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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-07-23 - Orange Coast Pilot-· --... _ • --• • • 1e c 1es ' • 1xon Be/uses to Give MONDAY AFTERNOON,.JULY 23;-"1973 - Tapes to Senate Panel ... • .. • • • • • ' ----- VOL. '6. JltO, tt4. I S&CTM>NS. 1' PAeeJ . - •••• • • • ,., • • • • • • • • • • Newport Braces for Hurricane Trio Bare All, ' I Land iri Jail I A W.pely r.edhead .ond her t.wo mal!. COll)panions were cited during the weekend on indecent exposure charges by Orange County Sheriff's Dfficers ocdered to crack down on :nounting reports of nudity on Laguna area beaches. \ DepuUes said they booked the rio on' charge! that they romped 01ude on the sands in South Laguna .1ear Point Place. The suspects »en identified as Anne Margaret Hoop, 30, of Marina Del Rey, Steven Jack Schwartz, 24, of Villa Park and Harry Thomas Arnold, 30, of San Francisco. Witnesses who said they objected lo the trio's disrobing told officers they deliberately ensured that onlookers were allowed to view the run extent of their nudlty: .'-'-----------' . ' .. '1918 Flying Ace ' . Ed Rickenbacker ' Dies; See Page 4 i Death has come to Capt. Eddie Ricken- , _JJacher, a man who dueled the airplane s bf the Red Baron to become a World War ) ny;ng ace and who ·tater be(:ame th~ ~-~in~US~ lines. · llkkeobaclrer was en . .tuto speed de- mon before the war, pushin4 his cars to 134 mtles an hour · oy 1914. He shol down five GermaD planes in a moolh· in 1918 to q\.iallty as an ace.: •. Rickenbacker died in Z ii r i c h , Switzerland. at the age of 82. The cause was listed as heart failure. See story, p1ioto on Page 4. CLASSIFIED A.D · • 'BEA.TS 'THE HEA.T 1, Don't put IJDG9ed merehandite on .ice. ' Beal the beat with Dally Pllol clasiilled • advertising. Here's how: Ji' 1\ I G I D A I R E, Mtom Imperial 1611, 9 mos. old. -. % Full doon, (Phone LA-hound . . Jei:Cra mes In Pacific PAPEETE, Tahiti (UPI) -A Los Angeles-bound Pan American Boeing 707 with 79 persons aboard cartwheeled into the sea a mile oft this South Pacific island today moments after the pilot reported a smashed windshield and said he would attempt an emergency landing. Only one person may have survived. Aviation officials said 10 bodies had been recovered from the oU~stained water and that a Canadian tentatively identified as a "Mr. Campbell" was rescued alive . The officials said a stewardess pulled alive from the water died in a hospital and they doubted i! there would be any other survivors. "As for other survivors, anything is possible but as the hours pass the chances get smaller a'ild smaUer," a rescue worker reported. Pan American announced the names of three of the 'lO crewmen and said names of the others would be released when next of kin are noillied. The three were : Capt. Robert E. Evarts, Grass Valley, Calil. Flight engineer Jsaac N. Lambert, Danville, Calif. Second officer Frederick \V. Fischer, Rochester, N.Y. The plane also carried a copilot, two pursers and four stewardesses. Rescue workers said an Ullflamed American tourist , whose wife boarded the plane at Papeete, vanished during the rescue attempts. They said he was in one or the boats' going to help. ·When he saw his wife111 body floating on the surface he plunged into the water and had not been seen since. There was no immediate breakdown or nationalities of the 69 passengers. Because of the French nuclear ex~ plosion 5aturday, Pan American had taken oo a humber of Australian Qantas ar..d Air New Zealand passcngen: because those airlille& were boycotung Utls French pollelOlon. • Local oltidals, salil 10 Ffeochmon were aboanf the plane. , '.!'be officials said the plane, Oigbt PA St&, originated in Auck.land, New li!atand.1 and was eoroute to Los ·Angeies and '8an Francisco when It plumm<l<d hundredJ ol.loet lnlo the sea ~'afltr takOoU. GJides Through the Air ABOVE IT ALL-Soaring birdman Sunday was one of about 200 persons who brou~ht their hang glid- ers to the third annual Otto Lilienthal Hang Glider Cbampionihips. The two-day event was held In Tra- buco Canyon near· O'Neill Park. Longest flights from a mountain peak were about six minutes. There Dtltr ., ... ,.,.... "' la ,..,.. were also youngsters of 9 or 10 gliding. It all began two years ago on a hillside in Corona del Mar in a casual atmosphere. Since then the Southern Cali· fornia Hang Glider Association has grown to about 3,000 members. Nixon Refuses to Give Tapes to S.enate Panel WASH!NGTON (AP) -President Nix- on today flatly rejected a request for ac- cess to tapes of presidential con- versations, saying they will remain ''under my sole penollaJ control." At the aame • time, Ni1on wrote Chairman S.m J. Ervin Jr. ([).N.C.), of the Senate Watergate committee thJ!.t "at 111 ._iate time during the hearings I Intend lo -public\y the subj<cts you are _p:insidering." The President said "I stln intend lo do so and in a way that preserves the ron- ltltutiooll prtnclpte of separation of powers, and thus serves the interest! not just of the Congress and the President but of the people." The White House at the same time made public a letter from the coumel's oUice to special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox. declaring that Nixon also will refuse to mate the tapes av•ilable to Cox. Tiie letter was signed by Cbarl., Alan Wrllbt, a University of Tena law pro- festOI" serving as a White House con- sultant. Dead Actress Wins Lawsttlt""."' .Given $45,000 A lawsuit filed by Mary Pickford Rogers shortly before her death In 1971 was won Friday by lawyen now acting for the estate of the star of lhc silent movle era. Damages totaling more than $42.000 and lawyers' fees of $3,500 wen awarded by Orange County Superior Coort Jl>dge J"""" F. Judge in a ruling that clooes the file opened in November, 1970, when Mra. Rogers sued the lessees of property owned by her in Fullerton. Airline officials said the pilot reported a smashed wi.odshleld and asked for an emergency 1aDding. But witnesses said the plane ..-. ~ turn and then No.) hlt the South Pacific with • li'trneildOul -" impact a mile ollPapeete IJOll. Fightin1r Continues Wright wrote Cox regarding tile tapes made of convtrsations and telephone calls lnvoMng Nixon: ''Production of them to you would lead to their use In the court&, end queations of-aeparalionoOf."°""" r<-in-the for<front when the ITIOll confidential docUmenta of the presidency are oought In tht judldal branch. lndied, mosi of the limited cue law on execuUve pc1vlltg• bu arlaen in tht C011!at of It· tempts to obtain eiecutive docaments for u11e ~n lhe (.'(ltlrtl." Judge Judge ruled against defendant5 Brtk, lnc. in action that also settled lesser isgucs raised in a cross-complaint involving the sub-leuee, N 1 t Ion a I Coordlnators, Inc. ~ "!rigtrotor sold aff!r the ad had "Tiie er ash happendl at 10: 15 p.m. ·~ run Clllly lwo ifays. TJieaiJV<rweni&!---suDaay~611D\e (1 :15 i .m. Prtr) to- extra call far summer fun, and tbe day," an 1irporl teclmlcian said. "I - 'llU1er Is ''<oollng It" In slyle. Tate the In a tiou.e at a left! above tht 1lrport. '!IELFAST (UPI) -cFourptMll &..r- ' in bombings and lhootlngs Sunday in Norihern 1~ and spowmen for the 11tCUritY forcea warned that more vlo- llnce ma)' II!' abetd. Beilul ll!df Wll fairly quiet desl>lt• wamlngs that re- sul'tld In a massfve security oper1t1on to prevent trouble. ~1<-. 'l'llO plane toolt off apparently nonully. ' &.at ol1 bJ ~ • ......,. Piiot clasai· n.s llghu Wlra on ., l could set It wu a • fled Wllll Id of your OW1I. Tiie number pan.\Jn ptaoe. to e11i?-. SUddeo)y, It toolt a sharp turn lo tht (Ste JET Cl\AllD, Pap tl Mr1. Rogers owned property l.n several Orange County communities a n d supervlled lea5lng operations from her t'allbroolt ranch, <OUrt o!flclals noted. . . l Surf Waves Hit Six Feet; One Dead The worst of Doreen may be yet to com.e as Newport Beach lifeguards brace again today for expected high surf that never quite materialized over the v;eekend. Doreen's powerful winds brushed the ~uthem California coast Sunday spawn· 1ng waves up to six feet in Newport Beach. 'J'.he rollin~ surf was 11trong enough to claun the life of a scuba diver from Pomona Saturday. David "Skip" Parker, 18, apparenlly panicked when hit by a series of waves and drowned off Lillie Corona beach despite the fact his air tanks still had a reserve supply. Lifeguards reported a tota l of only 48 other rescues -none of them serious - both Saturday and Sunday and few ri~ tides. "Actually it was a pretty nice weekend ~nee the overcast bu med off." said lifeguard spokesman Al Irwin. "We had some surf but nothing like we an· licipatcd. ·• . Irwin said 170,000 people came to Newport Beach over th e v.·eekend. Hurricane watche rs at the U.S. Weather Service in Los Angeles said Doreen "s brush with Caltfomia's coast won 't be the last of her. Weatherman Cluck Smiley reported this morning that Doreen moved back out into the warm ~texican currents about 850 miles off Baja during lhe ni ght and rebu ilt her v.•inds lo a steady 110 knots. with gusts up to 140. "At a radi us of 200 miles the v.·inds are still about 40 knots," he sakl, '"that's !See SURt', Page %J Orange Cout Weather h-lore of the same can be ex· peeled in the Orange Coast area on Tuesday. Night and morning low clouds will give way to sun.shine in the afternoon . The highs will be in the low 70s. wilh the low dipping down to 60 degrees. INSIDE TODAY .The11 sai~ he 1001 out of his mntd. entenng a 35·/oot boat in the T~mpaci.fic yacht nite, but lhe .!lctpper of the Chutzpah iJ having the la.!t lauglt todofl, See BoatiNfi, Page 19. • ' ' , I l -·· -• • ---f 2 DAIL> PILD1 s Mond41. July 23, 1973 Strachan: 'Dean Telling the· Truth' I ,.,...p_,eJ SURF •.. WASHINGTON (AP) -Alter tilt Wotergote break·in la.st year H. R. Haldeman cahnly ordered his assi stanl to "make sure our files art clean," the e l!'ed1otta . Former While llouse staJ:rer Gordon Strach:>n al!O said that earlier, durtnc the 1972 pre.sldeottal pr J m a r le a , H~eman ordered wiretap leader G. Gordon Uddy to ••transJer whatevtt capability he had" from one Democratic candldate to another. Strachan, denying that ha knew "Obout the Watergate wlreLapplng In advance, told the Senate Watergate commlttee he expected Haldeman to rebuke him for in- Competence after the wiretappers were caught. But whtn llaldeman reacted with calm, Strachan said he had to draw one Hijackers :Cet Orders f lTo Kill 143? ' • ... t DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (UPI) !-The hijackers of a Japan Air Lines 747 ,jet ordered it reJuled today shortly after .lbe oootrol tower at Dubai Airport "layed a, mysteri°"" message ordering them either to free the 150 hostages or FD them. • There was speculation the hijackers, lnc!-g Arabs and Japanese, might try to fly the big jumbo jet to Tokyo via Pal<iatan. They also demanded that authorities bring tbem the body of a woman hijacker killed by a grenade explosion during the takeover Friday. A few hours before the apparenl takeoff preparations, the sheikhs in the control tower passed on a message to the hijackers signed "13,!i69 inhabitants tof West Germany," Dubai o!!iclals said. The message read: "U ~ intend to kill lhe passengers on board JlM4 (the plane's real flight number was JU84), please do It at once tor be humane enough to release them. "It sounds ridiculous if you permit ,..those whom you obviously want to kill to .receive refreshments and meals. Please ._give up your intentions, there are other meam or wibloody pos31iblities ·to reach your political aims." _ The officials said the message was JfCeived by the Dubai government and they passed it to the hijackers from the .control tower. i. Tbe officials declined to comment on 1 the message but newsmen speculated it might be some kind of code telling the hi· ,jackert .wlist to do next. ~ Shortly· after It we received, the hi- " jackers issued their twin' demands and _.there was speculation they would take off . soon with the hostages who have endured ·three days of bumlng desert heat. -Government officials said they had no i~nite Information that the hijackers planned to take off. . It was at 8 p.m. (6 a.m. POT)-that the ·hijackers demanded the refueling of the • plane. On Sunday, they asked politely !or it to be partly refueled, but this time r they said tllty would blow up the plane I unless they received fuel immediately. At 6: 15 p.m .. the hijackers demanded I the return of Mrs. PeralLa, the woman t with the Ecuadorean passport who was I blown up by the accidental explosion of a hand grenade concealed in her clothing. 1be jet's chief purser, who was wound· I ed in the grenade explosion, said Mrs. Peralta and her husband were among the t hijack team. The purser, Yoshihisa fl.1iya!hita, 37, , was the only living person the hijackers I; allowed to leave the .plane since It ar- rived at'the modern airport of this o.il-1 rich Persin Gulf sheikdom early 5at1Jr. I day. l i Skylab 2 Ge ts Ready I CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The ~ Skylab 2 astronauts tmder-go their last t major physica l examination today to be lure they are reedy for Saturday's J;iunch and a 5~ay visit to the space ~ta ti on. I I I I I I I I ' I I I l I I I I J ' I j I · I OUN61 COAST ST DAILY PILOT TM or.,... Co-st DAILY l'ILOT, WI"' .tlt1;ll lt ~ 111'9 H•wt·l'rt·u, It Jlt,ll>IWl9cl ..., ll'lt 0.1 ... CNll l'ulllW.lnt ComlNflY, S@I· ..... ..i11-••t Pllbli.fllcl, Mindi'( '"'INll" l'rld1y, !Or Cotti M~, M~I llff,11, l'lllll"flQIOo &tkll/FounMln Vtll!•• L.q- ll"Cfl, lrv!M/SHdlMllClt ...r l1n tlt.....,lt/ Ian Jlfffl C1i:thlf-. A l""lt r191ert1I Ml!loil l1 M !ltlltd S.1111"111.,.. ..W S\lfldlYt. ffll P"IMl!MI llUbO""lnf ... rd k 11 llO Wttl lt't' St,...t, CO.M Mn.t, CllifW>'\11, .,..,., lt.1ll1tt N. W114 f'rftldlo!t 1NI 1'11111111\w J1ck I;, Cu•l1y ll'k1 f'mlll111t ...it Gftw1I ~ Tho"''' K., .. n ... l!dl!Dr JliOfl)af A. Murplih11 ,,,,_,..,. l!dltw Ch1rl11 H. Loi• lfi1 .. 1r• .,, N1U AultlMI MINtlflt t:.tlln Offk .. C.lt Mftl1 Jll w.tt l•y St""' 1'1...,.... ~~ SUI N"111fT tllil"~M UituM 1Mc.1'11 m ,,_, ... _ ·HllfHlrltllfl'I-": 11'l'J IMdl ._...,,..,,. .... C:*"-'9i .. '""" •1 tl..W. lll'll . , .... 'i 1714, 641 ... 111 Cl lftMI M •Mtl '•• MJ .... 71 ,_ C-... A"'" ..... ~ I MO 4tJ-44.IO ,__......,__,rMI...,,, o.r:""' ~ ~ ,.. 14f.1Uf It J C.,r .... t, 1"1. Or11111 C-t "*llWIN ~ °""""'t'· .............. lllwl•llloN.. Mlterlll _,,., w Id.....,.,._.. lllNlfl t • l'Nl' .. ••••llCtd wlfMut tPIClll ... ! ,' """*"' If """'11111 -· t 11<*'111 tllH --'"' 11W ,, Centi _,., c..11"'""' *"'*'i.11111 w ''""' a ... ._ "'911flll\'t "" 111111 U,11 mtmltlYI l"lltlt'" ..,.._,._ »M ,,_.,.,,. ' of t~·o conclusions: "Elt~r he knew about it ahead of time, or he didn't ex· peot me to report to him .'' .. -..ld"h•t-1........whl"'"~­ ccunset JQhn W. Dean 111 never lied to blm.-•nd tbat-00.bell<ves Dean.11-lellfog the truth in accusing HAideman, Preli- dent NIX1>n and fonner White tfouse ad- viser John O. EhrUcltman of compllcUy in the Waterg3te cov~r-up plot. "This is my opinion, based upon my a560ciation with Dean." Strachan said. "My op!nlon "''ould be that Dean i!I telling the ,,,.,h," Stre.chan said he first reacted . with shock and disbelief when he heard about the Watergate raid on the radio. Strachan, whose job was to keep Haldeman informed of acliviUC3 at the I some Jtarpl. ti J o.r...r wu ftPOrted moving alowly Ni1ot1 re-tlecUon campaign. aald he et-speclrlcally that be destroyed the strtngthen his chances against Nixon. toward the t.1exican coast and wu ex· -ted hb boss to be angry. m"""'o andum I queatlon and recalls Strachan said at the tlme he rtlayed pected to bit land near, Ciba Son Lucaa r-... '"" r n · sometime '"· ~ee• sm••y ··". w•·a "l was scared lo death. f tho\lihl I !bat u.ld didn't ,. be the order to Liddy he believed It bad to ~ • -. ... -•~ would be fired," Strachan said. ~ emon appear w do with pol!Ucal fotolllgence plhoijo&. she dcia •tha our! CG QrOa&e Cout Hut on tilt contrary, ll< said, Haldeman •...,.-iaed. ~Jl"'Dlm• • -..llo-lj.-'-' _.._..:.;_.:;.. ____ le--. didn 't berate blm. The Liddy Incident came In the spring diacuulons of campaign fntolllgoace as "J'd aay we ea~ ..jieel ....0 pretty ·tt ..... ld .. 1mo91-jofdncJ)';-'WeU, whet ol tm, Slracl!an said~llaldeman -ln--early-u Novtmber-197 eoGd-f-tliil·-~lto , do we know about t.be events ovtr the atructed him to tell 1Jddy1 who was.lhen Strachan aaid the inltruct1onl clme And if one stonn lln't toQugh. Smiley weekend?" Strachan said. · chief COQJlll<l lo the re-efection campaign sometime oiler April 4, when be advlaod • Hid hurricane Emily now pockblg ·Ill to stracban theo showed Hald<man an old committee, to "transfer w ~ate v er Haldemao ,of the !300,000 Jn!~• '-~-bu started bl!lldlng up llO memorandum in which strachan In-capability he bad" from the campaign of plan. ~ miles off Acagulco. Sbe ii rqovial ~ formed Haldeman that a !300,000 Sen. Edmund S. Muskie ol Maine to Sen. Stra<l!>¥ also told .tfle commJtee "It at abaut/fgbt -.aoil liar elfoda may "sophisticated po I i t i c a I intelligeoce Geotge McGovern of South Dakota, who was fah'b:~~ knowleitce"· that tbe be felt bY late thft. Week, Sriley 8lkl. gathering system" ~ been .approved by was emerging as the froot~runner for the driver far. Mulkle 'tfu tn .tbe pay of .tbe 4'My aueu woukt6e thM DllCle lhe cets the campalgn oommlttee. Democratic nomination. Committee I~ ll>e· 116-Eloellooi of the Into our'&oler water up '""e llio'll.dle," "He told me, 'Make sure our files are Strachan aaJd Haldeman ti a n t e d President or at 1Usf. lsupp1y1ng b-be llid. ' , v. ? clean,' "Strachan said. partlcufarly to find d!lt McGovern's rela-formalloo to the Nlxon Untfi.Ign. Newport Beach lifegu.lrds reported two He destroyed that and other documents tlonsblp with Sen. FAward M. Kennedy of t..1uskie wa!I out of town and his office riptide trouble spotS, ave the weekend by running them throu.gb a shredder, be Massachmetlll, whom McGovern wanted had no immedJate comment on that might get worse lf the storms ar· said. Later. in July, he told Haldeman ~ a vice presld.entlal running mate to Strachan's testimony. rive. Irwto said there have been strong -----------------~----------------------currents near the Santa Ana River jetties and the 15th Street Beach on the UPI Ttl_,..,. Police Still • Seeking Coyote That Bit Girl San Clemente police shot and wounded a Coyote over the weekend which could have been the animal that bit a young visitor at San Clemente State Park, but the animal could not be retrieved for rabies tests. Officers spotted the coyote walking into a canyon oU Avenida Lobelro near the Park Saturday evening. 'Ibey had been summoned to the area by a woman resident who found the animal sitting -apparently ailing -on her !root porch. One patrolman shot at the animal in the canyon, hitting the coyote in tbe blnd- quartet"s. But the sbo(failed to stop the animal and it disappeared into the brush. Park rangers over the weekend spotted yet another coyote. in the area but could not capture that animal, either. The .sighting and sOOoting were of no help to Denise Pimper, 8, of Norwalk, who is undergoing the 14 injections of a duck senun to stave oft the possibility ol. tables. Newport-Balboa Peninsula. The Orange County Aar~ Patrol reported· a VerY _busy w~k.end in terlll! of boat traffic but no major incidents . Cou11ty Accused 0,f Financing Te ens' Abortio1is · Orange County's welfare department was accused late Friday of making state Medi-Cal fwids available for abortions obtained by pregnant teenagers. The charge was leveled in a Superior Court suit filed by nearly 300 C0W1ty residents who named wellare department director Granville Peop les and county treasurer Robert L. Citron as defendants in their class action. It is alleged by tilt group that Medi-Cal funds made available to ptegnant females under the age of 18 are a viola- tion or the principles set out in the state's Aid to Families With Dependent Children program. It is argued In the demand for an in- junction against both cowity officials that AFDC was designed to support living children and pregnant women prepared to give birth to children. HIJACKED JAPAN AIR LINES JUMBO JET SITS AT DESERT AIRPORT WITH 150 HOSTAGES Plane Seiied Over Western Europe; Hij•cker.s Ordered 'Free Ho.st•ge5 or Kill Them' Spokesmen for the Veterinary Public Health Divi sion of the Orange County Animal Control Department said today that until they ., are convinced that whatever coyote is fotmd is the one which bit the girl, Denise will have to continue the painful shots. "The program. Wai created to support and oot destroy children;"' the lawsuit notes. ' Lawyers for the plaintiff said they will demand an injunction against any future county action on such Medi-Cal payments pending trial of the issue at a bearing to be scheduled Monday. Murder Charged Driver in Deaths o.f .. 2. TAMPA, Fla. (AP) -A driver who police said killed two young Tampa girls ih a deliberate hit-and·run incident sur- rendered to police in Baxley, Ga. Sunday night, authorities said. Raymond Alwyn ~tcMabon was being held in jail oo two charges of fifst-degree murder, Appling County Sheriff J. B. "Red" Carter said. The sheriff said McMahon waived extradition to Florida. McMahoo, 31. has been hunted by police ror more than a week in the deaths of Roxanne Caton, 13, and ber sister, Rabyn, 5. Police said the girls \\-ere walking l/ness.11 Croton Mary Judilll Mallet nearly loses her crown as she ls named Miss Texas o! 1973 at the an- nual pageant In Fort Worlh. Miss Mallet, 20, will represe nt T.e•ail'ln the Miss Amen a pag· eant later lllis yea r. •• outside µteir Tampa home July 14 when witnesses told police a blue and whi te car made several passes through the block, then suddenJy swerved from ~ opposite lane and IWlged into the Caton children from behind. Curtis Caton, ·12, who was walking with his sisters, was injured slighUy. . The driver scooped up the body of Rox- anne and sped away, leaving the other children lying beside the road. Ronnne's body was found later in a ditch. Sheriff Carter said McMahon told him be rode a bicycle from his mother's home io Orlando, Fla. to Woodbine, Ga., apparently eludiog police roadblocks dur- ing the rnas&ve manhunt. The sberifi said his men \\'ere on I.he lookout for McMahon because his grandmother, Minnie Hardy, lives in , . Baxley. "He. ga~e himself up to me about 11:4.5 p.m. We..:.bave him In jail and be said he Is ready'to return to Florida," Cartef said. • '~ McMahon's mother, Betty Swwuon, said her son visited her in Orlando a few days after the hit·and·run incident. 3 Marines Held; Evidence Found l1i Postal Tlieft Afoney order stubs and printing paraphernalia -all belonging to a burgl- ed Camp Pendelton branch post office - were dJscoveaid in a San Clemente motel room over t~•eekend , and could lead to suspects in the theft occurring at the reservatioo late last week. Base officials said that three Marines alrea~y have been arrested in the major break1n at the postal branch in the cen- tral area of the base last Thursday. But they added lhat the discovery at the San Clemente Motor Lodge over the weekend could lead investigators to oth~r suspects, The three men ""-'.ed Friday on the base and charged "'·ltb federal offenses relating to postal theJt are Pv1. Ronald D. Redman of Oberlin, Mo.; Lance Cpl. Donald R. Weaver of Shreveport, La.; and Leon t..nrayette. Ages of the three ar- rtstecs were not Immediately available from au lhorities . The loot included ll,000 In po.<llage stamps, scores ol blank postal money orders as well as the machinery and rub- ber stamps required to fUI out tho oegotlablo documeollJ. -s... olllClals .. 1a 1hat some oflb stolen Items were recovertd durlne the arrests Jato In the week. Local police said thoy found 200 stubs from money orders in the room at the lodge located at 2222 S. El C.mlno Real, bot-no ooniplete ~Y order• were 1unong the e.v~. Dancer Quizzed Over Geuy's Disappearance . ' ROME (AP) -Police questiooed a 23- year-old go-go dancer today about the disappearance two weeks ago of J. Paul Getty lll. . . The dancer, Danielle Devret, may have been the last person to see Getty before he vanished. The police are investigating the possibility that Getty, the 16-year~d grandJoo ot the American oil billionaire, might have been kidnaped . Miss Devret, a dancer in a discotheque in Rome's bohemian Trastevere section !reqlleflted by yowig Getty, said she saw him In the early hours of July 10, police said. She said they were in the Piazza Nova.no, a nl~ hippie haunt in oen-- tral Rcme, according to police. The yotmgster was bitten once on the leg by a coyote which crept up behind her a week ago and inllicted the single bite . The animal was not provoked, 'park rangers said, and no explanation can be found for tlie ~tiack. F/:ames S·weep Tall Building BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -Fire broke ou t in a 4Q.-story building here today, and two of at least 200 persons believed trapped on upper floors jumped to their deaths, police .said. Helicopters were being used to rescue tho5e trapped bet\\·tt:n the 13th and 40th floors of the Avianca building, Colombia's tallest. Police reported at least 100 persons were rescued. The fire . believed to have started on the 13th floor, appeared to be geUing out of control at midday. At least 10 floors directly alxlve the 13th were engulfed in flames. Neither county official could be con- tacted for comment on the lawsuit late Friday. • From Pagel JET ·fRASH :·~. left and started losing altitude fast. I got the impression almost as if a missile was launched from the plane. There was a loud bang but no explosion. Then not~ing else -silence." Rescue officials said a neet of official launches, yachts, pleasure boats and fishing vessels sped to the scene. "The rescuers worked by searchlights and recovered six bodies," an official said. "They .also retrieved some seats, the flight book from the cockpit, part oJ the plane's undercarriage." Later, they fowid four more bodie!. Top Singer Divorced RENO, Nev. (UPI) -Singer Diahann Carroll and Las Vegas dress sOOp operator Freddie Glusman, married just four months~ ago, were granted a divorce Friday. Glusman, who filed for diVorce Domellico Scali, chief of Rome's detec- tives, said M'w Devret told police that Getty suggested the two ol them go to a nearby seashore resort. Miss Devret said she refused and Getty became irritated and wandered away, according to her ac- count to the police. iiiiijiijiijiiiijiiiiiiijiijiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiil~Jiju~nje 22, claimed incompatibility. Nobody 'Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1'ull{a,f> HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE 11BEST BUY'' AWARD 15995 e WI DILIVH e W• l lllYIC• ''SDJllN e WI INSTALL t inN•s.ttF•t J ... lMh: ~ ,._....,~ to..to..p.I ............... ·- 22995. WI DILi',.. • WI SlllYICI e W• UtlTAU. . Dtlll(itf', ,, . . .. -, !•: I~ ; (:,~;) ~ ..... .. . Aulhorlztd GE SERVI CE 18995. w ......... .. e w• llllYICI e W• tNSTALL 6 CYCLE BUil T·IN ~::POTSCRUBBER DISHWASHER 26995. WI DILIVH • w111•v1C• t W• INTrl.U. Mombor of Callfornl1'1 L1,....1 c,,.rativt luyi"I _Groutt_ With Th. Volum1 luyint Power of· 110 Storts 9d DAY ~Uf w1iH•mom Cl lDJl 1815 JIEWPOII BLVD. Downtm Costa llesa -Phone 548-7788 - • I • roi-----,,. .---------• -----·-' -----·-- Monda)', Julr 23, 1973 s DAIL V PllOT !:, Gas Pains Pondered Ration S tam ps R ecall Days o f Scarcity By JACK OIAPPELL c----ot .. ...,._,_,. __ .__~~-- Detf'r Pllol Sl•ff Pllote Proof-ls In Tlac Tasting Mike Ashcraft judges the culinary effort of Gary Carrie is not shown. The fun and good flavor was Johnson, 7, (center), which breaks up Sandy Lewis, Bake Day at Aliso School in El Toro Fdday. It was 9. Sandy won the best tasting cake category, shar· part of the eig&t-week El Toro Summer Recreation ing the honors with Carrie Rusk, 10, her co-baker. program that is free to residents of the area. Ron Caspers Seeks County ~ EPA Protest Filth District Supervisor Ronald \V. Caspers or Newport Beach wants Orange .County to protest new federal Environ- mental Protection Agency regulations. At the Board of Supervisors next meet· Ing July 31, Caspers said he will ask other board members to support him in protesting the regulations which he tenned "ludicrous." The supervisor snaid the EPA was ordered by a court to produce the regu- lations within a set time and "they evi- denUy just threw something\ together to meet the deadline." A public hearing on the EPA rules is set for Aug. 9 in Los Angeles. The regulations would limit gasoline sales to last.Y~'.s ~' r~~e yearly auto emission .c~kJ..;,r~u1~.1an~on feeways to be reservea for ~ and 'tar pools and restrict c:onstruct1on of new parking facilities . Also required would be a limitation on the number of motorcycles licensed and a requirement that all cars back to .1966 be fitted with air pollution c:ontrol devices. Caspers said Gov. Ronal~ Reagan had filed a protest with the White House. He called the regulations "unenforceable and infeasible" because t~ey wo~ld ~}­ most eliminate the use of automobile! m the South Coast Air Basin by 1977. Reagan said the basin was completely dependent on the automoblle for its total economic social and physical well be- ing. "The' cure," he added, "Is far worse than the illness." The governor said he hoped ~ ~te House would appoint a tap .~U1C18l to work with California authorJt1~s on a reason!lble feasible and effective pro- gram "without EPA's chaotic, social and economic disruption." Caspers said the estimated annual ~t of the auto emission checks by tbe. Cah- fomia Highway ·Patrol woold be up to $200 million. 3 Suspects Held In Market Heist One youth was shot and two others ar- rested as suspecU in a market holdup in Anaheim Sunday, police reported. Craig Talley, 19, of Anaheim, was shot in the neck when he ran by Officer Gregory Mattis. He is reported in fair oonditlon today ln ,Orange County Medical Center. . Officer Mattis intercepted the trio as they fled the 7-Eleven food store at Magnolia Avenue and Broadway. He said he ordered the youths to remain in the car but Talley (Jed. · The officer fired a single shot wound- ing the youth. 1be other two suspects are Stephen Douglas and Wayne Clapp, both 21 and both of Anaheim. H asli Oil Gulp Leaves Youth Ill BALTIMORE, Md. (Al') -A 20-year· old Relsteratown, Md. man was in .aerioua coodition todey after one of 15 bap of hashish oil he swallowed rup- tured In his stomadl, pollco reported. Qarlea A. Venner IV was in the in- tensive care unit ol a bolpilal suffering -fl'om.ULOVerGooe Of the Polen! oJJ~ -~"" aald X-raya show lbat I~ of the t,...loch jong sausage:llke lte,ms were lodged ln Venner's intestines. Friends who brougllt Venntr to the boellllll sald he swallo"cd the bags 111......tay night, Just bolor• boanling an -111j>line In casablanco, *"""'°· police said. -'--------'---=----------------- Lagu11a Greenbelt Issue Set By Planners Tonight A public hearing on a proposed open space element rec:ommending preserve· tion of the Laguna Greenbelt and other scenic lands in the city will be held at 7:30 tonight by the Laguna Beach Planning Commission. The proposed element, in the hands of commissioners for more .than a month, encourages the city to preserve available open space through negotiations with landowners and government agencies. Also recommended is a massive revision or grading, zoning and sub- division ordinances to conform with the open space proposals. Atop the list of lands to be preserved .is Sycamore Hills, rising between Laguna Canyon and El Toro roads. The element suggests the city work with the county to make Sycamore Hills a regional park,. in conjunction with t'1e nearby Laguna Lakes. ' Other areas to be, preserved incl1-1de Irvine Company and Moulton Ranch lal!dS which make up the bulk or the pro- posed 10,000 acre greenbelt around the city. The element, drafted by a citir.ens copimittee 8nd city planning department, aJ~ urges preservation of ridgelines ad- jacent to Top of the World, Arch Beach Heights and north Laguna; lands border- ing Laguna Canyon; the beaches, and hillside lands with \Ulusual scenic, historic, or geologic value. One hearing is required before the planning commission before the element is sent to the city council for adoption. Iri' other matters, commissioners will hold the first public hearing on rezoning of a portion of the Shoals Motel property, 1601 South Coast Highway. to see one t'Ommercial from the existing R3 (high density residential ), The c:ommission also is expected.to set hearing dates for a specific plan to guide development between Moss Point and Victoria Beach and an annexation re- quest from property owners along Big Bend in Laguna Canyon. * * * * * * City of Laguna Offered Thurston Land 'Bargain' As local land values continue to sky- rocket, the city of Laguna Beach has the opportunity to buy 34 acres of open space at a rock bottom price. The city could gain title to the virgin hillside slopes bordering Park Avenue between Wendt Terrace and Tahiti Drive for $66,000 -less than $2,000 an acre. The land recently was deeded to the state by the Thurston Foundation for $6,149 in past due taxes. On top of the taxes, the buyer must assume $60,000 in street and storm drain assessment bonds against the property. That cost, according to City Treasurer Peggy Morraele, would be $2&,000 to bring the bonds up to date, plus $5,000 yearly through 1981. City planning o!ficials know the chaparral-covered land as parcel 46, one of 125 pieces of open space suggested for acquisition in the open space and con- servation elements of the General Plan. "It would be wonderful to be able lo preserve that parcel," c o m m e n t e d Wayne Moody, director of planning and developm~t. He noted~ however, that the land received a "rather low .. priority !or ac- quistion since steep slopes and potential geologic instability may stall any development on the properly. The scenic character of the land also was noted by proponents of the p~ posed Machu Picchu development. At one time they offered to buy the parcel and give it to the city as a "lradeoff" for city approval of the to\.\nhouse development farther up Park Avenue. That offer has been withdrawn in a rilt between the ti.1achu Picchu backers and the planning department over density standards for the proposed project. The parcel was long considered a "white elephant" by the Thurston Foun- dation, set up to execute the estate of the late Joe Thurston, due to the high bonded indebtedness. One of the individuals holding the bonds finally foreclosed on the property, sending it to the state for taxes. According to the county tax collector's office. the land became state property on July 2. It is now up to the county to auc- tion the property for the past due taxes. But prior to the official sale. the city will be given the first option to buy. Past attempts to sell the property for $120,000 -for a cash value of $49.000 plus taxes and the bonds -repeatedly failed. The only other proposed use of the prop- erty was to establish and outdoor archeological lab. The Laguna Beach Unifi~ School District applied for feder I Coods Cor the project, but did not recei e them. At the time. the school board lean1ed a portion of the land on ce was an Indian campsite and contains unusual rock out· croppings. Los Angeles Lifeguards Win Dory Co1npetition Los Angeles-area lifeguards dominated a dory boat competition which took place Saturday morning at Newport Pier. A Newport Bead! lifeguard crew, Word Saunden and Steve Farmer, finished last In a field of II boats. Entrants had to row three ,times around the pier, In and out of the surf zone, for a total distance or about one miJe. on;-polnf, one memt>er of each crew bad Io jump out of tho boa~ swlln around a Dag and re-enter the dory. Ftrst-place honors were taken by Ran- dy Steigely and Tom Snyder, from I.Os Angoles Cily ll!eguard!. Two ·San Clemente lifetuards, BUI 1""' ris and Steve Helfer. came ln SOOllfld. ln third place were Kerry O'Brien and Paul Matthies from Los Anegles CA\lnty. A Newport entry scored better in a sec- ond race Saturday, the l!lurf ski com- petition . Contestants row a long surfboard with a rudders, similar to a kayak. The race ortglnatod tn A-alla, a Newport lifeguard said. Eric Arneson of Santa Barbara came in-Ont In s(Jl'f ·s1<1 «>nrpeUtloir and another Santa ~arbara enlrat'" Louis Rlf· fie, was second. Third place honors went to Bob Hahn, rowini for the Rosty Pelican Oaring Association of Newport Beach. An Auckland, Ne.w Zealand, mklent, Kevin Riley. llni.sh.0 fourth. Combing thrwgb some forgott<n c<Jt· ners not 1ong ago, Marty ChriStensen found some of his tather's \Vorld War 11 gas ratlon stamps. "I just broke up laughing," chuckled Christenlen u he waved the faded tan colort'd old stamps. "I guess It's coming back. It's closer than you think," be said. A South Laguna resident, Otristensen said he's quite dependent on his car. "You can call me a traveling sales· man," said Christensen who now mar- kets a crowbar-like tool he developed called "Sweely Pry," used by firemen and police agencies. Christensen drives about 36,000 miles a year. "l've got a '70 Caddy. I'll roller skate be(ore I'll get a smaller or Lighter car. I want that mass of steel around me," he said. He said his car has been driven more than 110,000 miles. "You pull into a gas station and you get dirty looks when you ask them to Cill'er up. "Friday night I make dam sure I've got gaa for the weekend. Last week, I gave three peq>le gas," he said noting lhat he now keeps a spare two gaUon can in the trunk of hb car. "l know 1 shouldn't," he said. Christensen snickered at a joke about the service station customer who pulled up to a gasoline pump and was asked by the service attendant to wash the win· dows of the gasoline station. "I asked to use the toilet at one and the guy s8ys, 'are you a regular customer here?' I said 'not any more baby,' and shuffled beck to the car." He said that the shortage bas equalized some things for the gas station people who he said seemed to be victims of con· sumer mistreatment before. · "They doo't have to take the guff from the public so much now," he said. Chri!tensen said he's not sure what he would do if gasoline is rationed. "We'd probably be given a rating for something or other. "Human nature being what It is, you're going to get into a black market," he said. If propane conversions became wide- spread, Christemen said he'd certainly consider changing to the liquified bottled gas. Cbrlstensen sald he thought sell disci· pline would be be.Uer than govenunent- lmpooed ralionlng. Boat Blast Kills I MOSS LANDING (AP) -William Di11-1arzo of Santa Cruz was killed when his boat ex ploded while he was emptying its gas tank at Moss Landing Harbor, the fire department ~ported. Fire officials said the boat apparently sprang a gas leak Sunday and DiMarzo was at· tempting to pwnp out the gas when a spark ignited it. Delly Pl .. I Sl1H ...... "I'll ROLLER SKATE BEFORE I'l l GET A SMALLER CAR" Ma rty Christensen of South Laguna Looks at Ration Stamps -01Ur l'li.t Slall 1'~0111 WILL THESE RETURN? WW II Ration Stamp Surve illance Helped Nake d Moto ris t Rcuns Squad Cars , Fincrlly Sub dued "1LLISTON PARK. N. V. IUPIJ -A police sergeant on patrol spotted a naked young man driving a red sedan through this Long Island town. l~e took orr in pursuit and at the same ti me radioed for help. Four police cars pulled alongside the nude ma n·s car and told him to stop. Each time. police said, he rammed the police cars. When police finally cornered the car, the man punched one policeman, kicked another and bit patrolman Rocco Colucci on the left hand. "'He told the officers he likes to be free ." and that was why he w~ driving naked, said a police spokesman. Colucci went to a hospital to get his hand stitched. Six officers also were treated for minor injuries. SEATILE (AP) -The \Vashington James P. Sapienza. 20, of Garden City Natural Gas Co. helped the FBI in Park . N.Y .. was charged with second- surveil\ance of the Black Panther party degree assault, reckless endangerment. in 1970 and 1971 , the Seattle Post-. resisting arrest and a string of motor Intelligencer reported in today's editions. vehicle violations. -~~~~~~--~~ SHINE ANYONE 1 l ightweight Classic;1 By T eylor of Ma ine Fine Leathers and Suedes From $2 5.00 to $'45.00 PHEIJISMEAGER ~ OYEl™l!WINCAl.m>RlllA . NEWPORT BEACH Wilshire, Sherman Oak,. Pasaderia, l akewccd, West Covina , I I I I l ' I I I I I ; • ' ' -----.-,...-- .!J 0,\IL.1 t'ILUI I Huge Blast Recorded Bi~kenba~ker Dies!) A~e of A~es y~Bpp-sala UPPSALA, Sweden (AP) -The Soviet Union has apparently set off one or the largest underground blasts in Its history. 'lllo Uppsala Selsmologlcal Institute said the underground exploslon at 2:29:55 8,m. -6:29:$5 p.m. PDT -had a magnitude of 7. I on the Richter ScaJe. The dlrector of the institute, Pro!. Marcus Baath. sald there have been only five explosions in the last 10 years with a Richter magnitude oC 7 or more. 1be e11:plosioo occurred in t h e Semipalatlnsk area of Siberia. e R e boz o Given Audit MIAMI (UPI ) -The chief 0£ the ?ifiami olrice of the Internal Revenue SUvice confirmed today that presidential <'onfidant Charles G. "Bebe" Reboio was undergoing an IRS audit. t IN SHORT ... ) tEdward A. Beinke said tlie audit of P.ebozo's financial affairs was "oot unusual." 1"0n the average, about S percent of all rtlurns are audited," Be:inke said, "ilthough when yoo gel into the larger -.m, a larger per«ntage Is pulled. U yoti eam aver $50,00J, there's a good Jijc:elibood or an examination." • ABM Probe Sought ,WAS!DNGTON (UPI) -Rep. t.s Aspin (0-Wis.), has called for an in- vestigation into a ''suspicious" cost overrun for construction of a Safeguard antlballistic missile (ABM ) site. The comment by the persistent Pen- tagon critic came after the Defeme Department made available figures Sun- day· showing the single ABM site now under construction in Grand Forks, N.D., will cost Sl.3 billion more than the 1969 estima te for a two.site ABM program. e 'Hospital Bombed' MlAMI (AP) -A former Alt Faroe pilot says he directed a bombing strike on. a Viet Cong hospital in South. Vietnam but that the word "hospital" was left out of intelligence reports on the raid. Gerald J. Greven of Mi.amJ also said on Sunday that he later was reprimanded by his superior officer for identifying the 1969 target as a hospital over hi3 radio and at a briefing. e Llb11ans Denwastrtlte CAIRO (UPI) -Thousands d Libyam demonstrated with rallies and sit..in strikes in Tripoli and ~ today, demanding that Col !'.1oammar Khadafy withdraw bis resignation and remain as bead of the military government. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat also called on Khadafy to remain but Sadat held fast on the issue that prompted the resignation -his opposition to the bn- medlate unity between Egypt and lJbya that Khadaly is demanding. e ltf<W• Trip Lauuefled MOSCOW (UPI) -The Soviet Union's first Mars probe since 1971 hurtled tawanl the Red Planet today, its apparent mission to put lire-seeking electronic gear on the Martian surface. Mars-4 blasted off on the six-month, 290-million-mile trip Saturday at 10:31 p.m., the news agency Tass said Sunday. Poll Says Nixon Popt1larity Lags PRINCETON. N.J. (AP) -President Nixon 's popularity score has continued to slide and has hil its lowest point since his election in 1968, says the Gallup Poll. In Gall up's July IJ.9 national survey, 4.9 percent disa pproved or Nixon's handling of the presidency, while 40 percent ap- proved. Tha t is a ri ve·point drop from a survey taken two weeks earlier. ·The poll was taken after his fired White House counsel John W. Dean III testified at the Senate \Vatergate hear- ings but before former Atty. Gen. John N. t.t.itchell appeared. ' a.n.Ufl, f"la. (AP ) -Capt Eddie limit for airmen, the 6-foot·2 Ricken· Rickenbacker, a grade school dropout backer transft!rred to the fledgling nlsht 'Ill' iw:viv~il.b. lhe .. Jled, service and got his lieutenant 's com· Baron to beCOme -a World War l 0ytng-hlt.$Slon~nf1eT--onlyE l2'"praetJce nights In ace and the guiding genius behind t/\c frog llt' Spads. · Eastern Airlines, died today ln Zurich, Switzerland, Eastern o1!idals said. lie ASSIGNED TO TltE 94th liat-ln-The- was 82. Ring Aero Pursuit Squadron, be shot An Eastern spokesman said Ricken· down his first plane with o machine gun backer died of heart failure at a Zuri ch April 29, 1918. A month later he shot hospital. His wife was with hlm at the down his fifth to qualify as an ace. time. Soarlng without a parachute in His death ended a career ol excitement primil ve planes propelled by engines less and danger that prompted him to say In sophistica ted lhan those In today's 1970 : "I've cheated the old Grim Reaper lavmmowers, Rickenbacker eventually seven times that t know of." blasted 21 German aircraft and 'five ob- An Eastern spokesman said funeral scrvat ion balloons out of the skies over services would be held in Columbus, France. Ohio, his native city, later this week. On his 'o\:ay to becoming America's ace RICKENBACKER WAS the epitome d every Walter Mitty 's dream. A!J early as 1914, he was pushing race can to 134. miles an bout on' the !ands al Daytona Beach. By the time lhe United States entered World War I, Rickenbacker was earning $40,000 a year as an auto speed demon. In 1917 he enlisted in the Anny and became staff driver for Gt!:n. Jllhn J. Pershing, cormiander of the American Expeditionary Forces. Though 27 and two years over the age Horrors Told In Tortw·e Chamber Site MIAMI (AP) -Police say the dead man suspected ol the torture-chamber killing of an Ohio youth and the rape of the youth's teen-age girl companion had a criminal record. And homicide Detective Don Mathews said Dade County police were re.opening several unsolved cases to see whether Albert Brust, 44, might have been linked to thim. He gave no other details. Authorities revealed that B r u s t registered with county offidals as a con- victed felon oo the same day be applied le< a job as a bWlding illllpector last year. Police found Brust's body on Saturday after neighbors reported that he a~ peared to be dead, seated in a lawn chair in the back yan! of his suburban Miami home. Authorities sald Brust apparently killed bimself by faking poison. OFFICERS THEN found t h e dismembered body of 16-year-ol.d Mark Bernard Matson cemented into a shower stall in the house. He previously had been reported missing from his home in Washington Court Hoose, Ohio. of aces, he met propellor to propellor v.·ith the fl ying circus formed by Baron twfanlred von Richthofen, "The Red Baron." SURROUNDED BY three scarlet-nosed planes of the Gennan "ace of acts," Rickenbacker tried to get away but his pursuers showed'' ex tr aordi nary adroitness in handling their machines. The heavens seemed quite crowded with the three dancing Fokkers. "After a time, an opportunity came to try to outrun them, and with the motor UPIT.._..i. DUELED 'RED BARON' Eddie Rickenbacker UP'I Telephoto ' Police said a room adjoining the bathroom in which Matson's body \vas found ~d been converted into a torture chamber and the entire house in a busy residentiaJ area had been soundproofed inside with three inches of foam padding. They said the torture chamber was an airtight room lined with cinderblocks, five inches of wood and another six inch· es of foam. They said padlocks, chains and belts extended from the walls nnd the meta1 ceiling. FRED CARRASCO RECEIVES FIRST AID AFTER SHOOTOUT He's Suspected Killer of 47 in Texas-Mexico Drug War AUTHORITIES SAID Brust, a min imum housing inspector for Dade County, had been ch arged with kidnap, robbery, assault and grand larceny in New York in 1951 and was sentenced to three to 10 years in prison. He was parol· ed in 1957. After they foond the bodles, police con- tacted a 15-year-old girl from Frankfort, Ky., vfflo had told police in nearby Fort Lauderdale last week that she and Matson had been picked up while hitch- hiking by a man driving a whJte van. She told police that they were takeo to a torture chamber and forced to perform sex acts while the man took pictures. Police said she told them Matson tried to overpower the man but was shot three times in \be bead. Detective Mathews said the Fort Lauderdale police did not believe the girl 's story. 'Modern Day Pancho Villa' Ambushed it1 San Antonio SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (U PI ) -Thirty policemen with machine guns ambushed Fred Gmiez Carrasco, suspected .killer of 47 persons in a Texas-f\.1exico drug war, and shot him as he walked out of a motel room Sunday. "Knowing his re putation and all , we didn't intend to give him a chance,'' homicide inspector Jack Hutton said. Carrasco doubled over and trailed• a stream of blood several yards before he fell to the ground and was taken Into custody as his \Vife. Rosa , ran to his side and kissed him. A police spokesman said ' today Car· rasco was in fair condition and tmder heavy guard at Bexar Cowity Hospital. JIUTI'ON SAID carrasco was sought for sevoo San Antonio-area killings and •·he's wanted in Mexico on about 40 over there." He reportedly headed the largest narcotics smuggling ring in south Texas until he was jailed in GuadaJajara, Mex- ico. Officers said he paid a $100,000 bribe to escape from jail so he could eiminate other drug smugglers who tried to take over hls business. Homicide detective Frank Castillon, who said he arrested Carrasco, 33, in 1959 for stabbing a man to death, has said, "Next to Pancho Villa, I doo't know 1,1,•ho's killed more." igh Winds Sweep Texas Officers had staked out the south San Antonio motel for days after one of car- rasco's cousins registered using a faJse name. (. Tliul'tclerstorms Spill Over Into Midwest, Rockies Tem rnt11re.c N41•0W41 Wl41Mfl W•v•<I f0tlC4'1 ,. 'r• tll ., -21 -,,, 3000 • • U" WI ol.IMlt 'OIOCAlt . I ""'I!• iew~ ll'lu'1dt•1to•m1 ""o!ed In th<" t •t•tmf 10ull'lwtwrn &rt•I 111<1 In~ P•nf\1n,,Te ol Tt~111. s.eventv-mll,.,.per·how wl11<11 ro1red ll'l•OVl;ll'I Delll&rt, l•~., ro mllH nor!1'-...,.,t ol Am&rlllo. One·ln¢h hill 11nd l'llQtl w•11<11 IW9PI lnl••••••• 10. 1'D ml1t1 e.11 ot El P1~. Wl'lll1 !l>f' 111,11 ~twm1 .,.,. ~uooidlrtll r.om•Wl>lt e1r1v 1001y, """ vloor w•1 l!'llK!ed Into !hundf'1tormt Oller ~rl1 of '•ttMern 1Canu1 11\d "1•1>1"15~11 111\mdt'rllOtm• n<"" O'lf't wloetv ..:111...-.ct .,,,,,,, rn. Roekllt « r.1110<ed0 end WVO"'ln<;r, 1111 m14dl• Ml111sslonl Vitlle" t"ll •~t .\!ltn•lt (Oll1! from SOv!h C••ol>nl lo Ntw Jf"~ COl""1blt . MO , w11 nw-tJI In 1 t tn- ch•• 01 r~1.,,. """'' '""~ en '"'~ l'l~vlf't'I l~ltt11 I" :IQ ,..1n111t,, G•ft!'l•boo"O H C:. , "'"-' 1w11m1WG wllft '7 lllt~ 'Vfl<lllY nln.,, ,,., ~'"'-'' ~II(! 111111 ...... ,. ''"" ~ 1no n•ll"" ""'o""' mo.llv 1~1· '•'-' Tlwl ""'"""~.,,~ ti-for• <'I•-~·­..., ,.._ -1:§ II Ev•"'ton, W,.O, IO !;t •1 N_,...._ Cnnslnl WPnlfler Ult "IQ'l'll t!ld .,rty mQl"lll"' 1- (fouot 1on1on1 •nd tvtMl•Y wll!I ofl'tt•· wl.,. \llnny ~In. H)Oll IS !'et U. , ITno /tf .... n:'fflf P• MOMOAY ~Olld Hlgtl 11:~ o.f'!I. .. , ~ L-.);jl o.m. Li T\ICSOAY Fin.I Hlft\ ••J4 p.fft. '~ 11'1"1 Low a:Oll 0.11'1. '·' H(~ H)Of\ U SJ p,11'!, 0, I kond 1..-s-0111."'· s.1 K"Ofl rttH S:Sl t"". wh 1·01 p.11'!. Moon ""'1 :••.l'l'I.. •" J:ts •·"" "HE CA!\tE Otrl' to leave," Hutton snid. "We rushed out and hollered 'Poli ce.' He drew his pistol and we started shooling. '' The motel manager, who asked that his name not be used , said officers shouted twice through a bullhorn for Carrasco to surrender . The raiding officers also arrested t'A'O bodyguards and the cousin, who did not resist. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtllvery of tht Oafty Pl~ 1s 9\Watlletd ~ ..... ,.,.,! If -......... .,. - ....... .,. ••• "·"'"· Jl tl .. ,..., ..., ... ... '"""'' .. ,,,.... c.... -.... -,, ..... "'" ,,..,,..., ... htloUJ! tf ""' .. !\ff ,...,.. .,_ '""' .., t •·"'· 11 ...... f • lof I Liii. h!i41y, , ........ c., .............. . -Ct•.,,_._ ... ll.1....._ - Ttt,phontt Mflt.1 O.-•• c-•v •r-....... ioq:rt ~ ............. IMI l•tdl W • ._....,..,. , , ,. ... , ... Int J.11 (""""'"' Ultitl,_ IMCJI. 1111 111111 C1.alr-, OaM ,...._ 19111111. ...... ,1.. ....... flt ......... ~ lull open and the llOIO m!llit down, I looked back and aaw them fa.d1na away In my rear." ni. American who leamed to !'1 '1Y the ,..t of his pantJ later -to Ill': ''Ftom hl!to to·zero ls about the average bero's late. This hero business lhouldn't be taken too ttrloosly." But a fr.:'!"°° lat.er and hair a world away, bacbr'• cool bead ln .,,other war gaiotd blm the '1bero" bad&• again. WB1LB ON A mlaalon for the ...m&ry of war, the B17 ln which be wu a clvillan passenger ran out " fuel .. Qcl. ZI, IM2, and ditched In the Soutll PIClllc llOIM 600 miles north of Samoa. ni. elgbt men aboan! ""'8ped wilh their lives and four "scrawny" oranges. HAfter the oranges were gone," Rickenbacker recalled, "there showed up a terrific lot of pang1 of hqer and we Jlfayed for food. Within · al )our alter prayer meeting a seagull came In and landed on mY head ••• we wrung bis head and leathers from hlm l!ld carved up his carcass and distributed and used bis innards for bait." Drinking rain water and eating fish lured by the sceguU's gu~1 seven ol the eight survived 24 days on me raft before being rescued. • A year earlier, Rlcl:mbocker was critically lnjur.d when an E AL pa'8ellger piano crubed In a pine wood near Atlanta, Ga., kllllllg elg,ht. ...Although traj>ped. In the twist«! W?<clcage and pinned over the body of a dead ~nger, the Eastern ·president told h1S fellow survlvon: "I'm awfully t«'fY lhll had to happen to )'OU meft. II Rlckenbacker's entry Into commerda1 aviation came UuooCh the auto Industry. His Rlcienbacker Motor Co. deMJned the lint carwlth lour-wheel braka, 'but 111111 compedllon lon:<d his auto df the market and his company Into obllv!oo sooo alter the birth of both. Again be turned to airplanes. Taking over management of EAL ln 1935, be paid General Moton '3.5 miUion for it three years later and became president and general manager. He was made board chairman in 1953 and ·retired in 1963. He built Eastein from 400 employes to a company whlch today employes more than 35,000. Following his retirement, Ricken- backer and Adelaide Frost Durant Rickenbacker , the woman he maJTled In 19'l2, divided their time between Miami and New York, where sons David E. and William F. maintain homes. S. Vwts Free Prisoners But 30 Refuse to Go SAIGON (UPI) -South Vlelnam began releasing civilian prisoners today in the first prisoner exchange with the Communists in three months, but 30 of the first 375 prisoners rejected a return to the Viet Cong, a government - spokesman said. Thirteen of . the Commwtlst prisoners aboard the thin! flight from the big Bien Hoa air base, outside Saigon, to Loe Ninh, 75 miles north of the capital, re- quested asylum and received it, the spokesman said. Seventeen m o r e prisooen! aboan! the fourth lligbt made a similar deciaion. There were 75 prisoners aboard each of five completed flights to Loe Ninh, Lt. Col. Le Trung Hien, spokesman for the South Vietnamese command, s a i d . Earlier In the day, a field military spokesman had said each government CI30 Hercules lligbt would <:any 100 _prisoners. A GOVERNMENT spokeaman said plans !lad called for freeing 600 Com- munist prisoners today but military sources said a tardy start and a bureaucratic snarl involving the lntema· tional Commissioh for Control and Supervision (lCCS) reduced the total. Among those whose detention was pro- longed. by the delayed release were at least 22 infants whose mothers were among the prisoners. Government military sources said the ICCS team slipervising the prisoner ex- change decided to leave the Loe Ninh release site promptly at 5 p.m. to return to Saigon, an hour's night awy, although there was still two hours of daylight re- maining. WHEN 11lE 5 ICCS departure time arrived, the sixth group of 75 prisoners was already on the ground at Loe Ninh, awaiting release, and the seventh and eighth nights were inbound on the 26- minute Cl30 flight to the Viet Cong held fonner U.S. base. In other Southeast Mia developments: -The U.S. warplanes streaking across the skies over Phnom Penh blasted suspected Communist positions today on all sides or the capital in the closest such raids in more than a month. A U.S. observation plane crashed wtille trying to make an emergency landing at Phnom Penh's Pochentong airport in the second crash in two days. -Sen Harold E. Hughes said today "practices of oflicial deceit and secret warfare are more ominous than any p~ Iem tmfrooling our coontry." Consurner Group Assails Safety Of Mowr Home.<J WASIUNGTON (UPI) -A consmner group has charged that 43 percent or all motor homes are overloaded when two persons are riding In the front seat an.d asked the federal government to warn the public about it. The Ralph Nader-backed C...ler £or Auto Safety said Sunday the person.al let- tera sent by the Natlonal Highway Traf- fic Safety Administration (NllTSA) to 1.200 camper awners wu a ''timid" response. The group called for a warning to the public 1t large about i n a d e q u a t e suspension sy1tems ln lhe 1,200 vehlcles surveyed by Nm'SA. • As meny as 400,000 campen and pickup trucks wllh Cf.mper. bodies would have dcfecllve 1~ S)'ltetn.9 lf the suivey is rep~tat1ve1 the center charged. "NHTSA's response to these grueJOme Ondlngs has boon Ulnld In the utreme," •he L'l!Tlter wrvte tn • l!tter to acttna-ad- mlnlslr1tor Jame, E. Wltson. The "'1ter all6 criticised !be -·· req uest that manuU.ctuten make 'their own tnvestlpUon of the defects •11n the naive hope that they w!O see the lll!ht and voluntarily make the nectsSlly ld- )11.stments." After the Pentagon admitted the raids, Hughes, a member of the Senate Annecl Services Committee. charged that the administration had "deliberately lied" to him and the committee when It previous- ly furnished secret bombing staUsllc.s omitting the Cambodian raids. Major to Press Charges Against War Prisoners WASiilNGTON (AP ) -An Air Force major has accused the Army of failing to investigate dismWed m l s co n d u c t charges again.st a group ot ex-POWs and says he will file new mutiny charges against the men. Maj. ~ W .. Leonan! Jr., said, "I'm going to ask that the Army D- vestlgate, which it failed to do after Col Theodore Guy filed his charges" agaiMt five Anny and three Marine enlisted men who had been tmder Guy's command in a North Vietnamese prison. Leonard also was a captive there. Leonan! blamed the Anny, although the Navy also dropped similar aiding-the- enemy and other c h a r g e s. The secretaries of the Army and Navy both found on July 3 that there was in- sufficient evidence to take the cases to courts martial. "I suggest the Army decided to drop charges and the Navy Department didn't have much choice unless it wanted to have egg on its race," Leonard said in a telephone interview from Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala. "f do not believe that the POWs who served honorably were given an oP- portunity to present their side." Leonard said that during the time they were in prison he himself shouted a direct order to "stop all forms ot col~ la'?<>rati~" and that he got back talk spiced with an obsceni ty. Army officials have acknowledged that their investigation of Guy's charges In- volved only a study of documents n1ostly transcripts of general debriefing in- terviews with POWs cooductect long before any formal accusations were filed. In preparing hls charge sheet Guy listed 15 to 20 fonner POWs as poienUal prosecution witnesses. Anny offldab have said they questioned none or these men before reoonuriendlng d.ismls&al of the charges. Navy legal ofnciaJs have said Navy and Marine investigators did question some ol the prospective witnesses, but one Pentagon lawyer has conceded that the inquiry_ was not conducted "with the depth 1t would nonnally be done." Anny officials said three or the soldiers have been honorably discharged since Guy's charges against them were dropped nearly three wee.ks ago. Perr tagon legal officials said that as civilians these men are now beyond the reach oi military law and C1111Mt be tried under civilian law either. Thailand Called Ai1ery for Drugs WASHINGTON (APl -Thailand Is tho key amry for narcotics flo~ing from Asia to the IDUted States becauSfl 'Mlai officials do littl~ to stop the drug tramc. a report to 1 congressional comrn1tteo says. It al90 say~ th.et narrollc enforcement ls '° lax, drugs of 111 types "are readily available throoghout Thailand l!ld are wtdely1!3ed·by Amerlc1111'CTIOltnel. The report tn th! '"'"" Foreign Al· fain Committee was "'1~ by Rep. Lester L. Wolff ([).N.Y.l, rectnlly n1m. ed cha1nnan ot n special nartOtlca 1Ub> committee. The noport Is to be nol•ased TINrsday. A copy .,., ohtalned by 'l1w Anxlated Prtu. · . . "'ollday, July 23, 1971 DAIL V PILOT :J ' ' Cannery Strike Over Depends o n Dollars Too • Transit • I ll Voters' Han d s : P~ach Crop Loss w Carue ~lwrtage . . Rotlm peaches blanket the Modmo cling peoch .,...... earth and tbouaands have -• Ara llarplnlln llld Suoday. dumped, but C a 111 or n I a "We probably loll 100 tcm ot g~,. say oelilemClll ol lhe: cannery iiorteia 1trike llaved peactieii. It wuni"JUI - off looing the entire crop. 11 we can get !be ripe ..,.. oil now" However, they predicted M;,.i of the nation'• dlol canned P ea c b e 1 lhortaga peach supply comes from resulUng Crom the 1trike by cautomla groweri. 65,000 v.wken. "It wu a reaJ close call," Three Men In Vehicle Shot Dead CORCORAN (AP) -Three Kings County men were found shot to death here in a blood- spiattered ear, police said. Police identified the victims or the Sunday shooUng as Domingo Rangel, 32, and b1s brother Ernest. 28, both of Hanford, and Albert Sanchez TUE 'J'llREE.DAY walkout left growers without canneries to p-ocess their crops and hundreds of tons of ripe peaches and other fruit bad to be dumped. Negotiators for s t r I k I n 8 Teamsters Union members and cannery employers an-- nounced agreement on a three-- year . contract early Sunday morning ln federally mediated talks in Washington. "The only blessing the farmers bad was Mother Nature," said peach cfower Nick Bellino of E s c a 1 o n . "Without the cool weather last week we would have been Jost." "The ground ls yellow with ripe peaches. 'Ibese peaebes aren't replaceable. The price has t.o go up," said Bellino ( ) wbo estim>ted that he has lost _ BRIEFS _ 25 percent w his eer11 crop. ---------"WE LOST 7t to 80 tons. Jr., 21. The said a fourth Peaches don't wait for unidentified man was i n strikers," said La w r e ri c e critical condition at Hanford Zoleizi of Stockton, wbo fanns Community Hospital. · 370 acres. "It seems like once Oftl.cers said the shooting you get behind and then the apparently involved a feud others get ripe. you just keep between .two families that losing right along. The con- started two years ago with the sumer will have to pay." shooting death or one of the ·Cannery wokers will vote to- Sanc.hez sons. They said the day and Tuesda,y w}U!ther t.o Rangels were believed to be ratify the contract, which pro- cousins of the Sanchez family. vides overtime pay beyond 40 hours, a 5.5 percent amual e 3 Men Arrested wage increase and other ENCINITAS (AP) _ Three benefits, said Ronald Ashlock, men were arrested after a president of Teamsters Local search of their car revealed 748 in Modesto. 248 kilos of marijuana valued He said the muter contract covering 28 companies also at 13,5000, San Diego County proVides for equal starting pay sheriff's deputies re po r t e d for women sorting fruit on Sunday. be! !und Taken into custody early conveyor t.s, a to pro- Saturday morning were John vide more education and Forsyth Craven, 26, of Encin-training for minority workers las, Jeffrey Paul Alm. 23, of and a picket clause permitting I ood d H D vid Teamster cannery workers t.o Jnge w • an enry a honor picket lines by other Simpson, 'l:l. Teamsters in 11 a n c t l on e d e F iler Kiiied walkouts. Tomatoes were also affected V!Cl'ORVILLE (AP) -A by the strike, with growen 23-year"Jd Cerritos ~ w~ claiming ·they were loltng killed when the experimental da bel th • aircraft he was flying !or the $90,000 8 Y ore · e pea. first time crashed into El of the harvest. Mirage dry lake near here. San Bernardino Co u n t y sheriff's deputies said Sunday. Witnesses said Christopher Eric Slavin was turning left at an altitude of about 200 feet Saturday when the plane sud- denly crashed to the ground. e ()fficlaJ 'Erred ' "111E CONSUMER should realize that the little eitra they pay on the shelf does not mean much in the IODg run because they might not be able to buy any peaches U we're not in business," said Lee Armstrong, a Stockton grower. He said the Cling Peach Association estimated the entire crop at abclut LOS ANGELES (AP) - Cowlty Supervlsor P e t e Schabarum says he "simply ----------1 goofed" when he approved a cootract cbange at the request of the brother-in-law of a fellow supervisor. The alteration was made in a printing contract awarded to Irl Stalrop, the brother-in-law of Supervisor Kenneth Hahn. Schabarum admitted in a press release Saturday he acted without authority in tell· ing Stalcup that he did Ml have to tabulate the results of the questionnaire called for In the contract. HU•H MYNATT NEED A CAPRI? ..... ,...k•tHl•, ... -1111..-hl ....... , ... 111nti MW 1!,,,opff11 lm,ert.. 1"'11 Car. •cco...-v ,1u1t ''' ln,.......lloll 8t111 ,._.I 111'¥1Ct -"A-tll tu Hlllfl.'" 14o.Hl0 JOHNSON & SO~ LINCOl..M • MlltCUltY MU --·~ CMll MeM POT B URNS, CRASS TOO RED BLUFF (UPI) Tehama County firefighters report that burning graS3 Is causing grass to burn. The state Division of Forestry said several recent grass fires in the hills we.st of Red Bluff were started by discarded marijuana cigarette butts. SALE M0,000 -...t that I to 10 l!O<CllDI _,, loot -ol .,_. LOS ANGELES (AP ) -l.os of subways. hardwere th at should be u.~. They say a decision ls not necessary for 18 monlhs and they want t.o study Che· rapidly evolving technology in the <:1rea, partlcularly 1nagnetlcally elevated a n d tracked air cushion vehicles . Ertt:nsions into neighboring! Ventura and Orenge coonticr.i are anticipated. CALIFORNIA Angelet, famom for its miles Dire<.1ors of the Southtm of freeways. may have one of California Rapid Trans It the moet costly aqd ambllious District, .woo ('Olllrol rapkl mm transit 1ystem1 ever transit developmenl In Los developed by 1989. Angeles Counly. ~·Ill review "We'~ !!! reall7 baP!'l' the strike wu lettled 10 we can go blck to -k for the crop ... -all ytaJ' and pick jult once, .. Armstrong Aki. "lt'a bard to see aomelhinl dlo right under yoor !eel." "'--------' Whether the project, a ti&-the proposal tonight. ll will be mUe, '7 biWon 1ystem of high· subject lo at leasl six months apeed lralns and buses, get.s af review and public debate beyond the dreaming slage before the board acl.S on the depends on voter approval and plan. * * * 'Fill . the Jails ,' availability af funds -both of On ce passed. by the board It wla~ic1h are far from a cer· ~· 1n y. County resldent.s turned ••• 111 ad,.d jfion fO down a less extensive transit t h e 116·n••le p rl• Chavez Advises propasal ln 1963 and the $4.5 billion planners hope to get from the federal government for the project may not be 1t1 ary • u s t e m, e:rtenslo11s I ta 1. o neigh bor ing l'en• t11 r11 aHd Ora119e rouH tles are a ntic- DELANO (UPI) -Cesar Chavez, the organlw ol migrant fann worten, bu rttumed to tile "Grapes ol Wrath" country to the cry of "Huelga'.!" (Strike!) Chavez, 47, traveled hun- dreds ol miles during the weekend to &ddrea rallies and urge "1Jll>Ol'lers to fill the jails in defJ811Ce of a court order limiting plcltellng of lilnlck ranches by the United Farm wort ... un1on. So far 1,'IOO UFW memben and supportenl In -ee... tnl Callbula counties have been arnstoif Oince I a I t Wedne3day In the labor sttua- tion described by one sheriJf as "situng oo a powder keg." PREACIDNG nonviolent and a boycott," he told a cheering crowd. "The battle lines are drawn." available. Sunday was a day of rest in the fields, but pickets main- tained line! at several fruit and vegetable ranches which have dropped UFW contracts to sign With the Terumters. But the need is there, most officials readily a d m i t . Congestion, the g a s o I i n e shortage and tough air pollu· lpated ••• tlon standards have made con· _ _ _ _ _ _ _ tinued dependence on Los ~ Angeles' massive f r e e w a y would be submilled to voters. system impossible, many of the county's seven million resident.s feel. MASS ARRESTS ol pickets ended Saturday 8.fter most of THE SYSTEM, which would the jails \n Kern, Tulare and be partly 'financed by a voter- . Fresno O:nmty r e a c he d approved sales tax hike of ~' capacity. Many of them were of one percent, calls for crea· later released aftu signing lion ol eight transit corridors citations, but others refused to t.o various par13 of the county. budge. Five corridors would b e Chavez told the workers, developed for some form of most of whom are Mexican-Americans like himself, that high-apeed transit system. The the o>W1 order was un-exact style would be decided constitutional that I i m I t e d on later. pickets to one or two every 100 The three remaining cor- IF ' APPROVED within n year. construction could begln in 1976 and the nclwork could be completed by 1988 or 1939, plaMers say. Excepl for buses, planners have sidestep- ped specific recommendations on the type of rapid transit Rubber wheels on steel rails, anolher form or hardware under consideration, ls belng med successfully on rapid transit systerru: in ~tootreal, Paris and ~fexico City. However, if the system were built (oday. planners say they would recommend lhe sleel· Vo'heels~n·steel·rails now used In San Franci.soo Bay area rapid transit. ~W BUSES would be an intcl'al part or the proposal . The rapid transit district would have 10 add 1.000 vehicles to its current flee-I of 1,500. In addition to the 116-mile primary system , the con· sultants will propose a longer· range secondary network. It would be built much later and, coupled with the initial eighl-corridor system, would encompass 250 miles oI so- called ''impro\'ement areas.'' MEET A SUPPLEMENTAL $1% million, five-year program in· volvlng exclusive bus lanes on city streets. rxpre.ss buses and park·and-rldc facilities hu.s also been developed by plan· ners. Consultant.s belit:ve thi:ii: plan could be implemented immediate1y. Jn addilioo Lw: Angeles City Councilman Joel Wachs has proposed a tes t transit syslen1 us ing private cars which.~ would hold up to s i -/" passengers· each and travel non.stop from origin to destinli· Uon a I o·n·g monorail-type beams' under computer con· trot. The system was developed by the nonprofit Aerospa~ Corporation ol El. Segundo.• Wachs called It "superior lo\ any system proposed to date." Los Angeles voters rejected a S2.$ million. 89-mile rapid · lransit system lQ Noventber 1968. but officials hope that changing atlitudes t o w a r d urban transportation w i 11 result in approval this time. t:actla, O.avez led 2,000 peno<11 througb the streets ol Delano, where 1.!FW contracts expire next Stmday at 29 major grape groweni -the same ones he had gathered. to h!s fold during a five-year na- tlonwkle boycott or table grapes that ended in 1970. feet. ridors would be developed for After the jails began filling busways, one of ~·hich would up Kern and Tulare sheriff's deupties stopped an-esting be converled into a mass picket violators except in transit line whea patronage cases of actual violence or in-warrants. MARTltA RANdAll timidatiOO.. The system would have 62 Hundreds of supporters ol stations and include 35 miles Oiavei' AFUIO affiliated ----------1 He warned the growers not to bolt the UFW and assign representation or their fleid bands to the rival Teamsters Uo:i.on the way others have in Southern California. "We're ready for a stnl:e union arrived 1n caravans: !rom San Francisco, L<s Angeles and other ciUes dur- ing the weekend to attend rallies in Delam and at the county jails. KUls Like To Ask Andy ' Star~ with a Masterpiece -~. .... "~ > • ' . 8 • ' . . " Our Masterpiece Mountingsc collection of rings are exciting new free·form art, richly sculpted in 14 karat yellow gold. Worn just as they come to you, they are dramatic high fashion. And they are more. 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E onomlst * \'\ome :s t,1ar1<ets !of p.alP d p.adio star *"'an J FREE Shows fuR 'WOMEN WEdNESdAy, July 2~ 10:00 a.m. Meet Martha Randall 2:00 p.m. Guides to SucceH In Real Esta te 7:30 p.rn. Mr. Blackwell Presents• Famed 1V home economist Martha Randall tells you smart. thrifty ways to slrelch your food budget and cut calories and comers. A one-time personal appearance. Delightful! Experts give you money.saving tips on buying, financing, Improving or investing in a home and property. Learn how to avoid costly mistakes. Questions and answers follow. Fashio~. faC:ts, figures and fun with TV personality and designer Mr. Blackwell. Bring him your lashion questions. DRAwiNGS-No AdMissioN CkARGE •Admittance to tho Mr. Blackwell Program by ticket ont-J. Tickets limite d. First cqme, first served. Pick yours up al California Federal Savings . CAlifoRNiA fEdERAl SAviNGS Md LDM Meocia&IOn • Nation·s Largest F«lenlf 2700 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa Men Wetcome "h 's A 'WoMAN's WoRld '7J" ''POPS'' ISLA I ------------------------- • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • '• W' High Co st ·of E_ating ' .. " , -------sy-IM-end~ this week J!hase~l-be-maklng --1ood..prodw:tion,Jllrialled e er since nm controll ' ' went lntO eUect last augus · itself lei\ in markets tlu;oughoul the country. In some areas, prices of a few food items soared within 24 hours of the announcement that the price freeze was oU on all food Items except beef. 1 StrlcUy speaking, the retail oull'ets are supposed to gear their increases, dollar-for-dollar, to increases tn the cost of raw agricultural products, so the actual price mark.ups could take a lilUe time to reach their peak. When they do the consumer can look forward to bacon at S2 • pou~d. eggs at $1 a dozen and .c~ckens at 75 cents to $1 a pound, some economists predict. This is hardly joyful news 'for buyers trying to stretch grocery money which remains l~ked in wage guidelines that limit pay Increases to a discreet 5.5 per- cent. The discouraging results of earlier attempts to get the economy und~r eontrol in Phases I through 3 have not led to any outburst of optimism for Phase 4. Reac-- tions range from lukewarm enthusiasm to dark pe~­ mism. Labor Jeader George Meany blasts Phase 4 as "a further example of the administration's inequitable eco- nomic policies,'' citing controlled wages and unCQntrol- led prices. . Howe-anticipation of Phase 4 had a favorable effect on ih~ stock market , With investors apparently encouraged by this step toward removal of government price control& The pnce freeze on non-food items ~I be lilted Aug. 12, when another new set of econo"'!c rules ls expected. , Ollicials of ,thelood industry -an overall·incn!llse of 4 to 5 percent in retail prices by the end of the year. Tb.is would be a marked ftnprovement over the alarm· ing 22 percent annual rate of increase in the first six months of the year before the freer.e was re.unposed.. Unfortunately, there is no quick way to speed up • Producers estimate It will take at least ~ ~?'11 ',,. - to achleve any visible increase In beef 1uppJje;_ 12 14 · ' 18 months to rebuild bog herd&, six to elgb! months ur-· restore laying nocila to produce niore eggs. . Until this can be a<oompllshed, demand ~ exceed I supply and unfrozen prices will respond 1cc0nllngly. , Meanwhile, the housewife will do well to re.study ·. those nutrition charts and figure out bow to keep a _ _ famU1 well led on a somewhat le,. ilvish diet -for 111-- indefmite period. ·· · · Tangled Tax Facts • The calilornia Tupayers Assocbtion adviles W. •. that Orange County's pi:operty laJCis less per e1plta than • •• • any other county in the state - a modest $51,29 last, , , year for each of the county's 1.6 million i:esidenta. . .' This sounds line, but it doesn't tell the whole story. 1 " The calculation is based on tbe•county.government'a admirable low tax rate ol $1.95 per $100 of asses5ed val- uation ·-but that is exclusively for the support ·of the county government. Only four counties in Calllornla have tax rates below $2, says the asaociatlon. Most Orange Countians' live in incorporated areas, • and in numerous speciahlistricts, so their contrlbulion to county government is only a amall part of 1 property tax bill tl!at includes '!'llJ!idpal }eV!es, school taxes, iJ. branes, water and samtation, street lighting. mosquito abatement and other agencies. · · Still, it is to the credit of tb~unty that it only charges us $51.29 apiece .for governing us, In ·i state where the average per capita rate ls $79.M-and where the 600. residents of the least populous county, Alpin~ have to chlp in '390.61 apiece to support tbejr $1.4 mil- lion bud~et. ' ' _.,,,_ . . -.e :CS--:2" . ·. . ,, -... ' .... WHIST UN(; ~,. ' . ...... . , Shultz a Key Man' In Nixon 'Shiel~~: .. ' \ Dear · Gloomy . Gus . .. . I Bow It Worked In the Philippines A Pre$idential Takeover ·~ . '1 W, =il:f "-~ .. It bas I> e en ['°-J. stitutional defense available to.him. He -1~~r mm acandaJ.loaked invoked matti8l law." ::"'~!~= ~· ... ==':i'l:"!.~in!'~ c VON HOFFMAN AND TBENtl\erelsthi&wbat-ar .. ,...._' WASIUNGTON -Cuull converaall<lll ~ ~ II be released them, the could The NmOrl sug(ested that many of • making-such-a-fusa-about passage: with White House ollicials lllJtantly Wm IC!QN alter•the....,... ol'lliltoey.1 -inJruoos of dollars CREEP ·had " ... Martial Jaw bas been cbarac- reveals their evaluation of. the chief RI CHARD W J..l...AJ stuck in ita: dozens . terized by a strict adherence to con- significance ol President Niloo's changes G. F. M. of aafes aM --... ---~J\ declare . thtee lhlthe thCeseo n 8 t ~~ u t lo n m-stitutionality. Many outsiden: have in the top command of government for --........ 1' -~ \ appropria w woi~: remarked on the absence of tanlts from bis second tenn. . •i-r '" __.. -......... ., ~ hadfrombeenbusie~: f' • "~ther than f~ll~w the traditional the streets of Washington ... the 150 A Chicago economist w. IS very I e ... -. _. ,.. _ ,,,,r . ..., .,.... "' nessmen acrosa the _..,.. r po hca detainees~ politicw.ns, in· ho • 1 ttl be greater centralization. ~ ........ _....,.,,. ,.,_. .. -~ .. r practice of apportlOlllllg p a t 0 n a g • odd li . l known to the general J>4b1ic emerses ln a IT SHOULD BE clearly evident that ,...,. • ~ -. Dlllw' ,....._ • -imona: the factions allied to him in the tellectuals journalists -f 0 u n d .JnOlllinenl position u the oo«dllator the Pre>idenl iJ trying to put a distance ·--....,.,,, .c---------,.--' =.Now~ ''· form of a .~t and sub-Cabinet ap-tbemselv~ In the bands not of totalltari- "cl. tile entire eco-betWejlll blmleltad .the acbial opeflU!Ji , . ~ ..• · • • ~ , · ......_. and · ~ Mt; N-ga~ ilOO bis an automatms but o(_ le\JDlf Juman be- nomic policy deci-_._ft,-. ;111 a..; ~;: 'Di&~ ·~dff/.s· ' ' . ....,.,. up say· . Ii ·· ~ !51!!.l'.'.JJ grojlp of yo'upg non-lngii. Visitiljg prtvileg~.are llberal..and aion-makinfl process ~-~lloir..,_, t;lloill;j n\ade Wepl . ~cal~ijes~menwbO,.wbile Jea.,. ls eiOil'y attan}ii!''iO ·atlet.I a -both domestically througl>-fewer , JIOOOle,, and lb• · ;. · , · ·-l:oall:lbutl«w llllder """".;;, '' ftitf;!~no. votes "or, powerful · daJi8li.t,er's ~. !O •ls!l'.('parmt iri llld 1n1emauooa1ty." spo1-1> of"""" !ewe . -. ~ ~~ Her-~ · *~·-"·lcef .;; die 'l;llJtpital"'~' -·oc This ecooomist, would, in tum, be increaled. Not only ts o he J , ~~ ""°• It , . v 1~,1jnd~..p ftnance 1 cas.iolis."' .. -~<: ":"",..: .... :::"• ., • Georp? S h u I t z ls he doing this on the Ol'flllliiltioil cbarts t r teJ'nS 11 1 1'bite i-julceman. • ',iij,;} ~ l proleislonS. See, we let Senator Sam go home to sometimes d~ib-but as an actual ~ysical matler by pl~c-· : FoUawing lmrnedlately on 1 t b e And can't you Imagine justifying the No~th Carolina for Christmas, and lf ed. as Nixon's Ki!,.. ing himself at a distance from the White AmerbyicanEas Airlines lngannr;m:m:!: .:e~ act in the ide.n.Ucal1words Marcos uses to these imaginings strike you aa shrill or inger for domestic Ho.use -at Camp David, San Clemente, 0 t f Pl one . tern say dump on his Congress: hysterically far-fetched, tick off on yoor a!lairs but In high Key B~cayne -where he can be U 0 ace solicited, bul•had refuaed to pay up. N~. . "'I'll• ba)ani:e of pi>wer &l1)0ng .factions fingers what we know they did or at- policy inatters his writ runs farther than even less easily reached than at.., llOO com.es word from Watergate Prosecutor prevented ' i8tiona~ leadership from ·irr tempted to do: thuggery, muggery, Kissinger's, who still must be regarded PeQllSYlvania Ave. Cox I ·office that they have ~ .to oovaling or making hard decisions about burglary, perjury , extortion, etc., etc. To as fl technician more than a maker of The operating respomibilltiea of cabinet ~ ~ believe .literally bundredl of businessmen major Pr'9blems; policy was merely the this, impeachment might be a conp final policy. members Would be lnaeased but their SYDNEY J HARRIS have been leaned OD by Whi~ 1 Bouse lowest common de'.nominator of what the stitutionally appropriate response, but Already secretary of tile tressury, and policy-making functions could be ;. . shakedown artilta. A new type ~·born, . ""!Jorily o( fac;tioos wou)d tolerate to the failing U.,1 we could all wrl!e Julie and formerly secretary of Labor and~ decreaaed in fact, they wouJd inevitably the gangster with .• White ~ .~ . detriment of such coatroversial legisla-beg of her to say, "'Cool man, 1 can dig of management and budget, Shulti LS be decreased by the layering with which . and a top security ~ ,l'idiDg ' Jiol'i'as ... p~esiive ta.Jation ... l4r. it." the nex~ time Dad looks -across: the given additional status as assistant to the Nixon is surround.inf himself. The much This is absolutely the last "Odd Man around in a government limous~. · · Nixon armed himself With the last con-dinner· table and asll it be should gull. President in charge of economic affairs. complained about 'Hi.ldeman-EbrJichman Naturally, President Nlm1 dkfn't know · insulation is now increased by the Shultz Out" word-quiz for 1he summer; they anything about this either, even1 ~ ...... :"" , 1. , .. . . VIRT1JALL Y EVERY issue, from race layering on the question! which will be of take too much time for researching, I~y· the list of business victims was un~ -CREEP s u·zt • B . • relatklns 8;nd wel!are to nuclear survival,. great concern in the second term. .lilg dot enough time for temilil. Each_ list covered in bis confidential secretary's • . in usiness ii economic in one way or another and contains one name or item that doesn't desk drawer. ADdjUJt as ~y · "' · · . · . Sbultz has gotten hlto such questions hi IT IS STRANGE that a president really belong there; v.1ticb ls I~ and this list, enctly like the ~ .. • bis: previous capacity. Now his scope !S should become more remote and more why? Half right is list, isn't what it aeems, but is enlarged to such an extent that there lS regal in order to achieve a greater dif. an admirable score. actually a harmless guide 81 to .t.nm to . WASHINGTON -Shocked by payment hardly any fundamental problem .in fusion of operating responsibility, but it 1. Q>rdella, Miran--invlte to Wblte House social ,~. of legal f~ o{ more thanbl $80,IXM> in the fo,.,.ion and domestic material affaU'S is not necessarily contradictory. The da Pe-"'-»-· Al Ca the found I th secood quarter alone, ghJf initated ·~ , """""' ·-· and pone wu er 0 e Republican ·lat cata a,.. sending this which will be beyond his reach. President cannot see an unlimited llnd and v· l er! n-• ~- • 10 a. Am can nat ""u:u. , . angry m-'··ge' to ns"onal party offio'als The more that Nixon thinks and talks number of people every day, every week 2. George Smith, ...._ .• -::::; . ~1 about decentralliation the more he tends or every month. If he can reduce the Paul Jones, Clyde VP THERE In the sky .with ~...:Big----With r1<>M111 intensity: Don't use .the · to centralize his own operation in the numbers who have a rightM claim on his Van Dusen, Jimmie Boss, the Saints d. the Syndl~"lnb'!t"-ntOney wt contrlbUted to reeJectPreSt-$15,000 Went to attorneys-for ex".CJtEEP i White House. The theme of his second , time he will have that much more time Savo, 8 n d . Ben be waiting for Nixon to die 90 °"1 can dent Nixon to help deputy director Jeb Magruder, an ad-' 1--,enn Is lhe wider di[fuslon o f of his own to think ilu-ough major pro. Brush. ask him, "Howdja do , it?" We al. .earth campaign a id~ s milted perjur~, and f10t'!OO to attorneys ' responsibility, a greater sharing of blems. 3. uAJda," "La . . might speculate on bow close ~ have stuck Di tba Wa~. . for CREEP atjiedu'l,r Herbert Porter,, Washington's power by the states and What it means in practical terms ~ Traviata ," HBarber fl.. SeVille,'• · "Fal· come to having our government gate sca~l. ., , l who also hai.J'dmitt'4 perjury, , ciUes, restoraUoo of responsibility to the have elevated Shultz to hJs pJ"9ent pos1· staff," and ''1.'.>lello." overthrown by Us President. 1 Tbe'y have· a· pi'r-CREEP ground rules prohibit payment ' private sector. · lion was illustrated at a recent press ~. ·Presld·~-Tyler, Bu c h 8 n 1 n , That happened last year , w h en tia1 tbou:!jh silent ally of legal fees for defense of criminal t This I·• not necessarily incompatible conference. In one fell swoop Shultz em-, ...... ~ F~lnand E M·-......t.t ..... t 'Of. the In »-pu can nati-1 Fillmore' WI·•---,··• T. »-·veil •ra · ~-. •·-~ -·· charges. Bui CREEP pai'd 115,700 In lees WI.lb the centralization or federal ex-braced the primary matlers Nlxoo bas J.:IUlj 'CUIU .nuu:ie PhUJ-•-overthrew bis 1be -i....;... 1 -•-'-Georbe • 5. "So Red the RAlse," "Gon<oWlth the .,......, · ,........_ 8 ~-man to the firm defending Stans In the Vesco · ecutive power into fewer hands, of which currently before him -extension of for the act ls one that Ron Ziegler could Bush. While Bush ......... on "·y u, the day al!er •--,_ Sbultz'a advancement is an example, economic controls, a federal pay freeze, Wind," "Ah. Wlldernesa!/' '!Present use sbould it ever enter His ~p's makes no public ~ &:s•s"i Walter JP:, Bonne...--; provided the spirit of the second term a $350 bi!lioo lid on spending, a restric-Laughter," and "Anthony Adverse." bead to rule by martial law, m .rA few comment, ·he is 1 ~kt ui he _cUIL~wy~w wbe~ any !i can be carried out. The President ~ live federal budget. No fooling around 6. Burlington, Northwestem, Hock weeks ago, Marcos bought a 32-page, known to f e~.l. that . lbe <Jorn. tbis~'·pre-Jiidictment tepl help In . trying to simplify the job of being with diHerellC('s that might exist between Island, Santa Fe, and Unioo Pacific. f~lor supplement '!1 the,, New York mittee to Reelet!t, the "'Y.r e.s1 a .e..AI ~ tbe ·Vesco cue/Stans reta-..1 word to us , n.....,ident, but if this results in selling .up various agencies, the deciSions had been 7 Full ~-d Fle'·her ...... Times to ·-•ain his g--"--ent (CREEP) ·•·-'d •-c1--.--1~... • ~..,,. ;.~ .. in various areas (surrogate made and word of them came from the · er, ""'w er, K; ' ~y, . .....,. uy~-uw !>lMU UllVe ~ .... p ~• ·tbn)tlgb,a CREEP spokesman that jt dkl · Prdidents, so to speak) the result might President's right hand man. and Collier. ~~~--•o;uldth -be . i;:,torstal. Nov. a with Its $4.1 mllUon surplus turned not. l a. Natlooal flags of U.S.A., Fnnce, and~ ~·~"' a,.. over to tile party. Spurred on by the W1<at boi!M.ra Bush much more thin ' Wive s, Parents Differ. On Status of 'Missing ' Dead or nilssing? President Nixon has J>r0ml9ed 1 "full accotD1ting" <i the men still m1aing in action in Soulbeut Asia. However, he quietly blocked a Marine Corpl "change or status" report, whk:h \\'ould have declared the missing men as ofliclally dead. Thi5 1& the private cooclw:ion of the ex- perts who have been trying to trace the mi•ing men. Pentapi spokumen acltpowledge that they know ol.ooly one .,,, .. oo the missing list who may stm be 4Jlve. Most of the others , numbering ~ t,200 and 1,300, should be presumed dead. TOE MARINE CORPS wu about to make this olllc!al for !ta ovm missing lroopo on June If. But apporenUy, the Presldtnl llopped the Ml10Ul\Cemcnt because Of the anUclpated prolest from parenta. A secM Navy aurvey of the MIA wlv•• IOWld that • pm:ent of the woinen ' •• (,..J-ACK-AND--ERS-. -ON-..) hoped for the change of status. They reluctantly feel that it 's time. to start bulldlns • new life for lhemHlfts and their ~ildren, aeo<pling the reality of u,.tr husband's deatha. Until tile ........ officially declared dead, however, 1 new start ts impossible for ob v I o u 1 jllYChologlcal and financial IUIOnl . MOST'UF THE nffsshll meti'I parents, on the otbtr hand, are oppoted to • chan1e hi status. With no more children to rai1e In moot cases, Ibey cling deoperately' to the allmmest hopo of find. Ing their 1111111 alive. F-: The parenta control lhe "League OC FamiUes'' organization whlcll cmUnue1 to press for fact! on the mis• Ing men. , • • Liberia, Cbile and Italy. · Int•-In !:'"1pptne liberty. · •11 angry lat cats, BUib now Is stepping up legal Yees Ii the. oonlJiiued employment I Usie Ruther! d, ~~-•-·bor EnUtled Philippine Proapectl: Alter efforts to belaledJy close down GREEP of CREEP -·'" • · r, or ~~. ~ I. lJS yean of democrallc atal,emate, -which ·reported l6SO Goo t n · ,,_c reliit!ons ipecla!IJI · and Bunsen. ....,80\l t adenhl directa the ,.._•bli · ' Devan Sbumvrlill ••t . $36,ooo a Y••r. · 10 "I E " "E G " "H s 1' "N B "· U3° c e p t--c expenditures for the second quarter °'-Millioruiire Stans al.SO' continues on the "' · ;: · ·• · ·• · ., ~1oward tbe New SOclety," the document 1973. " and Q. V. ls claSl!c Zleflertan prose. poyroll at !30,000 a,.year. '!be midua1 , ANSWERS: BUT BUSH sees aome ,mer.it in using CREEP s!aff Includes e deputy to Stons, I. All but "Penelope" IF YOU •ublUtule•,lfio· ~nhlp's the f91% camp;!p surplW. to' jiif tqal a lawyer '!!"' "Y: Secrelaries and clerlta. Sb.•··pearean ~--,. are na. ?" dari! pol wrlte ,the 'sacred fees lor CREEP dltctal.i nameif as do-r-----·-·<.·-------, •~ ·~-ayl • -for ""..' =·· CID'! -· !endanta · dvll -·""~' • -"~>' I. "Jimmie Savo" ls a comM!an; tho ,-. ,_ m -~ """ ..,......,..,. others are all horses that -the v-hear tlle ZiQy ...,. explaining be!ono <UlgreSlfoaal Qltnlllltleel. Many' ·-~ that tt wu coostltutlonaJl1'1-"'te to party Jeoden IDd -ton dlsqrt!e. tuoQ' Derby. -,.,. "Hell, no!" one.-.. chairman upkJded S. All Verdl:operu ·except "Barber cl. to us. "Why sllould our mooey ball oot Seville." Wlehs 4. All twfCHDarried. except '! ~I! ~OUCl<J to.4~fwlll<m- "Bucbanan," only bachelor President. ' I. All but "Anthony AdYene" arc novel CREEP'• second.quarter report shows or; play titles tai<SI from 1._. llnet cl. ll0,256 In legal 1 ... ' AltarriO)>t !or ~laur!ce Stana, CREEP'• chief fund. poetryl. 0n1· ••-·~rth " RR. ralseT llDd<r ~I for perjury In y -ma •llllem. . runs the Vaco.cw., , -.. -...... -....,, .... Wt-handed, like.Ill tralno In ~and IDd ,-,v-r "'' •..-,,,.. ~OI' lt ·WU ,llj!Ut _bi ~ 7. All IJ~ "~Um-names_: except ' 1LJndsay," I place-name. (A Cl<Jth. maker, a fiddler. ao AITO'tt-maktr, and -. ..,.1 miner. - I. AD ""'1rlii-.WU.. flap ucept "Italy,'' red, white and green. t. AB but uumr" discovered atomic welghta ancl.olem..its. ' c 18. !JI are Uterary abbn!vlatlons, et· cept. 0 H.S.," a medical prtscrlption term meaning "at bedtime." (The othen are . IAtJn for "that i11" "for example," ''note well," and "wbk:h lff." Quotes 1.a .. , R. Mi.Ni.ca. ·s.. - •'Wheneverl am COll•ttsiae with IOHle' one who """'lllllJ -:,... -· hi his speech l llll lllln, 'NOl .'t -: ff )'OU think I .....,. -· "'1-. }'OU teUlng. me?' • · ... - '"We ._ -.............. lnm Ille oalffl to b•p dft Irene 11 abort u P'lllble.''-Presldent Nixon, on Phase '---------'~~=i-J!'rlce conln>b. I • I DAILY PILOT llo~ N. Wted, 1'11bUW,. Tilomao KetVil, Editor Borbciru ltrtlbich Edllorial Page Editor . Mpnday, July_23,,1973 I ~ I I I I I I I I I I I I , . . • MondAJ, J~ly 23, 19/J DAILY PILOT -l'•1111 H1r Clift!•· • ·-; 1 •• 8U Kea 11e ... VW Squad (;ar? I • . 'artli -h~ . "g ug ~-· Agenci es Switch . ' --. JCPenney Presents . ~ Bill Took Oscar · .. . . • . . .,;·--irl--1 KONICA-----· To Smaller Cars . r ••;1•'',1 Ji . .. . . ' Meci.8t "';;....,. ... /&t dly ol.Jbo. -..: ..... '. chi~£..-mo;\ apt lo se!-lieMachet 11 '~ .M-J . ... ,.,. ... -,...,.,"'*'trees, gu.,j )'00 -••• A tlUil 11'&-1 wjlo '""'8JTY after Siilir' bustilildo" deatba w.i1 el(bt yean or lon&er ID do so •.. Every third al drink sold II 1 Coke • • . Am still trying ·to _verily Curl G;Wy'1 iepact that Nebnsn .Is the stale with the -lliltn. Hard Id bdleve. · · ' By the A.tsocl1ted. Preu _Alan Sieroty'1 bill currenUy in the legt.slature which would ~· ~y the police car that prohibit public agencies from pulls yoo over may be a buying cars weighing more Volkswagen. than 3,000 pounds without Fiillj ma 1c SLll-Cam=nit=,,..---.-·-- ' You1i know 1 frorn TV commercials that Life Savers ts · -marketing a new ~win' pun. W!lh · DO•hole. Pretty daring. OrigioaJ!y, Life s. ..... dldn't bavo a bole. tither, Then · a fellow named John Edurd Noble bo!Jgbt the company m ltlS for $2,900. He polted a hole m that .man caney, and zip, up went sales way put $100 mil.lion a year. H I were I.Jfe SaverS, l certainly wouldn't ignoc:e that bolf:. · Too cJ>aiicy. Likewise the 'dooghnut didn't really get popular until it first came out with a hole, remember that? HORSEMEN -Client asks which of the American In· dian tribes claimed the best horsemen .. Depel)ds. Best riders Were the Comanches! Best breed.en, the N'ez Perce. "'1 .. U ... ~· ...~ •JI/. ' , I • •Mommy, can Katt.y oo on vocotM>n with us?' She would.'t tak•·vp much room.ff ·. · · ' . ' ' ·Indians Exempt· ~tboqgb lhe Volkswagen special permission. A Datsun poijce car is sun in tbe future. or • Pinto. at 2.000 pounds. it UlWitrates one of the most would easily make the ~·eight common solutions that city limit. but a Cadillac wouldn't aod COWlt governments have t 6 ooo --'· ··-• "-I a ' ...,......,. fow111 to utt: Uel crisis and ris- ing automotive costs. 11lE BlU.. has been ap- Beginning ID feel the crunch proved by the Assembly on the ~ye('I dollar, many Transportation Committee and have switched to smaller can sent to the Ways and ~feam ~bich consume less gasoline Oxnmittee, where no bearing aOct cost 1~ iu lnltlal outlay date bas-been set. and m a I n t e n a n c e • an The reasons for the decrta5e Associated Press ll u r v e Y in automobile slze in each disc.los~. agency varies. Some are con- cerned with the fuel shortage IN ONE OF &he more and rising operation costs. dramatic changes, the city of Others, like tf\e county -of tm Sau Diego is a>nverting its Angeles. are responding to a squad or 250 police cars to publk: outcry. medium-size can. Of 14 cities and counties "l THINK the complaints DEMO SPECIAL! C-lSV CAMERA e 3Smm Flexibility -In compact Iii• e Weiths only 12 01. e Gives Full-range pictures FACTORY DEMO In timer• Dept. Thurs., Fri., Sit., July 26, 27, 28 11 a.m.. to 7 p.m, JCPenney A little more on that matter of love at first ·sight, if you don't mind. Unlvenlty reoearcl!ers have looted mto IL They now say 66 pereent of the love-and-lir!t..i,bt situ-· ations last less lhan two mcmths, 29 percent 1es.s tban one month. surveyed, 10 are buying com-we get about county employes pact · can and trucks in in-driving around in big autos un- crea.sing nwnbera ror use in n e c e s s a r i I y are quite HELENA, Mont. (UPI) .:.-that led to the~ exemption, govenunent bUsiness. legitimate," said Gene Davi.s, The Montana Department of sald he now will try to get Another factor which could COlDlty purchasing a g e n t . We know what you're looking fo r. FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY Newport Buch - A. little garlic oil will kill mosquitoes, Pie science ·boys have learned. Also Potato tubular moths, ?eel cotton bugs, red palm w~~-~ house .m~s. some of -~ science boys, therefore, suggest the nationl>e drencbe4 in garlic oi.1. Interesting. Still, more expensive experimentaUon is : called for somewhere, no? In Italy maybe. Reveoae said it .wtll oO lonl~ baclt tues paid by reservation detennlne the types o f "How many of us really need l'-------------------1 Collect •~te ~ ·taxesr'~Indians~·::~m~~'."::.e~po.s'.:'.'.:t~fiv~e~y~e!'.:':'"·~pUrchases:·:.'.:'.'.::'::...:m:_~Assern::::b:l~ym~an::_~•::_:larg~e~en~gine~·:::_7_"~~~~====================================== . fl'Olll'....erv.Uon JddlirlL . · · r· · ~ decllloo, l!aiied"on •:~ · • cent· U.S?"tiupreme· COurt •rul- ing, affects 27,000 lndlam who are enrolled. members of OSCAR -Q, "Didn't the late Humphrey Bogart, like George C. Scott, refuse to accept the Accademy Award Oscar?" A. No. but he laughed at the notion. Claimed nobody could judge the best performance unless all the nominated actors played the same part .for. the same dii'ector. Then when he won the next year tor "1be African 'Queen," he did indeed hOtfoot It down the "aisle with bis tbank·you speech at the ready. Fine fellow, Bogart. Addren mail to :i . M. ·Boyd, P.O, Boz 1"875, Neu!-· port Beach, Calif. 926/JO. • Potato Chips Scarce .: . Because Crops Poor tribes and work -on resena•. • -. ---- tiom. Jeror® Cate, •, Bllllpu, Monl, lawyer .wi.~. helped ·, draw up the federal court suit . ·, ', ........ ' .· . . . . . ~' AUliUSTA: Maine ~UPI)-~. reported 1iJnllar 4ifl.lc:Wties. ; . >.~._ ............. · -1:...is iit· M8iile · · · · '1 '' ' ' "' report there )! a ·~.vere ' ·"':,:.t'~.,.,-!ryiog .. to.1 ~ .aa~ pUHJ --Hftl! ~·~_,'J'1'"' "l'" • .C.-"'·•:of , ............. iliat .-• ~ .. p' all 'l,>ul\we'~111or ;;;;;.t::"&iip;·~ ~Di.' "'l:rih 'gieatly••rlllloned ·'lap. Chipman C. Bull, executive pllfs," said Robert Meehan, · i ... . l • " director of the Maine Potato company president. • Commission, said the problemj;o----~~~~~~~~;;;;;;-;;;;;;-;;;i;-1t ~~=: .. f: ~:·:1:n~e: HarborDENTAL·f f NTER: the Portland area report the ~ situation is cr:ltical. DENTURES e CREDIT' e PENTOTHAL "I'VE NEVER seen a more horrible year in my life," said Frant Woodward, genera I manacet or RJng Cole Foods of South Portland. "' "*" .. '111 .................... -allltnldllll ...... ..My llb ,_. -*'II. • ....,.._ a. IM -. ....... -.....,_ hrttaltlr •tfM. , ... iltt-·-& .... --. ••• ----~ ........ ..... 111 ladl ... & ....... ~hftlS ~II •lfta. All ""11~1 · a._.. ........... ~.-~-·····.. 11 2706 HARBO.R BLVD-COSTA MESA A spokesman for Cir£llS Time. Inc. of South Portland said potatoes "Aefinllely are scarce," and, if something isn't done soon to bolster sup. J>li:es, she lnd.Jcated the com· -pahy and its 70 employes · • A .... tt. • Hnt" ""1 .. . • woullf. be·in trouble. The Humpty-Dumpty Potato Chip eo. of Scarborough ' • ·-·. . ''GAS SAVElr' SPECIAL 'CAPRI the Sexy European • • • . . .. ' . .. ' .. +-FREE l~S.PEE0.1 1BIKE . . . , '""" every ~ -or.red _.nil delivery during the month of July! I .$149.00 ITAUAN IMPORT VAL"E ••• . WIDE SEUCTIDN OF 21DD & Y /l's ~YAIABLE .. ---- I ' <" • I ~ . . -· ... ·. ~- ·, .. ' ' . .. , , •' " I,. ' . t' ... ' ,I J ... , ' . . ' " '• ,, .. ' . Many savers are. People who have kept their savings at the bank where they liave their checking account are discovering how much more they can earn at Western Federal Savings. ' Where ·does the 17% come from? That's the difference in the interest ,, ' J you earn, -.yith daily compounding. when you move lo a harder working 5~~'Xbiem rederal account from a bank passbook paying 4}2%. On $3000 .Ji., example. this amounts to $23.55 per year. We will be happy ·!O determine the diffenmce for your account, and arrange the transfer for you quickly and efficiently. It's easy to give your passbook • . a rais~ The-interest on ~tern rederal p.5sbooks is paid from date of deposit . to date of withdrawal. And deposits you make by the 10th of the month earn from the 1st, . . ~tern Federal also offers a broad range of higher yield certificate ac· counts, with maturities ranging from 12 months to 4 years. Plus free services, including the Capital Club, to all account holders with minimum balance. .~ ·Acc;ounts are Feder~y insured to $20,000. A family ol 4 can keep up ~ to $280,000 fully u:isured at Western Fed. .~ Assets over $340 million • Hugh Evans, Jr .. President Bcvc.ly Hill. a La Habra a Dd Aioo a Northridge a Six1h & Hill a USC a Ponorama Ci1y a City ol Orange a Larchmont a Co<0na Dd Mar a l~ewood o Honywood/Vcnnon1. Corona Del Mar 274'1 E. Coast Hwy. I Jim Park, Manager I Telephone: (714) 644-7255 w ' .' r I • • .. .. • .. " .I I .. ' " ,, '" '• ..... '· ., "' . ' • DAILY PILOT Mondli, July 23, 1973 -• E Cl ~o;;;;t1w;;;;;;r ~3~of-:-4~Defendants Had Previous Records ~.AL 1 Deaths SANTA ANA -Tbrte out of James Enright. • 'That manc1a1«y. jail time 111 au trllloorlPt IDll hll ..-i"'"t the blJanco ci 1 ~of the • I four ddendants woo came to analysis "-74 percent of our aicb. COdVlctloDI." verdict. ~ 19"72 iiiJya---i&. ~ TOKYO (AP) -Yua HU· pllg. bead ol the lll'nWll<lll --depltlmolll...o_J. Communist Clillla'• ~orca. died of _,...bNl'l.atto<k.-la·Ptkiog-Jul~ '· the Halnhua news agency aald today. He waa M. NEW YORK (AP) -Frieda S. Mmer 83, director of. the Women's Bureau of the U.S. Department of Labor lrom 1t44 to 1953, dled Saturday. Deatlt Notice• ARBUCKLE • l!ON WE.WCUFF MORTUARY d7 E. 17tll St., eon. Mesa ... , .. • BAL 'ra-BERGEllON FUNERAL DOME c:O .... del Mar 173-1150 Costa Me1a Ul-UU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY Ut Brwdway, Costa Mesa LI 14133 • DILDAY BROTHERS MORTUAJllES I 11111 Beach Blvd. ' Butt.st--14!-1771 I Z44 Redondo Ave. i Loq Beach !l:l-43'-1115 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1708 Laguna Canyoa Rd. IN-MIS • PAcmc VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Afortuary Chapel 3511 Pactnc View Drive Newport Beach, California 144-Z7H • PEEK FA~ULY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Bolsa A\·e. We1tmiasttr 193-3515 • SMITIIS' MORTIJARY IZ'1 f\faln St. JlunUngion Beach __,, Need ... as c4ulpnacntt For a..lllecl.Ad , ACTION Call A DAIL 'I' PILOT AD-VISOR 60·5671 Orange County Suptrlor Court felony delftldant> lln't u high The · 1,m delmdonl> who on felooy d>arges Jut year es some jurisdictions I n THE COMMEHI' II borne plead guilty repreHDtod ow· bad previous crimiDal records. C.llfomla and It certainly out hy a tWl<e at otatilUca Jy II) JJUC"llt of the aCCllled . Statistlcs compiled by the rtllects the national trend for complied 111 his ofll<e and felons -eel hr!l>o IJ)Odal ,, ~~ ti •--'"--•·w 1-" "-••e Co1111tv Jail records ~1-11. ._. court officials u::t;: ::;-:.i";h ;Mor -"*'---· --fiD~liiglhi'-ag. -llWiii or-q;'t."'io.~-iliif Uliif 10 criminal records acrounted in ENRIGHT ST R E SS E D , sentenced felons. percent of that numbtr bad 1972 for 74 percent of the 2,190 however, that <>range Co1111tv More thart 1,000 defendant. . elected to go for trial the defendant> brought to court is high on state llsllngs of -50 percedt of the total of reault '"'"'Id have be<n cbool for action on felony cases. counties that are seeking to convicted felont in 1972 -in the court l)'ltem. They show that 294 or those apply an effective deterreot to were in the 21·29 age group. defendants, or 13 percent or the hard core criminal who Add the '53 in the 18-20 age the total, had been to state bas oot leamed a Jeaon from group to that figure and you pri.900 on earlier convictions. a brush or two with the law. have penom between the ages Of the remainder, 747 deferr ORANGE COUNTY Orange County Joli terms dants or 34 percent · bad a were ordered for 1,140 of 1,960 All rr IS, Presiding Judge Bruco 5wnn<r nev« falla lo hamme!' home the !act that his Olllrt figures high In Cal~omia -~ It does DOI top the li.s! -Ill termo of the WOMEN WllJIE Involved In only 172 of the J,!llO ftlonlel fora~~ over I pemml. Ti\ey -~y-ln. forgery ehargeo -31 womeu, 91 men -1t Jt percent. Blacka figured l\lC)ll 1"001- InenUy Ill i.qiary, wbere 21 men bl lhat'race reflected 5 pel'C<lll of the bw'glacy total. So did Mexicao-Amertcans .. with 7S men and women ot that race comprising nearly 20 percent of the burglary tally in 1971 crime n!C'Ord of "major" defendants convicted on felony statu.. and 591 defendants or offenses during 1972. By coo- 'll percent had a prior crime trasl, just 226 defendants, or record of "minor"' status. a state pri!on. The most nearly 12 percent of the totaJ, 'Repe•t off~• pro1'14e tlte f>ulk of recorded m•e ... ..,d tt cert•I•· ly relleeta tlle ... tloaal tre11d Io r 191%.' speed wl1h which tt gets both Tormenting Rectal Itch I criminal and civil matters to ~ ona1ys11 ....id •wear OfHemorrhofdal Tissues f ~ hin'!,~1ir! 1:: u~ Promptly Relieved I TAKE ORANGE Chunty's 44 convicted killers, for example. 'Ibey were almost always white, mostly between the ages of 21 and 29, male in 36 of 44 coovlctlons and sent to state prison on 22 of tf>Ose con- victions. In 29 homicides the killer had a prior criminal record. He er :ihe bad been to state prlson in five cases and 24 further defendants were ev~ ly split between major and minor criminal records. Repeat Offenders dominated the statistics. ROBBERY AND burglary lopped the !isl with 44 of 160 defendants hauled before the courts on robbery charges - nearly a third -having previously served 'time In state J:rison. More than a third -53, or SI percent, of the total -had previously been involved in major crime. And 42 defen- danls, fl percent, had a record of involvement in minor crime. Of 426 burglary defendants, SJ, or a little better than 12 JJUC"lll, had seen the Inside of significant staUsUc in that received !late prbon terms. division, perhaps, was the fact 1"Ibe idea behind that ls lmt that 18Z accused burglan -43 we want to give these people a percent Of the to'·I -had ma~ taste ot what it's really like ~ behind bars," Enright sold. jor crime records. "That is one of the best records in the state in tenns NINETY PERSONS or 22 of Jail time for t'OrtVicted percent of the barglary total felons and, given tough judges, came to Superior ColD't with we want to keep it that way. mlnor crime records. Not one ot '21 classu break· "MOST LAWMEN w 111 agree with me that the of. lng down 2,190 felony defen-fernier who repeats after that dant.s could offer a reading as just has to have the book high as 50 percent in the1 "no thrown at him." Enright said. previous record" column with "It meaN that he has to be jwt one e x c e pt Io 12 -put away until be reaches the bookmaking, where 16 of 28 age when he suddenly realizes felooy defendants had no ))e's spent too much of his life earlier criminal record of any behind bets and it hasn't done kind. him a bit of good. "D~•bllita"•• ••M ••• to Eleven o( 90 defendants in neu<i uwi ,....,. •--~ f --~~ ~-be inside )'OU," Enright said. o..'VUI ' or~ sex uu~ "I don't believe .:m...... can had been to prison. 51 of 790 _,_ drug offenders had had the put it there -)'OU have to same experience and 29 of 141 want it before the greatest perSCll8 accu.W of forgery rebabllitatioo program in the and check offenses had been world can do anylhlng f<>< behind prison hors before lbelr you. Orange County arrests. •"You know that l! a def~ dant falls within a certain age "Repeat offenders provide group that he's far more likely the bulk of our recorded to' be a repeat offender," crime," commented C h I e f ""--'gh d. Our j .._ Deputy District A t t o r n e y u u-i t sai " Uu6es 1mow It too and It's been my esperlence tbot they go 'for of 18 to 29 committing about 70 percent of the recorded crime. Jail records put the figure higher. More than 75 percent . of the 1,149 convicted defen- dants who drew jail Ume as part of their sentence last year in Superior O>urt were in thet aame lf.29 age group. The district attorney's anslysls also gniplileally U- kislrat.es the role played by plea bargaining In Superior Court action against felony defendants. NO FEWER than 1,767 of 1,960 a n a 1 y z e d defendants pleaded . guilty before lrial with 806 of that number changing their plea to guilty from the original plea of not guilty. Trials were scheduled for only 193 of time defendants - less than 10 percent ol the total -with ~ going for a jury trialo 20 for a nonjury trill and ~ "'cepting the judge'• realllng of t h e of initial appearance for his Jn inany ca.se1$. Preparation H dreds or patient.a showed th~""' ctU'ts ·to sentence 845 giveeprompt.temporaryrelief to be true in many cases. Jn surveyed defendants -more from such pain and itdtlng fact, many doctors, thenl'- than 40 percent. and actually helps shrink eelves. use Preparoti.oft fl8 or It took less th~ two months swelling of hemorrhoidal tia-recommend it for their fam· to sentence another 247 ac--sues caused by inftammation. ilies, Preparation H ointment cused felons (more than 10 Tmtl by doct.ore on hWl-or suppoeilorie.s. percent) and less than threej -::;::=::0::======:;::::======::;:::-:" :·~~ fo"=.1i'.'°the' Last Chance This Summer! ONLY %.II DEFENDANTS, or just over 10 percent of those .surveyed, had to wait longer tbm si1 months for sentencing. And the vut ma- jority of those, cotrt records indicate, waited because of ac-- Uon taken on their behalf in terms ol agreeing to a delay or taking appellate er motion action that forced a delay. The district attorney's racial • lftakdown of 1,960 a«Used fekms generally appears to follow population trends In Orange County with 1,601 whites -about 80 percent - dominating the crime tally. Felons ol Mexican-American origin· totaled 2:tl « nearly 12 per<:ent of the total, blacks totaled 69 Or just over 3 per· cent and other races made up Teen-age Sewing Course Girls 10 to 18 Make a dress and learn to sew this vacati on. Accelerated cou rse. 8-21/4hr. lessons, 17.50 (only98¢ hr.) Register today for class start ing July 30th. Fot address of the Singer Sewing Center nearrtst you, .. wtlile PaQes under SINGER COMPANY. SIJi~§R Judge Commits Accused , ~apist RAND PENIN I • SANTA ANA - A Baldwin Park man accused on arrest of raping eight hltd!hlRrs oWr a lix·month period in pnmge and Los Angeles eoun' ties bu been amunitteed to Atascadero State Hospital as a mentally disturbed sex of· Bricklayer Sentenced To Hospital SANTA ANA - A Brea bricklayer accused on his ar· rest last March or raping two \\'Omen, att~g to rape three more and ol trying to gouge out the eyes of at least two of the victims has been sent to Atascadero State Hospital for an indefinite com· mitment. Orange County S u p e r i o r Court Judge James Turner ~tonday sent Jesse James Cabral, 26 to the state facility after finding him to be a men· tally disordered sex offender. Multiple charges of rape, at- tempted rape and assault returned by the Grand Jury last April have been suspend- ed pending sUbsequent reports on Cabral's progress a t Atascadero. lie was arrested after a six- month search by Fullerton and Brea police ror a man who at- tacked five . womtn in both communities. Officers said all five women" identified Cabral as their assailant. Marine in Pos t EL TORO -Col. John K. Davis, 46, San Clemente, has ass umed command or the Marine Air lleserve Training detachment at the Marine Corps Air Station here. lender. Orange Comty Su p erior =.J:.n~.w:: lion ol WUllam E d ,, a r d Gerald , 20, ..and. suspeoded multlple rape, leX perversion, assault and lddnaping charges flied by several police agen- cies. Gerald was aITested last Easter Sonday by a team of HtDJtington Beach Wlderc»ver officers who had been ataked out to catch the elusive rapist who forced many of bis vie--urns at knlfepolnt ' to participate in various acts or sex perversion. Gerald had pleaded guilty to three counts of assault and one count of sex perversion shortly before Judge Turner ruled that he needed llSYChlalrlc therapy Ill the Atascadero facility. Alaskan's Talk Se t on Pipeline SANTA ANA -An Alaskan whQ once served es speaker of the 49th state's House of Representatives will discuss the Alaska Pipeline and its impa ct on Southern California Thursday at a meeting of the Orange County Bar Associa- tion. Fonner legislator W. Eugene Guess will be the featured speaker at t h e luncheon meeting scheduled for 11: 15 p.m. at the Sad- dleback Inn. Santa Ana. A social session is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. Kids Like To Ask Andy MOST SUITS, C~TS. 1-Pc.DRESSES 99~ 'V'V"-'" the sury DRY CLEANING I ' Aaron Brothers Art Mart in GRAND OPENING SPECIALS . SALE GOOD THRUSUHDAY,JULY21 1/2 PRICE FRAMESILEI BUY ONE FRAME AT OUR EVERYDAY LOW REGULAR PRICES, GET A SECOND FRAME OF EQUAL OR LESSER VALUE FOR HALF PRICE. COLLECTORS BOXES VALUEST0$12.95 VOURCHOICE 1/20FF STRETCHED CllVIS BUVTWO,GET THE THIRD FREE! .DRIED STAR # -FLOWERS • . , AEG.91 C 69C FISH BARRELS REG.I.II 53.88 NAIL KEGS AEG.2.11 51.88 DECOUPAGE SUPPLIES 2011/oOFF FRIMEDPRI 1/20FF NO EXCHANGES ON FRAMU srr 1C · PER• ----. _:,,__-=_ ---::::- 8rds I PRIMED CAllVAS ·1ii~ii ORANGE COUIR'S NEWEST ART MARTI NOW!LARGE CRAn DEPARTMENT BEAD LOTTERY FRI .. SAT., SUN. 3 BOffiES TO CHOOSE FROM! . GUESS THE AMOUNT OF BEADS AND WIN A PRIZE! DOOR _ .. DRAWING CONTE SAT., SUN. AGES 6 TO 18 YEARS, WINNING DRAWINGS OF EACH AGE GROUP WILL BE FRAMED AND PUT . ON DISPLAY PRIZES AWARDED TO EACH WINNER FRAMES •••••• PAINTINGS PRiNts ••••• Ntl~ CR Ans PRIZES! ~~~· .. ' FREE DRAWING "\ I FWl£D OIL PAlllIINS Of YOU~ CHOIC£ I 1111' ,. ...... 'llUQ I =ESS ------·-----1 I ~ ~ .... w ... ·o· · I WINN.fl HUO HOT ., HUOO JO WIN. DP I \;O~WIPIO tfftl) SUH()•'· IUlf" r1onrtHOONI ·--.,,, 1714 NEWPORT BbVD~t-t7th formerly Cai peterla . Phone 645-6180 opening hours: mon -fri.10·9, sat.-suo.10·6 \' c • ' " ' l j j ~ ; I l I l l l l • . I ' . l . l •• • QUHNll By Phil lnterlandi 'Postcognition' ··New ( \ Watergate Type of ESP By DIC!\ WEST W ASHJNCTON (UPI) Nearly !very1hln( these days &eemS to have some 10rt or tie-in with tbt Watergate hear- lngs -even an article oa es- t......,..ry pereeptloo. The Smlth>oolan Jnotltuilon rOport. in Its monthly magazine that ESP, 1001 scof- fed st by the intelligentsia, is beginning to gain academic respectability. indicates lhfre actually are fOllt \ypes o1 ESP Tbe_addcd starter is "postcogniUon" -1mo,.1nc !Omethin& AFrEJI It happens. WITNESS AFTER wiln•ss be!an the. Ervln committee hl.•e uhlblted an uncaMy ...,. ft postoof!llltion. I..ooking back on their roles in ~ Watergate cover-up and related activ1Ues, they were able to perceive all sorts ot things that weren't ap~rent to them at the time they wer'e' ®Ing it. things that hApptned. Cert•ln gccuutpctl art bound.lo jlaV_! been in the realm O/th< supernatural. It has been sug1est.ed that lie deteetor teru could bo used to resolve conflicts l r ttsUmooy. But that wumes that aome wltntsaes werf' lying. Which might not bo th< case at all. "••eommercla.11 that say •especially if you're over forty' 'Send chilli up and do:wn my spine.'' #J a means of com- munication, ESP ls still-only about as reliable u the U.S. Postal Service. But, according to the Smithsonian, COUr"9el in parapsychology . the science that explores ESP, are now of· feted at 77 U.S. colleges. ' Navy Grooming 1 Judge Rul.es Wigs Okay ' , RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) - ~ federal jodge baa declared anconsUtutional a N a v y grooming regulatlon that pro- ~blted Jong-haired s a i I o r 11 1n>m wearing abort-haired wlga. ' U.S. District Judge Robert MerbJge's decision ln the sult broogbt by five Virginia Navy reservists could, 1f upheld on appeal, set a precedent for 1imllar cases. 'The s u i t , '°wever, W&!I not a class ac- tion. Lihber Sued For Divorce ~ LONDON (AP) -Gtnnalne ,.Greer, a blgb priestess of 'women's lib, Is being sued for .,-divorce. Miss Greer, 34, married _.eter de Feu in 1968. 'Ibey three weeks later. She wtlversity lecturer and of the best seller "'lbe emale Eunuch." -~ r . -c '~-~· ) , , We r All the ; : I I • f • ~ ' ' New High Rates 5.25%.to7% And we give you so much more! HIGHEST RATES IN OUR HISTORY Regular~ Aa:ounts e.am a cunmt annwil rate of 5.25" Compounded Daly from day In to day out OurCertlblos of Depooit pey 5.75'1., 6.50%.6.75'1., 7~ and moN. Come tn to open your account today. W.'D gtw yoo> ful detnis on Cert!&cate regulations teg111dk19 wtttm• ri'*num terms and amounts. ASSETS OYER $41'.i BIWON The stm1glh of one of the wodd'• ~"""' 6nancial -and. -of"'""""' sal<ty since IB87. MORE OFFICES TO SERVE YOU Gre.at Westem's starewtde network of 67 branches. all over California, IS the largest ln lhe ~vings and k>.an lndustJy. OUR NEW STATEMENT SYSTEM W1! g!Ve you a choice of the tmdi!ional passbook system or our new quarterly st!ltemeTlt shownJ al transacttons and your interest earned. THEGWCARD -· II""' can! •• any GrW -branch lo <aSh pmonal <hecks, make d-er wlhch .... obtain any available free seMce. With accounts of $1000 or more. · AUTOMATIC SAVINGS DEPOSIT SERVICE We transfer fund! automatlcalty from your c:heelclng account at any bank to your Great Wiiesmn ~ account-regularly. whenever you wish. THE GREAT WESTERN FEELING It's the fttllng that comes from knowing youW p.4 II""' savingJ In exactly the rtght place. GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS MiW'°"'""'*"'9 C.... .,.....1.._. ....... 0.-........... ~ --I ___ U,..•m.lm ......,,.. Hll.UlloWo...... I 141• II "'"9 "914 • U7·1511 -sAtna. AMA' 14'1t NMh M•l11 M 1tlll • 141·1$71 9 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. Daily/ Until 6 P.M. Fridays (Free Parking .. UL llACHl\AtMre...., lttt w.111111" ......... U4-ttll .... wmt ACCOVNTI flil' tM1 0. tle)flll: .... ~ lo1• 9111 .._.....,,_ Tmlelln ChKlla, MCWMIJ OnJlf9, No11ry ~ Trvet o.M/Noi. con.ctton. Alto f'" CMCll.\.Month '™"- MEM8ER1 FEDERAl. SAVlHas ANO LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION, FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK •A SAVINGS ASSOCIAl'lON OF GREAT WESTERN fl NA NCI Al CORPORATION ------ Hijacki1t g·- For Airport Sunday, Wednesday and Friday in the DAILY PILOT Monday, Ju ly 23, 197) PUBLIC NOTICE .. fl'l"l..,.~,,,,,.,._... ~FGOD PRICES ~ t TC) RISE ·4·¥J\ ,,, • Sylvia Porter's readers can beat that headline ••• she told them how to save up to 25 '/, on meat buys, as much as 20 °/o on canned goods: 'Follow the most fundamental, simple and ordinary of all the rules . . . Shop the specials.' Maybe it seems obvious, but when Columnist Sylvia Porter tells her readers something like : watch newspaper ads for bargains, she always goes the extra step. She asked qu estions of some of the food industry's leaders and found out savings can amount lo many, many times the 41h% predicted rise in overall food prices. That's econonlic advice you can believe. Tes t it for your seU. Check the .specials in the bar- gain-laden ads of the Wednesday Food Section every week in lhe DAILY PILOT. And il you wanl more tips on getting your money's \YOrth, read Sylvia Porter's "Money's \Yorth " column appearing sev· eraJ times each week in th e fin ancial pages of Lbe DAILY PILOT. • TM One That Means Business DAILY PILOT I DAIL V PILOT 9 PUBUC N011CE PUBLIC N011CE MOTIC• OP TW:UIT9•'1 IAL• T.S. Na. JV 0., AllClllll 15, 1'7J. •I 10:00 A.M.1 veJtOUGO SE•v1ce COfl"°91ATtON .• C11llfomla c:orpor&tlon '' dvlY 1t1P0111'9d Trus!" ......, ... ~ -we"! to DtoM "' Trus1 ~ J_., n , ttu, •• '"" No. "91, In book 7174, ~ .. s. f1f Of. ndet 1t9Cllrd1 rn ni. .me. "' tllit COl/flt1 lt.c«def' d Orene. County, Sl1t1 ot Celllornle, WILL SEll AT l"\JllllC AVC. TION TO HIGHEST lllDOl.lt l"Oll CASH (PIYlble el HIM of Mii "' I""'°' ,,...,.., 1111 ttw Ul'llllld S11lnl et t11it Nortll ....... tnl•ellC• to tr. Or~ Cllllllty C-' H-loc•lld '' ,. crvlt c.,iw Ort.,. W111 ttorrMrly w"' ltPI l~J S.nte .-.... C1rl tornle, 111 riorit, lltle •!'Id '"''"" con....,.ld lo ...0 -held by It undtl' wlol DHd of Tru1t In ttw prop.rty 1lt111tld In .,Id County end St1t1 d1t<rli.J ••: LOI I I" 11100:• J:J7 of Corone Dtl Mttr, I" Ille tll'I or N_.i llNci'I. c-.ty of O••fl09, 11tl1 of C11llor1>l1, •• -mep re<ordH '" 9oalc l Pttn .ti ...., G of MIKlll1<1~1 Mepi, rec:ord1 f1f ••Id Or•"O• County, T~e "'"' aodr.,1 end v!llM' com.._ <111lon•llon, If eny, of "" ,.., ~ <le!.C rlbed 1bov1 11 __.!Id 11) M: '°' J11ml,.. A.,..,,\11', N-.iort II I IC h 1 C1lllornl1. r ... u~ Tnntn dhet11"" .,.., 11eD1111v l'OI' ~ 1~1 or ttw •trllot .odr111 ,.,.. other comMOtl ctell1M"9ft. " '""'' ·-"-"'"" S.ld 1al1 wll1 ii. rn..i., but ""llllut tO'f'-nt 01: w1rret1ty, "'"'""' ,.. 1,..ir..i, AOe•Ol"'I 11111, PMll'IMofl, or ,,... cum11r1..c"' lo PIY IN r-lnt"'ll pr\n. CIPll '""' al !M notfll ) MCW'ld by "" Of!'ed "" Trvt.1, wtltl lnl91'1'11 """'-· • llt'nldld Ill .. 111 nor.(t), ldv-. 11 ....,. !lf'dlf" IN f.nt\I or Mid o.ld el Trust, IHI, CNlrgll Ind n~ of the Trntw ~rid of ltil lfllWI tnoeltd lJy Mid 0... oil Tru1!, TMI NMfkl1ry Ul'ldlt' uld o..I .t Trll'll Plwltalor1 exlQ!Md tfld cllll_... to "" undlnltl'lld • .,.,"-Older~ of Dlf1ult 11111 C>.mtfld tor S.1it. tfld 1 -lfltft Notlc1 of Olflllll lf!d Elld\<lfl 10 Sill. TM ~tlfned Cl\IMd Nici N9Mc1 of o.f•ult •"" E1«:tlon l1t s.tl 11 111> recordlcl '" lhl ~ty whtr1 ttw """ jll'Ol)lf"ly 11 kK•lld. D1tld: July 11, lm . VEROUGO Sli:lt\flCE CORPOltATION II Mid f f'Vllff, llV P•I ltolllnd ""' Pllbl!shld N_,.,, Mlftlor NIWI ~....,. COMbl""' wllh IN Orl!IOI C111t Dlll'f l"llot. W~POrt 8fftll. C1llllll'nl1, July U. 10 •• ..., ""°"" •· 1•n tt!l!l-11 PUBLIC N011CE , ------~--·----·-.. JO DAILY PILOT s Monday, July 23, 1973 Company Earnings r.-1· -fteporl·~ ' eEdlsottCo. LOS ANGELES (AP) "UnrelenUng pressure" from rising costs are blamed for a 4.8 percent drop in quarterly net earnings reported by Southern caJICornia Edison Company. Jack K. Horton, chairman of the Rosemead-headquartered uLility, said that 1973 second· quarter net income fell to $31.38 million , or 56 cents a share, frorr. $32.96 million, or 61 cents a share, for the same period a year ago. Horton said revenues fcir the quarter rose 12.4 percent to $246.97 million. e Allergan A1lergan Pharmaceuticals of Irvine says second quarter net sales for the three months ended Jun& :W increased 22 pero!nt over 1972 levels to IS,189,590, the highest quarter- ly sales in the company's history. Net income rose 23 percent to $382,536 and quarterly earn· ings per share rose from 13 cents per share in 1972 to 16 cents per share in 1973. eAmrord Am.cord Inc. of Newport Beach reported earnings from operations for the six ~onths ended June 30 were 19 percent higher than for the com· parable period last year. Second quarter r e s u l t s showed sales of $$4,244,000, with net income of $2,509,000, or 37 cents a share. In 1972 the company had second quarter sales of $46,332,009 and net earning.:1 of $2,352,000, or 34 cents a share. e Ahma••OJJ Special to the Dally Pilot LOS ANGELES -H.F. Ahmanson & Co. reached a record $5 billion in assets and reported net earnings of $24 533,000 or $1.08 per share for 1lhe six-month period ended June 30 compared t o $22,092,000 or $1.01 per share for the similar period last year. . Earnings before ~eallfed in- vestment gaw were $24,903,000 or $1J)9 per share compared with 21,929,000 or $1 per share the prior year. ASSOCIATE Caltforaia co,,.,otioa o f f • r • 4t'!. Dhtrkt OwHnMp I• N- c-petftfft htl""' '""°'"" '"°'""...,., ... llHIC., .. to "'" ddtriol Oftd COMMOtCJal 011tt.ts. llldMct .. I '"'t IMr¥'O 10llcl _,._ at••••t ..... , ..... -4 't9PC1• WHry of ..... co..,..._ cllotp of o,.,.,.. .... Co.,... pnMfoct & sysm. trolMitt. Troe• record win ""'° Sl,000 •...ntr Mt. So..._...I salary & eqow:t to oporotl09 IH"'f'lle'· SJt ,tlO wlll ...... Prbtclpols 011ly ,. .... Write hltt9ftt Co., 605 Hllldry Ave., ·'J1ttl lowoocl, Co. 90301. Att: ·:.f. l aftlHy, '""1dfft. lit· cl.cte:l:tadl9ro1111d hl1tory, refer- ' Mees. telephone 011mbor for 111- I .......,., 11"°'"""'"'· I ' )_ - j SEVEN ADVANTAGF.5 OUJI PAGER OFFERS that yours may not ! COMPLITI OIANGI COUNTY COYEIAGI IKW109: Lot••a hactri S-C......._, MlssJo.i Viejo hH Pot.it, • well .. Lo hoc•* MOtt of L.A. a MQNTM TO MONTH llNTAL IA.SIS NO DEPOS" IE9UllED ON APPIOVED CI EDIT ONLY Sl 7,00 Pll MONT TOTAL COST 1..n .. tt.ct ,...., 5 NIW CO MPACT UNIT sm t111"141 1/11 6 YOICI Mm A61 PA611S A'~ A•I AVAILAILI 7 PULL' PIO MAINTI NANC Milestone Auto·..Or is It"! Cadillac dealer Dick Nabers Oeft) and Costa Mesa Mayor Jack Hammett admire 1973 Coupe de Ville -supposedlv the five millionth car manufactured by Cadillac Division. Nabers later foun(I that errant Detroit workers placed nwner- ous 5,000,000 stickers on other cars during celebration and the actual mile- stone car could be anywhere. Nabers said, "Well, it's always nice to see the mayor, anyway." Interest Rate 'War' On-, Get the Most for Sa'vings By SYLVIA PORTER You can get an annual return of more than 8 percent QO short-term federal agency securities -obligations rank· ing second only. to issues of the U.S. Treasury itself -and you can get yearly returns almost as juicy ·on l onger-term federal agencies. You can go into the open market and pick up short-term issues of the U.S. Treasury which will pay you close to 8 percent -and you easily can get 7 percent-plus o.n a wide range of longer U.S. govern- ment maturities. AND NOW YOU can take $1,000 or more to banks and savings in- st itutions across the country and jf you pled~e to maintain your savings deposit-for four years or more, you can e a r n f'Otl:TER from 7 to 71h percent -which compounded, works out to 7.35 to 7 .9 percent. The interest rate "war" for your savings dollar is, ap- proaching the historic pitch of l96~JJI. As interest rates charged on Joans have spiraled upwaJi. and toward t h e frightening peak of a fev.· years ago, so interest rates paid on savings are spiraling upward and toward those rarefied ranges too. THERE ARE minimum in· vestment requirements i n many cases. minimum holding periods. other restrictions. Buying securitjes in the open mai'k:et is more comnlicated and carries more risk than putting your cash in a savings account. You have to have know-how. big-time monev and a tough nerve to "play" the sophisticated money markets here and abroad and earn the too rates available there. But no matter who you are. 1S"-' ANNUAL lnulN ON SI0,000 P11rtM" & Lt115ebl\Ck. Inc,,..... Paid Ov•rl.,ly, Tex Shel!tre'll. a11v a~ck of f\llt s10,ooo 11 ~If of 1. 1 ,,,,. 3 ~r1 {your option). AIRSCRUll&R (710 UUW ' A~ver1111ment FALSE TEETH That Loosen Nffd Not Embarrass Don't keep worrrinc 1b<1ut v<1ur Jalle teeth dnippf11Jt At the WfOl\C time. A dentun adhe81V9 eaa hel<1. FASTEETH• rl,.eedentutell • lone• er, firmer, 1tu.dier ~old. Makeii 8't- inr more enjoyable. }or mon llfCUrit;J' &nd c<>rnlort, use FASTEETH Den- ture Adhoeive Powder. De1tt11ru that lit llN! eseentl•I tu health.. See )'OUf' dentist rC(lllarb"• S A L E this is the moment to ~hop tor rewards on your savings dollar, to become fully aware of what you can earn and where. ,, 'I'he basic story ls that as a result of the Federal Reserve System's tightening money policy • and today's h u g e demands for credit, interest rates you can get on securities sold in the open market have been skyro.cketing. Now, to di s courage you from withdrawing your funds from savings accounts and rein- vesting in those hlgher·interest securities. th e regulatory authorities have either lifted or eliminated the interest rate ceilings financial institutions can pay you on your savings. nus WITRDRA WAL rein· vestment" process -known a."> "disintermedi,ation" -would daogerously ·.reduce tbe4,a.Qis financial irltittltiOils h ~,~e available lQl' home mortgage~ and . other llel;lrj])le~ and the \ Siithorities a re detenntned f6 curb the money flows. And so, the rates you can David D. Paulin has tieen named an assistant vice presi- dent with Bank al America's Orange County-Los Angeles Qijlstal Re- gional credit a d ministra- tion. Pa u Ii n. with the bank since 1966 was for- merly man- ager at the South Coast l",f,ULIH Town Center office in Costa Mesa. He is a member of the bank's o(fice managers ad- visory board which provides counsel to senior management, and on the board of directors of the Costa Mesa Rotary Club. He and his wife reside in Cypress. * Roger Jones of Laguna Beach has been named sales mana ge r of Spectrol Elec- tronics Corp. In his new positioi;i, Jones will be re- sponsible for sales an d marketing !WJctions of the manldac· luring £inn. He joined Spectrol · in 19611, And la- ter was an. ,ONIS pointed Southern California sales m an ager. In 1969 he beca~ western regional sales manager and earlier thls year was named national field sales manager. * Samuel A. Rader has been promoted to Western division sales manag~, ol. <>nbo Dlagnoldcs ~f New Jersey. ·ue joined'the firm as a sales eam on uncomplicated, easily arranged savings accounts are soaring, too. Here's a guide through today's m0J1ey markets (although the figures are changing by the hour and may differ to a minor degree, this guide wjll tell you what you can earn and where): - 5 percent maximum on passbook acco.unfs al com- mercial banks, equa l to 5.2 percent compounded. -S.%5 PERCENT max- imum on passbook accounts at S8Vings banks and associa- tions, equal to 5.47 percent compollllded. -5.5 to 6.5 percent maxi· mum on time deposits at co111- m~cial banks kept !or vary- ing periods of time, equal to 5.73 to 6.81 J)Elrcent com· ded. -' l"""'s n r.; &.~ -;~: ' um on,tjgje deposf!&,at.R 'ihjs ba~i '."' llnd 6 a Y'I~' g a associations, kept for~yarying · periods of time, equal to 6 per- cent to 7 .08 percent com- pounded. - representative in 1970. Rader will be headquartered in Newport Beach. * fdichael Riney <illd Jean Thibault, both of Newport Beach, have received New York Ufe Insurance Company Centurion -Award s for pro- viding life insurance coverage for more than 100 persons in 1972. * Thomas C. Simandl has been elected lo the partnership of Wolf and Company certified public accountants. Simand.I joined the firm in 1969 and presently manages the Newport Beach office. The Harbor Area resi- dent is vice f"~~l'I! president of the Ne\vport ~. Harbor · Chamber of Com rrlerce and a mem-s1MANOL her of the California Society of CPA's and the American Institute of CPA's. * Riclu!rd A. Grundy, ad- ministrator o f Huntington Intercommunlty Hosoltal in Huntington Beach, has been nomin- ated by the National As- sociation of A ccountants flS national director. The lfuntint!· Ion Beach •1tuNoY resident is a member of the United Crusade board or directors, Rotary Club and the advisory board to the Health Service at Golden W e s t College. .. ·--- .. OR'1NGf COUNTY R~fl!ffTf If PHONE SI HVICE 1>1(' Try Saturday's News Quiz I 714 -IJS-JJOJ 4Cll SO. SANTA Ill!, SANTA A.HA U..t l tKll1 Mlttlln Vltfl, """'· 11!1 CMIMfrfe, Ill'! I•• ............ 11 Tlrt, c.H loll 4fl4221 • • We Dare You , I \ • Wall .. Street • • . "niii .. •,. ··~ • . . .. T'. .J . ., ••• 11· • • •.. • •• u;f ;t ·au·$:·;11ftie/l ;:liJ.~;,.ou"f'V;'S:·ire'Pl$r"nef;~; • • ' •.• . • • .• • • . ~r : •. . .. . l'.'fl' ••• • •• • • • 8 •• • •• •• • • • II 0 •••••• 'fcifteep , o~f 'of every 100 Americans today own stock. ~·· ·we· i:oulpn 't prove it, of course, but it see,., s likely that the percentage is even greater here in the Or- ange Coast ar~a ... and it's growing every day. • ' ... •' > That's why the DAILY PILOT Was proud, year~ ago, to be the first newspaper 'in Orange Courify ._to bring its readers ntoday's final stocks today" via · super high speed wire services. We're still doing it in . every home- delivered edition and the service gets better all the time. Wall Street's computers "talk to" com put e rs in the DAILY PILOT plant every trading ·-day at the rate of more than 1,000 words per min1.1te. It takes only 12 minutes to move the enti re New York and American Stock Exchange reports from the canyons of Wall Street to the typesetting. machines of the DAILY PILOT right here on the Orange Cogst. '• And when technology finds a way to beat that speed . record, the DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the fir.st to . u~e it to bring readers "today's action today." " When it comes to financial news, the one that means bus iness is the ' ' ·- • , I • • . . . Why pay extra · .for 'zones' to cover · · .. orange ·roast ;with a -Classifled Ad? ---- the i ~ • ~ .. ' • • • · · t118 ~Pailv. Pilot covers it all with 8 Editions I . ' . . ' VO.U GET l ALL EIGHT FOR JUST. ONE RA TE ' . . ' ..... -..... . ~-...• ' ' I J I • • J • . . . -• . ' Huntington · Beach • • Daily Pilot Classified 'Want Ads' run in these eight different Daily Pilot editions • Newport Beach 0 Huntington Beach•Fountaln Valley 0 Costa Mes a • O· Newport Beach l 8 Irvine 8 Laguna Beach 0 Saddleback 0 San Clemente-Capistrano O Street edition (for area newsracks) \ I . Dial Classified Direct -642-5678 -You Caii Even Use Your Credit Card ' -l' . . • \ I .. . j • . •, . . . • • . ' . ' •. l • • ' • I • ' ' . •• . . ' " ' ... ·, . • ... ' ... I , DAILY PILOT I ... , ·.:.. .. .. ~ . ; . ' .. • ' • - ------------------~--------------'--- JI DAILY PILOT Mond11, July 2J, 1973 Coast Area Vital Statisti~s Dlssoltltion Of Marriage ''GAS SAVER'' SPECIAL CAPRI the Sexy European • • • + FREE 10-SPEED iBIKE with every Olle ordered and delivery during the month of Jaly! $149.00 ITAUAN IMPORT VALUE ••• WIDE SELECTION Off 2000 & Y /&'s AVAILABLE I , ·PSA wants 10 go north (or south)• with your mO!ll'Y. Other Grlnningb!rds to San Diego and Sacramento. Over 200 . . - flights a day 00111ecting all of northern and southern caJifomia. c;:ai1 your traVel agent or PSA and let's migrate • T·ry Saturday'$ News Quiz . -- We Dare · Yau · 1 .. ~ ' • COMPOUNDED DAILY • EXISTING and NEW PASSBOOK ACCOllfTS 9May NOTICE ACCOUNTS NEW Certificate Accounts .. • • .... Balance $1,000 .$5,000 ' $500 $1,000 $5,000 'llnas 90DAYS or 12·211 MONTHS . \ 1'·10YEARS ( I • ' ' • ' ... • """ .! ' • •if, . ·- 7.52"' ~ And we still offer our usual Free Services. •Penalty on al Certificate Accolllts withdrawn prior to matll'lty. ' AVCO !,~mJ!!!- 1 1 .. , I I 1 1 ' • • • I• .-. '. ~ l I i tier ~ra~~s Caring • • . ·, "' I , l I I • .. .~men . . BEA ANDERSON, Edito• ,.._,, ... D. 1Jn ,_ II .. -. . ,• ii • '··· --. ..,. . • .. . ' ~ .. ,Maryann oHers .sugge.tions to teacher during craft ~-.. ,se•si9n [·rigit+l. At ·far right she o'ffers individual attention to a · chil.d 'who nel!ds a " personal +ouch • •• " .. ....... . By JO OLSON Of ""' Dell1 "1111: ,..,. After almmt a year or servln« as direct.or oC the Newport Beach Assistance --------·------Leafue.Do~t,.,.Maryann.sne.d Exploring is part of the fun .of the Day Care Center. Maryann Sneed, director. gives one of her charge• · a boo.t. bas decided to add a new dimension to the aln!ad.1 sucttssful facility. "We must become involved v.ith the parents," the Corona del Mar resident stressed. "For a good ~ care ex- perience, it must be carried over into the home." ![be tnoat important thing she is trying to teach the ~25 children at the center is that they must have a good self-image, a concept wQlch needs reinforcement by their parents. "This is the most important thing that can happen t.o a child," she said. ·'and the earlier it happens the better. We are trying to let the children know they are Individuals and that we care about them. They are accepted by us as they are. We believe they are worthwhile, beautiful people." PARENT MEETING The first step in establishing parent rapP.Ort v .. as a Saturday morning meeting during which P.faryann and the mothers talked about problems of parents and ways to reinforce the concept. · Most of the children are from single- parent families, P.faryann said, so this is a difficult task !or the parents. Mothers often have UWe energy left ror their children after a hard day's work and an evening of household chores. Of the 20 chlldren curmiUy enrolled, only 'three ha've both mother and father in the home. Of the employed mothers, several are licensed vocatlooal nurse s, one does factory work, several arc sales clerks, one is a waitress, 8.nother is il physical therapist and most are office clerks. •'She's usually very tired," lifaryann said in desctibing the kind of mother she mee~. "She has the full responsibility of bringing up the children. She's involved in . an unhappy situation and usua1ly is ·resentful of the situation . Her attentioil is fOcusedon •·getting through.' There is lit- . ~le energy left for nurt1,1rtng the ctUW in ways we can here. NEEDS ,INDICATED "'Ibis certainly is an indicat.ion of our community and what our needs are." litaryann. who supervises a stall of four including l"'O full-lime teacherS. one part.lime teacher and a cook. reeeived her training at Orange Coast Colleg and California Stale University, Fullertorm. m1~·s11ecroes-not11nve c11ac1telo degree. she holds a cerUficatc in ear childhood education and has extensive experience in her field, The native Californian was intrigued by the proceM of learning and the activities in the cooperative nursery school where her children were enrolled as preschoolers, so she decided to switch her direction from elementary education to early childhood. f'or eight years she \\'as director of a cooperative nursery school in Full~rtoo, \\·ork.ing v.'ilh tlcad St.art in the summer and teaching parent education classes at night . A year ago she became involved in a Junior college program for cttdentiallng teachfo.rs. but had a great desire to get into the day care field. FOCAL POINT Day care is "more custodial" than nursery school , she beJieves. "Nursery school is supplemental. The child tends to be the focal point of the home. In day care, the parents i:nust work to support the family. Vle are interested in the education of the chlld, too." The slender mother oC three teeaagm carries her interest irt people to her private life. She. en.)o)'s meetiI!g ~. through encounter groups, likes t,o..)Mey. cle, enjoys music and IS an avid rnder~ Divorced for three years, if.& Wl- derstands th< problems of Ille '}'OUllg mothers she works with." She is concerned with the lack of care for infants and toddlers and believes it is a "disservice to the community" not to have it. Being director or the center, one ol on· ly foor nonprofit day care centers in Orange County, has made her "stretch more emotional muscle! than I · ever thought possible," she said. "I've learned so much about . people and about myself. .. about the effect. of the home on a child's behavM>r .•. how lo be "really firm v.ith people ... to make fewer value judgments about people. "I've learned that the emphasis need! to be on a child's concept of ,himself . Intellectual and social development is important but the other is more im- portant." ~cs:od · Neighbor Policy a . Big Mist ,ake " • ~.... . ... • DEAR ANN LANDERS: ·I'm a hard· working ~I with an interesting job for ,an investment flnn. I live in a luxury b1gb-rlle and !mow .., leW .eigllbors. '!be _,.. next doOr ii ~ altracUve redhead but we'd never said DtJte than .... good mcirning," until two .mootM a.go when her husband was se6t to Iran· !or an oil """Jl""l" I ,.w tbem 5'll' 122dl>1• and l nearly wepl. A week after the farewell scene I was .hmted to . party. ,. ~Wed II!' il l lnew «an lntereoUnrdate 11>" lilii ~ On an iznpullt I alliid Ille *""*1 If she'd llloO WI eveunc ouL Sile-replied, "You're~ •· llH:aver. ~J'm ctrtne-oC lonelinesil" J To make J long story short, the ttellead and her blind date got aloog oo well tl!il he bas ·been over there every ---....--. 11-~ 1. I • -. night ·1mct. M1 I to blame! I feel guilty. Or would a IMt'rled gal 'l'tot>Jayr aroomd bave !otllll a pi.)'llllte ~ her own? Aboolve me, p1eale.. -GlTil!:L DIWI GIT: 8-rJ, ,...,.. pllty. She mlllilt.uve !-a "'81"'811' ... hu own, buf t1ot 1ac1 ""'''"' t11at Yo" loand nus eae for btr. lftat'• the matter wltb you? ~'t.)'M bow •!Y~ girls! - . ... ,. ... DEAR ANN LANDERS: I have al"'Y' heard that the person v.1bo is sick in the bad 1!1bt! Jast-io recogni.rit:-HnlllnJo; everyone else Is crazy.· Please tell me i1 I'm getting a little cuckoo. Last week J started to introduce my sister-In-law (whom I have known:for 30 years) to a ncighhor. Suddonty l forgot her name. J was hotrlfJcd and cm- barrwed, This morning I was rushing to make an early-morning appointment and 1 began to talk to m,ysclf. l spoke in full sen· tenees, as if I were addressing a second person\ ! said, !'Don't rush. Take your time: A feW minutes won't nlake that much clif!erence. Haste makes waste .. .'' and on like that. My Wile beard me in the neat room and ·shouted, "Who In the world are you talking to?" I was ashamed tQ'i tell her lfiel\rilth-so-rrep!leG, '11'.-tlil radio." She yelled back, ·1·1 know your voice - and you're talking to younell. ~nt sign of Insanity.'' mw about this, Ann~ U?vcl with me, please. -TOPE~A DEAR TOP: Don't worry about It. Breatbe. there a mn v,itb-soul soJlead, who hasn't at some time or another saJd, "I'll never f or g et good ol' Wbatzli· name!" Ai for the solUoquy, that's norm· al, too, IO Ion& as yoa doe't address you.r· self as "Y"' ~fajetty" or ''Your Hofi. ness." DEAR ANN LANDERS: l am a t~ year~ld girl who doesn't know whether slie lias a problem or just a question. I'm sure you can help. Lalely a lot DI people have said to me, nvou are getttng -more likejtlllr mother every day." When my ISoytriend made lht remark last night it bothered me. I don't know whether it wAA su~ posed to be an insult or a compliment. Please give me your opirUon. I need to get th is llettled in my mind, - AMERICAN READER rn MNGKOK I • -. DEAR READER: What's your motbtr like? Do you want to be bke ber? Do pce- ple feel warmly about ber? Does your boyfriend admire lier.? J 1 don't know the ans1''er1 to tbele que.,. tiObJ, bat you do. Think them over and you11 come up with the answer to die questio1 )'00 uked me. .Dbeover-bow-to be-dale balnr11bour-- fa1Ung hook, line and sinlcer. Am Landers' booklet. "Datlng Dos and Don'ts," w111 help you be more polled and sure of youraeH on da~. Send 3S cents in coin along with a long. stamped. sc.Jf.addressed envelope and your request to the D•ilY Pilot._ • • J ,, .DAILY 'ILOT M-. Jo~ Zl, 19TJ' How Is Your Mar.riage Growing? Honestly? ' IJ JO OLSON Ot 9' O.Jty Heit Slttf If -ty ii a dllllcult "°"" cept to put into flO'a<llce, and. "'!'fla&e Is ooe of the most -dlllk>ult-nlallooa in tho world to maintain, then having honesty ln marriage 11 really a mind-boggling problem. This w.as the take-off point for the second meeting In the Marrlage-g<>-round t a k I n g place W1der the dlrecUon or the Rev. David A. Crump, marriage and family OOW!!elor. The fi ve-week series is organized on a lecture-dis- cusslon basis, with <hlmp giving a brief Introduction and introducing a topic for small ~ exchanges. ·The topic fer' the evening was honesty. '"'Ibere are no experts when you come to the subject of marriage," Crump said. "I MRS. BALD may be a trained C0Ul\5elor but there is as much low 11 pain In my lamll{ u -else 's. We have better love and belier pain. "H900tY P a n<!l word.l!l!! a difficult concept to put In pracUce. It'• very bard to be honest in ways that.eount." CANDY FRO>! BOX The Rev. Mr. Crump noted tbat "our training doean't get off to a good start," citing the "I'm the one who took the candy out of the box" syn- drome as an eumpJe. And, people are not honest with each other for fear of re- jection. "II I really tell who I am maybe you \\'Ofl't want me. I'm the most important or the two of us -l'm all t '\'e got" is the rationale most~ pie use he noted. _,. "]'m oot advocating honesty or dishonesty. Real matura- tion is when we get it worked MRS. D'DOHNELL Coast Ceremonies Vows Repeated O'DONNELL.MORRISON ; Millng their home Jn Whit-j ti« lollowlng a honeymoon In .. Hawaii will be Dr. Eugene ~ Paa! O'Donnell and his bride, ! the former P-abicia Marie : Morrtoin. - • 'The new~were mar~ · ried In Ho!1 Catholic . ChW'Ch. Orange wi the Rev. i Kevin Tansey officiating. : Their parenta are Mr. and . Sisters' ' Troth Told Mn. Joseph E. Morrison of Huntington Beach and Mrs. Lee O'Donnell of Butler, Pa. Bridal attendants w e r e Bari>ara Pluma, Louella Mor- rbaa, -. i--..,, &wn Provwal and-AJ:mette ILep:lre. ,,. • \ Best Man ,-. Mart A. O'Donnell, eriP tJlhers were David and John O'Donnell and JosepbMorriJloo. BALD-GOBBEL. Randy Bald and Becky Gob- bel excbanced vows before the Rev. Ken Harroft!' in San- tiago Park, Santa Ana. 'Ibey are the son and daogjll« cl Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bald cl Huntlngloo Beach and Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Gobbel of Orqe. Attendants were L i n d a Eltiste, Debbie P f i r m a n, Diane Perkins, Mrs. Ron NewPcrt, Tammy May, David ~l Jerry HlggiM, Paul Hankins, Bill Grimes and John Larrilon. out." -· precludes bmKty In marrllge? The COUDll!lor bellev" It iJ the "love and JOvely'' lrri11e lD marriage. ·~wbilabwt.Pe~ !M.lY1" he asked. '"There ls plenty of hate and U&1Y in a real mar· rlage." When oouples see ugliness coming their natural human powera are bottled by fear , the added. "Theil we begin the cover-up. 'nM!n there is a dishonest pattemlng, on e which blocks out growth poa- slbJlities. WHOLE THING "When we become adults we have to say "I can't be afraid cl other people all the time. r have to live with mysell,' Honesty Is a whole thing." In the small groups, only first names were used. ~1ost of the partlelJ>Ol)IJ did not know each other 'and most of tho groupo we,. dlff'""'t than 1n the Ont session. The diJcusslon was unstruc- tured and honest. In one 1roup the members ranied rrom one with a 31:year JD&ni!ic to 1 f year-old ~woo w as-oot-rriar· rled. The marital status was as varied. Susan, th<. 18-year-old, began by relating an e:a:perience she had with her parents where she )Vis able to be honest wlth them. John replled to her remarks. "l can't express my s e I f booestly, The earlier yuu start on honesty the better. When you're honest you're rtally cpen for risk." Li.sa said she believes it Ls easier to be honest in mar- riage than in social cittlts. "Perhaps that's my lack of self~nfidenc:e." HAPPY PERSON ''The way you .relate in Your Ho roscope Tomorrow eoclety ls the way )'OU relate In UWTilp," lldded L<Jcllle. "~ ii not IClinc to likb you. When you Uke Younell you're a happy penon.", ~.._-~_:·1 - alwaya told to be myaelf u a teenaier. But l a I w a f I ~'Who am I?'" 1'1ha&'1 a ovwtna. cbanglpg tblng,"' l&ld John. ' I 0 \1 r culture ii a n>~ one. 11•1 dllhoaell ..ie p1a71nr. rm trying to get that out of my lite." Lilcllle Interjected, "Y .. CID'! live your Ille In total honesty!" "Trull ,..... l'JI,. aald Be\. ty. Jolin commented that he wont< to be Uvin( his Ille for hlmaeU. "I want the freedom to have ouual lellvjty OUll!de o( 1111rrlage. I had 'to be honest with my•wife.11 "You can Jove in more than OGt way," agrftd Genie. 111.ove ls lO much deeper "When you are puttln& than the avenae teen.acer -.. htto lllOlhor rel•-llllnb of II," aald Lilcllle. -p. aren't you tat1n1 "ClnlWI" C0111tend Johll. llWlf -tbe one 11 home!" Jobq, added that be believes -IJettv there ii I "bed< cl I fot mot'I! . ·= . -"lilll'IM111iOrlban1n'thfplSt: llU1l'J1NG WIFE Tho group agreed thal "Aren't you lllrtlng '10"' oellilbness Is 1 bealthll.:''· wife?" asked Uaa. but not ln excess. Sel ea: a-ge disagreed with John. !1 .an aid to hontsty, they allo Corning from A college oam-dedded. pus and getllng matried WHY ATTEND? ncently, he aaJd he DO longer .,._, do people _ _.. an fell under pressure to pick up .. .., .,...- a dllferml girl~--· ewoln( on the Marriag..,.. Getting. -..... "Jlrell l'Otllll t.altlag about their prob. l'fllel !or the pressure, but I lemo, marllll and olberwlse, blew it. t want a chance to and dlscusgfng m a r r l a g e think... itlelfT '1----became "certain Join said, "O>mmitment Is --whit I'd Uko to dllcuaa." thinp beve been building up. I "You aren't marriageable :=.e~" clean out a little material," Betty saJd to John. Lillian --....nted that "no "I can't make anyone ..., ..... ..., secure. Security comes from marriage la perfect. Nothing within,,, be antwered. la llaiJWI~ Wbet blve 1 riot to lose? Aid besldel, !'If un· dm!aM my children (mar- ried) betlor."l 6-ge aclrQllled he came becluae his wlle uked him to. ~ e li"lil"'IMUble IOd they waot to solve the pn>blems. In summarizing, with all the (!OUl>ll'~ together, the Rev. Mr. Crump aald, "Marriage is in trouble. But we're gettinl more serloua about the!e discasaionll and better at it. We're just beg:innlng o o • .. 1 ...... ............. The 1hlrd -wig In tile aeries, which Is open to the public, will tau place at 8 p,m. Wednesday, July 25, In tbe educa-1 building ol the Newport Harbor L u t h e r a n aiurdl, ~ Beach. 'lbe:re is a Sl registratk>n fee. WHY BE SHY ••• H •• C....iwt""' All AIOUT "' "'-CWI" Pl UCltmON PllCISI Pisces: Make Own ·Decisions s~r~s.JI L~~=~ 64f.:~04 TUESDAY JULY 24 about security. Know it and don't be too quick to blame outsiders. You may appea r reckles1 to older individual who is basically cooservallve. -~~~~ri. (w1:C:.'3or] nonsense and the beginning of don't alwa)"S want• what is m,:;.:': :.~:_;,r·~'( Jtl 1. 11rti It. • ,., .. An . aocomplilhmeot. Accept good for you. ~ ., .. Mkt. -nspomlbllity, Deal with ..,._ ,.,,. C:.. '4M104 C.prleorn,CuctraodTamqit;:=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::::::::=:="""==="'"=='=='="=._..==="='="='=: peraons. Find out . costs and 1, ly SY!>NEY OMARR I 1m receiving letters of VIRGO (Aug. 13-Sepl 22 ): lftiJe because, it ls claimed, I You may feel that efforts 11re have been aaytng ''nice being spread tOO thin. You thing.s" lbout Taurus. Taurus could be right. Key is to ex· natives have ·a soft spot for perirnent without wasting those who wor,k their way to assets. Saglttarlan plays role. the top despite odds. Taureans You learn and reach beyond are themselves determined , current limitations. stubborn and ean go to excess LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221: In eating, clr1nldng. You may be coooerned with ARIES (\lfare!l Zl·April 191: tho CJC<:U!t, wbat ls hidden or Find ~ ii of value -and obscured. Key now II to dig protect. W Learn what is for information. I)Q )'Olli own phony -"'!'I let rid ol lt. This personal checking. Be anre II time to pay and collect, to of details. Someone may be take stock and htventory. Be trying to tell yoo IOl!lethlng. practicaJ. Don't fall prey to , Listen and perceive. wishful lhlntlnc. Check with SOORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)' PilCel pel"IOl1. Think before you act, talk or ezplor< potentlal. PISCES (Feb. lt-Man:b 20): Ycu should cbooee belween quick ldeu and developed con- ceplJ. Don't permit othen to make chotoe for you. You can plclc what Is rJgbt for you. Ariel, Ubra peno111 are apt to be Involved. Best to finish rather than to beiln Jl<Ojects. IF TODAY IS Y·OUR BIRTHDAY you mUll - CINI ,mere -I Is con- ci!med. Awld undDe otraln; don't talk too loucl for ~ longed lengtha cl time. YOU are aenaltive, dram at i c , persuasive. attractive to op- po&ite te.x. November could be one cl your most significant months thlt year. You draw to you many peroons born under 'hv. and Uln. You usually get what you want but you TAURUS (April 21/.May 20 ): write. This applies no*' more Cycle is high -trust your O'A'J\ so than usuaJ. You could judgment. You have power on alieDate one important to your )'Olli" side. nmlng is sharp. welfare if careless. Know it lntultlve lntelled II oo target. and take steps to protect Penonal mapetilm flows. ,.....if, emotionally an d ~-~ ~~~ Gdlenrlae. -. Vlrp., _________ , =~-__ , ----J&NC_llim'e ~· cepla. I I SAGrn"AlllUS !Nov. 22-Rl~EMINI ~;= 2'l f Dec. ii.I;· 'tr key ~ yourael( ot> ~ stomlnl'ff'..-meaN take It cepta. Reluae to rry burden euy In relationships,. I n not really 'your own. You do ealin(. drinking, Jn bow you have life of your own to live. apprOaCh and sell. TaW'WI, Make that clear to individual Ubra and Sctrplo personi who """"" determined to play Important roles. Your domlna1uUte ~~ '"~~18n1t voice will tntrlgue. Member or r.so oo ---• ~po opposite aex pays meanlnglul Ylltt. • ~l CAM:ER (June Zr.July 22): . CAPRICORN (Dec. n:Jan~., ..... ~ Accent ii oo .....Uvity, sue-19): Ulnar aapect coincides cessfuJ prof e 1 s'I o n a I en-now with affair of heart. You dtavcn. Leo, A fl a a r I• s may have bltt~t (eeling. ponoos mll!ht fiJIUI< In Im-Whatever oocun i. Colored by ' . portant roles. Emphlsls ii on yeamln(, !Ooodn.<. for wbat romance, tnoWq-wbere your COuld or might baVe been. You heart be1qp11 and on showlog blve »me growing up to do IOted ooo ""' \II> lBlderstand. and now is good time for It. • LEO . (July IS-Aug. 22). AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb. --PU1A Obatac!es may emanate from 18): ?l113 is time f« bus:ineas, SI '-iraper family DMllll>er eoocerned flO'lciicallly, the end of ---"-- Good Investment News: BUY DIAMONDS FROM ESTATE, SAVE A FORTUNE : Nowa..n.bleforthepublic: line jewelry from ... en1 large estata at Costa Mesa Jewelry. SaTt 503. F.state jewelry priced for immediate sale. Invest now for unbelievable 60o/o savings. Wise iDVestrDeat opportuDity. Collection includes ·diamonds, rubies and eme.r8.ids~ ~Big invest- ment demand becausC of•increasi ng value and limited supply. Beautiful selection of ladies and men's. rings ·and watches. Elegant necklaces, bracelets and pins in gold or platinum. Priced from $200 to $10,000 ••. values to $20,000. Oat•f·Pawn jewelry-a great investment. Hundreds or· _precioua·and .:,.semi -preclous items now a~lable. Priees low as $10. ' Make SomeOae Happy with the perfect gift from Costa ?wfcsa. Je welry. Make a sou nd financial investment too. RA(;ITl'S .. ' . . E:rqu~it~ ~ttlium ntt1'l11ce IDitft 151 dlllmon'th. i;t,.~Jitd,dfop·(.! . .'iS '"(//'Ill~} rhniHtld "!I J7 "'1!/Uf!Utlf, llX bril- lio1114. 11111i dtfiruU rlioderlf •if .lfl nia,.... 111i~11,.11t1fian11n1dlf. 'ThlalA 11rer /!i krrnitt. ,~ /1<".IHH1 ruluc. l'rire rediuxd 111 IH.~l!I:!. COSTA MESA JEWELRY 1838 Newport Boule~ard, Costa Mesa, California 92627 714 /646-7741 'll>e newlywtdo, who will reside In nol1bem Calllomla, aregraduateaofOrangeC.OUt:l-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~"--~~~~~~~~- . . IO'lllt SAVE TO 79c A YARD Machine washable prints, solidt, and novelty cotton1 and cotton blends. 36'' /45'' widths. COllege. COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS SPECIALS FOR JULY 23 TO AUG. 4 BETTER·WAY GRANOLA ' (A4ftte '*" •• .,., ~~~~;~~·> .......... SPECIAL 69~ "° °'· 12'h lb•.> SPECIAL 1 59 Regul1r 1.19 . . . . . . . . . . • VALU ES TO $1.29 YARD 2~~100 SAVE TO 5121 A YARD Good selection of voile prints, ••sorted 1port1- wea prints and solids, assorted butcher weaves, m•ny, many more. VALUES TO $1.91 YARD MACHINI WASH c ..... 1-... 44"/41" .... • 111111 11111 SAVE TO 51" A YARD e MU L Tl-COLORED DESl!iNS e TEXTURED SOLIDS I VITAMI N E 200 1.U. -D'Alph1 ~':"~=~~~~;-.. : ..... SPECIAL 2.99 NATURAL ROSE HIP 150 mt'• Vit1m1n C VALUES TO $3.U YARD 100~. POLntnl MACHINI WASH.AILI 1r·1•r ww. 2'!0 • 250 T1bloll SPECIAL Retul1r 3.9S ......... NIACIN or NIACINAMIDE 100 mt'• 100 T1bl111 SPECIAL R .. ul1r 99< ......... .. Coastline Health Foods L11w HRh '41t IL TOttO 11'0. N&Afl: ftALPtt' ...... --· . . . . ~ ....... ~ -. ( -flle. S""b-0.:-. ~ f""i~ + b!tlclo 51i;~f' llHOUSE .oF FJJBRICS • always f ir.Jt quality f abrics 01•Attl'wh M ... - Or•11teth.,,.. •IMI H1rhet hl'91tM-IJ ... W4 H..., pt- 17tt. ·•-1ri. .. 1 ....... -l4J.Jlll ..... ,.,.c, ....... IA '•IM• •t St1ntof'I ---nt-61U H•rt.,._ C..1r -f4it1t•r 1t 111,ll 11"1., H1111th11t111 le1ch -lt1 ... IJ ..... .,.... _ 12111 lrookh•t•t l111wt .t• V111'1I -P .. 1141 ' ' ' ,, ~ •• ' • " •• , ,t • ~ • " • AMBLER I TUMBLEWEEDS H!:RE COMES MR. 11JM~LE WEEOS! H 11 COWl'OY ! ........ · "'·. by Dou9 Wiidey by Tom K. Ryan '<Ot!'Rf ~Am.V l\l?Nl1ERIN6 WHY IM IGNORING 'IOU ... DOOLEY'S WORLD 1 'M SOAR'{, SIR, BUT' ~ Po NO-r C5IW our l'MAr IN~'OON SALLY BANANAS f!l?Y, l\'1D feRSo-J, II>\ aN e'\k:/JaNTe<> PRwce . 1 I l ... " I I • ' ' I J 0 ··~·-·"'· 7-2.,·i----------GORDO r MUTI & JEFF , I MUTT, HERE'S THAT Sl>CTY I owe YoU! FIGMENTS ~ANCY DDAY'S CBDSSWDltD PUZZLE ACROSS 48 Rkh1rd tPllCll aound 5 Attrlbul• to 10 Hu1ry 14 Edible roo11toc:k 15 B1nl1h e E11t lndi.tl VIP 17 And other1: 2 word• 18 V1rl1Uon 20 e .. 1enu1t• 22 W 1rd1d olf ·23 Mo¥11ln1 CUfll'I ·2"4 Mov1d 1long 25 BlbUctl 111ounl1i'I 8 ForglVI 32 B1bylonlan deity 3 W1nd1r1r ':J5 No-.lum1I 1 011nd 6 "But don't b11 __ r. 8 Moved r1Pfdly · '40 Long n1rrOw groove -t 1 Coty 1nd Cl1lr . •3 011d1n. dormoua• AS Summ1r drink ' ooel 50 Wt1hout: French 51 Hindu deity 52 Reque11i!'lg 55 C1rrl•d Ol'I •rmed conlllct. 2·, wOrd& 69 Surveying ln1!rument 61 Ruined 82 Tim• of d•)r. Poet. 63 Lubrlcelor 64 God ol love es Po11111e1 66 Le!jll 11 South p1per1 87 Outdoor .-1rlcan coin 12 When gasr 13 United DOWN 19 Severs 1 Gell 2 1 A1l1n 2 F1mlli1r kingdoni l1rewell 24 Long- 3 Tul11'•-leg ged bird Roberie 25 Conclude Un •¥. premature!y .4 Monet1ry 26 Re1ume un it 27 P .. ce In 1 5 Ed11or row: V1r. 8 W•y• out 28 Stride• 7 ln11rum1n1 29 Aclor Lloyd 8 Ow1rl 9 Kl110ol 30.Corrod• Jackel 31 Hinder 10 Oftt.t110 end , 3' Min NeW Jll"llJ 37 Mllllll 6 The Ro1r1nt l,..;:n==tf~r',;.c111e,•-n~rn,,-",."rin•_ • " " 39 State!'!' wOmen 41 2 R1m1in ln11c:t 44 Nol tlnlld 47 Get--•"" 49 ContrWtine• 51 Deserved: #llormel 5e Air: Co111b. lom 53 Ol&C>l•Y 5 ' C•lllornil '"'" 55 Decettful trick Sa Had oe1 57 Soon ' 58 Allle1t1tlo~ 60 Recline by Al Smith FINE! ·-NOW I MAVE TWO DOLLARS IN 'PEtlltlllES --HOW MUCH MONEY AAV!< '>W GOT?· 114 BIU..5? by Dole Hale a by Ernie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS rr---........., ONLY ONE FLAVOR PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH • • C:::Hicl< Hilt! • i'C1 f"1l'ID ~T .IF 'ltlUR NAME I~ f ON IMl2C.IA15 f i~&.i9r ' i IA1llW~ ' ~11)11 l· • .,. .! ..II'!••., -n:.-- YQU PON'T HAVE 70 THINK o~e-ll<JO ... THee •. fOUR .• FWE ... s1x .•• ·: SEVE!j .• ~r. .. NOE"• "TEN ! by Harold Le Doux M.EAHWHU:, eETSV HAS CAl.l.ED RICK l-ASSLTER JUST W, HE WA5 LEAVING FOR nlE AIRPORT TJ40SE ARE THE I'LL RE.NT A CJ$. AND .JU5T TELL n\E I WAHT TO 60 AA.PP1E5T WORDS~ &ACK TO HEW HEARD IH A \...OHG YORK WTTH TIME, OARLING! VOU, R1CK! f!IE OUT THERE $ECURITY GUAAD · 500RTL'f ! ~T 'fOU'RE COMI~ 'TO GET Ms:! . ' by Mell £.1,.C::::l"~~~..;i.:;i.f'="~··~·~·~"~··~ .. ~··~·~-=:!::::!:::::!O:!:=:~!:!!:'.!!.!:~ by Chester Gould MANG ON, BOY ! Wl!'VE GOTITMADE! Monday, Jul7 23 1q73 DAILY PILOT J 5 • by ROCJer Bradfield r----r' WM,RW t>O ~E:Y' WAH1' AAS' 1b tsANN ABOlll' LIFE ... IN TM'-STREIEB ? by Charles Barsotti l.J?,ll. I GtJess IT'!> Q'\le o,:-TJ./o":ie S1Tuai!oN'5o ~HeRe t..>e. COUt.D BoTH Be RlGHT. by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson WE\!., l'TlS NICE ')t><J ,-..,,,,knJALLY c>..R J.GREEMENT HAVE />Jo4 IS Wrnl nlE ARI! AAREEMENT ABOUT DEPARTMENT. ';...-!<-. SOMETH/N<r,. WOW!! CM C()()~T TO ™Al.It) I'M oor ~Ill SCHOOL 48"! BJ;/ • by ROCJer Bollen -Il.J... Pl<OBABll/ 00 00\00 I!.\ HISTOO/ iS OlE Of T~E AU: TIME e#!Jl:r KWDE~~TEllE~/ THE GIRLS "Oh dear. so much for my resolution not to go anywbtte this sum mer-here comes the National Geograpblt." DENNIS THE MENACE f ,· .'._. ;;i ') q{ ~ '~ /lfJfT AU. OYEJl HIM '' • I I I I DAIL. Y ,IL.OT Monday, JulJ 23, 1973 I Think I Can Do It T his Year, Says Aaroll "You caa ttll tbe commlulooer that be didn1-lt,• Mid• lllll!lnc Alroo. "It Just *'"' to wn out (hat way," said Aaren / • run per nine at bats this aeuon. At that 700 sUver dollan In rel1r11 for Ibo bell. II ''pltcbera are still ~ mo Ibo same. pace 'be would Qnlsb the oeuaa with 44 ..., caplurod by ea 1&-yaar-<>ld AtlanUn, J ba,. to credit lhl 1'11' that bot behin4 and 717 career-wtse. ...__ bel n......, •-~ -..i n-.... If Alron IDAPf lhe record tblt 'fW, be Robert Winborne. me. ~-· ore -·1 --~ -- ATLANTA (APl -Wlth -home :it& No. 71lll tucked safely 1w11 In the T9oard boob, AtlanJa Braves aluggtr '.lfenry Alroa now beglllJ the countdown ">Wini that other magic number -714, ~ "I tbtnl(maybe 1 can® It Ulll year,:· Ille »yeal'<>ld Aaron said wb<n asked If lie oou1d break Babe l\Uth's all-time record of 71t. "'lbot'o the nm one he hit off me and It'll be t:be lutt'' uld lhe 24-year~d Brett, who captund bis nlntb victory o[ Iha -in Ibo Phlls' H come-from behind victory. Aaron 1111 after 211 yean ID the ma- jors, aoChflll 1Urprlaea binl any m>re but ad!11lt., "I Gidn't lhWI I'd have '11 home nm at thlrtlme. I lboo"'1I ab!>JH$ Would be right. I feel good tllouah, end saya be will ''honor his <.Ullract." He 11 "! waa glad It went Into the llands so a rell E,_ fOI h<R, I've llwa11 bad food In lhe second"}'tarol o---JIMI, ,llt•,BML.,Q!!l!~"tl!l•11>!WJ!~'IJ:.."..Jhlll!t~W!1!.J!!behlnd!!!J!!~me~. _ _. _____ _ calling for $200,000 annually, Aaron uld. ... ..,. M'""::," ,;:"'~ :• "J wanted lo have 700 before lht All· 'star break. I feel lhat 14 more this aaon lsn't impossible." ·· Alron connected for No. 700 Saturday "nlgllt A1liilst Philadelphia Phillies left. hander Ken Brett, depositing a 400-foot drive 10 rows deep into the left-center Oeld .stands at AUanta Stadium.. ~ Wise Gets ptartin g Call For. All-stars ' CINCINNATI -St. Louis right·hander lllck W~ will start for the Natlooal 'Leigue in 'I\iesdayis All-star game in Kansu Q1y. Clnelnnatl manager Sparky -announced Sunday. f Antlenoa said he plcbd Wise be<ause ;he wu well-ruled. "It was between Wile ind Claude Oslttn ol the Dodcen." )\nderwon oak!. "I went with Wiae :becaUM be bu had more rest." i Wile, 11-6. bas not pltclled since IJ{ednetday night when be lost to Sm ~ncisco. &-3. He has an earned run :everage of 3.10. ~ Anderson said he expected Jim "Cal· ~"' Html<r, I~, ol lhe Oakland lbleti<s to start for the American 1111"· Wise, 11-16 last year, came within me out ol getting bi.I ltCOlld~areer oo hitter .,against the Reds last month. On June 13, he missed a no-hitter when Cincinnati's Joe Morgan singled With two out in the ninth. Berning Wins .!'J wouldn't care Ir he hit fQUr home runs o1r me.'' said Brett. "As Jooa a.s I go In lbe re<:ofd book as winning." 1\vo other A8f'911 milestone home run!! came in losing games at Atlanta Stadium. He his No. tlOO of Gaylor Per· ry, then o1 San F>ancltoo, Ajl<U 27, lt7t and No. 649 -tbe one to pass Willie Mays -olf Philadelphia's Wayne TwilebeU oo June 10, urn. l'PI 11UJ Llrj!Qg , , "I'm using a 34-ouoce l>at , tlilame weight 1 was using when I was 80 years old." .. With his ba!tball llfe conttnulng strong at ~9. Aaron plaN to OX1Unue ·the aame ocbodule for the S,avea' ftlllaininC IO games. He will play only one 1ame of ,dotJbJeheadera, He is a&rTently averaptg one borne UP'I T ....... :1'.b.• oqJy lhinaJ ~Is lbal I "l'~..!lP ~.l!! and J he,. loo .. • -.,.., .,, '"" M "· ""'·"' • ·~ . )1,~~ t~t aliiliil)t.-1 Signed a COi> -but )'Oll-{811'1~ck iiM -wliiii you .:.-... ......... "'- trJ<; and Plan to Jive up to It." hit home runs." ~·=~J~~·1l!1t: !~ ~::V'-~:'t~::.,. Aaron just scoffs at the idea . that Aaron saya he is glad to "gel to I nice c~o. • • _ ...,,11 20, 1,,.., 11 l'N!...ip111 •• '" " pitchers are groovJng the l;lall for bim. round figure. Now I can start counting •t:.,.""1i -:::.r,: ••· 1,.., 11 ,.11.m .. "' Mlk• ''The baJ) ( hit, out Of. the park fOF'700 down. M<C_Kk,..... ·- • WJS a bad pitch. It was low and lnslde "I know that I havM't felt any ,.:::y,~,,..J.:· 'fn. •1 ,.,,.., .,, a.yttrd • and I· fust got enough bat 00 it."' pressure yet, but when I get to 713 I aui>-~~ °M!:iW~:.=tt:: ::::; For the tan who caught the covefed N9' poae that's wben the pressure will start." "' 1t1t •IMltnt ...-. ..J.. 700, the Braves ma~ement 1a~ lft)"", The native ol Motiqe, Ala., says the Plll~,:111;_ Jutr "-1'~ •1 .a.nant" "' Ktn ,,.,,, . , Winkles · Welcomes . Break,: Says. Halos Will: Improve .... ' ' "I hope that's our slump for tt>e year." ' said caurorrua manager Bobby Winkles "if it's not, we're in a lot -of trouble." The Mge1s suf!ered their lot.h loss in 14 pmes Sunday evening when the Baltimore Orioles blistered them, 8-2, at Anaheim Stadium. "We .tried ... ju.st got beat," WinkJes said by way d qplanation. "We're not a slrmg physical team anyway and fatigue hiJ: c:caught qp wl.tl;t us. l'JJ) glad we're A,..ers Slate All ...... M IUll'C mt1 J111y it c11uom111 °11 Tt.ue 12i · July 21 c1111orni. 11 Tuts to within a game and a hall ol tile New York Yarurees In the East "We're in dam good position," swn- med up Orioles manager Earl Weaver. "We have a lot of games Jert agaJnst clu~ like Cleveland and Texas in tM sec- ond half . ., Robinsoo belted a two-run homer off loser Rudy May, 7-8, in the Sf!C'pOd inning and highlighted a five-run 'Baltimore uprising In .the fourth with 1 bases.load- ed, two--ron single. He drove in his firth run of lhe night in the fifth inning, following a triple by Don j Baylor. Jim Palmer, IH, _, II with a eight bitter.· • Robinson and Paul Blair will reprMMt Baltimore at Tuesday's All·star game in Kansas City. , l Two walks and an error preceoeq Robinson's two-run single in the fourth and Mark Belanger drove in another with a single. Angela reliever Dick Wge forced over two more with bMes loaded walks to Blair and 'l'ommJI Devis. Bill Grabarkewllz paced the Angela at· lack with a homer -his third -and a · single. J11ly 11 C•lllornl• •f Kt111ft cl" Jul• 2' C.Utornl• ,, IC1nM1 c11., (7) l:SS p.m. 2:l5 p.m. 11:2! it.m. 11:25 ........ getting three da)is oU ·with the All-star break.." Nips Crampton by One The defeat left the Angels in a fourth place tie with Chicago .in the American League West, seven games behind front- running Oak1and. It.also dropped them to the .500 level with 48 wins.and 48 losses. I Doubted I'd Win Again, Winkles believes the Angels will be an improved clull1 af~t'lh;e AU-stat bre~. 'Ibey resume l""llle elay .'l'lll1rsday nlght ... 'in Texas wit:& a doUWe-.beader against the Rangers. Admits Relieved Littler "I feel we'll be a different team in ST. LOUIS (AP) -Gene Littler looked Texas," Winkles said. "We'll have three as if he didn't know whether to laugh or days lo think about IO losses in 40 games cry. He settled for a big sign of relief as and if this team has" any pride and a broad smile spread acrGS.1 his pale, while Littler birdied the bole with a 15- foot putt. It was a two-stroke swing in LilUer's favor and put him In the lead to stay. ROCHESTER, N.Y. -Susie Muwell Beming celebrated her 32od birthday diunday by winning her third U.S. rWomen's Open go 1 r championship, shooting an evtn-PU 72 foe a 72-bole score of 290 -two over par. BALTIMORE'S OON BAYLOR SLAMS INTO BILL GRABARKEWITZ. character they'll try to improve. If we usually ezpresslonless face. don't we'll conUnue on ·oor downward "When you do something you believe Trevino, declining to discuss the in- cident with newsmen, obviou!ly was bothered by a photographer who scurried across the fairway whlle he was ad- dressing the ball on the tee. He becked off but put bis drive under a tree to the rigbl, bad to play the nen one !ell band-· ed end put it in a trap. ,, Mrs. Deming, tile defending champion. fwho allO won the ()pea in lMI. finished ;rive strokes ahead or Gloria Ehret and ;sJielJy Hamlln. Reds Dealt Blow flight. you could never do again, il's got to be a "But I think this team bas character great thrill," the 43-year-Qld veteran said ... I've felt it all along." after his emotioo~harged victory in the Winkles felt only misery Sunday as the St. Louis Children's Hospital Golf Classic Orioles, with Brooks Robinson doing Sunday. t Mis.t Ehret posted • filtal-round 71 :,on the par-7%, &-120-yard Country Club ~ RoChester course. Miss Hamlin shot · :• 74. N(J).~:Rest fq.r..-Russ~l~··,·:·;~:;, · most of· the dam8~, ripped hi~ tealn !pr , His fma}-round 68, ~ under par on .~JQird time~Ull.tour~ame~s.: ,_ the ~t,~. ~~~· •¥0Jls" ~tr)': .•. -Rolilmon -...c!,~ ~homer,of , Club ""-'• ti&iled;,-doWn • .hl.\" 1lnl the year a11d added a-jialf;OI sirlg!d drfv-, tnumph 81nce .cancec•lhtealemdctJol·only ing in five nw and bOostink the Orioles · his career bUt his Ure just-16 months a,o. 'Le Cle Triumphs INGLEWOOD -The favored entry of ~:.Le Cle and Pallisima finished l·Z in a i 1tirring finish Sunday in the $83,650 •Beverly Hills Handicap for fillies and ; mares at Hollywood Park. He's Headed for KC ; Jockey Bili Shoemaker got the 4-year-I old Le Cle home by one length over r Palli!ima. rldden by Lafflt Pincay Jr., ' while Convenience with John Rota up, the fhird beUing dloice, WU third. '!be seo- ond faYOrite -Mblltral Miss -was •• fourth in the field ol nine. ~ ,,,. winning entry pald 15.80, 16.20 ad ; $2.80 and Coovenience peid $3.60 to lbow. i Donohue Breezes , ; , WATKINS GLEN, N.Y. -Mark Donohue, moody and apparenUy uptight from numerous frustrations this yeJr. • Overwhelmed a select neld Sunday to win the 175,000 Can-Am Challenge Cup race at Watkins Glen. The 3&-year-old Donohue, showing only one major triumph on bis record aller putting ~ .. !300,000 aealOO lut yoar, .. domlnated the third Cllltlnc of the rich road radn periea tlmt be led ~ginbothl~e...,,...mof tbenoce. Record Equaled • SIENNA. Haly -U.S. Olympian Rod htilburn equaled his world record time of 13.1 seconds in the 110-meter hurdles at an international track and field meet Sunday. Milburn established the record at Zurich, Swlturland, July &. SimpsoQ. in Hospital BUFJ' ALO -The Buffalo Bills of the National Football League disclosed that t~ir star running back, 0. J. Sim pson, entered a hodtrital Sunday ror treatment of a suspected viral infection. It was expected tbal Simpson would re- main in Buffalo General Hospital for about two days. ST. LOUIS (AP) -The Loo Angele• Dodgers dropped their second game in a row, losing 5-4 to St. I..oula Sunday, but received more important news from Cin- cinnati. There it was learned that Clncinnati shortstop Dave Coocepcloo hod broken his ankle and that Dodger Bill Russell bad been named to the All-star team to replace him. That meant that Rtwell, who has played almost every inning for the Dodger• Sla te All ·-M tc.,; (.-J Juty 26 lotowton •I Los A"'11t~ JUiy 11 .._ton If lM Alloti.t JulV • Slit Frandw:o 1t La A,....W. Jlill'f 2' ~ f!"MCll(fl .t Lot ......... 1:,5 p.m. l :1J P·'"· ''" p.rn. l :.U p.rn. Dodgera this year, will not get the rest he planned over the three-day All-star break Mooday lluwgh Wednesday. "l'm'-happy naturatly," Russell said when told ol his selectiM. "But I bad planned to go home and rest so It's a change of plans." But the in.Jury also seemed lo deal a blow to lhe Reds' pennant chances. Loss of the .287 hitter with 46 runs betted in can not seemingly help ClncinnaU u it battles to overcome tbe Dodgers' 5in: game lead in the National League West. The ~ have only 63 games to play after the All·•lar break and C:OOC.pcion, who will be replaced by vtWan Dorrell Qlaney, will probably miss most of them. The Dodgers took a 4-2 lead-Into the bottom ol the eighth Sunday, but two doubles and two singles off relief ace Jim Brewer and an error by Willie Davls in center led to three St. Louis runs that won the pme and put the cardinals in fint place in the Natiooal r.ea,.. East Bernie carbo'1 grGWld·rule double into Ashe~ Connors • : BROOKIJNE, Mass. IAPJ -Veteran In their first sel. Ashe broke :Arthur Ashe will meet young Jimmy Graebner's service in the seventh game :.Connors tonight In the finals for singlea after tbe New Yorker had sun1ved thrte 1CompetiUoa in lhe r1iD-delayed $60,<XKI · ;U.S. pro tennis championships. btUk polnta earlltt. AJ!le hod ~ 1et1 , Ashe, the No. z IOfd ln the toumamtnt, defeau.n, Graebner. gained Ille champiooship round Sllnday "ll ahva11 aeems to be the same end- -be tllmlnated Qarl< c-., &-3, Inf," Graeboer said of Ashe. "! pl17 'I°" t:cn.s, a :JO.year-old former UCLA well, but then be bli.ts ....,. bl1 ibota tenall player, advanced In Sunday's and wins IL" the centerfield seats drove in Ted Sim· mons with the winning run. Simmons had reached second when Davis misplayed his two-run single. Had Simmons been held on first, he oould have only taken , third on ca.rho's hit. "I tlloogbl the only bad pild> ~rewer made WIS 00 tbe sinele to Ted SUanott wlllcb was the lint bll ol the inning," Dodger manager Walt Alston Mid !liter. "The ones to Joe Torre and Simmons were screwballs right. down there." Alston said be welcomed the All·slar break. "We loot like we're a little tired," he Mid. "I don't know whether we're not used to the beat 0< what." Whatever Alston's worries, however, , they're not ·as big as CincinnaU manq:er , Sparky Aodenon's. 0 Q)ooepclo0•1 injury js ml roini. lo slow us down," he vowed for the ~am wblcll bas _, 18 ol lti last 23 games. "'if it does, w.e're not a very good team." U. 1 MttMli 1•1 11. Le91t"'p) •llrlll'lll •rll1111 LOCIH, :zb 4 1 2 O llrocl. Jt 4 I I t , hl:kntr, If • 1 o o Sit~· ft 4 I 1 1 Mo••·ll'll 1 111~ ........ H1to11 Ir-. p o I o FoAtwa. p I t o o Jolln., ' 0 • • Stout. • • • • 0 Wti.•ls.ef 3 It MtMnlel',pll 1 1 't irtt~ t .5 I t Hr•tie.ty, t 0 O t O WCrwwford. rf , I • Tor .... :a 4 I I 0 ety,pll l 111$........,.._.,IC 4112 c;..,....,., 111 .5 0 • C.rtio, rf ' 1 3 1 McMullei, Jll S 1 1 JCrvr, ef 4 o 1 1 R111s.tll, ... • t 0 T\llOl'I, u 3 I O a ~mlttl p, 2 1 O Cs.wl1fld, p I I O t P-c:lwttl;, II 0 II 0 pwyttr, Ph 1 t O O R•ltl. a 1 I t t • Tot1l1 II I J Tot11J :P S f S L• ,.,_.la 100 !CO 020 -4 St. Loltft • 000 011 Oll: -J IE -MCC.rwt, CI r llo, C'-"'ftnd. MftHrSmltll, 9rock, W. DnU. LOt-l.Of Arlo.tft IL It, LllN .5. 2a-v.t:M111i.,,. J. Cnu, T°""-C•r"- 1,. N R •It 11 SO M ... _mlttl 'SJ21• llr-L,+t 2/)42101 Jolln 11200101 Clt!'l'lllnd ' .5 2 1 .J I FOi~.-. 1VJ22 111 .5IQVI W. ~ 1/)' l II t 1 I Hrtbotlly I 0 0 0 t 1 S.--..+rtbMtt'( r. \-2r1'. ~1"1'J, Clash ... said alter his match with Richey, "I "''"' frelil and rtlued ... ' EarUcr in lht day, Ridley had a dlf· ficull tlme in a quarterfuial motch .wlth third-ranked MaflY Ill-. llnafljr win-ninC M, 1-' and l-'. 0.-, bad 10 easier lime with ~ Did: Stoett· ton, w1minc M, M. .>... .>... .>... "A year ogo I didn't know if I'd ever w H ~ again be a tour player, let alone win a l •ltl.....-. ff) Ctllfltnll• ltl ,., .. ...,, 111 r 11rt11 lll:tllll'lnd, rt ' o 1 o Alonwr, u S o 2 o Grll;h, 2b 5 O 0 0 8wry, ef 4 0 2 0 llSl•lr, ef ' o o 1 McCrew, If • O 1 1 TO.vi .. dll 2 1 1 l FAoblntOlli 1111 A 0 0 D EWllll1m1. lit 3 I a a AOll-..r, lD ' 0 0 0 111ylor II 3 J 1 o Stinton, rf • O a o •• ~• ' Slesili.,,IOll. c 3 0 0 0 ...... nt.on. lb ' 2 3 5 Gell1gti.r, lb 2 a 1 o l!:lc"-Ollr1111, c 3 0 O D Mto!I, lb l o o o et11,...,-, II ' ' I I GrOllwtl. 211 l 1 2 1 P1lm.r, P 0 0 0 0 llMI'(, p 0 0 0 0 l.Mq9,p 0000 11"'*'· p a o o o Mlltgl,ll:IQ, p 0 0 0 0 ' . tot• lJ I 7 I ToltS. 3" 1 I I 11111,,.,. • .. 510 000 -• C.lllornY 000 OIO · !GO -2 E-Gr•blrtlWfL ~lfllrnle I. LOll-attllmort A, Clllforflll 10. 211-8wry ........ yb>. HJl-4. Rob- lrlto11 7, Gr•blrllwtt l. 5.......,..,.. $-flifrY. IP' M a IJI. aa SO PllP!ltf" W, 11.. • I '2 ~ • S JI. ,..., L..... l ' • s l 1 L""Ot 2/l 1 1 I . 3 2 lllrtlrr 3 l/J 2 I 1 0 1 Mlltvude I 0 0 O O I HIP4Y' Mn1;11do l:h:MtllrTM. .. lk-A. Mty. T-J:lf. A.-11,7.U. tournament," Littler -said. He had to make an eight-foot par putr on the final hole to hold off Australian Bruce Crampton, the season's leading money-winner who boosted his total to more than $240,000 with a second-place finish. Crampton had a rmaI 67 for 269, one back of LltUer's total. Bert Yancey, Bob Goalby and Lee Trevino weie neJ.t at 271. )'ancey had a 66, Goalby ' 71 and 'Trevino blew to • 7% after running afoul of a photogra_pher. Goalby, a former Mmters chamPlon, crept to within a slng)e stroke before maldng what he called "a couple of stupid bogeys" on the 16th aM 17th holes. Trevino had a one-stroke lead when the day's play started but bogeyed the third ·He altiO bogeyed the sevenlli and Lit- tler, !lnil!d 'rf,'lilttliig an lion wll!lin two yardl o(ttb{ cup: -it·.W&s another two- stroke sWinj am Trevino was out of It. '!be highly popular Littler, now 43, soored his Jast previous tour victory in the 1971 Colonial Natiooal lnvit.llon. That was the 24.th of .a career lhat also includes a U.S. Open triumph. But many thoug)lt ii was his last when ~arly I~ Ye&!' he was dia~ as hiv- ing cancer of the lymph nodes. He un- derwent surgery under his left ann, the operation damaging muscles and ,nerves needed in his swing. But the plucky Littler, even now pale and drawn, started on a reblbWtaUon program -IWinuning, weighlliflini. es- erdset:, eventually swinging a ctub. Lttdrll .cor-. and ll'IOnlT w!nnlllP 11t lf'le $210.llXI Sf. Loula Chlldttn'I tap!NI Golf CJeMk: Gent' Llttllr, M2.000 Ina Cr.~ SD.HO Lee Trtvll'IO, '11,1311 .. Goefby, tll,130 a.rt 'l'll'la'Y, •11.1• Miki WyM, M,27' J im Ftrri•ll, U ,21' Tom Wtbon, "6.Vt Hui.rt Gr...,, M.21' Tom 511.iw, M.27' Din $Ike&, ll.'90 Dorl 8!ts, 13.9'0 G•'I' II,_,., t3,t90 JIM J•mlnon, •U,'90 JUUi.it loroa. a .M K~lt z,rlty, s:i.M John khroedw, nm Rlk MaeMnult. 13.W Cllrll llocklf"r S2.ll5 Jotllt IMhlfft'(u:..m Bob Mtirplty, Rod C11r1; UASI Tomntr ,,.,on, $2.o!I DI-.. Stoc.klOll, UAISI MtMn RIH!Olpl'I; SI.SU J. c. ~. $1,JIS Don 1-..rt.on, 11..!IJ MK Mtleftdoft, II.SU GIN Pl1yer, 11.JIS ~ JOF!Mofl, 11,JlS Htlt Jrwln, 11,27l O.w G1en1., ll,27l Lff Eldtr, $1J7l GltlbV GH""'1, $1 .173 OW.. Ardltf, llAJI L.11"1Y HI"'°"' 11.G51 llllkh ••lnl, 11..olt lunkJ HMN. 11.GY Ageless Musial Still Harasses All-star Pitchers ST. LOUIS (AP) -Slan ''The Man'• Musial hammered two d0uble1 ad scored fwo runs In lead!llj( the Natlonal wgue to .: 7<1 victory over the American League in an All-star same reunion Sunday. Musial, wbo appeared In 24 All-star games, drove in Dick Bartell and Pl11l Cavaretta during a four-nm uplOllon tn !be first inninf ad doubled home Bartell a/!liII in the leCOOd ol their Old-Timer's 0.7 games. '!be American Lellllt". which Md ·1 lineup lncludlDC Hall ol Fame star Joe !>IMacP>. coUecled on1y two hfta oil Ila! Scbunlacber, Qirt Simmons and Rd>in --J. llz.bit Naticinal te-ailact lloo • --~ ~finib ~by downln1 OfllHKded Qlll • Gnlelx!er, who ts allO In the 'l'll!Clnl '9---.KlcboJ.....,._&-3.---bulineu.-eoatitwtd< · "Clark It one of Ille 1trongest players "! couldn't he disappointed.,! worked Comm. wbo bas never pla7'Cf the 3t). ye&Nlld Aahe, fained lnotoaLreooplllon In lht tournament Wilen he ellmlriated N<> I t<ed Stan Smit~ In lhe Openina Included -~~· Kin Jloyw and lied t1le Ill- er llellii!titi'ili' cumnf nia-. Fifteen of !be tO participants in tbe and can blow you Qff the court when he's like hell ror a change otter,. Couple of ln· playing "'ell,'' A$he said, "But tgalnst different ye8rs, and nevP.r expect~ to me, for IOl'flC rea!Oll, he trits to preu get to the semls. but there was Arthur and tGOllht he made four om>f'I, then I ageln." m11de wfnnlng shot.I. Connon. wisetdt.d ht the 1oumamcnl. I ' . -. . ' . . - round last Tuesday. · In doubles play, Stan Smith and Erik vAn Dillen will mttt Rleaen and lsm&e.J El Shale! ' ~T ........ 111.ftllT_YJtfUSl!f CO'aRSJiEAO DURING 8llEAJC IN TENNIS MATCH. • • , thr*"innlng game were members el the Inaugural Amerlaul W ... Ind NaUooal League All·star teams In a 4·1 game WOil by tbe American Wp •t Qilcaao In mu. • • , M-. July 2J, 1913 o.<JLY PILOT J7 Concor d -Nabs AAU Polo Crown 'lbe ordel" ol finish .. u • clupllcato ol Jut ....,.. as Concord A -the AAU na· tJooal outdoor wattt polo cbamplooslllpe Sunday • t Newport Harber mg11. Concord A dllpooed ol run- nerup, De Anza, 7... In the i-~ ... dlampionlblp-pme, and the NlMA A team dumped Pbillipo A ol l.ooi Beach, lM, for third placo. Earlier in the day, Concord dlspooed of Phillipe, H , and De Anza nipped NIMA, 5-4, to Alamitos Racing En bi es CINr a l'•t. l'lt'lt P-' 11u '·"'· l'IRST aACI -a .,.n1 .. t .,.., olds. AllowlllCI. I"-$1,700. Cit HOUH (D. C11liol:1) 117 FIYlno Minor (J. CW.\'ff) 117 Tff1.Ml1 (IC. H1rtl 117 P1IQ11ln (0. Mon-Ill 120 Flr•t ao (J. w1rdJ ltt Dupllc:•ff Win (J. '"'-hucl•l 117 S11111r IM Sor• (II;. !11nt1;1l 117 ( DlltJ "'"' '"" ........ .., ·~ KMtlllr Mltsollcl llloc:kll (L. Wrlglll) 117 Jwp JMO IS. TfHMKll 117 DE ANIA'S DOUG HEALY (51 REACH ES FOR BALL IN AAU POLO TITLE GAME. ,• 'San Clemente Wins Twice; Westminster in 2-0 Win San C1emente B swept a the game. • ", "'!. ' . f t . 11CONO •ACI .,.... 110 y1rd1. 3 yeer okh, Allowan<.1. hnl 11 AOO. Siil!"' Lulu IS. T ... -91 117 SUl'ltlltl'll Rockett. IC. Sm""I 117 FlM H Fll'ICY (II:. (1111k1) 117 Like 1 F...itier ID. Ctrdolal llA ~ (J. Wtrdl 11• Olk ,.,, Go (0, Knigl!IJ 117 TNIRO llACI -'10 y1nlt. 3 ¥Hr l*t• &. up. c .. 1rn1no. Pun1 12.• Cl11mlno Pl'ICI UJOD. Chu:lll't Ill-(J. 0r.., ... 1 113 Md9lw ctt. Mrr11l 1n Ultll MIM 8111< (J, Rlc:Nnhl 117 ldlhD Go CJ. W1nll 111 Orie 1ftd Onl'f {0. Kniqlll) lit Pll'!elmelr (II:. llAfllul lit Ml '"" (L.. WrlPll lit l'OURTM •A.Cl! -«IO \llrdl. 3 yur o1c1 .. Cllllmlng. l"un.e Sl.IOO. C\almlno prk1 U.S00.1 Afton 81r Lotti (II;. Ad1lrl 117 F1rldliol'99 (D. C1rdor.l ltt Echo Too (L. Myles) ltt Hilddl h YDU (D. Mon11) 117 Rora! P1r1d1 IJ. ll:lct..rd1) 122 tel up the UUe pmo. F....,.,. Nowport Harber 11a7' Etlc Lflldrotb and NlMA standout Mil<• Martin ol ConJoa def Mar were llJllOlll II playe" selected for the World Games team which will compete ln Belgrade, Yugoslavia later·this summer, and a11. NI.MA awimmen were invited to attend the World Student Games tryout camp wblcb begins today at the Newport pool. The 11% included Guy AnUey, Jim Kruse, Jack Dickmann, Bruce Black, Scott Newcomb and Boyd Philpot , all from UC Irvine. Kruse acored five Umea and Dickmann added (OW' more as NIMA dotloed the Phillipa ieom in the third place game Sunday. NIMA held a 3-2 edgo throo&h the llnt hall, hilt scored 11 Umes ln the second half to pull away. Black had two goals. Newcomb Martin a,.t Bob Nealy scored °"" iocb for NIMA while Undroth sCOffd once for Phillips. Dtckmam soored 1wice ln the NIMA·De Ania game as the NIMA team took a l-2 lead Into the final quarter be.fore losln1. De Am.a tallied twice In lhe final 2:28 for the vic- tory. Lindroth and G a rt h Bergeson of Corona del Mar both had goals In Phillips' W· ly loss to Concord. ln the champlOlllblp game, Coocord 's Doug Artb aocl Peter Asch had five &oalf between them 11.0d De Ania's John Gebers scored three limes for his team. Asch, Arth and teammata Pete Schnugg, Jon Svendlea and Joe Shlnahan were named to lhe World Gamel team as wu Jlm Fft"IUDl and John Schmit ol De Anu. and Jim Slaton and I'll YelQo vie ol Ph!Ulpa. doubleheader from Fountain ' Gates stole home for Valley to wind up its· .another nm and Fi.sher and American Legion base b a 11 Stavro each bad'rbi hits in the season and Westminster tuned outburst. up for J>O*seu:in play with a Fountain Valley loaded the 2-0 victor)' over the .. Fullerton-bases ln the sillih on an emir AIJtiels 'id ai;tlon Sw1'1ay. 1 ahd a pair Oi,walb and Gary I • ~ g ~::;~(rj.T~!~)11 ;~ CONCORD'S GREG ARTH t3) FIRES A""SHOT OVER DE ANIA PLAYER AT NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH. •IPTM IUCI -no y11'l11. l YI..-__ :..::..:.:..::.:_:::_::_:..::..:..:_:..::.:_::.:_:.::_::__:.__::..:_ _ _:.:._ _____________________________ _ San Clemente B felled Fo<lll-Jordan then singled to end the taln Valley, M. and 5-3, in shutout. games at San C1emente. Roger Sailor's f I et d e r ' s Mission Viejo, meanwhile, clx>ice also brought home a "won by forfeit from Tustin. run with an error on a ' Jerry Nel~n triggered four· grounder by Fox allowing the • ru(l innings In each game as final run of the inning. San Clemente B recorded 3 Westminster, which opens ~pair of wins to end the ~ tournament play against on a ~game Wi.Mmg Placmtia tonight in the , streak. Fullerton toomament, got a , With his ream trailing 4-2 In strong pitching performance . the fourth Inning o1 the first from Ken Loomer In posting game Nelson reached base on its• win over Fullerton. -t an error, and Ov~ lin&lef.later l:.bomer gave up singles ln •·the ·-weno in /riiol .jo the fourth ·and sixth inninp, -cstay. "·Pat .Hayden, Mr and struck out>flve In going Fisher Keith Man: and M"lke the distance for the vtctory. .·stavro' all bad run:;producing Westmin!ter gave Loomer • bits in the Inning. he onJ be ---•~ · ... ~r. Fountain Valley bad erased 1 Y run 1~ m un: t third bring when s c 0 t t o:a 2-0 deficit with 8 wo-run Bradley led off with a single homer by Dennis Tressler In f, ibe third inning, and took a and Tim Richards scored him 'short-lived lead when Dean with a twC)o()Ut double. .~i'ox and Bob Hardman singled Loomer singled home Dave "home -··· 1n the fourth. Twiss with an insurance nm in ::; San '""'Ctemente coach the eighth inning as Marshall Adair Used four dil'· Westminster e n d e d the ':!. ferent pi.t.Cben in the second regular season with a record a:game u Fountain Valley was of:~· Mission Viejo and ··limited lo two bits and a w . ente-• In three-nm outbUnt in the siXth estnllnster are n:u the An a he i m Invitational :~~n sing1ed, stole two .tourney whicb starts Tuesday. 'l:Sa9es and 9e0red on an error Mis.sion Viejo is slated for a 7 to get San Clemente started in p.m. game at La Palma Park •a four-run second inning ~ and Westminstef plays in the ·which proved the difference in nightcap. • ........... OD! 000 01x-I SICOND GA.Ml Sin CM"*'ff II (I) ... Fllhlr, cf.lb II' 0 Z1noftl, p.cf ' 1 Plr1, p O O Marr, c 4 O Miki St111ro, lb-lb 4 0 J1nlan, U"fl 2 0 J . Ntt_, 2b 3 1 G111$, II 2 1 P. Netltlfl, rf 2 I 5Nnkll, 3b 1 0 Htvclitn. »o 2 I Tot•I• U J l'-.t1lll Vil,_., {JJ ... 2 • ' . ~ g ' ' 2 ' 2 ' 2 ' • • • • • • " ' Sc.. •f lllfllllP ' ' ' 2 ' . 2 ' ' 2 .... ~ ~ • • • • • • I i ~ g l ~ . ' .... ' ' l ' ' ' ' 2 v g i I ' . •• . ' . ... ' ' ' . . ' ' ' i ~ ' . ' ' . ' . ' ' . ' . .... : ' g : . ' ' . ' . . ' : ' . ' 2 ' ' .. S.n Cl-•t 1140 ooo 0-s 7 ' Fwnt1l11 V1ltev 800 OCll D-3 I I olds & uo. Allow1nc:1. l"lll'M 13.500. Lltlll W1r Chic: IR. Ad1lrl Ill tnky'1 A,.! (J. Rlcherft) 117 Fourth Mocw1 fD. K1119htl ltt Spllt TN (I(, Hirt) lit Hoor Cllel"OI fR. hnbl 122 •-llar l•bY ID. Mon11J 111 Nifty Notl (S. TrnWAJ lit Grlv O.~ (L Mvtlll 111 Sir Mu.-(0. Canloul 112 Mr. Eskimo (C. Smllftl 119 AIM llllflMI Roc:klmon1 (S. TrHIUrtl 117 Mor~ ll:ockll (E. O.rul 119 SIXTH lllACI -3'0 y1rd1. 3 y1ar ol6I a. 1111. Oelml~ PurH $1.:klO. Cl1lmlng prlc1 M.000. Sir NO!Md tL.. WrlgMJ 121 Hy &ound (D. knlvl'll) lit Mr. k1111ty Cheroe (J. W1rdl lit IN. UPHI CD. Mon'lll 1lt 81111'1 Rlldl<" (S. Tr .. ""1!) tn 0.., Tonto CC. Smith) 119 TM C-1 CO. Clf'doUJ 111 Af*ihl ,. • ........, (II:. ••i.lu) lit ... ...,,. RACI' -. G yll'ft. S \llw ... • up. FlW. " ,,,.,..., An--1. ,.~ 13,jDO. Thi-... ,,,....._,__ UOht SN W1• CS. TrHIUrll l lt Miu 0oo WM (II:. llnbl 111 JudV'• Wcinder (II:. Adl1rJ in Flllnll'l(I GofflCM (J. W1rd) 111 Slrocl (K. Hirt) 1'Z2 l"«kllu (D. C1rdoi1l 11t Air Coolfd IL. Myles) 111 Prl11 Kl"MI (L., Wrlgtrt) 12'.J l'IOHTM a ACI -«ICI Yll'llL I yur ol(ls &. uP. c1•1mlng. Pune Sl,toO. c111m11111 Plic• 12.500. Tip Shnt (0. Clrdoll) l!:oc:klt Diii Jr. (II:. Adlh1 Achef11W (J. Rk:h1m) Z)llYMQO (S. Tl'llSUl"ll SI-tl'le v.-(J. Dr..,.,) Fl1$1t Allrl (0. Knl!ilhll llrlldsllck (J. W1rdl TOP Stint (C. Smith) '" m "' "' ,, 1\f '" "' "' NINTH IUCI' -«IO y1rcll. I Ytlr oklt a. yp, Ctal,..,lng. l"urw $1,1DO. Clllmlng ~ SIMG. T!ilplng ll1n (G. PrntlOeg} 122 II«* Mood IC. Smith) 111 Fllet king Horft {II:. Adtlr) 119 Oo!llKI loy (J, Wtrd) 122 RCllllcklng Roc:Ji (J, 0....,ef'I Ht Al1ml!01 Sleop ID. Knlih!I 122 Gomer J-(L. Wright) 1n Ttnifk'1 Cowtiorr (J, Rldllrdt) 122 H1y1ku (It. ll1nU) Ht Go Miity JOI ($. Tl'NIUl'tl lit DEAN LEWIS TOYOTA VOLVO Baseball Standings GAS SAVERS •u Nov• SS V.f, 1uto-1.-.. R/l'I, poworr N. CX"f4'1 ' $977 •ff COf"GM Coupe ....... .,...., ......... , ~~ ..... If' IYCUlU I , ''$1477 1 7 0 c.,.. 4 °"°'° A1tle. 1,...., , ............. U•MODJ $1277 '7th\aftttl 4 Door u.. .,...... ,.... ....., ("'90(1 $1577 'ffC.-..Cll ...... y--.--... --an•1•11r1 ..i. W .....,, ITOLml $3277 AMERICAN LEAGUE East D!vlsloa w L Pct New Yort 57 « .564 Baltimore 51 41 .554 Boston 52 « .512 Detroit 49 48 .505 Milwaukee 47 49 .491 Cle .. land 35 63 .357 w .. 1 D!vlsloa oat1and 56 42 .571 Kansas City 55 46 .545 r..n-49 47 .510 Alll"ll 48 48 .500 Cbicqo 4t 49 .51111 ruas 34 61 ,358 ...... ,.. °"'* 111111,.... .. Mllltl 2 C~ ... NIW YWll :t-1 Ml,__. 10. ...... 1 "-• CltY 1, MllRulttlt J Olk!W S. C....,_.wid I Tllllt 4, DtfNlt I, 11 I ...... T ...... _ -.. __ --....... Mflll "' ~ Cffr, NATIONAL LEAGUE Eut D!vlslo• Gii w L Pct. GB SL Louis 51 45 .531 11' Cblcago 51 46 .526 II 21' Pittsburgh 46 48 .469 4 6 Pblladelphla 48 51 .474 5~~ 71' Montreal « 51 .463 6\1 :1>1' New York 42 51 .452 71' WtOIDM1ioo o.q.n 63 ~ .630 11' Cincinnati 57 42 .576 511 8 ~Frandsoo 56 43 .566 61\ 7 Houston 52 50 .510 11 7 AUanta 45 57 .441 19 ZOii San Diego 33 65 .337 29 ---St, LcMtS,.,,...,., l"lttrtM'llll 1-tS. Safi DI ... 1-1 1"1141....,._. W. AlllnlFo S.I Sll'I Fl'lfldtco 4 Olkl90 1. ll IMI"" ClflclMMI t. MOnffMI t ,._ Ylf1l .I. "'"*'" t --Nes-Arf ... --Alkftr ....,. ft..._ City, Rustlers; Bu cs Top Foes Gordon Blakely's rbi double in the third inning got the Rustlers on the board, and BlakeJey later scored \\'hen Peterson's infield grounder was misplayed. Curt Peterson pitched a four·hitter and drove in the deciding run as the Senik Rustlers handed hte Anaheim· Fullerton Titans a 4--2 dereat and moved within a hair game of the · leaders in t h e ll baseball MaTRO STAMOINOI Metropo tan League 'If L T o• race &.mday at .Golden West ~\:':1,f::' i ~ 2 College.. \ t · ~ • T.Jit!J""'Grov•t lo 00 ~ The Vlcto~up a ~'f"'t~ ~ f«:~ · . ~1 1, ~ ~ day night showdown between 0r:1191 '"V.=.n t s 1 2 the Rustlers and the league-Min"" 2 11 • ™' lead. La Fond ~.. I S..SOllblck Gauchot I 12 o Fl'I mg a LNI"' a ,,......,... k ... Memxial Park with the win--~1::,~ s., "\-~!~':' 2° ner claiming at least a share charvomJ.~U\':r. :..!!: 1"".1 of first place. M=1~'1 P-;rk ~;~r;os "' Do111 '' In other, league games Sun. Thur..i•v -Don• v1 11:u1111r1 •• • • j.,_ _ _ M-ltl P1r1< C1::IOI; Pant,,.,, 111 day mvolvHtg Orange t..Qa5t M1r!nn ,, e1 Mocllrl• 111. rea ' ··-· Ward's P'·a•-Frld1y -Cll•rvtn ... Tlr-,, a ........... , u u;;:i llovfffl P•rk l7j· blanked the host El Toro s11un11v -P '''" v1 Ptn1Mr1 '' El Modlll'll \7), Marines 5-0 and Garden Suncl•Y -l"lr•tet "' T1t1n1 11 CS t ' Fu11"10ll (11 ; Llfl'oncll YI Cherve•I II GrQVe's tbargen: edged the ,.,,,_. 111• M1•l1111 v1 G•uclwH •• El Saddleback Gauchos.· 5-4, in 10 ~:.., 1~~1'"1~')~1 "' 11:111 "'"' 11 innings at Cypress College. Peterson struck out seven and biked hls seasonal mark to 2-1 with SUnday's victory. Both runs for the Titans were uneornecl Peterson singled home Ran- dy Mills, who had reached base on an error and moved around to third on a wild pickoff throw, for an extra run Major League Leaders AMaJtlCAfll LIA.GUii BATTING (2:2.S 11 .,_hi -C1r-, Min, .J.101 D. ~. Mii, .3301 T. 0111rs. ll1t, ..JlJ; 0. AllMI, CN, ..310; Murc1r, NY, .306. ll:UN$ -R. JKkton, Olk, 61: Otl1, KC, 6$1 O. ~y, Mii, •I; Mayberry, KC, 61 ; Cartw, Min, 60. RUNS BATTED IN -II:. J.ck.on, O.k. Iii ~.,.,...,...,, KC, llO; Murc~r. NY, 611 o.nr.ln, Min, •ti ~fOl'I. Clll, ..:ii on .. KC.'° HITS -0 . ~y, MH, 127; C1r-. Ml11. 1121 M\lrCI<", NY, 171 ; 0111, KC, 111; A. JaMIOn, T••· lOI. OOUllLES -lr1...,, Min, 221 Mttlotl, Chi, 11h 0 . AllMI, Chi, 201 A. RodrklUli, bit, lt; $cotT, M!I, 1'; ~.MIT, It. . TRll"LES -c.r.w. Min, 7; c-lnt. 1111, '' II"""°"'' hi, 6; lr1091, Mil, 61 ~-. C1I, 61 Ir-. Min, 5. HOME lllUNS -Ill. J..::~, Oak, l'.I; Hl'!ldrlctl, Cle. '201 Mlllltl«"'• KC, 2'); 0111, KC; 201 FfM, 11111, lt; Murcar, NY, It; 1rod0, Olk, 11. STOlEH IASES -Norlh. Olk, 31; C1m11o1ne<l1, Olk, %11 ""'°'"''' Cal, 71; Han>er, 11111. 711 I"~ KC, 111 0 . Ne!"'"· T~•-l\. l"!TC:HtNG (I Dachiotrll -Hurrtllf', O.-k. 1s.:i. .w . l.'11 51_.., c.r. 1w. .7MI, 2.65 L... !lllfl. 12·4. .750. 2.A3 Colbom MM. 1.).J, .m. 2.11 Snllttorfl, ICC, 12-S, .1116, 3.50 Dclb$0n. NY, '-3. ·"'· s.~ Mc:D1nl1I. NY. 6-S, .'67, 1.J.l Co!rmlfl, 1)11, \H, .~2. 3.IO. STlllKEOUTS -N Rvtn, C1!, m : S!11111r, Cal, 156; llh1e.....,. Min, l!l: G. P1rry, Cle, U1; WCIOd, Chi, U2. NATIONAL Ll!""OUI llATTING r:ns ,, blttl -WlhOO'. Hin, ,l U; llOll, Cln, .l1A; Maddn&, SF, .m; C1rdlfl1t, Chi, .)lf; (I'd-. Hin, .ll:UNS -a-1. SF, If; E1111n1. All, 10; Watton, Hin, 111• MM111n, tin. U : Rm.I, Cln. "6; W. D•""•• LA, 6' . llUNS ll"TTEO IN -S11r911ll, PWf\, 7Sl lllnch, Cln, 71 , fv1n1. "'II' j7; llOl'll1, SF, 6'1 ; Lurln1kl, Pftl, 6l. ... HITS -11:-, Cln, 17t1 W. DI 1, LA. 1141 Wal-. Mtn, 11l: 11....01. SF, lit; Glrr, All, 111; RutHlt, LA. 117. OOUllLES -St1ub, NY. 1S; C1nMMI, CM. 141 W. Ori! .. LA. Ml MOntM!. Cln, 22; Sla"'9fl, 1"1111, 21; Slmmonl, SIL. 11 ; lllVUtll, LA, 21 ; llOl'lll, SF. 11. TRIPL-ES -Mlllqllr, Htn, 111 Mal· thlws, SF. ll Sanaulllln. Piii\. I; Evins, """· 1; W. D111ls. LA. 61 Mio. ooii, SF. 4. H HOME RUNS -Sl1rtlll. Pllh, 301 . Aa•"!'.1 A"' 77; E"1n1, All, i); !londl, SF, D ; OtJCll'INOn, Aft, 21 STOlEN, (IA5E5 -Mnrt:IMI, Cln, J7: CeclMll, Mii\, :M; (lrock. Sil. 32; t.-1, IJi, 7'; Bondi, IF, !II PITCHING fl DI< 11ont.1 -'"'"· Piii, •• ,, .ue, '·'' Pl•k .... NY. 6-1. ,7W, Twll<"'ll. Pt.I, 1-), .m. ).7t !1111· lnc>lltm. Ctn. U./>, .m:I, ).01 S"ver. NY, H·S. .611. 2.01 W111, SIL, 11·'· .611. ).OS 1)1'"'1, LA. 11-.S. .'91. ).OJ llrvtnl, SF. 11-1, ... 7. )DI\. in the si,xth inning. A two-out single by Craig Kennedy later scored Peterson. Rod Brown and Jim Sparks paced the Rustlers offense with two hits apiece in the game. Jim Postel and Craig Mallory combined to shut out • the Mari9es on six: hits in Wa«r1 y~toiy. Postel 'went the first seven innings and Mallory came on for the mop up in the final two. At the plate, Rich Tachine's timely hitting was decisive as the Pirates third baseman rapped three hits in foor trips and picked up four rbi. Tachine singled in a nin in the first iming. doubled in two ...... in the third and singled In another in the fdth. Sadd1ebaclt scored all its runs in the first inning. and then got only one hit in the next nine u Garden Grove rallied for its extra inning win. Larey Lak started the Sad- d1eback spree with a single, and the Gauchos loaded the bases with one out. A ground out by Mike Jones scored one • Rick Peregud and walks to Bob ~1oen and Ken Nogawa produced three more runs. wa"''• l"lre•n (II IFo r II ""' l ! l l ~. 0 : •• : ~ !, • i 0 l : :SSJIOf ~ltyll'lll• ' .. ::;~i:, 3lJ===•1:: ,.,...di Oa!K"-(4) .,.,.. Lit.ct 3 110 KlnQ,IS S 0 0 0 Hnllr. 2b-lb 4 I •' •' w1111-. c ' 1 Jone1, H s a o0 ,• ~rtln, 11' J 1 P1r11QUC1, lb-P ' a j j MOuQhen, pr o o · "'°"'· 3b 2 o o, I N~w1, db-lb 3 0 Ml mql'ln, p 0 0 •• '• To1111 2' ' ·~ tty lllllitltl . ' . Sldclllblck co DID OGO t.-1 ' 2 G. Grow · OID JOI 000 1-11 7 t Sllllll R111llln 141 II: .......... 211 J , II,._.,, ( lllat111y, u Miiis, lb Pell.-. p S...rkl,·,11 Runoo.rf lll!flne.:ly. tf Teul1r. ct e1alnor1. pr TC111l1 .. . ' . ' . . ' ' ' • • • • • • • • • • • 2 H ' ' ... l : l 1 ? ~ : i • • run and after Saddleback r " _r_e_lnad_ced __ the __ ba_ses_c·_•_s_in_::g_le:._bY:.__~~~+':':,:":"'-_ _:::i~::i~~='.'...::~;_,:'~l:_ sc-" 111111"11 Save $1.96 on half.gallons of J&B Rare Scotch. IUILT IN I llOUl!:ll!:~ ············· Fish Report STll:IKEOllTS -St1.,.r, NY. 1'1; r 1r11on, Phi. 144; $uH011. LA. 101 (;f.,.Oll S'L l)J; 1i-.,,.mt". 1 ... 171 1~~~~~1 HUNT!NGTOM •'l!ACN -51 ....,, .... : DID YOU R~SJ.8.95 NOW $16.99 1s flOlllfo, llCI .,.,,.IC\ld,, 100 rock cod, I JO llfld beH. oc•ANSIDI' -20 '""""' 12 Mr· KNOW rK1Jd1, J7S lllll'lltn. no ~e111 bil''· • wNtl -11n .. ' 1111111111. 711 ""k cod. ' mnc-effl. SAN DI~ fM!tllkfplt l"Jtr) -14 1nallr1: :mt 118'towl1H, lflf bl•.. fl" tune. 1,•7 blrrlmlll, lMO bonf!(I, 72 lllllbltl, I w!11!1 ... blu. 1.111 etllCO b111. N.J rocll CCIII. LONG •aACN {..._, Pllfl -" '""''~' 4 wftd .. .., 11 t11irrlCUd1, 231 ?IOll11a. 17 l"ICll cad. ...... -13' lntlln: m llo!tlto. 2 bil!TICVOI, IS N1'11 l)IU, F l'lllllbut. N...-omT (Art't L.Mllillltl -164 lfltllrl: I ...,.,tndl, 0 bonl'O. M c111c1 11n1, 11 wlll!t ,.. bB11. 11111 blut ..... 1tt rodr. cod. °"'""" LAcUr -lQI -llrl: I ...... K\IN, U bOllllO, U1 biln. flll rodr. CllCL SIAL tU.CH -M6 11'1114irt; tl'O Miid 11111. 112 '*".., 17 e.rr1<udl. m rocll cad, ·J l'lllllbwl, 1 WlllllM Ml e.1 .. II,_ -IM lfllHr1: 4 '9r1'IC\ldl, a bonHo. lt ...,. e.n. I 'WMI -Mu. S "'""""· OANA wt!AllP -N ll'llllen: Ml Cllko MK, 17 ...,.,.~, Of boflllo. t ,_HllUI. 1•1 roc:lt cad, lOS mKkl!'el, 2 ..,. .. _ .... NEWPORT LEASES J4ot W• c .. t HJp_, LN1lng all VehlcMI 645-2202 XMAS IS JULY 25th MIW~'f -----· ... ---421 2M IT. ' NIWPO•T llACH He11rt 11 •.a.·I ,.._ ....... SM. • Savi\ 53.50 on JEB gallons Reg. 537.45 Now 533.95 • \ . I .. . . .. •' .. .. .. . .~. . . . . . ... _. ... • ' j,....-'·---------------·------------ I : JI OAILY PILOT Mondly, Juty 23. l'f73 • , ~; ' • I Now. It's Tomorrow . ' . . • Newsman Sriyder to Host Niglit Sliow !.(JS ANGELES (AP )-1'<> day, Tonf1ht and Toincrrow. II almost -like the title of a movle on the late, late show. It 's NBC's new lineup or odd-hour information a n d entertainment shows. "To.mor· . row?" Because by the time It comes oo arter the "Tonight" show It will bt tomorrow. It will be on (rom 1-2 1:1.m. fi.ton- day through Thursday. ENT£RTAINMENT • McKay's First Love: Writing· Plays LOS ANGELES (AP) -A decade ago when be played the Intrepid skipper of the Tiki ,on te?evtalon's "Ad ventures in Paradlle," Gardner MoKay rectlvod mo~ Ian 1"811 than any other 211tb Century Fox actor. of my Ure," be says. He rel1rod to ~ aod Jungle to shed the popularity telev11kln bad given him. lo< Spoi1a Dlu!lrated. But reluctant to tol~ aboot bis 10011 be wu m a 111 n g won. He Ill'' be bu flnllhod m&N11Ctlpts Io C&lllornla. lhr<e Ml ptaya and 25 mt Five years ago, be returned to plays and II wOfldqi on a - Loi Anl!eles. Since lben, he of short stores. '"l'llEllE JS such peace in has dlredtd sevm1l of bls -====- the forest, peace that I hav~ plays in local w o r ~ 1 b o p never known an}"fhttt else, theaters. • such l!!!!ll'·" M~ AYI· "JI At bls Sponlsh-style home on seema Iii\ ooallillig !lfilO, tiut~a lllllal<I bert;-shelves-aad I !Uppose in a very quiet way cl08els are filled w l t h I was erasing my career." McKay's writings. But he is "I th ink it's going to lead to all-night te:Le.vision." s a i d newsman Tom Snyder, who will be host. "Let's fac:e It. If we're tiU<..'Cessful at 1 a.m . everybody will be doing it. To imitate what we 're doing or tQ '""---------" ce-then;·McKa , 39;-hat lived as a recluse in the Sahara Desert and the jungles Of Venezuela. Today he is finally do.Ing what he's always wanted to do: write plays. In the desert. McKay was an adventurer and rode with the m Egyptian camel corps. By the MANN THEATRES ANO THE WHOLE = ,,., DCLUSIYI ]1(/0 .... -· - ENDS TUI DAY Lot•• So. c ... t TllHtT9 .,._UH S..I a..c. lay 111eatN Ul"fll N~ra•fo Drhe lfl ....... .... u/Mlt "OM ANY SUNDAY" IXCLUSIYI I• J ... _ e Mk!NIJ.9 f'flHlllll Clwk i...dllMll 2M Feat•,......W•ltw M.,._ "A NEW LU.f" ...... • "HITLE~ CAST 10 DAY~" "FORTY CARA TS" ... "DOLLARS" !Rl "TOM SAWYER" I G l ... "BIG JAKE" I PG) "FRIENDS OF EDDIE COYLE" ... 'LADY SINGS THE ILUESH (R) "Ln THI GOOD TIMES lOLL" ... "EVIL KNIEVEL" f P'GI improve upon it. It's a whole new area of revenue for the network and there just aren't that many left." UNLESS YOU'RE a con· finned insomniac, the thought of all-night netwo1k television does stagger the mind and send you reeling for the cot. But NBC's Friday night "Mid- night Speeial" -which will remain -has been attracting· huge ·audlenc'es ol young peo- ple. Snyder figures that a Jot of college-age viewers will tune in. Maybe he's right. 'I11e mid· night movies were v e r y popular when I was that age. "Tomorrow" is billed as a one-hour d1$CUssion program with overtones o f en- tertainment. But exacUy what direction it will take may have to wait Jo.r the shakedown cniise. Snyder, 37, who is an- chorman of the evening news program on KNBC.TV, and has been a newsman for 17 yean in Milwaukee, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Savannah, Ga.; and Los Angeles, said the show wouJa stick closely to the current news. "But we wo.n't have any politicians on," he said. "11tey never s a y anything they haven't said before." WllO Wll.L the show have on? "You people always ask that," he said. "I don't know who's.goinl{ to be. in the news th"ee mo.nths rrom·now." Snvder said , "We're not golJtl{ to have any mock trials of the President. but we're J!'Oin~ to touch on those things. Why don 't people get alarmed when they're lied to by the government? Just because the time he got to the Sooth American jUogle, he was Pentagon says some th in g doesn't make it lrue. Why were v.·e lied to about the bombing in Cam~a? Why are we told that the Vietnam War ls over?" McKay is putting t he finishing touches on "Me," a play he wrote and directed for television's Pu b 11 c Broad- casting System. The play. about a retarded. spastic child Writing, ALL TMIATUS First, it was Hffow to Eat a toOLh 1Y Piranha Before It Eats You," l&llOIUTION and his family, is to be shown ·~""{'~ next winter. U Snyder is awed by the task ahead he did not show Jt dur-tttcKA Y SA VS acting never was his real interest. ing an interview. A netwark "My acting was a fluke." he biography describes him as claims. "It was somethin1t "breezy -sometimes brash" that WMldered by. It was like I and he certainly is that. He is Q'Pened an invitation b y one of the leading prac· mistake intended for someone else." titioners of the so-called "hap- ---" ~ lldi "SALT WATER WINE" OW PLAYING Rl!llVIO SIATS Dn S.11 5'31 'Iii UI fr t. Sat.. Sil•. Moo MARLON BRANDO . ;IP.t ~m. .'}>iis py news" coocept, which he He says that, w h e n calls a refre.shing change. "l "Paradise" was canceled in think the days of anchormen 1963, he turned down a $200,000 ,x ~'::.~:' un11ed.lm11~ acting as though they received movie offer. Later, in Paris ~lOM. THRU THURS. 8 P.M. 7:30 • t :41 .......... the news carved Ql1 tableU! of where the television series STAln WIDNISDAY FRIDlT 7 & 9:45 stone' are over,"· he said. was a H'it, he was mobbed "LIQUID SPACE" SATURDAY 2-7 & 9:45 Snyder said he probab1y will everywhere he went. "lt was SUNDAY 2-5 g 8 go in for some advocacy on1~1~he~m~o~st~te~rr~i~fy~ln~g~Ul'<!~~ri~en~ce~~;:::::::;:::::::~-~;:::::::-~-~-====~l I ,::.:::•:;•~1~s;;u;;T~S ="=·oo:;::::'. . ..J Corona d•I Mar 67W260 Tomorrow." He said "It's no.tli a news--read show. Its a con- versation show and all row- versation is a fonn of ad· vocacy. l don't think l can escape that." . "1biii WHAT WOULD he ad· ~P-N . ~~-~~~ vocate? "I don't want people ~ to get hurt,'' he said. "I think PANAVISIO!f U11t11i1a.t1111 · , O ~ people get hurt when they're 7;00 alMI 10:20 Atlo lied to by the government. "lltOTHEl OF THE WIND" -1:50 When they're propagandized.''t•~~::==::c:':":""::::,..::'':':':"~'~""="~"~ .. :'•:;;;::::;::::=~~ "People think everyone wt» does what I do is a liberal," he said. "I suppose in a wav we are because we see people at their worst. But we also see them at their best. And now the 111ovir ... "A Jot of peoole think )'0.1.l~~. a liberal because you em- pBthize with the underdog. But w~n you've been a reoorter on the street as IO!lj{ as r havP. you tend to. svmpathize with peoole. I don 't know if that makes you a liberal, but I do know it makes you honest." · " ... perhaps the nlC'8t remarkable fil1n toe1ner~e since Ceci l B.DeMillefounded Hollyv.:ood." -~ERNON sco1r, UPI a~•·• ·IMANo 11Tolr \IY]O ....,_ U.A. Clf'f •!Ml Stlt1tl C.-st CIM!Mt -TllHIY•r SOC IL.Mi.. •IMI 0.lditMtl'l'IJ -01M11 '1W !:M ... M. ·:::;iii)~ '. ~-. , ... :::· Dally ··:·:·:·: "·""'·"·;~"}"~:";~.!~"~."'."l-'1·'"""":!!!.J·~~~ \.'.! JllMI CHll "STIAW hlt1 DOGS" ::::: :·.·. 81t11 In C11ot'! "JESUS CHRISf SUPERSTAR" 'I LI> ~U .1.l Y·C.1,R.LA"!Jfl(."/'N ·Y\I"''[ IOU.1~1A:0: ·!WI.RY lll:1'-~E.'1 _ .. ~\1\~11 Hr41"_,..., .. n.a.h""'' --... -°'""·ht.L ho"'~· . ._ .. rinol\o:t _,, An.R<o~'lidtu .... ~ .. 1"11111lu -<-"Artdrt~.,.,_,_"'111•1'1'N"l.•·-"'<IRM ... NJ~ ,_., 11£lMM.1,SJIOW~"'lllfll-'ll.T Srl(;'\\(J(l)·,......,. -_. -• r..,.... ....... _ ........... "6-, '.Gi-:::-.=o:-] PREMIER ENGAGEMENT NOW PLAYING CONTINUOUS AT 2 P.M. , UMITIO STATU MAISHM IOl OlllCl OfliNS 7,30 ..-.,, LINCOLN .._ DRIVEIN "PAT GARRET!' AND BILLY THE KID" ~-- ~ llLll ':'fl DICK lllllWI ·VII IYIE TECHNICOLQR'l ~..:;.. -.. --.... -•a.-. a.,. __ •• "SILVER FOX" South Coast Plaza II U.MOllGO JW'I. ll llllfot • S4•-3JSJ .,.., .. ...,.,... DAY Of TMI JACKAL IN! WMlll Mfl*ll • U* ..-.n ,m 'N' TIUll,... ••,.Dl•P'-V· ................ !S..1 "2·2411 nAH a taMI O'Nlll PAPll MOON 1"'I CHINES! CONNICTION(ll l lftc"""" .... -.ie111~ ~1·221J S•nt• Art• r ••••• , .... . c ................ . ~5&-701Z . , I ' L• ::::.'• 521-9990 FAMILY nmn.f.IHMllHT MUSICAL YC•SION TOM SAWYER !DI ., CHARLIE llOWN /ti HH AllY 12: .M ltw~OWMBOI Moxv'I Car Wmt\ l'tttlburgl\ Ito GENE /IAC[(MAN fi''IJ SC/V~OWi"/ Plus · Lee Marvin~ Gene Hackman .. ,.IMI CUT" PLUS · GEORGE SEGA L IN "LOVING" PlUS · DU~TIH HOFFMAN"" lii1 "'STRAW DOGS" ... ,,_.o WllAT DO YOU IAW WlllN NOW Al BO!ll CINEMAS ,I'll ~ lllE LONG-RUN A IOY HAL• YOUI AGl flllS YOU HI LOYIS YOU! ~ COMEDY HIT Cara-ts comes to the sc1een ~iv_Ullmann Gene Kelly Edward Albert BiniiTe Jfarnes IPGJ l,.i .t CW II GOLDIE HAWN IN "IUmlflllS Alt ,.,, .. NOW IN THIATRE THRll I ........ • -' ~]':l -=-"llfii" A P.~R,1t;.t1t WITH TATUM O'NEAL AS "ADDIE" PLUS · "HITlEI: ' !.."..' -~~:.. / ~ I ' IN CLNIMA TWO THE WESTBROOK llOOKHUIST ON WISTMINSTll AVI. 2 ILKS. SO. Of OAIDIN OlOVI fWY, SJ°'"°I Jamn C1tn . ~l'sllil\~"l o PG M£TROOl~ rLus nus '°' ACTION HfT ~ GREEN' OWlllON f(llCH G llJQH lA'l'IOll.l!CUG - -HILD Ova . ~ ........ --~ .~:....-i:. _,. 2nd TO~ lmAC .Sll>Nl:.Y' L--.PiMTtf.l\.j "'~ 't!EGqt!!EI\. \-_ ....... IN CINIMA ONI -PLUS ·JAMESCOBURN KRIS KRISTOFFERSON IN "PAT OAaam AND 11\l T THI KID" I I \I \II< f \I U\ •1:~ri_1 > t' f,iA~'> <th'A .. ![),\ )1 () .. 1"1 i ' . ' I! "THI "'"""' FACTOI" ) I -( I\ I \II < f \ 11 H '1,: ~ ' 10 '~ ' ,\. ,\ v ·, ~O'>'A ~'!~,\ • ?l'l .. l.il I ' Chntzp$h Gets Last Laugh -By Al.MON LOCIAllEY .......... ,..11 ... 11We won it fair and square -and we wvuld have won tt with ... willloul lhe penally." That WU lhe .....sment ol sttwt Cow1n, 3$-y .. r otd Honolulu attorney, ol the tm ~ whlcll he .... In his <llutzpoh. c11sp11.....,._.,doop" Cowan was In an e1pan1lv~ I~ mood In • posl-race Interview at 1t_be Hawaii Yacbl Club. 'Ille gwullng was more than a llt<le excusable. For olx months pl'lor to !be start al the race he had taken derl.!lve t commenU from fellow club menmers ol lhe Walklk! Yacht Club who pulled no pmches In advislng him he was out of his ever.lovlng mlDd to even think ol going to ... In • 35-!oot -that weighed aJ'OllOd 7,000 pounds. It would never hold together in those vicious P a c i f I c squall>, old Transpac hands prodJc:led. HOW DID cowan come to buy a ULDB, the eotmoversial "sleds" designed and bull by Bill Lee, an unknown designer from Santa c:ruz? Her~ Is the way Cowan tells it: MORNING AFTER -Stuart Cowan, Honolulu attorney and oWner of the S~ foot ultra-light displacement sloop Chutzpah, and his navigator Jake Van Hee. feren, reflect on their overall Transpac victory at Ala Wai Yacht Harbor. I "We dedded to buy a boat last August. When I say 'we,' it ktcludes a young fellow ·bY the name of Torruny Nelson, a local sailmaker who just recently went i n to 00.inelS here and who I helped finance. - "We figured the-best way to advertise Nel.!On aa1l5 was to win a Transpac. And In that comection we Dew Tommy's spinnaker all the way across. "In October 'IUmmy and I wmt to California to look at boats. We looked at Morgans, Brlslols and Cal hoal!. I had nad · tn one of the yachting magazines about the One-Ton boalll, and I had heard about this BW IA!e guy who hardly an:YOOO else had beard about. his right mind woold go to sea in a 6,000.7,000 poood boat. "Balsa wood? It11 never hold together, they said. 'Yoo've got to be crazy.' Even when Witchcraft won the Mazatlan race it didn't put the damper on the critics. "We found one guy who believed we c:ould do it with tbls boat. That was Jaie Van Heekeren, a sailmaker in Oaklaul. "• "'I CALLED BW and be i& ~ vited us to come down to "JAKE -AND Tommy col- 1aborated oo the saU.s. We car- ried only sails by Tommy Nelson aOO Jake Van Heekeren. Jake rounded up the rest of the crew, including Bruce Nelson, a young 1colw legian 'Who recently won ' the Kennedy Qip at ANulpolia. Jim Gannon and Steve Flelcller were the other two crewmen. So we wound up with lour super helmsmen and the world's greatest naviptor (VanHeekm!o.) Mama del Rey and sail on Wttchcraft about a week 'before the Mazatlan race. Witcbcnlft Is the prototype o! Cllutzpah. t : "About hall way out the jetw ty on Witcha'aft I looked at Tommy and Tommy looked at "I never got my hand on the tiller, which was just as well because I would have probably crashed it very rap.idly. I served as cook all the way over." me. we agreed: 1nu is it.' C.own said Van Heekeren we came back into port aed I sailed the boat 1n San Fran- bought the hoat. cisco !or about a month before I --didn' la ...._'keel the start of the race. Cowan 1.C.: ' .ii.::y t Yu.:: ~ himlelf never sailed on lt until , ~·. til about !be middle o! ••n before .~ -·~ ~ ~-Fel>ruary and it -la\mched •-"'!' -• ~ - in MaY.' We came back w· race. f,.. Hawaii 'And told everyone ft "We had no dilflCUlties with had bought lhls boat and were the hoat and expert~ no ,.· ju.st about laughed out of the steering dll!!-cu1~es. It s 1ust a · · Wakiki 'flacht Club. No one in super boat, said C:Owan. • ·c-21 Classes in Action OOWAN SAID lhe heaviest wrlt on the boat was the fUd... der which he explained was a Cal-40 rudder. In addition to the inherent lightness ol the boat, Cowan safd that all gear and equipment were chosen !0< llghtness-including the l~e ra!t0whlcll was especially designed. Regarding lhe Transpa< nap about penalizing the ULDBs, Cowao had thlll to say' "My basic ph!losoplly is lhat the boat waa built to the !OR (Intema.Uonal Offshore Rule). I told the Transpac Yacht Club In writing that if they wanted to change their own rule for 1975 it was their irivilege. After all, it ts their yacht race. But I objected to the cllanging o! the rule in mid-0eean, as it were. "My objection was that they sent out invitations I n January, Ibey accepted my entry and entry lee alter I had booght a boat I thought would win the race. ,.INF~. I had lunch with (TPYC) Commodore Clluck Booth and he admitted to me that -at that time -there were 62 boats in the race and ooly three o! them had been designed specifically for the race and they had decided arbitrarily to penali7.e those three boalll. "When we gat the eight·hour ·penally our critks really dug it to us. They assured us we couldn't possibly win with such a penalty. As it turned out, penalty or no penalty, straight !OR or not. ,.. 'OOOld have won It 1U the way. In my judgment, we beat the best the wortd has to offer in one ol the pmnler yadlt races." Reminded that the TPYC rules apecl!y that the race shall be sailed In oeawortby' cruising bots, Cowan said be COll3idered CIJUtzpab .. mudl a cruising boat as Windward Pas.Y.ge, Blackf'm er Ondine -"if you don't mind being without air-a:mditioning OI" • satma bath." "I do a lot of mlising around the Islands, aed I 1"lllid lake it an,ywhere," be said. arot'ZPAH IS powered by an 18-bonepower OMC out· board engine mounted In- board, wilh a spedally design- ed shaft. The "head" iJ I Pori.Potde, permanently In- stalled, w!>lch eliminates lhe neoessity ol ~I flt- tinp -aho a ...tght-aawr. "We did it with a remarkably mtap b o 1 t , ' ' Cowan said.. "A! she st.ands, we have a little less than $45.000 in the boat." As to lhe ... -of the boat, C:Owan said: "You'll have to remember tlis hoat wun't desi!IDed -It was computed. It WU buLH to aircraft lltrengtb and otand· dards. BW Lee told me' 'We build 'em strong. we bulld 'em fast and we build 'em dry.' He was right on every count.'' Cowan said lhe boat took I ooup1e of lmocltdowns that would have tam the rig oot of . .-.. • •. 226 Boats ·Compete in Balboa Regatta !· •' The Balboa Yacht Club was host to 226 boats In 21 classes :· for its ,1UD1tner regatta, Satur· :: day and Sunday. It was one of the largest turnouta of the · · season. Winds were light for :~ the two days of sailing on in-- .. side and outaide courses. :. Trophy winners: • -SABOT A (14) -(!) Mark Gaudio, NHYC; (2) Jim Buck- ingham, NHYC; (3) Kellh Kilpatrick, BYC. SABOT B (15) -(I) Flint Smllh, BYC; (2) John Shad- den, LBYC; (3) Dayna Williamson, BYC; SABOT (19) -(!) Kalhy Tyler, BYC; (2) M I k e Pinckney, BCYC; (3) Virginia Headden, BYC; (4) Scott Giem, BYC; (5) Carler Taber, BCYC. LASER 123) -(!) Peter Parker, NHYC: (2) Mark Hinshaw, LIYC: 13) Kurt Schmidt, LIYC: 14) Mike Eisenberg, WYC; (5) Bettina Benlll, NHYC. SNIPE (5) -(I) Tom Steward. ABYC . METCALF (7) -(!) Tom Willson, BYC. LJ00-!4A (20) -(I) Al Oleson, BYC; (2 ) Harry Wood, ABYC; (3) Cared Smith, BYC; (4) Merlin Gayman, ABYC; (5) John Thome, BYC. LI00-14B (26) -(!) Ted llimbaw, LYC; (2) GastDn Ortiz, BYC; (3) Jim Kerrigan, BCYC: (4) Pat Dunlgan, BYC; (5) Fred Toepel, BYC. LJD0-!4C (7) (I) George Suiter, ABYC; (2) Bobby Ross, BYC. , GHOST-13 (I) -(!) Dennill Ball, PVSA ; (2) Mark Hinshaw, OYC; (3) Don Ball, PVSA. KITE 15) -(!) Robert Kin- ney, NHYC. HOBIE CAT-16 (5) -(!) Harry Bourgeois, BYC. ETCllELLS-22 (6) -(!) Leroy Sutherland, NHYC. SHIELDS (7) (!) Prudence, Larry Baum, BYC : 12) Tomina, BW Martin, NHYC. EXCALIBUR (!) -(I) Husky, Rulh Smllh, BYC; (%) Howlin Owl, Carroll/Wood, VYC; (3) Shadow Fox, Jerry Wilburn, CBYC. SOLING (9) -(I I Tempete, Andy Zimbald!, NHYC; (2) Waka Saka, ruci Jenness, BYC; 13) Red Eye, Caroline Newcomb, NHYC. RHODES -33 (12) - (!) Mistress, Bill Taylor; (2) Impulse, Paul Mars, BYC; (3) No name, Bob Law, BYC. TEMPEST (5) -( I ) Peregrine, Tom G a t e s , SCCYC; _ LUDERS-16 (5) -(!) Angel, Bill Fundenberg, NHYC ; (2) Cat'I Paw, Kellh Dinsmoor, BYC. Oft tor World C1Mnnpioas11ip Julle Jones, a junior at Corona del Mar High School, and Jonathon Gluier, a senJor at Newport HarbOr HJgb School, left Swiday for Poland where they wrn compete ln the Junior World Kuaking Champion· •hips. They will later go to Seaule, Wub., for th• U.S. NaUonal Championships. -t boa!I. On -... bad the mutbeod in the wotu !or about two mtoutes because -la!led to let .. the lbeet. But ,.. came up aed ""'tlauod to sail." HA.nElt ~ J•m not about lo rllk me and four « flve oihor ~ In a bolt lhlt La unu.fe." Asked ..tiat was hi> most exciting moment of tM ract, Cowan said' "Winning It." 'Ille ...,. queatloa was put to Van Hee.kertn. wt.> was the winning naviptor on Stlp Allen's ClJ..IO In the 1116'1 race aed who bu navliated tbr<e other Tr&Dlp9C ractt. Sak! he: "I don~ find aallboat radnl ei:c.ittng for the same reu:m I don't get OJ1dted watching gran grow. It'• a thine you just go alter. You ,.t younell • goal and ... boll' clole ,... can come. Exdtement ls mt a part o! the orpnlzed elfort. Van Heekeren abo bad tome ldeo> on the ooncept ol crulJ. Ing bolts. 1'111IS POINT 11 always bnJuiht up, and it almost an,:era me," be aid. "A cruts.. Ing boat Is euct1y how ,... define It to be. And 10 many crulajng hoats are defined 11 big boats, e1.pensive boats, goklplaters, or boata OOilt like they built them 50 years ago. Why Ibey think ol them u cruising bollll I don't -· because they don't sail well. "M for creature comforta: in a boa~ a aignl!!cant thing to me is, can you bold oo to the tiller without getting tired in the ann.s. Does she have a oil d.. weathe!' helm? ?Can you reach the jib sheet? Can you pull the main sheet in without breaking your back? To me, simplicity and ease of opera· Uon ill a cruising boat." Rcgardlng •creature com. forts, C.Owan pointed out that Chut~h had no refr!geral« or ice bol. '"!be only lime we had ooythtng cold WU when ...... ... -"' • slx-podt o! beer before lhe race, aud when they lhrtw us a botUe o( champagne alter the finbh." So that b the new concept In offshore racing yaclllll -build them light, build them strong, keep them light-and sail the hell out o! them. * * * Vicarious Dead Last In Transpac HONOLULU ( A-P) Vicarious, I !3-loot stoop fn>m the San Francisco y achl Club, won the "tan.end charley" 1waril Friday as the Im TnmlpocifM: Yaclll race came to I close. Vicarious wu the last com- pellng yacht to .-.. It -dbmasted midway through lhe race, but wu jury rigged and continued the race. Ono ol the IO boats Is stW at .... 'l1ie 3&-!oot ,lloop De!Jant dnlppOd oul early In the race ofter loo!ng Ill! rudder. It WU -under tow brielly by 8D escort veuel, !Jul late< WU jury-rigged to continue under !Ill own power. It i. ..,... td»eduled to anive here next 'lbul'lday. Cltutzpah, I ~foot aloop from lhe Wa!k!kl Yacllt Club, woo the f!rst-h>fleet ln>phy at ID lwanls banquet Friday night. Her corrected time WU eiojJt days, 21 hours, 21.50 minutes, whicll lndudes and extra 20-hour penalty !mpooed on ....ra1 ligbtweight boalll. I -"'-I~ General NEWPORT HEIGHTS WITH A VIEW Brand new home Joca:~ in ~---· 3 huce bedrooi111 wtth walk· 1n do8et:s. dinirc room, hm· By room and rec:rft.tion room. This C1JltDm built -. b quollty built -Youwtll-ttie tn4ll)' extru. OtJl now t It won't lut ~· $87,SOO. 646-7171 Mondi!, Jutr 2J, 1973 DAILY PILOT 9 WANT ADS 0-HI WIWNG TO DO SOME HOU$EWORK7 You'll be' Mll l)tid be'OlU!!e the owner wOI help pey )'OUI" dollna: C05b. It'a a iood home rn • wry ptttl)' ntlgbbortiood, but It rwod.t a lltde paint and clean~. l"Ull price It $31,SlO. Call lo ftnd out hOf.' lktle $ will mow you In. M7..0lt • • • Cathllne Crofonl 1115 Part Moni.lgh Pl. N-rt llooch You. are tt)I! winner of TWO FREE TICKETS ·to the SOUTHLAND r ~ & Gorden Show July 7l'th thru Aua:. 5th ..... ANAHEIM CONV ENTION CENTER 800 w. Katella. Anahtlrn P1eue caD &U-5618, ext. 314 to dahn your tickets. c North CouMy toll tr'ft number ls stl). ll'}JJ. ) • • • Don't Call Me A Duplex!! I'm a roomy J Bedroom 2 Bath home on an open ro1·· ner Jo( with manicured !ronc )'&1'd and she-lttted patio. PLUS An f!6Sy to rent income unit with private entrance, now ............ SlOO/mo. $89,500 CALL 644-7211 ~N I GEL~ !;1\IL[Y !., A551JE1Al ES LA 9UESTA ASSUMAILE LOAN 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, N.'O year old home wlU1 be11111ed cathedral ceUlnga. UptUad· ed lhq carpeting. Patio kitchen wtth Annstrong Solarium noorlng. Oo8e to schools, amp. and beach. Won't last Ions at onl7 5'3.900. c.i1 todar MZ.UU Ol'fJl?I. •• fr'S ft/IN 1'> IJE MO/ti r 1~REAL ~ATERS SHARP GI .C BR I: Famlly room With !up yud. (Falrvlew • w ...... > . ...,ty polnled • carpel.I -L5 minutes to Newport Bt'ach. 0 n I y l"S.SOO -..,,, ..........,,,, -·-, II ~,,.,[,1f.t-, l TREMENDOUS REDUCTION & VIEW Panoramic view or bey. 3 bedroom. 3 bath over 2S aq. ft. of living. U11e )'(KD' deooraUnc klt!aa and take advantqe of a tremendous prl~ reduction. N o w available at $98,500. Red ea.,.et. Realtors -. IRYINE BEAUTY You V.'On't believe thl.I! 4 Bedroom, ~ baths, tv.'O story home located in prllTll! developed cwnmunlty near a l l recreation fa.clllt le1. \'.A. appralled at Ul,000 and ready for that fortunale veteran. Hurry on thl.I one Ca1l Red Carpet, Realtors -SEE US I For tht rlaht borne tar you. Cmnplete .election of homes In the beach attL HAUOl YIEW HOMU llALTY '3U7IO REDUCED TO STEAL! Lovely decorated 2 bdr, 1 bath located In mo! Hun- tlnxton Beach. P r I c e reduced below m a r k e t value, 11!111!1" very motivated to sell. A ft&I atea1 at $23,750 Call Red Cupet, ReaJton ~ (Open Ewntrwsl. -ADULT- OCCUPIED •.• and &Moluttl1 Immacu- late! FulJ ~. alJ buUtins, plush and modmi. Walle to ~. major *>pplng J.nd rnt&lD"Mts. Beautiful 3 betb:omu, 2 b&th, !or onlY 13'7 ,900. CALL M5-M24, SouthCo Realtt.n. IRYINE Y.A. TERMS 4 bedroorn, 2\i bath. two story home loctted in t"hoke '"""' -""""'unity. Nev ~ti -courts a.nd awbnmtrc pool. Thia home hu bffn aPlftlatd for $ti.CO> by VA.-\vl\at an op- portuntey for the veteran that hurries. CaJI Rtd Cupet,. ReaJton 54&-8640 fopen noenlnol. I ~--I~ I ---I~ ~IA ~ n REALTORS STEAL THE SHOW •nd enjoy1 lhia ~ly homt: nf'W Catpl!lJ and draJ"'S • IR.mily room or formal din· Ing room, but y.•hat a \'a1ue this 3 bedroom, 2~ bath, l\replace h0n1t-\11 t.ara:e patio !or )'our rntenaining pleasurrs. ,\ll )'Ours Ior only $31,450. 644-7270 BLU FFS CONOOMINIUM Completely upgraded two 1tory. l?.l?.tACULATE "W" plan. 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths. · bi'kk fireplace, l~ coun- try kitC"hen. Ctose t o evttything • pool., tennis club, ahoppq Ir schools. $54,!llO. &4A-7270 \\~n )00 \ls1 wt'lb US, \'OUR HO)fE Ill ad· vertbed ln Home fur LM,,. .....,1ne In more 1han 900 &l'l!U • and ............ '"' ~ 'to )'OU u ft'fn. rala trom our 477 a1· ftll:atet <A m.n.c;, Harbor View Hills $3,000 Price Recluc:tlon four bedroom tabulou1 c::ttan and harbor vin' pool aiud yard with aunny, private patio. 3<ar pn.s:e, family room, laundry room, breakfast nook. Fee Land! The absolute best btcy' in llarbor View Hills a t $102.<m with the land. Coll.Howl 67US50 Ol'fJI flC. t • "'S 1UN 10 BE NICEI [11 11~1·11·11 IAYCREST RICH IN Dl!TAIL Abllolute perfectk>n lD. thlll beautllully dl!())nted four bedroom home lo tbe .:iuahl after Baycreal neipborhood. El e cant formal dlnlng room, 2 baths plua cuest powder room, wann family room with flreplace. heavy ab&ke roof and eating area in the brl&ht c:ountry kitchen. You own the land. #l,500. C. F. Colesworttsv REALTORS -0 £ASTSIDE COSTA MESA Cute and roomy 1 bedroom Home. Valuable co rner parcel. Close to 17th Sti"eet shopping Now rented for $130.00. per month. Full price ot $21,900. HURRY I Call £.i6.-0555. COLWELL PROP l RllfS ll'tr: REALTORS ASSUMABLE 7°/o BREATH TAKING VIEW Panonmlc view or llC>Uth bay, high on bluffs. Thia home ha• been reduced t.o aell fut. Bring y o u r deoontln& ldtas (or this 3 b@dmom, 3 bath, 2500 tq, fl. speclllt°ul't home, Pri~ far immediate .!iale at $98.500. Rl'd C a r p e 1 , Re•Uon New l«:•Uon: 717 Ea.'ff. 171h eo.ta lifeM ~ MAR INE CONTRACTING Nl!"l\'POrt Beach. F l n r a t equipment I: waterfront locatim. ~ Yr. old com- pal'Q'~ Spl.CI avail. lor-boet -·-BILL GRUNDY RL TR '7M 161 • . . clean out the prqe •.• tum U\&t Junk tl"lk> cuh W'lth a Dail)' Pilot OU11lfkod ad. Call 642-5618. Gener1I OCEAN VIEW 3 + Guest $25,950 PrlVl\tt ctrcu1ar llCNet. of tine homes. Pa!N and save thou•anda. Sweepins: rroundia wttt-room fbr bost •. 3 bedroonul Jncludlnc- hh:1~•·"'&Y muter .Wlt', »eparate (Uelt taciUt)', · den v.1 lh ll1dfr-. eta-door to 25' m!malnttl: patio. BrMlhtUinc view al. a&n- )'On and blue Pad.de. BET· TER llURRY! Call Gts-0303. 10 1\l \I I 111\11 \ !ST TIME LISTEO 4 Bdrma.. Peninsula pt, 2- atory home, on best atrt'et. close to tennh I: beacllet. ln xh1t cond. $98,500 CANNE RY ROW Orw: of a klnd, 4 li\comH frot'r'I this va.luablt location. Call for deWJ.a. Call' 613-3663 ~ E-. associated BR OK r R'> l<l /\l I <'~'• :~1~ W ~,,, .. e •'''II HEWl'OlT HEIGHTS· DOU. Charmlna 2 bedroom doll howe wlth untlnlahed pg 00m• .., pr1me R-2 lot to Newport Beach. Will .e.D fut at SM,OCD. Red CUJloet. ReaJtoni (271 Eut 17th St., Co1ta Me•I 66-«lllO *NEWPORT BEACH CHARMING CUSTOM' BUILT ' ···---3 laf1e bl!drocxn•, 2 bl.thl,, 2 ---· ttlaxlna Uvtne room. ll!Jo arate warm ~m, kitmen for the , Jove.. ly laundry room. for $61,9:i0, Fee. 4Mt1~ CJl EASTSIDE CUSTOM MADE • I Builder• homt, bu evrl')'lhin&I 4 badlooai. 3 bath, railed b e a r t h tittplaoe, aa• blrbec:\tie, patk>I ewrywhrre, hup eorner lot 'With boat cate.' Need 1 say more? Call lm• mtdlately! ! Thl1 one wUI ao at SAS.000. Call Red Carpel\> ReaJton MS-8640 ( o p • n evt.nlnp). "WANTED" FOUR CHILDREN IN GARDEN GROVE No No down GI! Sell~ to pay Ill cott&. 3 larp BR. I baths. plua cm:y ftttplace I: a 9xl4 den. Home on a SOx1JS tt. Jot near Los AmliOI Ill School! CALL NOW. a v .. \Ll<fH ,-:, ii! SHARP· MESA-VERDE Bee.utlful 4 bedroom. 2 beth home with l&J'ie irrepl&l' lot in pr1.1ne k>caUon. Tb.111 home ls jult llated at S45t950 and nf!Wtt lhown betott. Don't wait \o call Red Carpet, Realtors ~ lopen evenings). BALBOA PENINSULA Cq_,tom, top qualit7 home plu.. 2 bedroom apt, abov ... t-ta.ny out.tandlne tea.turN. Slept to OCt'9.n and ahop. ptng, T~9 Jou. CALL now for deta!Ja, 66-72'll. Ontu l?ll Wettciltf Dr., N.B. NEW 4 ·PLEX &aper ~ 4-plex Ln ch:llC"J rental area. No betteT tu adY&nUa•, llurey and be the f1rat. D'llmtt. Call Red ear,,.t. R<llton -(open event,.,). TRIPLEX · PRIDE ~r 111-pltt on -C)f ow .-ltrtt.~--- 0 So at ~.000. AD unlta art 2 bedroom. 1 bUh. Call ~Cupet, Rf'altor1. rat Profit ta attained "'*' ,.,., otll throuah ....i~ ~~Pilot O• t ' ' . " ,, ' . f l' \ ' • --------·----• -------~--·-- o~v PILOT • • • j ---..... 12S•J" .,....,._ .......... JOO • 52' The Bluest ~rtetP!ace on the· Oranae Coast • loaK & Motlne ~ 900 . "' . . ... , ••••.••••••• 100~~ DAILY .PILOT .CLASSIFIED ADS ....... _ .••••• l50 -'9t .... -a.-; ... : .li1, .... ....... , ...••..• ,300 ·"'9 ft9.:lal • • • , • • :. • • 200 • 299 .. -+ r .. lb-r., So1i • • •• , • IOO • 124 • ... & ....,. ....... sso -57' Me!CI• &. , , . , .. , . 800 • M9 You Can Sell It' Find It' Trade It With a ·Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I SerVice Fast~lt ~I lll~RS. AdveHIMrt should ct.ck tliolr .. deify & '""°" ... .,.. lmmadl .... y. The DAILY PILOl """"'"' ll•bljlty fi>r t he ftnt incorrect ln~ only. t · " .. Gener•I . . OUR 24TH YEAR Offering S.rvic• Dnly Experience C11n Provid9 . • W,ATERFIONT WITH : DOCK 'Elf.n\OrdiJ!"fl', borne -like A"Wi with all ce(lar constMc4on. This lover:,' home' bas 3 . 'liclrma. & fal)llly ioom; the mstr. _bdrm. bath ·is· spectacular 1 ,. • complete with sa1,1Da. The extra guest suite is very livable .•. and rent· . lllle. Lot I! '!01\eP R·2 & fee simple -not teueho1d.,MaY 1"!1-Sho.w it to you -:-·we have Ule<tey ... •· alliO. Will ]ease/option. ' . . C,D.M. TRIPLEX • !< rare optiortunlty to buy a_ ~.Ple~J.n .. '-'Old ·CQroha." You_ could use one of ,tpe units as your home ind still have well ·over $400 a month !'roll!" the other two. 'Attractive two bedroom floor plans, close walk to shops and beach. Below t~e price or most duplexes at ,79,500. Call 675-.7225. , . t R~EP~ACEABLE TRIPLEX Jlayfront -pier & float,-•andY oh. , ·"l'wo 3 BR., 2 ba,. units & 2 BR., 2 a unit. ·First owner d"epreciation. Close t 'Balboa 6hoijs & fun. $270,000. Bents. • ,• " NEW OFFERING , , , :§harply decorated & clean. Lovely 3 bdim. in Lusk' H.V.H. Hard to believe price _,. $75,500. Will '~o fasl Jilli' MUiler. ONE BLOCK TO BIG CORON.Ai Just listed -custom home. Dramatic use of wood, brick & glass. Fireplace in large living rm. 3 BR., den. $94,500. By app'L, Dean Kring. DO YOU LtKI!' ROSES? . . .' Then ypu will, like this loyely 3 BR. .Lusk borne. Large cozy family room overlooking rose garden. 3 car garage. Harriett Davies $77,500. A NEW BAYF RONT HOME A super value -excellent financing. 40' Lo~ -4,200 sq. ft. 3 Car garage. 5~ J;latbs. Room for 4 lo 5 boata. Near ocean. Now $245,000. Geo Grupe. . THrS IS A MUST For the weekend athlete! Beautifully up-, traded .. X11 plan. Karastan carpets. No malntenance yard. 3 BR., 2~ ba. BluHs condo. '69,500 Incl. land. T. Escobar. . . . . ' , ·• BALBOA ISLAND BAYFRONT Lgt. hoZEl& on 2 •lol.s. Pier & float. 5 BR.. a.., Pi"" bom1a. playrm. 5 baths. Sandy ;J,eadi., )Jo~ ig !or summer fun . Xlnt flnance.-f:ll 7,000. Paul QuJCk. • , , 550 NIWPORTCENTER DR,, N.B. ( . ' . _ ....... General .H~~a ~~ Half gone in half a year and the rest will not last long. Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach devel~pment of condominiu1!1• homes, bu!lt-in clusters around handsome courtyards, Eight superb models, each a masterpiece of luxury, comfort, convenience and quality construction. Sundecks, fireplace, wet·bat; elegant Master Suite, Sun-Lite• kitchen, private enclosed double garage. Recreational facilities include heated swimming poo~ lighted tennis courts, sauna, therapy pool. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided., Satisfy your curiosity-~e , Newport Crest today! /Jil NIGEr· BAILEY & ASSIJCIATES ARE YOU A BEACH NUT? 1 n1inl bloclt rrqm the v.11.t~r. Plus an lncorfte unit above the large double rare~. Priced at only $70,000. flur- ry. Coll 646-7171 Gonwol 4 lNOCI: tiCMf HARBOR VIEW HOMES . Like "walking on a cloud" the s_oft shag is so nice; l*ewise the large corner lo~, func- tional floor plan and clean 'n neat condi- tion. $65,500. Harbor View Homes is one of America's finest communities and this two bedroom, den bas one of the finest locations. UNll;)UI HOMU OF NIWPOlT l l ACH, 645-6100 , A ....... ef I d H•le U M U~IVUI: tff)Ml:i REALTORS MESA VERDE DEUGHr UYE IN IRYINE IFOR THE KIDS! On frltnt'r-"Rand'I, .. 4 br, f ~ oJ(f, An o~ng no one can REFUSE! $3900 down, Whal'1 yOUr offer? Call now. C '.' .. \11>1 fl,, 111 Ocllghttul 4 bedroom, 2 bath Meu. Verde North hom~. Thh1 ls lnlleel'I a be11utlful homt> and Just on lhe n1arlrel or ~.950. Don't dell)' on thla one, can Red CafP't, R~nllort 66-8080 ._546-0022-'-"-------- . ::t_ !?-U..P~EX * OJ.I) CHARMER ., 1:£. • .2 ~·:...,. NEWPORT HEIGHTS COTTAGE sharp .-.:r"11 remc>dl!ld " lb " 2 br, 1 ba., w/lota, o( pane~ng. Lg. bric:k 1 =.";:J: O,~ ..:,b- frplc. & Hardwood flrs. 127 deep R-2 lot 1ng plus brand' new with alley access. P.S. Don't miss the, un·, t-bdrm. rental wt~ 1ots ot : finished guest bouSe. CALL 546-S880 ""'" ... ., ~ ....... Ta .... -look '" ct\oe UI ~ offer! t THREE BEDROOM '..+· HOBBY ROOM ,~M~O~R!.,GAN:....:..· R.;l!l!~·AL~T~Y~· MESA VERDE'S llEST VALUE -at only ~ ' $31,000. 3 Big bedrooms, large county ''Duplex ·Da!idy" style kitchen, dining room and added bobby 11ord to 'find! Modern unit room. Pride-of-owners~p area just one block near shops -·good pm-king · from' schools. CALL CJ1flck on this one_ Just 'rel! Iandtc&Jle:d, Just tlsled listed. 546-5880. ·, , · ,at. $19,lm su~ down I •-. ~ , ' ·~ r ·• .. ,. NEAR SOUT.H COAST PLAZA ' · ·" · • "' MUST HAVE QUICK' SALE -Adult occu· V. ! :.:-:.:! Ce.; pied 3 bedroom, 2 bath, with a large kitchep, Huge cul-de-sac lot with many f~uit trees and GENEROUS 49'.R-2 Lot : brick fireplaCe and .b(lautifiil , covered patio. · GORG~Us G~elli. &>. ot ' room f.or your own garden. Owner leaving h,vy,, ~rl~; lo~y ?!Orne State. CALL 546-5880. . '""°"'' roo, 1!12-5'!0· pal r;>en1son ~-· 673-7311. ~,r,_,.. HERITAGE .. REALTORS ' General •• General A VIEW ·? ? ? A view i1 • view ;,hen the view Is for1verll See this 4 bdr'm.,. 2 bath home with pool, jacuzzi and VIEW! $95,000. OPEN SAT' & SUN,' ·1 ·5 888 SANDCASTLE, CORONA DEL MAR . , ct Orange Coast ct 2600 E. COast Hw;j., c-oron11 ciel Mllr REAL ESTATE •···: I 644 4141 • [ liVlna I • ••• ,._,,c.,::.z, ~ f, .. _ ..... _ , ..... .. ~ ........ ....... _Col __ I • CdM DUPLEX , Rear 2 br . unit PractlcallY ' new. Front houe refurbilli~ ~ deUgbttuJ CdM' am. . $19,500, 613-4230 &. M<>-2960" . Costo Maoa · "WANTED"· . SIX CHILDREN IN SOUTH • COSTA MftA •' ·l ' i . I I •• Q 4 W· I ·' -'If **i f'1Pj!S .,.ZQICCO¥P¥1 t 0:r :OW'fiV:P'l>VSZSU P O POW!Jl P ?#itA Pd .. • -·----" ·- t •tistlc Gri8nlllpok, JAKE Y• CHOICE SO NEW TURTLE ROCK 1;:;:;:;:;;;!;;:;;;:;;10n1y 6 mos. old and lovely to ~d. Immaculate 3 bdrm, THE BIG WHOPPIR family room . home wiu1 Ideal Jor the tamily with plush shag carpets, "'llZ!=lil:ll:l:ll:l:ll:l:ll:l:ll:l:I; j teenagers! Your own swim-decorator drapes and many " ming pool, B·B-Q outside exu-as. Be au t i f u l pro. KEEP HIM FOR under the large covered tessional landscaping tor A PET patio. This home with sep-minimum mafnte~ee. and 'dies, don't wear him out arate formal dil)ing is a ·eye appeal: Charming mner doite Yant work, save his large, lovely, sin8Ie story 4 ·~yard . for · sun and back and move into this bedroom. Come see lt pnvacy. TJils one will cap- lanYln, OOitt Tiburon "Mali-963-562'l • 'hire your heart $58,500 ln· ~· "'°""· Featur..·.2 BR, CRAMPED KITCHEN cludiny l:""; 2 BA, fonnl <Jin, nn, lam , , , got you -n! If''" be 1s1on- n'n, bltins· &· air cond. Tot:a.1 stire to inspect th.is roomy ex!Erlot niaintenru\ce.' Ask-hOme. You'll have a roomy ~ $35,oo:>." · kitchen and Iivinfi-ioom with l•rwin realty Jnc. -· fireplace, 3 bedrooms llDd 2 (24 hrs) attractive baths, all on a ' deep lot. Priced at .$26,000. PACIOUS 4 BR, 2-story, 2% liu':!!.1. CAU. 846-3377. .Ba., close to s c b 0 0 I 8 . KANCH I POOL 546-0690 Your very own 4 bedroom ranch style hQtnc \\ith a untlngton Buch large ~mming pool .. This i~edhill REALTY A Company With Vision Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call Anytime, 552-7500 OUice hours 8 AM to 8 PM hard to find, but \\'Orth Jook. ing ,,~.t1 hoine, ''is loCated BY Owner • University Parle. North Huntington Bea.ch in Hard to find Ju11ia.rd model a popolar ~ Try $3t950. 3 Bft. 2 BA, bonus room: 847-8684: greenbelt!' $52,500. Prin· ciJll!ls oruf. 5S2-8114 aft. 6 or weekends. ' ' ' " . ' _ ..... ~I ... "All be your trimds in tl1is super Cedar & glass conremporaiyhcime. 3 Large bdrms., plus a den with out- tside entrance. Nestled in a .. very desirable, private. Woods Owe setting. This 3 bdrm. beauty bas oet>an views & over 2200 Sq. ft. of exclusive living. On!.y $89,500 vHlan REAL ESTAT~ llOO G\enneyre St. 494-9473 f>.19-0316 American Home Realtor a ee 0 -· July :U. 1973 I il 1 1~. fl fit',l: t . ~!~ ,..,.... • . ..... . .. . . ""' . . . ~ .. . . ...... ". -' . .. . . . . . .. . .. . . .. .. •· • ...---.. ---~ ...... ·-· ·-___ .. DAIL~ PILOT . I~ ,:;ml --~1~~1 1 .. ·• I• '""·-[SJ I _ ....... j :151 Apt" Furn. 3'0 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Rooms 400 Offlco -II 440 .. ~..._.:=h~;;-~$30=~1.M:t~;i;i;i~. ~ss=s !iH;10~UMC;;1.;an~l;,..~:~-~l --------ROOMS 121> v.1c up w/ldt $30 BEAGLE, malo t ,,,.. , Co,,.. tJ.onlnll ~ lmno * * * Newport lloach C<>1I• -wk •P ...._ OU!dttn A r>« PRESTIGE P•lm & Cord RNClor mi.~ 11-•&in 111i l'loor (ore & WlMow• SuMn 0 .... nd1um :.:::.:!:::.:.::.=::;_---1---:::-:7.:::::---teeUon .. 2376 N= Blvd., 01',ICIS Spiritual, pilYCbte, help In An..": W~~· Rl."WARDi Dutch Malnt. Senr. 531-~ i ••• M ·-"C ••• ·-1532 Mlromor .u.c S3S & Up. l 81!., 2 BR & DELUXE CM. !148-tm!, 3961. .~·-·-·-V·"-· n . .. ..... man<.... --· ~ M--•t ·30 ..... ••• -' ON !!"'~"\" -. .....-!'> -HIJ Balboa """ 83;chelora. r..otor TV; makl APARTMENTS BEAUT. Room. pr Iv. """"am -~. oc&uu-ete. Specl&l ttadlnc• $1.00. ""'7'VWI .. ' .,.., 1\13 LADY v.tnts • _... , ·~ :· ~ 1:'., •::;:m· ·· ~~ You a.re me winner of serv, pool. The ~teu, ru N. Alr Cood .. Frplc'a • 3 swtm-b a I c 0 n y w/mqnitlotnt tul new b111Jdh-. ~ ()pen daib' 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. area. clf8nl.n&" \\-'Orie, Eq>er. Own ) ---~I ---- ......... Unfvm. 305 Duple•• Untum. . • •• ... . TWO FREE TICKETS Newport BJ .. N.B. -..... Pooa • UO<lth Spa • ocean v!e<I. ·~ bY< boll. 2500 floor, 3,1111 ....... too~ 1322 W.,,_ Avo., GERMAN Shtp, blade a tan. tnw. i •'BR %\(1' ale••••·• $425 OCEANFRONT 2 BR. LoY.-er Tennlt Courts • Cym and Staview, CdM wtB dtvkSt tnto llDllla' WHllnlnlter !Ill-SW. ,8 "'°"' brown aiU&r \'k.. * ll?-3637 * ·~-+--·!-""'~ ~,,;t,j;'_ji,;;,,.~ -·'"~'!:Hti:~ .. ND'--1 Du....P.:lt:x. Yearlv. $300/mo. BJIU•rd ltoom. GENTLEMEN muter Br. ~-,~~ .. ~ n.JLLY UCENSEO ,.1~alts: Jul l$; Metonry ,. · __,...,-,..,.. ·-AVai Sie:Pl':"lr.'P!f:646-'1Dt ~Ro nom f150-• ~ fHi il-~'TV -"1C ........ ----~ rftrre Jn ... ·-.------Vision-Home ' Garden Show San Clement• 1 Bit Ir Den From SlSO lliiens' h!n~ walk to bch: drapet, all ~tie•,-~ Splrltual readtnaa 10 am·tO BR!Cf<. ftnee?I, It. p.; " l r Ired hill REALTY A Company With VWon Vn!v. Parle Center, Irvine Call Ai\)'tin1e, 5S2-7500 Offlce hours 8 AM to 8 PM July 27th thru Aug. 5th 1 BR frOm $210 S3f:i..8518 ~-:1'1<7!4) ~...,.. pm.. Advice on &lJ mattena. w a I k w_~,.Y •.:~.~•pMonrtj • j at the ~ ... Cl "··I lent H tel 2 BR. Twnh9e!I From '250 01....,.. 312 N. El c.mtno n ..... 1 S&n I I~ block tuN w • .....,.. ron ANAHEIM .30UI cmeme~c o MEDITERRANEAN ROO~fS S3l wkupwtklt$30 Cl emen te "'9i:9U6 ....,..... ,_ feoce1.tUeentTyway a·.11 $79.50 ptr Month wk tUJ aptl. Oilldm Ir: pet OFfICE SUITE -3 private '92-!IOM. • ' . . • ......--96.1-'185.5 co~~:.r:~oN F~~w: l::;u"~, VILLAGE t;;'.""~~~~Yd, = o~; ~..:; WID. 50 attnc. Uke to ..... .:::;::B'"'r1=ck::.-~B~loc~k-S~-,--I j 800 \V. Katella, Anahl'iin Walldna: d\IUlnce 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.t-.1. ROOM. w-bath &: prtv. entr. crpt'r. Newport Flne.nclal aenlleman who lil:e1 ~ Schools & &tS-8266 ! Pleue call 642-5678, ext 314 to ~· (7l4} 557-!mO near Laguna Beach HI. $75. Center lOIJltlon wM~. 775 dng. C. A W. mwic. and ln1trwtion1 575 Palntfng & ~~ym~;:k~~l~nc 114 Del Mar, s.c. 1?= ~~!so~~ mo. 497-UM aq_ tt., $4:1()/MO. &M-5633. ~ n:xmr::."G~O~-"· Co. YOUR ddld will enjoy learn-Paperh•!!fi"9 540-lZl>,l Apt. Unfum. 365 Wed. & Thun. 10-7 FUkl!:;Nh · ~m WNI°!_ ~~-& ButlMU Rental 445 LAOI&S July &pec1al l yr iJw to ~a YJute from an No \Vutt~ * * * Bilbao lolond 2 BR, Ill &. Sludto. Encl N;: oo!.'~7-·~·-er. NEW SHOPS membonhlp $5. Call expert. N...., lrvt.... * WALLPAPi;R * C d t ... _ gar. $157.50/mo. Cpl, 1 lo-'Partner' 836-1271 or 838-4194 Whm ~·call .. ._. __ .. ' BR. 2 BA, crpts, drpa. orona t rnmr f ok 842..f:>49 ..... ___ 415 ·---bkns. air cond. 01Hdren & ___ ___ ___ _ ___ __ YEARLY newer 2 br w/gttr, ant · no Jle'S. • Gutd ~ A few choice ahoPI 1tlll 548-1479 548-1444 eves. snall pets ok. $285. mo. ---------· nr s~/bch. 83.;..Mn; Dana Point PRIVATE ROOM ~~~ut~t ~~ ii~'. SWINGING COUPLES 1 1 ~ PIJNTING I: repair, 35 -1 831~ or Ml-J42S ~ "ft * * A* 11 * evtt & w nds, 646-l335. . PANORAMIC Ocean View. for elderly, am b v. I a to r '1 Laauna-_ ~15u'_'Leah" 2-8 p.m. .....__..... workrnanahtp &UU'· Take •' l BR. hon\e, 2 Ba. in Turtle wee , 3 BR, 3 8 ' · uge Capiatr•no ·B•i1ch Lr& 'J Br Opl'f., bltn kit., 2 penon. Nice, quiet sur-494 Ull advantage of my exp.·.: Rock $400/tm Shown by owner 8 unit, in new du· Ba. Bldg less than 1 Yl'· old roundings. Good, nu tritious ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. 536-7056. -.! appl. ·only. Av"ail. AU&. l, plex, beam clng. view. Near NEW 2 Bdnn, 2 bat~ duplex. Close to beach & harbor. meals. TWO shops, main st. front-Phone 542-7217 or write: PROF. painter, honest \\'OI'k, •.' prtv. party ~Z708 !:s~~='. f!!~~a:e-8-7, ~:fw~ld~ ~~ Very dlx. $300. 499-2895. Call 548-4Ta.1 ~tkm 600 ~ fts:,!n~~ P.O. Box 1229, Colla Mesa. Bualneta S.rviC9 R.:: ~n~t,~ est. ;! L•l"M a..ct. 675-6900 pets OK. $225. -496-9'!>9 OCEAN views, v.1k to heh, 2 VACANCY ror elderly lady ment Ideal for ~ type SWINGING SINGLES BOOKKEEPING &l1Y or --• · ! * * * * * * =~~=~~~--1 BR, furn or u n t u r n In Uc. Guest home. Good of ~. $200-$2?5. per mo. Call for Wo, 2-8 pm 530-1250. part-1hru financlal •te. D I: J Painting Service-The ~i ~u~~~ch nr !!!-~-~-!!-~-!!!!-~-.. -~!!-!!-~-.. -~~· Coron• del Mor im.l250. mo. Bta. 496-5721 food oerved. 646-J39I 11< Del Mar Ave., s.c. SWINGING SINGLES '"""'· payroll, A·R, A·P. =rt..~~~ •l $285 • Oumnlng 2 Br. So. 2 BR.. 11,ii ba., carp, drps, Huntington Buch Summer Rentals 420 SI'ORAGE/Shop, 36x38,', CaU "Leah" 2-8 9m 530.-l250. ~ small tuineu:. EXT/INT. Pafntinc-Heu. i.! Laguna. Fe~ yard. Dbl ~!W~. :';&_:r:,'E:::.· sm. ~ --....:.------1 SUMMER RENTALS O.H. door. 220 V. Nr. Npt Fi1mlly CounHllng C I •· I Quality work Ref'a '.• pr. a ,.. VILLA YORBA Poet Ofc &: Marinen Mlle. 636-5060 or 548-l6l1 arpe -rv ce 675-0160 or. 615-5230 : $400 -l.q-3 BR, 2 Ba, lrpk:, Huntington hKh ~ •!:•'" l, 2 & 3 BR. Unturn. SJl.,ulyps 4 -From $70/wk. 1n n7S/mo, Agt. 646-2414. .'> RP· din rm, yard'-0gar, _ ~---~ f NCL'D "THE FACTORY" Ii& ahopl JOHN'S Carpet A Upholateey BUY W.P. I: get banging .: NU..VIEW REr1TALS Rt rlg.-UTIL. I Sleeps 6 -From $95/wk. avail. from $90 mo. In Can-Ori Shampoo tree Scotch-contract In 1 home call. The ; 673-«m or 494-3248 NEW 3 BEDROOM ON TEN ACRES tbOOO Villa Yorba Sleeps 8 -l"l'om U15/wk. nery Vlllage,, 425 30th St., suard (Soil Reblrdants). Hangmen 541-5846 :: = de 3 dee'--2 bath, mcloaed pn"vate ...,.,._ Apt•. fum./unfum. ' .,,. IX SU. -Beach Blvd & Stark, ALSO AUG., SEPI'. & NB 6.,., 9606 or 642-8520 Deereasen &. all cok>r Pl••lor P•~ R-lr ., 2 BR. 2 U1U-, n, ""• .. -...., nr. S.D. F'rv.'Y oUrampJ WINTER RENTALS · · '"" ' brighteners &: 10 minute ' iw-r, ~. ocewt view, cpt'd, blt-in1, :': i~~:~~t$~ F=ai8enn{1 &~~t•i':!~~: 714/842~9622 Bkr. 6'5-5800 1~ i.i:·~~'. = I _,) bleach 1ar white carpet.. * PATOI PLASTERING* ~: T.;~~~·~ ::!,~· Avail Oswego, Huntington Beach. 900 Sea Lan, Cdt.-1 W.-26U * DOG RUNS * 1 BlJILDING from ocean -w/llv'g qtrs, $155. CM. Found ( r" -• 550 Save your ~Y by~~ All types. Free estimates •• 49f.:..a923 644-7680 536-4152 (MacArthur nr eout H"·y) SJ)<(c 2 & 3 BR, n49 & $199. Avail 7/'l8 -8/4. Al80 9/1 -646-2l30 me extra trips. Will ........,, Call 540-6825. I Kids ok. Pool. Keel60n Ln. 9/8. 3 Br, 2 Ba. $175 wk. FEMALE, mix breed, black llvh1': nn., dln1ng rm., Ii J ' Cip Nie-' Ouplexn, fl blk w. of Beach Blvd, off 675-8531 j ;l,;;nd;;u•;;;l~rl;;;a;;;I ;;;R~o~n~!•~l~;;;4;;;50;;; I back. white under s,ide, bal~ $15$10 ~ rmSS..15'7.~. Plumbing .: NEED 1 Slater ) 842-3546. some brown. V i en it Y oou · yrs. L.R. OTIS PLUMBING :·.· OO'u.J:IOUSE w/a view. 3 Fum. or Unfurn. JSS BDR. APT. WALK TO BEACH . w/balcony, sips 1, % NOW LEASING Bushard & Hamilton, Hun-::-~ I~t ~t Remodela &. RepeJn:. Water ·' Bdrm .. Js. ~· ~od. IN CdM 1 & 2 BR. Crpt/drps btt-l blck from beach $125 wk. Hunt I-ton Be•ch ting ton Beach, July 16. 2 Good n?f 531.--0101. • heaters, d1sposa1a, 1UrnaC9, ··: Leue. -: · Newport Beach 1 respon. aduJt male needs gar. 308 16th. 536-5005. Of• 675-6925 .... collars. 963-1777. · d:sm'Uhn. 642.Q;3 MA:" &: ; Lieto ltS. 5---~-W---,,....---3 a med-lrg I bd. Wlfurn apt i"""--'"--ii""-'-"'-'=--1KIDS, pets welcome. 2 BR, NEW M-1 JULY 5th, Mesa Dr. O>sta Cement, ConcNte B/A. Complete Plumblna: " & 4 BR, 2 s.!::~~ic, bea~ed In Corona dcl Mar. Prefer Li19un• 8ei1ch Corona de! J'l,1ar; l 'h blks. to 940 Sq. Ft. & UP Mesa. Tan pUr5e, Oregon PATIOS. walks drivel. Saw Service. ! CHARMING • Lril: 1 BR. ceillnp, crptl, drpl, 1 Nck garage unlt/tlrcplace. n70-heach. $175 Week. Hamtlton & Newland to. Call P. Fenton, 673-2110 break, remo~ &: ~place PLUMBING REPAIR ' ~~~y~~iit s~~I~ beach, balcony, ocean view, J!fi mo. I prefer lease. Xlnt 1:-~~N~f ~ta~) n ~va~n eod 1-,;;I•;:,' ;:,P;:,l•;:,•h;:,in"-;'R;;,;ltr;;,;·~..0675-4392"-'"" ''!!!!!!6'!46!!!.'!06"'1~o!'r!!!83W5'!"'~1!!!9"'" i M pm concrete. 5f8..8668 for est. No job too small 1!60-<)3(l;~~~·!::!~~=== $.125 up. M8-{i9]8. =~-N6~15~ ~~ 6~· Ph. gatde111. Pool & spa. Ocean NEWPORT beach~n~, 1lps1 1 400l BIRCH, NB St:nall whtte Peek-a-poo? \V/ *Cement Work* ** 642-3128 ** a.Kh view1. Close to beach & 9. wash/dryer, 40 WJ.ndow, lib! brown markings, 2 Q'.ll-commerda.l & t"H\denllal PLUMBING Salet &: Service Newport I~~~~~~~~: 2 BR Luxury. Split Level shopping. Lee. 2 BR, 2 ba. July 28-Aug. 11 833-8350. m>, a'.XX>. 3600 sq. ft. or com-lar. Vic. Willows track, 'Ir-Lie. &: Bond * 556-<W!68 * at Dlsa:Junt. Home Im.proye- J160 . 2 Br, 1 blk beach, Bal-, II~) G~tingen Apt. i: terraced apt. w/amenitles. $350 Mo., 5 BR, 3 BA house w/view of bo. thereof. Avail. 10/1/73. vine 55l4312 C t cto · ment Services. 645-14.ST. ~ boa. New crpts &: redec. ""911MnbfwRlnt ::= ba;J, o2'blks ~ =h~ ~ly furn., Incl. uUI. bay, Balboa Penln. $'250 wk Mr. Baumgardner, 541-5032. FND lg Yl'IJf male coOie/ on ra r Sewlng/Alter•flw $350 _ 3 BR, waterfront. Lido I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·~;;;; 1 Beam cell., tropical atrium. a ure adulta. 494-4653 or &. up. 536-1068 M-1 CORNER. ur on 19th shepherd nm. nea A red NEW, remodel, frame &: 19e. Frplc, bltns, gar. Stove re-.. d·'wr & your broker· SLEEPS 6, weekly, slePI to St. by 90'. 991 \V. 19th St., collars. Vic West CM 1lnlsh, stores offices & Alteratlons-642.SMS $450 • New LrK 4 BR, trplc, 360 tawxfu.. ~7829 ... 67i.9s10 L•OUM Niguel heh. 72(6 Seaahore Dr. NB, CM $250. 642-3490 &i>1688 homes etc. Custom work. Nee.t, accurate. 20 YMrS exp: gar,~ 1 blk bead!! Ap!!: Furn. or 8JS..s839 =&f&.01~001C:4o'o"-r-0642-~'°207"~=~ 1Rent1l1 Wanted 460 FND tan dog w/wht paws -IJoeNll!d. ~1961 Tl .. NU-VJ1;W RENTALS BalbN Pen1n.ula LEASE=,:""'l~B"'R,,..-garag--e-apl-..,.. CONOO. New. 2 BR, 2 BA, BAL. ISL. VACANT NOW• looks pt-terrier I: pt--eollie. JACK Taulane repair, ---------- m-tOOO or 49f-3M8 Beam ceillie, nr heh, quiet. :1 ~ ~~~=ub Modem 3 Br, 2 Ba. 130 B~~E~p~ vie. Lake ~polil HB remod, add. Ue. ~ '89072. 'CERAMIC TILE NEW A BLUFFS. 4 br twnltao, end $ll WEEK & UP SU15. 225\! M...,..,.rn.. Ph. ~-~~----1 Pearl, 675<n58. • • My Way Co. 517~ ....-t.""" "'-&n. Jol>I uirlt, 2'~ ba, 2 bib trom e S&eeplng Roomt ~7 Men Verde Vacation Rent•'• 425 IN CdM FOUND Sm. female poodle. ElectrfClll welcome. 536-203. 8589 stores,,% bltc from. achools. • Housekeeping Roo1111 1-.-2-8-D_RM_S-. -G-.-,-.-.-,-.1 •0-LX--2-&-3-Br--2-&--E-11-------'--"'11 respon. adult male needs wmre & Apricot Flea col-TrH Service ~ Lived ln bY owner. White e Ocean View Apts CUJSE lo B EACH _ ., · nc e BALBOA Bee.ch Apt • a med-lrg 1 bet imturn apt Jar. Vic. Huntington Harbor. ELECJ'RICIAN Uceue num· ---------1 , crpt. brick pltio, many ex· BALBOA INN $250/ gar. Sl6S up. Rental Ofc., Sips 6, $80/v.1c & up or in Corona det Mar. Prefer Can't keep. 425--0904 ber 87353, ~· )'l'I. exp. TREE bimming hlcl\ldinr ~ tru. 6U-Olll • 105 lttain Street mo. 6T"a"6900. 3095 Mace Ave. 546--lOM. Yearly $175/mo. 675-5810; garage unit/fireplace. $170-FEMALE lri&h Setter, np-Remodel and Additlona, etc. palm trees and tree : 3 srY ExecutlV1! French 61:>-8740 SPACIO.US 2 BR, 2 BA, Nevrport Beach ~-185 mo. I prefer lease. Xlnt prox 5-6 mos. old. Vic. 847-«Lll. removal. Gen. clean up, ProvtnciaL 5 BR, S BA, llv C Mela upstairs apt. Open beams, -THE NEW Rentals to SNre 430 re~. Need by Sept. 1. Ph. P8.ularim It ctevdand, C.M. •ELECTRICAL Contractors reas. Ir. Insured. 847-1791 rm. din nn, fam rm. All ostl lrg priv. garage. Close to , Mike, ~1527 alt 6. CaH 545-5357. Rei. Comm. lndust. Lie. blt-W. ~· _ IOIJ ,. __ _.._ Oro beach. No pets. 615-4873. BAYWOOD APARTMENTS GIRL, 23 needs roommate, TEAQ1ER, 14 yr old girl + WHITE male, 6 mo., long No.266114. 645-0357, 842--0731 ICCll.llW. mo. J.A:AJe, '-'ilMil .,.. In Newport Beach are to mare beaut 2 BR CM sml pet want 2'Br hae or · """' "--rd I can . .,..,.,....... 2 BR, PEN1110USE. New ..-.... Th -•-ff ts hair, llhota, .....,.2513 Animal V9 en ng ~ AU, tJrIUTIES·PAID d • .. ......, · . e MUca 0 ice apt. Pool sauna etc. $125. apt, Oil! area. $ 2 2 5 . service HAR80R vu home-Somer-Compare before you mrt carpets, rape11, 1 Ba. Pool. open daily from 10 AM ID Call 557-0236 5-11 PM. Keep 644-8938. * *, * .... 5 Br. 3 ea. 2 ~ •• Ad-,.,,,...._ d-' ......... •-h•""-$265/mo. Ph: 613-3850 6:30 PM. MacArthur Blvd. _,...., "'=';..oo=o;,....,....,.,~...,---FND. Lt Brwn puppy, fml, Tl W 'I """''I· ,_,...,wu• _ • .....,, ~ ....... ,.: ....................... ..__ , • San J rui.n.,;,· u ;n_ n __ ...... 1 ... e. YG couple looking for sm. vi W"-• Falrv' CM m 1 IOn )lclft 46 "Greenbett. par\c: • e "-..ioua.,ldtchlib w'ltb in. Costa Mell! .,. __.. ..... ·~ nUlW DA""l"'C"O ""IR 41 h -··-t t ..,_ ..,1:11 C-J.l:Aln iew <111-totl' 1,....._ ~ t/L -15 mo. d~ u....,.c_,. -· • 644-5555 ~"-"L'-'V wan ti, s are •IVWIC o ren ._ •~· 979-812) ~ ._, , , . t Joh W•nlod, Mole 700 t ~ --1 ... "'""~ .......... ,. .....,...._==""""". =-;--! 3 Br. home w/attracttve HB/CM area. _5315-«154-' COit• Mesa i .;;;;;,::;=-.:;~::....;lll;"•;..it.=----,.-l e S.Pl?"te dbi1f "1'ea More Room-Lna Money * OCEAN VIEW * young lady. Call att 12 pm. FND Afreda.le -young male You are the wtnner ot ' BR. 2 BA .• newly •·~likestonae COME see a real garden Brand new upper <krplex 536-3862 ·~ -Very friendly. Vic. N.B. EXP'O., mature gardener ~ want.!! exchan&e rtardenina ! ' aervice J'or partial rent • ·, CdM amall apt. 548-4197. ~ Job Wonted, f...,.lo 702 ·; ftdecttated. w a I k to e Private patiol apt! Uke IJvtng tn a home 4 Bdnlu. $375 Mo., year'11'"M_A_TURE~~m-a1-,---.-~.-•• -. 4 I( ii14) m-485.1 TWO FREE TICKETS Schi i'~ Is e Cloeed garqe \\'/storage for $162.SOIMO. 2 BR, l~I lease. Soo <Nrner at BR•·· H B -. .cu""'' ~ FND Gennan Shepherd/ to the ~ aoop'pq, Avail e Marble pullman • BA. 2 prk'g places, priv 207 Colton, Newport. Shores utn.'Cau· t,;~r 6m0p~, ~------~-imj~ Hmky/ mix "''/1962 Fargu, SOUTHLAND AQ1r."" Ml-49Tl e Klng-si Bdnns paUos -& rec &1.'e4,lh Wilson CHARMING 2-BR. 2 ba 2t 962'll068~-~k,.;=:::,....,.:,,-N. Dakorta tag, 534-3228. Home--& GarcL.i Shaw e Pool Barbequ.,. •ur Garde..,, on Wll.wn St., W. ' " 1, . July 27th ~-· •·-~• * CARMEL Model , Harbor nded. wi~ p1··-·· i d. ol Horbor. No chlld,/pel car rar.; som; apU. w/fpl STRAIGHT & wouare male. Announcements 500 Lost 555 .... ,,. ._ . .,..1 * * View Homes, 3 BR. 2 BA, rou "' uai• an • & beam ceU 11. Avail on 43 has nice 2 BR house on at tbe Joe Schwartz tam rm, nr park. avail Aua-ecaping. 2283 Fountain \Yay East leue. $285 To $300-~ E.' 19th to ahare. Lady OK. * * * •GENEROUS• ANAHEIM 17188 Edgewater LIM l. 16> mo. 644-7U4 ~';; i"BJ'.7iiis 646-28<6 644-79:<1 6T;M930 64>-1451. F. J . Flynn CONVENTION Huntington lloach . ; BR. houae, drpa, """'-Dbl 3115 w. Wloon 642-1971 HARBOR GREENS BAYFRONT wlpn v. beftro Garog .. for Rent 435 2512 W1Yecros1 Dr. •REWARD• CENTER You.,..""""""'°' : ~~.·--flancedmo. no!~.: LOWWEE!j:LYRATES Fum. & Unlurn. Fr $130. &: pier. New 3 BR, 2 BA,-~-------Coron1 dtl Mir 800W. KateUa, An&hf!im TWO FREE TICKETS ' .__,,...,,~ .,.,,,. r-uuuc:: Bach, l, 2 & 3 BR's. Model.!1 SS.SO/mo. Yrly, ALSO 2 BR, FOR motor homes trailer Please cell 642-$78, 'ext. 314 to ~e I .. 6 ... _,, Ex·-~lvo Suites Open 10 '!II 7 pm. 2700 2 BA •A=-Jmo yr I" ' · You are ttie winner of u• I mon pm~ , _ .. , . , .,...... ,, . boat, etc. 1648 Newport TWO FREE TICKETS For return or any tnfonna-to dalm)'OUl'tlclret:s. <North SOUTHLAND * PClOL. lovely prden, 3 br. 2 2080 Newport Blvd. Peterson Way, CM. nr. Har-979--0631, 644-4510 Blvd. CM. 548-9766, eves tion leading to return of a County toll free nWnber Is H & G d Show ba, $315. + Sec. Depoait. Cost• Mesa bor Blvd. &: Adama. NEWPORT CREST -Condo.1,644-~C-IOOI~.~-,...,~-~= to the N gold four lee.f clover pin, MO-IZJ).) ome ar en i ; 2SM Uniwrslty. 642--36e. 642-2611 -~=546-0~73~7-o=--3 br, 2~~ ba, frplc, tennl!;Office Rental 440 SOUTHLA D approx.2inche1lndtameter, * * * July 27th~ Aug. 5th ' : FAMDJES welcome. N"' l STUDIOS & 1 BR'S THIS 15 ITI c:rts, pool, spa, sauna, nr ---------1 Home & Garden Show with ~led bonetme in MOW & EDGE AN~HEIM ! SR, Br, tush carp. $550 e FREE L1nena PEACE & QUIE'T v.·atrr, 547-1250 NEW OFFICES July 21th lhnl Aug. 5th center; al.8o, eold Joc:ket EXPERT & CONVENTION ! path. ~. 644-7662 Bia. All elcc. Gold t-.-fedallion, 2 br WATERFRONT Apt -2 BR, AIRPORT at the (WM on chain), approx. the DEPENDABLE THE Bluffs. New 3 BR, lush •FREE Utilltle. apt w/pe,tio, ·encl gar ru;wly redecorated. $285. No lease req'd. full St?!Vice, ANAHEIM size ot a nickel, iruJc:ribed Call For Prompt, CENTER ;i Le $560 M •Full Kitchen v.·/storage, & laund, facU. Shp avail. 67J..1.l.82 m drps, cpts, music, air ('On<t, CONVENTION In script, FLA. Th.e11e are Im W. Katella, Anahflim ~['im.rned~&u-7662 me!!: : r.!~ ~~cllltlea Adl:!i only, no pets. $165 mo. 640-8496 all uttl. Single ottices from CENTER deeply treuured family Fr~:.v11:.t•. ~~:" )OOf~~~ ~ HARBOR V Hm&. Sharp 3 • TV I: 'd a.II Me Y Ln. in C.M. 646-00'Tl, NEW duplex 3 Br, 2~ Ba, $125. mo. 800 w. Katella, Anaheim mementOd I: the Jou is ir-., r ..... - . .,ll ~ nwn~ 1, , u mai 9el'V av · 646-ISIJJ. $375. per mo. 1 blk to ocean PALASADES CENTER Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 replaceable. PLEASE, * C ti G -.1--1 _,, u= -Br, ~l-!2" pool, inc. pr-e Phone SeMce FOUR SEASOJ'llS APTS or bay. 822 W. Balboa. t213J lm S. E. Bristol to d.aJm your tickets. (North PLEASE help H you have .. ~H ve .,_.... "I 540-1220.l dener, """°' 644-1791, Gf4.1692 . $30 WEEK & UP Spac. 2 sty 2 BR, l~ BA, 47S-6783. Newport ~cti 557-701~ County toll free nwnber i.!I any information • 64Z-3589 Put l!fe Ln your rSf,den &: a * * * * 2 .. ~:1_ ~ IT~· f:: •~a: 1 BR Apts. bltns, crpts, drps. prlv DELUXE 3 Br. 2 Ba, fli>lc, (Campw;-ll'Vlne Intersecllonl 540-lZ!O.J Eves: & weekendw. ~;!.in ~he:. Oeanup, COMPANION and Practical mDrr--m..mO pe •· Maid Service Avail. patio, pool. f"On'" \™" No built-In.", caJl>els, drapes, *WATERFRONT* l ~!!!!!!!!!*!!!!!!*!!!!!!*i!!!i!!!!!!IREWARD: male dog, Malnt, Lands ca ping, nurse, have CU', xlnt 1 refrig., 4 • Phone Service -J.Itd. Pool pets, S165. _ 735 Joann St, steps to Bch, year I y, Prime location, New p 0 rt Shep/St. Bemard m Ix . Sprinklers tnatalied/repair. ~!~.""eat''i '!'.!!! ~':""', 9 anyam 3 Br. Bch CQttage, steps to • Children 6c Pet Section C.M, 646-1450. $335/mo. 675-4911 BKR Beach. Large suite. Good 1 ,~. Brown I: wttlte, flea collar 646-1072 •IU\U~ O'M"V'Ll Ocean front. $185 /m o. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM NEWLY DECORATED NEAR HOAG HOSPITAL. parting, $350 month, ,..,... ~ocl_!o~ chain ; CostaMesa.1----,E.-----~ttt=4='pm~·~-~---·q 675-4911 BKR 548-9755 or 64$-3967 2 Br 'v/gar, lnctl y1'CI Lge 2 Br 2 Ba h\'1\hse, BUI Grundy, Re•ltor ~ · xp. NEED help at home? W~ 1: S.n Clemente fAd good foc $5 on rmtl w/patio -\Vlr Pd. Call dlsh\\'Shr, bit-ins, gar. 341 &Y!lde, N'(lL Beach MALE Siamese type cat. Ari\erican G1rdener have aides, nu r 1e1, 1::.;:;;..==="----ILARG. 1 br,lotwin beds, Ideal ~~ 1p&18~0636-4108. A~. IJA" Adults. $210 mo. 642-1387 * 675-6161 * Ptrsonils 530 thin, It. marldng, kink In 1 ~~;,_ Cl.Sprl~~'.... ~•~-~~ coUmpanlomj h . I BR I nd 2 Ba Onl for bache rs. SI p oo I . '"°'""" "" ""' ..., 3 BR 2 B bl tall. Vic. GoldenWest & ..._.....,.....,u.rg .. ·~ nuulf:'u....-:4• p o D , • 2 ' op co ' · y Adults Sl.65 548-9633" 1993 217&-E Placentia Ave $145 ' A, Ins. crpls, PRESI"IGE OWces • New Madhion ~1352. Se!vice. Call 66-1930 5C7..f3681 · Ma't!,Xtt Adults. Barcelona, Ch , S , , ' drps, betwn ocean & cha~ professional bldg., Fountain CARPENTER foreman 53, ,;:;;:;;,;;,~~"'--~-li7.""7';<:::;::~='"=:-szo. '9Ml44. ~~=-•~•-· _____ , 1NEW dt'luxe 2 Br. 2 Ba. all ncl, $350 mo (213) 43!J..ii622. Valley. Inclds receptionist 5'9" 160 lbs. meet single TORTOISE, v t c , LAWN & Garden care, mow Jobs Wi1nttd, M & F 704 Condomlniumt 2 BR fum apt. pool, car port, elect, patio, elect gr. carpet 1 BR. Close 10 Bench. Small room: rec e pH on is t & lady, Likes dancing, bowl-Halecrut{Hall or Fame. edR-vacuum-flowtt beds - F 315 close to sbopa. Adultl/no le drapes, adults, no pets. pel ok. Lido Isle. 673-7613 or answering services; dn.pes, ing, sports. A.T.H. ()), P.O. REWARD! Call 546-8437. plant and shrub care. 213 GOING away for a while? ...;.-'u.;.m.;.·------I pell. 1941 Pomona, CM. $225/mo, 181 Magnolia Cllrt. 67J...3522. c r Pt , g. Jan 1t 0 r 1a 1 . Boi.: 1148, G.G. REWARD! 592-3257 or n4 847....3372 Honest, re-Uabte, couple will Huntington Beach Huntlnefon Boch 645-3.163 Morn. & eve11. DELUXE 3 BR, "' e 11 1 Secretarial seIVice avail. PROBLEt-.f Pregnancy. Con-Collk!, male. COMPLETE I and• ca p e b:>useslt or boatlit for you. UPPER 2 BR, pe.rtly rum.. Ne\\'J)Ort. ll;i blks 10 ht•ach. -'962-554"'='°=1'=. ~~===-fident, s y mp at he t t c 551-1246 ma.Int. M!f'V, Comm'!, Ind, 548-7901 alt 6 pm. WOULD like to snbleue ror $14$-.$165 elec. hhns:, garage, quiet y ·I 642--3188 642-i914 OCEAN VIEW pregnancy couMeling. Abor-LOST: sml blk """'•July 4, is ~~ Sprlnkln_ cleanup. Htlp Wanted, M & F 710 1 yr. 3 BR, 2 BA. BACHELOR-.--1-BR., location. $150 lo responsible cat y, ; 1 ' Uon & adoptions ref. under Med "':iust find ~·· : Ewrythlng is furn . 2 ML patios, trpl.c's priv. prages adull. No pets. t"f f ' 1 . YEARL\·-2 & drn, 2 ba. SpacioU!I, exec. office in APCARE 642-4436 REWARD!! Att 5• 842-9l28 . Complete Lawn 4 Gttrdentng A A A A A A A , from beach. $.100. 96.1-2414. -Divided bath & lot~ of 646-4224. · ft~~o A~S· 6~ Call Union Bank Bldg, Newport PREGNANT? Th 1nk1n 1 Lost 8 Ir. W cat vi...;-.., f Service -Hauling &: ~B:f'upa. Our new ~porary offtce Ia Condominiums closels. Rec. hall, pool & Spacious, OJOI lg. apts. 1 blk · ' · CcnteT. W/Tecpt, typing, abortion? Know 11.ll the facts Costa M,.., 1 yr. oi.d-=~~ Jlm 54&-0405 at ml Westerly Pl Suite nfu 320 pool tables, sauna baths. 1o golf crsc 2 bl.ks 10 shop-Si1n Clemente xerox, etc. Mr. McFarland. first! Call LU"'E LIN'E-24 -,, ._1515 · ~ ... -General Services 115, Newport Beach. (The U m . Sec for )'Otlnelf. 11301 · ,_ ' In ,_ t '·h 644-!H40 hn "'I ~~-· -.,._ Don Koll,.,.._.__) Our Keel Ln 11 blk w f pmg ct'n..,r, m u.,.,,. 0 ""' 1700 WESTCLIFF DR 1 -~===~=~-'.n """"""4i. . '"'"''"u-. pres. General 80rl • · o bus stop Unfum Sl50 tum • PRESTIGE 2 ROOM MAN 30 seeks lltlJ·acttve gal REWARD! Lost wtit poodlt!: HOME R.epair. All Typet, ln-ent phone 546-2118 will be ~ Beach, 1 ~~~f Slater). $160. eo:xt arra.. 536-5ll4 2 BR .. 2 BA., Bltn appliances. Exec. office, adj. Airporttt 10 28 \\'ho i!I not tied down Area of Talbert &c: Edwards duding elec., plumbing, answering calh:. We~ see \ CONO. for lea~ 2 BO l Ba, $140 u~ 2 BR · 3 Br 2 Ba Pool . 00-627--1. Hotel. Full gl&.u view, by a job. Reply with picture HB on 7!16. 84$.6.109 J>&inllng, cabinets, shelve.. appll~t:I at, 8::.(1 lt-fondaY, ·' pool, new carp. no pe!s, $140 • ULTRA NICE Ap_t. 6 Pool, . bltins." piny " yard: Apts., paneled walls, all util., un-to Box 1124 Tustin Ca 92680 LOSI' V.lrt frnl Boxer w/l Mloor alteratlons, fixture monunr. We re l'Mdy tor -, mature adults.. So. Laguna Pools. 4 G_ardenii. Sa1!na. 1996 Jtlaple A\'e. _ ... 642_3813 Furn. or Unlum. 370 cm\\'<led parking. 2 1_ 7 2 brwn eye patch. V1c F .V., repair & install. etc. Time & !.~~!-Ravelnpatl kinds of fun. t _,, ..... ,,,,,_ Tennl.!I Private pat 1 o DuPont Rm 8 1-"-· ~t PRICE special. Mor-Com-"""' """"' m•l•~al. F • B Home -~ open I 1 . ...,.,_ ":i•t;.11110 • , • 2212 Coll....,.... No. l .• &!6-6032 • · • u vu11:. f fi ed bra ...,J.....,.,, ,., • I Arfull1. Ph. fW6--0259. ~&~ C d I M 833-3223. ort custom tt S-LO-~ haired blk/ ht 'Repair. 60-1403. Uz-La~l-Ruth-Karen & Lorl Irv ne ... EN. •••all ~ach hotel. 2 BR. 11,i i,.,, crpts, rfrps_ . oron• • II" =~FULL=,..-,s=rn=v"'rCE=--Your home or m In e -...,, ''"'6 w "' ut: b1tl uh /d 968-6219 or 96J..2400 For cat. Ans to "Tlll't'r". Re-TOTAL SERVICES CO. ~ t i BR. dlshWl!l.1her, bltins, Roorm S2'1 .50 ~ \\'k, Apta ns, w ~r ryer, patiO. Westcllff Bulldlrw1 'I ward 496-patnt'1 Plumb'& Rqelrs ,,... l swimming pool, ~g. dn. $95 per month. 536-7056. ~~·c;!: ~~ ~-~ 31~~;c~-~~r view, walk Comer we~tcltff nri~ l app · · 7'838. Mob. Hrna " ~ 496-SnT: ~ Mm'lll l-extru.5..11-2774 Lido Isle 2 New 3 n-., 2 ...tv .--t.-· 1 0 ·-· Irvine Blvd., Newport 646-<S'lT. ! ---------1 co-... ,, a .......... Call: 673-3663 sa._, Eves. Beach. ~1r. Howard Maull , 1:":::":;•:;1porl!;.::.:...;lo:::oc::h::_ ___ I J BR. Furn. Utll It. garage apts:. Bath &: ~. Frplc, gar, 645--6101. T d I Pa "I 4121 WNer1y Place ! ~.BRAND New 3 BR. 2\1 Ind. l adult only. S200 mo. nr school•, "'"'111· $340 mo. 1~~SfO~R-E-O~R~OFT~ICE~-ra er s radise M 0 V l NG, Hau 11 n (, &Im! 115, Nwpt. Sch. ' BA. Condo. w/Boat Slip. 2 Yenrly. 673-0837_ 64().8:505, 641.f.6'13 Ne'N(Xlrl & Bay Center clean-ups. Ke a 1 o nab I e A A A A A A A car au. All appllancea. 2BR, 28A, brick "-le. dbl 2 BR. Cpt1, bltns, pool, Xt.J2 Neumt\rt Blvd., CM. rates Free e 1tImate1 HELEN HAYES Crpts I (lrpiJ. Salt or lA'aM!. gar. winter rental.,~1$375 plut lndry, rrfrlK: No pets. S150. 525' Avall-f'ug. 1-J>k:A:. Utll 11• nes £e!leie Student.a. ( 714 ) bu ........ ..-a new ,..,11_1_ '·'· 213: 287-Q023 or 2 1 3 : util. 2l J.793--0427 1!~~te Vista. Mgr No. 5. f>JG-l25l or &U--~ o.v-1!181 ..-"""'~-.. ......._,,., :m.f72! ~ C u--G-RID OF UNSIGHTLY ~ • .>;ngtneerlnr~ Pl'm'lllntnt · u--porl •···h ' 01t1 ~ DESK 11...,,.. avallable (lf:I\ • c..1 '--'"~ .. 3 BR !aitbluft' O:indo. Vo ._... ~ SPACIOUS-CLEAN l br, mo. wu~1 x,-" ... "'--1iu-... t TRASH DEBRIS I ;;:;;:;;;;::;;:;;;:;;;:::;;:;:;;:;;. J d el bl t ··-~ ·~" I mes "' ru MedlCSl, .......... eoai..i Jot. JM, Lie/Opt $65(1, J • w/\\' crpt, ra, ect. t ns. TI-TE: E11.Cl t1NG 81 s.; mo. nswerlna MtVice LOAD. COILEGE STU· Career Empk)yment Ac!n- 9elfct own upta. $52..m6 * DAC11f;U)R. f"URN, $195. nr. f.,.,·ys. sulteble for work· PALM MESA APTS. available. 17875 ~ch:P.!vd. DENT, 54&-6429 cy, 3aoo Irvine mvtt., suite f!'ft:I .. ~h k hMited pool 1111 epic. No pets. 54s..4893 MINUTES 1'0 NPI'. nc11. ltuntington Beach. ~ d 11 LOCAL mov1na 1r haulina by 1098, Newport Deb. S., Juan, C.Wrano Arlulttt Only, yrly I~. 2 BR. Adul111. no pets. BAY Bach, 1 .\ 2 BR. from $150 1617 WESTCLIFF-NB 0 ars student. 1AJft truck. Reu. ACOJUNTJNG Ocr'k. Fut : , . -Security contro\JM new MEA00\\1S APTS, 387 W, Adults, No Peta. l980 SU '756 A MO Sq Ft S:U.,18t6 or &34-21&4. 8l'O'W'.,. Nat'L llllboat : NE\V 2 BR. OJndomlnium, L~ilt':f ~!!2":::.. Bay St., CM 646-4173 ($ .blb 1:!n 11~ Blvd.) Aniple PM<in~. Utlt &um '. a.EANUPS, remow dirt, mamd. hlrlhl accta. dtrk 1 -~·:tar~ 5515 ru ... A> .... 1111 2 BR. ms. og1 ••Y. beam --· 541·5032. HAVE $11,1111 T.D. .... t; Ft. lallJn( """" lil<ol .._ Ivy, drl~ ,,.. bead omce In Ooota I "'!"!"!! .... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. I rel!, redeoorA IM,. -CIJ>tl, * '"'"""-VICTORIA it oma: S0m f!r ..rent, otM' ~ ~ties. Want ..U l live aboard. Beaut. lfw, 841-2666, Uc. 2..,_ Mesa. ~ Ne. -cle:rtc T-ITriJii,m. m lBR, I block to OC'8n, 1 blk • .,,.. -tr S16-881!2 l • 2BR:""" "' un-. Loue, m mo, nr Newport good -inOOIJ<home lo ..... $22,000 Vat !W"T!>; GEN llatillr«. 1'ff/Sl>Nb ~~,.,._ ... "'JO ~ to bft.y, $175. mo. dA)lll LARGE 2 Br, encl garage C.rpet~ d--· O/W TV Blvif. on Bn>adway. C.M. ~ to ranch. motor home t'!O"Oltloa, or trim. Gar Ir Yd cl... eyPw \:cal~ 'N' ! H..,11_..... -h u• '"'" ~•12 ""' avail I child ' ··~· ' ST,.g'JSI Oavll Realtor 833-8100 ? • P.M. = '°°". flit, 531.Q17, ~-~-··•Opp•·~~.=_ 1 1:..;.=""=""·-=··~;_ ___ , vn-eino, f:W&vo.,.-v.a : ~ • Call &42-8338 ant. Pool. ~c. 52S Vtctorlll1 .=;:;:.,:;;;.:;;·=~~-=~'==~~~-~= v ~I ' ...,._. v ""'"t'"U.J"'U I 3 Bedrm % balhs, built· W. Balboo 81Yd. I ~~.,.=;;:=:..;;;,;o,o=o..· _,.,...., St. at Harhor, CM. 642-!70. lvrnt Salllioal ylew; :llo<40' WANT 'QI, '10 or •n VW LI"' to"""''' Out Troder'• SKIPLOADER & dump trock A <XIJRATE ~ Int, ielr1g., wMhu, DAILY PILOT 3J.~,,'."'Mj;.A\'fi it,,~ !!•~t H•le:!!h it'n ~ i?~f:o. Bch. ~,:'.,: &kr'~.':· = -';:~= b ."'""''" =~. =~ .... ~' :!:i._ ~,,pt r'dlct ! r, brana ne crpt. CLASSIFIED ADS St. No. D, SllO. 046-!362 NEWLY d<C 1 br apt. Avail It'• a -... .•• ..u your tprocont •• boy'1 bdnn rum. 5'dll/o JI"" l"URNITURE Van Jor Wilt., lltlil .li!-m. : Qdmi OK. mo. R Bock Boy vt.w % Br Au•. 111. c;rpon, pool, Ii.mo with , ... , ""' Dall1 ..,. Botd>ara nip, I st>al *>r S -local rum haolo • ...,., Dall1 Pilot. P.O. 8ox "611 • Ask for Dale, FO ACTION • • • in. U!3 1...i .. ~1729 113'. or Sl56. -· Pllo! Cb..utod. 6IW61I. ------------•-•' hftulfl!J. 543-1362. O>ota Mna, Cat!!. m • ' ' ' . .> • • • . • • • • • • • • ' • • • I : • • • . • • • • . • . • • . • • • t ' • .. • . • • • . . ' . • I ; • • l : • ' • • .; • • • • ; • ' . • . • • • . ' ' l • ' • • . I • l " ·~ t I t t • • • • • • • ' ( • . • . • . • • • • • • • • i l ! I ' • I . . -.1~!!!!!~~~~1 1 " .-~~~~~~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~· Ju112J. 19n ~I ,1~!:-•-•_,, .• _.~IITTJ:l~·='':··~lilJ~J,~[~1~·1~,,~.·;;;;l(i!]~J~l~[~·~·'''~·~[l})~fJ~[~L~•'"~"·;.;DJl~IJ~[~·~·~,,-~·j~[fi]~Jl ;I ~·~·~~,,~,~j-[DJ~~'~~~·-•~1~"-'~~j!IlJ~J~[~s~,,~,·~·~l~I _ .. w ... tod, M lo F 7IO Hflp W~ntod, M lo F 7IO ':!e'I! Wolllllll, M lo F 711 Hotp Wantod, M&F 710Holjt )II-, Ma F 710 Holp Wantod, M & F 710 Holf! WOO!~ Ma F 710 Holp Wontod, M lo F 710 Holp W-. M lo JI 111 iCcT CLERK PRODUCTION ~~=~~ =~/t!'!!:~1Jh:: INSl're!OR ~~ !!:~=::.'~. TESTER ~-s.: "= CIRCULATION g~ .... iay, Electro/ Tof r~:i :~i::~=-g~I p~~":ud:d ·b= -lii.ftt bookkffper Ute ex-· n»ttl exptr. deAred. Famll· •M-~ne ::.T....i,_ .. ••-•-a.;_, M h • I Long term security. jerience, extra '1ong term Pertec:.oHenpe ~manent ia.r w/NCR ®· Stt IJt!l'-Ml ...... -.... • i.uuwi-.. ec an1ca ~ " t!)I> dollan. •mploymen1, paJd vaoatlcn~ ......i """· •R1U1 .. & """"' ln11&U. Royal lndtl!lri0$, a najor manufacturu of nu-rvl~ ' 5tlJ....H5Q -atttr 6 month!. Plus one 1221 W. Cout !~--TRAINE -.. Apply Williard Boatworka. I clear components1 ls now blring experienced 17802 Sky Park wetk paid time off at BARTEND£R..EWai •Al\ ip ~ Lopn Ave., CM. nsp111f'tors . Ail -fN~IB.A-FEt A~--Cbtlstmu. •pany-J>Old '6ill:--~--B-e<r ,. Employ..,..,1 Counsolor \di ~chilllsu In the fol lowing caleaones. _ I • lJ.M.~U"'V life, hol!lpital, Sllrf1o·a"J iue Dl"'ll' CPI, . Shifts. Tempo Temporary t lelp medical and dental •--~Jt•. 642..5511 before 10:30 a.m. .. Wiii train sales oriented Ex ~·= 8 person. J.1otivaUon to learn to perform precl· J' Bo M--L• • OLVUNTING • NCR OPERATOR "'"•"' work In i con· EAUTJCIAN wanled for MALE OR FEMALE /hlih · c II Ell slon and usombly lg re ...... 1n1st ~\~~ns and il'O"'lh poten· =.1:=.~ = · £uis. ~~Co4ntro1 Inspection. E xper· Mi Irvine Coml>-$ny needs -f!r. NCR-395 operator for m t. Rl'P "1lo can lyJ'< OOwpm. Some formal edb.ca. lmiiiedilte openl:nr for lh· guaranteed. Pala vatatiori.. The Daily Pilot bas an og;ning in the circu· ~!...~!: .. -~B~~·N 8Alfency. ience In u sing 1ur-Profile Machinist (l\vidual to test and inspect Call 546-TI86 .J'ft/11 ••""'• vu. · · fa ce plat•s, coordl· el ·~-"· lation d~artment for a gtnner to manage EXECUTIVES NC Drill Ma-.. ln·11t ecuv11...: COQ'lpOllt'nU. fU· BEA11I'Y' operator. 5 day a ll lri t f bo d · Is deli · nat• m•chinu, and '"41 Uon tn acoountil'lg would be d esira b le . Exce:llent ~nefita. Call Mrs. Fielder dividual &(lected wW be week. W'/a T benefits. New a sma s c o ys an gir , vermg, $12,000 to' $75,000 t trained to operate various grad welcome. o a y , collecting and selling newspapers. Full Ume, Send resume or call TODA y optic• compera-E I Lathe M hi •st eleptro.nlc test equipment. S4G-2474 eves. 5 31-5 3 9 8, permanent positions with regular raises and for ront!dential NO COST tors requirM. Must ftCJ ne GC: ftl Requires good dexterity &. C.OSta Mesa, Nev,oport Beach full fringes including personal use of com· t'xecutivt tnteiview. have m in imum of • betwet-n 9 It 12 I 644-3319 1.=~ OpPort. Employer ability to learn qu;c:k!y. Ao> area • pany auto. Apply in person to Milan Leavitl, EXECUTIVE SERVICES, tllc" yous oxpor-Grinder Machinist ply at: BEAUTY operator. Take 0 'I Pil t 330 W t B St C t M INC. ience a 1 an lns pt:C• · tratlve Ass't $100 PERTEC QVer clif!nt.ete in bw.y salon. at Y 0 ' es ay reet, 0~ 8 esa. 888 N. twtain, Sa.ma Ana tor In •erospace or MiRlng Machinist Highest earning's. 96S-8<ll0, • cn<1 1 547-9625. I tod Ind I BUSINESS SYSTEMS HuntingtonBeach 1~1 EXEC. MANAGERS rea Us ry. • Med. Ins. Sec'y $3.50 hr. sman (mech} $585 17112 Armstrong AVenue BOAT BUILDERS !.~!Career opportunity for the Apply In Perton ·Irvine Industria! Complex Quality Sailboat ma.nu(. Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 right "pro~e • oriented" 1 1 13 Harbor Bl·J . Personnel De partment will be open for m. le~vlews 8 AM-6 PM Mon·Frl. & 8-noon SaL pr Constr. to $6SO nL~ $7()() An equal 9pportunity . l}oods exper. N:Bponsible . couple. 242 unit luxury adult -vu employer people to fill these positioos: CLERK:s Of~AL Assist .. 1 yr. ex· Apts. Exp. not required. 5 Costa MeN, Callf. Other intervie\\'ing times can be arranged. :iauwJVUm sales $000 -dst $500 l'ii;rolt Clric S600 ROY AL INDUSTRIES ASSN==·T:-bc:kkp7-'r~&-Crroc--n:-t ~d,-,:-.. · I Finish C•rpenters MARKET BASKET J>E:rience, ~ll ume, Foun· day "'eek, Start SlCOO per Payroll e.-.;p. nee. Constr. Min. 1 yr experience ta.Jn Va~!fi· 839-9660 ~· C&ll Mr. McAllister, oi-o..1< $500 bkgrnd Pref. Daily job cost. Maintenance Man Have Immediate openings 545-2300. Ing, billing, etc. $500 mo. A!J a.round experience due to remodeling in the ~nt1I ~ice Exec Sec'y $650 mo. 2040 E. Dyor Rd,. (Redhill & Dyor) S•nta An1, C1. LiPl Sec'y R.E. to $700 ~Sec'y !: start. ~ll WESTSAIL CORP. Orange County area for ex-O!'lhcxforuc:-E.xper1enced on· Employer pays fee on lhis 1626 Pl t' A ,...., perienced: ly. Chain1de & I a b . one. 540-3210 ~ Ledg<rBkkpr $550 ~.T. ()pero.tw. • ASSEMBLY INSPECTOR An Equal Opportunity Employer acen oa vc .. "" 842-m ;. APEX EMPLOYMENT BOAT e Grooery Clorks AGENCY • iiill 1rain $415 Lab Tech. ~ Mech. $606 Keypunch, to $565 DENT A L Assi&tanl. Ex· Equal Oppor. Empk:tyer m/t MECHANIC • Produce Clerks perieoc'i?d, chair side. X· 181!'.K Newport Blvd. I ~~~~!""'""""""""""'li_!;'-;~-~-;;-~~-~-!;'-~~--:-~::-~-~-~~~~-~-~~-~-~-~~-=:;-!"~-~-~-~~~s:-~I • Liquor Clerks ~~i'e s.oo!~.is~~tul, Costa Mesa 645-432.Q 1 IMi.\lEDIATE opening tor Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W1nted, M & II 710 Legal Sec $650 Flnance Mgr Trne $520 Sec'y R.E. to S600 N'ew accounts clrk $500 + '!)11¢ tme to $500 ..... Sec'y S600 Fl'·-$500 stcretaries to $650 Inhouse Counsel Sec'y JtlE or Constr. bkgni. $650+ Rea". Mgr. Sec'y. . $650+ llUon Payroll Clrk p/t f. to $4.00 hr. NEWPORT ; Personnel Agency 1133 Dover Dr., N.B, r 642·3870 . API'. MANAGER In Garden Grove. No. exp. req'd. Call lit 3 pm., 542-2859 • $SEMBLERS . l" Hughes i Newport Beach MicroelKtronics Division has immediate requirements for experienced Assem.blers i and RIGGER Pertee otters permanent E.xperience nee. Own tools. • Part time Checkers el!Wloyment, paid vacations Phone • 645-3880 after 6 months, plus one ~8~oo'°""K"'K"'E"°E°'P°"E=='R~A-/~R-Interviews will be \Ved- week paid time off at nesday, July 25th, 9 am thru Christmas, company paid $541 4 tile, hospital, s u r g i c a I Irvine area, Work In pretty pm. medical and dental benefits. offices Vi'ith friendly, homey Human ResourceJ Excellent w o r k i n g con-atmosphere. Familiar with Devdopment Ottice ditions and growth poten· some B/K machine & typ-2S35 So. Bristol lia1. ing. Great variety position. Santa Ana Requires 6 months to 1 year Xlnt benefits. Free to ap. 213: ~T:iOO PCB inspection experience. plicants. Also lee jobs. Equal Opportunity Employer Must kno\v 1..-omponent color Al>igail Abbot Personnel COMPANION . Dnver . good code & be familiar \Vilh Agency, 230 W. Warner, plain cook • non smoker· printed circuit b6ard in· _s_u_;1_e_200_. _S._A_._5_;1_-<_122 __ 1 drinkt>r. C.ood refs. 6441954 ''""Hon 'tandard•. Will ;n. BOOKKEEPER aft 1 wkdys, all day Sun. spec! preappl ic able assembly drawings and in· Lite or heavy for bookkeep· COMMERCIAL spect instructions. ing office. Expet". in public TELLER Apply at: accounting preferred, Sa1ary Experienced PERT EC open. Call' Part Tlmo BUSINESS SYSTEMS 17U2 Armstrong Avenue Santa Ana, Calif. Irvine Industrial Co"mplex Equal Opportunity Employer m/t ASSEMBLERS URGENTLY NEEDED Register today, work tomor· row! NO FEE EVER TOPS IN TEMPORARIES. \Vestem Business Services In<:. CONSUMER ·LOAN 5G3 W. 19th St.. CLERK Costa Mesa. 642·0'112 Experienced Bookkuper Full Tlmit Fee pa.id. Must have heavy' A/P & payrolJ expc!rience. UNITED GencraJ ledger lhru trial CALI FORNI A BANK balance. Great benefits. 309 Main Strffl Start $650. Also fee jobs . Call Sally Hart, 540-fi055, Huntington Beach Coast Personnel Agency, 536-8811 2790 Harbor Blvd., CM. BOOKKEEPER _ Mature Equal Opportunity Employer female. experienced in medical ins11rance billing. To work in Dr's office . Send Resume to: Comp. Operator 370 to $800 Westclifl Personnel Agency 1651 E. Edinger , S.A. Classified ad. No. 897, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 IA'Iark_ III ~enter) BOOKKEEPE;R -ex-~ 5"2-8836 . ~ Electr~apif41"' o.Astem)alers., ... ~ ,,... "' Microelectronic Component· · A1Hmblon . """""""""""""""""""""!!!!!'!!! perieneed • Girl Friday COOK •· M~ be over· 21 .. needed for retail business. Wages. aCt.wdlng to exper. ASSNT. MANAGER Irvine office. 835-3622. Apply m person, llamburger e Ultrasonic Wire Bonders e Photomask -Processors e Mlcro-WelCMrs • ·Die Mounters • T.C. Ball Bondon Busy fr. H h Hamlet, 1545 Adams Ave., Mature couple to manage o ice._ eavy P one, Costa ~1esa.. Ask for Mr • adult apt. romplex i n record keeping. 3 days a Hagan. Newport Beach. No pets or week. $2.50 hr. Pennanent. c..c=~====-- children. Maintenance exper 642-3490 1 CUSTODIAN required. Apt. + salary. CASHIER Wanted: ApPly Custodian needed to clean Write Classified Ad No. 677, CHECKER AUTO PARTS, laundry rooms in large Daily Pilot, PO Box 1$0, ill E 19th st c M apartment complex i n Costa Mesa, cal 92626. 645-8264: " · Irvine. Custodial experience Openings are on the lst and I '"'iii""ii;iiiioiiii;iiiiii;;;;;;ii iiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I required. Hours & days 2nd shifts. These positions Al'TENTION MEN flexible. Good salary. cau ~Her an excellent future Huntington 'Beach CHECK HERE Mrs. CaPece between 9 & ]j f!lth a growing commercial 1'-0untain Valley 97~28 eivision of the Hughes Costa Mesa Equal Opport, Employer 1Jrcraft Company. whore Irvine Me,,.Women CUSTOMER l:oP wages and outstanding 1 ~--a Beach Skill-,U klllod I"""' be n e I H • are N.":;;rt -.:h No o;.,:11 or SERVICE C(ERK r vailable. Don't miss this opportuni!y! Registration F.. We have an immediate open· F call or apply in 50 TRAINEES ing in our customer service n to: We hope that 5t> good Inside Sales, no exp. $2.SO hr. Oept. for a candidate who BIU.. ZAHN trainees will answer this ad Mach operators, l yr. exp. to has -substantial general of . II. ('H714)U548--0611GH' ExEJ. 2545 ~~·s~!t ~te!'!J~syoJ: J~~~~r$2.25 hr. g~e:;~Zy ~~~~~~: can qualify. All we ask is 25 yrs. $2.75 hr. & quotations, opera t In g l past Y..m'k has been if you Tow Truck Driver, min. sge eluding typing sales onlers that you \\'ill be willing to Camera operator to $8.00 hr. T('lefax, TWX & diuo r' AIRCRAPf ~udia~t I~~; ~~i':.u ~~~ ~~c~c!!~ !~~~·$~·~r~h11t ~~1!~· some telephone I· COMPANY will ... ses'.,;~rough a Ckt. -......... tab ~ A ~~~ $00 Superior venu. Unbiased _ wpor,t Beach, C•llf. Aptitude Test Girl Friday $120 wk. F.qua1 opportunity Mir'" \Vhich will tell you whether Clerk-typist, exp, $100 wk. pl you possegs the fundamental Motel maids to $1.75 hr. em oyer ability necessary for sue- Excellent fringe benefits in: eluding company paid group lnsuranc:e. Apply personnel d('pt. LSI ' cess in ou'r home mp.in- ;\saembly tenance electrical industry. Factot"Y Trainees & Many Olhera I BECOME A You will enjoy taking the , 1 test; it's free, given on in· tervie\\'. Our \\'Ork is not APEX , Transport Dynamics 3131 VI. Sogorstrom Senta Ana VARIAN hard. We are not the type of man or \von1an and driv.i !i ' company to stand OVE:r a SSEMBLE·R thOm. We do, "°'"ve', ex· pert an honest day's work for an honest day's earn· EMPLOYMENT AGENCY An Equal 0 P Po rl u n ; t y Employer ings. VARIAN suo Por W"k l8l0-C Newpol'\ B\v(I. DELIVERY OF DA IL Y Costa Mesa 645-4320 Pll.O'r, SUNDAY ONLY TO DATA as per written guarantee plus bonus and <:ash ad· NEWSPAPER CARRIERS fN SAN CLEMENTE AREA. MUST LIVE IN AREA, REQUIRES USE OF STATION WAGON OR VAN AND VALID DRIVERS LJCENSE. CON· TACT HARRY SEELEY, 330 W. BAY ST., COS'I'A MESA OR. PHONE 492-4420 or 6'2-4321 MACHINES vances. II you are •lncen?, clean cut and am.bilious Clerl<:al ( hiring e1~mechanical .asemblers for l st &: 2nd lfts. 'Requited is a nlnimwn ol 6 months ;18.ted experience In one of Ml following areu: Com· :ioncnt prep., IOlderlng & ;Nembly of P .C. Boards. W.O hiring in cabling & J'!ite'~P· • Join a growlllCJ company Ex.cellent em• I plcrye benefits ! • lm,_tlate openings I Pleue: Appbt In Penon °" Contact B. KraJlt& call: 838-5267 MON 9 AM-·1 :30 PM AUTO PARTS COUNTER MAN Ford erpcrience preferred but not necessary. Call Bob Stewart tor in t erview. 612-00lll ""'· .... THEODORE ROBINS FORD 0060 lfarbor Blvd,, Costa MtBa TYPISTS & CLERKS \Ve need typist s 45 'vpm + , clerks with good Engllsh 4 Ma!h. ApJ)ly In The · PeN10nnd [)('pt. lllon thrll t-'rl 9 am-12 noon <' ' PACIFIC MUTUAL 700 Newport ~ler Dr. Newpm't BeACh DELIVERY man for early morning L.A. Times home delivery route. Over 21 yean: old. must ha ve ccomiCal car, no soliciting, no coUectlng. W~minster .l Gardtn Grove nrca. Call 638-:m.t BABYSITTER w;th '. r' Clerk Typist DEWVERY, 5 ..... n..,,,. st"Ven yr old boy, beacb · N Call 6~-&""' tt.... Maintain bid & dra'o\ing liles, mg paper rou~. ewport llt'l!ft. ~r-l'u.<, ·~·v custon\CT' ll!IS, other u. Bea.ch. 5:30-7:30 AM. $1 46 evtf;/Wknd&. A n....• an1e<J 1lgned clerical dutie1. Ac· per mo . ...-~ m nWl MASI'ER Baker urgent. req. curacy lt nc.e.lneN ilnPol'· w/eoo.n. car. 979-7fil6 !or well eatab. la&". Sch. tant. '· · D E N T A L r e c eptionlst. Bak..,,. Perm. pos. exccll. EDLER INDUSTRIES ' Orth>dontle pro ctlcc, ~18:::L::.,Phone~:::-.-::,;..=;;,· ~-·I 2101 DIM> -ouut.anding opportun;I)' for · llalboo Boy Club Newiiort -ouallfled penon. To $100. WAITEM -Only ~-.u tx· Clo'rlt Typ. Ill -........ to o .... flcd ..,.,.,,..., need a pp J 7 • . ' Ad No. 901. Daily Pil<>t. DENTAL receptionist ex· pericnced 3 days per week. Call TI4: 847-8501. DOMESTIC Help George Allen Byland Agency. 106-B E. 16th St .. S.A. 547-0395 EXPERIENCED ASSEMBLERS NHdod lmmodlatolyl VOLT lifeguard at private country j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ----------• club. ~1ust be-17 or older. Medical Back Ofe. Call. for app'I Mon·>'ri, KEYPUNCH om A"ist busy -.. - 6'4-54ot URGENTLY NEEDED me<!k& i"OUP._ Creal 129 e-xperience. Instant Personnel DONtrr Shop -Night shift, Temporary Sen•lce lOPM...fu\M, ~ge 2 5 - 4 5' 3848 Campus 01·.-. SUite 100 Inspectors ALL SHIFTS H.egister today, y,·011c tomor- ro'1"! TOPS JN TEl\fPORARIES NO FEE EVER benefits, includ.ina: i-oftt •haring. Salary .. $500, Call Sally Hart, ~ CoutaJ Pel'90nnrl ~. 27 9 0 Plarbor Blvd., CP.1 female, apply m person, Mr. Nev;port Beach ~741 Donut, 135 E. 17th St., CM Equal Oppor, Employer Varian D•ta Machinea; li10THER'S help« tn neW Irvine home 3 lo 4 de.Ya per wk 9 to 4. 561·15U Dr's Assistant EXPER. ru11 ume blood ht & 2nd Shifts f(..:J dra"-'t'I'. To \\'Ork in medical YJU !·fas hnmed openings on nGDliPwt Dr. ....... "" NEED :f experienced tow truck drivtts. Young lady {18-28) to assist Lab. Must be tll'Xible &: able For receiving & In process 7:, in health spa. \Viii train, no to handle Teliponsibility. inspectors. A min. ol 2 yrs 11'zn. Call 492-5818 NO EXPERIENCE N6CESSARY e:..p. nee. Apply in person Typing helpful. Please call es:pcr is preferred. In pro-----:....----~ any alt or eve, 2930 \V. bwt. 9-3 pm 640--0140, ~irs. cess exper. shoo.Id inciude1""!!""""""l""l!'""""""" Coast Hwy,. N.B. Annstrong cables, circuit boa r d1· K h Opo '."!""!'!!!''!"'!"'!'~!!!!~,,.1iEXP&i''i;ERiljj!EN~CEilD)iMM'iT'°!SiTT assemblies, chassis&: power eypunc rat~r TRAINEE POSITION DRAPE~Y SAL&S _ N~at operator (legal) supplies. Rec e Iv in g in-Fee paid. One of the tmest NOW OP!N aggressive man for growing 979-9900 Ask for Lynne spection exper. should in-rompanit'S in Orange Coun· GB Industries of So. c.alU • firm. Great oppty. \\re will j ............................. I elude sheet metal parts, ty . 6 ll10L reCfl1I !'Xpttience. train. OJstom shade Cl circuit boards, components 2nd shift, Salat)' to $575. bu immediate openlnRs I.or Drapery Shop, 3535 E . Coast SO Inventory erks etc. w/knowledge in the use Also fee jobs. Cali Linda tn.inttt in d I 1 p Ta-,, H CdM Needed immediately 9! drawings, vendor Ray, 54()..6()50, Coastal Per-marketing distribution A wy, · VOLT catalogs, micrometers & sonnel Agency, 2790 Harbor credl~ merchandising. 6 new Instant Personnel calipers. Blvd., CM. ~~~ ru'::u:.i;;anr1n ,,::: Electronics WE'RE ON THE GO! Tmporary Service If you meet tlle:se quallfica· KITOJEN Helper -Mature -Uons now open for fU1J. time 3848 campus Dr., Suite 100 tions .~ are looking for a penon, PJ.1 shift. J.fHe. permanent people. New-port Beach 546--4741 position with a growing Verde Co nv aleace n t *XI.NT TRAINING PRQ.. F.qual Oppor. Emp)o)w Orange County co. that of· Hospital, 681 Ce-nter St., GRAM I!'~""'!"'""""~""~"" I fers xln't pay & benefits -Costa Mesa, 548-5585. Bt\\-n. * COMPANY BENEFITS FRY cook, exper. for ooffee 9-3 pm. * SOME PART T l ME VARIAN DATA MACHINES shop. Must be neat ap-Please' Apply In Person LABORER wanted, steady POS l 'P l ONS ALSO has several l mm ed ia t e pearlng. Call 548-2253 Or Contact job. Boat htllder, ca.bine1 AVAILABLE opc>nings due to rapid ex· FURNITURE DELIVERY 8 . KRAFKA maker, own tools. Wood FOR PERSONAL pansion. we are looking for MAN. Part or run time. 1'"'1nlsher for motor homee:. INTERVIEW CALL: • individuals that want to Cal l 642--9012 2722 Michelson Dr Girl to. ~-er phones & 53'-2591 ~i:ome a part of . the ex· -*-G=A=R~D~E~N=E~R~*--Irvin• Sl?"1e fihng & t Y p In i . Mon & Tuu from citing computer industry. 5J6-J.2fk) or 1281 10 AM \\"e are in need in the Be your own Boss • 1 PM 833-2400 ext 336 LEGAL Sf!c., young, part --. following areas: Full or p/fitne in your ' time. Corp .. experenenced. NEW mtg bulineu needs Own area. High income. Equal Oppor. Employer Newport Center. &W--0800. working foreman to Rel Up • Secretaries Typing 60, S/H 80. At least 3-5 yrs. p r eviou s ex- perience. Guaranteed Customers !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I & operate -t r a c I n 1 No C •• h Dow" LVN for Medical Reducing m chi I ~ Clinic, lite v.-orlc and a ne1 or new t' ...... uet Earn Now, Pay Later If\ M 1fi M V• n 1' pleasant duties. Mu."t be production line. Sa!Vyopen. 968-0812 slim & enjoy working with ~ftt ~. Call "".""-IC """~""'-tlo.tCt r,1 ~1!,. Call Joyce a t for appt • • Clerk· Typist GIFT w..,, M[g'c. leade<I tl\.VU•L n:J\.",,"'LL ~ ~~ No exp. nee. min.~· rem. g I a s s -c a nd I e s -wood ....._,..c .... V""V l--..,..C_,..,...,-.,.,,,.-,.---4HS Typing 60 with a ~·ledge planters. Needs he Ip . CCO\N""ES·~'"t\... I M.lchinisf Tr•inee yrs. Avail hn. r fil . & .JUV "-& days. Take & give wort o 1ng systems an in· 979-4638. Aftt>r 5 PM By Appointment Will train to ~te drill asalgnmPnta by phone. No l~resl in learning.a publica· HELP \\-'anted mature adult. Control Engr B.5EE to $l2K press, lathe, etc, if you have sale!!. In NB. Call 64S-4D7l !Ions dept. operation Janitorial service, Naugles Acctng Supervisor to SllK h~d shop cour&es &: AI'!'. a bet lOMl-IOPM Drive thru 214-01 Brookhurst 1''/C Bkkpr to $800 high scbooi graduate with NOW goin.,. ti.-...• ... h pl·-• •Jr. Tech ffB. Apply in person. See to controller to S"ffiO good mechanical aptitude & -... ....,... ..... _, hav resided tn Oran expansion. Need 12-15 :yn. llfustrator HOUSEKEEPER ·1Payroll-Constr to $750-+ e · it! eXper. flniah cabi net . . Exec Secretary to $700 County Ax a mtnimwn of &ken Paste·up of manuals, simple Llve-m. N~ Beach. Eng. Legal trne $650+ 1 yr. Dunean ElectroniCs,, .,m ...... ,.· ,.~ ... -... ,.· iiiiiii;&;j ink line drawings & have llsh speaking. '?WTI room, Sec/R.E. Legal 10 S650 Inc., 2865 Fairview Rd., I' operated ··srAT" camera. TV. Small family. 5 day Secretaries to S65CI Costa Mesa. "·eek. $240/MO. 646.:rm. Eleetro-rnech. tech. SOOO Equal Opport Employer M/F • Shipping & Hou>ekee,,... • -· Matu,.,,, G~I Frlday to S600 MAID R~ei·vi'ng Clerk expec., live-in. 4 children, Seo/Dictaphone to S600 Full u,,,., Laguna Udo 31156 -all ""'°"'age. 4'· priv. nn. Punh/Sec/m SH to $600 S. Cout Hwy, Laguno • Must have a current Calif. TV in new home. Dover Mech. Draftsman S~ MAIDS WANTED _ Wo ..... not N"""' RN1, L VN1 & .&ldoo Cre1te yOtJr own work week! driVC"r 's license. Previous Shores. $450 per mo. Ref. A(:ctg Clerks to $560 ncceuary Appl MCYf'Et. 6 ship/rec. ex Per 1 t-n c e 642-5607 Recept/Typ~!il ~ 6266 \V~m1tu Av~'. Hotpital Staff RelW •• , hel pful. HOUSEKEEPER-non Jive.in General offtCf' to S.'>25 Westmln.~er WE OFFER approx 3 to 4 hrs per day:· Keypunch/CRT $475 ' . Allows You To \Vork The : Corona de! Mar area. Must CALL TRISH HOPKINS MAN to '1\-0rk tul ! rtmc l.tl Days & Shill.I You Prefer • Competitive make lunch. Mr. Osmond, JERRI WHITTEMORE rental yard. Neat 1n appea.r. A Varie~ Of Aaleriments (714 ) 521-7103 488 E. 17th St. (at Irvinel CM w/neat handwriting. W1U Keeps You Curre:nt w/New pay · Su'ot 224 642 1470 train. Apply morns, 1930 Concepts & Techniques. No • • • HOUSEKEEPER to care for • • N....,,..,.,.. Blvd., CM. • Mod fa I ti ~~';~~~~~:'.;~l"."=~~".'.'~:'iiO ... ':-Fees or rebe.tea. Gd. pay, ern Cl I es home and 2 small children, 1f:o • • ,.. rtV-,.. 1f • Excenent !.mo.!:n t!:.'5~~j{!c= IRVINE Unified School Dis-MANAGER TRAINEES f(omemaJctts.Upjobn b fits area 833-3517 tri. ct now accept:i. ·ng app .. lica· ASSNT MANAGE RS 1805 No. Broadway, S.A. ene HouSEKEEPER & cook. tiOn.s for classified po51oons: Apply after 1 PM S47-661l Please Apply S70. per week. 12 noon P .E ./School Grounds-Kentucky Fried ln Person to 8 pm. Mon-Fri. Nevvport Chicken NURSE, LVN Part Ume, T-3 p.m. &: 11.7 Lm., Mela Verde Convale~nt. 661 Center, Costa 'Mesa.. Btwn. ~3 pm. 548-5585 . Or Contact: J. Fuller Bch. area. Call aft 6 pm. ~~0;b5 sm745 693 S. Coa.Jit ttwy, Laguna 642-7292. 2929 E. est. lh~'Y. Cdi\1 VDM 2722 Michelson Dr. lrviM, C•llfornfa 83:1.2400, .... 336 Equal Oppor. Employer HOUSEWIFE PT TIME P.E, Equipment Mao>-- 12 months $598-727 !'~~'!'!~~~~~~ $50, per V.'eek min. counsel· U Ill M /Al C nd ' ing brides to be. 7-10 PM. t ty an t o 1• MANAGER TRAINEE li-1on thru ThuM. + Sal tioning -Outstanding opportunity to days. Must be over 21 & 12" months $6# 783 advance to managerial potil· ambitious. No exp nee. For Plant Foreman • Hifh tion in 3G-60 da)'11. Our cur- intrvw. call Mrs. f'rink, School -rent man a E: er s earn NURSES Aide~. experienced preferred, 7-3 &: 11-7 ahiftl. lntervle-ws bet. 10-12. Hun· tington Beach c.onwieacent Hospital, H. 8. 18811 Florida St .. 817-3515 54&-5745 12 month!! $766-932 fl:00).41SOO mo. Must have H Y 0 RAUL IC machine Utllity M•n General direct sales experience. NURSE'S Akteg • We are b- ad • -•c,u Mr. Newman 979-5222 creuing our •tatt " ~ assembler able to re 12 monthi; $&44-783 •-=u hydraulic schematics, bend· P.1ANAGER Trainee, mature, experienced people. A 11 I bl fl are hydrolic tubing. P.1ust Application tormw and de· over 21. \\'ould I I k e shifts. Good benefits A E ectronics A5sem Y have own tools. Ask for tailed job descriptions avail· re11taurant f:Jfper, but will wages. Apply at 1•f 5 Foremain Herb Dube, (714) 5.56-8030 able, Office ol Ppr:.onnel train. \Viii haw to undergo Superior Ave., N.B. Iminediate 1st shift re· Services. 4S61 Alichellon a mart training period. NURSERYMAN qulremenl ro, a n ex-INSURANCE SAl£S Road, frvine 92664. ""''" ,.,,,. .,,JJege. Apply Minimum 1 yr .. wboleAle p e r i c n c ed a s s em bly JANITOR _ Lite main· Hamburaer Hamlet, 1545 nursery experience )Ont supervisor with a te .... ..-, 6: ..... •.3() a.m.-!580 Adama, C.M. Ask for Mr. sai·-· Ir benetl.ts ,._., .. _ demonstrated record of sue-. ·-""' .,.,.., H•nan between 2 3()...4 30 ..... 3 1.A\ll ......... CE'S8 supcf'Visina elf!dro· No exp nee .. earn While you Monrovia, Newport Beach. .... • : : Capece bttwee:n 9 & 12. m e cha nlcaJ usemblera. team, pert time, eves It 642.-3412. p.m. 979-6121 R<"'°n•lble tor hb"e & tire. wi<n<b, full time when quail-JUNIOR SALESMAN: MARKET BASKET Equo! 0pport EmploJer training. sch ed u I e & ~~en Insurance Group Eam $20·S40 ptr weric i:s lmm~te ope! ~~e 2 OFFICE GIRLS method• improvemenf3. working af1er school and ren 'Ill n v•cuige NEEDED Duncan c;Jectronlcs. lnc. Ed Lani * 540-1834 on Salurda)'s aet1ing new County ania: Radio telephone dispatch 2865 Fairview Rd.. Co&ta INSURANCE SALES cuwtomen for the Daily SERVICE DELr CLERK Mu.st be 25, able to drive !\1esa. ~ Pilot. Th.ls Is not a paptr \Ve.are lleektrc an indlVidusJ Appl.r. ~ Petton Equal Opport . Employer Lookhlt tor aggressive a e· rou.te and ~ not Include "'ho I& familiar ""I th YELLOW CA& CO. M/F c:owrt exec. 3 yn. aper. dehwrlet or t'Olltcting. prepa.rf:'d f()Ods etc. l86 E.. 16.i. ,._ __ u.~-- El•ctronlc Auembfy KhO\\"S personal llnes. comm. \Vfl have openlf\P In ~IA ' u1, .....,., •• .....,.. Foreman FabuJOUll markets to work Mesa and South Huntington .fRE;SJI FISH PE~ Of'F..SE"I' .preu opntor, DEY has tu1 lmmediate lJt with. Irvine Ol' WI~kki ~rfiett. Beach ool)'. Apply now! An experlt1f!iCtod fllh Ptnon $622. to sns. Pt"I' mo. Send ~hltt opening fur an ex· Cont.act Bill amungton, 9&'J.9&U. to cut. fillet, and dll'play l'H\lme to Sadd I e be.ck pcrieDCtd self-starting etec-979-7422. fllh. A1o.t Importantly, 11o-e ~ Unlfttd School 1 ro-medlankal uaembly INSURANCE SECY-Fire .\ KEYPUNCH ~ ~ lndlvld~ ""° Laauna :i11~ ~J;u~ • •puvhors ~ C..ualty. Small -·· SWING SHIFT pie. d .. I dJreet1y -.Deodllill!-date J"'" 27th. Challenge • pot e n ti a I . office:. Ph: m..o562. "'Y Rffpon.albilltle1 .rill lnclude 6 Mo'• actual .ark uper. Qu&llf'lfrd appUcanls •J1P1Y ORDER cMk clerk: Small train;na,l>Cbeduiff.~ "'UICK CASH <mkeypunch,...,.apeorny w~.July2SC11.e.-Pl ..,.uanc. llnn - I . 1 - I I I - 1 VDM Maun....z..40 yn....ol<1.,.. See ]•P]il.v trowtrw mfc. firm _ _e:.o....»or 'ff.ii, O:wta_Mea. titn0nnel Mero 1221. w. 1n tivfne om:iplex. MUi1 ea. 92626. Rtplie& atrict.ly Coast Hwy NcwpMt. Bc!ll<ih. have eooct tieUre aplltude. con.rldMttal improvement•, htre a: fire, T disc device. Um.I 1 om. sh&rp aareaivt prnon to l'bowmd--_ume .. ;+h ~TffROUGK-A---A~y'" .,,.. -......... -~l ----t Miilry hlirtory to H. Cary, . Ptr110nnel Department lfuman ftto.8ourtt1 • mall S3T3. pft' mo._ 2mM~t-'Dr, lrvlflo, Calfr.lrila 133-2400, m. 336 '· . • . Pu r c.h a a l n a d 4.! p l . I='"""""""'":--,,...,-...,..-, llolboo Bot Club badWWIKI helpful. Salary DENTAL A"'". n t - Bulba.ya -SQmt' txpcr~nce n> sszs. Cell Sally •rMt. ~. At leut 6 mo dl!Slnbl~. See penon, ~. O::utal Pe.nonncl exp, Jl.B. artt.. l4JMO nei Mii'· ~ncy, :mo Hlrbor Blvd., ($-10 am., 5-8 pm.J. lttl \Y. Coai1t llwy. NB CM CLASSIFIED ···•· •• 6Ca'71 -- Duncan . El""'""'"' Inc. DAILY 1 PILOT Mond.,.·Fri. 9 am·ll Nom -Olllce Mar<inc-~ eencl -:l!lt;; Fa>rvtew Rd.. Cool• PACIFIC MUTUAL 2835 So. Driltd """"' to P.O. Bax 957, ...... 92626 WANT AD 100 Ne""'°rt Conlfc Or. Santo Ana Sama """-9%IV2 Equol Opport. Emplo>"l Ntwporo S.ach 714: -Like to lndt? Our 'l'ndor'• M/F 64Z,.S6 78 £qua! Opporlunllf EmpaoYv Pvodbe oolwnro II tor m , Cl.AS511'1D> •• •• • • 142-5611 ~II Idle Item. ••• ~ Stoll idle tam.a ••• 6Co5i78 5 lbwt. 5 ~ tor.S bocb. J . -. ! - • DAILY PILOt . -·------------------.. .I~[ --I~ '--! _ ....... _v .. ~-lo.=-S Hele WentJ, MI F 718 Ml 71 Mbcell1neous !(§]I ![fl] I [J., ..... lrttJ I l[Il] I l[Il] I ,,.. .. , L eh;amt H I W od M I. F 710 Help Wonted, M I F 710 • Help Wanled, F 0 ApPlle.,_ I02 Mlocelloneous 811 811 3 Lines, 1 Times, $1.llO- Help Wanted, M&F 710 e P ent • RECEPT-SEC -"'--'------('.::::::::::.::=:::.--.::.:.; 1'£NNJS -m•mbon1hlp tor OSIT ONS OPEN N , _ _,__ 1 Tro!NICIAN BUILT-In raoa• top~., unit MOVING-MUST SELL """· 1100. CdM. Tennh PART time o(fitt bclp PHYSICAL 1'1wrap1.st for :1<--P I PW olttce in uvuM -Arch ' PER.TEC utters pcnnanenl .l built-In ovm urut, good T.V . .$6.). Tablf' tennis $20. Oub. 640-0015 Wanted. Gcru:ral o If 1 e e tlve ultluslr1al 1·hnir. Suh.111• FOR : li!l't nf'«llJ you! Type fiO, Cfnploynient, pa.kl vacation 1'0rwJilion, ~ ~n. WU! 2 ,.., . . ~i 120 ,__.,I_. ..... ......,.ulnx.I. HOUl'll & fl•h;"e ti..'nf'rltll. Send e BRANCH xii bffic.f1lll. Up to $:.)j(), Call 1 " I'· ~ 1 k l>t'll or trade for $1oveii or &rttrl e11,,.11.in a ~ · ,,.,...,.. .,...., ·~-1 ,. A••n ~,"g1"-l'.LJ'...,,.. c a li'"r .., niou ,,... , .. u11 "'ee i-frlg•ra•·-. '"'" ........ n tor $10 ea"hl. """"· ~SID. •---'ble. ~·ta 1'1 ............ ,, rt'"'Umt· P.O. 10893, S:1nlA ..... -, ""· .....,.."""'1, on· ··• 1· off 1 ~r1-• L " ...... ,,.~ ~ •·~ '-MJ L-..... "' l I ~ Dnpl palu iruc a ... ,. ~mot, -,-,=~=-'~7:::-:7.=-,,. &'tund SIO. 2 t\\'lll })(.'(b 3 Pharr ~31':> or 642~ Ana, 9'/111 SEC'Y iti ~r oymeni 1.'0n1pany paid llrt, ~pita!, AtAYTAG wuher A 1-lotpoint rnat~ • ............1 cood. $40. lo' •~1. I'' ·s-1~. • Aj(('ncy, 3400 lrvi™' Blvd., ·u-ral ""'·-f •··I ""n I drytr ·~ .,~ ,~. •-... -'-"' '' ~ '" OOF NIJ 11 .,.i • m.,.,11,;., '" '"" • c ec, • ..w. e-·11• '"'e Like new wht't'I harrow $1~. PAMl-Un,...Mlp..fleel1ed Apo_, MAGHtNE..OP-ERAToORS I ·-·---iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I lfll be11C"fil1. Excell ent v.·ork-dc.:Jivr:ey, 1:uarn. 546-8672 or R.ockii\K cti.11.ir $15. J\Jitiquc ply In person: Ate 'N Ed's Trairx.-e ,.;. 1.•,.; p <' r 1 (' n t' Ml OPERA TO ROUJ[ SALESMEN in~ t'Ondltlons: aod grow1h 847-8115 miniature lron i'tove $60, ..eiDA..!\10.$ . .J,.'lth S1._..___C.~f. 1u·u •b'•v> opcriilW'S .Jlti.~I \Viti ltt in . t _ _ potcnllal. ltE c._o .N D . AP!'lJ.ANCES. Anriq~ ci<k>.r jU&! 111_ ~ PAYROLL CLERK 1111 all sl1ifts in t·IPan, Tl<'\.\' C ,"'.""', ,1, 1,:,~1kx1x-r;9'.~1 SR TEST DelivM"t'd -b"Uar. Dunlap',11 S<t>40l5 bu 1111 ! fl'. 1 A M-3PM. on U( ,. J, t'S, .,,.,......., '. c ,-N ''M 518-7780 M8Jor Nc\\•port lk<tr.h firm ~ llP~·\, 11Pr--l-lAr.1. Shilt SECURITY ._..1.1\.'l! NaUonal o. ix looking • 18 _;J e11·port, ... ANTIQUES -ook Bo\.\1ronl seeks candid!'!!• 11•00 u; .r J: for JlCITilaocnt lllablc mi'n. Rent Wathers/Dryers t-heit, sliver caster ,;et, 6 tainhnr "·Ith all plut5l'!I of bonu11 p~n110urn Jo~ i;".';u1i.:r : PACIFIC . Exoollt'nl Jlfartlng ttala1y. TECHNICIAN · $2. "'k. Full maint. pc; 'rreKSel din. rm. 7!t yr. tht' payroll lun1·tto~. F'-\!· gra\'t'ytthci. PIMn' uni Y "1 U 1ntert'sted Call: * 6.19-l20'l * old, matching hu1ch, 2 h.'!.nd pcrlenct' .... ·11h 1.vn1 putcriz1·1l adv1tllt'l.'1"1'"1 \.\'htk·1.1"-'\mlnJt NAT'L BANK 714: 774-0330 ;;;;:;;;o-'"""'-':"c;:c;:'-::c-:::-;:::::\ braided rug approx. 9x12 & payroll z·ste.m rll'ic.irabl<". Ol'I .)!:ib. Top b1-'t1l•fLti; nnrl F'REE pickup relrlg runnine 12x20. Gone \Ylth The Wind Call vacation /lJan. 1•1t .. 11sc visit, 30aYl Cro\.\•11 VMl!t'y l'k\.\'Y (THIS IS A or no A appliances, !>Crap Xlnl be fits, Alrs. do ,-1 •n I. 1 blk. off Baker LltJ,'UOO N~ * SALESMEN * 6""-"""'o lamp, antiour. pretlS!!d glass Fit'ldcr. .... " Eq 1 o p1 CHALLENGING & 1°""0:'•7.lal"". "Ca°'l'°'I -;.•~~~=.,·-=;I all sha""""' hand _;_,..,, 644+3389 St. & Nc'"fu~t ~"Q."f.'way. ua pporiuncly l'ln oyer Do you take "Salt'!lmen INTERESTING JOB) Building Marert•ls 806 pl/\tcs, b;;ia go.lore~;; l><·t\\·ttn 9 ,11;: 12 200 Dri~i;. Co!iln MC·!lrt PRODUCTION CONTl«JL \\'lll\lt>d" ads with n grain of WILL lest. cttlibratl', lrouhle 150 yrs. old. Ma.ny other Ml1cellaneou$ Wanted OLD SILVER, GOLD, MISC. Coins. ~109 Offict_ Furniture/ Equip. 820 824 EXEC swv\ ctirs $151$25. Sec chrB $8 12"1. Desks $20/90. Pierce Ent. 8Gl \V 19 CM ~2-3WJ8. Pl1nos/Orgilns Free Organ Lessons AtALE, Goldrn Retriever • oiLx. Good wa~ xlnt I "'/kids. Ntt<b lg ynrd, lota 4 of love. MS-'1900 I COONHOUND mix, ~-ed - ft'malt, '10 mos .. nttdA I 1 yard. t'l'ce to gooc-1 hof'Dt'. j !16.\.-2001 Jo'REE IO :;.'000 Mme 2\1 yr Sill. ~ Dachshund. Call 8-J6-TI55 -Cuddle1ome Kittens "40-7G20 Pets, General I I I l I 850 l I E"Wli Oppo11. Jo:mployer • ..i;iiiiiiiiiii;;;iiii ... iiiiiiii•/i''.'l<TE'~ ulf·-!"'''"""""' 11t1l1 ?C(1n'tsayibla1neyou. 11.hoot and re-lr <.'Omputer e Surplus.Building things. ~8-9760 A L A You Like! TALKING An1azon Parrot. 4 " "'-''" "' .._..._ I followed up a few myself ,... 1000' NEW s ong s Youlll:'_, 1an1l', beautiful. OK PERSONNEL PRINTING en1p!Oyml'nl, paid vaculions in the past. The job seldom output mkTO film i.-ystems. r.ITEfAT~51ALDoo-1 •beot 1 STEREO: NEW 19i3 Gar-Non-playl'ts & playt'rs \1·el-ivlth ..i.v.. 1195. Call S44-6032. , niter 6 n1onths, plus 0111• Background in digital cir· "' ! rs, um r, PY· rard model full s i u come to anend Tucsd<>u ""b FSET h'l('(J u11 to the claim in Uu: _ .. af h-1rn· mold ' IF ~ 8S2 1' R OF \l'l'f'k pa id tin1e off 111 ad, cui1ry lpreferrahly TTL in· iv ........ ,, um s "" g, · turntable AM M ri.tPX nigh! 81 7.30 pr.1. \\'e wanl I Cats , SECRET A y PRESSMAN ~.,',1,;,',s~ms.m,".~ndtu11.~nn;tpn:,:,1J.,1 .. ~fi'.,·~~. ~to~~~~=!~n:. i:;v;~.~ lii: ~~~~~:~cd' c~~~~~:n~i~ ~06'1 L~~RS ~SURSPA.LUS ~~>jS:~ri~1:'~!~:"~ ~~:ry~~an1,0 ~~rnnl~~e.~~~ 1~1ERS.IAN klt!_ens, Clo~/\~& j ,., .. ._ "' " "' 10 make S.250 11 we<'k im· cwrs. RT l.'OTiuuo circuits 2406 So. Main t., . Quad syslem for *"" more. ful'Tli shed. l'Om ehamp1on. gr, e . J Progrflmvt' <'Offi/IUIC:I' prr· fo::0.1.1'llf'nl work I n ~ t'Orl· nicdiatf'ly, ii·i!h .an <"Yt' 10 and servo t'it'l..'llllK helpful. r.ton thru Sat 10-5 Tt'l'll\S, 89J....ffi01 'foin Diclerich . in chUl'g('. qd. gr. 1•h. and 'f'at of year' I phcrial produels 111<1n11!Jt1'-1hti!lrl.'i 1111d growth poten· JllUt'h nlOrt-in the /uturi•, 2 years fonnal !raining plus 714; 5'16·1032 Phone 642-2851 ancestors. $100 & up. Also I lurer has an ln1mecha!C' l st SHIFT ri11l. I'd like to laJk to you. 11 3-5 yl'ars exJ)('rience, Furniture 810 SACRIFICE COAST MUSIC I srud se1vict• available. l opening for a Pf'n;onne!h PA~ EXPEDITER· yuur quallfications n1alch Eng1"neer1"ng ----------,A,!.,·~,rux:.?,.','h' 'a"u""toma'",",· •. ~ Newport Bl\·d. at lla1·bor '---*="'~·~·"'="=~·~~~I aistant to \\'Ork for 1 e t•r-nur ......,uircmenls, this rou_ld "" ' " ...... -* * * Ji.U-.IALA\'IAN Kit I •t ···-1v,·11 _, E 1·ence on 1250W .,., * * * v •. ,...... S-'·r·.. h•ad-iOiiiij;iiiiCo~•~l~a~M.,'~""~~iiiiii / I llOttJl{' "a . ._,,,· '" -xper tx• tht• curN'r you·vt' been G E D · ~" .,.,.,,,,. .. " " tens, show stock, S'75 Up r tonn variotL'I St.'C:rctruial and with T -51 two color • This job .,.,•ill l"lll:1lJ pro-looking for. TECHNICIAN , . av1s phnn('S. Lots of tapes. Bst ORGAN SALE Also stud sctvioo. 544--2006. administrativf' dutLt't;. unit. Must b. a ble to 1tuc1ion shortage follo11up Interview aiipointmrnt l0-1 1801 Port Tiffin ofr('I'. 1n41 846-549-1 . Require excellent typif'I(:: and maintain uniform col· urid parts expediting. Should P~f. \.\·eekdays. 5il6-31R2. N•wport Beach BJ::AUTlJo"UL green KOOel \Vurlitzer Factory Authorized Dogs 854 I communication i;k\lls an1I nt ht• faniiliar with electronics JM~1EDfATE oJ)('ning for You are tho: wtnnei· of carpet 200 sq. yds. S12 per Sale on many n1odels. Other TOP BRED SILKY I feasl 2yearsrl"latt'<.1Per-orbalance a ndhair. pr n du c 1ion rontrol. ATTENTION:CANDY 1 h 'la 'hd' 1 TWOFREETICKETS b d 1 1 · d M 1 -RAISE S ec 111c n wit 11,!ita in· yrl. n<'\v, $5 per yd. l'O\v. rans a.so on sae, price TERRIER PUPS. tonncl background. So1n1• lin• registratio~ on •1 inun!.!'.~ _year expedpcr~c,.ncc FUND R lcrgratecl circuit ho a r fl You reniove. 832-9422 or front S295. 1 1 ... cwu intervi(.>y,•ing and coatodl•'lholabelsand n pivuuction ex iing-Areyau liredof \\·orkingfor backg•oun d. P·-orm tome &1'18 W JI' h M · C'ly FOR DISTINGUISHED ta"·n· al -p~-di!ipRtt!hllll;" required. Apply 1 , J · -~ad-boa~;.. 8_,, .. ':.,.m-SOUTHLAND I• ...,1 · a IC s USIC I t a ..,. c survey .-·-...... be able "o setup and f)('anu s. o1n an organrza-""" •u~.,, ,,.. .._v B CO CH k I DOG LOVERS ONLY llon,<k>sitAble. 1 or subnill resume to~ lion that can niake you big ponent-level trouble!ihooting Home & Garden Show ' U ; roe er, map e South Coast Plaza 540-2830 PERFECTION IN A • I Pertee offers J)("rn1anenl l"Ol· print on 40 pound lite-PERT EC riollars in commission & and· check out coniputer July 211h thru Aug. 5th 9x12 rugs, 1 gr(!('n/1 blue ployment, paid vacations weight stock. We need bonuSf's using ca ndy. peripheral equip men 1. at tlK' ~ood L'Ondition, Sl5. T\vo PACKARD Bell, 21'' color SMALL PACKAGE. after six n1on1hs. plus onc a craftsman who is a BUSINESS SYSTE'tS candles, slationary, gifts & Duties Include lab tesUng of ANAHEIM 9x$·15121 rugs. 10A~736n911 blue 'rV. remote cntl, folding CALL FOR weclc paid tin1e off at Olrist-self starter with 2-4 1712 Arnii.irong Avri~~e novetlies, jf'\\'clry, elc., rte. engineering protol,YJX's and CONVENTION or both. ,,.._ · clrs, perr \\'ork'g cond $200. APPOINTMENT · mas, con1pa;1y puid Lire. · • C 1. No invc.srmenl. Write, giv· mai11tcna111,'t' of documen-TER DECORATOR has n1agnifi· 642-0538. 552-9667 1 - ital, ~. mt>diea!, years experience in Santa Ana, a if. lni.: phone nun11x>r to: P.O. tation. Should have working CEN <.-ent buy on super heavy ny. THOMAS E l t · o ff I Sswork Ex 'A'' -uni opp or l u •1 i I y p k C . ·~ \\' K 1~1a Anah•1m ec ron1c rgan, e PUPPY WORLD e I and dental bcnefil'I, and ex-o Se pre • • ~... Box B:J. Canoga ar , alt!. knowledge of TTL -D TL '""' · a.,. .' .. Ion shag plush erpt. Golden modrl '~ . .,~ firm. Call 1 b f 't k em11loyer m-f "I~ I · · · · d' Please all 642 5678 ext 314 ~ ~ c:eUcnt salary' and \l'Orking cell•nt ene 1 pac • " ""'· ogic circuit 111 ad 1tion to c · • · peach 250 yds. 642-7.55 or 493-6048 Chihuahuas, Amt>riean Es-, conditions. a ge and starting sal· PROOF OPERATOR SA LES Clerk. \-Vonuui. 5 day general electronics. Re-lo el-ain1 your tickf'ts. fNortJ1 54.~'l'I "'"'""~=c-=~;;---,-;--,;--: kinto !Spilzl, Pit Bulls. T· 1 Experl'enced on bank k N ,, A quires al least 2 years of Coun1y !oil Cree numbcor is10,~,~LAN~~E=·-~-~=--1-lAMMOND T-400. rhythn1 & Cu p Poodl-. G•••l D•-, Apply IT K ·gr I ary. \'.'('(' · 0 C'\'CS. or ,,.m. P. ~'40-1220.J "c F RONT -+ Leslie. like 11e,v, sacrifice, L" """' ~TI~"~ 01 1 proof/encoder. J'1y in pcnion bt\111 !).11:30. applicable experience and THRO\V 494-&153 German Stl<'pherd, Bull Ter- ' ·PERTEC A11pl) tn Person Apply: No phonl·. 210 E. 17th St., hi'O .Years educatioln1:tl elC"C· * * * l.A\VN MO\VER $100. rier, Cockapoo. 100 r.tJXEO BUSJNl':.'i,S S\'STEi\'L5 17112 Arnistrong Aveu~ Santa Ana. CRtif. Irvine Industrial Con1plcx ' An equal OPJlOrtunity employer 01· Call: UNITED CALIFORNIA Ci\1. Cos1a Afesa Sfationl·rs ~~1~.!;;fkgroum beyond FR ENC 11 Prov inc; a I e 53&-3645 e Sporting Goods 830 PUPS!! Stud Service Most BANK * * ,.. Arply Or Contact bedroo1n scl: Vanity, st?OI AJl.1/F'M radio & stero xlnt Ne\v n10\dcd su11boarris. Col-Br('('(Js. OPEN E V ES: Dona Leverett •7llr :H0-5000, F.x1. 2.10 HYLAND LABORATORIES 222 Ocean Ave. Seamstresses T. Knight :~ ~pu~~':.,~Y ::!= cond. $25. childs chiffarobe, ors made 10 ord{'r, $40. 5.11·5027· I Laguna Beach (TI41 5-W-8340 s-· 6. j~j~ aln t Jxiok . sturdy, pretty U> gd. lan1p * 5574002 * AUSTRALIAN Silky Terrier. Equal Opporl F:1nploycr Production T•chnician 1;,. .,., •. u ".Ilse> $.l. 5:..&-9886 H F I 4 mos., female, AKC, M.rt'ne -con1mode urn!, customized . TV, Radio, i i, Champ ,tock 11~, Ev•s· for entertainment center Beautiful ORIGINAL MA.IO Stereo 836 1 675-(illG. ' 1"· · " · Upholstery Mfg. $55. Pair of antique iron painting -Biki11i Girl -Bes! -----------\1·anL~ SF:Ar.tSTRESsES BUSINESS SYSTEJl.fS rta'Orator type chairs $15 offer this \veek only --DACHSHUNDS, miniature, Exp'd pref'd. Salary Open. 17U2 Armstrong Avenue each. 536-:'11145 979-ls:jS or 644-8338 SACRIFICE AKC, shots, red; black I: PERT EC PERroNAI. Jines -Jigh1 eommerclRI 3 yn. expcr. Good Aalary ptul! group 3300 Hyland Ave. benefits. Xlnt promotion op-, Costa r.1C'Sa, Cahf. 9'.l62G Trainee ChallenJZing opportunity \\'l!h r-x <' e I JC' n I potenlinl. lnl· mediatr openingii;. for in· dividuals \\'ilh ncndf'n1k• ba.ck"1'0tlnd in iul\·arn.'C'<l mnth lcnlculusl , bnsic elec· tronics ,r,, some physics. Duncan F:lcctronics Inc., 2'1.65 1-'airvil'w Rd., Costa Xlnt Company Bellf'rits. San111 Ana, Calif. BEA'~ C " d . .\ li'anasonic stereo tape r e-tan. 538-6771 APPLY IN PERSON fr\'inc Industrial Complex OLD rashkln 'twin beds 2 -u •. 11 oni nia e cordc:t· "'ilh auto11111tic N'· -=~---~-~=• rrames \\1th head & f~t-aquarium, 200 gal.. 1·x3', verse. USt'S Am pex 7~; 4 SILKY Terr. fcn1, AKC, 7:00 A.M. to 4:30 P .M. an equal o P ~o rt uni I y hoard. 1 SC"t of twin springs <.'OSt $1~. l>at'. SEiOO incl. n"l'ls and tapes. 1nclud£'S 3 champ line, 6 ll-ks. $200 ea. pty. Work either Udo or ~ lrvlne 0U1ces. Contact Bill E:qual Oppol' l::tnployer 1763 Placentia Ave. emp yer & ma!!rcss. 5151 Tasman valuable fish. Ph: 979-3825. 832-9422: 644-6178 aft 7· pm • TRAINEES • spC'Cds, 2 st€'re0 speakers, Costa Mesa Or .. Huntington Beach, '5.1 Enc. Bri11111nica. <.'Ompl. hradphones. 15 pre-recorded Y 0 R KIE S-f.1/F. AKC. S 1-; 11 l\-1 ST R ES S f 0 r \Vill train wtXnen to ile<:ome after 5 & 1v e ck -l' nd s, \l'/"llook of Yr" up !o date, tllJX'S and blank !'('('Is _ all Small , sturdy stock. Priv. ho' I II injection molding operators. 897-8174. SlOO. Call aher 4 p.m. l'Qllipmcnt is brand neiv. ply 61:.-629]. 893-4092. up stery, u or parl J\1ust be> neat, de""'"dable, "17 ""'"" * Warm.ington; 979-7422 I l\lalc & female A good want ad Ill II. good L,. vestment. \Vant ad resulls ... 642-567S l\11'S.'l. Equal time. 54.!Wl2.19 Ru r f <' 11 · s ,~.. TRUNDLE bed, lamp end * "' "VJVJ Asking S275. or make offer. * * AKC Yorkshire Terrier U h I I h11.ve O\\'n car & he able lo Ible, 4 bar stools, pr. chairs, •QUALITY• (714) $46.5494. Puppies. Stud serv avail. 01•po1•1. Emplo>~'l oii"ioi0~'~'~ry .... Oiiiii~~ii;iiii sland entire shift if n<"l.". bl 2 ' •1/F 1narblc colfec 1 • cigarct· * r.1ULCH & TOP SOIL* * Summer Spect'al * . 5<1~35-11 or ~16 . Openings 011 graveyard shift t tbl bl ho ti I REAL ESTATE SECRETARIES/ j$2.23 Jl('r hr. 10 start, raise t' s, mar e c •v } · j,1!6....6930 Rebuilt.Picture Tube IRISH Setler. l\tale, 3 nlOS, in 30 days). Apply 9 Ai\.f-644-4951 aft 5 pm ?-.1US1' sell -Sunbird Back $87 50-21" 25" C I papers. SIOO. SALES TYPISTS 11 AJ.i or 1 PJ\1-3 PM. J\10VED from large home to Pack. J>t'rf. cond. $45/Bst • or 0 or Call 5-15-4147 C do ·"fi I l'I I r. * 2 YEAR \VARRANTY . A CONV041EHT SHOPPING AND SEWING CUIOE FOR THE URGENTLY NEEDED OP.ANG E COAST PLASTICS on • saw.• c ng qua 1 y off. 6'12-3963 a ter 0 pm. lnslallation Avallablc DALMATIAN Pu PP 1 es, FREE LICENSE Rt>gister today, \\IOril: IO· 850 \V. 181h SL, c r.1 ~~~u:~ sof~~ 1ov=i· T\YO black leather bt.lckel Rire's Television Service purebred. $10. Call TRAINING morrow! e TRUO< Drivers, 18 or 1 hairs 832-7267• seats. driver's seal electric. fom1erly ~1esa. North Center 5-t·l-6836 GM. ON THE CO. ,.._ .... , / Fl'C'C Plnet•ment Scrvire. NO FEE EVER. over, male or fcmnll'. amps, occ: c ' · $25. 646-9076. 1 Bick S. o~Baker 546--6002 r.1ALE BAS.SE'IT For •n ad In Wom1n·s World Frl'C' Training Program. TOPS IN TEMPORARIES. e KARDEX & File Glrl, exp Q UJ!'.EN hidc-a:-bcd, F/FI RUSSELL r· ye 11(1 w open 94> 16 d:.iys) 8 \\'eeks Earn \vhile you lt"Brn. Al f'd re(ng, lop quality & cond! .. ..1b· -N 1d' -•""Call' * ~9434 * "'""" 1n~1 ...,,._-'"·"'. ti pre Also pa-Uo set & more, lwi IOiu. ~ 1l'lfr->t"""' , 21 " RCA 1.'0ruiole color TV, Call Mary Beth 642-5678, ewl. 330 , DY«~ Apply in Person """' """" $-18-0297. like llL"'ll·. 3 mos .. Pl.rts & Schnauzer pup, ma.le R.E. SALESMAN ·Gill. lfGDu'-t Dr. COSTA '-1ESA AUTO PARTS 800,"~ssETT wt ., nd •SJIAG CARPET. 9xl 2 gold labor guDJ'. Picture tube 3 n1011lhs old. $30. 7·Part Wardrobe Dress or Jumper! I . 2165 Ii.arbor Blvd, c .r.f. canopy u e a & bro 3 ' Id 2 . $200 ......., * 962-1275 * nvesugate 1he nev.· approach LJ gold double bed 'triple dres-• \VT\, only n1os. o , guru:'· yea1s". ·• """l--~~-7'-C--,"",--,--& innovati\•e marketing If lrYiM· IU-12'5 S{':r, desk, chau'., cover and $25. Ph: &1;>-0114. . CapJtal. C.r.1. 54S-139;i. "\Vecd it & Reap" St>nd ht•r ihru sumnwr anrl back lo school \\'Llh 0111> right up lo l'ieven nC\\' drt'!;SM!! Th('y arC" ail QUICKIE s!yles with the prctliel"I d1•1aili; - conlrast accent~. collun~. pf.'l't p_lell!S. Prtnterl Patfcrn 9 :: 7 9 ; Otild'.s Slie11 2, 4. 6. 8. Si1.e 6 takes 1 )'dL L-111.. 1 • C'OTl- Jr, SEYr::N'l'l ·P 1Vr: CE~"TS for each pattern -add 25 cenll! !or each p.1tten1 r<•r Air ~tall and Speclal Hand!· Ing; otllerwise: thtrd-rlas!I delivery will takl" three weeks or more. Send lo Marian Martin. the D/\ll~Y PILOT, •142, Pntlem Dept .. 232 \Vc11t 18th ~t.. Ntw York. N.Y. 10011 , r>rlnl NA.At£, ADDRESS \\'llh ZIP, SIZE and 9Tl'l.f; NUMBER. SEE MORE Q uick FIUlhionl and choose one pa_tttm ~ f'rom our Sprtna:.SUmml'I' Calo.log. All id.zel! Only SOC'. INSTANT SEWING BOOK M!W-fodly, weu tomorrow. IJ. INSTANT FASR IO N BOOK lfundred1 o f fashion hu:u . St.< Any da.Y ll the BEST DAY to run an ad! Don 't delay, • .cell 1oday 60-M13. I • I • • ttthniques 0~ TJfE GAL-1;:;;;·;111;an;;;.;;;;;;;J;;;;;;; I URGENR Y 5prcad, $250. 582-8478 12x24 DEEP End Liner 2 PIONEER 6.J DX spkrs. 1''rom treasures 10 trash LERY OF 'tt0i\1ES. You Doughbo)_J [)rand new for Dual 1219 turn table, Shure Tun1 them into cash \\'ill be glad you did: Call SECRETARIES BED-<.livan.1dEarly1 An1ettrican "S=9S~.iC~o~ll~i~l~<o=68>->l=o:=o9<15::=,==.:_,'="=o"oi'd~g~o=. ;O!l6:;Z-=7l=22=·=5=3&-4="1=~· :.O:==CALL==~D=ai='ly=P=ilot===I 96.1-5611 for appointmcnt. NEEDED blue & go eag e tia e.rn. ,,. Licensed or unlicensed '\\·c The Irvine Company ha.!! inl· Solid oak tele. tbl. Both xlnt ~-------------------------------, 11•ill tr.tin. n1ediate openin~s for S • cond. 548-8703. REAL ESTAl'l': SALES secrttaries "·ith substantial ecretar1eS * COUC!l & LOVESEAT SUCCESS CAREER 1•x pericncl' in the sprcific Typists, brand nL'w. 00!.h for s1;,o, Nl.'W or ex-rienced. Join the field of public relations, Usually home, 968-7910 . .,.. architcct~ or finance. Clerk Typ"st & \Vorld's ll;lrgest aod fastest Shorthand RO+, typing 70 I FRUIT\VOOD oval tbl w/3 .....,..1\•ing resale o...,.anl• .. tion R T • l·avrs 6 •ha•-•vl•an• ... ~ ... ..... 1vpm. r.1ust be good 00 epro yp1sts ~-. ,_ ... ... " with a nehvork O( over 300 b k bl••l 64' "3"•6 lihones •-dealing' \Vith ac s. c;i ""' . ....., offiCt's and become a "" VOLT membc>r of our 1.1illionaire public. Xlnt \\'Ol'king con-p 3 PC. sect. $10. 2 chairs S5 ctitiorL<1 & b<'ncfits. Call Instant ersonnel pr. Cor. table $10. or all for Club. ritulti-million dollar r.trs. Fielder. Temporary Service $20. 519-1506 a fter 3:30. advertlsin,:: progra1n. Free guaranteed licensing school. 644..3389 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 KING size bed w/frame ,'!, ExceUent sales training. bet\\l'("{'ll 9 & 12'. Newport Beach 546-4741 mattress. Good condition. \\rtlat is your hcense 11·orth Equal Opport. Employer Equal Oppor. Employer $100. Call 640-1313 lo you? Chec)c our monthly SEC •• RECEPT. Waitresses LIV. Rr.t. 3 pc. sect. Gold honus pro~ram whieh nieans EstablishNI e!e<..1ronil· equip-noral, IJnen look. Xlnt cond. US lo you! Please call ?ilaTure 25--40 yrs old. Only $!""' M5-637S Virginia Jon<'S 835-4811. "1<'01 nifJ,'T. con:ipanyga1""rks u·ell experienced nCi'd ap-.-"~~~·_::::_::::oc_ _____ I Sharp ron.51·il'ntloll~ or ply. Sw JX'l"SOnnel r.tgr. J I 815 RED CARPET l'('('£'ption duries, invoieing Balboa Bay .Club ewe ry Realtors responsibili ties & general 1221 \\I. Coast H11'}'. NB REAL ESTATE urrice \.\'Ork. llcC'tlrate typing skills & front office appear-WAITRESS SALES MANAGER arK·e. Apply in person GT! Esper. l..onch & dillrK'r Resn.le Office needs manager Corp., Di"' Engincer1n1t Di-BLUE DOLPHIN • GENEROUS • • REWARD• with 2 years of !Wal E state: vision, 1399 Logan Ave., 3.~ Via Lirto, NB C':<perience. Newport Beach ~C~>~t~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiii•I "rAITRESS For rclurn or any in· :1.1-ea. Expanding company. • Cocktail & food, exp., 21, fonnation leading to relurn Excellent opportunity for SECRETARY part time, 642-8214 Clf a '°Id fuur leaf clover 11rofessi0nn.l gl"l\'lh. Apply to ori;:anize & managt• a husy pin, i.ipprox. 2 inches in in confidence. Sent! n'.'Sume ('Xl'l'Utive's busitl{'SS n1at-\VE need 2 sharp gals who diamC'IC'r, \\;th j e 1v t I e d to aassified ad no. 638, c/o 1£'l'S. SJ-l & flt".xibl~ hours arc inrercsted11 in a hOrseshoe in center: alllO, Daily Pilol. P. 0 . Box 1560, ._, M~ al '-k pennancnr, fu litne posl-nold lock<'t ~\\'as on chaiol, l"{'(IUheu. 1 t.""c UdC' • lion in a very conlcniporary " '" I · k I Costa l\1l'~a. Calif. 92626. ground dl'Sirahle. DELl\IA nicn's shop. r.iuxt have sell· · approx. the su.e o a nic ·e . R 0 SA LF.Sl\IEN C'ORP., 1~11 Florida, 1-funt· I N d inscribed in script, FLA . ... ~. ,, 1 • ng exp. o 1'1u cnts please. The""' arc deeply treasured Why not \\'Ol'k in the holtest lnglon Beacti. 841·3515. Call for "PPI T .. -1 -k -" · '"" .....,., • family n1emcntos & lhe loss a r r. n II u 111 i n i; Ion &~ '·nd ,, li1tl• ~,., J•"pp1'ly Bru<·h/rounl<iin Valley. Let ..-::1-:RVICE s tation · 2 is irreplaceable. PLEASE, = .._ t>• "" ,... · \VIG salesgirls & \vig stylist PLEASE help if vnu have off to school In !his i;r,y\c! ·U!'I train you! Call Phil salesmen & I graveyard v v V I L E , . Lltrgl' wig Co, needs key a ny information -642-3589 Pn>11 y 1uckl'l'I 1c,.1ure iii;. P.-!cNamee, LAG man. Top pay. "n~ 1 C I ~o .... k 1 cN"alcd 111· slipper stitch. REAL ESTATE. 963-4567 benefits, exp pref. r~ul\ or ~pni~ a ~As or Eves. & "·eckends. Crro<'hl'I <lrl'ss or jumper. Receptionist $700 part lin1e. Apply at Shell \VHO WANTS ·ro \VORK? Miscell•neous wi1h or \1·ilhout <.'Ontras1 oc XL.NT TYPING FEE Sta.lion, 17th & Jrvill(', N.B. 818 11·1th or \\'i!hout oontroirt ac-p,\10 SERVICE Station Atlcndanl. DRIVE A CAB! UPRIGHT freezer S 125 . <,'(·nts, of ~pory )'Rm. ~alter \\'cstc-liff f'ull & pRrt time. Apply in CHOOSE your hours, work Chests of dta\\·en $15., $20., , 116; ('hlld s s1Lcs 1-10 incl. p., ... n··I A-··y "''rson. 990 E. Co:i.st H\\y , for ~"OurscU. be yoor O\\'Tl $25. Kilchen table & 4 chain; •· . ..., ... -.,, "' •-boss. r.ten or women. Can S20 N f l $50 O I ' -F. F' 1· •' \ Ne\\·port Beach. . ew ovcsen · o · i;;;t;\'F.NT\".1·1\'I': ('t~ST~ 1 i;,l " .r ingf'r, -~·' · be sllghlly handicapped. ft"C & 2 rnd tables $15. Vanl-l~r each patt~rn _ add 2.j tl\-1ark 111 Crnter' Si\11UJ.. rnf~rr needs young Ne a t..Clean Appearance. ly & stool Sl2. Treadle sew- rents for 1•ach pallern for 542-~16 111an for s:cneral work In-Vis, rt'lired. Age 25 to 7{}, ing niachine. $75. i\fisc. Alr !\fall and ~peciaJ Haodl· ALSO Jo"EE JOBS eluding driving light ln.lt"k. SUpplcment your income. USED USABLES, 2560 N€'\.\'· i11J?: otherwise 1hird·class,liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 6'1:>-0822. Piton-Fri. 9--t. Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a port Blvd., c.~t Tues lhru ~~~~r;o or w~!o~~kt.n!ih~ RECEPTIONIST TAKING applirallon for ex-~~iO\v ~~~lyCo.,i186 k~~h ~"'=;o'·-~;-:;;c.;;-;;:;-;--;- AI'·-Brooks the DAILY Day or nlghl, no l'Xp. 11£'<'., pc-rienct'd n'lOldeni: & ex· -* AUCTION * " ' b \\"II 1 reriencro carpenh>n. Apply St.. Costa Mesa. PU..OT. 105. Needlecrafl ~1sr. fun jo . 1 tra n. no Dept .. Bo'< IG3, Oltt ChelMn ty111ng <or ~hortJ11tnd, rte, in Jl('~ 19131 Dct:Tc, SA. X-R.ay Tech for orthopedic Fine Fumllutt Station, New 'York, N.Y. Apply in pem:in nny art or ERICKSON YACHTS olfice N'pt. Bch full or preJ .~Appliances 10011. Print N•me. AddrM1, evr. at 29?.0 \\'1'1!'1 Cst Jl"·y., 540--8001 part tln1e. MS-Tl38 /\uctioos Friday, 7:30 p.m. 7.iµ, P1t1ern Nnhlhf!r. N.B. TELE P l! ONE Sltle!I. Windy's Auc tion Barn •n•I!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!"'!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~ llon1P"''Orkf'rs In SAN ~ 207:jtt Newport, O f 646-8686 FreC Receptionist CLEP..fENTr. & CA.CUN /\ MwchandlM J ~ Behind Tony's Bldg r.tnt'L Grn11·i~ flrnl 1X't'li!I shnrp, rircas. F.xp'd, prtfrrrcd, but . V FOR SALE rfflc1rnt uxhvidunl In h11n-\\'{' 11·ill trnln. Call col\{'(..1 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;, 1 NEEDLECRAFT C1'0t.'ht!I, knit, C'tC', <11n'-('tio11~. [i()t. ln'lhUli MllCl'llfllf" Jlonk, Basic, fancy knols. P31· 1,·n1!0!, Sl.00. rllr bu~v frunt rlr!lk. SIJll'I (I) 892--fl13l !'aper ba<.ic books 10-5-0t', $498, (;1111 (;lor1r1 GrA.y, N'COl'l1!1, r('(>I to 1w1 1apc ln11ltlnl Ur(l('tff-1 Root - LParn by plcturti;? Pat· lern.'i, $1.00. 541)-6tri.'1, ~Aini i'<'1"!4(1nnel 30 \:R. ri<lhle!'live n1fg. ,.,.,,.,,.,15 Antiques 800 l'l"C()1,11•r 3" faJX", Playboy If !l<'c' y "' mulurf' out oo , ............ ,,._ ~-I" s• .. and Ai:ency, 2790 arbor n1 .. '(1., r:-A/P AIR -•1 & .. -..... '""' -"A: " " Ct.t r.Xf). • · P'1Y"" Private Parly ~fUST n1i!k'. kitt'flf!'l u t e 111 i Is , lnXl'!ll. Xlnt >A'Orklng rond. SEU.! Beaut old ou.k, dlsile~ and odds & end!. Complel~ fn<il•nt 01'1 Rnoll: lll~CJ::PTIDNIS'I -Seely., -more than JOO aif!J -1~rt front (lffitt s:lrl for SJ .00. ~ contrtlctor, Lflgunu Complete Ar11wt nook -Nlgut'I. 8.11-1400 $1.00. ~ RECEPTIONIST for law of- 11 Jiffy Hu! Rook~ • 50r tier. LUI' t~eing & rn.L~. ;/:'" nt It P't11ft Ar,..... dulK>s. lnim~Tatc Of)('nlnl(. ~lit Book l -16 pe.ttttnl. ""'"'i.'-mi='------OOc. You flon'! nried a gun lo Mn11t11111 QoJH 'Rook t -"Drnw Fust" 'A'IX'n you ~t_.. '"' Tl'ldll(-" l.l\•h•i . pl&cto an, ad 1n lhc Doily ll hl!Autlfl.ll p111,m1. 50c. Pilot \Vant Adi! Ciill naw . - -612-5618. Plen!'le !l(!nd a n"t1un1c to niuh ogn.n y, waln u1 """"~ Th · St ("· & P'-•••llle f'la•U-, l'i37 wrv-A ur1n . ......y , .... ""' -furniture, 11l110 <'lock.,., l'Ug!ll. Thuri 1 c M Monrovia Aw. Newport ~turphy bro, decorator ..;:""~":;o--·.::::·~;;;;·,,-~=-=1 Bc11dt, ~ Items & lots more!! 1.3lj s. STEREO: NEW Garrard TIRES sales & &crvlre. Birch, S.A. 83.>1789 ~. Pl'(lfct;Slot\Al sft1' Rrakt> &: Al_!gnmen1 14.'rv!N". ~IA.LJ... darlina Dal tap lurntablr. 200 watt rceeiver, F'·1·1 or port 1!·1•. Sila~ 1 nd _,...., . 11lr ~ t!PtflkCl'!I. ·u " .,, mtlft a \\vuu antique' ~k lo 11.t f $20() plus c:on1n1\sslon Ca I I 1runk. $35. !'>IG-~f ~ . ....,1•1 n n ,..::.,,,1h10: 1 0 ; Gl-1-ll022, Coo.fit Auto Scr\'ICC' -'°",,.,, l't' ~·-·..--~ enter. i\NTIQU~: I?), \\hlte k lt(lld $1Ra. TcnnA. ~I 4 draWl.'r l-1~~1 . dc•t'Oralor :;c TRAlNEE fot Ol'\1pt'f'Y Shop. lrt:m. $45. &46-?5!6 Uke ~o Trade? Our 1r,&dtr•s llni.'t!:!°!ll Ornpcry &>rvi('(', Paradise column l.s lor )IOU ! 111111 Ohnit \\'ay. C'O!lta Daily Pilot Want Ads have 5 llllC'S, 5 dt1,y1 for $5. Call l\-1<'.~. bar-pins s:alol'f':. today ... 642-5&7S { • FIND YOUR NAME WIN FREE SHOW PASSES Each DAILY PILOT Winner Gets Two $2 Value Tickets .. JULY 27·AUG.5, 1973 ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER ALL AIR CON ITIONED 1fo----~· SEEi. .. THE ONLY MAJOR FLOWER AND GARDEN SHOW IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FEATURING FOR THE FIRST TIME ANYWHERE "FLOWER MAGIC OF THE TROPICS", ••• AN ANIMATED FLORAL SPECTACULAR SEE!... THE VERY ,LATEST INNOVATIONS FOR THE HOM! & GARDEN WITH OVER lJS,000 SO. FT. OF GLITTERING EXHIBITS SHOW HOURSt S·ll P. M. Weekday• Noon-11 P. M. Satw,day1 N60n •9 '-M. Sunda1• ADUll'S 12.00 • JUNIORS 11.00 {thildren under t2 Ir•• with parent•) Tho DAILY PILOT mokH 11 oosy. Jost check thro•gh••I Ille CIMlifJt.d secli-otrfor ''ads'' ll1tln9 wfftftert' "•"'''' If.-Y••- fl•d your nome lust coll 64%-5671, hi. 114, btt•"• 9 a~m. aftd 1 p .m. to make GrTOft•tntefttl to pick .. , your tickets ot ony convtwlent DAILY ~ILOT office. ( - I .,Jtl Pi': 10 cl Couo 540-1 SC J o,..J Tma "' I'm I "" TAI< Uc "'" ""' Bol ' e. 00 ! .,., ""' Wh &c ""' 644 13' Joi Ful pal rn 22' .... wil .... I $3,1 Spo1 ""' '"' Ph '10 hp '"' 531 '711 n~ Mo 84: ... "E .. ; .!! " ' . B• : _J Bo, Cl Cho C! or i 11. " I ~ Gil 1r fe *' w " 16' 11 p Cl cl 0 D< ;j .. , ·------I -DAILY PILOT as 1 -Old._ ~I -"'tor "' I~ I 1C...-lril I ---I~ I _,,,_ 1~1.__I _-_1w .... _,l§J I l§l ~I _ ..... 1 _ ...... ~1;;;;~ ljorw au -.. Sall 909 MotGr -·r HORSE SHOEING KITE No. 1006 • NOW ll6Q. Sale/ltont s. trlmmJna. Call 6<2-8291 All a t ta e b • d eq¢p. e SALllS e 71 SPORTS CUSTOM An 6-~·~-1/whlt•. Xlnt eend. e SERVICE e ... '"'""'· 4 """' nod A l~~~~~~~~~~l "'""""°"'0 healer. Nt'W 12 x 16.5 tirn.t----------1; COLUMBIA 34. p • r k; n 1 • RfNTAlS • 1%100. o.-..,. Olin. ORANGE COUNTY'S [I -.=;--I~ °!t':W:-~ooJ"':):;..9 * 1192·1&12 * OGLDEST . -~ $25,000. 846--0661 EXPLOltER !IT.chevP.U.-19155-0... CORONADO 35' aloop. Jncldi 01' Bel Aire }!161)..Gd l':~. It. * * * ram & extnu. 3 moo o1a, HUNTING TON BIACH parts. Doth 1or I O 0 • 962 Autot, lmf*!OC! IMW 970 Autos, Uood 990 Autos, UNO 990 Autos, Uood 990 MERCEDES IENZ SO USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY CADILLAC --------EL OORAOOS 14 TO CHOOSE COUf'ES-CONVEl'tTIBl.ES • Sharp New Car DE YILLES Trade-lns 31 TO CHOOSE -~o~~-1 :_;.IE __ o_L_D_S_M_o_1_1LE_ CORVF.TTE '71. 350, auto, PS, PB. alr. anl-hn. lnl. l\g:ht pkl.::. 16,000 n11. 494-5034 s.1 ... It SMvitt OL DSMOBILE GMC TRUCKS HONDA CARS UNIVERSITY OLDS 2850 Jlarbor Blvd. "Coita :\Wt:ii -·~9540 rt $45 000 18801 Beach Blvd 9'1&--1680 alt 6pm Don Oougl11 ~ ' · Now W),000. HUNTINCTON. BEAQI DODGE 1.nicll:, 1963, 4 ~pd. SAU:S.-SERVtCE-~G 10412 Tti1I 23, "Star''. 2 sets 4acron GMC no apln dltterent1al, 6 cyl, OVEflSEAS DEi.JV Coming In E vtry D1y COUPES .- Ask About Our Unique SWANS Uted Mercadts Lea H CONVERTIBL.ES DODGE '6'1 OLDS 1\8, 4 dr, rur, $250. 64.>-'2640 fir Fountain Volloy .. u,, 4 Ill• Jackel$, trailer. ~---"'°"· 15.lO. 49ii-5259 ROY CARVER, Inc. Pl ;\la.ny excellf'n t ("OJors ans Oloic<" of lnl,ri0r5 '&'I POLARA 500 l~ut"kt'I ". all pl\\'tr $119.). 6-&6708 Conv. & air. ~16-67-16 ,.ou ~ the winner ot rt1ake Offer, 546-131.1. Motorhomes . ".......,,.. 23-t E. I7ltl St. ;rwo FREE TICKETS Boats, Sllps/'•--ks 910 'GI FORD l'I ton. f.'' new eo.1a Me.a r.46-4-141 to the ..,_ 23' &: ~· pe.fnt, eng. O\'erhau ed, dia-1---------- HouMt of Imports 1c10111 • 1cat1>"' 6562 /\lancheater Buena Par!( Far1ory air 1'0ndlUon1ng un the S..'\nt11 Ana F"r.r.'Y F'l.lll )'IO"''"r • ciio!''" of: FORD ·n DELTA !!.$-2DI'. 1•1s. l'/0, \'/H. 26.001 ml. ~. 673-6.'iO'l aft 6 P~l SOUTHLAND SLIP, at .,, Ea st lmmodlate Dollvery ~":k,~late 8 x U flatbed . CAPRI Home & G•rd•n Show Edgewater, Balboa.. Up to Orange OJ'a, 523-7250 :O-!l•r1"(1 Ai\1 F /\I \"Utho <"ru1!1c <."On11"0! "67 OLDS 98, Lux. Stidan xlnt rond S$0. '70 ~Custom Dru1 , air, $1~-~3516 j July 27th thru Aug, $lh 32' long, 10' w1de. $100 per Ucluslve [)N]er Vant 963 ~ ' AN~i'.l'E 1M ma) ~~b~!!:-1 .,.,.., llLL IARRY TRUCK & TRAILER • MG Trunk Oprn<"r & rnor1• ----------11\ll in ln1n1aru.latr l'Ond1tion f..atilest St'lt-...·11on ln OrRn"I' County 1971 FORD GALAXIE 500 PINTO CONVENTION Boots, Speed & Ski 911 OllOO E. ":;)l'100oSan1a Ana 1970 rnEV. l ton 350 Vll, 4 '5:! /\IGTO, B.R.G., ''11h 2 Door lllll'dtop CENTER ----'==---1-. 12 tt •tak•. gd ""''· NOW OWN THE MOTOR HOMES ~m, ~·,:00.;.;y"""~~ FABULOUS 1973 , 800 W. Katella, Anaheim Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 to daim )'OUl' 1ickets. (North County toll free nwnber Is Sll).W}.) * * * SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS 15' HYDRO SWtft !dd boat, l''BR-CI. s.5hp, OB. elect !dart, trailer. $850. 494-l;;i81 dys, 846-8764 aJt 6 16' \Vilkins flatbottom ski boat. 70 hp lo.tett. OB' w/traller & cover. $1000. or Apollo, Pacesetter, B • r on, duty . 1tiple axle straight CAPRI Jamboree, Roblnhood • hilch . electric bnlk'es, 4 ft. Sport coope riccur, hody side We've got 'em at J>iY\\'OOd sides . removable. n1ouldings, reclinlni.: fl'onl KENDON Both sides covered with seats, con tour rear s..·Ats. 4 MOTOR HOMES vinyl tarps. $3000. 846-5494. speed transn1ls;;ion. po11.·<'r H.B. aft 5 p.m, frol\t disc brc.kes.. s1yle srt'C'I hettt otter. 1139-3248 .,,,,, N H-~ S.A. •Y• • ..-....... -. '72 FORD Ecoooline, 350 eng, v.t.eels, buckrt ~ts, radial ply ti.rft. (GAECN8991-12). 17 FT. Inboard &lei boat 400 ----'554-00ll""'~'----I air/rond, cust. s-e at s . Inch Olds e1121.ne. $1700 or $6895 17,000 mJ. itust sell-Must best oHer. gsj..9829 PACE ARRO\V see! Prl pty. 833--lrot, OVERSTOCKED I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY lrlft<"k top, orig con d. Nabers Cadillac lhruoul. SlOOO or ht>:.~ offC'r, 003-415~l---~--AUTHOHJZED 111':1\l..EH ':.3-f\1 .C. T.D. t'XCt'llt'nl con· ~ llARBOI~ BL.. dillori. Rebuilt t'f\JOne and COSf.A .\IES.\ trnrui;. $2500. S..'lG-1154. 540-9100 Opo.•n Sunday PORSCHE ·n ELOOltADO. l>a.~pera!C' ---------I to &ell. lla\·e bou);;h! 11nother '66 911, Black. 5 speed, full Jcniher interio r . A~1/F~I/Short\l.'8VC'. Best offer. 642--15Zt TOYOTA cnr. Coro \\•/Ian landnu toi1, nll p11T, nn11!n1 rndio, nu i:;l1~·1 l11'1lf'd 111\.'ll, 30.()~ miles. Best nff<'r. ~15-SU9, aftC'r 6 pin 6-11-0li.17 ~~- 400 \'R eng1fk' Cii11i;o'-O-n1atlc tra1u:. Pov.·l'r ~~ Pov.1•r diM-" brukf'!i T1r\lt•1I \\ lnd;:h~elti 1\lr l"Olll'hllOllHl~ A;\l radio \'lnyl mo! \\'httl CO\'•'l"~ New Y.:hltcv.·flll t1rl'"' Vi•t'y &oori ro11dill"11. IJ,ro:J 1111!1·.~. 51995 !)l>e ut '71 Pl;./TO S.1uiN' ~IAIM>n v.·agon. 11,000 111i. auta A?tl/F1'.f iilr.reo S:.?:l;;O-."•l..~~J7 PLYMOUTH '6.9 PLY?ilOUTll F\u')' ttl. Fully ('qllip. 1 ov.Tif'r. lo mJ. a ~auty. Sl,450. 536-2419. • J972 Pl~'lllOUCh .'11tellltt, 4-dr. p/!1, pill, ftlr, auto, t;l;>-JG':ll ------'G6 PLY Spot'! l'ury hd t011 K ,.._,_ 16' SKI boat, 283 Chevy & or 963-1168 ev-es/wknch. Orphan -apok -._._, -Trailer, x.lnt cond, $1 ~ or TIOGA '66 ECONOLINE ·~ T«ranl: -TO TAKE .., ' °"' eng, GUSTAFSON *CAD. '13 E LDORADO 1----------Everything i11r·l. :;un1unf. DAIL\" PIL.01' E:~1PLOYE PARKING IDT 330 \\'est lit1y, Co~ta ~1csa ., P /8, 11lr, Riii, n<'"' l\rea, good L'Ond. $495. 53-32.89 Petlent' """"°'· 1 thlnk best oiler. 6'J>.8\63. Base Price radial tires, elect. ;gnltion, I'm a kleptomaniac.'' 14' SKIBOAT, Mere 75. P.o.fl\IEDIATE DELIVERY Franz oU filter, dual batt. Uncoln-Mercury Doctor: "You ought TO Best oUer. CREVIER Br.t\V sofa-bed & extras. 546-5472 TAKE someth~ for that!·· 531-Zl&t or 548-899:>. Sales • Serv1.ce -Leasing ·n CHATEAU Oub wagon lGSOO Beach al Wnmer :iUI: \V. lst St., Santa Ana I 8 y..g a to' lfunUngton Be111'h YACHTSMEN -have your ~~~~~~~~~ 835-3171 P s, pa.ss. :_ u ' 142.at44 * (213) 592.5544 djusted devlatio ; ;;;;;r;;;;:;;;:;;~';;;;«:;;;;;<;wl~25~,~000~m~lo_. !:_S3~400""7. ~84!.'7::'767~0.,. =~-$25. 979-C79S~ 1(•1 19M73tDiSOO\H """r-andrentSundakial '69 FORD long 1 ton, aufo, 11 Home of the Viking'' TransportaUon ° or omeii: '" • m e air, mags, in&l. pan.I'd, 3U.I ** ·n CAPRI -GAS Born/Marine reservations . !0 r Summer mi. 673-5507 SA VER -DELUXE -CON· I Equip. 904 now. Phone ~llss Be~~et at '65 DOOOE VAN SOLE RADIO -4 cyl. -_ Bob Longpre Pon.1ar.. . dia! I 1 $169 5 :..,... -----------... Camperi,S.le/Rent920 892-6651or636-2500 V8, camper inter, $1200. Call ra. s, cean. . ~~ *RENTALS* ~:FORD VAN .:;;:;.n.~'::'1. '"'· !Ully ltt-awuesaa ISl&rids PLEASE ·~am co,,.;m""', -rs ~m ne1: Lifetime, Superior, Open $55(1. 644-1354 or ~7 «aCalulip~~~~r 10,000 nti. call me, Frank Coner. It Road, , -~u. 0v-·-• & ~ will be to our mutual ad· bumper -R/~I. low mileage .....,,......,. ~ muu vantage & insure a pleasant d~:n ~~00. Xlnt con· W~~1~ Autos Wanted 961 DATSUN ~~11 foror)'OO. rn 0796 RENTAL AND SERVICE •J-V•u J'Oo>-(1 •n TROPICANA. 8' sleeps 6, .... 6 N Cl SA ~'!!!:~~~~~~~~I elect "-'8.ter, oven/range, "'i · ara, TOP DOLLAR PAID IMMEDIATELY FOil ALL FOREIGN CARS $ SALE $ DATSUNS NEW DEMOS 1973 }, -·~ .... twi-, -t H~ nu, 714-836-8615 Sl\.tALL, 4 cyi. Gray Marine ...,..... ....... '""""" ".........., inbd. engine, great for bey aell for $695. 556-1747 • New Lu.'Cury LIFETI~tES ·boat oc aux. sail. 548-3561. \I CAn n...-w 23-25', Immac. Sips 6 "Com-D-Vv~: oven, stove, foi1ably", air, gen, stereo, Ice box. Slpg. 2 adlts, 2 am. pvt ov.'llr, 838--0900, Tustin 510's Pickup 610's ts, Powtir 906 DO Y'Otl want to tour the Bay, water ski, &hf Here lA the answer. Clean 13' Boston Wha1er. complete wfcove.r & canopy ,trailer, 40 John80n engine. gd cond. $1,:m, 644-6579. 13' BOSTON \Vhaler, 1970 Johnson 40 hp, w/elcc start. Full CO\'er. Frt!sh bottom paint. Many extras. $1,:m. tm..9189. 22' FIBERGLASS S po r t s Fisherman. 22.510, walk thru windshield, convert. top, !K>Under, tandam trailer, . $3,495. 641.6"109. 21 l'T GRANDY Sp:n1a: ftsherrnan. 2 Qi.rys. engs, Fully equip, tor fish- ing. T.S. F1y Bridge. $11,(XX). Phone 831·2889 or 495--0136. children. $525. 547-1807 '69 ~ T. ca.hover camper spec. R/h, lo mi, slpt 4, loe.ded. $3,fm. 646-5632 25' ~motor home for rent. F\Jlly sell contained. 642-2150 All Mode\11 & Colors to Choose f'rom. 94S CAMPER Shell !ita 8' bed, Trai11r1, Tr•vel WE ARE IN ARISTOCRAT lowllner. 16", DESPERATE NEED :'i1·111pm1 Dab1111 like new, $175. . Call 641).2331 Cycle1, Bike,, Scooters 92S Speedway Bike Ridden only ;li season by Danny Becker, Barns qUick change hub, assorted gprock. eta and gear d1anges. Best of everything. $1200 call Bud Ryder at xlnt oond .. butaine 11tmie, OF GOOD, CLEAN oven, refrlg, heater. $1200. FOREIGN C'RS or make reasonable offer. "' 897-2162 TOP DOLLAR-PAID ·m Aljo ..,. Sell-· trailer. FOR OR NOTI 4 wheel ec. brakes, tdrlg, Call or come in to !lee us. • •)('(!>',' .... 1 ... , ...... • "'""'1•-"' II<!•'' !..\', t~Clt 1973 DATSUNS ALL MODELS IN STOCK ,.._/oven/tan. ,..,,.. 6. NEWPORT BARWICK IMPORTS ~!leveling-· $2,000 IMPORTS 33375 Camino Caplmano ~ San Juan Capistrano 15 .. CAMPING Trailer. Gd 3100 W. Coe.at Hwy., N.B. 493-3375 or 831·1375 cond. $350. 545-.ooG or 64t.MOS ·n DATSUN 2-IOZ, air, 5'6-"'54 TOP CASH 4-lpd, mag•. orange, Im· Auto Service, P1rh 'H9 maculate! $36j(), 8·12-8836, (or clean late model cars e~a. 548-2806 TIRES· 100 and trucks! '71 241JZ J 011.·ner nu radials Assorted 111zes & _brands. Howard Chevrolet mags.· amrtm ~tel't".> tare: New & recaps + alignment · I · .,~r.~ & brake equip. -Tift' shop l\tacArthur and Jamboree auto. tur o mi. ~· ·70 13' noSTON Whaler. 40 "-'ent out of buslneu. Make Newport Beach &1Z-339Zl6/.>-3008. hp Johl190n , elec. start, oHer. 673-5569 333.0;;;;5 ·72 DA~SUN 240Z. lime NEWPORT IMPORTS trailer. Good cond. $1145. 3100 \V, Coo.st Hwy., N.B. \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR auto, a1r, A?<.f/F~~IS_ trnc 536-6982 or 962-3125. 642-9405 FOR TOP USED CARS mull. faC'I. bltn. Stnpp1ng, & '70 SEABIRD 24', trailer, BICYCLE SALE I l§J lf your CU' ia extra clean, mags. $4300. 557--0168 new 350 hl-perl. cng, big NEW 10 SPEED IT .......... . ~ ,.. U1 nnt. JAGUAR f\Ierc o/D, fast. $6500 cash. BICYCLES $69.95. Beach BAUER BUICK 842-T:SJ Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa 2925 Harbor Blvd. , J XJ6 Sed "" lXXl · 44' CHARACTER B 0 at Bl d 675 7282 A .._........._ _ _. A ti /Cl I 9S3 Costa Meu 979-2500 70 ag ' an. ""' mi. "Balboa". Seriou:(}y I o r NI~Hh<-t dcaicT. uu""'-u.cu n ques 151 ct Same mechanic tor over )T. sale. Great party boot for 40 •47 CHRY New Yorker WE BUY \Vill certify rood. $6000. Ph. people! 6T;;>-5937 KAWASAKI 900, duaJ disc. 4 ClassiC. 2nd owner, lo.lust IMPORTED ATJI'OS 67>3TJ5 eves, wkends. .21 CHARACTER BOAT lnlo 1, Yoshi •P"""'' 11.850. ,..11 thl• all 0..,.. black BEST PRICES PAIDI MAZDA Spe.res avail. Days 540-1312; be V ti com. Dean Lewi• Imports Bay favorite. i\l!l"Y xtras. Aft. 6, 832-1244. au111:;~!!-ne _,_ ~!5 1966 H bo CM * 833-14-la * \\'e , ,.;v.::.,.u,1ng .....,,,,..,,, .,auu. ar r, .i • ~ ·121~ SUPER Clean Triumph or bE'st oil. Day Cit' eves 646-9303 L A R E I Boats, Rent/Ch1rt'r 908 650, 5 spd trans. 6" ext. frnt 642-4033 ease otary "9 ne end. 'IT exhst. only 1,500 J1t1PORTS WANTED MAZDA , CHART,,ETRIOG57A' ,K, ETCH mi. Must sell! 642-6459. Recrution11 0tana:e County•11 Vehlclos 956 TOP I BUYER TOYOTAS Dny &t2-:1121 1•vrs li7:~m11. ·72 CADILLAC !"cdnn dl' \'illl'. 1011· uu .. t~Jcnn. has FOR {'\'('ry1hir1g~ ! ! c·:1l1 &Mi-7tl7 IMMEDIATE ·s.~ El Dorado. l'ICAu!. rond. DELIVERY oil "'""· N«'d c0<h. S.11 :\1X for \\·holrAAle. 496-140.i HI LlJX ·i;ISl-_:o,\N-o(.V!llC'. Full Pl\T Cl::LJCA + nUlfly extras. Xlnt corlli. CORONA $=' <J• ~ L\.~D CRUISER ,!,''~"=. °''c,~~·w'="°=-==o--~ 'TO ELDORADO. J-0,(XX) mi. ~ero}oer ~~=:~~11~~·: 1006 1-Iarbrn-, c.~t. 646-9.103 '6'J TOYOTA Corolla Sta '69 Can_l. auto, radio. pl~. \Vgn. 4 spd. Good condition. p/b, air. Stt'cl, rnd, $1699. Call 963-14-15 <13l-7•Kl.1 I 536--0021 '69 CORONA. Auto, 2 dr, CHEVROLET am/rm, xlnt condilion. $800. --------- Call 536-0635 196-t CHEVY Impala. 4 rlr, VOLKSWAGEN 3?7, auton111.tlc lr8Jlll .• po11·er •leering & hrnke<, 1>ew bol· tery & tin's. Good tnmspor-• * * tation $250. CnlJ Ro11 Gray * 993-9105 * 3700 Parkvlew Line #B '69 OIEVELLE I S111lt'r Irvine sport, xlnt cond., on" 01.1rn•r, You arc the \\'inner of TWO FREE TICKETS t)lui,-v.·1v.·hitc slrtfll'S, disc brnkes. ' ~~~~'""'10-:'1~9.l ·---10 !I\(' I ' -SOUTHLAND ·;.~ :\O\".\ t:us101n ll&tch· Hom• & Garden Show hack. Silvl'r, p .i', 11 rlls<" hrks, air, turl»-hchu. $3,2:j(). July 27th thru Aug. ~rh 979-2876. al Oie -"'=-------ANAHEIM * ·73 i\IONTE Carlo. air, CONVENTION dcht'C interior, nutomatic, $4,500. CENTER 552-7680 or ~0-4.J-02 800 \V. Kateila, Anaheim ·54 CllEV. l mPRla hdtop. Pl-. call SC.~78. m. 314 A/C, P/S, P/B, New to d aim your h C'kcls. <North paillt. i\lichcilru;. Ca 11 : Call :\l argu.1..-1 Greenman PONTIAC &12-4321 '71 LTD Brn1. Full J>"'I'. a/c, LEASE OR BUY stereo. Vl•op, only 21,000 ·n thru ·73 Pon1lae1 mi, Sac. a t leg than ',1.·hl!l'I. DAVE ROSS $2,39S 0' nean"t oiler. PONTIAC ii&-26711. •'fo FORD Torino 2 dr Sedan. 2.&SO llarbrn-Bh·d., at Fa1r \'II, p/11, d/brskes, a/1, alr Dri\'t', Costa hfeaa SflS..Slt7 rond, 3 nu tires. 69.000 nu, 'G.) p o N T 1 Ac Sedan Good co n d . Sl450/offrr. TC'mp;•iit. ,Nl"Cds wheel bear-5-\.~368,1 ini;i:. \\"111 lake oHer or ama.11 '7'! COUH IER -~m top pirlrup truck, same value. can1pcr n1irron1 -rear bun1-~l!Khl) per • R/H. Low n1ileagr -'70 C'ATALl:"iA \Vtlg(ln, tully one ov.·ner. SZlOO. £-<. l'On· c<tuippf'd. air, x1nt oon· dltion -5-i~!fl7 <htlon. Sl .l.iO. ~200 or ·n F'ORO f\laverick, ol door 963-243.'i srdan air cond, 11.uto, r -h,• -67~C~A~T-A-L-IN-, A-2-d~r.-n-u_H_re-s 1 32,(XX) m.i very clean, Sl4!Kl & battery. Jo tniles, $475. or 642-3720 otter. 6-16--3217 '6.1 FORD Econollne r-.:lust e ·r.s VE.VI"URA. $350. Runs S(']l. $700 OI" best of.fer. ..:ood, tires like l'IC'A', must a57-a.119 sell. 897-2162 ·59 FORD 2 Dr. 9:onomic11.1 RAMBLER fi eyl, !!lick shift, runs great. $100. 675--0893 '61 >"ALCON 4 -auln 66 RAMBLER 1rans, xlnl tr3I!ll"po. car. $300 2 dr. llAd hlo\\Tt head~ Aft 1 pm, R4&-0!J'i:l You repair. S150 flnn. (In. ;68 FORD Gal. 500. Fst/bk. c-hxll'!I N!palr parts}. r/h, foe air, p/s, VS. xlnt • ~iU-3691 • rond. $95(). &l().t806. T-llRD JEEP '6.1 INTERNATIONAL Scout. Chevy 327, 2 whl driv~, locked 4-11 gears, ne"ft' lirt'l!, very guoc1 cond thru-oot. S6.i0/be1Jt offer Of' trade . .... 2399. MERCURY MUST SELL '67 T·Blrcl. AU po~rer, xtnl rond. low mileage. 6T.l-2:Jgl or 61>8139. VEGA County wll free nwnber is C>:iZ-9314. !H0-1.ZlO*l * * ~:::.,Ol::c,F.co.V~,~. -,.-,-"-.,,-"-· ~4,-spd~. '72 ?ilERCURY Mont~. -S500 or l'IC~I orfer. Call ufl. \'<'ry good rond. 40,(XX) nU. .. . . Miko Polond 604 Mo rlgold Coron• del Mar Yoo "~ llw· .... 1nner of 1969 V\V CampeK, x!nt oon-Gpm ~~17-0140 li7l-7TJ~ btwn ;:, &: 8 pin on- Caldltlo1n1-mu_st s1el this "-,·~k! •67 ll\1PAI..,\ STA. \\IGN. l,y.'-...-~--~~-S79-ldrorl~na 1 0 n A-1 rond. !\lake offer. Cnll ;70 fORD i tercury i\lontrgo 496-mOR :? dr. Xlnt cond. Radio, a/c. '63 VW Transpor1er 1\tust &ee '72 GOLD CAPH!CE, lov1 t~.000 ml. Good tires. $11Q). to awreclate, $650. mileage, like n1•1v. $3395. '6"4'-""1"'580"---~-~~ "94--0322 . 546-7805 '68 i\IERCURY Colony Parle, '70 V\V Sq. Back. llf1che!ln ,63 Chevy lnlpala. vs. a i l, sla v.•ag., oil pwr, fully radials, good cond, $1350. pi s, p/b, Xlnt rond. thru-equipped, see lo apprec. Call 586-1167 OOL $359 49-1-~ I 6i1-5569 WA"\ED vw·.s CH, RY LER . °'·o"'•"'M"'ARQ"'-U-IS_4_W-__ -48-,000-m-l, _ RUNNING OR NOT S Air. full po9.'f':r, orig ownr. 530-6940 or 5?.0-4799 S1 750. 540--0107 ·70 BUG yellow-kl ml. 1 'Tl CHRYSLER )\(>\\'}X)rl. 4 s ANG cr.vner, 'xlnt ~nd., must dr J-IT, a~r cond .. ps/disc MU T sell! Sl(fj(l/offer 557-0757 b_rkll", radio . v.'/rear :;pkr, vinyl Int., pnv party, $2900. * "ro vw Bug * &39-4'1'02 t~~~·64~1condiuon. $900. =c=o"'N-T-IN_E_N_T_A_L_ '66 ,\UTO, pt;, vinyl top, r/h, 1nag11 &. new Ures, xlnt C'Ofld. f\lw l sell $ 5 5 0 . 557--0757 TWO FREE TICKETS to the SOUTHLAND Homo & Garden Show July 17th thru Aug. 5th at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER 800 \\1. Kn1~la, Al'lahein1 Plea."i(" call &12-$71. nL 31.f to claim your tidct'ls. (North Coun1y toU freoe nwnber is 540-l.ZII.) • • • 'U VEGA \Vag"On. 4 Apd. GT tinted glua, de.luxe Int. Ph: Gl.>-Zll6 or 673-2188. 1973, 350 CC FourHonda, 2 WU. 1-lAXEY TOYOTA • Coutal & Offllhore lsland ntOI old, like new, malr.e of-,51 CHEVY OuTyA11·Xlnt 18881 Beach Blvl. RX3 Station \\agm, our most CnrtsiJW. Xlnt rates. Dally ftt, must sell 642-3924 Tom, cond. $1!15. 128 Santa Isabel, H. Beach Pb. 447-3555 popUlar model.! '69 V\V Bug. Reblt eng, _ radial tires. chrome whls, 1972 A.Yark IV, Xlnt cond, lo SUOO. 835-{0021552-8781 mJleage. Loaded. S 6 9 9 5. 1970 V\V. sunroof-Alr cond., ~1360 betv.11 R:30 A~l-5:30 radlo-xlnt rond, $1570. Call 1-'-P-"M'--------~ '66 ~1USfANG 289CT Fstbck --'--c,,"'w"C«1.,.,--,,it'"&.,..-,R<=a-p"··- P/S. Aulo. u·ans. Disc From treuures to tnuh · or Weekcy. 01et Salisbury bem~n 8-ll AM. ~~~64~).-~1990~'--~~""""'=l~iJf.i'E"o-i~"f"F'iiJ hrakes. $895. 586-M29 Tum !hem Into cash N('('(j a "Pad"~ Pl'lce an 11d! CAU. Dally PUot 11 II. 675-8344 or T\op. Box YAMAHAa:l,xJntcond,7000 _CM. ' WANTED USED O•ty-$80.11 Monthly 316. Balboa Jstand. $350 Sp01 ls, Race, f<ods 959 MAVERICK Boots, Sall 909 ml, ,.: 646-1352 * .,7 CllRYSLER' 392 llcml PRIVt,1'{':1Jt'RTY MIRACLE MAZDA 551-2799. Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmponld 970 Autos, Imported 970 '70 HONDA Clr450 engine, Best offer. Call JUNK ca-want~•. F-c '68 SQ. bk, air, tape deck, - I Sall boat, t2'"J(oralle, Just rebuilt, $55(), 983-500i after 6:00 P~l ... eu .... 2Jj() Harbor Blvd. $1195. PH * 615-3.117 • 1 :rast. A·l condlUon. 962-3827 towing, lille clearance, 24 ' $4Cll. 540-6338 LADIES SCHWINN Trucks . 962 hrs. 494-1003 ext 608 Cosla l\lesa 645-5700 '65 BUS. reblt engine, pancll-G= f' ~.ne;'~:f~ VARSITY 10 SPEED 1971 FORD Ranger XLT. a)~~~ ~:ZR Ofu *Mazda 173 Rotary * ed, $595. 61:h'i116 few ,.,.., ,, __ .._.. Xlnt condition. 54&-36%1. ~ ton truck and 11% tt. DICK CLAYS. 646-3243 $66 MONTH l.~72~B~U7G~ . ....o,,,"-,~1."'"a~1,-. "°'CI~,-,""'o: •. ~,.,....,.._.. 1970 HONDA a 350 lo Mt Amerigo tlbeqtae and 36 ?itONTHS OPEN LEASE KITE 651 w/dolly. Good Cond. $425 -or best alum. camper. Both loaded Autos, Imported 970 \\'ill accept trade-ins 22:,000 mi.J~7G Call~ oUtt. 490-1791 After 5. "'·"' extra!, fully "'"""""· PAYMENTS' CALI.. MR. FRY 8'2-6666 Electric Cars 930 tamed. Llke new oondition • H t 8 h • :._.~ht ~~T fi~=: ELECT MARKEl'ER ::!!!'::I i;;,~m\fc!'.'\~f,j $65 DOWN $6~ MO. Un , eac ro5I $300. Sell $190. 4~3'116 ~ w"Orlt. $100. Xlnt for o11""crl eepaf..te. ~.bl or best r.:~1~1~.'·11~~&4~,c~~ MAZDA 16~~ • Toronarto. Nearly new. ~der persons trans. 536-8891 · c1. .. -es on app credit tnCtds jib, main, Ira.lier. Prt aJt 6 $3&.0.l54. • Phone 549-4348 • Def~d pmt, pri~; 3153.sO Pty. 9!17.-34~ Mobile Homes 935 '68 CHEV, C'Wllom CAb, \li ton incl. tax & Ile. Ai'lNUAL CAL 25, hull No. U77. Super 6 cylnder, 3-6peed, xtra PERCE NT1\GE RATE li331 Beach Bl. 842·66$ cltan. Sparkling condltion. 12-XfiO PACEMAKER v .. /ex-clean, call aft 5. 55&--0561 12.67% BOB LONGPRE Owner 5f4...6(M3 tras. Seaclilf Mobil Pie, 800 * '73 El C..mJno, ha a MAZDA . 1 \V. 15-, N.B. Inq sp. 63. t'!Verything. Eitcellent buy. oon·t give up , the 11h1J?! 642--'.l816 83S-4550 or 536-6871 "Llsf' it In cl.u9\fled, Ship The "Yellow Pages" of I Dally Pilot Want Ads have -SERVICE FIRST- to Shore Results! 642-fJG1'8. cJassUled •••• &42-fi678. barniM plore, 1st Street at the --7600 Westmlmter Blvd. Santn Ana FN')'. Westminster 2001 E. 1st Stret>t ~ 7551 or 638-7880 Santa Ana SM· 7871 BMW MERCEDES BENZ VOLVO ECONOMY & SAFETY 1-'Lt;." Savings & Comfort Jn Our Remaining 35 NEW VOLVO$ Immediate Dtllvtry ;1)t41t ltuli& -YOLYO LEASE A 1973 BAVARIA JIM SLEMONS 1966 11ar00,, c.>1. 646-9.103 IMPORTS Autos, U-990 ME~~~:!!ENZ ;.::.;.;.;::....;Bc;;.;U"'"1c_K_....;..;..; GOOD SILICTION OF USID BMW's '73 BAVARIA Demo '72 2002 ·n 2002 '69 2'00 '69 100) '67 iooo CREVIER IMW SALES l st.:RVIO:: Jim Slemons Imports 1301 Quail N"'-pon Stach SJ3.9Jll) El'IER FRO?.! ~ta<"ART!ruR Sales _ Scrvlet • Leasing '71 l\IERCEDF~c;..lk!nz 2SO 218 W. 1M St., Sula Alla Sedrin, p/1. p/b. t.lr, f'lect IU-J171 1•oindo\l.'ll, auto. trans on l•.__ ... ...,_ ... _..,l noo', nldlal•. 2900! m1, LEASE A 'T.I SAVARIA Demo • Serlal •3132993 fot 1166'.~ month on. or·bb)f t0f$8;29!1. Bob McL•ren, BMW, Inc. (714) 17'-5624 orig. owner 963--5986 MB. '73 280 Sed1n, flutO. 7 months, 14,000 ntlle!I, lite bl~t pfw, ~5'.iU\~. * * '71 Mttdcltt 290 SE, ~·• aJr, full ~T. 'flt Mtretd8 280 SE, Crttim. J.m Bavarian BMW llOOO ml Al pw!', ertrU. cltnn. 4 dr Stick. Fully EquJ,i. u-Gd cond. 1 ....... <!11-0Cll 'Wtfftnt:y. Prt. pt)'. &U--3S72. Need a "Pad"'f P1111.."e an ad! BUICK SPECJ,\L ('olvr bl.ue, Excel\f'nt rond. H.ftd)o, 11ir, ,. . Old lady !l'l'Jnl Phl!adclph10 pre\"\ouR o~·lll'r. 196i, :r.1.rm 1nlles. SllOO. • !rl'l-029i • t I~ J>:. ~ St., Apt. 14 CO!ita f\f~sa. '69 BUICJ\ Riviera. Good oondiUon. Vinyl top, all ex. tru. Below mark~ price. Pvt Pty. Contact l-lugh Mynatt, 5 49-26~i M >10-6630. l'OR SAL-E 1971 BUICK Skylarlc, powl".r a1~na. poy.'t!C' brakes, tilt """~· air 4.'0nd-. vteyl top, low ml. $21111. llll-<690. 'trl BUICK Sl<yl•rk. C.. =-~ ..... ''GAS SAVER'' SPECIAL CAPRI tht S1xy European • , • + FREE 10-SPEED BIKE wirh eve ry one ordered and delivery during the month of July! $149.00 ITAUAN IMPORT VALUE •• WIDE SELECTION OF 2000 & V /S's AVAILABLE I - • TO~GHT'S TV illGlillGIITS KCET e 7:30 -Rapid Transit.Jn Los Angeles. The Southern Calllorrua Rapid Trallsit District's -~-a..lllllll.;CllllOliOJ!.Jhe p~~..! ste an~_the~ caUon ol-iiiWtranst comUors. · NBC O 9:00 -"I Love a .Mystery." A spoof on private detectives and murder mysteries with Ida Lupino, David Hartman and U!:s Crane in a search for a missing blJJlonalre. K'ITV m 11:30 -"It Happened One Night." The only movie to win Oscars for best actor, actreSI and picture this 1934 comedy stars <!lark Gable and Claude!te Colbert. TV DAILY LOG .. I Monday Evening JULY 23 SM 8 .00Ill&l11!1 Gil""" ma -•-$-lftl_.•f- 8 ....... ""' .. Ahl .... -.... TNt fll.toT""' .,_ ....... 11--dl'.I) ... '• ..... ·-'(CJ~ .... -......... (COii) ''1--stM ca• ... • t:GO II CIJ ""''' '"' (t) "'' ..... flltSIJ as Unt" HlfJJ"s COllll~ CCMISilt who lllltb Liler DA • blind .... "" .... ~ """" "")Ii~ "" vtrsa ht writa (Of tTMtiftl clTds. D 1111 lllC ...... -ICI <"'> ~ "" • -(R) ("") •n -Ida tu,ino. DrM Klrtmn. las Cninl. 'In • spoof on pri'lltl d .. hCttws aftil 111111dw'mpterila, thfM llrbomt prtwttt lllVISt!ptoq "-" •• 111-ollt lflort to locate • Ill~ bHllon1lr1' wtlD is iftlllrld for $12: 1111111on donin. @ Chff ..... ---- • ' . ......... QMntitl•Lut •• .. ' 1-LB. CANNED HAM 1.26 Pre-cooked, re1dy to eat. I lb. im-po~ed c•nned hem. Mc:QuttA. P1ult Prtlllisl. Jim Hiit· ton. A 1n>UP or sa11on dlddt, to ..,. u.it ,.;p's computtr to 11rtt• till Ill'* It I llflllillnt casino. D CIJ &I,.."'°"' _, Ill (a<) ..... ,..,.. (t) (!~) '72 .- Dtvld Janssen, Stell• StntnS. Jtfl. ny Hunt1r. A Kami war Kero, lll&r· fitd to. Sl .. k, SldisUc. •k'Ohol;ie..il tricked Into 11olnln1 111 old· Armt' buddy In 1 fl!!Jltimlllion.dolllf ftlb.. ·~ _. "" ........ -to ..... "' . • '" ' Cl) C1S """Wllttr ponWll ....... T_, 111 .............. ;::, 1ci 12k> • ..,. .. "'. • CHOCO~ TES or ~.<::> '" -""'it Shel, CHOCOLATE BRIDGE MIX ..... -awt1111'fiqY• GI lrllMt I lb. bags of· ch~c:.ol1te dusters, choc:ollte covered flltllw Ian p••nuts or succulent Bridg• Mix. S1vel ID"""' i.., ...... --·--1Dutri1U ... CIWI 57 UO llCIJ -....... !II) -YOUR .CHOICE C aMI lttt .kl)'frltnd ltl• ...... rt llllJllll - 7:tt8 CIJ D l!ll - 11 ...... f• •" :•:;."t.'l::~~~"'a",: KOOL AID~ ·~ .. ~~~ .... 2....,. 1Sc "''"'" '~========== 00 ..-.: (C) (ZllrJ "Jeulcl" (tin) "2-'0lit DicMnson, M111rice Cllt- vtlltr, Aann Mootthtld. (j)--1-. .,-' I lM\aoi • 11 • .-11-.............. fl!.,;.,_. Cllt .,_ ·--7:3011--·· ...... a.. (R) J11n11 Dlrru auests. rn -·- a-Ill' .......... GI-"'""' . llilll!* ..... ' .. ~-'l>hA'"""' ·~11 .... llio'~Ml bi-~ tfllN:~W.. trrp llb -tries .. -ilo ... '!'~ to hm IM dlild ·1~urtd 111 1n aci:ldtnt. ···-CIJ_,_ Dh;.,_r..,T1.,, Iii .. -h""' a 1"' ,._ Ma la lt&flt .... ,,,,........ ID:!08T•lld CIJ l>o ,_ (i)OOO., _ D -$ -<Cl l2>tl "1111 fll Trw ......... ::.'"a":"i:::l~~-."' ·en•-10" ROUND TILT FAN .,,.;,;... 11!1-I-• = 11'°'1DDDGl8llll-8 22 l e1mcw1..,.. r-·•..., CIJCllllil fll-· · •• ....... Covtr•P of tht Soulh•m BO....,..,... Singl .. tp•.c:I fan ha1·thrH dlumlnunt blades. C.lifornl• Rlpid Tr1nsit Dbtricfs Ii· (J) hnJ ..._ Has carrying handJe~ Tilt stand. Chorge it. · ul report on tht ptOposid llfW sys-0 ...,.: "'U&t If .. Ctff'" (drl~ i=:::::::::;:::::::~ hm. Topics u,.:tld to Include '57--sldner Poit11r, Jotln tmMI· 1oc1tJon or new tnlllit "conldors" .... I!'-' ind I possible qlll5tion .... IJ\SlfW m Tfllti II ~ ... -m 1" Mwtttmr ....... : "1111 ~ str..r CB lblW 1 ill bUlllll (mys) '55 -Atrthol!J Quinn. MM ff) n. AIM-f.alr Ba!ICfOft. llil"'"""'" --a:oo. "--* (R) Falus Ind N Mt c., Tiidi (R) . Mrpowtf HtllWs 1U1rdfn1 1 stolen . • told alllpment, whlle M1f1h1I Dillon 11:30 IJ {I) en Lael ...,.: (C) "1111 r111 ulllCIJlr W011nded with 1 buUtt P....,.at" (dr•) 'H-hlllct: Wr-1 Mir ltb spint. Pitt II 'of I lflrlt. m1rt Marprtt Jofmtall, ' ... ~.,. 0 11§8'--VlW'Cali D a m Ll.P.I• (R) Stm law· is 1uut Ptosl ' . rent1 auesu. IJ ltMle; '1\t JlaP" (sd·ftl '52 II.._.. (2llr) "'SIM 1lMws" -Rod C.mtron, Maril Wlnftor. (mp) '60 -Edw1nl G. Robinson, O (])(Elack'hn Tt11ltt Noh\- Rod !'m"'' ._._._ "The Wheel fonn•tion m illbll. It pms tllllt. U ,., "°"-GJF-ti -"II ..... ot Dtlttl" (II) Whlll hldina: out 1ft11 ,_. Olil llPt": (1'11111) '34-Clail rabblq !iii co!IUll* IR I ftUlllblrs Glbl1 Qludtftl COlbltt. rlCDt, rr111k.EJsu lurna that ht Is ' bein1 IOU&ht IS • dollOf for • bonl 12:00 (I) Mint.I Dlllll m1now tr1nspllnt for his YoUl\I SOil Miki F1rrell ruats. 1:00 (])DD CJ) NM (JJ Mn ff the S.1 "C1nnon of tti• 0 Hlctnnr P1trwl """" u1 m _, --.... 1..., II TIM a.st ni Mn. Mllif 'J9....Clmter Mon'b,•Jollfl C."1dlM. m TM lltl11ClliWh fBL1Sntr1JINI l!!l •-EE)Mlplfitl Y11dn-. Ill•"" io!Oll .... -- Tuesday 1:4511_, .... ·-,..... (drl) '51 -11oMrt Mitcflllll, A'M G1rdrttr. 1:1011-: ·-.. -(•Ill) . '41-->iU -... ., , ..... l•"'m """ ldna" (lo) -ctr T tlq', Jl1n Simmons. 1:300""" _ _,,.._l*o> ·DAYTIME MOVIES .,._..,,rt""""'°'""' 1:00 CIJ """ r .... ._.. ,...,, '" f:JO D "Jwllt" lsldP) '56--0oril D11, -latt Lemmon, Walllf Mlltt1111. Louis Jourd111, Bari}' Slllffv1n. a (C) "M•l!Slef lit ....... (tom) lt:OO l])"LM Slim tf t11t AMlzM'" '6'-fttd Gwyn11t, Y'IOl'IM DeClrlo. (dr1) '57--0on T.,W. 3:30 0 "Tiit 1i1N kr' (n1) '57 -I g ..._ hll" (mys) '41-Dennls Anlhcl!J Quinn, Willlalll Collrld. 0'--1, Cllltt Tr"f. 4:00 8 .,,,,... n., AMf111f Piece" n:oo e •A ...,., fer ltlMr(' (COlll) •45 <.dr1J ·~111 T11111tr, Berl)' sui. -1. CmoU Habfl, •hllft Pwlltl" l!v111. (Ills) 12-l!.,.. ..... ,,30 Cl)-11 IOAll lhlioc --KOCC,CHANNEt • , 18" BAllBECUE GRILL Portebl~; ••sy -to •c•try 18" grill hes folding legs for h•ng·up storege. Cr•n· berry, •vocado. ' 1·· ·11 \ Oun• Bu99y Biby wa.v1' hi1 .' does wheelies, spins, goes fontt•fd end reverse. Alt' bf · ,,,;,ote control. '" ·Use Your KMART 'CHARGE I IANIG\MERICARD . IOYS ...C:OLOIFUl ' ·-MO..IRO~, FLARED ~JEA~S 2 DAYS ONlY .66. Cotton-polyest•r/cotton flered jeans in western. Ir p•tf•rn1. Wide sfl•ctio~ of colors. Mechirie w•shebie i~ sixes e.11; 11i~0six•s 8-16. . t • I ' ' .......... _. _ __,. .. .. PQ'""~OID MINUTE ·MAKER KIT 24.44 . ' ' Everythin.9 you need· for instant pictures. ·Squere · Shooter 2, Cese, Film and Sylvenia Flas~ Cubes for I eight p,ictures. . S J mt li-E''IFC ' $')-' *£ ' ' • V0-5 HAIRSPRAY Special Off« I $188 IUY 2 AT JUST . .• ,. · · 5 ·9AILON · . 'f_LANT SAL~ . . ;t(l~l, <;li~~E 2 ...... 7 ' . .. .Y~ Stron9 ~.~.lthy plllnts. ,Selectio" include; ilteli.;, Cy- pr.,1, &Jd9n ,,Arbovifae, ·Juniper T •m• and Holly- wood Juniper. ~ • • • - " •nW Wa l!al '° ." '(de C'F Sl•a t~ Hal • • .. r . ~ . . ~ .. ' . •·-------------------------· ----• • -Sag _.~l~mente . . Today's Flnal -~!Jpistra~o .. ED'ITION N.Y. Steeks -*-=--.. ·--· ' '(.Ol, 66, NO. 204, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS . - Haldeman'S Role in Watergate Coverup Told n •. , 1nW~GTON (APY , ~ Arter the Watergate lreak·ln last year H. R. Haldeman calmly ordered biJo av'stant lo "make sure our 'files are clean," the oi!le testi/i¢ today. 'f'former White House staffer Gordon St~~ also said that earlier, during o;e· 1972 presidential p r i .m a r i e s , H'aldeman ordered wiretap leader G. GQrdon. J..!ddf to "tramler. whatever capability he had" from one Democratic candidate to another. G Strachan, denying !bat he knew about the Wateraate wiretapping in advance, told ~ Senate Watergate committee he expected Haldeman to rebuke him foc Ur • competence after the wirttappers wtre caught. But when Haldeman reacted with calm, Stractian said be bad to draw one of two conclusiot11: ''Either he knew about it ahead of time, or be didn't ex-· pect' me to report to him." · Strachan said that former White House ccunsel John W. Dean Ill never lied to him, and that be believes Dean is telling the truth in accusing Haldeman, Presi- de!lt Nlxoo and former White House ail-vtser John D. Ebrlldunan of complicily in the Watergate cover-up plot. "This Is my opinion, based upop my association with Deen," Strachan said. "My opinion would be that Dean is tellipg strachan then showed Haldeman an old tb6 truth." memorandwn in which rtrachan in- Strachan said he first reacted with formed Haldeman dull a !300,000 "IOl)bisticated po I i ti c a l intelligence aback aDd disbelief \fben be bean! about gathering gystem" had been approved by ~ \Vatergate raid on the radio, the campaign comm.1ttee. sirachari, whose job was to keep "He told me, 'Make sure our files are Haldeman informed of activities at the clean,' " Strachan said. Nixon re-election campaign, said ~ex--·He ~troyed that and other documents peeled bis boss to be angry. by ruruung them through a shredder, he · ''I was scared to death. I lhougbt I said. Later, in July, be told Haldeman would be fired," Strachan said. specifically that be destroyed the But on the contrary, be said. Haldeman memorandum in question, and recalls didn't berate him. that Haldeman didn't appear to be "He said almoot Jokingly, 'Well, whai surprised. do we know about the events over the. The Liddy incident came In the. spring weekeni:i?" Strachan said. of 1972, Strachan said. Haldeman in· structed him to tell Llddy, who was then chief coun.iel to the re-election campaign comm.lttet, to "transfer w b a t e v er capability he hid" from the campaign of Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of· Maine to Sen. George AfcGovem of South Da~ota, who was emerging as the front-runner for the Democratic nomination. Strachan said Haldeman w a n t e d particularly to find out McGovern's rela· tlonsbip with Sen. F.dward M. Kennedy of MasaacbuseUs, whom Mf!Govern wanted as a vice presidential running mate to strengthen his chances agairuit Ni.Ion. Strachan said at the lime be relayed fhe order to Uddy be believed It had to -oun I own; Police Attempt To Catch Coyote San Clemente poliCi! shot and wounded a. coyote over the 'fttkend which could have been the animl\} that bit a young visitor al San Clemente Slalo Park, bUt thO animal could DOI be retrjeved for rabl<I -. Olficers spotted the coyote walking Into a canyon Ol1 Avftlida Lobelro near the Part Saturday evening. They had. been summoned to the area by a woman resident who found the animal sitting -apparently ailing -on her front pon:h. One patrolman shot at the animal in the canyon, hitting the coyote ln the bind· quarters. But tbe shot falled to stop the animal and lrdlsappeared into the brush. Park rangers over the weekend spotted yet another coyote in the area but could not capture that animal, either. The siititing and shooting were of no help t0 Denise Pimper, 8, of Norwalk, wbo is undergoing the 14 injedlons of a duck serum to stave off the possibility ci rabies. 3 Marines Held; Evidence Found In, Postal Theft -Mo~ ~.·stubs and printing paraphernalia -~ belonging to a burg!· ed Camp Pendelton branch post office - Were discov-S in a San Clemente motel -ioom.ovei:.U..irool<el!'l. and could lead to suspects in· the theft Occurrliig at tbe reaervaUon late last week. Base officials said that three Marines a1rea4y ,have been arrested in the major breakin at the postal branch Jn the cen- tral....., otthe base last '!'hurlday. But they added thal the discovery al the San Clemtnte Motor Lodge over the weekend could lead investigators 1o other suapecl•. ' The three' men arrested. Friday on the base and charged with !eden! offenses rtlating to postal theft are Pvl. Ronald D. Redmll!l of Oberlin, Mo.; Lance Cpl. ' Donald R. Weaver of Sbrevepurt, La.; and Lecin J.;ifayette. Ages of the three ar- --were oot immediately available from ailtll>rllles. ' '!be lool lnclUded 'lf,000 In pc>stage atamps, scores d. blank postal miiney orders iii well as the machinery and rub- ber iiamP$ required to fill out the belUllable-· Base olfici.ls said dull some .of th stolen Heins-were recovered during the armis l.i\l< In the week. Local pOUce &ald" Ibey louDd 200 stubs from 'money orders in the rOom at the lodle localed at 1121 s. El Camino Real, but no com~ete money orders were ,,,_ the evldeoct, , ' Brirain, Iran Talk Spokesmen for tbe Veterinary Public He,a)th Division of the Orange County Animal COOtrol llepartmenl ,.id today that until they· are conviriced lllal ._..,. ti<_ts-lhe.-which bit the girl, Denise will have to -the pAh)llll.-.. . 'lbe ioiingstir was itteir.tmce on the leg by a coyote wbicb crept tip bebiDd her a ""'k ago and inillcted the single bite. ' The animal was not provoked, park rangers said, and no eiplanahon can be round for the attack. -... - Planners To Get Motel Permit Pleet San Clemente planning commissioners Wednesday will hear requests for a use pennit to allow a 110-unlt motel near San Clemente General Hospital as well as a s~ceptioo bid for the same project. 'l1le motel proposed for construction by the Rinker Company of Newport Beach, would be located on commercially-zoned land at 600 Camino de la! Mares in the retail-oriented segment of the hospital com pies. 1t would be the fint stnctly commer- cial land use since the Los Mares section was master planned for development. Besides approvals for the motel, the firm seeks a variance to allow a sign nearly twtce as high as the legal limit in the city. The finn seeks to erect a pole sign 55 feet high, e;iceed.ing the 2$-foot limit by 30 feeL A secondary request calls !cir a sign surfaet; ~hicb would be substantially more than the codes allow. Other ttems on the agenda for the 7:30 p.m. ses.Von include: . .......C.OOtinufd deliberation on a request for a car wasb and servite station proj- (See l\llQIJEST, Pqe Z) 1918 Flying Ace Ed Rickenbacker . Die8; See Page 4 Death has come to Capt. Eddie Ri cken. backer, a man who dueled""the airplanes ol. the Red Baron to become a World War I Oytng ace and who later becamt the guiding g<niUI of the Eastern Air· lines. IUckeoblcker was an •uto speed do- - ~· ABOVE IT ALL-Soaring bitdman Sunday was one of about 200 persons who brou~ht their bang ~lid­ ers to the third annual Otto Lilienthal Hang Glider Championships. The two-day event was held in Tra- buco Canyon near O'Neill Park. Longest fligbls !rom a mountain peak were about six minutes. There lilftr ........... "" lM ...... were also youngsters of 9 ·or 10 gliding. It al) began two years ago on a hillside in Corona del Mar in a casual atmosphere. Since then the Southern Ca1i- f ornia Hang Glider Association has grown to about 3,000 members. Caspers' Recall Sought hy Angry Viejo Residents By JAN WORTH Of the Daltr l'lltl Slaff A move lo reca11 Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers was an- nounced today at the ,ourtb street closure demoruitralion by angry Mission Viejo residents. The announcement was a new tactic in a lllOll.th-long protest of closures of three streets at their intersection w i t h Jeroolrno Road. Some 100 resklentt picketed a( the cor- ner of Cordillera Drive and Jeronimo as they have three times before. "It looks to llS like Mr. Caspet!l hasn't taken the time lP find out what'!! going on ~ here,"L>iane Shaver or 24146 Barquero street, said. "It seems a (Set RF.CALL, Page I) . CLASSIFIED AD BEA.TS THE HEAT Doo't put unused merchandise on iCi!. ,Jleat !be heat with Daily Pilol classified advertising. Here's how: Nixon Refuses to Give Tapes to Senat,e Panel WASHINGTON (AP ) -President Nix· on today flatly rejected a request for ac- Ces.1 to tapes of presidential con· venations.. saying they will remain "under my sole personal control." At the same lime, Nixon wrote Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (D-N .C.), of the Senate Watergate committee that "at an appropriate lime during the bearings I intend to address publicly the subjects you are considering." The President said "I atiU intend to do so and in a way that preserves the con· sli U.rtional principle of separation or powen, and thu.. serves the interests not just of the Congress and the President but of the people.'' The \\'hite House at the same time made public a letter from the COllll.!el's offict to special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox dec}aring that Nixon also wiU refuse to make the tapes available lo Cox. The letter was signed by Charles Alan Wright, a University of Texas law pro- fessor serving as a White ~ con- sultant. \Vrigbt wrote Cox regarding the tapes made of conversations aod telephone calls involving Nixon : "ProducUon of them to you would lead to their use in the courts, and que.sUons of separation-0f-powers are in the (See ·TAPES, Pa .. I) Lifeguards Busy Rougli Surf, Riptides Reported Jtougb surf and severe riptides created Rough surf is also expected today a busy weekend for san Cle.meat& spawned by Huricane Doreen, located lifeguards, who reported '11 ....,,,., dur· 1 300 mil th est of San Di Ing t•· two days, includinl Ont swimmer ' es sou w ego, a F R I G f D A I R E, custom ·~ lil~•ard 'd •11o aulfered bac~ injuries. ·•-'81 • • Imperil! 1111, 9 mos. old. Wayne Grovet, 20. of Vlsli Del Miii' Despite the rou1h llllrf during the '2115--2 Full doors, (Phone Hotel In San Clemente, received bock in'. -kend, tho beaches were moderately No.) juri~ Saturday . when he wu thrown crowded with Saturday's c r o w d from his surf mat while riding • large nUmated at 1.800 at )he dty beach 1Dd IDOl'I btfort th&. war._" -LONDON (AP~oll-•Dd -n ltll can to Prfnle "Mlnisler EdWard Hoeth conferred mUeS an llclir privai.ly today on the coup I n ly 1911. , . . " ~~ 1 ~ The rtft1ceralor aold Iller the ad had wave, a lifeguard said. Groves was talten 11 .000 on the «Wily sands. An additional '.'t--.. .... OiiJy IW. illii> 'the id~il Sii\t'lellfi!Me_G __ l HOipltar-.mere--,1. therr-l•t.d the clly .-Cash for llllllllltf fun and the ho was treated and released. beach and 15,000 floclted to tl>e coun()I ' . ' ~ Alpnlslln an11 Soulheasl' A.sla 1MCUrhy lie shot down Ove Ge!Wn pl~. In a 1111llers. British and Jranlon diplomatic moolh In !ill to qualUy II an act. ~ Aid. Aa the leaden beld thdT II). Rickeobacktt died ln Z u r i c h , minute meeting aTThilt1rilin Einbuly, SWl!Wlllld, at Voge of Ill. ,,,....,..,. Prttldenl 7.tdllbr All BINlto ol l'Ulstln was llsted as hart l1ilure. ·Set story, flew Into London for a tWl>Cfay visit. photo ·on Page t. ' btt "cool""" 1•" '" I 1o' T ke the tlfeguardJ also reported ll<ftl'al 1-r bea<'h.., SUnd'31 Y" Is "'" ,. •• ' Y ' 1 moi!lcal aids during their "moder1lcly Temperatures on the sand ranged fl'OITl hell oil by Plldtll a Dtlly Pilot clalil· buoy" '1le<lr<nd, wbid! they attributed to 11 c1eg,... to It decrect on Saturday and fled--ad ol. Y<JUI' .own. The aumber fcroir to six.fool wavN cruted by • G de..-to a dtp>el oo Sumla7. to" caDf -Iroplcal distw1>1nce oil the -ol Water tenqlerattu11 WU 16 dqrea both H1waii. da71o • • • ., ·- do with pollllcal lntelllgence galherlnr, because Uddy 's name cropped up in dlscmskw of campaign intelligence u early u November 1971. Strachan said the instructkm came sometime after April 4, when be advised Haldeman of the P>O.QOIL. inteWgence plan. Strachan also told the commitee "it was fairly common knov.'ledge" that the driver for A1uskie was in the pay of the Committee for the Re-Election o( the President or at least supplying in~ formation to the Nixon campaign. Muskie wu out of town and bis office had no· immediate comment tn Sttacban's testimony. • Ie I 707Plunges Into Sea Off ~ahiti PAPEETE, Tahiti (UPI ) -A Lo! Angeles-bound Pan American Boeing 7f11 with 79 persons aboard cartwheeled into the sea a mUe off this South Pacific island today moments after the pilot reported a. smashed windshield and &ald he WOll1d attempt '" emergency llllC!!ng. Only one person may have survived. A•latlon d.flclall said 10 bodies hid boeft recovmd from the oil-stained water and that a Clnadian tent.attvely Identified u a "Mr. Campbell" waa rescued alive . ' The officials said a stewardess pulled ~dive from the water died in a hospital and they doubted if there would be any other survivors. "As for other 1Urlivors, anything ls pMSlble but as the hours pass the chances get smaller and 11maller1" • rescue worker reported. Pan American announced the names of three of the 10 crewmen and Aid names of the others would be released when next of kin are notified. The three were: Capt. Robert E. Evarts, Grus Valle:fr Calif. Flight engineer lsuc N. Lambert, Danville, Calif. • Second offlcer Frederick W. Fbober, Rochester, N.Y. 1be plane also carried a copilot, two pursers and four stewardesses. Rescue worters said an wmamed American tourist, whose wife boarded the plane at Papeete, vanished during the rescue attempts. They said be wa1 In one of the boats going to help. When be saw hls wife 's body floating on the 1urface ht plunged into the water and bad not been seen since. There was no lmmediate breakdown of nationalities of the 69 passengers. Because of the French nuclear · ex .. plosion Saturday, Pan American bad taken on a number of Australian Qantas ar.d Air New 1.ealand passengers becauae those airlines were boycotting this Frencll possession. · Local offidala sakl 10 Frenchmen were aboard the Pl.i\ne. The officials· said the plane, Oighl PA (See JET CRASH, l'q6 I) .. Weadler More of the same can be u- pected In the Orange Cou! area on Tuesday. Night aDd morning low clouds will give way to sunshine In the aftemoon. The highs will be in the low 705. with the low dipping clown to 80 degrees, INSWE TODA\' Theu tald he WQI out of his mind, entering a 35-Joot boat i" tho l'to"'fJGdfic !IOChl nl<t, b•• <ht lkiJ>P<r of 14 Chutzpah i1 lialli'!O th• lalt laugh today. See Boaling, Pagt 19. ..... ...... ' ... """"" -- -. --c........ tf..Jll -.... c......, - CtMkt ,. s.,,.,. ,..,,.,. ,. 11 1"'91 U.lP o.tll """"" I ..... ..,.._ ... II ............ ', .......... M • ...,,; t II .,...._.. W ;:.-... ,, .__.. ...... ,,.,. ... _.. .-.... ..... ' ·"" d ,. ..I, I I ·• l • Ull"IT...,_M ~· Mary Judith Mallet nearly loses her crown as she is named ?11iss Texas of 1973 at the an· nual pageant in Fort Worth. Miss Mallet, 20, will represent· Texas in the Miss America pag· eant later this year. From Page 1 'TAPES. • • forefront when the most confidential documents of the presidency are sought in the judicial branch. Indeed, most of the limited case law on execuli\'e privilege has arisen in the context of at· tempts to obtain executive document!: for use in the courts." 'Ille pNllessor said Nixoo weighed the • adVantage the tapes would provide the Watergate prosecutors against what was termed "the ..nous and lasting burl that \ discl""'es ol them ..... 1cf do to the coo- • lidenUality that Is lmperaUve to the ell.,.. , tive lunctlooinc ol lhe jieslde!lcy.'"·' • Wright concluded. 1•1n this 1nstaiice, the ' President b83 coocluded that It would not ) serve the public interest to make the · tapes available." Ni~ in his letter to Ervin, discl06ed he "personally listened to a number of them" before existence of the tapes be~ came publlc_ly known. He declared that "the fact is lhat the tapes would not finally settle the central • issues before your committee" and are t-"entirely conmtent with what I know to ~ be the truth and wha( I have stated to be -l the truth." f The President acknowledged that the i recordings "contain comments that per. } sons with different perspectives and mo- f tivations would inevitably interpret in • different ways" and, in addition, contain • "a great many very frank and very pri· J vate comments, on a wide range of issues I and Individuals, wholly extraneous to the i committee's inquiry.'' r ; A committee source said the Watergate panel would meet in closed sess1on and unanimously vote to subpoena the tapes. ! "Even more important, the ta~ could be accurately und erstood or intU.,reted t only by an enormous number of other t documents or tapes," Nixon wrote, "so i that to open them at all would begin an t lendJe.55 process of disclosure and ex· f lplanation of private presidential records ; 'totally unrelated to Waterg'ate and highly i •confidential In nature. They are the tcJearest possible example of why ! 'presidential documents must be kept f ~confidential. I I { I l I l I " I I i I : I : 1 I I I ; I t I I : ' ' I I I ; I ! I ~ ! I ; I I ! I I r . I ! I I I I I OIAN•I COAST .. DAILY PILOT b ~ Ille N.ws·~ ..... M pUl>lltfW ., IM DI'•• Co.ti l"VOllt1!"'9 CMftiMnf ..... ••t. ldll'°"' ... Pllbl"-, Mol!Hy nv...., Frloly, lor Colt. M-. N9-I 8Mdl, H""tl110tooo BPUl/f-tl11 Vlllty, ~ S,.th, 1rvi...t..,..IHlo9dl INI Sftn c...,_,.,. ht! J11a11 C..Jllilr•-A W..t. "'llilllltl M!!lon k ~l1MO "''"'""' ..a iur'll•n. T"-prlf!CJMI •llthllle """' It 11 bl wt.I ltf l!twl, Co111 Mne, C..lllOrni., ..a. lob1rt N. W1.4 l"re1lftll! t.W ,_...,.. J11k II.. Cvrl.., Vkt l"rn ldtnl .,. o.n.r!Jj ~ Tlt1r1111 Ktt'l'll ...... Tlio1t1tl A. M11r~*' MM1ttln9 11111"' Clitr/11 H., lttt lidltr1' P. Nill "'''''"'· Mt11111 ...... ,,.,. s.. c.. ••••• Offlcie JOS N1rtli El C11t1l~o lttl, 91672 --CM•• M-i Ill v:::= S'"91 H.....,, hilc.a1 Ull """"•t1 ...... 1"'9fwll ludli IJWJ hKfl ...._.,.. w-hKfl: m ,_, ,,....,w , .. ,,., .. f714l MJ"4JJ:1 C'-HW Ai\lettW..1 '414'71 7'! --lii"l:J•••• Al o,,.rw•w ~ ' , ... , •••• 4fl-4411 1 ~""'· '"~ ar.,.. (.oetf ~ I ,.-, "' · "'!_ llfWl 1'9l'i., HlwirlllMt, "' ,..,,..,. ti' H\'ttlll-K Mttlit , f 11\ff 1111 • ~ •flllovt teKMI ,,,,,,. ' 1111111111 9t .,..... ·--' -'"''"'"' ( ............ fl'tlf ltf c.-. ..... c.~ ........ Mltcfl!il!M '°II (·--"" """"""' .,-ffitn u 11 ' '~ -MllMtlflll UM' lllffllfll'l',IM!'lflll'l'J irwy -· • Hijackers· Get Orders 'Kill or Free 150 Hostages,' Not.e Reads DUBAI, lh!ited Arab Emlrolel (UPI) taUolf Jl"lllltlllom.,die lbelld>I ID tbe "'°"vod by the Dubai P..ernment and thq .,._i-11.io ihoJitjackql.lrom..tbe control tower. -blJodlenoh Japoo Alr-LIMl-14,'l-1 _.,.., • .,llol..-~• • -to jet -u -tod>.Y .-Uy' an.r the bljOcbn liped '"It ... lnbl-ta ,tbe control tower et OubaJ Alrporl o1 w .. t Gom\any," Dubai Glllclall llld. The o!Oclall ¥lneo! to tommeot on the rneaa1e but .....men speeuialed It might bo 110111e tlnd ol code telling the hi· Jackers what to do nexl relayed a mysterious rrieuage ordtring The message read: .... ,them either to free the t!O ~ or "U )<IU lntond to till the _ ... on till them. board JL444 (the plane"• real flight Shortly alter jt was ~ved, the hi, jacl<ert Jaued their twin demands and there was speculation they W'OUld tlite off _, with the hostqes who have endured three days of bumlng deserl beaL There was speculation the hijlckm, number was JUM), please do It at once including Arabs and Japanae, ml&ht try or bo humane enough to release· them. to lly the big jumbo jet to Tokyo via "It IOUlldl ridlculolll . U you permit Pakistan. thooe whom you obvtowly want to ll1ll to They also demanded that authorities receive tefteibmeotl and meall. Please bring them the body of a woman hijacker give up your lntenlioos, there are other killed by a grenade explosion during the means of lPlbloody possiblities to reach Oovermnent olliciala said they bad no definite lnlonnatlon that the hijackers planlled to take off. takeover Friday. your political alms.'' . It was at I p.m. (I a.m. PDT) that the hllacten demanded the refuelinfr ol the pu. 0n slllldoy. they uked politely far ij to be pertly ttfueled, but this time they said they would blow up the plane unJeu they received fuel tmmedlate]y. A few hours before the apparent The offidals aa1d the messq:e was ,,,...p..,,1 ~CALL -~ • • supervisor should try to be Informed wbeo there is a problem Jn b1s d1strtcL" Other mldenll agreed they !eel they haven't bad any satialactioo Jn their negotiations with the supervlaor. "He's not represeJ)ting the people any more," Carol Mattoon of 24086 Ramada St., said. Caspers faces a re-election campaign next year as his four year term comes to .. end. One sip read, "Ron CUJM!B II not healthy for dllldren and other U•lni lhi11gs," to provide the theme or the liqur long walk. . · At one point, Ron Collins, an Orange County fireman, was surrounded by picketers as be arrived to change the lock on the emergency entrance chain across the Cordillera blockade. "U I'd known these people were here I'd never have come," Collini 11id, refus- ing to Cive an opinion on the closures. Since the closures Of Cordillera, Car- ranza Drive, and Montilla Lane, PfOoo testing residents have tried • vlltlely or tactics. They have held demoD1tr1Uonl, met w I t b tbe MJaio11 Viejo H-. Msociation. the Orange County Road Departmeot and repr<lmlallveo ol caspers· office. They held a meetlni Tbunday which drew over IOO resldentl. AU of t.bese, Mrs. Sbaver sakl, have !ailed to get any response from the superv!Jor. "We are finding out we are not the only unhappy people In Cupen' district," Mn. Shaver Wd. Memben ol the United South Orange Coast Communlltes, a --coali- tion In '-Nlluel. Dana Point, and S9utb ~ allo bave lli!qd. qi recall Intentions recently. They are angry with wbat they claim II eup.it.gi!llw!m with Avcp~unlty DeveloP,erS lno.,In gettlnC approval !or bJ&h-denslty beadl developmenL In Mission Viejo lut week, more than 400 homeowners put "for sale" aigna up In their front yanll u a proleat to what they claim Is laclt ol """°""' to their demands. The latest ploy wu to picket model homes or the MlAlon Viejo Company over the weekend, puaing out laafleta to proopecttve buyen uklng H they ...Uy want to live in a "so-called plaDDed com· munlty" and Jiointing out me ol the umolved problea. Two reptell!lltatives d. the M i s 1 i o n Viejo Company attended l o d a y ' s demomtration. "We are concerned about lMse closures and we're not happy with the confusion they have caused," Martjn Rus,,o, community relations director, said. "We will support any rational solution -and apparently the closures are not the answer." ~ Trio Bqre AU, Land in Jail A shapely redhead and her two male companions,..,.. cltod<lurlng the weekend on Indecent expooure charges by ~ Coonty Sberiff1 officers ordered lo crack down on :nounting reparta ol l)Udlty on Laguna area bo!Jches. · DepuUes said they booked the :rlo on charges that · they romped nude on Ille sands In South I.quna iear Pol.nt Place. 'lbe ·suspects Nere identified as Anne-Margaret Hoop, ao, of ·MattM Del ll<Y, Steven Jack Scb_,14, of Viti. • Port and Harry Thomu Amold, ao. or San ·Francisco. Wltnesaes who slid they ob1'cted to the trio's disroblni told .oflkers they deliberately ensured that onlooken were allowed to view the lull extent of their nudity. County Accused Of Financing Teens' Abortions At !:!$ p.m., the hijackers dem8nded the return of Mrs. Peralta, the woman with the Ecuadcrean passport who was blown up by the accidental eXplosion of a hand grenade concealed in her clothing. The jet's chief puraer, who was wound· ed ·In the grenade explosion, said Mrs. Peralta and her husband were among the hijack team. The purser, Yoahibisa Miyashita, 37, waa the only living ~n the hijackers allowed to leave the plane since it ar· rived at the modern airport of this oil· rich Persln Gulf sheikdom early 5atur- day. Up With P~ple Musicians Need Oemente Homes Sing for your supper? Some 170 young traveling musicians might-jWJt be willing to do that ne:s:t month. Members of the international group, Up With People, ere uklng San Clemente residents to open their homes to them during their coocert date In the city. · The musicians wtll arrive in San Clemente Aug. Z lot two clays or """'"11s Orange County's ...ifare depulment :u:n~epart Aug. 5 for their next wu accmed. late Friday or mating state Residents who take in a wayfaring .Medi-Cal funds available for abortk>na musician will be required to provide obtained by J>l'Oill8DI teenager" transporiaUoo, meal> and a bed for their The ~e wu leveled in a Superior guest dwing the visit, said Eva Ravenel , · , · · a spokesman for the group. Court IUlt filed by nearly 300 county · Up with People, a non profit, educa- Jfllldenh.. w,bo namedwellare department tiaoal musical group composed of singers -tlll ''GrllllVille 'PooptesO .. it COU!lty .Otlad·l7,to 25 lrom all ov .. the -111. will treasurer Robert L. Cllroii u deferidanta presont two """'"11s at a p.m., ~ In their clul actlol . -~•'.Jn,l:..,S§Jiwill~il~;~aiid fl. It Is~ by the ~t Medii(:al • The San Clemente concert& are among funds . Jll8dtl avau&bW 7'"'to' prejiant the lut appearances of the group in the females. under the .ace of 18 are a vk>~ United States before the singers leave for lion ol the principles aet,out In the state • · a three-month trip through Spain. . Ald to Families .With Dependent· Clllldttn "Up With People tries to show the peo-ixi't"b"!~ in the demand for an In-pie the , brotberboOd '~t can exist junction against both county olllclals that throughou,\ the world, said Miss AFDC wu deligDed to support living Ravenel. For the people that open ~ir cbildten and JftlDllll "°""" pnoportd hom.,, they get the experience of havmg to gtve birth to c:hlldren. aomeooe ~m another part of the coun- '"lbe program wu created to support try share .~ e1:periences from all over and not d"tro cltlldreo " the lawsuit the world. notea. y ' Resident.II who wish · to take in a Lawym r.r the plalntlfl said they will member ol the group can make ar· demand an Injunction igaimt any future rangements with Mlss Ravenel at 492· O>Unty acUon on such MedU;al paynrent.11 57&1. pendlog trial of the ~sue at a beatlng to be scheduled Monday. Neither counly official could bo con- tacted for comment on the lawsuit late Friday. Irene Mitchell Skylab 2 Gets Ready CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The Skylab Z astronauts under.go their last major physical examination today to be sure they are ready for .Saturday's launch and a 59-day visit to the space station. 'Girl Di~s • • • Iii> Ravine • --L-IL!'r&<. • ·er·-Crash _ .. -· . ~ ... U'I T...,.... Gett11'• Girl Danielle Devret, a 24-year-old Belgian model and girlfriend of J. Paul Getty ID, missing grandson of the oil billionaire, leaves police headquarters in Rome. Mi ss Devret was the last known person to have seen young Getty. CdM Youth Hurt In Truck Mishap On Mexican Trip A Corona del P.far youth was seriously injured and a Balboa man was jailed in Ensenada following an a u t o m o b i I e mishap Sunday on PWlta Banda south of Ensenada. The liljl/IW youth I?' id!;llAAed as Breck teOrulra, ahout 17, Of """"'~ del Mat. """"~, ... 'Jailed (Jjllciv.1i\g . !he acCic!el.t -W2' the driver ot the four-wheel vehlcle, Ron Newell, 28, of fl3 Belleview St., Balboa. one or the partners in a diving class known as Scuba Umlted. Newell was due to be released Crom jail about noon today, according to his father, Robert Newell of Balboa. Details of the accident were sketchy, but according to Brad Stillwell, 17, of Laguna Niguel, Newell and other members or Scuba Limited ha.'d taken a diving party to the Mexican resort on Friday. On Sunday morning, Newell, Leonard and an unldenUfled youth went for an ex· ploratory drive along a narrow road. A shoulder of the road gave way and the truck tumbled about 150 feet down a cliff and. landed among some rocks on the beach. The unidentlOed youth was thrown clear as the truck nosed over. Newen suffered minor cuts and abrasions. Leonard was finally flown out of the area and Is under treatment al Universl· ty Hospital In San Diego. His condition was descfibed as serious. I '-:"'• G rove girl dl..J'eorly Bunda.y, dur\llg ... Ii-hour. period In wldch sl\e lay 1!' !-ditch sllf!!rini ~· injuries ...tainOd wbm. she WU thrown 'from • van rlpPad 'Opeti wnen'! rjif, oil El T°"' Road and ttru<k •• • Bet' dilte flhally rtplned.consctousnes's and crawled up from the fi>adslde culvert to flag down.a· pwlng motorist. '!)me bllli rqn 9QI, -ver !or Bobbi Lylll) Fennell, IS: ot-~ Ca1a Unda Lane, whom. Orange Cdlmly coroner's deputies esllrtiitecl died' about 2 a.m. &mday. -:---' ' ... InvutlgalGrs: said the vari driven by Scott Spendlove·; 18, Ol 13W Casa Linda Lane, burllecl' orr the hlgliway about 8 p.m. Saturday and finally ·crashed Into a Creeklied. Spendlove, seriously Injured, finally cr,wled and squirmed his way up to the roadway and nagged down a passing mo- torist. He was Usted in satisfactory condition today at Mission Community Hospital. Two other persons lost their lives in Orange' County traffic accidents over the weekend, the coroner's office reparted. A 9-year .. ld boy, Larry Lutz, o( 12592 Amethyst St., Garden Grove , was killed Sunday when struck by a truck while riding his bicycle at the corner of Valley View and _LamPfOD Avenue. Police said tbe Doy lod his bicycle were dragged 70 feet beneath the truck driVeo by William 11-fcGill of Santa Ana. McGill was not cited but the accident is still under investigation. ' Motorcyclist Robert W. Wiggins, 32, of Panorama City, was killed in Brea Sunday. Police said he was southbound on Brea Boulevard at a high rate of speed when he Jost contro,I, hit a curb and was thrown into a block Wall and power pole. Wiggins' body was recovered 170 fe~t from where hls cycle hit the curb. Fuller· ton police reported later that the motor· cycle had· been stofen. · From Pqe l REQUESTS •.. ect at 1717 and 1735 N. El Cammo Real by the Daly Company of Santa Ana . Commissioners conducted i n i t i a I discussion "bn lhe project two weeks ago , but delayed a decision on the project which would include an auto detail shop. Strong arcfu\l'C:iurai c;o.itrQ!s for the proj- ect have been 'offered by lhe·developer. -A prilpo.oed subdlvlsioo._ ol , two sepahite 'l!ekmento·ol ~ liqe ~den­ tial fleights · project -one belni a division of 28.44 acres into 12 con· dominium lots; the other 17.5 acres into 84 lots for the same purpose. Police Seeking Call Girl's Mate UlNDON (UPI) -A British judge t .. day issued an arrest warrant for the 26- year-old husban<l of Nonna Levy, the call girl in Britain's Lampton affair, when he failed to appear for sentencing on a traf. fie offense. The husband, Colin Levy, is being held in Spain pending a hearing on allegations that be attempted to murder his wife. Attorneys said they did not know whether the arrest order could be used to have him extradited. Mrs . Levy returned to Britain from Spain last week and was arrested in COO· nectlon with the sex scandal. Russo said the Mission Viejo Comp111y bad sent a letter several wiekl to Supervisor Caspers asking for a thoroQgh study of traffic complications ln the area since the closures. I . Succumbs at 79 iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiXiiiiiiiOciiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiXiijiiiij_iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "I'm not yet aware of the reaction to that letter," Ru.m said. Telephone Lines Severed in Dana Telephone lines were severed in a suspected case of vandalilm sometime Saturday night in Dana Harbor, a Harbor Patrol official reported. Wires to the harbor's 1aclc1e shop were · cut between the hours of 7 p.m. and I a.m. The severed lines also included telephone lines to the lifeguard tower and lifeguards had no phone communlcatli>n with the ataUon for a couple of hours during the night, the official said. However, no major difflcultle.s were experienced by the lifeguarda durln1 the period, he added. Driver Arrested After Accident A San Juan Capistrano man was jailed on drunken driving ch•t1 .. Sunday by Orange CcKmty Sherifr1 offlcer who said he was responsible for a head-on crash ntar his home that left both In- volved vehlcl., wrecked. llepuUes booked Felipe Mendoza Dlu, 45. or 31412 Lo Calera, after hil vebJcle smashed headon into an auto driven by Aqel P.na Sanchel, also of Sen Juan C.pistrano, near the lnteraectlon of ,Camino Capilltano and Forster Sttttt. Offlcers 1ald two brtathallzer tt:sts perfotMed on Diaz 1lii!Wed hlln ·to be In· capabla of dtlviJia. Thet aald Sanches received 'l'!nor Injuries In the colllaloo but did no! requite hospital treatment. f San 'Clemente resident Mrs. Irene Eudora Mitchell died Sunday at the age of 79. Services will be conducted 11 a.m. Wednesday at Lesneski Mortuary Chapel by the Rev. Allan Vernon, pastor of the First Chr1.sUan Church of San Clemente. Shipment and burial will follow in the Belcm:t Memorial Park in Salem, Ore. Mrs. Mitchell is survived by her bus· band Alliett I. H. Mitchell ol the family home, 122 E. EacaJones; a aon, Kenneth H.F. Coffey of Salem; a stepeon, Stanley A. Mitchell , CUmberland, R.l.: A daughter\ Elberta Irene Ayer, D>8 Calle La Serna, San Clemente, and 1i1: graridchlldren . •• 116, originated in Auckland, New z .. 1anc1. and wu enroote to Los Angeles ond San Franclsoo when It plummeted hundreds of feet into the sea shortly alter takeoff. Airline oWclals said the pilot reported • -wlndsbleld ond asked for an emercency landing. But witnesses said the plane made a 90-degrtt turn and then hit the South Pacific with a trcmendoua impact a mile off Papeete port. "The crash happened al 10:1$ p.m. Sunday TahlU b'lne (l:U a.m. PDT) to- day," an airport techntda.a said. "I was In a houao at a level shove the airport. The plant took off appattntly normal!y. Its lights were oo to l could tee It was a PanAm plane.__-~-~--~ SUddenly, It took a &harp turn to the len and sluted looing allltude lost. I aot the Impression almoot as II a m1 .. u. was launched from the plane. There wu • ~:' ~:~'.!'! explosloo. Then oothlng -. omci111 111a a n.et or o1n~111 l•uncbel, y,.i.11, pleasure boat• aod llahlng veucls sped to the acene. Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than~ HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ~'BEST BUY'' AWARD SOIT IOOD WA$11 DISPOSlll ,..., .......... ··---·Aet....tc 0.,.,.,.., Dkpfttw •S .... --.-- 15995 0 WI OILIVH e WI: llllVICI! ''SDJllN e WI INSTALL 22995 ........ ,. .. • WI illtVtcl e WW '"'TAU Author I tad OE SERVICE 4 CYQE PORTAIU DISHWASllll 18995 ........ ,. .. e WI llll'llCI , • WI INJTAl.L. 6 CYCLE BUil T·IN ~::POTSCRUBBER DISHWASllER ..... , ... __ . __ __ . . ..... ..... 1 ::a:--t MAL ... .... ., ... _~ ... 26995 ........... . •"!' 1J'PllCJ •WI rlfff"U. Member of C1llfornla'1 La(tlll C-r•llvo luylnt --oro.,-Wlttt Tho Volume luylnt Power of 11 0 St., .. 90 DAY··-- CASH Wtiit-.... CllllJ ' " 1115 lllWPORT II.YD. D111nt1111r casta Mesa -Plltnl 541-7788 •• J • -I 1, I I • • I I ' i 1. ' ' ' ( ' ' ' • ( f ' r r t I J I fi y c, " c .. .. •• .. .. •• • wl •• .. '"I w A• Al "' ff .. 1 • 4, . 5 ·~ r. .. • • J.9 UAILY P!LO I Company \ Earnings Reported eE.r1-c •. LOS ANGELES (AP) "UnrelenUng ptt:ssure" from rlslng costs are blamed for a U percent drop In quarterly net earnlnp repornd by Soolllern Cal~ornla Edison Company. Jnd< K. Horton, chainnan of the Rosemead-headquartered utility, said that tm second- quarter net income fell to $31.38 mUlion, or 56 cents a share, rrorr: $32.96 million, or 61 cents a share, for the same period a year ago. Horton said revenues for the quarter rose U.4 percent to $24'.97 million. e Aller11•n Allergan Pharmaceuticals of Irvine says second quarter net sales for the three month.!!' ended J unt: 30 increased 22 percent over 1972 levels to 15,189,590, the highest quarter· ly saJes in the company's history. Net income rcse 23 percent to $382,5.16 and quarterly earn- ings per share rose from 13 cents per share in 1972 to 16 cents per share in 1973. e Amrord Amcord Inc. of Newport Beach reported earnings from operations for the six months ended June 30 were 19 percent higher than for the com- parable period last year. Second quarter r e·s u I t s showed sales of $54,244,000, with net income of $2,509,000, or 37 cents a share. In 1972 the company had second quarter sales 1 of $46,332,000 and ·net earning.:i of $2,352,000, or 34 cents a share. e Ahmanson Special to the Daily Pilot LOS ANGELES - H.F. Ahmanson &: Co, reached a record $5 billion in assets and reported net earnings or $24,633,000 or $1.08 per share for the six·rhonth period ended June 30 compared to $22,092,000 or $1.0f per share for the similar period last year. Earnings before realized ilf" vestment gains were $24.,903,000 or $1.09 per share oompared with 21 ,929,000 or $1 per share the prior year. ASSOCIATE Callfonlla Carporcitlu o f f a r s 49•,-Dlstfk t OWMrsJtlp 11 No"" Competitive lllllNll. M«ketl .. rnohttlalHtfY NW IHChi .. ta ht· d111trial alld COMllMf'Clol 011tlet1. lltdlvldMI 111ut ..... solid -II· °'"'"' ltacktro11ad aftd capo· bHlty of tlilll .. co111pt.ff c ..... of .,..-at1a111. Co..,.... proditet & IJltelM trelallMJ. Trod ncord wlll prON $1,000 111oltthly Mf, S111bstaittlol sa~ry & •ICP"-"'to .,...11t1 .. portHr. $29,910 ·.111 ltaadla, Pri1telpol• oalr pl ..... Wrl .. latam Co., 605 Hl11dry A•e., l1NJlewood, Ca. 'fOlOI. Aft: J. ll:a.-y, Prftldfft. 111· cluff bctck9rH11d history, ~­ fll«S, t.t.,1to11e ftllMber for hi· MnMw oppol11tlllfff. SEVEN ADVANTAGES OUR PAGER OFFERS that yours may not ! 1 COllP\111 OUN51 COUNTY COYIU•I ... 111: L9tW S. Ch •la, "'""°" YMte ................. ............. u . MONTH 'fO MOHlH •IHTAL U.Sll MO DtPOSn 119UlllD ON ArPIOYID Cl~ 4 ONLY 117.00 Pitt MONT TOTAL COST , ................. 5 NIW COMPACT UN n Siii r1 V••4•Yit 6 YOICI MISSAM ,HPS At~ A•f AVAll AIU :' 7 l'UU. flD llA!NmlAMC f. ORA~Gf ('OUST\ RADIO'Hlf PHON[ SEU\'ICl I'( 714 . IJl-JJtl ... I SO. IAlifTA r:1, IAl'tTA AfllA ,_""'" ..... ~­.. ,." Sat! a.-i.. ... tr-. 11 ftrl, (Ml ""' 4'44W -- Interest Rate 'War' On- Get the Most for Sa,vings By SYLVIA PORTER You can get an annual return of more than 8 percent on short·tenn federal agency securities -obligations rank- ing second only to issues or the. U.S. Treasury itself -and you 1 can get yearly returns almost as juicy on longer·lerm federal agencies. You can go into the open market and pick up short·tenn issues of the U.S. Treasury which will pay you close to 8 percent -and you easily can get 7 percent-plus o.n a wide iange of looger U.S. govern- ment maturities. AND NOW YOU can take $1,000 or more to banks and savings in· s titution.s across the country and iI you pled~e to -maintain JOur savings deposit for four • years or more', you can earn ..01tTE1t from 7 to 7'h percent -which compounded, )VOrks out to 7.35 to 7.9 percent. The interest rate "war" £or your savings dollar is ap- proac}Jing the histori c pitch of 1969-70. -As·-interest rates charged on loans have spiraled uoward and toward t h e £rightening peak of a few years ago, so interest rates paid on savings · are spiraling upward and toward those rarefied ranges too. THERE ARE minimum in- vestment requirements i n many cases. minimum holding periods, other restrictions. Buying securities in the open market is mo"e ro'TlnlicAted and carries more risk than putting your cash in a savings account. You have to have know·how. big.tim e m"lnev find a tou(ilh nerve to "pl~y" the sophisticated money markets here and abroad and ea rn the too rates available (here. But .no matter who you are, . 11•,i. ANNUAL 1nu1N ON $10,000 Pvrdu111 lo Leai.ebea. I~ P•ld ~rl.-ly, Tl'• Shtlle<isd. llllY·lllKk of lull SI0.000 et 9"d of !, 2 or l )'118'1 lY0<.1< OPl!OI\), AI RKRUaa11t 17141 SJMJAI FALSE TEETH That LooMn Need Not Embarn111 Doa't keep 'Worr1lnr about 'f'Ollt rne t8th citop1>1nr at the 1n'OGI time. A d1t1tllr9 adbtli,.. et1a Mio. F ASTEE'l'R• l(lne dentttn. • lontt• er, ftnMr • .te.i!Mr hold. MU.•'-Int f1\0rt tn,loyable. Yor more le!:llril,J and comfort. uee FASTEETll OU- tur1 Adht•lve Powder. D1ntur1111 that l\t are -il!fal to health. See '°"' deDU.\ f9Clllatlf· SALE this is the moment to shop for rewards on your savings doUar, to become fully aware of what you can earn and where. The basic story is that as a result of the Federal Reserve System's tightening money policy and today's huge demands for credit, interest rates you can get on securities sold in the open market have been skyro.cketing. Now, to discourage you from withdrawing your funds ,from savings accounts and rein- vesting in those higher·interest securities, th e regulatory authorities have either lifted or eliminated the inlefest rate ceilings financial institutions can pay you on your savings. ' THIS WlTHDRA WAL rein· vestment process -known as "disintermediatlo.n" -would dan~rously reduce the funds financial instituUons tra v·e availahle for home morlgaJles and other demable purposes and th,e authorities a re determined to curb the money nows. David D. Paulin has oeen named an assistant vice presi· dent with Bank of America's Orange County-Los Angeles Coastal Re- gional credit a d ministra· ti on. Pa u Ii n, with lhe bank since 1966 was for- merly man· ager at the South Coast Town Center o£fice In Costa Mesa. He is a member o( the bank 's office managers ad· visory board which provides counsel to senior management, and on the board of directors of lhe Costa Mesa Rotary Club. He and Cypress. * Roger Jones of Laguna Beach has been named sales manager of SpeC&rol Elec- tronics Corp. In his new will be re- sponsible for sales and marketing functions of the manufac- htring finn. He joined Spectrol in 1968 and la· ter was ao-JONI S pointed Southern . California sales manager. ln 191!1 he became western regional ~Jes manager and earlier thiJ year was named national fie:ld sales manager. * Simuel A. Rader bas bttn promott!d to Weatetn dlvlaion sales man8{1'.e of onM DiqJlootlcs of New Jersey. He joilled the ftnn u a sa1 .. ------ Complete New York Stock List ·I \ QUEEN II! By Phil lntertandi 'PostcQgnition' ··New Watergate Type of ESP ( By DICK WEST lndlcates Ihm> actually are f<l!u types of ESP. The added starter ls "postcognlUon" - !mowing something APTER It happens. tlllnp that happened. Certain oceurnooee ar. bound to have been In the realm of thf supernatural. - "Commercials that say 'especially il you're over Corty' ~end chills up and down my spine." Navy Grooming I , ]Udge Rules Wigs Okay I RICHMOND, Va. (UPI) -The reservislHaid.they laced ~ federal judge has declared odlve duty because of the FUtutlonal a Navy length of their hair. They said p-ooming regulation that pro-the Navy would not allow hiblted long-haired s a 11 o r s them to wear wigs to cover Imm wearing short-haired long hair. ~gs. Merbige pointed o u t 1 t U.S. District Judge Robert however, that the Navy allows Merbige's decision in the suit wigs to cover baldness or t by five Vlrgtnia Navy physical disfiguraUoo. r..,.;.i,.s could, ll upheld oo "Oefendants have offered no ppeaJ set a precedent for satisfactory explanation u to almLllar0 cases. The s u J t , the justification for curtailing ever, was not a clas.! ac-the grooming rights of those who wish to wear short hair wigs and not the rights the Libber 'Sued For Divorce rights of those who wish lo wear wigs for c osme t i c purposes,'' Merbige said. WASIU NGTON (UPI) .. Nearly everything these days seems to Nive some 90rt of tie-In with the Watergate hear- ings -even an article on ex· traseruory perception. The Smithsonian lmtlluUoo reporta In its monthly mag87.ine that ESP, long scof. fed at by the intelligentsia, Is begiMing to gain academic respectability. Al5 a means of com- munication, ESP Is still only about-as reliable as the U.S. Postal Service .• But, according to the Smithsonian, courses in parapsychology, the science that explores ESP, are now of· fered at T1 U.S. colleges. THE ARTICLE says ESP generally iJ credited with lak· Ing three forms: clairvoyance -the abllity to• pereelve things outside the normal range of the human senses - telepathy -mind-to-mind con- tact -and precognition - knowing something before it happens. But Paul O'Neil, who wrote the piece, obviously did bis research before the Watergate inquiry began. Testimony elicited by the Senate invesUgaton wrongly WITNESS AFTE R witness before the Ervin oommlttee have exhiblted an wi.canny ...,. of postcognltion. Looking hack oo their roles in the Watergate cover-up and related activities, they were ab1e to perceive all sons of thlngs that weren 't apparent to them at the Ume they were doing It. It has been suggested that Ue detector tests oould be Uled to resolve conflicts l r testimony. But that BISW'De! that tome witnesses Wert lying. Whlch mls!>t not be tlw case at all. · rr MAY .BE a.matter or anf wllnels having great.I' powers of postcognition than another. In Which event there's a beater way lo establiah credibility. The Smtthsonlao aays the growing acceptance of ESP In academic circle stems in part from the development of. new and more accurate ways to test the JftnomeDa. Some of these manifestations --- of pootcognlllve ESP .. ,:1 .. --------"tl downright eerie. For example there might be three or four former White House aides with different ret~pective impressions of what went on at the same meeting. t PERSONALLY h a v e never been what you might call an occult buff. But the Watergate hearings b a v e made a believer out of me. 1'lere simply is no rational explanation for some of the Jrt . A Vcmon'S SPORTSWl!.All Westctift' 1'tan, 17th ud Irvine. 1Newport Be1ch,Cllifomi192660 THE STORE THAT BROUGHT LOWER PRICE S TO THE BEACH AREA PHARMACY WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME SINUTAB Ttbl•h. 10 •••• , •••••••••••••••••••• ,, , $2.50 1 .tt LUBRIDERM Lotio11, 16 01. , •• , •••••••••••••• , •••• , l .49 3.0l .; Mer!Jlge -that -sailor already called to active duty be releaaed, and be told the Navy not to ca.11 the other four to active duty. -CHICI THISI SUPll SAU 5"CIA.LS-1 ........ , ow .... ~ I SOL.ARCAINE Spr1v, 4 oL •••••••••••••••••••••••• 2.lt 1.19 HEAD & SHOULDERS Sht"'p0o, 7 01. tubt •••••••••• 2.45 I.ft 1111 Prkt 1.69 2.S9 1.49 1.4S ~ LONDON (AP) -Gennalne ·:Greer, a high priestess ol $women 's Ub, is being soed for cllvorce. Merbige later granted a temporary restraining order to Larry Brown, a Virginia Air National Guarmman, irevea~ fQg the Air Force from call· Ing him lo active duty b- vicilating hair .Jet111th regula· 2700 l Coast Hi!hwav. at Femleaf. Corona di! Mar • 644-7575 Mia Greer, 34, married eter de Feu in 1988. They three weeks later. She a university lecturer and author of the best aeller "The ; ~ ' ' ~ .. { •. ; .. ·: ;. f l • ! , I s ( ·= ' ! . r . ; ' • ' '. • emaJe Eunuch." -~ tlo6s. ~ ' ~ We ¥Allthe New High Ralcs 5.25% to 7%f? ... And We give you so much more! HIGHEST RATES IN OUR HISTORY Regular Sa\Angl Accounts earn a current annual mte of 5.25~ Compounded O.ly from day In to day oot Ourc..t&ca1 .. of llepollt poy 5.75%. 6.50%, 1;75%, 7~ and more. Come tn to open your account today. W.'1 glvo you ful d8lals oo C...llalle regulallom 1~ wtthdm .... ~terms end amounte. ASSETS OVER $41" BILUON The *81glh of one of the wodd's lazgest llnandol • --and. -of O<Hn .... safety"""' 1887. MORE OFRCES TO SERVE YOU Great Western'• statewkie network of 67 bra~ ell ...... Cal!lomlo. b the lazgest In ""' -and Joan Industry. OUR NEW STATEMENT SYSTEM We gtw yoo e choice of the lnldJ1lonol passbook systm or our new quarterly statement showlrl) al transoctlons and your lnten?st earned. TllEGW CARO Prlllent your c:onl et 111111 Grvat -branch to cash penonol cheelll. make "-or wtllidm • obtain 111111 ...aable he...-With eooounll of $1CXX> or more. AUTOMATIC SAVINGS DEPOSIT SERVICE We oansfer funds automallcaly from your ch«k>ig ecc:ount at any bank to your Grmt w.tern "*91 ac::c:ount-~ v.obsnwer ~ Vllllh. TllE GREAT WESTERN FEELING It's the feeling that come fnlm knowq !'OU'w pul your -.. .-:ly ""' ~ .,.__ GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS ··~l .......... C...... ........ , ... '"' ......... .. .....,. ...... .. •LAQUNA HILU/l ....... WINN 24100 11 lbro "°Id • .,,.,"' ............ .,..,, ~ 111• .. , .... ....,.71n g A.M. to 4130 P.M. Cally I Until 6 P.M. Fridays f Free P1rklna "UAl.~WMf ............. , .......... .... WITM ACCOUWTI OP ... 0.-lilOUi a.o.,... ... " .,.._.......,, Tnw...,. CMckl,MIMJ Ordets. Moury ....... Thi .. DIM/NM Coll<lton.Aleo ''" et11•4111•• ...... MEMBERt FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION, FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK •A SAVINGS ASSOC IATION OF GREAT WESTERN FINANCIAL CORPORATION _ .. ___ ._ • -• DAILY PILOT 9 Hijacking·· "1BUC NOTICE PICTITIOVI •us1•n1 MOTtcl TO C:Otn'ltACTOIU N R MAM• IYATSMa#T CALL.I .. ,_ 910& ..,,,,., eveni•e ,,. ......,.. ........ .... .... kttOill Pltitrtdt NIWPORT ..... IA .:;. IN' II ~I~ iYf'TIMS NI GetW1 "Nll'llO For Airport 0-•IVlf., Wt. p,'w.... Of ..... llllo-M11"'1:11:•~AMtl'fl-.111f Calif nMI .. , " JUI.. Y, ttn Dtiw. J...e MIWWltl\. O.t """* ""°' " llcl •••: MR ~ (~-=lrnl~c::!i:;!•:: ~ -.!~~11~~•tle11 'N-1 11er1..it Yon.. t..!lllfl WI"'""' AUOIOfYIOIO SIGNAL OISTltlllU-J1rnM T ltltl .. 1t.. t..llO"tli. Av; TJ()•• SvtTI.,_, ANO&"~ ELl!M(N· LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) L,. A11•tft. ca11,...111, ,..,_ .T.t.JIY KHOO&. ~-~-·-I M~--I •a-n llll• "'-'MfllM II ('JMIM;fW IW I""""' "~ Pl-eff .. fl .. : IUJ "lac;lll11e ~'I!~ I ~,.n nKlua" perlntrtlllp Av-. Cott• MtM tJOrill _..,......,. blf'e ••" newly JltM. T. lltll ._ N_OTICI IS HUI.IV 01'11111 1i1M 1M .,.... ,_ ~ ~ Tlll1 tftlfl'n"l\I Wtl 111td wit!' ftot ,. • ~"*' ICIMOI O!ltrl(t of 0r8'1f9 Installed antlhlJack meuure1 1y 0 .,11; or 0rqe c-1y on J\llv 10 • 'rlly. C•Utor1111. ec11"' a.,. _, ~ ~ay have proved an une:x· 1"" 7W1 ·" .~r!.1T1,~..:ir~=e."vt':'i: pected boon tO the COW\ty lt\lb!llNd Of'~ C.•JI 0.11't' Piiot' J• ! •OI llltr f!ltll tllli 1i.v.tt1ttd tl!M. Mll- trea M .. '"" ••-•1 4 t• 1'""· _,.._.. d bk!t tor lllt IWtnl II I (OfllrKI IOI" SUI')'.. ••• ' ......... ' ~,.... __.... -lbOVI llflliec:t. AlrPof\ Manager D a n-1e1 PUBUC NOTICE llt1~d1 .=.Ill .;:-".:11111"t11t ptec• '::.;. tvana said new security lanes ,.,1111c1v ,....., •loud 11 111e =••1• PICTITIOUJ IUllNISI ll'M and piece. for checking passen(tv.t may MAMI lfATIMIMT T11otr1 wlll bt I UJ..00 dtpotll ,........, have created a ucaptive au-TN followlnt P9"• •• 1101119 llull.,.. 1111r Mtll Mt 111 Md c10c1HMnt1 to 11: ,ll.ltfllll .. tht """'II 111 eood COftdlll .. "lence" for nearbv banks of HAPPY CAMP. L TO .. UC! ,....,,.,.. vltlll11 10 dtyt •"91' "" Md llllnllll .... slot '"•chtnff in the termlnal ~ or1 ..... klltt tti, NtwPOtt 11.-ch ,.;::....,.~ :~e:.~ .. be 'wilding. While D a I I e n 'e r PMll P. L-·· ~·I Pltl'tlllr Elc!I Md tftlll bt KC•ml*lllf .., "" I In the •-t Ix ths 610 N.....,,.., C1111... Oriw. Sul!• tt: tKUrlty rllltl'rtd to 111 "" COl'ltrtct vo urne 1ua s mon Newsiot1 •t«fl. CA lklc\lmtlll• ~ bW' "" 1111 .. ll'1IPllMll of 1972 was up IS ""'""'"t over T1111 11u11111u 11 tond\ldt0 "" , llll'lltlld ..uoton1rtetor1. . r--¥-• p1rlnlftlllp. TM DISTIUCT r~ ttit rigl'il Ire , .. the same oenod last year, ,.,u, 1•\ L-IODI 11e1 •11r, or 111 bllh or to ... .,. 1ny Ir· E Id sl. t machine Tlll1 1111-1 n1tc1 w1111 "" c-t-, IOUl•r 11,, or tmwrn1H'1• '" ,,,.,. bldl or V8D!!I SI t 0 Clltl'k ot Or11191 COUlll'f Ofl : July f, 1'7ll, Ill "" blddlftll. revenues were up a whopping •v Tlltr .. M. w.,ll. 0eputy C-ty TM 011T•1a 1111 *'"'ll'llold "" Clerk. ""'*'11 prw-11111111 r111 of ptf dl.n. ,..._ 50 -percent. Ftuts " fhl loc1H1V '" Wllldl 1!111 -k 11 to be Moat of the I •-are Puobl1.i.d Orl/lllOI ~'t DIHYL-f'llot, ptrt(lrl'Nd fiol' Md! Ut ft .,. ..,,. of S O..ao July t, Ii. U. JO, 1'73 tllS.T.1 _.krntn M9dld ta IJ!tcvle "" COfllrlct situated near the security TNM ••let .,. Ofl flll ,, "" OtSTIUci check Int nd the .:-........ ...___ PUBLIC NOTICE olfk• IOCl lld ,, \U1 Pi-rt. A-. 00 8 u.i1~uu-Cos11 Mtui. Coples rney be DbUINd "" sumlng ICreeninR" pr 0 c es s PICTITIOUI •UllNISS -.-l"l'Cl-t. A CllPV or """' , ... Wll be MAMI ITATIMl.MT poelld II "" loll .it.. allows oasseneen more time Thi 1o1iow1,. Plftont ,,, c1o1,. TM tor'IGl119 Kt11c1v1e • "" dl- t trv t•·. I k E 'd •etH 1$ blMCI VPOll ' --Ille H'I' ot 0 . u~lr UC • vans Sil . Wll"l!l'i:':GALLERY, 121J "I'" WHI 119111 ,., llourt. Tiit rar. for bolldly IM PUBLIC NOTICE B1k1r St., C•I• M9 .. t2'26 =~':'( work Wll Ill ti IN1t lll'M tlld Ctrol Slrw:lltl'I, 2700 P1lltl'IOl'I W1y, No. 01 ·,, 11 O, Cotti M11111, Ctllf. '142• TRA~~R ~o maw~on' upora !tit COH· fllCTITIOUS aUllN•IS B•rrv You119, 2700 PtltrltOll W1y, No. IW•rded, 111111 upOll .::: IUC:::.~!a~ HAMii ITAM•MINT 15 A, Co.I• MolU. C1llf. t'!62' uMtr him, to P•r not .... th111 Ille I Tiie followlrig ptr'°'1 11 dol119 bu1ln111 Thi• bu1l11111 11 tol!duclld bV Ill lft-1ptelflld rills to Ill -krnln ~ fll: dlvtclllllC.irol Stl!lllri by 11\trn 111 tl'll •-1Cutl11n of tl'll conhii:t-- FUR·IN-FLIGHT, :s«I Cypr-t11, Apt • .s. Tiii• 11111me11I Wll rued wllll th• Coun. No blcldlr rn•r wlllw:lr1w llt• bid for ·. L1gu"1 B11ch, C1lll. '2'51 C .., J 1 6 73 ptrlOd of forfY.flve 1451 d•'fl '""'" tn. &•ltv J1111 F1rr1r, 1'0 Cypr111, Apl. IV Cliark ot orin119 oun,. Ol'I u V • 19 · Utt Ml tor Ille OPtl'llllCI or bldt. S. LICIUflt kldl, C1tlf. t2'51 l I p~ A Plvmtnl IMlnll tnd 1 Ptrtwmlnct Tiii• bl.IMlllU ,, cOl'lducllcl IW Ill 1n. Publllllld Orll\'llt CO.II DI Ir p lof, J11-llClnll wm be ,...,ire11 prior to hlCVtllltl of dlv\Ollll, IV t, ll, 13.. 30, 1'13 2C17+7l "" C11t1trect. Thi Plrrntfll bolld mtH be Bttty J .. n F•n-t r UBL! NOTICE Ill 11\t forin Mt forth 111 tile COl'll'rlct Thll 11•1-I w11 rlltcl W'Hh Ille Coun-p C d(l(Vrntnfl tv Cllrlt of Orlflllll County Ol'I JutY 20, G~lrfllf!I 8-d lt73. P11fl' PICTITIOUI aUSIMESS lly Dorothy H1,_, Pl1htr Publl..ta.d' 0!'1"99 COii! Diiiy Piiot, Ju-MAM• STATIMINT l"utcllol1l11111 Afll!I t.,-. n, 30. 11'111 A\IDllll L 12. ltn 2261-73 Thi followlllll Pltl'"IOll It dolllll buslneu Publlllltd 0rll'lgt COltt Dilly Piiat ·:..:c::.:::.::::.::::::::.:..::::..::c:......c=~ ••: July l• lfllll :n. ltn 2171-73 Bl·TROHICS, 2.o2 Newport B1Yd., ------------' PUBLIC NOTICE N.woorl lklch., C1llt., 926'0 PUBLIC NOTICE Jack E. a1v111, lm Plec111t11. PICTmous •USINlll Newport a 1acll. CA '2660 1------------NAMll ITATIMIMT I Thtl bl,llJMU 11 conducted by '" /ft-f'ICTITIOUI IUSINISS TM' folloVl'tntl Pltl'"IOll 11 doing bdllnes1 dlvldu1I. NAMI IT.&TIM•MT 11: I J1ck" E. Bivin TM fallowl1111 perlDflt 1rt clolnt •A NC HO OLIVERA. L TO., 620 Thi I 111remen1 Wtl llled with tn. Coull· blnirlftl 11: Newport C111lltl' Orlvt, Suite :HI. ty Ctltl'k of Ol'1n119 Cou11ty Dt1 July f , 1f7]. LA CAJA "EALITY, no Vl1 Pl"""°' NIWPOl't &uch, C1lltor11l1 PWf4 Nl'WJl(lrt BHdl. Clllf tiiwe PMll I'. l-ld!ll. GIMrtt P1rlner, Published Or1og1 Cota! Dilly Piiot, J u-Tllol'N1 •. Y-.,.. no VII P'lllf'mOi 6lO Ntwport Cll'll"" Drive, Suitt :HI, IV t, 16, 23. 30, ltT.I 2113-13 NtwpOtt ••ltll, Cl lf. ""° Ntwporl Be1c!I, CA Evaly" Y1111ng, 210 VII '°'1"""° Thi• IMll!IU L• llel"!ll conductld by • · PUBLIC NO'l1C£ N9WJl(lrT 8Meh. C1Jff fH60 ' nm11111 P1rtntohlp. • Tiii• Mint» 11 c~Ucted by '" In· P.1ul F. L(!Ylf'ldgt dlvld1,11I. Thi• st11-1 fllld wtlll tl1t C-IV • ll7l1 Thom•• • Young Cttrk or Or.•ng• CGvnl'f Ofl: July ,, ,,73. NOTIC• TO CRl!OITORI Thi• 1t1ll'll'le!!I w •• fllld wlltl ""Coun. By Tllftesj M W1rd D•~·.... County IUPll!lllOR cou•T Ofl TNI! Cl«k, • ' ..,.,, ITAT& OP CAt..IFOltNIA 11'01: ~73~Llrk of Orllllll C°"'"ty Dt1 July 20, l'U5ff THI. co':.!11.~.0RAMGE "'91~ Publlllltd or •• COii! Delly PUG!. Ju-. .. , R G I • ' • Publlalled Or•noe CCl91t O•llv "llor, Ju-Jy '· 16. 2:1. 30. 1m 21u .73 E1t1t• ot ELMA T .. 0 " 30 "=========='=~IR0B1ooux, 0tce1Hd. v • • •lld A111111111''1:s. 1m ms-n ~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to lht PUBLIC NOTICE cl'"ld!IMI of "" 1t10v1 nernld deced1n1 Done by Dunn Pat Dunn gets things done. Tb.row her your challenge and see bow she handles It in her 'iAt Your Service" col· wnn, now appearing every SW1day, Wednesday and Fri· day In The DAILY PILOT. 11'111 1H perlOlll htvlog d 1!m1 11111lnsl llle,l----~~~~~--- 1111ld dKldtnl 1r1 requ/tff . to flit thtrn, PIC"TITIOUI IUllMISS with 1111 l!ICHMl"V YOUChtn, 111-tlle offkt NAMI STAHMINT of 1111 dltl'k of Ille 1tl0v1 111tlfllCI courl, or Tiit followlf\GI Pltl'"IOll Lt dol11111 bull""' to fl'"ntt'll lhtTn, wtt!I Ille nKtt$1rY fll : YOUChtn. lo the Ulldtn'9ntd 11 me law BEL AIR co .• nn Tr111t offtct of MARIAN PLUNl(ETT. Pool 01· Wtstm!1111..-, C1Uf. '2613 !let Box. 269, •11 Ollw AYlllllll, Hu"tlogton Rog.tr E. Hultqul1!, 71n Tr1sk, &eotcll, C1llfornl1 '26411, wtllth 11 ,,,. plac1 Wtslmlnlltl", C1tlf. '2613 of butlne11 ol the urdtrMned 111 t ll .,...1. Thl1 DUllneu It conducted 1W '" In. 1«1 Pl'f11l11l119 to Ille nl1t1 of 1111ld di!• dlvlclu11. dint, wllhl" four ITllll'llhs tffll' 1ht llr1r R(9tr E. Hullqul1t pubUcellOfl of thl1 n(ll]CI. Tiiis 1t1i-t Wll flied ""'"' "" c-·===========~I D•lld JuLv 11, 1tn. ty Clerk or Or•raoe County on July 211. ;: JAMES D. PLUNKETT 1t73. Pat Dunn Gets it Done in At Your Service Sunday, Wednesday and Frid1y in the DAILY PILOT l!x.ICll!or or the Wiii of thl tbclW nam4td dectde~I. MARIAM "LUNICETT "''"' Pubthllld Drlnge Cottf 0•111' l"llot, Ju- ly 23. lO •!Id AUlllllf .. lJ, ltT.I 22117·71 PUBLIC NOTICE 411 Ollft A'ff., PO l lll Ut HU!lll""'°" lkldl, CtUI. nMll T.t1 cno1..a , AtlofM'I' for lx.tnior Publl"'*' Or•• Coffl 011ly Piiot, Ju-MCmCI ~ PUlltc HIAltlN• ty , .. n , » ind Auouat '' 1m 2U.S.7l Nor!c1 I• '*"""" lllvwi fhlt "" Pl-1119 ::....::...:::...::.c:.::...:c:.:.:c_c:._ __ :.::.:.:.: I ComrnlulCll'I ol the City llf N""'JIOl't '*ell PUBLIC NOTI. CE wlll hold 1 wbtlc llllrtno 1111 Anlll'ld!l'llf'lt No. a2 ll'll111tlCI "° 'Ille Cll'f • Newjiort ------------IBHch lo COMk1tr 111 1mencl11W1t to Tllt1 PICTtTtOtJS llUllNll!SI 20 of "" NIWllOff !11lc!I M1111kkltl Codt MAMll! STATIMl:NT •mtndl"9 Stcllonl 20.0l.1'0, 20.1i030 1nd Thi fol1owlno p1r-It doillO bU1tries1 20,lLCDO 11 lhly Pl'fltl" to ofMtrHl 11: • ,..l"klllO """"r~1 fflf rnldlntlll COPY GIR L, 3AOO 1rvl.,., No. 103, UMI. NIWPOrl 811cll, Ctllf. 'l"° Nlllct II 1!trtbr turlhtr gl-!111t flld M«llCI M. ,..._.,, 221 W. C011I publlc h11rl1111 Wiii be hlld Dt1 !ht 2lld drt Hwy,, Ntwporl 611Cll, Ctlll. 92660 ol' A11111u11, 1m, II Ill• hour ol' 7;30 P.M.. T!ll1 111.11111111 11 tondl.Kltd by In In· In llw CQUrl.Cll Clllrnbtl'1 or !ht N-f'Ol"I dlvldu1I. Bllch City Hill, 11 whlcll tlm1 11111 pl.c. M«llca M. Moor• '"Y Incl •II ptl'1Dtll l11l1Astld m•y .,.. Thi• 1t1flment w•1 flllcl Vl'll!I IN Court-PNr 1ncf bl llllrd tl'lll'ICll'I . ly Cltrk ol' Ori~ Cou"ty Ofl Jul'!' 20, JACQUELINE £. HEATHER l'73. P:Ut14 Sl(Tl!iry, Publllhld Ore... COi'! Oilly Piiot, PtlMln!I' Comrn11110fl City or NtwpOrl hid! ly 23, :JO, 111111 AUlllUll 6, ll, 1f7] ~7l Putitllhld 0rlllll'I Coett Ottty P1tof uly 2l, 197' 1'212-7l PUBLIC NOTICE Sylvia Porter's readers can beat that headline ••• she told them how to save up to 25% on meat buys. as much as 20 % on canned goods: 'Follow the most fundamental, simple and ordinary of an the rules • • • Shop the specials.' Maybe it seems obvious, but when Columnist Sylvia Porter tells her readers something like : watch newspaper ads for bargains, she always goes the extra step. She asked questions of some of the lood industry's leaders and found out savings can amount to many, many times the 4~'il> predicted rise hi overall food prices. That's economic advice you can believe. Test It for yourself. Check the 1pecWs In the bar- gain·laden ads of the Wednesday Food SecUon e~uy week In the DAILY PILOT. And if you want more tips on getting your money's worth, read Sylvia Porter's 11Money's Worth" column appearing sev· era! timu each week In the financial paget of the DAILY PILOT. The On• That Means Business DAILY PILOT I \ i I l -· j .. ' ' .;,, -; . ,,, .. : !T ' .. , -~ .. •' . ............ ' '. .. ~ ' - ' ,. -· .. ~ • ' . ·. •' . ; . .t; :, " ' •T . .. •• 1- ~-... ·-· ' ·' ,, -J. .•• .. - :· " .. . ' '! I •• ! .: l! " ., h ~t tf " .. ~ u h •' ,• " ~ ~ • ' ' i'" I ( .. * . " _, .. • - M....,, Ju~ 23, 1913 SC DAILY PILOT J l ·-.MQndafs·Oosing J>ri~mplete New York Stock Exchange List Mar~~t· Igno;res · .. -!" • Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List I • .. -· -- JI DAILY PILOT Monday, July 23, 1913 ·~ ',. Coast Area-Vital S1a1is-ties GOOO-STE~AltT -°""""' c~i.... J1ni; M11. u, 4100 Hll1rl1. (tell -17, IC. Hlc:i.tlo1 A...., l"OUl'lt11111 MtN. VllllY J-Eielftt, 21, nN SlCZEl"AHSIO·'!VATICINS -Wlllllll\ Cr111 ltold, PalOI Y"111t. Arl!hon~lt" 2'3 S. Ull'>Oft. 0!'11111 l"AlltlfJ;f_OltlETT -Terry W1:1:\ Ind It ti lolRM. 11, US l"h11ner, ~ftto .nc1 ~'\u..~1&.Ml"~I -~-It STIN' -~N Ely, 1S. 311""! Alo<M AYI Apt l03, L1oun1 Hlpl, (:...1!!11 " Apt. S, Ollt Miii I F01tSTl!'R.SP'.t.11:ic$ OWIJl11 J1m11. rto;'" Ann. 12. 3111 • llltl SI .. Apt. ~ l>OQ GIM11ndi 1.Anl. Gt,rdln VAIL~:Jl'snH -ltlOlll Ol¥1d, U r -•nd OOM4I flllnt. 19, 14341 '" Tt11th St .. l'tunllnglon fl.eKll 111111 Ir\ St .. W..lmlnsltr. hill•lt •J11n, "· Ut Tenltl St,, H1111· STUICICIE'.OOU<iHEllTV -llNllf. nglon ltKll llf'at, V. U.. Minto'" 1.#1. C. Cia!t Ol!LAHEY-SMtTH -~ttln llrll(I, :JO, MUI llld uno. """· », ·21s E. :io12 conrc1tt. Apt. '17, c"'" ~ Wll1.oll. C°'I' Miii-Ind Thtttll Ann, It, l012 CoolldOI, ALLAN·NICHOL$ -wnw-ltk.k. ,,, Aol. 27, C"'tl Miii. 3111 E"I OJ .. thOrPI• Apl. C, ANOEltSON 11.SPE'NCEll -Tllor!wll ....,.,..m llld !"1111'1 Mill. n. 215-41 scon. 21, 122·27111 St .. NIWllO•I lltlCh lll'ICllll L.1111. HUl'ltlneton It.ell. llld 81•blr1 lrtf!f, :IO, Ill E11111f ST .. OAVIOION·llUSH -~ Tlloml .. ~. COlll Me5I 212' Orlon SI Apt. I, 511'111 AM Ind J'*llll Rfl, l£ 311-3-1111 51., NtWWI Birth s Wltll•"' \ Allllt; S.rfll M. end J1te 0. Nwfv, IUI" A. W Jolln f". ZNNI•• 'Mr'I' C..!Wfllt end Mlonl O.C.,...,., £00!• Jlll'I Incl Gordon W1.._ Monk• Mlil'W ell4I ·Ohltt .. ,_ llfPirkt..,.......,,, Md,0."4 I Mdtrt. Dodll.Y-M. Md G'!•l:f !If. u°""' Gf'lffl"-Ftldll'kk HOllM'f' tllCI Jl;tlllY rf sAn RY:,_ ~~=-M. W Htltl Sw1 ervce E.'llnll•P.-1• It. Hlh, Edwtrd E, ..-1 ~· G. ....._ .... U , L111111. lr«ldlo JOtru .no ,..., l.oy scon, Ol•rie M. Mid. ltlclllfd T. $~, ltrbMt E. Ind tmH IE, Z-. l(l~rly Ann 1nd, JOMPll MUl..,d. Andr11 II:, Ind M1rll S. Gllerf!Mro Colelll J, M1f MkflM John 8\t:1' ,..,., Elletl •ncl W1lllt Atll, Chrt'U .. 111111 ltOMld .£1''2f: ~":le c1ro1 L" ~ Gtorae ~=~ ~'=:,"'fv' d~114 t1:n~ I~ EdllWl!d PlllT!tr and .._I_ M~1~Glorl1 VtrOflf<I ~ltllPft Armtnl~)'3 Al Ind O.nlel T. ~·.~(1,•,.~YJf. ~0..~o • .. E • Grt=z.' Mir an Evtlyn Mid ~Cl PiVI~ ln8f~ H. Qcj•o,_,. fl:, LM\ln:PMI, Frtdttkk iflj,Jr. and #Mry E. Htnll.lftl1.Fr1nklt 111d 11'41 'i'-llf•tt11ttln, JHll 41111 Frink .V..rvln Cuti.t", "1r11n L. •rid~ 1. Colltns, Edw1rd l . 1nd Ill AIOM'loll. JOlllWI It. Mid llfJW It. 8r1CfV, •-kl J. Ind JOfin Allllr•v S'-OOlor .. c. tnd Dewty AH.n 11l.:m'o1tO-WMITAICER , -ltodglr L-. 21, 1:.32 !41, WH!m!MI« Mid Alvc• 1.Antn1, ti, 8051 ALltll AYI .. Spac1 ,.. Gltdlt! G<-FISHER.u>G4N&llL -A I (ti 1 rd Uk_., 0.-.. It. lflCI Arflr1 A. Sy•-, ll1r1M1r1 _. Wlllllll'I R. ' L Hos.'T.L ~IX. NltlCV L. ll'ICI llndlll E. ot.1, lllron It-~d L• MOAG MIMOlt A Wtlk. lnNI E, 111111 J11M11 Jt. P.a. Wlltf1m J , Miii L< M. Jiiiy " Tfn .J-M-Dlnlel Ind Dolorn .JHn Cr-ult, JM! -o.v J. Mr, Ind Mn. ,,.,_,In TOWNtf\O', "2 Puet1te1.!!,rtllr1 II'.. 111111 Menu.I J. T~. Arttwr Crldllon ltld VI• BNC.. ;13, tollVi Wiit leaf'_ Aw .. Btltlol ~ JIMf 1Cty1 •• 9ot¥t W•t a., ......... lllltlol. SWAIN-FINK -Frll'k J..clh. 21, 119' , PKlll SI., Apf, C:, lotuntlnallM tllcll Ind JUOllll Lit,_ lf, 4901 Hfll, Apt. 2$-0 , H1Mtl11DIOfl llHCll. GEltNE$-PETEltS -Mkhltt AnOr1w, 11, 1 .. 12 ll:lflOll" L-Mlll!t!nlllon ltkfl llld, .. rbltl lM. lt. '2• Sll1llin1r Or lY I , Co1l1 ..... SHAOLE...alME'S -Steven 0'Nllll, 21, 94 1rt A,,.,, V1ran1. P1n111Y1v.,,l1 111d Chlf'YI lYflfl, If, 261'2 Alk•nM, Mission Vltlo. HOACOlAHO-AOAMS -Rich.rd ICt,.1, ... lrOldwlY, Co1t1 Maw, boy MOltl-1 ¥!-Wllhlte , · NJ. 111111 Mrs. MMlhlrO Mly1ke. ttu AM allll' fflllt llKl'MS J-1J ., .JV De Moulln, Donlld C. Mid W1ndll !. Tlfn Clrde, Cosll .v..a, glrl SPlf'U, Slllnltl Y-11'111 Allred 11\!Mft. Wlli.t' Md M\lffll Mr, Ind W a. l(tlltl llrlllk.. 'JOJO S(llft. AJIMI, Rldllnl Cllrenc:1 Md Prbdlll ~~~~'l..~i ~-~ l . ( J~1~. \".;;· Munt11111on hKh. boy. ~~;~~.:~1eru11~~ l: kl!:tr~r.nc:T::' ~;;"T'wry e. ~ Mr. 111111 Mrs. w1111.... IC. Rvclewlctll. p~'rtf" •• Hedrl Ind P•lll J--llt1ttv, SlllCI•• c. •11111 J-H. " 177'1 Cypr111 Trw L-. lrwli.., glrl S.119flfl, Allll'll• A. end Al111 W. l lnM. Chrltll"' o.brl ltld Cl1rk Mr. IM Mra. oi.tlel T. c.11. 4111 R1tterrH. Don11d P. end Loll •• RIVmond s.1111 lloM. 1rv1 ..... girt llllllld, Jel'nlS Al111 1nd Ov1nM T. G1rr.it, lfllnd1 J. lflCI ltlchlrd J , r Mr. 111d Ml'1. 0.nlel J. TlgM, nn HotfmeJslw, Slllrl•Y llHll Ind o-v Montov1. !"'"' al'ICI Shlrltr M. Fr1nc11 Line, Coe.II M111, bOt IC. c-erd. LDl'rlf"' Ind Alllfl W, Mr. 1nd· Mr1. Danlld M. Glblon, 310 l"INAL OEClllES l~ 0 . Ind Slllron E. C1rrl"9 [)rly1, S1nta AM. boy Eni.tff J~M If Ill • oeor.,. Sui Ind~ Olvlt Mr. Ind Mr1. JOllllll c. Aldrlcll, 1J31 MMOONlld, Jove• Ir.cl TllOmll R. Pldltll, ICl•lfl Annt Ind Gtr•!d M.. Par! IClmberlv. Newp(lrl llNd'h girl Mlvtlfill, Niner IC.Ir Ind W1v ... LN M lier. Lindi L. 1!'111 Thorne• w, Mr. 1nd Mra. Jt1ymond J. Str1nd. 3101 llutltr, Alkl M. Ind CIM>!'le1 M. Wlec;h, Lindi S. Ind Conn.r P, , ---·-) •'-.,. . . ... ' ·PSA wlln!S to go north (or south) with yoo[ money. Other Grinningbirds to Sah Diego , ' and Sacramentq1 OVer 200 ' . ' ~ .. . • fllghlS a day connecting • > au of northern and llOuthem • Callfomla. call your travel aiient or PSA · and kit's ,migrate. ·" .. . ' :i.s. •m KIM Orlw, Hunllnoton l•Kh end J1nye1 Flor1nc1, :M, '7n 1C!t1 °""'' H1111llnolon IUMll. HAVALIOS!.HENOERSON -John. tl. 231 Woodland, Lf!Q~M 81ath •Ind Sllldr1 Ellltn, '11, 1'1 LI 9r- L"vn1 lllCI\. kM.1111 Manltatll, S1nl1 AM, boy ~ YOl.l!l!ll• Dorotl'IV ll11na Ind WllUem L1wlot, Merli T"-rfn ltld R1111er E. • Jvlr 11, 1m LloYd • s1riqt1ton, Conni• LM end "Thom••\~-----------,'---------~-..!. ___ _;:;:. ____________ _ Mr Ind Mn Ja<tll o Ale!1ndro. 547 Mc1Clns1rv, J1mtti H«blfl lild J11n W1y111 " TrtVll'll or1 ..... C"'ti "'-''' bCIV Sl!!..':"' Nlll(Y Wlnfltld Ind Pl!lf' Jef. Houc:tll, O.br1 c: Ind J~ A. HASTEROIC·WALICER -GI r V Ml~llffl. lt, 2SOI E1rt11rt. lf!Qvn1 Hllll ind Elli111tlh Sw:a11111, 11, 2501 E1tt11tt, Lf!Qlllll Hllls. ' THOMSON.MALL -l1rrr, Curtla. 11, 1411 loont¥ St., Wtl m1n1Mr Ind l.11111 1C1rt11, It, UUI llODlllV $!., Wfllrnlnslll'. Mr. Ind Mr•. MkllHI P11k, 10801 El wl*tblrlllf'I flex G. Ind Ari-J. ~~~~i:t J~:~~· :~1~°1"~ T s .-00, ' . N " 'Q' • llff, Wtilllltr, glrl O<.lrflld, Gill L. Ind NOl'mln W. MlflllllZ • ry a' tu• r • ·y s ews u z M~u:~~;."a".!~ ;~nt, 20t Adlml, ri~=-J~l~.JaJ"'Je-:-E~· . 8r~:rlndMfrdllll. MeM INf' Bobbit ' · ' ' ' .' ,' .: • ; ', ". • • ' •• : •• • \,· l Mr. 1nd Ml'1. W1ll>tr von KltlnSmld. ll',,1,urto. C1rvl Lov •nd Fri nk JOMllll Cl•Dlnllr, Slllrkl•ln L. •nd John A., U11 IC..i DrlW, COi'-dll Mir, boY l!'dw.1rft. ltkk!1 Lina 1nd C1p!Ofl1 L/:_· I(, ... _ •. ··• E·" ll; Mr. 1nd Mrt. Allin S10Y1r, 2316 Pacific Mlrlt $ "' ., ..... .., w D y "'· •lld Mra. SCott Stwllfd. ms Slll'fl Wllft'ldl ·~ ...... Btckl • M•rv JOlflM and Nin F,_ls ' -• ' ' < --" J "' V o Croud'I, 001111d W. 91111 011"' L. 1""9 llOld, ''""'' g f lllnl<IY, ...,. ~ • I llKI · E'rdm1nn. Vlrplnl1 L. 1nd Mic~ F . ,. LORENTZEN.JOIE$ -Sllnlr;' Jo.I, ». nno On::llld Aw., F-11111 v1lltY and Lindi Loulw, '6. 11710 Ordlld """" i=-1•ln ·vanev. LITTLE-l.ITTLE' -J.C:k Alhbu•n. ts, S14 V'lclorlt II. C•ll Mt.. Ind l>tborlh Lit. Ji', 571 V!ctOl'lt St., C•I• Miii. Orlw. Caronl dtl Mi r. flrl H(ll'n,_ Alblf"ll Vl-lnll .111d Vlf'~ 1-'ttOt111111 Ollt and Jlld Dtrll"' e ' ar· .e o·u·'. JllfY 11. 1tn Am110, ·•Jlrtd Joseoh Ind Lin• Joytl HI.Wt!, Cltudll JUI Ind ICM!h DIYld. Mr.lnd,...,1.RobtrtHlllh.nrlC1nvonl_•:::"':':'":::.":·c':":":~:.:':"':.:':"':•c_ ____ __:'~'c· ___________ _1. ____________ _: ____ __;_ ________ ..._~.:._.:._ __ ..,. ________ ~ OrlYt , Apt. C. c.t1 Mftt, bo¥ Mt. 1M Mra. l!'uoent VlllQuttlt, 12'2 Atl1nta. Apl. '-Huntineton llllCh. l"OTEET-MART1N -ltld'otn A117hony, %1, 31t 1!'1d 2111 St .. c.o.t• Miii Mii Ottlorlll """' It, J\f Elll 211f SI,, CMll ~. MILNE, Jr-MUSHETT -!'/'9derldl -.. Fi 2ZQ VII Pllnllf\10. Ml-411oft Vlt o Mid Ml<Y Anni. 11, 1un llffC:ll 1., Fovnt1111 v.111tv. M1Y t1, lfn STANLl!:Y.SRO'Zl(IC -Mlrll OOVlllH, 2.. 77111 Wimer. ADt. 1·1l::z. Hun· tlngl'Oll Btldl •nd • S\11911 A-. 2l. !J162 Chllhlre Aw., WU!lt'linallf'. HYOE.ClAltlCE -Gtor9I Aln1nc1er, "' 21111 St1rflr1 L.1111, H1111ll11111en Ii.ell Ind Mlfltrlt ,LOU Cl•rtllt, 311, mn Cl1rll!Mllt. tlvnllNflen lllKh· IOISSl!AU·ALOEltETTE' -R-lll-c1tn. 16. '911 Cer11toc. Aw .. A111Mlin end Ltne M1rlllll. 4 . U1GI Olvls ST., Wntrn1n1Mr. 8ROWNE, JR.-DOY(E -Artl\1.rr" .ff, 711 Octlll Aw.. HUfl!ln!lton lt•dl, end Mlrl• Loul••• Jt, 102a0 OtMI • AW., Cll•tl-111. t.llC:HALEUOGEltS -It u do IP II MlchMI, 45, 2'206 Vl1 ••• ~.!'.:. CM>l1tr11111 BMoeh Ind ,._,,,... swron. 79. 26206 Vl• · s • r r • , i"-"'''""'" 11...c!L GAROHER.MIUv -GllY Mlleolm. 25. !ot Slnt-'I An-'1 Aw., CMll MIU 1M• 'JttnllV Fey, 13. 2A2t Slnl1 A111 Aw., C~I~ ,M-. L CLll"f.ICNOX -WM Ed'#lrd, 11;1703 Suptrklr, Cmle Mell lflCI Merli l-ttt. '2, 131 Ltirlrlflal l-. COITI M-. THOMPSON·RAC:lYNSICI A1blf'I Mlrvln, 45, 111 W. ~-Clrelt, TtmJllll, AtlZOlll 11!d Mlrll'f"I Eltlll, 37, 1)'°2 Atltolll. A.pl. 1 • WH!fnfnder. SOUOEflS, Jll • .CROCKETT -RIV· ITIOnd Thanurt, 26, '14 WIS! 11111 SI .. C0111 Mist . ...cl HM""" MIN• \I, '14 W11t ltlh St., Cost• Mell. DUNCAH·IOURBEAU -Me Iv I 11 Art!Mir, ». 1.0°"' Ee1t 2lll, COii• Mt" end l"oll Mer1L 31, 10'°"' £111 • •• Mr. 11111 Mn. OIMl1 W•rd• 200"2 HDl'lll HIW .,.Hlill UM, HvnTl111110n BNdt. "" Ml. llfllf Mn. ll:Clblrt Blll'1'WOfls, 2115!2 Col\MMI Unt, Hllnllnoton atach. ... Mr. 111d Mr•. JDlln Mcleod, 311 M•s~ COil• Ml5'1 {llrl Mr. 11\d Mn. T1rrv C. ~. tt32 Comtrtlfoolr; Drlw, Hu n TI n g Ion Inch. boy Jltl!Y It, ltn Mr. 1NI Mr1. Pllltlp M. FrHn'llfl1 3120 llncoln Wey, COltl MUI, boy #N. Ind Ml'1. (h1rlt1 Oofph, 1250 Mtrm A'll!llll, Apt, A.Ill, (°"II Mell. girt Mr. and Mrs. Jt1ir A.. ICI-. 1626 H_,orl 8ovlt¥11'd. $p. I, COltl Mell. tlrl ~J._,fld Mra. MIM-o Melllschkow."" lf"ook Dl1••· H1111111111m aeac11. orr1. Mr. Ind Mr1. LYM Powell, 2All21 Svrton onw. e1 "T-. bG'f Mr. end M1'1. UONonl l(rt"-nblll. "5 01rrt11. COii• Mat. girl Mr. Ind Mra. e:mst Dtul'ilno. 'NO Wiit lf'ltl Strfll, COlll MIN, girl Jllfr 11. 1m 1.; Mr. ~ Mn. hlar Gtrltth. 1tf-A Monti V\111, Coe.II MIMI. boy Mr. ind Ml'1. s,.,,en llrown, 1GS,,., Nortll ••v Front. 111tt1o1 1111nd, bo'f Jillt'f 14. 1tn Mr. Ind Mrl. Dl¥1d 8rlllc, 171 Tiit M111er1 Clrcll. c°'" MUI. boy Mr. 1nd Mr1. l1rrv ""-'•• 4311 Slllnwoad W1y, lrwlne, bO'I Dissolution Of Marriage t111 .. com MtM. ........ J ... 11 • •1~.t~ 11.0lfN<OU.INS -It~.• 16!1'1 'T"1'11r• CllwllM 111C1 P. ftHttLI, ""' 1 Vltwpolflt Lint. Huntin9t'On e.ich •Glltltm. Etlftll' Eerl Ind DolOl'n end Clrd Mitt, ts. 1"61 VltWt;Jiolnt __ ,~ .. ~""~..!'~'~°"'~'~K~•V~.c.!""~_2TJ!!)lfl1 i,,.,.~• --·---· •" -SHllltMAH-L.1!1'Y -M\lrn'f Slnfafd, I "T · ~ 3', Sin 0tc11or, L• P1•rne 111111 Glld:Vs. 31, 61•1 Jt1n DrlYI, Hun. TfngfOft a.tell. AVIS-GUSTICEY -fllthlrd Herold, 31, 2111 Sin JOfiQVln Hlll1 lto.d. toron1 di!! Mir Ind CilhV WHhl11, 2t, SALE COl'Olll del Mir. ' SMITM•WtLLIAMS -Jlfrv .J.ordln, 26, 1m BffCihWOCld. Apl. 1111, s.n11 Ant Ind LOl'nl Lff, 1J. 1"583 K111n, Irvine. _ Ml'f' 14. tm YARNEY-MONTGOMiRY -Glry ei;ri::· ~""'Otfn.t''~~,,, ~l·~i Carle;[, FountMI VIUIY. · LOWELL-VAN DE IC.AMP -WIHMm Frink, 24 • Landt1lr ,._,,.., ~· 5, Lo. A ..... ef!d _'&onlrf Ann, 23.'. "'111 J~:/i'~E~ "~t.11:ov.1 ,_ . .1 as. ms NtwPort MYd .. cm. Miii ~ NQll'fne Sl,lt, io, lS2S HIWPOrt lll'td., c-. ......... . MCOOUGLE.WAUAc:E -Robt r I ' ~. U. 6100 WI,_ A~·1 "-Pl. JI· H, 1-futllinlrtoft__ lllCl'I -GIYll LovL11. l(. i«l\,W11111r Aw~-A.P'. 567 Hunll ngtori 8tiKl\ • GOltSICl.JCl.AHM/01 -L'rdtll Wllllain, is. 1101 Cl It , Slcr1rneni.. Sen Cltnllf'IM.lnd CllUOll Lov!llJ 11, ~502 C111t Stcr11r11n10. Sitt CltrMll~ NEFF·STOCICTON -SllWll ·~llt, 2'. 1331 CHN Orlyt,·~ llffctl •NI Anni Kirin, 13. 317 Ell'lll'lld Illy, l lltUll• 111«11 • SCHIMMELMAN-PUltPUlA -Jarnll E"-rd, 30. l0232 .r11ew1 Ortvt, Huntln;ton 8Hctl 1 Jlll'I Mlrlon, 77, 10232 H•lewa Drive, Hl,ontln;tan Btach , . lEAL·THOMAS -Otnnl1 J11nn, It, 1n1 °''"'' Aw., c°''' ,~ '"° ''GAS SAVER''-SPECIAL CAPRI the Sexy European • • • + FREE 10-SPEED 1BIKE I • with every -one ordered and delivery du rin g th• month of July! $149.00 ITALIAN IMPORT VALUE •• Wiii SELECTION OF 2000 & Y/&'s AVAILABLE I " . ' - • • > • • COMPOUNDED DA11Y EXISTING and NEW PASSBOllC ACCtDITS . . . . -. 90-day NOTICE ACCOlltTS- NEW Certificate Accolllts ·\. -. • . $5,000 ' $500 $1,000 $5,000 ~ 1i1i1S 90DAYS II' 12·24 MONTHS 24·30MONIHS or .. · ' 30·48mmlS 4·10YEARS • I • ! 8%'*' 6.72'*' 7%'*' .7.52'*' ' • ~~·' ',. 1(. -. ~ M • -- ~--,, .. .. And we still offer dur usual Free Services. 'Pe"81tYonalCertlftcatlAcc:oll1llwlUidraM1prlor to-,..c~-,:...-=--·--~--.,.. AVCO . !,~m!~~- • \ • ., ,. , _, • " ' • 1 " - VOL • - j .. w .. wasn' "Ho cock i • "Ab "'ft t ty lin town, One to visl A G.r Corp, hoWii conU its I dela! St DI Al wJ Wa~ Hald lo " aide' Fe Slral the . Ha~ -(lorj ~~Pl the ~d ( .. u • Lag~111a· Beaeh EDITION • VOL 66, NO. 20'4, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES .Laguna Cho hes on By JACK CHAPPELL Ol .. DMIY , .... It.ff . w~~t :d~r~~c w~~ . ~guna Bea0c,h "Horrible," said Polloe Sgt. Nonn Bab- cock today. ' · .. Absolutely horrible." .. Jt was bumper to bumper from the ci- ty limits (oo Laguna Canyon Road) to town1 yesterday," Babcock said todar.. One woman, coming to the Art C<ilooy to visit relatives turned off the San Diego - '. FretWllY onto the Canyon Road. She Immediately hit traffic after about a mile's driving and bogged do'wn so she m8.de a U-turn, cruised back to the freeway and made a 20-mlle detour to Crown Valley Parkway to the Coast Highway and then up to Laguna. She probably did the wise thing . Sgt. Babcock ordered the city's first siga~ this year on Sunday afternoon for Laguna Canyon Road. A sigalert warns motorists through oun Dally l"llot Sltfl l"llolt Rescue Demonstrated Lifeguard-Ca{)t. Bruce Baird simulates clifiside ·rescue at Laguna's Main Beich Saturday using Fireman Mike Dwinell as '"vi ctim." The event was 9ne of a series of rescue demonstrations that were cli- maxed by a coloi:ful 10-man skydive team parachuting simultaneously to beach and sea. They included Mayor Roy Holm . ·Rossmoor Work Goes On As Court Case Postponed Gradipg operalions on Ro 1 s moor eorPontlon's controversial 1 7 8 -a c r e housing development in Laguna Hills continued today while the company and its opponents agreed to a three-week delay in an Orange County Superior court I . • Stracllan Backs • Dean Testimony hearing on the issue scheduled for this morni ng. . Judge Charles Bauer set Aug. 13 as the date on which he will now hear arguments [rom the company and the op- posing city of L:aguna Beach and Laguna Greenbelt Inc. He will be ·asked by both suing parties Aug. 13 to order Rossmoor to go before the county's Board of Grading Appeals foe that afency's views on the company's alleged allure to protect the en- vironment in the area involved . It is argued that an environmental im- regular radio news broadcasts of heavy traffic congestion and in effect says "stay away." "In Laguna, a sigalert doesn't help much," Boabcock said wistfully, ex- plaining that since all the people were in- tent on coming to fest~vltls ,and such, there was no way of avoiding the, traffic. "The town ju.st had more cars than it could handle," he aaid. Sally Reeve, a spokeswoman for the Festival of Arts said that Sunday, ll,000 e 707Plunges l11to Sea Off Tahiti PAPEETE, Tahitt (UPI) -A Los A'ngeles-bound Pan American Boeing 7('/l \Vith 79 persons aboard cartwheeled Into the sea a mile off this South Pacinc island today moments after the pilot reported a smashed windshield and said he would attemP.t an emergency landing. Only one person may have survived . Aviation officials said 10 lx>dies had been recovered from the oil-stained water and that a Canadian tentatively identified as a· "Mr. Campbell" was ·rescued alive. · The olllcillleuld .a stewa~ ·alive from ~the-'Water died in a hospital and. ·tlilJ..tloubted Jf ~e would be ~ other 3Ul'Vivors. · "As for other survivors, anything is possible but as the hours pass the chanees ·get smaller and smaller," a rescue worker reported. Pan American announced the names of th ree of the 10 crewmen and said names of the others would be released when next of kin are notified. . .. The three were: Capt. Robert E. Evarts, Grass Valley, Calif. Flight engineer Isaac N. Lambert, Danville, Calif. Second officer Frederick W. Fischer, Rochester, N.Y. The plane also carried a copilot, two pursers and four stewardesses. 1 Rescue workers said an unnamed American tourist, whose wif'e boarded the plane at Papeete, vanished during the rescue attempts. They said he was in one of the boats goi.Dg to help. When he saw his wife's body floating on the surface, he plunged into the water and bad not been seen since. There was no immediate breakdown__ of nationalities of the 69 passengers. Because of the French nuclear ex· ploslon Saturday, Pan American bad taken on a nmnber of Australian Qantas ar.d Air New Zealand passengers because those airlines were boycotting this French possession. Local officials said 10 Frenchmen were aboard the plane. ""' The officials said the plane, flight PA 816, originated in Auckland, New Zealand, and was enroute to Los Angeles and San Francisco when it plummeted hundreds of feet into the sea shortly after takeoff. Airline officials said the pilot reported a smashed windshie1d and asked for an emergency landing. But witnesses said the plane made a 90-dcgree turn and then hit the South Pacific with a tremendous impact a mile off Papeete port. I ~18 Flying Ace Ed Rickenbacker Dies; See Page 4 About Haldeman ' . pact staWnent which originally permit-Death has come to Capt. Eddie Ricken- ted Rossmoor to begin grading the arQ backer, a man who dueled the airplanes was completely inadequate. of the Red Baron to become a Worfd War It ts iiso alleged thal compleUon of the 1 flying ace and who WASHINGTON (AP) -After the 1;521.Jiome tract be1-n Laguna canyon tater became the Watergate break-in last .Year H. R. and El Toro roads will be delrtm<nlal to Haldeman calmly ordered his as&istant greenbelt plans in the area . guidlng genius of to "make sure. our files are clean," the Laguna Greenbelt and lhe city of the Eastern Air- aide teJtUi<d todpy . Loguna e.acl1 claim that coounued con-!!nu. Fonner White Hou,. starrer Cordon structloo on the lloss!noo< 1tte could RJcRnlloclltt ni. Strachu. ilso uld that 'eoru.r. during -1t in heavy lloodlnf due to the strip-an •uto ~ de- the 1172 pre1ldential pr ~marl •• ' ping of natural ~etatloo from the area. -be!""' the war, Haklemu , ordered wiretap leader . G. · pualllna · bil cars to -Ganlon Liddy-; "tranif..-wbalO\'e•i--=,.---"""=-=-~ ---<14-nilleo-ao-S- capoblllty11e i..a1• from one Democratic Protest Rally Held >1 1111. . candidate to another. He sbol down o .. German ~ bl ·• Strachan, denytng that he koew about LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actlvlst Bert IDOllth In 1918 to quallf1 M 111- the Waterpte wiretapping In advance, Corona told a proteet rally Sunday that Rlckenbo<t ... died 1n Z.Mrlelo,• told the 11ena1e Watersate committee he Mutca1>Ametlcans should Join other Switzerland, at the age or81. The cauoe upt<lod Holdman to !<butt him for In-ethnic grou .. to com"*t the nation's w .. lilted as heart !allure. See atory, (i!<e WATEllGATE, !'qt!) economic woes. photo on Page 4. • • I _._.4 _ I Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS Traffic persons visited the Festival. Mra. Reeve aaid visitors ~:ere "swann- ing'' onto the groundJ and that traffic was the worst she bad ever seen. "I've never seen anything like yester· day. "Cars were parking back for as far as we jWld ¥'t· but~ we know they were beyond that," she '81d r.ferrtng to the Laguna Canyon Road curbskle parking. Every available space nearly a mile on the road from the Festival of Arts and Sa\\·dust Festival wu taken with lines of cars e1tending past Larry Hunt's Auto Center. Pollet logged 16 trarnc accidents in !he city over the "'·eekcnd, but rme of them involved seriou, Injuries. One wag specu!•l<d nooe of the ..,.,. could get gomg fast enough to do any major damage to life or limb. A spokeswoman for the Sawdust Festival said that some 23,000 Persons own; visited lhe grounds over the two weekend days. "God, the}"re ·coming in · ea''Y·': e;a:· claimed Art·A-Fair spokes man ean Spiry. She estimated l6~c..f~OOS visited Art-A-Fair's new grounds on South 6'ast Highway over the weekend . At Discovery Festival, Laguna Be~ti·s newest festiv al. heavy weekend crowds were touring the North Coost ·"Gallery Row" grounds, bot, no eX"9 count was (See TRAFFIC, Pull" !) • Ie . °"'" .. illit .. Ml • ..., ~ ... ,..... ABOVE IT ALL-Soaring birdman Sunday was one of about 200 persons wh9 brought ·their hang ~lid· ers to the thlrd annual otto Lilienthal Hang Glider Championships. The two-day event was held in Tra- . buco Canyon near O'Neill Park. Longest flightslrom a mountain peak Were about six minutes. There were.also youngsters of 9 or.10 gliding. It all be.gan two years ago on a hillside 1.n Corona del ltlar' 1n a casual atmosphere. Since then· the Southern Cali- fornia Hang Glider Associatiot'l. has grown lo about 3,000 members. ~ · Caspers' Recall ·Sought by Angry Viejo Residents Glwers Soar Through Canyon in Laguna Event By JAN WORTH or Ill• tt.lly ,.lltt St•ff A move to recall Fifth District Supervisor Ron3ld Caspers was an- nounced today at the folD"th street closure demonstration by angry ~fission Viejo residents. The announcement was a new tactic in a month-long protest of closures of three streets at their intersection w i t h Jeronimo Road. Some 100 residents picketed at the cor- ner of CordWera Drive and Jeronimo as they have three times before. "It looks to U!I like Mr. Caspers hasn't taken the time to fuxi out what's going on down here," Diane Shaver of 24146 Barquero Street, said. "It seems a supervi!or should tr/ to be informed when thei:e la a problem in his district." Other residents agreed they feel they haven't had any satisfaction in i.helr negotiations with the supervisor. "He's not representing the people any more," Carol Mattoon ol 24006 Ramada St., said. Caspers faces a re-election campaign nut year as bis four year term comes to an end. One sign read, "Ron Caspen is nol healthy for children and .other living thinp," to provide the lhe1De of the boor long walk. At one point, Ron Collins, an Ora.nae ()lee RECALL, Pac< %) 2 Gold Rings Stolen By JOHN SCHADE Of flHo D•ltJ "li.t ltltf One hundred sixt y-five gliders and 305 pilots participated in the third annual Ot- to Ulienthal Hang Glider Championships held Saturday and Sunday aL Escape Cowitry in Trabuco Canyon. The event !ponsored by lhe 3,000- member Southern California Hang Glider Association featured more than 400 nights from four area hills ranging in height from 100 to 350 feet. Rich Pray of Santa Barbara had the longest nig'ht time for nexlble winged gliders which me the lower and middle hills. Pray's glide from the llJO.foot hill took 50 seconds. Taras Kiceniuk Jr. from Mt. Palomar had the longest flight fixed w<ng flight from the upper 350 foot hill. His "lca'rus" plane look 2: t5 to reach the ground after Kictnlut launched himseU from tile hill. CLASSIFIED AD BEATS THE HEAT Don't put unused merch.andite on ice. Beat the heat with Dally Piiot classified advcrt1s1ng. Here 's tw:Jw: ~RlG IDAIRE, custom Imperial 1611, 9 moo. old. 1295.' 2 Full doors, (Phone • No.) From Sawdust Feat, • The relli1erator oold after the ad had J~r Robert lillleklt,-a-Sndlttt-n11>-only-two-da)'a. The od'.mtber ha• FesUval exhibitor, bas ~ the theft ezlra · casll for SUIMM!r Nn, arid the ~:rn gold rtap, valueil 11\,~ie each 1>uyer 11 "coollna It" in stylo. Tate the ~ llboW-"' !Ill Gldllwon beat orr by placlna a Dally Piiot claaal· Shields told Laguna Btach polJce the Oed want Id of your own. The number theft occurred IOrntUme last week from to call! -. an unlooted dlsplaJ ..... \I • In an unofficial night. Bob Wills of Santa Ana launchOO himself from a nearby mountain and stayed aloft for aix minutes. The first championships were held on a Corona de! ~lar hillside next to the Pacifi c View 111emorial Park two years as a casual event. But since that time , th e glider associa· lion has been formed which oow puts out a monthly magazine. "The Ground.skin· ner" and holds monthly meetings pro- moting the sport .or .. ge Coast Weather More of the same can be e1· peeled in the orange coast area on Tuesday. Night and morning low clouds \\i ll give way to sunshine in the afternoon. The highs will be in the low 70s, With the low d.ipptne down to 60 degrees. INSIDE TODAY They &aid ht wo.s oui oj ~1 mnld. rn1m11e,. 35{oot .bottin. the Trampacfpc t1atht roct, but the 1kippcr of the Chul<poh Is haoing tlu lait laugh todau. See Booting, PaQt, 19. 1-_,,--~-------'9-----''------·--·---- • Z DAILY PILOl LI ,,_PqeJ RECALL •.• County ft"'1Ulll, WU llll10!llldtd by ptcketen as be arrl\led lo change the loci. on the emergency entrance chain &mos the Cordillera blockade. "I! I'd -"-poople --here l'd nevtr have come,'' Collins said, re.ru,.. •---Tug to Q1v• airoplnlon on-the clnm""'.-- Since the .closures of Ce>rdillera, Car- rania Drive, and fl1ootilla Lane, pro- tarttni residents have tried a variety of taetlcs. -----· ~-- DfMi ............. Hijack Orders: • • • • ·1_ DUBAI, UnUed Arab Emlralel CUP!) -The hiiacken ol a Japan Air L1nu 747 jet otdertd U ..tuled today abortlJ after the control tower at Dublil Airport relayad a myslerlU m-ae ordering <\hem tither to rree the 150 host.qt. 'Or kill them. · • -• • ' ' II WJS at g P·'l'· (I a.m. PDT) that the bljaelen dei\\aMad the refuellna of th• raoe.he<li\~fi:~y asU<I PQ!Tte)y ror 19 '°,ipartly .!"¥led, but tblt Um• jhey ·~!)leY ~d )>low up ilie plane iirue. • .., ~Yid fllel lnunediately. They have be.Id demonstrations, met w It h the Missloii Viejo Horneowncn AlloclaU.a, the Oraoae County Road Otpartment and representatives of CUpers' office. They held a meet ing 'I'bundiy which drew over too residents. All of these. Mrs. Shaver said, have failed to get any response from the IT WAS IUMPER·TO.BUMPIR TRAFFIC IN LAGUNA CANYON AS ART COLONY BULGED AT SEAMS Thouund1 Poured Into L19un1 &Mch Sund1y C...aitt111 lottl1MCit NHr F11tlv1I of Art• There was 1peeulatlon the blJicten, including Arlll» and J-, mlgbt try lo Oy the big Jumbo Jtt t.11' Tokyo via Pakistan. They allio demanded that 1uthorities bring them the body of a womaa hijacker killed by a grenade eJploalon dl!tin& the takeover Friday. At 1:15 p.]11,; tie hljac:kera -eel I~ returnthe Eeuol Mn,. Perolta, the woman ."l .,,. adOreao--p&aport who was blown up by tbe:accidental explosion or a ·hand grenldd,eoocealed In her clothing. The )ti's cblel paraer ~ii<> wu wound-ed in lhe·trepfde· fl~ Ion, said Mrs Peralta 'and bit bu&baili' . ._vi!Ot. :·we are finding out we are not tht only unllappy people In Caspen' district," Mn. -Shaver said. Mombon o1 tile United South 0raoae c.out eomnunue:s, • homeowners coali· tloa In 1-a NiCuel, Dana Point. and Soutb Lagwia, alao have hinted of recall lntentiono recently. , ~are angry with what they claim1is .C&tptn' collusion with Ave» Community Nixon Refuses to Give . Tapes to Senate Panel • Developers lnC.,ln getting approval for : llJP-dmllly belch deVelopment. BULLETIN '. 111 lllllloo Viejo list week, more than WASIUNGTON (API -Tbe Seaote just of lhe Congress and the Preal.dent but of the people." , • • bomeoWDen put "for sale" signs up Water1ate committee lh11 afttrnooa : in tbdr front yards as a protest to whit aualmoualy autbortied a nbpoena they dalm ls lack ot reapoDSe to tbelr . 1etktag Prtlklent Nixon'• tape record· The Whitt House at the same time made public a letter from the counsel's office to special Watergate prosfcutor Archibald Cox declaring that Nixon also will refuse to make the tapes available to Cox. · CterDanas. ilp about lhe wlretappllll scandal, artd The latest ploy was to picket model tptclal pl"OfttUtor Art:hlblld Cox said be . homes o( the Misslon Viejo Company alto woctld tttk a subpoena. over the ....wid, pasalng oot leaflets to proopeetive buytt1 uklng ll they really want to live In a ">l><Olled plmmed com- munity" and pointing out sme of the unaalved pr<>l>lems. Two ,.pr_U-of the Mlsalon Viejo Company attended t Oda y 's demonstratloo. ·''We are concerned about these clolurel and we're not happy with the confUlklo they have caused," Martin R180, community relaUoos director, aald. , "W• will auppart 0111 rational oolutlon -and apponatfy the dolum are not the answer.'' -uld the -Viejo Company bad - a letter aeverlll -ka to , Bupenlaor Capen aaidnC for a tboroUg!I ;. aoJdy ol tralllc eomplleatlono In the area alneetheeiooum. t '1'm not yet awa~ of the reaction to f' that letWr I" Rullo Aid. " -: WATERGATE •• . . • ~ Qllllpotoace alter lhe w!relappen _,, .:..- ' Bui w!lllt Haldeman .. acted witll ' eahn, Slr8ehan uld he had to draw one 4 ol two .,.....,lloal: "Either he knew : 1baut tt ahud of time, or be didn't ex· • pool ... to nporl to him." strachan aid lhal fonner White Hou.e , "'-' Jahn W. Dean Ill never lied to .; blm, and lhal be belle•es Dean Is telling :. the trutb Jn vn•alng H•tdeman, Presi· f dmt Nina and former White Houae ad- vller Jahn D. Ellrlldunan of complletly -in the Waterple COVeNIJ> plol f ''Ibis Is my oplnloo, bu<d upon my , lllOCl.atioo wilh Dean," Strachan said. : "My opink>n would be that Dean is telling \ the truth." I' strachan said he first reacted with shock and disbelief when he bean! about the Waleriate raid on the radio. Stradlan, whole job was to keep l Hakleman informed of activities at the Nixon re-election campaign, said be ex· I peeled his boss to be angry. ' t' "I wu sear<Jd to death. I thought I woold be fired," Strachan '8id. r But on the contrary, he said, Haldeman didn't berate him. "He said almost jokingly, 'Well, what do we know about the event. over the weekend?" Strachan said. l Strachan then showed Haldeman an old j memorandum in which slracban in- t formed Haldeman that a $300,000 ! ••aopbisticated po 11 t I cat intelligence gathertog aystem" had been approved by the campaign committee. t "He to&d me, 'Make sure our files are de.an ,' " Strachan uid. • OIAlleleo.&n u DAILY PILOT I l i \ l \. 1 l I l ! ~ • WASmNGTON (AP) -President Nix- on today fiaUy rejected a request for ac· cess to tapes of presidential con· versations, saying they will remain "under my sole personal control." At the same time, Nixon vm>te Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0.N.C.), oC the Senate Watergate committee that "at an appropriate time dUring the hearings I intend to addreM publicly the subjects you are considering." The Presid .. t aald "! !till Intend to do IO and in a way that preserves the con· aUtutiooal prlnclple of separation of powere, and thus serves the interests nOt Chiropractor Awaiting Trial Hangs Himself The letter was signed by Charles Alan Wright, a University of Texas law pro- fessor serving as a White House con- sultant. Wright wrote Cox regarding the tapes made QI convtrsatioM and telephone calls involving Ni.Ion: "ProducUon of them to you woukl lead to their -In the courts, and questions of separation-of-powers a~ In .-•1the forefront .when the most confklenUal documents of the presldeaey are aought in the Judicial branch. Indeed, most of the Umtted caae law on executlve privilege hu arisen In the context of at- tempts to obtain exeeuttv. doeumenls for use In the courts." The prof ...... said N'l%Oll welg!led the advantage the tapes woold provide the Watergate prosecutors against what was termed "the serious and listing hurt that discl..,.... ol them would do to the con- fidentiality that Is imperallv.e to the eHee- Uve !unetlonlng ol the pr<Sidency." Orange County Coroner'• offleen today Wright concluded, "In Ibis Instance, the ollldatly ·~ u aulcide the death of a President.lluceoncluded 11111 It would not San Jl!egO ch!iopracter wM hanged .,....., the .J!llllllc ~>to.-the htmaelf during the w<e.kend In Oran tapes available." County J.111 lo Santa Ana. · ge N!~· In his letter to Ervin, diseloaed Sherill'a cleputlea said Gerald J. Mor-he ~ listened to a number o1 rfsselte, 61, hangad hlwell nine daya them:· -~uistence of. the tai. be- after • he wu returned here from ~ ......., knoWn. Atascadero State lbopltal for trllll on He declared that "the fact ls that the . munler charges. State doctors said he ' tapes woo Id not finally aetlle the oentrll bad recovered his sanity. !~es beftlre your commJttee" and are Morr!Jsette was ruled to be able 1<fnow entirely COll~sletlt with what I know to face trial In Orange County Superior be the truth and what I have stated to be Court on murder charges filed Oct 12 the truth." 1970, after he allegedly strangled. !lh The President acknowledged that the Wife, Edith, 42, at a Garden Grove motel reoordlngs "contain comnitntl that per· Motel guests discovered the scantily: sons with different perSpectlvu and mo- clad body of the woman in her · room tlvaUons would inevitably interpret in after they prevented what they thought dU!erent ways" and, in addltioo, contain wu an attempt by Morrissette to drown "a great many very frank and very pri· his 17·month-old son, James in the motel vate comments, on a wide range tJ. issues pool. ' and individuals, wholly exlr8neotl.' to the They told officers that Morrissette told committee's inquiry." them as they pulled the screamtmt half. A committee source said the Watergate drowned Infant away from him 1fiat he panel would meet in closed &eSSion and was simply trying to "baptize and unanimously vote to subpoena the tapes . purify" the boy. "Even more important, the tapes could Morrisset~e was ruled In January of be acetirately understood or interpreted 1971 to be insane and was committed to only by an enormous number of other Atascadero ror an indefinite tenn. doc\i:ments or tapes .'' Nixon wrote, "so Jall guards said lhey found Mor--that to open them al all wou1d begin an rlssette, at 4 a.m. Saturday, who had endless p~ of disclosure and ex· been alone in his cell, harlging from the planaUon of private presidential records eel) bars. 1bey said he slashCd his totally unrelated to Watergate and highly ~sts and neck before he hanged confidential in nature. They are the himself. clearest pos.sible example of why presidential documents must be kept Laguna School · N allies Students On Honor Roll ' A total of '13 Laguna Beach !Dgh Scbool stadenls maintained an "A" average during the third trimester ending in June, according to Prinrlpal Donald Haught. Names of the !U.ldcnts, according to grade, are as follows : Grade 12 -Pally Armstrona. Ned Bluroek, Elaine Bove, Cathy Carter Adreana C!ti.s, Charles COnnell, Ano~ Dolby, Richard Goodhue, Thomas Houts Leah Jacob, Gwen Johnson, Maurem Keon, Anne Larsen, Brent Llljeatrom Susi Mudge, Kim Needh~1 Bill Patrick' Linda Penney, Dann)' ""1Jall0, Debbi~ Simmons, Terri Syfan and B e t h Wormald. Grade 11 -Terl Andtr1011, Marm Blacketer ,Richard Bryson, Robin Buck Tracy Chadwick, K1ren Clai-k, P•i&~ CUlkotnp, Fr.ebCOll Dubau, Kartn Hum· mel, Carrah Macy, Robert Malone, Lori Marcum. Shawn McGuire, Mark Nelson Erin O'Hara, Eric Orlowski, N~ Porter, Eric Ressler, Nina Roberts, Brace Schoenleber, Mare Spltalert and Joe Trethewey. Grade 10 -Usa Bradley, Dee Dee ClJalli>, l.4urf Glenn, Kory Gluckaon Lisa HolM, Randy Lum Robert Mann, Patrick Mayock, Jeff...Y Nagel, Glii Penney, Oz Simmons, Charfes Syan· mondJ, Eva Toth and Amy Wandel. Grade I -John Anderm, Katy Bulle confldenUa1. "Accordingly, the tapes, which have been ander my sole personal control wtll remain so. None bas been transcribed or made public and none will be." Student Priest Stripped, Beaten Orange County Sherill's officers are ln- veaUgatlng what they regard at this point u · a motiveless attack durlna: the weekend on a young student priest. Deputies said Christopher Richard Grovea, 22, was attacked and stripped by • lhree 'long haired yoolhs as he walked along the private roadway to St. Mitthael'• Seminary on Star Route in the Orange area. They said the St. Michael's student wu kicked and vldoualy beaten and then left sprawled ln the driveway as his three wailanls ran off. Groves told olficers hb att.acken made no attempt to rob him and threw bis clotblng Into nearby brush after ad· ministering the beaUng. Ceramic Classes Offered in Lagu'na Classes tn ceramics will be olfertd beglnnln& nut Monday bi u.._i..auna Beach Recreation Deporfment at the hlah school. . He.avy Surf, Big Crowd Cause 104 Laguna Rescues \Vhlle the art feslivab drew hordes of visitors to Laguna over the weekend Art c:olony beaches-accounted for more 'than a few too. 1-a Beach Lifeguard Capt. Bruce Baird estimated some 35,000 persons Jin· over the sands Sunday, while 30,000 came Saturday. Heavy surf accounted for 104 rescues over the weekend as six-foot surf was -up by Baja hurricane Doreen las&ed the Laguna Beaches. Among the first aids was Janett Kieverwyden, 00, of 1305 CU'cle Way Laguna Beach who suffered a dislocated hip while wading, Capt. Baird said. She was admitted for treatment at Sooth Coast Community Hospital aides said. ' While surf seemed to have subsided slightly 10< today, Baird said the yellow "ca ution" nag would be flying at rno.!t of the coves and beeches. Another tropical stonn "Emily" was due to PllSi higher lhan 'nonnai aurf to shore '1\ieoday. Fro• P .. e J TRAFFIC ... kept, a spokeswoman said. Even when 1olb left their cars they "'1"1dn't eocape traffic Jams ol soni_ Sgt Babeoeksald. • Pedes!rtan tn!!ic to the Laguna Can-yon Festivals wu heavy, he Aid. Walkm croaibg·the Can10n n>id were partly respoJL'ibl• for delaying auto traf- fic trying td'gel pu~ as police attempted to democratically direct traffic in both directions at the festival sites Vehicles trying to get out ·of Laguna were packed up too from the in. tenectlon of Forest Avmue and Broadway. past city hall, down the mid· die of town and up Glenneyre to Legion streets, Babcock said. · "When you have that many people there'a not much you can do," Sgt. Ba~ cock sighed. Backing Not Needed NEW YORK (UP[) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnew says if lie TUruJ for the presidency in 1976 be would not need President Nixon's backing because "I reaur. don't think that means 8 greal deal, columnist Stewart Alsop tepOrte<l In Newsweek magazine Sundliy. Agnew told Alsop he is not "hungry" for the of- fice ?f president at the moment. A few hours before the apparent takeoff pttparal!ona, the abdkhs, In the control tower paued oo a me-.ase io the bljacken aJgned "13,111 Inhabitants of West Gennany/' Dubai'offidall said. The messa.ge read : "If you intend to kill the passengers on board JL444 (the plane's real flight number was JUM), please do it at once or be humane enough to release them. 0 lt soundl riditulous if you permit those whom you obvloualy want to kill io receive refresbmeot.s and meals. Please give up your intentioql, there are other .means of unbloody posslbliiles to reach your pollUcal,alms.'' The officials said the message was received by the Dubai government and they passed it to the hijackers !rom the control tower. The ofilclals declined to comment on the meaaage but nemmen speculated it might be IOITle kind of cod• telling the hi- jackers what to do next. Shortly after It wu received, the hi- jaeken issued their twin demandl and there was speculation they would take off soon with the hostages who have endured three daya ol burning duerl heat. Govemm .. t offtclall said they had lio definite lnfonnatlon that the hijaelten planned.ti> take oU. Laguna Rancher Vernon Gregg's Last Rites Held Memorial services were held this after- noon for prominent Orange County citrus grower Vernon Gregg, a Laguna Beech -who died Friday at ilie age ol 73. Before retirlni In llH5, Mr. Gregg, • ...,,..i • dlnlo' ratld>ei bl Anabetiil El Modena, Trabuee Caeytli and Hemtf In Riverside County. · : Rev. Baird Oollln ol. st_ Mary's Eplsoopal Churdl conducted the 3 p.m. services at the McOormlck Laguna Beach <liapel. Private lnummeot follow- ed the services. -Mr. Gregg II llllrV!ved by bis w1ao.r, Dototby, ol the family home, 80I Wendi Terlace; two IOOS, Vernon, Jr1 ·and Wllllam, bolh ol 1-a Beach, Ind a sister, Mrs. Marie Dilworth ol Laguna Hilla. A nattve ol El Modena, Mr. Gregg and bis family In years put olten travelled •by hone and buggy to vacation In Laguna Beach. After receiving a dec?Oe In agri<ulture from Oregon Agriculture College (now 0r<g0D State UnlvenKy), Mr. Greg began his ranching Clln!er In Orange and Riverside counUes. He supplied oranges, graDefrult and tcuu1t'les to tDAjor Jlstributors. The famlly 11uggests contributions to the American Heart Association or the American Cancer Society. hi . _, Wert. among the Jack ·team. ~ · " ~ The put.et, YothiblSa Miyllhlta 37 was the oo1y living ~ the hijaCker~ 1llowed to leave llie Plaiie since it ar- rived a~ the modem airport of thiJ oil- rich Penln Gull sheikdom early Satur· day. Police Still Seeking Coyote That Bit Girl San Clemente police ~ and wounded a coy(lte over the weekend whi ch could have been the antmal that bit a young visitor at San Clemente state Park, but the animal could not be rttrieved for rabies tests. Officers spotted the coyote walking Into a canyon off 'Avenlda Lobeiro near the Park Saturday evening. They had been llWlllllOlled to the area by a woman resident wbci found the animal Jilting -apparently atllng ~ on her !-p<irdi. . One patrolman shot at the anlmal In the canyon, hilting the coyote In the hind- quarters. But the shot failed to otop the animal and ti disappeared Into the bruah. Park rangers over the weekend spotted yet another coyote in the area but could not capture that animal, either. The sighting and shooting were of no help to Denise Pimper, I, of Norwlllk, who Is undergoing the 14 Injections oC a duck serum to stave off the possibility ol rabies. Spokesmen for the Veterinary Public Health Dlvlsim ol the OrlDIO Coonty Animal !:eo~ Department aaid· today ~t unt)I the~ are convinced, that wllativer.coyOte Is loond Is the one which bl:!,~ ·~~.Mlse'\vlll b8,. IAl'c:OOllnue Uie: ~ ~sbol!. ~ · · · 11i ~unPltt WU bltlen 000e 00 the leg by a coyote which erepl up behind her .a .1""k ago and lnlllded the single bite ... The animal was not provoked, park rangers said, and no erplanaUoo can bo fowid for the allaek. Kitchen Fire Causes $350 Lo88 in Laguna A kitchen fire did an .. tlmated $350 damage Sunday evening to the home o( Dougw Davol~ 1341 Terrace Way, Laguna Beach. Firemen reported a pan ol greue had been left unattended on the kit~ stove for a short Urne and burst Into fiame. 1'he fire was put out with a home fi re ex· · Unguisher prior to their arrival, firemen reported. . .. ............................................... . . ..................................... . No~ody Sells GE Dishwashen For Less Than~ HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ''BEST BUY" AWARD 15995 ..... , .... ••• ••ll\11,1 66SDH1 N e W• I NIT ALL •' t MNllWtfMlt J ... l...a. --•-AM--, ... ~ ............ ·- 22995 ... -.... ..... ..,,,. e WI *ITALL ~ Avthorl ... 01 SIRVICI - 4 CYQE POITAIU DISllWASlll 18995 • wa D11.1Va• e W• llllVICI • ft INSTALi. L::;:: I CYCLE BUil T·IN ::.-POliCRUBBER DISHWASllER •""' ............. _. ... ._. ·--·..-............ .......... , ... 26995• wa 01uvn e WI l•lflVICI ... .....,.w.. ~ .. Callfomla'a Lt ..... to DAY C-etlvt luyl"I CASH Group With-TM v.1 ..... 1uy1., WliH-Power of 110 St-CHlllf Patrice S....ell, P<ter Caraon, suwi Otlaholm. Mark Otrlsty. David Goodaon Deborah Grirfln, Sheri Hiiario, Ann Hub. Cindy Mon1J, Alan O'Hara and Mary AM Ottmer. • .. 541-7781· Ite111tnUon ts •t the recftation department office, in N. Coaat Highway . F .. Is $16 and clay la available from the lnltructor at nominal COit. Tho Om dus will m .. t lrom 2 to 6 p.m. and the .-id will ba held flom 71;0 10 pm. on Monclall• andW~adayfor four Wffka. Jlfa1111t111t11111tlllltllllltlllltllllltlllllllllllllltllllllllltlllltllllltlllllllllll"'""!"lllltllllllllltllllllllt""".,.,.,.,.,,..,:;~~~;..,llllt~;:::::caSJ ~I • ,, , I • . " " I I i 17 \ I -1 J 1 I ' I j -· • ·--. ---• -. • - Saddlebaek • Today's Fl••l N.Y. Stoeks EDITION TEN CENTS Yiejo Residents Tell Move to Recall C.aspers By JAN WOl\TH \ Of ... °"" Pia.t .... Barquero Street said. "It teems a supervisor should 1ry to be informed. when there is a problem in his di.strict." Other residents agreed they feel they haven:'t bad any satisfaction in a>eir A move to recall Fifth Dislrict SOpervilof Rooald Calpj!l'S was an- nol.IOCtd today at the fourth street cJOoure demomtratlon by angry Mission Viejo resldenll. · negotiations with the supervisor. "He's· not representing the People any more." Carol Mattoon of 24098 Ramada St., said. · "' , 1be announCement was a new tactic ·in a~month·long,.pr.otest ol clOAures of three streets at their intersection w i t b Jeronimo Road. cSome 100 residents picketed a\ the cor· ner of Cordillera ~Ve and Jeronimo as . they have three tlmea before. 1"Jt ·1ooks to us like Mr. Caspers hasn't taken the time to find out what's going on down here," Diane Shaver of 24146 - . Caspeis faces a re-election campaign next year as his tour-year term comes to an end. · One sign read, "Ron Caspers is not healthy for children and other living things," to provide the theme of the hour lorig walk. At one point, Ron Collini, an Orange oun. '~xpee~d Be,,..ke' .Bel'ieved Dean, .Strachan Says WASHINGTON (AP) -Alter lhe waiergate· 'brfiu:.m last year H. R. H4ideman calmly ·ordered bis ..,.istant to "make aure our rues are.·clean,'" &he aide lestilied today. Folmer White Qouse staffer Gordofl Stf"aChln also satclthat earlier, during \lie· 1972 pr.esldenUal p r i m a rt e s , Hafd'errlan ordered wiretap leader G. Gordon Liddy to "transfer whatever ca~bility: he had'.' from one Democratic caninaati to soother. Str8cban, denying that he knew about the· Watergate wiretapping in advance, told the Senate Watergate commlltee he eipected Haldeman to rebuke him for in- comj!etence alter the wiretappers were caugbL . But when Haldeman ·reacted with calm, Strachan uid be ·ha.d to draw one of two conclusions: "Either he knew about' it ahead of time, or he didn't ex· pee( me to report to blm." Strachan said that former White House ccumel John W. 'nean III never lied to him and lbat he believes Dean is telling lhe-'truth in accusing Haldeman, Presi· dent Nixon and former White House. ~d· viser: John D. Ehrlichman of compbcily in the Watergate cover-up plot. "Thi! Is my opinion, based upon ~Y association with Dean," Strachan said. "My opinion would be that Dean is telling the tnith. It. Strachan .said he flrst reacted with shock and disbelief when he heard about tbe watergale ' nlct· on the radio. Ovens, Disposal Lost to Thieves Brand new gas ovens and a garbage dispoSll wllh a total value of more than $500 were stoleii during the weekend from three Mission Viejo homes under construcUon, Orange County Sheriff's of- ficen said. Deputies said intruders who apparently used a master key to entet homes at i4Q21, %4025 and %4031 La Corona, used a truck or heavy vehicle to carry off a~ plicanCtS tbal were awa!Ung installation. OffloerJ aild tile homes are part of a !rid ·.lloliic bull I by u.i .Mlaioa Viejo C<lmpany. . . CLA.SSlFlED AD • BEA.TS THE HEAT Dmh 1"" unused mercllandise on let. lleaMht·hMI with Dali7 Pilot classflied advertlslna. Jim's bow ' FRIGIDAIRE, custom Imperil! 11\0, t ..... old. .. '1'5-S Full doors, ~ No.) Strachan, whose job was to keep Haldeman informed of actMties at lbe Ni:i:on re-election campaign, said be ex- pected bis boss .to be angry. "[' WaS acared to death. l thought l ISi!> WATl!llGA'l'B, .... %) Ni~n Says · No; To Keep Recordings BIJILETIN WASHINGTON !AP) -TIMI Senate Watergate committee this , afternoon unanimously autborUed a subpoena 1eeking Prtskle.nt Nl:lon'1 tape record· ings about the wlre&apphlg scandal, and seeclal pro1ecutor Arcblbald Cox said be also WOQ)d seek a 1ubpoeu. WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on today fiatly rejected a request for ac- cess to tapes of presidential con- versations, saying they will remain "under my sole personal conl.rol." At • the same time, Nixon wrote Chairman Sam J, Ervin Jr. (0.N.C.), of the Senate Watergate committee lhat "at an appropriate time during the hearings I intend to addreM publicly the subjects you are considering." The President said "I still Intend to do so and in a WtJY that preserves the con- stitutional principle of separation of JX>Wers, and thus serves the interests not just of the Congress and the President bul of the people." The. White House at the same time made public a Jett.er from the counsel's office to special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox declaring that Nixon also will refuse to make the tapes available to Cox. 11ie letter was signed by Charles Alan Wright, a University of Texas law pro- Jessor serving as a White House con· sullanl. \Vrlght wrote Cox regarding the tapes made of conversations and telephone (See JIEF(JSAJ,, Poge %) I Visitor Jailed In Pho.ne Fraud A H....U resident wh<> allegedly used a lraudlllenl credit card numi.:r to make nearly 11.llO w<><lh 0£ telephobe cans to the· lslmdl while staying at an El Toro ~ "" jllled during lhe -kmd on l"n<i ttieft cbarges. • county fireman, was surrounded by picketers as be arrived to change lhe lock oo the emergency entrance chain across the Cordillera blockade. Caspers' office. They heWi a meeting Thursday ~1\icb drew over tOO residents. high-density beach deve"9pment. demonstration. All of these, l\tn. Shaver said, have failed to gel any response from the supervisor. "If I'd known these people were here I'd never have come," Collins said, refus· lqg to give an opinion on the clOLSUreS. Since the .closures of COrdillera, Car- ranza Drive, and Montilla Lane, pro- testing residents have tried a variety of tactics. "We are finding out we are not the ooly . unhappy pq>ple in Caspen' district, .. l\1rs. Sb.aver said. In !\fission Viejo last week, more than tOO homeownen put "for &ale" &i.gm up in their front yards as a proj.est to wbat they claim ii lack ol response to their demands . The latest ploy was to picket model homes of the Mi!:sion Viejo Company over the weekend, passing out leaflets to prospective buyers asking If they really want lo live In a "so-Qllled planned coin· munity" and pointing out sme of the unsolved problems. They have held demonstrations. met w i t h the Mission Viejo Homeowners Association, the Orange C.Ounty Road Department and representatives or Members of the United South Orange Coast Cornmunities , a homeowners coali- tion in Laguna Niguel, Dana Point, and South Laguna, also have hinted of recall intentions recently. They are angry with what they claim is Caspers' collusion with Avco Community Developers lnc.,in getting approval for Two representatives of the. M I 1 s i o n Viejo Company attended to d a y ' s own; ABOVE IT ALL-Soaring birdman Sunday was one of about 200 persons who brought their hang ~lid· ers to the third annual Otto Lilienthal Hang Glider Championships. The two-day event was held in Tra- buco Canyon near O'Neill Park. Longest flights from a mountain peak were about six minutes. There Dlllr ..... ,..... .., I.II ,...,.. were also youngsters of 9 or 10 gliding. II all began two years ago on a hillside in Corona del Mar in a casual atmosphere. Since then the Southern Ca1i· fornia Hang Glider Association bas grown to about 3,000 members. 1918 Flying Ace Ed Rickenbacker Dies; See Page 4 Death has come to Capt. Eddie Ricken- backer, a man who dueled the airplanes of the Red Baroo to become a World War I flying a~ and who later became the guiding genius of the Eastern Air· tines. . Rickenbacker was an -tuto speed de- mon before the war, pushing his cars to l3f miles an hour -. ~ :.J . -lY 1914. ltlCKIN•ACKI• He shot down rive German planes in a month in 1918 to qualitr as an ace. Gliders Soar Through Canyon in Laguna Event By JOHN SCllADE 01 Ille o.llr Pllet Slltf Oae hundred sixty-five gliders and 305 pilots participated in the third aMual Qt. to Ulienthal Hang Glider Championships held Saturday and Sunday at Escape Country in Ttaboco Canyon. . The event sponsored by the 3,~ member Southern California Hang Glider Association featured more than 400 fiig.hts froin four 11rea hills ranging in height from 100 to 350 fee t. Rich Pray Of Santa Barbara had the longest Oight time for nexible winged gliders which use the lower and middle hills. Pray's gLide from lhe JOO.root hill look so seconds. Taras Kiceniuk Jr. from Mt. Palomar had the longest flight fixed wing flight from the upper 350 foot hill. His "Icarus" plane took 2: 15 to reach the ground after Kiceniuk launched hlmseli from the hill. In ail unofOcial flight, Bob Wills of Santa Ana launched himself from a nearby mountain and stayed aloft for six minutes. The first championships were held on a Corona del Mar hillllde next to the Pacific View Memorial Park two yeara as a casual evcnL But since that time, lhe glider U!OCia· tion has been formed which now puts out a monthly magazine, "The Groundskin- ner'' and holds monthly meetings pro- moting lhe sport Homeowners Vote for Park . . . Irvine Association Boosr:s Dues for lmp~ov.emertt GreeDtrte Homoov:nen • Association members have roted to.accept a 5.ko'e park by approving a .. dues increase lrom 110 to 113.22 a month to pay lo moinllin !be land u a private park City o f f i c i a I s after Incorporation belabored the public versus private park ISIU• for many moolhs. determlnlng the cll7 would live wilh the decW.O of the dXnmunity aaodaUoo members. tor Paul Brady had noted his opinion that the location of the park -«11ir,ly wilhln the Greentree tracts -was a poor one ror a public park. SUch a park ~wld gel litUe UJe from residerlta ln other~ of lhe city. yet a>sll ol maintaJnmc the park would have been sbared by all citizens. "We a~ concerned about thele closures and we're not happy with tbe confusion they have caused /' Martin Russo, commWlily relatioM director, said. "\Ve will support any rational aoluUon -and apparently the clos ures are not the answer:• l Ru.sso said the Miss ion Viejo Company had sent a letter several weeks to Supervisor Caspers asking for a thorough stud y of traffic complications in lhe area since the closures. '"I'm not ytl aware of the reaction to that Jetter." Russo sald. • 1e 707Plunges Into Sea Off Tahiti PAPEETE . Tahiti fUPI) -A Los Angeles-bound Pan American Boeing 7f/1 with 79 persons aboard cartwheeled into the sea a mile off this South Pacific island today moments after the pilot reported a smashed windshield and 1akl be would attempt an emergency laoding. 'Only one )Jen9ll may have sur\llved. Aviation officials said IO bod\es had been recovered froni the oU-5llltned. water and that -a Canadian tentaUvely ideoUfied as a ''Mr. Campbell" was rescued alive. The officials said. a stewardess pulled alive from the water died in a hospital and they doubted If there would be any other survivors. ·:As for other survivors, anything Is possible but as I.he hours pass the chances get smaller and smaller," • rescue worker reported. Pan American announetd the names of three of the JO crewmen and said names of the olhe.rs would be · released when next of kin are notifled. The three were : Capt. Robert E. Evarts, Grw Valley, Calif. Flight engineer Isaac N. Lambert, Danville, Calif. Second officer Frederick W. Fhcher, Rochester, N. V. The plane also ca1Tied a copilot, two pursers and four stewardesses. Rescue workers said an UMamed American tourist, whose wife boarded the plane at Papeete, vanished during the rescue attempts. They said he was in one of the boat.! goiiig to help.· When he saw his wife's body Ooating on the surface he plunged into the water and had not been seen since. There was no immediate breakdown o( nationalities of the 69 passengers. Because of the French nuclear ex~ plosion Saturday, Pan American had taken on a number of Australian Qantas ar.d Air New 7.ealand passengers because lhci5e airlines were boycotting thiJ French poMeSS.ion . Local offidals said 10 Frenchmen were aboard lhe plane. The officials aaid Ille plane flight PA 816, originated in Auctl~nd. New 1.ealaDd, and was enroute to Los AngeQ !See JET CRASH, Pace Zl Oruge C.ut :!\fore of the same can be e1· peeled in the Orange Clout area on Tuesday .. Nig~t and morning low clouds will give way to sunshine in lhe afternoon. 'n>e highs will be in the k>w 70s, with the low «lipping down I<! to degrees. INSmE TODAY Th•u said lie """ out of hi> mlnd. enttring a JS.foot boa& ha lhe T~k ...,hi ""'· but the ski!IP<T of Ille, Clwltpoh fl hoeing th• r..t lovgh todoJI. s .. Bootmg, Page 19. 1----'l'llO'...,.....tor lllld_after ~ !lad nin oaly tft days. TIMI od'"'1llw bas extra cub for IU11llll<I' fun; end the blij>er u "cooi1J11 ll" in atyle. Take the llM! all by placina a Dll!J' Pilot ciaul- flod -Id al your own. 'lbe number loClll? l!Wf/I. Onu>ge County Sheriff's ofllctn book· ed Mlcbael Ja-Thomton, ~. a!w an u.-tptton ill wlllch tlley Joined -with sptdal ,...ts or tho Paclllc TtltpluM Oompooy. Ofllcm aa l d Thornton made at least to l<JU colll lrom <>nnse c..m11 to Hawaii bef-lt\epbone · company agenll "'"' able to tnidt down the source or Ibo calls 10 El Toro. Oll!Cer1 said the lnvesllgaUon Into an allececl ft'aud ti111 bas Ml far cool Ult Rlcliinl B. Clark, association preti· deot, 111d '78 percent of the members ""1ng ,.; Ille duea increlle Jul week •P- pnwed ol the addlllon lO the private club bOIC!liiji:-TM ...OCiallon rn-111e1Jon111d Bnn 'tract in Walnut Village presentJy operates 1 private swim club m a three- quarter a<;re parttl. . . The pork mmibeni Vot<!i 10 Ococpl ·what onoo was Intended to be a ·public park wbeo Orange County government Mayor John Burtco sad today, "I am very pleased they made a decision to control the.Ir own palk and maintain it. 'n>e decision places their Board of Directors in·the pooitiofl to respond· to the needs and desires of the people ol Creen- tree Homes,'' -nurton aaid. Had the m'mbers voted t9 let the city tate over the perk, amenltles ~ by !Otm Greentree residents might ha ve been placed in the park. O.rk said today members Ian Wednesday voted-161 to u~1o~ac<ep1- dedicatiofl or the park from the Bren llrm. There are 323 resident mtmbera of the assocl1tion which wUt ultimatelr have 827 member&. 1be trvtne Company which holds the voles for the remaining unsold lols did not exerciM its •oting LM. -• ==..--'I c.......... , .. ,, C:-la 1• c__.. 11 DNlflt Mtffut • .......... , ... ' ..... lel:JU;•I II ,.....,.. . , .. ,, lekphon< COIDpany ll,187.93 ii atlU under way. · 1 •J>t>Nved initial zonioa. · llowe\ltr. Community Services Oircc- ) !See GREENTREE, Pqe Zl ,.., ......... ...... """' .. ' • • I • Z DAILY PIL01 IS Girl Dies In Ravine After Crash A Gorden Grove girl died early Sunday, during a 12·hour ptriod In which lhe lay in a ditch suffering from injuries rulained when 1he was thrown from a v., ripped open 'fllen tt ran off El Torn l!Olll llJd 1tnldc • ..... IW•dote finally r'lained oonocloo!lleSI ~·erawled up from the roadside culvert to n., <kwi'll a passing motorist. Time bad run out, however for Bobbi L)'l>llJenneU, 16, of 130!5 Casa Unda ..Line, wbom Orange County coroner's .dlPJll<t estlmaled died abool % a.m. &lnilay. 1 1"'111lgal«s said !he van driven l>y .scou Spondlove, ta, ol L108S Casa Linda Looe, hurtled off the bighWlly aboot a · .p.m. Saturday and finaJiy crashed Into ,a .-l;bed. ured fin II Spmdlove, ..rtoosJy lnj , a y .....-w1oc1 and aqulnned bb way up to the . """""' and 0.Ued down • polling ,... torill l{j> ·,... lialed in uUlfactory conditloo today at MIJsioo Community Hoopital. ho other penons Josi !heir lives in Orange Count,y traffic accidents over the weekend, the ccroner's office reported. A 9-year-old boy. Larry Lut., ol 12592 Amethyst SL, Garden Grove, was killed Sunday wllfll stnlC); by a truck while riding his bicycle al !he comer ol Valley View and Lempooo Avenue. Police said the boy and bis bicycle were dnUed 70 feet heaealh lhe tnldc ilrivm by William McGill ol Santa Ana. McGDl was not cited but the accident is still under investigation. Motorcyclist Robert Yl. Wiggins. 32, of Panorama City, was killed in Brea Sunday. Police said be was southbound cm Brea Boulevard at a high rate of speed when be klst control, hit a curb and was UlrMfn Into a block wall and power pole. Wiggins' body was recovered 170 feet from where his cycle hit the curb. Fuller- too police reporled later lhal lbe JDOWc cycle had been 11olen. CdM .Youth Hurt ; In Truck Mishap On Mexican Trip A Corona de! Mar youth wu serloully ' 'lnfured and a Balboa man WU jailed in EnleDllda followinl an auto mob 11 e milhap Suilday oo l>uota Band#oonlh of ''EmeDida. • . . ' 'Ille !njur<d ~oulh waa ldenllfled as Breck Leonlrd. about 17, of Comla·<ld ~·Mar .. • • ' ., • Jailed followln' !he accident wu the driver of the four-wheel vehicle. Ron ' Nd:ell, it, of 413 Belleview St., Balboa. '· cme of' !he partner> lo a diving Cius known .. Scuba Llmlled. ·, Newell was due to be releued from • jail abool noon loday, acconllng to his ; -lalhe:r, Robert Newell ol Balboa. • Details or lhe accldeot were al<etcby. but according to Brad Stillwell, 17, or Lquna Niguel, Newell and olher ( m<mberl of Scuba Limited hid taken a ' diVing party to the Meiican raort on I Friday. I On Sunday morning, New<ll, Leooanl and an unidentified youth went for an ex- ploratory drive along a narrow road . A shoulder of the road gave way and the truck tumbled about 150 feet down a cliff and landed among some rocks an the • beac!t. 'Ibe unldenWled youth was thrown ! f dear a.s the truck nosed over. Newell auttered minor cutl and abrMioruJ. leonard WIS finally flown out o" the f area and is under treatment at Universi· ! ty Hospital ln San Die10. His condition i w11 delcrlhed as oerlous. r l t ! f Skylab 2 Gets Ready CAPE KENNEDY , (UPI) -The Skylab 2 astronaul.'I under-go their Jart major pl>Yslcal eHminatloo loday to be IW'I they are ready for Saturday's launch and a 59-day vlalt to tbe space station. OUNN COAIT " DAILY PILOT Tlle Ofll'lllt C-1 £1.4H. Y ~tLOT, wt111 •lcll It ~ !fl• Hnn·~•eu, It N!Jllltll W !ht 0. ..... CH" ~uf>lllll ... COft'llM"' ...... ,.._ mHlloM •r• ""°'ltMd, ~ay """""" ,rlllay. ""' C..I• Mew, H_. IHdl. Hwlll""!Orl '-"''-tell! V1!'9y, l ..... 14tltcPI, l"'lnfl~ .... S.11 C""-'W S.11 JllM c..ltll'IM. A tlfilllt "'klMI •ltltll It ftllMltllW S.tvr41rt Ml ,.,......,._ TIW "IMIMI ,......,. ... 'f•lll It .i J .. Wnt l•Y .,,...., C•I• M-. I C•lllot'rlY, nt .. Relttrt N. We-4 ,,...lftnt .. '"'*"""' J1e• R. C11tl_, ¥!« l"ttt...., Mil O...rtl '"""'-,.. Th-•• ktt•il Rtl .... Tlie1t1•t A. M111r~i11• M ..... "" ldilw dttrf" M. L... Rlt!iltr4 ,, Nill ..... lttMI MMtt .... l•lw9 --. Otte ,_.I, 2Jt W~~:r ltr'Mt .. ..,.,. itHOI ml N ......... rf L..,_. e.tcfll m """' A- Nwll ....... --"' = ._,. ......... ._ ~.. ., c-...i ht! Tllc;ts rn41 '4MJ2t cia~ MiwtWs1 MU•7• • s. aa •• Al .., .. , xllflr ---y. .. , ..... ittJ.+tat ,.,,.....,.,, 1m. ONllt C-.1 ~..,, .... ~. ftlt ......... ........ lllwtnll9M, ............... " ....... ,,._,. ,,..,.... ,,,,...; .. , .... 11«11' -"'*" ...... ""' ........ .,,,..,.. -. '"9M ~ ... ,'" Hlf M C'Mll MtM, ~ "*""'ltf"" .,, (lf'tilr .... ,,....,L.., -" a .11 """lll"J ""'""" • __ ........ .a ... """"'''" - Moodl1, Jv~ 23, 197) Gett11'• Girl Danielle Devrel, a 24-year-old Belgian model and girlfriend of J. Paul Getty III, missing grandson of the oil billionaire, leaves police headquarters in Rome. Miss Devret was the last known person to have seen young Getty. FrontP .. el REFUSAL •.• calls involving Nixon : "Production of them to you would lead to their use in the courts, and questions of separatioIK1f-powers are in the forefront when the most confidential documenta of the presiOency are sought In !he Judicial branch. Indeed, most of the limited case law on executive privilege has arisen in lhe coote.i of at- tempts to obtain executive documenl.'I for uae in ~ COUl'f.I." '!1le proleuor uld Nixon ,..lehed the advantage the tapes would provide the Waterga!O,~tors U&!n!l .wbal was terin<d "tile iieriam and lastlbg hurt tbal disclootir<s' of ·them would do to the con- lidenUality that ls lmperallve lo the effec- tive funct.ioning of the presidency." · Wright concluded, 0 1n this in!l\an<:e, the President has concluded that it would not aerve the public interest to make the tapes available." Nixon, in·his letter to Ervin, disclosed be "personally Ustened to a pwn!ier of them" before existence of the ta~ be- came publicly known. He declared that "the fact Is that the tapes would not final1y settle the central Issues before your committee" and are ''entirely consistent with what I know to be the truth and what I have stated to be the truth." The President acknowledged that the recordings "cootain comments that per- sons with different eerspeclives and mo- tivations 'vould inevitably interpret in different ways" and, in addilion, contain "a great many very frank and very pri- vate comments, on a wide range of issues and individuals, wholly extraneous to the committee's Inquiry." From Pagel WATERGATE • • would be fired," Strachan said. But on the contrary, he said, Haldeman didn't berate him. "He said almost jokingly, 'Well, whal do we know about the eve.ats over the weekend?" Strachan said. Stracbim then showed Haldeman an old nlemorMdum in which strachan in- formed Haldeman that a s.100,000 ''sophisticated po I It I ca I intetligence gat6ering system" had been approved by the campaign CQmmlttee. • "He told me, 'Make sure our flleJ are clean,' " Strachan said. Dead Actress Wins Lawsuit- Given $45,000 A lawsui t filed by ~1ary Pickrord Rogen shortly before her d<ath In 1171 was won Friday by lawye~ now acting for the estale of lhe star or the silent movie era. Damaget totaUng more than $42,000 and lawyen' rees of $3,500 were awarded by Onnge County Superior Court Judge James F'. Judge In a rullna: that cloees the file opened In November, 1970, when 1tfrs. Rogers ~ the lessees o( property owned by her In Fullerton. Judge"1dge-l'lllt<l-•g•lnst urffllalltii Breit, tnc . In action that 1ltq 1ettlcd lesser is1ue1 ral.sed in a crou--complalnt lnvolvlng the aub-1euee, N a t I o n a I Coordlnatora, Ine. Mrs. Rogers owned property In aeveral Orange County communities 1 n d 1upervhed leulng operallons from her Fallbroot ranch. court ofnc1a11 . noted. \ . • -- Officials Still Seek Lead ·Ban ., . By TOM BARLEY Of .... Otll' , .... "'" Orange O>unty supervi!fOrs and thetr lawyers, are planning discussions of their latest defeat in the gaBOllne lead ban battle this week but their court room ad· vacates confirmed today "lt Js fairly like- ly" the issue will again go lo an appellate court. "We have to talk about ii," Deputy County Counsel John PoweU said, "but I penooally don't feel Iha! !he ruling last Friday in favor of the oil companies closes this parUcular book." A consortium ot nine oil companies had Superior Court Judge James F. Chtacb on its side for the third time in two years Friday when .the jurist ruled Iha! ii lakes a state agency, not a CaU!omJa county, to impose limits on lead In gasoline. "111.at's interesting since a decision in a recent san Franei!CO. stilt specifically pointed out that a state cannot impose such limits," Powell said. "Thal wlU be part· ol our appellalc court argument if I get the chance to make one;" Powell added. Reaction from top level county officials today indicated thaf there is still abun- dant support for·the Air Pollulloa Control District's Rule 74 and language originally inteoded to eliminale lead from gas sold in this area by 1~: Orange County was an the verge of implementing tbe fll'll step or its planned phase-out scheme when the oil company combine -Standard, Mobil, Shell, Union Oil, Humble , Texaco, Phillips, Gulf and Moha\vk -won a reversal of an appellate court' decision io the county's fa vor. ''We have the backing of the state's Department of Health and all agelicies involved in air. quality control in Califor- nia in lhis dispute," Powell said. U,IT ........ Vneasg Crow" Mary Judith Mallet nearly loses her crown as she is named Miss Texas of 1973 at the an· nual pageant in Fort Worth. Miss Mallet, 20, will represent Texas in the Miss America pag· eanl later this year. I ' Hijack Orders: • Kill or 'Free· 150 I • DUB'AJ, United Arab Emlratea (UPI) -'lbe bljackers of a Japan Air Lines 747 jel ordered It rdulod toda.Y shorlly arler tbe control tower at Dubai 'Airport relayed a ~terklul m .... ge ordering tbem either to free the 150 ~es or klll them. There was speculation the hijackers, including Arabe and Ja-. rnlghl try to fly lbe big Jumbo jet to Tokyo· via Paldslao. 1bey alao demanded lhat aulhorities bring them the body of a woman hijacker kil1'd by a grenade explosloa during lhe takeover Friday. A few bour> before lbe apparent tak-pnoparallom, lhe abdl:hs In lhe control tower pasaed on a message to lhe bljacker'll,algned "13,1111 inhabitants of w .. t Gei'lnaoyi" Dubai ofliclala said . The message reaa: "If you intend to kill the passengen on board JI.444 (the plane's re_al fiight · number was JU84)1 pleue do it at once or be humane enough to release them. "It IOUDdl rldlculou.s if , you permit those whom you obviously want to kill·to receive refreshments and meals. Please give up your intentions, there are other means of unbloody possibliUes to reach your political aim.a." The officials l&id the message WM received by lhe Dubai govemmeol and Ibey passed ii to lhe bljacters from the control tower. The officials declined to comment on the message but newsmen speculated it might be some kiod of code tell/118 the hi· jackers what to do nes:t. Shortly after it was received, the hi- jackers issued th~ir twin demands and there was speculation they would take off 1000 vitth lhe hostare1 Wbo have endured lhiee days of bu!nilv< desert beat. • Qovemment ofllclals said lher. had l)O ct,!inlte lnlormatloo that lbe lllJ:tr• plAooed to tUe'olr.' " II was at l 'p.111 .. (I U n. PDT) thal he hijacl<ers ~ lbe re!udlng of !he plane. On SUnday; Ibey aal<ed polllely for it to be partly refueled, bul this time Ibey said Ibey would )>!Ow up !he plane unlCS5 Ibey iece!ftd !uel lmln'ediately. At 6: IS p.m., l5e hijacl<era d<manded the return of Mn. Pera!tf, the woman wltb the Efuaclorean p,sspott who was blown up by'the acctd<Jital uploaion o( a 'hand "'-"""""1ed In bet clothin1 . The jet's ctµ~ purser, who was wound- ed In !he ~e .ftp!-. aaid Mr•. Peralta and'ber husband were among lhc btj~ team. Police Still Seeking Coyote That Bit Girl San Clemente police shot and wounded a coyote over the weekend which COlild have been the animal that bit a young visitor at San Clemente State Park. but the animal could not be retrieved for rabies tests. Officers spotted the coyote walking into a canyon off Avenida Lobeiro near the Park Saturday evening. "And while I have nothing concrete to offer on !he Issue at Ibis polo! II may -well be Iha! the federal goilemmenl will step .IJ\ to pieempl stale' ii1bts' In this field;" lhe county lawyer slfd. "~t comment ii made on the basis of corresbondence I have had with top federal olllclals," Powell added. Rossmoor Work Goes On As Court Case Postponed '!11ey had been summoned to lhe area by a woman resident Who found the animal sitting -apparently ailing -on her lrool porch. ' One patrolman shot at the animal in the canyon, hit.ting the coyote in tbe bbld· quarters. But, the shot failed to stop the animal and it disappeared into the brush. II bad been planned by APCD ofnclals that gasoline in Orange County would be lead free by 1975. It currently coiltaim 2.5 grams of lead per gall111. Chiropractor Awaiting ·1:~~ Ha~s Himself ' ·. • • 1. ;, • , Grading operations on R o s s mo o r Corporation's controversial 178 -acre housing development in Laguna Hills continued today while the company and its oppooents agreed to a three-week Trio Bare AU, Land in Jail Park rangers over the weekend spotted yet another coyote in the area bi.lt could delay in an Orange County Superior court not capture that animal, either. hearing on the issue scheduled for this morning. The sighting and shooting were of no Judge Charles Bauer aet Aug. 13 as the help to Denise Pim.per, I , of Norwalk, dat~ on wllicb he will now hear who is uodergoing lhe H lnJeclloll! ~r arguments from the company and the op-a duck serum to stave off the possibility posing city of Laguna Beacb and Laguna ol rabies. Greenbelt Inc. . . Spokesmen for the Veterinary Public He will be uted by both swag parties Health Division of the Orange ·County Aug. 13 to order Roasmoor to go before '' Animal Ccntrol 'Department .said today the county'• ~ of GradJng Appe~s ·that · until -they are convklced that for that a"!1cy 1 views on the company s whatever coyote is fOUDd is the one which a!leged failure to .protect the en.. bit the girl, Denise will have to continue v1ro~ent in the area involved. . the painful shots. . Orang~ County Coron<r'a oflicen loday ·officially listed as suicide lhe death of a San Diego chlropractei wbo hanged himself during !he weekend In Orange A shapely redhead and her two Counly Jall In Santa Ana. male companions were cited during It 1s argued that an environmental lf!i· The youngster was bitten once on the pact statement which originally pemut-leg by a coyote which crept up behind led Roesmoor ~ begin grading the area her a week ago and inflicted the single Sherifrs deputies said' Gerald J. Mor-lhe weekend on indecent erposure rissette, 61, banged hlmlelf nine days charges by Orange C.Ounty Sherifrs was completely inadequate. . bite. It is al.so alleged that completion of the The animal was not provoked, park after he was .returned here from offlcen ordered to crack' down 'on Alascadero Stale U.Oplta) for trial on .nountlng reports of oudily oh l ,521-home: tract between Laguna canron rangers said and no explanaUon can be and El Toro roads will be detrimenta to f .. ~,, f •\...'. atta k murder charges. Stale docton aald he Laguna area beaches. had recovered his sanlly. Deputies aald they booked lhe greenbelt plans in the area. OwN or 1.uc C • Laguna Greenbelt and the city of Laguna Beach claim that conUnued con- struction on the Rossmoor site: t'OUld result ln heavy flooding due to the strip- ping of natural vegetation from the area. JET CRASH.· .. ................ ' ........... . Morrissette was ruled to be able to now rlo on charges that they romped face trial ln Orange County Superior nude on the sands in South Laguna Court on murder charges filed Oct. 12, Jear Point Place. The suspects 1970, aftei' he allegedly slrangled his .vere identified as Anne Margaret wife, Edith, 42, at a Garden Grove motel Hoop, 30, or fl.1arina Del Rey, Motel guests discovered the scantily-Steven Jack Schwartz, 24, cif Villa S D and San Francisco when It plummeted clad body of the womao In her room Park and Harry Thomas Arnold, Top mg· er ivorced hundreds of feet Into !he sea shortly afler after they prevented what they thought 30, of San Francisco. takeoU. was an attempt by Morrissette to drown Witnesses who said they objected RENO, Nev. (UPI) -Singer Diahann Airline offlclals sald the pilot reported his 17-month-old son, James, in the motel to the trio 's disrobing told officers Carroll and Las Vegas dress shop a smashed windshield and asked lor an pool. !hey deliberately ensured that operator Freddie Glusman, married just emergency landing. But witnesses uid They lold officers that Morrissette told onlookers were allowed to view the four months ago, were granted a divorce the plane made a 90-degree tum and then them as they pulled the screaming half-full extent of their nudity. Friday. Glusman, who filed for divorce hit the South Pacific with a t{emendous drowned infant away from him that he June 22,'claimed incompatibility. Impact a mile of( Papeete port. was simply trying to "baptize and l~iii\iiii\iiiiiijiiijiiijijiiiijiiiiii\iiiiiii~xi'iiiijmiiijjiiiiijiiiiiiiiij~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii~~ji puriry" the boy. J t Morr~tte was ruled in January of 1971 to be insane and wa9 committed to Atascadero for an indefinite tenn. Jail guards said they found Mor- rissette, at 4 a.m. Saturday, who had been alone in his cell, hanging from the cell bars. They said he slashed his wrists and neck before he hanged Nobody Sells GE Dishwashen For Less Than~ himsell. Front Pagel GREENTREE • • privilege to sway the park decision one way or the other, Clark noted. The • Greent~ deicsion results in private ownership of an i n t e r i o r , neighborhood park. That Is the formula employed by the Irvine Company in Its development of parks in University Park and Turtle Rock villages. Elsewhere in county-approved tracts in central Jrvine, however, small publicly owned park.s have been built. One ts In the Ranch development and is improved. Another ci ty-owned . seven acre park is in the center of the College P1rk develop. ment and awaits dty funding for prtrk improvtments. The city cornmunlly services com· missioners have aet a general policy that the city spend II.I porka monty develop- ing larger community porict which ,...Id Include many of the actlve play facilities . Greenlree resldentl oppostd. lhole In. elude baMball-and ~football flaldl. At pl'fff!nt, a parks bond Issue I• being: prepared for a yet·t .. be·set election. The lllOil lrequontly discussed bond pockage total hu been $20 rnl!Uon, allhou1h con- tultantJ Ribera and Sue of Irvine have been hired lo delennlne a preciaa ·pork• HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ''BEST BUY'' AWARD SOFT IOOt WAST! llSIOSlll ,...,,.. ... bw •2Lettl ...... ... •• -......... "'-« ··..-.--·-- 159950 WaHL<VOO • • WI llllVICI ''IDU, N e WI lftllT .. &.~ t W....a.ttF ... • J .. ..... --....... ,,,,, ........ • hlll °"*""' ...... ...... ·- 22995 .... _ ..... • ft llllVtCll e WI INITAU. A""-11111 GI S!IRYICI 4 CYQI POITAIU DISHWASllll 1·89'5 0 WI Dl1.IV .. e WR llllYICI e WI IJ11ST .. U. I CYCLE IUILT·IN " ~::.POTSCRUBBER OISHWASllER < ......... -·---...-·--·--............... ..... . ,....... """. • 269950 WI -rvn •WI ll•vtel ... tfdTM.I. ..... ., Coll'-la'a Lar9"t c..,..,a11ve '"""' G...,WltLTho Volumo lurfnt Pow.r of 110 St- to DAY C:~SH wriM ,,,.0,11 Cllllt 1815 NEWPORT Bl.VII; ·1111ntown cma Mesa -PMnl 541-7788 •• bondP"'f!ratnandcostJ. '81:11t11111t111111Dllltllltllltllltllltllltllltllltllltllltllltllltaaatlaaatllltllllltlllllltllltllltllltllltllltllltllltltltllltltlllllllaaatlaaat1aaat111t11111t1111111111tllltllltltltllltltllaaat11111Iaaat1a!i ' I \ l I l l - ) -------...... ·~-'--·-----------·· Bun•i1-1gion Beaeh Founiai·n ·Valley . EDITION , · . . Today,..s Final N.Y. Stoek8 TEN-CENTS Huntingt.on Police ·Will Add Patrol Airplane \ By. JOANNE REYNOLDS • ~ Of .. o.ltr PIW Stiff 'iWltbin the next three or four months, Qie. !Jµntlngton Beach police Clepartment will.have a.fixed-wing airplane to add to its air patrol force of five helicopters. · Citf officials confirmed today that the J}.J,000 M.aule M-4 Rocket passenger piane ·has been ordered. Delivery is ex- peoted within 90 days. •Once ·the plane arrives in Huntington Beach from the Georgia manufacturing plant, there will be another $14,000 worth of work done on it to convert. it for pollce patrol work. The coat of the plane and the con- version work is being funded ou.t of the city's portion of federal revenue sharing funds. . Lt. Bob Morrison, bead of the police air patrol, said the Maule craft was selected because it has a tOp air speed of 160 mph and can fly as slowly a5-40";"tni>b. "This craft was originally designed for Alaskan bush pilots, so il's very rugged and durable, u be said. Morri.Son ooted the airplane has a fuel capacity which will enable it to stay aloft for more than six hours at one time. · The acquisition of the 4-passenger airplane will bring to six the total of aircraft in the police department. Iµ January or 1969, the department bought two Hughes helicopters. Last month they acqutred for free three Anny Bell helicopters which were declared surplus by the U.S. ~rense Department. Police Chief Earle Robitaille has assured city councilmen that the prese~ of tbe Bell craft has not altered the need for the airplane -a need which he convinced councilmen of earlier this year. Aceonting to Morrison, the idea of ad· . ding an airplane to the fleet is to give the department better air patrol capabilities. The three-passenger pell $hips, be ex- plained, will not be used for routine patrol, but will be used instead for . training, emregency rescues and long range surveillance in vice and narcotics cases, The age and air miles on the l\\'O- passenger Hughes craft has resulted in many lost palrol hours with the l\\'O ships in the hangar for maintenance. fl.1orrlson said the presence of a third petrol-use ship will mean that the maintenance will not have to be d0ne on a '"hurry up'' basis because there will always be one craft that Is in condition to lly. He also noted that an airplane can fly a greater number of hours before routine maintenance is required and that the maintenance itself does not take as long lo perform as a helicopter check does. Presently the department's aircraft are kept at the Pol.ice-heliJ>Ort next tQ the city's ne1v central park. ri.1orrison said the department is still in negotiations for a place to keep the airplane. "It's 8 STOL (s hort take off and landing) craft," he explained, "bUI It still \.\'OR't fit into our helipart .. , • -oun e own; Ie • 1918 Flying Ace ' . Ed Rickenbacker pies; See ._Page 4 Death has cOme to Capt. Eddie Ricken- backer, a man who dueled the airplanes bf the Red Baron to become a World War ~ flying ace and who later became· the guiding genius of the Eastern Air- Unes. Rickenbacker was an .-1uto speaj de· mon before the war; !'JUSHing his c'arS to 134 miles an hour :,,y 1914. ltCIC•NIACICElt He shot down five .German ·planes in a month in 1918 to qualify as an ace. Rickenbacker died in -Z-u r I c h , Switzerland, at the age of 82. The cause was listed as heart failure. See story, photo on Page 4. Supermarts Report Big Food Rush By the Associated Press Supermarket customers foUJ!d long lines at the checkout counters and some empty spots on the shelves today, as shoppers stocked up on food in the face of sharply rising, post-freeze prices. "They're buying like Christmas," said one cl.erk Jnterviewe4 by th~ A.$Sociated Press in a spot survey. The survey showed.. that stores were talting advantage of the lifting of the freeze~ to mark up many food items, particularly pork. poultry and eggs. -. 707Plunges Into Sea Off Tahiti PAPEETE, Tahiti (UPI ) -A Los Angeles-bound Pan American Boeing 707 with 79 persons aboard cartwheeled into the sea a mile off this South Pacific island today moments after the pilot reported a sniashed windshield and said he would attempt an emergency landing. Only one person may have SUJ'Vived. Aviation officials said 10 bodies had been recovered from , the oil-staiped water and that a Canadian tentatively identified as "a "Mr, CampbeD'' was rescued aiiVe. The officials said a stewardess pulled alive from the water died in a hospital ~ and they doubted if there would be any other survivors. Union Trustees To Get Report Ort Teacher Pay · As part of the Phase 4 economic pro- gram, announced by President Nixon last week , food processors and retailers may · pass to the consumer4 on a dollar-for· dollar basis , cost increases in raw agricultural products. Beef prices remain frozen until Sep!. 12. HIJACKED JAPAN AIR LINES JUMBO JET SITS AT DESERT AIRPORT WITH lSO HOSTAGES Plane Seited Over West~urope; Hijackers Ordered 'Free Hostages or Kill Them' "Arfor other survivors, anything Is possible but as the hours pass the chances get smaller and smaller," a rescue worker reported. Rescue workers said an unnamed American tourist, whose wife boarded the plane at Papeete, vanished during the rescue attempts. They said he was in one of the boats going lo help. When he saw his wife's body floating on the surface, he plunged into tbe water and had not been seen since. Administration officials have said there will be a sharp rise i!l food prices tem- porarily, but predicted that the grocery bills will level as supplies increase. Cox Acts Too Huntington Beach Union High School j)istrict trustees will hear a report on ·teachers' salary disputes at · their meeting Tuesday night. The report will be made by the Fact Finding Committee V.'hicb was appointed to investigate the pay dispute when negotiations broke down in May. Teachers in the district are asking for an across the board 8.5 percent pay raise. Trustees have offered five percent. CaliComia residents started shopping early, filling stores over the weekend. "We had 30 to 40 people waiting for the doors to open at 10 Sunday morning," said a clerk at a Lucky Supermarket. "They're buying meat they can freeze and can goods that111 keep. They're buying staples, too," said the clerk, Tom Kelly. Jack Pippin, a butcher for the Cala chain market in 8an Francisco, sakl that by the end of the weekend he was out of bacon and "darn near fmisbed with pork and chicken. I've had people in who are buying 10 or 12 fryers -and I don't think they were having a party." Nixon Tape Subpoena Voted by Senate Panel The dispute led the district's. t~o .teacher's organizations, the District EduCators A~~ion (DEA) and the Huntington ~~ Federation o f Teachers, an affiliate of the AFl.rCIO, to ·vote tO strike in June. But the strike bas been put off for the· summer while the committee in- vestigates the issueS in the dispute. · Members of the DEA have expressed reservations about tbe use of a com- mittee because they say trustees have in· 'dicated they will reach their oWn d~ion based on the findings of the committee, rather than abiding by any recom- mendation that the committee might make. OraBge I Weatlter <:oast William Gross; director of public rela· tions for the San Francisco division of Safeway. the nation's second largest supennarket chain in terms of sales, said a limit of two pounds of bacon per customer went into effect Friday because of a "temporary shortage." An official at an Alpha Beta store in Los Angeles said the sale of beef im· proved, because people bought It instead of J19Ck. He said Pork products had gone up 8n average of 30 cents a pound since the price ceiling was Jilted Wednesday. Martha Elias, 28, of Los Angeles, said, "I am loading up on fruit and vegetables llke it said on television. 1 won't buy the chicken if it goes up, but I'll substitute fruit and vegetables. BULLETIN WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Watergate committee this afternoon unanimously authorized a subpoena seeking · President Nixon's tape record- ings about the wiretapping scandal, and special prosecutor Archibald Cox said be also would seek a subpoena. WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on today flatly rejected a request for ac- cess to .tapes o! presidential con- versations, saying they will remain "under my sole personal contrcil." At the same time. Nixon wrote Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0.N.C.), of the Senate Watergate cofumittec that "at .an ap propriate. time during the hearings I intend to address publicly the subjects you are considering." The President said "I still intend to do so and in a way that preserves the con- stitutional principle of separation of powers, and thus serves the interests not just of ·the Congress and the President but of the people." The \Vhite House al the same time made public a Jetter from the counsel's office to special Watergate prosecutor Archibald C.Ox declaring that Nixon also will refuse to make the tapes available to Cox. The letter was signed by Charles Alan \Vright, a University of Texas la\v pro- fessor serving as a White House con- sultant. \Vright wrote ·C-Ox regarding the tapes made of conversalions and telephone calls involving Nixon : "Production of them to you would lead to their use in the courts, and questions of separalion-of·powers are in the forefront when the most confidential documents of the presiO:ency are sought in the judicial br~nch. Indeed, most of the limited casC law on executive privilege has arisen in the conte1t .of at· tempts to obtain executive documents for use in the courts." More of the same can be ex· peded in the Orange Coast area on "Tuesday. Night and morning low clouds will give way to sunshine in the a!ternoon. The highs will be In the tow 70s, with the low dipping down to 00 degrees. P~tricj.a Perez, Principal'--s Aide, . Succumbs at 36 Storm off Mexican Coast · JNSmE TODAY Thev sttid he was out of h!' mind, entering a 35-foot b~t in the Tmfllf)llcljjc uacht roct, but tlle 1klpptr of th• Chutipllh is ha<>iflQ the last laugh 'ti)doy. ~·· BoaUng, Poge 19. FUneraI services are pending today for Patricia Perez, assistant principal of Huntington Beach High School who died Sunday at the age of_ 36. Swells Huntington Surf ...... -' -" c:."" ... • C.19MlfMll Jt-tS ~~!'i..... . :: o.91 .... C'll I --' ..... ..... 11 .._ t•ll _ ........ I\" I II l4 .I Miss Pere>: ol Orange, became the A storm off the coast ol Mexico sent district's lint woman ·assistant principal mcd<rately heavy surf pounding Hun- wb<n sfie was named to that post last tlnston Beach over lhe weekend but year. She had been with the high l<hool· !Ueguardssayllierewerenoseriouspn>b- """ '-"'"" ,, district as• teacher, counslcr and assis.-lems wttll tt. -• ··-~"!-I-tanl prlnc1pat for 13 years. -c~ Waves re.ached three '" fiv(! fl!tt Satur-r.=--.=:-,: Sherued-al c:-ToiePli esptlill n dayana ran two Ttii:flltTSUtKtay as ,... , ... 1, Orange after a long illness. 86,000 visitors attttchcd their towels on Sftd: ,_,..,. tt-11 Commenting for bis staff. District the city hellch. T-H -" Superintendent Jack Roper said "She will Clly illeguanb reported makiz)g tGI ::::":......_ ,,.,1 be mtsscd by all or wi." Mlss Perez rescues over the warm weekend • leaves htt mother. Bertha Ptm, of 530 "rougher than averogt but no major in- E. Barkley Ave., Orange. cidents." I f • · About 33,000 Villton went to Hun- tington $tate J}eacb over the weekend, and another ~.000 were at Bolsa Chlta St«te Beach, but state IUeguards reported ·only 33 rescues were necessary and "nothing serious." Jn Seal Beach, cl\y 1rreguants report their area as '1tht beach without the aurf ," os wave.! rea~ onJy two to three feel. Swclls from the stonn surf di;l no( reach SMI Beach and lifeguard.<;: reported almost no rescues with a beach crowd of 23,000. 1 Hijackers G~t Orders to Free Or Kill Hostages DUBAI. United Arab Emirates (UPI) -The hijackers of a Japan Air Lines 747 jet ordered it refueled today shortly after the oontrol tower at Dubai Airport relayed a mysterious message ordering them either to fr~ the 150 bootages or kill them. There was speculation the hijackers, including Arabs and Japanese, might tr.y to ny the big jumbo jet to Tokyo via Pakistan. They also demanded that authorities bring them the>body of a woman hijacker killed by a grenade explosion during· the takeover Friday. A few hours before the apparent takeoff preparations, the sheikhs in the control tower passed on a message to the hijackers signed "13,569 inhabitants of West Gennany," Dubai officiab said. The message re~d :_ "U you intend to kill the passenger5 on board J1A44 (the plane's real flight number was JL484 ), please do it at once or be humane enough to release them. ''It sounds ridiculous if you permit those whom you obviously want to kill to receive refreshments and meals. Please . (See IDJACKERS, Pap 2) CLASSIFIED AD BEATS THE HEAT Don't put unused merchandise on ice. Beat the heat with Daily Pilot classified advertising. Here's how : FR!GlDAIRE, custom lmper!al 1111, 9 mos. old. $295. 2 Full doors, (Phooe No.) 11\e relr!gcralor sold afler the ad bad run only two days. Tho-adV<rttm bas extr;i cash for summer run, and the buyer is "cooling it'' in style. Take the heat oil by placing a Dally Pilot class!· fled want ad of your own. The nu~bt.r to call ? .,.W678.. There was no immediate breakdown or nationalities or the 69 passengers. Because of the French nuclear ex- plosion Saturday, Pan American bad taken on a number of Australian Qantas ard Air New 1.ealand passengers because those airlines were boycotting thi3 French possession. Local ofCicials said 10 Frenchmen were aboard the plane. * * * 3 Californians Listed Aboard Downed Jetliner LOS ANGELES CAPi -Pan American World Airways here issued 1his crew list today for the jetliner that crashed in the Pacific on a Oight from Tahiti to Los Angeles: Capt. Robert E. Evarts, pilot, Grass Valley, Calif. First officer Lyle C. Havens, copilot ~fcdford, Ore. ' Flight engineer Jsaac N. Lambert DanviJle, Calif. ' Second officer Frederick W. Fischer, Rochester. N.Y. Purser Sleglinde Siefert, 32, Jlelmsledt, Gcnnany. - Purser Rifa Van Beckum, 3 0, Cupertino. Calif. STEWARDESSES' Kerry C. Pearce. 30. Lincoln, England. Eva M. Leijoo , 27, Stocksund, Swedet1. Stela dos Santos, 30, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil. Julie P. Harris, 24, Manchester, England. Br itain, Iran Talk LONOON (AP) -The •hoh ol lran and Prime hflnister Edward Heath conttrttd prrval•IY today on lhe l:OUJ> I n Alghan~Jan and Southeast Alla le!'Urlty rnatters, British and lranlan diplomatic sources said. AJ tht leaders held their~ mlnut~ meeting at the Iranian Embassy, President ZulOkar All Bhutlo ol Pakistan Oew into London for a tv."0-day vlt~L .. ' --·••w" • ·-, ... u1 " MO<!d41, Ju~ 23, 1973 \ . In H•11tingtcm _ .. Bicycle Dangers Preschoql -. . ·~will €1.ose ,__'!__Scpred by _ Police • .. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ""' 0.11'1' ,., ... , ,, ... Three bicyclisls have been tilled and 1 SS injured in Huntln&:ton Beach so far Q UUI year and )IOC.l'd tbJnt by DOW some- one ...Wd have plell the message. ,; But pollce aay no, cyclPU seem to be .. going right on ahead and doint the same C" tbincs lhat have produced this year's casualty statistics. Tbey're stUI doiJlg things like riding three on a bite, or riding against the traffic oc DOI slopping for red lights and High School Renovation Job Awarded The IW<>f'bu<-f4/41 mlflloo contract for the renoYatlon ol HuntlngtM Beach 1llCfl SCbool .... -·-to the W.J.~-company. '!be. cantr.:t na awarded, at a bid- ftpeninC ..ui held recently and Sblrley's bid! On both phases were the Jo...,. ol those submitted. School ofliclals pointed ool that Shirley was the cooipany that has already 'done ... lllmtlnl[loo -lliP remodeiiJlg aad did the -al -l:iSci/:' piase al the project, which will cost the district $3.52 million, calJs for the -ol a ne" wing al I for the COMtnlction al a new Wine al II cJasarconu, a media center, ·librlrf llld tdeYlllon """"-. When that constructtm ls complete, the nllliPC, dulroom Will& will be c!emolbb- ed. '!bat parUan ol the remodeflng Is being funded on a loon f1'lm the stale lllnce the -k Is being done lo bring the high rdiool up lo Fl<l<f Act earthquake safety standards.. ""' SCbciol ollldals eslimale the Phue I "" pr6ject .wiJl tate II ...,Ills to complete. ""' ,._ n 1110inr lo -IU17 mllllon llld elllails the ponjaJ demolltlon and .renwHJnc al the achoo!'• auditorium, lmlaflatlon ol lilhlinc .., the track one! 'P remodellntr ol the boys' and gtrla' abower "' mm and bleac:bel'i al Sbeue Field. ""' . ... . i t.op signs. Doing things like that is almost sure to get you in a tangle with a car and U you happen to be on a bicycle at lhe time, you're going to wind up with lhe ahotl end of the deal. And it's not like the poUce aren't trying to prevent some d. this carnage on the highways. Police Chief Earle RobUaille has ordered a strict enforcement ol traffic laws which means that patrolmen are lssu.ing more citations for violations by cyclists. 'Ibey have a three-!6an bicycle safety unit (which includes at timea all the cadets and Explorer Scoots that can be rounded up for ei:tra manpower), special bicycle safety classes for kids who get tickets, bJcycle rallies and preparation of programs for schools. Their latest efforts at trying. to get at least the kids to obey the rules of the road is a bicycle safety po6ter contest. Tbe idea is to promote safety on the streets by having )'OUf!iSlers ages five to tc mate posters depicting some point or bicycle safety. 'nie posters will be judpl according to age group with the tldS bet-. ages five llld aeven competing together, the kids eight to It compeU., Ind the IS to 14-year-olds competing. Membm of the bicycle safety unit, which is sponsoring the contest, have gooe to quite a bit of work to get the more than $l,l'XX> worth of prizes they will ay,·ard to the top four boy and girl finishers in each category. WJnnera· will receive bicycles - StJncnya for the )'OWlller tld& Ind II). speeds f<r the older ones. 'niey have also rouoded up a free l1ft fc;>r every entrant In the ftve to ..,. .. catecorf. ~.-. Uie ·llOlllethtnc every kid In the dty -ici be _.kfnl furlOUlly on, ~~ Wronc. 'lbe deadline for entries ts noon Weclnada,y and the bicycle salety people say the turnout ls 11poor.11 'lbat means 10 posters have been turned In to the police ataUon on Filth Street and the bicycle safety unit at the poHce rqe on Gothard street. 711at afao means the eligible children and their poreata probably aren't poylng a Joi ol allelltlan to'blcycle' salety . And that JDe1111 more acddellts and more bicyclllta that m lalnc to s« burl and tlll<d. ~ :lJ!JUle1iin'1r l{g~~1 ~Qr<W,r.~ .,, . . . i:J :To Clean Files-Aide .,,. ~·· I WASHINGTON -(AP) -Alt>r the -wf1h Deon," Slruban said. · ~ W-.ate brealt·fn las! yur H. IL "My opfnlm·woold be lhat Dean is telling . t~ Haldeman calmly ordered hll usistant the lnltb.'' !Ii..;) to ''make IUl'e our fileJ are clean.'' the Strachan said he first reacted with "' -testllJed today. shock and disbelief when be heanl about -· Farmer White HoUle staffer Gordon the Watergate raid on the radio. Strachan afao said that ....u.r, durln! Strachan, whose job was to keep< the um puktential p r Im a r t es , Haldeman informed of activities at the llalcfeman ordered wtrttap leader G. Nixon re-.!ectlon campaign, said be n· Gordon Liddy to "lralllfer wbatever peeled his boss to be angry. capobillty be bad" from ooe Democratic "I was ICar.d to dealb. I thought I candidate to another. would be fired," Strachan said. f. Slruhan, deoyiJlg that be lalew ohout Bui on the contrary, be said, Haldeman 1 the Watergate wiretapping in advance, didn't berate him. ,.1, told the Senate Watergate committee be "He said almoot jokingly, •wen, what ft•. upected Haldeman to rebuke him for in-do we know about the events over the competence after lbe wiretappers were -!" Strachan said. ""'t Strachan tbeai show~· aldeman an old "'j ca....,. . ch "·~c But when Haldeman i:eacted with men,M>randwil in . , ban in-~ calm, Strachan said he had to draw ooe formed Haldeman that • !300.000 t of two conclusiorui: HEfther he knew "IOphtsUcated Po 11t1 ca I intelligence ;-.J. about it ahead of time, or he didn't e1-gathering system" had been approved by i::rt peot me to-repart to him." the campaign committee • .1...:::. Strachan said that former White HOUie "He told me, 'Make sure our files are "" clean,"' Stra~·-uld. ~'> ccunsel John W. Dean DI aevu fled to ~ ~ him, and that he believes Dean is telling He destroyed tb"at and olher documents l-1 the truth in accusing Haldeman, Pre&i· by running them through a abredder, be • !.'.ff dent Nl:ron and fonner White Howe ad-said. Later, in July, he told Haldeman "' viser John D. EhrUchman of oomplicily specifically that he destroyed lhe f 'f in the Watergate cover-up plot. memorandum in question, and recalls ~-t "This js my opinion, based upon JRY ~n!d~aa didn't appear to be =I The Uddy,incideut came in the spring OIAN•• COAST tt• of lt72, Strachan said. Haldeman in- i:1 • stnlCted him to tell Liddy, wbo was then l•l chief co.-! to the ..... 1ec11on campaign ::• l committee, to "transfer w h a t e v e r !..._) ,,,. en.. CMt.1 OA1t.v1"11.0T wm. -...1c11 capability he had" from the campaign of :.l '1 ~ ...... "........,....,, 111 ,.........,. ., Sen. &lnumd S. Muskie of Maine to Sen. ' lht °""" ce.tt l"vbll"""9 ~ ..... r.:.. , ... •"'-••• ,...,IMll, .......,., -.,..... George McGovern of South Dakota, who • ~ ,.,...,, .., c..11 MtM, "-' ~ wu emerging u the front-runner for the l Hu1t11...,.., h Kllll'-11111 v.iw,. 1..eW1o1 Democratic nominatlon. hedl, IMM11Ndi.1ti1e11 ..... SM CllllMfli.I 1111 J-(epl1trW. A 11f11.. ,......., Dally Plltt """ n t.M P1.-.. ABOVE IT ALL-Soaring birdman Sunday was one of about 200 persons who brou~ht their hang ~lid· ers to the third annual Otto Lilienthal Hang Glider Championships. The two-day event was held in Tra- buoo Canyon near O'Neill Park. Longest flights from a mountain peak were about ·six minutes. There WOre also youngsters ?f 9 or_ JO gliding. It all began two years ago on a hillside m Corona del Mar tn a casual atmosphere. Since then the Southern Cali- fornia Hang Glider Association has grown to about 3,000 members. 2 Major Accidents Occur On Pacific Coast Highway Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach was the scene of two major traffic accidents lhis weekend and police said today they booked ooe man on suspicion of felony hit and nm driving. In dty jail today is Zamora Pedro 1.amora, 32, a transient, who police allege fled alter his car collided with a motorcycle driven by John Brogdon, 26; of Redoodo Beach. niat c:ruh ocairred Sunday at 10 p.m. at the intersection of the highway and Hth Street and witnesses told police Zamora hurried away in his car. Officers said they found . the car minutes la ter abandoned near 8th Street and Walnut Avenue. Zamora was picked up about a block away from bis car. Brogdon was hospitaijud at Pacifica Hospital wbere he ia listed in salialactory coadltlon today. 'lbe aecood major crash Satunfay did l!Ot "'"111t In aerious JIUw1es, police &&id, but several feet of fencing in the city beach par!Wlg Jot al the foot of Beach Boulevanf was wiped oot. Manuel Mesta, 41, of Garden Grove, was allegedly traveling in ex~ of '65 mph oo Beach and failed to negotiate the tum Into the parting lot. Witnesses told officers the car went airbpme_when it hit a curb and landed on From Pqe I HIJACKERS. • • give up your Intentions, there are other means of unbloody possiblities to reach your political aims." , The officials said the message was received by the Dubai government and they passed it to the hijackers from the control tower. the fencing. Mesta was taken to Pacifica where he was treated and released. _ Police said they were investigaUng the 10:30 a.m. crash. Widow of Beach Official Seeks Compensation Mrs. Ruth Jones, wife of the late Hun- tington Beach City Qerk. PauJ Jones, is seeking a $26.000 workman's com- pensation claim for the deatl> of her hus- band.. • . ,_ Sbe a not liling a CI0,000 wrongful deaU>,suit asW,sl.~ tjty, ill'~ in . another neW9p11per. Her attorney, Bill Watson ol Hun- tington Beach, expl~ the ooolusioo today when he said the ·$200,000 wrongful death claim (DOI suit) filed with the dly council Monday night was "iperely a tecl'llicallty." · "We are not seeking a wroogful death claim and we are not seeking '200,000 from the city," he said. "We merely filed the claim to be sure we comply with the state's notification procedure r 0 r workman's compensation." Mr. Jones died April I following hospitalization for a serious heart con- dition. He had just been re-elected last April for his fourth four-year tenn as ci- ty clerk. ~ \Vatson said the family feels the stress of the job either caused or contfbuted to Mr. Jones' heart coodltion, therefore the workman's compensation claim is being sought. Ile emphasized , again , that the Jones family is not filing a wrongful death suit against the city and ·is not seeking $200,000 . Gliders Grace Trabuco Ca1iyo1i l1i Competitio1i By JOHN SCHADE Of tfl• D•ll'I' l"llft Steff One hundred sixty-five gliders and 305 pilots partldpated in the tltlnl annual Ot- to Lit¥mthal Hang Gilder Championships held Saturday and Sunday at Escape Country in Trabuco Qmyon. The event 'sponsored by the 3,000- member Southern California Hang Glider Association featured more than 400 flights from four area hiUs ranging in hejght from 100 to 350 feet.' Rich Pray of Santa Barbara had the longest fHght time for flexible winged gliders which use the lower and middle hills. Pray's glide from the ~00-foot hill took 50 seconds. Taras Kiceniuk Jr. from Mt. Palomar had the. longest flight fixed wing Oigbt from ,the u~r 350 foot hil l His "Icanis" plane' tOok 2:15 to ~tleacb·the ground after Kicenluk launched himsell from the hill ... In an unofficial flight, Bob WW.· of Santa Ana launched himself from a nearby mountain and stayed aloft for sir minutes. The fl.rat championships were held on a Corona del Mar hHlslde neit to the PaciHc View Memorial Park two years as a casual event. But since that time, the glider associa- tion bu been formed whJch now puts out a monthly magazine, "The Groundskin- ner" and holds monthly meeUngs pro- moting the sport. Skylab 2 Gets Ready CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The Skylab 2 astronauts under·go their last major physical examination today to be sure they are ready for Saturday's laWlch and a 59-day visit to the space station. , ' • 4 •• . 'lbe preschool whiclt OP,Or•lod 1\1 foun- tain Villey'i 1.lebowell Scll<>OI last year won't roo~ ln Septttnber: The project ts noJ being .""111nued ~~ to -,a lack or lunds from lta baclcer, the i:ommunfty Servi°' Project (CSP). . , Barbara Shirley, spokesman for CSP, explained that the project's citizen ad- visory board decided not to fund the school when they feamejl , Uiat · tts con- tinued operation would COit parents of the students $31 a month fu JWiion. The tttitlon WQUld ·have been. levied because CSP only 11'd 17,5GO to spend oo the school whiclt had· an 090/'fi!n' ex· pense of $16,000, prill}Aflly in the salaries of a teacher and Ihde &o oversee the 30 children in the preschool. "It was the· feeling of the board that II wo'!-1d have been discrtmlnatOry to back a program that would cost parents n& a month," she explair;led. 1be p~I wal aet up last yt8r u a joint project Of the CSP and tbe Fountain Valley Elementary School District. The school district provided the claaaroom at McDowell and the CSP pro- vided Ille $11,000 needed to get the proj- ctc through its tint year. 1 But thJs year, CSP had a tighter budget and couJd only allocate '7 ,500 for the: pro-ject. . "The board stressed that they favored the concept. but they just didn't feel it would be fair to make parents pay." . Mrs. Shirley explained. Bob Sancllls, assistant superintendent ol the school district; "'id the dislrict will not be seeking funds from another SOUJ'<e. "We fe\t, as did the people at CSP, that it wu an outstanding project'. We're sor- ry it won't be oonUnued," be said. Sanchls explained that the district has decided to fortgo ~king f u n d s elsewhere because it already operates four presdlools for 150 children and has a day can project pending which will ~ vlde another preschool for :>ll additional youngsters. Mrs. Shirley said she believes the CSP board was wlllJng to let the project go "because the tightened budget meaM that they have to establish a priority of projects that serve the widest needs in the COllllllunity. "I think perhaps they felt that this would be one that would be easier to eliminate than aoother which had a wider appeal for more people,'' she said. Police 'Lose Tlwir Power' l I ' Huntington Beach city electricians are trying to find tpe aource of a circuit overload that caused the pawer to the police department to switch off at 8 o'clock thja: momJng. The power outage, which lasted for about 4S minutes, affected only the .police department which wu forced to function on standby power. The police recenUy dedicated a $3Sii,OOO computerized communk:aUons system which worked smoothly through the blackout. One spokesman noted that the biggest problem was the telephone line! which were not functk>nlng properly. Watch Commander Dewayne Brown said that the dispatdlers were able to bnprovlse a phone system so that eme'rgency calls could get through to them. Flames Sweep Tall Building iiiiiiii0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim·1m=-................................. BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -Fire broke out in a 40.slory building here today, and two of at least 200 persons believed trapped on upper floors jumped to their deaths, police said . Helicopters ~·ere being used to rescue those trapped bcl\\'etn the 13th aod 40th floors of the Avianca building, Colombia's tallest. Police reported at least 100 persons were rescued. The fire. believed to have Nrted on the 13th' floor. appeared to be getting out of control at midday. At least JO i;;cp~if{ above the 13th were , ' ames . · Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than 1>dll{a.f> HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ''BEST BUY'' AWARD son FOOi WAST! INSPOSIR ,..., .......... •2l"""""w"" ·--...... ., .,..., __ . __ 15995-;-... OILIVH e WI t1•v1C• f6SDZS1N e w• lfilllTALL 4 CYQI POITAILI DISllWASllll . -18995 •. ; ........ e W• l•'IYICI ••• lfilll.t.U. .. ,,..,, .. Jllllll ...... k!vrft~ .... .......,.. TM """"' ... ' Jllltfltlllflt "-"' Ill ~ :a» w.t ltf ltfwl, CM.II MIU, C.l"9H1i., nut. Los Angeles Lifeguards I CYCLE BUil T·IN IJ:::=POlSCRUBBER DISHWASHER .............. .._,....,_ ' Win Dory Co1npetition Los Angel<>-area llfeguards dominated a dory boat competldon which took place I _""_Jurcfay morning II Newport Pier. Newport Beach lifeguard crew. Ward Saundm and Steve Fanner, fin1sbed Jut in a flOld ol ti boats. Entrants had to n>w three tlmH " ~-around the pier, In llnd out. of the surf zone, for a tot-1 distance or about one mile. At ooe point, one member of each crew bad t.o jump out of the boat, 1wlm around a Oag and re-enter the dory. Fll'lf1llace hooora wore taken by Ran- dy Stalgely and Tom Snyder. from Loo Angelel City Wtl\Ulrdl. Two San Clemtnte ur.,..,.,., Bill Har· rts and Steve llelfer, came ln aecond. In .. third place were Kury O'Brien and Paul Matthies from Loo AnegJes County. A NeWport entry scored better In a sec- ond race Saturday, the surf ski com- peUtion. Conlestants row a long ourfhoard with a Ndders, similar to a kayak. The race originated' in Australla, a Ne"1JOrt llfeguanf said. Eric: A.mtSOn of Santa Barbar1 came in first In aurf sltl competition and another Santa Barbara entrat, Louil Ril- Oe. was second. Third pb1ee hooon went to Bob Hahn, rowing for the Rusty Pelican Oaring Association of Newport B<aclt. An Auckland, New Zealand, resident, Kevin Rllty, finished fourth. . ' • • AuthorlS&d GE SERVICE . . ........ . ............ . ...... '""" ... I re-,_ w I 26995 ............ :::-:n~ ,...,.., ef Callfomla'1 1.o,...1 C-atlvo luyl"' Group With Tho v.1.,,,. •uYlnt Power of 110 St- 'ODAY CASH .m. ......... CllDfT 1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Dmtawn Costa Mesa ...;; Plln 548-7788 . ' . ··----~--------------~ ....... -~~-·-~---~----- l l ' ' • ' ,1 ' . • ' I . ' ' . • • -/ • ' ' ·: .• ' I '• • -· Jolf 23, 1971 H DAILY PILOT ' I Issue Will Surface A.a-aln Board Mulls Lead Ban Def eat Dlill'f' f'llet Sl.tf l'MIOI "I'll ROLLER •SKATE BEFORE I'll GET A SMALLER CAR" Mlrty Christensen of South Lagun1 Looks at R1tion St•mps Has Gas Pains Lagu1ian Won't Give Vp Big Car By JACK CHAPPELL Ot Hie DlllY l"llol St.ff Combing through some forgotten cor· nen no.t long ago, Marty Christensen found some of his father's World-War II gas ration stampS. "I just broke up laughing," chuckled Christensen as he waved the faded tan colored old stamps. "l guess it's coming back. It's closer than you think," he said. A South l.4!llna. resident, Christen.sen said he't1\'M(e dependent on his car. "V'ou can call me a traveling sales· inan," said Christensen who now mar- kets a crowbar·like tool he developed 'called "Sweely Pry," used by firemen and poliei! agencies. Christensen drives about 36.000 miles a year. "T've got a 70 Caddy. I'll roller skate before I'll get a smaller or lighter car. I want that mass of steel around me ," he slld. He said bis car has been driven more than 110,000 miles. "You pull into a gas stati&n•ant you get dirty looks when you ask them to fill'er up, -.:. '! · 1 "Friday nigbt I make aarn e:UJe l ve got gas for the weekend. Last week, I gave three. people gas," he said noting that he now keeps a spare two gallon can in "the trunk of bis car. "I 'know l shouldn't," he said. ' Christensen snickered at a joke about the service station customer who pulled up .to a gasoline pump and was aSked by the service attendant to wash the \vin- dows of the gasoline station. "I asked to use the toilet at one and the guy !a)'J. 'are you a regular customer here?' I said 'not any more baby,' and shuffled back to the car." He said that the shortage has equalized some things for the gas station people WILL THESE RETURN? . WW II R1tion St•mp . who he said seemed to be victims of con- sumer mistriabnent before. ~'They don't have to take the ·gulf from the public so much now," he said. Christensen said he's not sure what he would do if gasoline is rationed. "We'd probably be given a rating for something or other. "Human nature being what It;.., you're going to get into a black: market," he said. U propane conversions became wide- spread, Christensen said he'd certainly consider changing to the liquified bottled gas. Christensen said he thought sell disci- pline would be better than govenunent- imposed rationing. Driver Finally Revives Girl Lies for 12 Hours Following Accident, Dies A Garden Grove girl died early Sunday, during a 12-hour period in which she lay in a ditch surferiDg from injuries sustained when she was thrown from\a van ripped open when it ran oU El Toro Road and Slruck a tree. Her date finally regained conscioysness am crawl~ up,!rom the roadside culvert to nag down a passm1 yotortst. Ttme bad nm out, bowever for ,Bobbi· Lynn Fennell, 16, of 13045 Casa Linda Lane, whom Orange 'County coroner's deputies estimated died about 2 a.m. Stplday. Investigators said the van driven by Scott Spendlove. IS, of 13083 Casa Linda Lane, hurtled orr the highway about I New Hampshir~ . -· -Maps Porn War OONOORD, N.H. (UPI) .:... Hard core P1ouocr•plly dealon ha.. until Wed· neoday lo gel alwy·magailnt! orl the shelv.s and blue movies out ol the theat<n, 1tale Attorney Gtoera1 Wamo lludman 111)'1. "By Wedneaday, all bard c o r e pon108Taphy Is golna lo be out of the 1tate, '' Rudman told law enforcement of. ficlols. p.nt Saturday and finally crashed into a creekbed. Spendlove. seriously injured, finally crawled and squirmed his way up to the roadway and flagged down a passing mo- torist. He was listed in satisfactory condition today at Mission Community Hospital. Two other persons lost their lives in Orange County traffic accidents over the weekend, the coroner's office rePorted. A 9-year-old ,boy, Larry Lutz, of 12592 Amethyst St., Garden Grove, was killed Sunday when struck by a truck while r:lding his bicycle at the corner of Valley View and Lampson Avenue. Police said the boy and hi8 bicycle werl} dragged 70 feet beneath the truck driven by William McGUI of Santa Ana. · McGill was .not cited but the accident is stlll under ihvestigatlon. Motorcyclist Robert W. Wiggins, 32, of Panorama City, was killed In Brea Sunday. Police said he was · 10Uthbound on Brea Boulevard at a high rate ol speed when be klist cootrol, bit 1 curb and was \brown into 1 block wall and Powel' Pole. Wlgins' body was recovued 170 feet from where bis cycle hll the curb. Fuller· ton police reporled later that the motor· cycle bad been ttolen. • Boat Blast Kills I "" BJ TOM BARLEY °' ..... .,,... .... Oranae County supervisors and their lawyers are planning discussions of their latttt defeat in the gasoline lead ban battle tbls week but their court room ad· vocates con.finned today "it is fairly like- ly" lhe issue will again·go to an appellate court. "We have to talk about it," Deputy County Counsel John Powell said, "but I personally don'I feel that the ruling last Friday in favor <I the oil companies clooes this partioular book." Supervisor Seeks County EPA Protest Filth District Supervisor Ronald \V. Caspers of Newport Beach wants Orange Coonty to protest new federal Environ- mental Protection Agency regulations. At the Board of Supervisors next meet· ing July 311 Caspers said be will ask other board memben to support him in protesllng the regulations which he tenned "ludicrous." The supervisor snald the EPA wb ordered by a court to produce the regu- lations within a set time and "they evi· dently just threw something together to meet the deadline." A public hearing on the EPA rules is set for Aug. 9 in Los Angeles. . The regulations would limit gasoline sales to last year'S tota1, require yearly auto emlssion checks, require lanes on feeways to be reserved for bus and car · pools and restrict construction of new parking facilities. Also required would be a limitation on .. the number of motorcycles Ueensed and a requirement that all can back to 1966 be fitted with air pollution control device s. Caspers said Gov. Ronald Reagan had filed a protest with the White House. He called the regulations "unenforceable and infeasible" because they would al· most eliminate the use of automobiles in the South COast Air Basin by 1977. Reagan said the basin was completely dependent on· lhe~automobile for its total ec:ooomic, social and physical well be- ing. "Tbt cure,,. .he added, "is far worse than the illness." The governor said he hoped the White House would appoint a top official to work with-California authorities on a reasonable. feasible and effecUve pro- gram "without EPA.'s chaotic, social and economic disruption." Caspers said the estimated annual cost of the auto emission checks by the Call· fomia Highway Patrol v.1ould be up to $200 million. * * ·* Ca spers' Recall Sought by Angry Viejo Residents • By JAN WORTH 01 11M DlllY l"llol Sllff A move to recall Filth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers was an· nounced today at the fourth street closure demonstration by angry Mission Viejo residents. The announcement was a new tactic in a month·long protest of closures of three streets at their intersection w i t h Jeronimo Road. Some 100 residents picketed at the cor· ner of Cordillera Drive and Jeronimo as they have three times before. "It looks to us like Mr. Caspers hasn't taken the lime to find out what 's going on down here," Diane Shaver of 24146 Barquero Street said. "It seems a supervisor shoula try to be informed when there is a problem in his district." Other residents agreed they feel th ey haven't had any satisfaction in .heir negotiations with the supervisor. "He's not representing the people any more/' Carol li-1attoon of 24-096 Ramada St., said. Caspers faces a re-election campaign next year as his four.year term comes to an end. One sign read, "Ron Caspers ls not healthy for children and other living things," to provide the theme of the hour long walk. At one point, Ron Collins, an Orange County fireman, was surrounded by picketers as be arrived to change the lock on the emergency entrance chain acroa the cordillera blockade. "If I'd known these people were here l'd never have cotN!.'' Collins said, ft!fus- lng to give an opinkln on the closures. Since the closure1 of Cordillera, Car- ram.a Drive, and Montilla Lane, pro- tating resident& have tried a variety of tacticS. . 1be:1 have held demc::mtraUons, met w 1 t b the Miaalon Viejo Homeownera Alaodalion, the Orange County Road Deportment-1IDd r<pre«ntatl ves or Caspm' office. They held a meeting Thursday which 'Cirew over 400 resldenta. A>CONOrtlum of nine oll oompanles bad Superior Qiurt Judge Jamet F. Church on lls side .for tbe third time in two years Friday when the jurist ruled that It takes a state agency, not a California county, to impose limits on lead in ga90line. !"That's interesting since a decision ln a recent San Francisco suit specifically pointed out that a state cannot impose sueb Umils," Powell said. "That will be part of our appellate court argument U I get the chance to make ooe," Powell added. Reaction from top level county official& . Vneasy Croson Mary Judith Mallet nearly loses her crown as she is named Miss Texas of 1973 at the an· nual pageant in Fort \Vorth. Mlss Malle~ 20, will represent Texas in the Miss America pag· eant later this year. Surveillance Helped SEATI'LE (AP) -The Wallhington Natural Gas Co. helped the FBI in surveillance of the Black Panther party in 1970 and 1971, tbe Seattle PO!t· Intelligencer reported in today's editions . .. today Indicated that Ihm Is 1tlll abw> dant su~port ror the Air Pollutlon Cootrol District s Rule 74 and language orlglnally intended to ellminate lead from gas sold in this area by 1975. Orange County was on the verge of Implementing the first step of. Its planned phase.out scheme when the oil company combine -Standard. Mobil, Shell , Union Oil, Humble , Ter:aco, Phillips, Gull and Pt1oh&wk -won a reversal of an appellate· court decision in the county's favor. "We bave the backing ol the state's Department ol Health and alt ageocles Chiropractor . Hangs Hi1nseH In County Jail Orange County Coroner's ottJcers today officially listed as suicide the death of a San Diego chlropracter who hanged himself during the weekend in Orange County J8U in Santa Ana . · ' Sherifrs deputies saJd Gerald J. Mor· riSRlte,-SI, hanged himself nine days after he was returned here from Atascadero State lbopltaJ for trial on murder charges. State doctors said he had reccvered hil sanity. Morrissette was ruJed to be able to now face trial ln Orange -County Superior Court on murder charges filed Oct. 12, 197<>, alttt lie allegedly strangled his wife, Edith, 42, at a Garden Grove motel. Motel guests discovered the scantily· clad body of the woman in her room after they prevented what they thought wr.s an attempt by Morri!Rtte to drown his 17·month-old son, James, ln the motel pool. They told omcers that Morrimtte told them as they pulled the screamtiig half· drowned infant away from him that he was simply trying lo "baplizo and purify" the boy. MorrlMette was ruled in January of 1971 to be iMane and wa,. committed to Atascadero for an indefinite tenn. Jail guards said they found Mor· rissette, at 4 a.m. Saturday, who had been alone in his cell, hanging from the cell bars. They said he slashed his wrists and neck before he banged h.imseU. Hmh Oil Gulp Leaves Youth JU BALTfMORE, Md. (AP) -A 20-year· old . RelsterstOwn, Md. man was in serious condition today after one of 15 bags of hashish oil he swallowed ruir tured in his stomach, police reported . Charles A. Venner JV was in the in· tensive care unit of a hospital suffering from an overdose of the potent oil. Pulice said X-rays show that IS of the two-inch long sausage-like Items were lodged in Venner's intestines. SHINE ANYONE 7 • Li9htwei9ht Classics By Taylor of Ma in e Fine l••th•rs and Sued•s From $25.00 to $~5.00 ,. .... ~ Involved In afr quillty control In caur ... nia in this dispute," Powell aald, "And while I t\lve nothlng concrete: to offer on the Issue at lhl1 point It m11 wen be that the federal pvtmrnent will step In to preempl state rlgbts in this field," the county lawyer said. ··That comment Is m•de on the bast• of oorrespondence I have had with top federal officials," Powell added. It had been planned by APCD ollldals thal guollne In Orange County would bo ltad free by 1975. It CW'TtlftUy cootl.lm 2.5 grams of lead per galkln . \ Trio Bare AU, Land in Jail A shapely redhead and her two male companions.were cited during the weekend on Indecent exposure charges by Orange County Sheriffs )fflcers ordered to crack down on noul'IUng reporta of nudity on Laguna area beaches. Deputies said they booked the :rlo on charges that they romped (lude on the sanm in South Lapna >ear Point Place. The suspects nre ldtnllfied u Anne Margaret Hoop, 30, ol Ma-Del Rey, Steven Jack Schwarts, 2i. of Vill& Park and Harry Thomal Arnold, 30, of San Francisco. Wltnessea who sakt tbey ob}ected IS'the trio's di.robing told olDcers they deliberately ensured that onlooken were allowed to view the full extent or their nudity. County Accused Of Financing Teens' Abortions Orange County's we.lfare department was ac.cuMd late Friday of making state Medi.cal funds available for abortions obtained by pregnant teenagon. The charge was leveled ln a "Superiar Coor! suit filed by nearly 300 coonty residents who named· welfare deputmeot director Granville Peoples and county treasµrer Robert L. Citron u defencl1•1 in their clua action. t It ii alJqed by the -thal Medl-Cal fund,, made available to pregnlrit females under the age of 11 are a vicU- tion of the principlel 1et out ln the 1tite'1 Aid to Families With Dependent Cb1ldrm program. It i.s argued in the demand for an m.. junction against both county officials that AFDC w.. designed lo oupj)Ort livinl children and pregnant women prepared to give birth to children. "The program was created to ll1pport and not destroy children," the lawsuit notes. P$LPS MEAGER ~ Ml50TWSl!lr.\uroRM.I ... , NEWPORT BEACH . Be called the ...,.Ung lo brief them on tile bupo<t of the ......i U.S. Supreme Court nlinl, which glves local com- munltlel wider laUllldo In clellnlng wllat 11-. MOSS LANDING (APJ --wIIllaiii DiM•n<> or s.nta Cru1 wu killed when his boat 01ploded while he wu emptying . its ga.. tank it M,.. Landi .. llartior, the fire department reported. fire ol!1clals said the boat apponmtl,y •P<•n& • 111 Jtak SUoday and l>fMano WU at- tempting lo pump out lhl IU -a spark Ignited It. All or these, Mn. Shaver said, have failed to get any rtsponse from the auperv1Jor. uwe are ttn4lng out wt art not the only unhappy people In Caspers' district," Mn. Shaver said. Wilshire, Shtrmen Oeks, Paseden•, L..liewood, West Covin• L::=========================:::!:!:!~~' I • ' ' I • ' f . UAU.f t'll.Ui -j ·-· --- ·Huge Blast Record ed Riekenhaeker · Dies. Aee-of Aees l1lll open ond the -MJgbl don, I ' A yar oarlle•', 11kkenbacker wu loobd _..ond ..., them fodlng •'"1 critlCillr liiJurtd when an -P: A L ln my rear.I' "' lane craabed 1n ...i-wood By.Upp sala MIMfi. Fla. (AP) -Capt. Eddie Rickenbacl<er. a grade &ehool dropout wbO survived ctoiflghts with the Red .BaronJ1L.b<:colue. ~ lYt>rl<LlbLI. llYinK ace and the guiding genius behind Eastern Airlines, died today In Zurich. Switierl.and, Eastern officials saJd. He was 81. limit for atnnen, the e-root-2 Rlcl<en- backer trnnslerred to the Oed&llng fllgi!t service and got bla lieutenant.. com· -alter onl 1Z cll<e ta In l!il'~. The American who Joa,..i to Oy by puoenger P 1 ,..... ;..-1--,i;:iFl'.a,~ts .. ltlter was-to say: neartAt!ant•, Ga., kUUog ei,111...- "From hero to wo ls about the average ., Although trapped lo Jhe twisted hero's late. This hero bualnesa oboukln='t_,Wl'tckalead .se and pinned oru the body o1 a UPPSALA. s .. eden (AP) -The Soviet u'hlon has apparently set oft one of the largest underground blasts ln ita history. The Upplala Seimlolollcal Insiltul e -sold the underground eIJ>loslon at 1:29 :55 a.m... -6:29:55 p.m. PDT -had a magnitude of 7.1 on the Rlchtlr Scale. The~ director of the institute, Prof. Mart'US Baatb, said there have been only five explosions in the last 10 years with a Richter magnitude of 7 or more. The explosion occurred in l he Semipalatinsk area of Siberia. e R e bo::o Given A udit . MIAMI I UPI\ -The chief of the Miami office of the Internal Revenue Service confinned today tha t presidential . confidant Charles G. ''Bebe" Reboio was . undergoing an IRS audit. ( IN SHORT ..• ) -Edward A. Beinke said the audit of i,tebozo's financial affairs was "not WllLSUal" ,. "On the average. about 5 percent of ~11 returns are audited," Beinke said, "although when you get into the larger returns a larger percui,.ge ls pulled. II you ea'm over '5(1,000, there's a good likelihood of an examination." e ABM Probe Sought WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Rep. Les Aspin (0-\\'is.), bas called for an in- vestigation into a "suspicious" cost ovemin ror construction of a Safeguard antiballistio missile (ABMl site. The comment by the persistent Pen- tagon critic came alter the Delense Department made available ftgUJ'es Sun- ~day 41lowing_.1.be _siog!e MM site_~w under comtructioo. ln Grand Forks, N.D., will cost $1.S billion more than the 1969 esttmate for a t~-wite ABM program. e 'Hospital Bombed' MIAM.l (AP) -A fonner Air Force pilol says he directO!f a bombing strike qn a Viel Cong bospilal In South Vietnam llul that the wont "bospilal" was left ool Of lnlelligence reports oo the raid. Gerald J. Greven of Mlam1 also saJd oo Sunday that he' taler was reprimanded by 11111 superior officer for ldentilying the 1919 target as a hospital over his radio and at a briefing. e Llbtfans Demonstrate CAIRO ( U Pl) -'lbousanda ol Libyans demoostrated with rallies and sit,.ln J!lrikes In Tripoli and Bengbazl today, demanding that Col Moammar Kbadaly withdraw his reslgn•tioo aod remain as -ol the military govemm<nt. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat also called on Khad.afy to remain but Sadat beld fast on the issue that prompted the ieilgnatioo -his opposlUon to the Im- mediate unity between Egypt and Libya biat Khad.afy is demanding. e M•rs Trip~hell M05COW (UPI) -The Soviet Union's first Mars probe slnoe 1971 hurtled Iowan! the Red Planet today, its apparent mission to put life-seeking electronic gear on the Martian surface. $ MATH blasted of! on the six-month, m-mill.ioo-mile trip Saturday at 10 :31 p.m., the news agency Tass said Sunday. Poll Sa ys Nixon Popularity Lags PRJNCETON, N.J. (AP) -President Nixon's popularity score bas continued to slide and has hit its lowest point since his election in 1968, S3}'S the Gallup Poll. In Gallup's July 6-9 national 61.lTVey, 49 percent disapproved of Nixon's handling of the presidency, while 40 percent ap- proved . That Is a five-point drop from a aurvey taken tv.·o wee ks earlier. The poll was taken after his fired White Hoose counsel John W. Dean Ill testified at the Senate Watergate bear· ings but before former Att}1. Gen. John N. Mitchell appeared. An Eastern spokesman said Rlcken- bacl<er died of heart failure at a Zurich hospital. His wife Yt'as with him at the time. Hls death ended a career of excitemerit and danger that prompted him to say ln 1970 : "I've cheated the old Grim Reaper seven times that I know of." An Eastern spokesman said funeral services would be held in Columbus, Ohio, his native city, later thts. week. RICKENBACKER WAS the epitome of every Waller h-titty's dream. As early as 1914, he was pushing race cars to 134 miles an boor on the aand.s at Daytona Beach. By the time the United States entered World War I, Rickenbacker was earning $40,000 a year as an auto Jpeed demon. In 1917 he enlisted in the Anny and became stalf driver ror Gen. John J .. J>ershing, commander of the American Expeditionary Forces. Thougb 27 ·and two years over the age Horrors Told In Torture Chamber Site MIAMI (AP) -Polioe say the dead man Sll!peCted of the lorture<:bamber killing of an Ohio yooth and the rape of the youth's teen-a~e 'rt companion bad -a-criminal· r.cord. And homicide leotive Don Mathews said Dade County police were reopening several unsolved cases ' to see whether Albert Brust, 44, might bava bees! linked to tbim. He gave no other details. Authorities revealed that Br u s I registered with county officials as a con· vlcted felon on the same clay he applied for a job as a building Inspector last year. Police found Brust'S body on Saturday after neighbors reported that he ap. peared. to be de.ad, seated in a lawn chair in the back yard ol his suburban Miami home. Authorities said Brust apparently killed himsell by taking poison. omCERS THEN found the di=embered body of 16-yeaNJld Mark Bernard Matson cemented into a shower stall Jn the house. He previously bad been reported missing from his home In Washington Court Houae, Ohio. Police said a room adjoining the bathroom in which Mats<n's body was found bad been converted into a torture chamber and lhe entire lwse in a busy residential area bad bem. aoundproofed Inside with three lncbeo of roam padding. They said the torture chamber was an ·airtight room lined with cinderblocks, five lncbes of wood and another six inch- es of foam. They said padlocks, chains and belts extended from the walls nnd the metal ceiling. AUTHORITIES SAID Brust, a minimum housing inspector for Dade County, had been charged with kidnap, robbery, assault and grand larceny in New York in 1951· and was sentenced to three to 10 yeers in prison. He was parol- ed in 1957. After they found the boiiles, police '"'" tacted a 15-year-<>ld girl from Frankfort, Ky .. wOO had told police in nearby Fort Lauderdale last week th.at she and Matsoo bad been picked up while hitch- hiking by a man driving a white van. She told police I.bat they were taken to a torture chamber and forced to perform sex acts while the man took pictures. Police said she told them Matson tried to overpower the man but was shot three limes in the head. Detective Mathews said the Fort Lauderdale police did not believe the girl's story. ASSIGNED TO THE lllth llat·IO-The- Rlng Aero PUrsult Squadnln, he ·shot down his l!rst piano with a macblne gun April 29, t918 , A month tater he shot down bis fifth to quallfy as an ace. Soaring without a parachute ln primitve planes propelled by engines less sophisticated than those In today's lawnmowers, Rickenbacker eventually blasted 21 Gennan aircraft and five ob- servation balloons out of the sk::les over France. On his way lo becoming America's a~ of aces, be met proPfllor to propellor with the Oylng cirtus fonned by Baron Manfred YOO Richthofen, '"l'be Red Baron." SURROUNDED BY three acarlet- planes of the German "ace or aces," Rickenbacker tried to get away but lilil: pursuen showed' 1 ex tr a or d In a r y adroitness in handling their machines. The heavens seemed quite crowded wllh the three dancing Fokken. "After a time, an opportunity came to try to outrun them, and with the motor VPI T ....... DUELED 'RED BARON' Eddi• Rickenblcker FRED CARRASCO RECEIVES FIRST AID AFTER SHOOTOUT H1'1i Suspected Killer of 47 in Texas-Mexico Drug War 'Modern Day Pancho· Villa' Ambushed in San Antonio. SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI ) -Thirty policemen with machine guns ambushed Fred Goolez Carrasco, suspected killer of 41 persons in a Texas-Mexico drug war, and shot him as he walked out of a motel room Sunday. "Knowing his reputation and all , we didn't intend to give him a chance," homicide inspector Jack Huttoo. said. Carrasco doubled over and trailed. a stream of blood several yards before he fell to the ground an d was taken into custody as his wife, Rosa, ran lo hls side and kissed him. A police spokesman said today Car- rasco was in fair condition and under heavy guard at Bexar C.Owity Hospitaf. llUTl'ON SAID Carrasco was sought for seven San Antonio-area killings and "he's wanted in Mexico on about 40 over there." He reportedly headed the largest narcotics smuggling ring in south Texas until he was jailed in Guadalajara, Mex· ico. Officers said he paid a $100,000 bribe to escape Crom jaiJ so he could eiminate other drug smugglers who tried to take over his business. Homicide detective Frank c.astillon, who said he arrested Can'asco, 33, in 1959 for stabbing a man to death, has said, "Next to Pancho Villa, I don't know who's killed more." High ·winds Sweep Texas Officers had staked out the south San Antonio motel ror days art.r one of Car· rasco's cousins registered ming a fa1se name. ! Tliunderstorms S pill Over Into Mid west, Rockies NAh0NAI Wf41111t UIYi(I IOtt(#.$1 I• 7•M l,11•!)·1J , ... ; 'I • ""'II• s-re tlluroclerstorm1 eruPlfd In 1114! ex!reme IOUl"-wrn 1rM1 1nd I~ p.,,,.,al\dl1 of Tt xtl. SeYltlly·mil .. pe,.ftour wlf>lh '0.1"9d 11\rougll D1ll\1rt, Tta., 7a mlltt nor1t.. ~I .,.. A.rNrHlo. Orle~nch htll and h!gll wlnd1 1wept ln!trllllt 10. 111 mlltl 1•11 of El P•to. While Ille T1a11 1tonns '"'"" IUtlS!d[l!Q ~I t trll todly, lllW v!-•11 lnlec:ltd 11110 hllftdwnlonn1 -De•f1 of wes11m KIMll Ind N-bl'l\.,t . TMJ...,_.,lor!m tr'"I OWi' widtfy Ktll«td ''"" ll'lf "oct:I .. of Colorll<IO . 1r.:I WVOtn!fl';I. Ille mllldlt Ml1slHlp()I V~ll" ''"' ,,,, Alltn•!c c""'' 1rom SOI/th Ctrollllfi to . ,....,. Jer,.v. co1um111~, Me., w11 t•llll I~ 1.1 In. ell~J of rtiln, """' '"*" An · 1nc11 "'"ffWI fAllf!I In ~ ml!'MllH. O•-\ti.ot . H,C .. -~ 1•1m!Md ""1111 t.1 !...:lift $11111111¥ n~'I!; ~r efld .,,,,.,.._,. ,,.,.. ef 1.,.. n•llt'fl 1t11I......, ~v t~I• ,_,,.., T""' •--·~'"-_..,. ,......., """'" fMf , • ....., ~' -t lwtn\ten, ~· ~ " A' ........... C<>n•U.I W"nther l.111 ~l Ind fft\W ""*"'"' law tlou<h ..,,..._.. fN1 T-*f' wUa lllMr• wl~ Wftn\' $111.._ Hltll 75 to IJ;. S•111. /tf""'"· Thlr• MONDAY ~ !11gtl lltft p.111 ... , llClllld L-i :M Jl,Pl'I. S.J ftlr1I Hltll First Ww _,.,.,. ---'TUl.OAY f:S• .._.,.. '·• . 1:• .. M. t.• ·--11"11 IJI\.. QJ J:l111.M. ... , ... 1:1111.M. ............ kll "-Si• ''"'" MacWI l'tlll 1ta4'ft.o I "llE CArtlE Otrr to leave," Hutton said. "We rushed out and hollered 'Police.' He drew his pistol and we started shooting." The motel manager, who asked that his name not be used , said officers shouted twice through a bullhorn for Carrasco to surrender. The raiding orficers also an-ested two bodyguards and the COJ.Sin, who did not resist. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE ' Dtllvet'J of thl DlllJ Piiot Is vuarantttd TtltPllO!ltr MM.I Or._ C_1, Ant• ....... 6001 ........... , ~ ........ atfldl • .... WtlHllllttl'flr ., ........ •1• kll ~ Ctplltr-•e<td. ... ..,,..,_ C#lllrt"" 0-~ ...... ~ L.,.... M...-.... tf>4GI be lal<m too terloutly." ~-pr eet But• generation later and half a world told his teUOw llll'Vfvora: u1•m awfUlly .... ,. Rlckellbacker't cool bead In ....,,. tills bad to happm .. ,.. __ .. another war gained him the "hero" Rlcli:enbacker'• entry into eommtrda1 badge apln. 1vl1lloo came tbmugh the 1uto IDdultry. • His Ricltenbacker Motor Co. dMlped the 'first car With four.wheel brakes, but ltllf compeUllon loreed his auto oil the market and his oompany Into oblivion soon alter the birth of both. AsaJn ho turned to airplanes. WlllLE ON A mlalon for the secretary of war, the B17 In Which he was a clvWan pasaeqger ran out ol fuel on Oct. 11, 1M2, and ditched In the South Padllc some llOO miles oortb ol samoa. 1be olglll men aboard eocepecl w(lh .their llvea and rour "scrawny" oranges. "Arter the oranges were gone," Rickenbocker recalled, "tbert' showed up a terrific lot of.. pangs of banger and we prayed for food. Within an hour af\e< prayer meeting a aeagull came In and landed on my bea4 .. . . we wrung his head and leathers from him and carved up his Cltca5S and distributed and uaed hls innards for ban." · Drlnklng rain water and eating fish lured by the ""gull's guts aeven ol the elid>~ swVlved .24 days on il.e raft before bOlngrescued. Taking over mSnagement of EAL . In 1935, he paid General Moton $3.5 mllllon ft>r it three yearl" later and became president and general manager. He wu made board chalnnan Jn 1953 ond retlttd in 1963. He built Eastern from 400 employes to a company whicb today employes lllOl'O than 35,000. Following hls reUrement, RlckeD- backer and Adelaide Frost Durant Rickenbacker, the woman he married in 1922, divided their time betweon Mllml and New York, where sons David E. and William F. maintain homes. S. Vwts Free Prisoners But 30 Refuse to Go SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnam began releasing civilian prisoners today fn the first prisoner exchange with the Communfs\8 In three months, but 30 of the first 375 prisoners rejected a return to the · Viet Cong, a government spokesman said. Thirteen of th& Communist prisoners aboard the thin! Oight from ~ big. Bien Hoa air ha!e, outside Saigon, to Loe Ninh, 75 miles north of the capital, re- quested asylum . and received it, the spokesman sal.. Seventeen m o r e prisonen aboan! the fourth Oighl made a simllar decision. · There were 75 prisoners aboard each of live completed flights to Loe Ninh, Lt. Col. Le Truog Hi en, spokesman for the South Vietnamese command, s a I d. Earlier in the day, a field military spokesman had said each government C130 Hm:ules llighl would carry 100 prisoners. After the Pentagon admitted the raids, Hughes, a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee, charged that the administration had "deliberately lied" lo him and the committee when it previ0\15" ly furnished secret bombing statisticl omittiog the Cambodian raid$. Major to Press Charges Against War Prisoners WASlllNGTON (AP) -An Air Force major has accused the Anny of failing to investigate dismissed misc 0 n d u ct charges against a group ot ex-POWs and says he will file new muUny charges A_ <,;c>VERNMENT spokesman said against the men. plans had called foc lttelng 900 Com-MiiJ. Edward w. Leooanf Jr., said, ml1!list prisoners today but military "1'm' going to ask that the Anny m. sources S&Jd a tardy start and a lg whic . bureaucratic snarl involving the lnterna· vest ate, h It failed to do after C.ol. tional Commission for C.ontrol and · Theodore Guy filed his charges" against Supervisioo (ICCS) reduced the total. five Anny and three Marine enUsted men Among those whose detention was pro-who had been tmder G.uy's command in a longed by the delayed releaae were at North V[etnamese {lnSOll-Leooan! also least 22 infants whose mothers were was a captive there. among the prisoners. · Leonard blamed the Army, although Government military '°"""" said the the Navy also dropped slml)ar aid1ng-the- 1CCS team supervising the prisoner ex-enemy arid other c h a r g e s. The change decided to leave the Loe Ninh secretaries of the Anny and Navy both release site prompUy at 5 p.m. to return found on July 3 th.at there was m. to Saigon, an hour's flight awy, a1though sufficient evidence to take I.he cases to there was still two hours of daylight re--courts martial. malning. "I suggest the Anny decided to drop charges and the Navy Department didn't have much choice unless it wanted to have egg on its face," Leonard said in a telephone interview from Maxwell Air Force Base, AJa. , WHEN THE 5 ICCS departure time arrived, the sixth group o( 75 prisoners wu already on the ground at Loe Ninh, awaiting release, and the seventh and eighth flights were inbound on the 2Q.- minute C130 flight to the Viet C.oog held · fonner U.S. base. Jn other Southeast Asta developments: -The U.S. warplanes str!aking across the sides over Pbnolll Penh blasted suspected Communist positions today on ' all sides of the capital in the closest such 'raids in more 'than a month. ' A U.S. observation plane crashed while trying to make an emergency landing at Phnom Penh's Pochentong airport In the second crash In two days. -Sen Harold E. Hughes said today "practiCi!S of official deceit and secret warfare are more ominous than any pro~ lem confront.in& our country.'' Consumer Group Assails Safety Of Mowr Homes WASIUNGTON (UPI) -A consumer group has charged that 43 percent of all motor homes are overloaded when two persons are riding in the front seat •nd asked the federal government to warn the public about It. The Ralph Nader-bocked Cetlte< for Auto Sarety said SUnday the personal let. ters sent by the National HlghWly Traf· Ile Safety Adminl!tratloo (NHTSA) to 1,200 camper owners was a "timid" response. . . The group called for a wamng to the public at large about Inadeq u ate suspenaloo sY>tems In the !,JOO whlcles sutveyed by NHTSA. AJ many u · 400,000 campers and pickup trucks with camper bodi,. would have defective suspenolon systems tr the survey Is rtpresenlatlve, the center charged. "NllISA's ~to -~ llndlnp has been iliiildlii tlie ex!mne." the center wrote tn a letter to tcllng a(f. . mlnlstretor James £. Wilson. The center also c!1tklzed the 1$enC)l's request that manuracturerw mate their own lnvettlgatlon of the defects "In lhe naive hope that they will ,.. the Ug!lt and v<>ltmtadll' malt• the nt<lOSllry 111- Ju.ttmtnts." "I do not helieve that the POWs wh> served honorably were given an op. portunity to present their side." Leooan! said that during the time they were in prison he himself shouted a direct order to "stop all forms of cot.. laboration" and that hO got back talk spiced ·with an obscenity. ~y offi~ial~ have acknowledged that the1r 1nvesligation of Guy's charges in- volved only· a study or documents,.mostly transcripts of gefleral debriefmg m. terviews with POWs conducted long before any fonnal accusations were filed. In preparing bis charge sheet, Guy listed 15 to 20 fonner POWs as potential prosecution witnesses.· Anny offlclal.'!I have said they quesUoned none of these men before recommending dismissal ol !he Charges. Navy legal ofli.clals have said 'Navy and Marine investigators did question ~me of tht! prospective witnesses, but one Penlngoo lawyer has c:onceded that the lnquily· was not conducted "with lhe depth Jt would mnnally be cf one ... Anny officlals said three Of the soldiers· have beep honorably di,scharged since Guy's charg~ against them were dropped nearly three. weeks ago •. Pen- tagon legal officials said that as Civilians, these men are now beyond the reach of military law and cannot be tried under civilian law either. Thailand Called Artery for ·nrugs WASmNGTON (AP) -Thailand Is the key artery for n~lcs n.wtng from AJI& to' the United States hl!alust 'l11al officials do little to 11@1> the drug iralllc. a report to a congrtSS1ooal cunmlltee says. ~ lt also say1 that narcoUc enfortement ls so lax, drugs ol all lypes 0 a.re readi!1 available tbmugblllll Thalland ana-.,.. - wldt\Y ustcl by Amortcan personnel" The report to the Hou., For,elgn Af. [airs OOmmlltct .... wtltlen by Rep. • Lester L. Woll! (O.N.Y.). recently nalll' cd chairman ol a special W'CC!tie$..sub, commltt ... The rtport Is to be re1eue<I Tl7Jraday. A copy ..., obtained by '1111 ·As.oodated l'l<sl . \ .. ) ( I . ' • • ' .. '- .:l... 1 1! f ' ll p ..... .,., ~ IJb ~gui tbi! iiri1 I .. "" ni >y " .. !!It ' . ' S'i ji P!i ( l . :~ ·Iii ~ !l ' Bl 1 d1 N .. lo ~ (1 ~ lJ ·~ ., • s ~ ~ ,. c , • ~ ,, I I ~ I I I l 1 tj:>L. 66, NO. 204, J SECTIONS, 26 PAGES •• I . J 918 Flying Ace ~d .·Ri;1'enhacker p ies; ~· !'ag.e 4 1~ath bu come to Capt. Eddie Ricken- ~cker, a man. who dueled the airplanes 'il the Red Baron to become a World War tilying ace and who -~-~· • J,iier became , the ' guiding genius of ,Ute Eastern Air-,;:i u,i.ies. Rickenbacker was lft oiUto speed de- Dlll ·before· the war, iiushini bis can to 11:1 miles an hour ?Jy 1914. alCKHUCKH ~·He shot down five qerman planes in a month In 1918 to qualify as an ace. Rickenbaeker died in Z u r i c h , Switzerland, at the age of 82, The cause }fas listed as heart failure . See story, J\bOtO on Page 4. CdM Youth Hurt In Truck Mi shap :On Mexican ,Trip A· corona del Mar youth was seriously iajured and a Balboa man was jailed in ~ folloWing an automobile mishap &mday on Punl!._Banda south of Ensenada. - +'fbe_injured youth was ide.qtlfied as llreck Leooard. about 17, of Corona det Mar. , Jailed following the accident was the drifer of. the four-wheel vehicle, Ron ?1ewell, 281 of il3 Belleview St., Balboa, eoe ol the ~rs in · a diving class known u Scuba Limited. '°Nl'!weJI ·was -due to be··r-eleased-·fr-Onl Jail about noon today01 according to his father, Robert Newell of Balboa. Details of the accident were sketchy, frut according to Brad Stillwell, 17, of Laguna Niguel, Newell and other members of Scuba Limited had taken a · lfiving party to the Mexican resort on J'rlday. . ~· On Sunday morning, Newell, Leonard and an uni.deoUfied youth went for an ex· pJoratory drive along a narrow road. A eboulder of the road gave way and the i1'1ck tumbled about 150 feet down a cliff aod landed among some rocks on the beach. • 'Ibe unidentified youth wu thrown clear as the truck nosed over. Newell euffered minor cuts and abrasions. 1£onard was finally flown out of the sfta and is·uniler treatment at Universi· IY. Hospllal In San Diego. His condition 'jfas described as serious. ·~uack Kills Hiker ' ' · IDYLi.WiLD (AP) -BidWell Jumel, a ~year-old hiker, died after suffering a heart attack while hiking in the moun- taim near here with his two 1011S; of· flcials said. Jwnel, of Escondido, receiv· ed. aid from a registered nurse, Barbara Dodd of El ·Cajon, who also was hildng in !lmnber State Park. Coast oun Panel ,OKs • Su.bpoena For Tapes BULLETIN WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate Watett1te committee Ulla afternoon u.nanimously authorized a nbpoena •«king President NIJ:o11'1 tape record- Ing1 about lite wtretapplllg ICUldal, and 1pecial prosecutor Arcldbald Cox said be also woald seek a subpoena. W ASlllNGTON (AP) -President Nix· on tOday flatly rejected a request for ac- cess to ta~s of presidential con- versations, saying they will remain "under my sole personal control." At the same time, Nixon wrote Chairman Sam J. Ervin Jr. (~N.C.), of the Senate Watergate committee that "at an appropriate time during the hearings I intend to address publicly the subjects you are considering." The President saJd "I° still intend to do so and in a way that preserves the con- stitutional principle of separation of powers, and thus serves the interests not just of the Congress and "the President but of the people." The White House at the same time made public a letter from the counsel's office to special Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox declaring that Nixon also will refuse to make the tapes ava,llable to Cox. Tbe letter was signed ·by ebarles Alan Wright, a University 9_~ Texas law pro-. lessor serving as a White Houae con- sultant. Wright wrote Cox regarding the tapes made of conversations and telephone calls involving Nixon: · "ProducUon of them to _you would lead to their use in the courts, and questions of separation-Of-powers are in the forefront wbeo the most confidential documents of the presiaency are sought ···in·4he-judicial-branch...lndeed,...most_of the limited case law on · executive / privilege has arisen in the context of at- tempts to obtain executive documenl.!I for (See REFUSAL, Paa• II Dead Actress Wins Lawsuit- Given $45,000 · A lawsuit filed by Mary Pick.ford Rogers shortly before her dealh in 1971 was won Friday by lawyers now acting for the estate of the star of the sllent movie era. Damages totaling more than $42,000 and lawyers' fees of $3,500 were awarded by Orange County Superior Court Judge James F. Judge in a ruling that closes the file opened in November, 1970, when htrs. Rogers sued the lessees of property owned by her In Fullerton. Judge Judge ruled against defendants Brek, Inc;• in action that also 1ettled lesser issues raised lu a cross-complaint Involving the sub-lessee, N a t 1 on a 1 Coordinators, Inc. . Mrs. Rogers owned prOJ>erty in several Orange County communities a n d supervised lealing operations from her Falltirooi ranch, coull officials noted. Recreational • • . . . • ' ---· I own; - Today's F l•a l N.Y. Stoeks N TEN CENTS • Ie 707 Plu1iges Into Sea Off Tahiti · PAPLETE . Tahiti IUPl l -A Los Angeles.bound Pan American Boeing 707 ~·Ith 79 persons aboard cartwhe-eled into the ~a a mile otr this South Paclfjc island today moments arter the pilot reported 1 smashed windshield and said he rould attempt an emergency landing. 0nJY one person may have survived. . ~~latlOIJ ~fDE!I• said 11!. bod! .. bad tJf:en. recovered from the oll-staloed '!ater and . that a Canadian tentatively ~entlfied as a "ltfr. Campbell" was ~ed alive. . . • The o(ficials said a stewardess p.illed _jali~e from the_ water died i!l a hospi~ and they doubted II there would be any other survivors'. "As tor otbt!r ~ suryivors, anything is / passible but as the ·hours paSs the ABOVE IT ALL-'-Soaring birdman Sunday was one of about 200 persons who brou~ht their. )tang ~lid· ers to the third annual Otto Lilienthal' Hapg Glider Championships. The two-day event was held in Tra- buco Canyon near O'Neill Park. Longest flights frOJTI a mountain peak w~re about .six minutes. There were a)so youngsters of 9 or 10 gli · g. It all began two years ago on a hillside in Cdro~ del Mar in a casual atmosphere. Since then the I Southern. Cali· fornia Hang Glider.Association has groWn to about 3,000 members. J chances gel sma:Ucr: an<J .mailer," a rescue worker" reported. · Rescue woi-ters saJd ~-wmamed ' American tourist, wlx>se 'Wile boarded ~plane at Papeete, va~ished 'dtii-lng the rescue attempts:. They said he was tn one of the boal.!I going to help, Wber:v he aaw his wife's body floating on the suHace he 1f '' ... r-; . •• . . NewfHW't'. Braces ( More Surf Expected . . . \ From Hurricane Doreen . The worst of Doreen may be yet to come as Newport Beach lifeguards brace again today for · expected high surf that never quite materialized over the weekend. Doreen's powerful winds brushed the Sou them California. coast Sunday spawn- ·ing waves up to six feet in Newport Beach. . The rolling surf was strong enough lo claim the life of a scuba diver from Pomona Saturday. David "Skip" Parker, 18, apparenUy panicked when hit by a .11eries of waves and drowned off Little Corona beach despite the fact his air .tanks still bad a reserve supply. Lifeguards reported a total of only 48 other rescues -none of them seriowi: - both SatUrday and Swlday and few rip- tides. "Actually it was a pretty nice weekend once tbe overcas\ burned off," said lifeguard spokesman Al Irwin. 11We had ~ some surf but nothing like we an- Ucipated." Irwin said 170,000 people came to Newport Beach over the weekend. Hurricane watchers at the U.S. Weather· Service in Los Angeles said Doi"een's brush with caiifornia's coast won 't be the' last of her. Weatherman Chuck Smiley ... reported this morning that Doreen moved back out. into the ~ ~1exican currents about 850 miles oCf Baja during the night and rebuilt her winds to a steady 110 knots. with gusts up to 140. "At a radius of 250 miles the winds arc still about 40 knots," he said, "that's some storm." Doreen was reported moving slowly toward the Mex.iean coast and was ex- pected to hit land near Cabo San Lucas sometime this week, Smiley said, When she does ths surf on the Orange Coast will show for it'. "I'd say we can expect some pretty good surf this week," he said. And if one storm isn't enough, Smiley sald hurricane Emily now packing 80 to flll..knot winds has started building up 360 miles af.f Acapu]co. She is moving north at about eight knots and her effects may be felt by late this week, Smiley said. "My guess would be th.at once she gets into our cooler water up here she'll die," he said. Newport Beach lifeguards reported two riptide trouble spots ove the weekend that miglit get worse if the storms ar- rive. Irwin said there have been strong currents near the Santa Ana River jetties and the 15th Street Beach on lhe Newport-Balboa Peninsula. . The Orange County Harbor Patrol reported a very busy weekend in terms or boat traffic but no major incidenl.!I. ' Gliders Grace Trabuco Cany o1i l 11 Com r .etition By JO N SCHADE 01 !tie al" .. , ... l tafl One hundred irxty-five )liden Jnd 305 pilots participated in the third ar;ual Ot- to Lilienthal H~g Glide r Cha1onships held Salurdry 11nd Sunday a Escape Country in Traboco Canyon. The event sponsored by, the 3.0CJO.. member Southern California Hang Glider Association featured more \than 400 flights from four area hills ranging in height from 100 to 350 feet. Rk h Pray of. Santa Barbara had the longest night time for flexible winged gliders which use the lower and middle hills. ?ray's glide from the 100.foot hil.1 took 50 seconds. Taras Kiceniuk Jr. fi"om Mt. Palomar had the longest flight fixed wing flight from the upper 350 foot hill. His ''Icarus" plane took 2: IS to reach the ground after Klceniuk launched himself from the hill. In an unofficial rupt, Bob Wills of Santa Ana launched himself from a nearby mountain and stayed aloft for six minutes. 1be first championships were be.Id on a Corona del ·Mar hillside neit to the Pacific View Memorial Park two years as a casual event. But since that time, the glider associa· lion has been· formed which now puts oot a monthly magazine. "The Groundsldn· ner" arxl. holds monthly meeUngs pro- moting the sport. Special awards were also presented. .. plunged into the water and had not ·been seen sinpe. 'lbUer wa1 no immediate bre3kdowii of na"°"'UUes of the 69 pa"'"'""· -Because of the French nuclear ex- plosiqb Saturday, Pan American · had taken en a number of Australian Qantas acd Air New Zealand" passengers because those airlines were boycotting thi.s French possession . Local officials said 10 Frenchmen -w~re aboard the plane. 1be Officials said the plane, flight PA 816, originated in AuckJand New ~aland, and was enroute to Los Angele.S and San Francisco when it plummettd hundreds of feet into the sea shortly after takeoff. Airline officials said the pilot reported a smashed windshield and asked for an emergency landing . But witnesses said tt.ie plane made a 90-degree tum and then ~1t th~ 1Sout!i Pacific with a tremendous impact: a mile off Papeete port. "The crash happened at JO: IS p.m. Sunday Tahiti time (1:15 a.m. PDT) to- ~ay," an airport technician said. "I wu :n a house at a level above the airport. The _plane took off apparently normally. Its hghls were on so I could see it was a PanAm plane. , Suddenly, it took a sharp turn to the left _and sta~ted losing altitude fast. 1 got the :mpress1on almost as if a missile was launched from the plane. There wu a loud bang but no explosion. Then nothing else -silence." Rescue officials said a fleet of official lau nches, yachts, pleasure boats and fishing vessels sped to the scene. "'The rescuers worked by searchlights and recovered six bodies,'' an official · said. "They also retrieved some seats the flight book from lhe cockpit, part of the plane·s undercarriage." Later, they found four more bodies. * * * . . 3 California ns Wea.tiler More of tbe same can be e1- p0cted In the orange Coast area on Tuesday. Nigh! and morning low c!OOds wW live way to suDshine In the afternoon. Tbe highs will be In the low ?Os, with the low dippinc down to 80 dqrees. ·Investment Firm F d Ron Ri chards of Torrance woh the Orme . award f~r a quick sil ver glider with 35:3 · second lime. . . -T.LASSIFlED~ Listed Aboar d Down~d J etliner LOS ANGELES (AP) -Pan American JNSmE TGDA'Y ' Thev IOld ht IDOi o•~ of hil mind, ent<rfno • 35·/ool llbot in th• Trofll!XJClflc 1/<IChl race, but tht 11<ipptr of tht Chutzpah II "41>ing lhc l4lt laugh todou. Se• . Boattno. Po~t 19. l..M. ..,. ' f ~ UllRrt ,, = tt ....... '?-1 --• c , .... or...~ • c.-11 ........ ,...,.. '' """"""'"' , 1S S..-.. l6-t1 :,.:-=.. • ''** ...... , .. ,, ' T.......... M ·-·· ,. ~ " ....... """ _.. .... ,,.,. ,.. .. ....., . ......... ' ""' 3 ,. By L. PETER KRIEG Of .. o.iff ,..,.. ..... Formation ol. a n'lajor investment com- pony that will speclallu In recreaUonol deveJoPmenli waa llUIOllnlled today by Jaot D. Vlralber of Beverly Hilla, former owner of the Balboa Bay Club and Dis- neyland Hotel. ..:--" Richard S. Stevens, a former Wrather Corporation >ice president, and cu~t president of the llewpo.t llartJor Cham- ber of Oommer<ei wW bead the new com- pany. It will be ......,, aa ll!<atber D> vestmeotl, Inc. Stevens said lho Orm wllLoperate OI\. an International scale. It ii beglnninC looalll', and compon· 'l!vtly moda1ly, Stevens said, coolimllng this morning !hat k Is purcha&lng the well known Berb!Ure's By the Bay RtJ1. aunnt, :15«1 Via Oporto, Newpon DeacI.. ste ..... sald the reitaurant wlll ..... Unue to operote, wltb major changes but perhaps under the same name. He said plans call for the new corporate bead· quarten to locate ID the rooms above the reotauranl !hat for ytarS ""ed as the home of owner Jim Berlcsbire. Otber principals In the new Wrathcr · company are Monte E. Li.vinptoni execu- tive Vice president ol Wratber Corpora~ tlm and George Woodford, e:xi:cuUve vice pesldenl ol Southern Cnlilomi1 Finl National Bulk and founcllng ·presldenl of the Newport Naliooll Bank. . Stevem servocl wllh ·wratber .for more lban ten yean and ii pro.illy on opec:lal ualp_.. Iller runninl the~ Club and Ill •dWdiory .,.dGns for ,...ral ,..,. prior lo lheJr .... last yeor to "'" -Wlllloai Illy. Stevem 11111 -· Tovestmontl Mii ~-to oponie out of New)IOrt BeiCb and 1ntenr11 to ..,.age 1n • wide nna• of octMU<s lncludlng joint WltUrCJ. part- nerships aJl(i management contracts, 'all ~ , related ... the deVelopmcnt of wbat be BEATS THE HEAT calls umque properties directed towards serving the increased leisure lime of the publlc. . . "We feel oUr company is dillei:eot be- caUR we start. wltb ~ea lion ·and op. orations and wort. llecl<Ward toward real et1tate developm~" Stevens said. SteveN JiaJd that his firm will work with other deVelopers, landowners •"4 flnlind.al instituUR u well as develop its own projt<tl. · •<W..aeek only tboae projects that will PrQvide us with, a continuing, ongoing base ol Oi>milOfts arid jiiiili , as oppos· od to short term lnvol .. ment 10U&ht by _ mo11t developers," Stevens said. Stevens called the pendlna ac:qulsition ()( 'lhe B:erbhlre11 rertaUTlnt an "invett· menl for us. aa op)JO!!d to Jhe scope of !See INVESJ'MENT, Pase ti ·. -·- Don't put unused merchandise. on ice. Best the heal with Dally Pl!~ classified advertising. Here's bow: / • . FR 1 GI DA IRE, ;custom Imperial 111\, t mos. 014 129$. 2 Fuir doors, (Pll<m No.) The rclrlgerator sold arter the ad had run only two-dtya. The advertller ha1 exira cub ror summer ftm, and the buyer Is "cooling it'' ln style. Take the heat olf by placlnJ a Dally Pilot c}ull· fied want ad or ywr own. The. oun1ber 10 call! 60o667I. ,World ~irways ~issued this crew-list ---I today for the jetliner that crashed" in the . Pacific on a filght from Tahiti to Los Angeles: Capt. Robert E. Evarts, pilot, Gra53 Valley. CaHt First, ~ffk:er Lyle C. Havens, copOot. Medfoid, Ore. Flight engineer Isaac N. Lambert Danvtlle, Catil. ' Second officer Frederick W. Fischer, Rochester, N. Y. · Purser Sleglindc Sl~fcrt, 32, Helmstedt, Germany. Purser Rlta Van Beckum, 3 O., CUperllno, Calif. Ste~iti' Kerry c . P ....... 30. Lincoln, Englard. Eva M. Leljon. fl; Sloclmtnd. Sweden. Stehi dOs Santos, 30, Rio De Jane:tro. Brozll . Julie P. Harris, 24, A-tancbtstef, England. ,. . ~ ' ·---~- IWLY PILOT N Mondil, Jl>iy 71, 1973 ,~....::::::.;...:.=::._~~"--~~~~~"---'---'--- Bait Bai·ge Resists Change Hijackers , • ~up'}rmar~ • -€ase Slated Berkshire Opts for Family Life · Ready,,Jet R~portBig ..... Newport Beach councilmen tonight · will face a var ied agenda that ranges from building C011lrols for pert of New- t port Shom to a floating aeetood and ~live bait barge to be known 11 Pearson 's • Port at 300 E. Coast Highway In Upper , Newport Bay. ,: Among the other Items before ~n~il· men 1t their 7:30 p.m. meeting. 10 City . Hall are propos<d changes In the Emkay De\'elopment Company commertial prop- erty near Orange Olunty Airport and regular.Jons governing tow trucks. City fathen will also take another look at an Irvine COmpeny offer to donate eight acres or Upper Big ~yon' lo the city for a nature park. • Councilmen could eilher adopt the Newport Shores building controls, called a Specific Area Plan, or could amend the -plan to include changes recommended by the planning commission. 'n>e plan is des\alled to carefully con· trol coostrucUon « residences, .Prim'!'" jJy cfupleus, In the old c:ommercW strip along West Coast ffighway and Newport Shores Drive. . . 'lbe plaMing comm1SS)()fl has urged that certain uses wittlln the ~aries be allowed to continue and that the plan stipulate any changes in those uses would ffilulre city approval Roy Pearsm Is seeking a commerciaJ haJWr pennit for the floating fish and bait stOft that would be -red in a f11ed positio<J at the Bayside launching ramp at the entrance to the Back Bay. "J'OOee-and;or.tnlCk· compenles hove been at odds over who ohould' g'et police • collJ to IMlul away the pl<ees after ao- ddmts. 'lbe pr...,...i regulatloo woold reqW.. police to use only two towlllg cOOtpanies and. to alternate them every other Incident. Support for · city acquiattiGo· ol the Irvine Compony parlt property that the Parb and RecreaUon Deoartment wanls for a nature study area bu c:ome from olflcials of various Corona dol Mar achoolJ ml Borman Loata, depity supertnten· dent o1 the · Newport-Mesa UnUied Scbool Dlstrlcl. ;. City councl1m<n in the put have balked ~·at aceepting the gift of laud, as 101De i,: councilmen said they felt that an absence "' pming would make the pork In- -Ible to the genenl public """ ~ -... benellcial only to neighboring •• resldOnts oil Irvine Compony land ... -(' .; Newspap~r! A~m ~, Waste-Hit&.River •r; ~ OlS ANGELES (Al') -Radloective '· rnateriala deliberately ,.leded fiom the Atomic £neriY CommlJsion faclUUes in 5#• the Northwest have reached the Colum-'~ bia llMr; the Los Angeles T"uneJ t..,...ied today. . ' Sclentl1ta, iR papen pmeoted during the Past few years at several locatlona ~ ~throuChout the world, 11id the· DUdear ' moterlal la ol insufflcieot quanUty to make the water unsafe for drinking, the "'-paper aald. . But, the -1paper adiled, aome ol the · material could concentrate in fish in ,leveh 1,000 tJmes greater than in the our· round1na water. • , Newport Classes . ; Available Soon ~1 . r l 'n>e N.Wport Beach Department of 1 1Parb, Beache8 and Recreation hu a I wide variety ol classes -almost too :· numerous to menUon -available for ' enrollment thiS '"'wnmer. l Lista of available claues which would ~run the gamut of anyone's interests, are ~ 'available at lhe Newport Beach City • j' Hall, the Community Youlh Center in r Corona de! Mar or local libraries. t· \ They include alhJetlcs, arts and crafts ~ 'and other activities, some of which re- ' quire a fee for materials. • I ' f I t I '. I t I : I t OUN•I COAIT • DAILY PILOT T~ ~COW DAILV PILOT, ..-11!1 ....,_ .. ~-Ille ,,._,..,.,._ ........... tr( 'IMI Or ..... CM1t ~llfllnt C-.l!lr . ..,._ nt• edltlom .... PUlllllMll, M .... ,, fflrtUlll Frld1y, fW C.0.1• MtN, H""911 IHcfl,, 1+ur111.,.,.. IMCll/1'-telol v.1_,,, ......,. ... Gfil, "vlMtl.lddleN<:k ...., kn c ...... nff/ s.,. Jlltll C.Pi1tr-A •lolllle rl'lllloMI· edltioll • P'llb!l'IMll 5':1\!~l'f't ... ._ • .,.. Tlle -~ip.I llllOlhllllolf pllftt II It ~ W..+ .. , llr9", C..11 M .... "Uf«llll , tH)i. .... tt N .. Wet4 ,, .. 111.m.,.. ,,...,,., Jeck l . C11rlev \Ike ...,...'""' .... ~·i ,,.,.,...,. TMfft1t kHvll ..... Thet1111 A. Mi1ph11'1• M9Ntlllf hi,... I.. Ptttr Kritl ....,.,,.._,.c11r 4lflW --·-JJJJ Ntwptti 1 .. 1,.,,,.f M•11111t M41n11 P.O. ha 1171, '2"J --Cltt. M ... r lll WHI .. , llrttl L ...... INCll1 t2t ,.,., ,t,- ttulU'"'Jtft 1u<111 1nn tfltll ~ 1iMt ~Ml _,_. II c..mlM a..t M pl t•• t714t MMJJ1 QllllfW Uwc1I .. Ml-UPI c.wtrJtll'tl, lt11. Onfllt GMM ..,.,..,...,. ~.,. ... ....... ...... lllwfnt!llM. ....... ll'lttftt " .................. """"' ..., 11 r•-..c.I wl!Mvl 1i11Mlel ""' ...... ~ ....... .................. et Cati•,,..., ~. ............... w t""'9r t:l.U """"""' ., . IMft au "'"""""' ""'*""' an=•• •. .,~. , Ill' L. PETER KRIEG sale of bis iw...i BerbhJre's OD the Of IM °"""' •o•• ll•tt Sq ~' H V1a Oporto, to a F Jim -i .. 1>er111 peddJJn& si.m now Ill•---by~Di~clt~::~q~~~~~~~o·. ~~~ and ... rooc1 1114 ~ polllkl In •Sleviill 11141 ... -l>:Wrdif. n:''-'" e••1•ort-lla.tllot.ll.~~~:o;:::;:;:---"l'l•1 -ler-lill·J..,.....11 ' ·Food Rush Newport Btlch, the 111taurant over/' he Mid. "l'WI trled_to nm a rat.- neu and Jim Berkshire have chan&ed aunuit wtth linens and not placemata. a lot in those intervening years. And' there are other changes that mUi.Jt With a new wife and an IS.month-old be made that I'm not prepared to make." babf., Jim Berkshire, at 63, says be Berkshire's was always know D for can t -or doesn't want to -cope with •ll those changes. He's giving up the quiet and dlsllne:tive dlnin'i there was bustness for the dum8e that's most im-nothing flash1ng a~t e~Ung at Berk· port.ant lo him, his new family and a shire's. new home in Mission Viejo. Berkshire prided his rest.urant on lts ·"The restaurant business ls a dlfrerent service and its cllentele, the older New· ball game today," Berkshire says, re-porter or Newport Beach visitor. fleeting on the 42 years he'1 been there "1be big maket now is the 25-40 year- since the beginning in the small town of old -and rightly so -but it's a type Porterville in Northern California. l 'm not prepared to compete for," he He's rompletlng negotiations for the sa id. From Page J 'Ibe purchase price of Berkshire's was not announced, but it's figured at ap- proximately $500,000 for the lease on the 400-feet of bayfronl property. INVESTMENT 'n>e land, Itself, Is owned by the estate • • of the late Todd JohMm, a Beverly Hilla the bus1neu we want to be in. '"nlat will be much, much larger," be said. He said he expects the company will bring in a partner to operate the restaurant. Steveos emphasized that the new firm has DO connecUoo with the Wratber Cor· poratloo itself. The Wratber Corporation besides its . ' Bay Club and Disneyland Hotel ooldlngs in the past owned the Lassie property, Muzak and oil, land and recreation \'en· '""" t1lroUghollt the warld. tax lawyer. Because of its owner's style, Bert· shire's wu never the (ocal point ol anytltlng spectacular in Newport Harbor history, although Berkshire, when be was a leader In the Chamber ol Commerce, used it as the on,lnal 1le4dquarters of lhe chamber's aMual Character Boat Parade. Berbhlre makes a point that be never peddled bis Democratic politics too hard on the local level, what with his heavi· ly Republican 1-ttervatton list. But be never ducked when the subject arose. And Berkshire never carnpta\ned about the tremendous incn:ase in the number ol restaurants in the Harbor Area. "Growth dictated that ," he said. "I wu ood for businesses." Wat,er 'KelaXing'---in~ue. be exp1ilifed, .. , had to . educate people about eating out." · He even tried to capitalize on the Clms Will Help ~y~rs~t6':.~~_: Ease Tension Up upt! nae Newport Beach Re ~c re a t i o n Ilepartmttll may bave juat the ticket to take yru away from it au, right down lhett with the fish ml other marine life, in their element. Swim Instructor Al Fitzpatrick today announced rqtmation !or W a t e r Sens!Uvtty class, an unlikely b u t repon.dly · wonclrnus wedding of yoga and aensitivlty training -in the bay. 11This course of water exercise ac- tually allows lhe person to become one with the water. You relax and it actually speeds learning,'' says Fitzpatrick. Leaming -in this case -relates atricUy ,. ~I ml sucb, water nfane~ •Mt'tadomff pilftUl!if he notes. -Staying upder water for 1oog perioda.of meditation ls ooe. "Relaxation ls the. key," says Fitzpatrick , noting lbe classes run two weeb at 12:311 p.m. at the Tenth street Beach. port. That mtaunnt went to bis former wife u part of tbetr divorce setUement in 1970. II rec.ntly was sold to Fran Delaney, owner of Delaney'• Sea Shanty. · Berkshire ll4Y'I be plans to devote his whole-time to bis new family now. "I'm going to spend as much time with them as I can," hesald. • "It's been a great period of time ;' Berkshire says ol the pa!t, "but other tbingJ are more important to me Dow." The words come from a man who ls a past president of the Newport Harbor Chamber of C.ommerce, a charter mem- ber and former skipper of its Commo- dore's Club and a former director for the United Fund. He waS ~foreri:lan pro tem for the Orange County Grand Jury.and support· td,.\'lrious local candld8tes for office on the city council and school board. "But Newport Beach. tui. tpW1l and brought a lot of different t y p e s of people," Jim Berkshire says. "They are much more sophisticated than when 1 ar· rived. I guess I'm ~ an old cmmtry bumpkin." Newport Hearing Set For Parking Amendment BULLETIN DUBAI (API -A .i)ac:Ud Jopa Air Unet Jumbo jet, lltld oo Ille ,,.._, llttt for 1t boan, took Off tll1y 1\iaday I« an ua4fac:foted -· DllBAI. United Arab Emirates (UP!) -The hljacken of a Japan Air Linet 747 jet ordered it refueled today soorUy after the control tower at Dubai Airport relayed a mysterious message ordering them either to free the 150· hostages or kill them. There was speculation the hijackers, including Arabs and Japanese, might try to fiy the big jumbo Jet to Tokyo via P altiatan. , They al!O demanded that authoritie& bring them the body of a woman ·bljacker killed by a grenade explooion during the takeover Friday. ,. A few hours before 'the apparent taJceoU preparations, tho sbelkbl in the control tower passed ~ a mell8ge to the hijackers signed "13,569 inhabitants of West Gennany," Dubai officials said. The message read: "If you intend to kill the passengers on boar<!· JU« (the plane's real flight number was .JlAM). please do it at once or be humane enough to release them. "It sounds ridiculous if you pel'a'lit those whom you obviously .want to kill to receive refreshments and meals. Please give up your intentions, there are other means of Wlbloody poasiblities to reach your political alms." The officiab said the message was received by the Dubai government and they passed it to the hijackers from the control tower. The officials declined to comment on the message but newsmen speculated it might be some kind of code telllng the bi· jackers what to do next. SbOrtly after tt was rece!V<d, the hi· jackers issued their twin demands ancJ there wu speculation they would take off soon with the hostage• who have endurtd three days of burning desert beat. Strachan Backs Dean Testimony About Haldeman WASHINGTON (AP) -Alter the Watergate break·ln last year H. R. Haldeman calmly ordered hts assistant to "make sure our me11rare• clean " the aide 1e!tified today. ~ ....... Former White House staffer Gordon .Slrach3n also said that earlier. during the 1972 presidential p r l m a r t e s , Haldeman ordered LWlretap leader G. Gordon Liddy to "transfer wha'tever capability.be had" from one Democratic candidate to another. Strachan, denying that be knew about the Watergate wiretapping in advance, told the Senate Watergate commJttee he expected Haldeman to rebuke him for in· competence after the wiretappers were caught . - . By ~ Aiso<taied Press · Supermarkel customers found long lines at the checkout counte.rS and. .sorne empty apota on the shelves today, as shoppors stocked up on lood in the f1ce of lharp1y rising, poet·freieze prices. "'lbey;re buying Uke Christmas," said one clerk lntervl~ by. the Associated Pr<a In a 1/.o< survey, (See ediu.ial, page 6.) ' • The survey showed th.at stores were taking advantage of the lifting of the freeze to mark up many food items, particularly pork, pouhry Md egg>. M part of the Phase 4 economic pro· gram, announced by President Nixon last week, food 'pt'OctSSOrs and retailers 'may pass to the coosumer, on · a dollar~for­ dollar basis, cost increases in raw agncultural product& Beel prices remain frozen until Sept. 12. AdministraUon officials have saJd there will be a sha~ •rise in fDod prices 1em- porarily, but predicted thar the grocery bills will level as supplles incrtase. California residents started shopping early, filling stores over the weekend. "We bad 30 to 40 peopte waiting for the doors to open at 10 Sunday moryiing," said a clerk at a Lucky Supermarket. "They're buying meat they can freeze and can goods that'll keep. They're u .. 1 T....,..tt buying staples, too," said the clerk, Tom Kelly. . (fetty's Girl Danielle Devret, a 24-year-old Belgian"model and girUriend of J. Paul .Getty ill, missing grandson of the oil billionaire, leaves police headquarters in Rome. Miss Devret was the last known pets0n to have seen young Getty. FromPqel REFUSAL ... Jack Pippld, a butcher for the Cata chain market in San Francisco, said that bftbe end of. the weekend be was out~ bacon and "dam near finished with Pork and chicken. I've had people in who are buying JO or 12 fryers -and I doo't tbink they were bavlng a party." --William Gross, director of publlc rela- tions for the San Francisco division of Safeway, the nation's !eCOlld largest supennarket chain in terms of sales, said a limit of two pounds of bacon per customer went into effect Friday because or a "temparary shortage." An official at an Alpha Beta store in Los Angeles said the sale of beef im- use in the courts." proved, because people bought it iMtead The professor said Nixon weighed the of pork. He said pork products had gone adv~tage the tapes would provide the up an average of 30 cents a pound since Watergate prosecutors against what was the price celling was lifted Wednesday. termed "the serious and lasting hurt that Martha Elias, 28, of Los Angeles, said, disclosures .of them would do to the con-"I am loading up on fn.llt.and vegetables fidentiality that Is imperative to the effec~ like it said on television. I won't buy the live functioning of the presidency." chic ten if· it goes up, but 1'11 subStitute Wright concluded, "Jn this instance, the fruit and vegetables. President has_concluded that it would not Carol Zeruche, 36, of U:ls Angeles, serve ~ public interest to make the agr~. . tapes available." · "I'm mak!ng do with fresh v~,etable NlJ:on, in bis letter to Ervin, disclosed soups,'' sbe sata "I'm getting protein in be "penoully listened to a number of eggs. milk,' and cottage cheese and !feed them" before mstence of the tapes be-my kids peanut butter because I hear it's came publicly known : -t ~ ·hJgh in protein:"---- He declared that "the fact is that the tapes would oot finally setUe the central issues beftlre your committee" and are "entirely consistent with what I know to be the truth and what I have stated to be the truth." 'n>e President acknowledged that lbe recordings "contain comments that pu- sons with different perspectives and mo- tivations would inevitably interpret in different ways" and, in addition, contain "a great many very frank and very pri- vate conunents, on a wide range of. issues and individuals, wholly extraneoos to the committee's inquiry." Tennis, Surfing, Sailing to Begin Tennis, surfing and sailing anyone? The Newport Beach Parks, Beaches and Recreation Department will register entrants fpr three of its four tennis, surf- ing and sailing classes Monday (July 23) at the CommwUty Yolltb Center. But when Haldeman reacted with calm, Strachan said he had to draw one ol two conclusions: "Either he knew about it ahead of time, or be didn't ex· ~:~~~1:l'~~o~rWhlteHou,. Skylab 2 Gets Ready The Newport Beach Planning Com· missloo has set Aug. 2 for a publlc hear· ing on a proposed amendment to the publlc parking standard of the city's muruclpal code. In other action last week, the com· cr.unsel John W. Dean Ill never Jied to CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) _ The mission also amended lhe munidqa1 code him, and that he believe! Dean !s telling Skylab 2 astronauts under·go their last to grant a land use pe.rmJt for . the the truth in accusing Haldeman, Prtsi· major physical e•amination today to be development of a commerlcal nursery In dent Nlron and former White House ad· sure tbey are ready for SatUrday's a previously residental zone area on the _vlser John D. EhrUChman of complicity launch and a 59-day visit to the space Only Newport Beach residents may -sign up, however, on the department's local<itizen-prlority program, from 9 to 11 a.m. and 5 to 8 p.m. in the facility at Fifth Street and Jris Avenue, <(-Orona de! Mar. southerly side of San Joaquin Hill! Road 1J1 the Watergate cover.up plot. staUon. between old ml new M a c A rt h u r ;:I iQiiiiiii ";"iiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BouJevards. 11 M VislUng non-resident!; may sign up dur- ing the same houri: next 'l'Uesday through Thursday, or until the classes are filled . They are for all ages and all· levels of ablllty. Commtasion<n set the date alter Com- muruty Development Director Richard Hogan said the amendment wa.s needed to make off-street parking requirements uniform. Some -I• cannot develop their prop- erty for leer they ...Wd . not be. In <'O!l\- pUance with present pa r k 1 n g re· quJrements , be said. The five-acre plot had previously been L :fasslh~es~T~'ia~;d::t~a1~~~~: _Nouody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than -n.. •• ~ h for light fanning. The land was divided ~~ Newport Beach curmitly requires one ;pa.,. per mulU.famUy dwelling unit and two spaces, for each 1ingle family home. The South Coast Regiooal Coast;il CoMervaUon CommJMJon requires two spaces for each dw.Ulng of any type. Much ol the discuaslon Aug. Z will prob- ably be "' just what actually constitut., I parkin& space. The Clly Council In the past has favored ooly rpecmcally outlined or recular 1an10.,..,kln1 to fill-the ..,.._ quimnent. Tbe commission bas favored allowing open .a:pace in drlvewaya to fill the requlremen~ wben perscrlbed spaces . do not fill the need. into two parcels. The commission granted Roger's Garden Nursery of Costa Mesa a I>year lease on a ty,·o-acre sales area, ne:tt to the present MacArthur Boulevard. But they only allowed a flve-ye.ar lease on a three--acre growing parcel next to the new MacArthur Boulevard, where right-of•way is expected to be neede<l when the area road system is further. developed. The nursery company was also re- quired to limit parking space, restrict ill sales to nur.iery-related goods -ml to keeps its bulk fertilizer-covered after the commission listened to requests Crom the area's· Broadmoor Hills Community A~ation . Los Angeles Lifeguards . Win Dory Competition Los Anaelewrea lifeauanfs dominated third place were Kerry O'Brien and )'aul a dory boat compeUUoo which took place Matthies from l.os Anegles Coonty. Saturday morning at Newport Pier. A Newport entry SCOttlf better In a sec- A N-Bw:h life-••"" crew, Ward ond nee Saturday, the surf Hf ·com-.. ..., • •-• peUtlon. Slundera and Steve Farmer, finished last Contestants row a Jong 1urfboard wtth in a flekt of. 11 boat.a:. a rudders, aimllar to a kayak. The race Entrants hAd to row three times ortgtnated ln Australia, a Newport around the plu, in and out of the surf ll£eguard saJd. zone, for a CO\al dillance of about OM: Erto AmMOn af Santa l\lrbara came mile. At one point, one member o( each In fint ln surf ski cOmpeUtion ind crew had to Jump out of the boat. 1wtm---.nolher Santa Barbara entrat, Louil Rtf. 1niund a fla1 and rHntor the dory. ne, wu second. _ f'irll·place honors ....,.. token by Ran-"Thlr<I place honon went to Bob Hahn, dy SU"ely ml Tom Srcyder, from Loi rowtnl !or the Rusty Pelican Oarln& Anlela CllY .ltleJU&l"dl. Alsoct1tlon of N""!lllrt Beach. . 1'wo San Clemente lifesumll, Bill Har-An Auckland, N"' 1.ealml, resident, Ml and Steve Helfer, cunt In aeoond. fn Kevin Riley, fin!Jhed fourih. -• HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ''BEST BUY'' AWARD SOfT IOOI WASTl llSPOlll . ,_,.,Mt< ..... • 11 .. tl ....... •AltMlric ht..,..1 Dl1p1u1w . ...,. __ .,....._ 15995 ......... . it W• 11•\llCI. f'SDJllN e WI INSTALL • •ltM• lett ...... J .. l ..... -•11'-Alfl-..... """"" ............. ·- 22995 ... ""' .... ... • Wl•••vica e WI ltUTAU. 4 CYQl POITW DISKWASlll 1·999$· .......... • w1111•v1c1 e "'.I; IMITAU. 6 CYCLE BUil T·IN ~::.PDTSCRUBBER DISHWASllER c • _, ........ ,...,,, ...... -·--.... . ... , ....... .:=-... ... 26995 ........... ... tl•\llC8 ••• 1n1TAU. • \ • - .. ----'· ' - ; -• Today's Fl•al N.Y. Stoeks --TEN-CEN~-· --i . . SulJpoenas Nixon Tapes Sought :\ .. • ·· Ervin Pane~ Cox Both .. Agree on Historic Bid believed the Prt!sident congratulated him for keeping the names of White House aides out ol the investigation of Watergate. ~ said be ROf80llllly ~ to a number <ii ~ tapes and said Ibey_ are "~Urely -'Mit With Wilat I -lo be the ' truth and Wilat I have llaled lo be the trulh." ' . Moments before the . committet!s ac- tion 'was announced, Cox called a news conference and. said be wquld go to court to subpoena the tapes as part of his of- ficial investigation into the case. The committee announcement was made jointly by chairman Sam J . Ervin (J>.N.C.). and Vice Chairman Howard H. Bater Jr. (R-Tenn.), alter lhe commiltee huddled belllnci closed doors !or aboul ... hour. "We're golng to i.s.!Ue a subpoena to the Presid;ent," Baker said to a milling throng of reporters outside Ervin's of- fice. None of the details about which tapes the committee would seek was an- nounced immediately, but they were known to include those or conversations 78 Feared Dead lhe President had with ousted White llouae "'""'"1 Join W. Dean W. Dean contendl Ibey dlscuaaed elements of lhe Watergate cov~r-up beginning I a a t September. Cox told newsmen : "It therelore bemmes my duty prompt· ly to seek subpoenas and other legal procedures for obtairJng the evidence for the gi-and jury. ''We will initiate such legal measurt!s to secure the eight laP,eS and ce rtain other evidence aii soon as proper papers can be prepared, .. he said. The commiltee delayed the start of the afternoon session of the nationally televised hearing and met behind cklstd doon to decide whether to subpoena the tapes. Nixon had said he knew nothing in ad- vance about the Watergate break-in at Democratic headquarters and tb:at his aides kept }lim ignorant ol White House involvement in the cover-up until March . Dean said he informed Nixon about the cover-up last September, and that ·he Cox did not specify wbal !he eight tapes were and declined to answu any other questions. But he said be hoped to hold a news conference later in the week. "The effort to obtain these tapes aod other documentary evidence is the im~ partial pursuit of juatlce according to law. None d us should make assumptions about what the tapes will $how. • ·· "They may tend to show that there was crimlnal activity -or that there was none. They may tend to show lhe guilt of particular individuals -or their innocence," he said, Plane Bound for LA Ditches I PAPEETE, Tahiil (UPI) -A U>s Angeles-bound Pan American Boeing 7ffl with 7'I per.;ons aboard cartwheeled into the sea a mile oft this South Pacific island today moments after the pilot reported a smashed windshield and said he would attempt an emergency landing. Only one person may have survived. Aviation officials said 10 bodies had been recovered from the oil-stained water. and that a Canadian tenlatlvely Identified as a "Mr. Campbell'" was rescued alive. The officials said a stewardess pulled alive from the water died in a Hospital and they doubted if there would be any olher survivors. "As for other survivors, anything is possible but as the hours pass the chances get smaller and smaller," a 1918 Flying Ace Ed· Rickenbacker rescue worker reported. Rescue workers said an unnamed American tourist, whose wife boarded tbe plane at Papeete, vanished during the rescue attempts. They said ~ was in one or the boats going to help. When he saw his wife's body floating on the surface, he plunged into the water and had not been seen since. There was no Wupecliate breakdown or nationalities of the fi9 passengers. Because of the French nuclear a~ plosion Saturday, Pan American had taken on a number of Australian Qantas ar.d Air New Zealand passengers becatme those airlines were boycotting lhll French possession. Local offidals said 10 Frenchmen were aboard the 'Plane. The officials said the plane, Olght PA 816, originated in Auckland, New !See JET CRASH, Page Z) Christ111as" Hijackers _Get Orders ·:tf~;... , Shoppers Stock Up ~t Markets l!=-M.;=i:.,,..· • .;,... ! . B~seg' Set J --. 'To· Kill 150? BULLETIN DUBAI (API - A llljack<d Japan Air Lliiea jambo J~. beld oa tlle groaacl bere for 71 Man, toot off early today for u -desllnatioa. DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (UPI) -The hijackers of a Japan Air Lines 747 jet ordered it refueled today shortly after the control tower at Dubai Airport relayed a mysterious message-ordering them either to free lhe ISO hostages or kill them. There wu speculation the hijackers, inch.Kling Arabs and Japanese, might try to fly the big jumbo jet to Tokyo via Pakistan. . 11ley also demanded that authorities bring them the body of a woman hijacker killed by a grenade ·exploSion during the takeover Friday. , A few hours before the apparent takeoff preparations, the sheikhs in the control tower passed on a message to the hijackers signed "13,569 inhabitants of West Gennany," Dubai officials said. The mesuge read: "If you intend to kill the passengers on board JU44 (the plane's real flight nurilber was JU84), please dolt at once or be humane enough to release them. "It sounds ridiculous if you permit those whom you obviously want to kill to receive refreshments and ineals. Please give up your intentiom, there are other means of unbloody possibUties to reach your pollU.;al aims." 1be officials said the message was ·received by Ute Dubai government and Ibey passed il to the bljaclters lrom the control tower. •.1 Princess Anne has bet nlimber Iixei:l on her arm by her fiance , Lt. The officials declined to comment on the nieSage but newsmen spe<:uJated it might be IOMe· kind of code telling the hi· jackers what to do next. Shortly after it was received. the hi· jackers issued their twin demands and there was speculation they would take off soon with the hostages who have endured three jlays of burning desert heat. Mark Phillips, as she Erepares to ride her horse, Double~ in the Com- bined Open Cbanipi0ns'ii1p• in Sussex. The princess won the event. • P.altl-emn~·~ve Orders ,_ 7 ~ ~ CLASSIFIED AD ~rfo~ C1£an Files-Aide J . ~ ' BEA.TS THE HEAT lloa' pat unmod -... ~­Beal tho belt With Dally Pilot classlJled ..., ' ·~ASl!INGTON (AP) -Aller tho •-.ate bnok-ln lut year H. R. 4loldeinu Wally ordered bis -t ,. ,. ''11\Ue ... our mu are dean,,., the .. ale .......... lllda . "" -¥.,... y .Foniler Wlllte Rouse llal!er Gonion ' • ..... .. Id tbal w-Uer, cM1nC • 1172 -idall{al primaries . ~CNll!!ed ~: lolclrrll. a.a LlddJ to er wbacn.t •tillltr be lulll" Inn -Dtniocrallc w ...... another. • Slnctlr. ~ tl1al be -eboul lbe ......... •lrttaPl*I In .... ..,.. ~ 1111 -WaleYCM< wumdtt .. he 'f advertlain&-Here's how: ~ Ra)dern.en to rebuke hlm for In- competence alter Ille ~ppm ...,.. , F R I G I D A I R E, 'Clilloon causJtL Imperial 111\, 9 -· -.id. • 8111 when Haldeman rtt<led with '9> I P'llll .n_ (l!llone Calm, Slradwll sold .. bad lo d:r1W Ont No,) • " ot two conclulk:ml: 0 Elthtr he knew ·" about ll ~ <ii lim<, ~~ ~ didn'l ex-1'he relrii•ratorjold 1!ttt the 1d bad peel me lo rii>oc1 lo him . . nm Ol1IJ two days. 1'he adnrtioer i.1 Stl'ltllan~White H..,.. -xtra cull lat """""" 11111 iilil the counJ<I John W, Dtan Ill oever lltd to •bu ,_ .. ,._ ll" In MY''.' --' the him. and that be beliews Dean ls tellhtc "/f!r ~ coo~. •• "" •- the lnltb in llCCllllng Haldeman, Pres~ heal oil by pildn( a Qitlly Pilot .,._ den! Nixon and lormer W11i1e -ad-lied not ad <ii ,.... °""" 1'llo ....., vioer John D. Elrllcbmall ol complldty to call? 612M11. (See WA'11!1WATS, Pop f) ---------~ 'Dies; See Page 4 Death bas come to capt. Eddie Ricken- backer. a man who dueled the ai.ri>lanes of. the Red Baron to becoIDe a World War I Dying ace and who later became the guiding genius or the Eastern Ail' lines. Rlckenba'cker was- an -1uto speed· de- mon before the war, pushing hi! cars to 134 miles an hour JY 19.14. •tcKaMi.w:ic:a• He shot down five German planes in a month in 1918 to quaJify as an ace. ,Rickenbacker died in Z u r i c h , Switzerland. at tbe age of 82. 'lbe cause was listed as heart failure. See story , photo on Page 4. Hit-run Suspect Gives Self Up, Ends Manhunt I TAMPA, Fla. (AP) ..... A driver who police said killed two young Tampa girls in a deliberate hit·and-nm lnddent sur· rendered to poUce in Baxley, Ga. Sunday night, authorities said. Raymond Alwyn McMahon was being held in jail oo two charges of first-degree munler, Appling Counly Sherill J. 8. · .. 'Red" Carter said. 1be aberiff said McMahon waived extradition to Florida. McMahon, 31 , bas been hunted by police for more than a week in the deaths of Roxanne Caton, 13, and her sister. Rabyn, 5. . • Police said the girls were walking outside "their Tampa horne July 14 when witnesses told police a blue and white ca r By !M _,u..-.l'reaa _ Supermarket <1111!Gmm !ound long lines at the chec1out counters and aome empty spots on lbe shelves today , as shoppers atoclted up on food in the face o( aharply rising, post-lreeze pikes. ''1bey're buying like Clirislmas,'" said one clerk interviewed by the Asaociated Press in a spot survey. (See editQrial , page 6.) The survey showed that stores were taking advantage of the Jilting of the freeze io mark up many food items, particularly pork , poultry and eggs. , Al part of the Phase 4 economic pro- gram, announced by President Nixon last week, food processors and retailers may pass to the consumer, on a dollar-for- dollar basis, cost increases in raw agricultural products. Beef prices remain frozen until Sept 12. Administration officials have said lhere will be a sharp rise in food prices tern· porarily, but predicted that the grocery bills will level as supplies increase. California residents started shopping early, filling stores over the weekend. "We had 30 to 40 people waiting for th e doors. to open al .10 Swxlay morning," said a clerk at a Lucky supermarket. "They're buying meat lhey can freeze and can goods that'll keep. They're buying staples, too," said .the clerk, Tom Kelly. , Jack Pippin, a butcher for the Cala chain market in San Francisol>, said that by the end of the weekend he was out of bacon and "darn near finished with pJrk and chicken. I've bad people in who are buying 10 or 1% fryers -and I don 't lhink they were having a· party." William Gro5s, direct.or ot public rela· Dan~er Quizzed Over Getty's Disappearance made several passes throogb the block, ROME (AP) -Police questioned a 23-then suddenly swerved from Uie opposite lane and hmged iJt.to the Caton children year~ld go-go dancer today about the from behind. Qu1is Catqn, 12, w_llo .was disappearance two weeks ago of J. Paul walking with bis si.sters, wu 1njured Getty Ill. · slighily. 'Ibe dancer, Danielle Devret, may have Tho driver ocooped up the body of Rox· been the last persoo to aee Getty belore anoe and sped away. leaving the other he vanished. The Police are thvestigaUng cbi!dren lyiog beside the roed. Roxanne's the possiblllly that Getl1, the !&-year-old body was found later in a ditch. grandson of the American oil billionaire, Sbertll carter said McMahon told him mlgbl have been kidna~ . · ha 1'0de 1 bicycle lrom bis · molber's · Miss ~. a dancer In a dlscoth<q uc ~ In OrW>do, Fla. to Woodbine. Ga., Jn Rome'• bohemian Trastevere aection liriiirenby eluding police roadblocU dllr-lmpt<llted by young Gell)' said the saw liitlhe oiuuslv~.manhl.a1l blm in the early houn o! July to, potlco The ~n IOid his men were on the said. lookout !or McMahon because hb She aald they were In the Piaua grandmother, Min1ll•· Hardy, llvea In Novano, a nigbltime hippie baunl In cen- Bai:rley. ' - -tral Rome, according to polioe.t "lk-pve bimJell up JoJDO about 11:45 _ Jlomenico Scall,.d!!el !1! Rome's detec- p.m. We have him In Jill and he said he livu. 1!81d Mlaa Devrot told po ice tliil iii IJ:•cb' to return to Flortda," carter Getty suegested the two "-them ao to a lfld. near6y ~ mort. Mila Demi "id McMabOo'1 .,.;o,.... .)letty Swanson. •he r<l\Jaed and Getty 1-me irritated said her IO!t visited her In Orlando• !ew and wander«! away, a<eordlog to her ..,. c1a11 alter lbe bit411Ckun lncidenL count to tbe pdice. , lions for the San Fra.ncilco dirilion ot Safeway, the natmn's second largelf. supermarket chain in terms of sales, said a limit· of two powxt., of bacon per customer went into effect Friday because of a "temporary shortage." An official at an Alpha Beta atore ln Los Angeles said the sale of beef Im- proved, because people bought it instead ol pork. He said pork products bad gone up an average of 30 cents a po1.md since the price ceiling was liCted Wednesday. Martha EUas, 28, or Los Angeles, said. "I am loading up on fruit and vegetables like it said on television. I won't buy the chioken if it goes up, but I'll substitute fruit and vegetables. Carol 1.eruche, ·30, or l.os Angeles, aireed. "I'm making do with fresh vegetable soups," she said. "I'm getting protein in eggs, milk, and cottage cheese and I feed . my kids peanut butter because I hear it's high in protein ." Robbed Worker Kills 1 In Spree NEW YORK IUPll -A construction worker was beaten and robbed of his weekly paycheck in his tenement SUnday. When he recovered, he ltilled one man and WOiq!ded three others by shooting nt random mto a crowd. His scalp bleeding and all his teeth knocked out, the worker. James Winfield, 48, then surrendered to police. "I'm tired of being ripped off," officer DeMis ~tcCormack quoted him. as saying. · Winfield toli:I j)olice il was -the sixth Lime he had been robbed. Orange Coast Weatlaer ~tore or the same can be ex· pected in the Orange Coast area on Tuesday. Night and morning low clouds will give way lo sunshine in t~ afternoon. The highs· wtll be in the low 708, with the low dipping down to 60 degrees. INSmE TOD-' Y They laid M was out of hi! mind, tntcring a 35-foot boat in the Trampocijic vacht ract , but tht •kipper of the Ch•IZJlllh ia. hovlno th< la1t 1411Qh lodar. Stt Boating, Page 19. ' • • ' ' • I ! L_ DAILY PILOT c ---Monday, July 23, iq71 ~esa Co1=filcil Cringes; ------- 'Te1·rihle Ted' Returns • By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ltll DellY , .... Still A1' COSTA ~fESA City Hall the mention of Ted C. Bologh's name brings a slap to the forehead . a rolling of eyeballs and a protracted groan. Thorn in the side cf politicians. perennial .loser of City Council elections, rne verick, nemesis, vitriolic critic and bah. humbug man. Bologh hadn 't been heard from a few months ago since he moved out of Costa Mesa-lechnicn\ly. His new address. 226J Pacilii:. Ave ., is in COW'lty territory just outside the Costa Mesa city limits and when Bologh moved, the City Council nearly proclaimed a holiday. DESPJTt: llJS numerous protestations about the way which city affairs were being run, Bologh recently pe- titioned to have his new OOwe aMexed to the city of Costa ~lesa. . . _ Quite predictably, officialdom has not reacted to B:o- logh's request with great haste. But the fei sty 53-year-old city hall y,·alcher Is unde- 'TID 10LooH terred by anything as arbitrary as a city boundary Une and vows that "Bologh will be back." - lie says he holds the second trust deed on his old house at 2280 Joann St. which makes him a Costa A-1esa property owner and therefore gives hJm the right to speak out on municipal affairs. BOLOGlf'S RETURN appearance has been set for Aug. 6 when he expects to "1um on the faucets ot knowledge" for what he calls the "local brainwashed Watergaters." Source o( his lat.est displeasure is the $3.9 million open space bond election scheduled for Sept. IL Bologh figures it shouldn't be spent on the purchase of surplus school sites which he maintains have already been paid for once by Costa ~tesa taxpayers. "They shouldn•t have to buy the same land over again." charged Bologh. Instead, he believes the city ought to spend the bond money in Che Keys ~1arina area, in Bologh's own neighborhood. JN HIS OPINION. the city should by lhe land and help with the develo~ ment of lhe marina, and get started on a "multi-million dollar business.'' The council has never acted on Bologh's suggestions before except when he orfered his first house for sale to the city in 1971 to a!Jow the widening of Del Mar Avenue. THINKING THEN their troubles with BoloSh would be permanently ended, four councilmen lmrii.edlately rushed to accept the offer with a motion. . The ploy dldn 't work. Bologh moved, but only to a different part of town. CdM Y outli Hurt (l1i Truck Misliap , On, Mexica1t Trip " FromP,..el JET CRASH. • • Zealand, and was enroute to Los Angeles and San Francisco when it plummeted hundreds of feet into the sea shortly after takeoff. "' A Corona del JI.far youth was seriously ' injurtd and a Balboa man was jailed in Ensenada foUowlng an a u tom obi le mishap Sunday on Punta Banda sooth of • En!lenada . ~ ! ! 'ibe uljured youth was Identified u , Breck Leonard, about 17, of Corona del ; Mar. Jailed followlng the accident was the driver or the four·wheel vehicle. Ron Newell, 26, or 413 Belleview St., Balboa, • one of the partners in a diving class : known as Scuba Limited. Newell was due· to ~be .released from jail about noon today, according to his father. Robert Newell of Balboa. 1 Details of the accident were sketchy. _ but according to Brad Stillwell, 17, of Laguna Niguel. Newell and other ;. members o[ Scuba Limited had taken a i diving party lo the Jl.texican resort on Friday. : On Sunday morning. Newell, Leonard I and an unidentified youth went for an ex· ! l ploratory drive along a narTow road. A shoulder of the road gave way and the !ruck twnbled about 150 feet down a cliff and landed among some rocks on the ' ' '' I .LI • I l .. beach. The unidentified youth was thrown clear as the truck nosed over. Newell suffered minor cuts and abrasions. Leonard y,·as finally flown oul of the <lrea and is under treat1nent at Universi· ty ~fospital in San Diego. l·lis condition v.·as described t'ls serious. Leonard Is the stepson of Mrs. Marge LeQnard of Yorba Linda . His local ad· dress is unknown. Scuba Limited is a diving school run by Newell and several partners. They make frequent trips to Baja Ca lifornia on div· ing expeditions along the rugged Punta Baunda shore.. OIAHGI COAST eM DAILY PILOT 'T"-Or.ii" Co.11 OAll.'I' Pll.Ol, wolf! wflll;ll " """"1<'4d tllt 1"W>•Pntt1. It MUlll'lold W me O•t""lf Co••• P,.i,llllol"V CO!O\pllfly, s.,.. ••It '"";110r>1 •rt pO/OUJlt«I, Monci.y ,,,,,_,, Frkl...,. ID• Co1tt Me11, l'leWPO•I ''""· l<un!IF1V""' lt-Cll/FIMll'lt•ln V•llt y, l 1oun1 lfff.~. l•VIMIS-ltlNIC-..... ltn C .. .,.,.n!t/ ltn J~n C..Pl11rfll0. A 1fnol1 •e11lon.I f'O'!llM l• ..,01-Mlllrd•yc tnd S""4•r1 f~t pr!r>ell:loll pUl>MdllFIV Pl•nl 11 •I UO Wul l•r S!•N!. Cot!• Mh•, (•llfo<nl•, '~~. Rob1•I N. Wttd PtMlll.,,1 •nct Put>ll"' J1c~ R. C11,l1y V<• Prt1Mlto'U •nct Go,,.••I Mi"49't' Thom •• K11•1f Edlto< Thomlf A. M11rphi111 ~ .... l ... l!dl .... Ch11l11 M. l101 Rlcl1,rd '· Holt .... 1111..-it M....,i,.,o IE~"'' CM .. MIM Offlc• lJO Witt l1y Stt11t M1illft9 Mtlr111;',,0 . 1011 1160. 't61l -Oflk" H...-• """11: »» "'-' aovir...n ltfllM INdl: m ,._, A- Nllf'l!IFIVtvfo IMCllT 17111 ltolUI ._.,,,.,.., "°" (M!Mnhl: JOS ,..,!fl l!I Cimini lllNI T«.,.._ C71 <41 M2 .. )J:1 Cl•ln.4 A4'1 ..... t '4J.U71 C°"' .. '• lt1J. 0..... CoiM P\lllltl>IJll • eom,. .. ,. ,., ,....... ,_,...,, nl111tr•tllint. .,1111'1411 m••• ., -1\tt ll*lh '*""" -r 11t ~ •llllWI "*"' •· '"'''"" ., '"''""'' _...... SoKoftd cltn _,.,.. Nllll •' e..11 M-. C..lllorlll•,. "*"""''..,._ '"' ur•lv u.u -'111•1 ..... -II U.1' -lfllf'I llllllhl'Y •1t11111""' iUJ '""""IY-• 'I '-------------"' • Airline officials said the pilot reported a smashed windshield and asked for an emergency landing. But witnesses said the plane made a 90-degree turn and then hlt the South Pacific witp a tremendous i~act a mile off·Papeete port .. The crash happened at 10:15 p.m. Sunday Tahili time (1: 15 a.m. PDT) to- day," an aJrport technician said. "I was in a house at a level above the airport. The plane took off apparently normally. Its lights were on so 1 could see lt was a PanAm plane. Suddenly, it took a sharp turn to the left and slarted losing altitude fast. I got the impression almost as if a missile was launched from tbc plane. There was a loud bang but no explosion. Then nothing else -silence." Rescue officials said a fleet of official launche.s, yachts, pleasure boats and fishing vessels sped to the scene. * * * 3 Californians Listed Aboard -Downed Jetliner LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Pan American \Vor!d Airways here issued this crew list today for the jetliner lhat crashed in the Pacific on a night from Tahiti to L<ls Angeles : Capt. Robert E. Eva rt s, pilot. Grass Valley, Calif. First officer Lyle C. llavens, copilot, ?.fed.ford, Ore. Flight engineer Isaac N. Lambert, Dan~ille, Calif. Second officer Frederick W. Fischer, Rochester. N.Y-. Purser Sieglinde Siefert, 32, Helmstedt, Germany. Purser Rita Van Beckum, 3 0 . Cupertino, Calif. Sltv.·ard~se1: Kerry C. Pearce, 30. Lincoln, England . E\'tl ~t. Lcljon, 27, Stocksund, Sv.·eden. Stcla dos Santos, 30, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil. Julie P. Harris. 2<4, Mancheste r, Engl:ind. Student Priest Strip ped, Beaten Orange County Sheriff's ofnctrs are in. vcsllgating wh11 t !hey regard at this polnl as a motiveless attack dwing the "·eekend on a young student priest. Deputies .sald Christopher Richard Cro\·ts. 22. "'as auacked and stripped by three long halred you1hll ti.! he "'a\ked along 1bc privBle roadway lo Sr. ~Uchael's Seminary on Star Route In the Orange area. They $&id the St. ~1ichae.l's student was kicked and vlclousl)' beaten and then left sprAwled In the driveway as his thrtt a.uallanLs ran ofl. Groves told officers his auacken made no atte:1npt co rob him and threw his clothing Jnto nearby brush after ad- mlnfstcring the bc:tting . D•llY •1w ""'' llr L• 1"1)'111 TONIGHT COSTA MES'A PLANNING COM- MISSION -R<gular meeting, qty Hall, 6:30 p.m. TUEsDAV, JULY %4 SENIOR CITIZENS C!,UB -Tuesday Club, Community Recreation Center, 11 am. ·3 p.m. Huntington Police Set For Plane By JOANNE REVNO!,DS Of tM D.IW PUlt St•H ABOVE IT ALL-Soaring birdman Sunday was one of about 200 persons who brought their hang glid· ers to the third annual Otto Lilienthal Hang Glider Championships. The two-day event was held in Tra- buco Canyon near O'Neill Park. Longest flights Crom a mountain peak were about sLx minutes. There were also youngsters of 9 or 10 gliding. It all began two years ago on a hillside in Corona del Mar in a casual atmosphere. Since then the Southern Cali- fornia Hang Glider Association has grown to about 3,000 members. \Vithin the next three or four months, the Huntington Beach police department will have a fixed-wing airplane to add to its.air patrol force of five helicopters. City officials confirmed today that the $2t,000 Maule M-4 Rocket passenger plane has been ordered. Delivery is e1· pected within 90 days. Commission Set To Begin Work: 011 Guidelines Coastal protec!ion commissioners start to draw comprehensive guJdelines this y,•eek for the oceanfront in Orange and Los Angeles counties. The guidelines will aim for uniform· standards in nev.• construction under the COastal Conservation Act., Prop. 20. The South Coast Regional Coastline Commission has since February con- sidered 1,157 cases -more than the slate's five other such commissions com· bined. Like other commissiOll.!, it ruled on any new construction request within 1,000 yards inland from the mean high tide . Saying some woul~-be builders are uncertain what might be aproved or disapproved, Melvin Carpenter, j.'Om- mission executive exeeutive. said the guidelines "will let tbe developers know v.•hat projects are controversial and \l'hich aien't." : Mesa's Jaycees Plan Barbecue Costa Mesa's Jaycees are firing up their braziers for a barbecue picnic July 29 at the Orange County lt'alrgrounds to benefit Cystic Fibrosis research. Donations for the I p.m. to 4 p.m. pie. nice are $1 for adults and 75 cents for children. For tickets, cont.act Ray and Betty Dubbs, 642.-9420, or any Costa Mesa Jaycee. Tickets will also be sold at the fairgrounds before the picnic. One of the attractions Is rafne for prizes donated by Costa M es a merchants. The grand prize is a trip for two to San Francisco. From Pagel WATERGATE • • in the \Vatcrgate coverup plot. "This is n1y opinion. based upon 1n.v association with Dean." Strachan said. "l\fy opinion would be that Dean is telling the truth." Strachan said he first reacted with shock and disbelief ivhen he heard about the Watergate raid on the rad io. ~rachan, whose job was' to keep Haldeman infonned of activities at t?le Nixon re-election campaign, said he ex· pecred-h1St>OsSto be-angry. "I was scared to death. I thought I \\'OUld be fired," Strachan said. But on the contrary, he said, Haldeman didn't berate him;- "lle said almost jokingly, 'Well, what do we know about the events. over the \l'eekend?" Strachan said. Strachan then showed Haldemarl an old 111cmorandum in which Strachan In- formed l~aldeman that a $300,000 "sophisticated po I it i ca I intelligence ga!hering system'' had been approved by 1he campaign committee. "lie told me, 'Make sure our files arc clean,' ,. SLrachan said. He destroyed that and other documents by running them through a shredder. he said. Later, in July. he told Haldeman speeifla:iilly that he destroyed the memorandum in question , and recalls that Haldeman didn't appear lo be surprised. The Liddy incident came in the spring of 1972, Strachan said. Haldeman in- structed him to tell Liddy, who was then cl1ieLcounscl-to tbe..re..~ campaip_ C'Ommittee, to "transfer w b a t e. v e r cnpablllly be had" from the campaign of Sen. Edmllnd S. ~1uskle of ~1alne to Sen. Georgr i\lcGowrn ot Soulh Dakota, who was emer11ing as-ffie rront-runner fbt the Democratic nomination. Strachan said Haldeman w a n t e d parllcula rly lo flnd out hfc(;overn·s rcla· tionship with Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Alassachu.'letts, whom ~1cGovem wanted as a vice presidential nmning mate 10 strengthen his chances against Nixon . Fla1nes S·weep Tall Buildirig BOGOTA, Colombia (AP) -Fire broke out in a 40-story building here today. and tv.·o of at least 200 persons believed trapped on upper floors jumped to lheir deaths, police said. Helicopters were being used to rescue those trapped between the 13th and 401h Doors of the Avianca building, C.Olombia's calJest. Police reported at least 100 persons were rescued. The fire. believed to have started on lhe 13th floor, appeared to be getting out of control at midday. At least 10 noors directly above the 13th v.·ere engulfed in flames. Dead Actress Wins Lawsuit- Given $45,000 Gliders Grace Trabuco Canyori In Competition By JOHN SCHADE or -. Dollr Plltl' tteH One hundred alsty-flve gliders and 305 pilot.! participated in the third aMual Ot· to Lilienthal Hang Gllder Championships held Saturday and Sunday at Escape Country in Trabuco Canyon. The event sponsored by· the 3,000- member Southern California Hang Glider Association featured more than 400 flights from four area hHls ranging in .height from 100 to 350 feet. Rich Pray of 5anta Barbara had the longest flight time for fiexlble winged gliders whJch use the lower and middle hills. Pray's glide from the 100-foot hill . took 50 seconds. • Taras Klceniuk Jr. from Mt. Palomar had the lmigest flight fixed wing flight from the upper 350 foot hill His "lcarµs" plane took 2:1S to reach the ground after Kiceniuk launched himself from the hill. Io an uoofflclal flight, ·Bob Wills of Sanca Ana laUQched himself from a nearby mountain and stayed aloft for six A lawsui t filed by Mary Pickford minutes. Rogefs shortl y before her death in 1971 'The first championships were held on a Y.'as y,·on Friday by lawyers now acting Corona del Mar hillside next to lhe for !he estate or the star or the silent Pacific View Memorial Park two years movie era. as a casual event. But since lhat time, the glider cwocia· Damages totaling more than $42,000 lion has bee.n formed whicb now puta out Once the plane arrives in Huntington Beach from the Georgia manufacturing plant, there will be another $14,000 worth or work done on it to convert it for police patrol work. The cost of the plane and the con- version work is being funded out of the city's portion of federal revenue sharing funds . Lt. Bob Morrison, head of the police air patrol, said the Maule craft was selected because it has a top air speed ol 160 mph and can fly as slowly as 40 mph. "This craft was originally designed for Alaskan bush pilots, so Jt's very rugged and durable,'' he said. ~forrison noted the airplane has a fuel capacity which will enable it to stay aloft for more lhan slx hours at one time. -The acquisition of the 4-passcnger airplane will bring to six the total of aircraft in the police department. In January of 1969, the department bought two Hughes helicopters. Last month they acquired for free three Army Bell helicopters which were declared surplus by the U.S. Defense Department. Police Chief Earle Robitaille has assured cil.)I councilmen that the presence of the Bell craft has not altered 'the need for the airplane -a need whlch he convinced councilmen of earlier this year . Gas Shortage Speech Planned and lawyers' fees of $3,500 were awarded thl g I "Th G dskln a mon Y ma az ne, e roun • Undsey W. Miiier, senior consultant on by Orange County Superior Court Judge ner" and holds monthly meetings pro-the energy crisis for the Assembly Com- James F. Judge in a ruling Chat doses mating the sport. mittee on Transportation, will talk to the Ille opened In November, 1970, when Speci.a)-awards were also presented. Costa 1.fesa service station dealers about Ron Richards of Torrance won the t•-·1 h t Wed __ , f\trs . Rogers sued the lessees of property m: 01 s or age nie:K.lay. owned br. fil'r In Fullerton. a"·ard for a quick silver glider with 35.3 He will be the guest at a dinner 1 second time. meeting sponsored by the Chamber o( Judge Judge ruled against de£endants Commerce Service Stat.ion and Garage Brek, Inc. in action that al.so settled Committee at 7:30 p.m. in the Holiday lesser issues raised in a cross-complaint Skylab 2 Gets Ready IM. involving the sub-lessee, Na tt 0 n al Miller will focus on the problem from a CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) . -The varity of viewpoints, including fuel sup-- Coordinators, Inc. Skylab 2 astronauta under-go their last ply and demand, and fuel policy. ~1rs. Rogers ov•ned property in several major physical examination today to be Persons interested in attending should Orange County communities and sure they are ready for Saturday's make their reservations with the supervised leasing operations from her launch and a 59-day visit to the space Chamber of Commerce, 646-0536, before fallbrook ranch, court officials noted . slation. Tuesday. iOiiiiiiiiiiXiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiXiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiXiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiXiiiiiiiliii Nobody Sells GE Dishwashers For Less Than~ HIGH QUALITY LOW PRICE ''BEST BUY'' AWARD SOIT fOOO WASil DISl'OSll ,, • .,n.~ •• • 2 tN n.r..w .. h •Am.tic Det ....... Dl&pellMf .,..., __ . __ 15995 0 W1I OIUVH e Wf SEllVICI 66SD211 H e WE l/rl l'TALl. 1 l 11llt·l11SlftFltiil • J ... lMh 0..... I R-.Aill.,....... 1 D• Dt1t1p11t • S.tlli , ....... - WI DILIYlll WI lfllVICI WI l/rlSTAl.I.. 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