much Katella High's Mike Dunn makes hi.s time bi the gameis Casey does. He puts fmal ~e County appearance Satur-in as much as· eight hours a day day night, ,:~ding his three-year relgiiO( -some~e! and Ir-isn't just putting m- ' time. He's work&:." terror In tbe eighth annual North-South Jones '!'odestly lsclaims tbe apparent AU-star baSketball game. -natural lilept he ">Ssesses and says, "I It'• an 8 o'clock test at Orange Coast like to put In a lotf time playing basket· College and Dunn a two-year AU-Sunset ball. It's the mairreason I've gotten as league choice wbi1e at Western and an far as I have: Thtime I've put into it . has ma,de a diffence." All-CIF first_~ selection as a se!"Or !{e's also aware tthe coaching aspect. at Katella, is off for Pennsylvania Sun-'/Tandy Gillis habeen the whole thing. day as a swnmer cage camp counselor. There's no chant I'd have gotten Later he will assume a collegiate career aOything. He's tau1t me a lot of things_ at Utah. thlt most people "i!on't see. It'• un- At 11-5" (IOO _ _...) he led K teU heltevab!e the thing he's done for me." . n .,.,..,..., a a Jones (6-3) did d play basketbaU in with a 11.9 _av~e tn Crestview League junlOr high school ad bis only action at play and his Knighta mates compUed 1 that stage wal' lhmgh boys clubs ac- 30-2 record under coach Tom Danley, the ti vi ties. Norlh mentor. c · • dd G S I ed t "Obviously" Dani "M'k l asey s, a , ~e r., pay a _. , says ey, 1 e s one Stanford and Callfo.a, and the younger of the~ ccn:nPle,t.e ptay~rs I ~ye ever Jones ii alJo ticketefor Pac-8 piay -at coached. But it's bot strictfy skills I'm --· -- talldn& about. It's grades, character, maturity and ltadenhip. He does all the plus things a coach would like to have e:r:· hlblled. "And I don't take credit for those Items • • • Marv Bk!mker of Western High i,s a super human being and should take a good deal of the credit for Mike's character. He's a disciplined individual. • 11 And he made our team. He was the di[ference in our team being the clasi team It was."~ Dunn credits Danley with Improving his defensive ability and cites Blemker's coaching decision to start him m the varsity level u a sophomore as a major aid in his steady improvement. Fans can expect to see Dunn In his familiar double low post situation at , Umes in Saturday's contest. "C.oech Danley aays we have to win -this game between the free thrpw lines," says Dtam, "that we have to run with the ball. That means I have to get the re- bo1md and get tbe outlet pass off "Hut if we find ourselves being con· tained in that area I e1pect J'll be counted on to do more of the scoring off ~ JO E HO~ETT 1Unl••"1 ' :' . t~ ' .,.; ' ,., '· ' "' ".k" '""" l (• " ·~. ••• .,,, ' .... ll " • .. rl CASEY JONES he-·University of sOOtbem California. The pros? The Coron• del Mar whiz says:~ "I lhint college· beJl 'is a "big enoogh step to think ·about right ,__ A!< you move up the competition gets tougher. l Just want to keep doing as 'ftll as I can." _ ':\,·: ' .\ \ Jones is a 3.8 gpa lfudmt llJd. he's !ti· -vascillating hetw__eeo._ a ma~ -~ "~ oceanology or teaching at U~ , . ~,....1 " >tlr: The hest ol his prep me~)l,)lie '~· narrow verdict over Long' Beach PolY It, ,. • Lang Beach in !be C!F A AA.A ·"' quarterfilials. ' ...... ~. r; • 1' A!< IOI' Saturday's caitilcl Wltli 'tlie ~". North he too is anxiou! "to ·11ee 1Me1Ja11 1~ci Mike Dunn in action. "I've never~h ,;1" Dunn play but I've heard a lot lbool lllm:t• I was on the same lealfu with, Tim 1 • • Tivenan a:nd-be's-a,;-sgper guy." ~-.. . • Bl ~L SPRINGMAN Dino Hills . ' ..:~ •• ... • the low post. It depends on the tempo of the game, if we're rwmlng I won't get quite the individual chance." one would think Dunn hardly needs a chance to sbow what he can do on a basketball oourt, but the Katella ace responds : "Everytime you go on the co urt t~ ls somebody doubting what you can do." HollRtt Springman. Earn: ;.: . •• Dunn will be majoring in business ad- ministration and indu1trial relations at Utah and he saya he chose the Salt Lake City-based Institution hecluae o I academics ;..nd the general area. Mesa Rips T.roy With 57-39 Win Costa Meaa High's Mustanp Increased their Orange High summer bulcetball mark to 2-0 Tbur!ldly evenJni with a 57· 39 rout ol Troy. Coach Bob Sorensen's winners jumped out to 'an 18-1 Ont period lead and bre<z· l!d the remaining dlstanoe. Leading Mesa's scoring attack Was Phil Salaw wllh 17 counters. Jim Swain led In asslm with three and the rebounding wu spread throughout the Mesa squad. COsta Mesa returns to action Monday In the opening round or lhe Laguna Beach High summer cage clrcult against Mlssloo Viejo'• No. 1 Wilt. =· C ...... M lw•lll H1rt1t ltl!OI ~:• MtM c.tl .... (11) fl ft " "W•1Wm911 1 J t If Heffml11 , • 0 ·~ , 1 1 ' "'°"'*"' • 1 1 tJ~ t 0 t 4 Tottl1 0 1 I I SC.• '"' QM"'" 11 n . " 0 ,0 ' 0 J 1 I 1 1 0 • ' , 0 1 • 0 0 1 0 2J 7 11 S1 16 lt -57 lt 11 ->t CIF B,seball Honor s University Hlgh's Joe :ollett and Dana Hills' Bill Springman h1e been selected All-CIF in base ball by 'e Citizens Sav· ings Athletic Foundatloooard for 1973. Hollett, a senior Or. b3seman !or coach Ken Tratar's UniV'tlty nine, slug- ged tbe boll at a .S'IO clipnd was named to the first team. Springman , who priped at San Clemente High as a1 'reshman and sophomore, was a key 1ctor in Dana Hills' emergence as a v;slty contender despite the absence of ar senlon. Springman balled ·f for Dennis Nespor's team and earnee second team herlh. Holmes on P.obat.ion . YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio . Pro football player Ernest ltolmes, wt was arrested alter firing shots .at seval trucks in · Mahoning County Maroh\6, has been placed on five year'• pr<>blM, ' Common Plea• Court uclge Sidney m..,lhaupt ordered proltlon for the Pittsburgh Steeler detslve tackle Thunday, ruling that "tb publlc good docs not demand or requi that he be immediately sentenced." •:" '. ' '' I Player of the year law-els go to Sonofa J High's Jim Peterson •for the ~ _ .. straight year. '!be nifty Sonora pitcher .:. chall<ed up a 15-4 record. "., ~" AU-clF Baseball AA Finl Team '" Pot. Pllyer OF Hart OF Johnston OF Robinson 18 Hollett 28 Murphy 38 Underwood SS Skat! UL Clerk C Valentine P Peterson · P l!ustad P Parrish Sclllol Clul Mart ~:· Sonora Jr. -~ 1 Walnut Sr. _. , Hemet Sr. .412 •I, UalvenHy Sr .• S7t 1., • .' Elsinore Jr. ,449 , Roy1l Oat Sr. .3'\I San Marino Sr. .365 Gladstone Sr. .51 7 • qt~dltJ': Sr. 1364 I Gl:.t...: ~~: 1:1 : Walout Jr. '\1.1 : I Second Team ·: OF OF OF IB 2B SB SS Ut Ut I> r p p Kuntz Acosta Rinehart Myers Ture:i Sprtogm1a Shepherd Ditchfield -· ~lte Stanlland ~le Paso Robles Sr. .«I Bonita Sr . .Yfl La Sierra Jr .• m. Bann.Ing Sr• ,481 II Bell Gardens Sr. .379 ' Dona 81111 Ir. .m Walnut Sr. .379 • Nordboll Sr. .333 " Palm Sll<lall Sr. 4411 I PaloVerile sr. :u. 1 Santa Cllra St. 1.i Brawley Sr. · M ' Bell Gardons Jr. H • I r I , .. • • ~ 8 OAIL Y PILOT _._._ ' • • I I I • r • • For "Tllvrsda1_ Alamitos Results Ti'lundl,, .I-11, tt'J C111r 6 l'f'll ,lll:IT ••CE -3jO .,.,d .. ' vt•r old1. (ll h'nlfl9. Purst Sltoa. Mr. "'"°""ay (Tre1wr.I tt.70 6.60 3.20 Spilllull (Wf!Mllll t.60 1.40 P1pp\"'1 lleque•• (Adair) 3.All T!mt -11.~1. · A1MI ran -Fnn U,._let., L l1t11 Jim- ,..,,. Lto. Pride'' lleward, J odi Lee. Summer Sunshine, Kln11'1 CrulH, SJ)Of- ll' Sllvtr. kr1teM!I -D1r11"9 E111. Moon$1•r. 11 E••CI• -l•Mr. Arrowll' 4. I· S,Plt•flln, l"•kl 11ts.a. SECOND Jl:ACE -PO yards. 3 ye1r Olds & up. Clflm!119. Purse 11900. OClfl Kw r tGarzal 1.00 ~ . .a 1.60 Finey Wiiiow (R lc~rds) 7.olO 3.20 Ge "roul'ld tSmlll'I) 1.&0 Time -~7.20. , . Abo 11111 -Trk Fir., El Artfit, Li ,..'S 8ar L.-:ly, M-Sluy. Distance Runners Sparkle SU11<11t<d -I To Go. TlllP Sick, fi.Un'l 'f'olly. TIUIO •ACIE -»O Vt,dl. 2 V-llr old•· Cla!mlf!O. Purw $ll00, Ftv MK Fly (Wrltht) 24.20 l .6G 4.# MUl\YI Fund CP~l S.60 j.60 TtOPlcaj &1r l81nQ ) 3.00 Tlmt -ll.7S, Abo ran -e1n eov. Jon 8,Hn, 0.-Vll'I Potktl, Mf. Wfllillt , Falrtif P1U.o, SM~Ull Bit•, Evi n Up. POUITM •ACI!' -3SO yards. 3 year old fllllts a.nd mares. Cla"llltd 11ll01Wanct. P1.1rM $3SIDll. Tiit Oollgfa1 Airtran C.,,.,...ny • M1111119ement Club. w 111 .e 1o om (Wtrdl 1,20 4.MI l .«I Mlti Poklt ClllP {WalMll'll 5..60 3.20 Bayou ear B•lrf (Myi.tl s.20 'Time -11.01.. Also ra" -No re11n1t,., St S1.1rt j'<\OOll• N11ul1.1tlon. f't•TH lrACE -lSO yards. 2 year !Jldt. Allowarn:t. Purlf: S2000. Rae• MalcA!r IRlcMrdsl 12.1111 5.1111 3.1111 Na1 hvlt!e COPY CB1nkO 3 . .iQ 2 . .0 ,-Am I Said-{Wrlgllll 3.olO Time -lf.33. Aho ran -0~1 111.11•, Lllllt Tony Go. Elmer Glick, S1.1PerM111, Mll1 AD~. • SIJOM RACIE -.J.lt yards, J ye1r olds a. up: Sl.irlers allowaoct. Pur!ll $1100. G1rvtn County {Smith) 7.«I 4.00 2.80 Oollblt Por:o Bid £81,.kl ) 5.0D J.olO Brttllng CrHk (MYltsl 3.ClQ Time -,:17.95. AIM! r111 -Zhivago, Haddl Be Yoo. My Roman lndl1n,.Roblnlt. Olal Br.in- dy, Parr Clal>t>olr, Lint PalMr. U IEJlllCl.1 -·1..0lrv\11 C111111ty & 1• DMle Poca Siii, P1!4 SHUO. SEVENTH RACE -lSO yards. 3 ye1r olds a. up. Cl•s$1fled 11How.1nc1. PUr$t UOOO. Thi McCOMtll OOu!llas. Sll.lmrocket (Adair ) -l.80 l .20 2.80 Assured COPY CW.illonl 10.&ll 1.00 Vana11u• (Har!J ~.OD Time -11.03. Al.t0 r.in -Go Go Je1nlt, Judy's Wonder, 1Cln11 81rd, Watch Boy. l!:IGMTM •Ace -.oo yards. 3 v••r olds. Allowance. Purse S2300. Thrft He1t1 (Adair) 5.20 3.80 2 • .io Atamltde"u (Smlllll 6.20 3.60 Arurl Bar Go (Hl t!I 2.60 Time -20.31). • • Al~ r1n -Sunslllrie R.ocketlt. Chic Pat Go, Fair's Fair, Gennis, Copper Coll. Buoinv'1 Gold, 01' Oan. Scratclled -Glll1111, Ea rly Charge, M1lor lhreat, Famlly Affair. SI •uchl -l ·1'1rH Hem a 1· Ala!Mdlll1, Pakl US.00. NINTH RACI! -«IO yards. 3 year !lids. Clalml1111. Purse $2000. Liiiie Go Fletl £Treasure) 7.20 l .llO 4.20 Coo S1111 (Richards) s.20 ~.10 Fir.charge {C.1rdol11) 1• 5.80· Time -20.16. AIM! ran -Pass Em By, Flee! Rullah, Gvp's Cu!e Bar, Leyban Quick, Mlmlrtl, Selig, Nloka. Lutheran's Goodyea CIF Player of, Year Luth~ran's Bob Goodyear, who pitched his mates to the CIF A baseball championship with a 13--0 record, wa s named player .of . the year in that _classification by the Citir.ens Savings Athletic Foundati on board for 1973. Air Sr. .311 Sr .• QI ~r. .411 Sr •• 351 Conditioned 28-Meelu, MoilYe lB-HarllhOrn, SI. &on.t SS-ICOsl(IPOIOVS Boron UI -llfltr!v. 'twin Pines C-Wtrnekt, Lutheran P-Gooayear. l vttwran P-6•••Mv, Brethren P~•meron, euckl..,. SKond Team gF-McConneU, AmM1saoor F-An111.1lo, HoltvUll OF-A~, Ctrplnlerl1 1&--Howetd, llllheran iB-Brenntt::kt , Moor~rk ,38-l(uschtll, NO (Rlvl $-Petropulos, NO (Riv) Ut -P1dlev. Queen of Al'IQ. UI -lltookf.. Amblsffdor P-8r'llwn, LI Sallt P-Lorent. LA BIPll•I P-Mor-. C.1rpf11tvl1 FOR BOWLING BLUE .CHIP S1AMPS ~ .&.IO .... j .319 s .526 l ·13t:i ~ l~~ J .•n :m , ·"' .311 .471 .m .Ii: .., ,., 13< EVERY ff!UDAY 6 l'M. l!VERY SATURDAY 6:30 & 'P.M. I Mlnr ollf_. wop to win -IO .. llll0,000 ll•ml" Coll ~17 For R-rvollOfls HUITillTON l.PES ' . I lttn llACM IL MUfilTINGTON I E GET TOO WRJSTY Go r no. I in today's illustntioll ha foraottea one o the cardinal ,Wes of go~: your hands should alway lead the clubhead during intpact. This is tnao type ot shot. from drives to putts. l\'1 ly important on short chip and pitch shots, many high·handicap· 1olfers tend to get too and end up striking th• ground behind lhe balL i . I • 5 z ~ Concentrate on leamin& to -strike all yoiar shots th the back of your_lefl wrist ptactically atrallht lfer no. 2), instead of cupped (g01fer no. 1). You'll nd that your hands will lead the clubface tomatically. 'a IR OUT THOSE. IRON SHOTS! Arnold Palmer'sboOklet''Hittlng th Irons'' 1Wes champioliship tips to help sharpen your ironshot t niqut. Send 204 and a stamped, return tnvtlopt to Arnold P er, in care of this news a er. ight Y ellowtail ount Repor-wd •• " ' " • ' • " ' " ., " " " ~ .. ' • ' " ' • ' " ' ' ' " ' " LEASE • • • a Continental LEASE ••• Mercury Full Maintenance LHting •.. Your Choice, Nowl 540-5630 , Ala1nitos Racing Entries '_.,. T--Clllr & •a11. fif'$1 POlfl 714f ,.M, Pl•ST •ACE -SSll Yilf0$. 3 ypr olat. (lflmlnu, Punt JllOO. Clllmlf1ill '"''' snoo. - -RtdlllerOODllr (Of_.,...,) . 119 Oh So Good (Adair) 111 Mv ~rlgnl Svrgln lTr11surtl 11• N!<;illlen.Qtll ('-l)a.mDMIHJ 111 F11v1 JW (Hartl 119 Roy Cf\fnl tM111wd1I Uf C.Ola Dan (Ward) 122 01rKt 1..0PV (Bilnlll) 111 Mll1 8•1111011 Bar (Morris) 111 Royal Parade \Kn'lll\11. 1Ji AMlilllolllle Sonnll'I' Gal '(W•li.otll 111 Golden Hen tC1rdoz1J 11• Dln,.r Mtklr !PNll ,•,•,> Ctct.allar (Or•v•rl SECOND RACE -t7!1 y1rdt. 1 y11r olds & 1.111. c:11lmlf'<I. C•llf.or.G. Pur11 s2b00. Claimlna-prke SSODO. Pnoebl'I Bruce (Sml!JIJ 119 Ml Pit IWr~hl) 119 Mfnllelll (MVIH) 172 C:Olili_rn[11 .S.nds \Treuure> \I~ Fftlv Gr.11'11-fACfe ti~--119 Mr. Ade<IUI .. (Hfrl) 119 Pros.peroui Q11est (1llcll1rd1) 119 cnrn ear <B.inksl 119 THIRD RAClli. -Sit yards. 3 year Olds f Uf· Allowa.nu. Purllt $2300. , Moishe , Wrlllhl) 119 O'Olfl (P~) 122 TOP Pr!"' (Trt1s1.1r1l 122 One Al\dnonly (K,.lghl) 122· Uncle W•s tWard) 119 Santan,.•l'I fCN:lsby) 122 M1111n•mlnous (AdalfJ 122 Debra Zan (Harl) 113 FOURTH RACE -«IO 'Ylrdl. 3 ye1r old• & up. Allowance. Pui'!ll $2300. Clalmll'IQ Price $10,000. Thi Carman C'Oro. Rocket To.Ho• {C11r!!_oz.il Nifty Note (B•nksr -Loterlon (Knlgllll Tlnv Watch Bound IAde!r) SP«l•I Notlct (Tr1.11ure\ luCkY'l 0'8oy (Rlchatdl 1ll "' m "' "' FIFTH llACIE -S4' vard1. 3 year old~ & up. Allowaoce. PUr$1! $3SOO. Tht Ski Marr. Truly SPOI (Morris) 111 Little Llldv Roar !Smllhl 111 Vrocte R1,1f1,11 CRk hfrdsJ 122 Dvn'!lflo Gee (811nks) 119 Marble Mfn (Watsonl In Knight Affair {Myles 119 Bl11 C.invon tA.d11rl rn Frosty's Deacon IW•rdl 11' SIXTH RACE .-.00 yardl 3 ye..r '"l & up. C!almlna. Purie SIBOO. Ct• ming price 51600. Speedie Night (Trt1sut1) ll' Bar Tooler (Page)' 119 W<J.r Chic Two !l'.ros.Dy) llP DffP MoOn !Morris) 11a DYil.imo f'atrOI (8.irnksl 122 NV!her B1.1nnv (Knipllll 122 Mr. lm110rllnl (R1en11rd1) 122 Me David (S.leml 172 Gold lflllOI (MVll$) 122 Raider Rocktr (Wa!Mln) 122 Ali.o EllttDll: M.!· )Hl!Sler (Adair> Anlltl'1 S1.1re Mlkt \Cardoza) Rue Feree (Welson Palleo's Bar {Treasure). '" ·~ "' '" SEVENTH RACI .:.. 3so y1rds. 2 year olds. P1.1r11 S6000. The Jel Oeck, l'ma On (Adair} 12:2 Otsl Doll rstoreyl 119 Roval Moon 2·1oriayerJ 119 Rebt!I Kav (Hfrll 116 Lantv's Jet (Smllhl 119 MOOl'I Fiver (Rkhards) 119 Ltncoln's S\lrtt Bet (Banks) 117 True Moon '(WftlOlll 119 Otll's Shadow <Crosby) 119 Liddle FllCS (Mvfesl 119 l!:IGMTM llM:I: -110 ylrch. 3 y1ar olds & up. Clalmll'IO Pur11 $l000. Clelmlr.g 11!1~ $~. Lanovan Sir (Ward 122 Ve!ld1 Linda (Hlrl 113 PIUMl!r (Ao:l1lr) 122 ld.111(1 Go (CrosbVJ 111 MN Voo 0oo (Wfklhl) -122 Old Times IK"lghlJ in Armtd Casl'I cw.non) 122 SI-Pony (Rkhfrdsl 122 Al• lll1llllrl' Green Up (W•™"'/ Tiii Verlll (Ad1lr Paooa Wini {8.in4J "' "' "' ' ·Edison To.ps• Vjkes;; .. HB, Corona Ram file : . \ Edison Higb's Ch a r g er s upset visiting Marina Thurs- day night in Hunlinglon Beach summer basketball action, 55- 46, to continue ~aten along with Huntington Be a c h , Corona del Mar anti Servile. Huntington Beach kept pace with a fourth qwirter spurt to subdue visiting Lali:ewood, 70. 62; Servite stopped Fountain Valley at HWltington, 52-41 ; and CO.rona del Mar rolled by La Quinta, 411-36, at~ Edison. • Cor~• del Mir ..,,~ Hunllnulon 8aach Servile Ml C~ Stllllll11p w , Marini NIWPOrl HarDor WMtmtnsi.r L•~ewood •, 01n• Hiiis ES11ncl1 • Founteln VtlltY u Quinta ' ' ' l l i ! L 00 g i ~• l i l ' 1 ' ' i I Other re s ults found Westminster trampling Esiiln· cia at Marina, ~; and Newport Harbor bested Dana Hills at Marina, 62-53. Coach Dave Mobs' Edison quintet clicked for 23 of 32 at the free throw line in turning Mlirina away. Jack Clark led Edison i:n the offensive depart- ment with 18 points (10 free throws) and. Mike Rangel and Tom Lloy controlled t h e boards with 11 and eight re- bounds. Lloy snagged seven caroms in the deciding second half. ~ broke loose for 22 counters in P.&clng Corona del . ' Mar to Its second triumph - without Joe , Kozmata in the 1ioeUp,' NeWport Hary>or's B r i a n O'Flaherty aJao tallied 22 in helping his mates take care of Dana HillS, which was paced by Mark Schrey (11) and Joel Peck (I~). Conlr•r•s R•nkln la.rrlllQtr .Ga11man • Sciwlni.111 Citrtlll T011l1 N..,.,, Martior (•2) .. " ,1~ t O'FllherlY Vlndtl'AI ...,_, ' . ' ' ' . ·-~ Rtn,.r "" Lo!Jwfer Tol1ll ' ' ' ' " . 0.111 MDII .,!531 110 0.1ri1111 11 Crown 2 O H.11~ 1 0 Hoffmtn 1 1 Ollv1r 1 O Peck 6 3 Sc.hrtY 1 l RIC>lllt 0 2 Thoml:IOll ' o Toi.Ill 21 9 kort ~ Qvamf'$ NtwWt "'-TllOr 15 19 l ' Oanl HMl1 4 1' 1) -: li ' ' ' ' • • ' ' • ' " • " ~. " • ' • ' 1 ' ' • ' ' " ' " ' ' ' • " " ,..._., ..... ,, Raul Contreras was again ,._11111 v111•v 1•1J the leading figure in Hun-fl " " '' tingtoo Beach's conquest, this i~:l j ! ~ '~ Edison Marl"• I Free Pony Ride$ dail1J thru Sun., June 2f time connecting for 24 points ~i:~1mer 1 1 • ; in pacing the Oilers to their ~g1~v ~ g t .~, I ring •II your cowboy1 •"' Second win. Mali ne 5 0 2 lndi.111s for their fittt po11y Valbutna l -o 1 2 ·ct N t S H • Servite's Dennis Smith Lodtn5Mtn 3 o o 6 " •· oon o P·'"· u11t•n9to11 • ·TOll1$ 20 1 13 u Ctnlar's enclo•ed ,..,.u. S.1cth incl tallied 19 in leading bis mates sc-by Qvartan Eclinger •t tll• 51" Ditt• to their win over Fountain Fountain Vall•'!' 16 • 14 1-1 Strvli. 11 10 16, 15--52 ·Fwy. Valley, a. n d Westminster's [jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOOii;iiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;i;;;;i;;;iiiiiiiii;i;i easy victory was triggered by CAPISTRANO 19-point efforts from Dale Parker and Linn Wilson, along RACQU EJ CLUB with double ligure scoring from Tony Accomando, Dave Walsh and Ed Jirges. Corona del Mar's Mark Cage Scores Fe1ture1 • 1.c:oum e CL\tlJIOUSI •·PLAT AllA e UUNA &. JACml • no SHOP $PORTS SINCE 1924 • ; FLY ~FISHING 'HEIDOUARRRS .-• We have a giant stock of Fly Rods for expert or novice -----let us JOI you up wffh o bolonced rod, reel ond line • Fly tying motoriols and kits SWIM TRUllKS , Fomout Mokn ly ~Hang Ten-laguO- J)esigns Alive-Abc:o • New Connelly ~"""",.::~ Gloss Wotor Ski {Demo AvaHabl1 SPEaAL SIU ON llllNl'S . ' . At Our Po1hlon bloncl.Slofe $295 Value,to ,0.00-Whffe Tbey Leist· -:TElllllS JUST RICEIVEDI 'New Shlpm•nt of TfMl• DrtsMS -Ntw loob-N~ Desl;n1 HEAD'S NEW XR· 1 TENNIS UCIU •Custom Strung w/nylon . 36.00 •Custom Stlungw/gut 39.95· ,._,uw C1n ol 3-llat '1 '' Brands (limit 2 · -· 24 HOUI flSHING UPOIT 547-2545 YELLOW· TAIL .FISHlftG •.Best in 20 years-from Mexico to long aedch • Special Cu> tom Y ellowtail Rods- Good for any ocean fish--42.50 • 5 Days Speciol-Fill your reel with 20 lb. line for V. cont per yard BACK ·PACK Try thts new method to ·. · "get-a.way" from it . olll SAl.E-FAMOUS MAKE •BACK PACKS Reg. 51:95 ... 32.50 • SLEEP BAGS trom 17.95 • TRAIL BOOTS from 27.SO • HIKING SHORTS I.SO •HIKING SHIRTS 11 .95 • DOWN VESTS from • Full StoCk of 15.95 ORI-LITE PA K F D 6DAYSONLY LEATHER JACKn SALE 50,.-on · .!. ... ,. 111 quollty reg. 1Jock • YourchaM• to really 1an at all l.ath.r ·sty1e1 haV't dtoft'IOtkaly rai1•d In prtce· -Cl!ll) l · ,.. ....... • ' ,...--• T ' ' ' ' • • .,_ • • • All-stars Wrestle Tonight • • ~rlday, Junr 22, 1973 DAILY PIL OT J :J Cheeking Out Area Li~ks • ' a Members of tbe l·funfu1glon of. the women) golf' g11oup at Swartley (107-27-801 fourth. Dougherly finished fourth at "Seacll[f men's golf group sta~~ El Niguel Country Club In Dorothy &nks won gross &1 . • ed the second a n n u a I Laguna Niguel. Jerre Cini wa s honors in D flight with 105. F'lighl . c found ~1 a r y Macintosh tour n a men t the gross winner With an 88. Mary Betz was the net-winner \Vil Iiams arld Ruth Hunter Ued rcccoUy with Bob Spencer nnd Ruth Cohen copped net (1J4-35--79), foltowed b Y for rirst a1 $8.. Doi-ottiy"Ekhoff Several Orange CoasLacea Mani C®lon finishing with honors in A flight w Ith 93-Lou~ nossitier (114-32-621, WMS next ·at 59 with Helen wrestlers will be featured 60~ for top honors. 21-72; she was followed by Peg FairfiCld (117-34-83) and Llndli?y at 60. ·- tonight in the second annual A tie resulted for second Jean LeBon (93-20-73), Nel Eleanor Surrett (117-32-851. Bett y Hin1melsback was lhl' Orange County North-South place at 61 with teums com-Townsend 193-18-75) and In nn earlier three blind o flil{ht vict or with 60 followed dual meel 1al the Cal State posed of Fred Kibala and Marion Menne l93-17-76). mice lournanienl. Ruth Cohen by Tina ~1ackey and Judith (Fullerton) gymnasium. Dave Hubbard: Eugene Ford Jn B flight 06fothy Nido was was the gross winner at 93 Eriksen at 61. t::i lecn Morrow The meet bcgiM at 7. and George Kubis; Dan ·ran-Jow gross winner with 99. llap-with a h~ndicap score of 56. .was next al 62 The SOuth, winners of last nehill and Bill ~icGuire ; and PY Coltrin w.:in net honors Anpe Wright was next al 60 year's inaugural m~et, will be Ross Pierce with Bill Howard. 1101_25-761 folloWed by lielen with Jerre Cini at 61 and ~tel ----- hed b Bo! a d Townsend at 62. Kid L;ke To coac y sa ran e Three other teams tied for Willard (102-25-77 ), Martha In flight B, Pat Iversen was S 11 ~· High's Jim McCrillis and his the next spot at 61~ including Turner (tOt ""781 and Helen assistant, "Wayne Mickaelian Cl k 1102 2·;--1., · the winner at 57 with Doris A k A d of Fountain Valley. g~cyk; ~:;:;n Be~~~rdl.e!~h ar · -" · Nido at 59 and E i I e c ~ S JJ, y Altho h I f In C · flight it "'as Alice Schuhmann at 60 .• Nancy -----ug flna1 · wrest~ fs Merle Huggins; and llo\vard ~1cCrcdie-the gross winner r;:;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;_;_..,;;;;;...,J ha ve not 'been completed to Byall with Jotui Dobbs. M II \determine the South lineup. with 103: argaret · erten won net with 103-29-74: Jo _"'Or""'an~e'"iOCoast'r'n:Oa';;rea~=:'e'f'>re'iis:'Oen~-'-''---E""l'-'N:!.-'ilt!H::e:!l,__ __ Jj.lcien_was____sccond t lo 5. tatives DU'k Rose ie ( UD· In a low gross-low net 29-76), Mildred Wilbur lhiNl tington Be a c h ) , John tou t lo th mbe (107-29-78) and ca r o I y n -P-aramo.unt-,Sp.a Mazerkowitz (Mission Viejo), . rnamen r e me rs :Jenni:J . • in -Ai·ea Skaters Seek Titles ' FEATURING ALL TOP BRANDS Scott Eng I e ·(Huntington Beach), Glenn Jones (Corona del Mar), Dave Dosier (Qirona del Mar), Mark Marsing -(NeWPQrt Harbor)-, ·-t es Becher (Fountain Va 11 e y ) , Four Orange ·C9ast area cala, 7, and Katrina Alcala, Mike Finklea (Fountain youths will be competing in JO, -bolh of Costa Mesa , Tony Valley) Mark Garratt·(catona the national speed roller skat. Anderson, 9, of Costa Mesa, del Meir) and · Vince KJees ing championships July 30. and Ken Hutter, 14, of New- S .. IECIALlt! --NEW oONLOP"'tELLOW +usTRAl,.IA N Switching All-star Date M~y Mean Smaller Crowds lt's !tricUy my opinion, but: Calirornia prep, will be joined by Curtis The ~ AlbStar Football Classic bas Beck, J im Spillan~ and a host of other top mOved from Thursday nlght-:to Sunday a!ter...:.---sta[} · · · noon, which should result iri even smaller Isn't it true UCLA assistant coach Tom crowds. It might hav.e been a good idea if Tellez is talking with USC about a vacancy the game \ltere scheduled for 4 or 5 p.m.. which Will occur soon when Vern Wolfe takeg bUt it-21 111 be too hot~ people will still ~ a sabbatical? ... at the beach and those planning to leave for Why would Len Miller JeaVe Laguna . the weekend won't· even be tempted to ·Beach for UC Irvine? It seems a move up stay'. , • I to .some' but it could also be a move into Tbe women's and girl's ,AAU track and "obli'fti:ln. Len is a fine organizer of high field championships are better run than t~ school athletes a~ ~ fine coach ol y~- men's championships. The }t~n~r, Calvin sters who nee,d pr1nung .. But .at UO Irvine, Brown ept everyone up-tO\dale with results (:"the athletes Bill Toomey 1s trying to land arc 1' ' all Prett' much experts in their eveots ... UCLA bad a list of six · player.r"'irwanted to give JOhn Wooden for his eighth straight ~ -NCAA-basketball-title.~ .AlLbut San~J~uin Memorial's Clifi Pondexter, who was landed by Cal State Loog Beach's Lute Olsoo, Will STEVE BRAND attend ... Isn'l it about time . for f<ir an All-state basketball towparnent? With All-state wrest· ling alttady in, look for baskettiall· to come soon, but onJy after reorganizing the state so there arc eight rai'ciy eVe'H Wstrict! ... The Orange County area, to iocluae San almost immediately after a race ant.I a field'· Bernardino and Riverside, ,..could be one mlcropbcilhro · e. was ~ to~ each ~P· area and Ule LA City schools .along with or t 'f · · · · · ·' others in the CIF SS could form another. ~-~Eddie-®tne will ·hook on with the Min-Condensing the Oakland-San .RranciSto area neMita""'"'--Twlns-1mmedlately-because he's-a-'I schools is a must . , . · · fine pi~r but also' because Minnesota lt'a quite possible UCLA could lose just needs ailolber lefty badly • • • one game this year in football . The Bruins The Orange County NortlJ:Soulh AU-star have looked outstanding in practice with football game picked up a lot. of glimmer ex-Blair star Eugene Jones looking like an when Western High's fine duo oi Bob Acosta AJl-Ame"rican at end .•• The loss? Bow can and Paul Charlton bypassed the Shrine con-you bet against USC? te1t for this <DI • • • Release from Stanford University: " ... Look for Mike Peck of the CIF cUice tc ~farVin Holmes was a winner in the South· move to~the San Fernando Valley News and em Section of the CIF in both the 100 and Green Sheet. He misses newspaper work 220 with limes of 9.7 and 21 .4." Clancy Ed· although .he's dooe a superb job ii\ Kenneth wards of Santa Ana High might be a tad Fagan's ~ant . . . upset if he reads that. Holmes woo the AAA Jim Neldhart will not be ~ at UCLA. division for Monrovia Hi gh but Edwards was The Newport Harbor 1-Dgh s~. put1 whiz, a two.event AAAA, and . Master's meet who has thrown--the shot farther th8n any champ ... Sports Car Rally Set For :J11ly 7 ;~·--.. ~ . :P,bllV 6Dbf at!ffM~~ 9·hole, 3 .. p~r cour89 21nd putting green. Open to the public 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.---- Lighted after dark. Teaching pro·av.ailable GREEN FEES: • Weekdays-$1 .50 for 9-Holas (replay 75¢) • Weekends & Holidays- $2 .00 fp(9,fiol~ (replay$1.00) SPECIAL RAns , 6 lliEl!IERSHIPS ' •Monthly membershlp-$15.00: good·weekdays on~ any night. No Jlmil • tO number ;pt rounds. .. Family ~~ershlp (limit 4 to a Jamlly)-,$21..00:· good weekdays ' and any nlghi. No limit to number of rounds. •Ten PlayCard-$10.00: gOOd for 10 rounds 8nytlme. ~"''w""'. . ~ .. 1107 Jamboree Road. Now port Beach, Csliromla 92660 ~ • STARTER: (114) ..._..9910 (Estancia·)--were-all""VY1ng-f0l"--Av.g-.-27in7Lincoln, ~ebra~a~--port..Beacti. 1 - starting spots in their weight a~er w1nn!-'!g spor:ts m region· To earn a spot in the na- classes. al . compet1t1on this week. tionals, the competitors had North squad standouts_ in-Competition in ihe Southwest to compete -in three prelimin- clude ClF champions Mike ' Pacific Speedskating Oiamp-ary races to reach the semi- Fleming of El Dorado, Mike 'lonstiips was held·at the Skate final round, with tbe top three Bilms of Pacifica and Gus Ranch in Santa Ana . Local scorers on a poiJrt system qual- Bendeck of Rancho Alamitos. qualifiers included Tina Al-ifying. TENNIS IALLS $1 85 CAN o• > NO LIMIT 1 ON QUANTITY (wilh trH•·in ot J u\fC! b.11111 HOURS t MON. & FRI. t TO I TUES., WED., THURS. & SAT. 'TIL' SUNDAY 11 TO I 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa (Behind The Iptcrnatio"nal House or Pancakes) PHONE 642-6886 - - can ~-u-spol _ the camel Filters smoker? , 3- In this picture, everybody has _ a gimmick .. -.almost everybody. , Try picking the one who doesn't go · ' .. along.1.Noway. He'sGerryAtric, over-the:hill hippie. Irons his hair twice daily. Cigarettes taste just as flat. • Gimmick: Watching bowling pins "do their own thing, man." 2. Naomi Glowsoul. Gimmick: Uses so much body english mat police have raided the place four limes. 3. Nope. It's Angie "The-firm" Kugelman . Throws so hard three automatic pinsetling machines have quit. Smoke~ cigareltes so heavily filtered, he's like a man ' giving mouth-to-mout~ resuscitation to a rock. 4. Right. He just likes bowling , not gimmicks. Likes his cigarelte honest and no-nonsense; tdo. Camel Filters. Easy and good tasting,5. Zooty Smith. Gimmick: Has worn same good luck clolhes since he brokep 25 in 1942. Smokes war surplus cigaretles and saves the tinfoil. 6. Wh iz Kid Pringle. Devel- oped math formula to bowl a perfect strike. Unfortunately • . i I ' . ' \ releases ball dri bac kswing. . • . ~mel FllfflrS. CAM Et. '" .. They're -not. everybo<IJ.-~ ,- ' they COUid be forylouJ. . -Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigaret1e Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. : ' •• ' • ' ' . ~ .. I \ ,' 20 m~ ~•'.13 mg. iicot., "· i>'f 119111110. f!C Rljl(l!t FE8.7l •• I I .. 1 I ' ' .. • • -. • DAILY ~ILOT frldlJ, June 22, 1973 Leahy Was a Legend In Collegiate F oothall PORTLAND (AP! -Frank Leahy, a legend In college football coaching, is dead at 65. 1be former Notre Dame coach, seriously ill for several years, died Thursday at Good Samaritan Hoopii at 1be llOspiW said Leahy died bf con- gestive heart failure. He had been ailing with he art trouble and diabetes in recent )°ears. Leahy, who played under the immor tal 1,1 e trit lt-rjotre-Dame-and-Jater- came back to coach there, had been liv- ing in the Portland suburb. of LaU Oswego since 1963. · ... undefeated Notre Dame teams Is over!' He couldn't ~ve been more wroog. Tbe Irish went unbeaten ln his Ont swan, and after awltching to a T·fonna· tioo, the school woo SI strai&bt games in the 194&-49 period before loslnj lbe ... c:ond game ot the 1950 seaaoo. Onl¥ two ties btemJshed that sJrlni. Leahy, who spent two rean In the , .. Navy during \Vorld War II, came back to Notre Dame in 1953 but collapsed during tbe..Jecond. tia!f o[ a_game..wULGeorgia..._ Tedi. He was given the last rites ol lbt 1 church but -recovered. • t Rockne'• .197 winning percentage u ·• ooaclt barely surpasaed lbe .'88 mart> Leahy pUt together in 13 years at Bonoa~ College and Notre Dame. · . •· Jt was a weet aco that I.£aby, one of the most successful college coaches of all time, did not attend an awards dinner in blrbonor in Qllcago~because doctors ad- vised him to remain home. .i1 was absolutely crushed over the fact tbat I couldn't partlcipate, 0 he said It the time. He wu an lsslstant coach at )XJtb Georgetown Univecs1ty aoo~ -.. State before going to Fordham, wllere be helped build the line !bat became tnown as the "Seven Blocks of Gfanlte." •---Leahy played on RQc_kne's l~ Irish natiooal cbampfonship team. ife-later became an alllstant.coacb under &>time and accepled the bead coaching io6 tllere in 1941. Leahy's teams went undefeated six times, four of them winning nat.ional 'col· legiate tit~s. His overall bead coaching record \YU 107-13-9, including ~11-1 at ~ Dame before retiring in 1953. , "A native Of Winner, S.D., ~ahy wasn't well >mown,when he fin! became bead coach at Boston College. A local newspaper headlined the story of hls ap- pointment, •!B.C. Signs Unknown Leahy.'' It didn't take him k>og to change that. His . 1939 team lost only once in the regular season and a year later Boston * * * 17.•hot1r-da11 FRANK LEAHY College collected IO regular seasoo triumphs, the Eastern championship and a Sugar Bowl victory over Tennessee. \Vhen Elmer Layden retired as head coach at Notre Dame the following year, Leahy came home to South Bend. As he returned, someone called him another Rockne, but Leahy objected. "Tilere'll never be another Rockne."' be said. "We'll do our best and you'll be proud of your team, but the day of the \ Hard· Work 'Made Leahy ·A Winne1· in Football NEW YORK (AP) '--Frank Leahy never Wanted to be compared to his predecessor lCnute -ROCkile. "'nlere'll neTer be another Rockne," said Leahy Who died in Portland Thursday at the age ot 65. But in memory, that's where he ended up, just a short step down from the Notre Dame football irnmort>l d the late 1920& and. Jtl308. ·l "No question about it, he was quite a guy," said Red Blaik,J ormec AJmY coach whooe Army team battled Leahy's lrilh to a scorele5l1 tie in 1946. '1He was one or the great coaches of. the last 2.5-30 years. He was a fun· damentaliot ol lbe ~ anler. ''He had a rapport with the mm. that is hardly ~beable. 'Ibey look«! cm biln both as -a great coacb aa4 M · a character... - When both men were still active in coaching, lllallt said: "I uaed to think I wa the mo.t-inteDle-coach· i.q the bullness. But I'm Obaut ready lo c:mcede thlt Frank eats hil heart out even more than I do." "Well, 1 had a serious operation, but I'm doing better." - Leahy nodded and said "Fine." "She passed away this summer." Again he nodded and sai~, "Fine." Then lbe youngster said, 0 214," -and Leahy can1e back, "You 're foor potmds overweight." Lea.hy's head footl>all career began at Boskn College. "All you can say is that he w11 a uni- que person," said William Flyoo, Boston College athletic director. "He lost one , galne in the two years he coached at Boston College, in 1939 and lMO. He waa always keenly interested in Boston College, even after he left. We are all · saddened." In 1927, Leahy came as a student to Notre Dame. When ahked why, Leahy Said: "Because or ~·" It waa only 14 years later that he was being mentioned in the same breath aa the man he so admi red. "Everyone here at Notre Dame and thousands of Frank lahy'1 triendtl, teammates and players mourn his ~ ing. \Ve have all IUffered a peraooal loss," said longtime Notre Dame atliletic director Edward "l\foose" Krause. "We all cherish his dedicaUon, friendlhip and his Jove for Notre Dame." Orie of hls pupils at fordham was Vince Lombardi,-lbe.late fonnor_coach ol the Green Bay Packen who showed that Leahy'• strict disclpllnary system <Otlld be successful ln the pros. , After working wltb various bns!MJ!D enterprises, Leahy returned to footMll f~ year, in 1960, as _.i :rs· of the Los Angeles C!hargers of American Football Leque belan I team moved to San Diego. · He re-entered the insurance business the following year, then moved to Lake Osweio. He continued in bminess as 'an executive vice wesldent of Canteen Corp., a San Jose firm operating refresh- ment dispensing machines. The member of the National Football Foundation's Hall of Fame is survived by his widow, Florence, of Lake Oswego; five sons, Frank Jr., Christopher and Jerald of Lake Oswego; James ol Pasco, Wash., and Frederick d Portland ; three daughters, Mary Leahy of La'ke Oswego, Sue Moustakas of Chicago and Florence Harter of C:licago. Funeral arrangements were· expected to be announced later: today. Tentative plans are for services and interment in PorUand. Florida-Maintains_ Lead in NCAA GoH Tournament STILLWATER, Ok:Ja. -For awhile Georgia'• Bill Kntzert forgot he was playing in a foursome Thursday with Texas' heralded Ben Crenshaw. ,.J!ut lbe oolt-spoi:en Georgia junior caught hilrutelf just in time. After shooting a 35 on the froot nine, Kratzert decided he had best concentrate on his own game and not Crensbaw's. The result was a birdie explosion and a 32 on the back nine for a round of 67,~vaulting biln to a ...,.llrol<e lead for medalin honon in lbe NCAA golf champklosbipo here. Meanwhile, Florida took an ll·stroke lead in the team battle. Florida wound up with a IW<><lay total of 558 followed by Oklahoma State at 569, Houston at 570 and Texas and Louisiana State at 578. Kratzert has a trio on hi! heeli at one· stroke back including Crenshaw who carded a 111b11!31ay for bU 137. Match- ing lhat I o I a I were Phil Hancocl:, Florida freshman, and San Jose State's Phil Barry. Florida's Andy Bean was alcne at 138. . MEMORABLE MOMENT -Frank Leahy, 65, who. coached Notre Dame to seven undefeated football seasons, died Tblll'!day after a long illness. He is shown here being lifted to the shoulders of pl,ayers after final game victory over SMU in 1953 . -~s last year with the Fighting Irish. Only a tie with Iowa earlier in the year kept it from a perfect fin· ish for Leahy. ... " Aaron No Match for Osteen; Dodgers, Reds Vie Tonight-_ ' i.; LOS ANGELES (AP) -Claude Os-tot:six to retain a three-game 1Md over No Brave got as far as third base as teen, the ace lerthander of the Los the San Francisco Giants in the Western Osteen recorded his second shutout of the : Ange14f,s Dodgers, had a good hunch that Divis.ion of the National League. year and 37th of his career. It was his after missing fOW' game.s in a row Hank The victory enabled the Dodgers to sixth straight triumph and during that ,f Aaron would be in the line-up when he sweep the four-game series from Atlanta, spree his eame<I run average waa 2.06:. t pitched against the Atlanta Braves. For the year he ls 2.98. After alt, Osteen ranks No. 1 amoog Do,,,,ers Slate "This wa~ probably my best game,• active Nt.cher3 on Aaron's home run vie-Al ••nw. M KPI .... , f · "" -~ Y' JIH!e n Clntl11Mtt 11 Los ,t.noe1" 1:55 o.m. said Osteen a ter improving~ ~Vl"\I to tim list and It's not likely he'd miss a June n Olld1911H 11 Los Aftll•I" 121 •=ll P.m. ~3. "rve had some luck but I've also pit· chance to add to the 13 he's already hit J1m1 2• c1nclnn11111 Los Anoelft l;S.S p.m. . . . . 10 ched well." off-the-Dodgers-southpaw. ---t!lwlvth1ng.Losthe Br~Anavgesel~{'iaeason~ wans. in gam. es __ V{il1le ..J;r_a_w!9rd hammered hi!., sixth "Yeah, I kind of figured he'd be in the .uWll b n...i .. lineup," said Osteeti, "and I pitched him Tonight the Dodgers ho6t Cincinnati in home run for one of .t e uvutiers . runs just as I would any other"great hitter -the first of a 4-game series. and ifiRon 0Cey drove in another with a care[u!Jy." Aaron , whO had a painfu l boil lanced sacr .tee Y · Osteen won this battle -and a' few prior to-WednesdaY night's ga me, failed The Dodgers' three other rWlS were the others, as well -aa be hurled a four-hit in four tries against Osteen, only once result or . bad defensive play by the shutout, beating the Braves 5-0 Thunday getting the ball out of the infield. But he Braves which was the rule during the• night as the Dodger• ran their win streak wasn't alooe. tire se ries. The Braves made three er· rors in Thursd ay night 's loss and 11 for Tops Angels, 1..0 Garden Grove's .Blyleven Becoming Super Pitcher BLOOMINGTON, MiM. (AP) Garden Grove's Bert Blyleven. one of baseball'• hottest pitchers, offered to carry Minne!Ktta Twin's game hero Joe Lis into 1be clubhouse. Lis, whole pinch-bit single tn the ninth inning gave Blyleven and the Twins a 1-0 victory over the California Angels and Clyde Wrigh! 'Jbursday nigbi, politely refused. "I told him to let me carry him off." Sandy Alom ar lined a one-out single to left, and heatedly protested umpire J im Odom's decision that he was thrown out by catcher Phil Roof trying to steal ~ ond. "I beat the play,'' said Alomar. "He (shortstop Jerry Terrell ) never touched me. It was the biggest play ol the game. It would have been 1.0, with a man on sec· ood and the stari of a big Inning." the four games. In contrast, the Dodgers played errorless.~11 the entire set. Of Aaron, Osteen just shakes his bead in wonder al the Braves' star. •• 1 know it's tough on him," Osteen said. "I can't imagine the pressure he 's facing alld how it 's going to. build. "I know he's hit 13 home runs off me but I've probably faced him as much or maybe more than anyooe else. "I realize the fans come out to the Park to see him hit home runs. Sure, I can hear 'em boo whenever I get two or three balls on him. "But like I sai d, I pitch him like any other great hitter -_c~efully." AlllRll ft) LM Allll'-fl) 1llrllrt.I .. rllrtll I 8•~tr, cl • D 2 O Lopet, :lb • 2 O t ~ Ev-. 3b J t t O 8udtM1', lit • I 2 t Dl.JClflnson, 2b • o 1 o w.0..11, cl • 1 2 1 M.Alron,11 •oooc~.Jb JOOI Olt U, lb l 0 1 0 W.CrlwiO!'d, rf 3 1 I I Ol.llro""", rf • o o O Auulll, u ' O 1 t Cl llllOVfl, c 3 0 0 0 J~nu1, II l 0 0 I M.Per11., II J 0 0 0 V"'IJl'I', c 3 I I • MMIOn,p 2 0 0 00s!Mn,p 2 011 Goollln, Ph I 0 0 0 P1nllltf', p 0 I O O 1be day after Leahy's first season at N«re Dame in IHl1 he fulfilled a pro- miae to haie dinner with the Rev. Wendell Corcoran. a pastor in South Bend, Ind. Why got into his car wilh SUilivan and ·Ed McKeever then his assi.tant. "Let's itop at the college for a few minutes and study movies of our last game," Frank said. Miller Gets Into Habit Lis related. "All I'd been doing was resting for nine innings. Bert is a super On TV T-ljJflt c...,._15..t_fl Vada Pinson fol.lowed with a double, but was left stranded when Frank c Rob1rulon popped out to end the inning. · Bob Darwin started Minnesota's win· ning rally off Wright, 5-9, with a one-out single, then stole second as Steve Brye struck out. Torols JI 0 • O Tot1ll 30 5 I 2 All~nl~ 000 000 000 -0 Los Ar>Qeles 000 121 lOll:-t l E -Dlttt. M. PIJ!'fl, C."'"°"'· lOll -At-j~ ltnl1 l. Lot Anoelli (. 211 -DI. Jol'I.-., W. ,. Devis 2. MA -w. Cr1Wfo<'d IU. Sii -Lopn, S - "Nothing would intrigue me less," said Sullivan. "If you Insist," McKeever said. "I must insist,'' Frank replied. "If you get satisfied , the Ol>PQSition will lick you. They're making plans ror next sea.wn. So mast we." Leahy'• 17-hour·a.<fay dedicetioo to football gave him a record which fell 00· ty slightly short ol Rockne's. He had a career mark"-107-13·9 as head coach at Bolton College, and then at Notre Dame from 1911 through 11153. '!bat's an .883 percentage, battly below RocJtne's .897. '•His players at Boston College and Notre Dame held him in the highest regard," said Jimmie McDowell, ex· ecutive director d the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame, where Leahy #U inducted in 1970. j•ffe was one of the most dedicated men to ever coach football and certainly ODt ot the m o s t competitive. Llke ,Rockne, he wu a master psycbol.oglst." one of Leahy'a pl11yers recalled tha t the Irish coach always greeted each pJa,Yer wi th three stock questkw: "How are you ? How ii your mother and bow much do you weigh." Q>e player waa ready and blurted out: vcrs SINGER ' WINS GOLF HONOR RtVER$1DE -UC lr:vine's Gary ~ lw --to the !le<Olld U)ll\ ot 1be NCAA Colle(e Divlsim All· Anlerican IOI/ ....... . ,,.. CallfornWw _. named to the 1is<nan llnt ....... 1'd by champion Cal Stat• (Nordlrldlol wltb two players - Jllll a--ad Jell Harrier. Paul Wis< d c.t Siala (NleNG), UC Riverside's Mike IMlltar, Ed Selw cl I.SU (New Orleans) aad Mike Ford of RolU.. ~ --die baloDoe ol the first nnlt. • And He's Enjoying It • AKRO N, Ohi,o (AP) "lltls," murm11red Johnny 'Miller, "Is a good habit J'm getting into." The lanky blood had just put l<lgether a thrre-under-par 67 -including a hole in one -for his first competitive round since be won the Urllted stat.es Open Golf championship with a record 63 last &11- day . Miller's 67 oo lbe loog, tough Flrestooe .. Country Club course Tbunday eave him a share ol the first round-lead in lbe prestige--laden American Golf Classic. He waa Ued with 23-year-<>ld Forrest FezJer, an on-rushing tour IOIJhomore, who also clipped three stn>lrat olf p1r on the lush 7,180 yarm of the Finstooe layou t. Arnold Palmer and three •othen were just one stroke back at ea. "I'm encouriged, but not aatillled,"' the 43·year-old Palmer said after movillg• into a tie with big J. C. Sneed, Jim \Viechers and rookie Tom Kite. been getting the absolute moet possible out "-my rounds. Thia one wasn't llke thaL I feel like it could have been a lot better ... He mined two birdie putts of four feet or Jess, ll~ out another one on the 17th hole and atnlost birdied the 18th from an end trap, the explosion ahot going in and out ol lbe hole. · ' Mille!', who played with Palmer, said Amold di!lract.ed him whlle he wu oo the tee m the fifth, the 230-yanl , p1r·S·· bole on which he.made • act with a four wood ahot. · "Amold dropped bU ball just aa I WU standing over my tee shot," Miller said. "! llel>Ped bade. Arnold said 'Excuse me,' 1ben I got over it again, hit It and lbe ball lrlckled in the boie. I aaid, "1blbk you, Amo1d.' " lie alJo aaved par with a ·:15.foot putt m the flnl hole, birdied the p1r 5 R<Ond froni'l1'• feet; went to U... 1"1der ~r with hla ace and matched two bot!•Y• willJ two birdies lbe reot ol the way. pitcher. I hope if they ever trade me, they tend me back to the National League. I'd rather face Steve Carlton than Blyleven." • Lis, a .170 hitter before his game·win· nlng single up the middle with two outs, played with 'ZI • game winner Caritoo last year at Phlladelphia. "Tu be on a team ts one thing," said Lis, who hit .245 for the Phillies laal year, "but to help win a game mmm ' more to you lmide. n ..U. you feel a pirt of the team, It But Btyleven, who was U earlier in the aeason, bu won seven "-hll lut eight declalor4 with hla last five vtctoriel by shutouta to lead Ille AlfiF1can i_.,. lnwhltewubs-. Blyleven ICllltered elgbt Calll«nlo blta to Improve hla record to 1-7 and bop the Twins In oecond place in Ille -division, a half game back ol Cllk:qo. The Twins send Joe Deeter, 1·1, agaiNt Rudy May. M1 in the aecond game ol "the aeries tontg!lt. '!be Angels, falling 212 gamea off the lead in the opener ol. • five-pine aerlu la Minneoota, felt they 1bould have scortd off the 13-year-old Blylevetl In the eilhlll innlnc. Steve Braun walked, and Twins' manager Frank Quilici picked Lis to hit for Roof. "I turned a fastball over on him," said Wright, "and he bounced it by me. It came at the right Orne and at the right place for him." Blyleven tw1ce worked out of troUble with tv.·o men on. In the first there were two on and one out· before Mike Epstein grounded OUI and Rich Scheinblum .became tbei fint of. seven Angels to go down on strttes. · Ctll""'lt f•I Mlllftlll9tl I 11 # .. , .. ,.. AIMMr, 21> 4 e I o 'Ttrf'toll. 11 I"!,_, tr 4 o 2 o Hlllt , cf "·"'*"-•.. 4 I I 0 l(lltebrtw, lb ... ...,,,., ••20011 .... 1111 kMll'lllWm, rl 3 0 1 I CMu·wln, rf l«r'f', cf ' 4 0 0 0 Wiiien, If Oat119Nt, a 3 0 0 0 8rvt , II 0.\1""°", " 2 O O 0 8r1un, a Mcertw, Ph 1 o o o RODI, r; Mtlll,M O OO•L .. ,llfl T,,..., e 3 t It Monl!O!l,at C:,Wrlfllt, " . o o o o a1v1--. it TOlllt '2 0 I t Tt11i. Two eut "'*' wlrvi!"' run tcOl"lcl. .. rllrtlt ' 0 1 0 • 0 • 0 •• 2 0 • 0 0 0 • I I 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 I o 2 0 • 0 I I 1 I J I I 0 0 • 0 • all t 1 I C11lf0fllll 000 oot 000 -O Minn.Ml 111111 CICIO 001 -1 D" -C.ftfllnlt. 1, Ml-'-i t, LOI -Clll· fllrnl1 A, M.,_... I. ti -!"In-. SI -OWwftl, s -llllf, ar-. l .. Hlllllll SO C,WrltM IL.Ml •·tlJ 1 I I 2 • llyl......, IWN) r f 0 0 I 7 11 ... -2111. ..... ~. -...... Oslttl'I, SF -Cty, • J,. "It lfllllO ~ MM!on (L ... 61 1 1 $ 2 I I ~'. P1ntber • 11 0 010 #' OslNll (W,"3) t ' D 0 1 2 TllTlll -1 ;Sl, Afltndll'ICI -20,:114 ' "Jt was a \!ery rdued:nimd," II.id Palmer. "I'm driving better llld I ....., reel , .. little better with the putter in my . hand." Jack Nicklaus, who bu, colLected a leading 1190,000 and four tiU• already this "''""'· topped a big pwp at W. He n!<lcd olf ooe string of three ....-utlva birdies bot dropped baclt with a l>ofey rrom a bunker on the Jina! bole. ·Top Olyl••pians in Santa Clara ~eet '"!bat's not a bad opening round far me here," said Nicklaus. "I UIU.8lly start off wilh 74 or 75. I played pretty wtll, but I'd feel better abou t It If I hadn't made that bogey on ta." · • · Bruce Cramplon of Australia, winner of Jhree titles this yoor, matdled p1r 70 but streaking Tcitn Weiskopf look a por 74 and was well back in the field. I.ff Trevino Is not play!n•. "It was an easy 67!' ?.filler nld. "J've ' SANTA CLARA (AP) -Th< 1·2-3 Olympic flnllber1 are remalcbed In five races at lbe Senla Clara lnl•matlonal ' awtmminr and divine -loday, J!otw. clay and S<mclay. Eight men gold, allver and bronze medalllll -lbe 1m 11mu at Municb are entered In the other II Individual races. Meet director George Haines bu , predleted this aevenlh IMllll meet, with II world record -. portlctpatlas. wal be "lhe best In the world in 1m." I In the !IX previous meets since the mllllidpllly owned Senta Clara Swim C.0111' .... built in llW, • loll! ol 12 world ,_da "'" set. 'l'lloro--~ -. -relay 'and a divine ~ wh clay In bol!l mm'a and .,..eJi'S ,1a1-. 1be • athkCea, In lbe '<""'petition ..... from d COtllilrlaa: TbO ''"n!--tla(mt II ~ br. Sblo9· Jt. year-old A-n whO holda ~.told -ID lr1 11t71o .... medler •veots, and RolaDd Ml«be•· or East Germany who hold• two -in the 100 and .2!)0.metcr backstrol!o. 'l1tree r-wltlcll have W>p!Oee..oow Olympic swVnmerl W')ll be i:m F11day - Ille JOl).metor -• bac~~ lbe -men'• ba<Ulnlllo llld the ~ --ke. Halneo lhlnU the men'• -.utrote eventai may PlOf1de 10me ol the meet 11 mee!•" m:lllng ~!lair. J 0 h ft llencbn, II, a illDlanl ~n and -QtPorUna. caur. hl!lh acbaol star, Ii lite &<>ltf medallll #tdJ a world """"' ) . 2:21.55 at Munich. Against him will be sliver meda list David Wilkie of Scolland and bronie medall.st Nobutaka Ti...,.. of Japan . Matthes, who set a 56.~ world recot:d foi the JOO.meter backatroke al Moocow prior to winnblg In Munich, wtD be challenged · by .iiver medalist Mlka @tamm of lhe. CoroMdo N1vy Swim -'-•lion a n d b""'ae medalist J,.. ,Murph)' ol Gatorade Swim CIUb o1 Bloomington. Ind. Stamm set a 1 American record or r'f.7 at Munich. d f a s 0 t d E t t t c l h c p p G I a cl It c e a or w r e h ' • . -· .. .. Friday, June 22. 1973 DAILY PILOT J1, I Romanian Seeks Third North Squares Series With 6-1 Win : Title in Row I LONDON -llie Nastase, playing dazzling tennis and sweeping all op- J)061tion bef<>re him, is two m~tches away from winning bis third straight t.Q!Jrn ... rnent. 1 The talented Romanian faced Alex- ander Metreveli of Russla today in the semifinals or the London grass Courts Championship" at Queens Club. Roger Taylor of Britain and Owen Davidson of AustraJia were rivals ht the other semifin al. By HANK .Wl!SCH three games apiece. Sonora pilcher Jim 11 °' .., °"" ,.._ 11'" Petersan who\ started for the North, was The North All-stars accepted four gm named • the game's outs!anding player, ~ in tbeJinal three innings to break and teammate Mark ()arpeoter of Loo . a 1·1 tie and defeat the South, ~l, in Alamitos was · &warded the outstanding sixth annual \)range County high h11stler award. ~ baseball game ]bursday night at -· A1I , trequently • happens in AII!star ~~·s ·La Palma Park. 1 games, pitching was the dominant factor, A lull house. watched the Norlb jump .In but the South committed five em>rs Jn front with a fU"St !Ming run only to have · the , game while the North played the South tle things in the sixth' inning Dawlessly behind three bnrlers. 8nd U... ·ve It away in the final three 1be North mounted its winning rally In . , the seventh, scoring three times on just victory was the third in successlm one: hil. Ale~ Gorgi of Rancho AlamJioo for·the North, and it even~ the series at reached base on an · Wield single and i---Nastase-jauntily-went-tbrough-all-his-Wmnen'-s--A:AIJ-1'1eet lemts tncks spin and lob, volleys and drops to flatten Ismael El Sha!ei of Egypt, 6-tl, 6-3 Thur4daY,- Metreveli beat Juergen Fassbender of West Germany, 6·2, 7·2, and Taylor hit his way past CHU Drysdale "of South Africa, 6-3, 6-3. _.:.... _ 'Davidson bea t fell ow Aus tralian John Newcombe 7·5, 6-3. Stanford Ahead PRINCETON, N.J. -Three califonila Jeams _are_waging-a see-saw battle-for the lead as they head into the semi·fmals today of the 80th annual National Collegiate Athletic Association tennis tournament. Stanford took the lead. Thursday, holding a tw<rpoint margin over Southern Cal, 28-26, while UCLA, which had been pacing the tournament, slipped from first place to third , with 2a points. . Houston and Southern Methodist are a distant fourth with 15 points ea ch. U.S. Five Wins PEKING -Ronnie Robi n son's shooting and rebounding and Kevin Grevey's second-halfS coring lifted the touring U.S. collegiate all-star team to a 94-67 victory over the Peking men's basket~l team before a lTOwd of over 15,000 at the Worker's Gymnasium. The AAU women's champioo team from Jam F. Kennedy College, Wahoo, Neb., lost its second straight game however, dropping a 65-46 decision to a Chinese squad from Peking before a throng of 18,000 at the capital Indoor Stadiwn. Cager Killed .__~BOLOGNb ~L ~erome~ Lad~man. a 2o::year-ola Fairfield, Conn., University basketball player, \\'as killed early '11lursday~ ill-a car craSh which also claimed I.he lire of an official of an Italian major league club. Lademan. from Trumbull, Conn., wa s traveling with American basketball coach Richard Percudani, 37, and two of- ficials of the Norda Italian club from nearby Imola to Bologna after watching a basketball game. Match Race NEW YORK -Triple C ro w. n champion Secretariat, who hadn't been expected to resume racing tmtil August at Saratoga, may run in a three-W/Y match race at Arlington Park June 30, if officials of the Chicago track have the~ \\'3y. Track spokesmen said preliminary ar~ rangements for the $100,000 invitational event had been completed and that they had received a commitment t h a t Secretariat would run, but the horse's trai ner, Lucien Laurin , said nothing had been finalized. "Secretariai is coming here and he's going to run against Our Native and pro- bably Llnda's Chief," Jack Meyers, rac· ing secretary at Ariington Park, said. S-80 -Race Highlights . . -' . UCI Qualifying. Jleats By STEVE B6ANJl_ -= ' Of-... DifiJ Pllot Se.ff Qualifying heats in the 880, featuring Mary Decker, Robin Campbell and Wen· dy Koenig, highlight this afternoon's sess ion of the AAU women's track and field championships at UC Irvine. • Miss Decker, who fell in the Ill-fated finals o1-£he girls' 880 on Wednesday, returns to the track for the first tlme in the 800 beats scheduled at 5:40. Following a morning of preliminaries, Polo To_urney Set Saturday At Newport Fonner Orange Coast area stars Eric Lindroth and Garth BergeBOn and their Phillips 66 mates are seeded ftrst in the SPAAAU senior outdoor men's water polo ·championships beginning Saturday at Newport Harbor High. The Phillips 66 ootfit is coached by 1-fonte NitzkOwikl with assistance from! Ken Hamdorf and Tom Hermstad. Eight game~ ~~ scheduled for Satur- day, beginning at 8 a.m. and running through 4 p.m. NIMA A figures to give Phillips 66 Its stiffest test. NIMA A is coached by UC Irvine mentor Ed Newland and Included on the NIMA A roster is fonner UCI star Ferdie Massimino. Ken Lindgren'• Fullerton A team Is seeded third . in the rune-team tourna· ment. Six games conclude the action Sunday. Admission to the tourney is $1. Saturday'$ Schedule 8 a.m. -Phillips. A vs Fullerton B: 9 -Fullerton A vs Phillips C: 111-NIMA A vs IPSA ; 11--CdM vs Fullerton B; Noon-NIMA B VS Phillips C; !-Phillips B vs IPSA: I-Phillips A vs CdM; 3-Ful· lerton A vs NIMA B; 4-NIMA A vs PhilJips B. Sunday's Schedule 9 a.m.-second team bracket A vs sec- ond team bracket B; 10:30-fint team bracket A vs first team bracket B: Noo~d team bracket B vs second team bracket C; I :30--first team bracket B vs· fll'St team bracket C; 3 p.m.-st* ond team bracket A vs second team bracket Ci 4:~first team bracket A VI first team bracket C. ~the semifinals were set to start at 4 ·this afternoon with the last running event scheduled for 6:55. Finals in all 17 events, where the top two finishers in each race qualify for the national team to toµi: EU!9P9 later this surqmer, start Satufaay atiei:ooon at 1. • "Mary is healthy," says Miss Decker's "coach, Don DeNoon, "and although she was spitting nails she was so unhappy on Wednesday, she'll be ready for the women's races." Leading by a yard with just 150 yards • remaining-in Ille girl's champiooships, Miss Decker fell heavily to the track, gamely rallying to linish third, which does not qualify_for the national junior team. In that race, Miss Campbell, who is 14· years-old like Miss Decker, won easily at 2:08.3. But now a new set of challengers enters. Runners like Miss Koenig, who nn 2:03.8 behind Miss Decl<er's nailon- leading 2:03.8, and veteran Cheryl Toussaint, who has run 2:06.6, make this the feature race. The meet also features the javelin throw where Kathy Schmidt, wbo recently set an American record of a1, is going alter the world record.ol.213-5.- She is more than 30 feet ahead ol her nearest pursuer, Girl's champion. Karen Smith, .who-registered her IUetlme boat 'vith a~ave of 177--0 Wednesday. OCC Smothers Cage Foe, 48-27 WILMINGTON -Orange Co a s t College upped its record to H In the LA Harbor summer ·buketball league TbtD'S· day night with on easy 48-27 triumph over santa Monica. Bruce Miller WU the only Orange Coast player in double figures, scoring 10 points, whlle Dean Bogdan ltd the re- bounding corps With seven. , • Four others -Jim Worthy, Rod Snoo~. Miller and Marc Attlesey -cootributed. with four rebounds each. "I thought we played well delensively as a team," says coach Herb IJvsey. Ctun-Bogoct1n MIUtr Worthy Tot1li °'"'" Cflfilt ,., "ft.Ip, • 1 f Snook 2: 2: ' Stymovr 5 0 10 ""'""' I 2: A Ctfl'lll'Ol'I H1lftlm1: °''"" c-t. 22.f. .. ... • 0 •. 1 ' • ' . ' ' . ' ~ ... -Baseball Standings . AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvlsk>n W L DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO THIS WIEK'S .IPECIAll New York Baltimore Milwaukee Detroit Boston ,Cleveland 36 30 3t 28 34 31 32 32 31 32 25 41 Pd. GB .515 .525 IV. .Sil 1¥. .600 3 .4.92 3lf.1 .379 11 Chicago Montreal St. Louis New York Philadelphia Pittsburgh 40 28 31 29 3t 33 211 33 29 35 211 34 West Dlvllloo Pd. GB .561 .517 5 .484 7 .459 8V. .45S ' .452 ' 71 Ch;,tter Niiw,..-t ,.,,....,. "'9tr1111, 1lrftlllllllttlnlrlf;;-'"'".......,..· A VHJ CIHll (It. Only 1977"° c., •• , '7t ••lck Ith'-w-...· ' , ......... """' trlM, fktwy .. ,. ' ,.,. Ctlllllftllllillt. ,...., tlMrtllto Only 2777 .. 1"111') ' "ff CM. 1-M• 'llltr 1.i"""" ........ Cir Only 327718 (VOL.ml 1 '6' Ford % T• L , ...... Yl«C1 ...... -T. Htw ,,ll'lt! 1t1Mr hr A Tl'tit. • .,,;-ly 177'1 .. ,,,,,,,.. Chicago Mlnnesots Kansas City Oakland Anpll Texu West Division 34 27 .557 34 26 .643 y, 37 3Z .536 I ,35 32 .522 2 33 31 .515 2V. 21 39 .350 12V. Doqen San Francisco Houston Cincinnati Atlanta San Diego 43 25 u 29 38 31 3' 30 211 40 21 47 -·-SI. LOUii •, Monfl'NI S Sii'! l"ttMllCO 7, ClncllWllll l Howlocl 11, Sii'! DllM 2 • Plthtlvrvti 2. New vonc 1 °"""" •. Ali.nt• 0 °""' "'"" tch9dulld. .632 .588 3 .551 5¥. .545 6 .4IZ 15 .!Otl 22 T ... Y'1 OIMtl .. l'll1ldltlltll1 !Ct r"°" 7•71 1t MOl'l""'I ITor-m Wl Ntw Yort( (Stont ,.,) It Plllstiurtlt (llllt 6-71 CtllCMO (Hooton 1·11 •t St. loul• CC!e¥ll1nd •II All1nt1 (Nlffr~ .. ~I It 111'1 Olett0 (JOl!lll NI Clndlllllll IOrlM.il'f f.S) .. Dtf9'n CMIOl'I ... , Houston (Wt!.on H ) .. ,.., Prl!ICIJCO tl11T .,, look second as Valencia'• Tom Ricks got aboard on an error. carpenter then sent a bouncer to shortstop which got throllgh for an error which allowed Gorgl to score, and wbell a relay throw was wild trying to nab carjienter at second tiaSe, Ricks al'° scored. Carpenter' went all the' way to thlrd on the miscues and came home on a sacrilie& fiy by Rudy Ontiveros of Magnolia. nie North added single runs in the eighth and nlDth inning, only one of them earned, to put the game away. The South, meanwhile, Jooked filtlle at the plate against Peleni0!1, Gary Williams of Los Alamitos and Gorgi. The Rebels managed only three bits, two of them in the sixth !Ming when they scored their only run. A double to left omter by Gary _ North of Santiago, the longest hit of the night, set up ,the score which came on a passed ball. Corona• del Mar's Matt Keoilgi? pttd1od the fin~ three innings, giving up ' an unearned hm on a walk, two wild pitches and a passed ball, but also struck Out Sll Yankee batters. Peterson pitched the firstl htee innings and faced only' nine batters. He hit one batter, Westminster's Scott Bradley, but later picked him of( first base. Htrlll 14 I / Seutll 11 I •l>r ll.-.i 11>t ll rMt ll:lck1,Cf lOOO No ,cf 102 0 •C:11t1,,_, ct 2 1 o o er~!..~ rl·ll> • • ..,.o Cl fMn .... , 1• 2 2 I 0 6tl:",,;;sGn. ltl •1 0 e .. 0 ~U!lltfft, II I 0 0 0 I('°'*', p.rt ) 0 0 O·· MCKll"!'I'' rf 2 D D 0 ~hUlfpS, p 0 0 l 0 Onll,,ll'ot, rf 0 II 0 1 LoH!n, P' f"' O O'-o-... L..9dlllller. ( I o o O DMttr. 10 I o O 0" Grllllltli' e 2 1 o o w100, p o o o o Ho11to.lf 2000Jt!f,p 1 0 00 Vin HOf,111, If l I 2 0 O."tt, 11 1 (I O O 800lt,~ 200 11 01rk15,lf 1 .000 , OUtty, 'JI) 2 D 0 0 e''"'' It I 0 • 0 MtcHt ll, IS 1 0 I 0 Gormen. " t 0 0 it \ ' N1wmen, 11i 2 O O o Scfl11111er, ( 3 O I ll ., I S;otlbl, 2b 2 O D O A1Mln, pl" O 1 O 01!,"1- P1lnltr, 2b 1 0 1 1 Shtlll'll. 10 1 0 O O· ", 8o!hwell, ph I O o G Swinson, 2b 1 G o O .. Ptle<JOn, p 0 0 0 o 'l.1f WUll•fT11, p I O O O Gor91e, p 2 1 I 0 Tol11i ll 6 6 J l o!•lt North ,..,. ie1rt oy lnnhttt ' lllD 000 311 _, OOG 001 000 -1 • • • • 3 • -eotiaplete-Plaf#et!'-------• ... . , MIKE DUNN Dunn Sparks North Cagers Against South Katella Higb's Mike Dunn makes his final Oran8:e C.Ounty appearance Satur- day night, ending his three-year reign of terror in the eighth annual North-South All·star basketball game. It's an 8 o'clock test at Orange C.Oast College and Dunn, a two-year-.ui'8unset League choice while at Western and an All-cIF first team selection as a senior at Katella, is off (or Pennsylvania 81.ifi· day as a sununer cage camp counselor. Later he will asswne a collegiate career at Utah. Al S.5V. (200 pounds) be led Katella with a 11.t average in Crestview ·League' play and bis Knights mates compiled a 30-Z record under coach T<Xl1 Danley, the North mentor. "Obviously,'' says Danley, ~'Mike is one of the most complete players I have ever. coached. But it's not strictly skills I'm talking J!.bout.-It's grades, character, matw'fty and leadership. He does all the plus things a coach would like to have ex- hibited. "And I don't take credit for those Items • , • Marv Blernker of Western High i,s a super human being and should take a· good deal of the credit for Mike's character. He's a disciplined Individual. "And he made our team. He was the difference in our team being the class team it was." " Dunn credits Danley with Improving. his defensive ability and cit~s Blemker's coaching decisloo to start him on the varsity level as a sophomore as a major aid In bis steady Improvement. Fans can espect to see Dunn ln his familiar double low post situation at times in Saturday's contest. "C-oach Danley says we have to win this game between the Cree thrt>w lines," says Dunn, "that we have to run with the: ball. That means I have to get the re· bound and get the outlet pass oil jjBut lf we find ourselves being con· tailled in that area I expect I'll be counted on to do more of the scoring off the low post. It depends on Ille lempo of the game, if we're rwming I won't get quite the individual chance." One would lhlnk Dunn banlly needs a chance to show what he can do on a basketball court, but the Katella ace re~ponds : "Everytime you go on the court there 11 somebody doubling what you can do." Dunn will be majoring in business ad- ministration and industrial relations at Utah and be says he choee the Sall Lake City-based institution because o f academics ~nd U1e general area. Mesa Rips Troy With 57-39-Win Costa Mesa Higb's Mustangs Increased tbetr Orange High summer basketboll mark, to 2-0 Thursday evening with a 57· 39 rout of Troy. , Coach Bob Sorensen's Winners jumped out to an IM lira! period lead and breez· ed Ille rernainlng dlstanoe. Leading Mesa's scoring attsck was Phil Salazar willt 17 counters. ~ Jim Swain Jed in assists with three and the rebounding was spread throughout the Mesa squad. COsta Mesa returns to action Monday -In the opening round of the Laguna Beach Hip summer cage clreult aga inst Mission Vfejo'a No. I unit. I="" CummlM Sw1111 H1fllt S.Uot C0$11 /MM ,..,. C..-. Mfll tPI fl " " "'w111rm1n 1 ) t lf Holl'mtl'I 300j$Mrp 3 1 1 1 Solomon A I 1 t Jtcobf 2 0 2 • To!1!• 0 1 1 1. k:W9 .., a ... mrs 11 0 . " o e t o 2 1 1 1 l e e 2 l 0 I • 0 0 1 0 U1 11 S7 ,, 12 -S1 1211 -• , . Jones Guides · Attack "' .- "' .1- For S,outh Cage Team .. ... .,, ' ' Byot~!~~-. C.Orona del Mar High's Casey Jones will be making his final appearance under the tutelage ol coach Tandy Gillis Saturday night in the eighth annual North-SOuth All-star basketball game at Orange Coast College. Jones, a three-year starter for Gillis at Corona del Mar, twice named first team All.CIF AAAA, is the complete guard. Perhaps J~' best a s set is his sholJting -his ability to gun the op- position under with the 20-!oot jumper. Aside from his deadly shooting game, he finds the ·open man, he's unselfish and if you score on him, you earned it. Defensively he's second to none. In two meetings with Troy High's sensational scoring wizard Mark Wulfemeyer, Jones held him to seven and six points. But his story of success is in the usual mold for athletes who stand out above others. W<rk. "Nobody," .says Gillis, "puts as much time in the game as casey does. He puts in as much as eight hours a day sometimes and he isn't just putting in time. He's working." Jones modestly disclalins the apparent, natural talent be ·possesses and says, "I like to put in a Jot of time playing basket- ball. It's the-main reason I've gqtten as far as l have. The time I've put into it has made a difference." He's also aware of the coaching aspect. 11Timd)'GilliS bas been the whole thing. There's no chance I'd have gotten anything. He's taught me a Jot of things that most people' don't see. It's un· believable the things he'"S done {or me." Jooes (6-3) did nol play basketball ln junior high school and his only action at 1 that stage was throllgb boys clubs ac- tivitie~. Casey's dad, George Sr., played at Stanford 8nd Calilomia, and ·the younger Jones Is also ticketed for Pa~ play -at JOE HO!-LETT 1 Unlvo~ty CASEY JONES the Uttiversity of SOUtbem California. "\..-. , .. ' I • • The pros? The Corona del Mar '!hi• says: "I think college· ~ is a · big en<Jl!gh step to think abaul tlgb1 -.. J.s you move up the competition 1ets tqugher. Uust !!ant to keep doing as_ well as I can." J JoneS is a 3 . .tl gpa student1·.aqW•be's ~1 vascillating between a major, ~~~" oceanolog:YO r teaClilnn it-USC. .;;-::::--. "'"~,: ''"'"6 . ' « " ' _, "'(. r:ll,, The best ol bis prep . "l\le "•· narrow verdict over -Long Beacli a~ .. , ' Long Beach fq the CIF AAAA :"' quarterfiDalS. ' . : .·f! •,. 1'"~1': f~ "' 1' As iOi' Saturday'' mWC! · Witlf 'Uie .• qu North be too is anxiouSto ·llM.an'WJ111?)(0 Mike Dunn in action. "I've nevw:._. ,;, .. Dunn play but I've board a lot aboul llini.·'• I was • oo the same .. team .. ;will! 'l1m .. , Tlvenan and he's a suj»er guy." i~· ... + .. I ' I BILL SPRINGMAN , Dana Hills •J ' . ""' lll• ·-'~,I ,,. h •. 1 •m.I •l>tl ' :;.. +oil I -'1: • ol"'' ~.· ~·!'!!'" . ..-~ ,..;, °irr+• ~;, ~!f\ ~ i'" ' : .. . ,r •'"\r ,1r.• ' - •1:- •I ' ~ ~ Hollett, Springman Ea:rn; f~: . .. t1. :· .... , • CIF Baseball Honors , :.· ::~'. University High's Joe Hollett and Dana HUist Biii Springman bave been selected All.CIF In baseball by the Ci tizens Sav· ings Athletic Foundation board for 1973. Hollett, a senior fi rst baseman for coach Ken Tratar's Univcrsitf nine, slug· ged the boll at a .370 clip and was named to the l int team. Springman, who prepped at San Clemente High as a1', freshman and aopbornore, was a keyJ factor in Dana Hills' emergence as a varsity contender despJte the absence of any seniors. Springman batted .333 for Dennis Nespor's team and earnll:t a second:team berth. Holmes on Probation ' YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio .-Pro football player Ernes t Holmes, who 'f"tlS arresttXI after fi ring shots at se.veral trucks in Mabonlng County March 16, has been placed on five year's ~tlon. Common Pleas Court Judge Sidney Riegtlbaupt ordered probation fo r the Pittsburgh Steeler deltnsive tackle Thursday, ruli ng tlult "tlie public good does not demand or r<CNlro that he be: lmmediateJy sentenced." I • - Player of the year laurels go iO ~' • High's Jim Peterson .for the ' ~~:1 straight year. 1be nifty Sonora ·pitcher .... chalked up a 15-4 record. · :-• ;-. . • • .t 1 • All-CIF -.& AA - P•. Player OF Hart Flnt Team . i ·~· Sc:bool aa.1~ .... ~· lloo<>r• Jr. ·~ ~ WalDut Sr.; .. "I Hemet Sr •. ,.41J '•< OF Jobnslon OF Rl>blnson IB RolleH 2B Murphy 3B Underwood SS Skaff Ut Claik C Valentine P Peterson P Mustad P Parrish University Sr. ~u_,. EJsinore J<. .ffP ·~· Ro)'al Olk Sr, ,3'1 ~ San Ma<ino Sr. .361 Gladstone 81"1 .517 q1~~t': ~ \~,I Gladstone Sr. W \ Walnut Jr. "t.111 •• Second Team .. ' OF Kunlz OF Acosta OF Rinehart 18 Myero ZB Tures 38 Sprlqman SS Shepherd · Ut Ditchlield Ut Bosu c Duquttle p Staniland P Drysdale P Lee Pa'° Rl>bies Sr. .4.e Bonita Sr. 31'1' ' ,,. La Sierra Jr. :.m··, Banning Sr. .488 •:f Bell Gardens Sr. .3'111 ' Dana Hlfli Ir. .m ' Walnut Sr. .311 ; · Nordboll Sr •• 331 ·I~ Palm Sprlnp St. 'i ,. Palo Verde Sr. • '••' Santa Clara 8r. 7 ' Brawley Sr. if' 1 Bell Gardens Jl. M '' '' I • I • I ., . • Fridar, June 22, 1'73 :1 8 DAILV PILOT For TJaursdaJI_ Alamitos Re sults Ala1nitos Racing Entries Edison To.ps• Vik~s;: Tlllll'lll•Y• J-ti, 1ttJ Clfff" 6 PHI SCr1ttMcl -I l o Go, Too Skit, ~d.fn'•, Folly. THlltO ltACI: -lSO yt rcl1. 2 '/ti!' old•· Claiming. PufH lltoO. oon GET TOO WRISTY HB, Cq~oµa Ratitble' • ' ' ' ' . • \2 l!itecl• -lt-Mr, ArTOW•'I' & ,_ J~11t1111, l"tlf S11$.a. Sl!COND a.t.e:I -170 v•rdt. 3 v••r o1t11 a. up. c~1m11111. PIJl"H suoo. Doti kur IQ.aria) 1.00 '·'° 1.to Fll'C'f Wlllow (lllchirdsJ 7.IO I.Ml Go Around lSmlllll 2.IO Tl~ -47.JO. Abo r•n -'Tris Fl.... Iii A~te. LIM'• 8 1r Lady, ~ Silly. Distance Fly M•c Fly CWrlghl) ,,,20 e.60 1 . .0 MUlllol! f llf'd IP.oe) $.60 3.ti(I Troolcat B•r !81nla) l.Oll Time -11.1s. AIMI rt n -81rt 8oY. Ja.n Brnn. O.Vll'I Poc:~et, Mr. Wl!l1Ut, f'llrtlf P &lleo, St-.ebeUl11 Bflrl. e ... an Up. l'OUll:TM ltACl -l SO V••dl. l y11r old flllltl aNI m•rn. c1111ll!ed 111awanc1. Puf1.t $l500. Tilt D«10l•1 Alrcrtff (Ofl'INOY • MtNtgfl'MOI Club. Wiii &loom IW1rdl 1.70 •.40 J...0 Ml11 Pokle Cl'llP IWt'-'I SAO 3.20 B•vou ll•r B•bV !Myles) S.20 Time -II.CL Aho rift -NO reslrllll. Be Sur• MOO!\. N11r!l1tlon. "ll'TN •ACE -l 'iO yllf"d!i. ' yflr okb. AllowlflCI , PUrH $2(lOC. R.ce Maker lRlc,,.rC11) 12.IO S.IO 3.111 _N i11.hvllle C.OPY (8ilftkJ) 3.~ 2.M I Am I S.ld (Wrlghll 3 • ., Time -1•.ll. Abo rilft -O\Ml1 MlH. LIU1t Tony Gil, Elme!'" Gllc;ll, SU9tlf"iOll• Min A-. SIXTH RACI' -~ yardl. l year olds & up. St•rl1n •llowanc1. PurK S?lOO . Goiter no. I in tod1y'1 illU.tration ha fo1101ton one of the cardinal rules or goJ.f:· your hands should always·lead the clubhead during imp1ct, '.fhi• is true on every type of shot, from drives to putts. It's eapeclally important on short chip and pitch shots~ whea many high·handicap-101fers tend . to get too wrilty, and end up striking the 11ound behind the ball. I ' J Ed.bon Hlgh's C h a r g e r s upset visiting Marina Thurs- day night In Hunllngton Beach summer basketball. action, 55- 46, to·cootinue unbeaten along with Huntington Be a c b , C'.orona del Mar and Servite. Huntington .Beach kept pace with a fourth quarter spurt to subdue visiting Lakewood, 70- 62; Servile Stopped Fountain Valley at Huntington, 52-41; and Corona del Mar rolled by La Quinta, 48-36, at Edison. G•rvlft Counly (Smith) 1.¥J 1.00 2.IO -:-Ooublt Poco Bid (11•,..ksJ s.ao l . .O ' BrNllll8 Cr*k {Myles) J.00 Runners ~ Sparkle Ralph Serna won the mile in ) 4:21.7 and shared the three- mile title with Robert Angel (15:411.0 ) to highlight the first in a ·weekly series of all-comer tract and field meets at Costa Mesa High Thursday. • • Serna, a ' junior-~be at Loara High. eased to the mile victory while he and Angel, a sophomore last season at Hun- tington Beach, decided to share the 1%-lap title in the high school division. The feature event -the open three-mile run-drew 83 entries with Owen Gorman winning It in 16:21.0. Other . top marks included a 4:27 mile by Kent McDonald in !}le open mile, a 10.0 100 and a 22.8 220 by Cal State Fullerton's Mike Black in the open division and a fine double by Steve A4a ms in the hi gh school division. Adams, an Estancia High standout, clocked 10.1 In the 100 and 43.4 in the 330 in- termediate hurdles. The weekly a I l ·co mer s· meets begin oacb Thursday at 4 o'clock. with the junior-hi gh field eYeots. High school and open field events start at 5. 1'1»e running events get under way at 5: 15 with the open three-mile run climaxing the schedule at 7:30. Tlmil -27.tS. Ali.o i'1ft -thlvtgo, Hadd1 Be You. My Rotne"' ll'ldllft, Aoblnlt, Olnl Br•n· dy, l'•rr Cl•l>bf:r, Line P11u 1r. -· U •x•cl• -2-G•rvhi Cou"ty & 1· Doillfl+I l'OCI llld, Pilld 1101.50. SEVENTH RACE -350 Y•rd1. 3 year olds lo uP. Clt S!illled tllowanc:t. Puru MOOD. T)>e McConnell Oou!llas. Sh•mrockel (Ad•!rl 3.ID J.20 1.llO Auured COPY {W1tllfltl) 10.IO 7.00 Vaftoqu• (H1rt) •.OO Tlmt -11.03. Also ran -Go Go Jeanie, Judy's Wondlt", King Bird, Walch Sov. llQHTH •ACI! -a v•rds. 3 ., •• , olds. AllOWl(ICe. Puru J2JOO. nr .. Heats !Adair) S.20 3.lllO 2.41> Ala"'9dett1 ISmllh) 6.20 3.60 AJ:ur1 Sar Go (Hart) 2.60 -Tlma -20.30. Alto r1n -SUMl!fne Aockette, Chic Pal Go, Fair's Fair, Gt.ntsh, COPPll" ~. Bunny's Gold, 01' Oan. Scratched -Glh.lln, Early CJ1ar1111, Mtlor Thre1t, famlly Afl1lr. u •...a. -,..~ ........ ). AlllftWltlt, l'•N IU.00. NINTH RACI! -a yards. 3 year olds. Clalmlno. Pur11 $2000. Ll!l l l Go Flett (Trenure) 7.20 3.611 '·20 Dao Sag fRlchards) s.20 •.20 f lrtc:llaroe (Cardo»•) 5.80 Time -20.16. AllO r11n -PllS em By, FINI Rul11h, Gyp's Cu1e Bar, Leybon Qvl(k, Mll'lslrel, Sel.Nlok1. JS l!l1cl1 -J·Llllll Go FltU a ,, Doo 5-. l'lld S12l.Jf. Trout Plant § Q @ Concentrate on learning to strike aiI your shot1 --Wi.tb the back of your left wrist practically straight (aolfer no. 2), instead of cupped (golfer no. I). You'U find that your-hand• will lead the c:lubfaco automatically. t 1RON OUT THOSE IRON SHOTS!Arnold P•lmer•sbootilet "Hittlng th• lrona" 1Jves champiohship tips to help sherpen your iron1hot ttc:hnique. Send _20J and a stamped, r1turn envelope to Arnold P1lm1r, in c1re of this nt a r. ~ight Y ellowtnil ;;Count Reported "' "' "' '" "' '" :~ SIXTH RACI' ::.-0 yard!i. 3 yeer old$ ., up1, Clalmlflll. Purse 51800. Cl1lml1111 pr~• 1> ... SPN"dll NIQhl I rt1Wr1l \If Ber Tooter IPll!M) 119 War Chic Two 11.:rGWtl 119 Oflp ~(Morrl$J 118 IJ~namo Palrol !Banks) 122 Nu!her Bllllf'IY (Knli\111) -_ 122 Mrr hnPCll'"llnl (Aoc11o1rdO 122 Mt O•vld (Salem) in Gold lflllOt {MYIH) In Atldtr Aockll' (Walton) 122 Al11 lill9llNI Mr. JNpster (Adelrl 119 Alllltl's Sur• Mlk• \C:ardOl•I 122 Rut Fereo !W•lson 119 P1lleo's.81r !Tr11s11r1) 119 The yellowtail catch slowed ilov.•n somc\vhat this' week from Orange Coast area sportfishing establishments /but with water temperatures , \\'arming with the current heat Al! three area landin"S Sl!.lll!NTH RACE -3SO yards. 2 veer b olds. Purte 56000. ~ Jet Deck. reported some bait s)lortages, b:T 8g111f:,~~.,. lli but Davey's Locker.1 assures Aoval MOOll 2 1orever1 . 119 Rebel K1~ (Harl) 116 live bait on the paity boats, L•ntv's J11 (smJthJ 11• Moon fher (Rkhlrds) 119 and a Dana Wharf spokesman Llncol"'s sur1 Ber te1nkll 111 Trut Moon 'fWa!IOl'll 111 r eported good success in oi>-D1n·1 shadow tCrOlbYl 119 taining bait.with the landing's Liddle Fac:t 'CMYleO nt Own boats. l!.IOHTif •AC.-=-i7'11 y1rd1. 3 yur ollls & ~. Cl•lml119 PUl'H 52000 • • wave, better days may lie ahead. · . WS"7tNGELES -Big Rock i Light counts of yellowtail .Creek, Bouquet ~ a n yon , were reported at mid-week, Crystal Lake, ~1ttle Rocle .. with the most frequent catches Creek, san Gabriel River ' off the kelp beds out (East and West Forks). from San Onofre and Dana Catches of bonito, barracuda £~....:O~~':f f{~Cfvle~· . · 1n and bass continued good. with V.nd1 L1ne11 <Hertl 11 3 Plunder (Adair} 122 bonito reportedly biting WelJ Idaho Go ICros~,i 111 off San Onofre. and along the ~:TY:::,s'>~n\'!"tii~1111 B'.J coastl. th ' nd th Armed Cash ~bOl'll 122 1n e nor arou e si-POl'IY l RKMrdsl 122 Huntington Beach a r e a . GrNn VP cw:1':nr1~· 119 R£VERSIDE -H e m e t ; Point. Dana •Wharf ·reported ~e. J some yellowtail action of£ Several bonito were reportedly Tiit varltt IAd•lrl --in PilPDI WlM (B1nkl) -111 takeO off the Huntington NINTN RA.Cl ~ yardl. 3 ye,r Beach pi~r Thursday, with olds. c111m1nv. Pur11 11to0. c111m1n11 anglers using both Uve bait ~~!a~;,,,, (W1rc11 11t Cage Scores SAN BERNARDINO -Big 1 Catalina Island, and a 22· Bear Lake, Deep-Creek, pound yellow was boated by Greg<>ry Lake, Green ·Valley Gordon Moore of Costa AfeSa Lake, J enks Lake, Lytle Cree~ off Barge Rock. (Midd1e and North Forks), Bait shortages continue to d ·· Mon l11111o1 (Myles) 119 an }lggs. C111tom Art (Adair ) 119 A general warming trend in Bold .RDll• JTr111ura1 111 N11111ll1111N hKll s_,,_ Jim Doolin (f•-) 119 JV Rtwlls the water is expected to bring Rock•' Bir Chkk (CardouJ 11t coM 11, L• 0u1nt• 26 Santa Ana River, ~nta A pose problems for anglers, but HIQll Fl";'lr (Storey) 119 Edi o11 M I l7 good fishing this weekend. FIQll!en Chic (Gariti lit New':rt $1, ~n':: H111s l! 81dQer'1 8os1 {Rlchtrdsl 172 Wn lmlntl1r ~. E1tancl1 7' ' ' ' ' ' • l I Odermaft broke loose ror" 22 countera in' J>8Clng Corona del Mar to its-~ triumph - without Joe 1Kozmata in the uneu'p. 1 ' Nei.rport ' Harbor's Brian O'Flaherty a1ao tallied 22 in helping hia mat.ea take care of · Dana lltlls, wblcb was pac<!d by Mark Scbrey (17) and Joel Peck.(U). ............. ,.,, -•""'• CorllNrll 9J 42 •, "• Rtnkln == J ~~I~ kl•ll'lskl ' 2 J 1• c1.,.eu1 1 5 3 1 TOlal• ..: .., o.1ft.n 20 12 70 '-H-tlnotoii I' 11 11 2 .... 10 LaklWOOd 2 1 1• 19-112 c-a.., ""'' t•• Tucket' ': ~ '1 t~' Btktr o '2 1 2 ~~~~ :!ill Atl~IY ~ 1 ·1 ~ i*1c11'" ~ t t ~ Tot1l1 17 I' 11 .tt score toy Gll•rten. Coront Gel M•r II 12 ' I ........ LI Qulnt1 t ' IC ll--.l6 N...,....., Hlrtief' (61) O'Fl111trty .. • 'l .. •'~ ' l! \11nderAI • ' "'~' ' • ' , ·-~ , ' ' • ·-' • • ' -f'oJvllf' ' ' ' • ' ' ' " Tolals " • • " DI• Hlll5 !SJ) Darq.1111 • '\ tto ... .. • Drow.I • • ' • Haa1J ' • ' ' "'"-' ' ' ' Oltver ' • • ' ~ • , , " 11:1ix:l ' , ' " • ' ' ' , __ • • ' • Toltl• n • " " "*"' rt OHrttrs N-1 Hlrw IS lf .. ,._., D-HIU1 -6 1• 15 ,,_" P'-talll YllltY 1411 .. • .. .. Jotlev , • ' • L~H ' • • .. Gtntlle , • ' • E1>111l11tlmer ' ' • , Vo,s • ' ' ' Joi ey ' • • , Meline ' • , '! V1t~ • • ' Lodlfli!lln l o ' • To!llS 20 I " .. Sc-by OU1rt1n Fount•ln v11ily '' • '' 1-1 Sarvll'I 11 10 16 1S-S1 I :1 " J ' . ! l ,l I• .. " ~ ,._,. , .... WHtlll ........ (UJ _fiftpftll r 1 1 11 ~-~1 11 ~ ' ~ ,, ~,J,~.~ ••ll1tcll <;)"'" pf .. KOlllOI l 3 ! t 5tnkey I t l 22 GrQfflCll I 0 ·Htft-2. II l ~·' t -i I 1 Jera"ko 2 0 j • Macklen 3 ! I l(nui .. n a o 1 0o Tol1l1 II 1 11 Swrl llY Gvarl.,_ · W1slmlnstet" XI '! 20 ,._.. Est1ncl1 I '' '11-4 ' F"" Pony Ride$ dailtJ t1iru Sun., Jun1 ~~ Featuru • 1.coum e CLUIHOVSI e PLAT AIU e UUNA • JACUZZI e n.o SHOP Of*1int folt of '73 Anyone six years or age or older is eligible to enter. Joe Fisher directs the program under the auspices of the Costa Mesa Recreation Department. River South Fork. J when avai18ble Uve squid and VENTURA -Reyes Creek; anchovies ?lave brought the Upper Sespe Creek:. J best results. SANTA MONICA -ff •noltr1: 340 F•ze 2 (Harl) • !'H Strvlfe Joi, Founla ln V•lley 1.2 calico b111s, SO bonito. 1•1'9• -3'1 StOl'"Plo ll•r (~':i:/111"' 122 Lak•~:;~;11a;:!1,11e•cPI st REGARDING MEMBERSHll' angler•: 350 maellerel, 35 c•lfeo beH, I 8le1on D•ndv IWatsOl'l l 1:n Ellison 69,.D<ln<o H!lli l • CALL 49J.7676 All-COIMrs Tl'lck .... Fllloll MHI Opllll DlwlslClt'I Winnen Trlplt Jump -Dll'lftls Z.ruas t•·6: toriii Jump -Louis Slndtf• 1MI high jump -~ l(ent 4·21 3-mlle -a-Gam'llll 16:71 : mll• walk - Rudy CPwTI 1:.0.Si mli. -Ktl'll M(:Donftl ':'17.01 --Miki Plefee 1:aa.11 4-«> ~lll'ca 51.6: :no "-Mike ~tck 21.11' 100 -Black 10.0: 330 lllt. l'luntln -R""""' Norton 491 70 ..... -.,. .. Tlltfllf 9.0. Nads Tops JSaddleback In Open Play, 87-90 DOn!o, 2 l\ll!b\Jt. Dreiiden Doll (Wright) 11 7 c del M .._ MORRO IAY (lrtrlltS) -15 1ngler1: 1·~·~·~·~"~'~'~"~"·~·~'.'..:l~W~·~·~"~·~~-c•::n:__,,~.-~_~_· ___ ._'_"_·_"_'-__ "_"_'_'_""_'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'~ m rock cod, 13 llng COCI. IVlrt's L•n• dl"t) -l2 angle~ llntll cod. :Jl( rock cod. <San Sl,..,_1"!!-!i1 1ng1ers: 2' Ung cod. 1-46 rock cod. "·~·'-' Sl'IOt put -Dtft "11m•r 46-2"'' trlii't DCllEANSIDIE -254 angle,_: llD bclnfto, 216 kelp bass, 2 tiallbul, S2 rock cod, nc ytllowlall. · MALl9U PlllER -5' anglers: .UC rock cod. IS calko bias, 3 IWltlbut, I. wlllte lN blss. ' bOnUo, llO rock bass. DANA WHARF -262 1noler1: 705 ~~"'-' V•dl U-101 Wini lump °'""' ~~1 2:: .!':: !.:rk Fbf: Nads handed Saddleback lNI 3-fnll9 -(Iii) Robtrt ""911 W Coll j ___ , ' circuit resumes Monday night at Estancia High. calico r..u, s blrr9Cud•. 101 bonito. 15 yeltowlelt, "5 rock cod, 29 m..cktref. LONG 9IEACN lltll!IOlll f"ltr) -63 anqlers: m Mf'd bin. '2 bol'l11o, I halll)!st. h rtt -n anglers: 30S bOnlto. 30 barraeud1, 9 sa<'ld bass, 1' Jla11bul. Ralph SlrM 1s:M.01 mlla -hrilil ege ts OC\NllU straight ~- ':11.11 • -l(l'Ylfl Coc.llren 2:02.9: 4't ba k • Cosla M ~ -M«k FlflHtrkk S3.s1 220 -c111 / c m esa .,,......, sum- ;'.,~1 ~~.~ T~:., ~~'°in~'. mer league basketball actJbn S.-.....Ck LMI "o '•' ',: CPl1f11'1/ftl L•IMll11tl -'3 anglers: 1• Bautr 1 yeOowtall. 1 bonito. 310 c1llc;o bllt. OPltll 1 I • J SAN ,.ED•O lttllll It. L.IMl11t) - -M1m1 .,..._ Thursday night 87-60 in tn .1111911r Mi911 '#i--. . ' ' RObtrh s 2 6 12 125 a111111rs: 120 yellowt1ll, .,7 c1llco Holfm1n s o l 10 bass, I llllllbut, 9 mackerel. '25 blue Helley ~ I 1 J 17 bass. CSporltlshltltl -97 angl1r1: 12 Trlple jump -Slew llrebllovldl »41 abbreviated S)ate. Tollls 21 ' 1' 60 v1llowtan, 10 1Nrr1cuda, 160 bonito, .us In the other scheduled coo-Na• 111L "• ~. tp caufo !Hiss, 1 Wlilte 11a blu. iot long lump -D•MY SlllPI"'-11~; high lump -Vrebllovlcll M 1 mil• - 11111 H1rrell 5:03; •o -Bill SI. John 2:1J,f1 ....0 -Art IW.Jo IQ.3J IOI -Larry Fain 10.7; l3ll lnl. -L1rry Falk• "6.3: 10 hight -Tom Turner f.A. Girts -Th.rN mtll -Diane Letter 22:.55; 220 -Jan Ltst1r 24.4. At1~W•-rs Ofo11 191r1) LOll9 jump -10-11 y1ar1 -l\l1n Murray 12-1; high jump -Murr•y 3-fi· 3-mllt -M!k• Strna 19:13; milt w•lk ~ Jolelln FIJllll' 10 :50.11 mll1 -Miki Semi 6:01.1: fll80 -D•ve Loras 2:'3.21 270 -Jimmy Val'I Sickle 3'.3; 100· - Ale~ M11rrey ll.t . 17-t YHnl Lorie lump -Arthur Morrow 9-41 hlgll lump -Oen Fisher 3-6; mll1 - K1vln Wells 6:51.S; UO -'bO!'SI -Anthony Sll'n• IO-f 1 (glrl1l --$1oliln Fl-• f0.7; 100 (bO!'I) -Strn1 15.1 fglrl1) -Robin Fisher 11.l . 16 alltl 11111dtrl LOllg lump -8d1n Fls/llf 7-j; 100 -8rl1n Flllle-J 11.•. _ test A & C Properties moved ,MMDon•ld 1 6 ,,' ~;~'l:'~i1:00 1M11111c1,.1 t>lll'l -a.so in to the win column with a =:~:er a ' ano11r1: 601 y111ow1111, 112 bl...e 11n [orf 't 'ctor R d D. MCCioskey 1i ~ l 2~ tun.a, '1(18 tlOlll!o, '1 hlllbt.11, N bl•· el Vl Y OVer e B. McCIOltkV 2 1 1 s r;scuda. 111 rock c<Jd. carpet Realty. I Leiter t 1 1 19 MARINA DIEL REY -2• angler1: To1111 ,. 37 \J 1 11 360 rock cod, 3 bonito. Dick McCloskey B u C HaUtlme: Nads, ll-21. REDONDO 197 anu11ri : 2 . , r e vellowtell, • bllrracUda, 1 w11r11 11a 'Baron and Jim Lafler hall a .A. ..A,, .A. boss. 260 bonito, 1.1•1 calico bl~•· t.OJ field d · ! Saddl •·'!.k H H M blue bllss. Baret -76 a119IH"1: 2 ay aga1ns euin.; yeoowt•ll, 2s rock cod, 130 bol'll1o. scoring 27, 22 and 19 point!I i~ Costa MIM OPtll Jl,.ndhHlf NEWPORT (Art'1 Llndint) -11 1 lb W L ee llllllet'S! 23' bonito, 212 boss, l bar- e easy win. ~lkl~lumt'll ~ ~ ~:,cuc1a., 270 rock coo, 1s mackerel, Leadm' g the way for s.' d· wu'°"' F«d 1 1 1 .. ~ 1"'°!.! LKk.,., -261 •11111ers: :n A & c Pr_,..tles 1 1 1 uarrac,...1, 259 bonito, 1.AIU b111, 1.S dleback was ex-5an Cle ..... ~te Nedi 1 1 1 v~klW!all, 110 rock coct, s 111nbt.lt, JO ~·.,-• Novaek 1 1 1 mackerel. High standaut Rick Baaer. Rid caroet Really o0 j 2 2 SEAL lllEACH -14 •1t11ler1: 20 The dun. 1·nuti've guard h'•t n!"""' s1~1etrack co11~ bonito, 1 bllrracvd1, 1,480 Nnd bllsi. 10 ·~ Mllldar't O•llMI at IE1!1nd 1 Mlf,bt.11. ll1roe -115 1ngl1rs: :UC fiel d goa ls in account>'ng for 18 7:U -N•ds vs Rn11y bonito, 10 bllrracucta, u bll1s. 12 l :JO -occ Alumni VI NOVlclt hillibul. JXiints. lfiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;,;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.I Action in the eight • team LEASE .••• a Continental Lutheran's Goodyear CIF Player of Year Lutheran's Bob Goodyear, 28-Mtek~. MOia...e '" who pitched his mates to I.he l8-Her11norn, St. Bont '" SS-Ko!itOllOIOUS Boron '" CJF A baseball championship UI -L•lfertv, Twin Pines '" C-Wernel<e, Lutheran '" with a 13--0 record, was named P-Goodye1r, Lulhllran '" player of the in that P-Pe••sev, Brethren '" year P-C1mtr011, Buckltv "· classification by the Citizens second Team O~McConneU, Ambl•stdOI' '" Savings Athletic Foundation OF-AnQulo, Hotlvllle '" O~Ames, C•rolni.rl• f~· board for 1973. 18-How•rd, Luthll'•n 28-Brenllt(kl . MOor~erk '" , 38-KUSC:hfll, 'Wi {R V) Ii All-Cll' laseNll A SS-Petrooutot. 0 (Riv) l'lnl T11m Ut -Pedley, 011ee11 DI Ang. . OF-Mun-lluckl•v '" ~ Ut -Brooks. Amb11"'6or '" OF-Car-. besert ''· P-8rOWT1, La S1Ut OF-Brown, Tron• !" P-LorenJ, LA B11t1lsl f; 1B-w111s. Par..clttt " P-Morll'IO. CtrOll'llll'll . Air Conditioned • FOR BOWLING BLUE CHIP STAMPS . I liVERY l'lllDAY 6 P.M. EVERY SATURDAY 6:30 & 9 P.M. mn 11.t.c11 1'-\10, "Uf11Tlff9TOll l l ACN :~ -~,, .u \~ 11·1 ,,, ... .m ... , LEASE ••• Mercury :ffJ _,71 ;n .tl .. , ... ... Full Mllnt1n1nce Le-ltlnt ~ •• Your Choice, Nowl 540-5630 • FLY t:FISHllG ln-~_:. HUDQUURRS · • We have a giant ~ stock of Fly Rods for expert or novice let us set you up wffh o balanced rod, reel ond line • Fly tying materials and kits SWIM TRUIKS , Forrt0V1 Mofru ly ~Hang Ten-logurio- J>esigns Aliv.-Abco • New Connelly Glass Water Ski (D•mo AvaH.a~•) SPE IL SAU 011 lllllll'S . At Our f01hioil l1lond..5for1 $295 Volu•-to 20.00-Whff• ThtY Last · 24 HOUI PISHING UPOIT 547-2545 YELLOW· TAIL 'FISHlftG •.Best in 20 years-fiom Mexico to long Beach •Special Custom Yellowtail Rods- Good for any ocean fish--42.50 • 5 Doy• Special-Fill your rHI with 20 lb. line for y, cent pM yord ' • • i ' • ' • All-stars Wres tle • Tonight Several Orange Coast area Wrestlers will be featu red tonight in the second annual Orang~ County North-South r;lual qicet 1at the Cal State (Fu11erton} gymnasium. The meet OOgins at 7. The SOI.Ith, winners of' last year's inaugµral meet, will be coached by Bolsa Grande High 's Jim McCrillis and his a~istant, Wayne Mickaelian of Fountain Valley. ~ Frida~. Junr 22, iqJ.) •DAIL V PILOT {I} Checking Out Area Li~~ t Members or the Hunfing\on 'Seacliff mcn'a golf group stal- ed the second a nn ua l h1aclntosh tournamen t recently with Bob Spence r and Ma~ Conlon finishing with 60 1h: ror top honors. .. A tie'"' reslilted for second place at \G I with teams com- posed o Fred Ki~la and Dave llubbnrd : Eugehe Ford and George Kubis; Dan 'fan- nehill and Bill a.1cGuire: and Ross Pierce with Bill Howard. of the w0t11en's golf group ctl SiA·artley (107-27-80) foor1h. El Niguel Country Cl ub in Dorothy Banks won gross Laguna Niguel, Jerre Cini was honors in D flight with 105. the gross winner with an 88. Mary Betz was the net winner Ruth Cohen copped net (114-:D-79), followed b y h'Onors in A flig w j th 93-Loui~ Hossitier (ll4-~1. 21-72: she was follo\vcd bY. Peg l<"airfield (117-34-83) and Jean LcBon (93-20-73 ). Nel ··Eleanor Barrett (117-32-85). Townsend (93·18--75) and In an earlier three · blind Marlon Menne (93·17-76 ). mice tournament. Ruth Cohen • Dougherty fin ished fourth oit &!. Flight , C )ound" M a r y \\!illia n:i.s and Ruth Hunter tied for first at 58 .. Dohith'y"Ekhoff wns next at S9 with Helen Lindley· at 60. Betty ~limmclsb~ck \\'as thu D fli~ht victor with 60 follpwed by Tin:i f\1ackey and Judith Eriksen at 61. Eileen Morrow was next at 62. ln B night Dorothy Nido was was the gross winner at 93 low gross winn~r v.lith 99. Hap-with a handicap score of 56. py Coltrin won net honors. Anne Wright was next at 60 (101-25-761 followed by Helen with Jerre Cini al St and ~1el Willard (102-25-771. Martha Townsen:t at 62· Kid s Like T 0 Turner (101-23-78) and Helen In Oight B, Pat Iversen was Three other teems tied foi; . the next spot at 61 'h includirig Dick Johansen with LeRoy Gay; Barney Bernard with Merle Huggins; and llo\vard Bya l! with Jobri Dobbs. Although fl.[ij11 wrestle-offs }lave not been completed to ·determine the South lineup, Or~nge Coast area . repreSen-1 E l N'gue1--- Clark (l02·23-79 ). the winner at 57 with Doris A k And Nido at 59 and E i I e e n S y lo C flight it was Alice Schuhmann at oo. Nancy McCredie the gro~ winner -;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~;,;;;;;;;;;;;.;:~;;;;;;;.;;:;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;,;...._1 with 103; Margaret 1-Ierten I' i,•:on net with 103-29-74 ; Jo Tilden wa s seC'OOO""---r I 0 5 · 29-761, Mildred Wilbur third (107-~7Bi and Caro I Y.n Pa·rcrmaunt _ Spol'ls ' Switching All~tar Date M~y Mean Smaller Crowds ' lt.'s strictly my opinicn, but: California prep, "'ill be joined by Curtis The Shrine ,W.-Star Football Classic has Beck, Jim Spillane and a host of other top mbved from Thursday night to Sunday after· sta? . · · noon, which should result in even smaller Isn't it true UCLA assistant coach Tom _ crowds. Il might hav~ been a good idea if Tellez i~-talk.i!!I with USC about a vacancy ; the game "-'ere scheduled for 4 or 5 p.m.. which will occur soon when Vern Wolfe lakes : bu t at 1 it'll be too h!)t, people will still ~ -a sabbatical?-;-;. - at the beach and thOse plaMing to leave for Why would Len . Miller leave Laguna the weekend won't even be tempted. to 'Beach for UC Irvine? It seems a move up stay' • • • \ to . some· but it could also be a move into The' women's and girl's AAU track and obli-vton. Len is a fine ~ganizer or big,_h , field championships are better run than ·\be .school athletes and a fine coach of Yount· • men 's championships. The amouncer, CalVin sters who need priming. But .at UC-Irvine, ! Brown, kept everyone·uP'·tGidale with results.' ~the athletes Bill Toomey is trying to land are 1 , , ,. all prettJ much experts in their events •.. • .. , UCLA had a list or si:r:_playen it wanted to give John Wooden for his eighth str8.ight NCAA basketball title ... All but'-San Joaquin Memorial's Cliff Pondexter, who was landed by Cal Stale Long BeaCh's Lule Olsoo, will __ , __ _ ~- STEVE BRAN D almoJt tiftmed.iately after a nee and a field - micropbane was uaed to announce each jump,• ' . ,. -or throw" • • • , -t Eddie •Bane will ·hook on with the .Min- nei!IOta Twins immediately because he's-a fine pitcher but also because Minnesota needs 8DOlher left,y badly ••• The Orange Coonly North-South All-star football pme picked up a lot. of glimmer when Wfstem H.igh's fine duo of Bob Acosta and Paul Charlton bypassed the Shrine con- test for this one • . • Look for Mike Peck of the ClF office to move to .the San Fernando Valley News and Green Sheet. He misses newspaper work allllough he's dooe a supe'rb job ill Kenneth Fagan's elant ... Jim Neidhart will not be aloqe at UCLA. The Newport llarbol', IBl!h sbcit. pul· whiz, who has tbrown •the shot farther than any attend ... Isn 'L it about time-for fOr an All-state basketball tournament? With AU-state wrest; , Ung alrtady in, look ·for ba51ret6an to come soon, but only after reorganizing the state so there are eight fairly even. districts •.. The Orange County area, to include San Bernardino and Riverside, could be one area and t,Jle LA City ieboob yalong with olheri!I in the CIF SS could form ~ther. Condensing the Oakland-8an Flandsco area ... schools is a must • • • It's quite possible UCLA could lose just one game this year in football . The Bruins have looked outstanding in practice with eJ:-Blair star Eugene Jones looking like an AlJ-American at end .•• The loss? How can you bet aga inst USC? Release from Stanford University: " ... J.<farvin Holmes was a winner in the South- ern Section or the ClF in both. the 100 and 220 with limes of 9.7 and 21.4." Clancy Ed- . wards of Santa Ana High m1ght be a tad upset if he reads that. Holmes won the AAA di visioo for Monrovia Hlgh but Edwards was a lwo-event AAAA, and Aia&ter'i; meet champ ... Sports Car Rally Se t For,July 7 ;~-- :p~vtilibF at~~~ 9-hole, 3 .. p~r course · The Caliromia Sports Car Club will stage its 12th Brame Rally July 7 starting from the Braille Institute in Anahei m. Bllnd and partially sighted )'(Q'gsterS will serve as navigators for a field . of celebr:ltits, racing drivqs, members of .the sJiorts car llnd pultin·~ green. ppen • • to the,publ 1p 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.--:--- Lighted after darl<:. Teaching pro·available · · GREEN FEES: club and memj>ers of vark>ul police-and' ftte departments. I ~;I Fpllowlt;! directions In braille, tho youngsten wlll al- ., tempt to guJde the drivers • Weekdays-51.50 for 9-holes (replay 75¢) •Weekends & tk>lldays- $2.00 fof'9,hot~ (reptayit.OO) from A n.a h e ·i n) to. a indet<T(Dlled finishing poinl. CalebrlUes scheduled to take pert Include . racer T e d .Roberts, a c t o r s Steve McQuef:n and James Garner and-pla\Ua Errol Gamer. The Huotington Beach fire department will be aD'lOlli the entriee irl ha category. The event is open to the pu blic, wltll the only re-rrement belng ·lhal enb-ants " a lpOl'te car. Entry fee fJO. Proc:tedo from the ev .. 1 go lo tile Br1ille Institute. ,SPECIAL RA~S , 1' MElfl!RBHIPS •Monthly membershlp-$15.00: 'good·weel!<f&YS onil any night No limit to number of rounds. .> Family n'lernber$hlp (limit 4 to a fartiily)7$21.00: good ,weekdays and any night. No llmlt 10 num ber of rolJnds. •Ten Play Cerd -$10.00: gOOd for 1 O rounds anytime. ~'w"n. 1107 Jambonle Road, Newport Beach, Collfomia 92660 STA.ATER: (71 4) '44-9911 1"11' I.-lalonnaUon coil- cemtna entries Contact the ln-1 :0:.~ atltute at ill.SOOO. , ~bves Dirk RoseflLield (Hun-In Jo' gross--lo net t~ .B eac h), John 8 w vr MazerkOwitz (Mission Viejo), -loun\amenLlot lhe,.members Scott E n g I e (Huntington Beach}, Glenn Jones (Corona • derMarJ.naveOOsier<torona· A.rea ·Skater s -Seek Tiiles del M...ar ), Mark ~arsing (NeWJ)Ort Harbor), L es Becher (Fountain Va I I e y k Four Orange Coast area Mike Finklea { Fount a in youths wi ll be competing in Valley), Mark Garratt (Corona the national speed roller skat- .de! Mar) and Vince Klees iog championships July 30. ,(Estancia ) were all vying for A!Jg. 2 in. Lincoln_, Nebraska, starting spots in their weight arter winning sports in region· classes. al '. competition this week. North Squad standouts in-Competition in the Southwest elude CIF champions Mike · Pacific Sj)eedskating OJ.amp- Fleming of El Dorado, Mike ionstiips was held at the Skate Barns 0£ Pacifica and Gus Ranch in Santa Ana. Local Bend.eek of Rancho Alamitos. qualifie rs. included Tina Al- . c • cala, 7, and Katrina Alcala, 10, both or Costa Mesa, Tony Ande rson, 9, of Costa Mesa, and Ken Hutter, 14, of New-port Beach. !I To earn a spot in the na- tionals, the competitors had to compete in three prelimin- ·arY races to reach the semi- final round, with tliie top three scorers on a poi.wt system qual- ifying . • t n FEATURING Ali.. TOP I RANDS SPECIAL I It NEW DUNLOP YELLOW AUSTRALIAN TENNIS BALLS $1 85 '" o" NO LIMIT I ON QUANTITY (with tr.1de·i11 of i used !Niis) HOURS: MON, & FRI. 9 TO I TUES •• WED,, THURS. & SAT. 'TIL 6 SUNDAY 11 TO I 333 E. 17th St,. Costa Me5a (Behind The J.nternatiohal Housf' uf Pancakes) . PHONE 642-6886 can~u the camel Filters smoker? 3. In this picture,, everybody has • a gimmick ... al most everybody.' Try picking the one who doesn 't go • "'-''-...,.-----L...:>--'-"--'-.1....-' ~lo ng . 1. No way. He's Geny Alric, . , over-the:hill hippie. Irons his hair twice daily. Cigarettes taste just as flat. • , : ; Gimmick: Watching bowling pins "do their own thing, man." 2. Naomi Glowsoul. , Gimmi ck: Uses so much body engllsh tliat police tiave raided the place four times. 3._Nope. It's Angie "Th~ Arm" Kugelman . Throws so hard three automatic pinsetti ng machines have quit. Smokes cigarettes so heavily filtered, he's like a man giving moulh -to-moutK resusci tation to a rock. 4. Rig ht. He just likes bowling, not gimmicks. Likes his cigarette hone's! and no-nonsense, too. Camel Filters. Easy and good tasting. 5. Zooty Smith1 Gimmick: Has worn same good luck clothes since he brokel125 in 1942. Smokes war surplus cigarettes and saves the tinfoil.&. Wh iz Kid Pringle. Devel- oped malh formula to eowl a perfect strike. Unfortunately releases ball dri backswlng. ,. : camel Fiiters. CAM.El: They're .nQt. tar every~.· · · - ' (~"""could be foryguJ. Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarett,e Smoking Is Dangerous IQ Your Health. .. ;.. \ \ , . . . 'r ~ • • l. ' ZO m~ ·io:t.3 mg.°''"""· pert1iaro11e. FTC Aoport FEB.73. -- ' • I , ' I I • ' -· 20 DAILY PILOT Friday, June 22, iq73 ·,=~~~~~~~~~~~ Weel.:e1td CaJe1tda·r • Coast Channel Race Se~ BOATltfG - Ne~·port Harbor Yacht Club race committees ·will be busy this weekend as the y start a fleet of ocean racers on an offshore race or the Ahmanson Series and ride herd on five classes of one;<Jesign boats engaging in national title eliminations. The Ahmanson feature is the Diesel Cruisers ·Now :Fiberglnss Coast Channel Race and the S.ata )fonlca Bay SU Dlt1• five classes eliminating for CAL IF 0 RN I A YACHT SOUTHWESTERN YACHT ru ture championship regattas CLUB -California CUp, to-CLUB_ San Dleio to MarJna are the Star, PC, Luders-16, day, Saturday, Sunday. del Rey race, Saturday. SUm- Shields and Soling. WINDJAMMERS YACHT ' mer Serles, .f,70, Sunday. Voyagers Yacht C1ub will CLUB -Lld'o-14 fleet cham-CORONADO YA.CRT CLUB send the Midget Ocean Racing plonshlp; Ma~ de! Rey Cal-.L. Small B~t Regatta, Sat~ Fleet south Saturday to Datia 20 fieet champtooshlp, _Satur-day, Sunday; Butler Trophy Point in the Massey Midget day, Sunday. Race, PHRF,~. Series, to be followed by a rat-KING HARBOR YACHT SAN DIEGO YA UB tlng party in Dana Point C~UB -Vi~tory Invitational, -K-3B N 8 t I 0 0 8 I Cham-Hnr~i-Saturday n1ght. Snipe champ1onshlp, Saturday, plonship Saturday Sunday · Small boats will see action Sunday ' ' · in Bahia Corinthlan Yacht PAC1F1c MAR I NER S Gold Star ~!es, Star, Sa!W°· Club's Stars and St r Ip es YACHT CLUB -Stein Series day, Sunday. Peabody Senes, Regatta Saturday and Sunday. No 3 Sunday Cal·20) Sunday: Dr l SC o 11 So uthern Ca I l•f-0rnia · 'Newport .• Balboa Serles, llO, SUnday. Yachting Association' calen-NE W po RT HARBOR SILVERGATE YACHT dar: YACHT CLIJB -Elimination · CLUB -Whe<I Chair lle&at· Los An1ele1 • Long Beach series, Star, PC, Shields, ta, Sunday LOS· ANGELES y Ac HT .Luders, Soling, Satunlay. Sur> Norlll •lid lnlalld American Marine Ltd. or Newpart Beach has converted constructiOn of its three most popular models or Grand Banks diesel cruisers from \\'ood to fiberglass, it "'as an· nounccd by chairman John R. CLUB -Catalina Island race day. ANACAPA YACHT CLUB -'1l1' tL p At D p "ttt Newton. iAlohaSeriesNo.l)Saturday : BAHIA CORINTHIAN Santa Barbara and Return, .. Ofl ••. rogram ftllG f» New ton also announced 3 Marineland Race (A Io ha YACHT CLUB -Stars And Saturday. . change in accounting policy, Series No. 2), S:unday . Stripes Regatta-, Saturdaf, Westlake Yacht Club ·-Gordori Sutorius, sailing program director at Dana Point Yacht Cl ub. he~ps whereby .all development costs LONG BEACH YACHT Sunday. • Summer Regatta, Sunday. youngsters rig . a Laser Class Qinghy whiCh will be used in youth prograni \vhi_ch will be expensed as incurred. CLUB -Eagle Rock Race, VOYAGERS YACHT CLUB SANTA BARBARA SAilr gets under way July 2. Boys helping to rig dinghy are Randy l\1~dge, 14, (\Vllh Approximately $925.000 ex· (Catalina Island Seri e\s ) , -Dana Point Race, (Massey ING CLUB -Handicap race, visor) and bis brother Jon Mudge, 15. Boats and signu ps are avatlable any day pended Iii the year ended Saturday Midget Series), Satl,lrday. Sunday. of the week at DPYC. CG Chief To Retire Next Week March 31 ror conversion to>l'jw;w;'5=~~~~~~~~~Wi'.~~w;~~-=~w:==:;~5~~;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;~;,;;;;;-~-;;;-~-;,;;;;;w;w;w;w;w;;;;;w;w;w;w;w;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;,;;;;;;~ fiberglass and other expansion I and development programs will be charged off, along with an additional $425,000 or previously unaniortized defer· . rals. • Capt. George W. Walker, who hold the number two post as Chief of Stafr ror the I Ith Coast Guard DiStrict, will end a 32-year Coast Guard Caree.f <luring o ff i c i a I retirement 'ceremonies scheduled for June 29. At 10:30 a.m. that day , full Coast Guard military honors will be afforded the Captain when he inspects the troops for the final time at the Coast Guard Base on Terminal Island. Newton said these charges, plus a writedown -0r an estimated $197,000 due to the devaluations of the U.S. dollar would result in a loss or ap- proximately $1.1 million on record sa1es -0r $18 'million for the year which just ended. He said the change in ac- counting policy in no way reflects a re-ev aluation of past operations or of future pro- spects. which , he said, should be substantially improved as a result or the numerou s developinent and expansion programs put into effect dur· ing the year. : TAN.K TESTING ~ A model incorporating some rnodif1cations from Jntrepid's 1967 lines is installed on the tank test carriage at Lockheed Ocean Labor- atory, .s~n Dieg?, under the careful supervision of her or1g1nal designer Olin Stephens Oeft) and Gerry ~Driscoll, San Diego boat builder. • . Cup Def ender Intrepid ·Undergoing Ta11k, Tests Tank tests \~1hich eventually will detern1ine the modifica· •11ions to be nlad e lo the 12- .meter Intrepid for the 1974 America's Cup campaign got \D'ld er \Vay June 14 at Lock· heed Ocean 1:.aboratory, San Diego .. Tfie research progrl'lm is ex· pected lo continue until about ·Sept. l . according to San Diego boat builder Gerry Driscoll \\'ho \\i ll superv ise the remodcllng and serve as Jntrepid's skipper for the 1974 effort. Olin Sttphens and David Pedrick of Sparkman and . Stephens, the New Yo r k "design fir m v.•hich has been ~retained by tho lntrcpid·\Vcst ' " ,.. ~_!'atal Weather , Molfll' 1unnv IOO&Y. LTOhl v•t1•bl1 ,...__.1'111, nlo~t tnd mot~l"ll ~llV•• bf/COf!l.o 1f1t -fll"ll' 10 10 lJ -t10t1 In 1l1tf'o .._... todtl' •nd $thlrd1y. Hlgll !CHI.,., .. ,,.. .: coaittl lemP9rt hlrfl '•""9 lrom ,, • .,. 7f,. lnl•nd r.mootr•'"''' r11noe '•°'" " to '1 W•ltf l•f!l11t•1h;rt .. , P'llOAY ~ S••• 1'10011 , Tlde1 .. IKoncll hllft ••• · • .. · l It II ''" 4.t _..... ....... , ..... , •• 11.111. u IATU'ltOA'r' syndicate to prepare the ·twtr time Cup "·inner ror her third Cfltnpaign, \1'ere on ha'nd for the opening of the test runs. T\\'O EIGHT-foot models, 011e taken from Intrepid's 1967 lints and -0ne with her modified underbody (by Brit· tain Chance Jr.,} were used in lhe initial test runs In Lockheed's 320-foot tank. "H's a great advantage to \\'Ork ~·ith moaels or this size." said Pedrick. Almost all previ ous 12·meter research has been wtth three to fi ve foot models. "\Ve can ge.t a better readlng on the effect of hull shape changes at this ~tale than we can "'ilh the smaller mode ls," Pedrick explained. INTREPID was purchased Jn March by a snydlcate com· posed of George Schuchart of Seattle, George Jewett of San Francisco and Charles Hughes of San Diego. She, was shi pped across country by truck from New York and arrived at Drlscoll's San Dieg-0 yard Ptfay HAVOUNE MOTOJl OIL (F0tm1rly Autolit•) llfOTORCRAFT OIL FILTER •• Ford l Chry1l 1r GIANT 30"x50' OIL DRIP PAN "' 199 I /I ••• , CHEC KER COOLANT Protetl Your 1 s 9 Car A~o inU Sumll'l•r 5 H1ot "''· KOOLMASTER ENGINE COO LANT Gr•ol For A ir·Concl it1or11d Coro c PLASTIC OIL POUR CAP Sn:! On A ,_ 19c AUTO VOLT REGULAR '" FREON 12 Oo·lt•Yo1111•ll And Sov• ---- COOLANT SAVER• KIT Eo•y To Attod1 $o¥o On Coolon' W•U•. , • 69' 1!? VALVE & HOSE RECHARGE KIT Al10 lntlvde1 Look 011tcl0t And 15 oa. Con Of Fteon TREW AX CAR WAX GCM1 On Eo1y ••• 1!? F11ll Y1ar1 Shin• P1r Con 12 FOOT HEAVY DUTY BATTERY BOOSTER CA BLES CopP9r Wir• PRE CISIO N ALTIMETER 498 From 0·15000 Feel Above Sea l•v1I Bio 2 1/8" Eo1y R•od Bloc~ Foe• 4~?. BUCKET SEAT CUSHION CompllrMnling Color1 399 SAVE3~·50% AUTO PARTS TREWEllT'8M08TCOMPLETE Do.IT•YOIJllSELF AIJTOCENTER---- OPEN SUNDAY -, • 6 PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JUNE 26, 1973 HORN KITS •-•"""'-HERCULES HEAVY DUTY LIFETIME GUARANTEE SHOCK ABSORBERS Gu<1ranr1.d F"' T h• l if11i1M Of v-P1111nt c .. 599 ( =) 12 FOOT • STEEL TOW CHAIN ""' 111 Trvnlt < •• RMd e-.. nc ••• 299 .. FULL ACROSS FLOOR MATS ~I~ ,. ""'""" ~ ~ "IOlor Flusr• J ~)"'.:, ' .... ~··· ·-' -·-~ •, -~"":, '.;°"· .. TOW MIRROR Clip• On Won'I Scratch' C> Dint Yo~ Cori Surl<1c1 BUMPER JACK MOO EL T.J12 R.d TyPft Handle W•I"•' Ribb.d Tub11lor St1•I Rock Bor 81t 6".-8'. .. .,,... .... ]99 HURST JNDY SHIFTER "H" Patt•rn Flo!lf Shift Conv•r1lon Kit Eo•y To lfl1tall l.i1htnint Foti Shifting Flt1 W..1 o-ulc c •• A11or1H Col•• 179 1999 .. , • ~ ·-4 AMP BATTERY CH ARG~R . Cho191• All -· 6 &.l2Volt 8011•"•• 'ch•cli" 1.0111 R•t•l•r l!.~9 24 PIECE TOOL KIT '· Fo• Cori, 8 icyc!1., Mo1orc~cl11 , o~n• 8"119 i11 ...... . Green Fat StDl'1n;- l'1 -S111<11I Pl11c1• 1499 OFl.t lXt: Ml·'.Cll\\U .~ TOOL Cll EST 6 01ow1ro & U1 ilo!y T,oy. Heovy Guog• Con~!ruc!.on 3999 1099 COAST ~~t~~ilfNT TYPE A.PP*g~~B LIFETIME 1 FIRE MUFFLER -~EXTINGUISHER ~· Orr Ch1mlcal ~ Fi10 Eitlnguiditr -_. Gr101 For . . ._, Co•s, CH!pe11, ~,,~~ 80011 .. '· STARTERS ALTERNATORS ""' .,,.. ... , .... ,. t :3J '·"'· ,.s t "I"' ""' ,, .... ~··· I ;,. ,,,,,, t.I • ~ M'ltlb .......... •!• 11·"'· •.1 23. 'l'bt trip took eight daya. Recommleslonlng is schedul- ed for early January, 1974. She will then underro some prac- Uce .. mns In Sou the rn c.Jtfomia waters before being shi pped east for .the sta rt or the June tria ls of! Stanlord, Corm. in June. All M-101 Part• With SPflc lol ,Sol•ty Ch•ck Val"Y• In Ha1e 499 c1rr,.1 ... P1ocl1o1e11 tll"* 1299 1699 ~ ~ • ... ••• ••. ..:14 Jl,l'I'\, ,,, -· ""' Nlft • ....... tits •·l'l'I. '·' ptf'91 ... •" ,, ... , lilt •,IOI.• IJ. ... _. """" .......... 41!. p,l'l't. J,1 ~SK91111 io. ... , I~., •.m. l.O ~ l +tll j JO '·"" Ifft 1111 p.f!I. .._ lfwl llJU •.111. .. 11.01 o.m. ....... 645·1264 111 East 19th STRID, COSTA MESA JUST OFF NEWPORT ICYD· -....,.. M--., -' _, ' S""9 H•n Dally 1::11 lo ' . OPIN SUN. 9-6 ..... «;"::;·· ... BAHKAMERlllARD ,,.fi,.,,, f1111 . ... , ....... . I . ' MOl!eJI'• Worth Moving Expense Tax Deductible By SYLVIA PORTER ol his household during the (L<ut in a s.riea) period ol 311 CCll!IOCU!lva ~ . alter getllng the new ellljJloy-Of all the ~areas of mov-ment and 1 while occupying In whlch 1'o<i ~an lose te._ary quarten (whether y, none ls more irritating ·· ltlll looking for, or waiting to the tax area. move into, a new residence); Reasonable m o v j n g ex--Costs of sell~ng an old and paid by you, an buying a new residence, or )qye or self-employed terminating an old lease, in- . ' ln mnnectlon wttb your eluding attorney's fees, e9CTOW ment, are deductible if fees , appraisal fees, re'al our expenaes meet the ~ estate commissions, title costs uirements described below. m:w:t '~" _paid Lor le the rnles for deductions se rvices. (To the extent you.-- e liberal· deduct these house-selling ex:-' tzed by the; penses as moving expenses, ax Reform you can't use them to reduce Act of 1969, any profit from sale of your they also be-old residence.) came more pl. t DIRECT MOVING ei<peases < 0 m ""' • can be deducted clllly il O) the ~- • rrldlY, Junc 22, 1973 OAJLY PI LOT J.l ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;::~. • OVER THE COUNTER : NASO Lflllr• for Thul'lday, Juno 21, 1973 .. !..~ ~llOl)I l'"lllltt H toMo l!ft CN.kl' ,_ 1t IO J•llY Cr• 3V. 3' k:i'•1 .:: .. iii N:f &:f!.v~ 'r' 1~ OWM Ct llffll II-..._. II~ 1~ ~ t ·G f~.:i: m: ,.,. :::::. .. ... "' ~ w 1 J" ~ «111'1 tr ~t::· Ct ll~~ tti; 10 k•......... ,,. 1f: ' MY 0C ~ ~ §-(E~l#ft : A= 1~ tnM 'r. •lf' 11'l J.::" M, JU 1 " .) TIMI QUOt.. ~rvo. 1t~ ll!n~ •1• 1U: Cit ~ ll • 00 l'IOf IN:lllde ~ /!\II 1 "4 kl'll y ~ , "' Get.. ' 1 ' _,.w, _,. -i" ,.. '" , t• Tm °'"' "" ®wll .,. ·C(WMll.. M• 1 14 11 -lltvl\ 1. '\ii ft: f'"n 10- tlofti .,.. dO "°I ,.°" k ~ 1 RIYtl I!'.' U!!i u 't'!l IV. .,,_ r,:;;:::w..i.. r'119 E:.:i: ·z; 2'v. 1ov. ::::. &r. , rs« ~nrtt 'Vii 1n; 1&"~ IMDUITIU4Lf :i,. W 11 r.l'i Rolllfl• 8 Im ~" U ~ Nt f; -.. AM~h~Tlll :~11 ~~ la .... 11 == f:.· 1 ~ 1 ~lllY ~d~_;n; I . } June :ti. iln H•rl...., p ,~ J R11Ckr Pt1 I Yr 1 ~nYM~ a• fli m uthnl 1t~ b.sJI. ~::;;: ,,, ,._ ~ lilt~ ~ 22S'lo , v:C. Sn I.ti 54' x Ahr 1• ft-Metlllll C 4 4~ •ltm CD , ™' V1n O\lk 1 \It 11 111: ~ co k~ l!n 1ju. ~=111,t•'• ,m: ':? ,:mt1111 1~ 1~ v~1ionSllc~ JYI 1gv. A r:. Y~ or Ill) ~"'" C ll\j I• ~" !!" ~~ ~ 0 '{l m ~ ~~n~ ~v. .OU~= 1i-U ll:! tfJ:1L 1"8 'r' N' v ~ 1 1~ ti,~1,, ~ l~ ~ r,i. ~1t I~, "U~:ro .J 'Tl,\ 1 ," w::r. Mt i,.. lr\14 ~~ 'r:t ~ ·ff!Uv. :.; ..... w1T i= ,,~ i~ M":°~~ lT~ f'M =~A~ >t~ 1~,! Am '"""" 7Yt $ N11CI 21\'i m~ IEm•ttr ~ 24 W9'Cltll 1 I V! Am GrM St :It I" tx 1\lo 7'ill IWl'I Uo V. 11 Wllll'J WI l•U. lSI• • AMII"[ IY 11\'i mz ntt Cl"D 21 n ltr Co ~ Wt! ftCI M lS\11 lSlj Am T ... .., U'llli !nterc En !" "' ~~ j • W•jcll Pl i !" Am Wl'lcl JIN I \lo nrmt Ga 1 \l 1•\.\ rm-I Vt 1 .... WI P'uOI 1 I v. '!"1----jA~ft~W. 111-AJ~ ~o ·To11 J41./o 55\Q Wt'llr __ Fd -11:1------1 Allktn In ~ ,1,1, n llkW A 41• ~'lo l'id-P1ols---!Wi wn11mrr1 -, .~ ---· AlllClll E ""',, l"r•' Co 1Ho 11• 1P1Ctr1 14:i. 1SV. Wlttn H J lt'h 1 \I':> APS lneo 11~1 1 Vi re l"ll 11: j'• • ~ l1n1dy I 1•'1 \$\If Wint PkT 161'1 1 Ardn Myl •4 J1m•1b ~, 11'.l~J Id Rt11l1 14:t(,j ll"" WIJC PLLI IA\I It\~ .... ,.,, Aul '!' \'1'1 JI AfrFr 5 J*' !k N Al• 27Vi .... Wood m loWi l 1V1 Ar~ Hr 1 t~ Jt11!v11 M 17 I \4 llkN 8rw 101'1 Wfll'ld Sv 10 ... 1'1',· ArvlCI• t'l "' g·1-St 11~ 11'1111 IMk N 5 ! -fib WrlohJ W l AMO CDI• 11~ Jt:V. t v1r C •\l'i 'I• llrQe Tl) I Vi U Xy'~' ,cp 4'1_ _'It. ., Aft G1 LI 1•~ 15 .. ,.,, Tit ~I 6 luoer ' tth ti rt 6l'h •~ Avto Tm 111., 1m K.th"~ ,.,,., 171.1. w11r o IW. 11\io !1" r Co 11/o 9 l•jnl Alo ,._ 5 I(.,, ohn IDYJ 1! i1bo I'd SY, 6\~ IOM Uth U'h 21 I nl Wr I !WI K•Y 111 61/i ~ .. • ,r.,-·Mn ,.1,1i u. •v.• /"' lt\~ S . . ed. The high-) I g h 1 s ot_ employe or self-employed ruJ person moves to a new prin-tir,l'...'I ml Im ln"c~•-'!:: •v.: 10-Most -Aett- nk Ilda 11 1'h MS nd Y... •I• --------------='---------------------..:._ _ __: ___ ~-----·I ink Rel 26~ nYi 111ot VI l•V. 161'1 \ ~Ml M 11\/o l•llo OQ<tr Pr lt\:o 20'~ NEW YOR K. IUPl)-Th• 10 motl .-ell.,. 'l'" F U llo jSV. Krut11fl' 11• l'i Oocks lr•lltll on t~ OTC m1rke1 Thurs· thele es cipal job site that's at least 50 y tQ ~-Olio l<utlm El 611.l No dlV 11 1u1111lled bV NASD. follow. U )'OU • '"'°"''' miles farther from the old !hint Y o u .,. .rultled to residence than the old job site ""'"" moving expense de-was : and (Z) during the 12- d!Jdions, make your claim month period after arriving at for this deduclon on Form S903 the new job location, the which you get from your local emp&oye ls a full.time employe Internal Revenue Service Of-for at lea.st st Weeks; or, if a flee. self-employed ~ moves, be performs tun:time terVices 2. Amsies Tnreaten French With · Grape-eating lnsect,s ~Int F , .. i !ldd Pet 6\.'t l\lo $tock ... Volum1 1111 A1kMll Chll. Mil .ec111 c11 tl4I i'I 1nc:•1t 12 13\/o cn11•on 011 1!""" 1~ 1~ ~· -e-age ""'"' l• 71llo--·-n 14 lt1lllr Orc!n ~ 4,300 1 Ml lltll-1• "' Prd 36 J7 .wttr C !!Vt 36 Pinn Llf1 61.300 J l',._ \.1i •ll L•O :311Ao )t llY 80Y \~ 27';1 A11he.11 811Kh 64,IOO 45\'t •J.>--I\• bD Co n.. M4I ~"' Pl 1 l.O 1~"' 81nk1mer 63,j(ll) ~ •I + \~ Dnn 12 IN WIY H '\'I \la Am E11-o U,900 ~ s.tlf.-lh 81nl $on1 ~ Ctlmo ~ ' 81vvout llt Jt,tOQ ,~ ,,,...+ V. T E d x:l3\'Jl'" nc 8dO •\4 7\1 Scoto L10Gld 36.900 y,..:.. 1\T 0 n l ob Evn1 2l'4 •V. CIS. ..... S'IO Comb ln1Am 36,200,lO'llli. 11 -lo oofh No 171A t It 411~1' 49\!t Ed\ICll E~tcUIY U..00 21 30 -'I: lr111CC1 I jllf, j ~ Er: Co 51\IJ S:J --rinks In 0'4 G•1 14\!t IS toiASO Volume Tod1y: •.a,llXI -.. ,. :i;;~ Ml lll!Y '" A1,i ,_dv.,Xll· 2" ucttbt I v, I Ml tckt 38\~ lj\1 Dec:U1111 7'• E T 0 ? uc:k1y 6~ M•rll Frt I•" UllCllll'lfled 201S go np :ill: A' "~ • ~~m~~ l! • ""' "~ 111ERE ARE two main ior at least 71 web within 8 lyJles of deductible moYlng ex· H-month .,...1oc1 following ar- penses : (I) direct and (Z) In-rival at bis new wort location. direct. 'lbe difference between the J that ••--· · doll There are exceptions to m 5 "JCl-e ll no ar these. 31 and 78 week re-llmlt M the amoont ol deduc-· Uon f 0 r reuanable direct quirements in case of disablll· moving e1:penses. while there ty, diacharge, etc. are dollar .limits on the INDIRBtT P.IOVING ez- arnount you can deduct le< to-penoes are deductible only If direct expenses. they meet both ol the re- SYDNEY (UPI) - A \.air or Australian scientists are said to have a sinister "superbug'' ready to attack F re n c h vineyards if France continues its UJclear atmospheric tests in the Pacific, the national daily '!be Australian reported Thursday. 111E PAPER -SAID the unidentified bug, akin to the rose-loving aphid, is rePorted to be immune to all in- s,ecticides except one developed by its breeders, and would bi'ing ha voe to -the vineyards. At The Hague, a 6pokesman for. 1be International Court of Just.Ice said it would rule Fri· day on requests by Australia and New_ Zealand for an in- junction against new French tests on the basis that they were a health hazard and in- fringement on their sovereign- ty. Direct moving expenses in-qulrementJ listed above for elude ( n the cost ol moving deducting direct moving ex· houoehold goods and penonal penaes, but the am0unt of errtcts (Including crating and deductloo for indirect ex· packing) from your old lo pemes Is limited' as follows: 'rour new residence, plu.s (2) -No more than· $1,000 in---------------------the transportation expenses ot total for trips to find a new the taxpayer *id his family house before moving and for (including meals and lodging) temporary living expenses at while tnvellng l'rom your old the ~ job location ; (2) no Bike • to Buses to your new residence. more than '2.500 for the ex- IJldirec:t moving .. pens .. in-penses ., .. 111ng. buying · or n . f . G •o 'S h , valve _, leasing a residence. -iess the -.i=-ro ' e~ c eme Grant -If an employe has al.ready amount allowed under {I). obtalned employment at his · Any reimbursement f o r new-job Sffe,~ or if a self· moving expenses received by employed person has already an em:ploye Ol'-self=employed made s u b s t a n t i a 1 ar-person must be Jeported in ip- rangemcnts to begin working OOme. You then deduct the at the new site, the cmt" ol. any moving expenses you are en· round-trlps (including meals titled to under the rules which and. lodging) made by the tax· I have sumniarued above. ~payer and the members of his household principally to find a new resi dence ; -Cost of meals and lodging ror the taxpayer and members WHERE YOU use your own car for deductible moving ex- penses, )'Oll can figure either your actual costs or your costs 1t a flat six: ctllts a mile. Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dr. David M. Eggleston has. got· ten a lot• of laughs at~bis proposal for a bicycle-launching bus. But thl11 week he's finding it easier-to ignore the._ laughter. TIIE CALIFORNIA DIVISION ol 1fi$bways has a'l''arded the San Diego State University engmeering p~ ressOr a '51000 grant to build two bite-loading trailers which """1d hoot onto the boot of selected San Diego City buses. They're the integral part of the "Eggleston Scheme" he'• Jong been pushing at southern California transit engineers in vain. Egleston envj!ions the two-wheelers as an extension of comuter buses into the byways ol. downtown walking and shopping areas. .,. BIKERS WOULD pedal from their homes to desig· nated stops where they could unload their bites onto buses equipped with the special trailers. At downtown stops they would unload the bicycles and whiz off. ---*-"TA EN SVEMSK _' --- MED PA EN ARTUR" ------. ···•·8CUJUl j_ ' THIS SAAB WILL GET YOU SIX YEARS TO LIFE. Beach Imports, in cooperation wich Castrol oil, now offers an unbelievable New Car-Owner Protection Plan. You get the norntal SAAB ont-year, unlimited mileage factory w1rrantte and 1n 1dditional five.year warrantee-plus, at no extra cost. You c1n n-en transfer the Wlttant~ to the new owner if you sell. Plenty of reason to buy a SAAB from & .. ch Imports -But there'• more - • 25+ ml/ti to• 1.Uon • µ wtr po/1111/on fut/ ln/tcttd •"lint - era/ltd by a thrtt man /tom from start 10 fln/Jh • Front lt'httl DrWt • 4-whttl powtr m/Jttd d/Jc brakes • Stond4rd Luxury Accouttnntnn To buy a SAAB is to put you In the drimt seat of one or the ures1, most ecoftOmical, finest built luxury can In the •Olld. Ttll drift • SAAB 9' -Let • Swede bike you for a ride. r • The A basod , • ~•m Tt11 ~ ~ .... =c V IS r~:l-----------ustralian JtS •Iii Sow A\"\ AV. m 11\.'s 12l' & Lo !r le ~.., Vll'S !Mio 17 M9d lrn 4S 'ol lfriGlll-8 s•r• ont page rep:ri: on a tter hm• ,.. 10..., 11y, M1rld in '"' 1\\ u ~· ~ cabled to the newspaper by WASHINGTON (AP) -~::t· : 1m ~~ ~r~1'' Fr ~f"' l.m'l------------- one "Mary Smith" 1·n the A t bi! nuf t h..,, ~D 35 36 M ,DOJ:..11 2A 2AYI N-York (UPI) -Thi tollowl1111 ll1t U omo e ma ac urers hi er )r nv. "" M n.i F{b sv. ' u-a '11M at~k1 !Mt 111 .... 11•lnMf me Phl'l1'ppm' es Wednesda But n ' . hrl1 Sic: Moaul D 17W Im"'°'' •1111 li;il;t '"" motl bloMd _Qr! (llf'Unl -Y · a shouJd set a mmunum target 156 1~ !lr." .," i!~ ot cMnge Dl'I tt1t Ovw·HMl-CCM.lnl•r independent check in Manila I'll' u A ?! m1rx11 11 -.==.,tv u. NASO. of 18 miles to a gallon of fuel, ~ro I~~ , ~"' 1 ,g l~ 611'::..::~'*-W. ~ .. f:t I: ~ed th~ ~ : ma: the president of the Union Oil ~f sk~ = 1:5 il• &~, m m prlct Ind ""' .. '':.~~-bid prici. Co ... 1 ,.._111-1---1..1 toda mwjO P j21llo 22"1111 NII LlblY ~ 1• pseudonym, aod she was not . Ul '-'ilLllwi.ua .-w y. on" 11 ,. ~ 1sv. Nt MdlCr • 1 ~ Mlfv ~~1111.;:. ~ t H: tt·I found In the ~-1 ,,i,._ """'"-··-outl.. 1av.-11 NI PMtnl • s -m J --1nc1--:211-' "' u ,,'.3 -1.vu:: ow.111: gave. awa may DeeeSSJ~te -,.,.. Co 11v. tt\~ ","1r"' 1rn-11 ,.~ , ':"J'-iii•nn C:o 1R 1 ~~ u: 112 r11tch A ~ l~ r: JI .,... .. J MrfY Cv ull 4"" llo Uo lj 5 AUSTllALIAN ScienUsta are and why not? -the ellmina-B~I ~~~ ~~ ~ ~ w_, G l~ lf~ I ulldQSva .Old 114 "' UD l .I tl of_ the t model •n v M II-a •'" N colt! In ~ 7'ill Ellll'IY Convr '"' = U11 f,7 reported to have plant-onllich olgargan uad,edin . edll tr. t~ m ~ ~1:1=: •"' 33~ ~ I Ii',~ re::~: 11~ "' H: :-1 ed ~ sinister ~ w IO ten are cat §!)! Gen 3114 32' Nord11r 11~ 11"' 11 0::., 1-, Tl'!', 1 ~~ U0• •,.•, the be of Fr ·, •DI 7\/o I Nws NIG ~ fli •d1on ... •• D , near st ance s to ego " Fred L. Hartley told a «« 111 4$~ s No.oi111 c11 civ. '! 'j wrlQl'ltWm .11 4•, '~ uo 1.1 ba read ' • Dtklb AA J1~ n~ Nuc:lr Re I" ~'t I Comf•• Com 2' V. Up I' C mpagne grapes, Y to r!-•-te c 0 mm e r c e ,.a. 0.1111 1n•t 6V.. 1ou 1kwd H 5 !"' 1 Noblt11y Hom• 4 " Uo .o trik il th ~--• ~-·d .x:auit U" l)aluwt C l'IU :it\'i fl" Or Sl \.'J .$2\.'J U Pl•""'" Mkla 1~ 1 Up 1.8 s e e r 1i::i:J1.;u go m~ committee g iem C•• it1.1o i~ ein E• 1\l 1U 19 ~· fclCo 1" "' u11 1.1 with their plamed nuciear • ,,l~;i A ~ ;~~ ~ ,~r L~ "-• ~v. l• H ,: ~n }{% ~ H: I:~ tests," 'The Australian said. BAR'lt.EY JISIIFIED at a ~J,.~1 12~ µ:i uv,,~ i9:z 11 ~ ~="c~ :.... t! H: :~: "The ti ·--·~ puted heann' g -th MM-V hi I ~Ir o.., 7\lo ,,..,, ti coet IN 't 21 ldtntlcon CD 4 \to Uo '-!. ny tu3C\;~ -re ..... e ......,. e c e 8:•'1' ~ ,,~ rmont '"" 22 lltYM . 111<1ust 2\\ "' u11 j:i:· to prefer only the pinot ·anc1 Fuel Economy Act. o::;, gi: ,, ~ :~"'NA j!? · H ~l*lo15~1"'a • ~ H: '.61 ·' meunier grapevines -is said Composite 1973 U.S.-made =lnL.,~ J~ ~~ ~~. c,'f !ml" '5"' ts crown Cr•ft1LOSl1tss \lo UD S.3 -to be waitingjn-tbe hands of-a -.automoblles-get only-12 ·miles ~ruc.,.~rm~ ~~c,r~ -r.i.r. + A~~r'!: ' -flt l:Ji,----f ..... · · .,.,,..,.11.. r n.:. .f'4' Pa~ 8rd 1V. IV. 4 H fl -V. .O F r e n c h sympathizer at to the -non Hartley said So i. N,.cai ~~ 51-. P•!; r-..,;;; ~ > ~"~~ != •• jt: ' Reims in the heart -o1 the setting a goal of 18 miles to P'lll u.( nta IN Pin oeot 13v. 11:'! • ""-""' , -1~ I :I •1h1n A 21'4 ~·" P1ul lllV ls:Mll 1 ' -... c h a mp a g n e • p r o duc::1ng the gallon would represent a l!:ncu 111 "" '* "•11111v, • •""• • '• cl"'•'•'• , •-.,• · ~ ~ I'· d, . IUI , l!:t Pll'lll 6U. 1\1. YIU II 1.:0 16 Ml :,:r.:llY -..-"" (, ,1 _ islrJCt." oN ~~t _de(rease 1D fuel ~:~oii~it-,ff( :cl1-SW-1~1--l' ii-c~::r.r,.m::-~1j3· ----'-~ The report cabled to the consumption. "••"" er 11\li 11"" '"" HtH uv. 1m 11 m Mier.. ve ~' -•• -L. • • • • F-1va 01'11 •v. 1 P1tro w 1 ra 12 Ill nt nc 1 1 Au:ucalian said two scientists, . The legislation under con-~~'Fe"!.tn ;~ i: '"fl~n~v ~t ~\'I 1 1> -c~ . 'l'I ~ :f one employed by the. Com-s1deraUon propoees a 13 per-,,, T11Flfl ,,...·~ 1-w 11"' •"-t ,._,.. 0Sfldlw l"' 1 ·• monwealth Scientific a n d cent increue in fuel ecooom)'. ~i~~·::C ~ ,m C!= ~ 1~ :::;: l' ~.f:: 16ri: 2 JSt Industrial Research Organiza-!or all new can u of Sept. i; a1f~ ... lm \S ~=·:fl, ii 1i~ li 11u"' it =· tion (CSffiO ), and the other 1976, and I 25 percent increase ,~·· ~ I~ ~,.., ;~ f l'NI 1~"t nl =:ci1ow ~ 1214-lf: 1~~.I from a university in fue II ~ LrJ. 1 1971 U com Fr""°'• 't'4Ji ""'4 PSN C•r II\~ 11~ •YttOrw .JO m-~ Eastern Australian s t a t e s pared witbt973 modtt can . ~~= 'A Ii W" ;~"t10 .ilt•. ~tt a:=o ,!_ w.-t -1 v. ·: · ' • fnn. Fde n• !'ti OOMr Co '""' 10 W•ltta.nd IN: ,,.._ \411 0.1) spent a month In France "My objection woold be thatl.,.--llili:I. -----.u••••••••-establlshing the groundwork these goals are too modest," for their operatioo and are Hartley said. now on their way back to REDUCING THE Au.Walla s p e e d MUTUAL FUNDS ' · -, , limit by JO mUes an hour can _______ El .... ________ _ ASKED FOR REACTION lo reduce fuel coo.sUmption bY Ntw York .-Fol· NOWa.•01 JH1n flh 1.s1 1.16 A""1t 11:1: .. ~ tite report, J~an Guillpain of about 10 percent, he said. ~":.ii. 1~~.,,;,~ g~ "~ 11:~ It~ ~=''"11 lil.12~ L~:·~d 1.iT VI th\ Moet et Chandon company ••rt could currenily 11ave up u• ~ .., ...... , 1 1nc::m F :·~ 1·•,2 k•MsTo.11 Schu. s,, 1.211 '·"" t E . the heart of the Pund• •• QUO y J,* ' s Cusl Rl 11.ts 19.12 SCUDD•• PDI a pemay m lo 300 000 barrels of fuel per tilt HASO fflt. ick Jd lJU 11.:11 cw• &2 20.1M'l.01 lnrr 111.., 1._77'1, n Cha try afd ''I ' -Dtras .Gl .31cwt1M 121901 a.1enc 1593 · mpagne coun • , day," Hartley said. '"This one J~ i~!EJ1.J'·'1.\1:'1 £t:I ~~ fn ~~ com 10:1s ltrf find it rather funny, in !act move would probably"'*1;,;.;"Jfl",._}.~~~ l•·-· Cus1 s1 u.oi u.1~~•(w 2a~:ff very lwmy. I do not think eliminate the current gasoline Gt'Wlll ... ,, •.57 nc1 Am 1.:# : ~:: ~ 1~ 'J tJ slCUlJTY POI• · there is anything 9erious shorta f bout " IN:llll'I l" t.N ~ G1 11-H e.61 Cw1 SA J,, '01 Eciu1:r l.lf j-tl behind it. And -e\'en if it were 1 lngepor aH 1 one ydeear. ,,.: ,ff •.iJ i~Trt 1fM 1.11 ~r.~~~ tl; ti; L"r~ P tfo .:ll "' . . a pem, puty ~!!;:: ~: 1~·:J 1tn l= F 11°'M \!;,,, ltnkkt J.t:i l.Jt S•L•C.T•D POI: true, we have the mean11 to Bll1ilbnt 11 e c re tar y of A~f'J 1:.., 1:.., "tli1r1 d -~ 1 n !'!'~' G,th '1,•, 1.lt ~"'?. sh,r 1.n 1.1' fl.gilt We have trea'menls " AG Fd ,,15 4.•s I'm "''' '· r.12 ...... ,..,. 6 •-6' ........ a •.i• 1.14 · ~ · ~portation, sakt the ad· :1:;:i.,, ?':fPli2:'1 • 'ff., 1. . t~~ :.11ou;·:' "'1 =..:re ltfll~ mmistration opposed t h e Arnc:S; i li1' ,1 11RouP1 o Ltdr 1s.2l l6.61 s.ntrv P 12.93 1 ... os Douglas Oil Jenl·latlon which "would rm. Am Vl'I •3' I .:16 •nd Cl9b .... 9.11 rwtll S,1t 4.33 SHA•IHLD .... . fiL:M ,-.v Am q!V A.25 .... lo•Dl•I 11.IQ 11.0S ll•rdl 12." ll.72 Gom1f J.ll 3.<1i _ Vide for -substantial detailed AM •x11••ll );:J'con1r1 ,_,. [I°"' I'd s.-t1 s.t1 Enrror s.:. s.' 'u•M1 ~ ~ '·'fl 7.31 I" 1111v 1.• l.2t Flt! Fd 2A 3.90 Plans Facility government regulation in the f.•0111 1.24 1.u t: :·~ LN: c-. •.tt 1~ H•rli.-u 7 ,5 area of motor vehicle fuel Ii:::::., t::: :·i1 ~~~' 10'-U n'!: tl;1J;;c' :i. 1 • " 11 ~~:·,,~ f:: ftl economy .. i:i' I·" ,1fg .. ~run r':u lt·~ IAPL.as1 SN•AllSOfil ... , • A ~rth si in J•t-m"' 90 ,·,1 CID OY 12:n12.22 Aoorc 17jf•1lfll Officials of the Douglas Oil He said this aru should be A~ 1na1n 4'sl 4:" r,...,.. 22.01u.1 M1.111.111 1~.~, 1A.31 1nc:om 11, 11:61 , Arn 111 ... 1 A '6 A.'6 "l~HCIAI. L.O•r. Alli l11Yftt I. t.U Company of California have left ltargely to the forces~ the ~i~' , l'.Ti IJ: '",.~11 c•v~i17 317 ~~ ~u• 11-t·~~ t.f~ l~. '}l:n 'f::f 1t.:j b k ~·"' I he ..1 mar et. A. F 11 1n11 •.211 "'° •fld c1ett t.ti 10.ts ••GMA ,u .. oa1 ro ·enr, • ., ........ oranew au--• 1 "'" ne !ISJ l"L111r.rn 10.11111.02 CtoShr 111771 art r ll't t be I •~ FOR-·-•• he 'd In ~' j·l7 A.11 Vt<1t j·73 :1'J Luttwl In t,MlO.Jf Inv 10.0'Z!O:ts qu en ac I y 0 oca~ ~---. 11111 ' flCI lnY ,JS t.tJ ~si'llT v. I ."2 ll.lt MAIHtA ,UMOI: Tr11 1:.1 1-15 on a 31Ai acre plot at the April 1----.t of -"lf 101 '"~••TO•• Cio111 JM in Vt<1tur 1.u t .01 •ro1, -_. .. -· ,..,.,. ncom 1 1 '° 01, : lnc:om I~ 9 ~ Smith e , :w t J.l north~ast comer of Paulartno car sales were small cars, as ='':.n 1f1* 1J]: Gr~ ~~ !·~{ J:~ :~:S:-1'.'.i'. ~'.:t t1t ~ ~F \1'.~ l~: and Airways Avenues in C.Ollta compared wttl) 34 percedt the ~"'...t; F ~ :t •' r, 1!Milkul~ pl' r'·'r' =~ .. Gld l.IO 1.IO ~~.' lnY 7.97 1.62 M ber II • · 111 I/' (i 1 • w nv G S.97 •·.U esa. year ore. U•MTDN• FOil GROUP·' "'"'" 1.61 0.41 SOvr In to.n J.1 .15 • 100 F"nd 10 IS • 111(fp I' 1.JS f,05 SOKlr• 4.60 5 CM llr'~~~!:~!:!:~~~~ ............ -::-::-:~-::""il = ~ 4 .st ''1 101 Fnd 1·11 10.U MIH F ll.:I012.:t71&P lnO 419 .:it ~~~ ru· l .. 7·"' Cfllyfn /7~ l.11 MASS PNC.Li TAT• •No'o•P· •• th 11~,~~ lktl l'OU 'J:.lllS '·" 4,17 M 0 ll,•2 1•.67 PrDQrt J,,D .'.fS _ , 0 .. !\' >"•> 6.1• U Fund .s.ss ,'·.,· MIT 10.lfll.13 Com Fd X4.4' ._jf 1 0 0 "1 I' · 4.21 FcrnH · MIG 12.10 11.• Ol'l"ltll xA.N 5 - e1vroc '" 1 · o•o 1'1 MFO 12.591:1.16 SI f r Gr '-" 4.si t"''k !Ir i"1 s t,l OROUP1 MCO ll.«11' 64 SI Fr Inc 9 .• 9.21 e::"on 111 1i·n lg n = ,f·r' ,~ .. ::::, tv' tl~ 1l~ 1~-..A~:u' p':t.'! ll..auf!.L-1 ·~r I( 11 17 111 I' Miu.ti 1'.56 i l6 Mid Am J.1$ S.a:I Am Ind 2.73 21i ~ 11111 g•r Shr i oo i3~ f Slltert 10,• I · 1' Monv Fd '·;f 10.'2 Auo fd \ II 1·11 Stf_,__ II s~~n # i~ 1:'.~ ~f.{f.\{1M I IS I f4 ~_flJ A~i I~ 2S \~U s~m.' •01 '·J'DJi" ~ l!lr!IW!I 311 f .. OIOU1'1 •\rl' -):"d 7.4' l .t6 61l1ne I') !'!' ORDER . •,uLLOCI( ' ' CNTC 1"3 j tl Mt!' Grt "°" A.21 C•~ll r r LABELS UliO~· Gwtll Sr 7.11 "•.) Mll()m wl A.SJ 4,H Sloct l lull Fd l!.!2 U.'9 l'r lllCl'll 1.'5 ':i• MuOm 111 I • ., ':ll ''' CJ•DUPi r r-tn "d 11•t'l" U?.Gv s 1o co1~~ \lu1 5hra 14.5.3\4 Grwth SM 1.21 YOURS TODAY! Penonaliled • Stylish • Effldent Order For YourMlf or a friend· Mey be used on 1nv1lop11 11 return 1ddrn1 l1.b1IJ. Al10 · v1ry handy 11 id1ntlflc1tion libels for m.,lrin9 personal it•mt 1uch 11 Moks. .r-_cotds, tho+os, etc. Lel:telt stick on 91111 •nd m•y • u11d • tor m1rlrh19 home c1nn•d focd 1t1ms. AU l•btls 1r1 priMM with 1tyli1h V09u1 typo on lino quelily whlt0< 9umm•d paper. · . r ------------1 · ~ 'Ill .;. .i. ..... dip J ....... , .• ttl • ,., ... ,.,.,.. l.1•1 DIY.., P.O....... I 1 ClKle --..c.w. ,... 4 I i I . I I I L----~~L~!-~~J!~~--J 01~ Sl'lr 3' ~ :,1 1,•1111ti. '11 S.11 M\111 Tra I.ti l.'1 IN:em 1.00 1.n ",•,tw.1 • n 111.M •"•C•• '-A.13 N•f 1111111 t.M •.24 llmmrt Its 1.12 Vffl 10"'611tr0 I ot~ 4. 1•• MAT 1• C"Dl1 Tecrtnl S:a. ,.., !G'ri; '·" ,:u :~'m'3t'~ 11.LS I '.1• 811-nc L62 f.4 Syncre f ... ,, .;., -, ... ,!.3' 10. " .,•.ti _,, Bond ,, '·" $.:M TMll: Ap If, I" "" 'rln .(1<1 11 , " Ol\lldn 3.61 J,ts TtrnDf G J' '31 ~,.'l:'fMo11.10 1J.22 oc~ 1 • 1 .,,.., .S1k s.ts 6..50 Tower c j • ·uios, l"'HC 7~ '·'' lncorn 4.SI 1·01 T"r111 Cto 1,16 1:17 10 '3 ncfua Ir 10' 61 I~ tt Stock Sr 6,.jl .01 T~ EQ I·" 10.25 'd _.,_-,, ll:~ Piiot 1:0. 1'14 M~"*·· ~ .. ~ 6.til ~II COH 1 .JI lf.31 'wlfil 11r ~·ij 1.J1 ~·B-;· ,. Jl& 'i.•1 ecw1"' I "1''" 20th c 1· tli t: ,_ o'u ,.•.11~ ii•''' -... .6111.Jl Un.m.ct t.i.J." S-J · · · ll 1'•11JNU= I• Vtlflfril!' lJ11 J·n AlllX F-•r;-34 s IM Nl!A Ml fis lil ... '••Vic .,,, ~.U~ . e1t l'n-1 7,•2 ~·$~ ~tM 1)1 '-ts l'L "Mta1 7 n GW'F-l~ 10:t£ '!:~ ~ 1~1t 1l:Y 1l:# ~11!:' i· 'tii ,.,.., ~ ir1 t·r, or111 Ind 1!'·t1•r·u,.. ... ,, il.111 .... ~,. •• •02 llTr 'ii ~:,,. 1:~ 2111r11..ToJ '-21 'n ~f;"~i. l~:;I ltl: uiiifiD 1) ii» C. ,11 1l:J: ,t,g ~ 3.•1 "J ,,. N.,I lvtr ::• 1s.• .Aceum 6.IJ t'.J C IAL. ' Grwltl f·3' 1'.tt m °' j•03 Ind '" 1,ft 1'.a ' ' ~ n •• "' •• '~',. 1.n1o.'.lf ion-t.41 lt,,. •;:rt '·" t .tt M I .4111.61 COflt Ille ,04 t . l'~IV 1_-:; 1~: I 'I' t·~ 1..; ·!-1·~1 li.J? k$i "t'~ .N:'"" Orwtll ,,,73 -.ail .. _ .:W ~ A m •.51 to,4J \11 a f 1 ~IKOl'n 9.7' 10.MI ...,... ... l ·!J l•J# FllCI• I.II 1:..W J] :JI 11.ff ' ~~11:i1 1U 1~.:r~·· :".J~ 1""' o c: Tr: t.,; ,t,1 ~1L11t .. \1W J&s~ •• T TM :-I .ff 1 -1.~ Det•mt 1.:n 7.to V•I Lflt •It lH 1 Ill l,l! ''~ PIUI llY ,,,, J,1t VII !flt i"I 4 rt t I. I 1.01 '·!lt ::1_ /A°'' '·i ~:111 P~ ~ A.ti S.Jt t n Gtll i+,j .:n f'OIT\P or l:~ l:~ ~"' i·1s l:!f ~:n,. ~ i~ l:a v"'..t!-~ 2:,., i.ts ~omo r.i '·7{ l·l) In lnwu #.11«1.n Pllllt '"" I" I " s.U.D Rl1 s= • ~:h rg 1~:c: ~ J~~ 1t1t ~l,t~,. ,:~ :~ ~r ;:: ··r. ?:ti· ~="\..., :i1t11' "; ~IC i·t, .it.1 ";r;.••• ~Di Sl)l'Ci t-" '·!l!i ~=t~ }1'f 1'.u r• ~£~~. ~::, ~i 1t1:g 1!:., ~:;:::°" }ti 1:'1 =i,'c Jt4-0. ]qi ~i,j 17' 1 ~IMCI ,)t t.:Jt Vtt+td I .11• •9' ~~ .J 'It!' ~= x i:il .. ~ p;•M:\·a~.~ IUS ::~':It °' :.~ ;.:: do ·~ ••VIS .. otT~"7' Orwll\ ll, ... !'t.6t W11n ,rv l0.-1 11.llO WAfl: ' • 181 Om 6.lt 1 ~ l"tl 1 ... 11t:"9 Wfl(t tQ Jt.lt 10,11 O:!J.•f1 , I! t1111 J,pJtt:' ~{1 ,.;, ,.,.. ,~.,. t.I} ~;; ::~u:1~TOM t;:i;: ~ {;; ~:n ~·· 1'',~10'.~ ~l'l\ltdlot i~ :!; r~I°' 't:~,:11 _, Ml'"·" !;r,.:. l,~!I~ .;:::/.,, '°·'"'" "-'°'i":I\ fl.ow:t-f'o , 1 ~,. v., P•Y •·lJ ,,,.. •on&-.. • Tdwllv ij l'lflmt'1 ,.,,. ti If 1"" f" A, UO l'tTND11 '"°"' I li· ,,__. II Jll.-Jt'6' I I 1 Ctn-11,H 11.•1 ~ 1 , l 1' "''"""' •1:,. · ?""1!t too ' 11 11..iiy 1.m 1.1s w.lftli , .n !!!.'!!" 1•~11.111 "'"""' '·°' ,,,., °"' -,,~,""' Wfnlbr , ,n -~1~:, 1:: ~:n ~ "1111 tt ... ~fl IN: .::1~:ll ~GI' · ~ lY j)O !.-J t"t v~ ,1-~ ~ 1:,ft l!,:i ...... lnfJI ti tfj.Ji ~'" , ·~ 'fl ,.,... l'Ufld t•l •·• ~It ~ f,.11 !'., _ tlf'fltt •~ ......................................................... ..:1•~11t• ~~ f ,11 ,,II JP Owtl'I M f.OI v-•" t 1•1111,., o; ..... .cl!Yl "''Tfl'I .. J•"v' r11 '&.•I II " .... ._. ,. f" 1--• '"""y•!I• .. "· ' t • 2 DAil V PILCl I s i\ etr Dire t•tt>t• 1101,1,·ard r . AJJen. has _____ ,()ee11 electe t the board of dircttors of the Irvine Co1npany. He s uccei!ds retiring chfil_rman N_. Loyall ?11c:· Laren. He has been an executive with South- ern Califor.n.ia ----Edis.on Company, and is a sen- ior vice president.._ w rpo1·ate Profits Up In Quarter WASHINGTON (UP!J Corpo_rate profits made their biggest jump in· .h i s t o r y between J anuary and March, the Commerce Department said Thursday. The rise in dollar terms was Uie bigg~ qtUlrterly increase On record whether measured on a before-lax or after-tax Frld"'J , June: 22., 1973 ' Dollar On It's Wav .. Downward LONDON I UPI I The dollar lnched lower on in· tl'ruationnl curreJlC)' markets Thursda~'. losi ng 1nost of the i;n1:itJ gains h chal kl'<i up \Ved· ilcsday. In .:iingapore. "' h 1 c: h withd rew its .suppor·t or the U.S. dollar on \\'edncsday, the A1nerll~a11 currencv was worth 2.375 Singapore d011ars Thurs- day, a de facto revaluation of the Singapore dollar or 6.4 per- cent. Thursday the goYern· mtnl -of-f\1a4'-Y---j-o i n._e._d_ Singapore in withdra11ting its support for the dollar. DEALERS S A L 0 the A1ncrican currency might be stabilizing in value after two "'eeks of declines. but the dollar o pen e d fraclinna lly lower Thursday in London, Zurich, Amsterdam, H o n g Kong and Singapore. In Kua l2 Lu mpur. t he foreigu excliang~e~ maf\'et was suspended while government officials debated whether to follow Singapore's ·lead and floa t the Mala ysian dollar. The Singapore d o 11 a r . floated Wednesday , mo vie d sharpl y upward Thu r s d a y against th e U.S .• currency. meaning the A1nerican doll ar lost value. The price was 2.41 ,Singapore dollars, compared with 2.53 at the time or the Wednesday announcemen t. IN EUROPE the dollar dropped .23 percent i n Amsterdam, bu}'ing 2 . 7 I 4 guilders cc;mpared with 2.7213 at Wednesday's close. The Frankfurt market waS clos~d for a national holiday. The dollar also dropped in .. , .Jovial Ag••eement SoViet ~·Iinister o~ Foreign Trade Nikolai S. Pato- Lic:hev (left) shares a laugh with Treasury ~ecrctary George Shultz ·atfer pair s igned an incon1e tax treaty Q.e!~ve_cn_lhe U.S. and So\~et. Union \Vednes- da y. 'fhe treaty will eli1n inate tax discrimination and encourage trade between the two countries. Co11sumer Prices Up Again h1 May \VASHlNGTON (AP) lllghc r costs for food, clothing and gasoline pushed consumer . prices Up sharply again last month. the govern ni c n t reported Thursday . The in· crease was at a slightly slo we r rate than in April. however. Zurich, buying 3.049 Swiss TllE LABOR Department's fra ncs compared with 3.062 Bureau of Labor Stalistics basis, e xceeding even the pro-Wcdnesda)· n•'ght · reported the rise in the cost of fit spurt in the fll'St qua· rter of I • -d •-B .. h d n IA.In OD 111~ r1t1s poun living in ti-1a:Y at six-tenths of 1971, .when the econo my was eel $2 575 r · II reboilnd irig from ;he effects of open at · • ract1ona Y one percent. This works out to n1ore expensive than Wed-a n annual rate Of 7.2 percent, '3 strike against General nesday's $2.57375 closing pri ce. down from the 8.4 percent an-\ Motors. 'Hi g li Court Gold 's price was unchanged nual rate of increase that \Va s ir---1-~~-department-----updated n-arty tra-dlng 011 tlie"'tiig 1Jrojcctcd In April:--- fi gures it issued last month in 1 ~ d b 11· k b · Tells ' • ~n on u ton mar et, UI 1t In a separate repo rt, the a preliminary estimate of firs! II · z · h rose an ounce 1n uric .to bureau said the pu, rchasing uarter rofits. 1120 G J -"""''-"''-'"-"""'------.....! an ounce. o d rose power of v.·orkers declin ed liisl . sligti'try-m-Hong Kon•~. ----:month-bt..'cause of price in-e J:Jl~ Pr~~ide11t SAN FRANCISCO IAP) Vernon L. Sturgeon was re- elected president of t-h r GaWon\ia Public U t j· I i t i C s Commission Wedne9day for the 1973-74 fiscal year. · Re had been rea ppointed lo a ·full si,x-year term on the PUC by Gov. Ronald Reagan earlier this year. Sturgeon wa~ I he gov.-nor's legislative secreta'ry~ien he Was named to the commission in August of 1969 to fill out an unexpired term. ' e Co11n11odil le• LOS •ANGELES (AP) SUperiof Court Judge John l.. Cole has backed a Ca lifornia Department or Corporations ruling· that co mmodity options are securities and therefore are subject to CalifOmia securities laws. Cole's Tl,lling marks the fir st decision by a Californi:l court on the nature or l'Ommodity options. It was issued Wed· nesday in a suit filed by the state agajnst Puts and Calls Inc. of suburban Sherman Oaks. The firm currently is being reorganiz'->d under the Bankruptcy Act. e IB/H Ca1c WASHI NGTON (AP J -The Justice Departm ent is seeking a contempt of cuurt citation against mr.f Corp .. asserting the ~nt computer firm has d e I a y e d producing J .200 documents the gO\'Crnmcnt seeks in prosecut ing a four· year-old antit rust c11sc against !BM. But the company said late \Vednesday it too \I/as S('<'king: the contempt of court citation to clear up questions about the right of the government to see tbc documents. Local or ()v1rse11 Oellv"'f • P1111111 Fer Free lrtefllrl • Ele ctricity Taxed in LA Wednesda)· By United Press lntetnat(onal LoS Angeles used more elec- tricity \Vednesday than any other June day in history. kee ping homes and bui.ldings cool in 106-degree weat her. The ci ty's ·electrica l co1n- pany withst()(Xf the test, but officials worried about meet'· ing future energy needs. Demand on the Southern California Edison Co. for elec· trical power set a record at 3 p.m. when the system reached 9.915 million kilo\vatts. The previous record \\"3S 9.815 mil- lion , set last July 3l, the com- pany said . The Los Angeles Deix1rtment of \Vatcr and· Po\ver said the city used more electricity than on any June day in history. A spokesman for Edison said the company expected to meet J>O"'er den1ands ln the coming S('3SOn o f high air-conditioner use. barring any un foreseen problems, but that po\ver shortages \11ill occur by 1975 or 1976 unless lhe company is al1011·ed to build ne\v generat- ing facilities. - Airli1ie .4sks Far e Hike YORK (AP) Arn crican Airlines. Inc., the second biggest domestic car- rier. said WednesdRy lt would apply for a fare increase bC'<.'ause it has suffe red steep losses thi s ye<ir. An A1nerlca n sPokesman s.ild the &pplication to the Civil Aerona utics Board would represent the fi rst request by nn airline this vcar for a domestic fare booSt. The CAB hus asked the Cost or Living Wuncll to , exempt hlgher peak·season charges on in- ternational rar s from the tempora ry price frce~e. creases. Food agJ u accounted for a big rise in the cost of living, increasing nine-tenths of I percent in May to a level 14.5 percent above a yea r ago. On a seasonally adjusted basis, grocery prices rose I.I percent in May, off from the 1.3 per- cent jump the previous month and a record 3 percent boost in ~1arch. THE OVER-ALL. food index . Yl'hich includes food purchased in grocery stores a n d restaurants. jumped I.I per- cent in May seasonally <id· justed . This followed incre:lscs of l.4 percent in April and 2.4 percent in f\1.arch. However. the bureau said meat prices dropped one-tenth of I percent unadju s ted . reflecting in part.the effects of the ceiling on meat prices ordered by the administration in ~·larch . TllE CONSID.IER pr i cc report follo"'•cd a gloon1y report from 1he Agriculture Dcpart1nent earlier in lhe ·week predic ting food prices \viii !lverage 12 percent higher this yea r despite the 60.day price freeze and President Nixon 's promise of new Phase 4 controls. The effects of the OO-ch1y price frefie will not begin to show in the consun1e:- price report until Jul y's report in June prices. The total consumer price in· dex. including food. other goods. and services, increased Distrih11tor Opens Sl1 o p 111 Irvine The Curley-Bates Con1pany hns opened lts new office and \\1Rre bouse fa cility in the Jr vinc Ind ustrial Complex. an• nounccd George S h e I d o n , Curl ey-Bates president. T h e 2 7 . 0 o O·sciua rc-foot \\·arehousc at 1682 Ke11crlng Street, will provide improYed service for ils Southern Callfornia and Southwestern United States c u s 1 om c r s , Sheldon said, The firm dls1ributcfi a wide r1111~c or spo rting good s, in- cluding TilleisL golf balls, ~fun!\ingwear brnnd wcnring Apparel, Tiger Athleiie Shoes Hnd IV Leisure brand tennis ltern s. Curley-Bates was formed tn 1923 as a reg ional distributor and hHs su~quenlly ex- panded both nationally and in- ltrnlttlonall y. Ad cl i t Ion a 1 pjrsonnt:I have been employed lo hand1e the increase In volume ::it the-ne-w Irvine plant. Bay Area's Ex pe1i si1·e . SAN FRANCISCO (AP! -The San r·ra ncisco Bay area is the most expensive SPol in the continental Unitl'd Slates for a wo1·k· ing man 1.0 support hi!I family. the gov crnn1cnt says. F'cdcral Bureau of Labor Stotlstlcs released Wednesday .s ~ o w a "typical'' yearly budget for ::i low-paid worker and hls family cosl $8,201 here, <:ompared to a national average of $7,386. Only Anchor11gc and lloooluJu h@d higher costs. a t lll,096 and 19,118 respe<:· tlvoly, Complete New York Stock List No •• •• NE '" • N' " N• "' •• "' " " • • • HA HA N "' N • N NO NN " " No .. NO No " .. N NO "' N ~ " • " • N "' " .. '" • • 0 0 -.. • • p • • • • ' • • • ' ' • • • ' • ' ' • • ' • ' ' • •• ' ' ' ' p ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ; ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • # Thursday's Closi~g Prices-Complete New York Stoc}c Exchange List Dow Jones Index • Falis~ ·11 Points NEW YORK (AP}-Stock market prices drifted rather sharply lower Thursday in very slhw trading that sa w most investors yawning on t.he sidelines. Analysts sai d sellers were having trouble fi nd- ing buyers, with the resul t !.hat prices were falling under their own weight. With the temporary susfension of the public \Vatergate hearings, some o the edge has been taken off Investor co11cern in this area, brokers· said. --llowcvet,_woxries over the sagging dollar and lnllaUon still abound, they added. •• Junt , l97J O.AJLY\PILOT Finanoo (Briefs '" .. • • ' . - .J • • • ' { . • . . ,, .. ' . MONTH •LUS 1'llt &. LICINSl . , rt ta• & )lcense is _ C sh pr.1ct 1n . ,. . h gooodowncisbortrade. : A ·811 percentage rate 1s for 48 ~°"tit:· rred pmt prk't ill $4f14.1 • DD ':' 1~· ...... ~ ro''ed credit,, · -t i .'tV7" • vn . JT~S OF.FIC'.LAL .. Qrani81 County's .Jeadi°' Buick . Opel; dealer, ~ . in ,19721 . ' , ., ~· } ALL GAIS SUIJICT TO PllOl IALI ~· I I ,. • '73 IUICK liGAL 2 Dr. Ht. (27SGIU ) '72 IUICK llVllRA 2 Dr. Ht. (S0'2FELJ '72 IUICK llVllRA 2 Dr. Ht {538FEN) '72 IUICK SKYLARK 2 Dr. Ht (J48ELG) '72 IUICK LI SAHi 2 Or. Ht (629EPF) '7-1 IUICK ILICRA 2 Or Ht {699DDQ} '71 IUICK CENTURION · Convert. (6SIFBO) '71 IUICK SKYLARK '4 Or Ht (391CWQ ) '71 IUICK SKYLARK 2 Dr Ht 1738CX B) '70 IUICK llVlllA 2 O~. Ht C520BEH ) '69 BUICK LI SAHi -.f Or. Ht {XYM888) '69. IUICK LI SAHi 4 Or. Ht (9-41 FVZ) '69 IUICK LI SAHi 2 Or Ht (YRX928l '69 8UICK SKTLAIK Wt Ht (XTL250) '61 11/ICK ILICTIA .A Or HT IZXK827) '61 IUICK ILICTIA 1 Dr· Ht {ZTM762) '67 BUICK SPECIAL A door («17BQC) '66·.IUICK llVlllA 2 Door (RPR242) '71 COUGAI Xl7 (302 OTO) '72.JAVILIN (627FBH) '71 Pl TMOUTH DUSTll (372EAB) '70 CA!llLLAC ELDORADO (!J80LCl '70 T·lllD (700BUll '70 MllCUIT 'Marquis Wag, (8"5B RI ) ALL PllCIULUI TAX & LtCINSI ' ·1 ,, • .. • . . • , --·-· -'70 MllCUIT COUGAI (152AGWJ '70 JAVELIN SST (IUOAEG) '70 DODOI CORONET (190ER.S) '70 HINTIAC CATALINA (63.SASO) '6'0LDS 91 luxury·Md•n (816EIU l '69 IMPIRIAl LllAlON (YPSS62) '6f CADILLAC (Ol'!Vtrt. (XYEOO) '6' HINTIAC FllllllD . <•AFW) '69CAMAlO (YY J137 ) '6' MllCUIY f!IAIQUIS A Dr. (XXE121 ) 'tf MUCUIT COUGAR. {ZSG02J ) • '69 MllCUIT WAGON (Y..Y J'482 l '69 l'OHllAC PllllllD Convert (522CTH) '61 OLDS CUTLASS (YCU816) '61 T·lllD · 'U PONTIAC GTO (UZX610} '61 OLDS CUTlASS {WIC041 l '72 DODGI CHAILUNGll· (185FF H) 72 OPEL lALL Tl (016FF I) 71 JACIUAI V12 (599~1C ) '71 CllCKIT (063EAG) '71 TOYOTA MAIK 11 (n7EAD) 71 PINTO (78JELL) ' '6' CHIV. V. TON Pickup Truck . PllCIS IPFICTIVI THIU JUHi 25, 73 1 L ·~ ' • / ' " •, • --.... ~--- Arts I Dining Out Enteftainment • ' """-·---!"' , ... DAI LY PILOT %5 Friday, Junt 22, 1973 ~1 • . ' Writer ~ong Proves ., __ _ , f ' ... ' . "-;-, - 'p,J TEl\RY. COVILLE :&f D•llY '"" SWIH • Harlan }e:;mgs has ai.ways considered himsell more of a song writer, not so much a singer. "I'm a writer first, an enlertainer sec- cond," says the 21-year-old Ne\v York transplant. "I'm just learning. I don 't kno\V ho\v \\'ell 26-year-olds relate to a 21- ycar-old ~inger." They apparently relate quite \rel\, judging by his growing success at. the AUey \Vest in Newport Beach. The club recently gave JeMings a contract for the full summer, to play Thursday through _ Sunday evenings. He's competing in ia tough nightclub area whe1e several good local singeri have become well-established. Jennings plays to the ~e young Orange Coast crowd as Kurt Steinbeck., J .J. l\.1ack and other popular performers, but he docs it v.'ith a stightly different style and a New York accent. • ''Some people think l'rq a little Dylan, or Cat Stephens or Elton Jotin. People are so related to radio-"· they can't- distinguish a new style, so they identify 1\·ith their favorites. ·. I HARLAN JENNINGS: "I ALWAY$-FI Ei:-I'M"POURINO OUT EMOTION .. :•--'-" . . ,, . • Miria1n Shelton Displays Grace ful Wood Carvings \'Voods from walnut-to the exotic cocabola are favorite media of Corona del h'lar sculptor ltliriam Shelton. Twelve of her carved wooden figures are on display through li1on· day at the Laguna Beach Art Museum, open 11:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily free or charge. l\1rs. Shelton also works in bronze and stone. Plump children with pets, mothers and children, and .carved flower designs she calls 11toten1s" are Mrs. Shelton's recurrent themes. Some of these themes are seen in these photographs . taken at the show by Daily Pilot photographer Lee Payne . Hii as "l'n1 trying to· offer something a little bit different than J .J. or Kurt. These are the two heavyweights J'm up against. "I always feel I'm pouring out music ~nd emotion, a little more of me. I try to play the favorite songs a little different." \Vhile most local singers feature more of a "pop ruck" sound Uke •·erackl.in' Rosie," Jennings rearranges the songs to fit his voice. carrying the notes a little , tcnger, projecting more of ·lr· ghostly echo. But he can bang out some fast tunes on his guitar ,and has •achieved the common mark of success -people danci11g in the aisles, even at the Alley West. Jennings bas been writing so11gs (none you would Tecognizc) since , he 1vas 17. "'Orking for a New York, publishing house, Edfroi H. Moss. . The house was good on stage music, but \Vas · new to the JJOPUlar ·field, Jennings says , so he didn 't feel his music v.11s really pushed enough. He also made a few singing ap.. pearances -for low money -at such spots ..es The Bitter End and The Gas Light in Village West. Less than a yea r •ago he chucked his • ' . . ·~ • school IQueensborough College)l:_end his joO (on a leave of abeellCQ ' ~· isit friends m t..agmia BeacH. ....~~ 1 , "l liked it so I stayed." If this myjC)gig doesn't work out I'll go to UCJ!~)b the fall." -?-.:· Jennings begins each night at N .Alley 'Vest in semi-obscurity. do\\'ll ·in• wine cellar; a basement most cuswmen don 't even realize exists. ~ He likes the cozy atmospherEf of it, but llbcut 10:30 or 11,'when the dinDe'r crowd drifts a\vay, he moves upstair&.to biuer ~ ,.-quarters. ..... "I ahvay.,... thought l ".Was a decent ~inger1 but I nevec felt I cou14 do thil," he says. with unfeigned ~ty. "I never depended oo my voice :or 1gu)tar for • a living, but no1v the 'IYf.*°I 'Ii' taking a back seat. ;: • •":'' . • ~·· _ "I like this i~ of trj.ling to mak'e it on .my -0,wn, 2,000..mil~ away fr<mt'9nyt:h.ing that's ra:m:.iliar~·~·.only obstlcle is how mllCh·.of myslll can I jldt into a song. How creative earl I ·be before I l05e an audience. '"It's an entertainer's fault if he can't bring the audience around. An audience is a collage of personalities iand it takes a \r::t of practice to bring yourself across." ~ ' ; ' ' . \ I • . ( I . . ' , . \ " JoAU.y PILOT FtldlJ, Jun~ 22, )q73 What t o Do, Whe r e t o Go • Picture _Your Family at KMPC A.ir Show in Van Nu ys . . JUNE 30 ·JULY I AlR SHOW -Radio Station ~1PC "'iii celebrate its 14th anniversary of Alrwat.ch news and traffic reporting at Van Nuys Airport. The public is invited to attend and ... view ex· tensive displays of helicopters, freeway mobile units and Lbe .. twin-engine Beech Baron. Jn addition, K~1PC personnel will take free Polaroid color pictures or all visitors posing with KMPC personalities. THROUGH JUNE 30 SAN DIEGO STAGE -"The Gingerbr~ad Lady," a play by Neil Simon wHtDe presented Friday and Saturday only at R'.30 p.m. in the Mission Playhouse, 3960 Mason Street in Old Town, Call 295-6453 for reservations. "Forty Carats" will be presented in t~e Coronado Playhouse, 1775 Strand Way, Coronado at 8:30 p.m., Friday, Saturday and Sunday. For reservations, call 435-4856. · JULY 1 ·11 SENIOR OL ~tPICS -441.h am1ua"1 event takes place at lhe Los Angeles Coliseum and various . college campuses. Events include decath1oo, fencing, wrestling. Competition apcn to all men and women 25 and over, Entry fees $5 first event, $3 · each additional event. Infoiinatlon, (213) WE S.5548. . . JULY 3 Ftut -"Summer of '4.2" shown in the Humanities Hall, room 178 at 8 p.m. F'ri~ay, Adm.is.lion, students, 7S cents and olhcrS, $1. See "Billy J ack" at 8 p.m. in room 161, Human- ities Hall. "Klute" wiU be shown Friday, July 20, at 8 p.m. in room 161, lfumanities Hall . ) JULY3·8 ANTIQUE SALE -Annual Queen Mary antiques sales in the Grand Salon, Queen f\.1ary, Long Beach, ~·IO p.m. and noon.& p.m. Sunday. Adults , $2 and children under 12, free. JULY 3 ·AUGUST 25 MUSICAL -"Gigi" presented at the Dorothy Chandler Pav- ilion at 8:30 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 2:30 n\atinees Wed- nesdays and Saturdays. Tickets, $2.25-11. Lerner and Lowe stage and movie musical classi.c. Stars Agnes Moorehead. THROUGH JULY .J HORSE SHOW -Southern C3lifornla Exposition pr~ents the world's largest national horse show every day in the arena of San Diego County Fairgrounds in Del Mar. Ope,n daily at 9 a.m. Also at the Exposition are flower shows, var- iety shows, art exhibits, hobby show, gem and mineral show, Armed Forces displays, commerCiaJ exhibits and a carnival. All capped by a 4th or 'July fireworks spectacular. .. JULY l ' FIREWORKS 1'ommy -\Valkers "Glorious Old Fashion Firewor ks Spectacular" takes plat:~ Wednesday with pageant beginning at 7:30 p.m. and 2~ h<>9r presentation. Advance tickets are $2.50 and $4.50 wifh c~.ildren under three fr~. JULY 5 • t ANTIQUE SALl~ -Monte Carlo R09fll, Newporter Inn. DorQthy Emerson presents American, English, European'and Oriental antiques and art. Hours: 1 p.m.-10 p.m. daily, noon· 6 p.m. Sunday. JULY I J\IUSIC FESTJV AL -Pomona COiiege opens its fifth season of summer concerts at 8: 15 p.m, in Bridges Hall of Music, near 4th and College in Claremont. Single ticket prices are $3.50, $2.50 and $1 .50. For reservations or information phooe (714) 626-8511. JULY 1 FESTIVAL OF NATIONS -Dance Theater of Orange County presents its performance at 8 p.m. in the Outdoor Theater in Pearson Park, Lemon and Cypress, Anaheim. Tickets, $1.50 for adults, 75 cents for children under 12. THOUGH JULY 8 . COMEDY -carol Burnett and Rock Hudson star in com·· ' edy "I Do! I Do!" al lhe 11untington Harlfor(l T6C8(re.L.Oi Angeles. Tickets, $4.00-10. JULY 10-1Z· 14 ~ SUMMER FESTIVAL -Hollywood Bowl S~mcr Fcstiv I '73 tn kes placa. in the J~oliywood Bow1:··TUeSt1ay. Thursda and Saturday at 8:30 p.in. Eugene Ormrindy conducting Beethoven'$ 8th and 9th Symphony. 'fickets, $1·8.50. . JULY13 ·lti STALLION .SHOW -"The Womlerful World or Horses, Fea· luring the R0)·al Lipitian Stallion Show " will be at the Anaheim Convention Center July J3--15. Tickets at usual agencies. • THROUGH JULY '15 "FRANTIC FORTIES" -Peter Nichols' "Forget·me-not Lane" will be presented by the Center Theatre Group at the Mar_k Taper Forum Music Center. This West Coast pre- miere is a vibrant comic chronicle of life from boyhood-to:- maturity in a look at the-" good old days." Tickets are f3 .50 tq $8 with $2.50 for students with J.Q. rt>quired. Tuesday through Sunday with no Monday performance. THROUGH AUG. 18 SHAKESPEARE -Comedy "Two Genttemen fr9m Verona" being presented in the Ahmanson Theatre, Music Center, Los Angeles. 'l'ickets, $2-9,50. 8:30 p.m. "'lond ay through Sun- day with maUnees at 2:30 Wednesday ~and Saturday. ' ,, •Kingpin of .the Coast~ Lag u11,a Moulton's Siage Sc hedule Outshines Play liouse Torchbearers" was just plain hilarious. After a couple seasons of reaching for the star!, com- munity theaters 3.long the Orange Coast settled down sorriewhat for the 1972-73 cam- paign, presenting an evenJ.Y, Intermission I!: AMONG THE comJDunity theaters, however, Laguna's quality was by far the most consistent. Choosing a stand- out for the season among such gems as ·"Summer and Smoke," "How the Other Half Loves," "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" and "The Ef- fects of Gamma Rays on Man- in·the-Moon Marigolds" would be a Solomonic task: All were superb, while the opening and closing shows, "Forty Carats" and "Butterflies Are Free," a1so were very well presented. • balanced -U not overly anr bilious -diet of stage fare which included an impressive number of new shows in their Orange County premieres. Tom Titus Of the 29 pi:_ o duct tons '-------------------.J mounted by the haH dozen • local playOOuses {WMtminster = =~.!ct-.. ~tt!r"i: sat out the season while its · new theater-was being built ) Red Hot Lovers" -staging nearly half of them, 13 to be each before they were redone In Laguna and Costa Mesa, exact, were being seen for, the-~ively. • first time by ~~Y au. A •.... f back t~back And ·~ th end of ..,.. 0 • ~ diences. w11e sou dramas hi""'lighted the season t!>e county -Laguna and San •" Clemente _ accounted for at the Costa Mesa Civic ""e of",-se 13 new~m•~.,, .,, 'PlQbouse. Following a n am· ·r· "~ ,_ ~" bfiloUi staging of ''The (The Laguna M~u ~to n AndersonvWe TriaJ,"). th e Playhouse, by ~ crilical Mesa players put together a Yardstick. was _Y!t lngpin of higlily impresSive production the coastal seiaon: Its s -of "The Gtllgerbread .Lady," show schedule ·-rkled With a -~ Neil Simon's only "flop" which high gloss <>(, fessionalbm ,_,__ f h , as managin(!. director Hap O';'Ull-IC most o t ~ season s Graham -tguest directors tried -and ~rue material. . Richard.(':AnderseD; Bertram ' The ll'Vlne C om_ m u n 1.t y Tan:nrelf'and Warren Deacon ~Theater reversed its red·ink cornbhifd their resources to oourse during 1972--73, led by !X'esint ·the best S e a1so n popular stagings of "Dear Lliguna audiences have en-Fri~s" and "The Ninety ·0 ed 'il'irilllJ ;.e.rt..~•,J,t'I. , Day;1 Mistres.s.'• while the J y suspense drama ' ' T h e THE SAN Clem~nte Com-Desperate Hours" proved the Ji:lunity ~. which led the seasOn's artistic success With premiere li!t'With'fiVe, started · smaller, but appreciative, its .season ln high gear but audiences. · downshilled In midseason. '!be Cabrillo Playhoualf ·d i d , Tl.IE SEASON at the Hun- however, get the Ju#>p.qo twi> · ~ Beach Playhouse was 1 rt. .,_ I · ' not one of the more memorable ones, save for a fine production of. "Middle of the Night" which brightened the overall picture somewhat. PJay selection, in comparison to other groups, was the chief fly in the Huntington ointment. For the Lido Isle Players, Jess active thail other theaters. their milestone came in the fall-when, after 16 years, they presented a drama, "Dial M for-Murder." Since au- diences didn't react adversely, they'll do another one ("Sunrise ·at Campobello") next season. On the professional side of coastal theater' activity, South coast Repertory came up with an interesting and often ex- citing eight-play season. The highlight was a gripping pro- duction of "The B a s i ~ Training of Pavlo Hummel" however dimmed it was in the light of the previous summer:s "Pueblo") w h i 1 e "Moon- children" and "In the Midst of Lifel• proved involving and thought-provoking, and "The The top IO of the season? Well , excluding the entire Irvine calendar (which this writer directed ), they would be,, in no special order, the a f o r e m e n tion·ed Laguna quartet ("Summer," "other Hall," "Jean Btodie" -aoo "Marigolds"), Costa Mesa's ''And er s onv i I le '' and "Gingerbread Lady," H.un- tington's "Middle of t be Night," San C l e~ente ';; "Lovers apd Other Strangers" and both the Laguna and San, Clemente productioos of 4'But- terflies.'' · How they stack up against each other , and against the upcoming shows of the faJJ· season, will be anlayzed around Christmas when the ninth annual Daily P i 1 o t D i stinguisbed . Performance Awards are anJ'lOlUlced . Smaller Than Life . This miniature train, valued at more than $70,000, is built to 1'12'' scale and will reach speeds up .to 50 miles per hour. It will go on display at Fashion Is- land, Newport Ce nter for three days beginning Fri·, 'day, June 29, to publicize the film "Emperor of the North" )Vhich opens at Edwards Huntington Cinema, Hun tington Beach, June 29. The miniature train, replete in the most minute detail to the train used in the film, can be viewed from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. . J-im Croce Not Starwei-ght By THOMAS PAL.1\IER ("Don't Mess Around With there's some imagination in pressive vocals. 01 1 ... 0 .. 1., Pilot s1.t1 Jim"). Croce prqfuctions taken in . McUwaine's ,phrasing is The tough-guy syndrome Js In fairness, his materia.1, ,total, diversity between his of-reminiscent or Jose Feli· back in popular music. well received by an -opening ferings is rare. ciano's, but her songs are In earlier Ctays it was night audience, consists more The "ongs all fit 8 mold: kicked out ... ·ith power like Lee leather jackets and fierce cars of novelty items than· serious length, ~epetition of-verses and !\1ichaels'. an~ Everly Brothers' nasal observation. He leans all his refrains and lines. ""'ey all Though she is too stylized warning. Don't birddog my · ht t '" '"-'Clg on pu-ons. rhyme grandly. Each is con1-for mass appeal,' her musical quail. Also in fairness, this makes plete, telling . a \Yhole story. abilities are beyond question Then came a welcome, c f · humanistic retrea t to the soul-roce a air poet and And after two, they bore. (she was a prof es sion a 1 lik humorist, though his club nar-What's missina, perhaps, is a , guit'arist for James Brown) spilling honesty of the · es of rd • Nell Young. lie and a brief rat iv e ove epends on little mystery. and her better numbers. like generation 0 f flower-type bathroom jokes. but docs not Lines go from satisfying "Can't Find My \Vay Home,'' qualify him as a credil5le ("meaner than a 1·unkyard send both her cult and any children didn't need switch· Live Tlfeater Irvine Production musician. d o g ' • ) to d e f I a t e d unsuspecting listeners away bl ades to be liked. ~!e's a common guy, en-("everytime I tried to tell impressed. And now, owing partly to the' dearing himself to his rans you, the words just came out ~!er guitar can sound like a It's a Pleasant 'Surprise' nostalgia fad and partly lo Ith t ) t th· ") Sti k d N ·1 st.tar at her command and •-fans' refusal to let rock music cy are many, a eas is wrong . c aroun -e1 , Jlr week ) with stories and tunes you're not obsolete. fl uc nces front flamenco to linger-the demand for change about "dudes" he's know n and In distinct contrast, the Jamaica to black blue s even when it is for the wws~ d. "gigs" he's · done. Bu t , show . opens with smashing touches are iscernible. there is another change, and starweight he is not. guitar and absolutely biting A vaguely naive or outdated ., "Jn tile Midst of Ufe" '"l'be Clown•" Continuing in re p ertory through June 31) are these t~ original ~ at South Coast Reperjory, 11127 Newport Blvd., Co&ta Mesa. "Life" plays tonight through SUnday" with "Clowns" on stage WednesdaY and 'Ibursday al 8 p.m. Reservations 646-1363. ·,ISarprlte" Performances of this Ir.vine Communfty 'Illeatei:: farce con- tinue tonight and Saturday at 8: 30 in the Humanities Hall Playhouse on the UC Irvine Campus . R1e serv at i on s 640-3178. "Last of Tbe Red Hot Lovers" The COSta Mesa C i v i c Playhouse Is jiresentlng this Neil Simon comedy tonight and Saturday at 8:30 in the community Cent.er auditorium on the Orange C ount y F a i rgrounds. Reiervations 834-5300. "Butterfllt• Are Free" I loldover performances of thts popular cOmedy are being staged ThW'sdays t h r o u g h Saturdays unlit June 30 at th La guna Moulton Playhouse. 606 Laguna Canyon Road. Laguna Bea<h. al 8:30 p.m. Reservations 494-0743. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of tllt Dtlly Plltlt Sl•ft The current production of the_Jrvine Comm?.llltty Theater is called "Surprtse·• Which it reaJ)y isn't. -'\ It isn't surprising that Joan· ne Wolcott, who plays the lead part of Ella Wimsley, steals the show and completely dominates the rest of the cast. She is so good that she literally carries what might otherwise be a somewhat dull rendition of this slapstick com- edy into moments of supreme hilarity. THE STORY centers on the Seven Maples Inn, a hideaw ay in Vermont that the aging silent film actress E 11 a Wirnsley has just opened. Complications a bound as Ella's closest friend, writer Margot Lister, decides to use the iM to stage a real-life version of one of her true con- fession.type stories and aid a friend in getting back his wife. Add an escaped mental pa- tient, a case of amnesia and college protester with a one- track mind and the comic possibllltles are endless. \Vlth the exception of Miss Wolcott, however, the cast SOUTH SIAS TROPICAL PISH .----~t i '~ ~;~ VAlUABll COUPON "TllOPICAL "IH 0 , THI WllK" Delta Guppies -, -99' -:::,.. .. . ""'=·I ~"""' ,., Mtot!W, 1 .. ..... "' ••• ,,,.., J-Jt.l ltJJ, i; t .. HCflltHfll .. ~dlfll, zil 'W. W.... ~ W-548·7''1 ,. .. -.. ""1t: ..... '61-4 125 • it is truJY for the wont. A fair guitarist accompanied voice of Ellen Mcilwaine. She idealistic message is evident doesn't always live up to the but with a little better pace Lyrics are bad (that is, by another so-so guitar and a deals in strength, splendidly in certain Mcilwaine originals, promise. Occasionally they and sffise of timing by the su~ mean) and tones are worse. he 'll-do pianist, Croce in jects manhandling an amplified but she lowers a deserving provide some good comedy porting cast, it could be bilar. Exhibit A Is Stealer's Wheel. some lively images lyrically, ,acoustical guitar that com· boom on ~11idison Avenue without Miss Wolcott, but ious throughout. from England. Exhibit B is but the simple, catchy tunes petes, intentionally it i s practices in "Take My }louse more orten than not, her The production is being pre· tough town Chicago's Jim all sound like one. While assumed, with her loud. ex-and Move Away." presence on stage is needed to sented Fridays and Saturdays iife~R•s w~Ou~~~:ur, D ~ ~ ~:1~:::.=n==~;L;:;;x>;:;;;;:;:;;;iijjj;&::.;r,;;;;;;;;;:;;.,.~iiiiiw;;;!O-::;;;,IO;;;;;::;OM;Oiifiiii:i_,.;;;::;~ give the play that extra spark. at 8:30 p.m. through June 30 Anfeles, through Sunday. ~:,. ~ S t. t bers at the Humanities Hall Play-WE SOLD OUT OF LETTUCE t uppor mg cas mem house on the UC Irvine cam· I the songs were any • include D.D. Calhoun who tougher, we couldn't chew WE SOLD OUT OF PEACHES ! gives a lively performance as pus. Reservations, 646-3178. 'em. the authoress. Sorrell Wayne Hi s exlrernely popular AM WE SOLD OUT OF ROSES ! and John Philips are the hired radio hit ' ' O p e r a ~ o r ' • hetP: Pearl and Virgil Dubbins. Telethon Set established the writer·singer- guitarist. Since then he's JOHN LOUGHMAN ha& the Starting at 11 p.m. Satur-dealt mostly in stereotypes of last week was f&1ntastic:I We-•ven piclced 9 winners out of nine at Hollywood Park ! We were on K.F.W.8. News for this ecc:omplishment! SO HERE ARE SOME WINNERS FOR YOU ! WE WON'T RUN OUT THIS WEEKI WE'LL HAYE PL!NTY ! role of Peter Cort. the center day, and continuing through unhip characters, like "Bad of the live story staged by his 6:30 p.m. Swlday, Channel 11, Leroy Brown," roller derby authoress friend and Lois will telecast a 191h:-l;Jour fUlld queens, truck drivers ("Speed Farah plays his wife. r aising telethon, "Celebrity Ball Tucker") and guys you A SURE·WINN ERI /4 suR1 WINNl ll A SURE WINNER! . ............. •JI •• , .................... ~, The remaining parts are Parade for Cerebral Palsy." don't mess around with handled by Pat Schneider as.---------''--_...: ________ _ Ted Hazeltine, H'arry Lutter as Scott Axelrod. David Perlman as the Stranger, Deb- bie Ensign as Carol Wimsley, Mlchael Wilson as M o r g a n Crux and Larry Elson as the men from Duncan Hines . The t~act play by Fred Cannichae1 provides some in- teresting and funny moments. Ice skating everyday. • \ • • 10,000 FOR TH IS EVENT • PIRiT OP TH I LOCAL • 10,000 FOR THIS I VI NT8 • CARNATIONS • CUCUMBERS '• ROSES • • Frffh Cut • ~GOOD SIZE Fr"h Cut-Good Sis• • • 25 For $125 • 4 .... 25C : 99' oo •. · : • Limit 25 • 1 Limit 4 a Limit 2 Doi. • With This Coupon • With Thi• Coupon 8 With This Coupon • ............ -. • ~ .•••••• ·-· •••.••••• 1 IT'S FRESH FRUIT TIME -IT'S fR ISH FRUIT TIME ···~·························· • PINIST GROWN • OU R PAMOUI • a tt• Th St I • SMALL TIE,NDER CALIP VALI NCIA • 1 r •n c n • • U: • • • Most l tor" • z .CCHINI • ORANGE JUICE• MED. SIZ I • • SQUASH ,. , ... "I• Mod••" • LmucE • : 2 lk. for 29C : In '-~II~~.;!,,, , : 2 For 39¢ : Limit 4 lbt Limit 2 %·0 •1. • Limit 4 I ~ With Thl•c"'". -~ , Wl~h Thi• Coupon • With Thi• Coupon • ••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••• . . COUl'ON.S IXl'1¥E JUN E 27, 1973 Ov•r 300 R8staurents Buy Their Product Fllrol They K~O"'w -Qu1 lityll Why Do~'t You Be Tht 301 11.I NOW 6 TRUCKS TO SERVE YOUI .. Orange County't Masi Popular Product and F'lower House" ~~~-. r~~~. NEWPORT PRO DUCE 1'1.0WIRS IY DllRA . OpH 7 !lap • Wttll 8 e.m. i. 8 p.m. 261 6 Newperi loaloimd on tho l'onlnsul<t Ph ... •n.t11s 67:M11t '75-62'1 "iV1tere Qua ity s t le I ".1.J Years of Produce Know fiow" IONO EO FRU IT S._.I PPER FOR 15 YEARS Order of t!ie HOU$•" .>·-,.,. ...... ~ \ i • •. frldaJ, Junt 22, 1q7") DA.lLV PILOT 2 1:: Eas·t Coast Meets West • Ill Hochman's Deli Many New Yorkers transplanted to Califomla aay there's one thing they miss above all others -their favorite dell wlth 11.3 wOoderland of eating ~ spccls. They claim Iha\ most West Coast esta~ishmenls' fall short in one or more particulars. It tnaY. be UMf breezy at- mosphere 9f 'a speclllc foodstuff. But consider the poor ex-Hoosier or ex- Hawkeye who has never passed through 1the doors or a deli. He has mlssed hc\lf of life's pleasum througb unfamiliarity with a multitude of tasty dishes. Hochman's delicatessen and restaurant in 'Costa Mesa has something for both parties. Nostalgic New :Yorkers wlll feel at home and newcomers will be able to explore ·the world of kishka and kreplach. Several lunch and dinner outlngs du~ ing recent mohths 'have reinforced our view _.hat Hoclunan's-r&tes with the best of such enterprises in the east. From pastrami to stuffed cabbage, this. spot offers quality fare equal .to that served anywhere in ~1anhattan. or, for that matler, k> Ille Bronx anll Brooklyn· too. U one d:lUerence llhould be noted It 's in the matter. of decor. But even this fa c-. tor oets a plus for Hocbman 's. Because the Cotta Mesa premises are considerably more attra<tive than those typlcal _of ..mOIJ eastern deUlai....... Few of the }aUer, in fact, Possess an ap-- pet.trance baK as blight and cheerful. Warm colori assert their presence at Hoohman's tn small but expressive ways. Like the neatly folded yellow napkins at each place setti111 and the red and wbite strjped awning over the deli and bakery ta~l com.ten. By way ol. . effective· contrast, the furnishings and lighting fixtures are ex· ecuted ·in subdued natural tones. As are the waifs surfaced with a COOlbinalion of wood panelmg and brick. The 1otal result b a deli with the rare pairing d. equally_agreeable.surniumlings and food. Which shoold prompt out 'n' abouters still unacquainted w it h Hochman's to set up an introduction a1 SOOn as J)OSSib!.e. Out 'N About Norman star.18Y First·lime visitors need a ward ot warning, though, Especially those who like to peruse menus thoroughly before ordering. · Hochman's bill or fare is so extensive one probably won't be able to consider all -possibilities during the in1tial lunch, dln· ner or bfunch. From a la carte' ap- petizers through complete dlnnef's to fan· cy c:lesserts. there's somewhere in the neighborhood .of 200 individual items on the menu . Even the relatively easy task of selec- ting a sandwich for the midday meal gets snagged in the confrontation with more than 40 prospects, Wblch range all lllo 'vay from a simple peanut buttei:;, 95 cents. to a series ot compleK oom· binati<lns tabbed betWeen $1.95 and $2.30. One ol your best bets in thi$ latter dep.-ir1me11t is the "Blkini/' For $2.20. it Yi~~ds a nifty comblnation ot; Italian or Ko.sher sa lami, provolooe, bolobna, tomato, lettuce and dressing. I Other note\\'Orthy sandwiches ' include peppered beef, $L65; Orange County eombination (salami, liverwurst, Swiss cheese, cole slaw. Russian dressingl. $1.95; corned bee£ or pastrami, $1.55; pickled tongue, $1.65; Kosher knockwurst on roll, $1.15. Dinner entrees are served a la carte for one dollar less ,than the complete meal. By ordering the full dinner, however, you're o[fered an appetizer choice of chopped liver , geCilte fish, piCkled ' herring or tomato juice, and a cN>ice of soup (soup du jour or chicken soup with rice. noodles, kreplach · or maW> ball) or salad (tossed green with choice of French, Russian or blue cbeeSf. m,,sslng\, Quoting filll dinner prices, three en- trees recommchded on I.he b..isls of our flavorsome examples are roast brisket ot beef, served with Potato pancake and vegetable, $4.40: <.'Ombinatlon plate, con- sisting of £luffed cabbage, kishka and sweet-sour meatball, $3.95; roast turkey \\•ing, v:lth dressing;· \'Cgct...1ble, potat11 and re lish, $4.50. Among more than a. dO'len sa lads end dairy dishes. prln1e contenders for your order include cheese blintzes \Vilh sour cream and jams, $1.95; shrimp or crab Louie or combo, $3 .25; potato pancakes with .900r cream and apple sauce . $1.75: fruit salad platter with rainbow sherbet, $1.85. Several delicatessen platlers should also receive consideration. The assorted cold cuts, for $2.75, provides corned beef, pastrami, roa si beef, chopped liver, cheese. potato salad and tomato, while the as.sorted smoked fish platter, $4.25, contains 'i)'hitefish. <."Od, slict!d smok1.."<l salmon. cream cheese, Bennuda onion. tomato and olives. In addition to various ice cream dishes and desserl chee5e5, S\\ttt toe>lh re· qulr ments can be n1et advAntageousJy with $U<;h selections as black f~t cake,~ cents; pure whipped cream puff, 55 ctnts: chocolate ecla.ir, 6'.l cents: apple s1n1del, 65 ce nt s; or a French pastry, 65 cents. l~r offerings include Tub or g (don1esticJ. Coors. Heinekens (dark or lig ht ), Afichelob and Lowenbrau ~Light). Inglenook Chnmlls, Vin Rosa and Burgundy wine is available by the glass (55 cents), half litre {$1.50) or full litre 1 (,2,75). Beyond sil down dining and take out service from the delicatessen and bakery counters, !his fine establishment also provides a full line of gourmet catering ror all soc ial and business occasions. Located at 428 E. 17th St., U:lsla Mesa, }lochman's is open daily, except ~Jonda.y. from 10 a.m. ~o 9 p.m. Sunday buffet·· brunch service like\\•ise runs continuously from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. " IN THE .GALLERIES/Mixed Media at Golden West GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE ART GALLERY -15744 Golden \Vest St., Huntington Beach. Juried mixed media by the Huntington Beach Art League. ]fours: 11 a.m.-3 p.m. and Wednesday, 7·9:30 p.-m. Through June. CALIFORNIA MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY - 700 State Drive, Exposition Park, Los Angeles, pre~ts "Clay and Fire," an unusual exhibiUon of handmade studio cer· amics and commercially prOduced cei:amics throtigh ·July 30, on the patio of "the Main Building. Free admission, am- ple parking. Open. daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. DESIGN GALLERY -240 Newport Center Drive, Newport Center. Paintings and graphics by Carolyn J.ablonsky of New York. Through July I. GLENDALE FEDERAL SAYINGS AND WAN -500 New- port Center Drive, Newport Center. Mixed media by Dolly Russell of Corona de! Mar. Through June. ,CORONA DEL MAR LIBl\ARY -420 Marigold, Corooa del l\1ar. Works by Gloria Dradeson of Lido Isle. Hours: Mon.· Wed .. 1.9 p.m. and Thurs., Sat. 9 a.m.·5 p.m. Through July. REPUBLIC FED~RAL SAYINGS & WAN -30232 Crown Va lley Parkway, Laguna Niguel. i;:xhibit by the members of the Niguel Art Association. Through June. HUNTINGTON BEACH PUBLIC LIBR~Y -525 Main St., Iiunlington Beach. Crans by Veva Anne Cosper. GOLDEN.WEST COLLEGE ART GAILERY -15744 Golden Wes t St., Hupt-ing~ Beagi._Crafts 6y Veva Anne Cosper. Through June. · TEMrLE GARDENS Q*NGS6Resta11ro11t RICKS HA COCKTAIL Luncheon & Oin n'"er D•ily- 1500 ADAMS t• H.,._.I COITA MBA 540· 1'37 540-1'23 1'~ea turing Exotic 'l'J\JIJicn.I Drinks A"41, I•._... .... 12H1 llOOIHUIS:r IAt c•.,1 _, 6Jlo71H • ~incr 19,38 Th""e~ AIRPORT ettii!~°W RESTAURANT .11-. o1 eGf'P""C"~ 1: 1-ti41. e+ •STEAKS• PRIME RIB • ITALIAN FOOD Now A,,..t11t -T...-, tlllnl s.t.H1 TEQUILA SUNRISE DANCING I 262 S.E. BRISTOL cr:o•MIEltLY l'ALISAD•SI COSTA MESA 546-8390 One entree at our . re2ular price l""--anil the secood entree gratis (Wlltfl \IM ~I ttll1 Cll,lft 'WllN S...y "'"' ,..,.,..,. ...... , .. ,. s 3901 ~ Coasl Hlahw1y/C..ona del M• Phone. 675-0900 NOW OPEN MONDAY NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -2211 IV, Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. Markel Street Progtam, an experi· menial art selecti.on program for med by Joshua Young under a National·Endo'Nlllent for the Arts grant, features the work of James Albertson, Judilh Linhares, M. Louise Stanley, Donna HerreshoCf and Phyllis Ideal. In the Entrance Galley, two major_..works by Ida Horowitz. Hours-: Tuesday through Sunday, noon-4 p.m. and Fridays &-9 p.m . Through July 15. NEWSPACE -1535 B Monrovi a, Newport Beach. First ex· bitioo by Greg Erickson, entitled "a painting to my father." Hours: Friday through Sunday, 7-12 p.m. Information, Jean St. Pierre, MS-7017. · LAGUNA BEACH MUSEUM OF ART -Women, U.S.A., an all--woman mh:ed Jried.ia show, will be on display through June 24. One hundred works bf an have been selected from 1000 entries. The show is sponsored by the Orange County Art Association and the Laguna Beach Museum of Art. Also, wood sculpture· by Miriam Shelton. GALLERY LIDO DESIGNS -3375 Via Lido, Newport Beach. Hours : 11.S p.m. weekdays and li.4 p.m. Saturday, close<J- Sunday. Oil paintings by Jack Kay, through Juhe 23. ORANGE COAST COLLEGE -2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Student art show in OCC Art Gallery, May 29-July 15. Hours: Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.·2 p.m. '" BRENTWOOD SAVINGS AND WAN -1640 Adams . St., Costa Mesa. Acrylic paintings by Audrey King Baley or Costa Mesa, through June. Open 7 Duys .. BANCj>UET FACILITIES W ... 0.,.: 11.:10,A.M.,. ll:JO U ~l l 30 • , pto-: -~pm M. _. S... 11:H A.M. to l:JO ~: 4:ft.12 MIDNl•HT Saturday Only 909l E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962 -79 I I atNdJM;;'~ fiUNDAY · BRUNCH eG' ABOARD ~E~ RP.ubenE.Lee .L~STAIUING JUNE 24 fiJJ¥wiili «.,.Rua Fa or a llloadJ Miry ~ EOGS BENEDICT SCRAMBLED EGGS Wlrll ,,_,, deioD Nwnor...,,.,,. STEAK&EGGS CREPES SUPREME a-.,_ J dMiglolf.J ............. MONTE CRlSlO A" odll"f M'llit1~ tp«M/ly. ~j!S fom /Oam-2pm RESER>.l"ATIONS 675-MJI • For Acivertislng In OUT 'N ~BOUT Phone Norm Stanley 642-4321 ' --- FIRST· NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE -1650 Adams St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Irma Parker and Fern Miller through June. rtlARINERS SAVINGS -1515 Westcliff Drive, Nev<port Beach. Oils by Paul E. Franklin or Corona del Mar. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., COsta i\lesa. Oils by Marie Howes through June. CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -South Cotlst Plaza, 3390 Bristol SI.. Costa Mesa. Oils by Clara Miller through June. DAILY PILOT -330 West Bay St., Costa Mesa. Oils .by Lassie Hudson. I DOWNEY SAYINGS AND WAN -360 E, 17th St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Geraldine Speheger and Gordon Andrew. Watercolors by Beulah Treadway. GLENDALE .. FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Oils by Millie Winkler through June. J\IESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Afesa. Oils by Maurice Gregoire through June. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E . 17th St., Costa Mesa . Oils by Julito Alejandro throogh June. TRANSAJ\IERICA TITLE CO. -170 East 17th St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Pat Ingram through June. AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol St., Costa Mesa. Oils by Gertrude Mattocks through June. COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE -206 W. Wilson SI., Costa ?.fesa. One-woman show features oil paintings and sculpture by Ruth Sims, through June. Do11't Mi11 The ~lTH ~N.frllYllSAl.YJ..UtY_ Feeturing live "Scu111d 01 SH11d" 01,lH l11t li11dl• Nit•• ! Sat., .... 23. MUCKENTHALER CULTURAL CENTER --1201 W. Mal- vern St., Fullerton. Hours : Tuesday 'through Sunday, 1-5 p.1n. Faculty exhibit by teachers at the center. Through June 24. CALIFOR NIA MUSEUM OF OCFENCE AND INDUSTRY - 700 State Drive. Ex?)Sition Park, Los Angeles. Fifth annual exhibit presented by the-Photography Instructors Association features 250 outstanding photographs by high school and college students in Focus '73. Through July 1. DAILY PILOT -17875 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach. Crarts by Veva Anne Cosper. BANK OF COSTA MESA -Harbor at Baker, Costa Mesa. Oils by Linda Hudson and Cece1ia Coburn through June. C.'OSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Center St., Costa Mesa. Oils, a crylics, watercolors and etchings by Marcella Stanley through J une. · JACK GLENN GALLERY -2331 E. Coast Hwy., Corona de! Mar... Paintings and collages by Nicholas Kruslien\ct. a New York artist currently teaching at Cal State, Long Beach. Hours: daily, 11-5 p.m. June 2.'.hluly 20. CHALLIS GALLERIES -'t390 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beaclt. \Vatcrcolors by Charles R. Kinghan, member of the Na· tional Academy of Art and Design in 1971. Hours: dally. 11·5 p.m . • FIRST WESTERN BANK -180Z2 Culver Drive. lrvine. Acrylic paintings by Gloria Silkbcr of Turtle Rock. Through July. HAMPABIE SUIDAY BRUICH: 10· AJit -3 P.M. --{-:;::tev __ .,._ Coc:k111r1 &""'1•~ DINNER JS SERVED • FROM S P.M. ~ Ph-ui.2no , c)lirporter qnn cr.I.o~e1· 11700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. -flt (I Coppo.lte tlle 11,,...,I MIWf'OltT Introducing our BURGER FESTIVAL featuring: The Great America~ Burgers TERI-BURGER DELUXE -A really tasty mouthful of our ~· Pou'nd Te ri·burger pre · pared with all of the garden-fresh Vegeteri vegetables! • 80 TERI-BURGER -Oriental Teriyaki Sauce, Lettuce, Onion and spe· cial seasoning makes our blg,~·Pound Burger sen· satlonally delkious! .65 with cheese • 75 VEGETERI SUKIYAKI BURGER -Tender BURGER -Tender TEMPURA , BURGER diced Beef, Nappo Cab- bage, Cele!\/. Onion, Car· rots a nd Mu Shroom - prepared with traditiona! O riental Sauce -and served in a special 'Chop· ped Top' bun! .45 slices of Beef simme'red to perfection with choice •°"l nions, Green Onions. 'lomboo Shoots, Nappa Cabbage and Mushrooms. Served in a special 'Chop- ped Top' bun! • 75 -Thick chunks of delicious Shrimp Tempura served IMth Lettuce and tangy Oriental Sauce In • special 'Chopped Top" bun! .60 r-------------1 FREE I FRENCH FRIES I I I I "'1th purchasegf any Great American Burger! Offer good .nth Jhis coupon until July 15, 1973. L __ :._ ___ ----- NOW OPEN 7 DAYS } 10:30 A.M. • 10:30 P .M. -FRL & S. ~ 1:00 A.M. • I i 310 .E. 171h St.. COiia Mesa • S.2-0800 (near 17th & Santa Ana ATe.) J \ r I ' ._-.-- - - - -~ - --128 D..:iJ l '( PILO( Frld111. Jt1nt 22, 1973 l11· ·.I Ch ine e <.:uis iue I -'--'-~....:.::.:.:_ ______ _:..;_,,___ I ·/,Ir-. .,.. ••"Y .................... ., I KFOX Pla11s Free Sliow ( I BAMBOO . LUNc:fltJ~A~~ES I c 1 b. f---~i-1num: ~MP~~E:~~~NERS , • e e rate Count. ry Stvle 1{' IO'Jt' Orh~n1i:tl Cocktflll Lounge J " r l < .. ... • I I .J ft>lltur1nG Tropical Drinks I : . mt -11 "1.-1t-: . PHONE •••• 845-5550 ll~ST 17TH .... COSTAME~ CARIBE ROOM • • @61~-~&J~ . .. / 'l FOR J DINNERS Sundoy through Thursdoy 2 FOR I BUFFET-LUNCHEON Mondoy through Fricl.y Nightly Enterloinment GERMAINE & THE RICK ROMAN QUARTET • 21"112 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNJINGTON BEACH RESERVATIONS 536-1421 • lu11th 11 -2 e Din11•r 5-1 2 CIOMCI tw Lunch WM. a Sat. & Sun. -t p.m. to 12 • a 2440 W. CCHllt Hwy. • N..,.n leach 646·7071 • -~-Prime Rib .•·s1eok • Lob1ter I••••••••••. .. (• ,. ,,. ,. For Yqur Dancing · Pl111ur1 SCENE Ill Tuesday thru Saturday ~201 E. 1st St., Santa Ana .................... -... wpert fwys.) Fea1uring Orange County's FiMSt AmeriCln & Kosher Style Foods CATlllNG & IAKllY _LUN.C.H_f DINN_l_lS_ .. .i , •• • Steak • lob&ter • ChlcQn ' COCKTAIL$ RAOUL & .. MlCHJtc-~ W9d••••., •• S.t•rd•r ·.folfy 0~ Hu.qlington .fleoch ---,-::r,om 111 !fwMIWtCh- ro u M~u/ .. :11•tf..I ,l&Mb $ollttl •f,.. 5a• Diet• fw,. on leach llvd."J SUNDAY BRUNCH -BUFFET -" 10 A.M. · , .. ·-WA.Yi£ GABR.IEL ' • •. ' -TRIO Tllftffy tttn1 S.t11rdoy J~ti ·Ox Mi$sion Vie jo I Le r~~ IHd .. a1~ tlte IH Dlei)o Fwr.l t • • :. (j \ < , 1 The Exciting MA'RI DAVIDSON to 9 P.M, • HOUR~ '•Tues day · Sunday IO A.M .• 9 P.M. Cl osed Monday ,., ~~·,'\_ . r ... c1._, t1w11 · $ott1rffy &45 -1900 '21E1n11th St. C..UMnl,CL -. I .,, I ,,.,,. I ''i I •· 1 ' Jolly Ox Anaheim I Se:'N Au Fwy. at .. II lood I Arby'o ROAST BEEF SANDWICH ........... : Reg. FRENCH.FRIES ........ Reg. Arby 's SPECIAL SHAKE .... Reg. THIS COUPON I I . GQOD 'FOR UP SALE PRICE ;I ·,. •• I I .. ' •.. •• ,. I ~ • !:'1 TO'' 8 ORDERS I Only ... ~rby's 7942 EDINGER AYE • (Edln .. r ind B11ch) HUNJINGTON BEACH ·:· ~ ..... cpve..,_ Good • 'Iii June 2!, Midnlgh_! •••• I . ' I - GAS 'CO. SALOON JAMES HARMAN ICE. HOUSE BLUES BAND IS BACK Thur$day-Friday .. Saturday Hoot NiCJht-Tuesdoy f°!~ Slngtf-'1odnesday FOOD e BEER e WINE ·POOL e DANCING 496-5773 loiua tt'aune h• Light. John \Vayne will be honored in "Tribute to a Great A111erjcan" sa lute during '"fhe Old Fashion Fi~e works SpectacUlar," Wednesday, July-4-at Anab_e1m Stadium. A 400 sq. ft. portrait in firework s of the Newport Beach actor .will show the famous Wayne hat and flag of Te•as. , .. .. ROAST PRIM E Rll . OF IHF . Au Ju, BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, T •••··S•t. AMONG 20 SIUCT DINNll INTlllS 1550 SUPERIOR AVENUE cosT:t. MESA ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOU R 646~8 4 tO 7 p.m., Mon. thru Fri. VINA HARMER DUO 11~~~~~11111111~~1111~~~1111~~~ Sunday Royal Champ.tgn• Brunch ~--·1----Fiaii~IJrMOrlel'•••· ---+---11 12:15, TI111f'M91rJ. 0,.11 S..,.. Doys. • ·-- SHOP BUFFUMS NEWPORT SUNDAY 12 TO 5 DINNER SPECIAL '<"\rA.> $erMd S11llllay 12 te l , Mand•J 4 to 8 Complete Prime Rib Dinner, 3.75 h1cl11d.ts solod, bated ,.._., lriot rolls ncl butt..-. 32802 COAST HWY. !:>---11•1---1---~tAG~NA'.'.:NitiUi~'::::::-:J::=:=:lj • GRAND OPENING • 1 --·rw• ~--KA.MS :--==--1 '"'~~ Restau'IOJtf I RMEltA . ~~ b:!Yl ':" · CHINESE·AMERICAN RESTAURANT CUISINE Continental Cuisine LUNCH • DINNl!R • COCKT"AILS Cockllllo Serving Food To GO -Spoclol Dlscounll Lunclleon and Din11c:1 fl1ondu~ !/trough SatMrdar. BAN9UETS /CATERING 1117 WESTCLIFF. .DRIVE NEWPORT IEACH, CALIF.• NOW SERVING SUNDAY BRUNCH C!osed Sundays GOURMET .•• • . • BREAKF,AST b SELECTED • ENTREES FOR YOUR PLEASURE OPEN DAILY AT 11:00 AM YOU R HOST RECOMMENDS THE ADDITION OF ••.••• SATURDAY LUNCH 'Beef .)\'la~ter . R"....-tlotts Accepted • Pltooo 549.01 It .. 3010 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CIOMd Su~oys j ~~~.:::::==:::::~FO~.R~R~H~E~~=~~!O~N~l~Ci\=1~:.::.IN~l~•~41~....,.=":::..J' Ii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I I ' • • I I ' ' I :1 I I ·1 t • •. ,• • • '• • • PATRON WITH MISSION Norton Simon Real Cantonese Food e11t hire or takihom1 - STAG ,., CHINESE CASINO 111 211t Pl., Newport BMch ORlole )-9560 0,.. Y_ A,..... Wly lJ..12 -M . -4 s.t. "ti J .... DANCING • ENTERTAINMENT --_ .. 330-50.-COAST l:IUillWAY LAUGNA BEACH NOW APPEARING WALT .& PAUL ' •' w ... thru lvn. SUNDAY llUNCH 11 A.M. .. 2 P.M. IANQUIT PACILITllS Jl7 PACIPIC COAST HWY. HUMTIM•TON llACH • 536-2515 NOW OPEN SUNDAYS L1.U PrH1 11 :JI M .... frl. 'Dl'!9« II....., FfMI I P.M. GOURMET DINING ENTERTAINMENT DANCING M....,..,_....,..., ..... . , .... l>OO·D Newport Center Drive Fashion lslond NEWPORT BEACH ...... --· 444-5040 Is a"''•• •111,1re4 Wo Wll lo Op• 7 Dtiys A WHlc ... 1 ..... Slllldoy, Jlftl 24 AN AMERICAN FAMILY. RESTAURANT SP.ECIAL EVERY DAY IRIAllPAST e LUNCH e DINNIR . ,,_' ..... to 1;45 ...... • IANqun fACILITllS A ......... Per rm.to r.tl" er CNIK · · Colonial _}(;_lchen CO ... I SHOP e RUTAUIANT J , ·512 W. 19th ST. COSTA MESA 548°0366 , • • been lent lo major American museuros.1 More recently, Simon has lent J;irge numbers of paintings and sculpture Jo already established museums for IOOg periods of tlme, with the museums selec- ting w..-ks that augment their owl! col· lectiocw. ART 'EDUCATION Bedouins Act S~riously Ca nadian singer Anne 1 Murray will be featur- ed on Disn~yland's Tomorrow land stage r Sunday through Fri- day. Showtimes are 10 p.m. and midnight. - JERICHO, Occupied Jordan (AP) -The Bedouin tribesnlen stood in front or a black gc:ii.t&kin tent and angri- ly shook their fists in the direction of their Hollywood bosses. . "They aay we didn't bring enough lamb for the wedding feast scene," eip-lained Dlrec~ -tor Tmi Gries. "We only brought one lamb down from Jerusalem, and they said that wasn't enough foc a feast., that no respectable wedding feast would have only one lamb." , He ordered his assistants fo quickly get two more lambs'. "The Bedouin are rwly throwing themselves 1nto the part," he sighed. Gries was dlrectlqg the film Fi-Italia• Cablne Coefnalls 2325 ·E. COAST HIGHWAY • 673°8267 ReNrv1tion1 Open Dally -S p.m. to 2 1.m. CLOSED MONDAY MEADOWLARK COUNTRY CLUB Lark Room DINNER SPECIALS Cho-ic• of SOup or S1IH liked Pot•to or Ric• Pil1f e Girlie Ire.cf WIDNISDAY -Top Sirloin S!Hk ---·-·----$2.95 THURSDAY -Primo Rib -------·-·--······-········--$3.40 FRIDAY -Shrimp Stuffed with Creb ........ ·-·· $3.10 SATURDAY -Tournodos of Bui ··-·-·--·-------··----$3.15 SUNDAY -Louisiana P~•wns ....... ~ .................... $3.65 0r..,e Coallt9'• Top Etttertainmeat TMI TWIN GUITARS .......,_.H_ WIDNISDAY THRU SUNDAY l•itq,u•f f•cllitl•• ~p te 450 P•opl• 1f 7t1 61AHAM"AYIHUI CAt W.,...,) HUl!nM•tOtl llACH 1714) -1>16 12>1) 1'2·1'14 mIYElif.I M exicari Restaiirant PROUDLY PRESENTS TMI CHAPTER ll For Your Dining AJ\d Dancing Pleasure ..... Nlthtfy Wod.tlnS.. . "Finest Mexican Food in Oranue 'Count~" OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS , '· 547 W. lttli STRm COSTA MW ~2·9764 • version of "QBV11," Leon Uris,' best-selling oovel, on location near the shores of the Dead Sea. The court scenes in the $2.5 millloh movie have a!reajy l>oen lilm.ed in j,on- don. The picture is being pnr- duced by ABC Television for showing · on: television next year~ QBVIr, based on Uris' true- life court experience in Bri- tain's Queen's Bench VII, stars Ben Gazzara, Le e Remick, Leslie C a r o n , Anthony Hopkins, Sir J-Ohn -th e shooting has been ·going extremely well, Gries said. Suddenly, several Bedouins began to shoot their World War I muskets into the air. Two horsemen raced across the area. A dog b3rked and a baby scream~. "Not yet, not yet, go back," yells Gries. "l think they ha\te · forgotten they're acting." i- Gielgud, Anthony Q u a y I e~ r~~~ Dame Edith Evans and Jack Hawkins. LYN RESTAURANT ' _ Proudly Prosonlf AVALON TRIO FOR YOUI DINING AMD DANCING PLEASURI Tue. thru Sat. 8:30 to 1 :30 Dlnn·tr' Senod Uotll I :30 a.nt, 2200 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 6l42·B274 • • 11 DAILY lOG Friday Evening -........., JUNE22 Saturday --Morning JUNt:JS " ' I • I * Friday, June 22, l<J73 • j Ja cqueline Wi ll Hel11 ' Piel{ Cast County A 1·tist R ec<111 tures ~Hill IJitturv :vour:;~·lf :11 the turn-of·the..<:cntury. Hu.ltng tht• fl1nicular An gt·rs flight to the hou~ tha t \ t-lOLLYWOO_r tUPI.)· v:as hmnc on Burlkl.'1' Hill. \ · J<tcqucline -Susann has wrillen A house ~1·11h a 1>1>rso11a1J1y. an elegance. a proud three novels. All thrte rcathl'd bt·aut\'. No. 1 status on lhe bcst·scllcr FiliJ.lrCi: 1rin1 . rlulcd colunlns, octagonul windO\'IS. lists. Sounds of children pla ying , h1gh·\11hCeled "bicycles, and 1110 trio of sex-orientrd rhf occ:tslon:i l spuller of horseless carriages. - books have all been sold lo the Bun~cr I-Iii!. Los Angele~, comes alive in a St'ri es of 1novics where the celluloid paintings. scngrJphs. wOOdcuts an9 photof,'l"Cll>hs by West· versions of her stories have n1inster ur !ist To1n Bose at the California State Museum been received I es s en· of Science and Industry in Expo!)ition Park through July 31. 1husiastically. Thi~ "house portrait" serit•s "'Once Upon .I\ ~lilF' Fi l'Sl ··vallcv or the Dolls" traces the history of Uunker •NJI from ihe sin1plici l)' and and then "l'he.Love l\1achi'!ic" security of the t·arly 1900s .through the opulence of the J!l20s and thr decadt•nc;e of the 1930s. to the inevitable disappointed !he author on the scre(tn. She 111cpt after seeing change~ as the 1-ldl expired. . ~·ornll!r st un t·fl yer and na vy ptlot Rose started work • A11 Classes Ava ilable . . 1'he G.ai:dcn Grnv.i:._:.Art~ c:uild "'ill· be pre~ e n ti OJ.I claSSt..-s ·this summer for all ages. . . r Children car1 learn the art or sket.chin~ ~.anrl oil painting, p1·l nt 1nak lng or beginning l'luy, Adults \1•ill be able _,to · S('lect rron1 paintlng. clay sculµllu·i.ug, needlepoint, 'en1- broide ry. n1acran1e, p<ipier ·. tolle. n1 osaics and pa pier · 1nachc. lnfonnation may be obtained by calling 530-7036. MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENlS ANO YOUNG PEOPLE : Jiit o~•~'"' ol 1,,.i.rlng1 fr IO inlDrl'lf ~'"'' t OO«l ll>il w1tllf>it111 ol , "\'alley of he-Eloll~t on t~es_.as...a-projcc1 •. Jor-a-masteFs-degree-in..4f96L _!.;'.j ----n>Ciay he is deve loping his 111ork fu rther 1vith thcrmolorn1 . -·-~ ·~ ,.._, .. -.g Of ,,,.,, """*"'· I ' < Ga1·de11s 011 Ca11vns Pa.intings and graphics entitled, "Gardens," by New Y--ork-artist -Carolyn-Jablonsky are currently shown at 'the Design Gallery, Newport Center. The exhibit. the first \Vest Coast showing of Jablonsky's work. ~viii continue through Jul:i-._L A111phitheatre Books Steinberg and 'Tears' its premiere. To insure she doesn't strike oul a third ti m e in movies. Jackie h ave a ('ho i c e in-..,..; .....nKli cas1in!{ "Once Is No t Enough." Her husbind and partner. •·rai sed print s"' for the blind and the lin1itcd sig hted. These thcrmoform prints y,•i\l be included in the exhibit. Bunker l-l ilL Los Ange les. no longer exists. Chromiu1n progress h<Js cleared th e \l'ay fo,: hi gh rise apartment buildings and empty spaces. "'rhere is 'still a com_1uit1ocu.L to preserve the past anO • -reflect if it is 11'ort fi the chromium. 'fsays Rose. "Someone toining from somtf'" small lo1vn might be able to sec if what lhcy took a\.\'ay 1vas better th an 11•ha~ tbey put up." • The sho1v, spons_pred by the Garden Grove Artisans' Guild. is open daJ.ly from 10 a.in. to 5 p.m. TOM ROSE ON BUNKER HILL Irvine Mansfield. will be CX· "-----------------------~---·-------------------..J'I ec;utivc producer of the film " which "'ill be m<idc by Para· mount. J(OCE Screens Parascuba Film • "I'm not int.eres!ed 1 n wriling the sCrcenp\ay." the former actress said. "But I wou ld like to see the picture follow the story and Th e a d v en t u r e of telec<ist. This program will ;:iir 11'ill be shown l\'londay at 6:30 Bit·Bus·Line." The Transit characters as I wrote thcrn ." "Parascuba.'' a new sport Tuesday at 6:30 .rQ.nl. ancl . p.m. and Thursday at 8 p.m. District began in Septen1bcr Why. the brunette beauty conlbining the sk ills of Thursday at 7'30 p.1J1. A flat fare of 2a cent s i11 1972 acco1nmodating Orange _,.,,as a_sked, ba,'.e w o:m c n parachu ting and Scuba diving. Caspers. noiv in his second force throughout .lhe line, h:is County's growing dcn1ands for .novelists, writing about sex, will be featured in a Ralf-hour lerrn as chairman of the labeled the system the •··r,\10+ conVenient mQbilily. surpassed their male coun· film and int erview progra m Orange County Boa rd of ------------- tcrparts Jn the spicy book broadcast over K 0 C E ·T V. Supervisors, wi ll be Jinl category? Channel 50 Tuesday a n d Cooper's guest for a di scussion "Wor,nen wrile emotionally," Thursday at 1·p.n1. on the state of Orange County $e said quickl y. ''Men \.\Titc Dean \Vestgaard. paras<;uba govern1n ei1t. gi'aphically. They get into the expert and athletic instruCtor Only a generation ago the technical aspects of sex y,•hich at Orange Coast ·College. population of the county stood women don't find that exciting Costa .f.1esa. will ta lk about his at 26-0.000. The mode of living or interesting. unusual pa stime with Channel wa:'; casual e1nd country style. "\Von1en write abou t feel· 50's Kent Johnson. ;ngs in the sex act. Even in Th ·11 . I I \Vith the populat ion ex· e program w1 inc uc e a panding to 1.600.000 in 20 homosexual pa ssages -n1ale 13-· 1 1 · f m1nu c, co or movie o a .vears. the picture facing the or fema le-the wornan \\'riter b · b \V d parascu a JUn1p y cstgaar county toda y is one of un· can put down her thoughts and two companions in the bridled growth and a trend 1vithoot making tbc1r(-porno· \Vaters arou nd Catalina fsland. toward sophisticated urban i;raphic or too specific." 'fhe n1ovie was made to be life. CONTINUOUS SATURDAY and SUNDAY FROM 5 P.'M. Has Jackle got her own "shov;'n last year at the 4th C.'ont ro versy exists bet.ween .._ ___ _]ELJJMll<..bfi,IJILi!l<tli.--<l!JOJI!.:.. !he Holl ywo® Fr w 'i !11 __foanulaloc.explicit sex scenes International Conference oh-those who \Vish to move ahead ,.,\11n O:i\•id Stei nberg and Lankel-shi m Boulevard, opens in her books'! Underii·ater Education i n \vith furth er develapn1cnt and' Blood, S\\·eat and Tears. ha ve , !he season June 29-July I 1vith ,;One thing I try to do is Miami. It has alSo been shown the conservationists \-\•ho are l----~1o~int:.;::od:.;:lll~c~· rosler of stars ap· the Grateful Dead followed by avoid the use of four letter aL_colleges-and-underWate.----concerncd-with-environmcnta pear1 ng lits summer 1 n ~Denver. July 97 1 5 : words early in my novels-;-·~-fi ln1 restivals around the cOun· 1relfarc. Universal Studios new outdoor Ro berta Flac k and ·o avid she, said. "If you use them too try. * * * 1\mphjt l1eatre. Universal City. Steinberg. July 16--22: Henry (requenlly or too soon they * * * The birth . or organized Steinberg y,·ill share bill ing J\1ancin_i and Johnny Mat his, lose their shock value v.'hc_n Supervisor Ronald Caspers Orange Coupty:will be herald· with sinJ!er Robcrla f lac k, Ju-J uly 2:>·29: Tom Jones, July yo~ need the"} to make a will cominent on, his vii;!W of ed on ChannW SO's "Focus Jv JG. 22, add .Blood. Sweat and 30.Aug. 4; Harry Belafonte, point. Orari~e county goveriiment -Orange County'' pro g r a m Tears joins the 5th Dimension. Aug. 5·12. "It's importa nt to know ll1at its problems .and priorities -about the new Orange County St'i>tember 5.!). Tickets are now qn sale fo~ T don't use my four lclter 'on a KOCE-TV "Oninibus 50" Transit. District. The program The Amphitheatre. just off individual concerts or for the words for erotic purposes. ·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ -DAIL-Y MATINEES- 2 HITS FOR ALL AGES TO ENJOY "CHARLOTTE'S WEB" "WILLY WONKA AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY" ALL SEATS 75c ,--NO W PLAYING I ll:[SfRV EO S£ATS nn Sale ~,39 'Iii 8:30 1 MAR 1 LoN'· aRAN°00 ·1 ~!ft· I -,~&om. 'fails ClklMAtUQ ,.,. "~···· ...... . ..,_., ..... . -------°"''' e< 1 00, s JO. ' ~~ \ l ATTl£ •Oii: PIANfT 0 1 AP(S" P.G. lhlily J;JO, 7·10 10·11 "&JG JAl<f" ......... ~·-r __ .. ,,,, ~ ---OAlll 'I l!IS·S·l ·•o "IRASICR TH[ S£NSUOUS tlON"~' l ~Ill Al J ... ;fS-10-JO "JOIY" ~ tQUfltCOllSf" "'-*lA u ... -.,., l entire season and nlay be ob-"When Ernest Hemingv.'ayJ1 ~ Jbuth Coast Repertor tnined <it the box·9fficc and all wrote about sex the publishers 1icket ·agencies or by sending a r-emoved all the dirty words. It check Ei nd a self.addressed made hiln furious but he was stamped envelope to : The po1verlcss to do anything. 1\1nphithe atrc, P.O. Box 8679. "In the past 15 years Universal City. Cal .. !H608 . For ;:iuthors have co mp I e t e inforn1<1tion call (213! 877-21'.ll. freedom of choi ce of 1\·ord s." ,. ,(~'If yo u've been, Lookirid ']\ (: for a niovie tlie f a1nily : . ·~ . ·~< can Pnjoy, thi,s is it:' ) :• ~ --hLl(.)0 HO(JJ(0:flP• .... G : ... ' ' C ol11mb .. 1 P•cturu prin11u. ROSS HUNTER'.S ~~;;oo@~~@~ 11.\v•~ b.,. {·\'!'!(~/,.,. BUll..l BACl~AR.ACH H..<t DAVID a . CENTURY 21 77l·~ ~· .... -1 .. , EXCL USIVE ENGAGEMENT DAI l Y 2:00·4:45·7:30·10:00 U.A. CITY ANO SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESDAY SOc: !LADIES AHO GOLDEN AGERS) -OPEN TIL 2:00 P,M, New ar Regular Prlctt M1n D•llrr "Bl LI. y JACK .. "81.ESS BEASTS & CMIORE N" UA ::: '"JQU\'1 ' Coan Gen• H~(~m•,. ''"''· Ber~.u~e Sllfllty Wonl1tt 80111 ;.., '''i"i' d"~·~·iliii~~~~ -!ild (itfl;lf Imogen• Ccu• "TEN FROM Ma1jnu Only! "Ch~rlollt'S Web" "WUif ••fflE A J>OSEIOON V ADVENYUR E" -01111-"VANl)l>tl N!i POINT" 80!~ In Colcrl • YOUR SHOW OF SHOWS" -llillt- '"l'H£ J>JIOOUCEll:S" IPGI • Wonk1" Ca111r! !Gl f:~1n1n9 Only! "GJIAOUATE" "CAR NaL {R) ICNOWt..EOGE" "f:ltASl£R,TME SENSOUJ LION" A e. J . Tflorn1s "JORY" 'I' 1011> In Cctcrt CPO) FINAL WEEKS! TWO BRILLIANT SHOWS "IN THE MIDST OF LIFE" A Zetly, Vl\lranl M11$lcal Friday !11n1 511nday "THE CLOWNS" A Slapstick Symphony of Mime, Music 01td lowghter Wednnday & Thutsday 1827 NEWPORT ILYD .. at Harbor 1n1orma11ond~ttena110n$ 64 .. l:Ul a P.M. c~rt~in "Siliy Jcac k'.' "' "A Fistful of Do llars" "Theatre of Blood" And ,. "Otu1qh~ers of Sotan" "High Plains Drifter" IA) '"' "J11e Kidd " IPGI ~;fil! Battle For The Plane; Of T~e Apel" IGJ •.~~ "The Lost Co11to1e11t" II SHU$T~R/SAN0t.f.:R l'llOOUCTIOl't STallRINO t.llC.Hlllt U.ltAN AND llATHllflN[ JUSliCC VIClOll JORY "S l HE \'01Ct Of FRASIER , O:Et. PltOOOCl JI • HllRllY SHUS IE RI PROO\JC(JI • All~N $11,:iDlUt !'.Cll£ENPl.AY • JtRllY MOflAIN ! I MtJSIC•OOll t M£.NEC;(;[ft / O!RECTOJI •PAT SH1nos ~ COLOM 8Y 0£tUJ:l • '#.~ ~--...;;.,.•, tClflllT111ll/T...C,tli'C, ~ --...._~~=i"·..,_-1 ©' NOW PLAYING AT A THEATRE OR DR IVE-IN NEAR YOU -ONE WEEK ON L YI IOlml CIJAST #2 Cllita Mt,3 5-19·)3~2 CllHMA WEST ;:i Wtstmlnster $97."~93 CINtMAVl!JO MIHIOll Vltja 1130·11t90 u.A. cr11 Crttt.,..A Or~~lt !>32-G72l rot ru11eit• ·• ~l·«747 HUNTINCtO'I °":!ll MA llll!!ll~tlorr Beac:l'I 1147·'608 Wllltlllll W~rlt!•r 6!1'...2712 STATE P8Ulelefl~ 192·113' ALMAM8RA CINEMA Alt'Mmllr• '$2.61)6 L• MABRA or1~ .. h\ l~ H~ur• 971•1&61 EOWAROS Otlw._ln AretOll ~'1 .. 119 llOUNTAIM VAi.LiV 0ri¥e•ln FovnMln Vfllty 961·241 'LO\'f.. & PAIN & THI! WHOLE DAMN lM!"IG" .. I IS A LC)NELY • NUMRlilt" Met OlllYI "WILLY WONl<A" (0) "(MARLOTTe·s WEB" liVI Oftly! "NEW 1.S:a "" "8ROTHER SUN SISTlllli MOON" CPGJ lA MIRADA LA M111d~ ~21•9910 'FOl TW IN COY!n• l.'l2•ll)2 OA:AN OE Orl¥••1n • IS~nla An• !51·1022 THI V1Ll.AOE Cll•fmo.'11 4t4.a1~ CJolli!.T Orl~t·ll! NO•l:D ll1".f0 YME G•GE Dtlv••n cu~ ot Cllrr>mt!C! ~' 11» l otft I~ COIOt! 11111 '- ' Also -OionJI Rosi "LADY SINGS THE BLUES"--,., STARTS NE XT WEDNESDAY ZI P-A-DEE-DOO-DAHI .. GEIV/£ llAC/(JV/1-tfti·AJ. /1/J&/NO SC/il?!EO~fl/ lhe--ol Maxy~ Car Wosh, Plttsbu111h, P!>. SHOWING NOW! • \',rit~ltfr.Ak?.Y M~.ttA11 ~n~r£ · rroo,. J ty~'.1Rf 1~ ,"lt·.~·M,' Dt1t!M l'rtl!ff!Y '.' J1Al,Nl!i.i f1\~AV ' • !fl'.1111\U.Cfl • -.1l'e{l]:;::;_::W'::;_d r~IJ'jl \'111,,_.. ~rl!';Nr! 1..v..,...-.;;ry Q ,1 \',';rw r ... .,. ..J" f.<"tf:'/ HAllOI ONLY CO.HIT ALl-~O l!Mll(OCK'I "FRENZY" • MON •• ,a1. OPIN 7:30 P,M. S T. & SUN. OPIN 7:00 l'.M. WllkDAYS OPEN 6:30 P.M. HOW STl\aTS AT DUSK! WfEt<lNDS & HOLIDAYS OPfN 12 :30 P.M. All AGIS A0Wll1(0 Gtntr&I A111111no:u .. ~ .. ' e ----------~--~------ ®NO ON[ UNQ!ll 17 AQM1Tll0 jA9t lom1! 1111y v1ry '" "1'111~ 111:11) ··•··•··················•••· ..r ... \ {gl ~ .... [~ ·~ ....... ~. ,..;, ""-CC> .... ... -,,.~,.. O<>OI °' KU•.W.'10>\ . ' '1c******** Ol_IYE~N SUPll S'NAP _MllJS! fUH! JtOfJ11 u.tGiUHS1 SUUIDAY l syNMT AU O!Ti IAMT04•M Al llAIM>I ti.YD. ,, Ol.ANGI •1 '., • !•A•K ftll ANAHflM STMllU• SUN0!1 OMl.Y . OUNGf •I I •2! ,-, ..... , al l•ma<> SI. S?S-1~26 l"1<DIM A••· "~"of l\no!I 821·•010 CUit!' W TWOOO -HIGH -PtAINS DllfTll f1l "'UIJ CIOWO Tlli)MU YOU'LL LIKI MY MOTHll S•n O••go fwy c~o«•,.no I 01! '""'" •J•j oou•u SltO<« AOUt r SNOW'! LITILE CIGARS !l'GJ + SISTERS (II fll'U AOtllt "'°~llS! (1.) COffY (I! l'·I Llnlf CIGARS 110G1 3. SISTERS !ti ~'"'"<>!" A•~. "'"" al l\noll ~'1·1~1.\ lll SIAI U.'1 LAST OF SHEILA !'61 DAOOY'S GONI A HUNTING S•nla An• '•••w•v "~" Ct.Jpm~n A••· 558·7012 Soni~ An• f•••••• n••• C~lpmon A••• ~~t.1011 N•W~fl ,, •• ,...y ~t l!l•-t• St, 5•5<)313 ~\IN(M"\I f JOWi Jl"t'U DEEP THRUST !•! + FliTS OF FURY !ti Kids Like To . Ask Aridy I 2 • .. Jerry L~.is-Obsessed • I • • ' By fight i(gai™t_M D 'NEW YORK (API -Jerry Lew'is was 11· when he d.ld his first Jllhd-raising bendit. He wrote ·and appeared In a 90- mliiute schOot comedy show that he e$tlffi.ates raised about $100 for t'he Red cross. He'll be shooting for $1 milllOn on Sept. 2 when he starts a nationally televised 2- hour benefit that is the latest round in wliat be calls "this alinost psychotic di-Ive or mine to beat this s.o.b." ;'I)ie s.o.b. is muscualr dystrophy. a vpi:iety of hereditary diseases that pffmarily affli ct the very young.· It's Characterized by progressive weakness c&used by degenerating muscle fibers. .MD. as it's nicknamed, has been a personal and public obsession of Lewis for more than 2() of his 46 years. \\lhen asked why, the comedian simply smiled and leaned back ha his chair. '"Th.at's the only quesllon you won 't gct- ahswered ," ~replied softly. "I've been married to my wife 29 years and for the ·better part of over 20 she's neve r asked me, nor does she know. Itls the only secret I ha.Ye." · Orranization. The other half comes !rom year-around volunteer work on the grass- JOOls lfVel. • wis' televised fund drives began ln 1953, w~n he appeared on a Los An,e:eles station· to host-a two-hour show. They have since evolved into massive. ·carefully organized national efforts of 20 hours and lon ger. This year's telethon will originate from Las Vegas with a full roster of sl'ars Lewis has dragooned for the cause. MDAA officials say the Hughes Tclevlson Network will feed tfte show to at least 150 TV statiOos iarx\ that the program will in- clude live perform8.nces broadcast from New York, LOs Angeles, and Nashville. Tenn. · · ~wis, a tall. Jean man "''ho isn't visi bly ravaged either by age or 12-hour \vorkdays, tleld up · a red spiral bi nder that was at least three inches thick : it cor.~::.ined pla1,1s, skelches and ideas for tbe coming sho1v, as well u reference data from past shows. "By the time J go on the air/' he said, "I'll have four to six books just like this." . · ' 'ONLY SECRET I HAVE' MD Chairman Jerry J.,ewis Bach Ma8s · Scheduled For Bowt . Hollywood Bowl's pre«asoo Bach-~lo:iart F~Uval con-- eludes Saturday, July 7 at 8:30 p.m. with a performance or Bach's B minor Mass. Directing the performance will be Roger Wagner, whose · musical forces on this oc- casi<m include memOers of the Los Angeles Philharmonic, vocal soloists Veronica Tyler, Caludlne· CarlSOOP,....Paul Sperry and Douglas Lawrence, and bis own Roger Wag ner Chorale. For t h i s performance, \Vagner is pl anning an unusual deployment of vocal and instrumental forces: the 44- chorus members, instead of being placed as a wtit behind the orchestra, will merge with pledged and that actuafly received. the some 40 0 r c h es t r al To \vhich MDAA officials qu ickly reply players; sopranos with violilll:I, thti.t the cynics ar~ wrong, at least in the and so on. case of Leivis' telethons. They c'ite last Tlcke(s are avallable at the Friday, J11nt 22, 1973 i;Song of Freedom' Evangelist Oral Roberts wil l air a patriotic tele\'isiqn · special, filmed ex~lusively at Knoll's Berry Farm. The one-hour musical progra1n will be shown Thurs- day, .rune 28, at 10 p.nt. on Channel 9; on Sunday, July 11 at 9 p'.1n. on Channel 5; and again on Chan- nel 5 on Wednesday, July 4 at 3 p.m. The special, entitled "Song of Freedom" will star Roy Rogers ·and Dale Evans. Lewis, national chairman of the New York-based MusCular Dystrophy Associa-· ijops or, 'America (MDAA), was in town to work on plans fOt hls eig hth LaOOr Day telethon for MD in as many years. He said his ·1972 show from New York -the telethoos have been nationally broadcast since 1970 -took nine months of advanCe planning. Work on the 1973 program began in earnest last January., year's record-breaking mow as an er··..,-"'-="='l=eg=e=n=c=ie=s.=====-= ample. '-re==========;===;;=====; · MDAA officials say the past seven have raised a total of $26.5 million. But they say the money. from the show Js on- ly tialr the total annual income of the For Weekender Advertising -- Telethons get virtuaUy all their fu nds from viewers who tall in and pledge.a donation. Cynics say there frequently is a wide disparity between the amount llorl1 K1rleff A final audit, the MD¥ officials ~say, showed that of $9.2 million pledged , $9,096,841 -actually had been received as of Dec. 31. 'Based on past experience, they say, the remainder probably will be in \Ve11 before the next show. "FRANl(ENSTEIN" Francois Truff1ut's ltll LlllOll "DRACULA" · Phone 642-4321 -"TIN FIOM THE IOTll ortgln•t vTKvl ,,....1on1 from 1tl l, · ~lu~ 2 c•rtoon1 ol '"' 'lll1. "BED AND BOARD" -ALSO- "SEDUCED AND ABANDONED" Cannes Festival Winner .. .. ·-.. . . • .. .. ". . . .. .. • ·. : . . . . . . : . :: . • . . . . ·: ·: \' $HOW OF SHOWS" + "A NIW LIAF"~ CPGJ • J NOW! GEN/: HACKMAJV ALA • I •• - I • • MATINEES SAT, & SUN • , -RATED (R) I •• tit:·>-." ... ~·6'ii·1· . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. ( l\f II\ l:f~H R '° ·I t<~•901 A! 11.0A~\ 0\!A ~(~A • ~19 4141 ' :1 • • NOW THRU TUISDA'(, LIV ULLitAN .... Cfforte: C. Scott "THE HOSPITAL" I T Al lA U.OWINO ---1111111 \ Retum Of .The All Time Greats • The Classic Of The World's Rock Fests • With The Best Of The Bands '-'WOODSTOCK'' CONT. SUN. FROM 2 P'.M. LID 0 •rwroqy BEACH lNTllANll •o LIDO 1~lf I.... . ... • '•• •ow•,.D• ••• • :1 : .. . : • '' I •: . " : •'" "aATN "" J: •••• 11411-ll101 ••••• ...... o. AT •-Ml. COI T a Ml ... -·-· ""\.lt.O/' ........ ~ .. ' ~ ,, ~J~O ALWAYS "-INTY FllE PAUl~G · "~ll V PILOT • l British Rock Back The Brilisll Are Comln(, a retum visit of the-llllOI Brtdlh rock invasion, baa been booked for a concert at The Formn1 Illlllewood. ror Friday, July u , al 7:30 p.m. ~ The show ts by Richard Nader, who bas sucoessfully promoted I h Rock end Roll Revival, and will feature Peter Noone mid Heml9n's Hermits, Gerry and th e Pacemakers, Wayne Fon- tana, and the Mindbenders, , Billy J. Kramer and tho Dakotas and The Searcben. Each group bas .: bevy ol· discs that climbed lo the top. ratings during the 1900s. Herman's Hermits brought "Mrs . Brown You've Got a Lovely Daughter0 and 'Ttn Henry the Vlll I am." Gerry and the Pacemaken were responsible for "How Do You Do It," 11Don't Let the Sun Catch You Q-ylng," and "Ferry ACl"OSS'" the Mersey." l'loplt l1li!il ,_ lnlhe'9G' 2022. ..... , ..... 1 .... =AUO ao. .... y . llilliaaa m ••nucOl.<lll -· 1:41 c.tl n.... hr S... s.•aJ I . -• • ~ • • • .. ' ~ • • ' ' • , ~I , ( ., ' • DAILY PILOT Wednesday, June 20, iq73 , "68. CHRYSCER . 't . ' NIW YORI.El 4 DI . SID . . • .. I 1 I 'VI / f utom•fic, R&H , p owe r i() 1t.-'!'•ln9 • br•ket • te•t . win· dow • door <ioek1,• ·WSW, •ir c:o11dltionin9. !VRTIBt J '. $895 ; , '67 CHRYSlER . ,NEWl"ORT 2 DOo• "·'· V8. •uto m1lic:. r•dio, heel•t, power ii1erin9 I br•ke1, w1w tO tire1. ,;, (onditioning. I UJE-497} $795 . . •. ' '67 PLYMOUTH SPORT FUIY 2 DOOR V8, .a11tom1,tic,. tedio, heeler pow•r it11rin9 I br1 k11, w1w, ,;, eond., buc:~1t 111h. ITYT. 998 ) $595 SEii:. ND. CP4S-TlD-11tt74 ' oFP SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE 1973 PLYMOUTtl GRAN-SEDAN , 4 01. HDTP. BRAND NEW . 1973° LEBARON 4 DR. HARDTOP S•r. No. LEMAN$ 4 DOOi HAADTOI" VI, •utom•fic:, power 1teerin9 & br•ke1, r•dio, he•ter, w1w, Q 1ir conditioning, .,.;nyl top, elec· Irie: window1. IYDR002 ) $1495 '69 CHEVROLET NOYA 2 DOOR 6 c:yl if'lli•r. 1lenderd h •n1mi1· 0 slon, tedio, heeler, white 1ide well tire1. I YXlllll $895 MONACO 4 DOOi HARDTOP' V8, eutom•tic:, r•dio, h-•ter,. pow•r 1l••tin9 & brelr11, ~1w, eir conditionin g, ¥inyl top. 1549· AVHI, ' $1~95 RED lAG '69 CHEVROLET IMl"ALA 2 DOOi HAADTOI" va, •1dometic:, r•dio, he•l•r, 0 power 1!1erin9, pow•r br•li.11, w1w, •ir (Onditionin9, .,.;nyl lop. ( 13 ICUJ ! ·$'1395 '71 PLYMOUTH FURY 2 DOOR VI, euto.i.1tic:, r•dio, heeler, power 1t•;,Jn9, while .wall tire1,. !&71H PC I $1195 '66 FORD MUST AN• VI , euf0tr1t lic:, t1dio, h1eler. 0 power 1f.9•rin9, w1w, •ir c:ondi. tionint~ bucket •••h, c:on1ole. I Rflt4•1 $895 Wtdnrsday, June 20, iq73 ' . , VACATION TIME SPECIAL RED TAG SAVINGS ON ATLAS ENTIRE INVENTORY OF lNTERNATIONAL RECREATIONAL VEHICLES. NEW 1 /2 TON PICK~UP . . PLUS T")( AND LICENSE "GET 'EM . I UP SCOUT" ·-I H•f for the ~1111 ... tha c1eJ..t or Hach. in'°"• rufltd 90-ywh•r• Scout. SER. NO. JHICDCH741DI PILOT.ADVERTISER Ser •. No. JSI S6CGDl0112 ' NEW ·1973 TR,AVELALL BEAUTIFULLY EQUIPPED S•r. No. l02HOCHl750tl ... 1 I I ' • • ---------I • .. Fri~, June 22, 197.l DAILY PILOT: :JI ·~·-------~~-""'- 1973 · ,. ' . . , .. ' . ' • ',, I ,. I• f r, . ' • . ..,,. ' EXAMPLE ' . ' ,. . • • ' """' ' ... '"1 -!; "· ... ~· , • • q I• f , ... ~~~ • , • f. -( .v ~ .<' .. l?. 1f'o,· ....... ,,~ ••• • ' ,), ·~h,.: .. ~ . . TO CHOOSE FROM A ." ' LOW •; '., " t~".I~ 'l' --;;...~T· -"\ ' .~ .• , • : '",... :-:• '.. J.~,t,s;-... ~'\' • '·f DaMOH$T.aOt.T:ll: .', \... .• ' . MILEAG E . . ' Automatic ·Trans:f Power .1\~J:in~J:P"\\'er Windows, 60/40 Power Se~~• litereo ,RadiP..-· Cordova Top, F'actory 1ili .CO!ld.iliomng, Rally II Wheels Cus Triln 1Group,~ow_.,., Door Locks, Door Eage Guards, Body colored~ rors, ccent :8tripes .Dulll Exl 1 haust, Tilt Steering Wheel, Front & Rear bumper Guards, E2il-G)ass, -Ji'.alrt Gallge·Clust~ " er and clock, Power DJSc Brakes, Custom Cal'J>j!ts, Custom Cushion Slel!rillg Wheel ' (SOil #2P47Y3Cll3349) · :' '. • . • r • PR·ICE REDUCED • liRAND PllX · ' . $'~195 '69 LINCOLN MARii ·Ill <" .-f': r :" ~-8, auto.!tfans.,-fac'tOry V-8. auto trans., factory • Mr cQn4jijonla,g, powct.:' · air cond., power seats, fac- &leirln&, power. (disc) · • .., --tory tape d~k. and more. brnkcs. 1Nl""'e£ windows';"l'adio,-hcatCl', iWblte\\'all ~9789A892081 J . Priced below KELLY \vholesale tires. vill)d: roof.--Unted, gjUs, tape declC; lRally JI l,iboo·k.~·-------------•·---v.•hccl&. lnPu pQr4. A.--true sbo¥-car-$t&rli~ht Blac k -u•ltb raatching-int.,klr-&: .. tgp.-(-1.Jc. 172D'l'PJ '71 PONT. LEMANS SPT. '-~~..r-,-. ~ · · · ~ v . .s. aut~>.. ~s., fa~tory .. /, . /' •'I .... fl llX ....-' air cond1t1on1ng, radiO', l,,a ' \J ,. ... ....OM< I 11· :• ~ .F" ~t,... I , : ·stlGGESll'ED .... '12 '68 , RETAIL PRICE Statio11-\Vagon. V-8, 5 speed b·ans. See to appre-I ciate~---(130F..ND.l ~ POJU. CATALINA 4 DR. ~ H;!l'.-V:S.~auto._ttaflS:.;l~C'----J tory air conditioning, .J ,,~ power steering, radio, r.· · heater. Bahamas Gold: Low-low mileage. (t.lc. XVX013l '72· v-& auto 'trans.,~• s3995 Vetdb Gr!'::1t.:ih1ib1~k gl~or .. fLic. i.:-SF~Gj • air condltio~ng, full power, powersteenng. power_(dlscl •• ·11· POll"t CAJALl!iA Cf. S"-'11 PONTIAC FIREllRD ,,... < • f7t Prokes', po-over windows, radio, bea~r. whitewall • ·v.s. auto. trans., f«ctory ~ V-8,:auto. trans,, factory ""'· , " 1,,1 ;" tirei, Vinyl roor.~ tinted glass., Rally ll Wheels, lan• air Cohditioning. poW-cr ' , air COnditio~ing, full pD\Ver, \ ;,J d<lU port.I. Palladium· Silver -with matching ln· ' steerb'lg, radio, beater, I -. -power steer1ng,.f1ieater. terlor & top. (Lie. ~FNB·) •· · whitewall tires, vinyl. root, .tinted glass. Sierra whitewall tires,~vinyl roof. Rally TI w}\ecl!. Ctq.- Tan. (Lie. 096ELA) tom Copper Paint. Priced to sell. (Llc. 063CFN). l ·7·7 ~I.~~~~~ t~--~~~ $3~9 5 •70-~~!~wLl!:!.~s~;. )~ft •"\ '66 PONT. CATALINA .tPE. -~ F n.lr ·condi tioi:ting, full power. 't . steering, radio, heater, ':_t 11~ V-8, auto. trans., factory 1lj JJOU'er steenng. power (disc~ , hltewall r i 1 t • iJ fl.ir conditioning, 'radio, "<ak..,. radio. heater. whitewall tl1-es. vinyl roof. '"' ll'f!S. v ny roo ' · 1 ; \Vedgewood BJ~ with · "" • u ._.., Verdo Green. (Uc. 696AGF) tinted gle.sS". Regatta BJue with white top. (Uc. matching Interior. (Lie. 0614) Sl2ETFl '70 ~~~!~;0"!!!~ia~!~ $ JO T; '66 PO!fT. ·CATALINA:CPE. '12 GRAND~_flJi . ._ s· 4'295 air conditioi,Ung, full PD"'er, 1 -.:tJ V-8, auto. trans., factory V-8, auto. trans., factory pov.·er steering, power air conditioning, power , airicondilloning. full power,· \Vindows, heater, "'hllcwall. tires,,_vinyl roof, tinted steering, radio, heater. • po\lo·er steering. ppwer (disc] glass. ,AA.1/Fl\I ' stereo radio. Palisade Green with Crystal Blue v.•lth matching interior. (I.Jc. SYR377) -btikes .. ~·window&:. radio, jheeter, whitewall..; black Interior. (Uc. 217AS\V) t-Vinyl rool,,,ttnted ...... ~Iden Olive with '70 PONT. LEMANS CPE. \\•bfte Interior I: white top. (l.Jc. ~) , V-8, auto. trans .. factory , ~ · • air conditioning, power ~ '7;~~~p:1~~$-A69~ !lento cn!~~~£1i~: :~p~~ater. '. 't;, ~ir<lijlldltlo~;J,ulll'l'.w.e<..,tf a: '69 PONT. LEMANS CPE. l' " •( •, ~·~.-power ·,f.dlis:J '•' ·~ v 0 l Iran fat ~ ,, ' .'brat:el. power. wJndo~ lftdl~ ...ater, Whitewau.. -u. au o. . , s., . c ory v t" til't.~ .vinyl root i:intedi_:gJass, ~·IWI roof. Si&n air condition.mg, power b ~,Dance Oran" i-·lth ~·'lnteri9ir'i >You could look, · steering, radio, hea~~r •. , ·for'.f:r-1'1 & got tlnd a.faf lik~ ,thll,;,~ 603FNA)'. Clmeo White with blue top. (Lie. YRU315) . 1 ;17, 2 liRAN"Yl"'ir : : '.$ 11.' · · '69 PONT. IONNE 4 1111: S ' /;.'(", • i 6~ -e: ~ ;3695 H.T. V-8, auto. trans., fac-&: . I • V-a, ·auto. ~~ns., factqr1.; tory air conditioning, power !!: .II · 1 aJr coric;lit.lCSnirJg, full power ' steering, heater, white-· ii po\.\·er steering, IX>l\'er (di9c wall tires. Arctic Metallic Blue. (Lie. X\MZ810) brakes, pov.-•er·,vindows, po .... -"Crseats, heater, white-, ~ '67. OLDSMOll~ 2 DR. f A , V-8, auto. trans., factory v ' air conditioning, pov.·er steering, radio, heater, 4 t~ glass. Polar \Vhite. (I.Jc. T\VY601) .,. 9 CHEVY CAPRICE V-8, 1Wt6tn~'flc, factorY ' landa:u f..op, factory air Cond. (ZSS156). Price Below Kelley Wholesale Book. '70 OLDS CUTLASS s2' Sports Coupe. V-8, auto. :i trans., factory air con-;,- . · dltloning, power s teering, radio, heater, whitewall tires, vinyl root, rear speaker. Poppy Red. (Lie. 804CCA) ~ wall tlt'CS. vinyl root. tinted glass, AM/FM stereo '68 PONT~~ FIRUIRD · r, i' rJ" . radio. Ates.a Tan wir.h matching intertor. Elegance ' V~ 4 speed;-tinted glass, "" [ !J ~ •on•w-hce•ls•';.i;.U•c.•339CN--K•l---------. Alll/FM , .. dlo. hood -f. "J '69 BUICK LE SABRE CP. C1 -mounted tachometer. ·v.-8. nub_>. tr~ns., factory Y ··12 PONT. •IAND PllX ct3a· 9 ... Verdo Gtef'n-black interior. (Lie. WTU547) rur conditioning, power .S " ~~~~~=~~~:::~~:;;.~~-... -· I stcerinfrf pow:er ,•_ooo\.\'S, , V. • aut~. trans., factory ~ '68 PONMC· ,elElllD "¢:1'" Jl™W seats, radto, heater, vinyl roof, tilt wheel.· 8.lr condltionlng. full power,) "'I Al ell I h hit YO 091 power steedng, power (disc .,. V-8.. auto. tr&n1\, power J cu a Bue \Vil w e top. (Lie R1 brakes, radJo, heater, whitewall tires, viny' l roof, steering, radio, beateri ~-,_ .-custom Interior. Suilljght '>II 70 CAD. SE D. DE; VILLE tinted glass. Gunmetal Gray accented · in wack. Ye"-·· 'lack 1nt~or. ·iuc. ~•z) v • f (Serial No. 2K5TI'2Al92536) ...,,...-.. o:.o·• -~ -o, auto trans .. actory ,67 PONTl •C _ __, <'-n air condltlo~ing,JuU powe~ • , "' 1~1 '"j; power steermg, power '69 CHEVY · CAMAIO $149 Cdatom Coupe. V-8, 'auto. "11 windows, power seats, heater, whitewall' tires, vinyl V·8, Cordova Top, Custom . -trans., power steering, .~ ...,,_..,,,.,f, tinted glass, MI/Thi stereo radio, telescoJttc Paint, Mag wheels and tires, radio, beater, tinted glass. .., tilt wheel, cruise contiOI, leather interior. Sierra Low Mileage. (220ASY) · . Apan Blue l\!etallic. C1:Jc. 619BEP) Gold.· (Lie. 971BME) I • • 1 r. ' '69 PONTIAC LIMA.NS . V-8, auto., bucket scats,· ... factory air cond., Sunlight . Yellow with black top &.,interior. CZBJl~} '71 FORD PINTO (\ ' • , 1 4 "~·· 4 speed, factory ic a.itJOOnditionlng, radio, ( • 2000 engine. Mango Green. t (U c. 834DTB) ·71 · FORD 9 PASS. WION. t" V-8, auto, tra.r?s·· power • ( steering, radio, beater, roof rack, dual facing ..i rear seats. Desert Tan on brown. '69. TOYOTA CRN. WliN. h, I, r)l'.7 6 cyl .. auto. trans., air ,,_. • · , conditioning, radio, tinted ,•· .,,., glass. 3rd seaL Lotus · • Whit'c. Ctlc: 244AGFI '69 TOYOTA 4 DR. Auto. trans., air condi- tioning, tinted glass. White. cue. YXW715l , --r .. I~ r ... I.."; -o ·1"" -, -r":''\' t.f':.1,,. .. 9 ~~~~--~1;._,,.m.~1·li11Mmr . !1•5"-.ll!flU:Hfi1UlfJ)!l'Jk~lW:·~~~:~~~~ I ''RWV. GARDI N FRWY, ' • , OPEN DAILY• 9 A~M. to 10 P.M. ·· ''; • WI 1iailltrly DO PONTIAC WAIRAllTT'WOb: •.•• ' . ' " . llU DLUI OJ WHDI YOU ORIGINALLY 'PURCHASID YOUR CAI. WI LWI ALL MA.KU AND MODal . • SALES PRICES IN EFFECT THIS WEEK-END ONLY .. .. • ·, •• _f. • .. -F'rfdi)o, Junt 22, 1973 MUTT & JEFF ' •' ' . . . ' . - TD·DAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLI ACROSS 11"3 U!ff!oad 1., . . --, Oiorify *Fish Yesten:loy't Pun1e Solved; 6 RQnllen ~ 45· Oeetiny 9 C~ 46 Dendetti~ '" FemitliM coOcfirns sutfill 49 M•kn 15 HHVI! • ·-whisli:l'f opinion of, SJ N&utlcal 16 Chou-----snoot 17 Get • ••• Ol'l 8 &4 Ordtir ho11e "" 55 Hard fatty l8 RP.iKly for tis&ue pluckiflg _ 66 lake 'lll'9ll94 19 Boorish 57 Acifeto- 20 Chemical Bancrott compounds 58 Blfd 22 Dull pen(>ne: 59 Africat'I lnfOl't'TWll an1eklpe 23 "You wid itt9 60 Veni&0n i• Twolotd ~ice 25 Electricllf 61 Ga1ment deottce feature. 2B Abdllct: 2 DOWN 'llltords 1 On the slim $2_ Whimpers ~idtr -• • '0 . I l I A ••• 12 Cno1e 1.1 " .... boom bah"' 21 Actor Leon ;D Capac~ to 2 Agaiost: 22 Swear llJ)ptec .. te Pnrfbc 24 Italian poe! 34 Slate: Abbf. 3 S"iitndard 25 Separate 36 Among quantity 26 .. .,..... beiog '6 Ending wiit. 4 MM:le b<Kl 27 Side oneioeH It r.ont end 5 Nick ·····-: with:Ver. • form Fictionaf hero 28 Como 10 an '1 P1cfil with 8 Strang« end 9 meter 7 The very best 29 Bocly of is US A's a Be obr1Q11ed ' water neiQhbor to JO Kifld of l9 Get ·--· 9 "Weft! I do comedy ~ out of ···-··!" 31 Da11s llJ Expansa of 10 Ungovern· 33 Openings , lantl able 36 Russian lf1 w .. 11.en 11 Enthusieitm moontains 1. 2 ) " » ,. n Ve1b111 commi1ment9 39 Turned away 40 Galt 42 Good judgmenl 43 LondOfl native 45 Grrr1 name 46 Nutmeg product 47 Geometrical '"'"" 48 Flannel 49 Take on food 50 Fishe1n1an'1 purcha3e .5 1 MISS Horne 52 Stanch 54 Temporar'( h1sh10f1 I'LL. MAKE HIM FEEL. AT HOME JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH YlfTllfR4'1' :t l'OUNP A CIOl.O•""'°UP SAl'ITV PIN . 1~NlVlir I silN ONI ~ Bll'OU! l -v:;crrr;~ l l ... · . • DICK TRACY by Dou9 Wiidey by Tom K. Ryan THEl!f'U. !'I" A ~IEF JNlff\LU!IE WHILE 2 IS PAINSTAKINGLY llEING AWl"llTO 2. /'W-'1 - by Al Smith by Dale Hale by Ernie BushmiDer PE:R.HAPS YOU KNOW HlM •.• HIS NAME IS SAM OIUVER ! T>aS MoltNINIF :t WAT"4P A 1>1141 Ofl "'APflt "-1A1Tilf Of'~ THI IJL<1.UTJN llOAIW. IT WA• v11tv INT11fl9TINV. ~' ... , ... ~ SAL Y BANANAS GORDO }Jor Ar AcL1 OJ! DOG1 ME!JY.f • MOON MULLINS .All, MR. DooDLo·· STARTIN<OA NJ;W PICTUli'C, l SEE ..• • • -Jj - '· ANIMAL CRACKERS LA~,l.1 :! lllA'O W- l<IOllDfRlij"1·· ER ... lHAT 1s ... I-I··· . • by Harold Le Doux by Mell ')OU C.lf'TAN.'( ~MIA lfl&H, ALI. ""'··· by Chester Gould by Charles !He 1-(1 D cqUGl-IT 1l--le 5 :/6 Ftof=/ N05TALGIA T/11/J9f THE GIRLS DENNIS THE MENACE j •• .. .. ' ' Frldiy, J11nt 22, 1973 DAILY PJLDr 35 The Btue•t Marketplace on the· Orance Coa5t . Aonountemem . . • • , . 500 • S2<t ........... i.. ...•.... os0 -990 I ld5'h , ~tine lqvipinent 900 • 9"' 111"*'rn~ . ., . . . ' . . 700 • 799 financial • , , . , , •• , 200-299 Houses f0r Solo . . . . . . 100 • 124 lOlt & fcvnd . , , • , , , S50 • S74 DAILY Pl•OI _CLASSJFIED ADS • • ( 6.42-5678 ),. . One .Cal I Service ApProvai ""'9af'; . . . . .....--. . ' • . 300-_..,. .. khook ond in.ttuqlon • • • S7S • ~ You Can Sell It, Find It , ~~ .... ·.· .. aoo .149 Trade It With a ~Want-Ad fast Credit ERRORS. AdvtrtllOn shoollci check thtlr ads dally & report errors lmmedlatoly. Tht, ~AILY PIL01 an umts llablllty for tho first Incorrect 1nNrtlon only. • < OUR 24th YEAR Off•rlng servic• only experience c1n provide * OPEN HOUSES * 401 FELIZ S~T7SUN· r-5 BLUFFS 3 Bdrm. Dolores. Greatly upgraded. $67,500 . . 2912 ALTA VISTA SAT/SUN. 1·5 j EASTBLUFF. 4 BR. -lowest priced & most ~ livable plan in this area -; 4545 TREMONT SUNDAY 1"5 C:AMOO SHORES -view; 4 BR., 3 ba: & pool. '$123,500 OCEAN VIEW PLD MADRID '· m this aln'IOSI new ma· Si p Sangria in tJiis 3 BR , 2 le VIP fan1ily hru.ne. BA Spanish charmt'r, large ck>w; bedrooms, 2 baths courtyard, densely land- an<I excellt;111 area. You scnped, bltns, knee deep d\VN 1he lfYKI. }~uu price shag carpets, drape10, great ·Jt,6,500. . location! An1azing flnanc:i ng ' ~aHors 646.7711 !ti 13 \Vcstc:lif! Drive _ K"n_t.il~L a1 this low price S33, 7'".iO. Call 6W<IOO. _ ....... G•neral Gener ii ~--~~,. , ltxt G __ •no_r_._1 ------_G_••_•_r_.1 _____ G•n_•r_._1 ______ G_•_•_•_;_,1 ______ G_._ .. _r•_•--'·~---~-~- INVESTMENTS * * , * * * * TRl·PLEX ' . . Seller liquidating. Shru'J)~ c I le • . Id °A"41<M-$.id, ~ ... WOQATIS ~t.~~~:}1r~?'i: Herit•ge o ct1on --;-,cenenrO'.fsta-r.fesa-k>eatkln,-Jo.::-::~::;"-;--::-~~"!"------------1---I $4£,950. Call now . 546-1600.1 LOOK! LOOK! • REALTORS 2128·~·COAST-HIGHW,.,,__-+ CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. MONARCH BAY TERRACE • 32301 B•ltic S.. ,Spectacu1ar white water vieW' or Dana Pt. stretching to Catalina from all Redwood &- gl~s~, 4~Br., 3 i,..;~Ba home on 1h acre pri- . vate knoll in Monarch Bay Terrace. Spacious rooms, bath w/gardens. Pool w/jacuzzi in sheltered patio. Prof. Jndscping. Choose your cpt., tile, etc. Perfect for gracious liv- ing and entertaining. $310,000, · . MONARCH BAY Srlendid 3 Br, 3 Ba fa.mily residence in one o Laguna's finest private' communities. Beau(iful MeXican· tile entry leads to.1'spa- cious living room with beam ceiling. Ex- ceedingly priv. patios front, back a nd oU 2 Br. Lot is completely' fenced with room fof a pool. Priv. beach and beach clu b make this home per.feet for a family 'a nd for en- tertaining. $94,500. NEWPORT BEACH - 2001 ,; 2001 Cliff Orin Privacy for Pal'"eiits! 1.Jpstrs. Br &: Ba w/ lovely Jiv. rm. w/book ~helves, frpic & beau- tiful view of Harbor & Ocean. Dwnstrs. 3 Br., 2 Ba., lar ge Jving-room w/frplc . In- come from attached apt. 2 Br, I Ba frplc & priv. patio. Ori R-2 corner lot. $95,000. Open Hout• Sat & Sun SAN CLEMENTI! BEACH HOUSE IS15 Hoclonclo · Only 2 blks. from Ocean. 3 Br., 2 fla w/conv. den. Newly painted inside & out. Carpeting throu t both stories. Good for rentaJ , too. $38,500. . PROMONTORY BAY Prime lot opposite beach facing north. $133,750. _ _ _ CAMEO SHORES ~ __ COMMERCIAL BALBOA'S BEST DUPLEX ~ Open for in- , FRONTAGE spection Saturday & Sunday I to 5 PM, 820 1!8 fect on Brls!ol in Santa \V. Balboa Blvd., Balboa. Fine architect's Ana and 'i5 !ect.on adjoining __ dream design. 'rwo & three bedrm. units \YI street. Over l6,000_Ju1pt'OVl?d l.iy & din on up~er floor and bedrooms on sq. tt:=-reai!Y~sn'lall mar-· 1 . , . h -be eili' ket or professional bldg. ground evel. 1g.-.-p1tc am c ngs. Owner needs capital. Priced Landscaped, carpets & drap~. outside bal- to go .now at $47,000. Call conies & patios. Unusual wi ndow treatment. .':""TW1000 0· FOR ONE" Decorator's Delight! Go Western-Contempor- ary-An tique-or Akron. Investors -please note -best rental area -first user advan- tages, am\ only $96,500. CALL S40-l 151 Great-luiiCheon arKl ·cocktail - restaurant plus an cnt'er· taitunent establlshment al nigh1, both on the same Jot. Good leases and return wtth low down. One acre C-2 zone. Exe@'llent Costa. ?I.tel)& lo- cation. Call now • 546·1600. EASTSIDE 2 BEDROOM· $27,000 FO!l HORSES AND KIDS Over ~!. acre lot In rapidly I developing Santlago Blvd. area illows horses and 'kids - A RARE FIND -especially with features like these; Beam ceilings thruout, massive stone fireplace , large bedroo ms, fron t kit· chen with dinette area and fenced yard complete with fruit trees. Q\vner moving to Oregon/must sell: CALL us for compleN d• tail1> S46-S.80. °"""""""' •njoy oounfrl! at-COOL• IT =:e~r ,~:d~~ JUST SPLASH AROUND IN THIS BIG out at $14,700. 546-1600. SPARKLING· POOL -Relax on the large 546· 1600 covered patio or watch it all from the lovely 'INVESTMENT 4 bedroom home -with formal dining, family room and kicben eating area. Excellent loca-DIVISION \ion near schools and park. Priced at only OP€Nnt 9• 17'SruNroac N/CEJ $42,500. Mo~e in fast. CALL 540-1151 ·lt~-~. ~ COOL POOL I_ S BR; 3 BA. MESA VERDE POOL HOME. Ne\v ankle deep crpts. U:iruou t, large formal. $250 living & dining rpoms opening on to beaut. r OURS J oversized poo l. All bltin kitchen w/separate REN 'TIL Y ' dinette. Truly a magnificent family home l + GUEST + and priced only ·$59,950. Ready fo r your in- 644·7270 '. -' ~ ~ e FOREVER VIEW , , -~-, · . CHANNEL REEF -\\i'~lci> ~Is by d-Y, and harbor lights by Mt your livllig room. The ULTIMATA-FEE[ ownership, ,luxury 011-the-water Jiving. 2 Bedrooms, .2 · bath condo. Pool, security.,g_q_w-d, boat &lip ·ijvailable. CALL FOR appbifttrnent, $95,IW~ e DELUXE CORONA DEL-MAR DUPLEX Beautiful ... tree.lined stree\,1n Old Corona del Mar . BOTH DELUXE UN !1'S HA VE 3' bedrooms, de~,_ fireplace., 2 ~. builliti- kitchen, PATiu;:;,·12 bloc~s fOC~p'ping and . schools. Choice l~tiori. . . . . ~ : . ~. . · ' • I " ' e ATTENTION BUILDERS ·' . , 'ROOM TO BUILD ,secon9, tiJFr on i \• large comer lot. 2-bedrooln"tijlilfe. c.ar ," drapes, fenced yard ill ~ Heig s.~ ' ~ -· ...... .___,_,.. • • • • • • ... . . • • • • • • • • • 5QO, ' ' ' ' .1 tft• CM' " I UY. IEU. -OR TRAM} A. OE . ANYPLACE IN THE NATION AUSTIN-SMITH, REALTORS GORMAN-& l\SSOCIATES- ----·· 644-7270 Gene rel G•n•ral VIEW OF HARBOR UGl'tTS "HARBOR VIEW HILLS" Located high on the hill, olferiiig full enjoy- ment of the view of Newport Bay & Pacific ~ , Ocean. Lusk bit. 3 bdrm., family·;pu., dining rm., with a htd. & filt 'd. pool-& jacuzii; on a profess. lndscpd. Iot. Offered ilrfee at $99,000 • > POOL spect!on -CALL us for complete dotolls. -~==---t--S46-5880. ~· ------+-IRON GATES to South Sea Tascefwlr ecora ea 3t!r.:2j!l! Ba home in th is d1stmct1ve community. Ocean views =--~~---~~'9;;.f;t;J~~J-from-both-Master-B&.&..Li.v.ing Rm . ..Famil)'_ I Rm. \v/wet bar, formal dining rm., all with access to pool. $115,000. Island paradise 'vilh "ood deck patio, SY.'aying palnl.'I lUld·vokanlo..rock.garden.s. 3 bedroom including A p I I t level muter suite. separate CORBIN· MARTIN " -AUN TO SE E-962 SANDCASTLE "Beaut. 3 Bdrm. home; ocean &-~anyon view ; 2 patios-gardens galore. S(msbiny home. A steal at $92;500c Fee! ·o PEN SAT. & SUN. Hi. Lavera Burns. 2226 ARBUTUS-OPEN SAT. & SUN. LUSK 5 BR. 3· BA. EASTBLUFF home. Large !amlly rm. & dinins rm. Poolsize lot. Walk to scbools, .shoppmg & tennis. 3 ·car garage. $79,500. BRAND NEW.-50' BAYFRONT OPEN SAT/SUN. ,2-6. 1645 BAYSIDE ,DR. C.D.Mar. 3 to 5 Bdrm5., 41!! balhl; huge fun room ; new slip & side ties. Tax s)lelter- ed finance. $245,000. Geo. Grupe. OPEN SUNDAY 2-4 All the beauty of perfection. 3 Bdrm. LUSK H.V., lovely garden & stunning inside. 1532 KEEL .. Terrine price. $88,800. Jim Muller. 545 VIA LIDO NORD OPEN SU!I. 2-S Dramatic "One Of A Kind". Su perior corn- • er location. Sp8cious rooms. Excellent floor plan. 3 BR. & fem/dining rm., 2 frplcs., 3 .car gar. See & buy! $129,500. Muriel Barr. OPEN SUN. 1-l BAYCREST 1807 HOLIDAY RD. Ivan Wells - sharp. Formal din. plus lam. rm. overlooking pool. '4 Generous bdrms., 31!! baths. Choice Joe. Mary Lou Marion~ HARBOR VJEW H~ES Owner transfered. Price reduced. Port~ 1fino model, 3 BR., 31h baths-tam. rm., & bonus room. OPEN SUN. 1-5. 1612 PO RT TAGGART. $79,llOO. Howard Wells. 1507 KEEL DR. OPEN <SUN. l·l What a buy ! Watch the sunsets in a lovely · 3 BR., Lusk home-large family r m. Corn- er Jot; on fee-land. Owner anxious! $85,000. Harriett Davies. LAKE FOREST Sparkling Deane Bros. 4 Bedroom, family 'room. Huge lot. On child safe cul de sac. l $55,000. P. Hallock. , ONE BLOCK TO BIG CORONA .Just listed; custom home. Dramatic use of wood, brick & glass. Fireplace in lar~e UV~ ing rm.; 3 BR., den. $94,500. By app't. Dean Kring. BAYFRONTS-EXCLUSIVEL Y OURS' Move out of the heat onto the waler in one o( our many lovely homes. 30' to 60' front· age. 3 BR. to 7 BR. homes, starting under '200,000. Bill Bents. . 1 INVESTORS & BUILDERS 37\<2 Ft. lot less than 100 ft. to sandy beach-. 2, BR. & !·BR. beach houses fo r lmmed. Income. · FantasUc site tor. future income. "$69,llOO. Bob Yorke. ~ Coldwell.Banker ~ S50 Newport Ctnttr Dr., N.B. 133-070\I \ I i ' ' ,l • GRUBB & ELLIS CO. ~ · Realtors. 2863 !, Coast Hwy. Coron1 del Mar '• 67S-7llO • .,, *" *· * * * * *~TAYLOR CO.* Attl'BL-tlvc t\\·o -2 .BR; each \. gua;t facility with private J entrance oa pool, cozy den, used brick fircplace.i.. rugged bean1 ceilings. vourmel kllci>en wi<h built-JM. Ban-LOVELY qu e<. Jonna! dining.' Step -MESA VERDE HOME -in popular Town & dmvn rumpus t'OOnl over . . looking giant rOck waterfall -Country Series. Ranch style 4 & family fea- dance pavllUon . and spark'. turing manicured lawn, quality gold shag ling pool. Owner d~te. carpeting ... One block tb fairwiys of country ~ ADVAN"T4liE. Call club.-1'ruly a de~htf~I large family _home. · Offered at $4 1,500. CALL 'J46:SllO ( I Olli\ I L OL\0\ FORMAL DINING ROOM ~';:,·,rep~ LARGE LIVING ROOM, family room, 3 big I bedrooms1 covered patio and 'i'' trffi, --..,=-,,---,,--tr-. Delight!Ully neat and clia ing. Ab- solutely beautiful. Our exclusiv st listed at $43,950. in the heart of MESA VEf:tDE. CALL S~l 151 . 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 this week, so CALL us immed. S46-S880 "'"tti single garage, on 50' x VA hotn{' • $23,500, 3/br & NEW TRIPLEXES 150' R-4 iot:. Ideal for owner one mile from South Coast IN COST A MESA &. tenant, or build additional Plaza shopping center. No 3 Bdrm., 1% Bath llllils. $38,950. . d0'>\'11 .t: seller \\rill pay n1ost 2 Bdrm., 1 ~~ Batlt 408 E.l~IJ}_.\ of '"''" closing """· · 1 Bdrm., 'II Bath C.M.~ _ . 1 0r~:O~:'nty -'tf¥• 1f•• .,._,. PROMl~E HER llaii.. Rea11m1 546'00-.n Rul1o~"i'"~1-61t1 223R9D FACIRMVIEW A ROSE GARDEN i:ll( t\l l fJ ~l • ·~<'l h ,,...~, G.ner1I G•neral General •i • • AJl adult ~le story 2 .:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~JI C-1 property -ideal location bedroom Hwµ:ington Bay r" for any business, across condo. ThiA almost im-,,. HARBOR VIEW HOMES ·( MONTE~ MODEL 4 bedrooms, faml1y room , formal dining; carpets, drapes, super landscaping, covered patio, wood deck. $76,450 PORTOFINO MOOEL 3 Br, bonus room/sleeping Ion, formal dining, lush carpeting, lots of Spanish tue, charming Bricli patio w/ovcrhang. Adjacent to. p~rk. $19,500, ---- HARBOR VIEW . HOME~ ~EALTY . street front Safev:ay store. pOn\ble-t~flnd ntodel In· ~'lter will corisider tt·ade eludes washer, dryer, Ol' tinance. Submit. Vacant. reh'lg, covered p a t I o . ~ very aruciowl! . \Vonderful location right e CALL ANYTIME e next door to Banks and all 646-3921 or Eve. '7S..ll27 shopping. New listing, only 122,500. Lachenmyer R,• ollvr wow INVESTORS ALERT! 'I'v."O-On-one-lot! One 2 br/2 bath (2 ~rs.. oldl rents fo1· 1 $150, &a.'Ond 2 hr/1 bath, I rents for san1e. Both only $27,500. Live in one & let someone else n1llke the PRY· I menu C '.v1\Llll ll 11 Lil • co:rs WALLACE REALTORS 962-4454 NEWPORT HEIGTHSI 3 Brt 2 BA, family room w/lirepl, ne\Y car pets, drapes, b I t in s . Cool nlBnlcured yard on quiet cukle-611c. Walk to all Ne\vpol't schools, bike to the charm. $~6,500. C ALL 6'>-7221 I Rea.I tor~ M&-0562 *BALBOA ISLAND* -"-I' I 1., ... -.. ,. .. 2 11.J.l Wettclttr Dr., N.B. l'JO\:l\Ut 111 , new .,.,,_,uvut .> <'IC ---"-=--,~-~-! t:\R. duplex. FunltuJtlc \\':tier SEI USI view! A~-, fl'om pavilion. f"ot• the right 1x>n1e ror you. IZl9.000 · C.mple<e .. 1e<tl0n or homes BALBOA BAY PROP. In Hie beach"""· * 673-7410 -* HARBOR VIEW HOMES -Con't Bo Boat REAL TY I $29,950, Ni«l.Y Ja-•perl 4 133-07'0 bedroom 'ri.:1 haJf-.:lrcuJru· SUPER. 1740 sq. f 1. I. dMve. Patio, 2 baths. Dining townhouJO.ooctM vlCw-sood • roo1n. a.lg family room. Air· ArtA..,$45,000. Oarrl\tf, CR. · BJl.0780 <~nditlon<'<l, b1~lS40-1m. GUNTHER REAL TY ""'""'""'"""""'"""""'""'""'"'"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""" ____ ...,""'""'""'.!.' TARBE L 714·153-i395 or n<-~1151 - • ' -.J MAC -tfAB · IRVJ -r . SPYGLASS If . Watch the ocean; bay &-glttteriltg ni life in Newport Beach from this 4 BR/FR. home. Beautifully decorated & ready to · move in at ~.; Y $ 8,~0~. . ookie A.· n 642,8235. OPt:N;SA'it,& s . 1-5 p.111.-1 Castle Cove. (W11llr • (1 I . CAMEO HIGHLAlllP,t~ VIEW "-' Custom styling · • eleganf 3 :BR.-Oen home" overlooking Morning CanYQ:ll • & ·ncearr .. ~ $69,500. Charlene Reich'"""nn' 642'823~'." (W12) • . -~ . BIG CANYON- Beauitful 5 BR/FR. on ' cllOice comer lo~ · Ref. A/C. Comp. fenced. i:;\l.sh carpets' & drapes. Lots of.lstonework .. 'Room for pool. Joel Smith 642-8235. (WJ3) ',, • · . ... . " 12S' BAYFRONl'- Pier & float for large powe()>oat. Decortt: ' tor's home. Relocation ne~tates sellin'g : mo st unusual 3 BR, 3 bath home. Lg. LR, formal DR, spacious FR & ter rific kitchen . Ideal' borne fo r illdoor & .Ou,tdoo,r entertalli-, . ing. OPEN SAT. & SUN.-1-5 p.m. #41 Balboa Coves. (WI 4) · · " 1 • · BAYCREST • Newly listed 3 BR/FR home'ln lovely Ba~-' crest area. Beautifully,, d~rated. l..aJid •. scaped yard for summer entertaining. Dontl\ miss the special plaa for our boat "'"•l dog. Ready to e n,j,o,y ,Qlt only $77 ,1!0,Q. Cookie Allison 642-8235. cW15) , .. HOME + INCOME •. ' C.D.M. 2 lo.yely custom homes on large corner lot' ,v;beautiful Ocean View 'A 3 llR -2 batl;i, and a 2 BR · 2 bath & FR. Pool -5-car gar· , age. $174,500. Harriet Perry 642-8235. (WJ6) ' ,_ LOOKING FOR THI' IDEAL · 1 FAMILY liOME?t ~ _ Here it is ~ hard to fidd 'Broadmoor Har· bor View -4 BR's, FR;1ormal DR, private, master suite. Lovely dec:ur ' tbtu-out. Hii!ll beam ceiling LR. Comp. fenced . Close to pool. Drastically re d'u c ed. "Joel Smil)l 642-6235. (Wl7) ' . , . 1 BIG 1CANYON ! : 100' on the falnvay. Large Irregular shapo• ed building site on quiet cuk!e-sac. Tre- mendous loc ation fflr yqUr ne\v homt! $62,500. Tom Queen 1144-6200. (W16) 1 • 'I' ! lrvine,j --...... ""~;c.r.,., I 901 Dover Drift &42·1235 114' MecArOlur 144·1200 ,.,_port '-ch, C.Htcnl1 12111 .. .. • -l -~!.. .-. : .. Frida)', June Z2, tllf/) --------- I~! _,_..,. I~ I RANCHO SANTA FE Rambling ranch e'tat.e iocated in attfaC'ti\'e \\'ooded are<!. Co rrals, !'Y•i111n1ing pool. ~er\·· ;int'!' quarter'i. fully equiJ>ped fnr r:ti -=i·1~ thoro bred hor!!es. Can be-divided. Approxi· 'mately 39 acr es. $75-0,000 • APARTMENT SITE Prinle localio11 in 1-lunllngton Beach, near ---J-IHt1ntinctton-t-1irbottr:-\\titJ-sell-or-exehang $200,000 • • • • HAR=BOR- _C.OM~ANV REALlORS 2841 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mi1r ."S.lllng Rnl Estate In Newport Harbor Since 1944" 673-4400 Generai General * BOYD REALTORS· PRESENTS * JOYOUS LIVING ! Well cared for Portofino in Harbor Vie~· Homes. Steps from the pool & play area. 3 Bdrn1s.1 2lfi: baths. Coun!!:)'. kitchen & format C!Ji'.)1ng rm. ~ -~ 191S PORT WEYBRIDGE OPEN SUN. l ·S SMART ADDRESS Irvine Terrace class ic. 2 Bdrn1s., co nvert. den. 2 baths. Parquet floor.~ in li ving area. \\'el l design~d pQol. 1 S37 SERENADE ICffp thi1 lto11dy dlrftChlry wl .. JM .... WHll9fld • Y•• •• h•-·•u11th19. All tfte lec.tlo1t1 listed below -lllesctlbed '" 9reot.t ~•II a., odwertllllit efH.. wMto ie toMy'& Dolfy '"9t WANT ADS. Potrea &itowl"'I •p• houses for .... ., to rfft .,. •rted to ll1t-11tCll ldor•otlo11 111 rtll1 col111111n HCh ft'ldoy, S•t· urdoi & Svndoy. HOUSES FOR SALE 3 BEDROOMS 2622 Crestview (Bayshores) NB 644·2430 $49.500 (Sun 1532 Keel iHVuHi lls ) CdM "44-2430 $38.800 (Sun 2·6) 3 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 96'.! Sandcastle. Corona del Mar 644-2430 892,500 ' (Sat & Syn !·St 1812 Port Taggart Pl (flVuHomes) NB 644-2430 879,900 (Sun 1·5) 1507 Keel Dr. (HVuHil ls) CdM 644-2430 $85.000 ISun 1-5) 545 \'ia Lido Nord (Lido Isle) NB 644-2430 $129,500 (Sun 2-5 ) 4 BEDROOMS 1400 Serenade Terr (Irvine Terr) CdM 644·2430 $94 .500 (Sun 1·5) 2.()()1 Cl iff Dr. Ne \v port Qeach 675-7000 $!15,000 (Sat & Sun 4 BR & F:AMIL Y RM OR DEN *19 Tiburon Bay (S pyglass) NB 644-2430 $124 ,500 (Sun 1-5 ) *1724 Gala'y Dr, (Dover Shores) NB 644-2430 $139,500 (Sun 1-5) *1807 Holiday Rd, IBaycrest) NB 644-?430 S87;500 (S un 1·5) S BEDROOMS 627 Nyes 'pi (Porlo!ino Laguna) Laguna 494-9473 '$135,000 (Sun 11·1) 5 BR & FAMILY RM DR DEN 2'.!26 Arbutus.(Eastblu!l) NB 644-2430 $19,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1645 Bayside Dr., Corona de! Mar 644-2430 $245,000 (Sat &.sun U ) 320 Id aho Place (Mesa Verde) CM ~24 °$42,500 (Sat & Sun LZ.5) . -** .. I. ' A UNiftUE HOME PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES $25,000 For this imn1ac ul at e , upgl'aded 3 bedrooin. 2 baths, onl y 2 n1ile-s from the beacb. seller ~1111 pay loru1 fee~ ro you can buy Fii.A wiU1 as little as $1,000 down, or you n1ny \\'!I nt to assu1ne !ht! existing loun at only 5\i r;;' • W~Ll<f H & LEf * NEARLY NEW * Cute S~nish style home. Near beach .t: thapplnQ". 3 BR. 2 ha., din, rm , .F'rpl~. lleart ot BWl.xw. $69, 'iaO C4lll: 673.ZOO:~ S30-7914i Eves. associ ated BR OK ER!-. RF Al T<llfC: 11"11~ lit Dalbo" b' I lbl I SMILE! ~Ul.1g .rt>ur bon1e "CASH im'RCHASE PLAN" {7'..l hou1· evaJUlltiOn By REAL ESfATE 2231 South Bt1!Jtol A\'e. 546-0J'n Salisbury R.:>at!y •• 15 ?i'IAi~l J: A Vl<: . HALRO • .\ ISLAJ-11) CALL 673-6900 UYING 3 UNITS? \"ery t·Jean 3 ht• den & \\'al"k· i;hop in rea.r . Lo'i.; ot pri\'ai·y ' v;it11 chain-link fcnC(' arouod I thi~ ·chru.'ll1ittg honiE-1· Pric~ Is lh1n . Easy fina.'lcing:. C WALl<ER /'.. LEE •' • _ ..... I~ l.__-_,.,_ .... _,J~ I I~ r:;;;;"°"";;''";;s.,_. ~I ~;:· :r;1:: nm1 \t '-01 \O\ ' R£A1 'UR!; General ocnN VIEW l +Guest $25,950 11·tv11h.' Cb"CUl!U'~Sll't..'CI ot 11110 hon1~.-pa!J: and 1&..<tvt· thousand s . S"'•cuplt\ft i.;rOuods "''Ith 1'001 tu1· bout •. 3 bcdroonu includi n g hide·ll·Wfly UIA.illt.'l' 11ultti. i:;epara1c f;'.Ue!I fnt·iJity. den 1vitJ1 sliding ~hlS$ Ooor to ~· e111er1niners pntio. Il1-cnthtuki11>1: vie11' of t'llJl· Yon and blu1• Pn<;trir. BET· ·r i:: n. 11 u rt H. Y: ca J l 015-0.1<)3, IUR I.\ I L 01.SO~ " Rl,off/"LJ~:;, C WALl<EH & Lll B•lboa l1l1nd ISLAND CHARM St1..·v~ t•1 htl). j t>r. 2 bo, ~10~11 piny room + rtntal u111L Liu'. ,;un deck, 100?· F'an1ily hon1c \Vll:h olfl \\'Ot'ld cha11n. fh~t ti1nc oCfcl'-ed. 1.oltL 1J! \\ ood vauJtl•d 01>en bctu11 li\. ~·ni. w1ball'Ony, t.•lf1ve in Aug. 11.t, llt'l'..'ClltJy n.-.. n1odclfd ,~ In xlnt cond.· tr16.oorr. 01\·n~1.,r {l75.mo-1. Capistrano Beach CAPO. BCH. Ne"' Duplex jusl ncur <.'OUt• plctiou. 4-Wr111., 1!11 hn11~~ loWf'r 11nlt. Convcnicnl ly lo•:all·rl clo~r· to rr.·1•11·11y! c .11 S86-0222 Costa M••• EASTSIDE- ANNIVERSARY COTTAGE rent East!ilde U;)ca!ion ,·, ' 252, 262, 274 . 22nd St., Clot•.' J _L1u·gc 3 BR .. 2 ~A. ta~ rnh~-ll-·I fplc·. .'\ppl'OX llOO i;q. Tt1: C1 pis, dr1,s, lndscpd, fli cl'.f. All in clu clet.I . 9()!,'; rtnuric; ' i ng:~ ! Drive Uy ! ! ! ,'. '. (j4(j.\).l~;I, UI' 645--6177 TRl-llVEl, $44,000 " ' ·- I me:Ja u,.Je BEDRM ~~R~~i! !~~~!~I Dana Po1nr OPEN !louse S,\'f 10-1. Sul'I .1:1-5, 335.'i2 Bl'C'1nerton OP.,~ . BR. 2 BA: in1n1ed poss lo do1vn. ~1usl sell lhis v>kn<I . 714/728-8.i!IO. over thC' gara~e 1.'0n1pleh.' "·it h a \\·ct bur a nd ~!I bath. Plenty of rooin for lhl' rest of the family in this great fl oor pl an. 1...oti. of lan<lr<r:i p· ing <!_lid a nice, slr..e lot. Only $.16,9:,0. 847-0010. OPEN TIL 9 • rrs FUN TO 8E NICE' THE REAL ESTATERS "I AM TDO St,IALL" for my Pl't'St:nl o.wnet' hu l ju..,1 1ight for you wiU1 n1y <l BR, sparkl!ug riool, lrg cov p11.tio. Jmrncd . occ. avail. Subn1i l 0·1 $42,500. •GINNY MORRISON• REAL TOR-5S7-4130 Newport A_n•_h_•_lm _____ _ •I Falrvl•w 646-1111 (onytl,..) E:AST ·ANAHEIM Trailer access and intntt'll!'C storAgc 1u-e1t. Roon1 to pnrk boa ts, campers noel tra ilers. Still l'OOm fot' pool, en· tertaJning and g fl rd e n . Lovely 4-bdrnt. house in n very qule!, 1vell-e11tablishcd neighborhood. Und•r $40,000 580-02'.l'J * NEW LISTING * OCEAN vie\\' & pntio, 2 hr,'! r. Sharp, ~various 2 IlR., 2 ba, Y.alk lo bc·hs & ~lariz ·. ha"s., \\ilh dining mt,. Jlt.'W· By oi\11c1". $.:\.1,500. 340i l er ruof. t"opper plun1bing, ~·Jazo Dr, -l~Z170. ~·.A. heat, h·plc., hd\l'r!. Ors., ·s y O\\"NEn, 4 BR. spacious '· (:ru1J. & dr1t!)lci: s).ll'inkler vdth vie~·. S47,5011, or sub- 1;ystcn1 on lin1er . \Vidc t'OI'· n1it. Open Sat & Sw1. 33322 • nf>r lot, So. ol h\\'.}' .. Y.'idLJl Pala Alto, DP, 496-2058. , .' v i<'Y.' of !"he jel1,\'. ;I, BK, 1 ~~ BA, 2 stOlj.', CIOili * NEW DUPLEX * to nutri11a. cpt/drps, Jg sUfi . . , . aln1osl eO:itplelc-d. '1 er · deck, $37,500. 493.5029, ~ l'lt!c 3 BH.. 2 Ba. & 2 HR., F I • V II . ' 2 ba. Xlnt Joe., 1\·ith 1ni11i· oun ••n I ey • ' vil'\\', Lgf'. sundl'tk. Ubl.1 S ' garage \\ luuodry fncil. Lvtsl WIM IN THE , · 01 1•x.r;js. 01fc1'ed !ot· BEDROOM $! 15,!JV(J. MORGAN REAL TY S111x.•r sharp Tlbul'on con tJ'O • 673-6642 67S.6459 boasls lu1~re m tU!!t'r bedrnl, • --DRAMATIC--' Nt11· sp!it ll'"et duplex 011 1 1,~ lot11. sou1h or Hwy. Sepru11lc IJl{lgs. II.or t•11mplc1c (Jr!vncy, 1 Blk to bench. Open 'Sat/Sun. 12:3U 313 HELIOTROPE HAL PINCHIN REAL TOR . 675-4392 NEW-DUPLEX s 2 lg.,, n•w duplexes Sidv t;y side on 11 h1.:;h. 1.'0111cr IOI. (ir1 ·u1 bCl01,1,• lilvy, 10<-·., $102.500 f•a(~h. Pinn~ avail., choose )'our t)\i.-n cx-t~rlor. Unlver1ity Re11lty :l()')l ~. c~. lfw'y 6i3·6510 C07.\'.' corner collage, 3 BR, 2 BA + llU 1100 sq ft unit. 2 \BR, l BA & [tplc. $116, 750. ~o Poi11settia, 644-7311 or &16-9079 1·c11t 'all'-t'Ood, 1v1:t bar, sctf •• !'lean Ovc•n, Dtll'al'tivt> cr1>~ & dl'P.S nnrl n1uny o!.hcr ex• t1·a11. 3 Ucdtins, 11 ~ b.11h9/ (antlly rn1, diJ1 ing rn1, 2 1..-&\1 ' i,:ar & fJQt'io. 1600 ~I rt . \Vo1k to •lt!W Vountuin Plat!\ S110p. ping Cenlur. lkirt c.•ondo lo, . r n1 1on in F.V. $37.000. 1\Slo',. FOil t·. John Malo 961-5617 Rei: * KASABIAN *' Real Estete . , 962 "' 1 • 'J'RADE 2 Bil TO\\l'Nl lOUSS, • ~22 ftuu r1n. xln1 t'Orxrv 111Cnh•d 111 p1i 1nt> fo1111tnin +, Vnlll'Y iu·1•f1, hnn1c.'tl oo' • CUP,'Ult.')', llil!l\lll\llblt-J%~, 11111.11, $3500 t'l"!Uily. l-'OR boM • 11r l4>1•i;chc ot H!Ual vllluet. \ South liicy H.c11Hy 962-244 • Aor•n·r/Owner. ' ' .. . " REPO ,, $750 DOWN ·,. HOME-INVESTMENT 2 br. room to l>uUd. carry ~ YI' loun. 618 GoklGntod, 67a 3.100. HARBOR VU HILLS. l,ugk 3 br, SAUSALITO, Jar. 2 01' 3 UR Townho11ge, h~ -. r1unpu11 1'()1)f11 • tlble a:nc.. •• ~=~~~~ 1 s\Vlrn JIOOI, fe1 tcrt. 1-lurryl • • • !'<17-9144 ,,r R42~44'tl ~ •• • onol 11izl'fl yrl, ht<'ld~ 1Rnd. $79,000. Owner. M<l-S.167 -.-.-DUPLEX ee · '['111> !·Bf:. \Vnlk lO bt."llch $5.'l.MO Agent 673·8500 CAMEO SHORES Uy Owner, 3 br, 2~ ba, fan1 1·m, JlOOI. lll5,000. 675-1007. (.01ta Meta Fir•t PlonMr Realty~! t F'OR imleby ooner • Room.Y. -; 4 BR 1'1buron condo, 11¥. 1, nn.. di11. r1n., 2~!i B4, 1 kit/lan1. rm,, f)Atlo, 2-cat ... f:O.I'., clcc CJptlll<!r" waM,\! ,.. !Oftener, crpta &: C\llto~ drp!i lhr11011L 'rool &: , clubhouse. $38.500. fl63..5S9ff \ • -· 3 Br, 2 ~i Ba. fflm, trpl1; ~ mnny n1on,v l'Xtras, $.'l.1,900 # Ow11cr 5.il~..-.~ BY Ownf'r -Fully u,pgrndW -;;:;:t.::;;;r:;;;~:;;:::-;:;-;;::~O::~l 3 UR bon1c, 1111rrou11dcd by The f~IC!'ll drn.w In tlifl Weii,t '!'{ 1 luith grtencry. Hurry I ••. a Dally Piiot Clmlflad ... $33,!ro(), !14Ml48,. Ad. 642-a678,' • 3 2 I ---. -.. -~ • DAILY PILOT 37 Frldly, June 22, l .. ,i [j~;_,.,... l~ I -...... I~ [ _,.... ]~!.----.1-..... --.J ~ [..__'.-s_,_ ...... ____ ]~1'11!!!![ -!!!"!!!!!!!"!!!!, ...... ~]~~ I -:!::.. ][jj] I ·~:r.. 11#",.._I ---'-··.-___,]~ J~~~--~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~----;;;;~ s Cl 1 Income Property f A , "-L-~ -.,.. II T.,. L•-11Mc11 Loguno aucn Mission Vloio •n -n • 1R •::;":1.!l!:!•.::l•:::'-:::...:W!:o::!n!!tocl:::..,::1M:;l:Ho:.:.;:;Ul:.:;: .. ;_:F..:ii::.m::....,_=~-f;:;:I 1-;;;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;::;::;::;;;;; -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, ~~!!!,~~!....---!;;;;;;;;;:;";-;;:;;;;:;=;";--;;;; NOR111 ldaho a ty. Small t • I' I 4 • lDVfJX '4 bt 2 1-Wn RIVLERA 01.atric.1 new 3 DJl, e.ne1ne Mlea k IC'r'\oice. 7 -1 WILL-L•t1un• 8eadl Ii ol CELEBRITY 'S HOME-rm air oood vie;. lot. 2 BA_ '°1""'-•' w~b<autilul _aarJK.i<UJllldlmltl\1-GUARAN'l'EE TO.SELi;. -' 5 ••• 4 Bdrms., 2 baths. Fireplace. Ocea'n •· moun· Sl9'500 S3tMJ1%i aft "3 1 ~, n Vl>Wt; ll>el ani ,centf'll, '· '°'" cMln '*"'1· lawn &. gar-YOUlt llOME l i5b -Ual1" pd., attrac. 1 P ...., po ~ . . · · \li'a n!Jl pane ng. r P c • den equipn1ent snow-• . · ~ • DR, 11r. bch, Avail now. taln views. Atrium. Patio. Superior! $75,000 Newpart Be•ch patk>, courtyd Hitry w/ra.Js-mobiles go-carts: 4100 sq. c~ 30~~ $155 -u 1111. pd., ocean trool . Elogont 2 llo,ry homo with gorg.ou1 dHp , ~~ carpeting, cu1tom dr1'"_d .. , 1_u.nny . Kttchen and P"l tabla size family room ; over look •p•rkllng hooted ond flltorocl pool. ~ ~1'1s I• • stunning decorator home. S.. to :,.pprKlato. $56,900. i Bkr. 137.9400 ·' : NORTH END CHARMER Coastal ~vlews. 2 Bdrm ., 2 baths. Declr-~ams . Fireplace. Unique! $58,500 SEE JIM SMITH \ HARCUM & HORN REAL ESTATE 998 GLENNEYRE 494·8551 ed sundeck. Unlque 5ea-«>l· fl bid£' wfl.h living quarters 1 · b.lch, beaut. loc. BIG CANYON CORNER tagc designs on custom lot.!11 Ot; 2 pius llCl'f'I tronl ing ii A&l!!lt · ••• • .. •••• .. • 847-6612 $325 -Qq,nnirijc 2 BR. 2 BA Graceful garden living h1 In ~ure ~!£~·-...-major-thorvfant Giowlng houtc. vlew! Avail ~ mos. wwurpaued In this 'ttij}y Model horne open 117 grMB. Good net.' Exi:cllfl'nt 1 I~ NU·VfEW RENTALS outdoor ortenled 4 bedroon1, ~~a.r San Clemente. ri.,....•taWn. l l25,000. Confa«t r"--'-' • 673....tCM or 494-3248 21h bath home. Luxurious .. .,.-,u~ ·.-u ........ custo1n features include a llURRY ONLY 4 LEFT Jim ~uim Ratlff Renlty, Newport Eaec~ recirculating hot water NE\V custom bt, 3. lg BR, ~1~"-71~7-~,,_· ==-.,--1 1•••••••••1 ;;:;:-;~;;;~:;:;:;;;;;;;;;-;;;tt;,[ sy•tem, , bide t, t ra.ah view, prime area, $59500. * 4 UNITS * Buslnes• BAY VIew, secluded fUlly a;nia.tiher, and many others 130 Lobos Maril'l09. :t"".":'n turo. 2Bl\. 2BA, no peta, that a~d ease le eleg~nce to Sat/Sun 1.5 492-l9B8 vpe Brand ~""· Spunl!.11 1not!f. Opportunity .·200 tlldll only '1.&ty lat, STJO n\O. your life atyte in this most • · F.asflriclc Co!it:t. fltesa. \\'alk 6#-7037 11uperb ot all private areas. San Juan Capistr•no 10 rnarkr!~ Ir: park. 3 Bit .. Business r~H~-="-u~n~r-,-.---=ll5"° OMEN 'S UB Irvin• L•gun. Beach Big Canyon. 2 l>a. t:e'luxe 0 11•r1Cr '1 qr l"S. Opportunity 200 ouaea u • i Call to learn more about this llAVE $5ll00. \\'ant to assume +the in<."Ome from ttmolher General !lit "ilrd for this 11lush 3 * WARNING * special opportunity now to loan on house In San Juan, 3 1mits. fU0,000. EXTREA1El.Y fin e op-----------! bd'l'01.,2~!.bathTownhouse FIRST OFFERING 'l'respa:sserswillbecharmed purchase this home. DanaPo_int,or CapoBeach. CALL ·~ •. 141 •2414 p o rt unlt y for good, will seU..clcanlng oven, bit· The Jdeal home for a small by the seclusion of this z. Donald ~1. Blrd No C'OndoL Prine 'bnly, no 9~, steady-Dow busineu, idea.I la 1111111:~ & dishwasher. Ccn-family. Two large bdnn.11., sty, honle on a quiet dead· ASM>Cia tes, Realton • t,eaHors, 492-2667. { ·•:.. .~.;,,, fot· the yoong couple want. trltl 11.ir cond .. thick 111hag poo· l TIME spacious living room will) entl street. The loY.<er por-5 TNoneyporlPinesBel.aneh 3 BR .. 2 BA, xtra lg. kit ~t.:r ing bto, '1\'0rk Ior ~and''"'" carpeting, scp. dining area beam celling and Urepls..cel Lion can be Sep .. quarten ew ac • \V/~try view, liv rm. Ntlir Niw,orl P•t l orrlr• forta e ncome ,.. a ApmbiMlts & family room. Large cone. small den, wet bar, utifity wit h Its own entrance. 3 BR., (7111) 640-1711 w/trplc. fncd rear m. secure future: or middle !Jo, bU4n wot bar,_..,, Th1'1 3 B~ba-pool-hom•f-""m""-'. ·Alriu]nJ.@Y, _.,.,,_ -'-bo-;-lge., .... livlng-mlc * !ST OFFERING ilr 83r--022r8gl~l$ . -7-UNI~. $75:00, O oge-roupl• wM ting-a Mr-& -Du.,.._ garngc, hnngtng lamJ?S, has an BSSumable VA loan, garaaes, quiet P.Rtk>I. Wall! w/oatural aviary just out-S·-An Mrs op('ration. Liquor store, Houl9 loe~s of 1nlrrot11 a.net' best of pnrk aize yard \vith room to shoPlf, schools, pyk pool side J;>LUS an ~ view! Out.standing custom 2-sty. -• a grocery .store, ·Shell Station i....i;..,_...;,~-~~"' I ~~'.. n~ .. tu11 un1ablf' GI loan. for boat or campe1'. On a abend tellllls. A sctu·ce~ltem In Mystic Hills. $55,000. _home in Dovd "Sho5 ""sR""t .. I ·BY Owner 3 BR 2 BA ':'.~011lenutnlt"""'•. 1erbloncrkre~rem-w/lube room, laundromat. 433 \V. 19th s.t1 .. ~~a~'ll~ ~.a.t~ .... In cool, clean'Foun-corner lot near freeways autiful Unlvenlty Park. *FAMILY EXPANDING'!'* Profess, a-or. g. -• · ""' "" ice house, barber shop: ren-1854 S. Cotlst tw ..... .,., . t~tn Vallev, C 1 963-56ll ' Preview opportunity al This spacious home, having 4 mstr. suite w/view from cpts, drps, 0 r name n ta 1 Coast 1-lwy. W a I k In g tal plus 2 bedroQm house. -. : Call 539-1162 aJ ' Jit7,500. BR 3 ..... &: family rm balcony;, 3 be. Lge. goui·. ttrence, gas-lit frnt en-distance to nil sch\s & J)riced to go al $110,000. O,q ~~~ on,IaE ··1! . DON'T BLOW YOUR MIND a J.!.,11 GOOD\\'IN ,I ' J '·' ' •• ,, .., ~St. _......., Ca.92708 . 71~ 963-56tl . A BEAUTIFUL HOME VI.SI.OR-n~· carpe'ting & very clea~! met kitch. Formal din. rm.. n ~n_;e. veryld at t r a c . shop'g State Hwy. 247, 9 ml. N. Ot $100 • Par!y ftlin: ~: HB, F bul suuer fan1ily mi. w/frpl.. & '':'--\lee .. enc l'!atto, 2 C Sparling lnve1tment Yu<..'Ca Valley on O Id Avail .6--20. a *ouR-3MtihviA~S6_;.500. \\'Ct bar. Hobby rm.; lRun. ~~,900. 979-5767 (Msg. Corp. 6;s&-5462 \\'oman Springs Rd. (n4) $US -;J.,BR ppx, _pe.rt,b' I .r h•11 El Cariso Village; sur-dry rm.; 3 car gar. + boot ) L s 3&1-2320 ' tum, ~ d\ild, pet. re -I rounded by Cleveland Nat'), ga te, THe roof. You own 4 p EXE 1'ERRIFIC CRAFT SHOP. $160-$195 -2 BR houses,~· Forest; beautiful Oak trees. the land. $150,000. I I~ -Xl111 loca,tion with outstand· ~rum, ga~ &: ~:.... •• Rural environment. Mt. Gib Walker Realty .. lhttwt.:. ~ LetuaidtoWyouhow.tobegin ing trafflt: flow. $52,000 an.$.fAI • 3 BR hoUR, ............ ,.. Realty views. Will take 3 blda:s. 3355-G Via Lido, N'pt. Beach ' your Investment program nua1 gross salc>s based {lpor! 'lum, pncl, ynl lW' children; Univ. Park Center, Irvine $8,500. * 675-5200 * \\'ith one of Uiesc deluxe 50 to 60''." ntark up. oWiter 2-car ~ 645-0lll Call Anytime, 562-~ * RANCI{ STYLE HOt<.IE * OPEN SAT/SUN . I r Mobile HOfftft 4 . plexes. A 11 amenitil'S ve1·y W\XIOUS to ~e nwve . Office hours 8 AM to 8 "PM On large lot with hills & -;, F S.I l25 plus eXcell"Cnt locatlo11. Only Pl'ic<' $25,000. Terms nego.. --r:- ocean views. ?.'love-in conct. 205 21TH STREET or . e 10% doWn . $64,500. liable. Call &&2133. it,GU~~c::i OF'F~E t .... got a poolta ble, piano, n)OU1er-in-law, or teen-age 1nualciana that drive you out ot the house'!' "Now hear lhi.J!" -Put yourself In thU!I Dutch clean 3 BR, 21A BA Condo and fiend the gang out. to thfo guest qtn. (with 11ep. bath and \li•alk·in ckxell. 11'ie1"f''s_a Con1m. svd n1 ~-1' 1UM:i patio has a gas B-B--Q. l..o\V dO\\.'n -find only $31 ,900. CALL us now. ... _ c· 3 Bdm .... 2 ba'•.; warm WEST J'jEWPORT Motor Home Rentals Sparling lnYHlniont "'"""' -. 0 w au 4 ~1aster bcdh ns completely ''In The nsW ity paneled family rm., beam Duplex_ 2 BR. eac h; ! b&. _ Corp. 638-5662 prden,' ut$. pd., yrly, shag carpeted, all elect Of Irvine'' cell ., rock trplc. Room for a 1 blk. tn ocean. Nice wl.de S185 • Cute 1.'BR cottage, nr. bltins, covd patio, &hake pool. Reduced to $48,900. street. Patio &. sundeck. SALES & LEASING GOUR1\IET BUILT UNITS, ...., r.-.......,. =~1·;..Y~:, ~...:~. -2 BR, 2 roc:i.I. pro( lndscpd lot. Thls Jmmacu1ale 4/br, '1 year old EN,._-'ND \Ski $72 500 Agt. twenty (20) new ones. Ac-,_, ......, ......... ., .. h&.'1 to be lhe best listing in home with Oriental decor &: \no.U 67s-19nr\ ' · · 675-4073 Ba full ''"'Mvi·ce facility celerared.oppty avail. Gross A1'"'1'IQUES & curios; ~ BA, end. gar., child ~KB.A 11 .B. GI no money dowo or ·~· Quiet cul-d .. ~o REAL ESTATE BY OWNER·. Dellgh~ul 3 nmar otor Homes 154.000. prioe $385,000. Call eotire lol paokage. Dou 1295' . Room~_; BR, • lake over IO\li'. low lnt GI adjoining lovely greenbelt m .-· . u CJS 'Real Estate for all the garage ful l enough to open friic, kid!~ ~. ~s. I011.n of $193/mo. ~ . "The ,Jtanch" •· Irvine's 318 THALIA 494-8093 br, home. Lar. yard on details, 548-ll68 or come In slnillar' business. Golden op-ALSO SUMMER1 RENTALS planned community. 15 min· BIG OC.EAN-VIE\A/ _ tree-lined stree1. Choice 531·6800 to 1740 Orange Ave, Costa portunity. By appt. 4~1003, CALL $9491 larwin realty Inc. '61;1405 124 hrs) Girdin Grove MEDICAL/ DENTAL CENTER Control ft $350,000, 8 sulle nlL~cuJ Bldg. "1th ns little as ,$35.000. Will consider any "'""°na ble tenn'!. An xlnt tax slK"lter & investn1ent. 8 suites, includ ing fully ~ulp ~ x-ray lab. Located on a n¥lJ(ir "tl'Ct.!t in Garden C.rQye. ,\mple orr street pai·Ki nl{ V.'ith easy access, -Call S39-1162 rliage Real Estdte 2 BLKS to B~CH Heavy, heavy shake roof on thi11 charming 3 bedroom OC'CWl retreat. Gourmet tiled kitchen with all the latest appliances and fixtures. Big family rm, roaring fireplace, forn1al living room. Plush carpets just a year old! Dec· orntor drapes. Huge yard. &a.ch Joven swim In the ~an Cvery da.y! Untie. ueVable lo>,i,• price, hurry this 1von't last. BKR. OOZ-»l.l. PRICE REDUCED $1,000- utes fl'Om Fashion ISiand &.' .•• 2-Bdrm . own your own Newport Beach area. Nr. A-tesa $1-1652 ,,,,I/ *1,UNDCORDS * N_.,..,..,,rt Beach. Among the apt., c1--lo ~-•·g .' \Vestc!IU shop!!, Mariners '71 BROAD~IORF..12X64, 2 7 UNF'URN!SRED Units FREE RENTAL SERVICE ..... ,..... .,..... "'"'l'l' ... , • School. Low down Ir: closing. 'br, 3 ton central«Ir set up • Money to Loan 240 ""'~~:=~=.i":"";o'oi;-1 Orange Orchards. Reduced beach. Lgc. htd, pool & rec· La:r. assumable 7'/o Joan. in farnily park. 8x16 porch ~Santa Ana, $78,500. {7X UNIVERSITY PARK to $40,900. reatlon a re a . Beautifully P rin. only. 64:Hi889 patio & carport. + sto~ present ACTU.AL gross). 1st 1 t TD l AttracUve 2-bedroom, den, lndscpd. 1-IWT)' on this one * OCEANFRONT * shed. $8400. or best offer. & 2nd total $52,00'.l. Sell, or S 08 QS Choncellor hon1e (private at $28,00'.l. ""'"21'3 TRADE for; boat, exotic d ell'••) 2 "-•"-double COUNTRY CLUB LIVING FOR THE WII0t:E FAM· ILY! ! Beautift11 le: big, hard to find "Americana Model," 1 yr. new, loVely ~tk>n, across from comm, as!IOC., pool, park&: recreation aree. 5 BR, 2~ BA, 2 trplca, 2500 aq. ft. of luxury Uvlna on a massive cul de..sac lot. Own· er says he's lihxious. Sub- mtt your ortcr. A s k I n g $5.1.000. Red Carpet Realtors, 833-3380. PARADISE ____ .. car, stock or silver. Prine. w. .... ua.uia, B.'_lt==. W· 7,0CIOSq. ft.ofwood.~ch.nrm WANTED late model double on l y. S . Bern st on UP TO 95% flreplb ii .~ .. ~· ndDlningl are ah, ~""' duplex. $320,000. Expando. $6000 to $8000. TI4:956-3080 or TI4: 6.W--8269 2 d TD L u t-....., a. ICl'V ce pore · LIDO REALTY Adult park, pool, Near . n oans Rear yard~-'has covered coast. Ca.JI alt 2 pm COSTA Mesa, 10 units, patio, storage shed, ffull 494•5671 499•2100 3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beach 642-831.0 · $130,000. $16,056 inc, Prine. Lowest rates Oren9 e Co. trees. Front yard hal com· . , ~ .673-7300 * BEACH homes on Lido only. Bkr. 675-5800. Sattler Mtv. Co. plete privacy. po o I and E joyBeeutiful View EASTBLUFF · Pertln . Mobile homes with lndu1trial Property 168 '42·2171 Sff..0611 ~~n~i:=="~4m~ n_ the ocean vie\v from 3 BR 2¥.t ba nu X Plan large cabanas $9995 to Serving Harbor area 21 yrs month. Call evenings this 3 bedroom home with Full ' "-';v1 n .... .i..: $12 995 HUGHES 530-oooo ' 6~ •= or "'" -••• gue!lt house. Large attrac-pauu, w ew ....... ....,, , . ' 4 ACRES CA$H IN A HURRY! ,.........,.... ~ -... live yard. Open.beam cell· JU!y ht. Lease .fur $535. or WOODY 24X60 a.tr cond, cor-Bon-ow on your home, paid tlnte. ing in muter suite. Fonn&I quick sale pnce ~.900. ner l?t, xlnt adult park. • for or not. Use fund! to C()Jl-t-~IJ-A_N_D_!L_O~ll~D-S_I __ , dining room. Fireplace. Owner. 561-1488 or ~1526. $13,~. Near Costa 1-!esa. W@'ll located corner. Present solidate bills, improve ~ . ,,,, • $65,!m._brlf_49Y!Q03, · HARBOR VIEW Amenc.an 557-9390 income $1400. per mo. Gn!at home, buy nt w property, or We ~.U.: ln 'NewporC TARBELL Carmel mode1. 3 BR, 2 BA, 8'x2G' ALIOA f Br, patio; potential • 'vill divide. Ap-f?r·ru:iy good purpo11e ... Cioft. .BMch e ~ ~l ·Mu e lam. nn., own Jand. corner pool. Teenager & pet O.K. prox $1.25 sq. ft. f1dential, fast service in .Ir. Laguna. Our Rental. Su- BEAUTTFUL location lot, nC\v cpts, wani>apered, Lido Village, NB. $2500. Roy McCardle Realtor your home or our office: vice 19 FREE to You! Tr1 SOUTH LAGUNA. 1 bloclr: immac., pool size yard. 675-ZU9. 1810 NewportlJJ.vd., C.M. SIGNAL _.MO~TGA<;iE-CO. Nu·Vlew! "" ./ ''~ 'J -3 Bedm:im Park Huntington. &-1.ltt an:ciollli, ne<v home is BY O\VNER UNlV. PARK. -1~1y,..baby i& duc.-Tak~ad 3-BR. 2 BA, ralse.d_ dlnlng \'Mlage of this S & S bar· room. ~n beams, \\-et bar, g:tln. frplc, auto garage opener, to beae~. Ne~ly remodeled B Owner 6#.1515. 1973 GENTRY . 548-.1729 (7141 S56--0~. NU-VIEW R!NTALI 2 Bdrm., family rmJ wge._ Y · •. ---,;tno;u=--~~A~I~!!!';~.,;:~·~-~:;;;,!!!!~! 673-4030-or . 4M-32t8 deck\\T/ocenn view. Guest AruST eell Now;"''Baysbores o.: """';'"''6• ... uurui. $5750. l ' apt. 162.500 !irm. By owner. <my Collage, prt b<h, 2 BR, Amen oM, 5'7-<l390 Lots foriS.I• 170 2ND Trust DHdS 4 & 5 BR, obarp, ...c. 84G-IJ.51 or 847..s531 low maint. yard sprinklers, brick p&tio, wishing \VeJI, surrounded by pine trees. Walking dlat. achools, shops. ~A>klntr·I •~. 500 . Call 499--12>4. Would con-1 ba, w/patio, )1!1, boat stg. --• ~ homes, 'W/many xtru. Rent ~d': = = :W· ~s~:, ~r.exh~~ ( ~.~::--~-I~ .w AmNTION PRIVA~Y :nfYAIL. ~Or ~ees. m HUntln9ton Be•ch SPANISH HACIENDA Cooled by ocean brec7.es, cathedral beam Ci!ll, cantlna kltch ' O\'Crlook.s r o v e red brit:k patio, 4 lrg bcdnns, red tiled 1001: $4'1,!n'S \\'on·1 lllfl, cull no1v The Rcnl Eltate f"11.ir, 536-25.St Meredith Gard•n• UpP!ldcd tpllt level. 3 BR, 3 ba .. , \v.•/ram. nn. &. din. rm. 7'Ai Auum. VA loan. Sharp! $53,500. $.CJSO. Down 537,950. 5Bcdrms, ~ bath IV>me in tiue residential area near shopping &lid schools. VA • ....... .. • 962-2456. :l !.10~ R~.11 E1t1te .• $83 ,500 IRVINE TERRACE Huge, ~an view liv. rm. or G-14-73ll . ~ -'IUILDERS Corona dtl Mar w/trpl; din. area. 2 BR, LIOO .Sands, ~aut · 3BR, Eastside Costa Me11a. One •• Call 675--4494 BKR. 1.;;..;.;.o.,__c..-'----1 den T guest rm. w/w carp, 2BA. seclucJ.ed beach ~me. Acreage'· for. sale 150 pRt,cet 'lll0x300; zoned· for a !'.'!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!'"".~'"".!!!!!"! thruout. Centntl k it. Don't mlss this opportu:nlty total of 18 units. $95,000 NO points, no penalties, free w/range, oven, dishwshr. to live at the beach. By •SPOT FOR RANCHe CALL '=" 1 '''·2414 appraisal, low rates, ta.st. ~.this one! $53,500, owner. 714-&tZ-7711 5 to 25 Acres, lefel land Best ,;~ L Invcstors Thrift 639-6411. Deluxe 3 BR, J . BA.' o-.vnu.s Mission Realty 494-<TlJl CONDO • Vacant treed gar· Perris Lake Location Zoned ~& ' unit, in nEYN duplex, near laauna Niguel dens, pboi, 3 BR. -2 ~A roi:_ horses, Mobile Home a-.:Ai:'Tr Mortg.,,~ beach, pe.tios,~ fireplace, no 4 BR., 2% BA, 2 fll>lca, din· LRG custom de\ux 4BR, ~. secluded gardens, brlck 3BA, formal dining rm, patios, playhouse. Fee Janel. open beam ceiling, wet bar, Owner. (7141 497-127~ or open Sat & Sun 23851 494-1021.• ,=.o;=e:------1 Wavespray Circle. 586-74.?l $43,000/ Low ~wn, 6~;2f OK. · N••r Newpert ••.•.I orr!c• Trust Dffd1 260 pem, $425. mo. Availa ble 8-1. rent w,opi. 10 ""· ' • • • EXCHANGE r-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;, &fl.3645. Specula.tors -30 acres, red 1 • LIDO Isle • By Owner • 3 hot location, priced below R-2 Lot zoned tor 6 Units, PUT YOUR MONEY BR., 2 Ba., tam. rm., 45' Qiflret, pre-paid ..Jnterest Hu11~n Beach. TO WORK FOR YOlJI l-r.,-lf-T-';"""°=="""~ lot, $76,500. Principals only. · FOR: 10 to 15 Units ln Earn 10% inten?st t.n ·well· 673-7379· Choi~ !b! :Ome lots, Otange County. secured•2nd Truat Deedt 'on VIEW Home. Beautl1ul St. Best hi desert location Sparling lnve1tment Orange r.ounty real esr.-te··'.lliliiililif:~fj:;;,;iilji;.::1 LIDO BAYFRONT HOME 40 James Pl, Cliff Haven. 3 Br. ~'lust sell . Corp. SIGNAL MORTGAGE a>;.-41 Lagu~. Buch Lido lile OCEAN AND · •• --'GEMMi---ll Canyon v:l"'9 trom thi11 love-1610 W. "°""Hwy., N.B. REALTORS 642 .. 1623 88" A,__ HB ly 3 bdrm. home. Gre1tt .. ..,..,.,~..,.,~..,".,'·..,..,..,., ! location, cloee to schools. feet of sandy beach on the . Split I~. $ 81 , 5 O O. e BAY MESA e 631-5662 1n4) 556-0106 bay. Live on the quietest Owner/ogent 548-6310 4500 Campus Dr N B ' 548-212l OO"--WN '·-··· .7 mile " ' part of the bay w/2 rental ARBOR VI Som t S n 1,.J.v .._.., ... REPOSSE SSIONS :·nr"lrtlormnlion nnd location ol lh.-Ae Fii.A .\ "Ji\ homes, l'Of"'ttct • ~ 'KASABIAN Re•I Estate '62-6641 ·"'* SPARKLING * 3 Bdfrn. f\\·o story, 2\1 bath. family rm \v/firepl, formal din~ nn. Ocean Vlev.' SchoOI Dist. $42,500. PATI1 LEASE/LEASE OPTION on th.is 4 i,;R, 21h bath Villa Pacific Condo. $280. per mo. plus $100. Cleaning tee, and $60. Security. Sauna, lighted lcnnls courts, j11.euzzi, 3 pools, volleyball & basket- ball courl.9, and sep. park-h"\ for trailer or boat. arwln realty Inc. 9614405 (24 hnl \V:A.LKER REALTY Aaaume 6o/4-t0 VA Loen 84i-1418 Quick pos11e.sslon • sharp * DdLL HOUSE super 4 bdrn1 & family rn1., 2 Jtff!'m· do\\'Tllown . Sharp ceramic tile ln kitchen and & c:terin \\'Ith rock garden baths, "''ood shake roof, full for' low upkeep. 2 car gar double J!lec. oven, quality "·ith ~Icy entry. $29.75C. cRrpeling & decor. Very One ml to tieach. RED clO!le to beach -schools • rmnET RE ALTO Rs lliopplng. Ht!ft's your ........... chance to llve A little! Full 5.16-~ price, $5,950. call HOME PRESTIGE Home, 2 story BROKERS INC. 91)2..Mfil, M<l<iel 1800. wan1er .r. ENGLISH TUDOR Graha.m. 4BR walk In rlnlet. 3BA . formal dining, · S + POOL faro , nn \\'/frplc. bltlns, 2/sty on choice tree lined st. Afil!Jme 51!4 100% loon. "Pub" Taverl\ sty 1 e S32Jlj(l. 968-4I61 or~ · kit/f&Jn rn\ lndoor/ou~ Mu iT SELL 2 , Bdrm "Sea fpls, covered" patio, park Ha.Ven" home, fe\Y bl~ like yard w/fruit tree11. from· ocean on Bu11hard nr. LOW DN-LOW PAYMTS Adi.ms. $~.900-Make ofr. $39,500. F.e., 1'~or ·th I s ~/Principals on 1 y, · bArgaln call todtcy, The 962-6244. • Reill Estate Fair 531)..2551 . ~n Sat & Sun 1·5 LOVE 1T11 Jmrbnculatc 3 BR, 16342 a.nd you v.•IU when you see Eagl i!: Lane. 2 blks So. of th!x nelll·lls·a·pln 3 BR, 2 Edlncer, 1 blk • .. of BA + lrg bonus. Lov..-ly G~m . For info, 546--5941. covered pa,tio with firepil. OWNER TRANSFERRED Bonus & Polio wired ft>r MUST SELL! 3 BR, 2 BA, stereo, dish\v!lhr, sprinklers ~ah exterior, near and a well·kCJ't low maln1 bc4cll .tr: shopplna'. BKR, on· tront & rear yard. $38,950. ly Ul.950. Call 963-5611'. tor PERFORMANCE· BY o#ner, 4.BR, 2 SA. w/w 8'17•3584 Privacy & contentment sur- rounds this lovely home. Built on a cul de sac. Large living room, beautifully ar-- ranged built·ln k I t ch en . $06,900. ..AS/an REAL ESTATe 1ioo Glenneyre St. 494-94.TJ 549--0316 \VOODSY old Laguna area; 2 BR.. 2 ba:, frplc.. beams: ocean view. Very clean. Only 143,lOO. BIG VIEW, next to Emerald Bay; 2 BR., 2 ba.., [rplc., beams; secluded large lo(, A good buy, $62;l00 unils to help defray the H ew t rse 30 AC N San Diego Co Nr from main beach. C2 40% DISC $6000) .,..-ell cost. 1 unit 2 Br., 'a Br sit-BR. Fee. View. Prine. only. ~ 'county. Boy Scooi parcel. Over 10,!m eq. fl. 1st Ap le Valley ting rm., 3 Ba. Upper, 2 Br, $86,500. S44-M4l 644-6a:>7 Ca.mp. Rolling H 111 s Po&llble 5 unit Jite. Asking P ~s JM. , 2 Ba. Rear apt. 2 Br, 2 Ba. DlulleXes ntar theRealocean $950/AC. John· 646-0045 $50,!m. Xlnt· terms. May ex-moVal·1_,10%nj· .f!: ...,:.. n..--· All 3 apta. have o.-eeping Mlles Lanon, tor 1 1/3 ACRES A·2, corner lot, chan.ge for unitt or com-~", 't• ..._...... ~ in ' ~'loea· view of bay. 4000 s.f •. in -~=o*=673-BSG3~===*==---1 Corona area. $11,750, $2500 meGrc1a1R·UBB. •~ ELLIS CO. -wtruittc condition, bldg. In ~cellent condition. OCEANFRONT down. 548-3749 "" I J 1'-! knd only $335 Jer Be.low mkt. at· $'l23,000. Duplex, owner/agent 673--9266 Buiinell P--rtv ·154 557 - 1900 ~-~ll~1~11~-~A~z~l-~~~~J'-~~,...~~;ps~~4a:tk~l~.:Olll~:· M~r•:··1 C>Nner may finance. Call f D I • __..::..:L HUNTJNGTON Beach, sev-. Day1 56-3424, S o u t h C o Bryant Wiest, 642-U88 Ocean ront · up;: TWO wrs TOTAL lM'dlB' eral Jltlall house Iota, close , Rea1~1 , .. Bunster Creely, Bkr. R. Brose Realtor, 673-12 CHOICE LOC.-\TION,' HUJJ. to ~c~ & new Civic Cen-Hou1e1 Furnished 300 •1'\VO-bedroom houae. Clean RARE CHARM Ungton Beach, ZONE D ter. $5500 ea. agt/brk, inside &. out. Carpets, English Country f a m i l y I iN•o·w~po-r .• I •. l_i •• o.l~giihjjjlliijjiijjjjjjj B U S I N E S S , P R 0 · 536-3Ml9., Gel'.leral dl'll.pes, garage. A d u I t s home. 60 Ft. lot. 4 1'"ESSIONAL OR OFFICDS. C-2 LOT, xlnt IOC., approx. -~--------1 preferred. A.va.U .. now, ·$l'l5. Bdrms./baths. Huge liv. $17,500 ea. TERMS write 50xl80 on Harbor Blvd., I BR hcn.1se· HB $100 utU pd. lnclude81law.n matntenance. 1 rm., rec. rm. & din. rm. DRIVE BY KANPAK, 1993 Klhei Rd., C.M. must sell, owner. Also walk to water 1 BR,1~64~>-~1~213'"°'. ___ ~-=' 1 $152.500 506 Aliso and call for app't to Kibel, Maul, Hawaii. C213) 792.-1028 gar. $1.25. Also, 1 BR homfi!I }-~ BR-homes avail., $140, LIDO REAL TY see. 3 Bdnns, 2 bnths. 50 x Comm1rcl1I R-t, 75xl32. Comer Tustin & in Costa Mesa. CdM & Lai' S14.5, $150 "llleo, 1 BR howle, 1 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach !fe';: 10i~~-garc:~ PB~~1 __ P_r_•~pe_rty~-----l5I_ 23rd, Coeta Mesa. $23,500. Bch. Agt. fee, 979-8430. ~ $125, W11.lk to water. * 673-7300 * V 1 Reali .:Ao,. ... .,. Terms. 494-1235. Balboa lilencl s, pets on nll. A.gt. fee. ore . or.~~. * M-1 * . 979-8(30, 4BR. 3~BA. Bean1ed cell-Mounteln, Desert ~~~-------< ing!I. Beautiful pool. 45• lot. 123' x 150'. OK'Mce LocatioQ Resort 174 4 BR, next door to bayfront. J BR. Crpt. & drapes, lge. LAND, nunery or 7 home $114,500. Priv. Pty 673--0563 San Cle"*"'9 \ * C·l * ---------~ ~rie~~AR· :rlneed yrd., SPflCI!! for boa! sites. In Laguna Canyon. l.l M ••• Verde 2 Bedroom house plus EXTREMELY f In e °'" , · r, $190/mn. Shown Sat. &: Acre, $42,IXXJ. $2,000 INCOME 24 x l4 rt. shOp Port un l t Y Jor irooct. 84ifbea PenlMufa ~~ o~if Water pd. 924 Vic. Hillie McCormack Realtor PRIVATE party \•:ants hoose POSSIBLE? RIVIERA REAL TY steady-flow bua:lnesa, ideal . 0 a ' ·• , 100> N. Coast Hwy. 4!»-7551 In ?<.1csa Verde, 2400 sq. ft. , _ 2 8 ho Go 149 Broa(lway, C.M. for the young couple want· 4 BR. with bay vie\\', steps LCE &Side 4 br w/fncd yd or +' 4 or more bdnns. L.oi:tl'ge r, me., rgeous 642-7007 645.5609 E lne IO \\'Ork for a com· from. ~an, 1st 2 wks in Ju-+ 2% car ifll'., $775. mo. COASTLINE VIEW ocean vu, 2 Blocks beach, Yft fortable income now and ly avail. $225. "·k. or_ both Call aft 6 pm, 5't-4899, Own Your °'1'11 apt near Vic-1 "Pri-""·"~'r.· "'ooc-ly,,_.7.540-6099C.--~'7· -,--,.., can build 6 units, $65,000. 1st TU.l E offered - N'pt.. a secure future or mk1dle wkl. $395. total s.6-0401 548-2498. tor tlugo's. $52,~· Dally Pilot 'Vant Ads have $10,000. handles. 0 w n er Blvd. 9.2'% JWturn spend. age couple wt,nliq: 1 f. Mr & , DDril: Hope. REALLY ~ Easts\de, 2 ~N:;D;;,:>;:".:;;REA:=~i;;o:ro~Rcc'',';94-9=:::318=...;;;barga;;;;';;;"'::;•;-al;-ore_,.,==="-.Z673-;;;1;94o.:1::or=::m-«l3l~:-:":;;;;==•I ~ni,ncome. R, ea It 0 r Mrs operaUon. Uquor attire, BALBOA PENlN &¢t'ont J3R. 1 bl., honlc. Shag crpt, . $©\\.JllA-c!&t-tfS" Tho+ Intriguing Wort/ Game with a ChucHe ------ltlite• t.y CLAY I , POU.AN OReorrang• lettws, of th• ,,...---...._...-, four :1CTOmbl«I words b.. ~ to fonn four slinp1• words. I :N E c c I s I '. I ·1• I I I - grocery store, Shell Station 5 BR, 4 BA. Pier. float. i ltr, patio, yd. $22;.5. mo. Condominiums w/lube room, lawidromat, Avail Mid June-Ju1y 29. 646-1456. r for Nie 160 Ice houee, barber shop ren. All'JO Sept. Wkly. 673-2039. LARGE 1 Bodroon enclosed 1 \-.;.....-=;_-----".:.:: tal plus 2 bedroom house. 3 BRi :ZY.i be., swnmer or garage. 1' CONDO -Vacant, troOO gar. . Priced to go at $1.J0,_000. On winter. 305 Montero. Call 6-12-93.18 dens, pool, 3 BR, 2 BA, State Hwy. 247, 9 h\L.., N. ot 6'J3.0:>2S ·~~~----~--, $43.CKX>. Low do\\'n, or \\•Ill Yucca Valley on 0 Id 3 BR. 2 Da. gn r(l~e. families rent w/oiw. to buy. 673-5221. "1omo.n Spring!! Rd. (n4) Coron• dtl Mar only, $235. 2"~ Federal, 642-3&15. Bkr. 364-233) C.M. 646-17'18 , Lnk G ~-I Lnk CO'ITAGE, small, . 1. BR, ~ SHARP Tustin V I I lag e c regory ••• ua et -I! BtuJk roon1, lgc patio, year· Dana Point I townhouse. Sell or exchange view 2 BR 1~ BA tr/pl ly or summer 409 lrill 1----------1 for triplex. furnlshed '$2G,SOO 82l-4l42. Cd.M. •t ' • F1\BULOUSoctM•Plarb vu. 4 F'ORTIN, Realtors 6tl-6COl RanchM, Parms, BACHELOR unit. fumJ•hed Br .. 3 ha. fan1 rur, trplc, Income Property 1" Groves llO Nloe kitchen & bl.., $140 mo'. crpt/drpi9. $425 mo. 675.7414 lea1e. Util lncld. 640-0899. Fount1ln Veney COiie -Of1it1, "°"""· 11000 do•~. WINNER'S C!RCLI ~e 7~~ 1oM on b&tan· Thi• one Is No. 1, At $37,500. ce , ot $22,'r.l5. No agent.. This \flrge si)lgle story 3 BR 963f4212 . Is ~xtttmely sharp. Lovely ASSUME &'ii k>M.. model ldas:pg front & back. If home 1And1eapln1, .t BR, 1 y o u'r e fuss y, c all ·•. ndJe to beach. «J7 ,500. 71.t: l'ERF'ORANCE on th it one ... 988!-3563. • 841·358• .1· (.l "1yl 1 l I• ,: Al L IH Cl I ~ Random l!unijoo; HoW can SIX UNIT -apartments with «I AC. or 1JJ Ac'. -4 BR lhe, occl\n breezes. Spaclou.'I 3 2 bas. Spltt level. Loceted BR, 1'4 BA, bltlns. crpl'd, Oroville, Call!, 6 ml from drp'd. GS' x 300', cl<>1e to town &: i...ako Oroville. Thrte anunmar school. uoso. ~ acceu roa_ds -great view of come. Askin~ $US.OOO. but ~1ito Valley. Ph· 916 1nake an ofter. KINOAARO .. gn..21os. TennL RE. 64,..2222 RHI •• , ... w ....... , .. ----------3 BR, 2 BA. glganUc rumpus 1 $110 per mo. 18R cottage mi. all bl.Uta, D\\1, IJWUn f F..utaide, P.efs k adv~ pool, kids OK. only $265 mo. rtnt. 645-lim. No fee. Agent M2-4C2l Huntington Beach Huntinlfon IHch n "'fuElV'E: tt or oot 2 houses Huntington H1rbour on )"lot, aBR each, Income -~ per mo. Both tor on1y •~A~~'WNT boat stt:. ~· AJ<ot. 'm-5319 s~ ,..1 ~E 2730 aq. ft,. S br + $88iOIX)• Owner, - fartl1 • Priced Jor quick sale. _ _ . _ _ _ a 1ocpord ttll when he'• got the -? •• ,. I SETYMS I 1-.....,:;I ....:l;-:.,1,.:-;I""' ;;,I'"' -t o ~li'° ~,,. ""'~.!. ":.t L,_ -'--"'--'-'-.L--'-· -' you dOYolop '1 ......... No. 3 below, 1681~. or 1><11 onor, by Cj)UICK CASH owlier. 841H!035 or &l0-142!1 THROUGH A A PRINT NUMBERED I ETTERS ,-11110:,to ..... ilBR, Ill 'Ill' IN THese SQU~RES .oo, lrplo, pailo, rocent DAILY PILOT I I I I I I =-•ed $11,lOO. call WANT AD e ~~i':~~\~ l mERS lO I I A 11"!'1 """~•• "• ll>Od ,,.. 642·5678 SCllAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700 ~L -~-"--:.:.....:_:_~-~_:.:...=..::::...:.:.;:....::::.:..=_....:..::..:..:...:..:.=:.:.....:::..:__.=..:::~.:..:...:..:..:...:.:.:...:..._:_---'-.. • • . -.. . . DANA POfNT 4 pl_ex ocean & lailbo&t view. CASH BUYER needs In ~.¥.X>. Costa P.feu. Area .t BR .. WEBB REALTY 493-<fl61 famlty room T guest"'Toom le pool rron1 private pa.rty. TRADE 1.2 unitt. G.G. Equl. $ 6 0 , o o o max. Qwlck ti' $74,000 loJ hou.ol In poueulon. WUI ho' In town Balbotl. Red ea.rt>ct. Real. July lat. Reply "'!Ith l)honc ITI4) m -5401. no. to OAUlt.led Ad No, 884 4·PLEX, Huntington Beach, Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Good cond, 166,000, 112.000 C..ln M sa, 92626. down, by owner, 96U.l951. -E-A~S~LB_"_U~FF...,_CO=NOO~~W-AN-· EASTSIDE""b>SI'A ~A TED. l to .t Br., oldttr IC'C- (61 . 2 BR unit!\. $920 lnc mo. tlon only, will pay cash Owner. srr.:ioo. 54&-8695. * 640-t'ltM * ONlQY,E redWOOd, secluded CUSrQl\t built q u a I tt y blchclor's hon1e need , mobile home, 'A1.i( leue on tenant. Prhm1e 1'001, fOOn.. Jong tmrtl to qualified tnlN:, prof. decor. & lt nanb. Call tor • lMdtcft.ped, 2 &. 2. Gnillt a.t· polntment ~7300 mospbere. 6 mos. leate. $150 3 llR, 1ra fa m nn, wlk t11 mo: 962--0t58. sc:h11 & 11hopptnf, Xlnt. 3 Blt, 14'. ba. Avail. 7/t tor & c ond . $3 00 mo. lO 8 wkt. $275. per nio, +' 848-135.J '842 1972 evu deposit. No pets. 847·0015. ! .. EASE • <&BR. ~. Carpets. •. , t:lean out the aarage d.ra pes, C!-E AN! "?.fake Room For Dadlb•" IUTELl.A. 1147...Ql)l , .• turn that Junk Into cu h $1 25 l SR Mute, p l'., al•~ with a Dally PUot ClauU\fttl BR $165, utU. prl.,_~. pell ad. Call 64Ml618. on both. A&\. tee. 971-M& . • ... I • ' -• " 3a DAILY l'llOT •-.-u, tm ~1 [ ... ---.. -!:...:.-1~ I -ou··-l~I L-.... _·--""-__,!~ 1 ~-·""-l~ .... · ·--I~ I "'-Fum. ¥Oj • Q ---- lll~lou~-~~·~Uftfv~~·'.!-...~-ltlS~1 Hous.. """'"'-ltlS Apt. Unfum. 365 •~. Uftlvnl. 365 •---Offlu Rooilol I• ...,.. .,.,. -'8£AOI -~ 1BR. tum. N rt -Hunt1"n9ton lleoch k-· I ;;;~ •---• Fum • .,. Unfum. 37t _1_0 _:::::;10 ~--•-i C pnnPERTY " .. IMper $11.}-.JlW r---· ~· ----·---..-· ~ Costa Mtu -r~ ~beach.~'ij. NISTfGE ~ ·sr CM--~~ .. ~~: HARBOR VIEW BACJfELOR & t BR. llti.>1 Bit, t i..: BA. .;rudio on ''Rent A P~ p.ti:. Rents hY. v.'ffk or mo. OFFICES bulldlng, f ~t• + BA. ii) LOVEL\. 3 Bdnn. 3 ~lh n-1 -HOMES-paOO.., ft-pie-'• prit•. iiar..~ t-.J.Jl•-&'.J•:. Prlt. patMl, PJ?'· of a Palace'' $135 I UP A''llil Ju.ly "1. 833-1691/ Fountain Valley, BeautJ-li(I, ft. Pftrklnf:. Any C.l'~- ecuti'" !'tome '°" ~HP July 1 PaJermo ~todel . 4 Bed· -Di\idN bit.th I: lo11 or crpu. dr1>5, bit.in.. Nr. 6'i5i-5Gl3. tw new bu.Udlna, • il'()Und tlvity. SDI per n\Or. tan lst VlUa Pitdllr CbMo I !amll $S?-cloiet.s. RL>c. hall, pool & imop·g._ Children o:<. No orEAN GtG:\~'TIC 1 A 2 BR. NE W Po RT • l 1 I an d Door, 3,000 -· .. -feet, MG-6'961 or 616.12-J&. " • ne~r tennis couru ·"pool. rm ., ly ri;i, :i n Qi pool tfl!Jlej, S.OUIJ lx1U\I!. ~L'S •• 13.} Joann St. O t ~ . and \·ou Bet it's underpriced! \\'alerfront a.pta. i .. BR $115 ..... w divide w;;-;,naUer COMMIRCIAL A,;,J S325 per. in(I .• Uk for Roes, per mo. ease. '-6en Stt fur >~IJ. t7JOJ ~1"50 HARBOR VIEW TI1.1t'1v:hyUle'Se apta.won't \\'K/2--BR SD> "'k, l\tonth1y OWce.. SOc per aquare o'N COAST HWY." 962-4-ITI. Agt, 6#-7270. !-\eela;m Ln. ft bH<j \\1• or 2 BR. 11,. BA. new pAlnl, I.alt long. Crpfr!. drps, stove or 10 y.'ft apeclal rate. Dock toot, include. carpets, dM 67 --EASTBLUFF ne.cll, l blk ~:~f ·1 f.c·r). c.'Ptt, drps, O\'t n, ~· EJeg&11t apartments designed &:: tefrig. ~ or green avail. Ms--6592 drupes, all utilities, jalll· C ' 3-3345 • 8-11 7S,S .. 11rtJage disposal Pvt , ""·IUt a l\(aa!er's !Ouch. I U· la\\'n, Covered ii a r a u e •. 28 • 1 Bay & to ---"· Call MA...11 3 OR. houst w/Cffice or I 3 !Jr, 2'°' bft. nu X pl.an. full L'do 1 -~a ... )Ol"l s1ora.-0 s pace ' Jlt!'l"b hotii@ security, exclu· Adults, oo "'""' . 2020 Fuller· R.,.t BA, lrttl, Nr. r ~-,,n;e. '""' yn pn.tio ""''';""'''· Ready July , I Ue Ad~ts. 'MS-9573~ . :.i . :-e Ve1'!08.ldes Club and ton A\te. ti"'blk E. of New· oceiu,1. across from prk. Stovall (714) 83J.544(1. sl)a(.oe. 24:ll Newport l~t. l.l'a.se fur $$.lS. or qUlC'k pool \\1lh Ulli(11ie Aquabar, pc11 Bl\'d ~ 1 blk So of N~'Pt Bch $200 \Ykly. -• -$2.'.iO/ino. 548-700.i salr pri~'t' $jl,9CO. Ov.1k'r. \\'ATERFRO~'T I **!BR., l~: B,,\-** fountains and fonnaJ i,,'ar-Bay, c .. '1'.i Gu.ssoo.' . "6"13-<H=:.:13::_~-~---BAYFRONT OFFICES lndustrl•I Rental lrrino s.;1.1.i~ or ~15:?3. Lr.;:. 3 BR. 2 8.~. $:i'.i0f1no. L..an::e. neY;iy d~r. encl. llem. All pal1 ot !he South H I NEWPORT Beach, house ~fl Prestige ottl.ces, over look1ng I ;::;::;:;::::;::;:;:::;:::;:;;;1 s or unfurn. Lease. 673-ss.56 P,'lt\1. bltns. crvt. drps. Coast's filll'at 81)<u1DH~nl unt ""°" S..ch block from beach, tUWJlllrk, Balboa Bay in Newport l • NOW EAS ! 2 BR. 2 ba.. .• • •...• tm an Ju•i:-_ c~plstr•no Newpol"t Buch---C10M".....,ION "1"erytc 1t1in;;.SlSt70 con1n1unity. 1 .a QUINT•HERMOSA. 1lps 10, ample parking, Bc-acti. Varioos si2c wires L ING."~, • BR ~ .. -~a1 13-. ll"IO. o.11> i o. en er , I "-l d" r ~ ~ ._ 11•--1 Call 67-l~ lo\ 1·~ I Huntl~ton •-ocH ' .. . "w'"-'-'" ~ ...... <:> ~E\r. 0<.'ean \"le\\'. l e r.. 11: oa roon11slu 101 rom $100 . . ... m ~s "" Y· :>-.,.,.,, aa Y as .u.u. l!'fr mon. n· -• 2 BR. den 2 ba. ••. sz;:,I Ba. Ct"pt$ drps frpi , Pool $l·K> UP 2 .Br. 3 Br, 2 Ba 2 Beda'OOn\ h'\}ln $200 SpanWi O:l~trv Estate Liv· lDVEL\' 1 Bedroom July· ciudes drap, cpr, ullllties, N W M-1 ' ! 3 BR. '2 Ba'. ........ Sl\15 375 A: clu~ pnv!Zs ~ 3 BR. 2 "·"· + den, frpl. !\r. Pool. bltins, play yard. 1996 Models open 9 A.!\1. lil dlllik ~ Spapoolc,k>US_!,~n· T .. •~, August, Corona l_ll?l !\.11\1'. janitorial senri<.-es. l.1onthl)' 0.10 Sq. Fr. l UP • 1• 2 BR. n baths S32S · l)l!>a{ii.. S100 ~lo. yrlv. !\Japle A\'e. &U--3813 2212 ..... ~ ::iw..-: ~ t be h S150 k.. or lense. 3700 Ne\\•Port Blvd.. lltunllton It Npwland'~I \\'e Ha;e Sl.inu~;~·Rei;!als South L•guM I \\"(! lf:n-e Suntn\er Rentals College No. 1, 61fHi032 ~ BBQ. Unbelievable Living. 0 ac · · \\te N.B. G'i!>-12'20, •~•...__or•"'• ·~i,, V• • . Bay & Ol.'E":i.llfronl NICE 3 BR, 1~1 Ba. shag 1 BR. UNFURN $165 6-S6-9303. .,....._,., ~ ' ISi on-s PAc. 1 BR 11se. ~('v.·1> can: 67J..366.1 St!-225:3 £\'es ......... ts 2nc1 noor sii~ ,.10 ll fl 1 an. FURN slS5 uoo rsL'E. de1Ux -taa. ™· *WATERFRONT* l "'.""'~""~~~,,....,~1 qJt'd & drp'd Ne\\' kit ...,. I .... ,... ' ' · 2 BR. FURN $215 2 sty, w/ga.rde11 & pe.tio. Prime location, N e·w p ort 2-1800 sq. rr. M-1 spaCil. 8 ed h bhins, Vecy pri\-a:te, 1 blk t~ ~0~· apt Z\'o. 1• 357 W. Vic-ON THE BLUFFS AU. trrILlTIES PAID A\•nll July 14·8eyt. 3, eves Beach. Lru-ge suile. Good '\\rllh fl'Qnt offices, tlqe r .,,, beach. Pennant:nt renlaJ. · AT NEWPORT Adult£, No Pets 644-4895 or ~9470 parkl~. S35(I n100th , 1<e11.r door. Iden.I ff.'1 S:SO. mo. Adults. 4!&-3136. :! & 3 BR + patio, lrg, quiet (4 blks S. of San Diero Ftwy STUDIO apt, Hunt lla.rb, &HI Gnmdy, Realtor lul.loratory $245. e1t. ,.l Ho F ru· Baker & Bristol. Immed .,,__1 N•••·po-i Blvd., l""n al on Be_ ach, 1 blk.\V. on Holt · 341 Bay ·le '"~I "·a•"i \Vhiltler St ., C.M. D · 1 utes urn. or occup. i\l rig. l!HOA \raJencia, r'"'' ... • ... 16211 beaut f'ui'n, rec rucil, acroRll , * 6 .. 7r '•'i~6 ... ~·" 464-5fJ33 64G-008l · Unfurn. 310 1 :»7_7766 llospl1al Road {l block to (Th<Plarks847~~~.La.ne.) front. ocean, $150. \\'k, ~ _ _2r evM, P.EALT\' A Comps~ \Y\1h \'islon Ul)lv. Park C..ntc:,, Irvine Call Anyti.nte, 552·"ffi00 • Office houn 8 1\flt 10 8 P;\J allove Pacific Coast Hv.'YI to •. ,.....,. 879-2001; 8TI-7013 eves. 4001 BIRCH, NB! I 3 BR 2 ba /dr bit 90 c L •--h 1''E\\'PORT Ce11ter 2 lux· Huntington Harbour * B \CHEWR J<.UR.i."\; $195 . . ' carp ps, ns; entrance. 1 agney Lane, •guna u..c OPEN 120 36th St., Newport urioul oHicet; cverlookJn .... 2000. 2000. 3600 sq.fl . Ot' mn·! :..;;:.:;.:.::;,.:;::::..:.:;:::..::::::;~ _ 1;_~ & 1 · 1 1 ' 1 · like ne1v. ~fature adults: no Ne1vport Beach, Ca. 9200:!. n~ 1 Roo 1 4 ...... bo 'thcn..'Of. Avnil. 9/1 73i 3 BR • B .... ~,_..,, • ien e< p()l'f dogs. $200. m No. 7, 16th ·T 1 pbon (711) ,,,., ""A" SPACIOUS .. ,,,..._ 11=1•""' ucac 1· m or · Big Cnnypn. Now availp.ble rd ' ' ,f A, fantlly nn. ,\p-i~dult~ only, y1·ly le~ Place. Agt: 646-241·1 · e e e: ~..... s,....,,.,,., . ,.,... .w.i. Fnntilles only, ~h blk lo in full service lnw fil'ln, P.fr. Baun)Ka ncr, Ml"{'lO 2 pliance& for sale. Call Ior .:.ec111:ty. oont~~U~ nc••' •SHADY EL.1\-fS . POOL PARK NEWPORT ~~S.~~oc~ ~4~f:n beach, be' .. n:h. June, $90." July $100. library & reception In· Share APT or lfOUst:{ details: 846-4332, bulletin~. fi.12.2566 e Adults Poolside $14S up APARTMENTS I SAN Clen\ente deluxe furn, eluded, xerox avtlilable. Call 'llOME-PARTNER! 5 Or 6 Bdrmr;, • .. $375 Condominiums Las Br11a1 Apts. e Oiildren dead-end St. Ne~nort a..ch laundry, etc, nr bch/shop-Call 71-1: 644-4610 83l)-1.194 or 548-1419~ ' ~ g~:; 2 ':~~s t~nl . $400 • Unfvrn. , 320 :~115 I?i\'er Avt:., Nli lTI E. 22nd St. CM 642-36•15 On the bay ~ ping. $100/wk. schetlul CdM • 2700 E. Cst llY.'Y, 1000 Rentals Wo. n't-" ,·\,l.. ·· ·' ~ ... Eastside'Lr 2 &r's . APT. for lease, 2 BR, 2 BA: Pnrly 192-4313. · sq. rt or ind. suites froni .u 460 4 BR., 2~ lfalhs ~.f,;J Gener•I '}. BR. bltnl!I. su11rle1.:k, steps to . . I . l.uxury nparlnien! living cpts drps appliances $265 BALBOA Penin. Point. 2 Br 500-900 sq, ft. Fro1n 37c Air \!'ANT S 0 M E 0 NE . lro 1 :11 \il11'!!11. ---1 ll'ultnr '"SINCE 1946" JBR ntBA condon1iniu1n close to 01e beach \Vjth <letached garage. 962-2721 Irvine 2 BR, l~ir ba, twnh8e, cenlral .a.ii'. lol.!l of exlnlll. Fam. rn1, pool, xlnt location. Call 83J.-0719. .. bch, mode1-,,, '\'kiy or ~Tly blti~~· tri;i:, pal.lo at ~s~de. overiool.:ing the \vatcr. En· per ' n10. ' unfur, or· $295 house. New furn. See a t 2025 cond. cpts, drps, pvt ptkg \se. 213: 722-2-1~. 722-0&55, Sli.J .• \cili s.i no pets 642-9520. · joy 1150.000 hcnlth spa, 7 rum. Phone days 548-5244 l'ttiramar Dr. or ca 11 lot, seeurity, .S 7 3-4 t 2 O TAKI':; T1':;NOElt LO~&lC 71-1: 5-18-3470 l~RG.E 3 Br. 2 Ba. carpet, S\vim~tlui;: pools, 1 lighte<I eves. 631-1217. 35.2-0539. Charles \\'. i\Jas ters, 011,111er/ C . .\RE OF \'OUR llOJo.f.Et CLS to Bch, l~e 2 Br, beam dra~~ ups!airs, nea;' OCC. ~i:nnis courts, plus miles of ~"U~IJl.fER, -\Vlnter, Yrlv. LOVEl\.'Y 2 BR turn .house, bkr RF.Sl>QNSIBLE couP~. ceiling. \'ac syslen1s, gnr Ur $179. ;;>;J7--0350 oicycle trails, putting •. shu!· Anita's Rentals Bkr 200;; ·ctoee to beach, 001. July 15 OFr~CE space -#I Old ~ ~ii=~~1~i1-; t:!a.~5tn~ operator. Atlults, yearly :. BR, nr. fN'YS & shopng, f1eboll.rd. croquet. ,Jun ior 1 ~ Balboa Blvd 6tl....2ffi,S . .' to Aug 12, reliable people, Ne1vport Blvd. 3 blks No. of furnished hon'le In Lug11hii. S285. 642-3400 quiet tropical setting. $140 from $lS9.50 mo nthly; also 1 • ' • ~7901 Coast Hwy L 3 drafting nn1 Corona tlel Jo.1ar, or NPw~ ... , incl utils-S3l-8508/S48.-am and 2-bedroon1 plans an1I * * YEARL\ * * & 1 All 1 ~· \VEST. Ne\\'POrt 3 BR .. , · · , 2·story tmvn houses. EIPe-Near oeean. 2 & 3 BR. NEWPORT on Qian n e l, recept. rm. or Beach. Neetl Jn1mcdlii1q1y, upst.a1r11 rluplcx. ash panel· • BR, reas. Quiet . Adults Irie kitchens prival pa.tlm REALTOR 642-38:iO SJnall house, 1Jp1 6, \\-eekly, $30!1/mo. Util incl. 2ntl nr b·· Jul)> 15!h LI a mu111. ~I'<" Ing, ocea~ vu, sundck, )Tly over 35. Range, forced ht. or balconles.'ca.rpctl~g dra· monthly. 847-8270 w/ocean view. 548-53 00 ,.-41M-490t • ·.·! EXF.C. home, beaut . T"-le I NewpGrt S.ach lse only, 54~1 or 986-4604 :raJ Elden Ave, t'-1 . peries. Subte1Tnnean 'park. 1 & 2 BR. Apl from $150 to eVf'S. GAJtAGE ... ' S.15 & up. 1 BR, 2 BR & REJ?UCED J-ent for light ing \l'ith ell•vators. OptlonaJ I ir &) $250 \1·eek. 54-Hi89!1 or NE\V. bldg., beaut I f u 11 / l Rode; 4 br. fam. rrn, formsi l l BEAUTIFUL spilt le\·ei, 1950 Bachelors. Color TV, maid duties. _3 br, 2 ~· .;!Pts, niaid .11ervl<.'e. J ust :xlrth or ..,._ ,-67'";7598 decorated. l«e· ottk:e, he WANTED .,1, 1st \\'es1ern Bank Bldg, University Park. hvine Days 552-7000 Nights ~ln. rm, CltStom dra & crvt . I ,.q ft. condo. on back bay t erv. pool. The ~·1esa. 415 N. d1i1, blUns, pool. ;,W}..61;:,2 J.,ashion lslanJ at Jnmlxlrec · 2DR CABIN Bi& Bear, all of Laguna Beach. For i 1 rirplc, Se-lf-clePra. o\·en. NI'. ,..\\'all AUg. 1st. $600. n10. N~1vr-..n·t Bl., NB. 6~6-9bS1. LGE secluded 1 BR, Ouplex. and San Joaquin Hills !'toad. convenlenccr:;. ¥,i milt! f1'0fi.1 formation, contact: Need 10 rent u M>Of) '111 good sch!!!, child. ·park, \'1. lease. Ow11er. 640-1425 Eastside_, g,&1-age, a,_•ail. 1'eleph0ne (TI41 6"<1·1900 Roo-• all rec11!aUon. 968-92-13. RIVIERA REALTY 1?'181"_~~1 tor s tora;re,, ' shopping L-cnters. Pool .. 1. 8'"-80'" A U I 65 0 $16S 2 86 &'"' 28 "~ 400 4"' ~78 ·~2800 ·-~ meinbcri;hip In ·It!. Sl2.i 1110. " "" ""· pt. n urn. 3 1-1 · · 6-1 -ll ·..,...a :or rental inror1natlon 'SEE OUR AD UNDER :7't-JI;> .. .,,,... =~~-------- Avail. 1121. &t".-2325 Townhouse Unfurn. 335 AJ.J.. elec. 2 BR. 1 BA, 1 THE NEW f\'R Hoag, pica.sent emp. lady 360 CORONA DEL MAR F"ULL SERVICE DESIRE h(•t1i;(.• iu Nev.-p_TI1 4 BR 2 B \ t: 1 ~ Balboa Island child ok, $175 per 1110. 120 • or col. girl. Very nice nn. "Going to Europe" Westcllff Building Corona. <lei l\olur at~a. 3 ~R. Waln'ut, ,..;1~. 1~~·ir ns.u~;t1~ & La gun• Niguel Ali>t'rt, Ci\'I 646-5:596. BAY\\'OOD ~APARTf\-lEl\'TS Kitch & law1 priv. S70. LIDO tsle Waterfront ~ Co~r \\'estcU.U Drive & 1 P.1 1 ~f1 ~~~se!~his ">'r.~· d""s. fncd v. rd. 01ild1-n & 1 Bil. + lof1, u11fu1·:1 .. fqilc., 2 BDRl\I t . In Ne1>.')">0rt Bench nre ready. 548-0261 am BR/2 BA., .lunc/J,lv $1"";,, lrvme Blvd., Ne Y.' p o r l o1 , u ) w • • • -.' • . ,. "" $875, 2 BR, ocean vie\v, ten· on canal, Rm for 16' IXla t, , , ups airs, ran~e, , The sale~ office is ·open . ~ Be · h •1 II d l'LE::ASF. I 1 .,_, & " ' pets ok. $200. !"JW-1071. nis cts, sy;in1 pool, priv heh ""llV'l/nio. 673-3874. rchig, crplcJ. Spotles~. $1;.iO. ,la.ily fm011 10 A'I to 6·.30 ROOl'tiS $18 wk up. w/k.it S30 mo Aug S1500 673-8sss ac · '"' r. 0 "'a r ' 1 " !J °"1 U\1'V • .M'5:°· ..,.,.., Se N 1 t 791 SI rd .. .. • . • . 1)45...flOl. We need 1 BR npt/hM. ! ncee>ss In priv a~a. lse. ELEGANT 2 Br "'/gar, nr. ·e 0· a 1' iniar. P.i\f, l\1ac_A11h~1r Blvd. & ...,.1; .up ~Pts; Otildrn & ~t Villcatlon Rentala 425 ll50' JJl,IMED Cl\·1 nrc11 unfurn $139 jor 4BR, 2BA. c1·pti1, d1·ps. bltins. Children .~ sn1nJI pets Or\. 837-9U5/fA3-l4.29 496-4618. sho11s/bch, Yl"ly. 835-3437. C • I . n !. h . S.:u1 Jooq11111 llllls Rood. ~lt10~11.o 2.197755~ N~~'P°3967rt Bh;d., • . -occuponcy, -"-642--0280 ' .; LEASE, 3 BR, 2~~ bas. eve/\111.ncls 673.8484, ap11 rano -•c 6·14·5555 ....... ,,. o-, ....,,.... . BEACll tn1t~rlM. Pri\'ale \\'iii consider dividlng•for 'J. uur.,.,-r · + Oce vi FURN · ba h road. Vu fantutlc. 1 & 3 br, or n10re tenants. Coast H\\'Y $25. Re11·anJ for 11ccepl~le L.'un. •-ach I vi an ...,., e\\'h, "cun1_...,!Y 1 pool, $750. yrly OL'("an front. 3 br, 3 3 l}R upper duplex. Ocean DUPLEX-Brand new dlx, 1 •. ,_..: rol?~ pSntvud. 1 t ' \Vk/mos. July • 1•~111800. a.I Newport Blvd. t"'rcc rental In coast area, l~ r. Y9 P . vcac ' ..,.,,, n1 o, b + d • . I h '' 1= 0 Wk-•s ,blk ocean or ...,.,.,, 3 8'., 21.~->c'~. n P".'"-o'" en or JJiAllJ kn ••• .... c... " n -61" -!--"---·----~-~-586-2568.. . :\ en. <>IS l\VS r , u. ~ l\)O, pen nu. ~ k 1 N OCC Aug? 1 $1500/$2100. 675-1164; pr g................. ~·~~~--~·~>"~"~'"~·~"~'~'·~-~-M"~! $190 I BR hou \ . liispo<;al, 673-5729 10-2: 34-143 Via Espinoza, Ua. S:-1'95 n10. 2 Story v.·/llv \\'Or g gir • r · ,.,., """'1844 CLST G JJOO 1 .-sc. ict'>r ia I•· •w oort Beach Q tn Bch 871-0006 rms up, bea.nis. trplc. patio. ~>l&-""'"2S"72".--~'.,--,~-~--· ·· · DE.SI N sq. L Bch. Zoned busineSI!, Yrlv. Capistr•no Beach 11115 ano · eo ..... al S2'l \V. Bnlboli Bl. Furn. room with bath REST & Recreation '\r\mds comer. Suitable store/of-I~ $~2 BR oc-enn vlC1v ilvt. ADULTS_ LEASE ---·------· eves. .:>t:.. 213/476-6183. &. kitch. priv. Non·smoker or wkly rental5, Big Bear fices. Fronts on \\'eslt lilf ~1 ~. deck, beaut cond., 2 blks Bfl ,. ba l $250 OCEi\:\' \1ie°"'' -New duplex 2 D Po" t C1IAR!\IING 2 BR ,, Nr. OC'C. 557-8859 Lake -BI\ I d 1v l n Lodgt>. Dr. NE. Air Cond. plenty . ·~· bch. 1,_A.Lro'n" ; i".JO bl', 2 ha, db;h11·sr, rebig,I ana in : ·· -bn., 2'1 ----=~~=~-I Re!ierv. n4: 585--4709 pkg. 1815 \\'estcliff ~9~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~i $35()-Spacious .1 bl. firplc '-• •• 6-12·5.U.1 $?1.3 4!'1G-9209 car ga_r.; some apt<!. \v/fpl GUEST cottage, lo rent, In home. Nr. golf 'C 1• s e . . Duplexes Furn. 345 · nio. ·· · LGE. 2 BR, 2J091 La Cresla & beam cell",;, Avail. on exchange for care o1 pets & BALBOA Peninsula house or Al RPORT CENTER A t Laguna Nll?\l(?I, 3 BR .. 2 BA. Blt·i11s. Ocean 'B', $190. 'tno., lnq. l(llJ S. lease· $285 10 $300. yard. Refs. 5$-1843 apt, sleeps 8. Sl.10. week up. 0.:-\uxe I, 2 & 3 room office~ nno11ncemen I •~I NU.V,IEW RENTALS ·1oa Pe!"linst.,;i• 1·ic.,.,·. !:."50 1no. Cnll; 6·12·115'5 Coast. l..aguna. or call 644-793:2 67;)-:xl30 LAGUNA, Room in pvl 962-8680 acljacent Airporter lloteL DJ\"L'iE INDIVIDUi\L ..n,..,N~ ,,_ • ....,,. ur 4!~':-G223. •194~'8. QUIE'I' ' BR, cp.,, d~s. home, kit priv. l'tfan prefd. 3 BDRl\1, 2 st,.,,•. + "---. J,p....·est rates, full service~. ~:t' u1~ or 49-1-3'.l-l_S , . ·.· -... .., ~· .,., .. ........, !9-'" •• 1 1 so<.1J<:;Tv OF LOVE :1•te-1 CHAfillING ., L~l' ? 8 \ . 1 · & 3 BR su1n111er .'\:. "inter Coron• del Mar OCEAN views, wlJc to bch, 2 irundeck, nr \\'ell I c Ii ff 494-(;667. 111ent playrn1. Cabin $1 15 -..-..... ~ \\'eeM :cy~ ~Mn lt1 fl>t1r!'.', p~.,. • 1 ' ·• • •· -... • • 111 • 111 E. Halboa Blv<l. ;;;;;;;;;;,;iiij;i;;iiimi9[ 1;R. furu or u n furn shoppg area, adults pref."tt-oo=,,~,~s~125=--.~,-.-. ~,71,.gnlfi-=·. per 11·k. 962·i9i2 aft. 4 p.m. EXEctrrIVE office with 1111· \\'hole Lo\•r Oi\Ti.ne . , . r bch, I s e Io p l . $.JOO./n"IO. 6"" ""·"'' $2'10-$250. nXI. Bkr. 49&-5721 ,,.,, Atl" · , '"""' ocean ·"cw \' blk to 1 .~ .. ,-,., -an '"' & -•~ •· E 1 1· B 1 Now _ De-c. t'pp1•r ;~ •1·ch ,,,...,.,~ _ U'..,....., .j ..... ... • • 4 BR. 2~~ Ba. Suit-Ins block .,. · .,...... .. ... ,,. " •~O\\' .\'eru1ng e 1g Bay. Owner A.gt: 49-1-0.151 'Juplexes Unturn. 350 Huntington &He......,---:! BR. 1 ba. FrplC'. Steps to oc-ean. ax> Seaview, Cdi\1. to oc-can, Ui(l/\•.'k. Conw. lion area, FaMion l1l l.\t11I , hk nt1.y. No begging, p ·1te • ... : ocean Yearly· t1IVI nK> R & •--rd -s tum ... -·2 1'-'B. l'tlui.1 s u b· I e t lm· ..... s.~LI'. love offerino oc L•a na Niguel .,. · ' ._.,., · oom _. -· U'I.....,,_ · mediately, 644-0635. ,...... • ·oe ~u Balboa Peninsul• t\,. WAITING Ask for Mike Rentalt to Sh•r• 430 DESK •"·-.~"able t =;n 110llci!ing fundr:; whablOe er. NEW Sea Ten·tH .. "e T\\'Tlhse. ~.!,._ LIST JONES REALTY 673-6210 COLLEGE Girl to live-in for ....-~ TILU ._,, Spoi1sored Ly 1J1e ))th t--n·, Ocean view, 2 br , 11~ bu, 2 BH., 1 BA, upper, cpts, OPEN LUXURY Bayfrout high~ Sununer. Walk to be~. Rm WANT together girl' ta ahr tt.10·;wrr~~fumlturc till'}' c.n1st Oiar!ry-49-t.1. , df'a, crpts. 'l cnr attach. drps, blh1s, garage Avail ON TEN AC RES for apt. 2 Br., 2 Ba., boot slip & board + S70 ~ Ul t;X· !we. apt/or find funky okl at s;-; mo. Ani¥.-enng i;ervice VOTE ror Bill fo.1ohs (CloSt'l . garage, pritlo. Pr!. BeEtch, Nol\'. Yearly, 675-0496 Apti.. furn./un fw·n. Lease l, 2 or 3 BR Apt pool, lease $ 5 5 o / m 0 , chang1e f~ 1da1 )'ti0meboychil12d hse. No 1triiig8, Bob , ff~~~ 1!!5 Beah ~· for bu1Sin~s agent, ,)dNJ pool, tennis court, privcy, Costa Meu l<'irenlacP I priv. p:11ios. at the GT;>-8074. ca.re or "'r 4 "" · 213/430-XiS coll. OK. s. "'"'"'"" ..... n °"a.c · · 1453 830'.! Atla nta &I~ .. security. Sl:Jj, Le u s e ----"------f'ool!I Tennis Contnt I B!dst VILLA YORBA $!50 1 BDR·~ Own rm \v/tv. Wknd & eves Bch. 16l7 WiSTCLIFF-NB H.B. Polls op1•n 1·8, .lun~27 .. LHG. set:lu<lE\\ 1 BR , !!f.J Sca Lan, Cd/\t 64-~-:u.11 · " garage apt, tree. Must have -car , , 6-14-1~7 E Id U Co year round. For appt. call 11 On smoker 714/64Q.-0255 NEEDED woman to •hare 2 1980, .129f. T:i6 A $40 sq, ft. NEW SeA Teri·are lioine ... 1 ssts e, pvt. fncd yd, utils 'i\laeAr iur nr <i.St H\\'l') 1-funtington Beach 675-1319 &.ft ijpm · B:r -&!boa Penn Apt. No Am 'P) ~ p rk g , u t i 1. BR, Fam Rtif, 3 CUI' gai·. pd. $l${). A,·Q.i~ 7/1 6·~06 (714) 142-9622 EASTBLUFF. 2 B_ R, 2 BA, WANT Room • Board foi" 2 rent In exchange for OC· Bauingardner, 541-5002. . '9noMll fenced )Id . Private tennis NE\V -BAYVlE\\1 ~DOG_R ... UN-~S-*--g,arden apt. Pntio. Adulls. boys ages 11 •& 13 $50. wk. cask>nal counscling of 2 HUNTINGTON Bch, hnmac. 1 ,_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii beach, {:I. .C a r d e n e 1· , 1 11 •I 2 BR, 2 GA, DECK Spa. , & " llR. 1149 & $Hll. No ""''· $280 Call 640-0349. penn, M 0 1 h , r decoasrd. boys, 9 & lL 642-:rol 2 room. cpl'd, pvt bu th, :~.\Jes paid. $6."lO niu. 1 At*b•ltnbforRri ~c:$J=2loc-cmcco0c.·_.cY'-''-"ly'--673-9139 __ J..::icls ok. Pool. Kee:lson Ln. NE."'\V 3 BR. lge liv & din rm ,.,,::>l,:c>-:.."°'=~-----= WANTED 2 straight males, Pl'ks:. utll pd. 350'. $90. l\.1r. ~~!0-""'-'·-_:"!30_ c.------~. 2 BR. Nu. stove, ref., cnrpt., (I blk \\'.of Beach Blvd., fplc, g:ar .. s..,-:15. 812 \V.'.Guesl H-415 lo share new home, in -tang 5-I0-1301 \\'kdays. _ ·i 2BR, 2BA on 71h hole or t.;l drapes, vie1v, adults no pet'!. o[f 'Sla1er) 003-4029 01· Balboa Blvd. 673-9-198 ..,.,,. La.guni Beach. 83J.....9627 or BR...A.1\'U ne.\\' stores, oUices, TAKE POUN~ q f F Niguel Country Club. $2't>. $195. 67.l-6397 847-7786. · ~~~~~~~~--l ;;;::::;:FO;:-~:;-;::-:;-: ... :-:-=: 499-4290 100.iv. air & heat, elevators. PERJ\fANEi."\'TLY -t!h t• Ph: 49:'""482'7 Apts. furn. 360 ·11ARP I h Silln Juan Capistrano ~M RTABLE rest home Share APT or HOUSE .17301 Beach Blvd. H.B. Ible withou ~I NEW 4 hr. A\'ail. OO\\'. Lf'ru;e :s · .. , ocean c Ol>e 2 Bft, 1 '2 BEDROOM 1 bat ~:;_;:c:.;:c.;._;;c:.c;.;:.__;:.__;:.___I u1 Fullerton for elderly Ca/I HOME-PART sem \\'BY -t s. ""~. \VW consider lea"" op-Gener•I ba. Avail. on re1tn1 lease, builtins, fully~•rnatec:I. 3 BR upper duple."'<. Ocean Y.•/beaut. surroundings .. Pvt ' . NF.R' ~m-:::.;.2834.:o::c...~~~-..,.,-= I !hots or fnc1 diets. •) ilce --..:._______ $285 n10. Agent 6~5930. Ch.kl OK $135-\'u. $T;J(I mo. Open \\'knds, m1. Xlnt~ food & attention. 836-ll94 or 548-l479 Busl...u Rental 445 Turin's P.0 .P. progmm tion. 496-2-179. -Si\L\.U.. beach apt. for clean, .i BR, s. of 1-1 .... .,.., trpJc, suOOk, 1 t~•nc 1•1 DA. r:r 1o.2. 3.i.443 \'la Espinoza. Call (1) a25'-681.6. G•r .. u for Rent 43S works to get "''eight oU •nd LEASE 4 Br. 2 Ba. Built-ins.. q;,iiet, \\'Orking i:irl. SUI. gar, \Vash/dryr hookup. mon a 1 Capistrano Bch. 871--0666 PVT home, good care, xlnt STORES keep It off -and lt 'a •P. lrplc., patio S330 n"IO. 5.'i6-81.Sl $285. 673-1418, e11es/\1•knds. 962--4471. f.. k tio lad GARAGE JI.lain Street, Courtyard and proved al Orange ~'111 * 831-1.209 * Bilboa lsl-o•_n_d____ ----------eves. coo ' pa • Y or Oceantto al College, Golden Yi•• •• ,. , VI I Cu1t.1 Meu CHAR'1.I! 1-BR. d upl ex. 3 BR, 2 BA duplex, pvt patio, gentleman. 556-8065 WANTED al mod,.:1• res'°ni""s. av lnble College, Y.\\l.C.A."~-"" 1•t 111on e o redec., nc\v cpts/drps, etc. nr ne"' shopping $2'25. 31911 LICENSED • Gueat home .... ., C ' Y"•\RLY 2 BR ...... _ DELUXE N -• t 1 BALBOA INN Y.i\t .. A.'s snd by LJ or ... u .... 1. lnfa..n t O.K . No pelli. $135 Via Belardes, 493-1937. board & ~for the elder· et:1.1 o ren as 9000 as loct c 11 to 1 r · I 2d1BR, 2 BA. den, air con· 1-'ema.le 01· couple. Steps to APARTMENTS i\lo.; avW I 7/1. Owner Wostcliff ly. Private room. 540-8083 PQ68lble for at o r a & •, 105 ~fa.in SL :X>wi055s...~"'"" !-..!!6~1 ~11 I.ion, \\'ater paid, vie\\', bay. $z;;(). mo + util . ,,.,.,_,.....,, · ~2-""''' 6~ 0 740 ~ ·~ bad. en, 10 nun 10 lx:h G7;rfl666. Air l oncl r Fr~lc's -s S\vim·t ~~~~=-------Summer Rentals 420 ..:..:::,::-:::c~------,......, COUPLES 1 ;u Avail 7/l 49J..-O~I0/~7 1130 .::.:::..::='--------mbig Poolll. Health Spa r·oR rent $190 mo, 3BR unit, $185. 2 BR., Pool, quiet *SINGLE car garage, good "THE Factory'" shopping Partie ~·i N 'B ; ~ ' -· I Ba lboa Penfnsuia 1'ennis Courts • ligme and nange & refrig, Vi c : adults, no peis. EASTBLUFF N.B., luxury tor storage. S20 month. mall, consisting of 22 unique Call 1' .. ~a~~12~P1 1:~r~ ..,_ port ••c $l 5 WEEK & UP Rill!?i.1~1 Room. Yorkto\l'U & Beach. Ph. • 642·2514 * furn home, 5 BR, 2'f.i ba., * Cail 646-2687 * st:tr:, has &hops avail . 638_1511. .'. ! 1 Bednn. r·ron1 SlG5 _8"9"'27=' c.•~------A I beau. lg pool all utll pd Gara-. for Re I F 1 SllO/mo. In cannery $22:> • 2 BR_ , ch:i1_1nel frut, e Sle•p;ng Rooons -P '·• J I IA Owii 644-0688 . ..~ n VI ••• 30th S I ... 2 &:!dr1n. Fro111 $2lli \V/J..li:: to Oeach, new roo1ny Furn. or Unfurn. 370 u Y ug. er · 1959 Apt 5 l\1aple Ave. • _, t., N.8. FULL" LICEN...,.: P!· boal lie, Aviul r.rly. • Housekeeping H.oon1s MEDITERRAN~AN 2 BR. 2 BA, bltins dsh/wsh, OCEAN FRONT·PENIN Costa ~tesa 673-9606~ .1 ~"'.., $21:> -2 BR house, .l blks e Ocean View Apls I ti '"' ~~ I o •~ k. Call •• E J8 * SPffilnJALJST • 1 ~ean front~ gar. yrly BALBOA INN VILLAGE ~r. s mg crp ng, "~ Coron• del N\•r 8 eeps .. , _,.,/w Office Rental 440 l..., · th St., CM. Suitable S1,iritual readings 10 ~·10 S350 -3 BP., 2 BA. rr1)li,:, 11.tS l\t . 'tt * 2 BR. 2 ba, pllmh, elect. 673-6372 ~r or ofc. 362 aq . tt. pm. Advice ou till mM1'11. gN"u"-vdcclEkW. 4--0RooE"N. °"r•''t'"s· 67~1~·-,4•0 'ee• 2-100 llarOor Uh1<l., C.l\l. bl.~in r/~1•0crpts, ctr2a.s, a<lults lBR, t per.;on, no pets, gar OCEANFRONT NB -furn, FOR Lease, 650 tq. ft. OfOce S moc .• &s.1009R 11q. f~~280/ 312 N. E1 CanliiX> Reat,,f;iln .ro (714) 557-8020 01uy. ... . 5.%-519 for sml cu, avail no"'" ap. clean, Jrg. sumnler rentals, space. Cpl, drps. Do"'lltown mo. ·"· . ea! ""tllite. c I em en t e. 4 9 2-Pl36, 673-4030 or '1M-J248 2 lilt, YE.4.RLY, $250. RENTAi~ 01o~r1cr:; WALK TO BE_A_C~H--111m: SllO""New! 6Tr7691 aft 1·2·3 BR. 675-C688, 827-llOOl Lagwm. 494-3028. 5ell68. 492-9034. •: CUST built hon1e. overll)(lk· 6~1:·4~~ ~N 10 to 6 D1U.!--_!_ New 1 BR. Crpt/drps, gar. CS I u___ AptsF Unfu 370 Apt1., Af'Ftl PROBLEM Pregnancy,~otl-lng Back Bay in older lK'C· More oom.le11 Money 205 Eth. 847-39'.:i .. 1. 01 • ~ um. or rn. Furn. or Unfum, 370 urn. or Unfurn. 370 tident, s y rn path~ 1 c tlon or Bluffs. Beaul dee . 3 BR, 2 BA. conv. den, trplr, 00].11:: see a real garden ** UNFURN. 2 BR apt, _;_;;c.;.cc.;;.;_"-";.o;-"--'--"--'-'=;_;;.;_:.;.;'"'--'-..:Cc;:.>--'-:.;.;.:.:_; pregnancy counseling.·~ nrirrorcd waUs • crvstal fl'Otlt & rear porches, 1 blk apt! Like living in a hon"le neW' beach $150. ,,C::•;:•l'"•~M;;IOl;_H::._ _____ C::.os::.:l•;:_;M.:;'"'::.:;sa:;_ ____ _;C::•::•:,:l•;:_;M;:te1=::'":______ Hon & adoptions ref. -t .... _ chandeliers. lge ten· v.:/gus beach & ocean. Adults only. for $162.50/l\10. 2 BR, 1% s6z.ra49 1-APCARE &I~ I., c I & a "'f' s.ioo. per n10 ..... l.v. 646-82ll BA ''/Ii; I . New .1 es, anne l•u 111 .,. • · g pace!!, pr1v DUPLEX, 2 br, crpts, dras, PREGNANT! Th I n.~ n 1 drape~eti. etc.. elc. $)() Corona del Mar patios ru-eas. \Vll.mrt no pets or singles. Call abonkm? Know all the' cU mo. Year il:'!lse. jj44....l09G, -'-----"-:.;c.:;;....___ Garde , on \Vllson St., W. 536-0"30 • N Ont! Call LIFE LIN£ 24 644-4652. GOING TO ElJROPE of 1-larbor. No chlld./pet. ---·-------ewport Village hl'll, 541~. ·~' NEW BAY FRONT 3 BR, 2 B,\ frplc. paUo, ;n. 2283 FoonlWln Way East 2 BR, 2 BA, d•lux•, pool s;d, F•u1LY '•,I 3 BD"•f, 2 BA, fab,t•·o.• eluding dishes, linens, color 64&-2846 apart1nent, nr beach, $160. • loc ~ ""'·' "' TV, laundry tacll. Kids ok:. -,~==-c::-=''="=-==~-536-5882 Choice or ntkm COUNSELING :! view, pat, !rplc. S•l25'i\IO. S400. nio. lst, last & del-IOS.it, HARBOR GRE_ENS 3 ;:::BocR.::.=1nm--nn--cp-"-.-.-ra-s e Tennis, Volle)•ball, Pool 636-5060 or ~ YR'LY. ave 49.i-UliJj & avail July J to Oct. J. Refs Furn. & Unf.uni. f'r $130. S!!ti.nklers patio fnctl yd gd t! Arts 8r Crafts DO 111>mettrl11g ..,,~~' ile. 6'15-1972. l'ClJUiJ'ed. 6 4 4 -19 6 9 o1· Dach, l, 2 ~ 3 Bl~'s. !Tlodels schools parks $:5.1 96S-ll48 •. BGlllallnardl ~--Rooon ••·1"th a c-.,. a to-lgn ., .... ~.",'." r 2 ~BL,.U.llT vle\v hoinc s1;1-2'J.'>.l. Opcu,.....10 ul .1 pm. 2700 .::;;==.,.-=~-':::e=='""'""-''-'"'"" 11\1\1 ... ....., '' 3 B~ 3 Ba., luniily rni. 2 --·~-llele1·8011 \Vay, Cl\!. nr. Har· Oaa.nn1ng lrg 2 Br older reul player piano or 4 \veeks, Cl:lll E.G. 1ilgc, Frplcs. Pi·fvn la y,ui·dcn FtJflNISl·lED AJl1 -$1 ~ Ulil hoi· Blvd & AchJnis • apt. ne\\'\y redcc. $140 mo. e Athletic pl'Ogl'anl 495-4934 • .!.J p<1i<l. 1~ blk to 1.K:ean. NO i-a• "'370 ' Renlonon1ics, Brk. 675--6700 e BaChelol' & 1 & 2 Bedroom $550 !\lo/year)' Jeni;c !X'IS. 2500 Seavie\\', Cdl\1 -L B ALCOl-lOLICS Anon,y~u.s. Wlntor1 R.E. 675-1111 Costa Melli UPPER 2 br, Elec-t. bltins, agun• uctl Furn or unruni avail Phone 542-7217 or :.write BEACH ho111e. 4 RR. 2 BA. refrlK. . gar. $140. t 0 OCEANJ:o"'RONT lu x u ry , Adults, no pets P.O. Box 12'.l3, Costa ~l. fAm rni, pool nn "'/pool $30 WEEK & UP respontiblc adult. No Pets. vle""" pvt. patio, huge, trplc, Ne\\'JX>rt F\vy at Bilker St. SWINGlptG SINOL S table, frplc, ftr.J'OS1( ~tt"Cttt 1 • Studio & 1 BR Aph;. References. &16·42'l4. $350_.blO. YRLY. Dave c.nll "Leah" 2-8 pm re.~~~ach. $425, 1st e ·rv & l\tald Service ,\vall. 3 BR, 2 BA, lrg., cpts ~ 49•kim-• 1'1'5-1972 7l4-SSJ..0075 Socl1I Clul>I e Phone Service-Hid. Pool drps, adults, no pefs. Qulcr Lido Isle 1 ~~~"~!!)!!~~!!!1'~1 1 m VINE TERRACE e Chil<lren & Pet Seclion lln!R, SalO mo. 646-4939 & .;;...o.;....c...;;...------ 3 Br, 2~ Ba. carpets &: Zii'G ~l'\vport Bl\'d., C~f 6-JG-1689, BEAUT deooratl!d, 2 BR. l~I THE EXCI'!lNG drapes. onJy.$400. a month. ;,.13.9;a;, or 645-3967 SPACIOUS 2 BR apt., l\1esa BA. bltns -t refrtg. tplc, PALM MESA A.PTS. Afent 6'f3..4SOO l.\d Good for $S 011 mll) Vertie IU'Ca, bltns, cpts, crpts. drpa, 2 car gar. $350. PiJJNU'J'ES TO NPT. BCH. $EE OWNER HOLIDAY PLAZA 1lrps, $100 1110. Avl\l.I. 7/l on lease, 6~ FURN. OR UNFURN. F'ri. Sat. Sun. at 207 CoHvn. DELUXE Simclom 1 SR. 002--!>541 or !>16-6919. M;11 "erde -. Un:,Clievably l3!'!"e apts , Vnturn. upper duplex. 4 rum. apt Sl4!l. 1-reated pool. 2 BR, l~WA studio apt, pvt hua-e popl, Jt11cur.T elret bH· Escape with ld toth11 magical waJerland ol Vitt& del 8dnnt • yetlt'IJ leate. Anii)le parking. AtluJui:, no P'ilk.I 11nu1U l"hUd OR no DLX 2 & 3 Br., 2 &. Encl lllJ, Sha.'.: crpts, d~. aauoua 1.tllQ. whtr• the empl'latl1 Is ol'I th• nautictl, and the FOR. lease 3 br, 21 ~ bA, 2 pets. pets.' $160. nJ' Joa~ n , ~ar. $1&:; up. Rtntal Ofc.. Ille. Adults, no pets. w•v Of life 11 as t ranqoll or exci 1inp•a1 you car• to •-1 1 11 1965 ~,,,. • c '! "'"" .,_ 30951\tace Ave. 54&-1034. SlN•1tt::s · Fl'om S1'50 make it. Laknld• llvfng rMkes the ·•iff--en-10, !hose LUvp es, am rm, \\'C ,...., na ... ve., ·'"' · .....,....,u,, t SF.DRl\-1. From SlSG "' "' "'"' land 1 cpd . $3.50. IJ)O, $16-0 LRG. I & Oen upper, S?.fAl.J.. 1 BR, El\11~lde, uttl Newport Be•ch 11 BEDRl'tl. Froni $185 anjoying bO•llng, cascading fountolr11 and swimming Gardener. 213-968-ro-tS Ocn.n, quiet, l'ttature adlt, pd. t adult. no. pcl, Yrly Un!um Apta. A•Jall Froiu SlD ea close as your petlo-deck. lend lovers will apprecl1tt JfAR. Vu Pft.lermo. 4 Bl\, 110 J*I~, gar. 22:l4 c Rutgers $14').$145, 642·852J:l, 336 £. 1700 WESTCLIFF DR. to Sl!'i LES& ecre1 of exquillttl'( land1capod grounds and walkways. FR, 2~ DA, wet bar, 2, "D:;':,;''--' .,,c.;,•::;1.,__ __ ~--2)th st, Open house l ~ 2 BR, .Bltn appllances. You're rlicht, the)''re under-1fi~1,.-Each apartment·home includes every co~elvablt lux· Pound (frM Ht) 11., trplcs, rent w/prdpcr $550 LRG IBR. upper, kltche:n Costa Mell Poot 642.6274, nrl1.'e<.1! 1561 r.lesa Dr. ury •Ppolntment, llke eir-condltlonlng al)d special per nwnth. 64+''1181. bltins, adll.11, no pets. c:&.ll SUB-LEAm;<i Parle Newport (5 btks trom Newpol'I Blvd.• sound proofing to lnsuro your comfort 1nd privacy. V5Ja FOUND tt;r, tnnlc-r.:. an~ UFFS • BR I f 6p N•'\V 2 B 2 ba d 2 ,...... ua 110t>A Tlla Yach t Club offer• handball, gym ind uunat, ,.me ~ I NEW BL , p ay a. tm. 642-4044 ... r, • rpa, crpt.g, Af,t, BR. XL.NT LOCA· .....,.."'_, ::lilen vi~ n'"" V cm · St .. val] -I b~ A• I and 1ocl1I roomi. 'J rm, pool, a ~ur. lit. Huntington &Heh poo , , gar. uu ti, no T ON, Avail July 7th-Dec. * CASA VICTORIA * Cotta Mesa. Netdl w •-tM4 pet• 3~ Bay 3! """-"".,o l iving anvwtt1re else 11 out of the que:s tlon ... after !·' _...__.. ".,. ,,., ,.,. _,.. "'' · '" ·· · , ~· I a. 2 BR. Fum & UnfumTV •ire, iCUlo.:u1i.Men. vw-;,o\ ~" , ... TRA "' 1nlng Vi1tt d•I ltgo. 1 •l R W f1.n1 , Clim1el, Slw -,....., NICE Apt. 6 2 ' BR $156-ltove, re.trig, NEW Bayfront,.prlv Bch A Carpetl, ttre.pe• D/W, t'NO: 6/18 mother 1. •~-3 BR,•-I -1 4 .... -..1 ....... ~A J..•·~1•-hid I .,, I ~-Pool 1 " b I £fflcl•ncles,1,2,2pfu1den,from$190,furnflhed ~ .,._,... ..,.01. nr poo, ~•· u;u"'"""'' .;iuUM. Cpu. .... .,.64 poo,•,....,uta, Plcr 3BR. 2BA~~ mvyr. Ant. , e c. wme y n· _. 1 1 pups. Vic Natlnna.I •·, •-•-s•~ •••1-T••nlR Pr1 1 1 t • _, I bo 'I" I A' Inv un urn Shed ' model1 01)11n dally. nln• 'tll derk. ...r. CM ~ ~, ""'°~' '9iM. ~ '"" .... • vae pa o . no pets. ~ )f.9'19-063l <>r ~10. CfU"'l\ 1tl Ot11'11uve-n v F 1 • 101"" ·~ 1 1 M.I'" Ph· •~ -0 to •-VJct·~-St ... , rem tlie S11n Dago Fr11twey take H1rbo1 811 .... to -· • HARBOR. \Tlew J>a.Jenno <I ... • ~. ZBR. unf\.rrn, crpts, drt>JI, OCEANFRONT new 3 Br. 2 \\'ince, ~ vooo· ·.,,. Ad11ms1ndM111VerdtDl'lve. &40.1800. wu % GltO\VN rem11la Slo~SQI Br, 2'-' lk. ~ nn, a:x> J."or thol Item uoott S50, tiy range, Ovt'!llt refrlg, no pab, car IJMa:f, $600. yrly Jse. Harbor1 C.M. Mi...8970 · , cat • , ~ , 'II tt. p!O. mo. S.t~ the Ptl'lny Plnrher. $14:>. OOS-14:;.i CJD, bltius, trplc. 642-3443' \Vhlte Elcphn-nt Dim«·A·Uoe·1;,==========================d. I Call &t&-0749 ; , : I~ • •' ' .. r,. •• rfc!ay, Jurte 22, 1CJ7:3 DAIL V PICOT 39 ··~1.1o1~-;;-~ISJ:;;;: 1.....;-~ 115ll ...... ~ 115l 1 I 1' I 2 • DJ) I I ;I; ![)]I'--_1•• 11 _1 •_l[Il)I L-_L•.w_ ..... _,[)]11 ~ I iiiiilii(---~' ··~'1 ; r_· ;;;....,....iiiiiiiiic;;;;m;:· J~. rrn;;;•~i <l · nd (frM Miii 550 ~-Polnt1111 "& it<p!PW-,Mta '710 NoloWonted.M A f' 711 Holf Wontetl,M AF 710 Help Wonted, M&F 710 Help Wonted, M4,F 710 Help ~to!!, M & F 710 )"'()UNO 6/16 brown male NEW. remodel, tr&me 1 &: Paperhntl!'I Atrro BODY MAN 'd DRAPERY work room need11 1 c Sc 1 Coll · IIOUSF.:Wrve..~. A1 u th r i· • • • ,Col lUe Shepherd, brown ool· f1Ub. .tcret, ~ 4' PA INT IN".,.. _._ !:!I'. who Excel ·~. CL£1UCAL rt nctd bar tacke I I l-f hOo I c1::u itirl Cr11dua1<>ii ~lakt! qi for 4 KEYPUNC"H OP'RS u .~ ... 1-1o.. c-M••-....... ~-... "''" .... .,,.u, ~an, llll)p. . ll ex.penee _, <:l'tMI r. A11lrt w/hOOJ;ehold Joba., hr• of "'ol-k showln• ln11e\jj & :ruVt "'kMJW -~''!§ ~· ·~ a s:. ~~JQ(n_ "'"Qlj(, ---reliable. Uc.'.d lOl w/Rda. 1825 Laguna ~ Cl:ERI( m-.~ l or ~~. ....no. 5-8pm dally, 644-500~ b 1, .... , • &-.• I:, __ • .. m." • San Diego Fwy. ~ 982-lll6L ..... Ell sr.:S1<0: lid., call l!>Y 83.H916alt 6, DRJVER • Nile -0.11....,. s y .,..,,.-""=--...,...._.__ PBX OPERATORS ~UN-D ~~ 5 ptn Cement, Concrete PAINTING •-repa'-. -.... sn-mo. Must know C.l\!. & ~ }lospltal lfOUSl-.'\\IQHK • 4 hNI t•ot•h VOLT •v .......:a k J ., i.r .lo'1 ~·-TYPIST .,..... ....,__ ,. .. A_ ntornlng. !\ion 1hn1 F'rl. $10 17th. mud! •&•Pft: • une workmanship auar Take • Atn'O painters helper, r""4 ,...... ON ""Cf'k. Ov.•n C'iU'. S4-&-73'1 I, ln1tant Ptrsonnel ~~-Vlcln1~ or~: cu~.:.~p~RK ~f~" ot mY exp .. :~e;;~:.41~·: Ellarmpl""'oyBlmevd.ntC.Mc:..~ .. -lor MISSI Thl1\1El>li\l'E Qpctnn~' ror u ,,.,,,,Tctllipor..rr~&~ .. " 106 .....,,.h1, hlesa. Call 54&-6964 Pool decks. Don, &l)-8$14 appt. 548-7078 -· beautielnn $..· 1nanlrurlN! . .., ampus ...,.., .,.,, ' ".'alter 6 pm. PATIOS. a14 drl Sa PROF. pa.inter, honest work, 6ttmedlo.te OIJMing rcqujt'e9 Will train sales oriented lull or p.·1.11 tJme ~'<lt'k n~ Nt.>W[IOl1 Bt-ach 646-47.a l 8EAUTIF1JL male black &: break, :move ,ve~pla~~ ~':!· S:!i!~· tree elt. ~l~I~~ -o; ,!":_ :: a candidate with exctltmt pel"IOn. Motlv\atk>n to learn c ' e Bnlbna Tsl<inrl. fin..7-t~S. Equ.ul Qppor. En1ptQ~r -white kJtten• Part Persian. concrete. 548-8668 tor eat. • ••oRO· wk + room • boanl. typin& akih Som& previoua w/high earnings. Ca.II Elly ommun1ty ---.lo! rtl St '·-··· Plo•l•r Pot-Ro~lr e---i.ence in -raJ oalce E.11is. 556-85(f), C..o n tr o I INSURANCE SALES • l...ANOSCAPER .1 -ox· •\ !M~' tlnd )';;'w~, ~acl'i CEMENT I< Btock Wm1<. ' , _,, •-96&-2942 otter $ pm. d;;['.;.' will he •;;;;.p.,1. Career . Employ. Agency. pcrleoccd, nl"'O know . l-'1346 Int· a W~, patkll, aideWalkl, etc. * PATCH' PLASTERING '* BABYSI'ITING / HOU9ekeep, . 3400 Irvme. Blvd. N.8 . 1pl'lnkltts, full 11 n1 e · FNO fml small .,\. .. ~. dog By hr. or job, 64&-6915 All types. 1''r'ee eatlmatea. my home, Mon-Fri. $30 Excellent ~ benefits m-HOSPITAL No """P nee., earn \\'hilr you ,.979-3071 ,~~===~-I •• • ...., . Child Co,. Call 5'0-0825 week. Coot& Mesa 61&-1012 clud!ne coo>1>•'1Y pei<t lll'l>"P 1 Experloncocl h•arn, po>1 lime. '''"' .~ LATHE OPERATORS w lS, vie. Pa.ulatino btv.:n · · wr:Q: babysit I.or one Ct\ud in ~. "'knds, full tlnlt· 1\ilcn qua.II· . . Bear A Ba~~ CHll.D CARE. Age z.5• o.. Plumbing my home week daya. Irvine Ple&M Reply To COMMERCIAL fit>d. pendable. matUtt lady. Mam LR CYJ:IS PLUMBING 5.TI-3936 OMSlttd Ad No. 893 TELLER 27802 Puf!l'ta Real }'n1·n1rrs Insurant't.' Grvu11 N/C OPERATORS · FND in Vic. Mission Vlit;I A: F.dinger area, (Santa Anal. Ren~ls & "Repain Water BABYSIT.fER, l to S .1 .... ,8 a c/o n...~t... PHat l\1iak>n Viejo Ed Lani * 5'!0-183~ :GQLf Course, ?i.foncanoao 00-1881. • beaten dilposalt tUmao., G ~ 0"""'"'Y F'U'U or Pnrt-nme <E:ut of San Diegu f'rwy l ... ~l\ec 0u(h7l.]lll'Kf!) O')l\._~~~e. am.n C&R. Hot l~ dshwaahra. ~MIC & ~fere~~~.t~pe. ~·M:xea~ UNITED Crown Valley Parkway) Insurance Sec'y MIL OPERATORS " ---Bi& yaJ'd .-1 to 3 ~an. BIA. Complete Plumblnt To rec'ruest '714) 831 2300 P/linl<', 9 am·l pm . Xln't ... ~ , UNO Collle mix puppy, '549-1.Ui. Sf!rvtcc. S.by1ltter own tr•n1. an application form. CALIFORNIA BANK \ • typist, .SC'lini· sh, iuit11,111 ,. , :male, beaded collar, vtclni· Contr•ctor PLUMBING REPAIR &a0-0166 or 640-0221' F.qual Oppor. Employer m/f 3t41 E . Coast Hwy. a 111us1. R of A To\1·rr ll ldi:. , T.op~ W,eges .-•ty Hamilton St., Costa No job too small BABYSI1TER, live-in, 3 Coron• del M•r '714) 495 JJQQ Oriu1gl;'. l)hon .. li\•111 11 :l .~ Day & Night Shifts: f'• ·)leaa, 5'8-6418 JAO<. Taul8.ne, re pal r, **· 642-3128 •• . children. . xln't c·o n-d •• _. CLERICAL He~, penn. 5 67~924'-~ \ ""t't \ 12, &1.1-0012. Min. l yrs E~~,rleftce -1'0UND I~ black & wtille ~. add, Z yn exp. Lie TOT:"j;;SERVICES ro. 963-3963 or att Gpm, &42-(8)) day wk. Apply n person, no Eq al 0 E 1 • 'lr• • ¥oi • '11 Guarantefid Ovartime ., .~~~~=: v~ ~~~· My Way eo. ~~~~ BANKrN~ELLER pb. ca1tt: . .1009 Baker st. eM u ppoc. nip oya-RN'S· 1 • l : :l<esa-Call 543-211119 ·--~--'d NB CLERK EXPER CLEANING APPLY t:·o=-=7=-===,.---I Dr.tflnt Sewlng/Alter•tf'Jlll .............. 'fi exper req · · • woman. For medical office Newport FND Oranee &: white male regional ofc. Mr. Kibala, :P..t. Vic Vista de1 Mesa DANA Blue, blueprint&, 3M Alter.tlon-~ ... 2 ...... en•> OOl-~1. TYPIST auites. Nights, 40 hrs wkly .• SURG. Controls Corp. !'Pt•. Santa Ana i&ll!I bl IJQe~ ozalicb &: -..__ Ctntlnella Bink Benefits, References re· SUPERVISOR · 979-M37. . -e ' -m:e. Fut serv'•gs..:gui. Neat, accurat~. ~ yean exp. EqiAl:-O~Effi quired. Bondahle .. Newpot"t .909 W .. 16th St. er • Be a c h-area. Phone e MED. SURG. --.New~t S.•ch . l'OUND •. Schnauzer, fem. Electrical BAR ?ttAID, part time, over PurCh•sing Dept. \\'l"'Ckdays, M4--0ro6. 3 lo II, ·11 I ·a A to s ·PM ·' "'Vic, La Hermosa &. NJKUel I II i I j 25 for college beer bar. to 1 . Rd., Laa:,Wl& NIK u el,. EL ECTRI€IAN, llc~nsed, ~ 'f 83J..Sl9t 8.rter 4 pm, uk for 4 Day v.-ork week. Many bene-EXR. Woman office cleaner, • . l'.:qual op~rtuni1y enlp1oycr •• • 1 495-5214. ·' lxnlded. Small jobs, ma.int' . . owner. 011;. 1kgutna/ti Hills Area.;..,.5 ,..~2~Y ICU-CCU 'RVTNE procONNEl • LcKal Secretary Legal •1 ·8LA~CK tom adult car,~~ repaln, 548-5203. Columbia Yachts w' me, perm.~ 3 to 11; 11to1 ·• LIV , • , ; .-.bair ....... , BEAUTY operator, akllled, FE?i.f. Counter p--time, Male SERYICESW-:"rt:"'-1r-v, (!:~Jll'".'Cf. s~_H ... 00\\pm, typ- J ·, .Vic Alta Vista Wo,y .I: Job Wanted, Male-700 gulll'lf.ntee + commission. 275 McCormick, C.M. cooks. full or ~time, Apply e PEDIATRICS r'~.1Lr'l'l-·1 . ...., I _, . ~~-mente Dr., Lquna CHrclenlnt MerTeU Hair D.eslgn, Appiytnpenon'Mon·Thurs Kentucky Fried Chicken, 11to7 SEE OUR !>! ,~citi ~~~~i:.r.e~b~ii'. . JiND. Ala.le puppy approx 6 · , . . • -.~. COLLECTOll ' & OB RN & LVN ' "ll ""~ .. * GARDENER * . SCRAM LETS ~de! M&r, call "'' Equal Oppor. Empl<>,..,. m/t 2929 E. Coola Hwy. CdM. SUNDAY AD " ·"T,•• '~_.'1>'tf• . ., . y .JllOS. Lite Brown. Vic Mow, edp &:: po I &arden-BEAUTY Opr, exper, w/or -Retired' FRY COOK, exp'd for Ha(Tl· , I CALL TRJSll UOPKIN$ •.c.X~dt'U ·~ re·~ re r y . •Bushard &. Hamilton H.B. bia care. Expert & depend· AJtSWERS without following. Xln't "op-semi retired penon ·to col-burger stand .. Sum mer 11 to 1 J EH.KI \VJIITTEl\lOitl:· 1 ~ust ' d:. write. fluent ,962-6005. able. M08t areas. por. in Cdl\l. Call 673-0968 lect newspaper accounts. season, Laguna. 494-4898 .;.~ E. ITLh ::St. (at Irvine! 01 SpanlSh. ~lhg 70, S/H, 90. Prompt-Fr" Eat ' aft 6pm. C543-4001S2KS' *GARDENER *' Laboratory ~~-------~. Sec.-ctary; .S/11 no•, req. W1~1~m~~.M.$iui:t·iJ: Ptte 534-7117 Scenic -Sm.DkY -Latdl -&o.t Rtp1irmen Bi your own Boss . -v--v--v-Good tYPing, speed °' ac· VI H Systt>m -Ml:ASLES CASHIER Full or p/timc in your e MEDICAL TECH , JANITOR. p/tin1l.'. ~pl.I ti.n~acy. . · c. wi.tlngton Harbor * Cre•tlve Gardtnlng Jl.<µJdOm question: l.fow can Waterfront exper. prerd. for~ Coffee ~'---..:..~ • 'd only. own area. Hig· h Income. n.:1irC'rl. No f'Xl>C'I'. necess. • Cl<.>rk typist, i,."OOd typing · . 592-1736 ~ Perm, Full time. Mllllt have ... IV!". LollOJ' 3 t 11 30 -"""1 & accuracy . roUND Y-~--'-T•rri•r, Expel'. · lrlahman. Oeanup, a leopard tell when he's Bot . .&...-h"~ ,_ clean -~. E.'l Tot"O, Ask for Jim. Guitenteed Customers O : ~~r. Scanl' or M11. \V\l\i11ins, 11"""'"., . . : • w ·1u1uu" Maint, Landscaping, Sprink-the MEASLES? "'""' • .... "" ''""""..,."' 831).()44(l. , :Stl\'.Cl'\\'OOCls, '15 , Fashion ICN I harmacf'ut1cals_Jnc ·· ~untington •.Harbour· aree. lers trwtalltod/repatr. &16-1072 RETIREE need a !UP-Blporta~_'!~Boat Y,ard, .N"-'· COOKS No Cash Down Excellent Benefits Island. Nwpt. Center. t727 Cam833-pu~, J.rv1ne "£\lea. 84&-9540 give a>me ..,.,..u.:u. Earn Now, Pay Later & Working Conditions JANITOR ·~ dlfdneuishln& mark. YARD OeaJ'Mlp, maint . plementa.I income. Admln· 80 0 KKEEPF(General (1) tst Oass broiler man&: Al 534-7187 , lite 1nainle1uu1ce, Equal Opportunity Emplbyer Comm. -ReL Openln& new mg't. transp. background Offi U (1) dinner mok w/exper in An equal Opportunih• f/time. Over 21. Apply in 'd gray pointer pup, route. Exp. Japan e ae 645-7219 ce. te S/H, ·girl of· .. -... ~--.. ti Call GENER AL Contractor, '1 person l·lun\tngton Beach LE'?¥-~retary, exP '.fem. De.na Point. Red collar Gardener. 534-1622 LICENSED male nurse for fice· Newport Beach. Sml .. .,avy wuu prepara on. reasonably Mnest. Reslden· Employer Conv;,.lesccnt Hospital, 1881J 1 .. &l!!_ ott1ce. Santa Ana. . ··.&:leash. 493-7586 EXP. JapUHe Gardener. private duty, daya or nites, &fri~ company. Chet Fred, 644-1700. tial Const. 492-9857. l-'lor ida St., l·l..B 8.47-3515. $150 plus. 547~1.fll FOUND Keyring With l9ts Of Coinplete yard maint . .!llrub-xlnt care, refs. 496-'1635 Appl). ~~~p ~Dana HOSPITAL JANITOR/Gardener con1bo LITE . housekeeping~ colier : '1<ey1 • Missk>n Viejo ai'ea. ben'. trees.~ est. also MATURE 14 yr. old lxty BOOKKEEPER, lite, Dr., Dana Point Harbor, GIRLS-GIRLS NE. W p/ti111e. Apply !;iQtlvn 8an1· 00•~,:1f:an~',s~~,r:~~ Call & Identity. 8.10-9573. Babysitting. 64~7. wants baby sitting ~. p/tlrne. $150 per mo . D.P. Easy fun job. Day or night. -l prn, Mon·F'ri. r.1€!sa Vt•1Uo d fl..12 i2aM:l' wk Balboa ~~ND~1::!:!r ~eyt,~:~ G1rdenlng/~•nclsc•plne Allio Vlllu area ~4 . ri::n:u=s H'ibe.na Club, COUNSELOR wanted for ~u =~~o~ m~~5is: A Macy GmmJI H 'ral ~~v. J·logp, 661 Cc.nter St, ;;y C1ub. 5-18-~'79 • :,, Beach, 494-91.00. ExpertT:.,.!:liaNble, loc~1~~JobW1nted,·fMMle702 BUSBOY, C.ook, Wa.ltresa or GConlorllroal~-~balNI Flguwr11o1 ApPly in person Sat or Sun \\Tl . ospi JUNIOR SALESMAN · LIVE-IN Ho~~~pel" 11to ert, ...... ta unery ::iu-.xuo Waiter. Must be over Zl. ..-..vn ewport. noon til 6 pm. 2ll2 Harbor • c11.1-e for 4 yr old girt, te , • ~P -rin& -Vic. Swanaona ~ Ameri Gardener NEED help at home! We w ...... , -~•-to exper. tra1rJ. l\lust be attractive, Blvd, Costa Mesa. NOW OPEN Earn $20-$40 per 1veek hskp1;.S.A. area. ~9770. · Cream Sh>p. 67:'>-3)15 """""'~· can have aides nu r a es , ---.. .... "'uu• ha trim t i ....... and enjoy k' ft hool d Maint~, CletUNp I: h 0 us ekpn,' Apply in penon, Hamburpr ve ""& ... ~, 2701 So. Bristol '1'0 r ing a C'r SC' atl ""Jl:::m::...:.=h:;;•;:.· ---r-t 555 Land9ca.pmg. Call 645-1930 H---· .. -compATiiona. Hamlet, 1545 Adams Ave, wonw.: with Pe o Pl e · GIRL Friday. Lite book· S An 17141 979 3500 on Saturdays g<.>tllng ne.1\•1· * G k 1 ~7~•£u~ ..... UP John , Costa Mesa. Ask fer Mr. Mature woman preferred. keeping le: typing full or ant a a · custon1l'rs for the !Jai iy *·· · . REWARD ardenlna le: c ean-ups 54 ...,_,, Hagan. Hours 2-9 pn. Call 642-3630 p/time w/soine reception Apply Between 9 am & 4 pm Pilot. This is nol a papC'T' • l -Name your price! 3 pound 554-0657 RELIABLE person will do for appointmenl work. McNash R e a It y, .RN'S rou1C? and d~ not includ1· ~.gray male poodle. CO?.f PLETE landscape housekeepin&' &: or babysit· CAF.:ETERIA 642-1334. ICU /CCU• LVN LI 7 dclivl'ri('s Ql' ·,l'ollccting. MACHINISTS .,,.. Dog must have Insulin shot• mahit. llel'V. Comm'!, irxl, ting. One wkends. Call Lin· COUNTER/CASHIERS e Cross country GIRL Friday, sb not req'd. OB~ DEPT. . \\'e hn\'l' openings in South- -dt.l\y, Judy Yoww J.L. mid. Sprinkln, • .cleanup. da 632-2896/719--5'199. 7 &m• to :J:30 Mon thru FrL Drivers Lite typing & some bbkµng \vest Costa Mt'!ll 11ud Sourh • r;. ?, .,~ty; Ui61;! J;k-:ach Blvd., 64>$987 QUALIFIED -Dry dn. mgr. All 1,~~ .. , • wknds ~. e Forem•n knc:Mi...i .. e. Takata Nur:se"', LABOR & DELIVERY, Relief liuntingtun ~~!'!11 only. & MACHllE II B S47 1216 IWZ-8540 , ..........., °"' uu ""6 •.1 ME SURG Apply nO\\'! ~l. ' i , -• : · · · oc · LAWN Maintenance. Exp. Expertise dom . ,.,r, bach. QUI 833"69!. e Monogors 7"1 Baker, C.M. D ... LOSI' PARROT v1e, Japone .. Gal'dener . .._ -.. oUices-boats. 548-n91 CAR WASH MANAGERS • Asaomblors GIRL Fr;day; Realcy/Co .. tr RN 11·7 * KEYPUNCH * OPIEl"l'"·O' s ~ 1llrtlor HI g h I and l estimate. 545-5106-Htlp W•nted, M A P: 710 Izmoediate emp)oyJ:Dent, n:-e Moldtrl Co. Related exper in bkkpg/ SURGERY RN 3·ll ' Baycnst. Nr. Commodon! I: Generel S.rvlcet rlenced onl phones. Salary open 6'15-6900 PEDIATRICS Needed lm mediatt'ly:-l'lll · , ·~ipway. ··J>to~". pleue A~ Coordlnat pe y. Beacon Ba,y • lntpKIOr'I shifts available, • Day or • 1 J >:all 543-9749 or ~41B ul! CAPTAINS penon wt..P.. 10 condu~ Int..,,.._, -· e Gel R-lrmon GUARDS ·" RN•' "' 11.7 n;ght. Top !!!-ldoal Co"· ~XPERIE~c;li;i lar Dana. acdvity program ·in at-~REER .. TRAVEL* All 3 Shifts F\1a & P./time Poddom. Regls. Physical Therapist dll:lopS Long OT c:hnrt term "T.1.·Ta'•INE"'S LOST black male poodle, CAR CARE tractive conv. ho a p Ital .. National~-company We Will Train open in Orange eo:, L 0 n g For Weekend Employment a.ssig~eot. · '~ . ' ' ' '"l · ~ ._ J ·area of Spruce~ .ti: .. Prhuiaold ''Remember • • Judgwd Gool:\.P.13· \VkttYs 8:~. la nooN hlriilg ·.-i. 18 & MeeGrepr Yecht Corp. Beech, L.a&una Niguel in La· EirceUi!nt .Benefits · trvllw. 1 54{>-:1450 1mhl@6ilte o~· for .,:Founta.ln Valley -.1earlng on· br Che • )VUft. o< Plb..iie Call 642-ZttO. Qwr .to tta\'ft maJor cttta, 1631 Placentia, C:M. =!:ti~ '=e~;:. .I: Working Conditions 17!\02 Sk.Y Pru·k QXperic:ilced and in,IOOe .,,.., flea collar. sutttn uitti ,_'.. •PP!F8""P your ALTERATIONS Lady for New York, Miami, Hawaii. ' " Oidy-1 .18 Equal Oppor. Employer 'Anahein1 533-2'J22 ina(·hinists Otid nlllchlne ' .,, n1--•-• -· . 2Ul ·-. •--1 N ~ 2 re st omp oyment. 1730 \V La p I ' ':.'.!..._ye~ i o;<;uut•· neward, ( H~ wui .... •Polish.._ """l· .... ~en. _Mu a.t be o ""'"t-""••ence necie-r"Y. COUNTER help, restaurant. · rt ma o~ralors on our;! ;.,,_ ~~ w.X '"• qUa.litied. Top wages. Apply wk,erq»e9t paid~ Ma.le over 17, part time, Yrs. of age or 01der. Apply. HouHkpr-Motherles1 Temp T~mpornry Help shi.tt. (3,p.n'l'."f.o•l\',P .) .REWARD,Black Coc~er 1'"W'Pick'9\pa-J>d_1veey' Kust:er'a Oeaners, l 5l4 program. Ml;lSf: be a61e to nightl. Apply Burger King, ~ ~ 326~9i..::.~· Home an13rtl shift 'Up .. to lel Male, wearing nea oa,i 661 1br~e NeYt'JlOrt Blvd., C.M. ataJt immedtatd)'. ~ ap-3115 Harbor, Costa Mesa 1 • • · F/C Housek:-r, care for TIME FCfR--7 a.n1.J ln the follOlfing .'Vic' -st" Coast A1L lypea-Hiiine llepiln. ASSIST AN .T .,....., ="" ~~ ~ =~oced tor ..J;!"s'terttng' Security 's.mce triplet girla.-5'.i. ncgo. Call DAl'-Y PILOT e ureDrutr·i,ll p -, •. ,·,·-· w y . Lo• t 6 / 13, Actual time and materlal trainee, counter Ktrt.. fry Fri • drapery work room. Call An Equal OppQr. Employer 96M2'18. tlJ.3) 6$51;&..i. Ask ~ ~2880. Fuit Service. NO job bi ·rooa.. 11 or over. Apply to • 533-n61 or 962-3349. HAIRSTYusT tot Jamee Matthews. W4.N:~P 9 D'ebUrring ARD valuable papen, small. F &: B Home Repair tnmaaaer. Jack In 'nle Box, CHILD CARE -(Very lite Needed lm ed N·B A good want ad is a good Lr11.: · ' -• Milli • t.•.. bk. metal box, Jost while 64,..1403... 385 E. l7th St., a.ta Mesa. ~Ing) 1or 9 year old DATA 644-5700/~ve~ ~a. vestment. 642· e Chucke rs r1 ' movlno. In °"""' Shafts, YARD & !uoe<loanlng wtn-A>llD :' al proloulonal, PROCESSING OPR --e NC Orllla • r• , Wntclltt area., call ~ ~ y,•abng, bautn&, Pnten· Car lot !'ii~ . new ~e!.:.~ Outstanding temporary as-LOOK e Lethe• 1 111,noquettions asked. · q, Very ttas. rate1, 'l'horQ,lahly experienced fh our home), tor the swnmer ll.lnment. Must have exper.I 'I; {.osT 6/9, fem. Samoyed 646-3798. auto detailtng, Steady· Job. and entire school year _ 380'J) mM computer, NRE • e • • ..-.ones • -vtc. Seashore Dr., N.B. u-utl Good ~ours, Company bene-L M"-he h--~ IOl'ter --Aucer r; •1 e Gfinders. · 11 ... -~. De 1.p er a t e . "" n9 ·na. if not expttlenced pennanen ""°" ma ..... .., ~..-·' · .... ..,...... ' w~ ~-do and love children; depen-collator, "'"'"'""" Call IT'S GAR·BENSTANGEL TIME ! ,..,.,; Tr.U n.,./ mll>I haye lno-•,'15-4790. .. • 'LOCAL -Large ... .;,.,. 6 heuling "-• ~ _..,_ not'A~•PO!nl;.:_,!!! dablc! and happy ---. .. 11. Inunediately. . ,. , " ........ ,. "1 .., ........ o..:IUll!J. ..-•-· ...,. • ...,._... NO FEE EVER chirie Shop OT 1t1et·lll CARCE oranse cat w/ ea ltadent. truck. Heu. only See' Mr "N · sen ty. Salary ~ and open. tradl's backgrolind in 'l!ollar & ,.,.,.. on hind lep. 5Ui1M6 or 534-2164. -tERRY: BUICK 892-0060 alt pm. tilJid .,..,..,, milhary .. cvice . Vic of Santa Ana Ave. I:: GEN Haul.inc. Tree / Strub sd\ 'I: Wa!mrt CHllJ) care, woman or high or oAor mtploymeatl. ; , 10th St·, C.M. &IZ-1938. trim. Ger A Yd cleanup. HaitSugtiJn Bea.ell school girl to care tor 3 yr 2111•r.t Dr. '.il &:J • 1 -! :. o7 J male Silky Terrier, Eal 5.n-63Tl, 567-6904. · old days at my home. \\le-ot!e; sta:bte . Jpr'tr- --.Humbolt Island. Reward SKIPLOADE'R' dwnp truc:k Auto 557-7075, ~ e\'ea. .,.._. a1111 terni~!ibi\>10Virt~1Jt'~ . t46-nlr1 or 521-n77 \\mic. Concrete, asphalt NEW CAR SALES CITIZENS BAND RADIO en by our history of I'iO • 1 tosr . rma.U ien:de Jrlsh gav.·ing, httnking. ~ruo. Expert~ salesman onl)' o R JE:-..".f.ED SALrnlAN ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~ I LAYOFF'S jfl Our U· ·1. ·.setter. Cdi\t area. Call -needed in one of OrMge TO BE A$ISTANT TO NA· I!! fo,cturing ai,-ea ·' in 1 . JO 6i5-7973. R(!\\·ard, 32' F1.JRN'ITURE Van tor County's leading Fon:l deal-TION,\L SALES :r.1 F G . DELIVERY !\Ian lot' early years.. Excellent woncing -t L •• -.. 1 local_ furn hauls & gen'l ershlps. Excelleirt L"Ontinls· SALARY OPEN. PAL morning newspaper corlditions an<l salaries. -JJ).31 ong , ......... .,... gray ma e liaul.lng. :..ta-1862. slons &: bonus plan Insur-ELECTRONICS ro., 6391 delivery. Must have ·dcpen· Inc1bdfhi" the foll<Ndng },[ .... ~ Re\\1lrd! G-i&-4097 MOVING, hauling, clean·UPft. ance and denlo plait. Paid \\IESTMINSI'ER AVE . , dable car. Costa · 1.iesa, be~l:ifs. •. ~ ,..,.... Reas. rateit<oll. Students. \•acatlons, See Don Crevier. W IB'l'MJNSTER, CAUF. Newport Beach area. Ap-" ' ,, • Free est. 832-iaSl THEODORE ROBINS DAYS CAIL MR. SACKS, prox. $3)0. mo. Phone ~ * Lifi ln1uranc• " Ire'! YARD. garage cle•n'"'" " FORD 714-894-3301 EVES 543-4152 . USED· GARBENSTANGEL *Medical hbuctloft Remove trees, dirt ivy. Dll Harbor Btvd. ~71~4 ~-~~'.,...~~-~-DEUVERY Man, p/time Must have right·handtd. * Dental Drlvewya, cradbll· 847.:lJ66. O:ista Meea CLEAN:UP &: delivery boy, for turnlture store work. ZOf!nsti!tWwith-power diP"' ~ Profit Sheri-1'/Ume annly 1n Over 18 &: must be neat &: polttk. ould act'!pt ea,r. •Jiii ·-. GET rid al una;ghtly truh " Auto M-hanlc H ·~·~-~ 1M 1 ~al' clean. Martio rumlture,· ly model with bottory OP-* Rotirom"'I , ~hooli & debris $10 load. College ltU· ,.... w:.,CM'• ..., nd.ustrta: 1865 Harbor Blvd, Ol era.ted piddlebottom. 1* Educational R.9futtd · Instruction• 575 dept 548-6428 T~l-ork on ~·· le: -"-"'-''-==·'------5-IS-5131. Write: Owified ad No. * -Sh'ift Pr:emlum ,1~.-'--------HouaoclHni"! pany'l::,.,~,U:.· com-""UIC~CASH O.llvery ot DAILY PILOT, 174.-1~;\'LCY PILOT, Pc.o. I SAT UR AY l'•~ATE tutortna ""ade11· · T SUND·AY ONLY to ox <lfN, osta Mesa, A D •-• • •• CAIL en..~" rnte~auonaJ CREV11:11 .. BMW THRO G'H A ' · · ' 1 • ,' ·' ' 8. Reading, spelling .l math. u1 .,.. --n.i newspaper cani.ers in SAN ~·· '~. .. ::C~fe~~~!~nt f: = ?.08 \V. l~lll~nta Ana DAILY PILOT ~.eni?s~:aw~C: INTERV IEWS closmng. Bonded • Insured. WANT AD Von. Contact Mr. Hm'Y · ( 115l .6fS-6010. Have something you want to Seeley, 330 West .Bay St., ' ~ '"'""*' CDLLEGE student will do sell? Oi.ls~ified nds i3o it 642-5678 Coe:'ta: Mesa. ~321 _ . houaecleanln& J So. ~ W.. ~~~~;:";;·;;cal:;;l;;N;;0;;\;:":;;6:;12;;·:;5618;:;;·;;:;;,;:========;;;;: I D E N T A L receptionist. tlnlton Beach area. ,4 h.'r: 1 Miuion Viejo/Laguna. HUI • . I J'r Jlril Apply In penor . 8:00 a.m. to1l p.m . " • .. Bobyslttlng "I • BABYSI'ITING: My l"lome. Reliable Mother . ' 11te1U10nnble rate1. 645-1521 1 ~ ){ATURE, dependable, tenc· ... ~,d yard. lily home. Refa. ;, , '\IOI lunchea· M5-l007. IWer1 ' ( ~;;;;.;;;;.;;;.;c ___ ,,_ __ n irLL bUlld or t e p a I r z •. _.. ~11\1 your hOme nee<h. -Gene. 541-1838 • mlrdmmn $2.50 hr. Call l,Jn-area. Experienc@ requl.red. da ~2 1 Call 836-1395 corpe1 c10on1ne , 1. Trader's Paradise ==DENT~AL~uslst~ .. ...,.,-----= Floor G•re I Wll'lllllWi time p>SSlble full time. If you t.ruly understand garbenstangels ~ time to garben . . · Dutch r.to..lnt Ser\.', 537 Oiainlde aunt .. EJ\;perience Dodlcotocf Cloonlnt ;' lines J D';fi:i?'a!~~lonSI , CORPORATION * WE 00 EVERYTJt~ • 4 mature, exper. F/tlme. If you don't understand it may already be too late but, what the heck, send BERTEA Refs. Free flJt. 646-?ff!) 1 '• t• Call 548-8844 18001 Von K•rfttan DOUG'S canttt,e 1 Hn1~· .; 1mes DENTAL -~ Hun!. Irvine, Collf. 92664 ewninp, ·~ek9i&'~ Bch. exper or ~ h 8!3-1 1 E 2M ~.=1 ' ·... • ,., ·,dollars "'I'd. Salary ope•· 9'1')-36:'1 in t e coupon anyway : 4 4, xi. FA~ t'---'-. ? KITOIEN Prep. , Helper, Iii An Cqual ·Opportunlt)' .3• ...... .,........ part Ume. Cannel'1 Dining .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 'IJ • •' employer , clean. Own ' ~ &: Pie Shop. 628 N. Coe.st y II b Id b I I h l\'fale. an1 rem[\Je TYPING. ll92-l488 -; 'Ii' H Laguna • es, I wi ui a 9ar enstan9e -or aunc a • HOUSECLEANiNG '~ 16' l.e.pstrake Ba.y boft.t, 5 Units Ingle\\"OOd. 6. 213r . .iiwyiiii';;iiiiiiiiii;' .,...,.,.... h f I • h f h'b" • Machlne Optratori roR. IflU>./FllUfS REFERENCES OJmp ~tt. Mlnt vat $500: 12 •1 Br. unturn. for boat. D , As I • sea re or one can put 1n s ape or ex 1 1t1on at • PlMs~icj; OPf'nhi1ts an Znd & -: ' iual-• SoNlco' . '·. ;~ "EL'i • 642-0106 • tor cam•ra outtlt. vnrious Shop. center. ho,.,. ranch, r 1 I Stant • the. DAILY PILOT-South Coast Plaza Build A Bette r • ·;i::.;,.1~;;1~ .. ~;,,.;,~/;,;,;,,: landaceplnt :o1,...":e.brda.=:orboat )1"7 ~~~~adeup. Youns: lady (18-2&) to asslJJt • G•rbenst•n9el Contest •nd International Rallye. • 1\te v.·orlc i.n Lnodcrn nl'w TYPING v.,...,..,. ""1·-v""~ In h<:tilth 1pa. Will train, no 8 "" .,. · "" a hid~. Shift bonu!I promlun1 ~ .. ~ µNpSCA.PE. Gard en llAVE: 375 aeret Nevada, F'REE .. elev 10 M:1'P exp. nc.oe. Apply ln~non • Please tell me more. • for nitc 1\"0rk. Oppor. for Servke ~ .. clH.n·up, sortnldn. rr. .I: dt9.1', $XIO per acre prod\tC'lng ·Ol'IJ\i"C grove, on al\)' att or eve. \V , .11ch anc.~mf'nt .t-.,.111·1 h·in~1~ ..... ·s Carpet Ir Upbolltery :...:..u;;· MH852 ":.~:f ~-• ~:T~ ~~~P rr,;~, ~;. •eou!!l!OOG!'!t!!'H!!'wy!!!G![! .. !!:'!!~!!B.!'!'l'l~R!""' : NAME ···-··'··-.......... -... ·-·· _.............. • ~~~~· ·" ~~1i~n1 ln pcl'50n ~poo free Scotch-~ WHF..&£, Bkr. 673-6756. rrade up. Owner 6'75-6'lm. • Calif, lnjt'cllan l\loldin1.1: ,Jii-i:( (SoU Retardantt). 8RJCK •eneen, llumpllt:one TRADE 2 BR 1\vrtlse »i..22 f'REE A elev commerda.J Experienced only. Full or • ADDRESS ....... _ ........................... _,__.. a ln•lrt\' Jndu~. Con1plc' ten A .all cdor l:T block fe'!C'll. c:oncret• tam rm, xlnt cond.' F.V., Inc pr~a next to Sears pQl't Ume. 962-1000. • • 200 Brlw;a:s Av;•.\ C~t "' th""'.!! whlA tlO ,~.!!!.'!'..' petloo. ~.! !!'="" UNm.!__!1>% Jn, ii500 cq. qovtno. tor uni" commen:. oo1~1 IEST18 '~pd 'i"~ G<0<11~8• • Cl'\'Y ._ ...... ,,_ ....... _._,,, __ ... _ -· ·-···--··-· ZIP _ • • .• -·---· • MACllINlSI' "'' ~ eac:: •w e _.,...... TUe en .. , --·· _,.._.... J>'OR uum or Porsche of eq. )I' Inch.tit. '6-SJOOO ~ + A en y.. ..,. .. ncy, ..,... -Autom..1tive. txp'd man la ,. ~ your moQey by f'Vln& '•lntlnt a val. Artnt/Owner 962-24-60. l'radt up. Owne-r 6~. E . 16th St., S.A. 547.0395 • PHONE AGE • '"" ~h\)p fn J\tl~i'o" \1k•)J , ,. l .:..-~rsrni:.lll,,:;~e-: ,.,.~"I DANA Point 4 A 15 untt Uke to trade? Our Tradt.r'I DONUT SHOP, nlte shift + • ............. --.. -·-_,.,_ ....... _,.. ~-.. •-·· • 1''N•t\11aY Auro, S3l·1G66, , hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, compa!Uon aJQ., E:l. lath ParadlH "-'Olumn t1 for ~I p/time. Fem.1.le, &&e z-45. • M .. I "'' • · ~111kc . ROom t'or J),ulc!y" '' 1-uch 110. ~·•r "· 15 ~. Ho Wutti:\ pluM', Jge• ~~ trd 5 D.nn Apply ln ~·Mr. Oonut, • ... M DAILY "ILOT p O I ti'" C M ~-t"626 • · ' · el~an OUI" Iha ~•ro .. ..... ...na.1 ..., ~·v * w·LL,.P • jr ,..,.., 1~ E 17th St ~00'" 'le • r••••........ ........ r • . • ... -· ~HI IMI, -· .. exp. 11 what counts, not ,. ~ " lat, TD. Ownr/bkr. 1bc $ dayt ~ • • \,Na ..... "" aa. • ... lum that junk In ct\8h method. t do .ort mywelf. " When you call "Mac' m. Dana Pt. 9'1629. tor 5 buckl. Dally Pllot \Vant Aell have • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •· • • • • • • • • • • I "llh a DnUy Pilot (lnqjDed Good ret. 531.-Q1..01. $41-.14'4 eves. •••iii-•••••••••••••••1 bup.lna plo're. i.;;;.. _________________ • ---------·•c.:•d'.!: . ...:Cc:•'.!:11...:~~'::N!llll::•:::·--- • ' -• .. 4f)t IJAIL Y PILOT ' c ............ .1~ lflll ! '-..;.__' L .... _,,_, ... _j[Jl] ._I _1 '-'"' _ .• _[i])I Ii ;I J I ml! -~...,... I~!~•,.. I~ (~itflEX] :...--~,~~~~ ~ Hole Wanted, M,& F 710 Help Wintod, M & F 710 Help Wo~.!!d..:_~F 710 Help wantod, M & F 710 Halp Wanted, M & F 710Help W•-· M & F 718 Aiil!llo-I02 0.rogo Solo 112 [ Rool-.fe<Uo l f8. MAtOSWANTEO t\~·runr:couple l<l manage PAINTER SA LF;S~t E N ,' Me n 1 c~ 1toves '-$15. coln BlOCKSAL£,Sat 6'.23.one . _ ~ti. 1 ~ be:, ·p~_.lllfl".t~.Jo~/ flUlet udull :!() wllt In COtiht Non·unlon M.\..21!l.IJ Sports...,•car & Jo~umishings TRAJNEES ' waiher fc, dr.)'et" -$a1 MCh: iamtly movl.ng, o d )'Is e Y * 1 ,. me ~"f"MIJJI ::JtP~ -" . · 'l"'.ti.. de1.artm1>nt....Ncat, cleAn.ap._ -NOW HIRING 01.l'Olne dl:nelt.--ttt -$10. g&Jnt,---00!()1' '\l, t-ap n-==,,,.,....'.111··.-n···:::.: ager, • • PAltRIN'Cti1lt!ncla.nr. l! or peurnnce~F..icp prcr, not nee.I -G 8 INDUSTRIES See Sn~._ n. PM, 329 r<..'<.'Urder, Magnawx i teM:>, MM11t "''"' For s.i. ...... 1as B ltiol R J.:J C:'i:Jb l\1EDICAL 5ea'elary, expe1·. over, neat nppcar11..~. fl. Contnc1 l\tr. FI e i l c h \l r , • ' A'farguerite Ullt1 2 chalrs. culQJIY clll.!i;l11, Ac,.. .. for 11'* ············ 1• • "' r,-""l'J O ' OlclUphoue & l.osuran~-e hr. _Cnll tor nppomtn1ent . l-toelsclwNi. South COllSt FULL TIME PART TIME • ike dUIJ !iii A1Nrllfttlth for 1•1• .......... l J.221 \\'. ~oruit JlWy.. .B. busy ore. Sahu"' "'"'ll. 491-.l762 p1 ..... , $4st.$640 Mo. . . •-••to ...... _ WASIIER &-~· er or dryer b • ics, ~.rerv.lx•tu<t. au.in .... ~'!t-1"'c ·,.. ............ 14 l iiiiiiiii"iijiijiii!i~~~ii;; "·'" '><Vl'r. ·J v ..... _... WW"'r" rnv. 1 .... -.1~-~ • 1.d ~& pans ba•-.i n1 ·er. c-i•ll' ...,, rr ... c .... 1. " ~~ PAltTS Manage• ex-Jlonl SALE""'!AN f nalt C ii Lo·,mo-Su~l1or1 . Olli.;, w iu<=a· • "' nlO. o . BBQ •,_ . •~~-t etm!MF(lll ""''""' ........ U4 MAINT.E~. cwi '• "''" ~·· or SI ''V' -.... -·· i{e1nnore heavy duty . .•• 'U'Unlllg .,.,... •. CMffmlllh11m1 ferMlt ........ 1 .. MEN & WOMEN lS.27 opportunity. Alfa-Romeo & manuf. l\.lua t be interested $120 & Up S•I• 846-12'Jl c)oUies, 11hoe1, and lots of DuP!t•M/UMI• •• ... i ....... ta ELECTRICIAN EnJ"•l to ~'342.30 1>8.lai')' per Saab,, BEACll B IPORTS, in call ing on industriul uc· • goodies. 21351, 21421 etc. "''"•• ... "-vM ........... '" ~innuf11il'tllI"i"""1.dl'\lision 11N11r., mo. while \\'e teach ""U a 1200 ,v .. Coast Hh\'a)', co1uih> & n1usf enJO· y coin· Second shift work. No experience necessary. Rent We1Mr1/0rr.1ra Dockside etrcle 1-tB •~c...,.1 •1n,'"'tr ~ ............. 1~ mutnietil~ ..... re1~tHCfJh job skill in Eledr();ucs, Ne'N'{lOtt. rnunica1i11g "'/!>(!(1ple or all Training provided, il accepted.' ' $2. Wk. 'f'Ul.J main · \ MO VING: must lleii patio l~~·,~: S•~~ .. ::::::.:::: : qualified to pez:l'onn ~e 1'1 e c b a n i cs 01· PART·tlme \Vaitresi1 f o r ages.Lt714) ~Zl r * 639-~* turn, wsr, dryer, camping =~i:.~.11•.':t,.~.:: :,, v.1)1·k 'for 009~ circ,ttf,,,r1· Ad 111 In i s tratk>n. Alter Newport 1-1ai·001· EJks Club. SALES?o.tA & Manager, Call Friday, Saturday &: ?.,fonday to make FREIGHT Dl/nage Sale on equlp, girls Sch\\1lnn bike, Or•llP ,., "tef*f' .......... 1u strumen raOOrl, lnStaflatlon le tra ining, earn $4."MiO pe r 673-6110 · male & fem. $825 & up appointment with ner$Onnel director _ in new Hotpoint & \Vhirlpool oval kit. tbl 'v/Yiht formlca 0111 of 5111• ,,.,....,. ........ '" 1~!)8ir of electrical eqlli~. mo. ror 2 days \\'Ork. Cail *PBX OPERATORS• nt0nthly guarn. 11 qualU!ed. H·untington Beach irea 536--259!~ •lOAM.SPM r et 1' t g / \\'ll silers/dryers tqp & 2 ht-back cush. ch1-s. :::f":.i.r.•'h~M~:·~ .. ::::: :" $4.15 hr. Xlnt bemiits. Call TSgt YOUOJ;;'1 C11HJ'. Air Na· T I ho M-~· l No e:<t>er necess Mr Lee J'.'!'"!'~~ ... ~~~~~~· ~·!!oo~!!!!!'~··~!!!!!!,;,;.;;;,;;;;·_, 543-0780. Xmas decor, gar. tools, RHI lt11i. W11t1M ........... I Denese Cantrell al TI4: tlonal Ciu1u·o 97S..1.'l43. e ep ne ans. serv. eu1ca . . . . '1; i-~ll+J. MEN & Won1eu manager ~~~~~f:: ~m~~I !ii85h~~ (2l3J TIQ-85.t3. ~Wanted, M&F 710 Help Wl"Qtid, M&F 1\0 1d~~~~~:.v:~~e:fr~n£ i1~r·1~ ~~~tlew~ E.A:tual opporrunily einploycr trainee's, & a t t e n dant s open. Top sal. & benefits. Telephone Sollcltora 545-4554 alt 6. 1~f:f. of ~ton, Rookrose, Flnlriclll ~f/F • ~· ~:~i'.i~1~i~~~~1~~~}~ ~~~~(~·~~ICE SA~F~~CCE~OW . SECRETARY !'fo ~~'15a6.~"1sacy ~~~J~ri4'$e~clt. .and.MOVING: 2 Good. couches: 1u11n"' o,...r11111J1r ......... . ,\t,\N needed 4 d'ays a week able 10 •·"oca••. E•perie"""' \\'hen you call on Uieni as 1.RAVEL e 646-5848 e pattu heater ; patio fu111, 2 tu•ln11• W•0•"-'···,·.:..: ......... 1, L·1 '! · 1 k .... -m "" " '"'" agent exp 5 day aty. Ladder, motor &.'OOter, 111vflt"""1 11 11.. ...... J;t 1 e ., am . "'?r , must ~ not necessary. Send resuine nn AVON Representath:e. k ·Ex · • e DISHWASHERS washers · •~ve11men1 W•nt ............... J1t neat rcfefi!nce,,.. """" 3 . p \·ou·11 ""''" fun ,• n\,"k" Excellenl opportl.ml,ty to join Requires 2.3 yeirs soc~ wee • ccutive Travel • ' drum set, bicyclei>, Fri., Mtn•Y to a. .. 11 ............. .. · . • ·\ •\ ~'r.JV · .~ pict ure to .0. Box 533. " ~ "' " ' 1 1 1 1 Service, Unl•n B a nk r,i:ers, reblt, gunm & ~.t., sun.,· ~01,. 22, 2·• 2.1 w OH .. Coa_ st H1way, Laguna 10 to \ •n>o>> G.•-•-. c.• ~-•:. friends sell in.-. 001· tan1ous ooe. 0 .1 lf..\. na ion s . <UJ'etil retariol oxport'onco wt'th B ud· F v v'd "°'7620• ·~ •~s ,., ... MOnt'f •n · ........ , .... .. _,._ · " ... "'"'"'..,.." '"" Savuigs & Loan Assoc1arions. . u 1ng ashlon Island, · o.»-• .,_....,. .. • from 9 to 5PM., 23.15 Mitrtf•ttt, Tr1111 DMtls ....... W a. :\t O 1\E·J,.. n1aid neat pnxlucts. To Jenni ho\v easy ~Jiu/ 2-4 yrs sale esci'OW • minimum of 60 Ne\\'J)Ort Beaeh. Call for Buildlnn M•tlr1aia 806 °~·"arm 'Pl., Santa A1111 ., i\1AN or gil'I _,F riday. Ac· ~'. .. nc>·getl' ", , ·-•na' Beach' Jt ill lo sta11. call: w p t • C d" Appointn1ent .,, ••~ • H~t ' 551~• I 11.iAj ... ... '-A&U 54&.53·!1 or :H0-7().11 exlX''" requited. Position lo-• .m. yp1n9. an t• • ~ s. ""'""· 1 •• • ~~~~~~ Lfre :O~ecp~~v~ resort, 6 day \\•eek. 4!J.!-1100. ca~ed in our Ne\11xirt Be~ch dates r'nust have ability TYPIST-Sectetary, type 8() • Surplus:Buildlng LEAVING state: \Vrought Rentals . pa.yt'Qll . T)1>ing, $400·$5.10. a PLASTICS o!fi<,-e. Excellent ':"orkrng to handle v•ried assign-'vpn1 min .. no dictf,tion min l\tATERIAL • lOOO's of NE\V iron patio set, $35: h1atchg month. 642_3490 NCR OPERATOR con<!S &.fringe benefits. ments with a minimum 2 yrs exp. Starting SS.lacy ITEMS! Doors, lumber, ply-hj.·back ~Id quilted chairs Moulll 1un1•.._. ........... -. .' ... ait 3300. Outstanding temporary S t U M $6tXJ to $700. Call 83>-1808 or 'vood, alum ,&hee~. niold· SSO: 23' • Zenith console -.r;n ·l,lllf-................. * l\1AID needed, iva.Ce.Uott,after a.ss;"nment. Call Cathy ,·n•· e -P . an Please CalJ, l\tr . Rohrer of supervi1~on. apply at 1636 E. Ed'"'._.r, ing windrnvs etc $1'"" N"'""' dryer $30• Elec H•11-'""'· •r 11nt11111· ...... 11• .. I ' I I ., One uear s--. ... .,.,. "·-<a 2nd Shift 'O)')') '}l!N:! ,, •• ,,.,,.., .. .,,... • • • ...,, ~ .. e , _ Ct11C10m1..i1111"11 luni ••.••••.••. i:I ". ·. ~,,.,. per 'nl-. n1e<lla1etS'. .,....,..""""' _or lrt'hJVW E Suite;D,SantaAna.. BUILDERS SURPLUS guitar -& amp $50. 21031 C••111o·m111111m1.r11111 ........ . 536-0-lll, HS NG F'EE EVER . . · xcellent ·working con-al.bar Cir H 968-7636 conoo ''"' ff un••ra. l\1AIDS \VANTEO, ,l..a,~1na Must be able to \\"OrkSiit. & GLEN"ALE ditions and frinne ben-·u NO,ERq ROUND cable TV 2400 So. Main St., S.A. •G " .B. 'Townti.vtt 'n,m •• ~ .. :.:;;:::::,. #' • t; Sun. Days off to be a:i·. ¥' ··• exp~ installers, trainees 1 Mon tt1ru Sat I0-5 MARRIAGE l"es11lt~ in tv.·o or To-11t1tt• -'-· ·•···· ·•·••• * Reel 11ote, 30806 ~s. Coast G rangn" .. Prior ''per. desi"· 'FEDERAL efit1. . . . . . considered. Apply 2624 W. TI4· '-!""" . everything, Noahs Ark Townl!OuMf, furn, •r Wlfllt11. " ::I Hiwny, U4,rruna. ~J ,,,, • C H . -w• Is ""I D11pLun ""'· ............... . • m ·21aD.,r..+o... ah!c, but \\'ill train n1an v.•/ A oast wy., N.B. Tele· SALE! Tb ' IK'cl \\'/u•:(· DUINXH 1111lurn, .............. . ~1AJD wc)rl( l n ~"Changj: for n ni~·hanil'al apti tude. SAVIN<;S pply !f]~per~n prompter, an t'qUal oppty Cameras & dlnlf. picnic tble, sports O•llltll"' ''"'· .,. ltlllhlnl ..... .. 1-oon1. ~·nrs. PirO ay. l.176 . :Ar ...,... W.12'5 Apply 9 ;im.11 a n1 0,.1.3 pni - .. 01'-l!all:-employ,er. -~ ---Equipment-808 equ1pt, toys, tools, much ::r_·i!~~.-·.:::::::::::::::::'. • Newport Blvd. 548-975.5. Jnart * Oran~~ Coast Plastics * 500 Newport Cent('r Dr. Dona ... everett UPHOl-"TERY Seamstress, *AKA' I nwrc. 1674 lO\\'a, C.M. Sat. Aptt., tvnl: •r 1111htrn:-7 ....... - 1\1AJNTENAN'C'E 'CDUPte. 2 R'°;J() \\'1.-st l81h St. Ne\~'po11. Beach {714J$40..500o~ IXt 250 •full or part time, benefits, Camera ~=rder Ta f ~ • Suri. :::• &'9Ntd".':.::::::::::::: • br unfum a pt + util · + $300 Cc..<> ta i.\fesa. CaliL 1. Costa Mesa, 64.2-8400 • • • SPECIAL garage sale. Anti· H1ta1s. Mo1t11 ................... •tt mo sal. No pets. TT.fl Com· NEED babysitter, 18 or older SALES Hy· a' n d v 0 LUNTEER P'"-/Ac· Charger, $700. 5t<H>M2 que furniture, Oriental· rugs, Oue~I """' " .. '" .............. ,, 1 blk from beach, 5 days PORTERS ...,.., F It 110 ck "" b J sumfl'!fl' •"'1111 ............... • modore Cr, Apt 1, H.B. WANTED RED CARPET, cortlion player, 2 hi· \\•k. urn ure wi t~r. couc .. ,,,s. t e s,· V•cati.. Rent11J ..... , ........ Ot !\1AINTENAJjOE~ ~an,, apt \l'k. 75 ·ccnts an hr. or possi· ~fusr be exper. F/!ime. 'L b. . • ~tU91. ·know how to play tbe lamps, fixtures, pottery clec. Rtt11111 to Sii••• ............... :I: COmpiex' ·•" or 'l •'me. ble exchange for l'OOIU & Sec Pe.l'SOlll""i M .. ·. REA'· ·:roRS a 0 ra·tor1es . old faw1i"-. The Huntl•ngton SALE! 'Varehouse packed kiln, ea!lel franies, many :~··':t '°: •• •llllt ..... " ....... ... _.... 11 u board. 642-2615 '"' ~ R ,. ~,"Re,. 18851 with FURNITURE! sundry uems. 2189 Tustin 1nc1::.r1.:" ..... 1a·1 ... '.'.·::.:·::.:'.'.'.', ... 340-0781. Balboa Bay Club OFFER YOU... e !l'emen siuence, lOO's styles to choose ·from Ave. Costa ~fesa. 645-3933 Stor ........................... 4Sll MANAGER :TRAINEE 12".21 \V, Coa<;t Hwy., N.B. 3300 Hyland Ave. Florii:la, H.B. 842-7788 Living rooms e Living rooms • RNla.11 w1111" ················ ... Outstanding opporlunity tci RA.OlATOR Repair Man -. MORE! Costa Mesa, Calif. Waitress Wanted Bedroo1ns, dtnl.ng l'OOl.ns, box FUN~ fu & r c~tbing, Mltceltl11""5 RMi.ll ........ ~ advance to mW'lagerial po~i· Exp'd n111n .to run shop in 2 ff' · 92626 Interv:le\\1ng Wed & Fri 6-Spm sprgs rnattr's s tove 9 nlap e ni, inens, am~. ~ tion in 30-60 daYs. our cul'-l\'Ji.sslon Viejo. o .ices serving the. Har bor ALLEY-WEST re.f.rli. washerS ~ a1i ~ilques, Avon products, A~t1 \ 1ij!C rent n1n n age r s ea1·n l"P~E:E\\IAY AUTO 8.11-1666 area. 367 offices ln --3 -~{1uaTO-ppo·r· E ·1 at gre~t saVi~' · mlSC. goodies. Sat/Sun. lQ.. • -\\'estern States. 4 sepa1·ate ' · mp oyer Z106 W. Oceanfront, N.B. REPOSSESSION. CENTER 5. 433 Vista Suerta, N'pt , . $1000-$1500 mo. Must have inale & !en1ale di rect sales experience. <-REAL ESTATE SALES training P r 0 g r a m s· \\'Al TRESS EX-PER. 6.19 E. 4th St., Santa Ana Bch. ""-11cttnt11t1 ............... : stt Call ~tr. Ncwina n 979-fim Television a.ti v er ti s in g e BLUE DOLPHIN e Daily g to 7 * Sunday u.5 SAT & sun June 23 &. 2-l, !i c ard " Tlllnk•l lll M•'""lillm Mt \Ve h:\Ve in1n1cd. opening for on channels 2 ,fk 4. Mas9ivc 3.355 Via 'Lido, N.B. , ani-5 pn\. Antique trunk, L"'' NMlc•' ."" ............. •f! MANAG ER Trainee. 1uature, l\1·0 licensed sa:lespcrsOns. fu ll page newspaper ad· e Secretaries 1'10.'{ING l\'fust sell, BedrOom hobby itenis. elect l\p- over 21. Would l i k e Sn1all office, attracti\1e sur-ve11i~i~~· Extensive i<?Cal • Typists \\'ANTED \\'OlllM for a fe\V .swte, \Valnut ~y Drexel, 2 pliauccs, n1ise rw11, d.lshes r· ~' 1-estaurant exper, bu t \\'ill row1diogs, lop .conimi'ssion advertisnig. Unprecedented • hours, 3 or 4 days \\'kly for ove~utfed "'mg backed & misc itenis. 160 . \V. Personllls train. Will have to undergo schedule: located in much company Image. Yo1J'll earn • Unskilled Asemblrs gen'l house,vork .in apt nt ~1rll, .gold. \Vasher drye r, ~Inriposa San a ementc ~------- a short training pe1·iod. desired Irvine Orea. Call ror more, fai.1.er at RED e Gen'I Laborers Newwr\ Bch for month of l''rigldau-e, 100 ~·ear old ~~!"':;:;.' -"':0-0"°'""''°"= :rer~.~me ~'tll!cf'i Ai!'A~ NEWP.ORT -app'!. CARPET, ~AL1'0RS, 2629 VOLT Augu!'l811.,'Vrite Cla."'5ified ad ~~an.;,..,l~ Golden Eye, ~ATpeIO ~~~ni~l~~~·01;'d ~:~~~~~~.:::::::::::: ~ am.,...~er a n1 e, ;y.., Personnel Agency Har bor Blvd. 277 E. 17th Instant Personnel no. c/o Daily f'.ilot, .. ""'°-v••~ a • soc1o11 c1ub1 .................... iii Adams, C:M. · , s t.. Costa ,..Iesa. Call Ste\·e . P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, ORIENTAL wall prunting, pID.yer, crib, 2 girls bi~es, Tr1ver ........ 11' i\'IANAGER, p/tlme \\'anted 833 Dover Dr., N.B. Grannis at 546-86-W for in· :remporary Serv1.ce Ca. 92W3. $175; maple cluna closet & toys .. clothes, other. 216 ~------~ for small recreation club. 642-3870 terivew. 3~ Can1 pus Dr., Suite 100 WELDER .. · bkcase $60; record holder Orchid~ Cdl\I. ON LY Sat. l[S). Hrs_l0-5, 3 days wk. $2.25 Ne\vport Beach 546-4741 . . $30; sn1. Hoover ~'asher &r,,;23~,,,._,,H).~,;·~----~-........ ....., per hr. Pacific Sa nds NICE ladies \\'anted for part SALES Equal Oppor. E,mployer Heharc, a 1um 1 n ~ n1 & dryer 60; loug brocade sofa £.STATE Sale, oil ppgs, fun11 ~------~ , Cabe.nt!. Qlu9, 814l Attknta, lhne 111aid and lawid I'M TIRED stainless. Certlfl.cation ~I $100. 675-0ZIS aft 6pm also Oak. Hosp bed. can1er a •H.B. ,. . .. . v.:ork~ eXpcr. not necessat')'. l~t ,\::~~~ B=··Bldg. T!~ ~~'e.ta~~;~:i ~}:~~ S. ECRETARY ~!=~~us~~ep:f~a~~ I XI.NT Buy-~inirig Set. ~~~~~n1~.1· ~t· & . ~:iia 1U ~~ .. t~~ .. ~.~s·J· ........ ,.. JM l'llATUft~Ot ta:dlt-needed for ' ,Apply in person: Alibaba University Park, Irvine con1e under $lOQO mo. An . Ills bei:iefits, proht sharing. 1iotahogany w/mlay, China 1226 So Birch SA 531-1572 ----,J~---ir--::"11 ambu)atary 'liorile.' Li~ih, Motel. 2250 Newpol'l Blvd., Days 552.7000 NMlhts exciting & rewarding future \Vo are looking for a top SPARCRAFT cupboa1'd, S erver v..'/ 542-8600 ' ' ' l ~ Must haver e f e r e n1c;e s Costa 11e~.!'· · . ·• a\vaits qualified individuals notch .<tecre fary to learn the 770 \V 17th Costa Mesa dra~·ers, buffet, Table & 8 · lnltructlon · ~.....-· ~; Roon1 + hoard, + ,salal'Y.:.o •NURSERY:r<JAN to \vork a t ;,,,ho .. really \vant..to succeed. _ad_tm.._'._lL_yo_u _t_a_k_c._ · S4~1J.TI.!-. i · _chairs,_'YlhM<f made needle: c:;~.AGE Sale,.10-4, June 23 · , Call 642-8381 before 6 Pl\1 tr ee fa r 111 , ·0 p e ra 1 e REAL-r:s'J.'ATh:iAU:S-Call 83l-11359 for interv\v'. shorth.i.nd. type fast & ac· '-p61nt $1950 OOJ-1395 N('\I• & !>I. Bedroon1-se-ts.-a n·-·i-.-"'--a.--1.ia11""11iM1 . .....-...-~-~ --~ m iscellancous equipment, SUCCESS CAliEEI{. SALES 1 curately &. 1vould like a \VHO '''ANTS TO \VO '? Cond' · tlques, otgnn, TVs, clothes, T11t~trici1 ... .. .. •• ........ \l ', prefer 1 year cxpei·ience. NC\v 01· experienced. Join the peop e 'vanted for cha llenge, send .us your. DRIVE A CAB! · . . & hou.sebokl. 630 Plun1er, Just::S,ay 'Charie ~,1~ . ,.,, WREN PLACING A WANT AD IN THE ORANGE CO~ST 1 '4\i!M.~1 ~1:1 • 1111 1;1 ' " ' ---~ I llNMAMl~ltAllDJ I JUST DIAL 64·2-5678 . 342..-. \Vorld's largest and fastest telfJJhoue solicj tini. Salary r<'Sunic today. P.O. Box CIIOOSE y_nur hours, work MOVING -n_1us~ _s~ll ~I C.l\1., Mfb3066 , •' gro\\'ing resale organization + con1mission, &12-3200 16!)1 Nc1vport Beach Cn.lif . for yourself, be your oWn hou i:ehold fum isttings. Al59 REl\fODEUNG I f '' I ...... --1~--. -·. ~ Nurs..."S \vi lh a nehvbrk Of over 300 1'elepro1npter Cable TV. '""":, ' -· boss Men r · c Garage Sale Sat & Sun et -overs .. RN-LVN~AIDE "'lJU.l· · 0 \\'omen. an 2528 v Cl\1 . . D:icn'S · \l'indO\\'S insultation off ices and beoome a SALESMEN I be .sljghOy handicapped. . <t~sor, scree.is, nails, ~hutte'rs 'Ctc: 11-7 & other .shifts. Top P\.'I member .of our ~lilllonaire 000 $ · SECRETARY ' Neat-Clean A pearance OVA[ dilling · t bl 3 duty pay. Immed.1 pay tor . Club. Multi-milli(in doll ar Earn $1 , to 1500 nio. in ' V . . P • • nn. a e, Sat <lilly. 5151 Tasnwn fl d ly C . d . . your spare time. Call for 1 girl off.ice. 1'~or nc1v Co. ts, 1""'ned. Age ~ to 70. leaves, 4 new~y . uphol. Drive,' Hundngton Beaclt. Strvlff Olftctwy • • .. .. • .. .. • . • ... Jot W•..itd. Ma.. .. .. .. . .. ... 111 M W;;inltcl, "lmlM .......... 1tt oor u • o u n t Y w 1 d c a verbstng progi'am. Free appt. IS.ll E. SL. Gcrlrude Su~p eme t your mcpme. ch_alrs, $200. 67J....5M2 aft. 6 • •r." PAULARINO C M 5, lnUV.\'5. 1\'lon·Fri 9.0. gUs.ranteed Ucensing school. 493.-8886 Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a ·PM. J.WU , • • ' Jots W1nMCI, M&F .......... 1M ftU'.,,W!lltttl. Maff .......... • n, Lescoulie Nurses Registry, Excellent sales training. Santa Ana 979.5940 day Apply in person 4 PIECE nan· h mod Pedestal coffee labte, pecan Jal J-{os pi1al Rd., NB {Lob-\Vhat is your license \\'Orth s·ECRETARY SEHVICE Station Attendant ·'Yetio~~a_b Co., 186 E. 16th Drexel _~~;. set._ ill~ ~~~ '~· ~~'et suits: r l~·. by Park Lido Bld g) to you? Check our n1onthly · full oi: p/tlme, Days & St., COsta ?ifesa. ne\v. Best Offer. Ca.fl ..,~,,1001· ... ?~-t , ~ .fl ~ --642-9955, 540-9!t54. bonus progrant wltich means • niles, exper. prefd· Apply ~ ~ SSS t Pl . G p .... S52-8T::i6. I CLOTHES •. ch . •• •·••••· ... ' OF'FICE l\1GR o you! ease call Ill person, CITY at'unln, it en J e t '' • ······ ·· ·· ·· ······ FULL CHARGE OF,,CE Virginia Jones 835-48U. Requt'ros two • three J\Icsa Vel'de Shell Se1v, 3131 f==j~~ii,;i~= MODERN \\-alnut tr i P ! e portable ~di __, er -,~i :PJ>11~r.ce5 .................... 11111 l~ dresser w/mim:ir $60 night , . •..-IK!lon ....................... '6f I\iCR tor New c a r R.~D CARPJ:T ye11rs se·cretarial xper-l:Jarbor Blxd,_C.i\L..._ ---~ i!iiia--· -..J..-household · sat m -•111l!k'9 ~tt!..~"-"·,,,·-···· ,.. Dealersltlp, Yo u know the Rooltors e SERVICE 'STATION · .... ,,. . . -s $10. GOOd COM. Monihg, · Rd., CdM: c:.,_,, & ••""""'' .......... .. ience with a minimum 1 . 642-9n2. 673-55'1:.'' •' .. ~ "-lhl,. ·················•··••• 11• cxpciience you must have · • 3 Pump Island S.lsm ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;; ..,...,, !ii i ., • • ..,~. S•lt .... ~ ............. 11' Pl.•a"" •PPIY in pe-"n, or .. REAL ESTAT,E 'SALES Df60w.p m. typing Can-1 be " *SOFA & LOVESEAT * FISH .. ....,. .-J.,,.,_s l--u·•-·F' -.....111 a.tt11 ·~ ............ •M .. "" '"" • . , •• \\'f u exper. F'uu or p/time. n~er used, both for $156. .;;:;.r-:;":"'11 .... '"' "t_,_~ '-lrf ......................... Ill pllone 645-7770. Harb o r FREE LICENSE d1dete\;.must be highly Also man "''/sin~ lie. Be AntiqUll 800 968-791D U all ho rom....,,..n.., urn, tuuu, 1A\'.ilt'-l111t"Y ..................... 111 American Motors. TRAINING orgenized in order-to son1e lite n1ech e.xper. Ap-' su Y me.. L-P rec»rds, spol1in&: equlpt. 1·Ml'°'tl1111-.................. ::Z 2 OFFICE GIRLS Famous .Real Estate Li c!F'ns· handle heavy work load p!y Arco Station at 17th & ELEGANT F ,R EN C H WANTED to buy like-new _Sat It l ifun .. 3731 Cosley, ,:=~n.!:1~ .. ::'.::::: '21 NEEDED ing .Course ·now available nd ·~..1 • bv:ine ARMOIRE Hunters •furniture&. lan1ps, nice & Irvine. 1 .. ; Offk•"'"'""'"'''".,_ ........ U4 Radio telcphon(' Qispatch ?.·Just be 25, able to driVe Apply In Person YELLOW CAB CO. lS6 E .' 16th., Costa 1t1esa OFFICE CLEANING P/li111e eves. 1\lel\1X>l'I & C.l\I. 'Top pay. Exper. Over 21 only. 1213) 927-0115. OPERATORS for anS\\'ering service. Mature, telephone experience for e v e n i n g hoW;'S. , Full or part time. ll.f!-6011; ' OPERATO RS. exper, only. single needle & overlock. Top rates. Rolfs l'iianuf., 865 Production Pl, NB. G lr~. thru Tar bell Realtors. Free ~ varl.n11 assignm4!nt~ · . -cab:i.net. l.Dng' credenza, t'f!US()nable. 644-4687 CHAIRS. bC'a b k '"11Ms/o1'9'rit · ... : ........... al Placem,,nt Service. Free in busy 1ale1 office. SERVICE St~t1on Salesman n;iassive marble top side **French Provincial ciou.es' toolii:~· mo~.o ~'. =?.~01.:'~.:::::::::::::::: Training Progran1• Earn Previous experience in full or p/time,. Ov~r 18· board. Victorian settee, Davenpo11 . i75. Ca I I cond. June 23-24.. 289 Ogle ,•_-. "."" .... '.'.~.·.•~:.:.·.·.·.·.·.·.=--..'!! I ·1 I C·" I h' hi d . bl' Nea t appear. \Viii tnun. Ap. matching rocker More i:.AS-9663 C Cl\! 1 -\\' 11 e you earn. <Ul Al sa es. 1g y es1ra e. ply, 2590 Newpon Blvd., 830-649!} • • • ,r,o St. Apt. • . . ' TV, ltMlf, Hf.Pl, s ., ....... Uf Sloan (714l 832-5440. Applicants should have C.i\I. * BDRM. suite, niodem, BLOCK Sa~. Mt. Eden Clr. -[EJ REAL ESTATE excellent communica· 2 SERVICE Station Attend . LARGE Antique Chinese solid \\'OOd, xlut cond. $1'75. off Ne,vhope & \\7anlC'r. FV. 'I l SALES MANAGER tions skills. r~uu & Part time. Lite gong on pedestal -' A or best ofter, 546--7620. Fum. AP,?liances, clotbiog Pet•_. S&appln Resale Office needs manager 111cch. expcr. Apply Laguna Museum piece. Antique 4 MUST 11ell, decorator game baby ltem,s •. Sat-Sun. \Vith 2 yeai:s or Real Estate Excellent Working Chevron, 6(J.I So. Coast H,vy; poster bed, over too yrs old. table, like ne\v. 48" table, 4 GARAGE 'SaJe, Sat & Sun, ~"::· .~~:::·::·:::·::·:::::: experience. Newport Beach Conditions & Lag. Bch. Priv. Ply. S49-0UG. barrel chr's, $185. 551-4366 35gal Aquariufn sland ·ooan Dill• ...... : .................... IJt areri Expanditig com•••" F • B f 't SERVICE sta. night at· FINEST of antiqu es , SPOOL tble w/resin top&: 6 bag' chair & ETC!" 2852 ~ltfl i ........................... 111 Ex~~llent opportunity ..... j~; ringe ene 1 5 tendant"-2 or 5 nights wk. cranberry hanging lamp, stools': dining or game size. EUei mere, Cbsta P.1eaa a.i~:C.; .. ·:::::::·::::::::.:.::.:;: professional g1"0wth. Apply Apply in Person Apply at Shell, 17th & ~~~~ :~~f.~i~S:~~.& Xlnt cond. 673-5:305 1 1 in oonfidence. Send resume or Call : Irvine, N.B. 90 forth. 548--02'/0 * 7 SOFA BED & LOTS 0F'r;;;ew;;•;;ry;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;';;'5 &o.tslhd ,,. }f to Clruisiried a d no. 638, c/o SERVICE Station Attendant. OTHER GOODIES!! I ...... ~ "'- Daily Pilot, P. O. Box 1560, Dona Leverett Exper. luQe man. Apply in ANTIQUE Flea 'Market -552-7695 * *' * 'lit * * ~-------"-"'""' Costa J.!esa. CaHr. 9262S. (714J 540-5000, Ext. 250 pe,'.p"'i"ae' 990ach.E. Coast Hwy, ;~~--~~' J2.~~~.·~3t 1ti G•r•-Sale 812 DIAMOND SOLITARE ::,••M . .ii.;f.iS.:,'.vk.;··:::::::: :: R. E. _Sa:les. n1gn1t. '\','11;,\\' & HYLAND' N1 6 pin. YWCA, 14ll N. ..... 9 CARATS, na~'less, geir) ... ,.IM•tlllt -I• ........... ,.. groiving comprmy. :•·any SERVICE Stalion Personnel Broadway, Santa Ana. FURNITURE -Bicyele, -auto. 'QUai'lty, forced to sell!! 4lso ::::; ~::JQim; .. :;:::::::; Mt innovations & vbencfits. All \\'anted. Apply in person, ANTQ. Oak p 1 a t 1 0 rm water soltener 1 _ many $10,000 ol the most highly ... 11. hH ..................... . f ine-local t.'O. needs sa tes or· area~. 547·64~. LABORATORIES 3048 Bristol, C.i\1. Rocker, Victorian pull-up items. Sat.Sun, June 23-24. =~ve jewelry, sell for ::;: :::i':'=:1 ·:::::::.~·::. ~, icntcd person to handle husy VISteN SHIPPING CLERK chair, oval IWian marble 1600 Primrose, CM. ·675-7521 ,•...._ S!•r"' .... : ........... ''·; .... 1 ORDER DESK Alr.:t•tt ........... -...•......... fU Cyclff, 1111", kMttn ....... . desk. Son1e l'OITl'S[JOnd.?n<·e. 3300 Hylind Ave,• P /Hme $2.50 hr ' 642-3472 top coffee table, Reu. at BICYCLES & parts, Baby • Sal t S520 C 11 I\ R It I $100 each, firm. 499-3715. items. &ant bottle&. Air * * * * * * \\~it~1~~ 5-1~605j. Coas~al P:1~ =-~~·~e~•==Y=· ~n_c_.__ Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 s:,~e~~-ed~dle operalol', ex-• \\IE have a large stock of compressor. 2:.l2 Raleigh, sonnel A~cncy, 2790 J1ru·bor R.E. SALESl'ltEN Equal Oppo:r. Employer ~8-9495 English, carved wardrobes, CM · DIAMOND .,.edd.lng s et · Blvd .. Ci\!. \Vhy not \\"OrHk in tl~e hottest Male & Fen1ale S'!L locel b . need at i1550 S. Cout Hwy, MESA Verde Gar. Sale-Service nlan going over C.m""-S•leflttlftl .... , ••••• !S lllCl/'k C•l't .................. : 1 Molli!• HOl!lfl .,. ...... , •• ,. •• fil a r e a ~ n t 1 n g t o n ':;~~:=:~:::::;~~~;:;::!~J n . us1ness s Laguna Beach. Dishes antiquet, &· bric-a-seas, must sell. N e \V Beucb/Fouutain Valley. Let -.....,-. ___ __ __ __ pel'm. girl· friday, MUST . b ' 2817 'Ii'.:_.. Dr Oawleu . Have appra. at us train you! Call Phil --~ take lite sh xlnt '\\'Orking MUST vacate -Everything racs ..., .... "'l""' •• $1250 must sac $575 Call Need remodeling~ See want ad ~' SIRVICE DIRECTORY .fO.R-EXPERT HELP '" th·• DAILY PILOT ' .. M*t lttlll'l.. , • " ......... ,, .. • 9· \ i 'i TroMtn. T~ .; .............. , " Tr11!1n , Utlllly ... ., .•.• .,,, , I Avlti Servi~• a "'rfs . .. . .. , .. McNamee, V I L L A G E &-cretaries $500-$700 cond all 'the Ir l n g e goes, furniture, collectors Costa Mesa. 548-9514 · · R.EAL ESTATE. 963-4567 f'/C Bkpr(r.fanuf $600 bcnc;its. \Vrite Classified ad Items, 200 Coast Hwy., BABY Crlb, PI a y p e n , I RECEPTIONIST for animal Clerk Typ1!lts $400 No. 888, Daily Pilo1. PO Box Hunt. Beh h1$hchair -~ cond. Mlsce11aneous ~ 18 lwspital, N.B. 3 Dnys \Vk 100"/o FREE J 560 Costa .Me'.sa, Ca. 92626 * • BEST BUYS FOR AN· MlSC. clot~~s sz 12--14 I: ·.;.;;.===c.;;.;.. __ .:;.;;. r ~--~-''--~ incL Fti & Sat. Send resurne Llz Reinders Agency State experience and Salary TJQUES! other misc. items. 642-0231. 4 NEW metal beds w/matl., Classiried ad no. 892 c/o Dial A Job ... , ...... 557-3401 Expec1ed. ' J:l5{1 S. Coast H"'Y· Laguna PIANO, Duncan Phyfe Din $30., ea.; 1 l<enmore washer Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Office •• · · · · · ••..••.. 546-2ll8 SNACK ·S h o p Attendant, Beach. !able, J\li&c tables & j unk. i: dryer, used 6 .mos. $75. r •-------IC~o~s~ta~A~l~es~a~,~C~a~9~26~26:.. ..... 1 1-~-~~-~-~~-~-~~-.. -T,;-.. -~~-~-;~..,. f/time, Must be 21 or older * WESTERN PAINTINGS, 6812 Auburn Dr., ll.B. ea. 548-3551. o_., ........................ !" Iii S£CRETARY for C 0 s ta \v/short order exper. Call bought and sold at 1550 SO. 842-8276. 12'' PORTABLE TV, lle\V, .t11111111 .. fCllWc• ............ .. Rt>slauraut Mesa C.P.A. firm. Ex-Jlcnt fol" a ppt. T u e &-S un . Coast Hwy, Laa'Una, Beach. Moving to Co I or a do $60. Oil palndrlgs $1-$1(}. ·°"'"" .•°"'" ................ .. ""' J IA. , l . l Sperti;. RKt. ltotll .......... f A FUN PLACE typist -Steoorette -,644"-'--M-"'94-'.'-------,\NTIQUE 9ettee car v e d everything mu 1 t go. mps, ~ac. ar 1 c e 1 . Trudi• .................... , .. Qualified in generttl offi ce Sol·1c"1tor to $5 hr \\'OOd frame, be. autl .. ·I fa~ S a't/S un. 9-~. ·609~ sn.:Tn82. V•1t1 ,. ...................... .. TO WORK duties - must ?e nexib~c. & P/I. :rec Pd/also Fee Jobs rlc. 673-1616 iu Migcuertte, CdM. GIBSON refrig, 2 di'. ,workll ::: ~l~! i."P'9rti":::::::; :t personabl~. Write Class1l1ed \\lestcliff * 1 •till MOVING Clearing out Fr{ $65 Eska outboard motor 5 .,.,.., w.111 ........ ····: · .... · M :Jfie Reuben L ofee Now Hiring Dishwasher , F'ull Time AJ>l>ly 3-5 daily ad no 695 Dally Pilot P · have a few fhru SUn 9 t 6 h/p i65 sklll circular 11aw ""'0~ •"""114 ...... · • ·· · "" ,,. · • . ' · Personnel Agency sideboards left at 1550 S. • a.m. 0 p.m • .," 8411427 "''°•• N .................... "' o . Box 1560, Costa Mesa, ir~ll E. Edinger, S.A. Co 91 H La Beach Fum., c)othes, household •--· Avto1, UHlf .................... ttt Calif. 92626. 0.Jark 111 Center) ;ABY w~ff.ANTIIANo · etc. 113 Larkspur, CdM , 30-00 RIFLE. New. !\:la.user 1 Sec:ret•ry Wanted' 542-88.1& * $500 . * SAT. A .sun, elect. adding action barrel. Hand carved Secreta'r iul position -Re a I STATIONERY. Store In CdM CALL 6'13-aou) mach,· buffer, fun1., odds•A lrtock $90. 645-5921 alt 5 F..stnte Investment Division need! saleslady f/time 5 MAHOGANY Side Board er.;ts., 3>3 Canal, Nev.'(>Ort ••TENT TRAILER. 7xlS, in Irvine. Exp. pref. Salary days. Xlnt workbig co~ds. • Shore11. $125. open. Accurate typing & Especially fine clientele. beveled mirTOn, b e"a u t · JUNE ~1~17. Homehold -*Call 962-2563• SIH rcq. For lntervie"' PhOne t'rancl$-0IT, 67"'~1010 cond. Sacl'l:ftce. S'D-6317. " Stereo -Exe~.e. boat· & 5 NEW tires, 9.50. 16.S. 8 pl('ase ·contact Ga;1e Crane, Jor appointment. Applilncet I02 hain/CB equipment. 277 plys, Wilb whe<>ls. 842-llOO ·- 541-DJSS, SUPERVISOR Cecil f l., C?tt. eves or. anytime wkends. • ~ECRErARY • Accur111.e \V(IO(f ntill dept. ~1ust have WAIWS dishwasher, wood SPEEOI. Club sale, books, nJCHSIAS l.n bloom, 50 typing, soma shOrthand. 5 gea.<il(]ned backiroound In top,-all-.cce880ries. Sears furn., lampa, etc. 16693 large cuns 70c-$1.00, 291 Days a y,·eek 8::.«I to 12:30. prod mill work · Wittct;IOftener. 84~2979. iE \·ergreen, F.V. 6(21-612.\ Ellit 2.3rd St. Cost11. Mesa. Girl Friday, some ('1Tand111. • LEADMAN 1.ftECOND. APPLIANCES TR.ASJ.I lo Treasure ·. sale. CARPETING · 130 Yti.rds, 2 lSI E . Co••t Hwy. Ct1tl 1\·tr. M Nnnll't!, 96.'.l-4567 Bout ll$(lmbly · Jin\'!, Mu"t DeJJvered ·guru;. Dunlap's, Sntun1ay only. 2203 Puente tone green stiag,,vtry good Newport B••ch S E CltETARY, · Exe<.'\Jtivc , have kno\\'lt!'d$l:'tt ot all p11n~ 1815 ,.:ewport, Cr.'f S4S-mo AVe, C.M. ou Victoria. cond. IWS-4189 01· MG=\258. TIJttE FOR 11: Shrthnd & typing a must. o! M8embly. 21 ClJ n fi'Ost tree tree~r & MARKET BASKET opposite l\'l.AYTAC Elet t. dryer, Nfr, ''1 'i I ! . j Equ11.l OpJlOl'. Employer Lite bk))ng. Pref. construe· lsl•nder Y•chti E\,lreku 1.1prlght vacuum. Huntington Center, Satur· 2 ouWoor tbl tops, l wood QUIC' K CASH -Uon ex.per. 642--3121. 777 w. 1rth St., C.M. 54ll-5750 day, June 23rd. A.F.S. kitchen cnblnets:, 54Ml97 ~~;~~~; FJ~~'~ista~r TEL EPltONE Answering PRIVATE p3rty n1ust M?ll COMBINED Garage Alie. OAK desk 55"x26"' $25. Book ~ 1 NB Ca ll 644-5040 , Service, Btaeh ftrta. Prefer fro$!, tree mfrla. & go.s Incl rum.. 3.'219 Blue Fin, sholt or what-not; I~ $2S, Tit ROUQ H • •'· . 1 ROUTE SAtES- lnoking lor ~able people! 1.:ull: .1icrmanenl, lf interested ·114: 774-G330 ' ' · over 30 yrs. of age, VM"ied dryer. 557-0282 DP. Next 3 Snll:-US E 18, O t, 548-4485 fl V~candes cost money! Rent hoU1'$. Weekends. 673-1166. KEN?.fORE a u t o ma t f c SAT • 9 to 3. Elee drym-, COOO ga. 1'tove $2$. 'Extra DAILY PILOT ' vour house, al)t., store TELF..PHONE Sates .. WQ't'k Wi.!htt, 3 cycle, very good, child'• deak. much more. ref work~. $2$. 138. E . ~.;etc. lhru a Dally Pilot from your own home. $i5. 56-41&11 or 55ill--tl5f. 438 £.16th St. Q.t. 64~~ lStb St. • S48-4485 , nowl Ca.II 60-5618 Now! poricnce no l ooceuary, ruM perfectly, $50. 1791.' Misc. ltf'hls. 6t)J2 Jvory Cr. thrown mpwer $65. J5J3 Classified Ad. Sell ldlc llema lllghest cornmlasSons. Ex· 2 DR. Rctrtgerator/Freczer, TENT, clothing, camera, KJNG...(r,LAWN 21'' front I WANT AD S92-5184 Jo.niajca Rd, CM'. 546-6594. lJwit. Bch. BV-1242. Orange. Ave., C.M, 642-0066. ' ' •I l I ' '·I ' I -' r ,.. ' • ... ' . . . Frlda1, Junt 22, l ~73 DAILY PILOT <ff I • • [ ..... ,., ]~ I . ...·-.. ~1 1 ....... .. ~ I ...... ,, ·~ I -._ !!El I -=t.=·· I~ ~[ ~;;;;;-;;;;;'""~!~~~I~[ ;;;'_;;_;;. ;;;!~;I~[~-~"""~ .. ~ ;;;l§J;;i /~iii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;m;~ ~~i!iii!ii~~~~iiji I 909 C I Bllt Motor Homu RocrNtioMI j~Mltcel!!!?~'-'~noo~uo!,_ _ _;1!:1~1 Ml-n...11111 111 Miocou........ .. TV, bdlo, HiF~ Ho"" 156 looh, Sil '15.:;1.,.. 11' 925 Salo/Roni MO Vohlclot., ~ - CAPTAINS 2 7'0><161)ijclc 11 ..... J bcand Wanted 120 St-.,. 2 C..tle Geidl ... , • .,,.. •• 8 RllODES 19, &< cood. 2 .... ...:==-----SAVE BRAN. o' NEW ""~ s 1 ,.,. /FM -old, $250 ea. One reg. salla w/isplnnllkt!r. Seagull John'• Reel,. CyclH nu, never.......,..., p Y rat .. ,. SCO'TT 636 AM stereo .,.... lfill 0/B, lrlr. w/nu tire&. Must CO * CAR CARE Mllw>lcd ou """"''· 8 boll. WA.....,IL ,...iver: !Ike new. J yr old. AJ•P1 Geldlng 5 yrs, • ff pri * BUL TA wUL.f!t roro "' aiev. s;o. •1u~u--" y ruo. cau anor6:311. 640-3888 oood •i.po.t11on. "et t oeu. SIS50.or ""' 0 "· HEADQUARTERS FOR $ 1973 NEWPOR1TD ''ll.Ml51ltier )'Ou~ri"-judgcd Vied S20. ~'1818, US 4.hi l TO started, eood pleasure pty. 714-673-9082. 1000 IU by the •PJ>etil'&nce ol .)'our N B. CON.OOLE stet-eo w i I h horw &OOd potential show BEAUT. Trim8}'8n. "Kanoa" DESERT, MOTO X 1i car." Sl, ' * * ESTATE Jl.""\VELRY for am/fn1. Ex.oeUe.nt, best o(-horse'. $800. · AIIO 8 yr old uniq ue & proven design for Aettn0rlefll. SAN l))"'ril\lil'-l-land v.•JX.lng '-Polbhlng 1\ENCIA~~RES30autoXI 1Y."llShi00ng $il0,oqo CASJ.1. \\'e have bcea fer. b'1>0587 aft s. Thorobred Jumper, good in cruising & racing, $&500. llarbor at Wil1J011, C.l'\l. lllAllW~ $pedal \Vn.~ Olll hl~. • • n 00 ' payirig top dollar for a,11 BRANO l'lf!\V II Craig tnpe the 1lnl -xlnt jr. hone CTI41 963-20.lS. 646-4G53 or 64&-2428 20' Pace Arrow "' Fl'ft! Pick Up It DelJvcry Thin itaple• bed a-t ead s , gold pleee1, antiques, uoir111. deck, euseue. 2 speakers 16.l Hands. TA L L Y HO • BICYCLE SALE • BUBBL£ TOP YAN Cail 64$-1791 for estimate <:~5!,.,.3& nlle stand. $25. gen1s ~ e.IJ 'ctn(lJ. S49, call 644-5426. Famts, 17262 N e w ho p e , All nKlcTEI -~ N!.u1,0P05 -·\'e!Joy,• NEW ID SPE~D ITALIA!~ Utt Den to • .--. ti•...-uuil - ' 67' ~521 Fountain Valley. 9-0 '7" a a 1.,.. --. • B C\'CLE $59 "' Be h (0 ·c •30121''00 '.~::d SUPER 81'1 Movie camera & ,., 1.,......,.. oh hull, "'hite to~ide. Xlnt I S .<N, ac ""' oH Uk FOR SALE H F ff -6 Bk~dos, 806 E. Balli<>" MANY EXTRAS 'CONV'ERSI ' cal)!, e new, $15. Polaroid POOL T bl lallon lze [ lll TALLY o am>A, o e,. cone!. $000. 75.. • · ., ltlild ce:mera with "-··L al· a e 1'Ci\l 11 \V((..L buy · old magn:llnet s Cinest in hunter & jumper Lt SI Full 1 Blvd., 675--'1282. Authorized ARM RESTS l..Ll:lafl 4'X8' with l" slate. Inch.Ides pM!-1965 Stag Cavalier' \ · "-19V.. •-1-i""' •-1euoru by E DO 14• UlJll! Y equ p, NISHJKI dealer. tachmenl like new $4fi Allfi'' balls, c:uet, ra~. etc. Price lifule, Men,\ Pai:eant, True: -~f~y ... (':"proved AHSAl indd cover, Certificated, AUX BATTERY bqw!IJ'\&' ball with lold out only$325.Call837....4Zi:9. Amerlcan 10,, & Joke \ ·~ be 1 $695, 846-2164. \VANTED i '71 or 'TJ llonda 6' REFRIG condng.. case, co1nplete In-3 Lines, 2 Times, $1.00 judge. \Ve have au · ne~ 2934 / n 500-4. itnew oond!Uon. ... GLASS eluPing shoes (\\'Orn 4 ADM I RA L Si~~ld~ r.tagniines, aft 6 P nt, l.2xt.2 boK stalls. Visit us rt UDO 14, No. • \\' Ira er Have • iumph 250 ffu,,·k TINTcD tlmeli) Uke ne11,,, ~ten's size ~friB"'freezer, U cu. f~~·. tw7-S458 171.$2 Nev.:hope So. ~f ~nt oond, must sell,-$900 or $375. &: 3 slate ~I to.hie 8 PLY TIRES 9\~M Phone Grl4-4687 Qrexel '"'ill ~s. solid \\'At'l'J'ED to l;luy, like new ntEE to 0 gd. home 10\oeable \\lamer. ltountaln Valley Or 14 "', 'su0fNl.F490-Q689ISH __ ; 1 ~·. Like $600. Tra ·one or botlt or 413 ENGINE 611 a one ton Dodge Oul&ll111, 300 \'.l!I 127" v.il«-1 base, au10111111°\1· po\1'1,:r ilceriug, diM· bnik~. Jt•n11e11 Toilet, 1 •~1. · mahogany v"ll11ned oak furniture It. Jlmps, nice &: ma.le doxie, perfect pet. cR.iJ m-.9475. ...., uuw. sell . 5-0-mil. UNI LOUNGE * AUCTION * J nnl•h 12Sca. 879-~ rct••••u1l>Ie 644-'687 "Rusly" m--0>;4 Lldo. AQHA Yearling filly. Beaut. new $400. Carl at 879-9211 ,,;;tJ;o:;;_.:;~;;;.o'°'MB~A:;;T,--;•;:ta"',.::rl;:ck;.I FLIP SEAT Fl Furn! iiRIGGS k Stratton 3 ~Musical lnstrumentsm GERMAN Shepherd/Lab, &: ready tor halter classes. days. shocks cueto1n chamber SEAT BELTS 1;1~ lffx .sr nc. ne . lure RotB.l')' Lawnmo\\o·er. Like , black, ntale. Sharp & alen, Shld bri1'[ home all blue BALBOA XI w/trailer. 3 HP 'P,P. 's fast and reliable xlnl DOWN A OC4 & :~~11a.nc;s 30 • Nu. $25. Wenz.ell Umbl'ella I OLD Fe~ Telecaster with etn:I hunter, 962-:nsl. ribbons. $600. 5 4 8 - 8 9 0 4. British Seagull' $3600 Firm. cood., must sell ~2i79 $7399 10°/o' Wluc d,.' Aay,,: p8.m. tent 9x9. Used once. $30. humbucking pickup &: EXTRAORDINARY silve 540-6900 E:<!:t 256 557 Plumer, C.r.f. 1968 l{A\\'ASAKI 120. dirl, _ ~I 1nonht11 al $5995 _..,.n ,y s uct1on arn • 5-1.S-«H8 • ~·ood Illlger board S250. l\faltese, calico & black kit-APPY Gelding w/na~ • .? NOTICE Kite Racers. Fu11y $150. hfinlbik@;-fa8!, strong, CREVIER-BMW 1 ~--$91.63 2075~is Nl!Wpflrt, Of 6'ffi.-8G86 \VEDOING dress, Cathedral 1929 EJllphooe Ele;,clrfl $250. teu, mill, 8 wks. 5-10-76.20. yrs old 90ttell, 16 hands, equip Kite "'/dolly, no 593, calTics 2, $90. Irv i u e. Ca.;h l>i:ief' ilK'lu<Ung Tn.x a nti Bthlnd To11y'11 Bklg l!fat'I. veil, size 10, exclusive 1it9re 54!-2193 alt 5.. FREE to someone v•hio g'OOd Jumper. $450 w/tack. $550/make ofter . 5-t5--0904. 5.S2--0li14 or 979-5642 Salt.'S. Service. Lcasini; lil·f'nsf' $6:'~.7.i. Dt•ferrcd ~~ $i)O, com plete. New evening Office Furniture/ cares. adorable calico &:: 8:»-1737. • BRM'D ne\V '73, 14' HObie, 1971 SUZUKI )~; Yello\v. ~ \\'. ~3fJ1iJuta •\nli • p.:iynu•nt prk.-c $8800.42. DOUGHBOY POOL Plv.zo suit 646-1715. Equlpo 124 tiger kittens. 64&-1581. REG. Arab-ifulft.fo0rgan.1 4 yr with trailer, must sell, lea"v· 1800 miles, Wlfe's bike. s.i;;o1_~=~~=~---I ;\.P.R. ID.64. o .A.C. SwtVf:,L Bamboo chair, like 7 TINY Poosy.Catos. One filly. Beaur appe grey, in&: area, $1295. ~;)58 or best.offer.,842-1150 eves '73 T"10 a EXPil'ORER 16'c27 1 /depth 4-7' , new. Pole lilmp. Undenr.'OOd OONFERENCE TABLE will nlllke yOur Cua purr .. class A show prospect. HOBIE 16 and trailer, ex-or anytinlf! wlcn<Ui ~ . '.L ' New -l'ltill in rarton typewri,ter. Hand mad e Ex~. Cu!t., .w/6 chairs, feet. 644-7659. 842-5945. . tras! Sl450. Newport storage . 68 TRI. 250 Trophy p)O. Tt;. . . $(195.Af Sea'l'll. A~klng ST.ii .sha.\",l &U--0272. fully uphol.stered. New $850. 1 YEAR.. Mixed Collie, male. 5 YR o~ ~ Appy Geld1:1f.. avnil. 642:-7658 -. Cub. '70 Honda SL 90. '70 Loaded "'ilh ~.lr -lt!ll)TI· OF 837"'5003 'Eves & \\'kndH \VANTEO. USED Sattthce $450. ·Days 675-0210, Loyes ch_ildrrn~ Needs.gocid Good -Co.I~, Needs_ exp d kITE BOAT No. M Yanlaha 125 SI. $250 each. ing, 6 cubir ft 1'C.f'ri,1?<'rntor. ~ ORIENTAL RUGS 64o--0381te!t· s . home. 646-5998. rider. 494-2459. LIKE NEW 979-33nt548--0567. 15,000 B1'U retrigerafor. SACJJ,J"'Fi'CE sAf.E \\l\JI ..... , cash. Please ca ll EXEC S\\'V] chri; $15-25 Sec AflNIA'MJRE Sheltle-=PoodJe; 646-4656 Eves '70 K'\\Vi\SAKI 250 Xlnt l'lnlcd Glass, !1,000 Jb. Hunl"1ngton '·-I 121')~874 28 '2 It I chNl $Sl24 OeskJ $20/90 OU 2 ·ea -nlale!Hi · wk s, ~ · · • f chasi.is, Double! insulation, . ..._.... quant ly or U!lt.'fl ~ . .. l'O ec ' . Supl 867 \V 19 01 642...J408 645--0123 Ft.ee! I .... I a. ii * COLOMBIAN 22 * ?>nd. Less then ~.00) ;1'1_• 90 An1p Aux . Blillcry,.Rarlio, CIU>peling, i>IK'ti fmnl 8X10, OfL ~lanicure $3~50. Shan1-OF-FICE DESK~ 34x60 .... ~ 'r Miit "' Must sell $3800. \Vith slip. 11\C!lds 'street eqwp. $:11:> •• AND i\1Ai\'Y orrtER EX· Beach ftX12, l4Xl:i, $;1. ,'(. up. \\'Il l J>OO---ilJe.t $3.50...By_Michelle _ _ , __ 1 F'REE Black kitten . . 53&-4{& G46-M32_ l'R-.>\S i·Sl8U.il~ ~ ~ give 1ruper ~perinl df'nJ II Only. 7 Natlona Coil~s. S65. · &15:5200 "10 ~home-. -le 910 HONDA 30,j. ~bier, all .$A~E PRICED buying lllJ'te _-f[tlfUtllt.v or . MZ-{)844.' Pl nos /OrglM 126 G4&-before 5. .Boats, Slips/Doc S i;lre(>t equip. \ e1;• good $ 7699 Yi'hole lot. 646-5Sl2 C.?.1. UNIVERSITY . Out d 0 0 r • · 1''REE! Friendly ex·male Boats, General 1 900 SUPS av~ilable, 3;;', Sail or oon(t. 8000 miles, $300. PVT. ply. disposin1o: of hun· sJ)cakers. Amp~nbl Ii can· ORGAN WOHSHOPS I ~ myPlef~~~~. or I al' CRESI'LlNER \vtth small Po1\•er Boats. ;;'';'i'if-;,=i21-:::63:;--:=-,,,;-c:::~-,;,I dred1 of original oils.. l\Oll corule:Ctors. Tube cadd.,y l\R cabin, marOle toilet. . Tilt 673-6606 GIRLS 3 spd, $35; rnan's 10 watercolors, et cJt l n 11., w/tubes. Misc. s.is.:-3561. ·. A M I FREE ~S trailer, Mercuey Cruiser * 35. BOAT illip $70 per ors·pd,;J4__1Wike new. 546-0068 llthocraPhs by ooted arl11ts. FO!\.. •·t ,1 benhi in Wednescleys 10 • • 'I 9282 ~autilus Dnve, Jn-Out drive, power g1ide 1 month (no sails) ~ Sales • Service. -Leaaing .. Low Prlce1t. De a I e r g -..>JG e: n em · p Don't bnu any o....,.., until HWltington Beach. _ _. 1971 KAWASAKI 100 cc, set 2CS \\'. ll>t St., Santa Ana welcome 535-5595 Neivport area athletic club, '--OU ca~play!· M~Players HAPPY HEA1/fHY KfITENS steering. Coast Gutuu ·ap-* 54S-44TI * for dirt, lots of extras. $225. 835-3171 • $100. Call Ed, MCl--0010. ,, .... _, piuved, ready for the w~er. . "·'"' ""'"'· l--~~~-=-~~--1 SETH Thomns ships ·clock, \\'elcome to atteDd free v.·o,.. v.-eaned & trained. Cover inctuded. Ask for Boats, S---' & Ski 911 O't;,ru""'" e SAL ES e Wi.fthan1 boxed chromo. ·Wanted Oriental Rugs shops, Fo[ information ~15 Nick Varzak. 546-1934 days _ ,__ TRAIL blkc etroot leglll $75 e metet, Jaevi· Pf'l'petual pri pty nttds se\'eral> used Contact: Tom Dieterich FREE, 2 small _dogJ, ba,·e OT 979-1617 nights. 14' Ski boat, '\\-ood hull,FG, 53r24J9 • SERVICE do.ck.~~ me!tl pot lo f\1rn, rup. 64t-s326 . .67>8773. 642-2151 shots. Mixed .toy .... terrier & l3t~· semi v botton1, Fibgls 40 hp elec ~rf~terc, incldg -'-'~~-------: •• REf(TALS -.-min, lk,uor boltle collM'tion. 11-fOBI.LE car phone, can in-C011st Music Service chihuahua. 499-2884 over plywood, Glen L trlr, x1nt $500. 644--8038 Motor Homes Catt 6-14-2740 o.11 T:30 pm. 11all reasonnbly p1iced. Newport Blvd, at Harix>r GEfiltAN SheJ)herd pup, s fishemian, 91,2 Evinrude, 15' ski boat..& trailer. \\'/75 ·Sale/Rent 940 AU. Oievy parts . ~96 . 9GS-l797 Crnita lltesa months, Female. foN•ard · controls,. trailer, hp Evinrude. Boat needs EXPLORER ·Complete engine $200 . NE.W \V11.tcr bed frunw &· 673-8820 sparetil·e, '731icensod,qulck \\'011<. $375. 548-19.15 NEW 1973 OF Heads $90. IntakeB $50. manmade-fur spread. red ORGAN SALE FREE PERSIAN KITTENS. sale $500. 3925 Calle Abril, 14• SKI BOAT HUNTINGTON BEACH Block $100. :J:iO Block $100. fox. Bes! offer. 642-3273. \Vurlhzer .Factory Authorized Cali 962-0SJJ San Clemente Harb 0 r No engine. $145. EXPLORER lSSOl Beach Blvd. 842-8803 3Z1 J[cads. $50. 1-1.P. H~ads DIADEl\( Tourmaline Mink Sale ori many models. Other or 968-2288 EStates, 4~ 673-4537 J-lUNTINGTON BEACH $125. S.l~llSO; 542-3&13. stole xlnt (.'()11()., $300. brands also on sale, priced FREE 1 ~ ho ,_ al 15' RUNABOUT FIB, 30 hp MOTOR HOMES ANTIQUE Bombay desk, *' m-4884 :~ from $29'5. 0 6"""-· me, .n:m e Evin. B.I. moor sun1nlel'. - I:]" Msk, Pinca.\...JC 4 poster W II' L M ' C't Sianlese cat. $'JOO,. Snowbird & trlr, needs 11•1 24' GOUCHO Apollo. Pacesetter., Baron. """' Ml ". a ICJ1S . USIC I y Call 8314)67 ,.~-· $100. 9' D•·ngl•y ••9, r-····· J bo R b hood . + ref.rig. "'ash Ing see 1neous 1 =-·•" ...,30 "" <If• ·---· ""' am r1,>e, o 1n • JDachlne, color TV + mi9c. Wanted 120 South Coast P aza J"OV"'-" 5 fREE kittens. Prefer Salling paddle board $'95. on a l, ton Chassis, Full Self . I \Ve'v.e got 'em al 6'12-<1619. 1845 Anahcln1 Ave, trailer parl_c .residents. 2 &l2-1it2. Contained lncl ding rang'i! KENDON No. ~D. C.l\f. WAL'ITED: used complete set BU~D WGalnndut ABn t I q . mos. old. 835-8979, 7-10 Pm. '16' FISHING boat, Buick C•mpor1, S.le/Rent '20 and oven, ~wer, toilet. MOTOR HOMES BR.UNS\VJO< gold crown <l~i or Golf Clubs. \\'oods, Irons Austrian ra .. · 1'8'9"5 · ntOtor fly Bridge, galley, dual sinka, y,·ardrobe and CREVIER BMW l&SOl Ek'11<~1 ~ .. ·d. 8·12-880:{ 1-I UNTl ~GTON BEACJI 4 STAR MAC-1: . MIN~MllJORHOME $8779 SI:. ~t?.;el~~~i'ln:: St'lltS 6 or 8, Spacemaster flush loih: . .f with holding tank, ta sallon wuter supply, lX gotlon holding tank, Sin- gle> 52 &-allon t,'Us lllnk; Air Shocks, Steel buu1per with spnl'c tirc.i rack and vinyl covc1·, .Jo gallou hot V.'flter tuuk, 7' inferior ht•lld roorri, ti cubic Ceet gns • electric re- f1igcratol',. De11111rxt 75 gal- .Ion 1vatcr iy~l~1n. Ser. #012610-1718. Air ·conditioned • ' • • ·1 ' . ' ' ' . I ) '• I ' . , I . J '. ! ' . I ! •• •I i l •• & bag Cond, Sacrluce · head, bait ba(, 1/1 radio, FORCED to sell. 197D. 11 ~1' ioc'i.udi...,. optional e(!Ulp-~,07 N. flarbor S.A. x 9 pool tables. 5 x 10 · 67,,, """"'' 968-4.300 ~ -~ , snoohe.r arcade ganU!I Of ~----; ' ~ gd shape $2500 aft S pn1. Cabover Camper, c r pt g, ment, 413 engine, 8 ply tires, 554-0033 'fM..~~ . ' -CIMSified ads .• :;,.642-SlS. PIANO, Kiinballette, like Na Md....... n 646-nsJ. ' . toUet, healer, stove, hydrlc ext;a gu tank, dual ~~APOLLO, 2~,. For Rent. load-GMC Motothome Center • f .....,_ ~ ~ ......._ - _ -_ ---nt>\\', I;J.gh~ . jacks, many xtras. Supt!r lemes. \\.'ired fo1· ste.reo w ed $200 per "'k + 5c per (li.1 SI. at s.A. t'nvy.) 44lCT.bFULMSALWlJJWV.LA. Bo.ts, M.int./ clean & sharp. Cost new speaken!:, arn00• .00ch. au-1 '''"',· mi.le. 675-5995. 2000 E. lst'St., Santa Ana BILL BARRY ,,, \\'U~ITZER Spinet Piano, .,.., r----.. I ISO S. I • ~ Now $1500. Best otter. center air co 1 n ng ven. __ 5l8-IOOO TtXXf-conmt10n $395:--!IO..I., ~.._. r.Y.c \\lllJ finance. cai1rurer1 pm, fire---exti1~. r•24150J . D•luo Ch1tfton • S48-5 7 S8 LEOPARD cat kit, 5 v.b, .MARINE AIE~'lC 8.'l).-'tJ82. $9495 Rent '!7'. 6-ID-0-&82 NB . ''i~· ,fill h 1'"1SHER SPINNE7 PIANO 1nale, hand raised, tan1e. Good v.'Ork. Fair prices. Save ·68 o-IEVY Camper, auto, W \I Coirt SI.00>"+, See It make $400. Breeding stock. )"OU~ money. Call Burr's ale. pis. p/b, complete ~ Tr•ilers,-Trevel--945 • • offer! Sacrifice. 502--9716 496-9510. A1arint" 6T'a-8677: camper package sleeps 6 plus tax & he. Camper ~ *-PIANO ** C 152 n •• ,., ... _rl-extra clean low mi., 3731 1 QO/o DOW'N 1971 18' Golden Nugget, self ii' *"'~ _ .. its -.,.nw ·-contained tandem trlr, 84" CC)mplete, '~wllfl!ND· Small Studio Uptleht . Equip. 904 Cosley, Irvine. Ia1 mo at ceilin . J.9rt boat trlr. Will Ill M ~ff J..- Sacrlfice * ~7 PURE BRED Simam Kits, WE .rent .l sell campers for $123 14 acm!nOOate 22'. Pricecfl to ~ For .,, ad 'rn WDlnlln~s ·workl WEBER Console piano· Ir Seal & BJue, _ ¥.~i:. CF"-NE\V .bOat baUi.. .for po\1:er Import & 8' trucks. Resen'f! • • sell. 644-18JJ or \)44-5700 · ' TOY OT~ t C1ll Miry Beth 642-5671 ext ~330 -beach. (Ebony) Xlnt eofld. Reg, 9wks,, $3.i 5.si-l7?9 aft 00a..:_u.!edlo '".",.· Ual •,,~_:..SlipSal yours ~~ hHlare~-C~ easti Pril:;:ttding tax &: 28' SELF cont S.treamline + 18&Sl BEi\CHiB\:f l 11Mf'-8555 -1 . • 1 ' -~ rt.rm . 6:13-751.l 5 ••kdays. aunr-• ·u1n. & es 4AJ;;/U DUL-~ ta . Caa;L!l'l..-Eye· '· I Brighten' • -A R---s.w1,..-Machine1-121 8-I+. M--E-S~ • k-rtt n· ' -money-18.~l'rCo&t new-PSSr Mesa'...646-400'1 . "11c. $10087.75.-Dele-l'red pay~ pull-pkg-~ontu;;~;lin, -HUNTINGTON BEACH ,,_,.,_. ' -~-.red,-·· W/shots, ·.-""u,; ·--''Ice $200 h1cl 100 lbs • h 11 F n1ent price $15785.58, A.P.R. $5875. \\'rite . p IO_, '73 TIOGA n '~itt I ..... _, ... .., "'"""'u · · NEAR camper s e . or llt6"2 o Ac San Oeotente, 92672. hone • • , · .... , * USED MACHINE &. M!rvice ~Vn'tl:-531>-7!82 eves. chemical. Eves, \V kn d 1. Dlltsun or small pickup; · · · 'L· ORER 492.-6510, for brochure. llc~rl)C, Ooi2 • s ~ 1• 1 ···' ' *VACUUM SALE 2 BEAUTIFUL Siamese Kit 962-Z">'lll, Days 675-tiO-IO· 0 Slltlin" \\indows. $199 . EXP -.----. 'P1'1VI PP!-¥1 · Sa.grlflcc, ~. --MARINE E...,..;nc Gray 4-69 cA" ~ ~ FOR the ~11 car & ht~ 49-1,µ~·!A J ,1. l1',Y'f____ Good Kirb)'I w/attaclt's SM.50 telll, 1.wks, Sl.5-ea. Mlllion . ..... • • ~ --v.-cight towmg. 12' -PaeqoSc, · · . -. · Sing1.,>r 6618 ........ \.. $27.95 Viejo, j86...1606 • ,..!ik~newfo, cdall : ALASKAN camn w/gns l'('f. OF 13• & 15• Field & stream. GFuMC1LJunmy~4\\o·h\ d 1 n ve.t.;1'2• ., New National Advertised ma-AtALE Sb.rnese ·klttens, lldlofi · .,.>O'"".w.,.. r emo. hz 64 Ford PU., 41m mi, reblt . Mesa Camper Sales, .2()36 pwr, a ~¥10\ "l"i' UX chine, zig·'ZA&'. makes button pure·bred. 2 left. 962-4551,. Bo.ft Power 906 eng A-1 cond. ) 15 O O. Harix>r Costa Mesa int, nmflrii Ure .vnc1c. W9.9.;,co;:"'~:;,;,~ t.'!'1: Dot• 154 ~ \~~; cabo=s camper. Huntington '69 23' OPEN road lully-~ ':i~~642-3:, -;·~·· /aid' But Good' I coot., xtra clean.1 ·· Cl · "' doesn't ask 9Q ~1uch of;~ e PUPPY WORLD~. U le, 18. for import k 8' trucks. ~1esa * 5'16-9089 * • m1 s.. . but does '°m':th~ for you. 100 AllXl!:o PUPS o Camper Sales, ~Harbor, Beach '70 AIRSTREAM lntema)ibn· $57 Pillumd, . . j ~ All par. NQ Gunmicks. Over E '~-h s , t t pen S G BOAT C.i\f. 646-4002~ All ·~ ~1< 11 yrs ln ~ta l\lesa Sin· \'es. ",. . e l!r, 'J7 FT. Fl HIN 8.127',air, xtras,,,,_...,.. Sno~ts, tt.ce ~~9 Se !'if "Ch & '\r Doberman, Collies $a 0, Ideal (or family fun! Sleeps Camper h6' $100 18801 Beach Blvd. 842-8803 or ~ , ~ iJttrt1H ,r, cere w a · ac.. Ji.uskle Bull Tenier T.CUp e 673-2957 e HU!';'TINGTON BEACH ** 16• TRAILER. , sleepa 6. s' llELB" '6 """ .... , •·1. 1878 l:larbor, &16-9742. Poodle: Chihuahua,• Lab. 6. Head, galley, anchor ;;c--,;:i;;O;;':;;=~u;,.7 1 -ilUl'I 1U Spctrting Goods l30 ·Boxer, Cockapoo .. SWAfi winch, !>alt tanlt. Includes 8' CAf1IPER SHELL '73 VIVA refrigerator, oven, toilet, 4 speed tl500 UDK 131 -Shepherds tor ?? Stud Serv Nell'{IOt"I: mooring. $2500. \\'/metal boat rack. !$12.l. $795. 831-1543' ; Pr:i . Pty~ l714l &16-7925 73 EJSSL S (1) 633.-3272. 344 Cabrillo, CM. 548-8774 VEL TRAILER ' ' r 1t t .. '12·' KN up er roost breeds. 531-6027. __ __ __ __ . ___ __ ...,.. MOTOR 1'5' TRA _ True ' J 1 1 ~':.'i:cs JBO'~w/~:i• :~ ~lonco Tralni"I•. 2,;j~ s~~ ca~':: ~.8' ~ CUS'l'O•M ~~:'Ge ISM-'.'C~!;p~erg. t' ;f:~~i,j $100. 'Now $120. 919--3341 aft Russos CUw Starting this Sloop. Like new! Loo.ded! cash. :W&-5823 HOME '69 13' Shasta SleePs 4 · I 6pm. Sat., June 23rd. All ,..,, Dinette, galley, ttead, Ilghls, Cyclos, Blkot Cl$699""!c. ~. fu,,, butane:, '71j1 FORD ~ '• COMPLETE Scuba Outfit. lO Les3oris only $25. 2 Lo-pu!P1ts LIL. Johnson 6hp. 91S ~ Ill l for --• E cations. Newport slip $39$ by Scooters Dod "'-. Fully 9-' W separa e -..e. ves. Fash. Island, N.B. (2 Pi\tl 1 owner 544-94l9 1 ton ~e '-'11assi~. Auto Service, P1rts. ,..,.-Air cond, AM/Fri1r St e e o , ' only, 494-2785. Fash. Squ~·~-!:.A. (9 Af.t) GLASP.AR Sun1iner. 171.~', HONDA 350S1.. Low. mi.~~· Se1 If Co11ta11ncd lncblud1nLwall 3 . 9 6 ~loin~,'<i!.~ - 1 stec:ring, '9444 SlztS 8-18 ,..; ... 11f r.\T' ... 1379 i,~s ... ~ ·TY;··R•dlo, H11'r;----· ~ 1'971 Honda 1971 lOOCB . t 1ermosta . ca Su .pes ALL Chevy parts. Rnn~?t w · includes · Storoo 136 1 SPEClAL Shore mooring N 4 Bal. Is., Lo ml. Aft. 6pm 979--6283 ~reen door, medicine cab-complete engine $200. Hcalhi heavy' 1 l~'J~ :Is, I.in"!!, 75' hp, just Over hauled, nu 160 HONDA, needs rear Ure, 1net, aux. battery systf!'!'l. $90. Intakes $50. Block tlOO. aivli~ ~~ • RENT TO OWN TV'S &·S!EREO S1u - German Short Hair Pointer boa.t oo .. -er, new bottom runs v.·ell, SlOO or bst offer. oo a1np battery, Exterior 350 block $100. 327 heads ,~, OO Puppies, $45. each. Call Cin-paint top, big whl. trailer. 53&-"962 eves. 12V nitc light, DOH Tag. $.'iO: ll.a. heads S 1•25·. Y' • di645-8926or&l5-892l. 675-7'59 (V0·242). .842-1150; 542-3843 l 1 SAVE A l!OMELESS PET li' COMPLETELY equipped ~~.:·~~~ $6995 AJ17ERICAN Mags, U~..15" ~ .f.1.<;ll.,~~HWA J Labs, 2 thin ia tu r e skis, fish, or ? 40 horse pwr. plus ~year. snow Urer 0 NEWPORT BEACH daclishunds, Great Dane, O/B Electric shift & start. BULTACO Al'plna·, '72, 250c.c, . $40. Trader hitch for VW ~ · Beagle, Aprioot P oo d I e . tilt ··trailer $750. or oUer Xlnt cond. $800. Consider of-plus.tax It. J1c. $15. 536-9889 1!!-0IOI No Credil Check•No Depostt 494-48>!. 's4l).®.1 fer. 642-2749. ' 1 QO/o DOWN .67 \~V Bug, wrecked, 1>0 ' \ (J , MonUtly R ntals Available pies. Black & Blue, M &:: F, ideal for diving or fishing. $85 or best offer. ' $f6 ·97 ply truck tires y,•/6 lug G?ll ,,• Open EV... 543 4444 Champ lines, 6wks Old, rat Head, taJley, nu CW1hions, ~ • wheels $150. ~ & h ea Ith Y, Terms. canvas covert, trier, Needs * ·n HONDA CB 175 * Ca-.h Prtce lncludlng ta.~ and 5 NEW tires, 9.50. 16.5, 8 1'"'rtt DelivePn'. • Free Repair •GREAT Great Dane pup-~· INBRD Cabin Cruiser, 10 SPD bike, very good oond, -108 nK> 11t engine, $175. (4) 10X16.5 8 '~ A PANAfl>NJC stereo tape 598-3093/431-7815. work. ake otter. &12-8961.. Reasonable otter. lie. $73.34.75, Deferred Pay· plys. With wheels. ~USO Put color underfoot ~~aiMI ~:~s~~ltde~i lovable Beagle • ())cker 10 h.p. lnrude. trlr. $350. '67 TRIUhtPH 650, S500 10E.75X. O.,A.CL. ORER * VW* "~""17}~4. p~.r.11 ·-1 .. 1 oval-·g ;,, 4 ..:..1ors1 -t.. 2 st ~'-pups. Need good home. Call °" offer, 2400 Holiday or make otter. Good cond. .,,...,.. ._, .. .,_..,,_ •u ... ....... s~,.' .,. ereo •~ .. rs. 494-4U5 Rd, N .. MS--0851 ...,.. ...,,.... lt':-1 all single crochet so headphones, 15 pre·recorded .. .,.r.--""'•v recorder with automatic 1'\\'0 "'el'Y soc i a Iii e d • 10• G AR, tront steer, Call 54rHl879 aft. 6:30PM. ment price $ll216.24. A.P.R. eves or lU\Vti1ne wknds .;_of @ even a ~ner can 'make ~al)t!s and blank l'eels _ all AOORABLE blk & tan, Dox-it VENTURE -10 SPD. American E;agle o F ' thls rafnbow rug that's sure equipment ts brand new. le puppy, AKC, $50. i\I ~ EXTRAS •~i=M. road, compe. 23" !l'ame. I I[ (4) · • to w1n compliments. Pattern Aski"ng $250. (. 714) 846-5494. 839-1239 inc. trailer, llke ne\v. ~ Japan's finest $150 962-3650 Autosfwl* l :,65:;,.~FO=no=-:P='.'°u'°. -: 11 ::-,-=,.,,., -=v=I ~'Jlece dress 'vith the .......... d'rectl ns for~ 30 x ABLE s ~--s ·-• or best otltt 962-nGS -H t• t -· ~ h I II ' \n.: I 1,;ua. I o" -'Summer $poclol * LOV p ... ..., ... r pan1ei.s 15' F""LGS fish/•kl ~-1. •n HONDA TJO. $2100/~st un 1ng on !~~~?.·~, hlgs'hel've"s ~"·. kxlk ' coinpanion ayers -36" or 30 x 50 lnclu · I Pi T be puppies. A.KC. 6 wks. Hunt/ 1-..:> ....,... offer. 3 rail cycle trailer ""'""' l:IO!t amootb wll)' to achieve 8EVENTl'-nvE CENTS ebul t-,, cture ,, u pe.I. Rewl. 673-'445 , All access. lnclud. radio. $100 Firm. 64~7854 day11 Rec,...tion1I S31)..G;"Q. '-~~"!u !,"'f.:1;,, ~ ;..\'ni foe each pattern -add 23 ·$17.-21 or 25 Color IRISH Se1tec pup p 1 es Bottom J>alnt, lilt """"'· LADIES Schwinn Colleglate Beach . Vohl~les t561;,,;n;::..,,;;;co"'R"o:i-"v"s-.su"pc"·"•·-,;v:-•• ~.1 'n' l!lblld. , ~nta"for1 .•dac5~tternl H ~t ~ 2 YEAR! WARRAU bNITY Beuutltul AKC registered: $700. Eves 673-620/. 3 1pd, blue. $65. Xlnt. con-, Aulo trans, lonJ? wheel base, PrlntOO . Pattcm 9 4 44 : Air Mai an ~!a 1 a • . jlnstallat on Ava a e $100 Call -962-28ll 21: VENTURE, •w/n101or & dltion. 673--0194 18801 BeaCh Blvd. 8<12-8803 '65 IHJERNATIQNAL nu lx'ltl'<I t.h'\lt, cllean. Mitoooi' SI"" 8, JO, 12, 14, 16, ~':fi..:;.the::~~ ~""'= lo:::~ ~~";'~~;;.,.~~:;'ice DOB~RMAN Plnsc:her P"J>.', ll'ailer, 't's =· HONDA CDJ75. HUNTINGTON BEACH ,fil:\.1070. ' ' l\ 18. 5lze .12 (bust 34) takes wf.eks or n1ore. Send to · l Bick s. o1 Baker 546--&'.m registered, top quality. Call ND 1 · In ..,.1 hi '72, 1300 miles. $425. Call ILLNESS causes sale of •72 W" I( JHlllt ;;: '6$ Clij::l(. V~ I cyl. ena:. 2 5fs )'(U'd'-. 51':.~ch fl\bric. Alice Brook$. lhe Dl\ILY open !J-.G (6 dnys) S-l&-0989 14' LU A um um r s ng 968-1555 20' Luxury Balboa motor NJ\ ftU ..,.. Wt'liod pane Ing , mag wheelL &Ev~v...: CENTS Pn.or. 100, • Need'6Craft STEREOS· " , 9 7 3 DYNA-\\l'ORLD'S Fastest Bird dogs, boat moh:lr A tilt trailer, '73 HONDA XR7S. • home. Ptirehased 9 mos. Clean, 1t111s greal. ~ ~n11"1'oh" :~~ .. \1 .. ~ r~ Dept., ~.16.\ 9-,l.~~, .QUAD.Sy.aten\, 200 watt FM Regiltered, top quall~. Call J731 Cosley, Irvine. SS Call 642-5315 880· Chev. V8 eng, ps, plb. CHASSIS MOUNT &ft 6. .I • .... • I"" ,.Handt Stat10n, "New x'-'"• ~.x . stereo receiver 4 Quad Sf6.-0989 * 12' FIBER G LA sho"·er, elet.1. toilet . Air llqJST 1eU, no VAn on the Air Mall Md 5c1eCla:ro ~ 10011. Print Nune. A.,...., speakeJI, 8 track tape deck. ** COW~ AKC * * FISHING BOAT, ~ A10NOJA 10 sp. cond, furnace &: extras. Xlnt why, i6'9 ~'ord, ElOO, 31)11 ~~-~ ~ ':f E ';:9geL ~· -!:12! turntable I: head.Phone pl\J&' ' Clwnpioo Bloodlines $125 * 6!:u ~~· cond. lo ml, Priced to sell V.fl Automatic Poll·cr St~r· cngilll.', auto 1rans.. super weekt or Tt'IOft l ~ 10 CrocheJ knit, etc. Free-in jacks. Just releued from ** 49J...(B)7 * J7' INBOARD Runabout, now at $7900. 1624 Antigua inl, Air Condliioning, Stf't'!O van gd. cond. $1795. M0-3566 Mattan Muttn, 'the DAILY-direct1oM, 50c. "~· Now $Ul.40. PEKINGESE puppies aood ~ff\sh. $800 846-nl4 e HONDA :SOS, $195 • "'ay,· Dover Shores, N.B. and Tnpc Deck. Buc~ct E-300 Super Van, '72,. 800l Pn..or 441 ·Pattern Dept., hsbl•t Macratpe .911iol. 893-0001. al-.<iw stock. \ or 64-J-2929 Good cond., 5.51·5001 00-9980. ~t«, Fully !kif Contalnt-d, rlii, p/s, 1, /b, panf!'led, -m vint lllh St..' New Basic, fancy knott. pat. SI'Efl,EOS. 197'.l GARRARD ~1128 SCHOCK Sl\bol. No. 49U rac-1970 HONDA TRAIL _ it' PACE Arnn\•, 1 )'r, old. Lool."8 and run.s like new, crpte<I, "'/xU-• tea t . Y~,,_ N·!:.-~ ~tflnt tt:nas. Sl.00. '" ' itode1, auto turn tab I e, GR.EAT Dane puppies. Afale 1ng rig. Xlnt,.oondltlon. s:m. $ZiO * &l).Zl30 l.1,000 1nlles. :dnt oond., root' sleeps 4 CN?tfSIU!t). 968-9'515. , 1'~ a..,.,_,_. w• lcnitaat Crocltef" '900k .. AM/FM/MPX recelwr, 3 a: female. Brindle. Call 673--0IDI air, (Cllt'rntor, 7 cu ft. $3295 'S9 CllEV\' 11. ton. 12·· new ·lMmS-•R.ti& and l'l'YLf} b I ' p l alr I• """.....,. S II 909 BSA ~ St-rcct !like reh1,g., ccwe:tte pl~r. col· I l . --· -·-Lenrn v pet~. a· 'l&Y 1 u a Pen• n "".""2r"' Boits, 1 Xlnt cond., $"50. or TV sleeps 6 Siliro. bed .. o 11 y litt1-0ni .-__. .... terns. $1.0o. spellkert-Jui1t r e l ca11ed IRISH Setttt pups AKC 76 * j36..58.j4 • "'"'L.1896, , EXPLORER 64x1r.\1 .. ~nct. l\e!lt offer. SEE MOR.£ Q u t c k 'Qom~ 1..tant Qttt ~ from warehouse, 11WI boxed SI ' • 1"1"AlL'ORT Sal!Hllh, l'le\V ~~='~'-"~o;=:::: --..... .-.a -1..a...... --~ -oh< tha 100 ...i,... • Ml t•-1 •u• 90 Chrunp. ped. '°ta WOlTned. I doll 1'0 ' "n YA'IAHA 'linl Enduru 19~ DI ·• S =1 I J"aan"" ........ c -nlOre n 6 .... -.. l{Ullf~ .J;J. "' ,....,.,, ~tust Mlll 968-291.1'. cron snl, y. ....,;.,. ~· •• 1,J .sc:o\'crel 11.'"' u ..... 11 'G.) Cl\tC , 1 ion PU. 50,(Q) =~n fNe: from obr $1.00. ·Now $192.75. Term 1. ' bffi..-4452 · light, nwv1ng must sell l\lotor 1-lomes or rent. nt&kti · R ~ ~ .summer CaWor. All 6"'iplftf(I "'tcfaul ... ... 893-0:501. 4 LARGE clog crate• HOBIE Cal 14, all nu equip~ $150/0J' bst off. 644-8148. retr.1·va.Uon11 fol' Summer OF I m12-t un~ •""!'-'• ,, ....... ~IJ Onb' *' y( fl.00. · \QUAD •tereo cmpH.• oom-$10. ~ach. w/lrBller rendy to sail LADIES bike;-~. now, Phone 1-11ss Bennet at - INSTAN't', SEWING 900 tt tlltty R• ~ • GOt:. ...........,. set AMIJ'l\f tuner ~ 64&-0768 • w/b8skct, Ir baby scat, $.'W. Bob Lo118Pl'l' l',o n ! I a c • ~ f '69 1'.."0.RD V8, Y.000 Super ..... lotlay, -tomotrow, Boot .. JJ PriOe.-~·r..i olu.d 8 lrk'cuoel· GOLDEN Retrieven, 6 wks, * HOmE CAT 16' 675..1518. 892·665l or 6:!<>2500. -Hu ntl n gton . Van Cnmsf'°5-.32~/u tndo. IL FAStflON ~llt~t "11 -"teml ftfai>cdt'ckwP.E.changtr, ~ AKC, ~. $15Q. wttbtraller 1970 HONDA st. 90, Nccd11 RENT our new l.uxury _ Hundreds 0 r "(II .... ...,.. , " Nvtrb 4 IPkn. value over 67J...TUI xlnt conc:J. fl.800. ~7 Y.l:irk. Movlna:, must !ill?ll, Ll1''ETIJ\1E! •lp11 6, alr, Im-8 . h' "\Vhite Elc-pllant•" CYf!r· l1u1t1. p, , Tj; ...... QOIM ·-I , 11.500, ,.11 lor $lllO IMJ3..1%18 ' Hor-• <' IM KITE No. IMll. Cd "'90I, $90, IH7-1193. n:ac. ~vi. owner. S:JS.-0900 eac , ;;.:~~~~ .. ~~:.':II Al\Y 11 the B!!ST DAY IO 50c. ZENmt AMn1rl stereo ~ wlf1M salt. nu COW'J', le •n 350 I-lONOA. 'Ollt cond z; EXEC'lm\'E mo t or 1 m.d1 Blvd ~ \Mm awui a DaUt .. t run en edt Don't dlla)r. . • QutttJ 1.r Tul'llily'lf U•tttl' -conl01e walnut, ,.!.Yfl· old, R E Gr ST ER.eD. ' ' dolly. '850. 813-9385. $4(1. att e ho ... n:c .!2r ... ~01. F'ully 11elf 188011u""NT1", GTQ", ·.BF.ACn c1nl!tned Id! i .iiiit today 91H1tt.• t 1 15 bt•uttful pattetns. 50c. ~:.,~· •:ia· C a I I pldlng .~~~ ~ CLASSinED ,. . • . • 6fl.00i8--~!114-5lll~~~or!.,!D!;:!41!!:•!.._.:. ~:!!!·::.!~~,~·~~-----1.~~!.!!:"~~"C!!!:!'.:::::..-•~==..;='----- I • • • I f, j, -' • t ,, !' ' ' . - -· . . .. , I ' I • • • • • . • I I 42 DAILY PILOT ~ ~·Friday, June 22, 1~73 I ..... "'~~ llM·I At.itos for Sale 1§: I -. ..... J~ I '"'""'.. .11 .. 11 -..... l§l I l§l 1.:.[ _ ..... _ ...... ~,§]~~, 962 ITruckt. i --,7-3 -CH-EV-~-171t1 962 Truck• 1--------962 Tr"ucks Tr"uck1 963 Autos, Imported . A• I ·12 DODGE v ... erui.. .1r nn versary convtnlo11, lo ml I ea g e. SALE . ~~~· "'"" l.\900 IEST AT THE IEACH 910 Autos, Imported IMW LEAS E A 1973 BAVARIA '70 EL Ci\J.\tlNO Su~r Sport . Clean I.: c~terul n!llC'u~e. auw. J'., pldl5" b111k6'"· At.t·•· , \\'/rt.IV.'. t I n I glau, (act. all'. Fur hn• medhdc AA.le. $ml. ""' pl) o(c. 213: !l2f>-4407 or hon1r SHORTIE DEMO ,69 Ford ,12 Ton Auto Loosl"t 964 ~ .. ';'.'"m . ..:. ~~~: '72 CHEVY $4795 Je<:tlon, S.-Olj)ffi!, D 1 sc GOOD 970 Autos, lmporled 970 Autos, lmportoct 970 DATSUN . $SALE$ DATSUNS NEW DEMOS 1973 510'.s Pickup MERCEDES IENZ 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY Sharp New Car PICKUP SAV>; $1500 j' '"" I'S, '""""" "'1'· Now • LEASE e B;akos. OOHC, 690 HFR, SELECTION OF • p;11r1t. J{eudy fo r a tri p. , . $26fl>, BEAOl IMPORTS. '69 CllEYY % ·rt1n r 1 .. c li<:'<I G (·yhnd,·r l'nginl!, auton1<1tlt ()f.f ~.~'W ,p~~ r~7~z:c.;1, 73 Po"'lac Grouville Sedan 1200 \V, CJit, Hwy, Newport, USED 8MW'a 'S!!lkt', Very Low ~1ilcnge, 11·1u1smission, ra1llo, po11't.'r Cusion1 \ H~li. R~u.llv, ONL Y , JO ~10, ltl SLl5. per ino. 714/64>6406. 1912 2002 714: S.1&8256. 610'& AU Models & ColOMi to Choose r~rom. · Trade-ins Coming In Every D1y Ask About Our Unique Used MorcodH L11~ near pf'.rfe<:t L'Ondlr1o.n thru· lllN'lins: IJO"'l't' brukes S1"1nlsh Gold. Air con1ht lv11· $]777 00 71 L1nc..'lln Contlnenlal Sedan. 1973 BAVARIA out, l46Z!i1Tl. 1\IUST SELL t955GiLJ·. ·' lng, .l~OV.'l'r Stet•ring, SPEC· • ,24 lllO: at2$t39. per mo. PINTO •72 S Q UIRE l9'12 BAVARIA ~tAl<E\ OrFER. dlr. -$]Sl9 IAJ~ I Hll\1, Auto Ttn.ns, V-8, f\ l • 70 Tormo dr. b.t. 24 mo. at WAGON, Factory Air, Auto. 1971 BAVARIA 842-0066. '.{fiil, Cnn1p Hack, Ice Box, -toJl fJD14 $69. per 1110. Trana., Roof-Rack, Radio, 1969 2500 '63 FORD Van. rw.ooo mi, GUSTAFSON ~?1~rx~1~~~· ~~~~~kca-s TOYOTA l~c al~~vc u.JJ have pov.·er 781 F\VX, $2695, BEACH 1969 1600 , ~:ne~~1G!)()(? ~~1~·1s;,,i~11~ Lincoln-Mercury BILL BARRY \ South Coast Car Leasing k~~:S· ~e~vp~~:1: CREVIER BMW ::\1·111p11rt D~tt<.1111 ' ' w '1 ... , ''• • ''' >I••' ' ' ' • • j <el •• Pl1ns House of lmpo 68G2 ~anctJ.esl~r. Buena Pai\k vn the Sant~ Ana Frwy 1 523-1250 . tin's. Needs ,t::OO'I horne. 16800 ~ach at \VarnC'r ~ ' l l96li Harbor, C.'.\f. &1ti-93Q3 G~~.l~.af!er 5 pm~ "'knds~ 714J&l5-640i. Sale11 . Service. Leasing '72 DATSUN $400. or best offer. 5-16-2·~W Hunnng1on Bra1:h GMC M t h C I V 963 JACUAR ·= XKE. Air Con-~ \V. 1st St., Santa Ana PICKUP '73 RANCHEHO--842..aaM * (213)..&92-5544 o r ome en_ er ans Autos Wanted 968 •u -IJS..3171 Fully tact. equipped, ~1. RENZ 'li6, 230 S, bronze, E ''H f h V 'k " ,, <l .~t St. at S.A. }~,...vy.) diUonlng, AM·Fl\1 S W -""--=£"""---aulo, "°"-•ero1 pert in ~ out, state l\1us1 S('ll. AIC. ome o t e I 1n9 200o E. 1~1 Si., Santa Ana '72 CHEVY 31. TON TOP Rad~. 406BNN, $ 3 9 9·5, CAPRI 4 speed trans., rear $"""'" O?-bt-st 'of(el'. $36-6662. am/tm 5lerl'Q, pl~. n1ag ll C.._..,.., 5.'"JS-1000 74 BEACH U.1PORTS, ·iaKI \V, ----....:.-"'---bun1pcr, \VSW tires, u.JU \\'his. r-.1ichelin I ires. . .nc.~Y ~ Ton custom • onl 19000 li e~ MG 6~ I ~~~r;:.~: g=Sl"-'ays 8' ·~ck~URJ?l-~AKER ~J ton BEAUYIUESNRTYAN DOLLAR ii~ti~ Newport, (~EBG). m ', -------'--1 Classified Ad~ ·• .... &12-SCi,.~ Nt•cri ii "Pnd"? Pia\'<' an ad! * 557-4158 * PAID $2199 '6J MG Midget A-ut -1 "' ft7o-~ .. . IMMEDIAIE SCOUT &fyl. Pick·Up. ·12. m .... , os, mpo· eel T '""uto s;-lmpor ted-970-A-utos, Import.a 970 350 V .-Automatic, Pll\'lel'. . LJ:_JJa_QiQ~ Tl_r_u_.l ____ .ll..lL----1-lr.~JIBll.l'lal:~r ~-Red w:ilh bJa£k_t~ If;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ s1eerin~. factory air, 125" FOR A _, 774GXC, S2495~CH IM-NOW OWN THE Cost~ ~tcsn GAS SAYED . II .. "''ht>el base. C'LEJ\J'I AS A LL PORTS, 1200 \V. est. J-[y.•y., At Fair Drive ·~ PIN. t216ELG>. FOREIGN Nowport, 714/64;.MOO. FAB~~~~~ 1973 >1&8017 LAGUNA IMPORTS , B·ARWICK DAIS.UN $3395 CARS EXPLORER DES~:R~~~ ~EED OF GOOD; CLEAN ·of FOREIGN CARS TOP DOLLAR-PAID H t• t FOR OR NOT! un Ing on Call o' come in to '""' us. Beac-h NEWPORT . ~1GB '67 ROADSTER. \\'Ire With 2.000 4 cylinder or V-6 \\'heels, Chrom(! R a c·k----; engine, w!Ui or without ZYD732, $1195, BEACH IM· decor eroup, some with sun PORTS. 1200 W. Cst. Hwy., root or J andall_jop, ~~r Newport;-· 714/645-MQ6. disc brakes, style steel VW '67 BEETLE, Bronze, Radio, \'XY062, $ 6 9 5 , BEAClf 11\WORTS, 1200 \V, Cst. Hwy., New port, wh eel, radial tires, bucket seats. ORDER YOURS NOW. GUSTAFSON 11•-· ~Lincoln-Mercury · '65~Datsun Pickup · with camper shell !furry for 111is one. $995 998 5 COAS T : IWY Laguna Beach Ct:i 49 1 1075 MGI '69 MGI 2 to choo1e from 1 red -I blue, both wtl h wil'e wheels 1u1d \•e1y clQ4n. Ac- tuaUY )00 can't fcU these fron1 new. IMPORTS HAS 18801 BMch Blvd. 842-8803 3100 \V. Oles! Hwy., N.B. 1 IUNTINGTON BEACH 642·9405 CHRYSLER '72 HT COUPE, 16800 Beach at Wa rner Newport CUston1, Factory Huntington Beach Air, p .. ~, \Vind"'"· Lan-142-8144 * (2131592-5544 dau Roof, Cruise Control, ''Home of the Viking" All Vinyl, Landau Roof, 1-"'-=,..c..~:..::.,,..:..::="-- \l'mp11rt D.1b11n ' "'. ' • '•.. 'l •• '' \. LAGUNA IMPORTS 998 5 COAS T HVIY Laguna Beacti ca 4<.1 1075 GAS SAVERS '73 Contempo Sportsman CHEV 1 TON VAN TOP CASH for dean late mOdel cars and ,trucks! Howard Chevrolet D;.c Brakos. 422 HSV SZll!5. CRICKET BEACH IMPORTS, 1200 \V. ---------~~.' Newp•"· '"GAS SAVER" ·n 240Z. 1 O\\'ne.r, new radials, n1ags, a 1n I f n1 stereo ta~. auto, air, . lo OPEL mileage \3(60. 642-33921 --------- 675-300S. '68 OPEL \VAGON, Exl-~1 '73 2·10 Z, AJC, n1ags, condition. Lei\\' 1nilcs. $650. A~l/Fi\I, Jin1e-gree11 .. 19,00J 49&-(lllS. VEGA Hatch back . (896Cll) $5995 350 V-8 1\1&.!1\rthur and Jamboree Newport Beach &13-0065 PO\\'er Steering, Power \VE P AY TOP OOLLAR Brakes, Radio, lfeater, Auto FOR TOP USED CArui Trans, • Tu·crtone Spanish If your car is extra cleaq. Gold, Trim Chocolate BroY.'11. see us Unrt. Sl__ceps 6, flaul 2 Bike3, Ice BAUER BtnCK &ix, Stove, Pft>ssure \Valer, 2925 Harbor Blvd. i\Iag \Vheels 8 Stud, \Yide Costa Mesa 979-2500 BaS<' 875 by .165, 1'ircs, Se r JJ\1PORTS W M 'TED #11TI92-l614. ornnge County's BILL BARRY Bd~f,J:,Yi,';~OTA OODGE '68 CHARGER 2 OR-HT Factory Air, Radio, Lo ~rues. WW A188, $1395. . '71 Cricket 4 Door BEACH IMPORTS, lax> \\'. . Cst. Hwy., New p ort , Radial, tires, radio, loo• 714/645-6406. 1nilcs. I $1399,00 CADILLAC '68 CPE. DeV .. Auto Clin1ate Control, Eull ....S .E. COAST HIGHWAY Pov.·er, Land au Top. Stereo tn artl/IM Drlw) Radio. XSS187. $ 199 5, 0 NEWPORT BEACH ~ BEACH Il\1PRTS, lDI \V, l... e st. llY.y., New po r I ~ 673-0900 o n1i. $41395. ~2774. -"''-"=------ FIAT '69 Fiat Spider Rqadster ornngt, (;;:\r1JATl3) BILL MAXEY TOY OJA llt~l BEACH BL. 847-8355 ·HUNTINGTON BEACl-1 '65 Ponche 356C ! rich brown wi th black in·J terior, chrome. wheels. musl !!("(! to appreciate. . I LAGUNA IMPORTS 998 S COAST HWY l•guna e~acn Ca 494 10f~ '71 ~o~!r~~u~, ra· $1s95 dio. (L69DZK) GMC M h C · 18881 Beach Blv.:. otor ome enter H. Beach Ph. 847-8555 (lst St. at S.A. Fnvy.l 2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana 558-HOO '72 DODGE SURFER YAN \VE HUY lM PORTED AUTOS BEST PRICES PAIDI Dean Lewis Imports 1966 Harbo1·, C.M. &16-9303 C:=~ H'.1'. COUPE. '·~t F actory Air, Vinyl Interior, Radio, 6980LZ. $ 2 2 9 5 , · BEACH Il>.IPORTS, UOO \\'. Cst. Hwy., Ne v.'po rt, Q0 714/645-6400. VEGA 'Tl GT WAGON. Fac- JAGUAR JAGUAR '68 PORSCHE 9l1, new1 K6nies, ncy,• scmperlts, newi paint, lo mHes, am/Im.I s ter e o tap e, p e r f . throughoUI, 673-7848 NEW d USED '60 ?i68, rwis very good. N~· an ~1icheiins, good int. No rust. XJ Nl'l'(I& paint, ~1500. Take tory Air, Alloy ·Wheels, i:A.ou;;t;:o:s,;-;;lm;:pos;rt~od;;.-;~9;;7:.;0;i Radio, 822DPB, $ 2 5 9 5 , I BEAOLD-IEORTS, _llXl_\V. ... V-S, AutomahC,"lo\vmtteage, .--TFfErTJt£"ST JN · c s1. Hwy, Newpo rt , one ow11e1·. ~ted and -USED IMPORTS e 714/645-6400. paneled. runs like IJew (212-DATSUN 2+2 older pic-kup or \'M a.a P.!!r:! __ -CONVcR!flBloES -..,,.)'l!lffil:-496'.02S5. READY TO ROLL 1004 P ORSC H E. rod w/brouJ.":hRm, nu l I r e s , 644-1621 or 644-0927. -'69 -,.~M. _. ,..H~ FINEST [N __ MUS'l'AN '67~G~A.-Au1ot-=::'.======I $3295 IMPORT SERVICE e """"" Radio, P. Strng., '69 DATSUN 510 coupe. 4 speed, raIDo, heater, low miles, vinyl in!erior. EconOrd'y wonder. CZUC890> Do yoorsel~ a favor and come New Tires, TRJ270, $1395, see us fU'St. Open Tues. BEACH IMPORTS, 12((1 W. ~lit.a q111.• llhit111 '• ':J'll] I ,..... • ~ •• , '59 PORSOIE, coUector 'S - bargain. Offers. 6TJ-392.J P~mouth El Camino rxPLORER 8;11d Thurs. ti! 9, Sat-~ Cst. Hwy .. New p o r t , ~&---· -. til 5. 714/645-6406. '72 XJ6 Sedan. l\·laroon. 962·2577 Burke Jaguar. 4 Door 25,000 ml l ea, $7.000. Ca 11 '68 PORSCHE ru, orig owher, Xlnt cond . Sepia Brown, 641N777 S l 9 n • t. Auto., P.S., tYW61•71 V-1, P.S., oir, 1toreo. IY OV057 J v.1, P.S., •ir. 155440- AI OF . . . ilii\tdl Jh11p1111 ~·, or 64+1860, Mr. $1199 MAZDA '67 • !)12, map, new Koni shocks. Oien')', no · 1n1og dcvlC<' n.'({'J. 495-0978. $1995 • BARWICK IMPORTS INC. 33375 Camino Capistrano, San Juan Capistrano CAU 493-3375 OR 831 -1375 N-& Uffd COJ Sein • Leasing • Dall' l et1tal1 • Senlc:e • Ports SALIS HOURS • Sll YICI HOURS Huntington ~;F::,:;· Beach +• .. " ... :~_'.'!'" '" _. j : •• '72 \VINDO\V Econoline, long AUDI hody, 6 cyl, con1pl. in- 1 ________ _ sulated. New tires, Excel. 1972 AUDI 100, 0 cond. Ork green, 494-5480, · . ~. ~uto, !tU-7523 am/fm stereo, B.lf, nu tires, · xlnt cond. r-.1ust sell imn1ed. '69 1'"0RD VS, E300 Super $3695. S.16--0T:H day s , \'an Camper. P/U trade. S31-28i5 C\'es. 545-3215 Z-180 1-llrbor Blvd. · Costa l\1esa At Fair Drive 5'~17 '71 Datsun 510 Station Wagon AIR CONDITIONING <851DLFl PRICED TO SELL :Xr111p11rt D.11"1111 * M•zd• •73 Rotary* __ T_O~Y_O_T_A __ 1 $66 MONTH ~ 36 MONTI1s-o?EN LEASE '69 , Toyota Cpe Will accept trade-Ins · Extra Sharp lt~.rt~ 'iye~;h S995 :Xn11p11rl D.1hmt MAZDA 17331 Beach Bl. MERCEDES BENZ .. . '" .. GAS SAVER '70 COROLLA Y.'agoo. Doublt• sharp, lov.· mllt>:ige, 4 speed. Baby Blue JIM SLEMONS llnW>. guarantred. COS.161. IMPORTS $1444 MERCEDES IENZ SANTA ANA TOY'o-rA AUTHORIZED ·117 \V. \Varrlf•r 540-2512 SALES &: SERVICE , Jim Slemons 68 Toyota Cpe MM .• Sat. 9 •·'"· fo 9 P·'"· 511ftdoy1 t o.m. to ' p.m . Mon. ·Fri. 7:JO 11.m. to S p.m, S11furda, 7:30 fo Noon I rts Sharp fY."OZOOl ) i:i:ail $795 NeWport Beach 833-9300 :Xr111prn1 D.1 h n11 CALL 493-3375 or 831·1375 '66 Y.W. Bug ' 11>ftd, rodlo. neater, vinyl lnlerlor, ASM•11 '68 OPEL Wagon .o 1peed. radio. l!Hter. Elftfl· lent (onllltlon. Llce..t1 XOMt.Q '68 V.W. Fastback 1Srl11ht v~llow, ~ U>d .. radio. " lle~ner. ( W\IW:MM f '69 OPEL Rally• .o Speed, air ui.l'ldlllonl"'lt. LI· Cl~I No ZADt2). '67 '65 '69 V.W. Bug •lldlo. heeier, vin~I Interior. .. 1n1.c:ondltl011, ( UZU6'51 '68 DATSUN Wqgoo $1195 ' speed, r.tdl!IJ .,-.,,.,., 11lnt condlllon. (lcerife \IHA'.666. Mercedes 2205 $14 9 5 Cl<tt•lc: 8Nutv. e11t1Pllon1I ~Ulan, ' lfld, Air cond. '68 v.w. ••v ltedio, hN!er. ~1nv1 llllfflOf l'l'RLIS2! '72 JEEP Pickup $2995 ' whtel drlYI llkl n9W. l it-• No. 221S2K LARGE. SELECTION BUSES, CAMPERS FASTIAC:K & SCj)UAREBACK AND MANY OTHER FINE CARS; All Salt Prl<t• °""' T~rll 6-1 .. 7J ti f fl,M. • HARBOUR VW '· '71 240Z. blue. auto, mag "'heels, excellent condiUon. 557-~3. ENTER FROM l'itacARTHUR '! •<~>w 1' .. ""'-"'' ·~ . . ' ~ ·= •5 JUST ARRIVED FROM ITALY '69 DATSUN 510 Wagon new ~ brakes & tires, 645o-8960 ;:'! anytime. :x '70 Datsun 240Z '73 Mercedes '280 Sedan Becker Europa. Radial Tires, Air Conditioning, C079HPN). $8299 CREVIER IMW '69 CditoNA, 4-dr., xlnt. - conl'lilion, new Urea, R & H. l\lu~t sell! 846-4112 '69 TOYOTA HILUX PICKUP tZVE522) $1499 ~ A1r Conditioning, Ma.gs, O SPECIAL .c SOLD ONLY IN THE CllATI . ::: • ~-Easy To Ass embl• • Soper Ll91tfw•l9 .. lC THIS WEEKEND Sales . Sen-ice -Leuing 21)1 \V. 1st St., Santa Ana ~llt.irq111!; 111 111111~. 13$-3171 !OrOll I llQl'.J .l,1 I lr.• .. . = ; 10 SPEED BICYCLE :'ir111p11rt D.1h1111 : ·. . ' ' . · . • i;; • II~ ... • !l! .0 .~ . "' ALL COLORS • ALL SIZES ~ Need a "Pad"7 Place an ad! 1970 MERCEDES Benz 280 SE, air, auto, leather, ~teJ't.'Q, P/W, PJS, Stock Broker, must sell. ?¥take oUcr . 6is:775t - 4 DCX>R Toyota Corona '69 !\lake Offer. 492-2588 .~ • i;; • :E . ,. ·= l••utlfully ,.1nt9'I & striped with chr•m• fork• ONLY :x i ~ • :ic R19ular • oc $140.00 .. V... !!! .~ • 0 • ; • CampAnolA DeraUP1' • Aluminum Chain Protec--~ • I; ton • AJumJtium C11nter Pull Brake e Aluminum ; • Gear Protec tor • AlunHnum Kick Stand • Safety ; • :E Reflector Side &: RIW' e Aluminum l landle Ban • > e High Grade Cum 11rca e AJumJnum Wide Flange 3 !! flubs • Quick Rel('ue Hubs • Factory-\Vrapped • !:f Ii P lugged Handle Bars. •o .c .~ =~ NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Calltst Hwy .. Newport~· STAR GAZEKi<~ j'.:2'!'.!ce!.l..,:..:--"By CL\ l~ R. VO Lt.A Nl---~--'--l All IS Ll l lA ~ "'"'~.-.zr M Your Ooi/y .Adfrily Guide M Sl''· 21~ ~ '!'V"' .At(ording lo lh• Slors. Y • :.;; '' ' TO develop message for Frjdoy, ocr. 21 • a:n.n mod worOs corresponding 10 runbers 6~ of your Zodioc birth sign. 1 You'NI 31 Gooct..-iU 61 a. 2Yw 320f 6l S. 3A 33Up 6lMd 4 F~lol 34 s..1c 64 Thrlhy s 8ulld 35 Speciol 65 Ho•d 6TlPnf 36 '-"'. d6n. 7 tnteffth 37 "'"'"'ion 67 P..o.idlt!t I To 38 S.-61Thlnos 9Con J9Y_. '9'Whkh lOR.,. '40To 70Thol' ' 11 P~ Al Nd 71 Wori!1 12Uu. "l To 7:l:PYoj«t 1 J The "3 p..... 13 Ac.nM IA Yow AA Pvt 74 Atlloo'I IS Bot A5 lnllulnriai 7'5 t.-11 16 AH "68etltf" 7,You 17Toctlul A7 New '770f ll ~h AaMok• 71Y1;11/rt 19 fl1td "' RttPKt 19 SucctnU 20Plldl !00. 110P ... 21 In 51 s.tuctf II S..W.. 22 "-52 Thinl.int 82 Chunon 2J Witll . 5J PttlUll 8J Rldlly 24 Tolen"' 5.4 C11Ukf< a.t ~ 25 J~ SS Gene!'OYt 85 CClf'I 26 S..U<11... 56 Th. 86 Afford 27 UnflOllJtk 51 Buv 87Thtlr 21 Gal., 518on~IOH II F..t• 2? Md 59 Orllv 19 Of ,,,., ff JO With 60W6rdl 90.Ac.Ntwmlnl 111M·.10 '°' @• 6\ 6112 • ~~Good. , A.dnnc ~Ncumt J. t.,. • 642·9405 18 71 1 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 842-4435 -~-_......__j -··-----------WAllHOUSI SAU WAllHOUSI SALi • • .. ' .. . • . ' . . ~ ~· ! f ' ' ' l I! J " ' .. . . ' " .. .. • . ; ' ' . . ' ' ' . • • . ' ' ' ' . ' ' . ' ' ' • ' . ' . •• ' ' p . I , • I I • F1Jd11.y, Junr 22 1~7) . DAILY PILOT 4 ;J . I l§l I .,.,, '" ,.,, J §J , [ rA . .;.:u;.;l•.;.:•::.•..;l.;.:m;,:l"':;::rf:..:.:od:..._;':.:.;i ... Auto1, Imported 970 Au"''· lmporlod 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, tmported 970 Autos, U...ct • TOYOTA '68 Toyota Land · Crusier ' TOYOTA --------TOYOTA '72 Toyota Celica _ BUYS ANY NEW '73 BUICK LeSabree-Centurion Electra 225 Or Riviera In Our Entire Inventory BUY NOW Good Selection Of Colors, MOclels ---And-Biily Styles BUIC.K·O~EL DISCOUNT CENTER S•I• Price1 Good Thru June 25, 1973 g: TERRY BUICK·~- . 536-6588 TOY OT.A 50 New Toyotas In Stack Beat Price Increases! J>uAleAOi& -TOYOTA 2'180 HnrbOr lvd. Cosla l\tcsa At Fair Dri\'C ·• 546-8017 Au to Trans. 100.1CQQJ $1999 TRIUMPH' VOLKSWAGEN _... .... __ -· '71 v.w. SQUARE BACK Station w a i: o 11 . '1 sp<"Cd trans., facl. air, · radio, heater, ~(..'t'P tionaHy cl~an, low, low mll""· •005CIX) $2099 '70 V\V Sq. Back. Bran<.! nev.· tires, air cond; ntn!i super, Beaut inside & out. 8.'U-1087 LOW MILEAGE CREAM PUFFS JIM SLEMONS IMPORTS or GT:r-8436 after 6 pn1. . 833-9300 BAJA Bug, 1300 cc en~. llC\\' 1301 Qua il Newport Bch clutch & brks, gd. tires & ' 1 bOO)'. .nds. paint. $525. tt.. Mc.Artt.11r & -Jomboree ·s.1 TRIUl-.1PH Spnrire gd. 968-8915. . . <.-oncl., 1nust set! to appr. '70 V\Y Sundial Cam1>er, 5550. 963-2162----sunroof, nu engine._gd. All1..., ............ ,,..;... ... ., TRIUlo.IPll TR4A··67. Steel around $2400. Call 846-7i!OOI ~ l>eltcd radials. ~s. roll or 4688 h1adrid Way, l·l.B._ CADILLAC h.1r. $1000/otfer. 67""::t-TII8. '71 V\Y Can1pe1, xlnt cond.,1 --------- VOLKSWAGEN '68 V\V Bus, engine com- pletely reblt, many extras $1795. M(H)196 \i\v 'G:; Bug, radials, 12?11 on IT'blt cng., $500. 962-2045 ,.~M-Casselte, musl sell in1-EL DORADOS n1ed! $23.50. Call Susan 714: 833=--1143 8 to 4, Mon-Fri.-14 TO CHOOSE 1969 VW s 11 u are ba c k , COUPES-CONVERTIBLES ain/fm, 1600, Best oHer. e >18-1651 anylim•. ask (,, DE VILLES M.ike '66 vw Fa.tback 1600. good 38 TO CHOOSE condition, brand new paint COUPES job, $375. lo.lust seU quickly. SEDANS 968-5632 CONVERTIBLES , .• . . l\fany excellen1 colors · 68 VW. f ac. ru.r, nu engine, Choice of interiors clutch, etc. 2004 Harbor, CM (Clolh & leather• 6-12-3:.VJ3 .~~actory air oondilipning '67 vw CAl\lPER pop-top, Full JXl'''er. Choice or: split se!K-lcnt·rack. Reblt Stereo AM /F'~J radio · -cng-&-trans;-&Mr-1419 Cru~-eonlrol ··--- '63 vw. Good shape. Recent Trunk opener & more reblt -. ~~shocks. uph., tires. All in lmmeculnle rondilkin GoOO ~-968-41ll Largest sclet•tion in '65 ·Squarcback, 58,CKXl 1ni., Oraug-c Counly •• cortac-!800. Nabers--eadillac--• 675-1518 • AJ.nllORJZED DEALER '67 V\Y Bus -Custom . 2600 Hi\R.BOR BL., Camper -tt's a good oce COSTA MESA and clean. 548-5459. M0-9100 Open Sunday '69 V\V Camper. new brakes, I 7th A • rebuilt ...... & carpet. nn1versary n.995• ~1838 . SALE " '64 VW Bug $450. . ·ere.~ . . We WJ!Il! to show you 1he bigger, stron ger, spunkier Hondaj:ivic. (? Absolutely all new. The new CivicM is sporti ng engi- neering pizzazz like 4-wheel independent suspension, anti-sway bar and rack-and -pinion steeri ng·. ltl'll"llf .... ---·· ·And although it can' get from Oto 60 in 13.0 seconds, it st ill runs on pocket cha nge. Gets up to 30 miles per gallon. Come in and test drive it yourself. We think you'll be pleasantly surprised . • \ ' . ~~ 646--0946; .,1. ' ,69 CAD. EL DORADO '66. Best offer ove.r $230. Nceds engine over ha u I · Fully t'quipj){'d, gorgeous ca1". 545--0lTI or 548-6200 (YOl..825).. • '66 VW. Xlnt cond. Must sell. ONL y I cau after 5 pm. 548-5755 $3277.00 '68 V\Y Bus. w/Saf a ri camper. radials, mag \\'his, radio, $1495. Call 830-3765 , '71 V\V Sq . .Bk-Beige, auto, 42,0CO mi., Radials. $1595. DmleAOi& -TOYOTA 833-9234. or 499-4091. IS6:i Harbor ._£!\t. __ 646-930:~1 '69 V\V.Bug, exl~t cond., im· SACRIFICE $3795 1 maculat~. eves 6-9 pn1. '71 Cad. Sedan deVilli;. fully 646-1415. equipt. Garage kepi. In1· 'li6 Sqbk, reblt eng., Needs maculate. Bou~ht boa1. it SOQle body work. S 5 4 5. \\'Oll't fil alxwrd! l\lr. 67~7282 days/673-2491 eves. Porter, Lido Shores H.otel, .67 vw Bug. Very clean. 617 Lido Pk. Dr. NB. · I Runs strong. 1'-lake offer. 1971 Eldorndo. 'The l>N:it ~26?.6. Cadillac colo1· combo eVcr. coco \\'/Ian landau lop, VOLVO 29.0llOnii. brnnd nu sll bcltcrl ---'------I tires, tilt 1vhl , a1n/fn1, a/c, TH INK p/w, only $5600. 5:15-9-119 days 8:30-6:00 &14.00.17. . '73 Cpe DeVil~ ECONOM·Y Call Aft 5, 557-9271 ·71 CADILLAC Conv. \Vhite WHILE WE HAYE 40 w/whd.~10~i. ~~TI'rio' NEW YOLYOS JN '68 ELDORADO, all po1vr, cruise conlrol. 5!l.OOO nti: $26j(I. 551-ZWS: 4!'12-3!!71. '68 CAD. Conv. 1Yhitc w/Rccf tJQCK leather in!crior. Ex c . ~ Cond. 979-1907 '70 €AD Convt, Ptrfcct cone!, - . Deu L..., ~5:a·r~~~ s 367j·1 YOLYO "iO C1\D. DcVille. l.oacfed, Xlnl cone!. """ oll<'•" E'"'· C ,1 "'"'303 6·16-683..1 1871-8~ days. t!l66 """"°'· "'. ~ CAMARO BUICK --------'67 CAi\1ARO, clean, low 17th A~niversary mi lcag:e, $1000 or best orrcr. &12-3273. SALE '68 CAMARO 327 vs. ""'·· . '70 Buick Est. 1:1.ir, lo"' nil.. clcnn • 536--2686 • .CHEVROLET WCHJon 9 Pass., Auto,. Fact. P.S., (701.ESF\, ONLY $2777.00 A.C., '72 CHEV\r, l\1ontc Ctirlo, like nC\Y deluxe. Beautiful, n1us1 sell. ~1437 ---"68 ~1ALtBU Spt. CflC, Auto. P/S. P /B. Air. Vinyl lop, Xlnl ooud. $13JJ. &12-39SO . '"'•· .. I .. __ ,., '66 er:L Air.r 111110, p/s, f111 .. av,,_YOLfANLYfl. ~~29~[· radio. new ua·cs . -'6' CllEVELLE. •pm·t, 2 <I< 1966 HMbur, C.1\1. 646-9303 auto., 6 cylinder, r/h, $400. *'62 BtnCK Special Sia or bsl oftr. 846-4014 Wag., good transportation '67 CllEVY. Station wag. gd. $200. 646--0132. transpo. $400. cash. '69 BUICK CS 400. Wife's * m-4884 * car. Beaut· cond. Lo vt '68 CJ:IEV Impala, alr-cond, milellgc Maire oUcr 644-2975, new Ures &. brakes $600 . . . 6Th-<l\90 CAD,LLAC l -,5~7 ~Cl~IEVY~.-4-d_r_, V-8-, Good~ eond lUon, $250. SACRJFTCE, 1968 CADILLAC, Call 842-9076 t.adt!di,;+.1722 ·11795· '63 CHEVY 11, R/H F'MI results are Jusl a phone ~-"'$21JO"'=. -•=671""-",.'-;.'c.77_~ call aw!l}' • &12.Sbi8. 'J{'C(l ll "Pad"!' Plnt.'tl 8n ftll ' I K •• ·71 ·1.1 • 70 ro~ !,~:,, .~;~v~ !.,}.I~''' ''"'' 1 beliewe. 1261C8UI CH Harbor Blvd. IAll!SA 546-1203 • • ' I / .. . . . . Friday, Junt 22, 1973 • 4 I DAil V PILOT DODGE 'it l Auto. far Sal. l§JI A11to•.for~I• ]§] i ........ w. l§l •• §JI I~ l§JI Autos, U1oe4 990 Autos, Used --"-----CONTINENTAL CONTINENTAL COUGAR Anniversary SALE 17th Anniversary SALE '68 DODGE CORONET Aut91, UMd 990 Jl0DG£. ' •"1 LfNCOLN Oinlln<'nHtl. I ull)' <'1111lpp;'r1. B" o 11 r . , ""'I ?>lu~l :;ell. &12-~15. l~~i. '64 WNCOLN <-onvertlble, Goud CtJnt.I. S4:::il or best offt'r. G tG-Ql.5. '69 COUGAR yellow v.•/blk. \'inyl 101• air rood. :.i1,1t1.1 '69 Dodge Polara · '69 Dodge Polara 2 door, V-8, automatic trans- n1ission, radio &. heater, power steering. vlnY1 top, air conditiontng. (rom6l. '67 MONJ\CO, 2 dr, rtts t buck, A/C, P/,V, PIS, P/B, F. 53,000 n1 i I es, vinyl roof, real nice. Pi-1ake otter. Call 646-3016 private CORVAIR TIME FOR H./H l'il'an :.:1&---110-t ' '68 COUGAR. Qrig1nHI O\\'IK'I'. Good l'Ond . fil:tkt• offt·r. i:;.t4-M7:l Cj)UICK CASH DODGE THROUGH A '&I Corviur $:GO r.1~t set• to apprt,:ia.te P\'1 Ply 673--0440 DAILY PILOT I CORVETTE '69 POLAl<°A !I ""'· "'""" ---------xlnt ro11cl,. lro\\ ini.. radial 1 1tr. l-1.T., i\.T., P.S., 'A.C .. H. & II . Vinyl !Op, yellow l'.-..:t. ''i941'~ERJ. ONLY $577.00 W~NT AD '7;! Vl::T. l\l1dnight blue, % lH'C"S, p· S, radio, .\ C, lug- \ 64 .5678 \\hilt• vinyl top, ltUlO, 26,000 ~age rtil-k, s1i-i0. S\2-Rl!"l'I. ,, .. 9 .. n·1 _ n11. Xlnt ('Orld. $ 5 2 0 Q . The "Yellow Pages" of \!)(iii llurbor, C .. \1. ·nr ""' l----"-------1 .;•ccl<>=:..==;·~----= classl!ic<l .... &12-5678. Seit idle iten1s . . tA~-5678 . ;t)t41t le.wi4 -TOYOTA 4 Dr· H.T. A.T .. A.C .. P.S., Rad. 1\trq. e-..:t mnlchi~ Int . (ZMi\t· $889 iJ(li'. .... ONLY GUSTAFSON FORD $777.00 Lincoln-Mercury ;o l • 16800 Beacll at \VanlCr 1973 GR.AtotD Torino \Vr1Ron, - lt1t.M illlnil iluntington Beach loru.lt>d, rack & gaus,res, 7700 WI' WllG 842-1844 e (213) 592.5544 mile" ~1995 .,7-7627 YQLYQ "Hom~ of the Viking" I• '71 >'ORD Chatemo Vun. 29,000 n11. ~1int condihon! ! 1900 1-l"arbor, C.t.1 . &16-930.1 Want ad results .. , 642-5678 Sll!OO/ofter. 675-3590 Autos, UtlKI 990 Auto1. Uie<i 990 FQRJ) PINTO '71 i'L''fO, Rurll!.boUt low '70 MAVERICK md••fl)?t'. auto, llrown, ~111ke 2 Duor M'dan. D..'<:>-uftcr. 9fi2-7859. non1k·a1 J?us !Sflvtng =°"'p'°L~Y°"'M7'0=-::U"T"'H""'-c110: .. s:IU11<Janl 11·a.ns .. 1 ________ _ R & Jl,,..\·11 1~ I htJ1. 1nust SE'\• & 1!11\'c !( appl'(.'Ciat"'. (736,\JJDi $1499 -N-m A--m--mA--mA-N~ m--m--1:~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;4;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~j .oo GAL,AXIE, comp!, fac- CL YDE_ JOHNSON ... PRE~DENT 50 Year~ of Aut o motive Management 20 Years in the Harbor Area 20th ANNIVERSAR /. SA During our anniversary celebration, we're going to put all of our new and used c:~ on sale for the first store-:wide sale of the year. Every Cih\in stock is mark. eel for sale and will be ready to drive home immediately. If you or any of your frienl!S are looking for' a new or used c:ar, this i!. your best chance to buy a "Gold· en Touch" new Linc:oln, Mercury or Capri, and completely recondition~ used ccir at sabstantial' discount:s. As you are probably aware, we don't throw sales events very o~en here at Johnson and Son. However, when we do, you'll find it's a good one. • tory equip. New upholstery, Lincoln .. Mercury -brakcll, shocks, th'l'll, n1of· \ flcrs, Low mileage! ST;itl. 16.'iOO J :, ·.1t·h :1 1 \Va~· 1<·r 586--{)005 llun1 iu~1ou .lk·;11· ·-·~-tl ·cg""t·rrlColmtry S<]u tll. M2-8844 * (2 1~) 5, ;5~ ~ag. Good Cf?ncl. RtH:k, P~~· !H or:n!_ o!._th~tng Air. R/I{. Oise brks. Sl·l.J.1.l •-ii.--oiii""""'"'"._liiiiiiiiiiiiol 64<).Sm ~)~. IV kn"'. '70 CUDA 714: 505--S.104. '. ·10 rono Galaxic 500. 111 Auto & air. Must sell. mileage. sell cheap. Nu $2150 557·1975 valves. brakes, good cond.l~""'--!!!!!!!!!'!!!!"""l"!!!!!\!I $1450. 54,.q...&l')2. TB.ANS1'~ER foiccs sale. 1972 '67 GALA.XIE 500, landau top V!diunt AIC. a~lo if·ans, 541\1 V·8 a uto trans rcblt 2 vu1yl top, r1nhal hr€.'S. Shull> \Vks' a~. $750. · · 645-0200 _1·~!l.o,:!-,cl;;31:;5,,. =~·-~"I Brucl' 'US PLYl\10UTH Fury Ill ·68 FORB Cala.xic 500 <1 <Ir l:Oupc, Gold, 1.JO.\\'Ct~ & al;. hrdtp, Air . p/s, d is t:. luwh s1•;it, $67:>. ::i-10-9GI, brakes, Ne\v tirf'S. $850. _!_(}-5 ~111·~·~~~~-~ 96~3560. 'W PLY~10U1'11 &n·acuda. '72 GRAND Torino s ooo ti cyl, gootl \\'ork car. $400. n\l's, an1/fn1 stereO, 1;/c, l::\•es. 536--039-t. • p/b, p/s. &st Con.;j in SC. 19i..? DUST!'.:H.. Xlnt L'Ond. $.l-100. 673-6915. AIC :.1J1cl all xtras. . 11 -~--------1 sz~;o * <192-7004 ·~INCOLN Save $1000 ·n 'Lincoln Continenral 4 dr, ai1•/cond. lcatl1C'I' St'ill'S. pow- er \\'indo\\'S/Sl'ats, <"l'Uisc conlrol. am/fn1 stereo. $3:l25. i\irns i\lolors 644-il:fl or 213·~·1400 '61 UNCX>LN runs xlnt, 1is PL\'. sp0rr· Fury, leu engine. !\lake (!(f(_•r for all or parts, !rl!l-2627. PONTIAC LEASE OR BUY '71 1hru '73 Pontlacs DAVE ROSS. PONTIAC nlakc offt•r. 24.'iO Jla rhor Blvd .. at Falr ll----'*'-'-67"3-5'-'"1"'17'-"'*---I Drive, Costa l\lesn 546-8017 MAVERICK 'G6 PONT. Lel\lans·Owned by i\irlin<' Pilol, kept same ----------! t'Ond. as plane. Air L'<>nd, FOR sale, 1971 Luxury tiu10, rad, cus1 paint·, new l\laverlck Gn1blX'r, 1\•/cx· 1in·s. buck sls. 61,500 mi's. trns. Pc11. cond. Bargain pr-rf fn/out. 9'¥-7586. because _of departure. Best 1i9 FlRLBIR.D, full P"''l', air, offer. 8-11~ 11u10, siJ01·1y l'X1ra.~. Xlol MERCURY '"'Int. Red• avail. $1850. Pvt ---------party, 8·12-4300c.·-----I ·71 COUJN't' Park 10 pas.':\ '6S PONT. Catnlina, conv., CAPRI ~~~v"~~'.~·z.,~ ex1\~~~s~ f~~l! ~~;~· bl~lb~'.l~~;i0.'t~~i;: • I ' DICK JOHNSON ... VICE PRESIDENT Ori9i.n,1tor of the "Golden Touch" Ded icat\!d fo Constant Improvements " s31a1 • • ''The Sexy Euruf.l('an'' Gas Savcr. RaWo, disc • brakl'S, radial tires. (6834) ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS Choose From OYER 150 New 1973 Lincoln & Mercurys USED CARS SPECIAL STATION WAGON JUST IN TIME FOR VACATION TRAVELS 1973 COLO NY PARK WAGON ='2066. ·Air conditionin9, roof reek, 1=1owar window~. etc. REGU LAR PRICE $6260 $ '71 '68 '72 '71 '70 '70 '71 '71 '69 '70 GALAXIE 500 2 DOOR HARDTOP v .. , 11110, tr1ns .. power 1l•rln1, IK!Ory •Ir CWMI., llftdau l'Mf, 191JCTYI. AU 1boi,rt our mon1ybadl 1u•r9nlH. CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE U,OOG mun, F.nory 11r, NU pow1r, Ot9Clen fOld wifll Ml<li: IHl!Mr lntwlor 1nd vinyl lop, A .,,,.,. nk• on1 •wn1r cir drivM1 onty 12.tOI mlln ,., ye,1r. Ul"TAl.$41. Alli •bolll 111..r money bKk g111rinltt, COUGAR · Power Hffrlng, 119wer btik1s, 11110. 1r1ns .. 1lr C'Oftdlllonln1, Yinyl tMI. U44CUOJ Atll •bout our man1y ba(k gu1r1nlff. MARK Ill 9Uf'9undY tlllish will! 1Nlcnl119 M•lll•r Jntwlor. til1ek vinyl lop, hlll ,._.,, t1etll'f}' 1lr '9fldfflonlllg. (WAOHJ A11t •llwl ovr ,,_.,. INdr: 9111r•nltt. CONTINENTAL 4 DR. MONT£GO Ml( 2 DR. Sold •ll Jon-. """"leff by John., 1lr eond .. 1ut1. tr1ns., ,._ •l"rlllf a br1tlh. AH •bout our money b•ek tU1r1nlt1. MONTE CARLO snow-room (CllKI. Exe1ll9ftl tnruout, Pow.r 1tMrl11t & br•kn, m1t1llle n11t t1n l1h w•bllgt y111y1 top. (ffll!!YD), Ail! 1boul •ur ~.,. ~<k 1u1r1ntff. BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR HARDTOP 111c1try 11r conan1011lng, lull pow1r 9'flll1ment. AM/FM r1111e, \ll"'' top, 107AOtU, Alli 1b9ut ovt moMy bit.II tdtllll•, GRAND PRIX V.,, ••to!Nltk lr•Mmlss.-rMlt , 11.,.1_.-. ..-. llMl'fftf, """' .,.._ !Kl. 1lr ctl!O., i.nGiU !'Ml, lSlllAYI, AM 1•1 Mr_. Nd& ............. ''Orang~ t:o101t~·1 Familll of Fine Cr.flt' . l '• Home Of The Nev.1 Car • , • ' Gold"" :Couch!' • ohnson & ·son ' LI NC.0 1 N - J626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MESA e 540- $2375 $1875 $3475 $2675 $5275 $3675 . $2375 $2975 $1475 $2675 / • Aleppo, NB. 644-18:..1 <l!r..?-.~ . l\1El'tCUHY ·;2 l\TarlJUlf-1, '66 .J,E '-1 .. \°NS. r/h, vinyl Brougha111, 2 door, gold, air, lop, net~ls !W\V h cad i<11i all _extras. S J 7 5 O, fil!"'k"lsL t'k·a11. as is $250. 6i~i4 &14-"0J.'I SHO\VROO~t clt·an '6 9 'ill CATAl·7•7I''°'·7A-. °"2"'<1-t.7H°"T", -:400::I Mun1cgo 1.tx Wagon. Sl300 V--t1.-psl1•h. air cond. clec or 111ake 9ffer. fl62-0.1;""<1. \v\nll. Al\l/F~I $ l 8 0 0 . --962-J:fl.I MUSTANG '61 PO'TIAC Gcam Prix. 11;;;;;;;;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;.1 Nu brake~. goo:! tire!!, 1 '70 ' MUSTANG 0 """· 1325· SJ<H'9l 'bi PONTl1\C J_,('mans, full Must 5ell-$T795 po\\'er ,air, Xlnt cond. l\-1mt 557-1975 SI.Ill. $875. 557-{}..l{f.j_ ll•""'""'"""'""''""""'"-""'-"'-""'-11005 PONTIAC 2-+ 2, l\lovina '69 1.tuST1\."NG;'1169:i 'lo rust "ell. Best o·f f e r • fully cquip'fl, 011e 01\"nPr. !lG2-59;12. Super c_'()nt\. La gu na .. 1.s--;-r,.,·c1P-,--~=-",.~,-~-.-, 497-1260 ,, r:... ...-. ....... ~·· • '67 FORD ?tlustan~. air. auto, \1 ..... ~. n<'W lirt.'S. Xl n'I cond. $1050. 673-1574. bclo1v Blue Book. 5-IS-79-l:i RAMiiLER '67 l\1USTANG, 289 V-8, Xlnl ,63 RAMBLER cond. $900- Call aft 5:30 pm, 5-1S-2:C'li i.;d. i·onrl., $'250. 5'15-1 '69 A1USTANG. Red 11.•/1\•hite T BIRD j vinyl Jop, p/s, p/\J, radlalf.l, 1-----·----- V8. Xlnt cond. GTJ-836__.:!__ 't;R T-BI HD, xlnl rond, Jo mi '67 l\IUSTANG Fastb.'l.Ck 390, 11s. ph, fact air, tilt wheeJ,1 4 spd, best offl'r. Call blk tcnlhcr int. ?t1ust 1el~ 5.1l-69SJ. SltiOO. 4!M)...5600. I '66 l\IUSTANG, VS, cl1:an, 'tH T·BIHD, V·S. auto, p/s, Xln_L transportation. Only ri/b, ·air, good trnnspm1a• $395. 6#-6449 lion, needs sonw \\'Ork. Oill OLDSMOBILE '11 5 pm & wknd•. 5.1&-lll68. '71 OLDS 'TORONADO OLDS Delta Custom Royal 88. Full power. lee.tiler inter. AM I 1'~ ~1 stereo, lo ml. Private Party. $1950. 644-2024. 1972 OLDS C'utlasa: Supreme 2 dr I-IT. Legg thnn 12,000 ml. Full price $3500. -·' PINTO WE BUY PINTOS 557-1975 I * * '63 TH UNpERBIRD, good transportation, $150.. 673-$79 eves. VEGA WE BUY VEGAS I, • j • .. ....... _ _, .. . _ _, . Th e Bigg es t Marketplo ce on the Oronge Coost • . DAILY PILOT - ··- CLASS,,IFIED ADS DAIL Y, Plt..OT Diel 642 .5678 for Fast Results ( 1 .-..tos for Sile 1 §1[~ _ ..... _,., .... _!§]I ..... ,., .. 11..-.11._ _ ..... _ ..... _!§] .__I ___ .. -~1§1 1 L-_ ..... _,., .. _l§JIL-._ .... ,.,_ .... __,!§)'--I _ ..... _,., ... _. ~~·-·_"_'_'"_"'_' __ ) [ R I Autos, Nt w 980 4utos, New 980Autos, New 980Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos~ New 980 Autos, New 980Autos, New 980 Autos, New " l " ,f r ! I· l i ' l. ' L I \ ' • t ' '• ' • I • r ... I .I \ • 1973 COUPE DE VILLE _ Vinrl. top. t'ull 1 ... 1her inr ••rior. run powrr int•l. 6 wa y ~l'Rl. door Jock •, remoie t'onlrol t.runlc, powrr ,•ntcnr~a, fa1:1nry air ronditioning. A~l lf\l literf'o with tape plny .. r, 11111cd 1ll1h•. r1,h1 ~1di• n1:rr"" to'lt & t<l"~""I>•' '6555 Summer Clearance ~"' I I) 711 Q ' v•, ~~y 1leenn1, twilight 5t·nlinel, etc •. U •I 3 10:\4371. Low n1i!~~. FULL PRICE LEASE t~~~ 'l.'i9~ • BIJY OB LEASE Cadillac .Nineteen Seventy-Three ' . . 197:: COUPE· DE VILLE F'ULLY EUIPPED \VlTll ClirnatC' l"Ontrol air con- ditioning, vinyl 1111). full IX1\Vt'r inl·l. doo1· locks, 6 \\ay Sl'aL A:'l ll F !\I stCrt'{J, \VS\\/ tires. tilt & t£'\c- sc!1pic sll~'ring", lan'lp n111nltor & a host of 1nany othrr factory convenience t'Xl ras. (6D47H3Q2226671 LEASE FOR ONLY 5 168" 56666 l\IOt-/TI-[ rULL PRICE Lease a '7:{ Coupe De Ville FULLY }:Ql/IPPED \VITI-I Climute control, air con- d ili11n11u.:. Full po\l<'l' irll". Ii 1\'llY st!lll, A:O.l/f'l\I s!t•r«!J, \\'S \\" tir,·s. 1.u11·l.'r tl'"'r l\x:ks & a host or 1n11 1 1~· tll·l11.,l' facliiry cunveni1·nce extras. t6D473Q- ::! r;:-:~-1 1 ... Lf-.\SE F'OR ONLY l~EA SF.: FOR ONLY •15999 514444 :'l!ONTlr l\IONTH 1973 -----.......:::::~ SEDA N DE VIL . . r ULLY EQU IPPED WITH vinyl roo r, .-tim11e ntrol, air ronditioning. Full powl'r in•d. 6 w~v R~I. A~l 1 r~1 Bll'reo, ptnn~r J011r lork,. tilt & tele1Copit !lttring, fimply loaded 'l''ilh •II Ilic dtlu1.1e rxlra•. <Srr. 60.19R3Q271353) '6755 24 month open tlld le»se on ~P. provld crltdil. (Stock 4'111 74 onont~ o!M'n end lea5t on Olp. 3' month op.n-end ltlM 011 proved credil. (Sloc:k 452) •PPrlYed credll. !Slodl 44441 Nabers Leasing ... Lease l)ircc't ... lnnued i a l~ Deli Ye ry EXCELLENT SELECTION e FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY e FRE E LOAN CAR WHILE LEASE GAR SERVICED. WE WJLL BUY YOUR PR ESENT CAR FOR IMM ED IATE CAS H. Four a nd onE!-half acres of total authorized Cadillac facilities rlesigned to better sell and service Cadillac auto1nobiles (80 work stalls and 45 fa ctory t rciined technicians. .,. LEASE 1-"0 R O;\I.\' 1167?!. FULL PRICE 2~ "'•nlh •Pt••t•d IMM •• •PP<•••4 CINi!. lS•eclo ~7•71 LARGEST SELE~TION OF CA.,ILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY . IVE S ELL OYER 100 VSEQ CARS EYERY MONTH BECAVSE OF QVALITY YA LVE & • EL DORADOS ,4 FTER SALES SERVICE. OYER 75~QVALITY CA DILLACS & OTHER SE,LECT • COUP.E DE l'.llLES T RADE.INS TO CllOOSE FROM . WIDE SELECTION OF MOD ELS AND COLORS e SEDAN DE VllLES .BROUGHAMS ecoUPEs • CONVER'l'IBLES AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ,_]VST A FEW EXA MPLES LISTED BELOW. 1968 COUPE DE VILLE Che1tnul brown, vinyl top, 11ddl1 !11ther interior. Fu ll power •nd f11 ctory ,;, conditionng, tilt 1teerin9 wheel, AM/FM 1!1rto m"ltiple•, powtr door loclr1, IXR F91b l 1969 CHRYSLER 300 H.td!op coupt. Mini grttn exterior. vinyl lop 1nd mtlthing ltl)••lry inltrior, f1,tory t ir conditioning, "ufom•lic Irani., powtr 1letrin9, bralr11, b wty power 11111, radio, h1tl1r, WSW, low mil11ge, 1xc1plion.11llv cle1n. ((186GB1 J 1969 IMPERIAL LE BARON 4 dr. luordlop, Tuxedo bl•elr, bltclr lop, bltclr ltpellrv inleri· or, duel comfort 1eth, ftct. 1ir, full pow1r, til t wheel, 1 11!0. door lor;k1 end trunk opener. lmpeccebly cleen. !ZKL84'l ) 1970 COUGAR XR7 Vinyl bucket 'e•t interior. vinyl roof, fer;toty eir condi ti"~ning , eutomobile, powfr 1te1rin9, power br•ke1, AM/FM 1tereo rnuHiple11. Absolutely immeeul1te ~ I £26ESD) 1971 SEDAN DE VILLE Autumn gold with white vinyl lop & meir;hing white l1ether interior, !ult power, f1etory eir cond itioning, tilt wheel, AM/ FM t!ereo, power door lock1, crui11 eoiltrol. Very low mlle1 . !J29CXVI 1969 EL DORADO Vi11~l roof, luff leether interior, full power, f•clory 1ir condi· lioni111 , till 1teerin9 wheel, pow1r door loc•1. Beeutiful Topli 9old fire1"11i1t fini1h. Tr11ly ouhl111d in9. !861EYC I 1970 EL DORADO 6 or910111 p1lnl•flo green with bl1ek vinyl top, metch!n9 full 1eethet interior, fectory eir. full power, 1t1reo, door 1oc~s. 11ntinel that turns your li9ht1 off I on. A pampered ll,000 milt be111 ty. !615BQEJ 1966 . CADILLAC Conv••tiblt. S11nb1i1,.1 yellow with bltd.-lop-•'"'-ltkc or. FuH powtr, f1ctory 1i.1_.,.ot1dillonln9, tilt wh1el, door loc•1, AM /F J.0. IRIT!i55l • • I $3333 99 • 1972 CONTINENTAL MARK IV TibiCU Si'iwn, Conlovln !Oji, lull \iither l!ilinor, lid. ~1;, tu)I pow1r, dul l cus- tom Wills, '"'"· l\lfll. llMr loclu, ... mtles, IMMACULATE! (150292) 1971 CONTINENTAL MARK Ill Oftlr JS.oeo 11MN1, vl9yl •• INltll'r lnlffilff', tu/I power, l•c141ry 1lr, dlf!ll comfOl"I """· .. c. 111'082) 1971 COUGAR COUPE F1u • .arr, JIUIO. tr1n1., pow., t1Mr!119, power Dr•k ... wh ite 1lllew11t tires, 11.000 mHn, mint C9ncll!lon, IUOODV) 1971 MERCEDES 300 SEL o.tu•e ffdln with sunroof. Sliver blut, J.J tilt .. lull powtr. flCllry 1lr, AM/FM llll'M mulllpleit. Fvll l.,.lhtr, eic. U41J4SI 1970 BUICK ELECTRA 225 CUST. 4 llr. 1!1n!IO,, t1c1. llr, lfftl power, "limlffd trim." 1111 wtlHI, vlnyl lop, doer lodr1, M.000 mllH, lmm.c11T1le, (tUBEJI 1969 MUSTANG HARDTOP V-&, IUIO, lr•ns.. pwr. llHrlnt, pwr. brJlllH. tldlo, l!Nltr. wtl(le 1icltw•ll lirH, vinyt IOp, vinyl lnllff'lor, ll,000 miles, ltill In wlrrlnly. tZCLll11 1969 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX Just u ,too mite1, f1ct. 11lr toncl .. lull power, vlnyl top, tuH vinyl lnttrior. An •~ Cltlti,Dflll Vllut. UOAQll J 1968 BUICK CUST. SPORT WGN . F1cl, 1ir,' pwr, llHrlllf, pwr. brlkH, •uto. lrill>I., racito1 htl"r. white 1illew1ll hr-., ek!clrk: llll Pit, IVPlf d .. n, IDW mil-.. (XEUiot) 1966 TORONADO CUSTOM aumt Dl"Olllt tinllll. m1tcl!l119 vJnyl in,.rior, l1clory .. ,, fvH power, 1111 wneel, AM/FM. S111N1' tlHn, ITRT101l 1972 SEDAN DE VILLE FJ1cl0ry 1lr, tow mlle1, lvll p1w..-, 11treo, lloor lock1 , cruht con!nl, 1111 •lletl, Grtclln GOid, wtlltt lop, 9old l1>terior. !Sir ... 11114S) 1971 ELDORADO Bty.anlint 90111 with wnile vlnyl top anti gold lt~ll!tr lnltrlor, f'ult powtr, tattorv •Ir. Iii! WhMI, pciw1r lleor lock1 Loc:11tr owntd. Low mlle1111. 1mpecc1ble. (7S9DF8) 1970 CO.UPE DE VILLE MMllT• ptvm Wllll nwtcl!lftt IM'ac•llt Interior, flclflry llr cond .. 1\111 P9Wfl', 1teno .... lldrt. !ill tlHr. wllllit. LQw milts. I lo chlDOu fr11m. i1tlAGCJ 1969 COUPE DE VILLE Only 112,toO m1111. F1<10r'y 1lr, 11111 powtr. vlnfl top, AMl "M rldlt. tfll / llitS(oplc 110..-i111. (XS5'11J' olh1r1 IO ch-!nm. 1969 EL DORADO Romln rfd, Ollck io,, llllck 1e1lhtr. lull PO•er, l•ctory 11r. 1111 ~ !tleicopic whtel, llOOr IOCkl, lltrM. (ZLSMJ) 1969 CONVERTIBLE l'lcflry 1lr ctnel .. lwll po'"'• 111 1••1t!tr fftttrlor, 1ltreo AM fFM, ll>lllellt Very tow mllH. Clstl'TV) 1968 CADIL l>AC CONVE RTIBLE- Gr9ciln told, btltt lep, lull l>Nlh1r, t~ltry •ir. lwH 119w1r, 1111 11Mrlft9 WhHI, AMl "M rldle, (112"01 • • 1967 COUPE DE VILLE F .. ctory •ir. c;ond., (ull l1•ih1r inl1rior, fvll pow••· winyl fop, AM /FM, ti lt & t•lo1copie 1lotring . M•nr olh•r di•. llrfre1. !NOS667 1 1968 SEDAN DE VILLE· F,.ctory •ir, full powtr, vinyl top, lo.,!htr interior, lilt & lefe. 1copic 1teerin9, AM/FM 1leroo. IW8K065l. Show1~u1ual Clft , )' 1968 EL DORADO Full powtr, f•ctory •if' cond., vinyl lop, plu1h full la1ihtr inltrior, d oor lock1, 1farao, r•di1I liun , tit t & tele1copie 1le1r- in9, ele. ( XWY2'48 ) 1971 CHRYS. NEWPORT Cu1iom coupe. Feelory air eonditioning, •ulomatic, power 1teerii 9 . power br•ke1, vin'f'I top, r"dio, h11i1r, white wall tir11. le11 then 27,000 rn ile1. ('472EKTl 1969 COUPE DE VILLE ] to choo11 from. Factory •ir conditoning, lull power tilt & t1le1copie 1!11rin9, fu ll ltalher inltr'l'or, door lock1, vinyl top. An 11ceplion•I value. IZLY!6l ), !XTV802), !YY8794), Your choice. 1969 Corvette Sting Ray 427 4 1petd with only 17,000 mil11. F1ctory "ir cond., iull power, AM/FM r1dio, be•uliful Ebony bl•ck with vinyl interi- or, bl•ck top, wide oval tir11 & 1b1olutely concour11 . l72 B- ETZI 1970 SEDAN DE VIL LE. Adrielie turquoi1e witti whill' vinyl lop ind o•qui1ite l•pt1lry & leather interior. F111f power, f•clory <Jit, till-t1le whe1I, powtr door_lock1, AM/FM radio, new WSW iirtt, low rnile1, exeeption .. lly cl11n. 1214COU! •· 1971 OLDS TORONA DO F•clorv 1ir. 11111 power, 24,000 mil11, till wheel, 1t1reo, doo1 lock1, l•pt1lry inferior, split 11•1. 1=7215401 COSTA MllA 2333 $2666 l3333 $3666 $J 88 8 98' '• ' - • ' ' • • • • ' ' • I , ' ' I I I • I I • • • • • • • • • • • I ' • ! ' ' • • J .' -- •. .. I . . . . -. -. . . " . . . ' • or.!~'{ PILOT rriday, JoM 22, )973 JOI -· .. ... ' ~"" l' .. , ~-~··· . . .. * FREE PONY ~IDES ·*~--. r-------~ '. . -.. . 1~ I . ,.. * , ~\-(.0" . / -· ~ \W --.. FREE DRAWING COME IN AND REGISTER .. FEATURING: TO WIN A N·ew El Dorado Camper * El Dorado Campers; Motor Homes ~I.IEE~ SIZE·.;~~:· WITH ,,,.* Ford's · American Road Campers, Motor Homes ' • y DINEnE, SINK, ICE BOX CABINETS, CURTAINS, . - PANELLING, WATER TANK, I l 2V-1l0 ~l'..ECTRIC SYSTEM AND MUCH . MORE! NAME ................................. . " ADDltlSS ......• ••., ••••..•...•.... , . · • • ·. • CITY • . . . . • • • . • • • . . . • . . . . PHC)Nf \ ............• alGISTlll HfltE Olt AT WILSON FOID, 112$5 ,IE.A.CH ILVD.. HUNTINGTON IEACH. NO PURCHASE RE- 9UIRED. WINNER NEED NOT II PRESENT AT DRAW· ING. • * Escapade Motor Homes SPECIAL h U: GRAND OPENING * Sportscoac Motor nomes sAu PR•cEs -PLU S THE EXCITl~JG NEW SUBARU· .... WITH FRONT WHEEL DRIVE Quadrozontal Engin.e I • • ' ,/\ t{ *· • ·\)oCiS * ..,-··· ,, ~___,. ~ -/,\ . , .. / . WITH PURCHA~ OF ANY REC~IO N ""' VEHIC!.l! DURING TH IS Grand Open ing ~.,.-----. B ~ ~~= E. ,.---....-.....;.. -...,---::=1 A ~=---= !------, C TALBERT H ...----' B 7.EL=us:---- LJ L ~1· V. "='GA=R·F=1EL=-o ' .i:: o ..... . • 1, - ' ... . ... • ... ' , • • 1 73 DODGE SPORT full factory HfUipt*f (~r. No. Ll29C362 l 331 1) IMMIDIA~I ~LIYIRT • 1988 BRAND NEW 1973 B-100 Friday, June 22, 197'3 OAJLY PILOT • • '73 DODGE COLT COUPE Full foctory equi,,M Uied, low miles (6l21K35310095) s5a DOWN s5s A MONTH . f ull foc tory equ ipped plus much more $1 ·788· ' $58 A MONTH '58 DOWN ISi 11 ..._I lllln. ttY"''· $SI h 1 ... 1 ..... ""''· Incl. "'• & •II c•rryl"I ct.rp1.,. ,..,..,.. crMll hw 42 _... .. ,. rw. • ..-,.,. ..... ,..1 •• l24N h1cl .... a 11-... ANNUAL flllCINrAGI IAn ··~ '72 ·cHARGER ' IMMIDIATI DILIVIRY 558 DOWN · COUPE ~r st"rinv, air cond., . .....-::::::~ .--white wall t lrtt, auto. trans., m11ch much more. (WL21G2A 126917) 1788 $58AMONTH llUJEDIATE DELIVERY $74DOWN . (ser. No. 81 1A83X.11 7861) ' LAIGEST SELECTION Of OTHER VANS TO CHOOSE FROM $7 4.48 A MONTH $SI iJ -·~ft. ppllll. SSI i1 to!•I ,,.., P'Y""· inc.I."•· I~ & 1111 <•ryi'ft, ~-.,,.. crtclit ... ,,. _.., _,_.,. PY""· prict S11t7 i11el. ••• '10c ...... &HNUAl. "l(llHTAGf un ,,,,.,.. 1 73 CORONET WAGON ..... FULL FACTORY IQUIPPID $2888 sssAMONTH Sll ilt...i• l'r""· IU k ,_1_,..,...... iiocl ... •, ~l .!l ....,iooedierp1M.,..cM!t.U -"iL Dlfwl'M 174 I.a NINI lift. 17•.&1 It r.tel '""• Pl'"'1· Incl. hl•;lic•nM & •II tDrl")'l1t1clw,.._._.,,,.. Cf'll41t fw U S i11o!•I-~"""· llSi•r-1.,... ,,.,...,1.,.1. ltl•, liu!IM I oll <O"Yi"'l lharfti..,.,,..rrHltlw42-.MerrM Pl""'· ,.1u 11167 i.d ...... ~.ANNUM 'll<.IHTAGI u n 9.7)~ ,_._ ___ ., ___ .. _ •• _ ... _ ..... _ .. _m_ ... _ •• _.,_··.'· '·"·M'.· ~.· '•"·"-.·.··.··."·"·"•'"'·'"'·"-"'·'·'.'"-__ .,.._ ......... -... ·; .... IL .... I liu"'-· •HNUAl ,ll CfHlllGI u n 10.1,.,., . ORDIR YOURS NOW sas DOWN '70 MAVERICK 2°DOOR . INiie, .....,_, •tw•e lnfedw, 9ir c""' 1'7161lCJ '70 PLYM. FURY Ill 1: Dr. N.T., '14 • .-.. ~. ,_...,...,; .. r.!lie.. hHter, l.ctwy •ir, .-,.. ..,. (ttJA'R) '69 MUSTANG 2·DOOR llABTOP ledio, ~' 4Mv•e ........ , ,i1n 11t1Kh ...... (9fDlfl77·1•J , ' . '68 FIRDllRD 400 \o-1 .... ,. ,,." .......... 1twfi"1-,..,.., JM.tw, .,,..r ..,, ,_._,. oi,. (OlSC,,) '70 CHARGER 2°DOOR HARDTOP v.a,..,.. ,....~..ti..~ • .,11,,1..,, fedwJ •ii ,.... , .. ,Alli '72 DART DEMOll full '• .. 'Y •ctulpped inclvdlrt9, radio, heo .. r, whit. woU t'ro1 (lL29C2tJSIJ29) '691JtRD R•IMh ••••• V-1, rwc119, ""'9tef, ,._ ,._1.., ..,... tNM., (t12ACQ) FOR FREE .· PHONE :CR DIT CHECK 557-9220 \ •766 •&jj •1266 PULL ••IC• GAS SAYERS -TAKE_JOUR CHOICE '71 COLT ) Door, radio, h-er, factory OC!Uipped. (6Hl8KTSD5846) f71 DART DEMON . V·I, radio, heater, auto ..... tran1.,-ma9s. (LN29HLEl40231) '71 VEGA COUPE, 4 speed trans., radio, heater (833FPC) '71 PINTO 2 DOOR, 4 speed, trans., radio, heater (IR I ON45430) -s . $31.50 DOWN $31.50 A MONTH SJ1 .SO is totcll dn. paymtnt $:ti .SO 11 toteil me. pymt, incl. tox & lkonM MMI ~I corryinv ch.rtet Oii opp. <Ndit for U MOJ, Deferrff poymnt prico $1176.66 incl. MJ1 & fianM. ANNUAL Pl-.CENT~ UTI 17.91 '%. '68 COUGAR XR7 VI, avt.. '""''·• ,._, 1t.eri119< rodio, hM!er, •inyl ..,, foc""Y •ir fW'l"3) '69 DART IWINGIR '68 FORD FAIRLANI 2.0.0, ~..,. Vl,out.. tl'8nt., fectoryolr clMMI. power 1t9eri .. j40SCYZ} •• •666 ....... ICI ,. •566 P9LL ,NICI: :!fof!'9\~~NGER $ . , VI, outo. '~"'·• ... lo, ....... pow" ""';"I• 96.6. btKkot Matl, factory alr 'IJS2JN012'4146) PULL ... ICm' ·168 FALCON STATION WAGON Auto. trtin1., radio, hMt9r, lu99ctge rack and much more (6 S1 FAI} . '70 PLYM. DUSTER .. VI, •wto. trans., radio, h-ter, power ''"'irtt, vinyl ..,, factory a ir !129CQI) •1066 PULL MIC• :4\ WEEK -2888 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA . 557-9220 ALL CAIS SOLD SUIJICT TO ,.IOl SALi AND A,,.OYID CUDIT • • ' I ' ••• . . • • _, ' l • • : I • • . ,~ I , I -2 DOOR HqDTOP -. • FORD GALAXIE 500 • --• . . FREE- FlOO LONG RIGISTER ·. ··_' IODAYt ~ ' . •inlllfG ro 1ur --·~- • -11orHINct-rO-DO~-· --Alf you ~eecf Is o vollif.,: driver's license to fill out· the simple prize ' ' drawing ticket thot mak .. _y.ou ellglble to · win a new 1973 Pinto or -of 5-1 other val· uab~e .,.rlzes. It's Theo- dore Robins' way of saying "Thank You" 1,r 5:1 !llOnderful years of· serving Orange · County•under the some oW!Mnhlp-and man• agem.ntt .- W,HEEL II.ASE . STYLESIDE PICKUP • \'I nth1e, c..11 ...... 01k, whii. won fit•I, '°"., ll~i111., JHIW•t 1110\11, ... ,. CON- OfTI~. eca.t· grovp, li11,.d glon, tl•lu•• AA •Adie, wh11l ''"'" ond llv111ptr 1-9•. iA2ff2W17 S1k. -2132. '/ 4 DOOR HARDTOP', Crui t·•·"'otic t•o111111iu io11. po-• lro11t·tll1<: brok11, ~ 1fttti119, 1111dii1,. bro..,11 11111olli</.5H/•OO CIO JV I cylinder 111gino, <ri11yl 1HI lfi.,, CoHl0111;. 1111iuion1 l11ti119, btlltd w1w tirtt, corwtnitnct t •Ollp, dtht•• ltvMper 9110rd, All CON. DITION£t -S.lt c!oirt, "i11"tt i!'!11rl tiody 1jtl1 "'oldlng, !1111M 1i.11--<0111pl ... AM rodHI & pin 1l•ip•l. f::::;;JJS6SI0266'4) --tc-' (Jli.-W .... -. ........ J ,,_, """'9 '"'""'~· •iU•• • .,. .... -1 r..d f0\l9e'• ~· (~IOAl"IUll Ilk, #lllH_., _, ~--.. ~ , ANNIVERsARY .. $~44710 ...-$ALl PRICEONLY ~ ---ANNIVERSARY $38ftl86i_ _ ~ SALE PRICE ONLY _ 71 ANNIVERSARY~ $tit z -Oft9J . SAL£11RIC:E-E>NL-~--~--11~ • '66 ·Chrysler Ne~ 4 Dr. H.T. RlH, •..4.,•+ic, P.S., air cond., orlginer thru- out. l9w tmiles.~ (TEL58l J'" I .-------------------t'66 Chrysler 4 Dr. H.T. fFull power, air conditJoning', rlike new, good miles. ITiZ583J I '65 Musta119 Hardtop JVS, radio, h••t•r. automatic, good miles. (NGN 843 ) '65 M~tang Hardtop R1dio and lteet•r, eutomatic tri1nsmission, 9 o o d m i I e s . p lNGA8141 '66 Mustang Convertible VS, rodio, heater, •utom•lio, -$8 5.2 power steering, good mile5. ITFF510) I 15) '71 LTD's & Galaxies Example: '71 Ford Galeirie 500 2 Dr. R&H, •uto., · P.S., air cond., good mil•s. l 1.87861 ) • s195 2 ' '66 Mustang Hardtop VS, radio, heater, automatic, power steering, good miles, red. I SVG679 I '68 Falcon 4 Qoor 6 cylinder, radio, heater, auto- matic, P.S., air c"ond .. good miles. (WIES77) '68 VW Bug 4 speed, radio, heater, good m;les. IYQS918 1 '66 Mustang Hardtop VS, radio, heati1r, automatic, power steering, good ,miles. IT~S6121 '67 Mustang Hardtop Radio, heater, auto., power steering, vinyl roof, VS, good miles. IVHC992l '67 Mustang 390 VB Hardtop, R&H, auto., P.S., tilt wheel, vinyl roof, • speCial wheels, good miles. 0 l-421 ELV l '66 Galaxie Hardtop VB, iedio, heater, euto., P.S., good mHes. I RRY332) '69 Chrysler New Yorker 4 Door Hardtop, full Power, •ir conditionin9, 9ood m i I es . IYCN5 11) '68 Ford LTD 2 Dr. H~T. Radio, heet•r, auto- matic, P.S., eir cond., vinyl roof, low miles, .. IXSR972) '70 Moverick 6 cylinder, redio, he•t•r, chrome trim. Low miles. IZW- 299 I '71 FOrd Custom 500 4 dr., VS, auto., P.S., Lease return, good miles. l S•r. 3390 I '71 Mazda RX100 $105 -2 Rotuy. Rodio ond hutor; 4 $1 .1·s.2-• sp••d tri1n1mi11ion, tow: miles. _ l915EOWJ '66 Plymouth 2 Dr. H.t .. R•dio, heeter, auio., power "i • st•erin9, va,' air. conditioning, - good mnes. IFCJ8051 '71 CeiUgar ' R&H, •lltomati~ power •steer• ingi, air cond., redio, 9ood mHes. lt41BSWJ '6·6 Pontiac Catalina <4 Or.1 r•dio, he•ter, autometic, P.S.1 ilir conditioning, 9ood mnes. !SHE362J '68 Che'mllet Molibu Z Or. H.T. Ve, redio, hett•r, tutomi1tic, power steering, low m;les. IJ41BELI '72 Yamaha Motorcycl~ 250cc. Only 2600 mil•s, 1i1ddl• bo91, wind1hiold, l UOX075 l Vans -Vans '-72 Chevrolet Vi Ton, VI. '71 Chevrol•t ~ Ton, VI. .. ~ .... •• .. • • HARD TO FINO USED SALU DlltT. HOUltlt I ..... 1M11MM.•Frt.;I1nM pm Si1t.; 11 MIH'"' '""· PARTS alaVJCI MDUltat 7 ...... II"' Meet.; 7 ...... '"' T""-"Frl. PAllTI Dll'T. ONLY1 I-· ,_lot. A't. hie Pric" lffecthe ~ Id., J-24, 1m r . • • . . = -, ' . . . . " . .. . .. . . . . ... ,. ,. ' .. •• ....... -.c .r.-,,. -, ....... , .. ! .,, • .,-•••• _., . ~ .. ... . . . . . . • • • San Cle1nenie ~ . VOL 66, NO . 173, 4· SECTIONS, 48 PAGES • EDITION • . ' . ORANGe-cOUNTY, CALIFORl'lrA • • Today's ~nal N.Y. Stocks , -~ ... . . . ~ TEN CENTS · ' Celebrities to W elco·me Brezhnev in Clemente . . President Nii<.on and Soviet Communist On Saturday plans call for a major spinnet to be brought to the pool area on They ·include Gov. and Mrs. Ronald Party Secretary Leonid Brezhnev are reception a round the La Casa Paciflca's Saturday. Reagan, Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Red d~e to arrive on th e So\lth Orange Coast • pool with mariachis from ·san Juan Also on the agenda for the weekend -Skelton and others. on Sunday,'' a portion of the telegram people or the ti.s. and USSR by Brezhnev read. -similar lo that made by the President Br~zhnev·s dcp.:irturc det.:iils huve not <hiring !}is tri p to l\fosco\v last yeci.r .• • this evening lo begin a whirl_wind Capistrano prQviding the musjc. · _possibly fOr Saturday -'will be a On Sunday, the day Brezhnev plans to _._-~·ee~nc!_ th~l~romis~s to '?e: far diffcre!!t__ short flight to Los Angeles where the t~leave the President \Vill welcome the from the week's busmesslike su m m 1 t Stt~ERPE>WER--GHIEFS-SIGN--te-adets-wlll-tOOFttie exHibitionOrtm-S a as ronau , been specifi ed so Jar. Contingency plans have been made for · IH:s-assam-oo~thanne ·s1arrw.ng~such-a1r1rddr~srtronrthe-San-clemente·~--'ll talks. PEACE ACCORD-Story,· Poto 4 pressionlst paintings on Joan lo the U.S. 'The invitation went out today to the The two leaders are e~cted to touch , by the Soviet Union. • three space pion~rs in a telegram from down at the El Toro MCAS at aboy~ the · And the President may even bang a Tbt\receptico 8aturday, however, will the President. dinner-hou...-and~after l!-bri¢-night's-r est few licks at -the-piano-during-tbe~af--..be.tbe"major_llOclal event. "I welcome_you home from·the-Skylab -the summit will become ·somewhat of a terooon event. Local source,, have said HoUYwood stars, and other' VIP guests space ship 'Earth' and I also look spectacular. the stflff ha's commandeered a small are Oct the invt.taUon Hst of 150 names. forward to seeing yoU at San Clemente • Smog Brings Azito W <ir1ii1ig; ~fotorists were urged today to reduce driving to the minimum necessary as smog concentrations in Orange Coun ty began climbing toward levels dangerous lo health. A spokesman for the Orauge County Air Pollution C o n t r o I District said at 9:30 a .m. that forecasters predict sivog oxidant levels wil !rise to .4 parts per mil- . -._ -- Nearly $2 ltliUion c Government Pays For ·Nixon Homes lion. The level of .2 is considered By HELEN TIJOMAS years beginning July 1, 1968. dangerous to health. The spokesman said the heavy WASHJNGTON (UPI) -The federal Included in the Key Biscayne figure smog was expected because of government says iL has spent nearly $2 was $161,4'3 for noting two house! in the "stagnant conditions" in the South million improving President Ni:ii:on's complex for the Secret Service and White House communications staff. more details o( 'the Russian leader 's compound, ho\vever. • schedule later this \\'eekend. Although Br$zhnev leaves on Sunday, Such· secrecy has been ihe rule during Nixon will not. <... ~ Brez.hnevis vis it Initial reports said ~that the President So fa r no de tails have been released plans to stay on in San Clemente for a either on~ .possible joint address to th.e \..-eek or ~=e. __ Rehearing _; • ·In.Serum -~----·· C~~ Urged ·: Y, JOJIJ'! y ALTEW • Of ~ Dtlll't l"llat Stiff A menlber of the district attorney~, te.:im \Vhich fought · in vain to uphold. the tru th-serum murder confession of Mark Johnson vowed today that a rehearing \\'ill be sought within a matter of d8ys in J Coast Air basin that would not homes in Florida and California, all of it 1be White H said ne of these 1---1-permit-smog-to-float-out-to..sca.----relating-----1o~~y.kl" The_ exlfpeoses_bouses-irowne:;;._-lp-and-t · .ranged from fire sprm ers to go carta other -is owned in the name of 'Edwin·H. the lal!!Jm•ir~,. San Clemente -de!- -se. t And Oeputy Diatrlct Attorne~ta sears (ijd litUe to eone.t · • of ., I Youth Ch~rged for the Secret Service. The White .Hoose also .disclosed that Underwood, trustee for the Indiana Na· businessman Robert -H. Abplanalp, wlio (SO. II· MJLUON, Pqe %) F I , ' D ~!~n:h~u!";'.':"~":eit~f ~ p· . tff1; . • . ; at 1er s ay mooey -back in the form 0 rent e -ormet_ .. associated with Ni:ii:on's Key Biscayne, Sh , {;a Fla., place. ,. Ooting se--~---'LDlJlntlLago the_ White House had 'S~,..:. • _n • -. --li sted $39,000 in federal fundS wrim· -. . I fWt/-vurin-g -. · 1.. proving tbe Western White House at San Fifteen-year-old Davld 'w. Moberly of Clemente since NJ.Ion b6ught it in 1969. ., San Clemente has been formally charged Last week, after a further search. of s ·1i00z Sk • t __ wilh.murder_a.rt4_willJ!ppear for a det~ d bis.Ji ailed to 11Uft -It f; · -· tion hearing Jate next We<?k, a proceeding-recor ,-t gurei asJ ----~~_,_ --...:. ·b - -· ---. -On Thursday. General Services . • to examine preliminafy circutnstances of Administration (GSA), the govemm~t's the shooting of a house guest Father's housekeeping agency, said a still more By .JACK CRAPPEIL Day morning. exte nsive audit put the total federal ex· t1 °' .._ n.llY '1••• The San Clemente teenager was penditure at San Clemente at $7o.1,367 over A 11eops and robbera0 skit at the fonnally charged in the shooting death of four fiscal years beginning . July 1, 1969. Lagi.iia Beach IUgh School all night George Twiddy. 30. of Newbury Park. This includ.ed only the .residence there, graduation party ended · with the --durlng arr argument ati he-Moberly home riot the White "House office space. shooting of a volunteer entertainer in- Sunday morning. GSA listed for the first Ume the federal . · 'Mte youth was arrested a few minutes expenditure for improvements, equip-Jured when a,. wa~ from a blan~ shotgun after the shooting \Yhi ch reportedly men!, operation and maintenance at the shell struck him JD the head. . started over the placement of a pile of \Vhite House complex: at Key Biscayne, Hal lnuis ~· .21, ~ 1385 Skyhne soiled clothes. including both residence and office.spa~ ~Ive was reported 1n satisfactory ~· 'Mle victiih, a frequent house guest at _ $1.UW,S22, spread over five fiscal diti~ today at South ~.~uruty the ~1oberly home at 217 Avenida Rosa. · Hospltal. He was shot with a 10-gauge \\'AS shot four or !Ive ti mes with a .22-ri-double barrelled shotgun during a comic ne which reportedly had once belonged 10 Astroi•auts Make skit at 3 a.m. tQdai' at the high school. him. " William Allen, acting superintendent of Jt was reported today that the rifle was the achool district, said bis office was not later a gift to the Moberly boy. d ' infonned Ui.at fireanns were to be used Police have been under a blanket gag 'Super Lan ing ,· during the tra<liticltal high school grad order all week in the . case. a deCision night party. handed down by Superior Court Judge Laguna Beach police seized the 10. Samuel Dreizen early 1a$t year. 28 Days Away gauge shotgun: and identified the man The order forbids discussion by law of· _ wl!9_ !ired_ it aee\,s1Qeno Porter Molwav, 22, ficers of exact details of the crime and -~. _ _ =r~-__ restricts them to only the immediate ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (UPI) • of 390 3rd Str ~~na. Beach, w!"' was facts of the case. -Skylab's astronauts landed in "super acting as ~ sJfltiff dunng the skit. Young Moberly wi ll appear for the shape" in the Pacific Ocean today and Nollarrest w~made. · detention hear.ing in a, closed Courtroom lked hakily a few minutes later to the Po ce said . wad from the blank wa ,s . shell passed throUgh a hat worn by Prop-, June 29. d~tors office to see ho:w well they ,.. pe and struck him in the rear of the Trial in the case is tentatively set for withstood a record 28 days in space. : head. Witnesses told officers that tQe in- July 23. The bullseye splashdown and qwck jured man was 20 to 30 feet from the recovery by this veteran aircr~ft. carrier m~le of. the big bore shotgun. orange Coast Weather That expected cooling tre nd will make ltsell felt' along tlje Orange coast saturday with lo\v clnuds in ~ · lhe morning hours and highs in the ~ upper 70s at the beaches. Inland temperatures will be near 00. That1s-cooler-? INSmE TODAY He1s realty a song writer '1ot a singer, but liarkr;~ Je1111in9s, 21, ts jindi1io in. a Newport Beach night club engagement that sotnctintes it's the singer and not tltt S071'7 that countt. ·Hll story II 011 Page 25 of IP. da11't \Vteke·nder. • ma rked a nawless end to a mm1on that Officers surmised that more severe in- started with failure. The flight took a jury could have been done if p.e flying major step toward giving man a place in wad had bit anyone in the face area. space. Theme or~-all-filght-perty was Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph P. ci49er1 and the1Wlk1 West" and featured Kerwin and Paul J . Weltz returned.in Qlie a town ·called Deadwood Gulch. Some 250 Apollo comma nd ship in which tbeY, were itudenls were · expected to attend, Jaw cbed May 25. authorlUea aakl, but it is uncertain how The big s p a c e station remained Jn many studentl saw the shooting. earth orbit ready !or It& next ~ Jn five Don.Ha!'lht, ltl&h school principal, aaid weeks. (See 1Sll0011NG', Page 2) President Nixon quickly ~t a .._. telegram to the men who just completed ,.------------...., an 11.5 mi!Uon mile journey and invited them to visit hin1 at San-Cemente. SWr day. • "You have given conclusive evidence that evc.n with the mqst advanced scien· liric an d technological support In l\le world, the courage and resourcefutness of good men are still central to the suc- cess o'f the human adventure," the Presi- dent said. Conrad, commander of the nati'on's first space station mission, reassured recovftry forces several times that be and hls crtwmen were all right alter the strenuous r ... ntry which .quickly built up d.cceJeration forces 3% times.Ute force of gravity. "Everybody's in super shape," Coa~' radioed alter three orange.and·white striped purachutet .. Md the command moclule in10 l1" genllY rolling '!61• of the Pocilic 835 mllct southw811 of San Die&•• (See SKYLAB, Pip t ) 2 More Seized-:- Iii Sex Caper ,..LONDON (UPI) ..::. Police said today they a/Telled two .....,.-·in connedlon with the Lord Lambton "" acandal. .Both women were taken to New Scotlahd Yard and Interviewed by detectlve1, 1 police spokesman llld. Tiley were not Identified. Police IOW'OU 8lld me of them Is I friend of 'Norma Levy, the call girl at the center of the acandal. Lamblon ~· Earl JelUooe - boCh .,....nmeot ministers -- mlped alter admitting they were cliall& of.call g1rlo. ~· ,, ( the r.eversal blriled doh ear thla we.t'Ii-U>eFOtirtlfD!itMCoolrr -·~ y . . ..... ! p&ll.S. 'I ' ' .i;,., "You b!Oody well bet that we'll go for o new hearing. 'I'm burned," saidlhe fiery deputy D~. . ·., · \ Mrs. Sears, 'who Was on the team which prepared all tile brief.s for 'the ~ cou¢itel!on whldr re--Jaimion's conviction, said She would "wort nicbts if need be'' to draft a new iet ol documents to seek the rehearing, ---The-<oW'!-ruled~· -k-lltol-- the socliwn amytol confession 'by the handsome fonber Marine was in- admissible. Hot .JofJ Orange County Fire Capt. Bfuce Turbeville (tight) cools.off with help from Capt. Herb Eberhardt after .helping to cool off Thursday~s ~ire al the Holly Sugar factory on Dyer Road in Sa nta Ana. Turbeville had just come down· from roof where temperatures reached 130 de. grees during blaze. Fire started in a pulp dryer .~ut n~on and -caused an estimatecr$4;8004 n damage-to a-blltiamg ar ttiepJant. Accused Tustin POW Has 'Nothing to Hide' Johnso.~ad confessed lo a ps~lrlsl tlaat he .d beatll!n hi ii. gnant.;frife, Chnnie .. w th a .bat stoQ1 ~the ~le's Uoy pier-area ' apartment 'three years ago. He al"I' ~essed to disposing of a knife ~ USed \o •tali bis wile. Bu! Mn;, sear; said a ctitlcal se8-I of the cOnfession evidence was never ~ cepted for viewing by the· court. Videotapes taUD.. by San Clemoitlt police showing Johnson agreeing lo lj!t truth serum administratiQDS were~ revieWed by the court. · • · Mrs. ~ars predicted that ·the re1teoi;. ing woµld be pre.sse4. on that ~~ primarily. · . , · . • .... "I'm hurned about tiils beca~ th'ey never even considered that major pieCe of evidence," she said. , _Although technically bis convicti_i!i__Mli reverieil l lie C'Oi:irf'Oecliion would riot take ,effect for 90-days .. So Johnson remains in prbon. .. "We'll be In with a peUtlon with!!> 15 days, so he will stay incarcerated," Mr!. Sears said. --"' The issue over truUHerum_ caofesSlobs is truly a landmark one and Johnson'• origiqal convic~ • on . 'secon<i~g(ee mUrder was the first to have been granted on the ham of the contro~en'laJ medical teclmlque. The-prosecutloD'-asserted' t1Ja1-J~n A released Tustin ~tarine prisoner of war toda.y refused to comment on charg· es of misconduct brought against him by a fellow POW. · Col. Miller and Navy Capt. \Valter E. Wilber, 43, or Columbia Cross Roads, Pa ., had beerl charged with misconduct in North Vietnam prison camps by Rear Admiral James V. Stockdale o f Coronado. was lucid and unclnigged ~ II!' fii«.d • to taking the drug belore a large grow ol Lt. Col. Edison Wainright Miller, 41, issued a brief statement relayed to the press by the information office of Camp .. TWO EX·POWS CHARGED IN MISCONDUCT-Story, Poto 4 -~ Pendleton where it is believed MillCr \viii be based. He is presently on "con- valescent leave," a Pendleton spokesman said. A dofeme department spokesman in Washington confirnied Thursday that Lt. Gun Battle :Erupts Over Pot in Tijuana . ' TIJ UANA. Mexieo (AP)' -Polio< CX· changed gunfire with men neeing a house where 1,185 bricks of marijuana were found late Wednesday. Although IO shots wer.e·CQ\U\ted,1no one was reported hit. ·, La ter} three men \Yere taken into custQdy near the house In hills 90utb of fl\juana,• officers said. Miller said today, "l have no specifi c comment on any charges at this time. I · have on1y 'recently learned of this action and have not yet had a ' chance to --determine exactly wha 1-am-:-bein charged with. "l realize this is a serio!JS matter and it will be a difficult time for my family ' and fri ends," Miller said. Attempts to reach hiqi at his _ Tustin home this morning through contacts at the Voices of 'VJta:l America (VIVA ) of- fi ce proved futile. A VIVA organization ~kesman said J\.tn . Mil ler had no cOmmcnt on the charges and was leaving the ~filler residence with their five sons, three of wflorn are school age and "have just &Uf· feted too much from. aJI of this." . During ~1Wer's confmement ·in North Vietnam, he. frequently "'as the subject of ·news items and wa.<;. often .brought before telcvlslon cameras as an example of the humane treatment being given U.S. servicemen by their North Vlct· namcso captors. • • witnesses. • Interrogation IQok place oot by police, but by a psychiatrist. , · · Although Johnson <liSCtlSled lh e bludl!OC!l'ini, disposal of the knlf{'""1 having taken a shower lo wash off'blOod, he did not e<mfes.s to actually . s~ his wire, whose ' body was found ~~ ·~i fter ~slaying. • ' • It was JohnSoll 1\'ho Initially rOpcirl-4 the June 16, 1970 crime, calling po!ica after he returned home from gU.fa dli!yl His Wife's battered ·body·was foiind nude in the couple's bed. and bore .)1')b. wouods and teeth marks. • .. Johnson was free for a year to the day alter the slaying· as police steadily b~U\ a case against the Marine. Cen1etery Strike Hit NEW YORK (UPI) -A ·Manhattan Supreme Court judge, clUng 11an im. media te health hazard" ruultlng !tom th< t2-day strille by cemetery workers. Thurl!day order<d the sirlkel'S back lo work, The ·strike by t,800 M~ '\\'Orkers has prevented the burlal of mQre thal!;S,600 bodies In 47 metropolitan arit. cemeteries.' " ( • • ;$ DAILY PILOT SC .. WORKERS STRIKE OVER CUSSING DUNGENESS. England !UPI) -Near· ly 2,000 mtn 6idldin1 11 .nullimilllon- dollar oucleer power station we n t on scMke today over a swear word. The men walked out, one picket said, when a sbopGoor union leader swore at a ~ ~\g_lne~r_~uxt w~ fired Vi'hen he refu.!ed to apologize. :•: Frotn Page 1 SK.YLAB. •• Kerwin and Weitz reported 90me ~iriisS arter splashdown and Kerv.•in inflat'OO a pair• of pressure pants to keep his bloOct pressure from dropping to the point..,where he might faint. 11lilra temporary -effect \\'as expected l--lbt:CJtlll9e-of-the-tendeooy-ol-astronauts' blood~ t.Q pool in their legs , away from the braiJ\'' as a result of heart laziness in- duced.~by long e1posure to the lack of gravity. Or!·l..awrence_ Dietlein, a NASA physi- cian.~kt tM astronauts looked in "quite good't:~health, "far better from what I pers<iiuiJiy expected." . . ' ·- frldiJ, June 22, 1973 lta El Toro Canada Foothill I Purcha~e Eye·d · By JAN WORTH 01 '" Olllr l"lltt ltalf Occidental Pelroleum Land Oevelo~ ment Corporation, developer of Lake Forest. is expected to buy the-usable por· tion of the 3,000-acre Canada Jo'oothills property in El Toro. 1riensity ranged from I.~ units pe"-acre lo, 28 units per acre w1lh 1.800 acres earmarked for development. This would have included single fan1ily detached dw ellings, cond,ominium1 ,. 8Jld apartments. Thirty to forty percent of the 1,800 acres were in an area designated by the Airport Commission ·as too noisy for residential or institutional uses. The parcel abuts the El Toro Marine Air Sta- tion. _ Occidental wants to buy the 1,700 acres of the total 3,000 which a.re nol in the ls-con-nOisy-zone;-Baker-aaid •. The sale, from more than 30 property O\.\'ners led by V. P. Baker, \Yho owns the largest portion of the land", apparently does not hinge on whether the· Canada Foothills plan Ts approved or denied In a hearing July ~ before the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Dollar-value-of-the purchase fidential , Baker said. The original Canada Foothills plan, battered by environmentalists a ~ d homeowners before it was approved 3-2 by the county planning commission in January, called for a popul~tion o~ some 35~000 persons ir\ 9,700 dwelling umts. According to Baker, Occidental has an option on the property which runs out Ju. ly I, 1974. • "-•~ Ken Wasmann, project aireclor of Lake-Forest, said the arrangements are not on paper. and depend tlmewise on tpe outcome of the hearlng before the supervisors. "We do want the property and \.\'OUld like to develop it to everyone's satisfac- -. • Cooling .Off The spacecraft was hoisted aboard this ship -'tilh the pilots still inside, a switch frorm.pest procedures ma.de -to keep-the astrllhMJts' exertion to a minbnum. . Medin" were ready lo carry ~d, Kerwin and Weitz on stretchers, if neces.,-y, from their scorched capsule to t~· blue mobile medical laboratories 65 fe.tt .away. UCI County Et;ology Plan Gets Funds tion," Wasmann said. 1 •• The company will .exe:c~ ofhc1al _ documents to get an option -oft-the pro-, pcrty if the project is either approved or denied, he said . If it is sent back to the ' county planning staff for more study, Wasmann indicated Occidental will probably buy the land eveniually, though the time factor \.\·ould be changed. Presumably negotiations ,vould have to assure Occidental lhat buying and developing; the land would be economically feasible. Nan Johnson, 17, of Orange, combines her d.esire for a sun tan and her desire to keep cool dur1ng·a beaching outing on the B~Jboa ~enin~ula. Rec<;>rd heat has sent inland Southern Cal1forn1ans !locking to the Orange Coast this \veek an.ct. altha~gh ten1- peratures are expected to drop shghtly Lh1s week· end, local autborities are girding for big CfO\Yds al the beaches. I But.·the astronauts, smiling and wav- ing, climbed out of the Apollo under tbelr own pgwer. 'Ibey stood on a wooden plat· forTI\ .. brieOy, chatting with Dr. Charles R_0§$1.~~the fi!ght .~urgeonl-and_ then careIHU.Y made Uie1r w a y down some stepS and lo the special Skylab clinic. Cotir;td, who has been in space more than ·anyone, appeared the most relaxed. V.'eltz and especially Kenvln walked a lit· tle1>bMegged and slightly hunched over. Bui·•.the fact that they were able to walk as well as they did was significant. It meant the three Americans were in better shape after spending 28 days in sp3cc than two RUS5ian cosmonauts were at ·the end of · an 18-day flight in 1970. They had to be carried from their spacectaft. The primary objecUve of the Skylab marathon was to see bow well men fare for lQai perjods of welghUessness and --t.hen~.ai:Uust to the rigors of gravity back on eitth. 1--'-.'Cclir~·~ Kerwin and Weitz w.ei:e_un· dergolng k>ng and detailed medical tesU wi"* .. an hour after their 6:50 a.m. PDT splashdown. DQctorr aald the first results wool4 not he ·Imown lllltll late In the day. Tlil!·late ol two planned 56-day fllgbls aboard Skylab hlnged on the findings ol the dedors. 'l1le no:t launch is acbeduled July 27 for Skylab 2 astrmauta Alan L. Bean, Owen K. Garriott and Jack R. Louirns . The oilly problem of the day d~veloped just as tb;e three 'Skylab 1 astronaut.s werl"W~~ 19 teave_tbe space •tJUon in <WDIT 274 miles above the earth. 'Ibe refrfettalion system that runs the ~~· ti~ food and biological sample freezers failf· ~t j L A UC Irvine study pro~am call~ "Maintaining the Environmental Quality of Orange County" has received funding lcLL'ODtinue for_a-second year. . A federal grant of 125.000 will be matclled with $1%,450 by UC! for work with citizens of wiincorporated areas. Ada Mae Hardeman.. an urban pro- gr~s specialist for UCI, said Uie pro- gram will expend its focus next year from the Saddleback Valley to Dana Point end CapWrano Beach and probably unincorporated areas of northern Orange County. During ltl first year, the study team involved many members of the Sad· dleback Area Coordinating Council .~SAOC); furnishing a research environ· ment through whldl they produced a gov- ernance report urglng a municipal ad· vi"""l' councll for the Saddleback Valley. The team also co-sponsored a six-week lecture sertes on the history and ·ecology of -the"5addlebaek-Valley-coordlnated-by Fifth Dl.s1rlct Planning ConunWiooer Ron Yeo. A crucial abn of the study, Mrs. Hardeman sakl, is to encourage citlzem lo create a policy plan for development In uninoorporated areas. SACC will releue !ta policy plan, fJ>. tended to provide effective citizen input . to future land planners, by July 14. "Too often, professi9nal planners decided where everything will go in undeveloped land before citizens have a cilance io--respond," Mrs. Hardeman said. ~policy plan is an ~!tempt to get citir.en Input Into planning before the pro- fesslooals go lo work, she sajd. John Chapman of Chapman, Phillips, Brandt, and Reddick, an Irvine Planning firm, said he had been approached by Oceidental to replan Canada Foothills. He said Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Casper also had asked him if he was interested in the job. - Chagman also is in the midst of plan· ning t!ie 10,~acre Moulton Ranch par· tion of the Saddleback Valley. The Canada Foothills plan was aP.. proved 3-2 by the county planning eotn· mission In January, following turbulent hearings In which envlronmentallsl3 and homeowners attacked the plan for its density, alleged lack of tr~ffic circula~ion planning, and overall quality of planmng. Sale of the property would end a frustrating 12-year battle for Baker and the more than 30 other property owners in the acreage to try to develop it in some way. "Personally, I'm sick or it and just can't take this fight any looger," Baker said _Thursday. "If Occidental wants to take the .ball and nm with ii, it's au theirs." Baker said he and the surrounding pro- perty owners have become discouraged with trying to do something with their land. "None of the delays have been premeditated. It's just one of those things that reaulted from unfortunate circumstanct!. 'E'rvmf Page 1 qourt Suit on-Preserves I~ San Joaquin Area Due $2 MILLION • • • tional Bank, Indianhp;ilis. The While House said all of the tax· payers' money spent in San Cleme.nte and Key Biscayne was for security· related improvements and that all work was done at the request of the Secret Service, not the President. The GSA data sbowed items such as. $5.1,Mt in fiscal 1970 for interior security and conununications at San Clemente. It also included $3,303 ln fiscal 1970 for goU carts for the Secret Service patrol at Key Biscayne . I ' < ' ~ Joaquin School !llJlrlct trusteea ma9. go to Court to cpige a situation thei say h~'!.·cost thein .more than ,1.1 miUSon in four year1. ~ large amount of agricultural pretfrves iri:tbe dLmict -and the~ ty J:pard of suPerviM>rs' failure to levy ,an area-wide tax -are cited U causes of the~osses. ,. \fllder the 'stat.'1 Willflmlon Ad, a devlloper cait place ~ in preserves, guatanteeing tO nOf lJilUClion them for ·a . ti mt. and receive 8\·tax break .in return. 'file board of supervisors ts authorised undtr the law to levy a tax on all county resipents (whomight use the open spac;e ) to help pay fer the area's loss. sat Joaquln trustees repeatedly have • ~ • • • • • • • OIAN•I COAIT DAILY PILOT !'TM Or.,._ C-1 DAILY l"ILOT, wllll .._I(!! > ~IMd fM H""·Preu, It lllltllll!W .,, ..... 0••11(11 (Mtf """'"""" ~"'· ,.,,.. )°•" 9111tllN 1re ... llllMd. MOM•Y "'"""" •r~y, Nir C-te M.,., It-rt tffd\, lflllell a..dl/f-l•lfl V111ey. ~ lmn./1-..i~ Wiii S.n Clelntrrtt/ .,l~rt c.til1tr-A llftllll t1111o1Yt :...nllln ~ ,...1....., ... turd1y1 ...... """"''*' .,,.. ""*""'' ~""-,, .. ,,, .. at .. -· • •• , StrMt, CAiio ~; C.lltwftlli, nl1'. ; ~Mtt N. W•M : "'"'""' .... l"\IM!ohtr .• .J•ck ll.-C11rl•v : \II(• '"'"111!«11 .... Gtntni IMMttt : Th•M•t IC11.,.il • l!dlllr ! n.1m11 A. Murphi~• , M-tl"'I l!idtlw J::h••l11 H. l111 lllcli1r4 P. N•ll I AUfllllftl Mtnlflril E<'llO'I : S.Clt 11te0ffl&e ? lOS Ntrth fil C•n1i11e l11I, 91611 : Ott.f OM... , co111 Mn.1 no w"' ••1 ''''" • ,.......,., IMCll: ~ ,........,, hui....111 I H"""iftllltrl tUCl'I: 1111$ tucll ............. : L1f11119 IHCllt m hr..t Avttllle : , .. .,.... (7141 '4t-4JJ1 : c-...... ..,....,...., 64J.16n • • s.. c ............ , ..... &: ; Ttl•P•••• 4tt-44JI ('.,.,. ... ,, ltn, Or..... C..tt ~'"' f ll'Mr. NI ....., '"""'· HIW!rllloN, "''" ,...,..... ., """'"llNll" ._.." .. bt . ·~ •1ff!Olll ...... •· •• .. °""'1111' ...... )_,.. <"-.... ,.i. .. Cftlt -.. Ctll'IWnla,. "*terll!lilft 11¥' tHTtw •·" • ..... fMt'I ho IMll U,IJ _.,.1¥1 ,...,..,, pttfltlltllftt U.16 ,..,...,.,, • • been rebuffed in their requests for such a tax. Now they have told Superintendent Richard Weite to ture private legal counsel and set aside an account to pay for any litigation that follows . 'The attorney will research what the district's legal interests in the issue are and aid Welte in preparing a recom- mendation for action June 28. That meeting is supposed to be the pjstrict's last. San Joaquin goes out of business June 30 and three new unified districts take over. ' Wehe is also 'directed to contact Supervisor Ronald Caapers, w h o represents the San Joaquin area on the board, to request his help. District business superintendent Rex Nerison told the board Thursday that sin- ce 1969, the district has lost •t.24 million in potential revenue . Ncrison also said the Tustin Union High School District, which overlaps some of the same area. has lost $783,741 from 1969-70 through 1971·72. He had no information for this year. Those figures, he added , have been confirmed by the county asses.90r's of. fice . Two years later there appears another item or $5,230 for three Secret Service golf carts there . · Abplanalp, a Bronxville, N . Y . , businessman, who m.ade a fortune perfecting the valve which operates aerosol spray cans, lent Nixon $625,000 in 1969 to help him buy the original 28.9 acre San Clemente property for •i.s million. In 1970 Abplanalp bought 23 of .th.ese acres back from Nixon for $1.25 mlihon, canceling the I o a n and leavin~ Nixon with 5.9 acres. the house , the en)Oynient or the other 23 acres, and an investment of his own of $251,000. The White House said the Nixons themselves paid for $123 ,514 In im· prpvements, making their net investment $374,514 . From these figures , the breakdown of "'ho has what investment in the Sen Clemente retreat is as follows : -The Nixons : '374,000. -Abplanalp : •t.25 million. -The taxpayers; $703,367. Plane Snieide Test Pilots S1ioot Dowri Own Craft POINT MUGU (UPI) -Two civilian test pilots flying a '20 mil· lion Navy jet fighter shot U1e aircraft down ·w1th one ol lls own mis- siles, according to the Navy. . .. The Grumman Fl4 Tomcat crashed in names m the Pacific Ocean Wednesday about 70 miles south\\'est t>f the N.aval Air Station , here. The crew, Grumman employes, parachuted !llely and were picked up from the water by a Navy helicopter . A Navy spokesman aafd Thursday that while the Tomcat was test-firing an unarmed ~parrow missile "the mlaolle did not f1ear the aircraft .sufficiently qnd struck the bottom of the fuselage. ' Grumman did not nlake · the m1!Sl1e or Its firing tystem. The Navy swpende,.· fl ring the Sparrow missiles from Fl4& ~,,. UI the cause of the accident Is determined. • It was the third time si~ce December, 1970, an F14 craah9j1· Reagan Cites Strength Fro111 Page 1 'SHOOTIN'G' • • • As Guarantee to Peace he had no knowled:ge that a "shootout " involving ' functi on;il firearms u· ii s scheduled at the party. Gov. Ronald Reagan today put em- phasis on U.S. military and industrial strength rather than treaties as the best guarantee for peace during a key address to the American Legion at Anaheim Convention Center. "The dust bin of history Is littered with ihe remains of those countries which relied only on diplomacy to secure th_eir freedom," the Republ ican chief executive said. Marijuana Dogs Hit-in tawsuif - ANCHORAGE, Alaska CAP! -The Alaska chapter of the American' Ci.vii Liberties Union ·has filed a class-action lawsuit seeking to stop the use of dogs to sniff out marijuana in the baggage of airline travelers. The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Anchorage. alleges that the use .or the dope-sniffing dOgs depri~s citizens of their Fourth Amendment }ight to be free from "unreasonable intrusion by the government into their privacy.". The suit , filed by attorney r.11chael L. -Rubinstein-and ACLU attorney_R~bert H. \Vagstaff, is asking the court for an in- junction against the use of the dogs by st.ate police. lie said the party \Vas directed by "\Ve must never forget -in · the final paren ts or students,. and y,·as not a school analysis -that it is our military .. in-fu11ction. dustrial· and eco nomic strength that of· ··11 \.\'3~ not 1nanageti or SuperviSed by fers the best guarantee of peace for the 'school itself," Haught said. ,,, America in times of danger," he said. He said lo his knowledge the district "We dare not heed the counsel of those does not ·ha\'e · a policy regarding who would risk America's freedom -through one-sided disarmament pro-presence of firearms on the school posa\s that our count ry would carry out grourids. honorably, but which the · other side He said if a gun were brought during 1night evade or ignore." Reagan added. schoo l day, ii would not be all owed. but. ··our fir st commitment must be to .that the use of the fa cilities by an outside maintain and nourish in the hearts and group after hours was a different matter. the minds of our young ~~le the. love of "\Ve don't rcgul~e_ex_ccpLla .. tillLeXlent freedom t~at yo u .and . m1ll!9ns ~i~e .rou----ihat SQiileth~ing would be harmful to thr ha.ve-e-xn::iD1ted during times of cr1s1s, he facilities," Haught said, citing prohibition sa id. 1 of smoking in the auctitorium as an ex-. The governor. a~so urged support or ample. his state tax hmtt·r~hlnd proposal ~x· School authorities said they were al· ~7~~~n t~o~ ~~e subject of a statewide ' tcinpting to contac~the parent organizers "We must briog_govemment spe nd ing of the party to find out y,·hat had hap- under control if the wag e gains our peo-pcned during the skit. pie make are to be ~eat instead o( an Police reported the production involved endle~S C1Cle O[ pay '!lcreaSeS fol\owed t\VO 1nen being chased by 3 sheriff WhO by ~1gher tax deductJOns, follow~ by had shotgWls loaded with blank am· legitimate demands for even higher munition. wages so that the people can pay even . higher taxes," he said. · . Blank .shells hive a wad of plastic or ~le said the proposal would "prov ide fibe: which ~o.mprdsses the .powder back ample money for g 0 v-:e r nm en t' s against the hr1ng cap. or primer .. legitimate functions to e:cpand" but in 15 • The wads normally f~y some distance years would ''leave more than SI 18 v:hen !he shells are fired . A 10-gauge billion in the pockets of the people V.'ho shotgun is normally used for h~aV)"' earned it." bodied fowl such as goose. Sum~er _gafe Conlinued LEATHER SOFAS & CHAIRS ON SALE NOW Leather and Brass are natural partners. With quality materials; good design and craftsmanship •.. the result is a furniture classic. Reg. $1320 SALE $999 • Reg· $1470 SALE $1099 Top Grain Glove Solt Loather -Fantastic Value -96" length. If you're looking for quality, upholstery. dining, bedroom, or occasional ,furniture, 11 your chance to purchase tho lines! el 1ole pricH. Stop in todoy. now Fret, inttrior dtsign serv ice •v•il•ble, DREXEL,....HERIT AGE-tiENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASl AN · INTERIORS , WllKDAYS • SATURDAYS t10D FRIDAY 'TIL t:DO • . . lo 5130 • • NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIFF DR.. 641·1050 IOptn Su11d1v 11·5:)0) LAGUNA BEACH e 345 NORTH COAST HWY .• IOp'" S1111d1v 12.s:JOI 494°6511 TORRANCE e 2J649 HAWTHORNI ILVD. 111-1279 • \ .. I .. .. . • • .. •• 4 .. --. .. ' . .... . . -. ' ..... "'' .. \ . IA OAILV PILOT Frid.<!, Juoe 22, 1973 :.:LIC N<Yl'JCE PUllLIC NlmCE --PllBUPiiiiLiicD'NNOTiiTilCCEE-1 --PPUUBiilICtIC~NOTlmKCE~--1:==P=UB=L1=c=N='11ft::::C::E==:1 ---:i.rPiuiieiLL:ii1c~NOTiCE N..::~0~:.:~:.-:::s '1C'YITMl'UI 1ut1••tt llOTICI TO UIDITOltS ,tCT/TIOUI I US1Nlt:SS NOTICI TO C~T•ACTOltS ~."• tonow1r1o ""°"' 11 -~-·--...., 4 ,M&Mm nAftMllNT IUl'lltlCMI COUltT 0, Tiii NAMI ST,t,TIJdNT ,tCTmous IUSUllSS CALLING ,Oil 1101 , _,_., T'-"°°"""' ,.,_ er• llollll 1 ITAT9'0I' CAUf'OINIA l"Olt Ttw follow~ "''°"'' wa 9"'1!i1 NAMI ITATaMIHT SdlOOI Di1l•lc:I; Hi' WP 0 111 M [ SA I THE PICK OF Pu ch I T:~~~fts, 'i"'.¥t"i~ w IDE •H· ~~~ CCAST CllltCU!T, mo ,., TM•'°" ... ~! f::s,0..,.,... IMl=rt:MOTOll:S. 'Oii s. M•ln, s.n1• •• ; .. followl"ll penotl " dOI-.; ll!ililMW .~"=1~: IO:Oo o·c~ • m on ,""; 111/d,. 81IOIMI, CA ~A. W..t l•IDN onn.. SMI• AM. C.Hr. 'II""'-of CMAJltLES L 0 £11;MAH, ._ Ml. '2101 TEL INDtlSTlllES, 11152 G•r-Otn 2nl NY llt J11ly lf11. '°lvl 1... l.•flVIM!t UI ~flt SI J~ p , l1"91'1Ult, 1Ull '°"" (KARI.IS ZOl.l..f• 0£11tMAH, Dat.....0, J, M.lrlltl tv.:i.t. J02i I. ·-· hnl• GrOYI IJ\'ll., G•rdton Gr-~t i lld ~tc•ipl. llJ7 Pl1Cr<1h• ~i:;-~~~;. CA .:W.i " .st::=,.11t..N~~!:.c"'1m .... :~1.,1s~E=Y .:.=Nci:..= "':'. ~ Smllfl Jr .. ,..n C6n'.t•t. ,=::"v.r:-i.ii. 1nu S.n L11b. _,~:, J:i1~~·= N•..W VI NYL t'41cl11tl, t~ 11\1 •n lrto ,,.,.,... .. 1 .. NIWWI IMCfl "'°' ... ~· "9Yl"9 d.llmt aothut '"-Mlnloirl Vl•IO mn Tiii• bl.lti,.,... It DOll'IQ tol\dutlta Dy •l'I }Fl.DOM TILE 1'0111: hll!'Nf'Cllll MESA "•Ill L LI""""° Tl'lll ~ 11 CondllCIM D'/' If! lit-uld dtcol'ldlflt lro tt4Ulf'ltd lo flS. '""""' Tl'IU bullt1n1 It conducfW lh' I tfM'r•I [lldlYlclNI -t,fHlf'IEO SCHOOi.. OISTltlCT Tllll "''"""n' Wit n.., wl dlv_ld .... I, wllfl !fie --ry VOllChen. In '"-Offlc• p.trtnlnhlp O.OW111 E. Tlntl•V PllC~ Pl•111 .,. on F II•. lll7 Pltc:onh• Cler~ of Or•nat c Ill 1111 Cou11o IC.11"'"" ... T"'"'•l• of Ille elm of n. •llov• tolftlH court, or M. G, lr!lltl'I Jr. Tnlt tl~t""'1'1t fl~ wltll "'" Counl'f' Av-. Coal• M•w _ /1 ' 04/Ny on JIHIO s. lt1S TN• '"'*-I Wit fflod Wflfl"" COl.lflo lo "'"""' tl'Wn, wltll IN r«:-rr Tiii• •l•'-'11 ...... fftad wlttl Ille Coun-Cltfk of IY en· JIJftO n. 1973 NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN N I Ill~ ttutlll"*! Ot"inot CcNi.i 0.U ·=IV Clttk Of Ot ..... C-ty en MIY tt, vOIJClltt"t. 10 !fie vndlrtlg!IH •t.lhl ottlc:" ly Cieri!. of Ol'lflll' CDlll'lty on J11111 It, WILLIAM E'. . · JOHN,. GDlll'lty Cl1rll, ooow• n•l'l'ollll Seim D111rtc:t of O••noe "' •. ''· n, J9 Itta y ' 1m. "'LIPPOid. lltndtoltort'l Ind DI-. Al• lfT.I •v llltf'•w Wltd, DofffY, OM.inly, C•llloml•, HtrnQ DV •nd '"'OU911 ' 17'°'73 • ..u.4t IOtflt';t •t I.AW• .. e"•il 17'ltl 51., $\lllt "UlH FUttJ 111 Gci .. .,nlng 80.rd, hcrl'lno!!~r r1!1rrtC1 Pubntllod °'"""' CMlt Ditty ""'°'· 111, C••• ,,..., C•Hforl'll• *27, wllldl "UbUsllid Or-1no-Coost Otllr r•not, ,.ublllhacl o....,. C•ll D•llY PllOI, to a1 "OISTlll:ICT," will rft('lvt \IC) to l>IJI PUBLIC NOTICE I Ju111 I, J, JS, 22. 1m1 ltn-13 11.,.. »!act Ill bWI,... of 11\t \IAdlrllflltCI JlllW U. tt, •M Jllfr t . 1>. lf1S ltl).7' J11r11 1s, 22. 2', Ind JvfY ._ 1tn 1u 1-n f'OI 1111• 11'11n the aix1Y• 1101t1.111mt. lie.ti· 11---T-~::,:.:.:::.:::'.:'.'....J,__ C--";=':'::':-::-:'· :':":-::::-::=--"=-~I 111 an mtl'-pw11Jn1ne 1o tile ot111t at tic1 bk:l1 ror me 1w1rd of a con1,1e1 !<)• l I SI 7 I PUBLIC NOTICE Nici dacMtttf, wlfllln " montl\1 11ttr tile PLJ8LIC NOO'JCE BLIC OTICE 1111 ooove proje<:I. 1 SUPt:i:IOR cc~lT 01' THI r flrtt publlt.tllon or ltll• notlco. · PU N Bids 1rroll 1111 r1C1lw.O Ip IM• ploc:• laen· StATI& 01' CALll"OltNIA l'Olt M1rltl'I I. Gt<'"''" FICTITIOUS IUllM•Ss tlllea ilbovt, ftl\li Jllftll be _.,((j ~'111 : ™* COUNTV c, OltAMM ,IC'l'ITIOUS IUSIM•ss •xtattrlii of ti. e1111t/Wlll NAME ITATIM•NT l'M:YiTIOUS IUSINESS p.il>lld'f' read •IOlid '1 lhll lboY• ~tt1loN Mo. A·7•1ll. Tiit fol= JTATIMa•T clol of llw ob0\10 lltMld dlclodent The fClllDWlfllll P«9Wll •r• ~ NAMI' STATaNIEtfT 11i:;'~_,11ndw1fi1•:·. UCIOO der»Jlf 'f<l"'''t.J l OICI. 01' HIAlllNO 01' PITITIOM bi;tll'ltU 11• Pfl'IOl'll are flll L ........ H.....,_.. .. DI~ buill'lfn •1: TIM fOllOWlflO Wion It dolnll bullne11 klr eacl'I 111 01 bid 11oc,,.in..,1• 10 i;iuar -=~=::•AT• 0'° WIU. ANO FOil H001teR•1 GAR8AGE Dt5,.0SAL ~ .. lMW ' CASA DE COIFFURE. 21S o.I Mar, •t: 1nlee lh1 rllurn I" good conoUIDll w•!111n at T•STAM•NTAllY REPAIR AHO SE •VICE CO l'2HI -• .., lnll SfrMI, ..... 111 5an CIM!ltnla Cl . n.12 FOOT FREEDOM, P,O. 80.-lnt ID days allff Ill~ bill Ol*!l\U oetl ~~~of ElMER II. EVEMETT • .11ko 8rCIOkll1.1rit Wily Gtr* o''ro 1 C .... Meal. C ........... ,..., D•n A. W~lll, ""2' E. Aw . Sin L•OUNr leoc;ll, C•I. «16 (111\llln Acton, EKh l)ld m1111 contorrn and ire rf-MEr~VERETl , •k• ELMEM EDWIN C1lltoml1 fU'l • • y • T ......... I cntl ,...,.,,. J111n, San,,_,., C•. '2'72 L-OUlll e1ocll, C•I. m51 u•on1lve lo 1111 conU•C! dOCUIT'l'nl~ •sH • •k1 E. E, E ... ERETT, Roy A. HoOll;er, US Otfft1 Sllorft A...,_. fw •--.U 01Yld M. M.oal, 523 !:. S.n J11tn. hn •og.er IC.•nl V1n DI \lanlrr, lCISS EacM bid ihftll De ,1cc~nllld bv t~~ NOTic E 1 Dr1ve. Dnlrt Sllor'lt, Catlfcwnll '2214 l'ublllhad.Cr•"9'0 C••t Doltv l'Jlot JVN Clff"lll!lo, Ct. mn 81UIOlrd C1nyon, L-v11.,. 8e.c-n, Cal. 1ec:...,.ll'f' rl1trre<1 to In tile conlratl WAYNE ES E~::Ef!Y GIVEN ttr.11 Kelllll M. HookK, llnl £, Mc:L.tr•flt lS, 71. "•nd July,.. ,,1> 1 ..... 13 Tftl1~w.1nn1 11 belllQ conductad b'f' I f!tS1 I • oocumenh end by !Me list OI PfOPOSNI n ONA • ETT •nd SECUlllTY Norw•lk, C•llklrnflf' 90650 P1rlnotr"11IO. I bl.II flfl• 11 collducl by an In· wbconlrKton. '! L 8AHI( Ill~• fllld llor1ln 1 Tiiis bl.lllnotu I• collduclad b'f' 1 •f PUBIJC N-CE 'Otn 4 W..,enkMctlt dlvldl.lllt. Mr. Jo11m•' M. t1tl~r.1nd, Oirec:tor. on '°'" Probll• of Wiit and fOI oorlfllrslllp ,_ VII Tl\11 •l•temlftt fllad wtlll -CIMl'fllY llCl9fl' K. V1n oe V11111r Scnool FaciUUH M•lnllnilncl ftt\11 ()per• r tr f1oCI ol L•lltr1 T 1 1 I • m • n t 1 , ' Rl!lt' 4 Hooke!' " Citric of 0tll'IQO CDlll'lty an: June 11, ltn. Tllll lll!trntnl Wll flied Wllll Ille Coun• tlonl, will /!"Me; wllh 11\0M llef!IOnto In Cotyr.111'1 ltlJ. l D"Ofltfi ~ J yflli<lltot . . /J j,1r~' lo wlllcll 11 ~ few furlllt( Tlllt •l•ltmlflf ••• filod wl tll Ille c-. • DlD e y T""'"' M. W•rd, Deputy Countv ty Clerk of Or•nge County on June S, 11res1., 111 touring 1111 1ltr 11 111e Olfl~• PHri'r!J·;.fld 111.111 •no tlm• 1nc1 plac• IY Cti rk o1 Ot•ne• (ounlY nn J-5 lfn IUl'llllOlt cou•T Of' TH• er--. 1913. FtS• of Scllool F•tlll!lei, •~,., 111 921 8ektr l 1913 11""" 1111 been 1111 tor July U-.l'd N • ....,...,.., Atty ' STATI OI' CALt•OllMIA l'Ollt f"U"4 I Strnl, Co1t1 Mes.II, Colllorn,., 11 t ·C.O ~. • II t :OD 1.m,, In 1111 tourlrODll'I or •n ,-.,..__. 11.,,,. ' TH• COUNTY' Ofl Olt....... 'PUtilllhacl Or~ Co.11 Diily Piiot, PUOll11'11d Cr.,.,ge Co.1t Dally Piiot, P.M .. JIOIW 2!1, 1913. . "You'd think they could carer a bit rnore to ~Ht worAers." 1•rlmtn1 Na. J ol uld COutJ, •I 700 S.Ulll .. " c......,... ... .... A·7'm J-15, 22, 2t •nd July .. I~ llJl).13 Juno •• u. 22. "· 1973 115"9·73 Tiie DISTIUCT reslfYIS tne ••Oftl to ·~ 11~ ~':;';,!Q~1 ~-ll'LJfii._C!ty of lW'..oc • NCmCJI OI' ... ~.IMO Of'-'".n:n.to• -lecM!>Y or ell bidi rtr to wa1V1 1111y-lrrOQ ~tied J~nt 13 1;,;-"Ulll PCM!: PIOIATI' Ol'-HRllN WILL _J UBLJC NOTICE 'PUBLIC NOTICE ujlirllits or lnlormallllts In •ny bid~ Or WILLIAM • · '°ubl!&llod Or1nt1 COhl Olllr ;.!lot AND '°" 'L•TT•ltl 0 '° AP. -• In Ill• tilddl119. C <• • Sli"'J q HN, Jlll'lf, I, IS, 21, :If, 1'1l 17• 7J Mlllllnt:ATION I ' ,Tiie DISTRICT 1'1$ aerermlnea tne RNl!s°"'S~HAOrk ... ,SON . E1tole of 10A MAY JENSMA, Cl«N.,_ I... l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS geoi~r1I Pf"'llVlliilll! rftle ol ~r Olcm WoKIC\ NNlciY • ~ • od. SU,.llttOlt COUIT OI' TN• NAMI STAT EMENT In Ille loc:;ilUy In wnfcll 1111 work ls ra be . £ & 0 . IANOCLl'H Mii.Lii PUBIJC NOTICE • HOTl(:IE IS HEllEIY GIVfH !11111 STATlf Of' CALl..ottNIA l"M Tilt fall-Ing persons are dolnQ perform«I far "cM cr1fl ar 1ype ot .~ llltll J, Sclla9, Jr, DENNIS COO,.Elt lllt !Utd llertln I pell· TM• COUNTY O'° C.ANG• bllllnnl 1$; _,.min .-led ro execul~ 1n1 conrrat1. Ntielear Disp11te ~tc~rt~ ~IYd., P.O. 1-oJt ,,.. flllfl for '°roNIO of For•IOll Wl!t •nd for NI, A7'11f MEii.RiTT MASTEi!: ENTERPRISES, T"'"' rites ar• on Ille '' 1857 Placenll~ , C1l•I ~~-· 1111. fl6'l . I 51511 L1-nta of Latten of Admlnl1!r1Tlon to MOTIClf Of' Nl!AllMO O'° l'ITrTIOft S00 HIWpQ<"I Ctnlll' Drive, Su!r1 .00, Avenut, Cosl1 Mna. C~ts rNIY De cti· NOTIC• TO Cll•D(TOlltS !Ill ~lilt_., rt..,11\Ce lo which ls macll •Oil P•OIATI .0 .. WILL AMO ,OR ~ 8o•cll, Ca ~ 11lneo an rl'Cluesl A f;Olly ot !Mese rato:i lll>llshtd O••"il• Co.it D1Uy '°!lot, SU,.llRIOR COUlltT OI' lH• for furtlltr oorttcul•n. •nd Illa! llle llmtl-.Ll'l:TllS TISTAM•NTAltY P•VI Mirrrltt. Cllrl1tl•f\!!ll• °'1' ll.urtl $1\111 be ROSled oii !lie lob 1!11. j119 15, 16. ~2. 197l 116'·7l • STATlf 01' CALll'OltNIA ,..,.... Miii tl'IKI of ._.ring tflo-M""' 11•1 baln Eilill of MAY ALLAN SIMPSON. Jlreel, Sen Frftnclsco, C• Tile lortgoing tcl'ledule of lll!r diem • THI COUNTY 0'° OltAff• • Mt for J UI¥ 10, 1973, 1t t :OO 1.m, In 1111 OKMMd. -WUj11m Merritt Cllrl111jrnsen, ~'6 Oil· Wllll\ Is 1N1ecl upor, a workjno d~V at PUBLIC NOTICE No. A·7W) courtrCIOll'I of Ots>er:tmenl No 3 of Mid NOTtCE ts HEREIY GIVEN 11111 mond StrHI. L.Vuno 811cll, Ca. 9'US1 ,;g111 (I) hours. 1n1 r111 lor.· fioHday •11a Asl{s Halt Co11rt -f------..,-,.,~--';:_ ___ 1 Elllll of DAVID E. ROOT, •Ito kllO\l!l'I court. •I 700 Civic Ctnler Orlw Wnl, In HUGH-"J. RITCHIE II•• 111«1 lltrtln • Tlll1' bu1l110S• II being conducted by I D'lertlmt work ~lld!I be •I ll<Jll tune .iud et o . f , Jtoo1. Oeca•sld. tilt Clly of s.1111 Ano, C1!1fornl1, pttttlon frtr Probat• of Wiii ond lor G•n•r•I Parlnarslllp. one-11111. 1 1·~7a NOTICE. IS HER.IEIY GIVEN to tllo 001«1 J11!'11 20, 1973 • fltl.I•~ of L.tltrl Te 1 11 m ,.n I • r y Poul M, Chrl1tl111$en II $111!1 be mDnda!ory uPOn ine -CON NOTICI OP TltUSTl•'S SAi.• Cl"tcltlol's Ill 1111 ~ nl fMll ~I WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, reftrmu to Wlllcll 11 m.Oo far •fur1Mer Tlllt 1t1!1m1nt llled wllh tile County TRACTOR 10 wt.cm !Ill c:onlrll~I h UNDll!: D•ID O" TRUST llMll •11 PIQOlls lllvll'IQ ¢t11m1 Oll'lnlll J1t .Caunty Clerk oorlkultrt, Ind lft•I lllt time a'ncl pit<• Clerk af Orono• CounlY en Mav 14, lt13 1w1ro~. ~nd upon any 1ubeonlroc111'.~ Tl' 31'n · 1tld ~ 1r1 rtqUlrod lo flit "*"' 1t01•11tnON, HOWSllt A OAltl.ANO ot llNrlno tile urne II•• been set frtr J111v by TllerflO M.. W1rd, Depul'f' County undec hom, ICI PIY nor les' !Man lhu .salrr LOAN NO, l:Jltlf with lhl llKtlHry voucflon, In Ill• Ol!lco ly1, MkllMI ..,,.... l, 1973, •I t :OD •.m .• In tllt <:CIU'ftroom of Cltrk, specKled ratts to aft work"1tn ~mpla~~d ctlce It h•re':{ glwn IM•t SERltANO of llMI ct•rk of 1111 •bov• ontltW.ci ~·cw a.(•..,.. Drlvt ~""""" No l ol ••Id coun •' 700 F·2$SU by 111em In tilt e11ecutlon 111 tne can!•ACI. To Frencl1 Tests ' 1f10NYEYANC C 0 MP ANY , A lo present lhtim, wllh IN 11ec..Ury .......... -..ell. C911f. l'266J Civic Ctnltr Drive V/e1I 111 tri.' City ol Publ!slled Orange Co;,st Dally Pllo! June Na bklcler m;)y wl1Mdraw llh bid for ~ • O!"n • coroor11lan •• 1r111IH, or tllC· voudltr1. lo the \lllOll'slclrtld a 1 T•h tnt) ....,_ Siii!• An.a, CaUtornlll. ' 1. I, IS, 22, 1973 1616·n Pfrlod af lorty·tlve (~Sl d&V!i 1111tr Ille c ~ 1ru1111. or 1ubt1ltuttd truttH RobtrllDfl, Howser & G...-l•nd, AncwntYa.. A.......,.. lar= PotllMMr Pated Jll!ll IJ 1973 dat~ !iel tor tne opening DI bids. r:ie-~~ lo '"'a.I'd of tru11 lllKUled br .c.tO CemlMlt Drfw. ...o. •• m1 •• Pllbllllllcl Ii°"'"" Co.it Dally Pllo/, WILLIAM •.-it JOHN, PUBLIC NOTICE A payment bDnd end I PfflOrmanc:1 ANCH Pti~RANCH ANO 80NHIE H. Newport ~ch, C.llfornll. whlcll It '\flt J-22, ts. , lt7J 196(1-73 COUntv Cl.,k band w111 be required prior to e~ecu!lon ol r • SIANO ANO WIFE Ind pl1<1 of blltlnest ot !he undlrllg ..... 11'1 •II JOHN c. McCALL ,M:TITIOUS IUSIHESS Ille conlroct. Tiie PIYmtnl bond s~all tie !HE HA(iliE \UPI 1 -The Internationa l Court of Justice ~dtdOfoo'"', , ,11, 19n In boClk MIODS PffO molltrs wt1l11lng. lo 1111 •1111• of .. Id PUBUC NOTICE me.,,.....,.. a111111., Sllilt., '""E s•••EM•H'"" In tllo h>rm HI fo<'1M In 1111 conlrilc! i..,:'' c • tcor111 In 1111 offlca of !he ~I, wllfll11 lour mon1'11 •f'ltr !he L• ,........ C.VL Wit -' ' ' ooc11ments. d 'ii~ 1 ••corder ot Or•na• cauniy, 11r11 llUbllt'•tton ot flll• notlc•. , IUl'ftlOI COUlltT o• CAL•,O•NIA Tttr {2111 "1.S!I ~.~.':'.~wine 111tson1 a re doing Govt rnlll9 Botlrd asked France today lo suspen n•. •nd P11•111•11~ 1o !fie NOii~• of O.tad JIJllO s. 1m • Attwwy ,,, .. '°"'"-· 8'1' Dorotll'f' Hftrvey Fllner nuclear 1e.stin ·n th &>uth tull •nd f ltcl\ol'I lo Stll lller•"lld•~ aANK OF AMERICA NATIONAi. COUNTY 01' OltAHff Publlsllad '0r•ll9' CCIII! Dolly Pllof, SOUTH COAST CLEAN·UP, 31716 Purchailng Aotnt g l C r Ol'Old M•rcfl I, l,7l In book lt)Slt pag1 TltUST & SAVINGS o\SSOCIATION 1'11 Cfllk C..,., °"""'• WOii, s-t• A .. JIJftO 15, 1 .. 21. 1973 . 1165·13 ... lrelnlo W•'f', SO. Laguna, Call!. 9'16~7 Pi.obHshed Or•r>M Coas! Doily Pllol, Pacific_ but (1•c Fr e n ,C )1 ' of uld Offlelol lhcordt, Wiii SELL en I r LUdlle I . fUls. C.U• lllUMI•!' 1'71Q Mlrk W•rrtn Willie, 31116 Vlr;1nla Jllne 15 ind 22, 1973 117,.7J r 'J , • J0 Y '· 1t11 11 11:00 ''·"'·· 11 1111 Horth vice p ·~-Trl,ISf tUMMOlllS wiy, so, L1gun., ciru. V16n -goverrunent denied • th<> 'vor_ Id ont 1111lr•nc1 to IN Ot.atlllt COUl)I r. '°t1l11tllfs: DAltRELL EDMOND SAN· Vk tor ljlt'ttn Svlmonoll, 3 1 7 I 6 l' ic ''MllM 1oc11111 •I 700 civic ,.,,~ :=n:"'=. Ill t!:., "'"~ l'"OflD, 1 '"1_., by •nd 111roug11 hi• 111111r-PUBUC NOTICE v1r11lnlil W•Y· So. La11un1, Calif. nm PUBLlC NOTICE court's i·urigciiction in tt}e Ya Wl\t lorrnerly Wnl 1111 Slreel, MICHAIL : •• ~. dl•n 11d lllefrl, AltWILDA SANFORO T/111 bullntQ It COllCIUCled by • 11ener1l '11• An.. C.lllornl• 11 PWtlc 1ucllon, ta •Oll•TSOM, MOWSIR-I eAllfU.MO Defenanll: CHRISTOPHER ALLEN lifOTIC• iNVITING-llOS Pfl'l~nlllD. . NOTICE OF MDN·RESPON,lllLITY case. I lllglltst bidder tor qy, (~•bl• I f .. C•-Drtw TITMUS. AlllHUR THOMAS PSALIDAS, Nolko Lt lllreby olvtn 11\.11 Ille 90.rd al •rk WllllO Nollco Is nereby given lhil l~e un· J . ht { ' ( th ' I tlrne ol HI• In l•wlul montr of 1111 ,...._. 1 11 c llfW'lll · DOES I lllrougll J( Tru$1ff$ OI tn. lrvlrte Unified S<lloot .... 1 11111men1 wa• flltod wltn tt>t Coun-derslon!'ll ..,111 not l3e reSPOnllCl!e lar 1 n an e1g • 0 SIX \'0 e,· e ltec:t.51111•) •II rla111, 11111. Md lntt'1"1$1, ,....._..•:._s..; • To 1M.Deltnd111ts; A civil come>l•lnt Dl'trkt of Or11191 County, C•llfornl•, wilt 1'1' Cler:ti: of 0...•11111 C011nl'f' on Juflfl 12, debh or llablll!lts ccnrr1(ted bV invO::: court said "the Fr en '1 h < ,."•Yid 10 •nd ntH1 ~Id bv 11 ,under ••Id "'''°"""" ·._ E•Kutw t.1 bN!I nlad b'f' '"' 01111111':' 11Qr.1l'j'1 rocelw weled t11d1 up 10 lll!d lncludlng lt1l. otl'lf'r 111~11 mv1e11. an or .,uer th;s date. government shou ld a v o 1 d d Jn 1111 pr~rty ,11u1tad In sold Pubfllhtd Or D 1 'f'OU. If you wish 10 ci.fend 111 i lewsu I. 2·30 p m Oii IM 611l d1y of Juty, 1'73, •I """' Dftted 11111 Utll day at Jun~ 1973 funty 1nd s11t1GeKrlbtd 11 lollowi· •nae CNst al'f' "llOI, VOii mu11 IU• In 11111 court • written the of11C~ of Atlltl•nl super1111eno.n1, "ubllslled Dr11no1 coasi Olrily Pllol l wlllo M F y ng ' ,nuclear tests causing the LOI SIS •nd Ille Norlllt•slerly Oii... June I. 15, 21. 2'. 1t7l 1na.n olHdl119 In r1wcn11 lo llMI complelnt lcw Fltcal Pl1nnlng, Dt11elopm1nl 1 n d JUM 1$, 1], 29, end July'· 1973 1&3'2·1l 2019 Tllufln Na 0~ L Jloll 01 lo! J86 of 1roc1 Ho. 901, Jn Ille • 1 wrltl•n or orOI pl_Hd1,., It • J111tlce Resurch, 1ot1t.d 11 "5(2 Mklltl1on Rold. C!csla Meso. C~I. 916U ~ Uw 01 N1wpor1 B••cll. county of PUBLIC NOTICE COllrfl wltMln • cl•Y• off¥ tllls summons Irvine, Callfarnl• 92""64, al whk.11 lime •!'Id PUBLIC NOTICE Pubtlshed Or~noe Coa.r Daa~ <>11~1 ( ) ••~. Slelt 111 Call!ornl1, 11 per mao 1' It ttnild on you. 01111rw1:11, your defl\llt plKe bld1 wHI be Pl.lbllcl'f' openld •nd June 16, 11, :n, 1913 lo1,9•1) s llCWC!ed In •oo11 21, P•Qt!I 1S to 3' In--Wiii be enltrod Oii app!lt•tlon tiy Ille rffd aloud for: · ITATIMl:NT O• AaAHDONMEHT JN HO'RT l11slv1 ol )"1IK1ll1nfl)UI mll)I, recordl SU,.IRIOlt COURT 0" THI plelnnffl 11nd IN court tnlY enle!' • PURCHASE OF SC HOOL aUSliS, In It· 01' USE OF ----0 0 0 I Qr1nge COlll'l!V, C•tllornl&. ST.tr.Te 01' CALll'QttHIA tro• ]llllOrnenl •a-lnll vou for 11\t m_., or t<Wd•nc• with llld lnJ!rucllons, l !d Con· FICTITIOUS IUSIHE"SS HA'ME PUBLIC NOTICE . Ak"A -MW VI• Mtnron•, Newperrl 'THI: COUNTY 01" OltANGI otl\tl' rtll.t reqwslld In the c:omplelnt. dlllOM; Ind Sp..:lflc•llOlll on IU• ind Tiit loUowlng Pll'"&on ftils aboandoned 'he 1'•1ell, C1lllornl• ND. •..si1• If .,... wi.• la ..... tllo ""4t.1 ti 1111 al· •v•il•lll• •I 1111 office of Alslslanl u1e of lho tic:tillous business name ~la Jiit Wiii be m1d1, bu! wlll'IOVI NOTICI Of' SAL• CW 11t•Al "'""" 1111 Ill• IMIW, VOii .iio.N • II SllOlrlllll~t, FllCll Pltnnlf'IQ, Develop. ELMORE COMPANY REAL ESlATE c O'e<lllll or w•rr1nly, 11pr111 cw lmplltd, '°11t°"•1tTY AT l"llllV,t,TI! SAL• """"""1 II tMI ,._ ""9di,.._ If •111y, mttnt Ond M11Hrcl\, ICIC•led 11 4$.12 DIVISION 11 181 Do¥tr Drl~t. Suire 10, 1 irdf119 !Hit, 00.H stlon or tn· E1!1'9 ot M. M. MtCALLEN, DICHllll ... Till ftloltl tit --Mlellellllfl lo.cl, lrvl!'lf, C•lllorflll nt.M. NOWPort 81ocll, Cellfornl1 92660. lhe SLP·Ol2 FICT)TIOUS lUSINESS NAME STATEMENT fcillowlnc person Is da!ng ousln~u c: tntw1ncn. lo 11U1ty Ille lndtbltd111u .. OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lti&I tub-0.lwd Nov. t , 1t1'2 All bids rnvst be on forrAI •IJPPlltd b'f' Tile flcllllDUJ lluslr111.s namt rettrred to •1: I urecl by ll kl DNd, lnch.odl"lf !ht IM Itel to c:onflrm•llon b'f !hi IOOYe 111ttrt.c1 WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, Clerk ll'le lrvlN U11lflacl Sc:hOOI Dlllrlcl. -100¥1 w•t filed In Coun!y on Merell 17 COOK DRYWALL 9115 El Dur1nao I ••Pln\t of 1111 trul!N •nd of tt>t Court, on July 26. lt7'. 11 t:OO 1.m., cw IV DONNA Gt180ff, Deputy The rlgllt lo relect OI' wilvi Ir· 1,n, • ' Clrcle, Fo1mlaln v1111'ev, Call! 1 ts crHl!'d by Miid OH!d, 1dY1nce1 llltr~•lttr wllhln 1111 ttme •llowld ll'f' law. lS~All -regularl~IW ~n ;'!f •1 •II "40s 11 reMrved Ru11l P. WJUlam1, 167 N. LlntDln COOk·Ltslelle, Inc., A · C~l!lorn!~ t ... r:ndt~·~ w1,.111 lnl1rr11 as jl"r0¥1clld 1111 underslontd~ It C<M~KUICW1 ,,, ll>t ... 'L•• ADAIR bY tile 8 °'.' Jahfl ;·~le Pl•<:i!, MonroYll. Cellfewnl• 9IGU CorPQrollan. t71S El Dur•noo Clrtle, n •• ,,.. I Ufl~lll prlntlOll Of llw wlll of M. M. Mc:CALLEH, c1toe11Md, wlll A"'""1' OI Llw 'I'· Thh bullntu w11 tollduclfd I)'( "' In· Foun11!n Volle•, Cillll : ~. 11ewtd0 by uld doled; 10-wll wll 11 prlv1t~ Milt 10 tlle 11111nnt 1nd btll 1•1 Wwldlff Drl,,..., Swll• ttt P "'""'Aulst~nt S""'Cl:~!11,, trllot dlYld..,.I. Tl'lls buslneu '' bel"9 canctucr1d b'f' ii • ·"" w 11'1 ln1trn1 lhorto11 fl'-~ 11/dd&r on 11>t tw-m1 •nd colldltlOns N...,.,. a...:i., Call""91& '2"* ""' ranee 1 ' ' RUSH P. WILLIAMS corpor11lon dei::isil oi radioact ive fallou t · on· l\ustralian territory.'' ·rhe court said I he governments of Australia and Frapce should "ensure that no action of any kind is taken PUBLIC NOTICE ember 10, !!n 11 provided In ukl 11er111111ttrr m~llantd all rlghl, 11111 •nd T•h (7141 .,...Dll J11ne 22. lt, ltn lt:U-7l Tiii• 111ttmenl w11 lilld witft !he coun. LARRY L, COOK 1· tlilitr~l-trM. ~1.\:-M"'teAt:(EN~dK-.aUCI'; A"""""~lw-"l•lllflff -------fy Cler:lt of OrMOllt COllfllY on June-19, ~-etn/de!ll llld: June I, 1913. al 1"' Time of 111s·dHlll and 111 rlgMI, lltll '°llbllJhtod Cr•nve Coall D1lty Piiot, l,7l, Tlll1 sl•l~met.t Ille<! whn Ille Coon1y I i7114 SERRANO RECO NVEYAHCE 1nd lnrtrn l ltl•l 1111 n 1111 1'111 ocqutrod JUN 22, 2t Ind Jiiiy 6. 13. 1'1J ltst-n PUBLIC NOTICE · ·· F1'$11J Clerk of Or1noe Countv on: M•y :n, 1913. SUPERIOR COURT OF THE COM PANY I In ordditlon IO 11'111 of O«ecl~I •I ll'lf ltme Publi1lled Cringe COllSI O•llY Pilot. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COU .. TY Cl EllK, STATE o~ CALIFORNIA FOR l •I tllCll Trul!H al 1111 Ot•lli• in tne rQI pr-rly ICICIMd PUBLIC NOTICE S"PO•O .. COUllT OF June 22, 1', •nd Jiiiy t, 13 ,IJ73 1'37·13 Sy TtlOrlH M. Ward, Oeoulf ·THE COuMTY OF ORANGE &y WAYNE H • .O.\AlHEW~ In'"' CounlY ol Or1nve. Sllh of C1t1for. " F2~71 No .•. ,.,,. Aulllorlzec:t Otflcor nit, ~rlbtd •s !OlloNO.: CALIFOltNIA. COUNTY 01" CRAHOI Pu!!Hsned Orlnge Co.1' Oiily Pile!, HDT ICE OF HEARING OF PETITIDH UOll1nec:t Hewoor1 H•rbor" Htwt Pr111 Lots 26 &lid tt. Block 311 c.t H...,,nno-,.NO .. ~l~~O~TIA~:l::T:e:;LI CASE HUMlllt 211tlll PUBLIC NOTICE Jur11 1 1 l! 22 1973 1~1~73 FOR PROBATE 01' Will ANO FOJt c n"' wun Dally Pllor New-pert ton 8tocn 11.!b.JI"" Stell • SUMMON_S -• ' . • ~lET·TEtlS-TESl'-AMEHTAlll:Y • C•Utomto. Junt lS. 22, "· 1172. "'!IC' r~ I" a-. .-:0. '110.Pfo'i , __ c .. ~,. 1Jm-ot c tllor r Pi.lnUff: SECURllY l'OA:E COR· l'ICTITIOUS IUSIH ESS Eslal• o! ELfAA VIRGI NIA Ros1ooux. I -1112-7J MIK .. •ntOUI MaPS Sll(JOF....-OUt't'" !fie Stolt • n. POjtATION MAME STATEMENT ' " Dec.eesed. -Tl'lf' ul~ 1, t11blec:l ta 1111es ol'ld for lhl CoonlY of Or•nu• l!:I Deffn!Hnlt: ROMALD 0 . HOGEl.ANO, TM lollowlng per111111 •rt ootno PUBLJC NOTICE HOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN !Mt 4 , Otsellllllflll not dell I eo-In IN M•ller of lhl E!l•le of MA ON HA .. CY E. l-IOGEl.AHD, DOES I ll!rWl!h buslneu 11: JAMES D. PLUNKElT.hU flied Wein a t PU&IC NOTJCB C:Cl ndllll)r'll, f'fflT'ld=~ 'ns1rv1t= L.~llAr, i:c.:•'td1 tn.JI Ille Ull-v. lnch11\W I . I lHE l,C,CK RACK, 164·6 N ..... por, fll(TITIOUS BUSINESS petil;on lor P1obale of Wlll Clnd tor -T--r!Of!IS,_d_t!lts of '!lrt anti _,,_11 .. Cl • Y II Ytn Tei tl'IOt dlflllldlifth: A clvll comp 1in 81vd .. Col.18 Meso 92621 MAME STATEMENT lu1.1o1nc:a 111 Lllle!'I Ttsla,,...,,tor'f' IO ll'lt DUCATIDtll Ofi THI MIWPOIT·Ml:SA wl!llolll wirrinty OI' ....-i•tlon •• lo office of a ll\. Dll!RRl81!:1tltY fGEOllGIE "1o\1$1 flit In ll'llt caurt O Wt"llltn ~lndll!ll Glr11dln• A. TurMlf, 719 E. 23rcl, S•n JAROINCITOS, 1121 Placentle Ave, piece of llear!ng the Sll(Ot Mos been set \\'hich might a3f,'Ta\·atc or ex- lend their lll]{'lcar t e s t !-' dispute sub1n!(lcd lo lhc court or prejudice di..: rights of the •other party ii the respect cf the· carryiogt1cut oC \vhatever decision the urt may render. . . e5Cle red . NEW YO K {UPI) ~ Ted Patrick', n~3-year-old former aide to Ct.iii rnia Gov. Ro:nald Hc:igan:-:-a four qt11ers·have been cienred .. -of kidnapi.ng chnrge:S *mrnin_g ftotn at· · 1en1pts to •·cJeprogra1n" three 111e1nbers 1of a conservative re!ig ious sect. A Maahatuin_ grand jury fnuittl)n:AJfficicnt.. cause to in- dict Patrfck and R obert DiQua tl.ro. ·30. ~~.his brother James, 2~, or hfton. N.J_.: Charlcttl Sheink in, 25, New York· aud Lawrence l~ogow. a 43-yt'ar-old Conn et 11 cut Cng in·ccr. e Gmcrd• Reid TIJUANA. !\1exico tAP I !\Ie"lcon iederaf authOrities have iJ'restOO the ~irectpr of the isja C;lli!ornia Sfate Penit tiary aJ'ld to · prison guard and-charged lhem..with. co n1p city in the June 10 . , f • / l-----tt!9"l:\ITION-NO.~-~ "fee~. II 1ny Olr1il!ltlLIJl'llL ~-~!_..ptlY•l•,~!t..t'.ffii f'lu...b!l:l!lfilJ!Ll!'t'~';i;~Lnltff 41;1lnll you. _f':lll!ll. _JHn F911!j. f»_j(Q.._ SUeL J~ 1~1-11111 ptrton Ii ooirui b<H lnes• peUllonl.'r ·ef~r1nc1 IO wP!lch Is m;)Oe for SCLUTIOfl Of. TH• 10.t.RO D• Ttw ·~ri., II to be told "II It" 1ftw IM '111 <llY "' July, ' • lf 'l'OU Wlil'I tu ~ll&Wi\i\l;-'l'OCt -ltliliO;-·c10l:-ff311 -;is: ---. -further particulars, oAd Ilia! 1n1-trrnt 111\11 Hll'"IEO SC HOOL OUTlllCT OP tllt COlldl!IOI'! Ol' MlillbllllY of tl\I IOll ~ COfolRAO CO.), 11111 S. II Comlno •ul, S.n In rllPOllM to 11\0 compl•lnl W lllln 30 9unardlno C•lll n.eo. Cosla Meu, Calllornla 91617 for JulV lD, .191J, "' 9.00 am , I~ th~ • lllAl'IOlf COUNTY, CAlt,OllNIA-of any linprovements 11\tr.O.. #Dr con• CltoMflh ,-C•. tun, --Coll!llY ol..Oi:•DDI• d1y1_•1t.!": '!!!!.. wmmo111 1& wru«I on 'IOll· Tiii$ buslneu 11 ccriducted bY • Uml~d Creetlve _ H)l!P.ff!lngs, In~ ( ii courrroom ol OeP"rlmtnl Ne. 3 ol sa~ll June s, lt11 · •lrvetlon or OCCuPll1on •nd wltllout Stitt of Ctllforlll•, lo !flt lllghftl •nd btll OlllarwlM, 'l'O!Jr Mf•llh wlll be ..,..,ad on ~rtMrr.lllp. -" C•ll!or11la c:orporotlonl-217T" 1'1-aotentlil c-1 11 lDO Clltk' Ct0le~ Orlwt We,1, on motion of Mtmblr Arlllur F ''"''lht clurinu, ttrmll• WO'k or otlllr bidder, Ind subloet to canflrm1llon by tl'Jltltollon by thl pl•ll'lnff •nd 1111 COUl'I P•ul• J. Fogg Av1, Casi• M1111. Collf. 92611 '"" Cny of-Santa Ano11, Ci!fforn;a esca~ of 10 prlsonerS, of-. ficial!f-&ay,~ pi.an, duly 1econt1ad Ind t.on•nlmoui-•-Ir work to ·bl partorrl'lld bl" Wiier Hld·lwitrl<W Court, 111 1111 right. 11111 Mid m•r tnllr I Jlldgmlllll oorrlntt '(OU lor 1t1t' Tlll1 •l•llmWll w1s flied wl!ll Ill• Coun-Tllb blls!ne•s 1• conduc1ed by • cor· O.tad June 19. • 1tll rrl..:t, tn.t lollowln{I Rtao!ull0'1. Wtl TM pl'OPtrtv wlll be J.Old on Ille 1oi1-. lnt .... st Of Mid O.Cl•Mll II IM llfllll of n'IOllfY Ot otMr Aollef r111111Sled In 11\t IY Clerk ol Or•nu• County on Jun1 19, por61lon WILLIAM E. St JOHN, . ~r~R.EAS, ~IN N ..... port:....... Ul'llflld ~:.""~ ~:! : ,:::~ e~:~, :.nd ~~ ;i::,t11i:.,ftd .. ~~·,.1':t '!::::· ~:.::i ~~~r:-c:! ~v:!"'w.111" ... ""•fvke of '" •1· lf7J -FU167 ~:0~~~1:0~~,~i;r.~a'e~~s. lf!C. MA11.·1~:m:rLJ~~~TT ~ Olstrlct 11 tt>t _,,,..Of tl\at c:er. ~fl lo tlW uncltrsl~ Ind to itw quired by OPtt•tlon of li W or ofherwl ... ..,...., la fllll; ,......, VOii llNllllll 1111 IO Publt&htd Or•np Coa1;t 01lly PllOI, Tllf1 tratfmtn1 w1s, tiled bw tl'll! Count" •n "C!llv~ ~"'·• ·P.&_ •. to• 26, __ 1 n rail pr1191rly locilltd Ill Ille COUlttY ol Slilll*'for C-';1t'11 llll'ewtt-UCl'llll of tht orlltr lllln or_ln -~!!!on .l9 !twit of t•ld ,,_,,... M -ltMI .,_. trllMillf• 11 • ...,, JuM 27;'29, 1111<1 -:lilly ';--13,. 1t1'l._.....,",.n c11r11ororat1Qf" county en ~Y 2~ • .19?~. Huntington leach, Call!. t26oll ...... Stolt of C•llfoml•, ""'""""'' •IMUlll tild to accomplft'/' tPll """ by d«HMd. II !he ltmt (If dtltn. ln and lo mlY ... '""' ... "-· F2SU1 Ttl: (714 ) 5S..:lrQ!IG Ol' "' 1071 -. scribed; 1nd tet"llfled dl«k Ind lt!I bllant• 111 bf p.ld •II 11\e t ert1ln rtfll property tlh.111• 111 tlle 01ted MIV 7, lt7J _ PUBLIC NOTICE Published Or1no1 Coast Dally Pll•J\ Al!omey far: P•lltloMr _ l'JHEREAS. i.tld proptMy It not llO'N _.. tonflrh'Wllillfl ol ult by SUl)erlO!" Court. City of S•n Clernen11, COUl'll'f' of Ofeng-. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, Cltrk -June l, I. IS, 2', lt7l 16,•·13 Pubt0shl'<I Oransie Coo~! O~•ly· PUct, n !:'did. nor )rltt It bt l\OllClad by Ille T•~-. INUronc:e •°"'"'"'·II •nv, 1,_ tu Stato of C1llfornl~, p1rlltul1rly clncrlbtd lly FLOY MAY, Olpllty l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHESS , Junt 21, 22. •. Im lt.u~1J Irk ! tor Kl\oi!I c:l•lvoont bulldllllll •t be O/'Ol'"ltld to chit of tKrow. E.c:r-.. lollowt. to-w11 . SEIOEL, CltAll. I SIJtllJt I Umt of lr1111ter ol 11111· cllf,ron ,,. lo be cll'lfdld tll\llllY Delwetn l OT .tJ In Trott '31 In Jiit Clt'f' ol San 1611 WHlc~fl Df',, s.ite 1lt ·NAME STATEMENT PUBLIC NOT ICE PUBLIC NOTICE OW, THEltEFOllE, ee· IT MESOLV-OUy•r •nd Mlilr, •~CICll Ille! tlle .. tltr Cl-11, 11 per m•p lllereof, rKcwdtd N-.ort loKk. CIUI. NM Tiie folio..lno Pf~$ •rt OOlllQ \--------------1--------------- 1,,_I 1111 Olstrlc:I Ollft hereby ded1re will PflY !cw llocvment...., Ill'""" tnd 1111 In look No. 2' 11 ~ 'ZZ la t! In-Tit; Cn4) ....... " twalnns II: g S&S1S ~I:'';!;! ~~fy'"...;:~~pro~;~,, ic:,,..""' ::v~ ~!~~:r~:-~~ llllYtr win ~"'~"!nu°! ~~~~~ Mlpl. Record• A~ .... ~ COMI 0.lly l'llof, ,:.~.or;..,~~ c:i:.RT. 21.tll Piacen_11.. F~z::Jo~:A:~~i:::s 5~~,• ... EMJ~Rci~~F~TR~rA T~~R J "rms •nd ~Ill-""•lllllltr 1t1 lkll must bl 111 Wl"llllll •nd w\11 bl tn!'Umr~.: s'f'~ uslr In f/lwfu: "':f'V lof J""a 1S, 22, tt, &nd July '-1913 IJ.S0.7' H~~· ~'?1t:.~ew_PO" Cr, 11~111 loUDWing Pt'10ll Ii dolnq buslnelS THE COUNTY OF OAAHGE I lh, rte,iYld •I Ille offlea1 of HARWOOO & n •~on corr ""'..!i:nc w:; ~ P. lt11111rdli1, 11•1 Kiner Awe.. BRYAN 8AXENbEN COMPANY, ll& Ho. A"'409J Id~ rloll . l>fOPtrfy ls ll<t$crlbed 11 ADKINSON. lltorl'M'fl for Mid ~II· :.:':!c!:: ,! -billlll« cw ln.istedDoed Hunllftuton I NCi!, Cit. Eail 111n S1~1. (Clf,11 Mtsar,:117 NOTICE OF HE AR ING OF PETITION TO u_., ec:utor1. 11 sso H-oort c11n11r Drlv1, "'' PUBIJC NOTICE LEASE lllEAL f'MOPERTY J oortlan of --·•• .,,,,, ,,. __ 0 s·•oo -·. •-,. •• ,, ,,,,~, • ., ., 1111 ~ IO told. Ttfl o-rctnt of Tiils IM.lfltl.I I• tonducled b'f' •general 8ry1n 81xendel'I, W E111 1111 Strttt. "' ,._ "' -~~..-· '"' "'""' I of bid to 1111 ~-'lid wllll bid Plr"l~sl\lp. Cotti Mesa f'M27 Cao1terva1orshlp of FLORENCE TAY· "l"'tr !111.'67 ocro1. ~wred Ir-fM any 11,,... Iller lll"lt publlCIHon of llllt •moun ...,...... ' 1 JaUI 5amU1I p, lngerd!a Tlll1 . 111tsl11ns 11 c:ond11eted by an In· LOR HAll:ll.IS, Cons.,..vatee. """"rly II"' ol S1111t'lo<wtr A'ftnW, notle1, Ind before l'Mklne suc:ll a.lilt. l ldl cw oftlrs to bf ln wrltlno Md wlll NOTtC• TO CllDrTORS Tllb stittm1111I Wis flied wltM Ille CDlln-dlvldual. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\<ll IMrly Woklftam ,c,..-.nue 1 n f:I TM unotr1lgn«I l"IHfVI 1111 rltlll tD,. tit r«elvod •I llll •fDl'"n1ld olllct •t •l'l'f' SU,.lltlOlt COUa,T Of' THlf IY Cler:lt of Orino-Counl'f' an Jllnl 19, Bryan Ba•enckn . OOFIOTHY E. WILKERSON 1'11~ filed HllH'ad lt'om Ille lllltrly ' 11111 of jtcl 1ny IMI •tt bldt pr10t lo enlry of .,. 11'"' '""' 1111 llr•t Pllblki llon l\tl'otof Ind STATI! OP CAlJ'"fllA ~ 1t7) Tiiis 1101emen1 w1s f11111 wllh "" coon· ft~r11n a pelltlon for 111 arder l'Nlkln9 al>d ';:ll1Y,Jtroea. ot !hill ,orllon .. ll>t ordlr coriflrmlno il'll• ul•. ~~J~~ 1~11;73, THI: COUNTY 0,. OltAMOI F1'1U 1Y Clerk o1 oringa cauntv an Juno ~ aull'lclfl?ing her. ~• Conwrvotor ol Ill• I!.'""'" 19 J1me1 Mc:Fldellll, •I DATED'! Juno U, Im. .11 Wiifred Schmitt ,.., A.J""" l'Ubllsllod 0...•!1111 ca;o1t Dally Pllol. 1913. 'p;irson •r.d l!lla1e. Of Floren(e leylor ICrllltd In 1111 Fln1I OecrM of Part!-MARCUS M. MCCALL-N. JR. A<lm!nlsil"ttor wllfl Wll~nnt•td Estate of MAUD A. CAI EEN, DoctlHd. JllM 27, Jt, ind July ,, 13, 1913 lf2G.7l F·lltl 1 Harris, le leost saod Pl'OPtr:ly loaited ftl In ol ll'io ll•nc:llil hnll'OQ Ot 5"'nl0 WILLIAM-H. H-. MCCALLEN of ttte •Iola of pld qtctdenf NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to llll • PllCll$1\ed Ore"lltl Coail Diii¥ Piiar, 166 Hole Slr~f, ~nll ft\Ollf,1, Callfor11la, ; •·, Wllk ll -• ent.,tl.I 5fet!tmbe• 12. H,1,llWOOO & AOKIMSOH WM. C O'DONN•LL crtdllOI' of 11111 abovt n.ll"'ad dlC~I PUBLIC NOTICE J1.1ne 1, 15, 22, 2t 1973 lJJS·1l In 1ccart11nce w1!h Ille l~s ftnd con-In llooll "I ," P•t• no ol •'I': 0-1111 0. H1twalllll 9'D .. WMttlOr Stlllo * 1 hlvt 1 1 1 ""' ' di!lon1 of •aid prapo1.ec1 le...sc. reference ments of 1111 Dlllrlct court o1 tile AnOt11ov1 At L1w ,.lei lli_.. C•' IMI •II perlDlll no c •lmi 41V0 111 !a wh!Cll !1 nllldt for 111r1ner par11culars, 111 Judlc.l•I Dl1trkt ill Ind for Ll'I Mt~ c_..,·Df'I,,,.. Sutla IM AllwMr .,.; M.:.mi WIWlll A-•M Mid dKadent ire r~!rtd 10 fllo lllem l'ICTITIOUS I USINESS PUBLIC NOTLCE ar\11 tllOJI the time and pl.ice of Me.:irino /ll!elts County, C•lllornll 11'1 0 r e Plill Oflkl ••~ ltCl7 °' .......... NOf. -m wtltl Ille neceu•rY vou<lltrl. ln Ille office HAM.I STATEMENT ihe •Jnie hill been set lor JUTll 2'/, ·1t1l. ·~mcularl'f' dflKrlllad M follOWf,l N_,.... .. .ell. (1111...,... ftll) l:lfM.OC :: ~::{,ik '111=. 'ti;1~ ... ,:Min=~~:;, Tilt fallowing perton is doing b111lnt!S 11 11 :~ •.m .. In Ille courtroom al Depart- ,. ... •ncln11 II 1111 lnl .. MCT!on of T.,..._ (n4) 641-lSll "ullllslrod Cr•ntt Co.SI D11tr Pllot vou '"h.rs ,., '"' undersloned II "" ollk• 11: FICTITIOUS 8U51N ESS menl NO. l ct $111d court, .,, 700 Civic m1lley ROid wltn lllt c•rt1tt1t111 o1 A ....... 1 !<or C•Elt<1l'fal't ' c ' THI! VILLAGE SMllHY, 1635 .. AME STAT EMeNT Ctnlcr Ddve West, In rhe ·City of Santa unftower Aven1111 11 ihDWn Oii 1 !nlP or Publ1slled Or1nQ1 Cotti Dilll'I' Pllof J-72• 2J, 2t. 1973 · lt39·7l of Ills •ltO<'MV. l!tOY S. OIOllOANO, No."· onm, Wy, caste M111, 91621 TIMI tGl!cwl1111 person b dalno b11s1ncis Ana, C1lltornie . .set No. '631, l'teOl'dtd 111 /Aooll :M7, 1,, 11, 22. Jt13 llU.73 PUBLIC NOTICE · ~~~ ... ,1010 c"~.!'.. 1M•i:,..~··1 s;i,.111 _,MIO~ Harry Antllony Sarena. 2031 Nallonal 11: Oettd June Ii, 191J. '!Ill 4t •nd ~ of Mltcellaneouti MilPS. .,..., ' .,., 1 ""111• "'" 1 ,..ac Av•,. CDSla Mtu, Callt. t26'l7 SCOTIY'S SECURITY SE RVICE, 62~1 WILLIAM E. 51 J OHN -c:ordt of Or•nut Couirtv ; thanQ. ilang of buslnltu of 11111 undtrslgnad 11'1 •II TMls llMilntH 11 tcndll(ted by 1n In-W1rnoer Ave. No. 145, Hvnllnotan lledcll, Ca....n!Y Cltrk c:1n1.,11111 9f .. rd sunflOWlf' A......,111 PUBLIC N011CE I .SUll • mllttr• port1lnlno lo 1111 nt11t of ••Jd dlwlduil. Collt, 916•7 ROLAHO MAXWELL orrh • dilgroh li' ffl" l!•tl, '1'-20 fllfl _ NOTIC• TO CRl:OITORS dec:«llfll, wlltllr:' four mcnlh• •lt.r Ille HARRY A. SERENO Geori:re Ru""'H Horstkotll. 62'1 Ut Mut111I Sa¥.i1191 81dg. Ille norti-tl c11rntr 01 Tiit itnd NOTIC• TO' COftTRACTCMl:S SU,.•RIOll COU•T 0'° THI lll'SI publlt.ttlon of tllls nOllce, Tiiis 1111~111! wa1 !lied Witll tt>t Court-W1rner Avt No, 1•5. H11nlll\i!IOll 8e1ch, P•llCIHll. Clhf. flJOl Krlbtd It P1rc1I I ln 11M11 to CA L O r:OR llDS STA.Tl Of' CALl,.ORMl,t, H>R DATEO--Junt S. It'll 1Y Cltrk ol Or11111e Counl~ on J"'ne 19. CaUtornJe t2.W7 T1I: Cll)) 1Ko24'4 ewporl·MflO Unlflad khOol District t • ..__, D O L, °'o O . Hl!W,.,...T -M•SA THI COUNTY 01' OllANOI: CKAJtLES W. CAIEEN ttn. .l .Tiii~ buslntil Is conducll'd bv an In· Alltm•r for: pttlllolltr Kordecl August ts, 1'67, In OCIOk 13~ ...... .....,. 1 l' c "'" NO. A-7614' ElKlllor ol ,thl wlll of F2611t div!dllill. Puolllhed Or"'llle Coast Oolily PilOI. ill!' l ll of Olllcl•I Records ol Piii ~i:1 ~11sc~~OOD~~CT m llfl tilt flllfl of ULEl'IE L. Mii.LEM, Decee.. Tiit lbOYO 118fl'>td • ..,..,! Pub111hed Of•n11e COil! Dolly PllOI, GeorQre R. Hor1tkolle June lS, lo, 22. 1973 1116.).JJ r1noe Counl'jl1 lllento. IOllll>tr:lv l lOf19 119• · •· · ad. IOY JI, •.ottD•MO, INC. 11nt 27. 29, ind Juty '· ll, Im 19119·7l Thl"O 1l•l1mtnt "''' 1Htd wllll "" Coun· ie 01stn 1r Hne 111 Mid P1rci1 1, Soulfl ,.1= d:J i:.~11"" 1973• 1• 1157 ,.locontl• NOTIC& IS HE•EIY GIVEN lo ti. ltlt Mottll MM! 11 .. Miit • ty om ot Ot•nae County DI! JuM s. lt7l PUBLIC NOTJCE OIOl"M Sl' 05" E•1!, ..0.00 1 .. 1 to lhl .., K p . c:radl!Ol"l ol' !he •bCIYo Mrned dtoeodenl , ......... C.1111. UBLJC NOTICE l''HllG'\---------------1 rue Pall)t of Beglnnlng1 lllt(loet, COii· ,.,:;:i:u-·1~:~ ~ Nlfllll' Pelntlng ltlol •II Pl'l'tOI'!• 11.1¥1111 d alm1 19'1MI llle Tit: 17M) Mf·llff p Putililtled Or11111e Coiisl Dftll'f' Piiar, NOTICE TO CMEOITORS mi!flQr .wtl'llrly Mong .. Id Ms~rly llllO, N-•.....,-· c~ /fl'td 5dl00i Dlstrld ' .. Jd dtoel'lllnl oro required lo Ille """'· A""""Y '°' llii:Kll'lor ' I •• ,. Juna I, IS, 'ZZ, 29, lffl 1761-ll 5UPEltlOM COUMT OF' -THE 191'-ll' OS"---Elsl, .W 01 t-1J ..--,.... """.,.... n Wllfl Ille IWCftNrY -.C:lwrr.. In lllo offlc• Plltlllthod Or1not C1111t Delly Piiot JllM "' STAT£ o• CALOFO••<A ,0, " AC~ng on orders of federa I pros~utor ·Alfonso I~ o p e z Quinta. fec!eral pOlice Thurs· d11v arrested -V1cto1· De lc•---1 (:ar~, 29. director or the prison in Tijuana's La Mesa subu b sine,e November 1971. e l'ari• lliob PARIS lAPI Police today arrested several members of the Communist League. a rar- lcfl ·group which took part in Thursday's bloody s t r e e t fighting in the heart of Paris. League officials said police raided their offices at dawn and arrested a number (}f members. Ponce said they found t wo rifles. clubs and a" hand les in the league offices. • e S11b Inquiry • VERO BEACH. Fla. !AP\ - 1\ U.S. Const. Guard board or inquiry into the deaths of two scientists nboard. the sub- mnrlne Sea Link convenes here today t\\•o hours a fter n joint funeral service for lhe men. ' ff ...... Y oorilfel wt'ih ttte pi.c. Pl1n1 lrl Oii Fl .. ~ 11!7 '1.Ken!I• DI' 111o clerk of the obDYI tn!Ui.cl c:oun. cw t, IS. 22. 2', 19n 1767·7J NDTIC• TO CltlOITORS of Sunflower AVlllll.ll SOUttl 91 AYlflue, Co!llt1 MtM fO praMlll tn.in, wltll 1111 lllCMM"I IU,.l!lllOll COURT o~ TH! PUBLIC NOTICE THll COUNTY OF ORANGE / ~r-5~SY' WMI, 10.IO fee11 !hence NOTICE IS HElll:E8Y GlrEi:.i n;! 1111 ¥0UC111rs. to Ille undtr11gned 11 IM offko STATI' 0" CALl..atlNIA FCll EilllO ol CH:~L"es1'f.1GEMMAN, •kt orlllerly r•ll•t wltll .. Id •""''"' u...; ~~ ~T 5f~_.p1•1~cl nd Ill_ .... °' •ltorfll't'J 5. EAltL WMIGHT a. PUBLIC NOTJCE THE ~OUMTY o~ OU.NOE F',','·"·'·,",',,','M",',',ss CHARLES ZOLLER GERMAN. Qeceasea. Ol'lll 00 •• , SI' OS .. Wnt, JO.OD,...., .__. .. ,. I lorn ..... , no VJ • PAULI HI!! R. WRIGHT, •. SOI.Ith. Ollw Mei. A•7"11 NOT ICE IS HEME8Y GIVEN 1(1 "" t-enta till ~1111 wlltl ttw lh ~rnl;\ 8Nnl, ~l)lltlr rtltrrad SI. SI.Ille 1«11 , Lo. "1190ltJ, C1lllornl•. I '11!1 E1t1ta bl' M08EMT LANE LUCAS,' llll IOlklwll'IG persons 1r1 oolng tl\lllnll'il crldllors ol th• above l'NUT\ld dec...,.nt fl!ltrllno of S1111flC1Wlf A-.:lf'Mll l'lortrr .. lo•• ;3-IJT ICT"""wlfl rtcilW·uo.to. but which 11 !fie pl9CI of bus.Inn• of 1111 1 O.Cnsod. a1· 1k6t all persona rwtvlng cl~Jms acolnSI llM Albert Stover. 51. and Clayton Link, 31. died of carbon dioxide poisoning ~1on day while they a.nd two com- panions wer'e trapped aboard the 21-foot mlnl"'b 351 Icet down off key West. . . """"' JS' .W' E"I 10.CI0""'1t!_t lo ll>t l'IOt _ .. I thin ti. •bOYe 1!111d lll'l'IO, ..... lll'ldlrll\!Mlll In aH m11tllrl' pertalnl1111 lo SU,.l•IOR COU•T Cl' TH NOTIC E tS HEME8Y GIVEN 'lo 1111 . Pl~Efll DENTAL CEi:tAMICS. 616 talcl dec:fdtnl 1r1 required to file them, r11e Potnl of 8oo;llMI;,.. ----ad ,tllds !or 1111 ow11rd of I c:ontr1<t fol' Ille "tilt of Mid dec:l<let'lt, w/lllln lour STAT• 0, CALll'OltMIA l'"Clt crldltor1 Ill' IM lbo\11 .,.med decedent Governor SI .. Cot lo MIS•, Calif, 92626 wit~ tile M<Hsary VOllO:hers, In 1th! alllcl hi ltiove ~·c•I conl•lns a GI ocres Mlli lbololt llf"Clltcf, montlll •ltlr ttte flnt Ollb!Jc•tlon of 11111 THll COUNTY C" CMl:AMOll 11,.t •II ""'°"' ll.IVl"O clllln$ ~•!mt ll>t Stephen Tllomot erotzmin, 11• Of !tit cterk of ttlt <tbDvt tnll!lea couri, ar 11, condHlons of 1111 Hl• 1~1 01 1011;,...... l ids INill be recllved ln 1111 ploc:• ldefrO" notlc:1. _ . flle._A•""'-. l6N ..,1., clKldenl •rt rto.ui(ldJ o fll_e l!)tm, Gowltl!OI' s1 •• cix11 MKa, C•llf. 9'ii116 10 IM;riert! ttiem, wltn Ill• l!Kts1"1•Y OJ Thljllll price llllrtl De '3AIOO llll,...i llflld obo¥t, lflll-sNlt tit ClpaMd 9lld O.ltd JllM ,, lt7J J NOTICI Of' '411ARIMO 0" '°llTIT Mth 1111 llK"ury vouctltrt. In Ille Oii(~ Jeffery Nftl,fbluer , 1641 Palm Ayt .. VOllChlrs, lo lhe unde!'Signecl at th e offocei tllouiliid dOlllril. riUllUdy rMd tlaucl .1t 1!w •boYo tlli.ci ,t,, Q, MILLER, JR. l'"Olt PROSATI CM' ~11t•ION WI" of tllO Clerk of 1111 lboYI tnlltled COllr:I, OI' Ollvt , Cnlll. 91665 01 L1~PDld. Hl.'ndcrson •ncl Dl,...moor. Al- (2) A11 15erow shill be OOOl'lecl w1111,1..,. 1';"~ Jl/"':.; 1 12000 dllPOtll reciuirad E•ac\lfot of 1111 wlll of :r.:11T:_~,CNL•TT•1t• 0 " AD-':..v:'ri:tn~ :::"''NI "'lli"na!i"".1 i;:e:;~"' Tiiis buslflfl• Is cond11ctea by• gent••' 111ru1v1 ,, Law, lSO ,easl 11111 s1, Su1t11 . ncl'll'N l\okllr occept1blt to 1111 lor II Ill ~• ~-:. _ __. ._ -lfll abovt' nlmecl Mcldlllt •LM" E GRASEJt ' u "''II Cl oortn1111llp, 111, Cotti Met.i, CoHfornlo 9"621. wl!ICM Oltlrlc:I. ••c ol "'d ...,.,..,,.....,,, •• ""'' S. IAat. ftleMT I E11111 of · ' Ill Mr lllGrllf'ft. HILL, FAMMEM & !UR· Slt'l)llen Tnar11e1 8ro1tman I• Ille plact or buslnes' of 1111 1111dersl9f\ld l•I Tile ncrow shill cle&1 wltllll'I 1111 ~':'.,,'::~ ~ ti~-~=1!1:;',, wltllln lO PAULINI •• W1lletft O:fM~E IS HEll.E8Y GIVEN Ill.It ~:.;;;... ~.u~~\~ :oi~~lt~''is ~: Tll\1 ll•l1m~11t w111 flltd w1111 !M Ccun· In 111 mat1or5 per1alnl~ 10 1111 i»tate of d•YI 11tor 1111 &doPlfon of !Ills Rtaolu-Eacll tild must conform 11111 114 411 ...... Oii"" St., OENHIS COOPER h•• tiled II-In 1 ~II· PIK• of 11\Kl"'u of 1111 ,,.ndtrllgned 111 111 7 (14!rk , of OranQe Cou~tv on June IZ. ukl oecwent, wltlllfl ~ mottlfl• 1fier 11'1• '°" 1111111• ••lll!Oed b'f' • l'lllllU.I fltPOl'IS1W to the c:antr1ct docul!llntl. • .... 1411 !Ion for ProtNlto of FOl'tltin Wiii ind lor ll'lftltor1 rtelnlno lo Ille 11t1le al ld t1l. lll"'ll P<1llllc.iHan al lh•t l!Olft. 1grff~I. ' ' "'d ' • I .... Miiiet, C•llf. •14 ~ '"' ol Ad I I 1 II I pe '° FHtt1 Morlan L German l~Tlll bl,,yer illlll pey 811 of lllt llt "' thlll be ICCOfllOiln Id llV tllt "Tah (i:IJ) 1t7.2111 • lwJll!l(O "' lrt m 11 I r1 on o Otttdtnl, Wllllln lour fJIOFllh1 tlltr tr>t Pub!llhfo<I Orat1g~ CQllU Cltlly Pllfll EllKutrlll cl tl'lt Eital~/Wlll ' ... ··;· MCllrltv m.rred lo In tilt contrl<I "' a Ille pal'lllONlr rti.rtne• ta Which 1• m!Hlt first putilfc•lton ol 11111 llOllt•. J ,.,. 15 12 29 nd J 1~ 6 · 101] 18()1..7i ow '"11, l~lud no ,,,. dr•Wlfllt <JJ d91:u'""'I• ond 11\1 "" Utt of Pf"CpOHCI A"'""" nc:wtar tor f\rrtlllr ~rttclllort oiid ltltl Ille t1m• Doled J 20 lffl u • • • 1 II • • cil The 11bov11 nafnl!d dtc.,ltfl!. fDCum.tiii, tlio Prtmlll"' tor IN iullcontrKlort. '°ublf\llod Oronge CCllSI Dilly '°Hof J11111 end ploc:I of lleirll>Q '1111 1im• 1111 tittn M~R'Y JAYNE LUCAS . -Llfllltkl. Nendonoon l"d Olnunoor etY of tltte ln1vt111Ct, 1111 rKordl"O Mr, Jtrnts M, ~•1•1111• Dlr«tlll', " 15. 22. 2', 1973 17'9-13 "' tor JlllY 10, 1m, •I 9:00 •.m., In Ille Adtnlnl11r11trlx ol llM! 111111 PUBLIC NOT1CE AlllrfNlrs 11 L•w S 11 ' ~Oft'( dOclltnwnltr)' 11111 lll l'l'IPI ScllOOI FIKIHH", M•lnl1!'11r.tO •iid Opt(• courtroom of 04'01flmtnl HO. ) at Hid of 1111 1bov1 n1mod de<:ldllll --------JM r. l1th Sltfft, u e 11! ell mer bl f'91Nlrod, !Ion,, wlll m"t w1111 tl\CIM per$Ollt Jn-PUBLIC NOTICE court. 1t 100 Cl\llC C111ter Drive WHI, tn NILL, l'AJtRl&ll & IUltlllLL trtCTITIDUS •uSINESS ~·ri:..,:i':;'j7~:l":::;~:'" Ill I" •e<ord•r.tl wltll 1N1 lll"DvltlOM ol i.r.tlH Ill lflUflll(I ll\e lllt 1t 1M offtc:I of • lllO Cll'I' of S.nt1 Al'I•, Calltornll , ay1 •lnllll Ki...-MAM.I STAT EMENT .~.:ttlfYI "tor Elltcvlrl =Ion Coat $4<11111'!, l62CO, 11111 kllool FK!lltles. loc:alld . It tu l•ll•~ Dllell Jlll"ll 20. Im --445 '"""' l"j,ptt'OI SI. ~tit IOllCIWll\il Ptrr5Dll l• 111111\11 bl/a.inn;: &lbtlllltd_Or1111111.-a..i1 0.lly ..PUol.- 11111'1 1111111 -~~In ~ '!r:o.11t,,-C,t1t1 Mel01 11 10.llO e,m,,_Juno II Jl4lt -Wll..LIAM--•.-&T-..JOMH, .................. -(;oMl,--1 ••--J !'It IS 22 29 nd JUl\I I 1973 1161•13 -CMM 0.l!Y I '! !'ltWINMr 1$, ltT.1. llO'TIC• TO c•IDl'T'Olt. COIHll'I' Clertt Tttr {llSI ~ GREEN TO•O GARDENS, l20 Mvrllt1_u ' ' 1 .·-----I 01 ...,_..1 c:lrculotlOl'I 'elltl 11\td Ill 1111 'Tr. OISTJt.ICT rtMn'h tho rtotit lo ''" IU,.llltlOlt COUltT 0" THI •OlllllTSON, HOWll i. I OAi.LANO Atlanltrl tw Af:lmllllllr&lrf• St .. L111u1111 B111eh, Cellt. 91651. P.O. Olttrkt, ,1 ..... one• 1 _k '°' 3 ltet .,.,Y f/lf ,11 1110, cw to w•tvt 111" 1r. ITATI o,. CALlll'OliNIA •01t 1w: Mldllol °"'""""' ~111\td Or•nge co.11 O•ltv Pno1. 8CIJ! 111, si n Ju•n C•ph111no, c1111 .• KUJ,s Li'koo To tuccHllYe Wffkl prlof lo 1111 •111CVllllfl r~vl•rltle!r. Ot lntorrntUtl .. In •ny bids cw THI COUNTY OP OIAMOI Utt C....,.,. Dl1"" ,_ 21. ti, end Jutv t , 13, lt7l 1962·73 '26,l . Of • detd. 11'1 tlll bldOlf19. • A-HS1'1 N......,. IMdfl, C ... t. nMJ' f r1nk Meurlce. 320 Mjlrtte ,t., ee 1T l'UllTHElll llESOLVED '"'' 1111 , Tilt 011T1t•C:t Ill• oet .. mlnld tM 11111t of MYRTLE Ell.EH SMITH. Ttl! cntl ,...,... PUBLIC NOTICE Lag""" eeacn. c1n1 t2'51 .;!lCMn' t iid vi" ,.rwc1on1/Cltr1t of lttl'llf'•I .,......,111,.. ,,,. of ,., dllfll 11111 111-. ,, M'IMTl.E'f . sMtTH, •tlo ""'"""'..,, """""'' T111s w•1n11s 11 bflnc c1W11111C1111 ov 111 Ask Altlly INrd •r• l\el'tbV M.llllOl'liad •nd w1191:1 In Ille louillty Ill "'411cft tM -k It known IS MYRTLE SMITH, O.C111s«1. l'l!bllltttl;I Oranot CO.ti D#\l'f' l'llol, lnd!vlf:IUlll. Id 10 •)(kll"lt 111 -wry to bl ilfltl'oiiiltd tor Mell c:rott or 1yp1 or NOTICE IS HE•E&Y GIVEN to tile J-U. n, it, lt7' 1tst•73 SUl'l!RIOR 'c:J~\ OF THl: Fr•nl! M•urke 11, lllC!udlflll bul not llmllld lo -lu'l'IMI ,......,. '9 llfkvt.. li...CaMflCI c:rodliot11 ol IM ~ Mmod ~I Tflll 1!111-1 1111'11 wlll! 1111 COUlll'f' ft(f(IW lnt lr<,Ktlanl •lld Ille •r•nl TllllO ,._ .... on ,, .. ,, IUl "1lctflll. 11111 iltl WION flo¥11'1Q (l•ll'W '91111\0Jf IN s~~~·cg~HCTAYLl&r'o':t'..!H~~ll Clwk of O••"llt COl/l'lly on. Juno ''· 1t'3 • i1 .. ,.._. t•MY· Hlllllln(ln, ~:;renc~.:: .. ~ ='!t'::..~1:. =~ ::-:;;.,:~ ':'~.'r11 'l:. = . PUBLIC NOTICE , Ho11c1 otr HN:;.:i~':'oF "e•••••• ~1.rJ.""r'" M. W8rc1. Ot11U1v COUl'lrv U.,,,.ton. ~'"""'-~ INH ba ooetM •I"" 109 tlla. Of 1111 clttk eftht etioYI 111nne111 court, or • r:Jtttt OfiS: N-tilt '°'= Klltdule OI w dltf!\ IO proJMll lfllm, wUh ""' l'llCH~ry NOTICI °' S.fiLI t'Ofl '•OIATI: or: trO•E•GN WILL Pubtlslwd Orof'O• (NII Dlll¥ P!lol, J ... ~llM -krill ba If lfflf !Imo and JOHNSON .. KI NNe'DY, 452J,MKAr:lllllr = r~,.~~l~l~~: ::~.: ~~~:cEot ~iVIHJE~~S~, ~t~·tll•I e Peron Speaks ' BUENOS AIHES, Argentina ~API -After 18 years or ex- ile. for1ru•r Argcnllne presi- dent Jurul Pt.'ron Is attempting to pull ! tog.et h e r ~ls movcmeol's feudt n·g factlona, rcrrliiing1 the ntUI ' r·y could ont.-e 11g:1in swt.-~p Into power. After 1nc.titlng with Prcsl· dent ~cctor J~Camporn ---1 Thursda)' n.lgtlt. fleron chastis. ed 1niUtants ''Who try 10 in- flltral~ the papular rariks" 11nd ca.utlel'1ed, "\Ve are not ln coo· dl tion to continue destroying ourselves ." lEMT: 1111•11\IO'OOll "'""' ll ""*" • ~I'll Py of llOllCMr .. lo '"' IMIM!'llonld ., 1111 Oflkt I" ICCOl'd•nt• 'Nllft '"' orC1Ylll11111" ""' AlfO f Olt lETTS:•S D F AO. Jun. IS, 7.1, 2t. 1nd J111~ •• 197J lll't·n Tl Ofl tALll'OlltNIA 1 !fltftt ft) llOurt.. Ttw t•to Jor ~ldt'f .,. of lllr 1ttor111r.. IAltHES. SCHAO, C11tfor11I• Ul'lllOl'fl'I (llll'lmtrcl•I Cllde. MINISTllAT/OH I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:I NTY QI" OftANOI: ) ~II. loill0'¥1rd, P.O. IOI! 11N, Howoort 8Mc:ll, I t W C: E E ( l 'i 11,,.,1,, 1e.. L""''°"' v 1 c, " wu tia tMndlltwy "'*' "" CONo c.11torn1• •Ha. w111c~ 11 ""' pllCI of .;. "".:e::= ~:1~~~.:· ~~r=~ d: :\ur~ :o, o:,~ .. R~ ';~:.:' ~~~1• :,,: ldoltt/Cl•rk or• '-"' ot 11>t hard of TJtACTOll IO WIMlm Ille contrKI II buJlno1•11of 1111111urw:lor•IDl'lfd ln.:l-1 mllltrl l'IOllct ll•wlng Men 111\1911 fO Ollllt• 11.l!OW" for l111.1o1nc1 of \.11t1r1 Of Admlll11tranon 111101 fO lllASU!tl '°"'""" 5145 i suns SAVE UPTO S~ ef!Ol'I of Ille HtWllC'rt<'MM Utllrttd _., &flCll \IPOfl _,., lllkoMraelor P1rt•nt11to 1 ••1•1• 111' 141 . tit: to t l•!r11 •n ll'lttrMl llllf'•ll'I 1nd 1111flfllll1o 1111 Ptrlllloner r1ltrll'\CI lo w1'11cll 1• -r ~ ~ 11oo1 Dl61rlct ot Ot-11119t (oun1y, ""'*"' l'llrn, to Hr "" • lflM "" Mid :!!."'.,n !:j. rno;''111 •11.,. "" rt rat Pllflllur 11)4(;111"" 1n 1uc11 notk• 1or H Yrnt111 01 mtd• •• fur1lltr' 11&rtlcut1r1. 1nd ,,.., ille ~~le /Quotes) 11'°""11, fla'obY ctrtltv 11111 ll!t HO'lt NMtllltd ,,,.. to •II ~ .........., '""' '" • l'IOl t•· •UCll lltvlngr nplrtd. notlc• 11 Mrtby ll!l'lf •nd ploc• of .,..rlno 1111 Mma 11•1 ._ _ 10rnol119 RtMll\lllOll ilflt duty •I'll by"""" lt't 1111 n«:illton OI ""(Ollirtet. DtltOLMo:':t:lNTl. MOTZ OIV•fl tl\lt Illes• llOOll• wlll II .old •I *" NI few J uly IG, 1tJ1, •• t :OO "'"'" lfl s day 1,11.frly l(!ailttd lr'I' IM Mid lool'd 11 & No.bldd ... m..,. wllflWlw hi• llli!I IOr J M. Pl/blle 11.!Cllcn 1t 20J5\.\> Nt'#PDf'I 1111 c:ourlrCIOll'I of Dfolrtlfl'IOl'll NO l OI Un \l"r ~111'111 thlfef/lf ~ Oii IM jfll otrltd OI fOr',.,..flYI (4 ) lll•V• •ttw 11\1 ~~1:"~ lll~l~ I •oule••rd, City of Co•ll MtM. COUftlY DI Mid court, II 700 (;lylt Ctn,.r' Otlv1 ~l'llot ;i""'•,, 1..!n• ,,"",,."'•Md •r • ·~·,."'-"' :"'..,.°"'~'..'!! .. "' ri.t.,_,.. UINll IC~U 11• •n · Or•!!ll• s1111 ., C1llfewnl•, on 1111 1J111 w"'· In tM c 11y of S.n•• Ana. C.111~1'11•. Fl1 LlDAJ' mou1 VO "' •• r -...-• . llC• ' ' t11¥ of Jlll'f' lt1a, ot 1 O'CIOCI!. ,. M Dtlad J\11'11 to, 'lf/3 • IN ·WITNIU WH•ltlDfl. l fllvl bDlld wlll bl .....,1,.... prlol' IO ff«lltialll °' .ICllUdOJrl a K•MNIDY lM to11oWlll(I 11•1 •• a brief .r.lpllon WILLIAM e. Sl JOHN. itf•Ul'llO Ml 1"11 lltnd flllC ... , 1111• m lllt. COl'llr.ct. ll'!I IJIY"'tflf bOl'ld .r..n "'lrt IRNhT J. SCH.trl, JI.. ot ''"' oroperty lo.,. toi(I• Coun1r Cl1rl ·~"""'"'"' U'uJ1111t. 1trJ. ~"'""Mt to'1I! Ill"" CO!'llrKI dOCV>:.:. "::": •1...r... A~~ o':!-1 ~':'ti 0. T. SlrldM". =~:=·D~~lll a OA•U.HO .1~~~~~in~the~~·~1t~1~!l~j~·~µJ~(~,j~j~ ...,....,y I(, '"'"""on, Gowrnl119 l1111rd ,....,., '"""' CllH.nul Windy'• AKllOll .. ..,.. IMctrl. C•llt. ttwt ' ••••• Viet ,.,o11c1o1111c1tr11. ~, '"" ew ooronrr H•,....., 'l•htl' Teti 1n•1 ,,,..,. O.tH ot Cost• Me•• C•!lfolnla. JllllO T.t1 ·1n11 ,.... _ ..... Of lllt RO.flt°' e:llutll Ol'I ,ll!tl\ltlll(I Avonl Ail.,.,. lcw lllK!ltrl• 21. ltr.I A.....,. IW1 f'tltllfller ' .. _l!_l>Jl•l'IOll Or•11Qr41 CCllll D•ll'I "\lol JVflt PubllM'ltd lfl OrllflOf Co.st O•llr ,not Pvbll~ Or-noe to.ti DITl'I' "not. Plltllltl'lod Ortnoe Cool• O•UY "flot. "uttllslrod OI'•-CO.II Dalh Pllci• 1, 1s. 12, 1m 1~ Jun. 1.$ •nd Jun1 "· ttn i1JO.n JUl'lll l, 1. 1s. n. ",, lff).n Ju,,. n. n. 1t11 ,,...n June n. n . 29, 1m 1.,.1.13 S .. lll k it .... MOW o.~--Kiili ' 'l I 0 ,. •tl~Mittllf· ·1\S 12 •11t•Mll~ ..... 110 7) l t!tWHI ,,.,105 71 c.,.~,,,_, •... , . I lS 1'S S~fm ........ 11 1 7000 Hllf$f IMPOlllO JllOOllMI I •HIT\ °" C"Mtl•ll' --~! ....... S,_m_,., Slecfl lhlrtt •W1PITANYS I • Flll ALfllATIONI ~ .._,_ ... ._.. ....... OQj ,•!l\'M '.,,.lfl,_1 '~··· Ql4111 J L • • 1 s n I< -tL .. • de wl sp w " ,.. t .... • . .. " Fami II Circus bu BU Keane ' (:-_-"' -- ....... "Wow! P J is almost 2 inches toll!" ----~-~----- Cus~tody Ti ii Jt\net Leiglt Ac~used I Tony Curt~ ;iccuscd rormer ,,,ife Janet ~...eigh of misap- propriating mere than $100,000 in child support funds. Curtis:· 47, pet it ioned Superior Court in S a n t a 7'1onica for ctStody of his daughter Jamlt, 14, saying 7'1iss Leigh's home i s "wrought with t~nsion and.Ts otherwise an unwholesome · mediunt for I~ emotional stability and u•Bfarc of the child." to l\Jiss Hay\\•ard's \Vishes. l\1iss Hay\\•ard. who won an Academy A\\•ard in 1958 for "I \Vant To Live," frequently moved from hospital t o hospital to conceal he r whereabouts. * . d Elvis Presley prom 1 s e $1.000 to help restock a sum- mer camp cleaned out by thieves this \\'eek. Presley's ·manager, Co I . Tom Parker. relayed the pledge to Louisiana State ( J police aft~r the rock singer PEOPLE read about the theft during a lconccrt appearance in Mobile, ________ _. Ala . He said Miss Leigh, \\'ho ha s remarried. failed to set up a trust fund for Ja1nie, as she promi s ed, and misap- propriated Curtis' s u pp o r l payments for "unbelievable items" such as tra\'el, liquor. clothing and limousine rental bills. * Sen. Norris Colton tR-N .H .. I announced he \\"ill not seek re- ciff'tion next year. Cotton, '''ho has served 28 years in Congress ~ight in the House and 20 in t Senate -made his long·ex ted an· riouncemt>nt in a ne,vsl'!Uer-to hi s cons1itue111s. The 73-ycar old.Cott"1 said ··naturally. thls has been a bard deci sion to make and. being only hllman. I mike it with a feeling of deep tnh:.ip- piness. '' * The prin1e n11 nister·s '>ffice in Otta\\"::t confirmed that ~lar;;:arel Trudeau is pregnant The camp, located i n liolden, La .. is operated by state police volunteers. * . Passers-by paused to listen in downtown San Diego as a loudspeaker boomed forth the u· o r d..s~ot anthropologist ~largaret ~fead . "Mankind has the potential to SOl\'e problems ... " she declared. "The b r i g h t e s I person \r~e ever produced used onlv one-tenth of his brain. By.using our brains and technology together. we can recvcle material and stop trefiting o~a11--and· seas as garbage pails." Dr. ~lead's \\'3S the first of 12. lectures scheduled at the Civic Center. Loudspeakers ,,·ere used because she drew <In Q_Verf!o\v crowd of 4,000. Hard Hats and the second child o( Car~a-h 2 dian Prin1e ~linistcr Trudeau. Ofll y 53, and his \\'lfe. 25. is - peeled near the end of the' year. The brief announcement was made after repor ts circulated for \!'eeks that ;\lrs. Trud,au was pregnant. The Trudeau's first child . Justin . \\·as horn Christmas Day, 1971. * The son of actress Susa1 llay"'ard says his 1nothcr has returned home after being hospita lized si:nce earl y April. "She looks good. She feels good." sai d Ti111 Barker son of the 53-year-old actress. Barker and close associates have refused tO disclose the nature of tic': illness. 3eceding Job for Peanut.~ CERRITOS \AP1 -A burglar has pulled a job here "1r peanut s, Lake\\·oocl s h e r i f f ' s deputies said. The burglar :i pparenlly forced ope n <J 1ailroad fre ight car parked behind the Alt-1\111crican Nul Co. \Vednesday ~nd' took 200 poUTids of petinuts valut'tl at $5.000. a u l ho r l l i e s reported. ENJOY Lawmakers , SACRAMENTO (AP) T1\·o assemblymen who wore hard hats to a floor session \\'ere ordered to ,"cut out this nonsense." Assemblymen Paul Priolo (R-Pacific Palisades) and \Valter Karabian (0-Monterey Park ~. began wearing bright ye llo\\' hard hats ~1onday to dra\v attention to the earth- quake risks in the 104-year-old Capitol. They say they are trying to speed action on plans to replace or reinforce the building. BUI \\'llEN they appeared Thursday, Assemblyman Jack Fenton cD-li1ootebellol, who \1•as presiding, told them to ta ke off the hats or go out in the hall \\'here he said he \\'OUld have microphones and speakers set up so they could participate in A s s em b 1 y business. "Let's cu! out this nonsense.·· said Fe n ton , reminding members of the long files of bill s to consider durin g the session. BOTH LEFT the floor, but t he~' returned later and placed the hard hats on their desks. T\\'O engineering reports have said the unreinforced Capitol \\'OCld . probably col- lapse in a moderate to severe earthquake . _,.. · 'THIS 34~ sufMIER .r -·$~•-iFcOoL COM ORT HUNT INGTON 19sa2 LANES leach Blvd., H.I. • SPICIA( ltATES IN EFFECT • 35C . , FIU. 12 MIDNITE TO l A.M. --SAT.-U MIDNITE TO 3-A.M. ,.. o.me •t 5UN. 8 A.M. TO 4 P.M. 6it"1ftt' A••ll111ble '°' I•"'"* Lfffltft -Coll t'J·4Sl7 • • -.... I • • 12. • Re<Jularly 14. 97 Treasury's own 20 " 3-speed window fan 1/15 H.P. motor. rotary dial. (Model #9706A). Tilling floor stand lor 20" Ian (Model 19741) (not shown) 5.97 119.95 orS61 month Fedders 5,000 B.DJ 2-speed High and low cooling, easy lnstalla!ioo with accordion-type side panels. 9.5 Amps. 115 volts. (Model #ACP05F2EZ) .. .. 13.97 Treasury's own deluxe 12" 2-speedfan with rota!Y dial and tilling stand. (Model iS122). s99 or 5.50 1 month Philco 5000 BTU "Space Mate" Cools and dehumidifies. Lightweight. easy to instan. eamps.115volts. (M-#AM58 1M). 249.95 or 10.50 •month . •• f'.edders 10,000 BTU 3-speed Oeconuor styling, contrOls concealed behind sliding door. 12 Amps. 115 voils. Easy installation. !Model #ACT!OF2E) . OPfN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 ·SUNDAY 10 te 7 ·- F'rlday, Junt '22, 1q73 Roll-about stand for 20" fan. (Model #9740). 9.97 18.97 Treasury's own deluxe 20" 3-speed window fan rotary dial, deluxe grill. !Model #971 t ). or $12 • montl't Ph ilco 14,000 BTU. 5-yr, warranty.* , Big room coo~ng. 7 themlOstal settn'OI. 3 speeds. 12 amps., 115 volts. •s-yr. warranty from Philco-Ford covers all parts and serv1ce. tNo1 including Installation kit tiller, weather exposed finish, cabinet seal. tnm. No allowancet made lor product abuse) orS7.SOamonth Fed®_l'.$_&.!)OO_BTV 2·speed High and low speed cooling. plus fan only. Handsome styling. 9.1 Amps. 115 volts. (Model #ACA06F2EX) • GRANADA HILU 180CKI Chastworth St. WOODLAND HILLS 21500 Victory Blvd. •1v1as1DI 3~20Tvrer St. -tAHTA-ANA-North-of·South Coast--Pta1a TOIUNCl-Sepulveda:t1nd Hawthorne IUINA , .. H--eeach and Otangethorpe OUNCN Garden Grove Blvd. and Manches ter LAKEWOOD Carson at Paramount '" . ' ' DAILY PILOT f • ' ' ' . " • ' ' • ' ' ' ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' I • ' i ' . . . -. . . . -- -. -. . . . . . , ; , ' . •• . ' . ' , . • • • I 'l : -1· ' ' • ' • . ' ' ' ' • • ' • • • • ' • • I ' • • ' • • • • • I . . I . • ' ' ' • J ' . • . • • ' • • • . • • • • • • • • • • -· I I I f ·. ' . ~ . -. , .. ~2,._~D~A~~~V~f~il~OT.'......~~~s~c ~~~~-F-•_ld~~· J_,_,._22.~_19_73 Firestone Contract - ~~~~No1~<~! Tentative agreen1ent was reached early today on a new conlr<l cl b c t w c c 11 the Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. ~ ilnd the striking Uqitcd Rub- ber \Vorkers. 1'he uew, three-year mcnt covers 11carl agreer 18,oqo 't~Kil\Tc · STOCK f'ircstont• workers in 13 plants In nine states. The st ruck tho co1npany ncsday. ~,.. . It's Big, But ••• \\!age lcrins or the Firestone settlement were not dlscloscd, but three previous industry contracts negoliatc..-'d by the Wlion have provided wage in· creases averaging about 80 cents an Mur. This would give \l,'Orkers an average wage of $5.40 !n. hour after three year.$. e Team•ler'• !'olcf'ARLAND (AP J 'J'he tanker S.S. Coronado under goes final preparations for a schedu led June 30 launching at National Steel and Shipbuilding Co. in San Diego. Large al 38,300 tons, .it is dwarfed by the S.S. Ul tramar in back' round. Ultramar. at 80.500 tons, is the largest ship ever built oh the \Vest-<::oa t. Robert s Farm s, Inc., an· nounccd Thursday it has sign. cd a CQnlract \Yifh the Teamsters 'Union for the harvest or grapes and plums in the Sa n Joaquin· Va lley. , Roberts' contract with the United Farm \Vorkers Union ex pired June 9. t• e Bre:h11e1J \\'ASllJNGTON (UP I) Soviet leader 'Leonid J . Brezhnev, in another bit oJ lobbying out side !he official , protoool of his su mmit visit, talked business today wit h about SO U.S. ca patali~ts. in- cl uding the heads of some of Lhe nation's bi g g cs t cor- poral ions. . The session began at mid- morning if, Blai r l1ouse, the orficial guest ho~ ·for foreign.' visit.on across the street from the \Vhite J1ouse. e Aeq11l•lli<>ft WASHINGTON (AP) -Th• F'cdc.ral Trade Co1nmission nnnounced it has received from Procter &. Camble Co. a request for approval of the company 's prop o,:s e d ac- quisi tion o f International Paper CO .. a recently closed lisslle factory Jn Oxnard. · Pr:octcr & Gamble proposes lo buy lntemational's facility for S25 million. Procter & Gambl e is under order to cl ear such acquisitions "'ilh tbe Fi'C in advance . e J,ockheed S11eciaJ to lhe Daily Pilot PLAINFIELD. N.J. Lockheed Electronics Co. Inc. announced Thursday it has completed the acquisition or the Los Angeles-based controls dlvis\on of the Leach Corp. Loc.\:heed Electronics signed an agreement to acq uire the assets of the controls division on April 18. eGawllatlm1 SEQUOIA N AT I 0 NA L PARK (AP '! -Dr as ti c gasoline rationing has been imposed in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks due to reduced suppl ies and • in- creased consumption, Park Supt. Henry G. Schmidt said Thursday . Schmidt said Standard Oil of California, which supplies the park concessionaire, has re- duced deliveries of the fuel by five percent fronl last year's level•. e Co11lt'aet OK VISTA (AP) -A new con- tracl wllb major supermarket chains has been approved by the last ol th ree ra ti fication votes of grocery clerks in San D(cgo county. The pact, including an hourly 33--cent pay raise, retronct\ve 10 April 2. wos oknycd 32-72 at a meeting Thursdny night of Retail Clerks Local 1222. Two earlier approv<ll votes were tAken elsewhere. lot1I or 0.111111 · Delivery -• ·Pbon1 f6r Free Brochure Nixon Releash1g Divide11d Guides WASHINGTON (AP ! -In a move apparently aimed at the sagging stock ma rket , the Nixon administration has eas· ed voluntary guideline s holding dividend increases to 4 percent a yea r. The Committee on Interest and Dividends Thursday gave corporations a choice o f holding to the 4 percent giudeline or using 3 more complicated rormula . The complex alternative permits di vidends to rise by the average increase between 1968 to 1m . THE COMM I TTEE'S chairman, Or. Arthur F. Burns. head of the Federal Aerospace Back Pa}' Oi·dered W<ISHINGTON IAP I About 120,000 aeros pa ce wo~ers' would get $353.60 each in back pay under a rul- ing by the U.S. Circuit Court or Appe ,,.ls. The appeals court agreed Thursday with a lower court that the Pay Board acted il- lcgaJ ly in January 1972 when it cut back a wage raise for workers in several companies, including Lockheed, North American and M c Donne 11 Oouglas immediately a n d Boeing later. THE CASE was sent back lo the Pay Board "or such other body as appropriate" for set- tlement. A spokesman for Lockheed in Burbank said. "Lockheed aod Other comapnies were not parties to the suit and we do not care to comment at this time.'' \\'HEN A REP 0 RT circulated a few weyks ago that the co1nmit tee was con- sidering ch an gin g the gu idelines. the stock market moved up st rongly. It dropped after the Administration said the proposal to ease the guidelines had been put back oo the ~helf. Sources said the latest move was aimed more at the stock market than anything else. TltE COfl.1rtllTTEE, an ad- junct of the Cost Q_f Living Council. said it Was guided by considerations of e q u i t y , saying that the previous guideline~ limited dividend in- creases by sotne co mpanies to unusually low levels in com- parison with earnings. The move came as the Com- merce Department reported that before-t::uc profits of cor- porations ihcreased by $12.8 billion in the fi rst three mGfiths of the year. putting corporate profits at a seasonall y adjusted annual rate of $114.3 billion. Gas Ratio1ts Noiv at 67 o/o Of Statio1is f.fcDonneH Douglas officials LOS ANGELES (AP) -The declined to comment. · I r So th The back pay would be (or _ Automobile C uh o u em 1972, said a spokesman for the California says i.ts \Yeek!Y lnlemational Associati on or survey shoo.ved an ~ncrease in l\1achinists a n d Aerospace. the number of se rvi ce staU?ns workers. which have cut operati ng Firm Opens Mesa Office Savin Business Machines, marketer of o f r i c e com- munication equipment. t:hns lelised 4,200 square feePof of- ,flce space ln the Don Koll Proj- ect In Costa Mesa. :innounccs Zone General rt1anager Arthur E. Gell. The Western 7.one office of the ValhallA, N.Y •• firm is CX• pccted to occupy the addJ tlonal space in August, according to John Megery, Crubb & Ellis Co. Newport Beach ~nlesman, who represented both IMSec and the lessor. Don Koll of Newport Beach. hours or limited the am.aunt of gasoline sold lo each customer because or the (ue\ shortage. /'t'HE SURVEY of 173 sta- /tions in SoutllCrn California showed Thursday only 33 per- cent operating normal hours"'. and allowing motorists to fill tanks. This was a drop from 36.5 percent last week. or the stations contacted, 61 percent were linliting hour!i, mos! closing earller each evening and seve r al ciminating Sunday opcration- The number last week wa9 SI percent. Eldorado's Bid Okciyed Eldorado Bank has received appn,val from the St11le Bank· ing Deportment for t h e establishment or an office in Mission Viejo. Eldorado's first branch of· fie• will oo localed In too vicinity ()f La Paz Road and Marg ue r It e P n rkway. Complete Independent banking service wlll be available to the area In late 1973 or early 1974 . Total a sels for the bank· have rcoched $9 mllllon orter a year's oper!tion. LA Livi 1ig Cost Rises s,veepstakes . Contest Bid East Coast Banks Up Prime R.ate ... .. ·-.. .... ... .-... ,. . .... ,, ...... ., . Complete New York Stock List • I I 1'fonet1's .Wortla Moving Expense Tax Deductible By SYLVIA PORTER (La.st in a Series) Of all the side areas of mov· ing In which you can lose nioney, none is more irritating than the tax area. Reasonable mo v 1 n g ex- penses paid by you. an employe o r setr-employed person in connection with y~ employment, are deductible 1f your expenses meet· the re- quirements de~cri ~ below. \Vhile the nlles for deductions were liberal- ized by the Tax Reform Act of 196!J, they also be-- came more of his househOld during the period of SO consecutive days after getting the new employ- ment and while occupying temporary quarters (.whether still looking for , or waiting to move into, a new residence ): -Costs of selling an old and buying. a new residence, or terminating an old lease, in· , eluding attorney's fees, escro""! fees, appraisal. fees, real estate commissions, title costs and "points" paid f () r services. (To the extent you deduct these house-selling eY.- penses as moving expenses, you can't use them to reduce any profit from sale of your old residence.) Friday, JuM 22, 1973 DAILY PILOT 2,1 ;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';·, OVER THE COUNTER ; NASO Uslll!Plor Thurtd1y, Jun• ~1, 1973 ~ l•••••••••••••••-. .............. c. \4 ;· ~leflt ¥\Ill H !tt ~ QIHll\f Cl'I • lf to j.il'f c:to 3'.• • N .. tr,r ~ 1f"" QUMn C• 1~ 11'11 ""ot.r. 11,_ 11) ' ot •ICV -R•tnr Co ~ "' ![f W ~ ~~. ' ,,. ..,. . -,,r~ ~ 1tavcm '~ "• , Quofef IW -• -LlJ m Ve 110' 17k •nv 7" ''' ~ UUllfW -..rs 11 ~ }i~ R•vmd 11 l ~ DC ,,,_ ft • = °""' tl.'.-m n ·~ l ~ {J{l =·™ p~i 1~!· I lo:r. Ml ,u Ill: i Ir.:""~ ,~.J; ~-,... "" •i°""' 'j" il• l"' c" Ill! I' ' 111°=i IMrt.,., = ~lfd l£ii m' ~ =:~ ~1: l u :t}) 1So..8:i~ lt~ l~I~ ~ = :., c:m :t ~ s: 1 'l' -Rm\ Ii' ~ 2,:z ~RC'!t J4l r:='on.. KM Adv -12~ I* or. mt ijm~ u .r, v;; 1~ 1tt! I IMDUna1.u.s ~.m ~~ ff ti ~=· ~ li~ ~ f~-N~ l~ 1 l'• I ANO UT~rr1u •U l"nk 13~ ,•t Row• in.1 lJVli , Uni" -Fd• la' 1 , '"" I •mtl •r 30 1l11Ckr P.l'I 1 YI 17 Unv _MQO& 5 ~ • J""" • ~?1 •rlvt1 P 11t J 111111 stOv %1 ~ VeoM ~o, '!t' ''i~ 1 :Zb." H~= F, ;i( M ~·mAg~ r' N ~:::C'ovk 1~ 1fv. • • • l' ~ l'lnO c t.~ ~ 11111 1~ 1~ vf:' ""' I" !'" ~" " lll 'l" ::'.'l,.M• 16'11!~ M'" !j1' !11' '<lMI $1 1, A :: If"' I~ Ht11Ctl c lJU ,. cl'loll In fii fi ~llllol sc m 1:! ~~w •· ~ """aliJ.J"' "" ~~ ~;:~11 .r .m L~ ~h11 im A"' ""'I 111'1 Mtg lm'" ~ crloto I llo't ~Ii W•tl• Mt 11tt 17V• A I VI c ff w,rd lt\fi W•~rnfl l 1 1,4 11* Am ~fl 7VJ !!f.'. Nuc:I 2}1,1 22~ i.vffl VII • 1jU. 11" Wtlcil Wt 141,; lS\lo ~~I ii' n ~;;j IPCl'll 31 32 · ltitltr CP 4t 2-l\ W•ll~ M """ 15U :: T fJ: tr. ~tr,.."f G~ I ~~ I~"' lrn1»on 10'11 11'"1 Wt! ubf 1 1 14 = J/::i ' ~"'w•T l 19 s:~,,~ch M:w; , ~It• f-~ ...,., l"t VI 1 Ei lv. ,_,, llor•w '~ 61.!o Wstc• Pt i I" Arillfvtr-•™' Int ~ ~ .S~ IJ:r ' l~:-tt\4 ffil ~~\~mfd1 j ii:: •-... A~ 'R Jl'(i A\li lri l k A. lfli 1ttt ~tre 1 lA~ 11~ w1:•n HJ. ~ lj" ~~:··~:,· 1iu lfv. ~~~.~,, ia ,~~ il~"1:a1! i:n :i~ ~,~~ ~t1 l · ~.~, .. ~ 'll' ,, ,.,. II ... r.Fr I rn ltk N Ale 21Vr 2:11<'1 Wood Lll'I 1 11\'I: • I M l 1 tkN l rw lOV. 12 World 5v 1 :lli ""''""' r lj 1644 OI VII 1 •• 11 !Nk N s ,, '" ~WrlQlll~W A4' \) Arvkl• i~ f\li 'I"' SI .~ .,. itro-Tee 1 '·• 13 Olflll 11 ~ ~ -'-CCII• ll:wi lN • var C .r~ , ..... S~IMr El t . t!Ji t!lo rt •n'i All G1 LI 14" lj e•rn Tk 1,1% 17• 1vn1r Co 10~; 11• !"'" UCI~ .·~ a' Auto Trn 12\\ 1 '!ti Ktllwod 10,. 11 ••"-FO '' '"" Ions ,. 4., l •jrd Alo ~.\io l Ken Cohn Ill" ,., -a rd Wr u 1 v. Kev 01111 -• c o m plicat-~ ed. The tiigli' 1. 1 i g h,t s of &~ ' these rules 11('7; foUow. tf you .fo\,.0R:Tllt DJRECJ' MOVING expenses can b.e deducted only -jf ( 1) the employe o·r self-employed person moves to a new prin· cipal job site that 's at least 50 miles farther from the old residence than the old job site was; and (2) during the 12· montli'period after arriving at the new job location, the employe is a fu11-time employe for at least 39 weeks ; or, if a sclf-employ~d person moves, he performs full-time services for at least 78 weeks within a 24-morith period following ar- rival at his new work location. l:'~'r Un Jm' ~I:" ct: '. 'l\t 10 ltlost Aelfue .I v ff 311V. v. ic.vi• /"f 121,1o IJ 1 ----------n~ e1 11 7'h ~M lld S¥o '\~1--------------=::C=----------'---------====;=---------\11:~111,lt tttt mt l(:::rr ~: l:y,n M~Z NEW YOAIC tUPllliThf 10 rnc.t ectlv• ••l•lf F !4«o UIH Kr ueoft'· n ~• 1tocks tr1<1ftl Ol'I the TC m•rll•I Thur•· evl"• !Ni l~ K111tm Et ' 71._ dlY I S i\IPCllled bv NASO. lffllrM F ill 5 LICkl l"et llVi 6t<o S!IKk . Volume 81d MllHI Cllt, think y 0 u are entitled to some mewing expense de- ductions, mak~ yOur claim for this deducion. on Form 3903 which you get from your local Internal Revenue Service Of- fice. THERE ARE two main types of deductible moving ex- penses: (1) direct aod (2) in- dire(!t. The difference between them is that there is no dollar limit on the amount cl dedu<> tion f or reasonable direct moving expenses. while there are dollar limits on the amount,;you can deduct for in- direct expenses. There are exceptions to these 39 and 78 week re- quirements in case of disabili- ty, discharge, etc. INDIRECT MOVING ex- penses are deductible only if they meet both of the re- quirements listed above for deducting direct moving ex- penses. but the amount of deduction for indirect ex- penses is limited as follows: 2 Aussies Threaten French Mileage To End :w' " ~· t•nc:111 lW. cun•on on · 193,lOO 1~ 1"'-1~ v L~ jJ ~ 11'1<1 14 A1nk O,qn 7•.30cl liq Jl~ h IS Prd 1wt1r C :Ml\ 3' Penn Liie 6f;Jl)O-3 3~ W lill Lib 31\a 39 LIIV •ov 241\~ 27\~ Anheus BuKh 6'.ICIO di\ ·~I \• llbtl Co mo L~I Pl lU~ 12t~ 81tnll1mer 63,500 ~ 'I + t, 0 Drm 12 1 Llb<lth' H 2\" l \lt Am E•P S4,900 ~ s.~ I\• !rd s:or.1 Ljl Chmo ;n, 7'11 B!V YO\lf Ill ,.,too ,. ,~+ " 1123\124\IJ L nc 8dsl 6'-' 7\~ Scon1. L!liGla 36,900 .,..._ 1..., 8 oti Evnt. 23l,.I, 74\fJ Lion CtSa '"' 514 Comb lntArn Ji•100 llMll II -1'• 8oolt'I No 17'.4 11 Locllle ' '3117 l9\~ Edi.ictl E•tct11Y 3 "°° 21 30 ..,,.. \.t Bronco t 11 ~i '\~ LoeW'I Co llV:t 53 -l rlnk1 In lOV. 1 Mtid G11 , •!7 15 NA~O Volume Tod1v; 4~.100 rawn Ar f"" 7\lo M•j llllv 4'9 li\i•'i A.dv•nce1 m ,....-.._ !uc:kb<I 1 'h 12 Ml lc;kl 35\~ ' Ol(Unts 19• . \ E T . ? UCk•Y 6"i 6fi Mtrlt Fri ,.... .:v. Unc:h1noe.d 201J Uflll) SI 2114 m . M1rv l(y 28 1t Tol1I 3106 With Gi:~pe-eating I nsecf,S SYDNEY (UPI) - A pak of Australian scientists are said to have a sinister "superbug" ready to .attack French vineyards if France continues its nuclear atmospheric tests In the Pacific, the national daily The Australian reported Thursday. · THE PAPER SAID the unidentified bug, akin to the rose-loving aphid, is reported to be . immune to all in- secticides except one developed by its breeders, and would bring havoc to the vineyards. - At The Hague, a spokesman for The International Court of Jus~ice said it would rule Fri- day on requests by' Australi" and New Zealand for an in'- junction against new French tests on the basis that they were a health hazard and in· fringemen t on their sovereign- ty . go rip utl"° M $.'!•,~ :16\~ M£ Cmck 37 :JBV.1----------- The Australian based it s • ~~ !:: ~~~ ~\'!. ~cQu~v . l~v. Ji~ Ir t port I te ~en VIPS 16U 17 M~lrn •S ~ Gainer• & Losers on page re on a et f . hrno Pt 1ou 1n~ M•rld µ: ,m ,,~ cabled ·to the 6ewspaper by WASHINGTON (AP) -~~·~: 1!.., ~" ~r~1:,.. ' •1 ,, 1------------ one "Mary ""'th_" i'n the A · t b'I anul t ~;,,.. 11 35 36 M • G.11 2' 2'\\ N•w 'r'Ol'k (VPIJ -The followl1111 lltf ;)llU u omo 1 e m ac urers t.r er r n \\ 7'\~ M nn F•b s>.\ I t11ow~ '"" 11ocu thet ll•vt o•lned 1111 Philippines Wednesday. But an Id ,, . . • llrll Sote ~ul Co 11~ jj' ~ll m1»r and 1os1 tM "'°'' bltld on pen;•nl shou se1.1 a nununum target 1.s.s lt! •• 1n ll'Ai of enen<M on 111• 0vtr-tl'le<01111lff' independent check in Manila of 18 nliles fu 8 g~ of fuft' ~J~1:eo':L: A i~~~ foll MDf"•~ns• fig 19 , ""~~~·11~~ o:i:~~n?:i.!iwc~f~ ,,, "" showed the person wbo bad " . o;1o1,, ~I-CrD lJI'• 14\!o Motor Cl 1,., lL"" dllle••nc• b<llween The ~r(l\ls "'' l:lld I used . the -sident of the Union Oil ~.' ,L~ 1i~~ ~.~· :~· ~~~~ et; .,,; uric• •nd ,,,. currlfll l•sf bid price, sent the cab e a _...,. ;f;WTI hp 1ffl ~ Nit ~llblY '" ·~ GAIHl•S Pseudonym, and she was not Co, of California said today. con111n P t'11 1514 Nt Marer ' 10 1 Mv Tov co !..~ \lo UD jj·' , ~OllSll\$ 161~ 17 Nt Paltnl 5 p1 j C•rnln lnd111tr !~· "-VII .I found in ·~ft hotel she gave. "This may -··ltate "" co 11"-19•' N-.dl\m 11v. 1011t llr•oen Ind .20 ' ~ uo 14.3 wn:: ,-.,.'°..., -r~tcll rt v,"' i;" NiwU·"'C~ 10~ UV, 'i" Pin•• Co 10"" Ii.. VD lJ.2 AUS11lALIAN Scientists are and Why not! -the elimina-g:~1 ~~1,11 ~l~ ~ ll ~J ~., G~ 111l lf.:Z : 11~1~\;; .~:: t:Z ~ ~: lf:~ · of h mod I a Iv M 81~ t •i Nle0l•1 In ~ 1"' 7 Er.erav convr 414 ~ Vet 'J r.........ted to h av e plant-t1on t e gargantuan e s .r, 0 •11 j" 'lll N111t.1n A 33 :M'• 1 EDS N11C1t1r 1~ 4'11 uo •·• .. t"'"' • -l)•I• 0.5 ~tt 2'io Nltotun 8 ll'-w,, 9 F•rr Cotnl>fl\' l·~ \'I VII '·! ed kl sinister ~ "'hich SO often are dedi~ated §:;'' Gen 31''• 12 Nord'1t 11~ U\\ 10 OenloMed Ina ~' , .. uo •. la D• 7V. • NWI N!G .jl'i 9\• 11 A1dl1ton Totell 1~'>+ ~ Uo '· near the best of France's to ego," Fred L. Hartley told a .. !',"', !," Jiltl ,, N011r,11 c11 1'1 '' n wr1o111w .... 1• ~+ ~ uo •·j Direct moving expenses in- clude (1) the cost of moving household goods and personal effects (including crating and packing) from your old to your new residence, plus (2) the transportation expenses of the taxpayer and his famil y (including meaI.s·and lodging) while traveling from yoor old to yoor new residence. · ,No more • than $1,000 in ----------------------C1kl.!11pagne grapes, ready to Se te ~ o.1h1 1 ,1 61~ ~'4 •kwd H ! µ;. u NotiUnv Homs '~ "' V11 •· "---,,. lb ,. ~!•~ 4~ ~II(; r t e 'Ioli 2\~ 1l Comla•. Com 314 Y VII I. na commer ce SUu-D'!lu•• nc '.t'l\i 39~, •in or 5 .,., 52~~ is Pl1nn1<:1 Mkto 11u 1 • u11 1.:a strike if the French go ahead committee Dj•"' crs u•.• 12.\11 ••n Ell ,..., ,,_, 1• F011nd• Fc1c11 l\lo 1. Vo 1.r Indirect moving expenses in- volve these: -U an employe has already obtained employment at his new jot> site. or if a sclf- employed person has already made s ubsta nt ial ar- rangements to begin working at the new site, the cost of any round-trips (including mea ls and lodgiJ.18) made by the tax- payer arid the members of his household principally to find a new residence ; -Cost of meals and lodging for fhe taxpayer and members total for trips to find a new house before moving and for temporary living expenses at the new job location; (2) no more than $2,500 for the ex- penses of selling, buying or leasing a residence, less the amount allowed under (I). Any reimbursement r o r moving ex~es received by an employe Ol' self-employed person must be reported in in- come. You then deduc t the moving expenses' you are en· titled to under the rules which 1 have sl.Dllmarized 11bove. WHERE YOU use your o\11n car for deductible moving ex- penses, you can figure either your actual costs or your costs at a flat six cents a mile, Try Sattrrday's News Quiz We Dare You Bike to Buses • Prof Gets 'Sclieme' Grant SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dr. David M, Eggleston has got· ten a Jot of laughs at his proposal for a bicycle-launching bus. But this Wefk he 's _finding it easier to ignore the laughter. I THE CALIFQRNIA DIVISION of Highways has awarded lhe San Diego State University engineering pro- fessor a $.5,000 grant to buiJd two bike-loading trailers which would hook 0010 the back of selected San Diego City buses. They're the integral part of the ''Eggleston Scheme" he's long been pushing at Southern California transit engineers in vain. · Eggleston envisions the two-wheelers as an extension of comuter buses into the byways of downtown walking and shopping areas. BIKERS WOULD pedal from their hom es to desig- nated stops where they could unload their bikes onto buses equipped with the special trailers. At downtown stops they would unload the bicycles and whiz off, ___ *_''TA EM SVEMSK MED PA EM AKTUR11 I • i I I • •t110nJlildoir) "Takt o S.wd1 for" ridt ... THIS SAAB WILL GET YOU SIX YEARS TO LIFE. 8~~11-1ruports, In coopemtton wit tr Castrol oll, now-offers. an unbelievable New-Car-Owne·r Protection Plan. You get the normal SAAB one-year, unlimiled mileage factory warranteeand an additional five-year warrantee-plus. at no extra cost. You ca n even tran•fer the warrantee to the new owner if yo'u !!ell . Plent y of reason lo buy a SAAB fron1 Beach Imports -But thert's mo re - • 25+ miles to a ga//01' • Lower poll11tion fuel injected e11filrt - crafted by o three man team from st~rt to finish • Front Wheel !Jrf., • 4.wheel power 11J$/Sted disc brak-. · • Standard L11xu1y Accouttrmt ntJ_ To buy 1 SAAB is to put you in the driven-seat of one or the 11fest , most economical, finest built luxury can In the world. Test drive 1 SMB 99 -Ltt 1 Swede like you for • ride. ' , • ' ·'th the'• p1--·• nuclear · I) 1rn 1-ld 1~"' 1~ ~r M1 no S'4 11 Downtown c11 11. \1 u11 1.1 ., ll lll•lt:'.l f>ld l A fl 1TI'. '""" If L9• 6t 71Ao It Hvdrom11 Fii ?,;o ..... Vet ··' tests •.. -. Austral'·" sa1'd, H. DTLEY --~JED at a tllvr1 Sci ''" l'"' I vy M 1611 ,. " Dlaonq•llc 01 •n l"' '\Jet •-l. iu ...,.., ~ lo.3•U' DQt:llllf .., ,,,,. Firro 1i4 ! 20 Gr111hlc Scan l'~\a 4 VD '·' The be · the M·'-Vehi I Dolir Geti 7\1 -~ Ce>el 12~ 1 \lo 21 IOtn!lcon Cp • ' \I.I Vo ':l " tiny insect -reputed armg °'!. VW. Ce f'>orltldl 74 2A rrnonl 61" 1 t2 A•vne lndu!I 21 t; Up '· to prefer Only •-' pm· ot and Fuel ~-•·-y Act caw Jot\• 30 vrmyr 6\• 7'123 Hvdro C11t111rt ~1 l.!o uci S.t , u~ .D\.VllUIU · • Oo'o'l,. 011 Jj JN ~n NA 31, l \• j' A 1 Kouin Co • I'. UO j·•, me•-1'er grapev1'nes -, 1's sa1'd Com~1'te J-US d t')unkln o m 2'4 1111 Cro 51, Sli S Crown Cr411• S 1.-. Uo .3~ "'' r-••~ · .·ma e F.con l 11b 31\\ ~J't 1tat 8r .. "' •st. LOllti t lo be waiting in ,the hands of a automobiles get onJy 12 miles ~rue~~"· r ~ fP!~cG•m ~lf:11..f.l: j'iA::;;;iu~'J:_:~~._;; ~tt "~-J::Ti Fr en Ch Sym. pathizer at-to t=-on Hart-1--y ru'd So"'' N•~~· ·•· 5'\ ·~c--.:um -'I.lo :13\\ ar• c1n!Cro 3v.-'i« . ff· . 1111: 6..,. • e S · -=n•l'TI". I'. ,,, """' 1So 8rd \'lo t V. 6 Hlr.cllorn 2 -.0 Reims in the heart of the setting a goal of 18 miles to <=ou sa.t: 1n; l"i P•n oeo1 131-13v. ' ~11 u~o1c1 s 1 -111 11 J6·~ h d I h ll -""lh•n I\_ 'lJV, ?'"· P•ut RIV l~'to 1~~ ~ I wood om -~ ;ti lfj c a mp a g n e -pro uc ng t e ga on would repr~senl a ~~';1.··1~~ ~ ~~ ~:r:vc:s 1~ 1f' 1 ~1""'~~1~;c'~l 2\r-\s 11 1,: district." 50 percent decrease in fuel F1Jr t~ i•• ~ P•v H sv lj'h 1, 'M1eroc11t1 cci ~ ~ i,j" •• l<1rlon r=1 ?:N.i U\<!t P11G1.I. W 1 '• 1~~ 10 Owrw•HI ·Air l-.,.,, .J The report cabled to the consumption. . · Firm e·, ii\'l 17\i Pet Ha.H 16~~ 11\'I 11 Am Micro SVI 11,._ 1~ \'!1 ' • FIVI Ont ,i.o, 1 P1tro Lw 1 7i, 12 i:l«l'Wll llK ~ .,.. . Australian said two scientists, The legislation under con· F1ncir111 11v. 1' P1cN S•v h -1.,. n r11 A11101T1•1 2,•»--'.. , •,,. • • r I<•! Bolin )PIO 16\l Plnkrln 2 26\1 14 ec-ltr Incl n • one employed by the Com-s1deratlon proposes a 13 per-1.:1 T.-Fin "'" ' "I-w • l:i,, 1s s1ew1r! snaw •v.-1~ ~", I h Sci 'f' t · · fU I l•I W•tl' n11~·j"' "-Ind IS 1 VJ If lnttr,11 1ncoro 1 -• monwea t enti .1c and cen mcreue m e economy F!Ko 111c ~ r VJ Pl•nd Mk 13\li 11• 1n-~eoo1 l•lll-2., :! i Ind t · I R h Or · I all of Sept I Fl• Ttotflt 17to IS\.lo POii!! ero 4~ v. 1 O<:wnc •r, llf •"'-... " us na esearc garuza-or new cars u . . Fl~~o• nv. ,,,,.. Pott co 1ffi 11 1:1 ,, v1w.. 111(1 4v.-'I. on ' ... lion (CSIRO ). and the other 1976. a.nd a 25 percent increase:=• ~f 1~ 1m ~~::.~' 1 1~ r: ?!:,~~1~. 1"1\?:: I~ 8fl lf:• from a unl·v-•ty m· tbc as of ~ 1 11178 81 com Fr~""' ,.~• ...,l, PSl\I C•r 1~ nv. tt P1vbO•vo ,JD ,.._ '' 011 1 .1 ,..'" , , • F'1«1d '' ,., ~t Put>linr 1* ll\lo P. 8Ncn ,hchl S ,.,._ i.:. SU! Ii·' Eastern Australian sta te s. pared wit 1973 model cars. ~~hFd~ 'k, 1h, ~~r c~: A;t.,•101•" ~-==' .i~ r~..:: 1.,. ~ le:: spent a month in France "My objection would be that !JIU•M"""""' establishing the groundwork these goals are too modest," • ..._ ....., ~~w ~~r tho:ra~~~ ::Ct a~ Hartley said, MlJ-TUAL FUNDS ·. Au..lralia. REDUCING TIIE . s p e e d ASKED FOR REACTION to the report, Jean Guillpain of the Moet et Chand.on company al Epernay in the heart of the Champagne country, said, "I find it rather funny, in fact very funny, I do not think there is anything serious behind it. And even if it were true, we ha ve the means to fight. We have treatments." Douglas Oil Plans Facility limit by 10 miles an hour can ,,._,,,,,.,.....,_1<4"""""""""""'•""'""'"""..z;;""' _ _, reduce fuel consumption by N,.,.. vor11 -Fol· MOWAtD: •JH•~ 9111 '-'' 1.i, Alnlt'I 12 • .ff ... about 10 noo.rcent be said . IOWl!ICI 11 • Un QI 81+11 t>U t.3310.20 JHt,, lilO I.IS I ... St111ll•r 2.IC 2.10 r-• ' Did Ind ••lo.911 Ori· Gw!ll F 12.7' n 97 JOhnl!n • tt.M nt SC:l'wn Fd l.01 l.1S "It could currently save up c•• on M11tu11 1ncrne 606 1•2 1111M5TON•: SC:l'lus Sp 1.111 '·°' Fund1 as jUOI"" Dv Spe<:ll F •.•S C' Cllll QI 11.t5 ltl2 KVODaR ,p to 300 000 barrels of fuel ""r llM NASO nc. sic• Fd 12.:u 12 lo Cus1 "82 20 13 22.01 ln1r Inv l4.n'1111 , ~ --'~tlld 9'11031 Cini '' 121 901 It IS90 ... day " Hartley said. "This one TIMlnMf, t: IE SP 19·•1 19 " cu~i 1<1 i o.s 1)2 c:i:nc: 10·1s ll·1 ' Id b b 1 Ju11t 11. lr,.n • ' MGMT Olt,, cu11 tt2 5'" , °' Sr>K•I 2113 21• s move wou pro a y ·•M•••·••e Allll ",,tv Gr ,''°•/ CU$1 s1 UOJ U.1• Sl:ld L.., .. ,. , ... , 1. • 't th t JI .. "" 1 v Pr · Cull S1 10 6011•1 .., .11 e tmma e e curren gaso ne Gl'\lo'ltl 4.11 •.s1 ,J:"" Am 1.c . cu11 51 ,~., 111 s1cut1TY ,011 hort I bout " ltl(om J 69 •.0.. Qfll GI 11·•1 n... Cini S• l n io.1 EQ11!1y 3.10 3 rt s age or a one year. •n~rn 7.67 t.•1 citun Tri 1 .41 APOilo • 19 •" lnvm •.JI 1'1 lrw. p I d Advl1ff' • B •.SS Erntr11 .4' 318 Pol•ri 3·32 J.l3 U1tr1 ' .,,0 .; 10 , Ha pern, eputy ~:f': ~~ 1J,r, 1: J: t::tJPl F ':·M I0.94 i.;nk~r ~ tl 6 l'I SILICT•D 'Dl: assistant secr e t a r y of ""'"'r• '·"' '·"' 11rrid 1.:.J t.23 Kn-r 0111 6 is 1 19 Am Sh• 1.n 1.1' • AGE Fd 4 1S •.» m 8ur1 ,,12 t,11 lndmrk 6U 669 Ollo Fd I.I, 1.7• transportation, said the ad-A111111t1 11.10 1!6' FfgJI~ '·" Ltnir Fd ~.91 •.•1 scir Shrs 12.~11,u ministration opposed th e !~~:0Fi 112i~11cr1' ~•ou'i!: Y Lc'f.x i.:C::::>01~?11 .... ~l~ F 1~~ ltiJ legislation which "would pro-Am O...ra ·ll 'o 26 enc1 1111:1 1.M • 11 Grwtll s.19 •.n SHA•IHLO HP . All'I EQtv ' 5 ' ... 1,.1101•1 11.0J 12.0S AHtCft 11.55 u.n Ce>mst 3.11 , .0 vide for substantial detailed AM EXl'llllss C.ontr• f"' [ 111•v Fd s 41 s.ti Entr,,.. S.1$ s:as ,UNDS: ".>." S!>IC 00 7..JI ,·1e lnlv 7511 1.79 Fie! Fd 3• JN government regul ation in the c1ot•1 1.14 1 ?1 t':'' s.)2 LA< C•o • n , ,. Har11r ·21 f 9s • lncom .... t.22 "~ '10 ' Ll119 Fnd 111 J 11 Les. I L s· ... • area of motor vehicle fuel 1nV1tm 1.11 • •t E,:-:?~11 10.s111., LOOMIS PiC: FO ,,.~ •, ~ SPKI 6.116 1.SO "'"' l•.90 16 1 , at · -economy" Stock 7H80 0 P~rlffl tltlOOJ SAL I IHIARSON l'DS: -Am Grit! s 70 t.n ti'"" F J.fO ,·~6 Cap ov 12.2212.n All9rt 17.61 lt.31 Officials or the Douglas OU He said this area should be Arn 1n1111 4,s1 •" rtnd 2:1.c1 2•.12 M111u11 i 4.J1 1,.J, tfKOm 11.ot 11 '' Am lnvst '·~' 4 46 ~ HA,,.CIAL LO•D Aee: lnve11 I.Tl t.U Company Or Call.forni'a have left la111ely to the forces of the Am Mir! 1.00 !·14 •ootAMs: A11l1t1 ~ .. 11 ''' s11 e>t•n 10.10 10.10 Am~Gr 2.16 ,36 Fin 0Y,, 3 11 3 87 Am But l.fS 3 lt Side Fd 6,fl 7.7S b k nd f h d market AltCI ,. F II /"d ~ 70 4 20 8nd <leb 99] 10.1$ SIOMA 'VHDI• roengrou oranew ea -· ••ou · Fon A< s.sss 55 Lu111trn 10.a.11.01c1os11r 111 1n , , ~111111. j H 'i' V1nt 3.13 3 73 l11!h~ In f.6910.S9 Inv 10.02 lO:tj quarters facility to be located FOR EXAMPLE, he said, 1n nd •tiv ·.# • 1-:tt'f(rv• 10.•111 l9 MA°"A ,VNDS1 Tr.11 1:.2 1 s.s 311 ' Jot t th A '! 1~3 •• f """' 7 O 1 Ctol•! 3,,.. 3 19 V.ntur I U t 01 on a acre p a e pr1 .,, , ..,. percent o new ncom i 1 1:90 "'r ITO•si lncorn • '5 ''5 smuh e ,:34 9:~ northe ast com of Paulanno· I II v1n111r 1.u 139 ~sc F'o io1 s.u P1111rm ''' '·" se 1a.Gr 10 .. 10 .. er car saes were sma cars, as w. N•tt 11.3912:.,. rir111 Fd •i1 1,r1 M1nn1n Jn •.ltSo GenF 11·n 1221 .. and Airways Avenues in Costa compat'ed with, 34 percent the~:!' F ~.!1 l;f; ::f1u1fi 1'~ !·3! :~'ssGCO, I.JO 1''° ~='•'nv'"G f~ 1:g Mesa. year before. 'Th~•"XON FORuf• ot~L~hJ Frc1m '·!r •" ~ovr In to.12 1f.u ~----...........--------...---.-..---..... F1111d I 6.f! , . ., {~ Fnd 1.1! 81! MASS l"NCL • ~TATE 8N~·~ 619 l l~~~~!:~~~:!:!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:.;~~~,;;~j FU,,d ; 12 • 91 l8f Frnj 10 15 1b.11 '~:&SF F 1r-201!·~ s~''r,,o ··r, ~.(M §--~ ----.,.r4,.7~~---1~0--.,.r~o-'-o '1\u~ ,1fll;t;a (~i~"t.,fil r:t ~:& it*ltff ~=~o ~:u·r~ B•Yroc .... , ... ~Jioup, MFO 1''91]7651 Fr Gr •.5? '.52 !•'f111:o j., J OllOU,· MCC> 13.•01'MSIFr lnt tit 929 ORDER 11cn Hj ' .~• Grw!l'I' J20 /6S Melts Iv 2,00 100 51111• Sir •iS44'.tO . 8teton it.Ii 1~·n lncorn 11) 1, M•'"'-' 10.3110.31 ST•ADMAH • •Ds: •a-•lfal Bfftler K 11tJ11 11 F Mlu•I I $6 t 36 Mid Arn S.U 5 63 Arn Frid 2 71 213 lf"'Wllll•I Berkthr iOO ill F SDICfl 10:•1 ·f· Mony Fd 9,9910.92 Asso Fd 1.11 1'11 BOl'ldsl~ 'JJ •91 FQUtlQ F I la t 9, MS8 Fd ll 2113,?1 lnvesl J tf i'2t Stl-'--• 8ot1 Fdn •. .a 10 F•ANK;LIN Mii A.nG 92510.1• ST••H •o• 'i1' o{.• ~-v Brown ill f .. G•OU,1 M\F F.d 1.~6 106 l•l•nc le iJ YOURS JVLLOCI( ' . g~c 7.SJ a.u M :0 Gro '·~ •,37 Cep!ll (l i LABELS ~:ID~~ 12 1 Fr l~c~ ~·~~ ~;·! ~~ r~ :.~ :'.U S~ioc:•OUl'C·i ii TODAY! Penonali11d •'Stylish • Effldent -· Order For YovrMll or 1 Fr/and· May b• used on envelopes 1s return 1ddres1 l1.b1ls. Also very hendy es identification l1bela for marking person•I items such a1 books, records, phofo11 etc. l1bel1 stick on 91111 and mey be used fol' m1r~ln9 home c.•nned fo od jfems. All l•btl& are printed with styli1h Vogue typ• on f.in• qu11ity whit• gummed paper. . I ------, I Pl" fll ffllt ...... CPJ W ....... ti.» •1 Pli.t PNllllf L11111t Olv,. '.0. ... U. ! ---·-I I I I I L----~~~!-'-~~!!~~--J i"fln ~II ,,·~J J·~ US Gv S 10 nn 1~.1, MIJI Shrt 1,,5) 1• SJ Grwtl! SM 6 20 Div S~r :t.W J:f• lHllllJe S.31 512 Mull Trt 191 !.ti lncorn 1,00 1·n ~~tw<I 07;J JO.sa A",c•o 432 •.1a N••'•'""•u ,,u •.:u s.,..11111 aos •'2 y v~ 'I""' I! m J!:f !!JV •.OJ •.u ,. 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""' lvtr lj·ll 'j·•O Aceum •Al 1.J jOL IAL prw111 4.3' 6,,. rnuna 'if ·~ fnd1 I'd 7.tt 1:dt 5':~,: '·'' 'ij ":'rFr ~:~ i:~ 2...~ffl tf·!) 11:,1 c::, P: ~C '::ff ,.ou,,... :·,,. , .. s'"tito v 1:~ t~ o,;.,,,.,M Jtl, u.sr ~~::: u .111• • .u r.~h ~·~ 1~ t0oe .3• 2! Arm "" 10.•5 V111111c1 "" ~·11 ~011'1 i1111n'M "" ·IJ l·~~ o:; flld ,,,1 1.M ll'SAA. el 1l:# 1c·U r.~~~, G 1i'.~ ,tJ: ~~~:;11 1 ~'.11 lol~ OTC ~ i:~ 1f:rs ~11.gr LI~\" Jilt ;fiisT~NWlTH :OMArn '~·u' l~.J~ :::.:.·;~v ~:'j 1:ti ~!I iM ··to '·26 • ~. I I·" 1·" ,:i ll" I 1·1: :-" • ,j, .. ~ &y· :;i. '1:•l ::l! rom11 l!r i'° :ll ,,,"°"m i1 :,1 I'~ M~ l'.~ t• v 1 ~ •91 3;?$ ~omo ~o I·; .n ,~ '" .. '' rf.1 40.73 Phil• Fd •.01 •·ff si,; "'' • ~=d,s (: ,,·:s ~r~e& ~ 1i:Il 1i:E ~~i .. & ,;~~ ': .. rt~ ):~r ;:~ ,-:r, lllY 1 , 1 ·I ~ le ,l·l1 T.Hon Eti 611,?!! VMrt)lf I 1·~ ~::e:7" ~11 J:u L" isu~,,~ ~1:,~e,:k 1: .. t~ ,f,r~:· ~=:£>~~ 1frr'61;'° i.~" ',:~ ~J: ~tlRiJti;'.f; ~:.i.°J !:ii •f:: ~ .... Div J·fl ,. 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' f,ot VO¥ " .'ll 1~ 42 i..fl!·cHvldJfld. • "~TOH A J•l'llll·'d lj.911~.'' lt"V'~• flt Jt 1" ,..,..,.i;,.h•i,je~ ( ... ·~ ~ . -._ .. _.. __ " . .. . • rruill, Junt 22, 1973 5C Friday'.s Closing Prices-Complete New Yorli Stock Exchange List Dividends Move Peps Up . Market NEW YORK (AP}--The stock market, opening on a roller-coaster rise, held on to a good chunk or lls gains al mid-day as Investors look a bullish view or 1'hursday's anncuncement by the Committee on Interest and Dividends The Dow Jones average o( 30 industrials was ~p 7 45 points at 881 10 at nnd-day. In an opening uy1ng spree, the Dow zoomed up over 19 points. Tra ding remained active, but somewhat down from the opening frenzy of the first two hours Vo14 ume on the New York Stock Exchan ge hit 10 36 ~mtlhon shares by mtd-day, the hi ghest since Feb. \3 when 15 36 shares changed hands in the first two hours. Complete Closing Prices-Al:llerican Stock Exchange List DAILY PILOT %3 • \ ) --·----• • ~~-,., ..... -----=-~-----·-·-·-• Ever y: Car Red Tagged At Sup er low ~rices!- ,~~·;~· _j~'~--::::::;:~:ir:U«i;-irtii-----~ l~~,, } "' -. lNTRODUCING THE f{X '13 ,, OPEl R.~~~o~AtGE " . UN ROOF............ ON .•.~uToMATlC TRANSMlS_Sl NO cHARGE . WALL tlRES ......... . eWHlTE _ --. VlNYL TOP · NO CHARGE :Tl~TED '~lNDSHIELD '.""'" - '73 · BUICK -APOLL::::::O .\utomati c lran 2. DOOR COUPE $oldings, and ~~:'%l1::Jf) wall tires. linled gfass, custom - . 297 4 ~~1 l]]74 -~ r 'LUS fAX I LICfMR 0'4!mo"'bs 5500 • -• -MONTH S.1174.95. Dtr~rr 0••ca.shortr1de.(·ash .. l l.ll',..i. On appr~·~':~~ce is 13775.as. A:::, UICI. tax & license is • . -ptt(ent1ge rate is, ;13 -~BU\C-K CENlUR~ -2 DQOR HAR~T~~rakes, AIR -c oNDi1'10 '. \,, . \\'er stec11ng MONTH · PLUS 1.-.x & LIClHSl . · I lax & license i5 h tr11de Cash price inc · rate is for ·US 1nonthS. ~ dowlnPc~~ .. 0r.., $·\ln.i.16. Annual pcn:enlage · • ~ ()t>ferre ... pm . 5" 10.i.: ·0 ao ro,·ect crrd1t •• 11.llf•. n • " IT'S . OFFI CIAL Orange County's -leading Buick Ol'>el dealer • 19721 UI • • )-Specializing Jn Quality · ........... ALL CAIS SUIJICT TO PllOI SALi -• \ " _,... ----- ' ' ' ,1 '73 IUICK REGAL - 2 Dr. Ht. (275G IU ) '72 BUICK llVllU 2 Dr. Ht. (502FEL0 ) '•72 BUtCK RIVIERA 2 Dr. Ht 1538FEN) '72 IUICK SKTLAIK 1 Or. Ht C348E LGI '72 IUICK LI SABll 1 Or. HI (628EP F) '71 BUICK ELECTRA lo.Dr Ht (699DDQJ '71 IUtCK CINTUllON Convert. (651 FBO) '71 BUICK SKYLARK 4 Dr Ht (391CWQJ '71 IUICK SKYLARK 2 Or Ht (738CX B) '70 IUICK-RtVIEIA 2 Dr. Ht (520BEH J '69 IUICK LI SAlll 'Or. Ht (XYM888l '69 IUICK LI SAlll A pr Ht (941 FVZ) '69 IUICK LI SAii! 2.or Ht {YRX928 ) '69 BUICK SKYLARK 2 Or Ht (XTL250) '61-IUICK ILICTIA 'Or HT (2XK8271 '61 IUICK ILICTIA 2 Dr Ht (ZTM762l '67 IUICK SPICIAL 4 door (407BQCJ '66 IUICK RIVIERA 2-0oor_{_RPR242J '71-CoUGAR Xl7 ()02 OTO) '72 JAVELIN (627F8H ) '71 "TMOUTN DUSTll (372EAB J '70 CADILLAC ILDOIADO (118DLC l '10 T·lllD (7008UI ) '70 MUCUIT Ma~quisWag. (8'58RI) ALL PRICIS·PLUI TAX I LICINSI • ·~ -. . ' . ---'-';,-- ( --~~---j '70 MllCUIT COUGAl - ( 152AGW l '70 JAVILIN SST " 1860AEGl f '70 DODGI CORONIT (190E'RS l '70 PONTIAC CATALINA: (635ASO-J '69 QLDS 91 Luxury sedan (816EIU)' '69 IMPlllAL LllilON I YPS562 l '69 CADILLAC Convert. IXYEIMSJ '69 PONTIAC FllllllD ('88AFWJ '69 CAMAIO (YY J137J '69 MllCUIT MAIQ~ A Dr. (XXE\21 ) " '69 MllCUIT COUG. IZSG02J) • '69 MUCUIT WAGON' (YY J~2 ) - '69 PONTIAC flllllllll- Convert (S22CTH ) ·~ '61 OLDS CUTLASS ' • (YCU816l '61 T·lllD '67 PONTIAC GTO (UZX610) '61 OLDS cunAss ' IWIC04 1 l "'. '72 DODGI CHAILLl"'fll 11 85FFHJ ,1 • '721) IL IALL Tl . {016FFI) 1- '71 JAGUAR Vl2:''- (599EICJ '71 CllCKIT (063EAGJ '71 TOYOTA MAIK I! tn7EAPJ '71 PINTO • (783ELL l • ~ '69 CHIV. V. TON Pickup Truck • I ' PllCIS l"ICTIVI THIU JUNI 25, J3 • - I 1 • • • • • • • • ' • Lag11 ·••a Beaeh ' El>ITION VOL .. 66, NO. 173, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ' ' , . •• ORANGE. COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • • . .. • ' Today's F inal N.Y. Stocks -'· FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1973 ' Clean · Getawau E11tertainer.- Laguna Market Robbed -of $600 1\vo men. robbed the Boat Canyon Saftn\'8Y market of $600 and made a clean getaway after holding the market manager at gunpoint Thursday afternoon. , Laguna Beach Police Sgt. Victor Sagan nid the me11 \\'heeled a loaded shopping cart past the store's safe, just as manager Marvin E. Correll, 41 , of Yorba Linda opened it. One man produced a blue-steel revolver and ordered Correll to turn over the money in the safe. 'I1le robbers took only paper-money I deposited jn 8 p189liC l>ag. They left the store and disappeared in - to the parki ng area. A general police broadcast was put oot by Laguna Beach police for the two suspects, Sgt. Sagen said. $2 Million Cost - Of Nixon Home ; Repairs Revealed .. By HELEN THO~fAS WASlllN!lTON (UPI) -Tbe federal government says it has spent nearly $2 mijlion improving ·President Nil:on's bomn in Florida and California, all of it relating . to "security.'' Tbe e~ ranged from fire aprinlders to JOI! urts for the Secret Service. The White !louse also disclosed that busineasman Robert H. Abplanalp, who helped the--President buy his San Clemente retreat, has been getting some money back in the fonn of rent usociated with Nixon's Key Biscayne, Fla., place. _ A month ago the White House bad listed $39,000 in federal funds for im- proving the Western White House at San Clemente since Nixon bought it in 1969. Last week, after a furU1er search of record , this figure wns raised to '460,302. On 'Ibuflday, General Services Administration (GSA), the government's housekeeping agency, said a ,still more extensive audit put the total federal ex· penditure at San Clemente at $703,367 over lour fiscal years beginning July I, 1969. This included only the residence there, not the White House o!fice space. GSA listed for the first time the federal expendltute for improvements, equip- ment, ope ration and maintenance at the White House complex at Key BiscaY.De, including both residence and o[fice space -$1,180,522, spread over five fiscal years beginning July I, 11168. Included ill the Key Biscayne figure was $161 ,463 for renting two houses in the complex for the Secret Service and White House communications staff. The White House said one of these houses is owned by Abplanalp and-the other is owned in the name of Edwin H. (Stt IZ ~ULLION, Page II Coast Weather • Thal ei pected cooling trend will make itseU fe lt along the Orange CO.est Saturday with low clouds in the morning hours and highs in the upper 70s at the beaches. Inland temperatures will be near 90. That's cooler? INSIDE TODAY llt:'J really o sono writ.er not a singer. but Ha rla;i Je nnings, 21, i& finding in a Newport Beach night club engagement tluit sometime.t it's tlte singer o.nd Mt the sO'l'l-g that counts. His 1tory is on Po.Qt 25 of t()o • day'• Weeke1ufer. .... -. Me¥"9 ,,._,, MvtMI 111•""9 1t Hti!IHI Nt1n trlt °'"" Ctvttt'r 11 ltMt-•lltl 17-tt 1'11¥1• ,.,,,., ti IHfft 1 .. IJ •t1tk Mlrlrflt 'lt•lf T"9Ylt*I tt ... """ 4 Wfflltlll't Ntwt IJ·IS W.,1111 Nnt 4, 11 w........ 1'-ll ----·--~----• -. .• The man.with the gun was described as being in his late 2Qs, about five feet, 11 inches tall, and about 160 PQunds in weight. He reportedly had tattooes on hts arms. . 1'h e other man \vas described as being of l\lexican appearance, in his 20s, about five feet , sev~n inches tall and weighing about 145 powids. He was ~earing a bl ack T-shirt and a black ''Beanie" hat, Sgt. Sagen said. . . Lagunan, 19;• A ssaulted In Apartment A 19-year-old Laguna 1 Beach woman \Yas sexually attacked in hef Cliff Drive apartment and found unconscious by her roommate-early ·this--marntng;rrL5guna Beach. Police tt. Robert P..tcU1urray said the · v.'oman Jost consciousness-3fter her blouse was ripped and she · was struck and knocked to &he Door by a assailant. A1cMurray said the young victim has no recall of any events !allowing the blackout and does ·not know if she may have been raped. Police listed the crime as ao attempted rape. The woma n· told officers she was resting tn bed listening to the radio. when she heard a knock at the apartment door at about 10:30 p.m. Thursday. She told police she was expecting a caller, and opened the door. A man clad in \vhile shorts or a s"·im suit entered and told the \\'Oman : "I've seen you before. l want to see more of you." Mc~lurray said. She told office rs she alteinpted to scream. but, was chpked wit~ fear. The man grabbed her blouse, ripping it, and struck her several times, A1cMurray said . The would-be rapist was described as a man from 18 to 25 years of age, about 160 pounds with medium length hair. Astronauts Make 'Super Landing'; ' Away 28 Dtiys ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA !UPI) -Skylab's astronauts landed in "super shape" in the Pacific Ocean today and "''alked shakily a few minutes later to the doctors' office to see how \Veil they withstood a record 28 days in space. The bullµye splashdown and quick recovery by this veteran aircraft carrier marked a flawless end to a mission that started with failure. 'I'he flight took a ma~r step toward giving.man a place in. space. Charles ''Pete" C.Onrad. Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz relllfiled in the Apollo command ship in which they were launched May 2S. The big s p a c e station remained in earth orbit rea dy for Its next crew in five "'eeks. President Nixon quickl y sent a telegram to the men "·ho just completed an 11.5 million mile journey and invited them to vis it him at San Cemente Sun- day. "You hnvc given conclusive evidence that even u•ith the ntost ad \'anc:cd scicn- tlrlc a n d technological support in the world, the courage and resourcefulness of good nten are still central to the suc· ceas of the human adventure," the Presi· dent said. Conrad, commander or the nation's first space slation mission, rea!SU red recovery forces several times that he and his crewmen were all right after the strenuous re-entry which quickly built up deceleration forces 3~) times the force o[ gravity. t1Everybody's ln super sMpc," Conrad rndlocd after tllr~c orange-and·white S&rlpcd parachOtcs eas~ the command module into the gently rolling seas or the -l'aciflc 835 miles louthw~st or San Diego. (Ste KVLAB , Page !I h1 Laguna .-Skit Hurt By JACK CHAPPEIJ, Df ttte l»llY Plltt Steff -A "cops and robbers" skit at the Laguna Beach High School all night graduation pa r I y ended \Vith the shoot ing of a volunteer. entertainer in- jurcd~en a \va d from a blank shotgun shol l struck hin1 in the head: · · lial Louis Proppe, 21, ol 1385 Skyline Drive was reported in satisfactory con- dition today at South COUt Community Hospital. He was shot with a !~gauge double barrelled shotgun during a comic skit at 3 a.m. today at the high school. \Villiam Allen, acti'ng superintendent of the school district, said his-office-was not informed that firearms were to be used during the traditional high school grad night party. :- Laguna Beach police seized . the 10- gauge shotgun and klentified the man 'vho fired it as Gene Porter A1olway, 22, o( 300 3rd Street, Laguna Beach, who was acUng-a&-1.he sheriff during the skit. No arrest was made. D1llr Polo! s110 Photo IRVINE BOWL SEATS 2,500 BUT THE LAGUNA BEACH HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATION FI LLS IT .. 258 SeMiors, Girls in White, Boys in Maroon, Received Their Diplomas Thunclay Night Police said the wad from the blank she ll passed through a hat worn by Prop- pc and struck hi.pl jn the r~ar of the -head.lw!~,!11.t"olli,...-J!!a1,tllo in· 268 Get Diplomas Individualism Theme , ... At Laguna Graduation By JAN IVOR111 Of t111-1)111' '''°' Sltff Themes of individualism and a turn from the rebellion of the past decade dominated the graduation of 258 Laguna Beach Hi gh School seniors Thursday ni ght. The annu<il ceremony in Irvine Bo \vl had all its traditional features. Junior girls in long pastel dresses and long hair brushed to a shin~ bore £lowered arches they had m ad e themselves. A bright red and \\'hite class banner fluttered f r o m the stage's uppermo.51: beam. declaring" "Class of 1973." Pictures or each graduate were nasbed on the screen as be or she received a diploma . l)arcnts clustered around t h e aisleways, nash~lbs popping. As Donald.f;fiught, J..agWla 'Beach High School princip.l and the oommencement speaker noled, the class of 1973 has several "firsts" going for it. "You are the first class in 10 years to graduate "'ilhotit the \'ictnam War hang- ing over your heads. You are the first class in 30 years which wi ll not have to face lhe draft ," he told the students - and was ans\\·cred \Yith. cheers and ap- plause. The class also is the fi rst since World \Var II to ent er colleges that have enough space. And, Haught added, they are lhe first class to have to pay 50 cents a gallon for gas to get to the prom. He challenged the class to "become leaders in enhancing life, not destroying it." . Haught said in the future years the "old fashioned virtue called Yankee in- genllily" Y.'ill be needed again to help the cowltry solve the energ ycrisis and prob- lems or th e economy. "There's plenty to do -to solve ntany (See GRADUATION, Page %) Bazaar Shopping Complex Gets Adjustment Approval Laguna \1i\lage Bazaar, a $5 million shopping complex, won final city a~ proval for design review and prope~y coverage in action Th111'$fay night by The Laguna Beach Board or Adjustn1ents. The project now goes before the South Coast Regional Conservation Commission for permits to allow construction within 1,000 yards of the coastline. Developer Mark Gumblner said he ex· peels to file the applicati9n with th.e com- mission as soon as possible. Board o{ Adjustments members ex· pressed pleasure with the design of the plan. Some 60 shops, a major restaurant und three take-out rood faciHtles arc planned. The site of the proj ect. th e old Carpenter market site. is located at 1550 S. COast Highway. The, project would run from Cslliope St. to Bluebird Canyon Drive between SOUth Coast liighway and Glenneyre Street. Construction is scheduled to start in October, Gumbiner said. Completion should ·be a year later. "We believe we have ca,ptured the warmth, the human scale and European charm reflected elsewhere In Lagunn Beach in our final design,'' Gumbiner said. \Vhich may be reached Irom a ground level street due to the sloping topography oI the area. 'fhc three level parking,... struct ure sunk into B!Uebmrc8nyon Wilr accommodate 260 cars. No citizen opposition to the plans was prese nted during Thursday's hearing. Arnold Hano, board member, tenned the development 11a handsome project .'' "I comp liment you 311," Hano said. Moulton Development Plans Made Plans for a 200-unit residential deveJo~ ment running along the ridge slope ftom Arch Beach Heights to the Alpha_Beta shopping center in South Laguna will be announced soon. John Chapman, chief planner for the firm ol Chapman, Phillips, and Brand Planning of Irvine are £ormulat.ing the plan for the7rs of the Moulton Ranch. Current proosals call foi clustering the residences allowing open space between the clusters. Densit y would be 3.5 to si x units per age along the ridge·. "Obviously we can't do this without solving some traffic circulation pro- blems," Chapman said. Ideal access to development would be _via a road plan 'up tlobo CanyOn, Chap- man said. ·He said he expected an at- tempt lo tie into Alta Laguna Boulevard in Laguna Bcaeh at Top of the \Vorld. He said that route, following a natural canyon oulld be "no problem" en- vironmentally. A!other alternative, to run back of the hill to Aliso Canyon, would be "imJ)Ossible" Chapman said. .;That would cut up a lot or the hillside." Cha pman also intends to propose hook up with Alta Laguna Boulevard -an alternative de!eated by the city of Laguna amid vigorous controversy last ran. A meeting with officials fl'Om Laguna Beach, the Saddlebaclr Area C..roinaling Council, the press and other interested parties will be held late next week or early the following one, Chapman said. "We \vant to assure people that this can be done \Yilhout opening a whole ex· plosion or high density ho1:1Slng, .. he said. jured 1f08ri' was !O ,foff30> ~m the n1uzzle of the big bore shotgun. , Officers surmised that more severe b1- jury could have boeh dolle If' !lie flying wad had hit anyone in Uie face area . Theme or the all·nlgbt P8J1Y was "49ers and the Wild West" and lealared · a town called Deadwood Gulch. Some 250 students were ~ to attend, authorities said, but il is lmCertain how at.any students saw-tbe ~ing. Don Haught, hip achool prtnciA). oald <'* 'Slf90TlNG', Pop J) Laguna ·Favors 'A bati11g' C~ty ~ M . • v . ~ osquito 1iit The Orange County Mosquito Abate· ment District was given a swat this week by the Laguna Beach City Qiuncil. CouncUmen voted to abate the abat~ ment district. , . The Laguna city fathers urged by resolution thai the ser:vice provided by the distrid be taken oyer by the county health department and the Mosquito district be rubbed out. The district is responsible for elimtna. tion of the county mosquito population. but nothing else, and its elimination and transfer of function has been recom- mended by the county Grand Jury. One councilman questioned the exact functioning ol the district and suggested the district represented an example of the ~'proliferation of single -function. agencies." "They do do something,'' opined coun- cilman Carl Johnson, who tolCl of 5·ck service received from the mosquito O- pie "'hen bis Mystic Rills neighbor was faced with the Dying pests, "They've in spected my little rishpond at lea.st twice," ,Johnson said, noting "our experif~ at getting county aervlce Ls not ilways that goo<t:"--- "Do we need a whole district to handle mosquito abatement?" asked. Coun- cil"-oman Phyllis Sweeney. \Vith that, Planning Director Wa;yne A>loody slapped at his forearm and brush-· ed at an unseen flying object. Two large plar.n.s, an elevator tOY.'er \vlth Stained glass to\ver clock, cxtcns·ive landscaping and combitia tlon or-brick , wQS>d, tile and inucco building matertals are 'planned for the center. Shops wlll bc,bulll on four levels, all or PROPOSED LAGUNA BEACH VILLAGE BAZAAR GIVEN APPROVAL BY BOARD OF ADJUSTMENTS Bl uebird Canyon Drive Sf'\oppint Center Would Ft1tur1 60 Shops .. Restaurants and 'European Charm' r • DAILY PILOI L8 rro.r .. el SKYLAB. • • Kerwin and \Vefti reported some diain61 aft'-r aplashdo""' and Kerv.in inOaled a pair ol pressure pantJ lO keep his blood pmsure !run droppin& to the point where he might faint. , This t~mporary effect \'lllS exp<.oet1.>d because ·~f the tendency or astronauts' blood to pool in their legs, a"A'~ from the brain, a;. a result of heart Jaiincss in~ duced by Jong exposure to the lack of -gravity. Dr. Lawrence Dietlein, 1:1 NASA physi· clan, said the astronau:ts looked In "quite good" health. "far better fro1n what I personally expected." The spacecraft was hoisted aboard thi s ship \\.1th the pilots still inside, a S'A'ilch from past procedures made to keep the astrooaut!' exerUon to a minimum. ?.tedlcs were ready 10 carry Conrad. Kerwin and Weil i on stretcben, if necessary, from their scorched capsul e to the blue mobile medical laboratories ~ f~t away. __ But t.h6-astronauts smiling and wav· ing, lniOO<I ciit~c Apollo under their own power. They stood on a wooden plat- form' briefly, chatting w\lh Dr. Charles Ross, • the fli ght surgeon, and then carefully made their "' a y down some steps and to the special Skylab clinic. Conrad, who has been in space more than anyone, appeared the most rela xed. \Veilz and especially Kerwin walked a lit- tle bowlegged and slightly hunched over. But the !act that they were able to walk as well as they did was significant. It meant the three Americans were in better shape after spending 28 days in space than two Russian cosmonauts were at the end of an 18-day flight in 1970. ·They had to be carried from their spacecraft. The primary objective of the Skylab marathon. was to see how well men fare for long periods of weightlessnes., and then adjust to the rigOl's o! gravity back 00 earth. Coprad, Kerwin and \Veilz were un· dergoing long and detailed medical tests within &n bour' after their 6:50 a.m. P.PT splashdown. Doctors said the first resiDts woold not be known until late in the day. 'Mle fate of two planned 56-day flights aboard Skylab hinged on the findings of the doctors. The next launch ls scheduled July 21 for Skylab 2 astronauts Alan L. Bean. Owen K . Garriott and Jack R. Lousma. The only problem of the day developed just ~-~:11irte S/'flab \ 'l'S~Uts u·ere J>iephtJng tb leave the space station in orbit 274 miles above the earth. The refrige;~t!OQ\SY.!f.tm that r111m· the .sta- tioo'S ryoil Ani:I ~iologlcal sample freezers failed . The nature of the trouble v.·as not known, and flight director Neil Hut- cblMOO said It may be poMible for growld controllers to fix it by doctoring ttti sysem by remote control from earth. FremPagel 'SHOOTING'. •• he had no knowledge that a ·'shootout" involving fwictional firearms w a s scheduled at the party. He . said the party wai directed by parents-of students, and was not a school ftmction. -"It was not managed or supervised by the school itself," Haught said. He said to his lr!>Pwledge Ille dlirict does not have ti policy regarding presence of firearms on the school grounds. He said if a gun were brought during school day, it would not be allowed, but, tbat the use of the facilities by an outside group after hours "'as a different matter. ·"We don't regulate except to the extent that something would be harmful to the fscillties," Haught said, citing prohibition of smokin& in the auditorillm as an ex- ample. School aYthoriti~ ,11id they were at~ tempting to contact the parerit organizers of the party to find out what had hap- pened during the iktt. Police reported the production invtil ved two men.being chased by a sheriff who had shotnm . Joaded. with blank am- munition. .... ;· . • _ Blank 9hell1~have 'a ..v'ad 0£ plastic or fiber which' comprelleS tbe powder back against tbt,Qrina cap; or primer. The wadi normally fly some distance "A--ben the '1bella are fired . A IO.gauge shotgun is normally used for beavy- bodied fowl IUoh as goose. OlAffl COAST L• DAILY PILOT l ... Orllllllt C..t DAIL T l'ILOT. •I"" wllldl It ~blntd tllll '"1WI·~·-·· II Pllflolllfltd er the Ot•-CO.ti PllOlltllln1 (omf9f1Y. a.p.. r1i. tdlt .... lr1 Milt~•. Mlfld1y ~Pl l'rloil•y, 11>1" Colll MQI, Jlj-M llNdl, "'"'flf181Dn ' 81ICl\f l'OOiH1t1ln V111..,, t.,11111 lkedl, IT\llMJIHotlellldl Incl Sin (ltfMnti/ S.n JUlll C'tl'lftt1110. ,A 1l111t. PWOIOMI IOl!lofl II lll'llblkl-IO S.tvn11y1 ..., Svr!Qn. r111 (lrli.elooil 191*!11111"' $flt 11 11 ;uo WM!' ••r '""'· co.11 M ... , c1n.....,19, t1iH . Ro bert N. W1H l'resid1n1 llld Pllbll.n.t Jeck R, Curl1y v;u l"rllidlnt .,,,;/ 0-11 M•-.. • Tho'"''· kin-II 1!111 .... Tho'"'' A. Mvrphin1 Mtnotlnt l!lltw Ch1rl11 H. Looi Ri1h1r .. P. N11U Anl:tfl llt Meflltlftl l:lliten. ---ZlJ For111t A•1r11111 M1 ill11t ....... ,, .. , P.O. 101 ••t, f261J --CM1• M-: t310 ~ .. .,. Stnort ,....,.,. lillldlt »» Jlj ........ kllltwtrt M\tflllN* "'9dl1 1711t hitCft _...,, • ... °'"*'ttl .. Hll1tl II c.mlM ... I ,..,a., 11141 '41-tJ:at ea """'..,.,.. 1 .. w•n ~ ........ .,., ••: ,,,., .......... ... c.rr.... '"'"' °"'""' C:..al l'llltlltlllllt ~. No llC"" '*'-• IUu11r111w1., ~ _,_. tr .....,.,i..-.. lllnM ..., .. ~-WflJwt .... ,., • ...._ " ainri.111 ""*'• ...... ~ .... .,. "" .. tMI• Mftt, C.11...... ..._.,ll'tltfl Cl'J ~,,...,. UM .._...., ... -II U.lj . INl'ltMPI mllllt"' ~., ... ~. -.. Friday, Jone 22 . 1973 $86,850 Value Laguna Students Collect Awards • f\lore than 150 Lagu na Beach liigh School graduates paraded lo 'the podiu1n early thls \1·cek to collect $86,850 In scholarships :lnd awa rds for thei r academic performance. Valedictorian Ned Blurock au d Saluditorian Thomas lloots captured the cream of the financial crop during lhe annual Honors Convocation . .Awards and those who won them arc as follo"A·s: Et.ell SchOl1rll>i1f -Nfll e 1vroc1', Tr>omts Hovll. ar.eni....i..illA~•IUUIU Rll•t• Dlllllr•n £Jrnmgni .. c1m11e·e Powen. M$4Cl1lea Stuotnt BOC!¥ Aw••d -J osh Brighi. Aelivltltl OlrKIOI'" Aw1rd -C1ndjN PoW1:rl. Wiii iam O. M1rll'l Mtmorltl Hl110ty Aw1rd Greg Bishop. · 01UQl'llffl of the Ame0(::111 RIYOIUllOll -l(lm NHClhlm Ind Ollnl Spedtl•, hOml K0<1om!c1 l llYt • J1ln1; SMrrlt B•n<oi ind flrtnt Llllntrom. hl11ory medll of exctlllt!\Ct. Homt Economlc1 oep.anment Aw1re11 -L1 v•1 Town,..,d. 5ut 8 01!1 1nd Oltn .. Spiecl111. 'Btlf't' ('roc~tr H-m•~tr Aw1rd -Mery GlllU1n. Crbco Aw1rd -.Diva G11r!119. Legvn• Crill Gvlld "w1re11 -C11rl1!ln1 Shiver tnCI Ltl h Jt cob. · Binlnt11 •rid Pro1..s1lon11 W11men'1 8111rne11 Aw1ra -Sr-t•I ... ndrM. Britllt Alvmnl Sdl<'lltt1hlp -Gr19 B!lllop. BttktleY Alumni Aw1rd -SM•rl1 l ing iaoth Co11t Commun11r-Ho1pll1l Auxlll1ry Scl>Olln hliis -El1ln. Bov1 •nd Cl\trln Conn1ll. L111un1 Auto P1rt1 Aw1rd -Rty Hurt. P•nhellt11lc Socl1tyJcho11nhf~ -Dlbtlle eeck •nd AClrllnlll ChtH. Hews PClll Ovt1t1nclln11 Athlete -Oen Collen. Sou!Mrn (11Uornl1 Edi.on Grin! -Kathy KIOl'l. Soullltrfl C1!ftor11!1 Eal.on kltnct Awtrd -Hfli Blvl'UCk. L1g11111 Bt1Ch Pollet OlfLCtn Aw1rd -Ch1rlel Connell. Music D11>41rtml'!ll Aw1rd1 -Su11 Mudge, oult11n· Cllll9 blnCI lludenl: SllYI Smith. Cl\l•lfS Conne!I, Mitch Klrklln<I 11'1d Ol1n11 Ti;c:ker. honor 11u•rt•r rund; Tl!Omn Houts, ou11111'1dl119 choir 1!\Hlen11 t!lelh v1orm11e1. Aobln C11mp, Aobln Bi;c:k t nd 8111 Fee, l>OMI' qu1rtel cllOlr. 011nc1 Dep1rtment Awtrd -t!lelly An.n Lt11ter. 8 1!1 SlgrN Phi, XI XI Ttv Ch1p11r, Dutt111nC1lng Alh~te Aw•rd -Detlblt Slmmom. S Club Wllll1m Ullom Aw1rd -(1lhy C1rt1r. Soniptomlll Clllllllll'llp Aw1rd -"""' Dolby. SOl"OPfOITlflt Alblrtt P•tltr$0n ... w1nt1 -Oltne SPKl•le I ncl Beth Worm1ld. s Clvbber ol Ille Yet• -C111dy Powtn. Ninth Grlde Too Scllol1r1 -John A~non. P111• C1non, 01vld Gooclwn, Ann Hvbblt Ind Cindy M~· rls. · Tenth Gr1d1 TOii $cl>OIJrs -Dee Dee Ch1ll!1, 01n111 Jol'lfl50fl, R•nCIY t um. Oz Simmons 1ne1 Amy W1ndel. El1vlf\lh Gr1d1 TOP khot1r1 -Bryn 81rn1rd, Alcri1rCI Bry1on. Fr1ncol1 Ol/8111, OorHn H1111111rd. Eric Orlowskf, Nine' Porter. Erle Rn111r •nd Marc Splt1lerl. Rotary TOP Sc1>0l1rs -Ned Slu rock, Tl>Oml' Houts, Brent L.Upa~. St""11nl1 S0\111 •"" Andrl1nn1 Ch11e. American Flt!d S1rvtc1 Award -Jorge Vlll•bl1nc1 1nd Arunee Kl1t11lumbon. lnter111tl011l l Club Pr11ent1tlon -Ann• Lltltn t nd H11rrl S1ndberg. H1•~t•C1 Book Aw•rd -Eric Rn111r. Sorootoml1t Si>Ml•I Award -Sh1nnon MacMllllon. Klw1nl1 5<.l'Hll1rshlris -L••h J1cob, K1ren Kuw1l1ty and St•v• Sml!h. J•vc-L1r1"V Pierce Award -B<"n Jont111. Tedlnlt1I TllNI« Awerth -Lll'dl Hiii 111d Pant McCtll. . Or1m1 .-w1rd'-Julie C1b.ina, Robin Ctmp. sourl! Coat! Commvnlty Hospl111 CARE Award - Cl'arl~I Connell. Aui1lance LH11ve w11111m H1l1111 Memorl•I Sct>ollrsnlo -Tom Rt<:IWIU. .-'"erlcen Le<11lon Cltl>Pflll'llP Aw1rd1 -carhv Car!~r. Jell Teruleldl, Terry Symmand• •nCI Dtnl Crowley. AUoclaled Sludtnl BOC!• an.a Senior Clau Presen· ta!I011 -JamH YJ111are. Vint Point Prnen1111011 -Jell Tt nlltldl. Gemco Pres!'ntallon -Jo1h 8rt11hl. NROT~.SchOla•shlP -J1mes W1ll1c1. "'•mail<k lfe1vly C'.Oll"!te Scho!trsl'lto -Marlt P0'1Ct. Bronte Honors -Kite C•«ktr. H~necrt1 C1ernl1ci-st1, JDl'ln E•rrn, Gwtn John,on, flrn l<"vln, Jfff L._, Tom MtiHY, M1rl Ntwm1n, 8r•d Rennlngs. Giff TtbOf. Chrl1 Ullom tnd Pebble Nl""IDfl Sliver Honors -Patty Arm1tror1g, Dana Crow1tv. L•~lie Hutcherson. D~11ny Jacoti.on, ltlr<"n J0<1es, Dive Peden, Rob P1rrlnr, Htrrl S1ndberQ1. Mike St•· IOll, Terri Svfan, Debbie Vin D1us1n 1nd Tim T1vltlr. Gold Ho110~ -Tom And1r1on, Jullt C1b•ng, C•Thy Ctrltr, Clluck C11n1111t, Kim Cory, R1ndy H1nnln11er, ,\ndrtw Hubble, P~trfCk O'Connor, 8111 Patrick, Sltvt Smltt>, Jorae Vf ll1bl1nc1 •nd 8•rrv Sclllrm. lnsvrarl(t Agents Aw1rd -5teiihanlt B\Wll. • L111un1 le1ch Lumber (Ompeny Aw1r'cl -G11ry Grtc1v. "I Dir• You" Aw1rd1 -Lindi Pl!llll'I' I ncl P1ul Klosterman. Sullivan Set ~ilbert, Music Prog1·an1 ?i.1e1nbers of the Laguna Beach ~ten 's Club will listen to an evening or the music of Gilbert and Sullivl'ln at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at Bridge Hall. 280 SL Ann's Drive. Richard Sheldon. Nila Danoff and Theodore Crain from Opera A La Carte v.'itl present selections from "The Mikado" and "The Pirates of Penzance." The program also will include a travelogue on the South Pacific by O. \V, Price. J61T1es Oec~tr Voc1llon11 ScllOl•r111ip -Riv Hurt Rollrv Club VOC1llor>•I Scholtrsllips -fltlnl llovt ~n~.,1~1!~~r. Bs0: ... 4;,gs ;:1110 L.O<Jn ,o..w1rd~ -Brent L.11· iellrom. lnurston Fo11n.C11!lon Awards IVoca!lonll) -El1ine !Jove, Randy Bova, RDl>ln CoonraCI. Dlllll Ot!W1tlf, Ltrcy Flsett•, M•rv Glllllltn, P•l•kk Gl~a,on. Rick Hanlitn, M1ur .... Kton. • Cril!O l(e,,nl!dy. S11~nnon McM•tllon. (Jl\Cly N1g1I t ne l(trrn 11.coe•I•. fl'\Ut1lon Found~I\ Awdrdl llcou.mlc) -Snerrle 8111111. ~n11e DIN , "Tim Foi.ter. ()avid Kolll, KtlhV Keon. Char~ t 01tr1fl 1nd Sim SlodOer Tnurston Foun on Awtrds lPOJt Grtdualnl Jt mft Ktnnf I nd Jlt\I Actlll11Sen. VIH'ne• Bac:k 8ullMU Admlnltlr•ILOll A,..ard Ltu•• TownHnd. C1llforn!1 SchOl•n.lllp Fl!'Cle<•llon Ll•e MemlM:rtnlo -Greo Blll'HIO. Adrl1t1•a C/'laM, CnarlM Conna!I, An· n• 0o1:,y, Triom1s HcYt~. St.erry Morris. Sl\ltron Aobtrll, Debbi• S1mmc~. Betfl 11'/orm.ilCI, He<t R!uroc~. Mary Gll!llltn. Bren• L!l1nlrom. Jell T1nsle-ldl, 1,.1"8 Nunls, Oetlblt Beck. ll!;l11ln 6oY•· I.Hile H11tchen.oo. 11;.,ren Jcnts, Ol<1n1 T11ckt r and C•nclr Pcwef"I. f'.e-IU,1t o! A•ll MW.W&A!pl. !Ari)-ToriJ lan<.L J!m Bny!t'll. Kim C.orv ~nd Joh<1 Lil••. F..sllv1I ol Jl,rH Scl!Oldf"lhips IOrdml) -Rot>ln . CaF~~ilval ol Arlli SchOllf"ll'lip'I \Writing) -Julll C•~r;f~11 of Arts Scholarships tM111lcl -S1111nn1 J Ydgt, Tt.im11 Houis, Olan1 Tvcker, Btlh Worl'l\lld. F•sllv1I ol Artli Sc110l•r1l'llps !Otnce! -Blll't' Ann L.elltt• t nCI Patty Armlilrcng. Govtrnor's Scl!Qlers Al'l'lrds -Sherdt Bang. Nlld Blurock, El1!111 Bo~•· S~pnanle B_oyll, Adrl1nn11 ChlM, Rtndotph H1nn!ger. Themas Mollll, An.clrlW 'H"bble, flrl('ll Ll1jf'llrom, Liii NVnll , P1!rl<k O•Con- nor. Sharon Aoblrls I nd Debor•h Simmons. H1rw ... d Awtrd -John Wellsfrv. Btnk ol Americ1 Achievement Aw1ros -lhcm1l Hovrt, mtllleme!lcs; Pavl 1(10~1erm•n, 1cltrl(1• Lisa Nvnl1 aoclal sruole•: Detlret Von Hass. 1ore-lgn 11n11u•11•· Diane Spetlale, home economlc1; Thom•• R9dw!ll 'lnd111trlal 1r1s; Adrltnn" Chase, Eng!ls11; Julie (1Dtr111, Clrtma; Cyntl'lll N•111I, mv1lc; Kimberly Cory, art. aod Sheri AflGf""'· D111!nt1t. B1<tk of Amerlc1 Aclll1veme-n1 Pl10Yr1 -Rollin Camp, lint 1r1sr Ned Blurack, 1denct 1nCI m1111em1tlc1. ind Otborah Slmrnoos, lllM:rll 1rh . Prlnc!P11'1 Aw,.,d -Anni OolbY en<I Jo1h Brloht. Sport1 Co-C1ctaln1 -Spli.e Atkln•on, lrtck; Norm B~ell, 01n Jtcotaon and l lm T1ylor. tennis: Tom Afllwliz tnd Jolln W•ll•trv. wat•r pclo; 8111 Rot1trl1on and Chris Unon" fco!t>all; 01n Collini ind Dive Mtrrln..-, luseU\1: Josh BrlVhl, Jell T1n1llldl aMI C1rl Wrt>er. crou. coun!rY; Sttlan G••fll• •!Id Bttnl l.lllHlroml bt~ket1>1U1 Ptter Merton and Jcll!1 wenstrv. 1wlmm n!, and Guy Grindle, ;olf. Amerlctn Fltld erv!ce Sd'lllllf11\lp -Jo.II Brloht Boy1 S11ilf -Brent Lll(n1rom. ' C•mPlll R1prnenrallve (~wedenl -peobl Uln Dtvsen. C.illornlt S!111 Scl>Olarshlps -Debbie BK~. Gr«i Bl1111111. Adrl11nn1 Ct111e, Qlg1 de Wlllt, Parrlck Gleaton, Vicki H11s, Devon Hrr~elrtth, L.Hllf Hulther!.Of', St•I J()(IH, Karen K .. w1l1ky, 8111¥ t 1111e-r. Aoblrt M1vock, Jtnlct Prf'Cuo, Cfncly P-1. Oline SPKltlt •nd Jell Ttnsltldl. 01ug~ter1 of lllt Amerlc•n R1vol11Uon Good Citizen -5t1pJ1anl1 Boyle. G!rl1 Alllltllc As1ocl1t!on -Toni L1nc1. ov111n- dln1 1lllltl1 t nd Susie Mvdve, high l'(llnl t1lrl. Glr!1 Stilt -Dlbole Beck. • NiUon1I Merl• Commended S!u<1tnl1 -51\trrle Bing, Gwin JOl'll\SOO, Ranoy RLI1y, Sharon Acbe•'.'· Dtbble Simmons aod Dan Tomcl'\ll~. N1Uon1I Merli Flnllilt -~Ill Blsl!OP I r.cl Tnom11 Houh. Rt tde•1 011esl Award -"led R!uroc~. Epl1cop11 l'lurcn Scl'IOl1rslllps -Susie Mudgr, Rend) IU lfV, and Chrll Ullom. Jvn or Womtnl' Clvb Clllzen•hlp Aw1rCI -C•nov P~~~t&111c Ari Aw1ro -Christine 511auer. Ltgvna HUis P,.rl A.11ocla1lon AwarCI -Robin c~=i 111 E1Jlr11nc1 -Sheri Andrews, C11t1teen C1rt1• a nd Slllrrla Merril, C1i110rnl1 Slalt Unlvt•••· ty, Fullertooi CenOV Powers, UnlvHlll~ Cl lilt Pttl!IC •rlll Lindi Pil'llntV, Wllll1"1elt1 University, c11110rnla Sc1>11l1<1hlp F'ed1r11tlon Stnlar Mamb<lrl -Dtbbie Beck, Greq BlihOP. Ned B luroc~. Elalne !Jove, Stepnanlt Bovie, Jc~h B•lllh!.' C•lhy C~rter, Adrianne CMse, Cnuck Connell, Rocvn Coonr1d, Kim Corv. O•n• Crowlev, Anna Dolby. L•rrv Flsel!t, M1r1 GilllU1n, Ttl0"1•S Hou!$, A.n<tr•w Hubble, Ln 1l1 Hllltllenon. Ktren JOMS.-8•1111 L.llj1llrom. Sherrie Morris. Susi M1Jc19f, De!lbfe Newton. Lill Alunis. Pa!ric~ D'C0t1nor, C11ndv Powers, Jan PrecuP. Ran<ty ll:Hey, Y111ron Robert$, Debbie Simmons, St•ve Sml1h, Sam Sro;kter, GUI Tat!Or. Jell lO'inlelo!. Oiand Tvcker. O.bb~ V;in Dev•en and Bejlll Worm1!d. ()lsney Scl'IOl.:1rsniP Foonda!ion Ao11<1•CI -I.ill N11nl1. (aliforoia Oopgr!unitv Granrs -Andrl11nn• Cl'llse. Ma'"V o ·connen. Jenice Prttup 1nd ~'°"'' VJ11gone•. Stholarshli» ·-Debbi'! Beck, Unlve.,l!y ct Soulnern (alllornta: ,\ndrlanna Cl\il$!, UC Bt•klley; llfU (hrl11i1n11n, U(" L.M Aog.e:l"I L•rty Fis.flt, UC Irvine; S<BIP MU<kle and Ci ndy Powers, Unl~lf"lily of the Pacitlc; Jer1 Ttnsteldl, "'Ir Force AOTC. Un!versltv of Sou1hern CalltornTa, anCI 6etl'I Wormald, Wlll1W<:1rll'I Colle9e. vattrln•rlan As!l~!anl lReglonal Occ11p31\onAI Proqr11rn) -Mllry O'Ccnn.-11. . Nurses Aide -Kiiie Croc~;:r, t avr.J Froi•er, M11rv o ·c onn•l1, and Melodie Wogcn<"r. Dent•I M1l111n1 -Al'ldrew Hvbble 1nd SMron Nice. . Ro!ary Engine Repair -Jol'ln ll:rlkltn. Po!lery -Grtg Connell, Richard GOOCl!lue, rl1ncy Prickett and D!1na Turne•. Te-ltvlslon Service -Mlle!\ Kirkland Ind Peter Mvller. Emerpency Mt<:llctl iecnnlcl•~ -Rlc/'I Agu1ao, Ktren Roberts and H.Jrr1 SandbttV. Ortlct Octup11Hon1 -Sheri Andrewl. Aolla 01vlC11on, Terr~ Norgord, Virginie Vin L.ucllcne and Michele Vtvtler. Motorcyl1 Mach11nlcs -Scoll K1llkk, Mi~e L$Wil and Burl McCrlllldy. Mt•Cl'>l n.cllslng -Robin M1cC1il, Karen ll:otllrll and Mlcnek< Ze.gler. Teether A!de--Beverlv Bowm11n I nd Sh1nrion Mc Ml Ulen. Svperm1rl!ets Occupl!tlons -(;)ry F 11101 and Dtvt Widoll Pre-Scnool Aide -L.oul)e Howard. G~y Jura. N~n. cy McKown, Sn1ron Pee~. Betll V<orm11<1 Incl Mlc/'lelt ZflQl<"r. Conslri>Ctlon -Cl'>•ls Mi~ke'~'"" and Pl'IU M0<n All(llltnce Repair -Greo '"auriello. Summ1 Cvm LIYde -N~ Blurock, El•ire .Bov1, SlfPl'llni• 8oy11, Adrianne (ha•t, R1noy Henn1noer. Thom•• Hout•, Bren! Lll!flllrOm. Lisi Nunl1. Palrkk O'Connor. Shtron Ao~rts anel Oeoble Simmon• Magoa Cum t1111de -S11e<-rlt BanQ. 0.bb!e llecll., Kilt Crocller. Anna Dolby. Mary Gii/iii•"• Annrew Hubtllt, Leslie Hvtcllerson, Gw"n Jonnson, John Mir· rlllfl!, Llnoa Pen~y. C1n11v Powe ... Tom Rt<:1wl•1, T•rry 5ymmond1, D18n~ Tyck~• ana Btl"-Worm~le. Cv'" l11.1C1e --. Tl'\0"11~ And<"r50<1. Sheri An<'rt,, Pattv AnTlst•OllV, Gregg Blilloo, Chvck Conlltlt, ROl;lln Coonrad, taff~ Flsarte. TMll Herrfl, L.1all J•cOb, Klrtn Kuw1l~sv, Toni Lance. Belly l-rh Tor. Sllerry Morrl1, Su•I<" MIJd7@, (llarloll~ Osrralt. R1noy Allev. Steve Smith, L1ur1 To..,n1end 1nd Debbie Ufn D1u1rn. C1Uy ,1!01 l lllf 1'1'11!1 DUSTY DESTINATION-Two Laguna Beadi High Scho~l .gradu•te!, fresh from com1nenccment •rbursday night In Irvi ne Bowl, venture lhrough the arch to "Deadwood Gul ch." the Old-West town created fnr the senior all·night party in the hi gh f\Chool patio. ARM-IN·ARM-'fhe graduating seni_ors of Laguna Beach Hi gh School make their ~rad iti on al n1arch under the flowered arches held by go,vned girls of the junior class. 'fhe graduates this yea r won al · Dilly 'lltl l!llf , ... ,. n1ost $8 7.000 in scholarships. Nod Blurock, se ni or cla ss president. was valccli ctorian. Principal Donald l·laught. spnkc. Reagan Cites Strength As Guarantee w Peace ~ Gov. Ronald Reagan today put em· phasis on U.S. military a~nd industrial strength rather t~n treaties as the best' guarantee for peace during 3 key address to the American Legion at Anatieim Convention Center. "The dust bin of history is littered with the remains or those e-0untries which relied only on diplomacy to secure th eir frcedon'I,'' th~ Republ ican chief executixe sa id. " . f'ro111 Page i $2 MILLION ••• Underwood, trustee for the Indiana Na- ti onal Bank , Indianapolis. The \Vhile House said all of 1he tax· payers' money spent in Sa11 Clemente and Key Biscayne was for security- re lated imprO\'cmenls and that all work 1vas done at the request or 1he Secret Service. not the President. "\Ve· must never htrget -in the final ai:ialy~is -that il is o u r military, in· dusti'ial and cconon1ic strength th:it of- fers the . best guarantee of peace ror An1erica in times of clanger."' he said . t •·\Ve da re not heed the counsel of those 1\•ho \voµld risk Aincrica's fre edon1 through one-sided disar111an1ent pro- posals ,ihat our country would carry out honorably. but \\'hich the other side might evade or ignore." lleagun added. "Our first commitment must be to maintnin and nourish in the hearts and lhe 1ninds of our young people the lo\'e of freedom that you and millions like you have exhib tted during times of crisis," he said . The governor also urged support for his st ate ta x li1nit-rcfund proposal ex- pected to be the subject of a statewide elcclion Nov . 6. From Page I GRADUATION basic. ir not dramatic problems," Jlaught' concluded. "Look up to the Wliverse -~ out there [esides lhe only power greater, than you." Scni'Or Class President Ned Blurock ,' also the cless viledictorian, 3.dmonlshed his peers to emphasize ipCuvidual values, rather than trying lo ch'ange the world. "Our pcrsonal)finuence ahd power can .best be felt by/our fa1nily, friend s, and co-u·orkers. 'this is how "'e ca·n bring about changf" Lagu1it;t Clioral,e A1ulitio1is Set Auditions !or the newly fGrmcd Laguna Beaeh Summer Chorale Yt'iU be held at ~ p.m. ~1onday and Tuesday in Room 55 ol Laguna· Beach ll igh School, 625 Park Ave. The rhornle. according lo director Frederick Stoufer. is open to adull5 and college sluden ts "·ith prior music •• performance experienCe. The GS1\ d<ita showed items such as $53.644 in fiscal 1970 for Interior security and communications at San Clemente. It also included $3,303 in fisca l 1970 for golf carts for the Secret Se1·vicc patrol at Key Biscayne. ''\Ve must bring gov.emment spending under control if the-\fage gai ns our ~ pie make are to be real instead of an endless cycle of pay increases followed by higher tax deductiOns, followed by leglli.matc demands foi' even higher \vages so that the people can pay E;Vcl\ ' higher taxes." he said. , f Mc said the proposal v1ould "provide ample money for govern m en t 's lcgitin1ate functions to expand" but in 15 years 1\•ould ''leave more than $1 18 billion in th e pockets of the people who earned it." The goal of the chorale, Stoofer said, is a 1na)or•coneem in Aug ust. The program \viii inc lude B<-njamin Britten's "Simple Symphony,'' Ralph Vaughan-Williams "Five f\lystical Songs" and music fro1n the Renaissance to the 20th century. Tv.•o vears later there appears another item of $5,230 for three Secret Service golf earls there. Further informatfon may be obtained by calling Stoufer, 496-0642, or Keith 11aJverson. 635-3939. ' Summer Safe Confinued LEATHER SOFAS & CHAIRS ON SALE NOW Leather and Brass. are natural partners. W ith quolity materials., good de ~ign and craft s.mans.hip ... the result is. e furn iture clas.s.ic. Reg. $1320 SALE $999 . ...... -' i Reg· $1470 SALE $1099 Top Grain Glovo Solt Leather -Fanlastic Value -·96" length. If you're looking for quality, upholstery , dining, bedroom , or occasional furn iture, 1s your chance to purchase the finest at sale prices. Stop in today. now Free, in t•rior de1 i9n s•rvice av•il1bl1 OREXEL,-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOODMARK-KARASl AN I INTERIORS WEEKDAYS & SATURDAYS f :OO to 5:30 FRIDAY· 'TIL 9:00 NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 W ESTCLIFF Dlt . 642·2..050 IOp1n Sund1y 12·1~)0) LAGUNA BEACH e 34~ NO RTH COAST HWY, IOpo11 Su11d•y 12·1S :JOI 494.,55 1 TORRANCE' e 21649 HAWTHORNE ILVD. J71 ·121f . ' I ' ' - Teday's Fln•I Saddlehaek -"' .. N. Y. Sieelul . VOL. 66, NO. 173, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES Irvine city planning corumi s.sioners oti 1,000 people, assUming the city would be n split vote Thursday night agreed to iJi. buying other park land for development crease city park dedication requirements or community level (larger, public) lo a total of 6;{) acres per 1,000 people. parks. 1'hat is more than twice the amount.of Commiss ioners voted 3 to 2 Thursday land developers now must glve-aiial~5-to increase the neighborhood-park re- acres more than city co uncilrne.n last quirement even more, to the six-acre per week voted: to require. 1,000 standard. The city standard for dedication ls Commission Vice Chairman Robert presently 2.5 acres per 1,000 new people a Smith and Commissioners Mrs. h1ary developer bri ngs to the community. ~ Gaido and Paul Tonkovich sup- . Councilmen last week voted to increase ported the increase. the amount for neighborhood pa1rks, Opposed 1vere comrnissioneis Lowell either public or private, to 4.5 acres per Jo hnson and Gary Dalzell. Chairman . .- • .o! ~ . .:; :~ •• .. .. Bot .JolJ -tl>range County Fire Capt. Bruce,_ Turbeville (right) cools off with h~lp from Capt. Herb Eberhardt after helping to cool off Thursday's fire at the Holly Sugar factory on Dyer Road in Santa Ana. Turbeville had just come down from roof where temperatures reached lSO de- grees dui;ing blaze. Fire stirled in a pulp d"ryer about noon and caused an estimated $4.800 in dam age to a building at the plant. School·Play Backfires, Laguna Performer Hurt By JACK CHAPPELL 01 tlle Olllr ll'llof Sl•H A "cops and ·robbers" skit at the t.qguna Beach High School all nigh~ graduation p a r t y ended with the shooting o[ a volunteer entertainer Jn- ' .. .. Coast Weather That expected cooling trend 'viJI make itself felt along the Orunge Coast Saturday \Vith l~w ~JCluds in the morning hours and highs Jn tbe . upper 70s at the beaches. Inland temperatUl-es \viii be near 90. That's cooler ? INSWE TODAY I-leis realty a song writer not a singer; bttt flarl<rn .Jen?iings. "'21, is fi nding t11 a Newport ;,Beach ?iig1it club engagement .. thnt son1etl.n1es it's the .si1117er ond not tile sung t11at cou.1it.s. Hit story is on Page 25 of to- day's \Veckendet . &I T-S-k f I l ,M. a.Yf t ... 11111 ,. •can1er11I• s "' Cl1ttltlt0 ~ Clfl'llU 14 Cro11wOf11 :t4 '0..1111 Hollett 1l ... ..,... ..... ' ~ il11ltrt•111m111t Jto11 • P:l111nc1 .'1•11 ,ff "" ll~ortll II MtfttaN 14 """ L.Mtltt l) , Mltllblit • Mclltln •11 M11t11tl '"""' n N•t11<141 ..,_, .. 11 OrlMI CtvMv 11 llnl•wr•lllt t7·1t S)'lv11 l'..-1..-11 '"°''' , .. ,, SllK.k Mlrkt lt 21·U Ttl•¥111tn ff WNlller .. W_,_.,, Newt 11·1S W•rtd Ntwt t, 11 Wt1111Ml1t V..Jl • jured when a wad fron1 a blank shotgun shell struck him in the head. Hal Louis Pro ppe, 21. or 1385 Skyline Drive was reported io satisfactory con· dition tod ay at South Coast Community llospita l. lie \\'as shot \vith a ,11).gauge double barre lled shotgun during a comic skit at 3 a.m. today at the higti school. \Villiam Allen, acting superintendent of the school district, said his office was not ifl formed that firearms were to be used during the traditional lJigh school grad night party. Laguna Beach police seized the 10- gauge shotgun and identified the man ~·ho fired it as Gene Porter A1olway, 22, of 390 3rd Street, Laguna Beach, who was acting as the sheriff during the skit. No arrest \Yas ntade. Police said the wad from the blank shell passed through a hnt worn by Pro~ pc and struck him in the rear of the• head. Witnesses told oUicers tha t the in· jurcd man was 20 to 30 feet from the muzzle of the big bore shotgun. Officers surmised that more scv~re In- jury could have ,been done if tile flying wad had hll nnyonc in the face area. Therrie or the all-night party was "49ers and the Wild West" and featured a town called Deadwood Gulch. Some 250 students were expected to attend , authorities said, but it is uncertain how many students saw the shooti ng. 'Don Raught, high school princi pal, sa id he hnd no knowledge tha t a ''shootout" involving functional firearms \Va s scheduled at the pnrty. lie said the party was direct.Cd' by parents of students, and was not a school f1,onction. "lt was not managed or supervised by (See 'SHOOTING ', Po~ II ' ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1973 Harry Shuptrine and Commissioner Frank Hurd were abse nt. "I think it ls an excessive demand and represepts a threat to the nexibiµty· o[ design of developments. 'nlere are other ways t~ get more open space," Dalzell said, \'Without adding to the cost& of new homes and the monthly maintenance homeowners must pay. "The increase approved Thursday night adds $2$0 to the cost of a new house. When you con.sider a homeowner iD Irvine pays community association dues to maintain bis private parks, wilf . pay city tazes to support the public parts and achool taxes t.o maintain buildines and recreatlOn Qpen space, what we are adding might amount to as much as $50 per mooth to his -payment," Dalull said. "I think we are building an albatross around Olll' nee ks on J>jlik•." he added. Coounlssloners favoring the higher dedication requirement said they did not believe the higher cmt of •bou!ing would influence the ablllt~ to provide low cost houslDc In Irvine. The .standard could he 't'-'aived for such developme\llS. Dalzell pointed out this would result in a double standard 0 and would further call attention to low -Income neighborhoods.'• Irvine Q>mpany spokesmen who last week ~ the Increase tO 4.5 acres \\'ere present Thursday nig'ht to speak against the further increase. The developer argues that there Is only a need for 2.$ acres of recreational open space per 1,000 people and that anything above that represents the "desire " of the city.· ~ TEN CENTS Councilmen did no.t share that view and the related opinion that extra land to meet the added "desired" open spaot should be purchased by ilie dty. Nevertheless_j councilmen have ordered preparation of a ~ city bond election to purchase the community level parks. Tuesday night, they'll review lbe plan· ning commiSsion recommendation and. following a public hearing, consider act· i.ng on a park~tandard ordinance setting the neighborhood parks acreage dedlc• tion a:mou.nt. 4 • ' Foothill Purchase ·Eyed .. ·Occidental Considering Canada Property Buy, ' . ' By JAN WORTH Of .. o.IW 11'1'91 lflff Occfdentai_ Petro1ewn Land DeveloJ>" --The Origi.naI Canada Foothills plan , battered by envirorunenlalists a n d homeowners before it was approved 3-2 by the cowity planning commission in January,,called for a j>opu)atiogi of some 35,CIOO"persons in 9, 700 dwelling Units. · ment Corporation, developer of Lake · Forest, is expected to buy the usable por- tion or the 3,006--acre Canada Foothills parcel abuts the El Toro Afarine Air Sta- tion. OCcidental wants to buy the 1,700 acres of the total 3,000 which are not in the noisy :zone, Baker said ... According to Baker, Occidental has an option on the property which runs out Ju- ly I, 1974. property in El Toro. . The sale, from more than 30 property. owners Jed by V. P. Baker, who oWns the largest portion o[ the land, apparently does not hinge on whether the Canada Foothills plan is approved or denied in a hearing July 5 before the Orange County Board of Supervisors. OOllar valUe of the purchase is con- fid~tia1, Baker said. Skylab Trio Land Safely; 'Snper Sha~~ ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (UPI) ' -Skylab's utronauts landed in "super shape" in the Pacific Ocean today and v.·alked shakily a few minutes later to the doctors' office to see how well they withstood a record 28 days in space. The bullseye splashdown and quic~ recovery by this veteran aircraft carrier marked a flawless end to a mission. that started with failure. The flight took a major step towafd giving man a place in space. Charles ••Pete" Conrad,· Joseph . P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz returned in the Apollo command ship in which they were laundied May 25. The big s p a c e station remained in earth orbit ready for its nc:rt crew in five weeks. President Ni1on quickly sent a telegram t0: the men who jllSt completed an 11.5 million mile journey and invited them to visit him at San Cemente Sun- day. "You have given conclusive evidence that even with the most advanced scien- tific a n d technological support in the \\·orld, the courage and resourcefulness of good men are still central to the suc- cess of the human adventure," the Presi- dent said. Conrad. commander of the • nation's first space station mission, reassured recovery forces several times that he and bis crewmen were all right--after the stren uous re-entry which quk:kly built up dcceleraUon forces 31h times the force of gravity. Density ranged from 1.8 units per acre to 28 ·uruts per acre with 1,800 acres eannarked for development. This would have included single family detached dwell~s, condominium1, and apartni'ents. Thirty to forty percent of the 1,800 acres were in an area designated by the Airport Commission as too noisy for residential or institutiona1 uses. The ·Ken Wasmann, project director or Lake Forest, said the arrangements ate not on paper and depend timewise on the outcome of the hearing before the supervisors. · "\Ve do want the property and would like to develop it to everyone's satisfac· tion," Wasmann said. Plane Suieide Test PilOts Shoot Down Own: Craft .. PQJN'I' MUGU (UPn -Two civillaJt test-pilots flying a $20 mil· lion Navy jet fighter shot tho aircraft down with one of lls own mis- siles, according to the N~vy. · Tho Grumman F14 Tomcat cruhed in flames in the Pacific Ocean Wednesday about 70 miles southwest of the Naval Air Station here. The crew, Grumman empioyes, parachuted safely and were- picked up from the water by a Navy helicopter. • A Navy spokesman said. Thurs.day that while the Tomcat was test.firing an unarmed Spar.row missile "the missile did not clear the aircraft sufficiently and struck the· bottom of the fuselage." Grumman did not make the missile or its !.iring system. The Navy suspended firing the Sparrow missiles Irom Fl4s un- W the cause of the accident is detennined. It was the third time since December, 1970, an F14 crashed. Conrt Suit on Preserves In San Joaquin Area Due San Joaquin School District trustees .may go to court to change a situation they say has cost them more than $1.Z million in four years. The large amount or agricultural ')lreserves in the district -and the coun- ty board of supervisors' failure to levy an area-wide tu -are cited as causes of the losses. Nerison told the board Thursday that sin· ce 1969, the district has lost •1.24 million in· potential revenue. Neri.son also said the Tustin Union ltigh School District, which overlaps some Of the .same area, bas lost $'783,741 from 1961-70 through 19'11-72. He had no • information for this year. Those figures, he added, have been confirmed by lhe county assessor's of· fice. The company will execute of£iclal docwnents to get an option on the pro- perty if tbe project is either appnwed or denied, he said. If it I.$ sent back to the county plannin& staff for more study, Wasmann Indicated Occidentl! will probably buy the land eventually, though the time factor would be changed. Presumably negotiations would have tO assure Occidental that buying and developing the land would be economically feasible . John Chapman of Chapman, Phillips, Brandt, and Reddick, an Irvine Plannmg firm, said he bad been approached by CS<e OCCIDENTAL, Poge ZJ SACC Elects IRS Auditor , As President < Wm! Thompson, an audllor for Ibo Internal Re'{9'1Ue ~. w a s unanimously elected · presldent of the Saddleback Area COordinatlng Council (SACC) Thursday at a SACC board meeting. Thompson, 48, a Mission Viejo res!· dent. replaces Bart Spendlove, who will resign aS of June 30 to ta k e an ap- pointment on the Orange County Plan· ning Commlssioo. "I don't have to wrorry about becom .. ing president," 'lbompson cracked aoon after Spendlove's appointment; ''Nobody ever etecU an Internal revenue employ to anything," he said. But his work as chairman of tlie SACC governance committee which prepared· a report proposing the inn ova t 1 v e mWJicipaJ adv~ry cotmCil for the Sad· dleback ValleY bas kept hJm in the limelighf f lhe last six Jllll9ths. A retred" major in ·tbf •Atr Force. Thompson moved to Mission Viejo three and a half years ago with his wife Ma rian N!d five children. He is a native of Louisiana and a former Air Force intelligence offi cer. Spendlove told SACC· at its regular meeting Wedoellday ni&bt he had made it cte.ar to !l<JperVllor ROnald CAspers that "I will do my own thinking with no poliUcal pressures involved. "U Caspers doesn1t like "the job I do, out I go -no hard feeltn,s," he said. "If there's anything I can do it's bring developers and the people together," (See THOMPSON, Page ZJ •• "Everybody's in super shape," Coorad radioed after three orange-and-white striped parachutes eased the command module into the gently rolling ,. .. of lbe Pacific 835 miles aoutbwest of San Diego . Under the state's Williamson Act, a developer can place lands in preserves, guaranteeing to not build on them for a tlrne, and receive a tax bttak ln return. The board of supervisors is authorized under the law to levy a bu: oo all coUnty residents (who might use the open space) to help pay for the area's loss. Old MacDonald's Wins Kerwin and Weitz reported some dizzlncs,, ,after splashdown and Kerwin irillated a pair of pressure pants to keep his blood pteS!ure from drowlng to the (See SKYLAB, P•1• II Smog Brings Auto W ar1iing . Motorists were urged toda,y to reduce driving to the minimum necessary as smog concentrations In Orange Cowity began climbing toward levels dangerous to health. A spokesman !or the Orange County Air Pollution Co n t r o 1 District .said at 9:30 a.m. that rorecasters predict smog oxJdant levels wil lrise to .4 parts per mil- lion. The level of .Z Is COMldcred dangerou• to health . The spokes1111n said the heavy smog was expected bec1use of "stagnant coodltlon•" In the' South CoaSI Air bostn that would not pennit smof to n .. t out 1o .... • • San Joaquin truatees :repeetedly have been rebuffed in their requests for such a tax. Now they have told Superintendent Richard Weite to hire private, legal counsel and set aside an account to pay for any litigation that follows . 'The attorney will research what the district's legal interests in the issue are and aid Welte in preparihg a recom· mendaUon for action June JI. That meeting Is su-1 1o he the district's last San Joaquin goes out of business June 30 and three new unified dlslrtcts take over . Welte Is also directed to contact Supervisor Ronald Caspers, . w h o represents the San Joaquln area on the board. to request his help. District business superintendent Ra Cen1etery Strike Hit NEW YORK (UPI) -A Mlnhattan Supreme Court judge, citing "an Im· med.late health haiard" resulting from the ti-day strike br cemetery worken, Thursday ordertd the ,1r1kers baek to work . The 1trike by 1,800 cemetery workers his prevented the burial of'~ than 3,800 bodies In •1 metropolitan orea cemtterlrs. • ;· Lawsuit, Knott' s Loses :, I . ·~ ... ' Old MacDonald had a farm and he still has it t.oday, in addition to a judgment in hls favor on a $9.7 million lawsu.lt against Koott's Berry Fann for unfairly ex- p}oiling the animal attraction by ad· verti!lng It '°"' after It lelt Buena Park for Mission Viejo. The Berry Farm management had been exprtS!ly forbidden to do so by court order. Orange County Superior Coiirt Judge Raymond Thompoon ruled Thursday !or the operators ol Old MacDonald's Fann in ita: action against the Orange County amusement center where lt was lormerly located. ' The bearing acheduled next voeek for . Juda;e ThomPIOll to rule on exactly ho\v mud! the, defendanta 1hould pay the plaintiffs· for commercial damagH suf· ' fered. Fulton K. Show sued Walter Knott. his wile Cordelia, lfld olber principals of · Knott's )lmy. Fann -lnctudln¥ Shaw's own brOther Jack -ror adven1sing the • 1.facDonald's concession an.r ti relocated . KnoU and hi s code!endants we:re d ied lwk:e priOI'.. to trial for viola\ing the court order againsl their using or advertising in any way the Old MacDonald'• Fann. 1 name to create the impression lt was still located there. ! The crucial Issue at one point wu a j newspaper feature story on a muJe- drawn merry·go-.round at Knott's Berry Fann which quoted the plalnUll'a , brother, Jack Sbaw, wbo remained there. i at great length. The fint name of the Show quoted had I been de'eted by error oC omission or commission and Fulton Sha\\"s attorney Gordon Chytrau.s maintained It was done intenUonnlly In a pre.s.s release to make it appear his cUent v.·as still at Walter Knott's farm. . Knott's Berry Farm public rcl•ttons directo r Deon Davisson had his back Oles of preM releases 111bpoencd but the crucial Item dating back three, y11ar1 1 could not be found. l .. I ·- OllLV PILOT IS F'i'fday, June 22, 1CJ73 To Greft 'Brezhnev Presiqent Nixon and Soviet Communist Party Secretary Leonid Brer.hnev arc due to Jrrive on the South Orange Coast this evening to begin a wbirlwlnd weekend that promises to be far 'different from the week's businesslike 1 u m mi t talks. · The ty.·o leaders are expeeted to touch down at the El Toro MCAS at about the dinner hour ~d after a 'brief night's rest the summit \\'ill becOme somewhat of a spectacular. ' Nearl" $2 Milli0tt ·Government Pays For Nixon Homes ' By HELEN m OMAS Abplanalp, a J!ronxville, N . Y , , \VASHINGTON (UPI) -The1 Jede.ral b1,1slncs.sn1a11, who made. a fortune goverrunent says it has spent nearly $Z perfecting the valve w.h1ch opera~4· . . . . . · -aer-0601..spray cans, lent Nixon '625,000 10 uulliQU unprov1ng President Nixon's 1969 to help him buy the original 28.9 homes in Florida and California, Ill of it acre San Clemente property for $1.~ relating to "security." The eJt:penses million. ' .... ranged from fire sprinkle rs to golf carts In 1970 Abplanalp bought 23 of these for the Secret Service. acres .~ack Crom Nixon for $1.~ mil!ion, . canceling the I o an and leaving Nixon The \Vh1te House also disclosed that with s.9 acres. the house, the enjoymenl · businessman Robert H. Abplanalp, who or the other 23 acres, and an investmenl helped the President bUy his San of his own of flSl ,000. Clemente retreat, has been getting some The White !"louse said the .Nix~ns m e ba k · lbe f f 1 themselves paid for $123,514 1n 1n1-on Y c In orm P ren provements making their net investment associated with Nixon's Key Bi.scayne. ~374,514. ' Fla., place. From these figures, th·e breakdown of A month ago the White House had who has what investment .in the San SUPERPOWER CHIEFS SIGN listed .$39,000· in federal funds for im· Clemente retreat is as follbws : · h w · -The Nlxons : $374,000. PEACE ACCORD-Story, Page 4 p1'9ymg t ~ est~rn White House at San -Abplanalp : $1.25 milUon. On Saturday plans call for a major reception around the La Casa Paclfica's pool with mariachis !r:o"1. San Juan Capistrano providing the' music. Clemente smce Nixon bought it in 1969. _ The taxpayers: $703,367. - • DlilY l!'Llol Sloft ll'lloM And the President may ev~ bang a Last week, ·after a further search of BRIGHT-COLORED GEOMETRIG WALLS, STEPS ADO LIFE TO NEW IRVINE SCHOOL • Principal Delaine Rich1rds Stands in M,edia Center of El Camino R9al S~hool · few licks at the piano during the af. record, this figure was raised to $460,302. ler noon event. Local sources have said On Thursday, General Se r vices Moulton Adtninistration (GSA), the government's the stall has com mandeered a small housekeeping agency, said 8 still more spinnet to be brought to the pool area on extenlive audi t put the total federal ex· .Saturday. penditure at San Clemente at $703,367 over Also on the agenda fo r the weekend -lout fiscal years beginning July 1, 1969. possibly for Saturday _ Will be a This included only the residence there, It's a Colorful Sehool short flight to Los Angeles \vhere the t\vo not the White House office space. lea ders will tour the exhibition of im-GSA listed for the fi rst time the federal expenditure for improvements, equip- pressionist paintings on loan to the U.S. ment, operation and maintenance at the Ne tv El Camirio Real Facility Set for July 9 Operiing Development Plans Made By CAN DACE P EARSON Of JlN tMllY l"l~I Stoff The; graphics hit like neon : bright col· ors of orange, blue. brown, yellow, red and white. .,t can't be, bu~ it is, a school. ~ El Camino Real Elementary School in Ir•;ine is anything bul dull inside. · The school at 4182 Karen Ann Lane has !be no\\'·popular open space floor plan. Jts J>Ottable \Valls are paneled in shiny blues, yello~·s and gree ns. P.ennanen~ exterior walls have wood pancling1i0ii¥:le. Cupboards . vary. in hues nncf 'Walls JO some classroOrn and library center arefts are painted with geometric sha~ .. '.., , .. "' , St~dehfS .. \l'on't move iilto the new site until July 9, the .beginning of the second year of·the year-round school. 1 Construction ~·orkers, custodians and Principal Delaine Richa rds are busy with final de ta ils for the big opening. 11ie school has been housed fo r almost a year at the Irvine School site on Sand Canyon Avenue. From Page I ,THOMPSON. • • ·spend.Jove said. "When a developer wants to talk to me. that session will be accompanied at all times by an appropriate homeowners' representative." Spendlove is replacing Newport Beach architect-'Ron :Y~ who was asked to resign three weeks ago by Caspers. ''I'll admit .that I don 't like to see Yeo out," Spendlove said. "tie's done the best job that's ever been done on that com- ~ mission but l support Caspers and whatever hi s reasons were for asking Yeo to resign, I think he did the right thing." SACC members applauded Spendlove. ·'We owe' him a vote of ~ks for what ' . he's done to prQtect us in the last two t years," one member s'.aid. ~1.olintain Climber .• ' Plungeii _to Death JULIAN (AP) -Vincent P. Eustace, 20. died Thur&tay night of injuries he , su£fere4-Ut .·8 fail wbiJe mountain climb- ing neat• Jnlian, the San Diego County coroner's Office said. A cofoner's"'~pokesman said ~stace. of Imperial Beach, was climbing Eagle , Peak Thursday altemoon ~d fell ofr a ti>-foot. cliff. OIANGI COAST is DAILY PILOT Th~ 0r•""8 COii" 0All'f J'tLOT, wllll Whl('fl !S wmbi~ Ille Nt WS·P•flS, is llUDlllh!'d bY !ho O••noe coes! ""bllshlr>O Com11tnY. ~· '"' .Oitionf 1rt 11Ublllhed, Nlondey tllrOVOh f rld1y, lor Cos!" Mtu. Newport llet~h. Hut1!lnoton lleachfl'oun111n Vt lltv, Ltoun• tl.c:n. lrY1,,./$odd!e"l>Kl ond San Clftlow!\lo/ S•n' J1111n c .. pl•"•""· A sinole •f'l!1-I .C•!lofl h 11Ubh1hrd 5•tur0•Y• ~Pl(! S11n111y1. '"t pr110C!l»I 011b!l1hfn; pltnl 11 11 )~ ll•Y $1•1!!1. CO•I• Mtwo. Ctlllo•nlt , t»,_ J Rob1•t N. w,.d Prtsi!J•nt •rid P110ll111et J1ck R. c ... r,., Vl(c t'rt 110tn! tnd Gent rt r Mon1ttr Thom11 KttYil EOl!Or Thorn-1 A. M11rphin1 Mlnt11•nQ E.Olll>t Cht~t1 H. Looi Rr<h11d P. Nill A111111n1 M1M1l1111 eo1tor1 OHie• CoU• Mtu· JJO Wo1t !Ay $1ttt! Nt"'110rl 8tt(ll: JW Ntwttr! ll011ltY1t• l41;1>111 l!h~Clli m Fo•ttl AYtrlUt f.<in.lo~!OI\ llCO(ll i 11J1J BtKll 80ylf\lt•d ~ .... Cit ...... !•: JCIJ North El C•mlno 111.tAI T•.,tl•H (71 4, •41·4111 ClntHIM A~rtld .. 642·1,71 S.11 Cl-•r. All hpe,,......s: 1•J.pk119 491-4410 Cl!&l"tlll, 11n, Ottllle C.0.t! "11Dhllllno Como•~r No llt'"'' uo•lot. t11uttr1!1- ..,110f;.J m•!lf• er odw~tlll""°""U ~•r•!~ ..... y N l'fir9CIYM Wlff!Oltl lfl4Ckl ~·· 1111t-1\oll ot Rl:l'f•ltfit ownitr. $Pton0 C-1011 l'Ol!I Ot Hid, ol ( ... o Mqo, C1fllor1dt. "111l01,flen W ~orrltr SUS "'911rll!YI II\' ll'ltl! IJ,IJ motlflll~j lftltllO" Ollf!ftOllonl i 1,6* ...... 11\!y, ~ by the Soviet Union. \Vl\ite House complex pt Key Biscayne, Th t' s 1 d ho ·n including both residence and office space Plans for a 200=unit residential develop- \ e recep ion a ur Bf, wever. \VJ ment running along the ridge slope from. h · · I ·•t -$1,180,522, spread over five fiscal l c 1naJor soc1a ev..,., . Arch Beach Heights to the Alpha Beta years beginning July 1, 1968. llolly\\·ood stars, and other VIP guests shopping center in South Laguna will be are on the invitation list of 150 names. Included in the Key Biscayne figure announced soon. was $161,4&3 for renting two houses in the They include Gov. and Mrs. Ronald complex for the Secret Service and White John Chapman, chief planner for the Reagan, Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Red House communications staff. firm of Chapman, Phillips, and Brand Skelton and others. The White House said one of these Planning of Irvine are formulating the houses is owned by Abplanalp and the plan for the owners of the Moulton On Sunday, the day Brezhnev pl~ to other Is owned in the name of Edwin H. Ranch. leave , the President will welcome the Underwood, trustee for the Indiana Na· Current proo.sals call for clustering the Skylab astronauts. tio nal Bank, Indianapolis. residences allowing open space between The invitalion \vent out todiiy to the The White ·House said all of the tax-the clusters. Density WO\lld be 3.5 to six three space pioneers in a telegram from payers' money spent in San Clemente uni ts per -acre along the ridge. the President. and Key Biscayne was for security· "Obviously we can't do this without ··1 '>relcome you home from the Skylab related improvements and that all work solving Some traffic circulation pro- space ship 'Earth' and J also look was done at the request of the Secret blems." Chapman said. forward to seeing you at San Clemente Service , not the President. Ideal access to development would be on Sunday," a portion of the telegram The GSA data showed items such as via a road plan up Hobo Canyon,-Chap- read. $53,644 in fisca l 1970 for interior security man said. He said he expected an a~· BrczhneY's departure details have not and communications at S11n Clemen te. It tempt to tie into Alta t..;guna Boulevard also included $3,303 in fiscal 1970 for golf in Laguna Beach at Top qf the World. been specified so far. carts for the Secret Service patrol at Key He said lJlat route, following a natufaJ It is assumed that the staff will give Biscayne. canyon oulld be "no problem" en· more details of the Russian leader's Two years later there appears another viroomentally. Another alternative, to schedule later this \\'eekend. item of '5,230 for three Secret Service run bac k of the hill to Aliso Canyon, Such secrecy has been the rule during golf carts there. would be "impossible" Chapman said. Brezhnev's visit. "That would cut up a lot of the hillside." So far no details have been released Chapman also Int ends to propose hook eilher oo a possible joint address to the Sewage Leaks Again up with Alta Laguna Boolevard -an people of·t!ie U.S. an~ USSR by.Brezhnev alternative defeated by the city of Buildings there are old. some dating sunken reading area. a multi-purpose back to 1926, and lie under a jet flight room with a wa ll·to-wall orange curtain pa th from El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta-nnd three-step stage, a special education tion. _ class room complete with stove , some Richards walked on the green carpel in landsca ping already planted, teaching the new school and admitted, "It'll be areas that can be closed off into tradi- , di fferent." lional classrooms or opened for team ef- \Vhen El Caminp opens July. 9, about forts. 720 students of a total 960 enrollment will Richards pointed out a number of begin classes. . eight-sided , partially o~p. structures On the year-round schedule, students placed about the media center, men- attend school on different cycles for nine tioning the y are calJed "octahedrons." "·eeks and then have three \Veeks vaca-"Forget it,·• he added, dfopping the lion throughout the entire year. educational jargon, "they call them El Camino is built for a capacity of 720 ·caves.' Kids can crawl in them to get on a traditional schedule, but can ac· a\\•ay fron1 the cro\11d.'' commodate the la rger number because Each sha pe has its OY.'tl light and plug of the continuous progr~. Richards for headphones so the student s can read ..said . or listen to tapes in side, while in the Last yea r's enrollment was about 900. library. T\\'O more teachers \Viii be added this Ju-The flex ibility of the ne\V building is ly. one of its best points, sa id Richards. Most of the students are returning ·~ before posing proudly before the ne'v sign fron1 last year. outside. They \viii be coming back lo a school •·it's different from any school we have with a library-media center that has a seen in this area," the principal added. FromPqel SKYLAB ... Signups Saturday For Irvine Youth •• -similar to thal made by the President LOS ANGELES (AF!) - Raw le\vlge Laguna amid vigorous controve.rsy last point v.·here he might fa int. during his trip to Moscow last year. seeped into Los Angeles harbor for 1he fall. This temporary effect was cipecled Contingency plans have bet:!n m;ide for second time in a \\'eek when auxiliary ,A meeting with officials from Laguna Football Program Boys \vho \\'ant to play on the Irv ine Junior All-American Football teams this fall OlUSI register for the program Satur- ruiy. league offiClais said today. f "This is the final regist ration for the program. We cannot accept l a t e signups;• said Rudy \Vertepny, league president. Boys eight through 12 years old a r e eligible to pl ay. They must \ve igh betv.'een 55 and 100 pounds. _Regis tration will take place Saturdcly Cron1 l to 4 p.rn . at bot h the Walnu t \!i!Jage and University Park Shopping Centers. There "'ii.I be Uu·ce Irvine teams in the Orange County Junior All-American Football Conierence. Boys ei~ht and nine years old \\rill plav for a Clinic Division team. Boys 9·11 \vill be el igible to play on the Junior Pee \Vee~ Division teams and boys 10-.12 can play en a Pee Wee Division team. The teams ~·ill start practice early in August. Games Y.111 be played on Saturdays beginning in September. From Page 1 OCCIDENTAL • • Occidental to replan Canada Foothills. He said Fifth District Supervisor &nald Casper aJso ha d asked him iC he \~·as interested in U1e Job. _ Chapman also is in the midst of plan· ning the 10.000.acrc Moulton Ran ch por· lion of the Saddleback Valley. TI1e Canada Foothills plan \\'as ap- proved ~:t-2 by the county plnnn ing con1- 1nission in Junuary. following turbulent hearings in Y.'hich environ1ncntalists and homeowners attacked the plan for it s density. alleged lack of traffic circulation planning, and overall quality of planning. Sale of the property would end · a fru strating 12-year battle for Baker and the more than 30 other property owners in the acreage to try to develop it in some \Vay. ·~Personally, I'm sick of it and just can't take this fight any longer,'' Baker said Thursday. "U Occidental wants to take t.he ball ind run with it, Jt's all theirs.·· Baker said he and the surrounding pro· perty owners have become discouraged with tryi{lg to do somethlng with their la nd . "None of the delays have been prcmedita . It just one of those things I at · rcsulle(J-..Jrom unforlunatc circumsl.an ) -~ '- because or the tendency of astronauts' such an address from the San Clemente pumps failed to handle peak flow periods, Beach, the Saddleback Area Coordinating compound, however. officials say. A spokesman for the city Council, the press'and other interested blood to pool in their leg s. away from the Although Brezhnev leaves on Sunday, said Thursday about 1,000 _gallons an par1ies \\'ill be held late next wee k or brain, as a result of heart laziness in-Nixon will not. hour were leaking into the harbor but early the following one, Chapman said. duced by long exposure to the lack of Initial reports sa,id that the President predicted that the leaks would be stopped "We \\'Bn t to assure people that this gravity. _ plans to stay ·on in San Clen1ente for a today. The earlier fl ow has halted can be done without opening a whOle e1· Y.'eek or more. \Vednesday I · f bi h d ho . Dr. ~wrence Dietlein, a NASA physi· i ---------------~~==:.·~------------P!'.::::°''.'.':'.:'n'...:'.o'....'.'.~g'.'...::"''.'."''.'.it~y:..'.:~us~in~g:_,"_he~sa~ld'.'.:. c1an. said the astronaut s looked in "q1,1ite good" health. "far better from what I personally expected.·• Th e spacecraft was hoisted aboard this ship with the pilots still inside. a switch from past procedures made to keep the astronauts' exertion to a min imum. l\·ledics v.·ere ready to carry Conrad. Kerwin and \Veit7. on slretche rs· if necessary. from their scorched caPsule to the blue mobile medical laboratories 65 feet away. . But .the astronauts. smiling and \Vav - 1ng, climbed out of the Apo llo w1der their own J>O"'.er. They stood on a wooden pJat· form briefly, chatting with Dr. Charles Ross. the fli&ht surgeon. and then carefully made their way doy.•n some steps and to the special Skyl ab clinic. Conrad. ·,vho has been in space more than anyone, appeared the most relaxed. \Veitz and especially Kerwin wa lked a lit· lie bov.•legged and slightly hunched over. But the fact that they were able to \\·aJk as \veil as they did y.·as significant. It meant the three Americans were in better shape after spending 28 days in space than l\'>'O Russian cosnionauts y.·ere at the end of an 18-day flight in 1970. They had to be carried from their spacecraft. Front Page I 'SHOOTING' . ' • • the school itself." li aught said. He said to his kno\\•ledge the district does not hB\'C a policy regarding presence of firearms on the school grounds. He said if a gun were brought during sc hool day,)t would not be allowed, but, that the use of the facilities by an outside group after hours was a different matter. "We don 't regulate except to the extent that something would be harmful to the fac llltles." Haugh t sa id, citing prohibition or smoking in the audltoriunl as an ex- ample. School au thorities said they were at- tempting to contact the parent org9ili1.ers of the party to find out what had hap- pened during the skit. Police reported the production involved two men being chn sed by a sherur who had shotguns loudcd wilh blank am· 1nunit!on. Blank shells have a wad of plastic or fiber which compresses the powder back against the firing Cfff>, or primer. The wads nor mally rly some distance when the shell s are fired. A H)-gauge shotgun is normany u~ for beavy- bodicd fO'i''I such as goose. Summer Safe Conlinue:$ LEATHER SOFAS & CHAIRS ON SALE NOW Leather and Brass are na t ural partners. With quality materials, good design and craftsmanship . . . the result is 1 furniture classic. Reg. $1320 SALE $999 Reg· $1470 SALE $1099 ·Top Grain Glove Soft LHlher -Fantastic Value -96" length. If you"re look ing for quality, upholstery, din ing, bedroom, or occuional fu;nilure is your ch1nc1 to purchase the finest al Hie prices. Stop in today, ' I fr••, interior cl•1i9n service 1vail1ble DREXEL-HERITAGf>-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASlAN ~ IN TE R·I 0 RS WHKDAYS I SATURDAYS 9:00 to S:JO FRIDAY 'TIL·,9:00 • now ' NEWPORT BEACH e J7t7 WESTCLIF' PR.. 6-'1·2010 fOp•n S1,11'1doy 12·51301 l.JjGUNA BEACH e )45 NOR1H COAST HWY • IOp•n S11nll•y 12-lil OI 494-t SSI TORRANCE e 2l64t HAWlHORNE I LVO. l71·127t DA.U,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Individual Authority Sho_uld cout dlft!Jers be rtpre!!8nted by the same governmental voice as tnlanders? . • ln the light of recent events in the unincorporated coastal areas from South Laguna to Capistrano Beach, the answer seems to be no. Guidelines for a municipal advisory council (MAC) -'-an elected body and official advisory voice to the county -have been adopted by the Board of Super- visor$, paying the· way for a MAC in the Saddleback Valley. If the ocean· dwellers want to join that MAC, the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council, which bas spear· headed the MAC push, is waiting to welcome them. lt's clear a better voice is needed for south county unincorporated areas. But coastal residents are facing a myriad of unique problems and the plans of a di!fer· ent major develoPDl~!lt company. This is a, good time to examine the pros and coils Of i separate MAC to serve the needs of the unincotpo· rated areas, of the south coast. At first glance,. it appears to be a ~ood alternativei • . T't,'o comn:iencements are being celebrated at Sad- dleback CommunitYl COUege tonight -the graduation of 280 lltudents, an11 the dedication of the $3.2 million Jam~s l!. Utt Memorial Library. Just as two years at Saddleback have provided the graduates with a cornerstone for the fu ture, completion of Ut_~ schP.Ql's ',first permanent building -named after .the late oraDge. county congressman_, is a significant cornerstone in the future of the five-year-old commu¢ty college. -· Hum~le J>eginnings are not uncommon for commu- donated by the Mission Viejo Company, Saddleback bas carried on in 20 reloeatable buildings -leaky, creaky, and crowded. O~t!itted with the best educational fa cilities, the .library will offer students or the future advantages present graduates haven't had. Like other community colleges which have grown from unpretentious starts, Saddleback is on its way. W e}come Additions The City of Irvine, which has long boasted that 'it would become one of the nation's best planned cities, has now decided to follow through on that pledge. It is a welcome decision. ~ter the city's first 18 months of existence, the city bad only a five-inan planning stalI, whi~h was bare- ly big enough to keep up with day-to-day routine plan- ning department functions. City officials candidly ad- mit that serious advance planning for the time when Irvine could have 4301000 residents was entirely neg- lected. --Two weeks'1tgo, however, the Planning Commission a~ked -and Tuesday the City Council approved - funding to more than double the size of the planning staff by adding seven members. , , -With the additional staff, Planning Director Bruce Warren says the city for the first time will be able to formulate its own advance plans, and will no longer be left in the position simply of reacting to plans put forth by the Irvine Co. This is a healthy development. While it could re- sult in some increased friction between the Irvine Co. and the city from time to time, it will also mean a healthy competition of ideas that should be beneficial • SB to both parties. -nttr collegea., Sirice its opening on 200 acres of lan4 •I Ml~~ WRITING THOS~ GREAT Oll> SE~MON5 ~AINST TH£-ALM.IGMlY POllAA.• J Multiple For Gas Causes • Crisis To the .Editor: . Quit ,kidding us on the gas Sho<tage. ·Any ,student o£ the problem knoWs the surplua· ls gone because of weather, failute1 \ on the part pt _ officials to j. and industry to plan for our voriidous appetites. 'lbe questim is not Wbo did it, but How can we live 'witti it ol!t'Qi ~ next X years. . : Can we be convinced that saIVation lies fn voJantary speed re(tuclj.oo, inore <Elr pools, fewer UMecessary trips until mass _ tramport is made available'! Or must we .~ forced away from the gas station by 'hlgb prices ploa "keepaway" tuesl Since autO 1• ainounled to 5.'l 1· of'crude oil products in 1972, a 10% reduction ol. c(lr usage_ could Mve 9,660.000,000 gallons ol gasol .. ! - GAS IS-oiilY one Uem of the energy crisis that we have caused. Tt appears to me ttiat we need a reminder to save energy in the form of taiation and higher rates for ea:caalve usei. We lbould .. Y Jligher taxes for ~ ~' aua and ·appli~ces. Converstly, small bomei, small can and minimum ""'1l' usm sbould pay less. il .. prelfy,obrious .... that reprdless of who wu 1t fault, we are g4)ing to have 1 .... ....g, to use for a :1ong t1iDe to come, aad we had better Jeam live wl\b II. ' LYMAN S. FAULKNER A Barria Fan To the Editor: The Sidney HarriJ .. eolumn" would make 11)1! buy the Dally Pilol II I dtdn 1 read any other part. How refreshing to see something that SIY11 llD8ll cbildh!n imitate tlleir -ti and it's Important fo1• thole -parelns to ....., Jhis plaYll sucb an lmporlaal port in cblld behavior. ~ Everytbin~ we pick .ilp ;theae ~ to read kee~ bammertn&' awll!Y at djsdpline, dti<:lpline, punitll, jiunisb. ,TOO aiAN\I people cr;ii,~; too manY bellrie pualU.. ' s are the answer to ·e~. · '" • " No-.... ~, .. -Wend arid tomriCl' Cblktib. ' ~ '-! ' Studies are InclJCatlng that the maMer of discipline and the tone taken wtth oll&pring Ls UIUllly a repeat of the way the pareoll w.,.. treated by their parents. So what's the answer? Good child care ( MAILBOX ) centers -for rich and poor -would be a g90<f first step. If the influence at home ls good, the children would still enjoy the experience ; if the home was uodesira}>le, the pre-school training example set by well chos'n teachers might offset the ex· amples -~ at home. MABEL PARKER Trab1ed c-~• Tolthe Edi.tor: The Watergate Show, featuring the Southern Ham and his Watergate canaries, is rehearsed it seems; The singen are interviewed under oath prior to airing. the main show so that the DemocraUc-eootrolled committee can bring out just the de&ired points on the atr. -can the President win? Don't miss next week's show. How can you? . JIM BOLDING • To the Editor: On June 4, 1973, a manmcript in a 9112 envelope with address typed very legibly was sent to a friend in IJos Angeles from Laguna Bead!. It is still en route today, June 18. The return address was also given. Another letter was also sent to the same address on June 13 and neither bas been received. r In the course of these two weeks that it takes a letter to go from Lquna Beach to Los Angeles, I reCeived cor- re5p9ndence from Copenhagen (air mail) in three days' time. I IieUeve people sbould know that sec- ond class mail will have no preference -may never get anywhere. I feel it is ridiculous for a typed piece of printed matter to take all this time to arrive. Who do we complain to about such lousy service'! · SANDRA C. KENNER '9:15 Club' Promotion WASHINGTON -The White House has named a member of its mysterious "at- tack group'' of political hatcbetmen to a top lederol job where crttlcs fear he will juggle slatjstics to Sult P'relldent N1xon's whims. · . '!be attack group was 11t tlj> during the 1!112 campaign wider While House aide Charles Colaon to fog over tbt"Watergate scandal and to carry on a no-)lold>bamd attack. on Sen. G<orge McGovern. It met daily at 9:15 a.m. hi the White Hoult. So Impressed was Watergaler Jeb Magruder, the deputy campaign aide, that he awarded JLs members culflinl<s lettered I "9; 15." COLSON hos rntaled in a otill-oecrtt depotltlon tha.t one pf the atlack group's kl'!' members '1111 Edward Failor, a key ~Wia campaign aide blred by'""1!1palgn diActor ~ Mlt<bell. Failor 11.ed. to go almost daUf to Ibo attac~ lll'OUll meetlap at tile White Houet to j)lol-anti· McGovern strategy. · In the lest few days, Failor has been rewarded with a job as head of the Com~ m~ Department's Social and Economics Statistics Administration. 'A10nlrwith his budget of 1100 mllllon,.he will control aome 7,000 employes.· More importantly, hoWever, he will aupervise the Census Bureau and other vilal llalistlcal units. Critics fear the Wbila Houae may havo put him lhft purposely ao he can lamper with IIcures to make the NlllO!l-economy look rosy. FailGr, in a long lalk wttb us, denied he took part hi any Watergate-style ao- tivltiea as a member of the attack group. M F8llor explained It: "We only wanted to show the (Democrats) were doing bad ttdnga.· alto, eo people would aay, 'A plague Gii both )'Ollf boutes. I fl -•.. Dear Gloomy Gus 1rony is a land planner braggi,ng. a1>9ut seeing a cougar on hills where he 'll put houses. S. A. LJ. 0111o1nr Gus c.wments •r• s11bmltttd br rHRrl •nd do not neceu.rlly reffed ,,,.., .. 1., of tM "'w'9'ffr. Strid '''" 11e1 ""'' .. Gi.omy Gu .. !>Mir Piiot. With Music . Goes Money And Scandal "\Ve don't want a Watergate in the music business," says David Clayton· Thomas, former ICad singer for Blood, Sweat and Tears. But the popular record industry has been rocked by a widening scandal involving payola, drugs, sex, · booze and organized crime. One high in· dustry executive, Clive J. Davis, was ( GUES; REPORT J . fired as president of Columbia Records for allegedly misusing corporate funds and aoother, Larry Wynshaw, was bounced on charges of falsifying invoices. A. federal grand jury and a federal ant.i-erime strike force are investigating the whole recording business and one of· ficial has said: ••we believe that almost every major re:ord comj>any is in- volved." The scandal does share one common element with Watergate: enonnous amounts or cash which gave rise to temptation and were difficult to trace when misused; POPULAR MUSIC bas become a multi-billion-dollar industry, with record and tape sales toppjng fl billion last year to surpass movie! -($1.3 billion), network television ($1 billion), professional sports ($$40 million) and Broadway ($30 million:) lil revenues. Forbes magazine reported that at least 50 rock, pop and country music superstars now are earning between $2 million and $6 million a year, making the salary of lTl"s llarold G e n e e n , America'll highest-paid business ex- ecutive, look Uke so much chicken feed. "It had to happen," one record ex· ~cutive said of the scandal. "The in· dustry is just too big. there's too much money around, and there are too many people who got too greedy." lN THE LATE 1950s, another payola scandal shook the Industry. It , was revealed that record company promotion men used money, liquor and free vaca- tlOll! to persuade radio disc jockeys to play and praise certain re<.'Ortls. The Federal Trade Commission in Hl60 said that 255 disc jockeys and other station J)trsonnel were involved , and issued more than 150 complaints and cease-and· desist orders. Congress that year approved several amendments to thC Fed eral Com· munlcatlorui. Act of 193( requiring full disclosure of any payola by the recipient. The same bill outlawed the rigging -0£ teleYislon quiz shows. Before the latest payola scandal Is over1 the l934 Act may have to go back to too ,drawing boards to be amended ooce again. Edttorlal RtStarcb Who Gets the lnte11est': Profit • Ill Rent Deposits I . Let's say you are one or the millions of Californians who rent an apartment or a duplex, or whatever. If you are, when you fh·st rented your place you were no doubt required to put up a .security 4eposit to cover any damage that might be done· to the prop- erty while you occu- pied the premises . ( RUS WALTON J • Some 'financial protection against such vagrancy and vandalism is certainly proper. ,BUT, IT'S NOT the principle, it's the money. In addition, you probably had to pay the last month"s rent along with the first. Some apartment hOOSes ~ alSo re(iUlre deposits for such things as pets' clean· ing, and ev.eo keys. Ydu pay your advance rent and your deposits and yOUr money sits there -in "'•, ~ laDdJord's 'bank account. It stays --ther~r"all the months ana-all-the }'ears you rent his property; Or, he uses it as capital for other ventures. ' · In one casf, a couple renting a $2~5 a~ment had to pay $599 in advance rents and deposits: LAST MONTH'S rent, $'l85; security deposit, $100; pet deposit, $100; cleaning fee, $50, and key deposit,' $4. Plus a $60 deposit on the electronically.operated garage doors . How's that for openets? f)-om the landlord's viewpoint, such deposits and advances w e r e uri- derstanclable and necessary. There are tenants who ·skip without paying the rent; those who depart leav- ing burns in the carpets, dents in the walls and holes tn the windows. Either way, the money works -ror him .but not for you. Take, for example, one giant apart- ment complex in Los Angeles. It has 4237 units. The insurance company that owns the complex requires a $200 advance deposit on each apartment. For those 4237 units the deposits total $84r,400. At 5 percent interest per year, those deposits produce $42,350 -for the insurance .company. ASSEMBLYMAN . Aiex .Garcia, D-Los Angeles, has introduced. AB 1332 to pro- vide the renter some redress. Jlis bill would require landlords of four or more un its to pay renters 5 percent fu. terest on money tied up in those advance rents or deposits. 11Je 5 percent interest commences after the tenant has occupied the premises a·nd paid the rent for 90 days. Fair is fair. And, Mr. Garcia's legislation i,s fair. After all, why should someone else make money on the tenant's frozen assets? · In fact. the ten~t stands ~ lose in two ways when his money is impounded without interest. FIRST, the 1"'5 of· lbe inlerest, Second, the loss to inflation. Look what happens tO the value of tha.t money while it is held ' in the landlord's deep freeze. Take the young couple that put up the $599 in advance. rents and deposits. Sup- pose they occupy that apartment for five years. At the going rate of infiation, in five years the purchasing power on that $599 would be down to $420. · They would lose about $1lK> to lnfiatioo while the landlord was making at 1$st $150 on their money. What kind ,of a deal is that? Mr. Garcia 's AB 1332 would, at least. let the renter realize a return m bU compulsory investm ent , and some kind or a ~edge against the termites of inflation. I . / , How Hooke1~s Became Professionals The vigorous efforts of Margo St. James in the spring of 1973 to organize the country's hookers led inevitably to a nationwide sex boycott. Armed with a $.5,000 foundation grant, the attractive, »- year-old Miss St. James -a former lady of the evening herseU -t>eg&n suc- cessfully enlisting card-carrying mem· hers in her new "craft guild," as she called . it. And there was no question she seriously hoped to improve the plight of America's borimnlal working girls - long the most degraded and abused par· tlc~(\ln our free enterprise system. 1NITIALLY, Miss St. James' efforts were disrilissed in men's clubs and locker rooms with sniggering jokes about union labels and sit-down strikes. But an off. Wicks ( ART HOPPE ) hand remark she made during a press conferenCe sowed the seeds of the na- tional upheaval that was to follow. "If You take an apartment, a l'esort trip or candy from someone, it's legal ," she said of women who sell their favors. "But if you take $50 in cash, they 'll try to make a felony out of it.'' IT WAS Ms. Bella Steinem, Chairperson of WOW·, the W or 1 d Organization of Women, who saw the possibiLities inherent in this totally unfair dictate of society. "Females have been selling their favors for a million years," she told a cheering WOW rally? "Those who sell for pleasure or companionship are called loose \\'On1en. Those who seU for cash are call- ed prostitutes. And those who sell for mfnk coats and diamond necklaces are co iled jet.setters or movie stars. "But worst of all are the females who are trained from infancy to keep what they've got to sell untir some man o_ffcrs them a life'.-long cootra·ct of financial sup- port. They're called house)Vives. "l say that any woman who has ever put on lipstick or earrings should he ar· rested for conspiracy to commit a felony !11 THE UNARGUABLE logic of WOW's militant ttand gradually sank home on the nation'! women. Soon any tager young swain who knelt at his bel0ved's feet to , ,offer an engagement ring was greeted with a kick ifl, the jaw and an angry shout of "Wtwt do you take' me for !" ... Throughout the land: sobbing wiv.es slammed bedroom doors on frustrated husbands. Beauty salons and boutiqu.cs_ went bankrupt. And 11Son of Deep Thi'oat" lqst $2.4 million at the box ol- llce. 'M'\e nationwide ~· bo}'t'Ott was on. The man whp saved the day was the -. distinguished social scientist, Dr. Homer T. Pettibone, D.V.M. "Whife it is true that women sell their bodies," he said, "so do men. Scientists sell their ,minds, postmen their feet, baritones their vocal cords, bod carriers their backs, psychiatrists their ears, writers their fingers and politicians their tongues. "We are, let's face it, a nation o( hookers. And there is no reason we should applaud the selling of all parts of the human body but one." ONCE AGAIN unassailable I o g i c prevailed. "Huzzah!" cried the city.gm-. try, both male and female. And· everything retw·ned to normal. Except , of course, that prostitution became not only legal, but an ~honored and respected profession. For, after all, as Dr. Pettibone so rightly put it, "sellhlg what yoo m.. disputab ly own for an honest profit ls the very com,erstone: of our free eaterpriae o:vstem ." OfAH .. coin DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Nu.her Thomas Keetril, Edltor Barbara Kl'eibkh l'ditoriaL Page Editor ,,,;, editorW ,-of 1be Doily Piiot ·'.seeks to inform and stimula:te readers by ~ on ttd.-pace di11erse•~tntary'.on tople9 (If in.. , ttteSt by s)>nd~ed tOlwnnllts ud cartooni&ts. by pr~ing a forum tor niad'2'S' views and by pmentlnr this newspaper's ~lnlOns l.nd kteu on cum!nt topics. The editorie.1 optnkn of the Dally Pilot appear only in the cditor\A.l column at the tdp 0( tht page. Opin!Ona exprtl!Std by the-1!'01• wnnlsts and e-.Moonbt• and letter writut aJ)!Jbtlr_~n__&nd, DO ....... _ rnent of their views by 1he ~ Pilot -1!1 "" - Friday, June 22, 1973 •, Motorist Kill s LA Lawman VAN NUYS (AP) -An In- tensive manhunt wa s un- der y:ay today for a motorist who shot and killed a Los Angeles police off icer after he "'as stO pped for a routine traf. fi e viola tion in thls Los 1\ngetes suburb. Detectives said motorcycle officer Charles It:. Ca raccillo, 35, a 14-year veteran of the department, was killed in- ( BRIEFS· ) stantly Thursday night with at least one gunshot wound in the chest. They said the motorist PrOJltt"se Kept drove away after the shooting. Authorities reported at least Judith le!t) and Ruth Leonardini, 18, of La Paz, four shots were fired at 1 caraccillo, a 14-yea r police Bolivia get a welcome hug from Pinocchio as the two veteran, as he walked -toward girls v1 Disneyland Thursday. The girls will the motorist after parking his s d ·gham Yol:lng Univers.1ty after a prom- motorcycle. The or f i ce r , r sidenl Nixon 18 years ago of a college though mortally wound e d , education in the United States. Nixon was Vice- fired three shots at his P resident at the time. assailant but all reportedly _:...:_~=::..::::..::.:.:.._.:.:..__:_ ___________ _ went wild. e Sunshine Blaze Contained By Fire Fighters DAILY PILOT :r~rt~da~y:_ . .:'_J,~n~r _'.2'l!·c...1~9"._7'~--------=:.:.:...:..:::.:.:._,. ~ Hell's Angels' Girl Held I Censiu·e · Of Fonda Rejected SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -who was arttsltd In S•n Jo,. 2 with Miss Wnl~n In )llBI The girlfriend ol Hell's Angell ThUllldAY, wt~ dl.stribuUng Gruhlke'• presence ~ buy leader Ralph "Sonny" Barger drup and conspiracy. eight 01mcts of heroin for~ ha$ been ~ and "" An llllldavir llled bf a an ounce and tbat Stefan10n ralgned . on federal narcotics fedtral nnrcortcs agent e:tleges later 1ave lbe informant M5 1 charges. that an agent and infor mer gc:am• of a, white powder LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A , C'ity Council committee has \ turned down a resolution that Sharon Gruhlke, 23, a }~miaidcjia~rrianig~ejmie~nts~lfasit~A-u·g·. jij'\'ijhljichiijjcoiniitajilntd •. jjjjheiiijrojlnij.jjjji former Livermore b e a u t y queen, was arraigned Thurs- day before U.S. Magistrate Richard Goldsmith wbo set ball at $15,000. 11.e also ap- pointed a federal P u b I i c Defender to represent her and set July 2 for a preliminary hearing. \ would have cond~mned ac- tress J ane Fonda fdr remarks she made about American CALIFORNIA POWs. '--------" TIIE COUNCIL'S s tat e , county an d federal affairs committee voted Thursday to kill a resolution by Coun- cilman Arthur K. Snyder that accused ~e film star 9f characterizing returned POWs as liars, hypocrites a n d pawns. Miss Fonda spoke to the committee and said h e r statements about POWs had been direc ted against the ''h a nd -picked few who participate in press con· ferences." A ~pokesman for t he American Civil L i b e r t i e s Union said .such a censure w6uld be unconstitutional and added that the council ''had no right to intrude on anybody's beliefs." Lo1ig Hair Measure A FEDERAL complaint alleged that she did "know- in gly and unlawfully dlstrlblite and conspire to ·distribute about eight ounces of a substance containing heroin." 0 h1iss Gruhlke told the judge Gets kll,)" she w~s placed on two years' probation March 23 I n Alameda County after being SACRAMENTO (UPI) - A · found guilty of possession of bill prohibiting restaurants amphetamines. and o t he r state-licensed-Barger 1_s serving a businesses from refu sing to minimum ~O years' se~t~nce . in state pnson for conv1ct1ons serve long-haired ~st~mers O:fl narcotics, weapons and was approved, 48-11. without forced Imprisonme nt charges. deb.ale . Thursday by t h e r TIIE FEDERAL complaint Cahlom1a Assembly. also charges Bert Samuel Assc1nblyman John L . Stefanson, now in s tat e Burton (D-San Francisco), custody, and _Anita Walton, authored the measure after THE FINEST IN ENTERTAINMENT THE· BENNEI I BROS. Now Appearing Every Ttiursd1y-Frld1y & S1turd1y Nit• ot PIGGY'S FIRESIDE LOUNGE in HUNTINGTON LANES 19582 B11ch Blvd., Huntington A Topnotch Show With ·A L11 V1911 Flalr Bet ch --BEFORE THE SHOW'--~ Enjoy A Champagne Dinner for 2 TOP SIRLOIN DINNER with CHAMPAGNE 6.95 the fashionable Clift Hotel in SNYDER DENIED 8 charge hi.s hometown refu~d to s.erve by the ACLU the resolution him because of his modishly was an ;tllempt to censor Mi ss -long hair. Gov. Rona IQ Reag;:in Fonda's First Amendment has said he opposes the bill rights of free speech. even though his son, Skipper. JOIN US THIS WEEKI.ND The committee also recon1-14. Y.'ho has shoulder length mended that the council refuse hair. couldn't join t he to entertain suc h n1otions of govemor and his \\'ife for din- 0. C. Fair Que1n Contest Sund1y, noon 5outh Coast ftua " SACRAMENTO (AP) -The 1973 "Wilson Sunshine Act" - which allows twq hourS" of Daylight Saving Time instead of one -has been sent to the Senate despite prote~ that children refuse to go to bed until dark. Thursday, the bill's author. Assemblyman Bob Wilson ( D- San Diego), said that wid e- awa ke children and outdoor movies nothwithstanding. the extra two hours or day light would be advantageous. By The Associated Press soot-smeared fire fighters today contained the year's first mB.jor California brush fire and continued to battle a newer blaze in the Sequoia Na· tional Forest timber country. \\•orsened through the night in i....'.:co:'.:n~d~em:::na::t~io:::n_:in::_::th:e_:f,::ut~ur:_:•::.· _ __:n:::.•:.' :at:_•::h:::.e_:C::li:::rt:.. __ ----'---------------::0.---.,------;c---------- the Sequoia Nati.onal Forest. Stately stands of fir were burning and a Kem County Fire Department official said some 2,500 acres '"Dad been blackened by the blhze. Fire fighting conditions w e r e worsened by low humidity and high temperatures. e S!?cret Arm11 SAN DIEGO (AP) -A man described by prosecutors as former state coord inator of the paramilitary Sec ret Arm y Organization has been placed on three years' probation after pleading guilty to possessing flammabl e materials. Jerry Lynn Davis, 31, of Lemon Grove was released from jail Thursday and put on probation by Superior Court Judge Franklin B. Orfield. Davis had spent more than 90 days in jail awaiting sen- tencing. e Ott Agj1lt1 LOS ANGELES (UPll Sam Yortyi who took a lot of kidding during hi s 12 years as mayor about his penchant for travel, will spend the last eight days of his term on an ocean cruise to Alaska. Yorty. defeated last lll-Onth by cit y councilman Tom Bradley, slipped out of city hall unnoti ced Thursday. An assistant said he left word he would not be back . Yorty and his wife were scheduled to leave today on the Spirit of London for the voyage to Alaska. The ship won't be back until July 6, meaning Yorty will miss Brad1ey's in- auguration. e (}111011 Strife _INDIO (APJ Two Teamsters t.:nion organizers \\"ere charged ""ith kidna p and assault with intent to commit murder Thursday, sheriff's 'deputies said. Plckeling by other Teamsters and United Farmworkers supporters was regarded to be mo s t l y peaceful elsewhere. The two me n -identified as ' Guadalupe Tamez, 35, of Santa Ana. and Guadalupe Sausedo. 26, of Salinas -\Vere charged with attacking Israel Guad- jardo, 28, a foreman for J\taag Citrus in J\1ecca. A U.S. Forest Servic e spokesman said a 7 ,2()()..acre blaze was contained early to- day in the high desert country near Banning. They said they hoped to have it under control by Saturday. ALTHOUGH THE Banning blaze burned some trees at the edge or the San Bernardino National Forest, the main target. was brush. No stru ctures we re reported damaged and injuries were confined to minor smolte or burn cases involving fire fighters. A string ol !ires reportedly Ex-solon's Wife Gets Jail Term SANTA MONICA (AP ) - Susan h-1arie Brophy, the wife of former Assemblyman Bill Brophy, has been sentenced to six months in jail f o r vehicular manslaughter in the deaths of a.. Cudahy couple. Superio r Cou rt J u d g e Laurence Rittenband imposed the sentence. Thursday and allowed the 20-year-old former model lo be freed on $1,000 bail pending appeal of her con- viction in March. l\.1rs. Brophy \Vas arrested after Chris Panas, 48, and his wife. Elizabeth. 49, were killed when the Broph)'...auto crashed head-on into their car on July 18, 1972. The crash was on Pacific Coast Highway near Sunset Boulevard. Authorities said l\.l r s . Broph y was driv ing under the inOuenre of drugs when the crash occurred. IN ntE BANNING fire, some l ,000 fi re fighte rs looked like combat veterans after three days of action. "They had kind or a charcoal-like IQOk about the face," said Ed Medina, a fire information officer for the U.S. Forest Service. He added that the men looked a LUtle like spacemen with the hard hats , goggles and bandanas across their eyes and noses. Meanwhile, the state of California offered a reward or $500 for information leading to the capture of suspected. arsonists in the Banning blate. The fire WJlS started on the Morongo Indian Reservation, officials said. THE FINAL assau1t on the Banning fire was to have something of the appearance of an infantry and tank bat- talion advance. l n completing the fire lines at the edge of the blaze's hot spots, bU.Udozers were to push down the heavy brush and small trees, follow- ed by fire fighters moving in to open up a break between the open fire and its fuel - more dry wood. Teller Fle<l For Lunc1i FREMONT (UPI J -When a new bank teller at the Fre- mont Bank went to lunch and failed to return , a quick audit showed $7.000 was missing. Police Wednesday issued an all·points bulletin for Miss Carol L. Skodi, 21 , Newark , who began work on ly two weeks ago. Police said her car was found abandoned and her apartment was empty. Porno· Rule Reaction • Court Decisio1i Dr<iivs Praise, Damnatio1i-· By The Associntal Press The U.S. Supreme Court's decision on obscenity and hard-core pornography drew praise from so me state and count y officials and predic· lions of chaos and undue censorship from other Califor· ni ans . r.~ THURSDAY'S decision. the high court held that local community standards rather than national standards may be used to determine whether material i.s obscene. and that juries and courts no longer need to llnd that material Is "utterly" without redeeming ·social \'alue before it is declared obscene. Those two ports of the opinion wrrttcn by Ch1ef · Justice \Varren Burger drew the n1ost 011cntion f r o ni aulhoritlt'.!s ch:i.rged with en- • forcinr:r obscenity laws. The reJcclion or the test or tOCiAI value!! as a con~ ' stllutlon1I standard should give in1pelus to California legislative efforts to remove the standard from state law, said Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Joseph P. Busch. "IT'S A VERY strong op!- n ion and r edefi n es pornogra phy. Without qu('stion the opinion does away with the requirement for expert s to testify and provides !hat the GOV. RONALD Re a g a n jury will be the find er of fa ct. said. "This deci sion is one of That will make it ea sier for the most important rulings to prosecution. If the legislature be made by the U.S. Supreme will amend the slnlut('S to Court in recent years. And, coincide \\'ilh the Supreme "'hile it is long overdue, t am Court opinion, ii will make extremely gratified and pleas-prosecution easier." · ed that a majority of the court But Los Angeles City Ally . ~~e:;~u~[~,~~n~h~~~~ Burt Pines described the new munitics to rid themselves or standards as vague and dif- the corrupting inOuence of • ficult to apply. "I will be in a hard<'Ore pomogrophy." pos ition of having to enforce As a vchlcle for p~ this law, so I can't give my oouncements on the ca se, views personally," he said . Burger chose n Cnlifornia case "We have fimited resources. I in "'hlch ~tarvin Miiier was intend to ' emphas ize the convicted in Costa J\·lesa under greatest crlmln:il problems - a state law of malli ng properly 11nd protecllon against unsolicit ed sexuall y explicit property nndprotcction agalnsl materi;i:Js. Orange County vio lence. I'm not about lo tie Depul y Dist Atty. Oretta l.\P all the resources or this of- Se11rs, Who \\·orked on lie· fice -prOsccutlng pOmogrt1· Miller case, said : phy." e . • I t I , I ,... Huntington Bea~h Fountain ·Valley * * * ' . ; VOL. 66, NO. 173, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORAN6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -·. Belehrities to W elconle President Nixon and Soviet Communist Party Secretary Leonid Brezhnev are• _ ~ue to arrive on the South Orange Coast · this evening to begin a whirlwind \\'eekend fhat promises to be far different • On Saturday plans call for a major reception around the La Casa Pacifica's pool \Vith mariachis from San Juan Capistrano providing the music. from the week"s buslnesslike_s u.m m U_ S.UPERPQWER CHIEES SJG1'1 talThks. f I PEACE ~CCORD-Story, P190 4 e t\\'O eaders are expeded to touch -·--- _, . spinnet to be brought·to the pool area on They include Gov. and Jl.lrs. Ronald Saturday. Reagan, Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Red Also on the agenda for the weekend -Skelton and others. possibly tor Saturday -will be a .Qn Sunday, the day Brezhnev plans to short fiight to Lo~ Angeles where the t\vo Jeave, the President will welcome the leaders will toµr the exhiblti!)O of im-Skylab astronauts. preSSloorstpaiiitiiigs OOI08h to U)e-u:S:--The--invitation-went-ouli-today_to....tbe by the Soviet Union. · three space pioneers in a telegram from The reception Saturday, however, will the President. , . -. FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1973 on Sunday,'' a portion of the telegram read. Brezhnev's departure details have oot been specified so far. . It is assumed that the staff '''ill give more-details.-oL.the-1lus.sian..Jeader..:S schedule later lhis \\'eekend. down at the El Toro MCAS at about lhe And the President may even bang a dinner hour and after a brief ni ght's rest lew licks at the piario dur!ng th~ al the summit Will become somewhat of a ter~ event. Local sources have said ~ tl)e mgjQt..®Cial ~V_!_n!'-"! welcome you home-from the Skylab' Such secrecy has been the rule during Brezhnev's visit. spectacular. the staff has commandeered .a small .Beach Man ConVicted • Smog· Bri1igs Auto Warning Motorists were urged today to reduce driving to the minimum necessary as smog concentrations in Orange County began climbing toward levels dangerous to health. A spokesman (qr the-Orange County Air Pollution C o n t r o 1 District said at 9:30 a.m. that foreeasters predict smog oxidant levels wil lrise to .4 parts per mil- lion. The level of .2 jg considered dangerous to health. The spokesman said the heavy smog was expected because of "stagnant conditions" in the South Coast Air basin that would not permJt smog to float out to sea. Hollywood stars, and other VIP guests space ship 'Earth' and I also look are on the invitation list of 150 names. . forward to seeing you at San Clemente So far no details have been released either on a possible joint address to the ' earn own - Two Nixon Home Costs: $2 Millinn By HELEN TIIOMAS WASHINGTON IUPI) -The federal government Says it has spent nearly $2 million improVing President Nixon's homes in Florida and California, all of it rela ting to "security." The expenses rang~_rom fiJ'LS rinklers to gol! carts _ Today's Flaal N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS people of the u.s ... nd USSR I y Brezhnev -similar.to that nlade by t~c President during his trip lo ?o.1osc'ow last year. Contingency plans· have been made ror such an address from the San Clemente .k2.!!l~und, howe\•cr. Although DrezMev leaves on SUJfda••,-~-<• Nixon \Viii not. Initial reports said that the President · plans to stay. on in Sa1\ Clemente-for a "·eek or more. 23~ay Flight Ends F-lawlessly ABOARD USS TICONDERoGA (UPI) -Skylab's astronauts landed in "super shape" in the Pacific Oce.an today and \Valked shakily a few minutes later to the doctors' office to see how well lhey \\ithstood a record 28 'days In space. , The bullseye .spla:;hdown and . qulck < A Huntington Beach man who shat- tered his personal world when he fired six pistol shots Into his \\'ife listened q~etly and meekly Thursday as a jury convicted him or second degree murder. -The demeanor displayed by John R. Alden, 4.1, was consistent to his reactions throughout his two-wt;ek trial. Defense attorney M~U;hew Kurillch - 1\'.ho had argued that Alden was tem- porarily Insane -gasped. shook his head In disbeltel and lhen sat ltaring at the impassive p1nel. for the Secret Service. ,. The -white House also disclosed that recovery bY..this ve~ran ai(c:raft1carrier ol"'~-n\aFked-a...fla \\'lesS-etid..to...a_misswn...tha t---t started with failure. The flight took a Prooecutlng deputy district attorney Pat Brian immediately asked Orange County Superior Court Judge Byron k. McltJUJan to revoke Alden's $25,oot cub blil posted by his molhe<, with whom he qow Jives and remarw:l him to jail. Valley Trustees Approve Budget, Expect Tax Cut businessman Robert H. Abplanalp, who heJped the PresideoJ · buy his San Clemeple retreat, bas been gettiog some money back ln the form o{ xent _ associated wltb Nixon'! Key Blsctjne, Fla., place. · A month ago the White llouse had-• Jisted $.191<KM> in federal funds for im- proving the Western White Rouse at San Clemente sjnce Nixon bought it in 1969. Fountain Valley school trustees Thurs-Last week, after a further search o( He argued that Ute tragic explosion of tempers and gunfire in the A1den home atJOG& Gosha'1k Lane last September left Kwjilich's cllent \\1tbout a family, a job. or a house ·to go home to. day adopted a $16.9 million preliminary ised budget for fiscal 1973-74 and said they ex-record, this figure was ra to $460,302. t ~~drop · the ta On Thursday General Services pee a """'-~•• m " rate next Administration (GSA), the governmeflt's , . U'l_J ....... to SKYLAB ASTRONAUTS DOWN TO EARTH AFTER LONG TRIP Conrad (waving), !'•ih: (left) and KerWin on Ticonderoga year. . . housekeeping agency, said a still more !he spending plan, up . about $1.9 extensive audit put the total federal ex· His daughter, who testilied agaiMt him. has chosen to llve wlth relatives, rnany of whom were pcesent throu,p:>ut the proceedings. ·Judge McMillan started to order Alden cl!nfined again, but Kurilich Interrupted reminding the judge his mild-mannered cllenl has been described by one psychiatrist as no danger to the com- munity. mll_Hon over the past year .• wtll be financ--. penditure at San Clemente at $703,367 over ed IJl port by a jlrOpOr\y tu '"r o! about four fiscal years beginning July l, 1969. $2.71 per '100 assessed valuation_, com-This included only the residence there, pared to a $3.61 rate charged this past not the White Hou.se office space. year· GSA. li5*ed for the first time the federal For the owner of a $40,000 home expenditure for impro\·ements, equip- as.sessed a~ $10,000, that would mean. a ment, operation and maintenance at the tax bill or $2'71. 'Ibe ~ home owner White House complex at Key Biscayne, would have paid $361 this past year. including both residence and office space .Five Designs Comprise Valley's City _Cent,er \ "He ls now a convicted felon. 1be defendant bas every reason to leave this jurisdiction," Deputy District Attorney Brian contradicted. 1be 0 tax cut is the result of state -$l,l80,SZ21 spread over live fiscal legislation approved last year which call-years beginning July 1, 1968. The first stage plans for Fountain . ed for an equalization of tax rates among Included in the Key Biscayne figure Valley's City Center office and shops school districts throughout the state. said ·was $161,46.1 for renting two _houses in t_he complex were unveiled this '"eek at . Alden has admitted his role in the de.ath of his wife Arlene, 39. Dr. Charles Woodfin a s s i s t a n t complex for the Secret Service and \Vhile Alden faces a July 16 sanity heariM and ,,;u be Connally sentenced July 30. ·superinttodent for busi~ss. House communications staff. a joint session or the city COWlcil and d f planning commission. Under provisions of the bill. school The · ~te House sai one o lhesc districts with small tax bases, including house~ 1s own~ by Abplanalp an~ the The plan, devised by the architectural . ' Reagan: Nixon To Be Believed Fountain Valley, are eligible for greater other is owned 1n the name of ~dwm H. fin11 of Grillia s. Pirc. Rosier and Alves .slate aid to supplement local income. ~nderwood, trus.tee for. the Indiana Na-of Santa Ana, oUt!ines a shopping center The district ei:pects abOut $7.6 million t1onal Ban.k, lndianapol.1s. and office complex to be built on the 30 m state mmey to sul>Qlemeot about $3__ The White House sa1.f! al!_ of the tax-acres or ppen land on_BrQOkhurst Street million that·v.ill be generated by local pllyers money ·spent 1n San Clemente bCCWeeil\Vamer and Slater Avenues and taxes, Woodjin said. and Key Biscayne_ was for security-west.of San A1ateo Street. The budget also takes into account a 10 related improvements and that all work Tim f\:lcad1 project architect, explained SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan says President NWJo is "enliUed ,lo be believed" in his statements about the Watergate bugging. percent increase in the district's assess-was . done at the r~uest of the Secret that the proposed plan comes from five ed valuation, from $110 million to $lZ2 Service. not the President.. different designs for the center and it million, Woodfin said. The <?SA data showed. items such .as takes into account the ecooomic factors The largest expenditure listed in the $53.644 m fisc;al 1970 for mterlor securny of operating different kinds of . retail budget ls $5.S mlllion for teachers' and ~mmuntcatlons. at .San Clemente. It shops and stores as well as U1e fad that • - ' At the same time Thunclay, the Republican governor took a slap at the Senate Watergate hearqs being con- dud<d by sen. Sam Ervin (IJ.N.C.). · . f be also included $3,303 1n fiscal 1970 for golf there are already some businesses on the salaries, an increase 0 ~ ut ~,OOO carts for the Secret Service patrol at Key property. over the past year to lmance annual Biscayne. The total parcel is 53 acres but the ex-· salary schedule increases.. . . Two years later there appears another • isling development has effectively divid-" "About 90 percent of what we've heard to far in the Senate Watergate hearings hu been unfounded charges or rumors." Reagan told about 900 delegates lo the amual Boys Slate model government at Cal State Sacramento State. Distrlct teachers are still ™:g~hatmg item o£ $5,230 for three Secret Service ed the portions deStined for !he Qty r~r an across-th:board ~t-of living ~y g-01r carts there. ' ~ hike and additional fringe . be~ef1ts. Abplanalp. ., Bronxville, N . y. , Reserve funds have been set aside .1~ the businessman, who made a fortune event teachers are awarded an add1honal perfecting the valve Which operates (See TAX CUT, Page!) aerosol spray cans, lent Nixon $625,000 in Plane Suieide Test Pilots Slioot Down, O'w1i Crlt.ft POINT MUGU (UPI) -Two civilian test pilots llylnB a $20 mil· lion Navy jet fighter shot the aircraft down with one of its own mis· slles, according to the Navy. The Grumman FH-Tomcat crashed in flames in the Pacific : Ocean Wednesday about 70 miles southwest of the Naval Air Station • here. The crew, Grumman employcs, parachuted safely and were picked up !rom the water by a Navy helicopter. A Navy spokesman said· Thursday that while the Tomcat was test·lirlng an unarmed Sparrow missile "the missile did ' DOI clear the alrcraft sufliclently and struck the bottom ot the fu selage." Grumman did not make the missile .or its firing system. The Navy suspended firing the Sparrow missiles from F14s un· UI the cause o! the accident Is detennlned, It was the third time since December, 1970, an Fl4 crashed. 1969 to help .him buy the original 28.9 acre .San Clemente property for $1.5 million. In 1970 Abplanalp bought 23 of these acres back from Nixon for $1.25 million, canceling the I o a n and Jcavio~ Nixon with 5.9 acres. the house, the enJoyment of the other 23 acres, and an investment of his own of .. $251 ,000. The White tlouse said the Nlxons themselves paid {or $123,514 in im· provements, making their nel Investment $374,514. 1'--rom these figures, the breakdown of who has what investment in the San Clcn1ente retreat l.s as follows : -The Nixons: $374,000. -Abplanalp: $1.25 million. -The ~xp~ycr1: $703,367. llaiphong 'Clearecl' WASHINGTON (AP) -The Navy t .. day declared the matn chann~l of 1tniphong harbor, North Vietnam's prin·. cipal port, to be open and sare for shi~ ping. • Retired Police Officer Al Biddle Succtrmhs at 56 Elvin "Al" Biddle, who spent 22 of hls 52 years in Huntington Beach as a police officer, died \Vednesday and will be buried Saturday. He was 56. A1r. Biddle joined the force in 1950 and advanced to patrol sergeant In 1956_.\ a rank he held until hls retlrement lct8t year. tie was a member of the lluntington Beach Veterans of Foreign Wars and the American Legion. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Satur- day at Smiths' Mortuary in lluntington Beach, with Thomas \V. Overton of· ficiating. Private burial scrvlcas will ' follow. ~1r. Biddle is survived-by his wife, JQ:lml'!na, of the famJly home at 1720 Pine St.: lwo sons, Charles and Robcrl, both of llutftlngton lle:ach: a brother, Marvin._ of ~lolllster: n sister, Alvenai Dean of 1-larbor City, and two grandchildren. -- Center into two parcels ot 10 acres and 20 acres. Mead· also -pointed out that one of the prime considerations in the plan selected is that it can be developed piecemeal - an important consideration because there are five property O\vners involved. . He said · that each 1 individual property owner's_ parcel as v.·eJI as tbe entire ccuter was apportioned !or development so that 25 percent of the land 'vould be taken up with retail comme_rcial al_'!_d of- fices. 25 percent would be in open space and landscaping and 50 percent would be in parking. Some oC the plans considered featured high rise offices with three-story parking structures or double story bUifdings join- od by a series of small poods and f0W1- tains. nie plan selected has single story buildings with a central pedestrian mall area. :holead said there '"'ere plans for lnrge buildings to ~ccommodate sy,ch thillgs as supermarkets and cluster- buildings for the smaller shops and of· fices. ~·lead said that the plan '"ill no'v be revised and refined v.·orking with owners nnd developers with the idea of corning up v.•ith an architectural style. At Tuesday's session ·he suggested that the larger buildings 1night conlorn1 ijrchiteclurally. \vith the apartments \vhich filce on San rwratoo and dlvldc the land into" two pleces. And he added that tile smaller cluster buildings could follO\V the architectural 1hen1e ol 1he Union F'ederal Plaza "'hich f:1ces onto Brookhurst Street. Reaction to the plan was nol en- 1husiastic. Councilman Al Hollinden said he ·'felt the rug had been pulled out from under me" after seeing some of the rnorv elaborate plaus. that were considered before the propcm1I was arrived at. "Of course, ttlls is jtL~t tho fln:t time? I've seen It. It \Vill take some studyl.ng," he added. Rt prcsentatlves of t,,.o of the property O\\'M.rs also txpressied some ttservations about the style and size of the plan. but Mead no~ that there was no archite<:- tural style 8"t yel and the proposal com· plied wilh the city's economic 1111d plM· oing criteria. major step toward giving man a place in space. Charles "Pete" J:onrad, J•plt P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz returned i(l the Apollo command ship in which they were laW\Ched May· Z5. The big s p a c e station remained in eanh orbit ready tor its next crew in five weeks. President Nixon qUickly sent a telegram to the men who just completed an 11.5 milLion mile journey and invited them to vis.i t him at San Cemente Sun- day. '"You have given conclusive evidence that even with the most advanced scien- ti!ic an i;t. technological support in the world, the courage and resourcefulness of good men are still central to the suc- cess of the human adventure,'' the Presi- dent said. Conrad, commander of the nation's first space station mission, reassured recovery forces several times that he and lils crewmen were all right after the strenuous re-entry which quickly built up deceleration forces 31h: times the for<;e or gravity. "Everybody's in auper shape/' Conrad radioed after three orange-and-white striped parachutes eased the command module into-the--geDtly rolling seas of the Pacific 8.35 miles southwest of San Diego. Kerwin and Weitz repot:,ted some dizziness after splashdolvn and Kerwin inflated a pair ol pressure-pants to keep his blood pressure from dropping to the poirit where he might faint. 'Ibis tempora1"¥--eUect \'i'as expected because of the tendency o[ astronauts• blood to pool in their legs, away from the brain, as a result of heart laziness in- (S.. SKYLAB, .Page 2). Orange Coast Weather That expected cooling trend will make Itself felt along the Orange Coast Sa1urday with low cloods in the morning hours and highs in the upper 70s at the beaches. Inland ten1pcratures Will be near 90. That's coolt!r! , fle's really a so1tg writ.er Ttot a $lu ger, but llarla1i JeiiniflfJS, 2 t. is fl11ding i11 a Newport Beach 1li(111t club e119age1nent that somet'imes it's tlie singer and 1tot the scmg that counts. fits story is on Page 25 of to- day's \Veekende-r. At Yl'Vr Sfr'Vkl , l .M. lhd 1 •0•11111 tt CtllfOl'llll J C:ltnll!M 1)..11 Cf'ftkt J• Cre'IWW .>4___ O.tlll Notlctt II Ellllttrlel '•to 6 ll"!WttlRIMfll •)1 ,.fflHCI ti•~) JI•~ tM 11'"'11 11 Htl'•t«H 14 AM llltlefl IS M•llbt.it 6 Mtvltl JNI .-.111111110'11 ..... 22 Nt!IOll•I Ill••• 4, It Ort!IH Ctt111tr II llttllllfllltl 21·tt swi.1a '•rlRr " S-h It.It Jl-.k M1mts tt·tl T tl1Vl11aft 1t WM titer I W-911'1 NIWI 1).11 Worlll Htwl t,. 11 Wotilctllftr U-U ·- ~lt u"o..v PtLOl n Tustit1POW Won't Talk Of Cl1arges A released Tustin ll1arlne prisoner of v:ar today rerused to comment on charg. es of n1is<.'Oflduct brougbt ogaillSt him by n fellow PO\\', Lt. Col. Edison \V::iinright ~t iller. '11, ·issued 8 brief statement relayed to the press by the Information offi ce of Camp TWO EX-POWS CHARGED IN MISCONDUCT-Stor y, Pago 4 Pendl eton where it is believed ~tiller will bt based. He is preSffilly on "COn· vllescen t leave ," a Pendleton spokesman · -Y id.- A defense departmenl spokesman in Washington confirmed Thursday that Lt. COi. 1.@er and Navy Capt. W~tey ~· . Wilber, 43~ of Columbia ftross Roads. Pa., bad been charged v.1th misconduct in North Vietnam prison campS by Rear Admiral James V. Stockdale of Coniiado. Ocean View's Logan .i.. 'THINKINGI S NEW' j'k••n View's Shaffe~ \ 3 Trustees to . 'NEW BLOOD NEEDED' Ocea n View's Knox Retire - '"Gangland, Trlal Defense Seeking ' -Remingt.on Bail Uy ARTHUR R, VINSEL 01 fllo O.Hy Pllel St•ff Defense attorneys for a one-time Newport Beach attorney linked in tcstin1ony to gangland terror tactics in· volving the \plotting of murder nnd mayhem today were to appeal for a bail hearing that might allow their client freedo m while awaiting trial. ~lichael K. Remington , '?J, o( Fullerton . \vas ordered Thursday lo be arraigned July 3 ln Orange County Superior Court on four counts each o( conspiracy to commit murder and soliclring for rnurder. 11le testi1nony b.v Rollo gave i:l cloa k· and·dagger navor to the heari ng. as ht! n\ade rcrcr('nc'e to "the Lock.wood situa· Uon." .and "th~ C11ca1nongp 1affair.:• J ud ge Must CQncluded 1the henr1n~ by re marking about\the character of those \Vho have testified so rar. "The principal witnesses In this case are not persons or goOd character, reliability or honesty," he noted dryly. •·The District Attorney is handicapped in not being able to go out and pick hi~ 1vilnesses," Judge Masi conlinuecl . "Tht \1•itnesses are a disability to the District Attorney .. " I Judge Paul G. l\!3st5.1ld artm:tlose-o•f--- a four and a half day preliminary hea r- ing in Central Orange County Judlcia l District Court that, he was using di sere-- lion in refusing bail. FrotnPagel Defense lawyers \Villiam f\.1arshall ?\1organ and Robert Green had argued that cllarges against their client wil,1 not hold up in court. SKYLAB ... ~ duced by long exposure lo the lack or gravity. Miller said today, "I have no specific comment on any charges at this tlme. l have ~Y recently 1eamed of this action and have not ye~ had a chance to ~ detel'mine e1actly what I am being charged with. Ocean Vie'tV Members Sliaffer; Knox 8-year Vetera rts . Karate expert Gary ?\.f. Rollo, 20, or (;arden -Grove, considered to be Ute da maging prosecution witness, has testified Remingt.on retained him to ar· range three contracts to carry out acts of violence. Dr. La \vrencc DietlCin , a NASA physi· cian, said the astronauts looked in '!Quite good " health , "far bette r from whit t personall y expected." "I realize this is a serious matter and it will be a difficult time for my family and friends," Miller said. Attempts to reach him at his Tustin home this morning through contacts at the Voices of Vital America (VIVA ) of· fice proved rutile. A VlVA organiza tion spokMman said ?t1rs. Miller had no comment on the charges and was leaving the Miller res>dence with -their 'five ·sons. three of wbcm are school age and "ha\'C just suf. fered too much from all of. thi!." Durihg Miller's confinement in North Vietnam, he freque ntly \.\'BS the subject of news items alKI wa,, oCtcn brought before television cameras as an e:rample of the humane treatment being given U.S. servicemen by thei r North Viet· namese captors. "" Valley Approves $314,000 Road Facelift Plans Street improvement projects costing more than $314.000 were approved this -k by the Foonlain V a 11 e y Ctty Council. The projects include making a six·lane road out ol Brookhun:t Street from the San Diego FreeY.'BY to the northern city 1imils; installation of new signa ls on SJater Avenue at Bushard Street and at Brook.burst.; Improvement of Bushard to a four lane road south of Warner Avenue to the intersection and installation of a signal at th e intersection, and landscap- ing of the Broothunt -median -from Garfield Aven ue to the San Diego Freeway. Also included in the public \.\·orks proj· ecb is $25,<m \\'Orth of parking lot and lighting work for the city hall complex. Wayne Osborne. city public works director said the Brookhurst street 1\·idening. estitnated at $114,000, the signal for Brookhur:i1. and Slater, estimated at $39,000 and the Bushard proje<:t, .. um.led at ~.ooo, will be fund· ed half by the city and nail by ll>e COW1· ty's arterial highway improvement fund. He said the mcn?y for the civic ceoter parking lot improvement will come from the 'l million budgeted for the nearly completed civic center expansion. The si ptal for Slater and Bushard wil l receive 10 perunt fund ing from the federal goVe~l, be said. It will eo&t an estimate-4 '28JIOO. The ~,000 ri\edfan landscaping_ on Brooknunt will lie paid 1..-by the city out of it(, llltldJan .landscaping fund created out(Dtlees developers~have..pald the city. .:• Tuesday's oouricll action authorizes the projects '° be put out for bids, No Umetable has been establ ished for the start of t.be work. OIAN•I COAST .. DAILY PILOT T"• 0.-•""'9 GNtl DAILY l'ILOT wfffl wlllcll k ~I.-the -N.-l'r1n , it Pub1~ bY the 0.-..... (Mtf ,ullllil\""' (Ol'l\Pf<,,t, S.JM• r•11 9d!llont ·~ Jll,llllbllM, Mondty ll'lnlvol'I F ricl1y. for Catlll "'"'· Newporl l e1cfl, H""li...,,.., 1 .. cll/l'ownlllll Ville~, Llll;IUM IMCll. lrvl111l.,..ltl1Mcll •nd S•11 c;i.l'Mtl!t l S•" J»1n C111l1lr•no. 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C.1Hlor11l1. ~111\ofl " ,,,,.. lf,U -lft'-'1 by .... 11 JJ.!I ,...,,,1 .. 1 11'11111•,., 1111111o11-. u .d """""'" " • • 'ey MARCI DODSON OI 1111 D•fll' il'Uot Sl•tf After approving ni ne budgets, v.·ork ing • \.\'ith three ~uperintcndents, campaigning for six financial measures and approving plans for eight schools, two trustees of the Ocean View School District are retir· ing. Both R. James Shaffer and Robert KOOx agree lhat eight years is long enough to serve on the board. .. The board needs new blood. High~ now on the board, we're all satisfied wlth the way things are. When that happens, l''e need new members," Knox observed. "l tlli.nk the district should restrict tenns (for board members) to ei ght years. U you haven't accomplished what You want in eight years, you won't get it done. "Besides. the administration tends . to gel too comfortable with the same ~ pie. It's good to..bring in new boa rd mem· bers lo shake them up.'' he added. Shaffe r agrees. "When v.·e first came on the l>oard, we spent most of the time questioning the superintendent, just learning bow the district works. It was disruptive, but it ' made the ad· ministration dlg-up the answers and re- examine wha t they were doing. And this is healthy. This, basically, is the best reason for change." Also leaving the OOard is four·year trustee George G. Logan, who said he ran for the seat to see what input he could make in the management oC the district "But all the changes· that I thought School Play Backfires, Lnguna Performer Hurt By JACK CHAPPELL Df "'• EMJlr •li.t S .. H . A "cops and robbers" skit at the Laguna Beach High School all ni ght graduatloo p a r t y ended with the shooting of a volunteer entertainer in· jured when a wad from a blank shotgun sbell struck him 1n the head. Ha l Louis Proppe, 21, of 1385 Skyline Drive was reported in satisfactory con· dition -oday at South Coast Community Ho.spifal. He was shot witlt a JO.gauge double barrelled shotgun during a comic skit at 3 a.m. today at the high school. \Villiam All en, acting superintend ent of the school di strict, sa id his office was not informed that firear1ns were to be used during the traditional high school grad ni ght party. Laguna Beach police seized the 10. gauge shotgun and identified the man who fired it as Gene Porter Molway. 22, of 390 3rd Street, Laguna Beach, who waif actlng as the sheriff durllig the skit. No arrest was made. Police said the wad from the blank shell passed through a hat worn by Prop. pe and struck him in the rear of the head. Witnesses told officers that the in- jured man was 20 to 30 fee t from the muzzle of the big bore shotgu!'l. Officers surmised tha t more severe In· jury could have been done if the flying wad had hit anyone in the face area. Theme of the all-night party was "49ers and the Wild West'' and fea tured a town called Deadwood Gulch. Some 250 students were expected lo attend, authorities said, but it is uncertain how many students saw the shooting. Don 11augh t, high school principal, said he had no knowll'dge th.at a "shootou t" Funds Allocated 111 Seal Beacl1 Nearly Jf>S.000 of federal revenue shar- ing funds has been slaled by the Seal Beach city council for recreation and public safety. A total of $45,000 \li'ill be spent on recreation, v.·ilh expenditures f o r Healher·Lampson parksilc, $ 3 O. 0 O O ; Shapell Park lmprovcrnent, $10.000; nnd community center maintenance, $5 ,000. Under publ ic safety, $11.000 has been allocated for the fire house tower. and s1.ns v.;11 be spent for the fire auxiliary gene rator. The remainder of lhe esti mated $65,315 in revenue sharing fWlds v.'ill be alloce.ted at upcoming budget he•rlngs. From Pagel TAX CU T.;: fl\'C: percent pay boost. Woodfin 1ai'd. Included In Ule budget Is about $2.9 million for consl ructlon of Courreges School near the comer of Santa CBr lotta Street and MacKenzie lliver Avenue 'and l\tasuda School on '1'1ard Streel north of Slaler Avenue. · involving functional firearms w a s scheduled at the party. . He said the party was directed by parents of students, and was not a school fi..nction. "lt was not managed or supervised by the school itself," Haught said. Ile said to his knowledgeptlle district does not have a policy regarding prese nce of firearms on the school grounds, 117 Students Set Choir Concert In Httntington A choir composed of 117 of Orange County's top high school students will give a 90-minute concert in lluntington Beach tonight covering the music spec· trum from serious classic to Popular pieces. The Ambassadors. due to leave on a ty,·o-\\·eek European tour next month, v.·ill present the same program tonight they "'iii later offer in five Swiss cities. The musical group will incl ud e 1 B students from University High School. nine from l\1ission Viejo Hi gh School, four from San Clemente High School. three frol'll Huntington Beach High School, and one person each from Corona del A1ar, Estancia. and Costa Mesa high schools. "We've been practicing this music since f'ebruary:• says Director Jack Coleman, "Sil you can be sure it \viii be as good as we can make it." Henry Curtis, a 15-year..old pianist from Corona del lltar High School. will play a solo work. 1be concert will be held in the auditorium of Huntington Beach High School at 8 p.m. Donation to offset costs of the European tour is $2.50. Classical musi c \.\'ill predominate in the rirst half of the program , Coleman said. The choir will lead off \\rith Requie m by Du ruffle, a major work. Following \vl!l be Henry Curlis. playing a 4·1nlnute wo rk by fo"'ranz Liszt. Etudc in D-f.'lat Major . Then Curtis v.•il! learn \vi th a viollnst 1~nd cellist to play Haydn's Piano Trio No. 6 in D Major. The second half of the program "'iii in- clude a medlt!y from t"'iddler on the Roof . Creation by Bob Bobrow1u. ll's a Sma ll \Vorld, Let There be Peace. and Aincrlca the Beautiful. Seal Beach Offei;,s Parking Permits New parking permits !or Se.al Beach residents living In lhe Old Town area will be available at City Hall beginning the wrek of June 25. City officials ha\'C reminded aren residents that the green d'ecals currently in use wi ll expire June 30. and that the new red -sticker "'iJl be needed for restrtcttd on·street parking. Co.st ot the sticker ht $1.50. lt should be placed on the lefl rear bumper of the vehicle, a ~pokcsman ~aid . needed to be made had already been made. They just "·eren't apparent yet." The three retiring trustees "'iii be replaced by l\.1rs. ~1arianne Blank. fl'lrs. Jean Bogen and Darrell Carter. who will be seated July 2. ~1rs. Bla nk and ~!rs. Bogen are the fi rst women to SUV(t on the Ocean View board and Carter, 34, is on~ of Ute youngest nten ever electea to the board. .a Knox reminisced about the changes in the district du ring his tenns. The growth of the district first comes to mind, he 'said. "l can ren1ember \1·hen Ocean View l''as one of the fastest growing school di stricts in the country." Along with the grov.1h has come in- creasing community 'support. ··As the district becomes more recognized for i!s achievements. the peo- ple hnve become more in terested <Uld have helped the distrjct more.'' The biggest change noticed .by Shaffer \ras !he rapid urbanization of the school district And \\'ith the changing physical appea rance of the area came a changing trend of thought, he said. "The community v.·as searching for what role the school system should play in their life. Th.is was a little painful for most people . . . But .now \\'e have a more sophisticated ~ulation, a very well educated group in the district." Despite the rapid changes in the district. both eight-year members feel the philosophy of the board has remained lhe same th roughout the yea rs. "Our standards have been high, and we have not been afraid to try ne\V things. \Ve've initiated many programs and tried ne w things. like year-round schools. These things take more time, but \\'C've had a staff willing to do that. We have been leaders instead of follo\vers ," Knox said. Speaki ng softly -occasionally showing annoyance at rhe persistent cross ex· an1ination -Rollo admitted lyin g to District Attorney's invesliga tors at ooe point in the case. Def ense attorney l\1organ -a flam- boyant lawyer whose dramatic gestures and ringing tones led one newsman to dub him Clarence Darrow in a double knit suit - accused the chiel witness ol the lie. "Yes." replied Rollo._ "'ho y;•ill be sentenced Tuesday following his guilty plea to a charge of sol.iciting for m.J,l;der, ''What about'!'' Morgan plo<t4ea." . "£ made some self·servfng statements ... " Rollo r eplied before being cut off by Remington's counsel, who said that \\'as irrelevant. fie admi tled under flll'ther questioning that he told investigators tie hired some- one e I s e to thwart one murder plot after he had hired an earlier.prosecution \11itness to carry it out. Rollo said he felt he would help his O"'D prcdictment . [){'fense attorney Green challenged charges against Remington on that aspect. saying no conspiracy could be in- vol\"ed because Rollo \vas acting as an agent for the .dis trict attorney. Judge Mast earlier contradicted the concept that Rollo's testimony abould be rejected on grounds of coercion because he v.·as cooperating , with the District At~ torney's Office. h1uch of it dealt Thursday with small details of the Investigation in \vhlch Rollo aided aothor4ft• in,Probinc !l<mlngf!>O'• alleged 'role In aITanging ellmlnation or \Vilnesses in civil suits v.·it h \\'hich he was involved. \ Rollo followed three other witnesses 'vho testified he hired them to carry out beatings or murders for an unldentilied hig her individual in y,·hat Rollo called '·the organiJ.ation.'' The spateeraft \1'as hoi sted aboard this ship with the pil ots still inside, a switch from past procedu res made to keep the :.istronauts' exertion to a minimum. ~fedics \\'ere ready lo carry Conrad, Kerwi n and \Vei1z on stretchers, if necessary , from their scorched capsule. to the blue mobile medical laboratories· 65 feet away. But the astronauts, smili ng and "'av- ing. climbed out o! lhc Apollo under lhei r own pawer. They stood on n wooden plat· for m briefly, chatting with Dr. Chatles Ross, the fii ght slll'geon, and then carefully made ·their w a Y down some steps and to the special Skylab clin ic. Con rad, who has been in spare more 1han anyon e, appeared the most relaxed. \Veitz and especiR\ly Keru·in v.·alkcd a Iii· tie bowlegged and slightly hunched over. But the ract that they were able to walk as v.•ell as they did was significant. It .meant the three Americans y,·e~ in better shape after spending 28 days in space than lwo Russia n cosmonaulS' were at the end of an IS.day fl ight in 1970. They had lo be carried from lbeir spacecraft. The primary objective of the Skylab marathon was to !ee how well men fare for Ion~ periods of v.·elgbtlessness and then adjust to the rigors· of gravity hick on earth. COOrad , Kerv.•in and Weitz were un- dergolng Jong and detailed medical tests "'ithin an hour after their 6:50 a.m. PDT splashdown. Doctors s.ti ld the first result& "'ould not be known un til late In the day. The fate of t\.\'O planned 56-day nJgbt& aboard Skylab hinged on the findings of the doctors. The next launch Is scheduled July 27 for Skylab 2 Rstronaul! Alan L. Bean, O\\'en K. Garriott and J8ck R. Lousma. Summer Safe Confinue:J LEATHER SOFAS & CHAIRS ON SALE NOW Leather and Bress are natural partners. With quality materials, good d~sign and craftsmanship • • , the result IS • furniture cl1ss ic. Reg. $1 320 SALE $999 Reg· $1'470 SALE $1099 Top Groin Glove Soft LHthor -Fonlostic Value -96" length. If you're looking f~ quality, up ho lstery, dining, bedroom, or occasional fu;nitur~. " y01Jr chance to purchost the fi nest at solo prices. Stop in today. Free, interior d e1i9" servic• avai11ble DRfXEL.-1-iERITAG~ENR EDON-WOOOMARK-kARASlAN INTERIOR ~ WRKDAYS • SATURDAYS 9:00 to S:JO FRIDAY 'Tll 9100 now NEWPORT BEACH e 1727 WESTCLIFJ. Dlt.. 642·20!0 10,.,. Sulld•y 12.1 1101 LAGUNA BEACH e !41 NORTH COAST HWY I0,0011 Sun4•r 12·1r20) 4t4·6111 TORRANCE e 21649 HAWJHORNE tlVD, J71·127t I • • Friday, Junr 22, 1973 H DAILY PILOT ~ At Your Service Budg.et for County Grows A S..day, Wodaesday ucl Friday Fe1ewt Of the Dl!Jy Ptlot Got • problnnl Tkm write Pat Dun11. Pat 1Dill cut ,-ed tape, gel Ille • a·nswers end action ti o u need &o ._1 •~lve . ineqv.._ ties an oov- ernmtnt and business. Mail 11 our que.t- Uons to Poe Dunn/."-! Your Service, Qrange-COCZ!'C Reagan Says ArmsB~tter Than Pacts Ddily Pilot, P.O. Bo• 158-0, Costa Go Id !feta, <.:a., 92626. Include 11our v. Rona Reagan today put em- t£iephone numbar. phasis on U.S. military and industrial strength rather lplan treaties as the best c--~-D=Ofl~.~Li=~c~c~n~•~c~•-----&guar~,..an,,tee=l,,,or'-"~ace during a key address DEAR PAT: t ,.,,as all set to mail in to ihe American Legion af Anah!!!lrn--- my $S check for this year's license for Convention Center.. my dog until l read the instructions on "The dust bin of history is littered with Ule back o( the application. I noticed that the remains of tho.sf!! countries which I'm supposed to include <.. valid rabies ed 1 · lorn vaccination certificate and •I seht mine in reli on Y 00 dip acy to secure their .' last ·year with that applicati~ .. Tbe vac-freedom," the Republican chief executive · cination \vas· good for two years and I said. · - can't very well send in a cei:.tlflcate this "\Ve must never forget -in th!!! final year if the county already his it. can r analysis -that it •js 0 u r military, in- just man in the applicaUon and the fee1 dustrial and economic ltrength that of- ......_ . K.C., El Toro fers tbe best guarantee of peace for You sboald bave received Ule rabies America in.times of danger," he said. va~lnatloa certificate wltb your last "We dare not heed the counsel of those Cbect who would risk America's freedom year's dog license receipt. your through on~slded disannament pro-reeords for Ibis orange and llfblte receipt with &he rabies vaccination certificate at-posa1s that our country would carry out tacbed to It If yoa cu't find the receipt, honorably, but whlch the other side ask your veterinarian to 1u11e 1 daplicate might evade or 1gnore," Reagen added. alld send It aJo-witlt your appUcatioD. "Our first commitment must be to -D maintain and nourish in the. hearts and In ease you can't obtain tlals certiflcale. the minds o.f our young people the love of before the Juoe 31 Uctue deadline, RH in the ippllrcation ud fee, maklag 1 freedom that you ·aixl nllllions like you notation that yoa ..UI provide a daplicate have exhibited during times of crisis," he - vacclnalion ctrttfka&e u sooa as poa• said. The governor also urged support for ble. his state tax limit-refund proposal ex- Europe Wardro~' DEAR PAT: I am planning a European trip and will be staying_. abroad for several months. Since t intend to buy clothing during my stay, will 1 have· to pay customs duty even though I have worn the clothing? E.c., Ne wport Beach \' e1. An article acquired abroad 11 not exempt from duty because ol ne and wear, accerdlng to the lM Angelu JJ.e1ioeal Comm.lsstoner of CD11toms. 11le Customs inspecter may, llowever, make u appropriate ............ In 11s vahle I« use and wear. Car s,.... ColMrel pected ta be the subject of a statewide election Nov. I . , "We must bring government spending under control ij the wage gaiqs our peo- ple make are to be real instead of an endless cycle of pay increases followed by higher tax deductions, fol1owed by legitimate demands for even higher wages so tbat the people can pay even higher taxes," he said. He said the proposal would "Provide ample money fof governmeiit's legitimate funcaions to expand" but in 15 years would "leave more than $1111 billion in the pockets of the peop1e who earned· h." .. \ Dloily Piiot PhGto br LH PiYllt Bot .Job Orange County Fire Capt. Bruce Turbeville (right) cools off with help from Capt. Herb Eberhardt after helping to cool oil Thtl\osday 's fire at the Hol1y Sugar factory on Dyer Road in Santa Ana. Turbeville had just come down _from roof where temperatures reached 130 de· grees ditring blaze. Fire started in a pulp dryer about noon and caused an estimated $4,BOQ in damage to a building at the . plant. Doctor Cited _in 'Speed' Rap LOS ANGELES (AP) - A federal Carpenter, 39, former operator o( the gr~ _jW'Y baS indicted a Woodla~ HBls · ,,. message parlor, were ·named. Thursday phy~1c1an on charges .or consplrmg to in the conspiracy count. ()fficials · llold First llearings By JACK BROBACK Of tt111 o.1111 ,.._ Sl11f Orange County supervisors took some money out and then put some money back.in '11tursday during the board's first full day of hearings on the 197J..74 county si>endin~ program. As a result, expenditures increased $384,000. The ~uperviso'rs had put more-in than they had taken out. The day of budget hearings started \\•ith a proposal for spending $348 million during the next fiscal year. That v.·ould require a lax rate of $1.86 per $100 assessed valuation. or a drop of nine cents below the current $1.95 rate. By the tim e the hot sun over Santa Ana dipped belo\v the horizon, supervisors had considered only t'hree o( eight divisions in the program budget. The sun se t but the tax rate rose to $1.8684. Hearings continued today and are like- ly to go to the legal limit, consuming the next 10 days. The general fund budget, that part of county spending· \Yhich comes entirely from property laxes. is temporarily tag- ged at $248,698,509. To hold to this total. board members will have to cut enough "fat" out of the figure to accommodate an anticipated five percerit -pay increase .for county employes, or about $5 million. The $248 million figure is a fraction less than the current 1972-73 budget·and is in contrast to increases of 5.1 percent a year ago and 16.4 percent in 1971-72. The budget as outlined to the supervisors by County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas and his staff of analysts is $25 million less than amounts requested by county department he~ds. It includes a carry-over balance from the current year of about $18 million \Yhich is $6 million more than the amount carried over last year. The property taxes \\'hich will be col· lected to cover the general fund part of the budget include an anticipated five percent increase in assessed valuation of real property. - lo.1Usick agre~ -that the noor would not be completed \ until ~tay or June 1974 so tbe fund for 42 addit\on31 deputy ~hcriff and supporting staff WSilions will not be needed wiU1 the 1974--75 fiscal year. Added to lhe budget Thursday was : -$38,000 for increased staffing for the county's Sitton Home for young children "''ho are cared for because of crime: committed by their parents or by others. -battered children and others ~falling under the public care umbrella. The in- crease \\itl improve the ratio or staff members to children by about 80 percent. -$136,i46 for increa·sed staff in the Probatiod Department. Probation Officer _ 1'1argaret Grier asked ror 126 more posi- tions than tbe CA.O's staff granted her. She got 43. They Will · help alleviate a "greatly inc1·eased workload," add staff for a new drug treatment program and various other special programs man- dated by new stale Jaws. -$35,4n to add an engineering assis- tant tg the COWlty Communications Department staff. The sum, urged by Com n1unication s Director R. I. "Cuba " '.\•lorris, includes support. iquipment and staff for the engineer in addition to salary. ' -$39,487 for the Orange County Animal Shelter to allow the facility to be kept open on Sundays for the convenience of the public. The total Veterinary Public Health -budget -is $1 -miJUOn which is up $132,594 Over the current year, or 14 per- cent. County Health Officer · John l:t- Philp said the budget did °'t include .funds ro ra n e w animal shelter in the southeast part o[ the county. -$308,046 for the Orange County Medical Center which includes $300,000 for a ir conditioning 13 buildings. The total medica1 center budget is $28/2 million , up $2.3 million over the currenl year, or nine percent.. ' • -$100,000 lor1 the lieatth· DePartment for a ne\v program of pre-employment, 1nedical examinations of· all applicants for coooty ~ployment.,Purpose is r.o.i~ sure that the applicant can physically · perform the work proposed. -$30,500 for t 8 e Dee3rtment of Education which Will add one staff member and provide $20,000 additional for office expenses. DEAR PAT : I have a 1961 car and want to know w~the schedule is~for fit- ting those specla1 exhaust control devices on older cars. It seems to me that I read the lime limit has been extended, but I can!t remember the new effective date for thi s program to be required in California. Laguna Officers Seeking Y outli .. furrush "speed", a dangerous drug, lo . . -female employes of a H 0 11 y w 0 0 d Larson 1s ~ccused of supplymg mas.sage parlor. Carpenter with prescriptions Io r The $304,000 deletion from the previously proposed budget is for man- ning the fourth Uoor of the County Jail now under construction. The department total budget is $726,339, 'up $92,455 or U percent.over..:~ current year. Department head Dr. Robert Peterson proudly Pointed out that the educational services budget is less than one percent of the total county spen- ding. Most funds come from the state. D.C., Costa J\·1esa The Air RetOUl'Cff Board receatly 1u11pended the program reqoiriag "fit- ting of 1161-71 cin wtt.b oxldH ef elltogen control devices utU Oct. I, lt73. This 1uspentioa lndudea the reqatremm that 1 dev\ce be Installed at die time el resale and tbe lnslallolioD ,._ of lbe Jl"egr&m {or all vtbklet, previously ocbeduled to begin In July. Tiie progrom w:-; held up beeaase t.bt board food con- flrmatJOll ln a d.lagno1tlc center rtteartk report that there ls • corttlaUon betwee• faulty V1111Caam advance (an NOi: COltnl method) ud valved et er tor 1tl• n. Therefore, more time is beln._ allowed to evaluate the devices. • : D11"l19ht Saclng : DEAR PAT' I thought Daylight Sav- jpgs time was the Jaw in t1ti! country .. yet I know some ~tales are exempt from the jtme change. What government depart- ment oversees and controls Daylight Sav- ings Time and what current laws are in fffect? ' H.G .• HilntinllGD Buell ~ Under tbe Uatfenn Tlmt Act. w•lch became effective la 1M7, all sta&es. the Ptstrlct of Ctlambla ud U.S. ponessl!)Q ,Deglnnlni at% a.m. oa Ille laR Suaday la ;4prU and endlng at I •.Ill. • tllle 1ut llUnday In O<tol>er. Any olate, -y lep l.ttve aetioD, caa exempt tbelf from Ille law; HawaU did IO ta 1117, Arbeu t• )Ml, Mlcblpa in t•, UICI IM•a•a in_ Jilt. ne 1m lll!l~.!_to the u"" - jorm Time Act ~--olalff spilt !by time zones to ke tlaat tato eoaslder-iaden in u:empt g tllemselves. Al • ¥esult, Indian•'• ei:emptlon law 1ppllel :Only to the eastena portion of Its 1ta&e. rt'be Departmen_t of Tranl))Ortatloa, 1wblch over1ees tile act, b a 1 modified 'damlg tbe last lbree years some boo- ~artes In Indiana, Mlcklgan, Utah, Nortlll, 'Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Oregon ud Jrexas, due tn local problem!. I •• Tougl1 Brothel Law for Vegas? LAS VEGAS (AP) -A pl'IJ!lOM'I ,,rdinance mandating jail tentenc.-es for r&Orls convicted of sollciUng or ac. ~Ing an act o! prostltutkln has been in- ~roduccd before the Clark County Com- "J:n\ssion here. . The I01J8h bill wa• propooed last wtelt :~y Dist. Atty. Roy Woofter and brought before .the commission Wedne!lday by nsst. Dist. Atty. Charles Thompson, -who said crime associated with prostitution tuts reoched "dlsaslrou1 s)ropol'tionl'' in Lo.s Vcgns . In Rape Attempt A 19-yi?ar"°ld Laguna Beach woman was sexually attacked in he r Cliff Drive apartment and found unconscious by her roonupate early this morning in Laguna Beach. Police Lt. Robert '-1cMurray said the woman lost consciousness after her bk>use was ripped and she was struck 8nd knocked to the noor by an assailant. ~tcP.furray saJd the young victlln has no recall ol any events following the blackout and does not know if she may have been raped. Police Hsted the crime: as an attempted ripe. The woman told officers she was resting in bed listening to the radio when she heard a knock at the apartment door at about 10:30 p.m. Thursday. She told police she was expecting a caller, and opened the door . A man clad in white shorts or a swifn suit entered and told the woman: "I've !leetl you before, I want to see more of • you," M(:Murray sakl. She told officers she attempted to scream, but, wu choked with fear. The man grabbed her bloose, ripping It, and struck , her several times, McMurray said. 'Ibe would·be rapist was described as a man from 18 to Z5 years of age, about 180 pounds with medium length hair. Balboa Pavilion History Traced In Sunday Emtion Here's a quick look. at what editors i:,_i:- pect to be "Sunday's Best" in the Daily Pilol' PAVILION PAST -The 63-year-old Balboa Pavilion has been renovated and expanded 90 it seems an appropriate time to look back on the glory years of the Balboa Hop and the little red cars . Photos from early 1900s will accompany this nostalgia piece. MORE HISTORY IN PHOTOS -Stall Writer Hilary Kaye presents a 13-yeara ( s-day's Best) old Costa M .. boy's 1tary In "Hlltory In the Darkroom'' feature about his passion for printing old nepllv ... Llfl'E IN JAIL -Several organ1,.. tlon1, Including the Orange Co<lnly Grand Jl!'Y· are looktn1 lnlo conditions. trta~ meot 0( prlloners end lrninlng of guards 'at the Orange County Joil. Story will be told 11Y Slaff Writer John Zaller In YOU Section. ' Dr. Harry F. Larson, 51, ~nd Donald methamphetamine. Thomas said -and Sheriff James -. Johnson · & Son 20th Anniversary Clyde MARK IV LINCOLN • • • • • CONTINENTAL MERCURY MAR QUIS MERCURY MONTEGO • • • • MERCURY COUGAR MERCURY COMET • • • • • • MERCURY CAPRI • • • Big Savings! Big Savings! Big Savings ! Big Savings ! Big Savings! Big Savings ! Big Savings! Dick • NOTE See Our Big. Ad In Tho Pilot'• Classified S.C:tton Tomorrow With Anniversary Specials On All Our Und Cara As Woll. • • BIG SAVINGS ' ' • • • EVERY CAR IN STOCK • • .. Rome Of The New Car , , • "Geier .... r ... cN• • ,· • ENTIRE MONTH OF JUNE • "OranQ'&' Count~'' Fornily of Fine CoTj11 ' Llt1,,;(;c Jl ~~ 2121 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • MO-KIO . \ • • }Jome Of The New Car • , • ''Golde" T•tach'' ( , IJnwanted Chic ago Patroiman John Rae tzman _holds an hours~~ld in 1 fant he ~ad his P~{tner found in a garbage can 111 an alley on ~h1~ago s west side. Doct.<#5 said it was one hour old when found and 1s 10 excellent con· ditiod. It wiJI -~ put up for adoption if no parent~ are found. Hike for Aged ' 5.5% Benefit lricrease Likely \l.'ASHINGTON (AP 1 -The Senate Finance Committee has voted a 5.5 per- cent cost-of-living increase for 28 million Social Security beneficiaries, effective ~1ext ·January. Ind icatioils y;ere that both the Senate and Hou se would accept it. The panel decided on an 11-to--2 roll call Thursday to add the provision to a debl Jim.ii extension bill , even though Nixon administration officials had objected to ii. Comn1ittec Chairman Sen. Russell B. IAog (0-La.) said he was certain the Senate would approve the rider when it , acts on the bill next week. AND l·T \VAS learned tha1 Mouse Martl1,a Clainis "fl1itcl1,ell Ready To Protect 1Vixo11 , 'VA9HlNC:TON I UPI 1 r-.1artha Mitchell said today her husband John Mitchell \\'Ould "go to jail for Richard Nixon." "He's protecting the President of the United St ates.'' she declared in an early mornlng telephone conversation." ~irs. Mitchell said she had a nun1ber of "reasons'' to express 1hose vie\\·s but she declined to be specific. "I don't kno1v \.\·hy, bul maybe it's bcctiuse he had so much faith in Nixon. e\·cn after all this.'' she said ~l rs. ~1 i1chell declined , to say fron1 "'here she \\'8S calling. Thursday, she 11•as seen leaving 'her Ne1v York City apart1nent house with travel luggage. ~litchcll apparently stayed behind . • i\,o; to ho\V her husband is bearing up aft.er being implicated in the Watergate scpndal. Mrs. !\fitchcll said. "He's a hurt person . !\1y husband had more integ rity on 'Vall St reet than anyone else. He feels everybody's got their tail bet\\·een their legs and is running now.'' SHE SAID HER husbMd had lost a "helluva lot of weight." She once again Said she \rould be '·perfectly willing" to testify before the Watergate investigating conunittee, bu_t added "they don't want me." r..rrs. Mitchell said that "anyone \\1ho says my husband was fired" from the Committee to RHlect the President is "rroog. lie q u i t because of me.'' !'=hl• said. ' Democratic leaders were prepared to get their branch to ;iccept ii when the debt li mit measure goes to conference. 'l'he Jiouse already has passed the bill. Long said t he pace of inflation has been so great since the last Social Securi- 1 y boost in October 1972 that Congress has no alternative but to give some relief to ''these poor people who are the biggest 1 ictims or inflation." · The debt limit bill was chosen as the vehicle for the rider since the President must act on ii by June 30. SECRETARY OF th e Treasury George P. Shultz told the committee Thursday thal Nix ctn might have to veto the measure if it contained costly riders. But Long countered that Nixon always had supported cost-of-living adjustments in Social Security. "I don't sec ·why he ~·ould veto a bill that carries out \l'hat he himself has ad- vocated.'' Long said. Present law provides for a cost~f-liv ing adjustment but it \\'ould not take ef- fect witil January 1975. The Senate committee also added to the bill increas('s in payments for such adult \\'elrare categories as lhe aged, blrnd and disabled. TllE FINANCE Committee provision 1vould raise minimum payments from $130 monthly to $140 for a single person, and rr om $195 to S2IO for a couple. The Social Security hikes would cost $2.i5 billion over a full year. !he "'elfare increases $500 n1il!ion . The bill eontains no increase in payroll taxrs to pay fo r the higher benefits. Long •id there were a mple amounts in the Soc ial Sc::-urity trust fun d lO pay the $2.75 billion !or one year. DAILY PILOT DELI VERY SERVICE Orlivrty ot thr Daily Pilot 1~ guaran trrd Mtnd1v·Frlll•r: II vou llo not tla•• Y•u• P•~r OJ J; )II p.on .. c•U •nd your COPJ will IHI brtu9hl It JOU. Cl!I• ... li-tn uni!! 1:)(1 '·"'· Sf!urdlJ I nd SufldlJ: II ,.V .. Ml rtct l•t your <•PY _, • 1.m. s11urll1y, t r I 1.rn SunlllY. c111 1r.d a cnpy will bt brou;M 11 you. C~ll• art 1a-t 11 until IO 1,m, Telephone~ Mo;1 Dr1nqc Counly "''"' 1•1·0 t1 HorlhWt•I Hunl1nq'lon ltlCtl 1nd WtSlminlltr 1•~11111 S,in Clt mtnlt, C1pi•lr1ne lf1ct1, Son J111" C1pl1lr•no. O•n• ~•lnr, )OUlh l.•911n•, La91tn• HI'"' nt-U ll , Charged in Actions as POWs ~·:, WASIUNG'l'ON (AP ) -Two ligtiter pilots have been formalJy accused of 1uiscooduct for actions during their years ·in North Vlelnamese prisoocr of \\'ar camps, Pentagon...s.Q.urces ha\•e disclosed. They are the first officers lOC.:acc ch charges, \\'hich were brought car Adm. James B. Stockdale, of ronado. Stockdale, a caplain as a PO\V, v.'aS pro. rooted after he returned home. Fated Pla1ie's Pilot 'New To Airport' , PUERTO VALLARTA, a.fexico (UPI) • -Conlrol tower officials at the Puerto \'allarta airport said today the fiery crash of a Mexican OC9 that killed 'rT persons may have been caused by the pilot's lack of familiarity with the jagged terrain near the airport "Although the pilot was a veteran, he \Vas not familiar with this route," a spokesman said. '"Rtis is an are~ we call 'hardly practical' for landing." The pilot had radioed he was setting down for a landing when the plane slammed into a 3.000.foot peak only minutes from a safe landing, lllle Aeromexico OC'9 cruhed 20 miles sooth ol here Wednesday night while pre- paring to malce an intermediate stop be- t~'eeo Hotm.m and Mexico City. All 23 passengers, including 14 American and four crewmembers were killed. OFFICIALS DENIED rumors of an in- f\ight explosion. "There \\'as an explosion u•hen the plane hit and the light reflected ln the sky," Vera said. "Preliminary in- vestigations showed that the pilot mis- judged his altitude. He should have made a bank tum 18 kilometers (12 miles) earlier." - The plane crashed .into a mountainside at an altitude or more than 3,000 feet above sea level. Vera said it appeared it slammed directly into the mountain. The plastic-wrapped bodies of. the 27 \•ictims were w a i ting identification before being shipped to Mexico City to- day. "Some or them are unidentifiable.•· police spokesman Ricardo Vera told UPL ''They a re just pieces of bodies." ''The bodies and the wreckage of the plane were spread out over an area 100 meters by 50 meters," he said . "'The bodi es \\·ere taken do1vn on the backs of . mules, and then shipped here in am· bwlances." Salvage operations on the remote mountainside went on all day Thursday, hampered by heavy fog and jagged peaks that prevented effective cooperation from helicopter units. Federal air authorities sent accident experts to begin ·an investigation. 211d Cease-fh·e's 1st Week Ends; Violations Few SAIGON fUPl l -Vie tnam's second cease-fire endc..>d its fi rst u•eek today \\'ilh alleged Communist truCt! violations at thei r lo'>'·est point in a month. The Saigon (.'Ommand reported 57 Coin- munist-initiated incidents in the 24 hours ending at 6 a.m. today. the fewest sinc:c 51 y.·ere reported ~fay 24. The four-party Paris communique to reinforce the cease-fire took effecl a \reek ago today and Communist truce in- fractions alleged by Saigon h a v e dimini shed steadil y since then. [n the latest incidents, ho\.\•ever. the command said fi ve peasants -including 111·0 children -\Vere killed Tiiursday in 111·0 land-mine explosions in Quang Nam Province 350 miles north of Saigon. The t\\'O men are Navy Capt. Walter E. \Vilber, 43, of Columbia Cross RoadJS, Pa.. and ~1arine Lt. Col. Edison Wainright ~tiller, 41, of Tustin. In Tustin, ~1iller sa id, ,;J don'l kno\\'' anything about it ~xcept what I've heard on the news, so it v.•ould not be 8)> propriate to say ~nytbing at this time." -\\'ILBER WAS 'the executive olfice.r or a squadron ot Phantom F41 fighter planes . when he was shot down over North Viet- nam June 16, 1968. Miller's !\'Iarine F4 : Phantom went down over North Vietnam Oct. 13, 1967. The sources said Thur~Yuit Stockdale mailed the formal charges to Navy Secretary John 'Varner. Details.of Stockdale's accusations were n.o t avail able. Conlfjcted at his home, Stockdale said, ''I am not at liberty at this point Ui..con- finn or deny that I have filed those charges. I. .. wilJ not 00 able to laJ k about it until I am auth6riz.ed by the OOP (Deportment ol Defeme) to do so, , , You must lmderstand that no comment can be made in these eases until the men t harged are advised." MRS. DONAIJ> Kolari~ \of Clintou, Iowa, mother of l\filler, s\lid fler son t~ld her Wednesday that chark~ were betng brought against him, She l"Jd he did.not know w¥t Specific charges would be made. \ On . May 29, eight enlisted men were formally charged by Air Foree Col. Theodore Guyµ misconduct during their years of imprisonment. The eight men,\ all foot soldit'!rs cap- tured in South Vie nam. have denied any improper activities. Under a policy set out by Conner Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird. the Pc:nta__gQn is_ making _no. lo__mial charges against any of the 566. returned PO\Vs. The accusations by Guy and Stockdale are made u individual servicemen charging other .lndividµa.J strvicemen wider the military code rA justice. TIIERE IS A good chance many ol tlle , chaJ:gcs may l>" dropped. Each of the military servit;e secretaries must con- sider the evidence brought by GllJ' and Stockdale and decide if rourts-martt.1 will be convened. .\ 'Vilbcr has ackno1vledged making an- tiwar statements ~1hile in captivity. "J found out when I Md time to think about n1yself, where I \\'as. what we Were 1 doing, I found-out that my ;:·ence bothe'red me," he said in a t m- terview. A Navy man since 1968., \\'.ilber is mer- ried and has three SOllS all(l a~ Miller .a A'larine since 1949, l.s aim mar- _ried"ind has five sons. P~wers Sign Peace Accords1i WASHINGTON !AP) -The leaders ol the world's t1vo nuclear supefPO\\"ers pledged in a landmark agreement today to regulate their relations in a way to reduce the risk of nuclear \l'ar. President Nixon and Soviet Communist Party Secretary Leonid J_ Brezhnev reached the aC<,'O rd in the fifth da'y of their s ummit talks and prepared to sign it at the \\'bite House before heading on to Ca,lifomia \.\'he('e they "'ill conclude tbeir meetings on Sunday. In addit ion to its applica tion lo U.S.- Soviet , relations. the ngrecment applies also to the relations of either party y.·ith other countries. In this \1•ay, although technically bil<itera l. the agreement has multilateral implications. THE TI\"O LEADERS declared in the agreement that 1hey were "conscious that nuclear war would have devastating consequences for mankind"' and said they ------- \\'anted "to bring about conditions in \\'hich the danger of an outbreak of nuclear \\'ar anywhere in the \\'Orld \vould be reduced and ultimately eliminated." They pledged their cOW1trics lo '"act in such a \vay as lo prevent the develop- ment of situations "capable of causing a dangerous exacerbation of lheir rel:i- tioos. as to avoid military confrontations. and as lo exclude the outbreak of nuclear \\·ar between them and bet\\'Ci.'n either of the parties and other countries.·' Nixon and Brezhnev also agreed that !heir countries ··~·i ll refrain fro1n the threat or the use of force against the other party, against the allies of the , other party and against other co~tries, in circumstances \\'hich,may endanger international peace and security." AT A NE\\'S conference prior to th~ Conn.al signing, presidential assistant Henry A. Kissinger skirted questi ons on MARIGOLDS Re<Jula< 79c val. \\•hether this clause V.'OUld forbid U.S. bombing of Cambodia or v.'OUld have prevented the Soviet invasioo. of Czechoslovakia. Kissinger noted , ho\\'ever, that U.S. air strikes against Comn11,mist forces in Cambodia "'ere under v.·ay at the time -the agreement "·as being negotiated and that the bombing """RS not raised as ap- plyi ng to that pc1rtirular s ituation." \\'hen a ne11•s1nan asked ~·hether the agreement \\"Ould forestall any Soviet ac- tion against China, Ki ssinger rcspoodcd that the accord "'as "'not conceived as protec1ion for any country'' but added it "'ouid "have the practical consequence ol appl ying to the situation you describld. • U.S. AlLIES in Europe have expre55ed reservations in the p.::1st about any agreements "'hic h \voold restrict their use or AmlJrican-supplicd nu c I ea r \\'eapons in ftie event of a massive, con- \'entional Soviet attack. OPEN 7 DAYS GER MAINS PLANTER BOX 2' lon9 a•• wide 5.50 •al. 299 Marguerites 99¢ Y1llow l Wliif1 R19. 1.69. Mystery Gardenia 99¢ D•lic•t• doi.rbl• 9,.rd1ni1 wiih d1li9htf11I fr•- 9r1n c1. Reg. 1.98 Mexican Pottery 49¢ W1 h•~• • l1r91 11l1ciion. AU 1liep11 •11d 1i1e1. Pric11 frotn Hanging Baskets $3.98 Ouht1ndin9 Fi.rch1i11, be1utiful Beg oni11, l11c ioi.r1 C<1epin9 Ch.1rli1. Re9. 7.95 ~•lut . PetunJas 39¢ Dolly 7:30 to 6 Suodoy 8 to 5:30 Fair Weather Holds Sway 6 Pick pony pee. R19. 79t. Sun Fern 79¢ Good for hinging b•1k•h. Groi.rnd covtr - Pl1nt in Si.rn or Sh1d1, Rig. 1.91 -·•"' Tliu11dershoive rs lt1ur Pattern 011 Gulf, Eust Coasts A~apanthus 99¢ Tetnpernt11rex Al!Nnv Mli!h Lo"' P r .. .. " l\l l•ni. 1 i~ " n•k•r,tltlrt " ~ton ., .. Bu r1lg ll " (!MrlfSIC>n M " Cht rlo11r " ,, " cr,1c.eoo " " C nc!nn•ll "' " c1 .... 1.n11 " " o.,, ... ~, ., ,, Oetro l " M J're~no "' .. ~lonolulu " '" Ho111ton .. II " Jl(l\tiO<IYlli' .. " 1Car11.e1 Cl!v " • \,.al 'Vt<!ll is: " Ll!!lt ~Q(I, " i.~y,'•~111• .. ,. M W81#kff • ,, Mol1-t;.P•ul ll " ,._ '"'"• n " "ltw~ " " II g11.. t Clf\I " ,, ~·"' " ,. P11lm S11f/r\Cl1 '" ii ,..m Jtri01r' "" "~ •• ,,, 1111. " n " -~ •M tl I" ~ ruh " "ortl1fl(f, 0•1 ~ " lflt:P.m:xtd .. " "11cr1,....nt~ "' ,, \I LO\ffl .. " " \th , .t .. " ,. '"'" F'r1ncl1c11 .. " ...... 11, M " TfleJ,j, •I "' ~ Wilt.II n11on ., "' Cnllfor11la h= .Miii.a in 11lllE!11tv llfl ' ~O( ·O,~kl~ nolot 17 01 Af\Cl•I•• WI t llW ""1't ..; •t•t:h "II 10J i:tto•flt• 11'""6.lfi '"" ,.,. 111irt1 11r111on1 di¥ o1 -~ .. "',...... t1m~r11t11"'' T~t Cl111t1ri of btilli•nt blue flow1r1 -foli191 1ttr1c· fiy1 v••• roi.rnd . ~•9 · 1.91 viii.rt. 'REDWOOD SOIL IMi,tOVER Loosens compect- ed soil. Count,er- •cts •lkelinity. Ni · trogen fortified. l•tt• 4 cu "· ..... r19. $3.4t NCh NOW fCoastal 1ummor11 and 2 J 23 NEWPOR LY 0 TA MESA (Corner of P1tlo 642-4103 tidal dam' app•ar today on J B 0,1 .( $ _, Nowpol'I end Vlctorl1) NurHry 646-3925 Poae 20,I ,, _____________ ;,__.;. ___________________ _. , . ' l ·} Di\U ,y ~ILOT EDI TOBIAL PAGE Why the L9ng Dela ? • Telchen ·li! the Huutin~on Beach Union High School Plstrict .. re becoming increasingly vocal In air· 1og theli' views of district educational policies. . At the last meeting of the dlatrict board of educa· t1on, four representatives ol the District Educators As- sociation (DEA) complained to the board about some pol· icies which they saiii were creating hardships for teach· ers. They also were critical of board decisions that they said posed aerious lhfeats to the quality of educatio11 1n \he district. \Some o1 their complaints, especially those about spending priorities that channel funds to administrators rather tban instruction, are matters that ought to be seriously investigated. But there are questiOns that arise about some of their policy complaints and the timing involved in speak- ing out on these issues. As trustees pointed out. no teach- era .eal?)e to the bbard with their advi~e when these pol· icY decisions were rhaOe during the p~st year. That raises the obvious questior\\ of wheth~r the spate of compla!DU ts· motivated largely by. the con· tinuiJ\g palary .disagreement between trustees and leach· ers. ; ' ·" ' Ne~f:'-ifayhe. a B52?, .\ Oae' of llieE' · nts circulating at Huntington Beactt · ball' ves getting a new job title for Po- lice Cbidf{ Eule obttaille since he has become an air force commander. . JJt may be.\ stretching tbe point a bit, but with five h~copters ciirrentry assigned for police use and the purchase of an airplane for police patrol already ap- proved by the c;ity council, it would seem the police force is beco~~_g_an. uair force." · But RobitaiJ.Ji 11ays oth~~ise;. He points out that tile airplan!i \v;is requested and approved before the three hejioopters:''tfele released for city police use. The ' .. ' ~ ...... .. ' chief contends that DD one in the department knew or believed that the extra helicopters really could be ob- tained by the city and so the subject was never brought up in discussions of the airplane purchase. Well, the city has got the three Army helicopters to add to the two Hughes helicopters it's been using for the past three years. Someone ought to take a very hard look at the growing "air force" before the city spends $35,000 on an airplane to add to the already siieable fleet. · \ \ C~i::n~:.~a::e~~:g:~:~ design the perfect city of the future. . A group of seventh and eighlh graders at Rancho View S\:hool in Huntington Beach tackled the problem \ and had no problems coming up with a mod.el city. I Th~ answer, they decided, was simple. Limit popu· lation. ~ate automobile traffic in fayor of subways and overhead monorails. Enforce strict zoning regula- tions and, in some cases, simply place all industry under- ground, reserving the surface for open g.-een space. Buil d recycling centers and sewage disintegrators. Do away with all sources of pollution. Construct atomic generating plants for electricity. Develop plenty of parks and playgrounds. · . ~ The students, though, had one striking advantage over city planners.-When given the assignment, they were told not to worry ~bout cost. Unfortunately, today's city planners do not have Un· limited fu nds. And the best of their plans get no fur· · ther than the drawing board. 1 It costs nothing to dream. Maybe when these school children grow up, much of their vision will come t rue. Hea1thY dreams are worth pursuing. And the next dee· ade will see greater changes in our urban planning and style of living than in the past fifty years. H Multiple Causes Who Gets the Interest? For Gas Crisis • To the Editor: .• " . . Quit kldcllng us on the po .'IJ!>rtage · Any atudent of the problem knOws Ille aUrplua: ta gone because of weather, tilfures on the part o( officials to ,..., and industry 16 plaq for our vuracious appetites. The questiOa is not . Who did it, but How can we lil'! with it for the next X years. Can we be convinced that salvation lies Iii vohmtary speed reductitlll, mire cor pools. fewer UMectssary trips until'<lnass tr•J>Ort is: made available? Or must we be [oh:ecf away from the gas 1taOon by Nab .Jricel plus "keepaway''•rtUes? Since auto pa llDOUDted lo S3 % of crude oii pndocll In 1972, a IO Y •. reduction of car ulage could .a.ave 9,&e0,000,000 gallons ol. gasoline! •. • GAS IS only one item of the energy crisis that ·we have caused. It' appears: to me tbit We need a reminder to save erierl)' In the form of taxation awl lt\gher rates fOr excessive use. • - wi sbould plY higher i.xos for •bli(e< bomll, 1utot and appliances. Coo9ersely. -homes, small cars and mlnlmum eo'ergy .Jllet'S should pay leM. , · n 1a jftlly obvious .... that "'llrdlea of who •• at fautt; we are eotna to have lttl enet&Y to use for a l!JOC llJjie lo come, and we "bad better IM lo live wit h it. ~ LYMAN S. FAULKNER A H•rrls F iill' \ [ MAILBOX ) centers -for rich and poor -wou1d be a good first step. If the inlluence at borne is good, the children would still enjoy, the · experience: if the home wu undellranle, the pre-school training example set by well chosen teachers might oll!tt tbe ex- -amples set at home. • MABEL PARKER • '.l'rt1laed c-rie• . To Jhe Editor: 1)e Watergate Show, featuring the Southern · Ha m and his Watergate canaries, is rehearsed it seem~. The singers are interviewed under oath prior to airing the main show so that the DemocraUc-controlled committee can bring ..,t just the desired points on the alr. Can tbe President wbl7 Don't mi~ next week's show. How can you? JIM BOLDING To the F..ditor : The Sidney Hanis column would make Loiu!f Sert>lee me buy tho Daily Pilot if I ditln' read To the Editor: any other part. On June 4, 1973, a manuscript in a 9xl2 How refresblng lo see., SQJnethlpa that envelope with address typed very legibly says small _chlldnn llnlllla thtr._..,11 was sent to a friend in Loll Angeles from and It's Important for ~ ponals tO · Laguna Beach. It bi stJll·en n>ute today, knoWl.his playssucbap~.partin June 18. The return address was 'also child behavior. ~.. given. Another letter was also sent to the Everything we pick up tbe$e, days to same address m June 13 and neither has read keeps hammerU:tg away a t been received. dlsdpline, dlsclpllne, puai1110 ptlllisb. Ill lhe course of these two -1<s that it 1 takff a: letter to go from Laguna Beach 'JGt» MANY peopll. crave ,rm.iKe: too to '1..os Angeles, 1 received cor- many believe pt.llliUw meuures .are the respondence from Copenhagen (air mail) 'answtr to eve11"8DI. ,_ in tbree days' time. NO WODtllr we illl".•·~ l•IJe!IOft people sbou)tl la!<>W that sec-and tortured ddldnn. :nrfJ:;..;: ' JJ ond class mall will have no preference Studies are Indicating that the maftn~ -may .never get anywhere. I feel It Is ol dlscipllne and the tone tak!" with ridlculouJ for a typed piece of printed offspring, II asnally a repeat 9':'1he way matter to take all this Ume to arrive. the parents were treate4 by their Who do we complain to about such parents. lousy service? So what's the answer? Good child care SANDRA C. KENNER '9:15 Club' Promotion WASHINGTON -The White House has named a member or l~ Ql:·sterlou:i "at- tack group" of politidll &alehetmen to a top federal job where crlllc:s !tar he will Juggle statistics to sutt ~t Nixon's whims. 'it'• The attack group w11 at! up during the 1912 campaign under Wbi&e Rouse aide Charles Colson to fog over the Watergate scandal and to carry on i no-bolds-barred attack on Sen. George McGovern. It met dally at 9:t5 a.m. In the White House. So impressed was Watergater Jeb Magruder the deputy campaign aide, that he a1warded ils nlembc rS cu£01nks lettered "9:15." COLSON has revealed In a still-secret depoaltlon that one or the attack groUp's ltif members waS Edward Failor, a key ~ c1mp11in aide hired by campaign tlfreci« John Mitchell. Fillor used to go ·-dally to the attack group meetinp at the White House to plot antf. MctlOvem 1tr1legy. • (JACK ANDERSON) In the last few days, Failor has been rewarded with a job as head of the Com- merce Department's Social a n d Economics Statistics AdmlnlJtratlon. Along with hls bJldget of 1100 mllllon, be will control some 7 ,000 employes. More importantly, however, he will supervise the Census Bureau and other vital stallstlcal unlts. Critics fear lbe White House may have put him there purpdsely so he can tamper with figures to make lbe Nlxon economy look rosy. Failor. In a I011g talk with us, denied he took part ln any Watergate-style ac-- tlvitles as a member of the attack group. As Failor explained It: "We only wanled ai show the (llemocrats) wef8 doing bid things, alse, so peopltl would ·say, 'A plllgue on both your houles.1 " Dear Gloomy Gus Co-in' cidence -Ko in' sidens n. -Like the start of the season of backyard sunbathing &l}d the lower level flight patterns o( our police helicopters begiming at the same time. E. H. 0""°''1' Gitt Ulftlftelltf. .... IUIJMlftH ltV ~ •1111 11o 11111 qc:-rlt., reflect 1111 'rilw'I llf .._ ..........,~ SW ffllr ''' .-w M G!Mffty Gu .. DallY l'lter, With Music Goes Money And Scandal "We don 't want a \Vatergate in the mus ii:: business," says David Clayton- Thomas, former lead singer for Blood, Sweat and Tears. But the popular record industry has been rocked by a widening scandal involvinR payola, drugs, sex, booze and organized crime. One high in- dustry executive, Clive J, Davis, v:as (GUEST REPORT) fired as president of Columbia Records for allegedly misusing corporate funds and another, Larry Wynshaw, was bounced on charges or falsifying inv~ices. A federal grand jury and a federal anti~rime strike force are investigating the whole reCording QIJSiness and one.of- ficial bas said: "We believe that almost every ma)or Te<.'Ord company is in- volved." The scandal does share one conunon element with Watergate: enormous amounts of cash which gave rise to temptation and were di!ficult to trace when misused. POPULAR MUSIC has become a multi-billion-dollar industry, with record and tape sales lopping $Z billion last year to surpass movies ($1.3 billion), network television ($1 billion), professional sports ($MO 'milllon) and Broadway (136 million) in revenues. Forbes magazine reported that at least 50 rock, pop and country music superstars now are earning between $2 million and $6 million a year, making the salary of ITT's Harold Gene en, America's highest-paid business ex· ecutive, look like so much chicken feed. "It had to happen," one record ex- ecutive said or the scandal. "The in· dustry is just too big, there's loO much money around, and there are loo many people who got too greedy." IN THE LATE 1950s, another payola scandal shook the Industry. It was revealed that record comp.'Uly promotion . men used money, liquor and free vaca· lions to persuade radio disc jockiys to play and praise certain records. The Federal Trade Commission In 1960 sa id that 255 disc jockeys and other station personnel were involved, and issued more than 150 complaints and cease-nod· desist orders. Congress thnt year approved several amendments to the Federal Com· murucations Acl of 1~ requiring full ..disclosure or any payola by the recipient. The same bill outlawed the riggi ng of television quiz shows. Before the latest payola scandal Is over, the 1934 Act may have to go back to the drawlng boards to be a'Jncnded once again. Editorial Reu:orch • Profit Ill Rent· Deposits Let's S3¥ you are one of the millions ot ( J Calilorniclns who rent an apartment or a duplex, or whate ver. • RUS WALTON If you are, when you first rented your "'-----------"' place you were oo doubt required to put up a security deposit to cover any damage that might be done to the prop- teres t on money tied up in those advance rents or deposjts. The 5 percent interest commences after the tenant has occupied fhe premises and paid the rent for 90 day s. erty while you occu· pied the premises. Jn addition, you probably had to pay the last month's rent along with the first. Some apartment houses also require deposits -for such things as pets, clean- ing, and even keys. In ooe case, a couple renting a $265 apartment bad to pay $599 in advance rents and deposits: LAST MONTH'S rent, $285 ; security deposit, $100; pet deposit, $100 ; cleaning fee , 1-\0, and key deposit, $4. Plus a $60 deposit on the elect:ronically~perated garage doors. How's that for openers? From the landlord's viewpoint, such depositS and advances w e r e un- derstandable and necessary. . There are tenants who skip without paying the rent ; those who depart leav- ing bums in the carpets, dents in the walls and holes in the windows. Fair is fair. And, Alr. Garcia's legislation is fair . Some financial protection against such vagrancy and vaqdalism is certainly pfoper. After all, why should someone . else make money on the tenant's frozen BUT, IT'S NOT the principle, it's th~ assets? money. In fact, the tenant stands to lose 1n two YOu pay yoUr advance rent and your w~ys when his money is impounded deposits and your money sits there -in wllhout interest. the landlord's bank acoount. lt stays there all the man.th~ and all the years you rent his property; or, he ~ it foS capital for other ventu~es. Either way, -the money works -for him but not for you . Take, for e"xample, one giant apart· ment complex in Los Angeles. It has 4237 units. The insurance company that, owns the complex requires a '200 advance deposit otl each apartment. For tbose 4237 'units the deposits total $847,400. At 5 percent interest per year, those deposits produce $42,350 -for the insurance company. · ASSEMBLYMAN Alex Garcia, D-Los Angeles, has introduced AB 1332 to pro-- vi<te the renter some redress. His bill would require liindlords Of four or more units to pay renters 5 percent in- FIRsr, the loss of the lnlertst. Second, the losa to inflation. Look What happens to the value of that money whlle it is held in the landlord's deep freeze . , . Take the young couple tbal put up the $599 in advance rents and deposits. Sup- pose they occupy that apartment for five years. At the going rate of inflation, In five years the purchasing power on that '599 would be down to $420. They would lose about $llKl to inflation while the landlord was making at least $150 on their money. What kind of a deal is that? Mr .. Garcia's AB 1332 would, at' least. Jet the renter realize a return on his compulsory investment, and some kind of a hedge against. the termites of inflation. How Hookers Became Professionals The vigorous efforts of Margo St. James in the spring of 1973 to organize the country 's hookers led inevitably to a nationwide sex boycott. Armed with a $5,00'.l foundation grant. the attractive, 35- yeaMld Miss St. James - a former lady of the evening herself -began sue· cessfully enlisting card~arrying mem- bers in her new "craft guild," as she called it. And there was no question · she seriously hoped to improve the plight of America's borbootal working girls - lq the most degraded and abused par· tlcipants in our free enterprise system. INITIAU.Y, Miss St. James' efforts were dismissed in men's clu~ and locller rooms with sniggering jokes about union labels and sit-down strikes. But an off- 1flck s . . ( ART HOPPE • ) hand tt:mark she made during a press confere~e sowed the seeds of the na· " tiooa1 upheaval that was to follow. "If you take an apartment, a resort trip or candy from someone, it's legal," she said of women who sell thei r favors. "But if you take $50 in cash, they'll try to make ,a Jelony out of it'." IT WAS Ms. Bella Steinem, Chairperson or WOW, the W or I d Organization of Women, who saw the possibilities inherent in this totally unfair dictate of society. "Females have been selling their favors for a million years," she told a cheering WOW rally. "Those who sell for pleasure or companionship are called loose women. Those who sell for cash are call- ed prostitutes. And those who sell for mink coats and ~Uamond necklaces are called jet-setters or movie stars. "But worst of all are the females who are trained from infancy to keep what they've got to sell until some. man offe rs them a life-lone contract of financial liUP- port. They're called housewives . "I say that any woman who has cv~r put on lipstick or earrings should be ar· rested tor consplracy to commi l a felony !" THE UNARGUABLE logic o1 WOW 's militant stand gradually sank home on the nation's women. Soon any tagl!I' young .swain who knelt at hi! beloved's feet to of.fer an engagement ring .was greeted with a kick in 'the jaw and on angry 9hout of "What do you take me tor!" Throughout the land, sobbii:lg wives slammed bedroom doors on fru strAtcd hbsbands. Beauty salOll! and boutiques . went bankrupt. And "Son of ll<ep Throat" lost 12.4 million at the box of. lice. The nationwide sex boycott was on. The man who iaved the dny-was the distinguished social scientist, Dr. Homer T. Pettibone, D.V.M. "While· it is true.that women sell their bodies," he said, "so do men. Scientists se.11 their minds, postmen their feet, baritones their vocal cords, hod carriers ~heir backs, psychiatrists their ears, writers their fingers and politicians their tongues. "We are, let's face it, a nation ol hookers. And there is ll9 reason we should applaud lhe selling of all parts of the human body but one ." ONCE AGAIN wtassailable I o g i c prevailed. "Huzzah !" cried the city gen· try , both male and female. And everything returned to nonnal, Except, of course, that prostitution became not only legal, but an honored and respe<ted prolessloo. • For, after all, as Dr. Pettibone so rightly p ut it, "selling what yoo in- disputably own for an honest proClt is the very comerstooe of our free enterprise c:if6tem.'' DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, PubU.her Thoma.& Kt:t:vil, Editor 8arbara Krtibkh. Eaitoriai Page Editor The ediklrial ,page of 1M-Da~ Pilot .&eeks to lnfOn'n and stlmui.te read~ by prtt11tttlitW on th1s pqe diventeiCornmentuy' on topjct or in- terest by i)mdic•ted colu:mnlrtt anct cartoontst#, by provi<fins a fonam tor rnden' views and by prcsemq this nt\\'ti>ii.ptt's opln'°"9 and kleu an (:llJTent topica. The ed1torill op,lrdon!J of the Dllly Pilot 11.PSJC&r only in the editorial coJu.mn •t the top ol the pq:e, Opinions exprtMtd by t~ coi.. u.mn!sta and cartoonists and Jcttn- wrlten ~ 1.htlr O\\'Tl and no tndorae- menl ot thtlr views by the t>al!y Pllol -kl be w......s. Friday, June 22, ·1973 \ ' •• Motorist Kills LA Lawman VAN NUYS (AP ) -An in· tensive manhunt was un· der way today for s motorist who shot and kJlled a Los· Angeles police officer af.ter he \\'8S stopped for a routine traf. fie violation In this Los Angeles suburb. Det ectives said motorcycle ·officer Charles C. Ca raccll!O, · 35. a 14-year veteran or the depar 1 tment, \as killed in- ( ~id1Fs 1 ) stantly Thul'sdat' night with at least one gun shot wound iii the chest. They said the motorist drove awaf after the shooting. Authorities reported at least four shots were fired at Caraccillo, a 14-year police veteran, as he walked toward the motorist after parking his motorcycle. The o ff i c e r , though mortally w o u n. d e d , n·red three shots at his Prornise Kept Judith, (left) and Ruth Leonardini, 18, of La Paz, Bolivia, get a welcome hug from Pinocchio a~ the two girls visited Disneyland Thursday. The gU"is will study .at Brigham Young University alter a prom· is'e from President-Nixon 18. years ago of a college education in the United States. Nixon was-Vice- President at the time. assailant but all reportedly------------------- went wUd. • esulUhfne • SACRAMENTO (AP) -The 1973 "Wilson Sunshine Act" - which allows two hou rs of Daylight Saving Time Instead or one -has 'been sent to the Senate de spite protests that children refuse to go to bed until dark . Thursday, the bill's author , Assemblyman Bob Wilson (D- San Diego), saidt that wide- awake children and outdoor movies nothwithstanding, the extra two hours of daylight would be advantageous., e Secret Army SAN DIEGO (AP) - A man descr ibed by prosecutors as former state coordinator or the paramilitary Secret Army Organization has been placed on three years' probation after pleading guilty to Possessing nammable materials. Jerry Lynn Davis, 31, or Lemon Grove was released from jail Thursday and put on pfobation by Superior Court Judge Franklin B. Orfield. Davis had spent more than 90 days in · jail awaiting sen· tencing. . eottAgaln • LQS ·ANGELES (UPI) Sam Yorty, who took a lot of kidding during hls 12 years as ma yor about his penchant for travel, will spend the last eight days of his tenn on an ocean cruise to Alaska . ·Yorty, defeated last month by city councilma'.!_ T~m Bradley, slipped ou[ of city hall unnoticed Thursday. An assistant said he left word he would not be back. Yorty and his wife were scheduled to leave today on the Spirit of London for the voyage to Alaska. The ship won't be beck until July 6, meaning '(orty will miss Bradley's tn- apguratlon. 9 Union Strife !NDIO (AP) Two Teamsters Union organizers were charged with kidnap and assault with intent to comrpit murder Thursday, sheriffs deputies said. Picketing by Qther Teamsters and United Farmworkers supPorters was regarded to be mo s tl y peaceful elsewhere. The two men -identified as Guadalupe Tamez. 3S, of Santa Ana, and Guadalupe Sau~o. 28, of Salinas -were charged With attacking Israel Guad- jardo, 28. a foreman ror Maag Citrus in 1-lecca. Blaze Contained . By Fire Fighters By The Associated Press Soot-smeared fire fi ghters today contained the year's first major California brush fire and continued to battle a newer blaze in the Sequoia Na- tional Forest timber 'country. A U.S. Forest Service spokesman sa'id a 7,200-acre blaze was contained early to- day in the high desert count ry near Banning. They said they hoped to ha ve it under control by Saturday. ALTHOUGH TJIE Banning blaze burned some trees at the edge of the San Bernardino National Forest, the main target was brush. No structures were reported damaged and Jnjuriea were confined to minor mnoke or burn cases involVing llre lighters . A string of !ires reportedly Ex-solon's Wife Gets .Jail Term SANTA MONICA (AP) Susan Marie Brophy, the wife of former Assemblyman Bill Brophy, has been sentenced to six months in jail for vehicular mansla ughter in the deaths or a Cudahy couple. Superior Cou rt J u d g e Laurence Rittenband imposed the sentence Thursday and allowed the 20-year-old fonner model to be freed on $1,000 bail pending appeal of her con- viction in March, Mrs. Brophy was arrested after Chris Panas, 48, and-his wUe, Eli zabeth. 49, were killed when the Brophy auto crashed head-on into their car on July 18, 1972. The crash was on PacUic C.oast Highway near Sunset Boulevard . Authorities said Mrs. Brophy was driving under the tnnuence of drugs when the crash occurred. Teller Fle<l For Lurich FREMONT IU P!l -When a new bank teller at the Fre- mont Bank went to lunch and failed to return, a quick audit showed $7 ,000 was missing. Police Wednesday issued an all-points bulletin for Miss Carol L. Skod.i, 21, Newark, who began work only two weeks ago. Police said her car was found abandoned and her apartment was empty. Porno Rule Reaction Court Decision Draivs Praise, Dam1iation By The Associated Press The U.S . Su preme Court's decision on obscenity and bard-<:ore pornography drew praise from some state and counl y officials and predlc· tions of chaos and undue cen.~rshi p from other Califor- nians. give impetus to California legislative efforts to remove lhe stan dard rrom state law, ~aid Los Ani,.o.eles Coun ty Dist. AU y. Joseph P. Busclw 111T'S A VERY strong opi- n lo n and r e defines pornography. \Vithout question the op inion does away with the requirement for experts to testify and providc.s that the GOV. RONALD Re a g an jury will be the finder of fact. said, ··This decision is one of That will make it easier for the most important rulings to prosec ution . If the legislature .. be made by the U.S. Supreme will amend the statutes to JN THURSDAY'S dec ision. Courl in recent years. And, coincide with the Su preme lhe high court held that local v.•hile it is long overdue, J am Court oplnlon, it \Viii make eomn1un ity standards rather ext remely gr~ti~ied and pleas-prosecution easier." than national st3ndard:S may ed that a maJor1ty·of the court But Los Angeles City Atty. be used to determine whether ha s concurred in the absolute {Raterlal is obscene, and that necessity of helping local com· Burt Pines described the ne.w juries and courts no longer munities to rid themselves of standards as vague and d1f· oeed to find that material Is the corrupting Jnlluencc ol , ficu lt to apply . "I wlll be In a "ufterly" without redeeming ha rd-core pornography." position ' of having to enforce jroclal value before it Is As a vehicle for pnr this law. so I cap't give my Geelared obscene. nouncements on the case, views personally,'' he said . ; Those two parts or the Burger chose a California case "We have limited resources. t bplnlon \vr1tt.en by Chief· l.n which Marvin rwlillcr wns intend to emphasize the Jus!lcc Wnrnn Burger drew convicted in COst.a f\.1esa under greatest criminal problems - ihe n\oSt atlcntlon fr o·m a state law of mailing property and protection against p1,11hori1ics charged wlth en-un solicited sexually explicit property and proteclion against jorclng obscenity laws. m11terial1. Or:inge County violence. I'm not about to tie : The rcjoclion of the test of Deputy Dist. AU y. Oretta up all the resources or this of· 1oclal values as 11 con· Sears. who wo~ked on he flee prosecuting pomogra· ~titut !onttl standard should Miller case, said : phy." , ' Censure Of Fonda LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A City Council commJttfe has turned down a resolution that wouJd have condemned ac: tress Jane Fonda for nmarb she made about American POWs. THE COUNCIL'S a t a t e , county and federal affairs committee voted Thursday to kill a resolution by Coun- cilman Arthur K. Snyder that accused the film star of characterizing returned fOWs as liars, hypocrites \a n d pawns. ~ \ Miss Fonda spoke to the committee and said be r statem ents about POWs had been directed agalnst the ''h and-pic ked few who participate in press · con· ferences." A spokesman for t he American CivJI L I b e rt i e s Union said auch a censure would be unconstitutional and added that the council "had no right to intrude on anybody's beliefs." • CALIFORNIA Ftldiy, Junt 22, 1973 DAILY PILOT 5 rl Helrs Angels' Girl Held . THE FINEST IN ENTERTAINMENT THE BENNETI BROS. Now Appearing Every Thurodey -Friday. I. S1turd1y Nit• • 11 PIGGY'S FIRESIDE LOUNGE . ' 19582 Jn HUNTINGTON LANES , Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach A. Topnotch Show With A LH Vega• Flair . ' - ..---BEFORE THE SHOW-~ · Enjoy A Ch1mp1gne Dinner For 2 TOP SIRLOIN. D.JNNER with CHAMPAGNE JOIN US THIS · WEEKEND 0 . c. Fair Quffn Cont11t Sund1y, noon South Coast ?tu~ I 1' ' '· ¥ ~ !: ! f • .. " " \ \ ) ' < 0 \"/.A Oran.de f;oast r· 8 EDITION T oday's Final N.}:". Stoeks ' I 66, NO. 173, ·4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 22, 1973 N TEN CEN?S I . Mayor Urges Upper • Ba r By L. PETER KRIEG 01 lllt 0.Uy Plltt ltaff Ne\vport Beach Atayor Donald A. l\tclnnls, in lhe most diploinatic of terms, today told Orange County supervisors to get off the dime and determine how much cf Upper Newpor~ Bay they want preserved. Supervisor.s three weeks ago asked city ofiicials for a detailed report on what they would do with the Irvine company's Back Bay properties if there is no wildJUe presfrvc. A wildlife preserve for perha.ps all the undeveloped acreage sufTOUJl'Jlog the bay has been under study by local, state and federal agencies for more than a ye ar. Supervisors alsQ asked what geological restraints there are to development around the bay. The:Y said their appraiser needs to know the ans\vcrs so he can come up wit!111_v~lue of the property. foilclnnis. in his response, t o I d supervisors they could have found tM answers, themselves, by reading .the city's proposed,.general plan. t.-·tclnnis said t¥iO types of development could occur if there is no preserve. He pointed._ O!_lt' the ptan calls for either lo\v-density residential development or a "recreational commercial development of an open space natm'e." He also said the general plan point> out there are no more seismic problems around the bay than anywhere else in the city. 11>e mayor put It this "'ay: .. We have prepared-answers to the five queetlons regarding the city of Newport Beach's position on development of Up- per Bay. "Altbouglr the answer! to "°"'• of - these questioos may not be completely definitive, we believe that they are com- pleU! enough to give adequai. guidelines to the apprraisers in their determiriation ars ree Cooli11g Off o.il)' Ill._. St•ll """' IW lllcNN KMfller ' Nan Johnson, 17, of Orange. combines her desire for a s un tan and her desire to keep cool during a beaching outing on the Balboa Peninsula. Record heat has sent inland Southern Californians flocking to the Orange Coast this wee and, although tern· peratures are expected to drop slight.Iy this week· eiid, local authorities are girding for big crowds at the beaches. Atto1"ne ys £01" Remington To Ask Freedom on Bail , By AR111UR R. VINSEL Of tlle OelfY l"Utt Ii.ff Defense attorneys for a qne-time Newport Beach attorney linked in testimony to gangland terror tactics in~ volving the• plotting of murder and mayhem today were lo appeal for a bail ~ing lhat might allow their clierlt freedom while awaiting trial. Mj chael K. Remington, 33, of Fullerton. w1s ordered Thursday to be arraigned July 3 In Orange County Superior Court ca four counts each of conspiracy to Commit murder and soliciting for murder. Judge Paul G. Mast said at the close of a four and a half day preUminary hear- ing' In Central Orange County Judjcial District Court that be was using discre· Uon in refusing bail. Defense lawyers Wiiiiam Marshall Aforgan and Robert Green had argued • ~mog Bririgs -' :AutQ W arnirig Motorists were urged today to reduce driving to the minimum necessary as smog concentrations jn Orange County began climbing toward levels dangerous to health. A spokesman for the -Orange County Air Pollution C o n t r o I · District said at 9:30 a.m. that rorecasters predlct smog oxidant levels wil Jr:lsc to .4 parts per mll· llon. The level of .2 Is considered dang rous to henlth. Tbe s1>0kcsmun said the heavy smog wa·s . expected because or , "stegnant cqndltlons" In the South Coasl Air basin that would not permit smog to float out to sea. I - that charges against their client n·ill not hold up in court. Karate expert ·Gary ~1. nollo. 20, of Garden Grove. considered to be lhc damaging' prosecution \ll'itness, has . testified Remington relaincd him to ar- range three contracts to carry out acts of violence. Speaking softly -occasionally showing annoyance at the persistent cross ex· amination -Rollo admitted lying to District Attorney's investigators at one point in the case. Defense attorney Morgan -a flam· boyant lawyer whose dramatic gestures and ringing tones led one newsman to dub him Clarence Darrow in a double knit suit -accused the chief witness of the lie. "Yes," replied Rollo, \Vho 'vill be sentenced Tuesday following his guilty plea to a ch.arge of soliciting for murdc.r. "What aOOut?" Morgan plodded. "J made some self-serving state1nents ... '' Rollo replied before being cut off by Remington's counsel, who said that \Vas irrelevant. Re admitted under further qu estioning that ho told investigators he h.lred some- one e I s e to thwart one 1nurder plot after he h.ad hired an earlier prosecution \Vitncss to carry it out. Rollo said he felt he would help h.is own predictmenl . DeCense altorney Green challenged charges agalnsl Remington on th.al aspect, saying no consp iracy could be In- volved because Rollo was acting as an agent for the district attorney. Judge1 Mast earlier contradicted the concept that Rollo's testimony should be: rejeeted on grounds of coercion be<lauso ha was cooperating wlth the District At· torooy 's Office. f\1uch of it dealt Thursday with $mall details of the Investigation In which Rollo aided au thoriti es in probing Remington's alleged rote in arranging eli mination of \Vit.ncsscs in civil suits with which be wa s tnV"Olved. Holl ywood Stunt Acto-~ Sargent Succumbs at 73 Donald E. Sargent, a 22-year Corona dcl lo.far residen t "'ho was a stunt man In the fledgling days of Hollywood died \Vednesday. He was 73. . l\.ir. Sargent, a life-Jong Californian, was in the movies almost from the birth or the film industry. lie started working as a free-lance stunt man for all the major filmmakers as early as 19'l0. ms specialty was riding runaway horses and buggy rigs. As cars became more and more popular and highway chase scenes began· appearing in the 1930s, Mr. Sargeot began crashing cars for the cameras. He went through hundreds of mock smashups until the early 1940's wen a high-powered sedan he was driving went over a cliff on cue but he Called to get out in lime. He escaped with cuts and bruises, but the scene marked an end to his stunting days. 1t1r. Sargent conUnued to work ln films until the mid-1950s as a cameraman until his retir~ent alter 37 years in the in- dustry. , \Vith his growth of white whiskers and se;i farer's cap. he was known to many In Qirooa de1 1t1ar as "The Captain." Services for Mr. Sargent will be private. ac«>rding to a Bell-Broadway l\.1ortuary spokesman. He is survived by his wife, Felicia, of the family home at 10038 E. Coast Highway; two sons, J)()n and David or Huntington Beach; a daughter, D:lane Voorhees of Huntington Beach, and lwo gn.ndchildren. New Site Supported SACRAMENTO (AP) -The move to build n new legislative building here htis gained . a strong advocate In Assemblyman Willie Brown, the Snn Francisco Democrat who chairs the Assembly Wa}'a and Means C:Oarmlttec. ' T Spectacular Visit Set President Nixon and Soviet COmmunist Party Secretary Leonid Brezhnev are, due to arrive on the South Orange ~ this evening to -begin a whi;lwind weekend that promises to be rar .different from the week's businesslike,sb·lil mi t talks. The two leaders are erpected to touch down at ·the El Toro AICAS at about the dinner hour and aJ.ler a brief night's rest the summit ~e somewhat of a speCfacular. -' ---_ -~ On Saturdiiy lllMs C4ll for a major rece~ aroUncC jlle 4 Casa Pacifica'• pooy,iliith marl..-. jrom San Juan · cijHStraoo proy\dlflg the music. ,, SUP&RPOWER .CHIEFS SIGN pEACE AC:CORP-$tory, Page 4 And the P.reiident may even bang a few licks -at the piano during the af- ternoon event.~Local sources have said the stair bas commandeered a small spinnet 'to be brought to the pool area oo - Saturday. Also on the agenda for the weekend - possibly for Saturday -will be a short fiight to Los Angeles where the two leaders will tour the exhibition of im· pre.Wonist paintings ~ loan to the U.S. by the Soviet Union. The reception Saturday, ho\\'ever, will be the major social event. Hollywood stars, and other VIP guests are on ·the invitation list of 150 names. They include Gov. and Mrs. Rooald Reagan, Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Red Skelton and others. On Sunday, the day BreUlnev plans tG ]eave, the President will welcome the Skylab astronauts. The invitation went out today to the three space pioneers in a telegram from the President "I welcome you home from the Skylab spa_ce ship 'Earth' and I also look forward to seeing you at San Clemente on Sunday," a portion of the "telegram read. Brezhnev's departure details have not been specilied so far. It js assumed that the staff will give more details ot the Russian leader's acbeduJe later this weekend. Such secrecy bas been the rule during Brezhnev's Visit. · So far no details have been released either on a· JXISS.ible joint address to the people of the U.S. and USSR l)y Brezhnev -similar to that made by the Presid~t during his trip to 1'f06C0w last year. Contingency plans have been made for (See BREZHNEV, ,Pase Z) Clea11:up Slated 011 Bal Island The Balboa Island • • Br o o m Brigade" will stage its annual cleanup Saturday and Sunday dur· ing which virtually any trash or junk wlll be picked up and disposed of by city trash crews. Balboa I s I a n d Improvement A"°°ation spokesmen Nid the crews will piclt vp any pl«e of reluse excopt dirt ·and building materials. Volunteers will go out onto the . sidewalks and beaches and into the alleys to pick UP, accumulated litter In the homeOwners' communJty betterment campaign. The BUA says trash·lhould be put at the regular pickup point by no later than 1 a.m. to assure pickup by the city trucks. of the value of the Upper tsay lands fe r public acquisition. . "Jt is the position of the Ne"'POrt Beach City Council that the l.nterests or an concerned "'ill be best served if the feasibility of public ownership of any or all of the area is determihed at the earlial possible time. "'lberefore we urge the Board of Supervisors to coopcrate~fully with other interested agencies and to take whatever steps are required to achieve that rez determi')ation as rapidly as possible." t>.lclnni s, at "'londay night's council meeting, will propose for~·arding an eight-page report ans.,•:ering the ques- tions. In part, it says: "The Newport Beach City Council. by its reeent action in approving the Land Use Elemen of-the-Newport -Beach General Plan, bas indicated that it sup- ports the acquisition or· the Uppe r Ncwpor:t Bay and associated surrounding (See MclNNJS, Page %) . ' • •• I ---- -~ nev l I . .;;; •· ' Ul"f ,........ SKYLAB ASTRONAUTS DOWN TO EARTH Al'TER LONG TRIP Conrad (wavlnvl, Weltz (I"') and Kerwin on Ticonderoga Skylab Astronaut T eam Back in 'Super Shape' ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (UPI) -Skylab's astronauts· landed in "super shape" in the Paci.fie ~~n today 'and \Yalked shakily a few 'minutes later to the doctors' office to see how well they withstood a record 28 days in space. The bullseye splashdown and q·uick recovery by this veteran aircraft ~arrier marked· a flawless end to a mission that started wilh failure. The flight took a major step toward giving man a place in space. Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J . Weitz returned in the Apollo command ship in which they were launched May 25. The bi' '1 p ace station remained _ in earth orbit ready for ifs next crew in five \\'eeks. President Ni:ir:on quickly sent a telegram to the men who just completed an 11.5 million mll e journey and invited them to visit him at San Cemente Sun- da y. "You have given conclusive evidence that even with the most ad vanced scien· title an d technological support in the world, the courage and resourcefu"ess of good men are still central to the suc- cess of the human adventure," the Presi· dent said. · Conrad, commander of the nation 's first space station mission, reassured recovery forces several times that he and hls crewmen were all right after the strenuous r&entry which quickly built up deceleration forces 3~ times the force of gravity. "Everybody's in super shape,'' Conrad radioed a[ter three orange-and-white striped parachutes eased the command module into the gently rolling seas of the Pacific SM miles southwest of San Diego . Kerwin and \Veitz reported some di1.zintsa after . splashdown ;ind Kerwin Inflated a pair of pres..ure pants: to kctp his blood pressure from dropping to the point where he might faint. · 'I'hls' tCmporaty effect "'as expected because of the tendency or astronauts' blood to pool in their leg•, away !rom the brain, as a result of heart laziness in- duced by long exposure to the lack o( gravity. Dr. tawrence Dietlein, a NASA physi- cian, said the astroriauts lOQked in "qui~e good" health, "far better from what r personally expected.'*. The spacecraft was hoisted aboard this ship with the pilots still inside, a switch from past pr:ocodurrs made to keep the astronauts' exertion to a mini1num. l\1cdi.cs wei;e ready to carry Conrad. Kerwin and Weltz on stretchers, if necessary, from their scorched capsule to the blue mobile medJcal laboratories 65 feet away. orange Coast_ We athe r That .expected cooling trend will make itselr felt along the Orange Coast Saturday with low clouds ln the morning hours and highs In the upper 70s at tile beaches. lnJand temperatures will be nt?ar 90. That's cooler? INSIDE TODAY J.le's really a song wrirtr not Cl singer. bMt llarlaia Je n11inos. 21, ts f t11dh1g b& a Newport Btacl1 11iol1t club t1igagen1~11t that sonietimts it's rl1e stt1ger ond •1ot the &0110 · tliat cou11 ts. lli1r ttO'f"y is on Page 25 of to- day's \Veeke1K1er. At 'l'eur ..,...k• ) L.M, • .,. r I Ml Jiit lt CelltOf'lll.ll s CllSJltleCI J:>.q Ctlftlcl )I C:rttt""'11 J4 C>ulll Mtlkff 11 •dlltf'lll ll•ta i 1n...-111111M11t )t.)I Fllllntt ll•t l Fw ft11 lletOf"O 11 Htl'etctH ' 11 Allll L..t!td1r~ 11 Mtllkl! t ,.,,..,!ff ..,, M111NI ll'ulldl 1t N1rf ... 1t flitwt 4, 11 Oftlltt CMl!tlf' -11 '••l111r•"'-t1-tt l\'l'llt ~ ..... , II ,,.,,. , .. ,. S10tk Mlrk1l1 U.IJ Ttl..,h.ltn It WMlher t W_ .. N-1 IJ.11 Wtrtll ,.._., 4, II W""tflC!tl' Jt.,n • N -f'rl~J11nf22, 1973 ' Two Nixon Plane Suieide r Test Pilots Slwot Do·w1i Own Craft, ' $2 Million ,' POINT MUGU (UPI) -Two clvlll1n test pilots fiylng a UO mil· lion Navy jot fighter shot tho tlrcrtll down with one of Ill own mis- siles, according to the Navy. The Gntmman F14 Tomcat crashed in flames In the Pa ctnc Ocean \Vednesday about 70 miles soulbwest of lhe Naval Air Station " By llELEN THOMAS . here. • WASHINGTON (UPI) -The fed<ral government sftys jt ha5 spent nearly $2 million Improving President Nlr:on's ho1nes in Florida and Califor.nia. all or it relating to "securiiy." The expenses ranged from fire sprinklers to golf carts for the Secret Servict. The crew, Grumman empJoyes, parachuted safely and were picked up from the water by a Navy heUcppter. A Navy spokesman said Thursday that while the Tomcat was test-firing an unarme.d Sparrow missile "the ntissile did not clear the aircraft sufficientl y and stntck the bottom of the fuselage." Grumman did not make the missile or its firing system. The \Vhile House also disclosed that businessman Robert 1-1. Abplanalp; who The Navy suspended firing the Sparrow missiles from Fl4s un- til the cause of the accident is determined. • helped the President buy his San Clemente retreat, has been getting some It was the third time sihce December, 1970, an F14 crashed. mooev back in the form of rent .• associated with Nixon 's Key .Biscayne, fla., place. , A month ago the Wblte House had listed '39,000 in federal f\lllds for im- proving t.he Western While House at San C.1emente since Nlion boiight it ln·196i. Last ·week, after a further search of rec:ord , this figure was raised to M&0,302. On Thuraday, General Ser v t c t s Administration (GSA), the governmenl's hou1ek,eeping agency. said a still more extensive audit put lhe total· federal ex- l'ro11t Pqe I McINNIS ... areas by appropriate public agencies !or open 11pace putpo6es." "However, the Land Ute Element also indicates that If that acquJsltion 'does not occur, the city \'.ill appro'ie appropriate development of private lands within the . pmditure at San Clemente at $703,367 over four-fiscal years beginning July 1, lg&g. area. This included only the residence lhere1 ' 1In approving any private develop- not the \\'hite I1owe offlce space. ment, consideration will be giv.tn to GSA listed for the firat Ume the federal geologic hazards. flood hazards, grading ; expenditure for improvements, equi~ and park space appropriate to the m.enl, operation and malnlenance at the development White House complex at Key Biscayne, . "The city will require additional sludies including both resiQ.ence arid office space by developers to assure that appropri ate -· ·$1,180.521, spread over five fiscal measures are taken to mitigate hazards years beginning July 1, 1968. due to either seismic or flood plain prol>- 1.ccluded in lhe Key Biscayne figure Je~ity poli cy provides for park ac- was $161,463 for renti ng two houses in the quiaition or dedicatiQfl in relation to city complex for the Secfet Service and White slandards. specific lands to bi acq uired House conununicatiOlll stall. The White House said one of these for park purposes have not at this time houses is owned b)' Abplioalp. and the beet designa ted, and it 1.s not believed other is owned in. the name of Edwin H. that such lands can be designated and underwood, truslee for the Indiana Na-zoned for open space unlJl the city is uonal Bank, Indianapolis. prepared to proceed immediately with The White HOuse said all of the tax-acqul.sUion." "par.ez-s '. money spent in Saa Clemente Specifically, the report says, the city and . Key Biscayne . was for security· does not plan to block-any bluff develop- related improveme,nts and that all work ment on the grouoda of seismic hazards. was done at the request of the Secret Adequate erosion control meuures are Service, rlot the.President planned, the report said. The GSA data showed ilems such as It also says no development will likely $53 &« in £!seal 1970 for interior security be blocked because of flood control z.on-and. communications at San Clemente. It ing. Signups Slated For Recreatio1i 111 Newport Registration !or most or. lhe Newport Beach summer recreation programs \Viii ...!@.ke plat e Saturday at the Ne.wpor1 Harbor Hi gh School admissions o!fice. h1ore than 1,000 Newport Beach residents are expected to sign up for a wide range of lessons and activiUes. Regi stration will run from 9 a.m. to noon . Younger children's classes iriclude arts and crafts, drama workshop, creative movement and swimming. Women may take classes in "dan- cerci se," yoga exercise, "slim n' trim." and potential development. Saturday's registration also includes classes for the whole family like fishing, folk guitar, golf. judc, gymnastics, sail- ing. surfing, Swim1ning I and Tennis I and IL There are unique CO!JCSes . too like bridge, oil painting, and bonsai. the oriental art of planting. plus a Chinese cooking class taught by a Chinese e:s:pert. • Contractor Walks Off College Job. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ~ o.llY 111111 ltlH \ A general contractor . responsi~le lar construction or four ma1or bulld10gs o~ I . the Orange Coast College campus 1 Cos ta l\1esa has walked off the job, leav- ing behind unfinished projects worth nearly it million. Affected are the new food services laboratory, tutorial center and faculty of- fice s horticulture building. and stu~ent cent~r. All were scheduled for compleUon sometime next year. ·'This will probably pul off completion of the buildings six months to a year at the -very best," predicted Robert Humphreys, a trustee of the Coast Com- munity Collegi District. ' He said that none of the buildings are needed cZ.itically to a cc o m rn o d a t e students. Gene Hannan ot the Los Angeles con- tracting { i rm Hannan.B.J. Gladd Construclion Company served t. h e cancellalion of contract notice on the district June 12. Among the reasons ror \fr1nination he C'ites are the district's alleged failure lo: -i\1ake payments. - -Process and handle claims for extra work and change orders. -Inspect and supervise \\'Ork to allow normal undisrupted progress. -Prevent numerous p r o b 1 e m 1 • discrepancies and corrections in the plans and specifications. District officials, '¥\'ho are no \\' negotiating \vilh the !inn £or paymenl of "'·ork already compleled, have a different version of the dis~le. . "The district's side of this slory is lhat the company simply hasn't followed the plans and speclflcaUons of t h e architect," said Humphreys. "It's gone from bad to worse and has become a king-size headache." The Hannan-B.J. Gladd Construction Company bid the job at $994,500, nearly $60,000 below the archltect's estimate. Humphreys believes the extraordlnarlly- low bid ls responsible for the problem. STEPPING DOWN Postmaster Kluglewlc1 Mesa Postmaster Jol111 Klugiewicz ·wm Step -Do,~n John Klugiewic:r:, postmaster of Costa Mesa lor lhe past 10 years. is retiring next Friday after 38 years in the U.S. Postal ·Service. A replacement for t he 61·year-old postmaster will be annOWlced rollowing e\'aluations or postal nu1nagers in' the en- tire Southern California area, according · to Hector G. Godinez, sectional center manager for Orange County. Kluglewicz, of 2662 Riverside Drive, came to the Harbor Area in July, 1948, from Sebastopol in Northern California to work as a window and distribution clerk on Balboa Island. He later became station superinlendent of the Balboa Island Post Office and on Feb. I, 1963, assumed the position of postmaster for Costa Mesa. · --· • Tustin POW Won't Talk < A releas.ed 1\tst1n Mafi!le prisoner or "'"ar today refu.sed to comment on charg· es or misconduct broug~t against him by a fellow POW. LL. OJI. Edison \Vainright Miller, 41 , issued a brief statement relayed to tht. press by the information olfi ce of ~mp TWO EX-POWS CHARGED IN MISCONDUCT-Story, Pogo 4 Pendleton where it Is believed Miller "'ill be based. He Is presently on "con- valescet1t leavef'-a Pendleton spokesman said. A de!eMe deparlment spokesman in Washington confirmed Thursday that Lt. Col. ~Oller and Navy Capt. Walter E, \Vilber, 43, of Columb~ CroM Roads, Pa., had been charged with misconduct in NOrth Vietnam prison camps by Rea r Admiral James V. Stockdale o f Coronado. ~filler said today . "I have oo specific commenl on any charges at th.iS" time. I have only receoUy learned of this action and have not yet had a chance to determine exactly what I am being cMrged with. "I realize this is a serious matter and It will be a difficult time for 1ny family and friends," Miller said. . Attempts to reach him at his Tustin home this mon1ing through contacts at the Voices o{ Vital America (VIVA) of· lice }>roved futile. A VIVA organizallon spokesman said h1rs. Miller had no comment on the charges and was leaving the Miller residence with their five l90rul, three or whom are school age and "have just suf· fertd too much from all of thil." o'ur1ng Miller's confinement in North Vietnam, he frequently WI! the subject ol news Items and was often brought berore television cameras as an example of the bwnane treatment being given U.S. servicemen by their North Viet- namese captors. aisO included $3,303 in fiscal 1970 for golf And the kind o( development -if there carts for the Secrel Service patrol at Key is to be development -"will be limited Biscayne. to a Jow-lntemlty residential develop- 1-----""o-years-Iater. there appem_another.__ment or--a-recreatlODll--eommerclal , Item of $5,230 for three secret Service development of an open space nature," golf carts there. the report says. AbplanalR, a Bronxville, N · Y · · It says a planned community-type of Newport Beach residents who miss Saturday's slgnup and non-res idents who wish to register may do so June 25-28 at the CommWlity Youth Center in Corona del Mar from 9-11 a.m. and 5-8 p.m. The recreation officials said ·all classes are on a first-come, first-served-basis and' class enrollmeht is limited . City residents may register for ad- diUonal late summer classes in sailing, surfing and termis 111 and 1V July 23 at the Community Youlh Center from 9-11 a.m. and 5-8 p.m. ''He's finding that he can't follow the specification! and wants to make change~ because he bid the job too low." he said. Humphreys added lhat this rfpresenls the fi rst ma}or contract cance llation in the district's history. District offi cials hope that the negotia- -tions,-scheduied..lo.be c.omp~e_dJ?~ly 5, will result in a clean break between the district and the builder. The next step would be to readvertise the job and to award completion of the buildings tO another construction firm. Kluglewlcz says he has received in· quiries from prospective employers in other fields but that he may turn the of- rcn down because he does not want to leave the Costa h1esa area. : The retiring postmaster grew up In the Chicago area and · entered the Postal servltnafterwork ing-in-a-drug-atore,as a salesman, and doing office work. Even while he was in the Navy Klugiewlcz did poslal work, handling the malls in S1.n Francisco: San ·Diego and the Fiji Island$. 2 More Seized -JJrSex Caper--- f businessman. who made a fortune z.ontng wtll be required. perfectiog lhe valve which . operates· aerosol .spray cans, lent Nixon "25,000 in 1969 to help hi!'I bu,)i the original II.I acre San Clemente· property for 11.5 milli on. rn 19711 Abplanalp bought 23 r of these I acres back from Nixon for fl.25 million. l cancollng · the I o a n and leaving Nixon I, ·~ $;9 &Cftlf the houle,, the enjoyment ·l or the other 23 acres, and an investment ~1 of his own of $251,000. The White House said the Nixons them.!lelves paid for •tl,11514 in Im- provements, makinftbelr net tnvettment "174 ,514. From these figures, the breakdown of '¥\'ho has what investment in the San Clemente retreat is as follows : -The Nixons: $374,000. -Abplanalp : $1.25 mill ion. -'fhc taxpayers: $703,367. Me:xican's Cai· Search IDegal IVAi\fl!NGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supremel"Co'!irt: has ruled that U.S. im· migral{Oq 'atiPlorlties acted · lllegalty when .u.y ~bed the car o[ a Mex.Jean citizen.:'~~ . JiOr)b of the border wlthoo '.f~nt. -By a.,·Jr-4 ·:-.,Ote, the col1rt Thursday rever~l.olv.et cour.t decision upholding the s · ~O(,a car belonging to Conrado Alme~. , The ' 116arcli turned up 181 pl)Unds of marijuarla which led to :the Mellcan's subseq'uent caivlclion on federal drug charge!~' • OlANGI C041T • DAILY PILOT T11t ,Or•1111• C-t OAIL'f 1111.0T, ,will'I Wflic'll '' comDlnecl '"• N1W1°Pr1u, 11 pubtrshftl b'f 111-. 0r.:ii11 '°4111 Pllllill1l'lln!I Com"'nl'. StP•• r111 eolt°"' art D11tlll1Jlld, Motld•'I' fflrc1119h Frla•Y. tor (Mii MIH, 'N-•I Setotll. ..,llllll"lllD" 81i~ll/FO\if'l111ft V1ll1y, LtO.,,._ 111~. ,, .. r.,.t5'ddlff&cll ...,. Sin '"""'""' l•n J"'n (1pl1Tr1~11, A 1lnot1 •etlo<lll Mlllo!I 11 S11i~ll1llNI Jttut111y1 lnO Sul'ld1y1. T~ Dl'lnclPtl Pllbll1lll11t p1t111 11 •1 UO W.11 l•r $rrHI, COiia M... C.l/rot11i., tJtN. llob•tl N •. W11d ~r111d"'1 anO JIUblltl\tr J•e• Jt Curley Vl<'t Prt~lc:l1111 t M Gtr>l<'tl Mtllllt< Thom11 IC11wil El•!e• Thom11 A. Mutp~int M•M•Olllt l!!IUor l . Peter 1Crl11 Nt•-1 ltKll Cllr lt,._• New,.rt heclt OHke JJJJ Newport lowltwtrtl M1 IU119 Atltlr111: l'.0 . lo• 1115, 'lt6J .............. (Ollt M~lt UI Wttf Nr ltrnt Li.tVll• •••lllJ m ,_, """"w MUl'lllfl!llOll 8ttdll 11111 INd'I lotlt••rd S.11 Cltmtll"; -.S NOllll El Camll'lt llt .. 1 , .. .,.... (1141 .. , .. ,,, c~ .,...,..,..., 641-un C.,'l'rftlll, 1111. Qflf!Ot CMS/ l"\lblll.flW. ~~:.•·,,!,~tr":' .,;~~~'·= rNr .. ,..,..¥(.. ...itll<tlll t11«ltl ... , "lfUloll tf (OOt'l1t/ll 0-. s~ Cit .. ~''"" Hiii et Cttlt Mftt, Ct1"91'mt. ~!Ion b-r e1rrltr tt ... -tlllW'I W -~ tJ,11 "*"tllr,.t l'ftllrttrr ... ,1 ... 1• '2." -"''"· .. 117 Students Set Choir Concert lri Huntington A choir compooed of 117 of Orange COunty's top high ochool students will give i 00-minule concert in Hlllltinglon Beach tonight covering the mtaic spec- trum from serious classic to popular pieces. The Amba ssadors, due to leave on a two-'¥\·eck European tour next month, will prt;!senl the same program tonight they will later offer in five Swiss cltles. The musical group will include 18 studei1ts frcrrn University High School. nine from ?i.1ission Viejo High School , four from San Clemente High School. three from Huntinglon Beach High . School, and ooe person each from Corona del f!..1ar. Estancia , and Costa l\1esa high schools. Non-residents and others can sign up July 24-28 at the same time. Girls' softball division A play started this week, but penons still Interested may apply for later registration by eall- .ing the recreation office. The city does not ha ve a summer boys· softball league because the Harbor area boys' league hand.Jes most of the boys who want to play summer ball. The Community Youth Center will also be ottering activities ranging from organiC' gardening to an ice melting con· test . Persons Interested should call &U- 7606 for more informatton. Summer excursion for the entire fami- ly to Southern California run spots are 31so being offered . The trips will be every Wednesday .for seven week.a starting July 11 with a trtp to the San Diego \Vild Animal Park. ADD 3 Trips on successive weeks following the San Diego excursion will be to Universal Studios. "'tagic Mol.Mtain. Knoll 's Berry Farm. Sea World, the Los Angeles Zoo. Disneyland and Busch Gardens. Crow11ing of Miss Newport To l{ick Off Hawaii Week The crowning of a new Miss Newport Beach tonight at the Newport Harbor Chamber o f Commerce Commodore's Ball will kick off the merchants' annunl }fawail \Veek festivities. Five high sc hool coeds are in corn-. petition to become the successor to Karen French of Corona del h1ar, the reigning l\1iss Ne\vport. The five finalists include Kim Luce, 16; Deborah I1odgins, 17. and Pandora Rich~ n10nd, 17, of Corona del f.far High and Karen Binning. 16, end Susan Odell, J5, or Newport llarbor ~ligh. The queen will be chosen by the Newport Jayc~s on the basis of poise, personality, congenially, speaking ability and talent. The new queen, end her four princesses will serve as Ha14•aii \Veck royalty from J\1onday to July 1. dur ing "A'hic h lhey will make appearances ~t the 5 tores participating in the special promotional acllvily. Pnrtlclpating merchants throughout Newport Beach will feature special sales. polyneslan entertainment, ans and crafts and other contests and City ~Jail will also be decked out in Hay,·allHn-style, say Chamber Hawaii Week organizers . Mayor Donald Mclnnis has officiall y prqclalmed lhe week as H•wali \Veek ln Newport Beach. Tho grand finale of lhe week's events will lnclude drawlnas for three trlps lo Hawaii, all expenses paid. The prl.ze1 will go to a customer who entered at a partlclpatlng store, to one participating merchant and to one employe. Trophies will be awarded to the . merchaqts wilh tl)e best tropical window dl!plRy and·to the employe with the mo~t attracllve native altlre during the week. ' Day by day Hawaii ~eek events sc heduled by the Chamber include: TUESDAY -Hawaiian entertainment by the Islanders et Fashion Island from 10 a.m. to noon ; Islanders from noon to l p.m. at Kiwanis meeting at Villa Sweden In Corona de! f\.1ar Rlld then strolling !ron1 store to store In Corona del Mar un- til 4:30 p.m. \VEONESDAY -The Islanders at Harbor View Center from 10 to 11 a.m. From 11 a.m. to noon on Main Street Balboa Island and from noon to 4:30 p.m. at the Lido Shop:'!. Also a progressive luuu at Lido Shops with one 11awaihu1 dish at each participaling store. THURSDAY -The Islanders from 10 .. a.n1, to noon at lhc Bays ide Shopping Center and ngaln at noon nt lhe Elks Club. lslnnders from I p.m. 10 4:30 p.m. at Fnshion Ji;lnnd along '¥l1ith dcmonslr1:1· tlon of nati ve flawallan craflll. JUNE 29 -Islanders at Enstblurr Shopping Center rro.m 10 a.m. to J p.m. and EH \Vcstcllff Shopping Center from t p'.1n. to 4:30 p.m. Also at Westcli[f from JO a.m. to noon, l..onnie of lfonolulu w111 demonstrate the art or Hawaiian blanket-I making. Alao June 29 from I p.m. to 4:30 p.m. Lonnie will \veave at the Richard's Market f\-Iall in Lido Shops and the St. Andrews Presbylc.rlan Church Icthus Team will sing Hawallnn.-chrlstian songs at Fas hion Island at 7:30 p.m. JUNE 30 -Isla nders at Fashion Island trom IO ::IO n.n1. to 4:30 p.m. giving Hula lessons at the Fashion -Court. ,JUL Y I -Grand finale Pau Puty at Newporter Inn. Poolside-luau with en- tertnlnment sta'rts at 6 p.m. and ts open to the public at a cosl of $7.~ per person. FrotlOPtipI BREZHNEV. • • such an address from the San Clemente compound. however. Although Brezbnev leaves on Sunday , Niion will not. Initial reports said that the President plans to stay on in San Clemente for a v.·eek or more. He holds a bachelor's degree in businm IM!mln!Jlratloo from Ctll State Long Beach .' He obtained his diploma at the age of 48. . Sewage Leaks Again LOS , ANGELES IAPl -Raw sewage seeped lnto Los Angeles harbor for the second time In a week when auxiliary pumps ralled lo handle peak 00\\' periods. officials say. LONDON (UPI) -Police aald today they airesteGtWO women m canntctlon with the Lord 'Llmbton lfx 1candal. Both women were taken to New Scotland Yard 'and interviewed by' detectives. a . police spokesman said . They were not ldenutled. Police sourct1 said one of them is a friend of Norma Levy, the call girl at the center of the acandal. Lambton and E•rl Jelllcoe - both government ministers - resigned after· admitting they were clients of call girls. I ' Summer Safe ConlinueJ LEATHER SOFAS & CHAIRS ON SALE NOW • LHther and Bra ss are natural partners. With quality materials, 9ood desi9n and craftsm1nship ... ·tho result " • furniture classic. Reg. $1320 SALE $999 Reg· $1470 SALE $1099 Top Grai~ Glove Soft LHthor -F1nt1tlic v.lue -91>" length •. If you're looking for quality, upholstery, dining, badroorn, or occasional furniture , 11 your ch1nce to purchua the finest 11 sole prices. Stop in today. Fret, interior dt1i9 n service •vailable DREXEL-HERITA6E.-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASl AN - INTER I 0 R-5 WHKDATS & SATURDAYS t ;OO re l tlO P~IDAY 'TIL ftOO now NEWPORT BEACH e 1111 WESTCll'' Dlt.. 642·2010 t0,111 S11nd1y t2-5 :JOI LA6UNA BEACH e JCS NOltTH COAST MWY. IOptn Su1141y 12·11JOJ 4t4·6111 TORRANCE e 2J64t HAWTHORNE ILVO. J11-127t • I • DAU,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . Firidin Middle Road " When Newpod-Kesa school ·trustees adOpted next year's emplo19 aJary schedule contalnln• a six percent raise, they also apparently dllC!Jred a urulateral end to this year's pay negotiati9ns. _. District officials claim the board action ls final and the wagea are. now non.negotiable. Bui the problem Is, the six percent ligore the board WTlved at had never been discussed or even seen by the teachers until the night ~f the decision. Trustees apparently felt pay talks had gone on long enough -the district offering five percent and teachers aski ng 7 .5 -and the time had come to halt them. Though teacher leaders say district instructors will probably accept the district's six percent fi¥ure, they say the offer still* must be seen and ratified by the teachers. shaped and influenced by the commission. How the new members vote, react 'and voice opinions in the months ahead Will most likely be critical factors. 1 Both men, Hall Seely and James Parker, are at- torneys who have represented developers locally. Both ~ay they carry no pre-determined planning philosophies onto the commission. Seely served for two years on the city's Parks, Beaches and Recreation Commission, and was chairman in 1972. Parker has been the Chamber of Commerce's chief analyst and spokesman on the general plan before the city council. The question is, especially as the commission works toward completion of the development-controlling gen- eral plan, how much effect will these two new views and votes have on what finally goes into that plao? Both Seely and Parker are strong proponents of local government control. They condemn recent actions • iThey claim the negotiations aren't over at all but -ralherA he .. bo.,..i'.l .. silcpercent is me!®'_ a final offer. Unfortunately; the major teacher organiza ons- won't be able to ;get a reading from their members· until \>~ the Soµth Coast Re ional Coastal Co.ns_erv!lioo C=om~· ___ 1 JJUSSion as an a · m to bble in local affairs. fall. By .'tben, Since the budget must be adopted in August, h<!Jl!d ·be unwise-to start juggling the budget· ·,'f: ~ again. ' , It remaifu to ·,,be seen whether the board's rather >:.., ~ptm:Y letWll'lil:s bought some long·term .. employe _ , ' d!Ua~acfJon at U. method along with temporary sat· ~ l~?ril!t !be Dgure. . . 1''f~ ,,, ·~ "'"'"' · .... ~~·Planning Boof-up . llJ'wO DBWr planning-1 commissioners will take their , , . ._ seats next month, steppmg into the thick of some of the 1bl,egest plaonlng headaches Newport Beach ever has ficed. ~ . ·"' The 111neral plan, traffic, parking, the environment · aiid the 'future !ize and character of the city are being (I ' But they say i · to the city !o ward off these encroachments by taking strong, innov~tive action to .. correct the-problems from within. To date, such efforts by the commission and council have been inadequate · and too often inconsistent .. . The i!npg_d,an.c.e .an<linfiuence t{lat a planning com· mission has on its community depends primarily on two things -the staff input it gets and the strength of the people serving on it. _ln the Past the politically-conscious city council hM! not· supported many of the tough decisions and innQva- tive recommendations of the commission . · The bringing aboard of two new commissioners is a good time for the planning commission to look into strengthening and streamlining its hearing procedures, and to resolve...,tb speak out on planning more definitely and more aggressively to tlie public"" and to the city council. N -~ul~~p_le ·Causes For . Gas Crisis Who Gets .. the Interest? To the F.dltor: Qult b!dJng us on the 1as '!b<>rtag•. Alty student ol the problem mows the .,rptiq· iJ gone because of weather, fdUl'll on the part of officials to -illtf-*• and industry to plan for oor 'VOiidous appetites. T1ie q~ irnot- Wbo did it, but How can we live with it for the next X years. Can we be coovio~ that salvation lies tn voluntary speed reducUon, more car poolst fewer unne<:eSS&ry trips uotil mass transport la made availebie? Or must we be forced away from the gas s~ation by liicb ~ plua "keepews)I." taxes' ~-auto pa OlhOUDted to S3 ~ of crude 4il pnid\lcll Iii 1972, a IO~ reduction o1 car uap could aave 9,660,000,000 gallons of gafoUne!, . GAS IS only me-,tem of the energy crisis that we have_ caused. It appears to me ~ we need a reminder to save eQer&Y la the form of taxation and higher ntm for aaeaaive use.. "Ire -pay higher tares !or bigger homes, a11to1 and appliance.. Convenely, aoll -· small cars lllid minimum -.r'*"~dpeyless. ll 11 PRlt1 -..... that reprdless of wbo . .., at fault, we are IOinl to have 1elli elWl1 to use for a long time to come. and we had better learn to live !'Ith it. LYMAN. S. FAULKNER A Barrit F- To the F.dlto" Tile Sidne~ Harris <"Olwnn would make me buy the Daily Pilot lf I didn~ read any otlwr pert. How refreshing to see somethlng that ·says smaU childno ln\ilale their earents and It's important for -parents to tnow this pla)'> such lll'impanao!I ~ in ~ behavior. · . , • Bve/ythlng we pick •up these clan to 'rUd • ke<;>S '111111_,,. away a t diactpUile. clisclpline, "puDllb,' punish. ; ... TOO llANY people.,.,. ~e; too maa,y ~ pua(ti\le ~ are the -to·• ..... "'''* No ..................... /;iiial·battered .... toe lllltd dill-. . Studies are lndlciUni that the manner ol dlllcipllne and the tone taken with off11>rin8~i1 UllUllly a repea Lot_tbe ~ the ,pareall were treated by their , pe..ats. So what's the inswcr? Good child care [ MAILBOX J centers -for rich and poor -.,..·ould be a good first step. If the influence at home is good, the children would itiU enjoy the experience; if the home waa undesirable, the pre-school training example aet by well chosen teachers might olfset the ex- amples set at home. MABEL PARKER Tralned C•-rie• To the Editor: The Waterg ate Show, featuring the Southern Ham and his Watergate canaries, is rehearsed it seems. The lingers are interviewed under oath prior lo alrinC the main show so 'that the Democratio-controUed committee can ~ out just the desired polnts on the air. Can the President win? )'~'t miss next ~eek's show. How can JIM BOLDING Loua11 Serdee To the Editor: On June 4, 1973, a manuscript in a 9x12 envelope with address typed very legibly was sent to a lriend in Loa Angeles from Laguna llMch. It Is still en n>Ute today, June 18. The return address was also given. Another letter was also sent to the same address on June 13 and neither has been receiveG. In the course or these two weeb that it takes a letter lo go from Laguna Beach to Los Angeles, I received cor- respondeDce from Coptmhagen (air mail) in three days' time. I believe people should know that sec- ond clus mall will have no preference -may qever get anywhere. I feel it is rldiculoos for a ·typed piece ol printed matter &o ~ke all Ibis time to arrive. -Who do-we compllllft to about-such lousy Service? SANDRA C. KENNER '9:15 Club' Prorrwtion , •WASHINGTON -The White House has named a member of its m:·sterious "at- tack group" of political halchetmen to a top federal job where critict fear he will jugle statistics to suit Prelldent ?jl.xon's whims. r 1be attack group was let UP. during the 1872 campaign under Wbite Rouse aide Charle! Colson to fog Qn\' Ille Watergate ocondal and to carry_oa 1.11o·bokls-barred 1tiicll: on Sen. George ·McGoYvn. II met dally at 9: 15 a.m. In the White -So Impreat<d was Waterpter Jeb Map-yder, the deputy ca.mpaigo ekle, that lie awarded lta members c:ull\lnks lettered "9 : 15." nltSON bas ...,,..Jed in a atiU-secret depoaltlon that one of the attack group'• l!fy intmborftas ~ward Failor, a key 'Hixon cam aide hi..&! ~y camp.lgn tll*1or J tchell. Failor uaed to go l1111011 dallJ .to the atlllcl< group' liwY p at Ibo White Hoose to plot anti· Mc:Govent 1ttategy, . ' (JACK ANDERSON) Jn the Wt few days. Failor has been rewarded.with a job as head ol the Com- merce Department's Social a n d Economica SU.tl.ttics Admlnfltratlon. Along with his budget of l tllll mlllion, he will control some 7 ,000 employes. More ImportanUy, 1-ever, he will supervise the Census Bureau and other vital statlstlcal units. CrjUc.1 fear the White llOUIO may have put him there purpooely oo-lle can tamper with flp'eo to mall:~ the Nixon economy look rosy. FallOr, In a long talk wlth us, denied he look part In an¥ Watergate-style ac· tlvlUes as a member of the attack group. AJ Failor •11J>lalned It: "We only wanted to show the (Democrats) were doing .bad thJngs, also, 90 people would say, 'A plague on both your houses. 1 " Dear Gloomy Gus Co-in' cidence -Ko in' sidens n. Like tbe start of the season of backyard sunbathing and the lower level flight patterns of our police helicopters beginning at the same time. E. H. Ollom,. Out -h .... Wllm'"-1 01 l'Hdef's ....... not ~rily retloftt tll• _.....,, ot ""' ~. s.... rour ••• ...-v.-,...-G...,...'i' GOS, Dlltf f'llef. Wi-th Music Goes Money And Scandal I "We don't want a \Vatergate in the music business," says David Clayton- Tbomas, fonne r lead singer for Blood, Sweat and Tears. But the popular record industry has been rocked by a widening scandal involving payola. drugs, sex, booze and organi1.ed crime. One high in- dustry executive. Oive J . Davis, \Vas ( GUES~ REPORT) fired as president of Columbia Recards for allegedly misusing corporate funds and another, Larry Wynshaw, was bounced on charges of falsifying invoices. A federal grand jucy and a federal anti-<:rime strike force are investigating the whole recording business and one of· ficia1 bas said: "We believe that almost every majOr record ·company is in- volved." The scandal does share one common element with Watergate: eoonnous amounts of cash which gave rise lo temptaUon and were difficult to trace when misused. · POPULAR MUSIC ha! becoo>e a multi·blllion-dollar industry, with reronf and tape sales topping $2 billion la st year to surpass movies ($1.3 billion}, network television ($1 billion), professional sports ($540 million) and Broadway ($36 mWkll) in revenues. Forbes magazine reported that at least 50 rock, pop and Country music superstars now are earning between $2 million and $6 miJlion a year, making the salary of J'M''s Harold G c n e e n , America's highest-paid business ex· ecutive, look like so much chicken feed . · "It had to happen,'' one record ex- ecutive said or the scandal. "Tbe in· dustry is just too big, there's t0o much money around, and there are too many people who got too greedy." IN THE LATE t950s, another peyola scandal shook the industry. It was revealed that record company promotion men used money, liquor and free vaca- tions to persuade radio disc jockeys to play and praise certain records. The ~ederal Trade Commission In 1960 said that 155 disc jockeyS and other station personnel were involved, and issued more than 150 complaints and cease-and· desist orders. Congress that year approved several amendments to tbe Federal Coin· munications Act of 1934 requiring full discl06ure of any payoln by the reci pient. The same bill oullawed the rigging of television qulz shows. Before the latest payola scandal Is over, the 1934 Act may have to go back to the drawlng boards to be aniended once again. -Editorial ReJearcb Profit in .Re.nt Deposits Let's say you are one of the inillions of Californians who rent an apartment or a duplex, or whatever. If you are, when you first rented your place you were no doubt required to put up a se~urity 4eposit to cover any damage that might be done to the prop- erty while you occu7 pied the premises. -in~addition, you probably. .had to pay the last month's rent along \Vith the fU"St, Soinl;! apartment houses also require depositS for such things as pets, clean· ing, and even keys. In one cue, a couple renting a $285 apartment had to pay $599 in advance rent! and deposits: LAST M0N11''S rent, $285; security deposit, $100; pet deposit, $l00: cleaning fee, $50. and key deposit,...$4.-PJus-a:.$60 deposit on the electrooically-oper-ated garage doors. How's that for openers? From the landlord's viewpoint, such deposits and advances w e r e un- derstandable and necessary. The;e are tenants who skip without paying the rent; those who depart leav- ing bums in the carpets, dents in the walls and holes in the windows. ( RUS WALTON J Some financial protection against such vagrancy and vandalism is certainly proper . . BJJT, IT'S NOT the principle, it's_tbe money. Voll pay your advance rent and your deposits and your money sits there -.in the landlord's bank account. It stays there a!J the motiths am· all the years you rent his property·: oi:, be mes it as capital for other ven'tur~. · Elther way, the money works -for him · but not for you. · · 0 Tilke1 for exauiple, one -giant apart- ment complex in Los Angeles. It has 4237 units. The insurance com~ny that owns the camplei requires" a $2oo advance deposit on each aparlnient For those 4237 ullits the ·deposits total $847,400. At 5 peicent i,ntettst. per year, those deposits produce $42,350' -for the insurance co~ny. ASSEMBLYMAN Alex Garcia, IJ.Los Angeles, has introduced AB 1332 to pro- vide the renter some redress. · · His bill would require landlords of four or more units to pay renters 5 percent in- tercst on money tied up in tho8e advance rents or deposits. The 5 percent interest commences after the tenant hrui occupied the premises a)"}d paid the rent for 90 days. Fair is fair. And, Mr. Garcia's legislation is fair. . After all, wby should someone else make money on the tenant's frozen assets? In fact. the tenant •&tJnda to lose ln two ways when his money is impounded without interest. ' . FIRSf, the lOll of the lnlerest. Second, the Joas to !nfiatlon. Look wtliat happem to the value of that money while It Is held In the landlord's deep freeze. Take the YOUDC couple that put up the $599 tit advance rents and deposits. Sup- poSe they occupy that ap8rtment for five ye~rs. _ At the going rate of inflation, in five years the purcHasing power on that $599 would be down to $420. They would Jose about $180 to inflation while the landlord was m.aking at least $150 on their money. What kind or a deal is that? Mr. Garcia's AB 1332 would, at least, Jet tbe renter rea!iu a return on bis compulsory investment, and some kind of a hedge against the termites of inflation. How Hookers Became Professionals The vigorous efforts of ~largo St. James in the spring of 1973 to organize lhe country's hookers led inevitably t(l a nationwide sex boycott. Armed with a $5,000 fowidation grant, the attractive, 35- year-old Miss St. James - a former lady of the evening herself -began suc- cessfully enlisting card-earrying mem-~ bers in her new "craft guild," as she .l called it. And ~~·e ~ " was no question she seriously hoped to improve the plight of America's horizontal working girls - loog the most.~and...llbus<d.par· ticipants in our free enterprise system. INITIALLY, Miss St. James' efforts were•dismissed in men's clubs and locker rooms with sniggering jokes about union labels and sit-down strikes. But an off- Wl.,ks ( ART HOPPE J ' hand remark she made during a press conference sowed the seeds of the na- tional upheaval that was to follow. "ff you take an apartment, a resort trip or• candy from someone, it's legal," she said of women who sell their favors. "But if you take $50 in cash, they'll tty to make a felony out of it." IT WAS Ms. Bella Stein em, Chairpel'300 of WOW, the W o r I d Organization o( Women, who saw the PoSSibilities inheren( in this fotally unfair dictate or society. °Females have been sellinR their favors ror a million years," .she tofd a cheerihg \YOW rally. "Those who s'eJJ for plea.sure or companion ship are caned loose women. Those who sell for cash are caU- ed prostitutes. And those who sell for mjnk coats and diamond neck:Jaces are called jet-t1etters or movie st.A;rs;' "But .WOrst of all are the females who are trained from infancy to keep what they've 'ot to Sell until 80fne man offers them e hfe-long contract of financial s11~ port. They're called housewives. "I say that any woman who has ever put on lipstick .or eenings should be ar- rested for conspiracy to commit a felony!" THE UNARGUABLE logic of WOW's mlHtant stand •gradually lank home on the nation 's "'omen. Soon any c.Ag~r young sWain who krlelt at his beloved's feet to OCler an engagemeiit ring was greeted with a kick in the jaw end an angry shout of "What do you ttke me. for !" Throughout the land, sobbing wives slammed bedroom doors on frust rated husbands. Beauty sa lons and boutiques went bankrupt. And "Son o( Ueef. Throat" lost $2.4 million at the 'box o · rice . The nolioowlde sex boycott was on. The man who 1av~ the day WA$ the di stinguished social scientist, Dr. Homer T. Pettibone, D.V.M. "While it is true that women sell their bodies," he said , "so do men. Scientists sell their minds, postmen their fee.I, baritones their voCal cords, .bod carriers . their backs, psychiatrists: their ears, writers their fingers and politicians their tongues. , "We are, Jet's face it, a nation of hookers. And there ts no reason we should applaud the selling of all parts ol the human body but one ." ONCE AGAIN unassailable l o g I c prevailed. "Huzzah!" cried the city gen- try, both male and ferna!e. And everything returned to nonnal. Exet!pt, or course, that prostitution became not only legal, but an hclloNd and respected profession. For, after all, as Dr. Pett.ibooe so rightly put it, "selling what you in· disputably own for an honest profit is the \•ery co rners tone of our free enterprise <1vstem." I OIANM COAST I DAILV PILOT ]!obct N. Wr<d, ""1>Ushtr Thoma.s 1rewil, Ediior Barbara Krribfch Editorial Page Editor ~ editorial ,page ot ~ 'DI.lb" Pilot .aooc. to Inform -and tilmulate ~ by Pmmtinc .. ttu. Plat: dlvcne 1Commentary. cm tropics or fD... tft'Ht by t)'ndicated cohunnJsta ud cartoonlsts, by~ a fonnn foe' --·views and .. _. ... th1' Pf!WIPtiJltt'• oplmon. am 1deu" on current fOIMei. Tbr editorial opiniorai 0( ... Dally Pilot·-""' In .... editorial column at the 10p 0( tht N•• OpinkJna: ~preMJd by tf'M! coi- umnttb and .caJ10C:INlbl and lettft> writn att ttwlr own and no \l!4kklrl Mo ment ot thelt vk!wl by the Daiq t'\IOt -be -• . . Friday, June 22, 1973, ' Motorist Kills LA Lawman VAN NUYS (AP ) -An In- tensive manhunt was un., der \VAY today for a motorist who shot and kill ed I a Los Angeles police officer after he was stopped-ror a routine traf· fie violation in th is Los Angeles suburb. Detectives said motorcycle rt officer Charles C. Cai'accillo, I 3S, a 14-year veteran or the department, was killed in· ( __ B_RI_"F;F_'S _J stantly Thursd~ ni ht with at ' ICasT one guOShot Wound in t e ch•st. They said the motorist P-oint"se Kept , dro\'e away after the shooting. • Authoriti es reported at least Judith, (le!t) and R' uth Leonardini, 18, of La Paz, four shots were fired at c.araccllJo, a 14-year police· Bolivia, get a welcome hug from Pinocchio as the t~o veteran, as he walked toward girls visited Disneyland Thursday. The girls will the motorist after parking his study at Brigham Young University after a prom~ .motorcycle. The of fi c er, ise from President Nixon 18 years ago of a college though mortally wounded, education in the United States. Nixon was Vice- fired ·three shots at his Presid~nt at the time.-assailant but all reportedly _::...:..:::.:.:=.:..::.:_:::_:...:::.::.:~---------- went wild. e Sunshine Blaze Contained By Fire Fighters Friday, Junr 22, lq>7l DAILY PILOT ~ j Censure Of Fonda Rejected CALIFORNIA Hell's Angels' G~rl Held I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -who WllS arrested in San Jo!" S wll!J Mis> Walton in Miss The glrllrtend of Hell's Angels Thunday, with dlJtribuuna . Giuh!P'• pretence 10 buy leader Ralph "Sonny" Barger. drugs and consptraey. elibt OWlCtl of heroin for $615 has been ..,...le and ar· An l/fidavlt fUed by 1 , an ...-and that Stolanson raignea Oil era narcotics-fedtta narCollcs agent alle~s later gave lbe Jnformant !!! charges. that an agent Md jn(onner grams of a white pow"""" Sharon Gruhlke 23, a'.fiimia~deji'"ij'"i'~'i'"ien~tjs~las~t~A-Ull··-w·h·ijicb __ con_talinediiiiiiborolniiiiiiiii.iii ·former Livermore b e a u t y queen, was arralg ThW'l- d,J.y before u .s. aglatratt ~ Richard Goldsmith who set lHt RNEST, IN bail at 11s.ooo. He also ap. ENTERTAINMENT LOS ANGELES (AP) - A . City Council committee has turned down a resolution that would have condemned ac- tress Jane Fonda for remarks she made about American POWs. "--------~ pointed a -federal P u b 1 i c Defender to teP.resent her and set July 2 for a preliminary hearing. THE . 111E COUNCIL'S s t a t e • county and 'federal affairs committee voted Thursday to kill a resolution by Coun- cilman Arthur K. Snyder that accused the . film star of characterizing returned POWs as Hars, hypocrites a n d pawn s. _ t1o • ~· Miss Fonda spoke tct .... llie committee and said her statements about POWs had been directed against the ''hand~pic ked few who participat~ in press con~ ferences.'' A spokesman for t he American Civil L 1 b e r t i e s Union said such a censure would be unconstitutional and Added that the council "had no right to intrude on anybody's beliefs." Lon,g Hair Measure A FEDERAL complaint alleged that she did "know· ingly and unlawfully distribute 11nd conspire . to distribute about eight ounces of a sU:bst.ance containing heroin ." Ok Miss Gruhlke told the judge Gets ay she w~s placed on two years· ( probation March 23 i n _ . . ~Alameda Co~ty after being SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A roun guilty.1or possession -or bill prohibiti~g restaurants amphetamines. and o the r state-licensed Barger Is serving a businesses from refusing to minimum. 10 yea,rs' sentence in state prison for convic tions serve Jong-haired customers on narcotics, weapons and was approved, 48-11, without forced imprisonment charges. debate _Thursday by t h e THE FEDERAL complaint Catifornia Assembly. also charges Bert Samuel Assemblyman John 1 · Stefanson, now in s t a t e Burton (D-San Francisco ), custody, and Anita Walton, authored the measure after the fashionable Clift Hotel in his hometown refused io serve BENNETI. BROS. Now AppHrlng Every Thursday-Friday & Saturday Nile at PIGGY'S FIRESIDE ~OUNGI! 19582 In HUNTINGTON LANES Beach Blvd., Huntington leach A Topnotch Show With A Lu Vog11 Flifr ~-BEFORF THE SHOW•----, Enjoy A Champagne. Dinner For 2 TOP SIRLOIN DINNER with CHAMPAGNE 6.95 SNYDER DENIED a charge by the ACLU the resolution him because of his modishly was an attempt to censor Miss long hair. Gov. Ronald Reagan Fonda's First Amendment has said he opposes the bill rights of"free Speech. even though his son. Skipper, The committee aJso recom-14, who has shoulder length JOIN US THIS WEEKEND O. C. ·Fair QuHn Contest SUnday, noon ~outh Coast 'Plua mended that the council refuse hair, couldn't join th e ·i ' .\ ,., ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -The 1973 "Wilson Sunshine Act" - which allows two hours of Daylight Saving Time instead or-one -has been sent to the Senate despite protests that children refuse to go to bed until dark. Thursday, the bill's aulhor, Assemblyman Bob Wilson (D- San Diego), said that wide- awake children and outdoor movies nothwithstanding, the extra two hours of daylight would be advantageous. By The Associated Press Soot-sm~ared fire fighters today contained the year's first major California brush fire and continued to battle a newer blaze in the Sequoia Na- tional Forest timl)!er country. to entertain such nlotions of governor and his wife for din-1 ~·orsened through the night in 1 _:<:::•n:d:em:::::n:•t:io::;n:_:in::.,::th:e:_:f:ut::ur:e:· _ _:":•:_r ::_•:_t ::_th:e_:Cl::::_i(t::_. ____ _... ______________________________ _ the Sequoia National Fprest. ·t:cd's NewYo:r Stately stands of fir were ~ e Seeret Anny SAN DIEGO (AP ) -A man described by prosecutors as former state coordinator of the paramilitary Secret Anny Organization has been placed on three years' probation after pleading guilty to possessing flamm able materials. Jerry Lynn Davis, 31, or Lemon Grove was released from jail Thursday and put on -probation by Superior Court Judge Franklin B. Orfield. Davis had spent more than 90 48ys in jaD awaiting sen- -Off Agaita ! LOS ANGELES (UPI) Sam Yorty, whO took a lot of l idding during his U years as tnayor about his penchant for travel, will spend the last ~t days of his tenn on an ocean cruise to Alaska. ; Yorty, defeated last month fly city councilman Tom ~radley, slipped out of city ball unnoticed 'Thursday. An issistant said he left word be Would not be back. Yorty and bis wife were scheduled to Jeave today on the Spirit ~f J.ondon for the voyage to )\laska. The ship won't . be back until July 6, mearung Yorty will miss Bradley's in- iuguratton. • U1llo11 Strife : INDIO (AP ) -Two Teamsters Union organizers Were charged with kidnap and ~ssault with int ent to commit murder Thursday, sheriff's Jleputies said. Picket!Jlg by pther Teamsters and United Farmworkers supporters was regarded to be mo s tly t;>eaceful elsewhere. : The two men -identified as ~uadalupe Tamez, 35, of Santa jo\na, and Guadalupe Sausedo, ~6, of Salinas -were charged ~ith at tacking Israel Guad- ;ardo, 28, a foreman for ?ylaag ptrus in ~1ecca. A U.S. Forest Se r vic e spokesman said a 7,200-acre blaze was eontained early to-- day in the high desert country near Banning. They said they hoped to have it under control by Saturday. ALTHOUGH TlfE Barming blaze burned some trees at the edge of the San Bernardino. National Forest.. the ·main target was brush. No structures were reported dairiagoo~anttlr!Jurles were confined to minor smoke or bum cases involving fire lighters. A string of fir<s reportedly Ex-solon's Wife Get.s Jail Term SANTA MONICA (AP) - Susan Marie Brophy, the wife of former Assemblyman Bill Brophy, has been sentenced to six months in jail f o r vehicular manslaughter in the deaths of a Cudahy couple. Superior Court J u d g e Laurence Ritt enband imposed the senten ce Thursday and allowed the 20-year-old fonner model to be fre ed on $1,000 bail pending appeal of her con- viction in March. burning and a Kern C.Ounty Fire Department official said some 2,500 acres had been blackened by the blaze. Fire fighting conditions "!I' e r e worsened by 191'( humid ity and high temperatures. IN THE BANNING fire, some 1,000 fire fighters looked like combat veterans after three days of action. "They had kind <1f a charcoal-like look about the face," said Ed Medina , a fire infonnation officer for the U.S. Forest Service. He added that the men looked a little like spaCEmen with the bard hats, goggles anq bandanas across theiuyes Md noaes. Meanwhile, the state of California offered a rewatd of $500 for information leading to the capture of suspected arsonists in the Banning blaze. TI\e fire was started on the Morongo Indian Reservation , ·o{[icials said. THE FINAL assault on lhe Banning fire was to have something of the appearance of an infantry and tank bat· talion advance. In com pleting the fire lines at .the edge of the bl~'s hot spots, bulldozers we're to push down the heavy brush and small tr'ees, follow. ed by fire fighters moving in to open up a break between the open fire and its fu el - more dry wood. Teller Fle<l For Lu1ich ?o.1rs. Brophy was arrested FREMONT (UPI ) -\Vhen alter Ch ris Panas, 48, and his a new bank teller at the Fre- wife, Elizabeth, 49; were killed moot Bank \.vent to lunch and wh en the Brophy auto crashed failed to return a quick audit head-on into-their car on JuJy~showed $7,000 ~as mi ssin g. 18, .1?72. The cr:ash was on Police Wednesday issued an Pac1f1c Coast Highway near all-points bulletin for Mi ss Sunset Boulevard . Carol L. Skodi, 21, Newark, Authorities said Mrs . who began work only two Brophy \'las driving under the weeks ago. Police sa id her car influence of drugs when the was found abandoned and her crash occurred. apartment was ,en1pty. Porno Rule Reaction l • . ' f:ourt De cisiori Dra·ws Prciise, Damnution • . ' By The Associat~ Press • The L".S. Su preme Court's -decision on obscenity and. ;tiard~ore pornography drev1 1'ralse from some state and .count y officials and predic- !tions of chaos and undue !censorship from other Califor- )lians. ' . : IN THURSDAY'S decision. ;-the high court held that local ;::;.m::ii~naif~~~~~~d;3i~!; :'t>e used to determine whether !material ls obscene, and that !juries and courts no Jonger :-need to find that ma te rial is :"utterly" without redeeming ~social vaJue before Jt is :declared obscene. : Those two parts of the :opinion written by Chief .. Justice Warren Bu rger drew ;the most attention fr o m ~authorities ch3rged with en- : forcing obscenity laws. ; The rejection of the test of +toeia1 values as a con- ; stltutionn l standard should give impetus to California legislati ve efforts to remove the stan dard from state law, said Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. Joseph P. Busch. "IT 'S A VERY strong opi- nion and re d e Cines pornography. \Vil hou t questi on the opini on does a\vay with the requ irement for experts to testify and provides that the jury will be the Cinder of ract. Tha t '"ill make it easier for prosecution. If the legislature will amend the statutes to coincide Yl ith the Supreme Court opinion. it will make prosec\Jtion easier.'' But Los Angeles City Atty. Burt Pines described the new GOV. RONALD R e a g 3 n sai d, ''This deci sion is one of the most important rulin gs to be 1nade by the U.S. Supreme Court in recent years. And, while il is long ove rdue, J am extremely gra tified and pleas- ed tha t a majol(it y of the court ha s concurred in the absolute necessity ol help ing local com-munities to rid themselves of standards as vague and dif- the CQrrupting influence of • ficult to apply. "I will be in a hard·core pornography." position of ha ving to enforce As a vehlcle for pro-this law, so I can't give my nouncements on the case, views personally," he said . Burger chosen California case "\Ve have limited resoUrces. J in which f\.farvin Mil ler was intend to emphasize th e convi cted In Costa f\.1em under greatest criminal problems - a state Jaw of 1nalllng property and protection against unsollciled sexually explicit property andprotcctlon against materials. Orange County vlolence. l'm nQt about to tie Deputy Dist. Ally. 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We've carried n1orc funiilics over the summers lhan anyo ne. So you know you can n1akc Friend Ship Service just as friendly as yo u've found it day after day. Call Uni ted at 482·2000. Or, ask your Travel Agent to book your vacation in the friendly skies. Uniled's New Yorken 8:45 a.m. (747 to JFK) 12:00 noon (747 to JFK) (iOO 'p.m. (DC-10 10 Newark) 10:00 p.m. (DC-8 lo JFK) •• •• •• •• • • •• •• •• •• •• • • •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• ••• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• I , ~· • - Today's Fl•al N.Y. Steeks VO~. 66 , NO. 173, '4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES NGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JUNE 22, ·1973 c TEN CENTS ¥~i Celebrities to Welcome Brezhnev in Clemente President Nixon and Soviet c.ommunist Party Secretary Leonld Bre2hnev are due to arrive on the South Orange Coast this. evening to begin a whirlwind_ · vleekend that promises to be far di!ferent from the week's businesslike.summit talks. ~ - The t\\'O leaders are eKJ)CCted to touch down at the El Toro f\1CAS at about the dinner hour and after a brief night's rest the, summit will become somewhat of a spectacular. On Saturday plans call for a major reception around the La Casa Pacifica 's pool with mariachis from San Juan Capistrnno providing the music. . SUPERPOWER CHIEFS SIGN PEACE ACCORD-Story, Pago 4 And the President may even bang a few licks at the piano during the af· ternoon eovent. Local sources have said the stafr has commandeered a small splnnet. to be brougbt to the pool area m Saturday. Also on the agenda for the weekend - possibly for ' Saturday -will be a short flight to U>s Angeles where the two leaders will tour the exhibition or im- pressionist paintings on loan to the U.S. by the Soviet Union. The r'ecepUon Saturday, however, will be the major social event. Hollywood, stars. and other VIP guests are on the invitat.ion list (I( 150 names .• earn They include Gov. and Mrs. Ronald Reagan, Frank Sinatra, Bob Hope, Red Skelton and others. On Sunday, the 113.y Brezhoev_pJan,, to leave, the President \\ill welcome the Skylab astronauts. The lnvitatlon went out today to the three space pioneers in a telegram from the President. "l welcome you home from the Skylab space sblj> 'Earth' an d I abo look forward to aeeJng you at San Clemente on SUnday," a portion of the telegram read.· Brezhnev's departure details have not . been specified so far. It is assumed that the start \\'ill gi \•e more details o{ the Russian leadcr·s schedule later this "''eekend. Such secrecy has been the rule during Brezhnev's visit. So far no details have been rel eased eitb-er on.a possi_ble joint address to the own Flight Ends Flawlessly In Pacific ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (UPI) -Skylab's astronauts landed in "super shape" in the Pacific Ocean today and walked shakily a few minutes later to the doctors' office to see how well they withstood a record 28 days in space. The bullseye splashdown and qu.ick reeovcry by this veteran aircraft carrier marked a flawless end to a mission that started with failure. The Dight took a major step toward giving man a place in apace. . -' f a.ult. "P.tte." Conrad, JoieP.b. p : Kerwin and Paul J. Weit& returned ht the· Apollo c0mmanll' ship In whlcll they weu launched May 25. The big a p ace station remained In earth orbit reedy for its next crew in five weeks. people of the U.S. and USSR by Breihnev- -similar to that made by the President during his trip to MOSCO\V Jast year. CQntingenCy plans have been made f such an address from lhe San Clemente compound, ho\vever. Although Brezhnev leave s on Sunday Nixon \Vill not. Initial reports saidi that the l'rl~et plans to stay on in San Clemente for Y.'.eek or more. l ~ .. , President Nixon quickly sent a telegram to the men who just completed an 11.5 million mile journey and invited thent to visit him at San Cemente Sun- day. SKYLAB ASTRONAUTS DOWN. TO EARtH AFTER-LON&"'-m'~"' Conrad (w•vfng), Weitz (left) and Ke rwin on. Ticonderog1 \ Cooling Off Nan Johnson, 17, of Orange, combines her desire for a sun tan and her desire to keep cool during a beaching outing on the Balboa Peninsula. Record beat has sent inland Southern Californians fl ocking to the Orange Coast this week and, although tem- peratures are expected to drop slighUr this week- end, local authorities are girding for bJg crowd s at the beaches. "You have given conclusive evidence that even with the most advanced sclen- tlilc a n d technological support In the world, the courage and resourcefulnesa of good men are still central to the suc- cess of the human adventure," the Presi- dent said. Contracwr Q~it,s l!7 or~ • Nixon Home Costs Listed . Conrad, commander of the nation's first space station mission, reassured recovery forces several times that he and bis crewmen were all right after the On P.roject.s at OCC strenoou.s 're-entry which quickly built up By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ,.- The Harman·B.J. Gladd Construction Company bid' tbe job • 1894,IOO, nurly $60,000 below the ardlitect's estimate. Hunl.phreys believes the extraordinarily· low bid is responsible for the problem. . ·"He's finding that. be can't follow tM specificaOons and wants to make changes because he bid-the job too Jow," he said .. Humphreys added that this represents the first ftlajor contract cancellation in the district's history. By HELEN nIOMAS lour fiscal years beginning July 1, 1969. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The federal This Included only the residence there, govemtnent says it has spent nearly $2 not the White House office space. mlllim.-.lm.$lr.oxlo& Preside t Nixon's GSA _listed for t~ firs~,time the !ede~11l . . -=-. ~-.r=i r espend1ture or-unprovements, equip--horn~ in Flo~~da ~ ~ fornia , au of i menc, operation and maintenance at the relating to secunty. The expemes White House complex at Key Biscayne, ranged froro fire sprinklers to golf carts including both residence and office space for the Secret Service. _ $1180 522 spread over five fiscal The White House also di8closed that years 'beginning July 1, 1968. businessman Robe!1 H. AbJ>lan&!p, who Included in the Key Biscayne figure helped the President buy his San was 1181,463 for renting two houses In the Clemente retreat, has been getting some complex ror the Secret Service and White inoner back in the, fonn ~f rent House communications staff. associated with Nixon a Key Biscayne, he "h't H 'd I th Fla plac.e T '' 1 e ouse sa1 one o ese '' · houses ls owned by Abplanalp and the . A month ~o the White House J:utd other ls owned in the name of Edwin 1-1. ~sted $39,000 in fedtta_l funds for Im· Underwood, trustee for the Indiana Na· proving the Wes!em White liouse at San ti 1 Bank Indianapolis Clemente since Nixon bought it in 1989. ona hi ' .d· U f the t • _ _. --'" ft f rthe h f 'lbe W te House sai a o ax· '-"'•' w~. a er a u r searc 0 payers' money spent in San Clemente .,.. record, ~s figure was raised to $460,302. and Key Biscayne was 1or security- On Thursday.-General _services related Improvements and that all work Adminlstr~tion (GSA), the government's wa s done at the request of the Secret housekeeping .agency, said a still more service, not the President. extensive audit put the total federal ex· The GSA data showed items such as ~dlture at San Clemente at $703,367 over $53,64-4 in fiscal 1970 tor interior security ·Smog Brings Auto W ar1ii1ig Motorists were urged today to ' ·reduce driving to the minimum n~ssary as smog concentrlUoflS in Orange County began climbing toward levels dangerou~health. A spokesm•n for the Orange County Air Pollution Co n t r o I District said at 9:30 a.m. that forecasters predict smog oxidant (mis wil !rise to .4 parts per mil· llm. The level of .: Is considered dangerous to htaltfi. • '"1e spOkesman said the heavy smog was e.xpected because of ""st11Mnt cqndltlons" In the South Coast Air basin that woold net permit smog to float out to sea. and corDmunicfltions at San Clemente. It also included $3,303 in fiscal 1970 for golf carts for the Secret Service patrol at Key Biscayne. Rea gan: Nixon -To-Be · Believed. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan-snys President Nixon is ''entitled to be believed" in hls statements about the Watergate bugging. At the same -ume Thursday, tbe Republican governor took a slap at the Senate Watergate hearings being con· ducted by Sen. Sam Enoin (D-N.C.). "About 90 p;erccnt of \vhat we've heard so f11r ln the Senato Watergate hearings bas been unfounded charges or rumorS," !Wgan told about tlOO delegates to the rumual Boya State model government at Cal State Sacramento ~Stile. • Two years later there appears another item of $5,230 for three Secret Service golf carts there. Abplanalp, a BronxvjlJe, N • Y . , b.usiDessman,. }Vbo made a k fortune • perfecting the valve which operates aerosol spray cans, lent Nixon $62.5,000 in 1969 ·to help him buy the original 28.9 acre San Clemente property for $1.5 million. In 1970 Abplanalp bought 23 of these acres back Crom Nixon for $1.25 million, canceling the 1 o a n and leaving Nixon with 5.9 acres, the house , the enjo'yment of the other 23 acres, and an investment of his own of $251,000. The White House snid the Nil:ons themselves paid for $123,514 in im- provements, making their net investment 1374,51'. From these figures, the breakdown of who has what investment in the San Clemente retreat is as follows : -The N'ucons: $374,000. -Abplanalp: $1.25 mlllion. -The taxpayers : $703,367. deceleration forces 3112 times the forte of °' 11111 D•nr Pllel statt gravity. A gen'eral contractor responsible for "Everybody's in super shape," Conrad consfructicq_n_of four major· buildings on . radioed after three orange-and-white the. Orange Coast .College · campUs in stript?d parachutes eased the command Costa Mesa bas walked ofi' the job, leav- module into the gently rolling seas of the 1 behind uolinish' ed · t th :Pacific 835 miles southwest.of San Diego. ng · . pro1ec s wor nearly $1 nUllion . Kerwin and Weit:z: reported some Affected are the new food services diz:z:lness after splashdown and Kerwin laboratory, tutorial center and faculty of. inflated a pair of pressw'e pants to keep fices, horticulture building, and student his blood pressure from dropping to the center. AU were scheduled for completion point where be might faint. aometime next year, -Th.ls temporary effect was expected ',"Ibis will probably put off completion because of the tendency of. astronauts' of the txµJd.ings six months to a year at blood to pool in their legs, away from the the very best," predicted Robert brain, as a result of heart laziness in-Humphreys, a trustee of the Coast Com- duced by Jong exposure to the lack of munity Q>Uege District. gravjty. He said that none of the buildings are, Or. Lawrence Dietlein, a NASA physi· · needed critically to a cc om mod at c cian, said the astronauts looked in "quite students. good" health, "far better ftQm what I Gene Harman ol the Los Angeles con- pe"°"ally especi<d." lnlcting Ii rm Hannan-B.J. Gladd The -alt was hoisted 1boord this Construction Company served t h e ship with the pilots still inside, a switch cancellatiOn of contract notice on the from past procedures made to keep the district June 12. astronauts' exert1on to a minimum. Among the rea10r1s for termination he (See SKYLAB, Pap %) cites are the1diStrict's alleged failure to: -Make payments. . -Process and handle claims for extra. Plane Sui~ide work and change orders. -Inspect and supervise work to allow normal undisrupted progress. -Prevent numerous p r o bl e m 1 , discrepancies and corrections in the plans and specifications. • ' . Test Pilots Slioot Down Own-Craft POINT MUGU (UPI) -Two civilia n test pilots flying a $20 mil· lion-Navy jet fighter shot the aircraft'dowirwltlrone ofits own mis- siles, according to the Navy. The Grumman Fl• Tomcat crashed in flames in the Pacific Ocean Wednesday about 70 miles souillwest of the Naval Air Station here. The cl'l'w, Grumman employes, panchuted safely and were picked up from the water by a Navy helicopter. A Navy •pok .. man said Thursday that while the To mcat w ... test-firing an unarmed ' Sparrow missile "tbe missile did not clear the alrerart sullidently and stJ:uck the bottom Qf the fuselage." Gtumman did not make the missile or ltS firing system. The Navy suspended firing the Sparrow missiles from Fl4s un· W the cause o! the accident is determined . • " It was the third Ume .Ince December, 1970, an Flt crashed. -.. • \ ; .. . .. Di.strict officials, who are n o \V negotiating with the firm for payment .of "'Ork already completed, have a different version of the dispute. _ "TI!! district's side of this story is that the company simply hasi1't rouowed~the plans and specilicatloos of th c architect," said Humphreys. 11lt's gone from bad to worse and has become a king· size headache." New Site Suppor ted SACRAMENTO (AP) -Tl10 move to build a new lcgislalive building here has galned a strong advocate in Asaemblyman Willie Brown, the San Franci.CO Democrat y.•ho chairs the Aaernbty Ways and Means committee :-- • , District of{icia'Lt hope µiat Uie negotia- tions, scheduled ~ be completed by July 5. will refUlt in 4 ,dean break between the district and the ·bJ:Ulde?, •' The MS!,..., ~ lie lo rwcl\'ltlise the job \md te •"""' ~ ot \h• buildings to another construetioa firm. Weather That elpected cooling trond will make ltael£ felt along the Oranae Coast Saturday with low clouds ln the morning houn end highs in tile upper 70s at tho beacbet. Inland temperatures will be near la. That's cooler? INSm E TODA 1t' He's reol~ll a song aoriter not a . singer, but Harlan Jen.ning1, 21. is finding in a Newport Bcacla 11ight . ct11.b cngaoeyrnint t/1.(1£ .fometifne.t 't's the .rlnger and not the sO'ttg that counti. llis •""11 is on , Pooe 25 of lo- dat1'.J Weekendf1'. · Aly_,~ I L.M. llftC 1 -.. CflttlNll t Clt•tltlef sa.-c-1c1 _,. _,_..,.. at Dt•lfl Hot!cft u ." ...... ' ,.... ' .R!WtlilllMfll )ll•Jl l"l~llCt U•JJ , ... "" ........ 11 HDfMCelllt 14 .. ..... .,.,..,, . u • - l • ' •j bAllV Pll.01 .. - Area POW Won't Talk · • On~harges A reJca~l>d Tust1n Marine. prisoner of ,,·ar tQda y refusc.>d to oomment-~on chnrg· cs ()f n1isconduc1 brought :igainst hi1n by a fellow PO\\'. Lt .. Col. Edison \\'ainright ~1iller, 41. iSsued a brief statement · rcli!yed to the press by lhe infor1nation office of C:imp TWO EX-POWS CHARGED IN MISCONOUCT-Story, Page 4 P~dleton '¥\'here it is believed r.1iller will be .based. He is presently on "COO· vaJescerit leave," a Pendleton spokesrnan said. A defense department spokesman in Washington confirmed Thursday that Lt Col. ?\filler and Navy Capt. Walter E. ..-WuJJcr. 4$, of Columbia ·Cross Roads. Pa., had been charged \l/ith misconduct in North Vietnam prison camps by RCb.r Admiral James V, .Stockdale o f Coronado. Miller said today, "l have no specific com1nent on any charges at this time. J have onlY recently learned of this action 88d have not yet had a chance to determine exactly what I am being charged with . . "I realize this is a serious matter 3nd it will be a difficult lime for my family and friends," Miller said. Attempta to reach him at his Tustin home this morning through contacts at the Voices of Vital America (VIVA) of· rice proved futile . A VIVA ()rganizalion spokesman said Mr's. Miller had no comment oo the charges and \vas leaving the MiUer residence with their five sons, three of "'horn are :school age and "have just suf· fered tOQ much from all of this." Puring Pifiller's confinement in North Vietnam, he .~requently was t~ subject cl news iten\s and was often brought before television cameras as an example of the humane treatment being given U.S. servicemen by their North Viet· namese captors. Mexican's Car Sea:rch Illegal WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court has rfded tha t U.S. im· migration authorities acted illegally when they searched the car of a Mexican citizen 20 miles north of the border without a warrant. I By ·a ~ vote, the court Thursday rev~rsed a low~r court decision upfivlding the search of a car belonging to COnrado Almeida-Sanchez. The search turned up 161 pounds of 1narijuana \Vhich led tD the Mexican's subsequent convic\ion on federal drug charges. ... ' TONIGHT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE BAN· QUET:~ 20tb Anniversary of City of Costa fl.fesa, Mesa Verde Country Club, 7 p.m. dil)ner. "Li\SI' OF 'tflE RED HOT.LOVERS" -Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, Fri. and Sal. 8:'30 p.m1. Adm . $2. "IN 'ltlE MIDST OF LIFE" -Sooth Coast ~-~!*°~Y Theater. th~h Sun· day, f:p.m. ' • M~l\CYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -faifgi'o<lildi,'8:15 p.m.': s,)'rU!IDAY, JUN!i; ~l NORTH-SOUTH ALL S1'AR BASKET· BALL -OCC Gym. 8 p.m. OIAN&l COAST CM l1Mh)itp11 ... , ... Tiie On>pt9-Coe11,0,t.ll,.'f'" f'll.OT, with wflld'I It comblilild th• ,,.__P•Hl. ll publlillMtd W th• Oreno-CO.ti Pvbll1hl11t1 Com!Nnl'. Ste>&-r1~ tdl!lor!t IN ~liJllad, ,._II' throvgh Frlll•Y. IOr CO.ta Mt... Htwciotf fleKll. H1111ll11CllOll fle.cfl{fountt"' V11i.v..__ L.111111'11 e .. eh, l•YlntlSICkl ltlMlc• end San c;..._,., Sin J<1ln C1pill1.,•C1. A •it111• rflll-l 91111tiol'! 11 "°"t>ll1h«I '•r11re11v1 ll'ld $.u/ld1y1. Thi prltlclpal IWDlllOl\fl'IO pl1nr 11 II IJO Wnl e1v srreet, , .. ,, MtU, C:111111N>l1, tMlt. Rob1H N, W11cl J-Prnlll"'11 11"1d P11ttlltt>tr Jack R. C11rl1y - Vo« rrttllltnl 111d Gtn1rei Ml"'ffer Tho""•• K1 ... a EdltO• Tllo"''' ;.,, M11rpl.in1 Mll!lflll\9 EO!lor ~,,r,, H. loo•" llitheu.I '" Nill Atllt!1n! Mtntg!"§ t!t/101' C•hl M ... Offke JJO W11I Btv Str11t M1Hln9 Addr111:·P.O. l or 1160.,t2•J• QfhM OfflcH HtW90fl flttttl: JJJl l't~ 1IOV1,.,tnl • L.llil!IM 8t•<:ft: "'"°'''' ..... _ H>IMlottJllO!I 111,ft: \1t1S Bt.r.h IOl,llnltd Jlin (ltJMnfto1 )OS Hor-11'1 El C1ml,. ft.111 , ........ (7141 '4J-4JJI ClwlfW ~-. '"41·5671 CoPftlliM, lttJ, Orlflll Coei! l"lltllttllflt ~n.,. "' -""''"· m"'"'"""'· .. r~ ,...._ " ..-111.-ta 111rtt11 ..... ... ,..nc.. "1!hlvl N*lt J ,..,. Mkf.lol! " ~I ·-· ~ c ......... Pti.I " c .. ,. ~-. c.--..i •. , hl*l'i:.ilon bf urrlot• UM ~I IW ,...,, N,IS fMl'lll'l1'1 .... mu,., ...,.,.., ... at" nltl'lf!llT. • Friday, June 22, 1~73 'G•!!fllancl' Trial Pot Charges Defense Seeking 35 in Nixon's . Remington Bail Guard Accused By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of , ... o.i1y l"Uot Sllfl Defense attorneys for a one-time Ne~'porL Beach attorney linked in testi1nony to gangland terror tactics in· volving the plotting of murde.r and n1ayhem today 1vere to appeal for a bail hearing that" 1nlght allow thei r client freedom v.'hile awai ting trial. ~lichael K. Remington , 33, of Fullerton. \vas ordered Thursday to he arraigned July 3 in Orange County Superior Court on four counts each of conspiracy to commit murder and soliciting for murder. P erf orrrie1· '.Shot' Dur.ing School Skit By JACK CllAPPEU, 01 the DlllY Piiot 51111 A "cops and robbers'' skit at the Laguna Beach lligh School a\l night graduation p a r t y ended with the shooting -0! a volunteer entertainer in· jured when a wad from a blank shotgun shell struck him in the head. Hal Louis Proppe, 21 , of 1385 Skyline . Drive was reported in satisfactory corr dition today at South Coast Community Hospital. He was snot with a 10-gauge double barrelled shotgun during a comic "skit at 3 a.m. today at the high school. William Allen, acfing superintendent or the school district, said his office was not informed that firearms were to be used during the traditional high school grad night paMy. Laguna Beach police seized the IO.- gauge shotgun and ·identified. the man who fired it as Gene Porter MolWay, 22, of 390 3rd Street, Laguna Beach, who was acting as the sheriff during the skit. No arrest was made. Police said the wad from the blank shell passed through a hat worn by ·Pro1>- pe ahd Struck him in the rear of the head. Witnesses told officers that the in· jured man was 20 to 30 feet from the muzzle of the big bore shotgun. - Officers surmised that more severe in- jury could have been done if the flying wad had hit anyone in the face area. Theme of the all-night party was "49ers and the Wild West" and featured a town called Deadwood Gulch. Some 250 students were expected to attend, authorities said, but it is uncertain how many students saw the shooting. Don Haught, high school principal, said he had no knowledge that a "shootout" involving functional firearms w a s scheduled at the party. lie said the party was directed by parents of students, and was not a school fi..nction. "It was not managed or supervised by the schOol itself," Haught said. He said to his .knowledge the district dQE!S not have a policy rega rding prese nce or firearm s on the school grounds. lie said if a gun were brought during school day", it would not be allowed, but, that.the use of the facilities by an outside group after hours was a different matter. "Yi'e don 't regulate except to the extent that ro1nething would be harmful to the facilities," Haught said, citing prohibition a£ smoking in the auditorium as an ex· ample. School authorities said they were at· tempting to contact the parent organizers or the paity to find out what had hap-- pened during the skit. Police reported the production involved two men being chased hy a sheriff who had shotguns loaded with blank am· munition. Blank shells have a wad of plastic or fiber which compresses the powder back against the firing cap, or primer. The wads normally fly some distance "'hen the shells are fired. A IO.gauge shotgun is normally used ror heavy· bOdied fowl such as· goose. Judge Paul G. f\1ast said al the close or u rour and a half day preliminary hear· 1ng in Central Oran~c County Judicial IJistrict Cciurt Lhat he "'OS using discre· lion in refusing bail. Defen se Ja,vyers \VJ!llam Marshall ~iorgan and Robert Green had argued that charges against lht!ir client \viii not hold up in court. Karate expert Gary 11. Rollo, 20, of Garden Grove , considered to be the damaging prosecution witness, has testified Remington retained him to ar· range Otree contracts to carry out act s of violeni;e. Speaking softly -occasionally sho\ving annoyance at the persistent cross ex· amination -Rollo admitted lying to District Attorney's invesligators at one point in the case . Defense attorney Morgan - a na.iu· boyant lawyer whose dramatic gestures and ringing tones Jed one news1nan to dub hi1n Clarence Darro1v in a double knit suit -accused the chief 1vitness of the lie. "Ye s," replied Rollo, 1vho will be sentenced Tuesday following his guilty plea to a charge of soliciting for murder. "What about?" 11.forgan plodded. '"1 nlade some self-serving statements + •• " Rollo replied before being cut off by Remington's counsel, \Vho said that \vas irrelevant. , He admitted under furthe r questioning that he told investigators he hired some-- one e Is e to thwart one murder plot after he had hired an earlier prosecution witness to carry it out. Rollo said be felt he v.·ould help his O\vn predictment. Defense attorney Green challenged charges against Remington on that aspect, saying no conspiracy could be in· volved because Rollo was acting as an agent for the district attorney. Judge Mast earlier contradicted the concept that Rollo's testimony should be rejected on grounds of coercion because he was cooperating with the District At· torncy's Office. 117 Students Set CJ1oir Concert · In Huntington OlllY Pllel SllH PllOll STEPPING DOWN Postmaster Klugiewicz Mesa Postmaster Jolin ~11 giewicz Will Step Down \VASHfNGTON (API -Thirty·five 1ncn1bers of the Naval Cerc1nonial Guard , including 13 men who took JJtlrt in Monday's White House c ere mo n Y welcoming Soviet leader Leonid J. Brez.hnev, have been transferred because of alleged marijuana use, a Pentagon spokesn1an said today. The incident marks the third time in '"'O months that Navy men assigned jobs near President Nixon have been in· veW'gated £or marijuana use. The Naval Ceremonial Guard consists of 137 men whose duties include participation in, st,ate ~unctions, funerals • and parades. The sailors have been transferred to other duties within the Naval District of \Vashington while an investigation con· tinues, a Pentagon spokesman said \<r- day. Two other sailors· assigned to the district but not in tlie ceremonial guard also were implicated, the spokesman said. assigned to the unit that controls Presi· dent Nixon's yacht, the Sequoia. wert transferred after some of the1n v.·crc discovered smoking marijuana. In a related incideRt, four Marines assigned to guard the Can1p David retreat have been arrested on charges ol drag racing on a state highway at Thur· mont , Md., state police said. Troopers said they arrested Doniel R Brown, Richard L. }o""roshiesar, Carl Daniel and Erwin S. Hale Thursday nig'ht after receiving a citizen's complaint that two cars were racing on Maryland 's 550 outside--Thunnont,~whii:h is six mile!! from Camp David. The four were charged with violation of various state traffic laws and released pending a July 17 trial, troopers added. Frotn Pqe l SKYLAB • • • On May 8 the Navy disclosed that 28 Mari!'es a'nd lS sailors assigned to the presidential retreat at Camp_ David, 1.td. Medics were ready. to carry Conrad, \\·ere reassigned pending an investigation into charges that some were smoking Kerwin and \\'eitz on :stretchers, if Jolm Klugie,vicz, postmaster of Costa n1arijuana. necessary, from their scorched capsule ~1esa for the past 10 years, is retirin g On ll.1ay 25, the Navy· said 12 sailors to the blue n,1obile 1nedical laboratories next Friday after 38 years in the U.S. 65 feet av.•ay. Postal Servic~. H R d TI1e only problem or the day developed A replacenlent for the 6l·year--0ld aig eporte just as the three Skylab 1 astronaUts post master wiJI ~ announced following were preparing to leave the space station evalua tions of postal managers in the en-v· I t" La in orbit 214 miles above the earth. The tire Southern California area, according I 0 a mg \V refrigeration system tliat runs the 1ta· to Hector G. Godinez, sectional center lion's food and biological sample free~rs manager for Orange County . As Nixon . .\ide failed . Klugiewicz, of 2662 Riverside Drive, The nature of the trouble was not came to the Harbor Area m· July, 1948, known, and flight director Neil Hut-WASHJNGTON (UPI) -C&mpt.roller chinson said it may be possible for from Sebastopol in Northern California to General Elmer Staats has ruled that ground controllers to fix it by doctoring work as a window and distribution clerk Gen. Alexander ?lot. Haig Jr. is violating the sysem by remote conb'OI from earth. on Balboa Island. federal Jaw by serving as President Nix· If the trouble could not be fixed, He later became station superintendent on's staff aide while still on active Hutchinson said about.JS percent of the of the Balboa Island Post Office and on military duty. food aboard Skylab could spoil. But he Feb. 1, 196.1, assumed the position of Rep. John Moss ([).Calif.) said today said this would not seriously affect the postmaster for Costa f\.1esa. he has written Attorney General Elliot L. next two missions. Klugiewicz says he has received in-Richardson demanding that Haig be The Apollo command ship was loaded quiries from prospective employers in ordered lD leave the \Vhile Hou se. with a wealth of information about the other fields but that he may turn the of· Acting on information supplied by Pitoss sun and earth's natural resources as well fers down because he does not want to and in answer to Moss's questions about as medical data. leave the Costa h1esa area. the legality of Ha_ig's post, Staats said in Dr. Jamts C. Fletcher, NASA ad· The retiring postmaster grew up in the a \Vrilten reply dated June 15 that "it ministrator, .praised recovery forces for Chicago area and entered the Postal now is our vie w that a violation of the their unusually smooth pickup of the Service after working in a drug store, as statute is indicated ." astronauts and said all major objectives a salesman, and doing offi ce \vork. Nixon , announced May 4 that Haig, a of the flight were completed. Even while he was in the Navy four-star general who is \•ice chief of The astronauts left Skylab at 1:58 a.m. Klugiewicz did postal work. handling the staff of the Army, was succeeding H.R. and televised back a brief parting looiat A choir composed or 117 of Orange mails in San Francisco, San Diego and }Jal<leman. Haldeman resigned as chief the apace station before dropping into a !he Fiji Islands. h Yhl al I b" to be · 1'-'· 1 hom • County's top high school students "'i11 of t e \ le House st f 'after disclosures ower or •~ gm 'Jl;U re um e. n lie holds a bachelor's degree in about his possible role in the Watergate TV camera aboard tbe carrier spotted give a 9()..minute concert in Huntington business administration from Cal State-affair. the Apollo's three parachlltes and follow· Beach tonight covering the music spec· Loug Beach. He obtained his diploma at Moss origin•llY questioned Halg's ed the pilots' desecent for several mioutes trum from serious classic to popular the age of 48· civilian '!'Ole· while Hatg:suu was 'on \ac-to th'e sea. pieces. ti ve military duty. The White House then The Tico moved quickly to the side of The Ambassadors, due to leave on a S Le k A • announced Ha.i,a would retlre from the the bobbing capaule and hoisted it tw~week European tour next month , ivill ewage 8 "S gatll Anny Aug. Lf . aboard, using a single nylon rope 1% in· ~'loss, ln his letter to Richardson. said : ches in diameter, The Apollo was oo th e pre:;ent the same program tonight they LOS ANGELES ~AP ) -Raw SC\~age "If 1he presen t Sfiltus of General Haig is carrier's elevator deck 38 minutes after will later offer in five Swiss cities. seeped into Los Angeles harbor for the unla\\·ful . and the comptroller general's splashdown . The musical group will include 18 second lime in a week \\'hen auxiliary ll'tter indicates that it is. ~'e arc ubscrv· "We've all got our seat belts fastened students from University High School, pumps failed to handle peak flO\I' 1>eriods , ing a serious evasion of Jaw by our so hoist us .up." Conrad said, in obvious nine from Mission Viejo Hlgh School, offi cials say. highest authority.•· good spirits fro.m the trip back home. four from San Clemente High School,,,. ---~;;;illlll•;;llllii;;iiliiiiiii~iiiijijiiill~jji~~iijiiiiiiiiiii~ij~ijj;;jjiliiiii~m;i~=---three from Huntington Beach Hi~h School, and one person each from Corona del Mar, Estancia, and Costa Mesa high schools. "\V e've been practicing this music since February," says Director Jack. <;oleman. "so you can be sure it \Viii be as good as we can make it ." Henry Curtis, a IS.year-old pianist from Corona de! Mar High School. \Viii play a solo work. The concert \~·ill be held in the auditorium or Huntington Beach High School at 8 p.m. Donation lo offset costs of the'"European tour is $2.50. Classical music will predominate in the .first half of the program, Coleman said. The choir will lead off with Requien1 by Duruffle, a major work. Following will be Henry Curtis, playing a 4-minute .,.,·ork by F'ranz Liszt, Etude in O.Flat 11a jor. Then Curtis will team with a violinst and celtist to play Haydn's Piano Trio No. 6 in D Major. The second half of the progran1 will in· elude a medley from Fiddler on tJ1c Roof. Creation by Bob Bobrowitz, ll1s a Small World, Let There be Peace, and A1neri ca the Beautlful. ' Summer Safe Conlinue3 LEATHER SOFAS & CHAIRS ON SALE NOW Leather and Brass are natural partners. With quality materials , good design and craftsmanship . .. the result i• a furniture classic. Reg. $I 320 SALE $999 Old MacDonald's WiJJS Lawsuit; J(nott' s Loses Old MacDonal d had a farm and he still bas it today, in addition to a judgment in his favor on .a $9.7 million la"· stilt against Knott 's Berry Fann for Wlfalrly ex· ploit lng the animal attraction by ad· vertlslng it Jong after it left Buena Park for Mission Viejo. The Berry i-·arm mnnagement ha<l been expressly forbidden to do so by court order. , Orange Q'lunty Superior Court Judge Raymond 11iompson ruled Thursday for the operators of Old A1acDonald1s.Fann In its action against the Orange "County nmu~n1cnt center ~·bere it \\'&S fo11Tlcrly located. The hearing scheduled next \veek for Judge Thompson to rule on exactly ho'v much the defendants should pay the phtintifJs fo~ co~merclal dai:nnges suf· ft'!red. t-~uuoli K. ~w sued \Valttr Knott , his wife Corde.Un nd other principals or Knoll's Berry arm -includin~ Slla~·s O\\n brother ~ack -for ad\'crt1sing the ~lacDonald's e-0ncesslon alter l t relocated. Knott nnd his codefendants were cited '"'ice prior to trial for violatlng the court order agaii1st thei r using or ad\'ertising In any way lhe Old 11ac0011ald's Farm na1ne to creute the impression It wa s still located there. The crucial issue at one point "'a!I a newspaper feature story on a 1nulc· drawn 1nfrry·go-round al Knott's Ocrry f'~rm which quoted the plaintiff's brother. Jack Sha,v. Who re1nained lherc. at great l~ngth. The firs! name of the Shaw quoted had been deleted by error of omls);lon or commission and l"ullon Shaw's attorney Gordon Chytraus ma intained it. was done intentionally In 11 pre!l!I rehfese to nv'lke ii appear his cllcnt wt1s still at \\'alter Knoll 's furm . Kno,tt's Berry ftlirm public rOtatlons dlr c1or Dean Davisson had his l)ack Ill e!· of rress relea5ts subpcM!ned but the crucla l item dnHng back three years CQutd not he round. Reg· $1470 SALE - $1099 Top Grain Glove Soft Leather -FantHtic Value -9b" length. If you're looking for quality, .upholstery, dining, bedroom, or occ•sion•I furniture , now i• your c,lience to purcha se-the fine•t at •ale price•. Stop in today. Free, interior do1i9 n servf,e eyaif•ble DREXEL-HERITAGc-HENREDON-WOODMA'RK-KARASlAN INTER LO·R S WEEKDAYS' &-SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5'30 FRIDAY 'TIL f:OO . . NEWPORT BEACH e 1127 WESTC LIFF-DR.. 642-2050 !Op111 Sund1v 12-5:101 LAGUNA BEACH e 145 NOJITH CO AST HWY IOp111 S11nd1v 12°5:30) 494-6551 TORRANCE e 2JM9 HAWlHORNE .l lYD .• 111.121• • ( OAU,y PU..OT EDITOIUAL PAGE Finding Middle Road When Ne~rt;¥psa school trustees adopted next year's employe ~ ~hedule contall1i4g a soc percent raise, .they also apparently declared a unilateral end to this year's pay negotiations. , District officials claim ttm.J>oard action is (inal and the wages are now non-negoliab~e. But the problem is, the six percent· figure the board arrived at had never been discussed1 or even seen by the teachers until the night of lb• decision. , Trustees apparenUy felt pay talks bad gone on long enoug h -the district offering five percent and teachers asking ·7.5 -and the time had come to halt them. Though teacher leaders say district instructors will probably accept the district's six percent fi~re, they say the offer still must be seen and ratified by the teachers. They clatm the negotiations aren't over at all but rather the board's six~vercent is merely a final offer. Upfortunately, the major teacher organizations wol\'fbe able to get a reading from their members until fall. By then,. ~ince .th~budgeVinusFbe-adop~ August, it would be unwise to start juggling the budget again. . . It remai?}S to be seen whether the board's rather , peremptory,•aetlon bas bought som°""ong-tei:m:...empl~e disaatisfaction at lhe:,,wetbod along with temporary sat, !SlaCllon with the flillre. -. . -:·f ' .. .,.\ Ler ··v ·6ters Decide It How much open space Costa Mesa will have for parks and recreation., use comes to a vital decision point Tues4ay night. chunk or Ora·nge County Fairgrounds property -two of the five councibnen are finding faull They believe lbere's enough open space in t.he other two ballot-items and that the fairgrounds property should be "saved" for some use such as a community center. Unfortunately, unless the city buys the 33 acres, there's little reason to believe-it won't be turned over for private commercial an_d residential development. Whether the city could restrict zoning on the land is highly debatable. The iairgrounds proposal, a $1 .6 million item, will not' be on the ballot unless four of the five councilmen vote IQ puf it there. It is proper that Costa Mesa citizens decide if the 33 acres should be purchased. It is in the best interest& of the community that this part of the proposal be placed on the ballot this September. •• Plusses and Minuses eosta Mesa will light up another_candle on its birth· day cake tonight with a celebration corrimemorating the 20th anniversary of' incorporation. The past .2.0 years have made Costa Mesa one of the "-::. most pros~r~us communities in Orange.· CQuoty~ It ·boasts of the county's largest shopping -centers, three 18-hole golf courses, a fine civic center, and city gov· ernment that has remained untarnished by scandal. But there are also some negative aspeets to Costa Mesa's two decades of growth. There are some serious zoning problems. Factories exist next to residential units. Too .many billboards and signs clutter the land- scape. There are too few developed parks in the city. -me fairgrounds are beginning to deteriorate. . . . . :· •,,· ... ~~,,..... The city council will be deciding how much of a three-point $5.5 million program should be placed on the ballot ihls fall. On two points -involving 70 acres of. property in various parts· of the city ..,.... coun~ilmen seem to be in agreeJ;11ent. . But on a third proposed ballot item -a 33-acre Costa Mesa is on the threshold of making improve· ments in. many of these areas and theri!by upgrading its image. Many of these changes oUght to add lustre to the celebration of the city's silver anni'versary in 1978. Why not have them as specific twenty-flfth anniversey ~hl c 11 Ml~S WRITIN~ THOSE G~EAT OL~ SE~MONS MAINST iHE ALMIGMJY POltM.' . Multiple For Gas Causes Crisis To the Editor: , Quit kidding us on, the gas shortage. Any student of the problem knows the surplus Js gone because of weather, failures on the part of officials to judge, and industry to plan. !o~ our voracious appetites. The question is not Who did it, but Hqw can we l ive 'with it for the next X years. Can we be convinced that salvation. lies tn voluntary speed reduc.Uoo, tnm"e car pools, fewer unnecessary trips until mass transport is made available'! Or must we be forced away from the gas station by high prices plUs "keepaway'~ taxes'l' Since auto gas amowited to 53 r. of crude oil products in 1972, a JO r. red~on of car usage could save 9,660,000,0'.IO gallons of gaaoline! .r GAS IS only one item or the ene rgy crtsis1 that we have caused. It appears ,.lo rfte that we need a reminder to save energy in the fonn of taxation and higher rates for excessive use. / ' We ahould pay higher wes !..-bigger homes, autos and appliances. O:ilvenely, sman homes, small cars and minim~ energy 11SOrs should pay less. It is pretty obvious now that regardless or who w~ at faulJ, We ~re.going_to have Jem energy te Use fbr a ·long 'tiine to come, IDd we bad better leam .to live with it. . LYMAN S. FAULKNER A Barris Fa11 • To the Editor: . 1be Sidney Harri! column wouid make me buy the Daily Pilot IL I dldn~ read any other pert. How refreshing-to see ~l;Delhing that Saya small children imitate ·their parents and it's important for ~·~ts to kJ»W tl1is plays such an ~part ln chlld behaVior. " j . Kverylhlng 'we pick qp Uiese, ~ays. to read keeps hammerlng1 away at djldplloe, di11ClpliM ,' punlal!,,punish. • • • TOO MANY PeaP!e·cra\oe r_,ge; too many •v• f/\'".iUvt. -OJI are the llllftl''toe~.' ·' J'i!d. :.t:!"° "*11 l!"ttered Studies are indicating that the manner o! discipline and ~the tone-taken with offllthnl is usually a repeat fl 'the way the p\J were treated ' 1iY their parepti. + \ So ~fiat's~t~e ans"'..er? Good chtld care MAILBOX \ centers,-tor rich and poor -would· be a,good first step. If tbe influence at l!<Jme Is good, the childreo would sW1 eojoy the experience; if the home was undesirable, the pre-school training example set by well chosen teachers might offset tbe ex· . amples set at home. MABEL PARKER To the Editor: :The Watergate Show, featuring the Southern Ham aod his Waterg8'e canaries, is rehearsed it seems. The ilngers are interviewed under oath prior to airing. the main show so that the .Qemoc{aUc-controlled commlttee can bring·out just the desired points on the . air. Can the President win? boo•t miss next week's show. How can you? JIM BOLDING Lousy Sertliee To the Editor: On June 4, 1973, a manuscript in a 9x12 envelope with address typed very legibly was sent to a friend in Los Angeles Jrom Laguna Beach. ft is still en route today, Jwie 18. nie return address was also given. Another letter was also sent to the same address on J\Ble 13 and neither has been received. In the· course of these two weeks that it takes a Jetter to go from Laguna Beach to Los Angeles, ·l received cor- respondence from Copenhagen (air mail) in three days' time. I believe people should know that sec- ond class mail will have no preference -may never get anywhere. I feel it is ridiculous for a typed piece of printed matter to take all this time to arrive. Who do we complain to about such lousy .service? SANDRA C. KENNER ·~:~9:15 Club' Promotion WASHINGTON -The White House has named a member or U...m;·sterious "at· tack group" of political ~men to a top federal job where ·~ie. N8r he will juggle statistics to sult President Nixon's ·whims. . The atteck group was Mt up_durlng the J972 campaign under• Wblte House aide 'Charles Colson to fog·!)~ lhe'Watergate scandal and to carry on 'ne>lli>lds-barrcd 1tttack oo Sen. George McGovern. · !t "!et doily al 9:1> a.m. In the White lfouoe. So lmp...,...i was Watergaler Jeb , Magruder, the deputy campaigh al.de, t~at he awarded its member8' cufOinks lettered '19:1$." -· COLSON has revealed in a atUl·secret deposition that one of the attack sroup's iey n1emhero was EdWlili! Failor. a key Nina catnPolln aide hll'OO by campaign director John Mitchell. Failor used to go 1_1-dally to lhe atlack group meetings atthrWliltc Rouse to plot 1nt1; McGovern strategy. In the Jast few days, Failor has been rewarded with a job as head of the Com· merce Department's Social a n d Economics Statistics Administration. Along with bis budget or $100 million, he will control some 7 ,000 employes. More importantly, however, he will 11upervi&e the Census Bureau and other vital statistical units. Critics fear the White HOUJt may have put him there purposely so be can tamper wltb figures to make the Nlton eCono~y look rosy. Failor, ln a Jon~ talk with us, denied he look part in any Watergate·style ac- Uvttles as a member of the attack group. As Failor explained It: "We ooly wanted to show the (Democrats) were doing bad things, also, so people WoUld say, 1A plague on both your houses.' " Dear _Gloomy Gus Co-in' cidence -Ko in' sidens n. Like the .start of the "Season of backyard sunbathing and the lower level flight ,patterns of our police helicopters beginning, at the same time. E. H. 0"'9rn'I' Gus '*""'"'" •r• submitted b'f ....,.,.. •1111 Oo "Of nens.Hrlly ,.11.U Th• vi.-. ., II* llfW~Ptr. Strid Your P•I -v• .. o.._., ou., D•Ry Piiot. With Music Goes Money And Scandal "'Ve don't want a 'Vatergate in the music business," says David Clayton· Thomas, fonner lead singer for Blood, Sweat and Tears. But the popular record industry has been rocked by a widening scandal involving payola, drugs, sex, booze and organized crime. One hi gh in· duslry executive, Clive J. Davis, was ( GUEST REPORT) fired as president of Columbia Records for allegedly misusing corporate funds and another, Larry Wynshaw, was bounced on charges of falsifying invoices. A federal grand jury and a federal anti-crime strike force are investigating the who_le recording business and one of· ficial bas said: "We believe that almost every major record company is in- volVed." The scandal does share one common element with Watergate: enormous amounts of cash which gave rise to temptation and were diffiCult to trace when misused. POPULAR MUSIC bas become a multi·billion-dollar industry, with record and tape sales topping $2 billion last year to surpass movies ($1.3 billion), network teJevision ($1 billion), professional sports ($540 million) and Broadway ($36 million) in revenues. Forbes magazine reported that at least so rock, pop and country music superstars now are earning between $2 million and $6 million a year, making the salary of IIT's Harold G e n e e n , America's highest-paid bus'iness ex· ecutive, look like so much chicken feed. "It had to happen/' one record ex· ecuUve said of the sr.aodal. "The in· dustry is just too big, there's too much money around, and there are too many people who got too greedy." IN THE LATE 1950s, anolher payola scandal shook the industry. It was revealed that record company promotion men used money. liquor and free vaca- tions to persuade radio disc jockeys to play and praise certain records. The Federal Trade Commission in 1960 said that 255 disc jockc)rs and other station personnel were involved, and ISsued more than 150'complaints and cease·and- desist orders. Congress that year approved several amendments t() the Federal Com- munications Act or 1931 .requiring rull disclosure of any payola by the recipi ent. The same bill outlawed the rigging of television quiz shows. &fore tho latest payola scanda l is over, thf!: t934 Act may have to go back to the drawing boards to b& amended once again .. £dJtorlal Research Wlao Gets tlae Interest? Profit in R.ent Deposits ' Let's say you are one of the millions or Californians who rent an apartment or a duplex, or whatever. .,,... If you are, whE.!l you first rented · your place you were no doubt required to put up a security deposit to cover any damage that might be done to the pror>- erty while you occu- pied the premises. In addition, you probably 'had to pay the last month's rent along with the first. Some apartment houses also require deposits for such things .as pets, clean-~ ing, aDd even keys. . In ooe caae, a couple renting a $2115 apartment had to pay $599 in advance rents and deposi~; LAST MONTH'S rent, $285; security deposit, $100; pet deposit, $100 ; cleanillg fee, $50, and key deposit, $4. Plus .!\. $60 deposit on the electronically'1pe.J'at~ garage ~oors. How's that~for openers? From the landlord's viewpoint, such deposits and advances w e r e un- derstandaDle and necessary. There are tenants who skip· without paying the rent; -those who depart leav- ing burns in tbe carpets, dents in the walls and holes in tbe windows. ( RUS WALTON ) Some financial protection against such vagrancy and vandalism is certainly proper. BUT, IT'S NOT the principle, it's the money. · You pay your_ adv:A·nce rent and your deposits and your money sits there -in the landlord's ; ba·nk account.· It stays there all the month! ahd all ·the years you rent his property·; or, he uses it as capital for other ventures. Either way,' the money works -for him.but not for you. Take, for example, one' giant apart· ment complex ih Los Angeles. It bas 4237 units. The insurance company that owns the complex_ requires. a $200 advance deposit on each apartment. For . those 4237 Units lhe ·deposits total $847,400. At 5 percent intere~t per year, those deposits produce $42;350 -for..the insurance company. · ' · , ASSEJ\.IBL YMAN Alex. Garcia, D-Los Angeles, has introd_uced ,bB im to pro- vide the renter some redress. His bill would require landlords of four or more units to pciy renters 5 percent in· terest on monev tie1 ll"' in those advance · rents or deposits. The 5 percent interest commences <11, r ti' : hns occ upied the premises r . .,_ ·l 'h'.? re:it for 90 days. Fair is fair. .And, Mr. Garcia's legislation is fair. After all, .,,,.hy should someone else make 1noney on the tenant 's frozen assets? In fact. the tenant stands t9 lose in t\\'O 'vays when his money is in1pounded wiihouti;iinterest. Filtsr, tbe loss of the interest. Second, the loss to inflation . Look what happf?ns to the value of that money wh~e it is held in the landlord's d~p-f~eeze. Take the young couple that put up the $599 in advance rents and deposits. Sup- pose they 'occµpy that apartment for five years. At the· going rate of infiation, in five . years the purchasing power on that $599 would be down to 4420. ·They would lose abolit $180 to inflation while the landlord was making at least $150 on their money. What kind of a deal is that? Mr. Garcia's AB 1332 would, at least, let the i-enter realiie a return on His compulsory investment, and some kind of a h'edge against the termites of inflation. How Hookers Became Professionals The vigorous efforts or Margo St. James in the spring or 1973 to organize the country's bookers led inevitably to a nationwide sex boycott. Arme<f with a $5,000 foWldation grant, the attractive, 35- yeaNld Miss St. James - a former lady of the evening herself -began suc- cessfully enlisting card-carrying mem· bers in her new ·"craft guild," as sbe called it. And there was no question she seriously hoped to improve the plight o! America's b«lzontal -king girls - Jong ~ l1lll8I degraded aild abused par· ticipants in our free enterprise system. INITIAU.Y, Miss St. James' efforts were dismissed in men's clubs and locker rooms with sniggering jokes about union labels and sit~own strikes. But an off~ . Wicks ( ART HOPPE ) ' hand remark she made during a press conference sowed the seeds of the na· tional upheaval that was to follow. "If you take an apartment, a resort trip or candy froin-someone, it!s legal," she said of women "'hb sell their favors. "But if you take $50 in cash, they'll !ry to roake a felony out of it." IT WAS Ms. Bella Steinem, Chairperson of 'vow, the w o r I d Organization or \Vomen, v.·ho saw the possibilities inherent in this totally unfair dictate of soc iety. "Femilles have been selling their favors for a million years/' she told a cheering WOW rally. "Those who ~I for pleasure or companionship are tailed loose women. Those who sell for cash are call· ed prostitutes. And those who sell for mink coats and diamond necklaces are called jet-settef'3 or movie stars. "But v.·orst of all are the females-who are trained from irifancy tO keep ' What they've got to sell 'unlil some man offers them a lite-long contract or fitianCial su}>' '(Xlrt. They're called howewives. "I say that any wo'man who has ever put on lipstick or earrings should he if. rested for conspiracy to commit 11 felony!" TIIE UNARGUABLE logic o! WOW's militant stand gradually sank home on the nation's women.-Soon " ,ny c.;1.ger young swain who knelt at his beloved's feet to oiler an e~agement ring ·was greetl!tl with a kick in the jaw and an angry moot of "Wh•t do you take me for!" Throughout the land, sobbing ~·i vc!I slammed bedroom doors on frustrated husbands. Beauty salons and boutiques went bankrupt. Alld "Son of Deep Throat"· lost ,2,4 mllllon at th• box of· flee. The nationwlde-sex-boyoott was OA. The .tn$.n who SAved the da.Y was the -· I distinguished sooial'scientist, Dr. Homer T. Pettibone, O.V.M. "'''hile it is true that \\ .. omen sell their bodies," he said, ''so do men. Scientists sell their minds, postmen thei r feet. baritones their Vocal cords, bod carriers their ba cks, psychiatrists their ears, writers their fingers acd politicians thei r tongues. "We are, let's face it, a nation of hookers. And there is no reason we should applaud the selling of all parts of the human body but one." ONCE AGAlN unassailable l o g i c pre vailed. "Huzzah!'' cried the city gen- try, both niale and female. And everything returned to normal. Except. of coui se, that prostitution becan1e not only legal, but an honored and respected profession. For, after all , as Or. Pettibone so rightly p u t it, "selling what you in·. disputably O\~'n £or llO honest profit is lhe very cornerstone of our free enterprise <:vstcm." Ol.ut•I COAIT DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, hbll&htr Thomas Kcevil. Editor -Barbara Kreibich Editorial Page Editor The ~ltorlal ,J1$P of the Dally PilOt .leeks to irdorm and stimulate readers , by prnentinc on this pap divtrseicommentuy'on topics Of in- terest, by i)tndlc•ttd col.umnlsts mt cartoonist.. by provldliia a forum for , readers'. vht a.net by pttstrrtl"c this rieqptper's Opinions and ideu: on current topics. 'the tdltorial oplnionl ot the Daily, P\lot appear <ll'lly tn the editorial cOldmn·. •t the top ot: tttt l*Ce. Opinions ~xJ)l"tl:llCd by the (.'ID}. um.nists and canoonbtts and lttttr 'vritcn are their own and no clldorleo rnent or ;their vie-. .. by 'lbe Dally PllOt-ldbelnl<rttd. Friday, June 22, 19.'1.S ,_ .Motorist Kills LA Lawman VAN NUYS (AP) -An in. tensive manhunt was un· der v.·ay today for a motorist who shot and killed a Los Angeles police officer after he was stopped for a routine traf· fie violation in th is Los Angeles suburb. . Detectives said motorcycle· officer Charles C. Caraccillo, .SS, a tf.year veteran of the department, was killed in· . ---~- ( BRIEF~ ') r ....._ stantly.Thursday night wipi at C. • least one gunshot wound in the chest. They said the motorist drove aVt'ay alter the shooting. Authorities reported at·teaSt ~ 'rour shots were fired at Judith, (left) and Ruth Leonardini, 18, o-fl..a PaZ, ~CaraccUlo, a 14-year police Bolivia, get a welcon1e hug Crom Pinocchio as the two :.veteran, as he walked toward girls ·visited Disneyland Thursday. The girls will ~e motorist after par~ing his study at Brigham Young University after a prom· .;motorcycle. The offi cer , ise from P resident Nixon 18 .years ago of a college ~hough mortally wound ed , education in th e United States. Nixon was Vice- jired three shots at his President at the time. Protnise Kept ;assailant but all reportedly _:..:..:==:.::::..::::..::::::.:~---------- •went wild. · e Sunshine Blaze Contained By Fire Fighters ' - Censure Of Fonda Rejected LOS ANGELES (AP) -A City Council committee has turned down a resolution that would have condemned ac- iress Jane Fonda for remarks she made about American . . CALIFORNIA f'r ldlY, J11nt 22, 197) • • DAILY PILOT 5 ~ Hell's Angels' Girl He~d I j' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -who wa• arn-sttd lo S•n Jose 2 with Miss Walton In Ml• The girlfriend of Hell's AngeiJ Thunday, wUh cllstrlbutin1 e1Gni1h'11k0~:!f01~e-ln ~or !'J leader Ralph "S0nny" Borger drugs and conaplracy. " ~· " •• ..... has been arrested and ar· An affidavit filed bf. a an OUllOI and tt>at 51e1.,,... ralgned on federal narcotics federal narcotics agen t al eges lagrtaemr 9ga~ t~ ~%~po~:~ charges . that an agent cind lnforn1er Sharon Gruhlke, 23, a\:~miad~einrr~llljiji~emiienitaiii!ASitiiAjugi.jjw~hl-ch_con_taJnocl __ j!berolnijjjiiij. iiii. former Livermore b e a u t y THE FINEST IN ENJtRTAINMENT POWs. '--------; queen, was arra1gned Thu.r&- day berore U .s. Mariistrate ruchard Goldsmith .who set bail at $15,000. He also ap.- pointed a federal P u b 1 t c Defender to represent her and set July 2 for a preliminary lHE t 111E COUNCIL'S· s t a te , county and federal affairs committee voted Thursday to kill a resolutiOn by Coun- cilman Arthur K. Snyder that accused the film star of characterizing r~turned POWs as 1 liars, hypocrites a n d pawils. rt1iss Fonda spoke to the committee and said h e r statements ab6ut POWS' had been directed against the ''hand-picked few who pafticipate in _ press · ~n ferences ." hearin g. L H ' A FEDERAL complaint ong air alleged that she did "know· ingly and unlawfully distribute Measure and conspire to di!trlbute about eight -ounces of a substance containing heroin.''. , Miss Gruhlke told the judge Gets 0 kay she was placed on 'two years' probation March 23 i n A~ecia County after being SACRAMENTO '(UPI) r_ A found guilty or posse$sion of bill prohibiting restaurants amphetamines. · and o the r state-licensed Barger ls serving a bilsinesses from refusing-to mini.mum 10 years' sentence in s afe prison for cofivlcttons: · serve long-haired customers on narcotics, · weapom and was approved, 48-11, without forced imprisonment charge11. debate Thursday by t h e THE FEDERAL complaint BENNEn BROS. Now AppHrlng Evory Thursday -Friday & Saturday Nile at PIGGY'S FIRESIDE LOUNGE In HUNTINGi;oN LANES 19582 Baach Blvd .. Huntington Beoch A Topnotch Show With A L11 Vegai Flair , ~-BEFORE THE SHOW'--. En(oy A Champagne' Dinner For 2 TOP SIRLOIN DINNER .with CHAMPA~NE 6.95 A spokesman for t he American Civil L lb e r t i e s Unjon said such a censure would be unconstitutional and added that the council "had no right to intrude on anybody's beliefs." California Assembly. also charges Bert Samuel Assemblyman John L .1Js~t~er~anso~~n-,~n~o~w~l~n~s~\~a~t~e~!~~=~~==:~~~~~:~~~~~ Burton (D-San Francisco), custody, and Anita Walton, authored the measure after the fashionable Clift Hotel _in SNYDER DENIED 3 charge his hometown refused to serve by the ACLU the resolution him because of his modishly was an attempt to censor Miss long hair. Gov. Ronald Reagan Fonda's First -Amendment has~said__-®__upj>O~es the bill right s of free speech. even though his son, Skipper, JOlrytJS THIS WEEKEND O C. Fair Quun Conte1t Sunday, noon . -· -south Coast ?tu• " ~ SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The 1973 "Wilson Sunshine Act" - which allows two hours of Daylight Saving Time instead of one -has been sent to the Senate despite protests that children refuse to go to bed until dark. Thursday, the bill's author, Assemblyman Bob Wilson (0- San Diego), said that wide- awake children and outdoor movies nolhwiUlstanding, the extra two hours of daylight would be advantageous. By The Associated Press Soot-smeared fire fighters today contained the year's fi rst major California brush fire and continued to battle a newer blaze in the Sequoia Na- tional Forest timber cotmtry. The committee also recom· 14, who has shoulder length mended that the council refuse hair, couldn't join th e to entertain such motions of governor and his wife for din- worsened through the night in ..'.co~nd!'.e~m~n~a~tio~n!.;in~t~he:_r~u~tur~e._~n~e::r.:_a'.'._t_:th~e::Cl':".'if.'::t. ____ _!_ ____________ -:-==-::::=----::::------------- the Sequoia National Forest. I" Stately stands of fir were burni.J]g-and a Kern C.Ounty Fire Deparbnent official said some 2,500 acres had been blackened by the blaze. Fire fighting rondilions w e re worsened by low humidity and high temperatures. • Secret Army SAN DIEGO (AP ) -A man described by prosecutors as former state coordinator of the paramilitary Secret Anny Organization has been placed on three years' probation after pleading .guilty to possessing flamm able materials. Jerry Lynn Davis, 31, of Lemon Grove was released from jail Thursday and put on probation by Superior Court 'udge Franklin B. OrfieJd. Davis had spent more than 00 iays tn jail awaiting sen- leiicing. • eottAgain : LOS ANGELES (UPI) - i;am Yorty, who took a lot of ~idding during his 12 years as mayor about fils penchant for \ravel, will spend the last fight days of his term on an bcean cruise to Alaska. . Yorty, defeated last month by city councilman Tom Bradley, slipped out of city baU unnoticed Thursday. An p.ssistant Said he left word he ~ould not be back. Yorty and his wife were scheduled to ~eave today on the Spirit of 'London for the voyage to ~aska. The ship wontt be back until July 6, meaning :Yorty wlll miss Bradley's in- )!uguration. • ' :e Union Strife • : INDIO (AP) -T wo ,Teamsters Uni on organizers were charged with kidnap and :assault with int.ent to commit !nurder Thursday, sheriffs ~eputies said. Picketing by :Other Team sters and Uni ted !Farmworkers supporters was 'regarded to be mo s tl y "peaceful elsewhere. · The two men -identified as ;Guadalupe Tam ez, 35, of Santa ~Ana, and Guadalupe Sausedo, . 26, of Salinas -were charged :wi th attacking Tsrael Guad- : jardo, 28, a foreman for Maag 'Citrus in Mecca. A U.S. Forest Servi ce spokesman said a 7 ,200-acre blaze was contained early to- day in the high dese rt country near Banning. 'They said they hoped to ha ve it under control by Saturday. AL THOUGH THE Banning blaze burned some trees at the edge of. the San Bernardino National Forest, the main target was brush. No st ructures were reported damaged and injuries were confined to rnillor smoke or burn cases involving fire fighters. A string of firea reportedly Ex-soloµ's Wife Gets Jail Term SANTA MONICA (AP) - Susan Marie Brophy, lhe wife of former Assemblyman Bill Brophy, has been sentenced to six months in jail f o r vehicular manslaughter in the deaths of a Cudahy couple. SupeTior Court J u d g e Laurence Rittenband im!Xlsed the sentence Thursday and all owed the 20-year-old former model to be freed on $1,00J bail pending appeal of her con· viction in f\.1arch. h-Irs. Brophy was mested after Chris Panas, 48, and his wife, Elizabeth, 49, were killed when the Brophy auto crashed head-on into their car on July 18, 1972. The crash was on Pacific Coast Highway near StmSet Boulevard. Au thorities said Mr s . Brophy was driving under the in fluence of drugs when the crash occurred. IN THE BANNING fire, some 1,000 fire fighters looked like combat veterans after three days of action. "They had kind ol a charcoal-like look about the face," said Ed Medina, a fire infonnation officer for the U~S. Forest Service. He added that t.he men looked a little like spacemen with the hard hats, goggles and bandanas across their eyes and no.sea. Meanwhile, the state ot California offered a reward of $500 for infonnaUon leading to the capture of SUllpected arsonists In the Banning blaze. The fire was started on the Morongo Indian Reservation, officials said. TIIE FINAL assault on the Banning fire was to have something of the appearance of an infantry and tank bat· talion advance. In completing the fire lines at the edge of the blaze's hot spots. bulldozers -.ye.re to push down the heavy brush and small trees, follow- ed by fire figh ters moving in to open up a break between the open fire and its fuel - more dry wood. Teller Fle<l For Lun.cli FREMONT (UPI) -When a new bank teller at the Fre- mont Bank went to lunch and failed to re turn, a quick audit sho wed $7,000 was missing. Police Wednesday issued an all·points bulletin for Miss Carol L. Skodi, 21, Newark, who began work only two weeks ago. Police said her car was found aband oned and her apartment was empty. Porno Rule Reaction Court De cision Dra-ivs Prc1.ise, Dam11ation By The Assoc.fated Press The U.S. Supreme Court's decision on obscenity and hard~ore pornography dre\v praise from SOtne state and county officialS and pre<.lic· tions of chaos and undue censorship from other Califor- , nians. ' IN THURSDAY'S decision. 'the high court he ld tha t local 1 community s!a ndards rat her ~th.Qn nat ional St:lndards may be "1sed to determ ine whether :materi al Is obscene, and that : jur1es and courts M longer • need to find that material Is ' "utterly'' without redeeming IOClal value before it I!! ·declared obscone. • Those two part> or t~e • oplnlon written by Oller ; Justice Warren Burger drew • the most attention fr o m authorlUes charged with en- ; forcing obscenity la11'S. ~ The rej..Uoa of the lest of l aoclal valutt as a .con-_,,_1. stJtutlonal 11.Mdard -should give impetus to californ ia legislative efforts to remove the standard from state law, said Los Angeles Coun ty Dist. Alty, Joseph P. Busch. 'in •s A VERY strong opi- n i on an d r e d e fi nes Pornography. Without question the opinion does away with tie requi rement for experts to testify and provides that the G0\1• RONALD Re a g a n jury will be the .finder of fact. said, "This decision is one of That wi ll make it easier for the most inlPortant rulin gs to prosecution. If the legislature he inade by the U.S. Supreme will amend the statutes to Court in recent years. And, coincide with the Supreme v.:hiJe it is long overdue, 1 am Court opinion , it will make extremely gratlficd and pleas-prosecution easier.'' ed that a 1najorlt y of the court But Los Angeles City Atty . has C<:>ncurrcd 1n the absolute necessity nr helping local com· Burt Pines described the ne.w munlt!es to rid themselves or standards: as vague and dif· the corrupting influ ence of ficult to apply. "I will be in a hard-core pomogl.lphy." .. position of having to enforce As a vchJclc for pro-this law, so t can't give my nounccments un the case, view!! personally," he said. Burger chose a Calilomla case "We have limi1ed resources . I in w.hlch Marvin !\filler w:is intend to emphasize t h e convicted 1n Costa Mesa under great~st criminal problems - a state. Jaw of mailing property and protep,tion against unsolicited sexually explicit property andprotcCtion against materials. Orange Co unt y violence. I'm not about to tie Deputy Dist. Atty. Oretta up all the resources of this of. ar111 who wOrked on he ficc prosecuting pornogra· Milltr case, '81d: plly.'' ~niteds ew • ·•••o@•~~&~•••~••••@~oe o eoeo o ooeeoeoeo ••••• ~ ... :: •• o•~~(i'l·~~G"'~••~ooeo c1111>•••<11 ••••••••••ooe •c••o• •:•.•\• ·····•• -' .. ······ :···:.. • •• •••• 1 •••• • •• ::·· The sa1ne airline that takes care •i! ii ~-:.9f Ji1~1nysDaddayafter :: :: takes careofJ11n1ny and Ills i i s111n111er after si11111ner. •• •• •• •• •• •• •• •• .. 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