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1973-06-28 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 • r \ • Seores. al Slain Flklas Grabbed1 ' . . . .... . , . : t • ' : 'J , Oglers Misled "Ex-Mes.ft Banker By Big L . • IIDOUSIDe Vi~ti111 oi 57 500 ' ~ '· ' . In Newport Beaeh Extortion Plot DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * · t HURSDA-Y' i'F.TERNOON, JUNE 8,'.'i'l13 •· . .. . . .',. , ' 'VOU6'-JI0.;11',$HCT8NJS,.U•e"G'S. , _·, -•~ '>.'I -.. -,;,; ... .,., "l· .,,.,.. t. ....... , •.• ~ ·; ,t'· .... • '! • ... " -• ' • ·'•'".i' . " ' ' ' '""""'lji.....,;~ ... ".~·,iii.. -~~e · · J.'~11 f.k!• f •;' 't ,, ~ . <I • • I '~·~~,., '. .. • l • • ' . " rtist Ed Van Deusen of1 Laguna Beach works on his female statue i&l pla stic foam. Called "Forever\and Never," she would be 25·feet tall ii She, were .real. The art and other works will be on ,display at the ft11Uc .Sawdust FesUvil In Laguna Canyon from July 12 through ' A)lgust 26. • . Senate OKs Schlesinger ' WASHINGTON (API -· The' Senate disturbed . about Schlcsin&~r's statement unanlnoUllY conil'rmc<l fre.s'i<\en Nix._· _,tl~;a,,.t under certain conditions. he would ot1;1. nonllnatlon or Jam.S R. Schlesinger recommend 'resumption of U.S. bombing a1 -ary ol<'dcleno<i today. or North Vietnam. The ad.Mi came after Sen . WU!iam ln response to ProxmJre 's rcqueit that ~ (D-Wls.), dropped hill ob-he elaborate, Schleslnger said the only Jtdiona to the nomination. condition he oould foresee for such a Prmntre ttJld the Sena!• that he ls still (See CONFIRM, P•1• I) • > , • I I -·-' Beach Officers Grab Up 'Throat' Huntington Beach police today are · carefull y screening scores or sexy motion pictures confiscated in a Villa Park raid, including the controversial run-length motion picture "Deep Throat" starring Oglers M.is¥ By Limousine 01i Peninsula By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. Dllltr p ........ \\'ith the President of the United State! down the coast in San Clemente and · his former chief of staff secluded just across Newport Harbor, aJI of Balboa was sure it was getting into the act Wednesday. A Lincoln Continental limousine was parked at !he curb at the Rendezvous Condominiums QP Palm Street. Tourists gaped and peeked inside as they passed by. Tlie customers of the Red Carpet tavern across the street buued in lively speculation about who the car belonged to. After all, it was the kind of car made only fOt1 lthe government. .It has red lights and flag mounts. Its distinctiVe Y{ashington, D.C. licenie plate heightened the speculation. The speculation ended today. one Linda Lovelace. The entire movie screehing job has HWltington vice officers weary and bleary-eyed. "I've been looking at these things for two days now and I have only seen one that isn't hard-core pornography," a red.- eyed vice officer alleged. He didn't · !dOolili the non..rien,ive flick. · ~ .. ,?-• '• ·• · Hwltlngton l!each orficers allege ·the film raid at a -vrna Park 'hohle may have broken 11p· a major distribution setup for sex lllms in {Jnmge 0ounty, Am!8ted when the movie cache was confiscated was Charles L e o n a r d Hamilton, 40, ol 1111192 Mariposa Lane. He was picked. up Mooday. · Hamilton is free today on $5,000 bail and vice ollicers are viewing and logging each of the several hundred films fowtd · in hls home. . Lt. Robert Rinehart sclid 'Hamilton's arrest culminated · a month.Jong in-- vestigatioo "ased on information supplied by another police·agency in tl\e coonty. He sakl HamillOo, who is involved with several film pniducing companies which are not connected with the aJleged Pomogfaphy operation, was arrested on a warrant cha.rling 30 counts or selling . dislrilxitlng a1•C exhlblting pornographic . rpnterial. . . Officers said the warrant .was obtained when Hamll{on'. alle,edl)'. i;Qld them . two rcaturt:lengtb·pomographic. movies one of wJ:Uch was .,~Deep Throat." ' The limousine beJongs to Mr. and lttrs. Thomas seieJ. summer reskients of N d R Balboa. 'l'Jl<!Y live in Riverside and own eva a eports two McDonald's hamburger stands. "Oh, I didn't even think about it when I left it parked there," Mrs. Spiel said, Population ·Jtunp relating that she bad just come to town to get her. coodorninium ready ror the summer. LAS VEGAS (AP ) -Ne~ada's popul a- She said the fimily bought the car a Uon stands at more than 527,000, an in- . year ago rrom the Ford Motor Company crease of 38,000 i>el'900S <Wer the 1970 and1 yes, it had been in government census, figures released by the federal service. Bureau of Censul show. , "Jl was a Presidential limousine on 1be latest estlrilate, throUgh July 1m, Joan i.o the head ·o1 the United Nations," was presented to Las Vegas cit;t com· she said. mlsslonen Wednesday and indicated Doltr' ,ilof' Staff ""°"' 'TOO MANY HELICOPTERS' Deputing Pilot· McGregor Ex-Fullerton Football Player Suspected in Plot . A fonncr · Fullerton College football plaf er was ar~ested Wednesday by the FBI On suSplclon of attempting to extort $75,000 from Mel Miller, manager of the Bank of America branch in f<'ullerton. Douglas R. Barr, 25, Fullerton. is charged With threatening to kill l\1iller unless the banker paid him the $75,000. police said. 'Mle alleged victim formerly managed a branch of the bank in .Costa ~lesa. The threat was made by dropping a note in the bank's night deposit box last Friday, accon:ling to Fullerton police. The note reportedly threatened Miller and his family and iodicated the bank building would be blown up unless the cW]h was paid. ; Barr played football at Fullerton J.C. in tile late 19608. ; "~ a s I . ' ' :l ers ' Coast Pilot McGregor Quits Post .. Newport Beach's chiel police heli copter pilot resigrted Wednesday and then declared he believes Orange Coast police departments have more helicopters than they need . The chief pilot, Kenneth "Scotty" McGregor, said he believes police in Newport.. Co&a Mesa and Huntington Be<i-ch have more Ulan enough flying machines . ·to service all of Orange Coon., ty. McGregor 's reason for lea ving the Newport Beach Police Department:-. however. was to obtain a better job a~ chief pilot for the California Park Sen>ice in Northern California . The eight·year veteran l\fcGregor's resignation was oot announced by the ci· ty. He said he is quitting because there is no advancement potential ror him in Newport. l\fcGregor is ranked as a patrolman allhough ror three years he has served as chief pilot and flight in· structor. l\fcGregor praised the Newport Beach helicopter program but he told the Daily Pilot he thinks all Orange County police agencies should -and will, eventually - (See HEIJCOPS, Page Z) <:out Welidler ?ltosll y sunny in the afternoon hours ~'riday, following \be USU&! low clouds along the coast. Highs in the 70s at the beaches, squeak~ Ing out 80 degree readings inland. Overnight lows In the 605. INSIDE TODA'\' Ora11ge County supertrisors 11ave adopted, ;ust before tke J1oie 30 state deadline. a re- vised ope ti space plan with minor cluu1ges. See Page 9. • • Mrs. Spiel explained Iha\ she and her more than hall the stale'• residents -W Kill 4 S }{ husband are Lincoln collectors. They 295·,MIO per9011S -lived In Clark County. oman \ • s , e' L,M. lo~CI n r he -·· I their nd I 1970 the t ' l ' 1· ed •••tint n have 10 o t m. ~ 1111t s aeco n . coun Y s popu au on wu 1st co11tor1110 J limousine .. -----------•t..:l'IS.llll.'-' ------~----;rt1AGERA!('A ttaly~(AP+-~ye11•t•-1-~~f!11• u.41 "We had a limousine from a HoUywood Census oUlcials estimated Las Vegas old won1an threw all three of her cro11wtrf • studio /' she aald, 1'buL It was a me ss, ll picked up l l,000 of the , 38,000 nc\v children and a ne~w Into a well and ::.:.W*',': : hld-eagle&-On the door and a· put;fle ,and Nevadans, with ·the-.)M>P,td8tlon eaUmated then jumped In herself, police. said today. :=1MM111 tJ.~ yellow star or l>a'!ld oo the roof.' ot 138,127 U of last July.' The city's All or tMm died . Police said that Maria •w., •K_. • "The dealer in Riverside knew we were population was set at 125,787 in the 1970 Petrucci had been suffering from Ho111tevt n (See UMOVSINK, Pace I) census. depression for more than n year. ' • ,, • ~ . " ' • • • 1' l>AILV PILOT s Ttwrsday, Ju11t1 28, 1973 Ult'I Teleslllo!H ·· PROBER$ -Some members of the Senate Watergate Comm,tttt:e Jis· ' tening to former White House aide John W. Dean Ill are (clockwise from upper left) Sen. Edward J. Gurney (R-Fla.), Sen. Herman Tal- ,J madge (D-Ga.), Sen. Daniel K. Inouye (D-Hawaii) and Sen. Lowell ·' \Veicker Jr. (R-Conn.). Canine Caper ,. Shepherd Hijacks Bus in, Miami MIAMI !AP) - A German shephenl n3med Duke commandeered a city bus. (Orcing oot 25 passengers and standing . off the driver and police for 30 minutes. ; "It was a clear case of dog-jacking," , said witness Harold Lee. Duke jumped on the bus Wednesday, apparently to escape "' a noisy thunderstorm. He leaped into the seat of driver A. L. Rivera. "The operator·reac6ed his hand out to pet the dog," Said Mianti Transit Authority Supt. F.M. Fieber. "The . dog ~·grabbed hold of his hand but did not break the skin." "The Clpf:,'f'ator then removed his hand, himself arid the 25 passengers, leaving the bus to the dog," Fieber said. .,.~'D.lke refused to budge until police located his owners, Mr. and Mrs. Rolan· J1o Rodriquez. They ~ed him out. Witnesses said Duke was waiting at a Teamsters Reach ·Accord for Hike . Of Under7% WASHINGTON (AP) -The Teamsters 'Union and trucking industry r eached ten· tative agreement today on a ne\V 33· 'month contract providing "'age increases 01 fess than seven peroont for 400,000 drivers nationwide. _ 1'he agreement came in the early n1orning hours following an all night bargaining sessin at Teamster head- quarters. A formal announcement was expected niter in the" day. Neither Wlion nor in· dustry officials would comment. ; · However, sources close to the negotia- : ;Hon said the contract ca1l s for a total : ;v.·age increase of 95 cents per hour ••spread over 33 months for the truckers 'v.·ho currently average $6.16 per hour. ; The drivers will receive 35 cents per 'hour beginning July 1 and an additional ,30 cents per hour in each of the re- :n1aining years of the contract. : Jn addition, the Wlion won cost of living 'raises not to exceed 11 cents per hour. ;the sources said. Improved vacation and ; holiday schedules and health and welfare ;benefits also we re included. ~-=-'---'--~~~~~~~~~~-, I OIANGI COASf ST --. .. DAILY PILOT ' T'M Or111te Co-11 DAILY PILOT, wllt'I n 1ct1 b c.~!ned 1111 w..,.Prn s, Iii lll/bllllled ~ !he Or•!'V• ~NII PllOl!llllir>V C~nr. 54.PI· ••I• fdlllon1 •r• pVDll11>fd, Moncier '""""""' Fr1111,, ~ co111 M .. 1, "'"""°"' 111ch, l111n!l1191an ltKll/Fovntlln \111\tly, LHUM li .. c.h, lr~ln1/,l4dllbllct 111d S.n Clemln!t/ S•n J11tn (lpll1rlrl0. A 11"91• r19l-t IClllion II pvlllllll"' $elll~'fl 1nd SUl'ICl1r1. TN jM'illclPll PV(lllilllno oltnl It •I J.JO Wtsl llY .StrMt, COiie M ... , C.flifwnl1, fltl'to, ~ob.rt N. w,,d '°rfl.ldeftl •M "llbll"'-' J ec.11 II.. Curley Vke P"''""' •"" Gtnef't l Ml ....... Tholfl•1 1Ce1.,JI '""' Tholl'J., A. Murphi"• MIN9i!lt fcli!Ot Ch1tft1 H. Loot R!th1td ·r. Nell A11ll!lnl M."'"111(1 fd!IO,_ -ceate M.-; J.JO wft1 l•r sr .... 1 H.....-rl tMC.11: llD "41Wp0'1 IOuleYlf11 L.etUM leedl: m '°'•I A.._ MIHltintNoll'...ui: 17'7l INCfl tolll..,erl '-" cienwm.: J1$ Nettri I.I C..'"lftt INI f .. :Jt I SS (7141 '42-4121 ca "'iMI A4Mtl: tau MJ·l671 p~ ~ .... ,.. .. u,.. .... •tt.-4421 ,,_ ........ C-'1 c-!tlet ........ <•JT~ °"'""' e;, ~""Int c-tet!V' HO MWt •19rln , llfvttr•Tlert1, lllttrltl • _...., .. ...,,.,..~ """"' "'" .. ~.. wl!llwl 111(191 - "' 11ot! et twY!ISM """· .._.., di.II ~ ... ,..11 ., (ts!• ..... (91ffon11L ~--w Uorrlfr UM -'""'' .. N II p ,lf ll'llftflll'l'I !flltltwr .,,..,..tlM'a SIM ,.,.,,w,, ··L--------~ I ,coro.ef' with would-be ipassengers. But when the driver opened the door only the dog got on. Witnesses said the dog just sat in the driver's seat looking oot the window. Rivera flagged down a ~ bus, and the other driver .._.ted, "What hap- pened?" "A dog took over my bus," Rivera replied. Police arrived in three squad cars. "They took one look at the dog and stop- ped in their tracks," Lee said. One officer reasoned that "if you've got a dog on the bw, I guess the best thing to do is to keep him there." Finally, Duke was recognized, officers fowxl his owtiers, and bus No. 139 was back on the road, 30 minutes late and empty. The passengers were transferred to another bus. "Duke is a wonderful dog, very gentle," Mrs. Rodriquez said. "But he is very frightened of storms." From Pagel CONFIRM ... recommendation would be "major ag- gressive actions by North Vietnam which would threaten South Vietnam in viola- tion of the Paris agreemet'ts." Proxmire called that "so generalized" an answer it didn't mean very much. However, Sen. stuart Symington (D- l\.1o.), acting chairman ol. the Senate Armed Ser vices Committee, said he didn't see how the nominee Could an.swer the question any other '<''ay. Had he sided with O>ngress on the question of Indochina bombing, Sym- ington said, he would be embarrassed at Cabinet meetings and might have his name withdrawn. "He has the knowledge and the op- portunity to be a great secretary of defense if he use.s his own judgment," Symington said. Egypt Launches Missiles Over Suez at Planes TEL AVIV (UPI ) -Egypt fired several surface-to-air missiles at Israeli '''arplanes flying a routine patrol on its side of the southern end of the Suez Canal today, the Israeli military com- mand said. None of the planes was hit and all rcturnOO safely to base, a command communique said. A military spokesman said pilots reported that they thought the missiles ~·ere SAM2s. The missiles were 1aunched from Egypt at the southern end of the canal and expkxlt'd over the Israeli«eupied Sinai Peninsula. the spokesman said. He said he did not think IsraeJ '4'0Uld take retolialory action. "We don't lmo\v \vhat the situation is. We don 't know why they dldn 'L do it yesterday and decided to do it today. We have to wait to Uike a look to see what's going on with these peop\e.1' ''\Ve haven't got any interest in starting anything." he said. The spokesman decllned to say how many planes were Involved, declined to ldcnllfy them and declined to My how far ea~t or the canal the planes were ttytng y,•hen the missiles were fired. Co n1os 576 Launched MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union announced the launch Wednesday of Coomos 576, Jatos! In Its t0p-""'2'el - of unmanned space satdliles. l \ Ervin· Challenge·s N4on Actio~ Attacks Seen toBe eeking President's Testimony· ... WASHINGTON (AP ) -Sen a t e Watergate Chainnan Sam J . Ervin Jr. challenged today whether President Nix· on did anything "to perform hls duty to see that the laws are faithfully executed in respect to the Watergate affair." The North Carolina Democrat attacked certain White House statements after winning acknowledgement from John \V. Dean Ill that some presidential decisions and W1Ute House actions not related to the Watergate violated the First and Jo~ourtb Amendments to the C.OnstituUon. Questions by Ervin ~1 the fourth day of Dean's testimony appeared aimed at challengtng Nixon to testify on the Watergate scandal. Later, committee coW\Sel Samuel Dash said the question of v.•hether to invite the President to testify had not been resolved. In other highlights from testimony by ousted White House counsel Dean: -He kept no notes of most or his meetings with Nixon because "some of I.he things that were being said in these meetings ... were very incrilninating to the President." -He believed, "J was a restraining in- NIXON .'.ENEMIES' REACT TO LIST-Page 4 fluence at tbe White House. There were many wild and crazy schemes, some o( which I have not testified to." He was not asked to elaborate on the schemes. -The President pulled him aside shortly after the Jan. 20 inauguration ceremony to get ·~something done" about a demonstrator who had briefly breached a police line during the inaugural parade. A Secret Service agent had earlier told him that the President was quite angry about the incident," Dean said. Dean insisted in response to a series or questkw from the White House that 1\is memory is sharp and his accusations against the President are truthful. 'Ibe White House counter-attack was in the form of a series of questions sub- mitted by special presidential counsel J . Fred Buzhardt, and put to Dean by Sen. Daniel K. Ioouye (D-Hawail). Inouye said Buzhardt told him today that Nixon had been briefed about the questions. Dean's grilling is pert of a White House counterattack a g a i h s t 34 -year -old fonner counsel, who in his fourth straight day stuck to his story that Nixon and his top aides plottOO together to cover up the wiretapping affair. On Wednesday Buzhardt, in a letter to the Senate Watergate committee, called Dean the mastennind of the cover-up and described fonncr Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell u his patron. Inouye toot more than an hour asking 39 questions submitted by Buzhardt. He om.Uted one, perhaps inadvertently. Dean said that although his memory Montoya Accused Of Laundering Campaign Casl1 NEW YORK (AP) -'The Wall Street Journal said today that Sen. Joseph Mon· toya (0-N.M.), used dummy committees to hide the soorces of contri.butiom to his 1970 re-election campaign. The newspaper said that as a member of the Waterg~e committee, "l\1ontoya will be sitting · ·udgmert on Republican tac<k:s that be· · li has ~ed ." The Journal article said that "through the dmmny committees, Montoya fund r aisers routed contributions that might have generated political problems for the senator had they been disclosed. In this way, they laundered $57,000 from various political-action anns of labor groups ... as weII as "5,000 or so l r o m other special intere>t groupo." The newspaper said l\1ontoya declined requests for interviews about his fund raising. New Mexico Jaw, the Journal said, re- quires tund-raising committees for a can· did.ate to report receipts and ex- penditures with the seaetary of state who has interpreted id1e statute to include all CCll'lmW.ee.s raising money for the candldate, no matter where they are located. The newspaper said tile only report fiJ. ed by the Montoya organization was that ol. the New MexiccH>ased group. It said the campaign treasurer, Jack Beaty, set up al least seven other committees in Washington. "Mr. Beaty opened bank ac- counts in the names of the committees,". the Journal said, "but in every other respe« they were phooy, having no of~ fice, no employes, oo phones and no members." U.S. Electio1is Holiday OK'd WASlilNGTON (AP) -The Senate has voted to make election day a national holiday but dereated a proposal to shorten the length or p<e1ldentlal campalillB. 'Ille election day holiday w11 a~ proved by a voice vote Wednesday herore !be bUI puaed 71 to 24 and wasaenttotbeHouse . Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey offered the holiday amendment, cont...llng It la hard for m111y wor1dng people to ret to Ille polla on ttme and a bolfday -Id _,.,. YUter tun>ouL r Isn't a "lape rccordef," he rCCOU!CtlON of the Impress during meetings wJt'h Nix • ln Sei>' tembcr, 1'~ebruary, March and April. He denied that he had deliberately leaked stories to news media as part of a strategy 1!0 escape prosecution. He said he can't recall ever telling G. Gordon Liddy. y,·ho first proposed wire- tapp~ as part o{ the Nixon re-election campaign, that he y,ooJd have a $1-mll· lion budget. Fro11a Page J LIMOUSINE. •• looking for anather one so when this became available, he called us.'1 she said. ~1rs. Spiel noted that Ford lends the cars to the go\'ernment and sells them when they're taken out of service. The Spiels' Lincoln limousine is a 1969 model. Its windows and doors are bullet proof. But the Spiels use it just like any other family car. The children sit in the back seat and ""'atch the bui lt·in television set. 'Ibey sit on lamb carpeting. l\lrs. Spiel said she was an official in the Riverside election campaign for President Nixon and bought the specia( license plate for $15. It's good for one year. She said the car v.'as used during the election campaign to chauffeur dignitaries visiting the Riverside area. \Vhi\e the car impressed most observers, it didn't do much for the pro- prietors of a local resta urant Tuesday night. Mrs. Spiel confessed she had left it in a private space belonging to the 11ackercl Flats restaurant on Main Street and came back to find a nasty note on the windshield. "It said if we ever parked there again they'd have it towed away," J\>lrs. Spil'I said. From Page J HELICOPS ... join to create a county police air force. fie said si:ic police helicopters would be enough to service the entire county. The three coastal cities have nine helicopters and one airplane. In addition. Anaheim has tv.-o helicopters. McGregor declined to say v.1hat has stalled a n1erger of forces thus far. "The chiefs will te ll you they each need their own because there l\'ould be disputes over priorities in case of simultaneous emergencies,'' J\1cGregor said. McGregor said with si:ic helicopters in a county·force. four could be in the air at one time while the other 1 .... ·o are down for maintenance. ''They could stagger the s hifts so they could keep four in the air on almost..4 24- bour ·basis," J\1cGregor said: He said it \vould take 12 pilots for the entire force. fe"'·er than the three coastal cities have now. McGregor said it would be fool ish for Ne wport Beach to own its o"'ll police air· plane. He declined to comment, ho,vever. about the fact HWltington Beach has just bought it.s oy,•n plane. McGregor said a county force could use t"·o planes. "One could handJe the north countv and the other the south county." he said. He said that while he was on the White flouse st~ff he was a restraining In- fluence, halting many "wild and crazy SCht!mes" which others wanted to carry ~t. but which he filed away and ignored. iHe said he had once given a casual assurance to campaign deputy Jeb Stuart l\:lagruder that he Y,'OU!d receive ex- ecutive clemency if Magruder went to jail for his perjured testimony. He con- ceded he did this on his own, and with no authority from anyone higher. But he said tt was done in response to a worried Inquiry from Magrud<r •bout whether he and biJ ramUy would be cared for If his part in lhe cover·up were discovered. Dean aald he took no notes of most or bis meetings with Nixon becaUl8 110me of the things that were being aeid in these meetings . . . were very Ur crimJnating to the President." He said he dkl not want document.a recording such meetings because the White House had a problem with in- formation becomlni public. W ar1n Reeeption Brezhiiev Hcl.S U1iusual Reuirn ~10SCO\V (UPI) -First there was a wave, then a few jokes, bear hugs, kisses on the lips, and finally, overcome with emotion, a few tears. Rarely, if ever before, has there been such a warm public welco~e home for a Soviet leader as Leonid I. Brezhnev received Wednesday on his return from a 12-day visit lo the United States and France. There was no po1np and ceremony at the sun-bathed VIP V~ukovo Airl;lOrt just outside lhe city. There were no bands nor the usual specially recrwted flag-\vav ing crowds. Only Brezhnev's 15 fellow Politburo members, other top Soviet officials, his daughter, Galina, and U.S. and French diplomats were on han~ to greet his blue and white 1L62 jetliner after a three and one-hall hour flight from Paris. Millions of Soviet television viewers watched as the Communist party gen- eral secretary, dressed in a gray suit and red tie, emerged from the sleek airliner, waved from the top of the steps leading to the plane and bounded down the maroon carpet to the tarmac. Family Style 2 Children Undergo Surgery; 2 More Wait STANFORD (AP I -Two children ""'ith inherited heart defects u 11 de r went delicate corrective surgery this morning, while their two brothers awaited iden- tical operatioos scheduled later today. Surgeons hope the family-style open heart operations will give the fun-loving children another 15 or 20 years of life ex- pectancy. Karen Costello, 4, and Richard. 15. entered adjoining operatlng rooms at Stanford University Medical Center for operations· that could take as long as U...O hours to cl-boles in their heart Chambers. Their brothers, David. 18, and Kevin, 13. a lso will be operated on by Dr. Nonnan Shumway. a piooeer in heart I ransplant surgery, and Dr. Edward Stinson, a veteran member of his surgical team. A hospital spokesman said all four children of Santa Rosa truck driver David Costello were "very nervous" but eager for the ope.ration described as "serious but fairly routine." The children all are su£tering from atrial septal defects or holes between !heir upper heart chambers. The defects limit the circulation of blood and oxygen to tissues and organs. causing the children to tire easily. The defect was passed on to the children by their father. Little Karen also is suffering from a hole in a major vein to he r heart. a con- dition that also will be corrected by surgery today. If the holes are small. doctors planned to stitch them closed. If they are larger than a quarter. surgeons planned lo make a patch of membrane from the pericardium, or sac surrounding the heart. More than 100 pints ol type A-poalUve blood were donated for the surgery which was expected to require about 30 pints. The childrea were to be taken to the in- tensive care Unit after surgery and re- main in the hospital about 10 days. Doctors expect the children to get out of bed Friday, mying even heart tr_anspiult pitlents can get out ol bed the dayalleraqery. . The parmts and cblld:ren h a v e demanded the hospital protect their privacy during !heir stay at the ho<pltal. The family even moved in with friends before entering tbe hospital to get away lrom publicity' the hospital said. Space Program Financing OK'd WASlilNGTON (UPI) -The Senate today approved a compromise $3 billion authorization bill to £inance the nation's space program for fiscal 1'74. A Howie-Senate Conference Conunittee agreed on a $3.064 billion authorizatioo, $48.5 million above the administration budget request for the N a t I o n a I Aeronautics and Space Administratioo. The measure includes $2.2 billion in authorizations for 11 NASA research and development project5. Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1>uA(a.p HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE "BEST BUY'' AWA RO SOfT FOOO WASTI DISPOSlll PtWlf flo Moc!MiMIM • 2 l1v1I llitr•·W•tll , • AlftHll'tlc D1t1,,.... Oiiptflllf • Swlllt 0...... DHr • SIWl-o.t tall• ........ 159'5 : WI Olt.IVIE• WE SE.VIC.IE Wli IMSTALL • iuMt•llll $oh F1• I J ... l ..... 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(UPI) -\Vendy (37- 25-36) Berlowitz belted out a chorus of "Wedding Bells Go Ding Dong," auc- tioned off !he top half of her purplt;. velvet S\vim1nin·g suit and went to jail for exposing the 37 in a public place. "\\1e·vc sold everything bul our guitar which "'<'can't sell because "·e·re musi· clans." \'w'cndy shouted to the mostly male cro\Vd of 1,000 Persons \Vednesday on the University of Oklahoma campus. The men showed up to get a closer look at the former graduate school instructor. "AH I've got left is the bathing suil off my back. so it's going to be auctioned right now." The bidding did not go as high as she expected. "Come on, I don't want to cat beans lonight ," she pleoded. "I can't take it off until I get the money. Bring the cash up right now and I'll trade you lhe too for IL.. ' The bidding stopped at the $10 level and the winner was A.C. "Red" St range. "I just wa nted to give her the op- portunity lo loke it off," he said and she did . • Strange presented his $10 bill and the crowd roared. Then a hush fell over the assembly as Wendy reached back, pluck- ed the single hook loose and raised the top over her head. ··\Vay to go. Wendy! Put 'er there," one man in the crowd shouted. "You're a real revolu tionary!" yt'llcd <i oother. Her husband Jim beamed with pride. l~e said the episode proved his wife is "courageous beyond except.ion." ··rve never seen anything like It," he said and then added something that com- pared his wile to Joan of Arc. About that time a petite woman poli ce officer pushed her way through the cro\vd and arrested Wendy on a charge or exposing herself in a public place. Her bond was set at $1,000 and she was jailed when she couldn't post the bond . "If my husband can walk around without a shirt. why can't I? I'm sick of looking at my husband's tanned chest. It is di scriminatory for women to have to WC'1'r blouses and a 1nan not to. ' "The whole reason I took it of( was to Co to court," she went on. "I want to be there. They know I'll show up. Wate r District Warning Monorail Plan Discussed For Lagu11a The technology of the fut ure may ~ome the savior or a past dear to many in Laguna Beach. That notion came forward th.ls week at a forum on local transportation during presentation of an "imaginary concept'' to ease weekend and summer traffic con- gestion: a mooorail through Laguna Ca- nyon. Michael Schley, president ol the Citizens Tovm Planning Association, said such a system might not ·be as far a way as it would a~ar. The proposal, as shown in a series of color slides, includes parking facilities near the junction d Laguna Canyon Road with the San Diego and Santa Ana freeways. After parking their cars at the inland mouth of the canyon, visitors would board the monorail and travel the JO miles to a propoaed plaza at the Festival ol Arts. For obvious costs reasons, t h e monorail plan might be irecedcd by a bus line through the canyon, aatd Schley. The Cl'PA plan received enthusiastic applause from the 50 persons attending the transportation forum sponsored by the Lagwia Beadl Coordinating Council. Th< need fur Laguna Beadl to keep abreast of the newest in m a s s trans~rtation design also was stressed by \Vayne Moody, director of planning and development. ToOay's Laguna Beach, Moody said, is feeling the effects of ''developing the co1nmunity around the automobile." Paci!ic Coast Highway, built in 1927 has become the major transp n1.ation conidor for the town. At the same (ime, the highway "has ef- fectively separated the town from the ocean resource -the resource that brought them here," satd •Moody. Moody said t bat some "fairly in- novative" solutions to Laguna's parking and traffic problems soon will be made by a citizens transportation and circula~ Lion committee. Already, he said, the city bas moved to provide a parking structure on Glenneyre Street. and is aUempting to obtain federal grant money for a combined bu.s terminal-parking Jot facility adjacent to city hall. It has just been within the past few years that the city has established the Laguna Beach MWlicipal Tran.it Line, Moody noted. The plamti~ direclor noted that a "lot of changes" are in the wind, including creatioo of new transit authoriUes, in- creased rebates from gas tax ror rapid transit system development and study of a total "transportation COl'Tidor" along the coastal sector. "We're probably stuck with the automobile for some time, but we're not trying to encourage U1e automobile. rather mass transportation." s a i d Moody. Leaky Faucet Costs Money A lcuky fnucct means water and money down the drain. Oil'ectors of the South Coast County \V1itcr· District servin g the South Laguna area want lo mnkc that ract clc.<lr in u current carnpaign ugalnst "drips and dribbles." Using the slogan Oj lF you must waste money. don't waste it on water/' SCCWD offlclals hope to reduce needleSS' water use and co.~tly leaks this i ummer. Thomo!l Brooks, \\!ti ter bonrd president. s;ild needless use or water means hlgh<'r energy costs to pump ~ter through the hilly district. "At the !l":lme time, we believe \\'C have an obligalinn to ouf wotcr user~ to call their nttention to 'drips atld dribbles' that run up their water bills," Brooks ad- dc<I. For cr<ample, fl le11ky fauce t wll l drjp away up to 15 gallons of.\vater each day. A "dribbling" lollct will lose up to 400 gallons a day. SCCWO officials offer water users the follow ing suggestions to conserve water: -Cheek a ll faucets periodically for leaks and drips. espcclally out of the way fixtures In laundry room or gn rdans. -cbc<.:k 1oilcts for dribbling by placing );()me bluing in the tnnk . If the ctilor :Jll- pears in the bowl. the toilet is lcsking. -Don't overwatcr lawns or gardens. Check water requirements with lhOSI! f11miliar1 With ~l plants. -Water early In ihe morning or after sunset to avoid evaporation. -Wait for a ful l load of clothes before rwming an autorrtaUC wusher. !-Take short showers. Brool<a emphaslicd that-the dl !trlct Is not factd with a water supply shortage, noting a -new transmission line down Sooth Co.isl Highway will be able lo hon· die all peak demand.'l of lhc water dist.rict . Bus Service For Soutl1 Coast Seen Within three years, Orange C.OUnty's "lwo bit bus line" ""ill offer service throu ghout the Saddleback a nd Capistrano valleys. Communities that will be served by 1976 include El Toro, Mission Viejo, Laguna Niguel, Capistrano Beach and San Clemente. according' to James BinckJey, a civil engineer for the Orange County Transit District. During 1974, the district plans to in. augurate a route offering freeway serv~ Mission Viejo and Santa >.m.;· Bi_n~~!~-said ~t a !ecent lransportation forwn held in Laguna Beach. The next sizeable addition to the sout h county &erV'ice will be a line running from Orange County Airport through El Toro and Mission Viejo to the in- tersection of Crown Valley Parkway and Pacific Coast Highway in Laguna Niguel. The route will be running sometime during the 1974-75 fiscal year, said Binck!ey. Durinfl: the following fiscal year. the OCTO, he added, will establish routes linking Laguna Beach with Capistrano Beach and San Clemente. Currently, the 39 bus system covers cer:tral, northern and west portions of the county. Lines travel only as far S-OUth as Laguna Beach. The transit <ijstrict, Binckley said, "'ill be abl e to expand ils services in all areas \vith a $10 million capital improvements grant from the Urban ~lass Transit Administr~tioo of the U.S. Department of Transportation. 1'.foce than 80 percent of the money will go for purchase or 162 4f>.passenger buses. The remaining $1 million will be used for a neet of smaller buses. an ad- Iriiri.iStration and maintenance facility in Garden Grove, bus stop signs, bus stop settees and miscellaneous equipment, said Binckley. In addition, the transit district has re- quested $1.5 million from the federal government for a "park and ride'' system based in Fullertoo. The plan involves comtruction of park- ing structures to bold ears of commuters \vho take the bus to either Los Angeles or other portions cif Orange .County. · Biockley noted that the transit district is VefY pleased with a "dial-a-ride" pilot program. curreotly operating in La Habra. Persons may call the transit district and within 20 minutes a minibus picks them up and takes lhem to their destination. The fee is 50 cents. The transit district, he said, is looking for another Jocatioo in the county to try out the service. Girl, 9, Shot By Mother Dies. Ul'I T•""""'91 AT NEW YORK RALLY Browder in 1936 RE FLECTI NG ON LIF E Browder in 1973 Earl R. Browder, '30s ' Communist Leader, Dies !\ From "'ire Service' He ser,·ed prison terms from 1917 I PRINCETON. N.J . -Earl Russ('ll lhrough 1920 and in 1941 and 1942 for o~ Bro\\•der. Co1n1nunist Pany candidate posing American 'o\'ar policy. for president in 1936 and l!MO. is dead al fron1 19'26 to 1929 he served as director age 82. Browder. '.\'ho ,,·as general of the Pan-Pacific Trade U ni o n secretary of the Comn1un ist Party in the Secretariat in Shanghrii. helping to United States from 1930 to 1945. died in organi ze the Con1muni st drive in Chi na. 1 his sleep \Vednesday at h.is home here. ~le 11'as a nic1nber of the executive co1TI· , "What was good for the 1930's is no mitt~ of the Con11nunist international I ti.Jovement from 1935 to 1940. ~e~~ the 1970's," he said in the in-Brov:der \vas born in \\'ichita . Kan., the j "There's still room for a pusher, a pro-son of a school teacher. His lineage was gressive force in the coun try, but l can't early American , reaching back to the j' say what. The Communist party has pr<r-1650's in Virginia. He was self educated. ven in Ii!~ that it doesn't fit the role any ~Hs son \Villiam heads the departmC'nt 1 more. w,hat was requ ired to keep il of r..1athematics at Princeton Unive rsity. , strong woul dn't have been desirable." Besides \\lill ia1n he leaves sons F'el ix of The Communist Party became the Chicago and Andrew of Providence, R.l. , Communist Political Association in 1944. A me1norial service is scheduled SaWr· In 1946 Browder was expell ed from the day ~l the \Voo<lrO\V \Vilson School fo~ association as a ''re\'isionist" for sup-Publie nnd lntemational Affairs a~ porting President Roosevelt's policies. Princl'ton. The funeral \viii be private. Attor11ey ~elli "'to Defend Coast's Ex-POW Miller . ' • : l SAN FRANCISCO (APJ -A Tustin vehemently" denying the charges, iaid ?i.1arine lieutenant colonel will deny Bell i, attorney for Jack Rub}' after ~ .. "completely and vehemently " charges llarvey Osv.·ald was shot to death in tbc that he aided the enemy and mutinied aftermath of President Kennedy 'ii while held captive in Hanoi , said flam-assassination. boyant lawyer Melvin Belli. Belli said the 24-year Marine veteran'~ Belli said he will detend Lt. Col. Edison statement also will describe tile "mO:r.c W. Miller, who with Navy Capt. Walter harrowing" torture he experienced wliile E. Wilber was charged Tuesday by Rear a prisoner for five years. LA MESA (AP) -A 9-year-old girl Adrhiral James B. Stockdale, deputy Mill er, 41 , was the highest-ranking died Wednesday, five ·days after sheriff's commander of all POWs held in North l\1arine held prisoner by North Vietnai'p. deputies said her mother fatally wounded Vietnam. He and Wilber, both veteran fighter her and a 12-year-old brother before kill-"Miller is amazed at the charges and pilots, are the first freed POW offi~ ing herseU. doesn't know their basis. He says he charged with prison camp misconduQt. Ro.semary Yuhaus died in Grossmoot never met the admiral who filed the Eight enlisted men have bee n accused l>f Hospital of a bullet woond in the charges," Belli said. "He says he never divuJging prison camp secrets. fori;:head. Her brother, Stephen, died did anyt hing at any time illegal and Lesser counts filed against Miller and TueSday night. never tried to harm anyone else, any \Vilber include soliciting other POWs to . Investigators said Marie Brandt, 33, soldier or the country ." violate the Code of Military Justice. shot them and hcrseU in their home last Miller, whose wife filed for divorce disloyalty, conspiracy. failure lo obey Thursday at Santee after breaking up 'o\'ith ?i.iay 31, will issue a three-page statement an order and causing or attempting lo her boyfriend. "in his own words completely and cause insubordination. ~~~~~~~:::._:.::.::_:::._:__::..:::..._.::.::_: _ _:.__:__~~~~~~~~~- JJ. J. 9arrell; - Collection of Decorator CHAIRS As Shown now s18 9e ... or $3 49. per pair 22nd Semi-Annual Yo ur favorite interior cles i911er will b'c happ1J to assis t 11ou ••• ' H.J.GAl\l\ETf fllRNlTURE PROFESSIONAL Open Mon. INTERIOR OESIGNERS Thurs. & Fri. Eves. 2215 HARBOR BLV O. COSTA MESA. CALIF. '. '•. • .. ., ' I ·- , 4 DAILY PILOT h One End, ( ILl ... t the Other l)VD<lET BUSTERS DEPT. -Any _,.,..rif. e· who tries to buy this year's Qlbcbops--wttb-our current·doJlar-has a ·ftt.y gOod idea what budget-fighting is i about. She likely figures the price in- _ lion vs. dollar deflation is some k.ind of iracy. w can you blame her? Conspiracies ~.very large in the news these days. ¥fway _spending, versus s.aving is ays a giant tug-of-war and someho\v ms the saving part ends up on the . end of the stick. · isn't just in household budgets, you. Look to goverrunent. Like t here with our own Orange County rd of Supervisors. This is budget- -co a grand scale. folks like us worry about hav- ing only $42.23 left in the family food budget. Our country supervisors, on the other hand, are wrestling with ex- penditures that go up to $350 million. THAT'S RIGHT, it takes $350 million to run our county government for a single year. Personally, I can't even jm·agine how many dollar bills that is if they were ~tacked up in a single pile. In recent times, our county supervisors ~ve been going through what is known .,-; budget hearings. This means that all !hz . county department heads come l!rltfore the board and declare they must #.rend, spend, spend on a long list of vital •~ms. , Tbe Supervisors' task is to sit up there tll the big chairs and say no, no, no. . 0-~partment heads, however, are well e:ware that the supervisors are prepared to say nay at the drop of a ve>te "1d therefore they come prepared k. j u s t i f y the spending. Thus the tug-of-war is established. Sometimes the supervisors stick with the nay: so1netimes they get talked into a yea. What ends up getting spent shows up in your taxes. TAKE THE PRESENT Orange County pr9perty tax rat~. It amoWlts to $1.95 for i'ach $100 worth of assessed valuation on your properly. This is just the part that nms the county government. So this year the supervisors have been backing away -at next yeai''s expenses and figtl{e they sliced the tax rate back to maybe $1. 78. This part sounds pretty good. But at the same time, it appears that the county bas increased spending from $306 million on the current year to $350 ntillion during the coming fiscal year. How can that be? They say the tax rate goes down bu t the spending goes up. W_ell, for one thing, lhere was $22 million in the current budget that. in- credibly somehow, didn't get spent. So they are carrying that over for next year's spending. Then there was the :;mall matter of another $10 million that got handed down from the federal government. Of course you know where lhc federals got that cash in the first place. THUS IT IS the old story. The federals boost your gasoline taxes, take the money, hand it back to the county and the county says hey,. we can reduce your lax:es because we got this extra money. This is sort of like your cagey old Aunt Maude, wbo borrows eight bucks from your cookie jar up on the shelf and then. in a grand gesture, loans you a fiver. 11 all looks good, but somehow you get 1he notion that you aren't really getting Iii head. Nation's .UPI Ttlffflole CREWCUT-STYLED EX-BEATLE JOHN LE NNON, WIFE AT HEARINGS Singer Joins Watergate Spectators in John Dean Testimony White House 'Enemies' Both Honored, Amused United Press International Some said it \Va! a sign of lotalitariartism. Others \l'ere a111used. And the great n1ajority of the prominent figures included on a White House li st of "enemies" said they were honored to be considered enemies of President Nixon. '·I \\'OULD HAVE been embarrassed not to be included." said Sen. Harold Hughes (D·lowa ), "Jn this case, no men- tion, like faint praise, nli ght be con- sidered damnation." The list , released by the Senate \liatergat.e committee \Vcdnesday after it was submitted by former presidential counsel John W. Dean I II, brought fort h colorful responses from many of the 200 labor leaders, businessmen, actors, and joW"nalists included on it. Some journalists $aid it ~·as one of the highest honors they had ever received. •·Next to \Vinning a Pulitzer prize," said Ne1v York Post columnist Harriet Van Horne, .. there can be no greater honor for a journalist in this year of shame than being on the \Vhite House blacklist." "'T OBE RICHARD Nixon's enemy to. day is to be the friend of our founding fathers and of all that is decent and just in our Democratic tradition," she added. Black comedian Bill Cosby said "f 1l'ant to make it perfectly clear Nixon \\las on my list long before I was on Nix· on's list." His colleague. Dick Gregory. said. ''That's how Hitler got his start ... pretty soon the list will become a creden- tials list for knowing who are the right People and Bob Hope and Billy Graham will be saying, •are you sure I'm not cm it.' " Arnold M. Picker. of United Artists Corp. and a top fundraiser for Sen. Ed- mwid Muskie, was the first name on the list, which was in priority order. "I'LL LET GORDON Liddy pick up the award for me,'' said actor Paul Newman. Carol 6ianning, comedienne and star of the musical "Hello Dolly," said "I didn't know the Presid~t didn't like my singing." She added that NiXon had once said to her "You are my favorite DoUy" and only two weeks ago Mrs. Nixon ac· cepted a diamond ring she sent as a gilt. North lrela11d's Voters To Choose New Assembly BELFAST IAP l -Northern Ireland's voters choose a provincial asse1nbly to- day Amid a spate o( guerrilla violence and political backbiting. • Jn filling 78 assembly seats, the one million voters have a choice of 210 can- _ ( ___ IN_S_H_O_R_T._ .. _) didates trailing 19 differen_Lp~rty labels. Essentially, the fight is for leaders hip of the province's Protestant majority. The new assembly is intended by its British designers to ease the feuding betv.·cen Protestants and R o m a n Catholics which over the past four years has cost more than 800 lives and untold damage in bombing and riots. e Survivors So11gl1t MAN ILA. Philippines (AP ) -A ship sank with 20 Jives Jost. and frogmen were trying Thursday to determine whether as many as 5 Oothers m.ight be trapped alive in the vessel. a Philippine Coast Guard spokesman said. The ship struck what was believed to be a coral reef and sank early Wed~ ncsday about 12 miles south of Cebu, the Philippii'tes' second-largest city, 350 miles south of Manila, the spokesman said. e Dro11gJ1t Relief ROME (UPl)-Rain has 'fin"<tlly started falling in parts of drought-stricken West Africa but U.N. officials said Wednesday it could do more harm than good by hampering transportation of a i d to millions facing starvation. Experts of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), head- quartered in Rome, said the rainy season is also posing the danger that thirst~az ed, 'half-starved catUe may drink them- selves to death. East Coast Wet · .!Veedles Folks Wake Up to 105 Degree Temperatures .~ ... "' .)J ' "' " ·" ""wt AMI •OlOC.Uf. j ll•mont, lJ, an 01lrdtlt cowbov, and ll!A llorM. Coastal Weather Suriny lod11y. l lgM varleble wind• ntgllt end morning houri b«ornl~ Wfll&rly I to 16 knoll 111 efltrnouns !Oder Ind Friday. H11111 today n. Coastal '111mperalure1 ran1t from 62 !o 70, 1r.11nd 1emperaturM r111111t trom ~ to 74. W•lllf' l9mperth1rt 69. Su11, Jtloon, Tides TMUllSDAY Second 1111111 • . •• . . . • . . 7: 16 p.m. $tl;Olld low • . . • . . . .. . 12:.U: p.m. FlllOAY ~lrJt ll}flt .......... ':14 ''"'' 3.7 Fir., !OW' .......... 2:43 11.m .• 1.1 Stcond hicrh .......... 10:01 p.m. 1.0 SKoncJ !ow .....• ,.. 1:41 p.m. 2.1 Sun Ill-5~4' 1.m. ltt• 1:08 D.m. Moon llilff 3:41 1.m. S111 6:)9' D.m, DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE· Dtt~ ol lht Daily r!IOL Is 9LJ¥1Rtftd M-••·~rl .. 11 11 '" ...... -. .. •YllW _,,., rt )1M """'' 1111 MM1 ,..., """ •lit .,. .,.,,... "' ,... c.i11 •n ..., • -,, ..... ........ , ............ If .,.. .. -_._. Pl'!: "'" ., ' ""'· ....... ., • ., ... ..... ~ ........................ , ,,.. ""'"' -.... " .... (; War· Critics . . to President Will Veto All Bomb Ban Riders • WASHINGTON tUPI) -War criti<s, now in finn command of both Mme! of Congress, grimly pressed ahead IOOay wit.b legislation to stop the bombing or Cambodia -despite President Nixon"s veto ol such a measure. Antiwar forces in both the Senate and House vowed to attach a new end-the·war measure aJ a rider to vital ap.. propriatlons bills that' must be passed if the federal government is to continue o~g. ' mE CRUNCH IS expected to come on * a House-passed appropriations resolution, to keep_ federal agencies operating after the new fiscal year begins this Sunday. 1'\le House resolution contains an amend- ment -identical to the one written into the $3.3 billion su pplemental ap.. propriations bill Nixon vetoed Wednesday -cutting off turids" for U.S. military ac- tion in, over or from the shores of Cam- bodia or Laos. Senate approval is ex- pected before the elld of the week. In vetoing the supplemental blll, Nixon said the total bombing halt "would seriously undermine the chances for a lnstlng peace in Jndochlna and jeopardize our efforts to create a_ s_table, eruiurJ.ng structure of peace around the world." THE HOUSE, minutes after Nlxon's message was read, sustained the veto. Jt voted 241 to 173 in favor or a motion to override. 49 votes short of the necessary two-thirds majority. Cambodia Cheers Chairman George Mahon {[).Tex.), of the House Appropriations Committee said he would seek approval of a new supplemental bill without the antiwar rider, but doves said they would 5eek to attach the Cambodia amendment to the measure once again when it conlCS to the floor. In an interview today in th e Washington Post, Melvin R. Laird, the President's new chief domestic adviser, said Nixon will veto every bill that con- tains· a ban on funds for bon1bing Cam- bodia·. Nixon Veto Move TilE llAR0 LINE bf' the \Vhite House indicates the battle-between the Ex- ecutive and Legislative branches has been joined. Senate 'Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield pledged Wednesday to . attach the Cambodia bombing ban rider to every piece of legislation •'until the v.•ill of the people prevails.,. · From Wire Services PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -The government gave a predictable welcome today to President Nixon's decision to continue bombing in Cambodia. It said this could enable its forces lo control the military situation and shorten the war. NIXON'S DECISION coincided \\'ith the Phnom Penh command .announcing a series oi offensive operations to recap- ture lost territory in several areas. 'fhe operations reportedly \Vere on a relativC» l y minor scale. Maj. Gen. Sosthene Fernandez, com- mander of the armed forces, said coo- tinuing American air bombardment "'ill 'inflict heavy l~s on Khmer Rouge in- s\Jrgents and their N o r t h Vietnamese arties, "and the war will end very quick- ~· . In Saigon, Vietnam'-s ceasC»fire entered its sixth month tod3.y with the Saigon command reporting 13 civilians kilted in five separate incidents and more heavy fighting near Kontum in the Central Highlands. Two government soldiers were kill ed. four v.•ere \VOunded and 10 were missing following all • day fi ghting Wednesday within seven ~iles of Kontum, the com- rriand" Saia1.fu 'its daily communique. · COMA-IUNIST FORCES at Kon tum consist o( two regiments (about 5.800 men) of the batUe-hardened North Viet- ~ 30Znd ~r "Steel" Di'{i.Sion, Mili- tary~~ sa1d. . The~ Division helped defeat the Frencfi at Dien Bien Phu nearly 20 years agO. ~· year ago its for\Yard elements penetrated Kontum City but were driven back in one of the bitterest battles of 1972. Now the 302.nd is having another crack a t Kontum. The city is 260 miles north of Saigon and strategically located near the Ho Chi Minh trail to the west and to Pleik\l, keq city for the Highlands, to the South, . The 302nd appeared to be ignoring an ultimatum by Brig. Gen. Tran Van Cam, commander of the South Vietnamese 23rd Infantry Division headquartered at Kontum, to pull back by Friday or face a counter offensive -to be launched \Yith air and artillery bombardment. Nixon said it the supplemental bill is not enacted the payroJI for Socia l Securi- ty Adn1inistration workers would be withheld, and 25 million Americans might be deprived of their benefits. There is some question whether the measure automatically dies Saturday \vhen U1e current budget year ends. or whether it can be passed in the new fiscal year. The ilnpasse on the "continuing resolu- tion" could be far more serious, however. if Congress and the P reside\lt rail to l'Onlc to terms. I Chi~ Explodes Nuclear -Weapon in Atmosphere By United Press International China announced today that it exploded a hydrogen bomb Wednesday and declared that it wanted to break ''the nuclear monopoly by the superpowers." But Peking said it wqµld never be th~ first to use nuclear weapons in war. In a brief communique issued fro1n Peking and carried by the offi cial New China News Agency, China said the nuclear test was only a defense move and bad the , ultimate aim of abolishing nuclear weapdns. ' THE ANNOUNCEMENT indicated the bomb was detonated in the atmosphere. a method of testing that has provoked strong criticism against France in recent \Yeeks. The French are reportedly preparing atmospheric tests over the South P acific. The Chinese statemertt. monitored in Hong Kong, did not mention the size of the blast, bµt U.S. defense analysts estimated that the yield was in the range 'Of one to three megatons. A megaton is a million tons of TNT. By contrast. tile Unied States has detonated a 15 megaton bomb and the Soviet Union set off a nuclear blast in October, 1961. that "'as estimated to be S3 megatons. or the equivalent 58 million tons of TNT. *** GRAllD OPEMIMG BAYSIDE CEMTER • JUIT 2•!11 MARINERS SAVINGS ADDS TO ·; .. ITS FLEET *** :'\ow con vcn ien ti y loca ted in Bayside Center a l Jamboree atul Bayside D ril'c. *** * DOM'T lllSS THE BOAT* A 1k aboul our Special Surp ri1e FREE LOG BOOKS, IN FLAT ABLE BEACH BAG S AND O'fH ER NAUTICAL GIFrS e REFRESrIM EN l 'S IN LOBBY e . VISIT TH~ FRI E.N D LIEST CREW IN TOWN .. " .. .. , FOUNDED 195) ~·~ 1--MARINERS ' SAVINGS ~m~ AND 1:Qb.~t~§§.Q£LATION I -. -,,-·-- 1024 1 8'~ddt Dl'l\'t •Newport ktcll • C1llfornlt 9!Mt0 iii' f71l1642 ... 000 • Ho1.1n"9 amlo4pM;",rMb~u111U(I~. ~. MAI/II OFFICE: WESTCLIFF AT DOVER, NEWPORT BUCll ..... ............... . ............. .. 1 I r ---2 Sou.,.ht ~ Ja1ieFonda Not Scored Reapportionment B·lll .. ''SUMMER WAREHOUSE SALE'' In Kidna1l Of Officer LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -The City Counci l Wednesday rejected an at- ten\~ to censure Jane Fonda for calling returned P,OWs .•',liar s and · hypocrites." Override Looming SAC~Nl'O . (AP) Gov. Ronald Reagan's vetQ of t h e 1eg1stat1ve-conrressional reapportionment bill paved, t))e way today f0< leglalaklrs, to . tackle a veto override at- Assembly had the 54 vote• peeded to override the vetO. the ovwide. He said: "I think it's very doubtful. It will , be dilficult. T h e Republicans are so \well con- ditioned they won't vote for an override even if it means their political Jives." ' EVERYTHING 25ot. DISCOUNT~: GOES /0 OR MORE \ ·,' LODI (AP) -Police ar- rested two persons end were seeking two others Wednesday after a Police officer was kid· naped by armed men and 1ater released Wlharmed. Senate Pl'Wdent pro tem James Mills (~ Diogo) was less positive thin Meade In his analyals Wedneaday of the Senate's clwu:• ol peaslng I , Ml .. Fonda and her lu- band, activist Tom Hayden, were at ~ coun- cil se1:9lon "'Ith antiwar tempt. CARPETING--SURPLUS PIECES -CUTS-ROLLS 1 NAME BRANDS -BERV~N • BLAINE • HOLYTEX ·MAND· TREND VINYL FLOOR COVERING · Detective John Martin was seized by two men armed with four revolvers as he and another officer w e r e in- vestigating a Nd check case in a Lodi residential area, . supporten. Also present were about 25 members ol the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars, but neither side got to · present. Its case. The coun- cilmen voted 9-3 that Miss Fonda's statements were noDe of. the city's business. 1 Since 1946, when t h e Legislature mustered a t\\• thirds vote of each house to override a veto by Gov . Earl Warteh, no California . Legislature has· been able to oven-Ide a governor's veto. Violence Persists ARMSTRONG \. CONGOLIUM • G.A.F. 11'.lNflll ALSO AT 20°/o DISCOUNT ,-.--,,..-,,,-,,-k-.. -,-ff--.. Police sa id . The other officer w a s Senate and Auembly over· ride votes ·m the rea~ . ' By Grape Strikers portlonment b!JI were achedul-COACHELLA ( A P l l ColOrie Self Clee11l119 a...- 2 Drop0h1 1-... WALLl'Al'll • DlAl'IS • CIRAMIC TIL i SALE ENDS JULY 2, 1973 VISIT OU R WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM TODAY! I Use your BankAmericard or Ma ster Charge rel eased, but one of the ab-'----------' ed to take plnbe today or Fri-Violence connected with the day -before a five-week current table .grape strike leP.Jatlve recess be KI n • hen! bas occumd In apparent S&lunlay. • contradldloo to orders from "I CAN'T understand the confusion in carrying out my orders," Grami said. "Maybe I just don:t want to believe that instructions for violence were givCn contrary to my NEW MOTIF ~ ~=··":··~·"·~~ ~~~~ -ductors held a gun to l\.1artin's head and threatened to kill him ir they were pre vented from escaping, police said. Marlin and the , two armed men got into a car and drove to Sacramento. Police s8id the two men also apparently had a companion who fled on foot. The abductors changed ears in Sacramento and freed Martin, who was di sovered 'bound with his own handcuff.! by a passing mailman, police said. INVESTIGATORS later ar- rested Karen Lou Harper, 20. Lodi. and Jolwtny Walker, 4.1, Stockton. Miss Harper, booked for in- vestigation as an accessory to felonious assault on a JX>lice officer, was taken into custody at the home where Martin wa s conducting the check in- vestigatloo before he was jumped by the iarmed men. WaJker, booked for in- vestigation or felonious assault on a police officer, was taken into custody by San Joaquin County Sheriff's deputies when he appeared in traffic court. B11Sing Sustained INGLEWOOD (AP) -"We canoot turn back the clock," said a Superior Court judge as he turned down a school district's request to end forced busing. About S,000 or the 13.000 students in the westside Los Angeles County district ride a bus dally to achieve a racial balance in the schools. 1be program began under order t,iy the same judge three years ago. Judge P!1ax F. Deutz .said Wedne9day that to end busing '.'would in errect order resegregatioo in direct viola- tion of the mate and federal constitutions as interpreted by our aw.ellate courts." Last Fires The Republican KOVemot set top offlctals of the Teamsters the Wheels for an override try Union, a union official says. in motion Wedneiday when be In addition,~ a factflnder sent Battled• ·vetoed the bill and aaJd in a to tbe valley by Teamsters ' state"""" that parta ol the , . meur;;-mealW'e _ which Union presklent F r 'n k C b D • . . redran 120 ~tive and 43 Fitzsimmoq.s was. allegedly a~ Ow Oy • "S · Jin costed by a member ol a dissl-""''' ~·1 es -dent imloo faction which is a riiade ,j<. mockery of. good , se..i..i ..... to promote violence, By The Assoeiated Prua mwemment. ' · ....... . •·· ad • the factflnder uld Wednesday. Fire fi ghters tried today to ·Override . vocatea s a 1 d "-f--• "-Ir •-·...._. fight William Grami, ot Burl-COlltrol the last ol more than UEY -~ -~ ....... ~. I h lh the -Senate w he re ingame, director of· t e Assemblyman Ken Me.Me, the Western C,o n fer e n·c e of 150 Sierra Nevada fires blam- ed on lightning strikes that also killed a cowboy. At least 4,000 acres burned \Vednesday in Sierra brush and grass country f r om Fresno County north to Amador and El Dorado coun- ties. the California Division ol Forestry reported. O.kland Democrat who is the T e am • t· e r s ' Agricultural lower house -ot the W o r k • rs Orpnizing Coll> bil l '-•• w ...... ~-.iA · mlttee, said be has con-• -~~y : 11WE HAVE U to 25 hard vote.. in the Senate with &ix: or seven possibilities for the otbet-s" needed to read> the required %7 tally on the vote In the UPPl!f howe. Meade added that he was "confident" the sistently given orders that Teamsters lhould avoid vio- lence ot any kind · In their iw'i>dlctlooal dispute h e r e with Cesar Cbavei' AFU:IO United Farm Workers Union. orders." "The man responsible for au the violence that is going ori out there" is Ralph Cotner, the Western Conference's area s upe rvi sor, said Ray Griego, La Mirada. Griego said he was fired by Cotner, who reparts directly to Grami, as an organizer in t h e valley June 18. "It's not the real Teamsters DES IGN -•· ~ .... ,. = CEN TER ~ WILSHlll 1416 Wilshire AV(!- SANTA ANA CALIFORNIA EDINClll ' HOURS: tO a.m. to 4 p.m. -MONDAY thru SATURDAY organization that's responsible ---------------------~·--for what's going on out there, it's Cotner. I accuse Cotner because he has a personal v e n d e t t a ·against the farmworkers.~ .Griego said. He said he has been a Tromster for 21 yea rs. Try Satt1 r<la y's News Qtriz We Da1·e Y 011 Most v.·ere reported con- tained by nightfall, but a CDF spokesman said fires re· mained unchecked on 500 acres in the Madera-Mariposa area, including one about seven miles south of tbe roothilI town of COarSegold. Another blaze in the rugged, inaccessible Table Top l\1ourr tain area of Fresno County also was giving firemen trou· ble. and the U.S. Forest Service was still trying lo cor- ral a 100 acre blaze. Senate OKs Summer Job Funding lsdt it about ti1ne you spent a ~t vacation instead of a THE BLAZES el'upted from lightning that moved notth up tt\e Sierra range e a r I y Wednesday. LA 'Unisex' Police Okayed LOS ANGELES (AP) - Women poJlce officers ~ill be .performing the same duties as their male counterparts under ordinances approved by the City Council Wednesday. The so-called "unisex" plan \\'SS adopted witllout a decision on whether t h e women will have ito qualify ~ der present height and "-eight standards. Those standards will be specified later. SACRAMENl'O (AP) Le(is!Mm pouring 12 4 . g mlllion Into a p'Ogl'lllll to I"!> tect 100,000 aummer jobs for Calilomta Jou111s cleared the Senate -brief-.. ' Younc people between 14 and II woold benefit from the bill by state s.n. MiJtoo Mans t R-San Francisco). . T h e measure now goes to the Assembly· where Assembly Sp<:aktt·Bob Moretti bas pro- mUed to push ""' Its .....,e before the Friday recess deadllpe. The jobs would involve minbnum wage pay for tasks such as street cleaning, park cleanup and some clerical wcrk. M-' bill is necessary because of federal cutbacks, backers said before a 28-3 Senate vote Wednesday ap- proved the measure. great deal of money? 011fy Coast Qffers • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art Llnki.tter Th• lnlklln Club: A new way to beat Inflation. Its membership card permits you to bey near!y ,,,.ry. thing 'YOO need from the finest closecktoor show- rooms at substantial sav-: lngs -appliances, fumi· ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet'' price arid mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav- lnp •. Tho Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certfflcates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before,maturlty _on all certificate accounts. a lso provides big di &· counts on tickets to sport- ing and .entertainment events ••• •plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require- ment for SOYers-$2,500 minimum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en-- -titling them to a\I outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. MAINOfPa: 9lh Ac HRI, I.Ill,,,.._ • m.U91 ..... _ ............. ...,.PUCIJ 3933 Wltlhlte •MS.. I.A . Jll.1J65 LA. CMC CDl1Di: 2nd&. • .,....... 626-1102 HUNTIMT'ON KM:Hr 91 Huntm.ton Olnt«" (714) •1.:iot1 . ....,,._ 718WMlt!IN BMS.•~ --10lh&l'ICWIC•131-2141 --r.ntt.nd ....... Ctr.• Ill.mt MWAMAerrh a.. A Yafl NU)'t lfwd. • m.1171 TAlllZ&MI 18751 "--llfvd.• 141tlM ---Std. LOQnt. 4'7-7411 USl'LOS NW' "11 Ith ~ '*". M-4510 --f;r4t::=·-- """"' lmra.1:1o• a~111111ar. LA .... Alrllt LoM--Clt. 1114> me111 · ---Dll ...., • 1-n-· 2l7olMl Dlllr-_,Alllo4PM ,,._..__ Cenew,OpMt 1 ..,. 9Alllo1PM ...... -O'~IRIAI ASSETS_OVERONE•IWONDQLWll s...t::.~-=-... -----_,.. 6 .,,../7 daya at Royal ._ Ollly $208.50• (romplete). Maybe start by renting a boat and_ ..mpg along Puget Sound. Drop anchor and do some fishing. Or just Boat lazily along, enjoying the beauty of the shoreline and sunning yourself. When you've hadenoup water, come asbore·and visit the site of the 1962 World's fair . Have lunch at the top of the Space Needle. Or just lake a leisurely sight-seeing tour of Seattle. When you'vchad your fill o( the city, jump into your Hertz Pinto with unlimited mileage and bead(orMI. Rainier National Park. B!Ulhe tbe fresh, crisp air lad take in the breathtaking Wiauty. Maybe even hike or climb ablt. At day's end pu11 into a Royal Jrm. You11 be.welcomed with uaf~ttablc accommodations udaervice. The price includes air fare, hotel accommodations at a Royal Ina lllld a Hertz Pinto based on per-/ double occupancy. (Ualted VIClllon rT-UA-IU-H-738.) $267 .66 (complde) for 7 days/6algbtsla Wlliklki. There's something for everybody in Hawaii For people who like surfing and sunning, some of the most beautiful beaches in the \vorld . For honeymooners, golden sunsets, captivating moonlit nights, romantic places to dine and sce nery that takes your breath away. And for families~ special Family Plan U·Drive bargain s that let yo u explore the islands at your own leisure. Come see how much of yo ur kind of fun Hawaii has to offer. The price includes low midw week air fare and hotel accomm~ dations at the Outrigger West. Roundwtrip transportation between airport and hotel. A flower lei greeting. And admi ssion to Sea Life Park. (United Vacation IT-TW-UA· 738.) Prices subject to change July 6. S!•nclt... Sl&t H.,rt t•r It l20 molt per person ii l"lft .. 1111 •v•ll•lltt. Prices do not include security charge. $301.00• (complete) for 7 days/ 6 nights in Washington, D.C. Take advantage of this low- cost United vacation Lhat lets you see as much of Washington, D.C .• as you want. From yo ur com[ortablc accommodations at Barbizon Terrace, you.'11 tour the White House, the U.S. Capitol and other government buildings. You'll see the historical Lincoln Memorial and Washin gton Monument. Then you'IJ visit Mt. Vernon, Al exandri a. Georgetown, the Library of Congress and the Pentagon. You'll also have tinJe lo explore the city on your own, seeing and doing as you please. The price includes air fare and hotel acco1nmodations based on per person/ double occupancy. Plus all above.mentioned toun. (United Vacation IT-UA-AFW-2.) .. •Special discount air fare not available Friday. Sunday, 2:00 p.m.10 Midnight. r······--·--·----·-·---···-------········• I Pick one of 1hclc bar1ain vacations and call us at 482-2000. I Or c.oni.ct your Travel Agent and ask him 10 boot you on United. 1 Thac are only samptes of the many, rnoney-savin1 vacations we I have to otrer. For more informalion fill out and send £or our free. I fulkoklr btochuru with 111 the dctalls. Ualttd Air Unts. Otpt. 16, 111 l"t Canal SI., 121~ ~.Cb"-m. 60006 Name----------------~ Addl'tSs _______________ _ CilY------------------ Sta ~-----------Zip ____ _ My Travel Aatn1------------,.=,- AW·•is ·---------------------------------------J • The friendly skies of your land . Unlte4Ab: LID.es • \ , ~ . ',. " . " l " . ' .. ,. I . ,, ... • 11 ··~ I ' . ' ~ .\ ·~·~ •• ... yl( " ""'~ if%' ~ ... :~ • \ti:f• ,; ...... ~ ·~·'\ .... 1 ' • ...:. :>"-'i• '.! 1:.,. "'l• . : ··-: .. '",r ........ ... ~. .. ,·· ·::··· .,.~. . . ., ' ;.ft: ... \o· •:r . ' '\, .. , .. . "'" . \~· ' ' ., \' : . . . ' . " . !·:~ . . ' '\' . ' ' . . " ' -1} .. ,, -·· , " I ~~ ,, ·' ·' ., ' . . ' " • . J I •• • • , • •• .. ~ ' I • DAO,y PlLOT EDITORIAL PA.GE \ Just a Piece of T ape • A couple of decades from now, history may recoro. that Watergate was the most lortultous accident to befall the United Sta~s of America in the 20th Century. Tho bungled burglary of the Democratic political headquarters may turn out to have saved the American Republic. At the point the Watergate blew the cover oil of the whole lot of seamy practices in and out of govern- ment in Washington , D.C., it now appears that this nation had been moving slowly but inevitably -and through several presidential administrations -down the path- way to an authoritarian govemment. That is a polite way of saying toward ••popular dictatorship." The onus for this certainly does not rest totally on the current administration , though it must be said that it has done much -much too much · -to accelerate the processes put in motion by preceding administra· tions. The whole sordid business of using government agencies and resources to spy upon the private lives of American citizens for political advantage did. not otigi· nate with the Nixon Administration. Currently, we know it has gone back at least as far as the Kennedy admin· istration. And we know that it wa s used during the Roosevelt administration . So the presumption bas to be that this practice that has been growing like a great, gnawing cancer for perhaps 40 years. The Nixon administration, the record discloses. has built upon this, and it appears also that it has been bullt bigger and faster than any of its predecessors. The frightening thing about this is that the next administration of whatever party would almost certain· ly have carried the process further down the road - always protesting the highest motives of national well· being and "national security" -but actually serving the U.S. May Write Off India Deb t (ROBERTS.AI.I.EN) Wlsm.NGTON -Another huge giveaway to India is in the making. lt ,will likely amount to hundreds of millloo.s of dollars. Ttia't•s the real purpose of Ambasudor Dante! Moynillan's carefully unpublicized return to Washington "for consultation." Wbot \he talL witty prot~e from Harvard brought back with him iJ a secret plao which, Ill eflect, would wri\e all a large pert of \he ll40 million India o .... the U.S. In loans and other debb. This enormous sum is on deposJ.t in rupees to the U.S. account -ac- cumulating inlerest at \he rate ~ $100 million a year -in rupees. AT THAT PACE, by 2012, when lhese 46--year loans are due to expire, the U.S. would bave to its account S7 to $8 billion in rupees. Thal woold be approximately 20 percent of India's mooey supply. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and top officials of her leftist government con- sider ttJ.is an "intolerable situation." They don't deny India owes the money; &hey just don't want to pay it. Carefully not mentioned as a chaos. aea.ting factor was Mrs. Gandhi's sudden aetim in ~1ay oC nationalizing the wholesale trade in wheat -ostensibly for the purpose of "insuring fair prices and halting speculation and hoarding by middlemen," This radical move, the most extreme or her turbulent regime, has been widely denounced -even by members of her 01"'n pe.rty. lt's been assailed on the ground of "unwise and dangerously risky timing in the face ol. lile grave food crisis Dear Gloomy Gus Would you say the security aide who allegedly manhandled Martha ~fitchell and has just been ....... signed to a Job in the U.S. Depart· ment of Agriculture is sort of being put out to pasture? -A.R.V. • ......., Oft _._,, .,.. --~ IW ......,.. _. lit '"" ..-roy rwllf<t •• " .... "' !'!It ~-a.. ,.., Hf '""'' N oi.-y Ow. Dairy l"I .... gnppmg Jndja because of widespread drought." AL'iO · carefully not mentioned by Mme. Gandhi, who never puses up an opportwtlty to acclaim Russia -chief supplier of the massive Indian armed forces which overbwelmed Pakistan's ·smaller and weaker military -is that since the 1950's, U.S. economic aid to India totals more than $9 billion. In other words, ~e the U.S. was giv· ing and lending billions to India to feed ilS famine-stricken masses and build up its industry, transportation a n d agriculture, Russia was arming the military forces to the teeth with modem planes, tanks, gum, missiles and other \\-'ea pons. As. Ambassador Moynihan explains lt, Ii< wants to help "\he U.S. and India solve this critical rupee indebtedness problem." ADi\IJTTEDLY, that will involve wip- ing out much or the $840 million debt - perhaps even all of it eventually in ooe way or another. That sort of sleight-of· hand is not uncommon in long-range in-. 1ernational monetary agreements. Certainly that is India 's intent. Moynihan solemnly avers it is not his. "We cannot accept i.ero," he asserts. "There is no possible f!$Cipe from in· debtedness for India." Collecting Some Errors This is a general round-up today (which I've been putting off for weeks) of iex.cuses, explanations, corrections and rt.-bukes. First of all , several or my quiz answers h.ave been wrong. In one case. I listed several constellations as being stars. I caught the error In time to correct ii for my loca1 paper. but unfortWlately it was too late to make the syndicate deadline, and scores or readers all over the coun· try called me to task for this careless er- ror. Secondly. "1'1erce- des.. \Vas not the Christian name of Daimler's daughter, as f statt<I Jn giving the origin of tho .. Merctdec; • Benz" car. Dozens cl read· ~rs ~ught me up on Chis one -it was the name of his banker's daughter, ll man called Jellinek. flt was ~tupid of me to use this item oowrlfJed, because J picked it out of the ''Websttt Oictlooary of Proper Names.'.' 1 boot J panned unmerctrully when it came out Jast yt.ar, for its general slop- ~ IOd.unreliabillty. Don't ever use It a 1 rd'err!OCe v.wk; J won't again.> ~" AllOUT..,11rooundatlons. Ex"'P' fol\ olwlous vulgarlom.s. sueh as "ath-a· ktf:" for "alhlele" and "nu--cu1Iar" for ''tucle.r. •• most waya ' ol ptOOOUnCing 9'atdi are a matter ol wte. judgment, llocqround and .-o0cla1 •<-........... It la no lflU!l1<!lll 81•~ my version lo poini lo a dlc:tlanary 11181 allow1, or I ' ( ~YDNEY J.HARRISJ may even prefer, a pronunciation I re- ject. Dict'ionaries differ ; many cl them are permissive; and objectively, ot oourse. there is no ."right" way to pro- nounce many words. I am aware of this. But, on the other hand , there ts a form called "Standard" English, in which most v.·ords a.re pronounced a certain wa y by !he great body of educated pel'SOO$. l\foot people in the dietary· field say "pro-te-ln" in three syllables; tf you want to call it "pro-teen," that's fme with me. ~1aybe 30 years from now, everyone Wiii say "pro-teen," and it wUI lhcn be ~standard" English. But you ought to be m11de aware of these phonetic distindions, •nd then make up your own mind. IT IS FOOLJSll to be absolutist nnd dictatorial about words, because they change their meanings and pro· nundatlons from age to age; e.t the same time, If v.·c lx!come totally permissive, then rhc language degenerates and com· munlcatioo becomes harder, ooarser. a11d more divblve. (And literature sufftrs, so !hat Shakespeare today ls bartly un· derstandable by hJ&h school or even col· Jege stUifents, alif-in anoffiler century - may be as obscure as ~ucer.) Finally, if I don't answer all your le!· ters, calling errors and mis-statements to my attention, dm't lmlgine J rttent them. It's Juat lmoooslble to acknowledge the noocr of mal1 8nd wrfle a column every day. lowest common denominalor of political sell-preserva- tion. \ It is a fact that each administration builds upon the actions or Its predecessor, just as the good things an adminJstratlon does are appropriated and improved upon by Its successor. All of the array of "dirty tncks/' power politics, arm-twisting, Invasion of citizens' privary and outright flaunting or basic criminal law that one admin· istration employs successfull y is soon known to its suc· cessor. And it serves as a base upon which they can -a.Dd obviously do -build. Perb~s the most frightening thing of all of the revelations in tbe Watergate so far, even if one were to discount everything that has been testified to by 50 percent, is the lengths to which this administration was wilUng to go in the name of "internal security" to spy upon, burglarize, intimidate and harass private citizens for their political beliefs, or their news reporting. The fact that a President of the Unitea· States and bis advisers wOuJd approve this as perfectly proper and eventually were dissuaded not by the impropriety of what they were doing but by the objections of a power· lui FBI director (whether jealous of his own prero~a tives or whether genuinely concerned for the illegality of it all) is frightening and repugnant. But for an accident ot fate -and many great - events of history have turned on things equally trivial this country would be moving inexorably down the path to self-destruction. History may one day show that all that stood be- tween this great free nation · and a cancerous self-des· truction from within in the closing years of the twentieth century Was a little piece of tape on a door lock in a Washington office building on June 17, 197~. "I LIKE!> LAST YEAA'S tAKl>SLl~E SETTEP,." DoufJle-Dut11 Appoint1ne11t s Businesses Get the Inside Track WASHINGroN -In lhe name of bet· ter understanding bet\\'een government and industry, the Nixon Admini..slralion has been quieUy planting business ex· ecutives in key govenvnent positions where they can help their companies. Any big corpor~tion which wants to keep on the good side of government would like to have an inside man work· ing in the govern- ment policy councils. President Nhton pro- vided this opportua-. ity for several cor- porallons by setting Into molloo \he Pres· ident's Commission on Pl!rsoonel Interchange In 1969. 1be purpose, of course, was presented in noble tenns. 'Ibere would be an ex· change of executives between gove,m. ment and Industry to teach businessmen the bureaucratic ropes and, thereby, to promote understanding. TIIE COMMISSION has been used by the big corporatims, however, as a Tro- jan Horse to infiltrate the government At least SO top business executives will be placed this summer in government jobs where they may be able to influence decisions affecting their companies. Phillips Petroleum, for example, has already planted Robert Bowen inside the Treasury Department office which deals with oil and energy problems. Another oil executive, Tenneco's Ed Bridges, is working oo East-West trade al the Com· merce Department. The oil companies. of course. have a multi-million-dollar stake in East-West trade. Here are other examples from the C.Ommissioo's internal files: -The Bank of America tried to place Joe ,.1ason. "a bright young attorney." on the potent Securilies and Exchange Qmunisslon. ·Wrote the bank's assistant vice president, T.Jl.f. Quigg: "A year's tour with the (SEC) v.'Ollld be extremely beneficial to Mr. Mason.,, The SEC has been approached, we're told, about ta.It· ing Mason. -From Coca c:ol.a headquarters in Atlanta, Coke's Director of Taxes, Paul Dillingham, wrote the Commission: "We would very much like to participate in the Interchange Program provided the nominee from our company can be placed in the U.S. Treasury ... " The Com· mission and O>ke, however, quarrelled over the conditions of the placement, and the 1ppllcation was withdrawn. -The prestigious accounting firm. Peat, Marwick, Mitchell and Co., al!O bad specific ideas where it wanted to place a young executive named David Cole. "\Ve prefer," wrote the firm's Wkks James Smith, "that Mr. Cole be placed in either or the following positions: (a) As an assistant to the Commissioner of Internal Revenue ... (b) As a member ol lhe s\af! ol lhe Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Tax Policy, Mr. Fl'ederic W. Hickman." The finn, however, may have to settle for a place- ment at ~ SEC. -In "' reverse exchange. the Pacifie- Sierra Research Corp. hired on loan from Wright.Patterson Air Force Base a specialist who v.·as immediately put in charge of a research project that the company v .. ants the military tp fund. The company president, Frank Thomas, specified that he wanted to hire William J. Parker wlder the exchange program. A cursory rev iew by the Air Force found the loan of Parker to Pacific.Sierra "''ould crellte "no proble1n involving a conflict of interest." Yet only l\\'O \.\·eeks later, Parker reported to the com- mission : "I v.iU be the program director for a major research effort currently under negotiation with DoD (Defense Department )." TIIE COMMISSION'S chief matdr maker, whose job it lo to ""'1 big business with big government, is Jay Leanse, himself an ex-businessman. Less than a year on the job, lhe sofl-spokeo Leanse finds his staff in revolt, his budget $70.000 in !he bole and his chief White House spoosor, John Ehrlichman, in political disgrace. Insiders also charge that LeaNe has mishandled a most unusual "educa- tional" fund. 11tis fund, totalling over $60,000. comes not from Congress but from the corporatkm and fedenl agen- cies participating in the (l"OIJ'&11l. For every participant ln the program. the sponsor is billed $1,000 to cover "educaUonal'' expen.tes. These expenses last year blcl•:ded everything from a f4IS .-anck' 4 porty \O a 16,IOO blJI for brochuros which \he government ...ru.ed . to prlnl u loo 11udy. Making Marriage Work Modem marriage manuals keep no\\ .. ing forth these days describing the minor ripples th.al disturb the calm sea of matrimony -such as adultery, bigamy, assault and battery, triple-entry book· keeping and felonious mopery. But none includes the major flaw from which most modern marriages suffer - a disgraceful lack of lyraMy. Take Dy typical marriage. Take, for example. 1'-tr. and Mrs. Wilbur Wasp. In the past %5 years the only time Mrs. Wasp failed to r~ spond to one of Mr. Was p's questions ll'ith a question was when he asked her to marry him. "Yes!'' she said, flatly and definitely and for the very last time. l\IR. WASP also made a decision. Once. It was after they had looked at 42 hou9es following the.ir wedding. "Do you like this one, dear?" he would ask as ·they tramped through each one. "I don't know, dear," ~trs. Wasp would cleverly reply. "Do ynu?" After wee~ of discussion -"Do you ' ( ART HOPPE J think that rococo ranch house is loo far from the bus stop?" "What do you think, dear?" .:._ Mr. Wasp, in a frustrated moment, made his fatal mistake out of youth and ignorance. '"! think." he said firmly. '"we ohoold buy that hooJe at 32 Upper Rosebud Ter· race.'' "I'm so glad yoa made a decision for both of w," l&id Mn. Wisp, amllJng smugly. AND, SURE ENOUGH, the house tum· ed out to be riddled with tennites, beetles and dry rot. And. after the fir1t heavy rains, the address had to be changed to 32 Lower Rosebud Terrace. "It's all my falllt!" groaned poor Mr. Wasp. "I'm sure, dear," said l\trs. Wasp con· solingly, "that you thought you were doing \he right lhlng." But Mr. Wasp detected the secret note of b':iumph in her voice. lie knew he'd been had. And right \here he learnod That First Lesson of ~tarriage: The spouse who makes a decision ls responsi· Don't Push, Don't Push! Remarks a widower 1ets tired of hear· Ing: "You'll love to meet her, Joe -she's just your type." "You've got to quit thlnkina: of the past. After all, you're stlll a young man -comparatively speaking, anyway." "Why don't you come eat with us tonicht, Joel Me and the missus aren 't spcaklng, and maybe you could help broak the deadlock." "Listen, old pol . wlll yoo do a buddy a favor? How about me borrowing your apartment tonight? You could go to the movies or something." ( HAL BOYLE ) you're not 111pposed to try to Dush hol grease and paper towels down the toilet simply beca111e your sink Is lull ol dishes?" , "I'd like to go lo Jhe ·poker game wllh you tonight, Joe, bUt I can't, My wife and I are celebrating our 20th wedding an· nlversary." . "! premise you, Joe. You'll not only fall for her on sight -you'll also be crazy dbout her lour kids." "Maybe you ought lo get married q1ln, Daddy. l'U be thr0!1~h college pretty _,, and ·you know I probably woo't be around home much after that." ble ror its usually dire comequences. In the years that followed, the Wasps led 1 sedentary life. 'Ibey often dllio1wd going out ror dinner. but never went. "Whal about that little French place?" she would ask. "li you lhink we'd llke ii," he 'd reply hopefully. But she was too smart for that. ONCE nlEY went lo a movie after Mrs. Wasp suggested tossing a coin to determine which picture to see. It wu. ol. course. a terrible movie and lhe never suggested com toning again. Their eon, Irwin, (an unplanned chlld) attended \be local public school by 1"" and chose his own college. He WU always a rebellious lad -mainly because he never could worm a nit decision out of either of his cautious parents. While the Wasps have never gone aWQ" on vacation, never being ab&e to decide where to go, they do watch television e:i· temively -ever since they could afford two sets. And friends agree that they certainly ~ve "a lasting marriage," all right. · TH~T THEY do. For \be very proof that I rack of tyranny is the major naw in modem marriage lies in the fact that to many such marriages la.st so long. Actually. Jt waa 16 years a.go that Mr. Wasp looked up from his paper and asked: "Seeing we can never All"'!! on anything, do you think we ought to get a divorce?" •·1 doo't know, de1t," replled Mn. Wasp sweetly ... What do you think?" But Mr. Wasp wasn'I aboot to !all Into that old trap. And he never brought up the subject again. DAILY PILOT /!ob"I N. Weed, P®U.Mr Th...., Krrvil, Edit<w Barbara Krdblch Editorial Page Editor "lfow's your love life, kid? A guy with his own salary to spend -'I'll bet you have to beat them away with a baseball bat." '~. ::=IV--J:=::~'\--f-" ou'lfThan~ me laler lor introducing •1A11 yoo've got In your refrigerator Is four pounds of himburger "'d three packaPt ol co\lqe cheese. 11 tbat all you ...... n. yaunMl)f for-dinner?" - 001don'111ame-you flinli>I ruslllnf"lilr.- . another umrlqe, Joe. I l'Ulbed Into three ~ them -ud l 'll problbly die In •llmony Jail" The ed.ltorlal ,,,... or 111e Daily 'Pilot ~ks to lnfonn and aftmulatit reade" by prtstnUnc on tti.i. _. dlve~fcomm~11Wy'on follies Olin.. term by syndicatfd c:alumnlat1 6Dd · cartOonlatt, by provktlrw 1. l'orum for l'ftdtts' views ltld by ptntnti• 1h11 MWIP9Pl:r'• oph1bul and tdieu on CUIT'!:nt toplca. The edtlorlal oPlnionl oi tM o.Jl,y PUut. appur only In !he edltari&l toluntn' al ttle 1Dp Of ltio -· Optn1"'j .. _ by '"" col. umnflltl llld eanoontsta and 1.Uer wrttln att their' owa and net endorat- ....,t .c 1"tb' -by ,,,. Da14' Pllo<-.idbo- • {; you to her, Joe. She sews her own clothes and likes opera." "You know, I suspect he's got a ...,..t girl friend, but doesn't want us to m .. t her because he's a1hlmed of her." "This is lhe second time you've bod UI up hcre this month, sir. Don't you lmo'lf '1 "Who are you waiting for -Rlquel Welch or Julie Andrewal Whal you lhould be Jootq for ii a nice com- rorttble retJmf nune.11 ' Tbursday, June 28, 1973 • j ' 1Mommy1 what would be o good name for a toad?'' Senate Votes Two Ombudsman Measures Die SACRAMEN1'0 (AP)---One ombudsman measure for pris- ons and another ombudsman measure for the public were scrap p ed by the Senate Finance Com- mittee after testimony <iboul their potential cost. ( CONSl_JMER ) A 5-7 vote killed state Sen. James Mills' measure to create a stale ombudsman po5t. The San D i e g o Democrat's bill was opposed by the Reagan administration on gounds it would cost $500.000. Sen. John Nejedly I R - Walnul Creek) authored lhe prison ombudsman bill \\'hich was estimated to cost the state $400,000 per year. It died on a 3--6 vote. e Slice /tlark• SACRAMEN1'0 (AP) Retailers would be required lO clearly Identify which slice o[ the steer their meat cuts were derived from ww:ler a bill win- ning Ul1llllinous Assembly al>' proval. used cars and had their odometers rolled back at Marv's Speedometer Shop in Van Nuys before reselling them to buyers, including other car dealers in Southern California. Authorities estimated the total 1055 to buyers in excess of $90,000. 'e l' ear-round SACRAMEN1'0 (AP) Those annual car-registration lines tit Department of Motor Vehicle offices wooJd be eliminated under a bill winning I l-0 approval from the Senate Finance Committee. Sen. W. Craig Biddle's measure would put cars on a staggered amual registration system, instead of the once-a- year crush. It awropriat>s $250,000 to make the switchover to a year-round system beginning in 1975. e SJ00,000 Award SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - A 83-year-old man who contends ~~ injured in a fight with a Municipal Railway bus driv- er has been awarded $100,000 by a Superior Court jury. The jury made the award to Snake llituals Bizarre Gatlieri1ig Plnn1ied NEWPORT, Term. (UPI) - About 400 peraons are ex- pected to gather here Sunda y ror the natiooa l convention of the snake-handling liolinc!S Church of God in Jesus Nam~. THE CONVENTl\)N will be he~ on the grou~s or the ch~rch at Carron Springs, just outside Newport, ac'cording to the pastor of the church, the Rev. Liston Pack. "There will be singing, preaching and shouting, and we will also handle snakes and fire if the Lord is willing," Pack said. "We will have people at-tending r r 0 m 1'forristown, Chatanooga, South Carolina, Kentucky and Georgia ," he added. PACK SAID thal newly caught rattlesnakes and a huge oottorunooth wUI be part of th e services. "I put live rattlesnakes in with the cottonmouth and he ate two of the smaller ones," Pack said. "He is a big one." Will Retire 0 AK LAND (AP ) Alameda County Sheriff Frank I. Madigan, 64, said he will not seek re-election next March to a fourth term as sheriff after 12 years in that post. Madigan said he was retiring "for a varie ty of reasons, some of them very personal." TlllWTIBISllT DF Tiii WIST. TlllWTIBISllT DFTDDlt Thursday, June 28, iq73 DAILY PILOT 1 redeitf.ca m eras 1 et cet r SOUTH COAST PLAZA 333 Bristol 979-3373 MON .• TUES.WE O.TH Ull.S.SAT 10:00-0:00 FRI 10:00·9:00 ; SU N 12 :00-5:00 CELEBRATE WITH THESE 4th OF JULY SPECIALS! . KEYSTONE KEYSTONE 60-Second everflash"10 ~AMERA with BUILT IN ELECTRONIC FLASH •-' L iml l 3 POLAROID 108 COLOR FILM USES POLAROID FILM ' • Eltt lfon!c Flash Buill ·ln • Automatically Ad ju5!s so Pic l •Jre~ a1e • Alwaiy5 Pe1 leclly Expo sed • Us es Regulaf Polaroid Fi lm • 2 Di ffe rent f ilm Siz es ·· Standard Reclani;le and Less ExlH'ns lve Squ;11e Size 64.95 REG . PRICE 79 95 I ' I 5x 1 COLOR ENLARGEMENTS F1om Nei:atl ~es Gr Slides ~ P~p~lar Film Sizes Only 99~ l 1m1t 6 · 't 1.19 p11 roll The 64-0 vote sent the bill by Assemblyman John Foran (D- San Francisco) to the Senate. Foran says the bill "re- quires that all cuts or meat clearly indicate on the label whether the cut is from the chuck, shank. brisket, rib, sho!'tpl1te, !lank, loin or round." Hyman Coplon of Millbrae --D11Tllltt1 to. ~~~.~~:~~:1':~: 1.-____ ,_,~_,-_.,_~_ ... _.~_·~---"_._-_._ ... _-_._._-_~_ .... ___. Try Saturday's News Quiz ~ damages since the bus driver j==;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-~o1~,,-:: was acting in the course or his job as a city employe. ~ >- Coploo <ootonded he suf-•t e Mileage Fraud LOS ANGELES (AP) - Seven San Femando Valley residents have been accused by authorities or rolling back odometers on used cars by as many as 70.000 miles before reselling them. Police Lt. William Mossman said felony charges agalnst the seven were filed following a four-month investigation sparked by a customer's com- pl aint. He said an auto leasing company in suburba•n Northridge, Curbstone Motors. allegedly bought late model Beauty Fades FORT ERIE, On!. (AP) -The annual beauty con- test, a highlighl of the Fort Erie Summer Fwl Festival, has been can- celed. There were no en- tries. THE FINEST IN ENnlTAINMENT THE fered a knee injury when he got into a fight on Jan. 16, 1970 with Edward McCoy. Coplon sa id the Muni driver had just sideswiped his car. e Xero"' Sued SAN FRANCISCO (API -A former employe has filed a SSOO,OQO suit against Xerox Corp .. charging lhe firm with discriminating against women. Priscilla Hall, who filed the class action suit in U.S. District Court. said she work · ed fo r the finn nearly two years as sales representative. She charged the company violated her right and that of other women in similar posts to equal pay for equal work and to equal employment OJr" portunitie s with male employes. e Pen11y Suit t:1pltol News Service SACRAMENTO -Attorneys for Cal ifornia Rural Legal Assistance and the National Association for the Advan· cement ol. Colored People have filed a lawsuit in federal court here seeking to stop alleged discriminatory prac- tices by J .C. Penney Co., Inc. agaiNt blacks and Mexican· Americans. BENNm BROS. Now Appearing Evary Thursday-Friday & Saturday Nile at PIGGY'S FIRESIDE LOUNGE In HUNTINGTON LANES 19512 llooch lllvd,. Huntington Buch A Topnotch Show With A LH V09H Flair .---BEFORE THE SHOW-~ ~ En loy A Champagne Dinner For 2 TOI' SIRLOIN DINNER with CHAMPAGNE 6.95 Summer Blazers and Sport Coats NOW59.90 Get sel fOf'the holiday, vaca!ions and ttavel wlih one ol thesa super sport coat blJys. Select from polyesler double knits and lightweight leJ1tur- ized po!yester labrics In solid colors afld checks, Summer Slacks Checks and Solids Now 19.90 & 24.90 Slacks for every summenlma actlvlly, Be11 IOop end exten- r.lon w11istbend models In polyester double kn!! end cool lexturized polyester ..• ~nGs aoo pattorn1. U'"...£ YOtJ1I: SILVD!WOOOS CHAnor. M.U ttR CHAAOE", U.1''KAl.t~l'llC,\.fl0, 01'1 Mll'RICAN El<PflES5 silverwoods Sport Shirts, knll• and wovens Many styles, easy care fabrics reg. 10.00-1 6.00 •. , , •..••••••••••••.•... I .ft.I.It Swimwear Slvlnga, Now Nylon boKers, tallored boxers reg. 6.00-8.50 .• 3.tt-4.11 Save on Casual Panis ~1any double knils, mostly flares, reg. 16.00-25.00 •••• , ••••• , , •••.•••••••• 1.11-17.ff Flmout M1k1r1 Short Sleeve Dr111Shlrla Cool short sleeves, many patterns and solid colors. Easy care fabrics. Reg. 7.50-12.00 4.lt-7.tt Famous Maker Men's Shoes Johntton a Murphy Shoe S1l1 Strap & buckle style 1eg. 55 00 •• , • , ••• , ••• now :tt.90 Florthelm Shoe Salt Selected 1ty1es 1cg. 29,95 to 42.95 .••. now 24.8043.eo ' Notti U9C OI' 1'11"' SIHlf'lll• "OtPltl"' s 1i. ••ant 8e.t. Junt 3' , Treat yourself to great savings on Holiday and Vacation Fashions ... for men, for women. . . ' . ' . Holiday Values! 2-3-4 Piece Pantsuits at Super Savings r99. 48.00-120.00 29.90-69.90 Choose cau1rree polyes1erkn11s and o1her fashion fabrics in a mull1tude of great styles. Siyle shown reg. 66.00 now 39.t0 \' ; . / -·. ; ~ ; . . " .. ,; : •• Summer Drtta Sp1c11cul1r Oa.."?ling resl'lion looka In a wlde selectlon 0(, styles., colors al'ld labfrcs. rog, 32 00-60.00 13.90-39.90 Blouse l Shirt Bonanz• lnehJdes polyester II nits and puta sllllsi. Colort1,;I blouset, ehir1e, ah ells: and pant lops, reg. 1 S.00·20.00 45 FASHION ISLAND • Newport Center • NEWPORT BEACH • -"' ' .. ··•!1• ·,."TQ • ! .., ... 0 .... ~ I _, ,.,. ' . .... . - ""' ·! . ·- I I I I j ( l ANNUAL JULY REDUCTIONS TO 600/o SLACKS Special Group Double Knits Double Knits Req· 28.50 ALPACA TWO PLY SWEATERS $24 •E~. 34.50 SWEATERS 2250 Double Knit DOUBLE KNIT or WOOL SPORT SHIRTS, 1 I .... to no· / 2 PRICE Rog. $90. to $110. Rog. $110. to $120. FAMOUS DESIGNER PURE SILK NECKWEAR 495 ORLON & POLYESTER 1 OPEN JULY 4th Open Sun. 10 to 3 Daily • • • 9 to 5 POLO SHIRTS 1/2 IEG. TO SIB.GO PRICE o///ff40~ SPORT COATS $37 Broken Sizes MEN'S SHOP • NEWPORT BEACH 1107 Jambor-Rd. Angelo Correlle .... All Reg. 6.95 Pk•: 644·0330 LOCATED AT THE NfWP'ORTER INN NECKWEAR SWIM UM '/'Dur l 1nllAm1ric1rd or M1tttrCll1r9c $1.111., 1~ •tn ~ p.m.-o..;1v ' to s .l1T1pl1 P1rkln9 Reg. er 6.SO 395 WEAR 395 Try Saiurday's News Quiz We Dare You Avco Let's face It, playing the 17).Brket has Its pluses and Its mlnUIM. Never knowing but what you mfg ht hit this year's really big stock. Yet always knowing that what goes up must comedown. Compared to that kind of excitement, investing with Avco Savings seems downright boring. Predictable. You know your money will always eam a high rate of retum. That's guaranteed. And you know your money will always retum to you, period. Ttiat's insured. Ho rium. You simply can't lose. Why, with Avco Savings. there aren't even any broker's commissions to diminish yoor eamlngs. So, If you happen to have a llttla money, but don't happen to tiave the Instincts of a riverboat gambler, come to Avco Savings. Wa'vo got seven of the most boring, predictable waya to get richer you ever eaw. Olll!lt ep111 Satwdly, July 7, 9 a.m. to I pm. 1----J:illllllltM-WO.Briltof.str·Ht--.:_ _______ _ Golf Seore Cou1~se Upkeep? -$6,243-a Hole By JOHN CUNNIFF AP' •wt1M11 AMllVlt NEW YORK -Maybe some of you COW\tey cJ ubbers wouJdn't complain so loudly about your dues if you knew how much it costs to maintain that 1ush golf course you so casually abuse. The biggest ften1 ••• fs l•ffor ••• av• eraged $3,833 a hole. The facts are out now and you can't hide from them: The typical eourse that could be maintained for $3, 162 a hole in 1958 now costs $6,243 a hole, and like most things in life the increase is accelerating. climatic conditions, and ure styles, clearly played a role. THERE IS ONE more cost factor that isn't Included on the line called "tot al golf course maintenance." It is called 0 go1f shop, caddy .and committee expenses, and it adds $1,216, making total golf expenses $7,459. But then there is another side to the ledger that put s all these fi gures into reverse. The accountants put ii on a line called "income from golt fees. golf carts, driving range. etc." and subtract it from total golf expenses.' While the average of such income was $3,016, th e reg ional · differe nces a g a·i n were great: $1,980 in the East, $3.280 South, $2,747 Mid\VCSt . and $5,394 in the Far West. Swim Classes .Slated The second session o f Orange Coast College's annual summer swim program begins Monday, July 2 in the OCC pool. Registration is scheduled Saturday morning {June ' 30) from 9 a.m. to noon in the OCC gym. Classes meet Mon- day through Friday for the tw<rweek course. Two other sessions are scheduled. One is slated ror July 16-27, and the .other July 30 through Aug. 10. Registra· lion for those sessions will be held July 14 and July 28 in the DCC gym. Classes are 40 minutes long and are offered at 9 a.m., 9:45, 10:45, 11:30, and 12:15 p.m., and 1, and 1:45. Classes are offered for tod- dlers, non-swimmers, begin- ning swimmers, a d v a n c e d b e g i n ners, in termediates, beginning competitive. begin· I • I • I llMl&&T 8181& TDP IECDIDINl ITlll AID THBI llEITEIT HITS lo"'" IED z1,.,.1.1~ :.-tier coo,.i e,10ll PROCAL HARUM \\ y.1t1Go II JE'F IECIC cJ>.t.O ROLLING> STONIS lo\f.SSlllA. LO•Go\llS l 01,,. '1J11,.,, -MANY MOii£ - TOP HIT ·LONG PLAY s3~!. RECORDS:--.--...--.-.-. 8-TRACK l • $)Q) TAPES . !:.:: ~ · ) 2973 FAIRVIEW lat Baker! COSTA MESA 979.5353 , BECAUSE TIUS income EXPENSES LAST year rose was highest in areas where 5.3 per cent, which really isn't expenses were also highest, ning adu lts, and advanced l--------------------.-adults. Nearly Everyorie •-Listeris to La1iders so bad as to make you spill net golf expenses throughout Students furnish their own your drink. Your household the country \Vere surprisingly towels, caps and s uit s . expenses probably rose more nea r the $4,443 average in all Lockers are not provided. The than that, a fact you might geographica l divisions. pool \Vi ii be closed July 4. have learned .had you dared ____________________ ~ ____ -~--- examine each item. ~~-------------------- An accounting finn. Harris, Kerr, Forster & Co. did break down lthe costs of operating 100 clubs coast to coast, and now you have some dollar signs to think about every time you make a divot with your rive iron. The biggest item, as it always has been. is labor, \Vhich averaged out in the survey to $3,833 a hole, to which must be added $437 in payroll taxes and employe benefits. COURSE SUPPLIES and contracts added another $919; repairs to eq u i pm e nt , buildings, water and drainage systems tacked on $597, and "all other expenses" put $457 on the tab, bringing the total to 16,243. But this is an average, and in a country so large and diverse as the United States, averages lie, The operator or a Pacilic Coast club might give a consultant free g o I .f privileg'es if be told him how to reduce his costs to that of a Midwest club. Here's the breakdown: East $5,852, Soo!h $6,901, Midwest $5,166, and Far West 18,150. The accounting firm didn't specify the reasons for the spread, but topographical and • • " • TELEVISION e STEREO e APPLIANCES $139.95 BLACK & WHITE PORTABLE TV Next time you take a trip be sure lo take q Sony lV-11 2 along. It's a great way to en- tertain the family. Sony's optional auto/ boat battery cord or re>0hargeable battery pack means exciting 1V entertainment for !he whole trip. 11 inch picture measured diagonall y. Non.glare screen. All solid s tate. Earphone. Charcoal gray/chrome trim. SONY,. take a SONY Transceiver on your Vacation $99.95 BUILT TO GO THE DISTANCE ••• IN ANY WEATHER! Sony 2-cbannel citizen band transceiver with the l\V output for greater performance. 2 separate channels, solid state, push·to·talk button that opl!rates with the touch of your cheek; separat.e microphone ~nd speaker for greater clarity, Ideal for. sports activities, camping, boating, group traveling and shop- ping. e SALES e SEP.VICF. e SINCE 1947 take a so~y.Tv camping· o:::::::~ $129.95 BLACK &WHITE PORTABLE TV ... Want a lightweight 1V Lha l's a real heavy- weight when it comes lo features? Sony TV-750 at 10 lbs., 7 oz. fits the bill. Look what 'Sony has packed into this co mpact all solid .stale TV. Like the 7 inch picture measured d iagonally. Non-gla re screen. Go any- where , play anywhere portability with built-in battery /recharge compartment. Earphone. Ivory while / chrome trim cab. inet SONY• take a SONY: TV to sea BLACK & WHITE PORTABLE TV Going boating? Take ~ Sony lV-950 along With Sony's loptlonal auto/boat battery cord or rechargeable battery pack you can enjoy your favorite prqgrams as you skim !he waves. 8 inch picture measured diag- onally. Non.glare filter. Rugged all solid state . Earphone. Smart b lack & white chrome-trimmed cabinet. Next time you go down to the oea take a Sony 1V·950 along. Makes a .great boating companion. sot<v. 26 Yenrs of lntegrltu & Dependability COS\'A-MESA-e-HARIOR-AllfA-EL-TORO·.-SADDt!IACK-v,t;t'Mti"'tr--'i'!•""".._"""".,....rl-- 411 E•1t S'"'"t11nth $tr11t El Toro Ro•«f •t Fr11w1y !N111t to $1 .... 0 nl . Deily t .t , S1tord1y t .6 "'~{46°1614 Dilly 9.9, S1tutd1y f.6 137·lll0 RAD IO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV & APPLIANCE SERVICE PH NE 549.3437 • .... ' - For the Record Blrtlls Other Deatlis ST. PAUL, Mlm. (AP) - Dr. Harold s. Dleld, 11, dean ol the Un!Vl!r.lity ol Mlnnesoll Medical ~ for 23 years llJld chler in<dlcal olrlcer ol the American ' Cancel .Society for 10 yean, died Wednesday. FALLBROOI iAP) a.ne&er-act.Or Er..a Tmes:, 1:1, -Mg breU .. me In 19tl when he lllm!d witb Mary Plck!or<l In "a Good Li~ lie Devil," died Wednesday. His career extended through 1llent flbm, Broadway and lelevilbl. AllllUCILll a SON WlllTCUn' lllOllTUARY G1 &. 11111 .... °""' MIN 1•• ' . 8AL'n-llEllGERON· "1NERAL ·ROME '*-... _ -Ootla M... 111-znl • BEIJ. BBOADW AY MORTUARY lit llroodw1li::'ll Me11 , LI • DILDAYllllOTllBIUJ MOllTU.lRIE8 n•n-Bml. 11n11..... -IC-'1'1'11 \. .. -,.. •...... ""· ---ZU....1111 • M<COllMJCX IAOUNA HACH MOllTUARY 1'111 IApN c.,.. Rd. IM-lllJ • PAanc 'l'lD ) M~PAllK Cem~Melliir I I '1 -h.tae .... tt:,:' ' .. Newpon -, Col 11 .~' -..... • • .h11rsday, J11ne t-.... , .. 91J DAJLY P1LOi 9 Open Space . Plan Okayed _.- STER F 71114 .a1•a·-;, "ilf aik C. BloilmB J.55/f. S ... /U :,0".;0" 165 13 s.•011 i •:::.:," 155/15 S.60/15 ., .... ,. _ t2•.s• :::4 205/14 ~34" STEll 215/14 '36" H71/14 165/15 ::-:':! STiil G71/1S STiil H71/1S STHL L71/IS 6.45/14 6.50/13 7 .35 14 7.75 14 1.25/14 1.25 15 a.55/14 171114 205/15 '35" F78/l4 G78/14 G78/1S H78/14 !IS/14 175 \4 0.r cntMter,.llcyJ1tehtter Mrw Ytl•· If Y" .... • .-utlH ceMw•I .. ,,._ Heh er Mrfk1s·r1 .. 1"4 te , .. , JIH•• c•ll ..,. DlrKt•r 'ef.<•• .. •w Aft•ln, Mr. s . .,..1.11 (21J) 170-l7J7 ., l•l· ...... &hMW .. nt•f,.., .... '1WI 0.Ck" will ~. i111tff ••••rl .. • lelW M..,., •t tll1 ••,1rti1H ,,ice. •.•...... ; ...... ,...,, •........... county to eliminate his taxes meeting that a bond issue may board Wednesday to protest on that property. have to be placed be(ore the certain elements of the plan The incentive plan -Was voters ot $22 to $25 million tq further broadened to inc1ude implement the plan. He sug· but their protests were brush- the granting of an open space gested 1975 as the earliest ed aside in the rush to meet deed restriction, or In effect a date for such a vote. the state deadline. \public easem~on the land in As previously suggested by --- return for tax uction . the planning Btaff the open Everything The staffiqg modification space program designates five calls for hlr· of an open priority projects for first im-Under The Sun space manage ent staff in· plementatlon. They co ver For Summer eluding a program ·director, 145,000 acres or about one- four planners and a secretary. third of the county . lncluded~are the Lagung This replaces pr e v i .o u s greenbelt, the Aliso Creek recoinmendalions of the plan-greenbelt. e u r ban i z ed ning compUssion which called y,·estem sec ion of the county, for a 15-~ember staff and a the uppet ' Santiago Creek $22.5 million budget to cover greenbelt and the Chino Hills Look . the next five years i n .,..,...,.),,., area. .,.... ....... sc and preservation of So'l~C representatives o f open land. builders, developers and land At no place in the adopted ~ owners appeared before the pfln is a dollar cost placed on -J 00 the program. This was left to Kid L • k T C II ~ later determination. S l e 0 ~ I Board Chairman Ronald W. · Westcliff "-• 17tti & 1,.1 .. Caspers of Newport Beach Ask Andy Newpol't leocll said informally after the o,... TtlvncMy & Mo11day l!YH. l t • • • i I : 1 • ' ' ARTISTE DE LA RUE ALL LEVELS-LASTING, THRU JUNE 30 I 115/14 ER78114 '50 .. 195/14 FR7Bl14 s53,. 205/14 tiR78114 '59" ~ti= · 215/14 HR78114 '6~ 205/15 tiR78/1S 215i15 HR7811S '69" 235/15 LR78/1S s95 .. Full Siu U.S. C1n Rec. DRUM TYPE • I J % • 1 • ' I I I • • 1 = '-•• ~ " A ~ ~ ~ f ' ' ~j 170/14 f70/14 195114 '10/14 'F7~/14 G70/14 205114 1.so1••··········· ,_.,.,, .. ·········· 1.0011s ••••••.••• 1.00116.s ......... 1.U/16.S .... ·-" 10.00.16.J ........ vw DATSUN S !!o!!lft Includes: PARTS & LABOR .. -•• ·11---1~~L~~1-,-.IJ:=::=::::.&:::::::::;::~~:::::::._::._::::~~-+- W'l!:!iA ... F60/1S 160/IS 12.oe.1 •.S ·.ra;:.:.: ~ , ..... .......... COSTA MESA. -y •AIDIN ••OYI LA HAili IUINA PAltl PULLllTON 'II'--· ltl llH • SMITlll' MORTUARY llT Miii SI. 9 ~lwlt 005 HARBOR IWD .. , .... trtllllittnl ,_.,,. ........ -......... ftofl'MI' Wa~littlW •1111 .,....,1'1Vf11) (714) 557·8000 17141 """" ,... WllltllM' l M . INl:U...IM . ltomtr of Whltlltr 1eOrnor ofjlnc:oln Ind l•ch) • Ind I( II) 674-.JIU 11141 121.ssso 1n1 ... "' •1Klld II llO(t( Norffl Of It 'er110t 1',..1Wty) 1714) 17M1to OlANGI 411 N. 1'1111111 A~t, I l I I I I j " • I SANTA ANA -Robert Con· quer of 9354 El Cttmino Ave ., Fountain Valley has been na med to the Orange County 1\irJ)()rt Land U s e C:01n· niission. Conquer, an electrical con· 1ract0t· and \Vorld \~ar II pilol. replaces rrank W. Turnbull "'ho resigned beca use of a change in persooal plans. Conquer vt'ill represent the ct1untv Board of Supervisors on the commission. Other members represent I h e League of Cities and the public, JOIN US IN THE CROW'S NEST. Dancing and Entertainment Nightly with The Vince Howard Trio 1i}oll!)'."9.er. N.sr~._r 3333 Pacific Coast Hwy. Newport Beach (714) 642-2295 Don't forget our Weekend Brunch 9 AM to 2 PM Saturd~y and Sunday. I ORANGE \COUN I Orange Firm Gets Bicycle Trail Bid SA1''TA ANA -A bid of $96,950 by 'the Sully-Miller Contracting Company o f Orange for the construction of two new segments of the San- ta Ana River bicycle trail has been accepted by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. The project calls r or building a new trail on the river ·levee from the Pacific Coast Highway to Atlanta A venue in Huntington Beach and from Edinger Avenue in Santa Ana to Katella Avenue in Orange, Airport to License Independents ! By JOHN ZALLER Of ttMo D•llY ~Ult Slttf SANTA ANA -Small businessmen, who work but do not lease ofrice space at Orange County Airport, have been given a new lease on their legal existence. The Orange County Airport Commis~lon has decided to give up efforts to expell them fron1 the\ airfield. Instead the com1nissibn plans to \\\'Ork out a pl'1n to license them. CO~\USSIONERS T 0 0 K 1be action on a 3'-1 vot.e Tues· who wqrk from off-airport of· day after a steady strtam of (lees or -t.h& trunks of their pliot3 and small buslneismen cars · urged the board to "show · · some compassion for the little HOWEVER, AJl'l'ER 9 o guy," as one pilot put it. After two months of hear-minutes ot n ear I y-unin- lngs; the commlsalon had been ternzpted lestlmooy in op. expected to pass ao ordiJUmc< pooltlon to the propooal, com· that would oullaw a 11 miuionen decided to throw ~t businesses that did not pay out in favor ol a plan they had leases to the c o u n t y -r u adopted six months ago. airport. That plan, which calls for Thiis•\would have eJiminated licensing small operators in- many s ma 11 . independent stead of expelling them, was businessmen and mechanics rejected by lhe COWliy Board of &lperviJors in January and. sent baclc. to the commis<rion Gillespie Appointed 10;;":7~~•"the BVT LATER coov.,.,.tloos, he said, convinced h i m supervi!ors would accept the basic licensing idea if some of the detaill were changed. "We'll never get a perfect ordinance tbat la guaranteed to work," Ablott says. "But lhb Idea la m~h clooer to fiitistying all parties tbao the Other one.'' Co*ioners Vincen t Celano and Richard Bei1ea agreed ith Ablott. But Conunissioner J a c k Harloe, who helped draft the newer ordinance, said permit- ting small operators would resu1t in saturation. of the airport with too m a n y the pNlblem," Harloe main· tained. Comm J t s ion er Bertea responded that he expected county Director of Aviation Robert Bresnahan to use discretion in gra,nting licenses to keep dow~ the nwnber of operators. 1 \ 1 ' Fas,, Thorough, Guoron' f·d Real Estate Sole s and or Brokf'r l u ""\/;' TRAINING Phone for Fr1~c,> Folder • ANTHONY SCHOOLS HAllOI CINTll net M•""' C_,.,. CHJf M .. , Cllif9tnh ft. (7141 t7t·lJIJ businessmen. airport commission, said he at first had understood this ac--T 0 Mc Whinney post ~'! ~n:: :~ 8:1~~:~ •11 DO NOT SEE unfettered .:~~I~~;:,~ . l~in~g~co~nc=ep~t~:~~~~~~co~m~~~ti~IW~n~a~s~t~he~so~lu~Uo~n~to~~~~~~~!!ll!! \\'ESTMINSTER .,-Elden F. Gillespie has been appointed by the city council to fill the councu seat held by Derek McWhiMey until his recent conviction on grand theft charges. ' MAYOR PIULIP Anthony announced· at the same time that applications are being ac- cepted for the planning com- mission seat vacated by Tad Fujita. He was convicted of similar charges June 19 with McWhin- ney. Jn appointing Gillespie, the council rejected its option of calling a s~ial election. CHAimlAN OF the city's recreation and park com- mission, Gillespie was chosen from, a field of seven a~ plica:nts. Others vying for the post "·ere Conner Collacott, WilHam French. Haro 1 d Lorton, Howard N e w m a n , Angelo Treantos and Naomi Willmore. McWhirutey and Fujita were required by law to give up their government positions following their ~viction in a case inv9lving a c o u n t y agricultutal lease at Mile Square in Fountain Valley. ......... '. 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA OPEN DAILY 9 TO 6:00 SUNDAYS 9 TO 5:00 CLOSED WED. JULY 4TH STAR SPANGLED --GIANT SUMMER SALE 1, 1 .... 11 .... NUHDY STOCK BUY ANY TWO GET AN EXTRA ONE FREE DRASTIC PRICE CUTS IN EVERY DEPARTME~T! VINYL ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE "';lty. '"'"' [2d1 1 ·o 3~ c in. liles in handsome embos$ed pattern! Easy to install! NOW .... . FLOOR TILE Bright, cheetful colors to 24lll decorate floors or walls! tJC SeU·padded J2xl2 in. tiles . NOW _ -··· ·-· . SQ. FT. Get 1 seam .free look withollt waste! Thickly padded 12xl2 inch li!es. Self-stick! NOW .. NO-WAX SOLID VINYL FLOOR TILE ' Lasls _a lifetime ; neve;'1 needs waxing! Be all Ii f U:I. m•rblt chip pattern i,il ' 12112 in. tiles. ' NOW ............ -·· ........•.... r' BATH VANITY OAK PARQUET INSTALL IT YOURSELF AND SAVE EVEN MORE! FREE COLOR TIU \,. 23xl7 inch. faucet extr1. NOW ••• 34ss GROUT WHITENER • Whitens Grout Quickly! • Removes St1in1 Effectively! • LOANED TOOLS • PLANNING ADVICE P1e·linished 61/2161/z in. tiles. NOW ••• I; ' MIRROR WALL TILE CLEAR VENETIAN Mikes small rooms look l1r1er, dllll rooms look bri1hter! Easy, thrifty JOxlO in. liles. NOW ••• Buy $25 or more, 1et an inslallatien kit.~' FREE! FULL REFUND ' PN ALL' UNUSED, UNDAMAGED Tl~ • -11i1Mtr~ ·;.- • I SAU TH•U JULY ITH e TNn e SltnlM e VIHt .,.,.. e ..._.._ e fuchll• • ........ e H•.._. MMe-e e e I Now in Gorgeous Color •.. ROSE BUSHES Look them over end buy now while in bloom and SAVE BIG! .. 'Venrura' Peach Tree s ......... deOdMI ,, .................. ,, 7 95 ..................... _ ... __ .... . BIG SELECTION OF FRUIT TREES Start or add to your fruit tree orchard during our GIANT SALE. Dwarf ·FRUIT TREES. No yard or patio is too . sm'oll for these heavy bearing trees. . \ FlUn TlllS Pl.OM 7. 95 .... 2-GIT" ,.. AISOLUTILJ FREE - ht ft te Wert ••• SOIL PREP llDWOOD SOIL CONDITIONER . '"'""" •" ..... .. . e littela Mellhtr• ,e 1"911eM M•klt • StlMll..,. ......... : 9 r.,....,... Lew• 'NfTIO-LIDD' llDWOOD ' ' DICHONORA SEED f9'ry0Mone •f· ,.,. .... , ... i..t, .,....., ef DI· ............ UM hi NIM4 •• ,. .... 111 .. htl11t ...... ·, ·'Bl<; ~v·~ "· ONLY 3.49 t LL .... J.tl SPECIAL 1.49 ' I• ' Dicflondra Sod A LAWN IN HOURS u,.,,4 ,,, t9'I ..... w1 .. ,. ...... ~ ............... ,_ ............. . 5: "°: "· 1.69 We'll show you how to pla~it. I" ~"'" ii t.~ , ...... ·:+ f1.i ·~~IN THE FUN! CELEBRATE THE FOURTH! . If.~~ " .. ~· ... POPC~RN FREE ·-"'"' Docot ~,.:; -~~ FREE ........ otW.. ' t FREE S..U .... hc•I. It'• Ye1111 NII. " , ~ lrN• YOUI MMILf-ftU. YOUI NllNDI AND Nlf8HIOIS " DOfri\ MISS THIS ONCE-A-YEAR GIANT SALE! ,, • • • even1 You see, we have more services than other banks. Not that you'll use them al l. You won't. But it's nice to know every banking need imaginable is covered. And under one roof. !\'lore likely, you'll be into things that make day-to-day living simpl er. Like the ser vices we describe below. Of course, of greatest importance is how we view the banking relation ship. lt colors everythin g we do. Courteous personal service : We feel banking is a perso n-to-perso n matter. So we value the human touch. W·ith us, yo ur needs are as individual as you a re. Th at's why perso nal service has always been important at Bank of America. Personal Choice Checking and Savings: We have four checking plans to choose from. Beautiful scenic checks, too. And we offer many different savin gs plans. For example, our regula r savings account gives yo u in-and-out flexibility. And our three Inves tors Passbooks earn you 53!'1'/o annuall y for two years, 51/zo/o for on e year, 5% annual interest for 90 cla ys. $500 minimum deposit. Simplified monthly statement: This statement simplifies balancing your checking account. We call it t he Timesaver® Statement. It can even include a summary of your savings accounts and other information if you wish. You can tell at a glance where you stand. \. • Three ways to . finance your car: ' \ Only•Bank of America.gives you three·different,ways to financ~ your car. A'.sk your auto dealer abol J our Auto-Magic Financing, the rock-bottom monthly pay nt t plan. Or.•about leasin g. Tb en , there's .our; regular auto 10~1i. We've.,made more·oftf)e.in than any other bank in <;:31lifomia: See yo11r dealer or local Bank of America. I I I I I I I \ J I 1 .I • esc1ssors . I Red Carpet Se+ce: Our own special system to serve·you promptly, save you.time. And nobody ' I• peers over your shoulder when. you transact your business. Most:oftour offices have it. 1 . . '·:. ' ' Automatic Tqutsfer Service: Makes regular savings:deposits'.6r loan pay,n;ie11.ts forlyQu·autoplatically, from your Bank of America · 'checkmgaccmrn.t. Saves .time, . simplifies things. EspeciaUy·hel'pfu l when you're ill or out of town. ,t \I I I I I I I I ·1 I I 1. I More offices up and down the state: No other bank can say that. Wherever · yo u live or shop or work, you'll a\ ways find us close by. So you .can cash a check whenever you want. Also, we can transfer your checking and savings accounts wherever you move in the state-save you time and red tape. BankAmericard::- For everyday shopping cohveniehce, special occasions or emergencies. Good throughout California, the · United States· and around the world. One monthly bill helps yo u keep track of expenses. 3 great coupon offers: These coupons .J,'epresent some real banking values. • Big savings on Bank of America Travelers Cheques. • A free Family Financial Planning Kit-first-rate help in planning family goals. I I \ I I • Your first orde!'-oi'..200.scenic----~·---'-! or other premium checks-free. You can see why we think you should bank with us. More services mean greater scope to meet your needs. As you grow, we're with you. Every step of the way. Let's get better acquainted. m BANK • OF AMERICA for the business of fi . . ~ " . . , • ,. . . DAILY PIL01 l .. 'eetlfall fh"....-d No Tango • • ID Swaziland **************~****** * MERCURY SAVINGS * : Air Conditioners • • use Diseases? ' ..:h..t ~ 'ft... ~·~ L. ......... .1 . ' I.&ACORES c1;\~-.nt? I' iu.1. we.cu-;...,... \ ...... ~ ~"''°"~ + ......... T"E 5"\Ri .SAlc • 3U e , 1 'l !fir. Tos<t.e. ,.,...,"'- f'&O.. :i·~ \,\~ cal: .,.-n.on -"r''lt Miio. ~ a·.ue,.,.~ ISP..OORES 33 3 , I.._._ "id. .., -... ~l"' be~ . . . . Our : Finest Presentation Ever! . ' ' -·---\ The Biggar~: Summer ' Sale·· ) of ''?3 THE WESTS MOST VARIED SALE SELECJION . . OF THE WORLD'S GREAT HOME FURNISHINGS I • All T ctkeo from Our ~egular Stock Saving~. to 30% and more on • Seleq~~ Pi~ ' t DREXEL l 1 :-BIOWl-JOllWI HERITAGE-sTMllONS . ' HENREDll KAIASl'AN ·• BRANDT .~ and llllldl1 llllCl ... ~ · • ' " ' SALE NOW ... at all J ST-i !11ul1r St0<1 Hours !:JG to 5:3G • Spo<lll Nljlll Opoo1oc J...,, "* ' II l'P II 1 I ' • STORE ·5+., s.nt1 AM 147·1f21 Also ; ... d ... a,_. l • \. - minister and is often rumored as a leading candidate to be the nelt prime tnl.nister. "If aex derui !n neighboring statea are established with the main purpose. of luring South African citizens, the govern- ment will 'have no choice but to Impose stricter control on travel to those countries," Mulder said. Swazi censors v1twed .. Last Tango" Monday. The primt minister lll1l10UllC<d Tuesday it was bahned. No 1pecl fic reasons were given. \ Remiion Set * llld loan auoclltloo . . I • f'k?e ~:Planning Guide at the new East Bluff Office , ,, ' ·I ~' ~ ' ~ " .. ' . To celebrate the opening of its new office this week Jn the East Bluff Center, -"fllllertari:Sa'ltnga Jf;QlVil'l!'&lll•Y thls ·h&l)dy guide. S50 -di Information qn creating, ~ng. ,1119 trans, ' I , ~ . l fening an estate. It's yours, free. '· ' You can also pick up a free copy of an interesting "One-Pot Dinner" Cookbook. OFFICE OPENS JULY 2nd! 1 ·, Ch~ the free servi~es ,OU ·get at;fUllerton Savings ' . i t. . t O , __ COprlng No account required. Just give us something to copy ari<t!N'l'll copyJtdust llk~·that,-{dust a 18W'coi>ies·each, please.)· 0 F-Plnanclal PloMlng One of our • · financial counsellors wlll sit down and ' . o Free B•rcl•J'• Travel•rt Chequea The only QOSt Is th e cost of the amount you wr~e. No'service charge ai al,- o FrM Notary Public Whether you 're a member of the Fullerton Savings ·dlocuas wtth you waya to provide for ---,1-=.'rfiiill"_,_ .... .-·-: ·7vu ,, a aecu ... ,. • family or not,ijust come in and we'll notarize whatever you want. Free. D F-COrnmvnll)' "-Great place for your group's meeting's.~. at the Placentia, Anah9lni, end FullertOn offices. Jwst call Up and res8rve it. • -·~ ..l ,,_ ,. 1 b ...... __ .Trull.,.._ Tum it over to our collectbn •rts '· and relax.. _ .. . . . . . 0 F-MOMJ 0.-The safe way tc send moneyt? someone to r something. D Excllong• Check1. Pay a bill or give a gift, 'l'ith ~ .Gh•.cl\ made out to order. .. ' D Frw Parking There's ample free parking at eat:h of our four offices . ' 'Not•: T1i.tt.11trvlct1 requlr. a mlllllflum 11000 aeto(I~ btil1nc.: FULLIRTOll IAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ,......._. ~monwaalth at Malden, Phone 871 ,4244 YorlNI i EYorba Linda Boulevatd, Phone 524,1321 '"' · 1 9 Lincoln Avenue, Phone 7781 1630 ~ ~ Center), 2523 Eastbhl fr Dr., Phone 544,7173 Mo'.ft: Mondey TlllnlltV. 8:oc> 1.m. to 4:00 p.m .•• Frlday, 9:00 e.m. to 6:00 p.m. • Mtli11blr ol lrederal Home Le«n l!llllC'ltyltom and Federal Saving a and Loan lnS\lrance Corpomlon. • • O~F_,,.,..........., lt7l.W.U ............. , "\Vould you weigh a steak for laughs and then give me a pound or hamburger~" -. • L. h. Boyd First Fatal Car Accident 1899 Among Seasoned-Citizens, what do the happiest have in common? 1bat's what a geriatics specialist wanted to know. So In the course of hJs vi.sits to the habitats of the elderly, he m~de notes. And he concluded after his three-- year study: "The one common denominator seems to be that the happiest retired people reg- ularly write letters. The women, most-' ly in longhand. Bu~ the happiest men learn how to hunt and peck on type- wrJters." Q. "Does the cominon -Dy breed in Alaska?" A. No, but the stable fly, the blr.11 fly and the green bottle fly do. Q. "Any r'ecord of the first person ever killed iu a car accident in this country?" A. ThaL was Henry Bliss, run over in New York Qty in 1899. Q. "Why is it so many more youngsters take up tbl guitar or lhe piano or the organ than the trumpet at the clarinet or the sax?" A. Braces, I think. LOVE ANO WAR -It has been reported lbat numer- ous northerri men marry soutbem girls, but nlati\•ely few •southern men marry nmtbem ·girls. Clieot ·&!b why. Our Love and War man can oDiy surmlle. PenclDality ltudiel at Florida State University indicate the ·IOllthem Jadiel appear to be far more romanUcally feminlne in their out- look with a tendency to cater greatly to masculine desires. Thus, southern men are apt to be a bit spoiled, and north- ern men v.·ould like to be. Have you ever bet money at a race track? Pollsten say 34 out of ever 100 men in this country have done so, and 21 out of every 100 women likewise. ' ' Are you a ware that citizens nationwide spend more money on taxicabs than on buses? Please note. also, history records the ooly continent where the bow and arrow didn't become the major weapon at one time or another is Australia. The abcwigines stuck to spears. And the settlers liked guns. Archers just didn't make it, ever. "How many airplanes are in the sky over the U.S. at any given moment?" inquires a client. Nobody knows for sure, ever. But the aviaUon experts sai 10,000 is an ex- cellent guess. ·· Address mail to: L. /lf. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New- port Beac lt, Calif. 926~. NEWPORT BEACH, 311 0 Newport BIYd. HUNTINTOON BEACH, 9791 Adomt FOUNTAIN VALLEY, 16155 Herbor Blvd. Thursday, Junt 28, }q73 *1 ' . Seeurity:. That~s Dow tile T set se By OICK WEST those . deploring t h e ... penditures .• "HERE'S A $1 ,950 Item for prunlng trees," my friem Ernie Spadecaller poinled out I said, "Ernie, you obviously have little .,. no concept -of what aecurity f(lr the Pres!· dent malls. • "Ernie," I said, • •you rew minutes, then pounced couldo't believe the pUfalls again. that await a Pre1k1mC 1n a "Aha! \\'hat about this •J7g "''-ldated •azebo." ... VJ.UOt1 "' for painting the flagpole?'' "rr VEllY definitely Is on<! "WHAT'S s 0 dangeroos "lf'S REASSURING I 0 DAILY PJLOT J3 ·: : Flies . .. ., .•l! ... for fer<illr.e<, too!" ••Yes, indeed. You certaiPlY wouldn't want the l'reelclmfto be bitten by a ....... Dy. one way to help prevent,thlt ii to cover the property Wtth veewi flytrapo. Those plants need a lot of fertilizer." ' WASHINGTON (UPI) llisckllure lllat the federal govemment has paid about '2 million fer improvements to President Nixon's homes in Call(ornla and \ Fbida has genera~outbreak ci. !ush-twmihc a Administration of the re p,mlblliUes of the about 8 little till musical in-learn the Secret Service was ~ Service to protect the strument?" alert to that hazard," I said. Pr..Jdent, from falling tree "You are thinking about a "An unpainted flagpole could • , kazoo," I said. "A gazebo is quickly rust in the &alt air "BUT nlERE aren't lllfc·l llmh9. That can only be done rue In s t)l er n· • an open alt summerhouse. J( and, thus weakened, topple tsetse s o u ,. ... by pruning the dead wood.'' you OOn't keep those things over on the President as he California," Spadecaller ~~·~ The fact that the im-as he was looking over the list' "Oby," ~decaller said, fixed up, you're courting was raising the colors." tested. · ~t.~~ critics. provementa were requested by of bills the government paid at "Jet's assume that was a disaster." Spadecaller sulked several I said, "'lbat provel Ufe 1 the Sea-« Service for -ty San Clemenle. "Haw could leglUmale expenditure. But Dmled his liUle triumph, minutes looger, then said, "l security system is ~·; ptrpo1e1 appeen to have that have anything to do with how about this $523 for repair-Spedecaller became aJllen. He suppose you can ratiooalize a That $460 was ·money l.-~m~ilde=:__ll~ttle~~impresalon'.'.'.!'.::::_.,::on~oecurt::'.~ty~?-"~~~~:__~_'.'.lni:!..:tbe~g~ue=::bo~?-"~~~~-sc&lned::::·::::...:::tbe~·~1;.,t::.:m::_:ail=··=nce=-=•_;:secur=:=il~y=angle:=.:~for.::....:thls=·~$460:.:::.:_b~ill-rspen~-l.-"~-·~~~~~' When aB1:he-smoke has-cleared away, the difference between one cigarette and another comes down to just this: taste. · For many years, the smokers of America have known Winston tastes good like a cigarette should. But what is it that makes Winston taste so much more real and rich? The reasons are not very coµiplicated. Still, we believe they are rather ~eaningful to anyone who smokes for pleasure. Good tobacco ••• and what.must . be done to it. Winston seeks out costly Vintage Leaf, the most nearly· perfect tobacco on the market. We are not alone in our search for fine tobacco, but we like to think we buy more d it than anyone else. Then we· age our tobaccos, like fine wine, in wooden casks. This malces them mellow, and enhances their natural flavor. And you can taste the difference aging makes when you light up a Winston. Filter-Blend ••• the unique recipe i9r great taste. ·Select, aged tobaccos are just the beginning. Winston specially proces.,es and carefully blends these tobaccos, accmding toa unlqUe recipe: Filter-Blend. It's a formula known, litcrall'll to just a handful d m~ It results in a richnea d l3StC, and fullness of satisfaction that more than jostili~ the seaecv SlllUlUDding it The perfect combination of filter and flavor • The last thing you want a filter to do is fi lter out the taste of your cigarette. That's why Winston spent a small fortune marrying our own modem white filter to the Filter-Blend recipe. The result is the kind of filtration most smokers prefer: a filter that does its job without getting in the way of the taste. ' A little more freshness every time you light up. It would be a waste of the rare tobaccos, the time· consuming aging process. the meticulous blending and wi· nston painstaking manufacture if a Winston were to reach you in the form of a siale cigarette. You should know, then, · that thanks.to its popularity, Winston is likely to be the fJLTER·CIOARlTTES freshest cigarette you can bl!)( So that there's more going ' for you in a Winston than just taste. There's freshness. And that's every bit as impomnt. . Now ask youn;elf one simp!e question. If you smoke for pleasure, and pleasure means good taste, isn't it time you were smoking Winston? Wmston tastes good like a cigarette s --• . . Warning, The Surgeon General Has Determined ' ' • • . . •, :· . • . . • . . . . . • • • . . • • . . . • . • • • • . • . . • . . . • • . .• • . .. '• :· • :: :· :: • :: .. ' ' .. • ' . . • . '• . . .• .. .. ~ .. .. .. .. .. •• ~ ' :~ ~ ' ' .. ~ ~ ' '• ' .. ' ~ .. .. .. .. ' :: .. .. ' ' .. .. ' ' ' .._ ~ ' • ' ' ' ~ •• :· • .. That Cigareua Smoking Is Dangeiouuo.Your Health.-. .... ... '''"""'''' ...... :· 20 mg. "11r", l4 mg. nit111in1 IV. per cigerett1, FTC Repon ffB. 73. :i . .; •• , 1 • .. I l l " \ ~-J OAlLV PILOT Thursda1, Junt 28, 1·1 1 .. 'Didta't Sec11a Right' Accused Ex-POW Commits Suicide COMMERCE CITY, Colo. (AP ) -An hour before he shot himself to death, a former prisoner of war charg- ed \vi.th collaborating with the enemy in Vietnam told a doc- tor he feared the military would find some excuse to keep him in the service. MARINE SGT. Abel Larry Kavanaugh died on Wed- nesday of ooe bullet in the head from a .25 ·ca liber Gangs Battle In Brooklyn Injuring 10 NEW YORK (UPI) -Rival gangs battled with lx>ttles of acid, guns and (irelx>mbs in Brpoklyn Wednesday night. Five persons were shot and five policemen were injured. 1'indows were shattered and aome storefront. were hit by fllth>mbs burlecl from roof- toPS in • ...1es ol runnlni street fights tnvolvin&" about 200 penons. Police 1ai! the fighting wu between Puerto Ricans and Italians. Two persons wounded by gunfire were in serious con- diUon at Mr!hodist Hospital. 'Ibe other three who were shot were treated and released. Two police officers trying to quell the disturbance suffered bums of the back when a bot- tle of acid, said to be lye, was thrown at them. ... handgun, Adams County District Atty. Floyd Marks said. "From the evid~ we have now, it would appear that it was a suicide,'' Marks said . The bullet entered the lert temp1e, police said, Police Sgt. Jack Baldwin said, ''We're oCficially calling it a sel f -innictcd wound. At this point, we don't know if it was accident.al, but I would strongly doubt it." KAVANAUG H, %4, was the secona former POW to die sin· ce returning from captivity. Air Foree Capt. Edward Allen Brudno died of an overdose or barbiturates on June .3 in Har- rison , N.Y, Dr. John W. Bolin, a general practitioner in nearby Aurora, 18id he completed a physical examination of Kavanaua:h about an hour before the young Marine shot himM!lf at the home ol his father-in-law in this Denver suburb. "I found he was in absolute- ly perfect pllyslcal cond!Mon, but he said he was afraid the mi l i tary would make something up and find an ex- CUM to hold him co_ in the aervice," Bolin said. "HE WAS VERY quiet and seemed depressed and very anxious " Bolin saiil. "When I asked ~hat was wrong, he said he had been a POW but didn't go any further, saying lt was a military In1tter." "He just didn't seem ri&ht," Bolin said. "He seemed so burdened, a1 if something wu on his shoulders." - In Sunday's Fa mily Weekly: Henry Cabot Lodge: Can We Rebuild Our Faith in America? J ""' convi,u:ecl lliat i!i.e old political formula oJ Jeft, right and center is largely inapplicable •••• Th e urgen.i lf ced is for govcrnmeni thal iJ ,elfi cienl, trustworthy, Jarsiglued an.d free from seljl.sh influences. No one has known Washi ngton longer - and better -th an disti ngui shed statesman Henry Cabot Lodge. On t he eve of America's 200th anni· versary, our country is in the ~idst of one.of !ts wors~ arises of faith and idealism. The question 1s, can our government right itself and rid the land of its present crippling cynicism? In this cogen t and timely article, Mr. Lodge considers ten propo si· t ions -ten ideas that, if acted upon, could change t he cou rse· of our hi story: Read what he says about our electoral process and how it should be cha nged. Learn how he wou ld amend the President's veto power. find out what he would do to take the tyranny of the dollar out of political campaigns. Here's one article no citizen can afford not to read _''To Rebuild Our Faith in America: Ten Changes I Think We Should Make." e FOURTH OF JULY POTLUCK -Having a pleasant, relaxed holiday \viii be easy if you follow !ood editor Marilyn Hansen's step-by· step instructions for Southwest Grits Casserole and Arizona Kabobs. The reci pes are easily as· sembled. at the last minute and can include al- most any ingredienl the cook likes. • STAR CHAT -Mae West recounts some of the more memorable epi sodes from a career that began with her flrst stage appearance at age eigl1t. She In sists, "Age means nothing. It de- pcndJ upon ho\v a woman looks, how she feel s." AU Comi ng Sunday Wi th The [DAILY PILOT I r FTC Suit to Break Up Oil Firms? I ' '• oil proWclion from the time It wwld report oo ;,. study by comes out oC the ground until July, WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal Trade Commission staff intends next week to recommend antitrust action against several large in- tegrated oil firms, oil industry sources sakt Wednesday. director of the Bureau of =· petition in If.he rrc, said that an investlgatlon of th e petroleum industry r a 1 s e a serious antitrust is.sues. it is pumped into gasollneo,:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili;i!i'iiiiiiiiiiiiij SHOT TO DEA TH Ex-POW Kavanaugh NY Surgeon Charged In Killing ' MINEOLA, N.Y. (UPI) - The chief rellldent IJUl1eon at the Nassau. O:>unty Medical Center was charaed Wed- nesday wkh murdec In the ••mercy killing" of a cancer patient who had only two days to live. In the first euthanula Cl .. In TUE FJ'C DECLINED com- ment on the reput. Elsewhere, at a Senate hearing, James T. Halverson, Air Force Sergeant Held in 5 Shootings GOLDSBORO; N.C. (UPI ) ';"'"" An Air Force man was ar- rested today and charged with the shooting ol five ttletl, two of them fatally, at Seymour. Johnson Air Force B a s e Hospital. The Air Fm:. said Staff Sgt. Chester Willis Qillier, 23, or Copeland. Fla., was ar-. re!ted by the Wayne County She.riff's cffice and 'Charged with murder in the Sumay shootings. Collier is accused in lhe nae slaying ol Sgt . Larry S. Smith, 22, ot Phillips, Me., a medical COl1"'fl"D, and Alnnan Luis A. Sari.iago, of New York' "OUr Investigation sugg..,. that activities by major in- tegrated pelrolwm companies have had sl.gnilicali. anti-com- petiUve effects," Halverson told the Judiciary Committee~ panel on antitrust an a monopoly. THE OU. INDUST R Y sources sa.ld companies targded for ,proposed anUtruat action are Atlandc RiChlleld, Exxon, Gull, MobU, lihell &00 the -of Ca!UonU aOO Indiana. One source said Ille l!lall proposals wookl center on breaking up an a 11 e g e d vertical roonopoly, er fl'ip on 'tank.s. 1. The staff recommendations Evetythin9 will call for dlvestibre o1 tlle Under ft.:.. Sun marketers' tnterest in and , ..,.. coo1ro1 of tlle pipelhles which For Su"""91' carry petroleum from the fields to refinery. Umi,. are also to be laii<d on the major companies' domlnanoe of marketing and nl'tnlJll! \opera- tloM, said en tndustry source clooe Co the FTC otudy. TJlE W ASHING'roN Even- ing Siar-News qlioled con· gr~ s:iurces for a slmll<r report on the ITC study, whldt has ile<n going on for over two years. F'OC Olailman Lewis A. Engman had earlier promised Sen. Henry A. Jack>on, D- Wash., that the commission Look ~~-' ··~~·. ·'·THE '74's ARE COMING /. .... OUT Go .·THE '73's the nation involving a physi- cian in 24 years, Dr. Vincent Montemartno wa.s aCCUled or injecting deadly potaSlium chloride -an undetectable - chemical acluUon -into Ille veins ol Eugene Baue<, 59. SHOP 'TIL 9 TONIGHT BIG SAVINGS ON LAST FEW 1973 RCA's IN 'STOCK District Attorney William Cahn, who called lhe slaying a "mercy killing," said the potMsiwn chloride was in- jected into Bauer while he was in a coma and incapable of feeling pain. Bauer died within five mirotes after the rn. jedioo, Cahn said. "The patient had tie.n suf. fering from a carci'*'ma of the pbaeyDJ: (throat caDCet") for some time and wu ex- pected to die within two days at the most," Cahn said. Montemarano, 33, ma?Tied and tbe father of tv.-o children, stood with bowed he a d \j'ednesday night as he plead- ed innocent to the murder charge before Judge Frank X. Alt.imiri and was released in $25,000 bail. Girl Lives After Crash -5 P erish PROVO, utah (UPI) -Gina Gibson, 12, stood dazed. Tears ran down her face. Most of her clothes were burned away. "! hurt. I !J.ut so bad. Help me please." A few yards from her, across an irrigation ditch, lay the flaming, mangled wreck of a twin-engine plane with the bodies of five members of her family inside. "When I came out of the plane I was all on fire." the dark-haired survivor of the Wednesday crash told the first person to reach her. She was later ho&pitalized in cri tical condition. Killed in ·the accident near the Provo MWlicipal Airport were Lee S. Gibson, 34 : his wife, Elinore, 33; and their children, Gayle, 13; Clinton, 9, and Ernest, 5. They li ved in Vida1, Calif. Gibson's six-place Cessna 310 look off, reached a height of 150 feet, suddenly swooped down in a sharp bank. bounced off an earthen dike and slam- med to the ground in names. Federal inspectors sai d they did not know what caused the crash, but there were in· dications that both engines had stopped before impact. • I ' THI AMHllST A wt 1 t" ......... ..,... IC,... ,k .' tllre a. • c...,_, tr.i..4 KelHnlt W•ltlllt Caler c:ua-t. Tltu I 01 c ....... -..... """ S.hl s.... klld s.... s..--vw.. ..... , ...... en.. ....... ....... Almi•••k 1lat 6 .a«I Coatnl. 5" a l " SpMUr. -· _S<.l \.,;· SONY DILUll JM/AM DIGITAL "LlmlMF' Cl.OCI IADIO. TFM·C 72 0W •••• $15.95 FLOOR SAMPLIS e AM/PM PHONO WrTH SPIAlllS M ... H,..21tA. ..,_ sm.ts e AM/FM PHONO & CASSITTI llCOIDU M .. l•HP219A .... Sllt.t5 $199" $299" BONY• • . . . ASK ANYO NE SONY RCA'S llG-SCREEN COLOR PORTAILE THAT'S EASY-TO-IUY • ,_.., ... c.a.r .......... ,.,... .. -: ~-;:.:·~=®527995 _ ... __ . "" ...... ._ .... ,.,. ' ..r ....... ,."*..... - NEW FOR 1974 17" Zenith Solid-State Chromacolor II DIAGONAL RCA AA&D QUALITY PRODUCTS Why Buy From AA&D ZENITH JVC KOSS G,ARRARD PANASONIC B.A.S.F. CLARICON t PROFESSIONAL SERVICE ''Electronics for the - home'' (Almi Stw TYJ Houn: Dai'y 9-6 • • o.., ....... , I 275 E. 17th St. • o..,..,,.,.. COSTA MESA ..... ,.... pk..,. t11bt> .... , 642-8882 e DIMant ,ricn e 0.. .,.., .,...., t 1cllct1t1• Cell For Service ..... tll ... l'C~ Thur. • "'"""· ,.,._., ..me. -9.9 .. ICNOW 1 ar prHitcts a"d Nd: IMM wltti SllYICI In our op1n1on lhe HUNDEVAD i1 the moil flex ible, hl9h qualily wall 1yatem produced in Denmark. Ulu1tra tlon a t left 11 one of many combination• avallable. Vl1it any of our 1lo r11 lo 1ea olhar po11lbllltlu flltin9 your 1peclflc need1. c..E C•D PLl:.JMMER'S •& Fethlon l1f•nd , N•wport B•ach Mo11. I Fri. 10 • 9110 Tvt•·• W-'•• Tllun., Sit. 10 • 5110 6H-2ll0 .·--··~------ ' the broadway adventurers elub value-travel 111 what our tours are an about •first class and deluxe • porterage, tranfers, tips hotels •guaranteed emergency •all flights on scheduled return flights . airlines • bili119ual esorts and •round trip airfare included city hosts •full sightseeing, • broadwoy charge m('lny meals convenience* hawall 8 days, I Island v!• Canrln•nl•I Alrl!ntt. [)e.. ptrture\ 1N•rY S•turd•y. Plu1 lfl1o 1••· s•vrk• 7 nights Honolulu, pl us Pe1rl Harbor Cruise, sightseeing. Upgrade 1vailable. I night at K1u1i i5 optional, plus 24 .50. e I doys. 3 I ...... I night Hilo, 2 nights Kona, I ni9ht K1u•i, 3 nights Honolulu. Up9r1de ev•ilable. From .... $329 e 15 days. 4 hlaoch, I night Hilo, 2 nights Kon•, 2 nights Maui, 2 ni9hts K1uai, 7 •t Honolulu. Upgrade a vail:· From $405 xi vl• Mn:lc• ... AlrlllltlS. LOI me CO A119eln departur•. W•lcomt cocltlill on Nell tour. mexleo elty gain 8 days, 7 nights -s245 7 ni9hts Mexico City. Loc.11 host. OR 4 ni9hts Mexico C ity, 3 ni9hts Guedel•- i•r•, from $275. OR 4 1nights Mexico C ity, 3 ni9ht, Puerto Vall1rta, from $285. All include Billet Folklorico tick· ets. Fridays. e Jet Set, 8 days, 7 nights, 3 cities, from $285 e Me•lco Gola, 15 days, 14 ni9hts, 6 cities, from $461 e Mcaatklll Gala, 8 days, 7 nights, from $259 e Me•IC:o Colo•W Clrde, 14 d1ys, I 3 nights, 6 citi11, from $477 europe europeau nd~uture ' 16 d1ys _ s537 London, Brussels, Heidelber9, Innsbruck, Venice, Aorence, Rome, Strese, Leu· sanne, Lucarne and P•ris. Full si9ht- seeing, Rhine Sta1mer Cruise. Oep•r· t ures through Oct. e 4 C..pftal SwltMJ I ond II, 15 d•ys, London, Lisbon, Rome or Madrid, Paris. Thurs. thru Die. 20. From $637 e Gm Jet SwhM), 15 d•ys, 8 cities, from $533 • Potaant of Ewopa, 22 days, I 3 cities, from $851 the golden elrele 23 d1ys -s7414 Visitin9 London, Holl1nd, Belgium, Ger- m1ny, Austri•, lt1ly, Swit1erl1nd llu· cerne ) end P1ris. Departures through Nov. 3. e TH Grmtel Tour, 29 d&ys, 16 cities included in the 8 countries visited, from $958 e SP"i .. '""""'~ No. Africa, 22 d•y" I 3 cites, from $744 e ScmcllHYkl, 15 d•y•, 7 cities, from $'51 • • ....., & --ra. 22 d•y•. 1 citi1s, from $1065 world·wlde erulses earlbbean featuring Costa Lines I Italian Registry), N1tionel Airlines. Includes all me1ls on ship, plus transfers and porter•9•. e S.S. Federico C, 8 days from Los An9ele1, from $435 • S.S. Cri C, 8 d1ys from Los Angeles, from $6142 e S.S. 49rg.U.. Lawo, 15 d1ys from Los An9ele1, from $700 medlterr-ean prc•s include air fer•, 11/ meals on ship, first cl11s hotels with some me1ls, tr1nsfars, port1ra9e, tips I ltalien registry), from $1044 e Holy Laftds, 22 d•ys air/sea, featurin9 Chandris Cruises IGr1ek registry), from $1065 e Grffk hlcuMh. 22 days air/sea, featurin g Costa l ines (Italian registry), from $1279 e ~k Sea, 23 days a ir/sea, featuring Ch1ndris Cruises (Gre1k re91try), e NGrtfl Africa 16 deys air/sea, feeturing Costa lines from $1065 seandlna'1laa erulses f1aturin9 Chandris CnJises {Greek registry! e Nortller91 Capltah, 22 d•ys, Aug. 13 end 27 dep1rtures, from $1065 e M .. h)lst S.R, 22 d1ys, July 30 departure, from $1065 paeUle, orient ell ,pr!c•• ph11 15 'II. ••• .ftd ••rt'lc• orient adventure 21 d•y• h.!1068 Visit includ's Tokyo, Kyoto, T •ieei, 81n9kok, Sin9•pore, Hong Kon9. De· p1rture1 throu9h November. e Kabuki Kaper, 15 d1y1, J•p•n only, from $775 e Sootti Poclflc AdwOfthlre, 22 deys , from $1349 e Circle Pacific Adnotore, 23 d•ys, from$134t •• ... •rtlllP INI ... : monthly newtleltere e Jq111rterl'f' fr•velo91111 e bo111u di1co11nf1 on re· pe1t holid1v1 e ff11 f1l9hf b•9 prio, f<I d•· 1 p1rt11re e dl1co11nt1 on fllffl t tld proc111ln9. ellp and mall Broadway AdweoNren Club P.O. lox 31911, Los A"tolos. CA 90031 W• INVIT• COMPA•ISOf41 LIT US IUSM YOU fl'llltll COLOlll lltOCHUllltl O!I THI fl~LOWtHO TOU• ---·-···-·-··---- Name ··--------·---····-···-··········-··--·--··········-·· Address ----··········-·······-····· .. ·-··-···-···--·-· Cit). -··-.. -·--·-· St1te ........ Zip -... _. •Phone ............ Dept. 618.QCDP.6/ll Mt!MtnN" ti ,..+rM t.r _. 11r11rtk........_ .......... lltNll ....,._ ._.,.._ 0-. UM """ )'Mr, ......,....., ""'IMll'INllo .a.• .... '"" lldl ......... _.... ., 1m....-1tt 1•"91ty llvlflt 11111 .. _ '-9• eU. oe.-.., ••t '""4rM •etw. dlolfl11a11 11 ,... ,,........, (Ql'ft ·~·. Clialle1ige tlie N~ws Quiz . . . onSaturday's Family Page Castro to Travel --·*kw Tito Invites Cub cui to Yu.gosl.a via I From Wire Services Rebozo, President Nixon· s \\'as auctioned for $625 ,ZSO 11tl close friend , who wa s Sothe:by 's In London . CU.ban COmmunist Party hospitalized. but said later The top price was '275,000 leader Fldel Castro accepted that the pat«mt was Alfed ror a Gainsborough -:i 1 an invitaUon from Prelldent Rebozo. partrait of Eli:w:OOth an:! Tlto to visit Yugoslavia. * Sar~ O-ut.tenden, daughters "lt will be a pleasure ~or 1ne Israeli Defense M in is t c r of the British governor of 1' .... ort to visit Yugoslavia, and ~hope Moshe Dayao quietly married Ylillia1n, Calcutta . It was to do it soqp," Castro ~d a a 47-year-old divon.."Ce. bought by a London dea ler, correspondent 'in Havana\ . Dayan, 58, and his bride, who also snapped up tYl'O Van Government sources 1 n Pi.1rs. Rachel Korem, were wed Dycks. Belgrade said the f i r st in a ~minute ceremony. The founda tion \\'3S meeting between Ttlo end Dayan was divorced from established by Anl<'rican in- Castro will represent an im-his first wife, Ruth, alter a 36-dustrialist and art colll'Clor 1 provement in often cool rela-year marriage. He has tv•o Norton Simon.* I tions between nonaligned Yugoslavia and ~I osco w -( )' Attorneys for l\1~rle Z"·eif~I. oriented Cuba. PEOPLE Oklahoma land promoter ,.,,.1 * ing a six-year prison tern1 for An audit?nce at the Talk of '---------filing false mining claims. Jhe ~11 nightclub in London som and a d au g h t er , have launched appeal action in 1 huNday, Junr 28, 1q73 / OAIL 'V PILOT J :J t I See by Today's Want Ads e \\'A NTED: Trlliler lo rt'fl~ 1\•it1l stOV(' nnd Icebox. Do )OU huvc a spare? e 1\Rf; YOU P lNING for a Pinlo? Takf' a look at thi:A '71 Colij'M'. It's a 4 speed 1\ 11h radio nnd it's In good 1·11nd1ILOl1. gave Pearl Balley a standing authoress Yael Dayan. the U.S. District Court at 1'!-"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'"""'~ ovation and showered har with Mrs. Korern had two grown Reno. I~ roses in the finale cJ. her act. daughters. She had been ac-z~·eifel. convicted en 16 It as ?.liss Bailey's second ting as Dayan's hostess since counts of riling fa lse claims, performance since checking his divorce. filed for a ~Tit of habeas cor- herself out of a London * pus, claiming nun1erous violu- hosl>ital where she. had been A collection of 'l1 p~Ungs tions. of his comtitutional admitted for fatigue. ·by English masters put up. for rights in the Humboldt County * sale by the Norton Simon District. Court trial \vherc he Alfred Reboxo, a brother of Foundation of Los Angeles was found guilty. /(ids Like To Ask Andy C.G. "Bebe" Reboro,has been released m:m Doctors Hospital in Coral Gables, Fla., f~ an ovemight stay for mioor skin surgery. The hospital had cor.firmed a press reporttbat Jt was Bebe Committee 1 Coverage Bill Dies SACRAMENTO (AP) -I; move to allow virtua ll y unlimited television, radio and photographic news coverage of state Senate committees died a quiet death in the Senate's Rules c.omm.ittee. Asseniblyman Henry Wax· man, the Los Angel e s Dmnocrat who authored the prorelevlsion resolution, said he may go to court to force the Senate to open committees to broadcast and photographic coverage. 11PERHAPS 'l1IE next step now Ls some sort of court ac- tion, if the Senat~ will not allow the constitutional pro- tection of a free pre§/' he said ln an interview aft«r the Rules Committee b e a r 1 n g w.-ay. 332 FOREST A VE., AVE • LAGUNA BEACH IT'S NEW, IT'S DIFFERENT AND ... IT'S OPEN! .., GALA CELEBRATION FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JUNE 29TH &. 30TH, 10-9 MUSIC, REFRESH_MENTS, DOOR PRIZES .. ' Waxman's resolutk>n died alter it failed lo gel a motion for approval. '~~~---------------=-~--------~~~~~ii=i--.' ' TGl..w.rtl II ....,. .... ettpnt taste. An all white that blenda beautifully with •RJ .,. ..... 91/1" D ... ., Plates 11te price --6Sc ... 12 ... 14-ln. •lo plfc:o 1.Zt l .7t Llllt 1c1o1 r .. 1611 .... •... He oo. Joun r .. 111.., 1211-oz. •• 1. pric• •• ~ 30c ea. ,... ...... a... ... -······· 75c Soup/Cerell a..rs, 12 .... sale price ... 39c ea. c-M lotter Do. wl• prlc• •••.• · 1.29 . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . to --~---~ 1.79 . Now you can start, or add to, your TE~S-WAR~ Mela'!line Dinner· ware at these super.special savings. All first quahty. Child-proof and dishwasher safe. Quantities are limited ... so buy today! SEE HOW MUCH YOU CAN SAVE ON THESE OPEN STOCK PIECES: 6" Bread and Butter Plates sale price , , . 4 9c ea • Sonjnr Bawl, 56-oz. ute price •..•.•• 1.50 1 Omert/fruij Bawl~ 7<JZ. .sall!I Price •.• 30c ea. r •• s.mnc ...... 40-GI. sale price ...... 1.29 21).ez, Soop ... sale price .... _ .. SSc 71(" SolOhridt,.... sal• pric• . . . 55c M. Open Mondoy·Frldoy 9 om· 9 pm Saturday 9 am • 6 pm Sunday 10am·4 pm ' i i ' ' ' l ! I t j • . • •· I • • • ! I ' • • I l I I ' · . • I I l \ • " -- 8 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Junt 28, 1<)73 Spinning Wheels I ,...~, I Reinecke Disputes Mitchell Tale End Smog r • \ SACRAMENTO (Af>) -Justice Department \V hi ch taler was rnoVcd lo Mla1ni Beach. Cali£omla Lt. 00\'.. Ed Mitchell headed at ttJat lime Reinecke Wednesday con-an.oopnced settlement or an REJNE".XE SAID he has tr.adlcted form« Atty. Gen. antiti\ust suit against lnterna-related his recollection of the J~ Mi~ll's testimony de-tional Telephone & Telegraph events to FBI agents probing Asked Wednesday In a hallway interview if r.tit.cbell was lying, Reinecke replied: "I didn't want to use that "''Ord or suggest anything ol that nature." \V ASlll~G~~ped(r~ -A nylng he\ knew of an I'M' offer Corp. the possibility ot perjury by principle eve ' years of rirancial backing for the Mitchell told the Senate either Reinecke or ~titchell. ASKED IF HIS state1nent beago to serlhape·poSatteryFsoon 1will 1972 Republican Nati 0 n a J Judiciary Conunittee in 1972 That investigation was re-didn't contradict MltchelPs, pow ng n ranc sco Convention. that he did not discuss the quested by speciaJ \Vatergatc Reinecke said, "It would ap- ITT ofrcr to help finance 1he <.'Onvention if he had. Reinecke revealed in an in- terview with Tile Son Diego Union, carried in Tuesday's editions, lhal he discussed the reported ITT pledge o f $400,000 with Mitchell in a telephone call in May or June or 1971 . trolley ClU'S down "1arket Sheraton-ITT offer w i t h prosecutor Archiba!d Cox. pear to be in conLradJclion, Street -pollution-free. Reinecke said he t 0 1 d Reinecke during the spring of .. ,. "All I · yes." . REINECKE d I d 1be Department of -· Milchellinatelephonecallin i~11le11\: ater quit as al-.a ec a r e Transportation announced it f\tay or June of 1971 that 1971. tomey general to run ?resi-Reinecke said he was candidate (or governor next has given the city $300,000 to Sheraton H 0 t e Is, an l'IT The hearing was called to dent Nixon's re-election cam-unaware at the time he year, was quoted in the design and test kinetic energy ,.·; ... ~ subsidiary, offered to un-investigate reports that I'M' paign, resigned thal job after telephoned Mitchell that ITT Union's copywrited story as flywheel s as a means of pr~ derwrite·costs of ·holding the won a favorable settlement of the Watergate affair came to faced anti-trust action from saying he did not say anyihing Pulsion. #HumanltJJrian nHJSon$ be convention in San Diego. the case after making the light and is under indictment the Justice Department. He about the telephone ca 11 dMnlHldl This & costing reported $400,000 convention involving the receipt of cam-said he never wou1d have con-earlier "because no one ever Basic Rig lits? MILWAUKEE (AP) Is the right to call a tavern a "saloon" a basic right under lhCl Constitu- tion? No, s:iys U.S. District Judge John W. Reynolds. •JThe right to call one's tavern a saloon is not fun. damental," Reynolds said in dismi ssing a s u j t brought by a lavemkeeper who c l aimed that \Yisconsin's law barring the use of the word in tavern advertising violates the Fh-sl Arnendment. IF THE PROJECT works as;~ __ :_us~mo~n~•'.!Y"..:l' _____ :':TH~AT~_:W~A~S~~bc~f'."or~e'_ll/lh_':.•_!PIJ<led~ge::·..2Th~e:....'.con~v~e".'.nll/lion~~·'.'.ile~_i:pai~·gn~fl/lun~d~s.:_ _____ ~s~id~er~in~g~re~la~ytn~g~wo'."rd~ol~l~he~~a~sk~ed~m~e::.'::_' ______ ========== designed , the wheels will remove one of the biggest obstacles to the use or trolleys for mass transit -the need lo remain in contact \\'ith elec- trical wire~. • • . o-pens a "'"" to ..Oiseless a,. d odorless buses. It also could open the way to a generation of noiseless and odorless buses. The grant is for design studies only. The Urban Mass Transportation Administration says further funds will be forthcOmlng in fiscal 1974 for the actual installation of such a wheel in a San Francisco trolley car. THE FLYWHEELS were developed by Lockheed Missiles and Space Co. after the military asked it to design a reconnaissance vehicle with the ability to run silent. Lockheed engineers found that kinetic wheels -which work on the same princip le as the potter's wheel -not only could hold more energy 8nd produce more power on de- mand than batteries but also could be r ec harged in- definitely. Project engineer J i m Lawson says the w h e e 1 Lockheed designed for the San Francisco cars will be able to power a trolley car up to six miles through the streets before ha ving to return lo the power lines for recharging. AN ELECTRIC motor will rotate a 41 ·inch, 600-pound wheel to a speed of 20,000 ft'VOlutloos p e r minute - about 2112 times the speed of sound. This will be done while , the trolley car is attached to overhead electrical wires. The wheel will be suspended in an aluminum casing and will operate in a near-vacuum. It will be mounted horizontally under the rear seat of the trolley car. Once the disc is rotating at full speed -it takes about two minutes to hit full speed, ac· cording to Lawson -the streetcar will leave t h e overhead wires and start drawing energy from the flywheel . A generator mounted on top the spirming disc will _ turn the kinetic energy into 600 volts of direct current. This energy will power the electric motors on the street- car wheels. mE STREETCAR w i 11 draw power from the nywhcel when cruising on level grou nds and when climbing hills but will put energy back when gQjng do'N!!_J@~ all'!. '!_hen braking, Lawson sa1a . The flyv.•heel will lake eight hours to spin down Crom 20,000 rpms to 10,000 rpms when not producing power "so we 're not too worried about getting caught in a traffic jam," he added. DWll ~ Gain aLll mD'lti I Dm '13 F4D\ JmB-15 IGlllL71 IP'• 1·11 LDO '*''"' KUls Li.ke To Ask Andy DO~f-YOUISllF CINlllS Entire Stock GLASSWARE 8 4nz~g~ .... 299 S.99 EA. foldin1 BRIDGE CHAIR .... 499 6.99 EA. SMALL APPLIANCES ARTISTS SKETCH BOX Reg . 6.99 ~!I~. ' Limited Quantity! 8 Y.FT .x l1FT. AREA RUGS I Our Complete l ine of Burman LAMPS • ltteludin9 pin· up lamfll, vonity lompi, do1k SWAG LAMP CLEARANCE Our Regular Low, low Prices Y•u• choiu of 1moll houwhold appliont01 ... includin9 ••,. miao ... , and mony, mony m~ol :0:"'"' ....... ~··· .. !!loF~ Mon., b.outilul fi9hu to choo.o from • Hun., for lho ho1t Ml.ction • loo~ for tht $ptcic.I Clooffln<o log1. nl y MorYolon !!1%0FF MANY ST-YlES TO CHOOSE FROM APPLIANCE WAX SHELF LINING ~-:.· 19~. •,-:.·4 9f.... OUR REG. LOW PRICES 4 Blti DAY~ THURS. JUNI 28 th'u SUN. JULY 1 "' .. DRESS BAG •,-:/39: •. •• SUIT BAG :~~·39!. " ontod -BOARD COVER ·.~~· 69: .. l '•5' American Flags .... '·" f 49 -... Motol Clod "D" lalleries .. ,. 6' "' ... G.E. Mo«u"f SWITCHES ~~'~5~!. I O• • Of E-l•n1ion CORD-&.REEL .... 99 2.99 EA. Our complete line of Haldeck JiMiR LIGHT FIXTURES :·:; 41z .. -INTERCOM .SET •••. 788 12.99 EA. No. INY 21C ......... Battery Charger .... 299 l .91 IA. TANK BALLS 119. 3c· ,, •lncl11din9 complete line of ceiling fix-1---"~·~· 2;D·~10~'--J...-,jja.,,Wi;J.!.!lllllll. lure1 . 30 01. OFF OUR REGULAR 7:/0 lO~:ICIS l ,it<• Gl'K·260 BAR·B·O TOOL SET Eleclrlc Grill '"·'21.2 ~~ .. '9 99:.... s~~l9 1 49!~ FRAMED PICTURES i.~9eA. ~ for ., · Aluminum Frame DIRECTORS CHAIR •••. 799 10.99 IA. lefflord Moldod Plo!lic PATIO CHAIR .... 599 7.9" IA. FcHding PATIO CHAIR .... 299 4.99 IA CAMPING CLEARANCE Your·choice of our entire stock of all popular camping needs. Y!%~ ''"'" 011woll Mini-Tool Kit .... 69• 1.29 IA. 0 11wo FIX IT-KIT .. ,. .... 4T.' CrftConl Motric No.M I SOCKET SET .... t,88 I .It EA. CANE TABLE LAMP Vari•ty of colors . R••·14n• 19.99 ti EA." 18 Inch BLACK, LIGHT FIXTURE WITH LAMP j M518CR o .. J99 •eg. 11.9' EA ., Pallo7L~h1 Se1 TAPE.HOLDERS Kodak lnstamatic TER.~~~,IUM ~'.:. IT.' ~~ 69:.. MOVIE CAMER • At1ortod l..lllo<IUJi..,.,,...---j--...,..,,.-----i '.-.·~"'':'.;, •• :;~~Ii;;.. Jr'.~p:i·~~IH 3~~~B • ~~ r" .•. ::J::J N•.Sh N•.l067 .. H• No.M_,I ~ =:1·~. ~~&fi EA . PATioc4.ili>us MoTo• 01L / M'cno·i 01i: ., ..•• w .. h • .., ~-""2Y ni:J1~Htr 1/J OFF ~~'~ 29~f. ~:· 22~r. Out lo ular low, low pric11 No, 91-101 TERRARIUM KIT ····399 6.99 IA. IFT,x 10FT. o .wollTool& Howord10'•· TACKLE BOX DRILL SET EXTINGUISHER I~JtA~ ...,..,..·.,.:'.:-';,!,::;.'.~""'! .. ·t-:.-... -, ... a_:-:_.A· _,;:;.T.;;!.';;,_·H_...R.:.:·"~o:: • .::.::"::..'o-1;;,..;.;9M .. ':..· ..... •. . TERRARIUM KIT •••. 599 9,99 IA. lot!1ol TREE KIT .... 199 3.99 IA. #A·2DD·I "TABLE LEGS iig!iij ,,.'.:~;: ..... !.::.., VANITIES ::I EA T,ABLE,LE~~ =~~~:~~:~~o~;~~elop20%0FF WH/tl 1HEr lA~r 'J.9~"p,, '1• look For lho Speciol Solt To91 • Our 109. low, low ,,ico1 •A fantastic value! OUR REGULAR LOW LOW PRICES OUR :3~-, REG . 14.88 '.-:.i:J, =. ••.. , \'\;~ ::1::1 leu.Choke \\,\) •• EA . Ram or · • 8ern2omatic TO_R_ql KIT •Everything you need. Tank, tip1, etc. No. Ul.100 Accou1tical CEILING PAINT White Only .... · 199 'l.99 GAl. Powerhovse l/a" DRILL ..g-. 'n!I 9,99 EA. No. 7014t01lllt 11 lb. Slab CANDLE WAX Reg. 1.99 WHllE IT IASTS "· Our Complli te line off FIDTRl> Electrical Accessories • """'4"" ....... . __ ,_ -..\< .............. . -.i.1m11 ...... .. -....,., TV•"'"" .. ' ~ ............. ~ Our Reg. Low P1ices · SPORTING GOODS CLEARANCE TOILET SEAT WhitoOnlv • .,. •nn •.u~ Nt, TllO Everything must go. Balls, Equip- ment, Swim Gear, Etc . -Save Big. 2 ft, x 8 Ft. ,lastic DECORATIVE ROOM DIVIDER • Perf~ct for any room, ••• o .. 699 10.'9 EA . WHlll 11111 LAS'f CEDAR ROUNDS ~~·~39! .... Our Regular low, low Prices 1"'•2"•1 F1. ............. ····5"'• 79c 71.t.. Pre-Finished Utility Grade SHELVING • Perfect for garage•, etc. • Assorted 1i1e1 !!I~ OUR REG. LOW PRICES R~OT FEEDER •••. 688 Alar'" Ololn )0 f)•r ,~,. t 01. Setf•gua rd 12"JI 12" "loYo·On" 4 '•01 Hand Carved Waler Pump Pliers DOOR GUARD Pegboard Hooks FABRIC SPRA y Sho1 Carpel Tllu Cedar Grapes1okt1 ENTRY 9.tt E.t.. ~~.'ill:.... ~~1• I!! ~~~· 271~. 971~. ~~~·39:.... ~~~-I 9f.... DOOR SAVE UP TO OFF OUR REG . LOW PRICE LOOK FOi THI S'f:CIAl SAll l AGS 14 FT. Aluminum _EXTENSION LADDER • Sturdy constructton • UL -Approved. 10~! GIANT CLAM SHELLS •.•. ·y•nn 24.99 ZEA. S.:1oon O.or Rescreening Kil ~~:9 I~~ 2"•1"•1 Ft. loughledw...i •·•·59• 71Jc EA Redwood Palings '"•·39c .S9c IA. GOlD VEIN 01 ANTIOUE GOLD VEIN MIRROR TILE • 10" x 10" Site. Reg.~n¢ 57c EA. 2"•1"•6 Ft. Rough Redwootl '"•·39c S9c EA. .. ........ 1 Ft. REDWOOD •••. 299 3.19 IA, 2'014" Shorl lon9th CLEAi FIR 1::•;,. I 0~,. ..... ,.~ .. CDX SHEATHING .... 788 11 .tt IA. Ch.In D-Josi-er SO Ft. • Hoovy Duty S Gol. Coipot Cloontr K I '' • All Ma~ogany 11o koi w,,_.,,,.,., ... LUFKIN TAPE TIRE PUMP Drlnwoy Dr111ln1 RUG KARE "'"""""'' Toy Storage Chut ledwood Trl~Stok11 1--~,;.1_;....;2=-'~"~'". --l--~~f; 2 ~~--t-'"'"--''=-9:::,~:.· --f--::-~~9::';:-:-=2=.::~~~:;.· -~--;~_:,-;· 7;;1~9::":'"9_-11-~F:::t:::'.; 0-:2:l:;Si:::IL:;:~'.'·-t--::~"-::,.-:::::47.'::'::!::--t·-"~-~g-;';7.3:::"'.'~4::;:-:9:::-~-A •. l--:_~~-l.::...:,;.:'~,;,·_-I 9a12 Hoo"Y Duty 16 Os. Si10 Dllv<• Yit!'fl ~lie '6 •••4'11' S'ANDID 1/1" • 36" • t11o·· DROP CLOTH MOD PODGE WALL PAllT SHOP PLYWOOD lauan PIJwood .... 4,., "•· I 99 .... 299 .... 88 .... I 97 77c 7 1.t.. 2,4, IA. 4.ff GAl, 17.ff IA. 2.97 IA. l O S... Ft, ANTIOUllG ICIT .... 2 .... I'.' .,,, ny It• WALL PAINT .... f 99 2.9t GAL Daye• AH-Pi.or,.., HOUSE PAINT •••. 199 ::11,99 GAL .,,, )I .... ~,, FIR STUDS .... 99c 1.59 IA, ., •••• 4.49 t '"•f" Walr,ut PARQUET FLOOR TILE Ou• Reg . 19• 1.00 .... ---....-----·- I r Thursd1y, JuM 28, 1~73 DAILY PILqT· J7, TONIGHT'S !~7:~~~~~~ower plays the title role of the celebrated train robber and Henry Fonda is his brother Frank in this 1939 western. NBC D 8:00 -The Helen Reddy Show. The Grammy award·winning singer makes her debut as a TV hostess tonight, replacing F1ip Wilson for the summer. CBS U 10:00 -..,. Anatomy of a News story. Dan . Rather hosts this behind-the-scenes account of bow television news covered a breaking story the dem· onstrations at t he 1972 Republican conVention. TV DAILY LOG Sprillfl Coneert OCC Musicians Get 4 Awards Four Orange Cout College Singers for one semester. She music students have received alto plays the piano and com: schollt'lhlpo lotall!lg l9t>O at poses. She will major in voice the colle1e'1 annual Sprinc at Cal State UniveraUy at Choral Music Coocerl. Fullerton this fall . Jan Shlldt, of Santa Ana, Wampler began taking drum received '400 from the Orange lel&Olll at the age of seven and County PhJlhannonlc Society. was a member of the OCC Gary Wampler, ol Huntlnllon .Im Elllet-. Oolloort Band . Beach, WU ·-• !200 and Symphony Orcbeslra. He scholarship from the Coast was a teaching assistant at Music Service and $100 trom Marina lllgh Schoo! Jut year. the Orange County He plans to attend Cal State Phllharmooic Society. I.oog Beach. Miss Rayburn was a vocalist ANN llA YBURN, ol Ganletl and pianist at OOC. She Grove, recoived 1100 lrom lhe belonged to the Chorale and Ruth M.,... Memorial Foan-Chamber Singers. Jacbon, a datlcn, whlle stepbt.n Jackson, French horn perform e r, of Founlaln Valley, was liven played with the OOC Sym- a 1100 ocholanhlp by the OOC phony Orehestra, b r a s s Music Club. ~mble and varsity band. Miss Shikit was a member He will attend the University 9:00 II (() CIS hJMb: ''You'll Get of the OCC Chorale for two of . Southern caJifomia as a Thursday Evening JUNE28 Yours When You'11 cs·• A looll: lit-years and the Ch am be r compllition major. hind tllost nlnt·di&it socitl .urHr 1-------------'----'--'----.:..:========--::;:===---==-'--------------------------- numbtrs wt'ft 1U 111NK11111 ti ! . 1:oouoummmm• ... ill®INon 9.....,, w C.UrbhlJll ,, ld4ie'• fltMf 0 Wallttd DtH er A1w. m111o-m SW Trtk fBLos T1rres fD Heippeds1 LNp l!Jl) ... _ 1:)0 00 ...... KefM• D"""'"°,"""""'""''" (d11) '53 -J1tlr11 Hunter, Mich11I Renn it. (jJ CIS fltws W1lt1r Crnnkit1 Q HM 1111• Wiil Tthll Qi Mtrr lirtnbl Shew m...,,..,,. f.m Sit , .. , Yln1 '" m """• Enr a;i-rn Datri Tbettn mum.1na11 1:oou rn om-a '"''-' ,., ...... (j) Trutll " C....utllCU (j) AMfkllll ....,....,, OMll'•lltrl.W GI I Lliwl LKJ m I Drutl flf M11111il Ea si.p1e ..... 11 Maril EID r11 Clll Ql'11a11 m•,_. ai)T11t-lftbtlMulk.ll m.,...._ >.JO 8 y_, Dr. Klldan (R) Ytntr11I diSNM 11M&t•t trs the lilt of 1 pre!· ty eomm1111e rllf md htf •bom b1by. rn ,..... •• ,... a Tiii Ad'lt11turer 11 Mwlt: CCI (2h,, "'Callftrwla" (•IN) '46 -Ray Mlll1nd, B1rblr11 ,.....,... oo m Mc• Sur'"" memoril:t, •• MWMlllll Hlllhel Rudel ttlks to '°"" al the Zl 1111· lion penons wtle raiw 111011tb1J ciletb but stll Must ae vp tllli' life strints or p on welt1rt. D l!iil &l -.... ,,.,.., Lat CIM" (R) Cllitl lronsidt ..... SIL Brown to the vitltp of Grtftt's lly to lum whr mldtnb of tM filNI( ¥111ap ftflllt to cooptJ1tt Ill 11 ht- ¥1Stit1tlon Into tf'le 411a If a rt· tired policemen. D CDl1JE!l .... " .. _. (R) C.1111 I* m•n·lluntint to tllCh the truth to • 111111 tlr1 wflo lhlllkt sht h11 Slved him from tlM ttllowl br telli111 • lit. fBNlot IE 0 $lloW .. AkjllCITI Slltra: 9:30 0 nt H•PllJ' .... ,.,.. Slim 1nd , Henrietta dlscmr "tlllnp to do thlt 1r1 the." o-m Jiiii Jm "Soand! of SWlna" GIMuchcN llalilM me.""' 10:00 IJ"CI) CIS le,.rts "All1tomy of A News Story" A bllllnd·tM«tlln KCOUnt ol how televlslon nm CO'f· ert4 1 br11ki111 """ story -tllt -~ttioM 11 ttlt 1!72 .. ,... kin N1~ ~ 0.1 Rather is tl)Chormln. 0 (Ii Ill Dim M1ttll Slltw Fran' Slnatni Jf. alld Jama Stewart alllll. em111-u rn 11Jm-""'-c:nc. (It) A lllWMllPI kills I firl ,.. porter in 1 tit of lt•lous 1111 bt· u use she is Mtin1 another "''"· IM dots Mt .lMw that the .. othlf man" is his son. who Is ulth11te!J chtrttd with tht 1lrt's murder 80ral1Mlrtl:r···· Frtedom" Roy Rop11 D: ['1- 1ns, and 'K~litm O.nilll 111ht. fB•-1111- 0 -$ "°"'' (C) 12•~ "J-IO:IO 8 T• loct JI_.. (wn) '39--T~rvnt Powe r, ma-.-... ....... HelfY rond1. l!B ac •• , ... ([G lll'1MaM1Dlll a!JMlwt/SpiNtl IDTW Clrt l!IDn.,.t ll:OOBGDIEllDGl- m -c-"Gou "' ••I· rn Ill a -ler(' TIM E11t lot Anttlts p Ht • 0. ... ~ is OM of tile '"' 111Mriu u plori111 00 ...,.... Dillll lht pflilosoph7 of Chlc1no M . Bt· G ~: ~ 1 '*'-....,... 1u11 bf three >"OUnt Muict11·AIMri· (dB) 61 -Hlfriet ~ Mu t111 1rtists. Cotz is now used b7 YOll $~. N " mar• th111 30 l*Pll ""° ""* illCI ~ Mnie: "'.,· Allt&n {clr1) e•bibit there. 4~ lbtt. Nlftl F«:tl. . m .,.,,. m """' <C> .,_..,. ""'I Ql Mee s.p. '4~YWll'IMI DtCtm, Roll c.ner., m w... r111Rr 11:1s m ct .... 34 1:008 (()1111 W ... (R) A tow1111·• ruicltnt ICCUMI tlM W1rtoe'.• mo11n· ii 7UP presents UNday 11111 achool ot ttlthlnt tt1111sm, 111d * N' ht t •-M . thr11tens lo ce1111 tnMlblt for Min 'I 1 ln• O't.._ • Hunter (M1ricltre Costello) the Marprel Rutherford m tucher. ' '1Murder ·Shi Saki." D ll9)mrtD11m n. H11e1 RHdy Slltw Miss Rlddy, 1 Grtmmy Aw1rd·win11er fol her hit record "t Am Wom1n, .. hMb this wttkly con· tempo11ry mlllic 1nd comtdJ Stries th•t ttpltc•• Alp Wilsoo tor tht rnt ol the summer. U (J)(I) 111 ... _ (R) Unc IOfS undmoW!r H I hiJh ltMI 12.:JO 8........, Pih! wol\ef to II,.. IN Mlltr of 1 lrllnd CD .....,: ..._.. ...... (ldW) who w11 mllrdlrtd d11rl111 I lia:ht · • ·~ Qd. lWI• llllllL on lht (l1cltrs. ID..._.•'•Herwl dJ .... ,,.. tlll otftlpk fBta--m Wtttr1.t. tt.mfJ Will run •P· proxlm1t1!r 5 hours ind will prt· empt •ntlrt mnin(s rrDl'lllllL l:tll Cll DB D Ill -Ii)_, ....,,.. IJPI" <•~> 'II -lnlricl Tllvlln. Mu Von ,,.,.., 1:45 B .._.: (C) "Stir ii tlrrll ...... (WIS) ·~" Booal. M1111ll V111 Dor.I, .k>tln Ac:•r. II>"~ .. a;i v -• "' """ 2:11m ... _ -CC> -lfl""":...., Fdll...,. (dn) .. -..-• ..,.,,...,.,111111" '36--Jtll'llS Cllftlr, ROMtNry lJM. J•IO B ...... .... Ill -. . -•.. 1:10 ID Mtlf Crllfi1 .,. (drt) '41 -Johft P'tJM; MllKlll GD ffwtll O'li1r1. ~ J 1:00m~ r ..... ..,.. (ldW) Friday '13->1""""' ••tt. """ """· • l:IO Ii) """ .. -(-) '41 DAYTIME MOVIES ...,..~ Fool•, OIMI •• HwllW J:OO iI) (C) --· ,_, ... 9:30 D "ftnlp C.111s1nj..r' <-P> -frtnk S1111trt, StlllieJ MICl.llllL '40-Joll McCrt1, lartlllt Dlf, t 111 (C) ...... T_.. (*') '52:- 10:00 rn "IMd ,..... (wn) •57 -Kowud Duff, Mn SIMMllt. Georte MonltoftlllY. :S:JO Cl., ... ff 1"'7 (dr1) '57-«ii" II "Opefltlll K.,wtl" (llh) '50--1*111 ... Rl lpll Mttk«. Bill :m111111. Miii ~rfofd. 4:00 B (t) ........,.." (mus) '57- lZ:OO II M111 ltlt" (lllJS) 5Z~eorst Pit Boont. Terry Mooft, J•ntt1 Bftnt, Di1n1 Dots. "TM laltllllf Drury .,.., 111t Llltr" cc111) ·sz -o.ne · Cl1 r\lt10ml Chance. 4:Jt(J)llM • '-..... KOCE, CHANNEL 50 •• • • , ) ' . •• T \ This fantastic book , ' can save you hundreds of dollars ' • -- j right now! CONSUMER GUIDE ••• wldelyaccl1lmed IS the most complete, authotjtative book ever written on shopplnr. Latest 1973 edition a1ves brand·by·brand comparisons on quality, perlonnance, prlCO$ on ltoms you a"' planning to buy. Use it to save-become an Informed shopper. Nearly 500 ~ pocked with vital information your family needs now • $2.50 II books-and newsstands. Yours FREE now lhrou&h July 10 at Anlltllm Slvlnp. Supply limited. Ono to a family please; no mall or phone orders. NOW ONLY $800 GIVES YOU ALL THOE fREE SERVICES AT ANAHEIM SAVINGS: Open and mllttlllnan ICCOUlllol II lllSI $500 II Anaheim Slvinp. Get all these services ,_ ... 1119 deposit tioxas • chocklnc ICCOllnlS • money orders • travelers checks • Professional Buyers Service• notary public service • trust deed collection • photocopy service• income In p191J1r1tion (with additional qu alifying requirements). ANAl-IEIM SAVINGS Ml LIM UIOCl&A1'tONlll Y1M1 Of KIMCI TO IOU'llfPf4 CALl'O~HIA HUNTINGTON. BEACH: 411 Main St., 536-6591 I l ., I ., • j • • • f 8 DA IL V PILOT Thorsd.i.y, Junt 28, l9iJ ' PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P1·oduce1· Jacobs Made His Mark in Movies -~--- •• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE STATl!MENT OF A8AN D0NMENT OF ------------1 USE OF FICTITIOUS 8USIN!SS NAME F/CTITJOtl$_1UllN2.5S _Tiie. lollowi!lll otr1l!Q .. hU.AbA~tcl. .!_'?ii NA.ME STATEMENT !tW of ttie tlc!ltlou• busln~~ n"mt .,.'" lollr.w!ne perton 11 dol119 1>U1iness BLANKINSHIP FLOORS. 11 r>:n R•'" 1,; dolpll, Cosl11 Mesi, C1Ufornl1 92~?6. WILLIAM 8 . ROBINSON CON· Tiie llc!ll!oon buslllt~• n•mt '"''"ed !O Tll:•CTOR. 2'n Aftd•OI SI .. Co1!1 Mew. llbovt WIS !!ltd !ft Oran11e COUl'llV on C1lil, 926'16 Febru~ry 10, 1971. W!lll•m flruc• Roblnsoro, ?'In Andros WILL IAM ll:OBI NSON. 19n Andros •r., Costa Mna; Calif. 9262' ST•tel, Cost• Me~, C1ll~r11la t?~M "' ... • 1 0.1.Rl YOU ro Cll:OSS 'TMA,T L.INE. l " T~(S buslnHs Is CGfldllCled 11'1" '" r,.. Tiils l>USl!lelS WIS corH;IUC7~ by "" In·, ___________ _ <hvidual. di~lduel. WU!lam B. Robln5°" Wll!lam 8. R°"lnson T~ls statemen1 w11 llled will! the (our,. F-4" •1 Clerk ol Or•nve County on JuM 76. Pv1>llsned or""9" Co.osl O~lly Piiot, !91l. June 111. <>nd Julv s. 17. 19. 1913 2010.13 FUlSS Putltf!ol'f!O' Or11nge Coa~t Oa1ly PU?t. PUBLlC NOTICE J11M 11 1nd July s, 11, n, 1~1J 2009.1J,l------------ F ICT1t1ovs BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT PUBLIC NoTICE -------------The foll owing per$on I• doing buslneu as: NOTICE INVITING a1os MA RTIN LeVAN ASSOCIATES, '"° Nol!ce Is hereby given lnal the Board el Camous Drive (suite 220): NewPOrf Educatloo of tt.e Irvine UnHl~d Scl\ool Beach, Calll. 91660 District ol Or1nge Coun!y, CalUornl1. will Marl!n Levan, •1!? R(ll!CI Ro1d, re<:elve 1e11IO!'d !>Ids up to 2:00 p.m. on ll>e Irvine, Catll. 91664. 12111 day ol July, 1913 at 1"600 Sand Ca.,.. Tn!1o busln"51 Is tietnv conducted by an "°" Ave., Eaat lrvfiv, at whi.:h t!m• said tndlvldual. • bids wlll· be publicly ep~"<! and rf.,d tor Milrlln Levan ' furnlihlng ot Furniture. Complf!e ln· This •lalement filed wltn the Coun!y str1tellons, cllf!dltloos ol bid, 'pecilica· C!t.r~ o! Oran<le Cnunty on: June 76. 1913, l!oni, JCl!edule ol bid Item$ <'Ind bld forms WILLIAM e. ST JOHN. COUNTY may bt Ot>laln!MI "' !ht' oHlce of CLERK, 8 y Thtrt1a M. W,,td, D<ITTUIV. Allmlnl\!talor, Business SUllJ>Ort Serv!c"5, FJ635t 1"600 Sand Canyon Ave,, Eas! trvlne, P11b!l•hN! o'~otae Coa't OallY Pilat, Catllornia. J11ne 18 an.II July 5, 11, 19, 1971 1979·13 The Board of Ed11Catlon re5e<Yes !he --------1 right to reie<t 11nv or an bids and not ntc.,,..rlly ,,(Cfpf tt>e l~s! price. lrvlne Unified School District by: John M. Ralclc PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS llUSINE~5 NAME STATEMENT Autllorl11M1 Aoen! Publl~ Or11nve Coast June ,28, end July 5, 1973 Daily Pilot, Tiie followlng person ii doing business 2001·13 as: GOLDE N STATE ESC ROW, INC., PSS Via Liiio, Suite 360, Newport Ele.,ch, C~ll !ornla 92660 R~ecrans Escrow Cor poration llncor110ratioo In Stale of Call!rrn!a) 11110 POW/JV Road, Suite E, Pow11y, rafllornl/J 91<164 This business Is "'"duc!ed bY a cor-por<'!!len. liosecr~ns E•cro·N Corpcre!lon MirlMTI Schwarz. Pret lden! This sMlement w&s !ill!d ,.,;th tne Co11n· '" Clerk el Or~oge County on June 26, 1973 F163S1 Publl•~HI Ora~ge Cc.is! Daily Pllct, Junl! 11!, and July 5, 12. 19, 1973 1'001·1l Berkeley Councilmen Harassed BERKELEY (A p ) Boisterous fe1ninisls disrupted a Berkeley City C o u n c i I meeting, forcing the council to adjourn to a back room for the second time in two months. After two hours of discussion <ln the city's af- firmative action hiring plan. the council left Hs public meet ing chambers Tuesday night. FIVE W0,\1EN had march- ed back and forth be(ore the council C<!rrying picket signs and complaining~that the pllln to gua rantee equal hiring fQr \\'On1en and minorities is in· adequate· After heckling, the council PUBLIC NOTICE asked the women to leave. BEVERLY HILLS IAP) - li1ovie producer Arthur P. Ja. cobs, who dropped a career as a high-powered press agent to produce films for family entertainment. was found dead at his home Wednesday . the apparent victim of a heart at- tack. He was 51. A friend said Jacobs died In his sleep. lie had recove red from a severe heart attack four years ago. HIS WIFE, actress Natalie 1'rundy, \\'<IB In Natchez. li1iss. starring in Jacobs' latest prcr duction, "Huck Finn ." Jacobs, who was Marilyn Monroe's press agent at the time of her death. credited the blonde star with convincing him to produce films, a move which led to such productions as "Doctor Doolittle" "Tmt Sawyer" and the ~ries of "Planet of the Apes" movie.s. J acobs frequently recalied how Miss Monroe came to him in 1962 and asked that he pro- dpce a film for her. ••wE WERE good friends. She kept begging me to find the right story, right director, right writers and she'd ahvays add, 'You can produce,'" Jacobs remembered . He found the script, "\\'hat a \Vay to Go." and Miss Monroe agreed to star in it. But by the time the deal was completed, lifarilyn Monroe waJ dead. "Strange -and 'In .this case tragic -the worktngs or fate ,·• Jacobs said o n•c e , recalling ho'v he went ahead and produced the film with Shirley lilacLaine as the star. SUPERIOR' ~~~~T OF THI! \Vhen the women refused, the IT. WAS ms first break into STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR council voled to adjourn lo a producing and the culmination THE co~~7~o1tAHGE back room. of a lifelong aim to make a NOTICE ol' HEARING oir Pl!T1T10N Six weeks ago, the counci1 pennanent mark on the· m vie FOil PROSATE OF WILL AND FOR h h LETTERS TESTAMENTARY took t e same course w en business. E~1a1e 01 JAMES N. ·sTAR&1Rc, rent control s upport e r s A native of Lo!! Ange O<K e&sed. I NOTtCE 1s HEREBY GIVEN that JAC· disrupted their meeting. Jacobs majored in cinem at oueL1NE ooLORes STARBIRD has 111. USC, then took the only mo · led herein a pt'tltlon tor Probate ol Wiii end for l•sua,,ce o1 Let1er1 Tttt&m~iary HOWEVER, FOUR council job he could get as a 110 lhe pellllOM!' refel"f'!f'Ct 10 whlth Is ._A II Hancock f MGM t di made !er for111er 1NO•tlcul1Jr1, and Thal the mem~rS -0Il8 , messenger Or S U OS. •11me and Place o1 hNrlng n.e same Ms D'Army Bailey, Ira Simmons He moved to the publicity l ,~ne:O~,~u1~110!,~·,~~:i=~::m;, ~ and Ying Ke!Iey -refused to department, then took on a 1 ~~~,:~~;-~{1y ": s;~~!c A~e,n~":ui!:.:i': attend the back: room meeting. similar job at Warner oat"<! June u, 1913 • They contended it was a Brothers and finally . started ~!;1~"11,~k· sr JOHN. violation of the Bro\.\1n Act his own publicity agency SIL8ERT & SILSERT prohibiting legislative bodies whicb-thrlved. t.01 w11s111,.. a11111 .. su1tt t44 from taking actions in private At his peak, Jaco was I By; Al8,. o. snu1m;,, bs Bevertv Hln1. c1111. toi10 and I.he city charter \.\'h.ich · nress agent for stars including Tel: (Jll) 272"'311 ,,. O!ANGZ .1.11or..e~·s tor: P1t1111M1er speci fies all council meetings Gregory Peck, James Stewart, I CC'Ji I;:~ tf ,:,~'~:~\~ .~~·~::, f;~~ :~~t:·~~;~:s News JQu~:l•nd, Rich•' d ldalU US CbilW 1·11 lDD • hdlrlFm Jf' e Dare You • • • • • • • ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• • • • • • • • •••••••• • • • • • • • • • •• ••• • • • • • • • • ••••••••••• •••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • •• ••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••• ••• • • • • • • • • •••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .. ·•-•-··-· ............ . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• • • • . .... , . •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • .. ,. • • • •••••••• ••••• ••••• BIG SAVINGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT IN EVERY STORE! OUR GREATEST MONEY-SAVING EVENT OF SUMME~ '73 1-----MEN'S & WOMEN'S ,QUAblTY APPARELS ENTIRE STOCK lilOT INCWDED 'Jtl FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT CENTER, NEWPORT IBEACH I Burton, Rock Hudson i\tarlene Dietrich. over budp:et. The film was honored with nine Academy A1,1•ard nominations and t~·o Oscars but the studio lost $4 n1illion on It. "'tts ~ successful lt was .J aek Hirschberg. J a co b • follo1,1·00 by two sequels. fonned his APJAC Intern• lional produ ctlon company . "TOP f\'OVJE producers His film hits also included, told me t'd be laughed out of "Goodby ~1r. Chips." ''Play It. the movie business If t made Again Sam" and "Tb e this pic ture.·• Jacobs recalled. ChairmM." AS A PRODUCER, he \Vas kno\vn for big-budget movies on a grand scale with subjects aimed to please adults and children. His m o st ex- travagan t film, ' ' Doctor flooliille" cost 20th Century Fox $16.8 million. $2 million 110\\'ever, he returned to the sante studio rur a series or rnms that became freak moneymakers. ''The Planet of the Apes" Y:as begun in an at- n1osphere of skepticism but " .. .I al1,1•ays thought these Jacobs, a Io n g · t i mi ape stories could be bigger· hachelor. nu1 rriC'd li1iss 1'nul- thnn King Kong." dy in 1968. They had JJO Along witll an associate, children. , 1 ·--------------" Pre-4th of July Specials!! PRICED RIGHT! General's Famous 4-Ply Jet-Air·m $ for Size 6.!:10-13 !ubetoss '"'O!a' f.RiVaJT" Pl i.iS. s f :73' .. , .. Fed. E11:. Ta11: each. •Strong 4·Ply Construction • E8sy Steering Contoured Shoulders • Famous Dual Tread Design ~C:ha:rge~it~' i~~~~~n:i11ii1i~ii·-·i .. .,i ... -.... et ~rel Tfre :-:·::1, 7.00.13 or C7S.14 FITS: Cofva\r, Chevy II, Dart, Faleon, Valiant, ., .. ~:T~'.n...::,~:~. Buick Spec!al, CheveUe, MustaAg, Fairlane, Coinet, F"-&S, Cutlass. Barracuda, Tempemt ••• ANO MOAEI E7S.14 FITS: Chevelle, Camaro, Cougar, Falrlane, Mustang, Fireblrd, Chevy II, Montego, Coronet, Charger, Ambassador, Matador. Barracuda, Satellite • , , ANO MOREi . F7S..14 or F71·15 FITS: Ambassador, Barracuda, Camaro, Chevrolet, F-85, Dodge, Plymouth. Ford, Corvette, Jeep .•• ANDMOAE ! G78-14 or G78~15 FITS: Chevrolel. Dodge. Cutlass. Pontiac. Buick. Special, Tempest, Ford. Plymouth, T-Blrd. Mercury •.• ANO MORE! H7S.14 or HJS.15 FITS: Ambassador, Buick Sporlwagoo, Chrysler, Dodge, Torino, Falrlane, Monlego, Mercury, Cutlass, Plymouth, Fury, LeMans, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, T·Bird ••• ANO MORE! ···'' ,, ' *67'0 for 4 $71'0 4 *7980 4 $87 80 4 *9510 for for for for Size 7.00-13 or C78-14 tul>eleA blackwall, plus $1.88 or $2.08 Fed. E11:. Tu each, depeltdlng on s!ze. Su:e E"78·14 rubeles9 b!ack.vall, plus $2.22 Fed. ex. TSIC Neb. Sill! F78-14orF78·15 tubelt!sa bhtckw;.J!, pl1,15 $2.37 Of Sl!.•2 Fed. E11:. Ta• each, depending on t in. 5ize G78-14 or G78· 15 rubeless black,,.. all, Ph.1$ $2.53 Of $2.60 Fed. Ex. Tax eo'!ch, dt~ing 0t1 site. S1ie H78-1 ~ or H78~15 l11beloss btackwal1, plus $2.75or12.80 Fe d. E11:. Tu~. d61)6ftding e111 sia. WHITEWALLS ONLY $2 MORE PER TIRE lllAHll.Cllla:ao..ld -......., . .,. _... ~,,., O< t"'" N<i •~OOI °"'1...-t!i_, ......... -•Ill """""'11ny 0<1Mo" placid ioo• tot lwl.,._ ... ...,. ............... ...... RADIALS For Imports & Sports Cars General SPRINT .JET •Easy Mndllng radial ply construction • l91tg mlteaoe Duraoene tread rubber •Agg,.....,. European tread pattern AS LOW AS 2FOR $5995 -M58R--1S lltblleel blackwlll, Plue: $1.4 T Fed. Ell. la.r; •ten. SIDI TO FIT OVER 300 IMPORT CARS \ ._ DISCON'J'INUEf!. -----··-·-·· TIRE VALUES oN:Y E78x15 ::~.11 ........ s1~ 4 900 16 I pl! relroads l s2500 ONLY X c111n9. Dodge . · Weapon• Carrier ••· · ON:Y F78x1S ::1 1 ::.. . . ..... s1s~ ON.LY 600x13 .... ., .. ..s1~ o~~y f70x1S :::11: .. . I $)8~ • ... I•, T1• ft'9in 11.H ta 11.M USED TIRES LOT~ ., TltEAD LIFT 5'~ SMALL CARS SPECIAL General DURA-JET8 WHITEWALL $ 95 >4-A. Y NYLON COAD BOOY ONLY: .• - ..l!'.T. 11 ." EA. WHITEW~f.:~ 560x1~xlS--560x14-5;ox14-560x13 ~ ~ Complete BRAKE OVERHAUL \f ~"\ 1.1 .... NIWMnr•IWllt• .. 4 ........ 2 ........... ,..... ............ .. ____ ....,..,~-· 4.1 .... ,~.,.... ..... .. , ................ .... .. ._. __ _ 7. A.ifMt ....... -4cNcloo•--I•"'"'' ....... .. ....... .,.. ....... . $ ALL FOR ONLY ... 95 MOST U.S. CARS .(OllG IH'lllel Mt lftt!Wcftd) i • I :. .~: ___ .., FRONT END ALIGNMENT We correct Caater, Camber, Toe·ln, Toe-out to.your car . .manufacturer'• specificatlona • .. Safety check and adjuat your steerin;it $8~~ .... • lmA mY1C1 CIMMI JOA WS WIT" Ala COflCIRIOlllUll GI TOISm Nttl Don Swedlund • • COMl'LETE CAR CARE N 1959 646-5033 540-5710 'l:IOURS: 7:30 to 6:00 O.lly ) PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 1'·7ff ~ubl111'11d Or111111 Co.JI D111v Pllol Jun '1, '11 ~nd J.,.iy J, 12. ltl1 !~&Ii.I . . ' DAil i PILOT •• California Living More Dangerous? \/ironment." Schoen said ln an lnttirvlew. BERKELEY (AP ) -Livina ed mortalily rates declined ln C811fornia is m ore steadily for 100 years, leveled dangerooJ Uw1 It used to be_ otl in the mid·l950s and started an upswing in the l\10TOR V £ U I c L E ac· for those between the ages of 1980s and 1~. cidents. which account for 15 and 40, a state Department 1be ~alh rate for persons nbool so percent of accident of Health researcher says. 20 through 25 is 1.5 per 1,000 deaths, \\;t.'fe a n1arginal con- 011 looks like living ln per year compared with 1.2 In tributor to the rat:c increase. Callfomla in the 1970s ls Jwt the late \~. the report said. and Viet.nam·relateq death!i not as attractive, safe and Similarly, the rates increased were not Included, he said . \'lronmental cause or the in- crease relates l.O canctt and air pollution ," Schoen said. "Various stud ies show pollu- Uon is linked to cancer. They show smoking is linked to cancer and Is caused by stress. whlch relates. in twn; to ~ial en\•ironmcnt. healthy as it used to be," Dr. for the .25 to SO group went Accident s. s uicides, "SUICfOE AND homicide Robert Schoen, author of a from 1.5 to 1.6, and the 35 to homicides and cancer were also can be seen as a reacti on su1>1ltoa•:U~T 0,. TM• PUBLIC NOTICE report showing en tnereasing 4-0s from 2.1 to 2.2. . the leading causes of the in-to e n vlronme ntal stresses and STAT• Of' U.Lt,.MtA Poa death rate....among_y.oung . .men "The rise in death rates for crease, the demographer said. social pressures." PUBLIC NOTICE TM• co':~.~ot:AA•• :n~i.°c:t:~~~ ~; and women in the state, said the 15-to-40 age group lends adding, "there is no reason to Even accidents, like drown-~----------MOT1c• OP MP.a1111• OP flfllTtott fl!1t1VAT• tALa Wednesday. some support to theories about believe the rate \.\'Oli't go ing and falls, are the result ol I 47114 PH fl!tOUT• °' Will AfllD ,01 Mt . ltt Ml d 11110T1c• TO c1101To11 LnT••• ntTAMltirrAIY supertor c.ur1 of WMi Sl•I• of c1t1tornl• a possible increaslng sense or higher. I would not be surpris-people "being less secure an .._ suP•••O.: cou•T o" TH• E11•N1 ot IL.MA. V111:01N1A ao11ooux, '°'"Iii• county of LOI Mq11n. THE REPORT, released alienation between yo u n g ed if it did. l<'ss in harmony with their en-• STATI 01' CALlf'OINIA 1'011. o.c-td. 111 ttw MelJer .t tht E1!•'9 of AGNES TM• COUNTY 0,. OIANO• NOTICE IS Hl!ltl:IY GIVIN .,., M. MOlll:IS. O«MHd. -Tuesday lo Slcramento, show-adults and their en-• 'Th e pr i m a r y c n-viron1nent," Schoen added . ._ Nt. A·7Ult JAMl!S b. PlUNKEfT !wot llltd l'llfflll • ~ 11 '*tb\' flv1n 11111 tlw 1111-1------------------'-------'------------------------'-----'-----=,----'---------~'ltt• .t HARRIS LEE ALEXANDEll. pttlllclft tor l"tobill9 ef WlM W tor dlft\4111d wUI .ti 11 PIUVATE NOit, on 11Hd. hlut!IC• of ltftwt Tfftl"""ltry lo tilt or ttllf' t11t 11th dt~ ol July, ltl'J, •I the OT1CI IS HERESY GIVEN to flit Pttllbwt' ~ .. '°"let! 11 mllde lor off!ct of J~ R. ·°"cGulrl. JlO So. ltori of !hi •bow ~mt'd de(ldtftl tlll'liltl" Plrlkultrt #Id 11!9t h ti-t nd S.Wll'lll SlrNt, lot Anv111.. CA to013, I •II Pl'f'IOl'll h•VlllQ cl•lm1 •o•IMt llM Jlttc. ef tltlrlno n;; .. -Mt llMfl .... County of LOI A1>9llll. Sit!• of d dtt«llftl 1r1 re<111lrlel to 1111 llllm, tor" July lO, lf1l. t i t.:00 1.m., In !hi C•Hforlll1, to tl\e hlglll1! •lld bit! bl.s.r, h 1111 ll«tl51f'Y YOUChert, Jn 111t offlt• aiurtrvorn of c.p.rtfl'llfll No. J of ••Id tnd MIKI to conflrtMTlon by wld !tit cllrk of tht •boYI 1ntllllcl c-1, or court, •I 700 Civic CAnllr Drlw W11t. 111 SW*10t court. •II 1111 rllfll, 11111 tnd In· Pl'fftltf t111tn. with the rwcnt•rv 1111 City of Sent• "'*• c.n1ot1111. ""'"' "' Mid c11C11Hd •I the 1rrn. of c...,.t. to tht und1r1l9nld 11 tl\e offlct Oaltd Jllrlt 1t, lm. dlatlt Md 11! lhol rlthl, lllt. •nd lnflr"I hitr ttlllflll'I'• JAMES A. POORE, •10 WILLIAM I, It JOMN, 1t11t thol nttlt of 111d dtc••MCI 1M1 •c· th 8rOIC1wt¥. S1,1lll no. Le. A11go9l11, County Ci.rk QUlr.S by OP1r•llon of l•w or ottwrw1M. ~llor11lt 90014, Which 11 !tit ~ M MARIAM P'LUNKITT otMr" tl'lan or In lddlllon 111 !Ml of llld l lnlil .i 1111 ullde11lqntd In •II mttter1 411 otl"I A¥t., P',0, ... W ittc:-ed, •I tM llmt of dltlh, 111 Md to !1Fnlnt to lhl ttlllt of w td dlctcltflt H1111t11111111 1..ai,-Callf, fMll 111 ttll '9"1•ln rMI p.....,,.,. lllvlllt 111 1111 hln four monlh1 •fl•r thl llr1t Plibl!c.: T•h ('141 ,._,. " sat ltll County of Dr•l!G'9· Sitt• o1 C1lltonllt. ol IN• llOllc1. Atttf'My flt1 ,.,......., Ptrtllul•r1y dnc:rlbtd •1 follown. lo-wit: at.cl J1,1n1 14, lt73. Pt.lblllhld Ori• CM1! Ollly Pllel, All UND1VIDl!'.0 On.Mii (V.} In ~ .. VIOLET l . ALEXI.NO,. J1,1f11 21, ff. 2t. 1f7' lf"-71 to: Lots l .. Ind t1'0 of Modl11k• HOfM '1t E11icutrhc of !hi Wiil Sl!Mt f , ti 11>own on • Mep rtcord4'11 In "" of tt11 1bov• 111m1c1 cMct1:1 ... 1. PUBLIC NOTICE '°'* '· P•llff " ·111d AO of .i'lM1s ... P'OOll • Mltclli.MOl.ll M•PI· ltcO(dl of Orlftfl 'I ltvllil lrHdW•y, 1111'9 721 county, c 1111orn1• r... A-'"· r.•111. fltl4 • •1111 Term• of 1111 c:t1h Ill ltwfl.ll monev o1 I' I ftlll •21 ... 11 MUNICIPAL cou_t'f 0" CALl,OlNIA, IM Ul\lltd Sl1t11 on conllrm1tlon of wle, ""'1¥· fer ••Klltrllf C.UNTY 011 ORANO• or "r' c•lh •nd Nl•llC• tvk'IMlel b'I' , utlll9"'d Or1"11• Coe1t Delly PltOt, »141 c._ Ytl'l9y PlltlW•Y• natl ..c:urM by Mclrtflft Ill' Trull Dtld Jlilrle :11, •nd J11t~ s, 12, it, 1tn 2D'2f·1:1 UlllM N._.. o1 1111 prOJ1111¥ so "31d. Ttn ptrc•nl Of SWiii Of .... ce.iy J.-dlf Ollltkt •mount bid to bt dtPOS!llel wt11! bid. ,. PUBLIC NOTICE CAIR NUMllR 11SS lltd1 or olflr• to bl In wrl"nt •nd wlll ' IUMMOt4S be recll"ld •I tftt tforn&ld ofllc1 II tllY 111 ,1.,.1 Pl•lnllll: OUANE W. ALIERT time •lier ,.. flrll Pllbllct1lon lllrlOf •nd °' SIJfl!l!llO• COURT Of' THI Dtf•nd•nl1· 1091!RT I . ILATl!;R, dtMI bltort dtt. ol NI•. ,. ITATI Of' CALlf'OltNIA "OR SLATER'$ COo\ST LANDSCAPING O•lt'd J-fS, lf13. ~ COM PANY tnd It I! S ! It V E IN· ~ry M. ~ ' TN• COUNTY 01' OltANOll S"R•NCE •CO t c:orp0r•llOfl •nd Admlft11tr1trl11 of tN ?' ~ • Na. A·7617t " ·• OF ' THI! Etttlt M Nld dlcldtnt. ~ICI O" HIAlllNG 0,. P'fflTION SURl!TV COMP'ANY J ..... I IMOW'I o• P'•OIATI o" WILL ANO "°" PACl l"IC •• corp0r•tlon, •nd DOES I "' 16. •"-Stntt ITTl•I TllTAMINTAIY CMIND lhr0U9tl X, lnc:lvll~ A d•O •alfll L• A ........ CA M'IJ AIVIO} T• "" ~II. corn A"'""" "'Mllnlwlstr•"1• 11111 of lEONOllE l!:STEVANEL h11 bMll l!lld by !ht pl•lnlltt ao-lnJI you. 1JP CIC ; ttud. II 'l'OU wtlh to dtfend !tilt l•-ull, ¥0U fl!vbtbhld Or.,.e Cont 01tly fl!Ual J-OTIC£ IS HEREIY QlVEM th.ti """' flit In thlt (CllKI • Wflllltl plMdl1111 21 " •rid July 1 ,,,, :ltllQ.11 TEO CAllf'O•NlA 1.ANK, • In rH0011$1 ta tht compllll\I (or t wrlt1..,l::':._:c_:..,;_;_;,_' --------1 lfornl• Corpor•tlon, h•s n1111 llt•tln • or or1\ ploMdll'lf, If • J~lc• Court) within PUBLIC NOTICE non for prllbll1 of wm •lld tor • days tfllr !hl1 ll.ll'llmcll\S II terVtd Ofl IJtl.l•t1C• of lt1ter1_1 .. 11rutnl•ry ceond you. °"*""'•· vour 6111 u11 will "i---,==o--o:::::::;::::-:::::----1 ~lvldJ, r .. tfll'ICI to wh ch 11 !Md1 for tnltftd on IPPilc:allon by the pl1lnlltl •llCI NOTIC• fNVITI ... llDS ,.,iner 1'1<llcul•r1, ~ 11\11 1111 tlmt •rid !ht court mty lftler 1 luOoment 1t1ln1! ~OTICE IS HEll:El'f GIVEN that Nit· '4tc1 ol hffrlne lhol i1m1 n.1 bffn wt vou tor the ,..,_-, or othlr r1ll1f , .. Id pr°"°'•I• win be r11t1l"ld by tlll Cltv ,.. J1,1ly 17, lt13. •I •:OO •.m .. In tt.e q11tttld ln !ht comol1lnt. o1 C11111 Mna •' 1hl ofltct of IM Cl" i rtroom of ~·rtrn«ll Na. l Of ••Id If Ylll wlllll lo -k 1111 •llllvlCI .... •I· Cl1rk II tht Cl" H•ll, n Fair Orlv1, rt. •I 1CO Civic Ctnl9r Orlvt W11t, In 11n!9Y Ill Hiii lllllltw, P'I .,._..11111 .. II COllt Mtlt, C11llornl1, "'"tll !ht hOur of City of Stnl• Ana, C1Ulornl1. """""'' 11 1W ~ ,.....111,•U •J1r, ll :OD •.m. on Mondty, JUI¥ f , 19n ti 11ed J"'"t 27. 1~7J ito•~ ... flltllll 111 ft-. Whlc:h llml ttlt'I' Wll1 bl OPllllCI publlc:ly ... WILLIAM E. ST JOHN. O•lld Jin. 4, lm •nd r••d •Loud 111 "" ClllHICll "eh•ll'llwt .,• C-ly Cltrlt J1rn11 I , H1rrlt. C1"11 for turnl1ht"" tll ltbor'. m•,.i1l1, ecwlp. All, ALLIN ANO MO••" ey D. 0. HUTMACHl!lt. Otiwty l'l'llflf, tT1n1pOl"f1llon tlllf l\ICh otlltr I•· Witt o ....... .......,..,. !SEAL) clllllll II m.y be r.ciull'ld IOI' ltlt .... •1•, GarMM, CMlf, "14f H•NNIOAN, IUTTlllWICK CONSTRUCTION OF THI! MENOOZA : (2111 JJMMJ '21·1111 a Cl•fl!fl!ll STORM ORA1N. llrt Pttm..r A"""°" •I ~ A 111 of Pl•n1. 101ClncttlOt11 111C1 other 11,1btl1hed Orlnot Co." O.lly Pllof, .. "hlllh Sll'MI contr1ct doc-h m1y bl ot>lllnld 11 / 111. "•nd July 4, 1m 20:ll·l1 ,._.,,,..,CA,_, 1111 attlce ef "°" c1tv E,,.,1,.,..r. n F1!r ~ 'T .. , 1n•1 ~ OrlVI, c.11 Mff,e, C1llloml1, ~ • -· "#' PUBLIC NOTICE AttwM11 lw ,......., r1fllndabll NYINl!I « U.00. A.ch•r1t1 ol L P"'bll1hld Drtnte Cold l>•11y "1.t J-11 .00 Wlfl bl IMdt If lllndi.d by m1U. T NOTICI TO c••DITOltl ti, 21 ...... Julys. 11. lf71 1t41•n P'll!ASI MAIL SEP'A•ATI CHICKS. IUP'lllOI COUIT 0" THI EKll blllll lhtfl Ill mlldl Clfl !ht propowl PUBLIC NOTICE form •M In !ht l'Nlnlllf" ptovldld ln tht ' STATI 0" CALll'OltNIA "01 contrKI doc:llm9flh, tnd $1'1.111 bl K • ... THI COUHTY 0,. OIANOI. Jll•, A .. '9M V•TOMO l•Dt C"""lllld b¥ t ct'l'l1114'11 Oii' c11hlt r'• .._ fllOTICI IN chick or t bid ba1M1 for Ml lttt tun 10% .-_,11111 ol Al JARVI S, Dle'l111d, NOTICE 11 HE•EIV GIV£H 11111 -1· of !ht ttn~ o1 tttt bid rMdf PtYlblt to JIOTICE II HElll!l'f GIVEN 10 IM t1111 ,,.OPOHls wlU be r.«!Vld b¥ ll'lt Clly lllt City of Cotll MtMI ' t9clllort. ol 111t-..,.,.,.."'"*' Otctdlnr ---Cod• ~ if,... Of'llct llf "" Clf'I' N~ICE 1s l"UlltTHE0R G 1vEN 111111 tlll ""' •11 PIOOlll h•vl .. c:lll"" .,,., '"' c ... , lht Clly Hill. n Ftlr on .... CUf COUllCH of N ld City hn lwrltofDt• f: decedel\I .,. rtQU!tld to fill rhem, Cc.II Mii.i. Cltlfomt•, unlll tllt ho.Ir ef H l•llll"11d I prev1111.., .... Ind IClll of h 1111 neusw..,,_VOIK.lslo"I, In !hi offlCI ll:OCI •• rn. on MlJndW'I', Jwly '· 1m, WIOff, I" K Clll'd•llCiWllh l•w. lo tit Ptld flit cl1rk of ttw •boYI antlltlel c:ourt, or wl'llcll HIM t111Y will bl OCltfttll pi.lbllc1y In "" c:onlfrvcllon o1 11\t •bovl 1nllltlcl fll: pr111nl IMm, wltfl 1111 nec111•rv •llCI rlld 1LM In lht councll elllmlllrl 1monw-hl. TIMI wld r11• 1nd !.all hi", lo 1111 uncW.i9"1e1 1t lhl ol!lc:• for l\lrnllN"" tit ltbor, rntWl9't. tqUIP'" w•I ldo¢lel by tt1t Cl!\' COUllCll b¥ her 111or,..,., DONALD E • nw11t, 1r1naPQrbtl(lll tM Midi OIMr I• anotutlan No. J>.1 on tM 2"" 01¥ of LLWOOO. Allor,,..,. 11 l1w, 1•1 1 c:llltln •1 11\11¥,bl',...ir.i tor lll!CON-Jt nut rv. im. •nd 11on flit 1n 1111 Offlt• dltf Crlvt, Sult.'°" Htwllllff •••ch. !.T•UCTION OF Cl'TY I T•l!ITS ltn-n. OI 1111 City C::llrk llf Hid City. Thllt 11ld ornl•. nMO, wlllcn It lhe ti.ct of A "" ., • ..._ 9"dflc91'-•111111 "'* r.tl .,.. ~ 11 MrM rtflt'l'lllll tt Wld 111iPIM11 of 1111 Ul'ldlnlon.i ln tl1 tl\llrllrl contrad ~II ,.,.., flit 911t.JMd ti ........ In lhli Mttc. " """'911 lvlt¥ Ind ll!l!l'l•lnll'lfll lo lht "'•19 ol wlllll dtcldlnt. tht ofllai of tM City Ent!""'' n f'1lr comt141191V M'I forth lltrll"-lftd it.I Mid ~"In four ..-!hi tttw lllt llr1t publlCI• Orlv1, Cotti MIN, Ctlllor"llll , lilPOll • IC•ll, •• "'°"'" by Niii retol"'tlan, LI of lhl1 ~·· llOl!r.....,,.ltllit INl~I .t 111.00. A Clllf'91: ,.,_. 1 ~rl Of 1t111 Mttc. tJr ~. •Nld JllM f1. 1m. of 11.00 111'111 .. m.oe ll ~ w ""'"· TN Contr.ctor .... I" I h. • MARILYN JARVIS P'LEASE MAIL. SEP'AllATE CHECKS. ~ of 1111 -tt Wld lm- Mfnlftl91r•lrlx of 1111 ltl•.. b<h bid thllll bl IMdit on lhl prop(INI ~. conform 1o f1M L.lbor CoOI of !Ill tbCWI ntmld llll;!IClldtnl llrm •nllll 111 lht -provldld In !Ill et 1111 Sl•fl of Ctlllort'llt 1111111 otMr t.w. 0 I . IMALLWOOO conlr•cl ~II. tlld JNU M .c:-, of "" Sltll of C•tltornl1 ._.uc1blt 11 l" """"'"'-' tJr • ctrtlllMI or c•1l'll1r'1 """"'°' wtlh lh• t irceptlon only of 1uch ... cllff °'1'!'1 111111 .. dllck or-• bid~ IOI' flDf 11'11 thin 10% v•rl•tlen• .. mey be rtQUL•tllll unoer lhl a.Nfl. c111,.,.... .... ol lhl lfl'IOUl'lf of "" bid. m8dl .,.y•tll• 10 speci.I ... IUIH ~Ill to which pr• 'hi: 17141 MW:tU IN City of COlll Mew. CMlflMI ..... Wfldtr IA l1k.1n •nd which __,,_, fw A•"'flllll,..11'+1 NOTICI IS FUJtTHEll GIVEN 11\111 thl twv• not bMn JUCltl'Hdld 11y tht "'°' ~P1,1blllhld Dr•nt• Ca.11 01lly ~llot, Cl!\' Councll of Nld Cl!\' ""' Mrl'fotOrl Yll!on1 of 1111 l•bOr Codi. ,, ...... 1\(. to ~· 211, •tld Jul¥ S, 12, It, lt7l 202:J.13 .. t~ltl'ltd I PflV•lllnl tltt tM IC•lt OI' ltbor fl'otll be t lVlfl tdy II\ IM rntn,.., "fl•llll· In .c:cordlr.Kt Wltll 1-. to bl provldolll ~ l•w. ~ PUBUC NOTICE p11d In thl '9Ntrudl0ft °' tti• •t:o111 tn· No ~ 111tt1 .,. con11c11rtc1 un1tt1 11 11 ,,l-------------l*ltt.i lfl'IPI'"""""""' ni.t llld r•I• •1111 made an 1 d11* form lvrnl1hld by !hi 'I/. "ICTITIOUI IUSINlll _... Wll tOopl9d bf lhl City C~ll ~ Clfy ,,, Ct1I• MtM, tnd 11 mtdt In It• \ •AM• ITATIMINT ll...wHon No. n.1 en fN 2rMI ,:::"!._ ;;f corde!IC• wttn ttll f'l"OYl$1Gnt of 1111 pro-... ,.. i.;.INI,, dot Jtfllt*Y, 1t1J ..... It on ~It In tltt ....,,..,. POMI reqUlrltMnb "' Mii t i · Plf"IOlll ''' "I t1'1t Cltv Clttt 01t Mid City. Tiii! Mllllll r•l1 £Kl'! bfddtl' -·I bl 11tl'llltllll Ind t lM ~c 0 M ,.· -E H E N s I v E MEDICAL .... .... It lltrlln ~ "'~ ·= 111'-'111~ II t1111utr.i by ..... GROUP, "21 Knoll AwellW, IWfll..,.,... tn 11111 notlu.:.i TNY '1c1 Tiii City COUllCll of !hi City M Co.It 1rk., C•lllornl1 '°'20 ~·IV Mt f.nlll ..:: ~NJ MIN rwwto 1M "9111 II rtlKI tft'( or 1rv1ne MoP-i11, M.O., Q01 Lone = ,•• "':~ ~ ~ ~ •ti bldt. ,r.:.:,tV!l., Slllll No. 20I, LOl'Of aNC;fl, Tiit ~ Will, In I.;. Dmted~YJu;:ltsOlit~~ OF THI! CITY ~f ltoti.r-10 Ar-m1111, M.O., $600 AlllJ!o '*'°'WMa el I ht -W W -Im-COUNCIL M THI! CITY 01' c Av-LOftf a uc:h CA fDIOJ ,.,............1,, c:enform lo !hi Ulbilr CCITA MIESA, CALIFOINIA H•rPll" 'L. Doti, M.o.. '"''' s .• 1111' Slall "' c1n~1om'r' = ::: fl!ubl19Md Ori ...... CN•I 0 •11'1' Piiot JUM -Colortclo A-w . P•r1moun1, CA t0m of tlw s:;:• ~ llCIOJlflon ~l'I' of c_,. a Wld July 2, tm 201il-n ~ H1 rry Jahnson. M.0 •• 100 E111 ,,,_k .. =:tr.:'•• ,.,.., •be AqUlred ..,.,..., tl'lt ..-J tre•1• lOlll 11••ct1, CA 90IOS IJ*lll 1111111• ~ ht Wl'llch ,,. PUBUC NOTICE "\. c ....,1110 Jtrv•· M.O .• '"IS s. Color CllOlllll I IMrlllllMr .... I.ti"' and 'fl"llclll---~----------1 .. ~venw, Pw._1, CA tOm hlVI ~ bl>lll ~ bY Ille ,.,... MOTIC• TO <••orTO•• o" SALi °" :• Ct mlllt Moul:llle"fl•r, M.C., 16415 S. vlllON of Ille WbOr Codi, ITOCIC IN IULK<AMO NOTICI Off IN· ~ColorMto A.,._, Ptl'"•mo~t, CA 907%3 No bid W 11 be conl!OlfW 1111!1'11 ll 11 T••DID TlltANt,.•• Of' ll•UOI ., Wllll1m "nnlck., M.O.. IUlS S. mid• on • llttnk form turftl$1ttd by lht LICINI• oa LICllflll 4 (.olor.OO A111n111, P•r.mount, CA f<lm Clly of Coste Mtsot, W 11 mtllllt tn lie-NOTICE IS HEit;EI V GIVEN: •l hl1 bull""' II conduclld bl' I 911'1...-11 cordlllCll wflfl !flt provltlonJ of 11\t pro-TN! HAROLO H. JUDO •nd ROSALIE ~lotrM!lp,_~· poaal r..,irtmtnu. T. JVCO. soc. he. No. t S.214311#, •; ,..,flt Mo1kowll1, M.D., E:ldl 1o1c1W mutt bl lk1nMCI .n111 ... Tr.ntteror 1111111 Llc..,111, W:11011 ,butlM11 " Gl'lllrll P'tl"ITllr ,,-tQUetlfltllll •• rwllllll'lllll bf l•w. Mllllf-11 '""'* NIW(IOl't hul"..-d' f!I 0tnlJ 1111-1 wt1 llllel wUh lhl Coull-Tht Cl1Y Cou!ICll oi' !fll 01\' of COflt Ille Cl!\' of C..,_ MaM. Covntv of Ortllft, Cltrk o1 Of111111 County, June ~. ltl1 MIN ,..._ tl'lt rlftll to Nlecl •11'1' « '''"' .,; Ctllfwnl1, 11'119nd to Mil, trtntllr -J -ll•U"l •II b141. , 1111111 tHl1n to CHl!otd E. JOllnlOl'I tncl IJI · - --°""'~J--'M.-ltn.. -Rlllh l. JClfullon...loc. SK. l'.jo. .s.Jl-0).nfitJ ;f ubt1111td Oftllllt Ca.JI 0111'1' Piiot, IY THI OllOl!t 0,. THI! I Y AMI \¥1111tm Slo.n Md lrft-Mi~Y-JW ~ 7, I~. fl, 18, ltr.I lnt-73 COUNCIL 0" THI! Cl Tl' 0, '*4\, SOC. s.. Ho. S '7 ··1 '· i 7 7 t , t COSTA MD.I.. CAll,Olt;NIA Tr......--tlld lnlendlcl Traneflr .... 4• PUBLIC NOTICE P1,1bllallld Or•l!Ctl Cot•! Diiiy PUol Jlolllll' """'°'9 bVtlntll HdrH• ts %1106 Monico -1 21 Ind July 2, 1t7J ... CW$, Ill ttw Cl!\' of H\lllllllllloll IMcll. "' 1 •n11 COlln1Y • or.,,.., Stttt M c111rorn11, fhl ~ NOTICI TO CllDITOlltS PUBUC N011CE IOlloW'lnt dlKrltllld ptt'IOl'll1 pr-rty. to SUfl!lllOlt COUlltT Oii TNt: Wit: ITATI 0" CALll'OINIA l'O• NOTICI INV1TI ... llDI A11 tlock In tr .... fhrturet. KtUlpmtnl -. TMI COUNTY O" OlllANOI E•llT GOYEN lr-t 1nd t ood wtU ol t C«t•lll rwt1ur1111 tlld NOTI CE 1$ H coc:kl1ll IOUl'lfl bu1lnHt ~ II Ne. A,... H•llel propoa.111 Wiii bt recetvld 11'1' 1114 Slwmrock C•lt 11'1d Cockt.11 LGUl!Po Ill• ,11111 of ICA.THlltYN TAYLO!t •• 1 .. Clly of COlll M-•I ti. OlllCI .. ttw ch .. 11111 lnv111!0f11 llOI lo .. , .... l.l.000.00. ll.iliwn 11 ICATH11t¥N 8. TAVLOllL, Cl!\' Clirk ti tl'lt CJ!\' Hall, 7t ,.t lr W loc.lltd ti lltl-2• N....,..,.. ROl>i1nrd r::~~:re 1$ HElltEll'f GIVEN la '"' Drl¥t . Co.I• MIN, CtHtornla. vntll "" Ill "" City °' Cot!• MIMI, Countv of :mlton of !ht lboYI ne!Nd dlclCllnt hour of 11:00 •·'"· en M\WldlY• Jiiiy Ofllfltl, St.ti fll C1tltwnl1, llld lr•nef« '· 1t73, •I wllldl llm. ,...,. wtn .,. ~ tl'lt foHDW'llll lkal'lollc lllvlraot llctnM 111 Ptl"Mll'l5 f>l.-lna cl1lms "'tllll! 1h1 Id wbllcl¥ illd r...t .iaud In ll'lt COUllCll !or H~iz Orl-ltle 0.-•I, -lu l,lld dlltldlllt I,. rwqulrtd to ftlt lhlm. c:t.mbln tor iurnlilli"ll all lltbor. me-19 Df'tml-loc:tlM •I ltu-2' N-..ort ~ the _ .. ..,. vwc:hlrs. In 1111 oltlc1 ""1•11. ecwlPfMl!I, tr•lllOOl'llllon tl'ld ......._,.., for l'M 11!'"'11Mt tocattd t i ~ c~ .. !hi tbOYI tnlltltd court, or l\ICll °"*" ft<:lllllH ., mty be A11Ulftd ,....,.. ........,,. ..,......,d, In lhl City of Pl"•IOl'll "*'1, wl1h lht MCH•~ry for IMPllOVl!Ml!NT OF TE WINKLE Coata ~ CWflll'y .t Dfll!fl, Stttl o1 ~herl. 19 IN undlrilfned II IN offlCll MAINTENANCE VAID. C•llfOl'll!t . ~t tl!orMy", COLONEL HERRING S. A Mt el pl•ns, IOIClllctllons tnd ollltr Thll lhl tmoutrl M ,.rtlMM prlc:1 or NICLIN, 101 E11t lllh $tr1.i. COl!t tot!l'rtcl '9cu!ntnlt rMY bl otllt!ned ., comlder•"en • 11'1 COflMCtlon with Mid •· Ctlllomll 92'21, Which 11 IN OllCI lhl offtct ff lhl City El'ltlneer, n Ftlr tr•ll1fw M Mid lltlftM la 1111 Jllfl'I ot . blnlntt• of the l.lnderllfnld In 111 ,,...,_ on ... , C"1• Mtlf, C1lltorhl•, "'°" •non· tn.ooo.OO. 'lllllldl con1!1h"' l'h9 follOWlna · ••1 P1rt11nl1111 lo ti,. •11111 of ••Id dtc• ,........, prfmtn! el SS.~ ClltrOt ol Check. for s1.a.oo. tfld 1i1.0olM bllllll i dlllt. wllflln tour mon!N t!ltr !hi ""' 11.00 wlll M IMdt II 1llfldltilll 11'1' m111. oortlon" a ,..,,,llllll'Y llOI• to Ill rlpltc· llJ&llct llon ol this nollc•. IPLl!ASI! MAIL Slfl!A•ATI CHICKS. 11111 With tlth ,,-1or lo cloll of ncrow •llel.J;rol~~;nATHE:NOUR Etch O\d llftt11 M Midi on the ~DPOMI Thi! lhl _.of !ht pur<hlM .prlct • ' '°""' and In !hi Mt!Wlel' "'°"'dtd In !hi or contlllw1llen 11'1 con"ecllon wllll 11\1 llKllff • o1 ""Wiii contrect ·documtnll. tf'llf tti•ll be et· 1r1111r.r of Mid ~ 11 1111 1urn of oto1:'L '':.~t;";':0n•,"'1a~~I~ com111nitd bY • «rttfltcl or Clthl«'• tl'-JOO.OCI !which tnclllffl 111trn1ttd 1 111 llltl tll'Ht ' ch«k or • bid bOl'd fo.r l'IO'I IMI thin 10 amourit of ln¥9r!lllf"I' of 1tock 111 lr•d• not 1, 111rc1n1 of tllt •m-1 o1 1111 bid, mtft to ••cttd nooo.oo, which tot11!1t1 "' tne II M .... (Ill • n.21 Ol'l'lbl• lo !hi City of Coll• M•••· !ollowlnt; 116,jOO,OO blltll I portion of • I l714' .. ~~~111r111 NOTICE II "UITHE!t' OIVIN thllt ftlt oromLNOry nott 111 be r.pltcld with C•lh ' City COUllCH of Mid City hit htfloltifOtt prlOI' .. CIOM ol -.crow. ublllftld Orlllfl C011t OlllV llllot, tslebll"*' a prtVt!lll'llil rtlt MHf tu .. of AU a111tr llllllfltll ntfl'l4ol I nd 11tdr11111 J)!\! 21, 21 tn<I Julv '· It, lf7J 19'.J.11 Wfftl, 1n eccorcMl\Ce wllh 11w, to be .,.Id wM w tl'lt Trtntftrtl' \lllllhln 1nr .. YMn r 111 !ht cen1tnrc11oft • IN tbO'tl entl!IM la• pet! to ttr n kllo"fll\ to tM 'j PUBLIC NOTICE ~":~'o;:.:· 1!'f~~1:;it•c:=c:,,ac~ T~~r ti!;':.; bt""""n Mid 1 • •11U ltllOlvllon NO. b'Jt1 tft IN 2nd Oty of lie-tnd 11\~hlflll'll 4t ,... NOTK• TO ClltlOtTOlltl Jtnllll"I'• ltn, lnllll 11 en !flt 111 tM Otfln INWM by Ste. J.t074 of 11\t l111lf'Ht tftd 4 IUP'IRIDa COURT Ofll TN• .t tht City Cltrk of Mid (lty, Tlllt 11!.i P'l'Oflulllllt C-. ll'lel lhl conild«l'lltt! tTATI OP' CAl.ll'OllflA ,.Da rlfll W ectll 11 hll"ll" "1arTtd fll ... lot 1t!41 ,,_..., of N ld IMll!tll IJftd ; THI COUNTY 011 OltA... ...,._. In lhl1 notice 11 ltlDUOl'I lull'!' tfld tr•n5ftr llf ... lie-11 lo bt .,.W tt!l'I' t Nt. A·1.W1 COl• ... lttf t9f 1'l1h titr.!n, Ind !Mt Nill tft~ ..ill tr"ntfW .... bMft I~ bf Oltllfl ol JOHN I . WATfll, ~ IC•M, II ......, bf Mid ""'"""" h Mlllll C•1rt1M1'1 .. Alafloflc tewr• «oTIC£ IS HEIE,IV GIVEN le !ht .,, ... I ,,_rt fl lhtl"l'IOl!ct bf r.-.nct. Conlrel. c llort. ol !hi •boYI llelnld dt«idlnl Tiit C.ntractor lflalt. M t flt TM! • 111 .. tr1111fw •111111 t .. ltnml!ll If I •II ,.,._,. hlvl ... Cltll!UI ... IMI lhl Sl'lftormanc. .t ttlt -k tlif llm· !tit •'--Id 1tock In tT ... , nJrtvrt1, dtctdtftt -,..,irtd N lilt !him. pr~ll. COflfwrrl ht IM l...,. Co'9 111ut11mMt tllll 90od wlll o1 t1H1 Mid IM lll!CllN'l' "°""*"" In IN Olflc.t Of lhe 11119 ol C1llton1l1 tM ..._ ltwt b!,111,_ wtllt M meM. •llCI t1'1t C9ll' cltrk of t1'1t •blllt IMOIM ~. or ol tht Sl1fl of c.alfor11lt ..,ektMt lldtrllt!Ofl ,,_..... htltlfhlr" wllh !hi Uft> Jll'IMl'll lhtm, "fifth 111f '*"Nl"I' ftllnto. wtlil lhl tllC#llOfl tftt'I' flf luetl 1ldw"ltltn fw lhe tTen1f'lr 1111111 tultnintnl .... to lhl 111\dtrllfl\td It C/• Vlfll llOnt .. ll"lfY be ~""' """' lllt ol tM iiw.tlllll llCl'llll (Oii' Hc ...... 1 tlOfl, HllWlll'" a. O.tllll!CI llld Ptf\MY 111Kltl tl•!\1191 pOrWlnt II whlctl Dro. 11 ht M COM11mrn•llllll on or •""" lllMV. lhllr 1ttor111y1, fl!.O. loic H01, celdl1111 P'!ll"ll.llldtr •r• ttktft tfld Whlcll lllf • u y of J w' '" 1rn, ti Ctll..\Plll Ori~, Nll'IN'I IMdl, ~ f.!9' "'91'1 llilOerllOtd t1¥ ll)t IN:• "'9 tecrerw -.rtfMl!I 01 IANK tor"I•. which 11 flM pltct of bV•ll'lffl vltlMt-ol tlll L•bOI' C::OO.. ,.1wf11111N ht Oii AM•IUCA N.T.l.S,A.. Ntwplft !Ill 11lldll'll1111e1 'n •II tNtttrt Ptr· llbot' •l'tt'' bt tlWl'I only 111 !tie maMlr lltdl Olftct ., ,..... 1111 lido. In IN City ' Of to lht tlltll of Nld dlctcltnf, provtdld by llW, • jf N""'9rt IMd\, COUii!\' of 0rtf!Ot, I lwr monlflt tftw 1111 ftr11 p11blltt• Na bid llfttll be COl)ll,.,.... Ulltttl II 11 ltato 4lf C.llfor11!1, prOlllOtd ll!tt !ht ltlti notlct. l'l'!llde llfl • bl•nk liwm IUrllltlled tJr ""9 0.,.l'lfM!lt Of AlcOflOllc .......... Control • J\lllt 3'. 'lf'n City of CMtt MH.I, lll'ld II Ill ... Ill 11C> Mt llll'f'OWl(i N141 "9Mt« of Nld llctn .. , ,_, l'!Ol'lftCt t10C1911 w.1.,.. c111'111tftc• wtlh 1111 ~1 Of tM ,.,... °''" J\IM 11. 1m. ~ -. Pt!ltlOfll W1l1r1 T MIN pawl. ,.....,.,,_..,, H1""4! H. Jtldll, E~KlllO(f « 1111 W111 IKll llhtd« mutt bt "«nMCI Ind •Ito Tl'I""""°' W l !Clf'l- .. 1.ll::~'W.~"'1'.1.'l!'llll. "'lt"~'11'.?*1~orr..r. :::.,',;~:-l:f't,......~~1-,.r.:""..,v & P•Nli!IY Mt••1.~ !hi rltflf lo N IKI •nv tr Cllttlwd ' I . Jot!Mon. ' • 111 b11111 In~ ff•ntl ..... ...... IM'f9 ~1111~ JUN 11 1"1. lirlt'I S, JoflnllOfl, .~.-_,........ • y Ttt1'011011t 0, 'THI •nlll'ldtd! Tftl\tftrff ITV COUNClt. Oii THE CllY 1,...,. M. l ... n, .,., .... c .. l•Hllftn 0 1" COSTA MIU.. CALlllOltNIA lllltiftdld lrlntttrM lllllld Or•11$11 COltl Dtlly ,u~. Pllt)llthtd or •• Cot., O.Uy P'Hot. ~ublltl\H °'"'" COiii Delly fl!llOii ' 21. tlld July t , 12, lt, ltJ1 20>Q.7J JUM 21 aftd J!Ay 2, tfn WI.,, JIJl'lf 1', Im 201'-73 I I .1 OPEN INDEPENDENCE DAY WED. JULY 4•NOON-6 P.M. rtho-Pak & ~Double-Bonus __ -... ,, Ortho khlt or """"liltl mattr111 Mt: you get tlle lomouo Ortho-hl<: ' CONVERTIBLE SOFAS .. @r~ ORTHO FLEX • Reg. $179.95 Huge king-size 6-tt. wide by 7-tt. long stretch--out room combines with Or.tho quality for the ultlmate in sleeping comfort. Smooth Scroll-Quilted cover! Tempere d· Steel Innerspring I It's a great king I With Mattress, 2 Box Springs, Ortho-Plik & Double Bonus! SUPl!R QUEEN SIZE I Fleldcrest No-Iron Top Sheet, Fitted Bottom Shoet & 2 Pillow- cases • 2 Bolster Pillows • Mattress Pad • Metal Frame on Eaay-Aoil caat .... ---r-., I '_ • '19 DOuble Bonus Whh _.,. Ortho-MI JOU gel•opeolol - 8-: King or Qu-- Padded Vinyl H91dboard AND Quitted Bedopread. Twin or Full -Headboard AND Metal Frame on Eaay- Aoll Castera. Round Bed: Full-fashioned Top Sh .... AND Fitted Bottom ShaeL CORNER GROUPS Ct\lnnlllg E1rly Amerlc1t11tyHng with •uthentlc Cok>nlal·prlnt llbrlc. lncludel 2 Mitt,....., 2 Boa Sl)flngt, 3 .cal lop.topped Bol•t.fa, 2 fltttd qullt.ci Coverlet• & COrner Tabt9wtth knurled~ & tcalloped .ctgM - In• choice or 8 ~ BELMONT . IN HERCIA.ON9 PAIRIC · Striking conttimporary 1tyllng wfth &-button blek In rugg9d Herculon t.brlc. lt'I Coforfull &ly to c111nl Aleo •vallable In Full Sia! Love Seit & Mitch Ing Ch1lr, (9uperQueen Size-5 .. wldlr thlfl regutar Queen Size ""'*'- Ortho Products are Manufactured by Ortho and Sold Only through Ortho Factory Showrooms- O!i!ff(l *248 NEWPORT IN ICOTOHUlllD8 PIUMT MATTRESS l ......... "" ........... FREE DELIVERY THE~ATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS -ORANGE 445'N; ud1n If.vi. f11te1e ff• Or1119• MtlH ........ , .... , . I SANTA ANA and -POUNTAIN VAttn- 16131 H1rbor dlvd. l ... Mf •I hllJ!fet) N• .... 19'.,'t '""•I IJt ... 110 ANAHEIM l•twt1n lwtlill 1 n4 l rtt\hurtl Avt11111• J111f 1•11 •i fH M1rt 'h•11•• 11t .1s•o I LAKJWOOD Cendl 1wood Shop& l•crt 11 trO!fl L.1•1w•.4 C111ttrl P~on•1 t l•·" I J" • ' • ., 20 DAILY PILOT Thursday, June 28, 197) . . - • _ ........ _ • " ' " 'U Package aeal- ' ., . '· • ' ' ' • ·- Frent ellCI MfYfce pecliage 18, 88 r .. .,.,..,..,.,,...,.._ 0 ' llbtoftltn lnltllltd. '-"" • liJgn«landfroM ........... .. OPIN DAILY tiJO .. flM • IWlllAT 10 te 7 . : GRANADA HILLS lflOOIChetsworfh St. LAICIWOOD Cers,on at-P-arlmount WfloblANDltitllS 1f500 Victory Blvd~~ '520 Tyler St.1 IAfft'A AMI North ot South COISf PllZI 'fOIUN"I Stp.rlvfda 1nd HIMtw"'11whOl~•'"IO OllANGI Garden Grove Blvd. and Man'11csfer. 4 t ' IUlfM PAl!ltlflch encl OflnQtthDrpt I f \. ( - • I I : ' BEA . ANDERSON,' Edllo• T~lll'lllllJ~"'"' .11, ltni Pl.i ti Cu/f.ure · Cdlculator5 . ' Ponder About Past STORIES By CAROL MOORE CaliComia shell mound just as much as ot tt. De11Y Pli.t 11.tt hunting for "pretlf things" In Egypt. It sounds dry -Sou th we s le r n "Emphasis used to be on fmding the Archeology: A. Q.illure Area in Perspec-artifacts, establishing the who and live, Anthropology X426. where," he said. But the only thlng dry about the lee-''Now the impetus is IO\Yard collecting lures and an 8-day field trip sponsored by more data, figuring the how and why, UC I Extension ,wlll be the desert itself. theorizing bow early people adapted lo And eVcn that ma y be 600wy by the peculiarities or each region." Colorado border·. Daling is ·still a criteriGn, ·though, and "The area is spectacular ·with both Drover noted that ,dendrocbronof.ogy - prchil&qric and photographic value. It's comparison of the growth ring! Of trees as thougtt lime stopped when the -works fn the Southwest because of'the Spaniards came t~h," s a i d uniformity of Ponderosa pines. Christopher Drover, coordinator. Cross--sections of Ponderosa beams in "We'll hear local guides describe rock pueblos are compared with a maater carvings, clllf dwellings, I n ha bl t e d transparency to determine how long ago pueblos and national monwnent.s. the structure was built. The proccSs does "Plus we'll have time to buy native not work as well Jn other cultures where arls from the actual craftsmen or trees are not as distinctive or were not trading posts, hike, camp Md try used so abundantly. regional foods." Drover, who teaches at five Orange lf that sounds like a travelogue, he county colleges , led n student e1:- comes by his oothUsiasm naturally, ploratory dig on Irvine Company prop. Drover has enjoyed wandertng the erty in 1971 that unearthed clay Southwell aincc boyhood· when his artllacts cider than any previously round archltect-fnthcr '1'-tlctted his interest ht ln North America. • prchiStorlc struct~. The find Was validated a year later and But there will be -serious business, too, be has since presented it to the worth three unks o( academic credit. Southwest Anthropol~ical Association C1ass i: "1.lclpants wUt obsctrve the and the· Society f9r Ame rJ ca n strength 01 ')C Hispano culture, viable Ar~heology. Indian cohes1tJn In pueblo living, rltuals He hopes to resume sue~ field .work of the Penltentes plus numet'OU8 museum next fall under auspices or CallfOfllla exhibits. . • .._State University, Fullerton. Registration will be limited to -20 -"Cc:rimlcs aoo't ha·ppcn on theli' own. students. However,· since the $120 ·fee They were either made or traded here. doos not include food or ao-How did they rlt into !he cultural proc· commodaUons, eaoh student mu.st ,Pl'Q-css? · vl de hls''Own transportation and , may Vestiges of early horizons 1.n C.\lfomla bring Immediate family members. are just as important, If less exotic, than Drover explained that a true Egyptia n treasures. Drover wishes i:irchcologiiit enjoys researching Arizona-research grants for aoclal sciences New "-1exlco tribes or digging in a weren't ao dried up. \ UCI Extension . is offering study tours -or vacations with value. Participants on three of the trips may photograph a Lone Pine cabin, peek out a pueblo window at Chaco Canyon National Monument or study oceanography aboard the Fury II floating laboratory. The·· fourth expedition to John Muir Trail is s,old out. • Focus By AWSON DEERR Cll tht CllllY PilOI Stiff ·'The only way to learn photography is to go out and shoot pictures. Every time you take a pictu re you learn something about photography." Former Los Angeles T i m e s photographer Vince Streano \\ti.ll teach a UCI Extension summer course that will ' . allO\Y photographers to do JUSl that. Focus : Lone Pine -A Photographic Expedition will ofrer "five intensive da ys or !.hooting" while the class or 25 camps ou t at Lone Pine in the lower Sierras. "We chose U>ne Pine as a base camp because it orrers such a variety of sub- jects. Nearby is Independence, a ghost town. Jn the vicinity are •the Alabama Hills with interesting ·rock fortn@otions to offer subjects for forpt ~ texture and the Sierras for nalure study." INDIVIDUALIZED Streano explained that the emphasis will be on individual attention. "Before the field trip we will look .at examples oC each student's W!)rk to see I ' .. on Talents where he's at. If he 's pretty proficient we can work on adva nced photogra phy techniques he might not have thought about. "If he's a beginner we can work on c ompo s ition and form . Each photographer will be able to work on his own level. It wil l be five intense days of shooting." This is the first time UCI has ol£e red a photography field trip of thi s kind, he add· ed. Streano has taught advanced photography courses at UCI. "Each Saturday we y,·ent to a different location to shoot," he explained. The camping experience ( be ' s di!?COUraging students to opt for hotel ac- co mmodations in Lone Pine) will gi ve everyone involved "a chance to sit around th e campfire and discuss the day's shooting problems." LEARN BY DOING You can only learn photography ty doing he explained. "You can get the basics by sitting and listening to a lee- lurer. but you have to go out and take pictures to learn." Streano. \V h o \Vilt be assisted ,by another Times photog raphe r Steve Rice, said he doesn 't want to structure the class. •·1 want each one to go his own way. After the trip 1lhere will be a followup· se minar to talk about wh3t they come up \l.ith. Grading will be difficult. I'll pre~ ably base it on each individual's prog- ress. how much he tried." He hopes to c o v e r composition, lighting, .textures, filters, c I o s e -up photography and pOOto essays. To enroll, studeota must have a "work- ing knowledge" oJ photography and a "fairly decent camera" -one with ad- justable lens opening, shutter speed and fOC'US. Because of hiking required, pa rl icipants should be Jn good physical shape. Streano hopes to conduct other course5 in other parts or the st:ate and perhaps weekend excu rsions for short distances, if this course is SUCC'e!JSfuJ. Offbeat Oceanographers .. T r_olJing _Cban.n.e.ts ~ Santa Barbara, Santa Rosa and Santa Cruz are easy to place on a map of California. But where do you find them off shore ? . These three channel Islands plus San Miguel. Ana capa and the more familiar CataJina. wUI be destinations of an oceanography workshop that will go to The Californi a Nobody Knows from \Yednesday. Aug. 22 to Aug. 28. Ronald Linsky, director of USC'.s O!fice of Sea Grant Program. will conduct the intensive learning-adventure cruise for UC! Extension so participants can develop a wa~· quality vocabulary, be better voters on coastal issues and reach these usually inaccessible areas. "It's rough going. Sometimes we have water over our radar and that's 35 feet.'1 explained Dr. Donald MacLean, director of floating marine laboratory programs for the Orange county Department of Education . W~te r testing done du ring ocea nography workshop wi ll make class pa rtici pants more awa re of coast a l condit ions. C ha nn e l isl a nd history wil l augment the course. "And San Miguel is property o{ the U.S. Navy. We have special pennission to land there which is too treacherowi for most yachtsmen to do." For those who do brave the high seas and primitive camping conditions on the $280 trip, there will be plenty to see and do regarding terrestrial and marine ecology. Aboard the Fury 11, the specially equipped floating laboratorY, there will be water temperature and d e p t h measurements, water purity sample!, plankton counts and trolling for biological specimens. A1a.mmal and tidepool studies will be made ashore as well as exploraUons to "kitchen middens," Indian junk piles. Maclean described thi s phase as "ex-' cellent back bay opportunltles." At the end of the trip, students will compare conditions and uses of the islands fro1n Indian days to today. 1be five instructors whose specialties range from physical oceanography to marine technology to "old time ecology '' wt summarize the expedition. I "Th• tnp oock rrom Anacapa put I PoinL Hueneme to Los-Angeles will be a document ary. too. watching the water I ~me Wlbelievably cluttered,'' I MacLean added. During lhc year, Fury II is used to take elementary and high school studenLI on one-day excursions. ·- LlMky and !\'lac.Lean designed the works.hop three )'ears ago as a tour de I rorcc for teachers who wanted n1ore fllJc:I experience In teaching s c i e n c e , · oceanography or California history. Enrolhnent was opened to the general pubHc to meet the ri sing concern for ecology. "We still get a lot of teachers and some yachtsmen who lack tho cour11e for the 14J miles i:ind rocky moorings," Mo.cLettn !Wid. "But there's a good number of proteuion9l people. turned 180 degrees rrom their field, ~·ho want ID offbeal challcnae." • • \ t .1 ... I -· ' 2 __ 2~_D_A_IL_V_P_<L_o_r ________ ,_,_" -'-''-''cc·_J_'"_'_~,_.;~· _1 •_n Long Distance News Leaves By ERMA DOMBECK Al least a couple of times a v.'eek, I get letters from people \1 ho want to know how you can psych yourself up three times a week for a humor col- umn and Ignore a ll thc:.i bad news in the world !Oday. \Vho ignores all the bad news ? I jLLSt put ii in perspec- tive. Every morning while browsing through the paper, J tell n1yse lf: a couple or'milllon people didn't have th e i r phones bugged last year. The majority of the "'omen in this country never had an abortion. You can still ride the ferry boat out to the Statue of Liberty for a dime. · Mickey Mouse is over 40 and Her Han.ging AT WIT'S END communicates with young pro- pie. Forty-nine states didn 't suffer a tornado. Pi1illions of Americans s u r v i v e the highway traffic. Organized justice is better organized than organized crime. And there are 30 movie houses in town that show decent films and only two lhat se rv e x- rated fare. One of the best ways I know to keep in touch with reality is to read s nl a 11 town newspapers. The other day, because I \vas having a hard • .,. tin1c convincing myse lf that although 87 city policemen left their jobs on the force because of lo\v salary and increased crime 35 stayed , I picked up a small town paper fronl upstate New York. W E HAVE ENTHUSIASTIC AND HARDWORKING . " .. ~. .. ,. .. I Sam's Lunch An old·f a s h i on e d 1'"'ourth of July is plan- ned by the Col. WiUiam Cabell Chapter, OAR, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Costa A1esa City Park. Proceeds front such activities as sale of box lunches wilJ benefit 1nenlorial bicen- tennial gift to Harbor Area. Packing a lunch are (left lo right) the !\·Imes. A'Iilton Ail. Samp· son and Rodney Wheel- er. w ........ ,,.,. •• by • lloyl9 • Norl!Mlll Wiatt • AIMI SHOIS Notwollsen Cl091 • Soltdols 1127 Ee1t Co11t Hwy. Coron• d1I Mar 673-47'40 AVAILABLE AT MOST HOURS -FOR AS FEW AS THREE HOURS. OUR UNIVERSITY STUDENT EMPLOYEES ARE CARE. FU LLY SCREENED, BONDED, INSURED AND ARE COVERED BY SDI AND WORKMENS COMPEN SATION. UNIVERSITY HOUSEKEEPING. CALL 636·1800, MON., WED., FRI. ONLY:· HOURS I A.M. to 12 AND r to 5. SUMMER NEEDLEPOINT CLASSES! Assisted at funeral. (How?) Skyler Street man said pro"'· !er was in his house. Prowler turned out to be his daughter con1ing home late. Horoscope: Romance Life Samplers Siw-week 1e11ion; Thur1dey 10-12 or 1-3. July 12 thru Au9 u1t 16. $l5 ir1c ludin9 mat•rlel1 Children's Classes \Von1an reported clothesline cut. \Voman said her dog return- ed. r•,.feadowda\c Drive n1 a n complained of shooting al targets near his home (his \Vife). Spices Pisces' AIR STEP-BERNARDO - SCHOLL SANDALS -PASSPORTS MAGDESIAN -MISS AMERICA VINER CASUALS -HANDBAGS - ' . • Four·we•k 1•11ion ; Mondey 1-2 or J.4. July 23 thru Au9u1t 13. $20. Ba rgello four.w1•k 1e11ion; W,dne1dey morning 10-12. July 18 thru Au9t:1f 8. $25 . ~ One Day Basketweave Workshops Wedn•1dey ehernoon1, 1-3. •• •• July 18, 26 : Au9u1t I, 8. $7.50. I! 2621 f , Coast Hwy., CoroH clel Mor -644·7904 OFFICE MACHINE SALE INVENTORY REDUCTION I : .. I __ 4_o_· 0_Yo_1o_s_o_0_vo_o_F_F_-1I ,'1 r OUR LOWEST PRICES EYER ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS TYPEWRITERS • ·1 Friday, June 29th & Saturday, June 30th . U".l_V~~SITY OFFICE EQUIP. -,_ • r ... .- PARKING LOT 1931 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF • I ' ' • 11 lntervie\ved four candidates for patrolman's job. See? If those guys can keep awake, it will only be a n1atter of time before crime can be elin1inated in upper New York st.ate. FRIDAY JUNE 29 By SYDNEY O~IARR AlllES (~larch 21-April \9 ): Acce:nt is on home. security, property values. Stick to what is familiar. This is no time to Up With People Hosts Recruited Do you have a bed to spare and roo1n for understanding? Up With People, the nationally known musical troupe, needs 60 such accomrnoda· tions by Saturday in Harbor Area homes for July. 11-1ost of the 340 performers have been housed but Eileen Farrell, coordinator. wants to find hosts for the rest, aged 17 to 25 fron1 throughout the United States and foreign countries. ''We're looking for people who'll reach outside themse lves." she said. "Besides being- here for a n1ont h to learn next year's show, the cast wants to ge t involved in the commu- nity and get acquainted with its people ." She added that no screening is involved and host fan1ilies need not have children. The only meal s involved are breakfasts and Sun- day fare sin ce Up With People rehearSes from 9 a.111 . to 9 p.m. Monday through Satur- day at Corona del Mar High School. Trans· portation is being arranged. Mi ss Farfell. who can be reached at 673·5694 in the Newport Harbor Chan1ber of Com merce, said visitors are welcome at re- hearsals. "ln turn we want the performers to feel welco1ne here. We know people are bu sy with hou se guests, but perhaps they'll find room for one more. Con certs on July 26·28 will be our way of saying thanks." AVE • 332 FOREST A VE., LAGUNA BEACH IT'S NEW, IT'S DIFFERENT AND . . . go far afield. \\'hat you seek could be close at hand. Cancer indivi dua l is likely to play key role. Giv e logic equal pla y to emotional response. 'fAURUS (April 20-J\olay 20J: Good lunar aspect now coin· cidcs "·ith short trip. You make additional c o nt a c t s . GEMINI (~·lay 21-June 20 ): Emphasis is on m o n e y , personal possession. pa yments and collections. Check fine points .. Be 3\Vare of \Vhat is contained between the lines. CANCER (June 21-July 22 l: Cycle is such that you can suc- cessfully take i n i t i a t i v e . Highlight the new. Be in· dcpcrJ4ent in thought. action. If perCePtive, there is solid ad- vancement. Find out reasons why -·don't be :satisfi ed \l'ilh superfic ial explanations. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 <c \Vork quietly. Avoi d 1naking sensational claim s. Strive for harmony. Vi sit one confined to borne. hospital. Coopera te with special charit y p r o j e ct . VIRGO (Au g. 23-Sept. 22 l: Accent is ho\\' to make wishes come trne . You may be going too far. too fast. Friends are likely to be impractical. You get what you want but you may not 1vant what's good for you. LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0et. 221 c Evaluate and discern -get money 's worth . You have right to receive credit for con· tributions to · special project. SCORPIO (Oel. 23-Nov. 21 /c THI HOSIERY \\'hat you think is beginning Edwerd1 -Gerberich -i.:obh1 Hood may ac:tually be finished . PF Flyers -U.S. K1ch -S11mm•r•tt•• Aries is in picture. Accent is C•p•1io Dence Sho•• Dene• W•er by Den1ki11 on correspondence, long·range CorNCth9 s.... f• au... projccI. journeys. knowledge. 225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA ME·SA SAGITTAHIUS (Nov. 22-5 4 8 -2 7 7 8 Dec. 21 ): You get at truth.l ~~~~·~·ANKAMlltlCAltD. • MASTllt CMAltOe. and it could be frightening.li J\1cans you might prefer fan- tasy to fact s. Involves money, mernbc r of opposite sex. in· vestment. \Vhat is covered is revea led . You dig beneath ! surface indications. Leo . Aqu arius arc involved. CAPRICOl\N (Dec. 22·Jan. 19l: Emphasis is on publi c reaction to your efforts. If single, question of marriage1 could ar~e . If married there coul d be business decision in- volv ing a partner. Go s\O\\'. Let others show their hands. 1 Play \Vaiti ng game. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.1 18•: One \vho ser\'es you re- ciuests favor. Grant it "'ilhout bein g extravagant. Plenty of travel, social life indicated. 1 Forces tend now to be SCaJ· tcred. Sagittarius, Gem In 11 persons play prominent roles. 1 Keep diet in cheek. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20·1: Favorable lunar aspect now coincides ,~·ith r omance, special relationships, change , a variety of experiences which lend spice to your life. Do some revising. Tear down for purpose of rebuilding. Express \'ie\\'S in fortllright manner . PICKWICK FASHIONS SUMMER CLEARANCE - UP TO 1/2 OFF OUR fNTI"~ SUt.IM~n STOCK tlO\V SUBS7AIJTIALL Y RilDUCF.D I'~ TO 50% 1' FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT 8'ACH 19 FASHION S(j)UARE SANTA ANA .... ; -EE-KE THIRD ANNUAL MODEL & CRAFT SHOW . "--·--··-·· ---~·--June--29tfi~-30th _l_Julj-··1 st ·--·-··.-·-···--· -. GALA CELEBRATION FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, JUNE 29TH · & 30TH, 10-9 MUSIC. REFRESHMENTS , DOOR PRIZES 1 Anaheim Convention Center1 800 W. Katella, Anaheim -' Thous1nd1 of the Newest Product..-in R1dlo Control, Static Models, Cr1ft1, Rallroadlng, Rockets & Ceramics on Dl1pl1y . ' • Continuous Indoor & Outdoor Demonstrations • Radio Controlled Planes, Cars & Boats • Make 'N Take Crafts • Model Contests (Open To Public! • Prlles, Trophies & Awards SHOW HOURS: Friday 1100 P.M. -6:00 P.M. S•turday 1:00 P.M. -10:00 P.M. Sunday 10:00 A.M. -8:00 P.M. REGULAR ADMISSION: Adult• $2.00 Junlcin -$1.00 Under 6 -FrH (When Accomp1nled by Porentl ' l ' -~. - Thursday, Ju~ 28, 1973 Le .cture, Danc~s, Picnics Fi 11 i\gendas Democrats Councilman Bill Thom or Anaheim will , speak berore members or the Democratic Women of Orange County tonight at 8 in Democrallc Headquarters, 319 E. 17th Street, Santa Ana. His topic will be ap- pointment versus elec tion ror the office or mayor. OC Singles Orange Coast Sinl!les and guests will dance Saturday, June 30, to the music of Rob- bie's Group in the Costa ~fesa Country Club. The annual event will begin at 9 p.m. Members (,r Costa Mesa and South Coast PIY P chapters, Orange C.: o a s t Catholic Singles. RESCUE and the Singles Church have been invited . UCI Friends Dr. Giles T. Bro wn . Newpo1•t Beach. has been installed as president of the UCI Friends or the Library· Serving with him are Dr. Willia m Hen- dricks and Mrs. Richard Pouche r, Dr. Adolph K .. och and Don Meadows. v i c e presidents. Others are Miss Zada Tavlor and Dr. \Villard Sauccrman. secretaries. and ~1rs. Donald Keeton, treasurer. Bo a rd members Include Mrs. E. 11. Wisdom, Mrs. Keeton. Miss 1'aylo1 . Poucher nnd O·A. Malkin. Library Friends of the Fountain Valley Llbrnry are coll ectlnjl surplus books.pa per back books and 1nagazines for their tall book sa le which will benefit the scholarship fund. Books may be dropped in special containers 8t Slater' and Los Ala1nos streets, Foun· tain Valley, during the sum- 1ncr 1nonths. Literacy A new series or tutor training classes spQnsorcd by the South Coast Literacy Cou ncil· will begin Thursday, July 5, and run through August 6, every Monday and Thursday Crom 9 a.n1. to noon. Classes will be given in the C o m m u n i t y Presbyterian Church, San Juan Capislraoo. Art League Sylvia Paulas will give a talk and demonstration on use or the camera by today's artists at the 1'1onda}\ July 2, n1ecling of the Huntington Phony Answer Won't Click - DEAR ANN LAND RS: I am an 13- year-old gi rl who lives at home and com- mutes lo college. l\1y father believes ·~hatever Ann Landers says is LA \V. household such as ~·ours, however, the person nearest the phone should answer It a!' a favor to ot her members .of the family. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your remark in response to "Just Crushed," that "a gentleman never tells" -made me laugh. How naive can you get? plenty. -MIS$ CLAMMY HANDS OF THE MIDWEST -DEAR MISS: 1 refuse to retract a wordO I I( "Ttiose barl>enihop blab- bermoutbl can hardly be called gentle- men. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I have a good job and I make a good salary. But the tut of living has me budgeted to the last nickel. Every cent means something. I bate to sound petty, but one of .the girls J work with is driving me to the wall with her small "loans" whicit rum out to be gifts. Beach Arl League, beginning nt 7:30 .p.n1· in the ~rcation hall. Police Wives Huntington Beach Pillice Wives Guild wiU operate a bot dog and cold drink booth Wednesday. July 4, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Bill's Tire Service, across from the police department. Proceeds will benefit a year· ly scholarship fund f o r graduating seniors, daughters and sons of Police officers: Albert Silton Home a n d Fairview Stale Hospital. Rites Set In August An Aug. II wed~lng in tQe Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Orange, is being planned by Cathy L~·nn Baumgardner and Robert Ma.rcus Worden. "nleir engagement has been announced by Mrs. Beverly Baurngardner of Villa Park and Ernest W. Baumgardner of South Laguna. The Cuture bride, a graduate o( Villa Park High School, at- This morning the phone rang. I was asleep. It kept ringing and ringing. No one answered it until finally I pulled rnysel( out of bed and ans,vered it myself. Then I saw my dad sitting at lhe table, less than 10 feet from the phone. "!njoying the newspaper and drinking cof· lee. I asked, "Don't you believe in trurwering the phone if il rings?" He replied, "Not since Ann Landers said you don't have lO answer the phone if you don't feel like It." Did you REALLY say that? If so, it is the rudest, most inconsiderate, m06t anti-social and utterly sick thing I have ever heard of in my life. If you said it, 1 hope you will retract it in deference to the future sanity of our household. - SPARKS-A-FLYING I've held hands wilh at least 10,000 men in the past 20 years. You see, I'm a manicurist -and I could write a book about the things I've heard in the barber shops ol Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and Omaha. We (requently ride the same bus home from work. Twice in the lasl two weeks she bas asked me to pay her fare. She is also a coffee mooch. She has asked me to bring her coffee from the cafeteria at least three times this month, and it's never just col(ee -it's aiways a !ew cookies, or a sweet roll or a piece or pound cake along with the java. tended Orange Coasl and San-~ATHY BAUMGARDNER ta Ana colleges. Her fiance, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Worden of Orange, is an alumnus of Villa DEAR SPARKY: I did say a person need not answer the phone If be doesn't feel like tt. But that advice was given In a completely different context. For ex· ample, many people complain about being trapped on the phone by long:·wlod- ed friends and relatlve1· who call at J.n.- coavenleni Umes. Do you kno\v the favorite topic of most men?· WOMEN. Or to be more specific, "women l have known." (And they use the word "known" in ~he Biblical sense.) Naturally they never talk about their failures -only their conquests. And the dirty dogs name names and places, with no thought of who might be under the to'o\1els in the next chair. It could be the lady's husband for all they kno\v. J hate to remind a person about 26 cents and 35 cents. It seems so petty. Yet -???? Please advise. -SEEING RED DEAR RED : Memorize these five words and practice. them in front of the mirror: "SorTy, I can't alford It." Park High and attended Fullerton and Santa Ana co~-1 -~= leges. He resides in Costa Mesa. TIIAT advltoe Is for THE~1. Jn a So please knock orr that sweet taik that "a gentleman never tells." They tell The next time Minn.le The Moocher puts tile arm oa you for anything, say, ''Sorry, I can't afford It." Performing the ceremony will be the bridegroom-elect's grandfather, Elder Morris E. Worden Sr. of Independence, Mo. At Last Peering Around A Medlcaly Recommended l'r- For Wolgllt COlltrot ..,,....,,.....,..,.,a .~ HONORED with a life mem· bership in__the Rancho Viejo Junior Woman's Club was Mrs. Michael Riley. Lockhart of Costa· Mesa. The bridegroom is chairman or the Pounds Off Pennanently Miit• TUalN A t• LI. LO,SI board o! Treloar's Inn, Inc. d d Without shots, pills, big mon•y, rigi iets, exe rtion ROBERTA OLSEN has or ftOftHftH, received the El Camino Real NOW " Jun i 0 r Woman's Club's Mlk\ Turin announcn • mOA htllllvlclwil approach with the openlnt of offlcn t• contl1t1M hll YMCA, Outstanding Junior G i r I ·ywcA approv.d P.O.P. programt-Call hr an appoint- •••• 7 Everything Under The Sun For Summer Look 645-6406 --'~· •"OJ< DAILY PI LC1 23 ' Bogcr's Gardens ls already a S<Jtilhlnnd tourist att1·action. I (h'Pr :5.000 hanging ba'ikcts of I f!O\\ ('1'i11g plants enhance the 1 G11rd<'ns. Bogcr's is basically a 11111·sl•ry, Uut the normal nur· I st·1:; sl ucl{ (i.:onlaincr plants. f Prlili:t.•'l's, insret ic ides, etc. I l\l'P disrrCtC>ly hidden a"·ay. All you sl'1.: ns a visitnr is pre· IJianted greenery in full bloom. E1 r·rything Crum indoor plant.s to thl' uniqu<' aerial bouc1uets• of color. These hanging baskets; At'f' so unusual that th<'y have bt'<'n f<'aturcd in four maga- zines (including the June cover I or SUNSF.:T). Roger's Gardcrw I refl Uy are unique. Roger'• Gardens offer a unic1u<' experl!?nce in leisure.. living. There are nine C9J ex- clusi\"e lines of Brown Jordan pa t Io furniture displayed 1hroughout the Gardens, as \\·ell a~ Woodward. Troplt'On(. Gold J\1edal, Hurricane. and Cnlifornia Umbrella pa.Uo fur- niture and aceessories. Cali- fornia ls a year round out-door experience, and that's exactly .why Roget's offers this patio furniture. It 11 designed to be In strumental in organizing the club, she is the first to receive an honorary mem- bership from the membership. The club's annual Miss Teenage Citizen will be chang- ed to the Kay Riley Award in her honor. Award for 1973. m9"t wtthout obllgatknt 55~1)50 675-7271 Miss Olsen, now a senior at.\'-~::;~::;::;::;::;~::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;~::;=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~ Dana Hil!J High School, h.as maintained an a b o v e • B average and plans to study business administration at Stanford or the University o( South California. DEBORAH JONES Joneses Tell Troth Mr.,and Mrs. Jesse L. Jones or Newport Beach have an- nounced the engagement. or their daughter, Deborah Jean Jones to Michael Paul Harl· stein, son of Mr. and l\irs, j 'Theodore J. Hartstein of Mishawaka, Ind. They plan to be rr--arried I Aug. 11 in Central Baptist Temple, Huntington Beach. The bride-to-be attended Baptist Bible College of Spring- ----.fleld, Mo. Her fiance is a graduate of BBC. BERNARDO ---BERNARDO - BERNARDO "we •ave more of t•em and at 1 lower prlee11 t•a• anyoae ha the wot1d.'' •il PAIHION ISLAN D NEW graduates or the Caliromia Hospital School of Nursin g are Mary Jo Cooper of Huntington Beach and Carol Bartholomew of Costa Mesa. Ceremonies •took place in 11----------: Christ lhe King Lutheran , UffELL'S. Church. Torrance. I EXCHANGING w e d d in g UPHOLSTERY VO\\'S in Iowa Falls. Iowa were j wtlefl .,.:-;..w- L.D. Treloar and ~1rs. Phyllis1 1922 Hn.r IW. • c.. ..... ~ 141·025t Large--Sizes- SIZES 38 to 52 Suit• f0t 1unning • 1uit1 f0t swimming. Both kinds to clioose from at Ella Nor's. See ovr group of luscious F ·in ts ond 1llmminQ 1olld1. We'd love to helo you choo•• a . suit that doel nice things for your flgu,.. from $11.00 , • ....., Sli ...... t? .... .._. ""''"'' .... hoch 0,.11 12 .. s bCla Nor'sHALF-SIZE SHOP COSTA • --MESA 1 IOS NIWPOIT ILVD • IN.rtll •f 11.-Str.etl HUNTINGTON BEACH 14 HUNTIN•TON CINTll INeD 9-..._ 1,...1 PULLllTON-224 Or1111t• M•"· et 01 11tMfpe & Merkt M••· • 'nl•tt. • Prl. 10-t -,,.., • w..1. • s.t. 1 M Banlcamerfc•rd • Materclaarge ' ' G ~~4~~ft.1 TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL PRE-OPENING PHASE #40FFER. And reduce the cost of re- ducing! Pick up the phone and call today to see what 's happening. -· --CAtt-NOW---- 979·4800 •This ia the total average cost II you enroll only on a course designed Individually for you. ,~ -"""'" ""'" ....... ,,......,, ....... lftll •• '" -..-. NOW SERVING THE COSTA MESA / SANTA ANA COMMUNITY. .,611 SOUTH BRISTOL Construction site at corner ~ -Bristol and MacArthur Fory~~r.~~~~~g~:, JACK lA lAN1Nl'S Phyolcel Fltneu Spa for MEN • Figure Control Salons fo r WOMEN ....,,_ __ ,.,,. /: rorfit'flll HEALTH SPAS A u .a .INDU•T ..... CDM.-ANY, WOfllLD'I LAROl!IT AND PINI.IT CHAIN OP KUi.TM IPAI POR MEN AND WOMIN. "_..._._._...._...,......_ .. Over 100 loc1tlons co1t110 coatt. Owned ind opet11od by Health induttriea, Inc. ( Roger's Patio Shop also has a s1>eelal ~ltttlon-or accessory ite1ns \vhich includes: cache- pots, napkins, glasses. bar-b- qucs, place mats, and decorator I v.·atcring cans. Why Is Roger's Gardens so unique and popu- 1 lar? Because Hoger's Gardens di~play beautiful, naturaJ gar- den settings. Because the staffs planters have defined a new arl fo1:1n, and because every living plant at Roger's is nurtured to the highest level of living rx- cellence. When plants are not -oloonilng, they arc kept in storage for the sake of good taste. Good taste ts the ability to recognize and appreciate v.•hat Is beautiful. That is why Roger's ls so popular. The Gar- den's are uniquely beautiful be- cause everything is displayed naturally ... from the flower- ing plants to the patio arrange- ments. Roger's start believes that there i.s a place In the nur- sery for consistency In good taste and quallty, and you wUJ, too, if you'll only drop by for a visit at 2221 Fairvltw Road. in Cmta J\lesa (just off New- port Blvd.J One~ you've seen what -.., er's Gardens has, you'll a). \\-ays come back. It lJ undoubt- 00.Jy the most spectacu_kgiy °bt'llu tlrul garden In this &tee. OJJt'n for your insPQCtioft and l'r\io.vn11·nt from 8;00 &m. to 6:00 1•.n1. every day. 1r y1111 hnve guesu comll"lfl thi~ !tununl'r. csl)telally over th•· Julr ·Ith Holidays aheesf 1 • •.• lrt'lll them to the 11t,y.le Iha\ 1~ cll!i l lnctly Rogl'r'I -at your hnn1(' -in your W'!I Jl{lllo. l>i·op by for an Idea of what ~·11n }.)(' done! See: you hCt'('! ROGER'S Citizen of Year Banqttet Sat1t1·day Ci()' • .\dm1n1str.uor Da\id !W.,landi:: \\i!I tit' tht' ft'Ahtrt--d ~l'll'llkt't' S3turda} rught ::1~ tht• Jluntmg'\oo Bl•;1ct\ II ('I ~IE ,. Coorrtrs ('!f!.hth :inn u n I ··01j1c'f'I ol lh<' Yt>:ir .. :t\\:U"CI banquet TUE BA~Qt;CI tu.lu st} ll' -is schedulL-d for 8 p m. tv I a m at Sam 's &oafood Ht'Slaurant A !h('f't.-...prett band .,.;n prm'ide background and dance mu s.ir. DRURY LANE ANTIQUES 111 ...... Del ... s.oc- ARE MOVING IN JULY - W•tcli for ... nnounC•ft'l•nt! Ei.gh• local l.'l \'lt' leaders h.1\·,• ~·n no1nina1t"<I. for this ),...Jr s hooor. ~l ati;ar ct l':\rlb<'rg. founder of the en· 'tronn\t>JHal rounc11. .,.·on tbt- top r11iz..'n a"·ard in 1972. Tht>-eight nominees are: t'il y t~~lll<'tlman Al Coen : Pat l\;i\\'Tley . d1re<'tor of the Boys Club. J:irk Fc...•han, clistrict 1nanagt'r for Sou t h er n 1._'alifOnlJH Gas C'o.: Jant'\' Koch. d.i!"N'IOr of the Youth En1ploy11~ent Service. ALSO : )IARJOS ?\1eyer. an Oc-ron \"1e\,. School District voluntt'('r \\'Orkrrs, Bobby >lurphy. president cf th~ Hun- 11ng1on Be a c h Playhouse; Pri1n Shea. nlC-rnber o f titizens goals and objeclives committee: Katherine Wallin. city planning commissioner; and Bruce Williams. director r f public relations for Golden \\'es1 College. .. Skylab Spreads Its Wi119s • around" inspection. The picture clearly shows of the missing solar panels. one :\_n1erira's Skylab space station. with clouds and "''ater in the background. is shO\\'n in this photo taken f rom the command nlodule durin cr a "fly -------------~-0 _ _c·--------------------------11 Fountain V all~y Activities Slated F,\~ltLY SING PAPER TOLE Learn ,the easy and quick Safety 1st on July 4th Fireworks stands o p e n lhroughout the area Thursday, and the lluntingt(ln Beach Fire Department has issued a series of warnings ta help in- sure a safe July 4 holiday. Fire Inspector Jim Erickson emphasized that any person displaying fireworks is liable for any damage caused by his negligence, and that only those rireworks with the state fire marshal's "Safe and Sane'' label are legal. Explo&ve firecrackers are illegal to sell or set off in the cit y. hf:! said. His suggestions include: -l)isplay fireworks in an open area away from buildings, fie lds or weeds and other areas of combusUbtes. -J·lave an adult display fi reworks. -Do not ilisplay fireworks close to other people. -Discard sparkler wires in a non-combustlle trash con- tainer alter the wires have cooled. -Use long igniters when lighting fireworks. -Never pick up or attempt to re-light fireworks afle!' they have been lit even though they appear to be out. -Do not JlW'Ch.ase fireworks without parent.al permission. -Have a garden hose handy if possible. -Dispose or all expended fireworks in a metal trash container. Call Laguna Beach Adult Education 31 SUMMER CLASSES VOCATIONAL ARTS AND CRAFTS, LANGUAGE, IUSINESS EDUCATION, FAMILY EDUCATION, HEALTH AND PHYSICAL IDUCATION, SOCIAL SCIENCIS AND HOME ECONOMICS. PHONE 494-8546 FOR INFORMATION JUNE 25-AUGUST 3 Registra1ion i,\ open foc Fountain Valley residents who want to sign up for tJw classes and activities offered through the city's Conununity Schools Program. Bring yt.:ur self a11d-or -your This is the fun new way or way to beautify any room. One family. Favorite songs from bringing your favorite paper night class. Thurs .. July 12th, I~~;::;;::;:;;;;:;;;:;::;:;;;:;;::;;;;;;:;;;;;:: lhe past and present. Tuesday, print of picture to 3-7:3()..9:30 PM. no fee. li 7:30-9:00, no fee . dimensional 1 if e . Tuesday, WHY KIDS SUCCEED The classes run from July 2 through July 27 and are open to illl Fountain V a 11 e v residents. Most or the c!aW are held at Cox or !.1oiola Schools unless other w is e noted. For further information, contflct Colleen Wilson or Jack R:::binson at the Fountain Valley S:::hool District, 842· 6651. Here's a list or if.he classes available: BATON For ch ildren 6-12 j't"al'S. Each student must bring a baton. 'Register throu gh Parks & Rec . Dept. Bczir;s J une 20th. \Vednesday l :00 PM, $5 .Q0.8 \1ikS. GUITAR 7:00-9:00 PM, $3.00. Ideas presented by well· 8-12 year olds -Learn to TAP and BALLET known t hild development con- play your guitar this summer. A Y.M.C.A. sponsored class sultant on how to ~ring your Register through Parks & that starts preschool children child up to grade or ~bility Rec. Dept. Class begins July early in ~he art or tap <ind level in all academic areas. 18th. l\1onday. 2:00 PM, $7.50-8 ballet. Classes 110\V in pr~ Tuesday. 7:00 :PM, $2.00. \\'ks. gre<;'s. register through the GOl,F ASSOCIATION 1 8-12 year olds -Register Y.l\tC.A. -847-9622. \Ved., ?\1onth!.v golf tournament.s through Parks & Rec. Dept. 9:00-9:45 AM. $10-8 \Vks. for a!! enthusiasts. Dues are Class begins July 18th. Mon-Register through Y.?\1.C.A. $20 per year. day. 3:00 P~1. $7.50-8 Wks. _ 847-9622. Wed. 9:45-10 :30 OTHER ACTIVITIES Adult class (ages l3 & up), AM, $I0-8 Wks. RRegistcr through Parks & Register through Parks & SLIM 'N' TRIM ec. Re c. Dept. Class begi ns July Stay trim 'n' slim. Register Crafts -6-11 vc.1r olds. IFth. !\~ondny, 7:00 P~'I. $7.50-8 through Parks & Rec. Dept. Tues. and Thurs .. 2'.00 P!\!: \Vks. !\•londay, 3:30-4:30 Pt<.!, $2.50-5 Movies -6-14 year olds, Adult class 1ages 13 & up\. \Vks. i\101u11rl 'fhurs .. 1:00 PM . Regi ster through Parks & STATUE PAINTING Sports & RN:'. Tourn.aments, Hec. Dei;!. Class bcgns July Learn to paint. antique and \Vedncsday. 2:00 PM. 18th. Mon:lay, &:00 P~·!. S7.5J-8 make statues come 10 life. Special Events -Friday, \Vks. 1\Jesday_ 7:00-9 :00 PM, $3.00. ;;;;;;lc;;;OO.;,P;;;M;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii INTERIOR DECOR T.0.P.S. u YOUR SUPPORTING GIFT GUARANTEES () 0 YOU MORE rNCOME ~-i; () Iii You c•" occnMI tnONt mofltlly lite••· I T'f e11joy sullltaatl•I ta lftl19 nlst CA.LL Ml. JIM HIND klplt19 • ll•""""totlOll COllW tltro .. h. South CoOlt Communlty Hospltal'1 MW "Uvi., TntN ProgfGm." Write or call for details tod-r. 499-1311 Ext. 600 SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL 31172 Coa1t Hll)hway, So11tll Lotna. CoQfo,. .. 91677 BATO~ Register through Parks & Rec. Dept. Wednesday. 2:30 P~1 . $5.00-8 \Ilks. THERAPY PROGRAMS \Vall Decor By Larry. Foun-Think thin _ Take Off lain Valley. Thu rsday-July Pounds Sensibly! Oka School !Sth. 7:30-9:30. n} fee. Thurs 6 30 9 30 PM ,TE\\'ELJtY ~TAKING ., : .. :. 1 RB MEANS FURNITURE AND TllEN SOME! FREE DELIVERY. The look and feel of the famous designer original at a tiny RB price. Our luxuriously tufted big swivel rocker in the softest black vinyl w ith rolled arms and swivel pedestal base, complete with matching ottoman, Striking good looks, divinely comfort- able and superb quality (read our famous warranty). BIKE RIDING The onl y requlre1nent for th is week ly caursc is a bike. T:urs of f<"ou ntain Valley and neighboring com111uni tics are planned. Saturday. 10:00 A~1 , no fee. CAKE DECORATING ., Create cakes for every oc- casion. 5 week course, begin· ning June 25th. Mooday, 7:00- 9:00 PM, $6.00. CAKE DECORATING Uegins June 26th. Tuesday, 3:0'.l-5:00 PM. S6.00. CAKE DECOR~\TING Begins June 28th. 'fhursday, 7:{)1);-9:0 '.J P"-1. $6.CO. CERAMICS Cr~te hand-made \\'orks of art. Learn t> ~nake ''ases, coasLers. planters and knick · kn Hc ks. All glaze and kiln use are p~.:ov:ded. Tuesday, 7:30· 9:00 PM. t3.0J. CHESS CLUB Chess enthusiasts "'·HI learn to perfect iand pr·actice new chess m:::i,ve s. Le<::scns and si.:1Jsequent tcurnainerts con1- i;rise this activity. ~1cnday . i :liO PM. no fee. CO:\tMUNJTV BAND VOLLEYBALL Create neckla::es an::l oiher ~1t:!her-chil :I teams being jewelry items by learning the formed. Begins July 11th.I art of bead stringing. Create \Vcdnesd;iy , 3:0-0 P!\1. no fee. gift ideas for others or f:::r Adult fun and recreation for yourself. Tuesday. 7:30.8 :30. pArtiripanL~ is proTI)ised. All ~2j~i>ERGYM abilities are welcome 10 join this activit y. Thursday, 7:00' A primary goal of Bever1y Manor care is to restore th e patient to the maximum mobility and fu nction allowed by his physical condition. Registered physical therapists supervise patient rehabilitation program ~. Inhalation t herapy, speech therapy, occu pational th erapy, and other services are aljo 11v~ilable. All therapy rendered by registered therapists is provided pursu ant to orders prescribed by t he patient's physician, ,. ......... , __. •• "'"° ....... -~ ........... -.. •• I! A Y.M.C.A. course for P~1 . no fee. developing hand-eye coord ina-tion and other perceptual F'amily volleyball -bring Visit .... Alwon Welcome your entire fn1nily for an ~-() ~~:o;:.· .. abilities in ch ildren ages 3·5. evening of hm with -this ex-'•""'' MelllOr C011Vei.c.e11t Hnpit.I Classes are now "in ~rogrcss. c:itin" s,.;:irt. All a!!cs ;uid Register t h r o u g h the abili~cs ,. i1•e l:::.n1c. Tuesday, I 3541g.~:':~":. c.-:~•11•, 'Y.!\1.C.A .. 847-9622. 11-1on. and ti::JO P~T. no fee. ,._ ......... -.~ ... ,,. ..... , Vied.· 4: 15·5 : CO PM, $15.00·8 l~l~-'a~<"~·~1-.~· svo~l ~lc~v~ba~l~I. ~TI:i:u~rs:··ij ::::::::,.:.·:·-=· ::.,:·:-:·:·•:::::::::::::::::::::::4~"~·;57~1;6::::::::::::~~~~~~:;:;~ w~ . Kegister through Y .~l.C .A ., duy. C:JJ P~L no fee. \\'.\L'..~Al'ERING G4i·9622. Tues. and Thurs.. ____ _ __ 4: 15-5:00 PM. $15-8 Wks. LANDSCAPING All gardening and soil prob- lems \Vill be handled in this cou rse. Cla ~;,; tegins Tuesday. .Julv 10th. Tuc~day, 7:00..8:30 P>t. ~2.00. LIQUID E.\I BROIDERY Learn th.! art of Liquid E<:mbroidery. Fun !c".' all ages. :VI:nt:ay. 7:30.8:30 PM, $3.G't. !\IACRA'l'IE Learn the rcpes of tying knots in this fascinating class. Thursda y. 7;30-9:30 PM. $5.00. NEEDLEPOINT J1'"1mct>od~ rrn, you drug law, "'"<"fM'"' .. re rrla~cd. lhll >0mrbndy '' 11l~mg th11111!b h11 hll. Greece. P~s~o(>n. m1n1mum ~ "'°"" m j;ul. Tr3ftic~1ni;. ma .. mum 16 )"Cir~ p u~ lin~. US. E.mb~ss~: ma~imum ? )'t~•J ()I'~~. Tnllick1ni. maumum' ~·~. U S. [mba"v-NOW 43 GREAT RB FURNrruRE SHOWROOM STORES E rin ~ vcur in·stru:nenl and join this· new group. All ages anj -abiliti es are welc':lme and needed. Thur ~:ta;.. 7:l:0-3::!J P~1. no fee. Learn how to paint needle- point de~Jgns on y:.lL' canvas Thi;;; cl~s~ will cn'y !'.·ec: c:-ir tiine. \Ved.. Jut 1 It h, 3:3r ?l\'l. ra lee. 1r "'1mrhoJy !ells you thr ~Y'1cm nf JU•llft" fl''' y(lu Mll thc rirhu .. r a United Stall'_, cih1.cn in the UnUfd Stale>, 1hdl -< a hun'ch orb~loncy Mexico. Pou~s1on. 2 10" )Car) plu) ftnc. T11ffic~1ng. J h> 10 years plus fine. Illegal 1mpor1 or c'porl l)f d1up. 6 10 1 ~yea .... plu' fine Pc1~n1 Mlft~lcd on drug charge~ can e~ptc-1 a mm1mum ofb 10 ll months p1e-1r1al conlinemtnt. 111 Va'lhS"~ ~ophia\ Bl•d /\then~. G rttcc '<3 19~ Jubola~mutr~·~ Bern. Sw1t/(rldn.J Td 4JOOll SHOf'7 Ooll'SA Wl(K· WlUDAfS JO UlfTIL I •IATU-'f lll.ll'ITM.•• iUPIDAl IJ:)O Ul'lllli nKl ~ .... "_ • r11u l>l.COllATOll 5llrl1Cl· '•tl Dn.M:llT ·~"' IMllt Ttltlill MILLER A DIVISION OF I. F. GOODRICH Wide Rodiol Belted TIRE SAll.E MORE MUSCLE -MORE MILES -------- llKi'LEt:TIONS ,, ~-Reyn Sheffer Here is the strongest, safest. longes t \\'Cari ng tire ever built by !\1iller. It's a new couce-pt in construe-11.------, lion -two plies of Dynacor rayon laid at 90 " angle to travel topped with four belts of rayon running circumferentially around the tire, ' * 65% MORE IMPACT STRENGTH ;, the tread are• over 4 ply nylon cord t ire1. * 20°/o MORE RUBIER on the road for stop· on-a-d ime traction. * UP TO >/,.INCH WIDER TREAD th" Eu••· pean built radial1 for up to double the mile- a9e of 4 ply bla1 tires, * GllARR STABILITY and hand ling ease from radial con1truction. 40,000 MILE WRITIEN NATIONAL MILEAGE GUARANTEE Sii:e Replace~I Reg. Pric e Solo Prlco I Excise Tax ER70 -14 7.35-14 $59.00 $38.95 $2.70d FR70 -14 7.75-14 63.00 $40.95 2.88d GR70-14 8.25-1 4 67.00 $42.95 l .06d -HR70-14 -8.55-14" 71.00 $46.95 J.llt FR70-15 7.75-15 63 .00 $40.95 2.94d GR70-15 8.25 -15 67.00 $42.95 3.08d '• HR70-l 5 8.55 -15 71.00 $48.95 3.J)f JR70-15 8.85· I 5 I 75.00 $49.95 l .55 e LR70-15 9.15.15 79.00 $51.ts J.10. , ___ _,,___1\C:rORY TIRE DISTRIBUTORS Cr:t Prlc r:-Best Servlc• 27601 FORBES ROAD, UNIT J LAGUNA NIGUEL, CALIF'. 92677 (714) 83!·2230 • • I I "I ne'ter r•m•mber fullnt tlr~ by work, though ldl .. n•s• axh11ust1 ma complat .. ly . .. A. Con11n Doyle 1 \Ve \l'Ould have f'njoyed knuwin:-; the 1:rf'ator of Sht'rlock Holnu·s. It i.'> easy lo SIX' \I-hill n1adc hiln a pro· Bf!c \1Ti ler . . he \~·as <'X· hl.lU$tt•d by idleness. I t's not. so easy to under- stand how he avoided get- ting tired by \vork. Frankly, ht1rd work makes most ot us tlrNI. lfO\\'('VCI', It """ are fortunate enough to be en· .,raged ln work that is wel- sul\ed to us. '"e get a. mcn- sure ot satigfactlon •fr(>m the ~·eariiiess that f{ll\O\VS hard "'ol'k ... fro1n the l'C'allza· tion that our labor has l>e"n fruitful. \Ve try ah1•ays to be cSf)i"• cla.Jly t'ffll)On~lve to the needs ot thogc ,1·ho come to us I for help, C'V('n when such need may be unf'xprcsi;cd. I ~HcFFcR- moitTUl.llY L..._&UNA I EACH 976 SOUTH COAST HlGHW..._Y 494·11J5 _ SAN CLEMENTE 15ll NORTH EL C~MJNO REAL <492·0100 ' . Yl'u •h•>llld gcl !ht r~~I~ 'tf~!l'.hl. The 1r~1h 1< lh(1f Jruf 13"'' ~r,· 1<1ugh l\nJ thr' enforce chem h> 1hr kncr. Tht<c\ a gi rl from 1hr l;1111rd S1atr' >1Umg 1n a Rllmt" )d:I r1~ht n<-w. Shtll br 1hn efor 11\ hf"tcn m<inthl aw011t1ng 1n~I. \'.'ilh no ~.ul. No1 r'·rn ~chance IOI II If •h•'' (l/!l\1(1Cd. 11\ ~ min: mum <-f three vear~. ("arrymg >1111J ~l·1uu • llurJrr. from on• <'oun1ry lfl nno1hrr. "3,k1n~ for rrnublt. An.J \f!u·11i;ct11 ThaJ', 1hC11 1:111. And thrrr'• no WIY •to~nd I( · Over 900 United S111u citl1-co1 ;irt doing time on drug chargn in foreign J••b ngh1 nf!w. And nobody c1n get them ou•. No! family. Or friends. Or 1hr ~man<:!<t lawycr in iown. Not •ht Un1ltd S1a1e1 gove rnment. lf.,.:m'rr plann•M! I v1~" 10 , [ufOf"'·· the Middle fl•I nr l-OUlh o( our own bt>rdrr. (h«k our 1he tountnrs. Gd tl!r f~c1~ And gel them •lra1ih1 btforc yo11 le~'•· One (1cl w1U lomc 1hrough. loud ind cleat. When you're busied ro' d1up ()\'ff 1hc,c, ~oo're in for the lus~lc or )'OUI life. Sweden. Pm~~ion or salt, 6M lllHl/or vp to 6 )'c•~ U.S. Emb11s~': S111ndvtgcrr 101 S1ockholm, Sweden Tel. 63105120 Morocco. Poi.~uion. J montlu lO' yci1h 1nd fine. U.S. Embl~(y; 2 A ..... dtc MJrr••r'h Rabat. Mor()('(:() Tel. 30361162 US. Embas.."': Cor Danub.0 irnd Pasco de la Rcforma 305 Colon1a Cuauh1cmoc Me\icO C"t1''· Mt~•l.'9 Ttt. ~lt-7991 Spain. Pcn~h)" dcpc11d~ on quani11y of dru p 1nvol"td Le'' rhan mr.ram' cann~bi>. fine and c~ruhion. More 1h1n ~OO@r,un.1. minimum of 6 ~·rars m J~•I U.S. Em baJ»y SerranQ 73 /l.t~drid. Spam TtL 271:1-1400 Italy". PO!<~l'!Un, Minimum• J )'l~n. M1~im11m: ~~If>. U.S. l:mba!>!y: Via V. Vene!O 119 Rome, hal~ Tel. 41:174 !~~~~!!!:uin 10 yr an and heavy tint. Pm.1oeS61on or :im1ll 1mo11n1 ror pe~n•I use uiually p11nishcd by 1 fine or hs'it imprisonment and C\pubion, U.S. Embassy: 24131 Grosvrnor Square W. I .. LondOI'!, Engl1nd Tel. •99·9000 Netherlands. """"iM. ftn10f 6 monthi in pri~ri. Tnflkk•flg. ma~imum ' yr1n, U.S. Ernb•l~y: _ 101 Lange Voo1hout , The Hag11e. Nc1hrrl•ndi Tr~ t.2-'?-11 Tcl. 71?9~1 Gennany. P~SfS\IOn. jJ11 '-Cn!cncc or f'inc. Trafficking. m:..umum.J yu.u pl11~ fine._ U.S. Embiny. Mthltmcr Avenue 53 B<lnn·Bad Godcsbtri; Bonn. Gc1m1ny Tc! 02229-1\155 JapalL P<mn~•on. P"·1r1o11 dclfnllon. ~11i~ndcd ~nlfncc ~nd c •pul~ion. Tralficlin!-maA•mum S ycan. U.S. Emba~1y: . Hl-S A.ka!ak1 1-chrome Mm1tn·Ku, Tokyo Tel. 583·71•1 ~ Pounsion. 110 J yc1n in prbon, T1111iclting. 3 10 IS ycan. U.S. EmbalSv: Cornkhc 11 A11c Aiv Mrd~~h. 8cir11l, Lebanon Tel. 2-0-800 Jamaica. l'os.~iOI'!, P'i~n i.cn1cn~e ·~ llne. T1111\clting. m•~imum l ye•n at h1rd •~bot. U.S. Emb1~1y: <4) Duke S1rcc1 Kin~llM. J1m1ic1 Tel. _6J<41 France. flosK111(111. utt ar 1r1ffkkin1: priSM 1crm or J month• 10 S ye1u ind tine. C1n1om• Co11" wlll al~ levy heavy llnc, ~lt!im11.J!I J 10 •Jnonrh1 p1c-trl1 I cnnfincm•nt. U.S. Emb•~•y; 2 Aw: Gotiritl P1t11, France Td. Anjou 644() ISl'llL Poucnian. hc1vy fine 11'1d c•p11l1t0n. T1dlklting. ma1imum 10 ycar1 ind S,000 lttacU pou nds ltl.c. U.S. Embauy: 71 Hty111con Str«t Tel Av1,,., Juul_ • Tel. '6171 Bahamas. p,,.:.c:"ion. J month~ to 1 •'(I•. -t.t,S. f .. mi.;..,.~-- Adde1ly 8u1ld1ng l"a~\au. Baham~· T(l.21181 Canada. Pus.lfn .. ,n .j~il 'cnttnct aml t•pul\lon T1~ffk~1ng. m1n1m1.1m 7 \t~r•. ma"mum hfc. U.S. Eml>"ir"): 100 w,11ing1on S11cc1 Ottawa, Canada T •I. 2Jb·2J4 I Denmark. f'1'»0tlon, fin• ind dc1cntion up to.2 yea,,, U.S. Emb••iy: 0 1g H~mma11okjolds Alie 2~ Co~nhagtn, Ocnm~•k Tel. TR 4505 Tll'key. ~O!..'>fss .. ,n.110, ye111. T111ffkking. 10 yca11 10 hfc, U.S. Embalsy: I LO A11111rk 81vd. Ank~r1. Turkey Tel. 18·62-00 Iran. P~cu;on, 6 mon1h110° J ,,_,.., Tr•IF>c:•in1. f'inl offtn(C J IO I' )'t"lfl hlltd \1bor Ind ~nt. Second 01fet1«, Mt ind up IO life 11 h~td lib/Ir, U.S. Emba1~y: 250 Ave. Tak1i Jam)h1d Tcht1n. 1!1n Tcl~820091. 8.23091 !'j1110"1! C~111ftglloi~"' rn1 l.>fUt Abl.IM' lft(OfrNllOft., r .. .. Chrysler Hits GM Catalytic System DETROIT (AP) -In a rare bit o{ corporate s n i p i n g , Chrysler Corp, testified before an Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) hearing that a General M o t o rs Cof'.p. catalytic muffler system won't meet 1976 emission standards. IN FACT. THE G M cataJyUc exhaust s y s t e vi developed for 1975 cars ·'does not 5atisfy it.he requi rements or tile original 1975 standards now required for 1976," said Sydney L. Ten-y, Cllrysler vice president ol en· vironmentaJ and safely rela· lions. The criticism breaks an unwritten ,taboo w h e r e i n Motor Clty auto g i a n t s generally refrain from JX.Jblic one.-up.manship -at least in regards to the controversy over auto ell'tis.5ion standards. It apparently was aimed at a statement eel'lier th is month by GM President Edwin N. COie. He said the GM con- verter system woukl last the JilcUmc of the car and would COS1 only ,150. Starkman explained t h e "reducing cata1y.st" performs a different chemical fWlCtlon than the "oxidiz~ cataly5t" whidl GA-1 plans to use for coot.rol of hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide on lts 1975 nlOdel cars. A GM SPOKESMAN in Detroit said he t h o u g h t Chrysler might have "missed the point" of Cble's statement since the 1976 device will be different rn:m the •1975 device. . ' W eigh-lnn: r • ---~mmoni!11T28,1'1n-------<>·AIL y. PILOT %5 OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll1tlng1 for Wednotday, Juno 27, 1973 l!WM QllOlttlon• r•l'lk El ~IM ll¥ !ht N•· t•nlll llontl AMOC:il tioll ol rltnel I( t«11rllltt 0..ltf•, risen It ir• bids •nd '""' ro1 FdE 11U1r ti ~11111 1)¥ O.,..,•lhe-unt S.t *"''.,. dffl..,., 10 •J:,vn C Nell olt>9r •s OI •rllnk :low lE•i!tn -ire LrJ ~me.) Tht QI.IOI•· _nlc~ut~ lon1 00 nor lnc:h,ldt :tn Aul<IP ·•1111 mtrkup, m1rk Jn C•llOI JoWn or commit· -11~ kn:J lion; •nd oo not ::Orllm M• tQrltenr I Clutl :;r•Pll !.c r1n11tllQl'll. Gl'tV AllY 1roi11v~TRIALS H•ch (h AND UT!Llllli.$ H1nn ew We<IMSCMIV •II Fnk June 21. 191) 1mll Br l (O A'k <1rlvn P •cushnl 21-1.. tti.. ••1>er R \If~ Al-11>,1. li'n &wth Fl \lko lnd l• l•\.i HCl<hf19 C \111'11 6C'Y lVI l~ 111111 Ml Ullld T1I 1ti.. lt~ e111on ~~nA::, 1&t; 1ft ~!'.! C \ ArlCtlt 1L. j'~ oover \mE1 L.1> 1 "' Hunl "" Im f~pr S5.I' !Silo +iye I C Im Flnc:I 11 11'• vs11r C Im Furn ,,,., n, 1naa we1 Im Gree Jti.. <tll\• Jnll1 Nye/ '"°"\ Sv 11 11\'i n!o••• Am 1tev 22l·• 1l• • ln~I Cro llom Weld H 11.,., n!erc En U'' T• "°' '"~1r 43\J •• lnlml Gs ff O , lion~. Jn Jl • •'lo tnr Alum 'PK e '"' ~ tn 8kW A CLOTHING BY RALPH LAUREN _!XCLUSIYILY AT Kevin and Bonnie Ketchum weigh-in at Chicago's McCormick Inn. For the sum- mer months, the luxury hotel will bill guests according to U1eir weight. On a double occupancy basis, the rates will be seven cents a pound for adults and one cent for children under 14. Youn ger kids sharing their parents' room will be \PS lnc:1> ll\1 12\'> nlril (p .\rdn M'tl 1"" 1"-rfl•nd R .\rro Au! ll 1•\> 11m1!1> 'rrow Hr 16~~ 11'; Jer Alr Fr '•vllle •~• t ft Joslyn M 'HO Cola 16~ 1ru <n!"'r SI .. II G1 LI 141. lSlo (•Ivar ( 'u10 Trn lj 12~, (earn lk 3eoro Aro '• S'• ICellwod !Uerll Wr 111• 11.._ ken Cohn 3~ker Fe l,01:J ,",r.• Kev 011 .. aal11wn L ..,. ,.. ICtym Fb free. · --------------------------------------------l3ellv Mlt 301.oJ 39~> Kev cu11 !,n~~ e,",o 16'i. 17~• ICe-yst 1n1 " .. ~ •I 16'• 26'1 KMS Ind B•rnes H I•'• IS'• 1Cn•P9 VI 'Nixonburger' Book's Out ::~~~!~ F 1;_r l~~ l(OQe< Pr aoellne F ., ~ 5 Kr~r 3elrln (p ~.· @.'<. K"'tm El aenuv L• n • 1J L•lld P111 aesr Prd J.J J..11• Lanc<1st Belz l.•b Jiii'• 40._. Lance ' ~ 14 fASHION SQUAil SANTA ANA • 5.47-6:14! GIANT 4 FOOTYARDSDCK! · NEW CANAAN, Conn. (UPI I -President Nixon sug- gested fish, and Agriculture ·Secretary George Sch u I t z recommended cheese t o housewives eager to beat meat prices. Now, son\e housewives are asking the two to eat (l}leir own words. 101 uses: Measure children, dogs, trees, fabrics, ply.vood, what·have·you. Great for husband's do-it·yo urself jobs and wives at home. An educational gift ideal for teaching children measurements ... yours free at the Big M where you always get an extra measure of service. " tan...,_ odw• 001<-.1 (fjj~~ Look at these valuable free services- 0 Free Safe Deposit Box• O Free Photocopy Service O Free Travelers Cheques O Free Notary Service O Free Note Collection• ' ' • with qualifying bolonc:~ 2018 l-lenn,$1.000rnllWnum \ Now nearin g a hal f·c entury· of service to Southern California .savers, the Big M~Mutual Savings, is almost half·a·billion dollars strong ... and still growing with three new offices this year! Now 9 offices: Canoga Park· Chatsworth, Capistrano·San Clemente, Corona de! Mar, Covina, Glendale, Pasadena, Thousand \Oaks, VJSta, West Arcadia. ~ ~ ~, ' i THE BIG M MUTUAL SAVINGS erlCS ........ \ C..-dd Mar. 2867 Eut Cooot ~/675-5010 THEY HAVE COMPll.ED a cookbook \\'ith 42 varieties of "Nixonburger," including one from Donald R. Lovley of Winslro. Com., which called for one teaspoon of Watergate to be added "'i'-1len .no one is kDUng.'' I.mley said the ingredients all>b Co 1"4 ••A T "'""~' c BIQ Orm 1 HO 12\.'J l.IZY J:lov 'Should be lfried "in a bit Of Bird Sons 1~"2 ~5"'1 L!'QQtt Pl . I . t est il Se Bot> Evn1 11'• 23 L!1>11r11 H specia in er o . rvc on &Da111 No 1111\oo Lii c11mp tl •-I II 8rtnc11 1 22 12'ii Linc Bdil mea ess U<t)'S on y, usua y &rink• In _ 10~ l 1''> 1.1on c1s. Sunda Mond Tu sd Brown Ar 6"" 1•• Loctite y, ' ay, e ay. B11e k11e 11 •, 11"' Lotws c o Wednesday , ThurSday, Friday ~~~~:v SI '~~~ 2~ ~:r R~.~-and Saturday... 8Ull1r M 3.!t'J JSV. MaUckl t•m Tao 21 "" nv. Mtrll Fri His entry WM the ooly in-€:~ J,crs ,:t: 1:~ ~:~~'k edible one. Chmo Pt • Ro McOu•v Chtnct A ltlh 20 Med.cm Cllanl Co • •'4 l!rn TUE COILECI'JON o f ~~f~r ~~ ~~ ~ni. Mer~ i~ recipes had its origin during ::nrli sec 157 167 ml'i"°' '°(lit U A 31.._ ~:Ito Mf::s G11 .the April meat OOycott and ~1•1111>k t\~ ,~ ~ nnu1 F~: f II ed the t. f ir.tow Crp •12•1 13"" ~ 1 0 OW sugges lOOS 0 <...OCIC LI 1Ui l~ ~oex Sn Nixon and Schultz. The contest 1'"om1 sn~ 26 27 M~~n ' mwTJ P n :o Mot Cl itself was sponsored ·by the ::onurn P •l.W.""' MSlorOa'• New Canaan Dem 0 c rat i c Cousins l!V. 16 Nit CnvSI Cri>s1 Co 18 18~ at Llbtv Town Committee Cru1c11 R 4'111. 5 NI MdlCr • :url Noll ln!.o 13'4 NI Paltnl The book ;,.. ..1-.1:AAted "To :>an1 1n11 2-A,i 2"1 Neldhlnc .., \ICU.KA:! Oanlv M A< I V. NewU o the man who has made Dart orq 5.., ' NEnci Ge . • g•I• Des 21h 7'N NJ Nat G meatlessness a way of life 1n ''" G'n J.1 J•l'• Nicolet In • O.Clt Oa 1llo i i.; Nlelsen A Amenca," says Mrs. Lester Decor 1n ~• ~~ Nitlwn e Brooks in the foreword of the 8=~r 1~~ 'i~ ':~ ~~d'1N1G perbound · The Delu•a C 3' 3'\lo Noxell co pa reopes. cover 01.m crs ,~ 1311o N11e1r Re features llie p re s i d en t Diam Hd 10\.11 IO'tll oakwd H Olcl( A B 21\4 ?t>io 11n Or sandwiched ·in a bun with the '1"" sci lll'llo 11~ 0c11n E• , ~utrt l5'~ 3'111 OcllQI" Ml \\'-onfs; "Let them eat fish. Dollr Gen &"-71.4 Ofbh f OS · .,,,..eld1 ,, ..,.,, Oa11vy M cheese, nuts:" &,o:;, JbJ ~ ~~ g~1 7t~~ Dunkin 0 7!1\o 2~·, ormont Posts Filled l='con L~b 301~ 3~'111 Ovrmvr Educ E• ?'l''I 31'4 veri NA IOI P1:M1 ll ' • ll'i. Oztte Ctfl ~:_~~t :~ ~VI Plb!ll Br f.ou S&L l'l 12\.li P&c:Clf Flto•" A :U 26 Pee: Garn F.•ecu In '"" sv. Pte Lum r::1 P~lnt ,,., 7!.lo Paso Brd "'•I• \Jiil ~ 6~ Pan oc:ot F•rlM El :U"' :MV, Paul Rtv c~,.., II• 11'\ !~'~ Pallll'I' P At Stellar Stellar Newport nounced lndust.ries lnc. .Beach, bas r::~v~. Drcr ~''• 11, Pyls$ C•s "'1~.,·~• '""• '"· PllY N Sv Of "'" 'l~"n 1". '' . PaG<t. W bl ,.•F'" 2"''• 1~ Pel H&H 8f'r 1 ~! WslF I"-~ P'llro Lw '"Ko Inc •'~ 1n PlcN .S•v ••e res;,.,_,+;005 of Fl~ Tet.o 17\~ 1 11~ Pln~rln 1.11 '!>uuw r::u·~~· 1~ ,. Ploner w William G. Kimball and Forest O! 13'(i 13"' Piper Ind ~=~:.A= ::!:1""""""""'""'M-U .. T•U=-A .. L._F_..U .. N ... D_....S...,..-4i and the election of Rembrandt P. Lane, Ludffl Shaw andl .. ,...,.Mlll...,"""""""°'....,omca:..,""'""""'"',....,~ Andrew Galef to fill the three N-York -Fol· &E Mu 3.14 3.14 P Gwlh 115 t.'7 Vov11;1 •.Jf 10,J lowlnu Is 1 lbl ol Eaqla Gr 6.14 7.02 enl/'$ Fd 16.911691 evere F 1.74 1~ · the Stellar ...._~....1 bid ind ••kid llfl· EA.TON • Hen 01n 1.S6 a.n Rlntr! 11.50 ~ vacancies on UV<Uu . c•i on Mutuil HOWAlllD: JH1n s111 1.:1:1 t .ts >.11111t1r 2.11 '·ij Lane JS• -•y -'tor .,;,._ F11nd• 1s ouo111d by B•ln Fd 9.36 10.n Johnstn 22.16 :H.16 K ll1>s •Fd 1.00 I.] .,....,._,...,. .,.,, .. , ,......, lht NASO Inc. Gwin F 17.66 ll .1.t EYSTOME : )cllu1 SP l.t• f, --Inc~ 6.06 j.62 CU.I Bl 11.tl lt.71 UDOElt .. DS: president of Republic Corp. wldMldll~ Soecll F •" Hi cusr 82 20 09 22.02 lntr Inv 16.lt 16~ June 71, l t Sh:k Fd 12.2.! 1 C11U B• (il (J) Btllnt 1.S.'9 15. Pn·or to i·o1·m··· republic m· 111 A* e111"1d •.a 1 .:Id '"'" 1C1 1.os 1.n c om 10 13 1111 •"" ADM IRALTY: EOIE So 19.11 lt.22 Cu~I K2 S.S6 6.09 SDtetl 27.JJ 27 J Lane ··-· a dir ...... ~M Gl'WTll 4.11 •.511 EJ'C MGMT CRP: Cuti SI 21.:n:N.'6 bd LIU 4,JI) 4 1 anuary, no.> ~ lncom 3.6' 4.04 EQIY Gr 1.31 ••• C"'I S? 10.nll.90 SECURITY J'DS: and the ex-"'ve y 1• Ce ln.11111 1.n 1 ... Eotv Pr 1.&3 •. Cust SJ 7.CM 1.n EQUlty l .10 J:!J oeo.,.~y ....,........ 4.13 t.$1 Fnd Am 7.111 • Cvtt~ -164..J.Pf. ln'l't$f_ 6.52 l Atltll Fd 7.5J 1.25 Etrft GI 11.65 12.66 APOiio 4.11 •.!a Ullrl ~S.tt --president-fmance and ad· A•ln1 IA 13 ... l•.tS Ellvrl Tri IS.5' . Polit<'$ 3.21 3.53 >ltLECTED l"DI: f •• La 'lulurt 1.46 t ."6 Emera 3.C 3.7.S t<n!clcr .S.ID 6.36 Am Shr 7.79 7. ministration o 11.ue rwin 'Ge Fd •.1s 4.15 El'MN"llv F 110.,H, 10.ff '<nkr Gth 6.11 1.n 0pp Fd 1.61 ! G Inc Allslll• 11.6112.56 Ecru!IY • Lndll'll"k 6 16 673 Sol 61ln l:ut 1 f'OUP · ''Ml Fd 12.47 lJ.U F'1lrflll M 1.09 l!f\X Fd i 'IO ite lhwl 9.37 10.l Shaw, a private investor, was formerly a director of International Industries Inc. and executive vice president of Bekins Co. .. mcl!O F •.JI •.7' Fm llur• f.17 t .IJ LilC GROUP': ' try F ll.73 I 'm. Ov.-. t .4'110.)1 Feoct00~1RTY1 1.62 ('p leor lS.05 16.'9 HARl!HL.D OR \m EQtv 1.11 4,U F .... Grwth $76 630 Comst :J,10 1 .,M IXl"•Ess G0Jt_f~U ,.' 0,. , Resrch 11:61 13:n !ntrpr 5.37 5. FUNDS, "" G · .113 Llbty Fd iS .fl 5 93 Fltl Fd 3.17 l· C101et 7.21 7.t1 Ceoll l 11.GJ 12.0S 119 lnlv 7·55 AH H1rbr 7.25 lncam 1.-M t.is ~°"~:.C J"M 731 •)nc C•P ,:n 13. L~•I L s.11 • !nv",'" '·'° j.63 O:Si 5~ : ~"'° Fnd 3.11 •.. PH~•••'•'•••,·•.,• ! '-•,·!.!: . .53 Ei1e• 91'1 LOOMIS · lock ... 7.96 E ff1t 10'5611.S. IAYL.1!5 ; Apprc 17.n 19.JI Galef is a ~~!Cf~ in the ~~ ~\~ ~:!: :~ ~~nd,... 1f!! igf ~t°rua?v :1·ri ~~·~ I~~ 1~:~ 11!.i" m ·-:.n,.aemem-• finn AA~ Mrnvst •.• •·•,. s:f..,"' F J:ff i2~ LORD A•I: · · ;11 De•n 9.$6 .9 - "no.o"""C m 111 1.!M 1. T-"" 1 · '"'''' , -6 11 Ide l"d 6.tl 1 f G . ti ,&-(iaief. AmNt G,. 1.U 2.J4 '""" '22, 32'-1 Am B1n 2:N ilt IGMA l"UNbS:' 0 nsan ANCHOR Fl~NCIAL. BnG deb '1710 1t CIO Shr 1 O! l Galef is also a director of Gc~~~r= , 12 , 1 ,.,,,n ~v~Msi.14 ,,.,. 1nern 10:'° 11 :1s Inv 10:021 : Alexander S Mark ets , ~~~nv fff fh ~\~ \~ ~1: t~ ~~N~ni<JN7ds11°·61 .z~~'iwr ~:ll :. U · --• Mold' ~ and · ' V""I i n l 11 r-nnl•I J'3 J7~ >mllh 8 t,IO t ... D1Ve1ooi. mg ...._.p. u:=cr ~·~ :11 IJIFd V• 10.3911'.,. rnc.Nn 1:61 t '.47 :a !&Gr 10.r 10.IJ 0 ... ,. l"'~)c:s w "~'n 11:.U11 l"l•ST PU~ • .., 711 1 •1'° GenF (1 (~}" '0 IOfl .......,,,IC>. • Ast~on • 3.•S 3~ INVESTORS: 1nh1n fll 1:11 ~t Inv )' ... I,~ A .. ., •• F ,:iz 1'oc DIS<: Fd 5.0S 1.53 ~··· G"~ 1.11 1.11 ~.w '"r G ,',·!! ,•,· AXE ' Grlti Fd 6.68 7.32 -.i!ASS co , : vr n ·•• · lr--------------,IHOUOHTON· Stoel( F 7.•q •.711 i<·,..m 1.t• •.4" ~Mttra 1.49 '·' u..·"..IAT DO Fund A 4 54 4 93 1st Multi t .3'1 '·'' lndo F 7.,, 1.•• •-'P 1nD 1.11 A,l · &bortO.-~ nn FllM 11 6't1 7'51 1"0RUM OlfOUI": M••• F 11.l611.2JiTATE BND GR'°' You WANT? Sloe~ s·u ill 100 Fnd 10.1110.11 1~5 FNCL: ro.., .Fd •.•7 '· A1tt Sci 3'.ta 4)4 101 Fnd •.Oii 1.lllt ~.,.,. 111f!l11,t1 Olllfl•I ._9$ J.4 , BLC Glh 10.t 5 11 .t7 r:olt•.., 1.~• 1.U Mir. 11.6Jll.'3 ·~',D'I'!., •,-',21 '•'N• Blb$tM 10.5' ID.Sf 2:5 Fund 5.st 5.$'t ~""' 1• t~ 1' ••: r ..,, • • fl•vroc 6.96 7.«)Fl'ln G• ~.39 4.IO MFO l~<~l)t'I •Fr Inc 910 t, fl•vrll •• 5.S~ !.Ill) ~nlt,.DIRS .... Q ,, ,. H <II ~!.~It SI• 44.49 ••.I I l!ltec:n HI I.ti N.t l Gll:OUI": Y.e••.s tv 1.•• I .., oTll!A'>"""N f'Ora B•ec,,n 10.0 10.•7 Q.rwt"I 1.11 j·A" ••·•ne• ,,. ~ l~'" Am Ind 2.n 11 !l..-Cll!r I( 11.ltll.lt ll>C<"t'n 11 '°I .tt \Ali! ""' 507 $,5• Auo Fd I.II I.I tlltrt•hr 3.96 •.33 F Mlv•j •.U 9.••••~,.v Flt 111~1n'" lnvtSI 12' 1, !londltk 4.SI .H F Si>&tl ID.to 11.tl vise F-t 13 )4 13,,.. ITllN •ROii! l"D!I: eos1 F11n '·"°''·"',.o:r"' F 1.26 t.03 .... •1 a .. r: .,,1111, ~··inc 2:;20. IUTt"oac 3.11 J.111 ~ .6~:}'"' ~I ~ ,.~~ ! !: : ~ ~::.~ , .. ~ 1' llUNO!i i ON,.C 7'11 •ot"°'"°"' n• t 11 ,.., IS G1tOU,., Bull Fd 11.37 13.$5 r:.,..,., ~r 7.tt 7,""''"ll"" 1., .·,, ,..., G<w1t1 s .n 'j C:dn Fd J1.J323,lf> F• !..cm 1.•• ,,I) ut s~·• i•<111•'" lnc"Om -.oo •.1 Div Shr 3.lt ) ti \!~ ..:;., S 111.f'O 10.~ ..,,.11 .. _, \ , Gti , .,., Smm!t 1.01 I. Na!w(j 9.76 10:6t UllU!I• J,"M 5.1'1 ~ ... '""u • ,, , 11 Terhnl s ,ta 6. NY Ven 10.m 1n .... Pes ra') t..., •.11 ., ,,. ~-.c ,...,, · svncro F 1,lt 6.1 B•nhm t.11 t ~1 II:• r; .. 1v •""' l 11 " la • ,, •yo TMR An l .o:!: • . ..,m1Y·•UNT,I.,. rG l"•ond •. ,~10:11"~1 LIE'! 11.'"1''1 .. : .... ""sr ....... r • ..,p1 G l.ll' ('ftn T•ln 10.ot 10 t! "'" M• d" '95 •.'1 r11 ·11 , ,1 , .,. ower C S.12 \Vhcn it l.'llOlC!I to 8 pha.r-(" .. nt •ti• U.27 1J:11 •llNl:l'I INC~ ... :~ 'S11o: ... ;. •• T••n Cap 1.20 •• m.cy Ive think that \\'C t:l-l.INIONO OROUI": incom 4 ~ 1 nt Tr111I Eo t .Jl 1!. f'UNDl1 r.,.,,m ~'' •lt ._ .. ~ ~··· , ... rudo<' H 10.3'1 . k'\ow u•hal y ou CX-l 10 'ltlncd 10 '' 1' <> '"'°"C 1 "1 7.•• 0 r )(Ith CO "00 2 .. ~,~ Bnd F" ................ Ir 10.•-,. •• _.... I,~ f ,. Ct l's .,. recel.,,.e. Naturally, the first " · · · Plk\I 1,,.. T 1• ..... """ • •· " · • al tt &~11159'1: !·!l !·?! ·•'f""'' ~.•1 1.11 " ""' 1'1 1" ~•,..., ~I~ :-::: :· thing is profession a en· lnc(ln'I A ,7 , ,. ,.., S·• P ~· M ....... " "' •• •• •· NION s•11tVic1. tion nnd scnrict"!I. i''or \\•hen s.,..:,.1 1 •• ,, .... ~ •"f' i21 ,.21 •·~~ ''""1'~" ROU,.. '.our h •allh I• 1•1•-ivcd )'OU v"""'~ •I> n2 t;•Ou~ ~P'.('• ""• "' .... ·~· Bn!S iv'''''' ,,. " v v rw.1~• ' •-. 1< 11• ,., ...... ~-~1 ''' •~• ' · "'a.nt tu be sure thl'\t every-B<KTOw· 111.i F""' '"~ ............ , ..., ....... t•"c 1~ f·fJ 1· ""NI nM. ,.., .... ,...,.. ~·~ 1~..,11••"-"'" ·~,..,~ .... ~:1 12'n1l lhing Is done and donl' cor· Jl••n .. 'I J ·~ , .,. .-;,, F"'"' , " ~~,• .... " ... , .... • · ·• NIT•D iru · reclly. ~"T• 8• ~" 1 4' ~-Ind , • ..., '".., ""'" ""~ ''"' '" -Att11m 107N017~ ~""fl J?'I J 7'1~....... '1'''1•"'•"•• ....... , 8 . In addition \\'C think you rherri Fd • ""'"".TOM "'"'P: ""'' tllf• 1•,.,. i-•• i~' :~ i·IJ i· h th O ~10.31 11 .Jl "''"'" ~to\,..,., ••• ~,. ·•• ,., onl Inc: t'111•0' l'xpcct us lo nvc e 1>r • ·nLl"JNIAt. ,., ..... " A ~I J,IU ~~ 7.,. 7 :i.< ~ 111• 1~ duct you "'1.nl or that your "'""'n•: ,......,... • •4 • ,, 1 "t' '" 11_~, 11'" klanc: ,.se , ,.,,.w,... • ,, 1n ~, "~·'W•' "~, t ~1 Wll! 15 M TS.611 ~ 6.30 f ~~~~:r~~:£i~i1l~~ ~~ i;~~J~5£-v ~-~ ;.~ ~1i':M f~'1j0~ L.8t.l.J.\~:o: -v=.. '·"° i.n Ht'>",..., 1t'•• 1t'M "I~ Tgr: e;Ll 1 'S: ~:l L.f'lf l ,1' J. you expect U!I to be prompt, r,,.,..,. n 10 •< 10.45 ,_, c n • i? 1n.1• p.,..,.., 1 ,1 7" t.•"' r,·~ ;·JI :· friendly, dcprnd.!Lble and ro .. ~oHWt.TH ,_ n~ •.11 '"" •111 Rtv •n !·,, "''1 t:n, -MOnable. We feel that we T••ltTi lflt'; ,.. ... .., ,, •• , .... OIJ~ F •'.fl ~·1 Alf( " CAJI I .OP•".!!:~ F-r.:. ~~ ·,;: 4 M!il 2.m '~rt.MO lltJ; nuality In t'Vrry wn,y to 00 1 .~ "'' •""' '-a 4.27 '·'' er Fna '" t the kind ot ph&n'r\acy you fg:::: 1~ ~~ t·: :;,'~~' ;, !; ,; :, ... /~ $:6 f,r:' f;j° ~*~om f;t • d nd. rOl'>a llld •.lA~fT'"-.nn """'"",. T•• ,., ~•!>II •'>• CmA rom• fld lllol 7A1•11v ("., 4 l'/"111••••nNf'•• l"D· "'ir i'IO YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR Conc:rd ........ ,.,,, ... ~,. A .... t.60 ......... F~ ,, • ft• ..., 1090 .,, . C P ONE Us h f'oti• !l'lll 10•11·1,..tnv l""IC ,,, •kin ,11 11'7?t',.Ver I ' I AN ll W en YOU Cn'I" ow 1.1a <.11 '"'' .. ""! TO.ti 11 '' e1~.,~ u • ·,4 • ,, lkrwt Or t.06 I: need a dcllvtf'Y. We 'vU I de-t'onMI 1" 7.M 1"" '"'1'"'~T ·~"'"' • u • ,, t11s1 11, 114 rontr11t A.•7 7~ , .... .,. 7 •• 7 "' • • "''"' ,,·.,1i.,.. .,.., M11 11'.671 ' liver promptly "'1.thout t:xtr11 l"'Ollfl"' ,. ,, 1~ 14 .,., ~·:~: '" : ::,: : :; .,,.'l!l ROWll'· •1119 .., 10.n cilar&_('. A great mftny J,7.f,11? ~ 'b'f~ {1: ~;: , .. t. • ..;11~.,1,., ... 1 n""'"' ,, •• •• •• N•LllNOT0111 11 -ly on ''' f or their ca th ,.,."""" in t ' ,,.,, """' '... ~ ,.... 111 .., '""" R.0\11": --E ,._ ,,., IWAI•, ,..,. ND ~.,. '"' JfW).11)( ,,,...,_ ll~olOI' 11· ·71;n net:dll. Wo welcomo requnts 0o•Otw· ,,,... ',,. ~,. ... ,,,.. •.., , •• = ':I for ~•tv~ a e r v t c e A-A n-.1 · • '" 1n '' ........ 1 • ., ,., n ...... ~,., •.,. • " '""" 1 11 ""'-' ~·.1 ...... l')<otw" t11 '" ~-~ , •• , .......... -.. "'' ··~ .... lchlll"' , charge accounts. o-n• T ,· .. , ,_,, t·•-· •.. , ....... ~_.,,,. 111ftt•~·· T"''' 1 U· ..,.v..,11 s~ '"'y .. ., •• ·~"' , .., • •• ......... ''' w111tv 1. lf PARK LIDO ,HA.UA(v .,,..... l"'O ~,., ,, ........ , 4•• !'' """'•· W•Uln 10.7'1 "" T ... ~......... I• I( I' n • • •• "'·•·-• I' -1• •• W!ft1bt 7,lt l. JSI H•1pttal 1.-,., .... , r • "' ''' ..... '" •"" • .. ., .... -•"' • -.,., lnlf ~" j· l"••YI""~ l':.•e .,., ,,. "•• • ..... ~lld Gr n . N..,.,.t -..Ch '42·1SIO ,,,..., ,.,.. ,,. •. " .. ~ ... '" •" ·~ ., . .....,, ;,, ''" Defhowy ?i,,..;i~e'-.! 1;:: 1: :: ~ .:' .... ;: ,, :..: -1 ·· . -•• ~':; .. , .. ..,.,.lM t ·•----,----------'' )rd C•lll t 13 111 /It · '" ·• I'' r • --•'" • • r.u1i.•,l1•trt.. • I • -·. =(J DAILV PILOT 5 lnurt.aay, Ju11t 28, 1·11J ___ P_l1B_LI_C_N_OT_1c_E ___ , ___ P_UBLIC NOTICE 'l('T1ll0VS •1,111-.01 lllOTIC·• TO cl•DITOll NAll!\I ITATlfrll.llllT llJ,£1101t COUltT Of' TMe T'rl• MfWlllO ..,WIU tft Oril'l9 ITATI 01' CA.Lll'OIMIA l'Olt llvll-t ._, Tlfl COUNT'I' O~ OIANOI OEHE~ SPACI C:OMl'ANY, Q Ht. A•Nnt l lro. ~ S-f\. CIU10t,11t. ~ E\talt rif $HIZ.VK0 HEO•NI, OKMMd tc;..rtld I , .......... lut1 WOOll ltd., l'tOTICI! 1$ M!lfl\' GIVIN IO , ... I J....,...._ C .. 11. tHG<I ueclUo11·~ Cl' The •bcMI """'" OH.edt111 t fr·.t1111 CarlMl'h IJO ()lo, Apl, NO, I. 111111 •ti ""'°'" "'vi"' (161""1 ~11111 , ... aouna INdl, C:.111, t'Ull u lcl oecea.111 ..-. r-.itOCI lo lilt 11\tm, Rldlllrcl J, ICOIMow. ..., ltllbWDu• will! ""' -.-ry '°°""'httt. 111 ll>t ottlct A-· IUVIJf"tidt. C.Srt. tU06 vt tt..i dtf'< ol The abO"" ltftllllecl e-'• w Edward L. M.Uk.le.w. :KllS I Ntlll("t . to pr-• lntm. wl!ll !ht llKetY'V N•-' lluctt. can1. '16'IO "MJ'off•. 10 ttw undert.JGMll •I the otlle<1 Jtmff l. Nth.Oil, lt11 1<.11'19'1 RHd, ot hh A"Ol'fltyl ME$EllVE, MUMPER N.wporl ltKll, Ctlll, t2UO ANO HUGHES. 02 kv!h Flcrwtr Str .. t, Thl1 111.1tlM11 '-(Ot11h.1tlK O't' t (lflM<tl Wll AllGel-. C•lllornlt 'ICQU, whlcl'l I• 1"-JllltlnetNllO. olac:• Ill' b\l,J,..11 o! Tiit 11114t,.J911K In •II • J•~• L. Nel.on ""H.,1 perl•lnl119 to 1"4' ••••It of Wild Thll tltttlnlfll w•1 ll!M wltfl 1"9 C®"'" CIK9dtfll, wllhln lour n'IOl\lhl tlltr IM 1'i Cl1rk of <><•11111 Coun1y on Jun1 21o, 11,11 11ubll~4ll011 of lftl1 notlc:t . ltn. Dtrtd Jun. 21, 1973 • ,143541 MI NOltU HEOANI, .. ubl1111H Or•noe Co.-11 01lly PU01. E•.cutor of .... WHI J\lnt lt tnd July $, lt, lt, lt1l 20:P.73 or tllt 1b0Ye ~mtCI 11.Ctdtn• M•SE•V•, MUMI"•• AHD HUGHIS "·~----------·--tlJ SOll!tl ,IOW1r Street PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USIHlfSS Sllllt .. MMIM ltuihlll!ll L"' Alt9elff, Ctlitor1'11 tOOU Ttl\ tllJI , ..... Afl -YI fOf' ••.C:Mltr NAMI! STATEMl!HT PtltJlllhtd ~-Co.H Ot!ly PllOI. 11~1\t f0Uowl119 Pl'Hn I• d0!119 1>u1ln1n Junt 71 ind Julys, 12. lf, 191) 2031·11 PUBLIC NOTICE COLONEL eoe·s H0881ES. ltl~ H•rllor Blwd.. COlll Mt••· CAlllornl1 ,,.,, Ctlarltl It. Downs anci Ell!lfl c. NOTlce TO CltlDl'fO•S --'Downs. 20 Elden Awnue, Co111 Mt1a, Nt A 7 .. 11 C1IHornla 92627 ' tN1 1>;,o1lnus 11 Cond'1eled by a Qtn•r•I Superior Co11rt of !ht $1111 ot C11ifl)t'11l1 p1fln1rihlp · !or Ille Co1,1nly ot Oranqe. Cn1it1s R. Downl E1t11f ot MICHAEL J , BROPHY, ECIUh C Down Dec1aoed. 11111 11;iteme~1 w11 :ufll wlll'I 1,,_ COU<I· Noll« 11 r.1r11>y glwtn lo cr9dltor1 ot t Cl k of o c 1111''°"" l'lavino c1.im1 1>91ln1t It'll 1alCI l~n •r range ounry on June ll, C1tte<1111r ere requirtll to tile tMm. wl!l'I . · l'·MIM It'll 11tc:ts&ary Y(MJ(l'>tr1, In 11\1 0111,, of Pu1>ll1hta Drano• C6'•t D•Uy Piiot J1,1n1 lh1 Cler• ol tl'>t 1b0we entitled cOUf'I, or 21 21 •nd July s. 12 197~ lt"-n lo 111ew11t tt>tm with rile ntctl&at'Y ' • wucr...rs to Ille ul\Oerslglled 11 !Ill oUlce -,----,--,.-------lo' Charle• L. Keelef, 2115 Torr1nc1 BlvCI., PUBLIC NOTICE Torr1nc:e. Calltornll 90501 which 11 IM pl.ce ot Mlne11 ol the U'l1Clft'llgned In 111 -''---, -~==--~---__ m1t11rs pertaining to 11\t 1st111 of &aid ,ICTITIOUS llUSINEIS d.c.clenl, within IO..Ot ""'9fllh1 1tter !ht fl'AME STATEMllNT U"! Publlca!IO'I of !hl1 nollc1. Tiit loUowlr>g 11trr1on& ire 0011111 OlleCI June 19, 1973, bu1lne1s 11: ALFRED H. BROPHY ALLIED ADVE RTISING l\GENCY, Aamlnls1r1tor ol the E1!a!a t21 Victoria. Cosl11 Mesa, c111!1. 91'11 -ot salCI de<:eCltnl Prellon Lee 01w!1, 210 E. MOnlwood, Chlrlfl L, KHllr La Habra, ca111., sre111. liiO, Sulle 1 111' Totrance •'""'·· Rlcllard Lee Simpson, no E. Mont· T~r•"<'• Clllf. 905'1 WOOd. La H1 br1, C11ll., &ldg. 160, S11l11 Attorney ftw Adm1no111ra1or 1 Im«, Thl1 buslneu 11 conducted by 1 geroer1I Publl11>1<:1 Ora11ge Coasl Deity Pilot Ju111 P1rlrttr1hl11. 21. 29 1nd Juty J, 12, 197' lt.O.n Pra11on LH D1wl1 flkh1rCI LH Simpson ~ Tftl1 1t1tem.nt w11 flied wlrh 11\e Coun· ty Clerk of Or&lllN County on Jun. 11. lt7J. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 0, ' ..• ,, ·~ O C I ' F·l6"7 IHTl!HTION TO SliLL • "" Sucu range OllSI Oa ly p I01',',~",', N071CE IS HEflEBY GIVEN 11urs1,1ant 21, 21 1/KI J1,1ly 5, 12, 1973 ,,.. to lht! orowlslon1 of Section l4I0.1 ol lne • PUBLIC NOTICE Clwll Code of !hi: Stare 1>1 CaUfarnla, 1har fllTA M. MYERS Vendor(sl 1,11 1116 so. ------------Coast Highway, City ol Lagun~ B11c:11, FICTITIOUS BUSIJllllSS Coun!y of Orans>e, Slate of Calll1>rnla, In· NAME STATEMENT lane! 10 1111 lo CLOVANELL ELIZABETH T!tt followlllll per!Onl ;ar1 clolng FLYNN Vl'ndOl(ll, of 1565 Carrlbtln ''111y, bvtlnes• as; C!ly of ltguna Bekh, CounlY of Or11191, • GEERS PLUMllMG, 222 Ad1m1 A'19 .. $!ale ol Clllfornla, 111 that cer11l11 H\lhll11t1ton ee.ac:n, Calltorn11 l)l:rsonal Pfoperty con1l1rl011 01ner1Uy of C,..rlff S. Gair$, 11121 Mtrm•kl Cr., all 1loc:k In tracll, n)(fur11, eq1,1lpnl4fll and Hutrtl119ton BHc:h, C1tllornl1 !load wlll of a c:er!1ln REAL ESTATE Marla E. Gaer1, 9021 MerrNld Cr., BROKERAGE business k,_,n I 1 H11nlhigton 11.e&cl'I, Catlfornla SANDCASTLE REAL ESTATE localed 11 Tftll buslneu 11 cONlucted by 1 MMr&l 1716 So. Coest Highway, City of Laguna 1141r1ner1h!11. BHcll. Cl.l\lflty of Or1nge, S!tle ol Charles S. Gaer$ Calllornla, and tllat lht 1111rc11ase pr\ct This 1111tm1111t was filed wltl'I !M Coun· therl'Of will De paid at 10 o'clack, 1.m. on ty Clerk of Or1nge Count~ on Junt 11, Iha 16th ll1y of J11ty, ltlJ 11 M15510H 1,9JJ. BANK, City of L11guna Baac:n, Coun1y ol ,!Stit Orange, Slft!e of California. l"ubUs.hed Orange COiis! Dally Pllol. OATEO; June 21, 197]. Juna 11, 21, 21, Ind July S, 1973 1111-73 Rita M. Myer•. Vendor --------'-------and/or PUBUC NOTICE c1o~aMll Elll1btth Flynn "'"" ~ICTITIOUS ausu1e:ss P11bllslled Or•nsi• COllll Dally Pllof, NA.Mli STATEMENT ,·_-__ ,,_·_"_" _______ ,....,, TIM loUowlr>g persons 1r1 clol1111 ·- binln11i 111: PUBLIC NOTICE • PRISM GRAl"HIC$, nts "E" vre1or11 ------------- • ·stree1. Cotta M~ 'n427 HOTtc• TO CltlDITO.S '. Barry S. Moffl!I, 2013 N. C1Ptll1, SUPliRIOlt COURT OF THE Cost1 Mest , 91616 STAT• 0, CALll"DltHIA FOil S"9rry G. Moffatt, 2013 N. <;1pell11, THe: COUNTY DF O•ANG• COlll Mts1, 9U26. NII, A·7UU T!lll bu1lne11 II 11111111 conduct.cl by an Est1te of ANDREW BARA, 0.-ceaMd. !Ddlvlllual. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo Ille &airy S. Mof11ll o;:rtdltor1 ol the i6ow1 named Clecedent Sllarry G. Mofl1111 thal an 1Mir$Olll h1wlnt1 cl1lm1 agalnit tht Thl1 lllhlmet!I 1!1N wtth !ht Cl.l\lfllV 11111 dec:ederot are requlreCI lo lilt them, Clerk of Or1111it1 Co11nty on J ur.t 4, 'l,73. With tM nec11&ary voucher,, In Ille office Sy Thtrreu M. W1NJ, Depuly County ol tht dtrlt of The •bc>vt entftft.CI cC1Url, or Cltrk. · lo present !hem, wllfl the nectt14ry F·1S761 VflUChe15, 10 lhe under~lq.nell at 2190 Put>lllhed Orange _ COllll D1Uy Pilot, Harbor 8011levarC1, S11Ut 3\J, COlll Mfl.a, Junt 7, 14, 21. 71, 1t73 1411.n Calllornla 91626, whlcfl ls the pl•ce ol _ ___ blnlrtr1s of ttie u11Mrsl9ne<1 1n 111 matters PUBLIC NOTICE . , ------------ IJl<'l.tlnl119 to the eslat~ ol wlCI Otcedtll!, within fo11rdTIOfllhS Iller IM Hrn pUl)lk•· llon ol !his notke. ll'IC'flTIOUS BUSIHESS Dartd JllRt 26, 1t1], NAM• STATEMENT • Luctnda Mlc:ll<cll1 Guklberv 'The 1onow11111 per$Qft 1$ dol119 bu1llltss E11ec111rrx of the VJl11 ol 1s; 1111 llbc>ve named dec1dtnl PELICAN OISTtUIUTOllS, 113 •0 lt08EltT A. EASTMAN Boh.a Chfc1, Suitt H, w1,1mln"1r. Alltr..-y II L•w C~llf. !nt H1rber 81'14. • Sull1 iii .1 HHMS Cor11or1!1on. t C11ltornl1 cor· CHll M11a, CA. t21t• l)Onlllot1, 16665 Al110~11in SI .. Huntlnqlon Ttl~t: (114) 541 ..... 111.ai, Call!. t:l'4t, !C«PO«•I• bu1ln,u l\llornt't' llH" E•ttllrh• 'a lldrftl) P11blf1hed Orange Co.1! 01lly Piiot, Tiiis M lnen 11 t<'ll'lducted by a cor· Jun1 21, •nd July $, ll, 19, 197J 20'l1·1l pora11ori. ----HHMS Coroorauon PUBLIC NOTICE Slndfl Spiro, Corp. Secretary This 1111tmenl was fllect with the Cl.l\lfl··l------------- ty Clerk ol Orange COUtl!Y on Jun• 11, '"" 1'2Sf6t Pllbllthlcl Oran-ge Coast Dilly Piiot, Jv~• u , 11, 78, and July 5, 1973 179).73 Leading Economic Index Points Up WASHINGTON (AP \ -The government's index of leading economJc indicators rebounded Earnings Double For .Firm Special to lbe DaUy Pilot EL SEGUNDO Open Road Industries Inc. an- ~unced Wednesday that earn- ings per share for the fiscal year ended AprlJ 30 more than doubled from 93 cents in um: to $2 in 1973. • Net income for the yea r ended April 30 was up 160 per- cent to $3.3 million on sales of $70.9 million, which increased 86 percent over $38.2 million sales achieved in the prior year. Pretax margins in- creased from 6.9 percent to 9.3 percent during the same period. e ltlattel Shelf. WS ANGELES (AP) Toymaker Mattel lnc. has fli- ed suit to try to stop Shell Oil Co. from distributing 4.2 million toy cars except as p~ motional items at service sta- tions. The suit filed Tuesday in Superior Court said She ll now \\'ants to sell lhe Mattel toys at retail stores although when It ordered them "Shell kne\v or should have known that a real or claimed gasoline shortage was impending and th.at it would discontinue pro- mot ional premiums in view of the shortage." e Wbae Contrft<!t .MODESTO (AP) -The world 's largest wine maker. Gallo Bros., has announced it will nego~iate with t h e Teamsters Union on a con- tract for field workers previously represented by the United Farm Workers Union. The_Cesar_Cbaxe;:!.ed UF\V, \\·hich. already is battling the Teamster s for union dominance of table grape and lettuce workers, planned to picket Gallo vi n eyards starting \Vednesday, UFW organizer Aggie Rose an- nounced. e Truckers Out I No-fault May Get New Lift • •• . ' Complete.'.New . York St~k List .... ft:l:f Hklll LM u.'.t C , ,. I , . • Market Down, Up; T1·adU.g Slackens NEW YPRK (AP) -The stock market bounced around W.ednesday, closing slightly higher in lack- luster trading. The. market. opened higher, slid backwards, then rallied near the close. ''The market put on a pretty .good performance today," said Larry Wachtel o! Bache & Co. "The dollar wa s under pressu,re all day and there was talk o! higher interest rates in the near luture.11 ... , $_ e Gu Priees WASHINGTON (UPI) - The C4st of Living Council reports more than I , 1 O t wvict statiolls across tbt country hav• rolled bod< galOUne prices 11 a result of checks by the Internal Revenue Senrlce on consumer complaints. A council rep:irt issutd Mon- day said IRS agentr fOUDd 741 i ndependents and 385 company-owned s t a t i on• chargiq: prices 1bove the lteaie 1eve1. It s1id the average overcharse was 2 centr por 1111.,,. eFleet-4 • . . j • • · I THE PICK OF Punch 1 1 • ' "No w11tpowe1, that's his trouble." • Sclaool Co11rse Meclitation Aid To. Drug Crisis? .. SAN FRANCISCO (AP \ - Adding transcendental n1erJita- tion to lhe curri culun1 might help fight drug use among high school student s, says a member of the board of education. Lucille A b r a h a 1n so n . chairman cf the ·board's cur- riculum c-omn1i11ee. said the prcpasal is u n d e r con- sideration as a n1eans to com- bat the growing drug problem in the public schools. . (EDUCATION) "It is not as fa r out as it sound s," she said. She said a disciple of ~laharishe Mahesh Yogi. (he Indian \Vho gained fame as spiritu<il advi ser to t he Beatie:;. is due ~o appear .. · before the committee. and an advocate of 1.hc Tibetan "mind nleditalioo" already made proposals. ' echlld Care SAN DIEGO (APJ -Child· care centers at San Diego city schools will stay open at their present levels, despite an ex- pected loss of $500.000 in federal funding. under a 19711- 74 budget proix>sed by the Board of Education. The budget appropriates n1oney to maintain the present program which provides child care and preschool instruction to t,100 families for $2.9 million. If new federal guidelines take effect and proposed state support doesn't materialize. a special property •tax override 1vill be sought, said Supt Thomas L. Goodman. dlstrict could api::ly £or UJ> to S25.000 to help S\\'itch to ex- perimental year-round schools. Rodda 's bill would also free some slate school lbu1lding aid funds ,to be used ID convert school buildings fer year-round use. For instance, the moneY, might •be used to install air conditioners in hot areas. "\Vhat you have lhere is a carrot for the di stricts." said Finance Committee Chairman Randolph CoUier. ([).Yreka J. esex Bia~ SAN FRANCISCO tAP) - An art historian is suing UC Davis, charging she \vas refus- ed tenure for "extraneous con- si derations" including ·that she is a wo n1an. Dr. Susan Regan 'l\.icKil\op. \Vho is employed part-time at Sacramento State, said she served on the UC Davis staff from January 1964 until ·being denied permanent status in June 1971. Her husband is a mechanical engineering pro- fessor at UC Davis, where her parents also \\'ere teachers. < e Bill Sig11ed ~Capitol News Service SACRAI\1ENTO -Gov . Ronald Reagan has signed. into law a 'bill by 'Assemblyman Ken MacDonald ([).Ventura) v.·hich will 'allo\v greater flex- ibility for school districts to deal with hand i capped children. Th e measure permits the county superinte ndent o f schools to contract wi:.h a district or another county t J provide education for the physically handicapped pupils residing anywhere \vithin the county. Tile measure had bi-partisan e All-year support -Ojai Republican Robert Lagomarsino v.·as co- --sACRA-MEl\"l'O rA:P i 3uTh-or -.gnd the backing of Local school di stricts would be state schwl superintendent l'ncouraged to .try out year \V ilson Riles. ... round schools under a $600.000,i" __________ i l bill endorsed 10--0 by the ll Senate Finance Committee. Under the bill by Sen. Albert Rodda. tD--Sacramcnto J. a , Jury Acquits l ridia11 /1i Sliooting DOES YOUR LIFE NEED NE\\' MEANING SONORA <AP) -A jury of ? nlne v.·oinen and three men has found C on s I a n c i o De0ca1npo, a part-1'1iwok In- dian. innocent in the fatal shooting or a Jamesto\1'Tl man at a raucous party last Sep- tember. Th e p.1nel de I i be ra led 21h hours Tuesday before hand- ing ifs verdict to Tuolumne Coun1.v Superior Court Judge Ross A. Carkect. DJo:OCAJ\1 PO. 36, a \'nll ejo janitor. v.•as accused in the murder of AndrC\\P Nelson. 20. '•Police reported there had been consi derable drinking a nd marijuana smoking at the p.'lr- ty attended bv 120 persons and ~ that several fights erupled. I "i though! l v.•ould never get j Justice in this little tO~'fl. ,. DeOoamPo saiO after his ac- quiltaL Ma ybt what you need is a new concept of what li fe is . It begins with the Bible, which tells ~s that God, Spirit. is the source end substa nce of life. An understanding of the spiritual nature o f life can bring fresh. nes1 to your daily e11perience. It h•s brought he eling to m1ny pe9ple tod•y. Come i nd hei r Gordon F. C1mpbell in • lively t1lk on Christian Science: "This was an all-white jury. Bul J found oul that maybe "Why Put Up there ls justice for people like With Fe1r7" u~ In Qillfornia and through· IO:lO AM out ,the U.S.'' Saturd•y. June 30 DEOCAMPO WAS the ri rsl South Coa5t Theetre CDllfomla defendant in i• years _to !land' .._tria l , for j Child Care at Churc:h murder arter 8 s:rand JUrv blS Righ Cr., L1guna -Bch relllsed lo indict hi m, OrrlCl'11S ,-~~~~~~~~~r ·said. 1 -- .. Some 40 Bpeettttors, mostly .,. De0campo1s friends and In- dian movement sympathizers. , were )>tes<nl when 111< W'dlct """' 1nnouneed . KidS Like To Ask A1ul y I • Adjustable 7-foot Patio Umbrella Provides welcomed shade during hot summer months. Comes in assorted bright patterns. .... 19ss 74.11 -·-- .\ \ \ ·~·~ " '\' --t-\~, \, Set of 3 Long Handled Barbecue Skewers Just the thing for summer cook- outs. Set of three barbecue skewers with chrome plated 12 inch handles and pushdown feature fa remove food easier without burns. Reg. sac 1.29 -- . ' -· • •• . . • • • • ff flPPY 111 4th· ·,fr.om .C.Qf. Kerin ••• - ~ ,, .. Decorative Redwood Fan Type Trellis Beo utilu\ way lo support climbing roses and ..,ines. knocked down for Irons· porting . 6 ft. hiqh. ''•· 99_c -I.ft Spacious Double Size Hibachi Lorge enough fa prepa re a meal for the entire fomily a t one time . Hibachi cooking is fun, too! .... -4 -aa •••• ·~ .... ~ Electric 'Crock Pot' ••. The Slow Cooker 3 Y2 quart model ... the per· feet size for a family of 41 to 6 . Cooks a variety of delights slowly. Recipe book included. Relax and Enjoy The HGliday More Plush, 3 Inch Thick Chaise Lounge Pads Thi cker and plu sher than most, these pads are so comfortable , t.o lounge on. Prints or Solids. s '• •, ' Long Handled Garden Tools by True Temper American mode q uality. Bow rake, p ointed shovel, or hoe. Toke yo ur pick right now. I~! Features twin trigger dual control system for in depen· dent throttle a ctuation. O ui· efer, too. --11995 Ice Cube Tray Makes Giant Cubes Unb reokoble plastic troy a l- lows you to remo..,e one cube or on e ntire troyful. 6 colors. 35c ' Will Be Closed Wed., July 4th Germain's Rose Guard Feeds A'nd Weeds Triple a ction Rose Guard feeds, weeds and kills in- sects, too. A ba la nced fertili· zer. 51b. 249_ Black & Decker Shop Vacuum 2~'' d iameter hose, rectan- gular nozzle, adopter for 11.4" accessories. Picks up dust, debris; wood chips. 29!~ ill• o· "· . !ANIA ANA .... , I. • ' • . . •• Thursday, June 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT P Hypnotic . Trance Helps Blair Conquer Fear BALTIMORE (AP) -Paul Blalr <loetol't -being hypnotised. but he appears to be In a cootlnuing ookll· tb&-W«ld trance the way he's -lilt· ting the ball ol late. · Since vlslung a Baltimore poycbiatrlsl on June 15, seeking a cure for a sub- ·C0111C10U8 fear of bean balls, the Orioles' outfielder has clubbed American Lague pitching for a .522 average. "I'm more rela1ed at lhe plate oow," ,Blair said. , In his last IZ games, Blair bu col· Braves Seek Way to ~low Red-hot LA , ATLANTA (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers a~ riding their fattest first ,place lead J!l a decade and team captain Willie Davis says only the Dodgen -themselves can knock the club off the top. • "NoOOdy outside this team can hurt ,us." Davis said. .. U we can keep the same attitude and · Dodgers S klte '"""'· 5 p,M, t ;2S p.m. lt:lt il,fl'I, ··~ lighling· spirit there's no way we can JpSe." Loolng.is,somelhing the Dodgers hove 1experienced !nfnquently of late. winning • 11' of their' last 12 games. And .after an 111-9 pe;fonnance In May, lhe DOdgers have posted an 13-7 mark in ·June .. : The Dodgers, !die Wedneaday, -a six game lead over San Francisco and Houstm In the National League West into a tw!nlght doubleheader agalmt the Atlanta Braves this evening. lected 14 lilts lo • trlpl, Incl'"""' ab: double1. • triple and --.. driven In 10 runs and scor"1 11 more. Baltinc .211 Ill M.IJ.Jt. be Is ..... - In· the JMaue atr.321. "I'll never forget I was beaned," Blair sald. "I sWI want lo be aware ol the danger. But Ute difference """ Is that I have ooofidence that I can g<t· out ol the way of the ball.•• Blllr WU·CUt down Clll May lt0 1970, by a Km Tatum pil<:b wl>idl-1)'enclod his career. He auf!ettd ll!l'ious eye and facW lnjirles. and his baltJnc averap declined steedUy each YOlt &Ince, dipping to.m1u1 ........ ..................... from .,-u wriw, Blair visited Dr. Jacob H. Com to diacuaa his problem. During a 45-minute semdoo, the psycbiatrbt restored Blair's confidence in his ability to avoid inside pitches. "It ls amazing," said Dr. Oxm, a past pi-ol file Society for Cilli<:8l end Elperimental Hypnosis, "'that in me seaslon ba was able lo lrieam a three- year habit ol a fearful t)'l>e." "Hynosls ls a normal response under certain condit.ions/' Qian, l'llllid, "and the basic condition ls trust. Paul put his iife In my hands, because I was asking him to stand 60 feet away aod have a ball thrown at hl.m at about 90 miles an hour. "Ouek:Ing is not a hangup, but a normal instinctual process. Paul was unable to control his head jerking out of the way." Blair said he was not aware -he bad ,. Andy MesoersmiUt, J.6, was scheduled to lace the Braves• knucklebaUing Pbll 'Jfiekro, 8-4, in the first game. Tommy Jolm -a 7.3 """"d into the -game 10.. Los Angeles wlUt Rm Reed. f. t ,.ping for Atlanta. Ul'I TIMlolNll VADA PINSON CLEFT) STRAYED TOO FAR OFF BAG AND CHICAGO'S DICK ALLEN TAGS HIM OUT. The Dodgers al90 face the Braves in a ai.ngie game Friday night then continue the ~en-game trip Saturday,. Sunday and -y in Cincinnati. Sports In. Brief Loo Angeles returns Tueoday lo boot ... Dletll>. the team the Dod< ... beat lwt,oa tO open the road seLI · • - Davis said the 1973 Dodgen have a lllJedal "attitude" about the team that' ••js 8(llnething we've never had." Study Reveals Artificial Turf • ltnlinn Clips 800 Mark ; ' A> he put It, "Just becaule _,. Is In the lineup doeon't mean lhe 111JY1 on Ibo bencto are left out," nilerrfng to players who wanted lo be traded alter teeUw little action. Not Dangerous . NEW YORK (AP) -Artificial turf 1111y not be all It's cracked up to be - but it's not the villain !bet the National Football League Players · Associalion says it is. Japan Grabs First Win I The ooly thing that could hurt the loom, said Davis, would he if players "'challp and start gelling on each other" IMtead ol lhe other team. "If tllef keep their concentration on our ball club there's no way we can go __Jllt'IUJ& • I f 'Ibe NFLPA asked OxmniJsioner Pete Rooel1e la.t weekend fer • - m the insta11alion ol ortlfldll turf, """" tending that It may be tile cau.e of ln- crea!ed and """" ...... injuries. But on Wecbd.y, Rozelle rdeaocd a study by the -Research lnstlUXe -Cll51yS1hit;--wliOii'"1t comes IO c:.1us- ing major injuries. there's no difference betw""' artificial turf and the real Utlng. -Prep-Pken-u-m- lmpresses All lnMoundDebut But lhe 1acfl of a oomtanUy cleared "buffer 1.0lle" along the sidelines, the lack d.. proper wannup time after haUtime and the Improper """ of equip- ment came in fer .:xne 'blame and the NFL is talting stepo lo comcl thoee pro- lllems, Rozelle said at lhe league's an- ARUNGTON, Tex. (AP) lucky they didn't kill me." -"[ was nu.al owners meeting, expected to wind up early today. 11lat was young David C1yde's reaction lo bis major league debut In wlllch he ellowed J.l!nnesota only ooe bit in five iJ>. nlnp and the Texas Rangers beat Min- nesota 4.J Wednesday nighl Clyde, who was the Rangen' No. 1 free ligent draft pick earlier this month and signed for over $t00,000, struck out eiglll Twim In his five-Inning stint and got credit for the victory. "I Was nervous and wild at the start, but those three consecutive strikeouts in 1he find; inning _gave me the O)!•Meoce I needed," said Clyde. Glyde walked lhe fint two 'batters and 18itl to himseU, "Good Lord, here it ii !he' !in! inning!1 I'm nol Finl lo flOI anybody out • • they're just ..... rip me. But I relax arod got out ol U." Clyde said of Mike Adains" -In- ning two-run homer "Well, I knew I wu going to give up one sooner or later in the big leagues. Only I dido~ -II would be !bet soon." The.· IS'year .. ld Jen.hander aid "my I.Ill bell worted well. I th!nl< I con ptldl In lbe ·major leagues now. Bui U they ltill want lo oend me down lo the m1mn that'• okay too." Rozelle said there wml be any moratorium -a newer vtJfteial surface has been placed In the Mtrodome, home ol the Ho<.-Oilers, and Is being iJ>. 8talled In 1\!1ane Stadium. where the New Orleans SainU play -but he added thal the ltUdy Clll the relalionsbip of ar.Uflclal turf and injuries will continue. Nevertheless. the turf islue coold l!lushroom. The National Labor Relatioos Board bu elready ruled !bet it is a negot1abte 'Issue u far aS the next con- traot talks ... cmcerned. But Jim Kensil, eucutlve director ol lbe NFL, lllid at Wedneoday's meeting that there is curnotly nodlinJr In the coile<llve barpi'*'I, t.ib ~erring to arlificia1 turf. "I om uking our olflclals lo be especially alert for fouls commitU!d against running backs and quarterbacks," Rozeae said 1n hla state- ment. "It'a only natural that action centers oo these two positions, because they ban lhe football 11101t o1 the time. Bui ... w•t to doterm1no If the higher Injury rate Is a !WIO!lon ol being the focua OI IClion or ii thete JUy.rs aro the VicWnl of unnecessary violadons, >I m.LAN, Italy -Marcello Fiasconaro of Italy broke.the world,,.._sOO·meter record Wednesday with a time of 1:43'.7 in lbe ltaly-CzedJoolovaltia track meet. The South African-born Fiasconaro broke the 1:44.3 mark set by Peter Snell . ol New Zeal'\fld in 1962. The record had been equalled by Ralph Doubell ol Australia in 1968 and by America's Dave Wottle last ear, J apan Wins OMAHA, Neb. -Japan capitalir.ed on the wil<in= of United Stares pitchers Wednesday night in salvaging the win<Np of the Omaha phase of the International baseball series by a 4-2 score. Jeff Reinke, USC sophomore left· haOOtt, walked the base!I lull lb the fourth inning. USC Junior IOUlhpaw Brian Heublein issued two more walks to force in two runs that started the Japanese on their way lo the victory before 4,305. The U.S. has won four and lost one in the rivalry that will conclude in Anaheim Stadium Friday and Saturday. More Records , 11ELSINKI -Ben Jipcho of Kenya set a world record by nawling the ~.ooo meters steeplechase in 8:14.0 al the World Track Games Wednesday. Jipcbo, 29, beat his own record by more than five seoonds, lowering the mark of 8:19.8, which be set here two weeks ago. Asher '2nd AKRON, Ohio -COsLa Mesa's Barry Asher holds second place In the money· wimlng Standings ol the Profe!Slonal Bowlers Association this week after finishing filUt In the Freono Open la.st -km!. I I j IA•, .. Asher, who picked up fl,250 at FreOnO has totaled 141,446 on the tour this seuon, second only lo Don McCune's !50,540. Other top ten money wimers Contreras BaCtles seillaek 1!r~!!= ~~olbul~~ by~:..~=:-.:= M.ike Contreras bu ..ir.r.d what be . ~ -•·-coadl, -1nt1.,.r.bacl< to the .chtb's regular 'pre- bope•,wlll be jut! a lomporoey -• ~ol~~ondlo~~ •. beonlbo -• ....;...· ,. on hlJ way to a pro1...-1 ~ ·-·· .. _._ ~ .. ~·· -~ eer<ei after being cut by the Pwt1and ~ 9119 •tomn hlln't con-"I'll -to tali< lo my coach (Arirona ™ilblazers. ___ ~ htm In 11!11~· . -~!Jte'sJ;ed_)Vulk) and see what be """ And he's not giving up e1ther. Ooiiireras, a formor ~ ~ .,,_.is," Cmlferu .. )ll. "If I don 't ;11 really don'! know where I ...m ·Hlcli and Arbono tltaco Un!Yentty -· malte ti to the """ 1llis year;-1'11 go wrong " Contreru says In looltlna bade "P"lt a week ol lln ee • dlQ> -. lilt:k to-MllllJtil -• and flnlsb my on a Week -al Ille 'f'ratlbiaWll "'°"" wtth odlOI' hopelu9•at the lr)'olrt oomp. -toil and d!ea maybe try lo go lo le ~amp In Portland recently. He had 1-1 -by tile l'lll1lallcl •. O:U.--on." • "I don't know whet they're loolt~ for, team on tile -round ol !lie NllA>CIN!t 1blo .....,...., CGaetas t. keeping In bu! 1 ltUI leel q can make~ Ir Ille pros. aflor 1'8diog Arllano·-lo tlle Weal-.._by,.,.. ll>lhe Colla -ree- with their totals include: Jim Godman ($35,570), Dick Ritger ($35,040), Carmen Salvino ($29,250), Dick \Veber ($27,060); Don Johnson ($25,413), Jay Robinson ($21,600), Earl Anthony ($20,550) and Dave Sootar ($19,540 ). NBA Clean .LOS ANGLES---Commissioner Walter Kennedy or the ·National Basketball Association says the league has no drug abuse problem and would intervene if a team tries to "whitewash" a violation. Kennedy submi tted a report on drugs to the NBA Board of Governors that opened a three-day meeting"'W"ednesday at the Beverly Hill s Hotel. The report carried no recommendation and, -xen. nedy said, brought no noteworthy response from club officials and owners. been hypnotized, but Conn conteoded the outfielder was so involved in carrying out in.strucUons that be didn't tealize be had been put under a light trance. Alter watching a blinking light, Blair closed his eyes as Conn offered sug- gestions. . '·Paul is a fine athlete in excellent con- dition," Coon said, "and when I !old him he should be able lo duck out of tbe way, he seemed lo be impressed with that." Dr. C.onn, who acknowledges be can't create bitters from per90l'\S wldkMd baseball talent, said he bu !old BlaJr be now expects him to hit .400. ' "I'm not a prophet," c.mn sald. ''BUt Paul's confidence has been growing with repeated SUCces.!I. "When he telephoned me, I told hlni, •t have faith in you, now you can haft fatth in yourselr. On that basis, 1 expect you \0 hit .400.' .. At the rata he's going, Blair may have to slow down a bit. We've ·Become A Good Te.a~, Manager Bobby Winkles concedes that during spring training he never thought his California Angels would be leading the American League West in la te June. But now ·that the Angels have grabbed the top spot: Winkles says the team .. feels they belong right where they are, and so does the manager." A 3-1 victory over the sliding Oticago White Sox: Wednesday night at Anaheim A ngels Slate AM 0•-Ill kMn 17111 Jun1 71 ChkltllO ill Cillitornla June 29 Mlnnno\• ill Calllo>rnl" Jun1 30 Mlnneso • at Calllornll July 1 Mlnnnolat 11 C11lfornl11 7:55 p,m • 7:55 p'.m. 6:55 p,m, S:SS p.m. Stadium was the fourth Angels win in a row and kept Ca lifornia ra half • game ahead of Oakland. "Our pitching is keeping us in it and we're scorln"g runs better than I thought," Winkles said. "Ano~r 'big factor has been our abili- ty to come 1 rom behind," he continued. "We've done it 16 times this year and three times we've been down ~ and -come back to win." The manager admitted he was Yt'Orried about the club in the spring. "Anybody who saw us then would have figured us to battle Texas for last place. "We were .not a good team then but \\'e've become a good team. We've strengthened. ourselves," said Winkles. The Angels battled their way into fu:st place by :winning 12 of their last 17 games. Chicago, on the other hand, is moving the other way losing 10 of their last 14 and after leading the division now tralls the Ange ls by 1 'h games . California goes for its fifth straight vic- tory tonight. concluding a two game set with the White Sox. Clyde Wright, 6-9, who has given up just one run in his Jast 27 innings, will face Steve Stone, 2-3, of the White Sox. First baseman Mike Epstein offered CHICAGO CALl,OINlll. MrllrtM' il•rflrllf IC.eftv. rf • 0 0 0 Alomilr. 2tl 3 1 0 0 Muwr. If • 0 I 0 P lf\IOtl, If 3 0 2 0 -Allft. lb .f 0 e •-Roblfl$Gl"I, di'! 2 O 0 1 Metoln. lb l O O O Epstein, lb 3 1 1 2 Milr. di! l 1 1 o Scllelnbli.m, rr l o 1 o H'1'rmi1n11, c J o o o· St&nton, rf o o o o Ort.,, 2l:i J 0 1 0 Berry, cf • o lo Stwo,.-p, cf l 0 1 1 G1ll119h'1'", 3b 3 O O O Leon,» l O O O MflOll,ss 3010 Jol'lf\'Ol'I, p o o o O Torborg, c 2 1 O o f-ter, 1> O O O D Singer, p o O o o ro1.,11 :xi 1 • I Tot111 26 l 1 3 Cltleollgo 000 GOO 010 -I C1lllwnli1 063 ooo oox -l E-Hl'l"rmilnn, Leon 2. DP-Chicago •. Ci1lllornt1 1. LOB-Cltlcilgo '· Ciltlforn!• 1. HR-Epst1rn 3. se-Orlil. S-Alomor, PlnlOn. SF-F. Robinson. B. Jol'lnlOll L, l·l fOl"Sl'1' Sll'tller W, 12-"1 T-1:51. A-11,171, II' H .R Ell aa SO 51135 335• 22/32'0000 9 41 1 0 7 that, "I think an indication of how bad this team wants to win was our perfonnance TUe!day night against Kansas City. We scored six limes in tM last two innings and won. • "That's the mark ol a champb> That's how you win pennants." Califumia gave BUI Singer, 1).3, aD the runs he needed when they battered Bart Johnson, H, for all three ol ill runs in the third !ming. Jeff Torborg walked and b e a I Johnson's throw to oecond afl8 Sandy AJomar bunted. Vada Pinson's sacrifice moved the nmnen up and Frank Robinson got Torborg heme with a sacrifice fly. Then Epstein bombed a two-nm hxneT' over the rightfield wall. lt was his. third of the season and his first at Anaheim Stadium. Singer used ooly 98 pitches lo dispotc1t the Sox and said, "I like the Idea of being in first place." So docs Bobby Wlnkles. Youths Shine, Veterans Gain At Wimbledon WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -Rain which fell over Wimbledon most ol this moming stopped In time for play to start on schedule, and fiftfl..seeded Rosemary Casals ol San Francisco took advantage of the break in the weather to score a 6-J. 6-4 second round victory over Sue Mapptn of Britain. In other second round matches featur· ing headline performers, Evo nne Goolagong of AU!ltralia downed Bri1oo Jill Cooper 6-.l, S.1 and Olga -..Ova of Russia eliminated Australian P a ti I Coleman 7-5, 6-2. In addlUoo, Keqy Melville of AU9tralia beat Ilana Kloss GI South Africa 6-1, 6-4. Another suce<ssful U.S. woman, Krillll' Kemmer of Los Angeles, advanced to third round play wiUt a 7-5, H vic:lory . over South African I.inky Boshoff. 1 Today'11 play came after a day Wednesday that saw the youth movement in temls keep pace with the eataNillf>ed stars at W"unbledon. While Margaret Court and Die N-.., boUt top.seeded. advanced, their !- were malched by Bjorn Borg and ails Evert, who a19o· won. Borg, the 17-year-old Swedish aee, scored a S-4, &-2, M victory ewer BelguiJn's Patrictt llombel'gm 5-iocl No. 6 In t~ tourney, he is providing ~ gl~ to the men's stnglei diVISIOll, whidl was stripped when lhe As8oclation of Tennis Professionals ordered iis boy<ott In sympathy fw Nikki Pilic. Nastase, I h e flamboyant Romanian W/io is de(ying the boycott, bad lo auffer wiUt a bad back during his 11-2. HI, 7-5, g. l victory over Ivan Molina ol O>lomllla, WOM•N'1 SIN•L•I .. ,,.,It ... 1(rl1tr. Kemmer, LOI Arlgtln, bNI Hllltl OOuri.y A1.11tr1l 1, .. 1, M , 1 JUI COOllM'. lrltl ln, bNt 9i1"'1rl a-n., A ...... Cillll,. "°' ... ~. Lilurlt Fl1mlntt, For'l L•udlniilll, '11 .. bell ~ T1nnty, LOI A~tl", ..a, ..... A P1tt1, Hou•"· Le Joll1. btill Chrltt\1'11 ~ uslrl l ii. 7-9, .,..., .... • Llur1 Dup0nf, Cl'llrloll•, N.c.. DMI H. o.r.. . Ji101m, .. 2 • ._2. fsal* "-•· Coh1mo11, bllt 8'Nflllt w.... sen lttfMI, ,..,, '4. ...._ -·-Tory Frtti, LOI ~It$. 111.t Vk kl -C1rlldll, ._., W. Ctvh Ev..-1, Fort Uvdlnie .. , FM,. .... J_.,. Gohn, ltCMTW1(1f1, ...... 1. Glyfwlll Coln. 8rll1ln, bNI F1y "-Yttf, A41etr .... w.w. vr,.1n11 Wilde, a r\taln, bHt l'1t ._,,_, ......_ 7.S. "2. Mar911•1f c-1, A111lr1Ua. bHt ~ Kr-Austr1111, '"2, "3. M•N'I 11111-.•1 ' -·-J,lmmy Connon~ hlll\olllt, 111 .. Nit-o.vw L-' er lilln M , w,, ,.,, ._l. • 11~1 lllorO. "IWlllln. 11111 l'1trlc• ... llnMt .... I tlOIUfl'I M , ~. M. I Ait11 fMl~tl, lllllMll. llMt ... 011.... ' Mttrellil ..... 7.. I "''" l'lwrWllWI, °'"'*'" kit MwcM ...... ,_.. lco '"' 7-S. 2-t ... 1. 1.a. 't"lldlm11r zt11r1111;, C11tt101llvto.1" ..., ciey ...._ l rltilln1. "3, ~ ..._ '"t. .. Jlrf H~ C11ChDllllvkS., belt Aflt9nle ~If. I lt1ly 1-5, 1~ ...... , ..... t. Dfoll Jouwt, 'Il~ Mii J1fn11 i-w. a,..,.. ' Cltlll .... ~ .. ,, 2 ..... RI i(ll(lft, Aut rillli11 bffl TlllftY .......... .J •'4 ••. ,, ''°· k . . • ~ -Mtlltr". OltlTliln.,, 111111 1111 ....,... P'lile Vfr$, '"'· .... .... ]I hrnle Miiton, Sou!!\ /\lr1<1. llllflt ~ ow., Looleoul Mounteln. 'ftf'l!l ..... 74. 2.., 4>4', J;i. ' • °"'" Ptr"klM. AU-l'l"illfl, 1111Mt ltldty UW--. ' Scluttl AfrlCI, 4'. .. ,, U. t-1, )H. 111•'1 Hlltlltt, ll:omet1l1. Oii! 1¥111 #lellfla. C~ .... 1, , .. , '"· .. ,. Mind Amir•!. lllOJ1, OHi ..,_... --.. ltlOIUfl'I. .. 1 ....... 1. P.nc:no WillltlilU, hn ""'""" T-.. """" a.. Mllkll'lll· I""''' ,..., .. 1 ... 1 ...... l can ploy wllll anybody." em Reslonob ol Ille NCAA baoilelt>all ......, departriJont's _. belkelball Conlreras was abo drafted by file San tou1namen~ leecue 'llhile •""11lnc Ills nes1 move. Ufll,........ JIMMY CONNORS TAKES A F~LL BUT WINS ANYWAY. s~ ~· G«mtny,-. .-.-• Jlhn l'ltl!Hj.' klu ll\ Afi'l<I. bfft ,..._. Cwtt.,. """"- •4. ..,, 1... '· l>J. - i 1 l • . ... ' ... ·-· ,..,_.,. ,.,. "'"' ... 11ur '--"' ' Junior Col"lege All-stars May Play Series in Japan Golden W.St College baseball coach Fred ltoover is lD the proceas of pulling off the coup of the year in JC baseball circles. Hoover says he's just about finalized a series with the Japanese All-star team and a C.'ali!omia jwlior college all-star nine for oe.xt summer in Japan. ''l've been working on this since last C!lFist- mas and I think it's .sot a real good cbanco. ' CRAIG SHEFF Strlcllla adds tbal aaolhor --U· EtlUda Hlgll slaadoot Gary Ors111 -alM will au.ad Ille San Lah Obllpo cam .... Or- gill lllCI Jtff SI. Clllr wtre "'"8bly Ille -I COllliJ&eat players for Golden Wes& die put two1euou. SI. Clllr la htadtd f0r Te:ras AA! u* ver'llty tKlogsviUe, Tex.) wblle uetber Rutlkrs 1larler -Jell Bull -,.... to a~ tend Cal Slate (Fa~). ~ Bob Balin- bridge wm play for Warree Pacific Oolkge neai: Portland: Busy Flip Darr, the Saddleback Collese aquatics coach, says he'll coach a World Games swimming team that will tour South America right after the National AAU meet Aug. 22. Members of the team will give ex- hibitions and conduct clinics. • I should know for sure this weekend," says Darr, recently named to the new Saddle. back post, !las-lined Up most of bis water polo schedule for next season. . Saddleback will play· 16 Mission Conference games and also compete in the Santa Bar- bara Gold Coast and Mission tournaments. FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S GARY COCHRAN RUNS AT ORANGE COUNTY INTERNATIONAL RACEWAY SATURDAY NIGHT. Hoover. · Tbe lntematipnal Rotary Club is sponsor-- ing ·lhf! current Japan-U.S.A. series and Hoover is hopeful of the same kind of spon- sorship next sumn:ier. At OCIR Saturday It would probably be a tw~week trip. Chee . * * * king the JC scene: Mark Dekker, who helped Golden West College 's basketball &eam to a conference title in 1~71 and a third place flnlth In the state tournament, figures to play a key Nie for Cal Poly (Sao Luis Obispo) oezt IUIOD. Derr, 38, who conipeted as a distance free- stylei at Wyomjng 'University, says his best event -coaching-wise -is the individual medley. "It's a more exciting race and it gives the kids more of a variety. A swimmer also bas a chance to compete on a team easier if he has more than One stroke. Otherwise be might not be needed as much. ' Blackies Bag Tie For Lead Cochran in Spotlight Estancia HostsAAU Wrestlers Dekker, a Sanliago HJgb product, bad a lot of IChotutlc problems at Golde• West, but bas apparently come of age In that depart.- meot. John Seymour, one or Ille better sbootlng JC guards in Orange Coanty basketball lbe past two seasons, bat accepted a scholar· shop to tbe University of Aluta, reporq OCC cage boss, Herb Uvaey. Seymour played two H890al at OCC, alter prepping at Servile. He bad to sit out the '71·7% campaign and dJd ·not see any actloa the final aemet&er of last season -an. becaue of grade defi.. clencles. OCC aquatics transfers: Ron Mislotek has been given a full ride to UC Santa Barbara and will reportedly play water polo only. But the 6-10 Dekker, wbo ls an outstanding baseline abooter and a very good rebounder, got bis grades up and will be eUglble to play for tbe Mustangs In '73--7f, And Pirates Mike Beal, Randy Blatterman. Preston Hobbie.and Mike O'Brien are headed for Humboldt State. Bill McAneny will attend Cal (Berkeley)1 Dan Kent is expected toe~ roll at_ Cal S~ate (Long Beach) and Doug Moon 1s learung toward the University of Denver. "I understand he's loflt about 25 pounds and is really wortclng bard,'' says Golden Wes t coach Dick Str.lcklln. "U be works bard, he'll really belp tbem." Artists, Mesa Stay Unbeaten h1 Laguna Beach Cage Loop l..aguna Beach and Costa Mesa have set themselves up for a clash between unbeatens Monday evening in µte Laguna Beach High swnmer •boskel· ball leegue tollowing. their second cooqueot W-ay nigllt. Costa Mesa's Mustangs, unbeaten through four games in the Orange League, rambl- ed to their second win in the Laguna circuit with a 64-55 win over Missjon Viejo High'• Gold team. And LagWla Beach kept pace with a 69-64 victory over University. In the other test it was Mission Viejo's Red unit disposing of San Clemente, si. 48. Mesa 's dominance o ver Mission Viejo's Gold was a balanced. affair with 11 players sharing in the scoring column. Andy Sager took his turn al leading the Mustangs, scoring 14. Mario O'Brien and Dave Harris led the Mission attack with 24 and 17 -HaITis with 12 field goab. Laguna Beach's Mike Ser- rano played a nifty floor game and cashed in with ~1 field goals for 22 points in leading Laguna. Dave Kiesselbach and Mike Koenig added 15 and 10. Missim Viejo Red's win over San Clemente was a foul- ridden test as five players from the two tealll6 fouled out. C•I• ~ ('4/t '' Swtln o 1 ": ) C1,1mmlru. J 1 .c J Stuer ' 1 1 14 Stlti•r 5 o J -10 C1rlco 1 o 1 ' H1rti1 • 101 2 Hol'lmtn l O 1 4 Solomon 1 o 2 2 W1tennen 1 o l 2 J•Cobl 2 2 2 4 Runklt S o o 10 T011l1 2t 6 1• u Ml..,_ Vlflt Gol• CM) ~·er1e11 1'1 ~ '1 Z oc:nl1 1gt~ H1rrl1 ' s 3 17 Jtffrtvs O o 1 o Mllt•rcl 2 'O 2 ' Tot111 2S s 12 SS Snr. llY 0-!1ers Co1f1 M111 It a 21 16 -M MllllCll't \llt!O 5 ll 1, 23 -SS LlftMI ... ci .... , . . . ,. .. St11 Cl11M11,_ t41J sen--II I 4 22 'P'~''''Ratllbun 2317 b'c:;1 1 1 ~ 1J Mt Mtnus I o ' ,•, Rocerfs 2 o 1 , K!nttl~ch ,• '•', , Forem•n s o s lo Wll!ett Sl•vro o o l 0 Kornl11 s 2 o0 30 "• O.ntmOt"• 1 o s 2 TheneH IC•lot1 S I S 11 To1'll 29 11 11 VI Tl!/ilor 1 o J 2 Unlwnl'L (+'h, "• ol•I• 23 2 23 4 Cetd-ll 1 '1 Ml1.i• Vfeio,.ff.edft(ft)pf '-,, ~~1;:~ ~ & t ~ O'Brl•n e s o 1)' , 1 Zoog 12$ B~=r !~~} ~=~~Is ; l 35 U0 While S 2 i' U • Bt-ek 4 7 IS E111rtto0n 3 0 0 Gunkel 2 o ( Noon 201 'wnson J22 t Tot1ls 20 12 1• S2 Tot•ls 26 11 16 u Seort w Qu.rt.n s~ llY Ou.rttrS Sin Cl1men1• 7 12 ro 10 -II "l"un1 B••ch 21 I• 1' lf -ff Mission Vlelo Rl'd U 16 I? I -Sl un1v1r1Jtv IT 11 16 20 -« Blackies moved into a lie for the Costa Mesa open summer league basketball lead Wednesday night followi~ its 70-50 triumph over previously Wldefeated occ Alumni. In the other lilt at Estancia, RB's Army -1be measure or Nads. 63-59. Blaclties broke \t open in the secood haH as its opponents attempled w defend a tilree- game streak with a squad of six players and oo John Valle-- ly, Rick Mancebo, Bart Car· rido or Butch Rollins. Steve Sabins and Jeff Cun· ningham ~ the chief ex- ecutioners fer Bladdes, net- ting 18 points between them in the secood hall while the OCC Alumni could muster only 22 points in the second half between the six of them. RB 's Army shook off a COO· pie of technical fouls in the second half and moved away from Nads with the nifty shooting of George and Dave Trotter, who combined for 31 counters. 0. MCCloP.v J, McCloMY ""'" Leod!ler M•cl>onald J. R11m11 e. R••mcs TOii!$ H* lJI) .. " pl "' 1 0 2 I• 0 0 I 0 I 0 0 16 l 0 l 6 l 2 1 ' 1 3 ' lJ I 0 I 2 '11 5 10 59 ff..1.'t A""1 (Ml Art11:1g11t O. Trott1r Crurnllv R•PP ·-~ J. Trotter G.· Trotter Hutchln1 Tol1l1 .... ,,,, 1 0 0 2 8 1 ' 19 l 0 l 6 2 0 1 • 6 I 0 13 s 2 ' 11 ' 0 0 • 3 o a 6 31 •1268 H•lllme: 27-111. 11acklft (JO) Cunnl119l'llm P1rker .. " .. '' , 3 0 11 s 0 l 10 • 0 2 • 0 0 2 0 l 2 2 • s 0 1 10 ' 0 3 • 3 1 0 1 1 (I,. 2 1 31 6 13 7!t ""'" Rolo!I ...... S1b!ns mi~, .. ~ Tot111 OC:c; A1vmnl l!IOI ti n pf tp 2 2 1 • ' 1 3 1f 8 • 3 7tt 0 1 2 l 2 0 2 ' 0 0 2 0 21 • 1• so DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO Baseball Standing=-s _ THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS '69 Dodge Pol•r• 4 o• .. flll'CI,..,, •~tic 1r111s.. ,...,. ...... ,,.. •Ir fffldllllfllllt. rHlo. llNt.f". Vlltyt T.,. Yelt.w E•I. Only 577" ,.,., .. ", 'U Volvo 144 2 Dlt. 4 S.-M, AM f"M $777 CX.S"1J) '61 Mutt•nt V4, J Sllftd, ltldlO $977 (410F1El '71 Chry•ler NewP'rt ,.,,....,, "''' tr1111, •Ir eo1111t1ionln•• ,._ ,'"''"'· A \'1ry Clllfl Ct!", Only 197JOfl ff7..0CS ) 70 Buick l •t•h W19on f ... .._, MltOftMfk trlMo tKllf'y l lr, .,.. ~,,,.... ..... 1 ... Only 2777" CllllS."J ., AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L New York 41 32 Baltimore 35 30 Milwaukee 37 35 Boston 34 34 Detroit 35 :rr Cleveland 26 '5 West DM1fon Angell 39 32 Oakland 40 34 Chicago 36 32 Kansas City 40 36 Minnesota 36 33 Texas 24 43 .......... ,.. ........ A ..... '· Ctikffo 1 O..rolt '-J, Mlh¥1ull:ft ,_. Sal!Jmon '· ff"' Yortt 0 Cttvt'l•l'ld 11 kffrol'I, rain T1~11 '• Mlnntioll J Olki.tl'llf :a. KertM1 City 2 Pct. .562 .538 .514 .500 .486 .386 .549 .541 .529 .526 .522 .358 GB 2 3'h 41> 51> 14 I> II> II> 2 JS T ... Y'•O•- Chlcaoo (Sll:IM N l 11 """'' (Wrllht H ) CltW!itl'ld Cloe!Mn 2-7) 11 &otft>n (P1ttln 7·fl Ntw Yori!; (McCowtl 2'0) at llltlmore (Jtffer- ton 1.0) MUwM .. ISl>ort ,_., 1t Otfroll (lolld'I 7.f) Mln.-91 (Wood-... l 1t 1-.tlt 11!'01>91'1 •41 IU>nMI Ctty (luallY '-11 at 0.klllld 11111t 6-31 -·-MIMelOfl 11 °"'"M K•-CllV 11 T• .. C i.wi.l'ld .. New Vet'll Mltwllultft "' lcllton a.111m1r1 ,, DttNtl (hic.t ., O.U.nill NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dlvislon w L Pct. GB Chicago 44 30 .595 St. Louis 35 36 .493 71> Montreal 33 34 .493 71> Philadelphia 34 38 .472 9 New York 31 37 .453 IO Piltsburgh 31 38 West Dtvblon .449 101\ Doclcm 48 26 .649 Houston 43 33 .566 6 San Francisco 43 33 .566 8 ClnclnnaU 38 35 .521 91> Atlanta 31 43 .419 17 San Diego 23 51 .311 25 By HOW ARD L. HANDY Of H11 DaUr Piiot St•ff Drag racing is like a disease according to Fountain Valley's Gary Cochran who will !'.»m- pete in Saturday night's sixth annual Nitromethane cham- pionships al Orange County International Raceway· "Once you get hooked on drag racing, you stay with it as long as it doesn't put you in the poor house," Gary con- fides. Gary is one of the In- dependent driverS and he toured tpe eastern pro circuit with success for two _years before remaining a:t home this summer for two reasons. First, he is working as a construction foreman a t RosmlOOr Leisure World and wants to finish the job· be has started. Second~ he wants to work out all the bugs in his new rear-engine top fuel dragster. "I made the mistake of being stubborn and remained with the front-engine car for a longer period of time lhan I should have. As a resuJt , I'm two years behind the other guys." For a driver who won the Grand American series two successive years -1971 and Donovan block in use for 10 1972 -it doesn't seem that he months now and I'm still•using The 1973 National AAU is too fat behind. it. The old cast iron blocks "I'll be going back east in lasted for about two weeks, Greco-Roman wrestling cham- August through October but I then they were cracked and pionshill'!I iat Estancia Jfigh have gone in May before," be had to be replaced. Schoo~ begin with seven hours says. "Although' 11 coots $2,500 ror of wrestling billtd r..-Friday Gary began his drag racing a Donovan compared to $300 afternoon and evening, and career after fm.ishing high for a cast iron block, you can another seven hours Saturday. school at Long Beach Jordan see I'm money ahead with the High where he was a team· aluminum block if you multi~ Expected to compete among mate of Montreal's Ron Fairly ly $600 a month for 10 mon-the 165-plus entries ls l!m in baseball and a goalie on the ths." Olympics star Chris Taylor water polo squad. When the racing bug really and over 20 aUtletes from "I began street racing in bit him and he decided to 1955. It was the black leather ~ move into fuel competition Orange County -mostly from jacket type of sport at that with a rail, it cost him $20,000 the Orange Coast YMCA. time. When they opened Lions to build the car for track Action will be from 1·5 in Drag Strip, I was one of the operation. A funny car costs in the afternoon and 7-10 tn the first contestants· the neighbhorhood of $30,000. evening each day with the "You know, I wu sorry to Gary slays with the fuel see them close Lions. It was dragsters exclusively. fmals tabbed for 7 p.m. Sab.r-- kind of like an alma mater io "lf I could find a sugar dad-day. me," he reflects. dy for a sponsor. I v.·ouldn't Admission for aD four Lions Drag Strip gave way back off from the funn y cars s~ssions is $5 for adults and U to building progress and the but right now I have no plans for teenagers and under. noise a b a t e m e n t la\\'S to make a change." recently. When he is in the ea.st on Individual sessions are priced Presently. Gary is sold on tour. it costs roughly $900 a at $2 per adult and 75 cents for the Donovan 417 alu minum week for expenses for car teenagers and under. block and after last weekend, maintenance, travel , and Hv· The tourney is the IOle knows this is where hi s future ing expenses for himself and a qualifying tournament for the . lies. He switched back to the full-time mechanic. Operating cast iron block for a weekend out of his garage in Fountain World Games Camp and ia ~ run at Irwindale and promptly Valley, it costs about $175 to der the sponsorship of the blew it. $200 a week lo run on a year-Southern Califomja Wre9tling "O~erwise, '' I've bad the around basis at Southern Association. California tracks. ·it's sanctiooed by the Westminster Defeated By San Clemente, 6-2 "A car can pretty much Sou them Pacific Association maintain itself in the east with Amateur Athletic Union and appearance and prize money. the tourney director is Frank The tracks life scattered and Horpet coach of the Orange there are fewer cars than coast YMCA. .J there are out here ," he ex-Athletes will compete under plains. , ___ 1 G He met hi s wife Marie \Vhile the-t973 internattufuu ~ Roman rules. for coach Joe Benza's team. Chris Brainerd, Ron Shimaji and Jeff Hatfield were on base. In the firut. Roger Sailor scored the final tally on a single by Joe Mauler. serving as a radio operator in the Air Force and the couple Awards will be given for has two da ughters, Dawn, 13, first, second and third, along and Te ri. 7. with the Gorriaran trophy for Bill Springman belted a tong home run to tie !the score in the third inning and Do\,; Fowler's single in the fourth put the San Clemente A team in front to stay as it defeated host Westminster Wednesday night in American Legion baseball actioo, 6-2. The girls do not thrill to the most falls in least time. watching their dad go down a Also first and second place drag strip anymore. however. awards for teams will be S•" '"'""''' A iC , h rbl "They saw n1y car go up in made in addition to the a,1.-ard SprTnornari. lb s 1 , 1 flames at Irwindale one time for top--plectng n1ilitary tean1. KlnQlS •123 McComb, 7b 1 o a o and were sure I \\'ti$ none. \Veighls are 105 1 ...... 1141h, Oovol1s1, lb ' o o o b Nem11n, i>-rl 3 1 1 o They haven't really liked the 1251,Z. 136'h, 1491h:, 163, 180i,\i, Welther, c ~ D 1 O nd I" ed sttve Mlklo•, ct ~ o 1 o sport since," Gur)' laughs. 198, 220 a un 1mit . In other games involving Orange Coast area teams, San Clemente B lost to visiting La Habra, 11~, host Fouritain Valley was stopped by Los Alamitos, 13-4, and Mission -Viejo ·was foteed to·forfeit-for lack of a ninth player to host Buena Park. klem•n. rl 1 g o o,,_.;_ _____ ;__::_ ____________ _ Fawler, ~ ·3 o 2 1 Scott Miklos, II 1 1 1 O Doriol'loe. rt ? • 0 5 Tot•ls 3' • 11 5 W1s.tmr11111r (1l A•fhr111 Accom1fldo. 21xl ' o a Accom1ndo, itK.t 5 O O Don't miss the Cessna Pilot Center -RUlllJO,..C'~----_j 0 1 ----Whltelev, s1 3 o 1 -OPEN HOUSE! Springman also had a single and triple. Both Westminster nms were scored as the result of errors, one in the serond and the other in the filth. After La Habra scored a pair of runs In each of the first three imings, addtd three in the fourth and took a 10--0 lead . Joe Janton came on in a relief pitching role for San Clemente B and gave up one unearned. run in the final three frames. San Clemente was held to two base hits by three La Habra pitchers. La Habra is now 8-1 for the sea90l1, the leading team in the American Legioo program In t h i s dlsbic\. Mark Garfield, entering the game in a pinch-hitting role ITT the aecond inning for Fountain Valley, doubled with the bases loaCied to drive in three runs-- Rlthlrd1, JO ' 0 1 Helt, rl ~ 1 0 c. Runoo. lb ' o o Bradley, d o o o o Houle, cl 1 O O Twrss, 2tt 2 o 1 swrnore, If , 1 o ICut:tle<ld, II 2 O 0 Rnsen,o 300 Tot111 3-1 2 ~ Seo" by lllftl"'i ' ' . San Cllm1nt• 001 120 200-4 11 s W••fml111ter 010 010 000-1 ( J fOUflflffl \'.tll'f (~} Ab I' II r•l P1nt1t<>n1, cl 1 o o o G1rtl1ld, d 3 a 1 3 Reldtr, u--c ' o O O S~l!or, rl ' 1 2 o Zimmer, lb 4 o 1 O Maul••i p J a 1 1 Shlm11 , 2b 2 I a o 8 r1!n9rd, c J 1 I 0 Hlrdm•n, II 0 0 0 0 Jord1111, lb • O 0 8 H1Hl1ld, If 2 1 0 Tol•IJ 30 ( f 4 Seen IW IMlflfl LOI A!t milos '°' 0~3 00-13 11 1 Founlaln VttltV 030 010 1)1)._4 I 3 h ll (II-le I (Ol Abrflrtll %1'10111, P<I ' g O o Fhlltr, lb j ' 0 M•rr,c O I D J•nton. H·P 4 0 0 ~ J. Nilson, 21Ms 3 o o o s11vro. Jb J 11 o o Giles, lf·rl 2 0 0 0 ~~r~k~'. 2'b i 3 g t H1ydt11, rf I 8 0 0 P, NtlMl!I, rl 1 0 0 Tot111 tt 0 J 0 Seo" "" IMllllll ' ' . LI Hebr• 222 a10 100-11 10 2 Stfl Clem1ntt GOO GOO 000-0 J J TURN ON TO TENNIS During the Summer Program at the CO$TA MESA ·TENNIS. CLUB 10 LESSONS 510 UNDO THI DlllCTION 0, TINNIS PIOS ••• e RUSTY MOORE and MIKE DUNN e REGISTRATIONS: JUNE 30- rc.tl'I. 111ly for ""'"-' •t1rollm•t1tl • Morning e Afternoon • Evening CIHHI • Boglnnlng • lntormodl1to • Adv1nced JUNIORS incl ADULTS fef lllftl'fNlfflll Clll -(OITA M8SA TIMtrn• CL\tl -U7.fll1 HO JUNIPERO DR., COSTA Ml~ c..1iia I:::: Pllfl CINI! I -.- ALL DAY JUNE 30 • JULY 111 Find out everything you 've always wanted to know about flying. Bring your family a nd lrlendt. There'll be lots of fun. And be. sure to tear out this $5 lntroduclory flight coupon for your first flight In a Cessna 150, the world's most popular lralnor, OUT THIS COUPON--, ihlt Ce .. na PllOI Centtt' Coupon and $5 i• all you netd for you1 Introductory ftylng l•NOn. I I I t I ! HARBOR AVIATION MEADOWLARK AIRPORT I I 5141 WARNER AVE . I I HUNTINGTONBEACH 846·1100 •-~-------------------------j ' , __ ----------· Wo men's President's . Cup Captured by Marion Voss Marion Voss defeated Bcttv Brov.·n, 7-and.fi. tu win t.ne president 's CU)J championshi1> at Costa Mes.a Golf aud Coun- try Club this ¥:eek in 1he finals of the women's club conl· petition. Barbara Leonard was lhc consclation flight victor ·in the president's flight. In the vice 1presidenl's ccm- ,petition, Vi Hoskins defeated Ann Keenan, 2--8.nd-l. to gain the title. A 1playoff looms between ,three players for the consolation crown. Vi Theiss, Shirlcv Jackson and Vonda Adam's are the pclrticipants . Jn the secretar}'-tteasurer flight, Alice Hubbard defea ted Ccnnie Neske, 4-and-3, to win the dlampionship with Phyllis Barnes capturing ·the con- solation. S n11 J 110 0 Hiiis N2w officers have been elected by the •\Yemen's golf grou 1> ·M San Juan 'Hills Coun- trY Club. Lii Shattuck is the president v.•ith Adelle Mar lin a s sec:.TetU!'Y an!! Anita t.1cLeod the treasw-er. Ohris Behm was named tournament chairman: Joan Raudenbush as ha n di ca p chairman: l)Y,is Astholz as membership chairnlan ; and Frank Chaprr::in as ru les chairman . Anyrn·e inte rested in joining the group is ur.ged to contact Dx>ris Astholz at the club . Tournamen t schedule for July fer San J uan 1-lills CC women members ,finds a low net and ace of the month af. PRESIDENT'S CUP WINNERS -Marion Voss (left) defeated Betty Brown for t.he president's cup championship at Costa Mesa Golf and. Country Club: 1'1rs. Voss is a resident of Huntington Beach and Mrs. Brown ts fron1 \Vestminster. Dana Hills Batadball Ot1t Wallace Finds f::iir on July 5; irons only, low net , on July 12; two better balls of foursome on July 19; and even holes ':,n July 26. El Niguel The El Niguel women held a membeT-guest, gross and net tournament recentiy. fn the guest diVision,· low gross honors w~t to Helen Neighbors of . the Hacienda Country Chtb with an 88. In second was Dorothy DeVries of San Clemente (94) followed by Evolyn Hall (95). Barbara Willi8.1ru led the guests tin net with a 75, follow- ed by Ces Williams, Dorothy Walter and Mrs. Paul Greene. Nell Townsend topped the club ·members in A fli ght wi th a gl'9SS 94, Gene LaBQn was the net winner with 77. In B flight, Charlen Cramer «ook gross honors with a 96, Nancy Dougherty had a net 78 foll<>w- ed by Pat HversOn, who·netted IW. Betty Bratton, E 11 e n Bradwell and-Edith Wray all tied fo r low net in C light with 79. while !Dorothy Banks was the D flight. wtnner followed by t-.fartha Urquhart. IHitsfo11 Viejo The Mission Viejo Women's Golf Associaticn held a low gross .guest day e v e n t recently. Esther 'Nugen t was the top guest golfer, shooting a 90, \Yhile AclrierJ.Je White and Madeleine Tewes tied for sec· ond . Nadine Mace shot a 92 lo win the members division, . ·fellowed by c.ece Ccury (92), and Sue Osborne. Ra..Clao S.J . Carollyn Walbridge's 34 took A flight honors in a blind ·nine tournament of ·the Rancho San Joaquin women .f'ecently. Sue Ewers and Jackie Kroll tied for ISec{)nd with 36s. 'B flight honors were taken by Manda Beitel (32) followed by Bobby Ohartier and Phylli·s Stafford (35l. Peggy Roberts was the C fl ight winner with Kay-Leutwiler,--and-P.at I.ii v- ingstcn .tieing for second, while the D flight wiDOef' was Gloria Talm'Sge. followed by Grace Wehe and Anna Lee Shetler'. Mesa V~de Tbe Mesa Ve!'de· women's golf as.sociation held a team scramble .tournament recently with t he fullowing results. Low Gross -(tie) foorso-me or Dora Donaldson, Michl Uematsu, Marion Olson, and 11ary UP.I Manley, .a n d foursome of Be,tty Stetting, Bette G<lnya, 'Pat Gebo and Arlene Verfurth. Low Net -Joan Cham· berlain, Marjory Williams. Do:cthy Morris, K ! t ty Thomas. Coaches Selected Several coaching positions and athletic department open- A lVew Challenge · Second Lew Net -Bette Itamre, Piiiylltsoo-sure, EU1e- Kitson, Hortense Ca!'lin. The club's nine-bole group also staged an E c l ect ic tournament recently with Jean Mabee taking low gross honors with Sylvia Campl>ell second. Mary Garibotti was the low net winner followed by Phyllis Nehrenberg and F r a n c i n a n,, CRAIG SJtEF'F ings have been fi lled this week 0 , 11141 D•ily ,,1101 s1111 at Da n HiUUfigh School , in· Orange Cnast c 0 11 e g e eluding the selection of head baseball caach Barry \Vallace track and swimming coaches has fcund a new ,,,cr]d to eon· for next season . riu.er = and thafs. basically OOilOe<rroote, 28, will take why be wcn't !;e defending his . over the ~ition of head track st.ate oulda::i.r handball cham» coach and .football assistant pionship Uiis weekend at Santa after holding !imilar positions Ana College. at Canyon High in Newhall. "Wal lace, who also. V.\'lO the r..1ike Gaskins, a rec e n 1 outdoo r· handball title in 1970, says he's only ,played the gradl.mte of Cal State (Long game ab'out fcur tin1es since Beach), wiU be the new head last year's tournam~.n.t and swimming coach. bec.ause nf that prt1bahly · DcGroote, a gradua te of W()uldn't 1have ~!!Shot at the ti· \Yashington State University, tie 1this weekend. re places Fred Sharke, wbo A new Jove -·racquetball - resigned <the track job after has ,prompted Wallace to one season and will· teach at literally give up the game cf Marco Forster Jr. High next handQajl -although the two fall DeGroote is married ::ind sports are sirpilar. has two children . He will teach ' Both are played ;with ~he English.. same lype of ball. although Gaskms , 26, replaces Mark the ball used .jn _racquetball is SChubert w~ resigned to .:.a, little. softer. And barti games d~~e ful.1 .time_ to coac~ .the are played en a han:Jball MlSS1on V1eJO Nadadores AAU Couflt using three or !our~ group. He's a M_arine _Biol~ wa lls: , teacher, accepting his first But there the 'Simil~rity ass!Jtnment.. . ~ ~nds, says WaUacc. other poent1ons f111ed ~Y_ ~~ "The ,big dilference is lhat proval ·of the school ·~ in one game you use e racquet r~nUy ~nclude Bill Smith ~s tha't looks like.a Mwed.-Oiften-cha1nn~n of the. school 5 nis racquet end in h other p h y s 1 ca 1 educauo n depart-game. YO\I use four hand to ment, Bob Zamora as an l'elurn the bal_I. -aosiJtant baseball and football "Racq uetboll used to bi! coach and A~ Jet1ktns 11~ a ooUtd paddlEi ball, but they basketbaJI ass1iilant.. t-0ok lhe ·WQ2dei't rpart away Smith comes ~ Dana ~ills and ~l ID strings, from :rorrance High. He 19 8 "Handball Is a lot more gtadua te of C:il Stat~ (Long de1nanding as far as the entire BeachJ and was a~lst~nt body i.s conoorncd. In rac- dlrootor of lhe mens in· quetba!I ymi d;mlt bc.nd over tramural p1·ogram UM!ro at as much 'because, r,t course., one 1tlme1 , · PAN11JCl Zamort1 is a former ninor you re u 5 1 n g a . ·I" · le e. -b a 5 e a 11 player And ~a~e It 1sn t as a:1' coach in the San Diego demand1ng 11 ~u~s tnore peo-- Padres organization. M o s t P'I!, to.pl~y--tna ~pi)r.1-.... <I rcctntly he iaught at a junior Al,.,, says Wallact. In high school tn Corona. order to te • good handboll J~nkins, an (ISSlstant baskt'!t· player .You have to be able to ball coach at Monrovia ror the pin with botb ha~ds. rn rac- put six ycars1 rcjoi.Ps f-0rmer quct!iall you don t have tO Monrovia head cO:lch Tonv worry at;out. that. Stillson ul l>'in·i tilllr. · ""'llh::\11 a doubl., handball BARRY WALLACE is the 'best 1total condit.ionet, It involves more total skill because you !have to use OOth sides of the body." Since Wallace ha s beerl a state chan11>io11 twice In the _Past three years, He ~ parc.ntly has omquerOO the game o( handball --and be's after new ~cals. Thui5. "1len racq1.1etball was offered "as a course 1lh js year at OCC, Wallace became•in· t~rested. i1•There s~cms to be a tremendous ,interest in rac· quelba ll , not .only in faculty mctnbtts an<I sludents, \Jilt al!O in the community. And it's '8 game lhat ~1neq can play. also. ''l',m fascinated by lbe game and it's ·a big ch&Uenge for me,'" adds W'aUace. "l'd really like to--te a good racciuetball· playe1". l'm-.rigbt.now, .l>•L 1 h09e: to be..1' The OCC coach addJ that he'd also like to see 30me out· door tournaments in the ''trea .. And he's hopeful ot ·one day de\1clopi ng a state cutdooc rae<1uctball tourney. I ' Stewart. ' uu .. tlngto11 Seaelfff The Huntington S ea c 1 i f f Ladies Golf club held a two- day eclectic tournament Mon· day and 'l\Jesday last week. Cheri Thomas took !.. flight honnrs with a net 65, followed by Marilyn Celli ·and Joan Weaver. The second flight winner was Shirley Cummaro with Alice Acklin second and Hare! Mollica third ,while June Doyle, Mary Vander Sommffl - and Winnie Lindsay were the lop loor in the tllird flight. Vi O'Gara finished first in fourth flight followed by Mary Grose and Nooma Pard. In a Tuesday low net event, Ann 'Mays took honors with a 73 followed by Rose Erickson and Oleri 'Ibomas. In second rfiight, Winnie Lindsay a n d Mary Van<ier Scnnmcn tied for first with '1ls with Helene Ccwden second. In lltird Oigltt, Vi O'Gara rwas the winner with a 66, Lu Gaskell came in seco\1(1 wtth • 72, and Norma Pan! was third. Fish Report " ....... ,,.., ... T _h.:.ur.:.•d.:.'1:.:.·.;.J_unt-'--28;:.,_1_97_) ________ D_Al_LY_PllOT_ lJJ, ' CHECK OUT ·T.HE GRANT IOYS NEW FISHING HEADQUARTERS AT BOTH STORESI GREAT NAMES IN LARGE SILICTIONS lOR AU TYPES OF FISHING. FIND IT AT GRANT BOYS FIRSTI SAVE Ar fHf GRANT IOYSI on YOUJt 'ISHIHO ll,IHSI Hlltll COMBO! FRESHWATER 103 HUCK FINN REEL . GRANT'S SNCIAL Pata HO. 415 MUCK JINN NO. 390 TUNA KING 7' ROD AND IO I $688 "BACK PACK" ROD COMBO PENGUIN REIL. Granr1 Spoci•I Pri<t ... · . SPINNING AND FL YI : i ill ' .. • i : .. .. \ ~· \'I ' SALTWATER RODI NO. 390 TUNA KING s488 GRANT'S SPECIAL PRICE ••. t 1.•a .r ROD. Gron!'• Spt<ill Prlc~·-· · .. · ......... · · .. · .. · · .. · .. · ...;,,,..';~~;;;;;;;;;;;~========~ --_,_ -·-_, __ ,_ [olemon 6 6 \' Tents :\I I !, r:jl Till GRANT BOYS CARRY THE GREATEST SILICTION :: ; ' · Of!f OLIMAN TENTS IN THI ARIAi DMYfill \\ .\ \ COLEMAll 2001 wmu ',i : !I \ flf/![:Jllj,[/f COLEMAN I 0 x I ' ' . AMERIC~N HERITAGE TENT '/I ···1 ., I II I '. i j: .. . •: Ji • SEA NYMPH BRAND ALUMINUM BOATS " l • I ~l=~~~i:::r. ~z '···:.\.· ··"''"' f,,,,,_, """' "" • • ..... Mell ..... Ott,.,-2'00 llUl•r. ,.c•.,H-1/cwt"" wit• •., 1. s11t.u1 .. -11 •. , .. , ___ ..,, ..,t.wi. 1 L.r "'· \'tmllllty. ~ ~l~ ~~:~~ $1 ft88 PRICE u·-. COLEMAN FUEL , ..... ~ '"' i1 4111......t "-']•!II •• , '"'·. tt'I chNH. 11'1 ffootfllMI. lt'I '.,.UMll, It'• . •••1 tt li•4. 11'1 '"'"'l•I t. 111 ... tt N f t rHlw <Hki9t "'"'· MM1 ..,_,.Hfly, It ..... , .• 1 ... 1 GALLON CAN GIANT'S SPECIAL PRICE 88' CGLEM-tN'S. NfW , -55 QT. POLY LITE COOLER GRANT'S $2888 SPECIAL PRICE . : . . .. ':• ;1·. • ' ' 1 "\ \ • • -32 DAILY PILOT Tllursd.a;~, June 28, 1973 What's Doing Outdoors JIM NIEMIEC The litest word on the albacore picture can be summed up in one big word -great. While)'t owner of Anglers Center in Nc\1•port Beach called in at the last minute to give the follow~& information on the albacore migration. Whitey was quoting !''rank LoPreste, owner of the charter boat Searcher, and a kno1vledgable commercial ftsherman who did not want to be identified. The opinioo of. the two fishing pros is that this year ~Id be one of the belt loogfin seasons we have bad. All the pesaunlstic reports of wann water forcing the albies outside \\'ere pushed aside when scouting reports indicated that water temperature on the ou~ide was perfect. A constant 62-t.o-64 degree reading is current in such popular spots as the Dwnping Grounds, the 295, the 60-mile-bank and In fac.t from less than five miles off the Coronado Islands down to Cedros the bait and ·water cmditions are excellent. The warm water currently found off our coastline is trapped ~arm water and-exlends no farther north than Long Beach and no farther south than of! Emenada. The great yellowtail lisblne enjoyed during the past two months ~'as a direct result ol this warm water not being able to' escape the confines of the colder water surrounding il · Albacore to B~ln Bitting:>. Albacore 11couilng boats are cun:ent.ly workln1 an area some 350 miles west of San Dle10 and are plckln1 ap )Oqftnl OD lltelr l\'ay down. No one Is predicting ju1t1 wbere die flsll w:lll atart s"·ingiDg back ap the coat oa die lnside, but It aboald happen within tbe next week IO 11 days. U tHte' cold water cond.Ulona keep up tbroqbout the sum· mer, Newport Harbor area an&Ien are In store for aome fan- tastic off-sllore actloa. ~ .. Alamitos Racing Results Mesa Takes Over TQp Spot eo..ta IM<sa -over first pt..,. In !he Hari>or Area sum- -baseball t.aaue Wed· neoday night wiUt a &4 via«y , •• ......,, over Fountain Valley in action c1-a ... ,, at Cbsta Mesa City Park. ''RST" •AC• -310 verd1. 2 YNr In her • old1. Ct1lrnf~9. Pur11 1111co. ot games, Edison "'"'*'lc•n 01111 defeated IEstancla, 4-2, on the cc1rc1or1J &.te •·'° 1.e Chargers field while Newport 111:0.r Jov IH1r11 5.40 3 . .0 H H•POY EJ'IQUOll (IUcMrdtJ 2.20 arbor stopped Corona de! l\::r~ !!_·5Jeo.l C•itt•ln, •tttv LM Afar, 1..0, in an early game at 81d, Cindy Moan J.i, O...ert1r ••ndotr, dty park. 1 0~~1;i.!Vt ~·~~~ ._, • 7• Costa A!esa is a hall game •-J..,, ... ,. w ,-. in front ol Edison a n d oi!,~,:4!,:t,~•p;-,:':21~~0•• 3 v••r • Newport Harbor with a 5-l r~:l~)Filr ?,//II ,,IO ).20. record Oll'llpared to 4-1 for the I'm lloy1l (Hertl 7.60 .S.21) two runnersup. o~. '?"31).i:.' <P-0-1 oo Costa Mesa was forced to Also r•n -P)W)tM'• Limit, Giiien. Gtm1111, M•1or Thrur. come from behind with three runs in the bottom of the slxUt and final lMlng of• llm<>llmil game to overcome a 5-3 deficit. Steve Bernhardt walk- ed with !he bases loaded with one out to bu in the winning run . Ernie Hook !litdled Newp<rl Hari><r lo Us lourth vlaory, allowing two lime bits and st:rildng out 10 oppo s in g Corona de! Mar baUers in seven iooings. 'lbe lone run of the g a m e came in the 4hird frame when Don Pier doubled to left and scored on a single by Kevin THl•D a.Kl: -CIO rerds. 3 re1r oldt. Clelmlftlll. PurM 11aao. Air ShoW IRFcllll'dll 4.00 4.00 3.llO 4.00 3.IO L10 Fight_,, Chic: IG1ri1l Reech 'N' Gett II (Wll~l Tl1ne -20.6t. Marina Clips Barons; AllO r1n -Dorl• J•!\t• Joyoin Vllltl'l!lne, C11I M• Kid, t•m A Cooy. l'OUltTM RAC• -UI v1rd1. 2 ve1r cldl. AlhtwM>Cfl. l"urM uooo. Tlw Dr•flll'! Ct111! •'NII .8'Rl!h. Mlss ll1r Lolll (W11'dl 1._C ,,00 3.0CI 3..0 , .• Tiii Mii !Hart) Hesllvl11e COIW {Cl rdcl.1) Timi -11,17. "" 1'"1,TM RACO..-11'1 V•l'd1. 3 ~Ir old' & ~p. Cllll'l!ng. Pur11 11900. TM w .. 1,.,1n111r flowl~•· GrHf! Up (W1b0n) 20 • ..0 7 . .0 3.10 S1nou1ne•1 J.i (G1ri1l '·'° 3.60 Speedy Seven !W•rd) 3.00 Timi -47.ll. Also nn -VlllCl1 Llfld1, Knight Af· fair, Thi V1rl1I, Al11'1ll01 Phil, P1pp1 Wl111. SIXTH RACO -350 y1rds. 3 yeer o!ds " VP· C!•lm!no tor fllll~ " m•res. Punt 11.200. Rock!n' LtdV lfllckl'I) • Vik.es' Losner Injured, LONG BEACH -Marina 1be two teams return t! ac- High's su~r le~gue bask~t-tioo at Long Beach Friday h:311 co?tm.gent picked up Its with Marina going at 7 against fu'St wm m ffie Long Beach . City College circuit Wednesday Lak~wood and FoWlta~ Valley night, defeating F o u n t a i n playing at 8 against St. Valley, 44-40, but victory could Anthony. be somewhat costly. fw1111111 v.1i.., 1•1 Marina 's 6-5 Bob Losner Ft tt .-111> h M111,,_ S" 1 3 n missed almost t e entire game Jo1::.l 3 o 2 4 with a badly sprained ankle. fgrw~1•Jmw : ~ ? 1! Keith Koeller picked up the ~W1':1" ~ ? r f Bissonette oo a bit-and-run play. ' Edb>o llCmld lthree lim .. in lhe flnll lming with d1e aid of a h\·o-nin single by Scott Desrosiers. A single tally was '!d<fed In ll>e IOUrtll oo a home run by Joe -ado. Estancia 's only 5COrtS came in the kKrth when Steve Oilisen was safe on an error and Mark Devoo belled a loog Mne run to rlght centerfield. '1"111111111111 VllllY (J) ... , .... J1cks~. ''.J.b 3 t Fox, lb 3 .o H1rdm1n, IS ,• •, Uf)tcn, lb G1rll11d, rl 3 1 ' ' ! ' ' ' ' • · Treul1r. Kl 2 I Wlfletd, lf·P i' O 0. llle:alC. (f I <>oci.n. 2t1 o Ptlltorl, D •', :' T1u~r, c• 8rllntd. H1 ' • ' • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • Y11len11. rl 0 o o V. llltnllc:. If 0 ' ' • ' Slllm111, 21> o: :' Ha Ille d. P Churchwtll, p Tol1l1 2S S • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' Celt• M-<•) .. ' • "' ! . ' l ' , ' ' ' , ' i • ' • • ' : , ' I ) ' ' ' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' • " . l~1ty11111mp ' F01111t1ln VllllV COlll MMI ••• otJ(li)1 -S72 OOCl<ol -6 7 3 Lakers Clinic • ' • ' ' ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' • C_. dll Mir JollrtlOll •• , N1191we, ~ J•hllt. ct Moll, lb PrOIO, 3b Murphy, II Or"l''I" rf Moort, C WJlkln-. p FrenkUn, p Tolill •II r 111111 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 3 6 0 0 3 0 \ 6 , 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 l 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 g tt 0 I 0 ............ H1rlllf' {I ) 111 I' II 1111 ~ 1 1 0 J 0 0 0 2 0 1 1 J o o a 3 0 0 0 J 0 2 0 l 0 0 0 , 0 , 0 , 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 Pler, cf PIUltCI\, 1f) 8ll$Olllltt . c AbOott, lb 8l1ncnerd, rf cnerd, ss Sorc1. lb Hool(, P Robertson, If Oo1t1I, pl\ l(ru ... 11 TOl<1ls 16 I 7 I Suri llY l11nlnt• ' . . CorOfll dtl Mer 000 000 ~ ? s NtwPOrl H1rtlor DOI 000 x-1 7 0 ~th.lb RonquHlo, ls Hayes, as Mortoo, c Ohl!lln, rl 01ven, 2b 1nqd1t1, cl Fleming, If Tomlin, p Mlll1r. ph l!sl•Mll IU Tol11ls 21 2 7 2 1:.i-(0 Mftcov, ff-!) Hlblltrd1 If Detrllller1, lb Nicholl, ,cf Mlcy, c · MOrldO. SS Mll\Cl_,,1Mo11, 2b Schlllotf', lb M..n.n. p C11P1rus. rf Tol1ls 1111 , .. rbl i 0 I 0 ~ 0 l 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 I 0 J 1 l 0 3 ,. , 2 2 2 0 0 3 O I 0 2 0. 0 0 I 0 0 t n r 111111 3 , 1 0 2 1 2 0 3 1 2 2 l 0 0 0 3 0 0 ·O l 1 1 I l 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2S 4 1 3 ••• 000 lOD 0-2 1 ' 300 100 x-4 7 I Monarchs Breeze Past Foe Mater Del Hig)l's M~chs rolled to their 'fourth straight summer league basketball vi~ 1tory in the Santa Ana College circuit Wedresday night. sweeping past El Modena, a&- 66. The iwin gives •Mater Dei a 4-1 o reco<d -the same as Santa , Ana Valley. ' The two unbeaten teams are scheduled <o collide July 1l et 7 ,p.m. Wednesday's lW"in was paced by B<endon McOaughey, who scored 26 points and cleaned •the boafM lVitil 14 rebounds. Tea n1n1ate Jo hn Stemmer . added 11 reboUnds to keep ' Mater. Dei .in control ol the re-I bounding .game. ~ The Monardls had .. .\ five • players in double ~ Wednesday as Mark Brieltus. Jack Dean, Steve Delaney and John llu<lek added ll>etr touch lo ,Ute Male< Dei olleme. .... ~ lt • • ' " ' " ' .. 1~ ·.t There ls only one charter boat l1Ullllng out of the harbor art• and Ute 'iUttle Richard" bas tome very pod opea dates daring July and August. The fast delue cllarter bollt boasts one et the top catch i:verages for Its pasae.aaert along tile coaat and b skippered by Doug Harmon. , , Trvly M•rge (P191J Turlyloc.t. (DrfYtrl Time -U.20. A.20 2.40 2.10 J.to ~ . .o .... slack, however, I ea d i n g F~~ .. 'l!'n• 1~ ! : J Marina with 15 points with his "'"M •~> DON'T DISCARD THOSE outside shooting. ~ Fick '1 ~ ~ ~~ Members of ~ Los Angeles Ali.o r1n -S.Colcll Dee lier, My Tfo XII V1nc1v. Im• M11. W•r .. rlnct!ll , To Wlr With Love, V1ln JUMbu(I, Fountain Valley's leading K°'11'' 7 1 1 15 Lakers will conduct a summer OLD I 5 OUll Art's Laa4bog and Ille Pavilion will alto start scbedullng albacore ~Pl when the albles appear &o be close enough. Good Surfa<!e Fl.siting player was Steve Dorsett, who }!~~~~; ; f ~ : basketball clinic at Costa TENN 5 H Lend11r11 32 31 1 · u 11xect• -1~.ctl11' LM't a •·Tr. scored 14 points. l.•wrenc• 1 2 2 , Mesa's Sears store at South we ,..,. r •• ,..."-•"'>'fin of Adldu 1111111 T,.,.,.. SllMI. 111::.i::·r:•~'.J'.i~·.,, yards. 3 ye1r Tim Hill mis5ed the action Tot•ls sc-~v 0111.t." 19 4 11 " Coast Plaza, Saturday morn-ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE Passengers aboard party boats are landing a variety of sur- face feeding game fish. Included in tbe catches are bonito ,bar- racuda, white sea bass and yellowtail. Bottom feeders are filling the remainder of the gunny sacks. olds• 1,1p. c1111lfl1<1 1llOW1nct. Pur•• for Fountain Valley. ~'::~~:rn v1111y ~2 ~ l~ le! ing (g:30), Aug. lS. • w111TtL11",. l"LAZA e L•OO • l'"A5MION 1sLAHD • coJtoNA Dl:L MAR "'"" r....:~:.:::::::::...:::::.:~~~~~~~'--~~~-'-.!..~~~~~'..'.''.::'.'.'.'.:~~...'.'.'.:....~~~..'.!~""""""""""""""""""~""""""~"""""""""""""""~""""""""""""""""""~ There are still lots of yellowtail under the kelp patties in the channels, but are swimming around with their mouths closed. The yellows should begin to hit again Very soon and remain around for the duration of the summer. • Bay fishing has slowed a bit due to heavy boat pressure and bay anglers are haVi.ng to fi5h early in the morning and late in the evening to avoid getting run over. Fishing is also fair outside the jetty for anglers renting skiffs. The Balboa Pavilion is planning a giant celebration July 4 to officially open the completely remodeled facilities. Owner Phil Tozer has turned bael the clock to the tum of the century at the Pavilion with a completely new decor. There are events planned for the enUre family from a turn of the century bathing beauty contest for women to a water· melon eating contest for lhe kids. There is also a good chance that tbme attending the day-long event might see the first alba· core of the season weighed in next door at the Balboa Angling club. High Slerr• Leakes Opening Nearly au tbe Jai&h country Jakel on tile eaatera Slenu are open ,or are icing out. Fi&blng for rainbows, &oldens and amall brooldea la reptl1ed u pod at lakes betweea a, ... ad lt,008 feet. Roodlldt srr..nu ud lakes are being beevlly 1toclltd by the . Depa-..1 of Fii~ and Game la preparadon of the llllllHI of vacatlonen plnDbl1 ft beading up to tbe ltiP coaatry over tbe 4tb of Ja)y. Campgroandl are running at near capacity and campers are advised &o make advance space reservations where ever they can. Bot Bluegill Action Probably_some of the finest bluegill fishing in the Southland is currenUy taking place at Big Bear Lake. Bluegill are all over the lake and hitting most anything thrown at them. The scrappy fighters are not peewees either. The panfish are averaging al- most 1h Pound apiece. ' For real spqrt anglers should go after the bluegill using a nyrod and wet fly. The action is very difficult to duplicate for excitement and sheer fishing pleasure, not to menlion good eat· ing. Trout are also hitting in deep water aloog lhe nortbsbore for anglers trolling deep with blades and wonns. Rainbows are also being creeled by bait soakers, reports Holloway's Landing. Throw back size bass are continuing to keep bass fishermen off balance as very few keepers are rising to surface plugs due to the competition frQJD the smaller fry. Southland Leake• Producing Fishing is fair lo good for a mixed catcb at most lakes in Southern California. Jrviae and Analtelm are good for trout, Clt- fbh .. d bluegill, whlle catfllb lo fl Pollnds and big blaqlD ate acUVe at ViU. Umlteil 6iis action is on tap atlbi"San ·Diego lakes altbougb SIUlfJsb and cats are rated good. Extremely bot weather II limiting fishing alo1g the Colorado River wbere day time temperatures are bitUng tbe 1%8 degree mark. Fountain Valley Po Joists ' Prln ICllten t\Vrl(lhl) 4.111 3.10 2.60 Rock!! Stlule (Werd) 17.00 1.10 He's 81)Uftd To (Knlgllt) 7.20 Tlf!'I* -20.22. Al10 r•n -Y1n1ciu1, Scent OI Llm1. $wlftme1r, Chi Ch• 81r, Vlnewfn. l!IGHTH RACll -400 y1rds.. 3 Vtlr okU. Cl1lmlr>g. Pufll 11100. Lee's '"' CG1tr•l Flrecllln;Jt {Morris) Chant T-n (Tr11sure) Time -20.ff. ll.'° t.20 3.'° 4.20 3.60 '·" u • .. •cte -J·lM'• "'"' • I• Plr•™,.., ,.,111 •in.so. NINTH RACli -4G YltdJ. 3 ytllt olds & up, Cl1lmlng. Purll $1&00. C1lcutt1 2 ($mlthJ 811c'< Mood lWllSOfll Zhivago (Trtl$Utl) Tlm• -n.a. 12.10 10.to 7.to 21..0 10.40 LOO S$ l!xtctl -t ·Cllalffl .I 7•llacll: MllMI, P1id IJHJL Racing Entries LM A'9"'111s 1!11tl1H ..... Tll.,,..IY C .. ,, a Fnl. "'"' ""' 711S 11.m . 'IRST RAC• -350 y11d1. 2 yetr okls.. Cl11mlftlll. Purs1 '1&00. Cl11!m!119 prlc• ISOOO. Flylno Fen (S. TrNSUrt) Klllf. Gold !K. Hirt) Ptlm1btll1 IL. MVlli) MGl•ll• 2 {J. Rlch1rds) Miss A1lll1y (J. Drl'(tt) Cul! 'n CllYtr' (R. 1!11nbJ Mr. Whl•t11>(J, W1tdl Go Red Fox (R. Adslrl Sllldy Ev.,.tt U>. C1rdor1) D1ndr'• Express (J. W1t1011J s•COND RACll -350 y1rdt. 3 ye11r olds. Cl1lmlng. Pvrs1 S2200. Cl1lmlno Price 15000. Strlklltr 8•n (J. Wilson) Rlckelll Pwrr (J. Dreyer) Rlv...-stde Gold (S . TrNlurel ll1nk of Oreoon (J, Ward) Mis• Honeymoon (J. Rlcll1rcll) Ooh LI LI (l . Myles} Win-A J1! ID. K11lghl) TMIRD RAC• -150 y1rds. 3 year oldt & up. Cl•lmlno. Pur11. '2100. Cl1!mlng Pr1ct IJ«lO, \'Vllcll Crftk Chic (J. Ort'ytrl Topp Todd fR. Ad1lr) Don 81r't lmao1 CJ. 1Ucherd$) Oon1 M•r (K. H•rll Cotmlc (l. Wrltl\11 fl•rron flld (R. 8111k•I Roc'<tl Mick (J, M1ttuda) l'OURTM RACa -350 Ylrdt., v11r olds. Al1-1nc1 ... Urse SXIOO. Go Farthlrhsltr (J. Wllt§on) Th1t Otnlr Man (J, W1rd) Leddlt F1ce fl. Mylesl Rom• Jlt (0. CtrdOltl I'm An Okllt Too (R. Ad1irl Nevld• FIYtf' (R. e1nk1J Pon Dee 8•r (0. Knight) Fll'TN lil:ACE -.G) v••ds. 3 year -olds. AU-nc:1. "urst S2200. Tne S•n Gatll'let T1Ylf"n Owners Asi.ocl11lon. Moon T~r (K. H1r!l Tllree He111 ($, Tre••urtl Thi New Look (l . Myltll TOP 8on1nr1 81r !D. C1tc1011) cociev Girl CJ. W1tsonJ I'm For You CR. Ad1lr} SIXTH RACS -3JO yards.. 3 year old•. c111mlng. ,.UT"H S2200. Cl•!mlng PrlCI $5000. llurinv'• Gold IH. "•gel Dusi O.vll fD. Knight) Hv Ovotrdrlve (H, CrOSVVl Sn11k Att•ck (0 . C1rdOU1) Dupedffdoo (R. 111nksl Flnt N F.;incy (l . MyleJI Oustys Clown (J. Wtrd) Oupe's Niner fS. Tr111urel Fall to El Dorado, 6-3 SEVENTH RACE -..00 y1rdi. 3 year old$ & up, Cl•!mlng. Purse Slt<iO. c111mtng Price '~· Tht Oouglas 1he first tialf. then went Alrcr11t com. M1n11gemen1 Club. Fountain Valley If i g h 's "'ater polo team fought on even tenns \\'ith El Dorado in Don't Look Back (L. Wrlghl) scoreless after the in-Spur cnv fK. H1 rtJ ScOOPtr Skip (J. M1ltud1) tennission in losing a first su11td up <J. Rlch11•d•> WOflCltr How (11:, ll1"k1) round game in the Wednesday Rocky IHCll H1nk CH. P1ge> lnmlfl'I LID Two (A. Adl!r) Net Results night varsity league at Estan· Mr. Mir• l!l•r (J . W•ttl)n! •••HTH RACll -110 Y••d1. 3 Y••r cia High. olds " up. c111m1n11. Purse 12200. ldi-'· M1rlnt l Slfllfe• Cl1lml119 Price SXIOO. Dan LuUrell's two goal$ and 0oro111v·s P•llto 1e. 01ri1J G1blt'l110 (J, W1rdl Dana Hunter's solo score Yo Ql•ro (K. H1ro C•llfornl• Sindt ($, Tre1sureJ helped the IQ.iiing Barons to a Mr P11 IL. wr11111u On ol1 Ill d". H1m1u~I fM) ~-6. 4· 1. 6-~. 3-3 tie at the intennission. But ~:1!0L~: 11~: ~~~~~rds> N!wm1n (E) def. 8r1nnlno llA) "°'· ··~· ... ,. Enlll9n (f l loll to WltcMr {Ml ~·6,6· J, H. "'I Do ad Cul For Acts (R. Ad1!rJ i:.. r o scored three times NINTH RAC• -3so .,.rds. 3 v••• in the second half to Mfin it, 6--~~1'1mt,, 'lf..ice'~=.1111. Pu1H s1 000. •• el~ttr (El dtf. WK! (M) ,.,, H . Frlt1 1£) 1011 ro Po1ertor1 (Ml 1"6. O· .. Alfi• MCCl.il IL. Mvles) l(tllr !El loll to H•wklns (M) 4·6. 1· •1• Pellto lltold H. Crosby) t. tn other ll!"!lrfl-at E~·nci·a St•v• TM V•I 10. C1rdOll) Doubler " ..... ..,.,,. ;,... Riii! ,,_ tR, ••nks) Enslg" 1nd. Lvnot11 (EJ def. Cook \Vednesday ~-'""' d ~ led 8ud l!y1 (J, W•tdl 1nd MOfllDl'1 (M l 71, .. 7. 6-l. ' .J'UUWWI el~Q lltollk:klllGI Rock (J, Or..,.,J Nrwm41n 1na Ruud (£1 def, Lo$ Amigos, 5-4, in overtime ; Zorblt'• C1U lilt. Ad•lr ) H1m1Mkl •nd (lr1nnrno IM J .. ,, w . ll:O)lltlng ROCkll j J, WlhDn) er1i..r '"" Fr:,, (El d•'· 1nc11 ~ Buena Park dumped Millikan.· ·'-'~'"";;;';';";· ;'~";;';;' ;;;;;;::;;; f w chlClt !Ml l-0, ,._.,, 8-4 : -and Long Beach \Vil.son. l•bCNI t, MafllOlll t _ s1nt1tt outlasted Chaffey, 5-2. 0111111 <Eid"'· t•n•• CM> 11, '"'· nterc are no polo gam-e"i1on jE) def. (lrow" (M) U . H . - Studdfft 111 d•f. Poun<1• CMI .,,, .,,, tonight but tint round play In 0 M•rfc·• ttl dtl. llarr., !Ml .S-7, fol. '" the Friday night ffOSh.soph r111gnor11 tOl'lel1ed •wo · t I ro o 1 • s le.siJ7ue invclves five """'a metcMJ, -e ... .,. Doubt•• schools at Estancia Hlgh. NfW!'n1n I nd Ellmor• 11!'1 Hf, i=iiiiii::;;;;;:;;;;::;~~;;~j l Sllnion 1rld Flf'l!llng lMI •t. W, POOL TABLES '39500 --...: Ind (11111' .,.,., l,'(nollt Ill *'· C•nH • "" .. -• it"d 81HY !Ml t-4. .0. 1-ll<'ltl ~ ~f'llr Ill dtl. ltovm~•nd ca9f MfSI ft!JVfld, IMI H , f.O, .,,..,. ......... NEWPORT LIASES J400We1tC.-..... sup LHslnsr •II Vohlclot 645-2202 __ .. _ ..... lMltlt .... =~~ ..... ,. ... --OIA-COUNTY 1714) -BlS.2220 ·-•-•c.iuci up BRAKE RELINE ALL CARS ANY SIZELISTED --40~000 MILE GUARANTEE LINING AND LABOR ... ,.,, Werlilltftlhl .. • Cj>Hlfty Reptoc ... nt ..... e Speclol Low Prlcn R•o. ••.•s GUAIANTll 24AJS ll!J:. DISCS) EZS-14 F78-14 G.78-14 G78·15 The '111C1llry !Herke llnl .. lntalt.d oft yotir cer , .. ,. .. toed fer 40,000 "'II" w .......... 1 ...... -COMIMfCl•I ,.. ..... , ccrr .enke. Slto•ld ti. ll1dflt foll or ,.._ Mt d•rllMJ thlt pierlod. tMy wPI .. rtptoc.H - o ,,..,.,ed IMlh 4epffdl"' .. •ltHte --••tY· lhitttff to ....... , tlte ...... '"'°,. ... .,.. .... ..,.._ ~;;;;;:;;=:::;:;::::;;=;:======~---4URGER SIZES H79-15, ~15 end l.71--15 WHITEWAU.S, 4 For ONLY $120 r Plus 52.31 IO $3.31 f,f .T. S1rric1 ind 8el1~co TRUCK -CAMPER MOTOR HOME SAYE 10.00 to 30.00 A TIRE 1.56s lie SILICTION OF SIDS SW PltlCI SID &10·11 •••• 21 .tl 100-16.S •• 7ff.tS 21.tS 111-1&.S •• 700·16 ••• , 2t.t5 t5t-1&.S •• 710.1& ..... J6.71 10-16.5 12-16.1 ,,11.T. f,N lO ,,41; PltlCI lt.ts 47.16 S&.71 4t.15 It.II LUBE & OIL CHANGE WE'l.L LUIRICAT• YOUR CA.It ANO CHANG• l!NOINI! OIL. .. RIC• INCLUDIS UP TO J QUA.lll:TS OF QUALITY OIL. WHEEL BALANCE WHEEL ALIGNMENT ftffULAR VALVI Ii.JS 411 1,49 .. LUS W•IOHTS 5ss ,.,. Sizes.A78·13 plus $1.81 Fod. Ex. tax pet lire and trade ms MANY MODELS OF: Grem&n, Colt,t:apri, Yegt, ~ HURRY. •• DON'T M/88 OUT/ BUY NOW & SAVE • WE HONOR • • . . 'ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS Phones • .... 4421 540.4343 JONES TIR·E -SERV.ICE 2049 HARBOR.BLVD. let lay) COSTA MESA HOURS---, I o,m. ti • J.M. MONDAY l1lf1I JlllDAY SATUlll:OAY I 1.1'1'1, f9 I'·'"· • . If you want Goodrich, you 'll just have to remember Goodrich. I " •I I ' i Transpae DefJut Jack J~hnson and Bob Poole will co-skipper the Columb1a43 Sanderling IV in her first attempt at th.e 2,225-mile Transpac race from Los Angeles to Diam ond Head. Sanderling IV is an entry under the burgee of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club and ha s been placi ng high in local offshore races. \ , ·~ . l l I ' ~· ,, ,, • • Class A Contender --.... • •• ,, ·-···-,j ,..._ ~ -~ . 111.irsday, Jun! 28, 1973 DAJLV PILOT 33 ~j! N eiv Boat,s Built Fitaalists Selected Texanin Wales Cup From Fiberglass I Texas Corinthian Yacht Club NAYRU's Area F elimination Long know for its quality made them famous as of Houston, with veteran sailor events, are the third of eight wooden boats built in Sing· seaworthy, Ion g -distance John Kolius as skipper, has area representatives from compeUtion v.·111 be sailed in three-man Cal T-4 sloops over twin championship and con- solation bracket courses oft apore, American Mar l n e, cruising yacht, the company been certified for the second arowxl the continent to eam Ltd·, head q u at t e re d in said. The announcement con-straight year as a finalist in contender berths in the match Long Beach Flarbor. .1~ Newport Beach, ha s an-tinued : the North American Yacht racing championship series. nie Prince of Wales com· !u; nounced that it is now building "Although quieter and BOATING Racing Union's Prince of Los Angeles Yacht Club with petition, symbolic of the North ,~ .. tile famed Grand Banks 32 36 smoother than before, there is , • Wales Bowl championship to skipper Dick Deaver. and American match raclnl cllam-•'.A nd 42 od I 1· eJ r no discernible difference in a m es en lf Y 0 appearance between the woOd be conducted Aug. 27-31 by CorinUtlan Yacht Club of Seat-pionship is one of five major .. : .. fiberglass. and fiberglass boats. Hand Long Beach Yacht Club in tie with Bill Buchan were vie-championships conducted each ,r, .. American ~farine said the craftsmen finish the interiors on the flybridge. cooperation with the Southern tors earlier this spring. in year by NAYRU. The others ,.. , first oC the fiberglass versions wilh Burmese teak." The new The company introduced its California Yachting Associa-areas G and H respectively. are the ~1allory (men), Adams are now in transit to its world· boats will have wider side first production high-speed lion. Five more area winners re-(womcn J, Sears (junior) and ~ wide dealer network. decks, deeper lockers, y,•ider diesel cruiser, the Laguna, in Kolius and his Texas crew main to be se lected. O'Day (singl~handed chan1· Besides its long establihed,-be_r_lh_s_a_n_d_I_ai_d·_tr_a_k_,P_la_n_ki-'ng:__I9_70_. _________ me_;:_m_be_r_s_. _s_u_r_v_i_v_o_r_;s_o_r __ T_he_P_ri_nc_e_or_w_aI_es_Bo_w_I_cp_io_n_sh-'ip'-s-I. _____ _ policy of bullding wooden boats, Am erican l\.farine is alo noted for being the world's largest producer of diesel yachts. The switch to fiberglass for the three popular po w e r cruiSers was ·one of the best kept secrets in the boating in- dustry. The change about, company officials said, to dispel much of the competitive advantage which may have existed for those companies which had aMounced their in- tentions to produce a fiberglass boat similar in ap- pc3J11Il<e ID the Grand Banks. The new fiberglass boats are being produced at American Marine's expanded 13-acre facility in Singapore. They will retain all the qualities and characteristics which have --- ' <i:i l . . ··'THE EVERESr' BACK PACK AND FRAME ' Nylon pack, , and mog')eslurn, frame. Woi•t . and should• ~ atrops p<tdded and Odjustob\9. b pock•~'· too. . ' • ·¥$KY-LINE" ~coMBO-PACK , ~mlnum frome. ':'Ylon b09 & iip.,-ts. podded tiip J>e\t. Or~nge! ' . -. MT. CRAIG 2-LB. DUCK DOWN SLEEPING BAG SPKIAL PllCll •••1cnv1 THIUTUllDAY, JULY 6, 1t7J GLACIER MT. WHITNEY 2-LB. PRIME GOOSE DOWN BAG ~· POINT ACRON 'll BAG \ " ' ••. 1 "i . .i: '·' ... "' ... , '" .. •t. :.iL ,., •I •Hr .• ' . I " 1,•,1 "' v l "' tt.'I "" 11 .. " •!T ~ ~assel's 50-foot Britton Chance-designed cutter Warrior from Bahia Cor- 1nth1an Yacht Club barely ntissed overall and Class A honors in the 1971 Trans- pa c. After a successful Jocal campaign she will be back this year for another 3 MAN NYLON TENT Vinyl-coated fabric floor, 7'x7' or.a w/ mosquito flop & zippers. .~ «U try at the big prlie. , Transpac Front Rbnner I Bob Grant's CC-61 sloop Robon fr om Newport Harbor Yach! Club will be scrap- ping !or flrst-to-llnlsh when the 62·boat Oeet drives !or the finish Uno at Dia- mond Head. Robon was llrst to finish the Bermuda race last year on her 1nalden.outing. · • ' OPTIMUS SVEA PACK STOVE Almost soup<on size, coverw/hondle 11 pot. #123 tr=: . NIESSEN CLIMBING BOOTS Suede uppers, contro1 t s titching, podded hHl1. Ultimate comfort. 24:~1911 ENSOLITE PA0 .. .,., .... , .... ,, .... 499 1 ( "MACKENZIE" PACK TENT Nylon Mwn-ln floor & screen door. One-man mountal,o t•nt, NYLON PONCHO Lightweight with draw- string hood, lor~ 50" by 84" size. 511 BERKLEY BACK PACK ROD lrllf SAW #3140 lll'SJo,,fAl'f ,~~· ......... ' ' I. llf#CH IAHrflN I~~ .... ' · ' · · J,95 STUFF IAG 19511 .... , .. , 6.39 · MINS HllllNG SllO .. '. " · " .. ·' • , r • .u . IADIU HllllNG SHo:!:"'° · · · · .' 10.ts • FWl5ffD511fWQ #5407 #6S1 ••.. II.ts lfrtoiw Coto IUOJ ......... "ID GIOCllfD SHrn 1521·, · • ' ... ' •. : •. ,,. l'Of DllPl'Q #'640 . ' ' ' · · · · .. 1.6t Combo fly & tpln rod, llght weight, eo11ty pocked. 14:·.1111 .,., GllU , .. ,. ' .... ' ....... ' "" •1100t11oaonu 110 · · · · · · · · ·. 1.u • .. SCOUr llfTTU 16$~0 ... ' . ' ' 'J,ft II 4 l'l#r WIDr . " " .... S.fS ,,., •ourH aornr .... I ..... , "lfT 10rn11112; .· ............ o •1 1. fal ... •ii - • • • I . ' ·. • 34 DAILY PI LOT Tllursda~. Junt 28, 1973 <, 1 J'outh Coast Repertory ffMAL WUJ I "IN THE MIDST OF LIFE" "THE r:LOWNS" A .e.,.tid: IW•,l•llY ef MllM, M-'c ••4 Lo .. fltt>r Wed./Tl111rt. 1127 NIWH>ltT ILYD., ot Horbor IR .. tlllltMllVRt.Mt"v•li9tll "'"1:14) I PM . Curtitn Bllllf lffNBIJIB . SlllHH mna ill J. GOHR · JHGK WlllDlN ~GmlGl HHmlOON PREVIEW TOMORROW ., A Full-length Feature Film Multi-Screen Re-Creation of the 50's! In all the power of 4-Track Stereo! LET 'DIE GOOD 'flMESl{OLL .. "PREVIEW" AT 9:00 U. A, C:tTY AND SOUTH COAST CINEMAS-TUESDAY SOc flAOIES AND GOLDEN AGEllS~PEN 'TIL l:IM f'.M. Gec11111 Se<Jal 011'!1df J1ckl011 "A TOUCH OF CLASS" • -plui-•-Ful\lrelt.I "LOCUSTS" llfl'll 111 Col«! (PO) G.n1 H1tkm1n Ern. ll1Jrgnln1 Sht lley WlnltrJ ''POS EIDON • ADVE NTURE" -Piu-"VANISHING POINT" Bolh In Color! {PGJ Mll5. Dally M1linff 0!'1YI "WILLY WONl<A" • "Ch1rl11tt_.1 Web'' Ellfftillt Dnlr! "HAii.RAD EX- PERIMENT" "Love And Slr.,191n1" (Rl Mills. Dally C. Tys.n/P, Wlnlif,ld "SOUNOEll" G. H•c•m11n/E. Bol'fl'IM Al11n Arkin "POPI" Both In Colorl CGI -W1.0n1yi'-W1\'.LY- WONKA" "CHARLOTTE'S WE8" !OJ Evt Only! "LO VE & PAIN" "1 1$ A LONELY NUMIER" IRI • "THE POSEIDON ADVENTUlll:E" "VANISHING POINT" Bolh In Colorr !PGI Clinl EillwOOCI • "HIGH PLAINS DRIFTER" "YOU'LL LIKE MY MOTHER" I RJ Try Saturdc1.y's Neivs Quiz NOW! _j • Five Shmvs Closing Stage Season's Swan Song TI1e 1972-73 season of li ving lh~atcr on Ute Orange coast comes to a s udd e n, scrct-t hing halt this weekend . The last five productions on the boards -thrl'e in Cosla Mes<1 and one each in Irvine and Laguna Beach -draw their final curtains during the next few days. Ne~ \\·eek the entire coastline "'ill be dark, with only th ree July pro-- ductiGns on ·the local horizon. At Scuth Coast Repertory, "'he re t"·o of the three Costa l\1csa productions arc holding forth. "The Clowns'' takes its final bow tonight, while "In the l\1idst of Life" has two more performances remaining. on t~riday and Saturday evenings. The Costa !J\itcsa 0 i v i c Playhouse is bidding adieu to "l..ast of the Red llot Lovers" _wit h closing performances F°riday and Sat urday. Likewise. !he Irvine Com- munity Theater and i t s "Surprise." And the Laguna ~loulton Playhouse winds up its extended run of "But- lcrflies Are Free" with three rinal stagings tonight through Saturd ay. "IN THE l\ODST of Life" Is Ron Throoson's original revue with Toni Shearer and Bi-yant McKernan shari ng n1usical credit and l\lartin Benson directing the show, which centers on the life and works of Ambrose Bierce. l\1ichael Douglass plays Bierce In a cast which includes James dePriest, H.S. Parks, Mimi Smith, Sand ra Ban~, Gary Bell and Richard Doyle . "The Clowns" is R o n Boussom's pantomi mic tribute Bii.OWN CULL EN to the silent movie comics of yesteryear, featuring Steve Patter.son. Raoul O'Reilly. Linda Kostalik and Reginald Rook. Curtain time for both shows is 8 o'clock at the Third Step Theater, 1827 Ne wport Progra11i Supple11ae1ats Intermission Tom Titus Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reserva- t.iom 646-1363. NEIL SIMON'S "Last of the Red Hot Lovers" spotlights Bernard Simon in the title role and a trio of elusive liaisons portrayed by (in order of ap- pearance) Diana Sherwood, Helene Briggs and .Genevieve Murray: Resident d i r e c t o r Pati Tambellini stages the comedy. Curtain time Ls 8:30 at the Mesa Playhouse's Community Center auditorium oo the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Reservations 834- 5300. "BUTTERFUES Are Free" conc.ludes a successful engage- ment at the Laguna l\1oulton Playhouse under the direction <1f Hap Graham. William Cul- len stars as the blind youth trying to tackle life on its o\vn terms. I\tichelle Brown as the gi rl friend , Annabelle Quigley as the mother and Jack Bingert as a "now" director complete the Laguna cast at the playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna. Reservations 494-0743. ltft & NIWPOlT 541-1552 WALT DISNIY'S "ARISTOCATS" Abo "SONG OF THE SOUTH" IGJ CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM I P.M. THE JRVINE Conimunity ~~~~.~.~~~~~~1 Theater is bringing its season ~~ . to a close with its traditional ' madcap farce. "Surprise" fea--_,_ •-.J.iinol tures Joanne Wolcott, D.D. · ' ' ' · · ' Calhoun. John Loughman, Loi, CANNES FILM FESTIVAL WINNER' Fa!'!h, John Phillips and Sor-·ee~1F11m8vaNewOirector" .. re11 Wayne in principal roles. ' Completing the JCT cast are Debbie Ensign, Pat Schneider, 7\-fichacl Wilson, Han-y Lulter and David Perlman (It the Humanities Hall Playhou se on the UC Irvine campus. Curtain is 8:30; reservations 646-3178. "• Aword Wh•I .. Slriort "TO Sii '01 NOT TO SE E" 7:JO & t :JO loclt Eve11i1tt Uncel" A,... ..... •f 1(11ou •2:1-4010 BILLY JACK ll'fi! Pl.US • llCllAIO TMOfMI RED SK Y AT MORNING l"'l TV Networks Transmit 'Extra News' By JA I' SllARBUTf NE\V YORK (APJ -It n1<1y sound-odd . but the NBC, CBS and ABC television ne tworks regularly transmit n e \\! s reaturc and sports stories you'll rarely see on the networks' regular evening ne\\·s prog rams. Okay , so ·where do the stories go? They sho.w up on 379 television stations as part of local ne1Ys programs that start before or after the "NBC Nigh tly Ne\\1s;•• "CBS Evening News" or "ABC Evening Ne\\'s." They also pop up on loca l weekend news programs. The networkks t r a n s m i t then1 -al a fee -as a sup- plementary television -nt-Ws service to help local stations fill their news 'Programs with tape and film stories from other cities, regions and even nations. AT NBC, the service is cail- ed NPS, or "Ne\.\'S Program cranked up in February 1900 to .give local a f fi l i ate s "n1aterial 1.hey other 1v i s e wouldn't 'be able to get," ac- cording to NPS' acting chief, Jim Aldrich . "Previously, each station cnuldn'1 afford ,to have a oor- respondent in Paris or Londe>n or Washington, and this is where we could help our af- filiates," he said. Service." At CBS, it's caUed "WE ALSO emphasized ··The Late Afternoon Ne1\-s." sports. It was one of our l'Cry ABC calls it the "Daily Elec-big selling points and always THIU TUESDAY SIMO• W•d Att• leiicreft "YOUNG WINSTON" • "WHERE DOES IT HURT?" Wlrll Pem Sellen lettl I• Cotor I PG I tronic Feed." All <1peratc has been. 1t's one of the few 1;=~====~~~~=1 essentiaUy the same \\'ay . ways loCal stations can gel na- During the afternoon. they ticnal sports stories ~ause tell subscribing stations by the network ne\\'S program's closed-circuit teletype \.\'hat don't include sports coverage stories they have or expect IO on a regular basis." • 'Island Holida'' L•avcs Ba~Pa11flion Dall:11 a ••· • Call (714) 6 •SZ4S For B•servatlons, Etc. ... ··---'-'•·•Cl STADIUM 04 .~ , ..-:0:11• .... =nv.;;i<.=.o ' '"' "Song 01 The Soutlo" I GI "CAHILL·U.5. MARSHALL" -"HANG 'EM HIGH" IPGJ "FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" .... ' "PRIMf, CUT" (R) lcittle fcir The Pl9M't Of Tiie ,..,_. .. ICJI • "THE LOST CONTINENT" PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT ...... ". • • • • • • . . • • • • • • ••••• ···············•·• • • •(•G., llLYO . "' lLL11J. • ' et •. CO•I• r."'~ I U.IO 01160 '""~ 1'14 7 ·••o• , ... u NTI N<!:I to.. •<•C~ ALSO CALL 147-6017 WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY ONLY! (ll H~~,~~rt "Jr. GRAOUATf' 'LUS ·JACK NICHOLSON "CAl_NAL KNOWLtDJJ: 1 • mlfs' fif. jUN17 ft' I.EE MARVIN· ERNEST BORGNINE "EMPEROR OF ENORTH" (PG) \ have in 1he daUy video "feed." He said NPS was taken by They also give the gist of the only 36 stations when it stories and their approximate scarted; now, 133 take. CBS' leng1h -90 seconds or two version began ii\_ l\1ay 1961 mlnut es is the average. with 75 takers; tflc list ne>w The entire package is sent has 135. ABC's "Daily Elec- at 5 p.m. EDT. It's taped at tronic Feed," b e g u n in local stations, 1Yt'here editors January 1965, no\v has 111 and newswriters inspect the subscribers, according to th~ wares and decide whether to network. use 1hem. The networks also SpokeSTnan at all three offer a late-evening feed \\ilcn netY.-orks say the stories of- warranted. fcred on their supplementary CBS HAS a 2 0 • minute services each night never are taken from that evening's packa ge it sends ~Ionday scheduled net\\·ork ne\\'S pro- through Friday. NBC and ABC grams. each offer 30-minute feeds,-;==========~ll Sunday through Friday. The1 . material they send comes from network ne\.\-s teams and those of affiliates. NBC and ABC include ilt their service reviey,·s of plays and movies. Gene Shalit reviews for !\'BC; Kevin Sanders for ABC . The oldest of the three services is NPS. which NBC IN MISSION Vll!.10 EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO \AN 011 r,o 1•~ a1 t• r•r n1~~"" II lO ~QQ'l -.n' . 4icAllf 11oaoi .. ·~-Parr -'"' WIO.l .... nlll(I. 0 """ • ' IUIT REYNOLDS SARAH MILES f PGI "THE MAN WHO LOVED CAT DANCING" (PG) I w_~r.·~ , ~ COllONA DEL MAil N••-1 r ...... , •l l•k•r $1. !W5·l l ll lj:IWD •OUtCiftU SHAFT IN AFRICA 1~ + HIT MAN 111 IHE lll\lllOIJ\'N ll;l •l l .• IH,... w ...... 11~ •. ... ,, ., D~••ll l tvd. U1-J 591 12.00 Pll CAllOAD CAHl\l, U.S. MAllMAI. ............... LEMANS IOI Oi'll' tM i lillt l!•a IA ''A ROYAL TREAT!'' 11 ... A KING-DF-THE-Hlll MOVIE. A FINE, ELABORATELY STAGED ACTION MELODRAMA!'..,,",.,,,_ \ ., • {·' ! ~ ·,...,..i. \ ,• t . ' ~ ., ()nlyOnt-C... .. EMPEROR OF TIE NORTH FromTheMIMttOI "The Dirty~· :iflthOrnlll'V•fcnP,-~ lff-MNIWt · (RflSI-~· )(ElfH f.NIRMllfhl~EMPUIOOOflHEN(lfl'rH- llMMrrlne CHAAtlB t't'MfR • MM.rn.M Ml flll!URY · HARnV IWSAH • S!JttJN O.U.INll f'toctJ(tcl lrtS~ tO.Ot • Oi<Kltdby IQlRt AL(JIOI · A KlNNOH Im.wt "8UlTDt Writfton byDMTIJIHfR l(f()flf ·h\M-IJ\I IAAMI Dn'Ol ~ ~Al'l!Ali.-i .... ily'MMIY NllBtS· !.wfic,b\'ltll Ottfr'IO/Mi;l)k ll'tflWO(Dtl/OL • coum BYOf t.UXle~ [iijJJ o OPENS FRIDAY ! ! l ' •• :1 ' ' I 1 , ( ,, ( • • • .. •. TUMBLEWEEDS •· ----.......... ---..... .. . WE Dar(r ~ 61T /IUICED UP WITM TM' Ylt(. I C'HllE,..J.ELPtlA F~l\l'E. by Dot19 Wiidey l sut .• \Cltl _,. ~-· C'QIOE tNTIE~i0 1 SHOW)()() SCWETHINIS ... by Tom K. Ryan ....._--------r I iHINK 11' SAFE 10 SAY'THA1' NEVER j 1 HA\le l<f'( PROSPECTS FOR COPPING THE ~; 11\lf'l.!!. CROWN l'fEN llORe Rfrtare •• J' j ~ ' DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS IT' Hi> IP ~ WAN.V. -SOM~ MUSIC,,. ., ~· '' I 1-• r -,._ DAIL y PILOT H by loger INdflelcl by CharleJ 1an9"i 1"1)'3,1\1.Awoth $ J,ow.,.~.TH>tt• ........ ~ .... _______ ..,., L ____________ _.1:!1!!!!!!!!!-J Mun & JEFF EVERY NIGHT F1FTYceNTs-~ ~ERE's FIVE DOLLAr&--NoW DON'TCQME IN HERENNMORE! · NEVER/ IJNCl!RSTAHD? FIGMENTS I NANCY DENTIST ,....,... DENTIST 9·-==== - ' TDDAT'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 1 -····Cruz 6 Fruit 11 Mocc11ln 14 CMl•1 15·V-1h1ped tortifle11lon 16 "Diamond 17 C1u1lng to overlap 19 Turning point 1 20 L1W'(er'1 I concern 2' Reghter 1 22 Aca'*nlc gowns 24 l1reel: Var. 28 Salad ingredient T1 Satire 30 Mtlhworkt for ricing 32 "Remtmbel' ! lhl __ .. I 33 Singer Lent I · 34 Co1t. lna'c1 f and Freight 37 DMthnllle 38 P1g11 In I , ledger I 39 Olstanct ul'llt -40 Reptlle • 1 41 Ctrtlfn '" 1ruck1: Informal 42 81ronN1,for 000 43 Violent \ dltllk .. 46"" Absorb rnentatlv 46 Gambling game 41 Bultretl 49 Once mofa 50 Lancelol's nephew 52 L•rga llnd m111 68 Unprincipled ..... , 57 lmpro~m•nts 90 Franch ....... 61 C1n1d1'1 Mt. SI.·-·· S2 -·-· fOf' news 6J Sarilb Abbr. &4 Fertile 191m1 65 Numeticel preti• DOWN 1 ·····1nd·1P1n 2 £oy,t. entertalnar . """" ... <4 Boring 5 Black bird e Oan1dl1n a.port 7 Soaks flax 8 Mine antr1nce 9 Movl• 1ho1: Informal 10 Fill parmlnantly 11 Klndofvote Yntard1y'1 Puzll1 Solved: 12 Buano1 --3t Megrim 13 Confron11tion 41 Golferw' 18 S1tla1e concerns 23 Poem "2 H1ber· 26 "'Wh1t'n c!Mhary hem --r· 44P.1.n1tiY• I 2t DHorca 45 Phonog,.ph , centar 19eord 27 Beyond: 41' look.1 toward P1'1tf1X "7 Type alia · 28 "Too bed I" 48 Spur ! 29 Conauman' 90 Milk product tdvocete: 2 51 Tow•rd th• words , mouth 30 Wall-made ' 53 Erelong 31 Flower 54 This month: 33 "Out-and Abbr, natlva llnd" 55 Cruising 35 Sk:lt1'181tH 5B Small: Suffix 36 LqtJ'I un\11 69 Plumbing 38 P»nt ham emn1 • -ti.JIM by Al Smith FIFTY CEl'ITII Wotl'TDOIT N-JYw.>RE/ by Dale Hale by Ernie Bushmiller GORDO ~WUPEf Now ;r. !<NOW WIW 1Jilt.'I CA/.t IT J.OWMT · Mt/..IC! MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS DID YOU WANT TO SE'E' ME', NANCY?' , PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER PULL UP TO TAAT PHONE eK>OTH, WlL.L YOU, PLEASE? NOT NOW " by Charles M. Schi* by Harold Le Dou WOULD 'VOU 00 ME A FAVOR'? I fOROOl TO CANCEL AN APPOINTMENT FOR MY HUS&ANO ! WOULD YOU CAl.L THIS HUMB!R AND TEU TH! SECRETARY PLEASE ••. t CAN'T EX.PLAIN ••. euT IT WOUL.P eE EMeARRASSIHG roR M!: TO MAKE Tt1E CALL.! THAi MP.. LA~SITER WON'T &E THER~ AT THREE O'CLOCK? .-r71../. ~TOP .,,,... Ma.Nlal·CiUY, jitA • 1W&.£. 'l'MIM Al.I. WHAT ""'4 ~IA&.L'V 1'HIMIC. ! -WtTM COPS PAOI •• Y I NllNUTH 111!-I> NIM by Gus Arriola by Ferd Joh- . by R09er lol•• • ~~KNOW! • "Hlllf 19 UI'!! ~l!llnl/ THE GIRLS . 6·1'!· "Nolldac com .. -lo ityte r..i.r -1 ut ,...,.. Jal ..-.llJ tmoWI ...... ~.....o.e; ., .. .'&-u DENNIS THI MENACE j ' ' . ' • ' ' • ,.. 6 DAILY PILOT T1u.1rsdaJ, Ju1tt 28, l'f7J ~ •••••• )00.SJC The Biggest Marketplace on the Oran1e Coast ,....., ...... w..' ,t'll .. Mt Autor~, •••• , • , 9SO • 990 DAILY Pllol CLASSl .FIED ADS """°"°"· •, •. •. • .. S2S•S41 f""""°"'•llCllt •••••••• 700 . 799 .... ood -· ••••• ll0 ·"9 .... llkft GINRll. . ••• lSO -"' ''tnonciol • • • • • • • • • 100 • 299 [642-5678) ................. 300 -... Hous.H few Sole • , , • • , 100 • 114 L~ l FOl.lf'ld , • , • • • , 5.50 -574 Merchondt.c. . . ' ' . . . 800 • 8"49 Yo'r' Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval School' and lmfruc:tion ••• 5.71 • "' S.vilM Cl(MI ..,._., ••• 600·6" Troinporlration.. • • • • • . • "5 · M9 _,,, .... _ ........ ERRORS. Ad .. rtl18rs should check tholr Ht dally & report error1 immedi11t1ly. The DAILY PILOl ... umos liability for tho first incorrect ln1ertlon only. General General A~<M-~ ~ AlllASSOCIATfS REALTORS 2828 EAST C0MT HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR.CALIF. ;0;""°;;;;r;0;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ;G;on;;•r;•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;G;o~ne;r;•;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;\,Ge;iiiiiino~r;•~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiG~o~neii;;ro~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim,\ • PATTI • _,,, .... I~.___[ -_ •• _ ...... __,J~ General 1 Gener1I 1..;.. _____________ • __ ~~~~!~ "\\"ANT TO GE.,. A\\'AY FROM TIIB KIDS"' 4 Bel.rs. Xlnl floor plan for mommy & daddy's privacy. Quiet cul-de.sac. Shag cpl. $4<1.950. OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience C1n Provide ****** 644·7Z70 "1800 l\IODEL" LEASE WITH OPTION ,TO BUY 4 UMVU: 1-1™1: * TAYLOR CO. * e OCEANFRONT-DUPLEX Best Cul-de-sac lot in the PB.ES'T IGE lruct. 2400 sq. f!. of t,,'l·ucious livi ng, 't '/R, fonnu.I D/R. }>'rpl. We 1..'0uld go on wid on. Eastbluff Lusk' 3 BR., 2 ba. home. Family rm. ·with frplc: & parquet flooring, go.ur~et kitchen & safety equipped thruout with tn- tercom, burglar alarm & fire alarm systems. $450Month One of the Bett Homes in Culverdal• IRVINE TERRACE-$185,000 Elegant & Spacious home with great VIEW of bay, ocean & boating activity. 3 Large bdrms, paneled lam rm & formal DR. 3 Frplcs, sauna. Pool in front courtyard. Sw im on your own private beach, a step (rom yo•r front door. 'fwo Large bedrooms and 2 enjoyable fireplaces Jn each unit. A deluxe duplex property lil:ce this only comes along once-in-a-lifetime. Call now for appointment. ''EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN" CAMEO SHORES • VIEW 3671 FENN. IRVINE -These always seU fast! Especially \vhen owners have pur~ chased and want action. This· 3-bedroom is cute, clever ai1d includes access to the pool and tennis club. Offered at $39,500. ............................... ,140,000. Adult occupied 2 Story -3 Bdr. 2~i: Ba. One ol the nicest are&.$. You'll love it! In one of Newport's most prestigious a~, with its private, locked beach entrances, this 4 bdrm. home offers great family comfort. The living rm. frplc. opens to a conversation pit for relaxed loafing with your friends, or enjoy the pool with them. The splendid ocean view is a bonus. $123,500 UNl9Ul 'HOMU OF HIWPOIT llACH, MMIN ,,,,...._., ........... e HARBOR VIEW HOME ''Our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors SOMERSET MODEL -Immaculate-just remodeled TWO.STORY home. New carpet- ing, drapes and wall coverings. 5 Bedroom, 3 bath. FAMILY ROOM with fireplace plus another fireplace in the living roon1. FORM- AL DINING ROOM , sprinklers and fenced "KEEP ON 'fRUCKlN' " Easy access to San Diego & Cardl'll Grove Frwy. Xlnt I acre C-2 property. "'est· 1ninstcr Blvd. U~IVUI: li()Ml:S 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' REALTORS NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 "\VE Jf,\VE IT" General General Gener•I General yard. Near park. See to appreciate $89,500. 1.;..'--'---------------le DELUXE CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX VIEW OF HARBOR LIGHTS "HARBOR VIEW HILLS" Located high on the hill, offering full enjoy- 1nent of the view of Newport Bay & Pacific Ocean. Lusk blt. 3 bdrm., family rm., dining rm., with a htd. & filt'd. pool & jacuzzi; on a profess. ll)dscpd. lot. Offered in lee at $99,000 CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytime General General SUPER DUMP-FIXER UPPER of the first order, needs paint and lots of cleanup. 3 Bedroom, large yard. Quiet street in very quiet area. Great opportunity at $24,900. ON THE WATER -WITH BOAT SLIP - New 2 bedroom & 2Jh bath luxury, carefree condominium. Custom· decor, ready for oc- CUPl'nCy. FuU price $87,000. .. ,~:. HERITAGE . • REALTORS General 540.1151 Open Eves. General Beautiful ••. tree-lined street in Old Corona de! Mar. BOTH DELUXE UNITS HA VE 3 bedrooms, den, fireplace. 2 baths, builtin kitchen, PATIOS, 2 blocks to shopping and schools. Choice location ...... _ .... $98,500. WE CAN HELP YOU BUY, SELL, OR TRADE A HOME ANYPLACE IN THE NATION AUSTIN·SMITH. GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS 644-7270 G9neral General PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT LINDA ISLE WATERFRONT Custom 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of main channel. Soft colors, rich wood panel- ling & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel- ing. Waterfront m str. suite has dbl. bath. sitting area, vie"' docks, ........ $295,000. For Complete Information On All Homes & Lots, Please Call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suito 1, N.B. 67>6161 Ptin1e Beach Blvd. location. 4..25 acres C--4. Corner Site. lTI Tl Bc;i.ch Blvd., !·LB. CALL 842-14111 4 BDRM, 2 BATHS PRICE REDUCED. Owner 4 BEDROOl\1; 2 Balh, plus an x1ra BONUS ROOM. Big corner lo! "'irh a \\·ei;t i.ide OCEAN BREEZE. Try 10% do\vn. 16'x38' POOL says, "Sell this house in1-4 BEDROO?o.tS. 2 Baths, plus medialely," close to shop-large FAr-.tILY R00?-.1 plus ping le E!>iancia H.S. Needs \\'ORKSHOP plus JG' X 38' sonic TLC. $25,950. DOLPi-llN POOL. North side location. HORSES, HORSES , $33,900. ... allO\\•ecl on this ~: acre ' ranch 1\ith fl'n<."ed corral, 3 bedroon1 home, plus t\\-o rental houses. $5-10, inc.."Ome. ~'eeds son1e fLxin' ... Only $52,500. Newport II CALL 642-t7n ~r21 I J!!!!!!D~ON'T MISS ------1 THIS! wow I •COMMERCIAL INVESTORS INVESTMENT PROPERTY ALERT! $33,750. I OKI.\ I L Ol \O\ li'CA t fl../R\ MKE ADVANTAGE Of a custom home. built bciore 1oday'11 high building prices. A wonderful f!ln1ily honle ll'ith Oc.."Can Vl£'w in Corona llt•I Mar. \Valk to the beach and 'own your land. Ch\'l){'r says submit offers. $107 ,500. 673-8550. OPE.N Tll 11 •IT'S FUN TO BE N1CEI • .,~,.. HERITAGE REALTORS HUGE FAMILY ROOM! $29,950 NEWPORT HEIGHTS! Genoral 1--------General ~. Iott n--2 b 12 One block to lTrH St., C.~1. , .. 1>0n-one-· v 1"" r Perfect beginners start. V.'/ bath 1 (2 yn, okl) rent!! for convertible corner 80' x 87' $150, &ecOnd 2 brll bath, adjaeem. to 70' x 120' iv /con· , ... ·n THE REAL ESTATERS Opon Evenings • 926-445;4 • 1 c"IUl 'f bc/k>\>c !his pric..-c! Thr honir i!'; fa.nta.o.;tii: · totally upi..'l"l.1dcd a.nd int· 1nacllinte "'ith lhe prctti<-st pond anri l\'aterfall in back- yard. Nice neighborhood 100. so it 'von't iru.-t. CALL IMMEDIATELY 847-6010 OPf.N TIL g • IT'S FUN 70 BE NICE' [-'---~ NEWPORT HEIGHTS, CHARMER Sin1ply perfect coruiition, new carpets, paint &. papc>r. 3 bdr, 2 ba., lonnal dining r m shaq> home in the most <lcsiN!d loc:Kt.ion! On I y $55,!XK> Call Red Carpet, l'lC'altor.; 316-SG-iO {Open evl'nin~l General 3 BR 2 BA, high beam ceil- in_gs in huge 11.iving room "-i;h fireplace. large kitchen, oversized dbl gar. Roont in Spanish Villa Tri Level bat"k yard for hoat and Super sharp 4 bedroorn Sp;in- l'an1per. \\'alk to nil Nrv,r. ish tri·level. One of a kind port l!Chools. $44,500. CA LL \\'ilh a till' roof, de<.."Or-Jtor 6-la-rnt. designed. \\1rought iron tJu'Oughout. Truly a Spanish castle. Intercom systC>n1 . Professional landscaping. Too many extras 10 list. PtiC'C'd at only $55.900. 8-i2·2535. 1733 \\lestcliff Dr., N.'B. OPENTIL9 • ITS FUNTO BEN/CE• Newport Heights \!i8'?l Duplex .~' THE REAL ESTATERS E:aeh unit . :.! bedroon1 \vith l '~~~~=====, hri1·k Jo'i l'<'pla<'e. Built· ins -J iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio Dining area · L."lundi'y"Room * NEARL y NEW * anr! Room to expand. $48,500 . . 10~'.. down. 646-7171 . Cu1e Spantsll style _hon1e. Near beach & shopping. 3 '()PEN TIL II • 17'S FUN 70 BE NICE/ BR. 2 ba .. din. nn. Frplc. f M 11 J{ea.M of Balboa $69, 750 ll~ ~Call, 673·3663 830-1914 Eves. General associated BROKERS-RE Al TOllS 1015 W Bolboc 61l l 6tJ HARBOR VIEW HILLS Lusk LaJoLJa 1nodel. 3 BR .• family rm. \Y/ frplc. 3 Car garage. Ocean viev11. l)ool. Ne\v listing! $91,500. Ca thryn Tennille EASTBLUFF BEAUTY Lusk .. C" plan w /huge pool & beautiful patio. Lovely decor. 3 Bedroo1ns, 21h baths. 2 F'rplcs.: 2100 so . ft. This is the BEST! $75,000. Carol Ta tum NOW IS THE TIME For all ~ood tennis players to 1nove to the BJuffs! 3 Bdrn1 .. 2'h ba. 2·story condo de· signed !or lhe 11cekend athlete' $69,500 *MESA VERDE* renls for _sam.e. Both only 1 i-ertible house & garage. $Z1 ,500. Ll~e 1n one &. let fOne full.hall block) "'ith PACESmER som~~c clse n1akc th~ pay· adt'<luate parking. Get a ni<>nts. start \\•ith ""Ur O\\'Tl bu siness A sharp -3 bedroom ho1ne J ~ 1\·ilh lru-gl' 12 x 24 screened I 00"·· ily room. park like yarcl, and H.ealtors SIG-0562 'tVV _ uuw recreation roon1 'of n.he fam· •AA(.17id8JifOR.lll :~~tc 1nastl'1' bcdroon1 --""EA~"'s=TS=l=D"E=---1 c.:..:-lllhi. $46,SOO COSTA MESA --- Call 644-7211 3 BR, 1% BA, hardwood noors, fireplaC(', bHn kitchen ''JUST PROMOTED'' & sen•ict' po~. Tree shaded Your promotion, ean be S • , 19 x. 26 d~k \\'1th BBQ over · 1 fullilled with this superb ~ 1 looking fish ponrt and \~'ater· view home. Step up to this , -j (A.IL Front yal'rl sprinkler $11 5,000 executive custom · systent .. 2 Car delachL'Ct gar-built estate. Excit in~ vie\V CHOICE , 111'.;'l' \l'l!h Sf'parah~ "·ork of south bay. 3 bed. 21~ bath 4 BO RM DREAM shop.. Plux cx11·11 eoncrcte 2600 sq. ft . se parate pnrk1n;.: a1·c>a for C"ari1 & 11ua11ers below. apartment boat -Rlley :icce.ss. $31,500. suite master suite, spacious Lll\·t'ly <.."Orner 1ot. 4 bdr, upgl'aded carpets. This one \1·on'l lasl long at $29,500. Bett er cal l Red Carpet, Realtors NO\\'! 546-8640 ior1en evenings). 0\1·ner. 894-8437. kitchen. electronic garage ''HAPPINESS'' door opener, view from every room and a spec· tacular patio perfect for entertaining. Happiness is Dialing . 645-8080 for an ap. pointn1ent \\ilh a pro. fessional. Red C a r p e I , Realtors. General '" ' . ' •I, e·~·'!'·~·~·~·~~~~~~I Huntington Honey ...: Spaciou..<i -I Br, 2 Ba on super SMILE! Selling your honu.• Try "CASH PURCHASE PLAN" wide klf. !mt llun1 8111 nch::hbo11100CI. ilnma1· c•vntl, \\' bit-ins, shag rn111 .. ts. lots ot Jaud~apin~. rn1 ror bo.11! Sutxnil IO\\' d"11, trodes. T.D.'!I. 1->i'i<'ffl rii:;ht at ti2 hour evaluution service) $34.499. Call 6-b-R-100. By 7 QffW SERt/NG !QUI QlfH 711. ! C wALl(lH & Lll REAL e;-rATE L_v:~~~j rn1 South Bristol Ave. ''50-/o TAX liRACKET'' 546-002'.! *6 UNITS* }~~~s~l~:~:a l £~~~1~1'.~~ • loca1i•ln. Renl<'t'.~ 1\·ill "'ail ror this one. B1;ck & 1vood l"'O 1Ti1>lex1"!'; on l lot. All exterior, heavy shakC' roor. 2 BR. units \\' 11100. bl!in enclosed garages, laundry kitchell!l. lncon1c :S920/mo. racilities. Priced at $121'.l,OOO Room tor 2 or possibly 3 to make it a 'great shelter mor{' unl is. Ou1-0f.tcm'n. inveslment! Happiness is O\l'ner ~~ lmmed. sa1e. OlaUng 645-SOOl for an aJ>- 592.500. Call 5 4 5 • 8 4 2 4 , pointn1ent "'ith a · pro- c;So::.•:c•lhc;C::•c_Rc;•;.:•ccll::•";.:· "'-==ol fci1sional, Retl Carp e t . \Van t ad results .. b~z,....j678 ___ i:_c;_,11_0~•~~· ----- Gensial General I-::=====::::- MACNAB IRVINE Salesman of tha llDllh LUXURY AT LOW COST Designed & built for modern living ; dec- orated in excellent taste; 3BR/FR. Beau- tifully landscaped-room for pool. ~s.ooo: Amy Gaston 642-8235. (W23) . TURTLEROCK BROADMOOR VIEW! LOCATION! 4BR's, FR, DR! Superb park location! $69,500. Laszlo Sharkany 644-6200. (W26) ,,.,. .. ,. .. Coil• Mt•t oirlee Frank S1r1bla has t>ttn n1med S•lesman OI the Month al our Costa Mesa onlc•. WIT!i f,1\1\10 : Toni Escobar IIARBOR VIEW HOMES CAMEO HIGHLANDS-VllOW - Custom styling-elegant 3 BR-Den home overlooking Morning Canyon & ,pcearc $69,500. C. Reichmann 642-8235. (Iv 12) Frank Is the recipient ol numerous awards lor lop 111e1 performance and lin· lthld twelfth In the anllrt coma1ny !or numblr ol ••Its In 1972. EMERALD BAY EXCLUSIVES Two fine hon1es offered -\Vm. ·Pereira Cape Cod 5 BR. S350.000. Walter Ric hard· son architect -Spanish ~ BR. $295,000. Please call Pat Hu~ LA~GE LIDO LOT ~R~o-o-m~to_R_ar-==en-or-ex]Wflf or fOl'}'Our fifv· - orlte peL_thrce hd r1ns. & de!_l & charming; Full price $94.500. Gene Vreeland .....-- Coldwell. Banker 644-2410 ~ $SO NEWPORT C~NTER DR., N.B. -I PORTOFINO MODEL 3 Br bonus rooln/sleeping loft, formal dining, lush carpeting, lots of Spanish tile, charming Brlcli patio w /overhang. Adjacent to park. $19,SOO CHARMING WATERFRONT HOME 3 Br, extens!v~ wood paneling, carpeted thruou~ en- c losed patio; Pier & float; Completely remodeled 11113. $94,SOO lfARBOR VIEW REALTY 833-07JIO BO.MES SIDE BY SIDE BAYFRONT BUILDING SITES 54'8" on Newport Bay, Less than 10 min, to the open sea. 2 bul!dable ft.I lots. Ex· tremely attractive financing available. $219,000 total, owner will oeU one or. both. Tom Quee~ 644-6200, (IV34) [Irvine I .._._.._~em...., I Ht --141•11H IM4 11-.UU M4·at0 Wt HH 1,000 home• evt ry month 11 Wt!ktr • Let. Oulat1ndlng 1a1111'Tfen !Ike Frank S•rabla trt the 1ea· s~n why. Ctn hltn. (71-'I 5!1·'!.11 (714) 14"°411 2190 H11b0f Bl'fd, !CO•Mil 01 AcltMI) Co1t1 M111, CA 12',. 5465• Opon Eves. IOlll\I I. Ol\O\ /.' . . ~ EXCWSIVE EXOTIC HEATED POOL $35,500 Probably the vest value tri th<' area, and only available al 1HE REAL ES'TATERS. Luxurious large heated pool nc:<t to a citrus m~. No 111.n!eta to C1"0Sll to reach the grammar ~. and walking distance to hlP IChool. nnd Orange Cout College. Over sized 2 cU garage with room tor \\'Orkshop and you name tt. PleRRC phone now for an ap- polntn1cnt to view thb tx• elusive property. 546-UlS Peninsula Point Brl.t;hl .l chror'ful 2 BR, den, 2" bnths; beam oril'a,, hJll, patio. fmmllc. oond. '87,!500. OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-1 40I S...llle COAST PROPERTIES * 67S-S410 * "A FEELING 01' SECURITY" \'oo \!JIU hAvo Just tha.t kind of (l'ellng, whrn )'OU Aee um < hod"'°m I bAlh. 2 ""'Y CllSI~ buflt home, t..oc.~ on a oorntr k>t, with bDtl a.nd camper acceM, ful1)' fenced large rear ylril. With I h e 1' e oot&ndlN feAt\IJ'ell, Mn111IV4t n..iliii httu1h, ulMMJ brick fireplMll!. B,u!U.ln bhq, five yn, .Up. •"ply of fi f'C\VOOCI. delux .J pUnnce1 tu1CI lt1 only ,month'! oltl. [..()()tt..ltt<l In M()j dl'8ll'(lble f.'ASl.3ldc .loclllo111. llapplne~~ f11 Dialing .. 64~ for •1'1 appotntmerit ~th I\ pt'Of Mlol\8.I Red Carpet, Re!alton EASTILUl'I' 3 Br., LUSK llOM:£, 111le by nwncr. Excetltn '~"d1... qui« St. ~,IOIJ. M-t·lw.t . , 1-c..'ti a "l'nd"! Pbtl] anid1 j • • " . " ; ' .... _ .. -- ,. 1h.ir~ay, J 11 ~.,;: D~LV PILOT 3 !~I ('---'"'"'°_!~(~ -~fwW.~1~~1~(~-~, ... ~ .... ~l ~~Jt! 1(:..,., .. 1 ;;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ _,._ 0-rol Gener•I °"~~·~~~·~·~l ~~~~~-1 °",;;;.:.;"°~'~•~l~~~~~~l ·°":o;:;;"":;.:;.;'~•~l ~~~~~-J ;F•;";";t;•;l•;;;V;•;ll;ey;;;;;;;;;;;;LH;u;n;t;ln;o;t•;•;:;:B;";;;•;h;;;;;; lrvlne loguno Niguel l)Y nv.,)t•r, 3 Br, FUN AND FROLIC 1.,,,, '°'-139.900. 3 Sa on Get The Paint lnnh • OOGLE- AT OOGLE WANT INVESTMENT$ SCHOOL'S OUT 3 IEDROOM? Bul whoo ll •<•'1• ogam. TllkC" a dip In th~ pool, t\'lax .f.1.>0002 VA hOme • $23,500, 3/br It YOUR EYES \VJU. POP one mne from Sooth Cout OUT Y.'htn YoU feast th~m Plaza lhoppin& center. No on· tJlill lovel)' home The doy./!1 A seller wlU puy most m·e.ny x1:ra Xlra.8, rtOtt music of your cloaln& C011t11. a.lld a bubbling \vaterlnll. Thia home ir-; located In lhe finest of Ecu.tslde. iocR1'1oos. OrterOO at Just t.52.950. Pre· sented to you exelustvt'l.y thur our oUice. Call IQday lOf' further information, o .\,-tLIH r, Il l SUPER SHARP CONDO Cbolce Jocation in Hunllnlton Beach, 2 bdr, 1 bath condo near . all c ommun i ty taclllUe1. Ready for -you to move In and prlc~d al $25,SOO. Call no\.\· to sce - 546-8640 Red C a r p e t , Realton fopen e\'crrtngs) ''COOL POOL'' "I'm too small tor nlY Pre5· ent owner but just right for )'O'.I with my 4 BR, sparking poot, 1": cov patio." ln\med. ot"C. avail. Submit on $42,500. ·~~NA~~O~~~:!:• INVESTMENT ORIENTEO? \Ve have n1any ne\v & ohlcl' l.partn1ents available on aJ] exclusive basb;. Give us a call and brouse through our Inventories. Full broker cooperation, call R e d e CALL ANYTIME e ~or Eve. 541-9416 Lachenmyer Re.ii tor DUAL SPLENDOR BAYFRONT Carpet, Realton MS-8640 ~~~~~~~~~~ lopen eveningsl - *BAYFRONT 6 BR.* f\1ost e.'l:cluslve N'pt. Joe. Con1p. privacy, HEACll, PATIO, PIER I 1<"1..0AT. You o\\'ll lhe lantt. Pricro below market, s1-r..,ooo. BALBOA BAY PROP. * '42·7'tl * 4-PLEX-NEW Lovely 4-plex, just com· pleted and ttady for you to buy. Take advantaie of first owMnhlp tax laws. Priced at $80.000-Cull Red Carpet, Realton 54(>.8G40 ( o p e n e.venlngsl. 4 Bdrm• $2',950 Half clrculnr drive. Alr con· dltioned. Patio, dining m1. Plcture 1 qu e yn rd . Beautifully maintained home. brk 54(}..1720. TARBELL TIME FOR QUICK CASH BALBOA PENINSULA Active \\'a er e\v on an· 11el at llarbor entrance. 5 Bedroom.~. 4 baths and large dining room, separate maid's quarter•. 45' waler frontage -large private patio-pier and slip. $219,CXX>. Call 6'r;>-4(16() PETE BARRETI -REALTOR- '4205200 -----------------~-HIGH ON A HILL OCEAN VIEW How would you like ·to O\\'ll th.is n1agnifi Ct"nt home that sets on a private street with P a r k · 1 i ke surroundings owrlooking the P a c i f l c Ocean? You might expect to pay a king's ransom but you ~~;ould be surprised lo learn milt it's only $29,500. ~IWTY and caU St2-~ Ol'EN Tll 9 • fT'S FVN TO BE NICE/ THROUGH A [rfl l(~$1llil DAILY PILOT $42,500. WANT AD 642-5678 GET A 'CHARGE' out of your DAILY PILOT WANT AD NOW HONORING Luxurlo\J$ 4 Bcdnn & den or 5 lkdrrn ;\l esa Vet'dc hon1e. Quiet trtt Jifl('(j Joe. Close to 6("\100\s & shoppini;::. Dc<_.p shag crp1s, 2 sp..·ui<lin~ baths, 2 massi\'e fireplac~. lrg n1nnicured yard & f.:-t n· tastic shade 'tl'l'es. Call ~( SolJ'ltiCo Realtors. * 4 BEDROO!l.t. 2 bath!, doublr ;r-o.r~f'. 5<;(),l.00. Be-trt of terms. * COi\li\IERCIAL ZON E · 2 BR t"·o story older home, corner lo!. $2-1.500. Roy McCardle Realtor 1810 :\c"A'tlOrt Blvd., C.i\I. 541-7729 EASTSIDE DELIGHT Builders drean1 hon1e, highly upgraded and simply has e\-ccything. 4 bdr, 3 bath, raised hearth fittplace, gas barbecue, lovely con1t•r lot with boat gate. Only l yr nc1\· 11nr\ prif'ed af SG,000. Call to 9Ce this one now! R1--d C a r p e t Rco.ltol'i --STOP LOOKING!! Our profesaional ABies staff can do the work fol" you. Let U5 kno\V "'1'81 you an! looking for and we will find it. Take a!lvantage or our Red Carpet service, call 54&-8610 for detai ls. Red Carpet. Realtors, 2 6 2 9 Harbor BJ\-;_1 (<>pen e\'t'.'n· lngs). SEE USI }"or the right hon1e tor you. Complete selection of homes tn the beach area. HAUOR VIEW HOMES HALTY UM7IO 4 ... -x-$48 000 )'Our children ca n walk. R-2 Pan.~\! 11,,, Is a -ol nw ' -" 5 \\te 've jusl llst1~d I h J s cutic. The ov.'ner .,.,.111 sell or . harp furnl11hed unit-;, l..nun· chftrinlng 3BR Eruit-aldc It you own u Z Bedroom dry rooin. Lov.· \'llCallCy fac. honu1 Uu11's ull ready for l.fon1e he \l'llJ exch».n~t. tor. SriJ or exchw1ge, Prlnle Cflllt'k oceuriincy. The largt' This hon1e has jullt been ·?"t!ntul location. 20',., down . rcn r ynnl "'Ill be 1,crri·ct lor I' e n1 ode I • d a-I ••s 1.1 x g1'0~ Call Lodu'-'! .. , ,... .1 those 11un1 1n<•r Bnr-B-Q'11. assu1nable \7 A loan. $29,900. 5'16· 1600. llu1·r" on this. All tor only eau 646--0555. C-2--Law Down i10.ooo. :•a-23n £ASTSIDE Good leases, lncon1e and re-OPE.Nflt9·t1~FUNTOBENICE1 COSTA MESA lWTI. 1\'u """•""'"" one 1·1.11 aere In Coflra :l.fe1>i\. CaJJ ' 1 \Vould you llke room for )'our 00\vt 546-1600. 1 . Iii THE REAL ESTATERS children to play In safety!? !Mesa 4-Plex ~ iJ.~, Do )'OU desire pri,•acyT How about a co111blnation Hon1e Nee.r Ne-v.wrt Blvd.. llC\V lnvestmf'nt ¥.'here you cou1d paint in nnd our. 2 . 2 lx.'£1· build 11nothcr Jton1e in the nxin1 & 2 · 1 bt'droon1 unilt;. future? Here is 11. y.•ell cared Vecy lo1v ''ac::nncy-fa11or. for hon1e thar has all those P'i,500! Call 00"'· 340-lUOO. features for there arc two land -Prof. parcels of land. 'n1e llome Itsel f has 3 Bedrooms, 2 39.000 Sq. 1-'t. for ..adminiatra· BaU1s, a bullt-ln Teak China tive • professidnal. $88,500. Hutch in thC! Dining Room Adjoining land available. and Brick F ireplace in the Call Now . 54&1600. Spacious Living Roo1n. This 546-1600 type of pnmony ,, heoom-INVESTMENT ing lncren1dnsd.v n1 o r e 1'l'nrre Jn our nren. $46,900. DIVISION C11ll anyU1ne. ~j, OLD DOG LEARNS NEW TRICK This started out it short ti111c ago Ill! Rn old 2 bcdl'oon1 hou!le on a large lol. TI1c hon1e has been completely remodeled. It has new plumbing, new "''iring, new everything Including nn at· tractive nev.· look. At the renr or the lot a ne\I' building has recently lx.>en c:onipleted \\'hlch contains a line 2 bt'<lroon1 unit y.•ith 111arble shower ~1 nnd 11. nifly 1 bcdroon1 ~n1ent, plus 11. rlnuhle garage. This i11 the fil'st tin1e our new trick has been advertised, IO hurry, ONLY $59,950. Call frl&Till OPENTll t • ITTI FUN 108E HICEI ,--.' i ' I l THE REAL ESTATERS BAYCREST -.NEW LISTING J'wit lhe hooic you've been looking for, loc:itctl on one of the ni..:• !>I .'-t1'(.>('15 in Baycreat. This ?.200 s<1. fl. DUPLEX + TENNIS COURT + PARK 0-dll us about thi.-; super du· pl-ex \\'1th 3 BR . 2 BA °'''ners unit and roomy one bedn)Om rental, acros:s from gt'a.88Y park and public tennis cou11's. S92,500 home, wirh four large ••GAMBLERS bCdroom!I, lhN?e O a l h s , DELIGHT" B.autiful Duplex J Lnr<J"e ne11· duplex, haJKlsome I thrl'C' b e d 1· o o nt unit.s, be a n1 e rt ceilings, all shingles. The builder \\'ants I aclioi1! Asking $119,.iOO. Call : GiJ. 722>. I powder roon1 , fonnf11 dinini:; room !c hu<;?C livi ng room Buying an i:nvestn1ent prop-ALOHA, YOU'ALL- has a ll lho~ Ji; needed to erty is ah\'ays a bit of a p I ea s e t he n1 o st ganible, But 11ith the duple.'< l"ut on )'Ol.11' mun1u 01· sarong SURPRISE PACKAGE 0 WAll<l K & lll 7682 Edinger 8'12-445!'i ROOMY 2 STORY-- hui,:c '.1 Bd1·n1. ho1nc ,,·/Early Nestle1J among $50.00'.l hon1t's, An1l"r. decor. Lrg. fnmi ly 11·(' round a 4 Br. 2 Ila. rn1 \1•11il'h J>aocling. Prl'tty iuode l for only $40.950. ,,1is y:u'fl and h'Csh palnl. \Valk ISOO sq. ft. home has forn1al lo schools .t shops. Charm· dlnini,: in addition 10 ramily i11g: R I!: D CAR PET 1·n1. Ynu 111ay CVf'll i1ssun1t• REALTOllS, 536-88.16. the 5'!4 'i~ APR Joan. F:E;>o:;c,;-_,~slONS ·ri .. i11lu1'1.• •·111 :111d location o: I' "'l' 1-11 I .~. 7 A llOmCS. 1·, t"I • & conll' Kee our f·h.t\1'aii dlscriminnling family. And , 11·e j1L~t listed in Newport \Veek 8..,....iaJ. Eniny the to help you enlerlain your }leii:;ilts. the chance to \1'1n ...-~ ·'I" KASADIAN fr-d 1 - -u · blue Pacific fron1 your very ~fustSt. -Valley Ca. 92708 n4 963·56t1 many 1en 1;, an o ymp1c ts J,,'l'ea y increased. Priine 1 _,_ Real Estate 962·"•4 · 1 l b 01\'II s '""e roofC"rl chalet. 3 .,_ s17.c poo , \\'e ar & gas location, new carpet, nei.\' BBQ. The best buy in paint, just a 1e1v years old. Bdrm. split levrl «>n a lo\'el)' LAKE PARK n.. t t ~3 500 •-Se ncl R·2 lol. 0 n I y $79,500 . ..._,•cres a .-. , . .. you pa.rate e osed garages. 1.fahalo! BEACH LOVERS rishing fron1 U1is 4 )'car old own th e lnnd. Don't-pass on this one. Hap. Calif. l'lasslc is only a short C. F. Colesworthy piness is Dialing . &G-808() University Realty "·alk &\vay, located in a Rultori ..__.. _ for an appoiutn1errt wilh a 3001 E. Cst ""'Y· 613-6510· $l7,500~ nio-snl@.l:\Nlbfetll't'l\:1'1'1!!i,!t _ ,v profe§'S.ionll.l · Red Carpet. ~ no fish story. at $3.1.450. lt's ''DAILY DOUBLE'' cc"=""=''='o="'~-=,--~-----I * * • • * * Hf"avy shakl' roof on this a steal. Call . Jun1p on lhii; parla.v. T\\'O '1f17 000 Dcluxe 3 BR. 3 BA, 01vncr's 1•an10l.ing Calif. ranci1 home. for PEll FOR:\1ANCE hou,;es on a lot. \Vhat a fall· • • • unit. in 00\V duplC'X, near Ce1-.unic lile kilchen. all !he * ~47-~4 • tllSllc in\·l'S1nle111. TILis prup.-NO MORE beach, P.'\lios, fin>place, no la1cs1 appl.ia.nccs. Isolat.e<I By Owner-Pn:.-:;tigt> I 9 o o f't'ty has ~n rezoned R-1, Very dean 3 br/den & \\"Ork· pen, $425. mo. Available 8-1. ntru1tcr suite and vanity i\lodel, choiet> loc.. 4 lrg single family reslden~ on· shop in rear. Lots of pn·vacu * 6Th-6!:01 bt.1i1. 4 Bedroom, plush car· bdrni's:, 3 Ba, 3 car gar., ly, which assures you of .1 • * * * * pets and decorator drapes. sep fntn rn1., ror1nal djn al"'ftl'& maintaining it in a ','hi.th c~~~ink ~e aroundPri !~-~-~~-~-~-~~-~-~-~~-~-~~-~~~~-~I Loads of square footage and rrn., sunken liv rm. Prin· great neighborhood. Front Is ,.· 1!.:~"':'E"'.'.!, 'fin~~~ .... _ ce a. custom floor plan with a C'ipals only. s 5 4 , 5 o o . 3 bdr, l ba w/fireplace in u . .-.n ~.1 ~·~-& SUMMER IN OL' big laundry room. Blocks to IWG-.1085. great condition, rear Is 2 CORONA BbenKRch-962H-~~Tfll, it \\oo't last! t -M~U~ST~~s=E-L_L_2_Bd_,-m-.-.Se-a-l bdr, 2 bath that needs wme Collect rent fol" the winter, :>."I • Haven·· home, f('w blks fixing. Priced at S.I0,000. R ll ::A" ,_,.. lo1\' price, $44,jOO, Call 1 }>~or a JJmri.11 bel dm\'11. reap ea on; .....,.....,.,~ DenLc;on Assoc. 673-7311. $24 950 rom ocean on Bushard nr. bl SHARP POOL • · A<i•ms. 126,900. Mak<• of,_ 11. r: pay off. The8C COZY oorl!er cottaJ,,-c, 3 BR. YOU OWN Ownr/Principals on I y. thMughbred's nrc locntNI in HOME 2 BA + nu 1100 sq ft unit. 2 962-57,~1. cool },;am side Costa Mesa BR, l BA & frplc. SUG,750. THE LAND ------- Flapplne"s i!I Din I i n g Beautifully decorated • bdr, 500 Poinsettia, &14-nll or 3 BU., l5x20, dt•n, •4th BH. 1 + 645-8080 Jor an appointment Super liharp 3 BR \Vilh R·2 finished i;ru·11".'c i USl' ai; tun1pus rm, 2'h bath, lovelv 64&-9019 ~ "' \\1th a professionnl Red .1 -7'-""~='"""=~=~ zonini:; pe1·miLi;, Real coun-bonus rn11 bltn~. fl"pt c, ·1 blk pool home. nu. home i• H•RBOR VU HILLS-· · Carpet, Realtors. hiirlhly "" try Jivuig 111 city of H.B. fron1 Mfll'ina JtS. & sho1>-- ig upgraded and better Lusk 3 br, SAUSALITO. lar. All terms. piog_ Quiel cul-de-sac st. WALK TO BEACH than new. A stones throw to . , . TENNIS. POOLS, CLUB South Coast Plaza shopping. pooi~.soo' '"""0w,,.)'d,. 1!1A~~sA,,!,ancl· If 11~84=7--'=905=·~------Very cieftn 3 BR. 1% baths. And priced to seH at •;r · • · • U't't-.....,, GREAT location-6 n1in. to Family rm .. trplc., bitn11, $-19.700. Cnll Red Carpet. CAMEO SHORES t61·4471 ( :--·) 54MlOJ bch. lo clown \\'/financing carp., drape'S. $41,500. . Realtors 5Ui-S640 ( ope n By Qy,•ner, 3 br, 21,~ ba, ram ,,...,..,.,..,..··~"..,..,..,..,,1 t"On1mlttcd, 2 BR in 2-slory CAYWOOD REAL TY evenings) mi. pool.. $115,0CKI. 6f;>-l097. IO\\'flhouse. I )T. old. Pvt. * 541-12'0 * ESTATE SALE 111 I e e DUPLEX e e r<v-123.350 •17·8235 -~~-------'"--· l Fantas:lie 2 Br, rancho on Prestigious 4 Bdrm huge 3 Br. site! Built! nlorc Near Sourh Coast Plaza. unils later, G1-eat 1st home l'ool sized Jot. Rn1 for hoo t. and investrnen1! On I y Fireplace. Built Ins. CU!lton1 s~.900. Best financing avail· interior. Immaculate con· able!!! Call 64$-8400. dltion, $42,900, bkr., 540-lTlO 1 TARBELL Need n "Pad"? Place an ad! I Cal I 642-5678. NTtl9 v. E. 11 ..... n1 & c.. 11.ot t..-llri ...... 1\\\) 1-BR. \Valk lo beal·h $5.Cl,500 ,\geut 673-8500 Costa Mn. * INEXPENSIVE * 2 BR. house ........ $2'J,350 1 BR. house •..•..•• $21,275 Ea<:h on lll!pero.te k>l!i Zoned for _profe!ftl. use> BALBOA BAY PROP. ~ 556-llOO * S©~lA-l&t.!fs· OPPORTUNITY for property acquisition -h110 bcauUful cottagea on large cortlt'r lot East Costa Mt>sa, tncume $3SO Ill(), $750 d 0 W n . &12-6889, $37 ,500 on Wes contract. Master Charle and BankAmerlcanl That Intriguing Word Gam• with o Chudle ....... QAY I. POllM ·-·· .... -.of ... four moml.led wordt ti.- low to form few slmPle worda. I I I SUM E 1· I I I just heard o sod animol story. It's obout o lurtle vJhl" fell In lov• wllh 'Cl torn~- BY O"·ncr. Nr. So. Ctt. \Vft.1! never so swt'et R!I 1hi!I Pht7JI.. Sharp 2 Br+ l ~i: Ba cute 4. BR, 1% BA, loeatcd $1200 dn. T.0 . GI 7S~ in the heart (If l>~ounlaln p)'mnls $259/per mo , VA.lley. Have )'OOr O\\'ll bll.11· 83J.-ll03, 552-9503. dlnrnond in )IOUr 00.ck y!U'tl COME SEE and only $31,950. a1 s•;: fl I lo I down • Seller wtll help po.y 3 Br. rep aee, ts o lttt!I, buyers tWl5. Ctill • roo1n to grow. By owner 0 WALl<[H & lll after 6 pm. 642-21.20 for PF.Rf'ORf\IANCE * 847-3584 ;, ReRltot'S 516-0022 DY ovmer. 4 Br, 2 Ba, b\t\'18, M -•\th G d 11r.irlnklert, 1Jhng c r pt s, er.u ar ens MUST SELL I 1n1u1y xtra11, Grttll loct1!lon. 4 Brt. 3. bu. 3 C1u· lltU'1\S{u. B)' owner, suve on this P1i nc only, $.'t1,!i00. MG-1987 Dmn1·11t11' ('O!ty. flu.-ch Car. b<•nurUut mod('\ hOmc, 1 yr. I ~ELLI NG llonu·. By owner. pets. Trl.·levl'I. $00.llOO. old, 4 RR, 3 BA, bonus r1n, I• ll I 4BR 2 GEM lfllll, I'll\., l!lh"" l'l", t1!1' i .xccp 011n nrr.n. , ,...,.. lull BA. $iU.500. s;s&-5777 G O II' C co11d, ~prtnklCl'll, c n v' d R1EAIL....;RSoa111· H11·y··.,\'l-·~.~...... 1mt10. $57,0C:O. St-t tu n1>-F·1xER~Uppt_r. S br, $18,000. . .• u U"I 'fUi.i ~rccintC>. Open S.'l t & ~un 1. Owll<"r Aniclou~. 842-0091 or ·s-v-o--v-~-0~-,~-'-•• !' i::.,tt ,.~~o nk \Vil. ac . .S r, lltl. , <lo.rt\ .M?udc1u DI'., in !he !;µit, 1·1tterlain on the ---------- rlCC'k nnd re11.:fl t1"01t1 the Mesa V•rOe BBQ. Jusl 111{' honH.' fol' fw1 · ~ . filJ,..,1 days. 3 Ix.Inns, 'J. ha., I RIV~TF. pa11y Y.a nts hOu!Jt l11n1lly 1i)(1u1 "'ilh tlreplacr ln i\I\ S.'l Verde, 2-100 11q. ft. rorniuJ dlnin~ ;i.nd frt't!I; or +. 4 or. rnore bdrrns. 1)11inl. A rat·t! blf•nd for only Prine. only . .>-MHi099. S.t1,900. · \iis.lliion Vieto Vision- i) red hill RE.t\L1'Y .\ tcnnpany \\lith V1i-i1011 Uni\. Pal'k Ct"'nl~·r. l1'\·u1c Ciill ,\u~·un1e. a.~12-i::.OO Oflice hours:-! 1\:\I to S J-';\I COOL POOL! J.OVl:J.. \' 3BR, 2 BA; fam rn1. cpr.11 & drp11. Alot)(lra. By ()\\'flt. Principal!! only. 830-t4il0 LO\'ELY 2BR, 2BA, ~ air, Ii:. fenced )'artl. Kids • PPts O.K. 831-3tG-ct ___ 1 Newporr BMCh BIG CANYON Lots or 1uon1 l"On1es ,,·ith 1hir-; Oce1nfrGnt Dupt.x 1 4 B~l 11CM'.ll l~n1e .. Separate Ll.u-gc bldg + bay A. ocean lan11I)' n11 "'llh fu'C'place & view + 4 garaees + extra \\'Cl bar, vacant!! ¥2,500. beaLil tot +'furn. + m'!lel' Broker 8.17-6161 or 837-6211. ·loc. Loni: time owner. ' rt. Brose Realtor. 613-3012 Laguna Beach --= '---"--'---·~-f\1UST irelL Now, Bay~ BIRDS & BEES co.v eotiag•, pri bch. 2BR. lha, w-/patk>, yrd, boat stg. ... \1•ill !I{' youl' friC'rn ls in + room to expand. 2i>OO 1his S\Jfl('I" C1'1"\ar ~'l.i i.:b1ss C1~stview Dr, TI4/6f6-80'Z9 t•ot1te1111x1r11ry hon1e. 3 J,uri.:c or &U-13101,-=~=~--I ~rn1s., plus a den "·ith .oul· EAiTBLUFF side entrance. Nestled in a 3 Bn .21' u u x Pl'"' •••o·y ..._i,.. bl n'v•• • '' a, n "''• ·~ ....,,. a l',, I' . c,. 1-'ull paUO, w/vicw. Ready \'oods Cove set11ng. Tins 3 July 1st. Lease for $535. or bdrm. beauty has oc.-ean quick snle i»·ice $61 oob views .& o~c.r 2200 sq. fl. of Owner. 551-1488 or 54>1.526: exclusive ltVlng. Only $89.500•1~==~~-~--~-BEAur. 2 br, l be., + -. --I --rondrr"Coa'!tal blutb ;-ready -o e.an ro, """'P Sep'-u""" ..., _ REAL ESTATE ~1,'.',.311~1-1~' 1 c • 1190 Gk?nncyrc St. CONDO . Vacant, treed gar. 494·9-173 5-19-0316 dens, pool, 3 BR. 2 BA $43,CKXI. Low down, or wlll MONARCH BAY ~nt iv/opt. to buy. 613-5221, Spa<;ioos 3 bdrm, 3 bath &12·3645. family resictence....in . one oi:1c01~1~A=R~MJN=-, ~c'"""c~.-,.~Cod~~ .. ~lix~ ... Laguna's finest com1nuni· upper". 2 story with l Br I: ties. Private patios, front, l ~i Ba, Newport Heights. back & off 2 bdrn1s. Com-$49,500. Agent, 675-0123. ple!ely fe-llel'd, priva1e bead\ PALER~tO 4 BR, 21Ai BA, & ~sch club. ~"!'fcc1 for pRrks & pool facilities, new fan11ly & C'nterta1 n1ng:. ~hool , lmrned p 0 s g . $94,500 64<-5569 GRUBB & ELLIS 1 -o~.-p-1,-.,-.,-,.-• .,-,,,-".-...,-.-.-• Miles Larson, Realtor * 6]3-8563 * Realtors 2383 E. On. H"'Y·. Cdfl.t 675-7080 OCEANFRONT Duplex, owner /agent 67J..9266 CUSTOM BUil T * NEWPORT CONDO * Cl · ik 0 Nr. oeean. Brand new 2 OSt'·ln l\'t& to IQ\1'11 ''( BR. Save $ s 552--0175 beach. Ne\I' 4 bdrn1. 2 hnthi"=--==--','~"'"'='----1 hoinc \1•i1h l\le. y11 rit. roorn Newport Heights ro1· pool. llt>avy !!hake 1uof. .~hin :It• .sidir~. ,\ ic 1; \ 11 ;: 2_ BOR.i\t, R-2. ~ot, \~'O~kshop 'ij'I cj(I() 111 gurnge. $3.).jOO, Prin. on-... :... . .!r· 642-8Zi3. m f&~ -s •• '---'--:c"'1~.m= .. ~,.---- . ·• ~ lllVl.EltA District new 3 BR, 2 BA C.'Ollages w/beautiful 4•4·5671 49•-2100 oc~nn views, beam ceilings, Magnificent View w11.l.nut pane-ling, r r pl c, Chttrmlng Z.st)'., Blue Bird p11.uo. courtyd entry wfn.lB.. a1•c11.. Co111~ination din/fain-ed 11und~k. Unique sea cot· il)• 1'111. \l'/[rplc, 3 Bodrnis., tnge des11P1J1 on custom kitil 2 Ba, Nk•1• \l'Orkshop plu[I. 11 in nialuro neighborhood. bonui: rnl. Rush on this! _Model ho1n~ open 111 $7,9,500. • rr~1~11.r Sun Ocmente. H1ll lo fl.1cC<11·n1111-k Re:1110:: 4:ukitY ONLY 4 LEFT 1000 N, Coa.<11 lh1y, 49~·7::iol • OCEAN VIE\V * OCEAN VIEW lot. Will t~ke !luge, CM..>ean vie'v llv. rm. 6 units. $22,000. 1nchtdina: ''' r11>l: din 11rea. 2 BR, den plans, 49'241264. + f(1'C'SI nn, 1v/\v cnrp, San Juan C1elstrane thruoUt. Central k ; 1 . \\'/ra ngt', oven, dlahwhsr. J-IAVE $500). 1\l{U\l lo &MUme &.._, this one! $53,500. loon on hou~ in San Juan, ~1i!tSion Realty 494--0731. Dana Point, or Capo Beuh. P -• V ' No condolll . Prine onl)r, no anor1m1c 1ew l"l'A.llor~ <l!n-2667 f Supi"r1or J l)e(troom 1,;111 ' • lx>aut\lu1 ()(.'Cllll viC'li'. l.tn'e-1)1 3 BR., 2 BA. xtn. lg. Id! det'OI', Drt•am kU~·hen. F11.m· w/counlry view, llv rm. ii)' rm, Ureplace. Park-likt• 1\•/f111lc. fncd rtar yd. yrd. Bt.-ttcr Huny? $41.000. 8.11--0221 agt. 12.5, brk 494-&K>:t Westmint .. r TARBELL COASTLINE VIEW {)\vn Your Q\\·n apt ncsr Vic- tor l-lu,1t:0'11. $.':12,fJOO NEI-.. F. REALTOR, •19~-9:\1~ Lido lslt Gl0 NO-DOWN $25,700. Su1>e1· 1c;1Tiflc :t l>t.odr1n home in 111).ohlf) t"Onditlon. Ntw RARE CHARM "'"">'"'·old. En~li11h 1.:oun11·y f fl 11111 Y • 962•.f4l6 • hnn11•. nn t·1. lot. <I Sdr1111t./baths. llu~c liv .• , r1\\. l'rC. rni. &. dln. rm. illJge Rr.'i [ · " " DIAL 642-5678 ... UNSCIAMILE AIOVE l!TTEIS 11 I' I' I' I' r I ~ r>ves. '"' r. $19JO dn, T.O. t'ilA 1·~~~ 838-~16. • . . . _ . Dana Point !~m12ts $27S/mo 833-110.1,l~U~o~lv~,~,~~l~ly~P-a-,.-•• -.,.--0,-,-""-.,.-. ;).)2-9503. CONDO 4 HR. 21,. 13A. Own· I I I I I I I 2 UR. l\I BA, 2 story, Ck>Ml 1<"11.1 Vro rlt ;~ Rltitlncd \\'hen et! vk'1v lol on gl't•flnbcll, nr $152[foo REAL TY $Sl.1 Adtuntl, JIB l377 V\a. l.i('°' N'p Beach ,--.. ,,.ctd fl 4 Reap" • • • . • . • to marina. cptld~. lg: aun you 11ell throuJ;h mull-11!('!·1 pool. J-\11.lconlcit. 2 r .P. CLASSIRCATION 700 dook, $37,500. 493.!029_ lin;,~i\t, Pilot Cl ... lfled Shown by ~·1 . only o_____;,____;, _________ _,~Oa11~ifl~ Ads ...... 6-l2.-56'7S. Ads.-.t).j67S 714: !J,.'i2,.76n-f-T't7-lli01 * 67:J..7300 * t~n 1reuurea to ~ Oallv Pilot \VMl Aas 1\1'~ Tum tbe1n lntu cub bru1min!'I n,1orl!!. ' CALL Dally P;llot I 1 • U TO GET ANSWER SCRAM.LETS ANSWER S I l -- ,, I • I I ! • . ' .. . . I' _'DAILY PILOT Thursday 1 June 28, l tn3 §!]!I ·~::"· I~ '=I iiiiiiiiiiiiii""'•"'~•' ~~1 :.~--..::.~ _,,,_ l~ji[ ____ -_._·-__,I~[ -"'·"'-J~ 1-·-"'"""" l~ 1 .,., ...... ,., ...... ~ 'f,bll• riomM 'i lnco nle Property 166 • Houses u-... n 305 :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1;.;mmmmiiiiiim;,~~f a~1;;m;;mm;;;1 / ~iiiii.imiliimiiii;;miii.I Busi ness ·1 "'"' · Hous'"'• Unf u r• -D I U I 350 A t F uA A U •· "'5 A t U furl\ 365 -·-. ' f or S.le 125 7 UNFURNL"il ll~D Units, Opportunity 200 1G>neral -...o.•;.;....;;......;c_'"c.;.._-'_~, up ex•• n urn. p '· um. ~ pt. nrum. ,,. -~· n , • ¥0. !0f H ll nl I 5'l.1'1a Anl't, $78,j(){). 1iX ' Laguna Be•ch Co,t• MeM Newport le1ch Co1t1 Mau L1gun11 S..ch 01Ae n8 3 S ,,,.,.,.,,, ACtUAL "'~'·'" '" PAC IFIC BUSINESS . UNIVERSITY PARK -----·-& 2nd iota! $52.{)(Jll. &•ll, 01· SALES Ath'1«.:t1,·e 2-bedroonl, den, 1t $823 ?.IONTH t'.'/l-year 2 BR. Adu.Its. No pell. PnUo. DELUXE 2 BR CONDO, ~an vliew 'iSALES a LEASING TJ'<ADE for: boat. e.xotlc 2052 Nc"·poi1. Bl., Co¥1a Mt'Si.l I Olanoollor home (pi1v:oe leuse, for the true aesthete. G1u'8ge. 357 16th Pl. C .. ~1 3 BR. 2 b::i.. + den, !rpl. Nr. APARTMENTS clmie to beach & shops. • lull service facility car, illO<:k or silver. Prine. ~·U4J PhMe 64..-).1770 11 dwelli~J 2 bath.s, double M ll i;: ;\ i li:enl o~cnnfron CUii MS--0218 bee.ch. $400 Mo. yrly, Air Coud • Frptc's. 3 S\vim· Lease $235. RED CARPET ".~· nmar Motor Homes 0 n I y . s. B c rn s I 011 • * !trepl~cc. l)!nln3 3 re a. ~panlsb \'ilia. Prlval<' beach Di na Point \Ve J-li.\V(' ~~n1mer Rentabi n1tnst Pools • Health Spa • -'''=l.E"AL~TO~l=!S!:.·.:49T~-:cl16~1:..·,.....-ua 714 :956-3080 or 71,1: G:f:)-8269 Bar B Q ll:intl Oul built-ins anti scrvit.-c porch. ·~ pool. Lovel» r.nrduns. '" B:\y ' Ck-c4infront TCnnis Courts • Gyn1 l.lJld I BR, Downlov.•n, Adults, no , SLX UNIT_ ttparht,cnt ~ \Vlth $10.000 Gros~ ~10. Bt•ach a1·e1.1 llf":i1· ynrd has C'OVC't'E'fl ~it~'.!'~ artistic d'H itil~. Call PAN03RA?IUC Ocean View. :o.ii: G7:J.36S3 642•2253 F.vea. BlllL'lrd Room , pets, UtUs paid, $185. nlO. 531 6800 OCt'an h1't'czei;. Spncluus 3 * • . patio, ~lo1'8gl' 11hed. Jruit 494--:WO LrJ:t • Br, blln kl!., 2 Ba. 1 BR. 1''1'00l Sl~ Yrly. • BH , 11!1 HA. bltin:;, crpt'd, Liq . Store Beat h lJ'('l.-'8. Fl'ont yltrd hlls coin-Bldg less than J yr. old. 1 BR & !)en F)'01n $190 r1F. AU TI f" UL 2 4 x 6-0 d1·p·d. 65' x :{()Cl', l'l(»;c 10 Gross $16,500 ~10. ~~ On. plctl' prt\'aty. Po o \ 1tnd &,aguna Hiiis l Cloise to• beach & harbor. 2 BR h-om $21D Mesa Verde i'leetv.'OOd. r a 11 1 a s t i c gru1nn1ar school. $1050. ill· • * tcnnis t<ourt p~·h•llL't;t'~. Clo~·;-··., ·~ ,_,,.._ S300/~f0. 499-2895 2 Bft. Twnhsf'f F'ron1 $Xl0 13y-.ouL 2 hr. 2 bu, xlrll t'i1r111·. ,\ski11i,: , 11:\l~IO. hut , ~orree sho~. Seats t:JO to fl.h~pplng <:Clltl.'J'. $310 rx-•r ' ~E.'W 3 Sr. 2. Bu, cn11·J A/C. L•gune Beach MEDITERRANEAN .&n::. fiun rnl, fn11d foi· pct. 1118.kc an offer. l\INGAARD $2:1.0CO Dn . 12,000 Gr. i\tu. n1onl11. Cuti 1! \'en Ing s Renl/lse opt. $275 per mo. ::::::::-...o.':'::'-'::::--:--·I• ....... ---!!!!!-!!!!!,_ ln I or the flnc~l n1ohlle Ft.E. 642-2Z.?2 * * 673-6568 01' 642--0200 any 833-U03; 552-9503. \7ICTORJA BEACH 1 BR $35 & Up 1 BR 2 BR &. VILLAGE tion1e p;u1<i. $lH'I ,Ju{ln lndut trial Property 1~ ' Co1·kta!l~ FP 36000 tiinc. L N1 I Yrly Lea'.<1e. s24o. 010. Bachelor~. Color' TV, 1naid UOl:J. H rbo Bl d c ~foblle Estates. $ 1 8 , 5 O O. ------No food · N:11:zborhood bur 3, 4 & 5 BR, shal'p, •exec. a!J!UU gue Adults, nb pets 49+77~ serv, pool. The Mesa, 415 N. l~4J ~74-io .r.1. ' !l.).l4li. CRES ~1 . 1. Sh $20 j()(} homes, w/many xtras. Rent NE\V Sea Terrace Tv.•nhse. Newport Bl., NB~ 646-9681. OPEN EVERYDAY · J BROADr.10RE J2X61 1 2 4 A I · ac iutc op · ~230-$390 No fees (1) Oc~an viC\V, 2 br, 11,1. ba, Apt U fu 365 HO\.U'S: ~'ri·~ 10-6 br. 3 ton central a ir, set up • . I ~C\\'l)Ol't*~ch area R:!S-5571 ~r 828-5200 . dra. c1·pts, 2 car attach. Apilrtments for Rent [¥] · n rn. Wed. & ·n1urs. 11).7 In faniily park. 8xl6 porch. \\'l·ll l0t·ft fed corll<.'r. Present PACIFIC BUSINESS SALES Corona d e l Mir garu,ge, patio. Pri. Beach, Capistrano Beach M R .. __ _ Pallo &. carport. + stol'C I pool, tennis court, prl''''>'··l~--~---.;;~~!~~-~~~-;.~;-o;;;;;; ore oom-Lelr mvo.Y i:,!1ed. $8·100. Ol' best offer. lni,'(lnlc $!400. per ~~· Great EXTRErifELY fine op· S:?DO • Nice 2 Br, fJ-pl<· house. security. Sl35. Le as ep . .3 BR upper duplex . Ocean COMB sec a real garden tis6-2143 1x:ten1ial_-\VIII divttlc. ;\p. po rlunity for J::OO(l, B 'lns, 2 h!k<\ to bc:1ch! 64-1-1757 Apts. Furn. 360 Vt1. $2"';)(} n10. 0111..'n Wkn<is, l'lpt! Like llvltig in a. home 1lr.Q LANCl::R 20x:i5, 2 Rprox $Ml.2aCsq.dlll. R It I steady-How hu11!11es!'i, ideal S:l:JO. 3 Br., 2 Bu .. frplc. dhl 1(}..2. 344-13 Vla Espinoza, for $162.50/A.10. 2 BR, l~~ JlR. 2 8,, c 0 in P 1 , oy c ar e ea or I fos· the young L't'luple \\'onl-gui', patio + llei·k. Newport Beach .............. Balboa Penlnsuia Cupisll'l:l.no Bch. S?l--0666 BA . 2 prk'c places, µriv w/skirting, av.·ning!'i, sto. 1510 Ne1\•pcu·t Blvd., Oi r.t. ing to \\'Ork· for u t'OTll· 5450 , L.rg 2 + IJen. 21:: Ba. $lG5 .1 Pd Cl & . eves. ~ patios & rec areas. \Vilson khl.'<I. n1any xtrHs. Xlnt 548-7729 ro11 nblc income oow ant.. a 1'~rplc. \Vl't l.1111·. g111', patio. I B:·.U~ccn~fro1~un Bnl~~~ $35 WEEK & UP Gardt•ns, on \Vllso.11 St., \V. j:onrl. 548-8703, 5 Siar Pnrk. secure future : or middle NU.VIEW RENTALS Ye.ad)'. ·. •Sleeping_ Rooms· Corona del Mar of 1-Jarbor. No child./pet. ·= Lots for Sale 170 age couple \\'anting a ?-.Ir & 6~ 40.30 4 .. ,32 1_ C • J-tousekee 1 R 2283 Fountain Way East 1~.1vl2 GENTRY 1'}73 Model, ?-.1no operation. Liquor store, r · v. OL' ;n--18 JnN • ·2 Br. hannclfronl, ,P ng ooma 64&-2846 ;. lly l\trnish~. U\\'ning & t.rrocery slore, Shell Station fBR. So. of li1\'Y· carpets, "gat', boat lie avail, Yearly. • Ocean View Apts HARBOR GREENS irling. Costa hlesa Adult NEWPORT BLVD. \v/lube t'OOm, laundroniat, drape.~ titove, $22.'iino. $350. 3 Br. 2 Ba. F'1-plt, gttr, BAL·BOA INN ..... ~ ·· arlt·-$5;250 -or offer · t 0 b •·-ho G4" 0~1 de<:,k_. ·1 tloors ocean. 105 Main Street 0i -• Ful'n. & Unfurn. Fr $130. · · · · C.orocr...£9rnmerrWL lot ice 1 use, ru· ....... r s P ren· · -vaa ~ Bach, 1, 2 11 3 Bil's. ~1odels 1 merica n 557-9390 \\'ith Hb:3,1 shed rnl plus 2 be<troom liouse. Costl Mas. Inimac.! OTa-8740 ..,.. 0 1 lKING, l'Xt"t"l!•'nl cond .. I c·,,y n[ N'ewpo•t B•ach Priced to go at $110,000. On N. u.VIEW RENTAL.s. .3 BR. 2.BA. conv den, fmlc. ~ pen ° 'ol i Pill. 27 00 • .. St t H 2-17 :J l i 6 4030 ·.-l'cte1·son \\lay, C"l. nr. llar-oving out of stale. i\1Ukl• $3~.~ ya e wy. 11 . n1i. N. a li\! "'IACULA'l'E 3 BR, 2 BA. 73-or 49-1-32·18 front porch & lrg rear ter-ON 1'l::N ACRES bo1· Blvd. & Adams. ff<'r. 890 \\I. J."1tl1 No. 1·1, 20',;. Oo11·n 7ucca Va. ey on l 0 l1l -reened-ln 1mt\o, beautiful HARBOR VIEW 1'8.CC Nr ocean & bay • r•.t "'3 'e\vport Beach. \\?ntan Springs Rd. :t.71~~ fenced b.aekyard -on quiet beaches. Adults Onlv. $400 ~ptll. ~u.ru./unfu:n· Lease -70 NEWPORT BAY lfi'l-2320 s!reet in College Park. $325 -HOMES-per n10 Yrly, ?-.lay l.Unsider flt'eplace ( pi lv., putios. $165-2 BR. 1~~ BA. Studio on ~1ANUFACTURING -111ail I 1110. !\o ™'IS, children OI<. P alermo Model 4 Bed· for July sun1me1· 1't'ntal. Pools Tennis Coillnt 1 Bktst. cul-de-sac. Pri'f. patio, pool, 11r.1v 2 BR, I Bf\ dn!lhou~~. 'd '-n __ __. 25 6'2-505"> •· f il · • $ 646-82U 9CAJ Sea Lan, Cctti-1 W-26U ,...,,ts di bltl..t N }\dult fllll'k, pri\'8.te beach. 01 er ""'auty PllJ\I. · % ,... ~. rm., am Y rm, 525. --· ll\tacArthur nr Coast IhvyJ ~.-' ·ps, lS. r. 't_l6,500 540-?.672 COMPANY corp available for $15,000. UN IQUE J hr, 2 ba, fenced per mo. lease. Agent :YEARLY. 2 Br, fire le. bar.J '!!!!JJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ shop'g. Children ok, No "1 Giant returns. 675-8220 v, d. hngc fl"'lc. ,,.,, c-f., 64 ,7270 ()!tins 1.,a.-.... Ba ny 1 1~ pcL'i. 735 Joann St. 0 1 'fl BUDDY J2.X40, 1 brlnn, REAtTORS ,. ~ .,, -r • house' fo1·11~ .. ;)Cea11 rnt. .No NE\V. 2 BR, l~~ BA, frplc, 6-16-1450 jfurn. Costa Mcs:1 Adult , C M 40 S'.:15. iro. Avail July Isl, l I '''"" !P SINE l941 onay to Loan 2 :iil-1278 EASTBLUFF pets. $:100/ino. 67 gar., yry case. ~i.ov. RE.IIR.EMENT S pe cial, 1 ark. S4500. I 673 4400 ., 1.1, H $I JO 1 , B .'!bl', 2~~ ba, nu X pl11n, full 2 BR, YEARL S"~. 1,:c&Jo:W1!992""'-------quii't 2 Br. down stairs, )Arnerican -557-93.'IO • 1 t TD L -s1S0:· h~~wall.· ~ i:;l~ 1·~ s 1: patio 1v/vie\1'. Rcndy July 717 w. BA\ "Y" S~IARP, ocean close 2 BR, 1 garage, nc[u· sh 9' pp i ng, ~lOBILF. Honie, l0x·10', xln't ... -...... ~ ... ....,~-!! l S oa ns .1. k Jst. 1...eR¥"· ror S3.1J. 01· quick 6Ta-l3.'}3•492 91 ba. Avail on years J('ase, prime ~Tesa \'erde 111-ea. No lcond. I Br furn. Pilgritn. ATTENTION hinii ies, ·Jdio;, pels. ~\irt. 1 · $61 900 o $285 Ag t 675-5930 childt-en or pelll, $165/nm. t°4G-6642. , 1' BUILDERS UP TO 95% Fee. ~t.~ ~1~14~·1~~ 54s.i526: \vncr. ~orona del ~r ' 1-BR, n~;/ft·~~ & balt'Ony. .963-:;·::.,.:tc:;c;;-::· ______ _ 2 d TD L 3 BR, lrg enclsd yard, crpt & -BR I n Oa ns drps Sl90. mo. Clean·up fee EAST~LUFF vie~v ho1ne f<~URNISHED Apl _ SlS5 ti! BelO\v . h~. f.!'l5 1.fo/Lease. 3 , pat o, lrg, <1ulct. nr [j] Easl!-ii,Jc Costa I\fesn. One ""qu•·-d. J2!3) '46--06lJ 3 BR., .-.. ba .. , family rni., 2 pd. '··-· blk 10 n-an. 0 H.al Pinch1n Rltr. 675-4392. Baker & Bristol. I1nmed OC· Real E1tate, na•c•I ,,~.··300·. '"''_ .. ro,· a >< " ~~ up M " ]0 • 0 A V t · ,... '' ' ~ •""N·' "" = L 0 C I !rplcs. Pr1va1e garden ,..,1., "'-"" "~ vl•w CdM c · g,. \J"tV a enc1a, ....,neral I total of 18 untts. $9:i.OOO owest rates r•n9e o. SliARP 4 Br Mesa de! Mar $5.10 ttaJyearly lease ,.. .. .,. ~.JVV ""'a .... • · Costa Melli 557-7766 CAl.L ,.,.._ '"'·l4I4 Sattler Mtg. Co. home. lease, $:125/nio. \Vinton RE. 6..-.,_3331 J .. BR. \V/h•pl. & haJco1 ·1---------- •rn•tery 91~, ~ 642-2171 545·0611 :J4S-441t or 979-0745 Below hv.ty. S225 Mo/Lease A BUSY LIFE Dani Point ~lots/Cr pts 156 ~-1'• Sc>rving 1-larbor nrea 21 ..,...,. 4 BR, 2 ha, fan1 1111, ranlasli,.. 28 8 R,c+k.dt 'A" .in llafrorbor Viel"&·. llal Pinchln Riil'. 675-43921 • " .,...., ,,.~ P • 1 • cross ni poo · · A QUIET HOME OCEAN vie\VS, \\1lk to bch, 2 REAL TY CA$H IN A ltURRY! f.>..'\tio. l.Qv.• inaint y:irrl. $325 park. $3,'E .• /1910 Port Costa"--- 1\'0 PLOTS''' S.pmcc ,., .• "''' •• 1 • 1 orr1 ,,,0 •.•o 8251 -~•0 J A"~ ..-BR. furn or unfu r n .,,... .• w~~.!..' Ct BorrO\I' on your bon1e, paid . ......,-0 • _,.....,.. •JV;), Province. By appt on\)'. flavc both at the Vcndome s-1=. "''· e•-. 4= ~,,., inn, !-!arbor Resl l\ten1. r o~TI32 "~.,.. ~ ' ru · .........,., C , 50. 64 7 1 R-2 LQT cir nr not Use fu.,cls to 1.'0n· Dana Point ,,,... Casa de Oro ... near shopping. activi-k.. . .. f .s2r /ea. ;,..1 2' i·tl 1 1 ·11 · · Jud Zonl'd toi· S Unils. Huntin~ion so 1 a e 11 s, improve your BEAOI home, 4 BR, 2 BA. tics, yet sC(· eel in n Huntington Beach I Beach. &\ve1· paid. Alley. homP. buy nt v property, OJ' 1''ABULOUS ocean hax t) vu, tam m1, pool nu w/pool ALL UTILITIES PAID ~nch garden. These pre· I:.;::;;:.:;:,.;;:.;:...::;::;::::._ __ ommercia , ., $20.000. for any good put1Xlse. Con-4 .Br, 3 Ba, fam rm. frplc, table, frplc, ·acro!ls stree• Co1nparc ?efore you rent c1s1on-managed apa11mt'nts NOW READY' ;...;P_r..;oc:;pa=r'-'ty'-----l-'-;18 Sparling Investment fidentlal, fast sct'Vice in er pt/ d rps. $39:>/nio. fl'Onl sandy beach. $425 1st Custon1 deS1gned, featuring:· reatw-e fun kitchens, pario. • your hon1e or our office. 675-7414. & last. 645--08.16. ' • Spacious kitchen \\"ith in-living, garage, large livi ng CASA Jl[MPO ~corona-del Mar Corp. 638-5662 SIGNAL MORTGAGE co. a· 1 rgho· ·11 r· 1 11' 11 • · 1714) 556-0106. Fountaln Valley . I ON the Point. \Valk to bay or u-cc 1 . ~ l'OOrn 11 • 1 l irep act>. 1: • ild \Vhat you v•ant on this C-2 LOT, xlnt 1uc., approx .• iii ... iiii;iiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I beach. 2 sty· Spanish 3 Br, • Separa~e <1111 ~ arro anwrged on grounds \\'Ith re 126• pa.rec-I. Good cor-OOxlSO on liarbor Blvd., 3 BR. 2 BA, gigantic runipus fam, 3 ho, dbl lot, has all + • H~rue-like ~oiage poo1.t.. temlce, putting green. l You can sec the CLOCK !J1(•r location South of High. c.~f. must sell, o"1ner. 2ND Trust Deeds rn1, all bllns. D\\1, sv.·in1 gar. Kids. Agt. Fee 979-8--130 • Pl1vate patiOs . J BK. '$210. fron1 the San Diego l""N'Y. ~lva.y, Call today. 675-72'15. 1213) 792-1028 pool, kids OK, only S265 nio. . •Closed garage \\'/Storage THE VENOOME Ju!lt No. of the San Diego VfEW LOT PRl\'J\1'E FUNDS AVAIL. No fee . Agent 8424121. THE BLUFFS; 3BR, 3BA. e h1arble pulln1an . l'r1vy. at fl.1agnolia.) I I Any Amount cpts, <irps. Xlnt greenbelt e King·sZ Bdrins 1845 Anahem1 DELUXE 1 & 2. BR.'s -Nt\\1>0rt Beac 1 vicv.• or Bay Huntington Buch Joe. Avail 8 / 1 · J ease. e Pool . Barbequl'S . sur-Call l\lrs. Phillips, 54().()78l \V/FIREPLi\CE:S: &. 1)('ean. 547,:iofl. 97!l-.1HH * Ca!i 675-4494 BKR. G44-a609 .. ..,..,..,,..._..,..,!!!!•I NEAR BEACJI 3 Bedrm roun~lcd \\ith plush land-* EASTSIDE e Privet• P•tios Mountain , Desert · Resort 174 1-~orr LEASE BLUF1''S, Aug. scap1ng. , Large :l BR. Open ceiling. e Di1hweshers NO j)Oints. 110 penalties, fc'i'C 2 Bath, bltins. Child· 15th, 3 br, 2~ ba, utll i-111. AdullS. No Pets._ Carpets, <ll'apcs, bit-ins. e All Hntl-Pd. appraisal, 101\· ra1l•::. rast. ren/pets OK. Air-cond . End unit. Green be I l LARGE 1 BR. $185 Private pnlio Sivini·g 1,ool ··• lnvcstoi·s Thrirt 639-6-11-1 . 1 · •;;/VO ,.~.• ....... 2 BEDROO~I S'""'" · e Jacuul E..\'.TREl\IELY f In e op· $275. mo. Ask for Dale myview . ..,.,,., mo . .,.. ..... .u.;:N. -, • • u.iJ $160 1,t>r i\lo. No Peu;. fl or t un i t y ror ~ood. M W eel 250 962-4471. " :1 BR house, Newport Heights 365 \\ .-\Vll:son 642-1971 Call Bkl'. 675-5800 • Ha•tld Pool I s!ead)-f101~ bu.sinc~s. irleal ~o~n*•Y:;:~•~n~t ~::;;;;:;:;~.Q~~ $275. Call eves, (2 1 3 > ** 3BR 11· B\ ** •Recreation Bldg. ... * M:)* fur-ttu:·-yo11ng--rouplc-w1tni \VA'N1'--st2;cxxron--2nd . 2a1~~ \\'allf~-~~~~xs~~:-~ UY-E_LIKE...A..KIN.G 1.&!xc._Jl!;l"':jy~d~~r. encl. • Luxurious Lnclscpg f 23' x 130'. Choice Loc;:ition ~~~a~:e \\~~~in!or no~\' <.~~~ Ne11i·po11 Beach ho m c, church, Park. No y!µ'd \VOrk. HARB20R View .Palermo 4 At Budget Prices I pa0tio, bltns, ryUcrpt, drps:, ADULTS ONLY * c.1 * 1n a r ;, l' t v a 1 u e \Vate• pd ga• AdulU 0 I Br, 'h Ba, family nn, 2300 FURN ose to eve iing. $170 STOP BY ."..: SEE US . DAY '' a i(CCUr €' futul'e, or middle S70 000-' ' •· n y ft •~10 644 ~0.,. ' !SHED· n,o. 868 No. l Center SL OR NIGHT . FOR YOUR '2 Bcdruoin bousc plus aac couple \\'tinliilg a hfl' & ' $i:i.OOO. Bal. on l st no pets. $165 mo. Phone aft. sq · ._ · mo. -:X..:.a ..... UNFURN1Sl-IED ,4 3, II h " T[I 01i i;. $25.000. \Vi!J pay 4 pm 53&-8604 HARBOR Vu Hms, Cermel. $140 UP 2 Br. 3 Br 2 Ba CHOICE Of. APARTMENT. . · x · s op Mrs operation. Uquor store, 10',, inlercst, no points. Sh 3 e f · Pool · ' 8912 Heil Ave. H.B. RIVIERA REAL TY gi'OC<!ry, storl', Shell Station CUSTOl\t built qua I i t y arp r, am rn pool, me * POOLS · blttns, f'lay yard. 1996 149 B1uad11.·ay. C.r.J 1 \1•/lube-: room, luunrlromat. "44-!!'162 n1obile ho1ne. \Viii lease on gardener. s4:>5. 644-1791 · * ENCLOSED ~~jle ~ve.1 =~ 2212 ri.1 gi·. Mr. & rifrs. Elliott 2·7007 645-5609 Eves ic..-c house, bather sho(J rt>n-Mortgages, long tern1s to qualiUed BLUFFS hon1e, 2 sty 51n GARAGES ege .0· • ___ 847-498'"2.o----- , . , ta! plus 2 bed1oon1 house. T r u st Deeds 260 tena1_11s. Adult palic Call for srreen __ bll, for lease. $450. * CONVENIENT 28~. Tripi~:<· n~ decor, WAITING lST Tlr.1~ orfcrt"Ci • N pt. Pi·iccrl to go at $110,000. On -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,[ appOintnient 962-7306 499-20:>.1, c\'es, <100--0295 . btult-ins, p1 1v. patio, qultc, LIST Blvd. 9.2 ,,, Return spcnrl-Sta!c Hi\·y. 2-17, 9 oii. N. ol • I · H R p 1 4 BR TO ALL BEACHES C..'Onv. loc adults no pets hleJ11'.-ome..Rcaltor .. 675-6700. -¥ueca·-ValIDy-oii.-o Id PUT YOUR MONEY 7 1 BLJiS to, ~ach. 2C Br older FAR.. ,,Yi_1 BAa ern:i._~·b ' FROM $140 MONTH , ~83:0,?rc'236:i~=· ==~~~ OPEN Condominium1. \\tnman Sprjngs Rrt. r11<11 TO-WORKF O-RYOUJ ~~~~~~sse··::3rA~i:1· ~::· -frpl~~nt ~/g~~r~ --AO_U_L_TS~P-L_E_A_S_E_ 1l.c?E ~uoea-r-sr tfUpl~. -!or----- ; for sele 160 36~-2320 Elll'n 10'.'fi inh~resf 1..11 1vel\-979-8430 1 frplcs, rent w/gardener $550 Easts1de .• Garage. Avail 1, 2 or J BR Apt 1 · 12 x 60 ClfAritP on Colorafli'.1 11,,, .. ,. ·~ud Trust Deeds on 3 BR. 2 ha honie. Close 10 Sa n Juan Capistrano VILLA POMONA J~~~28$165· 6 4 2-l 1 8 6 · VILLAallyheORBA ft CONDO-Vacant, TREES, River Deck. A\vn. Garaf,e . ' 'ow1ty real estate. beach, ne\V c.rpts, paint & · -····-. PHONE 642 2015 !gardens, pool, 3 BR. 2 BA. Sp. rent S55 mo. 20' to .\.L JIO RTGAG E CO. dra. Xtra clf'an. Avail no\\'. NE\V 3 BR. rec., veluclc. • 1 BR, 11r. (rv.'Ys & shopng, lfunti ngton Beach 1$43,000. Lo"' do1v ri or will \\'Riel', $1)()00. 8 46-890 5 , 1714J f>JG·Ol06 $260. 892-3612 storage, ron1mu11ity pool, (1760 Poniona J-\\lt>.i quiet tropical setttng. $140 (714 ) 842·9622 !;~t.,.,";!op81.kto buy. STJ-52'.!L "'"36-3:..::.1::00;:__~-~~..,... "!'4~ii~OO~C~Jm~pu~s!!· !!D~r·~· ~N.,.B.,.~ 3 BR Condo, erpt/drps, $275 n10., 831-1453 Incl. utils. 531-8508/54S-8992 "'"'·Xl'l:i. I . Lnke Gre~ory Chalet -Lnke ;; bltins, r efrig, pool, clbhse. University Park $30 WEEK & UP 2 BR $155-stove, refrig, Nf:W 8 Unit, 2 blka front {JXURlOUS EastblufJ c..'O!l· vicv.' 2 BR 112 BA fr/pl $8100. 1ST T.D. 71h'/o, S82. $205 lllO. S48-l405 ----'--'-------1 • Studio & ~BR Apts. . cpts/drps, htd pool. Adults, Ol'C'an. LcaSe. 2 Br, 1 00, OI~X 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba. Encl gur. $ltl5 up, Rental Ofc .. :ll!t:> Muee Ave. 546-1034. Newport Beach "Rent A P iece of I P1l•c1'• OCEAN and HARBOR VIEW Elegant apartmen1s designed \Vith a Master's touch, 111· pel'b house security. exclu· sive Versailles Club and pool v.•ilh unique Aquabar, fountains and to1mal gar- dens. All part of the South Coast's {inest apartment comn1unlfS'. l BNltoorn/studios from $195 2 Bedroo1n. l1'0nt $280 i\fodels oi>en 9 A.I\!. Ill dusk ~ ON THE BLUFFS AT NEWPORT 1',1'0111 Ne.,l.'port Blvd., turn at 1-Iospital ltoa.d (1 block above Pacific Coast-I-fwy) to l'nll'ancc. 901 Cagrtny Lane, Nt•wport Beuch, Cu. 92660. 1'eJephone: (TI-I) ~2 THE NEW BAY\VOOD APARTMENTS in New}X)rt Beach are ready. The !'iilles office iii open daily h'Oln 10 AM to 6:30 Pi\:l. MooArthur Blvd. & San Joaquin lliUs Road. &W..a.555 CHARMING 2 BR .. 2 ba., 2 cnr i.:nr.: som~ npts. v.·/fpl s.. heu1n Cf,Jl's. Avail. on l<'USC'. S285 to $300. 6-14-i932 675-5930 DUPLE..X brand delux 3 br, 2tJ Da, $395 per nt0. 1 blk to ocean or bay, 822 \V. Balboa, Open Sun. 213: 476-6783 T\V extra large luxurious rooms, bath, f i r e p I a,c e , porch, garage. Single adult only. 6-~ 2 BR.. 1 ha. Frplc. Slepa: to ocean. Yearly: $300 month 1\sk fo r ~like JONES REALTY 673-QlO EAsrBLUFF. 2 BR. 2 BA, gank~n apt. Patio. Adults. No pcls. $280 Call 64IJ....0349. EAi>"'TBLUFF -3 br, 1~~ ba, ll('l\'ly dee, lcn.se $350. ~ 1no. 637-'1725 or 538-4978 OCEANFRONT, new 3 Br, 2 cur garage. $600 yrly lac. CID. bltns. frplc. 642-3443. STUDIO 2 Br. 2 'Ba. Near Hoag Hosp. $205/mo. * 612-4iZ7 * NE\V Bl\yfl-onl-priv Sch & Pier :~BR, 2BA, $..ii"JO mo yr- ly. 979-0631 or 644-4510. NE\V 3 BR. 2 BA -$400-mo.-1JOO-Front--St. 213: J:fi.-9716 San Clement. l1UGE 3 BR, 2 BA, \\'/frplc, l'K'Cll.11 view apt. Children OK. l pet OK. $210. mo, lse. 4!>2-T:>M, 492-2318 San Juen (apistreno I·®· 3 hr, 21,:i ba, rani l'Jn, diu furni:i::hed $26.500 821-4.142. 1no. dSl31. mo 4 yrs. Due 9 LEASE 2 Id 4 BR 2 BA 3 BR., 2!h BA., community • TV ,ti; .1'Ia1d Semte Avail. no pets. G4:r89(;;1 Dbl/OW~.. 'chagath.: ....... ~1 1'...,,li<lll",,~· rm p 'OI I d 1 640 l022 yrs. oubly Guaran. For '73 · yr o • , , recreation cnfr, park area. • Phone Service-Hid. Pool CLEAN 2 "'-'•« ..,..,., ....--t · 1 · n sci · -R h Farms. El Dorado, J\'l:irk IV, low frplc. dishwasher, drp:i::, $."i!:IO/mo. Lease. C 1ea 11 , e Children & Pet Section • 3 .hr, ba, crpts, $200-$210 monthly. 310 19th 3 BR upper duplex. Ocean 'ncomt Property 166 G'r~v•:; 180 priced hm, Cl\!, NB 673-7311 crpts, S295 per mo. 531-2998 damage dep, Avail 7/j, 2376 Newport Blvd. CI\! dras, _ bltins, $UIO. nio. St, 1-t.B. Call Alt 6pm & Vu. $250 1no. Open Wknds, j 4o r;, DISC $60000 \\·eil secured H t • t H bo 5..12-9300, Jack: 5 5 2-9 2 2 O 548-9ia5 or 645-3967 540-6~-752-------\Vknds, 536-0828. 1~2. 34443 Via Espinoza, I SHARP 4-PLEX lst Apple Valley pays $64{1 .....!:!!!. ing on ar ur eves. 1 {Ad Good for $5 on rent) Eestside Lrg 2 Br's * DOG RUNS * Caplstmno Bch. 871--0666 prun<i ll<'I\ 2 BR. units \\'ith AVOCADOS 1110. Hr:: B:.: 3 Apple \V .\TE RF R 0 NT Condo Housas furn. or SHARP 2 Br·tri-plex, 3 niiles bl.tll8, fri~, patio at poolside. Spa. 2 & 3 BR. $149 & Sl.9!J -~•"v'-'"'"'·-------1:' S1mn1sh flair. Parios, You don·1 have to e11t lhr.n1 1 v;j'jjljjfeiyi. i"i'i' i'i"i-3lii44i.iiiii 1 \Vlboat !l!ip, n1ai11 channel. Unfurn. llO to Beach, private en· ·$175, Aolts1no pets &12·9520. Kids ok. Pool. Keelson Ln. ;lpts !dttkY . Deiux<' O\vncr's to lovf" them. Let thl'm he 2 Br. Lease. g,l6-1)()69. _.;._...,;..;.... ____ ..;,.,c1 ter/patio. Ample storage. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt. Crpts, drps. (t blk W. of Beadi Blvd., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 l quarl{')'!' has 3 BR., 2 ba. your ml'al lickc!. (7J4l Ir vine Huntington Harbour carporls, no pets, $180. 703 $200. 25.L'J Orange Ave., off Slatcr·1. 963-4029 or 1-:}ls\SMlf Cosla 1\1ei;a nr. I 557-2:i20 is n good pl;;tcc to )~ 18th St. Apt B. a her 6 pm C.M. 673-0053 847-7786. Costa MeM !shopping & trans. Se" this find out \vhy. Hancho Con-Houtn f111"Aent ~ 3 BR, 2 B1\, fan1ily rn1. Ap-call 548-6885 UNFURN. 1 & 2 Br. Garden 1 "'"w'=A"L"K~T=O~B=E"A"C"'H~-1& inYest lortay! $110.000. sultants Co. · 2 BR. 2 ha. '· • •• ·' · · ·' · $l25 pliances for sale. Call for ATTRACTIVE furn. 2 DR, Apts. Frplc, D/\V, prtv. 2 BR. Ctpt/dl'PI!, bit-ins, gar. * CASA VICI'ORIA * 1 & 2 BR. Fum & Un(urn, Carpels, drapes, 01\V ,TV ant. Pool, etc. 525 Victoria St. at Harbor, C.M, 642-8970 •CALl (!) '•6 ·1414 i ~~·.; ~.\.dnt'.:~~· :: ~~ details: 846--4332 11,~ BA, heated pool, nr patio. $165-$190. 557-28'11 205J5th, 847-3957. ~ lftdl.111. Real E s tate Wanted 184 Houses Furnished 300 3 BR, 2 ba, bonus ••.••• S42S 3 BR, years lease, nr ~~shopping. No pets. t BR & gar. l'Cf/mg $1W. ** UNFURN. 2 BR apt, ~ Taf 4 {TY -I WILL-Ba lboa Pe ninsula 4 BR., 2 ba ............. $450 beach. $23.5. month. Xtra lg 2 br, ref/mg $125. near beach, $150. Nt•t Nt"porl Po•I Ot tlct GUr\RANTEE TO SELL \Ve Have Sumn1er Rentals Call 962-8530 1 BR. (nu 6 unit build .) gar., Adults over 35. 548-2407 962-7549 Put a little "loot" ll\ your BALBOA PENIN Ba t v• • Condominiums adults no fl!ts, $155. 2220 Oon•t give up the ship! Olarming lrg 2 Br older i.('v\s-aell those b...i.ubles for FANTASTIC FOUR · YOUR HOi\iP. -'. Y ront ISIOD-UnL·rn. 320 Elden. 646-1at2 "List" ii in classified. Ship apt. newly redee. $140 mo. "bucks". call OaasWed IN 30 0,\ YS. 5 BR. 4 BA. Pier, float. IV $Ht.950. FJ'. $12.0UO. D.P. Cnsh advnnccd. Avail Mid June-July 28. __ ..;.;.c;.. ____ _;,._ 1 BEDROOM -1 Adult onlv. to Shore Results! 6-12-5678. Realonomics, Brk. 675-6700 &12 .. 5678, N~ar So. Co:ist Plaza ~ S.D. / A!!:t"l t Solf.61il2 Also Sep!. \Vldy. 673-2009. i d h Costa Meg $105/mo. Roy McCardlc Apts Apt1., Apts 1'11·y. Great O\Vner unit plus --· H u I 30S re ·.11 Realtor. !>48-7'1'29 F u "' . 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Fu"'-. or un•·rn. 370 1 1errific invesm1enl! After Ei\SfBLUFF CONDO \VAN· ouses n urn. · FOR lease Me.sa Verde COMPLETELY tum. 1 BR.1-'-'u_r.;;n.;.._o.;.r...;._n..;;.rc;n;.;•...;.. __ .;...;.;.... __ .;;... __ ...;...c.----m-'-·---'.;c;.u .c;.....;.~ fixed rxp, plus loa n Pay. TED. ;~ lo ~ Br., olrlr1· sec· G I Country Club Villa. 3 Br, Apt. Adults No pets. 131 Costa Meg Costa MaM Costa Me11t • n1enls. shows ll.13'1i 1'etu1·n Hem only, \l'tll pay cnsh ene ra 2~ ha+, adulls only. No pets, F1ower St., C.l\f. 646-7883. 1.:.:.:.0;;...;;:.:;:~-----.;:;:;.:;;;..o.c.;;;c:.. _____ ;;.;..c._....:.:..;.;..:.. _____ , !tst y1•ar. Call no1v! frl:J.213.l * 6-10-17M * REALTY $390 utll ~aft 6 • ----------~ ' W 0 E 1\ Com1;a11y \Vith Vi.'>ion . BAOfELOR apts $118 & up.1 ' , 1 F Nt1t :i ANTED: A H M Huntln ton BHch Univ. Park Center, Irvine 9 No children or pets. 2135 V. E. llo1mnl & Co. !hi fAlllro ti....,.. ~--: NEW T RIPLEXES IN COST A MESA !) 'Rtlrn1., 1% Bttth ~ Bdrrn .. 1',11 Bath 1 ..Bdl'n1 .. ·~ Bath I JO';C DOWN Orange County Apartment RHltors 547-6791 7 UNITS-$75,000 ~ceUcnl sbtrll'r or retirc- 1 n1ent units, I block f1'0n1 Coast H11·y. \\1 al k Ing II dll'lt1t11ce 10 ol! l'chl.o; S: ;1top·g S,.rling Inves tme nt Corp. 638-5662 4-:PLEXES \\'ill takl' over :voul' pay1ne111s. c··' A · Eld A A t 1 c ~I Cali aft. G Pi\1. ,().16-14~5. RENTALS 1;1.1l nytimc, S5:Z·ia00 LRG 2 BR Studio. Brand en ve. p ' • . Apartments OUice hours 8 AM to 8 PM new. Pool. s Pac 1 0 us Huntlnfton Beach Dupteas greehbelt area. Nr. bch. $l4W165 I [ • ) Housel 5 Or 6 Bdrms ... , • , ••.•. $375 Child/pet ok. 827-8525. BACHELOR & l BR .. 1. 3 BR, 2'r!i b.a. -••••• $350/375 Irvin• patios, lrplc's priv. garages 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiil l'l3.1 \V. 19th St., Costa Mesa 4 BR., 2~ baths ·•· · $415/425 -Divided bath & loL~ of I J8.'J4 S. Coa.~t l-twy., LagUna 2 BR, Jl,{i bn,Jwnhse, central clo.o;cts. Rec. hall, J)OOJ & Busin es s air, lots of extl'as. Fam. nn, pool tuhles, sauna baths. Opportunity 200 C05.'TA J\1ESA OFFICE pool, xlnt location. Cull See for )'OUraelf. 17301. Sll5 . Bachelor tlouse. F'um. 833-07l9. Keelson Ln. (1 blk W. of $ $ MOTEL $ $ All util pd. Avl no1v. Townhou1e Unfurn. 335 Beach, 1 blk N. of Sla.ter). Nt'\\' C'llr plus ~Jury ancl ex· $125 . l Br. Fum. All u11I 842~7848 pcnll(' (t<'(•ounL llelp buli<I a pd. Cons. singles. I "SINCE 1946" Huntlnfton 8Mch 1 BR. J.'um. Luxul')" Adult bu<lget ~1otcl 7 chain iroa!lt $160 • 2 Br, I-louse. Gar. & b l \Vestom Bank Bldg. EW 1 2 Gan.Jen Apt Ac~ from 10 c;uH.11tl require!' $5,000 in· encl yd ror kldsl pet. University Piu-k, Irvine N story twnh8e. br, 2 Lake Park. $140 mo. 1035 vestn1l'n! l.·">t'ure--'l . $210 • <1 Br. ltoust.. Gar. Kid!!/ Days 552-7000 N'-his Im. dbl gar.. patio, crpts. 12tl St 53&7447 After 4 & '"' ''"' 'W dl'tl, flrplc. Modem kitchen, 1 • • 1002 M1ldlson Awnue pel.o; ok. Cons. sngl!I. pool, jacuzzf, sauna, tennis ~-~:.k•:;:n,,,ds~.'=~=~~~,11 ''uma, Arizonn 8j.'!64 CALL 645-0111 4 BR. 2 BA, nr. CUiver & crts. l>ark. nr. bch. $295. $140 -ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 Phone: 602-7113-9'115 l.J\GUNA BEACH 01'"'f1CE Walnut, frplc, bltns, cpts & Lease. Resp. adults. Avail Pooll. 4 Gardens. Sauna. • Chilclren1s Shop, unique $190-:Nll'l!-&-Qirl·m1·ar \Valk" <!.rr··~nU_!'ds86..~Jh.dre~& ..JlOjll. 54?-5745. x~nrls. Phi:t~~- • Pizza l:lousc, nice to Beac:h. Av\ 7/15. · pe 9 0 · • · N•wport Helgfttt u tr. · ' 1200 • <·i"ac•·us Studio iv/ 4BR. 2BA, crpl.s, drps, bl tins. · ShtALL Apt. for l or 2 eldc.r-• J\folol'cyclc, part11 & rl"p. ,, " "' Child & II OK EW l • Cocktail Lounge, good trplc. Victoria Beach Utll ren ema pcls · • BRAND N -LUX· Y penons. · NEED SALES PEOPLE pd, • &1T-9l.15/5'3-l429 urlous 3 Bdrm elec • -1111 ~ Holland Bus. S •les $:tlf1 . Nl!\V 2 ~r. Coodo. Poot. Laguna Beach Kitch self-clean I oven BUSINF.SS 1rnn1tcr. Take 645-~170 or 540.osos V\v, C11r. Clu1d/pvt. ftrepl; lrg patio. Ptof'. over lca8C.. 2BR beach apt, $2fil • Pr!v 1 Br. <.»Hat:. $175 • Smnll, bl.it ntce l Br. N H bo Hl & $278 mo. 5*1487 NEED man for l)tlrl·tin1e e-x-E.";~;111'.-crrig. Blk bch, ' · $~ '6!f~e~"~~. "~T~~. 2 ~~lgn r.sch~la.r Lease H~ntlnpton H a rbour fin11ncial Escape with u• to the JMgic.,1 wuterltnd ol Vis.111 del Lago, where th• 1mph1l1i1 is on 1he nau t1cal, and the way Of life i$ os trj11quil or excitlnn as you cttt to makf it, Ukotidt Hving m3k~ the dlife renct for those enjoyin!J booting, c.,sc:iding lovntalnt end 1wimmlng 01 close as your 1>11tio<1eck .. Land love~• ~jll aJJiPrecitta 11cres of eiquisitelv lnnd1caped grounds arid Welkwavt. I us: Shol'' )'OU how 10 bt'gh1 YoUr il'Mltllfment Pl'Ol.'l'fllrt v.'ilh llhe Of tilt.SC lfCIUX(' .f • plcxes. A I 1 amcnitie!I = cxce1J(lnl looat.ion. Onl)' ,----+.~~ r:-:.. ..... .rt c:.rp. .. N62 P. (' r I 111 c II t ~ I . work In 1'J,SO SUJ\IMEl1 R£1\'TALS patio«, vl!W, l blk bda.chl '-3(1Q, 64{;.7565, l BLlC tmn1 beach, Studio fibergl11a.1 aod. !Mm. Mu. • CAl~L. 494.9491 $35IT". 3 ~ Cll:'ftr-lfJ>IC, .... 'iefi ... A t-;-W I pd~"""IC D/W hflv" "ood"orklng u n cl * LANDLORDS ~ djn rm ttRwllrd ~00. tiunleirn Un_t vrn. ¥"°· Ja. ~~l:it.8s~~ 2.i3:59:z..!irn· ) f1bc11tl.all!I cxpcrlcnoo & . -, • .. NU y ' E R . "-T LS 11{1\•t• 2 .. 100 !i<l 11. or 1truice in f"ltEE RENTAL SERVI E • I EN S.ck 9ey Laguna Beech •hno or garage lor work LANDLORDS! 613-4030 or 4!J<f.3l48 - fl!J"'°1..,.-Etcl1 11panmen1-home lnc!udet every conceivabl• lu"· Q(c.fJ" "tif'{' el»d"il'itmetn;-ltke arr:ttfn'dlt1o·nlng an d'""lOCCl#il- sound proofing to insura your comfo11 ond priVacy. ~ The YeCht Club offers handball, yym ond 111unas, 0tmo 11nd socfAI rooms. 111'\.•11. Su lo1·y 01)1.•n. (N:;...o;035. JAPANESE l'ltodcrne, 3 BR, 2 Sit. New paint crpt & dlJIS. SPACIOUS SlUdlo. 1 I.Ilk • l~Li:GANT B E A u Ty ·Wt! SpeclaUie In NewpoM 2 bM, dbl gar. Walk to No pet~, nor children. above VJctorl11 Beach. ~. sunl', Nt>11i•poi'I ff CHi ch. Beach e Corona d~I Ma.r • .beaeh. AdOllJ, no pef.1, $375. '!\4iM<J~·;::::52e:..;•~lt,_;6,,.:Pm""'. ,---· l,w7•;:·..:1:;200;;..'"'::::':..· .:49':.:~.:2900::;:::;_· --I Ov.1nf'r opera.tcd. coo d &: Lt&gwu\, Our Ttenl~I Ser-Leo..ac <197-2!.m 8-lbol Penln1Ul1 Lido Isle cllen11•I(' -"J111 area -vice f11 f'RF.E to You! Try Fat Profit ls nu.alned when :Z BR, l BA. upper, c;rp111, \VATERFRONT living en~whtrt olse is out of the qutstion after teelnq Vista de! I.Igo. .. Efficiencies, 1, 2, 2 plus don. from S190j.Furnlll'ttd tnd unfurnlih.od modols OPWI doily rtlnt 'tll dirk. From the San Oftgo Fr•1way takt Harbor Blvd. to Adems and Mesa Verda Orlvt. 540.1800( mo11~y 1nukcr1 111ne 115 NNuU.Vlv""i E' w R E NTALS you tell through rcgult;?et· r 11nl<'. 642~. ID" • .,... ting Dally Pilot Cl.tullned t\.M ~128 6'ia-4030 or1 494-3248 Adi . 642-6678 1 drps; bltltt8, Jl'fl.r&ge. Avail. ~· 3 BR, 2 BA. $59.l/mo. no"'· Yearly. 67~96 'cYI!!':."!!!"!!'!!!"'~'"!:.· _!U!~.,.~::..-ff.673-8!1111~!!!!!l..J:.!:=:=:=:::!:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:===='=======~=====.., V . ~ --·--·- !~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~l ~~~~~~~I ~ ............. i !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~l ~~~~~~\~~~rsd~q~,~Ju~~~~~·~lW~l~~~~~~~D~Ml~Y~P~IL~~~31~I I ~at!•••m"'~ ]~I •-J~ [ ... ~ J~ I '""-'-1~1 1 L.,taod-]~ [ ---1~ [ .. ..,,,.,. l[ll][..__ _"1,.._·•••__,l[R ! L'""'""" Jl lJ !~ .. "_pl1...;.F..;u.;.',";;;·c..o;:,;•_::U;;nf:.:u::.r::,n·~':::..:70 ~ummer Rent•I• 420 Bu~1iiiinem•iii1iiiRiiieiiiniiil•iiiliiii:iii44~5 Fo und 11'" adi) 550 LOii 555 Gardentng Job W en.tad, F-le 702 Help W onted, M&F 710 Help Wontad, MllF 7~ I" BEACJ-1 llJ)I , lBR, fun1 t"OuND cock..._-poo typt" ...;..;,._ _____ --".:.: * GARDENER * Cotta Meg [rplc, opp(!Slte Corona dei STORES puppy. 5 f'!lOS. old. Vic. or S'TllA\'ED f~tnlle lllb 8 1no, P.fO\\'. edge &-gen'l garden-NEED help at honwT \\'e BABYSITTER _ )'OUr tionte DEWYER\' OF' 0 A I L '1' P.fnr 1tate 1.Jcach. Security Alain Str~I. Cuurtyard llnd Jtea School, C.1\1. Pk•aae childs pct. Vic: Preildio. I~ ca.re. Expen. Ir dcpl?nd· have akles, nur se•, or mine. Of or SA. Boyti; Pl!-07. SUNDAY ONLY TO U 1'J~E EX\~J~ING • aate. Rents by v.•eek or mo Octanfront Slore• available claim or wUI htt~ to take to 6/22, l"'rlday ~. able. ).lost arcu. ho u • elcprs, oomP;Bnlon1. l\l Jt 3»-)TS. 3•, attends ~. NE\VSPAPl'~H. ,CAR.RIJ!!Jl§ PALM MESA APTS. Avail July t 8l3·ll>!lli at n\Odc111 rt:nla. 0po~uccnd::·,;540'8-~177='----· I RE\VARD, lllmalayan cat. P rompt-Frff Est llonwmak~ Up John, day or &ehool. Bus picks u11. IN SAN CI..£ Pot F~ NT i MINUTES TO NP'T. OCH. 675-5513. BALBOA INN FND Olk & tan n\ale lonk hall· blue eyes .. 1021 Pete 5 •• 7117 M7-f&l 6~14 aft 4 pin i\R~A. ~tUST LJV£ IN I FURN OR UNF NEIVPO 105 M I S Kl Road NB ·•o •957 -p•~ O N I , AH.J::A, ftEQUlRES USE . URN. RT Beach house 1i an I. Dachllund. Snll Ii. ~iiin. lO 11311 • · · :>...,....... • ~ • uty 1,1rge Wt<~ BABYSIITER -1ny h<)lne, 5 or STATION' \\'ACON OR , Unbel.levably l~c a 11ta, block fron1 beach, ru· po.rk, ti7S-S740 gray. Vic Bushard & LOST: 2 Rinll'll, La.(;1.uU\ lll GARDENER or 22 years ex· cleKh'C!s patlent ca.re 111 d~'11/\\'k,. 8 hrJo1/th.l)', I \'AN AN 0 v AL 1 0 , huli'.e pool, Jacuz::1 elecl bit· 11lps 10, nniple f)flrklng Industrial ~ental 450 lla"etbrook, 148 Tennill roui1s, SW1 .. June per. seeks 4-5 adcllUonal hon1e. By I~ ~~r or 8 hr child. "111 pny ,vell . Ex11. ORIVEltS LJ CENSF.. CON-j hl!I, 8hag Cl'l>lli, dl'Pit. s11u11u hunlllt•s only, Call 675-1936: 1;;;;;;:;;:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 968-<1339 2-Jth. Re\\'1tt'd, 494-7~8-I r\~~!!el\Ul\(,.'e jobl;.. Grol'ge shift. Rcf11. 492-1037. nee. 979-3Ul8 TACT llAHRY SEELEY, f!tc. Adult1, no pct11. V•cation Rentals 425 NOW LEASING . l''OUND tiny n\8.le-part ~11u1x LltG or"Bnge niale eat, lost * ..... 19--2015 * TllOROUGH c I caning . Baker & a:10 \V. UAY ST., CO~'"TA , SINGLES :r1'0m $J5(i kitten vicuiity Vic·1orla St .. \'le llarbor & liamllton, -,.--.,.....::..:;·:::::7:....::.,...-,---I \Vel"kly jot1 prctel'i-ed. Vet')' • • • r-.1ESA OR J>JiONt: •192-1420 ~ :~g~:· t,'rom s1~~ Bt;At1-I trn1-Cdi\t. Private Huntington Beach1 Costa J.·teaa. Needs loving c .r.1. Ph: 642-2158 * Creative Gardening cood rc(5 . rrt. o Pc n . F1n1sh1ng Girl <> ·::,•·.::&,::12c.,-t::32::1'-----~-I · ron\ '-°" rood. Vu fanto.stlc l & 3 br NEW M-1 care. liousebt'Okcn. 640-8&!. :~~~~~~~~~ Exper. JMshnian: Cleanup, 5'16-8000, M~lm Sextant Reitaurant ii~:N'rAL Mmii:ta.nt position : Unfurn Ap111. A'.'a!J l"rorn ;ijl \Vk/mos. Julv • $ixlo/$1800'. 9-11)!•·1. ;·r. " Ul) FND fml lo1•u hail' cat. Tan Maint, Landscaping, $p1;nk· Job& Wa led M & F 7•• . f al --to 115, LESS. , Aug. $l;"V'/$'Z!OO. ~-l76l · ~ ~ 1 / n • -630 Ne\vpoi·t Ct'ntei· J)J" op('n or (!C'nl ............ ,_,. You re right, they re unJer. 213-928-i~A uo.r-, lltun1 ton &: Newland \VII.Ilk streaks. \Vhilc paws ll~ J lcrs il1$talled repair. 64&-1072 NeY.'llOrt Beach 640-0322 Opportiinily 10 movl!. from priced! 1561 r.tesa Dr. °"''· ~97 or lll-0519 Vic. HW1tington Harbor . lnltrvct6on· YARD Clean-up, nl a int. EXPERIENCED, rcHable, a~~l~1})::' to front ottlct (5 blks !rom Nev.•port Blvd.) REST & RcCl'tation. \Vknds 592-11?.6 ';mmmmmiiiii~iiiiii Con1m. -Res. Opening lie\\' mature couple want to BARTENDER, full tin\e, n1ana~rlal posit\on in bus)' 546-9S60 or "'kly rentals Big Bear 1800 SQ. !',., P.!·l space FOUND la~ black & white I route. Exp. Japa n ese 'h~nage an apartment coin· nights. Al!IO p/tinie n1an. 3 tJoct11r office. Assisting ex· $135 & Up La kc -Ba I d~ i n Lodgt>. w/(ront office, lrg rear rabbit, 1 floppy car. Vicini· Schools & Gardener. 534-1622 plex In beach area. 4 yrs. Exp'd. Neat appearance. perit·nt-e rK."C"essary. \Ve will Rcsen'. n4: 585-4709 door, Ideal for labratory, ty Virginia Place, Co6ta instructioni 575 EXP. Japanese Gardener. exp. 30 wiit1 or under. 2U: Call 8'12-ti49 · fully train you for (ront Of· GIGANTIC 1 BDRP.f. BALBOA Peninsula house or $?.Ml. 1715 Whittier St. 01. 0>col"''"=· "Ca"U"-'548--"· '-'2869=>':~~--;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;;:~1 Con1plete yard nlaint. $brub. 67l-56l5 ' e BEAUTICl1\N. full tin1e, Oce . You Bet it'ti underl)l;ro:I! upt, illeeps 8. $110. \\'eek up. 1300 SQ. 1''1'. $180, 1793 WWI· FOBND tri..colored Basg('tt ~ bery, tl'e('s. Free est. nlso Help Wanted M & F 710 exp'd In today's styling. :>li-1127 'f'haf11 ~·hy these apis. won'! 962-8680 Iler St. Days 646-5033 or vicinity Brookhurst & PLEASE! Babysitting. 645--0047. --'----'-' ----t• Sl~Af.IPOO GIRL. DENTAL assistant, 1-lere's last loug. Crpts, drps, .!llove 646--06Sl eves. Adams, Huntington Beach, General S.rvice i ACCEPTING appl. no1v, n1id· SAND CR A~ II A IR an oppo111111\ty to niove into & re.frig. Lots of green Rent1l1 to Sl'lara 430 2-1800 SQ. f't. 1'.1-1 spaces, 536-4509 Do yoursell a fa,'tlr If you nigl1t 7 run, staJ't pay $2. hr. I.JESIGNS nC\\' & expanding (Jeld of la"'n. Covered g a ra g c s , with frnt orJh .. 'Cs, large ree.r FOUND _ \\Jan's t\'edding want to qualify for a GOOD CAPTAINS Jack in the Box, ·011ega l-luntuigton Beach tienTul prevention. Umited Adults, no pets. 20'.n FullC'r· DESIRE together-type lady door. Ideal for laboratory ring _ "l\like & Linda" PA YlNG JOB ln just a (cw lht')'. 963-.ll3l assist i n g. Experienced ton Ave. (1 blk E. ()f Ne\t'-to shru·e brand ne\v, 2 BR, S2~:l. ea. 1775 \VhltUer St ., Identify. CcfM ~tONTIIS Ol' even a feo.v CAR CARE BEAtrJ'Y Opr. f o 11o\\'i11 g 1lN.-ess1u·y, \\I(' 1\·ill train you · po11. Blvd., & 1 blk. So. of 2 Ba. a111, in CdM, <yearlyl C.1\1, Days &16-'5033 or 644-4674 \\'EEKS, _if qua.lilied. ACCOMPANIST pl't'l'd. Good (.'0111111ission. us full tln\e preventior1 Bay, C.M.l 6"2·8690. Good vibes & pea(.'t'ful !iv· 6'16-0681 evt'!I. FOUND J une 26th small I CALL 543-1721 "bRe1nthembcr, you're {udged Reliable, l Frtilne in lligh 2Li/5!Y.?-0906, 592-2177. assistant. ~15-1427 Hunting ton BHch ing plea:sc. CALL: 4001 BIRCH, NB brown & white female dog BUSINl;SS INSTITUTE c~r." e appearance " your s1:hool vocal & chore.I music. BOAT BUILDEllS DP.NTAJ.. !!eeretnry. recep- 1---"--·"':;;c:;;_ __ I =it~oo=~*~· ',&4':.:·.:.Tio:53::....:.*:...... __ , 2QOO, 2000, 3600 a;q.ft . or com-with blue jeweled collar. OF ORANGE COUNTY Hand \Vaxing & Polishing l\1uslert be ext:'elJ(>llt sight Qualicy Sailboat n1anuJ. tionlst 25-Jar • Y•d'ars ~~U. Oct!~ LA QUINTA HERMOSA l\ll\:IATE \\'anted, \\'Ork· bo thereof. Avail. 9/1/73 Balboa Arca. 673-2866 1580 E. Edinger, Suite Q Special \Va.'\'. re&< · Contn<:t f\.ll's. lley. needs expel', r~blc eiqi pre erre · . a Spanish C.OUntrv Es late Liv· Ing malure. 2 BR. 2 Ba., l\1r. Bau1ngu1'dner, 541-5032 FEMALE German Shephe1'd, Santa Ana 1-'rt>e Pick Up & Delivery nolcls, bctwn 9 an1 ,t; 3 pn1, pt.>ople 10 IiU lliese positions: ~nd inature, ~alqry open. Ing &. Spacious Apts. 'J'f'l'· Apt , C.M. Call 833-30tH aft 5 Share APT or HOUSE vie. or-Main & 12th Street. I.,_,.-.,.,_,.-.,.,_,.-.,.,_,._..,_,.-.,.,_,.-.,.,... c.·ru1 645.1791 fo1· estimate 548·ll2L Finish Carpente rs f~stln area. 8?2-5060 raced pool, sunken gai; ptn. Ca.II 'llONIE-'PARTNER' Huntington Beach. 53&-6709 LEARN TO SAIL INDOOR -Outdoor labor. j J\lln. l yr experience D~.~IAL R..'ISIS1ant chair BBQ. Unbelievable Living. GIRL Zl nreis 10001n1ate in 836-l lS.l or S48-1479 or S.1&-4420 8 d A Sa'lt 1 Yat'd cleanup•, hauling, ' ACCTNG CLERK Mechanics Helper s1d~. excellent salary, ex·· 1 BR UNl-'URN $165 Costa l\lesa. 2BR apt, .$95 ra very 1 ng nstruc-Busy invesln\enl (i.1111 nL>eds ~r 6 · pet,t'tK'Cd PJ'l"ferred. Call 1 sR.. 1' .. URN $1 85 n10. 213·33$.5605. Ask for Rentals Wanted 460 FND little wht Jml dog Uon At Ne-.vport aboard wlndo\V washing, gardening. indiv. \\'/good niath ap-i in.. nio. expel'1enL't! bt>h\·~·n 10 run & 3 pn1 2 BR. FURN $215 DllsTy. w/blk spots. About 10 yrs !DU~·~25~-·~··~6~75-~8990~.~~~~ 64&-3793 Utude to help in AIR dept. Maintenance ~an f>JS..,;:;ss AU. trrILITIES PAID \VANT S 0 ~i E 0 NE TO old vlc. ~1onrovia & 19th CM TYPING and baby sitting in Salal'l' I<> $·•=. Cail Ll••da All al'ound experience 1-".:'..C='--------1 Garages for Rent 435 TAKE TENDER LOVING 646-814<J ho ~ WESTSAIL CORP OENTALsecreta r y,ex· Adults, No Pets ==~-O"-'='--~-~ I my nle. El Toro Pµ.a. 75 Ray, 540-6055, Coastal Pl'.'r'-• pcrlcnce necessary, ov~r 35 (4 blks s. of San D!Ci,.'O f"n''Y CARE OF YOUR HOME? f~OUND: Vic. of Lake & I I~ \\'pm. 830-1733 sonnel Agency, 2790 l larbor 1626 Placentia Ave., Cl\1 yl's. Dental alsistant, ex- on Bench, 1 blk \V. 0 11 llo\t Garage for Rent RESPOhllNdSIBLEd . C01 1UPLE.2 Paln1 H.B. med. sz. Terrier ServlcH • ...,,.. 1 Blvd., C?i1. BOOKKEEPER "'"rienced. ·for p1'8clice in to 16211 P-"·side , -i-.) 1959 Apt 5 l\laplc Ave. ''° c ren e111re o ease m;"t"•e PUPP" lan w/···h·t Houlo"ng I ,_ -'"" (7l~)'"847.l).14 1....... Costa l\Iesa or 3 J,x.'(Jroom, 2 bath un· reci.~225,"' " 1 e ,ALTERATIONS Lady for Take over full charge of Ne\\·port BeRch. 4:::rJ"1CN1 \\'ANTJ::L>: Dbl gar.ige in furnisfiL'<i home in Loguna, llANDY~t.<\.~ ,vilh· van \\!C ! dryc~~aners. 1\t u !I t be books including tax l'CJlOl'ts. DENTAL Assistant Ex· Laguna Buch lo\\'E'l' C.~1. or N.B. Call; Corona dr.l l\tar. or Newport FND lrg Wlhappy shaggy dog Babysitting repair, haul, deliver, or con-• q,?ahrit;d. Top "'ages. Ap!_)IY Great l"O-l\"01-ker!I. Loca.ted pcrienl'ed chair sid e . e 673-i415 • 13ciJth. N1~t'(j l n1mediately, vie. Urans Sq. near Bay sider anything. 714/842-TI167 Kuster!! Cleancn>.1 l.J 3'4 in Irvine Con1pl.ex. ~art X-Rays. Spanish helpful, fr. BACHELOR Cottage, full 1 CAR garage for rcnw_..,· IT · Ju!y 15th is a must. Phone Village. ~7487 ~~~n;;!~G~tt~~~()~~h~ H.B. Ne>,1·po1·t Blvd., C.l\J. $600. Call Gio1'1a Gray, inge benefits. 83$-238.1 ' kllchen, ya.rd. OC.'t'an vii'\\' P.I FOUND boys bicycle. Vicini· 968-0887 Brookhurst & ANSWERING s e rv i cc :Hl)..6000, Coostal Personnel : 1\•alk to bc h. $125. (H5-5&l2.' ~;;_~~~ a1~r 6~1ar:--"" \VANT <.'()ttage or single BR ty of Rochelle & Savernc, AdanlS. ~~~~:~. gB~ f'rtc:. Fuhion Island. Avail anY Agency, 2700 Harbor Blvd.,~ Silltl\IER, \\'inlcr. Yrl.v. llpt for 46 yr single man Irvine. Call 55l-4742· Best rates, 493-52a5 Rick, hn Full or PI t ime CM. DIAL A JOBI ; Anlla's Rentals, Bkr. 2005 Garage For Rent with re(. F1.1n1 or Wl(urn all SJA.i'1ESE male kitten vie. BABYSJ'ITING: Lie. ages 3 O"-en. ~3. . BOOKKEEPER \\'anted to • : Balbo11. Bhrcf. 673-2058. ~~~ ~~~~· &t~,~~ year Costa t.fesa. ~1ail care NeYlport Blvd & Santa to 12· Fun attention. Ph. Appllcat1ons f'IO\v being ae-\\'Ork in Public AcCOlUltant's . '. * * \'J::AR.LY * • of Lee Kent , 2830 S. Isabel, C.M. 646-7615. ~=-· Brookhurst & G~.H~~ng& T~e {ic~~~ cepled far ll'vine National office._ Fl!_ll tin1e. Call for !..lz Reinders Agency NellI' ocean. 2 & 3 BR. Office R.ntal 440 Fairview S.A. 92704 BLUE Pal'akeet, 200 Block, Est. 531-6.177, [;57-6901. Bank opening in Aug11sl at appt. 548-11).10 4500 Campus Dr., N.B. REALTOR G12-.".~!">0 GIRL in 2(l's to share 2 BR Cnbrillo, Cosla Mcsn. Call WILL give tender loving care I =''=~7="'0~"'-'=-~ C<lnpus & 1\-lacAr thur, *BREAKFAST COOK __ SS_7·340_1 _ _ l JI B I ,.,,5 Call ...:.10 ~o"" to in fants &. tod dler in n1y SKIPLOADER & du1np truck Newport Beach PRESTIGE · ap · .,.;. 1110· aft .no-."""" licensed home 64&-2263 v•ork, Concrete, asphalt e Tellers Expcr. Good pay & hours ...... --.-~~...-... OFFICES 4Pl\1 536-I20Z. Ask for Deb-FOUND, Radio at 1n11i n sawing, t:'eaking. 846-7UO. e Bookkeeper l\1ust be clean & neat. Ap-DINNER COOK 1700 WESTCLI FF DR. Fountai n V::tlley, Beauti· =""'•"'°-~~~-~~ heach, LagW1a, Sunday, C•rpet Service 32, FURNITURE Va n lor e Secretaries ply in person, Su1·r &. Sirloin, ASStST1\NT C~IEF 2 Bll , 1 St 2 BA. 'Blln up. rul ne\v building, ground SNGL gul 25 Into gra phics & -•=!lt-c:....:27o;0:::5_______ • local furn hauls & gen'! e Proof Operator 5930 \V. Coast l·lwy., N.B. Top salary . Must hnvc exper. plilllll'Cl'I. Pool. 642-€n'•I. noo 3 000 f painting \\'ants san1e to find JOHN'S CarPet & Upholstery hauling. S48-l862. e NP\\F AccoWlbt BUS Boy ""anted, exper. re· in Conlinent.U cuisine. Ap(:(y ,,.111r· cli~ide f::t~aresm,;;; nn apt. St!'alghl. S.17-1561. Lost 555 Dri Shampoo free $c.'()tCh· ,=:::::::.,:..::.:;::..::=----E I Onl quired. Avail lunch & dinner to General ManELger or Chef, i oU!ces. 50c ""r square 1 ~~~~~~~~~ guard <Soil Relardants). htOVING, hauling, clean-ups. x per enc• V shift. $Z.2S hr + gratuities. liott"'I Laguna, 425 so. Cou_t , [ I~ fool, Include:;-carpets, REWARD Deg1'easers & all color Re,.,.!!·es~~t!~~~I· Students. F.qu~°:cf~~~~11~::er Apply in person, 9-llam, H"·y., Laguna Beach . i • ---·------& d all ~ Narne vnur pn'ce! 3 pound brighteners & l O minute o.·~~="-"-=-":::~=----&• No. 1 Big Can)·on Dr, N.B. DfSH\"'ASllER . ,,-rapes, utilities, jttnt. I I il ... -bleach for white carpets. :". iiiiiiiiiiiiiii833-iii3ii700ii.iiiiiiiiiiiol '' tor llt'rvice. Cali ~Iarilyn Pwsonlk s ver gray male poodle. Save your money by saving YARD, garage cleanups. CAR \VASH l\lANAGERS & BUS BOYS ••••••••-1..,s.,"'.,'.,ai.,>.,.,m.,•.,>.,.,Jl32..,.,5440.,.,.,. !!!!! I "iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ ~un, lus_juhdyave'!,nsouulngin shoJ.Lts n1e extra trij)s. \VIII clean ~~~~. ~~ng~7.~'. ASSEMBLERS lmm.ediate employment, ex· Apply ~'""n 2 ~ 4 pm. Roomi 1 · • --" ,. living rm .. dining rm, & pencnC'ed only. Beacon Bay Will Train. -'-'------'400.:: BAYFRONT OFFICES Per10n•li 530 RHe8alty84"7t6612 Beach Blvd., hall $15. Any rm. 17.50, GE"l' rid of unsightly trash & Enterprises. &W-4460. THE DERBY ----------' · · ·1216 or '842-85j(}. h $10 Ota.' s:; 15 debris $10 load. College st1.1· R ta t 1, PLEASANT furn. roo1:u. Ba. niature \\'Otnan. ~· f o r w/oot kl!. prlv. no n smoker, n.•f l'nipl'd C.i'ot stG-1979 or 615-8765. SLP'G only · NO COOK'G. for older employed DAY \VcrkC'r $45/mo. I:; 4 3 Orange, 0..1. ROO~tS S18 '''k up \1'/kit $30 "'k up npL<;. Chiltlrn & pet ire<:tion. Zl76 Ne\\'J)Ol1 Blvd .. CT\1. 54S-9Th.'j, 64;"r 3967. EAS'TBLUFF. prlv. honlC. Large fun1 rm. prefer 2 col· lei;:e or \\'Ol'king glrl5. 64~11;>5 ROOr.t 11·/kit prlv in Lovely \'le\v beal'h hon'K'. ~tale only. So. U.guna. $.100 n10. 49S-4329 -ROOM-f o r Rent·Kltchen privlp. Empklyed mfln. $65/MO, Pl·I: M8-051G'eves. 2 SLEEPING Rooms, Indies only. Single $20, Share $1.J \Vk. &;6-7027. ROOM (or rent to man, .SiO monthly 275 1'1ov.·er S1. C.l\t. 6-16-9136. ~:!e o~~· i~ve~~~:~ TAl-.'T. POUNDS Or F VIC. Huntington Jnteroom-:~~ is ~·hat ircou~ls, ~l dent 548-WS Varian l?ata ~~ines Cl~~r~~::a:1;~~3 ~ ~:~ 126'2 s.E~ B~~I Ave. Bench. -Vnrious size suites PERl\fANENTLY -the munily Hosp. German Shep. method. I do \\'Ork myseJI. A!lofBITIOUS college students A leack:r 1n the nuru com·l.~d"'iE''~a~t~m~y~ho~n~>e~. ~;,~-7:.7:015:·i i-::-~-:Sant;~•:"';'"~:::I as 101,. as $!2(). per mon. Jn. sensible v.·oy -wiUJOut pills, {ll 1 1ix), 1 fem, blk & tan Good ref. 5.11-0101. 1\•/PU. Loading, anything! puter 1.ndustry ~as s.everal 586-6153 eves:. 'El Tot'tl. ' <'ludes di·np, cpt, utili ties, shots or fad dicl!'l. ~fike v.• l'UT y tail. Escaped from C t Reas. rates. Doug 557-7266 immediate openings 111 our * DISHW ASHa , Janitorial st'l'V'ices. l'ltonthly Turin's P.O.P. program an1i~al'!ce ater O\\'ller in· arpen er LOCAL moving & hauling by Prod u ct lo n area for Civil Engr Constr .$18K . &: weekerid: OVe or lea.c;e. 3;00 Newport Blvd., \\'orks to gel weight oU and vo v in traffic accident. t.-1.INOR hoine repairs. Plum· student. Large truck. Reas. Assemblers 8:t all lt:'vels on Ge n'I Acctng l\'lgr to $15K Part time s. r N.B. 60.\220. ke"~_Jt o1fl Y ;"t "'c.'Airs ap-., ~R:;•°"w=•:.:"';·,_::1197'.'._.,"°'1".o'------bing _Carpentry _ Painting 534-1846 or 534-2164. 1st & 2nd shifts. Elec. Technician to $15K l~;_.~~ aDelcute ~~ H tm,.unt prov ...... a ·" · ·"' ai LOsr t.farina high sci"'"'! Tile Call 0 •• ~ H I · · Control Engr to $14-$15K piuu, uu;:r" a~ua .. , · ' * WATERFRONT * by nx.>dicnl doctors. Cull ror class ring. .73• Vic. Llfe -· · .,.-IV"VoJ<JV OUMC Hning Ir. )'OU re looking .for a pom-Secretaries to $650 lngton Beach, 842-0611, ext. Prime location, N e wp o r t infor111aHon no\\·! 556-135(1 guard, 7 So 1 HB Cement, Concrete -hOlln\vtth a growuig 0 1'8Jlge Audil St.'C'y, S.A. tc $625 235. , Beach. Large suirc. Good -·~'~6~75-~727=8 --~---Inl Hals .. pA.f. .. P ~~~\vard PATIOS ~LLFfE .studcntSo\\'il~do Couty COlnputer ~nlJ>:MY Receptionists to $500 ; parklnr.. $350 nlonth, COUPLES 1&.35 + Initials "PAI.." Rc1vard. break., ~~C d~ve;,ep~!~ t~ e~ -area.' 4 ~~~ & me<!t these qualiliL"ations Clerk ,Typists $400 DJ5rWASHE~ &: AK\tc'jn , Biii Grundy, Realtor Pnrties, or meet cpl to cpl 592-1516. concrete. 543-8668 for est. minimum $2.SO hr. Call Lin· . . . Keypw1ch to $.165 e per, nm ure. PP r , 341 Bayside, N'pt. Beach . Cnll "Leah" 2·8 p , in. $11l0. RE\V,\RD, Black Cocker da 536-8932 Pleli.se Apply In Person Exper. Teller sr;oo betwn 8am-4pm, Mon-Fri. * 675-4161 * 638-1511. Spaniel Male, wearing flea ~Cc.h.;.1,.;ld_C_o_r;:,e_____ Carnat Cleani~ !\Ton.Fri 8:30 am-4 pin AsS't BkNkpE,WPORT $600 CMeer!'t8'erVS~cf:>"v. Hosp, 661 , collar. Vic: l\'IOS!I St & Coast r-To TI1e Pt>.1'SOt1net Dept. ' Cdl\I • 2700 E .• Cst fl\\·y, 4<XX1 H \\' y, Los t 6113 , CHILD CARE. Age 2-5. De· Floor Care & Wi ows Personnel Agency DISHWASHER ~~ ~~'. ~111~1 .F~~c37:~\; ~~~1~tfd~E~E~ 494-l'n9/9~2S80. ~j1~·r11~~17~n~~·;!~)~ Dutch Maint Serv. 537-liiffi Or80 CKonr 0 t1akc 0 t 133 Dover Dr., N.B. Dlck Ch1.1rt-!1's Resl'aurant, cond, cplli, drps, pvt prkg Spiritual 1"Cadings 10 an\·10 BLACK fem adult cat, short 541-1881. Landscaping 642~3170 2098 Ne<ivpol1. Blvd., Costa IOI, security. 6 7 3-4 1 20 pm. Advice on all matters. hair. Vic. Alta Vista Way & OtlLD CARE. MY HOME. LANDSCAPE, Ga r d en 2722 Michelson Dr. 1::::::::::11~"~°"'~·~~~~]~~~1 · Charles \V. 1'111.Stel'S, owner/ 312 N. El Camino Real, San San Clemente Dr., Laguna LICENSED. NR. SO lITH I• DISHWASllER & Busboya bkr. CI f' n1 en t e, 4 9 2-9136, 494-9200 CQAST PLAZA 557~ maint., clean·up, s~rinklrs. Irvine c l\1ust be clean &: neat. Apply l f1JLl. SERVICE 4.<r.?-003'1. \VltJTE long haired, blue Lie .. ll3100. 646-68.52 833-"2-..-, e x t 336 ---I in ~l'80nL Surf &. Sirloin, i Westcllff Building PROBLEl\I P1'C!gnancy. Con. eyed cat found wk ago. vie Contractor Masonry wu OC(J S 5930 W:-coail-Ri.Y,'-w.B. • Corner West.cliff Drive & fident, s Y mp a th e I i c lil. Ola Vista &. Princess, JACK Taulane, r e pa Ir , CK Equal Oppor. En1ployer Irvine Blvd., New p 0 rt Pl"""ll.'lncy counseling. Abor· San ClenH!nte. 492-9761 _ _. d BRI veneers, slump.stone 1 • I ... U -·. d . re .......... a d, 20 yrs exp. Lie &. block fences, concrete N ort •-h Dr S AsSlstant Bench. .1.•u'. ~I o"' n rd on · a optJOns ref. LOST. 619. , fem. Samo.vcd B-1 26ro72 '' IV c · ASSISTANT ewp ..,....c 66-6101. APCA RE 6"2-4'1lG Vic. sea-'--r• De., N.B. . ; Y ay o. patios, \\•alks & dri\'ewB.yS. manager """ S-174136 Tile entry ways. 963-1855 trainee, counter girls, fry EA"ECUT IVE oUice ,\ith hn· ALCOl·IOLICS Anonynious. Re\\'ard. Des Per ate. Electrical cooks, 18 or over. Apply to Hal Immediate prcssive ocean vu-& recep-Phone 542-7217 or \\'lite ce':;;75-4=.:;190::::e;·---~~~ 1----------Painting & manager, J ack ln The Box, opening For lion area. Fashion Island. P.O. Box 122.1, Costa J'l.fesa. LOST, 1 yellow Schwinn ELECTRICIAN, Jicen·-... Paperh•nging 385 E. 17th St., Cosla Mesa. Young lady (18-28) to a.uist. in health spa. \Viii train, no exp. nee. Apply in person ' any aft or eve. 2930 W. Coast Hwy .. N.B. ' NE\\'PORT laland. Roon1 NB •t •) · V · ~~ COOK . " ust su..,.. et tm-SWINGING SINGLES ars11y 10 spd. Lie. no. bonded. Sniail jobs, maint & ASST. Bookkeeper, ge n ·I \villi private OOlh. Ye11rly. mediately, 6ll--06lJ. ~116Z!, $2S Re \\'a rd , all'& 548-5203 No \Vasting 1,;:IOO::...:M::;•:;n::;lh"."'"15-397=='--~ 11150', IMl.IED. occupancy, Call "Leoh" 2·8 pm 530-1250. ='00'"""2=-='~·~~-----~~ocTRtCAL Contractors * WALLPAPER * ~e~~t ~ng:at:.i1~;;::: DOAl.lelnESTIB•lcand 11~.p-Goorg. 1~·; I l ,s_u_m_m_e_r_R_e_n_l•_1_• __ 4_~~o., \•rill coruo;ide1· dividing for 2 Family Counseling BLACK Lab. lost in vie. {)f oft C Ind I U \Vh en ynu call "Alac" Good pay &. b e n e f its. A pt I P ,... ~ ·-... Vlrt .,.,.,, uv..J'I "·'" ..,,..,.., ,....,s. on1m. us . c. "~"!"' , .. ,, .,0 _.,25. P Y n erson E 16th St S A 547 ·~ ' or more tena.nts. Coast H\\'Y .,,............,., ru· iHo-olO't» H.iel & Ne"·hope, F.V. No.266114. 64:)...03.'17, 842--0731 ........,,. tt .. • · .,,,.,....... 2131 Westcllff Drive · ·• · · -v.J;r-.J 111 Newport Bl\'d. Free PREGNANT? Thi n ki n g Reward! G d • * PAINTIN"Gc-*-.-l -'Assc:..1s"'T=,-.,-hou-,.-ho-ld-d-ul-.ie!!!-I Newport Beach , ESCROW OFFICER 1 BALBOA lsland·3 \\'ks left b1 July, take 1 or nil . Aval!. Wk. of June 30th·July ilh & J uly 14th. Good location, sl~P!! up to 7, $1riO. per "'k. prkng. &12-16-14. abo11lo11? Know alt the facts "'=---"53~1-45::·oc·1,_,2c....·-c-~ Ir ening It pays to call professionals. hi sch.I/or college girJ.1 ..,~~~~~~""""""'F'ee Paid. AAA ti.rm otters j CUST. DESIGN 1100 sq.ft. fi rst! Call lJFE LINE -24 LO~! "'edding proofs in LANDSCAPING, ne1v lawns. For tree est. &1&-5178. $2/hr, 5-8 pm d a i I y .1~ Cocktail Waitress outsl;nnding oppor. tor ol· 1 corne r. Suitable store/of· _lc:11".::·:.:.:.":ol-_,5o:::'22=.. -----albun1 betwn Knox Pl & sp1inkle1"8, rotot:llling, sod, PA I N T INQ.Reas, clea n, 644-5998. ~ only 642-82'74 fleer to niove up the ladder (ices. Fronts on \Vestcllff llarbor Sliop. Cnlr. 646-3868 co1npost, )IU'ge yucca plants reliable, Uc'd, Jn!!, \V/Refs. ATTRACI1VE Girl. Steady .:."'"''· · financially. So.Jary to $800 ll& Coral. 673-2230 , NEWPORT Island, water front.dock newly decorated, sleeps 6; 2 Ba, available Ju- ly 1+28, S27S. 1ier week; August 4·18 $300. ~r \\'l'Ck. 675-7599 Dr. NB, Air--€ond.-plenty Social Clubs_ _ ___135 or 646,,-2790 a f!er 5 for salt. 96.8~~ !'ree Est. 6T':>-5740. -(\\'Ork, h_i _pay, short hours. COLLECTOR. telephone <.'(JI· + comni. Also Fee Jobs. pkg. 1815 WestcliU 548-9586 I TR * LOsr German Shepherd, Gar•·no'ng/Land&copln111 PROF. n"int•r. hvoest \\'Ork, Gen'I cleaning.' no heavy lector, no exp req. Starting Cull Kay-\\ling, S10-6C6S, • AIRPORT CENTER * N ADATA f blk .. • •-••·k M l d e Appl n salary $350 mo. plus comm. Coastal Pe"onnel Agency, em. & tan, vie. Spr· Expert, reliable, local, free reas. Int/ext. !rtt est. \\ · us i·iv · • Y • contact P.fr. Gibbs, 642-1443 2790 Harbor Blvd., C?\-1. De{uxe 1, 2 & 3 room otrices Q UALITY ma l c h cs ingdale ,f.c Edinger, JIB. est. Takata Nursery 548-3878 Refs. 548-2759. -'~·~56~~~1Vi;;. ,:19tti~~S1~.;-· !:Ci.M~ ..... l,;iiiiiiiii;iiiiioiiiiiii ...... iii~l;oOioOi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;' adjacent Ail'portcr 1-lotcl. "'/Pl-JOTO RE\VARD! 539-6497. PAINT fNG & h · AUTO LOT MAN Lo11·est rates, full SE'l'V'iccs. "Largest in Calif" SIAI\fESE Cat, fem. \\-earing E.\:pcr. Anicrlean Ga.rdCt1er · paper anging COOK & Experienced LOVELY 1 bed r oom J uly-August OiroM Dt-1 Mar Close to Beach. $150 8J.1-~a23 (!).12 \\·cckd'"'S) tCall NO\V for FREE !lllnl-\vhite f1ea collar. Missing lllaintenancc, Cleanup & Ext & Int. Airless spray Expcrienc'L'd only need apply. ~ I fll LH.nd!IC:aplng. Call 645-1930 Free esti1nate111 97!N294 l'ull benef . DESK space available $50 P c pro e on 1 p1'0Speclive since 6/24. Vic. S.A. llgts I com1>any rts m-nuttch. 2-1 hn) Re\\•ard 5'l()-....,.,., c O~t p LET E landscano P afoler, Patch, Rapalr eluding uniforms, bisura.oce nio. \VUI provide furn iture ri38 .. :o~ .w•;i .,.. -at $5 mo. Ans1\•ering service 714 -541-.,1 I LA ~ ... LOST Fem. Burm~6~at. malnt. scrv. Comm'!, Ind, * PATCH PLASTERING * progran1, paid va(.'8.tion and &aG-0003 8vnilable. 17875 Beach Blvd. Tr1vel 540 Rosie". REll'ARD.' ;e. resld. Sprinklrs, cleanup. IJOlida)'s. App1y in person N E \V p o RT J ir I a n d Huntington Beach. &12--1321 Slate &. Magnolia, Fount. 645-6987 All t~'i ~~mates onlyGioUASrtTAMcCrnFSOm;Nck. week ""-aterlront apts. 1-BR $175 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB TEENAGE Canoe trip , _V'-'ly'-:.""968-:=7'7=4::.·~-~~ l.A\VN 1'taintenancc. Exp. Plumbing Colorado River, 6 days, J ur. Japanese Gardener F'rt!e WK/2-Bll. S200 wk. t.1onthly 1980, 1294, 756 & 540 sq. n. 1 .. 21• i\ges 12 to 1 . • LOST • ~lale Golden e-lma•·. r.:.•:;,,,5106. • _._ Lincoln-Mercury or 1.0 wk special rale. Dock Am p 1 e pr kg, u t i 1. s6();person. Li c'd goides. Retriever, vie. Edwards & '" u:: ""'" L.R. OTIS PLUiutSING 16800 o-• W avail . ~8-6592 Baumgardner, 541-5032. '"" "'""4 Edinger. fIB. 897-4436. Ga.rdcnl n~ & clean-ups Remodels & Repairs. \\'atcr ~(;., at atner S ORES 2 BA !·~~~~··~~~~~~I 554-0657 l·lunrtnglnn Beach BAY 'II • 3 BR. , CORONA DEL MAR RE\\1ARD! Male s i I ver heaters, disposals, furnaces, 142-1144* (2l 3) 592•5544 a vail. July (lll()/or Aug. Persian cat lost Tues. June A good want ad ts a good in-dsh\\•ashrs. 642-6263 MIC & DISHWASHER Apply in Person Snack Shop No. 9 COMMERCIAL TELLER Full or Part·Tinic UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK 3141 E. CoHI Hwy. Coron• del M•r 67:1-'240 F.qual Oppot'. Employer Sl200 mo. Call 9-4 PM Deluxe 425 sq. ft . orN<:e [ ]~ 26 N ~rt A 6~ -9 t 1 BIA. Co1n.plcte Plumbing "Home of the Viking" &14-3196 or wknds n 4. $1110. Broker 675-6700 Lost Md,...... ~·;;;;;;;;'";:·~;::;;:;;;"';;";;· ;;;'~;;;;;~;;;;,..:;;•;;";· :;m;•:;":;:·;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;::;., "Se~n:;.1''°'~·==-,==::---Auto 3444 E . Coast Hwy 75.';-34~. •IUNTINGTON Bch, in1n1ac.1 'iiiii•----~-; PLUl\lBING R'f.:PAIR NEW CAR SALES Coron• del Mar EXP'D pantry hC!lp, run LfDO ISLE, delux 48R, 3BA, 2 roon1, cpl'd, pvt lmth, I I No job too s1nall Experienced sa.li?tlman only Equal Oppor. Eniploycr lln1e. Alnle or (en1ale. Sect 2 ··r· w/gn.rden & patio. Prk'f, ulil pd. 3SO'. $90. J\.1r. Found (tr .. ads) 550 Trader's Parad1'se· ** 642-3128 ** nct'ded In one ot Oi·ange•lizz ·====z l l\·lr. Evarts, Chef. Tues thru Aval 'Ju~v 14-5ept. 3, ews Ung 540-1301 wkdays. • TOTAL SERVICES CO. County's leading lo'ord deal:li ii Sun. 3000 Club House Rd, &ll-4895 or S.18--0470 • BRAND new stores, offices, GRAY Rabbit, v:lc. Redlands lifinor Plumbing&. Repairs crshl1~. Excellent conlml• e Cross country C.M. N() I>h calls. BEACHFRONT -Newport 3 lndiv. air & heat, elev11tors. & Sllntfl. 111a·bc1. Ii" nes 646-0977 or 646-1809 siot'lll & bo111.1111 p)tnl, fn!lur-Drivers EXPER Ali=! & Cru(ts Direct· BR, W/D, xlnt v u , 17301 Beach Blvd. H.B. 645-2472 S•wing/Alterati?nt anl-e and den\O plan. Paid 9 Foremen or, n1ale coll~ student 6/3()....7/21, ~me Au i. ,842-::E..:2834;:"'-· ,..-,=--=-=,,--1'UUND vie lOth St. Beach, vocations, See Don Crevier. e Mananers o~•e1: 21 prer. Boy's C ub, 1 SXl-8350. MS-1757 FOR Leaae. 650 sq. ft. Office N.B. Sliver poodle, female, • Alterat'°na.-642-5845 THEODORE ROBINS • $,.2U per h1" 492.-03i6. BALBOA Ialand 4 BR. 2 Ba.. Space. Downto""·n Laguna. 6/23. 67fHi725 t I mes N('at, accurate. 20 yea.rs ex p. FORD • Assembler• Exp E R I EN c E 0 dog Sleeps HI. o n the bay. ~ Orps. Retu1ona.ble. SILVER gray m&lc P00<Ue. 2060 llt1l'boi· Bh'(I. • Molders groomer. full time, aooc:f op-· Clean. New tum. p:x> Wk. ::,;,=;=,~-~--=-I L' 00 'l&l A.J---Costa l\teill e Inspectors ('IOtiunity. Busy ah op. 673-7910 VERY deluxe 2 mi. oU!oo sl!i:.157.. • • ·-~ dollars I IITT111 AUTO • Gel Repairmen liii830-8627..,. ..... " .. ~ ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiii-t LIDO Isle, coin pl. furn, 2 aui hl in an xlnt loc. In O>sta oFN~o", =A-cb"il<-e~Vl~e~2Ct=h~& "'-""... UllJ All !I Shift!'! BR. 2 BA hae frplc, paUo, Mesa. &12-9347. Oceanh'ont ·N.B. 67f>..58(M; WANTED Experienced \Ve \Viii Train F /C BOOKKEIPER all elect kllch. Weekly or Busln .. I Rental 445 .;::c:=::::;;;cO'-=::...;;o..;=~ S.rvk:e Manager for MacGregor Yacht Corp. Capabll' or aupervlsbw mon thly STS-1365. WHIPPET pup 6-M -vie ** lla"-e lst TRUST rREE & C'lear 10 11ctH Job Wanted, Male 700 local GM Dealership 1631 Placentia, C.l\t. ~then. R<'portll to,rontro!ler. SAN Cle1ncnte deluxe furn, "n1E Factory_" 5hopplng Capo School, San Juan D I; E O.. IWIYXlmatcly p_roducln11 orange ~VI,!,_ on • • • :smell clt-1·l1'0tl cs nrm. ' l•undry, etc, nr bch/1hop-mall . con~~-Unl! .. o! Zl un1qalu 1 e Capo. 496:-847:1 -$46,000 cq. 8t"'1, $000 per oH·rtLrnp for WlilA, cOmmcr-SCRAM-LETS Goodndpay •n~cent· CUSTODIAN KilQ\t•l&l'(l"r ohflt"Om~tcr_m.. ping. $100/wk. 11ehcdu1e stores. ,_, M!Up& av · FOUND older lrlsh Jetter. month, want 01'01\IJe Co. tn. claJ or t $i9,500. Equi!y. . •te • car. resu-35S9-$i13 Per i'otonth teillll mac 11(' bkkpni: ••· ce rl)' 492-4.113. From $90/mo. In CamM?f')' Vic. Coll.It Hwy, Newport. <.'Onl<":. Brok.Ct" ~. Trude up. O\\'ller 67:).6259. me to Cla11lfiecl Ad Send written i'Ci'Sun1e to S.u1· 8Cnllal ~l"9• !_w1 1 .e~-pet". l.OVEl..Y 2 BR fUt'll hou9e. ,v.,UID.9606$te, ~J!h St., N.B. ,cCa~ll~6:;.7J.-0963o..;;~~-~~~ ~IAVE Costa Mt'Sl\ 4-plex. FREE & clear <.'On1men:lnl ANSWERS =503 c /o DAILY PILOT dleback Valll'y Un ifie d ,,. ....,_. close 'to betch, CdM. J uly l5 •.r 0 · ~v. FOUND: Tortoise, vie. Del t'X~ for sm311 hou~. h\C propei1.lt .. next 10 Sears P .O. Box 15'0 Coat a SctlOOI Ol~trlcl, ~Ir. Shinkle. F.qunl 011por. 1';i:i11iloyt'r 10 "'u" 12, nillnble ,_.pie, 145 E. 18th .!-11 .• Cl\1. Suitable ttfar & Wel!llnUn1tr:r. Co~to J. '~-~ BealN Rltr, c I to ··-M c -621.. 2461ii Cbrisru1!:\ ·~n~ion ~ " ~· f ~ I ,. • .., "M ......,..,..,,~ " ov na, r uni .. oommcre. "-'-aU -Ditto -Amu,. -e NI • .,, .,., . . , * GARDENER * .,, -. or SIOl'eS or ore. -. t. Mr:"". ~·1 Aller 3 PM o.,,., A .... 0 1 1 000 oeii ' • • Vl•Jo ""·· n<'W!'711. ""'•dim' .. ....,....,,...... -, "" o.u~• or ll< ttJSt, 165. ~ly. + ~lalted _ 11£l..'1ET · ....:I. "'"''"• ....., .t LfOO Y1le Waterfront 3 SHIO/mo. 4 l069 5CJ. ft. $2801 1-·ouND 2 Slnmc~ Cal.II, (.'Or eves SJ8.6341 Trnde up. Owner 6i'a-6259. 1 lust heant a sad o.nlniul Auto ·Mechanic Jllly 12. _ Be your own &o.1 81"2 BA., Ju-/July 1•Mll nio. C.J.S. Re111 Estate, Sa•1ta Ao1a A·-& ~>mar, DATA PROCESSING •·,,11010· P tl111 • ,·n '""' "' '"' l.t;,111 548 U68 v., V\: HAVE F.V. Lauodrom•H 8 Unils Inglewood. 6 . 2 8 1'. story. It'• about a turtlu 1vho Bnw Toyoln aacncy In llunt. r c mo. Aug. 11600. 673-8S86. · • O:l1tn MCMI. 642-13M ll'r'OMlngjl3,000 yr, 2 yr, old & 2 . 1 Br. unrum . tor boot. (ell •In 10v0 \.\~lh a con1bat Bch. need!! ,~las.'l A lin~ llnn1ediato 011Ct1i~ fpr O\\·n Dl'l"n. lllvti ln~"OtTlt'. CORON A dt"l Mnr, 1 blk to C-J PROPERTY. 124.~J \V: FOUND: Sn1ol1 DaChshund SPcro Quecn5. WANT1eri:::· -Sllbp.-ecnter; hGNtr mni!h,ll -C'~i''blc,M"E',_·r--·-.,...,...,,.--..,..-;or. moeh. with good hnport ex· fB~l-$)1911!'1n 3-0perator Gua ra nteed Cq~men Bia Cohlna, 'I bdrm. $600. 19th St. CJ\.1. 926 !IJQ. ft. vie. Sullivan & Brochard, er Income tor $10.000 equity. 01• T $-10,0IX) equity trade up. J b w ted F 1 702 per. ({'-")' PulWh Operator No Cash Down nlO. 67!1-4020 eves. bullcllng, 4 RAih1 + BA. 1000 So.nla Ana. M~24'' Ck\~r 6734144. O.vncr 675·62a9 ° an ' . •ma • _ t~or a pc1·n1 . Job \\'1111 1hc best ) EAril Now. P.a;y l.ttltt< OCEAN1''RONT, N.B. I & 2 tl!:it~: ri;~'~rAn~:·l ~1j ~,'O:;:.:;U:;:N:,cDc:Pu~p"py",-","-.,.",~,h~l,-pu-g :13i'.ooo=='-','<l"'u"ir"y"';"-n~3,..b~r-2~ba-, 72 x 100 ft LOT. Vltl'W ot R.EStp~'!'NT mang. or a•ls-~7-=~t.s, call i\lr. Sn1ilh, , • -675-6050 f AL 5)4..7117 BR. Apls }"rom $150 to $25() &46--6961 or 616-1246. or bulJdog. College Parle lnimaculate Olsta htt!IB canyon 11\k~. $10.000. Tnlidt! ta.nl tn1l con1pJe.-cc. Cd~T or =-"-="~=-------UMlatmT ca..•\ ''\\11ltc Elepl~ta" O\ltr• \\'k. S'l4-M99, 675-7593. COMMERCIAL APT. area. Cosl8 ~tea. 545-G633 home. R·2 zorict 11e:<t to lOlf on Beach property. Newport NB Local expcr, 675-0J!M BAQ\'SmER. 3 to S <f;l)'11 a runnlna your 1ious.o? Tum · 1 BR bl'ach e pt t !i brMe nr ON COAST HWY. FOUND pt'(!scrlptlon glsucs. ~ 1n traoe for Van, to San c.iemente. Bier., PRIVATE duty nurM. local "'k, Grnndn1other t y Pc . 601 .?°'1.'T Dr., ~~t. 3 thtn1 Into ''Cash'' • , • 11U bch. $100 WKJUP or Pt1o. Vlcinlty ot BAk" " Col\f!Ke. tan1per, TD or ?? ~1 .. UTS. ~1-8025 relfftJlttlf, Hvt 1n 1 0 u t . nererc1"1Ct1. 54!}-1907. NE.\\'PORT UE:A"il thm thru a ~ PQDt l'!llcs. 6'75-6.110: S36..os25 • CdM,, 673-3345 CoAll'I ,_ff'if'. Olli 549-30CiO ________ l!!I_________ &15-3361 Nttd M "Pad'"? Pis.ct 11.n Ml \\'hite Elephant Dunt-A·Ullt'I ('lf.Ylfitd adl U l ' T ·• ' I ' • • • & • • • • • 4f> DAILY PILOT ~~~,~~~~l~~~~,~~~~1!~~~1 -· ~ ..... .__I _. ' 1-' ·_fill!.____.__,. ·_ffiJ I J[Il) I He lp Wonted, M A F 710 CEN1'::1tA L, OHict> -J\·Jaturf' "·oman. l\fust be nccurah· typist 60 w.p.m .. lite book· k('(•pinft buckground helpful. $425-.S·L"". 9~1424. l[lJ [ ........... IITT) [ ........... ![II] I -l~,1~1 --iiiiiiiiiiiiii~l~~l ~[-·iiiii!iid·~·· m;;l~~~I Help Wonted, MA F 71 0 Help Wonted, MAF 710 Help Wonted, MA F 710 Help Wanted, MAF 710 Hele Wanted, MA I' 710 Antlq-100 Furni ture 110 Goro!" Sale 112 J1\Nrro11. li1e n1aln1ennnce, N£r;o 1oan for part. Hmi: REAL ESTATE Serv•ce Write LARGE French w a In u t 2 ~1A1'Clf1NG <1rangc quilted JUNE 30th. l·IOUSEJ10LD, f/limc. Over 21. i\pply hi ~XPl"rimrnlal \\'Ork In PROMISES' SALES MANAGER I r 1JCJ.a:h bed. 1nasslve dreUl!r I I 0 r a I loveseet hidabeds. TV. pe.non Huntington lkal'h Ubci;:lass nnrl foom. Must • Resale Orfice needs manaa:er S I M w/m1rror, nlichl table, S.350. $210. Like new. Knouy 1iUWs Ktrg"71?'A-IGslhi:rPL.& Mc3RE, Conva.lcscent llMpital. 188U have \.\'ood"·nrking a n d Ith 2 t R al erv Ce anager Engllsh halll.ree beveled hli,'hboy dresser $30. Mapll.l ~ t·lor~da $1 ., 11.JJ IJ.4i~3.'il 5. l1bergla~ cxl")('ricooe & PROMISES! w . yea.nNo 'rt ~lachte mirrors, lx7', S185. Oak coffee table $25. KinK site GARAGE Sa.Jc 10-S. Sat & GENERAL litEOI ANIC fl.lust have O\\'n 1ools, 50~; labor , guanu1t£>e $150. u week. 645-2327 or 642-4987 JANITOR/Gardener con1bo hA\'1• 2--IOO 8Q. rt. of space In expenen~. ewpo ~a M~hanlc: bachelors chest, Sl95. Pr. or g1·ecn quUll.'<I hett.dboard $10. Sun, F'Umlturt & Ml&e p/linll'. Apply 1; et,.,. n shop or g<J.rage for \~"Ork area. E..'xpand.lng company. -oak chairs, $35., Service for 2 yellow wrought iron Mr Items. Mc.'AU. Verde, ZO'll Snin~pm. J\1oo-F'ri. J\1rsa at-ca. Salnry open. 6"5-8035. PROMISES! Ex'rellclnt 1°Pp:>rtunih'ty ru1r p Ma 6, ruby dcpreK.Slon a;tass, stools 4.2", t>xceptlonal 2 for Baltlil Pl, C.J\1. Vi·t'lll' c(lnv. Hosp, G61 NITE AUDITOR pro C8S ona growt • App Y arts n S;t'i. ~1862, U73 Fairway $45. Stereo SIO. !lxl2 braided I ~""'~~-;;-c:--=,,.-,-:::-,;;; ("(Inter St. CJ\f in confidence. Send resume Dr CM rug wcy nice S2S. 5 pc druni LA\VN sule Sun Jul.y lit. 507 Gene r•I House keeper :'\lature. Exper. M9-n1 lfllll:I or l'IUI> C'Xp!'"r. n>q 'rl. Lo Clll1!.liifled ad no. 638, c/o Active growing Import defl1 '' set. Pals!e, nct•ei;, ~c('f 'fhali.a, Utguna. Kil ww-e J A.i'llTORlAL: ttsµ0n11\hte Knoo•IM,t:e of NCR 2000 &. Son1e compRnles make pn> Dally Pllor, P.O. Box 1560, ersiitp needs qua.lifted pe,.'. * WESfERN PAINT~NGS, <.'Onditlon S200. ll an g't n g lrade bead5, rugs bookB GIRL FRIDAY Retail store, acrounls pay. able exper. 4 d!l.)-'S \\'N!kly. Cali 5-t()..1500. pe~ for posillon in rapid· 4200. t' 1timl'. ~ Pet1>0Mel miM.•s, v.·e make ulle-rs. C~la Mesa, Cali/. 92626. llOnnel. 646-9303 ask for Bob bought llnd sold at 1550 So. lamps, ""'me11. ThW"S & Fri· c"'°=~rd=•~•~•c~-------:7. ly f'x1iant1 ing finn. 831)..2i48 Alanag1'r. REAL ESTATE SALES ' · · Coast llwy, Laguna Beach. ~-1 I 115 B Ibo B Cl b Varia n Data M a chin es SERVICE Station Sa1esman ANT lQUE 11 1 day, 6/28 & 6/29, 11.Jl('t' 2 ewe ry JUNIOR SALESMAN: I'" a1v ~-airy u Has The Jn1rucdiale FREE LICENSE full tlme. l Yr exper. Top wood trtt!! l':e~u~ll~lv f~~ pHml~"l <SOO CdMSurrey, Camroo ·-IA_M_O~N-D-,-.-m-·-.--.---rf-ect l::arn S20·S40 per W(>('k '"'' · '-Vttst · "')'., N.fl . Following Openings TRAINING pay for tight man + r ic, 673·1GtG' ·l'-1' nnds, ' biOnes. Apprnlscct'i 3 :-'ii 00 . \\'Orking :if)cr school :uid Sh'lpp'I & R • • F ..... 0,1,, P•aJ E•tate Lo'•cns· benefits. Mech. kl'IO\\iedgc. . . G1r1ae Sal• 812 '' k If 4~ '078 "·( CIBL Friday, part. Linn', s ln1 typing a n1us1. on Saturdays getting new NUflSES ng ece1v1ng 1;;;• Co~ now available Chevron Station con1er of ROUND oak table, n1agnil1· t: 8 e o er. """"" ' D't" ore rustOmers ror 111e Dally RN•, LVNs & AID Es thn.i Tarbell Realtors. Free Newport Bl. & Del l\1ar cent lurned base. cla"' feet, tn8 GALAXY Dr Dover 9 tun oi· a1t 6PM 6?;-0350 GJRL FRIDAY, niature, ~ood d1iving t e co r d , Laguna, -194-9458 Piiot. n1is is not a paJ.>1'1' Cl k Pla~m"nt Service. 1''ree CM. ' $48'', 2 leaves. 49-1-7473 ' Shores, N.B. Lots' of good PltlV 1\TI-: Turquoi.sc col- route and does not int·1udl" Hospira! Stuff Relier er Training Program. Eam SERVICE station full time Appll1nces 802 clothes, Co llege girls & lcctlon for sale. rleliveries or collecting. \\'ork ·ni(" l)ays & Shifts \\•hile yoo !cam. Call Al day help. l'ifust be ex ladles, size 8, 10 & 12. 64~8827 GOLF PRO -over 65, n1ust be a reiddcnt of Thi-llun· rington ReHre111cnt Residen- ce. 842-778.1). \Ve have openings irt South· ~~u}~~r~;. =~~-Pl.....,fer a min. ot 1 yrs exper. Sloan 1714l 832-5440. perienced, xlnt benefits. FREIGHT J?amage Snle on F'urnlture, Ste:oo, toys, '"l'St Costa Mesa and South Draftsman Prerer manager t y Pe . new Hotpo1nt & Whirlpool many, mru:iy mJsc lterns. Mlscell•neous 118 lluntington BeR.C'h only. JloinemakC'rs-Upjohn RECErTIONIST Reilly's ARCO, 19th & refrlg J 1vashers / dryers, Thurs & F1·1, R a.m. -2 pn1, i\pply now! 968·00.11. 18 ~ Great Spot 10 use your Span· Newport, C.J\t • 545--0780. June, 28th & 29th. SETI! ThomRs ships clock, 05 No. Broad\\·ay, S.A. 1 \'r. cxper. should include ish a.rxl lov1ng conecrn "'ilh N'""0"':1:..:0.""--"-::0:"'-~~~ \Vu1U1ant boxM chromu-547-6681 logic drawings & interest in doctors patients. Start $400. 2 SERVICE Station Attend. KENMORE \Vasher & . in a series or pa!io llH!ter, Jaeger peri>etual LABORERS lmmed. Assignruenls Top $$$ .••. Irvine 5-t!H-150 . 17802 Sky Park NEVER A FEE AT TEJ\1PO Tempo 'J'.empornry l·lelp NURSES, p/time, LVN 7-3 & J 1-7. RN 11-7. Apply 8-4 p.m. itesa Vcnle Conv. flosp, 661 Cenler St, C.l\f 54&--5585 )(>nrning PC work. C II Ell E11 · ,.~ <>r.r.<:: lo~un & Pa.rt lin1e. Lile elect. Dryer, Per! cond. sales. 9nni-5pm, Thurs, Fri. clock. \Vire n1esh ... ,tk> furn, a Y is. ....,.,..""'"'"· 1nech. cxni>r. Apply • ·gu"~ \Va1h & wc>ar cycle on both Sat. So 111 e t hi n g -(If ,,... Recel'yi'ng Conlrol Career En1ploy. r -....,. "" S c eryth.lng' 110 9 h s s E m1n, liqoor bo1:t1e collection. AJ?er•:y. 3400 Irvine Blvd., Che\•ron, 6().1 So. Coast H\\'Y, 150. 644-0643. ~ r' &loo! B1'wi . " Call &14-2740 aft 7:30 pm. N.B. Open l\Ionday. Lag. Sch. Rent Washers/Dryers 9thr:ne~1~. . .~ l\1 I S C ELL AN E 0 US Inspectors • R • • • SERVICE Station 'Attend. $2. Wk. Full malnt. llousehold J1enU1. G E KeptiOftlSt F/tinie. Chevron Station, * 639-1202 * BENT\\'OOD Chairs, ru1tiq's, I I C GROUNDSMAN $589-$7UI Per month GROUNDS LEADMAN r $619.$7M Per n1onth Send written re$l.Jrft..> to Srul· dleback Valley Uni f ie d School District , Mr. Shinklt', 24618 Olri!'lfl.n1a, J\Jission Viejo, Ca, 92\175. Deadline July 12. LEGAL SEC'Y NURSES aid, day shift, C'.-;:. pt'rlenC'Cd, start $2. hi'. lfa· 2 Yrs 1·eccnt expcr. in- cicnda. Conv. J1ospital. (213) specting circuit boa.rd con1· 434-4194 ponents. (lsl & 2nd Shifts) W k d nl 9 'I 3000 Falrvie C J\1 \\'hat nots, trailer cabana, re r g e r a t or. ontour ee en SO y, An • w, · esa.. AUTOMATIC washer and lawnmo"·ers. 2!20l Breton recliner with vibrator. 6 PM~ $2.50 per ho ur. SHIPPING Clerk, full time, electric dl')'t'r $45 each. Ln, Hunt. Bch. tAtlanta & J)avenporl. ll21 $. Halla.dy, R 0 S S BARTLETT. pen11a.llent, 11on. tht'U F'ri.. e &~ e Beach Blvd\ Santa Ana GUARDS Fec Paid. Prestigious la\\' finn needs indiv. \\'hO likL'S \\'Orking ror toP trinl la\\'Y(•r. Salary to S700. Also f''('(• J obs. Call Sally !·tart. 540-6055, ·Coastal Personnel Agency, 2790 !!arbor Blvd .. C].f. F'ull & f"/time Positions. open in Orange Co., L o n g Beach, Laguna Niguel in La· guna & Con1pton areas for qualified applicants "'ho de· sire steady employment. JS LEGAL Secretary. Newport ·yrs, of age or older. Appl y Beach attorney needs sharp in person, 326 So. Lemon Sttretary \V/good skills SI., Anaheini, beh\·n 9 ain &. '"'ho can ass um c responsibility. 54.'.>-9409. l pm. -'Cc7.='i'~=o:="-"::;:;=- A DT Sterling Security Serviet" LYN SUPERVISOR An Equal Oppor. Employer HOTEL MAID Steady year aroun:i employ- ror Nursing hon1e, Beach a!'f'a. 40 hrs JX'I' 1vcck, Call 49-1-8075 for details. ment. Apply to housekl'.'C~r. MACHINISTS Hotel Laguna, 425 S. Coast Experimental & Produt'tion. H\vy., Lag. Bch. 5 Yrs min. exper. Diversi- HOUSEWORK -4 hrs (laCh fled "'Orie load. J\.Tanul. of morning. Mon thru Fri. $40 instrun1entation. Advanced week. Own car. 6+1-7344. Kinetics, Inf'., 1231 Victoria HOUSEKEEPER \vith ex· St .. C.M. 646-7165. Equal pcrience only to work In Oppor. Employer. convalescent hospltaJ. Good 1 MA~~CJ=·~ll~N~l-ST~/~T-oo_l_M-....,. ""'agcs & benefits. Apply Able to work to close 1445 SUperlor Ave. Newport tolerances. Cer-Plas 1714) Beach 842-4602. HOUSEKEEPER -Apply betwn 8am-4pm, J\.1on-Fri. Mesa Verde Conv. 11osp, 661 Center St, Costa M(lsa. JNVEN1'0RY Control, esper. on1y. Invoicing . receiving · shipping. C.Omplete charge. Salary open. &12-3472, N .B. INSPECTOR Machine parts, close tolcr· ance electro n1ech. parts. 3 Yrs niin. cxper. in ls! article & receiving inspec· tion. Apply . . . CULTON lNDUSTR.IES Connector Division 6400 Roland St. Buena Parle 523-3480 Equal Oppor. En1ployer m/r INSURANCE SALES l\fAIDS \V"-NTED, Laguna Reef J\.Iotel, 30806 S. Coast Hlway, Laguna. J\.1AlD wanted: Don Quixote Motel 2100 Newport Blvd. Costa J\.1'esa. 642-2670 J\.1ALE \Vanted, Apply at Kentucky Fri('(I Chick(ln, 693 So. Coo.st l-I\ey, Lag. B. MALE \\'anted • Apply at Kentucky FriOO Chicken, 2929 E. Coast Hwy, Cd to.I. MANAGER Exper. not nee. Join grmving cha.in of SUL'reS."dUI car "''astll'.'S. l\1ust have meth. aptitude, ability to supervise help & handle customers. \VilliJ1g to \\'Ot'k long how·s.. Snl. $200-$250 per \Vk. to start. 8424153. NURSF...S Aide for (IJderly lady. Live in, day shift. Xl nl \\'Orking <.-ond. \\'eekends off. Call 546-1830, aft 6 p.ni. &15-0579 2 OFFICE GIRLS NEEDED P.adio telephone dispatch 1.>Iust be 25, able to drive Apply In Pt!rson YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th, Costa l\ft>sa OFFICE CLEANING P /time t'VCS. All carpeted bank N.B. Expcr. Over 21 only. Top Pay. 213/927.0U5. OPERATORS. exper. <lnly. single needle & overlock. Top ratt>s. Rolf's !\1anuf., 865 Production Pl, NB. 646--0.108. PART lhnc TI C\\'Spaper dellvery, must 0\\'11 d!'pen· dab!e tn1ck or van. No other need call. &'6-8162 P/Tlme J\ten. Day or night. Home cl!!aning serv & restaurant ninlnt. (h.·er 18 only. Extra Care !>.lain· tenancc, 847-2259. PART time inserting for 111ailroon1. See G e or g e Arauz at The Daily Pilot rrom 8A.!\1-1lA!\f. PARTS l\1nnag(lf, excellenl opportunity, Alfa-Romeo & Saab,. BEACH ll\1PORTS, 1200 \\'. Coast Hi\\•ay, Ne11·port. Payroll Clerk to $750 Fee Paid Fanta.'Jfic co. offers xln't hen· t>h\s & opportunity 10 cap- able indiv. Fun & congenial gl'OUP. Call Kin1 Clark 833-2700. 1\lso r-ee Jobs. Dennis & Dennis PersorulC'l Agency of Irvine, 2082 MichelsO'n Dr. J\1ANICURIS1' . Pedicuri~t. No exp nee., earn \\'hile you licensed & qualified. Kelly PBX-Operalo1-s, for anS\\'Cr· \earn, part lime, eves &: ·rcmpleton's, 445 E. lith SL, ing service, full & pa11 "'knds, full lime \\•hen quail· C.M. 642-0lM. tin1e. Exp'd pcrf'd or \\ill tied. ~""'---'-==::... ____ , _,_..,_··~--'-"-·~m_1·~~-~~ Farmers lnsuc.aru;e Groyp .. MAN train for ~'indol11 tint· PEOe.LE ARE. NICE Ed Lani * 540-1834 · ing ;nstallel'. Sia.rt $2 hr. INSURANCE AGENCY GIRL Commerd1!.1 lines undt>nvril· ing & rating. E.~per. neeess. Peacock Insurarw.-e, J\.lnl- Bradley. 494·1BS7 or 549.JC68. INSPECI'ORS QUALITY INSPECTORS Electro-Mechanical Inspectors famili1r witti •ystems int• gr•tion and / or launch operation. Must be •ble to communic1te we ll with a sse mbly and supervision. Will be a ssigned to field qu1lity a ssur ance on Wake Is la nd for • minimum of five months. Call R. R. Scott (714) $46-8030 E x t . 153 3333 Harbor Blvd. Cos ta Mesa, Calif. c Equal OPJm. Emp!Oy~r m /f Raises monUtly 10 ~1.50 tu· \\'hen you ('!Iii on lhen1 as "'!thin 1 yr. Over 25. 1'all, an AVON Representative. neat. 64+-8494. You'll have fun & n1akc MANAGER TRAINEE friends selling our famous pnxlucts. To l(larn how l'Rsy Outstanding opportunl!y lo it is to start, call: advance to ma:mgcrial posi· 546-5.141 or 540-'ffi.ll !ion i.p.3t).6() da)'s. Our rur-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;o N'nt tnanagers r.arn $1000-PRINTING $1IIOO n10. Jlilust ha\'I.! direct salrs <'Sperienct•. Call l\1r. Ke\\'Tnun !J7!!·5Z22 l\lJ\TURE L,.\.DY Nol\-smoker, good 1ypist for part time employment. J d11ys a ~·k. from 10 to 2 rip. proximately. New p ort Ccnt(lr. $2.25 hour lo.start. J>!ease call Edna at 83~9'm bcty,•f!<!n 10 & 12 for in· lerview. l\IAroRE lady needed for an1bulatory homt>, Live-in, l\1ust haver e fer enc es !loom + board + salllf)'. C<i!I 612--83Rt bPfore Ii PJ\-1 J\1EDICAL Secret1u'Y full <·hargf', GP in N.B. ·Desire!l: exp. medical sec. pem1. full llniC, must kno\\' insur, bill· !ng etc., salary of)('n, apply 1n penion 9-12 a .rn. 400 Ne"'porl Center Dr. Suite 411 NB i\tEDICAL Secretary, expcr. Dlc1aphone & insurancc hui;y ofc. Salary open. &Jfi-390:"$. ,\Il-.;DJCAL RCl'{'PI. Day/ S\1·ing. Frfime. Pcrsonne>I ~~pt, Hong I losp. N .B. f\T/V Help, 21 or over to 1\'0rk in food stands at An{tl1l"in1 S1adiun1 eve~ & \\'kl'nrli;. Apply in person 9;1111-,Jprn, ].fon trhu F'rl, Ci1nlC'e11 Corp., Anahclnt Sla1Uum nt gate Ii, Shippintt I.· ll.l•(', Dock. right f1<'ld :dtll'. OFFSET PRESSMAN 2ND SHIFT KORD 64 and l2SOW w ith T·SI two color 'unit. Must be able to m a inta in uniform col· or balance •nd hair- line r egistration on coded litho libels and be able to setup and p r int on 40 pound lite- weight stock. We need a crafts m an who is a self s tarter w ith 2-4 ye•rs e x perience in offset presswork. Ex .. c e llent benefit pack· 1ge and starting sal- ary. Apply in Person or Call: Dona Leverett (714) 540-500..l, C:xt. 250 HYLAND LABO RA TORIES ~ MEN & WOMEN lJl.27 , J::orn 111 $342.30 11nhu·y per IDl/11' 'E PER.50NNEL rno. ·whllc \\'I' 1ench you u 3300 Hyland Ave. Costa Ml'Sa, Calif. !12(1:.?G t~llf II~ jrJb skill ln F.IC't1ronics, F..:qua:I Opper. Employer ~1nlc & Femnle SERYICES•AGENCY 1\1 e c h a n i c Ii '' r Ad m I" I 1 trnUon. Aher j .,...., ............ ~ ...... !!! Alter S PM lly •\P<"lntment "•lning, eam S4HO P'" PRODUCTION Acooun11"1Jll·Dcgrl'e 10 SlSK mo. for 2 day!I Y.'Ork. Cull Control Engr, BSEE to S12K TStt Youna. Cattr. Air Na-MANAGER SaJes:IMana«nnent nZK + tion1tJ Guard 9711-1.143. Contract bckgrnd. Furn Dist. e MEN •• ~ I 1 Jn 'V Micro Bloln<Fl ... t to S12K . ... '"-"'"'l'f -n 1 · ·• F · • "I§.... area. for mr>rnlng [)Hlgn DraftJma,n to $~ nc-wspAper, au!o route!. Ap· Ind/Comm Lnftn Proc SASO pmx 21..ii hr per morning. Sec'y to ConlJ'OUtT to fiSO JoH7-89i9 ~-O:instr ti) ra .. ~=--='=-~--~---Sec'y/RE Legol to S6&) ~1 0 TE J. n1ald. &RI, Sec'y/Prop. Mgmt to S600 rncr~t1c, L.-.11;un11 Be11rh DrntaLGal Fri9o¥ 10 VJtJ rellOl"I., 6 tlay v.-e••k. 49-1-UOO. At least 5 years experience requin:.'CI In (lbcrgJruii boot <.'Ol\8lti.1C't1011 o{ lengths ovt>r 40'. Su~rvl~ry 1'.xperiencc & kntnvledgf' of Ul5ergla.orsinJt l•'Chn1(1Ul"lll are mandatory. SaltU"y commc:MUl"ft1c "11h ablHt)'. Excellent binge bcn· t'Cilll. Recept Gen'I Ole let $SSO ~ftiSTCTA:\"S \lo'li.nttd~ Form Sct1d rcsunit• to: In-Process Inspectors 2 '\'rs expcr. inspecling eabll's, circuit hourds & chassis. (!st & 2nd shifts) Receiving Inspector Min. 3 yrs exper. lesllng rcsis1ors, capacito1'S, puiS(I lransf(lrmers etc. Stock Clerk J\'lln. 6 mo's expcr. shift\ (2nd 846-0641 Apply in person 9 1o 12. 270 RECOND. APPLIANCr::s l ;e~~~="C,-~~--GARBENSTENGAL bulldent . E. 17th, Costa Jl<tesa. Dcllv(ll'ed . guar. Dunlap's, AS.Sif'.1ET. hff by i I e n1 s' . $95. Will buy my portable, RECEPI'IONIST-Typist. Ac· SHOE SALES 1815 Nt!\\'port, CM 548-ml :~~~h ~1'.e~ei .. ~~n~~~·. <'lee., 1>n1all do u gnu t curate & fast, tran!crlbe Full & p; · ' 1nachine ror a base. (lost J dictation, ailS\\·er phon(IS. · time, e~. only. FREE Pickup. Rcfrig. Ap-1800 Tamaica Rd, J\.1esa be) 494-04Z7 l2:3Q.S pin daily. Irvine ?<In't benefits + profit shar· pli11.11ces & Scrap metnl.l ;iV'Oc~rd~e~,~C~-~·~!.~~----sf'rew, 1nay • . Complex. Cn1l Mrs. Sugars, 111g'. ~.usy, plcasiuit ston:. Call nn.ytin1e. 675-5258. GARAGE S 111 e, Misc Balboa Buy Cluh Fnn1ily 546-6170. \MVr.,s;:vl<.,tt,. ~~_.,·.,:,' N.B. J\.li.. KENMORE' (llect dryer, 2 yr, ho~seholrl ile1ns. ~tl'd. BR Ml'1Tib1'rship. w/or without ..... z .roo;> ()QO'I s~ J( ,,, 1 St r boo t slip, save $ 7 5 0 . e RE c E p T I o N 1 s T _ • ' · 1;), enmore washer $75. 1 1 • ereo am/ 111 console. 552_9-174. Capable of handling busy SM. MFG. CO. 6Ta-8260 10am-3pm, 6/30 & 6/31 410 ""'""'~-,-.,.--,c-.,.---.,- board plus typing skills. 1 lady packer, 40 hr. "·k. GE \Vasher..<ft'Yt>r CElectrlc) Cabrillo Cto.1. GIBSON ref.rig. 2 dr. ~-orkB 642-9-liO. Ask !or J\.lary Ann. 2 lady lite as.<1embl.ers, 30 hrs. xlnt1 cond. · $50. e a c h. Cl1AlRS, beds, b 0 0 k s , S65 E111ka outboard motor 5 wk O·--$1 '"'"" """ ~""" cloth t I h/11 S6.j gkill circular saw RECEPTION IST for anin1al · .. ~-r w, · ·""'''1r. ~ es, 00 s, n101't". Ex. hospital. N.B. 3 Days \Vk 1 o~· .2 ].ten,.shipping &. re-MOVING n1ust sell 4 yr old rond. June 23·2 1. 289 Ogle $10 847-1427. incl. f'ri & Sal. Send resume Cl'JVlng, pt llllle. 20. hrs .. or washer & dryer . \Vhirlpool'i St. Apt. C. Of. S\VIVEL Ba.rnboo chnlr, like Ciassifil'<l ad no. 892 (•/o Allruul 40Aphp,~ly·· tlGo.001·~1; ~!ll .~0-best. Like ne\v $ 2 0 0 . 1'10VED. -Can'! use g"a~e new. Pole lnn1p. Uuderwood D ·1 Pll po Bo 1=" \A~\ s ., agoc I 11 f typeWli ler. Hand 111 ad e a1 y ot, . . x :iuu \\I ~ 9-16 \v 17th s' CM 493-3.<!61. u 0 -1tcn1s. Snt-Sun, Ju)' ShR\\•I &12--0272. Costa ].1esa, Ca 92626 Ill · · I., · GIBSON 12. Frid Se . 1. 10-a. 2127 \Vlnd\\·ard Ln RELIEI-' s IV i I ch b 0 a rd SNACK sh 0 p Att(lndant, Color TV 22" SC~~ 1 ~s NB . operator, fll e cll"rk for new f/lime, ?tlust be 21 or older old 644-zi29. ' · BLOCK Sn.le. J\.ft. Eden Cir. car auto agenC'y, Tues thru \1•/short order esper. Call otr Nev.•hope & \Vanl('r FV' Sat 0"9300 35 for appt. Tues-Sun . •FRIGIDAIRE* Furn A 1. clot•h. · · .......-ext · &1--1-449-1. 14 cubic ft. Gold $.t;. 1 • • PP lllllce!, mg RN night shift relief 11-7:30 * * 67~'1338 * * )ab,\' llems. Sat-:su11. CRIB and Kantv.•et mattress $20. 8 mm projector $10. Hide-a-bed sleeper 1100. !IGU9't! Clerk Typists Typing 50 \V,p.n1. A n1in. yrs office cxper. Bcvel'ly J\.lanor Con v . • STENO Clerk · Good tyt>-• . J UNE L'i-16-17 1-lousehol<l - ·.i llosp, 496--5786. Ing & sh. skills. Eag~r. s.;oo • DISH\\·A.511ER.$., 11·ashc1·111. Stl"l'l!O • ExeN:ise boat & mo. 642-9-170. Ask for Mary dryers, reb!1· guam & hamJCB equipm~nt 2n Oil~ J\tanicure $.l.50. Sham- poo & Set $3.50. By Af lchelle Only. 7 Nntions Coiffures, 642-0844. Secretaries !\tin. 3 yrs expe1;ence. Typ- ing 60, sh 80. ROUTE SALES Large National Co. is looking for pe1111anent stable people -Excel!t>nt starting siilary. If inrett>stetl Call: 114, n4-11330 Ann. d(ll\"rl. 839-7020;. 5-16-5218. CccU Pl., D I. ' l·--------1Building Mahriials 806 Gar•ge Sale Fri & Sat TEACHER AIDES • Surplus.Building 321 B:orad\\•ay, .~1. ].fATERIAL . lOOO's Of NE\V . J\.hsc !terns. ITE~IS! Doors, lumber, ply-F'OR Salr: J\1ahoJ;:any dining $2.84-$3.45 Hour wood alum sheeting niold· table, 3 leaves, side board, ·1 1965 f'OFt D lru(·k, !!hot'! bt<d, $9j().; Triumph TR4, SSSO.; grey mariric boo.I eng, $75., <l9'J...l7l'>. BOCK cquallzer hitch for travel trailer, completf'. canvas bunk beds. :>l(>.1713 or &1.2-4616. If you ml't'f any of these qualifications & are looking for a position \\•ith a grow. ing Orange County com· puter company & looking for oUers. not promises. SALES 1t1ANAGER Career J\.1inded Lady To manage \V atklns who I es a I e dlsttlbu1ion l'f..""nter lron1 her homt>. Supcn •iSC' .~ s upp t y salesladies. \Ve train at our expense-. S8000 + earning oppor. Call :P.trl, Patterson, 1714) 5J0..0811. Requirements: 40 \V.p.m. ing, ~lndows, etc. ' l'hail'!I. Call &1rr.1326. typing skill. Su('(.'t_>ssful com· BUILDERS SURPLUS 1 _.want ad results ..... 642-5678 \"ou'll find ii in Classllled pletion of 1eaf'hl'1· aide . course or equivalCflt. Apply Z;WG So. Jl<Iain St., S.A. in person, fountain Valley ilon thn.i Sat l()..5 Please Apply In Person Or Contact School District, No. 1 Light· TI4: 546-1032 house Lane, F. Valley. (Cor· '·":t.i:---'-=_,,,=-=--~~~~ 9#~~~ ~· nc r of Talllt>rt & Nt'W'land). ,-F_:u:;r.;:n:;:ilc;U::_r_::e ____ ..;1:.1:.;0 B. Krafka VDM Filing deadline Thurs., July 1 • • 5, 19TJ, 5:00 P~f. \Ve 8.n.! an 5652 lllGHGATE Terrace, equal oppor .. e1nployer. lrv~e. P resident homes, .. ,..,...,,,..,..;,,,;,,,,..,..•! JTX)Vlng -J\lust .sell, Ne\.\• ~ ..... f A CON\l[N1(Nt SHOPPING AND · -<7 SEWINQ CUIOE FOR THE CAI.OH THE CO, I SALESMAN · l\1a.nagement trainee. Home improvement sales. $650 + comm. 00 hrs. "'eek. Color Tile, 2221 Harbor Dlvd, Costa Mesa. 645-11.26 Seant deluxe l'.'RSht'T &. gns TEAQIERS or anyone in· dryer. CUst. \Valnu1 Parson5 terested in part time job. lbls, Contemp. dinelle ~1 . No invl"stment. Oppty unltd. w/6 directon chrs, d bl bed Q\.\•n hrs. 962-18S4. 1v/F'ur sprd & pillows T E L EPllONE Ani.-wering Bnvn/blk 12x15 shag rug. Service, Bl'ach area. Prefer Oil pnlntlngs & prints. ... ____ _ Vari•n Data M1chine1 For 1n 1d In Woman's World Coll Mary Beth 642-S671, ext. 330 Irv ine 2722 Michelson Dr 833-2400, ext 336 F.qual Oppor. Employer PURCHASING ASSISTANT $620-$753 Per Mo. SALES PART Tli\tE Fountain Valley . Costa 1olesa Hunlington Beach area only. Evngs &9 pm, $1.75 per hr. + romm. Call Mr. Wilson, 963-2445. over 30 yrs. of age. Varied I HAVE t'verything from: hours. Weekends, 673-1166. new G.E. frostfree refrig. to TELEPHONE Sales. \Vork Fr .. BR IK't, . llntiqur r·r. from ;-our O\\'n home. cha1ryi. gold ~WTOrs, Cl')'!ltnl Highe!'!t commissions-. Ex· & s1\vtt. 9 rust. made perience not ne<.-essary. couch, Plus other items! 892-~184 1 ~54~8-<c::::289e:::._. _____ ~I SantlG• CJO Bank Telephone Solicit-• PAIR "'" & Mrs. gold ... , uphol!ltered Danish rockers e Exp'd Tellers, ruJJ or par1 P /tin1e $L7S hr to strui S25 (la('h, Pa.ir Walnut lime. No, Exper. Necessa.ry "Lane" Individual cocktail • Exp'd proof Operator Cal1 536-2593 tables S15 ea. T\vo fable Contact Mt . Lorenz TRAINEE :P.lECl!ANlC lamp!! SIO ea. 83&-0752 ·i •1,8, •• 200 Son1e experient'<', dr°!''~rs HARDROCK niaple 72" drop I ..,, ,..,...;) IJ--•• rl ood d ----"-"-'=--'=----I · '-'·"""" an g MVlng !ear tbll'., 6 \\'1.ndsor ch11.IN1. SCHOOL admin. \\•/chain of reconl required. Sa I a r y 2 lar. lamps, cock1ail thlf', 2 private Montessori p r e· open. 645..2327 or &12-4987. end Ibis, misc. itl"ms. Sue. school. Experience in deal· TYPISf-Secretary, lype so for it price. !)j2-AA71. ing \.\·/public & gtoncraJ of· · d" tJ in fice required, mus! enjoy "'Pm min .. no •ct.a on, m J\1.ATClffl\'G table lamps, children. For intt.>rvieo.v call 2 yn e..'Cp. Startin~ Mlary double globe base \\1th large ,_ Requirements: 40 w.p.m. typing. E.xper. involving pur· chasing or materials con. trol 1\·ork. Apply in person, rountain Valley School Dis· triC'l, No, 1 Lighthouse Lane, F'. Valll"y, t Corner of Talbert .~. NewlandJ. Filing deadJinf' Thurs., July 5. 1973, 5:00 PM. \Ve are an equal oppor. l'mploye:r. 546-4531. $600 to $700, Call 835-l!m or shades, one hand ·painted - apply at 1636 E. Eding(lt, o!her ~·hlte. $20 each. :1 ""~ Suite D, Santa Ana. c6<t6--4-032"""'°"-------II PURCllASl.NG A/P CLERK' SECRliTARY \Ve are lookl.ng tor n top notch secrela.ry to ~am the ad biz. lf you t ake Immediate Opening shorthand, type fast & ac· Experil'nced Only curately & \.\'OU!d like a Xlnr'l \\'ag" & BCJ1efits challenge, send us your Schafe r Bros., Inc. mrume todR,Y. P.O. Bo:.: I F'un1. ~1anuf.. in G. G. i 1691 , Ne\.\"J>Ort Beach, Calif. CuU l\1aria (71 4) 894·6629 9266.l tor Appointn1t>nl I ~=:=:=::::; ""R!"E!"A"'L~E'!ST!!!!A!!!T"'>."'SA"'· "'L"'E"s"" • Secretaries·· SUCCESS CAREER • Typists New or experienced. J oi n the • PBX Operators \Vorld's largest and fastest VOLT growing resale organl:r:aUo n lnsti nt Personnel \Vllh a network o( over 300 olfices nnd become a Temporary Scrvlt-e member <>( our MJWonaire 3M8 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Club. ].Iulti-mllllon dollar Newport Beach 546-4741 TYPIST, full or part time, s: CLEAN, gd cond, bm sofa. to!> temporary now but ean .be Yll.iit dll G pc Br .!!i"t, "°" permanent. NC\\'}lOl'l Center, Formica. top!!. Rl.'Cliner chr, 6-14-8821. Cash only. 531-9503. tr... U~ERGROUND cable TV BR. Set Ethan Allan, 801id exp~ Installers, trainees Maple, t"11 beds, comp dbl considered. Apply 2624 W · dress mlrr 2 nite stds like Coast Hwy., N.B. Tele-nu cond. szoo. &ro-0569. pro1npter, an equal oppty STEREO o •• 1 employer • """' Y Arnrr. · maple unique ca b i net . WAITRESS I <.'Ombinatlon Perfect t-ond. $5(1. a f 1 cook neat appearance. 6/557-932·1. call 842--4549 ~~=~------~~::,..,:~,;;,!:;_---!MOVING • J\fust sell mMy WAITRESS oousehold items. Refrig., Alert, good attil~. Exper. din. table & chairs etc. Call cockta:ill'I. \Vork day or ni te. 541r3431. Tcle. 673-7722 for lnterview.'1 "o~IN~J~N~G"'-Sc-t,-lt-•-ll-.,-,-Pro--v-ln· • 1 < CdM. clnl, oval \\'/'J leaves. 'By \VANTED by re t I 1' e d Drex(I], ,t,, server. ~i Pr\Ci! Sailor Snap! ,-. •'' I ~ advertising program. Free Equal Opper. Employn gentleman; lady 4 O -5 O . at $650. 8J3..-0933. · Companion. good driver, BLK Scroll hcadhoarrl King presentable, unencumbered 11z $35 Dbl spring & mat· llve in: aon-.e travel, very It. trCs5 Clean $>l0. blankrl!' $1 typing. No Hmoking. Good ea. 3 spcl bike $20. 61;,-8374. . ' \ 9033 2.8 $650 In, 11T""·-11T~ ... Secret1 ry Good Skills salary. Call bl\\11 Z-6, ' guaranteed lloonslng school. Exc(IUent sales tralninr. \Vhat is your liccns.c wort11 to you? Cleek our n1on1hl> bonus progr1tn1 which means SS$ to you! Pl<'aS(I call Virginia Jo11cs 8.'i5-48tt. f~Ct' P:tl(i/,\lso 1''~ Jobs \Vl'stcli ff l'ersonnC'l 1\gency1 J6.)1 E. EdlngN, S.A. ~r.·lark III Ccntcl'J 54Z..88."i6 646--5864 PINE Harvest table. 4 cap-. • ' tains chairs. + bench. Sl75 .. She II navigate. joyfuUy WANTED shampoo g i r 1 . 2 canopy beds w/spl'l'8.c'I.$. lhru summt"I' in tlull l"llJ.Ul'l<.'ftl RED CARPET Re1ltors R.E:. SALES!lfEN Sccre-tarielt 1''/C Bkpr/J\tnnuf (.1erk Typist"' llO().SfOO 1600 1100 100% FREE J\1ust be llCt"n300. Alfredo's $15 ea CaJI 6444034 dt"t'llll lhnl zip!) up 10 a bright Jlalr Etc. 326A itarine Av{'., ' · . • lx.r.v an(l bratd·l'rimmed col· B.t. S?-1ALL pink J>81s1ey llOfa. lar. Easy-sew In pique sl'.LIJ. \VANTED-Young Man, 110me Xlnt cond. $45 cloth cotton knit. ' (IXperience. Newport Center * 673-7311 * Pri'nted Pattern 9003: Texaco. ~7"J5. * SOFA&: J...OVESEAT * ChUdren'11Simi2, 4, 6, 8. Size WARD CJ(lrk neodf'd lO ivork nev(lr usctl, both for $1$5. G 'takes lih ynrds ~indt. In atlractlve co nv. hosp. · 968-79l0, Usually home. fJEVltl"fT1 ·I 1VI'. CENTS Liz fl1'!11ders Agl'tlcy Exper neccss. Good wages REIBICERATOR, co u c h . for each pattern -add 23 l.>l:il A .Joh .......... 557-3-101 &: bent!fllt.. PleMe call coffl'C luhlc Aquarium, din· (..'tnt11 ror each pallern for IL1'~. Wes opportunity. Car· Of~'(' ..:.:.: · ~·".:.:.. .. ='6-~8 &12-2410 ask for .J\11'11. Rkt· ing set. 616-.1"·12. Air lttall Md Special Handl· e<·r nigtit, 7:30 p.m., Tul?S---~~· d("ll. WANTED 10 buy like-new In~: olherwlMl lhlrd-clau dny. July 3. 1850 E. 17th, SECRETARY WJIO WANTS TO \VORK? furniture & ht.mps, nice &: de Ivery will lake three Why not \\"Ork 1t1 th!! hotteirt a r. ea Hunt l n g 1on Beaeh/P.'ountn.in Valley. Ut u~ 1rain you! Call Phil J\fcNamee, V 1 LL AGE ltEi\L F.STATE. 00"'~1;,67 St\. S-17-61;,.!. Personntl director ~" DRIVE A CAB' rea!Wlnable &1-4"'4687 \vceks or more. Send to I th in(!' /a;ood · ' ~ -. ' M&rian....Martln, _the DA.IL,?. ~ VllleM ~~1,"'f; h~ndle ~nt~tta.l CHOO$£ YoUr houn, work * QUEEN·•lze hide-ll·bed. PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept., for yot1rSC1U, be your own like new, Um~. $Rcr!flcc! 232 \Vest 18ll\ St., New Ree lty, Inc. J't'(.'01'ds, Stllttry'to $&00. Call bosa. Aten or ~'Omen. Can 67"".>--0869 York, N.Y. 10011. Print Kay \l/ln1t, ~. Cofultal be slightly handicapped. W _, Chi bl NA.ME Al)DRP'.SS with Pcnonncl Agency, 2790 lht.r· N t! a 1-Clenn Appearance. ant.u, na c• _ net zt.i•, 'Aru: and ATl'LZ bor Bllld., CM. Vt1, retired. Ase 2S to 70. prl. pty. ' 552-0366 NUMBER. Sec'y· Tech T yp1ng Supplmnent YoUr Income. BEAUT J\.1AliOC BUFFET SEE J\.fORE Q u I c k JBM F,.:xec. 3-' yn l'.':itper. Ad· Drive o cab 6 hl'I 01' more a Rare hievi!l~d mirrors. Mu1t Fuhlons and choose one VIUlci:!d Kloot.IC11 , tnc. 1231 <fay. Apply In ~r"Mn, .tcll, $200. 873-"172 ~ttf:rn tree from OUT Vit1otia St., C.f\1. &it-7165. ~·~u::iCw01£a~Co., l86 :. l6th 11ousr;FUL of furniture for r lng-Suntmcr Catalog. All Equnl Oppor .. Employt"f'. -" • _._,,. .. eia. ~aJe ...... ·etteapr 3029 Fiiimore s zcs! ZPf *· - Sew! Puff Pillows - Give morn" a l'l(}w "country look" "'1th 1iufr pillowl! NO\Vl Add zing \\'Ith PUFF PILl..O" 1)! Join 6 x 6" IK:t'aJM or use l!iOlid fabric. Pleat. lhen SIUff. Pnttcrn 73311: prinle<I U.!UUtf' pal:tm-n pkoees rot l:l" square and round pillow. Sf:VENTl'·P'lVE Clr.NTS for each p11.t1ern -add 25 cents for !!sch pattern tor Air Mall and Speelal Handl· Ing; otherwise thlrd-clau dcllvtry will take thtff "·eek1 or more. Send to Allee Broo~. the DAILY I PILOT, 105, Needlecr.11 Derit .. Box 16:'\, Old Cbelse11 I Station, New Yorlc, N.Y. I lOOU. Print Name, Adbeiia, !Ip, PAttem NtunW. I N EE D L ECRAFI' "12! I Crochcl, kntt, etc. Fttt dlrectto ... 50c. -I ln•ta•I Macrame llooll:. BR1lc, fa~ ktwrts, pat. lrn1~. Sl.00. I ln•lltnt Croc-het Boot - Lcllm bY plctutfs! ·Pat· ltrns. $1 .00. Con1pktte ln"1anl Gift llooll -more thin 100 gUta -11.00. OMnfllale A.l&baa Boot - $l.l)Jl. Sec'y Tntlnee lo S5fiO rock rn>up ro rironiol,. IV'\\' AccoUn~ Ouk to ~ 11f":duct t\eed lead guitar. Copy ~t $400 girl If-ad sl'J:Cf. h A II f! Fae #"foWl Oft'b SJ60 pl.liYtf", pl&M <1r f.lt"J£an i KmENBURG MARINE SFX:RETARY, p/timt', ah \VOMEN or Men, etlrn extrn WI\)'. ColtlJ Me118, A.J)t 138. lN&7 SEWING llCX»f DAILY PILOT 'd. ~ 1 ·rri 1 money. F'ull or par! U~. SJMMONS rt .!l(lf!I IOOfl sew today, wear tomorrow. 1 ~k>n ~~~~·N.~. ~al~ fo~ia~~:776 for n.orc In-condition. ~~300 Buena S1IN•STANT FAS HI ON 644-~iO. . Vista, San Clemente. BOOK _ llundred1 o f TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A 11 .Jiffy Rnlf Book11 • 50c. Book of l.t Fri• At,,._.. 50c. . Qallt BDok l -16 pattt'l'DI. 50c. CAu. TRISH lfOP'KlNS ~w. O:lnta.ct °'lppor, JEIUU WHITTE&IOnE ~-~--------1 483 t. 171h &. Cat lrrine) CM ~fftJ a ''Pad"'? ~-e an t1d! Suite 224 ~1471 II'• a ~ .•. J>ell your Y• .. Hema w1th t'll!IC-, u.wt Dally Pilot ClaHUlod. &12-0m. Z'MO Otrloton St:fltC't s ... DJ.,.,, Ca . 92106 l\11JIS ~fumnlCl')' An cquRI opportunlly l'111playrr Se.II ldlf' l~n•s ...... 64z.{i(i'78 ' WANT AD SERVICE Suit~ Penonncl WOODWORKERS, mMUfac-* JllDE-a·bt!d like ne W ftUth k>n tacts $1 lure.rs of "Uld prod. has · ' I · ' wanted. Apply in ptl'IOn, opertlf18s, expe:r. & tralnet ll~rculon oil~ I wee' • Airy da,y ts flle 8~ DAY Co MuMlalll Qllut llol>t I .. !Oc. Qut"• IM' Todl3'·'• lJvh. • ' l!i beautltul P1lt.trn1, ~. 642•5678 3MS Dr\Jlol. C.M. In WOO<! ·Shop, asscnibly and .$97.50. Call 642-8171. run an ad! Don t de.lay ••• t'l'l'J' that lten1 und(lr SS-0, II')' 1111b1hlntt -operRtoni. Call 5 Unc1, 5 day1 tor 5 b\ie1<11. .call tbday M2-5678. the Penny Pincher. ~~7Z>5 for lntMV\ewa. ~ru!!:l·C:C.!:!!!ll~()JMll~~'IS.'!;_ __ _;l •••••••••••••••••••I =="'--'-"'="----,. '· ~ I t, I ' • '1 I I I -------... ·----.. Thursda.7, .h.tllf ?8, 1973 DAILY PILOT 41 I~ I -~ I~~[ -~"'"1'~~~1~~~1~1 ~...__~~I~~[ T--~I~~[~ = ...... = .. -=I§}~ .. ....... ][§] [ I~ L-1 _, ..... _v ... _Jfl I 111 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.DO *AUCTION* 7 PM SHAR~I FRIDAY, JUNE l9TH ESTATE OF HELEN MILHOAN 1tt."t.-eip1 •m1 Mlscel11neous Wonted 820 Boats, Gonor1I 900 Boats, R.ont/CMrt'r 908 Boats, SpMCI & Ski 911 CyclH, BlkH Trollora, Trovol 945 Rocrootlonol Scooter• 92.5 15' ARISl'OCRAT. BeautJ M Vehiclet 956 LOVABLE 1 yr. Tortoise 15' SPORTUNE Runa.bout. NEW '57 dletfKll nlOIOr yll.d'll. 17' CLASS boat 1910 115 hp. l ----'-~----1 Lyon11 Vnn & Stot·a,11:e Cartons, dlshl)ilCk8, \vard- robcs. tu~ 1-."(.'0rdcr, pro. jector, JCl\11 mo1vt.>r & edger set ot <lrunt~. air t.""Omprl'ls'. 1)1', go ~an. BR sets, dillf'Ue !lf'ts, d1VRn, gag BBQ. color 'IV, stereo&, fro:st-trer l'e- frlgerutors, free2<!rs. \vasli· <'I"I>, drycr & MUCH ?.10RE! WINDY'S AUCTION CO?ifE BR0\\1SI': AROUND 2075\) NC\l'J)Ort Blvd. • WILL bu_v Blue Chip Stanip Books at $2.00 a book. ~ ... 673-5246 • Wanted Orienta l Rugs pr\ pty 1l<l\'ds Sl!Vf'l'fil used .. 11tg$. 6'145.i26, 61$-8773. Musical Instruments 822 * SCANOALLI accordian 120 bass, beautiful con· dition. $200 • 962-1763 GIS.SON EB2DC. B a • e guitar. S200. Plu.sh base amp. 4-U" .speakers. $500. 003--12'10 GUITAR, Gibson. B25 old style Sunburst finish. Hard case, 557-3380. shell kilty. Spayed, ahots, rrtJJcr, bait tank, nw.ny for charter. Part dny or E\•Utrude. Ba.lt tank. 11kl~. e BICYCLE SALE e i'Onctllion * Ret'r igrmtor, bn,; trained. ~U9 aft 6 other acceuoriea. XI n I trip, very r ta• ona b I e . Cood shape, a 11 k In g NJ-:;<.V lll SPEED ITALIAi~ * R.anw:e & Oven * Sieep!'I .l!!''--------cond. $300. 842--llliO. Yachlina: As!IOC., 64&-0SSI. $1850/or offer. 548-3967 BICYCLES $59.95. Ek·ach e:ler *Ttt~~k, * * 1!eft~~ FREE -Black Dachlhund AVON 9' RED CRES T . Boa tt, S.tll 909 NE\V 16' deep Vee fib gla, Bicycles, 800 E. B11lboa Jacki;, * E·Z Litt flit1.ii puppy, female, part\allv Complete. 6 mos old. $275. outboard 1l\1lls, $ 7 5 O, Blvd.. 6T::>-i282. AulhorlZ¢1\ • Traner l\loving DoJJy, howse·tralned. 54&-0744 a.ft 873-1163. ~ fi.16-4187 9ant to 4pm 1.JSlllKI d<'fller. Jnc\1itled. * l\Jin'ors In· •l:30 p.m. Boats, M alnt./ SOL CAT • 16' GLASPAR, 75 hp 250 !\t ON T Es S A . '67 l'lurled. -GREAT 1'"VN FREE lo good honw, 3 Service 902 Johnsen, trailer. 1...8-Cro<Js, Desert ready. Ci\!l'I Pl~G -L."\:CELU::NT lovnb!I! adora ble fe1nale ki1· $l500.!'!!i!'!!i!'!!i!'!!i!~6~75-<m~~I l\1ust see to appreclAll'. CO~DITIO~ -Sl:f.JJ. ten• 84&-9102 MARINE MECHAN IC The Newest Breed! s300. AU. 6. 2u Lugoni•. • 548-139; • KITTENS· 536-3349, ask for Good work. Falt prices. Save ]~ Nc,vport Shores, NB J!l'il 18' C'.olden Nuggrt, sell Jel!: bet lO:JOAAf or alt you money. Call Burr's '72 PACIFIC l\!ULTI·HULL Tran..,ort•tlon .h 1971 SUZUKI 125. Yellow. contained, tandem trlr, 84" 7:30PM. Marine. 675-8677. Efficiency Chan1p ~iiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiij~~--~ 1800 mllc5'. \Vife's bike. $!50 ceiling. 19TI ho.it ll'lr. \Vil! DISHWASHER. Free. Pidc See It! Sall ii! 8u,)i it! or best offer. 842-1150 eves accommodate 22'. Priced lo up Sat. worldn& condlUon. Boats, Power 906 Aloha Vt'ccb: Special or nn)'1hJ1,. Y.1mds. ,,;ell. &H-1833 or 6-14-.)700 Ca.II 645--0ll.3 mADE 2 BR TOWNHOUSE, , Save SSS Campers, Sale/Rent 920 Z'J() llUSJ\Y • '69, need 11 Trailers, Utfllty 947 THE BOAT PLACE 1u $225 6~7"'2 ask FRE:E lo good home, male 20x22 fam rm, xlnt oond., 3 1972 A IR cond. sel con. ne up, · tmLITY • . Priodle mix, new rabies localed in prime Fountain 101 \V. Cst. i-lwy., J\'B Awning, alr oond, toilet. for Doug, If no~ ln leave TRAILER 4 x6 U· shots very lovable. 963-1885. Valley area, immed <K'· 714: 645-1144 Sl,l:xl. l\fany extras. See at: name & num~r ~a.ul tYJM;:. Great for hauling '73 CHEV COMTEMPO El Capitan Van #llsr@l6GO $4795 BILL BARRY GMC Moto,homo Contor !1111 SL al S.A. Frwy.) 2000 F.'. lift St., Santa Ana 508-1000 PRt. Party y.•IU rent 20' selfcontained mo!or coach. R.ea90Nlble rates. 839-9&t2 before 6 pm d ally. Trucks 962 Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'ls. Costa Ml!&I. * ~ Office Furniture/ Equip. KITTENS. 1,1 Himalayan 1~ cupancy, assumable 7~1:% ~ II u n ting ton·BY·The·Sea. '73 \VOMBAT Maverick bikes. $1.50. 548-2869 824 ? All cute & healthy, 2 w/3 , loan, $3500 equity. FOR boat INTERNATIONAL 14. Com· Spare 123 (714) 5.)5..8316 shocks cu1lom chamber . 1971 1'"0RD Rangeor XLT. legs! 644-1168 or Porsche of equal value. plete wt 2 mains. cover '68 V\V Camper, Pop Top. P .P.'s fut and reliable xlnt Auto Service, P1rts 949 ,. ton truck llf1d 11~ ft. FREE & cute kittens, hou8e South Bay Realty, 962-2440, & trailer. $500. Call Ken Re!Suilt engine, 141.:I. Im-cond ., mu.st sell 536-2'7'79 TWO G70x15 & two F'78 x 15 Amerigo tiber¢ass and CAPTAINS h"'XF.C swvl chrs $15/$25. trained jUtrt weaned, no Agent/Owner. 675-1800 days, 675-610S eves mac. fully equip, ready 10 '68 TRI. 250 Trophy $300. Tri· Kelly Springfield tires vw alum, camper . Both loaded CAR CARE S4>t.! chrs $8 124. Desks flcwl. 536-SSai. 2 5' 0 WENS CABIN &: "'lends. I go S2.100. 538-3287 bet\veen Cub. '70 }londa SL 90. '70 wheels, U.S. mags. 2-8\ixl5 \\•\th extras, fully self.con· $2()/90, Pierce Ent. 867 w 19 R CRUISER P.CAT, trophy w \ n n er, ~ p.m. Yamaha 125 St. $250 each. and 2~%x15. \VllL sell tained. Like new condition "Remember you're judgM Cri-f 642-3408. Fw/~~lld~kai~poo:Yn ~ F\111 canvas, stem room. trailer, t.""Ovel'3, xtra.s, xlnt Hl73 Affi cOnd., self con. 979-3371/548-0567. separately. Any reasonable and must be :ieen to be ap. ~.;r.~~ nppcarunce or Your Piinos/Organs 826 sho 962-7 Elect. refrlg, head, bait cone!. must sell. 557-5810, or fained camper, sleeps 4 * '70 Yamaha 250 Enduro oiler. Must sell. c q J I preci1tted. 23,<XXI miles. \VUl ts, 420· tank, etc .. See Sat. or Sw1-548-1917 -adults. 20 mi per gal .. Sl5. 280Q mi. $400. Call after 6 anytime. 645-7989. sell separate. Hand ~~~~~I 8\v~~lishing ORGAN WORKSHOPS D:S~ d~~Y !U:1~ day, Dana Point F2l Call 24' ISLANDER, ship-shape. per day, 3 c per mile. PM ALL Chevy parts. 3 9 6 =~·==Phon""~e-C54-:09-4348c-"-'=•~,,... . .I ~. P•"·k Up g. IJ,•l•"·•ry Sh~ <•o-•~s 642.-056l. Nu sails, lnbd eng + many 586-TI37' * 548-4318 * eomplete engine $200. He.ids ·oo CHEVY % Top Fiat Bed .,,.,,.,. '" ~" '"Y' puppy . .,...,.-""'· 21' CARAVELLE ••\Vahoo." tras t Dana -$3750 k Stak V Lo M'l Call fi45· 1791 for c-stln1nh· W-• d X • a r •. · 10%' CAMPER. S 11 95 , 1972 SHOW chopper -raked, $90. Inta es $50. Block $100. · e, c1y w I eage, egnes ays 10 A.M. FEMALE boxer from cham· Almost ne\V. 165 mere. I/0, 64&-22'll dys, 49J..6549 nts. Private party. $300 dwn. rigid frame _ spr~er. :150 block $100. 327 heads ncfll' perfect condition thru· FURNITURE, china cabinet, Don 't buy any organ until r1~ h.~iqualng, lfi5edmo~~· !ladgloal Ext~· Cawbin1 heaki~ SS KITE No. t OC6. \viii finance on good credit. Metal flake. bur g a n y, S:85!!.1150H.P . h384eads $1 2 5 • ouf,M(A46238TI~ 10-FMUFESTR. SE!t. old iron baby bed, \\'icker you r·un ph1.v! Non-players • .,..,. w vouy. • · .as. a er 8 •or All attached equip. Yellow 548-3905 645-7207 bef. 3 pm. Pat 4""" : 542-3 """ ua Ian.•• 1~ Id 1 ~ 1 5.')6....(i666. blue water fishing. &15-1407 E 6 8 •r-P .... .,., ~o rom ... ~, 11·1.' ct.Un(' 10 a!tC'nd fr(!e work eves hull, white topside. Xlnt New step van conversion MOVING north, must sell ! 5 N W .tires. 9.50. I .5, ,::.;::.~=;;;cc:·'=====~~ mirror. \VII.II clock, &: doll I shops, For inforniallon KITTENS, 2 Gray longhair, t 1 c""''=~===~~~ _rond""':;;· Oi$600~·,c6;75-~2300~.'=~-F'/campr, truck reblt from 1965 Honda, $13a _ Jiow plY'S. \Vll.h '~heels. 842-1150 1965 INTERNATIONAL 4x4, house. Old crystnl. -.:ut Contaet: Torn Dieterich gray & \Vhlte tabby. 1842 16' 7" BOSTON Whaler. KITE 651 BLUE HULL grnd up. 645-4336, 557.9417 cheap can you pt'!' 646-9156 eves or anytime wknds Travelall, many new parts, glass, pewter bras11 i;.ilvcr 642-2851 Galaxy, N.B. 642-2589. Sakonnet w/90 hp Johnson \Vlth trailer. $450. '66-289 MUSTANG eng 4 spd 3 gas tanks. $2000. Mrr7022 pieces & mu<'h misc Items. Coast Music Service M 0 v IN G--1 0 a Pt . outbrd, bltn 33 gal ga!I tank * 673 9070 * *E LDORADO. % Cab , '72 350 Honda., xln't rond. Lo trans Hurst Link & rear after 4:30. Silt only. 9-5. 17'151 S:'lnta Nl•11•11(_1r1 Bl\ fl, a l !lar lxtr Corker/Terrier dog. "Zlp-Including hvy dty trailer. -----"---"'-'----$.~ps 4, excellent co=~2 Mi's. $600. Ca.II 847-7123 end, $150. 551-2975 ··'ss'O-,CH:.,E"v""1"s'"· "'v'"an-."""'°·63,,.-c-ng.,.. Isabel C ~ 1 r<'r" needs n home. 531_5250 Top cond. $1950. 642-3:!>3. HOBIE Cat 14' \V/tra\ler & E R """""' d whl ---------1_. ...... ,." .. ~1 .. "i,'.;·';.""'""'iiii._Oi ck xtras. Xln't cond. Must sell. 8,,. CAB 0,,,. •am-·. Motor Ho-1 V\\' ng · t'l'blt $150 + p.ms. uns ............ tan em s, ~~ ---·-SKIP J a 20, 'TI Flybridge. n • " r-• ,,,.. E ' fl S 1 B.11 & f> t k!d ed $800 100/o OFF ORGAN. SALE 215 OMC, 4 "'hi trlr, rad. Sl.OOO. 2l3/966-S23l. Sl~ps 4, $600. 842-1150; Sale/Rent 940 A~~olive~ e557_~1 a 5 ~nos. & insulat • . With This Ad 11~1 ra\h, bait tank, 2 ha.ti, coast BUILD your C\vn. 30' mold 531-2304. --~------~ 1 \\'urlilZ('l' r a .. lury AllthorizC'd hU......... guard equip. 195 hrs, like for Catamaran hulls, $1500. -"'"'-'='-------SAVE '65 FORD P.U. %. T. v..s. AAr·s.fU::~tuJ>Sre., 10~1,•. pclil~i'~,·~~·. ~.11~:1 ;111~1y ntodc1 Is. O!hcr1· 'j;iiiiijiiiiij;;iiiiijiiiiij;;~~;:: J ;~"'"'w~-~-~~-i~~::!71~63~. :T;-~ Call aft 6pn1, 400.-3488. Cy5cles,t Bikes, 925 ..... -....... r...... Abuokut(). ~~ .. ~~-l~~ll ~-~ ,,, , 1..., on sn c pr1cct 1 }!OBIE 16 and trailer, ex-coo ers $ --'"·"" ~n•: ..... .,,.,.,v &: mil'>C, Ends 7 13, USED h'1nl ~2!lZ>. ' * COCKTAIL BOAT. '5S • •-~1 11450 N rt I 1000 830-<562. USABLES, ?""60 NC\\·port Wallichs M~sic City I Pets, Generel 850 Chris 18', 28.l Chevy & "°""1·1 64., · ewpo s orage USED BICYCLES Bl\'J., cr-.1. Tue5'. lhru Sal . Trailer. Better than new. c'rvc;;•;;;c_· ;;;:;-;.7;:;658;;;::;-;--;c== SACRlFICE! ·n % Ton Font ~So ""!'u~th""'C'"oas,..,•,.P,.l•,.•.,•...,,.540-.,.28"'"30' I GOING en vaca tion'!' Pet ~-,..28~371• 772-2501 or 32' PCOLSUMl BIA4.R.\~J7N00·G -~-A_.•_71l _TyH~o"'~N'-D*-A_CB64_2-_1271_75_z_*_ Antlque1/Claulcs 953 ;,fl!~:~e cC.~P ~ ~ ~ ;: Haven for cats, any small _,,~=·=,, . .::"""'~"'-"::.·----eeps .,.. .. SUPER Rl\f Pifovle camera & FREF. Organ cl.uses for animal & birds. l.Dw rates. •70 CUSTOM Mini Sport, ~~~·:-.:=:.;::::__;;~·=· Reasonable offer. 20' Pace 'Arrow 1938 FURD speeiaI deluxe 4 Xtra.s. 6'1'3-9454 case, like nl!\\', S45. Polaroid adults. Evel'y Tues. nile, Phone 494-3447 frbgls, padded seats, cover, SA.oor, w/dolly, F/G mast. Call 545-0.ri9 aft. 6:30P~1'. Lot Demo dr, 79,000 miles, five ne\v '71 EL CAMINO. Mag whls, land camera with R1tsh a.I· 7:30, CaU Beach Music. Cats 852 elec. !ft. Mere Cruise steer· Racing rl~ed. $300. TRAIL bike street legal $75 tires, radio, manual $Tl5. AMIFM. tilt \\'hi, tinted tachment like nC\\' $15 Al\1F' 847-8536 ing, trlr, 50hp 4 cyl Mere 675-2657 536-2459 (Ser #30l2FOOS3029) Bill 963-1564 glnss. 454 nuto, Clean. $2800. bowllng ball with fold out \VA.i~TED cild player pianos. PUR E BRF:D Slan1csc t\its, f'Rg. $1200. 586-3535 aft 6pm -H-0-8-1-E-14~159~.~,~.~h-a_n_d_t,-lr 1971~~ HUSKY, new top end, ~ ~S Rec,..tion1l 673--4523 nit 5 corn.Ing ca!i<', co111 plete In-D. Duprtt, Z8400 Grace Seal & Blue, Mother CFA l4' Ru NAB o UT & J\lte '/ Lido S2S. 644-500,j/ ne\v B::tu.rm tire, xlnt rond. AUX BAITERY Vehicles , 956 '59 CHEVY 11,1' I.on. 12' new eluding shoes (Y.'Orn 4 LanC', Cl\1 , 545-4650, 8:30 to Reg, 9wks, $35. 557-1779 aft TRAILER, s75. 9 611 :.ll.3: 547•1670, $695. 548-8454 6. REFRIG bed. 10 plr tires, eng. parts. Umes) like new. Men's size 5 pni. 5 wkdays; Fl d 0 H · '71 YW Xlnt cond/best otter • • ~M Pho • =~~~------oun er r., unttngton 12' SLOOP Koralle, Jr. New '65 250 t'C MONTESSA TINTED GLASS 645-51 .. 73 ne ,t4-~7 FOR Sal• smL 1-v-w·I Bch o · t B'k R ra· s P ffiES -.• "'.; "" " Dogs 854 . rond. Stable, unsinlcable, ir i e. uns ll'. LY T Westphalia ""'CHEV 18' Van, '63 ••g. RESlDENTS of The llun-Spinel Piaoo. Take over 15• FRBLGS fish/ski boat. $525. with trailer. 997--0891 $100, Ph: 960-1405 413 ENGINE JU ""' tington Y.'OIJJd llke to have a pymnts. Call aJt 6, 642-'""'7. All 1 1 d di E n 1 UN ILOUNGE Camper Runs good, tandem whls, lfl"Y,'ing machine donaled f()r CABLE Nelson CoMO!, :ghl e PUPPY WORLD e Botto~:!int,ncfilt' i::ne~: 32' PC, good cond, must G$l~'i N Good 80c~ 0 :~n: t i~~1: FU? SEAT paneled & lnsu1ated $800. their usc arts & crafts. The I 100 MDIBL> PUPS. Open 1700 ~-, 6.,., .,......., sacrifice $3200. 2 sets sails,. 96•1... SEAT BELTS complete with tent (977DUD) 557-331li. " Un t I nglnn n-urement l\'ll nut -Like new. Pvt ply. Eves. Irish Setter, · £.oY<: tol""O'"''· spinnaker, pn·v ply 492.3814 ;:,-. UiU $2899 n.o:: S750/Ph· 644-8349 ZJ' TROJAN Cab. D Pt $7399 ' 61 INTERNATIONAL Residents, 842-7788. · Doberman, Collies S 5 0 , in, ana · SCHOCK Sabot. No. 4912 rac· 1970 YAMAHA 360 MX Pi ku ... ~-vy ~"' ,96 UPRIGHT piano for sale, gd. Huskle Bull Terrier T-0.ip slip, reblt 70hp Grey needs I ~-Xlnt ndiUO' ir'>M. Desert style. Girling shocks, BILL MAXEY a.-T Re p -~ '-'"' ~-· · ,, cond $123 f Poodle: Chihuahua.' Lab., haulout. $1295 or trade. ng •15• co n . .,.,,.,.,. best ff 968-9515 "" on. uns, _.... ~=J'~et~.en~~t~ke! 2 0$500: · * 54f[TOJ7 * &xcr, Coekapoo. SWAP I c545-:::.,"°lli06'7'.=~~=~~ 673--0194 'GS ~H 650 ~phy for CREVIER BMW TOYOTA • ~70 • \"ALNUT A She...i..erdsfor ?"S!udServ ""'TROJAN TS FB ••11 * lf·28 KETQl·wood '56, "~ Ov I Xl •-•es •--•c '-aslng 18881 BEACHBL 847~ '73 CHEV.%T.Pickup.Hvy Block $100. 350 Block SlOO. '"' ustrlM Grand. mos';''breeds. 531:.sQ77. · ""ronl. head,' man' Y :...::.. ne\V Albin diesel '71, Dnna ..,.;). erhau ed. n t · -..L • ""''"'' e ·.....,, · "OoNJ duty, Must sell, make offer, 327 Heads. $50. H.P . Heads A1nt cond. Sacrifice at Si;:iO, ...... ..,, Pt berth 545-2J2l cond . 5.l,-{()40 eves. 208 \V. 1st St., Santa Ana ~lUNTINGTON BEACll T .......... ..u Ul'M 968-4300 SAVE A HOuELESS PET $9,500. 644-1&)6 -' ' owner, . •1 .i •171 ._..., .... , '1~•4• $125. 842-l 150; 542-384l. -~=·------ro. 2 BOY'S Schwinn Stingrays, _ _. FOR Sa.le, all tel'T8in vehicle 6 1 TRAVEi .•. Utt" sprung trailer S.wil'VI MKhines l2i Long Haired Chihuahua, 21' CHARACTER BOAT. • • • • • • • • • I 5-speed & l-speed. Like '73 y• & tnller Sand,· water or '65RuGM,S P~.._.'ii !?n. ,..';(ck• hitch, 3000 lb. cap. Pcrft'C'l ··• Yorkie-Poo, Chihuasua x. Bay favorite. Many xtras. $2 18 PER LB l\lake ff 644-0939 IOga snow 4 t spd na ., ... , Q<:11• <luer ... - lo6d le\•e-Uer. Flis mos 1 BIGGEST SALE EVER Wire Haired Doxie X. c833-'°"'c;1445~.,,,_=~--,"'"'-• • :e~~ HON;A e~75 CL ~ 40mph, usedPf!; tha°rf 18hrs, sale. 66-Sl24 Chry, G~1. Ford $60. t."<lmpl. Ne\\' ST machine only S4!1.95 494-485.'l. ** IT GLASS boat, 75 hp CHEAPER THAN STEAK! condition. Call ~ri7 aft. Loaded with Air ~ndition· ~-Yamaha motorcycle, & '56 F0~1PicfuUp. ~- 49Z-9942 aft 5 Pi\1. llovcr Oiai-a·matic w/tools SHIH·TzU, 8 wks, male, blk J<>hnson, 165(). EnMnad• 20 3:30 PM or 548-5988. Ing, 6 cubic fl refrigerator, nuruature F/G racer, a~ fer. :; KENMORE aulo wuhing only ................ , $54.50 & \vht, Show quality, 9 mo. ..,.,,.:536-8l91=:'=',°'~84H152~-""~-.., The Blg Little Boat that * ,65 HOND'• 305 * 1~,000 BTIJ refrigerator, pbyroxchl5' 11ong. Can be ridde.n TI4: 847-312'J. m·~1ne ·~. Xlnl -nd. Kirby vac only ...... $89.95 gold Jem. Also free to adJt "". I for "' Tinted Glasll, 9,000 lb. d or adult. F()r U ke to Trade? Our Trader's """' ...,... ... ~, home, blk shA.,.uv fem. aft 6 *14' FIBERGLASS runabout goes a ong way your $150. 540-M68 After 6 P.M. chassis, Double insulation, further infonnatlon call Paradl,. column Is for~". Twin Maple bed st ead s , Regina 2 speed vac ........,. w/35 h p ~"--·•e & trlr S I $ (7141 847 •-,_ chest &: nlte stand. $25. only .•.....•• , , , ... , $19.95 pm. 897-8776. ~ · .c.Yuu-uu · Aloha WHk Special 19TI SUZUKI 250 MX $1500 90 Amp Awe. Battery, Radio, -"'"'--'-'C~=w=-,-..,___ 5 lines, 5 days for $5. Call 673-6093 MANY USED MACHINES WEt.MARANER German 42 ~•M I I ~-1 Invested, tmmac. Sacritlce. AND MANY OnIER £X. Need a "Pad"? Pinet' an ad! today •.. 6C-S678 • "D VACUU · ' CRISS Craft Cruiser, twin .,.,...,.... nc · ',-... i er. iro:= .,..,,._2758 TRAS (Sl~) PVT. pty. disposing of hun-iLIBoM NoM6~M~~ Short Hall', male, aJI brown, screw, tri-cabin, mahog THE BOAT SPECIAL _,., . .n;r SALE PRICED .Viator Hom es Motor Homes dreds of original ells, Over 11 ·,...., . ""--1a M · N9eed"""s · ~ shohom"e·, 1:1~~ hull. 1952. $11,950. 963-4029 3101 \V. Coast Hwy. SCHWI1NNO-SPVDARSITY. $7699 li;;;;;S;;a;;le;/;;R;;';;";;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;940;;;;;;;;;;S•;;l;;o;/R;;o;n;;t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;940;;;;I .. -1.-lors. ct c h I n ~ s , . "·" in "-'Ull ~. 5......... ~ N rt Be h 645-1144 •• "" f< ~ f all chlld-n. $25. Call °'' ~-. C\V)>O ' ac •c.n * 642 <0·31 lithographs by noted ar1 s111. ep.'lll' a1iu parls or '" ~ QUIC C SH ~ ~ Low P~ D I "'"'"'· NEWFOUNDLAND M. 2-yrs, K A ••••••••• ! •• cc~. ea e r s Sincere Sf'\,1,,.., Machine & Boat Sii /D k 910 '73 lfonda~_§O, lo mileage. welcome. 5.15-5.)95 V lsiS"'H bo extremely lovable, needs at· THROUGH A I, Pl OC I Take over payments. MAYTAG \v he • d acuum, . ar r, tentlon, &: room, $125. UP 16, 0 •• ~·o .. , ' . ryer 646-9742 642-5107. DAILY PILOT to & 28' side tie spaoe --~~-~=---$150 pair: 9xl2 rug .t: pad available, xlnt Io cat Ion. MAN 'S 27'' SCHWINN 10 $120: kitchen 1h1 w/4 chairs Sporting Goods 830 AKC GERMAN SHEPHERDS WANT AD 567-1250. Speed Bike. $37.50. CREVIER BMW Sall!S • Service • Leasing 208 \V, lst St., Santa Ana 835-3171 m sn· aofa $50; 2 orange Lrg boned 6wks shots Cail 673-4771 chain $45 ea. 675-6350. 2 SCUBA tanks&: regulaton, Silve_r, Bik & S 11 v e f 642-5678 A good want ad is a good i.1-* AIOTORHOl\IB $300. 847-5181 vestment. ClassifieO Ads ••.•.. 64:t.5678. RENTALS • MOVING ga.J~ Thurs & Fri. """1 ~1 · jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiii._iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;==iiiiiiiiiiiooiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii;""iii;iiioiii<.I SUPERIOR Refrig., washer, dryer , ~--~-=~='----Airedale pup.s. Male <ll' fem. LOO \\'INNEBAGO matlress, 11prtngs, table, TV, Radio, HIFf, 8 wits, akc, champ stock. K OPENROAD chain. 21" c clamps. Stereo 136 ,P"e"t"o"r"show:::;:.::.·:.c84=7-..:1.:402=---• • e LIF'ETll\IE ~~ •. c:=-. Ts~~: .;;:;R;;E;;;NT;;;;;.;;:;;T;;O;;;;;;;O;;W;;;;N;;;; I ~~~:::'-i:~t~: IT'S GARBENSTANGEL TIME I 1150 ,~\1..;(f UP a1so lawn sweeper. yard TV'S & STEREO 8 MONTH old allver tea eup e REX:'REJ\TION IU.'NTAL & vacuum or trade. 646-8346. $10 Poodle. Female, legg than 2 SERVICE WW1 Hand made llnen table lbs. 8.19-9642 216 N. CLA RA ST., S.A. k. ln4l 836-8615 cloth & nap 1n~ ST.iO or '!' Ap. AKC English Pointer pups. praised $1500. aft 6PM No Credit Check•No Depostt Clamp. sired. Whel---" May 645-5064 J<'ree Delivery . Free R(!palr t-C ... Monthly Rentals ,\vailable 25th. call 675-8613. e SALl:S e • SERVICE • e RENTALS e 4 NEW metnl bed11 \V/matt., Open Eves. 543 4444 BEST OFFER! $30., ea.; 1 Kenmore washer White fe m. Peke, 6 Mos. & d-r. used 6 mos. $75. No pa-n ·--·0 ·~'" A PANASONIC stereo ta..,.. ..-' ~ ea. 54&-3554. ..... MALE Dobie 9 P FOR Sale: Simmons =:~ u~!h Ai;1tf:xfl'llJ~ GENTLE. ' mos. aJ)e!'._S. ----EXPLORER roll-1t-way bed. M 1 s c · reels and tapes, includes 3 * Call 548-5478 OF house. Items dem -J ev.-elry, '""""' .. -•·--HUNTING O E Stereo, 842-7289 S..-=us, " stereo spe11.At:n1, NORWlot Puppies, AKC, T N B ACH HAND crocheted l t e m s , aquare dance capes, many on hand or will make to order. 492-J.162 WOMAN'S 26" l speed bike like new S45. 66 Chevy % ton 400 auto. Camper Spec. Xlnt. cond. $1395. 847-9488. ADMIRAL 19" portable col· or. TV with new picture ube, remote control. Xlnt cond. $135. Call 833-2656. CHEST oJ drawers, like new, Schwinn Stingray, table, desk, metal coat tree, UBed headphones. 15 pre-recorded sme.llest of the Tenien. 18801 Beaeh Blvd. 842-8803 ta f)P.s and blank reels -nll 548-(Xl).1 USED GARBENSTANGEL HUNTINGTON BEACH equipment ls brand new. IRISH Setter Puppies, 8 wks Must have rlcht-handed. MOT A<ldng 1250. (.714) 84&-5494. old. AKC Re(Jistered a.am. zoonstllt wlth power dip-OR HOMES * Summer Speciel * pion Stock $50. 554-0861.. poleck. Would. accept ear-Apollo, Paceseller, Bar (l n . RebuiltaPicture 'Tube 1 "1ru;;;:;SH="Se~t"te"'r::Pu;,..=p~p"1e",::. "AK~C ~r~l '"i:.:i=~ Jamboree, Robinhood • $17.50-21'' or 25'' Color ~Is. Purebred. $125. can Write! Cluslfted ad No.. \Vl(E:ND()N1 * 2 YEAR \VAR&\N'fY 847-n.23 17.f, DAILY Pn.()T, P.O. tn~talhuion Avallablr GREAT Dane puppies. Mille x 1!60, Ca1ta Mesa, CA MOTOR HOMES Ricc'11 Television SeMce & female. Brindle. Call forn1crly Mesa North Center 556-8926 707 N. Harbor. S.A. 1 Bick S. of Baker 5"6-6002 554-0033 open 9-5 (6 days) GOLDEN Retrievers, 6 wks. 1970 Si-IASTA 17' ~fini motor reg AKC, Champions, $150. ho rd STEREOS. 1973 GARRARD 673-TI30 me with FlJ Econollne Model, auto tur n tab I e, chassis, sleeps 6, fully AM/FM/MPX receiver, 3 AUSTRAUAN Silk)' Terrier equipped Incl. slio,ver, air, bike. 839---3754 •way air su.4penslon puppies, AKC, 9wks., $175. low mile!!. $4600 or best of· RAGGEDY ANN 'N ANDY'S I speakers. Just re 1 ... e d Sl'r-:lll&ll alt 5. If you truly understand garbenstangels -'lc"-r.'-'640-84""'"'89"----- 5 ft. $16: 20 Inches, S6. from warehouse, still boxed BEAGLE Puppies, S weeks. 19'i3 Discm·l!rer and SUndial Deslgnl!r models. 642-6889. &. gua.r. Mfg, list $464.90 $10 each. • / • b f\1otor llon1cs tor l'l!nl, make 30 . 06 Rll<"LE. New. Mauter Now $192.75. Term I. Call ~3866 aftl!r 4 p.m. It S ti me tO QO r en f\:&ervutions for Su1nml!r action bitrrel. Hand corved _89=3--050.-"I_. ------AKC Boxer pupp\ea. Cham· l'K)lv, J>honl! Mh~s Bennet a.I stock$90.645-492lan5. STEREOS' 1973 DYNA· plonbackground.2 fcmales. If you' don't understand •1t may already !lob l4ng]>"' Pon:la c . S NEW tltti, 9.50. lG.$, 1 QUAD System, 200 watt FM call 96&--~ 892-6651 or 63&-2SOO. ply1. With wheels. 842-1150 stereo receiver. 4 Quad HorMI 856 25' EXECtmVE motor .... or anytime wkends. ::.:lib?.' l 'f!;~;:::.,d~ be too late but, what the heck, send home Jor rent. Fully sell :S OrL palnilnga by Whipple ln Jack.1. Just releued from TALLY Ho Fa.mi., ofJen '""'"""n"l.~64=2-..:2156=-----11 for appointment waret.ouse. Now $13l.40. finnt ln hunter A jumper h ·72 PACE Arrou: for l'l!nt. 6~.64pmonly ,, ll93-060L tralnl"I! 6 le'"""' by E in t e COUpon anyway Prlv~. $150 wk. Sc FOR sale Wheelchair. xlnt 'WILL=-i-"buy:C--co"lor-=TV,,.-s~&~la-te M=.;~ W~A~autH~ lt.-"m"-1~. =...::::::.. _____ 11 ~ !'-" prl-mod 1 bla • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I RENT Lux •.vuu., ~ ... .,, e ck le w h t t e box sta.111. Vltlt us at • our new ury *5'18-~* "°"•bin, worldng or ""· 17262 Newhope so. 0 1 • Yes, I will build a 9arben1tan9el ...:._ or launch a .• LIFETPvtlME! ,,.,. 6iJ1!:;.!,m· * HOUSEHOLD f'Urniture • ";4,;.::.9-l.:.:lll=·:..-______ Warner. Fountain Valley or niac. · owner . ...........,""" 0>uc• .. 2 chin, din set. etc . .=o:i1_e<>1or TV lf'-Leo """"''""' ~m-"-'-94"75".----• search for one I can put in shape for exhibition at • DELUXE WINNEBAGO ·caii MT-451T.--""'°" eib-. 3 'yn -old, 2 Gentlo Geldinp, apprvx. 8, • the DAIL Y•PILOT.South Coast Plaza Build A Better • Mir 11'"'· r;OOm N.B. A.POU.A wa.te-r IOftene!' $700 ttmote control. Make offer. yrs. old, S250 ea. One reg. Trillers, Trivei 945 value$400orbestoffcr.Prl. _.;-:.:::.:=----~ APP)' Gelding 5 yrs. 16H, • Garbenstangel Contest and International Rallye. • Ply. 962--4788 ADW:RAL 24" color TV. IOOd dlspos!Uon, we 11 • Pl II • '70 23· Sll~VER streak. Uke 12' by 3· pool $35. Ustd 3 mo. Instnt play. UHF-VllF cnsl. started, good P 1 fl a• u r ti • ease te me more. • new. llns everything. A/C Sean Elect. dryer, 23) Volts $150. Must see to appr. hone, aood polentlal ahow & a.\vn\ng. $4000 Orm. eves, $40. 962-llOOS. "646-S'ISG=:::::::....,.,----~ ='..:x1ju~~ .. s t:.i0[~ • NAME --·-· ·-_ ....... --· ·-·-.. -........ -.. -· • -~~~1=57="-~----ll I' FIBERGLASS dl~hy witb $90. Color TV antenna, used 2 the nnt _ xlnt · jr. hone • • \VANTED. Tem t 1• a I I er .,.... $75. MlltlM 5 ~ mo. $30 •.••• ··oo * 16.l H•ndo. TALL y no • ADDRESS ____ .. __ ..... _,. _____ .. _ .................. • 'RE'':!?T"" •• ~ .. ~~ 1"";'· TO men'• bike Sl5,•64i-..19&1 · tl'U-GJ F 1-2 N h ~1, • .,. ~ n t SUBARU GL COUPE Fully equipped. Same features SAME PRICE! Here's what you get: I. Front whMI 4ri"•• 2. AM p .. 1hbutto" ro1dio. J. kont di1c brok••· 4. 4-wh••I lnd•fMnd•nt 1111,.n1ion. 5. N•w I 400cc •ngin• 6. Ro1ck and pinion 1t••tln9. 7, Radiol tir•• with 1tvl•d co ... ar1. I . Tintad glo11 oU oround. 9, MacPh•t1on 1tr11t front 111•p•n1ion. 10. Economv-.iP to 30 1"P9 on r•911lor. 11. T ochom•t•r a11d •l•ctric clack. 12. F11llv·r•clining, high-bock bt.1ck1t 11oh. I J, Clgor•tt• l!ght•r. 14, Flow-thro1,19h Ytntilatlan. 15. U11d•rcoatin9 ond 11ylon carp•tit19. 16. Hinged root wiitdow1 17. Hoator, dofro1t1r ond r••r window dofogg•r. II. lmpoct ob1orbin9 1l•orln9 wh .. I, 19. Firo·r•ttrdont uphol1tory. 20. Co11toured r•ar 10011. 21. Roco11.d door locks. 22. Floor-to.dash contor con1ol•. / • 2J. l11mpor• thtt qv•li fy f•r ln1t.1ronc1 d!1co11n . 24. M••f1 now"t U.S. •ml11io11 1tondorcf1. 25. 12-montfl worronty. -DRIVE ONE TODA YI '71 SUBARU 4 DR. llHlo, llN1tr, wtll...,.U llr•t· Low mllft. c1n•lOl $1299 '67 FALCON 2 DI. 6 Cyt.., 8VM. tr1111., rMlo, hHI· 1r. (TQUH5) $699 '67 FORD 2 DI. v... avtt. """"' ,..,,.,, .... l,...,H II~ I•" OKI!, fUUIUn) $499 'U MUSTANG " ..... , ..... ,. Wflltwwll• ....... •-l'IWCll I crt. 1•Pket) $699 '67 DATSUN 1400 IOADSTll ' s ...... ,.... Mttw, ..... -.. Wiii tlrt1. IUIV•JJ $699 '70 DUSTER "'""· tr~ .• tKtwy .... .... "'""""" ........ ... .................. ltMIHOI $1599 anrut, ....... ew o.fse., ~ • Mlsc•ll•noous 21b'l'kCO\l)R TV,1 1SS. 1 ,.A1sollo21l·h· F<>tmlaln Valley, 979-94' . CITY _,. ..... _._ .. _,._ .. -......... .. .. .......... _ ... -.... ·-·-ZIP ................ -... -• 1'.!'ryFl,E1LD &nst,..om, 15111~ W1ntM 120 « \Y ""· WAN'T'ED: pl .. c.e to board ~"' l!an, cw cerpe .-..; """"'nteed. 549-4llB. hone ln>m July 11 to Oct . , • PHO NE AGE • ""''l'<~· ssso. 536-8595 Ill WANTED ID buy, like new fUrnlture &. lamp#, nl~ &. fcMOMble 844-4687 SONY ~ Eight Tract 1s. c.u .... u.c1, 714 : • ... _ .. _ ....... -.--.. ·-... .. ... ,_ ... --· • 15' AR1STCRAFT. ""'Y ""°" Authorized SUBARU ,Dealer J.DJUSTABLE car top car- rier !or Mtrcedct·llcnz. ·-· I \ Qn1Mdgc R~'Ord<'r S,i(). 346-2995 • Mefl ,.1 • c:ond. SI,3:)0 refrl3, 8tove, • 642-3147 • Vac•ncln CX>tt money! Rent _!lleepa: 6. Phone ~1395 17555 BEACH BL'lD ... ~--• Pun, .... M11011" DAILY PILOT, P.O. loo UH, C-M-Co. '2626 • STASILI 'f • Don't glv1 uo ttie •o•PI your J1llWJlll:'• apt., •tote ZER. for lravcl or "Ullt" It In ctassmcd, Ship bldg., etc. thnl 1 Dally Piiot • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I >ltlllly lrullcr, Ior Hie.~. HUNTINGTON IEACH 842.Q6'75 10 Shon! ResUllS! 6C-M78. Cla .. lnl!tl Ad. ··--------..------------------..11..:Cal=l ..:49M=:356:;· ____ ,._,._ ______ !'"" _______ ~ :r 'T .., ~ \ I • (fZ DAILY PILOT • Thur.-.,, Ju"' 28, 1973 • ---1§1 1 ---.......... l§l I ---I~ I -·-I§] I _.... _..... l§l I ~iiiiiiii~l1~~~I~~~~ 1.T_ruck __ , __ ~ __ .;..96;,;2 Autoo, Imported 970 Aulo1, Imported JAGUAR 970 Autos, lmf!!!od PORSCHE '1U Autos, Imported 910 Autos, UIOd 990 ::A:::ut:.:°'::•:...::U;;ood;::,. __ _;;990.o:i:.;A;;utos=''-"U;;Md:;;:.. ___ 990_ Autos, UIOd __ c_· A_D_IL_LA_c __ , _ ___:C::.::ORYETTE M .ERCURY OLDSMOBILE ESTATE MUST SELL '73 Ra.nchcrp. 400 enQ:, all Px-AUDI VOLKSWAGEN t.ras. Michelin 'tires, 6,CXXI ---------n\lles. 67'3-&72 1972 100 LS 4 Dr. Auto. Alr. '69 FORD vs, E:IX> Super Am-Fm lileree. Sunroof. Van Camper. P/U lrnde. Low nil. Prlv pty· $4000 ... 545-3215 ·o"f"f•.c'-~55'-1·~'"18"5''---- '71 XJ-6 PORSCHE 914 -·n. su,.., •71 YW EL DORADOS '64 VET IF you,.. 11, you'll "":kl" i:1.;~~\;;'."!.,~T..;...- "--'an Sable "ra.,..d'-'~ A~ r.?'P:,Nc(·w._ ' 14 TO CHOOSE Rcblt big block, 4 <pd., new t96S M•rcucy Cyclone, '· bcl-" blu bk, at $l695. d ~ .M:lll'. o.>.>-903 • W tphall 4l1 rear i'nd ilde n'IOunt8 hl'(jtp, beaut. cond. lo ml., ..,., Blsqu ln11•r1Qr, loMed, low 5J. ft G COUPES.C:ONVERTIBLES ma.gs, CoodyCe,11, 1tcreo, i auto, radio, pis\ buc~et ,896-~·:;,;1!195"2',-'e:,Ovi"es;;'56==:'-7-5"1'11j1C;:-~ miles, 131MBW). ,59 PORSCHE 356 con-Camper • lopt1. Eves. 00-3700 or sealll, ch~e wh eovtn, OLDS 'T.l, Cutlasi;, 2 dr tulr '64 OfEVROLET PU. Runs good. $350. 548-6937 '73 DODGE STRATO VAN 963 1 Ton w/dual "'heels. Somc- lhlng ne\V k differenl. $6995 Ser. •053812 Stock • 1758 BILL BARRY GMC Motorhome Center llst SL at S.A. Frwy.) aMJ0 E. 1st SL , Santa Ana 5&l-'IOCKI '72 WINOO\V Econollnc, long body, 6 cyl, comp!. in- sulated. New tires. Excel. cond. Ork green, 494--5480. 833--7523. FORD '72 Window Van, 5 bikes, 5 people, savC' gas, stick, p/s, p/b, Jo mileage. Pri pty. 557~2480 '65 CHEV. Van. 6 cyl. cng. Wood paneling, rhag wheels. Clean, rons great. 548-4668 an 6. BMW LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA GOOD SELECTION OF USED BMW's 1972 200'1 1973 BAVARIA 1971 BAVARIA 1969 2500 1969 1600 CREVIER BMW Sales . Sen>ic.-e -Leasing 20S \V. 1st St., Santa Ana 8™171 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & SALES.SERVICE-LEASING OVERSEAS DELIVERY ROY CARVER, Inc:. 234 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa 546-4444 '71 BM\V 2002, am/fm. cover 25,000 mi., very clean, $2'995. 545-4113. $6789 vertlblc 0, 1600 super complele with lent C977DUD) ""DE YILLES 494-0060 Bes! offer. 847-7636 J)wr, air, bucket seats, vi I • ~i.::;., f'Bc't oUer. fl) $2899 38 TO CHOOSE DE SOTO '71 COLONY Parl< 10 pa" top Mint c~od. 13,000. 0 111 .11 !Jll"• ll\11!tll'• 'lfll\I• ~ I I "' KARMANN GHIA * * '6.S KARMAN Ghia, good condition, $ 7 O O. 675-4no or 213: m--3511. Ask for Buzz. MAZDA * Mazda '73 Rotary * $66 MONTH 36 MONTllS OPEN LEASE Will accept trade-ins CALL M.R. FRY 842-6666 Hunt. Beach MAZDA 173.11 Beach Bl 842-6666 BOB LONGPRE MAZDA .._.. ... ,..., l-COUPES Sta Wgn., All extras & Juli 1..:oo:w"nc"r'-' =c58&-0~00ll'=6=---I SUNBEAM BILL MAXEY l>'EDANS power. 25,000 milos, mint, PINTO --·~------GOOD tr&Jl5portatlon 1967 Sunbeam, VX XOOL $400. .......... TOYOTA 50 New Toyotas In Stoc:k Beat Price Increases! CONVERTIBLES '48 DESOTA. Rebuilt engine. 818.AJeppo, NB. 644-1854. TOYOTA Many exeeU.Ot ""'°" Good original body. $500. MUSTANG '71 PINTO l8S8l BEACH BL. 84.7-8555 O>oice ot interiors Ph: 960-1405. HUNTINGTON BEACH (Cloth & leather) DODGE ,68 MUSTANG Green ext Black Int Auto. · •68 CUSTOPtllZED VW Van. Factory air oonditioning 1rarui., radio, new tires.. • Brand new inside & out Full JlOWl"l' -Glx>ice of: '70 OIALLENGER, super V-8, 3 spee(J:, radio. $2077 incld. mechanical parts. Stereo Ai.\t/FM radk> sharp, \Yht w/blk vinyl top, $977 C413DIN) mag whls. Good Ye a r Tnl~&tromorl e lo ml. p/w, pis, hvy dty {4.lOIBE) 4\aa1t l•1.:f Oversized tires. 45,<XXI mt & -.--·-brka. ale, stereo multi -WA ... ,. a great buy al $2000. All In lmmaoulate condition pie._ 96>-3535. ;t)f.41l lfAIJl.I" YO.~Yfl =. · "" "'~ d "AA ""'A" -•Largest selection in l>'M"'VJ<N ays or O't't'"~.N O C 1968 CJµRGER RT loaded -eves. range ounty & llnmaculate. Pvt. pty. TOYOTA .,., EMPl bit vw, many Nabers Cadillac 892-5626 oe 892-5146 1!>;6 """'°'· C.M. 646-9:103 xtras, repossessed by bank, At.rl'HORIZED DEALER '66 OOOOE CORONET 500 '11 OOUPE. 4 speed, radio, must sell for remaining 2600 HARBOR BL., Auto. V-8, PIS, p / B, 1966 Harbor, C.!\f. 6''6-9300 good condition. Sl.395. oc amount. 545--0629. r. COSTA l\1ESA Buckets SfiOO. ~134. '67 GT Fastback, auto, atr, lo best offer. 641Hl569 'TI VW Camper, good cond. M0-9lOO Open SUnday '67 DODGE, forn1er yello"' mi .. nev.• n1ags & lii'es, xlnl .::::.:;.c='-'-'"'-='---.I ~:tc:!'~l~~~:.1 ::f:~ CAMARO ~~bSu~~f· eau Eves1 -=~~;.,;~°""i5°"f=. u-'~1 ~"'="='~m=-~· 0~1=rc_r. PLYMOUTH J) l 8-4:30, TI4-833-n43. • '68 CAMARO, auto, air, FORD MUST SACRIFICE '6.5 PLY. Sport ~"'Ury, leri - ftlllM 11..:'• '65 V\Y 1500 sq bk xlnt nu~ch ps/p>.v, vinyl top, new tires.,1 _________ '68 !\1USTANG, V-8, pi s, r!li, engine. !\take offer for all o~ ~ UllUI cond nu tires reWt eng Jo n1i., xlnt cond. Must sell xlnt. $925. 646-6164. pnrts, 979-2627. ' : TOYOTA need' body wo•k Sun 11375. O!ler 557-0757 '72 Ford Gran '72 DUST,ER .sport. loaded, 557-9a69 '69 MUST<\NG. Red \V/\vhile low nUles, 1mmac. condo 1-• llarbo•, C.M. ""9303 '69 VW ..,...uareback, Ve .... , '69, 350 auto, p/s, pdb. lo mi, Torino Squire vinyl top, p/s, p/b, radials, Bc't orler. "A" 7311 ·, ;J{JO • U'W' ....., •.r Vinyl t o p • Immaculate. VS. Xlnt cond. 6T:>-8363 V'IV"" clean. Low mile. AM!FM. fl995. Pri. Pty. 67S-0745. Wa90n ,67 l\fUSI'ANG Fastback 390. '69 ROADRUNNER -GCt '68 Toyota $1,2'25. Priv. party. 67>1694 loaded. Air Cond, 3rd Scat 4 spd , be't ofle•. Call <..'Ond, new tires, chocks ~ -SERVICE FIRST-Corona Sedan ~·c-vcs=cc~~~~--. CHEVROLET t~llEBN). 531-<!EO. front enof. 4 Spd. 646-5993. -' 1st Street at the Santa Ana Auto Trans, (lit.rICJ.G) 'S:ra~.' ~ii~~~:·$~ ---------1 $3210 lc.=61"'•'°1u°"s'=T~A=NG~,= •• -,~,La~ck-.°"289", •;;,i PLY. \Yag. 1 owner: 1st Street at the $ 1199 E\'es. 548-4625 '70 Chevy 4 spd, \\'ide tires/mags, Needs body \\'Ork & Santa Ana f'rwy. real clean. $1295. 67J...s5n upholstery, offer. ~1821 • Sa t A ••• -BILL MAXEY 1911 V\V camper, \YestphaJia K1",,,.swoocl J9n Pl th Dust E-300 Super Ven, '7'l, 8000 --------- mi, p/s, p/b, paneled, crpted, w/xtra seat. Best Offer. 968-95).5. '73 DODGE DAYTONA VAN $5695 "A REAL BIKER" •~nm BILL BARRY GMC Motorhome Center fl st St. al S.A. Fr.vy.) 2000 E. 1st S1'., Santa Ana 558-l<XXI '57 VW Van good tires, good body $."';00. * 544--3417 * '70 FORD El"On. s e n1 i camper 240 -6 cyl., stick, under warranty. 673--3127. '73 CHEY CONTEMPO SPORTSMAN VAN Air conditioned. •1337111683 $4995 n a na JJ0-""~ int, clean. Xlnt cond. Lo • ..,. '65 MUSI'ANG, 4 spd, v-8 , S . k Y!,.~---er. 1971 ROTARY l\l a z d a . TOYOTA miles. $2450. 640-8522 Wagon tape dk. Xln't cond. $800. I.le -r.un...,,ny clll', perfect condition, n e w Call 551-2277, $1550. Ph: 642--8751. A1ichelins, while vinyl top. ™W~J~~ BJ4JiF VOLVO ~C;1~) Fcu.1ory F.quippcd, '51 FORD \\'oody, flatheaQ SHELBY '67 GT soo 501\f ~ti. PONTIAC Priv. party. Best oUer. Ph =~==--~--1---------$. 2599 V-8, Xlnt running cond. 3 4 speed $1500 UDK 131 6';-33.1.3. '71 TOYOTA MARK 11 THINK spd, good brak.,, $350. Prl. Pty !TI4J 646-1'125 LEASE OR BUY WAGON 497-1643. ·11 thru '73 Pontial-s MERCEDES BENZ Auto 'l'ran•. (903CQQ) '67 FORD LTD, R.W, ai•, OLDSMOBILE DAVE ROSS CAPRI '& $1999 . ECONOMY s)en.>0 tape, avail l'IO\\'. $750.1 ---------PONTIAC 50 USED !m--07SO wk-day,, '93-71)!6 '72 OLDS \~:n2~~ :i~li~cr ::~~ MERCEDES WHILE WE HAVE 40 p~! s~!rin~~u~1!!e .. ;ov~R~k~;~. Bry;hm, Atr, CUTLASS ~v!~ar~~ 8~!& ~ decor group, some with sun ON DISPLA y radio, air conditioning, vinyl All Extras, ,w l\11.,, E.xlnt. STATION WAGON '72 GRAND ·Prix loaded NOW OWN THE FABULOUS 1973 CAPRI roof or landau top, power NEW YOLYOS IN top, crunper shell. Cond. J'.olcl 1an \V/Vin Top. . . w/xtrus. lo 1ni's . $4250. disc brakes, style steel Sharp New Car '68 Toyota 52277 Orig. o .... 'Tler. 644-0:i-10. Auto trans., pcnver steering, ,Vork No. 5-ID-1854 bet \vhcel, ~dial tires, bu<.'ket Trade-ins -'69 FORD LTD. 2 dr, air, air condltion'ing. c..a.,.:opc:'o-' ccA"''~lo'-'CCB'-'~;"°o---.,,= 1 scats. ORDER YOURS Coming In Every Day Land Crusier STOCK t29717E) auto, PS. Must 11ell, orig $2977 '67 LE l\1ANS Pontiac 333, NOW. Ask About Our Unique Soft Top, Orange, Sharp, ~llllllM llr..:.1 01vner,41997::'129".3t eves. (0391\\'BJ "'ilh air & vinyl top. $100. GUSTAFSON U1od MorcodH Loa11 21,000 mil"' (WUV3571. -UIA UlflO >1'"'368 Afl. 6 P.M. L• I Plans $2099 · t\ L · TOYOTA '72 GALAXIE 500 XL oreom t\1A11 la1.:f '&I PONTIAC Grard Prix. ,S:,c:!,!~~e::e~ House of Imports BILL MAXEY aYf41l eW ~~-·:~ ~o~~ ~~ aJ!uanlOYO ... JA"' ~~.,.,~'."~: ~1t""" 1 Huntington Beach 68621\fanchester, Buena Park TOYOTA W VOLVO 1966 Harbor, C.).J. 6'16-9303 credit, priv pty. 492-3814 -RAMBLER ~H2-8144omo *o1 ~~3>V5't92-SS44k'tng'' on the ~~Ana Frwy l lml BEACH BL. 847·8555 1966 llarbor, C.i\l 646-9303 '70 Chevy Camaro '70 FORD 'f!'rino \Vagon.,.1,.;s=.::H:;"':.:"°'=•;.Co;-~"'''-' __,646-~9~3():\~ •-·-llUNT!NGTO" BEACH Clean, lo nus. R..~ll. p/s, 1- 1" '66 VOLVO Gold, Air Cone!. local Car pl b, gd rubber. $1885. Sa1cs I: Service ·~000c~u':!. ~i ..;':~: JIM SLEMONS l -,,7.69~T°'o"'Y"'o~T°'A~H"°ILc-U~X-!69SBEu 1. GT>-1167. OLDSMOBILE $3100. 962-2254. IMPORTS PICKUP 4 .~:~~i,1 $2599 ·10 FORD Ga!a.xie 500. Hi GMC TRUCKS MERCEDES BENZ <ZVES22l ~"' mileage, sell cheap. Nu HONDA CARS 1968 AMBASSADOR S t a \Ygn, PIS. P/B, new ti.res. R&H, factory air, pvt party, low Blue Book $000. 962-lSH BILL BARRY1 _»_A_TS_uN_ $ SALE $ DATSUNS AUTilORIZED $1499 (J!!J. S~~\1~" good cood. UNIVERSITY OLDS SALES & SERVICE ,64 C G I • 500 2850 Harbor Blvd. Thunderbird 1967 4 dr, Joa.d. Jim Slemons 1\1111111 Lai.:• ---------1 onv •ax•• Costa Mesa 540-9640 ed. k> mileage. AJkina: T·BIRD GMC Motorhome Center fl st St . at S.A. Jo"'rwy.J 2000 E. lsl SI., Santa Ana 558-1000 Auto Leasing • LEASE • NEW DEMOS 1973 SIO's Pickup 610's ALI Models It Colors to Choose Fron1. - «411\ U.UMI '69 Cl-lEV. lmP<tla custon1 P/S, !'lli, p,\Vi~·s;. lihr '70 DELTA 88. f/p"T, air. $1:l"i0. Imports YOLYQ hardtop cpc. 350 VS, po .... ·cr In!. Xlnt rond. $500. 645-4015 vinyl lop. Must sell, going =~==64&-8700'0'-7''---,,_--I 1301 Quail .1970 TOYOTA Corona, 4 dr. steering, radio, automatic '72 LTD rdr blue/vinyl top over seas. $2500. 832--0376 1963 T-BIH.D.j See at Union Nei.vport Beach. trans in console, strato 36M mi, louded, 1op cond. , . ... 76 , ... L·ttt Le ii 833-9300 auto, radio, very Io w 1°"" H bor C 'I °'" 9""" bucket sea'"". vinyl top, B.F". Spit book at $2975. By ownr. &I OLDS FIG !?COnomlcal,. , ..... guna. I . c ague n1ileage, in1mac. Orig. ......, ar • ·•• · <HOJ-. ,)OJ,) Good 'ch ~ 1 11 a ..... °""" trans nu bntt tires Sharp selling. $195 or make ofter, ENTER FROM MacARTIIUR owner. Ji'lake oiler. 536--6666 '61 VOLVO mode l :>44. runs n radial I i res' A stea -ca now ~ $Z15 &w...soo5 . Call ~t or 494-7017. good ood t' $250 644-4687. '68 FORD Galaxie 500 4 drl,==-=="---~-'73 Mercedes 4 DOOR Toyota Corona '69 541-89u g ires, . 1006 BEL Air, Pis, P/b, hrdtp. Air, pis. di sc. Want ad results ... 642·5678 You'll find It in Cluattied Make Off<.'r. colOI\ Molo H Mot H "13 Pontiac Granville Sedan 280 Sedan 492-2588 good bxly & tires. Needs brakes, New tires. .,_,. r OMD or CNTMI 30 mo, at $135. per mo. B k E R d'a!T' Autos, Used 990 minor engine work. $300 or 962-3560. Sale/Rent MO Sale/Rent• .. '11 Lineoln Continental Sedan. ec er uropa , a 1 11-es. 'TI TOYOTA make orfer •• 556--0787 aft 6 '69 FORD Bronco air cond. j~'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij 2;i mo, at $139. per mo. Air Conditioning, t079HPNJ. Sta. \.\'gn. $97'5. BUICK pm. :m-v8 carpet chrome Sac. I '70 Torino 2 dr. h.t. 24 mo. at $8299 Call 545-5347 '67 CHEVY Impala Sta. \Vgn. $2,695 oflcr. 846-8,j1)() $69. """ mo. 1973 DATSUNS CREVIER BMW TRIUMPH 'MUST SELL, have Co. ear. P/B,_P/S, air cood, pvt 1973 GRAND Torlno Wagon, The above all have power Take ovel· paymbJ. • 7 o party. Xlnt cond. $950. loaded, rack & gauges, 7700 & air. ' ALL MODELS Sal.cs • Setvite · Leasing Wildcat . AMIF~t. air cond, 499-1700 miles. $3995 847-7627 South Coast Car Leasing IN 208 \V. 1st St., San1a Ana 61 TR-4A, lM hp, perfect new tires, PIS, P/B, Xlnt '63 IMPALA Sedan, smooth 1973 FORD Maverick still 645--2182, af1er 5 pm & wknds, STOCK 835-3171 condition $12.)IJ. or offer. cond. 963-5933 iwning. New shocks & under \\'lllTanly O\\'Tll'r going 5T.J..82S9. BARWICK IMPORTS Pt1ERCEDES 1971 SEL 300, ~Ol;;;><i098:..::=-K:;•:.:ith::::.. ----''66~R°'MERA""'='=--need~-,-.n-go~·ne-br.:1.ke lining. PIS, P!B, abroad. 53fi..<m2 DISCOUNT Mark 10-Mark 10 3.)375 Camino Capistrano 6.3. Lo mileage, the rolor is VOLKSWAGEN overhaul -\\'OUld make 644-2229. .72 FORD Country Squ'-"B" lgru'tlon systems saves San Juan Cap'·--b'•-~,y, <all f, 0 m I rl "' I I . <a'"'""" ~ .. ~ .,.. gn~at ow-<k>r. $3 00. '70 EL CAMJNO S/S 396. Red Sta. \Vgn. New rond., mi eage, Pugs points. in· 493-3375 oc 831.~"75 9am-4pm, 5-11-2'13.'l or M4--9470, ext ~ ask for A/C P/S P/B Prt stalls eully, 644-5893 =-O'===c=-='-'~=--' apm-7:30 pm, 5J2-200J '66 V\V, wl'f:J!. engine, & ""' • • • mags. $3600. Best offer. 67'3-2791 •utos Want-• 968 '72 240Z. Auto, air, mag ""';;:;:;""''-"'""-'=='--sunrf. S625 or best of(. -'::.:;"m::,. =~=--~-Party. l\lust sell. 633-2902 FORD Gala."<ie 1967 4 door "" -.. whls, Becker AM IF 1.1 Ml:.~CEDES lk'nz '66 2l:I S * 557-0145 * '70 SKYLARK. Good con· after 5 pm. P/S, PIB, air conditioned • .stereo, radio & stereo Bronze, auto, pov.·er, perfect -1-972-.-411--'-STN=-"w"a"'go""n"".-u-nd_e_r dition. Full power. Fae. Air, l9Tl NOVA, VS, p.s., p.b., One O\\'Tler $475. 847-1533. TOP cassette. Burnt orange col-in & out, $2.250/best offer. \Var r a n t Y, Xlnt gas vinyl lop. Economy 8. air, delu.'Ce int., new DOLLAR or. Xlnt cond. S 4 4 5 O. 536-6662 or 842-3724. mileage. S265CI. S3l--S007 .1:.:224=5/~o~U~°'~· ~-~·=1~--Michelin tires, S 2 7 O O. G.M.C. 642-9980, 1624 Antigua Way, \\'ANTED?! Adjuslabte car SHARP '64 RIVIERA 49'1'-1279 I--------- PAID Newport. top oarrlcr lo• Merccde•· '66 SQBK. reblt eng. Needs nu paint & tires -""'-"'EV"'-------1 '73 GMC SPRINT some body work. $545. c~, '68 CH Impala, air~nd, IMMEDIATELY •n 24-0Z. 1 owner, new lk'nz. 548-3036. 675-7282 days/67'3-2491 eves.~ ,~··-----~MS-_9800~ )l('W tires &. brakes $600. radials, mags, am If m '69 M.B. 230, sunroof, CADILLAC 6f.,....{i190 FOR ALL stereo tape, auto, air, lo l\f ichclin Radials, xlraclean. '69 VOI.KSWAGEN Sedan -"'"-1~="-Ch------1 n1ileage, $3650. 642·3392/ See to appreciate>. 64., °""". Auto Trans. $950. ........ •• · ......... *Good,,. odev 6. pass. wagon. Ser. •5002Ta-1547 V-1 454 FOREIGN 67>3008. ~ Call 213: ~ 1971 Eldorado, The best co .. "" & ••dio. $3995 MG CadiOac color combo ever, ___ .:.*_:84:.:1:c·~:::566""-..:.* ___ 1 CARS '69 DATSUN 510 Wagon new '69 VW Sundial camper, all I-LL BARRY WE ARE IN ~:i~e. & tires, 0'15-8960 MGB R.oadstc>r 1969. immac. :i~~~ exc. cond. $2,000. ~ ~~:~nd1~:~ be:~!t ·~ ln~.GAI ~~ch mG~, e~ :":': B ' DESPERATE NEED 'TI DATSUN 240Z, si'ick, rood., fuli stereo & tapes. '70 VW. 7 pass Bus. Re-bit tiresp./w.' ~h~r~~/f~~fg 19 """72a:::sano=KIN:::m:::icGS"al".w-'6 00-"73-5507"D=c:.·CH-EV GMC Motorhome Center 2 chrome wires \v/radlals 1 $ 69 OF GOOD, ·CLEAN new mags, new tires, lm-driving lights, a I arm. eng. c ean, 1 5· clays S:J0.6:00 644-0637. WAGON Low miles 9 pass {1st St. at S.A. 1'lwy.I FOREIGN CARS mac. 494-6208 645--4744 Amie. 4!»-5560 or 4$--0582 'f:i!. CAD. Conv. white w/Red $3650 499-3840 ' ' 2000 E. tt.1 St., Santa Ana TOP DOLLAR-PAID '69 DATSUN 4 d1• sedan, -"~.~6li-':M~G~M= • .,~.~-'69 V\V sunroof BUG. Mags, leather inter1of. Ex c . ' · 558-l<XXI •bronze, new valve job. •--wet radials, stereo, $1200 or of-Cond. 979-1907 '49 CHEV. pickup, '62 6 cyl. MERCURY FOR OR NOT! Sacri(i('(" $QCI. 842-U07. $500, * * S57--0l 45. fer. 5.'i7-9192 aft. 6 P1.f eng. $245 OI" best olfer, after or come in to see us. ---~-'-~--OPEL '73 Cpe DeVille "1'...!';P·.'!°'l:,Jl968--0677~~:._~-~/.::;:-~;::;'-:;:--,--;:-.: NEWPORT '66 ~ ~r~.,':""d. Call Alt 5. 557-9271 '63 CHEV. V8. a;, cond, 1972 MERC Comet, 2 dr RAT Steve, 5"5-l095. '70 CONV., fully equipped, pwr/atr &: nu brks, $325. -deluxe air. PS, tinled glass, Call IMPORTS ---------I .•'TI OPEL l900 station --=~-'-''-"=--xlnt, last of its kind. $3750. call 546-4167 Ex<:el cond. $1900. <lfM...-210.1. '69 Fiat Spider "'agon 4-spced, radio, no 'TI V\V Bus. New eng, clutch. 673-S507 C 1 p k 3100 \V, Coast I-fwy., N.B. · air, clean inside & out. tires. Slll95. or trade for late ~~~·------1966 CHEVY Impala V-8, 2 '65 AtERCURY, oony s: 642tMOS Roadster $1100. 642-1050 or 673--0611 mod Sta. Wag. 645-3259 '68 El.DORADO, all powr. tlr, good Ures. $500. 962-6841 ~8Js_~· P/B, Air. TOP CASH o•ange. (W0ATI3J '72 OPEL Rallye. Low ml. *'73 Campmobile cruJse control. 59,000 . ml, CONTINENTAL . . $ 13H NC. $1850 or bcllt offer. Sho\v room condition. $26.50. 55l-2305, 492-39n. Autos, New for clean late model l'ars .and trud<!i! Howard Chevrolet MacArthur and Jan1bnrce Ne\vport Beach 8.13-0'"a55 \\'E PAY TOP DOLLA!l t"'OR TOP USED CARS U )'Our car is extra clean, lt.'e us first . BAUER BUYCK 2925 Harbor Blvd. 1 Costa Mesa 979-2!'JOO IMPORTS \YM'TED On• County's TOP I BUYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA lJ.111 Buch Blv ;. fl Beach Ph. 847-8555 WE llUY L\IPORTED Atn'OS BEST PRICES PAIDI 0.-Lewi• Imports 1'f'.6 11.u1>oo'. CM. 6*-«IO:l Autos, 1,,._...M .,., ... • THE FlltEST IN USED IMl'ORTS • • THE "NEST IN IMPORT SER.VICI • Do ~. laYOr' and CODM! ~ w rrn1. 0pen Tua •nCI 11nn. u! •• Sol- UI r.. ~~!.,-=) .. .__.... --.. ~ ... ln:r -nen .nn "fl •• 645-5220 aft 5, Rocky. $4500. 6~7459. '66 Coupe de Ville 1969 LINC Con!. fut l y BIU MAXEY PANTERA '61 VW Bug $795 Only '8,000 miles! Loaded. equip'd, like new, chauffeur Very nice cond. in/out. Sl700 640-00(5 driven. \Vhite on \Vhite, TOYOTA ,71 P-~NTER Call 673-2420 '67 FJL DORAOO. ai•, luU 494-4527. 494-1907. 18881 BE.ACH BL. 847-8555 A MUST ti('!] Emerg. '66 V\V power, lmmnc. Powder '66 CONTINENTAL, Good J.IUNTINGTON BEACH $500. or best offer, Priv ply. 1 ~~~"~"'-' ~11~000~. -"'~5-_1_187~--condition. Best offer over '6'1 Fiat lJ~D. For parts or 7500 ORIGINAL MIL.ES 492-3814 Nr<.'11 a "Pnd"" Place on ad! $800. 642--3273. \\'hole car. Good tires, lots Excellent Condition of new parts. 646-2564 after Fully Loaded 6:3-0 pm ,69 FIAT 124 Sedan. Call After 6:00 P .M. AIC. Xlnt shape! 631--3471 !600. eau 646-u.;i. PORSCHE JAGUAR '71 Jaguar Y·12 E Type Coupe B. R. giwn, loaded, k>ctll car (06'l1BW), $6666 ~tll .111)111» 111 111!11:. i'IWT-11 """3 -' I """" .. . . . . . TRADE 2 BR TOWNHOUSE1 20x22 fan1 rm, xlnt cond., loc:alt'd Jn prima Fountain Valley. area, lnuned oc-- cupe.ncy, asirumable 71~'ib loan, $.1500 equity. J.~R bool or Porsche of (!(fual value. South Bay Rcolty, 962--2440, Agent/Owner. 1963 PORSCHE au nroof, newly reblt cng., xlnl oond. 678·3418. * '66 912 5-SPEED. new '70 Jaguar 4.2 radials, compleiely rebulli ~"'~~"ne~-~64;;.2~-4-0.::,;;IO~.--,.....~ l'On\l'Prtl~c>. local Chr 12!)6'.. l970 9J1E Coupe, lllrnal NJJ J. $2999 orange, xlOI ,~,.1. 33M, xtras. 847-7073 ll\.111)111» 11"11111:. ~ • _.. I 'r" '6.~ PORSCJ~E C body. Very nice. Nearly perfect con· dillon. 644-1121 '66 POl~IE 911 $2850 Of v~ (.WC ~y! Renl bctil offer. Tf1I!' Mme, •Pl·· atore 1 ,.,~,..:;64;;."-'~l'-t78""'. "°N"'.o'=.,.....,...., !!!*-i ere-thru • Dally Pilot Llke to Trade? Our Trader'• uaimfled Ad. ~l ldJe llem1 Pnnullsc <'Olumn lot for yoo! "°"' C..U M2-¥i18 Now! '1 fi ne•. •.,t day• for 5 buck11. 980 DICK WILSON'S IRAND NEW 1973 ESCAPADE 20' MOTOR HOME P:ULL'f Sl!ll" CONTAIHSO e ""''s• ""' """$699 e Ge1/elt>c. Rl'lrl~•lof e Sheg C.rpott1 e Aul(lll· 11rv B"'"«Y • s1 .. 1n1e11 S!etl AtllQe COY« • Lal!. -ol C.blllfl SOil<:• and Much _ More. SEA. :-s.t•1112. IMMEDIATE D•LIV•RY NEW '73 ELDORADO OTTOWA CAB.OYER 8' CAMPER 5999 FEATURING: SPORTSCOACH "The Ul timate in Luxury Motor Homes" Brand New '73 ELDORADO MOTOR HOMES Now On Display! Contempo Yan Conversions SOME F.ULLY SILF CDNTAlNID '67 FORD >{, TON PICKUP WITH IRAND NEW '73 OTIOWA CAIOY!R CAMNR 4 ,,..-tT•n1'"l•1l•t1, hea¥y duty equlpp.d. Sto¥t, •in~ ie• Do•, e•blP1ets, c11rl•l111, pt n1li119, .+c.. ·~: ONLY $2299 DICK WILSON'S Q Q Authorlnd SUBARU Dealer 17555 BEA.CH .BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH 842°0675 I • i ~ 7 -I ' • • • • • ....... San Cle111enie Capistrano EDITION 'VO~. 66, NO. 179, 5 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES • • • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA """~'"'··~----... -.... --r ' . ,,,. ·~ . • Today's Flaal N.Y. Stoeks THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1973 TEN CENTS ' I - Newport Firm Charged in $1 Million Swindle A Newport Bllch firm eµgaged in a fi~gl_us boat manufacturing promotion is alleged to have swindled investors out o~ more than $1 million, the Orange POUce Department said today. Five men .have been arrested In con- necl.k.G with the operation which alleged. ly wai carried on throughout C&lifornla and in Ari'r.ona, Texas and South Dakota. Jailed by Orange police Wedneodly and today wer~ Lyle H. Swakford, 47, of 485 Costa Mesa St., Costa Mesa; Keith Carbon, 40, Santa Ana; John Robert Ford, 47, Tustin; John Freeman, 47, Lakewood and William Smock, 45, also known as A. J. Scarbrough, of Anaheim. Orange investigator Dennis Dahlke identified the firm as National Marine Industries. He said it moved to 4262 Campus Drive, Newport Beach, from Orange about tWo months-ago. t- -· Dahlke said a lengthy investigation started when an Orange resident told police he had been cheated out of $14,000. 1'he Orange detective sa id in· vestigators turned up eight additiOnal victims in Santa Ana, Lakewood, Santa Fe Springs, San Diego, Phoenix, Dallas and Rapid City, S.D., who alleged they bad lost more than $116,500 in in- \vestments made thro1,1gh the firm. . Dahlke said he had uncovered evidence ""hich indicates there may have been scores of victims who may have lost more than $1 million. The detective said National M~ine JnduStties operated under several other names and placed ads in I o c a I newspapers inviting investors to become associates in the production of fiberi:lass kayaks and other smaU OOats. Prospective investors w~re 1 invited to lunch and told how they could participate -' ' in the ·operation as mold builders, hull and deck builders or as assemblers and detailers. Company representatives nre alleged to have told investors of huge profits available through existing outlets for their finished products. Dahlke said, in reality, nQ such oµtlets were ava.Uable and the products were not marketab1e. IXOD onse 'Well Spent' Funds Def ended At Nixon Homes WASHINGTON ( A P ) The government's expenditure of almost $1 .9 million on President ~ixon's F1orida and CallfOrnia residences is money weU spent, says the chairman of a House Ap- propriations subcornmittee .•. Rep. Tom St<ed (O.Okla), said Wemesd&Y that the President "is ~t an ordinary 'citizen • :. ·Jn some lnstalic<s, 1 we sl)oulcl.pay bhn" for ,~- I Sa. '!1'!~g-.-.. . .~ . lllil UI8:DlP William Horton ' SuccUmhs at 63 Fmmer tiltematianal sailing cbampicm and ll.6. Olyniplc sailer WUliam Landon llci<tOll.ol Cl!pi~L~ ~died ~al eVfJJ\DI at San Oemente Hospit.8' aftei' a bMef illness. He was 83. Private memorial services for the loog4 time mm1ber ol the Newport Harbor Yad>t Club will be held Friday in the garden iii the famil y horno1 35341 Beach Road. His ashes will be acattered at sea next -week. , Mr Hortoo Is survived by his w!aow, Jo >.Ni ·11orta1 of Capistrano Beach; his brother, Jooeph Kurtz Hortoo ol Los Angeles; his children, Mrs. Walter V. RacMt' Jr. ol Newport Beach and Willlam Landon llDrt<ln Jr. o1 Los Angelft and six grandchlldreo. The third-generation Callfomlan sailed u lllilDPer In lhe llrqm class with his two childrtn during the 1951 aUmmer Olympics in Helsinki, F;lnJand. The Jilfqjiiilg yeit;<ie """ tbo~lntemational ~piomhlp in lix·meter sailing m Sweden. After World War 11, in which he served aa ·a commanding officer in the U.S. Coast Guard, be was co-owner of Lido Shipyard in Newport Beach until bis retirement in 1961. The family qgests dooatlona to the U.S. Olympic Fund; a!tentim: Bill Schroeder, 9MIO Sepulveda' Blvd,. Los Angeles, Cal~. 90045. Closing Urged Of Sa JL.Onofre The San Onolre nuclear i-er plant is -ol ilo Ulal lawyen for Ralph Nader k>day aaked a federal Judge to shut ·down'. ArllllinC In U.S. Dlatrid Court for the Dillrlct ol 0.Jumbta on I auJt filed against the Atomic Energy ComrnJlllion, attonieys for Nader and Friends of the Earth clalmed that a score ol facilities in 11 atalel bad failed to take adeqllllle pre,:&11tlons agalnot the pooslbluty ol an accldeol that could lfll"ad radioactive death ·f« "dozens ol. mile&'; around • plant. • Emigration Okayed KAllAOHl, Plklstan (AP) -Paldltan said ioday It will allow .SO BengaU otudenis, ... men, and otber• to emigl'lle to Bailgladalh. A For.I O!fice 'IJC)kesman said th• move wu the beglndn& ol •.· limited scale rt1>1triatlon of ll<qalia Slranded 0< dotalned In Paldstan Ind ol Pakistani prlsonen held by 8eft81adeeh. cban~eJ in the houses that he may not like but will have to live with. Steed's committee held a hearing at which details of the expenditures were released. Totals of a General "Services Administration ;{udit were released last 'lbu.->day. Among items not requested by the Secret ·Ser:vice. for security and safety Jl1l1m!I were, two OagpoJes and flags COlting almbst $3,000, the audit >indicated. no, ftberglus , Keyt Biscayne. Fla., fiicP.>le, cllt8per than one ' at San cie·mente, has a gold 1eaf ball on top and nylon halyards. GSA cimcJats told , the silbcommittee that •1tbe niilitaey requested this for their .comnwider·lnclllef." They said it and all the other non-security, equipment COLUMNIST TAKES LOOK AT ·IMPROVEMENTS-Page 13 remains government property and could be reclaimed after Nixon's tenn ends in 1977, but probably would not be. 'lbe-audit did not include a $400,000 helicopter landing pad at Key Biscayne or for an Executive OUice complex on military property adjacent to the 29-acre San Clemente retreat. Secret Service Direetor James J. Rowley said that more than $132,668 in landscaping at the two complexes and another $13,860 or more· for various kind s of ·shrubbery was a security expense, either to give privacy to the President, Protect him or cover up security devices around the perimeters. Dan.a Poin.t Ma1i -Robbed of $700 l 1i $"outh Lagu1ia ' A Dana POint man was robbed or $700 Wednesday night after being held at khife point by his assailants in the dark parking lot of a South Laguna restaurant. Two hours after the armed robbery. Orange County Sheriffs and San Clemente Police arrested three Florida men ·in connection with the case at a San Clemente motel. Boaied In' t o Orange County Jal! on charges of pnned robbery were Richard Hart, 21, F..dwafd Schumate, 21, and WarTen~Daniels, 20. Each listed his home as Pompano Beach, Fla. AC<Onllng to sheriff's department in- vestigators, the victim , Joseph F. Mor- rtuey, 21, of 33222 Christina Drive, Dana Point, was not Injured during the holdup. Police said tbe trio approachCd Mor- r~uey at Luigi's Pizza, 317116 S. Coast 114lhway Wednesday allernoon, then again about 9:30 p.m. · During the second encounter, a knife was drawn on Morrissey and be was forced to fork over· the $700 in his P'JISOSIOll, . Morrtue.y's description or the late model car bearing Florida license plates led to the arrest . in San Clemente, in· veotlgaton said. The su!p<CIS offered no resistance lo arrest, they added. FBI Chief Greeted . KANSAS CITY lAP) -Aboot 100 perlOlls greeted Police Chief C. M. Kelley at l\ansaa: City'• airport on his ar- rival Wednesday night from Washlngion, where the Senate had approved his ap-. pointment as direclor or the Federal Burttu ol lnv"911gatlon . I • , Dli,_. Piiot Stiff '911'- M~S! •SPIEL, Tl-IE LJNCOLN COl-LEcTOR; AND ' HE\t F.oRMER GQV&RNMENT LIMO "' In B•lboa, Tong~ Were Wa99hi1·1nd •· Reltau'rant 0Wner·w11 Furious Li1110 Misleads ' Big, Sleek Ex-government ·Car Parked • ''' Newport By L, PETER KRIEG 01 "" DlilY f'ilot 1"11 " .. ' ' ·~oh, I diiln't even think aboufit when I c;ars to the government and ~Its them left it parked .there," Mrs. Spiel said, when' they~e taken out of service. relating that she ,had .jUst «<OIDe ·to toWn ,'Ibe Spiels' ,.LincroJn limou.sine is @ 1~9 to get her cOhdominium' reru;ty for 'the ~J. Its wmdoWs and .~ are bullet proof. . .• \Vith the PreSideot of the United States down the coast in San Clemente and his former chief of staf£ secluded just across Newport Harbor. all of Balboa Was sure. it was getting into the act \Vednesday .. A Lincoln Continental limousine was parked at the curb at the ·Rendezvous Condominiums on Palm Street. ~u:r~~:&bd :~";~t·.~. &:"~·a But the Spiels ~e·it j~,like any other 'Ye.·r .a~'"-'!11. ·•"-F".'~. M••--~-'-'..,-,,pan·· y' fainily car. The children sit in .th'! back •-~i...v we . ui~u r.~\IWI U11u seat and watch the built·in'television·set.' , and, yes, it, bad , been ib · gOVehl{oe~t. They sit on Jamb carpeting. . service. -· ~1rs. SpieJ said she was an official in Tourists gaped and v peeked inside as they _passed-by. ___The customers_o( the Red Carpet tavent across the street buzzed in lively speculation about who the car belonged to. After all, it \Ytis the kind of car made only for the government. It has red lights and flag mounts. Its distinctive Washington, D.C. license plate heightel)ed the spC~ation. The speculation ended today. The limousine belongs to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas ·Spiel, summer residents of Balboa. They live in Riverside and own two McDonald's hamburger stands. "lt was a Presidential. limqusiqe on the' Riverside electlon ca'mpaign for loan to the head of the United NatiOOS",;' President Nixon and-bought -the special _she said. ~ ·~~~~--;~--license plate for $15. It's good -for ·one Mrs. Spicl explained ffiat she and her yeal. ~ ~ · · Jo. • • husband are Lin~ln col~ectors. · They She said .the car was used . during the have 10 of them. This is their second election camPaign tO Chauffeur dignitaries litnousine. . visiting the Riverside afea. "We had1 a 1imouSine from a HOllywood \Vhi le the car impressed m o s t studio," she said, "but it was a mess. It .. (See·UMQUSINK, Page·%) had eagles QO the door and ·a purj>le and yellow Star of Dayid ori the·root.1: : · ''The dealer in Riverside ·knew"We-were· looking fot anoth.er 'one so ' when ~his· be<:ame available, he called us," she 1said. Mrs. Spiel noted that Ford lends the Annexation Bid For Sa1i Juan . Clemente Negotiations Given Approval Arlnexation. or 21.4 acres to the city-or San Juan Capistrano -was approved Wednesday by a 3-2 vote in the second go arounc;l ·before the Local Agency Forma· ' For Goll Course Told The city of San Clcmente and John Sepe, owner ot the Shorecliffs Golr Course, are secretly hegotia~ing the city's purchase of the recreational land, it has been teamed. But spokesmen for each of the two en- tities today refused to elaborate the negoliations, ... Sepe, at \Vednesday night's Planning Commission meeting. conceded that the links have been losing large sums ot money on the golf course ever since he ·purchased th< property. Sepe and his attorney, Bernard Allen, protested Wednesday a commission plan to classify his land -'PrescnUy unclassified -to open acreage (OA). Sepe also objected to the proposed zon- ing, R·I. B·t (Residentia l) for another paf'eel of, undeveloped land he O'i''ns at the north end of the golf course's club house. Sepe's property was on the list or open· space parcels which by Jaw must be zon- '' ed in conformance to the city's general plan. The commission decided t6 -hold over any zon ing action on Sepe's lahCI~ in ad- dition to land of other developers. and resume study on the issue at the July 11 meeting. · Sepe requested an OS -open·spacc - zoning to allo'v greater flexibility in further developing the 'land. An OS designation allows several types of developlfte!lt, in addition to recrea· Uonal, .. including Planned ResidentiaJ Development (PRO), Sepe maintained that it would be dlfllcult lo sell his land ti the new owner would be locked into an OA ione, allowing only a golf course. Dick Ahlman , of the planning staff, ex· plained· that because the master pl1:1n spccH!cs a golf course in the ~ent, location, the land should remain o golf course. "We hove allowed greater density in (See PURCHASE, Page I) ·' \ lion Commission (LAFC). , Tl1e ~alled Raney Annexation is : located west of Del Obispo Street in the western section of the Capistrano Valley and immediately adjoins San Juan Capistrano. Annexation was first filed on Deeember 1972 but withdrawn in February. It \Vas refiled and disapproved on April 11. -· At that time a density of 6. 7 units per acre was proposed and was considered loo high by the LAFC and the city. A r~vised plan was approved Wed· ne!day calling for S.5 units per acre. LAFC executive. director Richard Turner said the proposal was a logical an· nexation ,to the city. The merger was opposed by the· Dana Point Citizens (or Actk>n Committee and the United South Coasl Community AssoclaUon' as welt as Dan Mitchell, a nearby proper'>.' owner. The approva l was fa vored by com· missioners Ralph Diedrich. Lou i a Rtinhardt and Cllllon Miiier. Opposing W~J'(! Robert Btlttln and Mrs. Ree BuPnap. As soon as the company salesmen enlisted as many investors as possible in a particular area they would then move on to another location and operate under different nantes, the Orange detective charged. Victims or the firm had to buy their own equipment to manufacture the boats, he sa id, with a $5,000 down payment re- quired. ' • een I ,, Laird Sees . President's i l Appearanee ' \VASHINGTON (UP ll -Presidenl Nixon will respond to all questions about the Watergate affair toward the end or the Senate's hearings, White HO~ --... counselor tlitelvin R. Laird was quoted as saying in a Washington Post interview Wednesday. Po.st reporter David S. Broder quoted Laird 'as saying Nixon would not ••re. spend to every witness" but would answer REINECKE CONTRADICTS MITCHELL-Story, P-,16 U ...o:~ All ... ...nJ,_., f qu~11:1, au '!: ........... .., ••• at a press . conference when we get near the con--· £}usion of the hearings.". · !>,. Broder said Laird, former defense secretary and recently a p Po i n t e d domestic affairs adviser to Nixon. reported having talked about the tinting of a press conference with Nixon. "I think he's willing to do that •.. I don't think there will be any problem with that," Laird said. He also strongly hinted that White : House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler will be replaced as the President's spokesman at some point, the newspaper said. Although not directly implicated in Watergate crimes, Ziegler is considered to have Jost considerable credibility through his handling of the scandal. . A spokesman in San Clemente, meanwhiJe, said the President took no part in writing the memo accusing John W. Dean Ill. of maslennindllig the I Watergate coverup, and it shouJd not. be 1. regarded as a definitive Whtte House , statement, according to a spokesman for . the President. 1 The statement was prepared_by H. Fred Buzhardt, the President's legal ' counsel -the office Dean once held - from · materiil supplied tiy "others,'' Deputy f!ess ~cretary Gerald L. War· ren said Wednesday. Nixon did not see nor approve it before it was sent to the Senate \Vatergate C.Om- mittee, but was briefed on it Wednesday, Warren said. The President is spending very little time on Watergate, Warren said. Qelegating the responsibility to his lawyers and devoting his energies to the other matter$ beCore him. Instead, Warren said, he was being kept in£ormed through summaries of the proceedings. His· family, however, was glued to TV sets. Chief of Staff Alexander M. Haig 3nd Ziegler appeared to be emerging as tbe (See RESPONSE, Page %1 Cout Weather Mostly sunny in the a£ternoon hours Friday, following the usual low clouds along the coast. Highs in the , 70s at the beaches, squeak~ Ing out 80 degree readings inJand. Overnight lows in the r.o.,. INSIDE TODAY Orange Cou1~ty supervisors have adapted, ;ust before' the June SO stat'e deadline, a re-- , vised open space plan wir.1, mitaor changei. See Page 9. L.M. lfr• ,, Aflll L111C11r1 n lkllllll • SJ MllYlft M C1llfon'll1 S M1.111i1a1 """"• H Cl.UtlflM :w-41 M.uleMI Hf'WI 4, 14 Ctm•c• .u Or•• Ctvtlry , Cro11 .. fd if S.ort1 tt-.Jt DHltl llftrlc.tt t SMU Mkt;tf• ..._U •oit.n.I ,... I Ttttri~ If •11...-i.i-1 ,. ,.,...,.... ,. Pl-t 2W1 WMlllW ' I 1'1r tht ltlCOl'd t W'"'tn'I Ntwl 11•21 H•l"fft-tt w ... MI """ 1, l• I • ' I. • _2 DAILY PILOT •Thur~ay. Junt 28, 197:3 ----~--~ , NoNewsNo~Gor.News t Coast White House By JORN VALTERZA Of f11t O.ll't Pillf .Iliff mE SOUTH ORANGE t'OAST this week is 1 .. rn1ng with somo of lbe 'bigges.t ·people i,n the news business. And some of the most frustrated ones, too. " Becituse for the p8st three 'ijays, President Nixon and his chief spokesmen · · .have been hoJed up at the Western White House, and only Deputy Press Secre- ·1ary Gerald Warren emerges to take hls daily pummeling at press briefings. So far, despite the heaviest of questioning and some low-down sneaky '' patterns of questioning, Warren hasn't budged from the '1n<>-COl1ll1lellt" posture of tbe Western White House. But despite their failure to elicit comment, the Press Corps still has a sense of humor. ' ' \Vednesday's allegations by John Dean that thP. White Hou se maintained a "list" of enemies pointed out that fact. THE LIST OF NAl\1ES assertedly kept fre sh at the \Vhite House moved on a teletype machine only a few min· utes before Warren aITivcd for his' routine daily joust . It drew an instant crowd, because everyone was dying to find out if he or She had bee n hated enough to be included. ... VALflRU. :· Alas, only Daniel Schorr and three others in the profession were on the list of "enemies." "What's he got that I haven't got," moaned fellow CBS staffer Robert Pierpoint, displaying mock chagrin. The list seemed to amuse, more than provoke, the group. But dne other revelation -from Dean didn't sit as well. It was the one aboui · using the IRS and its very efficient auditing system to "get back" at the "enemies.'' WHEN WARREN ARRIVED, the group wasted_ little time. The battle, . "''h.ich bad been launched Tuesday to no avail, was launched once again. First. the group hit on the list and asked for a comment. But Warren would say nothing about the list, about the assertions that the IRS was "out getting" foes of the administration or anything else about the Watergate hearings and the evidence. , So far, other than a similar appearance by Ronald Ziegler, Press secre- tary and Presidential Advisers· last Monday, Warren is the only available source for White House detail s. Before Wednesday's briefing, conversations among the newsmen abounded -all dealing with the President's options during the current state of siege. No one would make a bet on a press conference. And everyone was wondering what Ziegler ....: once a daily fu::ture at press briefings -bas been doing for the past three days of meetings With the Presi· dent. AT ONE POINT during the pre-briefing period a minor White House staffer called for one newsman, saying be had an emergency message for the writer. The recipient approached the aide to get his message amid a few wise- cracks from the oft-cynical corps: "Hey, fella, it's probably your wife." "There's probably a bunch of IRS auditors camped on your doorstep. You'd better start digging for your receipts." .San ]lian to Continue Ortega Highway Study The San Juan capistrano citizens' policy plan developed by five committees will be examined by the city p1anning commission at a fonnal hearing July 10 .....:... the first step toward implementation of new city policies. The 127-page plan. unveiled to the public at a meeting Tuesday night, is a 1najoc part ofthe effort to rewrite ~. Juan Capistrano's general plan. · The July 10 hearlng will com· 'prehenslvely examine the citizens' plan , and if ne<ded, additional hearings will be scheduled for fuller public participation. Each of the five committees -land , use: transportation and ctrculatioo; en- vjrorwnental resource management ; public facilities services and safety and , q:mununity design-historical preservation :.-have set objectives and made re<.Un· inendations to meet the rapid growth of the city. As outlined by the chainnen of the -OOnvnittees at . the Tuesday night .meeting, the general Cibjectives of the five comm.it.tees are: , -Land use : Growth in San Juan Capistrano should be a slow, evolutionary process. and an attempt should be made to preserve the characteristics of a ."small , self~ntained, village.Jike com· munity," despite ·the growing population. OlAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT -Transportation and circulation: A system should be provided to minimize the use of the automol:ile and to con· struct visually pleasing .streets and highways. -Environmental resource management: An effort should be made to conserve natural resources and guide and shape orderly growth and develop- ment. -Public :;ervices and safety: The city should promote a range of public ~:it!~ a~rte~~en~~e, at- -community deiign and hisloric preservation : 1be city should imure that the unique charaoteristies and nattral environment are extended to future growth of the city. From Pagel LIMOUSINE. •• observers, it didn't do much for the p~ prietors of a 1ocaJ restaurant Tuesday night. Mrs. Spiel confessed she had left it in a private space belonging to the Mackerel Flats restaurant on Main Street and came back to find a nasty note on the "'inds:hield. "It said if we ever parked there again they'd have it towed away," fi.1rs. Spiel said. Ervin· Ch~llenges Nixon Action Attacks Seem to Be Seeking President'sTestinwny ' . WASHINGTON (AP) -senate Fciarih Amendments to lhe ~nsttlUllon. In other highlights from testimony by ousted White !louse counsel Dean: · -'11ie Pmldeot ·pulled him 65lde ·shortly after the Jan. 20 'inauguration Ct!remony to get l'Somethlng done" about a demonstrator ~bo had briefly breached a police line dutilJj: the inauguraJ parade. A Secret Sorvlcey•gent bad '•lirllor' tola him ·that the President was quite· angry about the incident," Dean slid• Watergate C!alnnan Sam J. Ervin Jr. Que$1loOJ by Ervin at the fourth day of chalftnpd today whether Pmldent Nix-Dean's testimony appeared aimed at on did anytblnt "ta perform his duty lo chf'Jlenging Nixon to testlly on the see that the laws are' faithfu11y executed -He kept no notes of mo~i of his meetings with Nixon because "~me of the things that were being said in these meetingS .•. were very .tncrlmlnallng to the President." in respect to the Watergate affair." ·NIXON 'ENEMIES' REACT Th< North Carolina Democrat altac~ed TO l:IST-Pago 4 certain White House statements after winning acknowledgement from John W. Dean lit tbet-some presidential decisions and White House actions not related to the Watergate violated the First and -He believed. "I wns a restrlinlng [n. fluence at the White House. There were many wild and crazy schemes, some of which I hive not testified to." He was not asked to elaborate on the schemes. Family Style Watergate scandal. Later, ci>mmlttee COlDlsel samuel Dash said the question of . whether to invite the President to testify had not been resolved. Dean insisted in response to a serie.s of questions from the While House tliat his "''"llOl'Y \s sharp and ' hi~ accusatiOos 'l•llllt the President are trutb!ul. I 2 Children Undergo Hughes Takes Quick Flight Into Belgium · The White HolJSe counter-attack was in the fonn ·of ~ ~ies -of questions suf>.. mitted by special presidential counsel J ~ Fred ,Buzhardt, and put to Dean by .Sen. Daniel K. Inouye· (D-Hawaii). lnouye said Buzhardt told him today that Nixon had been briefed about the questions. Dean's grilling is part of a White Bouse counterattack a g a i n s t 34.. year~ old fonner counsel, who in bis fourlh straight day stuck to his story \bat Nixon and hJs top aides plotted toietber to cover up the wiretapping affair. Surgery; 2 More Wait LONDON (AP) -Howard Hughes, American billionaire recluse, left the sanctuary 'bf his blacked-oi.Jt London peflthouse early today to dash to Belgium and back to solve a pressing problem - renewa l of his visitor's visa so he can On Wednesday Buzhardt, ln a letter to the Senate Watergate committee, caUed Dean the mastermind of the cover-up and described former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell as h1s patron. . STANFORD (AP) -T\VO children \Vith inherited heart derects u n d e r \V e n t delicate Corrective surgery this morning, while their two brothers awaited-ide'n· ti cal operations scheduled la~er today. Surgeons hope the family.style open heart operations will give lbe fun-loving children another 15 or 20 years of life ex· pectancy. Tliree Swimming Sessions Slated F_J)r CUSD Youths Three sessiOOll of swimming lessons will bt offered this liWlllller lo ~ who have flnillh<d first grade in the Capistrano Unified School District. Each session Is three ,...ks ioog, with classes for beginners, j u n i o r i rr termediates, intermediates, advanced and junior iilesaving. The sessiOns ·will run frcxn July 2 through July 20; July 2.1 through Aug. JO, and Aug. 13 through Aug. 31, at the San Clemente City pool. Each class will be 40 minutes long and lessons will be givt!ll from 8:30 a.m. to 12:05 p.m. Registntioo lo< each ....ion will be held June 30, July 21 and Aug. II, from 9 t.o 11:30 a.m. at the San Clemente swim- ming pool. A 12 sign-up fee Is required. The flnal -Oii will ~ jrlority lo childreu who atleod summer llCbool. lle@istntioo on Aug. 11 will bt """'1cted lo llUllUDe< """°"' otlldenta Mly from 9 lo 10 a.m. A studenl who cloeo not Jll89 his test the first time can enroll in another session, provided ~ Is an opening. Swimmers may re-enroll only during the first Monday <i the 8eCOOd and !bird sessions. Additlmal lnlmnation may be ob- tained from the switchboard at the district office at 486-1215, or from Robert Bouman at Marco Fwster Junior High, 493-1133, alter 2 p.m. Karen Costello, 4, and Richard,. 15, entered adjoining operating rooms at Stanford University Medical Center for aperations that could take as Jong as three hours to close holes in their heart chambers. Their brothers, David, 18, and Kevin 13, also will be opqrated on by Dr'. Nonnan Shumway, a\pioneer in heart transplan t surgery, and Dr. Edward Stinson, a veteran member of his surgical team. A hospital spokesman said all four children of Santa Rosa truck dr iver David Costello were "very nervous" but eager for the operation described as "serious but fairly routine."· The children all are suffering from atrial septal defects or holes between their upper heart chambers. 1be defects limit the circulation of blood and oxygen to tissues and organs, causing the children to tire easily. The defect was passed on to the children by their father. Little Karen also is suffering from a hole in a major vein to her heart a con· dition that also will be corre~ted by surgery today. If the holes are small. doctors planned to stitch them closed. If they are larger than a quarter, surgeons planned to make a patch of membrane from the pericardium, or sac surrounding the heart. More than 100 pints of type A-positive blood were donated for the surgery which was expected to require about 30 pints. The children were to be taken to the in- tensive care unit after surgery and re- main ih the hospital about 10 days. From Pagel PURCHASE. • • stay on in Britain. The nighttime flight in a chartered ex.· ecutive jet got Hughes a six·month visa when he touched down on British soil again bet'ore .dawn. Hughes' previous ,permit, a three- month extension to the visa he "-'as granted when he f!e\v here Dec. 27 from earthquake-shattered Nicaragua, expired at midnight. There was speculation Wednesd ay about what the pubLicity·shy magnate would do \Vhen the visa expired. Even if he had failed to apply for a renewal of the permit, he would still have 'ilad a week's grace to get pennission to stay on in London. Hughes left his fortress-like penthouse atop the nine-floor Inn at the Park Hotel in cent ra l London before midnight and drove to rainswept Stansted Airport outside the city. There he. boarded the chartered jet and zipped across the English Channel to Os· tend. After a brief stopover, he flew back to Stansted wilt). the visa problem solved. Hughes had no formalilies to fulfill in Belgium except to have his passport stamped in and out again by Belgian im· mi.gration authorities. Br i t l s b im· migration officiils admitted him as they would any other American tourist, even though he had only left the COWttry a few hours earlier. A Rolls-Royce limousine, 'its windows ~sted ~er with sheets of newspaper, picked up the 118-year-old Hughes at pJaneside on , a quiet comer of the Stansted tannac. He was whisked away, 'Mih police escort, through a little-used exit and back to his hotel hideout. \,_ , Inouye took more than an hour asking 39 questions submitted by Buzhardt. He omitted one, perhaps inadvertently. Dean said that although his memory isn't a "tape recorder,•• ·he has firm recollect19ns of the impressions he bad during meetings with' Nixon in Se~ tember, Febru~ry, March and ApriJ. He denied that he had deliberately leaked storie:s to news media as part of a strategy >to escape prosecution. He said he can't recall ever telling G. Gordon Llddy1 who first PTOP9Sed wire- tapping as part of ,the Nixon :re-electlon campaign, that he "·ould have a $1-mil· lion budget. He said that while he was on the White House staff he was a restraining in· fluence, halting many "wild and crazy schemes" W'hlch others wanted to ·carry out, but which he filed away and ignored. He said ·he had once given a casual assurance to campaign deputy Jeb Stuart Magruder that he would receive ex.· ecutive cle!llency if Magruder went to jail for his perjlU'ed testimony. He con· ceded he did this on his own. and v.·ith no authority from anyone higher. But he said it was done in response to a worried inquiry from Magruder about whether he and his family would be cared for if his part in the cover-up were discovered, I Dean said be took no notes of most of his meetings wUb Nixon because '90Dle of the things that were being said in these meetings • . • were very in- crim1nating to the P.ttS!dent. '' He said he did· not want documents recording such meetings because the White House had a problem with in· formation becorillng public. ·*. * I'...,.. Pagel The Home Office, which handles visa areas surrounding the course because \Ve matters, said today: "Mr. Hughes ar· felt it was justilied in being near the rived in the United Kingdom this-morn--RESPONSE open acreage of Sepe's land," Ahlman ing and was admitted for six mooths on a , · 1 • • • visitor's visa." said today. 11 ghes d · ~--·,·c1en1•s c'···sl adv1·sors m' the Se t Id the · · b u -' ecision to stay on In Britain r-1-lu;M; pe o com111JSS1on t at the city though rebuilding ~ the Watergate-' ~-ttered · " · l led" · was t by finarlcial circles to be ~ :;ua is very 1n eres m purchasing the 1 the ban White House staff. Durm· g hi -~-sum-1 d d lated that . persona ra r t an indication he was ~ an , an s negotiations arc · 1 ed · nu't ,..JO. urn, Nixon has been, closeted dai· 00 und mvo v 1n any big deals here. w er way. Th be Jy for hours with Haig and Ziegler, ac-But c·t M K lb c od ere has en consistent speculation 1 y anager enne arr t ay . hi De be cord mg· to wa-·. refused to t th · · since s cem r arrival that Hughes ··~· M A . d commen on e negot1at1ons. 1 He also •--conferred often with Henry Ontoya Ccuse S ' lb I r I d was P anning to take over British com· nu epe s o er parce o an , the 25 . A. K'••m' ger, wilo is expected to begin .Cr.' at lb th d f th · parues. So far he has not apparently -e nor en o e course. is anot•·r China i'ourney m· a few weeks to II I t"" f th 'd 1 made any moves to do so. uc Of L d • presen Y s a o;u or e res1 entia ·~on· reassure Chou En-lai that the U.S.-Soviet aun enng ing. summit did not endanger the lm-This woul d allow one unit for every C 576 L h d provement in American·Chinese rela· 7,200 square feet of land . osmos aunc e lions. Campaign Cash Sepe, however, requested a zoning or Budget Director Roy Ash new in from RE , whlch would allow development of MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union Wa~ington for consultations today on one unit per 3,000 square feet. announced the launch WedneOOay of holding down federal spending to the NEW YORK (AP) -The Wall Street That zoning issue was also held over Cosmos 576, latest in its top.secret series limits of the proposed $268.7 billion 1974 Journal said today that Sen. Joseph Mon· until July 11. of unmanned space satellites. fiscal year budget. toya (P.N.M.), used dummy committees l j~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~;;;;ii;iii;ij to hide the sources of contributions to his 1970 rHle<.'tion campaign. The newspaper said that as a member of the Watergate committee, "Montoya will be sitting in judgment on Republican tactics that he himself has condoned." The Journal article said that "through the dummy committees, Montoya fund raisers routed contributions that might have generated political problems for the senator had they been disclosed. In this way, they laundered $57,000 from various polltical·actioo anns of labor groups ... as well as $45,000 or so fro m other special interest groups." The newspaper said Montoya declined requests for interviews about his fund raising. Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ''BEST BUY'' AWARD SOIT FOOG W ASTI DISPOSlll ,,..,. f1e Mec"-i•• •a t•Yfl 'nllff-W••ll • Awtl1Mrric D1ttrflllf Di1p1t1111" • SwS!it DIWR Detr '• SIM·Owt .... WI OILIV811 WE SERVICt: 4 CYa.E PORT AILE DISHWASHER • S·Lt Vil •1lflln9 IC!iM • 1•$""' •UfllllQ • Pltlt wl''"'' MtllnQ • 1'1•1111 GIO O<tflellHI • tuHHn 9')11 food 011po111 • Aet11~tllle ,0,..1 COid • Dllll Lin r1Ck1 • F1uc1t·,)O Uft~llP'9 • Aulom111~ O.lt'QIM • T ult T\111 •nlll•lor dl1p.n•r GGSMSSON ,.lie Or•r'l(le Cotll DAILY PILOT, wllll wlll(h I• ComblMll fl'l<I NitWl•Pl'nl, " putllllllell ll'r me Of•-Coe11 PllbU""I"' COIJ!lltnr. a- ,.hl tdl!lont ••• Plltl!itlltd, M...-.'I' fflrqh l"r~1y, for COJ11 M ... , Newport• a1ldl, H""tl"'l'Dn 8e-.:ll/Foun111n VtOtr, l.fil~ ~II, lNlneJ~l"-ck 1t1C1 ~n C:""*'lt/ kn .lutn C•plttr-. A tlnOle ...,lonll tdi!lotl It ~Ollt"'GI ' $elurdlirt end Sun<llrt. Tl"' Pl'IM!NI P\llllifh'"9 Pllftl It fl UO Weit 91~ $""'• CDthl M1t1; CtllfOmLI, 9HH, Rob•rt N, w • ..i l'r nllltnt •llO P11ou111., Jtck R, Curler San Juan Citizen Policy To Be Studied On July 10 "SD2S1N 159'5 : WI INSTALL • iuitt·lll Sotl , ...... , ... l"* 18995 0 WI DILIV .. e WI! SlltV1Cl • WI! INSTALL Vice "~~"'' '""° G-••I M-oe· Jhom•1 IC11•il EdllOt Tho1t11J A, Mu1pllin1 Mtntf!ng Editor Cll1r/11 H, Looi llich1r4 P. Nill AMtll_,.1 M.tMOW. E.il0<'1 s.. c1 .... ,. Offke · 105 North El C•mi~o lt11I, t2,72 --toll• MtMt UD Wat &tr StrHt N""POfl 8HC:fl: UU "'"""°" lloutt¥1td ~lingl'Dn ... di! 11'75 ••d'I -.i ..... ,,. l.lollnl httfl: m l"Ol'tll Al'ln\le , ........ (714J MMl21 Cl:arflM A.4ha1t ... 441-1671 S-C ....... A.LDapa11w•t: ,,,.,, •• 492-4421 C~ltflf, If?). Orfl'IH C:.•I P1191bhlnt C4imolftr, Mo lllWt IJlorlft, U11111r1llofts, lldttwi.1 INl1W tit'' Mvwllttmtnll lltrltn ""'" •• ~ wllllOl/I Nitti.ti "" min• " a..,rlaflt -r. _-.... dHt ........ ,.111 11 COlll N,ttt, c.n1ton111o. .....,..lll'f"°'I' .,. c.rrltr a.u """1t11r1 tllr _.I U.lf ltlOllltllV1 111111,..., *'1flNlllMt ..... "'""""· The San Juan Capistrano City Council l\1onday wil l continue· Its study into the proposed widini'ng of Ort('ga Iilgbway. The council this week 'heard developer Bob Afaurcr describe tbe traffic and school situation in the Mission Glen (tract two) development. Maurer outllnea the currtnt situatJon of the development and Jta future plans as wtll as the tm>lane hlghwAy !erving the area. The councll had requested the information for future rood network development. The State Division ol Highways has agreed to spend •1 million widening the highway ialer in the decade. Just how soon the Widening takes place depends on how quickly the clly call dedicate the rigbt-or."'·ay ln are·as where new housing projects •re approved. State aides say that each dedication ol iapd means the stat• will hav• to spend le1ss and thus the improvement 'or the road wlll come sooner, possibly as early as 1976. . TM state project calls ror the realign- ment of the present two-lane . road to a 104-foOt-wide right-of-way. Meurer told lbe Council lbat the presenl road could be widened to the pro- posed four lanes. Trouble spots on the preoent road, he said, would bt at the Lutheran Church property al the eastern end ol the developmeot and the Lyke property between SUndanc:e a n d Wind50ng Drlveo on lilt w..imi side. Access lo right-of-way would not be easy in either area, he said. The council's treatment of the mauer will involve additional sludY ol lhe tong- range acquisition ol rlghl.of•wllJI and the. legal aspects ol 8UCh acquisitions. 'I1ie council will also be studying lhe leaslbltity of using C.Ue Arroyo u an lltern1te traffic mJte to Ortega. Di.,..,•· a ·ftHttfAW·.,...._ t D..i 0..1,.111 1 ..... 1..a.1111 - WI OlLIVllt WI Slit.VICI WI IMSTALL Authorl:&td GE SERVICE • 269950 WI DILIVU e WI llltVICI ' a W• INtT AU. • Mombar of C11lfernl1'1 L1rg11t Cooporatlvo luylnt Group With Tho Volum1 luyln1 Power of 110 Stor" 90 DAY CASH . WITH APPIOYll C•IDIT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phollll 548-7788 - ! I , I I I l . . • Chrysler ·Hits GM Catalytic System now N!Qulred for 1976," said Sydney L. Te!T)', Chrysler vice pr es ident of en- vironmental and safety rela· lions. by GM President Edwin N. Cole. He &aid 'the GM ~ verter system would last the lifetime ol the car and would cost only $150. • . " . Thursday, June 28, 1973 DAILY PILOT 25 OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll1tln91 for Wedneld1y, June 27, 1973 T"-.. QUOl•llon• r•nk El ·~ 914 Pltnd Mii U\'t l~~Sl•tt T.C WQPIJtd by tl'le NI· r•nlll 11\oo 12~ POPI! 8ro ,~,. S'l'I ~ El 1111111 Altoehltlon of rlend IC 221• 23 Pen! Co IO~t lj!4 5v!'lff c;p S.wrltltt 0.•ltrl, rl~ll R 111\lo 1J V.. Prof Golf l~ Suoo Fd rw; FOE 11.. .... l'rogrM 11 1,.,,.. T1Uv Crp ll~ lfYt Mio ,~. 1~1Cl'i\ ~ ift 1r1 bhli •nd off1r1 llUtr 11 10~) 11"' PSN C•r IO't ll ''" T•mN t ~uotld by ovtr·lhe< -u11k Sre 1t1 '" P11bbllr II.fl l\'t 1111'. l1 ~Y,, ~ounrtr llMI••• IO •l;IJIY c """ .... Putn C•o ''" .... T•~lor w '"" .._ llOr!~ W.. j S"' on•r Cp I'• 9"-Ttlecl'I! ~ii 1\lo tad! Oltlt,. 15 of .1rlln 11\lo 6\li Ou•kr Ch 11\o ll'olo Tilltn'(, .116" 1 :loM l (E11t1n ''' rJ 1 1i,, OUOM Cl lo lj"1 Time DC f" !" 1me I TM OUOI• lco (p 9 9~ R1111r Co 1 Titan I -l9 ~ . ..,. • " I l•t• 2S1Jo RIY<tr\ Towle ... , """ 10\ifo 'Ion! do not lncJW. :i~ A11t"P 15-l.I. 16~ 16) 1611 Tr•n C't ftJ It) '•1•11 <MrkllO. mark :;p C~~ 2flM ~YI Aiwrnd 11 11 I''" Gt•P 13\S l3'9 Jown or <O<T>mt,. ~llfd l1>•I 7 7\i AltM Pac 16~ 1~'• l rn Oc:tn u:i. 12'!. ,, d Miid ,,,,,, 2 ... AKog Eq l\ii • l rl'M)h Fn tl4 84 ><Olll Ind dO l'IOI rhm Mfi 91'• 10 Atil E1ec 1••~ 1;_,. Uni C1111 I !" DETROIT (AP) -In a rare bit of corporate s n i p i n g , Oirysler Corp. testified l>e!ore an Environmental Protection Agmcy (EPA ) hearing lhat a General Mot o r s Corp. catalytic muffler system won't ~, meet 1&'76 emission standards. The crlUclsm breaks an unwritten taboo w h e re i n Motor City auto g i a n t s generally refrain from public one-up-manship -at least in re~ards to the cootroversy over auto entission standards. Starkman explailled t b e "reducing cataJrst" periorme a different chemical function than the "olOOi.zjng catalyst" which GM rplans to use for control of hydrocatbons end carOOn monoxide on 1ts 1975 mode1 cars. '110rtMf'\1 1cru11 Qrtllh Sc 1•., 71' All'!! Unlw 17\, 1l u11Jon S1>I ~ I 11o ··ri:,c~l~~IAl.5 c;,..l Ad'i ' 10 All'• Pia~ 6 .... UnArt Tl! SW. t h AND UTILITIES H:~n {~ 27~J 79 Aevt1 &A •Ho •2 US Ak NI 20,, 2,_. Wedn•Ml•Y en fnlt 11 11 Rival Ml ,,,, 2S US lrk L-11 ll'h Junt 27, 1973 Hamil Sr 11·1~ ll'4 Rc.td E>; 31 Jn-. Univ Fd• IS\'11 15\io 8ld All!. arfvn p 2t 311 Ro.l><"I Oil ll'• 1•'4Un Molli $ S'tr \cusnnt 21~ ?21' ••-r R 1~ to"! Rolll1>s tJ 1•'11 15~ llNJM Ho "° 7"'i IN FACT, THE GM catalytic exhaust s y s t e m developed for 1975 cars "does I not satisfy 1the requirements of I the original 1975 standards lt apparently was ailned at a statement earlier this monlh A GM SPOKESMAN In Detroit said he thou ght Chrysler might have "missed the point" or Cole's statement since the 1976 device will be different from the il975 device. <ltll Al• 1-·· lO'k """ ~ ·-Rou•e. Co ll"'° 1••,, 11anc1 Sn s~ ~ ,... •• awtll Fl ~· •.~Rowe F~t 11\li 12'/J \1111 Oy1<, 9¥o 1~ ~Jig k~ 1~1'1 1~ ~:f1'1 "11MC • • .. Aucllr Pll 17t'I 19 \Ian Sl!Cll t'A t \llltd T•I 16"-16"-,,?on ' l~~ l,~, RU•I S!o~ i1 ?21~ Victor! St 9 111 Ulvn Sa '"' ·~ fJ{Cfl c lJ ll~ s~. Ad• 61'o 6.,, Vldto Sy5 l1'11 <11'. \Jn AOl'll 10\oli 11\loo Homwd 1,_. 'Iii Sa lrm Cp • 1 114 Vlsual S.C 6 ~ ~ ArtCrfl ~ 3'AI OOVlr 19't :i8 S1msnl! lS'/f l'V. VQI Shoe II 11\lt \mEJ Lb 2 21'> Hunt Mfg 11 • 11.1,1,, Scherer J2V. :)J\l:j W;Ut\ NG 13"' I~ ) • 1 Weigh-Inn? UPI T111ptio10 Im E•Pr' S~ J5h VIII C 9 9'h Scholl Ill 2'I 21 W&l!t Ml l!WI lQ\;li. Im Flncl 11 11"1! vstir c 20\~ ~ Sco!I lt1n lOVt l1 Vo Wt•mn I 10'4 l!MI< Im Furn JI'> Ro nda Wat 19•t. 1~ S<ol!sL G 6 li•i WeiJ.11 A.• J~ '"' •m1 Grt1 )9•,o .OV. Inds Nucl ..o>.:. 21 \oli Sc•!PP• H 19 19>4 Wtldefl I at> \M rc SY 11 11 \IJ "'"'''If 6'~ 6~ Sc"PICI ' l\'o l\'!Welgl Wt 11\o'J l•I>'> Am Tele'I 22V. 21'~ Intel Crp J2 ll See Wrld 19•,. 20 Weflnq M 1dS\~ IV,:. O..m Weld 11 l JV, lnterc En s 5'1.1 Sv Merell 11''> 17\'t •ICil Pt 5~'> v,._ A.n'1._eusr •ll·' ~ tntml C1 1414 1•'• Svma•lr 25 '·'-26'i< Wst f>ubl 13~ UI/• O..nl<" In 3l• '"'" nt Alvm ·~~ S\> Seven U11 2•'• 2S Wettr F'd 20 20\'J 'l.11ac11e E 9'• ~In BllW A 6'~ 61t Sllel!r Cp ll'lo 2"-Wlll1rnt I 16¥o lA o \PS 1ricp 11 1~ 12~, 1ntrst Cp J H~ 111~ Stiorew 6 6'·• WHsn H J 11 12 CLOTHING BY RAlPH LAUREN EXCLUSIVllY AT Kevin and Bonnie Ketchum weigh-in at Chicago's McCormick Inn. For the sum- mer months, the luxury .b9tel will bill guests according to their weight. On a double occupancy basis, the rates will be seven cents a pound for adults and one cent for children under 14. Younger kids sharing their parents' room will be free. 'l.rdn M Vf 2~-2>• lre!ond R J\, 4 S!ml>5Dn 0 .... l ll• Wini PkT 1S:V. 16\'; ~rro Aul l) 1•11> Jamt$11 ~. 9'• S1>ap Toi~ S6 SJ lsc PL! 19 I"'° ol.r row Hr 16~ 1}'.', Jet AlrFr •~• 5'~ Slnd Pap IS1'. 153.li Wood Llh 16~ 11"' 'l.rvli;1a lh 9'"' Joslvn M 16'~ 11 \• Spectra 1•14 15 WCH1d S'i 9'4 10 ol.5W Ccla 16"'4 lAO <als~r St 11 '• 1n1 S!anadv I lS H"' WrlQllt w •~ ·~ 1" 'I.II Cs LI 1•'1< 15~. <atvar c .,.., ' Std R~·,s l 'Vi 1$V. Xonu: Cp 6'11.i N • ol.u!O Trn n 11"1 l(eo•n Tll 5 6'io Slk N A!! 23¥1. ,,,,. 'l'eUG Frt J7;. 31" t 3alrd Alo ,, .. 514 Kellwod 15'\'i 15'• SlkN 8rw 10'4 l lV. Z!eQlr co I aliO 3!ard Wr •lJ'o 17~ Ken Cohn" 10 1!''> Sleak N S 1:i.1 11 .. Zions Uth 771n 1' 3aker F11 371 > 3JV, Key Data 6\io 6!Ja 3aldwll L-lOl< 11~ K&v•s Fb 12 ... lJh --1-~allv M11 Jelle :tt'" Kev cus1 1'1• a 0 Most Aetil'e !Ink Bldq 16'\1 17% Kevst Int 11 l!ll"-,-,~~---------- 'Nixonburger' Book's Out 3en~ Rel 16-lt. 26'11i KMS Ind , .1,1 Barnes H ''I'• 15'4 Kn11pe VI ,, 16 NEW YORI( (UPI ) -The 10 010•1 !lassen F 241' 25'111 K"""r p la'4 19,, actlve stocks Ir~ ,.,n Ille OTC <Mrill !I av less ~. 10\lo I(-... r , ~· WedneWl\I IS SUl>l)l!ed ll'f NASO llet>line F •'io s rueger 1 ~ B Stock Ve1ume lld A1kMI cl ~ekln C11 6'4 ru Kuslm El 6""' Jlo Rank On~n 1'2,300 11 1114-,;_ !lenuv Ls ?2 23 Ladd Pet 6>io 6'1 Penn Ohl! 96.000 $ 5'4-~ Be~! Prd 33 J.t'h Lancast 17•.~ 13 lntercrfl Ind 61100 JO n Betz Lib 3'\I V:. 4!l•.~ Lance 21'/J 11\~ Clinton 011 $1.boo 1'-~ p., •. :"• 6 li'Liill 14 FASHION IQUAI! SANTA ANA • s.47-634$ GIANf 4 FOOT YARDSTICK! NEW CANAAN, Conn. (UPI) -President Nixon sug- gested fish, and Agriculture Secretary George Sc b u 1 t z recommended cheese t o housewives eager <to beat meat prices. Now, some housewives are asking ·lhe two to eat it.heir own words. 101 uses: Measure children, dogs, trees, fabrics, plywood, ·whaH1ave·you. Great for husband's do-it-yourself jobs and wives at home. An educational gift ideal for teaching children meas urements ... yours free at th e Big M where you always get an extra m easure of seIVice. (One per Jaml/y. adults on~ please.) WGID1>E~ Look at these va luab le free services- 0 Free Safe Deposit Box• O Free Photocopy Service O Free Travelers Cheques 0 Free Notary Service O Free Note Collection• 0 u'11/1 rJt11Jlifi.i119 f'C/i1nt"e « 2018 '. 2 year tmn. $5.0XJ minimum Now nearing a half-century· of service to Southern California savers, the Big M-Mutual Savings, is almost half·a·bill1on dollars stro ng ... and still growing with three new offices this year! Now 9 olfices: Canoga Park· Chatsworth, Capistrano•San Clemente, Corona del Mar, Covina, Glendale, Pasadena, Thousand Oaks, VJSta, West Arcadi a. dey In lo dey out po""1xllc- 1-fAUTUAL SAVINGS Md ~ ntOClldon Corona del~2867 Eul CoutHl--/675-6010 THEY HAVE COMPILED a cookbook with 42 varieties of "Nixonburger," including one from Donald R. Lovley of Winsted, Conn., which called for one teaspoon of Watergate to be added "when no one is looking." Lovley said ~he ingredients SlbO co 7:1,(,1 8'4 T ,awrer C 3-1,, 15\.'i Unlcaplr e n ..,,aoo 1 ~ ... .. sh Id• be { ·ed w b·t f Bio Orm 11~ 12\~ La1"1 ~oy 11 ~ ZSV. Funk seeos .i:i,.600 7~• l 'A .... ._, OU · fl lfl a I 0 Bird Son' 2•1'1 1!i'h Lf91 11e1 Pl 12\lo 11'11:. Am EllPl'"'5 u .500 u:+i1 SH!l.!. • 1 . I . ·1 Se 80!> Evns zn~ n L DtrlY 1-t 2 2l'o Fr{'lnir.lln I.I .0,1100 n;,, n'lll+ specl3 tnlefest 01 . rve Oil Booll'I No U 181,1, Lil Cllmp 7''. 714 Wasl• Mf\Qmnr 39,200 19'4 20V•+ m .. tless days Only Usually Brenco 1 22 22v. I.Inc Bd~t 6 61/; Nlel1en Co A J1,il00 31~. 32~- • Brinks In JOI~ 11V. Lion CIS1 •'I{, 5'4 --Sunday Monday Tuesday Brow11 Ar 6~• A\ Loctltt •t'llo ''"' NASO volume IOdav •.•76.6001 11:1.,1 • • • Buc~~e 11•;, 1114 Loews co Jl 5tv. 50'1: dtH;llne• 4~8, unclwtl'IClfd 20931 "*' Wednesday, Thw·sday1 Friday ~~~~~Y 51 2f~~ ,m ~:"I R~it• '!:Z 1~ ... 3093 " and Saturday." auuer M 34v. 35v. M1 1c1r.1 31•1. m~ Gainers .... Losers Cam Tag 21\0 121.li M1rll Frt 13~ UV. ..._ His e'ntry was the only in-~a1>l Sow '''-•1h M1rv Kr 75 \':t 26\o\•1-,---,----,--------,--~ _,,, VIP~ 16\4 ld!lli Mc Crnelt 391,, •1 New Yori< {U/>0 -Tilt flollowlng ' I edible Olle. ~!Imp Pl 9 f'llo (Quay U~• lSV. SflOws Ille SllKlll fhl! have g1lned '-hance A 19V. 10 Medcm 11\lo t2Y, mo.ii 1no IOSI lhe most bl•ecl on P"el'Ulll Cllanl Co ' 4~ Medllrn '6\li •7"" of cNtnir. on the 0'ltlrl·l'll<Clllf'l9r THE COLLECTION o f ~~.~. ~~ ¥6'\lo }~ ~~~r in,. 1~U 1;t! m~.~er,~ 11::~~11~i11!111c~•-=5 .,. ,-. recipes had its orioin during '"11"" Sec 1S1 167 Mlll,110o0•,, '6'1'> •1'h difference b91Wffn 1111 Pr•VIOUf lltf tJtO th A il bot> :itli u A Jl!ii 39~~ 1)1 24 2'"' price ind 1111 Curren! IMI tlld prlQt. e pr meat I ycott and Cle,,epk 9•• 9"" M~ln~ •• Fc•b 5'4 Woo GAINERS ~r c "' 13"i u• P 11'h la\.'i 1 OentoMdl Ind 2v.+ ':iii Up s.t.s followed the suggestions of CC:::~c ~ w1sr: 1~ MMo • s'n n~ »1(o 2 Como Commu 1.\lo+ \~ uo n:2 ~o I Sh 26 27 -· a 22'12 T.IV. J WlnstonNK Cp 6'i1+ 1'4 Up tt'1 Nixon and Schlltz.1be contest Cm~TI p 22 23 Mprrlsn 19'/J 20\lt • Spiral Metal c l~ ..... v. Up 11·, itself was spoosored by the :onrtiu P •1.,,.. 1,_. ~~oroa~! 1~ 1T(: ~ ~~ AE'1!c'r ~t r"f+ ~ 8: l g New Canaan Dem 0 c rat i c Cou1lnt 1S'4 16 Ntl Cn\ISI' a'!< 8~ 7 Bononza lnler • ~ Uo l ' Cr~s Co 11 1!~ 11 1.lblv 6 6.\lo B OCG TtH;hllOl'i 2 '1" Up 1 ~ Town Committee :::rutcll R ~ s NI MdlCr 9'h lO'ff 9 RavGo lricorp J I .\II U11 1 ' • :urt Noll l 2'¥1 1114 Nt Patent •'Iii s 10 CaPSowsl .OSb •'lo "1 Uo 11:E''i 'nl-~ '"--1. ;,, ..1n..1·1cated "To '.>anl rnr1 24.\lo 1~r. Nffdtlm ~ 1~ l1 Waste Mn;ml lt\'4 2'4 Up • ·i~ lA.IUll. ..., w:ru. Danrv M 7l<o a\4 Newu co 11 11'\lo 12 Com1>u1.11mp IV. Vo Up the man who has made Dart Dr11 ~·• 6 NEnv GE 16'4 1M<o 1J McMoren EKo •\It YI Up ··-r , Oeta Oil 21h 2>4 NJ Nat G IS'< 16'4 11 Cmolr °"IOn 3Vt ~. Up 11;1 o0 nleatlessness a way of life in oat .. G~n ~ 3•'6 N!co1e1 111 sv. 6Vt u N11n1 css Inc nv.+ 2'11 Up . " . ~-=t Det!S 01 7'11. 814 Nle'5'11 A l!~. 32't. 16 Nat M'ldlCare 91'11+ 1 Up 11'.lt Anlenca, says iMCS. LeStCC Oecor In 4~ 4:\!. Ni•lsen 8 311• :t2V. 17 Coml1x Com 5 + V. Up 11..1 B ks . th f . rd f th Ottlb AR •3V. AIV. Nordstr 11'11 11 lf walt180f"l(I Inc l"•J: ~. UP ll.:1 r oo in , e orewo o e ™1111 1n11 _>;>,. 6~ NWI NtC ·~~ 10 1' c111>rop corp 2'M ·~ up 119'!? P bo d · The ~lu>:t C 39 :tll'lli NDlflll co "3'1t .is 20 L1str Lhlk Cp l'h Vo Up ...., aper Un recipes. COVer O'am Crs l?'lli 1lU. Nuclr RI 11? 2"" 21 Morrl"11nc • .0 191nl 1~ Up ~ features the ~residen t g)~k A Hg ~~ ~~ ~::1 J:. st Jl-1 g ~!~!f::,enl1nc1 ~~ t! 8: !~ sandwiched in a bun with the '.llvrJ Sci 1111'o lll<o O.:ran El s"' 6'!. 2• Rad!aton Tech I~ Vo UP ..., Ooc11tet 3.~~~ :M~ O.:n;r Ml ~ ·Jv.' 26 Brul\0$ Inc 11~ 'Ioli Uo l_._2 'Words : ''Let them eat fi sh, 0o11r Gen 6~ n~ ottsll 1 Qs ,..,. 1~: . LOSERS ~-' h t ,, r)onald• '~ ~ OQllvy M 1,"'° 161~ 1 Fiblrstatlc Co IV.-'!Jo ~ r'° C eese, DU S. Oow Jon~ 30 ~ oli Fff'ro 711. a 2 Crl!KI FoodPr "'-1 ... ""'' 11'.1 l')ovle OR 11 1''' 11 Coat 121~ llV. 3 Zw!~k•r Elcet J\'--'14 0o"H ifi''.' Ounk!n D 1i• 1'1o rmonl 6,'t 6~ 4 Nuck!ar Res.: l'h-V• ~~~ LE'~ ~:~ ri::t 0Yrmyr 6'1• 6~-, ~ x~~~11J1-:1;:i ~~ ~ &:; 1' Posts Filloo "I PIM> llC~ 1:°1'\~ °"'" NA ;\oil ~.;: 7 0.:1enlc Ellplr Sl,;i-~ Off 1 $ El NYcel ••~ 5\'t Oilte Cl"O '' ,,, .. 8 NJcalel lnstrm SV.-~ Oft' I t Fnet11" C •VJ .~ Ptbsl Br >I ~ Oavl• W & W 16 -2 OffOff \lf.!'ll i:o011 S&L 11 12\'t Paccar :\4tlo 3J\loo 10 Juc:l~s lncotp 1 -\6 Off At Stellar fndustrjeS Jne. Beach, has <=:!~in A 2~ 2.. Pac Gam ln't 11~ 11 HamlltnT ws l'l\o-V. Exec" 1n •"' 514 P.c Lum iN 33\') 12 lll9'WPenn .05b ~ 4'a Ott G "''1' p,.Jnt ,.;v, J'lt. P•SO l!ll'd 7'4 av. 12 l11forex lnco.-o 61,lo-r,;, Off , 1 "'ak t.ne ~ ~"""'Pan OC<l' l'l'V. 12'111 I• N H A lnCO•P 1 '"•-v. Off !'8rlon El 2W. ?~V. P111I A.•V 1$ l J\') 1S Advan M.ciScf -~ 4'41 Off 1.J C'"rm Br 1114 l''~ P1ulty f> 314 3\olt 16 M 8 Ass«:l1t1 2~ \I, Off IL3 C'~"' Org ,.1; '1'1J, P\llst C•• is14 16 17 M&r!dltn .ll!ld S1+-Vi ii U .,.1,..,~~1 •~"<\ l~!o!i P1y N Sv Tl 13~ II Nl.t•" a . .tt 31'"'-2¥• U o( .. ,., q,, • .., ,.,,, 11 P1Gd& w 1~1.6 1,.\1 '' 0coJlncS'11'P Of Ji+-~' .., ••• T~"'" 1'"· 1• Pel lfll.H 1 1\~ 18\<\ :io R s R Co•G z:llo-" .,, 60· ''' W$'F "' ~ .... Petro Lw 6\1. 1\lo 11 8tft (Ol'P .S[l tlit-l't Ofl t! Stellar Newport oounced "'•Cl' '"~ ··~ in PkN ,Sll'i 6 1 22 Cl1>n Fc1Cp .36 20 -1,. Off - th. re.,~,;,...., ol "'" Te1eo 17',; 11\lo Ptnllrt1> 25 26"'1 23 A"'ronBros Cn 7».-'4 Off CO _ti"_,,_., o:nr""' ,, 1A Plone!' W M 1 24 Nl~l$tll A <.32 3114-2'\i Off LO William G. Kimball and FOf'e!I 01 ll\~ ll " PltM!r Ind 1~ 1 21!1 GUlf n Indus! IV.-~ OU 1,1 Martin S. Ackerman from the company's board of directors and the elect.ion of Rembrandt MUTUAL FUNDS P. Lane, Lucien Shaw andqc_,,...,..,.,..,...,...,moo;"'3Jm"""'"•""'""'""'a "" .. "" Andrew Galef to fill the three New YOl'k -=Fo1-E&E Mu 2.1• 3.1• JP Gwtti a.2s a.91 vov111 •.s, io.a 1owlrm 11 a Us! ot E1gt1 Gr 6.14 1.01 11nu5 Fd 16.9116.91 ewer1 F 6.1' 1.lJ Vacanc.les OD !he "•-11--...__....! bid Ind lsKld prl-aATOH .. IH1n Qfh 7.S6 I 22 A.In/rt 12.SO • o.>U:i.UU U\HUU. ces on.. M11t11aL HOWARD: /Han Sig $,23 8.95 !1<1lllar 2.11 2.11 Lane is,presenUy senior v:ice ~"e"'l:Ati T~.111:1 bv g~h F~ 1t!i 1g:3 ~ci;~~~oHE2;2·86 n.u ~~: ·r: ::~ ::'~ .d f Re bli Corp lncm. 6.06 j.112 Cu1t 8 1 19.9119.71 SCUODElll: FOS: presi ent 0 pu C • WldnHOltY Sotell F 6.•1 .01 Cuti 82 20.0t 22.02 lntr Inv 16.19 16.119 • • • • . • June 21, 1973 Sick Fd 12.2.S ll.39 cust Bl hl (zJ B1l1nc IS.99 is.ff Pnor to JOJJ'/lflg republic ln ADMlltALrf:id Aill~B':?'~o l::gl3:~ l~:: ~~ ~:~ r:iJ i~al ~~JJ~:~} January Lane was a director Grwlh •.11 A.$11 EPC: MGMT Oll:P: Cust Sl 72 32 2• ... bd L.... 4 JO 'tl • lncom 3.69 '·°' Eqty Gr 7.37 ••. cust S2 10:1111'.10 Sl!CURITY f"Ds: ·. and the t. · lnsurn 7.72 8.Mi EotY Pr 2.ll • . . C11st 53 1 o.1 111 EQufty 3 10 3 40 execu !Ve V I C e ... d'ilstr '·I~ 4.51 llCI Am 7.De . Cusl .$.f 3·.,. 3.9'J lnY11sf 6.S2 its president-fmance a n d ad-~!~\: ~~ 1~:i. 1~~ f,';,9J .f~ ltr. 12:66 ~~~~ ~:~ f~ i~'t,deo s~~::56 · ·stra" f 'h L · !,future 1.46 l .<16 J.O l.75 IClllckr 5 &O 6 ;w Am Shr 119 71' m1n1 won o ,~ e arwm "'GE Fd 4.7s .i.as I0.9610.961Cnltr Git! 6·77 1.2 OllP Fd 1'61 ,:,.. Groop Inc '11s111e 11.6812.S6 1.117 'ndmrk 6.16 in Spl 6hr1 12'29 IM" • ol.igh• Fd 12.~1 13, 7 • .0 l.Ot tnll Fd i 90 ito i1"llllel ;u 'tt Sh 'l.rnelP F •.3' '· 8ur• 9.11 9.171.ex GROUP'-• Se1>t1Y F lfn aw, a private investor , ~m !?~•• t . .w10. RA.1 t.u ... co Lwr 15:05 16 ... SHAllEHLD ·,..11 r. I I d. of '•mM "•'x'laE's·~· '· LITY Grwth 5.76 6.30 Com" :J.10 3.Jf was ormer y a irector ~uNos· andu:it> '" 9 83 R1t1n:h 12.,1 11.,. EnlrPr" s::rr J:"' International Indus tries Inc. ca1ita• • 1.u •'.·~1 cep1a1 11 :03 1ic) ._111rv Fd &.•3 s.n ~1e1b Fd 3.•1 .19 d ln'om t.'6 "' con1ra 8 37 .lte lnl" 7.55 1.75 I. er r 7.25 .ft and executive vice presi ent 1n.,11m 1.KJ 1ea cv 551(: 7'00 7.JI .Inc c10 6.11 1.J.1 Peo'• FL 5.87 •."2 of Bekins Co, ~~~ ~:Y ~:~ ~=If i'.H ··: ~r l .ll .... iH~CZ11siH· .. ~;.n Am Grlh S.11 a.JI t:'lerst ID S6 ll~~ 5AYLl!S: Apprc 17.73 lf,:11 Galef is a principal in the Am 1ns1n •.411 •.w Fund 1.:u 16.n c11> o" 12.:io 12.JO l"'°'", 17.09 1a.\Y ent . Am nvst '·" 4 • ..it Pvrltn f.20 111,g~ M11tual 14.32 ll.32 "l'H a.JG 9.,sJ managem COOSUlting fl.rm Am Mui t.~ 1.79 S11•m F J.tfj 4.U LOJIO A.Bl: sr Oee" t .56 '·" Or Gr. 1. & Galef AmNt Gr 2.1• ~.:\4 Trsncl Z1.13 u .19 Afl!lat 6.20 6.71 11•0•JAd 6.H 7.SI isan I . ...NCHOR FINANCIAL--Am S11$ 2,~, 3.19 !'.!' FUNDS: 1 Gal r · )s d;-~ of COllOUP' PROGRAMli: 8nd deb 9.17 10.79 Cap Stir 1.0S 1.'D e 1S 3 0 a u o;;i.;~Of t..1ota! J.12 A.52 Fin Oyn J.«·l .t4 L11tl!tm 10.2011.15 ¥"t 10.0210.M Alexander S Mark ets , ~~~'~nv ~~ ::3' ~I~ \~ t~ t~: "'vlin"~nFu9;ltit1:0·'1 ,v;1:1!ur i:~j f:a Unl·versal Mold1·ng Corp and LllCom 7.~2 7.91 Vent J.71 3.11 !~plat 3.'3 3.7~ ?m " B '·'° '·· · Vtonlur l.;,ll 11.ll htFd Va 1u.Jt 11.:J6 lncom 8.67 9,,7 ~8 l&C:~ 10.113 TO.IQ Ovation Cosmetics wa Natl 11.~1 lt.•• FINST PHn•m r.n •·'' ~o 1Gr1nl" lzl l1l 1----------·-----l As1ron 3.•5 3.77 INVESTORS: Vanllln 3.P2 4.11 :W11 nv 7.~B 1.5' ""'\Klall F 7.3l •. Ill.I Oise Fo $.OS S.s.l \11~1 Gwt 111 1.81 :w "~ G 5.91 6 . .,P '·--------------i AXt:. Urlh Fd '·" 7.31 \,1,t,SSCO: ' :-ovr In 10.9211.116 h HOUGHTON: $10<:• F 1.4 1.211 Freem 1.69 1.43 :0ttlr" •."9 4,., WHAT DO YOU WANT? Fund A •.SI 4.93 ht Mulll 8.3'1 ~.31 lndD F 7.17 1.19 i"'TP Inf! t,11 6.17 funtl 8 6.~1 7.fl FORUM GROUP: Mass F 11.16 12.23 ,.ATE llHD GllPi' StocM ~.4" 6. 6 100 Fnd 10.1110,11..,...ss FNCI.· ""' I'd ,,,7 '" ""e S<I J.\IO •.11 101 FM I.Oii I.QI MIT irian 11 91 D!~jf ···~ 1'•1 8LC Gin 10.95 11.97 Colum 7."' 1.,,_. MIG 116> 13°8J PrOQr.• '51 it1 Sabson 10.S9 10 . .sf ~ Ful'ld S.S9 5.5' MID ,,·,~ 14'~0 \I Fr Gr ,:11 'ii ~ayrot 6.96 1.40 FOii Gr •.)9 ....0 MFO n ·S6 1fr.J II Fr Inc: '30 t " 81vrll ~r S.S!i S.90 FOUNDERS MCO 11:11 u'.~ :r,.~ Str 44:•9 ,.:. 1Se1cn HI 1.9' 1.91 GROUI': \.latn Iv 1 97 l 97 1TEADMAN FOS· Beacnn 10.•7 10.AJ Grwth 5.21 S.69 """'Ile• 1n·~ 1n'i• Am Ind 2.11 2 ij. aer11tr I( 11.lt 11.19 Jncom 11 .19 1~.•9 'o\!d A m 5·o7 5·5o1 Ano FtJ 1.18 ,., tJtrk~· l .96 •.33 F Mru•I 6.6' 9.•~ 1-1 ..... y F~ 1n'o• ·11·,, ll!Yi!SI 1~ 1' Bonustk •.S4 ,96 F SPf<;ll 10.90 1!.91 \.ISS Fd 13.,. 13'34 iTl!IN ROI! Fos: BPSI Fd11 9.•0 10.27Four:i.q F tJ:• 9.D.3 11111 8nc; 91•10'1i 81lanc 10.5920.!f IHOW11 l.11 3,411 FRA~KLIN MIF Fd 7'411 i09 CaDlfl 9 n ,.,, =B~1D~K ~3Tl: 1 :n t.02 MIF' Gro •'.09 '·'1 s~ioclA.ou~4·.S[l l•:.SO 81111 Fil 17.37 13.SS Gwtn Sr 1::0 1.n ~ugm ?' ~·~~ :·;g Grwlll ~ 71 6 36 Cdn Fd 21.l.l %3.36 Fr lncm l ,9, 2.ll u m n • · lnc:om 1·00 1·n Div Shr 3.jt 3.94 us G'i S 111.00 10. Y.ut Sllrs 14..loO 1'.SO smmlt 1·117 , ... Natwd 9.1, 10.69 Utlllllt S-211 S.1 "lull Trs 1.90 1,"l Ttocllnl • · N'I' Vrn 10.0J 10.YI RH Can •.JO ,,11 .,.~, lnd11 9.27 f .21 ;yncro F ~·H t·"' 8•nhm 9.21 9.~l Rf EetlY •.06 4.ol.S NAT SEC FOS: TMA A • ,fl I... nllY •RANT, ...... CG Fund 9..JS 10.11 Fk LIEq 11 .1? 12.1s 8111l1nc 8.62 t .•2 Ttmnl 8 :·~ ;~ •• Cai> Trln 10.0210.9s Fd Mt d11 s.tl 1.ts flo"d Sr 4.11 S.il r owtr c 5·12 4 \Vhcn it com es to a phar· Cenr Shs 11.21 13.•1 FUN Dl INCP Olvtd11 l .!I 3. s Tran Ceo 1·10 1 91 m.cy We thl.nk ·that ,... CHA NNING GRO U • pl rel s o: s, ... ,. •,.,~, T••vl E'q tJJ1 10·1 • ,UNDS! Comm 1.0 9.19 ~com · · f dof H lOlP ' know what y ou cxcpct to e1111ncd 10.•5 11.42 •~c 7.0J 7.611 Stock Sr 6.u 1.0J 111~~ CG fot 1~· •ccc•·vc. Nat u-lly, the fl-t '"' s" •,,,", '1" 1p11u' tr 10,·"1,1·'7, 0."""w ••• ,•.,~ 6..9S10th c 1 3's •i • ,., '"' corn lk . ·.J7 Pt .09 .1 ., nlrl..:i 1'n , · thing Is professional att.en-Crwtll •.9fl S.'4 Gatewv 6.g1 7.31 e 11111 vt lS.5' 16.l t Vnlfund 1·.,. ;'!! tncom 6.67 7.29 e s...s P :M. l n.....i11 1n.~~ 11.~4 UNION s1:1tVic ·~ tJon and services.· F or when s~1 1,,1 1.1! '~ !iK 6.21 •.21 Side 16.39 ''·~' Gll:OUI"· • ' .• ,,1 •• hca llh Is 1·n·-lv~ vou Ventur 6.$2 1.1 GR UP sac: ''""" Mt 9.'lfl t.~1 SrdS j., 1,1,1,~ '"'' •u '-'U v CHASE' Ape)I; F s.:U S.IS'llu Cent 4,3S 4,3( Nall Inv ' · •••anl, lO bu s u re that CVC...,-805TON: 8 11 Fnd 7.16 t.60 <,1c1JWlll 79 3 1.9i U " \ 00.0131 m'· " ·~ Fnd ilM 1.n 1.49 Com Slk 10.tl \1.9S Ntwll'n 11.0fl 13,20 w';, "'1P · · thin ~ is done nnd done cor-Fron co ''ff s.21 Giii FAm 3.99 •.](; "w p, .. , ,,,?O u.~• IJNI~~~ '~ti~ · . r Cl]" Shl r Bs 6.1 1.&4 Grlll Incl 19.C3 19,G3 ~-Wld 11.'8 13.fl'I Aa:um ._17 C · v • k SP«I $.29 $.71 Guarcl 21.A 21.M <,1lrhtr• l ~.111 1A 11.1 8 d Fd 7 fl 1. In addllion \\·c t.hin you Clll!m Fd HAMIL TOH ORP: "eat IYlt l~ . .a 1~.'fl C~t iw t'o7 • I • · 1 • h•vc th• p•o •10..3.S ll.31 Fund ),% •.32 "lc:""n" < ·~ ~ ')' ""-t ~, ,·,. 10• expec ,j!j " ' ' ~ :oLONIAL Grwtll 6.U I.Cl& lm'I"~ ,,,4 , .. ~ 1-· " 13'1 1 . duct you \\'.ttnl or that y o ur FUNOS: 1nc:om s.16 6 . .i Ne" •·• 1 1~'11 ... s"fom · 4 " · I II r Conyer t.3710.t• H1r1wer t .tl t .91 -.,,. Wiii l ~,M 1S.6f v~~ ~.~ },_fl phy111c an mny \\'f c 9 p ••• f(fUl!'f 3.ot l.31 H•r• L'I !·" a,q )Pf'lltill'IM l"D: SAA c. 111 11 10.11 sr1·irit1on for. rcttdily avail-Fuf'HI t .S1 10.•1H:fdb1Q .a:i •.J.1 ·011 Ah'l'I tU lllc.A s O'lfS 10 0t10.u I !·-· . Grwtll J.)oi •.27 HlldQ• 5.~J "" Fnd 6·.·~ ,-"° Al.UE LtHi .. ~ ab](!. And. '-''lllOU Qtlf'!lt.1on 1naim 9.6'10,.MHeruo~ 1.4 1.j7 0o Tme j 7l ~''vat L~ ,.,, , 0 • ~t •1, to •· iu·omnt V1ntur ~.9$ 3.tt Horace 18.34 19.tl "'Tr. s-,· .. ~ 1n'c~ Vol 1-,·-,· y u x,...... • . ut.• . ,.. • co1um G 10.'5 I0.'5 lmor1 CP 'ii 1~.19 P8re,,,t" f )1 '" LIY Gift sn 6' friendly, dcpcndsblc I\ n d COMM~NWLTH !mo Gr 6:1~ 1.40 "•vi Rrv ,,n 1:J.1 v11 soc 2:n 3; -.,o nablc. We feel thl\l '''e TRuir. 11 1111: Id.Am IJ. '1 ~·36 Pciasus i:: •» S41 AMC!f '" t l Ii l~ 1' SI~ 1mi j·~ t·1~<>• Mui 1:113 i:Ol IANOERS: quo.lily In every way to b(' omP t r 6.3o1 6~ lnlfOOl'I ,·~2 1 'j PH!n sci 6.31 6.37 Bos Fnd '·" 1·• the klnd of pharmacy you omP co •.&O s:2• 111 ,,.,.,.st 3 '.tt o ' Phlla Fd •.02 •.60 vs corn j·" ·11 OnlOfld t161111nv1rn ~ ,.291 1~$! 10 (l) SIM(I ·i'· demand. omP Fd 1:9 1:61 "~ c9 1 '.JO 13A4 111 Tre 2.ts .• llndrt!t •· f·" YOU OR YOUR oocroR Ol'l(rd ! llt nv Gl,/d l'° 66"0'10Nl!IR l"O l "•nord 1. • .. °"' Inv 1 :1 ·H~1 Inv lndc '.!, • PIPn En ·'' 7.~ \ltnl ll>'O S.I' ; CAN PHONE US wh('n ynu l'laln t w •.tt s,11 jl'I" 801 10.t611.t7 PIOll Fd 11.2,12.uv1Flfd I ,.1 •·1 d d JI W Ill d OllMI Ill 7 06 7.06 NVEST Plonr II t .U '·" !kll't Gr .0. l n(le & e vt.ry: e W t -Olltrall 6'.t1 1:0. Cil>9m 716 7.1$ lanlld ,.Sf t.)1 iNtl!SI or ,U • liver prom"tl.Y without extrn ontr~c IJ.161 ~.23 c.0·11 '" 2:.0 2'.6.'l b~I 1>11:0 1 .411,.M •'!' ... Mu 10,"f"· .. 1 n ... s .!4 6.0I Cep l Sil $1' 'IO ICI ROWI: .1"'1 ta: I0.1 10. ch3rge. A great many peon ~ §wn 11'1 l:l! 1·00 INVEST OJ16UP'1 • rwl~ ''·ij "·ff ....... l,IJ(GTON l • I r 'h•I• health avtckl -,)2 rgs •~ 1 •• N.w Era 10. 10, .-:0UP'1 n1' y on 1l 0 ~-' ELAWA•I ' , s NO :11 s'.es Hw Hor •• .., •r.,lor 20.UU,!l n<>tru . \Ve \\'<'lcome reQut-ists tr"o!',P' •.JI 10,,1 ~e~1 ;·in 13~ ;;:: ... ~ 11·18 ~:{~ !~!;'\. 11•:t 1f;; for dcll\•M:'y se rv i ce find w F 9~-12 ,,91 sioc.I\ 11:U :_oo • ..t ro"" ·~ .01 111 Tt l\lllv .•o C'hGrs:o nccounts. i• T •.21 '·'° S.IKI .4\C.~O'M l" 10,0110.tS T-1·•' "·"I''~ aevtoh u .S& ff,M var '&v a.AO •.11 'l,rlN W•i1!1 1,1.f?' 1lli H •••ACY Drt<I Co 4-'3 .f.<14 ln'i ~ A.al S.l:I UHDS: INllll!n-l ,,~ • PARK 1.100 P A~"' §""°~ll u ... U U.1~ I _s !; C011Y11r 11).)\ It to W<~r ·j' . 3S1 Hotp1t•I Roff ,.~ e 9.91 '·'' Grwll'! J,tt •.36 ~QUi!'t' I 'Ii •• n "''' Ind ! ' ... II ,US Ollf' mi •.OS 4 U O U,1116.7~ .l,'1lld Gr .TT '~ Newport lffch 642·1510 f"' Fd 10.ll 1l.3t f'11 UI j..16 w111 10 U 11 '° """'"'"'' -'·'" '-, ~., .. , f\11 ~y 1•.ll 1.S.69 r1• $11 l ,16 1•.JI Inc I °' I.a.I rttfll~f .... ' .. _____ ... ______ ·'----" lfttM. 1.'4 !·!'hit Fnu 19.U 70;.;; 11!.V 'S1 j0.46 ............ ~ ...... . • ('"I t Al 1 . 11'1'1 Fulld ~t 6 lol Vl~!I F •.JO 0,lt .,,,.,1v1lllblt , • I I - OA!LV PILOT SC PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,.,M .. 111)11,hed Ot•"ff Co.t~I O•llr Pll(ll, Jlll)I :II lnd Jul., 1. 12, lf, 1•1l 10»-73 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ltTITloU£ BUSINESS NAMll! STATEMENT 'TIW fon-rno per-l• dOl119 l:loutlM H .,, COLONEl. eoa·s H0881E5, 1tl3 H•rllOI' l lvd., Coe.I• Mtw. C•lllornl1 ••n !(l.erltt R. Downs and Edith C. etown1, 2..00 El<l!n A~nu., CC>$!1 _,,, C1llfornl1 92611 !Ml bllsi-II conOucted b'f I QI Ml•ll pa tntr""lp, cn1rl11 R. 00''''" Edith C. Downs 1'1111 sla!-nl WIS tiled wllh IM COUn• tv·Cterlr. 01 Or1ne• county on Julie 11, nn. ··-PublllMd Ormi;e Cots! 01lly Piiot June 21, • 11w:I July 3, 12. 1911 1891-13 Tluirso.v, Ju11t 28, 1913 Darke1ied S·J~yline PUBLIC NOTICE \Vith the Pacific Northwest faced with a power crisis, Portland's night time skyline changed dramatically this week as office li ghts were turned of( to con- "'CTtTious aus11i11E;ss serve energy. Prior to lhis, lights were left burning. Left to right are: Portland Ti.e to1~!'6ir: sT~~~5EN~re 0011111 Plaza (unde r con s t r u c tio n ); F irs t N a tiona l Ban k;. Standard Plaz a and Geor g ia Pa· b1111nen 11: • cific Building. ALLI ED ADVERTISING AGENCY,,1---------''--------I~ Vlc1orl1, COSll M~a, C1llt. 92627 P•tslon lee Davis, 210 E . MOl'llWOld, l l Habte, Cali!., Bldg. 160, Suite ' PUBLIC NOTICE ltlt111rd L• Slmp~"· 210 E. Moro1.l---------------I wwcj, LI tt.Wa. Callf., Bid!!. 160, Sul11 NOTICE TO CREDITORS 1 SUPERIOlt t:OU RJ OF THF. l'flll bu1l1111St ls conduc ted by • general ST.ATE OF CAL1FOllN1A FOR pertnerih!p. THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Presltlfl Lee Devis No. A·7657t Rlcll.lrd Lft Slfl'IP$0A E1t.tl1 ot SHllU'° tlEOANI, OEtl<i ..ed Tllll·•llte~I "'as fllll'd with IM Coun-NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to th~ 1Y Clerk of Dl"•Mte County on J\IM It, creditors ot !he illllOVe n<1med clecedMlt lt11 Ille! an per.on'i having c!alms aoalnsl tilt -F·UM1 lfld dtcedent are ril'QUl•~d to Ille 111em. Published Or11111• Coasl Oally Pllo! J une will! lht necesserv voucllers, In tne ofllc1 21,.a 1NI July s, 12, 1973 J9U-73 of lhe clerk ot 1111 .ibove entlll«I courl. or -~-------------J'o ~res&nt them. "'Ith Ille nece»ecv PUBLIC N~ICE Y0\1Cher1. to tilt! ur>der1h1ned ,,i 11\e oftltt Crops Embargoed v~ of his Allotney1 MESERVE, MUMPER -f~--------~.---ANO HUGHES. 612 South Flower Street, lflCTITIOUS BUSINl!SS Loi An~les. Ci!lllOrfll~ 90017, which It the NAME STATEMENT p!"ce DI Du!lness of tne umler1lgned In till Tiie loltowlllll per.ons art do11111 matters pertaining to the 11tote ol 1ald buljnes1 n ; decedent, wllnrn tour month1 <1/ter 1111 GEERS PLUMBING, 222 Ad1m9 .Ave., llr1! pub!lcallofl ot lhi1 notite. Hunl(nvfon 9N<h. Celilorn!.i Ollled J une 21, 1913 C~rle S. Geers, lml Mfl"mllld Cr .. MI NORU HEOANI, Huntington &H ell, C1H10rnl• EiretUIO" ot the Wiii Marie E .. Geefs. 8021 M9rmald Cr., ot !he alJOve named d«ed•nt Hvntlnflton ··~ct .. Calilomi• MESERVE, MUMPER AHO HUGHES Tiil• blnllltil is cooducteo by a general 112 Soultl Flower Strttl p11rtflotl'$lllp. Suitt SllO MoOilt Blllldlng " Charles S. Geers LOI Antelts, C1HJorn!1 90011 ..?his slaternent was llled with the Coun-T11 : 42UJ 620-o:JOO fV Gl1rll. of Of&nge Counlv on Jun1 II, AUO"noy1 lor Executor llJ7l. . Published Oranlj'e Coa~t 01ily Pllol, ,.2Jt't June 21 and July s. 12. 19, 1'173 2032-73 PuDllslled Orange Coail Dally Piiot. June 14, 21 , 21. and July 5, lf73 1114-73 --------------·! PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS f'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS SUl"EIUOR COURT OF 'TNE NAME STATEMENT STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR •Tiie follv«lfl(I per90"!s .,.e dolfl'il THE COUNTY OF OR.ANGE b\flnfll as. No. A·7U1' .:::r·M Gll:Al"HICS, 1125 "'E" Vlclorl• Estate of ANOREW BAR R. Oece•~· , COiia Mt!.I 'i26]1 NOTICE IS HEREBY ~VEH IO tile •S.rry 5. Moffat!, 1013 N. C•peUa, credltcrs ct 11\1! above named dectdant <!Mia Mete, 97626 that all persons l'lilVlllll cl1lm• against 1n1 81'MrTY G. Mofl1t1, 2!113 N. Capelli, 11ald dec~enl are required lo Ille tr.em, C01ta Masa, n~. .,.J1n •t>e nl!'Cess.ir• Yc uchers, In the o"lc1 'Tli11 !Hlslness Is being cotlduclcd by en of 1ne clerit ot 111e 111JOye enUtlt:d court, or lndlvldua l. lo pre:ie111 !h•m, w11h thr nece11.irv t~ • Barry S. Molfall voucnrrs, ID lhe undt1rsl11ned o! 1190 •:.-Sl'lflrrv G. Mofla11 H.irbor Boulev~rd, Su;te 313, Co•!• Mesa, \VAS~llNGTON (AP I -The N ixon administral ion, alarmed al soaring livestock feed costs has ordered an imn1ediate em· bargo en further expor ts of high-protein soybeans a n d other oilseed produc ts. "'fhi s is a drastic action, .. Ag r icultu re Secretary Ea rl L . ·Butz told a news conference We dnesd a y. "It \vas not taken lightly ... * * * Japan Hit 01i Soybecu is 'Tiil, ~llllmenl filed with !lie' Co\lfllV Cerltornlo 9?626, which Is the pl11ce of dtrlr. of Oranoe County on Jt.1111 •• t91l. builAI!» of Hie uOOerslgned In Ill m11tters 'fOKYO (UPl J -Japan w a s BY ttierelf M, Ward, O.Wty County perl .. inin!I lo ll>e e>!il!e of ia!CI dlcedent, • J Th sd J dd ci.nt. wiltlln tour months alter th11 tors! publka· JO ted Ur ay by t 1e su en F-211•2 lion ot this norlce, U.S. embargo on exports of ~llhed Orang.e CoaSI Oally Piiot De!ed Jur;ie 26, 1?7J. • Luc111d1 M1cM11e Gul<1t1er11 soybeans and cottonseeds a n· ' ''· 21, 28. 1913 U21·1l Eiecuiri• OI llM! \'1111 al .;.--------,-,----the a!>Ovr named t1eceoen1 nOunced \V e d n e s d a y by [. PUBUC NOTICE 1tOBE1tT A. EASTMAN \Vas hington. ~ ' AffHl!IY II Law V ,,t;,.1"riOC1i •usiN"•ss' mt H11tw .....,, • su"• Ju Prices ot soybeans went up The tolio:~,:E~~!,~:-'::~ !Hlilneu ~!i'~,··,~!i =~•ao s harply. \Vholcsale r s said soy· 11. .1.n0tnt Y '"" < cutrh bea ns ~·ere S~41 in m a rke t 'PELICAN OISTRIBUTORS. 14 3 ~0 Published Oral't!le c,,.11 Oiollv Pllol, · \\' d d bl loh • Chica. suue H, westmlnSler. June ?I, and July 5, n. 19, J91J ?O'?·IJ transaction~ c ncs a y U c au1. were up by $7.50 today. HH MS Corporll!tlnn, a Ca11tornl~ co,.. ·---S be · d' b l IOl'illlon, 1616S Algontiuln St., Hun!ln11lon !'UBI IC NOTICL' oy ans are In 1s pensa e Bffl:h, ca111. 92M9, 1corP01<1le wsine~1 • i;. to this n a t ion \\'hich in1por ts 90 <1dt1••s11 r · I r Thh business ls cOflducled by • cor· per cent o 1ts supp ies ronl por~t1onHHMS corparatlOl'I NOT ICE ~o ~Eo1To11:s the United Sta tes . Th e S•nd•• $C>lro. Coro. Secrel1rv SUPERIOR COURT OF THE J apanese people feed a lmos t :ftu1 stlllemt:nl was Ille<! whh !ht Coun-STATE OF CAllFOllNtA FOR d ·1 be d • ty c.11rk ot Oran11e County on June 11, THE COUNTY OF Cit.ANGE ,, al Y on a n -<!Ur S. a m a ]Or im. FJ5t60 Es•11e of G0~06oAN-~':'~TOLlOF F, 1k• soybean product. l"ubllslltd Orange Coast Oally Pilol, GOROON El l STOLZOFF. 11l1 G.E. June 1', 21, 21, Ind July s, 19'3 l793-7l STOlZOFf, DecNSeCI. NOTICE IS HEii.E BY GIVEN to Ille t<•dl!ors cl the aDOve n"med dec11!1nt tllal 1111 periorts f\a•lng c111ms a11aln1I Ill~ ----1atd doce~flt are reQulred lo Ille !hem, FtCTITIOUS BUSINESS with !hi nt'Cessarv vouchers, in lne oflice NAME ST.ATEMENT or 11\e clo•k of !he al)Qve entl!led COYrl, or ~.fie lollowln!I pe11on Is doln11 !Hlslne11 to preien! them, wl1h tl>e nttHiafV a1.... 110Uctien, 10 the unotrslonrd a! Bloch. u!XtE W~lOI NG & FABll lCAT ION, Brlc-n~r & l OPln. Inc .. AllO"neys et Law, 1j~1 Victor•• L•rte, Hun111111ron Beach. 1'16 No. ll<oadw11y, S•nl~ A~. ca, 92101. taut. 9260 · ""11ch ls the p!,,,e or business ol the Rog.et' s. Kllisatrlc~. 1s2•1 Vlcto•!a. unde•i.i!lr>ed In a ll mol!e•~ pert~ln.no tc PUBLTC NOTICE Dollar Slu1nps Addi11 g Fuel to Mark H111111na1on Beach, C..tlt. 9'1M7 the eu11e of ukl de<;edenl, wltnln four Thl1 bu$lne1s 11 conducled Dy •n Ill· mor1111s 11ter tne firs; Pllbllc.illon of 1h!1 dltl!du11. notlc:e Roger A. Kllptlri(I( 0111Cd June 12, 1tl) T)!ls '""mtnl "'"' flied with I~ Coun-Mar111.1 A. S!ol{°''• E•etutrl~ IY Clerk of Oran11e Ccunlr °" Ju111 1•. er !Ml" Wiit of t!le Im . an.ove 11.imed dl!'C,dtlll ' P-JoWllt Bl0C1(, 1111.tCKNER & lOPUI, INC. Pubjl1htd Or•~ Coast· Dally Piiot J1111e 122• No. Bro1dwav -V 21, 21 aNI July !, n. 1~73 1fl7·13 1art1• An•, c1. n 1D1 '"' I S: PUBLIC NOTICE ---FICTITIOUS-BUSINESS T1l11>h0<1t: 1114) l )J-GJ.81 Attom1rs lor Executrl• Publlthed Or11>11e Co1111 Oally Piiot. June 14. 21, 28, and July s. 197l \84t·13 NAME STATEMENT > ---------------1 followl1111 per.on b dclPO bu1lneu1· PUBLIC NOTICE TOY WORLD. I Xll On The Mell, Buen• P11rk. C1Ufornia 90lol'O RI CHARD E. BOS,ERMAN ~ 11 SIUS Cor1U1 AYI. Wllllller, Cati!. '°63t NOTICE f'O CREOITOllS Tiiis bu•lflotSS 1, conduc:led Dy Ill 111· SUJIElllOll COURT OF THE di~ldual STATE OF CALI FORN IA FOii Richa rd E. 805serm111 THE COU NTY OF ORANGE Thi• 1!eltmenf Will IHed with lhe Coun· No, A•Jutl LOl'ilXJ N ~AP I ·-T he U.S. dollar s lumped lo record \O\\'s in Eur opean exchanges Thurs· d ay to se nd the value. of the West German mark above 40 cents for the first time. TllE DOLLAR set r e cord lows in Frankfurt and Zur ich and neared its lo"·cs l lc\1el in Paris. ln London. the British pound r each e d its h ighe s t level in relatio n to the dollar since it \Vas freed a year ago to float in line \Vilh mark et forces. In Frankfurt. the dol lar fell IV Cllr~ ol Orange County on Jufle 4, 191J Es!ate of FRANC.ES GAEBKE, De<eas· F·2S1'3 f:d, 112,.0C NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to !hel---------------- P!Jbtl1hed Oran!lo Coa~I Oally Pile!, creditors of 1tio nbov1 named dec!!den1 PUBLIC NOTICE · J une 1, 14, 21, :n, lf?l 1718-IJ th&t •II po1s0<11 118.Ylno cle!mf 1011lnst lhe s1ld deced1111t are •t<1ulred 10 1111 them. HOTtCE of PUBLIC NOTICE with the netes18•Y vouchers, In !he ollke IHTENTION TO S!ll ---------------Jo! Ille clerk of th• ellOV• etUl!led court, or NOTICE tS HE REBY GIVE N P11rsu1111t ,'-'''0US '"'''''' le 11re11nt them. wUh the ntce1t•rv •• S ··-, , ,. '"' voud1er1 to !ht undersl!IMd at n lO Norlh lo the prov isions "' etUon .,.,..,, o ue NAME STATEME NT Mlln Slt~t Sanla Ana Callfornll 92101 Clul1 Code al ,,,. Slillt cl C111llorn!a. 111111 TM lollowlng perlOn Is Going bu11111t1 whkll Ii nie piece 01' buslnei• OI r~ RITA M. MYERS Vendorf'I OT 1186 $0. •t; vnde•slo;lnad In 1111 matters pertalnill!I to Coast Hlohwty. City of L•Quna B11c11, FAii WEST FUNOING, 2ol00 W. Coasl Ille l•l•ll al Mid dtcl'de<ll withln IOU CounlY ol Orenge. Slate el Ca11!ornla, ln-HIQllwey, Suitt O, Newporl Beech, C111, ' ' !eftd 10 H t! to (lOVANELL ELIZABETH DOni ld R.. Orphey. 115 '''" Slreel, montn1 11ter tile llrtt puDlkaUon ol lhf1 Fl YNN VtndffCs). 01 1$65 c arrlbean Y/av, Ne""'°'t aeech, Cal 92660 nollet. · t llv ot L1111una !leach, Cou111Y of Orang1. Trilt business 11 CClllditettd by 111 ln-Oalll'dc~u~~J·R19~ATIONA' BANIC s111e of Calllornla. 111 th.II cer111n dlvlovel, " nerson11 o•OPf!•IY con111t1n11 9ener•1IY o1 oon1!cj It. Ort)flcy By Wt de L. 6rews11r 1111 stock in tr.,de, ttx111,.., eciulpment and Thi• sta!emcnt was flit<! wllh 11>e Coll'\· Atlll lilnt Tr11~! Officer good will cl a c~r!lln R.EAl ESTATE ly Cl1rk ot Or111111 County on June I!, E~ecutor 01 lhl! Esti1e BROKERAGE buslr>ess known a 1 lt'l, of 1he lbOYr 111mK1 decedent SANOCASTl E RE/IL ESTATE 10&1111:11 at F1S•61 M.ALCOlM E . STEWAltT \786 so. Coait Hlghw11v. City of L11qunA P'ubllsllta Or•"!I! Cc111 01ny-P1IOI W O s. Sl'JIUlv.da BoultYtrd No. 101 BNcit COllll!y or Or11nq.e. Sl~I• ol Jll'tl U, 11. ~. Ind July 5, 1913 1913.7) ~:i'it.::.~~s;, CU!lornl1 f004J Callto;nle. 1nd Thill 11'1<! 1111rch1st pr'ICI P UBLIC )';Of!CE SlP <a1 "ICTITIOUS •USINESS .AllOl'Hy fir EJKUlor 111tr.a1 "'111 11'11 pa!ri nl HI o•ctock. 1.rn. on Ille 16th day cl July, 1'13 11 MISSION PubUt!Md Or•no• Coa1f 0!111 y Piiot, BolNK Cl!y (II La(IUOI Bt&C~ (OUlllY ot Jun• 11, 21, n. ind July S, 1913 1826-ll Ore"ll~• s .. 11 of C1i11ornl1. " DA TEO: JUfle n . tt n , fol.I.ME ST.ATEMENT l'UBLIC N~ICE lollowlng ptr!IOll ll ctolng bu1ltte1lJ--------v-'----1 11111 M. Mren, Velldor aNltor troY•Mll Ellui~lh Flynn v ..... Published 0••1'4t Ju.-:n. 1173 Coast Oally Pltot, ~"-" ------1 PUBLIC NOTICE Announced Complete N~w York Stock List .. I I I , I 7 I 7 ' I I ·I Thur$61J, Jinlt 281 1971 SC DAI LY PILOT ~--''---'---'-~~~~-'-"~~-•!!'. Thursday's Closing Pri~mplete New York Stock Exch~e ~t Market Advances In Face of News NEW YORK (AP) -The 1tock market Ooated upward• Thursdsy, ignoring a declining dollar and lhe· Watergate bearings. "The market ls kind or floating upward without any vol- t.nne or sign1r1cant charllcterUllc to h," said Monte Gordon of Dreyfus Corp. "It's numbed in terms of lt.s reaction lo Mr. Dean's testimony." ' 4'Thcre's not blng in the way or news lo give you cnuse to believe the market should go up, but it 's encouraging thut it is golng up In the face of·the economic news," Gordon said. "It's coming up, not for reasons of aggressive buying, bot rather drifting upwards in the absence or selling pres- sure," . Complete Closing Prices-America1~ Stocli Exchange List Finance Briefs eweUaFcr90 • i. Spe<lal lo ... O.Uy 1'llol SAN FRANCISCO -W~ll\ Farao Bank ha rt<tlved !ederal reserve approval to enter an qreement wlUi , No r ddeutJche LllldesbOiik~ · Hannover, Germany, for a joint m.a)Otity jm'eltrDMli 1n- A111emelne Doulache Odl· AnSall, Rldmd P. Cooley. pr<tldenl Ind dllof -. offk:er, -'IWalliJ. Alliemtlne ~ Qd. Anotalt is opedal to .,,....; with Norddeutxile Kredltbook of Bremen in Septembei. '1bt . merged bank will retain it111' AOCA name and 1W1ll bt .. signif1cant factor in German 1bankiflg, Cooley SaJd . e PG&E Hike!' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) Pacific Gas and ~ Q) applied to tte Public Uti11tie.•, Commission Tuesday f o r permJaion to raise Jts nettral gas rates SlS million. Tht increue would be to olfoet the'hliil><r prlcoo PGl<E would have lo PIY for .,. purd>aaed from El Paoo Natural Ou Co. effective Nov. 2. The bill !or a typical residential cuMomer would ao up 15 Cflntt a month under tJwi new rate, a comp1ny opoknman said. e Gulf De•l Special to tbe Dally l'tlol SAN DIEGO -Acrtemtnl• for the "Pf<ldli<lloil • n JI". marketing of nuclear lutl for high t•mpcrature 1•.....,ltd l'&actor nuclear p o w er systems have been signed by GuJr OU Corp,, the Frtnch Atomic Entro ~ a ad Fmicb indW!lrlll !Inns. '!'be qreemrnt.a cover tm ..change of fuel ted>nolaiY and ntnbllsh a nuclear foll manufacturing and markttlor -· Le Soolttt Da °""" bulllble Pour llao<teun ;. • Haute Ttmpttalare In wllleb Gulf wtU ha" a 30 po.- equity. \ '• I %a DAILY PILOT Thimd11, June 28, 1CJ73 "No w111powt!r, (ha r's his troubltt." --··--------------- t Sefaool Coiarse Meditation Aid To Drug Crisis? SAN FRANCISCO ( APl - Adding t ranscendental medita- tion ,to the curriculum might . ~Ip fight drug use an10ng hi gh school students, says a . member or the beard or ,education. Lucille Abraham s on , chairman or the ·board's cur· riculum committee. said the • proposal is u n d e r con· ~ sideration as a means to com- bat the gro,ving drug problem in the public schools. { EDUCA _TION J , "It is not as far out as It sounds,·• she said. . She said a disciple of \\·laharishe Mahcsh Yogi, the • Indian \Vho gained fame as ,;~epiri tual adviser to t he Beatles. is due ·to appear before -the committee, and an advocate or the Tibelan "mind meditation" already made PfOP\""')s. echUd Care SAN DIEGO (API -Chi ld· · ·Care centers at San Diego city sCttools will stay open at their pre'3ent levels, despite an ex· peeled loss of $500,000 in federal !Ufldins, under a 1973· 7-f budke! proposed by the Board of Education. The budget -appropriates money to ,maintain 1the present program which provides child care and preschool instruction to l,100 families for $2.9 million. If nc"' federal guidelines take effect and proposed state support doesn't materialize. a · special property ~ax override will be sought . said Supt. Thomas L. Goodman. e All·11e11r di st rict could api:;ly for up tu $25.000 10 help switch to cx- pel'imental year-round schools . llodda's bill \vculd a lso free sc.me state schcol 1building aid funds to be used to conver~ school buildings fer year-round use. For instance, the money might 1be used to install air conditioners in hot areas. "\\'hat you have !here is a carrot for the districts.'' said Finance Committee Chairman Randolph Collier, (l).Yrcka J. esex Bl11s SAN FRANCISCO (AP I - An art historian is suing UC Davis, ,charging she \vas r efur ed tenure for "extra neous con- siderations" including that she is a woman . Dr. Susan Regan McKillop, who is employed part...time at Sacran1ento State, said she served on ithc UC Davis staff from J anuary 1964 urltil being denied permanent status in June 1971. Her hus b an d is a mechanical engineering pro- fessor at UC Davis, where her pa rents also were teachers. --l-- • Bill Sig11ed Capitol News Service SACRAMENTO -G o v . Rooald Reagan has signed into !aw a bill by Assemblyman Ken 1MacDonald (D-VenturaJ \lt'hich \viii allow greater flex· ibility for school districts to deal with h a ndi ca p p ed · children. The measu re permits the county superintendent o r scl;Jlols to contract l'.'ith a diSlricl or another county to provide education for the physically handicapped pupils residing anywhere within the county. The measure had bi·partisan support -Ojai Republican Robert Lagomarsino was co- SACRAMEI\'TO (AP J author -·and the backing of Local school districts \ltoo\d be state school superintendent encouraged to t ry out year \Vilson Riles. round schools under <i $600.000,,. __ ;;., ______ o;;i bill endorsed 10-0 by thc l• Senate Finance Commitiee. Under the bi ll bv Sen. Albert Rodda, (D-Sacr3.mento,, a _}l!Q'. Acquits I lnaiau DOES YOUR LIFE NEED NEW 1 n Sli ooting I MEANING SONORA ~AP) - A jury or Q nine \\'Omen and three men • has found Co n s tancio DeOcampo. a parl·h-fiwok In· dian. innocent in the fatal shooting or a Jamesto.,.,•n man at a raucous p3rly last Sep- tember. The panel d e Ii berated Ma ybe wh.tt you need is a new concept of whet life i1. It be9ins with th• Bible, whic h tells us th at God, 21,~ hours Tuesday before hand· Spirit, is the 1ourc:• jog its verdict to Tuolumne a nd subitance of life. Counl.v Superior Court Judge 'Ross A. Carkeet. .~ OEOCAl\1PO, 36, a Vallejo J anitor .. was accused in the mut'dcr o( Andrew Nelson. 20. rl>olice reported there had been ,considerable drinking a n d marijuana smoking at !he par· f.v a ttended bv 120 persons and that several fights erupted. · "I thought T would never get , justice in this little to\vn." DeOcampo said after his ac· quittal. An un der1t.tnd in9 of the 1pirituel nature of li fe can brin9 fresh4 ness to your daily experi enc e. It ha1 b rought heeli n9 to me ny people tod•y. Come and h••r Gordo n F. C•mpbell in • lively talk on Christian Sci enc•: "This· was an all-white jury. But J found out tht1t maybe "Why Put Up there Is jusUce for people like With Fe1r?" out the U.S." "" u.~ in California and through·1 IO·.lO A" S•turd.t y, June JO DEOCAMPO WAS the first South Coest Th eatr• Califomh1 defendant In 74 i Child c.,, •I Chu•ch 'years to stand trlrtl for murder after ll grnn rl i•1rv bl S High Or., l19una Beh 1..:..--.-irttwlecll4.lrHIJCL!llm .. _, ~'· ~, ·~"~' .,_...,~~~~~;;;;;;o~ / said. , Some 40 spectatflrS. mnP."' j)eOcampo's frie1ld'J nod In· dJan movement '''r"n,lhi71"", 1 were present when the verdict / wu ann;iuhCOd. · I f(icls Like To ' A_sk Andy · Adjustable 7 -foot Patio Umbrella Provides welcomed shade d uri ng hot su mmer mo nths. Comes . in o s!Orted bright potterns . ~ .... 19aa 24.11 t • '\• r \ \ Set of 3 long Handled Barbecue Skewers Jus t the thing for su mmer cook· outs. Set of three barbecue skewers with chrome plated 12 inch handles and p ushdown feature to remove food easier without burns. Reg. SSC 1.29 • • Decorative Redwood fan Type Trellis Beautiful way to support climbing roses a nd vines. knocked down for trans· porting . 6 ft . hiqh. ''•· 99c I.ft Spacious Double Size Hibachi Lorge enoug h to prepo~e o meal for th e entire family at one time, Hibachi cooking is fun, too! .... 4aa .... Electric 'Crock Pot' ... The Slow Cooker 3Y2 quart model ... the per· feet size for a family of 4 to 6. Cooks o variety of delights slowly. Recipe book included. ' ~'.l• 14aa • ••• l R~lax ·and Enjoy The Holiday More Plush, 3 Inch Thick Chaise Lounge Pads Thicker and, plusher than most, · these pods ore so comfortable to lounge on. Prints or Solids. ' long Handled Garden Tools by True Temper American mode quality. Bow rake, pointed shovel, or hoe. Toke your piek ri~ht now. I~! Features tw in trigger dual control system .for indepen· dent throttle actuation. Qui· eter, too. 11995 Ice Cube Tray Makes Giant Cubes Unbreakable plastic tray a l· lows you, to rempve one cube or on entire troyful. 6 colors. Germain's Rose Guard feeds And Weeds Trip le action Rose Guard feeds, weeds and kills in· sects, too. A balanced fe rtili· zer. 5 lb. J49 Black & Decker ShopVacwm 2Y.t" diameter hose, recton· gulor not.tie, adopter fqr · 1 '.4" access.cries. Picks up dust, debris, wood chips. ...... COSTA MllA 2999 s.Gol. Sl11 7 ' I .. -- ----·~---- N.Y. Stocks Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION \VOL. 66, NO. 179, 5 SECTION~, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNlA THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1973 TEN CENTS Citizens Speak Out on Arch ]Jeach Community' I, 7 By JACK CHAPPELL Of lie Dl>ll't l"llef Steff Twenty.six speakers trooped to the Lagui:m· Beach City Council microphone and 175 persons watched or listened. Ardl Beach Heights was called 1 everything from "a bomb with a fuse in it'.' to potential ghetto and a "beautiful view community" where one man said he planned to builtl a $250,000 hom e. While most of the people finally were to agree on the necessity to study and at; tempt to solve legion problems facing the hilltop community, they divided into two camps when it came to discussion . of Stopplrig building to allow planni ng for future de velopment. On one side was the Arch Beach Heights Association , rnc., CABA), which SUPPQrted the moratoriun1 on new hous· ing construction. Opposing the mora torium was the Arch Be:ach Height s Lot Owners AssoclatiQ\1, described as a loose-knit group by the lot owners' attorney Thomas O'Keefe, v.ilo is also a San Clemente City councilman. "Arch Beach Heights is a bomb with a fuse in it and we're sitting on it," said Douglas Whitaker of 94.1 Summit Drive. \\i'h ita ker, a member of the ADA board of directors hit the "mushroom lng or permits and mushrooming of building" on the hills. He supported !he recommendation ol the Laguna Beach Planning Commission and planning stQ:£f for a moratorium * • while plaming is undertaken. ~·we ask the council 110t. to <Submit these rec9'hmefldalions to a m'ilarily cooteM.," Whitaker said. ''1'1ese experts have no vested . in· terests other than improvement of the quality ol li!e," Whl.taker &aid. O'Keefe said he represented property owners wbo \\'ere not necessarily resident& ol the.community. He saisf the idea of a moratorium came as "something Of a shbck" .f(). property · • owners planning development. 'fit's a normal conflict between those who have somet hing and want to pull up the rope, and those who don't," O'Keefe said. ''I'm sure if 1he plan (ror the dense Arch ..Beach subdivision} "''ere to be p_r.esented now for approva l, I don't think a city in .Cali fornia would give approval." O'Keefe said. '.But, he said, the nature of the develop- mElflt was what "adds to the charm of una e 1vers $1 Million Swindle Alleged A Newport Beach firm engaged in a fiberglas8 boat manufacturing promotion is aU~ged \9_j:lave .swindled investors out of more than $1 million, the Orange Police Department said today . Five men have been arrested in con· nectkla with the operatioo which aUeged- , ly was carried on tbiOughout California and· in Arizooa, Texq 'aDd South Dakota. -. Jailed by Oranle D01i<e Wednesday and today were Lyle A'. Swakford, ~7. ol ~ Coata Mesa Sl, Coata Meta: Keith Can., 41, Sula Ana; Jabo -Ford. 471 Tustin: John Freeman, 47, Lakewooa llld WIJliam Smock, 45, abo -as A. J. Scarbrough, of Anaheim. Orange investigator Dennis Dahlke identllied the fltm Natioaal Marine lndustn... He aaid~t moved to 'Im Campus Drive, Newpcrt Beach, from Orange about two months ago. Dalllke said a lencthy investlgaUoo started when an Orange resident told pol~ be had been chealed out of f14,000. 1be Orange detective s a i d in· vestigalors turned up eight additional vict.inu io Santa Ana, Lakewood, Santa Fe Springs, San Diego, Phoenix, Dallas and Rapid City, S.D., who alleged they had lost more than $116,500 in in· vestments made through the finn. Dahlke said he had uncovered evidence which Indicates there may have been scores or victims who may have lost more than $1 million. The detective said National Marine fndustrieii operated under aevera1 other names and placed ads in 1 o c a I newspapers inviting investors to becom-; ggociates in the production of fiberglass kayaks and Other small boats. Prospective investors were invited to lunch and told how they could participate in the operation as mold bul1ders, hull and deck builders or as assemblers and detallera. Company representatives are alleged (See SWINDLE, Pqe Z) • Merchants Complain· Park_!ng Spaces·' I Return Planned A complaint by Laguna Beac!l South Coast Highway store owners about loss of highway parking prompted the City Council Wednesday to try to undo what it has just ordered done. At issUe ·are left tum Janes recentty ordered painted onto South Coast Highway at Thalia and Cress streets. To put in the left tum pockets, removal or ..... c:urllltde JIArl<lng .was '"Jutted. said Public Works Director Al ~ In all, to spaces were Scni6bed. Reoenily the city decided DO! all those had to be rm.oved and 12 were replaced. Wednesday, ~I told the council if the city wanted to pay for sandblasting ol.f the new left tum lane striping, the state highways division would litely allow smaller left turn pockets with sharper curbs in the roadway. Seven more spaces would be picked up, Thea! said. . . The divis ion of highways actuaJly con- trob marking and . signalization or the highway, Thea! explained. The state bad been pushing for Jeft tum pockets for some time, he said, and it eagerly jumped when the Lagwia Beach City council asked for the left tum lanes about a month ago. Removal ol the lane was different mat· ter, Theal said. Having once got what it \\'anted, the .highways division wasn't likely to approve removal of the left turn lanes, be said. FBI Chief Greeted KANSAS CITY (AP) -About 100 persons greeted Police Chief C. ~1 . Kelley at Kansas City's airport on his ar· rival Wednesday ni ght from Washington, where the Senate had approved his ap- pointment as director of the· Federal Bureau or Investigation. l\terchant s say matter ol Parking is critical to their busineSses. The council supported requesting removal of two new teft turn lanes and replacement of all parking spaces until altern ate parking. areils can be arranled. It also ordered Tbeal to san<fblaat df some of tbe parking control markings which establish uniform spaces along the curb. ~ CiUICll;~ Ml't= cars Could s(Jileeie Joto un . te cyr~de areas: -.. ~rr· -. • Laird: Nixo.n Will .Answer All Questw11s WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will respond to all questions about the \Valergate affair toward the-t:nd of the Senate's hearings, White Rouse counseJor Melvin R. Laird \\'35 quoted as saying in a Washingi.on Post interview Wednesday. Post reporter David S. Broder quoted Laird as saying Nixon would not "re- spond to every witness" but would answer REINECKE CONTRADICTS MITCHELL-Story, Page 16 "questions, all questions . . . at a press conference when we get near the con. clusion of the hearings." "I I Li1110 Mystery Broder said Laird, fonner defense secretary and recently a p p 0 i n t e d domestic affairs adviser to Nixon, reported havlng talked about the tirlling of a press conference with Nixon. "I think he's willing to do that ... I don't think there will be any problem with that," Laird said. He also strongly hinted that While House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler will be replaced as the President's spokesman at some point, the newspaper said. Although not directly implicated in Watergate crimes, Ziegler is considered to bave lost considerable credibility tllroogh his handling of Ille scandal. Newport Car Not for 'Big Wh~el' By L PETER KRIEG Of .. Diii ....... ...,. With the P,resldenl or the United Stat.. down the coast In San Clemente and his former chJf:f of staff srecluded just across Newport Harbor, all of Balboa was sure it was getting Into the act Wednesday . A Uncoln Continental limousine was parked at the curb at the RendezVous Condominiums on Palm Street. Tourists gaped and peeked inside as they passed by. The customers of ·the Red Carpet tavern across the streil Ne ·w Laguna Mall To Hold Ope1iing Lagult{li "'Beach's newest· collection ,of shops and busine88, the Forest A venue Mall, will have lls grand opening begin- ning at 10 a.m. Friday. Merchanu throughout the :it-shop mall; 332 Foreal Ave., will welcome LaguDll residents till 9 p.m. Friday and from 10 •.m. to I p.m. Saturday. The ftlG0 ,000 mall, built by Beach Construction, !eatum ancular design,· rough wood exterior, tlnttd &leg and widesprea d landscaping. ,, buzzed in lively speculaUon about who the car belonged to. . After all, it wy the Jtind of car made only for the govetnment. It has red lights and flag mounts. Its distlncUve Washington, D.C. Ucense plate heirhtened the speculation. '!be speculation ended today. Tbe llmou3ine beloogs to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Spiel, summer residents of Balboa. They tive in Riverside and. own two McDonald's hamburger stands. "Oh, 1 didn't even think about it when I Jen. it parked there," Mrs. Spiel said, relaUng lhat she had just come to town to get her condominium r!ady ror the surnnter. . She said the femilY bought the car a year ago from the Ford Motor Company and, yes, Jt had been in aovemment service. "lt was a Presidential limousine on loan to the head of the United Nations," she said. Mrs. Spiel explain«! that she and her husband are Uncoln collectors. Tbey hove JO of them. This Is their !OC!)nd limousine. "We had a Umooslne from • Hollywood studio," she said, 1100t It was a mess. It had eqles on tbe door and a purple and yellow St"' ol Oavtd on the roof." "The dealer in Riverside knew we were jSee UMOUSINE, Pqe II • A spokesman in San Clemente, meanwhile, said the President took no part in writing the memo accusing John W. Dean UI. of masterminding the ~'atergate coverup, and it should not be regarded as a definitive White House statement. according to a spokesman for (See RESPONSE, Pap ZI Garbage Me1i Take 4th Off Tbere will be no tralh pickup In Laguna Beach on the Fourth o! Ju- ly. Trash collection n o r ma 11 y scheduled !or Wedneocloy will be made Thuelday; Thuraday's trash will be picked ;y.~: and Friday'• wUI be up Satur. day. "If your ptck tlp clay fall s Oti' a Wedneoday, 'nlundly or 'Frlday, your plek up day w;u be one day laler,'1 said Maurice LIV!goe., public oervlca laopeetor. • • ' t.., • I . Otlil'I Piiot Shoff l"llet'I N_ose' 'Joli -· Artist Ei:l . Van Deusen of Laguna Beach works on his female statue iii. plaitic loam. Called "Forever and Never," she would be 25·feet tall if she were real. The art and.other works will be on displ ay at the rustic Sawdust Festival in Laguna Canyon from July 12 through August 26. · · $3.4 ~fiHiott Balanced L~na. Budge~.Unveiled . : •'\; :.. . '• " .. ' A ba,lailced 13.4 million Laguna Beach mwilcipal budgeJ was proposed · in prMiminary !form before Lagun3 ~ch city councilmen Wednesday· at a special hearing. Ttie budget anUcipates receiving more than $3.5 million. in income, giv ing the ci· ty a pad of $1.13,000 not committed to specific expenses. Finance Oflicer Tom Meade told the council ' the budgt.'t spending represents "nolhhlg more than the city has now." It ma'inlains only the CWir.rent level of city service, Meade, said. But he noted that the spendihg may be' .i6terpreted as "g~ ·bacQanl." Meade' esplained that. 13 positioos In the city are now ·filled ·with • PEP elnpioyes;' ,whose Salaries are1 defrayed by .~JVVemment ll'llllU. , 'lbati (1<1111am witt·. la~gely end In Nov.om~ Dtttmber and those ad- dlllGnll,~ wtll·elther ·have to be ·"""'"'4 .............. ol st ... 1 .. lowered, .Meade ul4 J • ., 'the~ aet lt• next bud8<t meetino r.. 1:!0-.. ,.. July u. with ...anoth<r &e$81on •at I 'l.m. July 28 fo11 further · M!nmg .t the speftdlng program. Adop. • • lion ~ired J!y l)lid-August. , •'l'h" im.H liscal \ludlet 11 up about '431.fp Oller !••! year'• ~sper.ct.ln& plan. Meade said ·tllat due lo . aome transfers I ~ • . '. froin varying accounts the amount or in- crease wa~ actually 4.5 percent. He said the budget anticipates a five valuatioD is determined by the Orange valuation. The city \von't have assessed va1uation figures until July. If the assessment rolls return less than 5 percent , a higher hike in the tax rate may be necessary, he said. Property tax is determ ined b y multiplying the assesssed valuation by the council-set tax rate. The assessed valuation is determine<: by the Orange County assessor. The .current city tax rate is $2.06 per $100 assessed valuation -$206 yearly for the owner of a $40,l)X) home assessed at a quarter of its m:1rket value. " · ·Medjtation Lecture . ' Slated for Laguua ' A lecture on..l'ranscendental )itedilatlon will be presenl<:<( at 8 _p'.m . Jury 6 ai lhc Laguna·Moolton Playhouse. 606 Laguna Quiyon R<ind. ., · - The le<ture wtll be pr<scnted by Dr . Wauer Koch. nn asl ropbyslclst. wtio will diacuss Mneflts or regular practice or mcclltatlon. j. . J co mmunity ." lie characterized the hilly, close-packed housing or Arch Beach with that of portions of San Francisco. O'Keefe suggesled the C<lUncil consider requ iren1ents for fire retarding con· · struction. architectural control, and flex- 'ible bu ilding standards rather than a nioratorium, ho1,·ever teint)()rary. Mayor Charlton Boyd asked O'Keefe ir th e attorney could abide "'a single bit or temporary ." O'Keefe said no, calling a (See ARCH BEACH, Page %) • Arch Beach · Moratorium i Threatened The Laguna Beach City Council \Vedncsday told quarreling Arch Beach J~eights factions they have 60 to 90 days to come up with solutions for the heights' ·problems, or the CO!JllCil will likely im-· JXlse a building moratorium and order a staff probe of the area . ' Council action rcame af:ter a lengthy public hearing attenied by an estimated · 175 perS<>nS who overflowerl Ille couneil I chambers and siood Outside ltstening to ' loudspeakero. The meetlng was generally orderly. · · · ·-' • ' 'RepltJLlitartJM ot W "'N1bis An:IL· Beach Hei ghu inte<ests planned to .- at 7 o'clock tonight at city hall to initiate work on commJttee orgarrization. The suggestion for the citizen·led in· vestigaUon came from John McDowell,; planning commission chaimian and Wayne Moody, director of planning and development. "I think we could avoid a moratorium.! But, jt's going to be up to the people i.n ' Aroh Beach Heights to do it," McDowell I said, adding that if within the determined amount of Ume, no. progress .had been • made "then we're going to have to insist ' on a moratoriUm." McDowell's suggestion was eagerly 11p-! plauded by councilmen with Vice Mayor · Roy Holm noting tbat the city has had very good luck with citizen committees assigned to study specific subjects. , "This does not mean the planning com .. J mission is passing the buck," said Mayor ! Charlton Boyd.. , ··The citizen is king in the political arena. It is no solution for the council or planning commission lo impose a plan ' for your cornmwiity," Boyd said. "The people in Laguna run their government," Boyd said, stating1tlat the i council's action was based on the "assumption that you people up there on the hill ca n work together ." The counci.1 pledged city support and direc ted City Clerk Dorothy Musfelt to make the mailing list of property owne rs available to whatever Arch Beach Heights committee emerges. The council also unanimously ordered stiffer enforcement or the no.- conslruction-on-weekends ordinance lo halt illegal building. "The city is not leading you. you're leading yourselves," said City Manager Lawrence Rose . Orange Ceut Weatlaer ~1ostly su nny in the aUemoon hours Friday, following the usual low clouds aloog the coast. Highs in the 70s at the beaches, squel.'k· ing out 80 degree readings inland. Overnight lows in lhe 60s. L~SIDE TODA 'f Ora1ige County 1uperoi.!or1 have adopted, juit btfore the Jto1e 30 .s;to te deadline , a re. vised open tpace plan w1tli mioor cltatigei. See Page 9. ...... ''" " Allll L-*" n ... .... n -"· ~:':"iJ • MlttU•I P-111•• H ..... H•llM91""" •• 14 ·<:t,• .. "'-~ • c ·-" sw•• "'" DHtJI N9tka -· Sllell ,._,,,_.. "''' ................ • Tfkl\11 .... " •lltlft.s.Mflt " T'°'"" " ·-..... ·-• ,.91' tlM llKll'f • .,...,.., ....... '"'~ --... .. ·--4, 1• ----· MRS. SPIEL, THE LINCOLN 'COLLECTOR, AND HER FORMER GOVERNMENT LIMO In 8.tlboa, Tongues Were Wagging and 1 Restaurant Own•r Was Furious Family Style From Pagel ' . .. .. . 2 ·Children Undergo LIMOUSINE. • • looking for another one so \\'hen . this became available, he called us," she said. Surgery; ? More Wait Mrs. Spi el noted that Ford lends the cars to th e government and sells the m \vhen they're taken out of service. .STAi\'FORD (AP J -Tv:o ~h ildren \Vith iilherited hca'rt defects u n d e r \V e n 1. delicate corrective surgery this morning, \vhile their two brothers awaited iden- tical OJX'rations scheduled later today. ! Surgeons hope th e family-style open ·hea rt operations will give the fun.loving : children another 15 or 20 years of life ex- r pectancy. 'Karen Costello. 4. and Richard. 15. entered adjoining operating rooms at E1npty Bzis Just One Clear Case Of 'Dog-jackin.g' 1\!IAMI (AP I -A Gennan .shepherd named Duke con1mandeered a city bus. forcing out 25 passengers and standing off the driver and police for 30 minutes. "It was a clear case of dog-jacking," s;lld witness Harold Lee. Duke jumped on 'he bus Wednesday, apparently to escape ~noisy thunderstonn. He leaped into the seat or <lf'iver A. L. Rivera . _"The operator reached his hsnd out to pct the dog," said Miami Transit Authority Supt. F.M. Fieber. "The dog grabbed hold of his hand but did not break the skin." "The oPerat.or then removed his hand , hµnsel{ and the 25 passengers, leavin g the bus to the dog," Fieber sajd. 'Duke refused to budge until police located his ow ners, ~1r. and 1\1rs. Rolan- do Rodriquez. 'ffiey coaxed him ou t. Witnesses sa id Duke was waiting al a -eorner with would-be passengers. But "1hen the driver opened the door only tbe dog got on. \Vitnesses said the dog just sat in the driver's sent looking out the window. Rivera flagged down a passing bu s, and the other dri ver shouted, "What hap. pened?" "A dog took over my bus,·• Rivera replied. Police arri\1ed in three squa d cars. ':They took one look al the dog and stop- j)ed in their tracks,'' Lee said. One o(fi~er reasoned that •·jf you've got a dog on the bus , I guess the best thing to do is to keep him there.'' FinalJy, Duke was recognized . officers found his o"'ners. and bus No. 139 .,.,•as back on the road. 30 minutes late and empty. The passengers .... ·ere transferred to another bus. "Duke is a \\'Onderful dog, very gentle," r..trs. Rodriquez sa id. "But he is very frighlened of storms.·· OIANGE COAST DAILY PILOT TIM Or•not Co.st DAILY PILOT, wtllt wl'llch 11 comblfl«f 1"41 N-.,.PrlQ, 11 pUbllal'lllCI b't' "'-Or..,.1 CGilll Pllblillllng Compl11y. S.p.. rite .clfllonl •rt P<lblltll«I, Morlcl1y lll•~h Frld,ly, I'll< Cosl1 Mftl, NtWl'Or1 8ud1, H1111!1"111t11t1 • e1ac:IVFoun1arn v1111..,., U1u111 9'1(11, 1,....1.,.fSllcldl•IHtk lllO S111 Clementt / ™""l-1"111lsh"1110. "' 11"91e r901oN1 edillort !1 pUOli1htd S.tunl11ys end Svnd10. The prinelp.<11 PVt1l11hlnQ pl111! 11 11 JJO W~1t II•~ 5TrHI, C0111 M111, Cllllorn1,, mu ltob•rt N. W11d JIOrnldtnt Ind Publll/\11' J•(• R. Curl ey ll o<f Prfli<leril Ind GtMr11 M1n1g9r Thom11 l(,,,..a E"t ltor Thom11 A. Murphl111 Mtflltl"9 l!tlUOt Ch1rl11 H. Lo" RJch1rd P. Nell Anht1n1 MlllfOf"lll Edltor1 i..t-..... Offk• 222 For11t A ¥111111 Mtili119 Adctr1111 P'.O. 101 6116, t 26S2 --Call• M-1 :ult WM! S.'(I~ N ........ l lKll: UN N""""°'1 IOll ..... l•t tt""'.,,._. l fft h: 1117$ IHd'I 11111""°.,' $M1 ·C'-11: J0$ Ncrnll El Oimlno 'IN! , ... , •••• 171-4) 642~111 ct ltt.tll A.twrtla ... 6'42·1671 &.e,.M .._..AM 0.,.-.11 .... ts r , •••••••• •••·t466 (#Vllfl!I, 1t7i, Otll'lfl C01.i PUOlllllll'IO ~. Ho -'"''"· Ulut1r11-... ....... _.. tr M>1r1(..,,_ r.trtlfrt I ~·Stanford Unive rsity ~ledical Ce nter for operations that coul d take as long as three hours to close holes in their heart chambers. Their brothers, David, 18, and Kevin,"' 13, also will be operated on by Dr. Norman Shumway, a piooeer in heart transplant surgery, and Dr. Edward Stinoon. a veteran member of his surgical team. 1: A hospital spokesman said all four children of Santa Rosa truck driver David Costello were "very nervous" but eager for the operation described as ·'serious but fai rly routine." The ch ildren all are suffering from atrial septa! defects or holes between their upper heart chambers. The defects limit the circulation of blood and oxygen ito tissues and organs, causing the children to tire easily. The defect was passed on to the children by their father. Little Karen also is suffering from a hole in a major vein to her heart, a con- dition that also will be corrected by surgery tod~ay. If the holes are small, doctors planned The Spiels' Lincoln limousine is a 1969 model. Jls windows and-doors are bullet proof. But the Spiels use it just like any other family car. 1be ch.ildren sit in the back seat and watch the built·in television set. They sit on lamb carpeting. Mrs. Spiel said she was an official in the Rivenide election campaign for President Nixon and booght the special lice:ise plate for $15. It's good for one yeat. She said the car was used during the election campaign to chauffeur dignitaries visiting the Riverside area. While the car impressed m o s t observers. it' didn't do much for the pro- prietors or a local restaurant Tu esday night. Mrs. Spi'el confessed she had left it in a private space belonging to the Mackerel ' Flats restaurant on Main Street and came back to find a nasty note on the windshield. "It said if we ever parked there again they'd have it towed away," Mrs. Spiel said. Emigration Okayed to stitch them closed. If they are larger KARACHI Pakistan (AP) _ Pakist than a quarter, surg~ plamed to .. '. . ~ make a patch of• membrane from tbe1 said t.oday > )t,1 ftl'lll allow 4SO. l*111'J pericardium , or sac surrounding the students, seamen, and others to emJgrate heart. to Bangladesh. More than 100 pints of type A-p:15itive A Foreign Office spokeknan said tlie blood were donated for the surgery which move was the beginning ~ a limited was expected to require about 30 pints. The children were to be taken to the in-scale repat.riation of Bengali! stranded or tensive care unit af.ler surgery and re· detained in Pakistan and ol Pakistani main in the hospital about 10 days. prisoners held by Bangladesh. From Page I ARCH BEACH OPINIONS • • • moratorium an "extraordinary remedy." Judy Swayne of 1159 Noria spoke as a representaive of the League of Women Voters. "Arch Beach Heights is in a state of crisis." she said. blasting ''rapid unrestrained growth" in the heights. \Vayne f\.1oody. director or planning and develo pment. had opened the discussion 1vith sla tistics of growth in the area. Arch Beach Iicights now has 326 residences., up 29 io the last si x months: 38 homes are under constructinn: 38 a"·ail pe rmils and 92 are under plan check, Moody sai d. lie said the area has 1020 lots suitable for building. and that between 1968 and 1972. half the si ngle-family residential build ing in Lagu na _Beach has been in Arch Beach. In the past, lhe planners have held that unless buildi ng 1vas stopped while plan- ning 11'as under \1·ay, in tervening con. struction \1·ould com promise whatever proposals 1vere drafted . Mrs. Swayne said the League supported the moratorium as a "fi rst step in the planning process .. , Ron Good ma n. a partner in the Los Angeles firm which underwrote the $400.000 Arch Beach sewer and road im- provement bond issue, told the council the financial credibi lity of the city of L<.g una Beach 1vns at sta ke . Goodman said his fir m sold the bonds on lhc assuran<:e <>f the city that all the ~ites bonded were OOnafide build ing sites. The mortitoriu n1 would alter that, he said . !·le said the city or Laguna Beach has "a fa ntastic cred it rating ." But that the city's credibil ity would be endangered if the moralori um \VCre enacted. He said there was great question as to whether a bond buyer would have purchased a bond secured by property v.ilere if forec losure were necessary he 1vould "end up v.·lth a piece of property that 311 you c11n do is pay taxes'on.'' Vice mayor Roy Hol m said that might be the case with a pennanent building freezt, but not wil h a temporary one such as the council was considering. we told there was 3 problem'?" she ask· ed . She said that she and her husband had sold their other home and were caught in an unfair squeeze. Don Arcoli of 1126 Skyline Drive told the council he had sunk all his money in a lot, and would not be pennitted to build under a moratorium. Arcoli said tbe city should look at the dense Arch Beach Heights subdi vision il inherited from the county as ''a mistake" and resolve not to let it happen else'Ailere. 1'1ayor Boyd likened the density of the community, and its problems to those of ghetto areas. "Surely you are not unaware of ghet· tos. You probably have some idea of how they're created ," ,,.1ayor Boyd said. "f never saw anybody in a ghetto who paid $60,000 for a house." Arct1li coun- tered. Reg Anderson of Ne1vport Beach told !he counc il he has owned Arch Beach lots since 1929, and that although he had no Immediate pla ns for development he thought hardship cases ought to be con- sidered. Anderson testily asked l\toody how long a moratori um would be needed. "No way am I going to commit myself , . . ""1oody said b e f o r-e being in terrupted by catcalls and hoots from the spectators. 1\1ayor Boyd quieted the crowd and f\1oody continued. "The length of ti me depends greatly on the am ount and complexit y of study. It co uld run the whole range from zero to four months," Moody said. He said four months would be the upper limit. Philip May, former president or ABA, termed the situation one of "money versus people." He referred to a report issued by the fire department on the hdzards of a large 11cale blaze, and the dense nature or the community. "The health, salety and wcllare of the community should come flrit," May sa id. In the end, 17 persona spoke against iht moratorium, seven &poke in favor of it. and two 11X>ke sideways to the Issue. The council decided since everyone Ervin ~aiting Nixon· . ,• Aimed at Forcing President to Testify? . l .... WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen a le Fourth AmmdmeDls lo the ConitJlutloa. "1 olher 1'llhlllbtl from IOlllmony by Water8'1e Chalnnan Sam J. Ervin Jr. Question• by Ervln at the fourth day of ted White House ~ l)ean: cbtJlengfld today whether President Nl.x~ Dean 's testimony appeared aimed al -He kept no notes of most of hl!I on dJd anything "to perform his duty to challenging Nixon to testify on the eetlngs with Nixon beCause "some of see that the laws are faithfully ext!Cuted tbingl that were being said in these in respect to.the Watergate arrair." NIXON 'ENEMIES' REACT eetlng1 ... "!!K'e very incr!D'liriatlng to The Nor~h Carolina Democrat attacked TO LIST-Page 4 President.' certai.tJ White llouse statements after He believed, '1I was a restraining in- winning acknowledgement from John W. \Vatergate scandal. Later, committee n nee at the White }louse. There were Dean III that some presidential decisiocs cowisel Samuel Dash said the question of many wild and crazy achemes, '°me or and White l1ouse actlo~ not related to whether to invite the President to testify which I have not testified lo." He was the Watergate violated the Fir$l and had not been re90lved. oot asked to elaborate on lhe ad*met.I * * * Paper Claims Sen. Montoyct Fund Misuse NEW YORK (AP) ..:. The Wall street Journal said today that Sen. Joseph Mon- toy a (D-N.~1.), used dummy committees to hide the sources or contributions to his 1970 r~lection campaign. The newspaper said that as a member of the \Vatergate committee, "Montoya will be silting in judgment on Republican tactics that he himself has condoned." The Journal article said that "through the dummy co1nmittees, Montoya fund rai sers routed contributions that might have generated political problems for the senator had they been disclosed. In Htis \ray. they laundered $57,000 from various political-action arms of labor groups ... as well as $45,000 or so r r o m other special interest groups." The newspaper said Montoya declined requests for interviews about his fund raising. New-Mexico law, the Journal said, re- quires iund-raising committees for a can· didate to rep:>rt receipts and ex- penditures with the secretary of state "'ho has inle11>reted the statute to 'include all oon1mittees ,raising money for the candidate, no matter where they are located. The newspa per said the only report fi l· ed by the ~1ontoya organization was that of the New 1\1exico-bascd group. It said the campaign treaswer. Jack Beaty, sel up at least seven other commi~tees in Washington. "1\fr. Beaty opened bank ac- counts in the names of the committees," the Journal said, "but in every other respect they were phony, having no of· Uce, no employes, no phones and no members.'' Closing Urged Of Sari 011ofre The San Onofre nuclear ~w plant is one of 20 that lawyers for Ralph Nader today asked a federal judge to shut down. Arguing in U.S. Disbict Court' £or the District of C.Olum bia on a suit filed against the Atomic Energy Commission , attorneys for Nader and Friends of the Earth claimed that a score of facilities in 12 states had failed to take adequate preca utions against the possibility of an accident that could spread radioactive death for "dozens or miles" around a plant. Cos1nos 576 Launched MOSCO\V (AP ) -The Soviet Urtioo announced the launch \Vedne5day of Cosmos 576 , latest in its top-secret series of unmanned space satellites . From Page I SWINDLE ... to havf told investor~ ~f huge profits availab e through eXJsting outlets for their fi ished products. Dahlke said, in reality, no such outlets were available and the products were not 1narketable. As soon as the company salesmen enlisted as many investors as possible in a particular area they would then move on to another location and operate under different names, the Orange detective charged. Victims of the firm had to buy thelr own equipment to manufacture the boats, he said, with a $5,000 down payment re- quire.d. Lagtma Chooses Coordinating Council Officers Officers to guide the activities of the Laguna Beach Coordinating C.OUncll for the next 12 months were elected Tuesday night. The following slate was unanimously acttpfed : \V:iyne Baglin, president; Ken- neth \Vood. first vice president: Jess f\1cridew, second vice presi dent ; C3therine Kiester, recording secretary; Anne Campbell, co rr e sponding secretary: George Fowler. treasurer. and Lida Cravens. James Dilley. Neal Hopkins. Bunny hlanus, Harry .Willats and Dorothy Joyce, directors . Mrs . Joyc1!, outgoing president, said the group tiopes to find a long term pro} ect with wide appeal that can be sup- ported by the coordinating council. She urged those with project ideas to contact board members of the council. Belli Entering ' Neutening Gase 'SAN FRANCISCO (API -Trial lawyer Melvin Belli says he will represent t\\'O young black girls who claim in a $1 million suit that they were sterilized by a federally financed agency without proper consent. "The fU'St thing we'll do is raise it to $2 million ." Belli said Wednesday at his of- fice here. "It's an open and shut case of assault and battery. This is the kind of thing Hiller did." The suit, filed in U.S. District Court at l\1ontgornery, Al a .. contends the girls' mother thought she was· giving her permission for vaccinations when she marked an "X" on a form she could not read. The suit alleges that the girls, ,.tiMie Relf, 14 and her sister, Mary Alice, 12, .,.,·ere sterilized on orders by officials of the f\1ontgomcry Com munity Action Commiltee. -The President pulled him apie shortly after the Jan. 20 inauguration ceremony to get "something done" about a demonstrator who had briefly breached a police line during the inaugural parade. A Secret Service agent had earlier told him that the President was qu.ite angry about the incident," Dean said. Dean insisted in resporise to a series or questions from the White House that his memory is sharp and his accusations against the President are thithful. The White House counter-attack was in the form of a series of questions sub- mitted by special prtsidential counsel J. Fred Buzbanlt, and put to Dean by Sen. Danlel K. Inouye (D-liawaii). Inouye said Buzhardt told him today that Nixon had been briefed about the questions. Dean's grilling is part of a White House counterattack a g a I n s t 34 • year· old former counsel, who in his fourth straight day stuck to his story that Nixon and his top aides plotted together to cover up the wiretapping affair. On Wednesday Buzhardt, in a letter to the Senate Watergate committee, called Dean the mastermind of the co ver-up and described former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell as his patron . Inouye took more than an hour asking 39 quest.ions submitted by Buzhardt, He omitted one, perhaps inadvertently. Dean said that aJthough his memory isn't a 11tape recorder," he hu--:firm recollections of the impressions he bad during meetings with Nixon in Sep- tember, February, March and April. • From Page I RESPONSE. • • the Presidenl. The statement was prepared by H. Fred Buzhardt. the President's legal C9UJ1Sel -the offiei! Dean once held - from material supplied by "others," Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. War· ren said Wednesday. Nixon did DOt see nor approve it before it was sent to the Senate Watergate Com- mittee, but was briefed on it Wedneeday, Warren said.- The Prestdent Is apending very liltle time on Wateraate. Warren uid, delegating the responsibility to his lawyers and deYoting his energies to the other malllts belore him. Instead, w..... oaid. he .... being kept infc>r'Dled through summaries of the proceedings. His family, however, wa s glued ·to TV sets.· - Chief of Stal{ Alexancltr M. Haig and Ziegler appeared' to be emerging as the Prea.ident'1 closest advi90l'a ln the rebuilding of. the Watergate-shattered White House staff. During hi spost-sum- mit sojourn, Nixon has been closeted dai· ly for hours with Haig and Ziegler, ac- cording to Warren. He also has conferred often with Henry A. Kissinger, who is expected to begin another China journey in a few weeks to reassure Chou En-lai lhat the U.S.-SOvlet summit did not endanger the im- provement in American-Chinese rela· lions. Budget Director Roy Ash fle\v in from Wa shington for consullations today on holding down federal spen ding to the limits of the proposed $268.7 billion 1974 fiscal year budget. Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1>uldcU> HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ~·eeST BUY'' AWARD son fOOO WASn DISPOSIR ,,...,n1Mechenis111 • I Leff! Jkre. Wefk I • Awt•..tlc D•ft'Jlnf DllpfM« • S'""' Den~ • SW.-Ollt heh ...... ,.15 995 : WI!: DlllVI!• WIE Iii.VICI WI INSTALL ~ 4 CYCLE BUILT·IN UV--_ POTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER ~ - ... Dun{ctf' . '-.. WI DILIVI• WI Sl•YICI Wli INSTALL 4 CYQI POITW DISHWASHER WI DILIVtll WI llilVIC• WI INSTALL 8 CYCLE BUil T-IN ~::POTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER ......... --. .._ ... ....,_,. ......................... 0...-• DW-A-LMI ... 1 S ... l... Am: 269950 WI OIL'"" e WI Sllll:VICa e WI lNSTAU. Momllor of C1llfornl•'• L•rlftf Cooporatlvo luylnt Group With Tha Volume luylnt Powar of 110 StorOI 90 DAY CASH 1'1'111 .. ~ WlfllOvi lilllkltl 01r mlulM of ON'((ltht ._._ Jo..in Pacemycr or lrvlne said that she a nd her husband had planned on building on nn Or6 Street Tot. and even though 1hey had chcc::ked with the planning department had nc\'Cr been warned about a problem v.·it h building in the area. agreed on the need for a study, It would throw the matter into tho laps of the Arch Beach Heights interests and wait for 60 to 90 days tO'!ttt'What sotuttons·thn-1-1-- ;.:;...:: l•i,A'I : r.--.. , "'-""' 1.. ... .:. ... . ., . . . '.' Aulhorlud GE SERVICE MOllllf cllK .-1 ... •W II Cot11 ~. C1t19'n'lr.. liillllo'l"IWI Of ~""'" Q_._ """'"'''' w """ u.u """llllY1 11'111!'9.., 11t1t"9flenl "·" !Nflffll'r. . "Why wcre't we warned, why weren't citlr.ens came up with. . If that raUed, a moratorium and 1tarf study of the 'problelll5 would appear to be necessary, councilmen seemed to aaree. i . ' ' . ' 18T5 NEWPORT BLVD. Dmtawn Casta Mesa Phn 548-7788 7 I 7 r • • • Saddlebaek EDIT ION VO L. 66, NO. 179, 5 SECTIONS, 62 PA_GES • Ill 1 Fou~ Kids · I ~ ' I-t. I· STANFORD (AP) Two teen·aged brothers with hereditary heart defects underwent corrective surgery today while their brother and sister awaited similar operations later in the day. Richard Costello, 15, . and Kevin, 13, were "doing as well as could be ex- pected," a spokesman for Stanford University Medical Ceftter said. "The \ ., operations went veey nicely, there were no ~plical.ions." The boys·were taken to the intensive care. unit after ~ergoil\g open heart surg~ to i:epair holes . between their heart cha'mbers: Surgeons hope· the operations wiU give the chlldr'en another 15 or 20 years of life expectancy. Kevin's 'three-hour ·operation was pe1ftc1ued by Dr. ·Norman 'Shumway, a ,. pioneer heart transplant s u r g e o n . Richard's 21/s-hour surgery WIS per- fonned by Dr. Edward Stimoo, a member ol Shumway's team. Karen Costello, 4, and OaVid, }8, ;vere to enter the same adjoining operating roOms later. The hospital said earlier that Karen and Richard were first in surgery, but tbe schedule was chang~. A hospital spokesman said all four . ' 'MRS. SPIEL, THE LINCOLN COLLECTOR, 1AND HEii FORMER GOVERNMENT LIMO In B•lbol, Tongues Were W•gging ·~ • Rest•uriint Owner wa, Furious .. :ti~··~. Ml1Jett:d I. r .,J ' • I ' • • in Newport Big, Sleek Ex-governme11t ~Car 'ltarked By L. PETER KRIEG Of ''" °"'" """ l ll tf \Vith the President of the United States dov.rn the coas t in san· Clemente aDd his former chicr or staff secluded just across NeY+'})Ort. Harbor, all or Balboa was sure it \\'as getting into the act Wednesday. A Lincoln Continental limousine was parked at the Curb a:t the Rendezvous Condominiums on Palm Street. Tourists gaped and pecked inside as they passed by. The customers or the Red Carpet tavern across the street buzzed in lively speculation about who the car belonged to. Alter all, tt was tbe kind or car made only for the government. Jt has red ligh~ aod flag mounts. It s distinctive Washington, D.C. license,plate heightened the speculation. The speculation ended today. The llmousine belongs to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Spiel. summer residents of Balboa. They live in Riverside and own two McDonald's hamburger stands. "Oh, I didn 't even think about It-when I left it parked there~" Mrs. Spiel said, relating that she bad just come to town to get her condor(linium ready {91" the summer. • She said the family bought the ~ar a year ago from the Ford Motor ·Company and, yes, it had' been in goverliment service. . 1 "It .was a Presidential limouSine on loan to the head oC the United Na lions," . she said. ' Mrs. Spiel explained that she and het- hllsband are Lincoln collectors. They have 10 or them. This Is their fe<ond limousine~ . , • · , "We had a limousine: from a HoU,,wood studio," she said, "~t, it 'fill. a f1'.IPSS. It had eagle.s on~the door and a purple and yello\Y Star of David on the roof." "The dealer "in RiYenide knew we were looking for another one 10 when this became available, he called us," fie said. Airs. Spiel noted that Ford lends the cars lo the government and sells them when they're taken out of service. The Spiels' Lincoln limousine is a 1969 model. Its windows and doors are bullet proof. But the Sptels use it just like any other family car. The children sit in the back seat and watch the built·in television set. They sit on lamb carpeting. 1.1.rs. Spiel said she was an official in the Riverside election campaign for Pre!lident Nixon and bought the special license plate for $13. It's good for one year. . She said the car \Yl'.!-S used during the election campaign to chauffeur dignitarie.1 (See LIMOUSINE, Page Z) State Budget OK Seen -With lJospital Fund A record st.ate budget, including plan· nlng money for the, L'C Irvine campus teaching hospital and renovation or Orange c:ounty Medical Center, was ex· peeled lo clear the legislature by tonight. Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach) told the Daily Pilot to- day he has ~ assurances f r o rl1 Assemblyinan Willie D. Brown Jr. (0- San FranciJco ) that the state budget in-. eludes a '900,000 planning allocation for the medical school. liadbam and ·state Sen, Oeonis E. Carpenle!" (R·Ne\V)>Orf Beach) each !Jave introduced• ~pard bills which would prOVide tbe ."llds: in the event they are deletoo by the-,coDferenoe.commiltee 'on budget which ~ chairs. Gov. Reagan.'s plans for spending federal revenue sltaring and state tax !lurpluses or returning money to taxpayers. "~1y best guess is that we'll vote on the budget at 5 or 6 o'clock today," Badbam said, indicating it is his feeling both houSes will act on the final budget draft today. · "Nothing I would say wouJd in.Duence the UCl budg¢t amounts," Badbam said, empbasWng hill conndence the teaching hospital l!JDding will be approved. Earlier. this year, the Joint Legislative Conupittee oo Teaching H91Pital Sltirl(, also chai'red. by Aasem~yman Brpwn, suggested a &vi$IOO of UCJ•a' !lbare Of a statewide, health aclerices bond limd. The (See HOSPITAL, Page I) • • Today's F IBal N.Y . Stoeks TEN CENTS ~ ' I • eart Surgery . l children ol Santa Rosa truck. driver ch.ifdren to Ure easily. The defect was make a patch of membrane from the David Costello were "very nervous" but passed on to the children by their father . pericardium. or sac surrounding the j eager for the operation described as Little Karen also is suffering from a heart. ~ "sefious but fairly routine." hole in 3 major vein to her heart, a con· !\lore than 100 pints of type A·posilive · 'Ibe chiJ~en .. all are suffering from di'tlon.. that also will be corrected by blood \\"ere donated for the surgery which atrial septa.I defects or holes between surgery today. \Yas,expected to require about 30 pints. ,' their upper ht!art chambers. T~e defects lf the hQles are small, doctor!f planned The children were to be taken to the in· limit the circulaUon of blood and oxygen to stitch them closed. U they are larger tensive care unit after surgery and re· I to tiswes and organst causing the lban 1 quarter, surgeons planned to main in the hospital about 10 days. ' . _J 38 Teachers Ol('d -. \ Irvine Trustees Bt;tck Boosts in Budget A Sl0.4 million tentative budget for 1973:-74 including monies for employe wage boosts and 38 new teachers was ap. proved unanimous ly by Irvine Unified School District trustees Wednesday. The board imm~ately set \July 9 as the date for a thorough analysis of a possible final budget for its first year. A public hearing on the budget "A'ill take place at 7:30 p.m. Aug . 6. The district expects to know its exact assess· ed. valuation by that time, whi ch if higher Irvine Bou,.d Seeks F.unlls For Schools . , Appµcati~,s . for abo~t fl·? !1¥l}i<19 .i? ~S~w:tff!t~; "·ould reduce the tax rate . District officials currently a r e estimating a seven percent increase in assessed valuation and a general pu rpose tax rate of $5.M per $100 assessed valua· tion. · The combined tax rates of Irvine'!! outgoing parent districts -Tustin Union and San Joaquin Elementary -was $4.78. Those dist ricts didn 't levy all the permi ssive taxes they could have last ye3r. The budget outcome also depends on th e rate of an Assembly bi ll now awaiting Gov. Ronald Reagan's signature. AB 2530 would allow the district to levy 1 $4.20 tax rate plus 7.5 percent of the permissives allowable last year, which Assistant Superintendent John Rajcic in· di cated could be higher than the pro- posed $5.84. A beginning balance of $410,000 from funds left by the two outgoing districts is (See BUDGET, Page ?) * * * * * * Classified Employes Get S.alary Hike From Board Irvine Unified School District trustees Wedne&day approved a. 6.5 J)trcent avtf!P salar.y !Jq~ for sjass~ied emit101of, which brought to a clOse Im. 74 etnploye negotiations. · , • San Joaquin Elementary and Tustin Union High Districts, which go out of bUsiness this weekend,• according to ll unification plan okayed a year ago. , 1-.Unilled -""'""'" lnllle<s. ,, '""'!,.-?-. The state olllce ol 1-i wt.llllJ<o bu agr.ed to wah·.-1tf uswii deadline to put the requests ~ tbe ·July 17 ClllocatiOhS board-agenda, dlstricl olficiils aald. '"'8 -dJslriCt. •bich doellni lake .... .,.. oebo/Jla ~ -floadoy, completed wage and benellt agr..menls "A'ith.teachers more than a week ago. Rajclc said the negotiators agreed lo ' · late the rugher ldiedule for oil polftlons and then OOosted employes to the nexf highest step on tfilt schedule. Previously approVed we're $121 ,892 in funds for work , on a North )rvine m.. tennedlate IChool, bringing the total amount the di!ltrict qualifies for to more than 19 mlllloo. If approved as expected by the state, the funds will allow a tax shelter over at least two-thirds oC the districi's first bond sale or $10.S million, Assistant Superintendent John Rajci.c said. That basically means Irvine taxpayers will get a reduction in what they woold ha\•e paid the first year for the district's succe~ul $ nillllon bond election, Raj- cic added. Di.strict officials decided not to use the bond moaieS, ,yet, "beCiuse the state building program will provide the sav· ings. The 18.9 million applicatioos break down like this: -$5.3 million for site acquisition and partial construction of a North Irvine High S<hool. -$1.1 million for partial roostruction or the North Irvine Intermediate School io the Valley View area. -$1.4 million for site purchase and partial building of "Hoeptner" elemen· tary school. -$556,366 for site purchase and ad· vanced plans for "Culverdale" eleinetl- tary school.I . . --$541,IU for site purchase and ad· vanced plans for "Greentree" elemen· tary achoo). In additloo, the board agreed oo a $4.3 million construct.ion paickage for the high school wi th arChltect ROn n. Y~g a~ appointed Young+ to ·do driign work for (See SCHOOLS, Pqe I) Assistant Superintendent John llajcic, the board's chief negotiator, said working with two separate classified salary schedules caused some problems. Employes are coming to Irvine from Nixon to Answer Questions Later, Laird Confirms WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon"will respond to ~I· questions about the Watergate afratr toward the end or the Senate's hearings, White House counselor Melvin R. Laird was quoted as saying in a Washingion Post inteiview Wednesday. Post reporter David S. Broder quoted Laird as saying Nixon would-not "re- spond to every witness" but would answer REINECKE CONTRADICTS MITCHELL-Story, Pago 16 "questions, all questions ... al a press conference when we get near the con· cl us ion of the hearings." Broder said Lain:i, former defense secretary ~ recently a p po i n t e d dOmestlc affairs adviser to Nixon. reported having talked about the timing of a press conference with Nixon. "I think he's willing to do that ... I don·t think there wiU be any problem with that," Laird said. Classified employes include custodians_. secretaries and other clerical aides and. library technicians. In addition to agfeeing to re-look at the entire salary situation during the district's first year, the negotiators touched on policies for working con· di lions. The board ratified the wage agreement unanjmously. , .Discussions took place. Rajcic said , with the taxpayer, student and "ultimately service to the dislrict in mind." Board chairman Charles Boulanger sa id it pleased him that "employes have been very cooperative and have looked at t.hing:s realisUcally. (It will) ultimately come out in the best interests of kida end that's what it is all about." * * * Ir vine District Superi11tende11t Gets Pay Boost Irvine Superintendent Stan Corey was surprised_ Wednesday night with \a $1,000 thank.you from school district trustees. Corey's yearly sa lary was boosted. from '36.000 to $37,000 beginning July 1. The action came after trustees went irl· to an unexpected executive (closed \ session early in 1 the meeting without Corey. • Orange Brown, however, "assures me the Irvine medical school plllUllng money is in the sfate budget and isn't likely to com~ out befOre the bill gets to the rioor." · The conference committee debates which have delayid Ass.!mbly ahd senate votes on the l9'7l-74 state budget involve issues other \ban the UC budget Irvine Council Approves He also strongly hinted that White 1fouse Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler will be replaced as the President's spokesman at some point, the newspaper said. A!Uiough not directly implicated in Watergate crimes, Ziegler i!I considered to have lost COQSiderable credibil ity through his handling of the scandal. When they came out only minutes later, Trustee Nonn Ginsburg said the board wanted to issue-a "vote. of con· fidence" in Corey and thank hiin for hJs service to the new district. Corey, hired froqi the Cupertino School District near San Jose last winter, was obviously surprised and a little em~ barrassed. Weadier \ . • MOBiiy sunny in the afteqlGOll hours Friday, lollowing the -I low clouds a long the coast. Hlil!s in the 7lls at the• be8cbes, SQ..ai:· Ing oui 80 ~ ·l'Oldlnp lnlailcl. Ovemlghl lows in the ... INSmE ,~Di\"l' Ol'Onge County !upetirisor1 have adopted, just before tM June 30 state deadline, a f"e- vtsed open space plan willi minor chat1ge1{ See Paoe 9. Allll~ n --.. Mw1MI 11"WIMl1 M "'"""'""' 4,M °""" c..., ' ·-..... ---T........ '' -" -. ............ ,,." ..,., ........ ,. A!nOnl the unsettled cooceri>s ol the coafererlce commlitee are alternatives to Chilean Coup . Attempt Foiled SANTIAGO, Chile (UPI) -The army said today It had smashed a plot by members ol lhe anned forces to overthrow Chilean President Salvador Allende.. ' Gen. Mario $epulveda, com~ of the Santlago province emer11ency zone. said the plot bad been "totally aborted" with the· arrest of several lowranklng military men, . Sepulveda declined " to say whether civilians were. lnvolmi or to ideD&Jfy the branches of the armed 1.,-cos 'that porticlpated in the effon to "~ the nation's lnatitut.iooal process." . New $2.4 Million Budget The city of Irvine ' will run for the next year on a $2.4 million budget Mayor John Burton feels strongly should have been "dumped in the tra9h." Burton re)ieated ,today bit Tueadey night sentiment.. regarding : Ille city budget which was apProved on a 3 to Z vote over his objections. Councilmen WIUlam Fischbach and Henry Quigley teamed wltb Coun· cllwoman Gabrielle Pryor to ailopt the b1'1)get. The final draft Includes a 33 percent hike In plonninf hmdo, )l!'Ovlclea for In· creaaed police and public '11fety services Including the city's llnt ambulanc. service, &ett aside f3Q9,000 ln Quimby Acl funds for paru development and provides nearly '150,000 In blcyole trail Improvements. -All are new or Increased items added· to the budi•t draft presented a mooth ago by City Manager William Woollett Jr. Unlike the rlrst year's budget process when Burton and Ray Quigley missed nearly every study sesiktn, the t ..... -o aeldom mltaed budget tOU!ldo thl! year. Votes on a varlety ol motkm rocord the 3 to I split ,ol the council over in- creased planning department funds sough! by the.planning commi~qn which planners left would more nearly balance the city's planning expertlae with that ol the Irvine Company. Tuesday night, Ray Quisley took the orrenslve to reduce the amounll added to the planning department budp\ lo uoe them to set up a .$50,000 reaerve "a1 1 !tart toward establlahlng savlnp £or a major city hall. cific center or other.ma- jor pubJic expeme." Another $51,139. -the balance ol the !See BURTON, Pap I) • • A spokesman in San Clemente, meanwhile, said the President took no· part in writing. the memo accusing John W. Dean III. of ) masterminding the \Vatergate coverup, and It should not be regarded as a definitive White House statement, according to a spokesman for the President. The statement was prepared by H. Fred Buzhardt, the President's legal counsel -the olllce Dean once held - from material supptied by "others," Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L. War· ren said Wednesday. Nixon did not see nor approve it before it was sent. to the Senate Watergate Com· mittee, but "'as briefed on it Wednesd ay, Warren said. The Pre.sident is spending very little time · On Watergate, Warren said, delegating the responalblllty to his lawyers and devoting bis energies to tbe other ma!tera hefor• him. Instead, Warttn uld, he wu being IS.. RESPONSE, Page ll Irv ine Uni£ied School District take.• over operation of area schools Sunday. according to a plan of unification ap. proved by voters a year ago. Ship Undergoes Fallout Exercise AUCKLAND, N.Z. (UPI) -The cre'v of the New Zealand navy frigate OfagO was sealed below decks for two hours t<>-! day In a nuclear (il.l lout exercise as l headed for the French nuclear test &r"f:I at Mururoa Atoll in the Pacific. New 1.ealand Navy sources said the e1· crcise .showed that the frigate's pro-- tectlon would be adequate if she cau.ah& fallout durlng her antinude•r protest vigil olf the atoll. The [rlgate )cit here today and wid probably rendezvous with the Austratiq navy oiler, tlMAS Supply, Friday befort Slliling for ~lururoa. H11ntington Police Eye Skin Flicks ·; :jHuotingtoa Beach poUce lodiy are ~re!ully acreenJng soores of sexy motion j:actW'es confiscated in a Villa Park raid , ticluding the controversial run-length Jio11on picture "Deep Tbrolt" starring iDe Linda Lovelace~ ::.'11le tntire movie ICl'eening job bas ifuntington vice officers weary and t>leary-eyed. · ·:"I've been looking .at these things for ito dayi now and 1 have only seen one friat isn't hard-core pornography," a red-: eyed vice o£ficer aUegcd. He didn 't identify the non-ortensive flick. IJWttington Beach orficers allege the film raid at a Villa Park home may have broken up a major distribution setup for sex films in Orange County. Arrested when the movie cache was cooriscated was Charles L e on a r d Harriilton, 40, of 18692 Mariposa Lane. He was picked up Monday. Hamilton is free t'oday on $5,000 ball ·;and vice officers are viewing and logging ·:'tach of the several hundred films foWld :~in his home. · Lt. Robert Rinehart said Hamilton's arrest culminated a month-long in· vestigation i..ased on information suppUed by another police agency in the eounty. He said Hamilton, who is in\'Olved ~!th several film producing cOmpanies whllh , are not connected with the alleged pornography operation, was arrested on , ;,i warrant charging 30 counts of selling I: distributing and exhibiting pornographic '·material ~' Offi~ said the warrant was obtaJned J · when Hamilton allegedly sold tbem t"·o feature-length pornographic movies, one or which was "Deep Throat." ' Huntington Beach vice investigators said they aided in the investigation by ihe Orange County Distiict Attorney 's Office and the orange County Sheriff's oroce. The work "'as handled pri1narily by Huntington Beach, the offiCi!r said '. because the original tip concerned alleg· ed distribution of obscene movies in llun· tington Beach and the deal with Hamilton was set up in Huntington Beach. Joaquin Board Meets for Last :·Time Tonight Highlights or the 1972-73 school year will be pr<S<Dted al 7:llll ...u,b.t .. San Joaquln School District trustees plher for their final me-eting, The elementary district goes out of business after Saturday. Then three new unified K·l2 districts -Irvine. Sad- illeback Valley and Tustin -will take over. .. The San Joaquin session is in room F·S at Los Alisos tntermediate School, 25171 Moor Ave., El Toro. A report on the retainment of private legal counsel to research loss of revenue from agricultural preserves will be given. Trustees have been concerned lhat tax breaks given developers who put lands in preserve... result in large losses to the ~ still-partly rural district. f -The district had Its inception in the late f l920's when Ralph Gates, n o w • Superintendent Emeritus. first became teacher-principal-superintendent at the f old Irvine School. ......._ Ernigration Okayed KARACJII, Pakisla.n (AP) -Pakiscan 1 said today it will allow 450 Bengali students. seamen. and others to eoligrate • 10 Bangladesh. I [ t. • ' r I f • • • A Foreign Office spokesman said the move was tht beginning oC , a limited scale repa.lriation of Beogalis stranded or detained in Pakistan and ol Pakistani prisoners held by Ba~deah. OIAN•I COAST " DAILY PILOT Tllit 0<• ..... C•H D.t.ll Y 'ILOl, WUl'I Wl'llidll II eombl,.... Ille t<t•wt-~Ml. i. llUllll!Mid rw *II er..,.. c ... 1 'lllll!lllint Clll'nPtftr. "-• "'"' edltloM .,. llUll!iu..i, ""-4oy ll\t9Wll l'rlf.,. '°' c.._,. !MN, H-PWI lff<l\, H\lfll""'°" IM<flt~-11111 V•llty, L- a.ct\, l,.,i.....<S-1~• ...... !.111 C"'-'t/ ;.ft J-C.P•-'••no. A tlnere •'9iorltl odllloo! hi -itl'IH SIJ\lr'd•Vt .,.... 'Ul'ld<tys. 1 ... P">M(INI ....ol!V>lflo Pi.~r •t •I SJ11 111'"1 t•r l l•M t, (Oil• M.,.., C•hfOrn;., ttili)>. lob•rt N, Wted '•Ml4tflt •ncl l"llOll•~ ... J•ck •. c ... r.y Vq ,~;o.,f •M c;.,,.,,.1 M•~ Tho"'•• K•••il 1:.1tt• Tit,..,,, A. M11 rpfii11• ...,..,....1111 (O l'- C!.trfff H. lo•i l ithtr1' r. N•ll AtotUtt11l M,,,...lflo E•lfef• 0.ta M--~ 111 Wttt hy Stowt Newtoft 9'"<11! Ill> N-1 ~tf'11 ~ '"C'fli m ,.ortt1 ... .._ ~ a..ui: 1111' llMtl'I ........... ... J.ttt ~: >tS /llorlll I I '"""'° •••I Tlf1,•1r1 Cn41 M2-4JJ1 Cl I °W .W..-o' t I "424611 s. C11 rs Al ..... 11u: 11'111$' 4t2-441t (#;'!'.... ""' °"...... c:..tt ~ .... ~. !ft -,,.,.... lllWtr•lleola. ... 191ifo! _,.... .,. -~···••l!o ,.,.. _., • ,.,.~ wilflevf ........... ....... " .... l'lirM -· a-.. <J$M ............. ""' ...... ClllllW!lt.. ....,...... .. (Wf'itt ..... -"""1 .... ~I U,11 ~I 11101,_ -.t111t1i..·u.6' ,......... C1llr PLIOI Sltlt Pholo Nose .Job Frea&P .. el BUDGET ... e'Jl"Cled. lrvfne's tentative budget caUs tor : -Repayment of '60,000 of an origh1al $1.00,000 state loan, for operation during Lhe district's past 0rglllllatlooal yeer. ;J82,000 !or Improvement ol achoo! sllel, Including purdi-ol tempornry -· ' -Pu.rdiase of aix mlni·buses and possibly •lghl' 9l·pusenger school buses at $1911,000. -More library books and media center materials for about t96,000. -SUpplemental textbooks and reading booka totaling f/9,ltll. -More than $4.Zimillioo for teachers' &alartes, including classroom. reading, music, speech. summer school. adult education, other special education and substitute teachers. -Reserves of $281.636. -Income or $64 .000 from federal sources; $2.52 mUUoo from state funds; more than $7.5 million from local sources; and $180.000 ln student transfer fees. District officials expect an opening enrollment of 8,050. A basic tentative budget is required to be submitted to the COWJty dep8rtment of t..>ducation by July L Rajcic said a more detailed presen- tation will take place July 9, which will also be the district's first meeting of its official operation. From Pagel BURTON ... $106,639 planning increase-Ray Quigley suggested be set aside as an unallocated contingency reserve fund . The motion was defeated on a 2 to 3 vote. Plans Conti1111e Health ·council Nixes Hospital BV GEORGE Ll!IDAL ot -. o.11r Pll!lll. 11.tf ~estern \Vorld Medical Fowidatlon plans for a 162-bed ''seed" hospit.ai for a noni>rofit, self endowing medical center near UC Irvine continue ·despite state Health Planning Council disapproval Tuesday. The.state council Tuesday voted to toO to uphold the denial voted May 21 by their seven-member subcommittee which reviewed an appeal brought / by more than half of the members of the Orange County Health Planning Council. That body last Sept. 25 overturned the council's facilities review committee decision to give Western World the go- ahead for its Irvine hospital. Health Planning Council approval qualifies a hospital for reimbursement for services rendered to state MediCal program patients. State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R· Newport Beach), president of the fouo. dation, said Tuesday "We will build the hospital anyway, because it deserves to be built and it is needed." The facility is designed to comptement facilities UCI-Califomia College of Medicine hopes UC Regents will build on campus acreage adjacent to the 150 acres the Irvine Company has reserved for Western. World. A foundation spokesman said today topographical surveys of• the site are completed and "precise site surveys are under way. When plans , are completed construction will begin," foundation ex· ecutive director Walter Clar!: said today. walle!J ol a bunch of Newport Beach doc-tors." Clark pointed , out the foundaUon t. establJ.sbed as a non-profit public corpora- tion, "No funds can inure to the .beoefit ol anY director or doctor." • Director Walter Burroughs hos ••· plained repeotedly that the foun$tlon will indirectly benefit the quality of medical school training UC Irvine can of- fer. 'Ille foundation's hospital will be sup-- ported .by incOme from leases to com- merela! tenants of buildings planned to share the Western World acreage at ultimate development. Meanwhile, the foundation will oppose a county health planning council master plan which suggests the Irvine ·area wi:tl need no hospitals for 10 years. ~r bearing on the master plan will be held at 7:30· p.~. Friday in Department One, Superior Court, 7110 Civic Center Drive West, Santa Ana. FromPqel RESPONSE. • • kept informed thr0ugh summaries of the proceedings. His famJly, however, was glued to TV sets. Chief of Staff Alexander M. Haig and Ziegler appeared to be emerging as the President's closest advisors in the rebuilding d. the WatergatHbattered White !louse staff. During hi spost""'1!l- nUt sojourn, Nixon hos been closeted dai- ly f0< hours with Haig and Ziegler, ac- cording to Wamn. · Artist Ed Van Deusen of Laguna Beach works on his female Statue in plastic foam. Called "Forever and Never," s.he would h:e 25,feet tall if she were real. The art and other works wtll be on display at the rustic Sawdust Festival in Laguna Canyon from July 12 through August 26. Monday night, Ray Quigley was the lone no vote against Henry QWgley's mer pon to increase the bike trails budget by $.50,000 to $143,000, providing for a1Culver Drive bike trail bridge over the ' -San Diego Freeway and anticipating other as yet unspecified projects. Tuesday night, Ray Quigley's move to take $50.000 from the bike trails budget to set up the civic center reserve account also failed on a 2 to 3 vote. Funding for the hospital is assured from private sources, Clark ooted and foundation directors have approved·con-- struction of the hospital on explratian of the one--year automatic delay built into the county health planning council's Ur itial Sept. 25 denial. State law requires the delay before the hospital is eligible for licensing. He also has conferred often with Henry A. Kissinger, -is expected lo begin anothet Cl1tna journey In 1 few weel:s to ,..,....... Chou En-lai that the 11.S.&viet summit did not endan&er the Jm. promneat In Arnerican-O>ineoe ma- tions. Speeders P11ompt Closh1g When all the wrangling was O\"er, the council appr_oved a budget adoption too- lion by Councilman Fischbach and sec· onded by Henry Quigley. 1'le new city budget anticipates no tax increase from the 33 cents levied last year. "We-"Will"be acting within our tegal rights to begin the hospital after Sept. 25," Clark said. Attorney Conrad Tuohey of Ful!ertoo represented the planning c o u n c i 1 members who obtained reversal d a Bay Area plannfug council endorsement of the Western World plan. Budget Director Roy Ash Dew In from Wllllhington f0< COMU!tations today on holding down federal spending to the linUts ol lho proposed $7118.7 llilllon 1974 liS;Cai year budget. ·I Of Tliree Viejo Streets or the S2.6 million in city revenues only $2.4 million is allocated for spending on city ope:rations. Tuohey has boasted his f1ttn has defeated "more than 200 hospitals in cat- iforo.ia. F,....P ... l SCHOOLS' ••. ! Orange County su pervisors. upon the advice of the Road Department, have voted to close three streets in 1'1ission Viejo. The action was prompt ed by protests of about 50 residents of Naccome Drive, San Andres Lane and San .Roque Drive that their residential streets were being used as a speedWBl'-. by drivers see.king a shoi'tcut to the 1.iission Viejo Shopping Center on La Paz Road. co u n t y R o a d Com,µtissioner Ted McConvillc said an intensive survey of the problem had determined that to decfease traffic on the three streets closures "'ould be placed at the in- intersections of Jeronimo Road "'ith Cordillera , ti'lontiUa and Car ran z a Streets. McConviUe said the blocking off of the entrances to the area \\'as prompted by considerations of traffic safety. excessive traffic volume and an accident rate much higher than normal. He said lraffic safety must be placed above convenience and that up to 4,000 cars a day used the residential streets, far above all acceptable nonn of 1,000 cars. He got board approval for closing the three streets nothing that if only one was to be closed, traffic would be diverted to 1he others. McConville sa id several alte~tc routes were available fol" residents l ing north and v.'rst of the closed streets He suggested Jeronimo Road to !\ilargue · c Park\vay 10 La Paz Road to the shopping center. He added lhat ne\v t'Onnccting roads in the area \VOuld be completed soon to provide access both to the center and the San Diego Free-v;ay. The road commissioner said a tem- porary benn \Vas to be installed Wednes· day and latf'r permanent closure bar- rie-rs v."OUld be erected. One ques tioner wondered how police and fire emerge~y vehicles could reach the homes with the streets cl~ and also wanted to know about parents taking I rvi1ie Scliool Has a Sig11- But No Na1ne The desirt' for community involvement \\'ednesd~y cnuSt'd College Park Elemen- tnry School In lrvlne to become No Name School. Irvine Unified School District trustees decided to leave: a concrete sign for the new school completely blank. Only two weeks ago, they v.·ere under pres.sure from archietcts to name the school so letters couJd be ordered and cast in concrete next week. Any delay would cost $500 to $1 .000, they "'ere told. The !!Choo!. scheduled to be op<n In the rail. \\'ill serve n~st kindergarten to, sixth grade students Jiving oortb of ~1oulton Parkway. Trustees bad se<ond thoughts about the rush and Wedntsd3y night said th<y "'OU!d take the time for suggestions fro1n residents .. Once a name I! cho@;en. It could be put up on a redwood sign !or $250 to l!OO. SUperlntendeol1 Stan Corey said. I/nut then the • c n o o I wtu be olficiaUy • namel ' . their children to -schools in the closed area. A1cConville said the type of barrier planned v.•oold nol prevent emergency vehicles from entering and that other streets provided access to schools. He pointed oot that bicycle riders and pedestrians could get through the bar· riers. 1 j Empty Bus Just One Clear Case Of 'Dog-jacking' Another $1.8 million is recommended for the city"s capital improvements ~ gram. Nearly all items must come back for final approval on a project·by·project basis. From Pagel LIMOUSINE. • • visiting the Riverside area. "If there is any ptace·in California that doesn't need more hospital beds, it's orange O'.lunty' .. the north county lawyer contends. He suggests Sen. Carpenter has a "conft.ict of interest" "'ith his Western \V.oi:ld involv~menl ~d charges that the foundatlm ''Was set up to fatten the .~111Pqel HOSPITAL ... \\'bile the car impressed m o s t observers, it didn't do much for the pro- prietors of a local res~urant Tuesday night. J\trs. Spiel confessed she had left it in a proposal provides for a $20 million 200- private space belonging to the Mackerel bed campus teaching hospital and $9.5 Flats restaurant on Main Street and million in improvements at OCMC. came back to find a nasty note on the Other bond funds from the $33 million ~flA~ll (AP) -A German shepherd v.·indshield. ICl share. v.ill provide a $6.5 million named D.tke commandeered a city bus. start on a $12 million campus classroom. forcing out 25 passengers and standing '·It said i! v.·e ever parked there again office and laboratory facility for the the Greentree school . ' Resolutions were passed authorizing district adminisu:ators to negotiate for the necesaary: school sites. Trustees have embarked on the am· bitlGUS building pnlCl'llll before they take over official operation of area schools. ,'lb< c~~ occurs July I, when SM JCJlli:tabo Elementary and Tustin Union lllgb Districts will cease to exist. Hoeptner Elementary is on a 9.5-acre site on north Jeffrty Road. 1be north Irvine high ICboo1. will probably be plac- ed fill a site north of Walnut Awnue bet'!ttO Culver Drive and Yale Avenue. CUJverdale Elementary is located north of Main Street at Thiel Drive extension and the proposed intermediate school. will front on Gascogne Avenue in the Village o( Valley View. The Greentrees site is south of Man-- zanita Avenue between Sleepy Hollow and Tiburon Drives. off the driver and police for 30 minutes. they "d ha\'C it tov.•ed away," J\Irs. Spiel medical school. "It was a clear case of dog-jacking:' said. Only the OC~'IC expen.5es hinge on S k' B Eff d said witness Harold Lee. Duke jumped on agreement between UC! and the rounty WO mg an ecte the bus Wednesday, apparently to escape S h d Board of Supervisors on who will run the a noisy thunderstonn. He leaped into the Cosn1os 76 Launc e county hospital. The bond funds may not SALEM, ore. (UPI) -It's against the seat of driver A. L. Rivera. be spent by the uni versity unJess a long law today to smoke at a state govem- "The hed h" h ..r1 t ~IOSCOW (AP ) -The Soviet Union term agreement provid ing use of the ment meeting in Oregon. operator reac is auy 00 to announced the launch Wednesday or hospital for the education of medical Gov. Tom McCall signed a bill Wed· pet the OOg,'' said ~1iami Transit , . . students. tbe Brown -mrru·t1ee recom· ~-y banni,.,.,. .,_,.i,.; .... at such gatber-A ·•-·, "''~ F " F. be "The d Cosmos Si6. latest m ds 1G1rsecret series ... v 1i=ua ·-& "'""' .... <& UwM"J Y ..,.,..... ..~a. ~ r. og mended. · It took effect immedlate]y grabbed hold of his hand but did not l -;o~f~un;;;;m~anned~~s~pa~c~e~sa~t~el~li~ie~s~. ~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~mg~··~~~~~~~;;;~·~iiij-break the skin." ~iil!1~~'..~i~Em£i~.~~~i Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1'ulda.P Duke refused to budge until police located his owners. Mr. and Mrs. Rolan· do Rodriquez. They coaxed him out. Witnesses said Duke was waiting at a corner with would-be passengers. But \\'hen the driver opened the door'Only the dog got on. \Yitnesses said the dog just sat in the driver's seat looking out the windo\lo'. Rivera nagged dO¥.'Tl a passing bus. and the other driver shouted, .. What ha~ pene<l?" "A dog toOk over my bus." Rivera replied. Police arrived in three squad cars. "They took one look: at the dog and st01> ped in their tracks."' Lee said. One officer reasoned that "if you've got a dog on the bus. I guess the best thing to do is to keep him there.'' f'inally. Duke ·~:as recognized. offie€rs round his O"'"T'K'.rs . and bus Xo. 139 was back on the road. 30 minutes late and empty. The passengers were transferred to another bus. ••I>Jke i!! a wonderful dog. very genUe." J\1rs. RodriqueL said. "But he ls very frightened of storms." Space Program Financing OK' d WASHINGTON (UPll -The S.nate today opproved a compromise $3 bllllon nuthoritatlon bill to frnance the nation's •P3<• program fOI' fiSClll i974. A HOUle'-Scnate Ccnfettnet'l Committee agreed on a $3.0M billion aulhortzaUon, 143.; nU!lim atiov. tho admlnlstratioo budget request fOI' the N a t I o n a I Aeronautics and Space Administration. The mta.-Includes $2.2 billion In authorizations for H NASA ..-rch and d•vtlopmeot proJ..u: ) 66SD251N HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE "BEST BUY" AWARD SOil FOGO W ASTI lllSPOSlll , ........ Mee ..... • 2 tett1 n..w• ·-Dt•• .... ~ •S .... --.-- 15995 e WI .... VU e WI! Slll:VICI e WI! lHSTAlL 22995·: ....... .. WI Slft\'ICl WI INITAIJ. .. DU/Uctf' . ' . Authorim GE SERVICE . ·~. l~· ~··, ~o . • • . ,. ,. .,, .. ' 4 CYQE POITAIU DISHWASIB 18995 e WI DUrfH e WI llftVICI e WI IMITAU. & CYCLE BUil T·IN ~:::POTSCRUBBER DISHWASllER 26995 ......... . •WI lllVM:I e WI IMITALL 90 DAY CASH WITH.&IPIOM CUllT 1815 NEWPORT ILYl Dnntnn Cesll llesa :..... Pllll 541-7718 I I Huntington Beaeh Fountain ·Valley • ED_ITION \VOL. 66, NO. 179, 5 SECTIONS, 62 'PAGES I ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . THUR.SDA Y, ~UNE 2.1, 1973 ., Today's Fl•al N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS Call .for Move of Police Heliport · . By TERRY COVILLE Of .. ...., .......... Huntington Beach p ark s com- missiooers want the police department's thrff..)iear-otd heliport relocated because or its "negative impact" on the new 220- acre central park. . A police SPokesman immediately · repl)ed that it.~·ouJ.d cost the city about $150,000 to relocate the helicopter facility in another· suitable area. Capt. Mfke Burkenfield said the cost of acqutnng a 2.S.acre site alone would probably run 1125,000, hten grading, landscaping and construction costs would rourid out the $250,000 estimate. The city spent only $40,500 in 1970 to build the asphalt landing pad and helicopter hangar, but Burken!ield said much of the work was done by cit y crews \vhicb doesn't show in the original cost figure. The heliport twW sits on land next to the central park (off Gothard Street behind the police firing range) which was acq uired from the county at half cost - tor park use. Burkenfield said the heli port v.•as originally built as a temporary facilit y, but the clty was able to renegotiate the use of the county land so·the police cho~ pers could stay. No fonna.1 action has yet been taken on the parks commission recommendation . The relocation prop6sal was sent to the plann ing commission Tuesday night for infonna tion . , Parks commi ssioners also empha sized that in no v.•ay should the heliport be ex- panded to handle fi xed-wing aircraft as recently proposed by the police depart- ' ment. The department has plans to purchase a fixed-wing plane. Burkenfield, when contacted about th& proposa \, said the police dcparbnent was: not prev iously aware Of the parks com- • (See NEWPORT, Page %) 'Nixon Action Probed 'l IMih' ~I.., Staff ,_. ·AERIAL VIEW OF HUNTING:f'ON BEACH ,f'OlolC& HELIPAD . P1rk' Commissioners S.y They W•nt it Moved ' . . Ex-Coast ~elic~~.S:a.1s : 'Too Many Helk~pte17s~. Nt>\\'J)Ort Beach;s chi ef police hellcopte r pilot resigned \Vednesday and then declared he believes Orange Coast police departments have niore he1icopten than they need. The chief pilot, Kenneth ''Scotty" l\1cGregCB". said he believes Police in Newport, Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach have more th~n enough fl.Ying machines to service all or Orange Coun· ly. McGregor·s reason ror leaving the Ne\vport Beach Police Department. however, was to obtain a ~tter job as chief pilot for the California Part Service in Northern Caliromia. The eight-year veteran 1\fcGregor's resignation was not announced by the ci- ty. He said he is quitting because \here is no advancement potential for him ·in Newport. McGregor is ranked as a patrolman although for three years he has served as chief pilot and flight in- structor. McGregor praised the Newport Beach heUcopter program but he tqld the Doily Pilot be thin.ks all Orange C.ounty police agencies should -and will, ~v.~tually - join to create a county pol~,ait'force. He said six police helicopters 9.'0U.ld be enough to service the entire county. The three coastal citi~ have nine helicopters and one airplane. In add~ion. Anaheim has t\\.'O helicopters. McGregor declined tb saY what has stalled a merger of forces thus rar. "The chlefs will tell yoo they each l)O<d their own because, there ·would be dl!llUes over . prioritlts in cue ,of simultaneous emergeocier," McGregor 1&kl. McGregor said with siX helicopters in a county l«<e, lour could, be In the air at one time while the other two are down for malntenance. "They eoukl lllagger the sbilts ao they could keep four In the air on almost a :H- hour basis," McGregor said. He said It wquld take 12 pilots for the enUre force, fewer than the three coastal cities have now . McGregor sakl It would be foolish !or D91tt Pllet Steff ...... 0'TOO MANY HELICOPTERS' . Doporilng P!lot McG;.,or ~~ Beach to own 'its own police air-• pl&iO' ' • )le ·,declined to ,con0nent, howevu. about the fact 111"1tinpla Beech has lust bo1Ji11t Ill """ plane. . Mc:G<ecw uld' a coooty , forte .eould use '"" planes. , "One coUld blhdle the -..... ly and the other th8 ~1ocaaty,., be uid. •'FlmJ Wini afiti:o!t have a gr..t !leal of value in ~ ""91," McGregor said , "especially out of the corm>l 'zonea of 0r.,.. Cowity and Fullerton Airports.'' "But it would be ridiculous for Newport Beach to own its own aifPlane/' ........ ' M<Gregor aloo declined' opoeific com: (See JIELICOPS, Pop l) Ervin Apparently Seeks President's Testimony WASHINGTON (AP) -Sena t e 'Vatergate Chairman Sam J . Ervin Jr. challenged today whet~ President Nix· 0!1 did anything "to perform his duty to see that the laws are faithfully executed in r~t to the Watergate affair." The North Carolina Democrat attacked certafu White House statements after wiMlng acknowledgement from John W. Dean m that some presidential deeislons and White House actions not related to the Watergate violated the First and Fourth Amendments to the COnstitution. Questions by Ervin at the fourth day of Dean's testimony appeared aimed at challenging Nixon to testify on the ~ . NIXON 'ENEMIES' REACT · TO LIST-Pago 4 Watergate scandal. Later, committee COW1$el 'Samuel Dosb slid the qµestloo ol wbelbe1; to invite uie Presideot ·to testily bad "" ~~ ....... , ) ' < In other blJ!pb 'liom tesibnmy by OOIU!d.J\'bite --i Qian' . . t -.-He kepi. no noteJ of most , of · hfl meetlt,s with Nt:am 6ecause ''!IOIM ·of the things that were being said in these meetings .. •. were very incriminating to the Presktent. '' -He believed. "I. \\'as-a ·restraining in- Oµenee at the White Hoose. There were many wild and crazy schemes, some of whlch I have not testified to." He was not asked to elaborate on the schemes. -'Ibe President pulled him aside shortly after the Jan. 20 inauguration ceremony to get "something done" about a ~monstrator who had briefly·breached a po1ice line during the inaugural parade. A Secret Service qent had earlier lold him that the. President was quite angry about the incident,"•Dean sakl. Dean insisted in response to a series of questions from tbe Wbhe House that his me~ is sharp and his accusations agamtt the President are truthful. The 1white tJouse counter-attack was in lhe form ol a series of questions sub- mitted by 1peeial presld<otial coumel J. Fred Buzhardt, and put to Dun· by Sen. Daniel K. Inouye (0-Hawaii). Inouye said - Buzhardt told him today that Nixon had ~ briefed about the questions. Dean's-grilling is part of a White Hoose counterattack a g a I n s t .M -year -old former counsel, who in his fourth straight day sluek to his story that Nixon and his top aides plotted together to cover-, up the wiretapping affait. On Wednesday Buzhaidt, in a letter to the Senate Waterple conunittee. called Dean. the mastermind of the cover-up and described former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell as his patron. Inouye took more than an hour asking 39 questions submitted by Buzhardt. He omitted one, perhaps lnadvertenUy. Environment Group Cancels Meetings The Huntington Beach Envirobm<11tal Council wlll only hold one meeting a month in July and August. Because of the light summer workload, meetings on the fourth Tuesdays of the month have been canceled. Instead, the council will only meet on July 10 and Aug.14 at 7:30 p.m. in the administrative annex of City Hall, a spokesman sa1d . Dean said that although his me mory isn't a "tape recorder," he has finn recollections of the impressions he had during meetings with Nixon in Se~ tember, February, Marcil.and April. He denied that he had deliberately leaked stories to news media as part of a strategy to esca pe prosecution. He said he can't recall ever telling G. Gordon Lidd y, who first proposed wire- tapping as part or the Nixon re-election campaign, that he would have a SI-mil- lion budget. He said that while he was on the Wh ite House staff he was a restraining in- fluence, halting many "wild and crazy schemes" \Vhich others wanted to carry ouf. but which he fil ed away and ignored. He said he had once given a casual assurance to campaign deputy Jeb Stu art ~·fagn1der that he would receive ex- e<:utive clemency if Magruder tvent to jail for his perjured testimony. He con- ceded he did this on his own, and with no authority from anyone higher. But he said it was done in response to • Canine . Caper • Shephe.rd :Hijacks1 Bus .in Miami ' MLUll (AP) -A German. she!>he<d _....,__.;_, .. ,;... .. , . """""-· . -....---• <!11 ••• forcing out.26---passenger1 ah.I stnilina: oil the drtver. ind f)OJke·fOI':-.JO milHl&es. 11 lt was a clear case of dog-jack.mg,"' said wit'ness Harold Lee. Duke jumped on the bus Wednesday, apparently to escape a noisy thunderstorm .. He leaped into the seat of driver A. L. Rivera. "The operator reaChed his })and out to pet the dog," said Miami Transit · Autbocily Supt. F.r,\. Fieber. "The dog grabped hold of his hand but did net break the skin." "The cperator then removed his hand, himself and the 25 passepgers, leav ing the bus to the dog," Fie~ sald. Duke refused to budge until police located his owners, ~1r. and Mrs. Rolan- do Rodriquez. They coaxed hi m out. Witnesses said Duke was waiting at a corner with would-be passengers. But when the driver ~ lhe door·.Olll.Y ljle <\oCl'Jton. · ~. •• ·•· f· Wtt!I( • said .tbe ,q j~ satj p the drQ.'er's1Sf!Al)qok,ing pul1 ~ wnxloW._ · ftiveta, tfaiged dbwll~"• pqllftl bus, and 'lhe other driver s11ootec1. "What hap- pened?" 11 A dog took over my bus," Rivera replied. , ·Police arrived in three squad cars. "They took one look at the dog and sto~ ped in their 'racks," Lee said. One officer reasi>ned that "if you've got a dog on the bus, .I guess the beit thing to do is to keep him there." Finally, Duke was recognized, officers found his owners, and bus No. 139 was back on the road, 30 minutes late and empty. The passengers were transferred to another bus. "Duke is a wonderful dog, very gent~." Mrs. Rodriquez said. "But he is very frightened of storms." Beach Police Seize, View Scores of Porno Movies Huntington Beach police today are carefully screening scores of sexy motion pictures confiscated in a Villa Park raid , including the controversial fullilength motion pi cture "Deep Throat" starring one Linda Lovelace. The entire movie ¥reening job has Hwttington vice o{ficers weary and bleary-eyed. "I've been 109king at these things for lwo days now and I have only 1een one that isn't hard~ore pornography," a red- eyed vice officer alleged. He didn't identify the non-off~nsive flick. Huntington Beach officers allege tile tilm raid at a Villa Park hom e .may have broken up a major ·distribution setup for sex fil ms in Orange County. Arrested when the movie cache was conliscatL-d was Charles L e o n a r d H8milton. 40, of 18692 Mari posa Lane. He was picked up Mooday. llamllton is tree tod ay on $5,000 ball and vice oUicers are viewing and loggi ng each of the several hundred film s round in his home. Lt. Robert Rineha rt said Jlamilton's arrest culminated a month-long in- vestigation '-ased on information supplied by another police agency in the county. He•said Hamilton, who is involved with several fibn producing companies wh ich are not connected with the alleged pornography operation, was arrested on a warrant charging 30 counts of sell ing distributing and exhibiting pornographic material orncers said the warrant was obtained when Hamilton allegedly sold them two feature-length pornographic movies, one of which was "Deep T~t." H'untington Beach vice investigators said they aided in the investigation by the Orange C.Ounty District Atto rney's ornce and the Orange County Sheriffs Office. a worried inquiry from Magruder about whether he and his family would be cared for If his part in the cover-up were discovered. Dean said he took no notes of most or l1is meetings \vith Nixon because 'some or the things that were being said' in these meetings . . . were very in· criminating to the President." He said he did not want documents recording such meetings because the \\1hite Jlouse had a problem with in· formation becoming public. * * * Paper Claims Sen. Montoya Fund Misuse NEW YORK (AP) -The Wall Street Journal said UJd/11 lbat Sen. J<»epli Moo· toya (D-N.~t.), used dummy committees to hide the sources of contributiom to bis _ 1970 ~lectioo campaign. The newspaper said that as a member or the Watergate committee, "M<noya 'Viii be silting ill judgment oo Republican tactics that he himself has condoned." The JoumaJ article said that "through the dummy committees, Montoya fUnd raisers routed contributions that might ha ve generated political probtems for the senator had they been disclosed. In this way, they laundered $57,000 from various political-acticn arms of labor groups ... as well as $45,000 or so f r o m other special interest groups." The newspaper said Mon toya declined requests for interviews about his fund raising. New l\1e~co law, the Journal said, re- quires Lund-raising committees for a can- dida te to report receipts and ex- penditures with the secretary of state 1vho has interpreted the statute to lnclude all committees raising money for the ca ndidate, no matter where they are located. 1 The newspaper said the only report fiJ. ed by the Montoya organization was that ot ttie New P.fexico-based group. It said the campaign treasurer, Jack Beaty. set up at least seven other committees in , Washington. "Mr. Beaty opened bank.ac- counts in the names of the committees;· the Journal said, "but ln every other respect they \\'ere phony, having no of. rice, no employes, no phooes and no members." Oraage Weather ·Ftiur Undergo .· Open . Heart Surgery The work was handl~ primarily by Huntington Beach, the officer said becaUse the·original lip concerned alleg- ed dislributk>n or obscene movies in Hun- tington Beach and the deal with Hamilton was set ltl!_in HW1tington Bea~b. t.1ostly sunny in the afternoon hours Friday, Iollowing the wiual low clouds along tbe coast liighs in the 70s at the beaches, sqUeako- ing out eo degree readings inland. Overnight lows In the 60$. INSIDE TODA 'l' I STANFORD (AP) -Two teen-qed brolhe'l with hereditary hear\· defects underWftll eomell ve surpry today while their brother and sister awaited 11lmllar. operallons later In the day. Richard Costello; 151 and ,Kevin, 13, \\.'ert "doing as well es could be ex· ~ted, 11 a spokesman for. Stanford University Med!Clll , Center IBld. "The operadons went very nicely, there were no compJl;cationa.'~ , ~ boY• were taken to the fldtensive cale unit alter under'°"'8 -heart surgery to repa ir holes bttween their • heir\ chlll!lbert. SUrpons -ope lhe .,,..auw will fll•• the chllclrtn another 15 or IO~ ol llle•o-. Kevin's threti-bour -opentkm was perlormed by llr. Honnen Shumway, • ' pioneer lioart transplant • u r g e. o n • Ridlard'• 21>-hour lllllltll' .... per-lonned by l>r, Edftrd Stinton, a member of Shumway's team. Karen Costelk>, f, and David, 18. wt re to enler .the ..,,,. acljolnlng. OIJtl'•Ung ,_.. later. The hollpltal 1&ld earUer Iha! 1Wen and lllcbard were first ID 811!1'ry, bu! the llChedule was changed. A holpllal spollesman sai all fO\lT children of Santa -lru~ driver .Dovld CoatellO weio '"my nmoos" bot eapr for the operaUon ducribed as "seriOU1 but fairly rouUnt." The chlldru all are 1U!ferlng from atrial ~ delt<ll or holes betweon their -bear! chambers. The defects limit lhe clrculatlon of blood and oxygen to -.... ' organs, ....... the chlldren to Ure eully. Tbe defect was paued on to, the <tiklrell .JJ.':clr !allier, · U!'\e Karen lloo Is fnHn a hole~in a major vein to her heart, a con· • • dlflon that al.so will be corrected by aurgery loday . U the holes are smaU . doctors planned 10 stitch them closed. II lhey are larger than a quarter, surgeons planned to make a patch of membrane from the pericaTdiwn, 'or sac surroWldlng the heart. More than too plnts or type A·positlve blood were dooated for the surgery which was expected lO require about 31) pints. The children were to be taken to the in· tensive care unit sifter surgery and re- main In lbe holpltll about 10· day•. Emigration Okayed KARACHI, Pa kistan (AP ) -Pokistan said today It wlll allow 450 Bengali students, seamen, and others lo emigrate lo Bangladesh. A Foreign Oilice spokesman said the move was the begtMing ol a li mited tcale ...,,alrlatlon ol BengaUs slranded or detained in Pakistan and of Pakistani pri!Oners held by Ban(llaclesh. Ora11ge Couiat11 supervisors l1ave adopted, ;II.St be/01·e t11e June 30 .ttate deadline, a .,e- vised open space plai~ witlt miiior clianges. See Page 9. ,..,. .... •Nllfll 1J AMI L.•..... n C•IHenil• J CltultlM 1"(2 c-k• u · c .... weni ~ O.ftr N9tlc:K t .... 1'1 ,... .. •MWt•l.,,,.,.t ,. PIMllCt tS-fl Iller lftt llK "'11 t ........ u • _,., .. M11flllil,..1111ft H 111111etta1 "... 4, , .. or-.. C""'7 ' ._,. ..... Sttell ........... ,, TtttvhM tr -.. ......... . ._..,.... tl.U Wllf'N ..... 4o 1• _ ... lo ..... IL UI • Thursday, JI.Int 28, l97J tlJ'ell Spent' 0 ~ ::. Funds Def ended ~{\t -Nixon Hom~s ~ . ' ""A~GTON (A P ) -The g~ve"'ment's ex~nditure ol almost •t.9 m1llion on President Nixon's Florida and canfomia residences is money well sptnt, says the chairman or a House A~ ~ subcommittee. _ p. Tom Steed (!)-Okla), said 1 y that the President "is not an oftlinary citiien . . . In some instances, we should pay him" for security-based 'i;l'anges in the houses that be may not )}lie but will have to live with. :'Steed's committee held Ii hearing at ~ch details of the expenditures were rileased. Totals of a General Services ·, :HELIPORT ... ' . " · knission recommendation. '·, "This is the most efficient and sare site :roe the heliport," he added. "It's In the :~phic center of the city 1vhlch helps : response time. There aren't many 1 : r sites." ·::!'Our ships approach the pad over a : CQlnmerclal area and they take off over : ~hi! (Ocean View) mushroom plant," he '811d. "I don't think the noise level is that : ~-"city has two Hughes helicopters ; ~!Uch it uses . for normal patrols and ,,.,..,ny acquired three Army Bell ; ~ioopters for emergency use and '.!raining porposes. · f!·'lbe possibility of moving the heliport 1.i... been mentioned by various civic . J~ders since the fac1Jity was built, bJt ; Jhe parks commission recommendation is 1 Jhe first time an o(ficial city body has p\ade such a proposai. · The phaseout was one or six sugges-lioM made by the parks commission bas-e<t on a review of the central park en-~!1'onmental impact report (EIR) written . oy the landscape architectural firm of · Eckbo, Dean, Austin and Williams. Five otter measures, suggeSted ln a mernorandwn to the plaMlng com- mission, covered: , -Not extending Talbert Avenue past Golden West Street. The current plan I cans for a looped extension of Talbert l'O"lh of the Central Park. I -Enlarge the 220-acre park to include 1 ihe propooed lllinl phase, more than 100 • Deres 900th, : -Do further masterplan studies oo : Sveet alignments and properties to be in- ~ t:luded in the central park area. -Support the concept of the park as a t •·passive" rather than "active" center. / -Necotiate a Joiw tenn .__ · agreement with the Ocean VI e w Mushroom Growers to purchase their property and phase out their operation because of its "negative impact" on the park. Administration eudit were released last Thu:sd•Y· Amoog Items not requested by the Secret Service !or security and safety purposes were two flagpoles and nags costing almost $3,000, the audit indicated.. The fiberglass Key Biscayne, Fla., flagpole, cheaper than one at Sen Clemente, has a gold leaf ball on top and nylon halyards. GSA officials told the subcommittee that "the military requested this for their commander-in-chief." They said it and all the other non-security equipment COLUMNIST TAKES LOOK AT IMPROVEMENTS-P190 13 remains government property and could be reclaimed after Nixon's term ends in im, but probably would not be. The audit did not include a. $400,000 helicopter landing pad at Key Biscayne or for an Executive Office complex on militar)' property adjacent to the 29-a.cre San Clemente retreat. Secret Service Director James J. Rowley said that more •than $132,668 in landscaping at the two1 oomplexea and another $13,660 or more £or variOU! kinds of shr;µbbery was a secllf'ity expense. either to give privacy to the President. protect him oil cover up security devices around the perimeters. Police Charge Coast Firm In Swindle A Newport Beach firm engaged in a fiberglass boat manufact uring promotion is alleged to have swindled investors out of ?more than $1 million, the Orange Police Department said today . Five men have been arrested in con· nection with the operation which alleged- ly was carried on throughout California and in Ari zona, Texas and SouUt Dakota. Jailed by Orange police Wednesday and today were Lyle H. Swakford, 47, of 485 Costa Mesa St., Costa Mesa; Keith Carlson, 40. santa Ana; John Rohen -Ford, 47, Tustin ; John Freeman, 47, LakeWood and Wi!Uam Smock, 45, also known as A. J. Scarbrough, of Anaheim. Orange investigator Dennis Dahlke identified the firm as National Marine Industries. He said it moved to 052 Campus Drive, Newport Beach, from Orange about two months ago . Dahlke said a lengthy investigation started when an Orange reside nt told police he had been cheated out of $1~,000. The Orange detective s a i d in· vestigators turned up eight additional victims in Santa Ana, Lakewood, Santa Fe Springs, San. Diego, Phoenix, Dallas and Rapid City, S.D., who alleged they had Jost more than $116,500 Jn in- vestments made through the firm . _ the city's environmental review board, composed of administrative s t a f { ~embers, is c u r r e n t I y studying the heliport suggestion and other rerom- Jnerxtations to detennine what shall be tbe conclusion of the final envirorunental impact rejXlrt presented to the city coun- cil. No specific date has been set for turn- ing the report over to the city council. Dahlte said he had uncovered evidence which indicates there may have been scores of victims who may have lost .J more than $1 million. Fro111PqeJ .HELICOPS ... mem aOOtrt recert addition of three P,Olice helicopters to the Huntington .Beach police department. McGregor's resignation, in itself, reportedly has been the subject or a number of top-level meetings at Newport .Beach city hall. City Manager Robert L. Wynn is not very happy to lose him . McGregor is the third and last of the city's original helicopter pilots. He was 'the instructor who taught the others to 'fly when the program started three years : lliO· ' Both Wynn and Police Olief' B. James , Glavas v.·ere unavailable for comment late Wednesday and early today . ' ., 01.t.N•I COAST •• DAILY PILOT TIM Orl""9 CMtl OAtL Y P'ILOT, Wtl!I 'lllllclo 11 -IMd.flle H1-Prn1, II Pllblflhlllll bY tlle 0r.,.... Coo11 P111>11s111119 co.._ny. SIJPI· ••II t!drtlonl art l'UDl blllcl, Moridl"I' ftlr-o1191'1 f"rlday, lw Co111 Mt11, H1WPOrl lle1cl'I, HunttnQlotl ll11rn11<0....11111 V1IJI¥, L•OllM IMd't, lrvlne/5adcllt111Ck ind $aft CJlmc11l1/ lllfl J111n C111111r1no. A 1lnol1 '"lonll rdltlcHI 11 P11bll1nt0 ilturdftyt 11111 SIHld•n. Tnt prlMllNI Pllbllilllno pi.111 11 II )10 Wttl 11"1' SlrHI. C011t Mttt, C.llklmlt, tM,.. Roli1rt N. W11d P'rnldenl 1/ld P'llllll-"•r J1cli: II. Curl1y The det«tive said National Marine Industries operated under several other names and placed ads in I o c a I newspapers inviting investors to become associates in the production of fibergla ss kayaks and other s1nall boats. Prospective investors were invited to lunch and told how they C<luld participate in the operation as mold builders, hull ' d«k builders or as assemblers and Hers. mpany representatives are alleged to have told investors of huge profits available through existing outlets ror their finished products. Dahlke said, in reality. no such outlets were available and the products were not marketable. As soon as the company salesmen enlisted as many investors as possible in a particular area they would then move on to another location and operate under different names , the Orange detective charged. Victims of the firm had to buy their own equipm ent lo manufacture the boats, he said, with a $5,000 down payment re- quired. Smoking Ban Effected SALEM, Ore. (UPI ) -Jt•s against the law today to smoke at a state gove.m· ment meeting in Oregon. Gov. Tom McCall signed a bill Wed· nesday banning smoking at such gather- ings. It took effect Immediately. OlllY l'llM Stiff ,lllte MRS. SPIEL, THE LINCOLN COLLECTOR, AND HER FORMER GOVERNMENT LIMO In Bilbo., Tongues Were Wagging and 1 Re1t1ur1nt Owner W11 Furious Li1110 Misleads Oglers Big, Sleek Ex-gover1iment Car Parked iii Newport By L. PETER KRIEG 01 1111 0.UY Piiot St•tl With tbe President of the United States down the coast in San Clemente and h.is former chief of staff secluded just across Newport Harbor, all of Balboa was sure it was getting into the act Wednesday. A Lincoln COntinental limousine was parked at the curb at the Rendezvous Condominiums on Palm Street. Tourists gaped and peeked inside as they passed by. 'l'be customers of the Red Carpet tavern across the street buzzed in lively speculation about who the car belonged to. After all. it was the kind of car made only for the government. It has red lights and fl ag mounts. Its distinctive Washington . D.C. licen~ plate heightened the speculation. The speculation ended today. The limousine belongs to Mr. and r-.trs. Thomas Spiel, summer residents of Balboa. 1bey live in Riverside and own two McDonald's hamburger stands. "Oh, I didn't even thin~ about it when J left il parked there," Mrs. Spiel said. relating that she had jlLSt come to town to get her coodominium ready for the summer. Flames Destroy Grove Gay Bar; Loss $100,000 1be Shangri-La ot Garden Grove, sister bar to the Costa Mesa Fire House nudie club until it became a gay establishment with female impersonators, was destroyed by fire early today. Damage was estimated. at more than $100,000. Firemen said the bar at 12272 Harbor Blvd. was completely engulfed in flame s when they roared up at 3: 10 a .m. The cause has not yet been eAplained. Debris from the fire spread over an area of 150 feet. Some adjoining buildings suffered broken windows and structural damage, acC<lrding to firemen. Police said the bar had been closed since la~ Saturday. She said the family bought the car a yea r ago from the Ford Motor Company and, yes, it had been in government service. "It was a Presidential limousine on loan to the head of the United Nations," she said. Mrs. Spiel explained that she and her husband are Lincoln collectors. '11ley have 10 of them. This is their second limousine. "We had a lifnousine from a Hollywood studio," she said, "but it was a mess. Jt had eagles on the door and a purple and yeHo'v Star or David on the roof." ''The dealer in Riverside knew v.·e \Yere looking for anot her one so when this became available, he called us," she said. Mrs. Spiel noted that .Ford lends lhe cars to the government and sells them when they're taken out of service. The Spiels' Linooln limousine iS a 1969 model. Its windows and doors are bullet proof. But the Spiels use it just like any other family car. The children sit in the back seat and watch the built·in television set: They sit on lamb carpeting. A1rs. Spiel said she was an official in the Riverside election campaign for President Nixon and bought the special license plate for $15. It's good for ooe year . She said the car was used during the election campaign to chauffeur dignitariel visiting the Riverside area. While the car impressed m o s l observers. it didn't do much for tbe pro- prietors of a local resta;.irant Tuesday night. l\1rs. Spiel C<lnfessed she had left ii in a private space belonging to the Afackerel Flats restaurant on Main Street and came back to find a nasty note on the windshield. "It said if we ever parked there again they'd have ii towed away." Mrs. Spiel said. Earl R. Browder, '30s Commun-ist Leader, Dies _ ft'rom \\'ire Services PRINCETON, N.J. -Earl Russell Brov.·der, Communi st Party candidate for president in 1936 and 1940, is dead at age 82. Browder. ~'ho was general secretary of the Communist Party in the United. States from 1930 to 1945, died in h.is sleep Wednesday at his borne here. "What was good for the 1930's is no good for the 1970's," he said in the in· terview. ''There's still room for a pusher, a pro- gressive force in the country. but I can't say what. The Communist party has pro- ven in life that ftdoesn'f flt l be role any more. What was required to keep il sl.rong wouldn't have been desirable." The Communist Party became the Communist Political Association in 1944. In 1946 Browder v.·as expelled from the as~iation as a "revisionist" for su~ porting l'resident Roosevelt's policies. He served prison terms from 1917 thr~ugh 1920 and in 1941 and 1942 for o~ posihg American war poli9". · Frcm. 1926 to 1929 he served as director of the Pan-Pacific Trade U n i on Secretariat in Shanghai, helping to organize the Communist drive in Clllna. He was a member of the executive com· mittee of the Communist International Movement from 1935 to 1940. Browder was bom in Wichita, Kan., the son of a school teacher. His lineage was early American, reaching back to the 1650's in Virginia. He was self educated. His son William heads the department of Mathematics at Princeton University. Besides William he leaves SOM FeUx o( Chicago and Andrew of Providence, R.I. A memorial service is scheduled Satur· dny at the Woodrow \Vi lson School for Public and International ' Affairs at Princeton. The funeral will be private. ParkSw~p Has Setback In Harbour Ai proposal to establis h a small .view par? on a knoll overlooldng Huntington Harbour may suffer a setback with the refusal of a developer to accept a land swap !or his h.ill toP property. fn a letter lo Huntlngtoo Beach May..- Jerry Matney, J.M.C. Constructloo Com- pany says two parcels of property owned by the county and coMidered for the swap are "unacceptable and n o l developable." Richard Ashby, speakine for JMC, will appear be.fore the city council Monday night to express his company's opposjtion to the park '!be discussion centers around 2.fi acres of land on a small blulf bounded by Waroer Avenue, Los Patos Avenue and Marina View Street. JMC owns about 2.1 acres and the city owns the mt. JMC plans lo build an ez. pensive condominium project on its land and had olfe<ed to buy the city property -with Us landmark water tower and well -to preserve that as open space. A half-dozen homeowners who live· on the other side of Marina View Street pro- tested the proposed condominiums and have asked the city to preserve the full 2.6 acres as a park because or its van· tage point. City coupcilmen have been reluctant to spend the money it would taJr:e to buy and develop the park, but had comidered a proposal to swap two nearby pieces of county property for the land. Tbe JMC letter. signed by Ashby, puts a damper on that proposal. Ashby says be bas looked at the pan.-els and cen- aiders one "unbuildable" and tbe other not wwth "more than 10 percent of our · property." In his Jetter Ashby statesr 1'1bere Is absolutely no chance that we will COlr sider such a trade." Ex-Fullerton Football Player Suspected iii Plot A former Fullerton College football player was amsted Wednesday by the FBI on susplcloo of attempting to extort $75,000 fmn Mel lo.1iller, manager ol the Bank of America branch in Fullerton.. Douglu R. Barr, 25, Fullertoo , is charged witb threatening to kUJ Miller unless the banker paid him the $75,000, !Xllice said . The alleged victim fonnerly man"aed a braticb of the bank in Costa 'Me"s<i~'1 ' ' • The threat was made by dropping a note in the bank's night deposit box last Friday .. according to Fullerton police. The note reportedly threatened Miller and his family and lndk:ated the bank building would be blown up I.Illes• the cash was paid. Barr played football at Fullenon J.C. in the late 1960s. Awards Day Slated By Bobby Sox League The North Huntington Beach Bobby90x League will hold its annual awards day Saturday at Clegg School, 6 3 l l Larchwood Drive. Activities will begin at 11 a.m. with the presentation of trophies for the first, sec-- ond and third place teams. The presen- tations 'l'ill be followed by a pol-luck din- ne r. The public ls invited . Ray Rohm, the owner of both bars, ex- perienced some 'heat of a different sort Tuesday night when the Costa Mesa City Council denied his request for a. theater li cense. Rohm hoped to avoid prosecution or hi s nude dancers by ma kin g the Fire House a thealer. Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1)ulda.p Record Summer Turnout Noted A record number. of children turned out \Vednesday for the first day of summer school clas.ses in the Ocean View School District in Huntington Beach. About 4,600 students, or 36 percent of the 13,000 students eligible for the sum- mer classes, are etU"olled in the four· week sessions, a district spokesman said. ln addition, another 1,000 children are enrolled in special summer clinics in reading, math, instrumental music, film and drama. \\forking as teacher aides during the morning sessions are 60 high school and 92 college students, district officials said. HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ''BEST BUY'' AWARD W• o•LIVI" Wli 11.ll:VIC• W• INSTALL ~ 4 CYCLE BUil T·IN u--u--POTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER .~ -' • in1.11Wtf ... • JWlltlL .... 4 CYCU PORTW DISHWASlll 18995 ......... .. , • w• •••vie• e W• INSTALL I CYCLE B.UILT·IN ~::POTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER Vici PrHkltftl 1na Otntrt l M111..itr Th1m11 IC11•il Editor Tliot1111 A. Murphi111 MMlll"" ElllOI a.1rlM H. Looi •ich1rd P. NtH Senate OKs Schlesinger D-,_ • ._AW Di..-. ...... °""'"" .............. ' -..: ................... ....., ... -·--.. ·~--.~ ... """ " • AMl1t111I Mt'll,lllf l.•ltwt. T11ry C1•ill1· w.t O!lftll Clumy E•ttor llMlql• .._. OMce 17171 h1ch lovl1•1l'lll M1ili11i A4l4'1111 P.O. It• 790, t2l'41 --L..-hl<flr 211 fl'ttnl ""-C..11 Mtw: D Wttt ltY ftrwl ,....,..., 111cRi am,...,.,, to.,,11vt•• ... " C""'*'lll JOS Hor'!! f:I Ct"lllll ltfll , .. .,., .. f7141 642 ... IJI ClmlHW ........... 642·1671 ,.,_ ,..,. or...., c..ir "-"'" 114f..IJJI C.11\'filfll, 1'1), OI'"•,,._ C.11 Pullllslllnt (_,.f!r. .., -•llr\n, 1!111to1r111Mt. tdltorl4il -""" ... •0'¥ ... ll~fl ...,..," """r " r~ WI"'°"' •oteltl w-"'1..-ef mirt'f-"I -· I ~ (lfq .......... Id II tlttt ""--• e91J!OrYlll. ""'9Cll1fllfllrl ""' ctrrltr ., ... ~I IJI' -" f;l.11 ~I~; Mllltt#T l..:--:·:1·~·= ... :.·="!.:"=:·:"-:~~,~~~~...l I ll'ASHfNGTON (AP) -The Senate unanimously confinned President Nix· on·s nomination of Janles R. 0 Schleslnger as sec retn.ry of defense today. The action came aiter Sen. William Proxm~• (0-1\'~. \, dropped hls ob- jections to I.he nom ination . Proxmire t.old the Senate that he Is still disturbed about Schlesinger's statement that, WldCr certaln condltlonl!I, he would rooommend resumption of U.S. bombing <JI North Vietnam. In reeponse to Proxmire's 'request that he elaborate, SchJ.,lneer said the only ('Of'ldition he could furelee for such a recommendation would be .. major ag· gresolve actioM by Nor1I! Vietnam which would three.ten South Vietnam in viola- tion of the Paris agreements." Proxmire called that "so gentraUzcd" an answer it didn't mean very much . However, Sen. Stuart Symington (0- Mo.), acting chalnnan o{ the Scn~te Armed Servi~ Commit tee, said he dJdn't see how the nominee could answer the question any other way. Had he sided with Congres." on lhe question of Indochina 'bombing, Sym· lngton said, he would be embarrassed at Cabinet meeUngs and might have bis name withdrawn. "lie hU !be knowledge and the op- portunky lo be • groat _,,, of delente If he iioes his own l\lllcmenl," Symqt.on uld. I I 22995. W• ~LIYH e •• s••v1c• • ft UllTALL " Dttn(ctf' . , ,, ... ,, ... , .... , . /.·'' ·' 1..--··J l,,ohf • ' ' "' . ' . ' Authorlzod GE SERVICE Momb•r of C1lllorol1'1 L1r1•ot Coopor1tlvo luyi"t Group With Th• Volum• Buying Power of 110 Stora 1815 NEWPORT I.VD. llllwntnn Costa Mesa -Pball ~7788 ' 90 DAY CASH WITH APPIOVll C•IDll • J ; I ThurSd.11, Junt 28. llf7J H DAIL.V PILOT 3 President to < · J, " Answer --Laird • UIZ NoNewsNotGoodNews At Coast White House By JOHN VALTERZA Of WI• O.llY Pl"' ..... THE SOt.rrll ORANGE COAST thia: week is teeming with some of lhe biggest people in the news business. And some or the most frustraied ones. too. Because for the past three days, President Nixon and his chief spokesmen have been hole<I up at the Western-White House, and only Deputy Press Secre- tary Gerald Warren emerges to take his daily pummeling at press briefings. So far~ despite the heaviest of questiOning and some Jow~own sneaky patterns of questioning, Warren hasn't budged from the ''no-comment '' posture of the Western White House. But despite their failure to elicit comment, lbe Press Corps s'till has a sense of humor. \Vednesday's a llegations by John Dean that tJw. White House maintained a "list" of enemies pointed out that fact. THE LIST OF NAMES assertedly kept fresh at the White House moved on a teletype machine only 1 few min- utes before Warren arrived for his routine daily joust. It drew an instant crowd, because everyme was dying ·vALTl'll:U. to find out if he or she bad been bated enough to be included. Alas, only Daniel Schorr and three others in the profession were on the list of "enemies." "What's be gol that I haven't eot." moaned fellow CBS staffer Robert Pierpoint, di!playing mock chagrin. The list seemed to amuse, more than provoke, the group. But one other revelation from Dean didn't sit as well. It was the one about using the IRS and it.! very efficient auditin& system to ''get back'" at the "enemies." WHEN WARREN ARRIVED, the group wasted little time. The battle. which-had been launched Tuesday to no avail. was launched ooce again. First, the group hit on the list and asked for a comment. But Warren would say nothing about the list, about the assertions !hat the IRS was "out getting" foes of the administration or anything else about the Watergate hearings and tbe evidence. So far, other than a similar appearance by Ronald Ziegler, Pres:s Secre- ta1' and Presidential Adviser.s last MODday, Warren is lhe only available source for White HOU9e details. Before Wednesday's briefing, conversations among the newsmen abounded -all dealing with the President's optiQl\I during the current state of siege. No one would make a bet on a press: ccllference. -And everyone was wonderinl what Ziegler -once a dally fixture at press briefings -has been dohlg for the pest three days of meetings with the Presl- deot. AT ONE POINT during the pre-briefing period a minor White House staffer called for one newsman, saying he had an emergency mewge for the writer. The recipient approached tbe aide to get his message amid a few wise- cracks from the oft-cynical corps: j "Hey. fella, it's probably )'Pl;:lr wife:• "There's probably a buDcb' of IRS auditon camped on ycl11•1 _doorstep_ You'd better start diga:ing for your receipts." Hospital Denial BY GEORGE LEIDAL Of ... Dtllh' ,., ... Staff \\'est.em World Medical Foundation plan.! f« a 182-bed "seed" bospita! for a nm-profit, self endowing medical center near UC Irvine <."Onlinue despite state Hoallh PlaMin& Council disapproval Tuesday. 'Ibo state council Tlleoday -10 loO to uphold the donlal voted May 21 by their seven-member subcommittee whith reviewed an appeal brought bJ mare than hall ol the members ol the Orange Coonty Health Plarming Council. That body last Sept. 2S overturned tilt council's facitities review committee decUUoo to give Western World tile go- ahead for its Irvine hospital. Health Planning Council approval qualifies • hospital for reimbursement ror services rendered to state MediCal program patient.'!. State-Sen. Dennis Carpenter lR- Newport Beach), president of the foun· dation, said Tuesday "We will build the ta:pital anyway, because It deserves to be built and it is needed." The facility is designed to ccmploment facilities UCI-Califomia College of Modlcine hopes UC Regents will build oo campus acreage adjacent to the 150 acres the Irvine Company has reserved for Western World. A foundallon •pokesman said today topographical surveys of the slit: are completed !Ind "precise &I.ta. surveys are under way. When plans are completed * * * construction will begin," foundation ex- ecutive direct« Walter Clar!: said today. FWlding for t.be hospitat is assured from private sources, Clark noted and foundation directors have approved con· s truct1oo ol the hospital oo expiration ol the ~year automatic delay built into the county health planning council's in- ltlal Sept. 25 denial. State law requires the delay bolore the hospital Ir eli&ible for !konsini. ' "W• will bo acting within oor legal rights to begin the hospital after Sept. 25," Clark Mid. A·ttomey Oxtrad Tuohey ot Fullerton Space Program Financing OK'd WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Senato today approved a compromise $3 billion authorization bill to fmance lhe nalion's opaee _.-am for fiscal 1974- A H...-Seoate Cool""'°' Commit ... agreed on 1 SS.OM billion authorization, '41.5 million above the aclmlnlstralion bodget request for the N a fl q n a I Aeroaautl<o and Space Administration. The mtalUl"e includes $2.2 billion in authorizations for I I NASA research and developmenl projects. VCI Hospital Funds Included Disc Insure . 'In Full' Promised Nixon to Answer Questions Later, Laird Confirms • WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will respond to all questions about the Watergate affair toward the end or the Senate's hearings, White llouse counselor Melvin R. Laird wa s quoted ;i~ saying. in a \Vash1ng1on Post interview Wednesday. Post reporter David S. Broder quote<! Laird as saying Nixon would not "re- spond to every witness" but would ans\Ycr REINECKE CONTRADICTS MITCHELL-StD<y, P•ge 16 "questions, all questions ... at. a press conference when v•e get near the con- clusion of the bearin@s." Broder said Laini, former defense secretary and recently a p p o i n t e d domestic affairs adviser to Nixon, reported having talked about the timin~ of a prtss conference with Nixon. "I think he's willing to do that ... I don't think there will be any problem with . that,'' Laird said. He also strongly hinted thal \Vhite I louse Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler \\'ill be replaced as the President's spokesman at some poinl, lhe ney,·spapcr said. Although not directly implicated in \Vatergate crimes. Ziegler is considered to have lost considerable credibility throogh his handling of the scandal. A spokesman in San Clemente. meanY.·hile. said the President took no part in writing the memo accusing John \V. Dean III. of masterminding the Watergate coverup, and it should not be regarded as a definitive \Vhite House statemeni. according to a spokesman for tbe President. The statement was prepared by H. Fred Buzhardt,. the President's legal counsel -the office Dean once held - from material supplied by "others," Deputy PreSs Secretary Gerald L. \Var- ren said \Yedoesday. Nixon did not see nor approve it bef()\e it was sent to the ~nak Watergate Com- mittee, but was briefed on it Wednesday. \Varrcn said. Upheld represented the planning c o u n c I I member's who obtained reversal of a Bay Area planning council endorsement of the \\'estern World plan. Tuohey has boasted his firm has defeated ''more than 200 hospitals in Cal- ifornia. "If there is: any ptace in California that doesn't need more hospital beds, it's Orange County," Ille nonh county lawyer contends. He suggests Sen. Carpenter has a "conflict of interest" with his Western World involvement and charges that the foundation "was set up to fatten-the wallets of a l.Junch of Newport Beach doc- tors." Clark Pointed out the foondation is established as a non-profit public corpora- tioo. "No fwids can inure to the benefit of any director or doctor." Director Walttr Burroughs has ex- plained repeatedly that the foundation will indirect ly beneriL the quality o( medicai school training UC Irvine can of· fer. The foundation 's hospital will be sup- ported by income from leases to com- mercial tenants of buildings planned to share the We.tern World acreage at ultimate development. Me~wllile, the foundation will oppose a county healtb planning council master plan which suggests the Irvine area wit! need no bospiUJs for 10 years. Another bearing on the ma ster plan will be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Department One, Superior Court, 700 Civic Center Drive w .... Sanla Ana. * * * .state BIJ·~get Okay Seen1 A record 11.aie budget, including plan· nine money for the t:C lrvine campus teaching hospllal and • rtt10vation of Oran&• County Medical Center, ....... pected to dear the leglslature by tonight. Assemblyman Robert Badbam (R- Newport Beach) lotd the Daily Pilot to- day he has assurances f r o m Assemblyman Willie D. Brown Jr. (IJ.. ·san Francisco) that the state budaet in- cludes a !900,000 plannlna allocation for the medical school. D•dham and State Sen. Dennll E. CarP""ter (R·Newport Beach) 81ch have introduced snfeguard bills Which would provide the funds In the event they -are deleted by the conference committee on budget which Brown chairs. Brawn; however. "IU8ures mt the Irvine medkal ·school pllMing money i5 in the stetc bodgel and Isn't likely to come 001 before the bill gets to the Door." The cmlerence committee debatc5 which have delayed Assembly and Senate votes on the 11?3-'l.t 1tate budgtt involve -other than the UC budget. Aroong the unsettled ...,..,,,. of the conference committee are 1ltemaUves lo Gov. Re•gan's pl1111 for 'l'tlldlng fcderal . revenue sharing and state tax surpluses or retumlhs money to taxpayer1. "My best peu Is that we'll vote on the budget at 5 or 8 o'clock todar.," O.dham oald, Indicating it Is his eellng both hou"" will act on th• !Ina! budget draft today. · "Nothing I would say v.·ould influence the UC! budget amounll." Badham tald •. mphaslilng his confido!lee. Ibo teaching hospital fUndlng wtll bo approved. Earli er this year. the Joint Legls1ativt • Committee on Teaching 'fospital Siting, also. chaired by Assemblyman Brown, sugges&ed a division of UCl's share or ii statewide health ldenees -fund. The proposal provides lor • l20 million 200- bed campus teaching hospital ond $9.5 million in lmprovem<nts at OCMC. Otller bond funds from the 138 mmlon JCI share, will provide a $6.5 milllon start on a $12 mlllk'Mi can1pus classroom. office and laboratory foclllty for the medical ""1ool. Only the OCMC expenses hlnge on agreemtnt betwt-en UCI and the county Board of SuperVlsors on who will run the countY, hospital. The l)Ol'ld funds 1nay not be spent by the unlvCrsity unle~s n long term agreement providing uise or the hMpltal for tbe cdutation of medi cal students, lhe Brllwn committee ret.'01n· mend~d. , .1 AFTER BIDDING REACHES $10, WENDY BERLOWITZ UNFASTENS roP JF ~ATHING :;OIT She Takes It Off to Protest Men like Husbind. James, Going 81re Chested arid Women Not f!t. '" Law yer Belli Will Defend A $10 Takeoff :::. 1. I b . t • I l,000 See Girl Doff Bikini Top NORMAN, Okla . (UPI) -Wendy (37 The biddi ng stopped at the $10 Jeve~) 25-36) Berlowitz belted out a chorus of and the \\'inner Was A.C. ''Red" Strange.~ Coast POW "Wedding Bells Go Ding Dong," auc· •·r just \\'anted to give her the op.: I SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A Tustin portunily to lake it off." he said and shf l tioncd off the top half of her purple d"d 1 Marine lieutenant colonel will deny velvet S\.\•immlng suit and went to jail for 1 · ' •·completely and vehemently" charges Strange presented his $10 bill and th&• that he aided the enemy and mutinied exposing the 37 in a public place. crowd roared. Then a hush fell ovet the ~ while held captive in Hanoi, said flam-"We've sold everything but our guitar assembly as Wendy reached back, pluck'"\ which we can't sell because we're musi· ed the single hook loose and raised the boyant lawyer Melvin Belli. top over ber head. ~ l 0 -11· 'd h ill def d LI c I Edi cians," \Vendy sOOuted to the mostly uc 1 sru e w en . o . son "Wa y to go, Wendy! Put 'er there,'" \V. Miller, who with Navy· Capt. Walter male crowd of 1,000 persons Wednesday one man in the crowd shouted. • E. Wilber v.•as charged Tuesday by Rear on the University of Oldahoma campus. "You·re a real revolutionary!" yelled , Adm iral James B. Stockdale, deputy 'The men showed up to get a cl~r look 1 t.'Ommander or all POWs held in North at the former graduate school instructor. another. ' ·, Vietnam. "All I've got left is the bathing suit off Her husband Jim beamed with pride. I .. Miller is amazed at the charges and my back, so it's going to be auctioned He said the episode proved bis wife iS doesn't k00"' their basis. He says he right now .'' "courageous beyond exceptloo ... " ,~ J never met the admiral who filed the The. bidding did nol go as high as she "I've never seen anything like It," ~ charges, .. Belli said. ·'He says he never expected. said and then added something that com;-. did anything at any ti'ille illegal and "Come on, I don't want to eat beans pared his wife to Joan of Arc. . ~ never tried to harm anyone else, any tonight," she pleaded. ·•1 can't take-it off About thal time a petite woman polic.•. soldier or the country ~" until I get the money. Bring the cash up officer pushed her way through tht Miller. whose ·wife filed for divorce right now and I'll trade you the top for Cij>\vd and arrested Wendy on a charg~ May 31, will issue a three-page statemenl. ii.'' of exposing herself in a public place. Her.· "in his own words · completely and bond was set at $1,000 and she was jailed.· vehemently" denying the charges, said · r when she couldn't posl the bond. , • Belli. a1torney for Jack Ruby after Lee Haiphong Opened "If my husband can walk around .. Harvey Oswald was shot to death in the without a shirt, why can't I? I'm sick ol-.1 aftermath of President K en n e d y • s WASIDNGTON (UPI} _ A U.S. mine looking at my husband's tanned chest. It.. assassination. sweeping task force has completed open-is discriminatory for women to have to Belli said the 24-year Marine veteran's ing North Vietnam's port of Haiphong wear blouses and a<tnan not to. statement also will describe the "more and will tum its attention to the port of "The whole reason I took it off was to harrowing" torture he experienced while Vinh south of Haiphong, the Defense De-go to court," she went on. "J want to be a prisoner for :_:riv:_:•:_::Ye:::ar:::s:· _____ ~pa:r1me!1::::::::':.:sa=::id:._W:.::ednesd==•:'..Y·:..._ _____ 1_he_r_e._T_he-'-y-kno_w_l'_H_s_ho_w_up:... ___ _ .JJ. J. garreff ~ 22nd Semi-Annual N O'W i11 Progress - ~ I 1 . 1 Collection of Decorator CHAIRS As Shown now or $349. per pair ~-1 . 1 ; . Your favorilt Interior des igner will be happy to OISfsl vou... ·~J H.J.GAl\l\ETT fllRNITURE A Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD. 646·0275 .~-... -.. . .. .. -. . . · ... ,· - PROFESSIONAL INTER IOR DESIGNERS Thurs. & Fri. Eves. COSTA MESA, CALIF . ,r:~• • • • , I .. +,One End , 'ut the Other DGET BUSTERS DEPT. -Any wire who tries to buy this year's with our current dollar has a good idea what budget-fighting is t. She likely figures the price in- vs. dollar denation is some kind of ccMiracy. can you blame her? Conspiracies tery large in the news these days. ay spending, versus saving is a giant tug-of-war and som~how ms the' saving part ends up on the end of the stick. isn't just in household budgets, you. Look to government. Like here with our own Orange County Of Supervisors. This is budget- oo a grand scale. lailliNcy folks like ua worry aboul hav- ing only f42 .23 left in the family food budget. Our country supervisors, on the other hand, are wresUing with ex- penditures thal go up to $350 million. 111AT'S RIGHT, it takes $350 million lo ruii our county government for a single year. Personally, I can't even imagine how rnany dollar bills that is if they were $lacked up in a single pile. In recent times. our county supervisors ~\·e been going through \\'hat is kno""'Il ~ budget hearings. 'l'his means that all !h: county department heads come llliiore the board and declare they must hnd, spend, spend on a long li st or vital t:;:ms. . The Supervisors' task is to sit up there Lt the big chairs and say no, no, no. Ul partment heads. ho'>'1ever, arc we ll C:¥lare that the supervisors are prepared lo say nay at the drop of a vote trtd therefore they come prepared ~ j u s t i f y the spending. 'q1us 1he tug-of-war is established. Sometimes 1he supervisors stick \\'ith the nay; sometimes they get talked into a yea. What ends up getting spent shO\\'S up in your taxes. TAKE TIIE PR~ENT Orange COWJ!y property tu rate. It amounts to $1.95 for ~aCh $100 \\·orth of assessed valuation on your property. This is just the part that runs the county government. So this year the supervisors have been backing away at next year's ex~s and fl.gure they s~ced lhe tax rate back Ill maybe,$!. 78. . 'lllis part souqds pretty good. But at the same time, it appears that the county has increas-ed spending from $306 million on the current year to $350 million during 1he coming fiscal year. How can that'"be? They say the tax rate goes down tN.t the spending goes up. \\'ell , for one thing, there \vas $22 million in the current budget that, in- credibly somehow, didn't get spent . So they are carTYing that over lor next ~·car's spending. 'I'1ler1 there \\'as the ~ matter of another $10 million that got handed down from the fedcraJ government. Of course you know where the federals got that cash in the first place. THUS IT JS the old story. The federals boQ.U your gasoline taxes. take the money, hand it back to the county and !he county says hey. y,•e can reduce your tai:es because we got this extra money. This is sort of like your cagey old Aunt J\1aude, wbo borrows eight bucks from your cookie jar up on the shelf and then. in a grand gesture, loans you a fiver. IL all looks good, but someho\Y you get 1he notion that you aren't reall y getting "bead. Nation's CREWCUT-STYLEO EX-BEATLE JOHN LENNON, WIFE AT HEARINGS Singer Joins W1terg1te Spe:ct1tors in John Oe1n Testlm~nY White House 'Enemies' Both Honored, Amused United Press International Some said it was a sip of totalitarianism. Other.~ \\'ere aniuscd. And the great majority of the pro1nincnt figures included oo a White House list of "en<.>mies" said they were honored lo be ronsidercd enemies of President Nixon . "I \\'OULD HAVE been embarrassed not to be included ." said Sen. }larold Hughes (D-lo\va). ··rn !his case. no n1en - tion, like faint praise, might be con- sidered damnation." The list. released by lhe Senate \Vatergat.e committee \Vcdnesday aft er it was submitted by former presidential counsel John \V. Ucan Jll, brought forth colorful responses from many of the 200 labor leaders, businessmen, actors, and journalists included on it. Some journalists said it \Vas one of the highest honors they had ever received. '"Next to Y.•inning a Pulitzer prize." said Ne\o; York Post columnist Harriet Van Home, "there can be no greater hono r for a journalist in this year or shame than being on the While House blacklist." ''T OBE RICJIARO Nixon 's enemy to- day is to be the friend of our founding fathers and of all that is decent and just in our Democratic traditioo .'' she added. Black comedian Bill Cosby said "I '1•ant lo make it perfectly clear Nixon was on my list long before J \\'as on Nix · on 's list." His colleague. Dick Gregory. said. "That's how Hitler got his start pretty soon the list y,•ill become a credcn- lials list for knowing who ar~ the right people and Bob Hope and Billy Graham 'vi ii be saying. 'are you sure I'm not on it. ' " Al'nold M. Picker. or United Artists Corp. and a top. fundraiser for Sen. Ed- mWld l\.1uskie, was the firsl name on the list, Y.'hich was in priority order. "I'LL LET GORDON Li.ddy pick up the award· for me," said actor Paul Newman. Carol Channing, comedienne and star of the musical "Hello Dolly," said ''I didn 't know the President didn't like my singing." She added that Nixon had once said to her ''You are my favorite Dolly " and only t1\'o weeks ago 1'-1rs. Nixon ac· cepled a dia1nond ring she sent as a gift. North lrela11d's Voters I To Choose New Assembly BELFAST (APJ -Northern Ireland's voters choose a provincial assembly to- day amid a spate or guerrilla violence and politica l bpckbiting. ln filling 78 ' assembly seats. the one n1illion voters have a choice or 210 can- (,__IN_S_H_O_R_T._ .• _) didates trailing 19 different party labels. Essentially, the fight is for leadership or the province's Protestant majority. The new assembly is intended by its British designers to ease the reudiag between Pro testants and R o m an Catholics which over the past four years has cost n1ore than 800 lives and untold damage in bombing and riots. e Survivors So119l1t MANILA. Philippines (AP l -A ship sank with 20 lives lost, and frogmen were lrying Thursday to detennine whether as many as 5 OOthers might be trapped alive in the vessel, a Philippine Coast Guard spokesman s aid. The sh.ip struck what was believed to be a coral r eef and sank early Wed- nesday about 12 miles south of Cebu, the Philippines' second-largest city, 350 miles south of Manila, the spokesman said. e Drought Relief R0).1E (UPl)-Rain has finally started falling in parts of drought-stricken \Vest Africa but U.N. officials said Wednesda y il could do more harm than good by hampering transportation of a i d to 1nillions facing starvation. Experts of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAQ ), head- quartered in Rome. said the rainy season is also posing the danger that thirst-craz- ed, ·haJ£-starved cattle may drink them- selves to death. East Coast Wet Needles Folks Wake Up to 105 Degree Temperatures T emperatMre1 t J T"' AHKll l ... ,l'ftl Hitll L-.. Alj':,n'f ., " •• -'' •n•• ~ •• •• l •ktr1tl1lo '~ " l:tlfo " .. ~ .. " " 'J::• ••tOn " ' (. rlOl!I " • c:r,1upo •• " " t ntmMll • " ··~··"° " ,, Den~· •• ~ "" ' " " " ,:,,_ '" " =lyhl M " ·~ ., " , ll'W:llf!WllOlll " " ,, J1t .. .ot1vlll• " " bnM• Cllv " •' W1 vr:~ '" " Lll'fl• ock " .. ~ ... "' " n .. • • ,, " • Ml-.. " " M~~ " " M9' 1. ~•Ill " li ·-M " " ,..,.. ft,,,., " " h " .. ~· " • '" " •• " ·~ 5 fit:. ,,. " " t! II J• '" 1; ll !l " • if· " " " • ll " -" " v.s.•••••r11 8 TM ~·"" ''"'' rvmMid K•llk lne ff.IOI'! itftd 1:!11' ~· 'l"~M IYil tl 1~V11!1y 9Wf' t l'llOlln = F:;" 11\f . k t! wr• .,, .,,, ...... '"''' • llOIMO,----~ ..tAIN (;;i:,;,~;JSHOW ~'*"""IS' r~~ lt•rnont. 2J. 1n 01ko111 co,,..bor. 1nd 1111 /'IOfM. Coastal Weather SUM'I' IOdly. L!gl!I VArl1bt1 wfndl t1lghl 1nc1 mornlr>O houri bttomh'ICI WMlerly I to 16 kno'll 1" 11tlernoot11 lodl\f ond Frid~y. High !od8V 72. Co~&lll lemperatur" rAn~e fr om •2 lo 10. '"l111d temPt'rature' •~"'9• from 6~ to 1~. Wiler tem~r•rur1 69. S1111, /lloot1, Tidex THVltSC>AY Se.:ond lliqh 7,16 p,m. SfCDl\d low ll:U p.m, l'lllOAY Fl•ll hl11h , t :U 1.m. S., FlrSI IO\Of 2:43 •.m. ·I.I SKond hlOfl , .. 10:07 p.m. 1,0 s.cm low ...... •. 1:41 o.m. 2.1 Su" lllNl 5:44 1.m. Stll l :ot ,,.m. MODI! lllStl l :•I 1.m. l tll •:>t p.m. DAILT PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE· Drf;ttry or tllt OalfJ' "lot lS ;lllrMUtd M ..... ,.,,llitfl II -.. Mt .... -~,.r .,. t:• '-"'-• U I! .... -~ •Ill ._......,.,,. -..<•Ut•n...._ ... ,.. ~"" ....... ..., .... , ... ,,. II ¥M .. Mt ''"""' "" '"' .., ' ...... _ _.,,, .. '""' .... .,.. "" .... ...., .. llt ........ , .. c ..... , ........ ... T tlf PP!otltt Mttl .9"• ~'' ·-....... 14-tm --.w .......... .... ... Wiii I ... '/ ........... ,. ... t-....,( ........... . ... "'"' <.,...,_, .... ...... ...... '"-· ... _. "'"" .... ..... / • War · Critics · to President Will Veto All Bo1nb Ban Riders WASHINGTON (UP!) -War critics, now In !inn command of both houses of ·eongress, grimly pressed ahead today with legislation to stop the bombing o! Cambodia -despite President Nixon's veto of such a measure. Antiwar forces in both the Senate and House vowed to attach a new end-the-war measure as a rider to vital ap- propriations bills that must be pe.sscd if the federal govenunent is to continue ope~Ung. 11lE CRUNCH IS expected to come on * a llouse-passed appropriations resolution to keep federal agencies operallng after the new fiscal year begins thJs Sunday. The House resolution contains an amend· ment -identical t() the one written into the $3.3 billion s upp l emental air propriations bill Nixon vetoed Wednesday -cutting off runds for U.S. military ac· Hon in, over or from the shores of C&m· bodia or Laos. Senate approval is ei:· peeled before the end of the week. In vetoing the supplemental bill, Nixon said the total bombing halt "would seri~sly undermine the chances for a· Cambodia Cheers Nixon Veto M·ove From Wire Services PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -The government gave a predictable welcome today to President Nixon's decision to continue bombing in cam.bodia. It said this could en.able il!I forces to control the military situation and shorten the 'var. NIXON'S DECISION coincided with the Phnom Penh command announcing a series of offensive operations to recap- ture lost territory in several areas. The operations reportedly were on a relative- ly minor scale. penetrated Kontum City but were driven ba ck in one of the bitterest battles or 1972. Now the 302nd is having another crack at Kontum. The city is 260 miles north of Saigon and strategically located near the Ho Chi Minh trail to the west and to Pleiku, keq city for the Highlands, to the Soulh. The 302nd appeared to be ignoring an ultimatum by Brig .. Gen. Tran Van Cam. commander of the South Vietnamese 23rd Infantry Division headquartered at Kontum, to pull back by Friday or face a e<1unter offensive to be launched '''ith air and artillery bombardment. lasting peace in Indochina and jeopardize our eftbtt1 to create • at.able, enduring structure of peace around the WOtld." THE HOUSE,· m.Jnute1 after Nixon's message was read, su.stalned the veto. It voted 2~1 to 173 in fa.vor of a motion to override, 49 votes short of the necessary two-thirds majority. Chairman Goarge Mabon (l).T02.). ol the House Approprtations Committee said he would seek approval of a new supplemental bill without the antiwar rider, but dov.es said they would seek to attach the Cambodla amendment to the measure once again when it comes to the floor . In an interview today in t h e Washington Post, Melvin R. Laird, the President's new chief domestic adviser , said Nixon will veto every bill that con- tains a ban on fund! for bombing cam· bod la. ' THE HARD LINE by lhe While House indicates the battle between the Ex- ecutive and Legislative branches ha• been joined. Senate DemocraUc Leader Milce Mansfield pledged Wedneoday w ' attach the Cambodia bombi(lg ban rider to every piece or legislation "until the will or the people prevails." Nixon said If the slg>plemenlal bill Is not enacted the payroll for Social Securi- ty Administration workers would be withheld, and 25 million Americans might be depriYed of their benefits. There is son1e question wbether the measure automatically dles Saturday when the current budget year end.!I, or y.•hether it can be passed in the new fiscal year. The impasse on the "continulng resolu- tion" could be far more serious, however, i£ Congress and the President fail io come to terms. Maj . Gen. Sosthene Fernandez, com- mander of the armed forces, said con- tinuing American air bombardment \o;ill ln.Oict heavy J~s on Khmer Rouge in-. surgeots and their N o rt h Vietnamese allies, "and the war ui ll end very quick- ly." China Explodes Nuclear ln Saigon, Vietnam's cease-fire entered its sixth month today with the Saigon command reporting 13 civilians killed in five separate incidents and more heavy fighting near Kootum in the Central Highlands. Two government soldiers were killed, four y,·ere wounded and 10 u·ere missing following all • day lighting Wednesday 'A·ithin seven miles of Kontwn, lhe com- mand said in its daily coJfununiqut>. COID!UNIST FORCES at Kontum consist of two regiments (about 5.800 men) or !the battl~hardened North Viet- namese 302nd or "Steel" Division . Mili- tary sources said. The Steel Division helped defe1t the f'rench at Dien Bien Phu nearly 20 years ago. One year ago its forward elements Weapon in Atmosphere By United Press international China announced today that it explcided a hydrogen bomb Wednesday and declared that it wanted to break "the nuclear monopoly by the superpowers." But Peking said it would never be the first lo use nuclear weapons in war. In a brief communique issued from Peking and carried. by the official New China News Agency, China said the nuclear test was only a defense move and had the ultimate aim of abolishing nuclear weapons. TIIE ANNOUNCEMENT indicated the bomb was detonated in the atmosphere, a method cjf testing that has provoked strong criticism against France in recent weeks. 'The French are reportedly preparing atmospheric tests over tht South Pacific. The Chinese statement. monitored in Hong Kong, did not mention the size of lhe blast, but U.S. defense analysU estimated that the yield was in the range of one to three megatons. A megaton is a million ton,, of TNT. By contras t, the Unied States has detonated a 15 megaton bomb and the Soviet Union set off a nuclear blast in October, 1961, that wa,, estimated to be SI megatons, or the equivalent 51 million tons of TNT . *** G-D OPEMI• ••""'• . ' :: ., . ' :;. :. • < , ., 0 '°"'" ,.. BAYSIDEO•t&R Jul~ ~·II MARINERS SAVINGS ADDS TO ITS FLEET *** :\ow convenicn 1ly l~ca<ed in Bays ide Center at Jamboree and Bayside Prive. *** * DO•'T ltlSS THE BOAT* A alt 11boul our Spec in I Su rpri 1e FREE LOG BOOK S, IN FLAT ABLE BEACH BAGS ' AND OTf-IER NAUTICAL GIFTS e REFRESHMENTS IN LOBBY e ·VISIT THE FRIENDLIEST CREW IN TOWN ' . " '., '. .. FOUNDf'.0 i9SJ -MARINERS SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION ' A ~lftKlll')' fll C,plul Alll1111:1 CUrll(>t'lllufl 102"4 h p l* ~ • Ntwpufl IH!k'h • C•llf11rnl1 '?MO 11 141642...000 • H1111"'•'"1o •pm.Yrld1y•11"11teprn, )IAIN OFFICE: WESTCUf'I' Al 00\ll!k. Nli.WPOIT IEAQl ' j I • f j I I 7 • Orange c~!!t • Today's Final N. Y. Stoek.s VOL. 66, NO. 179, 5 SECTIO.NS, 62 PAGES ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA N TEl)I CENTS 82 There are 82 Newport Beach city ...employes making more than $15,000 a year, and 18 of them are earning more than $20,000, a Daily Pilot survey reveals. or the most highly paid empioyes, 29 are pqllcemen, six are firemen and four ar,e lifeguards. . 1bere · art fwo librarians, 10 on the Community Development Department (planning and building) staff, and four each in lhe Finance, Parka; "Beaches and Recreation and manager.'s. oUices. Three work in the General Services Depart- ment. The totals include 18 police sergeants who will earn $16,236 during the 1973-74 ' .. fiscal ye•r. Seven police lieutenants will make $18,782 and four captains will eern $'11,756. City Mahager Robert L. Wynn is the highest paid executive. Councilmen recently boosted his salary $3,400 to 135.000 • )'Oat. City Attorney Denn.is O'Neil ma~es $29,000 while Police Chi.el B. James Glavas, Community Development Direc- tor , Richard V. Hogan and Public Works Director Jbseph T. Devlin Will draw $28;000• salaries. Finance Director George Pappas is paid $25,332. Fire Oh.ief Leo Love and General Services Director Jake Mynderse will both earn $23,544 ; James Hewicker. assistant community development direc- tor for planning and Benjamin Nolan. assistant public works direct.or, will make '22, 752. ~istant City Attorney David Baade will make $21,888 while Calvin Stewart, parks, beaches and recreation director, gets $21,348. Bobby . Fowler, assistant community dev.elopmel)t Qir~tor for building, will earn $21,192: Frank Ivens. assistant to the city manager for personnel and Bob Reed, marine safety director, will earn $20,844. City Librarian Dorothea Sheely and John Burkhart, assistant to the finance· ' ' .J • ' • • • • · L _ •· ' ' 1 ' . ·v J!"!" .... !9'\'«11•1' MRS. SPIEL, THI LINCOl,N COLLICTOll, AND HER FORMER GOVERNM!NT ·LIMO In &.lbM, TonguM Were•\Yqgfng •nd • Rnt•ur1nt Owner W•• FurioUI -. ' Li1110 Misleads Oglers Big, Sle ek Ex -governmerit Car Parked i1i Newport By L PETER KRIEG Of llM EMii\' ......... \Vith the President of the United States dO\\'n the coast In San Clemente and his former chler or staff secluded just across Nev.'))Ort Harbor. all or Balboa was sure it was getting into the act Wednesday. A Lincoln Continental limousine was parked at the curb at the Rendezvous Condominiums on Palm Street. Tourists gaped and peeked inside as they passed by. The customers o£ the Red Carpet tavern across the; str~t • Bal))()a Resident 'J'akes Problem 1, To City-Trash Charles P. Avery of Balboa made his point with Newport. Beach city coun- cilmen this week. Avery, of 1609 F.. Balboa Blvd., was getting fed up with the trash left on the beach in front of his house. He was pointedly displeased with the • eit. forcement ol lltter laws. . • _,_.1 ,_ So he mailed samples of tbe' ~· to cquncll'men. . Mayor Donald A. Mclnnll got lhree half-empty cans of wann beer. Others got empty Orange Julius caps and drlifd-out milk qirtons and crushed Seven-Up cans. . "HoW many of these cutbstone diners and litterbugs have been arrested !Or lit· terin(! by Newport Beach police the past year," A very demanded to know in , hls letter. Councilmen couldn't answer. But they told the city slafl to write Avery acknowledging receipt of his letter aller Vice Mayor Howard Rogers conceded !hat 11 ts a problem . "There war a van parked out in fronl of my house -In Balboa -thll -kend with a big 'Ecology Now' bumper sticker on It," Rogen said. · "When they left they left a big pile ol trash around it. The sticker must Nve mcaat for the inside of th4? van only/' he said. Nwnher Corrected A Dally Pilot editorial published Wedne9d&y, June Z'I, regarding the Harbor Area Youth Employmonl Service C011telned an Income:! pllone number. The correct number Is 842-0474. ' buzzed in lively speculation about who the car· belonged to. After all, it was the kind of car made only ror the government. It bas red lights and flag mounts. Its distinctive ,Washington, D.C. llcense plate bei&htened the speculation. The speculation ended today. nte·limouslne belongs to Mr. and 1.trs. Tboma$ Spiel, summer residents of Balboa. They live in Riverside and own two McDonald's hamburger stands. "Ob, I didn 't even think. about it when 1 left it .parked there," t.1rs. Spiel said, ·rtlating that she ~ just come to town . to get her ·coodommium ~ady for the summer. She said the family bought the car a year ago from· the Ford 1.lotor Company and, yes, it bad been in government service. "'It was a Presidential limousine on loan to the head ol the United Nations," she said. Mrs. Spiel explained that she and her husband are Lincoln collectors. They have 10 of them. This is their second (See UMOUSINF., P11e Z) Sen ... ErtJin ·Apparent~y Cliallenges President WASHINGTON {AP ) , -Sen ate Watergate Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. challenged today whether President Nl'<- on did anything "to perform his duty to see that the laws, are f~lthfully executed in respect to tbe Watergate afrair." · """ Nbrl1I Corollna Democrat attacked certain White House 1Latements· after winaing-Kknowledgel'Mnt lrom John W. Dean 11Lihal-1D111a pre!Kleritial decisions and White Qcfuse Qctions not related to lhe Watergate violated the First and Fourth Amendments to the Constitution. • Questions by Ervin at the fourth day of Dean's testimony appeared. aimed at challetJting Nixon to testify on the NIXON 'ENEMIES' REACT TO LIST-P19" 4 Wilterllte ecandal. Later. committee CCU11e1 Samuel Dash said the question of whether to lnYite the President to testify bad not beel1 l'ffOlved. lo other hlghllchts lrom testimony by ousted White House counoel Dean : .....:ffe kept no notes or most or his tneelings with Nixon because "some of !he things that were bell!( Aid In these meetings •.. were very Incriminating to the President." -He believed, 111 was a restraining in- fluence at the. White House. There were many wild and crazy schemes, M>me of which T have not testified to." He was not asked to elaborate on the scheme1. -The i>"'sldenl pulled him ulde shortly after the Jan. 20 inauguration ceremony to get "10meth1ng done" about a demonstrator who had'brtefiy breached a police line during the lnaugur•I parade. A Seem Service agent bad earlier told him that the President was quite angry about the inci<lent," Dean said. Dean tnsisted in response to a series of question~ from the White House that his memory is sharp and his accusations agalll~ the President are truthful. The White House counter-attack was in the _form of a series of questions sub- mitted. by"'speCial Presidetltial counsel J . Fred Buzhardt, and put io Dean by Sen. Daniel K. Inouye (D-Hawaii). Inouye sald Buzhardt told him today that Nixon had been briefed about the q!Jestions. Dean's grilling is part of a White House counterattack a g a l n s t M • year. old former counsel, who in his fourth straight day stuck to his story that Nixon and hls top aides plotted together lo cover up the wire.lapping aHair. S pock Schedules Newport Speecli Dr. Btnjamln Spock, a widely known baby doctor and a candidate for Presl· dent In 19721 will speak in Newport Beacl> ~ Friday on tne sub,,ect of l>rlson reform. Spomore<I by the Or~nr• County Chapter of 'the American Clv!I Liberties Union (ACLU), Spoclt w!U lddn>ss hlm- oelf opecill<aUy to ccnllllono al Orange ~ Jail, ACLU IPQRslnan said. ''Pediatrics to Pm>logy" wUI be lho subject ol the lo<l1re at I p.m. at Newport Barber High School. \ ) $15,000 a year director. "''ii learn $19,848 while Fire ~larshal Bill Noller will earn $19.092. Advance PI a n n in g Administrator Rodney Gunn. Utilities Superintendent To1n Phillips and four civil engineers "'ill earn $18,996. Miss Judy Kelsey, ad· ministrative assistant to the city manager, will earn $18.912. Ken Jacobsen, assistant marine safety director; will ·e.arn $18,62:4 while Wade Beyeler, assistant genetal services-direc- tor, and Purc_h'aslng Agent Dona ld Mea·ns will make $18,444. The four fire department battalion chiefs will be paid $17,748 while Virginia Reynolds, assistant city librarian, will earn $17,556. slightly more than City Clerk Laura Lagios, whose salary iJ $t7,496 . At the $17,232 level will be Eugene Cich, chief plan chock engineer: Carl Su11i, equipment maintenance superin- tendent; Rich Harrison, park superin- tendent; Ron Whitley, r: e c re at i on superintendent and two associate civil engineers. Three senior planners and two plan cheek engineers in the Community eDvelopment Department are paid $16,812 amt $16.416, respectively. Two assistant civil engineers in the Public \Vorks Department earn $16.4.16. Ted Kramp, systems and data proc- essing analyst, earns $16,41~ while Guy Prewitt, admini5tralive assistant to the public 't''Orks dir"kt.or, and Frank Holmberg. ad1ninislr~tive assistant to the general ser vices director, each earn $15,636. \. The city's t't'·o lifeguard captains earn $15.324 whUe Jim Frost, assista'nt utilities superintendent, makes $15,252 an<;t Bill Brown. safety and training coordinator, makes $15,156. There are two authorized positions in . the city budge t not included in the totals because they are vacant. They are the jobs of 11ssistant city manager, which · pays $21,348. and traftic engineer, which pays $19,944 . Ex-police Pilot Says ' Newport Beach's chief police helicopter pilot resigned Wednesday and then declared he believes Orange Cioast police departments have more helicopters than they need. The chief pilot, Kenneth "Scotty" McGregor, said he believes police in Newport , Costa Me sa and Huntington Beach have more than enough flying machines to service all of Orange Coun- ty. McGregor's reason for leaving the Newport Beach Police Department, however. was lo obtain ·a better j-Ob as chief pilot for the California Park Service in Northern California. The eigi;lt·year veteran McGregor's resignation' ,... ""' aimoum:Od ,,,. the cl- .,.. ·~-lf111it~'tl\D ts no advancement+poteptiaf for hlm in Newprt "'~r ii~ ranted-ms a patrolman although for three years be has setved Is chief pilot ·and flight in- structor. , McGregor praised the Newport. Beach , helicopter program but he' tdld ¢he Daily Pilot he thinks all Orange County police agencies should -and will; eventually - join to create a .county police air force. He said six police helicopters would be enough to service the entire county. The 'three coastal cities have nine helicopters and one airplane. In addition, Anaheim has two helicopt~. McGregor declined to say ~hat has stalled a merger ol forces thus far. "The chiefs will tell you they each need tt.eir own. because there "'·oold bie disputes over priorities in case of simultaneous emergenCies," McGregor said. \ Hard-core Films Confiscated In County Raid •tuntington Beach ·police today are carefu lly screening scores of sexy motion pictures confiscated in a Vitia Park raid, including the controversial full-length motion picture ''Deep Throat" starring one Linda Lovelace. The entire movie screening job has Huntington vice officers weary and bleary~yed. "I'\'e been looking at these things for two d3ys now and I have only seen one that isn't hard-core pornography," a red~ eyed vice officer alleged. He didn't identify the non-offensive !lick. •Iuntington Beach officers allege the film raid at a Villa Park home may have broken up ·a major distribution setup for sex films in Orange County. Arrested "''hen the movie cache was confi scated was Charles Leon a rd Hamilton, 40, of 18692 Mariposa Lane. He was picked up Monday. Hamllton is free today on $5,000 ball and vice oflicerls are viewing and logging each of the several hundred films found In his home. Lt. Robert Rinehart said Hamilton's arrest culmi~ a month-long in- vestigation '"a on infomiation supptied by another po agency in the county. He said Ham on, who is involved with several £ilm prOOucing companies which are not coMeCtcd with the alleged pprnography_ ope~aqon, \¥3!J arrested on a warrant charging XI counts Of selling distributing find exhibiting pornographic mnterlnl. Officers said tlie warrant was obtainCd when Hamilton allegedly 90id them two feature.l('ngth pornographic movies, one or which was "Deep Throat." Huntington 'leach vice !nvtstl1ators ••id they aided In the lnves111ation by lite' Orange County District Attorney's Olllce and the Orange County Sherllf's Olflcc. - . ii McGregor said with six helicopters 1n a 1 , "" ~t:"~~-.. _ J county force, f~ could be in the air at ~ ",,.·t;E. / .: one time ·while 'the other two are down for maintenance. "They could stagger the shiflS so they could keep four in the air on almost a 24- hour basis," ~1cGregor said. He said it would take 12 pilots for the entire force, £ewer than the three coastal cities have now. McGregor said it would be foolish for Newport Beach to own its own police air- plane. He declined to romment, however, about the fact Huntington Beach has just bought its own plane. McGreg\lr said a ooonty lor<e coold U!illtwo ... es. ' •I "One could h8ildle the nct'th OOllflty and the other the soutb.ooe•nt)l4",be 1aid. "Fl•ed Wl!ii llkiift·b ... a -t deal of-value in outl)ltng areas," McGregor said, "especially out of the control mnes of Oran(ie County and Fuller t on Airports." "But it would be ridiculous for NeWpott Beach ,to own its oWn airplane," he said. McGregor also declined specific com- ment about recent addition of three police helicopters to the Huntington Beach police department. titcGregor's reSlgnation, in itself, reportedly has been the subject of a number or top.level meetings at Newport Beach city hall. City,. Manager Robert L. Wynn is not very haWY to lose him. McGreg« ls Ille third and last of the city's original belicOpter pilots. He was the instructor who taught the others to "TOO MANY HELICOPTERS' o.partlng Pilot McGrepr. fly when the program started three years ago. Both Wynn and Police ,Chief B. James Glavas were, Wl8Vailable for comDient late Wednesday and early today. ' < ' • Newport Firm Accused Of $1 Million Swindle A Newport Beach firm imgaged in a fiberglass boot manufacturlng promotion is alleged to have swindled investors out of more than $1 million, the Orange Police Department said today. Five men have been arrested in con- nection with the operaUon which alleged- ly was carried on throughout califomia and' in Arizona, Texas and South Dakota. Jailed by Orange police Wednesday and today were ·Lyle H. Swakford, 47 , of 485 COsta Mesa St., Costa Mesa; Keith Carl900. 40, Santa Ana ; John Robert Ford, 47, Tustin : John Freeman, 47, Lakewood and William Smock, 45. also known as A. J. Scarbrough, of Anaheim. Orange investigator Dennis Dahlke identified the firm as National Mai:ine Industries. He said it moved to 4262 Campus Drive, Newport Beach, lrom Orange about two months ago. Dahlke said a lengthy investigation started when an Orange resident told pol~ he had been cheated out of 114,000. The Orange detective said in- vestigators turned up eight additional victims in Santa Ana , Lakewood, Santa Fe Springs, San. Diego, Phoenix, Dallas and Rljpid City, S.D., who alleged they had lost more than $116,500 in in· vestments made through the firm. Dahlke said he had uncovered evidence which indicates there may have been scores of victims who may have lost more than SI million. Tile detective said National Marlnt! Wo n1 an Kills 4, Self MACERATA, lt•IY (AP ) -A 33-year- o\d woman threw all three of her children and a nephew into a well and then jumped In herscll, poll« said today. All ol them died. Police said that Marla Petrucci had been suffering from depression for more than a year. ' • I Industries operated under several other names and placed ads in 1 o c a I newspapers inviting investors to becoine associates in the protluction of fiberglass kayaks and other srrlaU boats. Prospective investors were invited lo lunch and told how they could participate in the operation as mold builders, hull and deck builders or as assemblers and det.ailers. Company representatives are alleged · to have told investors of huge profits available through exi.';ting ouUets for !See SWINDLE, Page %) Orange Weathe r l\.1ostly sunny in the nfternoon hours Friday, following the usual low clouds along the-coast. Highs In the 70s at the beaches. fQueak· Ing out 80 degree readings Inland. Overnight lows in the aos. INSIDE TODAY Ora11gt County sUJ>ervisori ha vf! adopftd, just be/ot·e the • ·June 30 ara1e deadliue. a re- vised optta space plan wi t!: minor c11anges. See Page 9. L.M. ,..,. 1) ·-'"' ._,..,_ n,. , IMtlfll » t.11-.ntl• J ,...,,,... ....... • Clft.tlflH )Mt .. ,,._.. """ 4. 1t c-ia n or-.. c-tr • c ..... _,,. J$ '""' "'" DMlll Ntllcll t Stt(ll M1r!Mt1 1H7 •• ,.... ... ,.,. ' , ... ~..... 11 ................... )I ,,...... :M ,._, IJ..11 W...W 4 ,.,. .... lttc•• • ·-·· """" 11·11 Mtrelc-tt w.tN N-. 4, I I \ DAlL '.' PlLOT N AT NEW YORK RALLY Browder in 1936 UPI Tei.llOIOS REFLECTING ON LIFE Browder in 1973 Officials Perplexed ' On Charter By JOHN ZALLER Of ... DltlY l"lllt Sti ff 11 was a perplexing question for the seven members of the 12-man Otarter Review Committee who showed up Wednesday afternoon to discuss it. They wanted to streamline Newport Beach's city charter, but they didn't want to go too far. Must the city council .. approve and authorize" all leases of waterfront pr1>- perty? Or could it simply "approve" them? "What v.'OU.kl happen," asked com· mittee member D<reen Marshall, "if the council were to approve a lease, but not authoril.e" all leases of waterfront prop- erty? iEarl R. Browder, '30s A sudden rustling among committee members. . "Of CXIW'&e," e x c I a l med Com- mitteeman Ray Woolsey. "All we need is one word, 'approv~.' It does the same job and it's much cleaner." 1 Communist Leade r, Dies 1 ~-: Indeed. '1be committee of gram· marians reviewing the city's 1955 charter scored another breakthrough. .;: i' From Wire Services . f?RINCETON , N.J. -Earl Russell Browder, Comi;nunist Party candidate ~president in 1936 and 19_40, is dead at fie 82. Browder, who was general iecretary of the Communist Party in the tTnited States from 1930 to 1945, died in ; his sleep Wednesday at his home here. '..i "What was good for the 1930's is no r good~fo the J970's," he said in the in· ierv1ew ' " 's still room for a pusher, a pro- 1 :gr ive force in the country, but I can't I , ;Lawmaker Backs " : ·u.s. ~xpenses At Nixon Homes WASHINGTON ( AP ) The government's expenditure of almost $1.9 inilUon on President Nixon's F1orida and California residences is money well 1 spent·, says the chair~n of a House A~ propriations subcommittee. Rep. Tom Steed (D-Okla), said COLUMNIST TAKES LOOK AT IMPROVEMENTS-Page I3 w;d;;esday that the President '.'is not an ordinary citizen . . . In some 111stances, we should pay him" for security-based .changes in the houses that he may not like but will have to live wipi. Steed's committee held a hearing at which details of the expenditures were ,released. Totals of a General Services Administration audit were released last : Thu;sday. Among items not requested by the · Secht Service for security and safety purPrn;es were two nagpole~ ~ flags costing almost $3,000, the audit 1nd1cated. The fiberglass Key Biscayne, Fla ., !Jagpole, cheaper than one at San Clemente, has 3 gold leaf ball on top and nylon halyards. GSA officials told the subcommittee that ·'the military requested this for their commander-in-chief." They said it and all the other non ·security equipment remains government property and e-0u~d be reclaimed after Nixon's term ends 1n 1977, but probably would not be. The audit did not include a $400,000 helicopter landing pad at Key Biscayne or for an Executive Office complex on military property adjacent to the 29-acre San Clen1ente retreat. Secret Service Director James J . Ro\vley said that more than $132.668 in ' landscaping at the two complexes and : : another $13,660 or more for various kinds : ; of shrubbery was a security expense, · : either to give privacy to the . Presid~nt, protect him or cover up security devices around the perimeters. " ' " -,, " ·' OIAHGI COAST " DAILY PILOT 'f~•.Ore1191 CO..SI DAI LY PILDl, w•tt. ""'kt. I• comolned ll'lf Hew1·Pr•u, 11 1111ttllllltc1 bv !he Or•not COii•! Publlthlnll C°"'Plny. 5fP• r•ff tdltlons ''' Puttl!shed, Monday lht""llh Frld1y, 'lot (O>I• Mt1e, Hrwr»rl Betel!, 1'1ut11!"'11!0fl Btach/Founi•ln Valley, L•llUM llMQI, l••1nt/Saddltl!-'(~ &nd San C1tmen!e/ Si n Ju&n (6P1'1••no A 11,,qlt reg"1nlt tc11lion i• P~1>•1ihed Se!un1a~1 ano 5unoev~. Th• prlMll)~I 1>Utll(Jhln11 plan~ IJ •1 JJO We11 Bay S!rHI, (0!!1 M .. 1, Cellfvtnia. 9UU, Robtrt N. Wied Pfbidetll •nd PllDH•het J•ck R. C11rl•v \lo(t """'>Cl""' •ncl Gfflrr&I Man111t • Thom•• IC•evil EOllOf Thom11 A'; M~rphin1 ~n~giflO EOUor l . Pet1r K1ieg N~ lltldl City Editor N_,." h«h Off1c• JllJ Nl'<tport lo11lev•rd M1Uln9 .Ydreo• P.O. loir 117S, 112663 Otllef Offk" c. ... M-; no W•tt ••v Slttel LAfUN l~h: m FOtffl A- ""'°'t!"fllln ll•Kh: 1111' ltt<ll aoultvfrd -"911 C ........ !t: Jlli Nol'lh II c.tml..o lletl , .. .,,.... (7141 642-4)21 Cl•W.4 Ad.trtt .... 642·SJ71 Ceri110ftf, l"l. Or1,... ~JI Pubtftlll!'lt ~y. ,.. """"' t!Orlt'J, ll1nlr1tlo!il. .. ,..,._, MtfNll' ., .Owrt1~11 IW!t•ln ll'lllf M ~ild Wli'llol,tT tl)k\11 pet "\tlflbrl (llf ....,_M •-. ...... cl.-""'"' Niii ll (O'lle ~. '(:11""""'-<~lpliOft W U"let tt .. S ='fl .. U,IS "*'1t.IY1 fllliltll'I' ..... ~ sa,y what The Communist party has pro- ven in life that it doesn't fit the role any more. \Vhat \Vas required to keep it strong ~'ouldn't have been desirable." The Communist Party became the Communist Political Association in 1944. -In 1946 Browder was expelled from the association as a "revisionist" for sup- porting President Roosevelt's policies. · He se rve(i prison tenns from 1917 through 1920 and in 1941 and 1942 for op- posing American war policy. From 1926 to 1929 he served as director of the Pan·Pacific Trade Union Secretariat in Shanghai, helping to organize the C.ammunist dri ve in China. He was a member of the executive com· mittee of the Communist International ~1ovement from 1935 to 194-0. Browder \vas born in Wichita, Kan., the son of a school teacher. His lineage was early American, reaching back to the 1650's in Virginia. He was self educated. His son \\lilliam heads the department of Mathematics at Princeton University. Besides William he leaves son.5 Felix al Chicago and Andrew of Providence, R.J. A memorial service is schedu1ed Satur- day at the Woodrow Wilson School for Public and International Affairs at · Princeton. The funeral will be private. From Page l • LIMOU SINE. • • limousine. "We had a limousine from a Hollywood studio," she said, "but it was a mess. It had eagles on the door and a purple and yellow Star of David on the roof." "The dealer in Riverside knew we were looking for another one so when this became available, he called us," she said. Mrs. Spiel noted that Ford lends the cars to the government and sells them when they're taken out of service. The Spiels' Lincoln limousine is a 1969 model. Its windows and doors are bullet proof. · But the Spiels use it just like any other family car. The children sit in the back seat and watch the built·in television set. They sit on lamb carpeting. r..1rs. Spiel said she \vas an official in the Riverside election campaign for President Nixon and bought ttle special license plate for Sl5. It's good for one year. She said the car \Vas used during the election campaign to chauffeu r dignitaries visi ting the Riverside area. \Vhile the car impressed mo st observers. il didn·t do much for the pro- prietors of a local restaurant Tuesda y night. Mrs. Spiel confessed she had left it in a private space belonging to the Mackerel F'lats restaurant on l\Iain Street an d came back to find a nasty note on the Y.'indshield. "It said if v.·e ever parked there again they'd have it towed away," Mrs. Spiel said. Cosu1os 576 La1mcb ed ?vtOSCO\V I AP I -The Soviet Union announced the launch Wednesday of Cosmos 576, latest in it s to~secret series of unmanned space satell iles. After three months of committee meetings, there are many others. The word "deemed" has been amputated from at least three sections. It is con· sidered sloppy. Elections are no longer decided by qualified electors, but by registered electors. Several superfluous adjectives have been amputated. In all, there have been about 30 changes that will be recommended to the city council later this year when the committee finishes tts work. But few of them have been significant. "We found that the city charter was pretty good," explained c.ommittee Chairman I.es Steffensen. "Not many changes were needed." In eases where the recommended changes are impart.ant, they have usually been dictated by cireumstances. The city's three-year residency re- quirement for the city council candidates has been shortened to ooe year: This is the result ol. a state Supreme Court decisioo, which outlawed the longer waiting period. Another change invol~ leases of city property. At present, the council can grant leases on inland property for periods up to 25 years. The committee has recommaided that this term he changed to 55 years, because it is dil· - ficult to seav~ financing for private development ~ shorter lease periods. The one change committee members have made on their own is to recommend that councilmen get a pay raise from $200 per month to $300 per month. The committee beli eves it cost.1 councilmen this much to do their work. Steffemen agrees that most citizens won't understand, or possibly even care, about IOIDe ol. these changes if they are ever asked to approve them in a referen- dum election. "They're housekeeping c h an g e s . designed to bring the charter up to date." he says. "I think people will understand that." Egypt Launches Missiles Over Suez at Planes TEL AVIV (UPI ) -Egypt !ired several surface-to-air missiles at Israeli warplanes flying a rootine patrol on its side of the southern end of the Suez Canal today, the Israeli military com- mand said. None of the planes was hit and all returned safely to base, a command communique said. A military spokesman said pilots reported that they thought the missiles were SAM2s. The missiles were taunched· from Egypt at the southern end or the canal and exploded over the Israeli-occupied Sinai Peninsula, the spokesman said. He said he did not think Israel would take retaliatory action. "We don't know what the situation is . We don't know why they didn 't do it yesterday and decided to do it today. We have to wait to take a look to see what's going on with these people." "We haven't got ·any interest in starting anything," he said. The spakesman declined to say how many planes \vere involved. declined to identify them and declined to say how far east of the canal the planes were flying when the missiles were fired . Meet , Sendoff, Talks Fill Week end for Nixon A meeting with the French fortign minister followed by a ~endoff to a Congressional delegation en route to Com- munist Chin~ are on President Nixon's schedule for late this week in San Cle mente. 'Mic F'rcnch official, Michel Jobcrt, is expected to arrive sometime ~~riday for a rou nd or talks with the President. On Saturday Nixon will schedule a send· off for the eight mem bers of Congress who will speod 14 days in the People's Republic of China. Sen. \Varren Mag n u s e ft (0. Wa~hlngton), will lead the group which includes three Californians. Rep. Jen')' Pettis, R-Loma Linda , as wen as other Qallfomla repre5entatlves William Mat.Ililrd, R-San Francisco, and John Mcf?ll, Jl.Manteea, w!ll be along on the lrlp. • The group IS ,.t. to arrive Saturday morning. Wives also Will accompany the legislators who are traveling under the invitation of the Chinese Peoples' Institute for ·Foreign AUp)rs. Al.90 on the President's schedule for Satunlay will be a ,.rles of talks with the Permanent NATO CouneU. Presidential aides have not yet an- nounced specllic topics of the. Saturday discussions. - DlllY rnefstlff ,....,. • • Overstuffed Rest Stop Residents in the "100 .block of 31st Sireet in New· port Beach had the plushest park bench in town \\'ednesday. They found the colorfully upholstered couch on the sidewalk with a sign indicating its own· . .t·~d1 ers apparently on their way to ~ Goodwill f'Ollecti~n '\ station, got tired of carry:mg 1!. The SJgn also ID· vited folks to set a spell. Open Heart Surgery Set For Four Costello Kids , STANFORD (AP) -Two teen-aged brothers v.'ith hereditary heart defects underwent corrective surgery today while their brother and sister awaited similar operations later in the day .. Richard Costello, 15, and Kevin, 13, v.·ere "doing as well as could be ex- pected " a spokesman for Stanford Univer'.sity Medical Center said. "The operations went very nicely, there were no compli cations." . The boys were taken iO the intensive care unit after undergoing open heart Montoya Accused Of Laupdering Campaign Cash NEW YORK (AP) -The Wall Street Journal said .today that Sen. J05eph Mon- toya (0.N.M.). used dummy committees to hide the sources or contributions ~his 1970 re-election campaign. 1 'The newspaper said that as a member- of th e Watergate committee, ''Montoya \Vill be sitting in judgment on Republican tactics that he himself has condoned." The Journal article said that "through the dwnmy committees, Montoya fund raisers routed contributions that might have generated political problems for the senator had they been disclosed. In this • way, they laundered $57,000 from various political-action anns of labor groups ... as well as $45,000 or so f r o m other special interest groops." - The newspaper said Montoya declined requests for interviews about his fund raising. New Mexico Jaw, the Journal said, re-- quires fund.raising committees for a can- didate · to report receipts and ex- penditures with the secretary of state who has interpreted ·the statute to include all committees mi.sing money for the candidate, no matter where they are located. surgery to repair holes between their heart chambers. Surgeons .ho p e tbe operations will give the children aMther 15 or 20 yean of life expectancy. Kevin 's three-hour operation was performed by Dr. Nonnan . Shumway, a piooeer heart transplant s u ~ g e o n . Richard's 2n-hour surgery was per- formed by Dr. Edward Stinson, a member of Shurnway's team. Karen Costello, 4, and Oayid, 18, were to enter the same adjoining operatlng rooms later. The hospital said earlier that Karen and Richard were first in surgery, but the schedule was changed. A hoEipital spokesman said all four children of Santa Rosa truck driver David Costello were "very nervous" but eager for lhe operation described as "serious but fairly routine." The children all are suffering from atrial septal defects or holes between their upper heart chambers. The defects limit the circulation of blood and oxygen to tissues and organs, causing the children to ti re easily. The defect was passed on to lhe children by their father. Uttle Karen also is suffering from a hole in a major vein to her heart, a con- dition that al!o will be corrected by surgery today. If the boles are small, doctors planned to stitch them closed. If they are larger than a quarter, surgeolis planned to make a patch of membrane from the pericardium, or sac surrounding the heart. ' More than 100 pints or type A·positive blood were donated for the surgery which was expected to require about 30 pints. The children were to be taken to the in· tensive care unit after surgery ~ re- main in the hospital about 10 days. Smoking Ban Effected SALEM, Ore. (UPI ) -It's against the law today to smoke at a state govern- ment meeting in Oregon. Gov. Tom McCall signed a bill Wed· nesday banning smoking at such gather- ings. It took effect immediately. Sailing 01amp William Horton Succu:tnhs at 63 Former international sailing champion and U.S. Olympic sailor William Landon Horton of Capistrano Beach died Tuesday even,ing at San Clemente General HosPitat after a brief illness. He was 63. Private memorial services for the long- time member of the Newport Harbor Yacht Cl ub will be held Friday in the garden of the family home, 35341 Beach Road. His ashes will be scattered at sea next week. Mr. lforton is survived by his widow. Jo Ann Horton of Capistrano Beach; his brother, Jo.seph Kurtz Horton of Los Angeles : his children, Mrs. Walter V. Racker Jr. of Newport Beach and WiUiam Landon Horton Jr. of Los Angeles and silc grandchildren. 'Jbe third•generat)oo californian saifed I u aldpper in the Dragoo class wltli bis tWO children during the 1952 summer Olympj.cs in Helsinki, Finland. The followbig year, he. won the international champiorulbip in six-meter sailing in Sweden. .. After World War 11, in which he served as a commanding officer in the U.S. Coast Guard, he was CCM>wner of Li!.io Shipyard in Nev.·port Beach until his reliremerit 1n f961 . The fami ly suggests donations to the U.S. Olympic Fund, attention: Bill Schroeder, 9800 Se pulveda Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif: 900!5. SWINDLE •.. their finJsbed products. Dahlke said, in reality, no such outlets were available and the products were not mlrketalJle. As soon as the company salesmen enlisted as many investors as po!Slble in a particular area they would then move on to another location and operate under different names, the Orange detective charged. Victims of the firm ?lad lo buy their own equipment to manufacture the boats. he said, with a $5,000 down payment re- quired. Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1>uldM> U SD251N HIGH QUALITY LOW P.RICE ·"BEST BUY" AWARO 15995 e WO D<LIVIO • WI llRVICll e WI INSTALL · 4 CYCLE BUILT-IN fi=o==-POTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER = • W1.i.1ettF...i• J ... l.,. . .,... .......... ~ • °"" °""""' ....... ...... ·- 2'2995· W• D<LIVH .• I e WI SIRVICI e WI INSTAl.I.. Authorlud GE SERVICE 4 CYQ.E PORTW DISHWASHER Wl CllLIVI• Wl If.VICI WI INSTALi,. 6 CYCLE BUil T-IN !:::::POTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER ~ .... , ............... ...... . -...... ...... t W 1 M-l-LMI U,,. .:=... Atll 26995. W• D•LIVH e w111•v1c1 •WI INITAU. Momber el C1llfernl1'1 L1rgfft Cooperative Buying Group' With The Volume Buying Power of 110 Stor11 90 DAY CASH WljH AnltOYll CtlDlt 1B15 NEWPORT BLVD. Dawntain Casta Mesa -Phone 548-7788 -1 I / I Thunda1, Jont 28, 1q73 Lecture_, D.ances, ·Picnics Fill Agendas Democrats Councilman Bill Thom of Anaheim will speak ~ore members of the Democrallc Women or Orange County tonight et 8 in l)('mocrntlc 11eadquarters. 319 E. 17th Street. Santa A.n.1. His topi c \Viii be np- pointment versus elect r• n· for the ofllce of n1ayor. OC Singles at 9 p.m. Mem be rs of Cost.a Mesa and South Cout PWP chapters, . Orange C o a s 1 Catholic Singles. RESCUE aM the Singles Church hnve been invited. UCI Friends secretaries. and Mrs. Donald Kc~ton. 1rea~url'!r . 8 oar cl members Include f\.1rs. E. H. \Vl!:Qnm, ~1rs. Keeton. ,_1\ss T;h·lor. Pouch er :ind O·A. i\tatkin. Library J<'riends or lhe Fount nin Valley Library arc collecti11~ su rplus books. p a pc r back books and n1njtazi11cs Cor their ·full !.:ook sal~ whirh \viii bencfil the scholarship fund. Literacy A nev.• series or tutor training classes sponsored by lhe South Cmtst LitCracy Council will begin Thursda~'. July 5, ond run throu gh August 6, every ~onday ;ind 1'hursday fro1n 9 n..m. to noon . Clnsses will be i::iven in the r o m n1 u n it y Presbyterian Church. &In Juan Capistrano. Art League lltach Art League, begtnnlng :it 7:30 p.m· ln the recreation hall. Police Wives Huntington Beahlt Police \\lh·es Gu\Jd will operate a hot do~ a nd cold drink booth lVednesday. July 4, from 9 a.111. to \2 p.m. at Bill's Tire Service, across from the police department. Orange Coast Singles and guests will dance Saturday, June 30, to the music of Rob- bie's Group in the Costa Mesa Country Club. The aMual event will begin Dr, Giles T. B"own , Ne\\'port Beacl\. has been inst.ailed as (>resident of the CCI FriCnds of the Library· Si>rving \I ith him a re Dr. \Villlarn Jlen- dri!'ks and Ji1rs. Richard Poucher, DI'. Adolph J("OCh and Don Me<idows, v i cc presidenl.S. Others are Miss Zacl<i Tavlor and Dr. Willard Saucerman. Books may be dropped in special containers at Slater and Los Alamos st~eets. Foun- tain Valley, during the sum- mer months. Proceeds will benefit a year- Sylvia Paulas will give a ly scholarship fund for talk and demonstration on use graduating seniors, daughters of lhe c~mera hx today's · and sons or police officers : artists nt the Monday, Jul~· 2. Albert Sitton Home an d n1ceti ng of the Hunti~1gton Fairview State Hospital. I Ph~ny ARswer Won't Click Rites Set In August DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am an 18- year~ld girl who Jives at home and ccm- mutes to college. My fathe~ believes whatever Ann Landers says is t.A W. household such U!l' yours. howe\•cr. ~he penion nearest lbe phone sl:!ould answe r It as a fa\·or to other membe rs of the family. This morning the phone rang. I was asleep. It kept ringing and ringing. No ooe answered. it until finally I pulled myself out of bed and answered it myself. Then I saw my dad sitting at the table, less than 10 feet from the phone, enjoying the newspaper and drinking cof-DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your remark fee. I asked, "Don't you believe in in response to "Just CrUS'hed," that "a answering the phone if it rings?" He gentleman never tells" -made me replied, "Not since Ann Landers said you laugh. How naive can you get? don't have to· answer the phone if you I've held hands with at Jeast 10,000 men don't feel like it." ~}$. in the past 20 years. You see, I'm a Did you REALLY say that? lf so, it is · manicurist -and I could write a book the rudest, most inconsiderate, most about' the things I've heard in the barber anti·sodal and utterly sick thing I have shop.! of Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and ever heard or in my life. If you said it, I Omaha. hope you will retract it in deference to Do you know the favorite topic of most the future sanity of our household. -men? WOMEN. Or to be more specific, SPAR~A-F.LYJNG "women I have known." (And they use DEAR SPARKY: 1 did say a person the word "known" in the Biblical sense.) need Dot answer the pltone If he doesa't Naturally they never talk about their fed I~ tt. Bat that advice w11 gtvea In a failures -only their conquests. And the completely different contea:t. For ex· dirty dogs name names and places, with ample, many people complaln about no thotight· of who might be under the being .trapped on tbe phone by long-wlad-towels in the next chair. It couJd be the ed friends and nlaUve1 wbo call at in-lady's husband for all they know. coavealeat times. So please knock off that S\YCet talk that nlAT advice Is for THEM. In a "a gentleman never tells." They tell Peering Around plenty. -MISS CLAMMY HANDS OF THE MIDWEST DEAR MISS : I reftlle to retract a wortl of it. Those barbershop hla~ bermoutbl can hardly be caUed genU.e- men. DEAR ANN LANDERS: J have a good job and I make a good salary . But th!:! cost of living has me budgeted to the last nickel. Every cent means somethinq. I ha te to sound petty, but one of the girls I work with is driving me to the wall with her small "loans" which tum out to be gifts. We frequenlly ride the same bus borne from work. T\vice in the last two weeks she has asked me lo pay her fare. She is also a coffee mooch. She has asked me lo bring her coffee from the cafeteria al least three times this month, and it's never just coffee -it's always a few cookies, or a sweet roll or a· piece of pound cake along with the java. I hate to remind a person about 26 cents and 35 ce'nts. It seems so petty. Yet -???? Please advise. -SEEING RED DEAR RED: Memorize these ffve words and practice tbem In front of the mirror: "Sorry, I can't afford it!' The next time Minnie The ~1oocber puts the arm on you for M)1hing. say, "So rry, 1 can't afford it." At Last An Aug. 11 wedding in the Reorganized CQurch of Jesus Christ or LaUer-day Saints, Orange, is being planned by Cathy Lynn Baumgardner and Robert ~1a.!'cus Worden. Their engagement has been announced by Mrs. Beverly Baumgardner of \'ilia Park and Ernest W. Baumgardner of South Laguna. The future bride, a graduate of Villa Park High School, at- tended Orange Coast and San-CATHY BAUMGARDNER ta Ana colleges. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Worden of Orange. is an alumnus of Villa Park High and attended Fullerton and Santa An a col- leges. He resides in Costa Mesa. Performing the ceremony will be th e bridegroom-eJect's grandfather, Elder Morris E. \Vordcn Sr. of Independence. :-i-10. A Medlc:aly Rec .... eoded Protram For Weight Control Lockhart o( Costa Mesa. The Pounds Off Permanently 644·1 Everything Under The Sun For Summer Look DAILY PILOT 23 u••lf .....,.,.._" Roger's Gardens Puts It Naturally Patio Furniture Displayed in Natural 5-Acre Setting Rog!'r's Gardens is already • Southland tourist attraction. Over 5,000 hanging baskets of flov•ering Jllunt:,; enhance the Ga\'dens. Roger's is basically a nul'sery, but the normal nur- scrv stock (co ntainer plants, fc1·iili:i:crs, insecticides, etc.) arc discretely hidden a\vay. All you see ns a visitor Is pre- plnnted greenery in lull bloom. 1::ve1·yihing from indoor plants 111 the unique ae1·ial bouquelAl of color. These hanging baskets are so unusual that they have been featured in four maga,. zincs (including the June cover of SUNSET). Roger's Gardens r , lly nre uni ue. • HONORED with a lire mem- bez:ship in the Rancho Viejo Junior Woman's Club was Mrs. Michael Riley. bridegroom is chairman of the A _ board r Tr I . Inn Inc M•K• TU•IN A, .. La. LOSl:lt o eoar s , . Without shots, pills, big money, rigid d iets, exertion ROBERTA OLSEN h a s or ftOftsense. received the El Ca mino Real NOW J u n i 0 r woman's Club's Mike Turin announc" • more lndlwldual .,..,...ch with th• openlnt of offlcft to continue his YMC-'· Rogrr's Gardens offer a unique experience in leisure living .. There arc nine (9) cx- elusi\'e lines of Brown Jordan p n t i o furniture-displayed throughout the Gardens, as '\"Cll as Wood~·ard, 'J'ropltone, Gold i\1edal. Hurricane, and Cnllfornia Umbrella patio fur- niture and accessories. ca.Ii· fo rnia is a year round out-door exr..cricn<.'e, and that's exactly \Vhy Roger!s offers thia patio furniture. It Is designed to be ' tatq ·JJmports ::~~~~~~~~·~ •• i,,,._ 1200 W. Coast Highway J Outstanding Junior G i r I YWCA •pproved P.O.P. programs. Call for an appoint- Instrumental in organizing the club, she is the first to receive an honorary mem- ber$bip from the membership. 4 The club's annual Miss Teenage Citizen will be chang· ed lo. the Kay Riley Award in her honor. Award for 1973. m9"t without obllgatlon 556-1150 675-7271 Mjss Olsen. now a senior at j'-~;.-;.--:::;;;:;;:;;:;;:::~=============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!I Dana Hills High School, has Newport Beach 645-6406 ~ DEBORAH JONES Joneses Tell Troth 1.tr. and Mrs. Jesse L. Jones of, Newport Beach have an- nounced the engagement of their dal.!Bhter. Deborah Jean Jones to Michael Paul Hart- stein, son of Mr. and Mrs. Theodore J. 1-lartstei r of Mishawaka, Ind. I 'Ibe) plan to be married Aug. 11 in Central Baptist Temple, Huntington Beach. The ·bride-to-be attended I Baptist Bible College of Spring-I field. MO Her flance Is a gni,duate of BBC BERNt\RDO BERNARDO BERNARDO "we have more of them and at lower prlees than anyone ln tile wer1d.'' fiesta \~ #11 ,ASHION ISLAND NEW graduates of the CaLifomia Hospital School of Nursing are Mary Jo Cooper of Huntington Beach and Carol Bartholomew or Costa Mesa. maintained an a b o v e -B average and plans to study business administration at S1anford or the University of South califomia. l Ceremonies took place in 1---------- Christ the King Lutheran Church. Torrance. EXCHANGING w e d d i n g vo"'S in lcwa Falls. Iowa were L.D. Treloar and !\1rs. PhyUis 1 UFFELL'~ UPHOLSTERY w...·y" w ... ........ ltn H...., llwl. C.... M ... -541..0259 Large Sizes SIZES 38 to 52 Suits for sunning • 1ult1 for swimming. Both kinds to choose from at Ella Nor's. See our group of luscious r ~i nts ond sllmming solids. We'd love to flelo you choose a suil that does nice things for your figure. from $11.00 Sunday Shopper? Fullerton I Huntifleton a.och ()ptin 12 te 5 [!;{{a. Nor'sHALF·SIZE SHOP COSTA MESA ltol NIWPORT ILVD. INeftll ef 1 ... "'"91 HUNTINGTON BEACH f4 HUNTIN•TOM CINTll 'tN.xt te ._... Ires.) P.ULLllTON-JJ4 Or1t111•,_. Mell,• O••llf'll._,. & Hde' M ... • TlMrrt. -M. 10.t-r .... •WW.• s.t. IM Bankamelicard • /flQtercharge D tuflte~4~ ~ft.I tAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL PRE-OPENING PHASE #40FFER. And reduce the cost of re- ducing! Pick up the phone and call today to see what's happening. CALL NOW 979·4800 •This Is the total average cost II you enroll only on a course designed Individually tor you. ,._,.,,...., ....... MlltlllMll ....-C• ........ , .,. ....... ,., NOW SERVING THE COSTA MESA I SANTA ANA COMMUNITY. 3611 SOUTH BRISTOL Construction site at corner Bristol and MacArthur Fory~~ra~~?ifi~~~~~ JACK lA lANNf 'S • P.hyalcal Atneaa Spas tor MEN • Figure Control Salons for WOMEN ~=-er-".!" • Delightful Swimming Pool • Hydro Whirlpool, and much moref /:uuf""" HEALTH SPAS A u.•.INDUaT~i•a COM'9ANV. WO .. LD'I LAfllOllT AHO PINEIT CHAIN OP HIEALTH IPAI FOfll MEN AND WOMEN. A-ffMH-.-.-. ..-.. __ .. Owr 100 lix:1llon1 co11t to co11l. Owned 1nd oper1tod by He1 lth lnct1i1trit1, Inc, ·/ • f~oger's Patio Shop also has a special selection of accessory items whicfi includes : cache- pots, napkins, glasses, hllr-tJ.- ques, place mats. and decorator watertng cans. Why ls Roger's Gardens so unique and popu· lar? Because Roger's Gardens dis play beautiful, natural gar- den settings. Because the sta!rs planters have defined a new art form, and because every living plant at Roger's is nurtured to the highest level of llvlng f'X- ccllence. When plants are not blooming, they are kept in storage for the sake ol good """· Good taste ls the ability to l"t'COgnize and appreciate \Vhat Is beautiful. That Is why Roger's Is so popular. The Gar· den's arc uniquely beautiful be-ca.use everything is display('d naturally ... from the flower- ing plants to the patio arrange- ments. Roger's stair bellevts that there is a place in the nUr· sory for consistency Jn go6d taste and quality, and you Will. too, it you'll only drop by for a visit at 2221 Fairview Road. In Costa l\1esa (just off NeYo•- port Blvd.) Once you've seen what Ror· cr's Gardens has, you'll al- ways come back. I t ts undoubt .• edly the ma&t spectacuJarbr beautiful garden In this arta-. open tor ;your Inspection arat. enjoyment trom 8:00 a.m. tO 6:00 1>.m. every da;y. : lf you have guests com&rg this summer, especially OYt:r the July 4th J':lollde.YI ahNd .... tr<-.'lt thtm to the •tftt ll)at. i! dit1tincUy Roger's -It your homt--In your OWft I pAllo. Dn;i1, by ror an Idea or ""'hA t ·can be donol See yui I fh(tl'~! \ • • • • • • • • • • . . . ' ' •J~4.__D_A_IL_Y_P_IL_O_T~~~-'-'N~~~-T-hu_""_~~·~J-un~e-2~~~1-9~7) f I Federal Drug Attach' Turns ~ethal~· By MICHAEL J. SNIFFEN ~tM l"rns Wrltw One night, t~·o months ago. a group or armed men burst Into homes in Middlt! America and brought tcJTor to two families. The men were norootics agents, and they had made a mistake. Their error put Colljnsville, UL bl the nation's headlines\ and touched off a storm of in· dignation. An Associated Press survey has pro- duced a small, but chilling, harvest of similar tales. -In January, \Villiam Pinc was awakened by his daughters· screams as armed men broke through the front and back door of his \Vinthrop. Mass. home. ARB CAMPBELL He was poshed against a window ~·ilh guns pointed at his head before state police realized they had the wrong house. -Hey"'ard H. Dyer. 22, was shot aod killed Oct. 2, 1969, in his )\'bittier apart· ment when a narcotics a,ent Y.'ho had broken into the wrong apa\'tment on lhe floor above fired a shot thrQUgh the floor , -On May 18, an off-duty Texas Oepartmenl ~Public Safety officer was shot to death in a raid on a Houston apartment aft an informer mist akenly identified him to narcotics agents as hav- ing sold amphetamine pills. TIIE NIXON administration h a s declared "all-out global war on the drug menace." State and local enforcen'l!!nl has been stepped up. partly through the JAMES GARDINER efforts of the Office of Drug AbuSt L<'l.y Enforcement (DAl~F.) which .... ·as ~-et up Jn the Ju.sOce Department ln January 1971 to calT)' the federal attack on drugs, particularly heroin. to the stree~ lcveJ. 'l'bis campaign has resulted in record numbers of search or arrest warrants and pul r~ord numbers of drug truf· tickers and record amowns of ill~gal dr\lgs out of clrculatlon. · ~ut civil liberties group s :ind pcrsoos in the enforcement fi eld charge that legal restrictions or operating safeguards bav~ in some cases been ignored under pressure to produce results. Herbert Giglotto. 29. and his \\'ilt·. Louise, 28, 11·ere asleep Jn ll'\"1r Collinsvi\!e home April 23 v.·hcn a crash and some screaming awakened thctn. DARRYL YOULE ··1 TAKE ABOUT three steps out or bed. and I see these hippies with gtms. I lold my wife, '\Ve're dead,' " Glglotto said. ~ Glglotto says he and his "A'ife \\' e knocked down across their bed :1 d bandcuffed. He was threatened \Vi h death at gunpoint as the nlen shouted obscenitlds at them. one agent flashed a gold Oadgc, \vhich Mrs. Giglotto only glimpsed. When the men realized thuir miStilkc, they lef t without apology or explanalion, Glglotto said. Donald Askew, 40, and his \l.'lfc . \ril·girtia, 37, had just sat down to dinner \1·hen armed men began lo kick their door in. Askc\v told his son to run for his \Ue. REED GLOSHEN AGAIN, TllERE were thrett ts and no apologies before the men left, Askew • said. DALE or~cials in \Vashington say they can not comment "'hile the cuse is under investigation by the U.S. attorney i.n Springfield. Ill. a nd the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division. \ The Bureau or Narcotics a n d Dangerous On.igs a g e n t s who participated in the raids wider OALE's auspices were suspended. according to Specia l Asst. Atty. Gen . Myles Ambrose. DAI.E's legal officer, R o b e r t Richardson, said in \Vash.ington that the nien were suspended with pay and were ~!lowed to perform administrative duties without· their badges or guns. DAVID ELLIOTT Newport Beach Promotes Five Law Officers Newi)ort Beach Police Chief B. James Glava s has announced five promotions in the first step tO\\'ard staffing his long- plarmed traffic section on the force. Glavas said several of the men will eventually take over rommand duties in the new traffic section. He said no determination has been made as to which of the four new sergeants will move lo the traffic section. But he did say overall command of the new unit will be taken by Lt. James Spiers. ONE MAN WAS also promoted to lieutenant but he will remain in ·other duties even after the traffic-section starts work. Glavas said the promotions will fill three vacancies and two new positions that will be funded \Vith part of the $160.000 federal grant the department has received to form the new traffic section. Five other new positions. primarily.en· forcement officers, will also be created to fill out the new section, Glavas said. Officers receiving promotions include : -Sergeant Arb Campbell, promot ed to ~~· $ ,, 'If ' ''ii'. ~~3%#< '•' "'\..~ • • In tlie Swim of Things li eutenahi and patrol c!i\·isio11 \·.c1tch coin· mander. Canlpbcll i:o, ;1 Sf'\'L'n-yt•'1r fOtl·e veteran, a l'ormt'r dctt.>etivc and lrluny investigator. -Officer .James Gardiner . pt·oinotcrl lo sergeant and patrol di vision field supervisor . The three-year veteran is the youngest man ever to be pron1 otcd to sergeant. Gardiner is 25. -Officer Reed Gloshen . promoted 10 sergeant as day shift field supfrv1sor. The five-yea r veteran is a forrr.cr juvenile detective and 11'ili also take ov er as reserve officer coord inator. lnstructor Debbie Foster catches leaping Ja son Koenig, 3, during iuarn to Swim' lessons in the Orange Coast College pool. The sun1n1er swi 1n pro· gram, sponsored by the College offi cia lly begins July 2. Registration is slated Saturday frorn 9 a.n1. to noon in the OCG gy1n. Cla sses r11eet ~'1o n day lhro ugh Friday during the t\VO·\Veek cour:-e. Tow Controversy Flares Altern,ate Monthly S1rvice Plcui Meets Opp,osition A controversy over who gets' to tow cars for the Ne\\'J>Ort Beach police department is in the making. The issue Oared Monday night before Newport Beach councilmen and was highlighted by a heated exchange between Vice Mayor Howard Rogers and an at torney for a towing fjrm that want& a piece of the action. COUNCIL.l\fEN, introduced a proposed ordinance establishing new regulations that don't pleatc .Harold Graham, at· lOl'tley for 0 1!t><f W Towing Service. JllllO lrvlno Avenue. C:raham wants police t.o alternate tow· ing firms with each accident or other call •• for tow'iqg service. Police Chief B. James Glavas Wants the department to use only two towing finns , and altemate them 1nonthly, as they do now, with the city of Costa ~fesa. Rogen tried lo keep Graham from presenting his objections, pointing out an counellmcn were doing was introducing the ordinance and scheduling a public hearing on II July 9. Graham charged the action was Im- proper after a vote to recon!ldt:r in- lroductlon of lht ordinance failed on a 3·3 vote. "THE VOTE WAS improper. I didn't ·have an opportunity to speak. It's in· equitable, the vote should be r...tnded," demanded Gra ham . "The item is through," Roge~, who was running the meeting in the absence of Mayor Dona ld A. !\fclnnis, snapped back. "'J'he ordinance has bc<>n introduced and passed to second reading. You will be able to speak at the public hearing," Rogers said. Graham, when he· v.•ns given an op- portunity to speak, also sald he opposed a proposed regulallon requiring any towing service to have a storage yurd within lhree miles l)f city hall. POINTING OUT Newport ll<ach pro- hibits auto storage yards anywhere in the city, Graham sald that means the yards would have to be in Costa Me$&. • -Officer Dilrryl i'oulc. promoted to strgcant <ind night !'hiH t1eld su pcrvis0r. 'l'h':' sevcn-renr vt>tern n has been a n1otor offiet>r, traffic in ves!igat or and has done detecti ve 1vork . -Officer Da\'id F:!lio!!. promoted to sergeant and field super\'iSOr . The ninf'- year veteran is a forn1cr felony in- vestigatt,?r. GLA\'AS SAID :\E\\' c1npha sis Y>ill be placed on the ~1ay 1r<1lfic is handled in I\e1l'port Bcarh. "The ne11• section >11ill attempr to determ ine the correl ation bt't1\·cen causes •u1d lcca tions v.•hcrc traf· Ne1vpo1·t Gai1as lie accident s occur n11d our 011·n en· force m('nt effClrts ." he suid. "The formati on nf !he 11:;>11 section h~s ndtl ilional cn1phasis in light of the l''(· trcn1e ly unusual conditions th at exist 1n Ne1vport Beach ... Glavas said. · The chief cited !he prc\';i[(•nce of young drivers -11•hose n;ltlonal accident rate is highest -in Newport Beach and the unu.:."Ual street configuralions. GLAVAS ALSO said LI . Spiers \11ill prob- ably be sent to a Jear-long tr;iffic con· troJ institute rt-':'Xt year to bring the la1cst t<'Chniques b<ick tu the city, Warming T1·e11d Drawing C1"owcls, Ca sh to Beacl1 By JOHN SCHADE Of f1'11 O•lly Pllol Siii! Hot 1vea1her. congested roads and crov.·ded beaches 21ren't rea lly all that bad . Just ask the Ne\vport Beach merchants \\'ho have their businesses on the \Vaterfront. \\'ilh schools closed, temperatures set- ting re('ords and unusual ea rly morning sunshine. beach.goers are put · thousands more than is normal before the July 4 holiday. The flood of people has been a boon in .~c,vport Beach businesses. Storekeepers close to the \l'alrr 1l'ho nonnally cater to heHc'111oers ~av the soles hove increcisl·d from 50 to 200 percent during the last \\'eek. "fl's good tor !he soul to see all Lhc kids come do1l'n to the beach," .said Lawrence Scott. 01,·ner or Scotty's Fish Fry restauranl, 2110 \Vesl Ocean Front. Scott said ·he had to extend his lunch hour until 4 p.m. and his dinner hour un- til 10 p.m. He says business has doubled. Dane Wilhite. owner of Van's Belgian \\'afnes and Crepes on Balboa Island, Eskimos .Hold O·u'1t Olympics fAIRBANKS . Ala ska (UPI ) -Blanket jumper_s, ear pullers and knuckle boppers have been invited to the 1973 World F...skimo-lndian Olympics July 26-28 at th e. Univ~rsity of Ala ska. Officials said Tuesday that invitations have been sent to the Northwe:;t Ter- r itories, Quebec. Greenland and Siberia. The events will include the bJanket tos.'l \Vhere contestants jump as high as poss!· ble on a walrus hide blanket, the ear pull where contestants wrap rope aro.und each other's ear§ and pull unlil one gives up, and the knuckle hop where com· petitors hop across 1 hardwood floor on their knuckle11 and toes. Alcohol Bill Moves SACRAMENTO (AP) -A measure doubling slate: spending on prevention and cure ot alcohoU1m was sent to the Senate floor on a 9-3 vote of the Senate Finuncc Committee Monday. The bill by Sen. Arlen Gregorio (D-San M3teo), would increase state alcohollam funds by $25 million in the 1973-74 fiscal year, and by an extra $.19 mlWon Ille next y•ar . sa.vs his business. too, ha s doubled. \\'hilhite added that most or his business has corne fro1n late afternoon beachgoers and late ni ght 1vine and beer drinkers. ''During the day.'' he said, "the sun drives !he cu~to1ners lo the beaches.·· Charlie's Chili manager Dave fis h says his busines.!. at the r\e\1•port Pier had increased more quickly than ex- pected . "Tourist traffic is about 30 percent of ou r business in lhc surnmcr and \\'e had expected the .. Jncr<'ase to come in J uly'· hc adde<I . l3ik111 i sa les 1l'cre up thi s 111eek. ~'IH!ic Fo11·!ie. 011·ncr of the Barefoot Contessa Biki ni Shop, 2811 Newport Blvd .. h:ts increased sales by about so pcrc:cnt. She sciys th.is is the best June she ·h<lS had in the eight years she has been in the busihess. The sea equipment rental business has Unproved too. f\.farian Clark, owner ol. Clark's Surf Shop at 103 15th St., says her business improved over this time last · year, especially swim v.•ear and raft rentals. "Business is notmally this good in July," she added. Ne1vport Cyclery n1anager S t eve Kimble snys his store has had quite a fc1v rentals this week. but said "our business Is always good." A spokesman for Hobie Newport on Mariners Mile said, "lt'S not as thoua:h !he season just got here. Actually out· season sturted a couple of months ago, and should get better as the summer goes on ." Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce manager Jack 'Bernett says th e unusually warm weather bas ~n good for the "exµos ure" of area business. · "This is a li ttle early for this amount of people to be in the area," Barnett said. "This type or selling would be normal for days arter July 4th," J1c added . "It has 11ot hurt business, it's been helpful all around," he addL'<I. frank Brczdcn, manager of Hershey's Market Spot on Balboa Island, says there has been ·an Increase in his 3 to 6 p.m. soda po pand milk trade. ''Jt's not as Ousy as ll is in August when our buslnes.c; triples,'' he added. Fi'y's Market Is a half a block from the beach at l IG f'iftccnth St. Store owner Peter Duynstee say,s there has already been a 30 percent increase in sales on all Items over this time Jast,ye/'l r, "This doesn't mean that In an etnergcncy they can't perform t.he du lies of an agent.'' he said. SINCE THE Colltnsvllle incident, Ambrose has sent a reminder to DALE'!I 41 area offices to take care in preparing search and arrest warrants and to avoid intemperate language. The law allows agents to enter a home without a warrant if they have probable c21W1e to believe they caa apprehend someone violating the law. BNDD. which bas 1,320 agents in the United St.ates, gives its trainees 10 weeks of classes in fundamentals of the law and enforcement techniques, including prac- tice rai~s. • ~ But DALE, which is composed of about 100 l<!wyers working \vith agents and a special federal grand jury in each of its cities. "has no opportunity to train or . . ' retrain. agents assigned to i t ' • Richardson said . ' ., DALE HAS 465 federal agents, half from BNDO and the rest from other fede ral agencies, and more than 400 local or state Jaw enforcemeht officers on assignment to it. .J In the. January raid in Winthrop,i: Mass ., Pine recalled ,· "I sat up in bed and there• was a gun at my head, and J heard someone say. 'Don't move.' " , Five days later, the sla te public safety director, John J. Kehoe Jr., apologized ,' ·•1 sat Hp ha bed and t/1ere fVON Cl fllUt flf. mu h ead, a11d I heard san1e· 011e say, 'Do11't 1nove' .'' but a spokesman for the state said no disciplinary action was taken against any of the intruding officers. "It was a simple case or mistaken identity. Yoq don't cliscipline officers for trying to do their job," he said. The Plnos. lhe Askews and the Giglol- tos have filed damage suits. A $900,000 settlement was reached in a suit over the mistaken killing in WhiUler, and state and local officers involved drew varying suspensions from duty. In the Houston raid, the officers have not been suspended. but a grand jury is . investiga ting the case. Local police in Norfolk. Va. raided the \1-rong house at 3 a.m. ~lay 2, 1972, with a \l'arrant authorizing them to enter \l'ithout knocking. An unnamed informant said he had seen heroin in the house less than fiv e hours earlier. Thomas L. Davidson, 87, and his wife. Lillian. 55. feared thieves when they heard someone breaking in. She grabbed a pistol near the bed and f1red through the door. killlng patrolman Lewis W. Hurst Jr., 22. Police Chief Oaudl J. Staylor said no one involved was ' disciplined. The Norfolk police, he said, "paid a terrible price for this evident er- ror." · A HU~180LDT County ·grand jury in Eureka. has indicted federal narcotics agent Lloyd Clifton for second-degree murder <lnd involuntary man!laugbter in an April 4. 1971 raid. lie is charged with shooting Dirk A. Dicke nso n, 24, as Dickenson-fled from hls rBnch cabin while narcotics agents descended. Other mistaken raids by various Jaw enforc ement agencies have been reported in Phoenix. Ariz. this year; in Atlanta. ' Lia. three years ago. and in Oakland. in I~. • Neither DALE nor BNDD spokesmen recall incidents that led lo clismissal oC agents fo r abuses on raids. IN FISCAL 1972, BNDO made 7,167 ar- rests in the United States, confiscating more than 49 million doses of stimulant.! like amphetamines, 995 pounds of heroin don1estically and large volumes of other drugs. DALE in the year ending May 1m ex· ccuted 1,439 search wan"ants. served 5,608 subpoen as and has arrested 7 ,800 persons, of whom 1,550 have been con- victed. DALE says it has no figures on the numbe r of cases dismissed or dropped and many still are in litigation. But John Finlalor. who retired in 1972 a.<: deputy director at BNDD, thinks DALE itself "'as a mistake. "THE FEDERAL narcotics agents ought to deal with what they do best - interstate and foreign traffic -mt the street level. They've got no business doing that. That's why you have state and local law enforcement people/' be said. Finlator said: "DALE was strictly a political thing. They were trying to prove the No. 1 problem was drugs as Nixon said. They were under pressure to pro- duce." DALE officials respand that, during the presidenUal election campaign, they 'vamed tbeir offices not to lower in· vesligatlon standards to produce arrests. After July 1, BNDD and DALE will be combined in a new Drug Enforcement Admlnlatration ln the Justice Depart• mcnt. Donor Allegedly Probed Nominee WASHINGTON (UPl)-An oll indUAlry magnate who contributed tT00,000 for President Nixon's re-i!lection campaign reporledly Interviewed a nominee £or the job of Federal Power Commissione r before the man was appointed, Rep. George E. Brown Jr. (D-O'llif.), charged . Bro\vn, who conducted a private in- vestigation into major oil industry con- ntctlons In the federal government. iden· tlfled Ult oilman os Wiiiiam J..iedlkc, president of Pennzoil United, ' i n 1 tC!tlmony prepared for the Senate anti· trust subcommittee. The nomlnet ~as identified as Ru.lit 1 Moody Jr. II ' l. \ • r I I J \ • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks . YOL. 66, NO. 179, 5 SECTIONS, 62 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA IFORNIA ' THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1973 c TEN CENTS Fair1grounds Acreage Up for Grabs --Again_ By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of tti. 0.11., PllM Sllff Failure of the Costa Me58. City Council to place• acquisition of the 33-acre Orange , County Fairgrounds .slte on this Sep.. tcmber's open space ballot baa placed the prized land on the.open market again today. Inquiries start around $1.65 million. Din!<:tors of the 3Znd Agricultural District took the ·action to proceed with the sale unanimously Wednesday night. ' They lndlcated they already had several poleollal buyers. The S3·acre parcel near Fair Drive and Fairview Raad was or:iginaUy proposed fur inclU>ion In the 5epi. II city open space bond election but failed to attract the necessary four-fifths city council ma- i!>rlty to place it lin the bllllot. ' In moving ahead with the sale, the £air directors aJso rejected an alternate plan or the city of Costa Mesa to develop jhe acreage as a cormnun.ity or convention center under a jolii.t powers agreement. Fair directors also made it plain they resented the charges or "noo-coopera- tion" made by members of the City Council and that they bad proven their cooperation with the city by holding off the sale until Costa. Mesa was given the opportunity to clinch· the sale. Director Ernie Chapman described the recent confrontation over the .. surplus land ~s another cy~le. •Jevery ODCe in a while the City c:ouncu decides tct-ptck on MRS. SPIEL, THE LINCOLN COLLECTOR, ANO HER FORMER GOVERNMENT LIMO In ·a.1bol, Tongues Were W191in9 and• Rest•ura ~t Owner W•s Furious -. . .-, ,·\-\ L •. 1)110 Mi111leads ~glers Big, Sleek Ex-governmerit Car Parked • lJl Ne wport Bv L. PETER KRIEG ' Of fk O.lb' l"lltl' Ii.ff \\'ith the President or the Uniied States dO'A-ll the coast in San Clemente and his former clUel of staff seduded just across Newport Harbor. all of Balboa was sure Jt was getting Into tbe act Wedne!day. A Lincoln ContinentaJ limousine was parked at the curb at the Rendezvous Condominiums on Palm Street. Tourists gaped and peeked inside as they passed by. The cu!t.omers or the Red carpet tavern ~ross the street buzzed in lively speculation 11b0ut who the car belonged to. Arter all, it was the kind of car made only for the government. It has red lights and flag· mounts. Its distinctive Washington, D.C. ljcense plate heightened the speculation. The speculatton ended today. The limousine belongs to Mr. and Mrs. Thontas • Spief, Summer resideittS of Balboa . They live in Riverside and own two McDonald's hamburger stands. "Oh, J di~n1t even think about jt when ( left it parked there," Mrs .. Spiel said, relating that she had lust COl}'le to to'vn to get her condorll.inium ready for the summer. .Jolansott Trial She said the family bought the car a year· ago from the Ford J\'lotor <;ompany and, yes , it bad been in government seniice. u1t was a Presidential Jimousine on ·1oan to tht head of the United Nations," she said. Mrs. Spiel explained that she and her husband are Lincoln collectors. They have 10 of them . 'Ibis is their seoond limoUsine. "We had a limousine from a Hollywood studio," she said, "but it v.·as a mess. It had eagJes on the door and a purple and yellow Star of DaYi.d on the roof." "The dealer in Riverside knew we were looking for another one so when this became available, he called us," she said. Mrs. Spiel noted that Ford lends the cars to the.government and sells them when t~y're !4ken out or service. The Spiila' LiDOOin limousine is a 1969 model. lls windows• and 'doors are bullet proor. But the Spiel! use it just like any other family car. The children sit in tbe back seat and watch the built·in television set. They sit on lamb carpeting. Mrs. Spiel said she was an official in I I ' Jury Reaffirms Murder ·-- Charge. in Sanity Airing . ' ' Shocked defense attorneys today heard an Orange County SUperior Court jury rule tq&t tbeiricllent waa inaane the nigl)t be ,fired two lbot8 Jnto a boule but was sane only a 'few ""'"'°"ts later when he shOt and killed a Tustin policeman with a hunting rlOe. A psychlall'ist 1¢1fied durin1 the '81li· \y phaae ol p<oceedings 'l•illll Gary W. Johnson. ~t he §clually \hoUibt he was ahoollng a gray.green demon that ap- peared to hlm In an alcoholic delusion as ~ drank at il nt_,tin bar. The emplo)'fll of two btrs In addition to Johnaon have been sued for 17 millioll by the victim's wtdow ror serving Jotm1011 that nigh\. Officer Waldron Karp, 31, was shot in \ Number Corrected A Dally . Pilot editorial pubu.hed Wednesday, June 27, regarding the Harbor Area Youth Employment Service contained an \!ICOmet phone number. The correct number is 64i-0474. the stomach ·at a Diamond Head Drive CMl-.itloq las! December w!Jile hunt- iDC a prowl .. who had been firing a rifle into • home..' He died i2 daYs later and the aasault with a ~ly weapon charge filed agoinll Jojmson, 37, was changed · to murder. Jolmon bad al"'ady be<n charged wilh .firtnf1 a gun Into an occupied dnlllng In ooonection will! the shots lllat riddled the hoine of a woman friend with whon> he bacl.quartoled. 'lbe five-man, te"Ven-woman. jury ac. tually allowed JollnlOrl to beit 111111 rap today by finding that he waa legally In- .... at that point. They found exactly the opposite to be the """' when Jollnlon operied fire on Of. ficer Waldron when he arrived on the ...... thus l'Mlllnnlng its vmllc\ of -oad degree murder Ol1llOlll1<ed last Fri- clay. Deleme attorney Phil Steiif said be will seek a new trlaJ Aug. --9 when Johnaon returns to superior Court for a probation rePort and formal sentencinc . I ·:!. the Riverside election · campaign for President Nixon and bought the si>ecia1 license plate for S15. It's good for one year. She said the Car was used during the elecUon campaign to chauffeur dignitariel visiting the Riverside area. Wbile the car impressed m o s t observer!, it didn't do much for the pro- prietors of_ a local restaurant Tuesday night. Mrs. Spiel confessed sfie had lt_ft it in a private space belonging lo the RackereJ Flats restaurant on ?.fain Street and came back to find a' nasty note on the windshield. "It said if we ever parked there again they'd have it towed away," Mrs. Spiel said. Trial of Kemper In Deaths of 8 Slated Oct. 15 SANTA CRUZ (AP) -E<lmund Emil Kemper Ill pleaded iMocent . today to eight. counts of murder. ms trial was set for Oct. I&. Defense attorney James Jackaon asked the Santa .Cruz Superior Court to reserve his client's right lo plead innoceilt by rea.9on of insanity at a later date. Judge HarTy Bauer denied a defense motion to dismist two of. the e.ight counts. Jackson had asked for the clismtssa1 on grounds that the state had insufficient evidence to charge Kempel wtth the murder! of Aiko Koo and Anita Luchessa. Bauer ref~ted this : "When you find a head and a severed torao with evidence. they belong to the same person, ln- ferencu ipay be drawn that they -do in fact belong to the same body." Except for saying "yes, slr11 when' ask· ed tt he agreed to the pleas, Kemper was silent throughout the day's proceedings. 4tli Holiday For Traslimert l1 you Uvc In Costa M"'8, don't put your truh out on the Fourth o! July. Not only II It unpatrlotlc. but the Ir--\ pick k up. lie'• takinll a holkloy too. He'll make u up by pickin& up your !rash' July S. · .. \ ui;. 1 think we should ride this out, (et it run.off our backs," he said."[ hope that we keep .our cool and don't get involved in arguments," he said. The non-cooperation claims surfaced after a special committee of city coun- cilmen and fair board members met on the joirit-powers prop<>Sal for develop. ment of the Bite. City officials are now speculating that · the next rOlDld of the battle will be fought over I~ zonjng on the property. The entire fairgrounds area, including the 33-acres, is currently zoned in· slitutional-recreational but it has not been clearly established whether the city of Costa Mesa can enforce its zone. Fair directors maintain it cannot, citing an attorney general opinion which holds that cities may not h6ld jurisdiction over state-owned property. But once the 33 acres are sold lo private interests, Mayor Jack Hammett says the city coUld clearly exercise its Ex-police Pilot Says zoning preroga\ive. \Vhether this includes the ri ght to refuse a rezone petition to residential. co1n1nercial or industrial uses has not been established. 1'.-len1be.rs of the fair are un happy about what Director Frank Turnbull terms ;.veiled lhreats" to withhold zoning and are advertising the land subject to the ex- isting zoning. City Manager 1'"'red Sorsabal said today that his office had. been approached by (See l<"'AIR, Page !) Too -Many Helicops . Newport Beach's chief police helicopter pilot resigned 1 \Vednesday and then declared he believes Orange Coast police departments have more helicopters· than they need. The chief pilot , Kenneth ·•Scotty" ~lcGregor, said he believes police in Newport. Costa Mesa ancl Huntington Beach have more than enough flying machines to service all of' Orange Coun- ty. McGregor's reason for leaving the Newport Beac.h Police Department, however , was to obtain a better job as chief pilot for the California Park Service in Northern California. The eight-year veter<;ln McGregor's resignation was not announced by the ci- t,Y. He sa id he is quitting because there is no advancement potential for him in Newport. McGregor is ranked as a patrolman although for three years he 1-lef'!ed .. chief pilol, ..,:!'flilbt ln-Structor. .~ ir"' ' • McGregor praised the New,.,.i Bea.ch helicopter p_.,m but-he UJld .,. Dolly Pilot he thinks all Orange Coumy police agencies s.boold :..... and will, eventually - join to create a county Police alr fOl'ce . He said six police helicopters wou1d be enough to service the entire county. The three coastal cities have nine helicopters and one airplane. In addition. Anaheim has two helicopters. McGregor declined to say what has stalled a merger of forces thus far. "The chiefs will tell you they each need ttieir own because then! would be disputes over priorities in case of simultaneous emergencies," McGregor said. t.tcGrego r said lvith six helicopters in a county force . four could be in the air at one time \Vhile the other t~-o are down for ma intenance. ..They could stagger the shifts so they could keep four in the air on almost a 24- hour basis.:· ~lcGregor said. fie said it would take 12 pilots for the entire force, fewer than the three coastal cities have noW. McGregor said it v1ould be foolish for Newport Beach to own its own police air· plane. He declined to cominent, however, about the fact Huntington Beach has just bought its own plane. McGregor said a county force could use two planes. , "One could handle the north county aod the othe r the south county," be said. "Fixed wing aircraft have a great deal ol vatu. iii outly\J>g 8"0f/' .McGMor .said,i;~~cially oUt ot the ~ .Gots or Orange County and Fu 11 er to n Airports." · "But it wooJd be ridiculous for NeWlJOI'(. Beech to own its own airplane," he said. McGregor also declined speciiic com- ment about recent addition of three police helicopters to the Huntington Beach police department. McGregor's resignation, in "itself, reportedly has been the aobject of a rPJIJ1IJer ol lop-level meetlnp at Newport Beach city hall. c;ty Manage!' Robert L. Wynn is not very heppy to lOse him. McGreg« is the third and last of the city's original helicopter plots. He was the instructor who taught the others to 'TOO MANY HELICOPTERS'. Oeportfng Pilot McGregor ' ny when the program started three years ago. ' ' 1 I ' Both Wynn and Police Olief B. James l Glavas were unavailable for comment 1 ' late Wednesday and early today. Nixon Challenge Hinted / I I ' Ervin. Attacks W~hite House Statements on Bugging I WASHINGTON !AP) -Sen ate Watergate Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. challenged today whether President Nix· on did anything "to perform his duty to see that the laws are faithfully executed in respect to the Watergate affair." The North Carolina Democrat attacked certain White House statements after winning acknowledgement from John W. Dean Ill that some presidential ~isions and White House actions not related to the Watergate violated the First and Fourth Amendments to the Constitution. Questions by Ervin at the fourth day of Dean's t,estimony appeared aimed at challenging Nixon to testify on the NIXON 'ENEMIES' REACT TO LIST-Page 4 Watergate scandal. Later, committee counsel Samuel Dash said the question of whether to inVite the President to testify had not been resolved . In other highlights from testimony by ousted W·hite House counsel Dean : -He kept no notes of most of his mettlngs with Nixon because "some or the 'things that wei:e belng said in these meetings ... were very Incriminating to the President." -He believed, "I was a restraining in· fluenee at the White House. There were many wild and crazy schemes, somt of which ~ have not testified to." f.Je was not aslced:to elaborate on the .scliemes. -The' P..,.ldent pulle<I him aside shorlly after ~ Jan. zo Inauguration ceremony lo get "somethiRJ done'' about a demonstrator who bad briefly breached a pOllce Hne'during the inaugural perade. A Secret Servlce 1gent had earlier told hlrn that the President was quite angry about the incident;• Dean said. Dean lnsbted in respom.e to a Jeriel of questlOns from the White House tblt his memory Is sharp and his accusations 1galnst tlie· President are truthful. The White House counter-attack was· in the form of a strles of questions sub- mitted by spoclal presidential coonsel J. Fred Buzhardt, and put to Dean by Sen. Daniel K. Inouye ([).HawailJ . Cnouye said Buzhardt told him today that Nixon blld been briefed about the questions. Dea n's grilling is part of a White House counterattack a g a i n s t 34 ·year~ old former counsel, who in his fourth straight day stuck to his story that Nixo:n and his top aides plotted together t~ cover up the wiretapping affair. .... On Wednesday Bu1.hardt. in a letter to the Senate Watergate committee, called Dean the mastermind of the cover-up and described former Atty. Gen. John N • Mitchell as his patron. Inouye took more than an hour asking 39 questions stibmitted by Buzhardt. He omitted one, perhaps inadvertently. Fla1nes Destroy Grove Gay Bar; Loss $100,000 The Shangri-La of Garden Grove, sist.er bar to .the Costa Mesa Fire House nudie club uhtil .Jt becaoie a g'ay estabUshment with female Impersonators, w a s destroyed by fire early today. Damage was estimated at more than $t00.000. Flremen said the bar Bil 12272 Harbor Blvd. was completely engulfed in flwnes wheh .tbey roared up at 3: lO a.m. The cause has not yel been explained. ~bris from the fire spread over an area of ·150 feet. Some adjoining buUdings suffered broken. wtndows and structural damage, according lo fuemcn. Police said the btr had be<n cjosed since lasl Saturday. Ray Rohm, the owner of boll! bars, ex- perienced some ·heat · of a different !Ort Tuclday night when the C..to, Meaa City Councll denied hi> rtquest for a theater license. Rohm hoped to avoid prosecution or his nude dancen by making the Fire llouse a lhenter. Dean said that although his memory i isn't a "tape recorder," he has ftrtn recollections of the impressions he had t during meetings with Nixon in Sep- tember. February, March and April. He denied that he had deliberately leaked stories to news media as part or a strategy ·to escape prosecu~ion. . 1 He said he can't recall ever telling G. Gordon Liddy, who first proposed wire- tapping as part of the Nixon re-election ~mpaign, that he would have a Sl·mil· lion budget." He said that while he was on the White House . staff be was a restraining in- fluence, halting many "'wild and crazY schemes" which others wanted to carry out , but which he filed away and ignored . He said he had once given a casual (See ERVIN, Page %J Coast Weatker Jl.1ostly sunny in the arternoon hours Friday, following tbc usual low clouds along the coast. Highs in the 70s at the beaches, squeak· ing out 80 degree readings inJand. Overnight lows ih the 609. · I NSIDE TODA\' Ora11gt Count.11 supervi$OTS l1ave adopted, ;ust befo,.e tile Jutte 30 ..tta ce deodlit1e, a. re- vised open 1poce plan witJi minor • chanoe.r: Ste Paue 9. l ,M. IM 11 "" 1.~n n ...... • ~ ...... '" JI CIN ... 11 J Mvtvll l"llMI. M C.M11tinN Mod l'll•ti.oi1I fllh't 4> M C-1(• )I ONf!M-CtiMY t c............ )S '""' tNI OMllll Ntlk.. t St1d1 ~rte-..n lelfltltl ,.,. ' T ... •19* 1P •11ttrt1111M"'I Jt t11 .. 1.,. ... ,,_, fJ..!t WMtMI' ' "'" 1M ltK-4 ' W-'• I'll...., Jl·tJ ... ~ t1 ...... ..... t.14 l • , 2 DAIL V PILOl 1 hursday, June 2tl, l't,,: ::.4 Operations $1 Millinn Kids U11dergo Heart Surgery Swindle ·pANFORD \API -Two \ecn·aged tilolhers with heffi:litary heart defects ~der\\·ent corrective !>'Urgery t()(fay While their brother and sister a\\·aitcd iJfnilar operations later In the day. ' Richard C.Ostello, 15, and Kevin, 13. \\'ere "doing as \veil as could be t'X·- ~ted," a spokesn1an for Sta11ford University Medical Center said . "The operations went very nicely, there \\'Cft' no complications.'" The boys ""'ere taken to the intensivf!. c~e unit after undergoing open hea rt ~gery to repair holes between thei r h~eart chambers. Surgeons h o p e the opcl"ations will give the children anottier ; ~ or 20 years or life expectancy. ..Kevin's three-hour operation was ~onned by Dr. Norman Shumway, a j)1oneer heart transplant s u r g e o n . klchard's 2'h-hour surgery was per- fonned by Dr. Edward Stinson, a . member of Sbumway's team. , Karen Costello, 4, and David, 18, were 1 'to enter the same adjoining operating 1rooms later. The hospital said earlier 'that Haren arid ·Richard were first in '.'surgery, but the schedule was changed. ·' A hospital spokesman said au four r·cbildren of Santa Rosa truck driver t.:Da\'id C.Osteno were "very nervous" but .;~ger for th~~ration described as 1, "1;erious 'bllt1air1Y'~tine." : · ~e children all are £ering from . : alrial septa! defects or ho es-betw ! . ~ir upper _tleart chambers. The defects I ~ UJ;nil the circulation of blood and oxygen ~th tissues and organs, causing the t , ahitdren to tire easily. The defect was : (;ssed on to the·ebildren~by-theii:.Jather. : ··Little Karen also is suffering from a ,:hole in a major vein to her heart, a con-ti lfition that also will be corrected by ~ .~rgery today. I,: lf the holes are small. doctors planned : to stitch them closed. lf they are larger 1tlhan a quarter, surgeons planned to ; :make a pa~ch of membrane from the I.~ pericardium, or sac SWTOWlding U1e , heart. j; Aiore than 100 pints of tfpe A~pooitive •' ' ~:Hard-core Films Confiscated In County Raid . Huntington Beach police today are carefully screening scores of sexy motion pictures confiscated' in a Villa Park raid, I: including the controversial full-length ~ motion picture "Deep Throat" starring l' one Linda Lovelace. ,, 'The entire movie screening Job has l Huntington vice officers weary and f. bleary-eyed. I ' "I've been looking at these things for ' '·"·o days now and I have only seen one that isn't hard.core pornography," a red· I eyed vice officer aUeged. · He didn't identify the non-offensive /lick. Huntington Beach officers allege lhe film raid at a Villa Park home may have broken up a tnajor distribution setup for sex films in Orange County. · Arrested when the .. movie cache ""·as confiscated was Charles L e o n a r d Hamilton, 40, of 18692 Mariposa Lane. He 1 y,·as picked up Monday. Hamilton is free today on $5,000 bail ,and vice officers are vie\\•ing a nd Jogging each of the several hundred films found in his home. Lt. Robert Rinehart said Hamilton's arrest culminated a month-long in- vestigation i-ased on information supplied b,v unother police agency in the county . He said Hamilton. who is involved with several film produCing companies which :i re not connected vdth the alleged pornography operation. 1vas arrested on a "'arrant charging 3U counts of sell ing distributing and exhibiting pornographic ma terial. Officers said the \\•arrant v.•as obtained 1vhen Hamilton allegedly sold them two feature-length pornographic movies, one of which was "Deep Throat .. Huntington Beach vice investigators said they aided in the investigation by the Orange County District Attorney's Office and the Orange County Sheriff's Office. OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT 1'~• Or1"" Coa1t OAJL Y PILOT, •1111 .... kfo 11 combln9 tllf N-Preu , 11 pUbUIMd W rt11 0•• .... CO•Jt Pl4/U1Mno C0mp9ny. S.PI· •I I• .Ol!lon1 I r• 11\14:111~1\ed, M-•y tllfOWh Frld•r. '°' Cot11 M111, H-PO•I llta(fl, ~un!lnoriM B1&<;lllF011n11b1 V•llly, LIOl/l\I IN(h, !rvlne/Sead~IN<k lf'ld 51n Cla>met1hl/ St n J111n Opl>lr1no. A •lnol• rt;lon1r ,cillion II 1Nbll1~ $a!ur.:t1yJ 11'111 S11nd1y,. The pr!m;IPfl ~l>llll\1"9 pi.nt Is II 3Jll Wul Bly 51rHI, Co1ll M.w, C1lll'Ornl1, fUK. Rob1rt N. W1td Pr"ldtnr ""' Put>Ull••r J11• R, Curl•y Vi<:t ,. .... 111enr ..... Otlllt•I Mt"lqt• Tlooft'l11 Kt1 vll Eal!o• Thofl'l•t A. M"''Jl"i11• M1n101no IEOltor Ch11l11 H. Looi R:ich1!'\f '· N1U A111111n1 M111qlne EdllO•• Cen. w ... Offko 110 W11t lay sn •• 1 M1 ll1119 Atldrttti·,,o . lo• 1560, ,2626 -...... MtwWI ... (II: m' HtwPON Bovl•~•r• i..1-IMdl1 m Forni ,...._ M""'lll\olll'!I AtKll: H•rJ Beath llOylty1fd ~n Clem.fll!J1 JOJ N6tlfl El C11111fro ltNI , .. .,.... f714J MJ:-4)JI c ....... A4"'9hil.t 641°1671 C1t11¥•lfl'\I, lfn. Ot1• C0.11 f'ilbli.lllllt C.mOMY. Ht -U..,lff. lll¥1lr11~. ,.,,...lft ,.,..,._,. ., M vtrt11-11 l'llr•lfl _,, ., ,,_ .. ....:.. wffMoln llP'CJll ..,. ""'"""' .. *"'""' -· '-M (11111 _.._,. NN 11 C:.i1 Mtw. ~Hl'"'1l. ~111'1 1W <Iffier ft,45 -tlllY! fW !Nit t.J,11 lntl'lll'llfl llll!"'ry •111n1uo111 o ... l'IWlltltr. blood were donated for the surgery which was expected to require about 30 pints. Tbe children were to be taken to the in· l.ensive care unit alter surgery and re- alain in lhe ~ital a bout 10 days. Doctors expect the children to get out of bed Friday, saying even heart transpl ant patients call get out or bed the day alter surgery. The pa r1!n!s and children h a v e dcm<.1nded the hospital protect their privacy during thclr slay <it the hospital. The family even moved io with friends before fflleri ng the hospital to get away fro1n publicity,. the ho~pita l said. Paper Clain1s Sen. Mo11toyc1 Fund Misuse NE W YORK (AP) -The Wall Street Jouma·I said today that Sen. Joseph ~lon toya tD-N.M.), used ~ummy co1nmittees to hide the sources of contributions to his 1970 re-election campaign. The newspaper said that as a member or the \\'atergpte commi!lee, "~1ontoya will be sitting in judg1nent on Republican tactics that he himself has condoned." The Journal article said that "through the-dummy~commit1ees;-Montoya fund raisers routed contri butions that might have generated political problems for the senator had they been disclosed. in this u•ay, they laundered $57,000 from various political-action arms of labor grouPs ... as well as $45,000 or so I r o m other .special interest groups." The ne\vspaper said !\1ontoya declined requests for intervieu•s about his fund raising. , Nt!w MeXico ,law. t·he Journal said. re- quires.fund-raising committees for a can- didate to report receipts and ex- penditures ";ith the secretary of state who has interpreted the statute to include 1 all committees raising money for t he candidate, 110 matter where they are located. The newspaper said the only report fil - ed by Uie l\fontoya organization was th at of the New ~1exico-based group. It ~id the campaign treasurer, Jack Beaty, set up at least seven other committees in \Vashington. "Mr. Beaty opeqed bank ac- counts in the names of the committees,·· the Journal said, "but in everv other respect they \\'ere phony, having no of- fice, no employes, no phones and no members." * * From Pagel ERVIN ... assurance to campaign deputy Jeb Stuart At-agruder tha t he would receive ex· eculi\•e clemency if Magruder went to jail for his perjured testimony. He con- ceded he did this on his own, and with no authority from anyone higher . But he said it was done in response to a worried inquiry from Magruder about \Vhether he and his fam ily \vould be cared for if his part in the cover-up \Vere discovered . _; Dean said he took no notes of most of hls meetings with Nixon because •some of the things that \Vere bein g said in· these meetings . . . were ve ry in- criminating to the President." He said he did not \Vant docurnents recording such meetings because the \Vhite House had a problem with in- formation becoming public. Body of County Boy Discovered TONOPAH. Nev. (APJ -A 5-year-old Brea boy y,•as found dead in the desert a bout 20 miles east of here \\'ednesday. authorities said. Nye C:Ounty s heriff's deputies said Brent Pearce Crossley had been rock hunting \\'ith his father. Brent Crossley. and \Vhen he became tired his fat her left him ,~·Jth instruct.ions to slay in the shade The boy's body v:cs found after an 18· hour search by volunteers and shf'riffs deputies. Cause of dra1 h 'vas not lrn- 1nediately determi ned. Authorities said c.·rosslcy. 24. was book - ed for investigAlion of child abu.se i1nd possession of marijuana. ' ' .. TONIGHT "THE CLOWNS" -sou th Goas\ Repertory Titeater. 8 p.m. Ji' i n a I performance. FIUOAY, JUNE 29 "CONCElfr IN THE PARK" -Long Beach Navy Band, Costa ]\;fesa City Park, 8 p.nl . "I.AST OF TUE RED HOT LOVE RS" -Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, Fri. a nd S.T-S:30 p.m. A<fmlssion $2. "IN THE MIDST Of' I.J FE " -South Coast Repertory Theater. through SUn· da)', 8 p,nt MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairsrounds, 8· 15 p.m. Alleged A Newport Beat h firm t!ngaged in a fiberglass boat manufacturing promotion is alleged to have swindled Investors out of 1nore than $1 1nilliou, the Orange Police Department said today. Five men have been arrested in con- nection with the operation whi ch alleg~· l,v was carried on throughout California and in Arizona, Texas and South OBkota. Jailed by Orange police \Vednesday and today were Lyle Ii. S\vakford, 47, or 485 Costa J\1esa St., Costa Mesa; Keith Carlson, 40, Santa Ana; John Robert Ford, 47, Tustin; John Freeman, 47, Lakewood and William Smock, 45, also known as A. J , Scarbrough, of An aheim. Orange investigator Dennis Dahlke identified the firm 8s National Marine Industries. He said it moved to 4262 Campus Drive, Newpott Beach, from Orange abo ut lwo months ago. .Dahlke. said a lengt~y investigation stMted \vhen an Orange resident told pol ice he had been cheated out of $14,000. The Orange detective s a i cl in· vestigators turned up eight additiona l victims in Santa Ana , Lakewood, Santa Fe Spl'ings, San Diego, Phoenix, Dallas and Rapid City. S.O., w'ho alleged they had Jost more than $116,500 in in· vestments made through the firm. • Dahlke said he had unrovered evidence which indicates there may have Jx<cn scores of victims who may ha ve lost more than $1 million. The detective said National Marine Industries operated under several other names and placed ads in I o c a I newspapers in viting in vestors to become associates in the production of fiberglass kayaks and other small boats. Prospective in vestors were invited to lunch and told how they could participate in the operation as mold builders. hull ;i nd deck builders or as assemblers and detailers. Con1pany representatives are alleged to have told investors of huge profits available through existing outlets for their finished products. Dahlke said, in reality, no such outlets were available and the products \Vere not marketable. As soon as the company salesn1en enlisted as many investors as possible in <'I. particular area they would then ntove on to another location and operate under different names, the Orange detective charged. Victims ot' the firm had to buy their own equipment to manufacture the boats. he said, with a $5.000 down payment rt'- qu.ired. Senate Confirms Schlesinger For Defense Post \VAS~llNGTON fAP ) -The Senate unanimously confirmed President Nix- on's nomination of James R. Schlesinger as secretary of defense today. The action came after Sen. \Villiam Proxmire (0-Wis.), dropped his ob- j ections to the oomination. Proxf!)l re told the Senate that he is still dislur bed about Schlesinger's statement t hat, under cer tain conditions, he would recomrnend resumption of U.S. bombing of l\1orth Vietnam. ln response to Pro xmire's request th'1l he elaborate. Schlesinger said th e only condition he could foresee for su ch a recommendation v.'OU!d be "major ag- gressive actions by North Vietnam u·hich v•ould th reaten South Vietnan1 in viola- tion of th e Paris agreements." Proxmire called that "so generalized'" an answer it didn't mean very much . 110\vever , Sen. Stuart Symington (0. Mo.), acting chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said he didn't see how the nominee could anS\\'er the c1uestion any other \\'ay. ,. Had he sided y,1th Co ngress on ihe question ol Indochina 'bombing, S)'1n- ington said, he would be embarrassed at Cabinet meetings and m ig ht have his nan1e withdrawn. "He has the knowledge and the op- portun ity to be a great secretary of defense if he uses his own judgment." Symington said. Sn toking Ban Effected SALE~. Ore . 1U PI 1 -l l's against the Ja w today to smoke at a state govern· n1ent meeting in Oregon. Gov. Tom i\i cCa ll signed a blll \Ved- nesday banning smoking at such gather· ings. It took effect immediately. U.S. Electio11s Holiday OK'll WASHINGTON \API -The Senate has voted to make election day a national holiday but defeated a proposal to shortcii the length or presidential campaigns. The election day hollday wa~ a~ proved by a voice vote Wednesday before the bill passed 11 to 25 and 'A'as sent to the. lfouse. Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey ofC.red the hollftay &mendn1ent, contending It ls hard tor many working people to get to the polls on time and a holiday would encourage voter turnout. • • ... -- A Taste of the Fo11rth Me lodi Harper, 10, (left) and Karen Clark. 12. sneak a snack from 1\1rs. Joyce i\'la rtin's picnic lunch. Shenanigans like this won't be nec- e ssary at Costa Mes a Park this Fourth of July when the Bicentennial Committee and the Daughters of the America n Revol ution serve up lunches fron1 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. At $2, they 're a steal. Free enter- tainment, games. bands and dancing will be included. Canine Caper Slieplierd Hijacks Bus iii Miami ~1JAMI (AP ) -A Gennan shepherd named Duke commandeered a city bus, forcing out 25 passengers and standing off the driver and police for 30 minutes. "It "'as a Clear case of dog-jacking," Deaf Mute Foils Robbery Attempt; Suspect Seized Clifford ~lan.')t!n, 48. 0£ Costa Mesa in- formed police \Vednesday night that he 1rokc up \1•ilh a hunti ng knife at hi:> throoit. He didn't scream beC<luse he is a deaf niutc. But \Varrcn. \vho •vas awakened by a jigg le on hi s bed. maintained his alert- ness by grabbing the intruder's arm an d chasing him a\vay from his 168 E. 23rd St. home. Communicating through his father. Charles Hansen. the deal 1nute told police thal the man had slashed at him bu l missed and that he dropped hiS knife near the fence \Vhile escaping. Hansen claimed that he had seen the intruder Ix-fore at 2.116 D E lden St. and together .,ri!h police, 1\'cnt to the apart- 1nent to identify him. l n custody tOOay on charges of suspi- cion of bu rglary and assault \vith a dead- ly 1reapon is Randall \\lilliam De lancy, 19, a srrvice station attendant "'ho lives JI the Elden address. said witness Harold Lee. Duke jumped on the bus \Vednesday, apparently tq escape a noisy thunderstorm. He leaped into the seat of driver A. L, RiveTa. "The opera tor reached his hand out 10 pet the dog," said ~1iamJ Transit Aut hority Supt. F'.'.\1. _Fieber. "The dog grabbed hold of his hand but did not break the s kin ... "The OJ)C'rator !hen ren1oved his hand. himself and the 2a passengers. leaving the bus to the dog." Ficher said . Duke refused to budge unlll police located his owners, ~Ir. and Mrs. Rolan· do Rodriquez. They coaxed hin1 out. \Vitnesses said Duke was waiting at a corner with would·be passengers. But u•hcn the driver opened the door only the dog got on. Witnesses said the dog just sat in the driver's seat looking out the windo\v. Ri\'era flagged do\\'ll u pas.sing bus, and the other driver shouted. "\Vhat ha~ pened?" "A dog took over rny bus." Rivera replied. Police arrh·ed in three :;quad cars. "'They took one look at the dog and stop- ped in their tracks," Lee sRid. One officer reasoned that "ir you've got a dog on the bus, I gucs:; the best thing to do is to keep him thC're." Finally, Duke u·as recognized, officers found his owners. and bus No. 139 u·as back on the road, 30 n1inu1cs late and empty. The passengers ;c.·erc transferred lo another bus. "Duke is a \\'Onderfu l dog , very gentle," ~1rs. Rodric1ut:i said. "Hut lie is very frightened of s1o rms." . . ' ' -.. Billboard Signs Ugly But Legal The \ new billboards on Newport Boulevlrd in Costa l\.fe.sa may be ugly but they're legal. That 1is the determination of City Al· torney Roy E. June who has addressed himself lo the legal -bu t not the aesthetic -implications of the signs Ot1 the Orange C:Ounty Fairgrounds. . June told BeauliflcaUon Comm11teeo Chairman Maureen OiOon1enico Tuesday that the billboards are up legally because a zone exception allo\.,.i ng their con- struction was granted by the City Coun· cil. Mrs. DiOomenico's inqu iry was based on the allegation that the tv.·o original wooden_ billboards that the new double- face outdoor advertising structures were meant to replace, were up illegally. There is no record of a building pennit for the original signs and Mrs. DiDomenlco questioned whether the ex~ change of· old illegal billboards for new billboards was lawful. ~1rs. DiDomcnlco, who appeared 11.t the City Council meeting Tuesday night , also asked Councilman Alvin Pinkley why he voted for the two new billboards while at the same time claiming he wa~ against all billboards . "lf you trade two rat women ror t"·o good-looking women. that's a com· promise," said Pinkley, claiming that in recent months, five old billboards have been taken down and only three new ones put up. ,,. Ex-Fullerton Football Player Suspected in Plot A fonner Fullerton College football player was arrested \\'ednesday by the FBI on suspicion of attempting to extort $75,000 from Mel Miller, manager of the Bank of America branch In Fullerton. Douglas R. Barr, 25, Fullerton, is charged with threatening to kill Miller unless the banker paid him the $75,000. police said. The alleged \'ictim formerly managed ' branch or the bank in Cos ta ~tesa. · The threat u•as made by dropping 11 note in the bank's night deposit box last Friday, according to Fullerton polic('. The note reportedly threatened A'!iller and his family and indicated the bank building u·ould be blown up unless lhe cash v.·as paid. Ff'OM Page J FAIR ... about 10 different de~lopers ...,.ho ha\'(' declared their interest in residential or co1nmercial construction on the site. Councilman Alvin Pinkley . ...,.ho along \Vi th fellow Councilman Robert \\IHSQn voted against acquisilion of the property by open spact bond, said "'hatever is con- structl'd there, he does not want it to be "a shanty·town type of development." "It's their property but l belie,•e I\'(' \vill have a say on \\'hat it's zoned. It's surrounded by institutional·recreation a\ and residentially-zoned land but I haven't given it much lhought what the zoning should be," he said. Pinkley added that be believes it prop. er for the fair board to sell the land . "As long as there's no use for it, it shou ld go off the tax-exempt status and go back on the tax rolls," he said. Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1'ul1(ap HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ''BEST BUY'' AWARD SOIT FOOD WASll DISPOSll P1w1r ff• M1cllc!nis111 • J lo•tl Thef.·Wtslt • A.t•lllOfic Ott" .. "' Disp11111r • Swint Dt• Dfff • SW.·O.t IMkt • WE SIEllVICl 15995 ••• """" '&SOJSI N e WE INSTALL ~r----4 C¥CLE BUil T-IN u-u-POTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER ~ - 1 i11lft·l•ltft FHlll t .J._ LMfl DiltNf • Rill• Ail D ... 11111' 01111 Dtlllftllrt • S.1141•11'"1 o;- W• Ol!LIVER we St:ltVICf WI INITAl.L " WI OILIVlfl WI Sl.RVICI Wli INSTALL 6 CYCLE BUil T·IN !!::::::PDTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER • ""' ......... "-Alf ..... thll ............ ....... -• DW.A-1 .... -.• l .. l.. ... 26995twODlllVU • w1 •1•vrc1 e WI INITAl.L M1111~tr el C1llfornl1'1 L1r1t1t Coopor1tlv1 luylnt Group With Tht Volumt Buying Pow•r Df 110 Storti 90. DAY CA.SH WliH A"lOftl CRIDIJ . -_, j I •