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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-16 - Orange Coast Pilot• 7 • .. • ( - • • ' •agtinie Nips, Passage DAILY PILOT . . . . In · Transpac Thriller * * * 10' * * * !See Poge ISj MONDAY AFTERNOON , JULY I b, 1973 VOL. W. NO, 1tJ, J SliCTIONI, ?4 ~AGE' • • ea_ rv1ne o. ',~o P1·io1· l(1imvledge' Kalmbach Cites . i B11gging ·Payoffs \\'ASl11NGTON (AP i -llerberC. \\I. Kalmbach. President Nixon's former persona l l:nvycr froin Nc1\'J)Q rt Beach, acknowledged today he arised fundJ to pay the original seven \Vatergate de- fendants but denied any prior kno.,1·1- edge of 1hc \Valergale brenkin or its later coverup. Kalmbach's prepared test imony 1vas made public 11•hile \\'hitc House aide Richard A. :O.foorc faced conlinued ques. . . \ Beach Explosion Burns Occupant, • Dama'ges--H ouse --An expolsion ripped through a small Huntington Beach home early Sunday morning. blowing the roof off the struc- 1ure and causing the occupant to suffer bums over 40 percent of his body. Firemen said today Robert Guthrie , 25, of 310 Sixth SI. told them he-had discon- nected the gas hose lo the house's wall heater. The gas from the heate~/ ignited, resulting_ in the explosion and fire. Firemen estimated lhal $6.500 damage was caused by the blaze which they con- tained before it could spread to adjacent homes. Guthrie \Yas taken to Pacifica Hospital for emergency treatment and \\'as transferred to the burn ward at Orange CoWlly 1'tedical Center 'vhere be is listed In stable condition M>day. ' • ' Coast Orange ' . Weather Those low clouds will hang around in the morning hours through Tuesday, accon!ing to the \\'Calhcr service. with a chance that southerly winds-'fn>m the desert areas will blo\v them a\\.·ay later in the \veck. llighs or 69 are e.,'(pected at the beaches, rising tq 75 inland~. . INSIDE TODAY The Defrnte Department httt conceded 8521 raided£Mnbodio;1 ~ tarpetJ be/ore 1970 detpite r.c,... lier public assertfotts. ·See story. PaQe 4. 1..M. '"'' 1 A1111 L-...n 4 ... Ullt 11 ~ • Clllflffll• I N•n.Mll ,._ 4 C'9blll.. lt-t4 Of'111te CMlllY t CtMk• 11 IY1'fl1 hrW 11 c,..._,.. u '""' 1 ... t1 Dellfl Hellen t S+..t MM1fett t•ll a'!teNI ''" 6 Tttt¥i>ltll II a111t111hllMlll I TM"'-I •1111Mt 1•11 W .. lf!W I .. ., Me ·~ • .,,__.. ..... ,,.,. lteAM.tH 11 W., .. ,._.. I I tioni ng at tile Senate's t e I e v i s e d \\'alergate investigation. Kalmbach was to folio\\.' him ·to !he witness stand. The schedule of wil nesses \\'as left in some confusion \vhen the committee took its 1nid-day recess with a suggestion that a witness other than the scheduled Kalmbach niight be called to follo\Y f\·loore. Com1nittee la11'ycrs v:ould not identify the possible surprise \\ilness, although 'ferry Lcnzer, the assistant counse l, had reniarked in questioning l\toore that Felix Rohatyn. a director oi International Telfphone & Telegraph Corp., '''ould be qLestiooed subsequently. In his written statement, Kalmbach ·denied any participation in the planning of campaign sabotage or unethical ac- tivity. "P.,Iy actions in the period immediately follo\\.'ing the break-in \\'hich involved the raising of funds lo provide for the legal . defense of the \Vatergate defendants and for the support of . their families \\'ere prompted in the belief that it was proper and necessary to discharge \\'hat I assumed to be a moral ob ligation that had ?risen in some manner unknown to me by reason of earlier events," Kalmbach said. KIDNAPER AND oNE OF HIS VICTIMS SLAIN TODAY AT THE BORDER PATROL CHECKPOINT Clara Louise Coronado, SO, Slain With Shotgur:i. Legs Are Those of Her Abductor, Gary Raphael, 22 "The fact that I had been directed to lllldertake these actions by the No. 2 and . No. 3 men on the \Yhite House staff made it abSolutd.Y incomprehensible to me that my actionS ifi this regard rould have been regarded in any way as improper or • Kidnaper Slays Woman Before Bej~g Killed Huntington P olicema11, ·Firemen Save Boy, 3 unethical," he said. By JOHN VALTERZA r . . Kalmbach was a trustee from January orni. o.u,. '"'"" s1.11 __/ ........ A 3-year-old Capistrano Beach bov 1s of 196~ to early February 1972 of an The kidnap'ing of a middle-agectCouplc alive todav thanks to th e eflor1s oi a estimated Sl.6 million in surplus funds from their San Diego horn e early today Huntingtorl Tkach policeman and 11vo froro Nixon's 196!1 caplpaign. · ended ~ gunfire and deRth 11vo hours firemen . , Quoting Richard M. Nixon on the func-later at. the 'San Onofre Border Patrol Jason Rey "'as found Saturday af- tion of congressionaJ investigations, the c~ec~mt ~re ~e ~spect and one of ternoon floating face dO\lo'n in a swim- chainnan of the· \V~ergate committc~ hi~ v1ctuns \\ere k1,Iled mstantlr. 'ming 'poot of a home he v.·as visiting at defend@ Its inquiry as ·~al to lbe .tic apparen~ senseless .bloodbath 6111 \Viritergreen Drive Hunlington wCfl&re'of .thi n8tion ." claimed the hfe ot a· middle-aged Beach ' Kalmbach testified he dispersed por-housewife and a shotgun \\1elding ab-· ti. f th t " J the •uc•-1'dent"1fied as Gary Raphael 22 Officer Jim Austin \\'as lhe first to ar-ons o a sum on y at expr.ess -u ""' -, • direction of lf. R. Haldeman or othl!:rs \YOO died en route to a hospital. rive at the scene and he began im- mi..... ~1.~·· n1ediate 'niout h·to-mouth resuscitation on clearly having the authority to direct ·1·1n: .,........,,1ng octurre<l: at abou t 8 a.m. suc~ursements. "-as a blue van oWJ)Cd by the dead the apparently JifeleJ>,s,_iipJe boy. Kalm~ earliei' had dC.nicd that por· '>"oman 's husband pulled to the side C>f , firemen l\larvin !\luia'ock ond Ar1non- tioos of ttlal fund were used to help ~· l~· pennanent roadblock a few miles finance the purchase of La Casa south of San Clemente. Pacifica. Nixon's oceanside eslate al San The only survivor ot the shooting \Yas cremente, Calif. the dead wom3n's .husb.'ilid. John Charles Kalinbach was also the principal fund Corooado. 48, who was able lo flee from raiser in the . earlier stages of tbc the van when lhe shoolini started. Presi<lenrs 1972 campaign for re-elcc· The two hour!!! of terror for the 111- tion. . . . . nocent couple. be~ aL.--abou~ ... , a.m .. to- . Be said he completed Ibis, a,ss1gnmclit da,v •\ their bome •• SID\ Pjegd, pohce m ·lhe sprfng of llt/'2 and t~~ .. ~aaid. · . .. r '""--· -r ofigioal fund.railing n?dJrds lo 'tf)e It enKcd-two hours later lvith ~lrs. Finance Committee for lhe Re-election of Clara Louise Coronado, 50, slain by a the President. singk! shotgun blast 10 the face fired at l!ut-he said Nixon 's finance diainnan, point.blank range by the abdu<1or . The former O>mmerce Secreta'ry imr1cc H. asnllant a few momentsJa.ter was slain Stans, directed Kaln!blldi's ,..,...tary "to by police gunfire din!ctedlo the enclosed destroy my· files "''hich "'ere wholly · portk>n of the van. personal and supportive or tile ortainal Polk.'e, highway parrolmen and other files eerlier tra:uferi-cd to tM finance inve.stigators pieced together this acoounl comfnittce." of lhe "ri1plain8100" lncklenl which "This action on my par\-wa_s intended-b0pq-4i)()ffly after daybreak: • 10 Insure the continued ti>nfidenUallty of Raphael - a plumber d r cs~ c d .for the contacts that 1 had had wl lh various work -was picked up b)I a co"'Orker and IS<e WATERGATE.._Pqe ll IS.e.SIAYING, Page Zl ·\ . Graharn Cite8 Horne Br.ea~.up . ST . -PAUL. ~nnn. ll!P I I - Ev angelist Billy Graham said Sun- day that ~ailed C hr is tain -America Is letting the home go 10 pieces, thus causing the nation _ to go to pleces. In his 45-minute mesSage, the eYangelist $&Id thtt lack or co~lon In familie11 Is partly cau~ b) lnck or disci pline. and love. \Vhcn children arow up ""lthoul respect for th~ir --pnrents and o th: e--r - - authorities. lhey easily become lnwbrcakcrs, he said. I' do Gonzalez arr1vf·d at lhl' ho1nc shor1lv after Austin ;ind thev adrn1n1stered ox· ygen to the child. · 1\ccording lo the; hrtn1en. the l11tle boy shO\\'ed no· signs of life. Tht: th ree men decided not lo l'.'ait for the a1nbulance 1'.'hich had been dispatch- ed. and. pu t the ch1!d in Austjn 's paLrol c;ir for the trill to J-lunting ton lnteroorn- munity llospilal. The firemen said c111ergency 1rea11nent at the hospital \\.'aS, continued for 4Zi minutes before the boy began to sho\v sip;ns of rcvh•ing. lie i!1 C\1r ren1ly listed 1n "f!U:trdcd con· cJJ1 1on" in the hospital's inlt!nSl\'c c;irc unit. Firemoo said the child \\·as apparent ly ·in lhe'care of<• 16-yi';ir-old bahy s1llt'r a1 thl' hon\e They sax! no one ~1w the tut •f~ll h:1h1 \he poo1 and they do 1101 kOO\\,. how long ht 'was In 1he water bclore he Wa!'I found . 5an Que1\lin 'Lifer' · 30th lmnal'e Stabhcd SAN QLENTIN (A P) -The fatal slnb- bing of an inmate over the \\Cekend, was the '10th such attack 111 San Quentin this ye.'.lr, offic!Als report. Vehon \Valkins, 58. serving l'I \Uc tcrfn Olf-i SQn J011q11in Ct>unly murder con- 'lctioo, \\'8S found stabbed in the neck and dJed minu1es lnu.•-r, a spo kesman said I ( t Mason Aide New Chief Executive By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 1119 DellY 11'11111 111" lrl'in·c Company Executive Vice Presi- dent Raymond I.. \Vatson, 46, 'vllt serve as chief exccuti\'e officer of the com- pany. Board Chainnan John V. Newman announced today. He· replaces William R. h{ason who died Saturday at !he age or 54 . "I know I SJX'ak for lhe entire Board of Directors in noting our dee p sense or loss, \\'hich so n1any understandably and touching!~· sharl'." Ne\\·man said today. "Bill ~t;ison left behind a legacy ,1·Hhoul parallel in his ca reer fie ld. ri.luch of this is v1s ihle on the land itself. Some or it is less visible. ''The strong, talented and crea!ive management tea m he b uilt in hi year~ ,1·i1h us is but .one example,~ the board chainnan said. ",\ccordngly. Raymond L. \\'at.son. as e~cuti\'e vice president or the Irvine Con1pany, \\'ill be acling as chief ex; f'<:Utive officer fi.r the firm . In this capacity, he 11ill carry out all the major .. corporate rc sponslb11ltlcs required of that office." i\c111nan concl uded. A spokcsn1;1n for the company said \\·a1.;;on's tit!e "remains executive vice presi dent. l!is res ponsibilit ies are now enlarged. consis tent 11·ith the company's byla\\'S, to encOmpass those or the com- pany's chie f cxr<·utive ofriccr," the ~pokesman concluded, The company Boorfl"of Directors next meets Oil Aug. 13. It isn't kno-.m if a vaca ncy \\ill remain on the bo.1rd until !he next s1oc kholders meeting. In Junr. \'entura rancher Newman v.·as t'!ec1ed chairman of !lie board artcr a Claremont man. llol'.·ard 1\llcn. was M'lectcd bv stockholders to fill the vacan- c,,· t rc:Htd l'.·twn former board ch:ai rman :\'". Lo~nll f\lcl.arcn, 81 , stcppcll down . Allen. -17, is an executi ve of the Sootth cm Californ ia Edison Company. \\"at.son \1·as named to the. company boa rd of di rectors In June of 1970 just (See \\'ATSON,. Page!) * * tr Memorial Rites For ~r. Maso11 'fuesday, 7 A.M. A. fannly ~pokcsman "al(I today a mt'mor1al serviei! "Ill be read for \\"1lliam Ralph \lai;on hue prni 1dent. or the lrvihe Comp.1ny ot the Pacific View ~temo~'al Park c~~I. Corona del f\iar, at 7 o Jock Tuesday morning . l\lr. 1ason died Saturday afternoon. The 3mil Y. suggested that memoria l contribuUons might be made to Orange Empire Area Council of Boy Scouts ol Am erica. or to the Orange Coun ty i,unlor Achievement program . v.·h1ch were among l\1r. l\l ason's principal charitable lntCfcsts·in rC<'Cnl year!!. lie ser\'ecl as \IJt~em RcgiooaT Prtsi- dent o! the Jloy Scouts, and helped tabhsh the .Junior Achic\'ement pro.. gram in Orange County. lntenmnt \',111 ~ prin1c -- . , • • • • s ' • • I Prize-winni11.g· iY<mJsman Dies !;' NEW YORK-,CAP'I -Reiman Ne.wport Lawyer , • :Qoctors .Say . Nixon Siill 11P1t" Morin, Who twice won the ---l:-DPull;_, .. tJe-r-"fri""-dtll'lnj-hil---- wUh -1be ~\ed-l't'w, was ·1....i dead 1n·bJ5 aportment this · mornlng. He was 65. u ns~ .. Pu--v:: .. ./ ~ '• . Ile had been tn ill health. , ' .. . .t.. 'Moi'in won Pulitzers for his COveaige of the Korean War In 19~1 and for bi! eyewitness reporting of riot.lag over school integration at LitUe Rock, Ark., tn 11151. From Pqe I ' SLAYING •.. immediately drew a gun on his partner. Mon>en\a. later the aunman and partner noUeed the O>ronado van parked near tho caup!e's house and went inside. Seconds later the unwitting fello\V plumber fied from the Coro!' a.d o r~. tKlt the gunman stayed mstde, =' tho ~pie and orderlnj them "' He ordered tne Corooados i!lto t~ van and drove around for a few minutes ID an attempt "' find hlB f11it victim. Fl11ln( al that, the abductor then , droM to a residence and bound his v1c- timo with -around tho neck. then cirdored c.ronado "' drive along the -• ~ and then up the San DieC9 Freeway. In tho Oooanslde area, Co!<Jnado was able to stir the interest ol a highway patrolman c.r'Jlsing along the frec"."ay and the otTicer pulled up alongside, ,,.. noUcing that the couple were In trouble. He · feU back and called for assistance. At that point, CHP Sgt. Jack Cook said, c.orooado feigned 8 heart attack and his kidna~r allowed the man to pull to the skie. W\th the CllP officer surveying the scene cautioUSly, Qironado was replaced at the w!leel by bis wife. ,,.;· rugi. began ooce agatn. B,y then several more CHP units and several prowl cars from the ~ans.Ide Police Department joined in the pursuit. "As they approached the checkpoint here," -Sgt. -Coot-said, -"the kldnaper made mentiOn of tbe problem and predicted , 'now we're goona have some fun'." Patrolmen ordered the van to the side of the multi-lane roadblock and a~ proacbed the vehicle. "He jerked open Ute door," a fellow pa1ro1 olJici.al said, "and shouted for ~~getouL" ' By United Press lliernutJ~naJ Herbert·\¥. Kalmbach never wanted to become a houtebold word . · , ! A blg-hly succWtul NeWJ>Ort B.Ocb lawyer who Uked lo dabble Jn big IJjne • politics. Kalmbach was all but unkMim nationally until his fund-raising etrorts ~ behalf ol RlChard M. NfxOn drew hlm izl. to the vortex of the Watergate scandal. Kalmbach, a suntanned and robust 51. was the model of a respectable West Coast attorney: With an office on lhe 441.h floor or a Los Angeles skyscraper and a home in fashionable Newport Beach, Kalmbach had an Impressive list of clients which included the President of the United States. But he shunned publicity, preferring lo remain in the back&rouod. Kalmbach did the complex logal work on Nl.J:on's purchase of his San Clemente, Calif., estate, about 25 miles down the Pacific Ocean beach from Kalmbach's own home. Kalmbach also handled the drafting of Nixon's will. But It was his wor.k ~s a political fund- raiser that gave Kalmbach bis unwanted fame . In both 11163 and 19'12, he'. rabed substan tial .swns of money on beba1f or Nixon's presidential campaign, teaming up with Maurice H. Stans d1lrinJ< the re- election campaign which was liistory's most successful, political finance effort. Stans was rewarded for his 1968 work by an appointment to the Nixon cabinet • i':: * GOP Furul Se nt To Nixon Hom e Magazine Claim s NEW YORK (UPI) -Som/Republican campaJgn funds may have gone to help buy President Nixon's estate_ at San Clemente, Time Magazine says in th.is week's issue. Tbe magazine Sunday said Senate in- vestigators are looking into what hap- pened to a -sum of $1.6 million 1eft over from ~ 1968 presidential campaign as well as "Public Institute" funds raised by Herbert Kalmbach, Nixon's personal attorney. · as co~ seaitary. But Kalmbach · aVolded U\e national 1potllght untU his nalno lll(an bejjlg linked wfttr the seamy ai<le=ol :l>l?!llW• l sjiendlhg. · 'i'uliiiiO&ji preselit&d to the Senlll . Waler(Ol.i ~tlee named Kalmbach · ., the ·p.YJllaster !or:pQililcal oaboleur Donal4' Segrettl. Slant 11so • a i d- Kalmb8ch solicited 6'om ·l)im funds whleb" Ultimately were used . in an nt-~ tempt to buy the silence of ~ original Watergate conspirat<!".s. On July (\, Ameri can Airllnes disclosed It Hlegally had contributed $55,000 to Ni~­ on's re-election effort upco Kalmbach's urging. Kalmbach, -who \\·as attorney for United Air Lines , asked for and received the capipaign contribution at a time when American was seeking to acqulre Western Airlines, a move that required government approval. With Kalmba ch coming berore the Senate \Vatergate Committee, he was certain to be questioned closely on his fund-raising efforts. his ccnnection with Segretti and reported moves to raise money for the Waterga'te defendants, and the financing and improvements o( Nix· on's San Clemente estate. Kalmbach was born in Port Huron. Mich., on Oct. 19, 1921. He attended public schools there and served in \Vorld \Var 11 as a Navy pilot. After the war he attended the University cf Southern California, where he married Barbara Helen Forbush in June, 1948. A year later he entered the USC law school, where he became fast friehds with Robert H. Finch. A decade later1in 1958, he helped Finch win the lieutenant governorship of California and Finch in- troduced him to Nixon in 1964. 'Ibe Kalmbachs have two sons, Kurt and Kenneth, and a daughter, Lauren Ann. But for the last two years, the fami· ly has seen litUe of Kalmbach. "He's hardly ever at heme, even on weekends," Mrs. Kalmbach says. "He always seems to be off traveling somewhere and I never have a chance to discuss things with him." From Page I WATERGATE .. • contribol<n with whom I ,Qld cjeall dur- ing·lhls per;o<1,"·Ka1mbacnwd. Fro1n Rags to Riches Httl kkMr '"'lo Ragtime, a sloop soffie saiIOrs say looks like ' an elongated star boat, outdueled Windward Passage in a virtual match race over the last 50 miles to grab first·t()..finish honors tn the 2,225-mlle Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to }Jonolulu. Ragtime. finished four minutes and 31 seconds ahead of \Vindward Passage in one of the closest Transpac finishes on record. Read how she did it On Page 18. Transit Board Adopts $17.5 Million Budget By JACK BROBACK Of tht Dtlly 'ilot 51tlf A $17.5 million bud get for 1973-74 was adopted by the Orange County Transit District Beard 0£ Directors today. ~e total, $15.5 million will ccme fi'om fed eral and state grants leaving $2 million to be financed by the _distric!'s 4.5-cent tax rate. - The new budget contrasts Y.'ith the $3.9 million spencllng program for 1972-73. But as transit board chairman Ralph Clark pointed out the district operations have grown tremendously in lhe past year. -Heard Deputy County Counsel Ken- nard R. Smart declare that the director's post formerUy held by Derek McWhbmey was vacant because of hls ccnvictlon of a felony. ~tcWhinncy was found guilty of grand. theft by a Superior Court jury early this · n1onth in the Mile Square agrt,cultural . · lease scandal. lie has appealed the sentence and is free on bail. Smart said the League ·or Cities should appoint a new member and that the group is expected lo act July 1.6. The new director's term will be only for the bal- ance that McWhinney was to se rve and will expire in two and a, half years. WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon continued to show imprcwement today in his batUe with viral pneumonlai, hi s doctors said. .. "He is progrls&ng satisfactorily," reported Dr. Sol K~ti. pu!IDOllary specialist from Georgetown Universl\)I School of Medicine, one of the teem of doclot3 treating the President aJ Bethesda Naval Hospital. White House Press Secretary Ronal8 L. Ziegler said Nixon's progress is sucl'i that he will be able to meet as scheduled with three state vlsitOrs in the nezt twc weeks -the Shah "of Iran on July' 24 Australia Prime Minis1er '~tfaiU on July 30 and Japanese Prime Ptlinlster Takuei Tana ka July 31-Aug. 1. · Nixon's spirits were describieii as "just fine" and Katz predicted he may be ablf to leave the hospital by Thursday or F~ day.· · "He's vivacious, loquacious -an ti· cellent patient," said Katz. Nixon's doctors said they \l'ere havinl a tough time convincing him he had to slow ·down and curtail,his schedule, ·His work load Is said to be , only about a quarter of normal because of the illness. Nixon awoke at 8 a.m. after a good night's sleep. Dr. Walter Tkach said The President wa s given for chest t~rapy treatments Sunday. The tr.eatment res u It e d in "cooslderable improvement in his cheat congestion and chest discomfort is nO\v at a minimum ," Tkach said in his morn'· ing medical bulletin. The therapy did cause the President"19 experience some fatigue to the point where he was given mild pain kfllf.rs for relie~, Tkach saJd. ' In general, N'uon had a good day on Sunday. He had a hearty dtnoer of seafood, served abbut 6:15 p.m. t The President retired after }lb 1ait chest therapy about 9 p.m. and slept, soundly throughout most of the nJght. Tkach said. This sharply contrasted with hi s first night at t~ hospital Thursday "'hen he had :1 fitful,~~ hours sleep. :r~ chest inhalation ex~ise' was ad- muustered l>y Sue A\ W i 11 i a rn s , pulmooary nurse s~iatist assigned 1o the hospital's chest clmlc. Erom\..age.1 · 'Qle · ~· immedlately fired bis ~"*-·a!niiiir· the blul ol p,llets r~ the wilidSbiel'd Of the van •. "The Senate fnvestfgalors are ser10<Jsly probtng the po5Sl~llily that Republic>n campaign funds. l!lllY have beeQ. al.id · 10 help purchase -Nixon's San Clemente estate" the in1gazine· said. Time quoted -~Cli iscommenttng"on'tlie report, · He said be has S!!PPU<:!! ,lo the..llenate • Waterkate" 't'Ommittee staff CQptesl of his relnalnfng rec:Otds and some bank "At this time last year we had only 10 employes and nO buses on the streets. Today with 17 employes and four part time workers we have dial-a-ride in La Habra, we will have SS buses operating on 31 routes by · September:• Oark Me tal Worker s To :Begin Stri ke WATSON ... ,,__,..,. tumbled unhurt from the ~.;" s111e· iinO u 'Jilt'bi>rrtfted· wife tume4 lhe gunman "1ot &r tn !hdace. n..ii,. patiolmen · said, the ·....uant hep\ firing from ihe ·van towar<1 of- li«l'S The. exchange of gunfire lasted for several minutes. "lben wl'held back and walled," Sgt. Cook said. . "lf mwit have been five minutes or so and no activity was noted from the van. • ,; we were walttng for tear gas to arrive, . be·odded. lben officers began creeping loward .the bullet-tom !ruck and found both ..,. cupanta dead. • -The assallant, dressed tn thick, brown- canvas coveralls was on his back 1n the .rear of the van, the shotgun nearby. Mrs. Coronado's body lay between the two fruit syls. . . Patrolmen took her shocked, gnev1ng lwshand to.a nearby patrol unit where he sat dazed for more than an hour, barely able to speak to investigators. 'Ibe entire shootout took place in a con- gested, bu>y sect.loo of the checkpoint, wiUi traffic moving on the busy freeway at one side and large trucks and trac~rs parked at the weigh !:talion and m· s~tloo area to the other. "~t's hard to believe;" one officer said gazing ~t tbe death scene. · "He just picked this couple at random . They didn't even know the man who did an thls." "It apparently was •a wild, unex· plalnable thing," a san Diego police sergeant added. OU.NI I COAST DAILY PILOT 1"'9 Or.,.. CMi1 OAll. 't .. IL.OT, ..-tlh wflldl 11 ......_, lhf H_,.,._ 11 '"1(1111Md " ... Or .... ~ "*W... c..nHnY. kll9• · ~~t .a dime of campaign money went in- to San Clemente." 'lbe magazine said investigaton are looking for a brown leather satchel con- 'talning records or one of two cl Kalmbach's "Public lnstitdt.es". 'The satchel is now locked in a White House safe belonging to former White ~counsel Jo6n W. _Dean a.pd ''the papers it holds are ilmong thooe Iha! Ricbard Nixoo does not want the Senate cOmmlUee tO see On the grounds that this woold .violate the 'separation of pow- ers.' " T1me said. Tustin School Ruined hy Fire Fire destroyed a preschool in the north Tustin area Sunday night, the Orange County Fire Department reported. The blaie al the Tustin Country Day School. 13881 ·. Plmpect Ave.. was reported by passing motorists al 10:46 p.m. and was oontrolled by 11 :08 p.m. The loss was estimated at $40,000 to the one story structure owned by ·Gerber Foods Inc. of Fremont, Michigan and managed by Earl Petel'800. Thirty-0ne men and five engines mt.l-- tled the fire. Red Hill station volunteer fire chlef f\faur'y Elsher suffered a dis)ocated knee. Cause of the blaze is under in- vestJgation. Caetario Begins ' Londo n. M ee ti1igs ,..,.. M1t""' .,. ,...._ MeiW' "°"""" LONDON (l,IPI) -Portuguese .. , .... , ... CMtt '-'-· H-1 lf9c;:fl, Pr II c t 1+1Muiwten ••tc:~1,,_..111 "•1\e'f'. UOVM emier '-farce o ae ano arrived today 1 .. dl, 1 .... in.1~111>11ct. ..... '-ft c._..,, for a con troversial four-day official visit. 1111 J11111 "'"''"-. " 11n1~ •-01DM1 Threatened demonstrations protesting al· """'" 1e ,..,......, llhwd•Yt w ...,.,...}". Jeged Portuguese massacres of Africans ttot lrlrlcloll ,wi;,ii._ .i.111 " n ,.. w..1 f 'led de el I he ·1 rded ••r '"""· c.. .. -..... c.illwfli.. ,,.,., ai to v op a av1 y gua lleathrow Airport. a.~,. N. w • .d Police and armed security men ringed ""'*"' ..,. """'""" he I Ca ' Jict 11. c,,.101 t aJrport or etano s anival and net vq "'•*'' ..... C:.-.•1 MtotW a single demonstrator was in evklence. Tll•lfl•• K1o<wll However, as Caetano drove into town, t11w about 40 prote111ers gathered outside the Th•l'flq A. Mut,ttino Portuguese Embassy. Mtlllt...... ...... The ·-· ... , . cd a..1111 H. i...1 RJc••r4 ·p, Nill pruu~:: min~ er an:iv at noon AMhllflf --... e•t!9n -----aboard --a ·Pmiuguese air f~ 1CTl •• OffSete jetliner at He:lthrow where he was met • by Trade and Consumer'AUairs Minister Sit Geoffrey }fowe and several other British and Portuguese ol!lclafs. Rl).in Floods Italy '1-111..AN, Italy CAP) -Severe rain- storms lashed oorthem Italy over the weekend cau11\ng Ooodt and landslides along tho Italian R\vici'a tlnd leaving at lea&t 15 peritc>ns dead, authcritlefl eid. F pie drowned when a bridge col· the bad weather near Turin on u y. 'l'!le!r cars plunged Into a n ... -er. I records.: .• ,.., ~·.••"·"fi t ,t 11 ' . •, I In !hi.! statement Halmbach ,.;a l)e had Jleftf utod for immunity from proo. ecutioo nor indicated he · would e1:ercise his riaht to remain silent under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. ''I'm here belore you today to tell the truth about my .actiVities during the period in question," Kalmbach said. "It is not my purpose to testify f«, or aplnst any individua1." 3 Auto Thieves Get Jail Terms '"ilatect~Y. ,, ' ' ... . ·. . '1'his budget includes the construction ~of. a beadquar1enHDaiotenallce facility in Garden Gro~.pie1park-Mide ~ty in Fullerton, a dia~a-rid& expansion pro- gram to other clties, an expansive cor- ridor study and the rontinued expansion of bus services with 63 new vehicles ar- riving nezt spring," the chairman ccn· linued. "We will accomplish all this wilh the same 4.5-cent tax rale as last year," Clart conUnued, "this_ is because of our success in receiving federal grants and our judicious use of our State sales tax revenue." · Anticipated revenues irOm federal and state funds Includes $7.2 million federal fwids ; $2 million property tai revenue; $1 million from bU.9 fares, and $7. l million from the state ,sales tax on Tbree Navy meii who admitted stealing ga.Soline. 'lour lumry autos from a Huntington Principal spending figures include: ·Beach 9eaJer h:ave•been sentenced to go.. Salarjes, and wages, $1.88 million ; pro- day terms in Orange County Jail. fesslonal and special services (consul· Superior Court Judge James Turner tant) $1.12 million ; advertising, $466,254 : LOS ANGELES (AP) -A union spokesman says that sheet metal workeri were ready I-Oday to launch a· strike whlcb ~me observers say could cripple new construction in Los Angeles County. "I didn't see one opposing' hand in the place," wiion spOkesman Clyde Ringwood said after members of his 4,000..strong local gathered tor a strike vote at the Embassy Auditorium Saturday. \Vorkers make Sll.65 an hour in pay and frhlge benefits and seek the. 55 cent ~rease struck down several years ago 1n the wage freeze. Management says it· is being priced cut of business. Thieves Get Radio Gear f1·om Airplane two' months before he was made ~­ ecutive vice president ·of the fmn he join-- ed tn' 1960 as managl!r of the ·planniJ;' department. lo 1964, Watson \Vas elected vice pres\. dent and in 1966 he assumed responsibility for the land development division. He became a senior vice president iii January of 1968. A resident of Eastbluff. Watson and his wile ~lsie, have four children, Kat.by, Bryan, Usa and David. A native of. Seattle, he attended UC Berkeley \vhere he earned b o tJi bacfi:e!or·s and master's degrees fn arch1teclure and urban planning. H.e is a· director of the Easter Se,I Society of Orange County, i.s a register ... a,rchltect and a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. · bus operations, $2.9 million a n d \Vatson has been guest lecturer at UC campuses in Riverside, Irvine and l.m Angeles as well as USC. Watson is a member of the board <i visitors for tbe UCLA School of Arcliitecture and Urban Planning. ordered identical 'jail time for Carlos Dee -transportation and lra\•el $67,360. Intruders who entered an unlocked Carter, 19, Johnnie M.iltoo Jr., 23, and The growth of the district is indicated aircraft at Orange C.Ounty Aifl>Ort during W ' Anthony M. Simmoos, 18, after the trio, by ttt! 31 routes now in operation which the we<kend carried off radio equipmetlt a1· B52s R eassigned all from Long Beach Naval Station, cover the central. northern and western · valued at $1,200, sheri[!'s officers said. pleaded guilty to auto theft. areas of the ccunly. During the coming Deputies said the equipment y:as taken WASHINGTON (AP) _·The first BS2 Restitution was set at $750 for Carter year service will be extended to f\Iission from an aircraft ·owned by E.Z AV bombers retW1ling from the Southeast and $500 each for Milton and-Simmons. Viejo. El Toro and uther south ccunty Corporation of Carlsbad. The aircraft's Asia war ha\ie been reassigned to All three will serve three years pro-paints. operator was working in a nearby office Seymour Johnson Air Force Base near bation, Judge Turner ruled. In other business today, the .district building at the time of the theft, they Goldsboro, N.C., Pentagon officials aaid It was successfully alleged that the trio directors: , said. today. · \\'as involved in !he theft of lour late \-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;e =1 ii:::=.ieooi'.:~!r:~~~: ~~ LOW PRICES ARE . BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE Beach Blvd ., Huntington Beacb. The cars \Vere recovered. • Man in Ba r Shot ~ By S.F Poliee1n an SAN FRAN€1SCO (AP I -A man reportedly waving a gun inside a bar here was fatally shot bf a policeman - but authorities said they were unable to find the weapon the dead man was sup.. posedly wielding. Adn1lrol NO-DEFROSTING REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER · ALL THESE GR EAT • "-tltwl.FEA TURES • 1'111'1 Wldt!t "Bookc111'" ,,..,.,. Door Sf\1lf -for ln1t1nt aYll!tbltlt)'. • C1111 T1mp1r1tur1 Contro11- 11lttt th• r1lht t1m'p1ir11u" tor I.Ch HCtlon. • T"'n f'o!Qel1tn Cr11perr;-ktt1» lru!t, waltRltl l•rd•n lrnti. • t.tr1 1.1,.. 1tttr!r1retor Ooor SMiwt-lloklt. 1\1911 &IN quart "°""'' Police said Charles Eugene Fenton. 23, \vas hit by " single shotgun blast fired by patrolman Adrian Lim Sunday night in the Body Shop at Mason and Eddy Streets. Although wltnef ;es sakt Fenton was waving a gun. palice Capt. James Curran said no gun was found on the dead Tlllln or in Ute bar. He speculated one of several patrons who Jett the bar"tirter the shooting may have taken the weapon. MMef NT 1134 No clolro1fl119 r1fri1111tor 1octio111 with }.rctlc Air flow 1v1 ... lfl for full 1ycl1 circ11l1llo1'. SLIMLINE HEmBTlll Kelly Wins 120.mile Death Valley W.3lk""- oEATH VM!LEY (AP) -Dlst1nco runner John K\Uy, fintahrng a 120-mne walk acf'()SS Death ValJey Irr-a record 3!, hours, say& ''It was hell but I'm glad l did It;' ..... C11ll o F'Ull Width r,.._a.t • W°i*R•tl(I Tempe,... °"""9 ALL THIS $15-995 .-... , ... ,_. __ ' • t.trs °"'Door''"" FOR ONLY o ru11 Width ,,....a11rt CtlilWD......._. ~ ~,,::;;~· ~ 1s;:., rn C-r1t1 .. luylnt , Group With Tht WITH Amon • Volume Buying c•ron It ., , -·-l'owtr of 110 Stor•HI ~ Y ...... HY ... -. ~ I Ke.Uy. nn Jte.land native whc now lives in Santa tt.tonlc1, looked exhausted arter nn1sbing lhe trtk late Sunda)' altemoon "·llh only twc bri<'f rest breaks. tBlfllEWPORJ. BlVD. Downtown Costa Mesa ...,. Phone 548-7788 -__ !f • --. ..J.-- wa pro on! m " llld IW ... .. the eau me w Off le a :1%5 fro •• ·'!ai Col ha t AU ari au wif • ha of Le ' Sex Scandal BBC Broadcaster ' -Rescr.ibe.~· ~~·+- LONDON (UPI) -A btbadcuter who \fas not ickntllied in court testified by proxy today about what he said "can only be decribed as an orgy" at the J..on. don home of blonde singer Janie Jones. The man's statement was rtad to the court at \he start of the second week of lhetrial of ft1iss Jones, 34, and fwo men on charges which · began with m. Yestigation of alieged sex and money payoffs to British Broadcasting Corp. BBC personnel as an inducement to play certain phonograph records .. 1he BBC has a radio . broadcasting monopoly in this country. . "We all went upstairs wilb Janie Jones and looked through the reverse side of a ·two-way mirror," the man's statement said. . "Jn the bt!droi>m nex~ door on the bed, ~hree naked girls were performing !es· bian ~cts .. :-After that, Janie sugg~&ted "' Gooernment Sex Scandal • Charge Filed LONDON (UPl ) -Mrs . Norma Levy, the call girl in the sex scandal which Caused the resignation of two goveiv ment mblisters, returned to Britain and was charged today under the 1~56 Sexual Offenses Act. · After being officially accused of at- tempting to "Pf'OCure a woman to become a prostitute, Mrs. Levy was reman.~ed on :•ts,000 bail until July 31. ·~ Mrs. Levy arrived at Heathrow airport fro_m Spain on Sunday hours after police tlt the Spanish coastal resort of Denia ·"Said they had arrested her husband Colin. They declined. to say whether he had been charged .. !. A British consular spokesman in Alicante, Spain , said Levy, a London taxi ilriver, was arrested on suspicion of the attempted homicide of his lrish born wife. "We were informed by police that Levy had been arrested Saturday On suspicion , of the attempted homicide of ruirma Levy, but a formal charge ha! nol ·y~t been preferred," the spokesman said. "According to Spanish legal prarjice it is now up tG an investigating magi!trate. to decide what-a<:tion will be taken. ·There is an ex.tr3dition treaty between '_Spain and Britain and l expect the ~ritish police and lnterpol will get in touch with Spanish authorities." ~ •• Detective Chief Superintendent Albert W-U.'kstead ·arrested Mrs. Levy at the atfPort on a warrant he had taken ·with him. He said he had been advised she was arriving in Lond-On and she was held at the airport by Scotland Yard detec- tives. \Vammts for Mrs. Levy's arrest and • for that of Colin Levy were issued last moo.th under the 1956 Sexual Offenses Act, but they had by thln left the coun- try. Levy and Nonna left Brita.in on May 20 'l!lfter Nonna's association with Lord •Lambton, then a government minister, 1ttecame publicly known. Lambton and Lord Jellicoe, who was hlso implicated ·in the sex scandal, •-resigned from the government. ~ 1be Diplock Commission, appointed by ~rime. Minster Edward Health to in· (vestigate security aspects of the affair, reported last week that it was as the result of a domestic dispute between f¥orma and her husband In April this )tear that she Informed police of her associaticm with Lambton. wo all go Into the bedroom. • . . Janfe kepi flllng us on. • 1'So t' got undressed with two of the Gtben:· (men) and got onto the bed with the g!rls.'Wbat followed next~ only be described as an orgy ... The scene lasted for about an hour: And this ls the one and only time l have met Janie Jones." Miss Jones is, on trial on ze separate charge, most involving abetting pros- titutioo. but including blackmail, an alleged attempt to poison her u:·husband and Inciting a man to murder him. She is being tried separately on the latter charge. · · Her fGnner husband, songwriter John Christian.Dee, 34, is a co-de.Cendant at the, current trial. Sc> is Eric Gilbert, 42, a former county court c~ who lived at MIM Jones' home. Prosecutor Stephen Mitchell read a ·sec- ond Matement in court today, this one from and unidentified company dlrec1or, saying. he and .business .acqualntences bought sex from Miss JGnes and girl.s·she brought alGng "foor or five times" at his apartment. A third statement, from a man iden- tifie<J. as-'3. "freelance advertising man,"· said: "Foc the past fc>Iµ' years I'vfl: been taking advantage of a call-girl service .operated by Janie. Jones." He said the girls always went to bis ~- Marines Ass ault ·Mythical Land In War Games A 13.~strong Marine fGrce planned to land in the mytJUcal country of Campeen at Camp Pendleton today, to rescue its legal government beleaguered bY a guer- rilla group. The "Eight-Day War.~· te~d Opera- tion Beagle Dancer, was to begin at 9 a.m. today, 'vith regular and Marine reservists using aircraft and amphibious vessels to make a simuJated invasion on the coast of the Camp Pendleton M'drine Base. Marine officials said the exercise, "'hi ch ends ~t; ~1onday, involves the 1st and 4th Marilf divisions and the 3rd and 4tb Marine Aircraft wings, along with Navy amphibious fleet personneJ. "'The exercise is designed to train com· bined ground anEI airbornf! personnel tG counter guerrillil 0perattons in support of the Ieg«tly constituted fQrelgn govern- ment in fundamental c001bat opera- tions," said a Marine spokesman. H said Maj. Gen. Kenneth J. Hou 'hton, commanding officer of the 1st Ma ne Division, would be over-.all ex· ere e commander. rvine Trustees Sue for Acreage lrvine Unified School District trustees \rorking through the county counsel's of- fice sued Friday to acquire a 9'k-acre elementary school site by eminent d<>- main action. Named as defeIJ(jants on the Orange County Superior Court lawsuit are five property owners on the Jef£rey Road site that is scheduled to beCome the Hoeptner Elementary School. The district's board of trustees a~ proved the action taken by County Counsel Adrian Kuyper lh a resolution dated June 27, the 'lawsuit notes. • . - OAJl V PILOT 3 Liz-Dick • Separa tion i_A-J-g k·I>-'---,.--- Happy Padre "MOSCOW fUPf\ -Thlt separatlo" • from Elizabeth Taylor. 111d lll<bard Burton; waS1 a""11jouroalialic joke" that will end Friday in Rome. And as for published suggestiGriS or a rofflance bet~'ten hls ~ife Qf nine years and actor Peler Lawford , nothing lo It . "Good gracious me." Burton said Sun- day . ,;He's just a very old friend." Lawford ha3 been photographed witb P.1iu Taylv: in llollywood nightcluM several times since sht announced July 3 lhat sbt and Bur1C¥l had separated. "lL's just a journallslic !<>ke," Burton said Gf the hlghly·publicized split when ht arrivtd from Rome to attend the &foscow film festival. It was Burton's first visit to the Soviet Union. "P.1y wife and I will meet in Rome on Friday," he said. ''She wanled to COIM here but her mother is \'f:ry sick. very ill,. and she had tG slay with her mother (in Callfe>rnia )." • A procession o! floats unfolded the ·story of the · . Spanish trek from Mexico to California 200 years ago thJt included the founding of Mission San Juan Capistrano. Photograph with gasoline sign in back- ground was interesting ·juxtaposition of new and old. The Fiesta La Cristiaruta parade in San Cleme nte Saturday was seen by about 56,0QQ speclalors. It had more than 170 entries. Burton said he h'ad spoken wUh Mi~ Taylor by telephone Sunday befort leav- ing RGme and added that they have call· ed each ofher ''about three times a day" since Miss Taylor announced the sew .. · lion. .: "This is the l<>nge&~ separation we'vt !vtr had," Burton sald. ·"ft "ill be JO days." ' Powder Puff.Derby Hurt By Sunday Crash Landing CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (AP) -A. crash landing which perpJexed the pilot -but left the plane's twQ occupants unhurt - marred the action last Sunday in the 27th running or the coast-tCK:Gast Powder Puff Derby. Pilot Wanda Cummings of Rancho S&n· ta Fe, and co-pilot Eva Carmichael of La Jolla, were maeuvering their Cessna 182 for a mandatory landing at the Waterloo Municipal Airport when the single-engine plane developed a loss of power. The craft lost altitude, hit a fence, and left the two women the object. of an early-evening 45-minute search before they were fGUnd. •· "I don't know what happened," the pilot_,aid, "l think maybe it was fuel ex- haustion, but I don't really know. I had fueled in Topeka and had plenty of gas - but no pov.'er an or a sudden." The two flyers are among nearly 200 women who started their cross comitry race at ·Carlsbad and beaded for the Chemung County Airp<>rt in· Elmira, N.Y., where they were due today. One of · the mandatory stops is at Waterloo, a sister city tG Cedar Falls in northeast Iowa. airport in sight ." she ·said. "Then the power just went out. We caught the nose gear on the fence." She said the incident v.·as her first emergency ]anding as a pilot, "and J hope my last." \Viii she oompete again next year? "I don't know. Maybe if I've_ got an airplane that's flyable," she sakl. Her plane received "slight t G moderate" dc)mage, she said. Aerosol Can U1ider Attack LOS ANGELES (APl -OI the many i.nt.oxicating agents .available to youth, the aerosol spray can has become.a new trencl'which Di~t. At· .ty. Joseph Busch says mwt be con- trolled. Busch said toluene is a· chemical propellant and drying'agent used in many aerosol spray.s. It has pi-oven dangerous and sometimes deadly to young persons -who sniff the chemical to attain a high, Busch said. San Onofre lniprovement Top Priorit)' SACRAl\1ENTO .fAPl -The state Department of Parks and Recrtalion bas given top priority to a $2 million tm- provement program for a 5.5-mile stretch or beach cit San Onofre. considered one of the best surfing areas in California. George Rackelmann. who he.ads the department's project design section, said Sunday the money is to be expended over the nen.18 months on improving access roacb. sanitary facilities and other amenities at San Onofre State Beach. leased from by the state from the Camp Pendleton l\1arine Base in 1971 for public use. lie did not e1plain hGw he figured 10 days from July 3 tQ nttt Friday -July 20. A spokesman fGr Miss Taylor said last week she would rejoin Burton in Rome at the end of this week. They are makin&: tv.·o separate filrns in Italy. Asked if the. interest in the stparation surprised him, Burton replied: "t<i1y dear feUow, for 25 yean I've bad nothing but aueolion from the press. ~ has my wife. It's some.lhinf that happens nov.· and again. It will fa! away, I IU~ pose. in a couple of weeks." BurtGn later changed intG a black Mao suit and attended the festival's Sunday night premiere of the nim "Afassacre in Rome." He stars in it He said he and Italian producer Carlo PGnti, who accompanied him, will return IG Rome on Tuesday. P ersonnel Chief Hart to "Resign He said plans are being drawn for restriping the road approaching the beach entrance, creating a simple left· hand tum lane to eliminate a confusing Wtlliam C. Hart. Orange ~y pH'IOn-- U-tum, and rtlClC8ting the entrance nel director for the past 20· years bl5 kiosk, where fees are collected. . r6igned his position effective A a&· 17. The surfing beach, the state's first and Hart. in a letter to the BOBrd o1. only beach dedicated e1clusively fGr the SUpervi:!lors . said he was tP& a pollt in use of surfers, is directly upcoast from ~r California county. He did Mt the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Sta-name the coUnty · lion and one mile away from the Ylestem The personnel director said he enioY!!d • White House. The surfing portion is a lit-v.'Ofkiog for Orange County and off~ tie more than hair a mile long, with the to assist the board in recruiting a new remaining area Gpen tG camping, swim· director. ming and surf fishing. Hart is the second county department E.R. JUilette, chief Parks and Recrea-head to leave Qffice in the past five ticm ranger for the Pendleton area, said months. Treasurer Ivan H. Swanger Miss Qnnmings, a third-time entrant in the derby, said she was making a re- quired "fly.by" of the \Vaterloo airport for an ·official clocking of elapsed flight ·time when the plane lost power. "\Ve were about 1,900 feet and"had the .22(),908 persos visited the beach in fiscal retired on Feb. 28 and his post w~- 1972-73, 12,033 of. whom used the stretch bioed with that of tax ccUect<r rt '-~~~~~~~~~~~~•"ro"rs,,.u,rf .. mg.. Qtron. • * * * Powder Puffers Approach Finish, Of Women's Race ELri-1 TRA, N.V. (.UPI) -With on1y one day of flying time left, dozens of planes swept eastward today toward the finish line in the 27th annual Power Puff Derby air race for wQmen. By Sunday night, 26 single·and tv.·in· engine aircraft had completed the transcontinental race. To qualify, planes must finish ' by 6 p.m. today. ' • I ,_ -.:-:. ' ANNUAL " )J I • I' , I' Ii I • I • ,, ' ' 'Ille fiist plane. a Beechcraft Bonanza with Helen Wilke of Dallu and Kathy Long of Irving, Tex., abQard. landed last Saturday at the Chemung ,County Airport. T\venlY.·five others followed Sun- 'P;.'11"!,'-'!'---.tay-. -· Because of the handicapping system used, the winner of the 2.542·mile race will not be announced until \Vednesday. officials said. STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE f I : Tootla Bot1ttcb I Construction worker Dave Dana. (left) flJtds screenina for sharks' ! ~lh al a fossll·rlch slle in El Toro a· relaxing pastime alter work. I ·whale and dolphin .bones about 17 million years old have also been 1 located al the site called PecUn Reef. Paleonlologisl$ from lhe Los I Angeles County Museum o( l'iatural H'IStOry .supervise "the dlr1g_•. 1 · With Dana Is John Houser, ot Archaeological Research, Inc. w o dtd 1 an environmental Impact report on lbe project which unearth the i teeth and bones. . .... Pair Get 60-day Temi.s. in'f.hef t . Try in Laguna T\\'O San JUan Capistrano men who ad- mitted they had robbery in mind when they k..~ked on the front door at a Lagtlll'!"'.llea<h home and conlrooled the womafi.fl occupant With a .357 ?11agnum revolver have been ordered to serve 60 • days in Orange County Jail and three " years probation. . Su~ Court Judge James 'l\trner imposed senletlce-mJ!ocLL. Pbipps, ta, • Gt 2'1872 Calle San Rtmo. An identical aentence bad. ..ru.r l>ttn lmpooed In South Orange C<lunty municipal court oo Robert Lewis Hampton, 1t, or 27927 ea1i, San Remo. "' &lb pleaded guilty to tbe!t cbarset alter initially being booked for armed 1 , robbery wben •tbey vi~l<d Ille home of Mn. Betty Emilio l)wyet, 43S Holly St., Lagwia Bea<h. ldan:b ti. Botb · met1 Ded when Mn. l>w)-.r screamed, slammed the do« in their faces and summoned ber husband. They ,\ltrt anesttd on Forest Avenue after an '""""' sear<lr by four Art Ollol\Y pollce cars. • ' 15°/o to 40°/o REDUCTIONS . SUITS • SPORTCOATS TROUSERS DRESS SHIRTS • SPORT SHIRTS SWEATERS • OUTER WEAR • • , ..., PHEIJ>SMEAam ~ ana!ilnw1Nr.1U101H1A ' NEWPORf. BEACH • '·' ' ,, ,, I• ,, 1: I · I; ,, I• ) • • -• • , r 4 DAILY PILOT MOflday, J\111 lb, 1973 • ' Viet Cong· U.S. Admits -C·anihodian Raids • . . • Release Canadia m -Major Says Raids OK'd Recall Road Engineers? TRAIL BLAZING DEPf. -U you cast an eye on the ecological mood ot' the people these days, you rat.her get the oo- tion that C,.Ufornia'1 old muter plan for freeways, expressways, arterlal hishway and major roads has probably fallen upan evil days. People seem to be reasoning that smog and pollution are the enemy ol the mo- ment. And the highway is the rightrul ally ol smog and pollution. Therefore the higb.wa1 is the enemy. Anything larger than a cow trail may be viewed wtth distute nowadays. Despite au \his, the California lligbway Commission is still in operation. Once upon a time, ba<k in the yesterdays ci the 1940s, that august body was virtually all-powerful and omn ipotent. Com- missioners decided that a major route would fall on this line and lo, IO be iL MOST SUCH mGHW A vs ...,.. created on otralgbt lines because this is the way engineen like to draw. P,w people ques- tioned IL '11lat was just the way it was. Later in the 19605, as major road niltes began lo develop aloc!g those straight lines through highly urbanized areas. the bighway people ran into more O!'i>ool-'J1ley wen reslrided with StJdl octiVIU'" u public beorinp, pro- test, detalled al&emale roote studies and other similar delaya that slowed Ibo road bulldin&process. TODAY, THAT PROCESS has nearly slowed to a hell What with fuel shortaceo. --and a CXJOCenl for the 1tull ,.. ln<othe, "" may be returnUc to the era ci the bone. Yel the Highway COmmissioo Is still around. We know this because ooly last week the atate C'Ollllili&lkae were in our very own region. They held some highway bearings in Costa Mesa. Why, just a few years ago. the Highway Commissim holding hearings in Colt.a Mesa woWd have raised the hair oti the back d every collectivt noct ·in Newiarl ~Bellcb.. Yet this lime, it 4i-<1ilt"limt10 e9tn nise an eyebrow In the _city. Ntr'.-.:llOlf Jlftlijllt' nerves appear nJfllod ~ the CGota·-Cill' Cooncil winOd ind dined tllO eammisaloo and rurtb'!r gave the ltlte cxmmissioners ·• free , ridea aloft 'In Costa Mesa Police Departmeot heli~. RE'l'lJRN1NG FROM his aerial jaunt, lllgbway Commission <llairman Winston Fuller., San Ma,tno dlanced the~ that oilr Orange Coast area "ha$ a lot ol J><C!lle to be moved." · SAIGON (UPI) -Tu'O Canadian ol- rK'ers freed after ta days as captives of 1he Viet Cong said today they were cap- (. IN SHORT ... ) lured because. the C.ommwtlsts thought they were American spies. Capt. Ian Patten. 31, and Fletcher 'Ibomson, 25, v.·ere released Sunday along with tv..·o captured South Vietnamese drivers. They appeared healthy and fit e Cambodlc Bombed PHNOM PENH (UPI) -U. S. warplanes struck within stven miles ot Plmm Penh today in the close$! such raids since April. suppc>rtlng government fortes in efforts, IO repulse a Communist altack just south ol. the capital. · Fighting was reported on nearly all sides of Phnom Penh. Field reports and military !OUl'CCS said figh ting raged west, ·southwest and northwest ol the , capital. "The situation is very grave." said one high-ranking officer, Gen. Un Kau. e Auto Talks Begin DETROIT (UP.I) -Auto contract negotiations began today between the United Auto Workers and the "Big Three" auto companies to cover more than 70Q,OOO auto workers and indirect1y allect one in every six American "!orkers. 'l1le auto talks olficially began at JO a.m. when the chief negoUators for General rifotors Corp. and the UA\\1 shook hands across a six-foot-wide table at GM's internatioilal headquarters. e 3 lu Famll11 Die MIAMI (UPI ) -Detectiv., said they would seek three murder warrants today againSt opera singer Salwa Menige- Abrame on chari:es of killing her a-OOs- band and t .. children. Mn. -Merrige-AbramJ tool!: a handful of pills after the Saturday murders, police said, and was rushed to the hospital in· Jerious conclitim. DocUn said her con- dition was "stable" Sunday. e CouMtdoum Goes On CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The cwntdown rolled along smoothly today toward the July 28 isundl of three more Skylab space explorers wt.> plan to man the orbiting stati<lO for a record 56 days. n>e count was kicked off on schedule -at a p.m. Sunday, 12 daya before astrmauls Alan L. Bean, Jack R. • l.Amna and Owen K. Garriott plan to ride an ApollO command module up to the lab for another scientific research journey. Police Battle Rioting Virgi1iia Prison Inmates RfglX, ctmmissioner 1 But you didn't -• bellcopter ride "' find that out. Just try to. get home during cdr rush-_. hour trame.. . , . POWHATAN, Va. JUP I) -State police An~y, comnuss1ooera ~eyed fr~m using tear gas and dogs regained control the air ~ proposed .future inland P~1fic of two of three cellblocks seized by in- O>a!t Highway alignment b et wee .n mates at the Virginia State Prison Farm ~ d~I Mar and Laguna Beach. This for Men early today, but about 30 in- " an Irvme ~pany deal beca~ the mates, ;µmed with pipes, other make· new rou~ng Virtually involves lmne ran-shift weapons and scalding water bar- chlands D1 total. _ . ficaded themselves inside Cellblock 3. . Later, the com.nu ss1on ""'as wined .and "That's the ooe that's going to tre rough dined ~y the Il'Yllle Company. ~.little to get," Said Wayne Farrar, a spokesman &a;thenng w~ ~zed a.s JUst ~ for the Virginia Department of Welfare pnvate ~rty and certa1nly not a Dusi· ·and Institutions. About 125 police officers ness ~· stood outside, and about 100 st.ate police ONLY A FEW YEARS beck, such sessions would have indeed raised more eyebrows than just those in NewpoM. Beach. But apparenUy thiS didn't happen. Thus you may assume that in this day and age of the ecology movemenl._ the California Highway Commission just docsn 't rafsc the concerns that it did in yesteryear. Clearly, the times they are a-cbangi.n'. cars were seen inside the prison. About 200 inmates seized control of three cellblocks and two dormitories at the mediwn security facUity, about 30 miles west of Richmond, late Sunday night after a day of tension and minor in· cidef'!lS. Fa?Tar said t~·o cellblocks "'ere secured by state polioo and prison guards by 5:46 a.m. today and another dormitory wa.s secured later. Ul'I Tli-trlltt SECRETARY OF STATE ROGERS TOASTS PRIME MINISTER TANAKA IN TOKYO J1pan•H Leader Hosts Luncheon Amid Discussion of Economic Policy ~~~~~~~~~~~ Hit-run Driver Kills One Child, Abducts Another • TAMPA. Fla. (AP) -Police say a hit- and-run driver whb struck three children and stopped to abduct one apparently ·hit the youngstets on purpose. One of the children, a 5-year-old girl, died today from her injuries. "The evidence '"'e have right now in- dicates he hit the children intentionally." _ a Tampa police.spokesman said. Oificers said early today they had Jssaed a statewide bulletin for._the rqan. believed to be in his early 20s, and the 13- ~y~ar-old captive, RaDmre Caton. •i, ..., 1 • Police said Ro~; her brother Curtis, 12, and sister Radine, 5, were wal king single file two. fef!t off the roadway near their home late Saturday. The car, driven with its lights off, swerv- ed over, struck them and stopped. WITNESSES SAID Roxanne. who n~ peared to be unconscious, l\'as picked up ~ the driver. He threw her across the front seat and drove of!, the wilnesses said. "I told him to put her down but he Jrept going," Curtis said. Curtis escaped with only minor injuries but Radine died 11> day in an area hospital from injuries received when she v.•as struck by the car. Police said they feared Roxanne, who 'vas run over by the car, v.•as either seriously injured or dead. ~ • Mrs. Charles Cc:.ton said she knew of no one \vho y;oukl have an y rea son to hurt her family. Rogers Hears Japanese Demand for .Discipline TOKYO (AP) -Reflecting mounting Japanese bitterness over American trade restrictions, Foreign ~finister Masayoshi Ohira today called on the United States lo "exercise an increasing degree of discipline in managing its o w n economy." Ohira told the opening st'SSilxl of the ninth U.S.-Japan Joint Cabinet Meeting on Trade and Economic Affairs that Japan 'is greatly emlimTassed by American attempts to limit the exports of logs, scrap iron and soybeans: He -e1id it was of "imperative. im- portance'' to maintain the smooth flow of these and other products. And he urged the Uriited States "to continue its efforts to maintain a stable ~upply to Japru:i." 11e also criticized American "clamors for import restrictions, imposition of DAILY Pl~OT ·· DELIVERY SERVICE Dtli~try of ti" Daily Pilot is 9uarantttd ......... ,. ... ,,_.,, 11 """° .. Ml Mft ,,_ ~"r..., l :JI •·""•<•II llld Y"r <9'Y win ... ~I 1't Y9'f, C•"• In , .... ..,Iii ,,,. ,. ..... S1~1y 111d hft<llJ' II 'I'" de ..., rtctl¥t -<411t't' tJ ' '·"'· S1t .... 1,, ..-I '·"'· s.M1y, c•M 11111 1 c•" wilt ... ~I Ml ·, yM. Ctlh 1r1 '"''" ""'" 11 '·"" Ttltphonts "''" OrU•fC' c.u~1y Art•• ....... "l.utl ' . .,...,....,..,, M""tlfttl1n lt1dt l1ttl Wnllftinlltr '··· ., "" S4t-U2' 511t Ci. .... 1111, (ll ill•IM ttlell, Slit '"'" C1pll1rlM, Dini hfltt, 5.Ulll L19un1. llt Ylll Ni9w9I .... ~Jt surcharges or restraint.'' exercise of ex p.ort U.S. SECREi'ARY of State William P . Rogers reiponded with a promise, in- ·Serted into a prepared speech, that the United States would continue to be a source of dependable supply for Japan. He added that controls on soybeans, the source of much of the protein in the Japanese diet, "will not last a day lOnger than is necessary." Ohira said Japan regrets controls "which seek short tenn solutions at the border." , • ~ He said, "ln view of the predominant role and responsibility of the United States ·in the world ecooomy: it is our strong wish that the United States would cope with and find solu~ioos to these questions on the basis or a long-term perspective. r. Rogers endorsed Prime M i n i s t er Kakuei Tanaka's proposal for a general Asian-Pacific peace conference and listed several ways in which such major oU- consuming nations .as Japan and the United Sates should cooperate. THIS CALL for cooperation appeared to be a substitute for Henry A. Ki.gs.. inger's proposal last May !or a coo-. sortium or oil-buying nations, a proposal Japan has been· hesitant about for fear of alienating his Arab oil suppliers. Rogers recommended oil sharing ar· rangements when critical shortages • develop, sharing of in fonnation on negotiations with the producing nations: Japanese-American competition in de- veloping Siberian oil and joint research and development projects. WASlllNGT0N (UPI) -1'lo Deferue Departrnoot acknowledged today thal 852 strikes were made ln Carhbodia prior to 1970 despite public assertions at the time ol U.S. respect for the neutrality of Cambodia. Deteme Secretary James R; Sdtles- inger, in a letter IO the Senate Armed Senices Committee, said raids "had been conducted for some period ot time and were fully authorized" before the United States publicly announced attacb in May 1970 into so-called sanctuaries are8s ol Cambodia near the South Viet- namese border. ''At this period of time, you will remember over ooe half millioo , men were stationed 18 South Vlemam," Schlesinger said. "Because oI the sensitive operational anti diplomatic situation, special se<:Wity f,ftCautklm were taken to ecsure that the open.tiool wruld not be compromised." SCHLESINGER sent the letter lo tllO Senate panel as former Air Force Maj. Hal M. Knight !<stlficd under oath tbat he falsified record! of B52 strikes in ear· ly 1970. • He,_ said he acted under orders fron superiors that he bum all documents, computer tapes and other materials that would expose the strikes in Cambodia. Knight was asked if he ever questioned the procedure. "! asked who authorized this procedure," he replied.. "I wu told not to ask." He said ther:e always was a cover target with "a strike order in Vietnam'' to account for the actual missiorl in Qlm- bodia. THE AIR FORCE chief " stair, Gen, G.orge S. Brown, in ano<her letter to chainnan Stuart Symington (J>.Mo-) d the Senate Armed Services committee, said it was not correct to charaderize as falsification the security precautioos per· taining to the raids. "So long "' the reports met 1n every delail the requirement& impooed, they ""·ere not. intended to decei\re those lfitb • security "need to know," Brown said. "The ~ ""·hy spedal Jealrity precautions were dirtcted was not a repocting ~ue so Ion& as a respcxdible higher authority knew m fact. what was dooe and judged it to be in accord with instructions." Ford Sees Hassle In Safety System DETROIT (AP) -The Ford Motor Co. says there's an educational problem with its new safety bell-ignition interlock system. 1be safety. device will be standard in next year's can but is offered as an op- tion on some 1973s .. Webster C. McDonald, Ford's safety product planning manager, predicts "a big hunk of waving fists" when the public comes to grips with the new system, which prevents the car's starting unless lap and shoulder belts are fastened. McDonald said that, or 200 people who got the system as a no-cost option on 1973 Pintos, 63 percent liked it and 23 percent objected because it was inconvenient when moving the car only a few feet. f\.1rs .. Caton said another neighborhood child was almost hit . by the car of the :;ame ,description earlier in the evening but \Vas saved by a playmate who pushed the child out of the way . Curtis and neighbors \Yho \l'itnessed the incident said the car had circled the block three times, passing the chiddren , before hitting ~hem on the fourth pass. Divers Hunt for Atlantis Police said the boy also told them he remembered seeing the car driving around the neighborhood for the past week. Scr.ibci Team Seeks 'Lost Continent' • • in Spanish Gulf Storms Roam Across Texas CADIZ, Spain (UPI) - A team of .scub.1 divers set out ti;Kiay to search the floor or the Gulf of Cadiz for Atlantis, a continent that legend says sank under the sea thousands or years ago. Madrid • Rain Lingers Over Southern States · Alo1ig Coast "We expect to find an entire city ·or at lc;:ist evidence of ruined buildings,'' said Jacques Mayal. the team leader ·and a veteran seeker or Atlantic ... But OW' first lask i.s photographing and surveying. We \ • ...... " lt .. jti}$NOW ~ 'All ~'t'O""'l1 flOW V .S. S11mmarg \~·ill not pull out any artifacts or Fair ~~lr1 prev1lhtd o•er moil DI 1'111 fragments Of buildings." n.sToon too1v. Dul I tew !k~n11er1!11rm1 '°"mPd fro:"'. 1ou111er1t Te••I IO !lie 'J'he divers are part Of a 71)..metnber eX· lower MIU!tS•llC>I V111ey. .. .• .o. u •• 11 11oo11 w11rn11113 ,.,.,, 1uuec1 10-pcd1\t0n of U.S. students, teachers aJKt ~~~11~11~'~.~u11r1 t.,~'1~11fu',.•i0 '':! adventurers who arrived a week ago to lll!1vv 1.s1ns in 111e 11•11 tew d1v1 h1w study the area off southwest Spain -and 1wol1.., stre•ms. \ • A. ~ thvn<te"torm llnott•ld •IO!t9 to search for what legend describes as 111, Vinillll1 1"6 C1rolln1 CQlllll •I'd the d\ f-' 'I' t' th t o~r Ille i.ov11!e•n Jl:(l(•le1 lfKI 1M c...,. era C 0 ·;rSUJ)ert".IVI IZ8 100 8 OllCf ""t ,.,,,, 1CK11M•n P11•••u •fotitlon1. spanned the Atlantic ()ce•n l'oq d..Wl"Cfil 110<\G 11'>1' Pl(ll!c """ '°"~' '"" ;n .. ~ed ••r11 l•om the t••'"'" Gl'lh> V11leY 1NI ~<1Ulllt•1t Af>• f 0A1~{M.,...1 10 1"-e ml"<l•e "tt•"'"' SIX DIVERS planned to go down todJy •t~bO.lfll ,...., sou!IM!f!'I Ntw E:not111d. . I..& I . orr Ca" v1\1bi111., ;,, 1u•t• ct1 w1,1 v1,...1n11. in S11un )treas 1% miles wz. - ~'~~~~~~~~w Yori!..,,.., nN• nro "It looks hopefu1." said Phil Farrell, a G•'e~7'l';:~r~~1~,,.f,,~ 'Z ~ di ving Instructor from Califomia and one ~,,,~ .. ,o 111 ,,,. 1iOt •l'HI' '°' '"°'' •!I'll!' Of the six divers going down todav "Oiv-pi~c., J • ,,...,.,~,,,ur"' "'•"'" 111-rllfl!Md Ina off locid beaches last week, we saw a hO!T' .:i " fl••lllord. II'• , 10 •J -11 • N~euits ltoman column and amphora. If we can · ('B'f1ltnl 1'1'ft'fh.-r find a . 2.000.ytar old amphora close to Motlll' 'unny 1toc:11.,, Li.tit •••l•tlft shore we can rind tpany interesting re- wll'Hl'1 nlll!I Incl l!'IOl'"f!e llollrl !lot-' ,, fell'llllO ~•'-•'" '' IP 11 .,.,., '" tn••• m.alM out in the ocean. ;o:o;: rv i l'ld 11.'tWIY. Htgf'I !Oljl,y P,10.'it ardlaeologlsls b8VC d!smlSM!d CC1es•11 1e1T>Otr11urn ''"" ''°°"" " pre.vlous reports of ruins oft the Spanish 10 "· 1n1•nd "'"'"''''11ra r•nvt 1..0"' ........ ,1 Dul~--Ma~1-•~her .....11rector oiO 111 111.. Wlltr M-11,iirf U. .. .,... • J>,....,, Alu"'"" • \,.VU~ S11 11. JIJ1uu 1. TldeJJ ol the projed, said she believe$ she and MONDAY other splrituallst1i\ha,1c psychlC p('OO(S of ~11 111011 ,,.,, 11 m s 1 Atlantis' existence. \ ~ir<~ io· .. TUllOAY ~ ro p,m, .i' "I sinlply know \\'C will find It tkeausc ~:~ :;i ~1::,1 :::: ~j I 1am rpsAych1 Jc0and th~ blgbly civchiiU~. peo-b SK011it hlVll JO·'° 11.m.. s 5 p c o I 111n 1 were very psy c, s c ~ lfl"I' ,:,, fl,,,, '' Sllld. "How 'trong the '1ibrations ore S\lfl ft!'" !·» ~ m. S.n I OS p.., ,, "-..... •" p,lt\. '~" ,,oo •·""-lhesc days! . . I PORTUGAL ' ·I Ll•bon•· SPAIN • .. SlA • &o.....11"'·"'"·''(: ad lz -~...w~ ~:-0 A1lANTIC OCEAN MOllOCCO .. .. .. ·: -.. \~ '" .. .,. ALGERIA 0 1100 MtLEa ..,.....J ' NEW SEARCH LAUNCHED FOR LOST CONTINENT Ofl ATLANTI$ Scuba Divers Betln S.archlnt Gulf of Cadiz, Spain AS EVIDENCE that AU an Us once· ex- isted, Mrs. Asher cited the d.Jalop of the Greek phllOfOPhcr Plato. "1lO In tbc fourth century before Christ dHC'l'lbed an Idyllic clvlliz.atlon beyond what Is now the straits ci GlbraltBr. ft ._-tedly lanlc into lhe sea 13,000 years ago afttr a cataclysm o( undetermined origin, • l . .. "Scholan have found·,_,, ci Ii*" and Rojan ctvtll.ullons that v.wt onec C00$1dettd mythlcal," sald Ju!IUJ Ba'VI, a prof..sor ol history at C.Ulomli Sfil• Unlvmlty. "The tame Greelt stoti<S thll rtlu to tho!e clvW,.tlons also refer IA AUanUs. So at race value, tt Is no 1 .. crtdible." • I I en1 ass tit} anc me cro " we •· pla ... in air • Ali 1 ide Ro Mi cis • crl ""' Co fet '65 'Y r., sa~ qu . ' Su • lei ~ F~ th au tho Sk .I m• th· . sh au t • se ·m vi pc r te tu d< tu " m u •' L " D L di Ii .. n JI a zy . I• ". ii " u .. c .-. " . ' • a h ' ,! •' ,1 " t: I ,, , . '' •• I •' 1' I ,, .,. . PaW-Hurt~ In Stolen Aircraft engine plane assorted weapons a quan. tity oC vitamin pills1 crashed and setiously injured the two men who allegedJy stole the craft, authorities said. "WE HAVE no idea why the weapons Were 1n there (the ' ~, plane) or even why they were in this area stealing an aircraft," Police ·Lt. Merle • Ame!kKl said Sunday. The men were tentatively identified by Upland Police as Rod Crane, 25, Norwalk, and Michael Perry, 25, San Fra~ cisco. Crane was reported in •critical and Penj in serious condition at San Bernardino ·County Hospital. Crane suf- • • Waiting Gaine Despite smiling faces, Eva Ghilotti (left) and flladeleine Kreuter, face Possible death by rabies. They are among five horse lovers that may have picked up the disease from an infected horse on the Ghilottis' ranch in Nicasio, Calif. Rabies take between one and two months to incubate, so the victims face painful daily injections -and an uncertain future. · • 4th Nude Victim Found on Campus ' SAN FRANCfSCO I A Pl N 0 T f NG SfMILARITIES ..eoli.ce__arL...ln.vestii;:atinc the.... between lhe....cascs._.Mcl\fnna dealh.__o,f a young redhalred sai~ "\Ye have four females. woman found nude and ap-'Ibey were all nude and all had parently kUI~ . like ~ apparently been sU'"rrocated or others here 1n the '9f;t SIX: St ran led All f th " , weeks. g · o cm ~ere Like the others. the uniden-found In areas or public ac- tified viclim was in htr late ces,,, but we have nothing in teem or early 20s. homicide the backgrounds to connect all Inspector John ~1cKenna said. the victims. And like the third victim two weeks ago, she was found on a school campuJ. · ~lcKENNA SAID a v."Oman attending a karate demonstra- tion .at George \Vashington High School discovered the body Sunday lying in an alco\oe between buildings. '·The only ~·ay 10 connecl this is if we have some kind of freall wnq__ travels the whole city," he said. "That could be . but it's all cucssing. ·• ).toncs.u. J11l1 lt., 1q11 OAILY PILOT 5 --------------~ l j " i ()A E. -e ~· BETWEEN THE LEFT EAR AND THE RIGHT EAR B. ~ .. ' • fered third degree bums over---------------------------------- Acting coroner Dr. Ervin Jindrich described the dead v.·oman as 5 foot 6, 140 pounds with a gold earring ln her El Monte's Busway In there's a pretty face .and a perceptive mind. Ar,C: she just might get the message if you give her something beautiful in 14 karat yellow gold. A. With opals, S35. B. Fish·cross drops, S 12. C. Swirl balls, S 13.50 D. Bamboo hoops, S30. E. Bell drops, $16.50. F. Puffed hearts, $12, 165 percent of of his body. Per- . ry suffered lesser bums and a fractured back, a spokesman said. CRANE MAY HA VE been a qualified pilot, Arneson said. • The crash occurred eerly Sunday after the men at· : tempted to take off from Cable Adult Film Backers Discuss Battle Plans effort to win state legislation which will negate effects of a tough new U.S. Supreme Court ruling on obscenity. Secret Jm·y Pick Ruling Due Soon right ear. He said she had EL ~10!\IE t 1\P 1 -The lx>en dead less than 24 hours. nea rly $1 mi llion bus sta tion at She apparently died of suf-the eastcm end of the I0.1nilc focation. Jindrich said, but the busway frorn El Monte to exact cause of death had not downt own Los Angelei was yet been deterinincd. dedicated at a ceremony at-tended by some 2.000 persons. It is the fourth such murder The dedication fea tured, sin~ ~1ay 29 when the bc¥1y of among many treats, free bus Rosa Vasquez, 20, was· found rides. SANTA CRUZ (AP) _The in shrubbery In Golden Gate Start ing today, buses "Ail! zip Park. On June 10 .. Yvonne along the $58 million busway state Supreme Court is ex:-Quilantang, 15, was found •· r led 1 th. k at luc rate o one eve ry lv•o pee to ru e is wee on dead in a vacant lot located" in minutes at rush hour and one whether juror selection in the another part of the c1·ty. Then 7•c · I ·~ of Herbert J\1ullin mass murder C\'ery n mtnu es ...,.. rest . . . on July 3, lS.year-old Angela the day. said officials of the Do Something Beautiful., .. CMrtt .\<(Ml'lh l""ltM -•-•ktfl l!•,.tM ••llllA!Nrit•nll Mii Mt11tr CJlttt•• toe, SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH --~~-I 380 Wltft loct !ION Of: TGtft l'IC;t . Ottnot, Lt Ct,.1101. Lt Htbtt AIM1 ltn DI--Ltl V110t1. ·' ~ Field hett: using on1y one of the plane's engines,. authorities said. Arnesoo said the plane was a Cessna Skyrrtaster with e n g i n e s : mounted in fron t and behind the passenger compartment. Found 1n the wreckage a short distance v.·est ~of the airport were three shotguns, two rifle s, three LOS ANGELES (APJ - "Look at these people, if you didn't know, you might think this was a Kiwanis Club meeting," said the prf!ucer pointing to a gathering or his colleagues in tbe business of pushing sex films. INDEED, AS one viewed the members or the Adult Film Association of A m e r I c a lunching at tables under the trees at a respectable mid- town hotel, one wouldn't have guessed they were meeting in emergency session to plan tac- tics for an anticipated fight with the .Jaw. Their declared purpose: to keep pornography alive, legal and lQcraUve. YOU CAN'T expect people · to legislate in your favor if they think you're a bunch of freaks.·· said St an Zim· merman, press a gent for the AF'A gathering, which drew a crowd of 100 ex hi bi tor s . distributors and producers of blue movi es from across the country. trial can c_ontinue to be ~idden Thomas y:as found dead on a Southern California Ra p Id from pub.lie and pre~s view.-junior high school p•hla~y~g~ro~u~nd~=2T'.'ran~si~l~Di~·~Sl;ri~c~l.==------~~=;~~:;:=~~~~~;;~=-~;~~;=~~ Secret JUry screening begins _ = · ils second week today despite pressure from the state al· lOmey general's office to halt the unique procedure. , semi.automatic h a n dg u n s , ' m i.scel\aneous ammunition, vitamin pills and survival kits,, police saljl, "~eography -I.inked To Disease? LOS ANGELES (AP) -A team of medical researchers has undertaken a study to determine whether geography has an effect on multiple . sclerosis since the disease is , more -common in the North than in the South. , , A University of California at Los Angeles medlcal school The Kiwanis Club image wasn't accidental. AF A members intend to pursue their goals through legal chan- nels, among them a concerted Thus , a restrained group or newcomers and old-timers in the pornography business sat in a conference room for a full day Saturday bearing lawyers' advice on what to do about the possi bly disastrous U . S . ' Supreme Court ruling on obscenity. J\lullin, charged with to counts of murder l a s t February: has pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. Santa Cruz County Superior Court Judge Charles S . Franich has held the privale jury screening on grounds th:H open court sessions \rould in- hibit prospective jur9rs in their responses to personal questions. GARBENST ANGELS • • • .•• Are A History Lesson South Coast 'Plaza team headed by Dr. Roger•-.-;,;;-----------------------------.1 Detels is using MS, patients inll Los Angelell and SeatUe to determine what envirorunental factors they might share. Jn Los Angeles there are an estimated 10 to 14 cases of the muscle disease for every 100,000 persons. But. medical authorities say in sea.ttle, 60 or more cases occur per ' 100,000. ' Detels, a professor 0 r "' epldemiol.ogy, said in a recent interview that the difference 'in prevalence is probably •. caused· by environmental fac- ' tors. But just what those fac- , tors might be are unknown · aOO are the object the study, he oa;d, Boy Slwo t,s Girl, Self In Accident ''GAS SAVER'' SPECIAL CAPRI ~he Sexy Europeon •.• • + FREE 10-SPEED rBIKE with every one ordered and delivery during the month of July! $149.00 ITALIAN IMPORT VALUE .. ,. WIDE SELECTION OF 2000 & V /G's AVAILABLE o,.,,,, c •• ,,,, ., •r • .,;1, off ;,., '"" • • • BERNARDO'S ESPADRILLE THE SUMMER NATURAL Bernardo brings the canvas espadrille out in t i-ie ooen. .-.,. Gives it the natur~! fEeling cf Si;mmer fa~hin n s . L;fts "i t o n a · roped crepe wedge. II/l akes it the Clas5i·c cas ual you c6n"t Oe v1ithout. Blue, yellow o' whde . 5~ I 0 Med; um, 15.00. Better Fosh;on Shoe s, I OB CERT TO IGHT . 9:15 P. • AT FASHIO " \, ' • • ' ' . ·. • • .. -DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL P A.GE A Good Frjend Lost~ - The untimely passing of William R. Ma!on has de- i------e<me';.:d a lot of !!J19 le· on the Orange Coast who never ew llun o( a g en an a strong c iiliij)iOil. r-----t.::d~lila_:~'Sfl~~~P!!reSJ~·:\!!de!J!n~t, QfJ.l!eJzyine CmnllADY, mevitably gave h' an Impact on the lives of tens of thousands of nge Coast people -how and when! people lived, how they made their livings and the whole quality of life in the Orange Coast area. It was to his very great credit ihat be was deeply konscious and concerned about this responsibility and went many a mile and many an hour out of }\is way to ·try to discharge his responsibility. He acted not merely in his company's interest but the very best way possJb,le for all the people to be affected by such actions: As a man who dealt so much with the future, it was perhaps natural that he should o[fer strong leadership. and support to a broad· range of youth activities, educa- tional efforts and civic improvement programs aimed at making the futui:e of Orange County and the Orange Coast particularly bright. The passing of Mr. Mason is a loss that will be felt not only by his family and his business associates but by many hundreds of people who had the privilege of work- ing with him in his civic, economic and cultural activi- ties. l<_>n g Battle Ending A seemingly endless series of legal maneuvers, dal· ing back to 1958 when Joan ·Irvine Smith launched her battle to end the James Irvine Foundation's control of the Irvine Company, appears to be coming fO a reason- ably peaceful conclusion.· \ An anticipated ruling in Los Angeles Superior Court would enable the foundation to meet the requirements of the Tax Reform Act of 1969, despite contrary provi· sions Qf the late James Irvine's trust agreement which established the foundation in 1937. . . payout requirements establlsbed by the pmilnent. An impa!Se has eruted 1ince passage ot the Tax 1lerorm-A~rbecause-Mr;;mne-Jeft-thrl-d1Uion-a----·l---~i,_ _controlUa& illleresl in the ll>'ine Company and specified the stock be maintained iii a blOCI<;' to.guAranfee-"""',___ , tinuiag financ:W rosour<es ror its charitable' donaUQlll. The foundation has 54.4 per<ent inten!st in t,be Irvine Company. Balance of the stock is held by ~ Smith, his granddaughter, "ho owns 21.1 percent, and other fa.mlly members with lesser interests. Since h:r. Jwlne's death in 1947. the value of the foundation's stock has soarod from an •1Um•ted •5.6 million to something in excess of $100 mil ion. The. Tai: Refonn Act, designed to place tight government con· trols .on charitable foundations, rules that payouts to charity must be 00..«!d on a percentage of a~ts. further · ruling tpat assets may not be concentrated in single com· panies. · Unable to meet these requirements, the foundation seeks court authority to amend Irvine's trust agreement and dispose of all or a part of its company stock over a period of perhaps 12 to 15)'ears. < · This will not mean the end of the foundation, which has contributed extensively to state and cowity cultural and charitable organizations over the years in accor· dance with Irvine's instructions. Rather it may find it· self in a stronger. position as its holdings become more diversified. as required by law. · The position of the Irvine Company similarly could be strengthened as it becomes -responsible to a wider range of stock.holders when the foundation's control is minimized. Since the Irvine stock-never has been sold publicly, its initial sales price will be stronglv influenced by an appraisal now being undertaken bv the Interhal Revenue Service. And even When a valuation is establi~hed, dis· posal of the stock undoubtedlv will be a prolone:ed affair. The foundation shows n'o indication of "dump- ing" its holdinJ?s at bai-gain rates. • • .. This means the foundation, to comply with the fed· eral law, will have to divest itself of most of its· stock holdings in the Irvine Company and meet new charitable So, while the du~t of the court battles settle.~ slow- ly, the outlook for Orange County's major landholder appears to remain stable. ,. I (AffT BEi.iE.VE.· I ATE iHE WHOLE ililN6." l . • • Why Is the Office Phone Always Busy? ( HAL . BO"fµ: ) An office is a place of ·business. But more and more people: complain they are having difficulty making a business call to a place of busin~. Mapy subscribers blame the phone company for this. 'l'bey -plain the phoDe company mov· ed too alewly Jo ~p up w!lli the rilillg Jle. mond. But the !ault can i all be poor old Ma Boll's. An analysis of what is going on in. an average orfice .. .swit.chboard at any moment or the Wtrk· iQg day will reveal what Is really at fault. THE FOLLOWING situation Is prob- ably typical: • One «. the switchboard operators is busy calling llCJffie pals to go to lhe church bingo game next week. The boa is c.alling his country club pro to ask if the skies will clear in time for him to get in at !east nine holes during the afternoon. The boss's secretary Is dialing her hairdreMer to try to make a ltm.cheoo appoinbnent. 11le executive vice president is talking wit"b an executive placement outfit about getting himseH a better job. The first vice president is calling bis bookie to make an early bet. The second vice presiderit is calling the third vice president's wife about coming into town ror a matinee. THE THIRD vice president is calling the second vice president's wife trying to make the same kind of arrangement. The fourth Vice president'S phooe ls ringing, but he never answers it because he doesn't know what to do about Dear Gloomy Gus Once more the field for refonned alc9holi~ to get I.heir kicks Is nar- rowed . Now it has been determioed that sniffing aerosol cans bas a deleterious effect oo the liver! H.J. B. o......., Oft c-h ·,,.. aatNnllt..il lty ~ .... ""' ..c:na.r1l1 r.flld .... .,...... "' ""' 1-1W1r•tt. s.... )'-"' ,..... .. $....., °"' OIHy .. ...,_ anything anyway. 1be filth . vke president's phone is ringing; too. but his secretary .. down m. the cafeteria having a coffee break and he himself is in tbe•was~loOilng·at. bis new toupee in the mirror. Nobody can call the stock room, because a couple of the boys knocked !he phone ofr the book while playing catch with a softball. Why can't you phooe the secretarial pool? Why, one of the girls is leaving to get married, and another is calling a gift store to. select her farewell present. Why can't you reach one of the thtte salesmen in the office? Well, one is being bawled out by his wife, the second is call- ing his girl friend, and the third is out 1n the washroom \\'atchinq the fifth vice president admire his toupee in the mir- ror. THE TREASURER Is phoning lhe bank to make a loan to caver bis 4aµghter's wedding; the a:;sistant treasurer is call- ing another banW' and explaining why he is late with the payment on a loan he made lo go on his vacatioo.. How about the junior executive? There are cobwebs on bis phone. Well, how about ringing the office boy? You can always reach the office boy, can't you? Not Urts one. He's busy calling his guru lo ask if the acne he is suffering from could be caused by a spiritual crisU!. Yes, an office is a place of business. But the reason so litUe of the firm 's businesS gets done Is because everybody _ is busy tying up the phones -.vith his own moo key business.· Monotonous Work Has Its Rewards On a recent trip to Frana!, I visited the Martell Company, wortd.famotl! pro- ducers of brandy,· and ·saw there a manufacturing process which brought ~back memories. This is pertinent today because lxlredom at work is the nev.· in- thing with critics of the American way of llle. In the cognac bottling department of MarteU's, the sole occupation of t"·o adult Frenchmen was placing corks in the necks of brandy fCHARD WrrsO~ experience as a Vi'Orker in the home ap- pliance industry: One job consisted of pullil}g the lever on a drill press to bore a single hole at the end of a small steel bar · at the rate of about 30 an hour. BY COMPARISON the l'f"'lc/lmeD were lucky. They labored in a pervading and slightly intoxicating atmosphere of cognac fumes to stimulate-their day dreams. Day dreaming' is a s)iecial talent of the many millions throughoQt the. bottles as I h e y mattlied steadily in double file out of the "bottling apparatus. The corks were ·then struck a smart blow with a special mal· lei to secure them in · /!' 1 \'{Ot,ld . who makt their livings by . performing automatic Processes '"~~ siejldy, uninterrupted rhythm requiring oo·thought or particu1ar skill. place so that the valuable product was properly sealed. This clock"·ork p r o c e s s was automatically performed for seven hours a day into infmity. The memfJries it brought back were of my own youthful '11lis is the work ethic at work, not tt\e kind pushing men to the limits of · physical endurance, but tbal which ap- proaches Che eod of mental and,nervous - tolerance in a short working day. It is something to be gotten away from, as early and often as possible. Many more ' distracted and bored wotkers,are staying away from the job as long and ·as often as their money needs and the employ- ment situation penniL A document entitled "Work In America," focusing on, the boredom prob- lem, is the lat.est sociological approach orfered by the government's specialists, but it is naturally rejected by the leaders of labor as unrealistic and elitist. Of course work is boring and tiring and in labor's view should t>e performed in shorter time for mor~ pay. · WHAT IS a~lling ~bJiul fh e sociological .app~c •. • ho'wever: ·.jg-'the- academic idea .that mOOOtonOUs·:wm-R can' be made more fwt if not dispensed with .altogether, so that the American .in- dustrial world shall be poPidated "by ha~ py, motivated workers""like ti:w::" artisans of the Renaissance. It is not even sure that lhe vast ma- jority of workers wan( it that ·'Nay. Many of I.hem take pride in performing their tasks, Mwever boriJ!g, and gettin~ it Over with so they can go hunting, fishing, run their boats, cultivate their gardens, paint t.peir ,comfortable boua«J.: watch television, take a few drinks, and do all those simple things which make up the happy· humdrum of existence. Work, for them, is a way to realize a comfortable and rewarding life when away from the plant. The discipline of ordered existence ilself gives meaning lo their working days and hi~h pay, fringe ·benefits and pensions make their time off enjoyable and reasonably secure. TillS ts. where President Nixon and such anti-Nixon leaders ..as Auto· Workers Chief · 1-an! Woodcock agree. Work. even Jf dull and moootcmous.,. is regarded by 'both' as useful and .>Wr1bl> of ·pride. Such subile .auacl<s Qll..tbe. 'lock .ethic as "Work in America" prepared by the govenunent's labor theorists serve, however, to let it be known there is a serious problem on the a5.1e01bly lines which day ~earning won't solve. And if the means of solving it are car· ried, for example, to the extremes of the ecology movement. which has the same kind or h11m1'1"ltarian motivaton, '~"­ sumer will pay far a tyick s Parents Who Bear ·an Unfair Burden 7muble maktlrl' Hundreds of thousands af Galifomians send their children to private schools.' About 407,000 children attend nonpublic institutions in this .state. Not all of those 2197 schools are religious. There arc some 309,000 Students in 796 Catholic · schools , and 61,000 in schools of ether faiths. The reeent rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court hit the parents of those children fight in the bank account. The Court held that tax credits and tuition reim- bursements for such education are on-= t'onstilulional. The Court's ruling undoubtedly will vuttaw the 1972 California ·statutes grant· tng $125 tax credits to p a re n t s or (...__R_u_s_w._'A_t_ro_N_· _J children attending parochiAI schOols. The rulings may also halt the st11te's practice of each year distributing $1.5 million- worth of textbooks to thoSt!: schools. TllERE SHOULD, indeed, be a strong and lasting separation of church and state; a strict government neutrality toward religion. If t were involved Wltli a parochial school, if I cOuld afford lo send my kids to a privaie-insliftition, T woufd oof want it to accept st.ate subsidies or support. State control follows state funds and that would be too high a price t-0 pay. It would, in fact, defeat the whole purf>068 of sending a child to a private school. BUT, there must be an equitable neutrality for !hose who do send their kids to nonpublic schools. They take a v.·eight off of our backs; we should find a way lo take some of the weight off of theirs. The Court fails' in thiS. How Nixon Heard · Watergate Truth And, that is why those recent Court decisions do violen~ to religious freedom In this: nation. Tile rulings· are nol neutral ; they rig the scales against ttlose who send their childreil to religious schools. Where is the neutrality when caesar erects extra burdens and un'due hurdles for those who send their children t-0 non- public schools. The forces of ~he state are arrayed against t~m: Not only must they pay eve~lng taxes to sup- port public scpools they. do not use. they must also find the money for the private What iS at stake here is not · just separati9Jl of church and stale. Many parents send their child ren to private school for educational excellence and moral training; things not always ava-llable in today's public system. To them ·religious training is a bonus, not necessarily the prime '.motivation. But, 1ike so ·many cases in today's lock-step society, they arc penalized for being "dif- ferent." \VASHINGTON -The dramatic moments can now be recounted when President Nixon was confronted with the "'hole truth about Watergate. He was told the stark facts by former Attorney General Richard Kleindienst after While l!oase church serviccii on Sunday, April t5 . At one Point, Assistant.Attorney General Henry Petersen was hastily summoned lo lbe meeting. fie arrived in a dirly t,ee-shirt and sneak· -crs. He tuu1 been \VOrk.lng on his boat when the ca II came. Th e showdown with the PresidenL followed an all-night session at Klein· dlents's borne whcrt Petersen laid out the grlm details. He. had ju.st learned from the Watergate prosecutors the exttm of the conspiracy. He was so distraught when he found out how hlib the conspiracy readied that be smashed his fist Into a wall IT· WAS perailJtent and painstaking log•I "°'k by the three origin•i P'O" et:Utorl, and not a single t'!t1talytlc ln- ctden~ that brotce open the Walerpte .... aad e1posed ft as the moot •xploolvt • PoliUcal conspiroox In the Jialloa'• • ,. . (JACK ANDERSON J history. The prosecutors -Earl Silbert, Seymour Glanzer and Donald Campbell -felt certain that the case involved far more Important personalities than the seven men they prosecuted last January. Their belief was finally con.finned tn late March, wben they amassed enough details of hJgh level skulduggery to alarm the White House conspirators. FIRST John Dean and then Jcb Magrudi!r came to the prosecutors privately with the convoluted tales that are now familiar tQ miDJOM of tclevi!ion viewtrs. The prosecutorl s t u d i e d documents provided by the pair and took ~stlrnony from other witnesses. By April I~. tile three assistant U.S. attorneys had solid proof of a massive conspiracy to obstruct jUIUCe reaching right ilift> the White House. ' Tbe mdtnce ""' ,. compelling that they !ell duty bound to alert the PresJ. dent, sincd nmt wltoosses claimed he was unaware of the conspiracy. Cotn1 through channels, the .Ji'O'<CU'°" ... companied by their bos$, U.S .. Altomey Harold Titus, called upon Petersen on the night ol April 14. I ~ The meeting had just begun when Peterson asked: ·~is it true about Mitchell ?" He referred to h.ls Crlend and fonner superior, ex-Attorney General JJ>M Mllchell ,;Yes." Petersen was told. Such was his agony that he banged his fist into the of. fice wall. Tbe prosecutors added that, "'Or'sc, the case could lead to the impeachment of the President. After tbc evidence was presented, they agreed that Nixon should .be Informed at once. • PETERSEN put through a call 1-0 Kleindienst, who "'as spending the eve- ning at the While •louse Corr~ndcnts ·Association's armual dlMC?r. But be was not particu larly enJ:ining himself. Just before he had left e, be received a can from pr~identl.al assistant John Ehrlichman who reported that Magruder was talking to the prosccut-Ors and would inTpUcatc a number of NI.Jon aides. Kleindienst returned home from the press party af~r mldnlghland rectlvcd ,the can from Pcteraen. "Are you sober?" Petersen asked. "Flirty," sakt ~ndlensL He was told il was W'gf!nl that ·they meet Immediately. P~.lersen, Titua llDd SHberrarrlved at•t a.m. and stayed unlll ' a.m. By sunup, the suddenly sobtted Klt.lnd ienst. " close friend of Mit chell's itnd 11 devotet'f follower of the PreskienL was distressed to the point of despilr. Kleindienst decided the President should be told all the facts and, after a couple hours of sletJ) •. he put in a caU to the White House. It was 9:30 on Sundty morning when he reached Nixon, who asked him to come to the White House prayer service. Afterward. Kleindienst told lhc Pr~•idt!i\ all that the Jlf'06· ecutors had uncovered . Petersen was summoned lo Provide more ,details and arrived in tee-shU't Ind sneakers. · · THE PRESIDENT obviously had not realized the scope or lhe conspiracy, Kleindienst-told us. Be said he had a policy against. quotlnc the President but could repart Nixon had expressed "surprise" aoo "concern." "The Prosldenl -t alq with every recommend.ltion we made," added Klei~ dienst. "At nQ .time did he give CJ.s p.ny dirtetian other than to lnMUrale the case fully and let the chips fa!J wbere they may.'' On April 17, l\\'O days after the fatc:ful Sunday meeting. J,>resident N t x 0 n curi~ly told tbe nation that new In· formation had come to him fully three \\"eeks before the KJelnd.ieost meeting on Man:h 23. and he was peJ'SC\>BllY In- vestigating all of l be facts aboUt Watergate. ' · But be did not mentlotr how three Washington pl'OllCCUton had spen t to months to cut through lbe ,..b ol lies spun by top Wlifte HOUJJe aJdes. I I school. ,. 'That is not fair;. that is a kind.of dou· ble taxation that c0nles clooe. to per!l:eCU· lion . t Thei\ are lh(11e who .. c;ontend that If rellgl<iUs schooling .m~s so much to some pareQls',tbey s]lould be willing to make the sacrtnce aod pay the cost. TIIAT MAKES sense except that today caesit's ex c e a s I v e taxation ,wipes oul \t\osc !Ura lamll y. funds. Under th& qoort's d~ only ti:e wealthy ;an; ~rt v:Hb .t.frtt l:hoice:: the lower aild iniddlt cta.o;s ~rents ,rill be forced to lake the educationil · pap diSpcnicd at Caesar's tro.u&h, Opponcots. ol tax .,,..lits orgui: they shoold not be loteed to support 1:<liglous !cliools. Agreed. By the ...... ~ken, and ln the same spirit or 'neutrality; those who sond their children to parochial S<:hools should not be compclled to give run support to ~ ptibtlc system. • Classroom costs for public educellon average about '$800 per child, i1' the elementary and l<!COndary gr•des. u· the 407 .000 priv1te acf'Jool sludents were sud- dtnly dumprd on California's . publjc system, It Miu.Id cost tupayers another .. milll111 • year -not including c.pllal ttpWes for a d d 111 o n 1 I classroom"! tnd other facllltlt5 • \\fhal is at issut: here.is also equity and the question of coercion. The Court has enforced ecanomic sanctions that leaves hundreds of thousands of California parents no choice but to allow the !tale, to bend their t~igs and aim tbeir arrows. Hail, Caesar! OJ:ANH COAST DAILY PILOT . Robtrt N. Wttd, PubU.Shn Thomru Kcctnl, Editor Barbaro: KT"eibich Editorial Paae Editor I ' ' The editorial .page or the-I>ailyf: Pilot .'&feb-t.o inform lllld lttmulatel reedth by prtsentina on this Nell ~vtpe f<?!'mentiuy ·on fopl1:11 Of inJ terHC b)t t)rndlcated (.'Qlumnlsts a.rd cartoontsti, by provfdifll'' a fonrm roa m.dtn' views t.nd by prncnting thiJI nt!W5pl.ptr'• opinions and ideas °" (."Ul'ftJll toplca. Th(' f'dt.tottll ottl.f'I~ _or the Daily PllM appear ont)' m ,~ tdltorW Cplult\n at 'thp top ot ttMI ' pq:e, OpinSons C\Pi clM'd bf the ~ umniats and cll10onim aM letttq wrtten art their own and no 't'll(b ~ mtnt of ~ ~fW'I by 0'1• Dai~ ~ lhouJd be lnftrml. 1 Monday, July 16, 1973 : ' • -.- -· .. ' r ~ SI iI a: p -~ i ' ' 1 I h c ' l ' ! • ) ' I • I • Jf" .f'-Us Clreu Its BU "- ' ' ' "Daddy forgot to kiss T1d~y Qoodby.•' L. M. Boyd No Marhelers In MacPherson Is there any bistro In California that .tlll identifies It· self as an ''Ociall OUnge"? Use to be quite a nwnber of •ucb spots. They sprang up alter the state lawmakers there In the 19.10s prohibited signs which proclaimed the sale ol alcoholic beverages. Also, some innkeepers labeled their places: "Aloon," "Avern," "Eer" and "B Garden.': . Some doctors lnsi!t the best lll<dicine by far for elderly -·..:.&: .. ~., •,rt· .Jau \1 1•.· .1 \. -l . ' "·' ,·~ , insomniacs is red table wine • • . Sui· cide -rate among women in their 20s ~ quadrupled in the last 10 years. Why? . . . Our Chief Prognoslicaw says a man's ordiRary haircut can be expected to coot $1.50 within the next sl1 years ... How can you call your- self a historical scholar if you didn't know that Hannibal wore a wig when he croi;;!od the Alps? •.• Why the city Cathers in MacPberson, Kan., once .. · passed a Jaw lo pnillibit the playing ol marbles I ju!I don't know. QUERIU -Q. "How many women who might be classified as major stars have had clilldren out of wedlock in the last three year&?" A. Five. V~sa Redgrave, Mi.a Farrow, Mama cass Elliott, Pally Duke and Catherine Deneuve. Wouldn't re· port this, hear In mind, if they hadn't already leaped cen- ter-stage to report it themselves. SAFETY DEPOSIT -No, sir you ought not put that !alety bOJ< Into the joint owliership ol both yourseli and yoUr wife. 'Ibat way •. U you die, she can't open it..unles.! !Ollle bigwig from the court or the tu office is at hand. ~ Put that bu in your wife's name, then nominate yourself as a deputy, so you can gel In ·and out ol the thing. Such be the coumel of the experts. one. out of every three grownups In this country now is unmarried, divorced, widowed or separated. That's· doua ble the number of a dozen years ago. Is lt possible the average 6usiness executive spends a third of his work on the road? One management expert says so. Remarkable, if true. ~ever since the days of the sailing ships, says he, have men been so separa1ed from their wives. Numerous women reportedly have what's known as a perfume frec kle behind each ear. A little burn that deveJ.. .. ops from. the oils in the perfume they dab there, that's '-' all it is. Hannless. ,. Addre" mail to L. M. Boyd, P.O. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Free-time Cruiser Has New Nemesis Ctlrllt\1>11 l cltflCt Mllflllor krVk• -the time indicator disap- BOSI'ON -The driver who pears from view. cruises streets looking for unexJ)ired time on parking "NO ONE will know when meters may be in for a -the time will run out except surprise. ·the penon who put tile money A new kind ol meter design-In," explains Allen Sabin, vJ<:e. ed to foil the "free-time president for marketing at cruiser " as he's known to Duncan Industries, the na- police. 'has been developed, tlon's largest parking-meter tested, and-' is now on the ma.nufocturer. market. The "free-time cruiser" wiH UKE ANY nannal meter, the Muimim R eve nu e ' · Producer (MRP) has a lime ~' lndicat« that points to lhe amount of time you have " i-irchasM when you Insert a be unable to tell whether two minutes or two boun: of unex- pired lime are left on the meter. ln fact, Mr. Sabin says, anyone who drives into a park- ing space will have to insert a coin to find out bow .much unexpired time remalns. coin. . But a small 1'1ign reads, -''Time indicated briefly after 1 each coin ls inserted." "Briefly". is the sign'4 a'Ucial word: Three minutes after a coin is inserted -poof Eliminating the 'tcruiser," some traffic experts say, would increase parking-meter revenues and help eliminate traffic congestion. I I t Harbor~ENTAL CENTER .. -I DOOURES e CREDIT e POOOTHAL ' • .................... .....,..... ,...., .......... ..., ... ,_. .............. cm .. _ ... ,.._ ..... , .. ,,' I ..... ..... .,_ ........ """" ...... ---............ .. ..... ....,. ........... 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One cabinet, t"·o ill i;hf'lv<',, chron\I' !}llll'S and 11~·0 to11rl r111s:,s. \\'hitf'. [..' nvucndo and ~"tllnu t. -10 Oni.y:- 22" POWER LAWN MOWER 4000 Mdl KM 200 _ 2 Days Only 3 h.p. Brjggs & Stratton "n~inc -n'C'Ot l star tC'r - autornatic chokl'. \Vhl'<'ls adjusl for rutting hclghL CO~fFLETf.LY ASSE ~1BLED ' @-..,,_ . . " . ~ ·~ - ' ~ I ~ l ~~ .I ft p .~ FOR DELUXE LOUNGING ~ ' s1ooo ,, POLYESTER FLAR~S 3.33 Lari:-" 11ssortmrnt or mrn'11 -••••fllT' 1..-ilyestr r and pol)'rstrr rs All lllrnd 11;1nt.... A~snrlf.'d dlll'k i 1 NW nnd lii:-hl C'l'•lors. Dres.11, ca. ... •--.OfCIUwt uaJ nnd ~·•'<if{'rn styles. Sizes ~ Ii --, _: .. I 30-<0 r . n -""""""~ """""""' ....... -"""". """' ·" ! '• \ WOOD TABLE SET 22.88 !)('t 1,t th~ t 1lin to•tt!l ·ray to• In rrd with i:old crntl'r dccorntion. Sid• '"~ l1•liJ In i!:Old • 1 uA1lv l'ILOr Situati.on ~ Comedy Rebounds - Mond•y, July 16, 197~ ~ -- Italians Look to Orient • ·-'Chopsl'tick Easte~ns' Rep~ce 'S paghetti Westerns ' • LA Singer Tops Opera Contest : SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) + Kalhletn ?t.1artin : a sopranb from Los Angel~. has "'oh firs t prize in the onnual Sah f'runcisco Opera auditions. I She was awarded $1,500 anti • By JERRY BUCK ,_°""R"O"Mi'E=,,,-ilmA'cP"'i =,,....~W~i_t,,h-'ap"'.:e~ra"tloo;;;:;::.,and;= some utire." Venice Film Festival two Leone's low-budget Spaghe~ th e James H. Schwabacbc!' "Spaghetti Westerns OU Tf11'0iigb {be rams wrn-re~go. 'f'he f i-t-m • stern ginning-with---M·emoriah\wa1nlc.----L-------I f---th<.-,.ay,-1.talt&n il•lm-~pt~ ... ~. meet-West--in-aclion-arid . "Women's Red Brigades" '!''as " _.flliiyl or Dollars" and -----~-~~illiti~--1~-I never seen 1n o r e1lles, Television. ii is said, goes in cycles, with different kinds of shows moving in and out of ducers are now turn ing to casts . Albertini has included in however. on to "The Good, Bad an e "Chopstick Eastcrns." the cast or his "Superman Instead ,' suddenly this year. ~gly" -1nadc ~u~e profits. 1112 The new trend explores the Against · thy Vlolenc~ or a ho!lt of Horig Kong-mad e favor. U that Is true. and. the short history oI the medium seems lo substantiate: it, then we must be seeing a resurgence or situation comedy .• mystique and violen~ of the Karate" t"6'l'ar Eastern box .Easterners engulfed 1 t a I y . m Orient whlle the previOUJ one office attractions, Lo Lich and About a score of them. all had displayed how Italians Jm-Tung Lin. depictlng Kar.ate -or Kung Id W Film sources say Italian Fu -adventures, h a v e agined the Wild , \Vi est. already grossed $4. million in MANN THEATRES Quite likely in the future it will be a the expense of the police shows that grew like TOPSY in the past decade. It has been suggested that the law and order shows were a subile reactio'n lo the unrest of the 1980s and now that the times are quieter the public is looking for 11 g h t e r en- tertainment. ' In any case, the number of situation comedies is in- l:.reased to 22 in the fall. All are a half hour except the hour-long "Love American In a Pickle Lucille Ball and daughter Lucie Arnaz are dressed as a pair of pickles for a commercial on tonight's episode of "Her!!'S Lucy" al 9 o'clock on CBS, Chan·· ne l 2. · Style." ------------------ POLICE SHOWS ·in the u~ },,~.,."Sanford and Son.·· I p I ,. coming season more or Jess iivw I e eop e. hoJd their own -19 in··au -Jn the recent past NBC has Frjday nlght. in fa cl, but they still occupy the most not had moch luck with situa-beco.mse a virtual belly-laugh time because aU but "Adam· Hon comedy. It \\'OU!d have .ba.tilefield. Both NBC and 12" run from 60 to 90 minutes. been left out of the picture en· ABC are all comedy that night A major reason for the in-,lirely' if it had not been .for "l and CBS breaks the pattern at crease in comedy Is that NBC Dream of Jeannle" and "Get 9 p.m. for the Friday Night toot a sad look at the ratings Sma.rt" and, currenUy, "San-~levies. charts and once again found ford and Son." On television nothing suc- it.self bested by CBS. Leading cecds like success. the way for CBS "'ere such IN THE FAU., NBC is mak-If the swing to more comedy One film, an Italian-Spanish producers are try ing to get au-rhc Ital ian nuirket alone. diences used to Oriental production-with a ca~t in-thernes because they have NO\\' the Italian produi:ers. cludin"g Italian . and Oriental ~lainland China in inind. The including C.irl o Ponti, are actors, is already on the producers are said to be stepping in to add Italian im· screen, named "SlOry of hopeful that before long they aginaHon to the n1ystcries of can shoot films in China. One the Orient the \\'ay Sergio Karate, Fists and Beans." Leone produ ce d Westerns , · k noted directo(, Michelangelo Th.rte other Chops t 1 c Antonioni, was permitted to Italian style. Eastems are in production, all film a series of documentaries:lr==========~ made by Italians and one pit-on China la st year. ting the ~afla of Italy against the Karate Gang of the Orient. All fibns are shot in the fi&r E8st, particularly Hong Kong and Bangkok, and in Italy. SAYS BmO Albertini, the director of one of the films : "We are _not trying to offend anyone. The films are realistic -with only a slight ex- Botto1ns Set HOLiYWOOD (UPI ) Timothy Bottoms signed for a top role with producer i\1arlln Ransohoff in "The \Vhite for Paramount Pie· AND CHINA, e m e r C: i n g from its long i s ol a 1i o n , dispatched one fihn to the NOW THRU TUESDAY PAUL NEWMAN '" "JUDGE • ROY BEAN" shows as "All in the Family," ing a determined effort to ge t proves successful. you can be "The Marv Tyler ~1oore back into the picture. The certain that the cycle will corr Sho\v," "The Bob Newhart network is adding four new tlnue 10 tum in that direction. lj(i:;;;~~=;;~;~~ Show" and i\laude." comedies. 1'1Atsa ·Lu c k.'' And vlrtually the only place NBC, on 4he other hand, was "Diana." "The Girl \Yilh fQr movement is in the abun- top..heavy "'ilh detectiv e Something Ex tr a ' ' and dance ol. police ~bows. JAME,S GARNER KATHARINE ROSS "THEY ONLY KILL THEIR MASTERS" shows. several ol. which ran to "NeedJes and Pins." That's ln , ____ ..:__..c. ____ _ 90 minutes. Yet is consistent addition to "Sanford" and rat_Ings leaQer wu the _half-wh!_cb was follllerly "The L~ I~/ m s:~:. ALL NIW OCITIN• SUR.FINIS HELD OVER FROM ALAN RICH I ' "SALT WATER I WINE" lltf't R.,-Mhh "THE MAN WHO LOVED CAT DANCING " AUO rG I 7:l0 & t :JO lee.ti 1 ... 1 .. Rlc.litarlll Mirrrb "MAN IN THE WILDERNESS" -. -·'"" Ctll!DDMI l l ;, .. ~ "~''' ··~' ..... -.. $fAOIUM I :: ...... .u .·~·-··· «• ..... -.... Sr AD/UM · l :;:: .. _.,...,,..,1'.tU !fO:,• .. ...... '·-.--... "ARISTOCATS" ... "Song Of Tiie South" IGl · ~AHILL-U.S. MARSHALL" ·~iANG 'EM HfGH" IPGl l•n Ganar1 Yv•tt• Mlrnleux ''THE NEPTUNE FACTOR" Al10 John W1yn• "RIO LOIO" IG) ;:: AIK O.IMM!ll-wm ~~: "'MITLI•: THI LAST TIEH DAYS" :·:·: "(HINl:JI CONNl!'CTIOH" ,;,;,;.~,' •olll In Ctlorl IP'OJ , °" .... '" •• GltM1 JKll- "A TOUCH 01' CLASI" t -,,:::u;;tt S!ev~.f~:uttn t ;;-0,lo'•.':-,.w. ,ij.:.~.~ "LOCUSTS" •ElllERS" -· And no w th e movie ... · " ••. perhaps the most remarkable fil m to emerge since Ceci!B.De~1illefounded Ho\lywood."-VERNON SCOTT, UPI "JESUS·CHRISI SUPERSIAR" l fO ~UU.Y·OIU.A:<.DERSCN ·\\U'/lo.ULU\lAN ·!WIRY Dl ... N! 'I ,._., Mclw)n &in:.,. '-:fl!\lnJ!.,.OOll __ ..,..,._ •• ......,Cll!l>I.~·· .... ., TirnJl.n --,. N'dmo lk:i\ool v.ttt><T • ,,.., "T1111 R11;r :_ .._ .,Aldn! Pft>,;,, • ,..,.., -" ""'•l ~ ~..i ~· ~ .,._.:.,. NORMA~ J(\lo'l'i.IN _.;.., :-.oR.\lAN IEWISON ... ROllRT STK"o'M)()[)·, ,......., ,_ ,,,__. ,.., ~• , All 1HlATllS COOLlD I Y llfRIGlRATION ~-NOW . PLAYING RESERVED SEATS Dn S~I• uo ·rn 8'30 f1i .. Sil., Sun. NDon M~RLON BRANDO .irL pans . x ~~.~~:;~ lh\'lltl ~~11~1\ •'ON. IHRU ;HURS. 8 PM fRIOIY 7 & S ll SAI UROAY 1-7 & S lS • SUNOAY 1·1 & 8 4ll 5lATS $4.00 llLIE DICK 111 .. ~·~Hio. 1.,~.,.•Y ~I~.,.,_ !>I. ~1~3~?6 l ........ ,, .... -.iolllMllt 5'1."2'2?] S•nl• An• r ••••• , ...... Chapm on""· ssg.1022 Nt•POt'I r•e•w•' ~I ll•~or St. S4S·llll $!AD/UM •3 .~:· .. ~U. ' II.Ell.:• "FRIENDS 0, EDDIE COYLI" ••• 'LADY SINGS THE BLUES" (R) ... \",~\'~" " .:::'.:::,::: ....... :."" :::"' \ .••..••• 1...,.. ......... __ , ___ .... .,._1 :or .~.::"'!"-J PRIMIER ENGAGEMENT AIDREWI · VAi DYllE I TECHNICOLOR" co, ·1:-_ ..... -... $TADIUM,I ;:; ....... ,.,...,_ .. ,,l""C;'. "LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL .. ..... ''.EVIL I NllYIL" 'PGI Nearly Everyone Listen,s w La1iders ;1111 l.MtOF (PG) 51111~ • JAMIS OYAN llCHAIO 11<1 f! ... !lllOi $~0PPIN{, CINTl~ • ~EDWARDS -......... HARBOR ..'.~':.1 ~ "''10• 9••P •f ••l$0fl Sii C'!U I '"I ~• , •• 0~1) ... nw '"'''~\OU!• 'S•~Oll '-O IW• ALSO CALL 646·3266 . . • • COIUIN CANNON llNJAMIN : ,o• TH EAT .... ••, , ,,•' a •e -3 102 '•,,• ...... o .. •t •O•"'S cos•• MlS• .............. ' .... '° 00 ..... , ...... --;(-~3 i:;;:~ .. -~·.-w.:1 . . -. . ' . ~ Cl\I \I\ Cf\ I ER .............. Wt91MINITllt IT OCl OI,. Wiit l f t W((ff :::e.~~-~":",;t: lti--'••l ALSO CALL 893-7581 • • H;\P bOR ti.T ADAMS {.Q\lA ~(SA • 919 4141 NOW AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS a the most talked · • ·1 .. .,.-:&: ABOUT FILM OF OUR TIME! MI PGJ BILLY JACK , .... ~" M~ Ill_ TOM LAUGHLIN. DELORES TAYLOR "RED S-KY 19th RECOKD BREAKING WE EK AT MORNING " ONEMAalCENTIR • lilAllCMUTE • l•<T CG 1 1-". , • .., ,JI.t i/I Ollly M·~~~~,,~~EE::TE:i~c; G. H1(•tn•n/I . lirtftl!lt :~:~ YOU iz:~J~~:~.~NOW t V~;~:~J~~~~~~Q .'~.,1:;•:.,:.'~ lltlll In Color! !•l f'OINT" llolh In Color! "PAT OARRl!tT ANO ::::: l lLLY TNli IUD" "STRAW DOGS" llolll I~ C•lwt 1•1 The ptOSPeCtiW l'WMA ot Maxy'S Car Woth. Pltnburgh, Po GEN£ HACl<I'll/4N ~k"h SC/iJ?J:OWVt/ WARNIR BROS.(!) [RI©> IN THlATRl TWO ·~·· ........ . • • • • • • • • . . . . . -. • ... -..,... ····· ••·••·••····•···· • ( l\f\l\(J \:1 .ll • • • lllAC H lllYO At f ~II~ • • ••• <.o••• ,.,..., • sa .. '"'IHI ''"'" fl•7 •!i80 9 • HUMtlNC.lOM ftfll(:... a ALSO CALL 147-6017 HAttOR Af •AOA'-4S lO)TA o,A(S.11 • 979 4 141 I I STARTS WEDNESDAY • ...... fa~ ~··--:. lm _.. AP,_,.,. R,~.,, WITH TAT UM O'NEAL AS "ADDI E" PLUS · BURT R EY~OLDS RAQUEL WELCH IN "fUZZ" NOW Al IOT'H CINl#IUI JULY18 Ai BOTH lHEITRll IOX OFFICE OPENS 7:30 ...-.. LINCOLN · .._ DRIVEIN Lin(oln A.....,u, W. of Knoll Buen" P01Mc • 527-2223 ---- A 1 lOVefSTOR Y FOi( GU•S WtiO CHEAT ON WIVES George Segal EDWARDS HARBOR c.:·.:.2 _.,.,,_ 91.WO -•f-""I\'°" ii-• C0$1A ,.!SA 6•60,11 ~* ( Plu$ -Burt Reynolds Oyan Cannon IN "SHAMUS" !POI __ .,, "''"" ............. . c .... .._ . ._ "" "SILVER FOX" South Coast Plaza II Ult D!IGO IWl. Al IUITOI. • S49·lJS2 James Coburn Kris Kri5tofferson Bob Dylan In "PAT GARRET!' AND BILLY THE KID" METFQnOl·~ I!Jo0-· Plus • "CkhteM Co""ectlo11" I N THE W EST,..!N STEA (.ENTER "" l'WS • -lllOolll$ HO SKY Af MOIMNG (Nll]lllUI n•'A 2nd JAl.'f 5 "A M,t,N GARN~R CAlllO SllOG(" • • • • • • i'Pf o>r.'· •• ~·-,.·1 . . . -. . . • • U\I \I\< f \I Lil • ' 11 APbOR AT ADA'-'!\ (.Q\I A l,,A l \A • 979 4141 " '· ., EDWARDS TWIN CINEMA THE WESTilROOK IROOKHURST ON WISTMINSTll AV[ • 2 BLKS. SO. OF GARDEN GROVE FWT. 530-4401 ..SIDND" • .p()ffiF.1', -h\ • . -.c> BER, · ~-' Plus -Walltr Mlllthau Carol Burnett ·"Pete N' TilHe" (PGI ' 00/Gl.'llJ!l l\lllt !Allll( Will.l£R PIXlll' llMST llHitf. PIUi l tie Rock Ootr• "GODSPUL" (G) _j • II 0 ' "" c~ "'" S.k Sllv. W• ••• T~ " WUI "" .. , ·~ Pflt .!111>11 "' Gt1I '" Cllr '" •• ton ... ~ ""' ow ""' HI• • T" '" '" "" M• HI~ ·~ ·~ " '"' '" toi ... ' •• Sier ' ... .. , •• .,. • '" Mo '" •• th: .... ' Wo "I Mo '" ' '" ,. ~ wnua r.;ice. 1', It .... """ G." AM ... 1, = -· e .... r Mm 1t13. , .... Qff r>C: -'· P&elf v•-"""' _,, .... 11. u IDllt Ofl ft( '"' ., .... urvit ,~. Por11j t ~ C1 Cl I u L 1' GYPSY MOTH ... pESTRUCTIVE GYPSY MOTH SHOWN IN THREE DEVELOPMENT STAGES f County Offlclal1 Ask -.,,,. .. to KMp Eye Out for p .. 1 • ~·-if = For the Gypsy Moths Record HYouSeeOne Dissolution Of Marriage Of These,-Nah It l'INA.L 0-CRll!S l!llf"" ,_ :w l1r....1, Gino« L .. ll'ld Auovallne Conrlld, ll1V9rly J11n llld J1m11 Wiibur WlhO!I, Ly1111 I . 11'(1 W1yne A. S.ldt:lo. C1talln1 Ind Albert v. Silva, Ectw1rd F. Ind Norm1 M, Wnvek, Lindi J, Ind Irvin H. Forshay, Hll'rf J,_,,, Jr. Ind K11t!tnn Jay, ek. ThomlOfl, Lwton COU<"tn.y encl B1rMr1 Je1n Wllli1m10n. C1rolYn 1/ld Thom•• w. Flt'lds, Jo Ann Mid Edw1rd Leon PMlllps, Olt>orth C. Ind Ollvtt T. Auu, Gill Am 111d Ellfi-Allrldo P1lc1'1. Phll!p G, Ind Yvonne Slhlet', Wlllltm H1mllton tnd 1lll1 Mo" Gii-. Uur11 IC. Ind Jtn'Y H. Lecy, Bitty L.. Md Herold L.. cu.-, Anlhony Louis 11!d Ann M1r11 PelwMft, Johll end Edlttl A. Morron, Kthy -.id WllU1m Lemt11<1. Robt-rt Jt . 111d Penv J . Gr-W.IOJ'I, Roti.rt J°'9pli tnd Mldlele .. 5mlllt, 0-gi. Lff end Lont1 O..n l!-1. o.br1 Louli.e 111d Ran.Id GI...., Knoeb. Dorl• I . and Ernest L. Hlnn, lll'l'YI M1xlne 11\11 Cl'Mlr11s ...... T-l11n. II.tty J . Ind Wtltet" St1pen lloMlf'O. Joe L Ind CKlll w. C1mm.c:•. Andrl •nd Alchlrd I. H•!hwdl, John How1ni Ind C1role Ltt M~. Sll••n ~en 11nd Rlch11rd Frank Hll!on, J.imtt An!hony 111d F1ustlno Kmberly ~---' Heyde, John Wlllll m •nd S.111e.r.nn1 Hewm.1n, Alte<i Ron11d and Judith '""' Lo.vm..,,, Edward C. •nd Vir9it1l1 L. Frilus. E11nor and Larry U.url!n!, loul1 A. and Juli• Mu P1rrott, M1ry Lou and Oll¥ef' OK1r, Jr. .. Andersm, Holl T. Ind Ronald L. Sieracki, Abandr1 Cl1rlr. •nd Leo Charlt1 Dlyholf, P1trJcl1 L. .net Ronald H. G1rn1r, ~li.e L Ind Tffry L. Romyn, Corlne.elc. •nd comenus F. Orosto. lltlty Albtrt1 Md he N1tlvlO.d 211'1n, tlrM'11 Ann Ind John MICll&el Mon!~, Betty Je1n a!ld R-rt L, L1ms11n, Gin Jand •lld J ... ry Allllfl Rocchio, Robert H. 1no Allee A. E11"""4 June " Th1clr.1 ti.rrv, Shirley M. 1r>d Huoh T. LaW1.ln, Ge-urge Morris and Elett1 E!al.,. Watffl, Cori M. 1nd Ch.erle1 N. Blkhll. J1ne •nd Osah1nn $.tl1m M_.e, Fr1nkey R1y 1nd Linda Lou 8renm1n, Sherry 01rh:ne ilnd Ttiom1s Vlnctnl Clark. Ruth A. and Jerry W. Lee. Chari" G. and Judith 0, Death Notices ORANGE -The war ls on against the . spread of the destructive gypsy moth in California, William Fitchen, Gardiier's Decision Now Laiv By TOM BARLEY Of Ille Dtltf" l'lllt Steff SAN BERNARDINO -A deci.sioR handed down by ap- pellate court Justice Robert Gardner. of Newport Beach has become California 1aw in the field or drunken driving and the taking of blood samples from arrested motorists. Justice Gardner, presiding jurist or the Fourth District Court of 1 Appeals in San Bernardino, recently defended the withdrawal of blood from an uncons cious man who received injuries when his car ran into the--back or a School bus in San Bernardino County. T!IAT COtLISION led to the death or one child and the in· jury of eight other passengers in the crowded school bus. ~fotorist Robert Carrington was la ter charged with felony drunken driving and vehicular manslaughter. lt11; was argued by Car- rington's lawyers that no war- rant was obtained · by the MASON Callfomia Highway Patrolman WJUl1m Raloh M1i.on. 1'07 c;.,11111 r..,.. • I the r.tee. Coron• drl Mir. 0.11 ot df,11h, July mvo ved in investigation o{ I~. ltn. Sur~i"9d by wit., £Uabeth1 -., lh h nd h h d M1rk: d11111Mer1. Mrl.'Wen<tv cr .. wlPrd e eras a e never a and Miss Mlrlem Mall/If!; brother, H•rold the unconsc1·ous Ca · •--· G. M•wo. Mrl'nOl'"ill urvktt, T11eld1y, 1 rr1ngwu S ,.,_,, Paelflc view ChtPtt. F1m11y •uo· consent · for the taking of a •ttti lhoH wld>lng to mike memorl•I f011Trlbut!Ot11. l>l•ase cOt11r1t1ui. to 1111 BPv blood sample that led to th e ICOl/t$ or Arne-rk1. Pac.Ilk View Mortu1r"f', Ol•Ktrors. filing of the charges. ! O'CONNOR Elt1nor M. O'Connor. A111dent of Boston. GARDNER NOTED · h. Mtti.IChUMMl. Oet1 of dffth, July 1), In IS itn . In Me•ia crtv. s11rv1ve.:1 b! ~. ruling, however. that th e Cl\edln!l O'c-. of N!'WQOrt eKh; orandd1uo11iwr, TlllYl•r• A~ Cl•••· patrolman was kept busy at mont. s .. vlctt. Wldnna1y, , 11 1'M. lh .d f P1c1nc View ChllDel. 1nttr~n1. P1elnc e acc1 ent scene or more ~ ..... ~.1~~\0l'"1'.'1r1r.. Picitic "1-than an hour after the crash RUIL• and was not able to contact =:n~·~11°8ea~~~i1,1~7tltie~1~1~';1~ . Carrington tmlil he drove to 1s, 1tn. Survlvtd' by 111uoh1e.-. Mr,, H. c. the hospilal and authorized the IOelel M1!My, NIWPOrl BHCh: lhre<i or1n0c11U<1r1n1 bro~r. c1rnr T1y1or, test on the Un c On SC i OU S Fon worth, Te••s; srste.-i WllMlmln• sus--.J. GlbboneV, 1'r11nvton, Vlniln••· Memorlat IA-""'· urvlees. T11ndl(' I PM, Pkllk V!tw Chill>tl. 1"! ... mm, Paefllt VI-M-111 P1rk. Paclllc View Mortu1ry, O!""tor1, county agrictiltural com- missioner announced. Fitchen said his department is cooperating with the Slate Department of Food and Agriculture to· trap t h e dangerous insect pests. ••JF AU.OWED to get a real start in California it could do serious damage to our fortsUI and tree crop industry," the commissioou e x p I a i n e d . "The gypsy molh bas already infested more than 11 million acres In the east and last year 'aklne it defoliated nearly 1.5 million acres of forest" Any person who spota the gypsy moth larva, o r c.aterpi!Jar is urged to capture it and contact the · county aulcuJtural commissioner's of1ice , telephone 714«84, im- mediately. "The cateqiillars are at- tractive creatures. grow to two inches i1l length and are distinguished by many tufts of hair and a series of red and blue paired dots along !heir backs," Fitchen explai ned. Grand Jury Pusl1es Park Sm-plus Plan SANTA ANA -Sµpporl for a proposed county prograrri to , use surplus properties for parks and greenbelts has been voiced by the Orange County Grand Jury. 'In a letter to !he board of supervisors, Jury . Foreman Marcia Bents of Newport Beach said the-proposal of. fered by Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden Grove was a worthwhile way to add to the reservoir of land available for open space and pnrks. Baker 's suggestion is being studied by County Counsel Adrian Kuyper. It stemmed from a proposal to sell a five. lot size parcel in \Vestminster as surplus. The board voted to retain the property and even- tually turn it over to the city for developmen: as a park. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MOR'nJARY 427 E. 17th St., Co1ta Mesa 61Mll3 • LAFC Members Urged To 'Do Homework' BAL 'f'Z.llERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del P.1ar 673-tcSO Costa P.1esa 145-UU • BELL 8-0ADWAY MOR1™.RY JJl"'Broadway, Costa MHa u 11-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUARIES 17911 Beacl!i Blvd. Uanlhlgton Beach SC-7771 U4 Redondo Ave. Long Beach 113-Ul-IHS • MrCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY ti OS Laguna Canyon Rd. 494-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery ftlortaary Chapel ISOI PaclOc Vi<w nm. N...,.... Beadi, <:aUlt<plA 114-1711 • ,..PEEK f'All!ILY COLONIAL FllNERAL HOME 7181 BolN Avt. Wutmialter as.ms • I SMITHS' MOR11IARY &17 Malo SL llu•'-ri-lleldl ' 1Miit -- By JAl'.:K BROBACK SANTA ANA -l.ocal Agen· ly F'orJ!lation CommissJ.on members should do more "homework" through regular study sessions with eqiphasis on legal education and policy delermlnatioo, I h e Orange County Grand Jury believes. IN AN INTERIM report on the agency which has power ov~r a 11 annexaUons, in- corporations and boundary changes, the jury also sug- geste4 several changes in policy regarding spheres or in· ~.should be lh~y probed. The jury went so far as to say t h a t "a thorough .. knowledge of basics shou1d be considered essential for new commissioners prior to the assumpt.J.on of duUes." On splieret of tnlluenoe, 1 matter v.iUch the oomrnisslon has wruitled with . for lllOn! than two years, the report said a policy should be established that all county territory need not be within the sphere of ln- nuence of some city. (The rommission has had such a policy part ic!ularly in reference lo Missi<il Viejo, El Toro and-Laguna Niguel) . fiuence . THE JURY ALSO suggested In the report, signed by Jury the eslabllshment oC criteria Foreman Mn. Marcia Bents for granting spheres of in- of Newport Beach, It ls slated fluentt ror s u c h unln- thlt Ibo lnveaUgallllll of the _.1..t anaa .. pec1auy LAFC was made at the re--thole whlcb have 1ppUed for Cjl...t ol a number of dUzenr-m11nldpal advl'°'1' oounctl groups. 1be groups 1'tre not status or ~ a desire to named. remain unlnco1poratfd, ON STIIDY swlons for oommls!loo m<mben, ! h • meuage 1tal.td that a 11 legislation pertinent to LAfo"C bu!d.ness, ~qc:h a.s th e Wlltta""°" Act wlllch allows agricultml ~ for !f• Munldpol ad'1sory council• are a new ronn.. o r qua.sigovtrnmtnt created by ml• law. Tllri>ugll such coun- cils. unincorporated a r c " s work wtlh the Coonly Board of SUponl!lon reprdill( rnatlttl crltlcal w their t1rea1. .. ' j • • .. · . .) CAL-1-~DR NIA -- FEDERAL SAVINGS • • . . AND LOAN ASSOCIATION • * • * • * * Calilbri1ia Federal· Sa announces ,l>All V PILOT 9 ~higher interest rates -~ on passb.ook and ce1•tificate sa • accounts. Select the type of account to fit your ~avings need and visit any one of our many offices today. . . ~-j . ' . fr 410/0 ~~~~ ~~.?!ou~~~~~m!~:.d dally. iJ Open wilh any ,mount. Add or withdraw at any lime. current 911nval r1 .. 4-Year Certificate Account. For new accounts. Minimum deposit: $1,000. Interest compounded dally. • up to 71010 Certificate Account yielding 7.79~'2 ........... Minimum deposit $100,000. Ask for details on terms. 7.79% yield resulta when interest is compounded daily and all funds and earnings remain in account one year. !Withdrawals from a new certificate of deposit will recel'/9 on the amount withdrawn, the passbook rate then being paid. Also. there will be a penally of ,90 days' interest or interest from the dat• of issuance or renewal of the certificate, whic hever is less.) Plus--16 Free Services for accounts with bat1111ce1 of $1,000 or more. California Federal Savings .. 2ND ANNUAL OLD TIMER NEWTIMER PICNIC SUNDAY, AUG. 19 Estancia Park 1-4 P.M. . P~tlu~r Dinner ........... .,.. ....... '"PhD",._._, -Ml-lltS I • and Loen A1toel1!ion • Matts ewer $2 Biiiion Nation's Largest Federal COMMUNITY EVENTS A•TIST M TNI. M~TM Oti'tme Ii. Mllltd:\ Ai1111 StuOitd -C .. lfo<ll~ khool af Flnt Arf\, $.-i "•1nc:IMO. G<e ... t CNl/!tl ... t, l'••lt Fr1nn. Al,P wltto """ ""'' l'l'l°'41. P1rlt Fr1t1te Muir Cel~. 1'1~ C1t1j._ urod..,. !ht 11-... -'''" llllnl .. llN• Ht~' . ,.,,_... City C.11U901, ~ V«.M 11)0 """"In ,...,,.. ... k 111t1tur1 ( ... lf,h(I wlll'I k"" 0.•t#ICIOl'I .... Jtldlar<h R11tlen -MOC1"'11 Incl •Ml•~I Dotl~ll"9 lutclarlMt 1"1'"'1'11, Cliff. ~If M-Afl i......,. ........ Sflt'h Art At1«11t"' lo. 1'1'Qt'let An l Mtllt Nll~•l 1ocl'lly of"''' 11'11 L.iltt\ .. _ P111d-Art Asw;latt1 1:111111 Clllb Df H-rt IN111 T"•M 1'rl LI.,._,., \.I~·• 1,.. Htt -1!\1<11 1 .... l'dt ,,,., !\ l'OW "'"M~•"O I t "°' Cotti ,,.,..... ,lrt LH9\le. Costa Mesa Office: 2700 HarbOr Boulcvanl I' 546-2300 . NOW! OPEN O.N SATURDAYS 10 TO 2. • I f ·,. • ..t.\r -1 .. 1 t'tLOf Shortage Of Food Predicted - 1 s .. • ' .- Wall Street • • representatives say that food California ag r ic ul tural 1 shortage$ will occur if the cur. rent federal retail price freeze continues. FOR INST A~E. egg pro- ducers right now are losing about five ~nts for every dozen cartons of eggs they sell. Pomona feedlot ov.ner Al Benton said he..musl make !iO " cents a pound on ltis calves to make a profit. adding If thingS don't get better he may pot his calves to pasture. A basic -squeeze occurs j because raw products bought CHEVROLET'S FLEETSIDE PICKUP NO., I )iELLER IN AUTO, TRUCK L NE by the tanner such a:s· feed for ?fi~~l!~f4~ Fleetsid~ Tru.ckin' LEE ADLER, executive vi~ president of t h e California Grain and Feed Association, said the situation could "result In a reduction in the supply of me.at, milk and eggs to the oonsumer. Won1en Hea r Project T alk The Orange County chapter of the National Association of Women in Construction will meet in Anaheim July 24 to hear a lecture on project management. David G. ~filler, Newport Beach general contractor ~1ill discuss "Project Management -A New Emerging Profession ," at the Hyaft House beginning at 6:30 p.m. For reservations. c o n t a c t PJJricia Rich at 833-9244. SEVEN ADVANTAGES OUR PAGER OFFERS that yours may 1 COMPLITI OlANGf COUNTY COWllA6l JM:hnA .. 1 ....... leocfl S-C.._..., Mlalon Viel• hM hlirt, • w.11 ms Lo .._.__._.efl.A. MONTH TO MONTH WINTAL IA.SIS NO HPCKn 119Ullt:D ON A.PnOWID CllDn ONLY 117.00 Pll MONT TOTAL COST l..n..hff ,.,.., 5 NEW COMPACT UNn Sll'!' 11 1/c c 4 r 1/21 6 YOICI MUSAH PAGERS -.• o:o A"f A'IAll Allf :7 FULL FRO MAIHTINANC ORANGE COUNTY RAOl07HEPHONE SERVICE INC' 714 • I JS.JJD5 ffl SO. SANTA Jiii, SANTA ANA ,...,,.. l.a9Vftl ·-~. Ml111M V'-19, nl ll"tlicit. Sitn Cl1mentt, S.11 J"" ol1lr1nt1 Kl T•r1. ul ton I 4t'-J22J Clie vrolet Pickup Soars in. Popularity By CARL l:ARSTENSEN Increasing custo mer de- mand for new trucks and recreational vehicles reached another mile s tone as Olevrolet annoullC'Cd its ha1f· ton Fleetskle pickup is the largest selljng body style o( any General ~1otors passenger car or truck se ries. According to A. J. Olson, Chevrolet assistant gencraJ sales manager for true!\!, 'over 249,TiS units of the Fleetside model had been produced for delivery as of May 31. versatility o f light-weight units, a record. and import pickups, making them at-selling 1.7 million Wl.its, also a tractive as second vehicles record. 'This would compare for many ramilies." with the 1972 figure of 10.93 Olson cited the mass exodus million vehicles. of W'bl:n populations to the * country during h o I i d a Y s , Most new car buyers would · longer sum mer vacations, and be happy to recommend their greater Iota! family partlcipa-auto dealer to friends and lion in leisure-time activities associates, according to a as factors in the trend . survey of over 4 O O, O O O CHEVROLET EXPEt.iS .to customers. I. produce over 300,000 of the CONDUCTED BY the Sa.Jes half-ton Fketsi~ trucks by Follow-Up DI vision of the end of th.is model year. A u t o m a t e d . M a rketing It seems clear t h 8 t Systems, the survey asked whatever the final total and consumers for their opinions "TRUCK SA_LES in general -however it is m e a s u r e d . six months after they had have been increasing in the whether on ~ claendar . of . purchased a new automobile. past three years," Olson said. model year basis. 1973 ls go1.ng CUstome'rs: of 2.600 au t 0 "The popularity o[ our half-to l~n ...ut to be the third dealers selling both domestic ton Fleetside moilel is in-straight record year for U.S. and impo r ted· makes dicative of the demand a vehi-auto dealers. throughout the country were cie that is not only pracjical in * canvassed. \ day-tc><iay business opera-Auto sales are running at an Three out of four surveyed tions. but usable for a wide arutual rate of 12 million cars. answered in a positive manner variety or recreational and Trucks are selling at a rate of when asked Jf they would refer family uses." more than 3.2 milliQJJ a year, their auto dea ler to ac- l~e pointed out t h at , up from 2.& million last year. quaintances. In fact, st~ted "Wom en and urba11 dwellers The 1973 superboom has Sales Follow-Up, 68 percent have come to appreciate the surprised auto executives.~ said they already bad made PRIVATE TRUST FUNDS AVAILABLE FOA AE.AL UTAiiLOANI 111 a 2lld TMJST DEEOG J1,5GO To '2~.000 UP' TO •41. LOANS OM TfltJ5T DUO COUATEAAL Nfln'Qlfr fQUITY """'9 N•WJ>Ort C:...1•r 620 H.wpon C.111•r om. N•WllOl'I~, C.lil. (714) ~2<11 For Weekender Ad ve rtising Phone 6424321 such recommendations. ONE QUESTION mark over The survey was conducted sales next fall is the labor on behalf of auto dealers who negotiations beginning t h i s "'ished to get an objective summer. Contracts for the Big analysis of their sales and Three auto companies expire customer service programs. in September. A walkout could di srupt J>roduction just when NATIONAU..Y, the survey new models are being in· -report sho"•s that car dealers trodoccd. but early indications and their salesmen are doing a are thcit terms "'ill be reached creditable job of following up prior to the deadline. contact with their customers Sales on a calendar year after new car delivery. Almost basis are also e.i:pected to be 60 percent of the survey n!COrd in 1973. An a I y s Is participants n atio nwide predict a total of about 11.65 reported \hat the salesman or million, with domestic cars dealer hat contacted them to accounting. for 9.95 million determine .their satisfaction. Money's Worth Bargain Time Nmv For Deal on Carpets lly SYLVIA PORTER July·A~t are t'A-'O of the big bargain months of the year for carpet purchases - among the most expensive in· vestments i n furnishings you're likel y to make. wool in looks a nd performance. resist soil and sun-fading better than any other fabric in use and clean easily. But they must be blended with another fabric to cut the fire danger in 100 per· cent acrylics. What Do Many Doctors Use When They Suffer P'ain -OfHemorrhoidal Tissues? Eiduin F ...... Gins Prllllp(. T-ruy R.MI lo by c..., fro'I *' Pm Ai. Hd,s sanM Swdlioi of Sodi T ,,_ 0.. to !ol«tia By taking advantage of these summer sales. you may save as much as 20 to 50 per- cent on your carpets, which can translate inte hundreds of dollars. If you find an item being discontinued by a mill. your savings may run to 50 percent. Carpeting today costs from $5 to $25 or more a yard , plus the cost of installation. plus the costs of.cleaning and maintaining it througbout its Rayon is cheap. but it doesn 't hold up under heavy use. Jn a survey. docton were a9kerl what lh~y use Lo r[·]u~ve such painrul symrtoms. t.t any of the cl'oc tors reporting-sairl thE'Y t-ilht>r use Preparation 1-l tht'm- selvea or in their office practice. P reparation H give prompt. \emporary relit!( !or hours in mBny ca!le!' from pmiil, itchinJ: in hcmorrhoidal tiAAues. And it actunlly he lps 11 hrink painrul llW<>lling of such tisi;urs when inlr clcd and inOtimcd .• Just Yoe if doctor-tf'!ted l'rupnration H• rloPsn 't help yo-. Ointment or sup1>0tiitof'ics. lifetime. Under the 1953 Flammable Fabrics Act all large carpets and" rugs and all carpet tiles ma nufactured after Apr. 16, 1971. and all small rugs manufactured or imported after Dec. 20, 1971. must meet federal flammability stand- ards or slate on their labels that they are not flame-resis- . !ant. U the carpet dealer can- LEARN ~T l~ast the ~lCS not give you appropriate about judging carpet fibers, a s s u r a n c e about fire- textures a n d construction ' resistance, write the manufac-- Yihen sho~ lurer, ping for a t1ts1t;S1$1l$\'S't,•t1ts1t;S1$1l$\•$ •t,'fjl$ ca r pet. A .,. ~ rundown on HOW DO YOU judge carpet construction? -• this is In a ~ The Great Sale Continues! j ~~w. ~~1:~ ~ .,.. 11n.d J;iugs," ~ All sport coats · 30 ~o -SO 'Yo off!! .$. ~~~1lhc ~~~ "':,... pattern dress slacks • 40 ~o off!! ..,, ices Ad min-"O"-TI• .,.. I t d DRES S SHIRTS 1f: • 11 -istration available from con-.. ,. se ec e -2 price.. tit-,umer Product Information, 41t . selected SPORT SHIRTS • 40 % off! -:,.. Pueblo, Colo. 8t009 <90 cents). ~ group of TIES • 40°/. off! ~ \\'ool is the most expensive • · _.. carpeting material. easy to ~ selected PRE-CUFFED SLACKS· .. clean, resistant to fire and : 1/2. P.ri~e! ~ dirt, d9rable and resilient But ... -.; It must be mothproofed. may ~ ~ be dama11:ed by alkaline ... • M • 11 • detergents and can. cause ~~~--~"·~: n'b·;·A·,MJ{J· .. ~ ... 'ift= .. -~:-:&;nd ::;~::~;~t~~ ,... .,(£tUJ eJ1J "Q / V ~ gets Im benten up by abrasion, and w1tter-soluble •• , ... , YIA LIDO • NIWPOIT llACH • 671-4110 :: stains can be wiped out easily .,. ... with a sponge. ~s •s·•s l,.•,, $•'$\l$lf fS1$Jl$.'$1 $1'$1•t•s•J ACRYLICS WEAR It least as well ill nylon. resemble • c - Construction is the basic sec'ret of good carpets and means pile and workmanship. The thicker the Individual tuft. the better: the cli»er each tuft to the next. the be'tter. Also, look at ttfe back of the carpet to see whether t.ifls are well anchored. WAU.-TC).WALL carpeting can Ue very expensive because of hlgh installation costs and it has disadvantages in cleaning and in your Inability to tum the carpeting to spread out wear. If you're just st.arting out or if you must move fairl y frequen1ly, ·just buy nlS! or carpet tiles. What can you do if you have trouble with your new carpet and ro.ur dealer will not remedy It? Ftm -wr1tl! to the manufac- turer. TMn -write lo the nearest Better 8 us I n es s Bureau. '. Fifteen out of every 100 A merlcans today, '.own stock. We couldn't prove it, of course, but it s e e'M s likely that the percentage is even greate·r here . in the Or· ange Coast area ... and it's growing every day. That's why the DAILY PILOT was proud, years to ago, be the first newspaper in Orange County to bring readers "today's final stocks today" via super high its ) speed wire services. We're still doing it in every home- del ivered edition and the service gets better all the time. " Wa II Street's compute rs "ta I k to" ~ o m p u t f:l ,rs in the DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate of more than l,000 words per minute; It takes only 12 minutes to move the , en.tire New Yo rk Qfld American ' Stock Exchal')ge reports from the canyons of Wall Street to the typesetting machines oi the DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Ceast. And w'h en .. technology finds a way to beat that speed record , the DAILY PILOJ , no ·doubt, will be among the firs t to use it to bring readers "today's action today." When it comes to financial news, the one that .means ' • business is the I • .. • • ' I • ' ' ' . -- I . ' .. · TH.E · . ' ARE COM.ING July 18 through 21-South Coast Plaza \.--'C./ - • • UILD~-Y-OUR GARBENSTANGEL QUICK AND ENlER T IN THE BUILD .A BETIER .: GARBENSTANGEL . . CONTESllllf INTERNATIONAL RALL YE . ' ' ' • . I • • -. . AGAIN! ' \, • CUT CORNERS • . / ' " -#I " ,' ........ . # I ## I # I ### I ,,' Yes, I , ,' will build a ,, ,' Garbenstangel , ,,' or launch a search ,,' for one I can put into , ,,' shape for exhibition at , ,, the rallye. ,, -, ,, NAME _____ _ , ##ADDRESS ------ # # # CITY ZIP ' PHONE I " ·M•ll to : • I , '-.# ''omotlon Mlfltltf', DAJl.Y PILOT, '-0. lox 15'0, Cotta Me11 , C1hl. 12121 II ··-·-·······--···················· ~ ' • • • 11 A~ IJ~Lf PILOI QUEENIE Monday, July 10, 1973 -By Phil lnterlandi ' ....£ -.. • • Railroad Tank Car Probe Says ~ost Unsafe in Heat ' PHOENIX (APJ -Railroad special Inside Jnsulation to not make final estimates until com~anies wer41 told las~ yeai:_ 5revent ~rheatin!_in the he hU :nore ~orm~tion. that propane tank cars were esert. he sa . Tn an artt& on the C8l!pan Wf --1--tmsiifITOO pos..;ibJreilulctlcatt -He-said that the-Kingman--1'esearclL..in.. the.. laboratory: to explosiOM under bot, desert tank car explOllllM probably publication ' ' Res ear eh conditions, a nation a I stemmed from overbe~ting ln· Trends.',. Vassallo said: researcher says. side-the car;-The propene-p "The aafety-valves.Jnstalled The researcher,......also said bably expanded, was expelled in today's cars had not that 17 ,000 unsa~ tank cars through the valve and ignited prevented such cars from e~ are in service today which are as it struck air. he said. • ploding in derailment fires. similar to one which blew The researcher ls Frank A. Specifically, the Calspan team apart In Kingman this month, Vassallo, head of the heat found that today's valve is . killing nine persons and ii)· transfer section of Calspan undersized. juring 70 olhers. Corp. of Buffalo, N. Y., owned. "Re~xamining this original Two propane tank cars by Cornell University. ' data the researchers con- cw~'=.:::;:_,.-..- sEA •"d SKI Su11t•11 Lotlo11, 4 01 .•• , , , , • , • , ••• , •• $I ,10 Joh11•011'1 IAIY POWDER, 14 01, • ••·• ••••••••• ,. 1.29 --~ -11tOMO-SEt;-TZER;-6-\IJ at. , ,-, , •• ......---.-•• -...... -... ~.-----1..19 __ ,__ .lJ.~-1---.!!~-- Cltiral "FINAL NET' Htir Spr•v. I o., , . "' ... , ... · Z.25 2700 E. Coast Hitbwav. at Femleaf, Corona del_ Mar • m AMPll PAlllNG IN kU.R Houn -9:10 • •:OO Dolly CloMd SuftMys •II HollcloYl 644-75'75 Jcaked T h u r s d a y in El The basic ~search on the eluded tha.t. the requirements Centro. About 400 persons valves, he said in an interview ~eed mod1f1cat10.n along two were evacuated from the area, here. was • conducted by hoes.: To .provide for the but there \Y8S no fire or ex-Cornell laboratory for the llkel~hood. m. a large scale\~iiilimm plosion. Vederal Railroad Adinistration dera1!ment fire ,· of greater last year. .heat input to tank cars, and to TllE RAILROADS knew last take into account the possibili-c i.. ... , , .... , .. s,~.1~.1-. r.,., 191), ~10.i~ ,., • ., ,_ .. ,~. ·-, ··This outfiL doesn't believe in 'phasing ouL' Here, you 're either in or you're out." ycar that the present tank ca r • lllS C0!\.1!\.1ENTS on the ty that liquid -rather than v~lves should be replaced with Kingman explosion, he said, v~por -may be venting different types. or one con1-were based on preliminary in· through the valve 0£ an ' blnation valve. along with formation. He said he could overturned car. Typlioon Hits 2 Ships GARBENSTANGLES ... _, HONG KONG W}'l) -Ty- phoon Dot took dead aim st Hong Kong and the China coast today, driving two big ships aground in the colony's harbor and blastlig the area \l'ilh heavy \1•inds. , •• Aro Not To Eat ••• July IS.21st At 10:40 p.m., the No. 9 ty- phoon signal was hoisted. in- dicating winds of more than 72 miles per hour \\'Cre ex· peeled Y.1lhin a rev .. hours. 5oufh Coast ?laza Play The 4dvertising Game To Win ' \_ With This Rule: 1 Choose · The · No-Lie Pie / ( .. -~-· \ ·, ~:·-....... \ •. , . ... ...... ........... _ '":' ·. .. ... °\\ ... '• • • ., ....... -... -. :. . \ . ___ : . . . . .. ... .. .......... .. . . . . ... . ··: --~ • ' . , ' • • • • • • • ' . • . ·. . . equal ~ · · opportunites With two seemingly equar' advertising opportunities available, how would you decide which was to carry your sates nlessages? We have a suggestion-take a few minutes to find out just how seemingly equal they really are. Ask questions-how big is their circulation audience? Where do readers live? How much do they pay? And others. Then ask for proof! Ask to see a copy of their latest report from the Audit Bureau of (firculations. Equal opportunities? Be ABC-sure! I ' ' SUMMER FABRICS GROUP #1 ASSORTED Good Selections of cottons and cotton blends. VALUES TO $1.29 YD. MACH. WASH 36"/45 " WIDTHS l yds. for GROUP #2 44.45" Polyester/Cotton • VOILE PRINTS 44.45" roly115fer-/C•tto11 0 SEERSUC KER PRINTS 44-45" Polyesrer It.Ms • ASST. BUTCHER WEAVES 44·45" Poly~t•r/Cono• • DAN RIVER HOY A 50-52" Acotcrt• Nylo11 • • RIBBED LOQP KNITS 44-tS'' Cotton • DUCK PRINTS & SOLIDS -96'. ~· VALUES TO $1.98 YARD MACH. WASH YD • GROUP #3 44·45" Do11 llttf Polyetter/Cotto11 • NUBBY DAN PLAIDS 44.45" Polyester-/Conofll Do11 Rlffr "SM1u1111daoh" flt SPORTS STRIPES 44·45" rol,..,.../Cottori • DENIM STRIPES VALUES 'To $1.49 YARD MACH. WASH ·99< • YD. I \ GROUP #f S-T-R-E-T-C-H ' ·TERRY STRIPES VALUES TO $3.98 YARD COTTON /NYLON 58" I 60" WIDE MACHINE WASH GROUP #5 UPHOLSTERY FABRICS VALUES TO $5.98 YARD LARGE ASSORTMENT 54"' WIDE l yards JOO for II HOUSE OF ~ll BRICS e · atways first quality fab'rics ~'"" c.. ,.._ l rhto/ ti S•n Dieto hoy, Cow MtH -1,41· 1 IU 0 ,.....,.., Mell - Or•n9ithotp• tnd H•rbor F11ll•rte11 -S26·22J4 _ ..... I 1tlri •I l ri1tol j S.11hl A" -MJ-55 1 I••" PM CY94'tof Lt Ptlm• •I St•nto11 ...... '•tk -121·6121 • 1, J I " ~ i .. i : : • I • I ' I f. ' \ = ... i i • : • • i ( ! ~ • ' ~ndian Guides loaned the ' ickiup where students ulie Carrido, Andy Ellerson, ina Gu errero and Ruth ch illing I from left, below) tudy Gabrielino Ind ians. • I • baily ilot Budd ing biologi st squ ints into microscope to study ha tching of ' one-cell ed an imals , part of school'• oc ean projects. • ~oto• ticha~d t oehler • II Moore a nd Rich ard Munn I at right ) perform puppet show in cultural arts portion ·guided by Da"rryl Fontes . • • • ... ----, . . • I • ,. _6men _· BEA ANDERSON, Edito• M ..... .,, 'IJIV 16, ltlJ I' ... U Is the pre•ent ·a clue to the future of the Newport Beach- Costa Mesa area? Buffy Skee looks at 'sign pollution' examples I left) on Newport Avenue . Canyon School summer program studies the community. SChoOI Equals Fun Community Discovered By ALLISON DEERR Of .lht D1ily Piiot Stiff Summer school plus child re'n equals boredom. .\"ol any longer_ Canyon School. Co~ta .\lesa. h:'.ls a llC\\' equation. Stunmcr school C{1uats fun . Princip;1! Les Fcrgusun and a dedicated staff feel 11 y,·ill add up to bet· tcr reading skills. ht!:!hcr test scores and a better sense of co1n1nunity. • • The concept is simple. Goals of the summer prog ram arc to reinforce the learning \.\'hich took place .during the regular school year and expose the children to all aspect s of the. Costa t\lcsa- Nc1rport Bcar"h community. "Studcnls arc not labeled or grouped according 16 grade level.'' explained San- dy Bundy. faculry chairman. Children are grouped according to ages 5 to 8. 11nd the more mature 8 lo 12. sptc1al education n1ixccl "'ith regular cla S'scs. Th(' program is d1\·idcd 11110 six ureas rind i;;t udcnl s \I 111 mo1·c fmn1 one area ro ano ther. spenchng four da~ s 111 ('ach. Tht· sthoo! \\JIJ operate :i n10f1th. ending Au g J. Children participa!c from 8:30 a.m. Jo 2 p.m. and a hot lunch pro~ram is of· fcrcd . Other district su1nmer schools end at 12: 15 and run to the end of this month. The Canyon School approach is some11•hat unusual. Six areas, each headed by a teacher assisted by volunteers and student tutors. offer different looks at the community. \\lith i\lrs. Bundy. they dclvc into In· dian and Spanish cullurat influences on the area. A 1·isit to tneS<' 1110 classroon1s offers a "'ickiup: a metate. found on the bluffs. for gnnd111g corn: 1101V\ 11·ith cla y. baskets and bcad·stru1g!Ilg. 1 VISUAL AIDS l::ach area has a lull complement of visual materials -films, filmstrips.1 slides -and there is ~ supply of books on each subject co\·ered . '"Our philosophy is lo expose the child ren to th<: information through all of their senses. not just the \'isual reading. \\"c dec1drd no book." unless the children ask for them anrl they arc there as a source ... ~trs. i'otarjorit:> lluran's prehistoric set· ting includes a cave with logs for §itting. \Vhat better place 10 S"ee a (ilm on dinosaurs and exam111c fossil~!'.' There arc shell-: 10 examine and sort and a whale vert chra round on nearby bluffs CL:LTL"HAI. O l'Tl <l~S Cultural opportun111c<: ar<' 1·xplortd 11 ith Uarrvl Fnnte~. 11 ho in ;1 little theater seiting has brought puppetctr Del~\' Bro"·n. OCC lhc:tt<'r arts ma JOr Hob1.n Dodge . artist .lo~ec \;cndersk~· and <1 st ring quartet. The children sa"· a pa int 1 n g demonstration. felt and explored oil s aod "'atercolors. mixed colors and painted . They try dramatics and each child makes a puppet during his slay in the cultu ral .area. Also on the agenda Is a trip to see a perfonnance of "'The llobbilt." Cultural \'isits are being tagged on a map of the city. The ocean :-nd ho\Y 11 affects life in the Harbor Arca is studied "ilh i'olrs. Kal'(llrc lfampton. Mer area has a "'Ide ni;;SQrlm~nt of shells, fresh and salt '''<Uer :lqunMums. films ~nd ~!ides on S<'alife and a \"aricty of illustrations on "'alls and ceiling. Each group 11·ill make a beach or prcscrve exCt1rsion . BUSINESS IDEAS Ken "';igncr's group spends lit!le time at Canyon School. for bus1nrss and in· du stry 1hey go out into the community. 1\Cll\ 111cs ha1·e 1ncludl·d a cornparison of thrl'c local shopping cen1ers -elevator~ 1rcrc a nc11 experience but escalators old ha! A look at boats and ships mean! a "i!tt to dory f1shennen. boat repair yard and a catamaran builder. Speakers from the community "ill be featured . \\'ilh Nancy i'o·lunn the s1udents look in· to !he future. Visils to the community "'Ill include police dcpart1nent, city hall and planning commission. They arc stud~'ing. the teacher e~;. plained. 11'atcr rccyctins. soil and soil erosion. city planninA and smog. S!udents each dPs1gnccl their o"n city ;ind fol1011·inj;! dio;cu~sions dealt 11ifh architecture. ho11' c;ich dl'Sign arrccted !he cla.~s and hO\\ trH·y felt about it and ho"· architec:u n· t0t11 ~l\l' a ci!y 1ts particular pcrsooahty . l'OLLt:TIO.\' • One d1 ~play l" :od\·ertising sign pollu· l100 along :\'e"wrt Avenue. They al!o did rood color tie dye Of1 paper to"·els n1ade from rec~'clcd paper. Extra activities in the artemoon are cooking and sev.ing. "·ith :\lrs. Buf\dy and i\lrs. Haran and creative dance by thl!: re creation deJ?<lrlffienl. · The local libraries staff a library pro- gram and !he Ci'.! Department of Leisure services a .recreation program. The "department is sharing 11s bus for ex· cursion transportatioo and the Jolly Knigh t rcstaorant, Carden Grove, is lend· 1ng its doublcdccker bus for several cornmuni!y \"i<:it s. "\\'c bcgnn plannin~ lhe program last ~lnrch." i\lrs. Bundy said. "and have, n1('r e\ er\· "ee k 51111:c · The !ilaff of six tc:1chcr!'< ·design1'{! the scuings for each study nr('a 1hcn1sch·l'"· on !heir O"ll llm<'. \ VOLt:'.\,-f.ER ll ELP There 1s one paid aide. six teachers and a dedicated \"Olun1eer Slaff ''.!il•ithout ""horn \\·r couldn't do ttus much," ~lrs. Bundy added . Success \viii be measured by the: Califonua Readirig Test, administered last spring and again next fall ; by teacher-<l~veloped pre-and·post tests and parents' C\•aluation of attitudinal changes with regard to schoof and the com- •munil y. ·•101,· do the childre n like the prograrn! Ask 1' cl aym!lker. or a boy \vho hAs ju!H cxpJored a ca1amaron, or a "child making his ov.n "fossi l!!" from plaster d. paris~ "It 's fun ." And th~y 'rc lcam1ng. • • • -· ... • \ . .. 11 .. tJ ' Monday, July l~ 1q73 J lf -... ' • Horoscope: New Deal· Indicated ·for Taurus Blind · Make .:up · Cited NE\V \'OltK (UPI J -Have you ever tried to freshen lipsUck in the -dark or apply blusher to cheeks without a n1irror? Then yoo unders tand makeup problems or-btimf \\•on1cn. ·· Unless they ,.have special assistance rrom a sighted person, ttle blind \\'0111en of all I ages ai'e. helpless. But they have the same desire the sighted wo1nen have -stein· ming from natural vani1y. They "'ant to put their bt>st race fonvard -impro\•inc their appe:i rant'f! y,•i1h lipst1ck, blusher and even eye makeup. The problem of th e blind v.·o men is tackled in" a booklet , tilled "The Art ot ~·lake up for the Visually Handicappt..>d." It cpmcs in large type and braille editions. The large type version is for the women with enough vision who can 1nake out such printing. Dorothy Pirozzi, the author or the New York Association for the Blind The Lighthouse booklet. was a fashion model before losing her sight. Techniques described were developed through her own e1· perience, b6th as a blind woman and as a teacher or bllnd young women. She said the pamphlet grew out of the eipressed need of young "-1>1'1\8n attending rehabilitation classes at the agency. They wanted assistan· ce with their · make-up prob- letns. .. lttrs. Pirozzi is an instructor now in the Lighthou s~ R e habUltation Department. She had as,,istance from Ethel Browne of Eµiabeth Arden in drawing up the basic in· s1Th~ttcises help th · Pirou.i says in the booklet':ii ·Woman become f w~h int.ro<fuction. her face and to the bai\c "I felt it was just' as im- strokes otlons used iri portant to maintain a good ap- cleans and making up . pearance after losing my sight "Because 1 had been a as it was when I had vision. faahton mode.I before losing , "I have discovered various my sight. I was very aware of methods of applying my own the lmportance of a good make-up that demonstrate physical <appearance," Mrs. that a blind person can make To avoid disappointment. prospective brides are ren1inded to have their \\•edding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De· partment one week before the \Vedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcemenls it is -imperative that the story, also accom panied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding dale; otherwise it will not be published. TUESDA y , -CANCER (June 21-July 2'1: Dig ror r .. ts. Avoid needle JULY 17 You may be flailing away In brooding. Pl1cn, VI r I~ too many directions. Ha~ fun, penoM"llllY be tn picture.~ --'-7':..1--,J:xuSYllXJ!JN!!t:Y<I...cO!llMARll~!!!...--!!":.!lt!J~r;~ curiolllly but know --lWllTlilUJi• •N~ ... Where abn!wdnesa la con-w ~to --ataw llN!:-wteans · ~-. cemed, I 'would have to chooee strive for inaturity and ,degree %1): Pay close at tent Im Virgo and-Scorplo-u heading of teU-dislclpll.ne. Mon e y call1, messages. Opport.uni the list. Natives of these signs agreement Wlth mate, pai'tiie1' cOUl<f be on 'horizon. Rela make a remarkable te&m, is in offing. who is older DUIY impart - up as well as any sighted person." ~ - In her classes since the start of her neW career back in July of 1971, Mrs. Piroizi said she has stressed the use of light make-up with emphasis on natural, fl attering shades that enhance a _person's own skin tone. 'Ibis fesults in a natural appearance. "From my own experience and that of my students."' she tells v.·o mcn reading t he booklet via their fin gerti ps in t!ie braille edition. "I can assure you that when you J('a rn lo make up your face. you will both feel and look n1ore fem inine and atiractive. "And ~·hen you know you look your best. you y:il\ feel more confident. I. cannot stress too n1uch hO\'I im- portant appearance is in a sighted "-'Orld." The booklet contains lips on t J •• UPI T....,_ Blin d <1uthor Dorothy Pi roni" appl ies li ps tick to stud ent. She's devel oped m<1ke -up t echniques for the bli nd . problem skins, on fingernails, on hair and directions on a simple face. .and neck t.rea't- ment. · The latter is to cleanse and stimulate skin and · remove dead-skin cells. It aJso aima to help keep skin clear and young-looking. The tips on problem skins are just like those for women who are not blind. To wit : -Cleanse your face thoroughly tv.'ice a day, in the morning and at bedtime. -Do a thorough job in areas lvhere excessive oil tends to accumulate and w h e r c blemishes tend to appear - this is the T-zone: across the forehead, down the nose, and on the chin. The directions for ap- plication of lipstick \Vithout seeing go like this: -Remove the top of the lipstick and , in order to expose the lipslick, slightly twist the bOttom section of the tube clockwise. You should expose only a smaU amount of lipstick-so it will not break while you are using it. Check with your finger to see bow much is ex- posed. -Gently feel the outline and shape of your lips \vith the fingers of one hand. Find the cen ter of the upper lip. Feel tbe natural lines of the lips as they extend toward the cor· ncrs of the mouth. The rest of the lipstick dirtttlons include use of the Index finger of one hand to help guide the lipstick. At rtrst, Mrs. Pirozzi said. the bllnd woman will n eed someone to check lipstick and pther make-up. Once she becomes skillful, the checking isri't necessary. capable or putting acrOss Ideas LEO (July 23-Aua. 221: signlflcant news. Short trip. and produc t:ii. Emphasis ls on ties of errand may be main part o[ permanent nature. Avoid snap agenda. Investigate. Ask ques- ARIES (March 21-April 191: decisions. Key now is to lions. You can obtain answers. You iet rid of burden which ev~luate, to be a~re of fine CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J~ • has been a weight. You have pomts, details. Walt, observe. 19) N f . . 1 4• chance to be more gregarious. Let others show their hands. : ew I n a n c I a ar ! You finish. You could receive Be a1ert to legal pitfalls. Ob-rangement may be deslrabld'. acclalm. Popularity increases. tain e.1pert counsel. ~ 8f!d neteS!&J'Y. Road.bloc~~ Accent is on £riencf.ol, hopes VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): lS. ~ved. Could be clear and wishes. Give yourself a Some of your natural talents, sailing If you refuse to sell chance at happiness . abilities can now be pro-yourself short. Ari~, Ubra fitably utilized. Your sense -0f persons. ~Id play 1~(btan~ TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ): knOY.ing, perceiving becomes roles. Ftrush task, assignment. Spotlight is on new deal in evident. You find reasons. And AQUARIUS (Jsn. 20-Ftb. worJ:c , career aspirations, you will also fin<Hhat you are 18): Highlight independence, general standing in com-especially a t tr a c t i v e to ori gin.ality. . Get go in~ on munity. Views are vindicated. member or opposite sex. favorite pro1ect. Your timing, You also attract envious LIBRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 22 ): intuition and j~dgment are on persons. Keep guard Good lunar aspect coincides t~rget. Know 1t and. ~ oon- protect your interests. Speak now with chance for pro-fident. Leo person n11ght play in forthri ght manner to one ductive. changes. c r .. " t i v e prominent . role. D i. s p I a~ "in charge." ,..... endeavors. Your vitality im-shown1a11sh1 p. No tune for GEMINI (May 21-June 20 ): presses .. Personal magnetism false modesly. Favorable lunar aspect now soars. Young person could ..... PISCES (F'cb. 19-March 20 );) coincides wit.h1 d Is tan c e , look to you as example. No You fcr'i'et out informatioQ.l) educa tion, travel, the ability to time to take ba ck seat. \'ou obtain what is neededi t perceive future trends. Your SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):. S!udy Aquarius n1 essa ge{J intuition 'viii be sharply honed. Ascent on property, building Refuse to be th1varted byt You teach and · learn. You process. Older familymember doublS, fears. Yo;,;'re going t~f could be revit alized. Fa1nily could be coloring facts with no accomplish -vote· of cort-{ member pa ys worthwhile malicious intention. Allow for fidencc co1nes fron1 unusua~ compliment. nights or fancy-and fantasy. source. Be receptive. } Plann ing Ses sion 1 Diet Foods Prepare'd l Demons t ration A demonstration of an asSortment of entrees timely for summer diets wi!I he presented at 10 a.Ill. \Ved· nesday, July 18, in the Weight Watchers Center, Huntington Beach. Presenting the program will be ?\1rs. Susan Beigbeder, Dames de Cuisine c h e f . Dames de Cuisine is a how-to- cook program started by members \Yho successfully lost weight themselves a n d who could share their ex- pertise in food preparation. Secretaries Traffic problems involved on tlie Municipal Court level will be the topic of John H. Wyatt Jr., general commissioner lor \V est Orange C_ount y J\1unicipal Court. / fie 'l'ill speak fo\loy,•ing a dinner meeting of the Jiarbol" Area Legal SecretariPs at 6:30 p.m .\Vednesday, July 18, in . F ·r a n co i s restaurant, Hun- lington Beach. Atlooding the national con· vention in Holly\vood, Fla . Ju- ly 21-27 \viii be Norma Ever s m eyer, ?\1arlene Walgren, lris Does, Phyllis Salyer and Maril~ Grogan. Art Group A still life demoristralion in oils will be given by ·Mary catdin for lhe Artists Associa- tion of Huntington ·Beach North. - The meeting will convene at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, July 18, Assoclationof Un i'V e r s i l y \Vomen. Dates and places for the gatherings are Thursday, July 19, the Fountain Valley hon>e of l\1rs. John E. Schultz; Au J. the \Vestminster home J\1rs. Richard Bushnell, a Aug. 15. !\1rs. D. Craig lloganJ \Vestminster. PWP Sunset Harbor C h a p t e r '.!t Parents Without Partners~ meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jul 20, in the Meadowlark · try Club, .H'untingtori Bea ; for a business sessiOn, folio ! ed by dancing. \ ~ ' . in the Murdy 'Park Community == Center. Ol.D o u NI Aging Turns Sweet 16 Bitter Members will have an out· door art show at Saddleback Square, Orange on t he weekend of July 21 and 22 . AAUW II MANNING'S COLLECTORS SiiOP ~ DEAR ANN LA NDERS : I am only 21 years old and have been married fi\'e years. f\1y husband ;"•ho is 27, is carrying on "'ith our babysitter. She is 16. I became-Buspicious y,•hen it took him an hour and a half to drive her home. She Jives six blocks from here. 1 found motel room receipts in his pockets (how dumb can you get?) and a bill for perfume came to the house. He __________ _,. :::::-;.:-"-=-=-=--'====-=-=-=-=.!'"aid he bought it for his mother. His r mother doesn't even know what perfume To help fill requirements on both \red· din~ and engagement stories, forms are available in all the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by \Vomen's Section staff members at 6424321. '4'rite another letter for 16-year-4>lds '4'ho think they are malure enough l.v get married, be my guest. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Four years ago we moved to Albuquerque. We have a lovely adobe house with a spacious back yard and the air is fresh and in- vigorating. fl1 y pafents. who live in a sn1all apartment in'Thc heart of Newark, have been driving oul every August to spend a week \Yith us. Before they pull up they always sto1> at a 1narket, load thci' car with steaks, chops, fruits, vegetables and canned goods. They also insist on taking us to dinner at a fine restaurant the night before they lea ve. One could hardly call them free-loaders. l I WHY BE SHY ••• AO 1;11bo11t prnc,lptlon pricffl Call 642-4104 Is. \Ve had a long talk a 1nonth ago and he swore he had stopped seeing the girl and I thought it wa s settled. I should ha ve kno~·n better. He is such a liar I can't get a straight sentence out of him. Divorce is out of the question. Our religion allows one marriage, lousy or no!. J-c\A cmorrs 1 SPORTSWEAR (ME~HOP ] The girl is considered a minor in this state. Can I do anything through the J90 1. 17tll 5t. Gt T••tl" •••.-!courts to break them up? -ONLY HIS •• '' '. R.lp .. Mk'. -WIFE • eTilf 'Pll1.a 171h and Irvine, • ] Coste Mn.s 642-4104 DEAR ONLY: You can bave your bus· C'A'pon eai:fl.Califomia92660 .. '" ,. , , '' , 1 • ~~~~~~~~~~~!:==-=~=·=",,'"="=·=·=-='=·=='='lband put In jall, but what good would _ that do? flly advice 15 to gel some EXPERTLY CLEA' NED " ' ' ~~:~ MOST PANTS, SKIRTS, SWEATERS 49¢~ GI All ADA MIW liOD Cll1!1•"'1h ~~ l':'OllANU ..,.,.n.~1 .Ir.! llJWTliOn!f WOODLAllD MIW 21 !IOO Vrr:!or, B •C LlKlWOOO ~ ...... >1 t P~1i"MI B'li. llYllSIDt JSlO 11:• St IUlNA 'All( A1..,r -0 Or~&t!~?. SANTA A"A 3900 )Mt. Brl\~~I St OIANGI Gsrdt~ C·~,, 111,d llld liill(;Mit# Ott1t wtt klll1y1 91JO ft 9t3f -S"'ndciy1 10 to 7. counseling and decide if you want tu share bed an d board with the bum . The Church doesn't insist that you live wilh a man "'ho acts rotten. Interesting that this girl Is exactl y lhe age you "'·ere "'hen you married hin1. If you'd Uke to Doll s Wa nted GARBENSTANGLES ... ••• Do Soril1thln9 •.• Mo1t Do Noth ing South Coast ?tua ' My husband, Karl, starts knocking lhein mid-July. After they leave I have to listen to his smal~ digs for another two weeks. Neither fltom or Dad has an ounce of malic(" in them . They are lovely, big-hearted people. I can't understand why Karl dislikes them. His folks are a couple of sou r apples. At our \Vedding h.is father anct n1other • Confidential to Grown-Up Girl Who Wants To Learn From. Experience: Th is is one experience you can live without. I am dead set against any mind-altering drug. YOW" ,friend has been very fortunate. I hope she doesn 't push her luck. Flashbacks can occur as late as several months after the dosage. Do you feel awkward, self-conscious - lonely ? \Velcome to the club. There's help for yoo in Ann Landers' booklet "The Key to Popularlty." Send 3S cents in coin with your request and a long, stamped. self-addressed envelope to the Daily Pilot. • OV~WEIGHT? 56 LB. LOSS IN 40 DAYS Under Medical Superviiion at the . · Omega Clinic HOU RS: 9:00 · ~00 CALL FOR AN · APPOINTMENT COST A MESA ANAHEIM So\NTA AN• l'uller!Wl·LIHab•• '"' .....,.,, IU• w. adwy , l)tnTviUftAWI (714) 870-9347 i46·1633 778-4$41 547-6329 !.~\~!?;,!7!,!. • /IA/JfTS •WEIGHT •SMOKING •DRUGS • SLiiEP ' ' 0 1 j ·1 • /loADACl/ES , WID., JUlY 11 1:00 ,.M. THUii.., JULY 19 1:00 P'.M. I UN .. JULY 2.2 2:11 A.HD 1:00 P'.M. Tiit M•rl"'° 11"1" DU• Pfl"'I II Alklh ltt1l1"'rt1tl $an J..,, C•'11"- ''ft Cit-le ln11 Stft Cit-I• .. '• • AMBLER TUMBLEWEEDS •, OH-DH! • llT'S EWI! • I AIN'T 1 GO IN'! ' MUTT & JEFF • OH.GOSH, iMA.T CAR. N.EAR.\..Y RAl'I OVER MY SU<.E INTHEGUTTER.' cJUST A SECOND, YOUNG MAN/ WHERC. AA.E ytilJ GOING? FIGMENTS NANCY ·• ' TODAY'S CRDSSWDID PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Plant fluid ~ T1ophy of ! victory 9 loud shouts 14 Constellation 15 T11nker 16 A Kennedy 17 Misleading 19 B1ight 20 Nol moving 21 Calendar abbrevlation 22 TYornidio 23 Deserve f" Stalk of I thr~sh&d : gr~1n 126 l air ~ Time1one i l tabbr.I p1 Before fl2 Markm1de \,., by use I Yukon's neightllbr BS Obunite jl8 Mr. Lintoln B9 Kind of pie jll Draw in do11 ~ Penc~11nd U Swarm ~ Equines k1 Emplayer '9 New Ze1l1nd I aborigine SO Greek letter !11 0 .A.S. member I 2 ' " 17 " " pc "' » " " " " » ~ .. "' - " 29 - S2 Singtr 54 CivU wrong 58 Rest on chair 60 Ribbed labfic 61 Tfet Saturday's Pu11te Solved : 62 Neighbor of Ouebec 64 Thick sweet syrup 66 Purgative drug 67 Matured, as coin 68 Oltawa- Was_hington VIP: Abbr. 69 looks alter 70 Cabbage dishes 71 Saigon holiday DOWN , 13 Son of 37' Revelry • sneaky 40 Rids of dirt 1 ·-·-Hawkin• 18 Mr.Ford .•2 Chattered D1y 24 Eye intentty: 45 AsOestos, 2 Forum or 2 words for one Garden• 25 Under the 48 Wrec.ked 3 Harn.eu ······<Unwell •53 Muskal racing ho'• 27 Fur-bearing perforrnanc.e " Dog S11r mammal 55 Poet 5 Civilian 56 Raja·swif• 6 ·-···of 28 Tall woody 57 ····-Canal : plants 30 Card game 33 Show off; 2 grievances 7 Voong h1fe 8 Ge11 read'{ 9 Mrs. Truman words 10 European city 34 ·····Rainer: 11 Foamy waves 1937 Oac1r 12 M1n'1 wWmer nickn1me 35 Slander ' ' • 1 'ii " " • I '1 " 1 21 • " " " " k " ' " '" ' .. " .. " .. .. .. . .. . - " - " .. " " " . " I ' 10 " " Ontario wate1cour11 SS ·Hardy girl 61 Rotte1s. 62 Wrestler'• milieu 63 Pub product 65 Not old II It " l.o .,, lJ " .. " '' ,, •o, .. .. " " " . 'I -n . J .PEANUTS JUD.GE PARKER . ' " [W'~ . ~--::::::-·· --... ,.j, by Tom K. Ryan by Al Smith Hole by Ernie Bushmiller TAKE TWO ASPIRINS AND ·%~LM~~~N~ • WHAT Al2E r.(00 FISMIN6 FO~, (OllJ'LlMfNTS ? M;l'ld•'f, Juty lb, l'llJ OAI LY PILOT J 5 DOO LEY'S WORLD J ~::-:J-~~··r-::s::-::::=:~ FIN&,MAX! Ml''U.,,~MR -A>IO<I'"' ll> ~ ..... ' ANvn11,.,,c;! M'!i Hli'S NOr>otw SIJJ4DA Y YoO'I.• SF A FAMOUS" MUSICIAN! ' Mm/ING!. .. J ~:::::,,.._ _ _.., µ1 .¥.· rAM011S? • YbU 60 l'r"A SE J.:IJ)()IN~'~! ;;,~5"1 SALLY BANANAS atwaYs ia.Me...BeR.KID,Ler a 51'11le Be YoUR UM'PRella ' BuT o oN'"t ee a SILLY. CWM5Y PeR5(>1) a1110 PurJcH $aA'l!ONe 11v T!1e eye tJITH IT. • -llkhl(, ',) by Charles Bar5otti efU,~eYNe\/€.R LlsTeN •.. tiFiel2~l £. You CaN leaD a HoR~ j o (.JaTeR BUT YoV Ci!N'T Ma Ke HIM . Bllf\lf( UNLess Miln.e Yoo l-llT H1~ IN 1He Nose t..JtTM q tARGe PtcKLe Or;! .:iij S~t.L PeRsOl'll. ~ •7',N~~.t .i . .,._s ~ ... ,..e<~.t'l'C ---------' L-"""' '-------_:::::.__....:..<:,:;~~!:"""'-~=~-....J GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS ~,I NEVER S•EEP IN CHURC~ ,ANYMORE, TEDDY I by Gus Arriola ., ;1 r."'SP'IJ;JG ' O/tJ ~~ IN THIE JioJrEJ< E.S T OF -'<:A TtON.AL ii @:lJ1'JT'lf :1 by Ferd Johnson WELL,Ji.,5 ONE CONSlt>E$lS 'Tl-+E PoSSIB/LltY OF A FIN.AL EXAM• ONE iENC>S 10 po A .in•E CRAMMING- by Roger Bollen B'ECAOsE <.tll) {)Se LEQS. fltllsa.ES 10 SMIU! 1Hi\IJ TO FROlllll I ~ 0 0 by Charles ~· Schulz THE GIRLS .-----.. -. -.. --. --~-.... ~-· ·-. -"" by Harold Le Doux I 'LL FEEL 6ETTER KNOWING THAT YOU'RE HERE, EIET5Y ! WHEN A68EY AGREES TO I.ET 6ET5Y STAY AT r-1- SPENCER FARMS LASSITER'S SURE TO CONTACT THE PARKERS W HEN HE DOESN'T HEAR FROM YOU! PERH APS WE CAN HAVE HIM 8EL1 EVE YOU'VE M t:ANVIHILE STI LL NO WORD FROM HER! I HAVE TkE UNEl\SY FEELING THAT LITTLE 8ET!1Y MAY 8E PLAYING ME FOR A PATSY! LEFT TOWN! SAM DRIVES ' i HER TMERE! MISS PEACH l -- 1 " ! '-~ ; - :tRA, DO YOU. AND YOUR: ~HE"' HAVE AN INTFNSE 5181..N' ll:IYAf./tY ? DICK TRACY , OH, YES. 1-<1' 519CES A 10T IJllTTElt THAN i Sl&l.e, l!IAT l '1"- 81i TAKIN6 •ESSONS SOON, ON HOW TO ~IBU! 6E~lt. . by Mell t-rb p··one thing l'\'t learned from this tour, 50 far -it wu planned by somebody sitting at a d~k.'' DENNIS THE MENACE ~j 0 -- • • • 16 DAILY PILOT Mortday July 16, 197) '-----. Looli Out Halo Foe·s,-Ryan Says He~ll lmproye OE.."l'ROIT (AP> -~·Vroon1 ?" ··Exploding :" - "Super stuff ... super stuff ... su1>er ~luff!'• ''The best l'\'C even S<.'Cn ~" There \\'ere-as n1any descriptions or Nolan Ryan's J!itching Sunday as thc1·c v.·crc strikeouts by 1he California fla1ncthrowcr agriinst Oetroil. 'nut despite firint: hi~ SCl'onU no-tultl'r or the year and striking out 17 bat1crs. ll)e 25-yca.r-old right·handl'r insisted he h3s to v.•ork on his pitching. "I needed this because I 'l.'asn't pitch· Ing v.·ell. ··~ Ryan said after hurling 1he Ang<'ls to a 6.0. no-hit \'lctory O\~r the Tigers bclorc a C<ip Day crowd of '41..fll • a.I Tiger SHHl1un1 "I .,..·as up 1norc, than I ha\'e been becnuSf' nf tht> way v.e 'vc been los1n.lj 1 I wanted to throw a shutout," he !>Ri<.J. • R.vnn ~ca1neMIY the fiflfi n1a1rinint1· jor l(•11guc busl!boll history lo pitch '"'O no-hit111r~ In one season . T'A'O months ago to the dily h\' no-hit the Hoy::ils. Nu Pn1· has C\'t'r ht1tl tl1rec no-hit i::<H!l('" 111 ;i ~1nglc SC'a~rin 11 \I a-. lh(' third no·hittcr in the A1neril·an Lcag14F this yea r. The other 'A'JS ag:iii~~1 l>etro1t , n 3·0 victory ror ST('\(' Bu~h.1· nf lhc Hoya.ls on April 27 . "So l'\'t' thrown t1110 good games." Hyon ~.-i1d or !11.'!..2973 ,i.:rrns. "But look at 1ny ret:ord. J'm 11 ·11. I can'l look back and say 1973 was my btst year just b!.-esuse ) pitched 1111·0 no-hitters. .. , lmven't pilched as well i!S lasl year nnd I !etl I have to improve myself. 1 A11ge l• Slate All 06-11t kMf'C Ult} July u C!e"41i~l'd el C1lllOl'nl1 7~SS p'" JU!y ll Clevt'1'1CI er c11lt0<n•• 7:S) pm Jvlv II .,i. .. 11..-0 ,, C•lllorn•• 1:SS p.m. '~"-'-----­fel'I for thi s cl ub to stay in the pennant race I ha ve to do the job 1 'm capable of doing in lhe second half of the season ." A long delay, due to a rive·run Angel clghrh in ning, caused Ryan's ann to stirf. en soincwhat. He only struck out one batter the lasl two lnnlngs. "I lost 10111eth1ng ofJ my fast ball and "'8~ .• little stiff," the 6-foot-2, 195- JX(!Mer said. "I lost enough stuff in the laill two innings that I decided not to be conremed about sliiKeOUtS. waa grateful to get out of the game with a no- hilter." After the first seven inning!, Ryal} seemed fl cinch to break the league's nlne-.iMing strikeout record of 18, set in 1938 by Bob Feller ol the Cleveland In· dians. .. There 'll be another day," Ryan said . "I can't say !'in disappointed with my· sel f for nol getting the strikeout record." That wuu ld have added insult to injury for the!'J"lgers, Who had ~·on lhc first CtHftnill•~", fl rtl °'~ :1, fl rW three games of the series and were on a A1omt,, 111 J o t • Hortltrvp. tt 4 • • 1 five-game winning sLrtak, Zi~:... '1 11 ; : : ~ ~=~=~· :! ~ : : : ·''That wu the best I've ever setn ~ pl'I 1 o • 2 Cull. 111 • o o o , Slitflfan, tr O I O t $111\t. c 3 0 I 0 anrbo<:IY pitch... exclaimed lhc Tigers Epsltln. 111 ) I ' • Mt;,t.ulllle. :It! l 0 0 0 Dlek-'McAuJJffe, Who was jolnt'd by-fellow~ ; : t-~-~~~--~-:-\ l left·handed biller Duke Sims in striking G111.0,..r, iii ~ o 2 t E.llrllll.l'Nn ... s J o • o h . . t R s· 'd MIOll. H ' 1 ' 0 J .P.rry, p 0 0 0 -, out t ree times aga1ns yan. 1ms sru K11~v•r. c 3 2 1 o .kh.rm•n, P o o o o almost the !ame thing : "That's the best N.Rv•n, P o o a o I.Miiier. P o o o o Fanrwr.p 0000 I've ever seen." lt1•I• n ' • • 10111, 21 o o o They weren 't alone. Callfo<"nlo 001 ooo 0)11 -• De1tOll 000 000 000 -0 '"lllat's the best game I've ever seen OP -0t1roi1 1. LOii -c111tcll'nl• J. 0erroi1 • pitched. and it doesn 't t)ave to be a 18 -EP••tln. Mt<lll. SF,; Pl~Wfl,R l!R •• so no·hitter to be a well·pitchld game." said tt.Rv•n cw.11.111 • o o o • 11 I f Bobb · kl J.Ptrrv !L,f>fl 1.1/J s J 1 s l Ca i ornla manager y \Vin es. "lie S.:h..-.... 11 Ill o o o • o was much sharper today than in Kansas s ...... 111... o 1 ff l 1 o Fa'""'' l·lll 1 ff • I O City," "'·hen he fanned a dozen batters. l ime -l:)I. 1o11tne1•nc• -•l.•11 . Alston Has,. the Golden Touch LOS AXGELES (AP) -This. ap- parently. is \\'alter Alston·); yt"ar. E'·crything he touches turns lo gold . The Dodgers skipper recently put l\l'n McMuJlen in the lineup; 1\-lcMullen hit thrt-c home runs in lhrec games. He started Steve Garvey al first base and Garvey caugbt fire. And now Will ie Cra'A'ford. A starter half the season, CraY:[ord recently became a pla toon player. But no matter. SU{lday he bombed a three-run, wroog field homer to lead the Dodgers to a come'..from·behind 9-3 vie· tory and a three ga me sweep of the Eastern Division leading Chicago Cubs. The Cubs now lead second place St. Louis by only tv.·o games. Morton Says He's Willing To Call It Quits · THOUSAND OAKS CAP! -Digrunllcn quarterbad Chig Mortoo, \\'ho \\'alkcd out or the Dallas Cowboys' National Fodtball League training cainp in a con· tract dispu te. says he's wi lling to retire if the team's management isn't \rilling to renegotiate his contract. Morton said Sunday lhat he would nol report for team \\'Orkouts until his demands for a nflV contract arc met. A-1orton is currentJy in the final year of a three-year contract. "No. l v.•ifl not report tomorrov.·," the :Jn.year-old quarterback from the Universi ty o! California said Sunday. ··1 told them (management} that and they know that. 'Vbether the y belie\'e ii. I don't know." The nine-year National Foot b a l I ,.. Conference veteran, ~·ho is dueling Heisrnan Trophy winner Roger Staubach for the starting role, reported to the Cowboys camp oo Thursday. He staged his walkout the foll owing day after reaching an impasse in talks I with general manager Te.x Schramm on "just a Jillie more of a secure cootract.'1 A-lorton has said that if the Cov.1x>ys are unwilling to meet ,Jhis contract demands. he prefers to l>c lraded. "lJdon 't think it would serve any useful purJSose to let out what I'm asking for. I think it v;ould be best to keep it bet'A·een the Cov..ix>YJ and myself." said f\10rtoo, \\'ho lost his starting jol> to StauOOch in Dallas' super Bowl·winning 1971 season. "I'm still OOpeful lhat Cra\g wlll change his. mind," said Schramm. ''fie did ask me to pursue the possibiJity of a trade, but if this does not prove fcasihle, he indicated he v.·as prepared lo go into private business." The jeporting deadl ine for Cov.·boy veterans is tonight and Mor lo n , lcl'hnically. v.·ould not be liable tor disci plinary action until then. lt y;as the se\·rnth home run or !he seasOu fbr Cru11 rortl and his seventh a! 'hon1e. • .. You don't kno1,· ,1·hy they all come oil home : you ju..;t ).!O oul and do it.'' !'~id J11lp 1• Julp 17 July II ·Dodgers .'tlate An 0 -111 ICI': (.,.) LOS lo"""S II Plll•b\1•911 LO. A~lel II Plri.bi.rrVlt l06 A-In •I Plt!SDYrgll . } p "'· } p.m. l p.m. (,'rawford. "°"" hillin g .309 \\ith 38 runs balled in after.eight lackluster seasons 1vith the Dodgers. "The club waited for me a long time. Theil ... paticncc is mo·re responsible for the way I'm hitting than any adjustment ~ I've made.'' The Dodgers have v.·on eight or their last nine games and lead their division by seven games. "1'hl'y have a good number of pl<\_v~rs on 1he club 11·ho are older and they play evcr:ii da~' in Chi cago in lhat heal und it's got to t<1kc its toll," Dodgers catcher Joe Ferguson said of the fact that the Cubs arc the only major league team which plays no home night games. Cubs· coach Pete Reise r disagreed that the Cubs v.•ere; fading ho\\'ever. "Ou r guys are pros and they've been around," he said ... Our key pitcher is Ferguson Jenkins and he hasn't pitched the ball we know he can and our key n1t1n haven't been hitting. Billy Wlllia1ns hasn't been hitting and v.·hen he comes out of ii everybody else does ." • ·- SCRAMBLE AT THE PLATE -The Dodgers Claude Osteen slides in to home plate after colli sion with· Cubs catcher Ken Rudolph wh O 1ost the ball, then grabbed it back in time to tag out Osteen wh ose hand could n1t quite reach the plate. ----'----------~-~-- Simple Philosophy Sc ori1ig Mor e Points Most l1npQrtcuit Thi1i g By STEVE BRANO Of lttl OaltJ l':lltt llt ff i\e\v Rams head coach Chuck Kr10x can 1alk football \Vith anyone . but afte r all !h(' discussion over speed. s i z e . quickness super pl ays and super star~. he has on~ very ba.o;ic philosophy : "You can have the best offense or the ~st defense but it all comes do,vn to ?"e thi ng .. , do you \\'in?" says the lfunling· ton Beach re::ident of t11·0 'A'Ccks. "11le most important thing is to scorr mort! points. That's ;ill. l~ootl>ali is lull of deep talk . bul yflu hRve lo !'iCore more 111an the other learn." It sounds simple from the \'t tcrnn a~· !-istant coach 1\'ho calls th<'! llam!l his first head coachlnji! a~signmcnL He readily admit!! it's !ar. fr~ simple but 0 al !he same time he 1sn I \os1nR sleep O\Cr \l'GrTY about 11 n1nning or p;issing attack. "You have to do hrsl "'·har hurts the opponent most." he says. ''If you have lhc world's btst passing attack and meet a team ~'itb a super PBS~ defense, you bet~r Mve a running a1tac.k. "It's not a case o( hav1nR a balanced 1tllatt:"-That'a. just more talk. What yeu have to have Is v.'tiat the other team doesn't have and t.hat'1 what we plan lo ~:ork out In camp." • Knox was asked what he expecttd to get out of camp which really pteln up 10- d11y at C.I State (Fullerton l v.'hen lM veterans, u·ho c~kcd In Sunday, 5lart workouts. "I titive tour objec1ivcll," ht: uy~. "~y arr· ' -"\\'e want to ~1vc rvcry player !ht• opporluni1,v to provt•. he can m<1ke lhc team. \\'r \\'il nl nn rnisl<ikC'S like nn Ot is Sistrunk or /l;irold J;1c~,;;on. -"\\'e !>lrcss sound rundamentals. This is where ~ou can 11ork on basic parts of the game. -''\l.'e v.·anl lo gt'I all our ~:i.:· pcrhnenting over. Hy the !ime prescasOn and camp arc over, \\'l''ll have e\·eryone in a position and c1·er.vone 'viii kn ow every play.·· CHUCK KNOX -"\\'c 11·ill de\•clop n 11·inning attitude. \'ou ha\'C lo h:ivc this to "in and thl'rc is a price to be paid " All of the v.·otk, all of the hours . llll of the pain is for one goal to Knox. Anything Jess than victory is uoac· 'ccptablt•. ''So1ne people say if you play a good game <1nd lose it's all right," he says. ''If you lose it's never ~II right and you didn't play a good game.'' No first-.year coach ha s ever \VOn a Super Bowl. yet tMt Is Knox's goal. \\'ou ldn't he IX' sa1isifed v.·ith R division title "in one ol !he NFL'l> pre- mier divisions? Or even n solid "inner l'l flt'r a 6·7·1 record las t )'<':lr1 "We are aiming for the ulri mt1 10. Anylhing but lh.11! ultim:tl(' \\ill n1('a11 1ve dld,n'l ace<1n1p!ish our go:il." he s;i~·~ Knox says there are thrf'e key areas w~re the Rams rnu st Improve. "Our defensive secood:i rv Allowed 20 IOUChdo\.\11 pas._~s last yeaf and ranked 20th In lhe NFL.. Our firsl·round draft ehoict. o.rµcn Bryant from Colorado. reJlt'C!cd oor concern t~. "Our Unebacking must be Improved. The linebackers arc ex cellent but It "'111 be our job lo get them to "'Ork together more. They must be able to work as a telim. "We have to upgrade our orrcnsc. Thi:! naine of the gamt'.I 1, ~111 ixnllng more points on the scoreboord than thf ocher tt'n(ri. .. The 41-yenr-old ii;on of ~ch-lrlsh (See Kno~. PaJl:f! 171 Cftlc.,_ UI LU Mttlef If) ••,~rlll Mr~rtl Mond1y, cf • 2 1 0 LOCJH, tb S I 1 t 8e<~er1, tb • O 1 O lluc:~!ll<". II S 1 l O s.w111i.ma, tf 4 o 1 t w.O..vi•, cl 4 1 1 2 C••<IMal, rl • i:l 1 0 Ptclo•ell, ti 0 I D 0 Santo>. lb • o l I F•rv~JO<>· c 3 -2 2 2 Fanzot1a, 111 '.o 1 o w.cr.rwlord. rt ' 1 2 l IC~1IJ111e•. II • 0 , 0 G1rwy, lb 4 0 l l l:rll(IO!pll, £ • 0 0 0 Cey. lb 3 0 0 0 R~l,p 200 0Run 111,n 1000 Hlc.llm.tn. pl! 1 O O O 01!..,,, p 4 O I O AWc1r.p 0 000 LOCt•r, p o o o O C.Jimts, pl! I 0 0 0 T011L1 3' J It 3 TPllb l5 f 1J ' Clllcago !GI 000 010 -3 Loi ·~" OM 010 >ox -' E -Mondly, DP -Cl'tkl90 I, Los Al>Olln I. LOS -Clllcl90 6. LOI Anilele1 .S. 711 -Mond1v, e. WIUl•m•. w. Ct•wford, knlo. 311 -w. O.~IL HR -W. Crtwlotd 17). Sii - W. Diilis, IPM R ER•a 10 Reuschel (L,1°") 6 t 6 ' I J Aktt 14 3J IO Loc~er lO COC J 0 ,1,en (W,11·61 ' 10 J 3 o s HOP -by RtUS,1111 (Ru$1flt). Time -7:11. lllJtf\d.alKI -41.91', t\rm Operatio11 . - Helps .Bema11 Regain Form ROBINSON. Ill. CAP) Deane BE'man. noted i>r his brain rather than his bra1\·n in six years on the PGA tournament tour. says in winning the $125,000 Shrine·Robinson Golf Open he has completed his coovalescence. Beman, who underwent a delicate arm operation earlier in the year, said that he nov.• feels as if he is playinf so1id golf again and "that feeling well is really more re1\'arding to me than \\ipning a tournament." • The fonner amatew:: cl1ampioo, wbo left a successful insurance business in \\'ashinji!ton, JX: .. to join the pros at the age of 29. flasheCI a closing rn Sunday to take the $25,000 first prize by one stroke. Beman totaled 271-13 under par on the Crawford County O'.Juntry Club course. It \1•as his first tournament victory since the Quad Cities Open last year. Bunky lfenry. \vho \\'ent broke afler \1•inning only $455 at the Hawaiian Open earlier this 'year -his entire earnings for the season -and took a month off frol'Tl the tour to find a sponsor, shared second place with Bob Dickson. Dicksoo , winner of the Andy Williams San Diego Open this spring, and Henry pocketed $11 ,562 each for serond place. Doth made a final charge, closing with 'fi\'e-.under-par fl6s to card tournament totals or 272. Henry included an eagle 3 on the 12th and a birdie two on the 18th in hi s fini sh. Dickson bi rdied foor ool of five boles, starting with the lllh. in his bid. Veteran Dick Rhyan of Indianapolis, who v.•as in the 54-hote lead with Beman and Courtney at 204. ballooned to 77, Rhyan never has won 'a tournament. Be1nan birdied the second and third holes, "and this set me up pretty well.'' he said. "I also got a birdie on No. 9, and the only other one was on lJ1e,I4th. "But my key putt was from only 2"1 feet to save par on the 15th," he added. "ft \l'as a sh.ding, downhill litUe putt - one of those that can really get to you. I made it but after quite a bit of .study." wlnni~'JS In lht Contract Dispute IN SELECT COMPANY -Nolan Ryan (upper left) be<ame first ma· jor league pitcher in 20 years to throw two no-bitters in the same season Sunday. The last pitcher to do it was Virgil Trucks (upper righ t) of Detroit in 1952. Johnny Vander ?lfeer (lower left) did it in consecutive games for Cincinnati in 1938 and Allie Re ynolds..(lf the '51 Yankees was the Only otl}er pitcher to hold teams hitless in two nine.inning games in the san1e season. Meoll Didn't Shift Key · Strategy in Nint.h Pre~erved Ryan's Gem DETROIT (AP) -Normally opponents play left·handed hitter Gates Brown to pull the ball. In the ninth inning, California shortstop Rudy ~1eoli didn't make the usual shift but instead played backed up to the edge of the outfield grass. That might havr preserved Nolan Ryan's second no-hitter of the baseball season as the Angels beat the Detroit Tigers s.o. \\'ith one out in the ninth, Brov.n. who , had struck out once and \.\'alked t\.\·ice. hit a rising line drive \Yhich the 5-foot·9 A-feoli caught after leaping about a foot off the ground. "l thought it \\'as a hit," Ryan said , later. "When a line drive goes off the bat like that. ! fi gur.c it's a hit. But \\'hen I saw Rudy catch il. I really wanted to bear dov.·n on Cash.'' Norin ~sh \vas the ncxtr and last. Tiger baller. He popped a l·2 pitch to f\leoli . • On Saturday. ~1eoli leaped_ too soon on a line drive off the bat of Al Kaline and it \\·cnt over his head for a single. ''Yesterday, Kaline hit a ball just like Brown's," he explained, "but it had a lit· 'tie tail on it and I lost it in the stands ." ~1eoli said he talked his field posi· llooillg over with second baseman Sandy Alomar bctore Brown batted in the final frame Sunday. "I told Sandy I \.\'ould play back on the edge of the grass and he said he 'A'OOld too," f\leoli said. "If I hadn 't caught (ii ball, it wouldn't have been caught • anyone in the outfield." 'I'h<:re wru.n't another bait in the garym .fl\a t came close to being a hit. Ji~ Northrup had tbe most success. He fli oot three limes and struck out once. It "·as a happy day not only for Ry but also for Art. Kusnyer. \1·ho caught hif first no-hitter. lie also singled in I Lhird inning lo break an O.for·30 sir and eventually came flrowid to score only run Ryan needed. It ~·as his first. since May 5. ~ "lie threw fast balls for strik~ 'Kusnycr said of Ryan. "~lis fast ' seemed like they were exploding. Ev fas t ball "'ent vroom ." Logan Quits; Rams Report The Los Angeles Rams of the Nati Football Leagt!c said today they OOp€: lure veteran safety Jerry l..ol{an out retirement. but admitted they held lMll hope at being successful. ~ Brown Fails to Report ''.\\'crd' lik~ lo !.!Ilk him out of It, u·e'rc nof very optimi~lc.'' rt club sPo man said after Logan called the club urday and sai d he was rc!iring. CA llLISLf;, Pn. (APJ -Larry Drown, player of the year In the National Foot· ball League In 19i2, did not report to the Washington Re<bkins training camp 1°' day in an appartnt contract dlspute. George Allen, cotteh and poetal manager of the Redskins, issued a brief ilatemei1t which said: "l.arry is under a slpcd 1973 contract. . lie h'as an obligation fo the team. J ex· pect him to repon." Bro\\'n and his 11Uorncy, John Perazich ol \\'asbJngton. were not available for comment tmmedln1cly. Th ree other plnyen Also did not attend !ht nrst comb In ed veteran-rnokle workoul at lhe lr:i inlng camp 1n this ' ' soutMtntral Pennsylvanl3 collcJ:e town. Elgbty~ight players arrived 1n can1p by Jhe I p.m. Sunday deadline. Allen uilll that veteroi:ns Mike Tallafer. ro, Gtorge Nock, and John Jaqua wert •mong Jhe missing. Allen said that Taliaferro, a 10.year veteran quarterback, Is expected to <11r nounce his retln!ment Nock is still recovering from an of· seMOn operatloo on &·krfr.t which be in· ju~d In a 1tfis.mt--Ptt·seaaon game Jast )'tar. Allen Siid it would be better f()f' the running bltck to remain ln Washingtnn ,., Umt he could get daily treattment on his knee. The Rams 1vnlted until Sunda v to m the announcemenl to give 'Loga chance to change his mind. Ldpn w., obtained by lhe Rarm l~"'f' olf·8C830fl trade. In 10 years wilh Ballmore Coli.. he r<lumcd 34 leretritions ror 397 yards Md play the Pro Bowl th.rte times. His departure lcl't the team ~1th Welles: vctd"ans D:i,·e Elmendorf . Nettles ·and Roger "''llli1uns and Cullen Bryant , the Rams ' 'op chol«J In 1 97~ . . The Roms said. 84 pl11ytrs "'C".f camp Sunday nlRht at 2ft vettrans NI in and met the deadline ror \'elera to rM>Ort Sports it• Brief Emerson Seeking '"~e~.~o~~~~. Top-seeded Ille NastaseL the W~._S:e.f.JJlllclt.ol. the fiery and" flainboyant Roma -early· pace, leading into the nian, gained the final or the tum for home when Belmont! 1nen's si ngles at the Swiss urged Amen 2nd into the lead International tennis cham-to win by a neck with pion.ships, completing a 6-4, &.. Groshawk ahead id front or 3, &-4 victory over Patrick Klrrary , Proisy or Franee Sunday. Nastase faced N e w p o r t Bea<:b's veteran Roy Emerson today in the title match, which was · postponed one day because of rain. Emerson reached the final Saturday, rallying fro01 a two- set deficit to beat Karl ~1eUer of West Germany in five se.ls. Nasta!e led Prolsy 6-4. 6-3 Saturday when their match was interrupted by rain . The won1en's singles final. between Julie Anthony of Los Angeles and Rac:hel Glscafrc of Argentinp.. also w a s postponed until today. Atq_eta II.Wins INGLEWOOD -French- bred Amen 2nd captured Ure SIS0,000 Hollywood Derby Sun- day, beating 10 rivals in a race whose format was copied afler Eng\and 's Epsom Downs feature for 3-year-olds. S mllh Trh11nph8 BAASfAD, Sweden American star Stan Smith overpowered defending cham- pioij r.1anuel Orant.es of Spain 6-4 . 6-1 , 7-& and w~ the ~·s sing~s_ title at tbt... $75,000 Swedlsh lnternallonal teMis championships Sunday. Smith appeared to be in command throughout t h e 1nalch, but said later, "I · really had to play some of mv best tennis to win ." lie kePt Oran1es at bay with a booming serve and some dazzling volh;ys in picking up the $8,400 first prize. Olga Co1npeles CHIAs.50. Switzerland Olga Korbut, Rus~ia's triple Olympie gold medalist, is free to continue her breath-taking gy~tic performances al least witil November, Arthur Gander. president ..of the International \G y m n as i i c fe-Peration. said Sunday. Saitta Atta CC 11'it111ers • Eddie Belmonti of Puerto Rico piloted Lfi.e first foreign winner of the Hollywood Derby in 33 years as he brought Amen 2nd hooie iri tow minutes Z1 415 seconds for the mi I e -and . one -hair marathon over the I-lollywood Park grass course. A 6-I choice, the •Ni.nncr beat 1he favorite Groshawk with another longshot, K i r r a r y finishing third in the bulky field of sophomores. /... proposed rule that vooudl ba r some of r..liss Korbut's mQst applauded feats as too dangerous still requires ap- proval by the Federation·s Assembly in Rotterdam next l'\ovember, Gander explained . l\lrs. \iirginia Vistica of 1t·lesa Verde Co untry Club (left) and l\lrs. Fran Dye of Santa Ana Country Club display trophy they earned \\.'ith a viclory in the 1nen1- ber-guest better ball of partners tournan1ent at Sa nta ,-\na ('C. ~leCluske11 lt'lns CAMBRIDGE JUNCTION, M,ich. -Roger McCluskey, victim of a fuel shortage that cost him a major victory three weeks ago, drove his Eagle to a convincing triumph Swiday in a 200-mile race for In· dianapolis-type cars at l\.lichigan International Speedway. Pirates Down Rustlers, 3-1, KNOX • • • (Continued From Page 16) parents tugged constantly <Jll a cig8r as he discussed the Fo1· Fifth Straigl1t Triumph just fini shed rookie camp. Sknln ill Victory "It was an outstanding HORSHAl\.t, Pa. -Carole J . ca.m~," he said. "\Ve v.·~re Skala, a 3S-year-<>ld mother of m1ss1ng Br Yant· Jim three from Shingle Springs, Youngblood and ~ave Brown,• Calif., fired a'three-under-par two~ of our highest draft 70 Sun<13y to win the $30.000 c~1ces ~nd a free agent, and George Washington Go Ir st11l we hked what we saw. Classic by one stroke. "Those who. stood o u l She had a 54-hole total of 214 particW rly were Tim Stokes five under par ' (~x:Oregon!, corncrback ~d-r-.1rs. Skala,~ 5-foot-8 blonde die t-.1 c M 1 11 an ( ex-Flonda shot ~35 with five l>irdies, an Stat~) and defensive en~ Cody e41gJe and four'bogeys as she Jones (San Jose. Stale). • edged Sandra Haynie and Knox says he~ happy to be Kathy t-.tcMullen. \Vho each living in Huntington &ach tied for second each with itltlr- and notes the only difference under·par 215s. from being an as~istant to a head coach is added respon..,i· bilities. "Assistants are specialists." he says. "The head coach has to oversee everything. But thin~s have gone very well so far." The players, too. speak highly of' Knox. They call him stern but fair. .. You know \\'here you stand with him." says Seal Beach's .Jack Snow ... And that's pretty in1portant.'' Almost as impo11ant as v.·in- ning 1s to Chuck Knox. Lu.cky Sl1ot Helps LONG BEACH Rafe Boots bounced an iron shot off the head of a \\'Oman spectator for a lucky shot Sunday that helped him win the 4!tth Southern California PG A r.1atch Play g o l f cham- pionship. Botts withstood a l a t e challenge by Tommy Jambs, 38, whO was trying to become the first man in 23 years to win the tournament, held at El Dorado G<:ilf Course, three successive times. \Vard's Pirates ( 0 r ange Coast College l stayed hot in r.Ietropolitan League baseball play Sunday. ootching their fifth straight \Vin, J.-1 over the Senik Rustlers a t Golden West. r.1eanwhile in the other Jeague game involvin~g an Orange Coast area team, Sad· dleback dropped an 8 • 3 decision to the Anaheim· Fullerton Titans at Cal State (Fullerton). Pitching, which has been a big factor in the surge for Ward's Pirates, \\'as again the de~iding fa ctor in S,unday's en- counter. Mike Alba, a former Estan- cia High hurler, held the Rustlers to just four hits in going the distance for the win- ners. He walked five men and struck out eight. Alba lost his shutout in the sixth inning v.•hcn Rod BrO\\'n singled and moved around <Jn an error and two force outs, but the Rustlers'. couldn't muster any offense the rest of the game_ The Pirates \\·ere li1nited to five hits, but the team batting average for the season v.·as maintained at a heahhv .28i and tbc single runs -lh<'Y scored in the second, third ;ind METROPOLITAN lEAGU£ w ' L• FPnlla OClnl • • An•·Full tl"11s • ' Senik Rus!len ' G.t rd en Grov f CharQfrt • • Ward's Pirates , • Oftl'l<I• PaFl!hl!fS • , Maril'>t!s ' • 5111<1!ft>eck Gauchos ' " Su111"1'1 ~twu Waro's l, Rustlers 1 Tl11ns 1. G1uc1'0i l P1n111r11 ·5, c11ar111rt 4 Clor!s l'l, M•rinas 1 ~mtl Tllll WHk ' ' • • ' • ' • • " ' ' ' If ,., 1'~~10111 -P1nllt••s Yt. Plr1!e• at Mernprlal "''"' (7::JO!. w..an1s<11v -Rul!lt<S YI, M1rl"" II El Toro (7:30). Th\lt$dlV -CharQtrs VI. Plr•!es 1t El Molltn• C1:JO), Sa!ur!llY -la Foll((a YS. P•n!hfrs ar El Medena (1:30). Sundav -Ti!ans vs. Rustlers •1 Go!ll<!n Weit (lf-MarlMI vs. Pl•8tts ~· El Toro (I); Ch1rg1rs vt. Gtuc:hct ~r C:VDfelS (l). fourth innings were more than enough for Alba to work with. An error \vhich allowed ~1ike Folsom lo reach base followed by a single for Ron Ruff and v.11lks to Alba and Robin Chard gave the Pirates their first run. and a bases- loaded throwing error handed \Varo·s it ~ soore. Rich Tashine singled to get the third inning going and after \valks lo Dale Kubeska DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO Baseball Standings GAS SAVERS '61 Coran• 4 DC>Or Auto. 1r1F1f., rHlt, htll9t". hQlll 111111. tWl,Ol~I $977 ..... AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Boston - Baltimore Detroit ~1ilwaukee Cleveland Oakland Kansas City Angels ~linnesota Chicago Texas East Division IV f, S2 42 48 40 46 39 48 43 4t 46 33 59 '\'est Division 52 4-0 50 45 46 43 ' 46 43 46 44 31 58 JU'!Hln'I G-1 ·-A"9tll 6, Oftroll 0 Pct. .553 .545 .541 .527 .489 .359 .505 .526 .517 .517 .511 .348 GB 11 ':: 2'':: 6 18 31':: 4'1 41! 5 19 '\ NATIONA L LEAGUE East Divisio n W L Chicago St. Louis r.lontreal Pittsburgh Philadelphia Ne"' York 50 41 47 42 42 46 41 46 41 49 38 49 'Vest Division Dodgers San Francisco CinciMali Housl on Atlanta San Diego 59 34 S2 41 ;)\ 41 50 46 44 51 31 60 S11M1,•1"1 Gam•• Pct. .549 .528 .477 .471 .450 .437 .634 .559 .ii4 .521 .463 .341 ~QUtlon 2, Phi1-Jpl'ii1 II!' rnni"!IS· rliftl Allan11 •· Mpn!rt.tl 1 Clnclnn.tll J, Ntw Ycirk 1 GB 2 61l 7 81:: 10 7 71 ! 101 ~ 16 27 and ~·lark Schrupp loaded the buses. a "'ild throw <Jn a pickoff attempt b r o u g h I Tashine in. Tom Johnson singled. moved all the v.'8y to tbiro on a sacrifice fly by Chard to end the Pirates scoring in the fourth. lite an w hil~. Saddleback staye<l with Fullerton for six innings. but three-run ,rallies in the seventh and ninth inn· ings for the Titans put the game out of reach. The only Saddleback sooring burst was a three-run rally in the fourth which erased a 2-0 Fullerton lead. Rich ~tartin opened things with a single for the Gauchos, Mark King followed with a single lo right and Brian Hester ripped one dov.-'TI the third ba se line v.·hich the Titans third baseman stoi>- pcd but coutdn·t make a play on. Rick Pcres:ud then doubled t"·o runs home and another run scored one out later on Stan Lak's ground <Jul.- Stnl• llutlltn Ill •• • ' •• R. &r<>wn, 71> ' ' ' • lll•~tltV. H • • • • Milli, lb • • • ' Pe!lrson. P·lb ' • • • P•rlctr. " ' • ' • E111lno•t, o ' • ' • tD18r~~ c • • • • ' • • • wno111ty, t! ' • ' ' l<:fflnt!ly. I! ' • • • T•s1i••· t i ' • • • T11•als ~ ' • ' W1rd P1r•I•• "' .. ' ' ~· MIVf'S, Cl • • • • Ta~hine. " • • ' • Kuni~'"·'· c ' ' ' • Scfl/UOD. " ' • • • l'"ollnm. lb • ' ' • Rufi. lb • • ' • Jollnson, lb ' ' • lllb•. f) • • • Cn•rll. d • • ' To!~I• " ' , ' ,.~ .. lnno"'JI ' ' • Pu•!lftl ~ oo• ..,_, • ' Plr1!1s "" lOCI ' 00.-3 ' ' S1d81t1>1<k Ul .. • ' "" l~•. " ' • ' ' Av•la•. lb ' • ' • s~t1ncim1n, .. ' • • • w111••""•· e • • ' • W•lc~t, P• • • • • MCM1nui. " ' ' • • Ma•ri1' " ' ' ! • l(lnc. u ' ' • ~ts•tr " • ' ' " Pere9y!I, .. ' • ' ' , . ...,,, '" • • • • 1•wnn•~. o • • • • N4h•O~"' D . ! • • • To!~ll lnn'•f'l91 ' • ' \<••t " • ' • j\"'hfoT.,...Full 000 '°° )(l}-1 10 ' S1c10ltbeck ..... .,._., • ' • - MO/Idly, July lb l97J DAILY PILOT JT Ala1nitos Night Victors Racing Entries JThreeAreaNines I LH .... ,.._ .... ~ fw r-.iit In Leg io·n Wins CINr & l•tl. Flrll l"otl l ,tl P"' "' " ' "' "' JlC:ilNO a.:r -~!~ v1 !'d1. J I'·" 01!11 & uo. C:l.tl...,lnQ urtt 1 1W ~~~1u~i<;.~1!!~. '''"'°''J Hl11lulln IL. WrlqnO Nul., .. &ut1nv (J. lllt,..11111 G""'.,. J..,..1 fJ Wtrlll FaH J IR &.tn•tl 1-<~11.I..'< V•"9U••ll \0 l(nlcinr\ \'It~ W<>f> (I( H.Jrt eooov 0-1~•f 1G Prts!•lllOtl 'l'NlaD llACE -.00 Y••ll• old• AU°""•"(t PutM 111'CO. OttP (apy !D l •r<11>1•I "l•(k'$ MOOftdtOO 10 Monl1l IE'•$Y Flv•r (5 Tr•• .... r•) Ot<:~•l>OO I I( H<>rl) 1'm Funny TllO IG Pnn'•ldQ~\ Ou11llc•1t w;,, (J , • ..,t~u<1•1 I.I•. cure llrltd'ot1 co ICnklhll '" "' "' "' '" '" "' '" ., .. , "' '" ,,. '" '" " ' " ' '" ". '" ". '" "' '" "' '" "' '" "' "' Orang!! co'"Ji ar<'a !<'ams \\·on under the Ugh1s but fh,llUl· dl'ttld J,11 rh<' tl~ytlt'l"lc.> a~-th<' An1cr1can l...CRion baseball pro- grnn1 etl<led its next lo last Wl•ek of play Sunday. In a. night ~an1e ~ :1t S.an Clem<'nll'·s Bonita C;1n\011. the San Cle ment<' A t('~m tipped Sonora 8·2, v;hilc r-.1tss1on Yh'JO took a i ·2 viC4!!}' O\'<:r Santa Ana undl"r the hs:hts ;.it ~lt·1nona l Park. ' In day gan1t•s. Sa n C'h·n111111l' B \\'as belted hy c:ardt•n Grove. 1-4-0. ilnd \\lfSt1ninstrr frtt. .... 17-5. to Los Alamitos. Founta.i_n \':ill<'Y look a fo rrt•lt ~·1n O\Cr 1\1slin. Ficld111g lapSt·s :u1d .,.,·1ld11css on the part of SQnora p1tc~r (\1ar1y Frazicr a\10'.l't°tl San Clcn1cn1e A to srorf\ th rl"' lim"s \\'lthout g<'lling ~1 1111 throup:h the first six innu1gs of ll!i night g<1n1e. But "&in Cll'mt!llll' finally n1:inagl•d 1wo sing les and (iv(' runs in thl' sco,·cnth lo ice the gan1('. r-.1a11 Krough got the fir st Sa n CINnente hit , a bases- !oaqt.-d single ""''hiCh scored Pat \\'ellhcr and Bill Springman. 11xTH •Act: -HO v••11i-l Y••• \\'either 'had reached base :?:e i11~m1~11· Pu•" U l'.'l. '1•1"'·"!1 v:hcn his th ird slrike "·as lloor F•u !O. rtorrlsl 11' · --..1 b th l h I w11ch z·~ F•"(v <D-C••oM>111 111 n11s""-" Y e ca c i.'r an< Npn SIPPf• (( ~mithl Ill '-' . nm "S lh . ! Sl o! 01,.,.., 1J1ker I"· H••ll 111 oiprtn~ an w., t' 1r wn1•• Reiu•n • Rl<n••ll•I 11• 1v.·o successive walks. Too'• Gil !D 1Cnl<1n•J 111 T-n Oe•<Otl <J. Drt;·e.i 1u T ~th I t lmr11 ,.,..,0• 1s. ,,.,,.,~,., n1 \\'O more v.· . c ast. o Slrttrner llll<I IJ. W1•9! 11' Scott ~fiklos. fo in another t klntf> wON1er (R. A<l••»r 11t S:in Clcn1enle n1n. and Kl'n SEVENTH llACE -~00 ~·•a$ l >••• old• i. uo. Pu•M ,10.a«1 Tnf C:f\icMJci Donohoe singled one homl>. iiyna.r B•r ID. 1Cnkln1) 111 The final run or the Inning #1.-AI o"" O Mprrl•I 11\ • I l(•w~•" &•• '!> T••a•urel •H scored on a v.·ild pile L FllQn! 109 CO. C1roM>1•l 171 .-Cf>8r11er s~r {J. Dreyttl 114 Terry Neilsicn, a former S;.m Reocinln'l 5TA• (C. 5mllltl ll7 Cl 11· h · h ( Na1;vf 1::m11•t<• CR A11alr) 1n ernente lg pile er. wen A-RyOy IC"•n !M, e1n~•l Jlt d . k h . #l-H1<1an L1w~1oc~ o. £n1r1• · the istance to pie up t e v1c- "' '" "' '" '" '" '" "' '" Mlt!TM •ACE -lStl v•rdt. l Vt•r old>. Clblmlng. Puts• t1'00. C11imlno:i p1itt l l300. T~"lblt Tlnk~ (J W1,0) 171 BIAIO<I Oa1'0V (I(. 1-<1rO lit Rov~I Patt<tt IJ.alc,..rllsl 111 ll~t..er-• G. P•tt.!rlll,..l 11·1 Tam's Ba• !R. S•!tml in "·""" ll~n• !D. l(nl11nn lit E1rH!v c111roe (S. 'fre11u••l 111 RullY Cl._lll)t•tfCI IL. Wrkl"O 11• ll:un lllcobv RUii J. Or1vtrl 111 torv and struck out 13 in the prOccss. Frazier recorded a sin1ilar strikeout tolal for Sonora. Rich Romn1el strucii; out 13 ballers and Steve Robinson droo.:e in three runs \1'ith a pair of sin ~tcs 10 lead :..hssion V11:- jo 10 its \'iCtory. The v.·inners struck for four runs in the third inni ng, v.·hl'n Bomn1el tripled home Ton y Richardson and D a v id Schmidt and Rob ins on Bass, Bonito Hitti11g A lo11g Orange Coast. Bass and bonito continued to be the mainstays for ocean fishermen out or local landings over the weekend. but there "'ere hints of a bluefin tuna bite forthe-0ming. Yellowtail action s 1 o v.· c d considerably. with the general consensus being lhtit th" stov>'down was due to ~-pawning season, and the a w a it e d albacore bite hasn't panned out as \1et. All lhrce area landings reported heavy catches of bass in local waters with the hottest spot being off the San- ta Ana river jelly. Over J.()O) bass v.·ere taken off boats fro1n Oavcy·s Locker and Dana \Vharf. and 335 fron1 ·Art's Landing . Anchovies. which we re reported in good supply. \\'ere the primary hail. :i nd a relatively nc\V lure called a "Salty-Dog" also was taking a • he(i\'y LOIL Bonito \\'ere continuing to be consistentl y caught. and "'"hilc the b\11efin tuna catch was slight Sunday (twO out of bo!h Art's Landing and Davey's l..ocker t, the re \\'ere sevcrJI sightings v.•hich led experts to believe they could pick up this \\'Cek. On ~·ridav. 33 bluefin were taken out of Da na Harbor. and rhc ca l ch remained good Saturday but dropped off Sun· day. The Santa Ana river jetty area, sometimes very close kl i;ho re continued to be the he st spot. and the fish were l't'pOrl- ed tak ing best to small hook s and 12 pound test line. An- cho\·ic~ \\'ere the primary bait. Catches were reportedly h:i 1he 12-15 pound range. A sprinkling of yell<J~1ail ac- t ion \\'as reported O\'er the weekend , "but like the bluefin tuna the catch was practically nor1-e'xislent Sunday. Schools of the fish are being regularly sighted, but they're just nut biting. Albacore conlinue to play hard to catch al though they too have been sighted far out to sr.a and beyond the range of most boats. SANTA MONICA -1~ •"llltr• ~1 tlloCO 11.tll, 4 bcin1!CI, 4 hftlt>ut, •• ,,, -10.1 llllOlt•t: 110 bClnlto, l n•llDyl MAl lllU -1'6 1ngle<t: XI tlli(ci ti•"· I wn.it ~' b•"· I h~f!!WI. / tM PElllAl llACN -J1 1"1ilt11 ! v•llow!11I , 1 lllut!ln tyn1, '4M 1>••· rauxia. 111 l>ono1o . .a c•h<O l>•u. SAN DIEGO -191 an1lft1 1t "yf11Qw!1 ll. 91 tllY•hn rvn•. l "'"Dv•, l.S61 ber1cu<1.t, 2,l11 DDr1•TO, 4'l <•loco b1U PAlllADISE COVE -2\t 111Q!t••· 36 t•licc 11.tH, J n1!lt>ul, I.Goll roclt ce<l MO••O l.t.Y jYlrt'I LlftOlllO) -!)'J 11>9le" .:i ling cocl. l.iOO roclt cOd • (11<1Doos l1nO•,..I -<1 •nciltrs 1 lot'l<I !'Jll. 1 .... , ••• ,1. ll '""""' SAH 51MEOM -I)~ 1n1,11e,.· ~.I hr;<j coo. •.•JO •cio:1t c<>ll AVILA llAY -11 lf'IQlf•I' l.ISS roc- Cocl. t• hf'IQ Cocl . l'O•T NUENliME -Ill 1"'71~"· 1).1 c.al•<<:i Mt~, l !O Olu• l>•U. )I 01•-t•<IKI•. l Wt>dt •t• OAU . .0 ml(kfrfl SAN l'EDllO Ull'lll SltHI L•t1!1on9J- t.-: •·..<• t~ tAH PEDtilO 7Jnel4!1rttl l•ndl"'ll -\~/ At~IC• 1 v·n•~ '<~ 1>•11 Ill tn>·c l>•n. 1 n.il•l>U!-10 l>CI••''" 110 "''t•t••I '>lo M\t P•ll. I)• tt·t• CGrl 11"'1/ltlllO•ll -llJ lflOlt" l o.tt t•«•<H, 11 ""'IQ, 1111 <Al!!CI Ill"•, ;1 t•flll ~n. 1 Dlwlin tun•. U• mK•trfl VE Mru•A -111 '""!~•-(I(/ fAI" o.tl•· ~ l>l~t o.t-">-.-~I .... ...._ IMIU. .,\ Yt••• ••• 1>1n. 1 ~•ho~• '1' •K~ ,.,. d('lf\•('rrd his sin~le nfter a "'a/k and !it1Cr1fl{'C had rnoved Rtck'. \\'hltc Into scot1ng posi- tion also Rob111so11 pickN.I up another rbi 1n the foorlh, as ~flssio.n V!l·Jo licorl'd l"Q 1uivt• runs. \fcstm1ns1~·r's p1tchu1,i: prol>- l('m" b1.·ca111c t•Yt·n rnorc "'.;. d1·n1 .ts l..os All.tn111os pound<'d out 13 hlls 11nd l>«:nn(' the sec- ond 11.·11111 1n ris m:u1y" &lnw>r> to r1·:ich doubl(' ftgur('s against roiu·h (;(•ne l...oonit·r s club. \\'es1n1inst('r took a :!-0 le:ad in lht' <lpeninr. innin g when Curnal l!ungo l<h'til a lrlpJe lo Sl1'.lr1· f)an Acroui:indo and !111.·n 1.·an11• 111 h11ns1·1f nn a "'ild pirth r\t't'(J1ll:u1do had \\'illkccl prior to l{uni.:o's hit. Hunj!o p1ck1'(I u11 tus ~!'('Oncf h11 of 1h1.• ga n1t· 111 1!11• l'i~hlh inning !(1 tr1~gC'r ;J 1hrl'e-n1n :i;pri't'. but by that 111nl' Lo." 1\l;1n111os h:1d scorl'd oll its runs to put lh<' Cam(' aw11 y_ Kl'n Loomer \\'alkcd to ad· \·ancl' ·11ungo and both runner.!! mov<'CI up on a passed ball before singles by Dave Twiss and Larry Kubie cki drove hon1e the ruM. Al Garden Grove. San Clernente f.l managed ooly four singles and never thrt•:ll ent'd in taking t b e d1·fl':JI. ~like Sfa\'rO V.'aJ the only St1 n Clt>mf'nl e li b<ttter to l:l't more than one hit in the gan1e. .. ' A'<e>.rrv. t i • R<t .... •11-. u • ' Stnmodt. c ' ' Rom.,,..i, p • ' DMl,,_t, lO • ' Wllll•, ?I> ' • Rapin....,, U • • SAM1!"''· II> ' • T •vtPf', rf ' • lo••I• • ' Scor1 lly :tfJ!,11111 Miu.Ion Vlejci OOol XII 000 -'I ~1n11 A"' 000 O?O 000 -J Stn , .. ,,...,,,, A <•I .. ' ' ' ' ' • • Sp•inqm1n. JC Klnci lo ~~:;,1'1n Ullo~. <! ~:;:;'~, .• 11'. (" ;-{ Sto rr M.~1 ..... ,, "0'1''· I! DMOnc<>. 11 Ntl!~n. 11 Y.'t11n~, , To••h ' ' ~ ~ ' . • • ' . ' . ' ' ' ' " . ''"' lly 1 ..... ,,, 'ii>nci•• I'» llOO tOO -' S•n Cltmtnl• 001 010 le• -I Wnl..,IMI.,. (U .. ' Br1<1lev. u '• ' S ,..,v,1e. <t • • Ttyt, Ja ' • A~ccim•n!lc. 1! p ' ' ( ll:uf\00, Ill • ' R «nAt!ll, )p ' ! L<>D<M•. JI> • Tw•n. u ' ' Hiie, p-!11 • • A""'"""'· I! ' • SPOonmcior•, 11 ' • HOYlf, ( • • l(yl>+•<~J, t ' • To!•I• ~ , Sc•rl .. lnnl.,,1 • W111m1n1ltr "' ... .,_ . • ... • • ' • ' • ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' • • • • • • • • • • ' • ~ '-"! • • ' ' ' . g T • • . ' • • ' . • • ' . ' ' • • , ' • • • '" • • • • ' • • ' , ' ' • • • , ' • • • • • • • • ' ' • • ' • • • "' ,<1.11m1tot CJO ., Oa-17 IJ • Stn Cltlm•nlt I Ill .. • ' '" lanal!i, ct • • • S11vro. n .. • ' • N••r, t • • • Dor;to, lb • ' • ' N•ll"", Jo • • • ~~~;~~· 1f' • ' • • • • ' NII.,,,,, 7D • • • H~v=tn. ti • • • Tc"ll " • • • "~ .. '""' .. ' • ' • S•n C:l..,..n!I ClllO 000 000-• • • G. Crow • 110 "•-14 11 1 Major League -Leaders '6f Coron• Co upe Ault. ''""'" radio, 1lr ctf\11., 1r tVCatt,11 $1477 f.li'M ""'4i: 1. 1(1n1as ClfV e ~!On J, Te~1s 1 ti 1,,.,1,..1, r1ln! B11t!mo~ ), Cl!lclltO 1 O•kllnd t. Mllwevlr:" 5 Mlnnno11 7. Clev•"l"ld +(ID 1..,.1no1! s.~ FrtnclKo n, Pinsbu•oll a SI. lciu!t S, San Ole9C 4 115 lnninci!l °'"'"'' '· C:hlc.190 l TodlY'I Ctl!MI Minne sota's Killehre\v DCIAN .. DE -no •"91tt1; 141 l)f•· • Ila. !61 -onlto ~l• •elo 0•" _ I •· ~,, • l>~u. ) n~l>b~t. • D•vt' " !Vf'd if.Al •EACH -)t} Ar>Q•e•, I n~ ••no ~•u. 11 ~•ll~u:. is "'''-""'"e'> ~ bluttln lun1, 114 tlcini!ci. ll••tt -110 AMY•t I ........ c..01. J91 IM''"·' ~•no Cl\\, 1 w~l!t ••• b•U, 11 "•ht><J! '70 Coron• 4 Door '''"'" , .. It. l!Nltf ()IU.001 $1277 '70 Marie II 4 Door 1r1n1-. , .. i.. hff'9• OfflOCI .$1577 '70 Marie II Cou,. A•lt. frt!lt.. vlflyt l'ftl, m.tt. '"""'-rHl•I "'"'air ee11111., , .. i. 1m•rL1 $1977 •n C•llca rMlt. m"s. •Mr! top. $2777 fMIY'S Olmts ChlCatlP. (J!ll'!MM! 2·2l II llotletn ((Ul'li1 1·11 ICIMIS City (Or-•·•I II D•!roil (S!r1ni.r 3·'1 ll•ltimpr1 !JrlftrJOrl 3·11 at O.kl1fl!I (Hvnte< , ... ]) Clt.-tlincl IWll«• .!-SI 11 A!l9th l~lnPer U-<1) DnlY 11mf1 K"9dUll!d. T""~IY'I Gl!FIH Blll\m01't at ~kl1rMf CltYel•nll at A""h Mllwaull"" •I Tt•ls l(~ns• CITY 11 0.trol! M•nnlKOll " NllW Var-. 1 Chl<ot!IO I! &o!'.IPll. 1 Ood"'I {Sullon 11·Sl 11 Pl111b\frlh (llrll•1 8·11 S.tn Fr11'1ChCO (Birt 1·1l 1! SI. loul1 (Glbl.Pn 1·91 N~ York (Koo~m•n 1.1) " 11.ll•nl• !Nltkro •·•l /'\ Pf>ll•cltll>ll!a C Br~I 1·11 ~I (inc!n"'ll 1H01'1'1•n ... , MOl'flr-eer !Renlo.o •-Sl ~, llDullOOI (FP•l!h 1-1 ) Ontv otme> Kllfdule<!. Tllfld•V'I Gll!MI Dod"rs 1! Plt1~0:11Jtgf' s.~ D•f911 ., Cnic~'10 San F<Ul(iStO '' S!. LPUil N•W Vert. fl ltlant• p,,,l~tlllt!la ~I Cl..CiMe1o Montrtal •I H""'l!Of'I Ot1l for Eight Week s BLOO~ftl'\GTON. r.·I inn . 1i\P ) -l-l,1 rmon Kille•rE'\\' Un· derv.·C'nl :;;urgcry torlay on his :i il ini.: lrfl knet. 1he ~·11~.c;ola 1'wins rc1X1rll'<I. l\illebrew \\·ill be lo5l l<J the Twtn s for from six to eight wet.ks. The 37·yl'ar~ld slugger is fourth on !he 111!-time homo. run · list ...,·it h S44 ca re(( homers, but hHs hit ju~t three this season 11od 1s balling only 245. Kiiiebrew suffered a tom medlBI cartilage in a June 2S gam~ al Chicago. He wall placed Oil t.ie disabltd hst Saturday. "Atte:mpt.t to treat the in-- jury coiuervativ,Jy in orcltr th.Ill Killebre~· mJght h e available for limited use have b<'en un5uceesslul. 'J'hercfort. the dt"CiS'l1>n 111 undertake surg<'ry v.·as as:rE"l.•d upon." a ·r~1ns ~pokcsrni'ln ~ild . Klllebrc\\' snid he had hl'<'n hopeful the opcrallon could be deferred unlll season's end. but s.itd . "f 1hink it's in the best interest~ of my career and in the best inte~!ilS of tM club th1't I undergo surgery at this time in order that I mlght possibly be 11vnilablc for at lcas1 $0me hmited duty during September and that I ' 11 defi~1tely be ready for rullllfne ac1ion onet a~ain ln 1974. ·• Twins prl'sldent Calvin Grif- rhh !iaid he &grt'<.-d wilh Killebrew. "I. too. an1 con- vinced he "'il l be of greater value 10 1~ club on IJOUnd 'kJletS ... l,C)f(C) llACH (l•l"'°"I Pitf) -141 •"1111•1 J•l WMd ba11, 16 ~nl!G, ~· tlK• Ced lllr•t I/I ·~~Lt'\ 17 ll•t rl(IKll , l,1)1 QCll!llc;. I• ~•hll<fl IPlto"· pei~I l•ndl"!ll -It• •~c;lcr• lO VtllONl•d. I Clol'r<'tu<ll •• l>Of\;I~. ~I] c•llto 01'1. I .,,1lb··• ,1 ·~~e ~e> .. JH "tOI:• <O<I U lllv~ DIH NliWl'Oll.Tt !OIVtV'S 1.«Mt!) -)10 <'"llltfl. 1 to•"4(IKI•. Ill l!Cfl~. '• •lllO DllU. II •or • '"" 7 n1l•1i11T, • m.<-ftt! !A"'I L•"'"''' -1•1 ••· Qlt•J I tl.trtA(~~. m c•lf<O O••·· $ n1tlt>ut, la. o•~t •>IH J bl..Clln '""''· 1 ,..~,,~ \ti bfU DANA WNAllF -™ •Nlltn u+ <II <0 b.l$t, ll) w••K..O•, 642 b"'"lc. J ~hb\11, •• "1K~trtl. lllD0/'100 Tit •"!lltrs s y.itc ... ttU, ) w•uH! ••• 1>.1n 1 l>At· '~'""'" &tl c~ll(o c•u, I '11 l)lllt 1>.1n, l~ IWl•IO. 4 lllll!Mll ••r-tf -).£4 ll'>Olt•• !IO ll0<\•10 J'k r"\_{,•rrl, I ~.ho.,!, lllC •OCO tClll Sta ndings HAllllDll All l .t. aAJl:A \_L Cl " ' f , ' • I 7 I I • • ~· l ! 1 • , . " ! 1~ t • • • ' ., r I I: ,. " ,; • • • • i • . • , • ' ' I I 1· • I I 'i I· 1· ,. I • • ' ' ! . I ·. \ ' DAJL V PILOT Mond;t;y, Jul1 16, 1973 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTI<%. Edges Passage at Fitais h TONIGIIT'S \-~~--~~~~~~~~· PICTITIOWI lllSINEll PIC1'1TIO\ll IUllltEb HA.ME SfATllMINT MAMI ITATIMINT '"" llol.....,.. ..,.,.. .,. "°"" "" ~ llf'10ll l• ...... ~ """-' ••l . ..: - • TV IIlGHLIGIIT S 1 Ragttlbe Captures Thriller MAia GALLElllY, tlli "•" Wftl aANChO OL'IYl•A. l•k., " .. Cott• .-.. f»ll M.....,I Centff" Ori,.., C.rOI .....,_, ... JlllO P•I«'°" W••· Mo. N.-p0tl ltKft, C1l!l0tt1l1 U D. Co.r. MtW, C1lll, f'U>t lltlll I'. l-•kltt· ~II P1rlnt•, 1111"1' Yovt19, 1100 Pee .. .-Wly, NO, 620 N...oort (fl'llH Dl'lvt. 141111 m • U A, Ca..11 IMlli, C.IH. nu. !ffwporl 11..:ft, CA CBS IJ 7:30 -Gunsnioke. Matt OWon is bus h· wac.ked and may dle or become paralyzed unless a bullet is re1noved fron) near his.spine in the first episode of a three-part d1'ama . ' 1ali 11\!llNM i. oel'IGU(ted ~ an lrto Thb OlltintU II bllftt (Oft$Kltd ~ I By A.UION l..OCKABEY big Jearch light failed to 9.'0rk. aboard his father 's Ticoer Class A and oVerall handicap f lv!Wtlcirot $a...Wi llm.li.t r.:.:'7'."'~ldoe ...,i., 11111'-' Ragtime dolJS(.'(f her spinnaker deroga, J·•·--o said ·. honors. This mo-1 .... ahe was Tiii• 11111m.n1 w1• fl14111 w1111 ,,.. c-T1111 '"'""''"'' 111td, w1111 ""' c°""'" JIONOLULlJ R · uuu;,u ''&1.1.16 ty Cieri of 0.-1111 .. COlllll'f on J11ly t. ltn. Cllrk of Or•not c-tr on: J111V 4. 1t71, -agtime. a a few seconds before crossing ''Now l know how 1t feels to reported about 20 minutes off l"um 11 T11tr1•• M. w1r!l. 0t0u•w C011111y . 1 bh1ck-hulled sloop rese:mbllns Ult line. • be both •••. nJ nd Diamond Head sailing In light 1.,",;~~":f ~~ '911' 010" P 11 ;·1;j'J ci.r1o.. •MsN • KCET fD 8:00 -·rog ether. Jaz1, rock and sy1n- pbony orchestras blend in an original concert. set... a stretched ou! star boat surr-. on we w1n ng a ~-Pul!lillleef Or•nt• cou1 o.11y l'llOI. J1t-- «t down a be a corr or moonllgh•r-.....JE:ar.J)W"CPOrta..tWlt-Rag.tune_loslnremt;-Both wert-1brilllnlP'"--ii· "' •· '" n. JO. "!l 211 .. 13 orr Diamond Head at 41 had taken the lead over • 0 A comm u n ca 1 on a PUBLIC NOTrCE ' · against a 1nulti·screen light and slide §how .. SCf.'Qnd!'I aher R\ I d n I g h t Windward Pa!isage at least a races. breakdown because of weather ,1CTITIOUJ 1us1N1:ss PUBLIC NOTICE ABC 0 . 9:00 -"Gunn." Craig Stevens in a tnovle version or the TV ~eries in whic:h he Created the suave t}rivatc eye l1eter (iunn w i th Laura Devon, Edward ;\r-;ner . Sherry .Tar.k son and 1\lbcrl Paulson. l lot10tulu tlnie Sunday 10 ca(> day earllcr were erroneous. "This is the thing we have condltl()t'ls near tho J.sland NAMI! sTATl!MEMT lure II-•··o rs ,·n the !llh ~1ort tlaskell. n a vi u a tor aimed for since buying tbe resulted In no reports from the T11t 1011~1"' .,.,lOll• •r• 001 1MJ NOT1c1 TO coNT1tACTot11 •~ '~' o fJ 't \'IJ t h ..I l>lllll'ltU •l. CALLING 'Oil llDS T ·r y ht Ra aboard R.agthne said: "We boat l . " 'd ee SI a :1ea.so t epos;:i1• P.L.F. OEVELO,.MENT co .. 1onScl>nol Ol1trlcl • NEW,.ORT •MESA ranspac1 ic ac . ct. never caught Passage until 9 wo years ago, sa.1 ·ble handicap winners were not :~1'1m••· L11111n1 ee1e11. ~.111°'1111 uNtl'•ED . . llard on H.agtitne's transonl. th 1 hef the Chuck Kober, another of (he known ,..111 L F•rDer G_..,1 Pinntr 1011 111t Oo11011111: 11:00 oclCKk 1.m. '"' the J·,151 rour ntlnut s and 3! p.m. -ree XlUrt ore • • · ' , , .. ,; I'll i•ih 01y 01 h11~. 1tn. c finish." Ragtime owners. The syn-l)rder of nnish as of 8 a .m . ':i~~rn1r, U"illlf!I u en. .. "' • P11t1 01 1111 111e.ipt; 11f1 P11,...,111 seconds 1<1rer Clime \Yindward F h I <• mil r !he d' r c ... """ a-M11ert1t1 c. • cor-Av1t11111, COlill Mft1. C•Jl~I• Pas 5age. t"-eli:t'"'""I !line or I e ast <Al es 0 1cate 0 Sil Long Beach today: ~ --•tlon CC1llforn l1) Lfmlted "P•rl ..... ProJKI l<IMlll!IC1lion N•ml! MODULAlt ·~ ,_. he I boa! lit • .... ' • C.fr.Sl!WORK-OA\11$/PltESJOIO SCHOOL r ecord holder ror the 2.225 ~ace I wo . 5 were sp • Yacht Club owners purchased 1. Ragtime. ET ten days, 14 h!~ c.~i~: nw8 ' 0 • 0 w • 1 ' Pleet ,.1.111 .,, on Fl .. : 11l7 PL1etn1l1 mlle rllce and the yacht that ting tacks hke two maldl· the boat r-m J oho Hail of hours, tero minutes, 4 O Tti11 11uiiine11 i1 cON:tuc:1~ • llmlltd A-. Cot.I• Miii racet11 '" ,..,,,..,.,nip "IQllCI! IS Hl!Rl!IV GIVEN llWll , .... a U of Hawaii and much of the · . N seconds : CT nine days, 12 Pa11i L F•rblt· ·~v• n1mec1 ScllOOI D111r1c.1 of Dr•nt" h Id .... b Id "When we first split tacks ewport Beach ror a reported ho 15 mm· utes and 24 a.....-.i Pirt11er c_,1y, C1hioml•. ae1fflll b'I' 1...i 111r"°'11 i yac ling y.·or luvug l wou with Passage she was ;i.bout $30 000 rt beat r a c ,. n g UTS, T1111 111t1....,.1 w11 UIMI with t111 c-. n1 G-nll'llil &olrd, 11tr1lt111ttT AMrteo be tirs t to finish. • • . ' . seconds. ,:, Cllrt gf Qr11191 CoUflly °" J-xi. IO I\ "OISTlllCT." will rtttl.,. llP 1(1, ""' I the ) T ty.·o miles ahead and y.·e m achines such as wm· dward 2 Wind d p ET 1t7.I 1101 111 .. 1111n ,,... 1tioft 1t11e<t 11m1, se•I· t \¥as c osest rans pac h d blo . .. 'd ., war assage, ,_2,28 1c1 11101 for tN 1w1•~ o1 a contr1et •or finish since 1965 v.'hen the 72· thought we a wn ii. sai Passag Bl kl' d th ten days 14 hours zero five ,.ut111111ed or1"°' Ct11t 011 1~ P1101. ine ·-praflc:•. J Barney t,Jam one or lhc six e , ac 1n an o ers . 1 • d 11 ds CT J11111 " and J111y z. ,, 1,, 1tn 19$1-n 1101 11w111 111 r1«1Vld In Jhl pit<.• klen-TV DAILY LOG • Monday Evening JULY 115 1:0011 o om ID'ml m "'',, CI} Nen IJ lcm1111 "TIM Artis!" Oan O'· Httlilly IUl,\S IS I liUnd •rtisl wllo b w1llowin1 In sell-pity ind 11tohol unlil Bin Cu1wrirht clfers help. ({) Collrbhip of Eddit'I frll!tr 0 Wuilld Dttcl or AH11 @I M-lor Ltaru-lastblll Cont'd from 5PM .. m 1'1111 FllRbloftti «D Star Trtk fE Lts TottU fD ltodr•llltd~ Lod£• '1) Thrte Stoo1111 ~@ Mo11n'1 H11ot1 ,. O Movie: (C) (90) "LOllE1ltttr (dr1J '70--llmes Franciscus. Brit(· lord P.llm1n, Jtanette Nolan. Bhncl· td bJ Jly1n1 gl1ss from an e•plosion tb1t kitltcl his wite. an insu11nc1 ln'tlsli11tor be(:omes convinced thal If he an solve •n 1pp1r1ntly un1e· lated 1obbery, ht 'an 1~1n1e lhe d11th or hls wife. ·@ CBS Ne., W1lle1 C1onki!1 0 Htl>e ti11n Wl\I T11~1I m Andr Stlffllh fl! Sul '(1111~ 1'1RI 't'H • @D Litlna U17 EID 11111 Sullt1t1z Show m DHtrt Thltile 'I) Uttlt R21uh Conurt Jill, roe-and symphony orthest11s J!lencl in 1n ou111nal con· cert, set 1aain~l ii m11lli-sc1e1n ll11ht •nd shcle show. @II El Comanche mi Mi1veHto Y11de1 Show OJ Movie: (2hl') "DeYlra lsl1nd .. (clr1) '39 -Boris K.itrlofl, J1m11 Sttplltnson. l :lO m Mtrw Griffi1 Show mi Koftla foot Ticonderoga, skippered • . " b 1·11 1 t 1 1 half m1nu es an secon ; -11ue11 •bow, 11111 wn 1>1 •Ollf:l'ltd •f'td I owners of Raglime. But u a a cos o near Ya run' e· 17.47 08 p,it111c1y rtH lloud ., thl 1bo.,. 11111d by the a te Robert F. John.son. h to the . ill' d U . · · · nmt •M pL1et beHt Cornelh,1s Bruynzeel'"S 72_ "' en we .came ge r again a m ion o ars. 3. Blackfln. E'T J0 :22 :4l :05; PUBUC NOTICE TNr• w1u ~ , J\O.oo cttl'Otll reqult'H root Stormvogcl bv. Ii v e v.•e were about a quarter or a Blacklin was the third boat CT 9 21 ·21 ·52·02 for ••ell Ml of old aoc.11men11 ta "I he d W Id 1 l · ' · ' · SUl'l.•10• (:OU•T OF CALIFORNIA guar1n!H lllt rt1urn In 9ood eondltLon ntinutes and 18 'sl'<.'Onds. ITII .e 8 8 • e c 0 u n to finish at 8:4't a.m. Sunday 4. Ondine. ET 11 :04:19:20; COUNTY OF ORANGE w11111n 1a daY• ••tw IM 1:>1<1 -nr"9 d111. R . ho d h believe our eyes." CT 10·02·06·04 7'0 WHI Clwlc C111ter Or1.,. E•ch 1110 n'IUll (Ol'llorm Ind !If: agt1n1e mbe across t e k J h kl r (I) .• , PDT) She was about ' . ' . . S&llll A111, C1IHol"lll• t27fl fHPOOllve la ""' CIMllrlcl doc11ment•. finish line doing about 18 knots ~1ar o nson, s pper o . . 5 Bu cc an e er ET cAsE NUMIER E11(11 bid ih111 bl •ccompanlld by ~ before !he usual fotlo"·ing sea. \Vi~wa~d . Passag~. couldn't six hours ahead of her sister 11:08:38:45: CT 10: 12: 18:39. suMMON:-'11:~111t1AGEJ ~~:!i':'n11re!:;ldb'I' 'f .... 171.1 '':i P~= aiid "·earing her \Ya v. believe it e ither. ~atd he : ship Ondine which finished at 6 New --Wor ld ET In re 1111 mer11ago of Pc1111001er: MARY 111bl;ontr1e1ors. •'W d th · t k f . ' LOU t<:ILE'f 11nd Rtspcnden1· PAUL. J. Mr . J11m11 M. tithllnd, OIAClar, precariously through a host of e ma e e mis a e o 2: 19 p .m. (5:19 PDT). Bue-11 :09:30:19; CT 10:08 :49:55. K.1LEV · . scl\oo1 F1dll!lt1, M1rn1enance 1n0 0per1. conlmittec, press and s 1wc. not covering Rag time. But we -caneer was !he fifth boat to 7 Robon ET ll·l2-lt·2l· To 1111 R1spanden1: The ,,.1111i:wltr tits lion•, wu1 m•" wllh 111ote Ptnon1 In· r d ' t h · • · ' · • fllld • petlllon conc1r11lng y011r m•rr!1ite. !erelled In I011rl119 lllt sit• It canllcltd on tator boats which had nocked weraon a 1ree course tot c finish at 7 n '"· (PDT). New CT 10:10:15 :20. r011m1y1111 • wrlne~ resPOO•• w1t11111 Mor i..1ore Juty 11. 1t1J 11 1111 o111c1, •n lo the r,·01·5h lt'ne'to•wt·lness the finish and figured we would _.. d•Y• oi '"' , .... 1h11 this ""'Jm611t 11 ll•k•r street, C0111 Mt\•• t1l1Ph0f\I . . World finished at 8:30 p.m . P UBLIC NOTICE servld on yOll. 11 VOii 1111 •a ll1t'\ w•""" i57·6631. midnight duel. JUSt sail our own race. d R response wltlll n i11eh 11me, Y011r dri1v11 Tiit 01sTRtCT rtnrvn t11t rloht '' ,.,. Al .... h h hi "But those guys sailed one a n Obon Flt 10:30 p.m. miy be enterld and m.e c011rt m•v entrr IKt 1n1 or 111 blos or to w1lve 111r I•· lnuug t e l\\'O yac S A3 the first yacht to finish, •ICTtTIOUS I UllNllS 1 ludQm.nt contilnll'flil lnl11t1el1v• or reoul1rlll1s or lnlormellllet 11'1 •ny llldl or u•ere • aecarded the usual hell of a race" conceded Ra' . h NAMI! STATl!MlNT orher oro.rs tonc••nl"9 d!vlslllfl of pr0p-in tllt 01c11111111. J hn "Jl 'the' k' d f gUme became t e OVeralJ Tiit Jollowlng par!(.On 11 00!119 bu$lnes• .rti, IPOllWI lllflPOrl, CllllO cu•IOdy, TM OISTRl.CT ha1 del.,.m!Md Iii. !:OO EJ ())Htre'il1.1cy {RJlucy'astlll· r aucous ''aloha'' from rthd o son. was 1r 1n o and Class A led n h '" cnuo 1 inorr.ey•i i ts ano g1n1r1lpr•v•lll"9r•'•Ofperdl1m wt0e:• -• •• h h and .••a, a bt'g dt'sappot'nlmenl \Yeather most o f the way and a er 0 an-ADA EQUIPMENT RENT ALS. 1nt1 wr.ti. :;::"',~ 11 may~, g~:'ni~ by In lhe toc1U1y In wnlUt 111t -k 11 10 bl menu1111 lea WJls ,..,r t e c anc;.1 '"-· dicap lime. But he r reign at e1nc11 &tvd .. Hunt11191on 811eh,·9'2£&:1 nw c"""' 111rlormtd for ••en cr•fl « l't'Pll O! to ,pla1 1 cla11C1nl pic•le i" 1 tell· ·was the absenc e of the famed they look advantage Of every !he top or the corrected time C1rlos Sll'lthe1, ml Uth SI., Ft y-.. Wish ti -k lllt ltlvicl of in II-worlcmin neeoed to e~tcllll lhl contrk1. _,_,.,, ,, •• ,,.;,, ,,,,., •• , -n spotlt'ght beam from 01·amond m ·1nute of it " Wtsrm1n1ter. c.i1t. '161J. ,.,....Y la this """'' V"" sheulCI do M ,111ti.e r•,"'• •rt Ol'I 1111 '' ie.s1 "'"'"'H• ... "' "'' _... · list was expected to be short Th!1 tlllilness 11 conduc1td by 1n !n-• wr1 votnvt. os11 M~. Cop!• m•t be ott- up with 1 bizarre solulion. Head w h j ch traditionally Reminded of the closeness dlvldu11. r.-=,pfl~M' .;,.111~1.w:i.;,. 11 "'n ,.."°""' t11neo:1 on r-t. A COP'f o1 lhlM r11or:1 -, . lioJed, C1dos !•nthott ' me. 1h1ll bl po11tf 11 1111 lob MM. @ CMllMilica marks the finish line. for of the finish compared to the Al Casse\'s \\'arrior from This '"".....,' wa• 1uec1wun111e COlln· 0•1t11wMlll lJ;. 1J~~N ci Tiit 1oreooo1111 Kllldul• of per dlor:m 0 'Tl ~ ABC MOlld-Merit· (C) I · d the 1965 ace ·1n wh'tch h. ·as tv c1.,.1r ot Or•nge Caunly on Ju~ 11. · • • ""' W•OI• 11 bolMd l/l)(WI • -lrlnQ d1y ot l.lij ~ -r · scme unc xp a1ne reason r c Y. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Cub 19n. Bv Donni Glllbon•. Of:PlllY eight 111 flours. lllf: r•t• tor holldiv •ild (2hr) '1iu11n" (R) (drJ) 'S3-Cr111 F•JUtt ARTMUll: J, AUN£ -Mimi work sl'llll be 11 1111! llmt 1f\d Slev!ns, Laura Ot'IOn. [dw1rd As· was expected to take over P11bll•hcd O••ll!l<t coa11 0111y Piiot 1~1 Nerti! lroaOway -.-111. ' J11ne 2J ll'ld Julv t, t, 16, l911 1,.1,13 S •11 A•I, C1Hiior11I• W01 II 111111 be m.el't01lot'f upon !Ill CON- ner, Sherry Jackson, Albert P1u!sen. M k H h T k l---------------ITtMpMM: !7141 141.stss TRACTOR to wt1om 1114 cont•Kt Is Oneoftelevision's lirstprfv1!1eye,. ar ug es (.l es PUBLIC NOTICE A!tanlly for: P1ltt1-r IW•rOed, Ind upon 1ny 1ubcanlr1t!Of" Publl~Md Orano1 Co;n! Oaily Pilot, unoer him, to pay "°' lfls tllen !ht 11ld copes with Hes, l1diu ind larttnJ. '" Dana F~""" t---------------· Junor: 25 1nd J\llr 1, '· 1" 1t13 1971.13 'PltlAld ''"' to 1u workmen emploYT<J ~ MOYlt : (Cj (211r) "To Tr•p • LI...... FICTITIOUS l!IUS1Nl!IS by !Mm ln lllt IXetllllOl'I of lhl canlrKI. Sp~ R y h NAME STATEMENT -PUB LIC NOTICE No lllOdw "''Y wlttldr1w Ill• blO lor 1 ' (susp) '6S -Obert IUI n, 'Fl o f h K o ' Tht foUowlng person Is OOlng business ----------~-----J""'lod of fortr-flve l.U ) dl'fl 1n.r th• P•tricla Crowley. ... .. te 0 t e .. tes B IS: • 6&7l1. dill •• , for tllt O(llllf"ll of llldl. Iii D 'l II ... . N PL.AS TIC SALES &-thlG. CO .. 117 w. NOTICI! TO Clltl!OITO•S A P•rm.nt bOnd 1no 1 pertorm1r><:1 . llCMI ares e'v 1710 SI., C0511 Mnl, C1. tt•11 SUPE RIO• COURT OF THI! bOnO Wiii bl rKtUlrH prlOI'" to tXku!lon ot EE) Roller C1mes Paul fNMI} W1!gl, 10115 Olllo Av1., STATE OF CALI FOR MIA FOlt !l'le (Ol11rtcl. Tiit ptyment bond ihll! 1!4o ~ ,_ Criod II C ,... Loi Angeles, Ce. 90048 In Ille !0tm 1e! forth In !ht (onlf•tl W LI I flt f 0 Jd i..-.. fhjs business It eon<hicled by in In· THE COUNTY OF ORANGE docllmen!I. T wenly·two-year-o A'l a r-11· A P'l t Olv!ll11~I. Ho. A·7'114 GOV<trnlng lloard 9;30 l)@ Doril D1y St.ow (R) Doris' ~lugheS o r C0ron3 de! Mar lllO } 0 P111I W1t111 Esle!t ot EL.MA VIRGIN 1 A llr Dorothy H1rvt'f Flih1r I I' (p • O'H t cd h d I Tn11 1latotllltflt w1s llltd wll~ the COUii-R86IOOUX, Oectesed V Purcllesl"9 Agent newes ame atrrc. e1) pays captur t e secon annua tr Cltrk .,. orange C011n1>' on Jlln1 11 . ..OTICE IS HEffEB GIVEN lo tt.e P11bHshed in O••f'l9e C<11t1 . Dilly Pllot hu 1 SUIP!i&e v1~1t 1nd proPOSllS ''l•"\i(e of the Kites·· .Sunday. 197l, (r..Ollors al llle abovt named Otttc1en1 July, •nd July 16 1,73 1104.7l Coe Manufacturing Com· '·HU• 111a1 •N pf!•10111 h•vlng (l1lms a11111nu 111e ' are in lhe o11lna. "Hiling lhe five-mile Ncwporl pany pf Dana Point has an-Publl•hl!'d orange coast D~lly Pllo1 June iald oeeeoent art ·~11l•ed to 1111 them. ---~----------0 News llarbo• ~ursc 1.0 an hour and 1S an<I J~tv 2. ,, 16, 1,,J 19~1.13 wi.11 111~ nec1u 1rv vouclltrs, In the oince PUBLIC NOTICE rn Ciel Smut '-" nopnced what it calls a major of 1111 clerk of tr..e above <!<lUt!eo (ourt, « u:J 35 minutes. PUBLIC NOTICE to ll'••1n1 lhtm, with 111e ne,ess1ry --,=,,-----------ED Mitker Newbury Siti1er/30fll· engineering breakthrough in vouc:hers, 10 1111 11nders1gned ai •rie raw NOTICI TO cotcT1tACT011:s · M ff " · Th cd b th J ( .. ~-t· 'J t l'J' atfle1·of MARIAN PLUNKETT. Po•I 0!-CALLING FO R llDS WITle! rctey ewbury pe11orm1 !II e race. sponsor y e Q,.W cos au llkl IC pl 0 s. s FICTITIOUS IUSINESS Utt 8o~'16', 412 Oli~ot Avenue, ttunllnglan School O!llrl(I: NEWPORT • ME!A concert. Newport Harbor Chamber of called the Dual Coe-Pilot NAME STATEMENT Botacll, C•Ufornl• 9164 •• whlc!I ii 11"1 Pl•(e UNIFIEO ~ IJ rn EJ m Nm @II Mud11tlll itatilna Conlme rce. -nti'nucS \ h e Whi.Ch t·n-~rateS t Tiie l0Uow!119 Pt•!(.On 11 dolrig bllslnets ol butlnen ol 11111, 11Nl<!rllOned In 111 mat· BiO OttOlln1: II :CO o'tlotl! AM Ol ltlf: 3111 0 9"'tllr !Of Dcit11rs ..... '-V• I"' w 0 IS. ten pert1lnl119 to lllt tslt!t ot Sl!ld ~f· d•Y ol JUL., .,,, ~ -~, •• (C) t~ ., ... :"-··· mi LI Lim dt la S.llllUI .. tradition establis hed by the autopilots in one unit. FOUR COLL.AR FRED, ut AIC .ient, wt111rn tour tnO<ll~• a11e.-1111! tlrs1 Pt1c1 of Bid. Recelpr· 11~1 PIKtntla ~ _, .. m, .., .,.,...,. Rlvtrsttle, NewJIO<"I 6e•Cll, C1lll. t'1660 Pllbllc1'1on ot lf1i1 nalk t. A~ue Co.ti Mtu · fn1o ntnk Yl'lll(' (corn) 'M _ 10:00 f) (I) Mtcliul ttnltr_(lt) Clleslt fonner ''flight • of t h e The Dual Coe-Pilot consists Fredtrlc Mlrtn Oolhrlno. 109\'J 01reo July 11. 1913. Prolect ' J d t n 1 1 11 c 11 1 0 n 1111...,. J11nes DaM•~. P1"1tl1 rrtt1n, Kolm awsts is 1 famous doctor Soo..vbirds" initialed in the of l\'-'O solid state modular i~:!1n~~:!~1!"1~!;~i.!::· ~~n In· i:~:~f«0o.-P~N~~~T01 ~~g~o:~~~~o SIGNAL. D1ST11:11u: (l)Wlkflif,1 'JMalrr whost vitill ,urgtr. is postpollM J930s. electronic c irucits. One circuit djv!du•I. 1111 •bov• n•r'n<:d decedent. TAR'f scHoo"t ANOEll:SON ELEMEN-., f JJ 'nd Frtderlc M. Oothrll'IQ MARIAN PLUNKETT Pl Pr O Wktf1 My U111F when a tlvt 1'41!osN1 is fo~M Sunday's race dre\.\' 89 en· operates rom a sama WI Thli statmtnr w•s 1nld wun "" C011n1Y 02 onw. Avo .. f'O tox u' !(' •n~ •r• on 11 .. ~ 1151 Ptac~1;, m I low LIKJ lad_. in 1nolher P'htnt's dltst b · k d k indicator and controls the Clttt 01 Oral19f C011nly on JllOI 20. 197l. """'';"''°" Inell, Cell!. tu.a N~~~E 1t"'~e~'e"ov G•VE" -1~" tries, but r1s win s too a F1'2" T.i· 1n•1 W ·>tllt .. "''' 111• I I DfNI\ of lt:11nil 0 m Ii) Nm h{'aVV. toll and only SS rinished boat's course by ~·ind d i rec-Publlslled Orano1 COl~I Dilly Piiot J""e All;.,.,..~ fOr" &•w.lar ~=;;•t:ilirin'rllool 1?1stMcl of Or1ng1 Sl111P1t•••lt M11i1 (6.: T-'1i&hl Ztnt lion It does so electronically 25 end July 2. t. ia, 1913 19U.1l Publitllt'd or1119e Ct111 oailv Pno1. Ju· lls GoWrrilil ~.!,.:c :'.ib'f ,:nd tll•avoll ..i... __ .~,... ....... the cottrsc ac-rdo'hg lo race · • 1r .16. u , 30 •"" "·~-'· 1m 2151.n ,0 .. 015 ~ •• 'I . • n• tr rete«ed --. allJU I..;., 0 ltcif. PlrilW. T•!kt To , • • • .. v climina11·ng the I a r g e PUBLIC NOTICE ----"' T i ·~ win r..ce1v1 up to. bu1 -"a'2.•~.. officials. · • "°1 i.r.,.11•1n ttie •bov•ll•l~m" Hftl-~•"'*' e •~· f1111llJ cumbersome and COmP.licated PUBLIC NcrrJCE' ed !!Ids for '"° IWMO cl •Kantra~I lpr U) lpM~ Rattr CI:l V1tledlit1 Hughes was awarded the . ' · FICTITIOUS l!IUSIMl!SS the lbr>Vf pro!KI. Albert Solland pe r pet u a I linkage systems common Ul NAME STATEMENT 1 ,1116 8101 111111 DI recelV<td rn the plae• Idell· 7:30-Jollnn1 Minn's s11nd Up 111d lO:lO O Y••"" over-the-stem wind vanes. T1>11o11ow1119 peraon 11 etolno b11s1n1u suPr1t10• COURT OF THE lilied 1bov1, 11111 111111 bt ooened and -Trophy for his winning effort. . . . . ·~: STATE OF CALIFORN IA l'OR publlclv ••IMf llOlld ., !ht eboVl·Sllltd Cllffl (R) Andy Griffith 1uu11. 00 OINI st•, krod The · ren1a1n1ng c 1rcu11. in-SONRI SA o·6RO, 919 Sun1et Orlv1. THE COUNTY 0 1" ORANGE time alld Piie&. ~ ... an's Herou l!J lu• A•-t••• Second place went lo Phillip dependent of the ·wind in c.,.1a Mor:s1. c11it«nl1, t'1611 No. A 1u1s , Tnotrt w111 bl~ '2.S.oo depcsu •Mlllred l.lij """ Ramming ot Balboa, who edg· . . . John S Llndff'I~ 9" S11nsel Otlvot, Oll:OE• TO SHOW CAUSE rt: CHANGE for Heh HI at blO docUmerlls to 0 TM Ntw P1ko II Rl&hl g;)TV Musiul dicato r . IS compass controlled C""t~ Mot11, CatUornl• '1617 OF MAMIE Qu1r1ntea l~• •et11rft In 9aod c001dltlooi 0 "''• "' flel.t•bl!lf l;t';I News/"-ed Mr. and P.1rs. George Twist and holds th selected -·rse TMt bllSIMH II COl'IOllC!tO by In ln· In the Miiier ol the Appllc11!on cl wl!nln 10 O•Y• •lier Tl>e blO O(llnfng Oetot. ~ ~· f H · Be h · d · e "vu Ol~IOu11: DELORES M. HOESMAN. Ea,n l>ld mu1t conform &nd 114o ()) f lM Thrillsetke11 o unt1ngtoo ac in a r iv· by compass heading. A n ick of Ja1111 s. Lindsey WHEREAS, .,.111i0Mr ~•• Ille'!! 1 pell· r!!SP0<11!v1 10 r11t canlraet doc11men11. . Miiiian $ MO'lll : (2ht) 4"hl 11'.00 EJ [J 0 @II m G) Newt ing finish. 01Uy ''let St•lf l"llttl . Thll slelor:ment wa1 tlltd wltll Ille Coun-!Ian with 1111 Clerk o1 !his Coor! tor E•(h bid 1h1ll DI 1eeomp1nlld llV lhl "' .I M••" ldlo) ·~..,-H•o• Foo· (3) (ll O(lil News Bes'd k' h' d J · a SWl!Ch Changes the Control tv C!ttlo. ot Or11111e County on J11ne 21 , on:11r el\e119!ng por:!lllonei's n•m~ tr 51'1:11r11v retor:_rred ro In 1111 cantrict ~· ., ~ I es la 1ng I tr Pace in WINS K1TE FLITE from one ""'Stem lo the other 1911. DELORES M. HOESMAN to DEE M. ocumenh •nd b'f 111t 1111 01 praposf'd de. AnlhOl'ly Quiyle. ' (J Giit step Beyontl th th Tw" I th . "J. . , ' F-UJlt LIV INGSTON ; ul>contractors. 00 Perry M e race, e IS s were e -Mark Hughes No ms tallat1on IS ~u1red. the P11bll•llotd Or•nQ• COISI Dilly Piiot J11not IT IS OROERE O lh•I '" persOM In· The DISTRICT rtSl<Vtt 1111 right ta ,,. m fllll Sfrl -, •son Di ti°' first married COUple lO Cr OSS pilot fits any size s8ilboal with :U ltl'I J""y l , f, 16, 1913 1t'111·13 ltrtilcd In !lie at>ovt en!ltll!d matter IP· Itel ln'f Of" Ill blOs or lo Wl lVot 1ny lr-G) Dr•r11et u MOYll!: (C) "DoctOf kl llrt the finish line a nd won the 1----------------Pt•• before 11111 court et 2·00 Pm on'"' reguJ1rlU11 <II'" rntortn1Ull" In eny blet' or -w An1'11I Colltctlwi A riporl (Ulm) 'SA -Dirk Bo1ardt, Slm1n-ti\ lei:.. and can be adapted to PUBLIC · NOTICE 31•1 d•Y 01 July, nn In tne ~.j;..,,., 01 rnT1 .. "' "oMos'r"",·,,, ~ chamber's spec1'a\ race trophy was Gay Koll 12 or L 'd I I I h I I Dt:p1rlmtnl number 3 100 Civic C.nltr his dtlermlned '"" on firms 11111 h•-e succmlun, In· Iha ru1ar. • ' I 0 s e. n1os w ee sys ems. Drlvot w.,, Counl'f Ot Oral'lgf: Clly Ol gmer11 pr1v1lll"9 rile ol Plf' ll!tm -~ ttllkd th• four·d•r WO!'k week: ID Truth. or Cott1141ueKn in that category. She v.•on the A. 8 . Rouselle Details are available by F~JJ.,.T~0~/A:~~1:::s S•(lta Ana,'s111or: of C•lllornia, ~""snow •11 '"" loc.iuy In '""leh 1111s wor1o. 1, 10 be Iii. U.. .' -(d I F th I I I J h p I T h r .. r . CIU .. , " 1ny, why lht Ptlftlon tor ehll'lgf: performed for llCll er•" or l'fPt al Cl' Ware BU!et! rel)Or!s on bar· cm1: N tl'tll'ltr " r1 our pace wen o o n erpelua rop . y or that ef· v.1r 1t1ng Coe Manu actunn g '.h• 1<111ow1<>11 pers.on Is dol119 M lne11 oi nim• "1ould not be or•nled. workman nftdld 10 h1cur1 111e cllflt•11et. 11iM; Wini Sture1on·1 "A Way ol '51-A~liS S~ilh, ScMt Bli~. r.1ce1ure or Lido Isle. while fort. ~ Company. Marine Division, I$. Bl·TAONIC5, 26112 NewpOrl 81 ... 0., • ..!!. I~ ~~RTl-l:!f-o,ROEAEO. lhll • !':f: :::r.:-:,-;.r,. .. p~~~1:.1~'!:!!c.T Th.•. " ....... •. b t:T:I Ph1l1dol .... 01ca..-1r1 .. ho ft'fth place w·as capt cd by K 'th . . k r N PO Bo 463 D p . t N--1 l!ltlCll C1lll ......... _.,, "' "~' or .... r 0 ''-CIU:sf! bl c ' M ". tn 1n1. 1.....,,1 ba '"I reld; and u:i .... ur , e1 patr1c o ewport x . ana om . ·-~· ' ·• ........ Pllbll"'9<1 111 Tiit 01ny Piiot. • l\IWsplPtr "'• "'· capr11 ""Y 1>1 obl•IM<I on Kirt" Jo~nson's him, '·Hind" lle11wl {R) Dick Munroe or Balboa Island. Beach another 12-year-old. jiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;il J1ck E. 81Yln. 1S?5 PIKltl\lll, of gt<n~•• cl•c11!&Uon. printed 111 Otl"llf: r~"""'· A copy of lheH rates 11'1111 l>I Newporl B~Kh, CA 9'2660 coun!y. s1111 of C11ilor11J1, tor 1our sue· POS!fd •I the lob 5.111, m Tiit Adn"tu1e1 ll:JO 0 IT.CBS Liit Morrie: "D1rb"'• The first girl to cross the was the youngest boy jo finic:h NEWPORT. LEASES Thl1 M lntH Is conducted by •n In· CHSlVt Wttkl prior lo Thi Ctl!f: set ror Tl!<! tor111ol1111 KlledUlt of ""' dltm -... Usttd Its Ut I! <.!!./ , 1· p I r 'I: Olvletuat. l'letrlng on !ht l'f:liHon Wlllft 11 blJed upon • -king d&r of ~ 1 re. as Ranier•" (adv) 'SS-James G•mt1, 111e y.·as a u a Schneider o and picked up the Harry Jack E. Bivin o•TED· J ,.. 71 19;3 1lgh1 111 11ou ... Th& r1i. 1or 11&1tc11y 1n11 al TIN Add11111 f;1m1fr D •fO, ~ Johnnr ·cuio• Sl\tth Newport Beach. The l9-year· 'Yelch Perpetual Trophy. 2400 Wftt c-t Hi.hwoy T1111 s111e,.,m• w•• 111&!1 wn~ •tw Coun· 8 ·. ~L.AU6E M. ow-·is Ove.-11m1 work 111111 ti. ., 1t1s1 11m1 •nd "-' ~ "' ty c11r~ at or1nge C011n1y on July '· nn. . J~ 1 th 5 · , 1::(: -·nail. ' ''°" 0 III liunsmoke (RI M~11 Dillon! G1une is guest host. old sailor was awarded the Officials said the oldes t race Leasing all Vehicles Fl6Jt• L Ollk 01° ' u~nor 011 '' " 111111 be mort0111ory 11pon !ht CON· T 0 " · So II> y d I \V 'll' I I I P\>tlllstieo Or1nge Coa1t Dilly Piiot, Ju-J~=N K "r•OTT<• ,, Tlt,ACTOR 10 wllom lhl contrict 1, i$ bus!iwacked 1n Dodge City and ..,av11: " o nd '' "Jlt«• 1 1am ns ee P 'Cr pet u a I participant was Dave Stone of 6 iv '· \,, 11. JO, 19JJ 111:1-13 sunt •. • • ~ · 1w1«:1td: 111<1 upon any ,ut>tantractor 111'1 cli1 or become paralyiecl unte~~ tor" (mys) '52-Cesar Romero. Trophy. Ne\vporl Beach. He is 40. they 45-2202 401 Civic center Drl.,. W•1t und~ h•m, 10 P•t not ltu lhan troe seld • b"'l.t ' ., ''"'''' loom '''' .,, 0 (I) Wide Wo1td o1 (nleNi11° Th nges t · I I r· · h 'd PUBLIC NOTICE eint a1 ci111-11 eu11111no soeclllH r1tn 10 •ti wortimtn lmP!ored " 1 ... ~~c~y~o~u~~~~g~•-~r~~o:.;~m~t~s;;.~s~a~•~·;.,.iiiiii;..;;iiiiiiiiiiii-.i~-· ~::::::::::ii::::::::::~,1 ~=~J~~~~~~~~==:1 San11 An• cillloml• '1 701 by tlltm 111 !ht txecut!an of file coniract. spi11e,"'iifP1rt I of' three·plrl stocy. me11t "Marjofs Countcy -Nash· ~ l'ICTITIOUS SUSINESS T•I• horil'!n4l SC7-m6 US'5U No lltddtT m11 W'L!hdrew his blcl k>r . 'II " M · G t t... NAMI! STATl'MlNT P • ' Pt•IO<I Of forl'f:t!v1 !.Ul Ol'fl 11t1r the EJ m M1jor learut Baseball San VI e aqoe or ner, 0116 I Tht lollowlnv pe<IOl1 11 doing b111lnt11 AtlttM'f 11"' "111110fltr dtlt Ml for the Optn(ng of bl01 fr1r1CIJCO Gianls vs. St Louis, ev1n11eli ca l preacher W"ho tr1ve!ed a~: Published Or•~ co11r Olily Pilot A pa1m1n1 bOnd end 1 ..trtormincot ' • h \ '"' So th d [ ' CAL IFORNIA P1GGVllACt<: SERY· Jun• JS, &l'tO July 2, 9, 16, 1'73 ltn.n bond will bo '""''"-'"·lo ••-"•I-°' "· .... io•IS. I n1oug ou u , con uc 1 in· .... "" ... ~ ""' O uMo.Je: (C) (Zhr) "Wll Of Ille dep1~ inle!'f1ews with 1 wide 11n111 '-'GAS SAVER'' SPECIAL :;~;i001 1~l:~11.8t:~1or~~!'~~d .. Hu PUBU ICE 't: 1:'1~:.!n T~t ~it:·j~ ~ ~~:1,"~ <up&tuis" (sci ti[ •66 _ '"'·~s , of Nashville resiclen1s wllou 1cti'li· M,1e111tl o1 110 w1111i, 111n 81'11111 000:11m111h , "w • Ch c•, Hun! nv•an 6e1c11, C1llL nut Go\'«nl1111 Soiro Tamb lyn. tres lll centered In Nash'lillt. Emulf Tlllt 0u1!ne1s Is con011e1eo by 1n In· CITY OF COSTA MESA • lly Oorofi'ly Hervty ·Flll'llr 0 ,..... ~ .Tht Rookies "Crossfire" Tubb ind Hank Snow l fl lff\OAI lllvlaueL o•ANOE COUNTY' CALIFORNIA Pll!'Clwlllng "'""' "' ~ M . ' MIKE WILLIS NOTICE TO CONTRArTOll:S flublls.lltd Or1nge Co1sl Dally 1>·1o1 {II) Pe1ty Rod11~ues auests as R.C, arioes gue51$. Tiiis sl11tmtn1 was !Uld with 11111 Coun· NOTICE IS HERE6'f GIVEN llwl 1e11-Julr 16 ind u 1,13 21~71 T.~. w•· '' t•· 1,.,. bt--• otfit•I ID ft Tilt tbt Trutll ty Clerk ol Or1ng1 Cavllty on June 21, td P'OPOSl!ls will be rtcr lved ll'f lllt City ' ' '"" '"' ,,. """ 1~73. of Co1t1 ~ II Ille olfLct of Ille City on the force ind who is 11 odds rr. FH1J7 Clerk 11 the CHY Hall, n F1lr 0r1v1, PUBLIC NOTICE . IZ:OO 1.!U M•tsllJI DUIOll -Pirl>llslleO Or111111 COis! Dlll'f Piiat, Coste Mn1, C~lfornl1, imttl the 11!M.1r If ---• "1th h11 parlnu Terry Web11l11 uni!! m AllTtd Hlttllcoc~ l"rtMnb J11111 25 Ind J11\y z. '· 16. 19n 1 .. 1.]J 11 :00 a.m. on July 31, 197l. 1t wl'!kl't t!mot:1----.CDT"-l<-.-,".",c.,-,-.-.-.-,.-,'--- • 1u11m•n huntin11 • youn1 witness llley wlll bl DPtned publlclr •nd rt&d NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN '"'' I · th I 12 30 0 HI... ..,., PUBLIC NOTICE 1toud 111 Ille Couoc!1 Ch1mbtrs for ed 0,-.1 111 •• 1 "' 11m em I 'ommo n llOil . : If r 1ur n1snl"9 ell Nbor. m1te•11t5, e<wLPl'l\IHlt. -_..._' w ""' recr ~ Ir/, !ht Clly nQ} Newt m Mnie; "Act911 t11e Wide M• tr11n1porllll0fl •nd •llCll o!'-f<l(:lll!ln 1s of Costi MHI II 1111 o!llct al 1111 City F1CTIT10US IUS INIESS miv be rtQ11lred FOa THE IN· Clerk al !hi City H1ll, 11 Filr Dt lvt, m fht Cihosl 1ncl Mn. Muir MUlin (adv) '51-Gll~ ~bit, NAME STATEMENT STl\LLATION OF TIAFFtC SIGNALS Coit• Mf!SI, C1l!lornl1/ unlll lllt l>Olll' ot Q) Tht U11t111tl11bles "Hf~d ol _ Tiit fol lowi ng Pt"on h dol"9 1!u5.IOH1 l\NO S"FET'f LI GHT ING AT ll.OO i .m, on Jiiiy JO, lt1), II wh!cll ltm. Tri. reel ol Cray~ Elio! Ness finds · ~ '°" ~ HAPP'f CAMP, L TO.. t:io NewPO<I A se1 o1 plin1. •PKltociTion• •!Id 1111tr •loud 111 ""' COUftefl Cll•mben for ' I l ·OQ f'i'l -o '-' NNJ 10: MISCELLANEOUS LOCATIONS. , lhty Wiii bl lll>tlltd llUbllclr Incl rtlld llimsetf ift J 1tr1n1t S¢11Jtton wtltn l:4S O Mowii: . ...,.,,,, '"·-rldt" 10,.1 Cener O•ive, Sulit 221, N-porf lltKl't. (antrK.I <1oe11motnt1 m•r bl IN>lilnld ,, lu•nlslll"' •It l1bor. ma!trl1l1, """1.....,..,,, '. ··• h [ """' CA-lllt allRt Of Ille Cl!V Eti9Ti'I~. n F"itr lfl--1allon ...... llKll Ollll< l1tlll!I" 1• I A 0 ""''ool c um UM!S h m •s '43-Gin11r. Ro1111, lltbtrl Rp11. "•ul F. LO'lf:f~. Gen.r1L P•rlnor:r, Orlw, Cot;!• Mn1, C•lll01"nl1. UPOn I m•v flt rlq'lllftll lot lllt Otvf:lopmer\f of "b11I" in a bl1e~m1il plot and 1n·r' CAPRI &XI N_por, c1n1er 0,1.,., su111 111. flOl't rerUfld•lllt payment at ll.OO. A CM•04' Tanl(/ef P••~. VOIY!thftil wllh t~e ric~tb. J:lO 0 MOYlt: -rortrtss ol the Dt.r h S /I Newport l!lt1tll. Cll. OI Sl .00 will bot mlde 11 hel'ld!ld b'I' mall. A ill at Pl•nt. 1Ptd llc1Hons 1nd ofhlr , t e eYV Europea Th!• bu1ln••• ls (Ol'IOllCltd D'I' • Umlleo PLEASE MA IL SEPARATE CHECK& (Ofln"k'I documttUI m1y l>I Dl!l•lned tt fl) LI Senoia .lovtn ~clra) '65 -Johll H1d:ttt, Conrad -1 • • • Hrtnerltllp. E1eh bid 1111u be mlOe on Tiit .-..t lllt olf1c1 ol lllt CllY El'llflnH•, T1 Ftlr = y th A Ch • M " p h P•11I F. LOY.,.!!l'jle torm Ind In !ht mi_.-prG'l"I ... In !hi Ori.,,., COlll Miq, C1lltornl1, 11Part 11 l'IOl'I· QLI op tr: 11c 1n1 n1 a1 am. This 1111cm.nt 1111d w1111 ltM C011ntv '°"''•cl oocum1nh, '"° th•ll M 11:-rtfund•Oit p.1ymtnt at u .oo. A tllarr" -'Jerk at Oran941 Countv Of': Julv· '· 1'7l. Compi~lld b¥ • Clfllfl..:1 or "Cltflltt'I Sl.00 Wiii bl "'lldl II N f'l(fltd by mil . Tuesday "lntuns Can't Tak Money" (dt1) '31-Joll McCrt1. 1:00 Qlt'1tor111 Cop" (d11) 's.4-llobert l•vlot, Janet Le11~. Gtoil• Ritt. l:JO O (C) "The Lill Hvnr (1dv) ·sg -Robert Taylor, Stewart Granier. t:JO O (CJ "TIM Loni. Lgn1 Ir1H1r" J:OO (1) "fm Milts te Mldnl1•r llat1 I 1 (c.om) '!l4-l11C1lle Bill, De11 Aina/. (mn) '6J-An11\ony Per~ins. DAYTIME MOVIES 10:00 rn "Tiit l1op11ll" Part t (dra) '63 t\.11, (C) "£air 111 Lawt" '(rom ) 'SJ I -8ur1 Lil'ltl!ol!f. Claud•• Catdlnile. -lS1hc1 W1lh1ms, Van Jollnson. I 0 "II I Had Mitllotl" I I .32 1:30 0 "lnv1tilioR tp 1 Gunfilfller" • tom {•e•) '64-Yul 8f)11ner. -Girt Cooper, WC rl«lcls. I 4:00 O "C11tt1H !drt) 'S9--0tan Mar- U:IO 8 "Us! Tltlll frt• Mldrid" (dr1) tin. Shirlf)o Mac.lame.. '11 -DolOl'hf Lamour, Uw AJrt1.1 •:JO (I:S-.11 JOAM M1ti111 .. "' 8y TllerH& M. W1•d, OePllty ·Coun!y citeck Of" 1 bid tlOf'lll '°' llOI Int ltWNI lll"'lo Ekl't bid slltU D>I tnldl Oii 11\1 pr~11 Clerk. 01 lllt imount ot !he bid, ..,_ plyilll• 10 form 9nd In 11'11 m•nMr proylctfd In 1111 FREE 10.s1PEED 'BIKE P11bl1sht0 Or•tMJt Co1sl 01111 F~ tll~~~7ct1~-;~R.1.f~:·, G!V!Pt ,1111 .,.,.<~~ld~~~1~1r:i~•::11 c!:1111~~; July '· lt, )J, :Ill. 1913 11U·73 C!l'f COllncll of ).lld City h•i .... -..JW.t cll«I or . !>LO bond for nol !111 11111'1 lO"i --1•l1blllllld 1 pr1v1ill1't9 rill • ..., tuiof of ~ "t'1tTI gf lllt blcl, m.O. P8Vlbl1 lo PUBLIC NOTICF. -~• In KtorOsnc:t wl!h l1w te M pakl 'f Cost• M111. 1t ·--------------ll11 111f con1truc!IOfl of 1111 "°"6 Ollflllld lrtOTICE IS FUltTHElt GIVEN 111111 tnt + with every one ordered and , delivery during the month of July ! $149.00 ITALIAN IMPORT VALUE . . . WIDE SELECTION OF 2000 & Y /6's AVAILABLE , FICTITIOUS 1!1US1Nl.SS !orio.provem.nts. J iii! 11kl r11e M\O Ktll ~~!oS=I~ :.,''1~1 Cll'f 1"-1 llrr1loli!•1 ... MAME STATIMlHT Wll lflo!ecl !ff •Ill City Couf!dl bY WIQl'S. 11'1 occaro:.::. r:i.~·1:.:~o :''' f' Tl'lot 1o11aw1n~ p1r1011 11 Ool"9 l!utl11H1 RllGlu!IOfl No. 1J..l an 'lltt: ilncl ••1 of In lhl c-trwt\on of !ht .. ~. It'll~ II Jll1'Utl')' 1tn ft.fl llld <Ill '"" ICI I ii IMOrOWfM!ltl TP\lt Id 1t1 91119 SUPER4 Fjjm Edl11"9 Servlc1. l'l't 11! forlll hl•lln, Ind 11\&I \llcl ICllt, "w•1 "'°"tMI ' Oy ...... Cl: Counc:I"* °" MM, S111Tio C, Sin (:lem.1111. C1HI, .00,!tCI bY uld RtM111tl6fl. ll -• lthOl\1111'1 7>1 °" 1111 'litd Jav of J~ ~ m n !Mrt 01 11111 nolla :"'1"' tllt lllglltr !tdlf"•t lt11. •!Id l1 an flt• In tM Offlc• OI lllt Cl';' L.frTY FrHmln, 11l P1!\r•d1, Ap!, (, OI' T\:1~r'11~~IVlol1~ 11t· I I Cl.,.k II 1110 (ll'f, TMI uld r•ll ,.,,: S.n Clemlt\19, C1!1! n'n IV °'" H ""Y NI'! '., Kiii 11 lltflffl rtftr.ld lo •n<I lldot!ltd I Thlt l>lliL,,.11 11 belno conduettd b'I' 111 •II bldd.,.1 lhll II will 11ilrm111.,.rr lnwr1 INt notk • •t rttouoh ll,llt nd comp! " lndlvlou1t tn•t ln •nr ttt>l•KI entrTto ln!'ll PVr1111nt M1 !orlh IWr.in •no 111 ~t 1 Id 1 llottr L••rv l'tHm1n la 11111 t><1""1!~1. mlf'I0<'11y tl\tlll'DI .,...., bY 111.i •na1.!i '11 Kl 1• •• Tl'lh ,,,._, fllld wltll 1M COlllll'f' .... toi"prlH1 will lit afforded 1¥11 .. p.v! of 11111 netltt '1 r...,.~. 1 mao. 1 Cltrk OI Or•l'llile County °"' Jllfll '°· llTJ. POtlunlly 10 Wblft/I oldl I~ rl'MIOMI !(I Thi con111e1or tl'llU. . In t II • ty Tllt<IW M, W1ro. Dlpuly CMl!'f 1111• lnWlllll(ll'I ffld will flCtl 0. Clirtor!NlllCI af '"° -k •fld ...... ci.n.. dltcrlmln.tllCI All•ln51 an file J.._m Of Pl'-*'"'-corilotm 1o lllt L•bor coik •4•M1 fk'll. COIOI', or n.triOMI ortoifl 11'1 COii-o1 lilt Sl•ll at C1llflrnL• •n<I °""' .. Plllllflhed Oflnllt Cwit Dllty Plklt JUM llde•i llOfl tor '" .,..,._, ol !tit' S1111 01 C1llrotftl tf)Olk ;: 2$ •nd Jiii~ 2. '· ''· lt7.I 1954-7J Tiit Cont•KICW' 111111. )fl 111 e lller1to, "'"" ,.,. •~ttcltkln ~v af :.c .. 11 ·-------------'..C:JPOl'fict""'fl(t OI lhl -· -1 .... Yl1'1111oM fl m1y be ,_lrtcl ~ ll'!t (h,,.,,, •• ",,.,.,"•i'71/Fi1HC.f'I· AfVlfrt :r::Ti~ :"~r...:.. ~L=-~ rotc:ifi llltll'" P\irwtnl !(I wllldt 111'0-KOCE CHAN NEL so ~ Of 1111 111"9 of CIHlorl'lll• .,..11<11111 C....illlfl .... _..... .... 1••111 Ind wllkll J ;m T•fftlltO "el•h lCI 'IN:-" ... --C"" • H 'I ,_ h & lhlNIO. wllll fllo tllCtofion DO!lv et luc:ll t:'~ ~ ~, ....... r~ .,!1! l»t: - C1N L•li<•"· A docum1n11ry 1x1m. ••• ;;;;;, ~;·· 0,:,'1.,;.m pr; 0 nson son Chew! vtrl•"-11 mtiy °' ....,.,td _,., "'° llDOt 111eu"M glvwn ;;iy'1;'"~~ lnll'IO '°"" of n,. P•OOltmt l•Clt>O ""~ 61 (l\!ld •!ww -bel!tT kMWll II • lM(lfl ll•tvto. ~I to wl'lk:tl ~ Pl'O'lldOd ... Ito. Alftlf'k •n 1111t1111 -' Ille t1o1it1rtd 'tl\lld itndl'-. coodtl'IOI lllttUfdff ,,.. 11kon oM hi ' bid w n be c«11l0e<111 """-1t 1, .a:JO CIWl'•>j•llllMI !Cl A Dt.~.~•4 I ll•w "'°' °""' ~d by 1"' oro-mlde en a 1111n1o. torm fllrnl111td ,.,. "" _ tt,.:r: n rntth, ~""'fi'• ~1torJd 1:0t>t,1W1!" l'~Tllt ~''( ~ T~lr9 , vitlanl ol Ille l lbor C01'9, 'l" 11' CMI• ...,, •fld 1, molde In K• l~,1~~11111A•klPr °J:llOrt~"' 1 ""rm..'S' ,.,..~ 1~!~~~ 1111 wtlol~ \-4B I ~ m:. old llllll oe considered 11fll-It II cD!'((onc:t Wllft 1'1'11 lll'O'lt'*t 61 1116 "'"°' oo"lill I': !1 ~ ~r.-tCI ""' '' "''' " t~m • ..., ~ ------. -·p-rmw.... ~ """ -'""""" " ''" -•~• ., Pei':....'Ts, ~n ~r 1\111'1 • n d P•lrl~, 1111 pr(ld11Cll011 I• lltlltl:I to I --··--' ~at Mii MtM'~ I) ""'lcll !II •C· llCll Okldll' mu.I bl llClftlid Mid lllie 5 kl'lt 111 p,tr! at tlll• l>r.llln It 1111 worl! ot 1111rlno· I~ n<O "'ttfl !ht .,..,.,alonJ OI ll'\f 11ro-Pl'ICl'Ulllfl" •• "4Y!f'td by 11"', rldlv'S ~ o..i, w 1111 Ult:llklf\11 Of«>fe t .... mllOl'ltl'(t gt -..-.-~ lll!UI ~e-~, Tiit Clf¥ (Olfn<ll of 11i1 Clly of Ctsll l'oPollll n OW• \tr Johll , ... , ,·,~~ . .nt Ind Kill "1'"'"' ~·~~&...__ Tlll 'CI Cturlt I ol 11141 City of C•l• N~•~ rtM<vei. 1n1 1IOf11 ta tllt<f eny ot 11 f'(l(ll'I • I"'"" ~I IC.I; f n ~ ""-"' thr rlflll la rtflld •111 .,, 111 llilO•. .... ltcirlc C":':'fl..!' ~~ lt;f A yor~ • 00 All•iJ'\ WMl-M'11 Tiit fllll<'IO rt takel the .Ill olth. l!IY 011:011!11; cw Tlll (!TY COUN· 1;11 4 1:.00:~oo0f'Ji IC~ 't !lff' •.J04l~f:~I 1111 "f"tll'!'f a! IN ~ Ot!Od JIAV f, ltn CIL O• T1ll. CllY °' COSfA : . 11::, r.!' ,~.._ Ll1W1 lo tlOO~~~~~tfl •r~l!IC• rci 1$29 HAR&O R 8LVD .. COSTA MESA • 540 5'3CI out d wearng cfentLl'es. ~:1~1~1:', CALIFORNIA O.lolO: :r'-15t,, f;'~ll"Olthll1' t :• -OrMOI COVIii• tCI "fnt "$of , o1 Verwl!itt" 11.-----------------------------------------.JI .. 1'!.llllUtoti Dr•llOI Cot'f D1l1V Piiot, Ji,. P\Alllllltll' Ori• CMll O.ll'f "fllt 1u11 1, t. 1•. 1m l'0-1'·" 1• 1~ lt13 Jll!oO f • -. . . ' . '· • ' y ' • • ' ' ,, ' •· • " • ' ' .. •· .. • •· " •• .. N· " " " • • • "' " • ,, " •• " ,_ N· Iii "' • • .. "' ... " .. "" .. .. •• ~ .. .. .. " . .. n "' ,, "· " m " "". ,_ " ,,, " .. '· • .. "" n ••• '" '" ... • mo .. "" .. " "" " "' " " ... "" ,., ... " i:: " " ... "' ·~ '" ,, " .. • " ..... ~ .. ' "" • • • .. " ... O<• • '" .. " ,, TA • .. " . . l•M ··~· .. " ... ' ' . • ' - • DAILV PILDI J9 The BlggE~~ Marketplace on the Orange Coast . . ~ 1-bMi lor s. . . 115 -M9 Ar.nauw;emem • • t • , • SOO -S24 ~~I , • . • .. • '9SO . 99Q. loati I MorS. ~ 90(). 9M l.n_.,,m1111t • • • . . . • • 700 -7'99 , DAILY Pll.OT . CLASSIFIED ADS ,..,_..., , , • • • • S1S -)ot9 "'-" ard ~ . • . 950 -'" bal l\IOll ~. . l50 • '" Jinarw:iat • • • . • .200 ·'299 R.ntol . ' .•. '. .300·4" ~for Sole •• LC6t ' Fo..nd • Mott~ ..•. .100 . 124 . 550 • S74 You Can Sell It' Find It ' .Trade It, With a Warit Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service Fast Credit Approval Schook and htNCtiori • • • SIS • Yl9 Mnot.i ond ........... M)()-6'99 T~totion. , , -. • • • , 9t5 • 949 ERRORS. Advertisers t bould cheek their ads dilly & report errors lmmedlaitely. The DAILY PILOl 1s1ume1 ll.1blllU, for the first ~_-__ ... _._·_~II ie l \ ,_, ... w. l~~ln~c;o;';'•;<~t;l;n;se;·rt~l~o~n~o~n~l~y;.~~~~~~~~~ General [ ,_,,,.,.. ]~[ ,_,,,;.., ]~ General Generel -~-~-~~~~-~-~-~ _,,TOWNHOUSE SPECIAL-$22,500 PERFECT FOR EASY LIVING -Onl v one year old -This one's in delightfully 'sharp condition. 2 Bedrm. l bath, North Cosla ].1e;sa . Throw away your 13\\'n mo,ver and en· joy lhe \veekends. ;\~sumable 71 ':!r;. loan t Genei'al OUR 24TH YEAR Offering Service Only Experience Can Provide VIEW FROM CAMEO HIGHLANDS An extremely sharp home, high in this love- ly area. beau tifully d'ecorated & offering a good ocean vie'"· Private locked be3ch en-- trances assure privacy for you & your guests . . .............................. $?9,500. IRYINE TERRACE • VIEW • Let us show you an exquisite home, right on t he front TO\\', overlooking the ocean. Please call for details. HOME, INCOME AND SHOP ONE OF A KIND -All in one package East· side Costa Mesa. Large 2 bedroom home with . hardwood floors, fireplace and lots of xtras. Small cute r-ental unit in rear and oversized shop facilities fo r the . home mechanic or craftsman. 0£fered at $36,500. HURRYI BRIGHT ANO CHEERFUL LIKE A MODEL HOME -Located near South Coast plaza -Charn1ing 3 Bedroom hi;>me with large family kitchen, covered patio, flrepl ace, shag carpet.s and all the extras. Offered at only $32,950. ~-~ .... HERITAGE . • REALTORS. GREAT ASSUMABLE LOAN Tu'O story. 3 bcdrootn. 3 bath Cal Classic l-lon1c with un· finished bonus room. Pool sire back yat'd. , Great neighborhood -close lo schools and shopping. \\'ith TLC and $700} do11·n you "'ill lo\·e it at $38,500. Jt n1ay alreadv be J-'One. Act NOW -842-2535 OPEN 71t t • 11'S FUN 10 Bf NfCE' THE REAL ESTATERS Lachenmyer R.ealtor You'll find it In CIAS!>lflerl 540-115 I ROO~T TO BUILD • scmnd U'.liIT on th!s large corllC'r lot. 2 &!<.!room house, carpels. drapes, re n c e d yard. Yours for only $33,500. 644-7270 THIS HOUSE HAS IT Exclusive· location in a QUIET AREA. Lots ol built-ins in th i j T\\"<rSTORY, 4 Bedroom, 21 ~ balhs, r ireplace . SUNDECK off large mash.>r parent!'! hide·a11·ay suite. Large brick patio. Sho11· to. day and b1ing offer. $52.500. . 644-7270 \Vhen you list \\·ith us, YOUR HO:'ltE is a11. 1'£·rliscd In Horne for Li\·ing mngazine in more than 900 area11. and customers are M>nt to you as refer· rals from our 477 af· filiates of N~fLS . BEDROOM • $34,000 H~~ninga ~~~ Half gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built·in clusters around]landsome courtyards. Eight superb models. each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort. convenience and quality construction. Sundecks. fireplace. wet·bar, elegant Master Suite. Sun·Lile'' kitchen, private enclosed double garage."Recreatlonal facilities include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided. Satisfy your curiosity-see Newport Crest today! FrOftl Pacific Coa!il: Highway and Superior Avenue (Balboa Btvd.), drive up'SuperiOI'" tG T IConderoga. and directly lo Newport Cre~t lnformil.lion Cente:r. T ekphone; (714) 645'6141 Sales Office open daily 10 a.m. to sunset No.._t c ... 1111 .,...,n.iPKlfk N.C.lnc.. A Ci)._.__,, -llobm.H.G.•tC""'°'.t""~tlC-..:lor. -...= ... "~· ....... ~-.... -· ...... ~ ....... ,. •. , ... ,.... ~ ................. , ....... ,..J .,. ..... -............. ,. ... ...._..,.,,~ ••. ~ .............. ~ ······~· '·.c.w_ --....... -....... -J.~--~ ...... ..., ... , ... ,, .. 00'. ... "·ith pay1nents only 5177 per mer. including everything. THREE BEDROOM + HOBBY ROOM MESA VEROE 'S BEST VALUE -al only 131 .000. 3 Bil! 1bedroon1s. l~r~e tounti:.:v style kitchen. dinin g room and added hobbv room·. Pride·of·o\rnership area just one blol'k from schools. .,~ HERITAGE REALTORS General S4'-S88D Open Evt •. I ONE OF THE BEST IN MESA VERDE. Set on the go lf course. 5 bcdroon1s. 1nctud1ng maid's <'juarters. ('las~ic archtteclure, Syc:iniore t ree~. 3-c ar ga ra~e and exciting decor Yiilh practical design. l::xr lu s1re al $125,000. UNIQUE HOMIS Or> MISA 'f'EltDI. s••·S••o A lhtl11t ol M11rtll11 hp•• LJ~l()UI: li()MI:§ REALTORS * * * * * * I ;;~G;;;'";;e;;";;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;G;;;;e;;;;nt~rl;;;I ;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.1 *TAYLOR CO.*' LINDA ISLE-$195,000 Bayfront luxury! Unusua l design in this love- ly 4 bdrm hon1e \\'/lam r1n . formal dining rin. study & playroont. Prof. decora ted "·ith ex pensive wall papers, paneling & many fine appointments. Security gate. Pier/dock. 11igh·ceilings. \.Valer vu from most r ms. elJ1u/a .!J~t • PRESTI GE WATERF RO NT HOMES Linda l1le Waterfront Lovely 4 bdr1n .. 412 ba. hom e l'-rith swim- ming pool. pier & slip, panoramic view °' main channel. Lge. family rm. w/space for bill iards & famj\y d inin g. \Vaterfronl forn1al dining & living r m. $275.000. -, "Our 28th Year" For Complete lnform1tion WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtor~ On All Homes & Loto, Pie• .. C1ll:._ 2111 San Joaquin Hms Road BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" ' . . NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 I 341 B1ysrde o,., Suite 1, N.B. 675·6161 General General General *TRI PL.EX* iNYESTMENTS Stt'ps to beach. Balhoa PPnin. "Brt•ad & Buttt'r"' un1r.~. I . 1 ah\'11)11 l'('ntl'd: furnb.ilerl. J Tll-PLEX CS~'.~-J ,..,.,., 6 __ "'"""I E . . . / 11 i blocks to beach. Sy,·lrn· 1 · ' • ..........., .... "'"" \cs. I n1ing pont. An."1;t0us M>llcr. * 6 UNITS * Call >JO-t£00. I l"earlv m'\1· 2 RH . :! ha., ~leiuXe uni:s o!1 Or...'t!!l.nlro11t I 2 RESTAURANTS 1n lli.ilboa.. I-Jee. lrplcs., Lu hro and k · 1 • hea1v shag caf1)., hllns: nc n • co r t a I 1 _ sundC.Ck or balcony \.\'/t>aC""h I restaurant. l-~1.1rerta111n1~nl unit: 7 CO\"d. i·arpQrt" plus fur night 2'()('r s. T11n In· 1-parl:ing spa.C"I". :s.~::0."°3. l'Ufllfli .oo oM 11rrc. Zoned J .;;~ Cail: 673-3663 &12-:!2j3 E\·c~. C-2. ~I rt•turn on lo\1 '{ do\\·n. S\3.>.000. 5-16-1600 associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 1021' W Bolbco 67l·16t) NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE BUILDING an •I I Ex t ~aA~!. ~~~L!Gr~nily, "WANTED'' ~·1v1('t' porch, 2!2 b.iths. rll'1•1ric hlt in11. fi rr 11laer . 1 N'et1r Uclo. !loo~ H~p1tal. r-•\'Pred P·•1io. n•·11· cArJ)l'I . Gnocl rt'turn. \\'t'll nuun· MESA VERDE 11111f·1·J;()fl t'nrr. f.;llHrp. sh:irp SIX CHILDREN in tail11""1 offiC(' spa<.'f' for Lovely 4 BR. lam rni homt' -Uv.·nf'r n\ov1ng, hurry. (ll1·nt'Ml~C'r 1~ 11~1 brautiful I..ge l'Ornt'r lot w/room for A~kin~ S33.950 . \'1c11· S72.000 . .,.lti-JGOO j pool , boat, 1 r a 1 I c r . 540-1151 .Open Eves. , =-~-----oc-~-----i Huntin9ton Beach General General Su prr nice 2 s1ory ~ BH 546•1600 ~ Assutnahle ::ii~•~ VA loan , 011"nt'r 11111 hf'lp l1nanli.'. I 1$,500 Q\\•ncr/Ai.:t .1 ~HERITAGE I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·1 horn('. Hugr cul.dc·."llC 101 I OPEN TIL 11 • fT"S FUN ro 8£ NICE• block from e I e nl e u I a ry I ~ ~ !179-£748 I .,. REALTORS BAYCREST BEAUTY New Listin9 Located in a lush, la ndscaped , established neighborhood. Ou tstanding 4 bdrm .. 3 ba., family rm. Sensi bly priced at $69,750 . rJ1.~1ncL $3.700 ~·n '\™1 You h;nc t<.1 S<..'C tlus one to I I "hoo' '" FV """ "'""''I '~ DOLL HOUSE fxiSSl'ss1on Aug. 15th 1 1 I bo ·h1•\•r 11. l.t>vrly 3 hdr, 1'"' $14,000- No More I , • . i h.11 plu~ /11m1lv r o o 111 1 I Tr'\"'I~ ('\"~\1h.:/"I" on 1h1~ Tiu~ llllmr uw:lurlrs 11_ lfou~, SALESMEN 1·h<H<"f' largt> F:,1.'i'!Sldl• 101 Tr;11h•r n·ot1'fl al .$8.) . thr 0 WAL KE H & lll P.('al1ors I C<JI! 00\1 hl !ak" advanra~,· hr111::.1• 1ti.t•lf Li; n•n1f'f\ !or 546-00'22 \\'e'rt' un !ht• i:::ro.,.,· ol 11ui. pnrr-d •tv S(.'\I hon1,. s.1.·i0, llrm1r ha.~ l~·n rom • C.unrsnfloffi floor t1n1~· at S~.4.0'I(). RM CouilC't. Rf'll! 11h•!cly rf•lurbiJhcd .... 1111 rlf'11 MINI-ESTATE a Compaublc h<'lpful atnios. "'" "·inni;: an•I ~llltTo. C,\LI. BAYCREST • liO -Ml :.;11h! tors :HIJ.ll64() ioprn cveninf{!'!~. l111Jjl("r 11lumh1ns::, elretriraJI ;..... 4 BR home on large Int, Jlht'11 • TRl·PLEX-PRICE I NO\\'~ ... R·2 Lot, Too~ ~1'('<1 1 floor plan huilt around 1 • i:raini.ns:: ,\\·iulal•l" OF OWNERSHIP . R'"ALTORS 644-7662 beaut. palio. ShoY"n hy uppl. I'• Call :'\1~\."J fo .. dl.'1:i1ls ;;;;";;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;C;;a;;ll;;A;;niiy;:;ti~m~e~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l 4cOMO L17" • FORa~li ~-~ ~-,!7~~21~1 ~;11 'rJi;v:·':'..r: ;~:~:.~·~~:~I "·"'""'' --"fK/fr.l · CORBIN· MARTIN C WALl<EH & Ul General I General • • · · -.. -P:1rri11I virw of ~nlf cour~" __ _. .................. _ --------~ ---------~--• . .. --S ' • A n:•r1l pl~Mure to oy, n ut • 4 RF:t)ROOl\1, 2 ba ths. WANT l ANOTHER NEW . " ~~\~JI= ~?-1.~ .. c~~1 car1~1 . ~7l:'.:~;,1:~r"~"· s:w~. se~1 BEDROOMS? . POOL HOME TWO HOUSE-FIX~R l ri:;1 ~:. Lo:u;I 1111)'. I {'~~'.ln:~~~I:,. I 0 ll I' n • ('Q;\llofEHCJAL zosr-: -2 General •General -------------------Terrific Jora!ion. on quiet Zone-rt R-2? Oll'rlt'r will ex· change hi!i remorlled 3 Bedroom Home "·ith assum· able v ,, loan tor your 2 Bedroom Home, even if it needs a lot of y,·ork. Interested??? Call ~ . . Yes. t11-o houses for 1hc pnc1' Coronl!. rlci :-Olar · ----Bit hrn r.1or)I -olck>r home. fnr family fun . physical ol one. 3 hdr. J ha \\l!h 2 CLEANING · 1•irn1•r J,,1 $11,~(.(t. 1 .. .,. ..... 1!."'ll!I"'"' tree shad('(! street. If you have some c:uh, take ad· lit~ss a.nd for the be!o!t bdr. 2 01a 111 z'f'ar. Br1ni;: $20,500-PROBLEMS? Roy McCardle Realtor su1nn1er {'\'er, you shoulrl yow: pamL br~i.h iU\d 1n1ilg-NO MORE ! 1 call do!!l!O 1t...:L!J. t lJilu .•. r.-irl Uh:d., c.~1. \'llrrtai;e of the JO\\' interest GI loan that can be assum· ~" lhis honic. A large. inarion. Re<1lllt' a trl'nlt'O· Cal'J)"l!t, 111nrlo11, ll oo r•.! S48-7729 lli ...... l'll!l~lf!"'lji rd by anyone. Or try 5'1~ down. Close to shopping Aod lree11·ays, and only 2 1n1lcs bcaulirul easy lO takr cal"f' dous 1nv~lnll'nt it.1 $40.000 Oitr, 1mma{'U\all' and nn ;i 11·all:s. 6i:)..66;-i5 of pool sitl! behind a klv('Jy .. Call Red C.1rpct, R('a]1on: I 'r<'('-!lh(lded lane. ri )( 50 frrc E~lirrutlt'~ I --ht'-droom-family room and sr ~ IJally Pilol Want fonnal dinlni;: roonl home :>-lopt"n {'\'c·n1ni.::.~•. !nor 1-Pm('111 lra1Jrr h-1111 Th e Cl eaning Servi ce h:i~i:ln"' galore. . p:irl \\'llh allE"v 11cc..,~s . Lan:;-I • Co_rfl('r lot f:il\'l'!' you ~n:! A REAL PRIZE Jn\·rlv b;iC"k · varri and in General I General ~r1vacy. Pric-e o~ly St:~.JOO. Gorgroou.~ lrct.' lined ~trC'f't in 11:ond· nE"li(hhorhootl I (,\LL l~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil l .. ..,....,.lliilw.llolll!I "' '"' """cm C IVA Ll<E R & LEE JUST LISTEDI Carmel model, Harbor View Homes .. 3 Bd· rms .. 2 baths, fam . rtn. Decorated light & bright. Corner lot. Good privacy. $68,950. Ho\vard: Wells WM. PEREIRA ORIGINAL Rare opportunity to acquire a \Vm. Pei;eira design fa1n ily home in Emerald lJ,ay; equip- ped !or ultimate in living. 5 BR., den & family, A/C. $350,000. Pat Hug ' NOW IS THE TIME For all j;!OOd tennis olavers to move to the Bluffs! 3 Bdrn\., z1h ba . 2-story condo de- signed for the \veekend athlete! $69 ,500 WITH LAND ! Toni Escobar NEW BLUFFS LISTING lmmac. 4 bdrm., 3 ba. "G" pl3n with moun· ta.ins & night lights view. Large patio on greenbelt & dining room. Call Rieb Wray DANA POINT VIEW LOT S~tacu lar harbor & ocean vista. Large levl l lot, priced at $159,000. Gene Vreeland .--. Cold\WI,...._ 13!~700 644-2430 ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. Rea!1ors XM.1 \\'t"S1cliff Drivr S4S-17ll {)pt>n eves. · MESA VERDE .4 Bedroorru;. pr I v a I{' courtyard enlry, 11UGE LOT, loads of privacy. Great' landscaping a n d decorating. Woukl yo u belleve ju.st $37,900. \VO\V! ! co: Ts WALLACE REALTORS --5'54161-44141-->- (0pen Evenings) SEE U S! For the. rieht home for )"OU. ~mplete seJe.cuon of homes ln tM beach area. HARIOl Vl!W HOME$ UALTY ~TIO SUPER FAMILY HOME -SUPER PRICE Just $36,%0 for all !hill home. II ha~ a beautifully laid out spacious floorplan "'ith a larg~ eating area off thr kitctwn. "Gel 11.11·ay from it all in tht-large uJ)!l'l1un; bonus roont {.Tltllpl('h• "1th '""' bath and \1'('{ bor. It's a lot of house for th<' mont")._ C"Ome and take a )ook! "4i.fi010. Call rlOI\'. ~2-2:)3..;. Ea-.t Coi;ra ~IC1'<1. 1..m-e!y :l HIGHT '.'\O\V! 0Pf11T1L9 ·l1.!r'V>•TOBCN'Ci • btlr. J1i ha plus lan1lly · ·· [ ~ ""•Ill, huce lot a n d 1 rlecon tM above ,r,, hPyond. Jus1 on the m/\l'kt't at I Realtor! , ~002'2 S.1--1.000 anrl Ol\'tll'rs a1't' anx-----I J iou! !o sell fri.st. Call Rl'<t I REDUCED TO SELL I 1 WATERFRONT Carpet, Rcaltol'!'. G-1~ Fan!astir 11anor11m1c V!<'V.' ffiay or eveningsl. home. 3 bdr. 3 ba home 111!h DUPLEX • -----n\·er 2:"00 Ml. It. of liVUlf(. I CUSTOM CORNER I Bring you r dC1'-nrn!in~ Ideas $ 170,000 HOME and take 11r1v11n1a~e of lhls lnC'l!_ides 111~ boat Ooc:k~ and Super sharp and only 1 YT S9!1.000 r<vluccd priN". Call ad~rent \'Ar:i.nt lot !or t1d· nf'11" Tu-o !l'lllry. 4 hdr, 3 1);"1 l R~ r.arpet. Rt>~ 11ors 1 di11orutl bu!trl1ng -or rnr home 0n large ron lf'r lot j _!l:J-8080 fopt.•o evenrnli(s)_ I just plain prlva<'y. Ju!I '"'uh ~1 ira!e. You hn\'f' In CORNER -CUSTOM hstl'd. ~~~ht~ Jo\t>ly home lr~atrd _ EASTSIDE l 1n E.ast rost:.i. ~T<>s..1. ~ndf'r 1 0 Wflll\tH & LH rnccl at $4.'i.000 call Rf.'fl SuJ)f'r Sh.'lrfl' Cu~1nm horn!". I Carpet. P.ettJ!on ~A(I only 1 ~r nf'\\'. T11 0 ~•ory 4 RraltorB •Of""'n c\•en~nK~' htlr, 3 b;1 hon•f' "-llh ~rl~ n' m:i \\'t>sTc-11ff Ori\'e --OLD-FRAME--pal lO, loe1t1«'tl on hu;;I" ('r)r· 1 " -rw>r kit w\lh boal gall' . u.ir,....mt O~n evtl(. WITH FAME E\·cryth1n~ upgnvlM in thl't 1 MARINE T\\o bdr. J ha lran1c home btHldcrii hflmf' t.a~• )i•;1ni. ~ CONTRACTING \\11h ctultmlnq red brick price 11t Slj.(:0.l Call Rrrl ' Nt"A-port fknch. r \ n e 1 t f1rt'plaC'I' on hUKf' lt-2 k'lt Carpet. Rf'Flltoni 6-1:;..8().'.'IO I f'qlllpment &: 11'1ttM'fmnt "·i1h alley arc-es~ llow •open r!Tl\Tingtl locattnn. 35 Yr. old mn1· much me]'"" coold )'OU ask RY 0\\1'\F.-".R°""<"B~,-. =,~.~,--=.~,. OPEN HOUSE pany. Spacr •val!. lor boat for at $30.C.OO! Oh yes! It is 1115 ~1any xlra.s. Nr S ('111 M.lell &: rt-1.... on the Eastside 11nd you can Plazrt. .,.hlll .... ~ llnl' SAT & SUN I S .,....,.. w11olk 10 lhoppin". B !! · "' • ""' · BRANO NEW 4-PLEX SHARPJ; READY TO.CO! BIL L GRUNDY RLTR fa~ and Cau"' Red ~~~ .. ~ v,\ f\J;·e in Soperb rMl1" urrlt• V!'cant and Vacant & redeoorat~ 3 BR.. 675-4161 carpc1, Realtor11 St~ '1· 1 .~ll'W' 1 5 pm .-·nlling for th11t tint ov.'TM'r fam rm, formal dln rm l VIEW OF BAY ropen to\"trtlnp} Sun,~ Trin ty Dr, SJ.2.tm . 10 ta1ce hill tax adv•nta~. w/buut easy care )'ard -- --at&.l!loi•. l Priced lo se ll al $80.0D. near pool. Jn P1"l"fll~ Art'a. Yoo ~ft P'-U lhl!ton@ by al * QUIET STRE ET * Sl!ARP 3 hPdmom, l~ bath, Cell ~ C.~t. Real tors 172.500 f'et land. 1949 Pon ~~~· Beau3t1~I, ~':"'f~ 3 Bdrrn11. E.'l'tn )al""'jl:'" ,ioi. ! Nr""fl0r1 ~ach, Rnrk Ray, l ~.fopen even\ng111 R&mq;alr, H:lltbQr \.il'lw. I ta~~ &,11 R: d ~ 1)1\Tll'r M'in1i". t tni' ber.ut &tl'N'I. 2 finopl'1, 2 6TS-&324 or 6-12-S583 r .. -R •1 • ..., 0.,.n Co\cta ~fl?'Sa b:'. S32.500 .• .,\nt \ p.i•On"I $11500 t\b~11"1'd Don'I &lW!' uP the ship! --"'-'=-"'--'-' '"--t'"'L M. !Oft ;,....._, f1na1K:1 ~ avallabW. ·• !Y:~ 6-1~. "l.l11t" It In c:lauiflecl, Ship 1 1 Netti a "Pad .. ? Place an ad! lopm f"Vt-~L. BALBOA '6AY PROP. A~ .,..n1 ad-.,.-,-.,-,..--1 .. to Shon RNWl•I IO-W1I. €.11 60-5$f8. SrU i!tlP """"' •. OC2.-561! * '42·7491 *-_;,,_,~•m_mt_. _____ _ I MACNAB · IRVINE CHERRY LAKE AREA Large 4BR . 3 b11th hon1e-cuJ.de-sac 1~ cation. Pool size lot. Vie\v of lake. $89.500. Bill Burt 644-0200. I Zl31 SHOR ECL IFFS. NE WLY LISTED 3 BR f'~R. ho1ne·pre!\tigc area. Large LR., formal dining area ln1n1aculale1 S\10,000. rookie Allison. 64·2·8235 1Zl5) BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM Lovely Bordeaux !vtodel -2 oversized ma.ster suites w bath ~ den adjoining kitchen. Triple garage. $98 ,500, J oyce Ed- lund 642-8235. (Zl7) [lrvir;e I ' to1 .0o¥afDrtw. 142.12i1 •, t) OAILY PILOT 'I'--.. I I Genor•I I SOME HOMES i JUST HAVE IT.:... I HEATED POOL I $35,500 j Probably U1e best va1Ue in the area. Luxu11o11s lar~» 1-----,,I -henh'l<tlJOOI ntirt-to a citrus • mlnl..groye. No 5treets to 1 CM.)tlS to roo.ch the ~ran1nuu· scbool, and wt1lking dislanCf' - to hl&h !!Choo! and Orang1• Coe.st College. Over sized 2 c:ar prage with room for workshop and you name it. Please phone OO'.I.' for an ap- pointment to view this ex- clusive property. 540-2313. OPEN nL 9 • IT'S F~ ro EE N1CE' I ' , ' l ' f . Monda~, July l&, 1973 * * * LOVELY 3 UR, I ,BA,!,;;======= 3BR, RUMPUS RM. c"stom ooilt home. Like POOL TIME $25 950 n••\\', O/\V. i;to"'1. w/w • · cpt'g. drps, lrg. den, dining LcNi•ly 3 Bil 2 BA lxnnc wJ 2BR COUNTRY 2 f I · & lo ,..,.,,. lx'uut fkl0dtight1..'d pool, & rm.. tp c" µat · .w<N bnc-k ll·H·Q. exet"pt:l6hel DUPLEX !IQ. rt . S62.000. 375 E. 23rd .... St., Nev•porl -Be a· ch luJK•t>x ~.,.'111 lhl3 bou:se •pi1.rt $391950. S.~192. Jron1 th('01h1..'f'S. Gd 1·rpu & HORSE RANCH & d11>!!, uwt pr11-cd riw:hl Ill B•lboil. lsl•nd $31 ,000. Pool is kidney INCOME !lt\al'«I ~· x 30'. wttti mtn $52 ,500. ISLAND CHARM $1600 down, "'"'""' of s;no 1 INCOME UNI TS Slcp~ to b(iy, ~ br, 2 ba, t'OW~ all. sn1all play roorn + l'<'Ulal I' 1llage Real Estate $59,500. unit. l.;11-. sun deck, too! "' fo'an1ily hQnw .,..·1th old wo rlr\ BEACH OUPLEX Chw-m . >"int time oil•""'· 531·5800 Ir,:;./ 531·5800 $79,500. Lots. of '.l'ood. 1111.ullcd open :::=:::::=:;::==:::::~=:i~ IJl•un1 hv. 1'1)1. w/balcony. j 1797 Oralll:t.'. C.l\'l. &J7.J7n t.tove in Aug. lsL Recently REPO Ontu n·rnodrlc."(j & In xnll cond. $JSO DOWN 6'21 L Sll'ITL16,000E Owner. 67$.WI 2 llr ·3 BR Townhouse, hge ISLAND ch. o Ice run1vus ronn1 dblc f.:ill', location \\'llh bay VJC'W. 4 sv.·im pool. fi'.'w tell, Jturl'y! Br, loft, prof. decorated. 5S7-!'1141 or 842-4421 I, J~ r _,.... 1~ .__l ---=, .... =-..JJ~ Huntington S..ch BIT OF THE OLO WEST ... i~ 1'1111 IWf'l"! \Vt''r1' stlll 9C'rvinR our Gl'11, !iO t'i)Jlll' on ln 1111ii Mk to see this beaur. 3 l)fo(hm 2 hath hoin~ thal's aln10!'t new Whb all Ute ~1rnf In: Lawn!<, 1'u1 .. prt~. dT;'lfW'!I, and ;111 !ht' ~--1b~ Wi Wt:!ilCJ.'lltl.)I enjoy. Only $33,500. And any GI r11n bt.1y. C A L L 846-3377. WESTERN LIVING , , • at it11 lw-st . Swin1 In your l11.'uut. J:l' x 30· J)OQI, drive 5 minutes and surf or i;hap tt! nearby Jlunllngton (.'t'n- tf'r. 111l:s l>rt!.ut. 11 i);>d1•m, 2 ba1h hon1c '' lth hartlly·no- n1aint, is a hold·UP at $34.900. CAU. 847-3ss.1. THE FRIENDLY "' STREET ' Huntington -h BEACH LOVERS COUNTRY FRENCH ELJ--:. CANCE, sets d~ In thlg nunblh~ ocean retreat. Hand mortcf'(..>d til~ 111 foyl-'I', louverc1I <JOOrs, cus- t11n1 dl'llJ)('IJ and WRll C'Ovet· int(!I', SH.ANO Nfo:W CAR· P~'TS.-3-den ~ bedrooms including a n1anunoth 111.as- tt-r suit(' and vnnlty. Coun· It)' J.:itchcn with all U1<> lntf•1"t !C'atures pJu~ a HHEAK1''A:IT R00!\1. Huge patio B!l.LJAIWS ROOM. Lood~ of &quare footage. Dcs.pur1:1te transfetTcd O'l\1l· c-r h<f!I ju.st listed at nn un· b.·Jievablc IO\\' p1icc of '36.!l>l. B!Ql, 962·5Sll. * PEID'ECT f'A MJ L Y · flOME * ay .-OWtier Uniwraity £ark Village III, Standford Town hOusc, Main Cre<'n lic!ll, :1 Br. 2~~ Ba. near everything $51,900. 502-73$7. • Laguna Be~h INVESTMENT Solid potential, <.'0111mercial ofllce & 6 income units, in ttn nl'ea of in c r eusi n s popularity. Never a vacancy .si~n. local~ just a block off the beach. These units pay tor themselves & provide ' - • PINCH ·YOURSELF ) (You're Not Dreaming) '·~) c' I I THE REAL ESTATERS S92,00J. Shown by appt. j First Plone:•r Realty * *--*--l'-P:.:rln'2co.'· oc°"'.'.Cly"-"6C::1'-:..;21=91--EASTSJD£ orona del Mar j it~l'l('r :"2 Br. 11.,Ba, nu 1 1.i1inr Con<lo, $750 dn, .Sni . • features a 3 ~1111 2 bu.th fan1lly ho1nt' 1\'i lh an l'at·ln kitcht'n. !Vlom &. Dad will enjoy the no.work- llt."'l'Clf'd atniosphcre and privat'y of this nice siv;e n1astcr bedJ:m. There's iwn1 to gal'den on 1his -huge lot. $.10,900. C A L L 963·5621. $45,900. ADULT OCCUPIED fine lax shelter.---You-won't--- ha ve to do a thing to it' but -. BALBOA PENINSULA Cus1on1 , lop quality hon1e plus 2 b«lroon1 apt. above. Many ot1~andini;: tt>atw·es. Steps 10 Ol"Can und shop- ping. 7~ loan. CALC now for de!ails, ~1271. ~21 111"1 \\lestcliff Dr., N.B. I HUGE SINGLE STORY ANNIVERSARY OPEN DAILY mo. i:>l-11~1: """ 64>-2:!t2. con AGE Bright and beautiful Lusk Huntinqton Beach THE REAL ESTATERS Harbor \lie\\' lhrec bcdroo1n lionle. &1tutiful lanriS;Caping and a J>l'('k of lhl' ocean. 12'l6 Seacrest 2~ p.m. Call 67S.7225 'SUMMER FUN CA:•, BE YOURS !oday in this fantasl i{' V!lCanr ()001 hn1ne. :.! Bdrn1s, 2 bu1hs, ! l\ll)nl for a boat aM 1nuch 1llOL'C, and l\OU!d you believe only S:/9.900. Call quit'k! O\\'n£>r anxious. C ALL !HZ..9371. TRADE YOUR EQUITY PER[O~~ We're here to help! ()p.'fl <.'V!'!S 111 'j OWNER 4 Br. needs v.."Ork, FOR TI US gorgeous spiral $975 dn, assume IBA, . . . . . tn111 llon1e. Loads of Ull· 552-9503 This t\\'o ~story, 4 bedrm ho n1c has l"'O 'master bedrms, ~ l for in-Jaws or who.lever), formal dining plus den, and ins ide laundry roon1. Near ocean a.nd ex- ecutive nbrhood. • 962·2456 • l' 1llage Re ill Esta te 11843 Adan1s at MagMlia PROVINCIAL BEAUTY 'APPLE PIE CONDITION sit hack & watch this in- vestment grow wilh Lguna. $160,000 ,..,,... vlGtan REAL ESTATE I 190 Glennt.·yre St. 494-9-173 549-0316 CLOSE IN Over looking the city & beach. Beauti ful 2-sty. home "'ith bean1 ccil's., & lots of 1vood paneling. 3 Bdms., 2 haths; (rplc.; lge. recren· lion room. ?.1any extras. An exceptional buy at $79,500. Nearly 2000 square feet ol brautifu1 living area in this well built honle. It is loaded with such extras as ce ramic tile entiyway, \\'liter· !iOft- ener, sprinklers, frwt trees and much more. Prime location -$45,900 · call now to .... OCEAN VIEW --JUSTL ISTED--· ~tairC"asc Fran<·iscan Faun-pymnts $276. 8 3 3-11 0,3 , Large, lux~1 y r!11p]f':>; in n1u11 grading. CALL S·ll·9lTI , . . · cond., 1•.1th bt·ntu . g.1rd.•n I 3 BEDROOM 1 BATH \\lute Elephant D11ne·A·Ltne 3 +Guest $25,950 r>:ll!o. Short \\'aik lo. beach, ~ I l Private-(·ir.::ular Sll'et:'t .. of Oil l\'ce lined slrM't. in 011(' r llUGF. LOT· US(' yo~r Cl, fine homes. Paint and save of Corona d~·l :\lar·s rinrsl j sell<'rs v.•ill hC'l p finance. I t ho us a n ds. S\\·cepi~ arf'as. An >-lnt buy a.1 , CALL 842·9371. 4 BR, 1%. BA, nelvly painted in and out, countrv style eat-in kitchen 1\'/abllndant cii.bincts, attractiv~ living r n1 V.·/brick !ireplc opens to trellised patio and large yard '.11th dog run. Llix- urious shag ca11H't. load:-; of extras. $.1:3,700. \Von't last. call TH E REAL ESTATE ~:AIR.-536-2531 -~~ I 494.5671 '"-1100 847-6010 O/'EN TIL g • IT'S FUN 10 6£ N1C(1 SHARP GI ' 4 BR & Family room with I large yard. {Fairview &: grounds \.\ith room for ho;1t. $119,500 1 3 bt'(lrooms i 11 r [ u ding ~Q,." 11~ I hidc-a-\Vay 1nasl1.•r suite, ~. · ~ .... ~ I sepa rate gut-st facility, : . ~-., den 1vith sliding glass door • ·' . to 25' e~1terta~ncrs patio. 494.5•71 499.1100 Breathtaking VICW of <'<10· ------- yon and blU<' Pac1f1c. BET-* DUPLEX * -,- TE R ll U fl RY ! Ca 11 Just l1stcU this bc141ty' !-=====-====~~· &15-0'.iOO. Charming 2 lxl1111 , bath & CUSTOM kitchen remodeled Copper I p!un1b1ng. Priv. patio 111th 3 BEORM ON R-2 LOT GET A 'CHARGE) I Warner) -newly painted & carpets -15 m inute; to ..i Newport Beach. 0 n 1 y I $26,500 -early occupancy! IOlll \I L Ol\O\ ,:.> E " 'Uk:J I gas BBQ plus 11 ne1v I . . . . I l-bdrn1 apt that is pl sh' 1 · , . in llp-lop c:ond11Jon, I t f . · . · u · Loads or t1·u1t and OU O your I Blt-.1ns, d1sh\\"Shr., beaut. vegetables, in xlnt Hunt. -;...,,; WMl(lH I\ lll START TAX WRITE·OFF NOW 546-0562 T\V0-2 Bedrm. units -g<lXI l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I condition -good rental. 11 Roon1 tor additional unit. I $29,500 College Pa'k Area. $3.1,500. 1 4 Sedrm, 7 Bath, sharp cul· de-sac home. Large covered patio. Look no more because this. one's clean. too? cabmet 1113rk, .brkfs.t. bar. Bch area Only $24900 - r.1any extras 1n this con-· ' · illage Real Esta te vcnlently located property, I' So. or H"''Y· 0"~1er anxious! MORGAN REAL TY 1 •u.•'Tl ( ... ) .,6 llOl 673-6642 675-6459 , .... ..... "" • BY o\\·ncr l!arbor Vi c11• I $35 950 Ho1nrs Portofino n.1~eJ 3 4 BR. c1 ... ~Mnr. Patio lxlr. l. ba: forn1 d1n1n~ & ,1·/BBQ, ft' n ~ c cl yd. rk>.n. 1-ully !nc!!>Cpd. 111uch I \v/sprinJ.:lcrs. Shake roof. 2 bnck prof. r!.-•l'OI', 1nust st'll B:i. Close 10 beach. "'"'"°· "'".,.,,,· -GE111M1-- 1fi1 0 \V, Coast Hl\·y .. N.B. REALTORS 642--4623 1 OF A KIND , Newport ABOUT $2000 So. of Hwy, 1'' R·Z w.lov<ly I at WILL MOVE hrnne ·"' incomr, hL'CUlia nt F•l,.i.w ,•"'"""'· 192.500. c all D<n•· 1 REPOSSESS IONS -to Utis great 3 bedroo1n ho111f' IRVIN1i;: TERRACE uf t i1t'~C 1'1.1.-\ & VA homes, I "'"Ill YOU IN oofl As~". G73-i:n l. :·.-w infornlation and localion· (.ny,1-) Yes, the ov.·ncr is a ru.:ious 4 BR, 3 '· .Ba. fan1 _~in.~ •·u"'.:ict. ""' and v.•lll help to pay your )(<.'paratc d1n1ng rm, $9J,500. \ KASAlllAN 1 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ! closing costs. You'll love the ~~ner. 673-8846 I · i 1 1 1! floorplan and the pretty DUPLEX, Cozy cornl.'r eot· j Re~I E s tate 962~ I SIX CHILDREN [ vanta.gl' of thi!! great offc1· sq. ft. uni t. 2 BR. I BA .~ UR ''WANTED" 1 neighborhood. Tak e ad· tRgc,·3BR,2 BA + nu1100 1 SELLING YO j and call 11011•. 847-6010 • frplc. 500 Poiru;etlia. • HOME? 1 near I oPEN riLe ·fT'Sf'UNt0 BE NrcE1 ·••DUPLEX•• GUARANTEED ~ALE I I [ ~ . , I CASH JN 48 HOUHS SOUTH COAST T1\o l·BR. \\11.lk to beach t AH in f confidrnnal S59,j()() «\Rent 6TJ·S500 I ,\gPnt I > PLAZA Costa Meso , 963-2941 I l Super & nice 2000 sq. fl. , I BY ol\ner~A&ept!ng pro-1 "Re p"blic" 4 BRtrn 2 Salt-Spray Spec1·a1 BEGINNER s motloo .. """t sdl. 4 to 5 story home. Huge brick BARGAIN BR d f j patio and lovely yard. $4200 ·· in. & am. rn1s. & Do and · A Out of area O\l'ncr rorred Pe1:fet"! s!arter hon1e, ne\\•ly I bonu~ :·~: Your 1vork. is I l5t~n possess.an ug. to liquidate this nlodrm pa 0 1n1ed, !arge 1 BR + h~ge done, ;;~1 1~klers, . p a t io , peninsula dllplC'.\:! Ovf'rsi;i:t'd 1.4 x 26 bonu.s rn1, bnck bl~ck "?II, upgiaded afl 3 BR, 2 BA uni ts. fplc, crpt, ftrepl" park-hke y a rd 1U.l'!\S. 2 t.1onths o I d. a WAll([H & lll drps, sunde<'k, OCJ::,\N w/tt;i1t trees_. Zoned R-3. 96.1-21:!0~=3=-~c--~- Realtors VIE\\'! Easv financing: \V(ln t last $25,500. Call 1101v LaQUESTA Sanl a Cruz. ' 546-0062 \\'on't la..~t at ·~S7,:ffi .• Cull 1:fE _REA~ ES T A T E ~lode!, 2720 Square Ft, , OLDIE BUT t1Xlay! ! 645-))400. ~AIR. i16--2;).')l . i\'IOl:l~I 1101111'. J_,;indsc~pini;:. A GOODIEi 1 wv 1 NT11_9 BY OWNER I 1111 to lx~l!, SS.000 in up I ~radcs. $:;.J,500. ! 71 4 ) I CUte 2 bdr, I bn fra.me 11·i th ' V. E. Hen.u ni & f.o. ,4 IJP., 2 BA. rorner lot on '""=·=-~'=·"=''-~~~--~ loads of paneling and red a..1 £Mm~ cwl·de·li3~'. forn1al DR, laun· s:i.· Oi\•n,.r . Glen !\'lar ,i hr 2 I brick fireplace. Large R-2 dt;< 1111. play rn1 & oHiec. tx1.. [t•p!c, crpt. d!'a, crPrd lot in choice' East Costtl -LARGE-ll1·ivC' hy 216 SheJ'\\'ood kilchf'tt l\/bltins, cu!·de· Mesa plus a,'oo''".,.:.cccss. I cl'l;i('c, ,c~<;~~"3i\tes<1. Tht'!l !lac, 2 blk to schl, shopping Close to all ... you 1 ALL 'IQ-~ for upp1. & park. $.11.500. 962-4321 won 't net'd a car here. I FAMILY? $'12,000. 01\·nei' \Vlll catTy Perfectly priced at S30.00J. 2nd. Principals only. DREAM COTTAGE ~~ 0~~~~ ~ cf:slt.t ~:I~ Com" and sel' thi~ beautiful * WI LL V.A. * '\~~·h 2 c~~~.cl~~f~o sm~: ~ 4 at• 5 bron11 single story Nba~','' ""ccor~.~d. 3. BR, 1 1 ~ All;I. Chris, Att. 6 P:'.I, homP. Xlnt lncation, nlodf•rn tis. over;-u pallO, fe~t'ed 8'16·1962 •.. ""'""--....,~-~ ARTIST·\\.'RITER-RECLL!SE bllin.o;, raiSt'd hearth rircpl. yard. On qu1C1 sn·r<'I. Nc•ar :- \\1e've 1ound 11 hm. for you plush crptg, indoor B·H·Q schools. A ~ value al OCJ.:AN hrl',ezes. h (!a ch , ln a fantastic re~rt location. $26 500 schools. :i Br. fa 1nily r1n, .Jn fact, there are tv.·o .. at nnil .tov.·erif1!: shack• lr1•cs._ BAL-BOA-BAY PROP Ji::e patio , 22041 Hula Cir. ' ,__ h "" b 'd Cun he ,vours for n11!r • ""«4341 'R,"""' on1e~ ~·ue y s1 l' $.J:l,500. Call 5 4 j .'S ·I 2 I . * 556-8800 * -. . . and the prices 11.1·1' an un· i\!ODEL H L d bell~abk> Sll.51)() · & Sl2,500 SouthCo ncaHor~ '/ ACRE R --i · on1e ;1n scap1n~. at io~; d1vn. t hc.~c 1~1111·1 -·-T\\'O BEAv-Tiru-,,--V 2 ANCH : ~~~~~a,~·~ foil~.~· 1~0~·.:~: la51. Sparling Invest. Corp. I PLBXES ern1ont farm '! o 11 s ~" 3 \ S.11i 000 (~1,11 96S-J.l6l 6.~5662 SIDE hy sldf' in hfo~t ['!Ol1 nf p Cd l' O o 111 s 1 n c I ud111g ' 1' ' AnuhC"ir n loc., 2·2 bdr. s, 2·3 ..,;J?ar:1tc, in~stcr s u i I e , fast resu 1$ are JUI'! a phone WAIT A MINUTES! Wr .. Olln(·\'~ delui-c unit .\:_ r.u~r~rens wing_ n_ncl guest call ~1vay 642-5!'7S. __ And save hOui's, by letting a frplc .. CO\'ingion hit. only ;1 farihty. Sacr1 f 1CC1J ~~ --------· ~DAILY PILOT WANT AD NOW HONORING Master Charge and BankAmericard • DIAL 642-5678 CAREFREE-- LIVING * OCEAN VIEW* Huge., O<'Can view liv. r m. \\'/fl"JJI: din area. 2 BR, den + guest rm, 11'/\v carp, thruout. Crntral kit, \\'/l'allgc oven, dishwshr. Si't' this onf'! $53,500. r.1ission Really 494--0731 DECORATORS DEUGHT Pri. heh, 3 Br, 2 ba. Fplc, In this almost 11c1v 3 Oc.h·n1., 1 ~2 bath condo, close !o everythiiig. $29,j()(} 846-1351 or S.17-8531 beam <'eil !iv. rn1. All nu appliances, d r p s , crpts, - :::: deck. 2 car gar, elec. dr. , · . Lse1opt, $65,000 01\•ncr agent ~ c;=~,c<·c.~c:;o:~~U~·L~~loca-b-.o-n­ SOUTH LAGUNA. 1 block BOAT GATE SPECIAL I to beach. Nc\\'ly remodeled $3 , -J 1 1. :1 1, 0 . . 2 Bd11ll, fa1ruly nn. large ... """'. us . is ec · Lning .deck \~·/ocean view. Guest "?Om, fa1n.1ly r o o 111 . ~pt. $62,500 firm. By owllf'r . dishv.·asher, fit'cplacc, shaJ.:e Call 499-1204. Would con- roof, 3 beclroon1,.;. sider summer rentals also. • PAffl • c HARl\tER, FLXER !JP-~~~~~~ PER, $58,500. \'iew, 3 BR, 2 171TI Beach Blvd .. H.B . bas, ft'p\c, hrriv.·d firs, CALL 842-1418 Frl'nch doors, brick patios, --BRING your POOL TABLE for this beaut. 2 BR cortdo. Bonu~ rTn is 20' x 20'. 2 car ef'lcl. gai'., bitlns, xrra cabinets, shag crp!s. Adult occupie<i. Fronts green!x>ll & steps to pool. · RED CARP.ET RE/A L T 0 Rs. 5.16-8836. HOME SPECIALISTS I CJ .OSF. TO BEACH. ALL P R tCES. ALL ~JZJ::S larwin realty inc. 968-4405 (24 hrs) small 2 sty, close in, Owner 497.1212 494-10?1 BEAUTIFUL ocean view lot Only $13,900 Oceanvie\11 Rily. 673-8500 5 OCEAN VIE\\' homes starting at S50M -Duplex try $150M Broker. 546-7739 PORTAl'INA, Fab. ocean view. 3 BR. fam rm, den, 31,~ ba, cpt'd~ draped. 2 yrs old. Askg $89,500 499-3098 Laguna Niyue1 BY Owner. 3 Br, 2~'.l large lot, $39,950. 495-055:. Miss ion Viejo Ba Oll !!!IJ!!!!!!!!!!!!fl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ I BY OWNER, 3 BR, 2 bath Huntington Ha rbour Seville honic, fully carpeted 11·-shag, custon1 drapes, Bf.ST \Va1err1·ont Buy in loaded iv-extras. 837-6736. J-lun1ington Harbour, 2400 sq. j t. home, with dock for Newport Buch 36' boat. Sy 0\\1llCI', 71'1 : 84&-371~1.:... ----- Irvine POWDEE! YOUR NOSE or \Vash yow· clothes ... this sharp, "'ell-arranged ,i bdpn. home '" i 11 ac· commodate all your necrls. Lovely garden entry, lnts of sto1·age w1d a great location near pool. $58,500 Vision - (i red hill Rl'.:ALT'I' Uni\·. Pal'k Center, Irvine C.all AnytimC',' 552-7500 Qfhce Hours 8 AM to 8 Pl\'1 Clas,si fit'<I A t.'I , 042-55i1" Any day 1s tne BEST DAl ' to ,I n1n an ad? Don't delay .• , ll CALL .DAILY P:Im , SUPER CON DO $4j,/x)() Lux. 3 Br, 2 Ba by the bay. P ools, put ting greens & more. Call Denison Assoc. 673-7311.' *VACANT CONDO * Gardens · Pool. 3 BR, 2 BA. '$43,000 Lo\v .do1vn or \\ill l?t>nl \V/Option to BUY. 673·5221 or 642-3&15. ~2.500 Best Ne1vport Heights location. 3 br, l~t ba, bllins, di'Sh'.l•sr, sep. dbl gat, xlnt financing. Call eves., owner &if>-1731 Duplexes ·near the ocean ~tiles Larson, Realtor * 673-8563 * \Van1 ad results ... 642·567S professional flnrl your ho1n<' \'l1'. old. hives!. 11Wls more $.12,500. BETIER 1-IURR'i. for you. \\'hy do i hc work iux . ...i1,.111,1• 11 h:\! do .,..,,11 f)UI'· Agent 645--0303 youriu?lf~ Just call and !f'll JN hat 1 kl poi:t .. Sparli1~ Invest, Corp. lllvrly Eastsidl' Cnl de !"ac. 11~ \\' you nrc 00 ng: for 6~·J662 '.l BR, 2 B1\ hon1e. Kitchen S©~~lA.-lt"Btrs .. -I Just Say 'Charge It' WHEN PLACING A WANT AD IN THE and v.·e will find ii for you nrwly remodeled. la r g c Call Red Car!X't. Rrnl!ors STOP LOOKING covt>N>d paUo. F'ani. Rin. 64.)-8080 ropen e\'cningsl Let a profC'Ssion<il rtnd your Fireplacr, v.·/1\' cpts. d111s SUPER SHARP--homr for you. Our In· &· n1uch mort'. $37,!'f>O. .CONDO ,·rntorlcs arc ns large as 54&-603.~='--~---­ our desire i:i; to hcl.P you. OPE:\' Daily . .:.I bi". 2 ha, nl'\V / Ab.<O!Utt-ly l1Q high ,picssure pnint & itl'md'c & out. Nf'IY ~~~s techniques. \~c have. a c rp ! , inc! i;d pat i(l, la1 gt' staff 01 profC'sSlonlll sprinl.:!t'rs, v.•a!rr softtWI". Beautiful 2 bdr. 1 bn rondo 10(.'atc<I In <"hoice· cool, ('()01, Huntington Beach. A l'l'n.J cool price at $23,T.)(). Don't hesitate to call Re<l Carprt. Rf'9.ltor~ 546-8640 1r.ipcn CW"fl!ng~I. Re:il Estst1l' i:alc~mrn tlmt clean. $'13 ;,oo, 5'1&-.57i7 ; kno\1' propf'rl)". tak~ ad-' I vanlal?C' of th('tr tree grl"\'11'(' RF.AUTJFUL &t· 1-larhor. find c·all Red Car p I! I 1WO ~· ft. "1 Rl'. fn1. ln1 .. 6 UNITS-NEW Jtf'n1tl'l1'll: 546-8610 'n pc 1i 1:n1i11' 1-n;. 2 1·ovrc1 parin~. t Choice FAtslside Cn11!n ?.1cso cvrninasi Tl ryt -~~:l,J(B~.k 0~111C'~-')'9''anls ! 1 I --WRITER'_S_ -as ,..,..(', ,. I'. J<N-11.. . I rental area •. t\ most com· -plCIM_l ru1d renrly IO 11cll. All O\VNER "1BR, 2BA. fllll<". ! unitR arc 2 bdr. t tm and ·RETREAT Cpts, drps, lllkwnll. Ne1\·ly Joc111ed on a choice oorncr. pnlntt'<I. Nr st·hool!i. bu!<. Cali RMI Car""I. Realtors t.OVfo~LY ptinl'll(•d rlen i1·ith Principals only. $29 !X)I). 1~ Swt-dl~h flrt phtrt' in quiet &16-1723 ' ' Si.;..soso (op('n cvcnlnpl Tlf'i.llhborhoofl cf Corona. dt>l , 4 Bdrrnl-$2V,750-t\rlar, PlU!l l bcdroo1118. 2't • ANX IOUS ln e:iceclictll co 11 di t I 0 n. llalhs and delli.;::htful lh•h1R , 1\1.'.:RE with_ 2_ BDR:\f Covered Pflllo. Af11ny fniit f(l()ffi with brick !lropl ncc. ~W>rl'le, try S:li,9.30. Bkr IJ'tM;, 2 hl'lth8. Family rm, Charmlnii no1v, and 1.nimy .51\l.=-"'~"~'------­bullt-ins. ~ar llirl"" n11, pos,.lbllltie!> lor f u I u r c BY Ov.·ner -3 br. 1 ba. J.ara:t brk 540-1720 u p i;: r a d t n ~ . A. real lot. Cit-an. a~; down $24.!iKI. TARBELL money-make'-at $59,j()(), Snll 548-4005._~-- 673.-8550 3 Hft .. J 1 ~ bathi. Patio, lgt' OPOITIL D. rrs FUN ro IE MCCI yd, w/gardm. Bl1n11. C1e1H1! FOR fiflle by owner. lov~ly !;ptt.nl~h 11tylc, 4 a r . w/f11n1 . aree. extra lrg 1·111 '11· "9t~ IOI 968-'822 f'ortln Co. Rltr~. &t1..5COO ~ U ke IO Tr11.deT Our Tradt'r~, That Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle f oll...m .. , CLAY I. '01.lAN ------- O l!earrong• letter I of the lour scrambled words be· low lo form four simple·words. I T.UM ONA l I I I' I ~~R_A~·-M ~O_A...-ll l!~. . I I I' I . l • Now ci~ Cnpe Ke,,nedy: I D Y MUP I' I I I I' "The y've just developed a roe~ ~"' that goe$ so fast, they call ~...,.!,,...~ ..:.,ol.,.;.y .,:IE-.Nl..:.A~l-1 ~ ~~ ''"'"' :.d L. -~.-~.-~.-~.-~.'-~ b.,. !d!1119 111 1he mrn111g word you de~•loo fro1T1 t'lp No. ~ below, $PRINT NU~.IRfREO L[T'Tl~S. IN THESE 50UAR~S UNS.Cl!AMSLE ABOVE LETTERS 10 GET AN$W£t ' LUie lo tradt? Our 'n'ad('r'1 l-ooll an)' M2-&61'8. THE REiil ESTATERS Pn.rnrliY" column 1:11 for ytnl! ~ ,.,,.., 5 d'l'• 10' 1.1. call SCRAu .• LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCATION 81B ' 1.;:=::~==========~.!:,.l~«~l•~Y~·~·~·~<H~Z-5678~·!!:!.__ ·----"!""'"-----~-~-~----.:...:.--.:...:..:...:..:...:. ..... _;_.:_:._ , . . . . .... . ' . ' -, , ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • JUST DIAL 642-5678 \ But You Can PINCH YOUR .PENNIES with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified '-d 3 LINES 2 llMES Any Item Priced S50. or Less '·· (If more thin one lttm, tht-C«tlbintd total c•nnot ucHd $SO.) .. 642-56 .78 · ' ' , • j Mondi)'. Jvl1 lb, 197) OAll v PflOT ! I I~,__! :....._ .. -~1~/1 ---l ~I I~ ~I _~_ ... ··__,]~I --- Nowport "'""h Comm1rcli1I Loh for Sale 170 HouMt Fumlahed 300 _Houws Unfug:. 30S ,Ouplex11 Furn. JotS 4,pt1. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfum. 365 1Apt. Unfum. Property 151 msTA Al~• R·2 kit, new 1 I J.;;;:;;;:;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;J rlupl!'l!, ""'° per nMJ., iliP-Huntington BMch Huntington S..ch !rrilewport 8ffc" Lido Isle ., Cost• M.M I Newport Betc.h !-:AS\' ,\(.'<."!-:SS 10 ~n !Jlr1:11 ~~~fd !~~S "$~r9, ~~~·:ALONE on lat 1 Br h5t'. AJIO [;::;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Nr'T Sl !Ont:~: 2 t3r. '! l\.,, 281<. ~HA. tine k !!-pl·, 1tl'll OE: LUXE THE NEW SEA CHALET \\"0\\1! Open b1.•11n1~ uc- (.'Cntuate this Prninsula 4 Br. 3 111\~._.harrncr r loor to celllng lireplat'c, d('E'p !>hllg t'Bl'petln.g, !luge fa n1 i 1 y roon1. Slcps to surf or bay. Fantastic al SSl,950. As~U/l"I(' VA lo..1n . Hurry! GRUBB & ELLIS R ealtorJ 2863 E. CsL I hi)· .. Ctl.\l 675-7080 BA ysHORES Cozy Cnttn~c 2 pr1 benches, 2BR, lBA w/patio, yrO, boat stg + room . lo f'Xpnnd. 2 5 9 5 Crcstvi!'w D1\ Opc'n daily J.:=i. BY 01~·ner -4 Br. 3 Ba, F r.. & Pool. $.39,950. 2-118 llolicJay (off lr•:int>f 5-1~_,..,. Newport Heights ALISO AVE. ChalTlling 3 BR .. 2 ba. "'ilh u.<1cd brick f11>IC', · kilrhen bit-ins, lols of cabiT1£'1s & pantry. Li;:e. lot with spare for pool. 1.ge. gar. on 111lcy. CALL G> 6•'·1414 '1~· iEAL TY Ntar "'""P•r1 Po1t Offle•. Santa Ana . Gt1n!rn Grove 1'h.')'5. E:\:· °"~·r/AW -Co.rn\\'(' 11 C.:'lf . .m. Balhoa. 11'alk lo 2 BR, l 00. lk'•utiful UpP'lld· , ........ ~·111U;. Mfl "lltrr. S,.10() jlllr, \li)l)!>'r r··n•al , s::~:1 pl\L'i APARTMENTS I ('f•lll'nl OllC•(ICI"(' C·7 Pl'Ol)o MG-7823 ~~i91 ' 'A<llrr. Sachcklr, uW pd. ('(( fgwl'!llOU~. lrn.·ld llill&IM'r, )Tl) s,,~-l.llil? uni. 2ll-7'J:~l?l \ t l It flpl . ' . UAY\\"()IJLl ,\PAllT~IE:\TS l'rl.)o', \\'r1nm1n.1'lt'-r Blvd. Mo j De -J\¥1. 1-'N'. S36-Xi75 ~r. 1hM\w11.stW!r, JJ1(r Duplexes Unturn. l.50 Newport Betch ·1;,11~'1 1',C:)i ~ j'1 ,~11111; -~~n:j 111 ~r>11lur1 Bl'IH·h arf' m • unt1 n , Hrt Lagun1 Beach nc .... ·. i;rooct kx·l'llioJ11. Cornu\. :-----:--:-:-----,1-;....:...;. ___ :.;..,..:.. ___ ,I Trn111ic C'nurt~ "c;,ni° nnd I r"a(ty. 111l' "'d1~ orric·~ l,g • 'A .. Resort 174 pnol, $22';. nio. Ask for lll1I" Corona . del Ma r '''''"'" 1,.-,,, · '''"".·". •.lr11l,). f1,11t1 lD 1\~I to WAUCf• BAl.11. \\/k11!·h1'11, rrpl•'~I . "" .,., • 1 '' 'I \ 1 1• I SJ 1::...uti! P•t NI~ Bach 1-Ull If 1 nB fi\•Ol SJ.JO t1 · • • 1• tn·. '"' 111r vi · 11111 B·"a:'h'~lll,'." .. II B. * 370 AC. * kil l.rg dr1:k So LagUna ~ Adll11, no JM't•. po•nn ~r \Hit k l)t•n J-"1"111 $Hi1 .~ -"Hi Jn1.111u1n .. ll11l'\ Hoot!. c,\Ll. s.r.!-t'.lis Nr. R•ncho.Calif, s11;;.u1i1 Pd.', 'vir"· 1 Ur. ;---: -. -.. -;-: ~h'1~1 utll. sr:;, "~" 201 .J nH '"'"1 S.?lD 1t'"I·&"•..., ............................. ,.;;,,,1& \\';tl"!l(•J' Hot Sprlnga, in 11'/deC'k. Vi('tOl'ia l:k>1H·h~ 962.4471 (::::.JMM10l Of:'lt.1:.1• :1. BH, ~HA. llU).(t" -.-·-·.-----~ HH 1\\nh~ t"l"lll S.!."·O l 111{. 1ba11111 . l'll"llS, rl!"Pl', ~ /u1tn B<H'rci,:o Staie Pnrk, $200-Charnung 1 nn 110\I."<'. 111~·1,.,,r·11 un1 1, 111 ne"· du· SP ·" l p I Bil. 2 Bil .f.-MED ITERRANEAN b1hu1~. 1nr11t1 ic•r. IAr, Duplexes/Units · I 110,''hl h\1·y 79. rn .. 't' Ir Ch"la1·. l.ng\11111 C1tn)'On. B ,, au t AL.ONE on Int 1 Br tuc. aar. 111.·:., lit.•fl.l111'll\l;.\11~'. Nt>a r Bal'l]cli>r11. Color T\', 111111;1 1).1•H"1. All 11111 Jl(I . No r.:"· sale 161 Silcrifl(.'t'-1\take Offer. \\'ill 1;11rdt>n: ,\lioo "'alk to 11•a1rr :.I Rr. hca<'h r~llh"lS ru· .. pl<i''{" no ~rv. IJOOI: 11K· l\h·:l.'l., -'1 '"· ' VI LLAGE S\\lfl n"lf•, IGOC> l110•1>n I' AC't'. ---------'-'" take part 11·11tll'. ~9710 NU-VIEW RENTALS SIW. \'11·1,· of ()ro(-11n :1 u.-. p..•1s, S.m. n10'. Availabli S.t . .:.~c~port Bt · "_.!! GIG-~'(!!11 :"" 1•." p o rt It," i R h '1l . 4 PLEX ~·~~ll .... ·~~ 1,·knds or 11·erkdoy.s b13-'tO:l> or t.~-324~ l~==o~·~""=1.-•~·"=·~5"'-25~'~·~"~'--6i:i..b.llQO t"ltJL~:. 11 nH. 111~~· s.:Ar. :!liA'.l 1 ~~;·;~:>r~~~~~;.j C :'-1. · 1:11;.:r..!.tl~~T.'._'2 ___ _ ~~ 2 HR. Nonhf'"l\li. v.·nlk 10 l~o·ne • • *' * • ,. \\1t~ • ..:rlc ryi•r, • .;., n'lfl <II'>.\. >·.1·>·.1·.1·1111· Sa n Clamt nt• SJ>ac\ous three bedroom O 1 of S p 171 '" _ _ _ _ _ _ Xiil>t lli,:hl~ 6 l"r,Hi11r1.rl\ir. . o-.1ncr's unit. Z!OCI' Rnd Ii u tat• rop. hcach, S25. pcrda,y. '111 Sertf .;;;:;:;:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;::;;;; -C - 1 M~ tH~2'.!S 11k1.,1.. • lk>iirc; Fri f\l('s Ju..fi 111·0 bfo1lroom 1000' unit and lJ. o• 1 ew. -----\\('!1 k ·111ur.< 10 7 hvo one bedroom 800. unit", ~!OUNT'~ home Job8 Peak -494-8262 :~ BP.. 2 l"llllhs · · · · · · · · S~~ 2 JlR. sl('Pli to Ol.'l'.•n. Ir.: \\'lllTE \\'11trr Cl)ll11r \'1,.v.. :-.111~k. 2HH. :LUA, adl1.i, 1~·'":'• Burn.a \'~la . S.C ss15• a nlonth in<.'Ome and 3100 square fN"I, 4 l'itory . 2 Bit;~············ S~, EASTSIDE 11111-n 1,11c:~· c'.11.~1,. 1"\': f'lc · HARBOR GREENS owner occupied. \'aluable Lake Vit'\\' tum. SJfiJXKl LAG U.NA, fum . h 0 U 11 c · 2 BR, • 1><1, d!'n, A C. " S~oJ :!BR. hv rm. uWcin Kll rh & ,\1·a1I ~ •··· 6 ,.1, s.;,v '~· Furn f;. I 'nlurn. fr Sl:-.0. R-l hit:h rise land. firm. 893'-1313 nr !"i.32-9110 !ialaried rcspongible adult. ~BR. 2 ba, a1r.rond. ·· $-~ l..:undlnret1C', r•ri r.ori·h. t11!·. -11".f'f: ~-1~~nt.nr ~il-SJl.1. li;u·h, I, :! It:: BR's. "'°""'~ c; Pt>nnanerr1. $1ro. No pc'ts. 3 ar.. 2 ba., den ...... $10 .11 $I~ • .1 . 1 ., RI< ,. l...._..,I "l"J P. lllX'n 10 "nl 7 11111. :r;"1W1 San Ju•n Capistrano C a ll 67S-n25 Ranches, rarms. ·19-l-8170 , BR 7,1 ''''' •••••.•••.• ,1 "' "'· r nlf1. ,.1·11i 1111m•~ .•• , "r )I· 1 . ., "· .• 11,,., 1, 11. ,_1 l HH 11rflt·r dupl,..ll:. Ql'f'1111 ~ hll" < I k 6 """ •·• I •'ll'r§f)u :'I.•·. •·'" . 11r II 1r Groves llO Newport Beach 4 BR· 21 1 • s i·r. r.o 1· "" n • · 11('1" . 11~ s • ....., 1110. on ~Tl)' 1'a~c. I 1·1. 1 111 1 lo Ad \"u. S'!j() rnr1 01 ... ·11 \\.knd11, SHOPPING CENTER EXcl'l!t'nl 1a.x S\i'UC\Urc with this 100'"/, occupied, Costa l\lesa ShOpplng C"Cnter $150,000 Full price ' HARBOR COMPANY REALTIJP.S SIKCE l!l4-1 673-4400 4 UNITS COST,\ '!ES..\ OFFICE Real Estate Wanted 184 SOO-Fun1 ~tudio . nri· beach. Carpon. liul Paid. 1 WILL Sl05-1 Br . Duplex, encl ·gar, --stove. F'.astside. Gl,JARANTEE TO SELL Sl<IS-2 Br. house. Car, yard -YOUR H0~1E -for kids/pet. IN 30 DAYS. f'.!2;')....3 Br. 2 Ba hom<'. Bltns, .Cash advanced. i,:ar, fucd yard. Kids/pct. Agent .............. 847.0012 CALL &lj-0111 -I BR. 210i~' .~. ~ .. :: S·I~ ~ bC'f noon or aft 6pn1 ~110. !l!S-~fl". ">r \'I s.U..o37onii.. i~:Z :;~-&-1:: \·11\ t~•J>lrm.11• \\"I.' lh11·l' S111nn1£'r ltl'nl ,1b S~!AIJ.,1 hr rluplt'X. rr11l, 1 Br. <'Ins.· in ,.,.,..,111. \'t•arl} ilJ'll~lrru)I• Ut·h. Ril...ooi)ij V• • patio, 1 a.ilult Yr l .\'. lrn11u~t J"IO:>~l'l~"''n. 612-lll':ti 01n1 Point I ••:._•'!-_______ _ ISi on-s1:J.'i1n1n. Unl pd . .'.rll3 E or !ll l~rh . .;1, \B Apt• "" I ~'0th. &t2-R.'l20. ----1 p ,\\l)l:,\.\llr. ct.·.·1111 \'11•w F ., U I 370 1 BR •1pt \\·1111.~r N'nl al lu111. 1 !Jo; "l Br 1 ,1,i.~. i,1111 kl! ., I ur n . or n u r n. : i d h·11 Duplelee s Unfurn. 350 Slll. n1n 11..11 ' 10111 :it.. Hti B!dt: J,-..s th.:Ul I Yl' o'i,I d '•' ' re I . Huntington Beach J\.B. 6T.>-&l!l2 I c:iv~(' 1~ IM•aeh & 'l11!.l'l111r: Corona el Mar San Clemente I \ rry <IL\, SY.l). ·lfJ'J..."$. d OC'E;\'.'\ \'[F.\\', lg1• "l !~r. 1 :J BH :.! h<L (l•'•'.1n \'li.'\I", v.·alk Rl::.\LT\' NEW 3 BEDROOM &u1 r1 .. 1n,..111r H1·..:1rr .. n1 llul"l j R.a. t-rpts, drps, , ti!tnio;, II• 1,.,.11,·h. ml ,\\..-.. ,\ Con111any \\'1th \"iiic1on 2 ha1 h, ~'ll•·ltllit'<l pn\•atc ~~r· $79.SO per mon. 1 hn!1~1.10~_. t•n1·!· i.;a:i.1~c. Sllill, C'idl G71."Ji6.": ti·l"l·Zl.:J.l Evr~. t:niv. Piu·k Ccnl1•1'. ii"\'11\(• I Ill;<.' in tl11p!1•x hu1!thng . SM. riu!f'I • ..;o'l'tlll' .'\\, ... J_, nr S.:17·.•l•li. Call Any!inH•. ~2:;-;:i00 I f>l'r n10. ,\Jnnai;er tll 313 furn ut1I -lulo ·n l'lt'r•if',., OCE°A:-J \'Ll'"'S -"~1k-,o-lx-·I~,-, Oftii.:c houN16Al\l ro8 P.\l . Os11·c,:o, llunlutgton B("fli.:h. \\'nlkun; tli.slan1:r h1 C'lt'l)' J{H . fun1 'or un f u~n associated :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==:; j' 5.164152 thin1:. $2'..'ll-S250: n10. Rkr. 49&-5711 ll·I DI-I 'lar. S.C. Hunt in9to~ Be•ch Apt. Unlum. 365 5 Or 6 Bdrms .. -........ s:m 3 BH., 21; ba .......... $375 4 BR., 21, bath., , • , •.• $42:"; Newport Be•ch NOW READY! CASA TIEMPO \' E:,\RL \" $:'..jO -; hlk ()C'Mln. G t 3 Br, 2 Ba. tJlt/rtrp, frpl,l __ eno __ r•------- BROKERS -RE Al roqs 10J~ W lalboe 671 l6tr Cost• Me ... TIIF. F:XC?TINC. PALM MESA APTS. 1 i.:aT· _ .. P..'110~ 4~ ruvcr. BE1\UTIFUL 2 BR. 2BA 6-lrl.l.~I. 11· lk h · ---------apt-a 10s opp1ng. I Dupl•xes, T\\'O closed garagcii". Furn. or Unfurn. 355 5250 mo. Call 642-4353 1 y.,u i·M ,.,.~. Fht· CL()('!.; :\u~:_t·n.:-: ?To Nl'T. 1~11. h'f)ll\ lho· S;u1 !)10 :::·i ~-I'\\). U.n ti, 1 ~ -n n. fron1 $150 Ju~r ~IJ. ol lhi• San Dlo').:Y I Arl_u!ts~ No Pt>ts. "SINCE l!m" Newport Beach :\gt. fJ'"ll)'. flt ,\IAj;;l)ulni 1 11'11 '11•5.1 Dr. DELUXE 1 & 2 BR , <~ hlk! !rom N,.wport Blvd.) 1st \\'e:-rtem B.'l.nk Hl!li;:. .Uni\"l'r~u:v Park, lr,.1nr Days 552-7000 Nights -~-------· --------\~:'lrLY l)ECOHATfJ) ~U;\li\l t--:R, \\"intC'r. ycnrly, 3"'~ Br 1\/c;;ir . f111·o[ \111 \r r·ntt:l'l..,\Ct:,.;: ·• 1 "'"--I .\i1r.11· 2 Rr ar11~. •tf\ih-t. hiJ:h .~· I BH, ~BA. fplc, t.~an\{'d v.limt io _ \\rr l'•L (;;iJI e Private Patios t'Cilings. ctrits. 1lrp~, 1 blC'k h111 n 1 & :i: 6".6-<1121) e Dishwashers " BDH. 2 lxL fnc1I. yd. air hruch, ha.Iron~·. !JC('llll vici~·. 22'!S-C rtiu·1·n!U1 ,,,.... .ll·\:1 • All Heating Pd. rond. C'rpt. l11..'l11y ri('('Or. $.125 up. 54~18. 2176.-E PhH"<'n!1<1 fl1·1· $14:1 e Jatuni Calif. liO!ll('~ $295 f!Vail Lill• SPACJ_OUS 2 Bit. 2 HA. • Heated Pool mf'd. a.52-TJO!i I ' I) ~ I 1 19} ups airs ap · pt•n u•:nni~. • Recreation Bldg CONDO 2 6 1{. 2 DA, avail ..,.._ ... -. • il'j( priv. i.:arnij;<'. C!oSt"' to • • 8-1. no chlldI't'n. $26j. hcril'h. j\;o pets. 6~>-'l~i::. • Luxurious Lndscpg ADULTS ONLY 551-:llii:I or 83.">-1511 i\lr. Balboa Island' :iTOP BY & Sl::J·: l !S _DAY 1,._•an1 1·..,11 .. 2 blk.i rn n1ajnr !1'1-.,opriin..: •'Mllf'r. xrra lrg ··lrr...•111. (;n'IUnil ~. Nc1• 1>a1nr, r-;"o P''''· Fu1T1 Sl~.51"1, Unfun1 SI>!.~.~.(). ('all 536-5114, 2 8/{., 1·ruiw"l11 dn1pe11, _no ~'" s 1r..;, JX'r 100. &12·4'11J Newport Beach • . ---~--Dunagan. , Apts. Furn. 360 , . or~ N°f( ;!IT . ~'OR Youn LAGUI':A Br.:ACll O)"'FICF. 4 BR, 2 BA, fully <"'P'tcl. ilrp~. 1-BR. 11. ri·l'l. & hali"<iny. ! l"llOICE OF Al'AHT:'-lF~T 1700 WESTCLIFF OR. I!• l $17.'.>-f'u.rn Bach, nr bch. Util hltn.<1, ('('!1!ral air cond., Balbo1 lsJ•nd Bt'lrr.1· h111·. sm ~T') 1 ...... a~"· I 8912 H ·1 A He" . 'J Bit .. I k 2 Bl\. Bl!n 8J). pd. Avail yearly. rhlldN'n .~ .. srn pels OK. $28;1 llol Pin. hin Rl rr tii:">-13112. ei ve.,. · · 1 plla11<'l'K. Ponl. fl.12-627·4. ~------~ $190-1 Br furn 01· unfurn. R'1 011· • 1•11•1 \TIR \C ' b · fi I , . . .\li.;r :'-1r. & :\Ir~. Ell 1u11 _ in•) .. ,~ .1rira.>-~'· ' ".·-rup!X'r. lll>r,\\,\t<;"TI.n to huy l1kf'-11r11 ""'7'982 ••••••••••II Vie11·. Quiet cpl or single. B gar, utll pd. no fli:.·ts. 1 hlk rn, •. , ... 11 ",.' <· lt1mi~. n\rn '· -..., • $200-2 Br ovl'r gar. Bltns, Laguna each 1 h \ I I ' I I '" " ~ ... [ I~ Busl.n••• < ... ' \'~[ or \\Ill ,.r \\.'/\ ii i'(''l<.;Qll<!blc. 6-1-1--1~ F II H N w ·11 ,,. DJ\\', consider tot/pct. ""'"' , 1 •h $200 u ouse ow-1 ""'tan 0 ' 200 Sli~)-~iCC' 1 l~r. fi1 tn\\·n. near ...... ·p · .I · JX"r n10. pportun1ty $31.>-3 + I)(>n. Ocean 1'it'11·. beaC'h. Slo\'c & ff'fn..... GT<>-6529 Coron• del M.1r . accept 1pplications for 1 ~;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii;:.iiiii~I ~-r p I c , p a I i o , d c c k , " I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I I I • Grrnt 4 unit for the in1'f'stor NE\\' local mMal furn. manu· kids/pet $3:5--Vcry lrg & nil·<' '' Bit Balboa Peninsul1 II u ure vac•nc1•1. th.al requil'('S a ta.\: shelter. fac.1uring Co. 11·1111 f'XJX'r. ALSO sLJl\ThJF:R RENTALS frpJc, La~una Hills hon1<'. " · !or Rooms 400 11i·1th cash flov.'. p e luxc ov.Tier n<'c'ffs production or CAU. 4M-9491 SJ1.;...1 + rnm. 2 ha 2 lrplc, $35 WEEK & UP ....y I 1,2ur 3 BRApt ----------1 unit~. idc~l lo live in. l\lr., a<ln1inistati~·C'ly m~ndPl.I par!-* LANDLORDS * y<1rrl, rlhl Ji[at. ON!an l'1r11·! e Slel'ping Rooms ~ I at the ltOO~IS $20 'A'k up 11.•/)111 s.~.o ~-!IS(:JOnc, No. 227 ncr. Capital 1nvrstn1cn1 rnEE REr-.'TAL SERVICE NU-VIEW RENTALS • llousckcep1ng Rooms -VILLA YORBA 11i·k UJI a1Jt!I. Chlldrn It JX'I req"d. LANDLORDS'. 673-40:ID or 4.~1-J.!I~ • Ocean va;"'o' Apl<N•N llunlipgton Beach o ,tio,ni.'I ~6. Nf!'A'Jl011 81\'d., * £.U.61.16 e\'£'5. * (>Ct:AN \'u · Arch Rl';irh BAL· A ' ON TEN ACRES (714 ) 8.41-9622 . ' ' » -i.:i.i, &i: ... 3!167. \\'e Specialize in NeY•JXlr1 l-IC!ight!I 3 lg. br. 2 ba, bltins. lOJ ~lain S~t A'p(s~ furn./unturn. ~ase H00~1S . $25 ,(c u p. • Be£'r Ba.r -Great Spot Beach e Corona del ~lr.r e (rplC', lease $360. n10. Call Gia-87~0 Firejilace I priv. patios. I * DOG RUNS * ~1ktr~ Jl;u-bor .\ e Audio-Visual Sy~tems & I..a~na. Our Rental Ser· 4~:rr.?O SHARP Pooli; Tennis Contnt'I Bkf111. Spat' 2 k 3 RR, S\49 &-$199, • 1 Ck.'f!an. ~J blk lo Ot.'C6n. 2500 • C11ildren's Shop, Ex Loe Nu·Vie1v~ po (l\.lacAr1hur nr Coast fhl"Yl 11 hlk \\ or ~~ach Bll"rl, olf I R00~1. nit'f' hon1e. 80flrrl .\ • Book & !lobby-Store vice is rnEE lo You'. Tty New rt B~•ch REDECORATED !JOO Sea Lan, Cd:\! 64~-2611 1 Kids Ok: Pool . Krc\Mn Ln. ~nvi<'V., 11\,\I. Holland Bus Sales NU VIEW RENTA-., bl . •-1 l btodrm. apt. 1 hlk lo ocean Slater1 l!.12-J:)\6. . , . 1 al . O\\INER. Nr So. Coal'I • -~~ $160--Bl~. l k '""ac l, R.· b<iv. :-;0 pi'!•. Sl7:i po.•r ---, nunun~ ca~~ OJI ton . r-.:r. Plaza. Ncv,o 2 Br. 11 2 Ba. &l:>-lliO or ~ 673-4030 or 494-324R B~lboa. ~L·11· l'~pts & ~cdr<'. ~ 1110. ""siart 51.•f!!. ll:ll \\". 1 2 BR Luxury !o;pllt ~vrl 2 .~n. apt,,.fr,.s~ly 1111111tC'1I. hus, C.M. &12-23811. S995 rln. A~sumC' GT loa.n -NEW 4-PLEX 3 BR 21 BA . I" $32;)-:\ Bl •. 2 b.L r~plt, _rlhl 8al1Ym .Sl\"d. li41··1!i.S.) d11ys Gantcn /\"pt Priv. tcrracecl ti ptd, (']_ose<I ~ar. _pet & l)l'ACIOU~ v.·/b&lh, block pymnt $262 nio. 8.';'3-1103, . . A CUTl.E! ThMft-D·Lux:i dry ' '~ · gigan IC ru~n-J:ar, rrnl·ed yard, \\cst1:J11f. or &l2~277 C\'<'S. t1e\llng, overlooking C'anyon l'n!all child OK $14;,. mil. from ho.•flch. 209 Col ton, f1..'i2-9."":o03 .../! I Brand ncL11, Spanish motif, 3 ('!caners & laundry agrncy. pus nn., a!l blt_!1s. ow. S\Yl~ $450-L~ 4 Br, 2 Ba, frplc, ,. &·. buy. 2 blks 10 bl'ach. fl.l1-Rl•19 N.B. Call ufr 6. ;,\/1-4.-::92. BR, 2 ba. deluxe unit Days 645-7108 nit cs pool, kids OK. Onl) S2i.J bltns, dci·k. garage. ...osta Mesa &;un reii,, tropical atrium. 2 BLOCKS frf)tll BC'a£'h, 2 Br. l\"ICrplc., & 3 2-BR units ea. 979-8-174. ' mo. No ft.'<'. Agent 842-14Z1 NU VIEW RENTALS $9.""J. FURN .. ll('pan\c en- / · d k =-=C--...,c.-7.e---c.,--C d I M • C d O Srovt•, refrii.:, dsh\\'r, & law1-2 Ba., frp1c, dish""·ashf'r, Iran{'{'. u1llltles, priv. pstlo 1\· patio or s Un e C '· DIST: \Vould you like a oronl e Ir 6i3-4030 or 4!»-32~8 QSG e rO rlry. 673-i~~ or 673-~iO. pr1v. patio, nu bullrlini; • l~lh, '12-34". Eastside Costa J\fcsa nr. 26 "" ~· " ·"' Ne""·port H1s. Buyer gets 1st ~~~~,:.:fa~~~i~?st~~ $1.lG-Util pd. Qu iet Jurn GRACIOUS BA\'F"RO~T ALL l.JTILITl~S p,\JD Costa Mesa SZZJ!._mo.~~ J ROOt-.1\ \\"·hfllh & pr!-,·~. -,-,,-,-.1 user tax depreciation. Ask-Full or .. ,.r1 time m-mG Ba~h. wfgar & Pool. , N<'w 1700 sq. ft. l\ Bdmi. Compal'{' before yoo r~nt WALK TO BEACH nc.1r 1.a1,.""linn lkR<:h Iii. S"'ri. ing $110,000 t""""-' $285-2 Br. Bltns. fn)mac'. 3 Opt"n llean1~. F" Rn t a st i c Cuslom. rl~-si~NI, fcaturin~: More Room-less Money 1 & :z Bil. Crptfdrps, hit-ins. rno. ·l!li-12'1:1 ............ I~ l'All I:\.• 646.2414 BEAlITY SHOP, Costa min. ll'alk to beach! 1·1e...,·s. S,-l50/MO. Yrl y. • S!>'-1cious kuchen ,,·1 th in· co~1r; M'f.'" 8 real garrlC'n gar.~ 16!h. 5J&.~. •-=--~~--~- Mobile Homes IN, 1'1~sa. o..on,er operat~. ~ 1Xi0-Lovely 3 + Fam. 3 Ba. 673-j719 49-i--0615. din:'Ct hgh11ng apt: Ltk<' living in 11 tioinc Hf>O!'ol, rn11)l"d day 'A'Ork1•r. For Sele 125 ~,, ~ c!1entele. Xln area. 540--0,j,AI, 3 frplc"s, pool. Irvine _Trr· TIIE: BLUrrs • Scpara1e din"g al't'a for $162.301~10. 2 BR, i1, I Laguna Beach lrvly nnly. t'l'f. S20 \\k. ----------~ t:vC'S -a40-Sl82 race. 4 HR, frpl c, grernh<'l1 , 2 : ~omC'·likC' s_torage B1\. 2 prk"£; places, 11riv LAGUN,\ estate li\'ing on : G~...!979H· 6-\:)-87,_0~j·--~415 B8~:Ch~;:f.~~an. ~~~111i ~k1~~ Nt•r Newport Pott Office Investment NU-VIEW RENTALS patio!!. S.LiO 1no. Lsi:>. Call riv<il(' pauos pat1n.<1 & rec arr11s. \\'1l<o;0n :i1:N"s of ni a in 1 a1 11 r •I u••t om• PACIFIC PROPERTYS Opportunity 673-4030 or 49.i-3248 l:\·f's 61:r-I~-~-• Clo,;o•d garag(• \\" sl()ragl' Ga!'flrnK, on \\"1lson St., \\". i?an:IC'n~. Pnol & spa. Ocean I PRIVATE ROOM ~lstr BR, 2 81\. rlin rn1, air "E"STCLlf.f' ' B 2 Ba e :'-Tarhlc pu!lman or Harbor. 1'o chilcf./peL .\'K''A"~. Close lo hcarli & oond. Lndscpd. fenced, self· Taho'tl Hotel roR lca"l', chamtlng 2 Br. & \\ • · r. · e Kin""·~z ilfllTll~ ""°" fo""la•·· l"ay ["•l I 11 I In b I -I I I I ..... ...,.. .. I can • ~ " •• ~ "'"" shopp1n". '"f'. :z BR .. 7 ba.1 nr e ( ('r y, .• " .• w .• Y clean oven, pool, i:: ..-.1 f "EXC. IN VES1',1.E:N.,... OP-F"an1-rm iome, n c "' Y carpe f ........ ,, ... ' ' e Pool -Barheques -1rur· 6111-""~'i "' "+ !'.; I Lo price. Good invl'sln1ent ~ rl'<l led 2 bl k I $-lj(]/nin Yearly leasr. l::\'l:'S Kl~ 1 1 h 1 1 ~.,..., up\. \\'/t1n1l'n1t1C!s. $,150 l\1o., 111.'"rllfln. ' ir:. 11uir .. '°Ur· roursc. Sl5.000 Pvt. [inane-and ivay of life. PORTU=-iJTY. 2 . 640 ae. . ccora . oc g rom 67;T-I.X,7 mur ~" \\"I! I pus ll111 · SP \CIOUS 3 RR 2 BA C I p;irtia!ly fum., irl<'l. Ul!L roundlni,:s. Good. T\11 nllou~ ing avail. 673-S915. d parcels contigoous to Rancho big ~rona Beach. Call Sl:aping. · 1 •• ' • b.p ~. i\la lure adults. 491-<I,.~"' or 1neal~ New Hebri es Cal•· I .. $800.00 ....... ""• fin...,.. &14-137;, afl 4 pni. HAf{(;AlN BA YFRONT A 1 11 ~o Pel d111s, refr11.:. dsh...,•shr, •11.n1 • ..,...., r JI 5#. l-:I NEWPORT BAY I'" A"-1,1.-" ..... '"'-~·~ 2 D-h r I .,',,"G~: I. BR s'•~" l'('i l., frpl('. ~'>':In nl 0. your hrok ... r. .ti •J. ...., '-'"" "" T JAC LA!\D CO 2 BR f 1 panelt"<I living Nev.• 3 B<lrn1, o.o l s. rp c, ..... c. °" _..., ~C\I.' 2 BR. 1 BA dollhousc. 29i9 Acrr Islanrl l1'1TIS · " • pc, l ~ ~ v'-•·•. 0 •>1>· $4"'/mo. Yrl>·· '"~ 11. \\'I ' ,..,.19.,..., 642~1f'OO before 5 pn1 " t"ANTASTIC z BR ::t"t jn VACAr.:C\' for 1•lrlrrly lady. I\'C. Realtors PH: (TI4l room, sto1-e. en""'-' yaru, .... .,, '""' I !'On .,.. 11 •1 •·· -" c " " 1· r· 1 ('-• Adult park, private ~ach. Also building Ioli<, hotel and 658.2216_.. $2.65 per mo. 673-6719, -t!»--0615. · · "c.n.cuury. Spanish \'iJla on 0t.'f'!1n in IC'. .uC'~! 1nn1,., ........... $16,500 ,tto....3672 nia.rina sites, lx'achcs, an1 I 6r;r7696 LOW WEEKLY RATES MJ::"sA Vrrrlc -,·Jean 2 front. Rt>au liful 1o\c1v, frpl r, loot! !if'ti."l'll. tr1r,....1"":91 BAYSIDE Village f.lobiicf hotels. Brok£'!'. ""'"''"''"''"'""'"''"'~~1 .-=~~ lSOO Kl:-OrH ERLV. S•r:iOimo. E xecutive Suites IW<hmm, 2 Balh~. lnr~e l••1tdi~l "u1dows. Ji.:j• l,.,'llt1H"<I Su"1"1efRentl l·-,-~4~2~0 gal". \\'alk to store5 & hcach ~Ir. Beals. S30-8696 h . I I 9 01 I I ' . ' I 11 0111 c, N c 11. r 111 u i 11 1 67"5·6712 ;i•IS·S796 Money to Loin 240 LARGE 3 BR., 2 b..f.: dbl. 3 Ar Hlll'bnr Vii·'v H()me. 2G80 Newport Blvd. rooms. f•rt·pltu'..'.l'. N t' 1• r ('l.'1ling, c,i.rport, 111a11 r, rluhhouse. 2 t1vin hrlrn1s, 2 DO CTORS & INVESTORS 1 TD L ----------Costa Mesa -~. o ll r 1 n g. 1110, '~"'i:, s Ppci o rn,·a" -.·::ir· 11 SUMMER RENTALS 811, liv rm w/lrplc, prof. TTENTION st oa ns S~OO mo., yearly lease. TllE Blt.1!1<1, Nc1v 3 RR. lush 642-2611 li·l."Hi610. I i11th ~~111 pool. ,\<l,ull>.:, no ~1•·•·11~ I -1-·ro1n SiO/v.'k In 'l·-"•l•tl. C."ll 6-,~~~·lJ"o for A . •. Bol"d Hcaltors 67~5!130 carpt'g. Lea.ore. $5.j{l mo. ,.0 l'T 1~,I ~, S·l.iO. mo on yr " 1 .. 11.,. .. , J 1 · '""V' ~ " "" ., · · d "<I 7"'2 Bk STUDIOS & 1 BR'S Foun s i-:,\:'f i\S 11 s. . ~·-1 •91 ,-,, "' .,,1,, 120 new units, Cnsta,ll£'~a. · 1 UP TO 95m 0 Costa Mesa Avail. immf" . n· -..,.., !'. ~ ' "I 2 "R 1, "1 .,t.-1r11ni.: . .,.,pt. st. ., -'~ c·i · 1• ,. 1~1 k • • . miJCS 10 beach. ,\Cl'l'lera!Cd 7( ·>fl:ll". " y D • ~ n' '! , -l .~ f'l'j)S ' -I'll)'\ • .,., \\ • 1n by 40 in LIOO VLllai,:t' (1 1• rrcciation oppol'tunily. 2nd TD Lots • 1 1ESA VERDE: 3 Newport Beach • F"HEF. l.ifl!'n~ hl!n~. rrp1J<;, rlrfl!', JJl'l\" 1 (J.'IJ~. Bdrm, :-.!01·r , N'trL~ ...... a ...... fl .... )I -1-·1·nn1 Sll:)/v.·k. Park, 2 Br. f~lly furn, Scht.'fl. inconie $~1,000. Price • f,{l::f: Ut1!1l1l'S p.1110, pool , f'Oll\'. loc. =''"' e;irpi•t, ~rraJlf'.;;, Adult~. ,.,.. Al-((.) A!;G .. ~El'T . & stol"a.i.:<· a~a. pall6, o11·nc1~ $.t.'tJ.!XXl. For details Call Bedroom, 13.4. bath , 38' ·BOAT SLIP • ruH Kih·h(·n fl' t~. SlW. 7.1:1 Joann :-<1, ! J)f'l.'I. ,\1'1Hlablc A11t:. 4, S1iJ \\J~Tt:l'. Jtt:NTALS par king 6L..,...21179. CJS RE.AL ESTATE low•st r•tes O range o. witb gardner. ~m~ed. ,\: luxuriou ..... 3 Br, 212 Ba e llca1C'd P•10J C .. \1. lil6-14j(), ~ 49i·26:"~~ ;~ft. 4 prn J',kr. 6i:i-:~'I((} 2-lll-00 ADULT park, 2 B • i :i.18-1168, evrs 557-62.J;I Sattler Mtg. C • occup. All new -1m-rondo. Yrly l!M'" s.=i7a. 100· • Laundry Facililir!i --;;-::Bft.. 11 . .z n,\ * • 1 1 ~Imo. Yr. tsc Lu.><urirrus BALBOA PE.0N~l~N"-=S~U~L-A~ 1 t 2 ba f II 10 642-2171 .,, ••11 maculate. $325· mo. S.500. l\ttlM'.lut ii.Ip. ~0 pets. • n ' &. maid sci,,· a\':!U. Larvr, 111"•vt1y. dtto'!". t'Tl(:I. nceanmmt a)'Jt: Pnv h>·h " Sh:1r1, 1 r-...~1n11 -1 hlk 10 ain rm, I -·,.~ ~,,t~1,· 7 UNIT"$75 000 ~~ So C R It 6T;l-7851. • Phonr Sf'rv1e1· "'•I~. bli•••.' 'M''· d--. pool. Imm('{!. o r ,. u~. appliances ta,JtN .. ....,....,:i "· ~ 1 •--" H ho 21 uth 0 ea ors .~ "' " ·• • ,, · ,. ,., .•.. ," ,\· h1:1)' Sh .. '<'ps 4-:;. """"'ng ar r area yrs. · Newport ·Shores t:'Mo WEEK & UP Close to f'l'C'rythin11 . SliO 49l-~.~:'ll. SI"'"· no·r 11k . •'• N.•••. 1174 19xsi~· Terry, Trnvcl paek. DON T BORRO~W · f 1 -I .., 1r ..,,. " Xlnt con<litlon. air, yll Ex('('l\cnl sL1rtcr or rl-tif"e.. ' EASTSIDE 4 BR, 2 BA , Pc, • Studio & l BR i\pls. n10. Ril.11 No. I Crnlf'r !o;L Lido Isle \\ 1:1111.-.a HJvcl . 6l-l-4&x:1 $2000 &t:l-4782 nicn1 u11i1s, l hlock from 'Tl L YOU CALL US! pool. neiv paint & cp~!I N F. \\' P 0 RT S 11-f>.P.. ES • n · & ~laid Scrvio•o Avail. :z RDR.\1 UP$1alrs "P'· Crplo;, 1lr1y~ "r 612-6277 1·vr11 . xTra..s. . . . Coasf II\\)', \\i'al kin g Bom:J11•on}'OUrilo~1cequ1ty thruout.Ncarseho..-.ls,_boys \\'ATF.nrR0\1 -:; Rr.:: e N10nc Scr\"H'f'-llt1l.f'()OI firp:o;, l:iunftry ~ r:;ira-:t' . .,, .. :! RP.. \'eiirl). l.1d<t ~~:\\J•(JH-T Island di!;tancc lo all schls & for anv i:tood pu.r~. SC'rv. C'luh, $125. LC'a.<;(', inc.ldg Ba, Dnr, 2 Ir. Community • Childf1'n & PM Scrttnn Olrl<'r adults p~f. r\r• Po''"· 1~111nd 100 \'ia ,\nt1hro,.;, \\":t\l•rfront U(lll'. I-BR $115 Reill E11a1•. "'"""' shop'g ing L<~ ,\ngf'lf'K County f'll"" mo!__. ~rv. 673-0797 afl 6· clh, ponl, tcnnii1;, I~. Wi(I. 23i6 ;-.:, 11 ?}rt Blvd., C:'-1 ."">-1~97:'.."i :'\ B S7j...:12?.! or 1 I 1 \\ 1~/"l-lll{ t 21fl "k. ~1onthly Sparling Investment over 20 )"C':ml and NO\\I ffi 1LRG 2 Br, $140. A_lso \1r"' Of 67j.-6917 5-1..~-91;):"1 or S.G.::!167 Sl-IO UP 2 Br. 3 Br 'J n.1 fl~~ or 10 \\k !>pccial ratP. Dock Corp. 6~5662 Orange Coun!y~ ncran 3 Br. $235 .• ~ 2 Br. San Juen C~pl•tr•nct f::AST!o;JOE. rinse' 10 !!1hop~. Prool. bltln~. pl:'.ly y11Nt. t~1 Newport 6e1ch •1,1111. .'tli'l-f,."~!2 SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. 11·11lk lo \\'af{'r, llB $l6:). · -~-·-C hR l'h4•1or apt, n'flr or 2bdrn1 :\lapl<' A1 ... f.12-:\.1111 2212 1 . . . . , , , , Ill\'~.!.\' 1 Bt~ Tum hou!V'. PRl~IE loc., Lag. Bch. 5 1 714)~1{6 ;\;;{. FC'l'.9~1::0 .NH. lk'nch. or11oi 2Bl{ 21Jlt hon1f' 111 rronr Q1.1 1t'I C"l!''~('Nn \,&16-00!.? OC'~ .. \'.\~R<l~T lc}ll•I, rlr1!'of·loht•fu;h,Crl~t.July t;1 ,.A_,_r_e_a~g~•-fo_r_1_1_l1 ___ 1s_O/ uni1s. Clock ltv shol ppbi.nU tlOO Cainpus Drive, ~.IJ. UNIQUE l BR H!le, ffJllC', l"Wlu~r. shai;: crpt ~. diP!'· n1·1~hh11rhood. Furn. Call 2 Bl' •. ··rp•~. iln•~ ~ ~ £\1 , /. J,.,, , p,u·1nu~. '" i\_UI\. 1i rt•li·1hlt• 11(-01)1•· 1-bcueh. romp· re 1.1r is, .... ,,. I iiiiii ... iiiO;iiiiiiiiiiiii""iol beam Ct"!iling, pr!" · yarrl, hltino;, fpl. pat in, f'lrc i;:11r. 6il-47i7"1 tw•·im ('('Ii Sl'10 l f'htl<t nk , 1nnri• r 11 t:n1ri111' y,. u·I~· ! tit.~"TOO:l. ' ' ' *R~.tr,;.R~~{ ~ci!'fl~ only. $134,950. 2ND Trust DHdS rlec/wtr pd. $18.l mo. no ~~~m. ,r.poo~·n~h! rlul~~i~~~: L..\RG. l br, !'\\.'In IX'Cls.. vlt'11l nn' fl'"''~· li.u;...1i:'fi. :)IZ,...OiM ~~~~-~~ fi;~,.g1fns11.1e adu lt~ LJIX) 1!)1,1':, !11•lu.,. <IBM, ~roA, DEVELOPMENT I .:::::..c='-------·PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. dogs S4S-6680. IA'll~ S:.i65/·1~32:ll fnr b..1t h<'lors. SI p on l Li\1:. 2 hr. arit. ;i.1,,~.1 \'f'!'tlC' , . • • 1 2 !<!Ty, v;/lfllrrl('n Ir. pal11> • Industrial Propt'rty 161 ~Y Amount · 2 BR. t'ocd ya.rd, ga.r, off, Arlulti;. $165. ;',18-96..t:l, 19'JJ in'l:a, Arlull s. vlilt'r c-hJld O.'I< Tiff, BLl f ~ ·nr lloa~ 1 A1·inl Julv 1<1-fit•pt. 3. <'Vf'5 F"inPs1 vk·w ln Con)n:t-1(t'n-* C II 67, ,.94 BKR street, adult cple, no pcl,. Condominiums 320 . C:t,1ur<>h st. •• OK, SlliO mo. !J6:t-9':Yll Jlrn.p. '.!BH 2BA ll'v.Tlh"<· fi.1 1-4.'\!l:i ur ;..1~9470 ~1·r~'.IH~~k-a~ncr:0r\\l<.1~1%1il~ a -• $180 . .:;.t8..8251, ~1405.. Unfurn.. I !.DP.~t furn . apt Sl.1.1. n'rfl '11\R:, A11t.1h~. l\IJ p('\.~, UAY ~10~1~. <~tiu J~'Tls-~18 1 ~1-:\\"J'>()ltT f)('Jo:,\N~:Jt(>N ! homf' j161'k or rtindl sir j's. 4. ACRES .0 1 . * 2 BR. 1 BA. To\\nhotlsc. NE\\"PORT crrio;l /BR :zt~RA Jl ('a\ed f?JI. _Adults 11nly '.\IJ-;i\00\\"!o; AM'S. :>.'i \\'. lk ii;. A<luh area. 6-12--IJ!.:7 I S111u·lflu~. \ln<!1•m, On1qur ... I , SllO < k I r.,; Poln\a:, no pcna lies, lree $22.>. P<>ol. patio, garage, ..,......,1 pl•>" ,,, •. ,,, A<<". 1.,. f\u pc.>ls .. 'l-llt-!f.'1-IS Bay St .. C~f 6U>-007~ ---, ,---Hr. 2 B.i -S~lt> v.k. 2 Br, J C11.I ;,<~'i· CVf'!I' I\' c•111 JI \\.C'll locatcrl comer. Present RppraiSAI, low rates. fflSt. dishwasher. S.13-8974. ,, . .,, ~ .. l11.\H\ll'.llC. 2 BP., 2 ha .. z, I~:. -S27~1 v.·k. Julr 21-2'1 l· or• :i.t.il-5..'12.'i \\.'C'l'ktlay1. lnvt'!!lon 1_'hrilt £3S.Mll, ? ~st' S:-100/600 tM 5-17-12.10 2 BR furn apt. fJ'IOI, car por1, 2 BR, $lj() Oillrlrrn OK , nii <·ri r qnr,; "'1ni£' ap•~ 11/fpl ,\HR 11 _ Srrl 15 ~i':"i-691'1 Comm•rclal \nC'on1r $1400. per ~1?· Great , BRAND IX'IY ., BR, 2 .BA, C t M 1 <'lo<;(' !n ~11rir41. Afiull~/rvJ fltls .~n rarpt"·rs or r!raf11•s. & lll'ani '""!!''· A\"all ini • _______ 1 151 potf'n!\.il -11'111 dn,de. Ap. Mortg.,_s, C'pls. clrps, & ewrythlng' I 01 a es pr-is. 1n11 Pnmnnfl. C;\1 &ir~Z'll-l, :tt,..µ:311. lr·;iQ' $21\j To S.1)("J 1 flt'l<.A'\" l··'a<'hfrone, !.tt~"\1n11 ~P~r~o~pe.;:.;.r~ty,_ _____ prox $1.2S .5Cf. fL Tru1t Deeds 260 $240 l>f'r mo s..17-1)791, ·: RR 21lA nJiln", lrplc. BE.\l'T Vl'Hi\. 2 P.R,.Sl"i!i 1-1,r· '1 ~1,1,-1 , II\ ,,;-,1>.l-1-rt:l 1,7:,....:1!'11 '1 ! Bl'. Apt!C. 2 (,,\. STID -• R MC di R 1ltor 1 h · · · .,_ ·1 I · ' ~ ' · ' ' · '2 ---..k .11 (•••· .. nlru1i1 LAirl.lna ALPHA BETA oy car e e j 2 RR. j{llr, yd" t llt'C'~·! fn<'t'I yrl. rllil ~ar. SFll n1'1, n•:ani c;i , po(l, f1 1lul1s. no\ e11rpri, pall•l, ~ariu:c :"\t \'1'1'\ rl•·I 1,11~111,,,,,~ B1~ 1 l'h \"1-\r;-q, i-ir. 1 Jll\0 Nl'\ITIOrt Blvd .• c.~I. PUT YOUR MONEY Olde~ adults. No pets $16.1 I $2-:i&to, ~~ \\"knds & evt'S Pf'!~ Sil-~.,:'() (l("C ,\1\1!~ 5)Gj, jlf~l I r1 .. 11! 'r•••lOU~ 1 Bt I H-t . -If I~ :IJ_I_ Alpha Drltl . Le the lt'arlina I 548-n29 I TO WORK FOR YOU I nlO J-1*-0IOl .!_21~1 ~.,,~ ! Huntington Be•ch (l):" Lt ':\F !. nt.2-·1~. -~ "..,.qr hl·lc PrY"ll, ' r• ;,\"all I ('(Jl{O;\ \ d, I ~Tar lu1. n l"OI, l!'Mnl In lhlft M"llt<'r, ()V.'!ll'<I D p . H ,. ton Beach 'f ! k I . ! r·I 1111. \'rly I~ s-r;:. I H,'f'. ~11~ r~(. S160 v.k hy ,....,•rr<\l ln1"'~1<11l'I. \\'r 11rr CHO ICE 1'f t COR?\'ER t:am 1Qr~ tntcrf'st ... n 11i·cU· •n• oint un ing Sl·~Slfi:"i 1 rpi~1,r.1~' · ~un'!.~~,i;.,;11 riu .,1-1 w;1 A\1111 oov.·, thn.i t..atior Day offerin.c: 'I unit• l1Jr S'l!l."llO t ~1th Ew;t ~!Tll.'r E\11•lkl "J llll"Curtd 2nd Tru1t. Deed4 on R 2 hath f le w1111hcr r\EAR Brem -:i J\rlrm. I'. B.\rl!F.:LOH .t· 1 l!n. :pr '·' ""''..__, -" --: ' ----.., -,\cl li71-m2 1\•tlh pri:o·alc nnancinR · Tnlbl'!rt St. F v. c;m;I, ok Ora11Rc <'ount}I rtal estate. 2 rlr)~. \\"alk ~ beach k RRlh. Pnoil. Pri,·, pa•Jll. p.<il~. frplc'.<1 pri" lta.f'l l!:~ t:xn..·n .. ''. 1 ~ '.! Rr .. Gerri<'~ l hH · \.~'.;:rlt~ ~:h 10 BF.AO I Apt,; J & ~ Br. t'urn, Call 67S-722S 1'> milt• !root San Diegn SI GS AL ~10RTGAGE f'O. ht1rbor Adult~ only tJ;a. rrplc. Glll'ill!C • cafJl')rt. -01v'tck'tl lllith & lni~ ..-.1 Apt.<1, ~ rplt. D!~~· rn\ · 0'~ iln A~k 1;.j. \tLkc lrpl, OPf'O'llff' (nm°" dtl Ff"\\")', \r ill M'll Ill Tax 8S• li14) 566--0106 mo 499--3729 847-40'1•1 CV('!' Ir 'A'kf'ntlic. <'l()ll;Ct,1. Rec. h;aU, f"".o"JI k p.'\llo. $1~S1~ :l.H-~ __ 1 -J()\"J-':; l't' \IT\' l'·l-6210 to.Jar .'CUlll• hl':11·h. :-:r-·. ~t~ ~. appra.is, 1'1"°1nnick, 4500 Campus Dr .. N.B. F ' V 11 2 RI{, v.·a~hlrli;cr, sto\,., pool tableit. ~un.1 b:11h11. ND'' I & 2 Hit Drp!l. crpli,:. · -• ·· .:.....--~-By \\ll: or l'olo ..... 1~-1~1. 64;.....4363 ountaln a .., fr1 I crpts Stf' lor )''O\l~ll. IT.lit pr.ii. llh-). gRr Adult!', ,,,, • • UA \'fltONT -pr, \'. BAI.BO,\ Pt'nln,111-,~l~, .. -,-~-M· I L S 1-, _, . "' 11"'71"'1.m1""'"1 o~ P?"'2 ~~ ' l\('f'l80f\ Ln <l blk \r, of Pl"1•· '.l71i \\'.Ba>. C ;\I Rr-:ich .t f'1,.r. N,.~. 1 Hr, 2 •Pl. sl"l'pa S. SI J<I \\'l"t'k \Ip Lots .,.,r ••• Ill 4 BR. 2"9 BA .•• "C, Cf'Pl g, a\'ll J, '"· ,1.) ~ Beach, I htk :-:. o[ Slater I 2 BR Sl~ I ty "Ix' lt;1 Y•·a;I\· _s ;. .l 0 I nl 0 VIEW LOT .._,_,.. 11~1 ~~-inL fllC;lmo. Newport S..ch ~2-734.~ t'f'il ,, ~~1:i .. ~{:_ 9~.1. t.tl--45-11J . ~; arit 1.ioiOr,1 .. IM LAR\lm BM!dl. 'l''htre \\.';HO?T ~ 1nt1--'on BNc.h • RR.AND Nrv.• 3 BR. 21 t $140 . L1.T~\ SI('!-: ·~111 fi drp!. 6~'!.!ll or 6~ 1 .... ~r:· ~~!:ii d,~~ AAlulr::;· \'la l\ntlOro<>. ~.B. 6T.1-.l122 .. \'\t"W of l\laln &d1·h Mil · .. ,,,. RA . Crir.00 . -.. /Rill!t Sl!p. 2 l'ool~. 4 Gardf'n~. S!lurtn f:l~idr i1"hLIC" 2' RR . (1'f\l<. ·-111 fi.'l;..J;9~i:, I -~=~:i====~-1 CQIUlll\nt>. Gd. nf'i(hbortinrid ......... p 3 m N le rnr JAi' All ttppllnrl('f'!I. Tennie. Pn\"fl!(' _Pa t ,t.., ' tlf'Tl!I, hlln~. nn' pcl.!l. s ir~. ;\\ihlable Aug:. ht. 61>-'605 ~77-.,---.,,---.,-I• l"l'JO mtop lncludfod, Not In Hc,utM Furn•lhecl 300 ~Yrrd. &~· a.v~ll. 11 -: ('rpts .to <l~~lr nr !Rn~f'. ,\rlul•~. Ph: 11.1&412.'!9. Cull 64~1101, """11 1;~;~1~in.1.~~1 ~~~:~~~,'~'~~ DANA POINT C-1 Prop.'"?£::· $19~;.... B1l O\\~ •-i~-Ponlnsul• Or~ ety. Ca.JI ~pt of 213: ~ m-2 1 l ~ ,\~J-~_ ,.12m•11].n 1'1Cac:h1. ho1,.1 r:xTr~ \ ntr,. 1m1! rlt"5n 2 nr Y1~\~~L1;··.},l!R1._23 l•h · Sr11. SlYI, "Ak. 67~ <.i:ll. 1~· Iron! hy 1211' •k-r11. 0!'1 ..... 49~1:11• °'.rt.....,,, ... ~ --T r 8 ll ' p 0 r I ll ti (In ' :t~'T-Kill. n•JVll... ..,.,, ~r "'"". APl.'1 II rrpk ;\"µ I n·t• drf'!-) ·J ' "• 1' Ar "'',. ----- (11,i'lf'l" R1J.11•I nl'ar n1nrl1111. 6.il"t]O LOT. l60'7 Corn11i·llll, BALllOA PF:Nl'N BA,yfmnl 2\.~621>-3310 fi'1>ni !>-l }i .• All<. C'lau ~ \'°k"v Su 'JI S% p·r~on1h. ,,v;...m;,,;_ Sli'l 'll>~ll()"r:· l'Mfll'rl)' Hous-' '1-1:!-1ff1 Fl1\IROA lsl~;-1 1 hr, ll'M. 11 Xlr11 slti'. "·•·II ln1ffiC'kM u<'-.-})C!arh. Nr. ,......._ :;. SR,•"' r•-r. •oa<. wlulays. B,, 2 U., Condo nr ........ 1, "* F l'RSlSflF.D Rach,.lor -;-\'EARL\'. l RI< S.S:• :i!o~·i~ 1 .lu9 $l .O l.,...'r v.k . • " $~ noo SUI It ·~ ....... ' •r•ir ... .. ~ .., II •• .• (k f • 3 Bit $600 .\11.i.~111 $Ji:"., liiis..&.i2!1 111'ell, "'l\1"i ' · ' · >m ping. Ownl>r. ~l Avail July I~ A ~I 1. ~11 lhe old !tUH Buy lbe 1J1rW lmnili & """· A\•Al1 .Au~ •-11.1111 :\H'!I a • P<i•I ~ Pl1t..:c 11n ru1' ~a.n ron · -of~M'. 6'6-lZll. 5"11 lll\f' ltrrr" 6U·S6i8 '\.'t't'kl)'. fin.2039 milt. 1.ith Sl211/'lrJ fil ~:!l l 1 1 SI tn/m'l ~17-!N3.1 tU' M!".-21'~ Pl"ript>rt1· !IOI 'It" ~?.'.t"N) n' 1n ,.,1 \tl• fM2.!;;7!! - I I I .... ' :.! DAILY PILOT ~ ~1ona1y, J1r11 lb,. 1~7~1 I -~· !!!!!l~~~l 1 ~-~~,~~~l~ .. ~ .... ~-~l[S]~ 1 ·-... -J~ I -... _ J ~ I ~....,._ l!DJI ..__ _ ..... _,"··__.l[i]],.__I _& .... _ • .:..~_· fill I ~ .... ·· · llilJ llv•.•,ltfmmon R•nt•I• 425 ;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;,1~iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;; ic.~C~l~no~t~m~•~k~ing~~~~Ji~::::~~iiiii~.:.;~ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~l ~~~;;;~~~~~J;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~\~~~~~~;;:~1 • BualnoH R•nlol 445 Fou{>d llrH •chi '550 ~ · P1intlng & Help W•ntod, M & I' 710 HoTp W1nlod, M&F 710 Help Wintod, M & F 710 H•lp W1ntod, M" I' 710 LAKE OF THE WOODS. So. CABIN£1'S & t'urnlturr: Paperh1nglng -----'=;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;j Oniron. Lak2tmnt mountain NEW SHOPS f'ND h1tlc Im! Da.Jmat1:ui Re~~ :«,.~9woric ASSEMBLERS EKrOW officer $9SO 1 ~ cabin w/dock & boathoullt'. Vlc \\'es 1 m I n 11 t er &: Jo'lltST CLASS PAINTING A: If .....,, are a 1~.a. .. over 25 COOK El I I INSURANCE SAL£S "' SI ,., -..... A fe11i· choice .aiops 111ill · , c1,,...1 Service PJpcrhiinal1111: Ext It Int. --~ ..... would liko~a' •-30 .... ectron c H ••m•n , ' m. pl. u, •~ "''k. nvnilable Ill VUlaac Fnir, n,.,,road\l ay, Ot. Pl('a§C Iden· ,.-l!"'n>e I 97s. WJ<l nui ,.. 17K ~-noo """" """' " ' '"' .,.,.. "'" ""'" Jo• with • small 111• J C PENNEY CO OCEANFRONT APT., '1.-eJ>& l..'.l;;una. I ~ wy. 646-483'1 J~l~N 'S Carpet & Upholstery Pl1,Ter P1teh Re ptlr And novclty company, please • • • W~tcUU . • ~. avall. 7.7 to 7·Zl Sl50/tA•k. J Dri Shan\poo frt'l' Scotdi· ' • rotne and *<e Wf, 9 to ll:30 Pfflondtl Agency No exp nee .• eam while )'OU learn, part time, eves & wknd1, full tt.lM! when quail· !it'i:I. alit0 3-4 10 8_11 St7S/v.·k, 4f4..1181 (,_ fo'ND Sml blk dog Ter· guard fSoU 1tc1ardwits). * PATCH PLASTER ING * Al\1. Goldm'a Magic Wand, 24 FASHION ISLAND 15.>1 E . .Edinaer S.A. 1·-Wetl nc-••ofront, N.B. Industrial R•nt1I 450 rlor/Poodlc mix. \Yhl patch Dl.,.'l'CllM.'1"5 & aU ~lor All types. fo"'ree 1'.'ilhnatl'a: 9-tli W Jflh St CM Newport Beach (Jl,tarlc ill Center! -.. ....... "' on chest. Vic Valley Shpnsc briJ(titc~rA & 10 n1u11.1t(' Ca ll 540-6825 · ·· · Mi..8836 S<S-1930 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;,I r~u<'Jlll & l-::dd1ng('r SA. bleach tor v.1Ute carpets. · ASSEMBLERS Fannt':rs lns1trane~ Group Ed Lani * S.aG-1834 BIG Bear l.11ke. lovely 3 Br, NOW LEASING &.19-l•l."4 ~Save. )'our rnoney by Mvlng Plumbing Precimoo mechanical as,sem. 2 Ba Cabin '11/frplc, avail Huntington n -ach rND: Sml kitten u!J grry tile extr.i. trips .. \\Ill! i;lcnn LR OTIS Pt UMB bly, 801dcring, or drill pt't?£8 HM opening for full ESTABLISllED janitorial & part !lrne coTf~ hot1st\ conipany wants good men cook. Xlnt v."Ork1ng con· for full time & part time t11Uons. ~ r nuuie.nl emplO)'ni,ent. Aug-Sept. 71~2979. ~ v.'/\\•ht flea collar \'le. Uving 11n .• dining rm., & • • . • ING t'Xperlence required. NEW M-1 \Valloa St .. a,1. . Mil Slr.. Aey 1·1n. S7.50, '~;;~11 d~=-lr~~!" Cole lmtrun1cnt Corp. INVENTORY Clc-rk needed. Expcrlt'nce rf"· <1ulred. Si>Qrt!ng good !i background prefen-ed. Good with nu1nbe.r". Not e.traid or hard v.·ork. Apply In peraon. Alunson Sporting Goods. JS> E. Pau!ar\oo, C~f _, Rent1l1 to Shir. 430 ~ Sq. !-'t. & UP S-13·9-l(H couch $10. Chair SS. I~ )'I'll. d I --'--....... .:.,,,3 !IC • aJ34 Plact.'lltia Ave., CM \l~mllton & Nf'\\'lnnrl l'Xp. l'I what rount!I, not 11w-11 •· .........,.-?. & 642·80!!0 Apply ln pe~n 10 am-I pm notpe:!1t~al~retiUied·,~~ An Equal Oppty Employer right men. Call 646-8363. * * Two cun>cr girts looking for 3rd to shaft" hU£e NJll. 13ch. ilpl. 646-0697 o r 833-0519 FND BI k / .q1" y ,mal-0& nK'thod. I do work myself. !!IA.I Complete Plumb1'1i: ASSNT. MANAGER rock-a-poo. V c !\fa n Good rel. 5.11~01 . , -""~·"'="'=· ==""°"'==-c=-~!"'~"'!!!'"'l'~""'~I Broadway S,A. 545-WIJ or 1 PLUlilBING . REl)AIR EXPERIENCED loreign ear counter man Ov erseas P.iotor Parts. 1990 Harbor Blvd., CM. Call 586-20.10 for appointment. Call bctv•n 5.JO. 7 p • rn . 6'&-'539 1800 SQ. FT. 1.1·1 s1>11ce ~rn C1rpenttr -No job 100 small "'/fronl offiCt'. lrg rf'ar FOUND rur.1r of re11:..Tipt,)o11 * * <'.M '".,. * * door, Ideal for laboratory, ,.-P . . NE\V, remodel, fralT!l' & ~&MJ RM mall' wanted: Girl 0.1\, S240 tnS \\'hitHer St Cl\1 Black framed. Vicinity of flnillh, stores, olficrs & Sew ing/Alt•r •li?nl $60 for July, SOO for Aug. lD> SQ. ti, Sl80. 11'93.Whil: Colila t.1esa Hi,gb School. homes etc. Custom v.·ork.1--~~------ Nr. Sch. 4&1 N. Np! N.B. lier St. Days 640-;,QJJ or Call 642.-52:"fl LiCf'n!led. 962-1961. Alter1tions.-642·584S MATURE malt> waneW .!ihr 4 6,'6-a:iSl eves. t'OUND lilly male·part ""111nx --CABINE-TS/ Neat, acc\ll'ate. 20 years exp. BR~. H.B. $90 pl'r.mo. + Share APT' or llOUSE' kiuen vic1~i1y _Vic1ona ~-· CARPENTRY utll. 962-8668. Call 'H01\1E-PARTNER' Costa lt1esa. ~ loVlng all rype11 536-1648 • - • • f"EJ\.JALE to 1harr 2 Bil 836-119-1 or 548-1479 care. Hou!K'brok('n. 646-8498. [ =1[i]] fum apt. In co~la Mesa. · 1600 ft $22S f'ND f1nl long hair ca!. Tan Cement, Concrete (mploymerlt i I • &J&.8736 • . sq. ·• w/blk s1NakJ11. \Vhllc pa"·s . . f' -=~--~----, CMra ~TesA, 6-16-1130 Vit-. llununglon Harbour. PATIOS, walks, rlrives. Saw, 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!jiiii.;;o;;;~ WANTED 2 Fem. lo share i 592 1736 break, r('move & replace I rent v.'/young male11. Con· 1 Rentals W anted 460 FOUND 1 ~-.. , ·k & h" concrete. 54&-8668 for est. Job Wanted, Male 700 tat:I Al Bol'C'i; 81 67>-lS.I\ . 11rge mac \.\ Ile LOCAL businessntan want~ rabbit . ~ floppy car. Vicini -•Cement \Vork• . . . G.r ••• for R.nt 435 I lo rent hoUSe in San J uan ty Vlrg111\a Place, Costa comniercial & residential l\1AN_AGEMENT ~lion g I c.,-. c a-llea"h or o ... ~ Mesa. Ca ll 5'18-2869 Lie. & 'Bonet * 556-0868 • Derured with Yacht Builders ,., ,.... ... ,... ----------1 or hl Yw:.ofit Salrs & Service. FOR motor homes trailer f>o111!. Has one small child l-'nd: Sla1nese cat Fm. Beaut. Chlld Care 30 yrs experience in Marine boat, etc. 1648 'Newport _&_pet. Up lo $200., 492--2667 Vic. Gard('n Grove -Brook· Field dealing in new con· Blvd. Cl\I. ~8-9766, eves \V ANTED 2 Bdrm home or hurst & L.'Unpson. F.xciting Summer Camp, ages s t r u c t i-o n , installations, 644-1061. duplex w/yard, s 16 o . 539·34iil6 5 lo 10. Beach, fif'ld trips, setviC<' & repain, gas & Reliabl(' renters. Referenceg BLACK & \\'hit(• pup, short 5 k at in g. Transportation Die!K'I engines. Se rv ice 1 CAR Storage Ga~ S20. mo. 557-9833 lhanlington Beach area available 540-8306 before 5 hair, Fountain Valley, near available. Rt-as. 645-1057. mManager or Purchasing p.m. -Cemco. 962-8290. Contractor Agent for past 17 )'t'ars with SJNGLE Car Garage, near 12th SI. & Balboa Blvd., in, N~wport. SJO. mo. 67~126 1~~~~~~~~~~~1 ----------1 local Yacht Sales Coin· IRVINE: University Park JACK Taulane, repair . panif's. College grad, LCDR prefd. Lease 3 or 4 BR od dd 20 · in USNR. inactive. "'ill also ~a0;1~,· :r 4~~~~· Local I Loll n1 fud j~ ['f M90n'. ~,!~,::· t~ Skipper or Engineer yacht . . L:i.J 547-0036 in So. Calif. Vt'aters. Resume Office Rent1I 440 PL.EASE give us a chance· & rerommendaUon letters i ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;=;;;;;;;;; young cpk> looking for I Br Electrical ava.ilable. 545-3509 before 9 I• hse n1· be~~:~ S150. Lost SSS EL ECTRlCIAN, licensed, am, afler 6 pm. PRESTIGE OFFICES Fountain Valley, Beauti· ful new bulldina:, ground floor, 3,000 aquare feel, w1U divide into small.er cffices. 50c per square foot, Includes e&rpets. drapes, all utilities, jani. tor senrice. Call Marilyn Stovall {TI4) 832-5440. •GENEROUS• .•REWARD• I -I~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~IFor rctum or any infonnn· Person•ls 530 rion l<'adtng lo return of a ----------1 gold four ll'af clo\!er pin, AVAILABLE FOR app1'0x. 2 inches in diaml'1er, with jeweled horseshoe in . DATING C<'itter ; al!IO, gold locke1 BAYFRONT OFFICES Clerk, 56 yr, 5'6" 110 lb. (wa.11 on chain). approx. th(I Prestige otrlces, ovi:r looking Secy, 57 YI'. 5'8" 140 lb. size of a nickel. inscribed Balboa Bay in Newport Teacher, 56 yr, 5'6" 125 lb. in snipt, FL.A. These an> Beach. Various size. suJres Secy, 40 yr, 5'2" 110 lb. deeply trf'asurcd family as low as $120. per mon. In· Nurse, 43 yr, 5·5·• 115 lb. mementos & the Joss is ii'· el udes drap, cpl, utilities, \Vkf . 60 yr, 5"4" 125 Jb. replaceable. P L EASE, janitorial serviccs. Monlhly A.T.H. CO .. 558·1301 l24 hr) PLEASE help if yqu h<1.ve or leaM". 3700 Newport Blvd.. P.O. Box lJ4S, G.G. any information . &-1~~3589 N.B. 67&-1220. 1-iJLLY LICENSED F.ve~. & 11•rekenrls. * WATERFRONT * • SPIRITIJALIST • REWARD Prime locRtion, NC! w port Spiritual .reading~ JO am.J O ~n1e. your price.! l pound Bea1·h. Large suitc. Good pn1. AdviN' 0 n. all mattef'!'i. si.lvl'r gray n1ale px>dle. parking. S350 month. • 312 N. El Cam100 Real, Sa~ Dog must have Insulin shots Bill Grundy, Re•ltor C 1t'men 1 e · 49'l-9lli, dail}'., Judy Young J.L. 341 -Bayside, N'pt. Beach 49"l·9034. R~ll'J13', 16612 Beach Blvd., * 675-6161 * PROBLE~t Pregnancy. Con· H.B. 847-1216 or &42-&i40. OCEAN VIEW fident, symp~_th eticwsr 7-6 1973 all blk Ouf. pregnancy counseling. Abor· 1 full · ' · tion & adoptions ref. y, ~wn . Fcr!'I. cat. Spacious. ex«'. ·office in APCARE 642-4436 Was wearing ••h1te fica ~I· Union Bank Bldg, Newport =~==~----~1 Jar. Loil betw~n Magnoha Center. \\'/recpt,. typing, GRADUAT E student I wife & Beach Blvd. -Warner & xerox, etc. Mr. !VfcFarland. available for homesitting Slater. $5.00 rev.·anl for her 644-9+11 from Aukust thru Sept. 15. return. 842-4113. FULL SERVICE 673-7958 wsr Old Engllsh Sheep dog Westcliff .8uiklint GET WEIGHT OFF & Keep fem puppy 4 mo. Black & Comer \V('stcll!f Drive & U Off. Mike Turin's P.O.P. v.·hite 1 blk l'ar, Oea collar ProJ:ran1 works. Ca 11 only. Lost Balboa Penin !!Vine Blvd., New P 0 r I 556-1350 Pavillion vie. 675-1391. Beaeh. t-.lr. Howard 66-6101. PREGNANT? Thin k in g $100. REWARD Black Cocker 1827 WESTCLIIT Dr., NB abortion? I<now all th(' facts Spaniel Male..' wearing flea lirst! Call LIFE LINE -21 collar. Vic: Moss St & Coast 1100 sq. It. 1vi1Jdov.·s frnl & .. _ 541-0022 ~ide; .'ltlit offiCPS or store. , .. '" ' H ..... y . L 0 s I ti I 1 3 • Air cond. cpts, drJ>!', bar ALCOiiOLICS Anonymous. 49'f...4TT9/!m-2880. · k RR I " k Phone 542-7217 o'r v.rite LOST 719. Yellow Lab, ~~en1, sin, , o prg, l223C 548-9586. P.O. &ox , osta h1esa. ''Nenio", Laguna, v I c STORE OR OITICE SWINGfNG C6uP LE~· A 1 h e l' t s o n · s · Newport &: Bay Ccnler C;i.11 •11.eah" 2.S p.m. Rev.·arrl, 49'l-1344 2052 Nev."POrt Blvd., C?ol. ~l!lll. W ST-green plaid lM't?r-suck· 5Z5' Avail Aug. 1: Pkg. Util. SWINGING SINGLES CT' spon coat at ?.lctro Car 616-1~2 or SW-2'128 wash , C.M. 7/8. Call DESK space available S50 Call "Leah" 2·8 pm 530...l250. 54().2279 aft :i pm. mo. Will provide furniture Family Counseling Lost Labrador, blk lml. Vic. at S5 mo, Ansv.<erlng service 636-5060 or ~-~ ~lisskm Viejo Golf Course. available'. 17875 Beach Bl\!d. SWINGING SINGLES Ans 10 ourty. Reward. Huntington Bt'ach. IH2-43Zl Call for info. 2-8 pm 530-1250 .. -"'~'=·~123cc,L-..,.,,...,,...,_,-,-­ \VANTED: ~E finn seek.~ 4G YR ld bach I .11. t lDST: Lge black Labrador approx. 400-600 sq. ft . Costa 0 e Dr \~ ing 0 dog named Jack. Vic. 2149 A1('sa or E. Santa Ana . Ex-i;hr 2 BR home \~/attrac Ocmn \\'ay, Lllguna., Sat, change prop mgmt scrv for fem. 11\atc. IHZ..2696 an 5:30. June 30. Rey,·ard. 49'1-2814 part rent. 830-7330 _ Social Clubs S35 \VHITE long h.11.ircd, blue CORONA DEL MAR * INTRADATA * e,.d cat fmmd wk '11"· vk Deluxe 425 sq. rt. otric(' So. Ola Vista & Princess , BROKER 675-6700 QUAL I TY m 8 t e h es San Clrn1entf'. 492-97S1 C IFF-NB-w/PHOTO SIAi\lt:.<;E Cal male Lilac 1617 WEST L "Largest in Calif" Point. Vic. 0 Lido Island, 1980, 91 2. T;iG & 540 Sq. FL ICn!I NO\V for FREE s11.m· ne<-rf<i ntedication. 6T:i-1625 Ample 1:iarkin't. Utit. Baum· pie profile on l prospective. I 673-4100. Reward. gardll!'r, Ml-5032. matcfi. 24 hrsl LA ""0 "'""" REW'"A"R"D='""--omCE Space for rent, 714 -5'11-3738 ' !;1;1(1..,,,,.~ Lea.w, $75 nt0. nr Newport Ln~1 ColllC', Mall' 5-W-4723 d C or n<'11· number. Blvd. on Bron WAY: .M. [SJ 67:r-8761 . I I 7 4 Silver Gray F. drk. CHOfCf; C.i\t. •iffi<'r, lfi64 . lost Md Found stripes. med length fur, llC!a i\&B NrtA'J)Ot1 Bh·d. ~Ir. As· ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;~; ml/ar E<ll!ll)ll aN?il. 962-7543 muncl ,}>lti--Oa.21: S·)6-5..~ • ·-Business Rental 445 Found (free ads) 550 STOltAGf:/Shop, 3 6 x 3 ~ • . l-"OUND German Shep. male. , ~lntetioft J!1• J O.H. rloor. m v. ;'l;r. N'pl _Jlc_a coUar. Laguna Ni&:ue.l.1;;;;;mmiiiiiiiiiiii~·~-~ Post Ofc &. i\1arlnrrs !\Tile .. 49;)..{)49fi ~~~~--~-~~ Sli.>1n10, AF:!. 646·2414. FOU~ri. German Shep,_ Blk Sehooll & • "~fi. 1-;~~~~\'~~"in s~~~ ~1~1r409malc, Laguna N1gt1el ·-l~~tr~~~tlons 575 ~ry '_'.Ill~~-•12:i ?.0~1,' St.. FOUND ntale dog vlcinlly *Swimming Lessons*" N.R , 6il-9606 or &l2·R.120. _ · Slater_~ k \Varner, F.V. ~ulll gn·iup ,(c ei-onont). NEWPORT CENTER 847-44:x:i Good 111surant-c ror New show room! 1'0Y.' nvnll. ~-nd. tfl!Ch1•1' nii H. lden!ify. ~umnl<'r fun! 600 to 5000 Squlll'e Ft. Te\\.'inklt' School, C,r.1. BLUE DOLPHIN * 6•1(}-0700 • _ ;,4~.1?.62 SWIM SCHOOL G F. R l\-1 AN She phtrd, l'.\l:t:l f.k.•11el1 U!vd purebred. \ric -i:. a g u na 1 714 . 892-202-1 bonded. Small jobs, maint & Job W1nted, Female 702 repairs, MS-6203. I-:LECTRICAL Contractors P.1 A T U R E • part firf!C! Res. Comm. Indust. Lie. El_emenr.ary sch! teacher 1n No.266114. 61:Hl357 842--0731 mid 20 ~ seeks. ro;im & ~"i~c-'~~~· ---1 board Y.'tlh farruly 1n ex· Gardening change for Mother's helper 0...---''------1 duties. Exe. local refs, * Creative Gardening 497-1045 "'Put l!fe in your ga;,cten & alN'~E~E=o""'°""~i-p_a_t ~ho-m-,~,~w~, llOng in your heart. have aides, nurs es, Ex~r. Irishman. Cle!-lnup, h 0 u s ekprs, companions. MalJlt. La n dsc apin g, Homemakers U p jo hn Sprinklers installed/repair. 547..QiSl ' 646-1072 . R.N. desires rull-time Dr's Hurried Sloppy Work ollicc position. I-lave l\1ed. & Is Not What I Doi OB hospi!al exp. 646-3657 I CARE Help Wanted, M & F 710 ~p(!rt mo~e.d&:e~ f'rl:imP! 1-~ree Est. Before 5:30 pm - A AA A A A 497-2Ul3, anylirne 534-7187. Sine<' our office burnccl riov.'Tl, Exp operating th111 the ans\\·cring . • S('"rviee 546-2118 until "·e Amer1c1n Ga rdener t't'locatC. H<ive exttllcnt po- 1\laintenance, Cleanup, sitions, as ah\·ays, call us Landscaping & Sprinkler now~ Service. Call 645-1.930 Liz-Laurel-Ruth-Karen & LDri C0t.1PLETE lands ca pe T main!. serv. C.Omm'l, ind, 'Sf' J rcskl. Sprinklrs. ~ clcan'M>. :-t===>-= Lawn & Gardening I ~ Service -Hauling & Cleanups. Lil RCJNDCIU • r~-.r Ar~ Jim . 548-CH()j 4JOO c-,.iu Dr. • ,..,,,.,_, tf'Cll A'">"' f•-OrMP Co-.1 AlrpOl'I' General Services PhOM 546.Jl la . . ACCOUNTS R eceivaiile 1-101\1~ Repair. All Types,_ 1n· BookkC'C!per needed by clu_di~g cl~.. plumbing, ntanufacturer nr 0. C. p~1nt1ni;. cabu~ts. sh_el~li. Airport. Ex p"rl on Bu; .. !\f•no.r a_lteratt0ns, f.ix ure roughs 1500 w I ba sic repair & install. etc. Time & •1 d I bkk material. No job too sinall. ~no" e gc 0 pg. Type 642·1403 50 WPM, some telephone .& · oy,•n correspondence. Pa1d A?t-1BIT I O US Collc ge varation after 6 mo. Other Sludents y,•/P.U. Hauling, coinpany benefi1s. Avail Im· painting, \\indow \\"asbing, n1ed. Salary ol)('n. 557-7770 anything, Reas. R a t e s * Ansv.·cring Servic.-e• 557-7266 . . Full time, part time YARD proJects, ha u I ! 11 g. & graveyard. 5:'>7-Tn1 local n1ovlng & \\'indOw .,.,.ashing. co .... n truck 1 APARTMENT &l&-3198. MANAGERS H1uling E:cpcrieoced. Fer 78 U11i1 --~~------1 Building in tfun1ing:1on GET RID OF UNSIGHTLY Beach. TRASH & DEBRIS. Sl2 \\.'rile Clas.11itied Ad #896 L 0 A D . C 0 L L E G E Daily Pilot. P.O. Box l;,scJ, STUDENT. 548-&128 Costa ~1esa, Calif. 92.626 32' FURNITURE Van for APOXY Adhesive mfit. ncf.'ds local furn hauls & gcn'I Pxp · rotnpounder. f/I days. hauling. 548-lR62. l\Talure, high school grad. MOVING , ha uling, clean·ups. fHS..a125. Reas. rates-Coll. Students. A~R2E=yo~,-,....,.,,,-,-,.,-_-w~H~,....,.,.-. ·Free est. 832-T.""J!lt" terestcd in supptem()n!al in. LOCAL moving & hauling by con1e? If so the quickest & student. Large truck. Reas. son1eUn1cs the most ;134-1846 or 534-2164. fascinating field is fashion ='"7'°'=",-"-,,,,-,,::,--:;=I niel'('handising. If you like CLEANUPS, remove dirt, fun & the opportunlly 10 ll"C('S, ivy. driveways.grad· l"'al"n 11p lo fl!IO. ~·k ad· !ng. !W7·26tifi. Lie. 2401S2. di\\onal ioconte call Mr. GEN Hauling. TrN>/Shrub &Hers or l\1r. Phillips, lrin1 , Gar & Yd cleanup. 494-3993 or 49"-17TI. Esr. 531-6377. 557-6!K>4. -~ ---- SK!PLOADER & d"mp ""'' ASSEMBLERS v.·ork. Concrete, asphalt AAwing, breaking. 846-7110. Housecle•ning Carpet Cleaning Fk>or Care & Windows l)ull·h r.104int. serv. 537~1508 HOUSECLEANING. r :f's t . cfricient, 1ne 1rc u lo l s. Varian Da ta Machines A leader in lhe. mini cont· puter industry has several imm('dia.te openings in our J!roduction a r e a for Assemblers al all )('\•els on ls! & 2nd shifts. H.('fe1't'nces. 548-TI97. If you're looking !or a pnsi· Insured Quality Cleaning lion with A growing Orange Carpets, Floors, \Vintlo\\'S Counly computer company * Free. Est. ~ * & meet these qualifications JAPANEsE!ady v.·0U1d!;k(. Please Apply In Person ho u se w o rk . Needs !\ton-Fri 8:30 om-4 pn1 trflnsportallon, 96S-0;0.1. To The! ·PC!l'llOnnel Dcpl . , L1\DY \VllJ\!S house & apt. Or Contact c·J(':tnlng work. E.~r. B. Krafka • 01vn trans. S4i-3637 • Mature couple to manage a<hdt apt. comp!E!x in New. port. Bea<'h. No pets or children hiaintenance ex. per requited. Apt. + salary. \\'rite Cassi.lied Ad Ne. 677, Daily Pilot, PO Box 15ti0, Costa Ml'Sa, CB;-92626:- AUTO WANt'Et> E>Cperienced ;ser'vice Manager for , Tlocel G.M. Dealerihlp. Good pay and percent- age and car. Send resu- m e to Classified Ad •503 c/o OAILYPILOT P .O. Box 1560 Costa Mes e, Ce. 92626. Auto Mechanic Busy Toyoia agency in Hifrit Reh. needs cllllS J\ line mech. with good import ex. ..... For a penn. job with the best of benefits, call l\lr. ·Smith, 847-8500. - CUSTOMER SERVICE CLERK We have an lmmedlate ~· ~=~======c-­lng in our customer l5el'Vlce F/C BOOKKEEPER dept. for a i:and1date who Ke"ep the. books straight for ~....5llbsttantial general Df· yachf company. Li le t1ce experience. Xlnt typlr€ payroll, only lite accurate has substantial gent"ral of. typing needed. Salary to feni a varil'ty of dutieti In· $800. Call Sally lf r.i. r t , eluding typing .sales ot"ders 54CHi(l5.5, Coastal PerSonncl &. quotations, opera I I n g As:ency, 2790 Harbor Blvd., Telefax, TWX & ditto CM machine, son1e telephone ----------contact. FEMA L E Factory Packagers, $2. per hr 10 Excellent rringe benefits in· start. Merit raises. 548-51 2:> ~luding company paid group FORE LADY 1r11urance. Apply personnel dept.. LSI Transport · Dynamics 3131 W. Segerltrom Santa Ana Sportswear n1fg. l\'"B. Salary open -s1'eady. 612·3472. FOREIGN Car Parts counter man, great opportunity for adv anccmetft-w/rapidly growing chain. Apply in person al 18758 Beach Blvd. GARDENER ror apt . .complex NB, steady \\'Ork, expC!1' & bondable. 644-0606 General Ofc. $SSO BABYSITTING & I i t e An Equal 0 p po rt u n i I y Type 50 y,-pm JACK lN THE BOX Now hiring clean-<:ut in· divM:lual to work Mom, Lunches, or grave-yan:l.. During scliool mo. Apply In person 3-5 pm. Thun Jilly 19. 18462 Beach Blvd. flB. JANITOR, pflime. &>ml n>tired. No exper. '1ect-s.'I. i\·lr. Scene or Mr. Williams, Silve1v;oods, 45 Fashion Island, Nwpt . Center. JUNIOR SALESMAN: Earn S20-S40 per week \VOrking after school and on Saturdays getting ne"\v customers for the Dally Pilot. This ls not a paper • route and does not Include deliveries or collecting. We have openings in South· v.•cst Costa Mesa and South Huntington Beach only. Apply now! 968-9&11. KEYPUNCH SWING SHIFT housekee!ping Room & Employer Highly l\1olivated Board + ~ary. \\festcliff 6 Afo's actual \\"Ork l!:Xper. * 979-1135 • CUTtE~ Personne~ Agency on keypunch, keytape or key BABYSIIT£NG & lite house. S rt I NB .. ~, 16..l, E. &finger, S.A. disc device. po swPar m g. · ._.ary (M-~' Ill r. l A I I Tl keeping, call after ti pm. open • stea~·. 00.3472_ • ....... . .._.,n cri pp y n 11' 968-9435. .,~ 542-8836 P<'rsonnel Department BARhIAIO . Family type DELIVERY OF 0 A I L Y GENERAL OFFICE i\1onday-Fri. 9 am-12 Noon bar °'"'' 2 PIWT, SUNDAY ON LY TO . i . l . PACIFIC MUTUAL • .no-. 4 Vikki 's NEWSPAPER CARRlERS F.me ocal company in tv1ne Lounge, 17911,~ NeWpon IN SAN CLE !\I E NT E complex. Great co-workers. 700 Newport Center Dr. Blvd., Cl\1. · AREA. MUS"T LIVE IN Be right-h'.'-"d to secre_tary 1 .. ~'!"'N~•~wpo~~rt!!!!Be~a~c~h--~I 2 BEAUTICIANS, w/some AREA. REQUIRES USE lo the pres1d!nl. Dlll Linda KE YPUNCH operu.tor, p/t following, hole! salon. OF 5rATION WAGON OR Ray. 540-fi055, C 0 as 1a 1 daus, l/t swina, Personnel 833-2534 V A N A N D V A L I D PersonnC!I Agency, 2 7 9 0 '"" ·~ DRIVERS LICENSE. CON· 1-larbor BIVd .. C~I Dcp't Hoag H os P I ta I, BOAT MECHANIC TACT HARRY SEELEY. GIRL FRIDAY Newport Beech. 3.10 W. BAY ST., COSTA Fee paid. Boss seekS person. MESA OR P{IONE 492-44..?() ality + Person who loves or 642-13Zl challenge, cyping & lite ac· DELIVERY man -Early counting. Up to $700. Abo morning, 2~~ hrs. SZ20 pe r fee jobs. Call Elly Ellis. and RIGGER Experience nec.fa.n too!s, Phone • 645-3880 ~9~-Rept.iJl1lo1n-:--:-.month + bonus. Cal l LA 556·!l105, __ Control Career \Vaterfront exper. prel"d ... Trmes; 642--4gc,Q -~ Employ. Agcy. 3400 Irvine Perm. Full lime. Must have DENTAL ASSISTANT -Blvd., NB. short hair & cl¥jln record. OrthOdont.ic ofUc:e, v.· i I 1 1 ·H-E_L_P~-,-\'-an_t_ed ____ C_oo_k Blackie's Boat T ard, Nf'lv. train. typing nee. Call \Va it re s s, Dish\vasher'. port Beach. 832-5060. ?42-.JIE7. Marguarita i\iex· *BREAKFAST COOK DENTAL Assistant -Chair· 1can Restaurant. Exper. Good pay & hours. side. At lc-ast G n'IO exp. H.B. HOUSEKEEPER, C8.J"e of t.ftL'il be clean & neat. Ap-area. 846-35-W 18·10 am., home & 3 children, 5 days a ply in Jl('rson, Surf & Sirloin, 5-8 pml. 1veek. Own transportation, 5930 W. Coast H-.')'., N.B. DENTAL Assl.!ilant· . Oral Turtlerock area. ~3942 BUSY office neetfs sharp girl surgery & X-ray experiincc. or '833-3893 aft s· P~1.• to handle phones. typing, Immediate ~nlng. 644-6161 tfospitallty Hostesa bookk('('ping. Part time. DENTAL receptionist ex-Service 642-3490. periencf'd 3 days per v.·eek. Is looking for women to CASHIER Call TI4-847-8501. y,•elcomfl &. interview ne\v KITCHEN HELP APPLY IN PERSON Ancient Mariner 2607 \V. COAS7 HWY, LADIES NB 15"20 hrs. per Y.'t.'Ck. You choose hours. Pleasant en· jOyablc customer serVicc near home. Good earning o_p. portunity. Cail Mrs. Brown at TI4 : 826-3200. LICENSED 0\nlcal L a b Technologist, 2 yrs min. diversifil'd exp ln hospital. 1-~uu.. time .& call rotating v.·eekends, 842--06ll. ext 271. Young g i r \, experience DENTAL 8..!iSistant v.·/mlni-residents. Sates or adver-LIVE-IN housekeeper. t.ow. prrlCtTCd. Apply at 2072 mum 1 yr exper, in gcn'I lislng exper,. helpful. ~lust Jy Capistrano hon1e. ocean Bristol, nr. o .c. Airport. dentistry. 493-1178. have car & ·typeo.vriler. vie\\', pliv nn, o lde r CASHIER DENT AL Aasist. 1 ...... ex· i>li7i-i:iU!lii5.iiiiiiiiiiiiii childcm, mother h o m e , ,,. light cleaning, I au n dr y. Mature, able to y,.·o"rk Sat & pe.rience, "111 time. Foun-\Yeekends free. Start at $30. Sun, also variable hours. lain Valley. 1· t kl 493-~ Kerm Rima Harchvare, 26fiti Call 839-9660 nspec ors wee y. , . Harboi Blvd., CM. DENTAL Assistant. Ex· LOT man • Driver. Full CASHIERS . __ ., periPnced, chulr side. X-V , D M h. & part lime. Phone . eJ1.'l)l'r1en ... ..:<.4. El R a, s. e-...-nllJ:'I helplw, ar1an ata .:•:c=o~n=•~•-j;o:::iiiii~5.l~7:--05:520;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Toro area.-Golden Bull <>vu R('staurant. 830-0440 ask for fringe IX!nefi1s. ~~. Has immed openings on itr. PearroY.'. DISHWASHER MACHINE SH.OP 11 1 & 2nd Shilt. CHAJRSlDE dental as.sn't. Full lime, Bavarian BakC!ry, E f XJn i ro8 El Camino Re.al . Tustin. .6~~~· ' 1 sa ary. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j;;;;;;;IFor receiving & in process CHECK HERE Mert-Women Skillod·Un•killed No Depo_sit or Registralion F•• Outside sales. e x p . S 4 mo•draw, $100 car allow· """' Tow truck 1driver, exp. !\tin. age Z> yrs. $2.75 hr. Inside sales, no exp. nee. Plenty of overlinte at time & 12 S2.60 hr. base Factory trainees to $2.25 hr. !\Jany others Secretary $520 mo. S/H or .~prffi \vrit.ing, lype 50 \\IJ)m FIC Bkkpr to $800 mo. thru fri.31 balance. AfP. AIR &. pi\"}'roll. -- Girl Friday S2.25 hr. m in. agi 25, m exp, nee. able 10 drive. Factory trainees-.to $2.25 hr. l\lany Othe.rs APEX inspectors. A min. of 2 yrs exper is preferred. In pro- \'oung lady {18-28) to assist Ct'ss exper. should include in health sp&. \Vill train, no cables, circuit bo ard exp. l"l<!"C. Aeply in person assemblies, chassis & power any all or eve. t 2930 \\'. supplies. R"e c e iv i n g in· Coast 1-lwy., N.8 . spection exper. should in- ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'"'""""""~I elude sheet metal parts. 001\IBSTIC Help George circuit boards, romponenls Allen Byland Agency, lll>-B etc. w/knowledge in the use E. 16th St .. S.A. :.47-'1395 of drawing:( vendor catalogs, micrometerit & Dr's Assistant DR.APER\' Installer, only the best need apply. Must calipm;. be capable of making $300 a If you mei:'l thesc-qua\ifica· week. !\1ust be clean cul & tions & are looking !or a presentable wtown vehicle. position with a gro\ving Call ~1-2080 bet 8:30 ,& 5. Orange County co. that of· DR YCLEi\NlNG finish('r, fers xln't pay & benefits - experienced or Ir a i n e e, Please A ppr( Jn P('rson male or femal e. 644-0893 Or cOn1act ENGINEER DEi has an Immediate open· ing for an en&:lneer to design _precision functional potentlomelC!~. Assignment '1111 require math thru clliculus, electronic circuit analy!is, mechanical ap. • B. KRA.FKA 2722 Michelson Dr Irvine 833-2400, ••t 336 Equal Oppor. Employer titude & some electronic •• drafting. Exper. in rotary .,_.. I comjlOnents desi r able . Degre not required. tMPLOYMENT AGENCY . DUNCAN 2865 Fairview Rd. C~f 51>-8261 Afler 5 PP.1 By Appointment Accountant-Degree to S15K Control Engr. SSEE to S12K 1810-C Newport Bl vd. Coi;ta Mesa 645-4320 CHEF S1200 a n\O. The .Blue Beet, 107 21st Pla ce , Newport Beach, 673-9904 aft 4 An Equal Opport . Employc_: ESCROW LOAN PROCESSOR F IC Bkkpr to SSOO F.C. Bkprfconstr. ~ Exec Secretary to fSOO Sec'y to Controller to S150 Pllyroll-Omstr f(l $750+ To handle all phases Sec'y/RE Legal to $650 Lear Siegler Inc. Transport Dynamic1 Division 3131 W. Segerslrom Santa Ana A welt known local manufac· turer with stable cn1ploy· ntent needs. -JANITOR -SHIPPING CLERK -RECEIVING CLERK -DEP'T. INSPECTOR -WELDER --TOOL ROOM MACHINIST -TOOL & DIE MAKER. -GRINDERS -AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINIST -TURRET LATHE 3 NF:W SHOPS · OlfiC'f'.~. Laguna &nch. Oct•an 11kle ttwy. Vu, prkg, 494-5.'iGl. IDEAL Joe. in cdM ror 11m11ll glfl or greeting <"ard snop Call; 673-0010 NililJcl, 4954196. I~~~~~~~~~~ KIITES. 11hort hair, black.[' ·~·-~ -· ]~ Masonry 2722 Michel1on Or . CLEANING lady, mature for of convention•I loan Girl F'riday 10 S650 P.tature Sec'y $65(1 escrow proctsslng & Sec/lite stutnd to $62S -ENGINE LATHE Mi rollar \vilh bells. Found _, __ .July •It h. S-12-1938 Trader's Paradise Sabysitt•nt BABYSJITING ; l.lc. 11ges 3 IQ 12. Fun a.llenUDn. Ph. 963-<&7 Brookhunil & Adant.'I. • ' Ai\lPtUCAT •'1th tnt.JraUcr. 1 A ~ value tor lent tn.iler or sl'l'lllll tnivel trailer. CA1I ~ lines ' times dollars I LIKE kids! J v.·otdd like to baby!llt for )IOU. T.x' hr. ln(antll ln<'i. Call Oi.risty -BABYSITTINC In our home, dR.)'l'l or n\ahlt. 11.ll Agf'!I v.·~lcome 962--7216 Bohyglllln~ In my home. Vic. Pnulorino School. Ukci le trader Our Trade1"1 • 51.~ • ~aradl~ cohft'rln ti fioi" )'OU! Busin .. st S1rvlct 5 lines ~ .... , ...;._..;.. ______ _ 5 dllls wtLL do 1111 ptui.e11 or PIR for S bucks. • bkk:pl lhN lrial baln~ '••••••lll•••••••••••••I tn my horn.-~ 557-Sl60 • ( Irvine offlC'f' suites, NB. 40 hrs wk. BR! K \1eneers. patios & l'xpcr. & bQndable 644-0606 wnlk15, s1u1nps1onc & block 833-2400, ext 336 COMME~RC IAL -f(>ncing. COTICTI'le \\"Ork & HIP f'ntry"-·ay&. 963-185;). 1-4unl Oppor. Employer TELLER P•lntln9 & Experienced P1perh•n9ln9 ASSEMBLERS UNITED CALIFORNIA BANK No wasliM_ URGENTLY NEEDED 309 Main Street * WALLPAPER * Rcv;i$1<'r 100ny. v.'Ork tomor· a . ch \\ll~n you call "Mac" row! Huntington ~a ,. .. ~ NO fEE EVi R 536-&81 I ;,...,.Jf+I eves. TOPS IN T01POlt.\RIES. PAINTING k repair. 35"Yri }~qual Opportunity £mtJ&oyt r v.·orkmanshlp guar. Take CONGENIAL family with AdvantRg<' of my exp. ~-.J , cnt't"I' job mother M:'Ck~ 5.16-7006. J·(Jm nat.,_. Dr. n'linblc, matll!"(l v.'Oma.n 10 PROF'. painter, hotx'st \\'Otk, H rr1re for girl 10. art school It """R ,"· <:.•J8n~_:1.,,,2~13 ~r. .11. .....,.. w.1191 c1o1 hot15C'lt'Ork.r"'i t1Jbldi~ dund~ (' ·"· ,,., •• ,.,.., '" ·,>;I • lttan • nit summer. ex 1ty A D & J Painting Servi~. The O\\'ll lr.-11.1.pl11alion a mu11t. Penona1lty P•lntrr~ wltMl-.,.~~~~~~~!!!!!'i l.Aguna N~cl. 49.l--1194 ,,,.,..,..,touch 64ll-8656 ASSEMBLERS COOK · APJ>lY In penon --* PAINTING * tlc..·11'01llC' . rcmal(' IJ'alnee. 301 N. Tustin. It P1LYJ to call professionals. No c>Xpt•r. ON-. full tin1r, Santa Ana F·or f~ r,it. 6't6-51i~ d11ya, Sl .80 10 1111u1. ~UI. a.ASSIFJED will IM':D ff! c losing for Newport Purch/Set.'y/no sh to $600 Branch office, M ini· R.ecept Gen'I Ofc to $5.'iO num 1 year escrow Gl'n'I Ofc to S525 I I Copy Typist S400 oan 'exptr encf' re-Fiie le. Mall ams S360 quired. Various P-T jobs to SJ.00 hr. CALL TR1SH HOPKINS S•lary c.ommentu-JERRl \YHlTIEMORE -TRACER LATHE Excellent frlngl' benefils in· eluding comp(lny paid group '"'""""" PHONE ~3131 rate with experience. 4SS E. lith ,..;1. lat lrvhlel 0.1 For furt+.or lnformo-Suite 224 '42-1470 1 .. E.,-.,,.'.,o,,.,,..!!!!!!". Em~plo!!!!!!"',,r...i '!~~·~,.~~·~··~'"'.;:;:;~*'~"~":::::"'~' MA~'lNTST • G~'ERAL tion a lntervitw ap-• ; ... ; •• -.. """"" '""~ polntment, Call Per· INVENTORY CLERK ,.,=tt o:::~te~ ~ sonnel: Exptr. o.nl>' -invoicing -, !ties, ' Hlort na11 213: 625·7341 • LOS ANG'ELES FEDERAL SAVINGS r"t'a!lvlng -ahipplng -11. ll'Od· Ell='d latht, mJll, t,yping. ~ surf~ . er, etc. Cole tn.nnent_Com . . TIME FOR :1334 Pi•~ .... AYO. CM &l:l-8lllO DAILY PILOT MALE Help Wonloci ~ lucky Fried Chicken, 693 S. WANT AD Cbast Hwy., LaJ1Uno °"°""" Apply llfttt I pm. An Equal Opportunl1y EmplQ)'« 1 ............................ 1 _____ _ 642°5678 ~ot'd o "'Pad'"! r•-an Id! .. ' • .. [ lfil] [ Help-Wonted. Mt.F 710 MACHIN ISTS All round machlniat !or ¥.'Orit on molds & tlx1tu\•1. Nl'ed lmmtdiatcly. !-'ull or J)aJ'l tin'H!. Afl!J!' ho1.u·s Ok. 'flop rate. \\', D. ADA .\l CO. 630 \V. 111h SL Co!ltn i\fl!'!HI !>16-62-L'l 1i1ACHINIST -T 0 0 1.. l\.lAKER. Dur 11'0rk Call for lnlt>r\•ic\\', 6. 9 p l\.I ~1UJ-;,t3j ' r-.tAID-1\tOTEL. . ,.Apply· t;xccutl\'e Sullt's \2080 N~ Blvd., C.l\t'. rviANAGER '1'.Rll lNEES ASSNT MANA?nRS Apply ftf\~r I Pi\1 Kentucky Fried Chicken 69.1 S. COruit II\\")', Laguna 2!1'29 E. Cst Ii"'Y· Cd:\1 Experienced only. 494-0771 NO EXPERIENCE MECESSARY TRAINEE POSITION NOW OPEN GB Inudslrlcs of So. Callt. has Immediate openings ror trainees in disp l ay, n1arkeling distribution & credit merchandising. 6 nc11• locations to open in in1· n1ediale future. 1'.lany posi- tions no1v open for full tinlC! permanent people. * Xi.NT TRAINli\'G PRO- GRAl\t * COi\1PANY BENEFITS * S0t.1E PART TI l\1 E POS I TIONS AL SO AVA.It.ABLE FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW CALL : 536-2591 Mon & ·Tues from 10 AM-7 PM Nurses RNs, LVNs & Aides Create your own work week! Hospital Staff Relief ••• AI ows VoUTO \\'OrK'J'IT_e_ Days & Shifts You Prefer I A Variety Of A.Mignmcnt!IJ Keeps You CuJTent w/NC\\' Conceptl'I & Techniques. No I Fees or rebates. Gd. pay, J.lomcn1akers-Upjohn 1805 No. Broad"·ay, S.A. 547~1 NURSE AIOES 2'nd & 3rd shifts. 7 paid holi- days, vacation pay, !ilck leave. Expcr. preferred, but not nci..-essary. Park Lido Flagship Convalescent Cen- ter •100 Flagship Rd., i'\B li~2-SQ .. j.j NUl'S('S RN-LVN·AIOE U-7 & olht>r shift.,. Top p1•1 duly pay. In1med. p11y for floor duty. Co u 111 y \\'Id r lntf"V\l"S. JI.Ion-Fri 9-5. Lescoulic NUl'SC'S RC'b-is!ry, 351 Hospital Rd., NB !Lob- by Park Lido B Id g ) 612-9953, 5-11)...!mJ, NURSES, RN & LVN , full or parl tin1e 10 11-ork in at- lractive con\' a I e scC'n·t hospital. Good . 11·ages & benefits. Call 6-12-~10. Ask for ~-I r. Snyder. or apply at 14-15 Supc>rior Ave., NB - NURSE'S AIDES nwtl'd. Laguna Beru:h nu r s in g homl", call ·194-Ao75 for details. NURSING LVN FOR RELIEF !;l!).JOO 2 OFFICE GIRLS NEEDED Radk> telephone dispatch !\1ust be 2.5. able to ctrtve Apply rn Pl!rson YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th, Costa J\fcisa OFFICE HELP J. C. PENNEY CO. 24 FASHION ISLAND Newport Beach !las opc-n1ng {or ottltt hetp. E!(per, In 10 t\ey adding n1af'i1f"'• requlrl"d. ,Apply In person 10 am-4 pin -An Equal Opply. Empkl)'!'r .OUTGOIN(i recep- Uonlst/Glrl rriday for busy I ~I o!lk-1}. S.-1t-5lll.11C1', inu1t 1,ype, Shrlhtf tfit,irablf', 12 mo, ~1811 s~ yr. 640--J.flO, 3443 Pacific Vie"' ''-Dr., CdM 'r • ... the oppo11w1ity to as~·- 1atc 1vith lan\•in really "'hcr1~ / youl· crtorts arc recognized and re11·arded. • \\"(' oflt"r an exlra- ordirlary bonus pro- gr<itn ~· e Continuous nionthly ~es and listing con· tf'sls • Listing retinals and buyer clients fntm 18 Jarwin new home s1.1b- divlsjons • • Con1pany paid major 1ncdical insuranC<' Op!'nings for t11'0 full 1irlK' s.'liesn1cn. Spt>Cial progran1 ofCered to part time sall"S- i"ilCll. FOR APPT. CALL LOU S AN GERMANO. 9684405. REAL EST,\ Tl'.. SALES SUCCESS CAREER Ne1v or experienced. Join the World's largest and fas test growing resale organlutlon with a network of over 300 ottiees and ~~ a member ... o! our Millionaire Club. l\tuJti-mlllion dollar advertising . program. Free J:Uai-tu1teed llctnsing school. Excellent sales training. \Vha! Is your license 11'0rth lo you? Cht'Ck our monthl) honus program 11·hlch mean~ S.~S tt> you! Please rail V1rg1nia J ones 835-4Sll. REO CARPET Realtor1 REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER Rrule ORicc needs manager "·llti 2 years of ~al Eatate cxperienct>. Newiiort Be1ch area. ExPendina: company. Elc~llcnt owortunity for prof~sional fP'O'Wlh. .\Pr>b' in conlldelK"t, Send f'ejume to ClauUled ad no, 63S. c/o Daily Pilol, P."t>. ~ l~, 0.lll Meiw.1. Calif. m26 . R F.. SALF-"')f&,~ \\11)• "°' \111rk In lh1.· h0t1r•t 11 re H Jl u11t \111t lon ~rh fo'n11ntain Vlllley. Let us train )'O\l! Call Phft 1\lcNA.nM!t, V I LLAGE REAL ESTATE. !16.'<-4361 ' ... ., • J.. Mond.ty July lb, 1473 ---. F F I~ 900 .. ' I ' • " D.41l Y PILOT ~ ;;;;! -~· .... ;;;l-= 1 !.___·_"··""_"1·---'l§J 1 ,:;;i · _ ..... _ .... ~J§l~1 ~1 ... ~ .. -...... ~,~~;!~ l;; .. ~'"1•" .... ~l§l~~-;; ... _ .. ~§: 968 Auto•, Imported 970 Auto1, Imported 970 Autos, lmf!rtod 970 Autos, .Ullld 990 , s.n . . CHRYSLER ATLAS .. Chryslor-Ply,moulh DRANO f\'EW [ ........ - Autos, uMc.t LIKE NEW 2l t'T. CUPl>l!:R r.11\.R tNE 118.ilboatL F'ull 14.'t of sollll, lncludinf AUX. JIU\\' Cr' lire jackct1, t"tc, L.ikc nc\\' lan· den1 ''ihc<·I t:r3ilt>r. TI1l1 blk little boat i1 prtscntly docked al a slip, 90 flO Pft)bk-rn thcrt'. ~1 UST SEl..L please phone 644·7 T.t 940 Auto& Wanted _.::.:;;;.<..:;;::.::._~..:..:.:: TOP MQTOR HOMES DOLLAR • MAZDA TOYOTA CADILLAC 1973 . JEEP '56 JE."EP S1a. \\18.jC. 4 "'hi. CAPRI' Apollo, Pace~ter. Baron , Jwnbo .... , Robinbood • • PAID ! 'ii CAPRI '1 spd. deluxe con- ' wh.' low m1. $1900. or lx'sl viler. "11 \\'fF ~42·862°l Nikki 1.r tiny day alter ·5 11n1, 8'1G-4396 Leose A Aotory Eltlil .. 50 EL.DORADOS 14 TO CHOOSE OOUPES.CONVERTIBLES "IMPERIAL drive. r-8. Big Ur('M. i\~11ny LE BARON e<lr"" Mal«'""·~ WlK,EN°DoN" IMMEDIA TEL y MOTOR HOMES FOR ALL 101 N. H\\rbor, S.A. 5"4-003.1 FOREIGN CARS -----'72 C,\Jlfl l 2000 uulo/fucl n,. J1•rtlon, ht•11dcrs 1ild1• 1.ilr.cs rnai:li S3.o00 or he-~• inu.'JI i.i'IL 5.1\t-AA'rrl twfon· 3:.10. MAZDA RX:I Station \Vagon, our 11mt popular 1111Kl«I! New Toyotas In Stock Beat p;1ce Increases! • DE VILLES 38 TO CHOOSE l.'OUPES SEDANS CONVERTlBI~ES i\lany excellent culorti Choic(' of lntcrio!'11 moor ""'~100. •men"'' 1.=:=cUrNCOLN Fln e11 1 Lu ~u r r 'C1tr __ ....::.:..-----·! Scautllu\ly equlp(X,'<l (or '72 J\IARK 4, \\'hite "'/vl11y l u I t I n1 a I f! I u )( u r y . !Ojl, bwl{IUiriy inlC'r.. !ul.!y 1Ylf<l3-T3C-2831l13) C<Juip1., nn1/fn1 stcrro. !lit KITE No. 1005 . NO\V WA:>. All tt1ta c h ctl cqul11. YtllQ"!/whlte. Xlnl \."Olld. 673-3478 e SALt.S e • SERVICE • WE ARE IN DESPERATE NEED OF GOOD, CLEAN FOREIGN CARS TOP DO~LAR-PAID FOR OR NOT! DATSUN Only $80.11 Monthly MIRACLE MAZDA .'~000 "'hL-cl, side! niold., n1us1 sell. Gr..r-2879 ' MUSTANG SLEEK 17' Sailboat, xlol cood . .i')llly equipped, llPll 2, v~ sen "'Orthy. h1w;l t1ell. &at offer. aJ().-8772~-­ COLUhfBIA 34. P c r k I n s dlescl ped('stal 11teertng, 9 winches, .Loaded w/xtras. -$25.000. to&Mi Gliil- 14' HOBJE CAT v.·/trail1·r. Coll 645-3467 KITE 651, b!U(' hull trailer, $Gl 673.-001'0 . CATA!otARAN '72, 14'. Xlnt shape. $725 or Ix.'!>! offer. 530--0255 aft 6 UDO. 14. "'/1railcr. 'l srl~ sails. Good condition $850. 540-2003 . ISLANDER 24, fihergJas$, genoa & spinnnk~r. Evin OB. $3500. 644--02Clt 22' CATALINA & NI::WPORT J\.tOORINC. sr..i00. Call 675-7158 Sall ~t. 12' Koralle , Fast·. A-I condiUon. $400. 540-6338 Boal•, Slips/l>ocks 910 SLIP, at 407 E a<i t Edge"'at('r. Balboa. Up to 32' Joni;:, 10' wide. $100 per nm. 1714\ ~1153 days, (213) 697-1336 CVt'S * &f X 20' SLIP + Avail. Aug. l!;I. Lido An':i. j • Call: 64.>-27a:t • ' ·• RENTALS e EXPLORER C.il l or i 1n11r in ro Sl'" u~. OF HUNTINGTON BEACH 18801 Beach Blvd. 842-8803 JIUJl.'TINGJON BEACTI l_ 1973 Dl.s<."O\·('rer and ::iund1i1I l\!OIOr i(Onles fo1· l'l'l11. llHJkt' rr:.ervalion!I for Sunllll\'I' NEWPORT IMPORTS 31()(1 \\'. COJ!ll lh1y., i\.R. 642-9405 now. Phone i\tiss Bcll/lt.'I [ti \\'E l'.>J.Y l'\11• IJO l .• l.Alt Bah l.ongpn-Jlon ~\(I{', 1'0/l TOJ l.J'St:IJ Ct.:is c""=c·=665::::,I .::•:.' .::•:::36-:.-2500'='"' ~~-I Ir your 1'r11· 1s \,x11·;1 L'lt•an. T tfi.;.F. ... SHF: DON'T set' u~ f1r.~r. '71 fULl~Y CONTAINl::D B.\L·1::1: u1·1c1~ 23.000 r.h 2:1z·1 1la1 bnl' H!vrl. J>RJ PTY Co~la :'llr s:1 !17!12."'IO 54>-3103 e Ni>11' Luxury Lit'ETlr.1t:S 23-25', lln1nnc. Sips 6 "Com- fortably", 11ir. ~en, ~trrro, 1:iv1 011·nr, &18--0900, Tustin 2:J' EXECUTIVE mot (I I' home for rent. Fully S('I! ronlained. &12-ZL"IO 1971 20' \\11nnebago L'OOl'h D-20 Sc"Out $6.500 96S-i049. Traile", Trave1 945 ror-1'll·un l;11t• n1ud1·l (";11-s nn1! 11·ucks! Howard Chevrolet l\luc,\rlhur und J:unllor1-c N .. 1\'f~•r1 B1•n1·h /i:J;j./).)jj \\'t.; HUY li\·lPOlt Tt:D AUTOS BEST PRICES PAID! Dean Lewis Imports. 15' ARISTOCRAT. !kaur1ful 1966 l!;u•lnt". C.~l. rondilion * Refrigl'rator, fil!i-!l:ll(l • RanRe & Oven • SIL'Cps \\'1\XTF:n \'\\"~ Six, " Sink. • :io i;:al. "at('r Tank, * J.c·ii·hni,: Hl.i'l:N!NC Oft N<>T Jacks, * r:-7. Lift llltl'h 5JO-ii9IO 11r 5.10--<li!l!I * Trailer i\1ovi~ Dolly, Autos, Imported lnl'luded. * Mirrors In· 970 ""dod. -GREAT FUN ALFA ROMEO CA:l.IPINC -EXC~l.LE:\T I ---------COND!.TI~1" } _$13!°. 1\IUST N.•H 19119 Alla· l{oniPo S· SALE $ DA TSU NS NEW DEMOS 1973 5JU'ii lll1·kup ti.10' s .\JJ :\l•J<lt•ls & C'o!vrs lo Choose Fi'Onf. -· ------- : :Xrmpm1 Dilbt111 .-... t(lO() w ( .... '1.<l'wa1 . • .., , """""°'' s.w. ... (,4~ 11400 ~J;t(} ll11rl:oo1· Blv(.I. <Asia r..lc!Ul fiiL"hJjOO • n l • IC!olh ,{-JcathC'rl f'ull po11•er. OK>lcl! of: - toJc. f.un& l'"ilC'torY alt· (,;011ditloni1~ MERCEDES BENZ TOYOT4 ~~';;'; ~~~\' ••d1o ;:;;;-;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;-;:;:;:;;:;-[~1.9fl6'!'!,_!H~ar'Cbo~'·~C~-':!:'·-t&l6~·930~JI Trunk opener & mon!-'72 MERCEDES BENZ All in lmmooulate '""dlUon ·VOLKSWAGEN Lao""' .,1oc1;00 In Orange Cowlly.. Of( suggested r('tail J)rl1,-e ATLAS Chry1f1r-Plymouth 2!n9 Harb>r Blvd.• Costa l\1esa 546-1931. Open Nightly 'Iii lOP:l\f including Sundays CORVAIR 350 SL PAYMENTS? Nabers Cadillac \ $65 DOWN $65 MO. AIJI'HORlZED DEALER 1966 CORVAIR l\fonza, auto, l't'.ltl•ll11cr11i1u·d101>. A.Jr ron11, !'i!odcl Jiii. 1''o. 4185, 4g n10s. ;'tiOO 1-IARBO~ BL., ~~f. =· b~~~~t~: auto 1111.rnJ.. 3 10 1·hoosl' inc·I. tax, lie, & all can-ying COSTA ~fESA 1973 DATSUN·S f1u111, \'l'I')' llJ\v 1n1Jcs. rhnrgC'!I on App. cl'f'd\t. 540-9100 Open Sunday bes t offer. ~2399. __ _ TRY US Ocie"'" pmt. p•ice: 3153.80 *CAD. '73 ELDORADO DODGE -. ' . . . ALL MODELS BEFORE YOU BUY int•l. tax & lie, ANNUAL Evc•rything int'ludlng sun-1 ---------- p E R CE NT AGE RATE roof. Ony 642-3121 eves '69 CORONET 500. \\'agon. V!I, IN STOCK 12.67•/,. @ 611·7778. air, & all exlras. rack & toe BARWICK IMPORTS GARDEtr CADILLAC Conv. '69. Orig ?ar. nu tit't'r!. 1 011·nC'l' 36,000 nti, $1800 642-71\69 3:!37.i Cnn1J1X1 Capistrano WEST · -. 01rner. Perfect slu11>£1. All I ;ii;"'-;;;;;;,::;i'-""''-c::--:-;-Snn Juan C..pislrano xtr<11. J\lt18l sell. Highest of-'69 DODGE Coronet, Air '193-:1375 or 831-1375 3100 \\I. Coa.st lfl''Y·, N.B. 7000 \\'{'s\minster Blvd. fer by Sat. night. 673-8718 Cond. PO\\'el' SI e er in g, 64 \\'estn1Jnster ri.1r. Camp. 892'-7421 -'7,1 DATSUN' PicKup, Can1pc'r 2·9405 893 ~-1 6.1~7880 .~-c=:t;--:-;-;;-,,,.--,,.,,. 1 ---'C"°'==~~--Shell, r..ti:.t \\'heels, 4 .Spd. ---,;,.-,..;;o..---1 =~:;._·.;;~~0"'~~~~ '63 CADILL..\C Sd., fully FIREBIRD real 8harp, SAVE Ne\\'{Xll't 50 USED '67 V\V SQUAREBACK. Air equipped, vinyl lop, new ----------1 Datsun 1000 \\'. Coast l-l\\'Y, MERCEDE·S conditioning. radio, heater, radial tin>s, $1625.or best o!-'71 PONT. l'ireblrd. Air J\{'IVJIOrl HC'ac-h, 6.15-6400. fK!\\I tirl's. ~ptlonal con-fer. 61~2733. L"Ond, radio, neo.v tires ON DISPLAY dition. ~ri.tust se~J $850. Call ''7,o"""co'°u"'P'°E~de~v,"'·11-e.~Lc-at-hcr 5.52-9353 or 642-37Qi .. n 2-ID7.. Call . 897_ -523J .'1f!er 6.00 _pm. :>eats, vinyl top, l • p e ~"-'=.:;.;:c=::"'---~~;;;:lS:fray, linmar. Sharp NeW Car 65 V\V 1500 sq bk XJnt mecb recorder, Car is loaded. FORD Trade-ins cond nu lire,i; reblt eng $3700. 49Hll07 · FIAT Coming In Every Day ~d~ body "·ork S un '68 FLEET\VOOD ----------1 Ask About Our Unique , ;JJ7-Xi69 . BroQgham, sharp, atr, pwr, ·70 f<'l,\T 124 Spyclf'r. Cold, Used Mercedes Lease 6?, \VHITE, stick, R/tl:...n""' stereo. $179J. Prl prty SIU~. Sl2-9730 7-10 pn1 Pl tires & comp tuneup, 1::i.OOO 962--.'i003 aft('rnoons. 2 Door 1-fardtop 11·N.·k<ia)l', ans ~l1i. Cli.'on. $U50. S.15-$116 ·Gs ELDORADO, all powr, '100 _vs e11gi11~ 1971 FORD GALAXIE 500 JAGUAR House of Imports ilft 6Pm l'rtlise l'Ontrot. 59.000 llli 1Cru1se·O-n1a!I{' 1rans. 6862 r.ranches!Pr, Buena Pai:k V\V '1'.! Bu~. yelloy,·. air. xlnl S26JO. 5..il-2305, 492-.."971. ' Poi~· s!CC'r1ng ·-·1 XJO SEDAN · If un Ul(' Sania Ann Fn,·y ~nd. MW>t sell S2200 .. 63 I O\'~'ER C "'II . P?"er lh_llC b1~kes 4-• • ill!'. run m, 523 7250 675-7696 . '"~ · llul ac Tinted "'1ndsh1eld •'1l'., in11nac. 64:).8000 days -Convertlhle. Great shape. Air c-ondif · ,. ft.li\fAC. '66 r asrback, 2+2, V-8. 289, aulo. fl/H. P.S .. llCIV til't'S & b1<tkl'S, .recent Png. o'haul. Xlnt L'OOd. $695. 5J6-8.IOO. '65 ~I USfANG CollV('l1. Good tl'aus. C11r. Net'ds son1e 11·ork .• 275. Call 54.S-6287 '67 ~IUST ANG }'astb.1.ck. 289, •I spd, 11ide tires/mags. real clean. $1295. 67J-.Sj77 OLDSMOBILE Sales & SPrvicc OLDSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS UNIVERSITY OLDS 2S50 Jlarbor Blvd. Costa fifcsa 540-9640 OLDS VISTA \\' . .\GON, 'i2· 17,000 miles. PS, PB, ail'. rack, new tires. Dix int. Corporate exec. car, In xlnt cond. $4300. Call ELCO, 558--8131. PINTO ONE 011·ner -'71 Pin!o sedan !\lint conclilion, 1 0 tlK>usand plus 1niJ('s. Price S162:J. Phon<' 492....0.:J12. '72 RUNABOUT, air. radio. lux. in! & C'Xf. Gold. \\'ide track lirf's. Xlnt t'Ond . $172.i. _49_Z-6_75_l_•fl.~ • .::6_,P_,>c,I =-- PLYMOUTH Boots, Spoed & Ski 911 u IT. inboard ski hoat 400 Inch Old.!1 engine. $1700 or tS· 395 Spyd1r, 1'.!nr i'Ond. ,\nd 1!17J GlL1':S travel trailer 26' foot J;)(J t 'l' Fou r I londa 2 1110. 4 wheel ell'<.". brks. air ('(lnd. old. Likl' 11cw, n1ake olfrr. fully St>!f contaiOC'd, many 6~2-3.92 1 Tnn1, bt•t\1•rcn ~-ll u12--0-1.-12 Hites. JIM SLEMONS 'i"l VIV \l'esfphalia .. Pop·10p $400. 646-8707 • A'I , •• ,.,. IOIUO., .=---~ / L k " '65 PLY. Sp<ll'l f'ut j', ll'SS JAG XJG '71, imniac, 1vhill' canlpc'r w te nt. 1 e neiv, '6.} CADILLAC Coupe de Vinyl roof ' C'nginc. ti1ake off('r fol' all or 11/hlck int., pricro {or IMPORTS 10 ~1• war. 552-7120 Ville, all po1ver, xlnt cond. \Vheel C?v('rs _ parrs, 97g._2527, ~~~~~21sa!('! S6100. 7111: MERCEDES BENZ 66 SQ, BK. $495 $7'".J(I. 675-6969 ~('V.' 11·h1i£111•all tires .69 FURY lll, air c.-ond, P/S, , best offer. 962-9829 10 93 hp Evlnrude, Trailer, cover, xlnt cond. $U95. .644-2999 ('Xfras. 979-0189 Ai\L A J fl& T J{ EA!\ f -l 7' Self COil· lained. Incl hitch &. britk(' wiring. $1500. F i r m . 492-1579 ---------AUSTIN HEALEY AUTHORIZED 675.'7282 or 673-2491 CA• 'ARO ~ry ~ condilion. P/B. vinyl top. $!250. '7'\ XJ-12 Jaguar, brand ne11•, SALES & SERVICE '70 V\V BUS, Lo nli. Xln!. M 4.9,000 miles. 847-2248 as~unH' lease paymE'nti:;. J' · SI -nd I o n n•p>'ng· ~.. $2095 Im emons LV •· w er, ca IJ<:U '70 c "'ARO XI d PONTIAC C•1ll r..·1011 thru rri. 835--0187 l ranie $1850 963--5353 •un , nt con . SC'e at I rts , ' · · . Very Jow mileage, $2399. DAU..Y PILOT El\fPLOYEE ---------1 'ji6 AUSTIN SPRITE KARMANN GHIA mpo 70 VIV . Camper. N" J>a•~l, wkdoy• ,,,,.,.176 all " PARKING LOT LEASE OR BUY 1301 Quail ValvC' JOb, radials. AM/f M "'!tends a11ylin1e. 330 West Bay, Costa fl.lrsa 947 Xlnt rond. S!i:'iO. ____ ,..:·'~'·~"'~'-~'---Trailers, Utility lfil filOTORC'i'CLE 3 rail trailer ) Slj() >ill ,, .. , .•• ,_ C.M. I BMW '7J GHIA Nc111J0rt Beach ~!er('(), xtras. 5<18--0057 1967 CA?.IARO 327, auto 01, '71 thru '73 Pontiacs 833-9300 for sale· '66 Bug 1300. ~~ trans, good cond Best off('r. Call ?ila.rgaret Gn:-enman DAVE RCSS LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA 11.~IOO 1nih·s. radio, 11·11h bla(•k interior. EJ\'TER FROl\r l\facARTlfUR fi~rglass. $350 ca sh . 644-5932 642--4321 PONTIAC '61 r.mz 230 SL Roadster 546-9G-17 after 6PM CHEVROLET SUCH A DEAL! I 2-ISO Harbor Blvd .. at Fair C•mpers, Sa.le/ R•nt 920 CA~fPER '65 Oicv. ~ii ton. 4 speed trans, " rear end, nu shocks, nu S-ply t:irts, air, 8 ft. cah ov('r Open Road sum 847..6iili l§l1 S1995 Concourse. 1 of a kind . 2 "72 SUPER BUG, 4 spd, B)' o11,11cr '67 GaJa.xic 500_ Dri\·e Costa l\lesa a.\6.8017 lops, n1usl ~u lmn1t'CI. Al\f/rl\t, 16.000 mi. Sl1!95. Auto I.ran~. Buy f 0 r , Autos for ~le GOOD SELECTION OF USED BMW's 6.16--<llSl, 962-726.1 644-1437 '70 Cl-IEVY Cor1t.'0Urse \\1 Balance. ~,324, •. ,.,, 0 ,,960 72 PONTIAC Ca I a I i n a P/S P/B P/W. · ocn-o.>.M.10 B1uughan1. P I \\'indo1vs. 1966 l\1ERCEOES 2j() SE L'ti'3 CAl\f.Pr..tOBILE, fuUy ' • in.. air Bruff'. 11ni/lm 811.'t('(l. air, vinvl Auto Service, P,.rt, 949 'TI BAVARIA Droto '72 ~'002 NEWPORT IMPORTS Suf)f'r shapt'! Su Per equip. in1mac. cond. Musi <."OrKI, full cover Int. fonm "ro""R'-o"c="·""'"72"'7:-:---,,. -I top, $3,700 ., b•l olf.,, 111ileagf.': Su!X'r car! SJOOO. SC'll, ivill sacrilicc. 67J.-7459. p~ds. Lug · rack ~/cover. ouric>r ' . lo"· miles. Cycles, Bikes, I VW'S & lmpons RC'puil"f'C1 65-7751 . ~ ~ Tilt \\•hi , 2 WHY tail gale. One 011ner, R&H, gem cam· ~96~2-09lli~~'-------l 65 V\V, Camper. $1150/ofir Trl £•r hilch & plug. 546-6185 per mirrors -l'l'ar bumper ·11 GRAND Ville ronvt. fac. i\IB. ·73 2SO S«lan, auto, 7 sundial. ·vel)' clean, Linda S2195 or olfer. ' elc. $2300. E.x condition -air, tape player, actual mi. ~JOO\\'. Coas1 lhvy., N.B. bh;~thpsi",1~~ ~~~c~,l7Rlit(' \\loi·k 833--3840 m.1 833-l~2 '73 MONTE Carlo, gold, AHer 5· ~8--4987 21,000, beau. conrl. orig. 'ii :.W2 '69 Z'LIJ(I Scooters 925 I H£>A500ablP & ~aranh't'd 642-9405 ' ' ~. . ~ ' '11 VVV CAl\fPER VAN 1l'hite vinyl roof, sivivel '67 FORD LTD, R&H, air, 011·Rcr. $2,liOO. 839-6234 PANTERA GOOD CONDITION buckel set1.ts, ani/fin, air. stereo tape, a\'ail 00\\". S750. ··-ss:;·"c=A"T-'AL::l:::N::A:..,:::P::a.:;»:: .. ::1~-•• -0-n. 'f,!J llJOO '67 woo <---------Bill & Pur's J\u101nol11·e • i . 5.17-5681 ' Speedway Bike ~R.-,-,.-1~1;-=00=1-.1' =---1 '69 VW Karman ------'-----1$2:',00 * " 64>-1594 beau. riding & cond, must 8:'13--0780 'vk-days, 493--7946 Air conU. PJS, .~ brks. ~~1~;r." ~;1~;'.~s:1~'t';ia~~; Ghia 'Zl PANTERA VOLVO S('I] family C'mcrg. 534-2300. ·~vcF&O· ~v:,OOG'a· I··~ 500. H,· $975/'Be5t 'o(f<'r. 673-1498. CREVIER BMW • Ridden only 1·i season by Vehlcfes 956 Danny Becke!". Barns qui.ck --''--.;..;..'-----' .C'hltllge hub, assorted sp1'0Ck· els and gf!fll' chang('S. Best of f.'verylhing. DUNE Buggy -body, engine, trans, all parts. Needs to ~ t.1SH'1nblecl.-$~:l0 o•· bc>st of- * 1970 El Camino, fiberglass ......... '67 GRAND Prix 3 s]l('Cd, full 835--3171 ,11·;1nt!e, outy a~.000 mill·S. 7500 ORIGINAL MILES THINK .shell. 350 V:--8. P/S, P/h, niileage. SC'll cheap. Nu JX111'er, air, C]('an, xln1 cond. CfRANGE 'Co"UNf Y'S 1!~ISADX1. air cond, turbo-hyd. valves, brakes, good cond. $630. 846-6559 $1200 fC'r. 962-1271. • T ;;;kiNTERNATION;~l I SCOUT · OLDEST SAVE Excellent Condition OOS.OJ'{.8 anyh1nf'. $1450. :>48--S852. *1970 GRAND PRIX 0 BILL MAXEY · Fu!ly Loaded ECONOMY '65 CHEVY Malibu. 327 cu,in '68 FORD Gala.-..:ic 5()1) -I dr St.175. cab Bud Ryder al Call After 6:00 P.M. bit., air shocks, headers, hrdtp, Alr, p/s, disc. 6•12·1GS2 or 879·l600 x riS TOYOTA --=6-38--3~4-71~--1 WHILE w· E HAVE 40' 1r4·,··~~-Call all 6 pm ~-'351;,. New ""'· $851). RAMBLER NEWPORT IMPORTS · . I "'·"l m:.1cu RL. w .s;.;; PORSCHE . '66 CHEVELLE, reblt eng, I\ SUPER Cleiin 1964 Ford. I ---------I .SALl::S·St.:ltVlCE·Ll::ASIXG I !IU:-\TINGTO~ BEACI! 1----------nu tires, cherry cond, auto trans, rum like. a 1op. '56 METRO. Conv. Sharp, OVEHSEAS DC::LlVt.:HY t MAZDA l9i.1 911-S, \\'HITE Porsch(' NEW YO.LYOS IN $800/best oiler. Call Amy, r.tust see to appreciate. Call ll{'w paint, great mi!('ag('. ROY CARVER, Inc. 1 Tm-ga. Ste"" SJ:l.2>16 G.,.,.. ""'"' "" 7. ""''""·mo. 3100 W. Coe.st Hwy., N.B. 642-9'405 AfUST .sell ca: 1972 Suzuki TS z;o, 2(6() mi, llkr nC\\". uklng $550 or l'Jl>st offer. ATW'73 SuzuRrI'S-m-mtty- 730 ml.. shov.TOOm new, ai;k'g $925 or b<>~t offer. 1n3) 691--8881 art 6:30. •I \\'hwl D1ive. ,\uto Trans,, \\'[1rtX>11 llub. 1 J,200 n1ilc·s. $3195 ~:w c. 170, Si. '*Mazda '73 Rotary * 1 ___ ·_,1_1·_;27_-_,_"'8 ____ 1 STOCK '64 CHEV. r.1allbu VB. ,\uto. 1973 GRAND Torn10 \Vagon, '66 RAMBLEll Am('I'. 2 Or. (1Jsta L\le~a 5~5-4111 $66 MONTH , SAAB Runs good $300 F irn1 ioad('d, rack & gaUJ::es, TiOO Hrdtp. Gas Sav('r! $43,; or ::<; i\.10NTlfS OPEN LEASE -----~----I 673-7992 n1iles. SJ99j 84i-762i besl 0Ue1·. 979-7®. L~:ASI:: A "i:l BAV.\HJA t\ 111 ac(·ep1 trade-11t." '66 !-IA.\B, ~ood running Mt1- 9 1'1 •• ., L•rtt!t. 196.1 01evy J[ Nova. }"QR sai(' 1966 Fo1"CI G.'.llaxy '63 RAr..tBLE ll Ainbassador. NEWPORT IMPORTS D(•mo Sc•ri<tl st:i \32tJ;; r .\LL :\IR. }'RY &t!-6656 rli lion. 2-door. lW, $2.10. IU~ Ull1G Good condition 2-door. Pl!i, p/b, air cond. xlt11 one 01\ner L"Ond. SliO. --,,,~!166.·11 ,,.., '"""'" Hunt Beach !J63..J.i7. Call"""" VOLVO !400 .• 962-225< smo. cau !JSS.762:; 5J&.l791 0 1·.L nr h11y fl'lr S~.m. • TOYOTA ·s.1 CHEV. Impala hdtop. '67 "GALA.XY 500" VEGA Bob McL arSlf , BMW, paint. r.1ichelins. Ca 11 : Lo n1i!es minf rond cash or BICYCLE SALE NEW 1() SPEED ITAL.JAN BICYCLES $69.95. lkach 3100 \V, Cons1 H1\•y., N.B. 642-94-05 In ~ I MAZDA 1!166 Harbor, C.:1.I. 646-9303 552--9314 n10 pmts. 540--1697. 1973 VEGA Ka1nback, 4 spd 17141 879-5624 • '68 Toyota Corona '68 VOLVO ~.69~M=AL~_,~au~.-P-,,-.-,.~,~;. 1 '1"'96'°7 ~F"'•ro~G°'a17ax~.,~."G"d-. oo--,nd. GT, ''"'"" ,1.,,. '''· int. ·I D1_· S:!dan, Auto Tru11s. I\ 0 . 4 .Spd A' Corn:l 1 heater, vtnyl tap, auto, Xlnt $560. $2500. Ph: 645-2116 or Bicycles. 806 E. Balboa CAPRI j ii.131 Bcac.1 BL 842-6666 Blvd .. &Th-ml. Authm·ized 71 SPORTS CUSTOM --------BOB LONGPRE Radio, (\VIC34:J f. nii!1C''age, E ~ c ::11 <' n i ~~~ rond. $1475. 968-ll573 * 962·5.t\2. • 6i3·2!&. $999 cHtion, tan "'ilh tan vinyl Autos, 1mponeo 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmporttct 970 BI LL MAXEY ; ,,,,,;., I r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;~1 $1595 NISHIKI df'alC'I'. S11per sha1·11. 4 sprl, l'ad ,l/.t '71 HONDA 3ti0 SL Jo 1ni. xln! 1i;!l1er. Ne11' 12 x 16,;j lll'l's. ~ MAZDA rond. s;-,25 or bf-st oHcr. ·n · $_i{)(). or tJ;>~1 of.rl'r. •• . I TOYOTA Honda 100 CL lo nii. xlnr . * .s.1.-is32 * -SERVICE FIRST-IS.>l~l BE1\Cll BL. 1!47-8~ rond.S22:Jorbt'.~loffrr.F:vr:< 'Tl CHEV .1 T p·~k ~ .1 NOW OWN THE lsr Str1.·e1 :ic the llUXTl:\'C'rO:'.' R~AC/! after 6 p:n1. 979-628.'l. . '1 1"' up. P{s., ~!nla Ana Fr\I"'. • 1 1~1fi.'\ TO\'OT,\ g,.,,. \\',''•"·· • a111n. ma.~~. h1·y £11.v rqu1p. FABULOUS 1973 ~ Kawasaki Three sllt'l!, 12.noo rnl. xln1 l'OIH!. 20.11 E. lsi S1t'('('! xln1 cond. 4. nN' 1irf's. 4.--spd NEWPORT IMPORTS Jj(l: '71: 11,000 ori,i.:. nii.: • \\'hlsle_'.'lW2til a~r jpni__ CAPRI ~;int:1 Ana .)5.1\./,'li l I ll'a11s. /\~kiri~ S!n>. 61S-i6 fV Clean. r..lork -l!t~400 1 or '5(i CHl.::V ts· Van. ·03 <'llJ!'. \\'llh :?,000 I 4'~!ind~'I' 1u' \' {i (;n1:-.t; lu Europe' '7'.! :\l:izda f '72 TO\"OTA l\1ark JI S1111io11 3100 '"' C H NB Giiil JI:;.. TI Of r d a)' I! l lluns guorl. tnil<li•ni \\'hi!!, l'!lfl1nc. 1\ 1U1 or 111U1oul H.otar>·· \\'.(ll.:. Vinyl _top, \\'um:in. f~1lly C'quippcd, sz:.ioo · '4ts;4051·.. · · :>:>7-7461. j'.IJllJ('lf'<I <Ir insultttrd $800. df'cor group, SOlll•' \I 1tl. ~un l'i!t•k. Air. Xlnt. S3300. After 6 pin 96."'i--22itl • · 1973, liO CC FourllotKla. 2 5!'17--.1305. rool or land{lu l11p, /1011·t·r .l!S--701·1 ,72 T '67 VO LVO 1'14 S. Xlnl mech mos old, like new, make of-~ OJ . d dill(• hrnkf'~. ~1\'ll· ~lt·1·I --TIM OR I oyota L'Ol'kl. Needs ~nlC bcxly ._," t~ to Vnn, i1·/11·1n o1v!;. \\'ht'"l. rnd1a l 1 111:~. l,,,,.k .. 1 E F Mark II Wagon ".'llrk. A':Jto. 8 trk la"". ne\v fl'r, Al\D 1969 Alf11 Ron1eo 6 cylinclrr slick. xlnl gas ~ · ..,... Spydrr. '<Int cond .. n1ust ini 41,...... "'' Sl500 0, 1,,11 sealti. Ol<Ol::R YOUHS \ 9UICK CASH A T , _ Ml ~ lll'l"S. $9,j(). 962--6837. !'f'U 642-392·1 Tom, bl'hvff>n off;:, ~m21. · ' · NO\\' 111_0 rans., ....., Jes (SrO-* '61 \;OLVO * ~11 AM. ·71 DODGE w.,.1"" v,,,, "'' GUSTAFSON 1 THROUGH A E>G '. . $2899 v'"'iJ:."::",,'i~i.cJ"""' '73 \\'O~t.BAT ;i,ra\•trick vs. nyto. slN'ps 4. xlnt l"Ond,' Linco)n .. Mercury DAILY PILOT '""''' '"'1"" '"""""' sorn or1 '· 646-92AA BILL MAXEY Autos, Used 990 P .P.'s fflst and !'f'liHblc xlnt ·im f'ORD ,-~-,-.,llfl~-,-ll).l!.llO Bcarh .1t \\'nmer cond., must sell f'36-2ii9 • , '· ~ 'UJlt'T Hunrtngron Britrh WANT AD I TOY•OTA BUICK '72 BULTACO 1\lpin<-1. xlnt \an Ca~fll;'r; ~ U tradC'. 842.8844 * (213) 592.5544 1 lS.'iSl BEACH BL. ti<l7-~:::::;--------'--.i l.>-:l2L' . "H f th V'k' " 642 5678 -l"Ofld. S700. ·71 Bultaoo ome o a 1 1ng • HlJNTINGTON BEACH '69 Bui""k Electra Sherpa, fas!, <IC'JX'lld:'lhle, * F'.l~ C,\:\11NO "io. ·I ~pd.· ---=-=--=========~~===:0-::=-::===::cl ~ S450. 612--2749. ps ipdb, ss 396• prlv p.iny, 225 Custom Cpe. -$1~. ~S189 jms r ~ ~ '72 TIUl\iPll :JOO Duytonn '•·,·"· ST' "'R (iA,..·E"'D"'j(.V.M Air Cond. Po11·cr \\lindo-.\'S, $100 cash do11•n, rakl:' ovt'r '72 F'ORD PU. Heavy duty ·>t ..r1 .IU ..a'-..,..'r 6 "'ay pa11·er seat, tilt steer-paynils 4M-l:l29 •lxl. F:?;:.o, Xll'l\S. 26,000 n1L D ct•Y'-l'O · h I · lrol ' . . Good corvl. 1~1J77)7 .t.1111 1 n. • Lil•4 ing "' ct?, ennsc con ' TRIUMPH c..11i1tm Bonni, '70 A) MA,,ll 1'-1: YourOoilt.A&..;tyCuiJ• H sEir.:».irh AM 'FM Strreo, Vinyl roof, eng, chrlT)' <.'Ond. J\lust SN" ·n CHEV.=\, T. Pick up. hvy :h • 11 "V" According lo tit• Storr. "Y" ocT 11 ~[@ Exeelleut t'Ond. to appr. 551-4629 nf1 f!'.30. rluty "'-1001 box. 53100. -1_ ~~:;. To develop message for Tue~doy, 4.-:1--20<W.'ol $1995 1970 RULTACO u:i-1' La~unii •194~~i07~ --~...l7-68 r~word~<.orr~ponding to~ 74 ~ A"lnl cond. $300 or bi's! offer, '66 RANC!lf.:Ro. V-ll. l~/l', .t(T.i.u•Ui' ol yourZodiac.birthsign. scoa,io *Call 8?~1-l li6 tt AIT. maa:i:s. e;m1prr. she'll, if;,~,~.2o l ll•••-.1 J~P1:<11.,,..1 61Cho<!c<t OCT.ll ~ --sr~·,o. 673-0'.l09 "-.: • "ri..... :1. N.. ":l~ ... • '71 l!(JSKi •IOIJ --I' IJAf1C J.l\,•r<i!•o1l :•J I ~.. ~J I .• l'llevcr raced , xlnl con(\, '!~'\ Cl I ~;vy 1 ~ 1nn, ~oort :;---l).J9.)• • • . 1 1• Clt'l.i.,. 1~~ ,... , .,11,11 _ I~</ JI 6ll f"~1l cortf!. Musi ~II SI.WO. or 6'1~7.f9-~ ~ .... ,. :>~ 1 v-.1r1 t~>. ,..., o er. ~ t:. .. _ 11 ., ~,7 -,., 1 • .., 1 :ii1 ,,,._.. «.i SP-<;.,r ..,.-<1t n rr. ~1.J0....\1.1?. ,. , ''' •72•,· TnJUr.tPll, 650. cuslnm ~' '''""II e ._,..,. . '68 1 Ton Ford Stflk(' Trl.!{'k, "' ~ , .... ,t ~~ F" c..~ M<>Of'•o;!• dr.llght. 2,000 nu, 8''lll of· 962 1ll l .,,., JOi. 6Q~fo<.ol fer. 4!M-M45 28.!0l n1 ilt'~ $nOO. -i, I: . 10 ,.,..,l'Q\CS .. on... 7011,,.,,u, ('\If'$. ------~ l 1 1/'11'1 4 11'¥ 71 F..im '711-fODAKA IOOB. Super.ra1 A I L • 964 1 11'r.rup ... ,c.i,u"' 111""'<;,.' Plsrons. nred V11tl\-e5, 2 u o ••sing l)Grt ")"·eon>~ 7J~·~ carb. 552-7902 • I• ~ 4J O!w 1' °'"'"• l.>TSCOUN1' l\·Jark l~1'1ark \0 1 lSL-n 4SM:I 7~Eltlft•ol1f '70 HUSKY BS ~· Xln! "R" lltl'litian l'fSll'm~ AA\~ 16011 '\.i46to11 76 Rtlair..a condllion. 1.0 prlC1' of $.iOO. rnllt&Rt, plw pc;iints, 1n. l7T<> 1&.o 710l 67:1-1658:=::.· -~---~ "•:.:l•:::lc::l•c.•;;•;::•l;;,IY:.:·..:&:.:1'-l-i"."'1"'-3 ~~ ~: ~:c''t ~i~~ ~ ~,.:,:._. :ri'FioN01\ UJ, :1,(Xll mhcs AulOI Wentect 968 20Ma.. !.01'1 &00r SQ. CAL. 1st NAT BK LEASING )(Cl l\lichel~ Dr. lrvif)(" •ii h 83.1·8620 (21.)) 924-4413 BUICK SPECIAL. Color blU<'. Excellent cood. Radio, air. VS. Old lad)I from Philadclphia Ph:v::toUI O\Vhet . 1967, 29,00(I miles. 11100. + ~-. ''GAS SAVER'' SPECIAL CAPRI the Sexy European • , , + FREE 10-SPEED BIKE with every one ordered and • delivery durin9 the month of July! $149.00 ITALIAN IMPORT VALUE .• WIDE SElfCTION OF 2000 & V/61s AVAILABLE • I I,.,_ !100 · :n !t•n•r 'il 1""'""'1 81 A"•xlo!d 1 __ _,_ nc ......,. . 1n extnu. ,, Hn;ti \J Thi' 82 Tiltt 'JJ~Jl ~ --17\IPOHT~.,_V;\1 ~ ~n,--.<.t'l'mr Ill!. 114 E. a>lb St., Apt. 14 Co&la J\fesa. '00 TRTUMPfI TJOOR. l~.000 • Or.wge County''1 '' S•'11r !IJM.a:le 114 l>e$irtJ I TOP I BUYER 7.ilN!.<Jled !'1!11,... "5"'"'""°"" ml. chmmr fl'Bme 11 u11 ,..,. ~ """""'--! 261M-• !16 s.•1 a~ L.¢.t.mm.1 "1=::=::=.::-lrtll. $liOO -641-0,)4j UJLJ .. ~IAXEY TOYOTA VIII.GO . •,,'?! _ _. 31 Thi' ,, ~-'$ '61 C;\D CDV, l:dl Xtr.1$ Inc. "" 18,lt,lll BC!D.t'h Ulv :. ,.~,....., ;-.a•"••fl"OQ'• .A!Cho•f 11lr, ncccnil.)• pulnW<J. $4~!0. Moblf1 Homes ,..35 fl. llrach Ph. IW7·!1.'ir'5 '#1 ..t .Au~.JJ ?OP1.-....., "iQJo-110,.,.., &IS.-1531. flt I U*T.11 lOT,. 60G.ol., ~>.11"1i(ort --:,...,:-.= -307't. l1JIYflQ'lm" w/c11be1111. JUNK cani \\111 n1l'(I. frt'C' \...~!!-,l..,•~ ... f2iGood IGl,.\drme ()?lt:'JJ..t '70 CAD Ol'Vllll", Londa!! On L\io Pr:n-ln., 100 II. ll'Olll lowJl'l(Z', Ullc clcnranct', 21 ----~~=;)'=-==="='=~~===IB/=======:::'.====::i'.._. ____ I $341)1). SuJ:lttb o:md. ~. 2629HARIOR8L'-10 .. COSTA MESA • 540-!QD bay. 1-14-2231 Altl!r l Pl\1. hl'I. 1194-loo.1 l"~t GM :•:_:'6-::' AA:tl=:!!..:;' ti:::<>•:,:>~871~-8850!!:?:!:!..!!d:!,»~•:J~!!!!!""!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!"""""""""""""""'""""';.;.,""'""'""""'""'""'""""'"'"""'"""".J • CADltLAC • • ·, • y ' . ' ' . ~ , ~ . . , . . . . . ~ ... ----.... ·- • I , -~"' --- l San ··Clemente • • Today's. Final • Caplstrano EDITION N.Y. Stocks_ f .... YOL 66, ~O. 197, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUf'{TY, CALIFO!lNIA -TEN CENTS ... I Ragti1ne Wi11s Trµnspac Race Ragtime, a black-hulled sloop · SOf!le sailors say looks like an elongated star boat, outdueled \Vindward Passage inJ a virtual ._match race. over the last 50 miles ,: to grab first-to-finish honors Sun- day in the 2,~mile ':tJ'anspacific Yacht Race frOm Los Angeles to Hooolulu. ' Sailing nt 8 knots, Ragtime Dashed across e finish line off ~ Diamond Head j st four minutes ' and 31 seconds ah of Windward Passage in ooe of the closest Transpac finishes on record. Read ' how she did it on page 18. Hjgh Winch Catch "Boats By Surprise Heavy winds off the south Orange Coast caught boaters by surprise Sunday and caused dozens of skippers from Dana Harbor to seek assistance. One boat washed ashore on the i>an Clemente beach Sunday night. I An is-ioot cabin cruiser with five persons aboard brok · cruis- ing off tlJe.San a le shore. Tb lli!ot, Jolm AJexand Of Riverside, had"uO anchor. e buffeted boat.was caug up in the surf and carried asOOre, set- tling down one half i'nile north of the pier at about 1.p.m. No one was hurt, but the group needed the assistance of lifeguards, and the boat 'vas towed off the beach by land. Later Sunday night at aOOut 11 p.m .• tbe Harbor Partol sighted flares from a ~foot cabin cruiser that had run out. of ps 200 yards off San Onofre beach. t 1lte boat had left Catalina for Newport Beach earlier that day and missed its target, ·according to a H arbo r Ratrolman. The patrol rescue boat to\\·ed the cruiser in to Dana Harbor, arriving aDout 1 a.m. The owners name v.•as not Immediately available. The Harbor Patrol was also kept busy Sunday afternoon with 15 boat tows dur- ing a tv."O-bour period. l\1ost boats given assistance v.'ere saUboats with broken masts or rudders and those wholie pilots WhO couldn't navigate their vessels jn the ZO..otile-per-hour wind, a patrolman said. Beacli Explosion, Bu.r11s Occupant , • I)amages H or.ise !.. explosion ripped through a small HWltington Beacn home early SUnday morning, blowing the roof off the struc- tule and causing the occupant to suffer burns over 40 percent or his body. Ffremen said today Robert Guthrie, 25, of~310 Sixth Slto1(l1hem he h3d diScon- nected -the gas hose to the -house's "'all he<}ter. 1be gas from the heater ignited, rewJting in the explosion and fire. Firemen esti mated that $6,500 damage ~·as caused by the blaze \vbich they corr Wined before It could spread to adjacent homes. Guthrie was taken to Pacifica Hospital for emergency treatment and was transferred . to the burn \\'ard at Orange County ~tedlcaJ Center \vhere he is listed ~ in ,iable coodltion 1oday. ·, Graham Cites H 01ne Breakup ST. PAUL. Minn. (UPI) · - Evangelist Billy Graham uld S~ day lhnt so-celled Ch r I 1 ta in America I! letting the home go to ~lece.<, thus causing lhe nl!llon ,10 go to pie«•. · • IM his 45-minute message, the . ~vange11'1 aatd the lack 61 coheolon In fam.llles Is partly aJused by laclc of dlsclpllne and love. When chlldrrn grow up wllhout respect for their pa"'nts and o t h er autl\orltltr. th<y ...Uy become l1wbreak:er1, be Mid. ' Boy Sqvef/, By .Police From Pool A 3-year-old Capistrano Beach boy is alive today thanks to the efforts of a Huntington Beach policeman and t\vo firemen. Jason Rey, soo of Michael Rey, was found Saturday afternoon floating face down in a swimming pool of a home he was visiting at 6111 Wintergreen Drive, Huntington Beach. Officer Jim Austin \\'as the first to ar- rive. at the scene and he began im- mediate mouth-to-mouth resuscitation on the apparenUy lifeless Utile. boy. Firemen Marvin Murdock and Armon· do Gonzalez arriv,ed at the home shortly after Austin and they administered ox- ygen to. the child. According to the firemen, the little boy showed no signs of life. The three men decided not to wait for the ambtilance which ·had been dispatch- ed, and put the child in Austin's patrol car for the triP. to Huntington Intercom- munity Hospitaf. The firemen said emergency treatment at the hoopital was continued. for 45 minutes before the boy began to sho., signs of.reviving. J{e is currenUy listed in "guarded con· dition" in the hospital's inteMive care unit. Firemen said the child was apparently in'the ~e of a 16-yearj>ld_~~Y sitter at the home. They said no one saw the tot (all into the pool and Ibey-do not know hOw long he was in the water before he WBS· found. ' Kalmbach Says He Raised Funds · To Pay Plumbers WASll!NGTON !AP) -llerbert W. Kahnbach. President Nixon'! former personal lawyer from Newport Beach, acknowledged today he arised ftmds to pay tbe original seven Watergate de- fendants but denied any prior knowl- edge of the Watergate breakin or its later coverup. Kalmbach's prepared testimony was made public while \Vhite Hoose aide Richard A. Moore faced continued ques· tioning at the Sena te's t e 1 e v i s e d \Vatergate investigation. Kalmbach was to follow him to the witness stand. The schedule of witnesses v.1as left in some confusion when the committee took .. its mid-day recess with a suggestion. that a witness other than the scheduled Kalmbach might be called to follow ~toore. Qunmittee la~iyers "·ould not identify (See WATERGATE, Page ZI • Magazine Clai1ns GOP Fund Used For Nixon, Home NEW YORK (UPI ) -Some Republican campaign· funds may have gone to help buy President Nixon's estate at San CJemente. Tirrie Magazine says in this week's issue. Tbe magazine Sunday said Senate in- vestigators are looking. into what hap-1 peoed .to a sum of $1.6 million left over lrom the 1968 presldentlal campaign as well as "Public Institute" f'llnds raised by Herbert Kalmbach, Nixon's personal attorney. "The Senate investigators are sqiously probing the possibility thnt Republican campaign funds may have been uoed to help 'purchase Nixon'• San Clemente estate." the magazine said. Time quoted Kalmbach " -menting on the report, "not a dJmc or campaign~ went m- tti San Clemente. II The magazine &aid tnvatigalors art !ooltlng for ·a b<oWn le•~r aAtcbel coo- talnlng reonnls of one ot two d Ka1mbach'• "PubUc lnsdtutes". 'l1le utcltel Is now locked 1n a While ROUJe aaf• belooalng 10 former White "°"'"' COWl,.l John w: Dean an<l "th< papers it holds are immg thOlt that Richard Nixon doeJ not wnnt the Senale conun!ttee to ... on the sroundt that this would violate till ·-•""' of pow-cn: .• " 'nme aald. • ' . , , ' Sru1 011ofre Gi111 Battle Fatal to Pai1· By JOUN VALTERZA Of ttM o.llY "lilt llaH The kidnaj:>ing of a middle-age;d couple from their San Diego home earty today ended in gunfire and death two hours later at the San Onofre Border . Patrol checkpoint where tbe suspect and one of his victims were killed ins tan Uy. The apparentty seMeless bloodbith claimed the life of a midd1e-aged housewife and a shotgun wielding ab-- ductor identified as Gary Raphael, 21, who died en route to a hospital. ~ The shooting occurred at about I a.m. as a blue van O\vned by the de.ad 11·oman's husband ·pulled to the side of the pennanent roadblock a few mlles sooth of San Clemente. The only survivor of the shooting was the dead v•oman's husband, John Ol&rles Coronado. 48, who "'as able to flee from the van v.·hen the shooting started: KIDNAPER ~ND ONE OF HIS VICTIMS SLAIN TODAY AT THE BORDER PATROL CHECKPOINT · Clara Louia Coronado, SO, Slain With Shotgun. Legs Are Those of Her Abductor, Gary Raph.M' 22 The tv.·o hours ol terror for the in- nocent couple began at about 6 a.m. to-da~ at their home in San Diego, police said. It ended two hours later with Mr!. Clara Louise Coronado, 50, slaln by a single shotgun blast to the face fired at point.blank range by the abductor. 1be assailant a few mornents later ~·a.s slain by ROlice gwllire directed to the enclosied portion of lhe van. __ ...... - ·!F-·ciJffi'Pa1iy's· Vk~·7PresUlent Cit~s Loss of Maso1i Police. highway patrolmen and other investigators p~d together lhls aooount of tile "wiexplafltable" incident which began shortly after daybreak: By GEORGE LEIDAL Of IN Dallr "llot Stiff 'Irvine COmpap.y Ex.~tive Vice Presi- dent Raymond L. \Vatson, 46, will serve as chief executive officer or the com- pany, Board Chairman John V. Newm.an announced today. J:fe. replaces \Villiam R. Muon who died Saturday at the age of 54. "I know I speak for the entire Board of Directors in noting our deep sense of losS', which so many underslandably and touchingly share," Newman said today. "Bill rt1ason left behind a legacy tvitbout parallel in his career field. lo.1uch of this is visible on the land itself. Some of it is less visible. ''The strong, talented and creative management team he built in hi years \\'ith us is but one example," the board chainnan said. "Aecordngly, Raymond L. \Vats.on. as executive vice president of the Irvine Company. \ViII be acting as chief ex· ecutive officer for the firm. In this capacit)', he will carry out all the major corpornte responsibilities required of that office." Ne\\'man concluded. ,\ spokesman for the company said \Vatson's 1..itle "remains executive vice president. llis responsibilities are OO\v enlarged. consistent \\ith the company.'s byla~·s, to encompass those of the com· pany's chief executive officer." the spokesman concluded. The company Board or Directors nei1:t meet s on Aug. 13. It isn·t known if a vacancy u·ill remain on the board until ~ Qtteftt. Reigtas \ Julie Bunker, 17, a senlor·at San Cleincnle High School. wa s one of the al!nctive sights during_ the Fiesta La Cristlanlta parade Satur- day. Sbe was queen of the fiesta . Ju.lie ls the daughter or R. L. "Mike" Bunku, 210 Via Nida, San Clemente. .. the next stockholders meeting. In June, Vehtura rancher Newman was elected chairman or the board after a t1arcmont man, !Joward Allen. v.·as selected by stockholders 10 fill the vacan- ey created \1·hen former board chairman N. Loyall J\.fcl..aren. 81. stepped down. !See \\'ATSON, Pagt %~ ... fl ·:r Maso11 Eulogies Fron1 Officials · Continue Today Govern111enf'orficials continued today to tiffcr eulogies to \Villiam Ralph ~1 ason. Ir vine Company Pres ident who died Saturday of an apparent heart nltack . Ronald Caspers, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors said, "The Joss of Bill Ma son to the Ornnge County community v.•ill be long felt by all those ~·ho knew and respected him and by the thousands of Orange Countians \\·hose lives his visiorui and ef· fo rt s have so significantly impacted. ''Bill ~tasa.1 \\·as a man of the highest integrity and forthright honesty , ' ' Caspers said. "All of his business deal- ings "·ere dooe in a !pirit of fairness and openness . \ "Hi3 dream'! for the future of the Irvine Ranch v.·ere embodied l'.ith creativity and dedication," he said. ad· ding pel-sonal sympathy to ~1rs. ~1ason and b.is family. "\Ve ~·ill greatly miss Bill h>1ason as a (See rtlASON, Page ZI * * * Men1orial Rite s For Mr. 'Mason Tuesday, 7 A.M. A ramily spokesm..-1n said today a memorial scnrice "'ill be read for \Lrllllam Ralph ~tason lote president of the ln•ine Company al the Pacific View ~femorial Park chapel, Corona del ~far,~ at 7 o'clock Tuesday morning. ~Ir. !\la~ died Sflturday afternoon. The family suggeAlL"1 lhat memorial contributions might he mndc 10 Orange E1nplre Arca Council or Boy Scouts of America. or to the Orange County Junior AChlcvemcnt progra.m, '''hich were Among ~Ir. ~lason's principal cha.ritable inlt'rests In recent years. He serv~ as . \Veatcm Regional Presi· dent of the iloJI.-Scout•, and helped ulabllsh the Junior Achievement ~ gram In OrBnge County. Interment ~111 be private. • • Raphael -a plumber d r e s s e d for v.·or·k -"·as picked up by a coworker and immediately drew a gun oo his partner. Moments later the gwunan and partner noticed the Coronado van park ed near the couple's house and v.·ent inside. Seconds later the unwitting fellow plumber fled from the C o r o n a d o residence. but the gunman stayed inside, rousing the couple and ordering them to dress. He ordered the Coronados into the van and drove around for a few minutes in an attempt to find bis first victim. Palling at that, Raphael then drove to a residence and bound his vic- tims \\'ith nooses around the neck, then ordered Coronado to drive along tht Route 405 'Freeway and then up the San Diego Freeway. In the Oceanside area. Coronado was able to sti r the interest of a highway patrolman cruising along the freeway and the officer pulled . up alongside, no1icing that the couple "'ere in trouble. He fell back and called ror asslslanct. At that point, ClfP Sgt. Jack Cook said, Coronado feigned a heart attack and his kidnaper allo~·ed the man to pull to the side. ~ \Vith tbe CllP officer surveying the scene cautiOU-!ly, Coronado ~·as replaced at the "'heel by his \\ife . The flight began once again. By !hen several more CHP units and sev{!.ral prowl cars from the Oceanside Police Departme~t joined In the pursuit. "As they approached the checkpoint (See SLAYING, Page ZI Oraage Cout 'Weather Those low clouds will hang around in the morning hours lhrCJUgh Tuesday, according to thu weAther servtce. with a chance that southerly winds from the desert nreas "·ill blow thern a'.l·ay la ier in the \reek. Higm of 69 are expected 3l the beaches, rising to 75 ialand. INSIDEr-TODi\ \' T/1e Dt.fen,ie Department hos coucedtd BS2s raided Combod !'Ja targeli before 1910 dc 1pite nar· lier public as.seitions. See sloru, PO{Je 4. LM. IM 1 AMI u.....-. 4 • •• ,. '' #<Wf\ff • C1!1tll'lll1 I Ma!W1I Mtwt 4 Ct1t.iflM ... lt-M OrMt1 CMl'llY t '-"• 11 f.'t'lri• '""" 'It ""'"""" '' ,_.., , .. ,, °""' Mt'lkft t Si.t'll M•"tll l•U a~WMI '•t• ' T.......... lt ••1+1'1111"-tlt • I Tt!Mitrt I JlllMMI 1 .. 11 '#MIW I ,.., -· btwt ' ·--·· ..... , .. ,. MlfMaf• 14 • .,. ........ • • \ ' , • • \ UAILJ t'ILOI st PUBLICITY SHY Newport's K1lmb.ch Kalmbacli Previously An Unkn0wn Monday, July lb, 1q71 From ,.,..e J W..A.TERGATE • • the ponible surprt,. wlln<u, although Terry i.. .... r, the a!Sl1tanl counsel, had remarked In qoeillonlng Moore that F'ellr Robatyn , a director of 1ntemat.looal Telepbocie I< Tel•ir•ph Corp., would be q~ aubiequently, Jn hit written statement, Kalmbach denied any participation In the planning ol campaJgn sabotage or unethical ec- Uv!ty. "~1y actions in the period Immediately following the break-In Y.'hlch Involved the raising of funds to provide for the legal defense of the Watergate defenQants and ror the support of their families were prompted ln the belief that It was proper ~ necessary to discharge what I assumed to be a moral obligation that had arisen In some manne.r unknown to me by__ r~ or earlier eventJ " Kalmbach said. "The fact that I had been directed to undertake these actions by the No. 2 and No. 3 men on the White House staff made it absolutely incomprehensi ble to me that my actions in this regard could have been regarded in any way as improper or unethical," he said. Kalmbach was a trustee from January of 1969 to early February 1m of an estimated $1.6 million in surplus funds from Nixon's 1968 campaign. Quoting Richard M. Nixon on the func- tion of congressional investlgatiooll, the chairman of the Watergate committee defended its Inquiry as "crucial to the v•elfare of the nation." Kalmbach testified he dispersed por- By UnlWd Preti Internadonal lions of that sum "only at the express Herbert w. Kalmbach never wanted to direction of H. R. Haldeman or others become a hou~hotd word. clearly having the authority to direct A highly successful Newport Beach such disbursement!." lawyer who liked to dabble in big time Kalmbach earlier had denied that por- poliUcs, Kalmbach was all but unknown lions of that fWld were used to help nationally unUl his fund -raising effort! 00 finance the pufcbase of La Casa bebalf·of Richard M. Nixon drew him in-Pacifica, Nixon's oceanside estate at San to the vortex of the Watergate scandal. Clemente, Calif. KaJmbach, a suntanned and robust 51, Kalmbach was also the principal fund was the m~el of a respectable West raiser In the earlier siages of the Coast attorney. With an office on the 4.4lh President's 1972 campaign for rc-elec· floo Uon. • r or a Los Angeles skyscraper and a borne in fashionable Newport Beach, He said he completed th.is assignment Kalmbach had an impressive list of in the spring of 1972 and transferred the clients which included the President of origin.al fund-raising records to the · the United States. Finance Committee for the Re-election of Bui he lhunned publicity, preferring to the President. remain In the background. But he said Nixon's rmance chairman, Kalmbach did the complex legal work former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. on Nixon's purchase of his San Clemente · Stans, directed Kalmbach's secretary "to Calli., estate, about 25 miles down trn; -destroy my files which were wholly Pacific Ocean beach . from Kalmbach's persooa1 and su)>PQrtive of the original own home. Kalmbach also· handled the files eerller transferred ft> the finance drafting of Nixon's will. committee." ~ut it wu his work as a political tund-·:This action on my part was int~ed raiser that gave Kalmbach his unwan~ to msure the continued conf1denUahty of fame. In both 1968 and 1972, he. raised the contacts that I had had with various 11ubslantial. swns of money on behalf of contributors with whom I had dealt dur - Ni1on's presidential campaign, teaming ing this period," Kalmbach· said. up with ?.faurlce H. Stans during I.be re-lfe said be bal!I supplied to the Senate election campaign which was lUstory's Watergate committee staff copies or his mon._su~sslul_PoliUcal finance effoit. remaining records and some bank Stans was rewarded for hill 1968 work records. - by an appointment to the Nixon cabinet In this statement Kalmbach said he " as commerce secretary. But Kalmbach had never asked for immunity from pros- avoided the 11atlonal spotlight until his ecutioo oor indicated he would exercise name began being linked with the seamy his right to remain silent under the side of political spending. Filth Amendment to the Constitution. Testimony presented to the Senate1 "I'm tiere before you today to tell the Watergate Committee named Kalmbach trµth about my activities during the as the pafmaster for political saboteur period in question/' Kalmbach said. "It .Donald Segretti. Stans also said is not my purpose to testily for or Kalmbach solicited · from him funds against any individual." which ulUmately were used in an at- tempt to buy the silence of the original Watergate conspirators. OtJ July 6, Ainerican Airlines disclosed it illegally had contributed $55.000 to Nix- on's re-election effort upon Kalmbach's urging. Kalmbach, who was attomcy for United Air Lines, asked for and received the campaign contribution at a time when American was seeking to acquire Western Airlines , a move that required government approval. With Kalmbach coming before the Senate Watergate Committee, he was certain to be questioned closely on his fund-raising efforts. his connection wtth Stgrettl and reported moves to raise money for !he Watergate defendants, and the financing and improvements of Nix· on's San Clemente estale. Kalmbach was born in Port Huron. Mich,, on Oct. 19, 1921. He attended public schools there and served in World \Var II as a Navy pilot. After the war he attended the University of Southern California, where he married Barbara Helen Forbush in June, 1948. A year later' he entered the USC Jaw school. where he beca1ne fast friends with Robert A. Finch. A decade later, in 1958, he helped Finch win,.the lieutenant governorship of California and Finch in- troduced him to Nixon in 1964. OlAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT . 'T"9 Or-Ca11I OAIL Y PlLOl, wl!!I .... IC!\ It ~lflld 1"41 H .... ·Pf'11, II pybllllltd Ir/' ti!• Or•no-Co.st '\IOll"'I"' corftco.nr. '-" nr. •Ilion.I ••• M1'9'*1, ,._ly lllrfVOll irrlcMr. fllf Coll• M-. H-• Bt•cll, H1111nnvtan ltacl'l/,_11111 V•llt"Y l~.,... ... (II, 1 ..... IM,.....,lftioldl .,.., ..,. c...._.,, S•n JlfM C•elt••-· " ,1.,.1e "'lklMt Mlflon II ll\fllll•IMll lelurd•'l'I ..-it Su!ldtya, TM prfM.,,.I 1111111'-11""' pi.>llf 11 11 lJll W•1I a.1 trr~, COllt MtM, C.ll'-""111. ntJI. ftebtrt N. W1.J "'" .......... ,,,...,.,,., J1t• II. C111rley Viet PN111Wtl '""" "-rtl .......... .Th'"''' IC11Yll ...... Ttr.011111 A. M.11rplll111 M.,_.llnt f:tll"" Clt1rJ11 H. l••• llldt1r4 P. Nill A"ltr.nt M-Vlrif lifl'-" S.. Cle••I• Offtcie JOI Horth II C1111!119 l11t, t1672 .,_ °""" CO.It....,.,, )JO WHI l.y ltrNt frf...,... kKlll mi """"" '°"'4"1••• ""'""""" IN'tfl; "'" ~ huWo_,,. ~ ltKll; m ,_1 "'- Til.,.._ ln41 '4lo41JI Cl•lflH A""'1t ..... MJ.1671 S.. C ....... Al 0.pal:zlftl T•l•P•••• 4f2Ml0 ,...,.,llM, 1,,i. Oratlff c..u . ,~ "' -.. J, Ht MM 1..i.., llllltlt'fllllnil, ... --... .._,'-"' '*""' . ~! .. °' . ,..,.,..... -111\ovr -'-' - ...... ti Cl9Y'llflt -· ~ a.. ,..,.,. ..... ti C.kl ~ "9"""""· ..._.,_..... l>r a""" ll:U.I ~I W -II U.11 "*"'11'1'1 11'1111""' ltMlllM ~~ '"°"""'"· I, From Page 1 MASON ... friend ," Gaspers concluded. Caspers' remarks today followed an outpouring of similar sympathies ex- pressed over the ~·eekend by notables in- cluding State Sen. DeMi.s E. Carpenter (R-Newport Beach). fonncr Fi! th Dfstrict supervisor Alton E. Allen ; UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr.: mayors Donald Mcinnis of Newport Beach, John Burton of Irvine and Jack Hammett of Cof!lta Mesa, as well as Dally Pilot publisher Robert N. \Veed. Speaking_ for the city ol Laguna Beach. ,_fayor Oiarlton Boyd sald today, "The city will miss this fine man." The shock of Mr. Mason's death Satur- day at the age of 54 continued today. ~fr. Mason who joined the Irvine Company in 1959 has been president of the land development and ranching firm since 1966. Ma}-or Boyd remarked he was "taken aback" by the ne\vS. "I had met \vith him .ooly this past \\'eek under very favorable ci rcumstances to discuss Laguna's role in the (coastal) Irvine development and highway transfer," ~y~ said. "I had always found him to. be gractoos, alert and a most competent business e:tecutive,'' he coocluded. Assemblyman Robert Badham CR- Newport Beach) said, ''This Is sinctrely a deep and persqnal los.'\ to me ending an association that has lasted for over a decade in all the fields o( my profeS11ion both socially and In business. ;,Bill's leadership of the Irv ine Com- pany from an agricultural operaUon to a fi11ely tuned land planning and 01>cra- tional development company nre WlC· quailed in the world. Bill Mason had that infrequently seen ability to put complex n1atters in clear focus and to keep strong adversaries dealing reasonably with each j)ther." ' From Page J • WATSON ... Allen, 47, is an exccullve or the South- ern California Edison Company. Watson was named to the comp.any board of directors in June ()f 1970 ;ust two month.I before he wa~ made ex- <.'CUlive viee president or !he finn be join· ed in Hl&O as manager or the planning department. In 1964, Wat!IOO was elected vice presi- dent And in 1968 ht as11umed responslbllijy for the Jand dcvelopmeoJ division . Ji& became a senklr vice president in January of 1961. .J. .-..id<nl of Eastblulf, WatS<fi. nnd !us wllo Elsi<, have lour chlldren. K1thy, Bryan, lJJa Ind [la~ld. • • • ( • • .... ' ' -Dall'I' "I'-' ,.hoto lly Jolln va1.W • • Transit Distric t Budget OK By JACK BROBACK 01 flit IMllY "llot 11111 ' A $17.5 million budget for 1973-74. was · adopted by the Orange County Tran!lt District Board of Directprs today. - Of the total, fl5.5 mllllon wlll come from federal and state grnntl leaving $2 million to be finant;ed by the dislrlct1s 4.5-<:ent--iax rate. The new budget oontrasts with the $3:9 million spending program for 1972-73. Silt as transit board chairman Ralph Clark pointed out the district operations ha~e grown .tremendously in 1he past year, _ "At this time la st year we had only JO employes and no buses on the stree~. Today with 17 employcs· and four part time workers we have dial-a-ride in Ca Habra, we will have 55 buses operalifl' on 31 routes by. Septen1ber," Claljk stated. BORDER PATROLMAN SURVEYS VAN IN WHICH TWO WERE SHOT TO DEATH AFTER KIDNAPING Victim, 1 Sin Diego Worn.n, ind H•r Hutb.nd Were ~~!Jlfed From Bed Before ·senHle1s Killing "This budget lncludeS the oonstruction of a headquarters-maintenance facility .in Garden Grove, the park-n-ride facility in Fullerton, a dial-a-ride expansion pro- gram to other cities, an expansive cor- ridor study and the continued expansion of bus services with 63. new vehicles ar- riving next spring," the chairman con- tinued. From Page 1 SLAYING .•. here," Sgt. Cook said, "the kidnaper made mention of the problem and predicted, 'now v.·e're gonna have some fun '." Patrolmen ordered the van to the side or the multi-lane roadblock and ap- proached the vehicle. "He jerked open the door," a fellow patrol official said, "and shouted for everyone to get out." ' Raphael immediatedly f i r e d his Shotgun aiming the blast of pe1let8 through the windshield of the van. Coronado tumbled unhurt from the passenger side and as his horrified wife turned, the gunman shot her in the face. Tilen, patrolmen said, the assailant began firing from the van toward of- ficers . The exchange or gunfire lasted for several minutes. "Then we held baclt and waited," Sgt . Cook said. "It must have been five minutes or so and no activity was noted from the van ... we .were. wait.inglor tear gas to _arrive," be added. __ Then officers began creeping toward the bullet-tom truck and found both oc- cupants dead. · The assailant, dresse.d in thick, brown- canvas coveralls was on hls back in the rear of the van, the shotgun nearby. Mrs. Coronado's body lay between the two front seats. Patrolmen took her shocked, grieving husband to a nearby patrol unit where he sat dazed for more than an hour, barely able to speak to investigators. The entire shootout took place in a oon- gested, busy sect.ion of the checkpoint, with traffic moving on the busy freeway at one side and large trucks and tractors parked at the weigh station and in- spection area to the ottler. "It's hard to believe," one officer said gazing at the death scene. ''He just picked this couple at random. They didn't even know the man who did all this." "It apparently was a wild, unex- plainable thing," a San Diego police sergeant added. 3 Auto Tliieves 'Get Jail Ter1ns Nixon Still Improving, l{eeps -Visitors Scheduled \\'ASHJNGTON .(UPI) -President chest therapy about 9 p.m. and slept Nixon continUt:d to show improvement soundly throughout most of !he night, today in his battle with viral pneumonia, Tkach said. This sharply oontrasted with his doctors said. .. his first· night at the hospital Thursday "He is progfessing sati.Sfactorily," "'hen he had" a fitful four hours sleep, reported Dr. Sol Katz, pulmonary The chest Inhalation 6:ercise was ad- specialist from Georgetown University ministered by Sue A. W i I J i ams , School of Medicine, one of the team Or pulmonary nurse specialist assigned to doctors treating the President at the hospital's chest clinic. Bethesda Naval Hospital. -\. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon's progress is such that he will be able to meet as scheduled with three st.ate visitors in the next tv.·o weeks -the Shah of Iran on July 24 Australia Prime Minister Gough \Vhitla~ on July 30 and Japanese Prime J\1inister Takuei Tanaka July 31-Aug. 1. Nixon's spirits ~·ere described as "just fine" and Katz predicted he may be able to leave the hospital by Thursday or Fri- day. "'He's vivaciouso loquacious·-an ex- cellent patient,'' said Katz. Nixon's doctors said they were having a tough time convincing him he had to slow down and curtail his schedule. His work load is said to be only about a quarter o{ normal because of the illness. Nixon qwoke at 8 3.rri. a:ner--a·--gOOd night 's sleep. Dr. Walter Tkach said. The President was . given for chest therapy treatments Sunday. · The treatment r es u I t e d in '1considerablejmprovement in his chest congestion and chest discomfort is now at a minimum ." Tkach said in his morn- ing medical bulletin. The iherapy did cause the President to experienec some fatigue to the point where he \\'as given mild pain killers for relief, Tkach said. In general, Nixon had a good day _ on Sunday, He had a hearty dinner' of seafood, served about 6:15 p.m. The President retired after his last 200,000 People Break 'All OC Fair Records f\.1ore than 200,000 persons flocked to the 1973 Orange County Fair in Costa l\1esa July 6 to 15., breaking all at- tendance records of the SO-year-old event. The new mark of 208,974 exceeds last year's count of 149,184. by 59,790 for an · attendance increase of approximately 44. percent. . Fair Manager James E. Porterfield safd today that the tiirrislile"<:.~u-nt ror ·u;e I<kiay fair exceeded his \\•ildest ex- pectations by nearly 9,000. Organizers of the fair had originally hoped to attract 200,000 fair visitors but Jt became apparent during the first few days that the "magic number" would be eclipsed. The fair recorded the highest sinile- day attendance figure in history on Saturday, the second day of the fair, with 21 ,283 ~nd the people count kept iOOming, acoordmg to Porterfield. Porterfield credits the one-pay gate system adopted this year with much of the success. "We made sure that all the entertainment was free once the people had paid admission," said Porterfield Kelly Wins 120-mile who brought attractions such as Pete Fountain, Les Brown and the original D l V U W Coasters to the Costa l\1esa fairgrounds. eat l a ey a}k Last year motorcycle racing fans com· ing lo thef fairgrounds for the every- DEATH VALLEY (AP) -Distance Friday-night speedway oontesls found ninner llohn Kelly, finishing a J20-mile thc1nselves paying three Umes, once for \Valk across Death Valley in a record 34 parking, again to get inside the fair, and "We will accomplish all this with1?re same 4.5-cent tax rate as last yeaf," Clark oontinued, "this is because of our success in receiving federal grants and our judicious use o[ our state sales tax revenue." · Anticipated revenues: from federal and state funds includes $7.2 million federal funds ; $2 million property tax revenue; $1 million from bus fares, and $7~1 million from the state sales tax On gasoline. Principal spending figures include: ' Salaries, and wages, $1.88 million; pro- fessional and special services (consul- tant) $1.12 million ; advertising, $466,254; bus operations, $2.9 million and transportation and travel $61,360:. . f The growth of the district is indicated by the 31 rouf-9 now in operation whith cover the central. northern and westCm areas of the county. During the coming year service will be extended to MissiOn Vi~jo, El Toro and >Jther south ooun\Y points. In other business today, the distrtc:t directors: - -Heard Deputy County Counsel Ken- nard R. Smart declare that the director's post fonnerlly held by Derek McWh~ v.·as '!acant bf(ause of his coQ.viction o!, a felony. MeWhinney was found guilty of gr.and ·theft by a Superior Court jury ear.ly -tbis-· month in the Mile Square agricultural lease scandal. He has appealed tbe · sentence and is free on bail. .., Smart said the League of Cities should appoint a new member· and thatl .tke group is expected to act July 26. The new director's tenn will be only for the bf.d- ance -that McWhinney was to serve and will expire in two and a half years. · 1 '·' " ,, Prize-wi1111.i1ig , ' Newsman Lies: •• --, NEW YORI\ (AP) -R<lmaa "Pat" Morin, wbO twice won the,1 ,..Pulitzer Prize during his careu. with the Associated Press, was • round dead in his apartment this. morning. He was 65. He had been in ill health. hours , says "It was hell but I'm glad I a third time to watch the races. Three Navy men who admitted stealing did it." ''Most of them \\"ere very annoyed so four luxury autos from a Huntington Kelly, an Ireland native who now lives \\·e dropped the concepl of entertainment Morin won Pulitzers for his coveage of the Korean \Var In lp5 I and for his eycWitness reporting or rioting over-school integration a1 Little Rock, Ark., in 1958. Beach dealer have been sentenced to 60-in Santa ~Tonica. looked exhausted after charges. As a r~sult we had overwhelm- day terms in Orange County J ail. finishing the trek late Sunday afternoon ing attendance in our grandstand . Superior Court Judge James Turner l rw;;i;;th;:;;On~l~y~t~w~o;;b=ri~c=f ~re~s~t ~b=re~a~k;'-~;;::;;=:~~e~v;;en;l~s,;;"~h;c;;;sa;id;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ordered identical jail time for Carlos Dee ~:'~/:; Jsf~tii~~a1i:; .~~ .~"o~ LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • ,>. RAISED ELSEWHERE all from Long Beach Naval ~talion pliaded guilty to auto theft. ' • "Restitution was set at 1100 for Carter A-6.'111'••-l NO-DEFROSTING and $500 each for Milton and Simmons. --~ .... All three will serve three years pro-bation, Judge Turner ruled . REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER It ~·as successfully alleged that the trio v:as involved In the theft of four late model Llnooln Continental Mark IV autos from Gustafson Lincoln-Mercury 16800 Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach. nic cars . were recovered. Thieves Get Radio Gear fro1u Ait,planc Intruders "'ho entered M unlocked aircraft at Oraqge County Airport during the \\'eekend carried off radio equipment valued at $1.200, shcrtff's officers said. Deputies said the equipment "-as taken from an aircraft owned by . &.Z A.Jr Corpora11on of Ca.rl$bad. The aircraft's opcNlor was workine ln a nearby oUlcc building at the time or the 1beft, thty said. Rain Floods Italy P..fiLAN, Italy (AP) -Severe rain- slorms Whed northern llaly o\'er 1he \\'ctkend cau!iing floods nnd landslides nlong the Italian Riviera and leaving flt least IS pecson~ dead, authorltit's said. rour people dro'mcd when a bridge col· lapsed in the 'bad v."tathCf nc11r Turin on S;alurday. Their cars plunged into a nver. ( 1815 NEW!ORT BLVD. ALL THESE GREAT _ _,,.,,FEATURES • F111I Wldtll "8oolleas1•· fmur Door Shill -for l11tt1nt av•ll1bl1lty. • 011at T1mp111t11re Contfoll- 1al1ct the r1Rhl 11mper1t11r. for eacll 1!Cllon. • Twin Pon:a!aln CrltPtni-k"P' fruit. w1at1bles 11rden frnh. • titra I.art• Rtfr11trator Door Sh•IYH-holds ..... ,, tall quart boltltll Mffet NT 1JJ4 No d1fro1ti"9 r1fri9•ra+.r tactiot11 wilh Arctic Air flow 1y1to111 for full 1yclo circ11lotio11. .SLIMLINE REFRIGERATlll ..... C11J2 • • f'ult Width f'rffHf CMst ·-• W"!dt-Rat11t Ttmoitniturt: Cantrol ALL THIS $25995 '.,..,..,'"'"""·'-'"'"'.., • ~OffpOoorShelf FOR ONLY • f'11H Width /Mn·Mltt C!>lllH D.,_ r-r.1· -Member of •15!:~AY U C•lllornle'I ltrgetl CASH . " .. Cooperative luylnt · Group With The . ,. WlfH Art'lOYU 1 ,; Volume luyln1 CllOIT '' ••••uA._, .. _ Po.,..r ol 110 StorftLJ ~ "''' ........ ,....... ~ Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788 .:~ \ -! " ' ' • ' • • ' • • ' r ' Jfl VA1 .. 1 t'ILOt SC Shortage -Of Food Predicted FULLERTON (AP) -Som• Calttornla agricultural representatives say that food shortages will occur II the cur· rent fedcr.ll rtlaU price freeze continues. • FOR INS1' ANCE, egg pr~ ducers right now are losing about five cents for every dozen cartons or eggs they sell. Pomona feedlot O\\iier Al Benton said he must make SO cents a pound on his calves to make a pront. addinlflfthings don 't get better he may put his cal\'es to pasture. . A basic squeeze occurs because raw products bougbt by the farmer such as feed for his cattle, ·are uncontrolled and rising in cost. But the con- sumer products soW by the tanner are contro lled. CHEVROLET'S FLEETSIDE PICKUP NO. 1 SELLER IN AUTO, TRUCK LINE Fleetside Truckin' LEE ADLER, executive vice president of t h e California Grain and Feed Association, said the situation cou1d "result in a reduction in the supply of meat, milk and eggs to the ~mer. Chevrolet Pickup Soars • in Popularity Women Hear Project Talk The Orange County chapter of the National Association or Women in Construction will meet in Anaheim July 24 to hear a lecture on project management David G. Miller, Newport Beach general contractor will discuss 11Project Management A New Emerging Profession," at the l:lyatt . House beginning at 6:30 p.m. For reservations,. c o n t a c l Patricia Rich at 833-9244. that you ·1··-tOMPLITI OIANGI COUNTY COYIRAGI hMlllCflllMJ: locJ111H1 IHch S.. C'--ellte, Miu.Ion Ylelo ID9ltO Pefat, • -11 • lo .... 9114 "'"'of l .A. MONTH TO MONTH llNTAL IASIS NO, DIPOSJT l19t11RfD ON APPROYID CRS:DIT 4 ONLY S17.00 PIR MONT TOTAL COST fnllmlted ,...sl 5 NIW COMPACT UNIT SIU 1111~ir-41'l1I 6 'OICl MUSA.GI PAGERS A' CO Afll AYAI ' Alllf '1 FUU Fiii MAINnNANC ORANG£ COUNTY PA0107£LEPHONE SERVICE 1"'c- 714. IJl.JJGI *l SO. SANTA ~e:. SANTA ANA· rom L..ltlln• ... ch, M!Hlon Viejo, 0111a" hint, S•n Cl111M11h, lln JW'n •llltlrlrM, El T•r1, u11 toll ,,., 496--J22J By CARL ~ARSTENSEN OI' WW DIOY ,llot Stiff Increasing customer de- mand for new trucks and recreational vehicles reached another milestone as Chevrolet announced its half. ton Fleelside pickup is the largest selling body style of any General Motors passenger car or truck series. According to A. J, Olson. Chevrolet assistant general sales manager for trucks, over 249,775 tmits of the Fleetside model had been produced for dellvery as or May 31". "TRUCK SALES in general have been increasing in the past three years." Olson saiP. "The popularity of our half· ton Fleetside model is in· dicative or the demand a vehi· cle that is not only practical in day-to-day business opera· lions. but usable for a \\1ide va riety of recreational and family uses." 11e pointed out t h a t , "Women and urba11 dv.·ellers have come to appreciate the FOR REAL ESTATE LOAMS 1•1 l 2nd TRUST OEEOS ,1,500 To '250,000 • UP TO 80"4 LOANS OH TRUST OEED COUATf:AAL. "~"' e:autTY fUtlDS N•wport Cen!•r 62'0 Newpofl Cen"r Om. N•wpor1 Bt..:h, C.llt. {Tl<t) 644.;qM For Weekender " Advertising Phone 6424321 - What Do Many Doctors Use When They Suffer Pain OfHemorrhoidal Tissues? bdaift Fnola r.nes Pr..,t. T ,.ponry Rdiof hi llny Cues fr• w hiL Abt ~ sm.i. Swdlili .r w r..-o.. tt 111<dia . • _In a sUJ"Yey, d.octol'J were uked what IMy UM! to relieve such painful symptom11. Many of the doctor• reporting said they either use Prepa~ation H them· 1elves or in their office practice. Preparation H fives prompt, \emporary relief for hours in , • manv Cl\Sf!9 from pain, itching in hi>morrholclitl tiis.sue&.. A'.nd it actually helps •h rink painful ,.,.,·elling of ttuch tigguf's when infected and inflamed. JU1l see if doctor-tested Preparation H• doesn't help you. Ointment or suppositories. · · -~--· --~~ -- f$SS11$ $1$11$ ,•s •s,-.tss1!• $1$ ,1s,•s •s,•siss ·The Great Sale Continues! An sport coats • 30 %-50'/, off!! pattern dress sJacks • 40 °/o off!! !elected DRESS SHIRTS -lfl price'! - ,elected SPORT-SHIRTS -'40 '/, off! ':-~ .; 9roup of TIES -~O '!. off! -... ~· -~ selected PRE-CUFFED SLACKS -';. .,. lfl price! ..., -~ :;:--~ M tf?~i~N;p~i ~ . . .. 14'7 YiA LIDO e HlWPOIT IU.CH·-.J! 61J-tl11 ~ ~$·1 versatility o r light·weight pickups, making them at- tractive as second vehicles for many families." Olson cited the mass exodus ol urban populations to the c:owilry during h o I i d a y s , longer summer vacations, and greater total family particiP,?- lion in leisure-time activities as factors in the trend. CllEVROLET EXPECTS Jo produce over 300,000 of the half-ton f'lcctside trucks by the end-of this model year. ' It seems clear that Ylhatever the rinal total and however it is measured . \vhcther on a clacndar of n1odel year basis. 1973 is goi11g to turn vul to be the third straight record year for l!.S. auto dealers. *' Auto sales are running at an annual rate of 12 million cars. Trucks are selling at a rate of more th.'.ln 3.2 nlillion a year. up from 2.6 million last year. Th.e 1973 supcrboom has surprised auto executives. ONE QUESTION mark over sales next fall is t~c labor negotiations beginning t h i s sunlmcr. Contracts for the Big Three auto companies expire in September. k.valkout could disrupt production just \\'hen new models are being in· Lroduce<t but early indications are that terms v.'ill be reached prior to the deadline. Sa les on a ca lendar year basis are also expected to be record in 1973. An a l ysts predict. a total or about 11.65 n1illion, \vit h domestic cars accounting ror 9.95 million Mo1aey's ll'orth Bargai11 Time Now July-August arc l\\"O of the big bargain months of the year ror carpet purchases ~ among th e most expensive in- vestments i n furnishings you're likely to .make. By taking advantage o.>f lhe~e summer sales, you may save as much as 20 to 50 per· cent oo your carpels. which can translate inlo hundreds of dollars. If you fi nd an item being discontinued by a mill. your savings may run to 50 percent. Carpe~g today costs from $5 to $25 or more a yard, plus the cost of installation . plus the costs of cleaning and maintaining it throughout its lifetime. · LEARN AT least the basics about judging carpet fibers, textures a n d construction v.·hen shop- ping for a car p et. A rundown on this is in a new book.let, "Car p ets and Rugs." by the a.n, l i era! Ser\'· a ices Admin· f'OllT•1t lstratlon available from Con- sum~r Product lnfonnaUon, Pueblo, C.Olo. 81009 f90 cents). Wool 1J the most expensive. carpeting material. easy to cl~. rtsistant to fire and dirt, durable and ttSllient. But it must be mothproofed, may be damaged by alka l ine _detergent• and can cause aUergy problemt for some p<Opl•. Nyton is Je5111 rcslJient than wool and lts..<1 springy. bul it gm lcu 00.ton up by abrulon., ind water-soluble at11ns cal' be wiped out easUy '!"Ith a •r.-ce. ACllYUCS Wf1'11 al 1 .. st U Wf'll II ny1oft. rtan\bJe. . > • • Complete New York .Stock List ' • ' -• • , • • ' l ' I ' ·. GYPSY MOTH DESTRUCT IVE GYPSY MOTH SHOWN IN THREE DEVELOPMENT STAGES County Officials Ask Homeowntrs to KHp Eyt Out for Pest ' -It 0 "1 J ""'"" A .•.• """""""' For the Record Dissolution Of 1'1nrriuge Jl'J NAL OEClll!ES ERllrtG JUftt U llarr..,.1, Gl"Vtr LN tnd AVlllVJ!lne Con!'..:l, S.1111rly JHn -Jlmtl Gypsy -Moths HYouSeeOne Of These, Nab It ORANGE -The .war is on against the spread or the destructive gypsy moth in Calilornia, William Fitchen, co u n t y agricultural com- missioner annou nced. Wll~ur - Fitchen said his department is cooperating with the State Deportment or Food and Agriculture to trap t h e dangerous insect pests. Wiiton. Ll'"n II. "nd w1vne A. G d ' S1lcldo, (11.,lln" """ Albe<I V. ar ner s S!lv1, Eclw1r<1 F. 1..ci N"'"'" M. Wn\l(_t, Lindi J "nd lrvln H. For'111y, H1r/y Jewel!. Jr. 1nd K1tMten Joy, ere. Tllomton. Lwlon Covrtntv Ind ll1rb1r1 '"" WUll1mson, .C1rolvn incl Tr.om11 W. Fl.ids, Jo Anfl Ind Eao«•rt LllOrl Phllflp .. 0eDor1h C. encl Ollwr T. Avr1, Gill Ann and En•!Ql.M! AUr.00 Patch, P~lllp G. Incl Yvonr>I Slhltr, Wiiiiam Htrnltton 1rnt All• M1rv • Gt1i.oow. Ldurle K. Ind Jtr"Y N, L..cy, lltl!y L. "ncl t-11rold l . cur-, An111ony Lov11 1rn'.I Ann M1rie Pe!..,.$11'1, John tnd Ecll!h A. Norton, IC!hy 1nd Wltllnrn L1mblte, R~rt R, end Pei19y J. Gr11nlwrl11ll. A_, JO&flln 1nd Michale ·~ Smith, 6-"gJ1 LM 1nd L-[>a.In llavtl, o.t>ra LwlM and Ron11d Glenrl ICl!Oeb, OWis II. 111d Ernest L. HI..._, llen-1 Ma•ln1 and Clwrrl11 . ...., TCll)lllln, II~ J . ant Walter $1epen llottl1111. Joe L. and Ced!• W. C1mmK1t, Andr1 Incl Rlcll1rt I. H1tt1wetr, John H-•rd •nd C1role LN 1MWr. Svwn °"""and Rlchltd Frtftk ~ HUion, James Anll'lonv al'ld Fwllln1 KITIWl'ly Ml'flle, Jonn Wlllt1m •nd S1lllt ,._ NIWmln. Altl'l'I Ron1l(I ll'ld J\lclllh • JO'j'CI Lon_,.,..,, E11W1rcl C. 11'1d Vlrglnl1 L. Fr11..,.. Ellnor Incl Llrry L1ur1tnl, LOIJIS A. 1tncl Jvti1 M11 • P1rrol!, Mary Lou ll!d Ollver 01e1r, ''· r. Andtrson. Noll T. •nd Roneld L. .Slarteki, Al•1ndr1 Cltrk af\11 L~ ' Chtrlts_ _ _ ---D1yhof{, P11r!c11 L. dnd Ron1ld H G1rner, De<!l>I L. Incl T"ry L. Romyn, Corine.ale. l!'>d Corr>1!1us F. Ofot(O. Bt!ly Al~rt1 Ind -10' N1tivldad ' llen, D-na Ann 1nd John Mldllll Monlo,,..,.,.y, 8r!ty J11n 1$<1 Rati.rl l . L1mson, Gill J1net 1nd Jtrry Allon Ro«hlo, 11.0l>lrt H. Ind Alk• A. , Enl ... N J-21 I Tht<:~at>trry, 5nlrley M. a/Id HYgh T. L1w1ln. C.eor~ Morris Ind Elttl• e11101 Wt1er•, (or• M. ind (llarle• N. 81~~11. Jene 1nd Owt>,o0n ~IM Moore, Fran~~ R•v Ind Lindi Lou Brtnmtn. 51\erry 0.rlent and ThotT\11 I VlncRnl • Cllrk, Ruth A. and Jeffy w. 1 LH, CharlH G. ~nd Judllh O. ----Death Notices ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY 427 E. 17th SI .. Costa l\lesa &•G-<888 -• • DAL IL-BERGERON FUNERAL 1 10~1E Corona del Mar 673-9450 Costa l\1esa 6~6-!~2~ . " BELL BROADWAY • MOR11JARY 110 Broadl\·ay, Costa Mesa LI 8-3433 •• DILDAY BROTHERS J\IORTUA RIES 17911 Htlll'h 81\'IL lluntington Bt-ach 84%-7771 Ut Redondo Avl'. tong Btacb 21~1145 • l\1eCOR!\11CK LAGUNA flEACll MORTUARY 11708 Laguna Canyon Rd. 414-!M IS • PACIFIC VIBW ~!EMORIAL PARK ' Cemell'I')' l't1ortuary Chapel 3~ Pacific Vie"'' Drlvt Newport Btacb, CalUornla 114-lm • PE!K FA>\Uf,Y COLO~lAI. FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bol11a Av~ \ftltmlnstu Q3..3W • SMITHS ' MORTUARY 627 Alain SI • JlunUnsien Btac• 536-Ult • Decision Now Latv By TOM BARLEY Of l'llt OlllJ Pllet Sl.tf SAN BERNARDINO -A decision handed down by ap. pellale court Justice Robert Gardner of Newpor.t Beach has become California law in the field of drunken driving and the taking of · blood samples from arres ted motorists. J ustice GllJ'dner, presiding jurist of -the Fourth District Court or Appeals Jri San Bernardino, recently defended the withdrawal of blood from "IF ALLOWE'D to get a real start in California it could do Se!'iOUS damage to our fott!ts and tree crop industry," the commissioner e x p I a i n e d . "The gypsy moth bas alrea~y infested mor\ than 11 million acres in the east and last year alone it defoliated nearly 1.5 million acres of forest" Any person who spot. the gypsy moth larva, or caterpillar is urged to capture it and contad the county agricultural commissioner's office, telephone 774--0284,"1m- mediately. "The caterpil lars are at· tractive crea~s. grow to two inches iri length and are distinguished by many tufts of hair and a series of red and blue paired dots along thetr backs," Fitchen explained. an unconscious mall who recc~vedlnjunes Whennis car G1·and~-J1rrv ran into the back of a school -.-. J bus in San Bernardino County. Pushes Park THAT COWSION led to the death or one child and the in- jury or eigh t other passengers in the crowded school bus. to.1otorist Robert Carrington was later charged with felony drunken driving and vehicular mans laughter. It was argued by Car· rington's la\vyers that oo war· rant was obtained by the California Highway Patrol.man involved in the investigation of the crash and he never had the unconscious Carrington's consen t for the taking of a blood sample that led to the filing of the charges. GARONER NOTED in his ruling. however. that the patrolman ~aBJ kept busy at the accident scene for more than an hour aHer the crash and was not able to contact Carrington until he drove to the hospital and authorized the test on the unc o nscious suspect. - Sm-plus Plan SANTA ANA ~Support for a proposed county program to use surplus properties for parks and greenbelts has been voiced by the Orange County Grand Jury. Jn a letter to the board of supervisors, Jury Foreman 1t1arcia Bents of Newport Beach s8ki the proposal of. fered by Supervisor David L. Baker of Garden Grove was a 1vorthwhile way to add to the reservoir o{ land available for open space and" parks. Baker's suggestion is being studied by Coun ty CotmSel Adrian Kuyper. It stemmed from a proposal to sell a five- Jot slze parcel in Westmimter as surplus. The board voted to retain the property and even- tually turn it over to the city for development as a park. -. LAFC Members Urged To ~Do Homework~ By JA'CK BROBACK 01 ttM 0 1\ly 1'11111 Sl1ll purposes, should be thoroughly probed. Tile,Jury \vent so far as to . SANTA ANA -Local Age.n· say tha t "a thorough 1y F'ormation Commission koowledge of basics should be members should do more ""col'l'Sidered essentinl for new "home-.vork" through r~gular rommissioners prior to the study sessions v:ith emphasis assumption of dulie~.'' I . . On spheres or inOuence, a on egal education and pohcy matter which the commission detcrmln.ittion, .the Orange hu WJ'UStled with for more County Grand Jury believes. than two y~. the report said a policy should be ettabUshed JN AN JNTEHIL\1'.rcport on that all county territory need the agency which has power not be within the !}>here of iJt. O\'Cr a 11 annex3tions. in· fluence of i;ome city. ('lbe corporations And boundary commission has · had such a changes. the jury also sug· policy Part I cu I a r I y In gested :iieveral changes in re!erencc to A1Wlon Viejo, El Toro and Laguna !"lguel ) . policy regarding sphcrts o( In· flucnce. In the report, signed by Jury Foreman Mrs. ~farcia &nts or Newport Bench. It is stated that the inve~ti11::ition or the L.AFC was m11de at the re- quest of a number ot ctllzcM groups. The groups wen not named. ON S'Olt>Y se11ions for C'Ol'llm~ion members. t h t me3sagT.' stated ·that a 11 legislation pertinent t.o LAFC business, such a1 t h ~ Wllllamm Act which t1lM agri ltural preserves for tax TllE JURY ALSO suggested the est.ibllshment of criteria for granting spheres of to. fluenct for s llC b unirt- corpor•ted areas especially ~ whtcb ·have applied for mWlklpal advisory aiundl slatUJ or ~ a destre to remain lMlncorporated. Munlefpel ad*isory Coloidll are a new Conn o I qua.,,lgovernment crtatfd by state law. Throu&h such coun- cils. unincorporated a r e·a,J -k with the County lloanl of Superv\90n1 ttgardln1 malters critical t.o 1 Wcir areas. I - " • - • - MondlJ, July U , 1973 DAILY PILOT 9 CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS ' AND LOAN ASSOCIATION * • • • * • • rnia Federal Sa announces • • ~ er mterest rates onpassboOk and certificate sa • · acc011nts. • Select the type of account to fit your savings need and visit any one of our many offices today. --- ... Passbook Account. For present and new accounts. Interest compounded daily. Open wilh any am011nl Add or withdraw at any time. -610/o 2-Yea-rCertilicate Account. 2 , For MW accounts. Minimum dep0alt $5,000. Interest comP.ounded dally. ·-- annualrai. • 7010 4-Year Certificate Account. For new accounls. Minimum deposit $1,000. lnlerest compounded dally. annual'* up_ to 71°/o Certificate A~co~nt . "f"f90/0 yielding I •I .. ,_ Minimum deposit $100,000. Ask for details on terms. 7.79% yield rt111lta whe~ Interest Is compounded daily and all funds and earnings .......... remain in accaunt one year. ,'(' (.Withdrawals from a new certificate of deposit will receive on the amount withdrawn, the passbook rate then being paid. Also, there wlll be a penalty of 90 days' interest or interest from the date of Issuance or renewal ol lhe c<lrtlficate, whichever is less.I Plus-16 Free Services for accounts with balances of $1,000 or more. • CaliforDia Federal Sa~ and Loin Altoel•tlon • Auets·o¥•r $2 81\llon Nation's Largest Federal COMMUNITY EVENTS I 2ND ANNUAL A~TI" ~ THI MONTM ~ S. Mtttecll• Artl't Stvdl«I -C..ll+ortl'-S(hool Df Flnt Arts, San Franc:h.CO. ·Costa Mesa Office: OLD TIMER NEWTIMER PICNIC SUNDAY, AUG. If Et11nCI• P•<k 1-4 P.M. Grtm. ~ ..... 1, FrMKI. Aho ~flt',.,.. dft'' 11'1.lft, ~lllt Fr111c: .. Muir Colltot. f'1MCNnl CaHf. llfllMr 11\t ltlt'IOvl p0rtr1lt "'"'"' 111111r Hans..,. I llt1.,.,.,. cny Colleve, ~ Yoooe also Ma•Tln ~ S<vlplll"9 c:.,.1mlQ wllll llt!l'j' Dev*'1(10ot'f .... 11:1c1wrl'dl Rut.I -M<l<ltf" •nd •ti.Ir.cit Nilnllno --!ttMOtN. CllN. ~ RarlXifl!OOI--~' •' Potluck Dlnnor , hr htlAI CM &.Hy• '1'W.::t" ,,__,,_ ..... ,,., C9'1t MUI Art L19eW ~ IMtll Ari AMol:ll1ft L .. '-"'"" NI l. ...... HllioMI SO<lely tf Arts tf'tG Ltl"'1 l'I ..... Art ...,MCl&tn IMn Cl_. If ~I fHKfl Tonn1 Art L ...... """u Ar>I NOW! OPEN ON SATURDAYS 10 TO 2. I H•• -"'*''i' fWlt"ft 1"4 Is flOW ltl Cll!ng 11 fN Cot!I o\o\t .. Art L ....... • • • • I "" ... I MIO '•' .. 1 -~Lt ;~ n l •• •W '. It Pt 11 Gt 11 er l~ XI 15 GI "w 11 IC " G ~~ ~I U ll ~ l• II'! "' -~ ~" = " • / ., t.lond.11 July 16 1973 ____ :::S:::C ___ D:..Ac.IL;_V_PILOT U Monday's Cl~ing, Pri~1nplete New York Stock Exchange List Market Climbs --On Gloomy News ' \ ~1 , ~ It \I~ .. \,. •"> ... )'4-• . ,_ . ' t • :~~~ ... 21 -~ n" 'I , ' -. ,, + ~ ,.,,_ . m " '"±"" ,,~ ... ,,._. I ... . ! ••• ' '~ 12•0,-1. ,.,,, " • *-• 30\tt I o '' t \) .. . -.. .. _ . " -..... n -• ,, lf .. ~ oj ,. " -..... , lt + • 1.-;1 ,, H .. ..-" " + ' . " . " .. Ameriron Sale.Y Volume r="'= I; Fi11ance l Briefs I L Special lo lhe Dail} Pilot CHI C \GO -Consol id rited Foods Corp has announced :.in agreement 1n pr1nc1p!c for th~ <1cqu1st11on of Knickerbocker roy Co Inc ma.nufacturrr Qf :-in cxtrns1\e hne of stuffC'd dolls ind animals 1nclud1n., !h(' Raggedv Ann and Andy Dolls fhc anno 1ncement w :i ~ made by \\ 11!1a1n A Buz~ck Jr chairm;;in of Consq\Jdated I oods Corp and I.co I \\ hitc prcs1dl'nt of Kn1ckc1 bocker To\ Q1 e Dollu1• Dip• 10'D0N 1llPIJ -The US dolJar droppt'd !J1 \aluc tOO ny 111!ien lhc European mon~y mark('ls opened and the do ~n\1 Jrd lr.ond \\nrsened n<11 1hc d 1y v.orf' on The dnl!n1 11as up 1n Tok)O reflecting 1t.s Hl."I 1lnl!I\ Ir ding \\ 1"' l i;:ht nnrl 111 ... runow1ts of. 1hc dollar :s rail v.crc sm ill But the lroubled Amencan t 11rrcnr1 sl pJ)C'tl sl1i;htlv 111 ( l'nn:Hl\ Fra l<:<' Reli;:1um Bri!<1111 und un )U.'1. nboul (\Crv 1>llX'r r. 1rope:in f1Jrc1g11 turrcncy ~xchnngt> e Stu·f•o1t l"r llARRISBURG Po I Ar\ 1't't1 l"'lh an :i orr1c1::11 " f 111 rt su 1 F 11d \: ch:irµini.: tt < ullfnrn1a b:ise<I f r1n with ope r:inng nn 1tlei;:al pvrt1m1d dl1;tr1buto1 ship pro~ran1 S!:'l I ov.er lnduslr es .. tnc • loc:'lted 1n San ftaf lt>I allcgtd ]\ oprr 1trs a pvrarn1d or chain pr( moti~n srhtmc v. hich in-. 1 hr<> !ur111~ J>(.'rsons to make mon,.1 h1 r1thrr selhng St.a Pn11rr produc 1.;: rir inducing other<> t 1 p:1rl1t'lp:1ll' 1n th\: progrnm th~ state said e ClaN# 1<'1iOH BEVERL~ lllLLS IAP\ .\ plan to .stlt\t' live C'lass n<' t1nn suits agtunst lnternallon:il lndu s.trlt'-s ln c l"1Mdqut1rte1ed her~ has lxcn delayed by a fed\:ral court btcausc ol 00.. jc<'UOO!! b)l !r:mcltisetS, the fLnn sa)11 Thr con1p.anv said Frldav that a U~I\ Ot.~lct C®rt 1-n KatlS<lS Q~ ~lo. has asked for n meMlng_ or all par1.!ti 11t!Jt \\CCk • • , J 2 PlllLV PJLOI * MOfKlay, July 16, 1973. - ~ QUE~IE By Phil lnter.landi Railroad Tank Car Probe Sa ys Most Unsafe in Heat PHOENIX (AP I -Rai lroad con1pani~ W,ere told last year that propan~ jank ca rs were unsafe and possibly could lead lo explosions under hot. dese rt condilions, o na t io n a I rcstarr#!r says. ·nic rc.'1Carchcr also said that 17.000 unsafe tank cars are in service today which are similar to one which blew apart in Ki ngman this month, killing nine persons and in- jurlng 70 others. Two propane tank cars leaked Thu rs d ay in El Centro. About 400 persons "'ere evacuated from the area, but Uv;!re Was no fire or ex· plosioi\. "'This outfit doesn't believe in 'phasing out.' Here, you're· either in or you're out." THE RAILROADS knew last year that the prcsenl tank car valves sbou1d be replaced with differ.en( types, or one com- bination valve, along with T yplioort Hi ts 2 Ships · HONG KONG tUPll -Ty- phoon. Dtit took dead airu at Hong Kong · and ·the China coast 'today, driving· ™'O big s1itps aground in the colony's harbor-and -blasting the area . . • "'ilh heavy \\'inds. At 10:40 p.1TI.1 the 1No. 9 ty- .phoon signal "'as ·hoisted, in- dicating winds of moi'e . than 72 miles per hour \\'C.re ex- pected "ithin a fe\v .hours. ,,,. •• " : ' j • ? • • • -t ·~ . . ~· I ~I I , ! j , i .: ;t' ! ·,(,., - ,' 11 ,_ .,. ' ' ~ ·i ., . , .. ·~·- !-.. ~; ·' .. r • . " ,J-; I . 1_'' 1ve Wtterest on 4 yur ctrtific1lt ICCCUlts. $1 ,000 mini1rt1111 b1lanct. Deposits 11 this rite may bt limited"' ""'""""''') 1q11lltlon.. • R1iulitions r1QUir1 1 penally on all c1rtlficlt1 ICCOOnb withdrtwn ~ wkv lo mtturitJ. Westem ftdertl -.. ftdetll~ ~ .. ed interest on 2'n ° lo 4 yell certifi- cate ICCOl#lls. $5,000 mininun balance. , interest on 12 lo 23 month certificate a<:coonts. $1 ,000 minimum bal1nc:e. Corona Del Mar "' I f special in.side insulation to prevent overheating in the desert, he said. He said that Ute Kingma n tank car explosion probably stemmed from overheating in· side the car. The propane pro- bably expanded, was expelled through the valve and lgnlted a.s it struck air, he said. The researcher is Frank A. Vassallo, bead of the beat transfer section of Ca1span C.Orp. of Buffalo, N.Y., owned b)r Cornell University. The basic resea rch on the valves, he said in an interview here. was conducted b y C.Omell laboratory for the Federal Railroad Adiniatration last year. lll~ CO~U.IENTS on the Kingman explosion, he said, were based on preliminary in- formation. He said he could not make final estimates witU be hu more information. In an article on the Callpan research in the laboratory publication ''Res e ar c h Trends," Vassallo aaid : "The safety valves installed in loday's cars flad not prevented such cars rrom ex· ploding in derailment fires. Specifically, the Calspa.,.team found that today's valve is undersil.ed. "Re-examining this original data the researchers con· eluded that the requirements need modification along twq lines: To provide for tbe likelihood, in a large scale derailment fire, of greeter heat input to tank cars, and to take Into account the pos.sibili· ty that liquid -rather than vapor -may . be venting through lhe valve of an overturned car. GARBENSTANGlES ... .•• Aro Not To Eat ••• July IS.21st Soath Coast ?Im • .a raise interest on 90 day bonus ICCOU!lls. No minimum. interest on passbook tccounts. hii:I from CSatt of deposit to dalt of withdr1R. •effective annutt r111 wftll daily compoond lnterut. · •.. and tWalve offices lo sem )'OU: Beverty HiRs • L• H1br1 • Del Amo • Northr~gt • Sixth & Hiii • USC • • PIOOl'tmt Cily • City of Ofana to $20,000 llld dllposlts by th• lOUt eim from the 1st. 2744 E. Coast Hwy. I Jim Park, Manager I Telephone: (714) 644-7255 • llrthmont • Corona Del Mir -In~-• Nollywood /Yermont Western Federal Savings ,& Loan Association 111~ Offlct; Sillh & HQ(°""''""' l>S lnplu • Tela""°"" (213) 626-!liOI Antto·.,., $340 mllllon. Hu&JI [YM11,k. Pluldonl w L '. -l. , • . ' . . ~ " .. WE OU.GTE · PRIG.ES , OVER THE l'HONE ••• ANYTIME -cHl~I THISI sun1 SAU srrc••~ -., -... 1 ow._ ... ~ I SEA""" SKI Suman l otion, '4 ot ..•. ,, ..••••.•••. Sr .to l .lf Jol11no11'• IAIY POWDER, 1'4 01. , ••••••.•••••• ••• 1.29 1.0t IROMO SELTZER. 6Yt 111. • • • • • •• • • • • •• •• • • • • • • • 1.79 l.lt Clalrol "FINAL NET" Hair Spr.iv. I. 01. • • • • • • • • • • • 2.25 1.15 S•ll Pritt 1.09 89c 99c 1.45 . 2700 E. Coast Hi"1way, ·at Femleaf. Corona def Mar ••• 644-7575 SUMMER FABRICS GROUP #1 ASSORTED Good selections of cottons and cotton blends. VAtUES TO $1.29 YD. MACH. WASH 36"/45" WIDTHS _l yds • for GROUP #2 44°45" Polyedwr/Cotto11 • VOILE PRINTS 44·45" Polyesm /Cottu • SEERSUCKER PRINTS 44-45" Polyes,., lteff1 • ASST. BUTCHER WEAVES 44-45" Polyesm /Cotto11 e DAN RIVER HOY A 50.52"' ~ "'*' e RIBBED LOOP KNITS 44-45~ Cotto" _ • DUCK .PRINTS & SOLIDS 96< VALUES TO . $1 .98 YARD MACH. W SH YD. GROUP #3 • 44-45" D•11 afMr Polrosm /Cotto11 e NUBBY DAN PLAIDS 44°45" Pol,.stet'/Cetto11 Doll lllfftr "llleti•11 .. 1U" e SPORTS STRIPES 44.45" P•lyn ttt"/Com11 e DENIM STRIPES - • VALUES TO $1.49 YARD MACH. WASH 99c .. . . YD. GROUP #4 S-T -R-E-T -C-H TERRY STRIPES VALUES TO $3.98 YARD ·--------· conON /NYLON 58" I 60" WIDE MACHINE WASH GROUP #5 UPHOLSTERY FABRIC,$- VALUES TO $5.98 y ARO LARQE ASSO RTMENT 54" WI DJ l y1rds for . R HOUSE OF FllBRICS • 111> ,always firs t qu_ality f ab rics , _ s ..... ~t ,, ... l 1l1tol •' S1" Oi•to Fw¥. __.Cotte ..... -14S·1516 Or••tefctl' M ... .- OT•n91thorp• •Mi H1rbor '•llettot1 -5J .. JJJ4 '""' HMOf Ptoa 17tti •t lritt•I hltN AM -141°5511 ~l11tH P..t. CY..-ter l • P•lwu1 •t Stt11kln IMllO P..t; -121°6JZJ H1111tlllf'9ll Ctttter-Ecli119•r 1t le•ch 11..,d ,~ Hu11th1gton l t•ch -lt7ol01) ' G9t4H .,."_ 111 1 1 lr•oU11itt.i l111•t to VoA'•l -lf0°1S42 - • n u • "'' >11""1 ' ' Vo • ... l I VI ' Ka .pe ·~ pa I~ cd co I l • j } r d rr 'L \\ \\ r b r· p 4 a ~ c • d ( ' I ' t I i • \ I ·I ' I ' • • • Lag~n~ Beaeh EDITION Teclay's Final N.Y. Stocks • VOL. 66, NO. 197, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS .. Newport's l(a ach Admits 1Hush Fund Role WASHINGTON (AP) -Herbert W. Kalmbach, President Nixon's former .personal lawyer from Newport Beach, acknowledged today be raised funds to pay the 'Original seven 'Vatergate de- Jendants but denied any prior knowl- edge or the Watergate breakin or its later coverup. Kalmbach's prepared testimooy \Vas made public while White House aide Richard A. l\foorc faced continued ques- tioning al the Senate"s televised Ragtime Wins Transpac Race Ragtime, a black-hulled sloop some sailors say looks like an elongated star boal, outduoled Windward Passage in a virtual match race over the last 50 miles to grab first-to-finish honors Sun- day in the 2,225-mile Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu. Sailing at 18 knots, Ragtin1e flashed across the finish line orf Diamond Head just four minutes and 31 seconds ahead of Windward Passage in one of the closest Transpac finishes on record. Head how she did it on page 18. Al ThealGe~ Assistant City Manager· Post Al Theal. Laguna Beach public works director, today 'vas named assistant city manager by outgoing City Manager 'Lawrence D. Rose. The position of assistant city manager was created hv the City Council last week as a preliminary step in l~ansf~r­ ring Rose's duties lo Thea! on an 1ntcr1m basis. RQse, under terms of an agreemc~t reached with the council, will depart his post this summer. ·. A statement released late this morn· ing by Rose read as follows : .. "I have today given the additional assignment of assistant city manager .to Director of Public Works Al Thea\. \Vh1le carrying on his regular duties a~ direct~r of public works. hC' .wil~.also assist me in di&charging my duties. Brisk Breezes Surprise Boat.s ()ff S. Coast Heavy winds off the south Orange Coast caught boaters by surprise Sunday and caused dozens of skippers from Dana Harbor to seek assistance. One boat "'ashed ashore on the San Clemente beach SUnday night. . . . An ta.foot cabin cruiser with. five persons aboard broke down while cruis- ing off the San Clemente shore: The pilot, John Alexander of Riverside, , !rad no anchor, and the buffeted ~t was caught up in the surf and carried ashore. set- tling down one half mile north of the pier at about 8 p.m. No ooe was hurt. but the group needed the assistance of lifeguards, and the boat was towed off the beach by land. Later Sunday night at about 11 p.m., the Harbor Partol sighted Dares fro m a 28-foorcabin cruiser I.bat bad run out of gas 200 yards off San Onofre beach. The boat had Jell Catalina !or Newport Beach earner that day and missed its target, according to a Ha r b or Patrolman. The patrol rescue boat towed the cruiser in to Dana Harbor, aniving about 1 a.m. The owners nllllle was noJ immediately available. · • The Harbor Patrol wu abo kept busy Sunday afternoon "1th 15 boal tows dur- ing a t\l'o-hoyr ptrlod. Most boats given a~~tance w~e sailboats with broken masts or rudders and lhose whose pjlots who couldn't navigate their vessels ln the 21).mlle-per-bour wind, a patrolman said. Mexican Train Hit MEXICALI. Mellco rA P) lnvcstlgaton s11y ~persons were lnjuffii ~ncn a late-running Jlassenger train plowtd Into a freight IPaln stopped to unload suppties near this border town • ... > Watergate investigation. Kalmbach was to follow him to the witness st.and. The scheduJe of witnesses· was left in some confusion when the committee took its mid-day recess with a suggestion that a witness other than the ocheduled Kalmbach might be called to follow Moore. . "\ Committee lawyen would not idenUfJ the poSstble surprise witness, although Terry Lenzer, the assistant counsel, had remarked in questioning Moore that Felix Rohatyn , a director of lntematiooal Telephone Ii Telegraph Corp., would be qLestioned subsequenUy. In his written statement. Kalmbach denied any participation in the plaruUng of campaign sabotage or unethical ac-. tivity. ...__ "My act.ions in the period irrunediately following the break-in which involved the raising of funds to provide for the legal defense of the Watergate defendants and for the support of lheir families were pron\pted in the belief that It \\'as proper and necessary to discharge what I assumed to be a moral obligation that had arisen in some manner unknown to me by reason of earlier even1s," Kalmbach said. t1be fact that I had been directed to undertake these actions by tbe No. 2 and No. 3 men on the \Vhite House. staff made it absolutely Incomprehensible to me that my actions in this regard could ha\'e ~ regarded in any ~'ay as i!Jlpropcr or unelhical," he snid Knlmbach"°'·as a trustee from January of 1969 to early February 1972 of an estimated $L6 million in surplus funds from Nixon's 1968 ca1npaign. Quoting Richard ~1. Nixon on th<' func· lion of congressional investigations, the chairman of lhe ~\1a1ergate c:ommlllct defended its inquiry as "crucla l to the ~·elCare of !he nation." Kalmbach !{'stifled he dispersed por· lions of thnt sum "on ly at the express ' • Mason Aide ' Will Head . lrljne Co. ~y GEORGE LEIDAL 01 Ille O.lly Pllt! Sl11f Irvine 'company ExcCutive Vice Presi- cfcnt Raymond L. "raison. 46. will serve as chief executive offjcer or the com· pany. Board Chairman John V. Newman announced today. He replaces \Villiam R. ~fason who died Saturday at the age or 54. "I know I speak for the entire Board of Oir~ . .;n.,poUq:-Wp. JellSe-,ol loss, .which so many understandably and touchiP.glj. Ware " Nf:wgpgn pid today. "Bui Mason left ~ind a legacy "'\thout parallel In his career field. Much Of this is visible on the land itseU. Some of it is Jess visible. "The strong, talented and creative management team he built in hi yean '\'ith us is but,. one example," the board chairman said. "Accordngly, Raymond L. Watson, as execut ive vice president or the Irvine Company, \fill be acting as chief ex- \ecutive officer for the finn. In this capacity. he will carry out all the ma)or~ corporate respoosibilitie~ required of that office," Newman concluded . A spokesman for the company said \VatSOll's title "remains executive vice president His responsibilities are oow enlarged, consistent with the Company's bylaws, to encompass those of the com· pany's chief executive officer," the spokesman concluded. The co1npany Board of Directors nex t meets on Aug. 13. It isn't kno\vn if a vacancy will remain on the board until the next stockholders meeting. In June, Ventura rancher Newman was elected cbairman of the 'board after a Claremont man, Howard Allen, was selected by stockholders to fill the vacan- cy created when rormer board chairman N. Loyall 1'1cLaren, 81 , stepped down. Allen, 47, is an executive of the South· em California Edison Company. ' Wat.son was named to the company board of directors in June of 1970 just two months before be was made ex- ecutive vice president of the firm h°e join- ed In 1960 as manager of the planning department . Jn 1964, Watson was elected vice presi· dent and in 1966 he assumed responsibility for lhe land development division. He became a senior vice president in January or 1968. A resident or Eastbluff, Watson, and (See WATSON, Page%) * * * Memo1·ial Rite s For Mr. Mason Tuesday, 7 A.M. A family spokesman said today a memorial , service will be read for William Ralph Muon late presid"'t of the Irvine Company at the Pacific View Memorial Parlt_chapel, Corooa del Mar, at . 7 o'clocl< Tuelday morning. Mr. Muon died Saip-day a[temoon. The family sugettted tMt memorial contribulloos inight be made to Oonge_ Empire Area Coundl ol Bay Scoaits of America, or to the Orang~ County Junior Achievement program, which were among 1'1r. ~faaon's principal charitable interests in rctcnt yeah, He served u Western Rtgional Presi- dent ol the Boy Soouts, and helped tstablilh the Junior Achievement ~ gram in Orlllll• COODlf. lottrmeot will be prtvate.. i KIDNAPER AND ONE OF HIS VICTIMS SLAIN TODAY AT THE BORDER PATROL CHECKPOINT Cl•r• LouiM Co ronado, SO, Slain With Shotgun. Legs Are Those of Her Abductor, Gary R.aph1el, 22 Auto ·Crimes Hit Laguna Rise i1t Thefts Alon.g Canyo1t Road Tied to Festival The first Laguna Beach art festival \l"eekend brought with it a flurry of crimes called "cttr clouts." the theft of valuables from locked or unlocked park- ed vehicles. • The method of operation involved in a ca r clout is nearly always tbe same, said Police Sgt. Nonn Babcock. He explained that the thief usually breaks the small wind window, opens it, rea~ insicte and opens the car door. With fesUval goers' cars lining dark stretches of Laguna. Canyon Road at night, lhe small time auto burglar has a fine selectioD oC ta rgets. Beachgoors, too, who park their vehi cles,. bidt: valuables under a seat or under a blanket arc favorite subjects. Sgt. Baboock said. Two ca.ses reported to Laguna Beach police th is 11·ee kend are typical : -Three out-of-town young \\'Om rn parked their auto at the vicinity of !JOO Cliff Drive . They left to go to tile beach , and upon their return found that $182 ln cash had been stolen from the car. The cash "'as conLained In a purse hid· den under the front seat of the car. Entry to the car ~'as made by forcing the ~·ind Y<indow, Police have no suspeds. '--Theft of stereo tape player ·and an F~1 radio was reported by Laguna Beach artist Sharon Ford of 430 Calliope Street, Laguna Beach. The vooman's unl!X!ked van was parked in the J!Ol block of Laguna canyon Road. The burglary was discovered late in the evening as the artist returned from a feslival. "They just tea r us up out there over Art Festiv y ls Record . Optimistic Weekend Arti.stl at Laguna Beach's summer art feaUvals, settling in for the six weeks of waiting, watching, and selling. ended their ftnt weekend Sunday on an op- timistic note. "lt's a little sl~w but we've got cash In our boxes," said Ro bi Crozier, a merchant of patchwork q u t I t s , watercolors, and pillows at the Sawdust Fesl1V11. Overcast weather wu blamed for smaher than mual openin« day turmuU: Frtda7 and Saturda,. but Sundly's 1umlune f111irtlie grounas. -- ArUsts al lbe Festival of Arts. thC grlJJddaddy ol. the festival tradition in the Art Colony, rtported generally brisk ules and a new Contemporary flavor. "ll loob like the public is tlttd or teateapet,'' Ray Friesz. ii IZ.yea1 • veteran "' the !..Uva!. said. "People in ame:raJ •re takltag to the at.tract, and • t • now you have to look hard to find the traditional painters here." OOter artists reported the same phenomenon at the fcs~ival, saying they felt this year's show represenu: the most significant change in personnel and style they've detected ln recent yt!ars. "The relallonship between the publi c and the artisu hu changed here," Prim said. "They give you an opinion whelhtr you want it or not." Top sellers in recMt yesirs have goo~ home •·ilh up to $30.000 from Festival of Artn:iles: Others 8\-enge-SB;OOO, H sales are good. and aome sell lesr. "It just dependl on what people want. Some,times things the other artists lhink is tops just don't sell ," one festival artist commented. Reactloos to the Sawdust Festivil, begun eight yots 110 U I purportedl y !See l'ESTIYAl.5-Pip II the \\'cckends. '" Babcock said. He ~1id the depar1ment \1·i!1 he 1n· crea .sing surveillance of all lhc hot spot!i'. · fo r c<ir bu rglars :ind hc-appealed to lhe puhhc to ale1 t the force if suspicious J){'rsons are observed lurkin~ ne<ir ;:iutos. \\'hile auto burglaries acc:ount for a large number of cnmcs reported to the pohcc, lhere 's no tally available on how (See CAR CLOUTS1 Page: %1 * * * Burglary Wave Strikes Laguna ·Complex, Church Burg laries of six Laguna Beach rcsid{'nccs or businesses -three of them in the same Jpartmcnt Cllmplcx and one at J church -v.·cre repo rted O\'Cr the \\'eekend to police . Police reported !hat unkno\1n pt•rsons had used a (:rip-type tool to twist the door knobs from residences at 232. 228 and 250 N. Co3Sl Jligh\\·ay someti me Fri- day night or Saturday morning. Polis:e saKf the apartments were apparently searched but • no property v.· a s discovered missing . In another incident. t~·o stained glass windows from an old Los Angeles mansk>n-were stolen in 3 burglary of a store room at 416 Oak Street. ('.rorge Guinn. a building contractor, told palice, the windows were valued at $750. The theft "':IS repoMed S3lurday . Two ste reo speakers valued at $$0 v.·ere !i'.tolen from St. P.tary's Episcopal Church, 423 Park Avcnut . In 3dditk>n. the burglar did ao 3ddilionat $S0 Cf11mare lo c?lurch doors which he forced open to reach the church office sometime between Satur- doy and Sunday. Okadas Nursery. 611 S. Const Highway, reported the theft of $3S in change by burglars "'ho broke throuRh a ~retn and Window to reach the oCfk:e 'SOmttlme ov1rnJght between Satutday and Sunday. • dlrtctloa of ll. R. lialdeman or q_lhe:rs clearly having the authority to direct such disbu1 5e1nen1s." Kalmbach earlier had denied that por· lions of 1hat fund "'ere used to help finance the purchase of La Casa Pacifica . Nixon's oceanside estate at San Clen1ente, Calif. Kalmbach \\'as also the principal fund raiser in the earlier stages or the (Se~ "'ATERGATE, Page %1 San Oi1ofre Gun Battle Fatal to Pair Dy JOllN \1ALTERZA \ CH 1 ... 01l1Y PJi.t Shoff The kidnaping of a middle-aged couple from their San Diego home early today ended in gunfire and death two hours later at the San Onofre Border Patrol checkpoint where the suspe<!t anti ~ o( his victims "'ere killed instantly. The apparently senseless bloodbath claimed the life of a middle-aged hou&e\l•ife and a shotgun wielding ab- ductor identified as Gary Raphael, 2Z, who died en route to a hospital The !hootin1 occurred at about a a.m. as a blue van o"ned by the dead v.·001an's husband pulled to the side ot . the permanent roadblock a few miles south of San Clemente. The only survivor of the shootlng was the dead \1·oman·s husband. John Charl's Coronado. 48, who was able to flet fr om the van "'hen the shooting started. The IY.'O hours of terror for the in- nocent couple began at about 6 a.m. to- day at their home in San Dieg o, police said. It ended ty,·o hours later \\•ith 1-frs. Clara Louise Coconado, 50, slain by a ~ingle shotgun blast to the face fired at point-blank range by lhe abductor. The assailant a fey,• moments later \.\'as slain by police gunfire directed to the enc!Med portion of the van. · Police. high11·ay patrolmen and other fn \'C'Stigators pieced together 1his account of !he ··unexplai nable'· incident which began shor1ly afte r daybreak: Raphael -a plumber d r cs s e d for v.·or k -"'as picked up by a C<l\\"Orker and immediat~ly dre11· ;i gun on his partner. i\loments later the gunm an and partner noticed the Coronado va n parked near lht coup le 's house and v.·cnt inside . Seconds later the un"·itting fellow plumber fled from the Co ron ado r residence. but the gu11man stayed inside, rousing the e<>upte and ordering them '\o dress. He ordered lhe Coronados into the v.an and drove around for a-few minutes in an attempt to find his first victim . f'ailing al that. Raphael then drove 10 a residence and bound his VIC· tims \\'ilh nooses around the neck, the n ordered Co ronado lo drive along the: • (Ste SLAYING, Page %) Orange Coast Weather Those I0\1' clouds \Yi~ng around in the morning lours through Tuesday, according to th!? "·eathcr service, with a chance thal southerly v.·inds from the desert ;veas,"i ll blow them away later In !he week. llighs of 69 arc expected at the beache'.'1, rising to '5 inland. INSIDE TODAY The Dt!ftn11t Department ho.! roncedtd 852i roidtd Cambodia11 targets btfore 1970 dtspite rar- fier pt•blic QS&crrions. See .story, Page 4. L .M .•• ,. 1 ••""" -,. C11itetlll• I C11uo11.. lf.14 C...ik1 U C .. H•H• II 0.elfl Neri~ f 1;111..-111 ..... • '"telllil-...t • ,l,..Me If.II "" "'' •tc.... ' ,..,~ '' ' , . Allll Le•t1 ' _,_ . ti11t+ta1t N,.... t Of" .... c-,., ' ,....... ......... 11 IWlt t .. n SIOl:ll Mll'teh , .. 11 TtltV'flltll II TloMi.n t Wfflfillr I W.-'t Mtwt 1)·1' . .,., ...... . . - HEADING IRVINE COMPANY Executive VP W1ts~n From Pqe l WATSON ... hii wife Elsie, have !cur children, Kathy, Brian, Uq and David. A native ol Seatt le. he attended UC Berkeley where he earned b o t h bachelor's and master's degrees in architecture and urban planning. He is a director of the East.er Seal Society of Orange County, is a registered architect and a Fellow or the American Institute of Architects. Watson has been guest lecturer at UC campuses in Riverside. lniine and Les Angeles as u·cll as USC. Watson is a member of the board ol visitors for the UCLA School of Architecture and Urban Planning. Frem Pqe 1 ' SLAYING ..• Route 405 Freeway and then up the San Diego Freeway. ln the Oceanside area, OJtonado was able to stir the interest ol. a highway patr1olman cruising along the freeway and the officer pulled up alongside, noticing that the couple were in trouble. He fell back and called for assistance. At that point, CHP Sgt. Jack Cook said, Coronado feigned a heart attack and hia kldnaper allowed the man lo pull lo the aide. Wllh the CHP olflC<r surveying the scene cauUously, Coronado wu replaced at the. wheel by his wi(e. '!be lllgbt heran ,_e again. By thed several~ CHP unit.! and several j>rowl cars from tbe Ocea.nstde Poliee Department jolne<lin the pursuiL "A> they •P!•<•t<hed the checkpoint here," Sgt. Cook said, "the ·Jddna-per made mention of the problem ·and predicted, 'now we're goon.a haVe some lun'." Patrolmen ofdered,.the van to the side of tbe multi-lane roadblock· and ap- proached the vehicle. "He' jerked open the door," a fellow patrol oUicial said, "and shouted for everyone to get out." Raphael immedlatedly ! i r e d his shotgun aiming the blr.st of pellets ~h the windshield of the van. C.Orqaado tumbled unhurt Crom the passenger side and as bis horrifled wife turned, the gunman shot her ln the face. Then, patrolmen said, the assailant began firing from the van toward of· ficers. 'Ibe exchange of gunfire lasted for several minutes. "1ben we held back and waited," Sgt. r.ook said. "It must have betn five minutes or so and no activity was noted from the van ... we were waiting for tear gas to atTive," he added . Then officers began creeping toward the bullet-tom truck and found both oc· cupanl!: dead. The assailant, dressed in th.ick, brown- rcanvas covera~s was on his back in ,the rear of the van, the shotgun nearby. Mrs. Coronado's body lay between the two front seats. Patrolmen took her shocked, grieving husband to a nearby patrol unit where he sat dazed for more than an hour, barely able to speak lo investigators. ' OU.N•I COAST LI DAILY PILOT Tllf Ol'M!M CN1t DAILY l'ILOT, wllh -le~ )I ~ ""' H_. .... .., 11 Jllll>lhllttl 1r¥' ,,,. Or....-Cae11 ~llf>lnf ~f11. a.p.. rile W!llD,,. •r• """"ltl'i«I, Morodt, "'•WOh l'rlllt,, fllr Collt 11111.._, H-1 99tdo, Hl#lllnv .... : .. Mfl.ll'-lt"' Ytlley, L9<1...,t 8H dl, lrvlM/llfdi.-c:tt 8flCI Stn c...-.-1•1 S.n J-r•.,...ll'ena. • •ktloi. •-0-.1 .. Ulen 11 ll"*IW.. ... ""'*"' -k>oldt,., floe prlnc:!Poll ""'blltl'llf'4 pltnt It 11 »J ~" .. , ltnilll, C•lt M•M~ C..H..,.-nlt, f)tH. Relatrt N. Wt-4 ,.,.. ......... ""'*"'* ~ J•c• A. C111,lty Vlot ,.,_IW!f tllf a-.t M..,.,..... n.,._,,. k •• ,11 ·-~ •• A. Mrtr1tlil11e ,.. ...... l411w Cfttrl•1 H'. L..tt Rlch1r4 P. Nill AM IUtftf MtNcll'lt Etlllltl't ._ __ 222 Fer•1t AYt nu• #1111"1' A.44,..H I P.O. h11 .... •1•12 --C.lt 111 .. 1 UI '#ell .. J'I"-" H...,.,, leectl: »JI H...,.., .......,,,, HllnfMetefl l..ai: 11'71 IOll(fl .,._...,.,, kn ~Mil.JOI Ntf'a SI~ a..1 "'~ mo'\ ..... ,.. - ClwJfW A......W., MJ.1•11 L.,... .... Al D•f:ZI 1•1 , ......... , .. , ... Ccilm!f!.'t, lf1J. Ortf!fe c.... l'llM!tMftl ~. fifl -""' '"""''"" •""'1•1 l'N1'ffr " tdwrtlMnwftll ..... _, . • '"""""'".. """*" ...... 11'11' ••• ., .,,.,111\f -· ._,,. NII _,.., N lill •t C.11 Mf.M, C.llfemle. k>Olcrlttltin .... canltf U.61 =IYJ lol' ~It U.U "*""WI ll>l!lfarr 1i. VM mtflW'r, . . . • 'Highest l1ategrit11' Eulogies -To-Bill-Maso Given ' "" Government officials cootlnued today to offer t>U logles to William l{.ilph Mason . Irvipc Company Prtsidenl who dJed Saturday or an apparent heart attack. Rona ld Caspers, chairman of the Orange County Board ol Supervisors said, '"The loss of Dill fl.fason to the Orange County community v.·ill be long felt by all those who knew and respected him and by the thousand s or Orange Countians \\'hose lives h.is visions and ef- forts have so signi/icanUy impacted. "Bill Mason V.'85 a man of the highest integrity and forthright h o n e s t y , ' ' Caspers said. "All of his business deal· ings were done In a spirit of fairness and opeMess. "His dreams for tbe future ol the Irvine Ranch \\'ere embodied with C'reativily and dedication," be said, ad- ding personal sympathy to 1i1rs. Mason infrequently seen ability to put complex matters In clear focus and to keep !ltrong adversaries dealing rea5004bly with each other." Rep. Andrew J, Hinshaw (R-Miaion Viejo) ca lled from the Ooor or the House of Representa:Uves today to express bis sym pathies. "Bill's dealh came as a shock to me - partly because he was at the height of his career and.always seemed to me to be In good health. "It is· going to be very difficult to replace Bill Mason. Technically he always appeared !o me to be very com- petent. "He understood not only what the goals of the company 11hould be, ht.it he un- derstood the functions of government. Even here in Washington, officials recognize the importance of the lrvine Company to land development in- novation. and his family . .,-•·r would attribute that reputation to BUI MaSOll's leadership," Congressman Hinshaw concluded. "We will greatly mi ss Bill Mason as a friend." Caspers concluded. ~ . •Ca:spers' remarkJ today follo\ved an outpouring of similar sympathies ex· pressed over the weekend by notables in- cluding State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter IR-Nev.']>Ort Beach), former Fifth District supervisor Alton E. A1\en ; UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G . Aldrich Jr.; mayors Donald Actclnnis of Newport Beach, John Burton ol Irvine and Jcutk Hammell of Costa 1ite5a, as well as Daily PHot publlsher Robert N. Weed. Speaking for the city ol Laguna Beach, Mayar Cllarltoo Boyd said. today, "The e.ity will mm this fme man ... The shock of Afr. Mason's death Sat~-· day at tbe age of 54 continued today. Mr. Ma!OO w1'9 joll)ed the Irvine Company In 1959 ""' been preslderlt of the land dev~ent and rlllChlng firm !in£e 1!166. May(]r Boyd remarked he was "taken aback'' by the news. "I had met with him only this ~st week un<ltr very favorable circumstances to discuss Laguna'• role in the (ooeslal) Ir'Vine development and highway transfer," Boyd said. "I had alwaya found him lo he gracious, alert and a most competent busines.s execut1ve," he concluded. A.Slemb(yman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach) said, "'il>JJ Is sincerely · a deep and personal loss to me ending an aMOda.Uoo that bas lasted for over a decade ID all the fields of my profe- both aoeially and 1n business. .. '.;'BIU'• .~P of the rrvjiie \:l>m· pany lrom an agrlculturai operallon lo a finely tuned land planning and O~· tJdMJ.' I ifivelopmeiit com~jr are ii6t- giiall<d lli tHe world. BiU M!""" had that Laguna .Planners Review Proposed Hill Projects Standards for planned residential development, grading and environmental impact report!:, particularly as they relate to the Machu Picchu and Sycamore Hills projects, will be reviewed tonight by the Laguna Beach Planning Commls~ion . The 7:30 p.m. study sessiog will be heid at city hall. According to Wayne Moody, City direc- lor of planning and development, the staff has several proposed standards relating t~ planned blllside a n d developments, grading and i mp ai; t reports .. Once the standard11 are reviewed and approved by the commission, they will be applied to any new development ii\_ the ci· ly, said Moody. f These would ioclude htachu Picchu, a 250-unit proposed development between Top of the World and P.fystic Hills and Sycamore Hill,, a 2.016-unit projec t in Laguna Canyoa. 'Other Items IA> he discussed by the commission Include annexatJon of land near Big Bend in Laguna C'.anyon, a specific plan for Rockledge By-the-Sea and revtew of the proposed open space and conservatioo eleinents of the General Plan. " Magazine Clainis GOP Fund Used For Nixon Home NEW YORK (UPI) -Some Republican campaign funds may have gone to help buy President Nixon 's estate at san Clemente. Time Magazine says In this week 's Issue. The magazine Sunday said Semite In· vesligatoB are loo king into what hap- pened to 1 sum ol Sl.6 million left over from the 1968 presidential campaign as well as "Public Institute" funds raiaed by Herbert Kalmbach, Nixon's peraonal attorney. "Thi! Senate Investigators ire strtowly probing the poAllblllly lhal Republican c•mpaign funds may have been used to htlp purchase Nixon's San Clemente tat.Ile," the magazine said. Time quoted Kalmbach as commenting on the report , "not a din,e of c1mpalgn moot)' went in - to San Clemtnte." The ma1az.tne said investlgt1tora are loollng for • brown leather satchel con· talolng reoord1 of ooe of two o! Kalmbach's "Public rnslltut.es", ( Kalmbach Previously An Unknown By United Pm1 lnlernatlonal Herbert W. Kalmbach never wanted to become a household word. A highly successful Newport Beach lawyer who liked to dabble in big time poliUcs, Kalmbach was all but unknown naUonally until his fund..nising efforta-m behalf of Richard M. Nixon drew him in- to the vortex of the Watergate scandal. Kalmbach, a sunlanoed and robust 51 , was the model of a respectable West Coast attorney. With an office on the -«th floor of a Los Angeles skyscraper and a · home in fashionable Newport Beach, Kalmbach had an impreulve list of clients which included the President of the United Stalea. Bui he ahunned publicity, pn!ferrlng lo remain In the background. Kalmbach did the complex legal work on Nixoa'I purchase of bis Sin Clemente, . Calif., estate, about 25 miles down the I Pacific Ocean beach from Kalmbach~s .r.,..;,· home. Kalmbadt also handled the drafting of Nlzon's will I But lt'w• his wort as'll polltteal tlmd- i rai!tl' lb.al...nve Kalmbach his unwanted faI!le. In both 1968 and 1972, he raised substantial sums of money on behalf of Nixon's presidential campaign, teaming up with Maurice H. Stans du ring the re- eleeUon campaign which was history's most successful poliUcal finance effort. Stans was rewarded for his t9l!J8 work by aµ appointment to the Nixon cablnot as commerce secretary. But Kalmbach avoided the national s?Jtlight until his name began being linked with the seamy side of political .spending. Testimony presented to the Senate Watergate Committee nam~··Kalmbach as the paymaster for pollticaf·saboteur Donald Segretti. Stans also s 11 id Kalmbach solicited from him funds which ultimately were used in an al· tempt to buy the silence of the original Watergate conspirators. On July 6, American Airlines disclosed it lllegally had contributed $55.000 to Nit· on's re-election effort upon Kalmbach's urging. Kalmbach, who was attorney for United Air Lines, asked for and received the Campaign contribution at a time when American was seeking lo .acquire Western Airlines, a move that required government approval. With Kalmbach coming before the Senate Watergate Committee, he was certaln to be · questioned closely on his Tund-raislng efforts, his connection with Segretti and reported moves to raise money for the Watergate defendants, and the financing and improvements of Nix- on's San Clemente estate. • Kalmbach was born in Port Huron, Mich., oh Oct. 19, 1921. He attended public schools there and served In World War IT as a Navy pilot. Alter the war he attended the University of Southern California, where he married Barbara Helen Forbush in June . \948. 1 · A year later .he entered the USC law school. where he became fast friends u·ilh Robert H. Finch. A decade later, in 1958, he helped "Finch win the lieutenant governorship of California and Finch in- troduct'd him to Nixon in 1964. The Kalmbachs ha ve two sons, Kurt and Kenneth. and a daughter. Lauren Ann. But for the la st two years, the fami· ly has seen liUle of Kalmba ch. "He's hardly ever at home, even on weekends," A:frs. Kalmbach says. "He always seems to be off traveling somewhere and 1 never "have a chance to dlscuso things with him." FromP .. el .CAR CLOUTS • • many theft& go unreported. the victims c:oosidertng'1hemselves sadder not wtll- lni to ha ssle maklng • report. ~ut Babcock encouraged all victims of thefts to rtparl tht crtme1. In thllt ~y .. pattcma of operation can bf.. established and the depa.rhnent can allocate man- powertftccordingly, Al.10, without a complete report of 1t~en Items. the 1toltn propeny If ever rte0vered may not be trlloeable to 111 rightful owner. I' • ' ' 01Uy l'llol Sltff l'lltle • .. 50 Foretgn Students • _Arriving .... Some 50 students fro1n Belgium, Austria. Sv.·itzerland, and Germany a.re schrouled to arrive in Orange County to- day for a month-long study visit. Karen Inge, one of the project's coordinalora for the Foreign St udy League. said the studen!s v.•iJI arrive from the Los Angeles Airport at Newporl ~Jarbor High around 7:30 p.m. They are being hosted by families lb Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel, Hun- • tlngton Beach, 'Corona dcl Mar Irvine Tustin, and Costa A:1esa. ' ' The group will meet for semirwrs on a variety of American topics each mornin1 at Newport H4rbor High School. Ecology, economy, social patterns and experimental lifestyles, health care and trends in land planning are a few of tM subjects to be covered. , .Trips lo Disneyland , 1he 1 Los Angeles C1v1c Center, Marineland, rind Lion Coun· try Safari are planned . . The students range in age frotn 16 to 25. They will have several Iree weekends lo spend with their host familiCs. SAWDUST FESTIVAL IS ONE OF FOUR UNDER WAY IN LAGUNA Poor Weather Marred Opening But Thing' Picked Up Sunday A home is still needed for two teenage boys, whose host family had to cancel to- day due to illness. "We've exhausted all our possibilities·" l\1rs. Inge said. '"\\le have a pla~ f~r them to sleep with a roof over their heads tempor arily." Huntington Policeman, Anyone interested in hosting one or both of the boys may call Gaylord or Karen Inge at 495-4934., Firemep, Save Boy, 3 From P"fle I FESTIVALS. A 3-year-old Capistrano Beach boy is , alive today thanks to the efforts of a Huntington Beach policeman and lv.'o firemen. Jason Rey. son of hfichael Rey, was found saturday afternoon floating face down in a swimming pool of a home he was visiting at 6111 Wintergreen Drive, From Pqe l WATERGATE • • President's 1972 campaign fqr re--elec· tion. He said he l'Ornpleted this assigilment tn the spring of 1972 and transferred "the original fund -raising records to the Finance Committee•for tbe·Re-election of the President. But be said .Nixon's finance chairman·, former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans, directed Kalmbach's secretary ''lo destroy my files which were wholly personal and supportive of the original files earlier transferred to the finance committee.'' "This action on my part .was intended to insure the continued confidentiality of the contacts that I had had with various contributors with whom I had dealt dur- ing this period," Kalmbach said. He said he has supplied to the Senate Watergate committee staff copies of his remaining records and smne bank. records. In this statement Kalmbach said he had never asked for immunity from pros- ecution nor indicated he would exercise his right to ~remain silent under the Fil'tk Amendment to the Constitution. "I'm here before you today to tell the truth about my activities during the j>Criod in ques tion," Kal mbach said. "It 18 not my purpose to testify for or against any individual," 24 Held at Concert ~N DIEGO (AP ) -Twenty.four spectators were arrested at a six-hour rock concert at old Balboa Stadium. authorities sa.ld. Huntington Beach. Officer Jim Aust in ~'as-the first -to ar- rive at the scene and he began im· mediale mouth·to-mouth resuscitation on the apparently life]~ littleJlOy. Firemen l\1arvin Murdock and Armon- do Gonzalez arrived at the home shortly after Austin and they administered ox· ygen to the child. According to the firemen, the little boy showed no signs of life. The three men decided not to wait for the ambulance which had been dispatch- ed, and put the child in Anstin's patrol car for the trip to Huntington Intercom- munity Hospital. The firemen said emergency treatment at the hospital was continued for 45 minutes before ·the boy began to show signs of reviving. He is curreqtly li.11.ed itt-"guarded con- dition" in the hospital's intensive care unit. Firemen said the child was apparently in the care of a 16-year-old baby sitter at the home. They said no one saw the tot fall into the pool and they do not "know how long he was in the water before he \\'as found. Man Held After Store Incident A 4(}.year-old Laguna Beach man was scheduled for a court arraignment today following an arrest at a liquor store where he allegedly threw a number of wine bottles about after a clerk refused to cash a check for him, Hermilo Aragon Aguilar of 255 Center Street was booked on suspicion of assault with a deadl y weapon following a fracus at the Spigot Liquor, 1800 S. Coast Highway late Saturday. Police Sgt. Norm Babcock said Aguilar h~ attefiiptcd to get a two party check cashed and when the clerk refused, the man allegedly became irate. No one was injured in the incident. "Wine bottles were apparenfly going everyw~ere," Babcock sald. • • moreJn!onnal alternaWve to the FestlvaJ or Arts, Varied from "the best yet," to "strained" to "not as interesting as lasi year." Several participants in the Laguna Ca~ yon show said they fell the hanci-builf booths are the most noteworthy part ol this year's show. Each exhibitor designs and builds his own. . "They're getting fancier and more im- aginative by the year," -a patter saki. Most enthusiastic about o p e n i n g weekend were participants in Art-A-Fair, which opened its seventh year at a new location, 59.S S. Coast Highway. , "It's just fabulous," Jean Spiry, one of the group's organii.ers, sakl: "It's beeo a long time coming but it IQO~ like OUf ' festival is finally ovef"the top.'' ?i-17:•-Spiry said Art·A-Fair artists repoi1ed . their biggest 9pe~ weeken4 sa les ever. , A party for some 300 participants. community leaders, and members of the press was held on Art-A-Fair's lower level deck Sunday night. Also opened this \\'eekend u·ere the an· nual All -California Invitational at the Laguna Beach Museum of Art and the Discovery Festival, Laguna's latest ad- dition to the art scene, at 364 N. Coast Highway. ·Neighborhood Officers Meet Officers of the Top of the World Neighborhood Association recently at· tended a county-wide day-long conferenoe for neighborhood groups sponsored by J bc Citizens Direction Finding Com- mission of Orange County. The program. a part of the UC Irvine extension dealt with the exchanging ideas and learning ways to participate, com- municate and operate a \•ital association. Attending from Top of the World were: Bill Parrish, president; Don Stfanklin. first vice preSident: Jerry Inmel, treasurer, and l\1nrgaret Ro u s e , secretary. 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I . -I , Saddlehaek , • EDITION • • VOL. 66, NO. 197, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES • • • • - • Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS NewpOrt's Kalmbach Admits Hush Fund Role WASHINGTON (AP) -Herbert W. Kalmbach, President Nlxoo's fonner personal lawyer from Newport Beach, acknowledged lOdaY he raised funds to pay the orlgina1 ·seven Watergate de- fendants but denied any prior kno-A•l- edge of the Watergate break-in or its later coverup. Kalmbach's prepared testimony was made public ~·hile \Vhite House aide ltlchard A. Moore faced continued ques- tioning at the Senate's t e I e v i s e d \Vatergate lnvestlgatlon. Kalmbach was to follow him to the witness stand. The schedule of witnesses was left In some contusion when the committee took its mid-day recess with a suggPStion that a witness other than the scheduled Kalmbach might be called to follow Moore. Committee lawyers would not identify the possible surprise \'.itness, although Terry Lenzcr, the assistant counsel, had remarked in questioning li.foore that Felix Rohatyq, a director oi lnt.emational Telephone ~ Telegraph C<>rp., would be qLestioned subseque;ntly. In his written statement, Kalmbar:h denied any partlcipaUon in the plannlng of campaign sabotage or unethical ac- tivity. "My ·acUoos in the period immediately foliowing the break-in \\'hlclt involved the raising of funds to provide !Of' the legal defense of the: \Vatergate defendants and for the support of tbelr families were ' . Replaces Jtlaso1i San Onofre Watson ·'to· Take Gu11 Battle Irvine Co. llellll FataltoPair By GEORGE LEIDAL Of IN O.llT l'lllt Stlrff Irvine Company Executive Vice Presi- dent Raymond L. Watson, 46, \viU Serve as chief executive officer of the com- pany, Board Chairman John V. Newman announced today. He replaces \Villiam R. Mason who died Saturday at the age of 54. By JOHN VALTERZA Of "" Dtlly ., ... lt.tf The kidnaping of a middle-aged couple from their San Diego borne early today ended in gunfire and death two OOurs later at the San Onofre Border Patrol checkpoint where the suspect and one of his victims were killed lnstanUy. The apparently senseless bloodbath claimed the life of a middle-aged housewile and a shotgun wielding ab- duct« ldelltilied u Gary Raphael, Z2, who ·dled en roole·to a boepilaL prompted· in the $eiief that It was proper and necessary to dlscharge what I assumed to be a moral obligation that bad arisen in some mMOer unkno\\·n to me by reason ol ear Iler e\•ents. ·• Kalmbach said. \" ••n.e fact that I had been di~lttd to undertake these actions by the No. 2 and No. 3 mef1 on the White ·House staff made it absolutely incornprebenslble to me that my ,actions in this regard oould have been regarded in any "·ay as imprtlper or -. unethicul,".he said. Kalmbach was a trustee frontJanuary (){ 196!) ttl early f'ebruary 1972 of an estimated Sl.6 million in surplus funds from Nixon ·s 1968 ('ampaign. Quoting Richard r..1. ~ixon on the func· tion of congress iona l investigations .. the cha innan of the '\'ateri;ate rommittce defended ils in{1uiry as "crU('ial to the "'elfare of the nation." Kalmbach testified he dispersed por- tions of that sum "only at the express din!tt~n of II . R. llnldcman or others clearly having the authority to direct such disbursements.'' Kaln1bach earlier had de.nit'<! I.hat por- tions or !hat fund \\i!rc used to help finance the purchase of La Casa Pacifica. Nixon's oceanside estate at San Cl('mcn1e. Kahnbach '<''as also the priuc1pal fund raiser in the earlier stages of the (See \\'A'fERGATE. Page ti • "I know I speak for the entire Board or Directors in noting our. deep sense of loss, which so many understandably and touchingly share," Newman said today. 'Ille !bQollns ~ at aboot ti a,lil. as a ·Wue-'VIB -'OWrR!d~by tbe-df!lrd'-• ·--aJf·• il:ll8iJ!i!l to· the -ol -tbe pel!IJBl/dtf' -k a lew miles south of ,Bon Clemente. "Bill :a.rason left behind a legacy without parallel in his career field . l\1uch o( ttlis is visible on the land itself. Some of it is less visible. . ''The strong'-' talented and creative management team he built in hi years \\'ith us is but one example," the board1 cjiairman said. "Accordngly, Raymond L. \Vatson, as executive vice president of the Irvine C.Ompany, will be acting as chief ex- ecutive officer for the firm. In this capacity, he will carry out all the major corporate respansibitities required of that office," Newman concluded. A spokesman for the company said \Vatson's tftle "remains executive vice president. ffis responsibilities are OO\V · ~enlarged, consistent \vilh the company's bylaws, to encompass those of the com- pany's chief executive officer," the HEADING IRVINE COMPANY Executive VP W1t1on spokesman concluded. responsibility for the land development The company Board of Directors next division. meets on Aug. 13. It isn't kno\\'Il if a He became a senior vice president in vacancy will remain on the board until January of 1968. _ the next stockholders meeting. A resid~nt of Eastb!uff. Watson, and tn June, Ventura ranchef Newman was .. his wife Elsie, have four children, Kathy, elected chainnan of the board after a Bryan, Lisa and David. CIB.remoot man, Howard Allen , was A native of Seattle, he attended UC selected by stockholders to fill the vacan-Berkeley ~here he earned b o t h Cy created when fonncr board chairman bacheior's and nuster's degrees in N. Loyall McLaren, 81, stepped down. architecture and urban planning. Allen, 47, ls an executive of the South-He ts a. director of the Easter Seal em California Edison Company. Society of Orange County, i3 a registered Watson was named to the company architect and a Fellow of the American boatd of directors in June of 1970 just Institute of Architects. tm, months before he was made ex-Watson has been guest lecturer at UC ec'litive vice president of the firm he join-campuses in Riverside, Irvine and Los ~d ln 1960 as manager of the planning Angeles as \\•ell as USC. Watson is 11 department~ member of the board of viii.tors tor tbe 1n l~. Watson \vas elected vice prcsi-UCLA School ol Architecture and· Urban· ~ and in 1966 he assum e d Planning. * * * * * *, Willillm Maso1i Give n .l l -r \ T r i bute of Area Officia ls ·-• Tbe 001'.._~vor o! the shooting was the dead wunan s husband, John Olarles Coronado, '8, who Was able to flee frorri the van when the sboollng ataned. The two hours of terror foT the in- nocent cwple began at about 6 a.m. to- day at their home in San Diego, police said. , It ended two hours Jater with Mrs. Clara Loul.le COronado, so, slain by a single !hMg\m blast to the lace fired al point-blimlt range by the abductor. The . assailant a ftw mcments later was slain by police 8'mM! directed to the enclosed portion of the van. Police, highwaf patrolmen and other investigators pieced together this account of the ' "unexplainable'' incident which began shortly after daybreak: Raphael -a plumber d r e s s e d for wort -was picked up by a coworker and immediately drew a gun on his partner. l\.toments later the gunnutn and partner noticed the c.oronaoo van parked near 'the.couple's house and went inside. Seconds later the unwitting feliow plumber fled from the C o r o n a d o residence, but the ~ stayed inside, rousing the eouple~-«lering them to dress. l He ordered the ados into the van and drove around for a few minutes in an attempt to fmd his first victim. Falling at fhat, Raphael t h e n dJOVe to a residence and bound his vic- tims with nooses around the neck, then ordered Coron3do to dTtve along the Boote 405 Fr .... ay and then up tbe San Diego Free.way. ' In the Oceanside area, OJrooado was able lo stir the interest of. a highway patrolman cruising along the freeway and the ol!lcer plllled up alongside, noticing that the couple were in trouble. He fell~t and ca!led for usistance. At that polnt, CHP Sgt. Jack Cook said, Coronado feigned a heart attack and his kidnaper allo\ted the man tp pull to the side. With the CHP officer surveying the (S.. SLAYING, Pase I) .. . Government officials continued today lo offer eulogies to William Ralph Mason. Irvine Company Preoident wbo died Salµ1day of an apparent heart attack. Ca!pen' remarks today followed an , outpouring .1 similar 1ympath1es ... Rag..:. me· w:ns Ri;Jiald Caspers, chairm'ln of the Ora~e County Board · ol Supervisors saiJI, "'Ille loSI ol Bill Mason to the Orange County community will be long !ell by all those who I.new and ~ him and by the thousands of Orange Countlans whose lives h1I visions lnCt ef- for!S hive so signillcanUy Impacted. •• aaon was man of the M&hest mtegrity and lorthrigh( & on ell y • ' ' ca.pm said. "All of his buliAds dell~ lngs' were done in a spirit of faimeas and opel!i)es.s. "llio drtoms !or the future ot tbe Irvine Ranch were embodied with truUvlty and dedicotlon," he said, ad· ding -•I 1)'11\ptlby to Mn. Muon •nd hla lamJly. · · ' "We "ill greatJy mlu Bill ?.fa.IOI\ as 1 frieod," Caspen conclllded. t \ pressed over the weekend by notables in-W " eluding state Sen. Dermis E. Carpenter (JV Newport Beach). fonnu F If th Tran.sp· ac Rnce Dlstrtct supervisor Alton E. Allen: UC . -""< Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrlclt Jr.: ,Ragtime,. a blact-hulied ~loop m•yora Donald Mcinnis of Ne"PO<I ..... Allen say loots llke an Beach, Jolin llurtoo ot Irvine ud Jack eJooialed atar boat, outdueled Hanunf!tt or Costa lttest, as well 41 Dally Windward Puap in a virtual Pilot pubUaher Robert N. Weed. mat.ch rice over the last so miles Speatlng !or the city of Lagqna Beach, to t1rab nnt-to-flnl&h honors Sun- Mayor Olarlton Boyd said today, "Tbe da~ln the 2~mlle .,._·-·cU!c dly wtll m!Js tblJ1ine man:"--1-;r. -"_,.. Tbe ahoct of Mr. M"""''' death Batur-~~ m Los-Angeles to day at the 1ge of 54 oontlnued 10daJ. Mr. Sallin& at 11 P>oll. Raatlme MalOO who joined tho lrvlne CGnrpany in flashed adoll the finish line of! 1919 has been prulcleot ol tho land Dlamood Head JUI\ lour mtnu"'° de•elopmenl and rl!ICblog firm --:= and II ......irabeod of Wlndwanl 1964. p-In ... ol the -Mayor Boyd mnarted ho wu ~·at'" Tr-flnilha .., r=rd. R<ad abact" by the news. "I bad met with bo• lbe dld tt.., Pli• ll him only ~ past -k under •trY (~N. l'ltil• ll er. KIDNAPER AND ,ONE OF HIS VICTIMS SLAIN TODAY AT THE BORDER PATROL CHECKPOINT · Cl1r1 Louise Coron1do, 50, Slain With Shotg't"· l e91 Are Those of Her Abductor, G1ry Raphael, 22 Transit Budget Approved Federal, State Grauts Finauce All But $2 Million By JACK BROBACK Of 1tMi Olli't Pltot Iliff A $17.5 million budget for 1973-74 ~·as adopted by the Orange County Transit District Board of Directors today. Of the total, $15.5 million will come from federal and state grants leaving $2 million to be financed by the district's 4:.5-<:ent tax rate. The new budget contrasts with the $3.9 million spendPJg program for 1972-73. But as transit board chaJnna\ Ralph Clark pointed out the district opqratlons have grown tremendously in J)e past year. "At this time last year we had only 10 employes and no buses on the streets. Today with 17 employes and (our part time workers we have dlal-a-r:lde in La Habra, we will have Sr5 buses operating on 31 routes by September," Clark stated. "'Ibis budget includes the construction of a headqu·arter&-maintenance facility in Garden Grove, the park·n-ride facility in Fullerton, a dial-a-ride exparuik>Jl pro- gram to other citie., an expansive cor· ridor study and the continued e1pansion LAFC Director To Add1·ess Meet At Saddlehack Richard T .. Tutner, uecutive officer ol the Local Agency Formation Commission (LAFC). "ill speak et the geoeral meetldt of the Saddlebaclc A r e a Coordinating Council (SACC) at 1:30 p.m.Wednesday. ¥ '1'ho! meeting, jn the Royal Sa'ings and Loan Building Iii ·El Toro. will be the first •ith...new president Ward 'l'hompoon in ~e.of the i-esponsibilities of LAFC is to determine tbe lq•lity o1 proposed apheru ol lnllucnce and annexations by local agenciea and cities. SACC recently atep))ed up elfort1 to _ oolldll)' mo.-In tho Saddlebact Va~ Jey In the t..e ol prupooed ophere ol lo- nuence expanaloos by Laguna Beach and San Juan Cap!Mnno. t of bus services \.\'ith 63 new vehicles ur· riving next spring," the chairman con- tinued. "\\·e "'ill accomplish all this '<''ilh the same 4.5-ccnt tax rate as last year." Clark continued. "this is because of our success in receiviniit· federal grants and our judicious use of our state sales tax revenue." Anticipated re\'enucs from federal and state funds includes $7.2 million federal fund s: $2 million properly tax revenue : $1 million frtlm bus fares, and $7.1 mjllion from the state sales tax on gasoline . Principal spending figures include : Salaries. and wages. $1.88 mil\ioh ; pro- fessional and special services lconsul- 1ant ) $1.12 million ; advertising. $466.254 : bus operations, $2.9 million a n d transportation and travel $67 .360. The growth of the district is indicated by the 31 routes now in operation which cover 1hc central. northern and \l.·eslern areas of the county. During the coming year service will be ex:tcndcd to i\lissi on \·iejo. El Toro and Jthcr south cowuy points. In other busiocss today, the district directors : -Heard Deputy County Coomel Ken- nard R. Smart declare that the director 's post formcrlly held by Derek fl1cWllinncy Fisliing Derby Set for Irvine Irvine's second annual all~ity fishing derby will be held from I a.m. to 2 p.m. July 21 at Bonita Canyon Re.'iervoir. City recreation coordinator f'~roomc Gayle said the event ls free to an city l'esldenls. - Competitive divisi003 will be set for pre-teens. teenagers and adults and prlzes will be awarded In each category. Each contestant must supply hl1 own bait, tackle and picnic lunch. Off-street parting will be provided near the mervoir. off Bonita Canyon Road. For entry details., call city l'tcl'!.aUon staff at 833-384-0. ' • • was vacant because of his convictioo or a felony. i\1c\Vhinney .... ;as found guilty of grand theft by a Superior Cou rt jury early thi!I: monlh in the Mile Square agricultural lease scandal. He has appealed lhc sentence and is fre<' on bail. Smart said the League of Cities 'Stfbuld appoint a nc'v member and th at lhc group is expccled to act July 26. The new director's term "'iii be only for the bal- ance that Mc\Vhinncy was to serve and '<''ill expire in \\\'O 1u1tl t1 half years. ~1exicau Trains }lit ~1EXI CALI . r..!exico I A P ) Investigators say 8.l pcrson!I 11ere injurl•d \\·hen a late-running passenger traln ploy,·ed into a rreight lrain stopped to unload supplies near this border town. Orange ' Coast • Weather Those low clouds will han g around in the morning hours through Tuesday, accord ing to th1: weather service, wilh a chance thi1t southerly winds from the desert areas 'A'ill blow them away later in lhc 'A'eek. High.'I of 69 nre expected at the beaches, rising to 75 inland. INSU)E TODAY Tht De ft •u1e Departn1en i hns conceded B52s roidtd Combodi'l1I torgel! before J 910 despite rar- lft r public asscrtlrnts. Set sto1 y, Page 4. L.M. '"" l Metlfl'I ,. C.•llltnle • C.M1Jl"9ill lt>M C~• '' C.'9ff--4 11 DHtl'I NtOt.. t Ill~ ... ·-I ·-~--.. J'ltl•..u 1•11 ,..,. .... lttc... • -.. r All~ L-.n • -. ,..,~ ....... 4 °'-c...., t l'tiN ...,,.. ... l"'1t , .. ,, t1'1ic• M1,_lh 1•11 T ... vttiM 11 --. WM...., 4 ._..,.~~It w.t•....... • • \ " , • .::i M~day, July lti, iq73 ---~~----- Herbert Kal11abaeh Newport Lawyer ;_ Shuns Publicity By United PrttJ l11ttroaUon11J Jlerbcrt W. Kalmbach never wanted 10 becQme a household word. · A highly successful Newport Beach lawyer who Uked to dabble in big time politics, Kalmbach was all but unknown naliOnally until his fund-raising efforts on behalf of Richard ~f. Nixon drew him in- to the vortex or the Watergate scandal. Kalmba ch, a suntanned and robust 51, wu the model ol a respectable We:il Coast attorney. With an of flee on the 44th floor of a Los Angeles skyscraper and a home in fashionable Newport Beach. Kalmbach had an impressive list of clients which included the Pre£idcnt of the United States. But he shunned publicity, preferring to remain in the background. Kalmbach did the complex legal work on Nixon's purchase of his San aemente, Calif., estate, abou~ 25 mUe~ down the Pacific Ocean beach from Kalmbach's own home. Kalmbach also handled the drafting of Nixon's will. But lt was his work as a political fund- raber that gave Kalmbach bis unwanted ' High Winds Catch Boats By Surprise H .. vy winds oil the '°"th Orange Coast caugbt boater1 by surprise Sunday and caused dozens of skippers from Dana Harbor to seek assistance. One boat wuhed ashore on the San Clemente· beaclt Swiday night. • An · IS-foot cabin cruiser with five peraans aboard broke down while cruis- ing oil the San Cementa shore. The pilot, Jolm Alexander ol Riverside, bad no -· and !he buffeted boat was caught up in the surf and earned ashore, set· tllng down one ball mile north of the pier at 1bout I p.m. No one was hurt, but the group needed the a-ance of lifeguards, and the boat was towed off the beach by land. Later Sunday nlght at about 11 p.m., the Harbor Partol sighted flares from I 2&-foot cabin cruiser that had nm out ol gas 2JO yanls of! San Onofre beach. The boat bad left Catalina for Newport Beocb earHer that day and missed Its target, accordlng to a Harbor Patrolman. The patrol rescue boat towed the cruiser in to Dana Harbor, arriving about 1 a.m. The owners name was not immediately available. The Harbor Patrol wu also kept bosy Sunday afternoon with 15 boat tows dur. ing a two-hour period. Most boats given assistance were sallboatl with broken masu or rudders ani:l thoee whose pilota 'Nho oouktn't navigate thelr ves.sels in the 20-mlle-per-bour wind, a patrolman said. Beach, Explosio1i . Burns Occupant, Damages House An explosion ripped through a small Huntington Beaeh home early Sunday mornlng, blowing the roof off the struc- ture and causing the occupant lo suffer bums over 40 percent of his body. Firemen said today Robert Guthrie, 25, of 310 Sixth St. told them he had di!COn· nected the gas hose to the house's wall heater. The gas from the heater ignHed, resuIUng in the explosion and fire. Fire.men estimated that *5,500 damage was caused by the blaze which they con· tained before It could spread to adjaooit -·~ Guthrie was taken to Pacifica ll06pilal for emersency treatment and ~·as transferred to the burn \\'&rd at Orange County l\fedical Center 1,1:hcre be is listed in stable condition today. OUN•I COAST 11 DAILY PILOT lfl.t Or•"ll" Coast DAILY l"ILDT, wllll w~Jdl .. Ul"lllln«I ,... fttws·"'·-· " ""'""'" by !tit OrAflVe '""" l"lllllt.r\"'9 ComN<'y. S-· ··~ -'ltions ••• """*"'*'· llfl-•y lll•OUOll Fr111,y, +or COii• ,1,1_,,, N,.._t •~di, H""llf1111IOll •fftllll'-ltln Y•ll•f, l&9\llU ._,., ll'Ylne/SMct'-Mct •nf I•~ Cfetntftlt/ lt11 Jij.., (1 .... tre,,._ A tln;lt •f9ltllot -'lliofl 11 """"""-' ltf\lrd.ly• -""""'""· flit ,..lflell!oll ••ttu1...i..e itllM it H Di lftll l•~ S!fM I, C.... M-. C1Hltt"lol, t»M. 11.a.,1 N. w.M .... loihfrl •1111 ,..,...,...,. J.,. 11. c ... ,1 • ., Y.C. l"..-olf"'' .... 0-r•I ,.,........, tliolf\01 IC1tY il Elllllw Tlrto111•• A. M11rplrti~• ,,_....,.Int l!lllllto Clio .. 01 H, l-. Ri~lrt•r4 '· N1tl .. l&lt'M M1M91 ... 'lflt9f1 ....... C•I• Mt1•: >JO WHt ··r '""' M""'110rl IH<ft: JUJ Mft-ho; ..... ,. L...-Bffcl'I: m ,......,, A_,. H\lllllrlol'orl lffcll: 1111J ._.. ~Ill lefl C~IJ: "5 i'ftrth II (.e"'N ll•I Ttil.,..... fn41 MMJ.11 C ... NW .w..ttllk1 641·1,71 ... c ................... , T•b••s 11 4f2-442f c...,..lflot, 1'7" o~ c.,t ~'-"1111 C-"Y· Nt -lltolM, lflw."9 ...... 9dllefloll -"" .. ---1"-h ..,. _, llt ~ •llflout .-i.1 ..... ,.. ..... " ~"'" -· ~ ct. ... flM\llOt .. 111 •I CMt~ ...,,_, C,.11""°'... love.tfl~ilofl tw tMrlw lt.U llltllfltl" W fl'lllll U,11 -llll'rl 11111119,., .,_.,MM ' U,M ,,_lfllY. '· fame. In both 1968 and J972, he raised substantial sums or money oo behalf or Nil:on's presidtntlal campaign, teaming up "'Ith Maurict H. Stans during the re. eled.ion campaign which was history's m011l tiUCcess!ul political llnance ellort, Stans was re~·arded tor hls 1968 work by an appointn1ent to the Nixon cabinet as commerce secretary. Dut Kalmbach avoided the national spotlight until his name began being linked with the seamy side of political spendlng. Testimony presented to the Senate Watergate Committee named Kalmbach as the paymaster. for political saboteur Donald Segrelti. Stans also said Kalmbach soltclted Crom him funds which ultimately were used In an at- tempt to buy the sllence or the original Watergate C()nsplrators. On July 6, American Airlines disclosed it illegally had contributed $M,OOO to Nix· on's rt-election effort upon Kalmbach's urging. Kalmbach, ~·ho ~·as attorney tor United Air Lines, asked for and received the campaign contribution at a time when American was seeking to acquire Western Airlines, a move that required government approval. With Kalmbach coming before the Senate Wa tergate Committee, he was certain lo be questioned Closely on his fund·raising errorts, his C()nnection with Segretti and reported mo•;es to raise money for the Watergate defendants, and the financing and lmprovementl ot Nix- on's San Clemente estate. Kalmbach was born in Port Huron, ltflch., on Oct. 19, 1921. He attended pubUc schools there and served in World War 11 as a Navy pllot. After the war he attended the University or Southern California,. where he married Barbara Helen Forbush in June, 1948. A year· later he entered the USC law school, where he became fut friends with Robert H. Finch. A decade later, in 1958, he helped Finch win the lieutenant governorship of Calltomla and Finch in- troduced him to Nixon in 1964. The Kalmbacha have two sons, Kurt and KeMelh, and a daughter, Lauren Ann. But for the last two years, the.fami· ly has seen little of Kalmbach. "He's hardly ever at home, even on weekends," Mn. Kalmbach says. "He always aeems to be off traveling somewhere and I never have a chance to dtacuss things with him." From Page J WATERGATE • • President's 1972 campaign for re-elec- tlon. He said he completed this assignment in the" spring or 1972 and transferred the original fwtd·raislng records to the Finance Committee 'for the Re-election of the President\. But he said Nixon'' finance chairman, former Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans, directed Kalmb3cb's secretary "lo destroy my files which were wholly personal and supportive or the original files earJJer transferred to the finance co,inmittee." "This action on my part was intended to insure the continued confidentiality of the contacts that I had had Y.~th varlous cont ributors .,..·ith whom I had dealt dur· ing th.is period," Kalmbach said. He said he has supplied to the Senate \\'atergate committee staff copies of his remaining records and some bank records. In this statement Kalmbach said he had never asked ror immunity from pros- ecution nor indicaled he ":ould exercise his right to remain silent under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitutioo. "f'm here before you today to tell the troth about my activities during the period in question," Kalmbach said. "It is not my purpose to lesti(y for or against any individual." 200,000 People Break All OC Fair ' Records hlore than 200,000 persons flocked to the 1973 Orange County Fair in Costa ~lesa July 6 to 15. breaking all at- tendRnce rewrds of the 81).year-old event. The ne"' nu1rk or 208.974 exceeds last yl.'ar's count of J49.l84 by 59.~90 for an nuenditncc increase of approximately 44 per~nl . falr f.fnnager James E. Porttrfleld s11id today that the turnstile count for the lo.day fair exceeded his wildest ex· pectations by nearly 9,000. Organizers of the fair had originally hoped to attract 200.000 fair visitors but it became apparent during the first few days lhat the "innglc nurnbcr" "wld be e<llps.:d . Th<! fair recorded the hlghest single; day 1111endance figure In hl!ttOry on Saturdny. the ~d day of the fair , with 21,283 Md the people count kept zooming. according tot,erfield. Portcrlleld credits the "*P'S gal• system ado this y,ar with much of the SUct"!ss. '\Ye made sure that all the entert:ilnmcnl WllS rree once the people bad paid admls8ion." said l'orterlielrl who brought attractions !uch as-Pele f''oontaln, U!s Brown and tht original Coasters to the Costa ~Jes11 falrground.5. Last year rnototcyc:\e racing f1U11 C()m· 11'8 to the faltarounds ror lhe evtry· Frld>y·nlght apeedw•y c:oni..ta fOlllld them~lvca paying thrte tltnea, once for parking, again to get lnalde lhe fair, and a thlrd ume to wa~ lbe races. - / Docto1~s Say Nixon Still Improving WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pre!ident Nixon continued to show imprO\'em~nt today in his battle with vi t'&! prteW"nonla . his doctors said. "He is progressing satisfactorily.'' reported Dr. Sol Kati, pulmonary specialist from Georgeto1vn Unll'ersily School Qf 1.1edJcine, one of the tearn or doct()!"S treating the President zr! Bethesda Nava! Hospital. Whlte House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Nixon's progress is such t.hal he will be able to mee t as scheduled with three .state visitors in the next two weeks -the Shah of Iran on July 24, Australia Prime Atinlster Gough \'lh.ltlam on July 30 and Japanese Prime A!inisler Takuei Tanaka July 31-Aug. 1. ' Tee.a Cetater Opens Nixon's spirits were aescribed as "just fine" and Katz predicted he may be able to leave the hospital by Thursday or Fri- day. Jrvine School on Sand Canyon Avenue is destined to cru1nble before a wrecker's ball, school district oifi· cials say, But, lor the summer, it's a perfect place for city teens to gather on Friday nights for an ar- ray of activities including pinball being enjoyed here by Peggy )'oung, Bob Rhodes, Cris Lauster and \Nels Tahti. l\liss Young and Tahti are teen direc· tors of the center city officials hope will be respon- sive to needs oi teenagers while encouraging re- sponsibility. "J-le 's vivacious, loquacious -an ex-• cellent patient," said Katz. ~ Nixon's doctors said they "\\'ere having a tough time convincing him-he had to slow down and curtail .his schedule. His v.·ork load is said to be only about a quarter of normal because of the illness. From Page J MASON ... ' favorable circumstances to discuss Lagtma's role in the (coastal) Irvine develoPni.ent and highway transfer,"• Boyd said. "l had always found him to be gracious, alert and a most competent business executive," he concluded. Assemblyman Robert Badham (R- Newport Beach) said, "This is sincerely a deep and personal loss to me ending an association that has lasted for over a decade in all the fields of my profe.!SiOn both socially and In business. "Bill's le8dership of the Irvine Corn- . pany from an agricultural operation to a finely tuned land planning and apera· tional development company are une- qualled in the world. Bill Mason had that infrequently seen ability to put C()mplex matters in clear focus and to keep strong adversaries dealing reasonably with each other." Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw (R-Mission Viejo) called from the floor ol the House of Representatives today to ~press his sympathJes. "Bill's dt.ath came as a shock to me - partly becauoe be was at ·the height of his career and always seemed to me to be In good health. "It is going to be very difficult to replace Btll ~1asoo . Technically be always appeared to me to be very com- petent. "He wtderstood not only what the goals ot the company should be, but he un· derstood the functions of government. Even here in Washington, officia)s recogni:i:e the importance of the Irvine Company to land development in· novation. •·1 would attribute that reputation to ~ill llfaSOll's leadership," Congressman Hinshaw C()ncluded. fl Memorial Rites For Mr. Mason Tuesday, 7 A.M. A famlly spokesman said today a memorial service v.·ill be read for \ViUiam Ralph r.1ason late president of the Irvine Ccrnpany at the Pacific View ~femori<il Park chapel, Corona del Jl.1ar, at 7 o'clock Tuesday morning. ~Ir. Mason Qled Saturday afternoon. The family suggested that memorial cnntributions might be mado to Orange Empire Area Council o! Boy Scouts of America, or to the Orange County Junior Achievement program, \li'hich v.·ere among Mr. ~Jason's principal charitable interests in recent years. 11e served os \Vestern Regional Pres!· dent of lhe Boy Scouts, and helped establish the Junior Ac.hieven1ent pro- sram in Orange County. lntern1ent will be private. Laguna Pla1mers Review Proposed ~ill Projects Standards for planned residential development, grading and environmenial irnpt1ct reports. pArllr.ularly as they relate to the r.tachu Picchu and S)'Camore Hills projecl!!, \\111 be re:vle\\·ed tonlght by the l.flgUM Beach PJanning CommiS$lon . The 7:30 p.m. study session ""Ill be held at city Mll. Acrordlng to Wayne ~1oody, cily direc- tor of plannlng and development., the ~raff has several Pn>rwed slandards relAting to planned hillside an d developments. gr11dlni and I m p a c t repor1s . Once the standard~ are rev!ev.'ed 11nd :ipprovcd by the comm\Sllioo, tht>y wilt be. applied tb Jlny nc"' development In the cl· ty, said r.toody. These would Include ~fAChu Plccho, A 1'>-unit proposed dtvelopmenl between 'top of th• World and M)'11lc lllils •nd S)•c:ruuore Hills. a 2.01&-unlt pro}ft<:t in U!gunA Can)ut.,. 50 .Foreign Students Nixon av.'oke at 8 a.n1 . after a good night's sleep, Dr. Walter Tkach said. The President was given for chest ther3'1y lreatments Sunday. · Arrive on Coast Today The treatment re s ulted in ''considerable improvement in ·his chest congestion and chest discomfort is ooW at a minimum," Tkach said in his morn- ing medical bu1letin. " Some 50 students from Belgium. Austria, Swllzerland, and Germany are scheduled to arrive in Orange County to- day for a mooth·long study visit. Prom Page J SLAYING ... scene cautiously, Coronado was replaced at the wheel by his wife. The flight began once again. By then several more CHP units and several prowl cars from the ~anside Police Deparbnent joined in the pursuit. "As they approached the checkpoint here," Sgt. Cook said, "the kidnaper made mention of the problem and predicted, 'now we're gonna have some fun '." Patrolmen ordered tbe van to the side of the multi-lane roadblock and ap- proached the vehicle. "He jerked open the door," a tel101v patrol official said, "and shouted for everyone to get out." Raphael immediatedly f i r ~ d his shotgun aiming the blast of pellets through the windshield of the van. Coronado tuml1led unhurt from the passenger side and as his horrified wife turned, the gunman shot her in the face. Then, patrolmen said, lhe assailant began firing from the van toward of- ficers. • The exchange or gunfire la~ed for several minutes. " "Then we held back and waited," Sgt. Cook said. . ·· "It must have beeit' five minutes or so and DO activity was noted from the van ... ~·e were waiting for tear gas to arrive,'1 he added. Then officers began ·creeping toward the bullet·torn truck and found both oc- cupants dead. The assailant, dres!ed in thick, brown- canvas coveralls was on his back in the rear of the van, the shGlgun nearby. ~frs. Coronado's body lay between the tv.-o front seats. · Patrolmen took her shocked, grieving husband to a nearby patrol unit "\\'here he sat dazed for more than an hour, barely able to ak to invesligalors. The en · shootout took place in a con· gested, ·on of the dl~kpoint, with traffic o · g on the busy freeway at one side a · ge trucks and tractors parked at th ·eigh station and in· spection area lo the other. , Karen Inge. one of the project's coordinators for lhe Foreign ·Study League, said the students will arrive from the Los Angeles Airport at Newport I-Iarbor High around 7:30 p.m. They arc being hosted by families in l..aguna Beach, Laguna Niguel, Jiu11- fingto11 Beach, Corona del l\far, Irvine, Tustin, and Costa Mesa. The group ~·HJ meet for seminars on a variety of Ameri can topics each morning at Newport !·!arbor ~ligh School. Ecology , economy, social patterns and experimental lifestyles, health care and trends in land plaming are a few of the subjects to be covered. Trips to Disneyland, the ~ Angeles Civic Center, Marineland, and Llon Coun- try Safari are planned. The students range in age from 16 to 25. They will have several free weekends to spend with their host families. A home is still needed for two teenage boys, whose host family had to cancel ~ day due to illniss. "We've exhausted all our possibilities," Mrs. Inge said. "\Ve have a place for them to sleep with a roof over the ir heads temporarily." Anyooe interested in hosting one or both of the boys may call Gaylord or Karen Inge at 495-4934. Heroic Milkman • Receives Medul; Saved Six Lives Jack Wilhite has been awarded the 1973 Pasteur Meda l for heroism from the Milk Industry Foundation for saving four peo- ple and two dogs from a fire at an Irvine home. \Vilhite is a distributot tor Adohr Farms. a milk company. His n1edal ~·as presentOO at recent ceremonies in Santa Ana. While on his milk route, \Vilhite reportedly noticed a fire in a garage C()ll- nected to a home In Irvine at 5 a.m. Oct. 11. 1972. He broke down a garage door, released two dogs and then awoke a ~·oman, her daughter and two grandchildren and directed them to safe- ty, an Adohr Farms oCiicial said, Pasteur Medals are awarded annually by the Foundation. The therapy did cause the President 10 experience some fatigue to the polnt where he was given mild pain killers for relief, 'I;kach said. In general, Nixon had a good day on S•inday. He had a hearty dinner 6f seafood, served about 6: 15 p.m. The President retired after his last chest therapy about 9 p.m. and slept ~dly throughout most of the nishl. Tkach said. This sharply contrasted with his fi rst night at the hospital Thursday "'hen he had a n1ru1 four hours sleep. The chest inhalation exercise was ad· ministered by Sue A. Wi 11 i ams . pulmonary nurse specialist assigned to the hospital's chest clinic. 3 Auto Thieves Get Jail Terms " Three Navy men who admitted stealin;: rour luxury autos from a ~ingtfft Beach dealer have been sent to 60- day terms in Orange County Ja1 . ' Superior Cour.t Judge James Turne!"· ordered identical jail time for Carlos Dec Carter, 19, Johnnie Milt.on· Jr., 23, a1\d Anthony 1\1. Simmons, 18, after the trlO, all fro m Long Beach Naval StatiOD, pleaded guilty to auto theft. ' 1 Restitution was set at $750 for Catrer and $500 each for ~lilton and Simmon.f. All three will serve three years p'r'r bation, Judge Turner ruled. '· It ~·as successfully alleged that the t'lilo "'as irivolved in the theft of four I~ e model LinColn Cootinenlal A1ark IV atHO! from Gustafson Lincoin-:P.1ercury, 16$00 Beach Blvd ., Hwttington Beach. The ca,r.s 111ere recovered. .Driver Loses Life .. .. ~ In F1·eeway Smashup Ruben Gonzales, 30, or Bellflower, was killed early today on the San Gabriel Free1vay just south of Ka tell a A venue near Los Alamitos. The Cal!fomia 1-figh"'ay Patrol said it has not been determined what caused the man to lose control of his northbound car ~·hlch they estimated '""'as traveling at a high rate or speed. Gonzales was dead on aM"ival at Los Alamitos General Hospital at 4 a.m. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • • • RAISED ELSEWHERE • Adn1lrol NO-DEFROSTING REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER ALL THESE GREAT Athwl,.1,FEATURES • r1111 Width "'8ookt1st" rrHzer Door Sll llf -lor lnstont ·~•ll•blllty. • Du•! Ttml)trlhlft Contro1,- Hltct fht r11ht t9mpt<Olu,.. fot •1th MCUon, • Twin "°'"l•!n Crispe,.-kHps INit, wgfl1t>IH 11rdtn fr.th. • [.dni Ura• Rtlrlrtr•IOI' ~ Sh•IW's-ho!ds mn tall quan bottl1sl Adnslral. M.ol NT 11)4 No dtlrodlnt r•lri••r1t.r 111tle~1 wltlrt Arttlc Air flow 1y1t.m f6f full c~l· sirculall•l'I. SLIMLINE REFRIGERATDa M .. I C11JJ • run wictm fl'ffttr ctln' • Wk»RtnCf l tmptrllUN Conlrol ALL THIS s2599s FOR ONLY , ""' V11U1I Dtlrott·timw Jl!dlc:ltor • t'Xlrti 0H9 Door lhtlf • rull Wldtn TMn·M•rt Chlli9r0f•-15995 M1mber of .C1llfor"l1'1 l•rt"t Cooporatlvo Buying 90 DAY CASH Group Wlfh The WlfH AfflOYlt • Volumt lvyl"f Cl.nil ,.,.,,.ao_,•-'•wor of 110 Stor"Q] ~ ...... ,..... -~ 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Costa Mesa -Phone 548·7788 ' • • ., " . ; Huntington Bea~h Fountain -Valle , . VOL 66, NO. 197, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES .--< ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA • Today's Final N.Y. Stooks MONDAY, JULY 16, 1973 TEN CENTS Transit Board Okays $17 .5 Million Budget By JACK BROBACK Of Ille O.llY "ll•t St1H A J17.5 million budget for 1973-74 was adopted by the Orange County Transit District Board of Direetors today. Or the total , $15.5 million will come from federal and state grants leaving $2 million to be financed by the district's 4.S-Cent tax rate. The new buciget contrasts \•:ilh the $3.9 million spending program for 1972·73. But as transit board chairn1an Ralph Clark pointed out the district operations have grown tremendously in J\e paJt year. ''At this time la.st year we had only IO employes and no buses on the streets. Today with 17 employes and four part time workers we have dial-a·rlde ln La Habra, we will have 55 buses operating on 31 routes by September," Clark stated. "Th.is budget includes the construction or a headquarters-maintenance facility in Garden Grqve, the park-n-ride facility in Fullerton, a diaJ·a-ride expansion pro- gram lo other cities, an expansive cor- ridor study and the continued expansion of bus services with 63 new vehicles ar- riving next f pring," the chairman con- tinued. "We will acromplish all this with the same 4.5-<:ent tax rate as last year," Clark continued, "this is because of our success in receiving feder al grants aiid our judicious use of our state sales tax revenue." ' 'For Posterity' Nixon's Offices· Bugged-Ex-Aide \\IASHINGTON (,\Pl -A rorm('r presidential aide testified loday that Presldent NlX'On had listening devices in- stalled in his oHices and on his telephones at 1he \Vhite House. the Ex- ecutive Office Building and Camp David , Md. Alexander P. Butterfield, a surprise ' Doctor Reports President Still Sliotvs Progress 1\·itness at the Senate's t e 1 e vi s c d \\lntcrgatc hearings. said lhc tape recording equipment \vas inslalled by the Secret Service, acting. on authority relayed from the President. "There '''as no doublt in my mind that they were insta1led to record things for posterity, for the Nixon Library," said Butterfield, now 8.dminist rator of ~the Federal Aviation. Administration. "Tbe President wai,. very conscious of that kind of thing ... " Butterfield said the devices were in- stalled on the authority of the ~President "by \\·ay of" H. R. Haldeman and La\vrence Higby, an aide to the former \V hite House chief of staff. Butterfield said the equipment \\'as in· WASltJNGTO N (U PI ) -President st alled ahout three years ago. Nixon continued to sho1v i1nproven1ent Butterfield said as far as he kno"·s Anticipated revenues from federal and state fund s includes $7.2 million federal funds; $2 million property tax revenUe ; $1 million from bus fares, and $7.l mi llion from the state sales tu on gasoline. Principal spending figures include : Salaries, and "'age.s. $1.88 million ; pro- fessional and special services (consul- tant) $1.12 million; advertising, $466,254: bus operations. $2.9 million a n d transportation and traVel $67 .360. ' The gro~·th of the district is indicated by the 31 roule! oo~· in operation y.·hich cove r the central, northern and ~'estern areas of the county. During lhe coming year sen•ice y.·ill be extended to ~tisslon Viejo. El Toro and ..>ther south COU11ty points . In other ~usiness today. the di strict directors'. -Heard Deputy County Counsel Ken· nttrd It Smart d~cla re that 1he director's post formcrlly held by Derck ~1c\Vh 1nncy .' today in his bal!le ,,·ith vi ral pneumonia, tapes of presidential ronversalions dating ,. his doctors said. hack to the summer or 1970 remain "He is progressing satisfactorily." ava ilable. KIDNAPER AND ONE OF HIS VIC TIMS SLAIN TODAY AT THE BORDER PATROL CHECKPOINT Clara Louise Coronado, 50, Slain With Shotgun. Legs Are Those of Her: Abductor, Gary Raphael, 22 reported Dr. Sol Katz, pulmonary He said the equipment actual~ \vas in- specialist from Gcorgetoun University stalled by the technical security division School of Medicine, one of the learn of of the Secret Service. Butterfield said he doctors treating the President al served during his White House days as Bethfsda Naval Ilospital. liaison man with the Secret Sen:ice, and Irvine Vice President White House Press Secretary Ronald therefore artanged for the installations. Watson Takes TotJ Post L. Ziegler said Nixon's progress is such He said there were tape recording that he will be able to meet as scheduled devices in the Oval Office of the Presi- with three state visitors in the next two dent and in Nixon's office at lhe Ex· weeks -the Shah of Iran on July 24. ecutive Office Building. lie said they Australia Prime ~1inistsr Gough Whitlam ,rere activated au ton1atica lly. on July 30 and J apanese Prime Minister Butterfield said there also \1•cre Takuei Tanaka Ju!y 31-Aug. I. recording devices on Nixon's telephones By GEORGE LEIDAL , Of !he DlilJ Pilol S!1ff Nixon's spirits were aescribcd as "just in thos·e offices, in the Lincoln silting fine" and Katz predicted he may be able rooin of the \Vh.ile House, and at the to leave !be hospita l by Thursday or Fri-President 's persona l cahin at Camp Irvine Con1pany Executive Vi ce PrC'si- dent Raymond L. \Vatson , ~6. \\'ill serve as chief executive officer of the coin-day. David. "He's vivacious. loquacious -an ex-Bo d Ch · J h y N Butterfield said the l'\IW'lple "'ho had pany, ar airman o n . e1vman cellent pati ent,'' said Katz. ,.~ Nix on's doctors said they were having knowledge of the listening devices in-announced today: He replaces \Villiam R. a tough time convincing him he had to eluded the President, Haldeman, Higby Mason y..·ho died .Saturday at the age of slow down and curtail his schedule. His and the Secret Service officii.ls involved. 54. work load is said to be Only about'~a --He-sald he did not think-either John-0. m-i:=_ l " f th ti Bo d f Ehrl'chrn f to ·d t N' · 1 KIKJW spea1; or e en re at 0 quarter of nonnal because of the illness. 1 an, a ormer p a1 e o 1xon, 0. \n . d Nixon awoke al 8 a.m. after a good or John W. Dean. Ill, the fired White 1rectors noting our eep sense of night's sleep, Dr. Walter Tkach said. The House rounsel , knew of the recording loss, which so many understandably and Presidenl was giv.en for chest therapy equipment. • ·--·-touchingly share,'' Newman said today. treatments Sunday. Butterfield, who said he took the stand ,"Bill 1'.lason left behind a legag The treatment resulted in \l'ith on!y thre_e hours' notice, was called \l'ilhoot parallel in his career field . ~1uch "considerable improvement in his chest to 1est1fy pnor to the scheduled ~p-of th is is visible on th land itself So COl)gestion and chest discomfort is now pearancc of Herbert W. Kalm~ach, Nix-e · me at 1a minimum," Titach said in his morn-on's former personal lawyer. of ii is less visible. ing medical bulletin. .~tear1while. in New \'ark today, former "The strOng, talented and creative The therapy did cause the President In ;\tty. Gen. John N. l\1ilchell and rormer mMagement learn he built in hi yea r-. experience some fatigue to the point Commerce Secretary ~lau rfce fl . Stans 11·ith us is but one example." the bo.1rd y.·here he "'as given mild pain killers for claimed thttt the "carnival atmosphere'" chairman said . relief, Tk3ch said. of the \Vatergate hearings-\Vould 1nake it ";\ccordngly. Raymond L. \\'atson. as tn gcnerttl. Nixpn had a good day on impossible for them to get fair trial s executive vice pre.liderit of the frvine S'Jnday. Ile had a hearty dinner of here on charges involving a $200,000 con· Coinpany. will be actiog as chief ex- seafood, served about 6: 15 p.m. tribution to President Nixon's re-elec tion ccuti\'e ofllcer for the firm. Jn thi s The President retired after his last campaign. capacity, he will carry out all the major , chest therapy about 9 p.m. and slept corporate responsibilities requ ired of that soWldly throughout most of the night, ffi " N lud d Tkach said. This sharply cootruted with 0 ice, ewman cone e · · his firsl night at the hospital Thursday A spokesman for the company said ~when be had a fitful rour hours sleep. Ragtime Wins Watson 's title '<remains executive vice The chest inhalation exerci~ was ad-president. His responsibilities are no \v ministered by Sue A. W l 11 i ams , enlarged, consistent wHh the company's oulmonary nurse specialist ~ to Transpac Race bylaws, lo encompass those or the com-ihe 00,pital's .chest clln¥:. pany's chief eXeeutive officer," the • $15,00Q Boat Stolen Fro1i1'Sunset Beach "11agt!m•, blad<"'11Ued--.1oop 1pok6Slllall--OOl1clllde4.- some sailors say look! like an The company Board of Directors next elongated star boat, outduelcd meets on Aug. 13. 11 lsn'l known if a Windward Passage in a virtual vacancy wUI rtmaln on the board unt il match race over the last 50 miles the next stockholders meeting. t& grab first-lo-finish honors Sun-Jn June, Ventura rancher Newman \11as A bnat valued by its owner at SlS.000 ~ ,_,,as stolen during ttie weekend from the Sunset Aquati?'f'ark in the Sunset Beach area . Oriafll(C County Sherirf's officers said. day in the 2.225-mile Transpacific elected chairman of the board afler a Yacht Raet rrom Los Angela to Claremont man, ffoward Allen. Y.'as Honolulu. selected by stockholders to fill the \•acan- SaUing at 11 knots. ttagtime cy created when fortn<'r board chairmAn nashed acroM the finish fine of( N. Loyall ~tcLaren, 81. stepped dO\\'n. Diamond I lead just four minutes' Allen, 47, is an executive cf the South· ~puties snld the loss of the a1.root in· board power 6oat wat ttpar1ed by owner Douglas ~ore 'KcsStnlch, 36. of Downey. Officers said the thief ap- parently had a key 10 security gates tur· rounding the mooring ma. and 31 M!COl'lds ahead of Windward em Celifom.ia Edison Cotnpan y. Passage in one or the closest watSon was named to the com pansi Transpac rinishes on record. Read boltd of directors Jn June of 1!170 just hOw she did it oo page 18. two months btfore he was made ex- e<uU .. vice pmident ol the firm he join- HEADING IRVINE COMPANY Executive VP Watson cd in 19W as manager or the planning department . In 19&1, W.atson was elected vice presi- dent and in 1966 he assumed respoosiblllty roz; the lal'ld devtlopment divis~on. lie became a senior \'ice prtsident in January of 1968. A rj!:sldt:nt of Ea!itbluff. Wal !!orl . and his "ire Elsie, have four ehlldrr:n, Ka thy, Bryan. Lisa and David. native of Seallle. he attended UC I y ,1hcre he earned b o I h b.."c helor·s and master 's dcgrtts In archilec1urc and urban pl:inninj!'.. - !It is a director of the Easter Se:tl - Soclely of Orange? County. Li a registered arthlle<:t aOO a Fellow Gf the Amtr1can Institute of Architects. Beacl1 Firemen, Policema11 Save Bov From Pool ,\ 3·yc ar-0ld Capistrano Beach boy i" rtlivc today thanks to the effort s of a Hun!inii;ton Beach policcn)an and 111·0 fircrncn. Jason Rey. son of :O.lichael Rey, \1·as found Saturday afternoon noating face do\lll in a swimming pool of a home he \1·as visiting at 61 11 \\'intergreen Dri ve, Tluntington Beach. Officer J im Austin \\•as the first to ar· rive at the scene and he began im· n)ediate mouth-to-mouth resuscilation on the apparently lifeless little boy. Firemen Marvin ~turdock and Armon- do Gonzalez arrivl'd at the home shortl y after Austin and they administered ox- ygen to the child. According to the firemen. the little boy showed no signs of life. The three men decided not to wait for the ambulance \.\'hich had been dispa tch· rd. 11nd put the child in Austin's palrol c;i r for the tri1) to Hun11 nglon lntcrcom- lllllnity Hospital. The firemen said cmergenf'.V tl'cauncnt at the hospital "'as continued for ~5 minutes before the boy began lo sho~· signs of revi\•ini;. I-le is curri.'111/y listed in "guarded con· dition'' in the hospital's intensive care unit. firemen ~aid the child Y.'U apparently in the care of a 16-yea r-old baby sitter at the home. They said no one sa"' lhf tot fall into lhe JXlO! and they do not know how long be was in lhe water be.lore be was found. Blood1nobilc to Visi l I h111tingtou ~l ou day A Red 'cross bfoodmobile 'II.ill be psrk· ed In front of the Huntington i)e(tch r:lks Cl ub. 10400 Tolbert Al'c., foun1a in VRll }'. from 2:30 p.m. to 8 p.m., ~lon­ d;iy, .July Z'I. AppoinJment! for groups or illdividuals "'ho Vi'ant lo c!ooo,t e blood can 'be made hy phoning Red Cross chapter H ad· quarters al ~I . ' was \1acant ~awe of hls ronviction of a felooy. ~1c\l.'h inney y.·as found guilty of grand theft by a Superior Court jury !!arly Utls n1onth in the ~tile Square agricultural lease scandal. He has appealed the sentence and is fr ee on ball: Smart said the League of Cities should appoint a new 1nembcr and that the group is expected to act July 26. The new director"!! lenn will be only for the bnl· ancl' that ~lc\\'hinn£'y "'a!i to serv'! and "'111 cx-plrc in l\\O nnd a h,1 lf years. • Sap Onofre Gun Battle , Fatal to Pai1· By JOH~ VALTERZA 01 11'1• DallT '°ii.I Sllll The kidriaping of a middlc·a~ed couple f rotn !heir San Diego home early today ndC'd in gunfire and dealh ty.·o hour!! ater at the San Onofre Border Patrol checkpoint y.•here the suspec t and one of his \'ictims "·ere killed instantly. The apparently senseless bloodbath claimed the life of a middle-aged housewife an'd a shotgun "'ielding ab- ductor identified as Gary Raphlel, 22, who died en route lO a hospital. The shooting octurred at about 8 a.m. as a blue van O\.\'l\ed by the dead "·oman's husband pulled to the side-of the permanent roadblock a lew miles south of San Clemente. The only survivor of !he shooting u•as the dead \\'Oman 's husband, John Cha rles Coronado. 48, \\'ho "'as able to fl ee from the van \\'hen the shoo ting started. The 111·0 hours of terror for the ln- no('en! couple began at about 6 a.m. to- day a1 their hon1e in San Diego, police said. It ended f\\'O hours later 1rith ~lrs. Clara Louise Coronado, 50. sla in by a single shotgun blast to the fa ce fired at point-blank range by the abductor. The assailant a fc\1' moments lak'r 11·as slain by polict gunfire directed to the enclosed- portion of the van. Police, high\\·ay patrolmen and other 1n\ estigarors piecrd together I his account of the "unexplainabl e" incident y.•hich brgan shortly after daybreak · Raphael -a plumber d re s s c d for \\Ork -\1·as picked up Dy :!_ coworker and imm('diatcl.v drc1\' a gun on his partner. .\lomc11ts later thr gunn1an and partner noticed the C.Oronado van parked nrar the couple 's house and \fent in side. Seconds later the un"·i11ing fellow \ plumber ntd from the Coro n ado residencr. bu1 the gunman stayed inside. rousing the coup!e and ordering them lo dress. lie ordered the Coronados into the van and drol"e around for a fc"' minut es in an attempt to find hi<; first victim . Failing 111 !hilt. Haphttcl the n dro1·e to a re~idencc and bound his v1c- lims 11·i1h noosts aroond lhe nec k, then ordC'rcd Coronado to drive along !he tSee SL1\\'IN"G, Pagt tl Orange Coast Weather Those low clouds will ha nc around in the morning hours through Tuesday, according to the "'Cather service, n•lth a chance thal southerly wind s from the desert areas Wlll blow them ay.·ay la:er in the y,·eek. flighs of 69 are e~ed at the beaches, rising to 75 inland. ' l~SIDE TODA. Y Tiie 1'eft:n.se l)eportmtttt l>a! conct!ded 1152! raided Cambod•1a tnrgett br.fort 1970 dtipirc rcr· lier public assertions. See slt>rlJ, T'agc 4 t..M, l t'td 1 All~ L•Mlrs • ... llflt II -.!el I (t !INtllit J Nillt!lal H-t 4 (!1,Utlttl lt•l4 Orlllfl C-ty • Clmitt u srtvt• ,mw " C'"t~ 0 I""' 1 .. 11 Ottlll Ntll<tt t llt(lt Mtrt:th •11 ldlltf\tl '''' • TtirlblM! If ,_,,fiRMM'lf • '""'""' I l"tNllH:t 1 .. 11 '#........ 4 ,., •• Jttterf ' ·-·· ,....,. 11·1• ....,__ 14 """' ,...... • l L • He'll R e l ire Dr. \Villiam B. Langsdorf of Corona del ~1ar will retire this fall as vice chancellor for aca· demic affairs of the state uni· versity and college system. The &3-year-old educator was found- ing president of Cal Stale Full- erton. Beach Explosion Burns Occiipa11t , Damag~s House An explosi~pped through _ a small Huntington Beacfl home early Sunday morning, blowing the roof off the struc- ture and causing the occupant to suffer bums over 40 percent ol his body. Firemen said today Robert Guthrie, 25, of 310 Sixth St. told them he had discon- nected the gas hose to' the house's wall heater. The gas from the heater Ignited, resuJting in the explosion and fire . Firemen estimated that $6,500 damage was caused by the blaze which they con- tained before it could spread to adjaCi!fll !Kimes. Guthrie was taken to Pacifica HO!pital for emergency treatment and \Yas transferred to the burn ward at Orange County Medical Center wltere he is listed in stable condition today. 3 Auto Thieves Get Jail Terms ftree Navy men who admitted stealing four luxury autos from a Hunttncton Beach dealer have been sentenced to ~ day tenm ln Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge James Turner ordered identical jail time for Carlos Dee Carter, 19, Johnnie Milton Jr., 23, and Ant.bony f-1. Simmons, 18, after the trio, all from Loag Beach Naval Station, pleaded guilty to auto theft. Restitution was set at $750 for Carter and $$00 each for Alilton and Simmons. All three will serve three years pro- bation, Judge Turner ruled. It was successfully alleged that the trio was involved in the theft of four late model Unooln Continental Mark JV autos from Gusta!Mm Lincoln-Mercury, 16800 Beach Blvd., Huntingkln Beach. 1be cars were recovered. Blaze Damages Baseball Sl1ack A smoldering cigarelle or match was bla med for a fire Satur(jay afternoon that caused $450 damage to an equipment storage shack owned by the South Foun- taht Valley Little League . The 5 p.m. fire damaged the shed at 18240 Ward St. shortly alte r a ball game there. Lost in the blaze \\'ere 20 batting helmets, a vacuum cleaner and other cquiprhent, said Fire Capt. Larry Ham- mer. No inj uries were report ed . OIANll COAST M• DAILY PILOT l ft• Ot•"'O• Coto! t>All Y P ILOT ... 1111 wnocn 11 comlll""' "'• N1W• p,,,,, 11 PUlll"M<I DY fht Or~ CMll P~•i..,,.,.Q (-nr. ~-· ... " fdniltM ''' PllOlh1'fi:I, Moo.cl•v ll'lrouo~ F•;..i1f, IOr Coitt Mtlt, N~rl lle1c~. "1....,11"'0111<1 111<~/~()lln!tln 11•11•~. l•Qunt llffcrt, 1rvlntl$10dltbK~ 11111 S...~ ClemeM1/ itft J ... n c10111t-. .t. 111191t rt<aiontl M Ulclol Is -ll•llff S.rurd1~1 tlld St.old1ri. TM! Jl"IN;o!NI ,.,.f11111nt "'"' II II lJll Wnt a.r i trH1, (•It ~. C.11'9<"11, •'61t. Ro\•rt N. w.,d ,., .. 11*\t tlld l'llOlll .... I Jee~ R. Cutl•v \11¢9 ll~I W ~rll M_,.,.. n.''"' te .... a ' ldl1'!' - Th•tn•• A. M1,1rph!ft• Mt .... 111; f.cHIOI' c:ti¥1M H. lo•1 Ai,lrtt~ '· Nill AM•llt"I MWMtlrlt Edi~ T ,,,., Co•lll• Wtol Or•"°' c...,.,, Edi!., H ........ , .... flOffli~ 1117$ l 11ch loul•"•"' M•lllfli Adclr•11~ ,.0 . l e11 7•0, 91641 OIW....,_ l..-•..m· m "'""' •·-Co111 M-: U1 W'"I a., '""' N.....-f ·~ft! J;)ll N-1 ..... ltva•d kn<:...,,_,.: :1n NOrtfl Ill C•""""-•MI , .. .,.... f7141 64J-4J21 C'-"'94 .............. •42·5671 ,_ '"""' ~ ..... C-ly C"°!-'t.._ 540.1120 ~r191'1t, ttn. Of"•,.. Co-11 l'll&lltto .... c.,..,..,, .._ """' tllrlft, mw.tr•t1-. wn.ri.i """"' " .,..,. .... _.. ,_. INlf ... ........... wllNolll ~· _.. ~ ........ """-· .._.. ci. .. ,.., ... •"' ... c .. i. ,,...., "''"°'""' ~letttll "" <¥f'llr U.61 """""'"'' 1W -11 tJ,U """""1'1 tn!lll'tl,., ....... llmU&l-tflf'I, Co••••••••••icatio1as Beach .Computer· Unit Deilicated Officials from ~lotorola and lhe city or llun11ngton Beach "'ill gather Tuesday rnorning to dl'd1cate the city 's new com· putl.'rizcd rnic1·gcncy communictitlon:r; systr1n. The $355,000 system has been in use for :ih<>ut three weeks by th e police and fire deportments. The dedicat ion, "'hich v:ill be led by 1'1~yor Jerry f.lalncy and Cit y Administrator David Rowlands. will in· elude a "'orking demonstration of the sophisticated computcr·radio setup. The program is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. in city council chambers. 'The commun ica tions network v.•as designed to go ink> the department's new headquarters which ~·HJ be ready for oc- cupancy in January. The compute rized radio network is made up of several components -in- cluding a teleprinter that can print out bulletins in the patrol cars, an encoder ~ that automatically relays the status or a patrol car without the officer using the radio, and an auton1atic address rile that will tell officers the location of the ad· dress to which he is being sent. The address file , is also designOO to provide information on son1e occupants of each address. That ca pability was the cause of a bri ef inves tigation by the fed eral agencies which provided about $155,000 in grants to fund deve lopment of the system. But the investigation, held in April, found that there was nothing amiss in the use of the ftle. According to Capt. Mike Burkenfield , who has been in charge of the system's development, the address file contairui in· 200,000 People Break, AU OC Fair Records · More than 200,000 persons flocked to the 1973 Orange County Fair in Costa Mesa July 15 to 15. breaking all at- tendanoe rerorda of the 111).year-okl event. The new mark of 208,974 exceeds la..t year's count of 149,184 by 59,790 for an attendance increue of approximately f4 pereenL Fair Malll!ger ·lames E. Porterfield today that the turnstile count for the • lair exceeded his wil\l"'lt ex· ons by neafly 9.000. · Organlzers of the fair had originally hoped to attract 200,000 fair visitors but it became apparent during the first few days that the "magic number" would be eclipsed. The fair recorded the highest single. day attendance figure in history on Saturday, the sec:ond day of the [air, with 21,283 and the people count kept zooming, according to Porterfield. ' Porterfield credits Lhe one-pay gate system adopted this year \\'ilh much of the success. "We made sure that all the entertainment was free once the people had paid admission," said Porterfield Yl'ho brought attractions such as Pete Fountain, Les Brown and the original Coasters lo the Costa ?\1esa fairgrounds. Last year motorc1cle racing fans com- ing kl lhe fairgrounds ror the every· Friday-night speedway contests found themselves pa ying three times. once for parking, aga in to get inside the fair, and a thi rd time kl watch the;aces. "r.-fost of them v.·ere ¥_ry annoyed so \ve dropped the concep t or ente rtainment charges. As a result we had overwhelm· ing attendance in our grandstand e\·cnts." he said. Although the profit (or the ''Good Old Days '73" fair have not yet been calculated. Porterfield estimates the net to be somev,.herc between $40.000 to $45.000. "We'll put it right back in for im· prove ments for next year's fa ir. We're hoping to get some better entertainment programs. Some of the names we've toss- ed around so far incl~de Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald and Doc Severin sen." Pers~nnel Chief Hart to Resign -\Villiam C. Hart. Orange County persOn. ne! directo~ for the past 2{) years has rf'slgncd his pos11lon effective Aug. 17. Hart, in a letter to the Board or Supervisors, said he "'as taking a post in another California county. He did not n<-imc the county. The personnel ditt<":tor said he enjoyed \\·orking for Oringe County and offered to Assist t~ board In recruiting a new director . Hart Is the secon d county department head to leave office in the past five months. Treasurer Ivan H. Swanger retired on Ffb. 28 a.nd his post was com· blncd \vith that of tax collector Robert Citron . Kelly Win 120-miJe Dea th Valley \Valk DEATH VALLEY (API -Dl•tance runner John Ktlly, finishing a 120-mlle ~1dk across °'"th VAiiey In a -record 34 hours, ~)'S "It w:is hell but I'm glad I did it." Kelly, an Ireland native who now ll\'CS ln Santa Mon~, looked exhausted after finishing the trt k late Sund•y afternoon 111·11b only t~o bric! rtst breaks. forma tion that is already available to police. 1uch as weapons reglat.raUon. location or ex-convicts and the history of crimes and complalnts from each ad· dress . ,,, Burkentlcld pointed out that all the In· formation in !he add,res.s file is in· formation readily avarTable to any of· ficer , but Its inclusion in the computerzed radio network means that it will be in· slantly available in the field . FromPqel SLAYING ••• Route 405 Freeway and then up the San Diego Freeway. In the Oceanside area, C.Orooado was able to stir the interest of a highway patrolman cruising along the freeway and the officer pulled up alongside, noticing that ·1he couple were in trouble .. He fell back and called for assistance . Al that point, CllP Sgt. Jack Cook said, Coronado feigned a heart attack and his kidnaper allowed the man t0-pull to the side. , With the OIP officer surveying the scene C'autiously, Coronado was replaced at the wHcel by hls wife. The flight began once again. By then several more CllP units and several prowl cars from the Oceanside Police Department j(lincd in the pursuit. "As they approached the checkpoint here," Sgt. Cook said, "the kidnaper made mention of the problem and predicted, 'now we're gonna have some fWl'." Patrolmen ordered the van to the side of th e multi-lane roadblock. and ap. proached the vehicle. "He jerked open the door," a fellow patrol official said, "and shouted for everyone to get out." Raphael immedlated1y f I re d his shotgun aiming the. blt\st of pellets through the windshield of the van. Coronado tumbled unhurt from the passenger side and "as his horrified wife turned, the gwunan shot her in the lace. Then, J?8trohnen said, the assailant began firing from the van toward OC· ficers. The exchange ol gunftr• lasted for several minutes. "lben we held back and walled," Sgt. Cook satd. "It must have been five minutes or '° and no activity wu noted from .the van ... we were waiting for tear gu to arrive," he added. 1, 'Then ·olficers began -ping toward the bullet-lorn truck and found both oc- cupants dead. 'Ibe assailant, dressed in thick, brown. canvas coveralls was on bis back in the rear of the van, the sho(gun nearby. Mrs. Coronado's body Jay between the t\l;o front seats. Patrolmen took her shocked, grieving husband to a nearby patrol unit where he sat dazed for mol'e than an hour, barely able to spe~k to investigators. The entire shootout took place in a con- gested, busy section of the checkpoint with traffic moving on the busy freewaf at one side and large trucks and tractors parked at the v.•eigh station and in- spection area to the other. "It's hard to believe," one offiC:r said gazing at the death scene. "He just picked this couple ~ndom. They didn't even know the man who did all I.his." "It llpparently was 8 wild\ unex- plainable thing," a San Diego police sergeant added. Solo1i' s Cousin Miss California Huntington Beach City Councilman Don ShJpley has a rare beauty ln the family. His second cousin, Susan Kaye Shipley of Stockton, WM named f\.1iss California June 30. The shapely ~fiss Shipley, ag.:25-36, 15 a music major at the University of the Paa· . She capture( the talent contest in rl judging with a piano rendition of "I\ 1 uena ." J\.fiss Shipley, Councilman Shipley boasts, first won the f\.fiss San Joaquin County title before capturing .the state cro"11. She will represent California in the Miss Am erica Pageant. Dog Tags RafsC $58,000 Revenue More than $58.000 has betn raised rrom the sale of dog tags in Huntington Beach during the first five mooths under the city's new dog catcher, California Animal Cootrol (CAC). During the month of June alone, CAC sold 987 licenses. worth $8,799. CAC took over as the city's official animal agency In 1-'ebruary. replacing the. JlunUnaton Besch Humane Society. In a report to Tht. city council, CAC say1 it answered l,lill radio calls In June, Issued 21 cilntlons for breaking the leash law. Im-pounded 289 dogs and 221 cals, and picked up 159 dead animals. 24 lleld at Concert SAN DIEGO (AP) -Twonty-lour spectaton ~·ere arrested at a slJ·hour rock. concert at old Balboa Stadium, nuthorilics SAid. • Kite Fliers - Huntington School Bids Set' Tonight ~~val lo seek bids on a $350,000 facility for handicapped children is t!I· pected tonight from trustees or the Ocean View School District in Huntington Beach. · Tonight 's acUon will mark the second lime. ~I officials have attempted 10 receive bids on lhe project. which wa~ approved last ~ear. The first request for bids . met 1v1th no response, said Supermteodent James Carvell. "Compared to other projects in Orang<' ~uni~; ours is a smaU one:· Carvell said. Most companies are looking to bigger industrial contracts, so none bid on oura." ~ project calls for a permanent facility at Lark. View SchooJ for 90 train~ble mentally retarded, mentally handicapped and deaf.blind students he said. ' Plans call !or three classrooms, a physical education facility, a therapeutic pool and a speech therapy office. The facility wouJd replace tempora ry portal?le classrooms there, Carvell said. Owing the 7:30 p.m. meellng trustees also will consider a request to purchase two, 16-pessenger minibuses for use in district field trips. The buses \\'OUld be used by students in th~ district's Early Childhood Program. with the $15,000 tab being picked up by state funds , Carvell said. The meeting wil l be held in the disirict board room, 7972 Warner Ave. Mr. and Mrs. George Twist of Huntington Beach were the first mar~ ri~d couple to c~ss the finish line in Sunday's annual "Flite of the Kit.es" boat race 1n Newport Harbor. The Twists, 10201 Main St., also captured third place overall in the 89-boat race. For other results, see boating, Page 18. Fountain Valley Asks County , William Mason Given · To Share Funds Fountain Valley has joined JS other Orange County cities in asking the county to share some of its federal revenue sharing money with the city. Tribute of Area Officials City rep~esentatives appeared before the county Harbors, Beaches and Parks Comf!1i.ssion lo ask .that the coun ty give the city $400,000 of its $2.5 million share of federal funds. Government officials continued today lo offer eulogies to W!Wam Ralph Mason. Irvine C'.ompany President wi.o died Saturday of an apparent heart attack. Ronald Caspers, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors said, "The loss o£ Bill Ma90rt tO the Orang• County "!"'ll'lunity will he loog felt by all those who knew and respect<d him and by the thousands of Orange O:iurlttarui whose lives his visiOns and ef- forts have so significantly impacted. "Bill Mason was a man of the highest integrity and forthright hon e s t y , • ' CaSpers said. "All of his business deal· ings were done in a spirit of fairness and openness. "His dreams for the future of the Irvine Ranch were embodied with creativity and dedication," he said , ad· ding pe rsonal sympathy to ?ifrs. ?\fa.son and his family . "We \\'ill greatly miS! Bill Mason as a friend," Caspers concluded. Caspers' remarks today followed an outpouring of similar sympathie:s ex- pressed over the weekend by notables in· eluding State Sen. Dermis E. Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), former Fi f I h District supervisor Alton E. Allen; UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr.; mayors Donald Mclnnis of Newport Beach, John• Burton of Irvine and Jack Hammett of Costa Mesa. as y,.·ell as Dally Pilot publisher Ro~t N. \\'eed. Speaking for the city of Laguna Beach. ,Mayor Charlton Boyd said today, "The city will miss this fine man." The shock of ?-.Ir. ~1ason's death Satur- day at the age of 54 continued today. Mr. Mason who joined the Irvine Company in 1959 has been president of the land development and ranching firm since 1966. A1ayor Boyd remarked he was "taken aback" by the news. "I had met with him only this past \\'eek under very favorable circumstances to discuss Laguna's Tole in the (coestal ) Irvine development and highway transfer " Boyd said. "I had always found him to be gracious, alert and a most competent business executive," be coocluded. Assemblyman Robert Badbam (R- Newport Beach) said, "'11Jis is sincerely a deep and personal loss to me endiz;li an association that has lasted for oftr a decade ~ all the fields of my profeak>n both S0C1aUy and in business. * * * Memorial Rites For Mr. Mason Tuesday, 7 A.M. A family spokesman said today a memorial service will be read for William Ralph Mason late president of !he Irvine Cm!pany at the Pacific View f\..1emorial Park chapel, Corona del Mar, at 7 o'clock Tuesday morning. Mr. Mason died Saturday afternoon. The family suggested that memorial contributions might be made to Orange Empire Area C.Ouncil o! Boy Scouts of America, or to the Orange County Junior Achievement program. which v.•ere among Mr. J\.lason's principal charitable interests in recent years. lie served as \Ve.stem Regional Presi· dent of the Boy Scouts, and helped establish the Jun..lor Achievement gram in Orange County. Interment will be private. • ,un Width "tookCt'M" f,..ttr Door Sh•ll -lor ln•1•nt •v•il1b!llty. • Du•I Teml)tr•tur• Control•- Ni.ct lilt rl&ht ttmPlfllutt for net! HCtlan. • Twin f'Of't•ltln Crit.ptn-Mlpl fruit. "'"""' ••rden frtlh. • £.rtr• Lara• Rtfr11•t1tor Door SMIYH-tlold1 •'l'ltl lllll quilt ....... M ... NT 1JM No 41fro1HMJ ,.frlttrt'-r 6nti9fl1 wlffi Arctic Air flow rytt9M f., f11ll ml• cl,.111ltH•"- The money would be used to add to the city's recreational complex at l.file Square Park. · Wayne Osborne, director of public works for the city, explained that if the city gets the funds , plans: will be ;eadled for construction of a cultural arts center on the SS acres of the park which has been given to the city by the federal govermuent. At present, preliminary work is being done on a $1.25 million sports complex on the site. M currently funded , the site wlll have several courts and fields for tennis. baseball, handball ant basketball as well as a multipurpose building that can be used as a gym or a recreational hall. Osborne explained that, when plans for the site were prepared , they included a building that could be used for a theater with craft rooms adjoining it. 'Ille culture center was eliminated. from the existing building plan because of lack of fund!, and Osborne said city officials aro hopeful It can he reinstat.d by getting a portion of the county's revenue sharing funds .. The recreation portion or the complex is being funded primarily with the city's revenue sharing money. .Rain Floods Italy MILAN, Italy (AP) -Severe rain· storms lashed northern Italy over the ' we-ekend causing floods and landslides along the Italian Riviera and leaving at least 15 persons dead, authorities said. Four people drowned when a bridge col· lapsed in the bad weather near Turin on turday. Their cars plunged into a river. SLIMLINE REFRIGEllATDR M ... C11JJ • rw11Wldthr,.,.,.a..t • Wide-,..,._ T~ Control FORALLTHONL1sy$2599s : =-~~.::.~~'-• full Width ftHZt·M•rt Cllillllf °'"9f m · Member of ls~:!AY U C1lllor•l1'1 Llr9t1I CASH Cooporollve 1uy1,. Group With The WITH AlftOna Volume luylnt ciion •· " ""''""-.,._ of 110 Stor1tH e:N:Sl ............ rn 1115 NEWPORT BLVD. Dmtowa C1sta Mesa -Phone 548-7781 --. ( • .-' ' ,_,onddv, J uly lb l9iJ H CAIL Y PflOl • ;J l\almh,ach Admits He . Raised Funds -. Tooth Hounds Construction w.orker Dave Dana, (left) finds screening for sharks' teeth at a fossil-rich site in El Toro a relaxing pastime· after work. Whale and dolphin borles about 17 million years old have also been located at the site called Pectin Reef. Paleontologists from the Los Angeles County Museum of Natural History supervise the digging_s. With Dana is John Houser, of Archaeological Research , lnc. who did an environmental impact report on the project which unearthed the teeth and bones. Broadcaster Tells of 01·gy In Britisl1 Sex Scandal LONDON (UPI) -A broadcaster who was not identified in court lestified by proxy today abou t what he said "can only be decribed as an orgy" at the Lon- don home of blonde singer Janie Jones. ( Government Sex Scandal Cha.rg~,. Faces Call Girl LONDON (UPI) -Mrs. Nonna Levy, the call girl in the sex scandal which caused the resignation of t\\'O govern- ment ministers, returned to Britaln and was charged today under the 1956 Sexual Offenses Act. After being of!icially accused of at- tempting to procure a woman to become a prostitute, Mrs. Levy was remanded on $25.000 bail until July 31. . Mrs. Levy&rrived at Heathrow a~rt from Spain on Sunday hours after poli~ at the Spanish . coastal resort of Denl8 _said they had arrested her husband Colin. They de<:lined to say whether he had been charged. A British consular spokesman in Alicante, Spain, said Levy, a London taxi driver. was arrested on suspicion of the attempt<fl homicide of his Irish born wife. "\Ve \Vere informed by police that Levy had been arrested Saturday on suspicion or the attempted homicide of Norma Levy, but a fonnal charge has not yet been preferred,'' the spokesman said. "According to Spanish legal practice it is now up to an investigating magistrate to decide what action will be taken. There is an extradition treaty between Spain and Britain and I expect the British police and Interpol will get in touch with Spanish authorities." Detective Chief Superintendent Albert Wickstead arrested 1'-trs. Levy at the airport on a warrant he had taken with him. He sald he had been advised she was arriving in London and she was held at the airport by Scotland Yard detec- tives. The man's statement was read to the court at the start of the second week or the trial of Miss Jones, 34, and two men on charges which began with in- vestigation of alleged sex and money payoffs to Briti.sh Broadcasting Corp. BBC personnel as an inducement to play certaµi phonograph records. The BBC has a radio broadcasting mC:!nopoly in this country. ·'We all went-upstairs with Janie Jones and looked '"through the reverse side of a t\Vo-way mirror," the man 's statement said. r ''In the bedroom next door on the bed, three naked girls were performing les- bian acts ... After that, Janie suggested we all go into the bedroom .... Janie kept egging us on. "So I got undressed with two of the others (men) and got onto the bed with the girls. What followed next can only be described as an orgy .•. The scene lasted for about an holD'. And this Is the one and only time I have met Janie Jones." Miss Jones is on trial on 26 separate charge, most involving abetting pros- titution but irfluding blackmail , an alleged attempt to poison her ex-husband and inciting a man to murder him. She is being tried sep'aralcly on the latter charge. Her former husband, songwriter Joh n Christian-Dee. 34, is a co-defendant at the current trial. So is Eric Gilberl, 42. a former county court clerk who lived at ~1iss Jones' home. Prosecutor Stephen Mitchell read a sec- ond statement in court today, this one from and unidentified company director, saying he and business acquaintances btlught sex from Miss Jones and girls she brought along "four or five times" at bis. apartment. A third statement, from a man iden- tified as a "freelance advertising man," said: "For the past four years I've been taking advantage of a call-girl service operated by Janie Jones." He said the girls ahvays went to his address. .Powder Puff Derb y Hurt ... . By Sunday Ci·ash Landing • CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (AP ) - A crash • landing \vhich perplexed the pilot -but' Jen the plane's two occupants unhurl - man-ed the action last Sunday in the 27th running of the coast-to-coast Powder Puff Derby. Pilot Wanda Cummmgs of Rancho San- ta f'e. and co-pilot Eva Cannlchael or La Jolla, were maeuvering their Cessna 182 for a mandatory landing Ill the Waterloo ~lunlcipal Airport when the single-rogine plane developed a loss of po"·er. The craft Josi altitude. hit a feoct. and 'eft the two "1>mcn the object of an ea'.rly-evening 4$-minute search before they were found. "I don 't know what happened." the pilot said, "I think maybe It wa! fuel ex~ haustloo. bul I don't !l'ally know. I hAd fueled In Topeka and ~l'lf!ll;t ol gas - but no power all of 1 Sl.Kldcq-•· 1be t1'1'o nyen are "tnOflf nearly 200 women Who started their cr05s country race ·at Carlsbad and headed for the Chemung County Airport in Elmira, N.Y .. where they were due today . One or lhe mandatory stops is at Waterloo, a sister city to Cedar Falls in northeast Iowa. Miss Cummings, a third-time entrant in the derby, u.id she \li'SS making a re- quired "fly-by" of the \Vaterloo airport for an official clocking of eh1:psed flight lime when the plane lost power. "\\'e "-°tre about t.900 feet and had the air{>ort in sight." she said. "Then the po"'·cr just went out. \Ve caught tht nose gear on Utt renct." . She SAld the incident wa!I her first emergency landing a:t • pliot. "and I hope my lest" Y.'W sbe compete again next year'! "I don't kno". Maybe if 1•ve got en airplane 1haYs llyoti . ' she said. Her plane rt!CeiVed "$tight I 0 moderate" damaa;e, she said. Attorney Time By Unittd Press la.tunaUooal Herbert W. Kalmbach never wanted lo become a household word. A highly suceessful Newport Beach lawyer who liked to dabble in big time politics, Kalmbach was all but unknown nationally until his fund-raising efforts on behalf of Richard P.f. Nixon drew him in- to the vortex of the Watergate scandal. Kalmbach. a suntanned and robust 51, was the. mod.el of a respectable West Coast attorney. With_ an office on the 44th floor or a Los Angeles skyscraper and a home in fashionable Newport Beach, Kalmbach had an impressive list of clients which included the President of the United States. But he shunned publicity, preferring to remain in the background. Kalmbach did the complex legal work · on Nixon 's purchase of his San Clemente, Calif., estate, about 25 miles down the Pacific Ocean beach from Kalmbach's own home. Kalmbach also hand.led the drafting of"Nixon's will. But it was his work as a political tund- rai.ser that gave Kalmbach his unwanted fame. In both 1968 and 1972, be raised substantial sums of money on behalf of Nixon's presidential campaign, teaming up \\'ith Maurice H. Stans during the re- election campaign which was history's most successful political finance effort. Stans was rewarded ror his I~ work by an appointment to the Nixon cabinet as commerce secretary. But Kalmbach avoided the national spotlight until his name began being linked with the seamy side of JX!lilical spending. Testimony presented to the Senate \Vatergate Committee named Kalmbach as the pa ymastir for Political saboteur Donald Segretti. Stans also s a id Kalmbach solicited from bim funds which ultimately were used in an at- tempt to buy the silence of tbe original Watergate conspirators. ·On July 6, American Airlines disclosed it illegally had contributed $55.000 to Nlx- '\On's re-election effort upon Kalmbach'! urging. Kalmbach, who was attorney for United Air Lines. asked for and received the campaign contribution at a time when American was seeking to acquire \Vestern Airlines, a move that required government approval. With Kalmbach coming before the Senate Watergate .Committee, he was certain to be questioned closely on his fund-raising efforts, his connection with Scgretti and reported moves to raise money for the \Vatergate defendants. and theJinancing and improvements of Nix- on's San Clemente estale. Kalmbach was born in Port Huron. !\ti ch., on Oct. 19, 1921. He attended public schools there and served 1n World War II as a Navy pilot. After the war he attended the University of Southern California, where he married Barbara Helen Forbush in June, 1948. Richard Burton Say s Separation 'Onl y a Jok e' ~·IOSCO\V J,.UPI l -Thf;t se paration from l<.:lizabeth 'favlor, said Richard Burton. w<'ls a "joui-nalislic joke" that will end Friday in Rome. And as for published suggestions · of a romance between hi s wife of nine years and actor Peter Lawford, nothing to it. "Good gracious me," Burton said Sun- day • "He's just a very old friend." -Lawford has been photographed with P.iiss Taylor in Hollywood nightclubs several times since she announced July 3 that she and Burton had separated. "It's jUst a journalistic joke." Burton said of the highly-publiciz.ed split when he arrived from Rome to attend the Moscow film festival. It was Burton's first visit to the Sovtet Union. : "~-ly wife and I will meet in Rome on J•riday," • said. "She wanted to come here but her nxtlher is very sick, very ill . and she had to stay with her mother I in California).·· Burton said he ha"cl spoken with ~11~ Taylor by telephone Sundax, before leav· ing Ronle and added that they have call· ed each other. "about three times a day" since Miss Taylor announced the separa- tion . "This is the loo.gestf.paration we've !!Yer had," Burton sai • "It will be 10 days." He dKI not explain how he figured 10 days from July 3 to oen Friday -July 20. A Spokesman for Miss Tayk>r said last week she would rejoin Burt.on in Rome at the end of this weet. Tbty are making two separate films in Italy. Asked if the interest in tilt ~paration surprised bim. Burton replied : "My dear feUow, for 25 years l'vt hlid nothing but attent.Jan from the pres.Ii. So htls my wire. It's somelhinf that happens now and again. It will fal away. 1 sup- pose, In a couple of weeks." Burton later chang~ Into a black Mao suit and attended the festivars SW>day night premiere of the rum "~lassttcre in R<mt." He Sllrl in it. 11• uld ht and ll•lllll producer Carlo Pon11, who accompanied him, will return 10 Rome on 1\Jesday. . I I -- U~I T .... IMM PUBLICITY SHY Newport's Kalm btch M agazi1ie Claims GOP Fund Used For Nixon Home NEW YORK (UPI) -Some Republican campaign funds may have gone to help buy President Nixon's estate at San Clemente, Time Magazine says in thi! ~·eek 's issue. The magazine Sunday said Senate in- vestigators are looking into "'hat hap- pened to a sum of Sl.6 million left ov~r from the 1968 presidential campaign as well as "Public Institute" funds raised by Herbert Kalmbach, Nixon's personal altorney. ''The Senate investigators are seriousJy probing the possibility that Republican campaign funds may have been wed to help purchase Nixon•, San Clemente estate," the magazine said. Time quoted Kalmbach as commenting on the report, "oot a dime of campaign money went in- to San Clemente." The magazine said investigators are looking for a brown leather satchel con- taining records or one of t"·o of Kalmbach's "Public Institutes".· The sa tchel ·is no\\' locked in a \Vhite House· safe belonging to former \Vhile •louse counsel John \\'. Dean and "!he papers it holds are among those thP' Richard Nixon does not "''ant the Senate committee to see on the grounds that this would violate the ·separation or pow- ers.' " Time said. , ", • . . . .. ' Den ies Any Awa1·e11 ess Of Bu ggi11 g \\'ASHINGTO:'J fAP l -llerbt'rt \\" Kalmbach. President Nixon·s fornl('r personal h1wyer from Ne\1port IX'ach. ackno"'lt'dgcd today he raised funds to pay the originnl seven "'atergatt' dt •· fendants but denied any prior kno11 I· edge of the Watergate break-m or it! later coverup. Kalmbach's prepared testimony \\'aS made pubHc ~·hlh.• \\'hite House aid e Richard A. r..toorc faced continued ques- tioning at the Senate's t e I e v i s e d \Vatergate lnl't'S ligation . Kalmba ch "·as to folio"' him to lhl' "'itness stand The i1chedule qr \\'ilncsSC's 11·'as l<>ft in some confusion 11·hen lhe comn1itte1.1 1ook DEFENDS PRE&lDENT Nixon Advi ser Moore its mid-day recess ."·ith a suggest1011 th111 tai~·r 111 lht• earlii·r $1.1~1~:. 01 tl1r a 11·itn<'si1 other than the schcdulrd ) I I :'l'~ldl·nt 's 111;'.,! t":11npu1~11 for rt"l" 1"C.·· Ka.Imbach might be called lo fo1!011 luui ;\1oore. Comnlillee la11·,·ers 11·ould not 1dl·tHil\" lhe possible surPrise witn,ss. <.1llhough Terry Lenzcr. the assislant counsel, had remarked in que stioning ~!oore tha t f'eli x Rohatyn. a director 01 International T<'lephone & Telegraph Corp .. v.•ould be qt.estioocd subsequently. In his writttn statement. KalmbaC'h denied any participation in the planning of campaign sabotage or unethical ac· livity. ''!\fy actioos in the period immediately loBowing the break-in v.·h.ich in\·olved the raising of funds to provide for the lega l defense of the \Va1er~ate defendants and for the support of their families \\"ere prompted in the belief thal it \\'as proper and nec<'ssary to discharge \\"hat J assumed to be <1 1noral ~ligation that had arisen in some manner unkno\\'n to me by reason of earlier 'events," Kalmba ch s.1id. "The fact that I had been direct<'d to undertake these actions by lhc No. 2 and No. 3 men on the White !louse staff made it absolutely incomprehensible to me 1hat my actions in thi s regard could have been regarded in aoy "''ay as improper or unethical." he said. Kalmbach v.·as a trustee from January of 1969 to early Febniary 1972 of an estimated $1.6 million in surplus funds from Nixon's 1968 campaign. Quoting Richard M. Nixon on the func.- II~· ~:ud he c-on1pl<>U'd tlus il ~s1gr11nc111 1n lhl· ~pr1ng oJ !!II'! and tn.11i:o.f1;r'l'('d The ong1n:1 I lu111l·ra1~111t: ll'COrd~ 10 tht• I· 1nancc C'on1m1llt'\' for· 1hc H1•-cle1:11011 ol ih,· Prrs1d1·n1 • But he s.11d :\"1 xon·s f1nancr eh~urrna11 . former Comn1rrcc St-t·relary ~1aurice H. S1ans, chrectt"C.i K3Jm1>.1<·h·s :.f,.'Cret.ary "In destroy my fllf's \\'h1ch ~ere v.•holly personal ,,1nd ~upporll\£' of IN.> origina l files earher transferred 10 !ht• fu1ance committee." ''This action .on my l>'lrl "'n~ intellilt'd to insure the COll\llllled c:onhdent1ality of the contacis th at 1 h.1d had \\1th var1ou" contributors \\'1th \1·ho1n f had dealt <l ur· 1nJ.: th is pC'riotl,'' Ku\mb;it'h s;;IO ' lie said ·he has ~uppl1••d to th<> Sena tr \\";Jtergat c tvn1rn111 ee ~t:tff etJp1(·s ot ht'I rt1n1ai11 ing rc1"Qrd'\ ;ind M.11rlt• bi\11k rr('ords. Jn tl11s statemt·nl K:iln1hach :i:1id he had never asked for 1mmun11y frorn pro~- 1:cu11un nor 1nd1eatcd h<' ...,·ould l'Xerc1se his right lo ren1a1n si lent under lhe Fifth Amt'fldm ent to the llilsl1lut1ou. T ustin Sc hooJ Ruined by Fi re tion of congressional investigattom. the Fire dest royed a preschool 111 the north chairman of the \\'atergate commillee Tustln area Sunday night. t~ Orange defended its inquiry as ''crucial to the _cwnly Fire fk.partrnenl repor1ud. \li·el fare of the nation." The blaze at the Tustin f'ountry Day Kalmbach testified he dispersed por-School. \~\ Prospett Ave . 11·:1~ lions of that sum "only at the express reported by pas.!.ing rnotori~ts at 10:46 direction or H. R. l·laldeman or others il.m. and was controlled by 11:08 p.m. clearly having the authority to direct The loss ~·:u1 estimated at $40.00U to such disbursemenls." \hr· one story structu re n\1,.lll'd by Gerbe r Kalmbach earlier had denied that por· Voods Int of Frernont. i\llchigan <ind lions of that fund \\'ere used to help 1nanaged by E<tfl Prlf'rson. finance the purchase of La Casa Thirt y--0ne n1cJ1 <incl fivr engines bal - Pacifica. i\ixon's oceansi de estate at San tied the fire Hed /1 11! slation volun!Ct'r Clemente. firC chief :'11 aur\' El .snt·r sLlffered a Kalmbach "'as also the princi pal fund · d1sloc:11er! knee. · " . -c I ANNUAL ' STORE-WIDE - CLEARANCE 15°/o to 40°/o REDUCTIONS " SUITS • SPOR TCOA TS TROUSERS DRESS SHIRTS • SPORT SHIRTS I . S\VEATERS • OUTER \VEAR ' ' , -., PHELPS MEAGER ~ OYtll Oil YEARS IN CALJroRHlA ' , NEWPORT BEACH - -' Wil1hlre, Sh•rm•" O•ks, P•,•den•, l•k•wood, w.,+ Covi"• . I • OAll.V Pll.OT Monday, Juty 16, lq73 Vie t Cong J U.S. Admits Cafilhodian Raids Releas e Fq_,rmer AF . . Canadians Recall Road E . ? . ngmeers. Tl\AJL BLAZING DEM'. -If l"" cast an ·eye c:m the ecological mood of the people these days, you rather get the no- tl<m that Callfcmia's old master plan for freeways, expressways, artltrial highway and major road< has probably fallen upoo evil days. People seem to be reasoning that smog and pollution are the enemy ol the mo- ment. And the highv.•ay is the rightful alJy of smOg and pollution. Therefore the highway ls the enemy. Anything larger lhan a cow trail may be viewed with distaste nowadays. Despite all this, the California l-tighway Commission is still in operation. Once upon a time. back in the yesterdays or the 1940s, that august body was virtually all-~'et'ful and om n i pot e n t . Com- missioners decided that a major route would fall on this line and lo, so be it. MOST SUCH IUGHWAYS were created oo ~ lines because this is the way engineers like to draw. Few people ques· tiooed it. 11lal was just the way it was. Leter in tbe 1960s, as major road rou1os bepn to develop aloog those stralgflt lines through hi hly url>anized areas, the highway peopl1 ran into more opJ>OS(tion. 1bey were restricted with such activities as public hearings, pro- test. detailed alternate route studies and other similar delays lh.at slowed the road building process. TODAY, nIAT PROCESS has nearly stowed to a halt. What with fuel shortages, smog controls and a concern for the stuff we lreathe, we may be returning to the era ot the horse. Yet the Highway Commission ls still ar(J!Jlld. We know thi! beeall3e ooly last week the state cunmissiooers were in our very own region. They held some highway bearings in Costa Mesa. Why, just a rew· years ago, the Highway Commission holding hearings in Costa Mesa would have raised the hair on the back ot every collective neck in Ne'tQJOl't Belch. Yet this time, it didn't~ lo even raise an eyebrow Jn lhe barboc city. Nor did any Newport nerves appear ruffled when the Cost.a Mesa City Coun cil wined and dined the commission and further gave -the state commissioners free ·rides aloft 'n Costa Mesa Police Department helicopters. RETIJRNING FRO!U hi s aerial jaunt, Highway Commission Olairman Winston Fuller of San Marino chanced the opinion that our Orange Coast area "has a lot of SA l(jQN IUPli -Tu·o Canadian of· fl ccrs freed aftC'r 18 dtiy.s as capti ves of the \7iet Cong said todny they y,·ere cap- ( IN SHORT ..• ) tured because the Con1munists thought they v,·ere American spies. Capt. Ian Patten, 31. and Fletcher Thomson. 25, ~·ere released Sunday along v.i th tvlo captured South VietnamtSe drivers. They appeared healthy and fit. .. Cambodia Bombed PHNOM PENH (UPI) -U • S . Warplanes struck within seven miles of Pll)om Peril tod<y In the clcoest 8UCh raids since April, supporting government forces in efforts to reptilse a Communist attack just south ol the capital. Fighting v,·as reported ~arty all sides of Phnom Penh. Field and military soorces said fighting aged '"est, southwest and northwest or the capital. "The situation is very grave," said one higb-ra nlting officer, Gen. Un Kau. e Atdo Talks Begin DETROIT (UPl ) -Auto contracl negotiations began today between the · United Au.to Worken and the "Big Three" auto companies to cover more than 700,000 auto workers and indirectly · affect ooe in every six Amer-ican v.'Orkers . The auto talks otrldally began at 10 a.m. v.ten the chief negotiators for General Moton Corp. and the UAW shook hands across a six-foot-wide table at GM's international headquarters. e 3 ht Famll11 Die MIAMI (UPI) -Detectives said they would seek three murder warrants today against opera singer Saiwa Merrlge- Abrams on charges of killirig her ex-hus-- band and two children. Mrs. Merrige-Abrams took a handful of piHs after the Saturday murders, police said, and W3' ""1led lo the hospital in serious condition. DocUn said her eo& ditiao was "stable" Sunday. e Co11ntdotma Goa On CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The COOll!Alown rolled aloog .._i.ty today towanl the July 28 launcli of Uu-e. more Skylab space explorers who p)an to man the orbiting station for a reard 56 days. The count was kicked off oo schedule at 8 p.m. Sunday, 12 days before astronauts Alan L. Bean, Jack R. Lousma and ..Qwen K. Garriott plm to ride an Apollo command module up lo the lab for another scientific research journey. UPI,........ SECRETARY OF STATE ROGERS TOASTS PRIME MINISTER TANAKA IN TOKYO Japtnese L•lder Hoth LuncMon Amid Discussion of Economic Policy ~~~~~~~"---~~~ • Hit-run Driver Kills One Child, Abducts Another TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -Police say a hit· and·run driver who struck three children and stopped to abduct one apparenUy hit the youngsters on ~. One of the children, a S.yelll'-Old girl, died tod<y from her injuries. "'Ibe evidence we have right now In- dicates he hit the children intentionally," a Tampa police spokesman said. Officers said early today they bad jssued a statewide bulletin for the man, believed to be in his early 20s, and the 13- year-old captive, Ros:anne Caton. Police said Roxanne, her brother Curtis, 12, and sister Radine, S. were walking single file two feet off the roadway near their tiome late Saturday. The car, drive9 with its lights off, swerv· ad over, struck them and stopped . Rogers Hears Japanese Demand for Discipline TOKYO (AP) -Renecting mounting Japanese bitterness over American trade restrictions, Foreign Minister Masayoshi Ohira today called on the UrUted States to "exercise an increasing degree of cilscipliDe in managing its o w n economy." Ohira told the opening session of the ninth U.S . .Japan Joint Cabinet Meeting on Trade and Economic Affairs that Japan is greatly embarrassed by American attempts to limit the exports of logs, scrap iron and soybeans. He said it was of "imperative im- portance'' to maintain the smooth flow of these and other products. And he urged the United States ''to continue its efforts to maintS:ln a stable supply to Japan." He also criticized American "clamors for import restrictions, pnposition or surcharges or exercise of ex po rt restraint.'' U.S. SECRETARY of State William P. Rogers "'"i'Onded with a promlse, In- serted into a prepared speech, that the UrUted States would continue to be a source ol dependable supply for Japan. He added that controls on sOybeam, the source of much of the protein in the Japanese diet, "will not last a day longer lhan _is necessary." . Ohira said Japan regrets controls "which seek short term solutions at the border." t. .. "' He said, "In view of the predominant role and responsibility of the United States in the world economy; it is our strong wish lhat the United States would cope with and find solutions to these questions on the basis of a long-term perspective." Major Says, Raid s OK'd ~ WASl!!NGTON (UPI) -The Defense ..ilepartm<mt acknowledged tod<y that B52 strikes """' made in Cambodia prior to 1970 despit. public a""'1iclm at tho time of U.S. respect for 1be neutrallty ol CMnbo<Ua. De{ense Semtary James R. Sdil ... Inger, In a letter to the Sellai. Armed ~ces Committee, said raids "had been CCIDducted for some period of lime and were fully authorizeil" before the United Stat<o publicly 8!IMllllCl!d attacks in May 1970 into so-called sanctuaries areas ol Cambodia near the South VJet.. Damese border. "At this~ period of time, you will remember over one half million men were stationed in South Vietnam " Schlesinger said. "Because of the sensitive operational aoll diplomatic situatloo, special security precaullono were taken to emu.re that the operatkm ' would not be compromised." SCHU:mNGER ""' the Iclie!' to tbe Senate pallei as former Air Force Maj. Hal M. Knight t.stilled Infer oath that he falsified. records of B52 strikes In ear· ly 1970. lie said be acted Infer Ol'dln !rm superiors tha1 he bum an -. computer tapes and other maf<rials tha1 wauld -the strlbs h CBmbodla. Knight WU asked If be • ..,. queotloned • the prooedure. HJ asked wt~ authorir.ed lhls procedure," be replied. "I WU told not to ask." , He said there always was a cover target with "a strike order in Vietnam" 10 account for the actual mission in Cam- bodia. THE AlR FORCE chief of staff, Gen. George S. Brown, in another letter to chainnal) Stuart Symingtoo (]).Mo.) ol the. Senate Armed Services committee, said It was not correct to characterize as falsi.ficatlon the security precautioos per· taining to the raids. 1 "So loog as lhe J"<llOfl! met in every . detail the requirements bnPoSed, they were not int.ended to deceive those with a security "need to know," Brown said. '"The reasoos why special security precautions were directed was g,ot a reporting issue so long as a responsible higher authority knew in fact '"'hat wa,, done and judged it to be in accord with instructions.'' Ford Sees Hassle In Safety System .,. ~pie to be moved." ; '· · 'Right, commissimer. But you didn't need a helicopter ride to find that out. Just try to get tone during our rush-- hour traffic. Police Battle Rioting Virginia Prison Inmates WITNESSES SAID Roxanne, who e~ peared to be unconscious, was picked up by the driver. He threw her across the front seat and drove oil, the witnesses said. DAILY l'ILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Rogers endorsed Prime M i n i s t e r Kakuei Tanaka's _proJ>OSal for a general Asian-Pacific peace confen!nce and listed several ways in which such major oil· consuming nations as Japan and the United Sates should cooperate. DETROIT (AP) -The Ford Motor Co. says there's an educational problem with its new safety hel~lgnltioo Interlock system. . Anyway, commissioners surveyed from the air a proposed future inland Pacific Coast Highway alignment b e t w e e n Corona del ?-.tar and Laguna Beach. This is an Irvine Company deal because the new routing virtually involves Irvine ran- chlands in total. Later, the com mission "'as wined and dined by the Irvine Company. The Jillie ga,thering was characterized as "just a private part y" and certainly noi a busi· ness session. POWHATAN, Va . (UPI) -State police using tear gas and dogs regained control of tv.'O of three cellblocks seired by In- mates at the Virginia State Prison Fann for Men early today, bul about 30 in- mates. armed with pipes . othci' make- shi ft weapons and scald ing water bar· ricaded themselves inside Cellblock 3. "That's the one that's goi ng to be rough to get." said \Vaync Farrar. a .spokesman for the Virginia Deparlmen l of Welfare and Institutions. About 125 police officers stood outside , and about 100 state police cars were seen inside the prison. "l told him to put bel' down but be kept going." CUrti& said. Curtis escaped with only minor injuries but Radine died ~ day in an area hospital from injuries received when she was struck by the car. Police said they feared Roxanne. who "'as run over by the car, \\'BS either seriously injured or dead. Mrs. Charles Ct.ton said she knC'1V of no one v.'ho V.'OUid have any reason to hurt her family. DtllvfrJ of th' Daily Piklt is guarantttd MtftMY""'"""': If "" .. ""' ""9 ,,_ ........ .., J:M ....... c•U '""' -r ctn" WUI at ......,..., It ""'· Cit" , .. IM111 1'11111 ,, ....... s..twMy "IMI ~1y: II .,... "" .... ,_ ...... ,_-c..., .,. t 1.m. $'"'""''' ..-• t .m. lllM•,, c1n •nd • ''" wift i>. w..,i.1 It yM. C.lt• trt lal<tfl Ylllll It 1.m, TtltphM!S Mt1I Or ..... c ... nlY At•lt .. .. ~2-021 /rttr!"-11 H"'t11!119'4ot1 ltl<h •Ml Wtll..,lt11l•t .... Ul>-1Ut Slh CIMMnlt, ClpltlrlM I~•<~. San J111n C1pl1tr1t11, Din• Point, io•th L•t•nl, l•t•n1 Nlt••I •..• ..-2·'4lt THIS CALL for cooperation appeared to be a substitute for Remy A. Kiss- inger's proposal last May for a ~ sortium of oil·buying nations, a proposal Japan has been hesitant about for fear of aliena ting his Arab oil suppliers. Rogers recommended oil sharing ar- rangements when critical shortages develop, sharing of information on negotiations '"ilh the producing nations ; Japanese-American competition in de- veloping Siberian oil and joint research and development projects. The safety device will be standard in next year'!! cars but is offered as an op- tion on some 19'13s. Websler C. McIJooald, Font's safety product planning manager, predicts "a big hunk of waving fists" when the public comes to grips with the new system, which prevents the car's starting unless lap and shou1der belts are fastened. McDonald said that, of 200 people who gol the system as a no-cost option on 1973 Pintos, 63 percent liked it and 23 percent objected because it was inconvenient when moving the car only a few feet. ONLY A FE\V YEARS back. such sessions would h.!ve indeed raised n1ore eyebrows than just those in Ne'NpOrt Beatji. But apparently this didn't happen. Thus you may assume that in this day and age of the ecology movement, the California Highway Comm iss ion just doesn't raise the concerm that it dirf in yesteryear. About 200 inmates sel1.ed control or three celtblocks and two dormitories al the medium security facilily. about 30 miles west of Richmond , late Sunday ni8ht after a day of tension and minor in- cidents. r-.frs. Ca ton sa id another neighborhood child \\'as almost hit by the car of the same description earlier in the evening but '''as saved by a playmat e who pushed the child out of the v,·ay. Curtis and neighbors who \vitncssed the incident said the car had circled .µic block thrre times, pa ssing t'he chiddren, before hitting them on the fourth pass. Divers Hunt for Atlantis I Oearly, !he times they are a-c hangln'. Farrar said tv.·o ce\lblocks \I/ere secured by state 'police anttprison guards by 5:46 a.m. today and another dormitory was secured later. Police said the boy al so told them he remembered seeing the car driving around the neighborhood for the past Wei!k. Scu.ba Team See ks 'Lost Continent' in Spanish Gulf Storms Roam Across Texas ~ CADIZ, Spain (UPI) -A learn of scuba divers set out today to search the floor of the Gui( of Cad.it for Atlantis, a continent tbat legend says sank WKler the sea thousands of yea rs ago. "\\'e expe ct to find an entire city or at least evidence or ruined buildings," said Jacques Maya!, the team leader and a vete ran seeker of Allantic. "But our first task ls photographing and surveying. We Rain Linge rs Ove r Sout hern Sta tes Along Coa st 'l'e111p,-rnt 1rre.c Hlt ll <w Al~n¥ " ~ A!lluo.1ue•111H1 " " "'rri.rlllo " " ,_.,. " ~ All1~11 " " 811t1•tll111! " " e1r"'r1111111m • .. • ... M " " -·~ " .. 811tl•lo .. " Cll«lftton ... " '""'°'t' • .. ~~~f:.11 " ~ " " ci.v.11nd M " .,.,_ " u ""r.-" .. -· .. ~ For1 W«lh .. ,,_ " .. HMOl•hl .. " H•o"M " " ll'tlllaNllOI!, " " J ACl\IOft•llle " " IC...,_ City " .. Lmt V1911 "' " ~llttt ltodl • " ot ~Ill " " ="'· ~ u "'' ,Mfrmf " Milwif't n ~ MIMI-'l '•vi Ntw t"'"l .. HIW 'l'"fl' .. ~.:·~ CllY li • "' SOr\119• ·~ M "~.!r.:t .fi I ' ' . =~ ,iort1• ~ °"· u 6' " g " • t -*': r. 1, " !I • " " ,. ... ... -~ ... ·" ·" ·" ·" ·" ,. ·'' ·" •• " ·" ... ·" HA110 HAl WI Al NII ~I IYIC"I IOllCA~l I• 7 4M I 11 1 • tl • 1 \ ~tOtlofo----~ ,. ..... ~~NOW '"" ~MIQlllftlS llOW V.S. S t1n1mnry will not pull . ~t a,~Y artifacts or i:,,;, .~1,, o•ev1l!K1 over ""'°'' ot ttlt fragment s of buildings. ""'"'" iooav. 11u1 • !tw 111u'ldlf•!orm1 ro•~ trom IOlllt1trn lew11 to 1~ The divers are part of a 71}.member ex· ,_,, Mln Ji1IPf!I Va!~y • A. 11••~ 11-wa•n•t>Q .... ll.Wtd to-pediUro of U.S. studen ts, teachers and c11v 1or •·•~s we•1 o1 A•1t1 ... T•~·· •M adventurers who arrived a WHlc ago to wnl I nd no1111 o! San AnWlf!lo, tt ~Y M•"V r1in1 111 tM "''' tew a'"' ,,......, study the area off southwest ~in -and 1WOllM 1lrPam1. ""t" • A '" tllvnderSlomo "~ •lllftt to search for what legend desaibes as t!W Vlrqlnlt '"" (1roHN1 <OMts •llCI •\.-cradle of a supe-1"viJ'••tion that -6"'9' !I'll >OUIN'11 llO<l l" l fld ltlll CM\• l.lft:' ''-._. "''"" 1r11 1M \Ol.I"-" P l1>ei111 r.QI__ ........ ...M the Atlantic Ocean Foo d-'-d l!Of!O IM PMlrk "t'<'',..._..,. " (0.11 ~ lnvlded ''''' f!"')IYI ll'lt '''"'" O..io v1u,.. ttld Saumtrn "-t; ~~~:;•,""io~m~i:·I!,,:.=. ins-~~IVERS 1~21annec1mll ~fg.2~~wn today vi,""u'., .., ,,.,,., "' wMt l/lrw1t111. ~llJW areas es ..,. \AM,l,lz.. IC .... l\lckV '"° Ntw Voo-\ Wi t ,...,... I.,. ''It 1-•· ...... ,Ill .. -·· Phil F II llf'to•e d•vtw••'· ~ . ....,... , ;wuu arre , a G•~';;(!:~~1;in10 ":. :::'i: diving instructor from Cllifomla and one ~·~~~ " 1t1t '°' •""' '°' _, ot'-' of thQfllz dlveri going down today. "Dlv-~'""' ... '''u"'• ~tot• d•-•M191d Ing• «It local beaches last week, v.•e saw a "~"' .0 •t 9 •Mllord, "'', It ti II N.....,1e, Roman column and amphora. Tf Y>'e can ('nntt•ttl ""'"th4"f" find a 2.000.year old amphora close to .Y0tl1• ,""..., •Od•v. Llthl v•l'l•ll141 ~e v,·e can find many interesting re· wll'l(fS nl1llt I nd moo"""' llOWJ !Ito-, ' ,, totnino ...,,.,,.,., ,, '° ,, ~~ '" 111t..-. ms ou.t In the ocean. ~ :.v '1141 Tund•Y· Kl9fl to0a1 MO!!I erchaeologi5ts have dismissed ,.,.,,.1 '~Pf,.,~ ,,,. frOll'I " previous rrports of ruins oil the Spanlsh 1e n. •~••nd te'""'',,,,.."' r111tt fl'Olll M ~ • ·•· cod" ., 10 14. w.,., i._-•tur• u. ~ coast. But 1'.ln . a ... ,ne ftM..:r. 1rec:tor S11n. -''"""· Tide• or the project, said she bell••" she and #110..DAV Olher spitilUAJISfS have psychic prrol'!I Of =·~: '.~·,~ :::: ~;Atlant is' exl,tence. UI find 1 TUISOA,. • "I simply know W! w t because ''"' """ u·n '·"'· • 1 I am psychic and the bJghly civilized peo-:!c'"'c!wi 'i:..,. . . . . .. "M~so !.':. ~~ pit ot AllanUs wen very psychjc," she SftOlld ..,... • •:n .,,M. '-' Mid. "flow strong the vlbraUons are i~ ~:.~ ~--~~ !.':'. = ~;: ::. these da)'3 !" • PORTUGAL ' ·I Llabon•· AllAMTIC OCEAN ·~ ... ·' .. :: .. MOROCCO Madrid • SPAtll . •.·• .. -., .. " ·: • • \' .\ ,, .. .,. MEDITtllANEAN SEA W1£RIA 0 2 00 Ml~S ... ,__, NEW SEARCH LAU NCH ED FOR LOST CONTI NENT OF ATLANTIS . Scuba Olvars Begin S..rc.hlng Gulf of Cad!., Spain • AS EVIDENCE that AUantls once f'X· Isled, Mrs. Asher ci ted the dialog> of lhe · Gre<!k phllooo,>her Plato. who in lhe rourth century before Christ detcrlbed an ldy!Uc civiliia tlon beyond •1>at i. "°" the .traitl of Glbntltar. It ~ aonk into the aea ll.000 yeara ago after a cataclysm of undetermlntd or1(1n. • "Scholars have found proof of Incm1 and Rojan civl liz11tlons that were onm consldl<ed mythical," said Julius Davi, a pro!e;sor of history at C.lllomla SU.IA Unlvmlty. ''Th! ...,. G,..k ltori., thll rtler to U-dvillullona also ft! .. ~ Atlaills. So at race vaJue, lt is no 1Clllt credibfe." p k s s • 7 • VOL. 66, NO. 197, 2 SECTION S, 24 PAGES .. a son Nixon 'Put _ Devices On Phones' \VASHJ NGTON (AP ) -A for mer presidential aide testified today that President Nixon had listenin g devices in· stalled in bis offices and on hi s telephones at the White House, the E1· eeutive Office Building and Camp David, Md. Alexande r P. Butterfield, a surprise witness at the Senate's t e I e v i s e d Watergate hearings, said the tape recording equipment was installed by the Secret Service, acting on authority relayed from the President. "There was no doublt in my mind that- they were install ed to record things for posterity, for the Nixon Library ," said -Butterfield, no\v ad1ninistrator of the Federal Aviation Administration. "The President was very conscious of that kind of thing ... " • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 0 ea • ' • . ' MONDAY, JULY 116, 1973 • rv1ne Mason Aide \ New Chief Exect1tive By GEORGE LJ::IDAL 01 Ille 01l1Y Pile! 51111 Irvine Company Ei:ecuti\'e Vice Presi· dent Raymond L. Wat90n, 46. v.·il l serve a! ch.ief executive officer or the com· pany, Board Chairman John V. Newman announced today. He replaces \V illiam R. Mason who died Saturday at the age of ... "I know I speak for the entire Board of Directors in noting our dee p sense -0f loss, which so many understandably and touchingly share," Newman said today. "Bill ~fason left behind a legafy \\"ithou t parallel in his career field. !\fuch of this is visible on the land itself. Some of it is less visible. · "The strong, taten!Pd and ereali\'e n1.anagen:icnt team he built in hi years 11'1th us is but -0ne example." the board chairman said. Today's Final N.'J-Stocks N TEN CENTS o. HEADING IRVINE COMPANY Executive VP Wa tson Butterfield said the devices were in· sta lled on the authority or the President ··by \\'3Y of" H. H. llaldcman and Lawrence liigby, an aide to the former White House chief of staff. Butterfield said the equipment was in- stalled about three yea rs ago. K10NAPER· AND ONE OF HIS VICTIMS SLAIN TODAY AT THE BORDER PATROL CHECKPOINT Clara Louiff Coronado, SO, Slain With Shotgun. Leg5 Are Tho5e of Her Abductor, Gary Raphael, 22 ··Accordngly. Raymond L. \\lalson. as executive vice president -0f the Irvine Com pany. v.·ill be acting as chief ex· ccutivc officer for the firm . In this capacity, he will ca rry out all the major corporate respons ibilities required of that office," Newman concluded. Memorial Rites For Mr. Ma son Tuesday, 7 A.M. Butterfield said as far as he knows tapes o( presidential conversations dating back to the summer o{ 1970 remain ·available. Onofre A spokesman for the company uid 1\ family spokesm&n .~id 1oday a Sh .lilll ~ w ' 1 " • mem-0rial service v.·ill be read for Ofltout s ' pr~~~t. ti~~ r:::bru~:it~: ~c; \Villiam Ralph ~fason late president Ot . .U.. • · · . ,., "',........ .. eGl,arfl~ consistent wUb U. .rqnpany's tbe Irvine Company at the Pacific Vie'v ., -· bylaW3, to encompass those <>f the oom· ~temorial Park chapel, Corona de! Mar. .. ~ pany'• chief e-.c:ecutive orncer," tbe , . .. He said the equipment actually was in· stalled by tbe technical security division of the Secret Service. Butterfield said be served during his White House days as liaison man with.the Secret Service, and therefore arranged for the installations. ' · · .. ._ -~. spotesman concluded. .... .._ at 7 o clock Tuesday morning. Gu1i1nllll Shotguns woman, Dies ii'. Hnil of Lead The company Board of Directon t " Mr. Mftson died Saturday afternoon. " meets on Aug. 13. It isn1t known ~xa The family suggesled lhat memorial vaaancy wi ll remain on the board until contributions might be made to Orange He said. there \\'ere tape recording devices in the Oval Off ice of the Presi- (See BUGGING, Page Z) "W oma11 A1Tested After Turning Off Police Car A woman who said she feared children might fool around \\'ilh a Newport Beach police patrol car parked with the engine • and radio running found herself in a jam Sunday. Theresa Jenn ings, 23. of 12292 Hasler St., Garden Grove, reached into Office r Don Cots' squad car. shut of[ the engine and tucked the keys between the seats. Officer Cots 11t the time v.•as respond- ing to a medical aid ca ll in Fashion Isl and, where an elderly inan had fa llen, cutting his head. He determined that no ambu lance \vas needed although one had been called and r8ced back to his patrol car. only to find the ignition off, the radio inoperative as a result and the keys missing. Patrolman Cots 'finally found them between the seats and completed his ta sk after considerable delay. He then arrested Mrs. Jennings and booked her on suspicion of interfering with a poli~ officer, despite her ex· plana tions that it \vas all due to good in- tentions. Orange Coast Weather Those lo\v clouds will bang aroond in the morning hours through Tuesday, according to the weather service, with a chance that southerly winds from the desert areas will blow them away later in the week. Hlghs of 69 arc expected. at the beaches, rising to 75 inland. INSIDE TODA\' The Defn11e Departme1tt lias conceded 8521 raided Cambodian targets before 1970 despilt. rar- Jier public a11t.rtio111. See stor~, Paoe 4. ' L.M. ••'11 l aeatlftt It Call._.. ' Cl-.tlilM 1 ... H Gtl!liu 1~ ,,...~ .. 0.-111 f!Nfklt • 1111~1 ,._ ' ... ..,...,_, . l'IM_,. 1 .. 11 .. ., 111t 1tecff'll t ....... ~ u '""' ........ " ~ Mll¥fll I N1tleMI Ne-• on .... ctwt11r • IWt'tll ,.,,_,. 11 .._.. . ''"''· iMCll M111t.tlt l •H Ttlllwhliltl II ,,....... . --. w-··,.... ll-14 .... """' 4 1 By ~(IHN VALTERZA Of the 01Hy Piiot Sl1ff The kidnaping of a middle-aged couple fron1 their San Diego home early today ended in gunfire and death t\l'O hours t.i ter at the San Onofre Border .Patrol checkpoint "'here the suspect and one or his victims "·ere killed instautly. The apparently senseless bloodbath claimed the life of a middle-aged house11•ife and a shotgu n wielding ab- ductor identified as Gary Raphael, 22, who died en route to a hospi tal. The shooting occur'red at about 8 a.m. as a blue van -0wned by the dead \\'-Oman's husband pulled to the side of the permanent roadblock a fc\11 miles south of San Clemente. The only survivor -0f the shooting was the dead woman's husband. John Charles Coronado. 48, who was able to flee from the van when the shooting started. The two hours of te rror for the in· nocent. couple began at about 6 a.m. to- day al their home in San· Diego, police said. It ended two hou rs later with Mrs. Clara Louise Coronado, 50, slain by a single shotgun blast to the face fired at point-blank range by the abductor. The assailant a few moments later was slain by police gunfire directed to the enclosed portion of the van. Police, highway patrolmen and other investigators pieced together this account Rites f Ol' Man From CdM Fou11d In Plane Slated Graveside funeral .services for the brother of a .Corona de! ~'1ar man v.•hosc B·24 lxlmber \Vas discovered rccenlly in the New Guinea jungle 3()'years after it crashed remain Wltatively scbeduleQ for Wednesday. The remains of 1st Ll. Francis G. "Bµd" McDowell , 22, were sd1eduled to arrive this evening at Lo'ng Beach Airpo rt A full military honor guard is sched· u1ed to be present for ·t.he ·lt· a.m. fun-- era! Wednesday. · • 1be World War II aviator'• brother \\'illlam McDowell, of 432 Angelita Drive. O:>rooa del ~1ar. accidentally noticed a story in Wednesday's Daily Pilot re- garding the hometown relum and burial of another crewman on his brother's bomber. _ lfe had not known his brother's plane had been found but recognf1.ed the name of crew chief l..eonard Womlak and cor1' tarted his family and was put in touch wit h military authoritcs who hitd been trying to find him ror t~ month~. Ironically. he re•d of discovery or the wreckage 30 ye&!'!'t to the day July 10, 194.' that the Llbcralbr bomber cra~hcd. • of the.. "unexplainable .. incident ~vhich,_ patroln1an cruising along the frcc\\'RY began shortly after ·d:iybreak : and the officer pulled up alongside, Raphael -a plumber dressed for noticing that the couple "·ere in !rouble. \1·ork -,1·as picked up by a coy,.·orker and lie fell ba~k and called fo r as~istanc~. immrdiarelv dre\v a gun on his partner. At that po~nt, CHP Sgt. Jack Cook sa1~. :\lomentS!ater the gunman and partner ~?ronado fc1g~cd a ?cart attack and his noticed the Coronado van parked neri r k_idnapc r allo"cd the man lo pull to the h I . h d . .d side 1 r coupes ouse an \vent 1ns1 c. 11.: h th CflP ir· · h · " . 1t c o 1crr surveying l e Seconds later . tbc un\\llling fellow scene cautiously. Coronado "·as replaced plu~ber fled from the Coto~ a_d o at the i~·heel by hi s v.ifc. rest~ence. but the lllnman st~yed inside. The flight began once again. rousing the couple and ordering them to By then several more CHP units and dress. . se\'cral prowl cars from the Oceansi~!! He ordered the Coronados 1~!0 t™: van P-0tice Department joinC'ain the pursuir. and drove a~ound_ fo~ a fe'_Y '!llnutes 1n an "As they approached the checkpoint altempt to find his first v1ct1tn. hrrc." Sgt. Cook said, "the kidnaper f'ailing at that. Raphael t h c n n1adc mention of the problem and clrove to a residence and bound his vie-predicted, ·no\\' "e'rc gonna ha\·e some lims "·ith nooies around the neck, then fun· ... ordered • Coronado to '!rive along the Patrolmen ordered the van to the side Route 405 Free.1ol'ay and then up the Snn of the multi-lane roadblock and ap- Dicgo Frce"·a)" pro11chcd the vehicle. Tn the Oceanside ar<'il. Coronado \vas ··Jfc jerked open the door:· a fellow able to stir lhe interest of a high1vay ~See SLAYISG, Page 2) 1'ro1n 'Rags to Ricla~s Jlagtime,• a sloo p some saJJors ~ay ·looks Ukc an elongated star boat. outdueled Windward J>as.1>age in a vi rtual 1natrh race over the last 50 miles lo gra b first-to-finish honors tn the 2,225-inilc Tra;spacif1c Yacht .ll>ce from . Lils Angeles to Honolulu. Ragtime ,lini~ttcd four minutes and 31 seco nds ahead of Winstward J>assaRe 1n one of the closest Transpac finishes on record. Read bow !he dtd 1t Gii· Page 18. the ntxt stockholders mee ting. Empire Arca Council of Boy Scouts o( In June, \_'entura ranche r Newm an wa s America. or to the Orange County J unior elected chairman -0f the board after a Achievement program \1'hich were Claremont man, Howa rd Allen, was . .° . . selected by stockholders to fill the vacan-among !l·lr. ~fason s pr1nc1pnl cha ritable cy created v.•hen forrTic r board chai rman interests in recent years. N. Loyall ?.fcLarcn. 81 . stepped down. lie servrd as \\·cstem l{cglonal f'resi· Allen, 47. 'is an cxoo..itive of the South-dent of the Boy Scout!!. and helped em California Edison C.Ompany. establish the Junior Achievement pro- \Vatson \\'as named to the company gram in Orange County. board of clireetors in June of J970 just Interment \.\'I ll be pn\'atc. t1vo monlhs before he \C'as made ei:- ecutive vice president of the firm he )oin· cd in 1960 as manager of the planning department. In 1964. Watson \l'BS elected vice presi· dent and in 1966 he a s s u med responsibili ly for !he land development di1·1sion. lie became :i senior vice presi dent 1n January of 1968. A resident of Ea stblu lf. \\'atson. and his wife El sle, have four children, Kathy, Bryan, Lisa and David . A native of Seattle, he attended UC Berkclf:Y •••here hC earned b o t h bachelor's and maslc~s degrees in architecture and urban planning. He is a director of the Easter Seal Society of Orange County. i3 a registered architect and a Fellow -0f the American Institute of Architects. i::r -{::{ i::r 14 Persons Hurt In Truck Plunge PALi'.tDALE 1,\P1 -Fou rteen pcrsoos ,1·rre injured \\hen a prckup truck In .. 1\·hich they \l'Cre richng plungerl down a 400-fool rmbankmcnl 1n the Angeles Nn· tional Forest 16 milr s south\rcst or here . the High\\·ay Pntrol said A }!1gh1•>ay Patrol spriokesman S;"tid l\10 adults anrl thre<' children were the most severely injured. They suffert'tl mullip\e fractures and other in1ur1cs 111 the misha p Sunday night. he satd. Thl~ -0the rs rccrived only n11nor injuries. Investi~ators said !hr group con si!ltt'd of players and fans of tht' Verdugo )~ills Ponl 1 y League baseball team . William Maso1i Gi,ven Tribute of Area Officials <i ovc rnnlcnt -0fflci als continued tocln y to olfrr eulogies to \Villiam Ralph ~laq}n. Jr,in(' Company Presiden t \vho died Sa!urday of an apparent heart attack. Ronald Caspe rs. cha irn1an of lhe Orange Coun!y Board of Supervisors sa id , "The loss of Bill ~1ason lo the Orange County community will be long felt by all those "'ho kne''' and respected him and by the thousands or Orange Countians "·hose lives his visions and ef- forts have so significantly impacted. ''Bill ~Jason was a man of the highest integrity and forthright h o n e s l y , ' ' Caspers said. "All of his business deal· ings were done in a spirit of fairness and -0pcnness. "His dreams for the futur11: of the Irvine Ran ch were embodied \vilh rreativlty and dedicatioo ," he u.ld. ad- ding personal sympa1hy to ~trs. ~lason and his family. "\Ve will grc<1lly miss Bill ~lason as 11 friend,·· Caspers concluded. Qi.spcrs' remArks today· followed an outpouring of slroilar sympathies ex- pressed over the weekend by nott11blcs in· C'luding St11te Sen. DeMls E. Carpenter 1 R·Newport Btac1'), formu Fl f t h District supervis« Altoo E. AUtn ; UC lr\'1nc ChanC'cllor Dnn1cl (; ,\ld rich .Jr .: n1ayors Dona ld ~lrlnni'i of i\cwporl Beach .. John JJurton of lrvtne and Jack llammclt or Cos1a :\!rc;i. a.~ ~rll as Daily Pilot publisher Ho be rt N. \\'C'ed. Speaking for the cit y or La~una Beach. ~1a)'or Charlton Boyd said 1oclay. "The city will miss ihis fine m:u1 " The shock of ~"Ir. !i.tason"s death Satur· day at the age or 54 cont inued today. Mr.' Alason v.·bo joined the Irvine Company in 1959 has been president of the land de\'clopment and ranching firm since 19e6. Maynr Boyd remarked h1 V.'as ''taken aback" by the Re\.\!':. "I had met \\'il h him only this pJtst \\·eek under very fa vorable circumstances to di'.icuss l.3guna 's role in the <eo..1stal ) Irvine development and h1 ~bv1ay tran~fcr." Royd said. "I had Rh\·ays found him to be gracious. alert ;ind a most competent business execu tive." he cOncl uded . A$Stmblyman Robert Bodham ( R· Nev.·port Reach ) said, "This Is sincerely a deep and pcrsonalJou to me ending an assoclallon th11t has lasted for over a decade 1n all the fields of my profcsslori both socially and In business. • 4: UAIL1 PILOI • $17-.S Mi llioti Transit Board Approves Budget By JACK BROBACK Of 1M D•llY l'llel Siil! A $17.5 mllllon budget ror 1973-7~ "'as adopted by the Orange County Trunsil District Board o{ Directors today. Of the total, $15.5 mi!Bon will l'Onlc from fediral and state grants leaving $2 -million to be financt?d by lhe district 's 4.5-cerlt tu rate. 1be new buc1get contrasts with the $3.9 million spending program for 1972·73. But as transit board cha irman Ralph Clark High Winds Catch Boats By Surprise Pointed out the district operations hnvc gro~'n trcinendously in 1he past year. "At th is 1i1ne Inst year \.\'C nad only IU en1ployes and no buses on the streel:i . 1'odi1}' with 17 employes u1KI four part time \\'Orkers we have dial ·a·r~de in I.a ~labrn, we will have 55 buses operating on 31 rou tes by September," Clark stated, "This bOOget includes the construc11on ol a headquarters-maintenance.facility in Uarden Grove, the park·n·ride facility in Fullerton , a dial-a-ride expansion pro- gram to other cities, an expansive. cor- ridor sludy and the continued expansion of bus services with 63 new vehicles ar- riving ne1t spring," the chairman con- tinued. "We will accomplish all this ...,•ith the same 4.S<rnt tax rate as last year," Clark continued, "this is because of our suc~ss in receiving fed eral grants and our judicious use of our state sales tax revenue." .. Anticipated revenul's from fed eral and state funds includes $7.2 millio n federal Heavy winds off the south Orange funds ; $2 million properly ta x revenue; Coast caught boaters by surprise Sunday $1 million ·rrom bus fares. and S7. l and caused dozens of skippers from Dana million from the state sa les tax on Harbor to seek assistance. One boat gasoline. wubed ashore on the S&n Clemente Principal spending figures include: beach Sunday night. An ll-foot cabin cruiser with five Salaries, and wages, $1 .88 million: pro- penons aboard broke down while crufs. fessional and special services (consul- ing oil the San Clemente shore. The pilot, tantJ $1.12 million; advertising. $466,254: Jol:m AleDnder ot Riverside, had 00 bus operations, $2.9 million and "' IDCbtr, and-the buffeted boat was caught transportation aJld travel $67,360. _ up in the IW'f and carried ashore, Rt· The growth of the district is indicated UiDg down one half mile north of the pier by the 31 routes now in operation which • cover the central, northern and western at~~ ~m~. but the group needed areas of the coUn(y. During th e coming tbe ·uslrtance: of lifeguard!, and the bolt year service will be extended to Mission was towed off the beach by land. Viejo, El Toro· and Jlher south county Later Sunday night at about tl p.m., points. the Harbor Partol sighted Darts from a Jn other business today, the · district 28--foot cabin cruiser that had run out of directors: . gas JOO yards off San Onofre beach. -Heard Deputy Coi.inty Counsel Ken- The boat had left Catalina for Newport nanl R. Smart declare that the director's Beach earliec., that day and missed its poswast vfo3rmcan't'lbecly hae~e b%t ~re~n~i~~~:~,e~ target, according to a If a r b o r Patrolman. The patrol rescue boat towed felony. the cruiser in to Dana Harbor, arriving t.1cWhinney was foWld guilty of grand about I a.m. The owners name was not theCt by a Superior Court jury early this immediately available . month in the Mile Square agricultural 'I1le Harbor Patrol wa5 abo kept busy lease scandal. He has appealed the Sunday afternoon with 15 boat tows dur-sentence and is free on bail. ing 1 two-hour period. ?.fost boats given Smart said the League of Cities should assistance were sailboal5 with brokJn·--appoint a new member and that the mast!; or rudders and those whose pifots group is expected to act July 2.6. The new . who oouldn't navigate their vessels in the director's tenn will be only for the bal- 2:0-mlle-per-hour wind, a patrolman saicL ance tlCat McWhinney was to serve and will expire in two and a half years. FretltP-.e I BUGGING •.. dent and in Nixon's ot!ice 'at the Ex· ecutive Offioo Building. He said they were activated automatically. Butterfield said there also were ~n1 devices on Nixon's telephones in those offices, in the Lincoln sitting roon1'of the Whit.e House, and at the President's personal cabin St Camp David. Butterfield said the people who had knowledge of lhe listening devices· In- cluded the President, Haldeman, Higby and the Secret Service officials involved. He said he did not think either John D. Ehrlichman, a Conner lop aide to Nixon, or John W. Dean. JIJ, the fired White House COUllllel, knew of the reeording equipment. • Butterfield , ~·ho said he look the stand y,·ilh only three hours' notice. was called to testify prior to the scheduled a~ pearance of Herbert \V. Kalmb.'!ch , Nix· on's former personal lawyer. Father Rescues Daughter From Bottom of Pool A Costa Mesa lather saved the life of his 2-year-old daughter by snatching her from the bottom ol a swimming pool Sunday and giving her mouth·to-mouth resuscitation. Tbe girl,' Erika Evans, 3216 Idaho Place, was reported in good condition to-daf at Orange County Children's boopltal. Her father, Jotm Evans, had brought her up from the pool bottom by the time Costa Mesa firemen arrived. The girl, unconscious but breathing, was given in- halation and rushed to Costa Mesa ~lemorlal llospital for emergency treat- men t. Personnel Chief Hart to Res ign ?i-feanwhile. in New York today, former AUy. Gen. John N. Mitchell and former Commerce Secretary ~faurice H. Stans claimed that the "carni val atmosphere" of the Watergate hearings would make it impossible for them to get fair trials here oo charges involving a $200,000 con-tribuUon to President Nixon's re-election William C. Hart . Orange Counly person- . nel director for the past 20 years has ~~ for the two asked U.S. resigned his position effective A tig. 17, District Court Judge Lee P. Gagliardi to Hart, in a Jetter lo the Board or the chat r · Supervisors, said he was taking a post in dismiss · ges 0 coospiracy · the Calif · H did t obltrucUng justict and perjury or . to ano r om ta county. e no move the trial to another district or to name the county.. . . t an indefinite postponement. --Th«: personnel di rector said he enioyed . agree 0 "·ork1ng for Orange County and offered lo assisl the board in recruiting a ne1v OLlN•I COAST • DAILY PILOT ' .,,,. 0••"99 c .. 11 o-.1LY l'ILOl, "''"' loft•t" lo -lntd "'-H•-·""°'~ It Pllb!l"*I b\I w. o.....,. eo..1t l'UOllVl1"9 C-nr. ''"' director . Hart is the second county department head to leave office in the pas! five mon ths. Treasurer lvan II. Swonger retired on Feb. 28 and his post y,·as com- bined \Vilh !hat of !;ix collector Robert C.'itron. Dtillr ,., .. , .....,. .., Rkltt rC Dr1k1 Kites in Fliglat Portion of fleet that turned out for Sunday's second annual "Flite of the Kite$" moves bri skly past Bal- boa Pavilion while negotiating course in Newport Harbor. Eighty-nine entrants battled breezes and each other for racing honors in the modern version of the "Flight of the Snowbirds.'' For the outcome, see Boating, Page ~8. • Blast Rips -Beach House;- Occupant Suffers Burns • An explosion ripped through a small Huntington Beacn home early" Sunday morning, blowing the roof ofithe struc· lure and causing the occupant to suffer bums over 40 percent Of his body. Firemen said today Robert Guthrie, 25, From Pagel SLAYING •.. patrol official said, "and shouted (or everyone to get out." Raphael immediatedly f i red bis shotgun aiming •the blast of pellets through the windshield of the van. Coronado tumbled unhurt from the passenger side and as bis horrified wife turned, the gunman shot her in the face. Then, patrolmen said. the assailant began firing from the van toward of· ficers. The exchange of gunfire lasted for several minutes. "Then we held back and "'aited," Sgt. Cook said. "It must have been five minutes or so and no aclivity was noted from the van ... \\'e were waiting for tear ga s to arrive,'' he added. Then officers began creeping toward the bullet-torn truck and found both OC" cup.ants dead. - The assailant, dressed in thick, brown- canvas coveralls was on his back in the rear of the van, tbe shotgun nearby. Mrs. Coronado's body lay between the t\\.·o front seats. Patrolmen took her shocked , grieving husband to a nearby patrol unit where he sat dazed for more than an hour, barely ab le to speak to investigators. The entire shoo tout took place in a con- gested, busy section of the checkpoint. '~·ith traffic moving on the busy freey,•ay at one side and large trucks and tractors park<'d nt the 1reigh station and in· spccrion area to the other. "It's hard to believe," one officer said g:izing at 'the death scene. "lie just picked this couple at random . They didn't even know the man 1,1:ho did a\1 this." "It apparently was a 'l'ild, unex- plainable thing," a San Diego police sergeant added. ·of 310 Sixth St. told them he had discon- nected the gas hose to the house's wall heater. The gas from the heater ignited, resulting in the explosion and fire. Firemen estimated that $6,500 dama ge was caused by the blaze which they con- tained before It could spread to adjacent ~mes. Guthrie was taken to Pacifica Hospital [or emergency treatment and was transferred to the bum ward at Orange County Medi cal Center y,·here he is listed in stable condition today. 2 Me8a Colleges Receive Funds For Loan PW.n T"'O Costa f.1esa campuses are among three Orange County colleges which will receive nearly $300,000 for use in the National Direct Student Loan Program. U.S. Rep. Andrew Himshaw (R· Newport Beach) disclosed that Orange Coast College, through Ch an c e 11 or Norman E. \Vatson, will receive $70,691 to benefit 157 studenL'i. Southern califomia College will receive $143,nO for 319 students with the funds to be administered through college presi· derit Emil A. Balliet. Chapman College is scheduled to receive $75,166 for 167 students. federal fund! provide 90 percent of the monies distributed under the program. Tbe participating colleges contribute the remaining 10 per~nt. Kelly Wjns 120-mile Death Valley Walk DEATI{ VALLEY (AP) -Distance runner John Kelly, finishing a 120-mile walk across Death Valley in a record 34 hours. says "It was hell but I'm glad I did it." Kelly, an Ireland native who now Jives in Santa Monica, looked exhausted after finishing the trek late Sunday afternoon wilh only two brief rest breaks. 'Bouncing Boy' Only Slightly • Injured by Car Little boys are lucky to be so bounc- able. · This fact of Jife was proven again Sun- day on ~ the Balboa Pcn!Muia, when Andrew William Makshanoff, 2, came barreling out of a garage at what one witness described as "about 90 miles an hour." The little boy who lives at 242 Walnut st., Newport Beach, bounced off the fender of a slowly passing car driven by Craig C: Sowman, 19, of 1707 E. Ocean Blvd., Corona de! ~tar, sustaining only a skinned knee and chest abrasions. Investigators said the bouncing baby boy was treated at Hoag ?i-femorial Hospital and released when it was determined no bones were broken and no ot,her damage was done. Bowman was not cited In the accident at L Street and the alley alOhg the ocean front. Lamps Stolen From Collecto1·'s Newport Home A treasure trove of rare antique Tif· fany lamps worth $117 ,500 Is being sought today, folloy,•ing the Saturday night burglary of a Newport Beach collector's apar1menl. Jerry O'COOnor, of 2125 Sherington Place, reported the loss to police early Sunday when he arrived home at the Oak\\'OOd Apartments and found his unit burglarized. He told delective Bob Brockie the haul included 16 of the hand-crafted glass lamps p!us an undisclosed amount of cash J Ge.nuine Tiffany lamps are' extremely rare and were made around the tum of the century by Nev• York glass artist Louis Comfort Tiffany. He hand blew and hand colored each individual item of glass used in the mosaic pattern of the shades . Docto1~s Say Nixon Still Improving WASHINGTON tUPI I -President NixOn cootlnucd to show improvement !oday in his battle \1-'ith viral pnewnonia . his doctors said. "He is progressi ng satisfactorily," report~ Dr. Sot .Katz, Pulmonary speclahst from George town Universilv School ol Medicine, one of the tea m Or doctors treating the President 1H Bethesda Naval Hospital. White House Press Secretary Ron ald L. Ziegler said Nixon's progress is such that he 'viU be able to meet as sclledull!d \l'ith three stale visitors in lhe next two weeks -the Shah of lran on July 24 . Australia Prime 1.finister Gough Whitlam off July 30 and Japanese Prime Minister Takuei Tanaka July :h-Aug. 1. <1t Nixoo's spirits were described .is "just fine" and Katz predicted he may be able to leave the hospital by Thursday or Fri· day. · · ''He's vivacious. loquacious -an ex- cellent patient," said Katz. · Nixon's doctors said they were having a tough time convincing him he had to slow do"n and curtail his schedule. His ~·ork load is said lo be only about a quarter of normal because of the illness. Ni1.on awoke at a a.m. after a good night's sleep, Or. Walter Tkach said. Th' President \Vas given for chest therapy treatments Sunday. T1le treatment r es u I t e d In "coniiderable improvement in his chest congestion and chest di scomfort is now at a minimum ," Tkach said in his morn- ing medfcal bulletin. The therapy did cause the President to experience some fatigue to the point where he was given mUd pain killers for relief, Tkach said. ln general, Nixon had a good day on S•mday. He had a hearty dinner of seafood, served about 6: 15 p.m. The President retired after his last chest therapy about 9 p.m. and slept soundly throughout most of the night, Tkach said . This sharply contrasted with his firsl night at the hospital Thursday "':hen he had a fl!ful four hours sleep. The chest inhalation exercise was ad- ministered by Sue A. \V 111 i a m s , pulmonary nurse specialist assigned to the hospital's chest clinic. Parking Ticket Wasn't Enough A Santa Ana man who allegtdly snarled to a pair ol Newport Beach jioli"""°' that he pays their 511!arles with his traffic ticket fines, may con- tribute a bit more than he expected. Keith 0. Jennings, 21, of 2909 South Bristol St., was isSued a citation charging a parking violation SWlday in the 100 block of 38lb Street. Officer Carl Anderson claimed Jen- nings ~·as so annoyed--that he threw the ticket on the ground. Anderson and his partner then arrested Jennings on a charge of littering. Mewl Workers To Begin Strike LOS ANGELES (AP) -A union spokesman says that sheet metal workers were ready today to launch a strike which some observers say could cripple new construction in Los Angeles County. "l didn't sec one opposing hand in the ~· place," union spokesman Clyde Ringwood said after members of his 4,(l()C}.strong local gathered for a strike vote at the Embassy Auditorium Saturday. Workers make $11.65 an hour in pay and fringe benefits and seek the 55 cent increase struck down several yea rs ago in the wage freeze. Management says it ts being priced out of business. Rain Floods Italy MILAN, Italy (AP) -Severe rain- stonns lashed northern Italy over the v,reekend causing flood s and landslides along the Italian Riviera and leaving at least 15 persons dead , authorities said. F'our people drowned when a bridge col· lapsed in the bad \\·eather near Turin on Saturday. Their cars plunged into a r\\'er. LOW. PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED EUEWHERE Adn1lrol NO-DEFROSTING Adnr1ro1. REFRIGERATOR/FREEZER ALL THESE GREAT _ _,_t,FEA TURES •11t edUioM Ir• -11•~«1, MO<'Oor "'•11'1191! Frlll•V· ,,. Co1l1 M"•· ,.....,,.,, ll11cl!, ~""l!"'lltor> 111ach/Fwn11in v1111y, L•o""• 1111(.fl, """''''10c11-c• ....o S..n c1 • ....,,,111 hn J\lln C111<tu•,,. A •11>11" rt11l-I MlllOll ~ pi;OlhhW i.l!\lrlllY• 11W1 •11nct1.,.., Tiit &lflMl,.I PllO!IU\fnt "''"' " It JJD wnt .. , 51rfff, Cotti M ... , C11t!Oftli., ,.._,., lt1li11f N. W11tl 1'•nldt111 1MI l'\/01!'11.,. J1c~ ll. C11•l1y \'kl ..,.loitll .,.. C-•l lo\flfllltW lh1m11 IC11rll Newport Cou11cil Names Advi sory Pa11el Members • full YudO'I 0'ioMC1M"' fl'!tllf Door Shell -for lntl1nt t v1ll1bil!ty. • Ou11 T1mp1r•l11r1 Co11trol1- 11111;1 !he rl1ht t1mper1tur1 for I.Ch Mellon, • Twin 1'1:1~1!1/n Critf)ff1.-llMPt fNJt. WflltblH l•rdtn fretft, • htr1 l.trp lt1frtflil'9!0f' Door Sl'lelfts-holds ewn \Ill «11111\ ..... , SLIMLINE HEmlGEHATOH ElllOr Tliom11 Ji.. Mllfphi111 MMltlflil .,,, .... L P1t1r lfri•• ftf'WSIWt hid! City l'111r Nft1Nff IMc•OHtc. JJJ) N1wp1rl l111l1v1rd M1i1111, Mtlr1111 P.O. 111 1111, •2&&J ...... "'""' Cet11 M-: Ill '#HI .. , l!••tl Leeui'll 111t111 m ,..,..,, ......._ MllOllll'lt*" lllldl! 1N1S lttefl loull"t•I "" Cllrlwltt: IN H"1'll 1:1 Clmlril 111111 , ........ 1714) '4Jo4JJ1 c-. .... , .......... &41-1&71 (""'1tfll, lt?I, Drlllt' Gitt! l"lllll!tl'!"' Cf!lllllny. N9 ,,... ••"" lltlilttt1ll•11, 1111191'111 l'llflfotr .. Mvtnit""*'ll "9fflfl _.._ lft!llW •-,.,,..,,w., w!.._I lfl«lll _. MIUllorl ltf Cle'/""'f l'li'M'. t...i CMM M.tlMI NW r1 C11t1 MIM, '"""'YI... ._,..,.... w """'" n.u -"ftlYI -fMM IJ,11 "*""''' MllllllV ...,. ... , ..... ~. ' ( ,. The Newport Beach City Council h1&s &PPointed new members to the citizens advisory himmJttee wbJch handles the. n:Jes applicable to the city's r.oning orctiJlances. Councilmefl confirmed the nppointrnent of seven members and six alternates to the Development Standards Citizens' AdviliOry Committee under 11. new policy by which one member and an alternate flr~ appointed by each council mr:mbtr, The council stlll has to confi rm one. altematr: recommcndat1on by Coun· c1lman ~1\lan Dostal. Contim1atlon is ex- pected at the July 23 etiuncll m~1Jng, Membert and alternates: oppo1nted to the corrimlltee are member Stephen Barnard, 101 Via Dijon. nnd altemat~ Fnnk Spansler, 1000 W. Ocean Front, appointed by Mayor Pro Tem Howard Rogers: member Mrs. Margot Skilllng, •• ' 6610 W. Ckean Front, and allemate Pa.ul Balalis, 5309 River Ave., appointed by Ma,yor Donald Mcinnis. Others include Al Forgit. 2205\ii W. Balbo11 Blvd .. and alternate Miss Goldie J...,ph, Sll Via Lido Soud, appointed by Councilman Carl Kymla; me m be r Gordon Glass~ 2562 Waverly Drive, •l>' pointed by Councilman ?i-1ilan Dostal: member Richard Clucas, 4403 Seashore Drive. and alternate TQm 11ou!ton, 208 lluby Ave .. :lppointf'd )ly Councilman Paul Ryckofr. Other fl\)J>ointrnent[{ arc member SIC"-'llrt \Voodard , :!709 Ocenn Blvd .. and oltC'matc Jerry Hill, 404 Tris Ave., ap- pointed by Councilman Richard Croul: member Richard Spooner, 1327 Seacrest J...nne, and aJ1eroate !\-1rs. Patience Bethel. 3919 Park Lane, appointed by Councilman John Store. M ... NT 1JJ4 N1 tl1fr11ti11, Nfrlg1r1tor 11ctie111 with Ji.rct;c Ji.Ir flo_. trtt.fll f.f fllll 1ycl1 c~11111l1!1111. ALL THIS $25995 FOR ONLY ..... C11Jl • f'ullWllftl'l f,.._C!Mt • W-•ltll'lfl T.mpwwtutt Contrd • ftM Vltutl Oeftolt>*"" ~ • twtrl o..p Door ""'" 1 F11n Wldtt'I frMn·Mtft Ctri!Jet Ott.,,., 159'5 Member of 90 DAY C.llfornl•'• Lorg .. t CASH Cooperativ. Buylnt Group Wifh The WITH A"lOYll Volumt luyln1 C.UDIT .,,.,, 0110,.._ Power of 110 StorK(-;;J ~ ....... ..,...... ~ 1115 NEWPiRT BLVD. Dmtawn Costa Mesi -Pirone 548-7788 • • • . , '. ' Orange C~!!t Today's Final N.Y. Stocks •• ·-' --VOL. 66, NO. 197, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE .COUNTY, ·CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JULY 16, 1973 c TEN CENTS Former i\ide Says Nixon Bugged Own Phones , WASHINGTON CAP) - A former presidential aide testified today that President Nixon had listening devices in· stalled in his offices and on his telephones at the \Vhite House, the Ex· ecutive Office Building and Camp David, Md. Alexander P. Butterfield, a surprise V1itness at the Senate's t e 1 e vised Watergate hearings, said the tape recordini equipment was installed by the Secret &f!rvlce, acting on authority relayed from the President. • "There was no doubt in my mind that they were installed to record things for posterity, for the Nb:on Library ," said Butterfield, now administratOr of the Federal Aviaticm. Administration. "The President was very conscious of that kind or thing ... " · Butterfield said the devices were in- stalled on the authority of the President "by way of". ti. R. Haldeman and Lawrence Higby, an aide to tbe former \Vhite House chief Of staff. Butterfield said the equipment Y.'a.s in- stalled about three years ago. Butterfield said as far as be knov.·s tapes of presidential conversations dating back to the swnmer of 1970 remain available. He said the equipment actually was iJl. stalled by the technical security division cl the Secret Service. Butterfield said he served during his White House days as liaison man with the Secret Service. and therefore arranged for the installations. He said there were tape recording ' KIDNAPER AND ONE OF HIS VICTIMS SLAIN TODAY AT THE BORDER PATROL CHECKPOINT Clara Louise Coronado, SO, Slain With Shotgun: Legs Are Those of H~r Abductor, Gory Raphael, 22 Tran·sit. Budget Adopted County Board Approves $17.5 Million for '73-74 By JACK BROBACK Of Ille PIHt f'llOt Sl1H A $17.5 million budget for 1973-74 \Vas adopted by the Orange County Transit District Boar(! of Directors today. Of the total, $15.5 million '"ill come from federal and state grants leaving $2 million to be financed by the district's 4.5-cent tax rate. stated. ''This budget includes the &nstruction of a headquarters-maintenance facility in Garden Grove. the park-n-ride facility in Fullerton. a dial-a-ride expansion pro- gram to other cities, an expansive cor- ridor study and the continued expansion of bus services with 63 new vehicles ar- riving next spring," the chairman con- tinued. "We will accomplish all this with the same 4.5-<:ent tax rate as last year," Clark continued, "this is because of our success in receiving federal grants and our judicious use of our state sales tax revenue." nard R. Srnart declare that the director·s post formerlly held by Derek i\fc\Vhinney was vacant because of hi5 conviction of a felony. l\lc\Vhinney was fowid guilty of grand theft by a Superior Court jury early this n1onth in the Mile Square agricultural lease scandal. He has appealed the sentence and is free on bail . Smart said the League of CiUes should appoint a new me1nber and thal the group is expected to act July 26. The new director's term will be only for the baJ<. ance that McWhinney was to serve and v.ill expire in two and a half years. devices in the Oval Office of the Presi- dent and in Nixon's office at the Ex - ecutive Office Building. He said they were activated automatically. Butterfield said there also were recording devipes on Nixon's, telephones in those olfices,. ln the Uncoln sitting room of the \fhite House, and at the President's persanal cabin at Camp David. Butterfield said the people v.•ho had knowledge of the listening devices in- cluded the President, Haldeman, lligby San Onofre Gun Battle Fatal to Pai1· By JOHN VALTERZA Of IM P1Ftr '"" ..... The kidnaping ot a middle-aged couple from their San Diego home early toda y ended in gunfire and death tY.'O hours later al the San Onofre Border Patrol chKkpoint where the suspect and one· of his victlllu were killed instantly. 'Mle apparently senseless bloodbath ,, "1•ill!'4-, W. , lik ,,of _, ~­ housewife Ind a sbotguo wielding ab- ductor identified as Gary Raphael, 22, wtiO 'd!H lD 1-oute to •. boopllal. The shootli:ig occurred at about a a.m. as a blue van owned by the dead y,·oman's husband pulled to the side of the permanent roadblock: a re,v mile s south of San Clemente. The only survivor of the shooting \lo'as the dead v.·oman's husband, John Chafles Coronado, 48, \Vho was able to flee from the van whe.n the shooting started, The ty,·o hou~s of terror for the in- nocent couple began al about 6 a.m. t<r- day at their home in San Diego, police said. It ended two hours later '":ith ~frs . Clara 1-<luise Coronado, 50. slain by a single shotgun blaat to the face fired at point-blank range by the abductor. The assailant a few momeni_, later "'as slain by police gunfire directed to the enclosed portion of tlievan. Police. highway patrolmen and other investigators pieced together this account of the "unexplainable" incident which began shortly after daybreak : Raphael -a plumber d r e s s e d for \\·ork -\\·as picked up by a cov.·orker and immediately dre\v a gun on his partner. r..toments later the gunman and partner noticed the Coronado van parked near the couple's house and y,·ent inside. Seconds later !he unwitting fellow plumber fled from " the Coronado residence, but tbe gunman stayed inside, rousing the couple and ordering them to dress. He ordered the Coronados into the van (Ste SLAYING, Page%) and the Secrl't ScrviCC" ofhciols in,·oh·ed. lie said ~did not think either John D. Ehrlichman, a forn1er lop aide to Nixon . or John W. Dean. Ill, the fired \Vhite House COUJlS('I, knew of the recording equipment. Butterfield, v.·ho said he took lht! stand with ool y 1hree hours' notice. was called to testify prior to the ~heduled ap- pearance of Her bert \\'. Kalmbach. Nlx- on 's former personal J:1wyer. r-.1e11nwhile, in Ne\\' \'ork loday. former Ally. Gt'n. John 7\. ~filchcll and former Commerce Secretnry fllauricc H. Stans cla1mt'd that lhe "camlval atmosphere·• of the \Va1ergate hca1ings v.·ould make it impossible for thcn1 to get fair trials here oo charges ln\'o\ving a $200,000 ooo- lributioo to President Nixon's re-election campaign. . Lawyers for the 11-ro asked U.S. District Court Judge Lee P. Gagliardi to dismiss the chargC's of conspiracy, obsl ructing justict' nnd pt•rjury or to n1ove tht> lria t !u another chs1r1C't or to :igrce to ;u1 indehniie poslponemenl. U~IT ....... I .. Fa·om Rags to R.iclaes Ragtime. a sloop some sailors say looks like an elongated star boat, outducled \Vindward P"assage in a virtual match race over the last 50 miles to grab first-to-finish honors In the 2.225·mile Transpacific: )·acht Hacc from Los Angeles to llonolulu. Ra gtirnc finished four n11nutes ;ind 31 seconds ahead of \\'indward Passage in one of the 1·10:-.e~t Transpac fini shes on rcc·ord. I~ead how ~he cll d 11 nn i>a}.(e 18. Man in Bar Shot By SF SA'.'J FBA:\CISCO f AP l -1\ man reportedly wa ving a gun inside a bar here was fa tally shot by a policeman - bul authorities said theY were unable to find the weapon the dead man v.·as sup- posedly wielding. Police said Charles Eugene-Fenton, 2.1, \Vas hit by a single shotgun blast fired by patroln1an the Body Streets . Adrian L;n1 :-i11nday night 111 Shop al ~Iasf'ln and Edcly Althou gh \\'ilnesses said Venton was waving a gun, poht·e _Capt. .Ja n1es Curran said no gun Yras found on the dead man or in the bar. !l(' specula led one of several pa!rons \lo'ho ll'ft the bar afler the shooting may havl' taken the weapon. The new budget contrasts with ihe $3.9 million spend.i~g program for 1972-73. But as transit board chairman Ralph Clark pointed out the district operation9 have grown tremendously in Jre past year. .,,.At th!S time last year we had only 10 employes and no buses on. the streets~ Today with 17 employes and four part time worker.J we have dial-a-ride in La Habra, we will have 55 buses operating on 31 routes by September," Clark Anticipated revenues from federal and state funds includes $7.2 million federal funds ; S2 million property tax reveoue; $1 million from bus rares, and $7.l million from the slate sales tax on Mason Aide Watson Taking Reins Orange Coast ga30line. Principal spending figures Include: Salaries. and wages, $1.89 million ; pro- fessional and special services \consul- tant) $1.12 million: advertising, $466.254: bus operations. $2.9 million and transportation and travel $67.360 .. The growth of the district is indicated • ~ --Oy the 31 routes now in operation which cover the central, northern and western areas of the county. During the coming year service will be extended to Mission Viejo, El Toro and Jther south county Weather Those lo\v clouds will hang around in the morning boprs tHroogb Tuesday, according to the weather aeivice, with a chance that souther!)'. winds from the desert areu wU1 blow them away later In the week. Highs of 69 are ez:pected at the beaches; rbing to 75 Inland. JNsmE TODA'Y The Dtft:mt Department hos conceded BS2s raided Cambodian targttl be.fort 1970 despite ear- lier public asstrtlons. Set storv, Page 4. Uo'. ... 4 ' ........ It Cl....,11.. A J c.i.tnll\tll 1"1' C-.lc:• 11 CrtH"4'11 11 OMJlil Hell<ft t •4!flttMI ..... ' ... ,.,, .......... , . l"tNea 1 .. 11 ,._.Ml!t 11-' t --.. ' I ~in ts. ' In other businea today, the district directors: -lleard Deputy County Counsel Ken· 14 Persons Hurt In Truck Plunge PALMDALE (AP) -Fourteen persons were injured when a pickup truck rn which they were riding plunged down a 400.foot embankment In the Angeles Na- tiooal Forest ·1& miles ·IOU~west of hert, lhe Highway Patrol said. A Highwa yr Patiul 1pooke.sman 94id two adults and tbrec children were the most sev....,.ly Injured. They !ruUtrod mulUple fractures and other injuries ~ In the mbbap Sunday -Pi«ht, he said. The others received only rnioor Injuries. .. • ~/~vine Co1npa1iy Vice President Gets Nod By GEORGE LEIDAL Of !Pie P1Uw f'llet 511H Irvine Company Executive Vice Presi- dent Raymond L. Watson. 46, will serve as chieC executive officer of the com- pany, Board Chainnan John V. Newman announced today. He replaces William R. Muon who died Saturday at the age of 54. "I know I speak for the entire Board of Directors ln noting our deep sense of lois, which so many understandably and touchingly !hare," Newman said today. San Quentin 'Lifer' 30th Inmate Stahhcd SAN QUENTIN (AP) -The fatal stab- bing of an inmate over the wee.Kend \\'8S the .»h such attack at San Quentin this year olflcials report. Velton Watkins. 51, serving a life tirm oo a san Joaquin County murder con- viction, WIS fOtmd stabbed In the M:k and died mirnltcs later, a spokesmlfl said . • "Bill ~Jason left behind a legacy \\"ithout parallel in his career field . i\luch of this is visible on the land itself. Some of it is less vis ible_ '''The strong, talented and creative management team he built in hi years w1th us is but one example," the board chainnan said. "Acoordngly, Raymond L. Watson, as executive vice pre.rtd4mt of the Irvine Company, will be acting as chief e:x- ecutJve officer for the finn. In this capacity, he will carry out all the major eorporate respomlbilities required of that office." Newman concluded. A spokesman for the company said Watson's Utle "remains executh-·e vice president. His re$ponsibilities are now enlarged, oons.Jstent with the company's bylaws, lo encompass !hose of t~ com· pany 's chief e:cecullve officer," lbt spokesman concluded:- TM com pany Board of Directors nc:ti;l meets on Aug. )3. It isn't knOY.TI If 11 vacancy wlll remain on the board until the next stockholders meeting . ln June. Ventura rancher Newman wa!i elected chairman of the board after a Clart:mont man, Howard Allen, was !iCIC'ctcd by stockholders 10 fill lhc vacan· cy created 11•hcn form er board chairman N, Loyall i\1cl..aren. 81. stepped dO\\'n. Allen. 47, is an executi "C of the South· em Califomia Edison Com pnnr. \Vatson \lo'as named to !he company board of directors in June of 1970 just tYtO months before he was made ex- ecutive vice president of the firm he join- ed in 1960 as manager of the planning department. In 1964, Watson y,·a!I elected vice presi- dent and in 1966 he assumed responsibility for the land development di\·iston. He became a senior vice president in January of 1968. A resident or Ea!ltbluf!. \\'atson. and his 1\·lfe Elsie. hfWe four children. Kathy. 1-tryan, I.Asa and David .. A native of Stallle, he attended UC Berkeley ~here h<· earned b o t h bal!tlelor's and master '! degrees In nro.hitecture and urban planning . He I~ a director of lhc ~:ai;ter Seal Societ)' of Orange County. IJ a registered architect and A 1-~ellnw of l~ie American Institute of Archll(..c1S. ... HEADING IRVINE COMPANY Execuliv• VP Watson ' •• l I 2 DAILY PILOl ~-.. f'ro11t p .. ,, l · SLAYING •.. and drove around for a few mlnules in an attempt lo find his firs t victim. Falling at that, .Raphael I h e n Ckowl to a residence and bound his vic- tims with nooses an>W>d tho nt<k, then .....,. Oorooado to \!rive &1on1 the Route 405 Freeway and then up the San Diego Freeway. 1n the Ckeanside area. Coronado was able to stir the interest or a highway petrolma.n cruislng along the freeway and Lbe officer puJWd up alongside, not.icing tha t the couple v•cre ln trouble, He fell back and called for w lsi..ince. At that poin t, CHP Sgt. Jack Cook sa id. Coronado feigned a ht:art attack and hi:; tklnaper allowed the man lo pull to the side. With the CHP officer surveyi ng the scene cautiously, Coronado "'as replaced at the wheel by his wife. 'tlie lllgbt began once again. " By then several more CHP units and aevttal prowl cars from the Oceanside Potlco Department joined in the pursuit. "As they approached the checkpoint btte," Sgl Cook said, "tbc kldnaper made mention of tbe problem and predlcted, 'oow v;e're gonna have S<lmc hm'." Palrolmcn ordered the van to the side ol the mulU·lane roadbloc k and ap- proached the vehicle. "He jerked open the door," a fellow patrol official said. "and shouted for everyone to get out." Raphael immediatedly f i r e d his !botgun aiming the blnst of pellets through the windshield of the van . COtonado tumbled unhurt from the ptnenger aide and as bis horrified wife turned, the gunman Shot her in the face . Then, patrolmen sald, the assailant began firing from the van toward of- ficers. · The e:rchange of gunfire lasted for MVeral minutes. "1'!len we held back and waited," Sgt. Coot aid. "It must hive bee1r·nve mlnu~s or so and DO actlYlty WU noted frcm the van ... we were walling for tear gu to arrive," lie added. 1ben otOcers began creeping toward the ballet·torn truck and found both OC· cuponta dead. 1be uallADt, dresaed in thick, browJ>. caDVU coveralls was on bls back in the rear of the van. the ahotg\m nearby. Mrs. Oormado's body lay between the hlofm>taeata. Patrolmeo -her shocked, grieving ~ to a nearby patrU unit where he aat dazed !tr ....,. than an hour, bartly able lo -1 to investlgaton. 'tlie enllre abootoul took place In a con- gested, twy ll<Cllm of tho checkpoint, wllll tr&fflc moving Oil the lw)' freeway at one side and large trucks and tractors parked at the weigh ataUcn and in· lpedlon area to the oilier. hJt'• bard to believe," one officer scdd Pline 1t tbe death acene. "He just picked this couple at random . They didn't even know the man who did all this." "It apparently \\'IS a wild, wiex- ptaln.able thing," a San DiUo police i;ergemt added. Raphael's wort compankln, Arthur Loomis, 53, told San Diego police that he ~ up the younger man at tne'latter's to drive h1m to the CQlStruction site where they worked. Raphl<I pulled oul a saWl!d«I shotgun after they had driven a short distance and Joroed him to stop when they saw the van parked at the Coroo.ados' home , Lomnb said. Raphael was quoted as saying, "I need that van." Wide the house, Loomis said, Rapllaej told tbc couple : "You're coming with us." Raphael forced Mrs. Coronado to drive, her husband said. In the shootout Coronado suffered minor powder bums, police said. He told officers that Raph ael told him as the van was forced to stop. 'iNow the fu n begins." • Tilere y,•as no explanation r 0 r Raphael 's behavior, Loomis y,·as quoted as saying. • Phone Strike Begins MARION, Ohio (AP l -'l11e Com· mtmicatk>ns Workers ol America struck the General Telephone Co. in Ohio this morning, but union officials said they ex- pected contract negotiations to conti nue. 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"""'"'"""'•· ....... .....,..,. fl! .......... .,,.. ... --""" ... ,.......... ...... ..... ...,. ..... -~-· ..... l'"9 ....... J'* '" c.t• ........ ~.,~ .. ~ .... .....,..~.., INlll a .11 """"'*'' "'",.,.. ....... p,All .......... ' I • 'H·igliest l11teg1·it1t' Eulogies To Bill Given ~ Mason Govcrnincnt officials cuntinucd today to offer eulogies to \\11.lliam Ralph ~tason, Irvine Company Prcsidcnl y,·ho died SalurdJy of an apparent hcJrt utt<1ck. IU>oald CasJX!!S, ctiainnan of the Orange County Board of Supervisors said, "The loss of Dill ~Jason to th~ Ornnge County 1.'0mmunity y,•il\ be long felt by alt those y,·ho knew and respretcd hun and by The thousands of Ora nge Coun tians whose lives his visions and c!- forlS have so significaotl y impacted. ''Bill Mason was a ma n of the hlghest in tegrit y and forthright ho n es t y . ' ' Caspers said. "AJI of his business deal· ings 1~·ere done in a spirit of fairness and openness. "llis dreams for the future of the High Winds Catch Boats By Surprise Heavy winds off !he south Orange Coas t ca"Ughl boaters by surpffse Sunday and caused dozens of skippers from Dana Harbor to seek assistance. One boat v.•ashed ashore on the San Clemente beach Sunday night. An IS.foot cabin cruiser wi th· five ~rsons aboard broke dovm while cruis- ing ot.f the San Clemente shore. The pUot, John AlexMder of Riverside, had no anchor, and the buffeted boat was caug ht up in the surf and carried ashore, set· tling down one half mile north of the pier at about 8 p.m. No one was hurt, but the .group needed the assistance of lifeguards, and the boot was towed off the beach by land. Later Sunday night at about 11 p.m., the Harbor Partol sighted flares from a 28-foot cabin cruiser that had run oul of gas 200 yards off San Onofre beach. The boat had left Catalina for Newport Beach earlier that da y and missed its target, according to a Ha r b o r Patrolman. The patrol rescue boat towed the cruiser in to Dana Harbor, arriving about I a.m. The owners name wa s not immed1ately available. 'l11e Harbor Patrol was also kept busy Sunday afternoon with 15 boat tows dur- ing a two-hour period. ~ost boats given assistance were sailboats with broken masts or rudders and those whose pUots who t'Ollldn't navigate their vessels Jn the 20-mile-pel'-hour wind, a patrolman said. Doctor Reports President Still Shows Progress WASR!NGTON (UPI) -President Nixon continued to show improvement today ln his battle with viral pcieurnonia, his doctors said. "He is progressing satisfactorily;• rePorted Dr. Sol Katz, pul monary specialist from Georgetown University School of Medicine , one of the team 0£ doctors trea ting the President at Bethesda Naval Hospital. White House Press Secretary Ronal d L. Ziegler said Nixon·s prog ress is such that he ~'ill be able to me<'t as scheduled 1v11 h thrcc st:ile visitors in 1hc next t1\'0 weeks - the Shah of Ir an on July 24, Australia Prime ~1ini ster Gough Whitlam on July 30 and .Japa11ese Prime J\Uniste r Takuei Tana ka July 3l·Aug. I. riixon 's §J>irits 1vere described as "just fi ne" and1\atz predicted he may be ab le to leave the hospital by Thursday or f'rl- day. •·ffe's vivacious. loquacious - an c:it- cellent pati ent." said Katz. Nixon's doctors said they v.·ere havin g a tough time convincing him he had to slow down and curtail hi s schedule. His work lond is sai d to be only about a quarter of normal because of the illness. Nixon a~·okc at 8 a.In. after a good night 's sleep. Dr. \V alier Tkach said. The President 1vas given for ches t therapy 1rcalmcnts Sundav. I 'The . lrcat m<'nt rc!i u l lf'd in "consldr rnblc improvemenl 1n his chest congC'stion and che st discomfort is now ;JI :i 111in11num . ·· Tkach said in his morn- ing medical bul lc!1n. The lher.1py did cause the Presid('n! to experience some fatigue to the point where he was gi\1Cn mi ld pain killers for reh~f. Tkacli said. ' Jn general, Ni xon had a good day on S•Jnday. He had a hearty dinner of seafood. served about 6: IS p.m. The Pres.tdent retired after his last chest therapy about 9 p.m. and slept llOWldly throughoul mo.-;l of the night, Tkach said. This sharply contrasted with his fi rst night at lhC' hospital Thursday \\'hen h<' had a fitful four hours .<;leep. The chest Inhalation exercise \vas ad· ministered by Sue A. w i 11 1 a m ! , pulmonary nurse iipecialisl as.signed to the hospilars !=hcst chnic. Rain Floods Italy MILAN. IUilv tAP) -St.vere rain· storm~ lasbtd ·northern .Jlaly over the v;eekend cau~lnJf floods ;ind landslid(!'!; along !he: ltal!An Rivie.re. and leaving at least IS persons dead, authoritJt:s said. f'our people droWTied when 11 bridge col- 1.af)lled In the bad weather n4;1a.t 1\irin on Saturday. Their cars plun ged Into a ri \'ct, ' Irvine J{anch ~·rre embodied with 1-rea11vity and dtdlcati on," he said, ad· ding personol sy mpathy to 1'-lrs. Ji.1ason and hls family. "\\'e ~·ill greatly miss Bill f\1ason as a friend," Caspers concluded. Caspers' rtmarks foda; followed an outpourlna: of sim ilar sympathies ex- pressed over the weekend by notables in· eluding State Sen. DcMis E. Carpenter IR-Newport Beach), former F'i f t h District supervisor Alton E. Allen ; UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr.: mayors Donald fl.tclnn is of Newport Beach, John Burton of Irvine and Jack Hammett of Costa Mesa, as well as Daily Pilot publisher Robert N. Weed. Spea king for the city o( Laguna Beach, ~ayor. Charlton Boyd said today, "The city will miss this fine man." The shock of Ji.tr. Masoo's dea th Satur- day at the age of 54 continued today. "Ir. f\1ason who joined the Irvine Company in 1959 has been president of the land development and ran ching firm since 19'0. f\1ayor Boyd remarked he was ''taken aback" by the ne11'S. ··1 had met •'ilh him ooly this past \1•eek under very favorable circumstances to discws Laguna's role in lhe (coastal) Irvine· development and highway transfer " Boid said. "!had alwayslound.him to be_ gracious, alert and a most competent business executive," he concl uded. Assemblyma n Robert B&dham (R- Newport Beach) said, "This is since.rely a deep and personal loss to me ending an :.issociation that has lasted for over a decade in all the fields o( my profession both socially and in business. * * * Memorial Rites · For Mr. Mason Tuesday, 7 A.M. A fam ily spakesman said today a memorial service will be read lor William Ralph Afason !ate pre sident of the Irvine Company at the Pacific View Memorial Park chapel, Corooa del Mar, <it 7 o'clock Tuesday rooming. A1r. Mason died Saturday afternoon. The family suggested that memoria l contribution s might be made to Orange Empire Area Council of Boy Scouts of America, or to the Orange County Junior Achievemml program, whlch :were among Mr. "fason's principal charitable inte rests in recent years. He served as Western Regional Presi- dent of lhe Boy Scouts, and helped esta blish. the Junior Achievement ~ gram in Orange County. Interment will be private. Rites for Man From CdM Found In Plane Slated Graveside funeral services !or the brother of a Corona del Mar man whose B-24 bomber \\·as discovered recen tly in !he New Guinea jungle 30 years after it crashed remain tentatively scheduled for \Vednc sday. The remains of 1st Lt. Francis G. "Aud" AfcDowell. 22, were scheduled 10 arrive this evening at Long Beach Airport. A full military honor guard is sched- uled to be present for the 11 a.m. fun. era! Wednesday. The World \Var II aviator's brother Will iam McDowell, of 432 Angelita Drive. Corona del Mar. accidentally noticed a .story in Wednesday's Daily Pilot re- ga rding the hometown return and burial of another crewman on his brother's bomber. Ile had not known his brother's plane had been found but recognized the name of crew ch ief Leonard \Vozniak and con- tacted his family and 1\dS put in touch with military authorites ~·ho had been trying to find him for two months. Ironicall y, he read of di scovery of the \1·reckage 30 years 10 the da y July 10, 19'13 lh3t the Liber~tor bomber crashed. Persorn1el Chief Hart to Resign William C. Hart, Oflnge County person- nel director for the past 20 years has resigned his position ~fective Aug. 17. Hart, in a letter to the Board of Supe rvisors, said be was taking a ??St in anothtr California county. He did not name the county. The personnel di rector said he enjoyed wot king fo r Orange County and oltertd to e~slst lhe board in retrultlng a new director. llart is the second county department heBd to leave office In the past five months. TreBS\Jre r lv&n ft. SwMger rel ired on f'eb. 28 and hi~ post was com- bined wllh !hat of t.ii.x collector Robert Citron. lluss cin Back Home AMMAN . Jonlan i AP)-King Hla .. in of Jordan and his prime mlnl5ter, ?..aid Ralai , are back home after spending five days in London for tAlb with Prime ~1lnister Edwnrd licalh. \ \ l e'll Retire Dr. William B. Langsdorl of Corona del .atar will retire this fall as vice chancellor for aca- demic affairs of the state uni· versity and college system. The 63--year-old educator was found - in g pres~qent of Cal State Full· erton. 200,000 People Break All OC Fair Records More than 200,000 persons flocked. lo the 1973 Orange County Fair in C.Osta Mesa Julv 6 to 15, breaking all at- tendMce iecords of the 80-year-old eve11t. The new mark of 208,9'14 exceeds last year's count of 149,184 by 59,790 for an attendance in crease of approximately 44 percent. Fair Manager James E. Porterfield sa id today that the turnstile count for the 10-day fair exceeded his \\'ildest ex- peetations by nearly 9,000. Organizers or· the fair had originally hoped to attract 200,000 fair visitors but it became apparent during the first few days that the "magic number" \\'OUld be eclipsed. The fair recorded the highest single- day attendance figure in history on Saturday, tbe seeond day of the lair, with 21 ,283 Md the people count kept zooming, according to Porterfield. Porterfield credits the one-pay gate system adopted this year with much of the success. "We made sure that all the entertainment was free once the people had paid admission," said Porterfield who brought attractions SU~ aS Pete Fountain, Les Brown and ~ 9riginal Coasters to the Costa Mesa fmrgrounds. Last year motorcycle racing fans com- ing to the fairgrounds for the every- Friday-night speedway coin.tests found themselves paying three times, once for parking, again to get inside the fair, and a third time to watch the races. "Most of them were very annoyed so we dropped the concept ol entertainment charges. A5 a resul t we had overwhelm- ing attendance in our grandstand events," he said. t AILbough the profit for the "Good Old Days '73" fair have not yet been calculated, Porterfield estimates the net to be somewhere ·between $40,000 to $45,000. "\Ve'll put it right back in for im- provement s for nex1 year's fair. We're hoping to get some belier entertainment programs. Some of the names we've toss- ed around so far jnclude Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald and Doc Severinsen." Kelly Wius 120-mile Death Valley Walk DEATH V1\LLEY (APl -Distance runner John Kelly, finishing a 120-mile 1valk across Death Valley in a record 34 hours, says "It was hell but I'm glad I did it." . Kelly, an Irelancj native who now lives in Santa Monica, looked exhausted after fin ishing the trek late Sunday afternoon with only two brief rest breaks. , • Costa Mesa ·· Agenda to Focus On ·Conservation Open space, conservation and the establishment of sctnic highways provide the focus for tonight's meeting or the Costa ~1esa City Council. The meeti ng, scheduled for 6:30 o'clock ln city council chambers, n Fair Drive, • Is expected to conclude With the adoption or an amendm ent to the General Pl an charting Costa Mesa 's future course in these areas. Citizens will be ab)e to react to some of the proposals during the publi.t bearing portion of the meeting. The suggested General Plan amend- ment -drawn by environmental plan- ning consultants LIM, Leonard, Bess, Hall, Sharkey and Aasoclates -citea the eed for improvement in several parts of the city. . Recommended in 80\lth Costa Mesa are the upgrading of 19th Street and con- Marines Assault M ytltlcal Land In War Games A 13.000-stron__g Atarine force planned to land in the mythical country of Campeen at camp Pendleton today, to rescue its legal government beleaguered by a guer- rilla group. The "Eighl·Day War," termed Opera· lion Beagle Dancer, was to begin at 9 a.m. today, with rtgular and Marine reservists using aircraft and azQpbibious vessels to make a simulated invasion on the coast of the Camp Pendleton "1arine Base. Marine officials said the , exercise; \\'hi ch ends next Monday, involves tbe 1st and 4th Marine divisions and the 3rd and 4th hiarine Aircraft wings, along with Navy amphibious fleet personnel "The exercise is designed to train com- bined ground and airborne personnel to counter guerrilla operations: in support of the legally comtituted foreign govern- ment ln fundamental combat opera- tions," said a Marine spokesman. He said Maj. Gen. Kenneth J . Houjl!rtoo, commanding officer ol the Isl Marine Divisloo, would be over·all ex- ercise commander. Father Rescues r- D au g h ter ' From Bottom of Pool A Costa Mesa father saved the life of his 2-year-old daughter by snatching her from the bottom of a swimming pool Sunday and giving her mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. The girl, Erika Evans, 3216 Idaho Place, was reported in good coodilioo to- day at Orange County Children's hospita l. Her father. John Evans, had brought her up from tbe pool bottom°">' the time Costa Mesa firemen arrived. 'lbe girl. unconscious but breathing, was given in- halation and rushed to Costa Mesa i\femoria.l HoSpital for emergency treat- n1ent. Fire department officials said the girl "'as taken to the hospital in the station \\'agon of Battalion Chief R ober t r-.1cClelland and later transferred to the medical facility in Orange . Dynamite Explodes GREENWOOD, Mo. (AP) -FUty tons of dynamite exploded near this Kansas City suburb Sunday, killing two persons in a blast fell miles away, the Missouri Hlgh~·ay Patrol said. ' struction of a scenic road network throu&h Fa irv iew Park and existing oil lands to the west of the ci ty, and south or 19lh Street. For the North Ates..1 Verde area th" J!'ullertoo consuh ing firm has .suggested the landscaping ol lfarbor Boulel'ard and Ad arns Avenue, creation of a scenic rest stop at i\!esa Verde Drive and Bakl'r Stretts. and the landscaping of pa rking Joi! and control of signing and util ity wires along the commercial Harbor Boulevard. On Costa Mesa 's eas1s ide the recom- mended improvements include landsca- ping of a commercial strip on 17th Street, improvement of th e city entrance on Newport Boulevard . and moving the Santa Ana Counlry Club Golf Course fence back to provide attractive relier from ~t-up areas. The area including the civie center College Park and A1esa de! h1ar, has al~ been targeted for upgrading. Suggested are a parkway treatment on Fair Drive inc luding a band of side..-.·al ks, landscap- ing, and lighting treatJ11ent in front of !he civic center and south on Fairview Road. On the northaide the recommendations are to conserve some of the rich agricultural land for urban uses with scenic road s, open spaces and parks an d to improve its ident ific ation with the rest of Costa 1'-1esa. Finally, in the triangle to be fonned by the cqmple ted Co rona del 1-far Freeway. the Newport Freeway and the San Diego Freeway, it is suggested by the con· sultants that wide setbacks be required ~n industrial areas, along with landscap· mg, and recreation facilities in areas where there is a high concentration of employment. 2 Mesa Colleges Receive Funds For Loan Pl.an Two Costa Mesa cmnp~s are among three Orange County colleges which wiIJ receive nearly $300,000 for use in the NaUooal Direct Student Loan Program. U.S. Rep. Andrew Himshaw (R· Newport Beach) disclosed that Orange O>a!l C.Ollege, through C h a n c e 11 o r Norman E. Watson , will receive $70,69l to benefit ~7 atudent:S. Southern Call(omia CoDtge will receive $143,770 for 319 students with the funds to be administered through college ·presi· dent Emil A. Balliet. ... Chapman College is scheduled to receive $75,166 for 167 students. Federal runds provide 90 percent of the monies distributed 'under the program. Tbe participating colleges contribute tbe remaining 10 percent. TONIGHT COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL Regular meeting, City 11a\l, 6:30 p.m . TUESDAY, J ULY 17 NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD - Regular mee ting, Costa Mesa lligh Lceum, 7:30 p.m. LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Raggedy Ann songs and stories, 10 :30 a.m. SENIOR CITIZENS TUESDAY CLUB -C.Ommunity Recreation Center, IL a.m.-3 p.m. LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • •• RAISED ELSEWHERE Adn1lrol. NO-DEFROSTING REFRIGERATOR/PREE.ZIR ALL THESE GREAT --1,FEATURES • f11!1 Wlcltll "looM:1M" ftMJ:tf Door Sllt lf -fo r lnst•nt ..... il1bllity. • Du1r lt111pel'fll111r. Conttots- Mloct the r11trt 11mpontuA1 fot MChMc!IOn, • T-411 rorc.laifl CtllJl'ft-Mlp& ffVlt. ~ 1tn1111 1-h. • b\nt L#tl ~emtor Door ...,.__,,... .... 1111 4"'tt\ ... .. , Adntlral. !~~.~ llEfRIGEHATDR • ru11 Wklth,,.....O-t • Wldtoltfflll lempmtu'9 Oofltrd • Red V!Mi1I Dlltott-trmlf lndlcltot • lJrtn °"P Door $11.+f' • full Wldtl'I FrMlt•Mllt Chllltr Dl'flWtl' 15995 Memkr of 90 DAT c111i.m11'1 Largo1t CASH C-1tlvo Buyl111 · Gniup With Tho WITM APnOYD Volume 8uyln1 ClllD'1 ................... _ ~ ........ 1110 s1-( .. ·SI rn ........... ~ 1815 NEWPORT 11.YD. '.Dnnlm Costa Mesa -Pholl 548-7788 7 I ... d ~ 1 ~ 1 I I ' ] ol C• ., • n f v I • c ) I r l ( t